University of South Carolina Libraries
The Chesterfield Advertiser PAUL H. HEARN Editor and Publisher. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY Subscription Rates: $1.50 a Year; six months, 75 cents.?Invariably in advance. Entered as second-class matter at the O 4L yUSkUlilLC ?V VUCObtl HClUy UUUUJ Carolina. PRESIDENT WILSON IN EUROPE It would be interesting at this time to know the thoughts and feelings of that little crowd of "wilful men" at Washington who have been so bent on criticizing and embarrassing our great president while engaged in the great undertaking of making all future wars more diflicult, if not impossible. But the bitterest denunciations that intense political jealousy could produce could not prevent Mr. Wilson from undertaking his great duty as he saw it, and the wonderful manner in which he lias been received by the people of Franco and England prove already that he was right ad that the heart of the whole world (save a handful of lb-publicans) is with him. The Atlanta Constitution, referring to the reception of President Wilson in Paris, says: "No monarch in history ever received such an ovation; no such deference and such a general outpouring of genuine expressions of welcome ever before greeted any man anywhere in the world. Men, women and children, irrespective of age, nationality, class, religious creed or political opinion joined in it?all greeting the president of the United States as humanity's foremost spokesman." The New York Times says of his reception in London: "London, satiated with spectacles, which has seen so many famous sovereigns and (ienerals and statesmen, gave Mr. Wilson a welcome more cordial and impressive than any other of her illlsirious visitors has received. That it is compared with the Jubilee of .81*7, when the venerable Queen, after three-score years on the throne, clustered about her the remembranc es of two generations of history and seemed a sort of symbol of the long life of the State, shows how strong was the feeling of the crowd. * * "Amid the flags innumerable and such a wealth of American flags as London never guessed at before, past the Trafalgar lions, past stately , houses and clubs, past hosts of workingnien and workingwomen, taking advantage of the holiday to see a great leader of democracy, mid the chimes of all London churches, guns roaring greeting, airplanes throbbing it, the 'Star-Spangled Banner* clanging from the hands, the President and the King went to Buckingham Palace. That an American President should be the guest of an an Knglish King marks the work of time." There has, of course, been much 1 discussion ;n the press as to the ad- 1 visability of the President going to 1 Kurope. Leading Republican and Democratic newspapers, with few exceptions, agree that the President exercised his right and did his duty in 1 going to the Peace Conference. A prominent Western daily. Re- 1 publican, says: "There are many arguments why I the National Kxeeutive should play i his part as a representative of the re- i puouc in world altairs. And Mr. Wilson can hold his own. We will never have to apologize for his ability. He I has an intellect the match of any in Europe." AFTER THE WAR WHAT? Now that the war is over, one of , the most serious problems confronting thi> country is that of labor and labor suopiy With the discharge of thousands of soldiers who will be seeking employment and with the probable influx of thousands of foreigners from thj. war worn countries of Europe there will arise conditions that will tax to the utmost the skill urn' judgment of our statesmen and civic authorities. It. has been suggested that the congestion of skilled and unskilled labor may be offset by the emigration of many foreigners from this country to their former homes in Germany, Russia, Italy, France anil other countries. But with the havoc war has made in Europe ther- will not be a great inducement f:>r i hose natives of Euro- 1 pean countries to return in haste to I the fatherland. So, as The Advertiser sees it, there 1 is going to be a condition of affairs ( in this country that will require wise 1 management to nrevent ?ni?t?mi?i?u < between labor and capital. When this and some other adjust- ' ments have been accomplished which ' we are sure will occur in due time ' nothing can prevent an era of pros- ' perity in the United States. With 1 our ships sailing all seas, exporting our products to every clime, they will < bring back gold to make our national 1 treasury and the safes of our banks i bulge with fulness and our farmers, f flush with plenty, will indeed till a t land "flowing with milk end honey." U So mote it be! ^ jg iBCVBIIBflfeB9SBS59BS9B9BBBeSBHeB9 S WOULD PLACE WORLD CON. \S SCIENCE UPON THE THRONE Carlisle, England, Dec. 29.?PresiM dent Wilson, accompanied by Mrs. . Wilson, came to Carlisle to-day in rain and a cold penetrating mist to visit the girlhood home of hits mother. But the warmth of the greeting of q the people of the town and of the thousands of strangers from the surrounding country more than offset the dreariness of the weather. Large crowds lined the streets and cheered the presidential party lustily as it drove from the station, where the president was received by Mayor Bertram Carr and local notables, to the ^ Crown and Mitre Hotel, where the jj president signed the Freeman's Roll They visited Annetwell St., where the 8'tc h'8 ^ate grandfather's 111 chapel was pointed out to him and w the house in Cavendish Place that was ti built by his grandfather. During the Jr services the Rev. Edward Booth, the pastor, requested the president to come into the pulpit and address the c< assemblage. This the president did, w delivering a short speech, in which he ^ touched simply but eloquently on ^ iiis mother. The president spoke as follows: w "It is with unaffected reluctance a that I inject myself into this service. s< I remember my grandfather very sj well, and remembering him, I could tj *ee how he would not approve. I re.ncmbcr what he requested of me ,r and remember the stern lesson of duty ? he spoke. And I remember painful- * !y about things he expected me to ^ know that I did not know. 1 "There has come a change of times ^ when laymen like myself are permit- ai ted to speak in a congregation. There a is another reason why I was reluctant ,o speak. "The feelings fixed in me to-day ? ire really too intimate and too deep ^ to permit of public expression. The S1 memories that have come of the a mother who was born here are very u affecting. Her quiet character, her sense of duty and her dislike of os- ^ centation have come back to me with ^ increasing force as these years of e duty have accumulated. Yet, perhaps, it is appropriate that in a place w of worship I should acknowledge my indebtedness to her and her remark- a able futher, because all that the world n is now seeking to do is to return to S( the paths of duty, to turn from the c savagery of interests to the dignity of the performance of right. k "I believe as this war has drawn t< nations temporarily together in a g combination of physical force we shall i be drawn together in a combination ^ of moral force that is irrefpstible. It p is moral force as much as physical j force that has defeated the effort to subdue the world. Words have cut as deep as swords. World Go?i on Cni*td? "The knowledge that wrong has c been attempted has aroused the nations. They have gone out like men for a crusade. No other cause could have drawn so many nations together. They knew an outlaw was abroad and C that the outlaw purposed unspeakable n things. "It is from quiet places like this all over the world that the forces are accumulating that presently will overDower anv attemDt to accomnlish c evil on a great scale. It *4 like the ~ rivulet that gathers into the river and the river that goes to the sea. So there cornea out of communities like this those streams that fertilize d the conscience of men, and it is the k conscience of the world we now n mean to place upon the throne which others have tried to usurp." ITALY LOST 2,800,000 MEN 81 Italy's total losses in killed, wound- ^ imI, dead of disease, disabled, missmg, and prisoners, aggregate 2,800,000, according to Colonel Ugo Piz/.arello.of the Italian Army, who ar- ^ rivedin New ifork recently on a mis- w sion for his government. He gave out figurts amplifying an announce- j ment made in Paris last Saturday ^ that Italy had lost f>00,000 men in ^ nilled or dead of wounds in the war. ^ "As Italy's effort and losses are so much bigger than those previously mentioned," said Colonel Pizzarello, ^ "we feel quite justified in thinking jj that the public shouldknow the exact figures of the total losses she suffered so as to give American public opinion complete knowledge of the ^ threat part Italy played in the strug- ^ ifle for justice." Disease alone took a death toll of = .'100,000 men in the war zone, he said, while the number of killed was 500,000 and the wounded and missing and prisoners 2,000,000. LEMONS WHITEN AND BEAUTIFY THE SKIN Male* this Beauty Lotion Cheaply for Your Face, Neck, Arms and Hands At the cost of a small jar of ordi- m nary cold cream one can prepare a I full quarter pint of the most won- J derful lemon skin softener and com- ^ plexion heautifler, by squeezing the 1 juice of two fresh lemons into a bot- J tie containing three ounces of or chard white. Care should be taken 1 to strain the juice through a ftrve ' cloth so no lemon pulp gets in, then this lotion will keep fresh for months. Every woman knows that lemon juice ^ is used to bleach and remove such blemishes as freckles, sallowness and tan and is the ideal skin softener, ftl whitener and beautifier. Just try it! Get three ounces of srehard white at any drug store and ,wo lemons from the groeer and make * ip a quarter pint of this sweetly fragrant lemon lotion and massage it ? tally into the face, neck, arms and umds. It is marvelous is smoothsn Mfh red hands. Mh w""|in lorning. | ba Prescription Clerk in Drug Store: ju "hat explains it. wt> Customer: E)xplains what? v Clerk: I've been trying to fill that | onfounded tihng all morning. . WORN NERVES tHt an ~wh Nervous troubles, with backache, izzy spells, queer pains and irregular idneys, give reason to suspect kidey weakness and to try the remedy ''n hat has helped your neighbors. Mrs. J. A. Coxe, Cheraw, s\c.-Lib ?ys: "I suffered terribly from kid- brj ey trouble about four years ago and j le pains were so severe I was in contant misery. They started in the ^ inall of my back and would shoot up nd down as, if a knife were piercing r.4{ le. I had terrible headaches and 1 jUf ss so nervous, I couldn't stay quiet minute. I couldn't sleep because m le pain was so bad. My kidneys ac- ? ?d irregularly, too, and certainly H iused me a lot of annoyance. A I I riend told me about Doan's Kidney | ? ills aJnd 1 took a few doses. I could ;el myself fftting relief. I continued H ikinK them and in all used five boxes. oan's campletely cured me." H Price 60 cents at all dealers. Don't I mply ask for kidney remedy?Ret j I oan's Kidney Pills?the same that! I [rs. Ooxe had. Foster-Milburn Co., Itgm., Buffalo N. Y. ?Adv.4 1 Look Ahead! Be Independe When You Gi A goodly torn ?f money in bank is a i tf years. Yon art young and vigorous aad full if good money. Things may not always bo so rosy. FLAY TO DfeFOSIT A OEATAIir I A1X 1 Bank Book Is Yi The FARME1 ' . i - V V , .pr. > -Ti'? " 'VJS riFE IS HAPPY OVER HO HIS BIG APPETITE IRS. ROGERS APPRECIATES mn HUSBAND'S COMPLIMENT car TO HER COOKING wa fus Ge NCE SUFFERED VERY MUCH voi _____ so* Ir. Rogers Suffered Long With m> Stomach Trouble, But Wee tht Restored by Teniae pr< tio to "My fine appetite certainly pleases th? ty wife, for she is a good cook and am kes to see me enjoy my meals," said [. M. Rogers, of 105 Budd St., Kl- ^ lira, N. Y., in a story for men, and \jr omen, too, who have a finiky appe- wh te and cannot eat the fine, nourishig meals that are set before them. -ol Tl "For a while," Mr. Rogers explaind, "I couldn't eat any solid food. I ye, as continually bothered with gas nd bloating that made me feel as l<*r I were going to burst. My breath pai -ould come short and I would have c?' wil stuffed up, suffocating feieling. It paj iemed to affect my heart. My ;omach was so sore I could hardly >uch it. I kept doctoring and try- ' lg remedies, but got worse instead mc f better. While I was suffering so ?' kept hearing of a new medicine, ev< anlac, and commenced to take it. ?? ?1:?* * *1- ??* Th u<um >, ony tcuci irum me nrsi | ottle, and I said to myself, 'stung I ^ain,' but people told nfe to give it' fair trial, and so I kept on. In aj ttle while I began to improve. Af;r my fourth bottle I felt fine. The e<* Id aj >ctite came back; I did not aa< ave Hi'y more gas or bloating or VIC jffoci \ing spells, and my stomach ^ nd wnole svstem were toned right p." - 9tr "That is all true" declared Mrs. | ogers. "Tanlac worked wonders or him and we are glad to tell our|an' xperience to everyone. It is no use! n ? o doubt this Tanlac; it does the! , ' rork." I b,c Tanlac is the Master Medicine for ilments of stomach liver and kid- P?1 eys and catarrhal affections, which n151 o often makes good after other mediines have failed. W1! Tanlac, the Master Medicine, is sold j The Chesterfield Drug Co., Chea* pic rfield, S. C.; T. E. Wanamaker db MU one, Cheraw; Mt. Croghan Drug Co* (jw It. Croghan, S. C.; McBee Drug Ce., Ki. IcBee, S. C.; Pageland Drug Co., jor 'ageland, S. C.; J. T. Jo were dk Soas, Sei efferson, 8. C. Adv Cai - - lat A DIFFICULT PRESCRIPTION "V wr Readers who have marveled at tfce pF( rytic character of physicians' pre- lie rriptions will appreciate this bit of ialogue from Judge: dc1 Customer: By mistake, I left my e{j OVER TELLS THEM WHERE TO GO, FOR ALL HE CARES Washington, Dec. 27.?Food Adlistrator Hoover, in Europe ariging relief for the people of. tho r devastated territories, has reled in emphatic terms to discuss rman food conditions with Baron 1 Lane ken and Dr. Rieth, who ight a meeting with the food adnistrator. A. message from Paris to-day said ;se two German officiate, who were eminent in the German administran of Belgium, wired from Berlin Walter Lyman Brown, director of i commission for i lief in Berlin d Rotterdam, that they had been pointed by the German government negotiate with Mr. Hoover for >d supplies, and that they desired '. Hoover to advise them when and ere he would meet them. In answer to their request for a vference, Mr. Hoover sont this issage: "You can describe two and a half are of arrogance toward ourselves d cruelty to the Belgians in any iguage you may select, and tell the ir personally to go to hell with my mpliment8. If I do have to deal th Germans, it will not be with that ir." THE CAMERA AS A WITNESS The camera has often been the ans of giving convincing evidence a crime the existence of which, :n, was unknown to the operatoi the time he mad the exposure, e motion-picture camera caught a ycle thief the othre day in New rk, says the Weekly Telegraph. A V who had been at the seaside at wport the previous summer strollinto a West Side "movie" show J was much interested in some ws of tho famou .side re. >rt ich showed not on' ? h and > harbor front hi the principal eets. Presently eh was surprised to see nself prop his bicycle on the curb d walk into a grocery store. A >ment later a man walked out of > same shop, coolly mounted the ycle and rode off down the street. The boy called the attention of the lice to the picture, and they r< copied the man as a suspected charier against whom they had long *hed to get evidence. An amateur photographer of a sus:ious turn of mind set an autoinatcamera with a flash-light attachnt inside the curtains of the elling-room for the purpose of tting osme evidence of the behav of his household during his abicc. In trying to catch a sprat he Light a whale?or, lather, a burgIn entering the room the maudor set in action the camera, lich secured such an excellent imession of his features that the poe were soon able to arrest him. A Portsmouth photographer phojraphed a garden party. When he veloped the photograph he observwhat looked like a repulsive face the holly hedge that formed the ckground of the picture. A lady rchaser made the seme discovery a ek later and declared that the face tembled that of a man who had led at her house ider very suspius circumstances. She informed police, who searched the district d arrested a criminal?the man o had been lurking in the hedge. THE CRYING NEED The complaints we hear from Berthat the artists who have painted ne of the horrors for which the i.-h i .-> in my uiiii navy ar? respniile have treated Germany unfairly ng to mind the story of the very mely man who complained that a olograph of him, just taken, fell short of doing him justice. "Justice!" exclaimed the photogiher. "What you most need is not itice hut mercy!" ow Old! ftouroe of comfort in one's deolin ui eaer^y wuy. x ou are maaBUM EVEKY WEEK Df THE f r Best Friend IS' BANK ** i iimmwrnrnm i I bi iii # ## ?j# m^lg M tmmBM pi. extm lar^? wiwiwmiw BTM TO tVUUt I BUCK 15.00U12J0 RACCOON HUVr fDRRED 8.001. 6.00 ORDIOm 6l50I? 5J0 OPOSSUM ) 2*' MIKKPAT W,NTER 180 to 150 nuonKAi FALL 140to 2^0 CATCH .'El We Want AU tl RACCOON, OPOSSUM, M strong demand. A shipme GET A SHIPMEN* These extremely f *J~11" iT jM/ji/Bry] ISEESSsSSSsS DR. L. H. TROTT1, g Dental Surgeon q Chesterfield, S. C. i Office on second floor in Rosj Building. | All who deBire my services will 'please nee m? at Chesterfield, as 1 ^ have discontinued my visits to othel towns. DR. R. L. McMANUS Dentist Office over Bank of Chesterfield. Will visit Pageland every Tuesday; ML Croghan every Wednesday. Other days in Chesterfield. Prices reasonable. All work guar anteed J. ARTHUR KNIGHT Attorn?y-at-Law Office in Courthouse Chesterfield, S. C. HANNA A HUNLEY ?Attorneys? R. E. Hanna, C. L. Ilunley, Cheraw. Chesterfield Offices: Peoples' Bank Bldg., Chesterfield Bank of Cheraw Bldg., Cheraw 1,040,000 FRENCHMEN WERE KILLED IN THE WAR | t Paris, Dec. 26.?Announcement1 was dadc ih the Chamber of Dcpu- ] ties to-day by M. Abraz, Under Secretary of State, that France's losses J in officers and men killed up to Nov. 1 of the present year aggregate T 1,071,300, divided as follows: Officers 31,300, and men 1,040,000. J ri The number of dead, prisoners, and tl men missing was given as 42,600 of- y, fleers and 1,789,000 men. c> The missing total 3,000 officers and Is 311,000 men. | ir inu prisoners still living total j a 8,300 officers and 438,000 men. ^ ^ "A SPLENDID TONIC "j"; I Says Hinon Lady Who, On Doc- 11 tor's Advice, Took Cardii And Is Now WelL Htxson, Tenn.?"About 10 ran ago I was..." says Mrs. J. B. Oadd, of R this plac?. "I suffered with a pain In [ my left side, could not sleep at night P I with this pain, always In the left ^ side... P My doctor told me to use Cardul. I took one bottle, which helped me and ol after my baby came, I was stronger ' ai and better, but the pain was still! Hn there. * M I at first let It go, but began to get .. weak and In a run-down condition, ; 11 so I decided to try some more Cardul, | ot which I did. la This last Cardul which I took made (.| me much better. In fart. rnr?d i? ! baa been a number of years, atTu I A have no return of this trouble, P< I feel It was Cardut that cured me, M and I recommend It as a splendid female tonic." Don't allow yourself to become' ~~ weak and run-down from womanly troubles. Take Cardul. It should surely help you, as It has so many thousands of other women in the past 40 m years. Headache, backache, sldeache, w nervousness, sleeplessness, tlred-out w ! feeling, are all signs of womanly trouble. Other women get relief by taking t OarduL Why not yout All druggists, i NO-1SS % There Is more Catarrh In this section . of the country than all othar dleeaass (ft put together, and for yeare It was sup- , posed to be Incurnble. Doctors preserlbsd local remedies, and by constantly falling to curs with local trsatment, g% pronounced It Incurable. Catarrh Is a I local disease, greatly Influenced by con- \J stltutlonal eondltlons and thsrafora ragulres eaastltutlonal treatmant. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio, is a conetf- hll tutlonal ramedy. Is taksn Internally In sad acts thru tha Bleod on the Mucoua Surfaces of the Ryatem. One Hundred m Dollars reward la offered for any.case that Halfs Catarrh Curs falls to euro. end for olreulars and testimonials. g] F. J. CHEN1I Sc CO., Toledo, Ohio. V, eld by Druggists, Tie BC Hall's Family Fills for ooastipatloa. ^LLARGC N^TMEOIUM [N?I!SSSL pm? TO WtMW OfTHA TO wmn tnm^MUM MTO 0.00to 8.00 7.00to 6.00 5.00to 4.00 Ti 5.75to 525 420to 175 325to 2.75 1C 4.75 to 425, 175to 100 150 to 2.00 2i 2.40 to MO 1.60 to 120 lJOlo .65 1.0 220to 2.00 MOto liO liOto 120 "J1 120to 1.70 1 JOto 125 1.10 to 25 l.( I?SKIN 'EMte South Carolina Fori USKRAT, and all other Fur-bearor? nt to "'SHJJBERT" will bring you r OFF?TODAY. You'll be mlg high price* quoted for immet ____________ tate of South Carolina, ounty of Chesterfield. Court of Common Pleas , SUMMONS J. P. Pollock, Plaintiff Moscow Powe, Sr., Moscow Powe, Jr., Willie Powe, Alphonso Powe, an infant, Alex Powe, Charlotte Russell, Geneva Johnson, John Powe (a), Tom Powe, John Powe (b), or Henry Powe, William Powe, Samuel Powe, Lucy Powe, Mary Powe, children of John Powe (b), or by whatever name the said children of John Powe (b) may be called, or any other child or children of the said John Powe (b), Alice Pegucs Gray, Geneva Pegucs, Manuel Bailey Pegues, an infant, Henry Powe, Abram Powe, or any other child or children or heirs at law of Maria Powe, deceased, of Charlotte Tomlison, deceased, of Alice Powe, deceased, or of Moscow Powe, Sr., be he living or dead, or of Tom Powe, be he living or dead, or of Maggie Powe, deceased, or by whatever name the said children may be known, or the child or children of Charlotte Russell, be she living or dead, or by whatever name they may be known, and the child o?* children of Warren Powe, deceased, by whatever name they may be known, and any other child or children or heirs at law of John Powe, deceased and Harrison Powe, deceased, Defendants. o the Defendants Above Named: You are hereby summoned and equired to answer the complaint in us action, of which a copy is hererith served upon you, and to serve a opy of your answer to the said comlint on the subscriber at his office t Cheraw, S.C., within twenty days fter service hereof, exclusive of the ay of such service; and if you fail to nswer the complaint within the time foresaid, the plaintiff in this action ill, apply to the Court for the reef demanded in the complaint. B. F. PEGUES, Plaintiff's Attornav To Mohcow Powe, Sr., Charlotte ussell, Geneva Johnson, John Powe i), Tom Powe (If living), John owo (b), (if living) or Henry Powe, Hlliam Powe, .Samuel Powe, Lucy owe, children of John Powe (b), or y whatever name the said children ' John Powe (b) may be called, or ly other child or children of the lid John Powe (b), Geneva Pegues, anuel Bailey Pegues, an infant, enry Powe, Abram Powe or any her child or children or heirs at w of Maria Powe, deceased, of harlotte Tomlinson, deceased, of lice Powe, deceased or of Moscow owe, Sr., be he living or dead, or of aggie Powe, deceased, or by what* 'er name any of the Mid children or I ASHCRAFTS | onditlon Powders i A high-class remedy for horses ! si mules in poor condition and tired of a tonic. Builds soli usele and fat; cleanses ths sy? 1 m, thereby producing a smooth ossy coat of hair. Packed is 1 M. 25c. bos. Sokikw ?. H. LAMXY N9 2 N? 3 N? 4 JJ^^JJUTV UTOMf?MMUTV MWW^JMUTV Ota 3.00 2J0ta L2S .75to S0 Ota 2.00 I25ta .75 JtOta .40 Ota liO LOOto JO JOta 20 Ota .40 .20to J5 JOta J5 tOto .80 iOto I .40 SWlMMMSMi I 7* 7r \c wmnitwiDT Ota .60 jSta 25, HMKET VAUIC -SHIP 'EM k Ton Can Ship i collected in your section in "'more money"?"quicker." Hty slid you did. iiate shipment. ?ilralTlrlcB BSBB heirs at law of the last four named persons may be known, or the child or children of Charlotte Russell, be she living or dead, or by whatever name they may bo known, and the child or children of Warren Powe, deceased, if any there be, by whatever name they may be known, and any other child or children or heirs at law of John Powe, deceased and Harrison Powe, deceased?non-resident defendants whose addresses are unknown: You will take notice that the original summons and complaint in the above entitled cause were duly hied in the office of the Clerk of Court for Chesterfield county, South Carolina, at Chesterfield, S. C.t>on the 9th day of December, 1918, and that a copy . of the same may be had from the said Clerk of Court or from the undersigned. December 9th, 1918. B. F. PEGUES, Plaintiff's Attorney. TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANT, Alphonsi Powe, an infant over the age of fourteen (14) years, residing in South Carolina, and to the above named defendant Manuel Bailey Peguea, an infant over the dress is unknown: age of fourteen (14) years whose adYou will take notice: That unless you apply and have some person ap-> pointed as Guardian ad litem in t^e above entitled action within twenty (20) days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service, the plaintiff will apply and will have suitable person appointed. December 9th, 1918. ,B. F. PEGUES, Plaintiff's Attorney. I hereby certify that the original summons, of which the above is a true copy and the verified complaint in this action, were duly filed in my ^ office on the ltOh day of December, 1918; that an order of publication as to the above named non-residents has been duly made and filed in my office on the lOih day of December, 1918; and that the foregoing is a correct copy of all papers now on flls in my office. I. P. MANGUM, Clerk of Court of Common Pleas ior Chesterfield County, S. C. CLERK'S SALE State of South Carolina, county or Chesterfield. In Common Pleas. H. H. Sowell in his own ri^.' \ and as Administrator of the Estate of J. E. Sowell, Sr., deceased, et al., Plaintiffs. vs W. D. Sowell, * i Defendant.' By virtue of an order of Sale made' in the above stated case by His Honor Edward Mclver, Judge of the 4th Circuit, I will offer for tale to the highest bidder for cash before the Court House door at Chesterfield, South Carolina, within the legal hours on the first Monday of January next, being the 6th, the following real estate, situate in Alligator Township, in above named State and county: 1st. That lot of land in McBee containing eight (8) acres, more or less, bounded now or formerly on the North by lots of H. M. Pigg ft Co., East by lots of H. H. Holder and Mrs. Isabella McPherson, South by lots of I. E. Middleton and G. T. Horton and West by lots of Chesterfield , Land and Development Co. 2d. That tract of land on Lyne)?'s River containing four hundred (400) seres, more or less, bounded on the North by lands of W. E. Horton aad . ?*.>thers, on the East by lands now or :' [ormeriy of Chesterfield Land an#'"'1 ' Development Co., South by lands of - ?5* 3. W. Sowell, and West by Lyneh'a , ^ Purchaser to pay for all necessary