The Dillon herald. (Dillon, S.C.) 1894-????, November 25, 1920, Image 5
I
* I
/ PERSONAL MENTION *
' * '
' .c 1
Phil Acherholt spent Sunday in
ff Bennettsville.'
Miss Ella Edens is visiting relatives
in Sumter.
?o?
J. M. Sprunt is in New Yojrk this
week on business.
Miss Ellen White of Lake View
? was in town Saturday.
r ?o?
Miss Bessie MeQueen speht the
-- "week end at her home in Fork.
C. W. Neil is spending the week
end at his home in Danville, Va.
'Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Olive and son,
Billie, spent last Thursday in Florence.
Prof. W. D. Roberts left last night
for Spartanburg to attend the State
Teacher's Association. v..,? . ...
Dr. Watson B. Duncan and Mrs.
Jt' \ Duncan left Tuesday for Georgetown
to attend the Methodist conference.
n" Cfaoirhousn. and T. L.
1/1 . *? ttUV Uwuvnuv%.wV- ^
v Manning attended the cotton meeting
* at Columbia Monday, .1*
Mrs. A. B. Jordan ha9 returned
home after a short stay with relatives
in Columbia.
< *-" ' ;
Miss Louise Rogers of Fork is the
attractive guest of Mr. and Mrs. A'. C..
Rogers.
Mi9s Miriam Moore of Converse
College K at home for a few days
this week. 1
\ , ?o?
Hugh Croxton, Mrs. O. C. Croxton
and Miss Effie Ramsey motored to
Florence Tuesday.
0. W. Ramsey of Hamlet spent
Monday with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. J. B. Ramsey.
Misses Florrie and Luia Rogers of I
Marion are spending the week with
Miss Cora McKinley.
Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Moore of Columbia
are spending some time with
Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Moore.
I
Mr. and Mrs. H. C. McKenzie and
children of Aynor are spending >the
'week with relatives here.
Mrs. Maggie McGirt, who has been
f visiting Mrs. Wade Stackhouse, left
Tuesday for Darlington.
i "
n* Mrs. M. E. Williams and daughter;
/ of Florence are visiting Mr. and Mrs.
' 3. F. Williams this week. '
i i i m
25 Per Cen
t Reductioi
? Sale ;;
{ ] TWO 9* IN. PIE PLATES ; *i
! ] IffT.LIPPEDSAUCIPAN ilflf?8*!
USQT LIPPED SAUCE PAN J
1 SOT LIPPED SAUCEPAN
?*OT^WNGBOWL '
IS V 15
T
IS
ll. At our Sfilers SALE
f lightweight, sanitary, heat12
pieces of the finest tram
$13.50 Worth of A1
!f LIVING ROOM AN
T FURNfTUl
n i ^
T Our living room an
T ture will stand the &8t c
it is substantially and-c
J *n every detail. r
i 25 per cen
^ REDUCTION SAI
L ' I
SHS-SHS-E-?-?
Mr. and Mrs. R. E. West of Flor I
ence are visiting Mrs. West's fath- (
ei, C. E! Peck, this week. I
Seth Robertson of Fayetteville
spent Monday with his parents, Mr. i
and Mrs. J. W. Robertson. i
A. B. Welch who has been in New
York for about two weeks on business,
returned home Monday.
G. E. Powers of the Willard Storage
Battery Service is in Birmingham
this week on business.
Misses Alma McGilvary and Annie I
Lee Trawick of Bennettsville spen: 1
the week end with their uncle, J. P. J
1
wntte.
Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Vinson and i
little daughter, Julia, of Fairmont. I
N. C., spent Sunday with Mrs. LeRoy I
Williams. I
Mrs. W. T. Huntley and little son i
Billie, of Aberdeen, N. C., spent the 1
week end with Mr. and Mrs. Paul 1
Deaton. I
Mrs. J. C. Colvin left Saturday for i
her home in Chester after spending
some time with her daughter, Mrs
S. B. Stoney.
?o? !
There will be a Thanksgiving service
at the Baptist church this morning
at 10 o'clock. An offering will
be taken for the suffering Armen- i
ians. . i
. The Ardmore Company will appear I
at the school auditorium Monday i
night, November 29th. This attrac- 1
tion comes under the auspices of the i
local lyceum committee. The com- 1
pany is corapose<f"of six ladies, all '
of whom are muscians ofj^ very high
order. " 1
Judge Ben Lindsey of Chicago 1
will deliver a lecture at the school <
auditorium tomorrow night under the ]
auspices of the local lyceum commit-, 1
tee. Judge Lindsey was for a number 1
of years judge of the Juvenile Court
in the city of Chicago and conducted
hifi court in such an excellent manner
that he won gn international reputa- j
tion. Judge Lindsey's lecture will
probably be along the line of the
proper method of handling youthful
criminals. ,
o jj
OFFICER NOTIFIED HIS i'
BODY IS ON WAY HOME./
Lynn, Mass., Nov. IS-? Although 'j
Lieut. John C. Gramstorff, a Yankee,]
Division veteran has notified the i
War Department several times that 1
he is not dead, he received a tele-'i
gram today at his home in Everett '
announcing that his body is now on'<
its way home from France. The tele- ]
gram came from government officials i
who have been told repeatedly^ that :
-V -
5HSHS-1S?EH5H5H
. Tha
1 Our Thanks;
niture, Rugs
i ;r, ^ r
NOW FREE!
! Cooking utensils of ALUMIF
resisting METAL so ideal for coo
4 on the market GlVfcJN AWA
uminum Ware "Quality Brand
D PARLOR, DIN
10 piece
d parlor furni- . . .
fully design
)f time," because
^refully made WUliam arK
hogany, eitl
Edison Phonogram
T S. Vai
E
2-4 E. Evans St.
-H3?SHB~" B???
he lieutenant is not dead. The of finals
also have held back money due
he lieutenant, apparently unwilling
:o believe he is alive.
Lieut. Gramstorff is at a loss to
enow what to do with the body, which
jndoubtedly is that of a wrongly
dentified soldier. '
O !
AMILY ROUTS EAGLE.
Flight Year Old I>ad Has Narrow,
Escape.
Glendo, Wyo., Nov. 22?It took
the combined efforts of the Spaulding
family today to save eight yeaj old |
CValter Spaulding from being carried,
iway by a giant eagle at their ranch
tear here. When the huge bird at-1
tacked Walter in the ranch yard, he
grasped it by the neck and screamed
for help. John,, his seven year old
brother, came to the rescue and a
tbird boy ran for neip. Mrs. apauiaing
beat off the bird with a stick
and the eagle attacked her. She
was saved when Mr. Spaulding came
with a shotgun and dispatched the
bird. It had a spread of eight feet.
The two boys were severely lacerated
by the eagle's claws.
o
SWINDLE GAME IS PULLED.
>outh Carolina Farmer Says He Last
$11,000.
Atlanta, Nov. 20. ?Paraphernalia
alleged to have been used by a syndicate
to swindle persons out of $100,1)00
since the middle of October
through fake bets on horse races was
3eized here late today in two raids
by Solicitor General Boykin and his
leputies, and after another raid tonight
it was stated that $10,000
worth of drugs had been taken.
The raids during the afternoon followed
the arrest yesterday of a man
giving his name of Abe Powers, who
was held, in default of $25,000 bond
nn information furnished by H. C.
Holley, of Aiken, S, C., a farmer,
who says he lost $11,000 by making
bets on bogus horse races. $
o
DISASTROUS FIRE AT HAMER
Buildings and Merchundiso Valued a*
$20,000 Go I"ifi Smoke.
Hanier suffered another disastrous
fire at an early hour Tuesday morning
when buildings and merchandise
valued at $20,000 were destroyed..
The origin of the fire unknown.
The buildings valued at $6000 on
1 pre-war basis were owned by D.
McDuffie. Mr. McDuffie carried a
3tock of merchandise in one of the
buildings valued at $10,000.* The
Diher building was occupied by E. L.
Westbury who also conducted a geneial
store. Mr. McDuffie's stock of
merchandise was not covered by insurance
and is a total loss. He had
$2000 on the buildings. Mr. Westa-S-SHSHlHS-Sr
nksgn
jiving Offering
, Ranges, etc., a
IStj.
L==^MFfu' j EVERY PIECE IS
E j|7 i GUARANTEED BY
MANUFACTURER
1 FORTWENTYYEARS
d
JUM, that beautiful, durable,
king purposes; a complete set of
Y OUTRIGHT.
" 20-Year Guarantee.
ING ROOM SUITS.
dining room suits, beautied
such as Queen Ann and
I Mary, in walnut and maler
veneered or solid.
)hs and Records, and Re
in this 25 per cer
ughan Fui
"THE HOME OF C
We Delive
-S?IS?11-?-?-?-?
bury had a small amount of insur-l
ance on his merchandise.
The fire was discovered about 5:30i
Tuesday morning and had gained
such headway that% it was beyond 1
control.
o :
Missionary* Society Mecis.
Mrs. G. H. Bell entertained the
Woman's Missionary Society of the
Baptist Church last Friday afternoon.
The society is divided into
four circles and this was Circle No.
2 of which Mrs. Bell is leader.
I -The subject for the afternoon was
"Doctors and Nurses' on Foreign
Fields."
I The 27th Psalm was read by Mrs.
Bell after which Mrs. W. C. Allen
mad^ a talk, "Evidence of God's Approval
on the Ministry of Healing."
| Mrs. W. E. Hall read a paper orf
Medical Mission Work in China.
I Mrs. S. C.- Henslee made a report
of the W. M. U. Convention which
met in Charleston last week. After
the progrom came the social hour
during which a salad course was
served. _ I
I Music was enjoyed on the Edison.
o
Four hundred thousand dollars
monthly will be required to run the
League of Nations next year.
The ancient astronomical instruments,
seized in Pekin by Field Marshal
Count von Waldersee, of the
German Army, in 1901 at the time
of the B&xer trouble, and taken to
Potsdam have been returned to the
Chinese Government.
One torn of wheat straw will produce
the equivalent of forty gallons
jot' gasoline, according to the United
Slates Department of Agriculture.
The most northerly air service in
the world is between Porjus, Sweden,
and Suorvajaure in Lapland.
A Jiatchery with a capacity of 10,000
eggs will be used by a poultry
products will used to supply the
products willr be use dto supply the
Yellowstone and Glacier national
T*?rir hntoi evstpms with fresh eggs
and poultry.
One hundred and ninety thousand
men are being educated in the United
States Army schools.
Thirty-five thousand head of Texas
cows are to be sent to Germany
for the purpose of rehabilitating the
depleted dairy herds of that country.
, A new invention in wireless telegraphy
makes it impossible for eavesdroppers
to listen in on reports of
the League of Nations assembly
which meets November 15.
-ffl?IS?S?E?SHE?Sfing
2
is Our Entire ?
t a Reduction of 1
Think of it. And with this
splend id FREE VALUE you
~?rl nil fvears of
arc jjiunudwu ?4. .... ^ ^
daily relief and labor-saving
which bas made famous
SELLERS
KITCHEN CABINETS
"The Best Servant in Your
House
Tbis set of aluminum ware
purchased by [the piece would
cost you not a nickel les tbar.
$13.50.
But tbe Sellers makers have
furnished us a limited number ol
sets to now give away with tbe
Cabinets, so you get it free.
DPn DAA1U CITTT
UJUU IWViTl UVA A
New and attractive de:
room furniture, in walnut,
and ivory, are offered at t
duction sale.
d Star Detroit Vapor St(
it. Reduction Sale
miture Coi
iOOD FURNITURE"
t Anywhere
???????
For the first time in their lives
many European children, born during
the lean war years willt, enjoy the
taste of sweets next ChHstmas as a
result of price declines in America.
,
NATURE TEACHES US EV
OF PLANTING.
IF YOU WANT CORN, YO
SEE HOW EVERYTHING
PLIED.
IF YOU WANTAFORTUN
PLANT THEM IN OUR BANK
OUR THICK WALLS ANl
PERIENCED MANAGEMENT
SERVICE AND THE BEST OF
K PUT YOUR MOf
>
- The Banl
i
SAFETY,' SERVIC
\
f
Dillon, S<
-SH5H5HS-SHS-&
Sale I:
itock of Fur- *
25 per cent.
s. "RESTWELL'
. ' Mi
sicrns of bed Included ii
standard mal
mahogany which are guai
in every detail
his big re- We also hi
, that ordinaril)
S13.50.
)ves are excepted
w *
Florence, S. C.
~S~6?B?B?S?B?B
J Doping race horses was claimed by *
a Chicago race horse trainer as the
rehson for his having in his possession
62 quarts of whiskey and $3,000
worth of narcotics, 3
'
$
M
you want 41
an Oak
>u must plant
an Acorn
^Ifyouwantto
/2maut ft
K uivw a
IT Fortune ^
{You must plant
\ Money
rERYWHERETHE NECESSITY
U PLANT CORN.
YOU PLANT IS SOON MULTIE,
YOU MUST PLANT DOLLARS
%
, %
) STRONG LOCKS, AND EX,
GUARANTEES YOU PERFECT .
??TTCMTTnW
nil bii i tun.
<EY IN OUR BANK
( of Dillon
? " , i
>.
E
AND 4 PER CENT
)uth Carolina
: 7 \ t i
??? J
a HI a E a [3
25 Per Cent ^
Reduction m
Sale I
^ [ ]
ll
' AND "RED CROSS" ffi
\.TTRESSES T
n this sale are the above ?*
ce mattresses both 6f" rij
anteed to be satisfactory T
ive other felt mattresses T
r sell for $18, Sale price m
*5 PER CENT a i
DEDUCTION SALE
a