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The ChestirSield J Advertiser Paul H. and Fred G. Hearn Editors PUBLISHED J3VERY THURSDAY Subscription Rites: $1.50 a Year: ' six mc?!l~, 7J cents.?Invariably ir advance. Entered as second-class matter at the postoffiee at Chesterfield, South Carolina. FINE TRIBUTE TO WILSON Senator John Sharp Williams of Mississippi, in a recent speech in the United States Senate, replying to some remarks of Senator Frelinghey pen, of New Jersey, paid a very high compliments Lo ex-President Woodrow Wilson. He said in part: "Why, Mr. President, with the possible exception of David LloydGeorge?aye, without any exception?Woodrow Wilson stands today before thinking manhood and womanhood, not only of America hut of the world, as the greatest and most unself'sh man in politcal life who has during this generation grasped God's purposes in the history of the world, the man who has most clearly seen the God in history, as Mommseu calk him, der Gott in dor Geseliichtc. am: has seen how the God in history u;c the instrumentalities of the common man's common sense and common conscience, for the purpose ci \. jr:. ing out his own plan, God's pi:.::, i'o. the comiing of the peace of the \.oi!d, and the upbuilding of tho prcj-tand civilization of the world. "I do not mean to be deflected from this little funny talk into a j_,e exordium or eulogy, but long, Ion. after the Senator from New Jcrsej dies, long, long, after Woodrow Wilson?crippled in the Gear War for world peace?has gone to his "wellearned rest the Senator's grandchildren and great-grandchildren will wonder how he ever could have said a disrespectful word of the greatest public man of his generation." NOT A CANDIDATE THIS YEAR Here is some late news from Florida. Hon. William J. Bryan, who habeen making his home in Florida, and as his enemies claimed to qualify himself to run for the United States Senate from that State, gives out a statement that he will not become a candidate from Florida. Thank you Billy. BUSINESS PROSPERITY AND SERVICE The editor of the Atlanta Constitution writes an editorial upon the subject of "Business and Service" in which Henry Ford a'nd his business creed are used with fine elfect. in a recent interview with the great Detroit manufacturer and multimillionaire he referred to some of tla principles by which he had been guided throughout his career. As the Con stitution puts it whatever Mr. Ford has accomplished has been the resal' of effort based upon the theory that individual or business prosperity i essentially measured by service. Mr. Ford gave a summary of his business creed as follows: "1. An absence of unreasoning fear of the future or veneration of the past. One who fears the future, who, without reason, fears failure, limits his activities. "2. A disregard of competition. Whoever does a thing best ought t<> be the one to do it. "3. The putting of service before profit. The profit cannot be the basis?it must be the result of service. "4. Manufacturing is not buying low and selling high. It is the process of buying materials fairly, and with the smallest possible addition of cost, transforming these materials into : consumable product." WAKE THEM UP, SENATOR! Sentor Dial, of South Carolina, introduced a bill more than a year ago that was adopted by the Senate and sent to a committee where it has been quietly sleeping ever since. Referring to this message Senator Dial recently made this statement: "There are many things about the cotton exchange which I desire to have investigated; but I have not the least shadow of a doubt about the justice of my bill and about its sufficiency in affording great relief to our people should it be passed. In fact, unless we have some legislation to help the ?* -? * ? ??' *' ui tuHuii iiruuucnon, it win not be more than a year or two until we shall have to ofTur a premium to get people to raise cotton in the United States. There is now the darkest" outlook for a crop of cotton which I have even known in my lifetime,'' SLANDERING OLD VIRGINIA It is true that the country is dry and getting drier hut we can't , swallow this base insinuation from the Washington Post which says that there i is a town in Virginia so dry that they have to pin on the postage stamp Virginia postmasters can lick evei if they haven't got any lieker. NOTICE OF DISCHARGE On 15th May, next I will apply to the Probate Court of Chesterfield County, for a discharge as Admin "trator of the estate of D. R. Sumner ^ceased. C. R. Sumner, Administrator FOR SALEr^?Brown Leghorn Egg? for sale. $1.25 for 16 or $1.00 pei dozen. Pure bred. Best stock. ^J I 1 1 BOLL WEEVIL ' CONTROL FACTS t Methods Generally Employed With Success, and Mistakes Whlc?t 1 Farmers Make. , 1 , I By C. A. Whittle, < Soil Improvement Committee. ' . The boll weevil has practically covered the cotton belt, but there seems ] to be no marked reduction in the amount of cotton grown as a result. ^ The fact is the boll weevil can not and will not overthrow the South's greatest crop. I , How are farmers meeting the 1 boll weevil most successfully? There < are two main ways: (1) Pushing the cotton to early maturity and (2) Kill- < ing the boll weevil. The following questions and answers ^ give the main things that are being , done and also the mistakes that pre being made: PUSHING THE COTTON CROP. 1 ' 1 What soils are preferred for hasten- ] Ing the crop? i Well drained, light soils warm up oarlier and grow off the cotton quicker than heavy or poorly drained soils. Sandy soils are, therefore, better than clayey soils. I' Is It advisable to use poor 6olls? ' It would be a serious mistake. Poor polls never did pay, and with the boll 1 weevil taking toll, poor land cotton j will only put llie farmer into a deeper hole. | < Kemeniher that It costs more to grow cotton under boll weevil conditions, ; and there must be enough cotton to make it worth while to fight with j the boll weevil. What varieties of cotton are pre ferred? Any variety which will set an abundance of bolls early and will continue to set fruit throughout the season. A variety which is early but which also quits fruiting early is not desirable because the weevils will do heavier damage to the bolls when they do not find squares to puncture. Cleveland strains are most generally preferred by farmers. * i What methods of cultivation are used to hasten maturity? Frequent, shallow cultivation until the greater part of the crop is set. I Then !o: s frequent cultivation. The later cultivation should be the skipmiddle method, taking alternate middles and with tile novt cultivation tnlr Ing the ones that wore skipped. This So-eps half of the roots of the cotton plant undisturbed so that there will be less shedding, more squaring and bet- j ler protection of the cotton bolls. KILLING THE WEEVIL. Is the poison method of killing the , weevil practical? It is, but it is a particular method which many farmers may fail with when they first try it, because they are not in the habit of doing particular things right the first time; I? -the rules for poisoning are adhctvd to strictly the cotton farmer will get the most complete and economic control of the weevil of any method known. Any one contemplating the use of poison should get complete instructions from tho Government l3oll Weevil Station. Talluluh, La.,?the State Entomologist, or agricultural colleges. Docs it pay to kill the weevils on the young cotton stalks before squares 1 begin to form? If tho weevils come out of winter quarters in largo numbers and threaten to take all the first squares, it is considered advisable to kill as many I of them as possible. Calcium arsenate sprinkled from a perforated can or from a cheese bag on the young plants is the most efficient and economical method of killing the weevils on the young plants. It is not necessary to apply the poison until just before the squares begin to form. Is it practical to gather and destroy squares? If the poison method is not used it will often be found necessary to gather and destroy danmged squares that contain immature weevils, in order to have assurance of any sort of a crop. Picking up squares is not as efficient nor as inexpensive as poisoning, but if thoroughly done a fair to good crop can be obtained. Is poisoned molasses applied to cotton effective? Poisoned molasses or other poisoned weets will kill some boll weevils during dewless nights, but the poisoned sweets will kill honey bees and other sweet loving insects that are needed to carry from flower to flower the pollen that causes them to fruit. Calcium arsenate dust is more efficient and le^s expensive to use where poisoned molasses are effective. A:-e boll weevil traps practical? A farmer never tries a trap more than once. The government has tried till kinds and recommends none. Can the say of cotton be poisoned SO as to BftitAn "" __ ? . v.. i ' ?-"c weevil r Tlus Creator lias given all plants the power to absorb through their roots plant food and to resist all that is not plant food. If plants could not resist the poisons in the soil wo might run a ri k of being poisoned every time we eat a potato, apple, herry, etc. Can the boll weevil be driven from cotton by offensive odors? The boll weevil has not yet been successfully com batted through its broat! ir~ organs. It has been subletted to the most inlea.se war gaseiwithcut results. ? i i THE UNIVERSAL CAB ( CARS, TRUCKS, TRACTORS t I SERVICE J i PARTS t AIITA ca ii . v - ,v v . " " . a-L 1 1 - .a? THE SOUTH OF TOMORROW t t ? The South has nearly one-third of ' he total area of the United States. ^ It has a greater combination of nat- { iral advantages than any other equal 1 ireu in the world. It has three-fifths of the coast line s >f continental United States. t It produces over 60 per rent, of 1 . 1 1 -A A .iiu worm > conon. 1 It has the greatest natural gas fields I ;nown in the world. t It has the largest sulphur deposits ] known in the world, producing three- i fourths of the world's sulphur supply. 1 It has practically all the aluminum < industry of the United States based > an Southern raw material. j 1 It has three-fourths of the coking i coal area of the country. Its coal area is twice as great as that of all Europe including Russia, ] and five times as great as that of all Europe, excluding Russia. It has, according to Government re-! ports, an estimated oil reserve of 55 j per cent, of the entire supply in this j country. * j [ It has 40 per cent, of the country's ( forest area. | It has 55,000,000 acres of reclaim- 1 able wet land, which, when drained. can be made to produce crops worth ' from $2,500,000,000 to $5,000,0r ,- 1 000 a year. ; ' It can raise cotton and wool with 1 which to clothe itself and much of the world, and the livestock with which to : feed the country. | ' It is already annually shipping sev-1 ' eral hundred thousand carloads of 1 early vegetables and fruits to North- ! i-ni ami western marKeis. It has nearly GO per cent, of the 1 cotton consumption of American ' mills. j 1 The exports from Southern ports in 1021 were $1,807,000,000, compared 1 with $330,000,000 from the entire Pacific Coast.?Blue Book of South- 1 ern Progress, Manufacturer's Record. ' FAIR PLAY ASKED FOR SALVATION ARMY j The attention of your readers is^ called to the desperate attempt of the , opponents of National Prohibition to ] break down the morale of the splen- ( did Salvation Army. New York City j has a $300,000 drive on for their ] work. The Chairman of the Committee, Mr. James Speyer, is head of the^ banking firm of Speyer & Company. Mr. Speyer is also one of the vice-' ( presidents of the Association Against the Prohibtion Amendment. When the newspaper reporters in- , formed Commander Evangeline Booth that Mr. Speyer was a "wet," she said ] "Mr. Speyer is an old esteemed friend of the Army, but I think he will , have to change his views if he is to ( continue a.-: Chairman of our drive. 1 Our stand with respect to Prohibition is what it has always been, absolutely tee-total.'* Because of this consistent attitude. the "wets ' J1VI> tvvin.r .' *> ] her. Shu refuses to recede and will 1 stand regardless of costs. One of New York's great politcians who has the power to do what he says, has prae- i I 11 Stories of By Elmo J Great Scouts Vatson I j ?, Western Newspaper Union. ' "LONESOME CHARLEY" REYNOLDS, CUSTER'S SCOUT Many noted scouts served with General Custer during Ids Indian cam- ( paigns, but his favorite of them all \ was Charles Reynolds, known as | "Lonesome Charley." In the early s seventies, Reynolds was a hunter for ( the garrison at Fort Rice, N. D. He , was a quiet little man who lived ( much to himself and preferred to | hunt alone, no matter how many hos- | tile Indians were near. Because of , his disregard for human companion- ( ship, he became known by everyone , as "Lonesome Charley." Reynolds first served under Custer In the exploration of the Yellowstone country in 1873. During his expedition two inoffensive civilians with Custer's command were murdered by the Indians. The next year, while Reynolds was attending a sun dunce of the Sioux near Fort A. Lincoln, N. P., he heard a young chief named Kaln-in-the-Face boast of the murder of the two men. Charley reported this to Custer and Ruin-in-the-Face was arrested and imprisoned. Later lie escaped and sent back his now-famous vow of vengeance of the whole Custer family. "Lonesome Charley" was with Custer during the exploration of the Hlaek hills In 1874. When gold was discovered, at Custer's request he rode lf>0 miles, through a country HWn rt til n cr will* 11? i.. .11 * - " 4 - r* ...... i ir; Iiiuiniia III r liri | Laramie, Wyo., In 48 hours and gave to (lie world the first news of the discovery, causing ? stampede of rain* r ers Into that region. When Custer started on his Inst j campaign against the Sioux In 1870, f Reynolds was offered the position of ( chief guide. j When the Seventh cnvnlry left the j Bleatner Far West, Reynolds was 111. t ('apt. Grant Marsh of the For West f tried to persuade him not to go with c the expedition since he was In no j. condition to do any fighting. Reynolds j refused. f "I've been watting and getting ready for this expedition for two fl years, captain, and I'd ruther he dead . than miss It," he said earnestly. So j lie rode away to his death. v When Custer divided his command :o attack the Sioux on the Little Rig ^ Born, the scout was sent with Major 0 Iteno. The Indians swept down upon r [teno and forced him hack to the v fvooded bluffs across the river. "Lono- f tome Charley" was killed In this re- | rent. Bis body was found surrounded V. _ ically threatened to withdraw the Salvation Army's permission to soicit funds in the streets, on the rround that this utterance of Miss Booth is "politics." Miss Booth's adIress is 120 West 14th Street, New fork City. We cannot and must not forget the iplendid work of this organization luring the war days. Then they sacrificed and rendered glorious service 'or the brave men at home and on 'oreign fields. The thirty organiza;ions that are opposed to National Prohibition are certainly desperate vhen they resort to such measures. Let every ex-service man that appre:iates the service of the Salvation Arny rendered during the great World War send encouragement to Comnander Booth. Fair play must win. * BE SURE TO PLANT A FEW PEANUTS THIS Y EAR ^ What abort planting peanuts tins /car? This question is being asked >y hundreds of South Carolina farmjvs today. The experience of those who have planted peanuts the last', /ear or two has not been very hapjy one, but they admit that they are setter off than if they had planted all ;otton or corn or any other so-called noney crop. | The price of peanuts has been dis- J appointing it is true, but all farm products have been alike in this res-1 pect; and now the peanut market is the first to recover. Spanish farmers stock is now bringing $70.00 per ton md it is natural to suppose that the j price will continue to advance as the J public becomes better acquainted with i the fact that peanut is the most eco-1 domical and most wholesome concen-! trated food on the market today for both man and beast. Advertising is all that peanut needs to make it one of our leading food crops. The growers and manufacturers should cooperate in advertising it, and I trust that a movement to this end will soon i be started. For planting White Spanish peanuts, the kind best suited for all soils and market conditions, it requires 40 lbs of shelled seed to plant one acre, ! dropping one kernel every four inches in 30 inch rows, or GO lbs of thorughly cleaned peanuts in the shell, drop-! ping one pod every G inches in 30 inch rows. j Farmers who have not saved their; own seed had better secure what they want immediately, because good seed is oeeonung very scai-ce. Get the graded and recleaned seed in the shell now, because the shelled seed will not keep until planting time.. Last spring many farmers lost their crop or a poor stand on ac-! count of planting too early. It is risky to plant before the last of April. May would probably be better, and June just as good. No time should he lost in preparing land and putting out fertilizer. Acid phosphate is dirt cehap and it is the best fertilizer for peanuts. Besides, it is .r>0 per cent, lime, and the more ter. Peanut planters and weeders should be ordered at once. | "VAMPS" WHO | MADE HISTORY | By JAMES C. YOUNG. <(cj by McClure NuwMpaper Syndicate.) THE WOMAN WHO WAS JEALOUS OF HERSELF. n ITC ... ? ^ ...j wus n wuuiau wnom no one ever understood, who may have been the evil genius or the guiding spirit of Napoleon III, but who admittedly was a beauty without peer. As we study the picture of the Countess tie Cast Igllone we see a woman of amide figure, beautifully molded, and a race which Is slightly haughty, yet soft and winsome. She was a woman >f contrasts, paradoxes and perplexities. Born In 1840 of a noble Florentine 'amlly, at an early age she won the iffectlon of Victor Emmanuel, king of i'ledmont. Iy the course of things, favour, his great minister, conceived he Idea of sending her to Paris, the lomlnant capital of Europe, for the special purpose of bewitching Napoeon III. The countess came, saw and :onquered. The existence of Italy depended up>n French policy. Napoleon III ehershed an Idea of reclaiming that counry by right of its having been countered under Napoleon I. And the ting of Piedmont was striving to ennrge his holdings Into what now conitltutes the kingdom of Itnlv. It was lie business of the countess to keep Napoleon out of Italy and let Victor iCiiinianuel carry on his plans. Na>uleon stayed out. Italy eventually leeame what It is today. She gained complete control of Napoleon, a scheming, nnrrow-visloned nan who thought himself great. Perhaps the countess' real love was icrself. Paul Ilaudry painted an nnIraped picture of her, lying on a ouch. It was one of the most lieautl- j ul canvases which ever caine from I lis brush. The countess had It hung : n her boudoir. And every duy she ex- I indued herself lii comparison to the reatlon of loveliness before her eyes. She grew to fear that Rhe was not ao >eautlful as the picture, that she was adlng, that Baudry hnd flattered her ind set an Impossible example, iler usplclons turned to Jealousy of the ilcture?literally, of her very self. And n a rage she cut the canvas to pieces rith a stiletto. Then came the war of 1870-71, the lownfall of Napoleon and the sorrows f France. She rallied every possible esource aghinst the Qermans, bat the vorld knows the story. The countess sded from the scene of great events, 'erbaps the best commentary ef her In a new package t At a pr ri that fit The sati.e unmatche Turkisi:.Virginia < ?e Guarcnlced by otrdxxc&s^? tragedy near charlotte 1 _____ < Driven despondent and perhaps i.A- ( < sane by an incurable stomach trouble, John Helms, living in Mecklenburg county, early Sunday morning took a ^ wood axe and slew three of his own i children and then took a shot gun and blew the top of his own head off. ^ a 13-year-old girl was the only eye j witness to the tragedy, but she told a THE RE/ Not what you get by chance or in! in life, but what you gain by hone successful. What are you doing to funds for future nc dr. by starving THE FARMERS B ii M. L. RALEY. J. S. McGREG President Vice-Pi DIREC F. D. Seller, J. S. S T. II. Burcb, l!__ n- ? ? -She Seopl I ?OF CHEST Will Appreciate Your Busint $200,0 Our customers and friends hel ! nted of accommodation or you I i to see us. Guaranteed burgl Let us show you this wonder, i R. B. LANEY, President ' CHAS. P. MANGUM, Cashier iftank. cf % The Oldest, Large Bank in GheSt 4 Per Cent. Paid on Saving* Dep Sea L C. C. Dougla R. E. Rivers, President. M J. Hough, Vice-President J The Best I Family Ren t>ucaj?e .t 8 remedies have cei Is Li 1GKesterfi3ld L D. H. DOUGLASS. President W. J. DOUGLASS, Vice- Pres. ALSO FIRE, ACCIDENT, HI INSUR muiMMlttiai leven cigarettes jFjjk Three Friendly Wjn Gentlemen TURKISH VIRGINIA /H!l BURLEY ^^rpjFTEEN hat fits the pocket? s the pocket-book? d blend of 2nd B URJLE Y TobacCOS *111 ^mwTML ucid story to the coroner. She said ihe was in the yard with a 9-months>ld sister, when her father approachid and without warning picked up ar ixe and struck the child out of hei u-ms. She ran to escape a similai fate, and watched her father go int< Lhe house and brain two boys, agec \ and 6 years as they slept in bed Me then took the shot gun and walkec into the yard where he placed the bar rel to his head and fired. TEST icritance, not what you start with :sty is what will make you truly better conditions? Accumulate f a savings account HERE NOW. ANK, RUBY,S.C. (OR, MISS ALICE BURCH esident Asnstant Cashier TORS i mith, J. S. McGregor M. L. Raley, I ea' Rank | GRFIGLD I ;ss. Total Resources Over 00.00 I ped us to do this. When in | have money to deposit, come i ar proof and fire proof safe. I V cordial welcome awaits you G. K. LANEY, V.-President J. A. CAMPBELL, Assist, Cashier I I keaterfield an/1 Di auu UILUII^CAI erf eld, S. G. osits. $1.00 Starts An Account I* i, Cashier. D. L. Smith, Assist. Cashiar R. T. Redfearn, Tiller tedy i.? a'l ' tScr jst* to ?otk fe Insurance oan & Ins. Go. C. C. DOUGLASS, Sac'y A Mgr. GUO. W. EDDINS, Treasurer. EALTH, HAIL, LIVE 8TOCE I True \\ 'k i Detective Stories j; | BQLAND, ALIAS | GARDNER ???>?? ?????? ? ? '! Ctpyrliht br Tb? Wh<il?r Hjradletl*. Inc. WHEN Hyman and Hess, dealers In cloaks and suits on State street, Albany, N. Y., sent a check for $38.77 to Rels and Blum, garment manufacturers In New York city, they didn't have the slightest Idea that they were starting a chain of evidence which would land one of the cleverest crooks In America behind the bars. A few days later, before the New . York firm had had time to report the nonnrrlval of the check and thus permit Hyman and Hess to look Into the matter, a young man came Into the National Commercial bank in Albany and presented a check for $880, made out to "Bearer." The date on the check, filled In with a rubber stamp, 1 corresponded to the day oa which It I was presented, and the man who handed it to the paying tetter mentioned ' casually that the check "was to cover an option" and that he had to hurry { back to New York In order to complete the transaction Thp nnvlnu tailor : feeling certain that the signature was r' genuine, cashed the check, and the ; man who had presented It walked ojit | of the bank with $I.'80 In his pocket. '; When Hytnan and Hess liad their ^c. j count balanced they found that they I: were exactly $380 short?for the original check had never reached its NeV York destination, but had been lifted out of the mall box by one of a gung of clever criminals, the body of the check erased with an ink eradlcator i and the date and amount filled In on | top of the original signature. | "Only one man in the country could j have done that und gotten away with u a j : It," growled (ieorge A. Fuller, assistant 1 | superintendent of the Plnkerton Detec| tlve agency, when the bank culled the | details of the case to his attention. : "It's Poland's work !" "Yea, Poland," replied Fuller. "Or (Jard;.or. as he sometimes calls himself. lie's got a regular orgnnl/.ution for this sort of thing. Trains hoys to loot the mail boxes, washes the checks witli tnt ucld preparation of his own invention, writes in a higher amount, a.tikes litem payable to 'Pearer,' and then another of his tools cashes them." "if you know so much about the man," asked the untaxed bunker, "why hasn't lie been arrested long before ^ tliis?" "It's easy enough to arrest a man," was Fuller's reply, "hut it is sometimes j* very difiieult to convict hint. So far as ^ the actual check-raising goes, Poland J lays a lone hand. What's more, he I pays his men well, and takes care of i .:n in if they happen to get caught. So i far, none of 'em lias turned state's evl! ileiice. mid until tln.v <t<-> <>? until Icutch I it.laud red-hunded?there's nothing to do but -bo carefuj. We've got our eyes on lilni. He can't wove without our knowing It. I Warned by Hynian and Hess check that the Boland outfit wus once more conducting operations In New York state, the IMnkerton man kept close I ateh on all persons suspected of be- it I longing to the organizations, with the "c ' result thut three men were arrested ! and sentenced to terms In prison. But .. i all of them steadfastly refused to Ina- -J plicate the "man higher up." ^ J| Finally Bolund and three of his as- " soclates were arrested In Boston, aft- ' t er Fuller hud shadowed a boy whom he suspected of robbing a mall box. Pano, the boy, and Devlne, another , of the organization, drew short terms Ifor petty larceny, but Boland escaped on account of a technicality, and moved to New York where he tried | to continue his operations. But the I New York police and particularly CoroI mlssloner (leorge S. Dougherty, made things so difficult, that he was soon reduced to the expedient of securing checks wherever he could?a necessity which led to the fatal slip which Fuller had predicted. Out of the mall box of an up-town apartment house, one of Boland's apprentices secured a check for $60, made out to a real estate company In payment of the rental for one of the apartments. It was child's play for Boland to wash off the original name and amount and to write In the words "Bearer" and "Two Hundred and ' r.ieven uoiiars." Once that was done, he had a perfectly good check (ap| parently) and he sent one of his men I down to the hank on which the check was drawn, with inlnute Instructions as to the cashing of It. Hut the cashier, being suspicious of a check of that size being made nut to "Hearer"?particularly as he knew that the woman whose aignnture appeared upon it was very careful in her financial dealings ?declined to cash It, and Holand's man returned with a story of having been watched and therefore very fearfid to approach the paying window. Holand, In a spirit of bravado, again altered the check, this time making it ont In the name of "William llath" and set forth to cash the check himself, something which he had never before attempted. One glance at the odd amount?$211.?and the recollection that a check of slmllnr size had been presented that tnornlng, payable to "Hearer," was enough to convince ine paying teller that something was wrong. The Plnkertons were Immediately notified and Poland was caught, red-handed. Klfteor minutes after hla case caine up In the County court In Brooklyn, Poland was on his wuy to Sing Slog. * \MTHUk KNIGH1 Attora?y-*t>L*?* Office in Courthouse 3kciterti*l4 9 C R. L. McMANUS - .? Dentist Cheraw, S. C. At Cheetereld, Monday A Page land, Tuesday. At Ml. Croghan, Wednesday morning Ruby, Wednesday afternoon Mm .1.1. M||| M