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^V^fV * <&br liortu Cmifd CONWAY, S. C. Altered at the Post Office at Conway, S. C., as second class mail matter. H. H. WOODWARD, Editor. Vbblished Every Thursday Morning: by Conway Publishing Co. : ' IIJ(J) V SUB^crij^TION PRICE: One Copy, One Year $2.00 One Cepy, Six Months 1.00 One Copy, Three Months 60 Payable in Advance. TELEPHONE 21. Make all Chocks or Drafts payable ia The Horry Herald, or H. H. Woodward, Conway, S. C. THURSDAY OCT. 20, 1921 PAYING THE PRICE. Both men and women often go so far as to do that which they are sorry for, and then will not retract because of a false and unfoundei firide that fills them. Having do*"that which is wrong, this false pride steps in, as an instrument of evil, to prevent the righting of the wrong they have done. In every case the man or woman, pays the price of this. It comes to! them often at the time, more of?* ten at some other time, when they, least expect to reap that which they j have sown. Usually they can ox- j plain it by saying that they have' been paid back in their own coin. By what measure it has been meted out to others, be sure it will bo remeasured back by the same standard. It is a wrong1 spirit that exists in many when they do some hasty aci without the use of clear thought and judgment beforehand. ' The things we have done in this world that we most regret are those done in a moment of anger, even of pioue. In nine cases out of ten, if we had delayed and given one thoughts tinv> to act. the thing that we now st 1 much regret would never have been i done. , Hence all of the old sayings that,Tiave been done to us through the ( years of human experience, such as *4Ix)ok , before you leap." It was pood advice the first time it was ever spoken, and it is good advice i yet. It means that we should take time to act. Thoughts and words are cheap and they may be forgotte-i or explained away; but action that we take may result in something that cannot be changed. Taking swift action before the judgment ha-* had time to dictate it, leads to th* other truism to the effect. "It might 4iave been." And of this it has been khuI tVmf fliAT? cvp th*? sjirlrln^f wmvlo *of tongue or pen. Nature has endowed us with brains capable of training and use in the working out of our live*. Ho who fails to use both the brains and h'; ph ysical powers in accomplishing life, makes a failure, and the doing of things without reason is one result j of the use of physical powers alone, and leaving the mental powers al-j most entirealy off. 0 o No life is worth living that is nor dedicated to the willing service of others. o This country has no use for the ! man who sees no good in it. He is the man who still persists in keeping us back. One necessary thing to the performance of any task is tbo begin . ning of it; for a task never begun : can never be finished. ' The little cotton that has been ' made will not be sufficient to sup-l ply the demand without calling on the amounts held back from crop4 of othrc years. o May the time come some day when the knocker will no longer knock, but will place his shoulder to the wheel of modern progress here where we live and heln us to leave better town for our children. It is hard to believo but nevertheless so, that some of the. best men. or claimed so to be, have been found doing some of the very things thai they denounced ;?s evil. They set a poor example. They fail to practice what they preach. Any things in the country, at this time, that tends to array class against class, or any part or parcel of the citizenship against any other part, is a menace to peace ami good order that may lead to civil strife on no more than a moment's notice. NOTHING PERFECT. There is nothing i>erfect. When you hear men running down the courts and crying out that there is no justice in the land, tell him that the imperfectroijs of the law and the application of such laws as we have, are the reasuitj^'of*' the same cause that makes 'till wings.'human imperfect. It is human nature to strive to improve. The very fact that improvement is usually made as time fjoes on, shows that there is nothing as good as it might lie. It follows also that it never will he. It Is not human nature. Ths world wa** never intended to he perfect. If it had been and were in fact so. then the earth would l>r heaven it.-elf an 1 nothing else. Lets never form the ha'?!i of looking ot the dark side of things seeing only the imperfection - Km' <1i>couragemnts; but rrther let us strive to see the good points in all things and try to improve conditions a* nature intended us to do. * Tbo way to beat th? boll weevil is to raise food crops and live stock. o As this country prows more populous, more weaithy and more powerful. there are things bound to rise out of experience that will tend o its undoing. We say this because] history repeats itself over and ovor.j Things which have taken place in great State, as have been recorded in history from times long ago, are almost sure to visit us. SELECT SEED AT DIGGING. Clenison College.?During the past few years many sweet potatoes have been destroyed by diseases in the fields and in the storage houses throughout the South. These dis-( eases are in a large measure due to beding diseased potatoes, from which diseased plants are almost sure to develop. Among these diseases, black rot, stem-rot and scurf are the most important to South Carolina growers. The most typical symotoms of black rot are the dark, nearly black, I ciml/an 1 f ? VI.?V *< ????v nviiinvilf I1IV/I V. Wl VII ' cular spots on the surface, often involving the entire potato. The diseased tisrsue has a bitter quinine-liki taste. Stem-rot shows itself in the field? by r yellowing: of the leaves an! finally the wilting of the diseased vines. If the diseased vines b? pinched open they will l>e found to be blackened inside. Scurf, also known as soil stain, is characterized by brown discolorations on the surface of the potatoes, varying in size and shape, or there may be a discoloration of the entire surface. The best control method for tho above mentioned diseases, according to L. E. Tisdale, is to select seed potatoes in the fall at digging time. Each hill should be examined carefully by splitting the stem, and if the insido is streaked with black, the potatoes from that hill should not be kept for seed. It should be remembered *haf a heavy frost will also cause the black streaking in the stems. Do not save for bedding anv potatoes that show any spots or blemishes, or anything to cause doubt as to th^ir freedom from disease, but only the perfect sound potatoes. Store potatoes intended for bedding in a part of the house where they will rot come iii c onttiv/cahtae they will not come in contact with the general stock. Sort out again in the spring to make sure none are bedded that are diseased. Crop rotation is necessary to prevent the disrease producing organisms from becoming established in the soil. It is also advisable to treat the potatoes with corrosive sublimate or formaldehyde before bedding. Information and instruction in preparation of plantbed or hot bed are fur?i i.. r ii? /-? 1 i iiijmu-u uu iiuunuiiuoii ^aru ino. <?, which may bo had when desired. NEWS FROM FURMAN. Greenville, S. 0.?Friends throughout South Carolina of Prof. Luceo Gunter, who was compelled through il'ness to <rive up It is work as head, of the department of education at Furman University for the present ( session, will he pleased to learn that he is showince some improvement in ' health. He is back from a several weeks' stay in an Atlanta hospital, but will have to return about November 1 for further observation and treatment. student bodv of Furman will furnish a detail of some seventy-five or 100 men for participation in the historical pageant.. "The Keeowee Train." which will be presented in Greenville on a tremendous scale next' month. The men are being put 1 4 k - I, / .tk II/nu/M. ? . 1 i UUUVi.Uii i niriu >ai.> un juiiiuui tain- * PU3. - Z - <* "! The first "alumni number" of the "Furman Hornet." the student weekly j publication of Furman Univrsity, is | just off the press and contains a ' large amount of news relative to work rmnng former -tudents and crraduates <f this institution now being carried n b\ the alumni a -sotvntic.n through' iis executive socio1'>v, 1.. M Glenn.' (<i ' ?ra.l column. o* interesting news concerning aluoni. also : ppe;?rs en th.? a'unini nu-"?Vt. Kvei \ fci.rth number of the weekly paper wi'l he devoted to news of the alumni Friends of the instiution everywhere are urged to send in items of news concerning Furnvin men for publication in the weekly. Active preparations for the publication of the 10:?2 edition of "T!u* Bonhomie," the Furman University annual, are under way already by the student management. A photographer's gallery has been set up on the campus and an expert photographer from Greenville is now engaged daily in making photos of studr?'->t**, and faculty members for publiS., 'PUa icll/lljll III till; <411 II vl (II* 1 III-/ MUUK4/V' ment is determined that The Bonhomie shall not make it ? appeal anco this year after the -Jiose of the academic session, as wa* the case la? t \ear. WILL GET SEUVICE. An extensive market reporting service is being; planned for the farmers of Nebraska. The secretary of the State Department of Agriculture is arranging with the Bureau of Markets and Crop Estimates of the United States Depart ! ment of Agriculture, to have a "drop" from the bureau's leased wire at Omaha extended to tin I State bureau at Lincoln. The moveIment of farm products, with prevailing prices in market centers, will he imported daily. Hui'duig n?\v houses would increjui* hwinw :tl Conway just at this time, j because people of standing and value fo any community, would br jglad to go to a place where they air jnlenty of houses to live in. THE HORRY HERALD, OOH ('. A. CARDWELL I WRITES CHAMBER Conceraning the Markets For ?!'hi,') Sweet Potatoes Raised This Year. THREE OF STATES ARE INVESTIGATED Giving Full Benefit of All Information Obtained by Efforts of Agent. Tllf> Cftnwnv r\f v* i wmmcivt is In receipt of a letter from Mr. G. A. Cardwell, agriculural and industrial agent of the Atlantic Coas Line Company, giving information as to the market for sweet potatoes. In view of the fact that quite a large crop of sweet potatoes was made in Horry county this season, the information may he of value to the farmers. Mr. Card well's letter follows: In connection with the marketing of Southern sweet potatoes, I have recenly made a survey of the markets in Virginia, North Carolina and South Carolina. Letters were addressed to a large number of dealers, many of whom ft);led co r*,|iiy. However* some i interesting inlomjation as to prospects for selling sweet potatoes on these markets was obtained. I am giving you the benefit of his information i)e!ow. Virginia W. W. Timberlftke & Co., Staunton, Va.. advises they handle Star Sweets, a car about every twelve days. Have never handled Southern sweet potatoes. Only selling yellow varieties at this tin.e. A. T. Hirrpinbotham, 125 S. Augusta street, Staunton, Va., advises he sells about one carload Eastern Shore yellows per week. Possibly this party can be induced to try Southern varieties. I Gardner & Clark, 230 Main street,1 Danville, Va., advises market will use about one car a week from November 1 to April J. Up until about November 1 market is usually supplied from home-grown stock. George M. McMinn & Co., 1308 East1 Cary street, Richmond, Va., advises they do not buy sweet potatoes, but do handle a number of cars on commission. If you desire to ship on commission basis this firm will keep you posted as to the market. American Brokerage Co., P. O. Box 676, Roanoke, Va., advises Roanoke market will take approximately forty cars from North Carolina. There have been practicallv no sweet potatoes sold on this market for shipment from Souh Carolina. Chewning-Upton Co., Inc., 22 East Campbell avenue, Roanoke, Va., states they are very much interested in | sweet potatoes and would like to have J names of parties dealing in this commodity both in North Carolina and! South Carolina. K. A. Laughon, Roanoke, Va., advises this market will probably take] about two c.ars of sweet potatoes per week from now until first of May. Eastern shore of Virginia potatoos are sold on he Roanoke market until the first of December. After that time couU! draw supply from North and South Carolina. North Carolina. McConnell Bros., Asheville, N. C., states they buy sweet potatoes in car 'ft.s, handling between eight and ten cars between the first of December and first of April. At this Hme they aro supplied with local shipments, which supply will last through the ^nonth of October. Ramsey & Company, H6! Depot street, Asheville. N. C., advises their market consumes from fifteen to s-wontv cars of sweet potatoes yearly. Season usually begins January 1 .and j end-- the latter part of May. W. I. Anderson & Co., Greensboro, i N. C., states they handle approxii 4 fl'il'lAnrlvi of SWPft OO il.il V\5 I Y V ? -? ' " v# " * - - - ? ? - * taloes during the months of September to April. They are doing all they co 11 to increase consumption of this commodity. Piedmont Produce Company, of Greensboro, N. C., advises sweet potatoes will sell readily on their market throughout the year; that there is a large local acreage but not enough for home supply even at harvest time. The market uses from three to four cars of sweet potatoes per week. J. A. Tate Company, Inc., Greensboro. N. C.. states they expect to handle considerable quantities of sweet potatoes this season and desire names of carload shippers of choice eating potatoes In both North and South Carolina. Eflrd Bros., Winston-Salem, N. C., states their market can easily u^e ten cars of sweet potatoes during fall and ( ten cars during spring months. I J. W. Zimmerman & Co., Charlotte, N. C., states about 100 cars of sweet potatoes handled on that market each season. They desire names of dealers of cUI*d sweet potatoes. Best trade is from1 January to May. W. J. Edwards & Company, Charlotte, N. C., states they will be able to sell from one to ten cars of sweet potatoes tov snipmeni January, Kei>ynnry"a.n<l March. South Virginia. I W. J. I'Mward." & Compeny.#Spari tanhurg. S. C., states thorp are, . enough loco! potatoes to supply the . demand until late in the spring. They I do not handle until loc.il crop is consumed. Local crop this year heavy. Trade prefer them packed in barrels ? ov in hulk. , Pearce-Ed wards Co., Spartanburg, I S. C., states that approximately thir tv to thirty-five cars of sweet potatoes in hulk were sold on the Greenville market last season. They would I WAY, S. C , OCT 20, 1921 like to have the names of some live shippers. Market period late fall until April. WHENDOES PROHIBITION BEGIN? Leading Members of Press of Country Comemnt on Big Question. BOOTLEGGERS AND II I i ait A?ria i ILLIOII 5 | ILLIIMU Nationwide Prohibition Survey Conducted by New York Tribune. "When does it begin?" a foreign visitor countered. when asked his opinion of prohibition during the first year of its enforcement. Then, along-j about the first of this month two Labor members of the British Parliament who visited the United States last summer to investigate and report j on the results of prohibition, stated in their joint report that "prohibition,] as we in England were led to believe it prevailed, does not exist; America has been described to us as 4a bootleggers' paradise.' '* The non-enforcement of prohibition in the United j States, they aver, "and the resultant] consequences on the morals of the people bode ill for the future, particularly as regards the rising generation." Coincident with this official report comes the news from Chicago that according to the Chief of Pol ire ".r>0 per cent of Chicago's police force are identified with the bootlegging industry"; that "prohibition enforcement in Chicago is a joke"; that "there is more drunkenness than ever before, move deaths from licjM ?* lhan 1-cfove prohibition, and move of every evil .attributable to the use of liquor." Tt is nen declared in n Chicago dispatch to the New York Tin.es that "chip police station was the home of a nest t-nMlegorors, who delivered whiskey j in the patrol wagon," and that i:ni- | formed policemen would 1 ob vhisVey __l_ a._ i.i. - / ? * - * ? * JsnijimtMius in uie ire^rnr yfim.s, unaer : pretense of confiscating the ';'.vk<i, and sell the booty in case lots. There-! upon a policema ? w*m! I /ippeni r?nd demand a substan'.in' amount for rro- i tection, and after the amonut had been paid still another policeman would "raid" the place?/and collect another fee for protection. Yet another policeman, it is said, would confiscate the liquor and eventually *ell it to stfrue saloonkeeper. A. nationwide prohibition survey conducted by the Now York Tribune, with the aid of its correspondents in many of the large cities, finds that "smoothly running bootlegging machines" are operating in a dozen large centers, and that "the Eighteenth Amendment is being flouted almost as openly in every other large city as in Ncnv York," where the greatest degree of wetness is supposed to prevail. "Bootlegging has never been so prevalent throughout New England.) with the exception of the first fewmonths of prohibition enforcement." ' snorts one Tribune correspondent. "People drink more than they ever did," we hear from Baltimore, while it is estimated that in the vicinity of Detroit "a thousand cases of Canadian liquor come across the border every twenty-four hours." Altogether, -?? Ui'iWl Sstnte5? customs authorities, international bootleggers smuggle into this country about 0,000.000 gallons of liquor a month. "More .Scotch whiskhas been imported into the Province of Quebec in the last year man in ir.e entire ten years tnat went before," avers the Providence News, which further declares that this enormous surplus comes into (he United States. Added to all these, says the New York Evening* Post, are the 1X0,000 gallons of whisky and the 302,r?32 (marts of champagne that were legally imported during the first eight months of 1921. Other cities covered by The Tribune's survey are Philadelphia, St. T ~imV Cincinnati, New Orleans, Cleveland, Denver and San Francisco. In all these cities, we are told, the Volstead law is being violated everywhere. Now York receives six trainloads of liquor a day, asserts the Now York World, "but how this stuff gets in or where it comes from no one h.is officially found out." "The enforcement of the law." maintains the Seattle Post-Tntellingencer, has become "complicated and impossible, mainly because bootlegging is in the hands of 'big business.' " The enforcing of prohibition "threatens to demoralize completely the nolice denartmentH of American cities," agrees the Philadelphia Public Ledger. o The failure of farmers to raise plenty of food crops for family and animals is responsible for the failure of many of them today. They arc the ones who. usually lose their farms under mqrtgaws. From banded proprietors they have descended to thr level of a day laborer. Many people on the small farm.*of this county fail every year be cause they are too lazy to worje. It ir easier to stand up bV thV? , fen?f and talk to some passer-by than il is to plough out the corn. o The Anderson Motor Co, of Tabor N. C.. M'st, veroived a car-load ol nwloi Povd truring. roadster an< f'oupe cars. If you are planning tf buy see them now. Yours Very Truly, Anderson Motor Co. J. B. Elliott, Mgr. Advertisement. If HI ARTICLES ARE STEP SAVERS Kitchen Cabinets, Tray for Serving on Wheels, and a Unique Refrigerator. While many devices in othcv groups also save steps, there arc a few pieces of equipment which may be called distinctly step savers. Chief among these is the kitchen cabinet which combines a pantry, table and shelf-space into one article kitchen equipment does more to co-ordinate utensils and working processes than the manufactured kitchen cabinet. Th?? rr?/\^?io have flour and sugar bins, cereal and. spice containers, rack shelf spaec and adjustable moulding boards. When used with a stool', such a cabinet saves endless steps by grouping within arm's length of the worker both supplies, utensils and tools needed in many kitchen processes^ The serving tray on wheels is another distinctive step saver. Several models are on the market, some with single, others with double tray, mounted on rubber-tired wheels, which can bo steered easily. Such a tray enables the homemaker to servo a complete meal with cue or possibly two carryings of dishes, or to clear the table with similar ease. This kind of tray can also be used excel* lently as a stock table when ther? is no drain to. the right of the -sink, or it can be used to wheel clean dishes to the pantry, avoiding constant trips and the dangers attendant on tray carrying. Larger and more massive styles are found in I the typical hotel dishcart which can I be used equally well in the largo i I 1. 1 1 nousenoia. A unique refrigerator most excellent in country homes particularly is a worth-while step saver. Thi"elevator ice-box" looks like other small refrigerators, has three compartments, hut is operated by clockwork pulleys. It is so installed thai the pressure on a button in the floor causes the ion box to rise up into, the kitchen; or a similar pressure causes its descent into the eel ilar. This saves the hundreds of tedi ! ous steps entailed by the countrv Ihomemaker who has to keen manv food products "down cellar." And if the cellar is cool, the ice box can be satisfactorily used-- even without an ice supply. Any other device or. equipment which co-ordinates work,' such as these: a tool basket with j compartments, a house maid's bucket with places for rags, soap, powder, etc., speaking tubes or "house" telephones, etc., can be grouped properly under the important head of st?m savers, and hence energy and , effort savers. IS BUSINESS ON RIGHT TURN? Business is like an opera singer? temperamental, sensitive to environment and responsive io the attitude! ol the nublic?thinks the Boston Herald. "Is Business Turning the Cor-1 ner?" was the titlo of our last article: on this important subject, and .since * that time (September 24th) the New, 1 York Journal of Commerce lias re-! | plied that business lias passes! the < | turning point nn I has started upon. the upgrade; the indications of such j a trend .ire unmistakable." But what, are these indications? First, perhaps, comes the net operating income of, the country's largest railroads for August, which marked the best showing that they have made in more than a year. The total is estimated to be $90,000,000, as against .$69,000,000 in July. In July of lust year, it is point- ; ed out, there was a deficit of $J 1,000,< 000. Railroad business is barometric j because it consists in hauling the j products of other businesses. "This ! showing is considered a hopeful sign i in the period of general industrial de- | pression," writes the New York Times's Washington correspondent; "already many of the railroads have begun to increase their working forces in the repair and maintenance departments." Another item which encourages the railroads is the prospective gain of 40 per cent in the amount of perishable freight during the next three months over the corresponding period of 1020. "The significance of the latest cheerup news on the general business situation is that it presents facts rather than opinions," notes the Pittsburgh Chronicle-Telegraph. One of the most important of these, reports the New York Evening Post, is the reduction in unemployment, and the stiffening in iron and steel prices. Another very encouraging feature of the business | situation, writes B. C. Forbes in the 1 Philadelphia Public Ledger, is that "idle money is piling up so steadily that tne banks now have to seek out borrowers in order to find work for the funds." Business conditions in South America show unmistakable signs of recovery, says the Department of Commerce. In the woolen industries, we are told by the Spring' field Union, "the increase in the num her of employed over a year ,ago is 114 per cent." "Virtually all Libert,v bond issues advanced late in September to the highest price quoted in more than a year, the gains amount'{ . to $4 and $f> on each $100 for most issues, observes the New York : World. Work of organizing Furnian University graduates and former stu . dents in South Carolina into county * clubs is progressing rapidly undei 1 thea leadereship of tho alumni ..oc> rotary, I/. M. Glenn, form: r newspaper man, who vfllinciuished hi>- duties as morning editor of the Anderson Daily Mail August lit last, to render his services to his alma mater. I w \ I ON HARVESTING SWEET POTATOES Clenison College, Oct. 19.?At i v : j conference on sweet potatoes hekl V at Clemson College during the annual meeting of the Extension Sej/vice forces, growers of sweet potatoes Were advised that potatoes be dug if possible before frost; that they be stored iti curing houses; that banked potatoes:-do not make a commercial product and should be sold while green; and* that great care* should be taken in properly harvesting, grading and curing the cropto bo held for better spring prices. Attending the conference were T.. B. Young, president South Carolina sweet i'otato Association: Geo. F. Hoffmann, extension horticulturist: F. L. Harkey, agent in marketing; D. W. Watkins, assistant director Extension Service; and Roland Turner, agricultural agent Southern Railway. Relow are the recommen.d.ations made: 1. That it is the sense of the conference that potatoes should be dug before frost by all means. 2. That we encourage all parties who have potatoes to harvest and store sur^e. in curing houses wherever satisfactory houses are available, as we believe prices for well kept potatoes itext spring will be more profitable than to sell now. For those who can not carry potatoes in storage, we believe it would be best to mnrket their potatoes while green rather than bank them with the idea that they would have a commercial product to ship lat^r on. It is the sense of this conference that banked potatoes do not make a commercial product and ca.i not be marketed successfully at long distances, but can at best be a local proposition. 3. That groat care should be taken in pronerlv harvesting, grading, storing and preserving the present" crop of sweet potatoes, to bo carried until the soring senson, at whioh time it is believed thnt reasonably profitable prices ran l>e expected. o NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of the decree and judgment of the court made by his Honor, Frank B. Gary, presiding1 iudge in the case of Virginia-Carolina Chemical Comannv. a corporation. plaintiffs. vs. C. B. Dusenbury, Southern Life ?& Trust Co., a corporation. J. W. Holliday and Burroughs & Collins Companv, a corporation, defendants, and dated the 1st day of October. A. D. 1921, I, the undersigned W. L. Brvan, C. C. C. P. as special master, will sell at public auction to the highest bidder before the court house door at Conway, in Horry i < county, and state of South Carolina, during local hours of sale, on salosday in November next, it being the 7th day of said month, all and singular those certain lands situate in Horry county and described as follows to wit: All and singular that certain tract of land situate in Bucks township, in the county 4*f Horry* and state of South Carolina, and having the following courses and distances, metes and bounds, to wit: Beginning at a stake 3x0 on the public road leading to Conwav. S. O., and running thence N. 27* 31', W. 1461' to stake 3x0, thence S. 60* 30'. W. 1201' to ?take 3x0, thence N. 82* 45', W. 1353 to corner at pine 3xN, thence 1166' a ditch the line to a holly tree 3x0 and stako 3x0, thencn N. 10* 15', W. 1200' to st.nke 3\0. thcnce N. 45* 45', W. 1538* to corner at stump 3x0, thence N. 27*. E. 086' to three stakes 3x0, thence N. 44* 40', E. 2284 to stake 3x0. thence N. 84*, E. 1800' to strike 3xN by stump, thence S. 75* 15', E. 18J5 to corner at stake 3x0, thence S. 14*. W. 502' to pine 3x0, thence S. 27* 30*. E. 2581' to n stake 3x0, thence S. 6* 30', E. 2275' to cor' - * o a ii a n am ir? ner at suiko .5xu, inence o. o<s iu, : W. 998 to stake 3x0, thence S. 33*, j W. G9C>' to said road and thence the ; said rood to the beginning poijit, i bounded by lands J. W. Long, Harper j Estate, Benjamin Moore, W. F. Heard, j Lorrimore Hucks, Officer Thompson, ! Julius Thompson, lands of Brantpn and the said road. All of which more fully appears by blue print of the above described tract of land made by W. C. Pitts, C. E., dated November A. D. 1915, to which reference is hereby craved: The said lands containing seven hundred and sixty-six (766) acres as shown by said blue print, and was composed originally of various difPei'ent parcels: The said lands are covered by conveyances to me, the said C. B. Dusenbury, as follows: J. Warren Sing by his deed dated January 4, 1907, and Gilbert Potter by his deed dated December 8, 1892. Terms of sale cash. Purchaser to pay for papers. Conwav, S. CM October 8, 1921. W. L. BRYAN, Clerk of Court as Special Master. H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. o One of the lai'gAKt '^manufacturers ? of paint and roo^itig materials which I markets itft ,products direct to the user, haft, an. ,opening in this section Vfor a salesman. We awant a man who is well ancl / 1 ' ' * i i lavoraoiy Known ana wno enjoys the jconfidence of tho community. We | prefer a man who has had some selling experience, but this is not absolutely necessary. Wo have no "get-rich-quick" scheme, nor are we offering an opportunity to make a fortune over nij<ht. But we are offering; a chance to form a life-long connection wit'i a reliable manufacturer. And, furthermore, a chance to ".alee a larger income than tho averai; * mar. earns. With our long lino you can sell in winter as well as in summer. Write to The Tropical Paint & Oil Company, Cleveland, Ohio-?ltjpd.