The Dillon herald. (Dillon, S.C.) 1894-????, March 25, 1920, Image 5

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t * * PERSONAL MENTION. * P -r Austin Smith spent the week end in- Richmond. Mr. Alec Montoe spent the week end in Dill.n. Mr. Tom McQueen of Fork was in town Tuesday. o Mr. Rex Medlin spent Sunday in Fairmont, N. C. Miss Ellen White of Lake View was in town Tuesday. Mr. James L. Alford of Minturn was in town Tuesday. Mr L. J. Prevatt of Lumbert.n was in town Sunday. ?o? Mr. L. G. Miller 0f Lake View spent Tuesday in town on business. Mr. S. G. Rogers made a, business trip to Columbia Monday Mr. L. Cottingham left for Nesmlth Monday on business *1 ?* T ihu T? onV Mr. A. D. ueiuea Ui JUlVViV AVVW? , was in town Sunday. James M. Carmichael was here fr~m Bennettsville Monday. J. L. Norman of Lake View ftas a visitor in the city Mtnday. I Mr. J. M. Weaver spent the week and with friends in Gastonia. Mtes Kate Woodley of Clio was in town Monday shopping. William McNaul spent the week and in the city with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. D. M. McPhaul spent the week end with Mrs. S. P. Melvin. Mr. Dewey Dunlap spent the week end with his father in Bonlee, N. C. Burney Lane, who is attending College in Columbia, is home.for a few days. Mr. John Hayes has returned from' Los Angeles, California, and other western cities where he spent several weeks. | Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Braddv and daughter, Alley, have gone to Columbia this week. Mrs. H. H. Ford of Wilmington visited her brother, Mr Jack Watson, Sunday. Q > i Miss Louise Moore left Tuesday! morning for Columbia to attend the; - automohile -shgjE. Lieut. J hn Mills returned home Saturday after spending a few days with friends here. j Horace Bethea of Atlanta spent Sunday in the city with his mother, Mrs. ta. G. Bethea. Miss Adele Critz spent the week, end i nCharlotte with her mother,! who is in the hospital there. The Pleasant Hill School will give an entertainment Friday night, April 2nd.- The public is cordially invited. Mr. and Mra. A. C. Rogers and Miss j Inez Rogers left Tuesday afternoon for Columbia to atend the /uto Show. Messrs. Bill Vfhe&r, Frank David. Thad Hamer, FranlpLoyd and J. A. Smith went to Hamlet Monday night to see "Oh Daddie/' Mi. W. J. David attended the sale of Guernsey cows at Darlington last Saturday and purchased a fine cow for which he paid $500,00. ?o? Charlie Saleeby has disposed of his stock of dry goods and will de-' vote his time to the grocery business, i The stock was purchased by Mr. Saleeby of Darlington. ?o? Owing to the lack of labor very little pr gress has been made on the street paving. The contractors are finding it very difficult to get dayj laborers. A great deal of construe-, tion work is being done around town and the new saw mill plant being erected by the Beaufort County Lum-; ber Company has exhausted the normal supply of labor. The Woman's Club met on Monday: afternoon with Mrs. L. R. Craig, j Besides the members, several guests, enjoyed the occasion. After a num-j ber of bands of rook were played the "hostess assisted by Mesdames W. j Murchison, F. M. Niernsee Jno. C Bethea, and R M. Carmichael ser ?- J I wfcd block cream, caKe coriee auu mints, Miss Beatrice Rogers had the members of the Juveni^ Missionary Society to meet with her on Saturday afternoon. This little band under the able leadership of Miss Sallie Du-: bois is composed of members from four to fourteen years, and is doing splendid work. After an enthusiastic meeting refreshments were served and the children then enjoyed singing some good old fashioned songs and hymns. o ^ HEX WITH 13 EGGS. L. F. Britt tells of a Dillon lady who killed a fat hen the other day and while dressing her discovered 15 well developed eggs. The hen had refused to lay and as she corMnue(j to take on flesh the natural inclusion was.that her days of usefulness were over and she was killed. The discovery of the 15 eggs explained the hen's delinquency as a layer. RURAL CHURCH WORK WILL BE DEVELOPED ' BAPTISTS PLAN TO REACH 15,000 ' COUNTRY SUNDAY SCHOOLS THIS SUMMER. m |PROVIDE BETTER TEACHERS 75 Million Campaign, With Assistance of SuMday School Board, Makes extension Program Possible. JL : Y " SmH <w* jj^E^SssB HEnBBfi^K^r^H^nnH^PHK * . .* DR. I. J. VAN NESS * Corresponding Secretary Baptist 8unday School Board. In what is believed to be the most j extensive campaign for the develop J ment' of rural Sunday Schools that has | 1 yet been undertaken by any single de-1 f nomination, the forces of Southern : I Baptists especially interested in Sun I c day School work will undertake to f reach 15,000 or more rural 'Sunday t Schools of the South and Southwest ? this summer, announces Drr 1. J. Van 1 _____ __ _____^ <4 /M. Let Us I Business I Your partner has a business and you look t counsel on important r titled to all the help he < Do you get a partner's matter? Do you get the: ized knowledge which printing and paper, and which a combination of Our job department has ment for doing work < letterheads, billheads,"a: we carry in stock, recor ^ ?@5! I he X/ttltry nt Let Us Serve Yo Jones for Style Special Es Of Coats, C( Dresses. ^^Ve unusual values 1 and coat suits A Coat suits mark* $69.50 and down special at $39.00 an Silk georgette dresses at ! Tafeta and mesaline silk dress $16.50. Wash dresses at $4, Children s dresses at $1.^ Middy its, sizes 6 years priced special at 4.50 to $13., LOW SHOES.~PumF special at $13.50 nd down t had and the acme of style. JONES DRY GO Ness, corresponding secretary of the Baptist Sunday School Board at Nash j ville. The work is made possible by the larger funds available from the 75 Mil lion Campaign arid will be carried on I by the forces of the eighteen states of i the Southern Baptist Convention in co-operation with the Sunday School Board. Additional workers will be put i on in every stale and a large number , of Sunday School institutes will be | held in the hope of reaching a great majority of the rural Sunday Schools j In every state, riormai sunciay scnooi Institutes will be held in fifty counties of Tennessee, for instance, and aver 500 ruarl centers will be reached with the better system of Sunday School teaching and methods of administration. Similar methods wilf be fol- < lowed in all the states. Every State Enlarges Work. Over $300,000 a year will be expended on Sunday School field work in , :he territory of the Southern Baptist , Convention, it is announced, and every { state organization will greatly enlarge ts Sunday SchoW force, giving especial mention to the development of the ural schools. I In order that an adequate number of nstructors may be available for car | ying on this larger program, a thirty lay normal school w(ll be held in Nash | rllle, beginning May 31, in the instrucdon in which a large regular faculty j >f Sunday School experts and many fecial lecturers will be employed. | The Sunday Schflol Board at Nashrille has just established a department | Snndav School administration which rill deal with all questions of Sunday | school organization and equipment. Thid department will bs In charge of Vrthur Flake, who has been a member . >f the field force of the Sunday School 3oard for quite a while and who was ormerly superintendent of the Sunday School of the First Baptist Church of ^ort Worth, Tbx., said to be the " argest Sunday School in the South. Build Better Church Houses. Another department of the Sunday School Board is giving attention to the 1 ncouragement of better churct louses and pastors' homes,in the rura listricts, furnishing architects' plans or this purpose and detailed instruc ions without cost to churches which * ontemplute buildings along these ' ines. 5e Your Partner knowledge of your :o him for advice and natters. You are en:an give you. help on your printed most from the specialwe have regarding above all the service the two can render? . every modern equip? ??l> Ar/larc Pnr ;u ludii uiuuo. aw* nd all kinds of forms, nmend and use mu I? ^ tjin ess Taper ?u as a Partner Jones for Quality ister Sale i >at Suits and are offering I| n dresses, coats for the Easter sd very special at to $27.50; coats d down to $23.50. $95.00 and down to $27.50. ics at $29.00 and down to 50 to $9.50. >0 and up. i and up to larger ladies sizes, 50. * j is in patent, kid and brown, o $3 50: none better to be 8 0DSCOMPANY Methodist Committees. ] At a Church Conference held at the Main street Methodist church on last Sunday morning the foil .wing com- . mittees were appointed: , 1. Committee on Evangelism? Prof. W. D. Roberts, \V. C. Moore, W f J. Carter, Mrs. L. Cottingham \ and', Mrs. L. C. Braddy. 2. C mmittee on Missions?D. W. Bethea, W. H. Muller, J. D. Hargrove Mrs. W. C. Moore and Mrs. W.' G. Caldwell. ? 3. Committee on Social Service ? J. P. McLaurin, Dr. J. H Hamer, W. H. Murphy, Mrs. J. A. Nettles and Mrs. J. D. Hargrove, 4. Committee on Church Decoration?Mrs. Ida Dunbar, Mrs. T. W..' Bethea, Mrs. Lutie Bethea, Mrs. A. C. Rcgers, Mrs. A. J. Evans, Miss r.mila Mnnpp Miss Maria Smith. Miss Mary Carter, Miss Sarah Bethea, and Miss Beulah Mason. 5. Committee on Christian Literature?L. Cottingham, Walker Floyd, T. W. Bethea, Mrs. B A. Bedenbaugh and Mrs. W. J. Adams. ^ | Wants j RATES: 10c. A LINE % m Count six words to a line. M A No ad. taken for less than m m 30 cents. M , WANTED ? HIDES* AND COUNTRY PRODUCE. HIGHEST CASH PRICES PAID FOR SAME. DIL LON MARKET, DILLON, S. C. 2 12 tf. LOST?BETWEEN MY HOME AND ( Dillon, last Saturday afternoon: auto license No. 51181. rinaerj notify L. L. Carmichael, R 4, Dil-! Ion, S. C.?3 18 2t. FOR SALE?OXE HORSE ABOUT 71 years old at a reasonable price. Apply to B. F. Williams, Dillon, S. C. ?3 18 2tp. FOfc SALE?ONE OLIVER TYPEwriter No. 5 in good condition. First check for $45 gets it. P. O. Box 365, "City."?3 18 2tp. PEAS FOR SALE?SEVERAL BUSH els cf good field peas, at $5.50 per bushel. Extra good quality. L. L. Carmichael, Route 4.?3 25 ltp. LOST ? LAST SATURDAY IN OR near Dillon auto license No. 27320. finder please notify Mrs. Annie Stephens, Dillon, Route 4.3 25 ltp. j CDI ur i Smar In SUITS, SKIRTS are vited to see thi cidedly novel s We are show with and without * tine and poiret twi NEW SPRINC . AFTERNOO crees of fasliion An assortment t a garment that u #NEW/ We are shown are charming,?jus $35.00 up. Men and Ladies and hrown. You Easter foot wear. vruxrc qttttq ilTX JLi 1 "N \J uv/l X w Our line is com for Easter wear J. D. FOR SALE?A NICE SEVEN ROOM dwelling on East Calhoun street. Will sell at bargain. Address G. P. Box 295, Dillon, S. C.?3 18 2tp. rAKE DINNER AT THE PALMETTO CAFE SUNDAY.?3 25 It. Wa OUR WINDOW ?FC Special I am giving i the grocery dep Charlie i IrvrovDnnv L V LI\ A UV/I/ A TODAY, Thursdi OoVU.?i TT * His ve niest and greates Try To Admission 15 a J| A A V/WA wa* ? -v ? UN t Fas DRESSES, C arriving daily. * ?? e exceptionally p ;tyles in suits. ring a beautiful line ( vests. Tbe material ill. Prices $35.00 anc ; DRESSES FOB N WEAR, embody in all tbe * exclusive hat will give you an ofo )ill satisfy. From $2 r SPRING CO lg for spring a line ol t the thing for walki QHDFfs kJl 1V/UM Oxfords, all styles a will find just what : , HATS, SHIRTJ plete. Don t fail to { HARGE FOR SALE? CLEVELAND BIG boll cotton seed, well selected. The seed that makes Aore and better cotton. R. M. Olirer, Dillon. 3 4 4t FOR SALE?CASH REGISTER AT a bargain. Dillon Motor Sales Co. tch I EVERY WEEK Prices all my time to artment. ^ I 'S THEATRE ay March 25th )OUGLAS IRBANKS IN :n the Clouds Roll By I ry latest, fun- I t picture I ? H Get In I nd 30c tax inc. | cfs nions OATS You are in- i retty and de~ )f attractive suits | s are serge, trico- I 1 up. L STREET and ing the latest despnng materials. 6ortunity to choose 5.00 up. ATS : Polo Coats that ng and motoring, nd leathers, black fou desire here in > AND TIES. Jet a Stetson Hat | LOVE /