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The Chestcrlield Advertiser ' Paul H. and Fred G. Hearn Editor* PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY SubscriptAor R ites: $1.50 a Year; six moi.1, v^nta.?Invariably in advance. Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice at Chesterfield, South Carolina. A PAIR NOT NEEDED IN THE SENATE It is an acknowledged fact that Senator Lodge of Massachusetts, the Republican leader in the Senate, and Senator Reed, of Missouri one of the leading Democrats in that body and a very able man, are both compelled to make a strong fight to retain their scats in Congress. Senator Reed cannot be charged with inconsistency in his opposition to the League of Nations as is alleged of Senator Lodge. Senator Reed, who has fought President Wilson and the League of Nations persistently will have to make the light. of his life this fall for the Democratic nomination. His opponent i>- Hon. Breekcn ridge Long, who wain the State department of tin Wil son administration. It is said that Missouri democrats have become tired and disgusted with Senator R.n d's fight upon Woodrow Wilson < -n ??'* ler the great i resident ha I retired from office in broken health. Admitting Senator Reeds' ability they feel that he is prostituting his laicnis and is aiu>v.*in<; ins prejudices to control his actions. Referring to 'hose two eminent hut misguided Senators the Atlanta institution has* this pertinent (aomncnt:| "Aside Jroni then attitude towaid international questions, there is lit?ii in the public r* fords of Loupe and Heed, respetcively, to commend ei !;ei of them to the American piople. democrats or republicans. "Neither, as a senator, has been a builder, a creator, a pioneer in any field of thought or in any construe tive enterprise. Neither ever trained at.oUn.. W.. I : I I Mwv.ivavii kjy uuvill^ I II11 UIll'll illlVi worthy act of legislation. "As a matter of history and of record, the politcal eminence of each of those men rests, not upon constructive accomplishments, not upon affirmative achievement, hut almost entirely upon detructive opposition to the work of others. "Each of these two senators is a man of unusual and unquestioned ability and intellectual power; but the masses of the American people favor constructive and creative leadership rather than leadership predicated upon ability to obstruct and destroy. "That fact, coupled with the powerful influence of the womanhood of their respective states?an element to })!> iwk'onoil \l_' i t 11 f liie ?? . l? first time since woman suffrage became nation-wide?is very likely to relegate Senators Iieed and Lodge to private life next fall." DEFENDING THE BOLL WEEVIL It is said of a kind-hearted old lady that she could always find some good in everybody, even the meanest of men. She had a good word for old Satan, saying that he "was very persevering." Now mines Mr. Cully Cobb, editor of the Southern Uuralist. who would have us believe that there is some j*ood in the cotton growers' pest, the boll weevil. This is tile way Mr. Cobb pleads the cause of the boil weevil, in a speech recently delivered on Southern agricultural condtions, Mr. Cobb said of the boll weevil: "it is said that it is tin ill wind that blows nobody t^ood. in the ease of the boll weevil we can find much for which he is directly and indirectly responsible that is ^ood. Agriculture | has made greater strides during the past ten years than in any lifty year, previous. Much of this progress is due to the fact that we have had to fight the boll weevil. "The boll weevil has done much toward promoting agriculture in a manner that will result in leadership than any other single eontributary cause. Cotton is the nation's most im portant crop. More business is built arfiund it than around any other. When the? boll weevil came to be a menace, people who had thought little about the problems of agriculture became interested." REPUBLICAN RECORD FOR SIXTEEN MONTHS Senator King, of Utah, it not only a great senator, but a great Democrat. Iteed Smoot, the other senator from Utah, is a dyed in the wool Republican, but Senator King is such an able and zealous democrat that he not only holds his own against Senator Smoot bi>t redeems the state that sett these two men to the Senate. Comparing the records of the Democratic and Republican parties when in charge of the government, Senator King recently presented these figures: The prosperity of this country when the democrats had contiol brought the wealth of the United States from $185,000,000,000 to more than $800,000,000,000. Now, since the Republicans have been in power, one year and more, they have reduced the wealth of the United States from $800,000,000,000 to perhaps $215,000,000,000 to $225,000,000,000, so Republicans can congratulate themselves upon the fact that they have decreased the wealth of the United flutes from PROMINENT MEN AT ? S. C. S. S. CONVENTION Spartanburg, S. C., May 22.?Announcement has just been made here that a number of "bite men" of several denominations are to have a place on the programs of the State Convention | of the South Carolina Sunday School Convention which meets at the University of South Carolina, Columbia, for a three day session, begining June 20. Among those who are to be convention "head-liners" are Dr. D. W. Daniel of Clemson College, one of the leading Rlethodists of the State and Dr. W. J. AlcGlothlin, president of Fur man University, Greenville, who is also president of the General Board of the Baptist State Convention, Dr. McGlothlin is also vice chairman of the Educational Committee of the jouth Carolina Sunday School Association. Among the other prominent religious leaders who will address the convention are: liishop Kirkman G. r'inlay of the Episcopal Church; Dr. ?V. 11. Hudson, returned missionary from China and moderator of the Presbyterian Church Synod of South Carolina and Dr. S. J. Derrick, President of Newberry College 'Lutheran' Newberry. WASHINGTON LETTER Washington. D. C., May 22.?Probably no President of the United Slate.has ever had occasion to view with dismay a greater uvun wunin iiis awn party than thai wh'ih confronts Mr. ilurdii;r. '1 he r ?^ult in Indiana was -.wilier nl to give alarm, but the b'.oody defeat ol the nmst powerful machine in the l'n:ted State.-, that in Pennsylvania, is. almost iray.it in its forecasts and portents. The machine has gone down to defeat before one of the most pronounced leaders of the Progressive movement of Hi 10-12, llitfurd Pinehot, the friend of Roosevelt. Probably in all the history of machine polities there has never been an organizations more unscrupulous in its methods or more saturated with graft. On.y a few years ago it was shown that me ward organization in Philadelphia, in the insolence of its power, had registered and a voted a saloonkeeper's bulldog, thinking, doubtless, that it was a line jest at representative government. Rut the bull dog cast as patriotic a vote as the ward boss himself VlMlv! 1.1.. ..t it ......... ..... the saino investigation that tin." ward loaders, in order to return certain majoriles which they were expected to maintain, copied names from the tombstones in the city cemeteries in order to t?et lists of fictitious voters. Boss Penrose, whose last .act was to force Hnrdinjjs' nomination, is deadIt looks like his Pennsylvania machine is also ready to be coflined. The defeat of Senator New. the President's buddy, in Indiana primaries, lias left some sore spots. The Vincennes Sun, a Democratic paper, takes some pleasure in quoting what the Vincennes Commercial had to say about Boveridge before he was nominated. The Commercial is a leading Republican organ of Will 11. Hays' neighborhood and under his influence. Its editor charged Boveridge with bong a "demagogue, traitor, atheist,and mischief-making agitator." He declared that Heveridge was the only man he knew who had not answered the countrys' call during the war, and that President Wilson did not have his support. Incidentally it appears that Chairman Hays would not, in 1U1M, allow a Republican campaign speaker 10 mention ('resident Wilsons' name in his speeches. The Commercial had a rich fold to explore, i;oiii^ so far as to tell haw Boverid;te s hook on the Kaiser "was used as (lerman propaganda" until the (iovernment. threw it out of the mails. The editor did not tell, however, of the time when Ueveridpa' nac^ed Senator .loe Bailey to such a point of irritation that the Texan slapped his face and pulled his collar otr. VVashinjjtonians were much | amused at the indignation of Beveridtfe's friends at what they called a "hrutal attack," while Boveridtte c:<cused his non-resistenee by claiming that Baily "never touched me." Those familiar with the case thought Beveridce oroiloceil i. ..1:1*: and would have thought bettor <?f him had he used his knuckles as freely as he had always used his vocal chords. Applicant--No, nin'am. I could not work where there's children. Madam?But we advertised for a jfirl who understands children. Applicant?Oh, I understand 'em, ma'am, that's why 1 wouldn't work where they are. Anything? that is standing? still is jjjettinj? ready to move backward. The leading? farmer is the reading; farmer. (Jood material for a working; farm library can he had from the publications of the Kxtension Service, the Kxperiment Station, and the U. S. Department of Agriculture. THE LIAR You couhl have taken a blakesnake whip And lashed me over the eyes. You could have struck me full in the face? Hut you chose to tell me lies. Yet the cut of a whip is straight and clean If the heart that strikes be strong, Hut the wound from a lie is a fetid thing That stabs and festers long. The liar is born with the yellow streak Men shun from sea. to sea, You can go and hunt with your coward pack? FIRST OFFICIAL STATEMENT OF GOVERNOR HARVEY Columbia, May 20.?Following is the first oilicial statement issued by Governor Wilson G. Harvey: "The resignation of the Hon. Robert A.Cooper,as Governor of the Stati to accept membership on the Federal Farm Loan Board offered him by the President of the United States, devolves upon the Lieutenant Governor the duties and responsibilities incident to the office of Governor, and I have therefore this day assumed the obliga- j lions as constitutionally provided: 1 "Entering upon their discharge, 1 j am mindful of the fact that the usual i antagonisms resulting from conflict- < ing politcal differences are not now 1 swaying the public mind, and that at this peculiar period there prevails u ' .general spirit of politcal peace and 1 harmony. ^ "It is a source of gratification to ] nie that evidences have not been want- < ing, that my assumption of the duties 1 is with the general approval of my fel- I low eitiens, irrespective of class, creed and politcal alliliutions, and with this ' feeling I enter upon my otlicial duties 1 determined to the best of my ability J there shall be a strict and impartial discharge of my responsibilities, spc- ^ cial favors shown to none and justice , to each and every one. "I feel that I voice the overwhelm- t ing sentiment of this State when I 1 bear tribute at this time to the un- ' swervcring fidelity, the incorruptible : 1 it. e i ' luteal *11111 till' Mil U clIKl sanu HIScharge of oilicial duties on the part of Governor Robert A. Cooper. "Tte eonditions which have con-/ | fronted oui people for the past several months and the outlook of the present day, unpreeendented in ihe annals of our State, Call upon our citizenship for level-headed, temperate, careful and patriotic thought anil ell'ort. In these distressing business difficulties, touching every avenue of endeavor, there is a demand for a unity of purpose, free from dissension and unwnrped by personal antagonisms or intensity of feeling. "The leaders of thought in our State, whether they represent professional, business, agricultural, labor or other lines, should have as their single purpose the alleviation of hampering or restricting conditions, the restoration of business confidence and the resuming of the normal conditions of the past. Strife and animosity among the people will only add to present fortunes. Woes will not be lessened by dissention. Happiness cannot be attained by discord. "It must be realized that at a period when men have become overwhelmed with trouble and misfortune, they naturally attribute their difficulties to sources which in moments of clearer thoughts would not be held responsible, and it behooves the leaders to impress upon such the policy of watchful waiting until the troublous days through which we are passing have been bridged over and a period of prosperity reached. "Called unexpectedly to this high of'.re ?o carry on the business of the State and to administer its laws, it is not expected of me at this-time nor would it be lilting for me to enter into a discussion III' nnlii-iov nlriiiwlo .....II i ....? ?.??jr ?m defined, and 1 v\? i ronton*. myself with an appeal to tin thoughtful men and women to aid me during my brie f encumheney to the faithful discharge of my ? uties. 1 do not hope to escape censure 1 do no', expect to In.* free from mistake's, hut 1 can conscientously endeavor to work with them for the welfare of the State, and (his shall be my aim and purpose." YF. FARME GOSS1PF. A livestock man is Known by th sires lie? keeps. i The best product of pi^ clubs is not better pitfs, hut better hoys. 1 Fat dairy cows that are lean pro- ' ducers should he sent to market. Eternal vieilance is the price of the * | Gardner's freedom from insects and disease. "Watch and spray." t A timely tip to farmers from Solo- | mon. "lie that tilleth tiis lands shall ? have plenty of bread."? Proverbs 1 "8:10. v Farmers who don't plant plenty of ' liay crops now for livestock are likely to have "hay fever" when they find it necessary to |?uy hnv next winter. A new way to make waste lands \ profitable- prow timber on bad u slopes, inaccessible, corners, rocky (i lands and other "useless' places on the farm. n I Yes, we must learn to prow new <! crops, but it is danporous to plunpe f in special crops, (iamblinp is pnmb- h I np. whether on the farm or on the '' stock exchanpe. a Any farmer who would like to know s how it feels to be in "hip business" ? can find out by joininp the Co-opera- ? tive Marcktiiur Asaoeisitinn :? - headed toward becoming the biggest business ]n the old U. S. A. Ii r The five best paying farms found.in b a survey in an Ohio county were *' the five best yielding farms. Build M up the soil and build up your future ^ bank account. . A. F. DAVIS MARKET [ The Fineat Freah Meat* The Beat Fancy Grocerie* High Grade Canned Good* The Be*t of Everything for tlio 0 III I.I t , 11 g=g Stories of By Elmo I Great Scouts ?. Western Newspaper Union. WHEN ANDY LEWIS FOUGHT CHIEF CORNSTALK The buttle of I'olnt l'leusant on September 10, 1774, was the first "allamerican" battle ever fought on tills continent. Europeans bad taken part n all Important entnutenients before? French antl Indians against British , md Americans. But when Andy I^ewls ind bis borderers balled with Chief Cornstalk and bis Sbuwnees, It was ?trIcily a native affair. Lewis whs born In Ireland, but he :iad come to this country while still , ..i.ii.i .....i i... ?? ? i ? i viiiiu, aim nx- ? n.i nv iVB^i 111 Ainrr- | can than the frontiersmen he led. He 'ought with (leorge Washington In the French and IndlHn war and he became >ne of the greatest leaders of the coonlnl troops. He was six feet two nches tall und powerful. Lewis was chosen by Lord Dunmore In 1774 to lead a picked body of men against the Shnwnees while Dunmore attacked them from another direction. Chief Cc.rnstulk knew the two armies were coming and decided to defeat one before the other could Join It?a fn- ; rorlte trick of Napoleon. The Shnwnees attacked Lewis' army parly one morning. Lewis had taken , out his pipe when the tirst shot was j llred. lie coolly finished lighting his j pipe and then gave the orders to his , men, who rushed to meet the Indians. Both sides fought "Indian-fashion," , dodging from tree to tree and taking advantage of evgry bit of cover. The lighting was at u close range and In the smoke-filled forest frontiersman !iinl Indian eimie hand In loind?tnmii. hawk against hunting knife. ' l.nte In the afternoon tlie Indians gave way, but there was no rout. Cornstalk was too good a general for that and the Americans paid doanly for every foot of ground they won. That night Lewis held possession of the battlefield, but lie had won It at n terrible cost?7f> men killed and 14(1 wounded. A inly Lewis and Ills borderers had won the greatest Indian battle in early American history. Andy Lewis did 1101 have a chance to make a name for himself In the war or rue iiovoiimon wmen soon 101 lowed, lie w?s passed over for k?mi cnils of less ability and lie died in 17S0, an embittered, broken-hearted old man. The fhte of Ids opponent, j Cornstalk, bad also been a sad one. j In 1777 be came to a fort on the Ohio on a friendly mission. He was arrest ed and thrown Into prison. While there the threat Shawnee leader was treneherorsly murdered by a mob of sold!*rt in revenue for the death of a , eotainde who had been ktllcu by In- |' d I tins. E "VAMPS" u/un E L- - mmwmrn ^ Tf t IV W I MADE HISTORY | By JAMES C. YOUNG. $ ((?) by AlcCluru N?\?Mj?tper Syndicate.) THE WORST WOMAN OF ROME. IT IS rilllk'ult ro read Roman history without a shudder at the cruelty of its emperors, hut wo may well utld auother shudder for that at Its empresses, The worst woman Rome ever knew was Messalinu Valeria, the wife of Claudius. This Claudius lacked character, lacked intelligence, lacked everything. When he came to the throne in the early days of the Christian era it was a woman who really ruled, and that woman was Messaliua. She seems to have had little consideration for Claudius, and did as she pleased, boldly, iier excesses shocked even Roman society, which had fallen away from the stern days when the Roman lived austerely, and had entered upon all the soft ways of the East. Women were afraid to attend ii hatapiet where Messallna was pres. [*nt unless their husband* he snatched a way from them. If they caught her fancy. And it was whispered that many men whom she favored In the i-vening were murdered In the morning. 11k?? the wives of the famous I laroanal-Kawchld in the Arahlun Nights. McssaI Ilia's tuste varied from the Orst men in the stute to the lowest. A dove, a gladiator, u trainer of animals for the arena, might catch her ye and he raised to sudden greatness, loaded with gold, handsomely housed ind plied with rare wines. Then, in a "ew days, they disappeared, none knew vhere. At last Messnllna's heart turned to 3. Silius, whom Juvenal tells us was 'a young noble of great beauty." Hut I... l.. ^ ? ??'? - in- m ini oi .>111us ciinneed to nelong |( ? nnotlicr woman, his wife, anil the . vife opposed Messnlina hy all the dies at her coininund. In first one vay, then another, she frustrated her. iVhen Sillus was sent for lie had gone twuy, and when ho returned she for;ot the message. The rage of Messnllnn may he liniglned, and this opposition also put a iigh#i price upon Sillus. Claudius letermlned upon a trip to Ostln, leavng Messallna In Home. Here was icr opportunity. She took It, coinailing Silius to divorce his wife, thieh merely required the writing of letter In Home, saying that the husiind dlmlssed the woman. Then Mesalina publicly \yent through the ceretony of marriage with Sillus, although he already was married to the emcror. When Claudius heard of these events e exclaimed, "Am I still emperor?" faring that Messallna had overthrown Im. Hut her thoughts had been of lilngs other than power, and Claudius ,'as assured that he still wore the pur le. Mrssiillnfi mailed for Out I a to ersunde I) I in, and might have succeed(I. had not one of Claudius' froedtnen rdered her execution, which took lace In A. D. 48. EYES EXAMINED Neglect may prove serious. Havo >ur eyes examined and glasses fitted, ffico in place of residence on Green red. ' I A H A year ago? almost unknown Today ? a leader ? A sweeping veroic "My son," said the father impressively, "suppose I should be taken 1 lway suddenly what would become of "Why," replied the son irrevece-"' , * u stay here; the question is, vhat would become of you?" I THE RE/ i i Not what you pet by chance or inl I in life, but what you pain by hone | successful. What are you doing to | funds for future ae ds by slurvitif i THE FARMERS B i I M. L. RALEY. J. S. President Vice-Pi DIREC F. D. Seller, J. S. S T. II. Burch, | 9he IOF CHEST Will Appreciate \our Bu.siiu $200,0 Our ou.<tomcrs a ad friends hel need of accommodation or you to see us. Guaranteed l>nrj?l I Let us show you this wonder, j 1 R. B. LANEY, President CHAS. P. MANGUM, I Cashier ifyank cf % Tlie Oldest, Lar^t Bank in Chest 4 Per Cent. P?id on Seringa Drp See I C. C. Dougle R. E. Rivera, Preaident. M. J. Hough, Vice-Preaident. | The Best S Family Reir Because it wort remedies nave cea ?Jn % | Chesterfield L tj D. H. DOUGLASS, President W. J. DOUGLASS, Vice- Pres. i B ALSO P1RB, ACCIDENT, HI INSUR v - V ^J1 99 cigarettes -a. A* TAT T'IT> :c lur yunLil I i I A man in Kngland is said to have invented a dye that will tfive material ; two different colc?rs with one immor- , .'e k and Ilyde, the famous . l d 1.aerated by Robert Lew- i k.u-.en >11, must have had thnt kind f immersion. i KL TEST | leritance, not what you start with j sty is what will make you truly | better conditions? Accumulate j I a savings account HERB NOW. j ANK,RUBY,S.C. 1 !OR. MISS ALICE BURCH esident Assistant Cashier TORS mith, - J. S. McGregor M. L. Ruley, II m' iBank ERFIELD ;ss. Total Resources Over 00.00 ped us to do this. When in j| h.-^vc money to deposit, come I ar proof and fire prool safe. I V cordial welcome awaits you G. K. LANEY, V.-President J. A. CAMPBELL, Assist. Cashier 1 il' hesterfield iSt and Strongest erfceld, S. C. loiili. $1.00 Starts An Account Is ss, Cashier. D. L. Smith, Assist. Cashiar R. T. Redfearn, Tiller I ledy is when all other ised to work fe Insurance oan & Ins. Go. C. G. DOUGLASS, Sec'y A Mgr. GEO. W. EDD1NS, Treasurer. ;alth, hail, live stock j ANCE I L . I | True Detective Stories ALL EVIDENCE Jopyrl(ht by Tit* Wb?el*r Byndto*t*. Ino. CD. WEST, head of the prosecu4 tlon department of the National Association of Credit Men, euned back In his chair nnd placed he tlpe of the Angers of his left hand >reelsely ngainst the tips of the fingers of his right, a habit that was sec>nd-nnture to him during the consideration of n difficult problem. "Why on earth, Edwards, didn't you nmn in too \tMfh fhla u f nru Itofitro t It's too late to help you now. Your dock's gone, your credit ruined, uud ;hey've milked you dry. A word to :lie association In time would have inved you money and us time." "1 didn't dare to ccyne out In the >pen," groaned the man on the othpr side of the desk. "They had the roods on me, too, remember. I did lire a private detective agency, )Ut . . "Private detectives 1" snorted West. Detectives of any kind are practically useless In cases connected with commercial crimes. "There's nothing that pan be done In this case, but there Is ? way In which you can assist the law, land the men who fleeced you, and possibly make a grubstake for yourself. Listen . . Less than six months Inter, Abe Einstein, who called himself a "credit manager," wandered Into the office of Henry W. Knston, lawyer, and after seeing thnt all the doors were carefully closed. Inquired If Easton remembered Edwards, the shoe denier, whom they had nicked some time before. "The name's fnmlllar," replied the lawyer, "but 1 don't recall the details." "< )h, !t whs the same old pame," pruntcd Einstein. '4 pot him to come tip iiimI talk to you?you suppested that* lie ship the hulk of his stock out of town to me?I'd sell It, and we'd sjfllt with hint after the 'usual fees' had been deducted." "1 remember now. Then, when he came back here and timidly asked for his part of the rake-off, I told him he was lucky not to be In Jall~for violating six or eipht different stntutes. Our 'fees,' as I carefully explained to Win, more than ate up the proceeds of his stock at a forced sule, and he really owed us money! You should have seen his face then. Hut what's the trouble? Ilus he made a peep to the police? "No, nothinp like that." Einstein replied. "Hut I happened to he passlnp throupli Wllkesburre the other day. and who should I ruu Into hut Edwards. Prosperous, too. I knew him In a minute, and wondered where he'd gotten his money. Followed him down the street aways, and found that he'd opened another store. Flashy, hut good-looking. Somebody's evidently staked him, and he's trying his luck, hut?and here's the part that concerns us?he's nearly on the rocks again 1" "What? On the verge of bankruptcy?" "Exactly; only this time he evident ly intends to work the game nil hi# own. You can't blame hlni {or that, after he's been burned once." "Hut." protested Easton, "he can't bundle It by himself! "That's what I floured," Mid Einstein. "But. naturally. I didn't put the matter up to hiin. Things liuve been pretty dull around here for a while. Why don't you run up uiul aee Edwards? Admit that we didn't do a# well for him the first time as we might have, and make him fl guarantee of JfU.lJOO on n -10 00 split. "Bight I" snapped the lawyer. "I'll take n run up there tomorrow." The following afternoon, In the private office of his store, Edwards and Easton thrashed out the details of their former arrangement the lawyer stating that he had come to pay over $r>,000, "which had been unexpectedly saved from the wreck." "Incidentally," he added, "I understand that you won't he here much i. wiiiu); i<> i i y mtj same game yourself?" "Possibly," replied the shoe dealer, "Why not?" "You can't do It without on organization," Insisted the lawyer. "You need us, and we need you. Then, while Edwards nervously played with some papers on his desk. Hasten outlined his plan?how the goods were to he shipped, how Einstein would handle them, and the $2,"lOO guarantee which would be paid the shoe dealer for tils part in the fraudulent bankruptcy proceedings. Terms were finally agreed up, imd the whole court proceedings went forward without a hitch. The day after he had been declared liniikrniO W,ltu??<lu " * loinun m i:oui|>lllll(*(l r.llSlon to tlie lunik, and there received the $i!.rwit> willcli hud bean promise*) hlin. As llie lawyer handed him over the money. he heard a voice behind him aay: "NaU him, hoys!" Turning, he enme fa*'*' to face with a rather small, pleasant-faced man of about fifty?the man who was the terror of commercial criminals. "West!" erled the lawyer, "What do you want.?" "You and Klnsteln," was the reply. "We've got the goods on you this time ? nil the evidence! The dictagraph in Kdwards' office, under the papers on his drsV attended to that for ua. This ought to land you In the pen for abonl six years." J. ARTHUR KNIGHT Attorney *at-Le? Office Id Courtbeoae Ckoeterfteld. I. C. R. L. McMANUS Dentist Cheraw, H. C. At Cheatereld, Monday A Pageland, Tuesday. ii Mt. Croghan, Wedneeday morningr