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VK w The Chesterheld Advertiser PAUL H. HEARN Editor and Publirher. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY Subscription Rates: $1.50 a Year; six months, 75 cents.?Invariably in advance. Entered aa second-clasa matter at the postoffice at Chesterfield, South Carolina. An exchanore suvs- "fiivo formnN - fair price or they will quit farming." And when farmers quit farming eaters will quit eating. The Victory Loan got a good boost in Henry Waterson's town, Louisville, Kentucky. $2,500,000.00 was subscribed in thirty minutes. The amendment to legalize the sale of wine and beer in Michigan was defeated in the recent election by a ma-' jority of 206,936. Michigan was one of the States counted on by the brewers as sure to go wet. Lieut. Vincent Astor, whose father was lost on the Lusitania, made the statement on entering the war, that he would not come back until he brought a German submarine. Vincent arrived in New York a few days ago and sure enough he brought a German submarine with him, being himself at the wheel of a U boat. As 800n as the Pocahontas Mem nr. ial Association can raise $1,200 they will place a splendid bronze statue of Pocahontas on Jamestown Island. The famous Indian maiden has been a long time dead but it is fiever too late to do a good deed even for an Indian. The three sea plans that will cross the Atlantic this month will be commanded by John Towers, of Rome, Ga. His name has an appropriate sound for one whose life will depend upon his ability to remain high in air for several days on a stretch. May it sustain him well above the Bea on his perilous trip. Senator Johnson, of California, who has been regarded as an opponent to the League of Nations, has come out in a statement endorsing President Wilson's attitude toward Italy and Japan. He said, "The present is the supreme test of the profession of our purposes which the President has so often voiced." Herbert Hoover, who is in charge of the food distribution in Europe, sent a message to Germany to tlu: effect that unless the strikes and disorders in that country ceased they might find their food supply cut off. He did not propose to send food over there that might be seized by rioters. The better class of German papers approve of Mr. Hoover's ultimatum. Have you read that letter from Middendorf? Then read it at once, from start to finish. The writer was afraid she was using too much space. But if she only knew how hungry this paper is for just such letters! We want the news not only of the little goings and comings, but the real news?what are your people thinking? In the meantime, keep your eye on Middendorf. The spirit of progress is stirring down there. When a community like that begins to think and talk education the future for the boys and girls begins at once to grow brighter. RICE DIDN'T FLY The first person in Louisville, Kentucky, to ask permission to make a flight with Victory Loan aviators was a lady. Amo"ng others who wanted to fly was Cole Ygung Rice, whose wife is the author of "Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch." He coupled with his request, however, the proviso that he would not fly without his wife's consent. He didn't fly. HOW OUR SHIPS WERE SAVED There were some things that could not be told while the war was in progress, but they are coming out now. One of the most important of these was an invention called "paravane," to protect the allied ships from the German mines that were sown in the ' " ' ' vesthe ich er. led de-! tips in und oss of in France. The paravene is described as a metal cylinder, twelve feet long, weighing 1425 pounds. Each paravane was fitted with a set of teeth which cut the mine mooring as easily as a knife cuts a piece of cheese. The mine thus released from its anchorage, would come to the surface, and was destroyed. The towing cable of each paravane was about fifty-six yards long, so ample sway was pro- , vided for catching a mine. The Germans were kept guessing' . . /, iTT.V -Hiriniiu I but they could not ftnd out what it Ui | was that seemed to give the Allied ships a charmed life. Not even the pro-Germans in the United States, vt the spies that were numerous and a vigilant, were able to discover the secret, so well was the envention ^ i guarded. Some noted English engineers *** came to this country and joined the BP the American engineers in preparing V for the production of the paravanes 'n on a large scale, which reached its ? highest mark in the early part of 1918. A German mine off the coast of J Maryland would have destroyed the dt American superdreadnaugh North 01 Carolina, had it not been for the use by that vessel of the paravane. The Germans had the reputation of being great inventors and discoverers, 1 particularly of poison gas and meth- 81 ods of torture, but they were not cr able to discover what it was that ^ made their mines useless. There will be a great many afterthe-wa revelations but none, perhaps, of more importance than the paravane. sc THE BIVOUAC OF THE DEAD ,1 The muffled drum's sad roll has beat ^ The soldier's last tattoo; No more on Life's parade shall meet That brave and alien few. q. On Fame's eternal camping-ground aj Their silent tents are spread, And Glory guards, with solemn round, The bivouac of the dead. cj No rumor of the foe's advance Now swells upon the wind; di No troubled thought at midnight ai haunts le Of loved ones left behind; _ No vision of the morrow's strife The warrior's dream alarms; No braying horn nor screaming fife At dawn shall call to arms. Their shivered swords are red with rust; Their plumed heads are bowed; Their hauty banner, trailed in dust, Is now their martial shroud. And plenteous funeral tears have washed The red stains from each brow, And the proud forms, by battle gashed, Are free from anguish now. The neighing troop, the flashing blade, The bugle's stirring blast, The charge, the dreadful cannonade, The din and shout, are past; Nor war's wild note, nor glory's peal, Shall thrill with fierce delight Those breasts that nevermore may feel The rapture of the light. Rest on, embalmed and sainted dead! Dear as the blood ye gave; No impious footstep here shall tread The herbage of your grave; Nor shall your story be forgot, While Fame her record keeps, Or Honor points the hallowed spot Where Valor proudly sleeps. Yon marble minstrel's voiceless stone In deathless song shall tell. When many a vanished age hath flown, The story how ye fell; Nor wreck, nor change, nor winter's blight, Nor time's remorseless doom, Shall dim one ray of glory's light That gilds your deathless tomb. ?Theodore O'llara. Com prices on April 25 advanced more than 6 cents a bushel, and July deliveries in Chicago were $1.70 a bushel. Northern farmers are cutting down their corn acreage to sow more wheat, and their is no prospect that corn will be materially cheaper during the next twelve months. Here is a lesson for our cotton, tobacco, and peanut growers, and it is this: = Foods and feeds are certain to be A high, while cotton, tobacco and pea- B nut prices may be low, comparatively. U We can't afford to buy food and feed P with cheap cotton, tobacco and pea- H nuts. Make food and feed on your I farm this year. A sure way to do I this is to plant an ample acreage to I com.?The Progressive Farmer. B Mfhy Take Calomel? I Dr. Thacher's Liver & Blood Syrup B will do all that calomel will do ana fl -j I i <1 41 rr i H without tne alter enects., g Years ago, when people were bilious, K when the liver got lazy and failed to do I? its work or the stomach was out of it condition, calomel was the standby. C By and by the users of calomel found K that the "after effects" of taking the E drug were as bad and more often worse m than the ailment for which it was taken. 13 Dr. Thacher, In seeking a medicine E to take the place of calomel?one that m would do all the good that calomel B would do, and yet leave none of its evil i Kj ?trects perrcctea Dr. Thacber's Liver tt | K Blood Syrup. This was in 1862, and ; Ej ;ach year uince has added to the confl- R lence of those who have used id. 9 MisaBnsie Brewer, of Chattanooga, H Tenn., tried calomel. 8he was Butter- I ing with a very serious cold and grippe ?nd had no appetite whatever. After the calomel failed she tried Dr. Thach- ! jr's Liver & Blood Byrup. She fell better after taking three doses and she joon got entirely well. "I think Dr. Thacher's Liver and Blood Syrup is a wonderful medicine," she said, "and I im very thankful I tried it." For nearly threequarters of a century this sterling preparation has been an old stand-by" in thousands of homes in treating rheumatism, dyspepsia, inligestion and other stomach and liver complaints. It is a powerful tonic and blood purifier and can be used with the utmost confidence. Write Thacher Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn. for a copy of "Thacher'a Family Doctor," a book giving cause, symptoms and treatment of 47 common diseases. Dr. Thacher's Liver and Blood Byrnp for sale by dealers in mndtcinca every Where. THE CHESTERFIELD DRUG CO. ?e Scalding Watar to Wa?K OUh?> There see ma to be an almost uniirsal belief that lukewarm water, little soap and any kind of an old X clean dishes. People do not seem know that to actually clean dishes, irticulary cups, glasses, forks and toons, of dangerous mouth secrejns, which are the means of spreadg most of our contageous diseases, om tuberculosis to whooping cough, at it is necessary to scald them. Some people, for fear of breaking leir glasses, never scald them. They > not know that if they are rolled submerged quickly into hot water, > that the glass expands evenly, ere is no danger of breaking them. Recently I helped a friend wash her shes after she had given a party to xty people. Several women in the owd had bad colds, and some of the >8sip of the afternoon was that two hers had tuberculosis. All that my iend did was to wash them through rty water and gave them to me to y with a much used drying towel, hen I remonstrated with her for not aiding them, she called me a crank. :t is not only practicable but it saves bor to have a pan or pot of boiling ater in which to dip the dishes, es?cially the cups, knives, forks and toons, after they have been washed, his makes the drying of them easy id leaves them clean and glistening; is easily done by arranging them in ire baskets and using a clean, soft oth for wiping them: Perhaps the worst of dangerous ?* " \r rliclioc n r<> tlinen cnrtrn/1 of on/In id some quick lunch counters.?Sected. u I DO IL. < with | Thei >f r r Of Life Insurance Arj wards every cemetery a desolate home. It of the widow. It w in black. The policies of t Trust Company, Grec to-date in every resp Chesterfield L C. C. DOUGL ALSO FIRE, ACCIDENT, HI INSUB We Buy ?.ad Self Reel ? .1 III! 1^ i> ii 1MM??? ?? How Indians Foolod tko Hun*. . Because of the nature of the country ever which the American troops fought in the Meuse-Argonne offensive, the Germans found it easy at times on our field telephone wires. The commander of our brigade of artillery attached to an American' division was particulary annoyed by enemy wire tappers jn a heavilywooded section of Argonne. Code messages from artillery observers were being intercepted by boch listeners-in and the commander knew as all armies know, that no code is impregnable when experts get work-1 ing on it. * The artillery commander took up with the colonels one of the line regiments the question of Huns' wirctapning activities. And the colonel hit upon an idea. Two Indians, both of proud Sioux lineage, members of one of his companies, were assigned as telephone operators. One was to go foward vith the artillery observer, the other to remain at the brigade-receiving end of the wire which the artillery was certain the Germans had that day tapped somewhere along the line. Now, when two Sioux Indians get talking together in their own tongue what they say sounds very much like code, but isn't. Anyway it raised hob with the code experts of certain Prussian units. The Sioux stuck on their jobs for three days and nights. They and the artillery commander and their own colonel enjoyed the situation immensely. If the Germans got any fun out of it they kept it to themselves. m K* * M i | leen iowt rf ggggggggg' *e Is Henty ufiimoi.t. It heads toIt rr turns again to glistens in the tear alks the streets clad he Southern Life and nsboro, N.C., are upect. oan 8 Ins* Co. .ASS, Manager SALTH, HAIL, LIVE STOCK LANCE Estate?Money Loaned i Mi ftiftaifl i f*ktiWw'i i . ? ' - . , i t1 cost of conor ib thejouth MR. J. 8. WANNAMAKER GIVE SURPRISING FACTS. STATEMENTS OF FARMER! South Realize* It* Future I* I 8take and Must Act Accordingly. Mr. J. Skottowe Wannamake chairman of the South Carolina Co ton Association, upon the request ( a well known mngazlne that he fu nish them with a statement "sliowin the cost of cotton to the South," ser them the following article: Cost of Cotton to the South. First, as to the cost of cotton t the South, I have estimated the coi of cotton to the South includes th following: 1. The production of cotton cost th South slavery. 2. It caused the War Between th States. 3. The production of cotton ha brought slave labor. Regardless of th fact that cotton is a hand-made pro< net, a price has been established o i - v- - tuuui t UII UIO UUHIH UL nlaTC'laDU from which price it has never bee removed. 4. It caused the South to beconi cotton slaves. 6. It caused the South to merely e: ist; denying to the producers the n< cessities and comforts of life. 6. To produce cotton and exist i the price paid for it by the manipi 'or necessitated the estahllshmer of starvation wages in the Soutl which exist even unto today. 7. It has caused the illiteracy ( the South, through the manipulation of the cotton bears. 5. It has caused the impoverishmer and pauperism of the South. 9. The production of cotton hs caused the bad roads of the Soutl through the impoverishment of th producer by the manipulator. 10. It has driven fVom the rur: communities the white man, who i no longer contented to eke ont nn e; istenee; to deny to himself and h: family the comforts and necessities < life; to work without a fair remuner tion. 11. It Is even driTlng the negi away; fco has received a new vision he is no longer satisfied with his u comfortable surroundings; he Is insu ficiently clothed. Has Made Other Sections Prospereu 12. It has made other sections the country prosperous; it has fa tened the bears and manipulators < the North; It has blessed mankind 1 every spot of the globe where th sun shines except In the South, whei It has proved a curse. IS. The production of cotton in tl Sonth today has caused the descen ants of the people who fought I break the chains of physical slavei from the black man to fight for tl purpose of forging the chains < slavery, of poverty, of Illiteracy r the women and children working the cotton fields, both white ar black, still tighter. 14. Tt hart filled the grave-yards the South with men, women and 1 tie children who existed and psss< away without necessities, comfor and education. 18. It hae created one of the grei eat gambling hells on thia glohe. tl New York Cotton Exchange. exten In* Its damnable and blighting m nlpulationn and schemes througho our nation; fattening and prosperli the gamhlers and mantpnlators on tl life-blood of the toiler. 16. The production of cotton in tl South has caused the producer to 1 come a commercial cannibal, this 1 lng abnohitMy necessary to est at him to exist. He has destroyed t forestry, fleeced his soil of its f? tllltv; existed on his natural asset denying to himself and bis fami reasonable hours of work and prop working conditions; a decent horn the opportunity to play and to leai 17. H has caused child labor In t South. It has caused the women ai children of the South, both white ai black, to perform not onlv labor, i gardless of hours, bnt even to p< form the manual labor of tilling t soil with the plow. (White worn and colored women can bo seen plo ing the cotton fields of the Soul with little barefooted childfen pit ding along behind them, scatter! compost, and performing their wo from the break of day to the twi'tg ?underfed, impoverished, half-eloi ed. worn and weary.) 18. It has caused the producer cotton to go without the neressa cotton clothing?the white man s dnm having enough to meet the quiremcnts of health and hygiene; t negro being seldom Mesped with nu than four cotton undorsults?one 1 life use. one when he Joins the chtir* one when he ?n?r~les the first tin and one when he Is hurled (This 1 Ing In excess of th? average.) As to the Coet of Production of Colt In the South. I requested the TT in D. IT IToust* Secretary of Agriculture, to furni me with a detailed statement show! the cost of production of cotton the South for the year 191S He h Just telegraphed me as follows: "Itemised estimate of total cost production of cotton for ISIS not ^ CALOMEL SALIVATES AND MAKES YOU Sl< Acta like dynamite on a sluggish In and you lose e day's work There's no reason why a pars should take sickening, salivating c omel when a few cents buys a lar bottle of Dodson's Liver Toneperfect substitute for calomel. It is a pleasant, vegetable "rn i which will start your liver just I completed. Work now being done will provide basts for estimate in few weeks. Would be glad for your association to select committee of three, to be in Washington April 21, for special conference on factors to be considered in estimating cost of producing cotton." For the purpose of estimating the cost of production by the producer, by the experienced business man and by the experienced banker, T have selected various men from our Btate. The result is aptly furnished by the - following statements, which are In w line with the various statements received. These statements are from three men of unquestioned veracity, ' 9ne business judgment, long business ,x experience and men who have been actively engaged in farming for over a quarter of a century; men who would not purposely make a misleadr, ing statement, even though they felt t- ' satisfied it would result in assisting >f fcs to win this campaign, regardless of r- ; (he deep interest they feel in the sueg resg of this movement for the comit | merclal freedom of the South Cost of Production Illustrated on a One-Horse Farm of Flftesn Acres, o Planted by J. M. Holman. it The production of this farm is tased e on a ten-year average production of Calhoun county. ie I have been farming for thirtv-flvb years, and have also been actively en;G gaged in cotton for the piest ten years. All past years must be left out of any tR calculation in finding the cost of the [Q 1919 crop, for the reason that all values have advanced out of all reason, n Labor and fertilizers coat three times r, as much as they Aid at the beginning n of the war. The calculations herein are made ,e with the actual cotton planted on this one-horse farm, and the expenses are i- figured only for the actual working e- period, my only object being to And out what it will actually cost to proit duce a pound of cotton. The owner of ii- this farm gets nothing for himself out it of this farm except his profit of $96.fin and he will not get this profit if hir cotton is damaged by storm or otherif wise and is reduced in grade, also prois virled he gets thirty cents for his cotton and $00 for his seed. I have not it charged this farm with any expense for hoeing. T expect the plowman to have time to do this work. 1, Expenses, e lfi bushels planting seed....$ lfi.00 3 tons high grade fertilizers 180.00 il 750 pounds rent paid, at 90c.. 225.00 Is Ginning, bagging and ties, T ic- bales cotton 35 00 Is Wages one man. eight months if at $40 320.00 a- Feed of mule eight months... 120 00 Rent of mule 30.00 .0 Picking 9.000 pounds of cotr ton nt $1 90.00 n'. Hauling to gin and market... 21 on Kxpenso handling seed 15.00 Wear and teur tools and flx^ tures 15.00 of t_ $1,006.00 >f jn i Income. k(k i 3.375 pounds cotton at 20c.. .$1,012.50 -e I (5.000 pounds seed at $G0 150.00 IP ! Oroas Income $1,102.(50 d. I Expense 1.066.00 to y Profit $ 96.no le 0f #*CoHt per pound. 31.(58. >n I certify that the above statement In Is correct and true. J. M. Holman. id Cost of cotton production lllu?tratedon one-horse farm of thirty acres of (twenty acres cotton and ten acres It- food) by J. A. Banks, sd Fertilizer. te . 8 tone 8 4-0 at $50 $ 400.00 1 ton soda 83.50 it- Labor. ha 1 plowman at $40 per month.. 480.00 d- Hoe labor 40.00 ia- Extra labor 40.00 tit Plckinr 12 B-C at 76c per ng hundred 99.00 he 20 hu. planting seed at $1 bu. 20.00 10 per cent depreciation on $500 equipment 50 fP )e. Current cost farm equipment 30.00 ,0. Ginning and bagging and ties, >le 12 BC at $5 60.00 its ,r. $1,308.60 a; Income. 276 bu. cotton seed at $1 bu..$ 270.00 MOO lb*. cotton at 284c lb.. 1.026.00 e; n- $1,302.00 hp This farm should produce under average conditions in tbia county of Calhoun, S. C.. food sufficient to feed r? the borse that plows it and twelv 8T" 400-ponnd hales of cotton (three bales h? of whioh ahall be taken for rant r4 ?B land! and 276 bushels of cotton seed w- This makes a balance and leaves the farmer nothing for his ttme and *1- attention. n* I have been farming for the pa?t fk | forty years and I am thoronghly >ht familiar with cotton production, hare th- also had many years' experience in general merchandise business, Hupplv ?f ; Ing fertilizers and supplies to farm T ers. also have bed twenty-five to j thlrtv years' experience na a hanker r'*- | being engaged during this period in h*" I farming. merchandising, operating ,ro sales stables and furnishing live '"r | stock. 'h. I The above is a correct ststeme , Illustrating the cost of production rr cotton. J. A. Ranks. ! Cost of Cotton Production Illustrated ?n on a One-Horse Farm of Twentyseven Acres (18 Acres Cotton >n. and 9 Acres Corn and Ish Hay). By T. A. Amaker. r\9 Fertilizer. 'n 695 tons fertilizer 8 3-2 at ins $68 $ $91.8' 1 ton nltrnte soda 90.Of of Labor, ret J plow hand 12 month *, at 110 J?n if surely as calomel, but it doesn't makt ZK you sick and can not salivate. Children and grown folks can tak< r#r Dodson's Liver Tone, because it ii perfectly harmless. ! Calomel is a dangerous drug. It ii l0n mercury and attacks your bones al- Take a dose of nasty calomel todaj ge and you will feci weak, sick and nau ?a seated tomorrow. Don't lose a day'i I work. Take a spoonful of Dodson'i ..! Liver Tone instead and you will wak< m 1 up feeling great No more billioue i SiiiiriBiiri 'i Iloe labor, 18 acres at f2.26 40.86 E*tra labor, gathering corn, hay, etc ... 80.08 Picking 10 bales cotton at 81 per hundred weight 110.00 18 bushels planting seed at 82 a bushel 86.00 10 per cent depreciation on 8600 equipment 60.00 Incidental expenses 80.00 CUnning and bag and ties 10 b. c 60.00 81.848.00 Income. 7 b. c. 400 lbs. each at 30c..8 840.00 249 bushels cotton seed at 81 240.00 8l.08Q.00 The a bore farm should produce 10 b. e. and tenant must pay three bales rent. After paying entire proceeds of* sale of cotton and seed on his year's.] expenses, he o%es a balance of 8268. j Land planted in com and hay will produce enough to feed horse. I have been engaged In farming for the past thirty years and am 1 thoroughly familiar with the cost of production being now extensively engaged in farming, and also thoroughly* familiar with same as a merchant! selling fertilisers and supplies, having been extensively engaged in the mercantile business for the past thirty years. The above Is a correct statement illustrating the eo3t of production of cotton. T. A. Amaker. Referring Beck to #e Cost of Cotton to the 8outh. Cotton production has cost the South all that I have said and a vast amount more. The cost is so great that it would require the judgment of God Almighty to render a decision a to what cotton has actually coat the South. No mortal man can make the estimate. Henry Grady more than thirty-one years ago delivered a speech in New England, which made a more lasting impression possibly on the country ^ than any one speech ever delivered by any human being. The production of cotton in the South has prevented his prediction from coming true. He said in part: "When every farmer in the South shall eat bread from his own fields and meat from his own pastures and disturbed by no creditor, and enslaved by no debt, shall sit amid his teeming gardens, and orchards and vineyards, and dairies and barnyards, pitching his crop in his wisdom and growing them in independence, making cotton his clean surplus, and selling it in his own time, and in his chosen market, and not at a master's bidding?getting his pay in cash and not in a receipted mortgage that discharges his debt, but does not restore his freedom?then shall be breaking the fullness of our day." The cost of production of cotton In the South has made the loyad American citizen realize that it ie abso lutely necessary for him in carrying out his pledge to help make the world safe for democracy, to help in every way possible, using every ounce ol energy at his command to help improve conditions in the South, so that it will be a fit place for people to ^avK'live in. He has made this decision ' cause he realizes, first, that It is hi^S duty as a loyal American citizen and because ft is his duty in justice to God and man. He realizes: 'Once to every man and nation Tomes the moment to decide; In the strife of truth with falsehood. For the good or evil aide. "Then to sidnwith truth la noble, When we share our wretched crust; Ere her cause bring fftine and profit. And 'tis prosperous to be Just. "Then it is the brave man chooses, While the coward stands aside. Doubting in hia abject spirit, Till bis Lord is crucified." South'* Futur* at 8taka. The South realise* that it* futur* ^ existence ia at stake, and that It I* absolutely necessary to market, bank and finance it* cotton crop and thai if this 1* not done, the cotton produo tlon of the South -will follow the indigo production, and that the cotton produotion will be referred to only a* something that once existed In th? Bouth. For this reason the farmer. merr> chant and hanker hare abaloutely determined to arrange to market cotton. They are forming a 9200.000.00C corporation for this purpoee known as the Marketing. Exporting and Flnanc1 Ing Corporation. The manipulator* and gpmblers who hare fed on the life blood of the South will, of course, Violently protests. We realise that I commercial freedom of the South is absolutely necessary to the futur* progress and prosperity of the South. The banking Interest* of the South 1 will increase their capital and nr 1 plus by at leait 60 per cent, and will accept liberty loan bonds in payment for additional stock Issued. Oppor1 tunity only knocks once. The South realizes that it is knocking today and 1 the door will be opened. Are You Halplag. A r* VYYII hhlnlnor in >U HID ll|Ul IW commercial freedom of (he South? It l not, you are not a loyal son of either America or the South. Not only thia I ?>ou do not realise that America, of which the South is a part. Is your own, your native lAnd; you d<? not realize that God Almighty made all men free and equal; you do not believe on "Peace on Karth good will to men." No loyal American will so far forget ? his duty as an American citizen; no 1 lovnl ,A nir rio?n ??.ll -* ? -A , . ....... tt.ii bu iiir loraei nis | pledge to make the world eafe fog > democracy. ? neu, constipation, sluggishness, headache, coated tongue or sour stomach. Your druggist says if you don't And ' Dodson's Liver Tone act better than 11 horrible calomel your money is wait! ing for you. Adv. 8. i ') TRESPASSING FORBIDDEN ' A This is to notify all parties coni cerned that trespassing on my lands i is forbidden, especially the hauling of ) straw, wood and llghtwood. - 8-p 8. M. JACKSON. . i \ a rt|| .. V -^|t.