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Now Ready) Huntley's Cotton Ginnery corner Front and Church street Our's is si brand new, < < pcrated throughout hv elect 3Ir. J. B. Bundy, who i.s exj)e understands how to handle as the Short. Come see our plant in opei for you and you will then knov P. B. HU Cheraw .\E1101'LA>'E SOMERSAI LTK An I niiviiul Feat by a French Aiiator 1,."?rt0 Feet in Air. Juvisy, France, Sept. 1.?A French J aviator named Pegoud. today "looped j -the-loop" while flying at u height of 3. "'00 l'eet in his aeroplane. He afterward riasreuded without injury. Pegoud recently caused a sensation by droping safely from an aeroplane with a parachutte. He announced today that he intended to turn a somersault in air with his aeroplane and his movements were followed closely by a large body of observers. When he reached a height of about 2.700 feet, he shot his machine straight toward the earth and darted downward with his motor working at full power. After plunging about 1,260 feet with a frightful velocity he changed the position of his rudder and caused the aeroplane to turn a complete verticle circle. The machine then glided down in a huge colplone and alighted gently on the ground. MONEY FOR MILITA South Carolina Companies Will Receive Washington. Aug. 20.?Announce, meat was made today by the war department of amounts allotted to the various State militia argonizations tinder two appropriations of $2,000,000 1- nvnlllntinn r?f rillo liMr cat-a, une iui pivjtiiuviv.ii lice, and arms, equipment and camp purposes, the other for supplies and ammunition. The money was apportioned according to enlisted strength. New York heading the list with 14,Son men. Among the allotments are the following: Virginia. $7b.0h0; North Carolina. -S7 South Carolina. S.'T.uimi; Georgia, $SS,00fi; Alabama, Florida^ $MS,0(m.; Tennessee, <?t',7,oiMi; Louisana,, Mississippi. 8.V..OOO; Arkansas, $.10,000; and Texas, Slnd.ooo. nch The Secrete authorized the raw to increj stock. On anc ber ISt, we wil this increased for a limited t formation d cheerfully gi\ son interested write to or call The Bank Cherav for Business , located in lirick building ts, is now ready for business. lown to the minute, outfit, rieitv. and is in charge oi* rieneed in the business, and the Staple Cotton as well ration, let us gin a few bales i* what w? can do for you. NTLEY c r J J? v> VAM'AKEE HEAL ESTATE FOR SALE AT AITTION. lly virtue of authority contained in deed of trust from the heirs at law of John Thompson, deceased, dated June 3rd. 1!H3. for the purpose of partition, we will offer for sale at auction in front of the Town Hall, Cheraw, S. C., on Monday. September 2!ttli, l!'l3. the following real estate. to wit: 1st. Lot No. 47<>?100x300, fronting on Christian street, known as the John Thompson home place. 2nd. Lot containing 1-4 acre, more or less, lying on the South side of Seaboard Air Line ^Railroad} with dwelling thereon. 3rd. Lot No. 7."?30x1."n in "Kinland." All the above in town of Cheraw. 4th. Lot containing one-half acre, more or less, at Rocky River Springs, N. C. Terms of sale cash, purchaser to pay cost of preparing papers. Maynard-Raley Realty & Trust Co., Trustees. To Kaptist Woman's Missionary Societies. I take this means of reminding you to have your September meetings the first week in September, and af ter that meeting send all the money you have on hand to Miss Jessie King, Hampton street. Columbia, with instructions how to use it. Then till both the annual resort blanks 1 have supplied you with, return one to me immediately and sending the other to Jefferson by your delegate. Please send Associational Expense Fund money to Jefferson to defray expense of having us there Mrs. Lawton, a returned missionary, and to pay for a report in the Association's minutes. Watch next weeks paper for the program and exact date of meeting. Mrs. S. L. Swieegood, Supt. The Chronicle is only $1 per year. :ice try of State has Bank of Chetse its capital I after SeptemII offer for sale issue of ^tock ime. Any inesired will be en to any perwhowill either 1 at of Cheraw v, s. c. FEARFUL OF THE WATER. Children are often fearful of the water, especially at the seashore, and kind-hearted parents will not thrust a terror-stricken baby into the surf. John Muir, in the Atlantic Monthly, advises the need of caution in this matter by relating how he was made miserable as a child by being plunged again and again into the sea by a strong-armed servant, despite his Bhrieks. "As the time approached for this terrible bathing," he says, "I used to hide in the darkest corners of the house, and oftentimes a long search was required to find me." ANOTHER RELATION. "Xo, I'm sorry, but I'll be a sister to you." "Pardon me, I have plenty of sisters. What I wanted was a mother." T iJHC? HOW IT HAPPENED. Teller?I see that Hennepeck has developed into a free thinker of late. Grimshaw?Yes; his wife has been away from home for a week? Puck. Voices of the Wood. To some people the trees talk?If you are to believe the people. They dare not try to put what they get into language, because they know that to do so will be to silence the trees. Living in cities they naturally get out of touch with trees, but put them back in the forest and, likely as not, they will be caught in a listening attitude, a listening and watching attitude. That little ripple up toward the topmost leaves that a painter would have to paint golden or liquid or both, if it were the impression he was after, delivers its message to the one who understands. That urgent sweep of the strong gray wind going westward communicates something to the trees and the trees pasB it on ?to the one who can hear. "Take me back to the wood," said Jeanne d'Arc, "and I shall hear the voices." Monster Rudder for Liner. A rudder with a doorway into the interior is a feature of the Cunarder Aquitania, which is shortly to be launched. The rudder has just been placed in position, and is so large that a doorway has been constructed in the lower part to admit workmen, so that they can remove the pin which connects the rudder to the ship. This pin is four feet long, and bigger than the heaviest projectile made for modern artillery. When delivered at the builders' yard the rudder was in three parts After they had been connected and laid upon the ground the distance that had to be walked to pass round the rudder was over 100 feet. Applying Logic. A Sunday school class was studying - looonn n M ft thp tPftCheT U lilisoiuuai j ivoux/4* M..u was telling of customs among the Eskimos. She said: "I have read an article by a traveler among these people, and it is the duty of the Eskimo's wife to chew her husband's clothes to keep them soft and pliable, as tho skins get stiff, and therefore, a woman is chosen according to her chewing ability, every man endeavoring to get a wife with strong teeth." One little boy, with a look of intense nausea on his faoe. blurted out: "Why don't they get 'em a billygoat?" Dickens in Australia. It is said that when a Scotsman leaves old Scotia to make his home in some other land he solaces his exile with the book of Robert Hums' poems, and that the Scot abroad comes to be even better versed in the rhymes of the peasant poet than the Scot who has remained at home. It has been remarked that the same is true as regards the Englishman and Charles Dickens. W. M. Hughes, acting prime minister of Australia, goes further than this and asserts that Dickens had an importune inuueuue on Australian democracy, and through men who read him and loved him, men who imbibed his hatred of shams and humbugs, who wanted freer and better conditions, to have some other place to look to than the workhouse, had made Australia what is today. Adam Smith says that nobody ever imagined a god of weight?and he might have added of the multiplication table either. It may bo that the relations of nature are all as inevitable as that twice two are four. DR. L. B. KERRISON DENTIST . CHERAW, S. C. PHONES: OFFICE 222. RESIDENCE 72 Phone Y< ?] CHICKENS, EGGS, CABI BANANAS, CHEESE A] OF FANCY AND J Php] PROMPT R. N. ST "Where the Doll ???? CLOTHES TO REDEEM WOMEN HI! /* LI-- Tk?* Illinois commune r)as i nwi; nat Dress Will Help to Reform Female Prisoners. A well-dressed woman can look her fellow-men in the eye, not necessarily in a flirtatious manner, but with the conviction that no fault can he found with her apparel, says Leslie's Weekly. She can go into a business office, a restaurant, rhe church or the theater with no apologetic shrinking from the gaze of the multitude, and she is therefore at her best. Evidently this theory is responsible for the conclusion to which the Illinois Women's Reformatory committee has arrived, as it declares that many penal institutions fail in the return of women inmates because corsets and fine clothes are not provided. "Self-respect is the first element toward the reclaiming of a woman's soul," is the assertion of Mrs. Minna S. Jones, chairman of the committee. "Dress women prisoners well and they will be reformed." SUBSTITUTE FOR GLASS. As a substitute for glass, sea shells are used to splendid advantage in the Philippines. The windows in the main entrance of the Philippine General hospital, Manila, are a fine example. The sea-shell windows may also be seen in the old churches. Manilla alone uses in the neighborhood of 5,000,000 kapas shells each year for windows. The largest sized shells will square about three inches. These sell for from $4 to $5 a thousand, according to quality. Shells that will form panes of about two square inches sell for anywhere from $1.50 to $3 a thousand, and are used for ordinary purposes, in dwellings, stores and the like. The shells are translucent and the light comes through them in soft pearl-gray tone. Our I Prompt Servi If you have real estate of results, list it with us. We K charges are only per rent. If Yoi Fire Insi Life Insi Plate GL Fidelity r> i... 13 ouieiy lj or Anything in tl Se< >V?* act as administrators and our services are at your en WE DO OUR UT1 Maynard-Raley R CAPITA] PHONE 84 )ur Orders roR? 5AGE, POTATOES, APPLES, ND ANY AND ALL KINDS STAPLE GROCERIES. ne 151 DELIVERY RICKLIN nr Does It's Duty." J HAIL FOR WILSON HOLERS. Negro Charged With Attempted Assault Allowed $100(1 Itond. Bennettsville, Sept. 2.?Wilson Rogers. the young negro charged with entering the room of a white lady and attempting an assault, in Brightsville recently, and who -was trailed by i bloodhounds from the penitentiary, I has been allowed to give $1,000 bond, i The bail was secured from Judge Watts, by Stevenson, Stevenson and ITince, attorneys for Rogers. Rogers has not yet given the bond. State of South Carolina, County of Chesterfield, Court of Magistrate. Xellie Mix, Plaintiff, against William Mix. Defendant. Summons. By Thurlow Belk, Magistrate in and for the County and State aforesaid: To the defendant, William Mix: Complaint under oath having been unto me made by Nellie Mix that? you are indebted to hoc in the gum o? one hundred dollars These are therefore to require you to appear before me at my office in Cheraw, S. C? on the Twenty-First (21) day after service hereof upon you exclusive of the day of such service, at 12 o'clock M., to answer to the said complaint; and if you fail to appear and answier thereto, as aforesaid, then judgment will be giv. en by default. Given under my hand and seal tills 27th day of August, 1913. Thurlow Belk (L. S.) Magistrate. FOR FINE TAILORING CLEANING, PRESSING AND REPAIRING C. F. GRAY ) Phone 13.1 i 'ladies work a specialty VIotto: ce and Results any kind for sale and want quick .NOW HOW to move it and our Need irance irance iss Insurance Bonds ?onds tie Insurance Line. ? Is. jruardians, executors and trustees iniiiuud. VIOST TO PLEASE. ealty & Trust Co. $25,000.00 CHE RAW, S. 0.