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THURSDAY, JANUARY 2S.I1937 . I THE CUNTON CHRONICLE, CLINTON, 8. C \ ^ Nobodly’s B By Gee vMcGee n PAGEJBYRIf ■ Ten Days Vacatiop In Florida and Cuba* (Fifth Day) ' , After spending a few hours; in Ha vana, I reacih^ the cpnclusion that 60 per cent of the ik>pula>tion was selling lottery tickets, and 30 pef cent was selling something else. Nobody Just as everything seemed to be all set for a building boont^hat would up much of the slack ih'employ- Synopsis: EUlen Mackay, on her way {surprise. For a moment, she scarcely) from school at ^imipeg, to join her knew* w^re she was. Presently Ellen turned. The crew ment, it turns out that there is a defi nite shortage of building materials of / father at Fort Edson, misses the boat by which she teas to travel. Hearing that another boat is to start north in the morning, Ellen goes to I9ie owner, Besftianeu .and asks bkn to give her a pa^apge. To her surprise, he flatly ref •>' kinds. There is .IreJst no lumW the night came Cree Indians,*and they stared at her , ... .. . .. .. 1 I . .1.,. 1 bs.... ^ ^ »ny price in the East, had happened during back to her and dhe relaxed. Close be^ jin shy, unwinking amaxement. Eyes side her a d^p voice was booming. {from otlier scows had marked her A moment she listened; then mriled. j presence also, and she saw Pierre V * ♦ SECciND IN^ALLMENT “This is Angus Macksy's lass, Pierre,” announced Pat. Pierre Buschard murmured a sonor ous greeting and bowed clumsily. ~ -Ellen smiled and advanced cl^ to tihV giant riverman. “Ybu are going to help me, Pierre?” “Oui, oui, mam’seMe,” rumbled the big fellow. “M’sieu Beiiham, he’s be mad lak’ wolf at'Pierre Buschard, but Pieire do w’at he can. You co^e wit’ “Pierre now mam’selle, and we must be quiet lak’ lynx w’en he.xtalk dat rabbit.” Ellen, victim to a sudden tumultod^ thrill, scurried away and donned hfer macITinaw and cap. Back in the big room she stood on her tiptoeu and. pecked Pat McClatchney on ope whis kery cheek with her r^ pipped lips. “I’ll remember this, Pat,” she prom ised. “ ’Tis little enough, laSs. Now stick to your guns and I gSmble this wkll come out well enough. I feel sure of your safety, for whatever else he may be, John Benham is a gentleman and the finest riverman in the north. Noyr. 1 un along with Pierre and do just as be says. He has already taken care of your luggage.” Pat gave Ellen’s arm a squeexe and shook hmids with Pierre Buschard. The next thing Ellen knew Pierre had taken her by the elbow and was guid- ing^her steps down the sloping bank OX the river. It was still out there, vastly except for the ceaseless beat of the river, while the night throbbed to-the power of the limitless wiWemess which stretched away to tHb north. A faint, haunting, quavering note drifted down from among the massed stars. The geese were winging north. AM things were heading north, even she! KMen found herself thrilling with s and lacking in outline, somewhat like a half-remembered dream. Suddenly she realized that the inexplicable restlessness which had actuated hpr during those four years had beenj nothing else but a form of nostalgia., , , . , ,. , . Il h.d been her own countrS^; the}^™"**' 1‘ ‘^"uWn t be far country, that had been caHing to ^ jher,< And now she was going home! Presently rivermao' ceased his song, and then all the multitude of -lesser sounds became manifest. The noe pulled up- on the shore, and in the bow of this Pierre placed the pH. Then he shoved off, balancing himself deftly in the stem, while he lifted and -dipp^ a gleaming paddle. The buoy ant craft. trembled brfore the grip of the river, but heided against |h« curren and stole silently upstream. Ahead a jutting poin^loomed. Still a wind-blown sdiadow they rounded the ■ point and drifted bankwards again. Uncouth shapes took form in the night. Ellen recognixed the load ed scows of John Benham’i^ brigade The canoe drifted m and gently hosedfhead was aching and her muscles tor the nearest scow. Silently Pierre Bus chard stepped to the scow and held the Peterborough firm. “Come, mam’selle,” he whispered. Ellen stepped out beside him. Pierre indicated the massed cargo of. freight upon the' scow. He lifted up one edge of the tarpaulin which covered the pile. “Under here,” he breathed. “You must hide. For a day and a night you must hide, mam’selle. Den wa will shoot dat Cascade Rapid. M’siega Bsn- ham, she’s not send you bath after iiat I have put dat food and watar and blankets, mam'aelle. And Pierre, he’s watch out for you.” never forget this.” 'Bian,” he grinned. “She’s make me now, quick. Her heart beating thunderously, El len crept beheath the edge of the tar- patdin and crouched quietly. She felt the^elight quiver oT the aedw as Pierre left it. Alone now. Alone! Definitely committed to the great adventure. The future might bring — anything, but queerly enough, Ellen felt no fear. Only a atirring anticipation. She remembered those strangef they rested on her—what wqirid they mirror? Surprise, yes. Anger—almost surely. Yet Ellen felt comfort some how. HfjL perturbation left her. In itf place came a flood of warm, dancing thrills. She began humming softly, keeping time with the cadence of tlM song the deepohested riverman was singing. It was the wild song of the river bri gades, the Chanson-de Voyageur. And it meant that the scows of John Ben- ham’s brigade wree at last freed of their tethers; that they were now part and parcel of the great spring migration into the distant wilderness of the Three River country The chill of early morning was still in the air, and Ellen was grateful for the.vriirmth of her hlankets.She lay therb quietly,iqueerly content. Strange \ Buschard grinning broadly and wav ing at her. Then one of the big craft headed 'in towards her own. When the scows were'^still a good three yards apart, a big, bare-headed figure clear ed the space in one clean leap of splendidly coordinated musdes, and a moment later John Benham was be side her. ' “Well,” he said slowly, his vqicei and such as there costs frqm a third to a half more than a year ago. The same is true of bricks, cement and other building materials, and the market is almost of plumbing and hQ|ting supplies. - The strikes in the glass industry seemed to be in a hurry. Every fourth person is a policeman, the city is clean, well-managed and officered, an4_ it is an up-and-coming winter re sort. ~ > milk, but jehny milk is oik menu of tbouaiinds of fanriliea. Evgry fanner we saw4kt work in the flekli w»| pkiwing from mne to 8 ydcM of oxen; it is an eaey matter to 'grosr 4 ylcrops of fine corn every jrear ia (?uba. I , V • ^ ‘ 1 My party was all the time hunting a good place to eat. They would ride an^ xwi ...X. ^alk for blocks seeking a joint with X(^-appeal. After they found sdbh a^sMtablishment, they would walk in,, sitxdown, and order ham and eggs or breakfast bacon and eggd. One member Of the crowd ordered . ... , ... ^ . ... some kind of salad every time; it h.ve rt re.m foolish to build . /eidu, pike- berry limbs, punkin vhiea and a cu cumber all cut up. It smelt like very Strange as it seems, we saw a laiga- field of cotton, about 30 miles south west of Havana that had not than a 600-pound bale of cotton per acre open; it was being picked by ail agaa and sizes of laborers, I didn’t like to see oottoh growing dodm there. Tha stalks, bolls, and limbs were all of normal size'and the cotton fibre wouM easily pull and inch and a quarter. (Possibly everybody already knows everything I am now trying to tell/ but there might be a few here and there that don’t gather this kind of infonnation . . . tha^ why d am touching on such jf/bjects as cotton and living conditions in Cuba). house now, when window glass is al most unbuyable. , There never was a time, in my life, when it was so easy to get money to steady and deep. “I see you’ve won. And by the grin on Pierre Buschard 1 can gue.sa how you did k.” Ellen’s courage came back with a rush. Sbe smiled. “I was desperate,” she answered. “It utis^ the only way. I hope you will not be angry with buy or build a Hbme. There has never been .«iK’h a shortage of homes. But I’m afraid that home-building is go- iTig to be pretty co.stly until the sup plies (»f building materials are re-fj^ plonisheu. . i c. nice grazing. I still conteh4 that it ought to have been served frodv a fod der rack instead of a platter, \ tb4 transition wrought Within the | Pierre. He was Very .kind. And as I Space of two short weeks. She thought said at fir.st—I will jiiy you well for of the school life she had left behind J your trouble.” her; of the com(>»nion.hip, the gaiety,j , deprecating hand, the luxury. A far e^ indeed from, ^ h.rdnew twisted his mouth her present IMS,tionJTet ah^new no, , ^^ain glint of triumph shone regret. It all seemed queeny vague assured,” he said BOOKS — Prices The removal or impeachment of Tj^aident Oomez during our visit cre- d abou^ much-excitement and ^ lecrti created.^when "we dis- q^ii^fy a tnh^stmte'orr^ cqeoner over /hei’C foi' inSl-feXsarice ill office or fpf* [ ^mo o?,my friends in the'book' finding a corpse guilty of sliicide'j|pd 'trade are rejoicing over the supreme'calling it It’s a habit in Ciiw court’s decision that any state may j to a.'^k for iind get new presidents pass a law, as several have done, per-1 every now and then. Everybody seem- mitting the producer of a trade-mark-1 ed be satisfied. (I think it was a good ^ . , , ed article to fix the retail pnoe, be- rnove too). '* .My payment Ts alreaiiy • which no dealer may sell k. My , friends admit that this will not 1- hator. III exact my jHiumi of flesh. i ^ Ellen stared at him. In a space of j insure greater profits foi^ publishers seconds he had become somehow stem I and booksellers. and savage , A ripple of fear shot Xo me any law which prevents any- THE CHRONICLE'S WANT AD RATES Ic per word for flnt tion; five inaertiona far tiM price of four. Minfmiui eharta 25c. Card of thanka and tribntan of reapect, le a word, pajaMe in advance. Minimnin 50c. OATS.I iety,^. FOR SALE—Appier .seed va- per bushel. Peavine hay, price ri^t. - Apply to D. E. Tribble Company. ^ ^ 28-2c came when a in-i -My first bad luck wiir Cuban eased up^jt£L.jne and rubbed sure- hoarse, throaty mutter of the river; the endless eong of adventuring wa ters; the creak of stout timbers; the rasp of hard-swung sweeps against the thode pins. Once the shrill hunt ing scream of the osprey echoed. Sev eral times ahe heard the eoft shuffle of moccasined feet passing close be side her hiding place. * At first these sounds were sooth ing, but with a passing hour or two, restlessness seiz^ the crouching girl. Her hiding place was* far from un comfortable, but it'was irksome to re main so still and quiet when every fibre of her being caUed #o^ freedom and action. She began avidly to crave sight of that world whicn lay just beyond the thin covering of canvas. It was the rising sun which made Ellen’s position particularly uncom fortable. The heat, under that can “Don’t worry persorialTy,^ he stat ed with a swift, harsh laugh, rea<ling her thoughts with disconcerting ease. “You’ll be quke safe. And Pierre himself against my bmly, looking like he was trying to .smell me or some thing. I thought he was crazy and he one from riMlucing the price of any- knew I was. When he got thru show- F(jr^ jYour^lectric ^ Sup plied; House^W i r i n g, Pciptracting, R^airing, LtghB Fixtures^ Phone 36 ^ RADIO EXCH^ANGi: IS . -an old and valued friend. He meant thing to the consumer seems worse than” silly. ATT such efforts to dis courage cqmpetition end up by rais ing the cost of living for everybody. What if a few big stores do^sell books ering hie affectione^ upon me, my fmnrtmn and « ^ vest pocket were missing, and «o was — • ^ he. There are a few of these smart rogue.s that can and will steal any- at cut prices? Isn’t thxt, in the long I thing from one’s person from a pair run, a benefit to the reading public? The book bu.siness is a queer one, ahe said i ahyway. We Americans are not great book, readera. We'^ei most of our reading 'from magazines and news- well.” A crimson tide again flowed across Ellen’s face. “Thank you,' stiffly. “I’m nbt trfrXid;’^ Benham nodded and turned away.. j Coin, b«k to tv crew he snapped 1 **!; ^/““"d a few terse orders. The Crees leaned ij» r innscular bodies against the sweeps | and under Benham’s directions drove the scow up to the bank and tethered it there. Ellen’s uneasiness grew. Was he grew. going to .send her back after all? Was her triump/h to be so short lived? Then she breaithed more easily. Ben ham, axe in hand, had leaped ashore and was swinging the gleaming blade in swift, powerful strokes among the slender boles of a dwarf birch thicket. FOXES ~ Gray Northern New York state farmers are being bothered by gray foxes, which, after killing off most of the rabbits, are beginning to ri^id chicken- coops. That is something new. For yeaxi it hJ»i beau-the red foi( which has been considered the chief jiest in rural regions in the East. The gray fox is a native of this country, and differs in most of its of BV^lls to a stick pin, and the said person won’t know what’s-happening till it’s too late. We attended a professional jaialai game. It was the fastest and most in teresting athletic undertaking I ever saw. I hope that will be a common sport over here some day. Nearly ev erybody was betting on the,games. In fact, the Cubans are bettors from A to Z. And it’s contagiou-s. Zip. I lIo*ft 30 cents on a game rooster just like that . . . the next day. hOR SALE—'Filling station and lot on_Murgrove street. Immediate pos- aession. Apply to C, W. Wier.\r Rohr: 4-2p FOR SALE- We have a few new and u.sed Frjgidaires that we are clos ing out at very special prices. Terms to suit your convenience. W. C. Bald win, Local Dealer, Clinton. tf In ten minutes’Aime he had felled and V,. covennit grew I VblVrirem th^TurepeiFfha” toi' ^8 covenng pew inicK ann neavy. passed them aboard. A moment! ». Ar««riW Before long she was bathed in per-|i.ter the scow was again-out in the'^^ wcre.brought to America apiration, and she drank often of the | river, scudding northward. water the thoughtful Pierre Bustard j ^ x , (Ckintinued Next Issue). ihad provided. The crawling hours seem^ intolerably long. She did her best to sleep those hoUrs away, but a fitful doze was the best she could ac complish. By—the time nightfall brought blessed coqlpess again her mented with the inactivity. But ^en, by the efforts and shouting of the Cree Indians,, she knew the scows were being warped into the bank to tie her up for the night, renewed en ergy came aguin to Ken*, and she smiled in triumph. One more cool, friemHy niglii in hiding, and in the morning the brigade would shoot the Cascade Rapid. After that she would be safe in making her presence known to John Benham. For, once below the rapid, he could not sand her back without expensive d^ay and labor. The scows wwe in movement when Ellen awoke on the following morn- Bllen gripped Ptanre’s huge paw Iqg. Again some membfer of the crew, wHfr both her iff Hie spariding dawn. kind, Pierre,” she murmured. “I wULrWas roaring out the river song. And agAln the river was speaking to her, though a new note had entered its happy to help, mam’selle. You hide voice. At fwet .it wa’s only a distant thiroh, but as time went on the throb became a deep rumbling roar. Cas cade Rapids! FreSh activity arose on the scows. by sportsmen about 200 years ago ami turned loose mi IxHig Island to furnish sport for hunters. They have multiplied so fast that now red foxes are commoner than the native grays from Virginia north. Naturalists say- that the Arctit white fox is the gray fox in his win ter coat, and that the black and "sil- We visited two night clubs one eve ning about 11:00 o’clock; they said we were^ too early. The first show start- txl at 1:00 a. m., and the second show at 3:00 a.m. It was truly a night club but it was mighty hard to get a table Snd I chairs reserved. The cover charge was from all you had in your pockets . . up. These night club-hours are either too late or too early for •me7 I-couldn’t dee+de whioh, -Nearly all of the girls had on a smattering of clothing, so to speak. Ami could they rumba? You’re telling I. Prompt and Efficient Refrigeration Service on Any Make Refriger ator.' Phone 36 ^ RADIO EXCHANGE Plants, seeds. Pansy, Cabbage and Onion Plants. Oyster Shells^ Scratch Feed, Starting, Growing and l/aying Mash, Sweet Peas, Flower Seea and, English, Peas. Oo^ Light- wood Kindling. Blakely Brothers Seed SUire. Telephone 188. Ic ver” foxes are his cousins. All kinds of ftixes eat mainly field mice, rab bits and inseCHT and none of them do (Sixth Day) .^peaking of laziness, we got up early Tu(»sday morning (in Havana) at around 9:30 o’clock. After hem ming and hawing (and jewing) with a taxi-man whc» owned a 7-passenger For RADIO SERVICE, TUBES and RADIOS - Phone-36 RADIO EXCHANGE MEN WANTED for nearby^Rawleigh routes of 800 families./^Reliable hustler., .s'hould start earning |25 weekly and increase rapidly. Write today, Rawleigh’s, Dept. .SCA-27-SC,, Richmond, Va. . 28-4p half as much damage to poultry yards Lincoln touring car, we began a trip as many folks imagine. Food For Thought An active mihd must have exerciee in order to last long and prove the utmost in efficiency. Nothing endures long if allowed to rust, smolder, de- WILDCATS — Down East Up in my old home county of Berk shire, Massachusetts, wildcat hunters have had a hard year of it. Around cay.I hav«( seen many men to whom | Monterey there is usually a heavy mental You’ve idleness was a-deadly bore, i“bag” of wildacts, for which the found it that way, haven’t j county pays a« $10 bounty for every you? Wholesome activity i* one*of the one killed. The night screeching and best things, positively beneficial to yowling of wildcats on Mount Hun- the intellectual human being. i ger used to keep Monterey folk awake “ Even the eye is said to require sya-jand frighten the children tematir exercise, if the owner would . preserve good eyesight far into life’s arctic regioiw. who are denned up in big cities rarely emplpy the eyes to see over a few blocks; they become accustomed to abort distances and fine print. Hence the army ,of spectacle-wearers, moat of them bi focals. The ag^ resident of the great Now the Berkshire" tHtdcits - seem to have been pretty well cleaned out. Thirty-seven were killed in the'eoun- ty in 1935, but only 17 iln 1936r.al* Directions ajfid advice were .Hhouted! open tjmees often does not need glass- back and forth. The creak of sweeps jes at three score and ten! Wholesome on thole pins became'steadier, firm-'exercise for the eyes! into the country in the direction of Santiago which carritvl us a distance of 160 miles. , The majority of native Cubans and native Cuban Negroes, embracing the blacks, the tans and the whites, co mix and co-min^e on an equal social footing as to 'association, schools, churches, marriages and otherwise. The Negroes do not seem to object to it very much. 'There are Iss many Ne gro policemen and public officers as Hiere are white men. The old Spaniard types have steered U. S. APPROVED CHICKS - Pullorum bloodtested,cooperating in the National Poultry Improvement Plan, administered by official State Agency and the U. S. Department of Agriculture. Supervised for your pro tection. Our fine rturdy, quality cliic will please you for broilers, or a fine flock 6f pullets that will lay lots of eggs. Our Square Deal pop^ pro tects you. Buy from us smh confi dence. Our .l^h year'/fkilding good will with our chicks. R; I. Reds, White Leghorns, and Bari^ Rocks — $9.50 per 100. Ohew^ if called for at hatchery. Wpite for prices on quan--^ clear of racial degradation and seem to represent the 'so-called upper class. er. The ecows began to pitch and rock. Ellen, even ”m her walled-in covert, though many hunters were out aftefrAfter, trying to discourse 2 or 3 days them. In the 32 years since the boun- with those Cuban folk, I got to th ty went into effect,, Berkshira has point where 'I couldn’t talk paid out $6,890 for 589 wildcats. much less Spanish. Very few^qjT the But if the wildcats are vanishing, j rank and file speak English; Wlien the beavers are coming back. There are four beaver colonies now in Berk shire, and one farmer has asked the CUSTOM HATCH YOUR . EGGS our» fine electric incubators* with 'separate ^hatchers. Prices reasonable. We hatch Hen, Turkey, and Duck eggs. We got~80% to 85% hatch out of sOrhe of the turkey egg.s set last The imprisoned muscle of'rthe in- tellectOal is never more than fifty a beaver dam cut off his dairy water — speed. The thunder of the rapids arose] We are growing into a race of intel*beavers! to ertwhing proportions. Then it j lecti^ at the price of rugged, vigor-j ^ they do speak it,' it tak^ a whole i season. Write for Jjrices. family-to get as much h^very FARMERS HATCJIERY > word deciphered. Tl^r most of__their j 908'>lain St. Newbcrix S. C. legislature to pay him $2,000 because italking is done srrth their hand.s any-1 ; .. . could distinctly feeJ the increase in per cent normal—often much> lower. 1 *oi^ply» sod he can’t legally damage marvelloiMly clear, almost hypnotic eyes of John Benliwn. The next tin(i€*ts«niied”wrthough a giantrKand grasp-! ous health. ed the aoow M>d hurled it out into But, be #ure to get this: Exercise is litter chaos. Mad waters! The hoarse, quivering roar of the pent river beast, battling LIGHT — Bend It The newe.st device of applied sci- how.t On our trip into the rural sections,: we came upon all manner of country life, Thera was an occasional nice I farm-home with well-kept buildings [ Say— 1 SAW IT IN THE CHRONICLE* Thank Y01! not torture. No man givw his eyes fence is a substance which will carry't*^^ generally, but the aver-^ 1 exercise, diminutive, blurred llitht around a comer, Called "PonU-|?i' '“"'I’*'”* for a place to live. Two rooms is* con- F xiwr MX biu? pvrnt river uewUf ;^yP^» wiifch 'thc OV^T-Stuffcrf publlCH*! litC> this mHtcriAl is fti* clcHT ftS * i- j ^ * i a. 4 ' i k* il ‘ ■It was cosy there in the darkness|the barriers of confinement. Spray tion held eight inches from his face,[but only half as heavy. A rod horse narked in the' beneath the tarpaulin. She rtirred and'Xflose to tin^e the lunj^. The scowjoften with a poor light. He inflictsjof pontalite can be bent or twisted , ^ - y i ,, i felt about her. Then ahe bleeeed sim-i leaped and danced like the merest punishment of the most dangerous into any form, and when a light 18 front piazza. pk, big-hearti Pierre Btachard. For, in a crevice between the maaaed bale* and boxes of the cargo waa a bundle “of food and the sleek, chill contoors of a jar of iratef. E^Ien snuggled down into the blan kets, covering herself with the warm, comfortif^ folds. After a bit shears- laswd all tension. The nooif roae and fell to the amge of the river, creak- cockles If men were shouting eir voices were being bMten back at their lips. Ellen was not frightened. Rather was she thrilled to her finger-tips. Here was the true pioneer blood, which beat rich and strong and vi-' brant in the bdttle with natural forc es. Abruptly she ewept aside the tar paulin and stepped forth. Confinement kind. It is the same Of the mind. To over work the mental faculties is almost as fatal to them as profound laziness —idleness. I shudder for the fool that races his mihd day and night—that placed at one end of the rod the other end glows brilliantly, though no light is visible between the two ends. It is easy to imagine many possible uses for this new product of the chemical laboratories. To me, how- FOR THE NEW YEAR DAY BOOKS CHRONICLE PUB. CO. The rich people in Cuba u.se cow’s milk, the next bracket south uses goat gives it no rest in the mad chase for'ever, its chi^> interest is that it addsj ing and complaimBg at its tethsr Uks I had become intolerable. The men at a blooded horse,'anxious to be gone. > Ellen’s thouglits, grew dreamy and clouded with sweet languor. Rie aeow beesme a etadle aiid'the great tsxioas ioaxB of tlm rivar a faMMl to rode it PressnUy aha slept 'When Ellen Kaelmy awoke agete it was wttk a stset aad a short gax^ the sweeps did not seem to notice her. With quick^ thrilling steps die ran to the front of the eeow and braced teraelf ikare. Spray drenched her, the wind of their ^^eed elutehed at her face, her throet, her hair, her clothes, wUpping the' latter tight ahoat her iiUiii^ valisot f^re. • ' coin. Remember the crash is out yon der in front not so far as you think. The musdes—those wonderful hingr es, pulleys,’levers! Exercise them, but stop short of punishment, if you would keep physically fit another, proof that the conquest of nature by man is going on all the time. We carry a cemplete liae of Maak bosks, Ledgers, Cash Posies, Jaaraals, Day Bsafcs, ate. Call 74 far aasda. Chroaicle PabUskiaf Ca. ■ . / t . FOR THE NEW YEAR CASHBOOKS CHRONICLE PUB. CO. Lady Took Cardui When Weak, NenroM fl can’t my enough for Cardui If X talked all day,” enthustastlcally writes kfrs. L. H. Caldwell, of States- trlDe, N. O. “I have used ,Cardui at tntenrala for twenty-five yeera," dhe sAte- trouble in the beginning waa weaknem and nervounem. I load of Cardui ln>a newm^ wd ernkM right then to try It. Xtaaamad batere X had taken half a botUe of Chvdnl X was atroagw and waa aoom and around.'* lai" ^ A Gray Funeral Home Clinton, S. C. FUNERAL DIRECTORS .M ftlllf M. EMBALMERS Ambulance Service Phones 41 and S99-J L RUSSELL GRAY aad V. PARKS ADAIR, Gem Mgfa. <w» r X