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VOL. 39?NO 28 - CHESTER! 1LLD, S. g, THURSDAY," JULY 8> 1920 ~;,o A YF.AR TV A twaxtpd . - BIG REVIVAL AT CHERAW A big religious revival is announced for Cheraw, begining Sunday, Ju ly 18. The largest tent that has ever been brought to Chesterfield County will be used. It will seat fl.OOO people. Rev. Luther C. Bridges, a well known revivalist, will have charge of the meetings. It is anounccd that the meeting will be assisted by other ministers and a special choir. It is announced that the meeting will be conducted in the interest of the entire Pee Dee section. There will be services every morning, afternoon and evening. The first service will be giv cn at. 11 A. M. Sunday morning, July 18. STOLE 4 EGGS PAID $25 FINE Dock Wells, colore 1 citizen of Chesterfield, attempted to purloin four cwr.s from the Busy Bee Cafe Saturday nij?hf. He had slipped the he:i ituit into a papef saek and was about to make his exit when the sack bursted and the ckjc' kerfloppd to the floor. Dock couldn't understand how they got into the sack hut Peter Zounis could. Magistrate Teal fined Wells $25 which was paid. f n ? 1 Detter Living Conditions to7^ w - 'i:-. -.' r>, ? A *V?- ' j, j7. cr.-&j.y Dclco-Light is more than a mere lighting plant. It gives you electric . power too?for operating all of the light machinery around the house and barn, usually turned by hand. It will pump and deliver water to all parts of the house or barn. ? Write for Catalog . Funderburk Electric Service Co. PaKeland, S. C. Dealer for Chesterfield County. There's A Satisfied User Near You ^ y A At Last Genuine * O an** 24 Selectior Each phonogra finest phonograph n Now offered uj ful instrument with teed. Six (6) Excl A JEWI 1. No Needles to Change o never wears out. 2. Guaranteed Longer Life 3. Plays All Makes of Recoi 4. Always Ready to Play as t? Sur>rnm/i in 'IVmn Im/.-jiio G. The Pathc Controlla enal volume at will. , Yet the l'? Total < Cost * I P. T. GANT1 ORGANIZING CLUB CHESTERFIELD WILL HAVE A BASEBALL TEAM NEXT WEEK ( a Lack Of Interest On The Part Of The n Public Will Not Prevent Player* |d Getting Together _____ s< The cold water thrown on the plans tr <f the 'ocal hell players when an at- f< tempt was made to ort>ani*e a team *?! recently did not rsult in the abandon- b< merit of the idea, as was generally hi supposed. In fact, the discovery that there ni were no real supporters of the name S in Chesterfield, except the few play- n< rs and those dirortlv inlere.-.ld in the ri forming of a club, only strengthened hi the determination of this small cot- so v'rie to have an organization. ni Plans are now well under way and practice will begin before the pres- pi ent week is over. A game or two will hi be played next week to got a line on t< the merits of the players assembled tl md then some real games with regu- p' lar teams will bb announced. ni It is rather late in th season to get bi players regularly, but the best that ni can be done at this late day will be to in the nature of short engagements th with star players to help out in big in games. Two players from Kershaw th will arrive in town Friday. Thornwell th Sowed will be on hand for some of the games as will First baseman cr Heath, of Charlotte. Arthur Rivers di and Henry Douglass will be regular b< members and Rudolph Hursey, who bits lately developed into a good all st round amateur at the Citadel, will ic have a position in the outfield. w Other players are being rounded ft up and games will be scheduled as si voon its the team considers itself in tc shape to tackle the clubs already ci playing in this vicinity. M V 1 ALL TEACHERS ENGAGED la pt FOR NEXT SCHOOL YEAR C Prof. MoKinny has signed con- ei tracts for another term as Superintendent of the Chesterfield High t i< School. There ha i been some doubt as z<i to Prof. McKinny's returning for another term and considerable anxiety C< was felt on this account, as his ad- le ministration hud been so eminently C< satisfactory that a change would ni hnve been most undesirable. Prof. McICinny has engaged all the teach- to ers, new and old and the list will be dr published shortly. gsi Miss Mattie Gaddy, who for sev- Ss eral years has had charge of the st classes in music has tendered her res- ly inflation and will not return to Ches- ja terfield in the fall. Her place has not yet been filled, but the School Board hsi has the matter in hand. fo 0 Genuine Porto Rico Molasses, the lis hind that sops Rood first, last, and all a! the time. W. P. ODOM fr You Can , is, twelve Si.00 Records of your o 'OUR OWN T pring shipment of PATIIE Phonoj an get that GENUINE PATHE P elivered to your home this very da ph in this shipment is a GENUINE lade and a PHONOGRAPH you a >on most convenient terms, which iin tlie reach of all. Every instrur usive Advantages in iLLED PATHE n a Jewelled Pat he. The Sapphir of Records. ivIs and plays thorn bettor, soon as you slip on a record, o of the famous Pathe Sapphire I >k s you to inc rease or decrease ilu itlio costs no more than the ordinary pho $135.2 ' DRUG STOP t ' SOUTH CAROLINA NEVUS During a gale that parsed over lharleston and vicinity last Friday n immense dry dock broke from its loorings in the harbor and started rifting out to sea. Swept out irough the breakwaters hy wind and ia the large structure was a serious lenace to shipping. However it was allowed and halted before any damp:e had been done. Half a dozen tug oats towed it back to the place it ad escaped. Reports from various campaign leetings in various parts of the tate indicate that Chestcrfeld was ot alone in lacking enthusiasm and roviding big crowds. Some of the rge towns of the State report as few ? thirty persons at the political eetings. Now that gasoline has reached a rice of 36 cents a gallon thieves ive found it a profitable article to ? purloin. A scheme has been uncaricd in Columbia whereby a tube is lat e ' in the tank of an automobile id the gasoline drained olf into a jcket and darned away. Many autoobile drivers have bet n complaining i dealers of the largo amount of gas leir cars have been consuming. An vestigation uncoveretl the method of le thefts but failed to catch the lieves. All evidence in the Columbia canal ise is in, and the lawyers are adres sing the jury. A verdict should reached this week. Last Saturday in Florence two range men folowed the driver of an e wagon on his delivery ami recighed fourteeen deliveries. They >und that he was systematically tort in his weights and that in fouren deliveries he had cheated his istoiners oui of 100 pounds of ice. e was arrested and fined $100 for olation of the? weights and measures w, which is under (on eminent su rvision. The Florence lee and Fuel ompany, by whom the driver was nployed, paid the fine. The York County Cotton Associai?n will hold a monster picnic at Tirih on August 1. Mrs. .J. J. Carmack, mother of the jlumhia corespondent of the Char: ton News arid Courier, died at the olumhia Hospital last Saturday ght after a prolonged illness. A man named Scott, who is said have been under the influence of ugs, suddenly pulled a pistol and bein firing into a bouse ir. Charleston iturday night. One of the shots ruck a woman named Regina Lovekilling her instantly. Scott is in il. The Cadet Corns at the Citadel ive secured "Shorty" O'Brien as otbail coach for the coming year. 'Brien is no stranger to Chaleston iving spent two seasons coaching id playing in that city. He comes om New Haven, Conn. Have A _ _ j* 1 lograpn wn choosing ERMS v>tln graphs has just arrived and MONOGRAPH you've been y ON YOUR OWN TKRMS. PATHE, the very re proud to own. place this wondernent fully gwaran i!:i" mi \ o o lull. ionai fr nojrrnph 20 tE, Jefferson COX AND ROOSEVELT DEMOCRATS NOMINATE OHIO CANDIDATE ON FORTYFOURTH BALLOT 1 I I James M. Cox, Third-Term Governor of Buckeye Stale, Was Strong From The Start?Franklin Roosvelt, Assistant Secretary of Navy For Second Place After nearly a week of balloting the Democratic Convention at Pen Francisco swung to Governor James M. .... e 11. i?n-i. \yuA, .111*1 WII llic iVIiyiWUIlll I 'it I 111 L handed him the nomination. Franklin I). Rooscvelr.of New York, was then made the paity's candidate for vice-president. 1 James M. Cox is one of the l ie men of the day. F >r three consecutive ' terms he has been elected Governor of his native State, Ohio, by the people of thai commonwealth. He has put ' many reforms into effect in the State 1 that have endeared him to Irs people 1 and have attracted the attention of the whole country. Mr. Cox is known as a fearless, independent and progressive Democrat. He is-bossed by no man or set of men. ( He has been a staunch supporter of the Wilson Administration. His rec- , ord is clean, elcarcut and there can be | no digging up of unpleasant past history; three successful campaigns in ( Ohio having disclosed all there is to disclose. The principal fight waged on Mr. Cox was due to his expressed views on the prohibition question. lie had expressed himself as favorable , to beers and light wines, but as there is no mention in the platform of the prohibition question. Mr. Cox's preference in tliis regard will be a pureIf iwnviintil iiiwi .?? *#! campaign as an issue. Franklin D. Roosevelt, assistant | secretary of the Navy, who was ac- , claimed vice-presidential candidate, is ( a native of New York state, and, al- | though a comparatively younjr man, has an established record for clean . politics. The nomination of Cox and Roose- ( vclt seems to have met with the ap- j proval of all factions til ^he Deiiiocrntie-party and shoub+f therefore, be assured of election. William Jeninprs Bryan seems to be then only disappointed "democrat," aside front candidates so far heard from. He expresad himself as de- j jected with his "heart in the pvrsive." This is the lirst Democratic Convention in many years in which Mr. Bryan has hud no voice. ILLITERACY FIGURES IN CHESTERFIELD COUNTY ' The Stale Department of Education and The Illiteracy Commission ace making vigorous efforts to refine illiteracy in Sou'h Carolina during the summer. The Department of Education calls particular attention to the figures in Chesterfield County. According to tables compiled from statistics there are 270,000 persons over ton years of ago in this State who cannot read and write. The HMO census figures report 5,287 illiterates in this county. Of the white population nearly 20 per cent, were illiterate, while over id per cent, of the negroes could not write their names. The total white <inu uiac'K uuiviiicy in uiv couuiy vmsi more than 2H per cent. In comparison with other counties in the State Chesterfield County ranks thirtieth in the scale of literacy The table compile.! by the State Superintendent of Education from the Democratic Club rolls of 1916 give startling facts. In thai year 1!?,K78 men voted in the State who signed their names to the club rolls with a cross mark. In Chesterfield County o,863 Ion :ej?istered, more than 1,0(1(1 of them making tin ir marks. When compared with other counties of the Stale Chesterfield County ranks thirty-ninth in literacy anions its voters. Tiie Illiteracy Commission asks hat each person who knows an illiterate teach one or more of ths unfortunates l i at least wtite his or her own name. The !ir*t step toward progress is education. Without education there can be no progress along any of the lines that progress is so i.aoiy needed in this county, Good schools, sanitation, trood roads and p.ood livnjj conditions are opposed only these who have not had the advantages of education. I am ? bad liombye on Chewing Tobacco. I sell it at a very small margin by the box. W. P. ODOM. FOR MAGISTRATE Cole Hill Township L. C. Sellers I hereby announce my candidacy for Magistrate of Cole llill Township subject to the rules of the Democratic 1 Party. p L. C. SELLERS ONE MAN AND FOUR STILLS TAKEN Deputy Sheriff J. 'J'. Grant in company with United State.* Marsh a lis Kelley and Evans and State Constable Eichelbrger paid a visit to some regions suspected of contuiniing blockade stills and were rewarded by finding what they went after. At the first place visited which was near Gil-i lespie's Siding on the Seaboard, Clif-i ton Crenshaw, a white man, was taken. On a branch a few hundred' yards from his house an outfit made j of a 30-gallon gasoline tank was found. Also 75 g.-Mons of mash. Crenshaw will answer to the United States Court. > On the same day near I'atrick an- j other well equipped plant -vas found. This outfit consisted of a live-gallon an eight-gallon and a fifty-gallon galvanized still;. Forty to fifty gallons ?...i. ' - * l?i iiitinn w<i? pouieo out ai 11 is piacc, but no arrests were made. It is pretty , well known who was operating the' outfit and the Gove.niivnt and State; officers will continue the investige.-1 tion. LEGION ENTERTAINED AT HORSE RACES Tin* Chesterfield Post of the Am-1 eriean Legion attended the races at Darlington last Monday as ti e quests of the Darlington Post. About all the boys from this county accepted the invitation and all report a fine time, good races, good eats and good behavior. FLYER WILL COME EARLY The Chesterfield County Fair Association has made arrangements for Aviator Merrill, who will fly lu re during tl*e fair, to conic to town on the Sunday preceding the exhibition. On Monday Mr. Merrill will take up passengers and will dy over the county and into adjoining counties and nearby towns scattering handbills advertising the fair. It is intended that Cheraw, Ruby, Mt. Croghan, Page- ( ami, dcnerson, nnjceies, iMclii i; and , Middendorf shall by showered from ibove with P'air literature ar.il that ( llso neighboring towns in North Carolina shall in like manner be informed of the big event. JAIL WILL BE MADE SANITARY , The new well at the jail has been completed. A nice How of v-ater was struck in a new location at a depth >f 140 feet. An entire iu w s\>tm will l?e installed, including new ai?* pressure tank and all new pluoibmjr. The recent repopt on the ji<i 1 1 y the State Welfare Board eo: amended the manner in which the jail was manned hut complained of the un: anitary and obsolete plumbing. The recommendations of the hoard v ili now he capri2(1 out. \ /VWA/A/-7, V/V/S C/1A I Or-' A? i : A//.S3 l^C y jj/ V/ y? , v ! t7/f/?V?VcS /.'? /-.! (/ 7 / A* / ' rj\ I H tikM! - $&#' -' J\ Jmm ;-l, ' /.n^'^-h \r - '.'i\r. ' jfyi ?!' $, ::(vr '% \ t < P' 'V * < "' < ?., V -V <il v C . - ' > > x, tj j "WE'LL EAT WHAT WE CAN AND WHAT WE CANT WE'LI CAN" is the slogan of the i n - ? oeiore ihe war was so easy to buy fi to take the time or s eryorie is canning th The zeal and t the problem of horn which is easily with For all of your We have a complet nels, Wire Baskets, Funnels, Wire Baslu Etc. Faimeis . CHEST FRIDAY "SHE All-St; Admission 2( MR. MATTHEW GRiC.GS Mr. Matthew 'irons died a 11 it a" Ioiik illness ??f tuboreu'o. U at hi.home near Hopewell last Sundav. Mr. Grijctrs was well known in Ins community and !ia<l many friends pn ie\ o to know ??T ! is death. He wa hliried at Honewdl. Mrs. Grij.r.s -urvivos. EDO LISEHBY Kdo, the tcn-y ir old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. N. J,. Lisenbv, lied of typhoid fever last Thursday ni;_ht. The little body was laid lo rest at Hopewell Friday. Serviei s we? cor-duoted by Revs. L$. S. I'utnhti>u? B. .1. Guess and I'. Chewnimr STATEMENT OF THE PEOP l.oeated at Chesterfield, S. ('., at lb'1 Resource* Loan - and Discounts . ,Sf2V2,1(5! ."?2 Overdrafts M 84.44 Bonds and Stocks Owned by the Ban' .'7,707.SI Furniture and Fixtures . i. I 87.0a Banking House ! ,.'!lu.aO Due from Banks tnd Bankers 11,847.2a Currency 450.00 Sold 202.50 Silver and Other Minor Coin 404.8(5 Checks and Cash Items . . 00.00 TOTAL 0i:{. state of "South Carolina, COCX'iV OF CMES'l CKFli.I.D. I'.t f'?re nie came 0. I'. Mnajrum who, be in;; duly sworn, says the nl?? condition of said bunk, as shown b; Sworn to and subcribed before Correct Attest: .1 A Campbell, K. W. Rivers, .1. L. Douglass, IMyeetors. y e:,7.rir. ajo ^/. _>a //.. , 1 ' ! ) TO _ i I > ' j r i zj = r- ' n /?1 ! m l ip c.xt'1 /tc- (' v / 11 a . ! '/ - . V /?&? I : \V 1 - \ T*X? ' r * "' 'I \ ''? ** 'O |jps|i \( if!Tj?Fi j.K*a !' l*:'i ' 1 j!' \ \ '' <r y \ ! i ' I ! v; lit#w1 ([? ji ij/J irfer ,J k j t modern American woman. housewives had lost the good mits and vegetables by the dov.? trength to can their own. Rut tv esc days, for home canning lias enthusiasm with which the hoi e canning is largely due to the in the reach of every woman, canning needs we are well pre le line of Prserving Kettles, 5 Measuring Cups and Spoons, ?ts. Measuring Cups and Spoon? Hardwaie I T All V/Li Hand ERFIELD JULY v :rry" jr Cast ) and :iO cents DEATH OF LONDON CRAIG un ion one of ill" representncolored men of this County, (i last Sunday after a long illness, lie w:? about sixty years of age. Ho '.vjis a life long le-ident of this county ami had always the respect of 1 tli tin* white and colored people. He was known a a progressive member of liis race. His funeral Monday o ie of the largest ever given a 1 n nil i i the coumy. 'he I ,-e District M. E. Churcli l'( .if? i i :.ce to lieid at Chesterfield 'duly I 1. I ."> and lb, invites all memhers of ,dl ckureh - to attend. On the ' ' and I| .ciiic lienors will be given. Kve-ybody invited to come |. id-1 i.iske.s. THE CONDITION ?LES BANK elose of business dune doth, I'.eju Liabilities Cap: il Stock Paid In . . . $2.r?,(?00.00 Surplus Kunil 2,.r>00.00 1 i 'ndivid. d Profits, le^s Current Expenses and Taxes Paid 1 1,11)9.57 Individual Deposits Subject to Check .. .$ir?:i,7.-,L'.:il Time Certificates of Deposit . . S2,77 1.07 Cashiers' Checks .... :'>[).). PH ' ?$2.16,914,30 Hills Payable, including Certificates for Money Borrowd $55.,000.00 TOTAL $:S80,6!?.!)? , Cashier of the above named bank, Co' and foregoing statement is a true . the b ooks of said bai.K. C. P. MANfiUM, Cashier, me this 7th day of duly 11)20. ! '. M. Cannon Deputy r"'erk of Court ' CV.C-,1 TO A'-?? ' i 7 O r-i.2 'SJE I ' 7 > . \ r /-. j. , f-~t /.,.'? / .y / I . \ j ! >\ ' \:\ - - , '/ > j , f u/ /,! i ' I a// : r lr 'pH/ r > ' i? lr . ' wlllil/ J i) ! J P'li i habit of canning. It 11 car.s, no one cared mv it'.5 different?evconic to stay, isewifo has attacked splcnd id equipment pared to . apply you. iteamers, Colanders, Jars, Rubber Rings, i, Jars, Rubber Rngs, Company B /