The Chesterfield advertiser. [volume] (Chesterfield C.H., S.C.) 1884-1978, April 27, 1922, Image 2
"
The Che&Urlield Advertiser
Paul H. and Fred G. Hearn
Editors
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
SubscriptqQSt Sites: $1.50 a Year;
?ix - cents.?Invariably in
advance.
Entered as second-class matter at the
postoffice at Chesterfield, South
Carolina.
THE JEWS GOING
BACK TO PALESTINE
That the Jews will again occupy
Palestine and that it will be once
... *u.. u 41 t as i
niuit* iiiv iiuuic iiiai ?iueiy siuiiviai i
nation seems to be fulfilled. This will
be in accordance with biblical prophecy
and will be another evidence of
the inspiration of the scriptures.
One of the latest and most significant
features of the resoration of the
Jews to the Holy Land is the resolution
introduced in the United States
Senate by Senator Lodge that was referred
to the Committee on Foreign
Relations.
The resolution is to the etTect that
the United States favors the establishment
in Palestine of the National
Home for the Jewish people and that
the holy places and religious buildings
and sites in Palestine shall he
adequately protected.
A NEW FARM LOAN BILL
A bill has been introduced in Congress
that is intended to assist farmers
in getting loans. Our great ..rouble
with the farm loan banks has been
the delay and red tape that delays
the proces sof getting loans. Farmers,
of course, when they apply for loans
need the money and need it as soon
as it can possibly he secured
The bill referred to creates a farmers
finance corporation for the purpose
of certifying land titles in
that loans may be negotiated at rea.
enable costs. The bill, which was introduced
several weeks ago. is intended
to give owners of farms a recognized
and approved ioan value in
the form of a government certificate,
which may be accepted as official security
for loans limited by the amount
for which the property is approved.
Congressman Langford, of Georgia,
who introduced the bill, made this
statement in referring to it:
"Can there possibly be a better loan
system than the one here proposed,
which will enable the farmers of our
country to borrow the money they
need, when needed, for as long a time
as needed and without exorbitant
fees?
"A system which will enable them
without delay and extra cost to reborrow
anu lepay from tirr.c to
as desired any amount limited only
by the approved value of the property.
The system proposed will help not
only the farmers, but the entire country.
"I am sure the banks throughout
the country will gladly cooperate in
the operations under this bill. Especially
is this true of the country
banks.
Improvements are steadily being
made in the etforts to make the telephone
more useful. One of the latest
is to record a message if the person
wanted is not present. An instrument
records the message and when the
party for whom it is intended comes
to the 'phone the mes-age is repeatd
to him.
. . . . . . .
MAKING THE PANAMA
CANAL DRY
The effort of the prohibition leaders
to make the Panama canal dry
is meeting with opposition by the government
authorities. Secretary Weeks
has requested that federal prohibition
agents be kept out of the canal scone
and permit the governor ??f the canal
zone to continue the administration
of the national dry law there without
assistance from other departments.
The Secretary fears that the two
sets of dry officials might clash in the
administration of the law. The Panama
canal is a wet proposition and the
canal zone has not been so very dry.
SOFT SNAP FOR AUSTRIA
On some occasions the United
States seems very liberal with the peoples'
money. Austria owes the United
States $24,000,000 for money ad-1
vanced, but our generous government I
has agreed to let Austria have twenty
five years in which to pay the debt.
Considering the changes that are taking
place in the old world there may
nr.# K?. ......
..v,v "V "IWIMCI III fc?v.;i.i,y IIW
years, especially as the League of Nations
has been knocked into a cocked
hat,
&
THE GENOA CONFERENCE
America is not represented at the
Genoa Conference but there are more
than forty other nations taking part
in the proceedings.
At this writing it is not thought
probable that any special adavntage
is to be gained by the conference and
it is probably as well that this country
did not spend any money in sending
representatives to Genoa.
Some of the representatives are
said to bo favoring disarmament and
at the same time improving their garrisons
and in peace preparing for war.
NOTICE
The Town Council has ordered that
all those who fail to settle electric
light bills be promptly cut off from
further service. Those in arrears are
requested to make prompt payment.
Council's orders will be carried out.
April 17th, 1922.
?ani
ALWAYS BE THE BEST
If you can't be a pine on the top of
the hill,
Be a scrub in the valley?but be
The best little scrub at the side of the
rill;
Be a bush if you can't be a tree;
If you can't be a bush, be a bit of
grass,
Some highways to happier make;
If you can't be a muskie, then just be
a bass?
But the livest bass in the lake!
We can't all be captains, some have
to be crew.
There's somethinp for all of us
here;
There's a bip work and there's a lesser
to do,
And the task we must do is the
near.
If you can't be a highway, then just
be a trail;
If you can't be a sun, be a star.
It isn't by size that you win or you
fail?
Be the best of whatever you are.
?Selected.
FORMER RESIDENT WRITES
AN INTERESTING LETTER
Dear Editor
I note with no little interest the
amount of cooperation among busness
mon esnprinllv i? tViic truo witli
the farmers. South Carolina unquestionably
has been hard hit by the boll
weevil, but it is not alone in this respect,
and I hope it will not be alone
in the fight against the weevil.
South Carolina will always raise
cotton, that she should do but they
should plant other crops to supplement
cotton, truck, peanuts, sweet
potatoes, spuds, velvet beans and
clover. And keep more hogs, cows
and poultry. If properly handled it
can be made one of the the most
profitable side lines on the farm.
Then too a creamery, a small
creamery often gives the farmers
some ready money daily. We have in
Ocala, just started a small creamery
about 2 Vj months ago. The first
day we had come in about 146 gallons
of milk. Today we are getting
500 gallons daily, with a daily increase.
Prices are 35 cents and 40
cents per gallon according to butterfat.
One of the most necessary things
in trucking and poultry raising is cooperative
marketing so as not to
Hood one market and others really in
need of truck and eggs and willing
to pay the price, go without.
I am also gratified to note the interests
in better schools and good
roads, there is notning thai, has more
tendencv to build a ronntv stnto nr
nation, than Rood schools and roads.
1 am proud to hoar of so many improvements
in South Carolina especially
Chesterfield county (my old
home) glad to hear that so many people
are contented, and progressive
and unafraid. We all have a lesson to
learn, and if we keep our hearts
pure, character clean and head cool,
we can face the future with confidence.
In casting my lot with the good
people here in Ocala, Marion County,
Florida, some seventeen years ago, I
have learned to love my adopted home
and the people, where we have one
of the best counties in the State of
Florida.
At any time should any of my old
friends wish to make a change in
their location and wish the true facts
of conditions in Ocala and Marion
County, Florida, I would be only too
glad to be of service to them.
J. D. McCaskill,
RF.UN ION AT W1NGATE
At the request of many of the former
students, we have arranged for
a reunion of teachers and students of
the Wingate School Wingate.N. C., for
May t, !this being the first day
of our commencement.
At 10.:,ii Judge Walter E. Brock,
a former student of this school, will
deliver the address of the occasion,
?in it- u-iu iicrs hiiu representatives ot
classes are expected to make brief addresses.
This address will be followed
by dinner on the grounds.
Let all teachers and former students
make special preparation to be
with us, and add to the pleasure of
this happy occasion.
C. C. Beach,
Principal.
IHl UNIVtRSAl CAB
CARS. TRUCKS, TRACTORS
SERVICE
PARTS
LUCAS AUTO CO.
r?. DAVIS MARKET
The Finest Fresh MeaU
The Best Fancy Groceries
High Grade Canned Goods
The Best of Everything for the
Table
A. F.DAVIS MARKET
PEANUTS 1c
Suffolk, Viginia, is the peanut cen- 1
tor of the world.
Our annual peanut crop is valued 1
at over $30,000,000, but even this is <
not sufficient to supply the American j
public, and we import great qunnti- j
ties from Japan, China and Spain.
Peanuts were not held in high es- <
teem in the south 60 years ago, and ]
land that wouldn't support any other
crop was contemptuously termed (
"peanut land."
But enterprising salesmanship developed
a wide demand for peanuts
in the northern states, so that raising
and preparing this food has become
one of our largest industries.
In addition to roasted peanuts, the
public now has an appetite for peanut
butter and peanut oil.
HONOR IN BUSINESS
There is honor in business that is't
the fine gold of it; that reckons with j ]
every man justly; that loves light;:
that regards kindness and fairness jj
more highly than goods or prices or i
profits. It becomes a man more than )
his furnishing or his house. It speaks
for him in the heart of everyone. His (
friendships are serene and secure. ,
3 is strength is like a young tree by the ^
river.?Longfellow.
There is forethought and fearthought.
Men belong to the type they associate
with.
f
Some men have no bad habits and
not much else.
SOME VIRTUES OF MILK
Pellagra is caused by diet deficient
in certain elements. Milk added to
such a diet cures this tropical disease.
Beri-beri is a disease of the nerves
similar to pellagra. Milk cures it.
Inflamatory rheumatism has been
cured by an entire milk diet. The
milk washes away the poisons caus- j
ing this ailment.
Milk cures sore eyes when same is
caused by deficient diet.
Milk adds actual inches to man's
stature. Japanese coolies were experimented
upon, and after being feu
much milk, several inches were added
to their height.
Milk plus fresh air and sunshine.
cures tuberculosis,
A milk diet exclusively will greatly
reduce flesh.
A milk diet exclusively will add
Rood solid flsh to a thin person.
Milk was one iff the main foods
upon which Jack Dempsey trained for
his winning battle. It makes dependable
brawn and muscle.
Milk is recognized as the gie?l?.-sli
"protective food" known to man. The
milk eating man or woman has a re-'
sistance to diseases not possessed by
non-milk eaters.
The midshipmen at Annapolis are :
required to consume at least one
Stories of By Elmo I
Great Scouts Watson I
?. Western Newspaper Union.
"JOHNNY APPLESEED." SCOUT
WHO PLANTED ORCHARDS
Not all of the great scouts were Indtun
lighters. 1m contrast to the career
of Lewis Wetzel, who was something
of a professional Indian killer,
la the life of John Chapman or
"Johnny Appleseed." Chapman never
killed an Indian In his life, but be
r*iouui'iy suveu as many wlilte men I
from death at their hands as Wetzel '
did. "
Chapman tirst appeared on the Ohio
frontier In 1800. He came floating
down the Ohio river in a canoe, towing
another, and both boats were loaded
with apple seeds from the cider
mills of Pennsylvania. His purpose
was to plant the seeds in the wilderness
so that orchards would be started
for the settlers when they arrived
there to jmike their homes.
For the next 30 years he went everywhere
up and down the Ohio country,
planting seeds, going from one orchard
to another, pruning and caring for the
.voting trees. He was a welcome visitor
in the Jog cabins of tlie settlers
for he always carried u Bible and
some hooks from which lie would read
and preach to them before the blazing
fireplaces In tbe evening.
Johnny practiced his teachings of
humility and kindness. He never killed
anything fur food. He carried a kit
of cooking utensil*, Including a mush
pan, which he sometimes wore as a
hnt. Usually he wore u brond-brimmed
black hat, but a coffee sack with arm
holes cut in It was ills only coat.
White men called him "queer," for
he often went barefoot In winter as
well us in summer, but the Indinna
said, "lie has been touched by the
Oreat Spirit." He went everywhere
among them unharmed, for the fact
that Johnny never carried a gun convinced
them that he was under the
special protection of the Manito.
During the War of 1812 when the
British were overrunning the Ohio
country, Johnny Appleseed performed
his greatest service for his people. In
liis wanderings among the tribes he
often learned of their plans for attacks
on the settlements. Where no
other white man could have gone,
Johnny passed In safety and more
than once he carried warnings to the
settlers, giving them time to prepare
for defense before the red Invaders
swept down upon them.
All this time Johnny Appleseed was
carrying out his cherished dream of
making Ohio bloom with fruit trees
and many of the finest orchards In
that state today owe their beginning* \
to this strange man. In his later years
Johnny left the country which he had
luart of pure milk per day. Mo "sick
lays" are common here since milk
las become the conditioner.
The Chinese, Japanese, and similar
races who have never known the
dairy cow are undersized and lack
inititave and "pep." World leaders
ire invariably of milkfed nations.
Miss Florence Busse of Iowa State i
College, has divided milk into the fol- \
lowing: For muscle, milk and cheese; ,
for bones, milk, cottage cheese, and
cheese; for energy, butter and cream;
for body regulator, butterfat; for
growth, milk, butter.
Milk prevents scurvy or cures it.
School children who are regular ]
milk users complete the grades in two ;
years ahead of non-milk users, ac- j
cording to an experiment on 55,000 !
children in Los Angeles.
In all atheletic competitions milkl*
drinkers invariably win over non-milk
drinkers.
Milk makes well developed tissues,
smooth, bright eyes, and healthy col- i
The lime in milk builds strong
bones. m
The vitamines in milk insure normal
growth.
Children who do without milk are
*pt to be nervous, irritable, have indigestion,
are restless ni?ht, and J
take cold easily. 1
The old cow is the standard manu- *
facturer of our all important vutimines.
Stunted children or stunted men
"come back" on a diet of milk.
Milk is beneficial in the treatment
of boils, pimples, gasto-intestinal derangements,
diseases of the respiratory
passage, and as a preventative
of bubonic plague. Its vitamines are
the reason.
Milk prevents or cures ricketsArctic
explorers and sailors, on
long cruises who have run out of'
dairy foods and greenstuff actasally
die of starvation.
Mothers who would not niak* much
headway in feeding their b&Vies and
children large quantities of fiver kidneys,
egg yolk and carrots. In milk
we have the vitamin source as nature
intended it.
The best baker's bread to be bought'
today is now made with miik instead
of water. This costs thousands of doll-1
ars more a year, but it pays because i
the bread is tastier and keeps longer,!
as well as better for us.
Milk makes fighters. Europe, in f
her turmoils of countless years ago^l
was alwavs connuereH hv Hnirv--fo.fi
tribes. The weak races of the far ,
East and South are examples of list- j
less, easily conquered peoples who
have never known the energy diets of"
the hardier northern people.
Babies die like flies every year because
ignorant mothers attempt to
improve upon nature with milk substitutes.
God made milk for babies.
Good cocks everywhere use milk instead
of water in making their good
dishes. Likewise they use butter in- j
stead of lard-like substitutes for the
same reason. Nothing can compare
with the milk taste?Helen S. K.
Willcox in Veterinary Medicine.
i "VAMPS" WHO i
3 MADE HISTORY ?
^ By JAMES C. YOUNG. |
(Q by McClura Nawapapar Hyndlcata )
THE WOMAN WHO PLAYED FOB '
A CROWN.
TIE beginning of the Seventeendfc
century found Henry IV on Him- j
throne of France, perhaps Its abieat<
king since Charlemagne. He was-dtovoted
to Gabrlelle d'Estrees, '"'iMrto:
vmurieiie," nuu planned to marij> twr,
but her death Intervened. Uearjfv wu
disconsolate. For three months, helocked
himself In a black-draped chanv,
ber and took counsel with his grl-)f.
But this could not last and be was
perauuded to return to Paris.
AlmoBt the first person Henry met
was llenrlette d,' Entraguea. Henry
was vanquished. Bat Henrietta was
a thorough vamp. She talked about
marriage. Henry demurred. Then
her family carried her off from
"the wicked king" whom sfce had ensnared.
Henry's passion led him to
sign a contract with the family agreeing
to wed llenrlette If she gave him a j
male heir In a certain time. Then i
everybody was happy for a while, all
but the Due de Sully, the king's minister.
One day he announced to Henry, !
"We have been marrying you, sire. .
Marie de Medici Is to be yoqr; '
queen." '
Henry vehemently protested, but.
Sully talked of the advantages In *
marriage linking him to the grenc j
house of Florence. And Henry relenti- *
ed. He tried by every possible means*'
to get back the marriage contmcti |
which the D'Entraeues famllv ? mW I
not surrender. Then a child was Dora
to Ilenrlette?dead. The colltruc&was
void.
The king married Marie and a .contest
Immediately began between the
two women. Henriette, rightly or
wrongly, wus Implicated In a plot
against the throne atM ordered to
prison. "The king may take- my life
If he pleases and everybody will say
that he killed his wife, for I was queen
before the Tuscan woman," was the
bold declaration of the prisoner.
Henry had her released and their Intimacy
continued until Henrietta's
Imperious temper made him seek relief
In other quarters. This he found
In the soft graces of Charlotte de
Montmorency.
Henriette was banished from court,
and In her country retreat she turned
to strange practices. The woman who
had been a perfect type of the vampire
sank herself Into gluttony and drink.
She became fat, displeasing, vulgar. .
But her heart still harked back to the a 1
days when she was almost a quee ^ I
Then Henry was assassinated by Va- j]
ratUac and suspicion turned to ||
" ' ' '
- : V'- ) .
^J| ^^one-e
Hi
1(
In a new package t\
At a price that fit
The same unmatche
Turkish. Virginia ?
_ _ Guaranteed by
l rafei IP u c\s> ^
THE HOME MERCHANT t
t
Mid pleasures and palaces thoujh c
[ may wend, I find the home merchant t
ei much-valued friend?the mail ord- s
er catalog woos me in vain, for to pay e
without seeing may bring me a pain. \
The home merchant credits till pay- 1
day arrives?he knows all the whims ?
of his friends and their wives. His 1
overalls wear like the buckskin of 1
old, his buttons ain't glass, if he tells
you they're gold! Of every community
he is a part, and even the kids know >
i THE re;
Not what you get by chance or inl
in life, but what you gain by hone
successful. What are you doing to
funds for future ne-ds by starting
THE FARMERS B
. M, L. RALEY. J. S. McGREC
, President Vice-Pi
DIREC
F. D. Seller, J. S. S
T. H. Burch,
|
?
She S'eepl
OF GHES1
1 Will Appreciate Your Busim
I $200,C
Oar customers and friends he
ni Pfl ni aiulAMmnJa*!/.- ?
wvvm v* uvwuiuivuaiiuii ur juu
to see us. Guaranteed burg
j Let us show you this wonder.
R. B. LANEY, President
CHAS. P. MANGUM,
I Cashier
Rank ef t
i The Oldest, Larg
Bank in Gherf
A Per Cent. Paid oil Skt'iaft D?
See
C. C. t>?w 11
R. E. Rivers, President.
M. J. Hough, Vice-President,
?
I T1 - -
Iine Best
Fam ily Ret
Because it wo
remedies Have c
IsL
I Cfieiti afield 1
I D. H. DOUGLA SS, President
W. J. DOUGLA) ?8, Vice- Pre*.
ggg -u f I
leven cigarettes F
Three Friend!)) \ \
Gentlemen ? >
Turkish ;;
virginia. "
burlry c?
v :
^^FIFTEEN
hat fits the pocket? w
$ the pocket-book? ai
d blend of hl
md Bvrley Tobaccos
#111 tousp- -
? l\
t cl
he path to his heart. He boosts for u
he chapel, the lodge and the school? u
community uplift and basketball 11
earns, look kindly on him, in their ^
ithletic dreams. I'd rather have him
it my elbow each day, than to deal j,
vith a shark, many furlongs away. c
Let's make the thing mutual and
itand by our friend?'there's no place t
ike home, for the money we spend.-- I
Exchange.' ?
o
A baby is about the only thingh on J
;vhich everybody agrees.
==i
TEST |;
leritance, not what you start with | |
>sty is what will make you truly j
better conditions? Accumulate j '
f a savings account HERE NOW.
ANK, RUBY,S.C.
I'
\OR, MISS ALICE BURCH
-esident Assistant Cashier
i
TORS 1i
mith, J. S. McGregor
M. L. Raley,
J
e/ $$ank
EKFIELD
ess. Total Resources Over
100.00
Iped us to do this. When in
i have money to deposit, come i
lar proof and fire proof safe.
A cordial welcome awaits you
G. K. LANEY, V.-President
J. A. CAMPBELL,
Assist. Cashier
ll
> keaterfield
e$t and Strongest
terfield, S. C.
posit*. 41.00 Starts An Account
Us
lass, Cashier.
D. L. Smith, Assist. Cashier
R. T. Redfearn, Tiller
I,
"VUJ
rks when all other'
eased to work
ife Insura nce
Loan 8 Ins* Co.
C. C. DOUGLASS, Sac'f 4 M *r.
GEO. W. EDDIN8, Treaaurar.
?I- I
True
Detective Stories ;
TRIANGULAR FLAW
py right by Th? Wheeler Byndteete. ! ?
rHERK was as little doubt that
Lord Herbert Laurence Sheffield
belonged to the nobility as there
us about bis nationality?ami that
as Apparent Immediately from his
onocle and his spats. Every shopseper
along the Via Shlala In Naples
lew his lordship, and every one of
lem admitted that a more reprentative
member of the British ariscracy
had never visited Italy..
Lord Herbert was not only lavish
ith his money, but It was whispered
round the Grand Hotel.dl Napoll that
- - - - -
Is daughter, Sylvia, soon was to De
lurried to one of the richest m^a In
lugland.
Therefore when the Bngllsh nobletan
wundered Into the establishment
f the largest Jeweler in- Naples some
ivo months after his arrival in the
Ity and asked to be shown some dlaiond
necklaces, there was an Immedlte
scurry to wait upon him. Finally
lie proprietor himself requested I/ml
lerbert to come Into his private ofce
while he took from the safe a
ecklace valued at 450,000 francs, the
roperty of a client who was In finaolul
straits.
"I would like to purchase something
o give my daughter for a wedding
iresent," explalued the Englishman,
iiid the Jeweler nodded for the rumors
f the engagement had already reached
lis ears. "I'm afraid, though," coninued
his lordship, "that this neckuce
is u little more expensive than 1
an afford at the moment. I don't
loubt Its vnlue, but I'll have to have a "!
ittle time to think It over."
"Certainly," agreed the Jeweler. "I ^
vill be pleased to hold It as long as
,ou wish and, should you desire t<T
see and examine it again, I will be
>ery glad to bring It to the hotel ut
( our convenience."
"That would be excellent," assented
the \ isitor. "but I nnturnllv do nut
bvisli my daughter to know anything
iihout the .transaction. Tlie whole matter
is 10 be u surprise to her."
A f"W days later, in response; to
Lord Sheffield's request, the Jeweler ^
took the necklace to the Grand hotel 1
nod found the Englishman alone in
the room. After a very careful examination
of the diamonds terms were
agreed upon and Lord Sheffield had
just produced his letter of credit from
his wallet when a girl's voice was
heard In the corridor. Just outside the
door.
"My daughter 1" exclaimed the Englishman.
"She mustn't know anything
about this," and he swept the ^
necklace and the wallet Into the drawer
of the desk before which he sot. A 1
moment Inter Sylvia Sheffield came in
and nnnounced that her father's tailor
hud arrived and wished to see him at i
once. Excusing himself with the state- *
inent that he would he hack very
shortly, Lord Herbert left the room
and his daughter followed him iumie- j ?
diately. t
When half an hour had passed the
Jeweler began to wonder what was detaining
his client, but he didn't worry
in the least because bis necklace and
bis lordship's wallet were there In the ,i
drawer of the desk, right under his Vl
hand. The transaction Involved too
much money to warrunt any linpn- U
tience, so It was not until two hours i
had slipped by before the jeweler rang M
for the hotol clerk and requested to
know what was detaining Lord Sheffield.
"His lordship and Miss Sylvia left
the hotel nearly two hours ago," was
the reply. "They hiul received a cablegram
from England."
Sensing that he had been robbed, the
jeweler tugged at the drawer of the
desk only to find that It was locked,
but a moment's examination of the
next room sufficed to show that the
wall against which the desk was
placed had been pierced and that the
whole procedure had been u plot to
lift the neckluce and make a quick
getaway.
Lvlgl Ronfl, one of the shrewdest
detectives in Naples, was Immediately
placed In charge of the case and telegraphed
to Home to have the pair arrested.
Sheffield, anticipating such a
move, had planted two confederates In
the capital, and by the time that the
police had found that their a^lbl was
ironclad the real criminals were well
on their way northward. Then followed
one of the longest chases in
< ouiiiii-uuii uuiecuve nisiory.
Finally, nfter more than eight
months, ho located them in l.ond<Mi,
only t?? ho mot by the downright denial
of the Englishman that he had ever
used the name of Khoflield or had ever
been in Naples. Ho accounted for his
possession of a number of unset diamonds
hy the statement that lie had
bought them in the Argentine amj exhibited
u bill of sale covering tho
gems.
To this Bonft made no reply, but
whipped out a Jeweler's magnifying
glass and commenced to examine the
diamonds, one by one.
Then, before the Englishman Knew
ovhat lie was doing, lie leaned forward
and snilll'.ieiJ >i nnlr nf liuti/l?"??
him.
"Hills of .sale," snld the ItaJlan detertlve,
"are easy enough to forge, but
you can t forge a diamond?and one of
those Mi your possession has a triangular
flaw In precisely the same place as
did one of those In the Montorl necklace
t"
Sheflield" spent the next
twelve years in prison. The girt eaI
raped.
- . 1
J. ARTHUR KNIGHT
AttorMy<?t*U?
Office in CowthouM
ClwittHlcM, S. C.
R. L. McMANUS
i
Deatiit
Cheraw. S. C. 1
I At Choatereld, Monday
I A Paceland, Toaaday. 1