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Above Is pictured the Shutnrock 1 tlonul race yacht, which is now rep< the Bahama islands. The Shamrock w house and Its name changed to the I> The Early Broiler Catches The Profits. Clem^ 3l College, Dec. 22.?It is time a ?f?in to save eggs and hatch a hicks for early broilers. Ear!? always bring a good vr*s^r is svery reason to .aat the prices will <y "' Stood ltexT" spring. Broilers are in demand from Februray, March and April. In May the prices begin to go down, and by June the market is practically gone. Baby chicks hatched early in January hit the high market. But the old hen will not turn the trick. It is usually March or April before she becomes broody, and by that time the prices are going down. Build a brooder house 12 by 14 feet and purchase 350 baby chicks. Then you will see profits ia the broiler business. Clemson College will give you further information on broiler raising. Just drop a card to the Poultry Division and obtain this help.?D. H. Hall, Extension Poultry Husbandman. o Corn to Hum. The Calhoun Times. F. G. Rickenbacker is not what would be called a big farmer. He is in the medium class. Something was said about corn the other day. He announced that he had a thousand bushels, and much of it for sale. "Your price," was asked. "Not less than a dollar per." He will get it before many moons change. Yet many a poor sinner is turning it loose at 66 cents a bushel. It is amazing how little foresight a great many people have. They live only for the day. The future must shuffle for itself. Next summer these same people will be trying to abuy corn on tick at twice 65 cents. lLast winter all to many sold even ^the pigs to interloping Tarheel hog J peddlers. Hogs are now bringing a v good price but few for sale. Every little pine tree as big as a man's thigh is being slaughtered. Living only for the day. It is deplorable lor the morrow. No preparations for emergencies, old age and rainy days. o iwwuro me iMtoili'K St ni l News and Courier There has been more talk against the Volstead law at Washington since Congress opened the other day than at any time since national prohibition was adopted; so much so that the New York World is encouraged ^to'dcclare that "the prohibition tide has turned." v Possibly, but while the Vvorld was \ optimistically putting its hope into \ tvna ITn(?AJ ai?t? ni-l-l-. i yu utaico i^inn itl AllUI IH'V Emory R. Buckner of New York was ,telling a lot of metropolitan club ' men that they had Just as well be > careful how they drank bootleg liquor If they valued their lives. Up to date, Bald Mr. Buckner, 511 persons are known to have died in New York this year from drinking poison liquor. Of 50,000 samples of seized liquor analyzed by the Federal chem0 aja a \4 II, Sir Thomas Upton's famous interna jrted to be in use us n rum runner in :tis recently acquired by u Nassau liquor K'rtclps. ist attached to the district attorney's office, he said, more than 98 percent contained some of the poison that the government had put in deI natured alcohol. Mr. Buckner's idea is tliat very little liquor is now. being imported into the, rnite;}- states, at least in j Nejv York, but that most of the "bootleg stuff is being manufactured out of denatured alcohol, his estimate being over 40,000,000 gallons of this product now goes into the bootleg trade annually. The point is that no matter if the tide against the Voletead law has turned, as the World thinks, it will probably be some time yet before those who have to depend on bootleggers can liquor up without taking chances that nobody but a fool would take if he knew what he was doing. There are people who find a special relish in drinking because it is against the law. This is particularly true of some of the younger generation, girls as well as boys. If they appreciated the vileness of most of the stuff they can get., and if they understood that there is a quite serious possibility of its being poisonous. not a few of them might hesitate before imbibing. The argument as to the effectiveness of the enforcement of the prohibition law rages fiercely but there is one phase of the situation about which there can be no dispute. However much the prohibition law is flouted it has operated to make it practically impossible to buy liquor that is not dagerous for one reason or another. Beware, if you are wise, of the bootleg stuff. It isn't worth the risk. Beware of tt esr?o/>ioii?r _ VW|/WIUII/ <11 lilt Christmas season, for the chances against you will he heavier than ever during the next fortnight. The Christ mas Spirit. Chester News. This is the season of the year when our hearts and minds naturally turn to those who are near I and dear to us, with an affection that apparently is greater than at I any other period of the year. It is r? limn M ttncit our love and i sympathy for little children art enlarged; when we feel like we want to do something for every person, great or small, young 01 old; when our natural impulses are to bestow a gift on everyone and bring good cheer and happiness to the whole world. This is the Christmas spirit at work in our hearts. It is the subi conscious love of the Master ol men, manifested In our wish tc give to our friends and associates some token as an expression of oui esteem and affection. Love is indeed a most wonderful and powerful force. It binds us tc home, to duty, and to the principles of truth and righteousness. It is the bond that holds society together. Love Is an Innate part of every human being and It manifes's itself in many ways. In some it it .jsed ? liquor. o developed into ?t finds expression j lives. .s always, but never is so expressed as at the happy stmas season. Then we call it ue Christmas spirit, which is a 8) nonym for kind words, good deeds { and wholesome thoughts. ? Wo complain that the Christmas < spirit is manifested only a short time in the year; that it should . always he uppermost in our lives. | If. is ever present but the oppor- j tunitv to show its presence comes but once a year?then every hu- | , man heing with a spark of love left rekindles the fires of affection for all held dear, and the Christmas spirit is again at work making hearts light and cheerful. o Tenancy impoverishes the soil and leaves tenant and landlord poorer. Notice of Trustee's Sale. Notice is here by given that pur- , saunt to an order made by Hon. j R. J. Kirk, referee in bankruptcy | I I n&. your better? If you 1 be amazed anc NO-NOX Moi Noxious, Nonful to man or i NO-NOX is pr: per gallon high Gulf Gasoline Try it out today G REFINING i ! %"W% KJiS at I - f 2 * by ,, ~x*t by ? */f G. W. I <5?nd on the tlrtj right, title and v. II. Cain, bankrupt, ^ all that certain piece, lot of land situate in the . of Little Rock, County of .ion, state of South Carolina, designated as lots Nos. 3 and 4 in Block L. on a plat of said town made by J. M. Moncure, civil engineer, bearing date December 1909, and bounded on the north by lot of M. S. Britt: east by Bonsall Avenue; south by M. S. Britt and west by J. W. Hamer. All of the above property may be offered for sale cinfiv in , 111 1V< 3 VII parcels and then offered as a whole, and such bid or bids as may be the highest and best will be received. Terms of sale cash. All of above property to be sold free of liens and encumbrances. A. B. JORDAN. 11?2G?4t Trustee. NOTICE OF SALE. Notice is hereby given that I will sell at public auction, to the h-ighest bidder for cash, in front of the courthouse door in Dillon, S. C , an sales day. to wit: Monday, the 4th day of January, 196, between the hours of eleven o'clock in the forenoon and four o'clock in the tifternoon, the following described personal property: Certificate number 18 of 5 shares of the Smith-Major Company of Latta, S. C., and certificate number 17 of 10 shares of the capital stock of me onuui-ftiajor Company LatlVQl you had your tank fille lge Gas, NO-NOX?didn' ks disappear as if by r car performing a hund lave not done so, get bus i delighted. tor Fuel is guaranteed Poisonous, and no more 1 notor than ordinary gasc iced only three cents er than That Good r at any Gulf Station. ULF G COMPANY the sig t 4# >ck above / , oledereH as * Jjfherit of said ^botes beirtg past P. LANE. jS Agent. <0 j ~-~ys Sheriff's Tax Sale Under and by virtue of a certain tax execution to mo directed by JnoIt. Watson, treasurer of Dillon county. notice is hereby given that on Monday, the 4th day of January, lf'26, I will sell before the courthouse door in the town of Dillon, daring the regular hours of sale, to the highest bidder for cash the following described property to satisfy said execution: All that certain nippp nnmni ?? tract of land situate in the county of Dillon, the state aforesaid, and in Hillsboro ownship, containing six acres, more or less, bounded and de' scribed as follows: North by lands of Martha Cook; South by lands of Martha Cook; East by lands of M. H. Cook and West by lands of Willie Barfield, F. A. Cook and A. L. Church. C- S. EETHEA, 1?. 17 3t. Sheriff Dillon County. Probato Judge's Sale State of South Carolina, County of Dillon. In Court of Probate. ; Ex Parte, Mary Reeves, 1 as Administratrix, In Re: Estate of Lawrence Reaves, Deceased. Pursuant to an order of the Probate Court in the matter of the estate of Lawrence Reaves, deceased, I, J. C. Davis, Judge of Probate ir and for the County of Dillon will s?ll at public auction to the highest bidder for cash in front of the Court House door in Dillon, S. C. on the 1st Monday in January, 1926, within the legal hours of sale, and ir. aid of the personal assets of said estate the following described real estate to wit: 1st. All that certain piece, parcel c-r lot of land with the build'.ngs thereon situated and being in the! County of Dillon, in the State afore 3d with the t the carbon sag nagic?isn t red percent IP? }y?you will to be Non y^ieaRAh / <j feet by one /'feet, and boundlot of Betsy Alf ,^a8t Emma Page; by Jefferson Stree b >ie West by Third Avenue ^nown as the Lawrei Ifes home place. *. 2nd. Those two certain lots si? uated in the County of Dillon in th State aforesaid and in the Town oi Dillon and measuring together sixty feet by one hundred and fifty feet, and bounded on the North by irtt n T uru,? \ -?*- - ? iuv vi v>. u. tv iit'cier; on me H.ast by Second Avenue; on the South by lot of the Joint Stock Lodge and on the West by lot of T. A. Dillon. Joe Cabell Davis, Judge of Frobate for Dillon County MASTER'S BALE Slato of South Carolina, j?,fCounty of Dillon. ^ In the Court of Common F W. B. Willis and Mrs. F. ; Flaintiffs, against k Mrs. Margaret R. Peacocl Florence E. Goodson, Mrs. Davis, Mrs. Gladys M Clarence L. Wiliis, Flor Hatchell, as administratrix estate of W. C. Hatchell, d and H. A. Bethea, Defenda Pursuant to an order of 1 or Judge E. C. Dennis, Judg tfniirl V. T..JI-I-I * vuivu JUUIIIUI circuit, date the 28th day of N 1925, the undersigned, as for Dillon county, will sell at gal hours of sale, on the ft' day in January, 1926, sam the 4th of January, 1926 the courthouse door in the T Dillon, in the County of Di' the State aforesaid, at pubi tion to the highest bidder tn lowing described property: All that tract of land contain one hundred seventy-five (1. acres, niore or less, and bounde*.. North by the estate lands of Mrs. Mary McSwain; East by the lands of John L. Lane; South and West by lands of John L. Lane, The said lands being conveyed tc | Clarence Willis, by deed dated December 12, 1903, and record in the office of the Clerk of C< of Marion County, December 1903. Terms of sale cash, purchaser t? pay for all papers and revenu? stamps. Any person bidding of the said property and refusing tc comply with his bid therefor, sale property will be resold upon the same or some subsequent salesday at the risk of the former purchaser. A. B. JORDAN, 12 17 3t Master for Dillon County UitiDISv ( " V" 'V-K a wtfo