The Chesterfield advertiser. [volume] (Chesterfield C.H., S.C.) 1884-1978, August 22, 1918, Image 3

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I AMERICANS A r UMTIJJI .Must Use No More , Per Person a Moi Meagre Allied . Is Man Stock* Will Be Short I Y.? D.*: ? ?? ?ivauuii may n ;? ________ ' _ Tw? powdi of soger a month?half p*as4 a wook?that la tho sugar ratios tfeo 0. k Food Administration has asksd ovary American to obaerv# aatll January l? till, in order to make ears there ahall bo enough for our Army and Navy, for the Allied armies m and for the civilians of thooo nations. By Maw Tear's the world sugar sitae i loo will bo tailored somewhat by the aew crop. Cuban a agar of this ytar's crop will bo arriving la thla country. Every available sagar source will be drawn oa by the Pood Administration daring tbo next winter mentha to maintain rafllcleat stocks karo to keep np oar national soger supply. During October the drat Amerlron - wUI irrlTt In the markets. By the middle ef November seme of our Lou#talsna esse erop will be available. All ef this sagmr and mere may be needed to keep this nation supplied on a reduced ratios and to safeguard tbe Allied sagas ration frecn still further WOMEN TORTURED I Suffer Terribly With Coras Because of High Heels, but Why Care Nob. v I Women wear high heels which buc-! ' kle up their toea and they suffer terribly from corns. Women then proceed to trim these pests, seeking relief, but they harddly realize the terrible danger from infection, says a Cincinnati authority. I Corns can easily h? lifted out with the fingers if you will get from any drug store a quarter of an ounce of a drug called freezone. This is sufficient to remove every hard or soft corn or callus on one's feet. You simply apply a few drops directly upon the tender, aching corn or callus The soreness is relieved at once an * won the entire com or callus, root end all, lifts out with out one particle of pein. This freezone is a sticky substance which dries in a moment. It just shrivels up the com without inflaming or even irritating the surrounding tiastt* nr bit. T-U -I --- - WW v* / U iU OTMV BUUUl tliif. Adv. 3. RAINBOW DIVISION WARMLY PRAISED Washington, Aug. 16.- The Rainbow (Forty-second Division) Division particularly distinguished itself in the fighting east of Rheims, July 15-1( when the German offensive was launched on both sides of that city only to be stopped and the Germans L later driven out of the whole Aisnew Marne pocket. A general order isaued by General Naulin commanding the Twenty-first army corps to which the American division was attached in the French Fourth army under Gene-si Gouraud commends the Fortysecond for its valor ardor and its spirit, in the course of the battle when the Fourth army broke the German offensive on the Champagne. The text of the oljjer issued July 20 when the Forty-second was leaving to Join the first army, American corps, in the drive to the Vesle was made public today by the war department as follows: "At the moment when the fortysecond American Division is on the point of leaving the Twentyfirst army corps. I desire to express my keen satisfaction and my sincere thanks for the services which it has rendered under all conditions. "By its valor, ardor and its spirit it has very particularly distinguished itself on July 15 and 16 in the course of the great battle where the Fourth army broke the German offensive on the Champagne front. "I am proud to have had it under my orders during this period; my prayers accompany it in the great struggle engaged in for the liberty of the world." ALL HONOR TO HIM WHO DELlV. ERS THE GOODS, HE'S THE ; MAN OF THE HOUR A preparation that gives results, delivers the goods, restores your heslth, is the one you need in the hour that old disease comes knocking at ypur door. L-Rheumo cures rheumatism and gout, that's why those who suffer from this or kindred ails should take L-Rheumo. It's a re juvlnating, eliminant, laxative. Its use iniurea success. Don't listen to druggist who offer you something else, you know the reason, if you don't ask us. Guaranteed, price 91. For sale by Chesterfield Drug Co., Chesterfield, 8. C.; J. T. Jowers A Son, Jefferson, 8.C. ;MorvenDrug Co., Morven, N. C. or send us $1.00 and get a bottle post paid. ChapmanAlexander Labratoriea, Greenville, 8.' 0. Adv. iSKED TO SE OF SUGAI i Than Two Pound nth if the Present I Sugar Ration lt&ined. Jntil Beginning of Nei Be Enlarged Then. redaction. In fCurope the present l tloa Is already reduced to n mlnlman Our Situation. The situation which the Unit 8tatea faces Id Its efforts to malnta n fair distribution of sugar to the i lied world la as follows: Sugar supplies throughout the oeu try. In homes, stores, factories ai bakeries era at a lew ebb. We mu make Increased sugar shipments to tl Allies. Production of Amerloan beet ai Louisiana cane crops have been diss pointing. Ports Rloo crepe have been ct I tailed. Immense sugar stocks In Java ca not be reached en account of the eh I ping shortage; ships are needed f troop movements and munitions. Army and Navy sugar requlromofi have Increased as well as those fr? the Allies. Most Industries using sugar have hi their allotment reduced by one-bal some will receive no sugar. Households should make every < fort to preserve the fruit crop wltho sugar, or with small amounts of sugi Later, when the sugar supply Is lai sr. the canned fruit may be sweeten aa It Is used. DEEP-WATER SALVAGE There are three ways of circur venting the sea wolf. One is to sir him on sight; another is to build shi; faster than he can destroy; a third i raise the vessels he has sent to tl bottom and put them again into se vice. All these mothods are being er ployed to defeat the submarine car paign, and the last named is mat possible by the tremendous impeti which the war has given to the art < salvage. Little as we have heard < the feats now being performed und< this rubric, the sum of them up I date makes an important and" not worthy chapter in the four-year re< ord just about to close. Before August, 1914, you could m plumb the salt seas with any chan< >f raising a vessel that had carri< lown with it a cargo of more than 1 100 tons. Today you can get yoi vire lifting-ropes around a ship thi las 3,500 tons of freights in its ho ind swing it sheer up to the surfac Formerly wrecks were cleared of wi .er with the ordinary ccntrifug pump, which had a lift of no moi .han thirty-two feet; the introducti< of the submersible electric pump no makes it possible to work effective at far greater depth. Germany's a tack upon the world's shipping h. led to various other new types i salvage machinery, including tank d vices and better equipments for tl diver. In the old days a perishab cargo gave otr gases injurious to tl worker and sometimes fatal in the effects. The recent discovery of t inti-toxic eleminates this danger, ar the salvage men are able to proce* just as soon as the cargo has bet sprayed with the preparation. Private enterprise used to be r lied on for floating submerged ship (n Kngland the Admiralty salvai :orps now performs this duty as branch of the British war servic Mot many years ago salvage won i hief title to fame by raising su merged bullion. Those were the da when Alexander Lambert recover {350,000 worth of treasure from tl wreck of the Alphonso XII of tl Cannries, and when a companion di r finished the job by bringing i {100,000 more. A Spaniard obtai ed $50,000 worth of silver bars fro he wreck of the Skyro in more thi 170 feet of water off the boistero :oast of Spain. Add also to the nance of salvage the $200,000 secu jd from the Hamilla Mitchell, wrec ed near Shanghai; the $750,000 specie recovered irom the Uceer inti the ?i,uCC.^00 salved in bul!i< from the Malabar. Today, with the mightiest aalvai quipment ever accumulated, the A niralty corps is spending ita energi >n submerged merchantmen, and ntent on recovering both cargo ai hip. It salved 260 vessels in 191 7, most of them over 1,200 tor luring the present year, up to tl 19th of May, is has recovered 4< thips and their valuable cargoes lome waters alone. Its latest achiev tent has been the lifting of a 1 ;00-ton vessel, which had also fall a victim to submarine attacks. T ?hip was pumped out and floated, ai today almost ready to resume I dace in the British merchant fle< lest of all, its precious cargo of too duffs, worth $16,000,000, was "ve argely salved" and has already goi as stiffening into "the sinews of wai Slawiai Daws, Owing to the unexpected prolon I ng of the war, Arnold Bennett, i I jnderstand, will publish a no> monthly instaad of every fortnigl as heretofore.?Rochester Post E ptm. I HOW COLE L. BLEASE ADDRESSED THE NEGROES ^ It is well known that in October of f 1916 ex-Gov. Cole L. Blease addressed an assemblage of negroes at Allen University. No blame could attach , to any white man because of addres<S sing the colored people. But a speech under such conditions could be reprehensible. We reproduce the speech of Mr. Blease, delivered on October 1th, 1916, as published in the Samaritan Herald, a negro paper. Readers can decide for themselves what was the mind of Mr. Blease when he made that speech. Allen University opened last Wednesday with about 400 students. Dr. B. \7. Mance, the new president seemed to know his business as though he were a whole term. We as trustees were hospitably entertuined with wh it the appetite could bear. Bishop W. D. Chappelle, the new bishop, knrfws his business, and performs his duty like u hero. He is his own diB# ctator. Ex-Governer Blease was nd present, and was introduced by the i*t Bishop, who prefaced us follows: h? Mr. President and board of trustees: I feel that we are complimented to have one of the strongest white men in South Carolina in the person ir. of ex-Gov. Cole L. Blease, to speak to these people, I watched in- carefully the record of all the Govornnors, and decided on er-Gov. Blease. , r We want the friendship of our white people. 1 want money. I am going m to ask him for it to help lift our peopeople. I don't believe that Cole. L. sd Blease will insult my wife, or no j If; other colored lady any more than he would like for any one to insult his wife or any of their white ladies. lit The Bishop now introduced Colonel .g. Blease, Who rose anil said in part: 0 Mr. President and members of the Fuculty and my friends: I want to _ congratulate you having such an able Christain gentleman as your president if his face is black. I have bnwn him from his boyhood and always thought he would make a groat mun. ^ I would trust my daughter in his hands us well as you are trusting to 1 yours. They said that I am ugainst 116 ; the negro. Nay, I am a friend of the r" negro. You are robbed out of your n" rights by the unjust laws of this state n" How will the judges and juriors stand before Clod who will take advantage of a powerless race? What ki.id of a law has this state that' will not allow a negro representation on the jury or prohibit him of his rights in any way. If this state would give you all of the money j c" from the tax paid by your people I you would have better schools and no longer terms. I am not ugainst :c' educating the negro, but only wanted the taxes of each race set aside for " its intermediate purpose. Yes this ,r state is rotten. They're robbing you out of your rights but there's a God above that will bring them into judge* ment. I have never insulted a colored B" woman. The man that would insult a' a woman is worse than the darkest re cloud that ever held over the firma>n ment. Girls and boys your character w is what God gave you, and can never be taken awuy. But your reputation is what you make it and what BS the world says of you. If justice was given me 1 would have been your e* Governer to-day. But it is white ie people that is stealing. 'e (Line dropped out ) ie some years ago and political thieves, hilt thn n??"i in nun UUt UI llt in and who is now doin^ the stealin?f? I am a Methodist and will never leave my church but I do not attend n because thieves and robbers are at the communion tuble and 1 am not e* going to associate with them. What ,S- is the use for jails penitentiaries chain gangs and the church too. If all of a the leaders of the people were rlghtc' eous there would not be any use for prisoners, for the leaders of the peopie have caused theig to err. y? String Beam for Breakfast. L. We wish Mr. Hoover would hurry back from London so we could ask v* him as man to man whether it is neeessary in order to win the war that we n" hould have string beans for breakfast m merely because there is a surplus in in our garden.?Grand Rapids I'ress. us _ t KEPT HER AWAKE in Tkt Terrible Pains b Back and Sides. Cardni Gave Relief. d_ MsrksviUe, La.?Mrs. Alice Johnson, eH of this place, writes: "For one year I in suffered with an awful misery in my back ld and sides. My left side was hurting me 5 all the time. The misery was something awful. , ' I could not do anything, not even sleep at night. It kept me awake most of the night... I took different medicines, but n nothing did me any good or relieved me *" until 1 took Cardul. .. I was not able to do any of my work for one year and I got worse all the time, he was confined to my bed off and on. I got so bad with my back that when I stooped its 60wn i was not able to straighten up " spin ... I decided I would try Cardui ... By time I had taken the entire bottle ry I waa feeling pretty good and could n* straighten up and my pains were nearly all gone. I shall always praise Cardui. 1 continued taking It until 1 was strong and ft- well." If you suffer from pains due to we female complaints, Cardui may be Just rel what you need. Thousands of women tit, who once suffered In this way now praise '.x- Cardui lor their present good health. Ofre U a trial. NC-1? # OUR SAVED FOOD FED TK ALLIES Food Administrator Writes President America Conserved 14V 000,000 Bushels Wheat CREDIT DUE TO WOMEN. Maat and Fat Shipment* Increased hgr 44,600,000 Pound*. Conservation meemirea Applied by the American people enabled the United States to ship to the Allied peoples and to our own forces overseas 141,000,000 bushels of wheat and ?44.000,000 pounds of meat durine the past . year, valued In all at $1,400,0001)00. ' This was accomplished In the face of a ; BfrlollK fvinH clmrt o on In *KI?s bespeaking tlie wholehedtrtedneas and patriotism with wblcb the American people have met the food crisis abroad. Food Administrator Hoover, Id a latter to President Wilson, explains how tbe situation was met. Tbe voluntary conservation program fostered by the Food Administration enabled tbe piling np of the millions of bushels of wheat during 1917-18 and the shipment of meat during 1917-18. The total value of all food shipments to Allied destinations amounted to $1,400,000,000. all this food being bought through or In collaboration with the Food Administration. These figures are all based on official reports and represent food exports for the harvest year that closed June 80, 1918. The shipments of meats and fats (Including moat products, dairy products. vegetable oils, etc.,) to Allied destinations were as follows: Fiscal year 1916-17... .2,160,000.000 lbs. Fiscal yeur 1917-18.. ..8.011,100,000 Iba Increase 844,600.000 Iba Our slaughternhle animals at tbe beginning of the last fiscal year were not appreciably larger than tbe year before and particularly In hogs; they were probably less. The Increase In shipments Is due to conservation and tbe extra weight of animals added by our farmers. The full effect of these efforts began to bear their best results In the last half of the fiscal year, when the exports to tbe Allies were 2,133,100,000 pounds, as against 1,266,000,000 pounds In tbe same period of the year before. This compares with an average of 801,000,000 pounds of total exports for tbe same half years In tbe three-year pre-war period. In cereals and cereal products re duced to terms of cereal bushels our shipments to Allied destinations have been : Fiscal year 1910-17..259.000,000 bushels Fiscal year 1917-18. .340,800,000 buabels Increase 80,000.000 buabels Of these cereals our shipments of the prime breodstuffs In the fiscal year 1017-18 to Allied destinations were: Wheat 131,000.000 bushels and of rye 18,900,000 bushels, a total af 144.900,000 bushels. The exports to Allied destinations during the fiscal year 1918-17 were: Wheat 135,100,000 bushels and rye t,300,000 bushels, a total of 137,400,000 bushels. In addition some 10,000,000 bushels of 1917 wheat are now In pert for Allied destinations or en route thereto. The total shipments to Allied countries from our last harvest of wheat will be therefore, about 141,000,000 bushels, or a total of 154,900,000 bushels of prime breadstaffs. In addition to this we have shipped some 10,000,000 bushels to neutrals dependent upon us, and we have received i some Imports from other quartern. | "This accomplishment of our people In this matter stands out even more clearly If we bear In mind that we had available In the fiscal year 1918-17 from net carry-over and as surplus over our normal consumption about 200,000,000 bushels of wheat which wa were able to export that year without trenching on our home loaf," Mr. Hoover said. "This last year, however, owing to the large failure of the 1917 , wheat crop, we had available from net carry-over and production and Imports only just about our normal consumption. Therefore our wheat shipments to Allied destinations represent ap IfiuAiiuaici; ia?iu(i iruui our OWB wheat broad. "These figures, however, do not fully convey the volume of the effort and (sacrifice made during the past year by the whole American people. Despite the magnificent efTort of our agricultural population In planting a much Increased acreage In 1017, not only was there a very large failure In wheat, but also the corn failed to mature propany, and our corn Is our dominant crop. "I am sure," Mr. Hoover wrote la concluding his report, "that all tha millions of our people, agricultural as well as urban, who have contributed to these results should feel a very definite satisfaction that In a year of universal food shortages In the northern hemisphere all of those peopl. joined together against Germany have come through Into sight of the coming harvest not only with wealth and trpnffth fullv malntolngft Km# only temporary periods of hardship. "It la dimcult to distinguish between various sections of our people?the homes, public eating places, food trades, urban or agricultural populations?In assessing credit for these results, but no one will deny the dominant part of the American women." hoarder is a man who is more interest ed in getting his bite than in giving bis bit. Hearsay. A group of old ladies were talking nitting on a veranda. The conversation got around to how much each weighed at birth One old lady aaid "Well, I weighed just three and a hall pounds." The others gasped, and one of them asked: "And did you live?" "They say I did," answered thi other woman, "and done well.">Boa ton Transcript. ' _ v t |avtog|ugar|? American families would people of war torn Fran< on our home-grown sugar sto< Approximately 75 per ce to our snores. We produce ab a year. Our imports from abr 000 tons a year in normal tinv The United States Food family to limit its use of sugai per person for household use. mands that every avai'.able shi of the Army or Navy. Whe shipping. NOTICE OF DEMOCRATIC C PRIMARY ELECTION IN CHESTERFIELD COUNTY ',{ M Ndtici' i? Ki.nil.tf ?U~? *.?? II UIIH Ull Tuesday, August 27th, next, a pri- ' mary election will be held in Cheater- ' field County, South Carolina, under the rules of the Democratic Party, % for a member of Congress, for a Uni- ? ted States Senator for the lonjf and ? short term and for State and Coun- c' ty officers. e The polls will open at H a. m. and ? close at 4 p. m. In this election the ? Australian Ballot Act applies to the following precincts; Pagoland, Jeffer- rr son, Mt. ("rojchan, Kuby, McBee, Pa, trick, Cheraw und Chesterfield, but 1 ; in all other precincts the election " will be conducted as formerly. J No person is qualified to vote in ! this election unless he is 21 years el . aj?e or shull become before the next I general election in November and is a demoerut und a citizen of the United States and of this State and has resided herein two (2) yours and in ^ the County six (G) months prior to the said general election and in the " club district sixty (60) days prior to 11 the primary and in addition to this tl his name must be on the proper club [r roll and he must vote at the precinct n where he enrolled. The following managers and clerks 1 have been appointed to conduct said " election: ci Cheraw?G. W. Guin, C. S. Lynch, li Joe Lindsay. Clerk: D. L. Tilman. c Place: Town Hall. Bethel?J. It. Burn, J. I*'. Powe, J. l< T. Chapman. Clerk: T. G. Ma the a Ron. n | Pee Dee?D. K. Jamison, F. fi Newman, J. II. Wallace. CleTk: I), b / ; ? \W. ill llliuoil, J( Brock's Mill?R. A. Sellers, J. W. Brock, Henry Barker. Clerk: J. C. o Brock. A Patrick?II. B. Boston, T. B. Camp- G bell, G. S. Crenshaw. Clerk: J. A. R Winburn. f, Middendorf- J. B. Simms, W. K. tl Johnson, Boykin Wilkes. Clerk: I). (1 M. Rowe. C McBee? CI. T. Horton, M. A. Me- tl Bherson, J. E. Middlcton. Clerk : T. n M. Beattie. it Cat Pond?Calvin Wilkes, J. A. <> Williams, J. W. Ruthven. Clerk: T. J. Summer. I Snow Hill?E. C. Crawford, A. J. i Smith, B. F. GrigKH. Clerk: Carroll it W. Davis. Grant's Mill?J. N. Johnson, Wade " Turnage, W. R. Huneycutt. Clerk: <1 , W. T. McBride. g i Odoni's Mill?J. T. RatlifTe, I). A. i?< Campbell, Miles Watson, ('lerk: I). ? A. Smith. Douglass Mill?B. C. Wadsworth, I A. A. Douglass, Sr., W. A. McNair. Clerk: J. L. Douglass. :p Wexford?B. A. Gulledgc, 11. K. > Jenkins, D W. Coker. ('lerk: E. J., Moore. Ruby?R. D. McCreight, T. G. ! Griggs, J. F. Crowley, Clerk: Maek|a I Dees. Cross Roads?J. S. VVadsworth, l' ; G. II. Gulledge, I). A. T. Douglass. M Clerk: V. B. Waddell. d Mt. Croghan?N. T. Rivers, W. .1. 1 Rayfiebl, W. W. Baker. Clerk: (?. I>. Gulledge ' VVin/.o?J. K. Robertson, T. B. *l Watts, H. Z. Outen. Clerk; H. M. r Padlock. I '' Pageland?S. A. Sellers, II. V. 11 Mungo, I" Barker. Clerk: J. I. . Watford. Plains--T. J. Rogers, G. W. Hin' son, W. B. Evans. Clerk: T. 1*. , Hicks. r i Jefferson?L. K. Gardner, J. W f . I Miller, E. J. ('lark. Clerk: L. L , Bird. ( Catarrh?C. C. Morton, G. H. Mid- j dleton, J. G. Sowell. Clerk: B. E. f i Funderburk. Angclus?W. F. Young, J. E. Lee, ? i D. A. Clark. Clerk: J. C. Jowors. 1 Ousleydale Theodore Winburn, j J. Warren Johnson, W. C. Clark. < Tr * ' ? lavesghippntg have less sugar than the :e, if we depended entirely :ks. nt. of our sugar is shipped out 1,000,000 tons of sugar oad amount to over 3,000,es. Administration asks each r to two pounds per month The military situation dep be placed at the disposal n we save sugar, we save lerk : Frank Wilkes. Courthouse?A. W. Hursey, J. avers, I). Smith. Clerk: T. lulloy. Voting place. Courthouse. Dudley ?(). 11. Jones, T. A. Fundi urk, J. M. McCray. Clerk: T. underburk. The criminal laws of the State p ide that if any person shull at a f the tireeinelu t h r. r abuse any voter with a view untrol or intimidate him in the fi xercise of his right of .suffrage, su (Tender shall suffer fine and impi 11 merit at the discretion of the Cou The member of the Exeeiiti\e Co littee or one of the managers | ich precinct will please call at t ourtliouse for boxes, tickets, et o'. later than Saturday, Auj; 24th. M. J. HOUGH, Chm. J. CLIFTON RIVERS, Secretai RED CROSS HELPS PRISONER: "If unlucky enough to get ci iired send your first prison cai ost card to the American Red Crt 1 Heme." This is the substanc lie advice which the War I)epa lent is having all officers give t ion of the American Expeditions breos before they go to the frc i France. By sending this pc ard to the Bureau of Prisoners I ef of the Red Cross at Berne, t aptured man sets in motion the n hincry which will cause his fain ? be notified promptly and also c bios the Red (Toss to begin sh icnts to him of twenty pounds nod every week, and clothing, 1 acco, toilet articles and other co >rts and luxuries as they are need* Awaiting the arrival of such cai r other reliable evidence that merican is a prisoner at a Camp ermany, the Red Cross has at Bert enons and Copenhagen quantities >od and clothing which it holds le agent of the army and Navy I le relief of captured men. The R ross also has supplies of its own f ie care of captured civilians, a lany comforts and luxuries which furnishes captured soldier and si rs. Not of That Sort. "Would you strike a defenseless ? nal ?" "Boss," said Mr. Krastus I'inkb you stand around at de hind heels at mule foh half a minute an' y ineter discover that defensclessni i de least of his qualification! ?Washington Stnr. A BIT OF ADVICE ir?t?Don't Delay. Second?Do! Experiment. If you suffer from backache hei ches or dirzy spells; if you rest po / und are languid in the morning; h 1/ 1 /1 n /? iot>'i ?? ? * ! * n.M??v.jr ocvi wviuun nic uir^u nd unnatural iri appearance*, do i clay. In such caseB the kidneys i*n need help. Doan's Rodneys Pills arc especi y prepared for kidney trouble -tl re recommended by thousands. ( esidenta desire more convinc iroof of merit than the statement , citizen of this locality. A. W. Chance, merchant, Main i ,ancastor, S. C., say: "I have b? ihinvc Doan's Kidney Pills for ye md they have always stren^ther ny kidneys. I am satisfied that tl ire a good kidney medicine. I hi elt much better since usiny ther OVER SIX YEARS EATER, 1 'hnnce said: "I think as highly )oan's Kidneys Pills now as whei irst recommended them." Price 60c at all dealers. Do limply ask for a kidney remeoy? )onn's Kidney Hills-?the same ti dr. Chance, had. Fonter-Milln Do., Mfgrs., Buffalo, N. Y. Ad\ 111 w II II I ?? ' CITATION County of Chesterfield. ? State of South Carolina, ' By M. J. Hough, Probate Judge: Whereus Minnie King made suit to mo to grant her Letters of Administration of the Estate and ecects of j C. P. King, deceased. | These are, therefore, to cite and j admonish all und singular kindred and Creditors of the said C. F. King, deceased, that they be and appear before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Chesterfield, S. C. on 29th Aug., ne"', after publr'jt on nercoi, at 11 o'clock in the fomiflon> I to show cause, if any they have, why the said Administration should not in; granted. Given under my hand this 1-lth lay of August Anno Domini, 111 18. M. J. HOUGII, Probate Judge. CLERK S SALE ' State of South Carolina, County of Chesterfield. T. Hedfearn and A. M. Rcdfearn, as Executors of the Estate of E. N. Redfcarn, deceased, Plaintiffs, vs. Lacostu Evan, Defendant. Ry virtue of a Decree of Foreclosure n.ade in the above stated case by His Honor Edward Mclver, Presiding Judge, I will offer for sale to the highest bidder for cash before the Courthouse door at Chesterfield, S.C., within the legal hours, on the first Monday of September (sume being = 2nd, September, 1'J 18) the following lot of land in the town of Cheraw, Q ' Chesterfield County, South Curolina: E. That lot bounded now or for_ merly on the Northeast by proj) perty of Lacoste Evans, Southeast by lot of Sarah Chapman II rwl 1 XT. _?1 ...... uvnvm, n t.n unu .iurvn?My west by Green Street and bein>j the same lot described in a (iced recorded in Clerk's office ?ce in I)o???l Book 4), I'iikp 1X7. ich Purchaser or purchasers to pay for is- all necessary papers, rt I. P. MANGUM, m- August 5th, 1 !)1 H. Clerk of Court, r?r Chesterfield ('outny.S.C. c., ELECTION NOTICE State of South Carolina, County of Chesterfield. To the Hoard of Trustees of Clark T- School No. '2: A petition of the qualified electors of the above named school having this day been filed with me asking .hat an election be hold in the said district on the question of levying an 71 ^ additional six (<?) mills on the pro388 perty of said district for the current of expenses of the said school, you are rt- hereby authorized and commanded to hold at the schoolhouse on Aujc lilt, during the leeal hours of elections ry under general election laws of South inl (Carolina, an election on the question >st above submitted. te- Signed this the 14th day of Aujr. he 191*. ,u- I ARTHUR KNIGHT, ily County Supl. of Education. ip REGISTRATION NOTICE of Lo_ State of South Carolina. County of Chesterfield. id. To the Voters of Chesterfield County: 'ds Under the net of the funeral asun sembly of 11)17, all registration cerin tifieates will terminate on JuneSO, ie, 1018; and for the purpose of roof registering all voters of the eounty, a:~ the books of registration will be open or in the ofiice of the county board of ,ed registration at Chesterfield court >or iiouse every day during the mo-'ths nd 0f duly and August (Sunday except ' ed) from 1) ;00 o'clock AM. to 6:00 'il- P. M., at which time the voters nre invited to appear in person and qualify Note, please: That under the law, kn_ you must apply in person, and not by proxy. 'y. During this time voters of all sec?f tions of the county may register; but for their convenience, the registration board will visit all townships during ine nionin r?i nepieniher ami register the voters. This schedule will be published later. r. U. INC It AM, C11ARLIK DAVIS, n't .1, (' RLA( KWFXU County Hoard of Registration. i iot msurnmsmjiro of wewevTes tmrru> statu POTUtNMENT ial- L???_J 'In Buy Them And Help Win The War FOR SALE EVERYWHERE en *' ' . . . .*3