The Dillon herald. (Dillon, S.C.) 1894-????, February 03, 1921, Image 6
'y ftQSSt WAT|A*E IMMCHTTM.
V ?b?J *u? by Homer abont a century
ftid a?half after tbo deeauction of
fbe town of Troy following tbo ton
| years of war that was waged In tbo
eaaas of Monotone, king of Lacede4BOO,
wbooe consort bad boon carried
away by tbo son of tbo Trolan mon
arch. The two poems see ss old ss
Parld's psalms. Originally the 111 lad
would appear not to hare been a single
connected poem, but to hare attained
at a later period Its present
-complete state.
About one hundred years after Bom-Cr,
Lycurgua, the lawgirer of Lacedemon,
brought these poems Into
Greece, and two centuries and a half
later Plststratus Is supposed to hare
giren them their perfect form. His
eoo Blpparcus Introduced the custom
ef reciting rhapsodies at the Panethenala,
or festlral of the tutelar goddees.
A more complete edition of the
Homeric poems, from which the modem
ones are taken, was prepared for
Alexander the Great bj Aristotle,
which the former need to keep under
Ida pillow In a golden case. Also
Aratua. the astronomer, Arlstarchus of
Samoa, and Aristophanes, librarian at
Alexandria, bestowed their labor on
these Immortal songs. Because of the
ftne moral sentiment. Homer became
the pattern of Thucydldes, the favorite
author of the greatest and noblest
men, and one of the best teachers of
the wisdom of human life.?Detroit
Hows. *
MAKE THE MOST OF TODAY
All That Haa Gone Before Is Past and
the Future la Clouded With
Uncertainty.
Today la what yon have. It Is also
wh|t you are. And again, Today Is
what yon do. And If you haven't anything,
and aren't anybody, and do
nothing?why, then, for you there la
no Today.
For Today la music. Today Is art.
Today Is literature. Today Is Joy. Today
la work. Today Is play. Today Is
life.
Yesterday la do problem?for It la
CiL Tomorrow la no problem?for It
't here. Today la supremacy. Today
la the world. Today la?Opportunity
I
Crowd In upon It then. Today?take
held upon Its faintest chance. Spread
your smiles?Today. Be game?Today.
Be glad and great?Today.
Today la the day?your day.
Today la Time and Change doing Its
Job. Are yon a vital part of the play?
Today yon may start out all anew. Today
yon may pat to nse what yon
learned a day ago. The center of your
entire life may revolve about?Today.
Bnt, above all things, do not fearToday.
And let all worry slide. All
things that do not count?let them go.
too. Work and help and love?To
Fer this Today will never dawn
again!?George Matthew Adams In
Good Housekeeping.
Snake's Menace Mere Bluff. '
A really accomplished reptile recently
arrived in London In the shape
ef the American "hog-nosed snake."
When approached by man. It acts in
a most disturbing way, flattening
part of Its body and Inflating an awe- |
some hood like a cobra. If ever anything
said: T am death," It Is the
hog-nosed snake receiving a caller.
As you get nearer, Its rage and menace
Increase, but, one more step, and
there Is an anti-climax. The hood
collapses, the snake "flops" to the
ground, turns on Its back and ap
peers perfectly in pi ess. stir it witn
stick, and It remains as limp as a
piece of garden hose, but turn your
back and It will crawl away. The
two specimens now In the Zoological
gardens. Regent's park, have gone
through their "act" so often that they
are too bored to repeat It for the present.
The point of the joke Is that the
hog nosed snake Is perfectly harmless.
Cleaning Watches With Bread.
Perhaps the most novel use to which
bread Is put may be seen In some of
the great watch factories, where more
than forty loaves of fresh bread are
sometimes used each day.
Prom earliest times In the history of
watchmaking It has been the custom to
reduce fresh bread to th-> form of
dough. This dough Is used for removing
oil and chips that naturally adhere
In course of manufacture to pieces as
small as the parts of a watch. There
are many parts of a watch that are so
mall as to be barely risible to the
naked eye. The oil Is absorbed by this
docgh, and the chips stick to It and
there la no other known substance
which can be used as a wiper without
leaving some of its particles attached
ha the thing wiped.
Enormous Sharks.
Sharks grow to a tremendous sixe.
Bondetett's shark, for Instance, which
fa an Inhabitant of tropical seas, at
tains a length of 40 feet. The great
basking shark Is eren longer. A
Bf this species, brought to
I set ap. is 17 feet la
I grown, this shark may
reet and rival the whales
age- beep killed 30 fget In
ft* not for a moment to
that we have secured the
? fact Is that the natural
s eras Is still vary largely
k, and that surprises era
tor future genera tleaa.
ip|i
4$V
TREASURES OF BUPOWIST ART
0g|fg0Hm f#r
CiRturlw In Dm Twupls of
* DalgeJI In Japan.
- Delgoji. the Mid temple of the Ono
school of (M Bhlsiw stct of Baidhlam
Id Jipu, situated not for from
Kyoto. in the UJ1 district, Suggests by
Its nuns Is rolstlon to Emperor
Dalgo, who reigned from 898 to 800.
Its nemo originated from us fact that
Its founder. Abbot Shoho, came to this
village and exclaimed after he drank
from an old farmer's spring: "The
water was as good as dalgo t" It Is a
Buddhist word meaning an unctuous
rich liquor. The posthumous title of
?<? vuiynvr uiuoi OBTC OnflDtUQ
from his devotion to the temple and
Its founder, as well as from hla burial
In the temple grounds.
Rare specimens of Buddhist art and
literature, carefully preserved as the
temple treasures of Dalgojl, and exhibited
recently at Toklo, through the
efforts of Dr. Katsuml Korolta of
the editorial staff of hlatorlo graphical
materials In Toklo Imperial university,
bring the story of the temple down
to 800 years ago. Among the peculiar
paintings In the temple are the
flower viewing screens," pictures of
horse training and a collection of fan
paintings said to be rare treasures.
In the literary collection there Is
an Illustrated copy of the third roll
of "Scripture of Cause and Effect of
the Past and the Present." It was
made nearly 1,200 years ago, but the
colors In the picture are as fresh as
I the present day pigments. This scroll
Is considered the oldest thing extant
In Japan of colored art on paper.
TREES GIVE MILKLIKE JUICE
Tropics Provide Pretty Fair Substitute
for the Animal Product in
Use in Northern Climes.
In British Guiana and the West
Indies, particularly on the hanks of
the River Demerara, there grows a
tree known to the natives as the hyahya,
which yields from Its bark and
pith a Juice slightly richer and
thicker than cow's rallk. The tree Is
about forty feet high and eighteen
Inches In circumference when full
grown, and the natives use Its Juice
as we use milk, It being perfectly
harmless and mixing well with water.
The Cingalese have a tree?they
call It klrlaghuma?which yields #
fluid In all respects like milk; while
In the forests of Para grows a tree
called the massenodendron, which
gives a milklike Juice. It can be kept
for an indefinite time and shows bo
tendency to become sour.
On the other hand, certain trees In
the valleys of Aragua and In Cauagua
yield a similar flnld, which, when ex
posed to the air, begins to form Into
a kind of cheese, which very soon
becomes soar.
In the Canary Islands there is a
tree ealled tabaya dolce, of which the
milk, thickened Into a jelly, Is considered
a delicacy.
Unpleasant Dreams.
A London chemist, dreaming that
he had swallowed poison by mistake,
rose from the chair In which he had
fallen asleep and, so vivid had the
dream been, he went to the shop and
took an antidote. But this, In the
absence of real poison, began to poison
him, and before he realized the
mistake the error was beyond repair.
In another case a man, after a heated
argument with a visiting friend,
dreamed that his guest was in his
room molesting him. He actually
"felt" rough hands on his body,
Jumped out of bed, and ran to hla
friend's room. There he attacked his
Innocent "assailant" so violently that
the latter was confined to bed for several
weeks.
Bachelor to the Rescue.
In a street car the other day I sat
alrectly behind a woman who was trying
desperately to untie a face veil.
I was fascinated by her persistent but
fruitless attempts to untie the veil
witn one hand while with the other
site clutched her nose glasses, which
were helplessly entangled In It. I was
Just wondering why some woman passenger
did not offer assistance, when
she turned to me and said: "Pardon
me, but would you be kind enough to
see If you can unfasten this veil."
After frantic efforts, amid the suppressed
merriment of the passengers
I caine out victor. But I was a much
embarrassed bachelor.?Exchange.
Ostrich Plumes.
Ostrich plumes are not actually
plucked, bj the way. They are cut?
pruned with no damage or pain to the
bird. When the feathers are "ripe"
the ostriches are driven into a Vshaped
enclosure. Their beads are
covered with a hood like a stocking,
which renders them tractable. The
wings are spread by the man doing
the "plucking" and the feathers are
clipped off fairly close to the flesh.
This does not hurt the bird In the
least and within sixty days the dead
t|uui cuub ur^p uui ox meir own accord.
The tall feathers are also
dipped.
Kept Fish Alive.
During the recent storm several automobiles
got Into such deep water at
Pennsylvania and Twenty-second
streets that they had to stop until the
flood abated. On*i member of a Ashing
party climbed out on the running
board of his car and carefully tied a
net of live Ash to a spoke and calmly
dropped it Into the water.?fir fan
ape!Is News.
k/fM*, 4 - xVlr.e t J) %/ "..
"" ir'"B"" ,
<XPWC??ED VWul ?f HttPl* 1
*1 if Fwlll/ <fifSS )
tlM WHh eiMMmc
The tana Tint 4<w<nt Owitttattoo"
to ftmiaUy ipyM by
irrttm ti what * better Mm J4? 1
I tnicill7 m tto TaadaiMital Order*
of Connecticut," Many people la
Massachusetts baring become dlasstlsfled
with a law that none bat church
members should rote or hold office,
st length determined te form other
settlements. Other town organiseMrtne
mVes>Ajl? * " *
???? UIIIHIIU iiuuvl DQU11J irom |
Massachusetts to what was then the |
wilderness. These were Newton, j
Watertown and Dorchester, which had <
their names changed, respectively, to
Hartford. Wethersfleld and Windsor. I
Along with them went their govern- <
Ing organisations and a general court
for the three towns was afterward
formed.
Jan. 14, 1839, this little community
formed the first written American
Constitution at Hartford. This Constitution
springs directly from the
will of the people, and neither English
king nor parliament, nor Colonial
council, nor governor had anything to
do with It. The orders provided for
two general representative assemblies
each year, composed of delegates
from each town, one for the election
of governor and magistrates, the other
for making the laws. These fundamental
orders as they were called,
were the beginnings of democratic
?vtviuuicuv iu Ailifl icu. j
KEY TO ANCIENT HISTORY
Greek Papyri Have Revealed Practl.
cally All That Is Known of r
Greco-Roman World. ]
Greek papyri were documents for c
ancient history which supplied a per- s
sonal view of things. They described r
classes not represented in history as t
usually written and helped In the study *
of popular psychology of the Greco- c
Roman Egypt, and by analogy, also, c
to some extent, the Greco-Roman j]
world. y
The papyri illustrated the history r
of administration, showing it in ao- ?
tual working, and not in theory. There A
was not much in the papyri on mys- i
tery cults, but there were Interesting I
religious documents, such as the hymn '
to Isls. The papyri mostly illustrated 1
the popular attitude to religion, popu- 8
lar piety and impiety. They were also
useful for early Christianity, Egypt
being the native country of monaatlclsm.
The economic decay of the Roman ^
empire, popular education, and the t
history of the Greek language, were j
also Illustrated by papyri. The bor- 1
rowings of Christianity could bo traced (
from older paganism from the papyri, t
and the Christian and pagan attitudes 1
could thns be contrasted.
Historic Lisa. <<
Two of the most famous lies relate {
to the last hours of Nelson. Everyone c
knows that the real signal at Trafal- 1
gar which he ordered was "Nelson ex- i
pects every man to do his duty." The <
other He Is about the coat he wore *
on his quarter deck. He Is reported (
to have sllehced the affectionate lm- 1
portunity of his officers, entreating *
him to conceal the stars on his breast,
by caylng, "In honor I gained them, <
and in honor I will die with them."
This Is the great style, but It is untrue.
Dr. Arnold heard the facts from
Sir Thomas Hardy. Nelson wore on ^
the day of battle the same coat which
he had worn for weeks, having the
order of the bath embroidered upon
It; and when his friend expressed
some apprehension of the badge, he
answered that he was aware of the (
danger, but that It was "too late then ,
to shift his coat." The fabricated
,
saying is magnificent: why destroy \
it?
<
Stirring Things Up. I
Gertrude Is 4 years of age. She <
faces the world fearlessly, looks It '
squarely In the eye, and If It doesn't {
track exactly to suit her she tells *
It things. Her mamma had gone
away the other day and left Ger- ]
trude In the care of her grandma, '
and, after a clash of wills, Gertrude t
had been put Into a room to remain j
for a specified length of time. "If ^
you stir out of that room before I ,
tell you you may," cautioned grandma t
severely, "I am going to spank you." i
Gertrude stood with arras akimbo for t
a moment and then retorted In a tone
of finality: "Well I When you spank I
me you will find that business Is cer- '
[ tafnly beginning ts pick up In this 1
neighborhood."?The Argonaut. 1
i
3,000-Year-Old Story. ,
Do you know which Is tho oldest
work of fiction? i
It Is the "Tale of Two Brothers." 1
wniien over inree tneusand years ago
by the librarian to King Merenptnh,
the supposed Pharaoh of the Exodus.
The story was written for the
amusement of the king's son, who afterward
reigned as Sett the Second.
He has signed his name In two places
on the manuscript, and these are probably
the only surviving autographs of
a king of Egypt.
The "Tale of Two Brothers" Is writ
ten on nineteen sheets of papyrus In a
bold hieratic hand. It was purchased
In 1857 by the British museum from a
Uma il'Opklnou
, 1
Their Business.
"I read about a meeting of deaf and i
dumb painters. How do you think they |
got a*eag T"
It ought to be eauy for painter* t* <
get along with the sign language." I
ri | eitaln - "
* ?>' 4.- * V*.. . . ? ?i > '
5^^*eJ2?5Sli^*^lieIe^ea!ee
aaammunm tajlwbm*
umoam nu wbhl
Columbia, Ju. 11.? The mackmwMid
tut Inheritance tax U
trovided la a bill to bo introduced
bio wook ta tbo House of Reproooaatives
by Reprsssntatlvss J. K. Attinsoa,
of Spartan bare, and Buckifluup.
of Aikea. Tbo Mil hao ?boon
mgroesed and may bo prooontod to
ho Hoooo whoa It reconvene? tonight.
Tbo bill will provide for a tax on
nheritancea received by huobanda,
rives, children and grand children
iccordlng to the(bOowlng schedule:
>n inheritances up Re $20,000 above
he exemption, one per cent, up to
(40,000, two per cent; np to $80,000,
hree per cent; up to $160,000, four
>ei cent; up to $300,00, five per
ent; over $300,000, six per cent.
For an inheritance left to a hue
Htna or wire the exemption Is $10,-.
100. The tax is applicable to the
amount above the exemption. For
ninors the exemption 18 $5,000; for
idult children, father or mother, the
ixemptlon la $3,600.
On property inherited by brothers,
listen, uncles, aunts, nieces or ne>kews,
the tax would be one per
rent higher than that on inheritance
>f husbands, wives or children, in
ill other cases the tax would be
;wice that against inheritances of;
>rothers sisters, uncles, aunts, nieces
ind nephews. For each of these two
rlasses there 1b also a schedule of exemptions.
The bill would provide for the aslessment
of this tax by the state tax
>ommission, the tax executed through
he probate judges in the counties.
o
DOMINIOK SLATTD
' FOR COMMITTEE.
Washington, Jan., 31?That South
Carolina will have a member of the
vays and means committee in the
lext congress for the first time since
L895, when John McLaurin served
>n that committee in the fifty fourth
rongress, now seems practically aslured.
The member will be Congressnan
Fred H. Doninick, o f Newberry,
hjrd district, unless all signs fail.
During the past week there has been
considerable activity among Democratic
members of the house in regard
to selectiona for desirable comnittee
posts. Among the other mem>ers
talked of for the ways and
neans committee are Representatives
Jtagall, of Alabama, and Moore, of
Virginia, both prominent southern
nembers. It is thought that the Remblicans
will permit ten members
rom the Democratic minority, which
ticreases Mr. Domlnick's chances of
iucce88.
o
FIFTY MILLION POUNDS
TOBACCO WILL BE SOLD
Winston-Salem, Jan. 29?Local)
varehousemen are now predicting!
hat the market will sell over fifty
nillion pounds of tobacco this season.
Today's report Bhows that 43,930,>00
pounds have already been sold at
in average of $23 per hundred. More
han two and a quarter millions
pounds were sold this week despite
nclement weather.
Pitcher Ernie Shore, of the New
fork Americans motored through
;he snow from his home in Yadkin |
:ounty this morning and spent the day
Here chatting with friends. He heH
lothing to say regarding a reported
leal by which he has traded with
wo other Tanks to the Vernon club
jf the Pacific Coast League for a
promising young infielder named
rohnnie Mitchell, a crack shortstop.
Shore was a member of the Greensboro
team in the old Carolina League
before he went to major company.
o
AN EDITOR 51 YEARS.
IV. D. Grist Successor of Father and
Grandfather as Newspaper Man.
The Publishers Auxiliary, of Chicago
says:
On January 1st Wood Davidson
Srist entered upon his thirty second
pear as editor of the Yorkville Enquirer,
York, S. C., a record of editorial
longevity in the game perhaps
anequaled by the service of any other
editor in South Carolina. He besan
his new year as the director of
the Enquirer at the age of 55 in the
best- of health and with every indication
that he is good for another
three decades in the same capacity.
The Yorkville Enquirer Is known,
throughout the Carolinas and the
South as one of the leading semi-!
weeklies. It has been printed under
the present name for sixty-five years
having been founded by the late Capt.
[iewis M. Grist, father of the present
editor, in 1855 as successor to newspaper
published there previous to
that year by Captain Grist's father,
the late John E. Grist.
W. D. Grist, the present editor, is
|otnt owner of the business with his
irnthor llhor* u v -- ~i ?
f ^avvt w Ml. VJ1 1DI, UUB1UOSO
manager of the establishment and
superintendent of the composing
room. Their children are associated
irlth them in the conduct of the.EJnjuirer,
editorially and mechanically.
The following is taken from a
sketch of Editor Grist and the Yorkrille
Enquirer which appeared in a
recerit issue of the City Editor and
Reporter, Chicago. %
"For thirty years, day*after day,
From early morning until late at
night, he has been sitting at his
leak?a typical newspaper man's
lesk, editing bis newspaper, the
forkville, (S. C.) Enquirer. About'
>Dce every three years friends will
pursuade him to take a trip for a
week or two, winning out with the
irgnment that it will do him good. I
wayDo wunin rour aays, or six at
most .he will be back at hla desk. I
"Every dollar he haa ever made
In addition to his charities, the education
of his children and the expenses
of hi? family haa gone bark
Into the pavegr?to make it better
und a stronger power for good and
for progress.
"The Enonlrer has the Wrest
5t*enlatl?n of any eonntv newanaper
In Routh Carolina. They call it the
"Bible of the Piedmont." |
, MMMtAW a, uati
Tfe? following Is taken from Ik*
News and Odtritt'i files of IN years m
*The steamboat Poo Deo. which or- n
rived bote m Bunday, bos completed 7
ber seventh trip from tbls tows to *
Cberaw sad back, staee sbe ha* been 0
under tbo superinteadericy of ber U
present active sad enterprising com- b
mander. . >'
The average time la which she has I
performed tbe trip (Including the r'
passage both up and down). Is eight b
days; sbe has taken up each time a R
full freight of merchandise and re- *
turned with between four and fire n
hundred bales of cotton, etc. '
Th? distance, by water, from Che- M
raw to Georgetown, is estimated at *
220 miles; the Pee Dee usually de-!8'
seen da the river in two days and as
she does not perform any part of the!
voyage in the night, she of course
makes her passage down In about
twenty working hours, which with- 1
out allowing for detention In taking
in fuel and for accidental delays,
gives an average of eleven miles an
hour.?Charleston Courier, Jan. 26, n
1821. e
(This Is not so bad after all. Two c
or three years ago several Dillon ^
men started to Georgetown in a mo- 0
tor boat on the Little Pee Dee and j,
haven't reached there yet.) a
o "
Home of Solicitor Spears Burned
The Darlington News and Press J
says that the handsome home of So-1
llcltor J. Monroe Spears was destroy-',11
ed by fire last Thursday. It had n
been sold to A. D. Flowers, but Soli- P
citor Spears was occupying it till he n
could arrange for another place. He h
was In Columbia when the house
caught fire in the roof, and reached
Darlington in his car in two and a
half hours. Most of his furniture e
and law library were destroyed. r
o d
NOT OUR J. K. BREWER. n
p
Mr. J. K. Brewer of Kemper wants
The Herald's readers to know that ~
he is not the J. K. Brewer who was A
sentenced to four month's imprisonment
in the Dillon county jail for
violation of the prohibition laws.
The J. K. Brewer mentioned is last T
week's Herald is a colored man 11
whose home is in Georgia. Mr. Brew- ^
er says there are lots of mean things z.
a man could be guilty of doing but ?
in his opinion the meanest of all is ?
the making of liquor.
# a
A government report says the av- 1;
erage wages paid on the farms of the ii
South during the past twelve months t
waB 951.75 per month. That may be p
tiue so far as the day laborers were b
concerned, but it 1b far above what 1
regular or monthly laborers received. I
The farmers of this section could not ?
pay such wages If they wanted to c
do so. The average farm laborer Is )
the poorest paid and the hardest worked
man In every country. They
live very little better than the beasts
of the field and receive lees consid
cuiiion, eitner rrom their employers t
or the public at large.?Edgefield c
Chronicle. j
o 1
If the government will remove the <
tax on the poorer grades of tobacco ?
it will permit at least 25 per cent <
of the 1920 crop to be manufactured
into fertiliser.
Of our virgin forests one-sixth remains.
*
FARMER'S 1
I,
County of
do certify that I am a farmer and c
*_emnly promise and agreq on my sacr
year 1921 I will not plant in cotto
lands cultivated by me during the J
And I further promise that I will
may have with my friends and neig
obligation and to co-operate with t
ganization and the work of the said
*
* Witness
Sign and s
SOUTH CAROLINA <
809 LIBERTY I
COLUMB1
I
I YOI
I
M\k
m
We are opening a
Dillon, S. C. At the
will be at the Hotel 1
cond and fourth Mond
ing Tuesday in each m
and fit glasses. Call
L. A. WOODR
Eyesight J
HSSBSSSHSS38S89k*is^
^ ^ ' v ^ t '1 .1 ^ ^ # V
BORf Oi?, ilTWIT.
?. s. ^5!!*wto*
"1 got your letter ukla teritlaoC
17 Asseto mmI Liabilities new I tela
on when i lent is that order that t
as kef la a reeterrant and not n
eneral Store and i doa't keep etch
lingft as- Ijeaiti and Hahltltiee on
3d besides IX 1 did it ain't none of
our d?m blrnsss how mains hare i
ot no how, they was a feller noelng
snnd here yesterday wot said Sg how fk
is name was r. g. dun and Company
nd he asted me how much money did
hare and i kicked him clear into the
liddle of next sunday. 1 tall you i
ront hare no medlin in my blsness i
I as good as any man and a d m
Ite bettern some if you don't want to
ell me goods wy go to he- U. please
nser by next male.
Your fren,
ft
o
VHEN FOLKS PAY MB
I'LL PAY YOU THEN
The following letter Is provoking *
iuch merriment on the part of
veryone that has happened to see a
opy of It in the last few days. It
ras sent to a fertiliser company by 1
ne of its customers and was printed
a the News and Obserrer. Its ad rice
nd word of warning come in very
ood at the present time.
"I received your letter about what
owes you. Now be pachent. I ain't
orgot you and as soon as folks pay
ne I'll pay you, but if this was Judglent
day and you were no more prepared
to meet your Ood than lam to
aeet your account then you sho going
0 hell.
"Good-bye."
o
One of our dentists was about to
xtract a tooth a short time ago. The
patient was a young woman, '
rives a car. "Shall I give you w
ladam? "Why yes, five galll Wf
lease, and charge it to my husbani W
1 FINE HORSE
FOR DILLON COUNTY.
Judge Joe Cabell Davis has just
eceived from Mr. Roy Miller of Lexngton,
Kentucky, the well bred
oung stallion Henry Putney for
reeding purposes. His sire is San
'rancisco 2.07 3-4 and his Dam is
(endoceta. He is a full brother to
lary Putney 2.04 3-4, Abbie Putney
.03 3-4 and Montovals 2.10 1-4 and
full brother that went the past year
a 2.10 over a half mile track. He
n a beautiful brown horse and will
>e kept at the Pair Grounds track
lurely for breeding purposes. We
hould pay more attention to the ralsng
of horses than we do, as it is a
>aying investment. They can be raisd
in Dillon county cheaper than you
an buy them, so get busy and raise ^
ou a horse this year.?2 3 It.
TRESPASS NOTICE.
All persons are hereby forbidden
o hunt, fish or enter upon the lands
>f the undersigned without written
>er mission from the undersigned.
Tox hunting, fishing or hunting of
anything strictly forbidden. All parens
violating this notice will be
lealt with_ according to law.
a. JL). uraham,
Mrs. S. E. Page,
Mra. Bettle P. Jones.
5 3 3tp. u
A
'LEDGE. '
a > J
h
? of the
otton grower and hereby sol
ed word of honor that during the *
n more than one-third of the *
ear 1920.
use whatever influence that I
bbors to have them sign a like *
he county committee in the or
cotton reduction.
:
*
CUU IV. ^
xtton association
jank bldo. i
[a, s. o. JR
I ^
'
n Optical Office at *
i present time we
Wheeler every se- I '
lays' and the follow- I i
lonth. We examine I 4
and see us. I .
UFF, D-Opt. I
'm f