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s SUHtiUUSmmm > 1 (C*?tiMUl fNll feMl WMk) | CHAPTER XVIII, fhe Hoi^u*. ; Beaaley left pic aittlng |* the door Up-rrre a Wotlpa he had npi oat of bandtaffs, erae he tnlfM hate clapped a pair of trfenl1 on me^whlle he started M? p?ilH*^le Atropla with the captured ra'ldera and their leader. Whop he caaae back we took tUne, Daddy and \ and the M| marshal, to alae gpthe daaag* that had been wroeght, and beyond that, to dig late HMrkyl" H? yallttf. "Chlrity nil* \ orton'e Drained Yaur Mine for Yel" t)M mystery of the continuous grunthi lug roar which was still ascending Ml of the yrreck-coTcrcd mine shaft Beasley stayed with no, w&ittag. &S 1 teok It t? get his bthakfast before la ran me off to JaJT. ahd the fhrhe of is fell to work clearing Sway the fallen timbers and roofing Iron, Daddy Hiram leading the attack and being the first to stick his head throagh what remained of the tangle and hang It over the edge ef the shaft's moath. "Hooray f* he yelled, his voice sounding ss If It came from the Inside wi a oarrei; ana tneu again, "Hooray, gtannle, sen!?by the ghosts ef old hadracfc. Meshach and Absdnego, Charter Bullerton's done gone and done eggs-iacny what he Mid he ceatd do drsatosd your mine for ye I Climb h here and take a loo* at to. SU'i empty?empty aa a gourd?but. at that, she ain't goto' te be, very long I" A few' more minute* of the atreauouii toll cleared the pit mouth ao that we could all see. The bomb which had exploded In the shaft had wrought a complete transformation. The standthg flood, which all ef oar pumping attacks h*4 fatlad to lower by so much as a fraction ef an Inch, was gone, and with It had vanished the two big centrifugals, the platform upon which theybsd stood, and their pips connections, done, likewise, was the greater jpnrt of the heavy wooden shaft-lining.-' A Uttle ef this remained la the uppea. part ef the shaft, hat from a point peaslbly twcnty-flva feet down, there was nothing but tb* bars rock side* of ths square pit swspt by the receding flood. As for the hollow roaring nolsa which had followed the crash ef the explosion, and which still continued, there was a goed and sufficient reason plainly visible from the pit's month. , Some twenty feet down, and on the eastern side of the abaft, a stream of water biff enough to ran a good-sized hydro-electrle plant was ponrlnff Into the perpendicular cavern, and tt was Ks plunfflng descent into the bowels ef the earth which was maklnff the mimic thpnder. Bessley was the first to find speech. "Whert the biases Is all that Water eotnln' front 7^ he exploded. That's jest what we're going to And out I" I barked. "Can you and Daddy handle my weight In a rope sling 7" They both protested that they could handle two of sne if necessary, and a sling was quickly rigged and I was lowered Into the nit. At the neerer view thus obtains*, so?a eg the mye- ; teries were lnaSnntiyhnjhdW clear/ The reason why the wooden boxing disappeared below n certain point In the WUl WM <M( 11 n*a IMT?r ?HW>md ui farther tawu, It bat b#aa mera? |gr a U>* wttk a battam I?and all tboaa ulna itraaai laMMRau which bat trtat ta Mflatar tfcawtalvaa oa tka tar wbaa X hat tej itrhggta with tea > W^jlWlM octapaa war# UutaaUy twpwM latartabf X ?ca?lt bar# awara, tbaa, teat ****** a hattom la Um baa.' mat tbava waa a battom. Apt that atbar |*>ryclia?that I bat aacaaatarat aa laratelac atraaai oi tea ctt water , la tba cbUllaa taptba; bara waa tba atraaa; a fwrtthlch. aaaar-lilH? cataract, |itippM ta tbffa?b a lafiuly pact aat Mbma tlal natatt cC laily tpte Im? ?tp*J la a flaab tea wbalb-Mmtaai ter* UWJ'W'.JUUil l.u ffiy !S~S6R] BNER'S^SONS^3^ ; an out-dour race along the mine Iedgt 1 to the eastward; a hundred-yarde dash which bright us to the banks of the swift Mttlrt mountain torrent in the right-hand gulch. A brief search revealed precjgoly what I was. expecting to And; what i anyone In possession of the facts pre| cedent would have expected to And. In tha middle of a small pool slightly upstream from the path level?a pock- | eted bit of water neatly screened and half hidden by a growth of low* branching Spruces?we saw .*> cone* shaped whirlpool swirl Into which a good third of the stream flow was vanishing. Below this pool an apparently accidental heaping of rocks' ~ formed a small dam which kept the tittle reservoir full. Without e word. Daddy Hiram and ths Angelic marshal plunged recklessly Into the stream and with their bare hands tore away the loose-rock dam. With the removal of the slight barrier and the consequent clearing of the course of the stream, the pocket reservoir Immediately sucked dry, the Inlet , of the cataracttng pipe was exposed, and the secret of the flooded Clnnabur was s secret no longer. The scheme which had been elaborated apd set In motion to "soak" Grandfather Jasper was n premedl tated "holdup." The Cinnabar, In op eratlon and producing to Its cnpsi-' was worth, so Bcssley asserted that my grandfather, had paid and more. But with the brain*' road built to Its very door. li> would be doubled. Two alic. bad thus presented themselves owners, who wore Cripple ? mining speculators who hud bong! the stock at a low figure while tin main vein wna as yet unexplolted: ibc./ could go on mining the ore and stor- I Ing it againat the time when the railroad, with Its cost-reducing advantages, should come along; or they I could suspend operations for the same ' length of time, setting the losses of a > shut-down over against the Increased I profits when they should start up < again. i With our discoveries of the morning 1 the plan of the robbery became per- 1 fectly plain. Some giant of finance among the speculators had evolved a ' scheme by which the* mine not only might be shut dowh during the Inter- 1 val bf Waiting for the railroad io build ' over the bench, but at the ume time be made to yield a buuiper crop of profits. Taking its various a tape In their order, the first mere in the game was to sell the mine te Grandfather Jasper while It was stlU a going proposition ; and this was done. But one of the conditions of the sale (Beasley told us thls> wae that the selling corporation should continue to operate the mine, not as a leasee, but under a contract by which th* operating company should receive s certain percentage ef the output; an arrangement which gave the holdup artists ample opportunity te prepare for the coop de main. Hew these preparations were made, and 'the secret of tliein kept from leak* lng out, still remained one of the unsolved mysteries, though Beasley suggested that probably Imported Workmen were employed, and that the work had been done under Jealous supervises with all tha needful precautions taken against publicity. The tight wooden box?which would figure as a part of the shaft lining?had been built, and late the box the creek had been diverted by means of the small dam and tha underground conduit. With the wster admitted, te rise 1b the box to the level of its Intake In j the creek reservoir, the trap was set and was ready to be sprung. Beyond this point there was a gap we were obliged to bridge by conjecture, but the Inferences were all plausible enough. Doubtless the plotters had notified ray grandfather that his mine was flooded and was no longer workable. Doubtless, again, he had authorised them to buy the needful pumping machinery and to Install it? which they did. In this barefaced Imposture the plotters had conceivably buUdcd something upon Grandfather Jasper's advanced age as an Insurance against any too-searching Investigation; but beyond this they had carefully disarmed any suspicion that he night otherwise have harbored by enc-uraghim?In the actual purchase of the property?to take expert advice, and by craftily priming him, by understatements of the fscts, to trust them. < Oalv rumors of what h?<t swiirroil at this vtaK reached Angels; but Hen a- . l?y ceuld testify that nay grandfather | bad come gad returned alone, and that i after the pumping demonstration had basin made he had seemed disposed to gasket Me huge lose aad- to call it a bad day'e work. The later developments were not head te figure out. Beasley was able t# tell as that the proposed railroad branAi to ran te the new copper properties la UK!*- Cinnabar gulch waa new a certainty for the very near future. Hence the time was folly ripe for the recovery of the Olaaabar by the pletters. No doubt they had confidently assumed that a Repurchase of the property?net directly by themselves, of conns, bat by en agent who would figure as a disinterested third party?would be eesy. Beasley said j that there had been soma talk of aa ' undorraaefog deal neks tunnel, such aa J .EEtosSSs J?Slhlri 1 BflfiSSSXtESSBBESdkSlMMMKSBHEBSMMI 5T0 manidfluttBlCjrfMrat^IBtSed HM venture up .to. profit and ;o?e would ell for ft song rather tbafi to'ventuiV igftta; and-In this they were probably (veil within the truth. Rut at the mouient when they were ready to complete the circle of Imposture, death?the death of Grabdfather Jasper?had stepped In to complicate matters. Somebody?possibly Cousin Percy?had corresponded wltfi whoever was representing the robber syndicate, sod by this means the plot* tera bad: learned that they would now have to reckon with an heir. Itow Rullertop came to , be employed by fhem almost at the Instant of his return from South America we did not know; hint we could easily understand that with the^qew complication which had risen by reason of Grandfather Jasper's death, It was highly necessary for* some emissary of the syndicate to get on the ground quickly, propared to forestall by purchase, guile, or, In tile last resort by force, any attempt of the Dudley heirs to pry Into things they were not to be permitted to know. The pushing of tfid fight for possession to the final and property-destroying extremity was another matter that BeaHley was able to explain. "Ye sea. It was a case o' fish 'r cut* nan, and ao it quick," the marshal exI Waa Looking at Joanle When I Replied. plained! "If he could run you folks nit, pronto, and get possession afore anybody come along to ask a lot o' [ 'luted questions, he stood about one L'hance In a dozen to lie out of It tome way. If you-all got killed In the icrimtuage, he'd scatter his men In the woods and try to make me b'lleve that you'd got done up trying to run hlno rtT." "Would you have believed him7* 1 isked, grinning across the tabid at dcasley. * "It '?! a-bean a question of vee-radty. is the court says; with maybe you ind HI Twoiubly too dead to testify." At tfcls, Daddy, who had been eatng like a man half-starved, put La tin word. "x rvcicon you can't fet at them ;aloots higher up, Stannle, but If you lon't shove Charley Bullerton Just ibout as far as the law '11 allow, I'm roln' to call ye a quitter." At that moment Jeanle had Just irought In auother heaping plate of lie luscious corn cakes, a?id 1 was ooking at tier when 1 repiieu. "We'll see about the shoving a bit ater, Daddy. The first thing to do h to nut the old Cinnabar in shape to ihell us out sotu* money. I'm broke, ma know." When I made this admission, Beuse.v, the last man in the world from vhom help could coine, I should have mid. looked mo squarely in the eyes. "Stannle Broughton?if that's your i a roe?you alu't so dad-blamed crasy is you loek and act," he remarked. 'Money's what talks. Are you alfeatn' ;o swing onto this thing with your own xands for keeps, I mesm ; not to sell t eat to the first set ' mlnln' sharps hat comes along?" "Sure!?you said it; I'm going to xeep it and work it?after I get eut rt the Jail where you're going to and me for pinching that inspection ar ana getting It smashed. Why tlse did I start oat blindfolded to liant 'or a girl, a horse and a dog?" He let the latter half of my reply to without comrneut; charging It ap :o some last lingering remains of the rarlneaK, perhaps. "Well, let's see about where you'd 'rack your whip Orst," he Invited. "That part of It Is easy," I laughed. 'What I don't know about the prnclcal end of the mtnlng Job would load i wagon. I'll pitch out and hunt tne ip a real, for-sure miner, of course." "Notlifn' so awfully crazy about liat," he granted. Then: "What's the natter with III Twoiubly, here, for rour bosa miner?" "Not a thing In the wide world? ixcept that he can't he I>ecause he Is ;olng to be my partner In the deal." "Now you're talkln* a whole heap Ike a white man," said the desperadosh one. "Dog-goned If I don't b'lleve roil are white! What do you say to Ctvln' me a whack at the bossln' lobr I took Just one little glsact at I bully, and the tnlld blue eyes *ald "yes." "But you've got raw under arrest, Mr. Beasley," I pointed out. Just to tee what he'd say. "You can't very well close a business deal with your prisoner, can you?" "Kill two 'r three birds with the one rock," he mumbled, cramming the limped hajf of hi* breakfast-finishing oni cake into his capacious mouth. 'I'll fchaae ymi down to Angels and :urn you over to the majesty o* the aw -%he Same bplai by wrap* eld ' Equity Dubbin. Than Til Jsnp kg fob & sortln' oat the tad angels from tmongst the good s&JjM* hnd, go out ind tus^e. your ball. vHh?e .eld BUI * Dubbin's cbewin' oyer the lew In sfch raseaj made and petytded-dfkk he's M?un4 to do?111 scrape up s bunch of mso f y, gtart em up hereaways to IM.MMMiW 'uNf*11 1 ' Pl'tWlWUiP1?"^11 *~" ? v. L x " ;T^ was a wit rradt HLS . . | , "H strikes rae fair In the empty pocket, thy good friend," I told him. "Just at tlila presnut moment I couldn't finance one solitary lonesome carpenter?to say nothing of a wing of them, with half a dor.cn utecinfttters and bnllerinakera thrown In." "Huh! workln* capital, you mean? That's about the easleat.thlng this side o' Hades?with a tnlne like the old Clnnnbar?with no more water In It than what can be pumped out?to back you. 1 reckon your title to the property's all right, ain't lt?M "It la; Hiave a deed from nay grand- , father." So much 1 said, but I didn't go on to explain how the quick wit of a girl who now hated me had saved that deed from being a mere scrap of wnste paper. Not tbat I knew how she bad done It?but the tangible fact wiis safely In my pocket. Fifteen minutes nff?r tills breakfast table talk .1 was bidding a tern porary good-by to the wreck on the ClnnahaV ledge, and was about to take the r?tid to Atropla with Beesley; boti. of \4 Intent upon catching a wayfreight to Anuels. Daddy had lent me the pisbald puuy for the^rlde to the "Now You're Talking Like a White Man." J railroad station?this either with or without Jeanle's consent; I didn't know and forbore to *sk?and the 1 hnrlequln-faced dog was ready to trot at the pony's heels. But the blue-eyed 1 maiden had shut herself up In her i room, and I thought she wasn't going i to come out and see me off. At the final moment, however, after | Beasley had already steered his nag < across the dump head, and I was < about to climb Into my saddle, she \ game to the cabin door, and was both l curiously embarrassed and a bit breathless. "Please!?One inlnutal" aba bagged; and as I took ?y foot out of tbs stirrup : "Do you know what they bars done with?with?" "With BullertonT" I helped out. "No, I don't knew; but I suppose they've taken him on to tbe county seat at Copah with the others." "Then?then?please let him go! If you refuse to prosecute?" "Make youreelf entirely easy," I broke In, a bit sourly, tnaybe. "Til agree not to play the part of the dog hi. the mapger." "Thank you?ao much 1" she murmured ; and then she backed away gulckly and went in and on through to the kitchen, leaving pie to follow Beasley, which I dfd, with the sour humor telling ma that of all tbe pussi Ing, unaccountable things In a world of enigma*, woman's vagaries were the least understandable. For, after all was said and done, and after all that had happened and been .made to happen, It seemed to be palpably apparent that Jeaale Twombljr was still la lave with the Jeet. CHAPTER XIX. Angels, Desert and Urban. Our atop-over In Angela. Friend Beaalev's end mtn* *<i ><?? - est. Our business with Father Wtl- ' llara Dubbin was the merest travesty upon a trial at law, and was speodlly ( coneluded. Since there would be no passenger ( train until afternoon, Beasley and 1 ] resumed our places In the freight's caboose, and In due time were set down in Brewster, the breezy little metropolis of Tlmanyonl Park. Here my captor?-and friend?appeared to be very much at home. He took me to the best hotel, where he was greeted with affectionate camaraderie by a clerk who wore a diamond big enough to serve for a locomotive headlight, shook hands with, and Introduced me to, a number of gentlemen In the lobby, and presently gave me orders to go up to our rooms and "take a wash." preparatory to meeting a certain friend of hie at luncheon; the meeting contingent upon his being able to "round up" the friend In time for the feast. It still wanted a half-hour ef the appointeu luncneon time when I descended to the lobby. A Utile before one o'clock Beasley came In with a middle-aged man who looked es tf be might have been the retired manager of a Wild West show ; not long-hatred, or anything like that, but with the cool eye and bronzed, weather-beaten face of one who lived under house roofs only when circumstances forced him to. A moment later 1 was shaking hands with Mr. William ptarbuck, mine owner, ranchman, a director In the Brewster National bank, president of the Brewster Commercial club and the prime mover in e lot of other civic activities too numerous to mentten. V may pass lightly ovar the events of the three days following; days In -j which MA-flyUUem Starfcuek, who. thdtjocnger 'generation as "Uacltf Btl* 1jr UbdrtH untiringly In my beh<?;' > procured me the neceeesry working ' credit at the Brewster Nftyepnl, helped me the. eg^srU>d i -H.hh ' V" ? . i ' itii ii mi *um* if and last, but not leant, made my peace with the railroad company In the matter of the stolen and smashed Inspection car'; this being a thing which he was easily able to do because he was the brother-in-law, once removed, of the railroad company's vice president and general manager. On our last day In Brewster, and As a parting favor, 1 asked Starbuck how I should proceed In regard to quashing the Indictment against Bullerton, and when I did ao, he gave me a shrewd look out of the cool gray eyes, with a gentla uplifting of She shaggy brows. "If you are determined to let Bullerton go, all you have to do Is to do nothing. If you don't appear In Copah to prosecute him and his wouldbe mine Jumpers, the case against them will be dismissed, as a matter of course. But really, you know, you ought to make on example'of them." "In the circumstances, I can't." I returned, so we let It go at that; and an hour later Bensley and 1 were on oar way back to Atronla and cinn*. bar mountain. CHAPTER XX. Couain Percy Wire a. It was on the evening of the fourth day's absence that Beasley and I left the train at Atropla and took the mountain trail In reverse for a return to the high bench on Old Cinnabar, Reaaley riding a borrowed horse, and I the calico pony, which Daddy Hiram had sent down to the station by one of the newly Imported workmen. Juat fcs we were leavlug the railroad station Ruddy Fuller, the operator, ran out to hand me a telegram. Since It was too dark to see to read It, nnd I supposed, naturally, that it was nothing more Important than a bid from some machinery firm anxious to supply our naeda, I thought it might wait, stuck It into my pocket?and promptly forgot It. Our talk, as we rode together up the low familiar trail, was chiefly of busllesa; the business of reopening the nine; and It was not until we were searing our destination that the exnarshal said: "Still stlckln' In your craw that you iln't a-goln' to pop the whip at Charley Bullerton?" "It la," I answered. "Well, now, why not?" "Principally because I h^ve promised lomebody that I wouldn't prosecute." "Not Hi Twombly; he'd never aat rou to do anything like that." "No; not Daddy Hiram." He didn't press the matter anj further, and we rode oh In silence. As we approached the neighborhood of ( the mine, evidences of the fortliputtlng ictlvltles began to manifest themielves. Daddy Hiram met us at the door of als newly repaired cabin across the lump head and Insisted upon taking :are of this horses. Beasley and I a-ashed up at the outdoor, bench-and3as|n lavatory; and when we went In, Jeanie had supper ready for us. She didn't alt at tabla with ue? a from which I argued that she and her " father had already eaten?and I thought she purposely avoided me; avoided meeting my eye, at least. I lldu't wonder at It. Her position, as 1 had It figured out, waa rather awkwardly anomalous. By thlB time, I dad fully convinced myself that she was In love with Bullerton, and was 1 probably engaged to be married to hhu; and that U was only her native denesty that had driven her te take ildes against him In the struggle for the Cinnabar, prompting her to do the >ne thing which had knocked his nefarious scheme an the head?naiaely, he recording of my deed. Knowing nothing but hard work, Daddy Hiram was running the deepivell pumps himself, or rather, taking he night shift on them ^ and about ten >'clock. Just as I had made up my mind :o go to bed and let the repairing activities take care of themselves, I saw Teanle going over to the boHer shed with a pot of freshly made coffee for jer# father. Here was my chance. I LhoUght; so 1 waited and cornered her is she came back. "Let's have It out, Jeanle," I said; A-lilch, I confess, was a sort of brutal way to begin on the woman I loved, and yet the only way If I was to go on -emembering that she belonged to another man. "We can at least be good friends, can't wo?" "No," she returned, with a queer little twist of her pretty lips and a flash jf the blue eyes, "I'm afraid we can't sven be th*t?or those?any more, Mr. Broughton." t n was awicward for both of oa, ^ ? ATonic i a For Women H i SO "I wtt hardly able to drat, I DC j U wassowejUencd/^wrltesMrt. jyj ] "The doctortreated me tor about |fl \ M two mentor, still I Min't |tt M ( N| any better. 1 had a Urge M ( U tly and Ml I surety ttustdo U i JQ something to enable m# to tefce UB nj care of any tittle oose. I had Q j iCARDUli m Tin Woman's Tonic?j JH Mt decided to try It" coo- fit 1 fl ttoeee Mrs. Ray . ,*1 took rj 1 M bottka la all... Ire- N , Fi nty wwiui ina mvw pi j hJ had at more trouble with wo- to Q r 8 TMlOordto Mto II m ft M NP "M yei neflh M , f v i | i standing there before the open cabtfl door, and I pointed; to the bench wtiara Daddy Hiram was wont to amoke his evening pipe In good weather. "Won't you alt down until wa can sort of flail it out?" I begged* "It's np use, whatever," she objected ; nevertheless, she did sit down and let me sit beside her. "I know just how distressed yau must be." I began, "and (perhaps I can lift a bit of the load from your shoulders. There wlU be no legal steps taken against your?against Charles Ballerton." "Thank you," she said; Just as short a* that. And that Isn't all;" I went on. "Aft. er we get Into the ore and have some real money to show for It, I'm going to make over a share In the Cinnabar to your father and put him In a position to do the right thing by you when you marry. And be'il do It; you know he'll do It." "How klndl" she murmured, looking straight out In front of her. "It isn't kindness; Its bare justice. Between you, you two have saved say legacy for ma." "I wish, now, It hadn't been saved!" she exclaimed, aa vindictively as you please. Truly, I thought, the ways of women are past finding out; or at least the wav of a maid !?> ' "Can't I say anything at all without putting my foot tot* ltT" I asked In despair. "You break a man's back with a load of obligation one day, and toss him lightly out of your young life the neat! I haven't done anything to earn your - to earn the beck of jouj "Let's Have It Out, Jeanie," I Said. county ta: State Ordinary County "loads Bridges Total ;neraw riarburg Grange Hill Pats Branch Pee Dee Stafford Bethel Center Point Chesterfield Parker Pine Grove luby hiloh Snow Hill Stafford Vaughan Wamble Hill Slack Creek Center .? Center Grove Cross Roada kit. Croghan iuby Wexford Winzo Zion Buffalo Dudley Ifive Forks Vlangum Pageland Plains Zion \ngelus Center Grove Clarke lefferson Macedonia Plains Bay Springs .. n? tun jicvu mu . , Leland Middendorf McBee Providence Sandy Run Union Bey Springe Bear Creek Bethesda Juniper Middendorf Patrick Pats Branch Branch Shiloh * Stafford White Oak Cat Pond Juniper Oualey Patriek; V >. *? . , - .-.tx-swi| ^SSlHMidflfiklfiMIW?i??i?? ^ r?>* -* ? hand, Jeanle; or If I have, I don't know what It Ik" "Too hava committed the anpardonable eU>," she accused coolly. "I don't wonder that Miss Handle took year ring off." I wVsn't gotng to let the talk shift to Llsitte; not If I knew it, and could help ML "What la the unpardonable sin?" I asked. "To misunderstand: to think a person capable of a thing when a person la not; to?Juat take it for granted that a person is guilty?oh"?with a little stamp of her foot?"I can't bear to talk about It I" I guess It's a part of a man's equipment to be dense and sort of stupid? in his dealings with women. I mean. Slowly, so slowly that 1 thought the catch would never snap and hold, my fool mind crept back along the line, searching blindly for the point at which all this fiery indignation toward me had begun; hack and still back to that moment of our deliverance? Daddy's and mine?at the shafthouse door, with this dear girl untwisting her aims from her father's neck, and with me saying, 'Tm not hurt, either. Welcome home, Miss Twombly?or should I say, Mrs. Bullerton?" "Jeanle !* I gasped; "do you mean that you're not going to marry Charles Bullerton??that you never meant to?" "Of course, I'm not 1" she retorted, with a savage little out-thrust of the adorable chin. "But you thought so small of me that you simply took It for granted I" (Continued on last page) L. H. TROTTI, Dental Surgaon Chesterfield, S. C. Office on second floor in Ross J. ARTHUR KNIGHT AltorM|*at-La? Office in Courthouse ChaaUrfial^ &? C. R. L. McMANUS Dentist Chcraw, S. C. At Chestoreld, Monday A Pageland, Tuesday. At Mt. Croghan, Wednesday morning Ruby, Wednesday afternoon Society Hill, Thursday Cheraw, Friday and Saturday I THt VNIVIRSAL CAB CARS, TRUCKS, TRACTORS SERVICE PARTS LUCAS AUTO CO. X LEVY 1921 12 mills . 6 mills 6 mills 1 mill 28 mills ui j F T/i w F I I I I ? ? * 1-5 5 e. I I ? i 8" ? 5 I i I i 3 fig. 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