The Chesterfield advertiser. [volume] (Chesterfield C.H., S.C.) 1884-1978, March 28, 1918, Image 2
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Buy Them And
Help Win The War
TOM SALE EVERYWHERE
The Chesterfield Advertiser
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
Subscription, $1.00 a year.
Entered as second-class matter at the
postoffice at Chesterfield, South
Carolina.
PAUL H. HEARN
Editor and Publisher.
ANSWERING THE KICKERS
It will interest and please the re'.a
tives and friends of our boys in
France to read this letter from a
chuplain who has been with the boys
"over there." He writes this letter
to the father of one of the boys who
is now in France. "I had the pleasure
of meeting and talking with your
son. He gave me your address that
I might write you. He is nicely located
and in fine health. He with
other soldier boys, has plenty to wear
and to eat and is safely sheltered.
Our government is doing everything
possible to safeguard the health am
morals of our boys in France, and
they are the beat cared-for soldiers
in the world."
Senator James, of Kentucky, who
read this letter, in the United States
Senate, made this comment:
"There the minister of God, the
good man who is working among
these boys, brings from France the
news to a Kentucky father that his
boy is with the soldiers of America
there, and that they are the bestcared-for
soldiers in the world."
In this same speech Senator James,
referring to the charge of inefficiency
in the administration, said: "The
United Suites Treasury, under its
Federal Reserve system stands as
unshakable and secure as the Rocky
Mountains do. Under the old system
a Wall Street rumor would throw the
Nution into a panic. Under this new
system a world's war does not shake
it."
ESCAPED THE HUNS
It is gratifying to know that Hon.
David R. Francis, the American Ambassador
to Russia, has been able to
get away from the Russian capital
before the Germans could get there.
Nothing would have pleased th Kaiser
better than to i.ave held for American
ambassador as a ransom for
some German prisoners in America.
Ambassador Francis was once governor
of Missouri and he was at the
head of the great exposition that was
held in St. Louis in 1904 to celebrate
t.oe one hundredth anniversary of the
Louisiana purchase.
A PLOT THAT FAILED
The uttempt of Mrs. Hirst und .1.
W. Cook to blackmail Mayor Asa G.
Candler, of Atlanta, proved a boomerang
to those miscreants. In the
woman's case the jury took twentyfive
minutes to tind a verdict of guilty.
The Judge sentenced her to the
State Farm for one year and to pay
a tine of $1,000. Cook was sentenced
to the chaingang for a year and to
pay a fine of $1,000.
Robert Pollock wrote in the last
century "Slander is the foulest whelp
of Sin." It is true now as when it
was written. If anything could add
to the baseness of slander it is the
effort to exiort money as the price
of silence. Mayor Candler did a pu' he
service when he went before th
grand jury and had the blackmailer
indicted.
Mr. A. M. Warden, of Tullithoma,
Tennessee, advises Southern farmers
? > raise Angora floats. He claims
th?t they are very docile, he never
Lfiew a vicious one and they are very
valuable on account of the quality
of their fleeces. He says the fleeces
vary from one to twenty pounds each
and sell from 35 cents per pound up
to several dollars according to the 1
quality. Mohair from the Angora is 1
made into fine dress goods and the 1
average price is $1.00 per pound and
the demand is unlimited. <
That is a case where it pays to "get i
your goat." 1
- t
Some queer things happen even in <
the high courts sometimes. Here is i
a case in point. A man in Georgia 1
hud one hundred bales of cotton of
the 1014 crop that he was enjoinod t
from selling. The cotton was tied up 1
and the case finally decided in the i
supreme court showed an advance in I
the price of cotton from fi to 30 odd i
cents. This is an instance where a 1
man lost his case and gained $10,000 t
la the operation. <
A STORY WITH A THRILL
Few stories of noble self-sacrifice
ire better known than that of Faher
Damien, the Belgian priest who
rave his life for the lepers of Molotai.
The hearts of thousands and
.ens of thousands have been touched .
>y it. Less well known is the story
>f him who took Father Damien's J
jiace; yet 11 too is one or ine goiuen
records of humanity.
When, after twelve years with the ;
lepers, Father Damien was stric'en
with the fearful malady, there wns
a man, who at that time lived in
Memphis, who read of Damien and
determined to go to Molokai and take j
his place.- His name was Joseph Dut-;
ton. He went to the leper settlement
as a lay missionary, became the.
trusted friend and assistant of Fa- ]
ther Damien, administered his es- |
tate when he was pone, and has continued
up to this day to labor in the
great work which he began. From
him there comes a message, told only
as an item of personal interest in a
letter to a former friend in Memphis
but a message which can scarcely fail
to thrill all who hear it.
Father Damien was born in the
tragic city of Louvain. Brother Joseph
is a native of Vermont but h:s
parents, when ho was four years old,
moved to west to Wisconsin and he
grew up with that State, enlisting as
a private at the outbreak of the War
Between the States and serving
throughout the conflict, rising to a
captaincy before its close. After
the war he was in Government service
for a time and then lived in
Memphis where, we are told, "he had
many friends." He has Leen at Molokai
for thirty-seven years, over
twice as long as Father Damien served,
he is at seventy-throe one of the
lepers for whom he has labored. He
can never leave Molokai, the war
can never touch those about him, yet
jhe keeps the Stars and Stripes flying
over the leper colony and his
letters to his friends in Memphis tell
of the anxiety w:.th which he is following
the ebb and flow of the great
Wur. Here is the paragraph of which
we spoke above, taken from a letter
dated February 14, 1'J18:
"And so here we are?all the world
in a big war, all in fact being affected
by it. So far away, we are
busy with it over here. Even our
lepers have bought some $3,000
worth of Thrift Stamps?the money
earned chiefly by those able to work
some yet."
Brother Poseph did not know that
his letter was going to be printed.
The lepers of Molokai did not know
| that what they did would berome
known to anyone except themselves.
They simply wanted to help. What
I chey did know, as the Memphis Com
mercial Appeal reminds us, was "the
value and the valuelessness of money."
They know too, as few can
know so truly, the meaning of freedom.
The story of what the lepers of Molokai
are doing to help win the war
for freedom ought to be read by every
man and every woman who has not
yet been able to find means and a
way to serve.?The Charleston News
and Courier.
In the new school opened at Roeheater,
N. Y., to train phatagraphers for
the Signal corps, the primary training
will cover four weeks along highly
specialized developments brought
out In the war. At Its close the successful
graduates will be sent on for
a month's advanced training, after
which they will he organized Into units
and sent overseas.
Men with the highest grades will he
vt-ii hum iiiriuer i nuning ror commissions
a? photographic intelligence officers,
first lit ii school and then In actual
flights at ihe flying fields.
ImiHiik the month of Jununry $11,787,517
were paid out to farmers of
the United States by the federal land
bunks on long-time first-mortgage
lonns, according to a statement by the
federal farm loan hoard.
On February 1 the total amount of
money paid out to farmers since the
establishment of the federal land
banks was $50,782,432, covering 24,020
lonns closed. The total amount of
loans applied for up to February 1
was $200,556.801, representing 112,140
applications.
Near beer und temperance drinks
coming within the designation of malt
liquor are Included In the President's
proclamation II ulflng brewers of beer
to 7b per cent of the amounts of grains
and other fond materials that were
used last year.
Massachusetts and Michigan chapters
of the IhtugKWa of the Revolution
ure establishing "mending rooms"
in cantonments. These departments
are opewcd for hospitals, where hundreds
of garments are mended each
week.
t
UGH! CALOMEL MAKES
YOU DEATHLY SICK
Stop using dangerous drug boforo
it tslirstsi jrou! It's horrible I
You're bilious, sluggish, constipated
and believe you need vile, dangerous
calomel to start your liver
ind clean your bowels. |
Here's my guarantee! Ask your
iruggist for a bottle of Dodson's Li-j
rer Tone and take a spoonful tonight. |
if it doesn't start your liver and'
itraighten you right up better than
:alomel and without griping or makng
you sick I want you to go back to
the store and get your money.
Take calomel and tomorrow you
will feel weak and sick and nauseatd.
Don't lose a day's work. Take a
ipoonful of harmless, vegetable Dod- ,
ton's Liver Tone tcnight and wake up
'eeling great. It's perfectly harmess,
so give it to your children any
ime. It can't salivate, so let them I
at anything afterwards. Adv. S. j
paenv WV-* "V " HT'T T?C."."1?TTT~ ?.MTil
OBBeBBBaBBSEBBEBBBMBBBgaBEaBH
LIEUT. THORN WELL SOWELL
HAS CROSSED THE OCEAN
The following interesting letter
from Lieut. Thornwell Sowell was recently
received by his father, Mr. R.
D. Sowell.
Moultrieville, S. C., March 9, 1918
My dear father:
No doubt you are thinking I have
forgotten home entirely. If this is
the case I wish to relieve you of that
impression. I have by no means for-|
gotten you nor one member of the
family. It was to my own sorrow
that duty caused me to remain s.lent.
I have just returned from across the
deep blue and to-night I am happy.
With 3,300 troops aboard the ship
not one seemed to realize or fear the
danger we were in, while coming
through the submarine zone. We
hailed from New York on of
January and landed in a European
port near the first of February.
Dad, I sure hated to say good-bye
to so many noble American brothers
at one time. I had rather gone to
the trenches with them. But someone
more capable of seeing the position
I was neoded in worse, ordered
me back to America. I went over
with the responsibility of all the lives
of so many noble men depending en'
tirely upon the previous militaiy
training I have had. I was gun commander
on one of the desperate
j weapons we use in defence in a submarine
attack. I was somewhit
nervous but not afraid. I can whip
a dirty German on land or sea. 1
am the least bit disappointed that I
did not get a chance at them. Not
once did I see a sign of a sub.
Though regardless of my disappointment
I feel honored with the confidence
my comrades had in me.
Dad, you know life is very sweet.
But I am willing to sacrifice it rather
than have such a thing happen in
America as the massacre of Belgium.
A beautiful Belgian girl told me a
story while in London that caused my
blood to ulmost run cold. She told
me how the German curs approached
her home and completely destroyed
it. She said one old German stabbed
a bayonet through her four-year-ol.l
sister and nailed her upon the door
of the house.
Dad, you know that's not human.
Would I want the honor of your son
if I could have the heart to refuse
to do my bit in preventing this happening
in my home? No, indeed. A
thousand times no! If I be killed,
just feel honored that your son died
for you and his country. They have
got to murder me before they do you.
You know that cur (the k&iser)
thinks he has a divine right to curry
on this way. He can have his beliefs.
But we are going to show him
that his wooden god is not real. Wt
have got to come together as one
and destroy that brutal military
power. His doctrine cannot live.
, It's beyond reason. The brutality ol
the Germans is more baraharous than
that of ancient Rome. Don't worry,
dad, we will get them.
I am in school now, studying wire
less telegraphy. I think I will like il
fine. We have a small radio station
here. If I finish here soon I will continue
my course in Monroe, Va.
Papa, I have taken $10,000.00 insurance
and made the policy to you
This policy has been running twc
months. In case I die you do r.ol
get the $10,000 all at once. You
will receive $57.55 per month until
the amount has been taken up, plus
4 per cent. I will let you know when
I leave for France and you can watch
the death list. Immediately after my
death you place the matter in the
hands of an attorney at law, so the
payments will begin at once.
Make everyone in the family wri.t
to me.
As for myself, dad, I am in good
health. You should see me now. 1
know you would be as proud of me as
I am. 1 weigh 11)4.
Regards to all and much love tc
you and Aunt H.
Your devoted son in uniform,
THORNWELL
According to an announcement by
the war trade board special license
has been Issued covering shipments
made by persons In the United States
to. and for the personal use of, Individuals
serving In the United Htates army
or navy or the American Red Cross
abroad.
This license does not permit shipments
by persons In this country to
American prisoners of war. but has
been Issued to facilitate small personal
shipments to soldiers and sailors and
Red Cross workers by doing away
with the necessity of securing an Individual
export license In each case.
Hhlpments by mall under thla license
must be made In accordance with the
regulations of the poet office department.
If It becoraea necessary later
to limit this license to certain specified
commodities notice will be given
through the press.
^ The United 8tatea rifle, model of
1017, commonly called the modified
Enfield, haa now been tested In the
I service of the Army a sufficient time
I to warrant the assertion that it more
than Justifies the claims mada for It,
according to a statement jmthortsed
| by the secretary of war.
The new rifle takes a 80-caliber cartridge,
which haa the advantage over
me nnmn Hnnein or MlDf rlmlMi.
ft hat b??i found that unless rim car*
trid|M are fed through tha magaatne
uniformly with tha rim of tha top
cartridge ahead of tha rim of the one
Immediately below, jama are likely to
occur.
The model of 1017 haa an orer-all
length of 46JI Inches; a total weight i
Including oiler and thong case and
bayonet of tan pounds and flea ounces,
Tha krfaah mathaalam la of tha holt
tft*
mil same pays i
his income tax
By ROBERT MoBLAIR.
Mr. Slmpklns gazed at the portrait
oa the wall till his eyes filled with
tears. It was a portrait of his father.
Colonel 81mpkln^ who had four times
been promoted for valor daring the
Civil War and had died bravely on the
field of action. Mr. Slmpklns* throat
ached now for two reasons: First, he 1
reverenced and adored the memory of
I his father; secondly, his age and his j
I eyes and his game leg wouldn't let him
go ro war himself. And as he observed
the martial bearing and uncompromising
gaze of Colonel Slmpklns he saw,
in Imagination, the khaki clad lads of
the new generation marching forth and
crossing three thousand miles of sea to
ngni, mayoe uie, ror iiDerxy.
' Mr. Slmpklns peered around to make
aure that neither Besa nor John (who
were at the teaalng ages of alxteen
and seventeen) were where they could
aee him, then he atratghtened and
1 threw hla right arm up for a salute.
But hla gouty'shoulder twinged, and he
groaned. He couldn't even aalute.
"Damn!" said Mr. Slmpklns. and
I with his other hand fiercely twirled his
| white muatachlos.
I He turned and limped Into the library
and sat down creaklly before the
mahogany desk on which were lying
the blanks for his Income tax statement.
blanks which he had rather
grumpily got from the Internal Revenue
officer only that day after luncheon
on his way home from the club.
Mr. Slmpklns* Income for 1917 had
amounted to Just about $15,000, and he
had been rather snappy on the subject
of taxes ever since he had discovered
that the more Income a man tins
the greater the percentage of It he
pays in taxes. He could think of several
me^who, like himself, were married
and had two children, and yet,
although their Incomes were nearly
half of his, they would pAy only a
small fraction of the amount he paid.
He gloomily drew the blank nearer
and began filling In the Information
that It asked for.
As Mr. Slmpklns' Income was $15,000
he had to figure out the amounts payable
on each of the successive smaller,
classes of Incomes In order to arrive
at the total due from himself. He
passed over the first class who must
pay taxes, thnt is, single men making
over 1,000. His calculation for mar
rled men then showed up as follows:
First, they pay 2 per cent, (under
the 1910 law) on all Income over
$4,000, deducting $200 for each of their
children under eighteen years. In Mr.
Slmpklns' case this was $212, which he
put down In the "payable" column.
He saw next that, under the 1917
law, married men pay an additional 2
per cent, on all over $2,000?with the
same allowance for children. This
added $252 to his "payable" column.
He then observed that for every
$2,500 Jump In his Income over $5,000
he had to pay a Surtax, the percentage
growing larger with each Jump. Tkls
1 was $250 more added to his burden.
!, And on top of all this came an "Excess
Profits" tax of 8 per cent, on all
r "occupation" Income over XflOOO mik.
lng $720 more,
p The total, then, he must par wu fourteen
hundred and thirty-four dollar*.
"Whew !" exclaimed Mr. Slmpklna
angrily. "There'* young Henry Wlllclna,
who married Jake Johnson's girl,
he makes $2,000 and he doesn't pay a
> I cent, of taxes. I guess this la his war
i as well as mine f"
Thinking of young Henry Wllklns,
he remembered that Mrs. Wllklns went
. l every afternoon to make bandages for
| the Red Cross and that Henry, who
' ; was a lawyer, was aiding the Local
' Draft Board with Its questionnaires.
"Well," be admitted to himself,
1 "rhat makes a difference."
> He thought next of Judge Wllloughi
by. whose Income was about $3,000.
i "lie only pays $20," commented Mr.
, Hlinpktns, not quite so angrily this
time; and then a thought struck him
and he aat up rigidly In his chair.
Judge Wllloughby's son had been
drowned on the Tuscanla when It was
submarined with the loss of two hun:
dred soldiers.
"Judge Wtlloughhy gave his son to
1 America," muttered Mr. Sltnpklns.
He leaned forwnrd suddenly and put
, his face In his hands.
For a long time Mr. Slmpklna sat
very still In that position. There was
no sound In the library except the
ticking of the tall clock and an occasional
trill of laughter from the chlldren
skylarking upstairs. The square
of light on the carpet gradually withdrew
Itself through the window, and
flrat ?n/lll?kl *?il -*
..... ..... iiivfi imikucu muito
in about th? quiet, white haired, sometimes
irascible old man.
Mr. 8impklns was thinking things
which he would never afterward speak
of. he was thinking things that were
too sacred ever to be put Into words.
But some inkling of his thoughts may
be found In his rejoinder to Mrs.
Stmpklns when that placid lady came
In and turned on the lights, and asked
him whether he was ready for dinner.
"Judge Wllloughby's only soiv was
worth as much as fourteen hundred
and thirty-four dollars, wasn't het"
Mr. Hlmpklns demanded of her.
As his wife, who was not ua used te
bis superficial Irritations, watched hha
In mild astonishment, Mr. Blmpkla*
limped out to the hall and took his
old felt hat and silver-headed?eane
from the hat rack. I>ettlng himself out
Into the foggy evening, he tapped his
way down to the corner, and mailed his
| income tax statement and check With
his own hanua.
"Now, God he thanked," aaid Mr.
HlmfiUlne aa the tld clanked shut over
Ida missive, "I cnn do this mock fee
in/ country, anyhow."
Two colored women were talking.
Said one prondly:
"My husban' ain't been arrested
now far goip' on twenty-five yeahs."
"Yessum," said the second. "Well,
mine's in for life, too!"
No. 666
This is a prescription prepared aepeeiatty
tor MALA W lA^CH IL^? A FIVKR.
If taken tkmrn a toak As KmrefH awl
refer*. h Mb an la Hear haMss than
PERUNA in Y
A housewife must give the fli
idler ailments. Her promptness in
Mvee a serious iHness. Her experie
her to know that PERUNA is ahraj
have It on hand for the immediate
coMe? and that it Is always to her
raoaln our fuaiify
JmrlmltrVrf' fof 8 nuuibci oi
- MW yea'"' a..'l tiuve
'n"'111B' rfr"'
wliaOii i "'?< ue
Wol? ??aariott? l>'r~
N had not been yery eertous'umil wwniljl
Since I Bare taken Pa rasa the drop pint in my
throat has discontinued, and my head and nowafa
not aa stopped up la the morning. I am
pie as id with the results, and shall continue to
use h until 1 am entirely rid of catarrh.
"I heartily recommend It aa aa booast medicine."
What It Mas for her it is ready to do (or you.
Colds and Cats
The great weight of testimon;
lated in the 44 years that PER UN/
market proves it, beyond question, to be tl
edy, ever ready to take, preventing the a
coughs, grip and derangements of the di
proof is published from time to time and
profited by it.
us fill yea tee ehtaie KRUNA la t.Urt fwa fa
odfi ysa ead he ferttfied aeaiaat taddee sttxhs.
The Psruns C ocnpany, CoIud
j HURSEY B1
I The Cash
I Barred
Foundation Stock TIi
You Can Get Eggs Fn
\
Florence, S. C., Not. 6-9. Poo D<
eeftibition Pen, let Cockerel n
I
Florence, S. C., Dec. 26-29. let n
end 2nd Cockerel bred Pullete,
hibition Hen, 2nd Cockerel bre
pion Pen.
B. C.
Bamrockburi
i
*- - - ?
Young Man,
Scatter Yo
TOOTH IB NLODIOAL.
mvw iu VHlL.UA or A DOLLAK.
YOUTH IS HOT KYZHLASTpfO.
tti fiuUatln for tMr 101? ky ?ye
Iff You Hope ffo A if) our
Delay Starting a Bank Ac
Start It Today,
k The FARME1
our Home
-at aid in colds, coughs and
applying the remedy often *
nee with remedies has led
irs reliable, that she should
treatment of coughs and
The Family
Safeguard
The experience of one i
woman, given herewith, is
typical of thousands of letters
that reach the Peruna i
Ilf You Are In
90-Day Seed Oat?
Good 15 per Cent. M
Good Horse Feed
No. 1 Timothy Hay, 1
IUr Anythinf bite in Hear
We Han
I We are running a CASH
will keep what you need at all
I .C Us B 4
I Hursey E
I THE CASH
EggsForF
FROM MY HIC
n i
kAiuipaiij tiuiu ^ ( aictu i
friends who have found then
homes incomKlete,
and their _
imily safety in
danger without r(l\Vi
PERUNA. f\ 'JVV,
Lrrh r
y that has accumu-1 V
L has been on the (
ie reliable family remerious
effects of col<l3, i'WnJS']
Igestive organs. This r^wj
1 many families have ? ivj. - "wl
'f?Qr\
r y.ar miplari Carry ft y 1
ibui, Ohio V ^
ROS. CO.
Store
Need Of
ill Feed
reed Oats
y and Fancy Groceries
pe It
BUSINESS this year and
times.
U Buy
Iros. Co.
STORE
latching
iH CLASS
Kocks
iompson Ringlets
om These Winnings
h Fair, 1st Cock, 1st Hob, lsl
lating.
ad 3rd Coclcorol Matiag, 1st
, 1st oxhibltioa Fallot, 4tk ox.
d Hoa, Chaaspioa Malo, CkamJRKER
n, S. Go
5^^
Don't
ur Dollars
illy Hm jnif mu D0KS1
Tki Mff mam at th? aammfm 1.
?iaf a toak teomt wk*a ft
it to Anything Doe
couti
US* BANK
/THINKS TANLAC SAVED
(HER FROM HOSPITAL
"
ONCE AFRAID TO EAT BECAUSE fe
OF SUFFERING WHICH
FOLLOWED
GAINED 15 POUNDS
Instead of Living on Broad and Water
Dial Ska Now Eats Hoartiljr.
"I whs so afraid to eat because of
the suffering food caused me, that I
v>ori Kaon livinir almost on bread and
water when I heard what a wonderful
new medicine called Tanlac was
doing for others. And just think of
it, I have been saved from the hospital
and have gained 15 pounds."
This was the earnest declaration of
Mrs. Edwin C. Shell, of 6 Main Ave.,
Schenectady, N. Y., that shows the
wonderful record this new reconstructive
tonic, system purifier and
stomachic is making. ,
"What a blessing Tanlac has been
to me," Mrs. Shell continued and her
words have been echoed by thou- \
sands of other men and women. "For v
more than three years," said Mrs.
Shell, who is the wife -of a wellknown
business man, "I suffered.
When I tried to eat ordinary food it
would not digest but would sour and
ferment and cause gas, bloating and
pains. The pains would extend even
to my chest and I would have a feeling
of suffocation and shortness of
breath. Some nights I would get
only two or three hours sleep. When
the stifling spells came I would have
to sit up. When I tried to do housework
I would have to sit and rest
every little while. I was losing flesh
and strength every day and, Oh, how
miserable I was. M
"After I had taken the Tanlac
treatment I did not have a bit more ^^1
trouble with my stomach?not even
indigestion. I could eat anything.
I slept fine and always felt good. I
did not tire out after my work and
I could even do my washing. With
good digestion and fine sleep I began
to build up right away and was not
surprised when I began to gain in
weight. Finally I gained 16 pounds.
I am glad to tell everyone about Tanlac."
Tanlac, the Master Medicine, is sold
by The Chesterfield Drug Co., Ches1
terfield, S. C.; T. E. Wanamaker A
Sons, Cheraw; Mt. Croghan Drug Co.,
Mt. Croghan, S. C.; McBee Drug Co.,
McBee, S. C.; Pageland Drug Co.,
Pageland, S. C.; J. T. Jowers & Sons,
Jefferson, S. C. Adv.
TAX SALES
Under and by virtue of authority
contained in Executions issued by W.
A. Douglass, County Treasurer and
directed to me I have levied upon
and taken exclusive possession of thS
following real estate to wit:
583 acres in Aligator township,
known as N. M. Johnson land.
mi it> iou in Mctfee, known as Mrs.
Lula E. Creighton lots.
6 lots in McBee, known as John
m . Putman lots.
i ' 100 acres in Alligator township,
known as M. C. and C. E. Shaw land.
One lot in Cheraw, known as Edgar
Allen lot.
83 acres of land in Center Point
1 school district known as Mary E. Ca|
toe land.
One lot in Jefferson, known as J.
j P. Gurganus lot.
I 511 acres and 6 lots in Alligator
township, known as W. A. McQueen
oetate.
36 acres in Lewis school district, A
known as J. C. Howell land.
55 acres in Lewis school district,
known as W. A. Griggs land.
100 acres in Lewis school district,
; known as J. D. Jordan land.
35 acres in Cat Pond school district,
known as A. B. Boan land.
150 nrrii in Oinl... ?1
... wU.IILJ mnuui uikincif
known as M. E. Grooms land.
170 acres ni Ousley school district,
known as D. L. Seegars land.
180 acres in Ousley school district,
known as Willie Johnson land.
2 lots in Patrick, known as J. B.
Highland lots.
88 acres in Sandy .'.un school disI
trict, known as W. J. A. McDonald
| land.
80 acres in Sandy Run school district,
known as Gilliam King land.
432 acres in Wallace school district
known as Mrs. L. Hopkins land.
f,ft arroi > * W-"-? -* " -
... i> iibte miooi district,
" ^ known as Mrs. Annie Jones land.
== And will sell the same for caah to
the highest bidder before the Court*
house door at Chesterfield between
i the legal hours of sale on the first
r Monday in April, 1918.
* March 13, 1918 D.P.DOUGLAS8,
Sheriff.
DR. L. H. TROTT1,
Dental Surgeon
" Chesterfield, 8. C.
Office on second floor in Ross
Building.
All who desire my services wifi
please see me at Chesterfield, as I
B have discontinued my visits to other
i ? towns.
>
DR. R. L. Me MAN US
Dentist
Office over Bank of Chesterfield.
Will visit Pagsland every Tuesday!
^ Mt Croghan every Wednesday,
igy Other days in Chestsrfisld.
Prices reasonable. All Work guar
antssd.
|*| MANNA A HUNLKT
?Attorney*? W
K. E. Henna, C. L. Hanlsy,
Cberaw. Chest srfisld
Offices:
reifies* Bank Bid*, Chsstasfisld
Bank of Chsvaw Bid*, ONwt
.At- ?jjIIi