The Chesterfield advertiser. [volume] (Chesterfield C.H., S.C.) 1884-1978, January 16, 1919, Image 2

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The Chesterheld Advertiser PAUL II. HP: A R.N Editor :>nd Publisher. PUBLISHED P\ KUV THURSDAY Subscri]) i' $l.t>0 a Ye.ir; ix mo nth t, '. vents.- Invariably in dv a nee. ' Entered as second-class matter at the postoftice at Chesterfield, South Carolina. A Ml'Ml i'; IAI UfM!lll r 1 I luwiTivni/lki IlV/jri 1 4'\L It would t ? atore. tinp t"? mow i what the people of tlx- eoun'x are thinkinp of ill- plan , fi . i ! , Mr G. L. 11 u11i y arid |?o . d in a recent issue of Tlx- \ ! rti i. to erect a hospit il in li ' ur ddn-r dead. The I'ajjek.nd ^ lather non-cominita! on tlx- , !?? :rij_T certain of o < . that wrought to do >.; . > ri- Mi-nis to be a lui i. hat pood paper's pit.- , teve. tlxpeople of - i-1i,v vxii: ?i > | will be a " ' . . i r ? ! e cr with Mr. 'I - . i i11 of u hospital x.- i; i a - v poor nx morial and .. ii i r - : e. . <-.? it horxu on those xx'.o.n ... .\ .x t ? Ii ni<>r. Hut why !. . ;! 1 i. an iol< n : affair? . t ife of u Se?r \xby ( h t . " -ould i do the tli i.p ii- f -.111 eiy any othei to know 11 i.? . ir deciding thinp to d >> i -. for a poo al i i 11x !. county. v\ i- . ujje tent phy . i i i. - - i an of cases tha' xo < u iy po tin-re and we liax < . ' .. \Vad< boro, Moi.i , i i;rio11 , I lorene< and < .'o! . ! i oui w hen need for : i i - -s. We XVI . ee t ins i|U? .1 loll tliorou ii; . on! b. a r? pre seritutixi- f ( lies;erlield COUIIlty" I:. i.ollld lie done \x: i .. . .hit ure i in .-< sion. f- . :ll not lonp delay in inal...:,- x i. to ereet a .-.U'table jiionunx-.i , oar Ix-ioi , xxho died for tlx- of humanity and to JlVenpi i .p of a helpless people. ,, z nx. t litlinp momma . .1 la- a handsonie inenx r . I In r .ily -upportxd by tlx- ' i r;. .. !'.-ri:ip of ?>11r own ;? :iii . .atu-d. A TRI ,IO OLK BOYS ill ?)! ' I. /I' > lofore fiiiii' lit; i' . : 1 11 Wilson mad t,. o< :|i<- va!"r of our . rat i llV.-t of tin- r 1, ' . I.-- ; 1 * war: I.; . . h ?. '.< .. M. dcepe 1 ii. ' : our Mi<-a WO|l I. Ml ill lllto ill : I.it ! I ju t U' till- < 1.' ii -II l.lio wfiojo faio of :. . ! . I lo harm' ii. l;n . . t:i fri-sh .st . " Morn in 1 1 . 1 .a i| 1 and sw< p ). . .1 o, 1 urn it. oiio ha1 tIi u< forth it 1 1 . i'ii' i. 1 for th cncmidM, , 1 < r attain forward! 1 a ordy a scant four > 10 the coin mandor-i ' n- 1 .tr r. i|?u< know themseK 1 ' 1, a no -. th?-i 1 very 1 1 ii?i. '#n I" HE WAS A Cif Ai AMl-.KICAN fine of ' h ' hat. In tlilife and o 1 o K 1'resideni itoosovo.' . ? i a. wr.. Jen riinp"The ( 1 -.'..iii fi.'Oilonoi Ifo 1 lo of d. voted f array 1 against h:?n 1. o' . I r his death | n 1 . rout 1 ovi" .....1 1 in- 'If', I |,J ! " .1 well as l>> I'i I. "lie V.'a a t A merie,in arid made a f?? ?i ?11r<-! inipn ion on th> thought ..f h j' *?? j ?11. Hi pif turc.s?|i|f i .iri'i f il foi.. a fa<-< mat iritf chapter in 1 ir r.iithistory." Hisle p l>.ii . r.>?I? ri litis heen appointed i,? 1 <1 of tlie evanpeliral depart fi.< '.| ij.e Southern Methofl 1st Home o 1 Ho.<rd. 'I his is well op 11 | 1 ft,r the South Carolina '1 lin 1 on Terence of this ho !. heal this year at I unaluska. One-t' of il.. ? ilth in the whole v. 1' ! I ,i, ie t 'n te?| States. , l If the e/oi you an doinp is use ful it Wi! lef'i ;i you a pood living. 1 l,ook ip" ; faults of others ;? ? you would iia < thorn look upon yours. I iVrhap a rhan shave- and a hair , rut would help Russia us muc h as any , tiling. ? . T?' ' 'mi .u^hts, throw off oM | ha... , t . . .d a no danger of old ] uge. DEMOBILIZING AND j RECRUITING' While 30,000 men a day are being discharged from the army, Secretary of War Baker is appealinK to Congress for legislation to permit the resumption of voluntary enlistment. The reason is that the men now serving must, in accordance with the Selective Service Act, be discharged as soon after the proclamation of peace as the existing emergency will allow. As Secretary Baker reminds Congress: "The only men who would remain in the service are those who enlisted in the regular army on or prior to npril 1, IP 17, and whose enlistment has not yet expired. This small number has been cut down by casualties and other vicissitudes until the entire military force of the United ! tales Ilia' can be retained in the rvico will be abs.dtely inadequate ; ml insuilicicnt to perform such esntial military duties as policing the .lexican border, garrisoning our inula! po ohsion*, guarding the seaii a si possession of the United States, < cupyi'ig permanent posts and gar,:isons, guarding dnd protecting the I . irge amount of recently act. ired < ioverniiienl property and maintainI i g and op' rating the camps and can'iinieii!.. in llii-; country, to wh cl. roups i .-turned from overseas may c .-'Uit for prompt demobilization." i .\i<?iv in.,!i e| vcii hundred thou! ..id mi n ni'ir designated for ilumo | nivalin.. i ile- .so.on weeks follow iv the s inn."- of tin- armistice, ami ;?j.:o\ i. :i l-. one liumlred thousand ii' ,i hi;, ilisehartted. It ha i.ecu ' riilod by the Wat ')e;iait. that the National uaia i'.i re ;aken into Ih d r..l ai.n;. u.il not revert to till a: a ,,i-i aln Upon Ineir disehar; ut vviai lie completely freed from .nil try < vice. 'I here vtert! las> in.e 1 !.,H)b national guardsmen if In li in! States army. inn ii.-- War Department's rul op i i, ..ii eels State.; will have l? I.-;- .i National (iuard a^aii , ila r ( i .nir n >v fores by volu i; en I .: meat or by exchanvrinK the oic" :*u..ei| after the old KUard .a l.i: i'ii for f ederal service nvereas. '1 heir policy will depend on sh.it ad ion ( 'impress takes in fraini'K plans for peimanent national miliary organization. A FINE CHOICE If you had the leisure and the I noiiey what indulgence would you el or? An Englishman from th(. Yorkhire district tells of a widower who lad almost rounded out his three ;eore and ten years, working from ten o twelve hours every day in a coton spinning mill for laborer's wapes. From the time he was nine years ild he had been rousted out of bed it a o'clock, and had reported for vork at six. At sixty eipht In- bad accumulated nouph to close out his declining ears without working. Ho he rentd ;i room on the ground floor of a id:'in;' house, with a larpe comfort.bl bi d. A milkman called at the lion ,o at daybreak. The old cotton spinner paid this iari a . hillinp a month to rouse him t Ins regular hour f> o'clock. \? in n : iieard the noundinir on his /iridow In' would lift his head from ho pillow, ami in the KrufTest voice, all out: "(lei out of lu re 1 What do you n-.i ? rapping on my window? I ori'l pi t up til) I fuel like it." I In n In- would jfo hack to sleep. CITATION NOTICE tat < I 'out h (arolina, < 0:11.1 v of Chesterfield. " !. Iloiiv'h, I'rohate Jud^u: W'In pn.s W. A. Ni-wsom made nit 10 11. to pram him Letters of V ' .'i.o i f the Estate and ef I j W Johnson, deceased, *1 i. :.re, therefore, to cite and <! i ii nod insular the kind* a d red 'or of the said .1. W. .. del .-a ei|, that they lie and P'e r ii fore rne in the Court of , o he held at Chesterfield. ' . on tie- !hth of .lanuary next, r ea: 11. hereof, at 1 1 o'clock n ?11? fori nooii, to show cause, if I. i.e, wh\ 1 he a id A d m in is tr.it: >n hould md he granted. '? "i> under my hand this 10th >!.iy of January, Anno Domini If)Iff. M. J. HOUGH, Probate Judtcc. OUK f CIGHBORS IN FLORENCE Tell New* of Interest to Chesterfield Readers Florence is not far away. All that happens there is of interest to us here. Read what this Florence resident says about Moan s Kidney I'ills, and profit by her experience. Cheslerfield readers cannot ask for more convincing testimony. .VIrs. W. N. flight, I Old K. Evans #t.t Florence, S. says: "Moan's Kidney I'ills have been used in our family and I have always found them o do excellent work. About three years atro I had a had case of kidley trouble and tried different kinds >f medicines hut Moan's Kidney I'ills vere the only one that relieved me. We always have a box in tin- house uid when kidney trouble appears, a few doses rid us of the trouble. I an recommend Moan's from the results of their use." I'rice <?0c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy jjet Joan's Kidney Fills the same that V1rs. High' had. Foster-Milburn Zon Mffcrs., Buffalo, N. Y. Acl.0 1 1 - VETERAN FOREMAN SAW FLEET CHANGED BENNETT FOR YEARS HAD BIG PART IN BUILDING BATTLESHIPS STILL IS CONSERVATIVE Telia of Great GooJ Tanlao Did Him and Says "1 Only Took Two Bottl?a" For twelve years William F. Bennett was foreman at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, Uncle Sam's hive of industry for the country's defense, where thousands of skilled workmen toil at the nation's vital work It was from the ways of this went yard that some of our greatest dreadnoughts were launched. Mr. Bennett had a part in this work and there hf saw the evolution of the American navy worked out. To-d iy .Mr. Bennett, need OK ye r:>, is tetired, living at 008 Gates Avenue, Brooklyn. He is still the conserv e live, cart1 tally speaking man of the navy yard days, and so the story lie recently told will h. ve added forcu. "For a long time," Mr. Bennett explained, "I kept having a pain in ly chest, and a full, 1 "ivy Moated feeling in iny stomach and abi orne 1. It felt as if 1 hod e iten io' .ethi hat di ag. ee.l v.:th i ", at 1 cou.J lot tel what. My food did not di. est, I:' renr.ied to sour and l e 1 " 1 i lu i:> I got so I couldn't eot vceal.le . nt all. 1 lived on '-ggi s..??! iiilk, and lots of times I didn't have in appetite e.en for that diet. Be ddos, I had night sweats rnd I could lot n* lly rest more than an h< tu - t". > : ' night, a id then only when wsi all tired out. I had to lie sc red I ,!u:t dropped o.'f ;> sleep. I ook lots of medicine and was treai d many times, hut 1 just kept or 'eeliny had. Hut now," Mr. Bunnell oritiiund, "1 feel better in everj way. 1 can sleep all night long. 1 save a rood appetite and can eat anything with pleasure because my stomich is easy and does not distress nic, ' ut digests my food. I feel as good I nia' it a rule to walk twenty to thirty blocks each day. "What did this for rue? Why, ratline. So many people told me about Tanlac that, though I reall> di<l not believe all of it, because I didn't think any medicine could In ts good as they said it was, 1 decided to try it. And 1 only Look two bottles," he continued. Tanlac, the reconstructive, system purifier and tonic, is designed to go Lo the root of such t'oulb- as Mr. lh Illicit had. It is designed to create real digestion and assi nilaf ion of food that is good and nourishing and so build strength through blood and tissues. Tannic, 11.?? M ister Medicine, is sold by The Chesterfield Drug Co., Chesterfield, S. C.; T. K. Wanamakcr & Sons, Cheraw; Mt. Croghan Drug Co, Mt. Croghan, S. (J.; McUee Drug Co., McBce, S. C.; i'agelund Drug Co., I'agolund, S. C.; J. T. Jowers Si Son a. Jefferson, S. G. Adv ASHCRAFT'S )dfidition Powte A hiplt-clnss remedy t'>r ml T'lt'c*: in poor < > !i?; n -! a nred of a tonic. Mt,:ld; soli, ntisclo and f. t ; cleanses llie sy'cm, IhereDy producing a smooth flossy coat of heir. Ducked -/? Itr-b. ?5<i, f/OT ; .... , J ') M I INFV Look Ahead Be Independ When You C A goodly sum of money in bank i ing years. You are young and vigorous and ing good money. Things may not always be so rosj PLAN TO DEPOSIT A CERTAJ BANK A Bank Book Is The FARM1 wwwp 11 <!f 111 n^^MMpjpjpaj 1 y.fffffi sealed have 1 also I I1I1I11 WR ! That n taction Imltatlc sealed fecflon 1 : MASTERS SALE I'uruant to an onlci of His Honor j Edward Mclver resident Judw of the Fourth Judicial District. dated January 7lh, lltl'J, in the en of W. , Wines, as Assignee of A. M. Soinpay' rac, plaintiff, versus Catherine ('??>:, ct al., defendants, 1 w II ill l>etween the lepal hours of sale, at ,?uldie au< | tion, to the highest bidder, for en. , before the door of the Court House, Chesterfield, South ' arolina, th,. following premises: "All that certain tract, piece or parcel of land in the < our.ty of Chesterfield, in the State aforesaid, containing sixty < ' ( ) at res and bounded as follow- North by Old Itoad i ividinjr this iand front land of John II. Linton, formerly land ? f Alex Linton; east by Choraw & DarI. ip.o i railroad: south bo hiu.t S. Dixson, the ditch between the lands being the line; west by lands now o .vi ? <1 by Lee Chapman, formerly lands of Melton Douglass. This land being conveyed to James Lougla. s l.y bis father, J. Kllcrhuc l>nugI s.:, by deed bearing date November I Purchaser to pay uli taxes and pay for norev.ary papers. I. I'. MANCIJM, Clerk of Ct., Acting as Master. Pollock it;- Pegues, | For Plaintiff. VHdj r I n Pf pJnH| j irow Old! s a source of comfort in one's dcclinfnil of energy today. You are makr. [N SUM EVERY WEEK IN THE Yorr Best Friend IKS' BANK ' wm . )K for the l I package, but ||fj an eve out |||jj{ for the name |||||j 1GLEY5 J ame is your proagainst Inferior |j lj| >ns. Just as the |||| package is pro- |?S against Impurity. : reatest Name ggtHj lip AUTOMOBILK BARGAINS - Wc have on hand for Halt* at exceedingly , low prie s eight automobiles used by the Government; also six automobiles that have never been used, bought at a bargain Prices $H5() to $ 1 ObO.OO. Also want agents rn each county for a good line of cars. COLUMBIA SALKS AGKNOY, Columbia, 8. C. I'hone o7.S.'{. OR. L. H. TROTTI, Dental Surgeon Chesterlield, S. C. Office on second floor in llosi 1 Budding. i All who desire my services will please see me at Chesterfield, as 1 have discontinued my visits to othei towns. DR. R. L.. McMANUS Dentist Office over B.-nk of Chesterfield. \V ill visit l'agclaiid every 'I uesduy 'All. Croghan every Wednesday. I ' Other days in Chesterfield. Prices reasonable. All work guar I anteed J. ARTHUR KNIGHT Attorney-at-Law Office in Courthouse r" i??_ ? r. _ i j e t v*l IIVIU, U. V. HANNA fir HUN LEY ?Attorneys? II. E. JIunnu, C. L. Hunloy, Cheruw. Chesterfield OfR jcs: Peoples' Hank Hid#., Chesterfield Rank of Chernw Hid#., Cheraw AffiEVOUS WRECK i Fruai Tliice Years' Suffering. Says Cardui Made Her WeD. Texa3 City, Tex.?In an interesting r*stcincnt, Mrs. G. ii. Schill, of this town, toys: "For three years I suffered untold a^ony with my head. 1 was unable to do any of my work. I just w anted to sleep all the time, for Hint was tlic only ease I could get, when 1 v as asleep. 1 became a nervous wreck i-ist irom tin* awful suffering with my head. I was so nervous that the least noise would make me jump out of my bed. I liad no energy, and was unable to do anything. My son, a young boy, had to do all my household duties. 1 was not able to do anything until I t?k Cardui. I took three bottles in all, ? nd it surely cured me of those awful i headaches. That has been three years J ago, and I know the cure is permanent, I f >r I have never had any headache since J taking Cardui. .. Nothing relieved meuntil I took Cardui. ? It did wonders for me." c Try Cardui for your troubles?made * horn medicinal ingredients recommended s in medical books as being of benefit In j female troubles, and 40 years of use has proven that the books are right Begin taking Cardui today. NC-134 Y.W. C. A. WORKER IS BIG SISTER) | Industrial Woman's Service Club Brings Home to Girls in New Factory Community. BLUE TRIANGLE MEANS CHEER I Club Stands for Hot Lunches, Clean Towels, Comfortable Cots, Parties, Games and Recreation to ' Girl Workers. Katherine Holland Brown. ?TV X V nuine Ih Mny Isabel Carnu- } I y I linn. I am eighteen years , obi, ami I work In a big far- I lory In Michigan. More than four hundred other girls work there too. I don't aim to tell you about our John. You ran rend about our work In the labor department reports. llut I do aim to tell you about our Rig Slater and of the tilings she has done for us. "To begin with, our factory to^i Isn't a town at all. It's a huge barn of buildings stark down In the country nineteen tulles from nowhere. There Is n railroad siding, a station the size of a dry goods box. seven farmhouses and one general store and postofllre "omblned?It's pretty near as big as n hot taiaale stand. And that's all. No Main stroot, no banks nor stores, no lee-cream parlors, tint one solitary movie show. In all those nineteen miles. Lou* some? .It's the ragged edge of desolation, that's what It Is. "I was one of the first carload of forty girls that was shipped tip from PI den go The factory was swarming with workmen put tint; In the machinery. and we girls couldn't begin work for a day or so. so we began bunting places to cut and sleep. That was a trl'le that the employment folks hadn't thorgty of. The workmen were sleeping and eating In the ears that hud brought them there, backed on the s'ding. <>?ir only flmnci' for beds and food was wllli llioso seven farmhouses, mi wo i nrolioil straight l" 1 Im* farmers' wives ! .! ?' asked for lionnl un?l room. Farmers' Wives Hocpitable. "I will -iiy iluil thoxewomen were kln?l nr.d hospitable. They fixed It up hetwoon them to feed us forty girls. niul they pivo us good food too. llut for rooms, thnt was tlie question. Tlioy emtld onoli siuiro ono room. Tlint mount sloop five or six In a room. Hut rltrltI tlion along onuio the boss of thA factory and told us tho nmohlnory was ready and he'd expect us girls to work double shifta. nlglit and day. "He wanted to make use of every minute, you see. Hut that pave us our ehanoo us to sleeping. We fixed It up with the farm folks that we'd work double shifts and sleep double shifts too. "So we planned It. Three girls would use a room from eight at night till six the next morning. Then they'd hustle over to the factory, and the three girls who'd been working all night would take the room and sleep till afternoon. It wasn't any luxurious slumber, believe tne. The farm women bud so few sheets and pillow cases that most of us went without. Ami towels were scarce as diamonds oil blackberry hushes. As to soap? well, tin* general store kept yellow bar soap, that kind that Is so full of rosin you could use It to culk a ship. Hut we made out till the next three carloads of girls came rolling In. Then we went 'most distracted. Those poor girls had to sleep In tentH and In the ears that the workmen had abandoned by this time, and they were lucky II they got a straw tick and n blanket. Hy this time It hnd turned raw cold, and mavbe you know what late autumn nights In Michigan feel like. To cap the Cllmnx the farm folks cut down on food, and for a week It wai potatoes and beans und mighty few beans at that. Alona Came a Mirari* Hut, right when we were nhoui ready to quit our John and boat It for home, along rnme a miracle. Two quiet, businesslike women <'llmhe() down from the eaathound train on? morning. With them nunc eight work men, a carload of scnntllng and tat paper, another carload of cola and blanket* and pillows and sheets and towela?brand new blauketa nnd bed* ?think of the glory of thnt I?and bushels of dlahea and roll* of oilcloth and enough burlap to carpet the country. You won't believe me when I tel! yon that In ten day a their workmen had u Hcnntllng-and-tar-pnper aback put up and burlap tacked over th? walla, and the Y. W. (!. A. secretary and her helper had sot up hoard tablet and coffee kettles and were serving ui the grandest hot lunches every dny And back behind the hurlap screeni were sot those rows of clean cota, with enough cover to keep you warm th< coldest night that ever blew, and e1 towel apiece for every single girl. I)c you wonder that we all felt, as on* girl put It. 'I'll wager the Krlt/.-('nrl?. Ion hn s nothing on this!' "Who wore those women? Why Y. W. *'. A. secretaries, of course. IV ttiluk you'd know that without holny told. All over the country wherevoi wo girls have pitched In to mnke aoro piano clotti or ovoralla or munltlotiH 01 canned goods you'll tlnd a Y. W. C. A secretary working harder than any body else to make the girls comfort able and to keep thoin happy and well 1 SomotlinoM tlioy hn n't money enoiigl to got all that wo really need. But al ways they stretch every cent to maki It do Its level host for us. I?o you won dor *h".i we girl workers have loarnei to call the Y. W. C. A. our Itlg Slstei ?the very best tig Hlvlvr of all) Ther* la more Catarrh In thla section if the country than all other diseases lut together, and for years It wss sup-, tosad to be Incurable. Doctors precrlbed local remedies, nnd by constanty falling to cure with local treatment, ironeunced It Incuraole. Catarrh Is a no a I disease, greatly Influenced by contltutlonal conditions and tbersfors reulres constitutional treatment. Hall's 'ntarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Iheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio, le a constlutlorial remedy, le taken Internnlly nd note thru the Itleod on the Mucous urfacss of the System. One Hundred toilers reward le offered for eny oaee hat Hall'a Catarrh Cure fella to oure. end for circulars end testimonials. F. J. CHKNIT A CO., TolSdo, Ohio, old by Druggists, 7I?. Holt's Family Fills (or oonstipotion. * -w 1 I II I I III State of South Carolina, County of Chesterfield. Court of Common Pleas SUMMONS W. P. Pollock. Plaintiff I ?vg? Moscow Powe, Sr., Moscow Powe, Jr., Willie Powe, Alphonso Powe, an inf.ant, Alex Powe, Charlotte Russell, Geneva Johnson, John I'owe (a), Tom Powe, John Powe (b), or Henry Powe, William Powe, Samuel Powe, Lucy Powe, Mary Powe, children of John Powe (b), or by I whatever name the said children I of John Powe (b) may be call- ' I cd, or any other child or children of the said John Powe (b), I Alice Pcgues Gray, Geneva PeKues, Manuel Bailey Pejcues, an infant, Henry Powe, Abram Powe, or uny other child or children or heirs ut law of Maria Powe, deceased, of Charlotte Tomlison, deceased, of Al.ce Powe, deceased, or of Mosc >w I'jwe, Sr., be he living or dead, or of Tom Powe, be he living or dead, or of Mn^ie Powe, deceased, or bv whatever name the said chil.' en may be known, or (he child or child.*cn of Charloll liu.tO'i . If livimr or lend. ?r by nhuc.er ..ante I tey may '.e known, and the child or ! ii i of Yv. men 1'cwc, i!cc-.tn -v.. i?y v.l.nte.cr name they i .^y I o known, and any other I .i.]<! child.en or heirs at law I of John I'owe, doce tsed and Ilarri: I'owe, deceased, Def'*nd".nls. fo tht. Defondan's Above N'tned: You arc hereby summoned r.r.<l ;u'.r ;! o nns'.ve. the complaint in 's re !, of which a copy is hereith served upon you, and to serve a opy of your answer to the said comtint on the ::ul scriber at his o'^ce i Ciierav, S.C., within tv.eniy days fter service hereof, exclusive of the lay of such service; and if you fail to inswer the complaint within the time .foresaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the re* !ief demanded in the complaint. B. F. PEGUES, Plaintiff's Attorney. To Moscow I'owe, Sr., Charlotte Russell, Geneva Johnson, John Powe (a), Tom Powe (if living), John I'owe (b), (if living) or Henry Powe, William Powe, Samuel Powe, Lucy t'owe, children of John Powe (b), or ay whatever name the said children of John Powe (b) may be called, or any other child or children of the aid John Powe (b), Geneva Pegucs, Manuel Ba.ley Pegues, an infant, Henry Powe, Abram Powe or any >ther child or children or heirs at law of Maria Powe, deceased, of Charlotte Tomlinson, deceased, of Alice Powe, deceased or of Moscow ('owe, Sr., be he living or dead, or of daggie Powe, deceased, or by what;ver name any of the said children or heirs at law of the last four named persons may be known, or the child >r children of Charlotte Russell, bo she living or dead, or by whatever name they may be known, und the child or children of Warren Powe, j? '.. ce .sod, if any ihere be, by whatever name they r.ay be known, and any other child or children or heirs at law of John l'owe, deceased and itarrison I'owe, deceased-?non-resident defendants whose addresses are unknown: You will take notice that the original summons and complaint in the above cuti-lcd cause were duly filed n the o.Tice of the Clerk of Court for Ihesterfield county, South Carolina, it Chesterfield, S. C., on the Oth day of December, 1918, and that a copy of the same may be had from the ad Clerk of Court or from the unJersigned. December Oth, 1918. B. F. PEGUES, Plaintiff's Attorney. TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANT, Alphonso Powe, an ill ant over the age of fourteen (!4) years, residing in South Carolina, and lo the above named defendant Manu'I Bailey Pegues, an ir^ant over the Irors is unknown: ige of fourteen (14) years whose adYou will take notice: That unless you apply and have some person appointed as Guardian ad litem in the above entitled action within twenty (20) days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service, he plaintiff will apply and will have suitable person appointed. December 9th, 1918. II F. PEGUES, Plaintiff's Attorney. I hereby certify that the original lummons, of which the above is n rue copy and thu verified complaint n this action, were duly filed in my >f.!CC on the ltOh day of December, s to the above named non-residents 1912; tli.'.t an order of publication has been duly made and filed in my >fiicc on the 10th day of Decomber, 191b; and that the foregoing is a ^ correct copy of all papers now on file ? in my office. I. P. MANGUM, Clerk of Court of Common PleAs for Chesterfield County, S. Q.