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?OBI I ' ' . .. I .1 .IB The Chesterfield Advertiser Plot H. and Fred G. Hears Editors yv PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY Subscription Rates: $1.50 a Year; H fix mo..tl~, 75 cents.?Invariably in advance. N Entered as second-class matter at the postoflice at Chesterfield, South rp Carolina. . LEE AND GRANT ARE EULOGIZED A At the dedication of the monument to General Grant, Vice-President ^ Coolidge made an address that was so generous in the refernces to the Confederate soldiers and to General H n_l I' T Onronasvn 1WUC11 JCJ. JUUC, mat Utliavui I^TTMIIOVil of Virginia commended the address 1 and asked that it be published in the Congressional Record, which was done. S Some one has suggested that the Republicans made a mistake in the Presidential nomination. They should have put Coolidge at the head of the ^ ticket. Readers of The Advertiser will agree to this contention when they read this eulogy of General Lee and of the soldier* of the Confederacy: "Grant had great adversaries. They fought with a dash and a tenacity, 0 with a gallantry and an enduring pur- e pose which the world has known in Americans, and in Americans alone. ? At their head rode Gen. Robert E. Lee, marked with a purity of soul and ? a high sense of personal honor which * no true American would ever stop -to question. No force ever quelled s their intrepid spirit. They gave their f loyalty voluntarily, or they did not v give it at all. It is not so much the c greatness of Grant as a soldier, but 8 his greatness as a man; not so much * of his greatness in war as his great- c ness in peace, the consideration, the 1 tenderness, the human sympathy t which he showed toward them from the (iav of their Riihmiaainn refunimr the surrender of Lee's sword, leaving 1 the men of the southern army in pos- c session of their own horses, which ap- v pealed to that sentiment of reconciliation which has long since been com' ? plete. It was not a humiliation, but 1 an honor to remain under the sovereignty of a flag which was borne by f such a commander." * Not to be outdone by this eulogy to General Lee and the soldiers of the ? lost cause, Senator Thomas E. Wat~ /1 :_ i ii- _ a M?A . A _ I sou, ui vieurgia paia uiis iriDUie to General Grant, which we take from ^ the Congressional Record: "Coming from the South, as I do, I wish now and here, by unanimous * consent , to pay my tribute and that of the South to the memory of the great soldier, who at Appomattox refused to accept in surrender the purest of human swords?that of Robert \ E. Lee. In behalf of the great section, Whose army of northern Virignia Theodore Roosevelt said v?a3 the greatest ^ that ever took the field, I wish to say . that we honor General Grant and we ? love him, because at the surrender he was so kind, so magnaminous as to t say 10 tne ragged and starved Confed- t erate soldiers: 'Take your horses ^ home; you will need them in planting your corps.' "Had General Grant been President after Mr. Lincoln, we never would ^ have had the agony of reconstruction s and the bitterness that followed the , Civil War. * "I see him on that monument, ^ which is to be unveiled today and , which I think is one of the sublimest r conceptions of the human brain, and ^ I feel like lifting my hat every time ^ I pass it. My heart swells, and I am proud that our reunited country pro- ^ - - v duced this great captain and that his & family lived side by side with mine in j. the old country?his just above the q Scotch border and mine just below-and that the clans never had a feud. 0 "We of southern blood and memories bear in mind that, when the administration which followed that of Mr. Lincoln threatened to arrest the paroled Confederate officers, General ^ Grant virtually put his hand on his ^ sword and said to the President in effect: "You shall not do it. My honor ^ is pledged; I signed those paroles." t] Ana me ^resident dared not vio- ^ late the pledged word of General Grant" g| Then in closing this patriotic love ^ feast in Congress Senator McCumber, p leading Republican from North Dako- p ta said: g "It is always a pleasure to receive a such evidences of a united country, and to receive from men of the South g such a tribute to the great leader of w the national forces. I think we can u] justly say that for many long years g< there has been no bitterness between CJ any sections of the United States growing out of the Civil War .that we all feel that we have today but one flag, but one country, and we honor the great heroes who fought on both sides in that great conflict." V( i fm mt?s th Civil War is raging in China. We se can make little of it, however. We n{ learn with some concern that d< Fengtein troops are cut off from re- "t treat at Chunliang cheng and that fu the gun boats of Wu Peri Fu have bt appeared oir snangnaewan. Outside of that we suppose everything is all F< right. A. F. DAVIS MARKET T)m FiaMt Fraik M?*ti 71m Bast Faaojr Grocariaa High Grada Caaaod Goad. Tha Boat of KfarytUsg lor tho |h Tablo imi JUST SINGING By Frank L. StaDton 'hen clouds threw shadows o'er the sky And all the world seemed like a sigh e found a ray of sunshine by Just singing. ot that his heart was happy?no! But, like a river in its flow, hen music ever made it so? Just singing. .nd cheeks forgot the falling tear, And souls in valleys dim grew near? Irept to him in the deark to hear That singing. t led from crrief and doom and Inns? It led from seas where billows toss, 'o light, that beautified a cross? That singing. ling! Sing! when sound the stormy knells, When high the darkening tempest swells; ling! Sing! and hear the harbor-bells Just singing. OUR WASHINGTON LETTER The outcome at Genoa seems seriiusly threatened by reason of this government holding aloof from this ffort to pacify the turbulent and unettled conditions in Europe. Harding las allowed Lloyd George, the greatist statesman of his time and probaby of all times, to tackle the tremenlous problem alone and unaided: if he ucceeds it places him upon a high ledestal of glory from which all time vill not take him down. The best theory put forward in Washington to iccount for Harding's non-participaion is that he feared he would be accused of doing the thing that Woodow Wilson would have done under he circumstances. The coal strike has been allowed A r*Hr? nn aovnrol wonl/o wifK w was UV * V*M? T* TT 1VII UVVIlIIlg lone by the adminbtration looking tovard its settlement. More than 700,100 men are directly affected by it, vithout taking into consideration the ndustrial plants daily shutting down ecause of coal shortage. The best igures indicate that 3,300,000 work;rs are out of employment in the Jnited States. While Wall Street gambles in stocks at the rate of milions of shares Der dav on monev hor. owpd from the banks at 3V4 per :ent., able-to-work young men are >egging a dime for food within a tone's throw of the White House pounds in Washington. The Republican Congress still hag;les with the soldiers over their bonus, vith the outcome as uncertain as the veather, while the business world vaits with like uncertainty the new ariff bill. Last winter the leaders talkid of adjourning Congress the first lay of May; the month is here and ad ournment is one of the events so far n tne future that it is not even disussed in Washington. And the ,counry waits and waits, and waits while his "business administration" does business in a very unbusinesslike nanner. It has been long though by ordinary oiks that one of the principal misions of our State Department is to .eep us on friendly terms with other lations of the world, thus making or peace and friendly commercial ntercourse of a profitable sort. Repesentative Yates, of Illinois, son of he famous war governor, Lincoln's riend, has vigorous opinions on the uccess of the administration along hese lines. Remember that Yates is Republican. On the floor of the louse he said, on page 608-1 of the congressional Record: "There is not nation in th#? world tnHau :?> ur friend. They are all auspicious nd unfriendly." The President is reported to be prearing to remove Commissioner Blair rom the Bureau of Internal Revenue, '.lair is trying to run the Bureau roperly. and he can hardly do this if e removes the hundreds of oxperta rained under the last adminsitration, uring which period the work of the !ureau increased with tremendous trides, but the President feels that e has to yield to the thousand of imortunitiea for jobs for the smaller olitical leaders by putting into lairs place a man who will use the x on the experts and put in the inxperienced fellows who voted on the Warding side in 1920. Of course the ork of the Bureau and the interests f the people will suffer; but these are jcondary considerations; the politiil machine has to be kept up. NO NEW SIN, CLAIM Suffolk, Va., May 3.?"No new sin is been invented for the past 4,000 jars," Dr. R. C. Heflenstcin, of Dos, Del., declared this morning before ie Southern Christian Convention, in ssion this week. Moral conditons >w are challenging, he admitted, but iclared thac those who lament for he good Old davs" #r# "TV,, I + ? ? -w *?? Viiif,, 1 lie tture is brighter than the past has sen," he said, 3R SALE?Fine Honnd and Pointer Puppies?several breeds. All high-class parentage. Males, "$10 and up; females, $7.00 and up. Also opposum and fox hounds. Prices on application. Satisfaction guaranteed. Jones' Konnels, Lilesville, N. C. 3tp20 Hi* "Universal" Is Iks k^aft swssy >?k on th? asrhst Wins on* go?s TO CONDUCT EXPERIMENTS ON HARDENING PEANUT-FED HOGS Cooperative soft-pork experiments conducted by the United States Department of Agriculture and the State experiment stations of Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina and South Carolina, during the last three years | have shown conclusively that when | hogs, starting at a weight of approxi| mately 100 pounds are fed on peanuts in the dry lot or grazed in the field for a period of 60 days or more, a soft carcass is produced, and that it is impossible to produce a hard carcass by feeding corn and tankage or corn and rnHnnannfl mool soft hogs for a subsequent period of 60 days or less. The above statement, unanimously approved by representatives of the Bureau of Animal Industry, and of the various experiment stations at a meeting held at Chattanooga April 1 9and 20, is not meant to discourage in any way the feeding of peanuts to hogs in those sections of the South that are well adapted to the production of this crop. The experimental data compiled by the southern stations indicate very clearly that peanuts are one of the most economical feeds known for hogs and that they can be fed with profit in many parts of the South, even though soft hogs are discriminated against on the mar1 ket. Many farmers in the South have tne idea that soft hogs can be hard ened by 30 days of feeding on corn i and tankage. But, according to the i department, it has not been shown i that this can be done in twice that time. Next autumn the department i will start feeding tests to last 90 and . even 120 days in an effort to deter.I mine just how long it takes to firm a soft hog carcass. It is an important problem, as the firmness of the carcass has a very noticeable effect on the price paid by packers. [ : HONOR ROLL STAFFORD SCHOOL 1st grade: Edith Hunt, Maggie Lee ' Smith, Rosa Nell Atkinson, Audrey ^ Johnson, Louise Rivers, Hazel Henry, A r 1? * ^ mvme juruun, james MC^uaig. 2nd grade: Inez Hunt, Gladys , Hicks, Beatrice Rainwater, Sallie ' j Mae McBride, Blease Rivers, Lennox , Smith, Vernon Smith. .i 3rd grade: Geneva Rainwater, Mil,' drcd Grant, Donnie Hunt, Lexie Thert veil, Bernice Hodge. ( 4th grade: Jerome Stafford, Belk Hunt, Ethel Whittaker. Bth grade: Volina Rivers, Phoebe , Grant, Essie Hodges, Leitha Therrelli Sallie Turnage, Daniel Atkinson. 6th grade: Lola Rainwater, Ruby [ Davis, Georgia Hunt, Reba McBride, , Berta Therrell. 7th grade: Lillian Davis, Cora Mc' Quaig, Annie Rainwater, Willie Rainwater, Dwight Hunt. A happy family: One whose yearn , ings are no greater than their earni ings.?Monroe Enquirer. i 11 1 ???i ^wwwwwwwMWWj?wMMMWMMWWywwv | "VAMPS" WHO I | MADE HISTORY ? By JAMES C. YOUNG. ? [ <(?> by McClur* Newspaper Syndicate.) VAMPIRE WHO TURNED BIGOT. A BABY girl was bora la the prison at Nlort, France, In 1635. Iler ; father was a Huguenot, or Protestant, . and her mother a Catholic, lleliglous dissensions then divided France between the two sects. Tl>? man had been imprisoned because of his sturdy adherence to the Huguenots, and remained under key until 16S9, when he was released and went to Martlnlaue. West Indies, with his family. He died there and the mother brought the little girl hack to Paris. They were very poor. When the girl was just past fifteen she met the Abbe Scarron, that brilliant scholar and writer, who then was a celebrity. Scarron was deformed and always 111. He offered to pay her expenses In a convent, or to marry her. She chose the man, and for ten years tenderly nursed him. Her position brought her Into contact with the first minds of the day and she learned rapidly. After Scarron passed from the scene Biie was invited by the Marquise de Montespan, mistress of Louis XIV, to direct the education of their children. She accepted and it was not long until the king took an Interest in her. De Montespan was a haughty high-tempered woman, De MalDtenon, calm and even In her demeanor. Louis found relief from the storms of the one In the placldness of the other. And the old. old story was repeated. After De Montespan had been banished from court the queen died. De Malntenon led Louis Into a morganatic marriage and assured herself of a position Almost beyond attack. But the vampire of the sweet ways developed Into a shrew as she grew older, became bigoted 'and a relentless persecuter of the Protestants. She had been credited with Influencing the king to revoke the famous Edict of Nantes In 1685. This edict | guaranteed a measure of' liberty to Protestants and Its revocation plunged France Into civil bloodshed which sapped much of the power that had been built up by Louis and two great ministers who preceded him, Masarin and Rlcholleu. It also drove from France many of Its best families and stirred up unquenchable flames of hatred, which eventuated a hundred years later In a complete overturn of the Catholic power. De Malntenon hesitated after ahe saw the results of her influence, but It was too late to draw back and, womanlike, ahe figuratively threw up her hands at thf harm ahe bad wroughtShe outlived the king and the toft COOPERATIVE SELLING CAMPAIGN CONTINUES THROUGH MAY Columbia, May 8.?Although over 420,000 bales have already been signed up and the original quota was only 400,000, officials of the South Carolina Cotton Growers' Cooperative Association announce that the books will i be kept open until June 1 and opporI tunity give those who have not yet I joined to affiliate with the organiza| tion. It is expected that at least BOO. 000 bales will have been signed up by June 1. The campaign to sign up 400,000 bales by May 1 is declared by many to have been one of the greatest campaigns ever waged in South Carolina and there has been much jubiliation among those interested in the movement over the wonderful victory won. "The larger the percentage of crop the association signs, the more effective will be the results obtained," says a statement issued by the association in announcing a continuance of the campaign. "Those who do not sell their cotton through the association sell in competition with the association and against us. Naturally we want to get every bale in the association we can because it helps the situation for the farmers of the state that much. We believe that there are many farmers who are now ready to sign up. They will have the opportunity during the next three weeks of lining up with their brother farmers instead of lining up against them." BIG BEAR CREEK The Womans' Missionary Society of Peniel Church had an all day meeting: on Friday the 5th and a picnic dinner at the church. It certainly was grand. Every body got plenty and there was plenty left. We had Borne very interesting talks by Mrs. Herbert and Mrs. Exum. We are very sorry to report the death of Mr. H. L. Munnerlyn of our community. He was only sick a few days. All that loving hands could do was to no avail and he quietly passed away about 5 o'clock Saturday afternoon. He was buried Sunday in the Mt. Olivet cemetery. Mr. Munnerlyn was loved by all who knew him. He has been in our midst about three years and has won many friends. May He, who doeth all things well comfort and sustain the widow and children in this time of their affliction and may they meet >Vhen the Pearly Gates unfold. FIERCE TWISTER QTDIVCC A f ICTiai nWJIIll Austin, Texas, May 4.?Nine dead, 38 injured, two probably fatally, and property damage estimated at $400,000 was the toll of death and destruction in the wake of a tornado which late today swept through the. west side of Austin and on out of the city to Oak Hill, eight miles southwest, according to a check of the situation late tonight. I . J Stories of Great Scouts Vatson I ?. Western Newspaper Union. HOW "LIVF.R.PATIN' " inuwanu COT HIS NAME Among the scouts who were w|fh Gen. Nelson A. Miles, when that officer Inflicted his crushing defeat upon the Slppx chief, Crazy Horse, at the battle of Wolf Mountain, Mont., In 1877 was one bearing the strange name of "Llver-Eatin'" Johnson. Johnson was a powerful Norwegian, weighing more than 800 pounds and standing six feet, three Inches In his moccasin-clad feet. He bad a great shock of golden hair of which-he was very proud?so much so, that he refused to wear a bat, and when he went Into battle with this golden mane In the wind, be looked like an ancient Norse viking. Johnson hod won his name In a gruesome way. Two stories about this are told, differing slightly In detail, but agreeing In the main facts. One j tells how a party of Indians had raided a trading post on the Mussel| shell Illver, but were driven off with I heavy loss. It is'said that Johnson, ] In a spirit of devilish bravado, cut j out the livers of several of the dead warriors and actually ate them. The other story seeks to Justify Johnson's act. A Cheyenne chief bad , raided and burned Johnson's camp while ha unn niviic nn a ?? v. pedition. When he returned and saw the ruins, he swore that he would kill the Cheyenne and eat his liver. Later he made good his threat. Either account may be correct, so far as details are concerned. At any rate, he was ever afterward known as I "Liver Eatln'" Johnson. Johnson's Inseparable companion was "X" Beldler of Montana vigilante fame. Beldler disapproved of Johnson's lack of headgear and called him a "yaller-headed Injun," because, as he said, "every decent white man wears some sort o' coverln' for his scalp." But Johnson was firm In his convictions, and In the fight with Crazy Horse's Sioux he justified himself?to his own satisfaction, at least. As Beldler and Johnson charged up the snow-clad slopes of Wolf mountain that morning against entrenched Indians, a bullet cut a furrow through Llver-Eatln's balr, "like a pair of redhot sheep shears," as he said. ^ he eirlaimed to hit "pardner." "If I'd had a hat on, It'd bin plumb rained I" Little la known of Johnson's later history. Be was a scout at Fort Ouster 1081, when the young chief Sword Bearer tried to stir op the Crows ? , They I Good! M Buy this Cigarette i EYES EXAMINED | MA I Neglect may prove serious. Have c i your eyes examined and glasses fitted.' ( uince in place ol residence on Green 1 street. Mrs. C. B. Edgeworth, r Optometrist. 1 I . ! X. _ ; THE REA Not what you get by chance or inheri in life, but what you gain by honesty I successful. What are you doing to b< funds for future ne -da by starving a THE FARMERS M M. L. RALEY. J. S. McGREGOf President Vice-Presi DIRECTO ,( F. D. Seller, _ _ J. S. Sir.it | T. h. Burch, 9he People. OF CHESTER 1 Will Appreciate Your Business. $200,00 Oar customers anu frieucU hc'.pc; need of accommodation or you ia I to see as. Guaranteed burglar i Let us show you this wonder. A c R. B. LANEY, President ( CHAS. P. MANGUM, Cashier li ; II /T\ w - i&anH, of f?h The 01de?ct; Largest Bank in Chester! 4 Per Cent. Paid on Savings Deposit See Uf C. C. Douglass, R. E. Rivera, President. I M. J. Hough, Vice-President. R. 4 The Best Family Rem? Because it works i w remedies hare ceased t I Chesterfield Lo; D. H. DOUGLASS, President C. ( W. J. DOUGLASS, Vice- Pres. GE< I ALSO FLUB, ACCIDENT, HEAL INBURAN1 - |-y j<u V rt -V':" 'i\ : '* ??? 9 j icr ind Save Money ss=assas lNAGER WANTED?Exclusive :ontract, resident representative,' farmer preferred) advertising arm agicultural equipment for arge manufacturer. No investment equired. Must have highest bank eferencs. Box 212, Atlanta, Ga. j T rr\T~\r^trr\ s L, 1 L.S1 I tance.^W* what you start with ' is what will make you truly itter conditions? Accumulate . savings account HERE NOW. j ,NK, RUBY.S.C. I I, MISS ALICE BURCH J dent Asr>stant Cashier RS j h, J. S. McGrevror ! M. L. Raley, E *' iBank | FIELD Total Resources Over | 0.00 I 1 us to do this. When in 1 ve money to deposit, come proof and fire proof safe, ordial welcome awaits you 1 IT T A Kfl?V If n : j x M IX. V . ri'CSlUIMll | J. A. CAMPBELL, , Assist. Cashier ? =11 . ? leaterfiela and Stronge.it field, S. C. , i ti. $1.00 Starts An Account i ! ! I ? Caihiar. >. L. Smith, Aaaiat. Caahier T. Redfearn, Tiller I - i ??I i ____________________________ i r ,dy | r 8 when all other I to work .1 t i i Insurance an 8 Ins. Co. I 2. DOUGLASS, Sec'y A M*r. ). W. EDD1NS, Treasurer. TH, HAIL, LIVE STOCK A 1 111111111II i IIIil III 1111 I Detective Stories | | THE BOMB PLOT | kprrlfht by The Wb??l?r Syndicate, lee. TAP?Tap?Tap! The knocking at the door of the house occupied by Charles von Klelst, in Brooklyn, was not peremptory. nor jet did it savor of steiilthi uess. During the silence which followed, the two inen on the doorstep looked at each, other Inquiringly. rhen? Tap?tap?tap, they knocked again. Slowly, silently, the door swung jpen and," from the Inner recesses of a pitch-black hall, came a voice which Inquired, In guttural German: "Who are you, and what do you want?" "We come from the Wolf," was the reply. "He snld that you would know what we wanted." "From the Wolf?" echoed the voice from within. "How do I know that you are not wolves yourselves? How "Thls'll prove who we are," interrupted the man who had previously spoken, producing a card and slipping It past the stout chain which guarded the door. "Read und act," tie continued. still in German. A moment later the chain had been removed and the two men, their coat collars turned high, their hats pulled low, entered the darkened hall. Not until the old man had refastened the door and preceded them Into a room where the tightly closed shutters effectually prevented any spying from the outside, <Wd lie again address iiit-iu. ?v iit"ii ne (liu speak, It was merely to Inquire their names. **** "Barnltz," replied one <?t the m({h? the one who had carried \on the conversation from the outside. "Barth," said the other. "Barnltz," the old man repeated ruminntivcly. "Tliat Is a name of the Fatherland, a good name. But Barth? I know it not. Is It not English?" "American," corrected the first of tlie strangers. "It would not do to use too many of our citizens in this plan. It would cause suspicion. We must use all kinds of people?that's how we fool these Yankees! Besides, should you doubt, there is the card from the Wolf. That hears both names." "That is so," agreed the German, "and Von Igel is not one to take any chances. He is too close to Von I'apen. For what were you sent here?" "The Wolf wishes to be assured that everything is going smoothly. Then, after a moment's hesitation, during wlliell tie studied Von Klolol'? very carefully: "llave you completed the bombs?" "A few only. It will be simple to make the others. Come, I will show you." Through the winding, labyrinthine passages of the old house the Herman led them, and then out Into the back nrd?a tiny plot of ground barely a few feet sqtiure. W 'As you will note." he saldr ot be overlooked from any of I minding houses. B I The loan called Harth. glum-in^n^ 1 aw that the German was right. the hare wails of wurehouses fro^ftt ' down upon them. As he looked, . J ever, he seemed to catch a queer HLt. from one of the nearby roofs?a . us of sunlight refracted from a hlruHL lar-glass. AftPf lift hft/1 rnnmvA/l V? ?/? bulbs, planted in a straight line, as mark a certain spot, Von Klelst ]j dueed a small oblong box, black a^ft M ominous. ' "This," he said, motioning them bucH into the house, "is the only one I huv^B ready for use. The ones I shall sho\v^ftfj you in the cellar?In order that you B IllgV tell the Wolf tn?? hnu' ?il? nlona " 't j ... f""' H iire being carried out?are merely the Vi cases. But this one Doctor Scheele turned over to me ns a sample. Care- \ ful! Don't drop iti "There were several of these on the Lusltanla, and when the news of her destruction first arrived I thought that my handiwork was responsible. Rut the honor was not mine, unfortunately. There are also similar bombs planted i>n the Frledrlch Der (Jrosse, In case these Yankees ever attempt to seize our property. The moment they start tier engines, that moment they start the bombs! Yes," concluded the old man, "you can tell the Wolf that his plans are being well carried out Karaode, Schmidt, Paradls and Praedel ire attending to the ones on the ship, ind Scheele und Becker on land." "Splendid!" exclaimed Barnitz. 'The chief will be delighted to hear this. Why not come with us now and ^ tell li1111 about it?" Thinking, of course, that his visitor * referred to Wolf von Igel, Kleist readily agreed, ami It was not until their axlcah stopped in front of police lieadjuarters that he sensed anything vrong. Itefore he knew it he was being valked Into the office of fnspeetor rhomus J. Tunney, with a gnn In his lbs. "Cblef," cried Harnitz, "that card limed the trick! You'll have to get a inrdon for the scratcher. Anyone who an forge Von Igel's writing as clevery hh that doesn't deserve to be In Jail. Ve not only nailed the old bird, but le's implicated half a dozen others Sometimes it pays to have a German limit' and be aide to speak the lun[tinge!" Hut the bomb plot, designed to detroy half the Shipping In New York inrbor. didn't otllelally eml until Klelst ml Sehml.lt were sent to Atlanta for wo yei.rs each, while Heeker, Paradis, 'model ami Karhode drew six mouths m?1 o ?|ne. J. ARTHUR KNIGHT Attonwr-at-L*? Office in Courthouse Chesterfield. 9. C.* K. U McMANUS Dentist Cheraw, S. C. At Chestereld, Monday A Pageland, Tuesday, t Mt. Croghan, Wednesday morning Buby, Wednesday afternoon