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; ^MBaegaggaeggege^ ? xK k.? - ? rU # / Mr. Tohu C. Hayes of Lafta was in Oillon Moqday on business. ^ Mlw* Kuth Able.spent the week in Lake City. t *. Max B um of Latta visited Mr. ji vfJ'.iun Friuay and Saturday. C. Stanton is in Columbia this week at a witness in the Federal <2ourt. "f *' ' * - | Mr. and Mrs. James McLellan and Mrs. J. R. Regan spent Monday in Clio. Mrs. L. E. Mason spent the week end in Florence with her niece, Mrs. David Edens. Misses Cheayis and. Laurie Easterling of Bennettsville spent Monday in town. Miss Neil Smith spent several days last week in Clio, the guest of Miss Kate Wood ley. Mr. J. B. Gibson and son Jimmy spent Saturday and Sunday in Richmond. ?o ? The Mother's Club will meet with Mrs. W. Murchison tomorrow (Friday) afternoon at 3 o'clock. Miss Mentha Floyd of Fairmont, N. C., is the guest of Mrs. J. C. Lupo this week. ? ?o Mrs. S. H. Turner, of Hamlet is spending a few days in town with her parents. H. H. Hilton of Louisburg, N. C., s? ''1P week end with Mr. and , - M*. Hale. Jy Jt and Mrs. M. A. Hunter and n of Clio spent Saturday in Mr. and Mrs. M. H. McDonald and daughter. Miss Jeddie, visited relatives in town Sunday. \ Messrs. Otis Adams, Victor Barrington and Hoyt Reese of Tatum were in town Monday. Mrs. J. A. Hursey who has been in I the Baptist Hospital at Columbia, re luiut-u uuiuh naiuraay nigni. sne Will go back to the hospital the last this week for further treatment. Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Watson of Rowland, N. C., were called tp Dillon Tuesday to the bed side of Mr. WatI son's mother, Mrs. Flora Watson, who is critically 111. Mrs. B/. F. Williams, accompanied l>y her sisters, Misses Kit tie and Nettie Proctor, spent Sunday with Mr.' and Mrs. Walter Stanton at Little! I Rock. I nuiA i 11A1A Vi ill-? You can i tenth of one ce hy the farmers } and you get a | I the New Cott I I vnn iffl Qprvi/>P _ ^ w w x v w W * IVV 1 per tale per m I THE NEW 4 The Dillo ir1"""" Jf THE mux Mrs. A. M. Mclntyre of Latts was in town Wednesday on business. Mrs. Maggie Floyd of Fairmont, N. C.. stopped over ttefe for a few" hours Monday evening on her way to visit her daughter in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Arnette and children of Laheview accompanied by Miss Mae Regan were in town Sunday. Walter C. Barefoot of Dunn, N. C. who has accepted a position with Blum and Blumberg spent Sunday with friends in Fayetteville, N. C. Claude Parrott n Hoof m..t "? Sumter, spent last Sunday in Dillon with his friends, Nat Brown and Gilbert Smith. Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Fass returned Saturday from New York and Baltimore where Mr. Fas8 bought his Spring line of ready-to-wear. Mrs. Monroe Rogers and daughter, Beatrice, Mrs. J. W. Rowland and Miss Columbia Rowland motored to Minturn Sunday. Mr. J. C. Adams, who has been confined to his bed for the past week is better. Mr. Adams will te able to take up his duties again tnis week. ?o? Mr. B. A. Bedenbaugh's many Dillon friends will be interested to know that he has resigned his position as secretary and treasurer of the Palmetto Bond "& 'Mortgage Company of Lake C'ty to accept the position of treasurer and business manager of Porter Military Academy at Charleston. Mr. Bedenbaugh and family moved Charleston last week. Mr. J. G. McDonald ha s accepted the position of superintendent of the Hamer Cotton Mills. Mr. McDonald was reared in Dillon. In^t left here nhnnf 9 vnn? ? K~' ??1 - ? -U .T^nis r.(,u. xir Iiii? liuiut" Ol> easionnl visits to Dillon during that time to keep in touch with relatives and friends. Mr. McDonald is a son of the late Hugh McDonald. Mrs. S. C. Henslee was taken to the Florence Infirmary last Friday and reports from her bedside state that she is showing improvement. An Xray examination did not disclose any fractures of a serious nature. She is st ill suffering from shock and it may be several weeks before she is able to leave her bed. The many friends of James Bethea will be glad to learn that he is taking a very high stan<j at the University of North Carolina. The average at the University this year has been unusually high and James' name is included in the honor list of students making an average of 90 or more. James took a very high stand at the Dillon High School, and with the splendid beginning he has made at tlie University it is safe to predict that he will maintain the good record he made at home. James is a Bon of Mr. T. W. Bethea. n Corn pital i Why I Store store it where it :nt per pound per > of Dillon Coun state warehouse on Warehouse i A J * r jn. grading re onth. Governir WAREHOTJ >n County L. C resident; Directors; ] w. ? % * V IMUjl >N HKRALD, DILLON, flOVTH CAKO l' CHURCH IJSHKR8. | The*n6nt>wing ha^e bfcfcfl ^hppolhted ushers fpr the Ua^o Street Methodist Church (or the year: A. ..Coke Hog1 ers; Walker Floyd, W. J. Carter, Dr. O. Moody. Pierce Rogers, Bryan Ai1jchaux and Buist Jordan. o - TALKING 11AK1) TIMES. A Charleston man talking hard times made the mistake of saying J ' that things were worse now than i tbey ever had been before, even in th? days just following the Civil War . soys the News and "Courier. It was , a uiisuti\.v, ueciiuse among those to j whom he made this remark was a Charleston woman who ha<j lived through 'those day8 and she instantly j protested the statement. In the next five minutes she had swiftly sketched a picture of conditions which existed in this section 55 years ago which convinced the I first speaker and everyone else pres; ent that the difficulties through which we are now passing are light indeed compared with those through Which the generations which came out of that other war had to pass. For five years after Appomatox a new dress in the South was an event! In the first year of that peace there were hundreds of families in Charleston which never knew what it was to have meat on the table; homes whose inmates in other days had enjoyed every comfort. The leaves of wild violets were gathered for miles around for greens; children went' along ditch banks digging Indian po-j ,tatoes which were cooked and eaten with relish. How many South Carolinians of; today know th0 story of "fighting': Dick" Anderson? He was the ranking officer in the confederate army from j this state and one of General Dee's1 most trusted friends and lieutenants.! His family had been people of wealth anj for twenty years before the Civil .War he had been in the United States I army. When tile war ended he tried to farm and failed and coming to Charleston got work as a day laborer in the yards of thn South Carolina railroad. At the same time General Stephen : Elliott, the hero of Fort Sumter j was earning a living: for himself and his family by catching; fish and selling them at Hilton Head to the Federal garrison. The house he occupied was a rude fishing shack in sight of his ancestral home. All over South Carolina, all over, the South this was the sort of thing that was going on; an^ the poverty, , which prevailed was the least of the' [general afflictions. Worse than the j privation^ to which the people were subjected were the fears and anxie-j ties and humiliations which they j were compelled to experience. They .lived through it. overcame every. thing, regained all that they had lost and more. i | The same spirit can put the South on its feet and keep it there. n The war reduced the French population by 4,000.000. I AUTHC Stock -et You : Y our ( is absolutely saf< montb. 1 be C ty. Tbis wareh receipt for tbe c< now. Bring you e of 35 cents per lent grader servn SE. Warehouse NOTTINGHAM, r\ T IT T"*v . 1 L^r. I. n. Uavid, JK. . W. Evans, A. V. J ^1 ?r -> ?f y irr- /- , ,. .?v ' LIMA, TBI) HHP AT BfO-IfllfG, JANUARY 27, 1921. ! SIS SI IS ? IS? HI? ?S IS ? ? E 51G Efi :H ' . "> ,1S S I WE E E w ? - I GOOD IS 1 On Fertilize is m , is ? Such as Nitrate ol 69 j|| Acid phosphate and K S We also represen1 IS ? cultural Chemical Con IS ? to name price on n LS IS 8-4-4, 8-4-0, 8-3-3, IS other brands. i*I ' T\-VI 1H ffw"-"' .T^n^jfTTTMIWW a 1 McLaurin a a a a a aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaac j. j. *17 HUM Wal )RIZED $ 100,0( r Cotton Rc cotton No~w ; from fire, theft and wea otton Warehouse in Dill ouse belongs to the State Jtton you store. Th ere i r cotton along and let thi hale is charged and then ; ce. PLENTY OF R 5 and Marketint , Sec. and TrCas. S. Rogers, J. R. Regan, H. 1 Betkea, L. Cottingkam. *. : * ; ?*-V i'?????? ????????a s M I AVE j : ? IS! PRICES 1 a ;r M at^nals | a a l Soda, 16 per cent a a .ainit. a a t Th(* AmPriran Arfrl_ ? ... a tvUll fXCl I ~ L3J ? ipany and will be glad ? lixed goods such as ? ? and 8-3-0 or any ? ? ? ? r Thompson 1 a a a ? a saaaaaaa????????? I ")0.oo >t? I r SS a itlier damage for one- I -i t on is largely owned jg Warehouse system g is plenty of space in ? B s corporation give to | i flat rate of 50 cents 1 OOM NOW IN I ' Corporation I A. Rogers, W. H. Smith. I |