The Chesterfield advertiser. [volume] (Chesterfield C.H., S.C.) 1884-1978, June 22, 1922, Image 3
\
t ^
Cbpuriqhf bu Edwir\Balimer~?*
(Continued from last week)
. i k
CHAPTER XVII
Mr| Spearman Goes North.
Th$ message. In blurred lettering nn?1
upon the flimsy tissue paper of a carbon
copy?that message which had
brought tension to the offices of Coryet,
Bhurrill and Speartnnn and had
called Constance Sherrlll and her
eaother downtown where further Information
could he more quickly obtained?was
handed to Constance by a
clerk as soon as she entered her father's
office. She reread It; It alreudy
had been repeated to her over the telephone.
"4:05 a. iu. Frankfort Wireless station
has received following message
from Number 25: 'We have Benjamin
Corvet, of Chicago, aboard.* "
"You've received nothing later than
this?" she asked.
"Nothing re'gurding Mr. Corvet, Miss
Sherrlll," the clerk replied.
"The crew?"
"Yes; we have Just got the names of
the crew." He took another copied
Sheet from among the pages and handed
it to her, and she looked swiftly
down the list of names until she found
that of Alan Conrad.
Her eyes tilled, blinding her, as she
put the paper down, and began to take
off her things. She hud been clinging
determinedly In her thought to the
kivlU' * . .. -
ucuei nun aiuii nugnt not nave been
board the ferry. Alan's message,
which had aent her father north to
meet the ship, had Implied plainly
? that some one whom Alan believed
might be yncie Benny was on Number
26; she had been fighting, these last
few hours, against conviction that
therefore Alan must be on the ferry,
too.
8he stood by tiie desk, as the clerk
went out, looking through the papers
which tie had left with Iter. What she
was reading was tlie carbon of the
report prepared that morning and sent,
t his rooms, to Henry, who was not
yet down.
The last message read: "0:40, I'eteskey
is calling Manitowoc, 'Signals
from Number 25, after becoming indistinct,
failed entirely about 5:45,
~ probably by failure of ship's power
to supply "cuftent. Operator- appears
to have remained at key. From 5:25
to 6:43 we received disconnected mesaages,
as follows: 'Have cleared another
car . . . they are sticking to
It down there . . . engine-room
crew is also sticking ; . . hell on
car deck . . . everything smashed
. . . they won't give up . . .
"Mr. Spearman has come In?"
The clerk hesitated, but the continuance
of the tone from the other
side of the partition made reply superfluous.
"Yes. Miss Sherrlll."
Constance went to Henry's door and
rapped. He made no answer and no
move to open the door; so, nfter waiting
a moment, she turned the knob and
went In.
Henry wns sented at his desk, facing
her, his big hands before him; one
of them held the telephone receiver.
Me lined it slowly and put It upon the
hook beside the transmitter as he
watched her with steady, silent, ag
gresslve scrutiny. He did not rise;
only after a moment he recollected that
he had not done so and came to his
feet. "Good morning, Connie," he suid.
Come In. What's the news?"
The Impulse which had brought her
Into his office went from her.. She bad
not seen nor heard from Henry direct*
If since before Alan's telegram had
come late yesterday afternoon; si.'
had heard from her father only that
he had Informed Henr.v; that was all.
"I've 110 news, Henry," she said.
**Havo you?" She closed the door behind
her, moving closer to him.
"How did you happen to be here,
Connley* he asked.
She made do reply hut gazed at him,
Studying him. The agitation which ha
was trying to conceal wns not entirety
consequent to t^er coming In upon him;
It had boon ruling him before. Jt had
nudealala the loudnesa and abuse of
hlo words which she had overheard.
I That was no capricious outburst of
temper or Irritation; It had come from
something which bsd seised and held
him in suspense, In dread?In dread;
there was no ether way to define her
Impression to herself. When she had
opened the door wad come In, he had
t. . jjgjh M tbongh prepor
'.
HMHn^nHflHffl|lPHBM^w?
' She Made No Reply but Gazed at Him,
Studying Him. ,
stinctively tivuuiinu ills embrace;/ana
he stopped at once, but he had come
quite close to her now.
As she stnreil at him, .the clerk's
voice came to her suddenly over the
partition which separated the oiHec
from the larger room where the clerk
was receiving some message over tho
telephone. Henry straightened, listened
; as the voice stopped, his great,
llnely-shaped head sank between his
shoulders; he fumbled In his pocket
for a cigar, and bis big hands shook
as he lighted it, without word of excuse
to her. A strange feeling came to
her that lie felt what he dreaded approaching
and was no longer conscious
of her presence.
She heard footsteps in the larger
room coming toward the oHiee door, i
Henry was in suspense. A rap came
at the door. lie whitened, anil wet his
lips.
"Come in," he summoned.
One of the ofllce girls entered, bringing
a white page of paper with three
or four lines of purple typewriting up- ?
on It which Constance recognized must
he a transcript of a message just received.
She started forward at sight of it,
forgetting everything else; but he took
the paper as though he did not know
she was there. lie merely held It until
the girl hud gone out; even then
?)d folding and unfolding it, and
js did not drop to the sheet.
?Jr! had said nothing at all but,
seen hor, Constance was
; the girl had not been a bearer
1 news, that was sure; s^o
t some sort of good news! Con,
certain of it, moved nearer to
to read what lie held. He looked
and read.
Ht Is it, llenry?"
museiiliir roiietlon n? ?"?'i
drawn the sheet away from her;
^HL'.xoYIM . <1
S""*" the paper '? hur
:8<"> a. in., Manitowoc, Wis.," site '
^^Bd. "The schooner Anna S. Snlwerk
been sighted making for this port.
^^B is not close enough for communl^^Hon,
hut two lifeboats, additional to
own, can he plninl.\ made out. It
^^Bel'.eved that she must have picked
^ survivors of No. 2.1. She carries
^ wireless, so is unable to report.
^^Bs are going to her."
fl^VTwo lifeboats!" Constance cried.
^^Bmt could mean that they all are
^B<m1 or nearly all; doesn't it. 11. ndoesn't
it?"
P^lle had read some other significance '
In It, she thought, or, from his greater
understanding of conditions in the
storm, he had been able to hold no
hope from what had been reported.
That was the only way she could explain
to herself as he replied to hor;
that the word meant to him that men
were saved and that therefore It was ,
dismaying to him, could not come to 1
her at once. When It came now, it
went over h^f first oiUy in the flash
of Incredulous question.
The telephone buzzer under bis desk
sounded; she drew close as be took
up bis receiver.
"Manitowoc?" ho snld. "I want to
know what you've heard from the Solwerk.
. . . You hear nie? . . .
The men the Sol work picked up. You
have the names yet?"
H ?? *
"The Benlon?"
. *"
"Oh, I understand! Ail from the
Benton. I see! . . . No; never
mind their names. How about Number
25? Nothing more heard frouMhein?"
Constance had caught his shoulder
while he was speaking and now clung
to it. Release?release of strain was
going through him ! she could feel It,
and she henrd It in his tones and suw i
It In his eyes.
"The steamer Number 25 rammed
proved to have been the Benton," he
told her. "The men are all from her. '
They had abandoned her In the small
boats, and the Sol work "picked them
up before the ferry found her."
He wus not asking her to congratulate
hliu upon the relief he felt; he
had not so far forgotten himself na
that. But It was plain to her that he j
was congratulating himself; It had
i been fear that he was feeling before?
fear, she was beginning to understood,
' that those on the ferry had been saved.
| Horror and'amusement flowed in up
and went out. he followed her, railing
her nmne: But, seeing the seamen In
the larger oftlee, he stopped, and she
understood he was hot willing to urge
him.-elf upon her In their presence.
"I'm willing to go home now, mother,
If *yuu wish," she said steadily.
When they had gone down to the
street and were In the car, Constance
leaned back, closing tier eyes; she
frared her mother might wish to tulk
with her.
Toward three o'clock, the ofllce
call etcher, hut only to report that they
hml heard from Mr. Sherrlll. He had
wired that he was going on from ManJstique
and would cross the straits from
St. Ighace; messages from liim were to
he addressed to I'etoskey. There was
110 other report except that vessels
wer% tV.il continuing the search for
survivors, because the Indian Drum,
wUieh h?d *>mo heating was Ideating
"short," causing the superstitions to
be certain that, though noiue ?f the
men from Number 25 were lost, some
yet survived.
Constance thrilled as she heard,
that. She did not believe In-the Drum;
at least she hud never thought she
had really believed in it; she had only
stirred to the tdqa of its being true.
But if the Drum was beating, she was
glad it was beating short. It was
serving, at least, to keep the lake men
more alert.
A little later, as Constanco stood at
the window, gazing out at the snow
upon the lake, she drew back suddenly
out of sight from the street, as she
saw Henry's roat.ster appear out ofthe
storm and stop before the house.
She waited in the room where she
was. The strain he was under hall
not lessened, she could see; or rather,
If site could ".rust her feeling nt sight
of him, it had lessened only slightly,
and at the same time his power 'to
resist it had been lessening too.
"I thought you'd want to know, Connie,"
lie said, "so I came straight out.
The lttchardson's picked up one of
the bouts of the ferry."
"Uncle Benny and Alan Conrad
were no*; in it," she returned; the triumph
site had seen hi him had told
her that.
"No; it was the first boat put olT by
the ferry, with the passengers and
"Were They?Alive?" Her Voice
* Hushed Tensely.
cabin maid and some injured men of
the crow."
"Were they ? alive?" her voice
hushed tensely.
"Yes; that Is, they were able to revive
thcriTal!; hu*. it didn't seem possible
to the Richardson's officers that
anyone could be revived who had
been exposed much longer than that;
so the Richardson's given up the
search, and some of the other ships
that were searching have given up too,
and gone on their oourse."
"I see; how many were in the
boa*.?"
"Twelve, Connie."
"Then all the vessels up there won't
give up yet!"
"Why not?"
"I was just talking with the office,
fienry; they've heard again from the
other end of the lake. The people up
there say the Drum Is beating, but JTs
beating short still!"
"Short!"
She saw Henry stiffen. "Yes," she
said swiftly. "They say the Drum began
somullng last night, and that at
first It sounded for only two lives; U's
kept on heetlng, but still Is beating
only for four. Th?re were thirty-nine
on the ferry?seven passengers and
thirty-two crew. Twelve have been'
saved now; so until the Drum raises
the heats to twenty-seve# there Is still
a chance that someone will be snved."
Constance watched hlin with wonder
at the effect of what she had told.
The news of the Drum had shaken
him from his triumph over Alan and
Uncle lienny and over her. It had
shaken him so that, though he re- I
malned with her some minutes more,
he seemed to have forgotten the purpose
of reconciliation with her which
bad brought hlin to the hourte. . j
She dined, or made pretence of dining,
with her mother at seven. Her j
mother's voice went on and on about
trifles, and Constance did not try to
pay attention. Her thought was following
Henry with ever-sharpening apprehonslon.
She called the office In
mld-evenlng; It would he open, she
knew, for messages regarding Uncle
Rennv and Alan would h<. nvnoi-tml
there. A clerk answered; no other
news had been received; 5^ie then
aftked Henry's whereabouts.
"Mr. Spearman went north late this
afternoon. Miss Sherrlll," the clerk
Informed her.
"North 1 Where?"
"We are to communicate with him
this evening to Grand Rapids; after
that, to I'etoskey."
Constance could hear her own heart
bent. Why had Henry gone, she wondered;
not, certainly, to aid the
search. He had gone to-^hlnder It? .
Continu*d next week.)
FOR SALE?Horse in good condition;
price right; cheap, plenty of
mmm
1 II
REASONS FOR PLANTING
SOYBEANS
Soybeans will grow on poor soils
where cowpeas fail, and on soils too
wet for cowpeas, and c i the average
in cultivated rows will yield 25 per
cent, to 50 per cent, more hay or seed
than cowpeas.
It is usually possible to get more
profit from an acre of soybeans
than from an acre of cowpeas and
have more material to turn in for
soil improvement. ,
Soybeans can be used by^ Southern
cotton oil mills to supplement
cotton seed and thereby lengthen the
operating season of the mills. A ton
of soybeans will make from 32 to
35 gallons of oil and 1050 pounds of
meal. There is a loss in the milling
operations of only about 120 pounds
per ton.
Soybean meal contains 30 per cent,
more nitrogen than cottonseed meal
and has a higher feuding value.
Soybean oil has a wide range of :
usefulness in the manufacture of
soaps, paints, varnishes, linoleums, oil
cloth, etc.
The soybean can be u^sed a way to
return good revenue and at the same I
time to be a soil-building crop, soil 1
improvement being the greatest underlying
problem in the South. 1
The above are some of the rea- '
sons why farmers should plant soy- 1
beans given :n Extension Cireula.* 30, 1
"Soy Bears,'' just pub.ished by the 1
| If yf nnci^m - ? ? - - L- 1 1 ?
.???vi*^ivii uvi t \jujjiv > may ue iuui
upon application. . 1
i
THE SUMMERLAND CREAMERY 1
Batesburg, June 15.?The Sum- i
merland Creamery, which has been in
operation less than two months, is 1
proving to be just what the farmers i
of this section needed, according to i
D. C. Badger, District Dairy Husband- <
man, who reports that the creamery s
is helping to put the farmers on a t
cash basis?the greatest need perhaps i
of South Carolina farmers today. i
The creamery, in the establishment <
of which the Extension Service aided, j
's run in connection with the Bates
burg Beverage Ice Co , so that the |
power, refrigeration and space were
provided without the usual expense of
' money and time'for these things. Be'
ginning with an initial churning of only
122 pounds of butter, it is now receiving
1200 to 1500 pounds of cream
per week from which are made 600 to
700 pounds of butter. A first class
product is being made, says Mr. Badger,
and there is no trouble in selling '
it to advantage in Columbia, Augusta,
Aiken and Batesburg. In fact, the supI
ply canont meet the demand.
Since the creamery has been in operation,
the Manager, Mr. M. P. Hazel,
has also put in a milk-feeding station
for poultry, which provides a
market for all kinds of poultry. The
I roilers receiver! are placed in batteries
and fed on a buttermilk mash
for fourteen days and then shipped to
the Northern markets at a fancy
price.
During May the creamery and the
poultry market paid to the farmers a
little over $1400. Of this amount, the
creamery alone paid $760. The farmers
in the vicinity of Batesburg are
naturally very well pleased, and if it
continues to manufacture the quality
of butter now being turned out, it will
have a splendid growth.
SOUTH CAROLINA TOBACCO
GROWERS ORGANIZING
Thirty-eight mass meetings of to-1
bacco growers in South Carolina j
begin Monday and will be carried to
every marketing point of the association
according to present plans!
of the Tobacco Growers Co-operative
Association
Leaders from Kentucky, Virginia
and North Carolina are scheduled to
join officials of the association in
South Carolina next week on a speaking
tour which will reach thousands
of tobacco growers in this state.
Vice Presidents of the association
from Virginia, North Carolina and
South Carolina officials of the Extension
Division from several states, veteran
leaders of the 72,000 tobacco
growers will address the farmers of
South Carolina whose last chance to
sign-up their 1922 crop with the marketing
association will soon be over.
Why tobacco sold in Kentucky
through the Co-operative Association
'brought $29.00 per hundred while
hurley tobacco on the auction floors
averaged less than $21.00 will be told
by members of the Farmers Burley
Pool.
Tobacco growers are coming all the
way from Kentucky to tell why 90
per cent, of the burley farmers have
signed the Co-operative Marketing
Contract and to explain why thred*
thousand new members rushed into
their association after the second payment
on their tobacco was made last
month.
C. E. Marvin, famous stock raiser
and tobacco grower of Lexington,
Kentucky, who stirred thousands of
farmers to action in Eastern North
r.nrfilinu nn * * -
..... inn mtciii lout, is expected
to be with the South Carolina
growers next week.
Mr. Marvin told the tar heel growers
why Kentucky farmers who could
never got loans from their local banks
before, can now raise hundreds of
thousands of dollars even after receiving
their first and second payments on
tobacco, through the association.
The sign-up of South Carolina
growers continues to increase following
the meeting of warehouse managers
for the association held in Florence
last week.
Prominent tobacco planters from
South Carolina who have joined the
as8o<^ation within the last few days
I are George Holliday of Aynor, Hor
ry County, J. C. Davis of Centenary
I one of the most prominent nlantera of
I lower Marion counta jIM^Bfarren 1.
_- - .
A. x * ' " 1
GEORGIA FARMERS BLUE
OVER POOR START
Farmers in all sections of Georgia
are bluer than they have been
in many months and are expecting
practically to be failures, according
to information reaching the state department
of agriculture.
Until two or three weeks ago the
heavy rains had centered in Middle
and North Georgia, while South Georgia
farmers were getting a chance to
go ahead with their work, but since
that time it has been raining almost
constantly lit South Georgia, so the
gloom lies now general, it was said.
Water is reported to be still standing
in most of the lowlands and when
it subsides it will be too late to prepare
properly the soil for corn. Some
farmers are planning to plow up their
;otton and plant corn, but farming experts
fear they will be too late for
this, since the high grass must be
mowed and raked, and then the
ground plowed and harrowed before
the cron crop can be put in.
Many farmers have made desperate
L'fforts to save their cotton by wading
into the water and mud in their bare
feet and chopping out the grass. However,
they are not expected to accomplish
much by this method, since the
mil is so wet that the grass will continue
to grow, simply taking hold again
in a new location between the cotton
rows. In many cotton fields the grass
is said to be more than knee deep.
Asked about the situation J. J.
Brown, Commissioner of Agriculture,
ulmitted that the farmers are sending
in very pessimistic reports and that
there are indications of one of the
shortest cotton crops on record. There
ire still chances to get corn, the comnission'er
said, but present conditions
ire very unfavorable for planting
:orn and the time is growing short.?
Atlanta Constitution.
FARM HAND WANTED?Day labor.
I will pay well and my pay is sure.
If applicant does not wish to be deceived
he should pay not attention
to knockers, who seem bent on injuring
me. All I ask is a fair day's
work for a fair days' pay.
ltp J. E. Wallace, Chest. I.
SICK BASES
Respond I nst :mt ly to ;i
Short Treatment of Dr.
Thornton's Rosy Teether.
ilrif
-e-a\v /
-\.l^ * '
Mother, you can save yourself many
sleepless nights by removing the cause
of baby's pain. Sour stomach, colic,
colds, indigestion, bowel troubles and
feverishnesa soon give way to a few
doses of Dr. Thornton's Easy Teethcr.
This sweet powder is composed of
antiseptics, digestnnts anil granular
stimulants that work quickly and
harmlessly on the stomach, bowels
and kidneys. Contains no opiates or
harmful drugs. Rabies like it and take
it more freely than sticky svrups or
liquids.
For fifteen years this old relinhlc
prescription of n successful baby specialist
has brought hundreds and hundreds
of unsolicited testimonials from
practicing physicians, druggists and
appreciative mothers. Its efficiency
has been proven beyond shadow of
doubt. If it fails to help your child
your druggist will refund money without
question. Twelve powders in a
package with full directions for 25c.
Ask your druggist for Dr Thornton's
Easy Teether Advertisement.
WEAK, NERVOUS,
ALL RUN-DOWN
Missouri Lady Suffered Until Skc
Tried Cardui.?Says " Result
Was SurDrisinffi"?Got Alontr
Fine, Became Normal
and Healthy.
Springfield Mo^"My back sc
weak I could hardly stand up, and I
would have bearing-down pains and
Waa not well at any time," says Mrs
A. V. Williams, wife of a well-known
farmer on Route d, this placo. "I
kept getting headaches and having to
go to bed," continues Mrs. Williams
describing the troubles from which
she obtainod relief through the use ol
Cardul. "My husband, having heard
Of Cardnf. nrononoH arotMntr < tnv mn
**I saw after taking eomo Cardul
... tliat I was Improving. The result
was surprising. I felt like a different
person.
"Later I suffered from weakness
apd weak back, and felt all run-down.
I did not rest well at night, I was so
nervous and cross. My husband said
he would get me somo Cardul, which
he did. It strengthened me , , . My
doctor said I got along fine. I was In
good healthy condition. I cannot
say too much for it."
Thousands of women have suffered
as Mrs. Williams describes, until they
found relief from the use of Cardul.
Since It has helped so many, you
should not hesitate to try Cardul If
troubled with womanly ailments.
For sale everywhere. K.8I
j| A m y Cur** Malaria, Chills,
' , Fever, Bilious
.. ,-r^jr-r ' y ,T??
- "' -...
I THE HON
How to Make and Use It
I. RADIO AN OUTGR<
We usually think of the great wai
Incalculable amount of harm to the wm
ful if the war did as much harm as g<
resulted in immense benefits to munkl
provements and advancement of med
mechanics, engineering, metallurgy an
the toll of life, the destruction of propi
of art and (he bankruptcy of nations
replaced and forgotten, the scientific j
direct result of the war, will endure
mankind.
Of all the arts and sciences whk
by the war, none Is of greater interes
the average person than radio telephon
was well established, universally used
science: hut wireless telephony was set
iini?a?d??5r* ? - ?
?..w. Kim uiiiiK complicated, little tu
Ilut today, s?> incredibly rapid have
ment <?f this science, that wireless tele]
easily understood thine?far simpler t
not only commercially, hut by count lei
however, the war merely launched prac
far greater progress has been made in r
ening it within the past four months
within the previous six years. Indeed
that it seems to have come upon us alt
weeks It has leaped from an obscure, s
sally used means of entertainment and
Today thousands of mere boys ar
the instruments made by the hoys tl
electrical supply stores and elsewhere
for a few dollars. From various statior
weather reports, speeches, songs, oper
and baseball returns; shipping news ai
are sent broadcast through the air. fre
telephone receiving sot. Thus, the fan
sailor at sea. passengers on ships, gu
boards and people in their own homes <
the music of hands and orchestras, the
dialogues of plays and countless other
clearly and plainly as though no space
Truly, radio telephony is the greal
tastic and fairy-like than the Arabian N
the fabulous lamp of Aladdin or the flyl
the reach of everyone, while the "inus
to listen in.
It is certainly a strange, almost i
about us. even within our dwellings. If
music, messages and songs which are i
which may he caught and delivered to
batteries and a few appliances so simp
Ami the limit is far from being r
months, the range of wireless telepho
even thousands of miles, antennae or a
and the instruments for sending and re
and reduced that one ntay carry them
epliony has already become highly perft
tical, yet It is still hardly out of its Inf
its future may he.
NOTICE
The Chesterfield County Methodist
Sunday School Conference meets with
Ebenezcr Church, East Chesterfield
Charge, July 27 and 28. Each Sunday
School is entitled to two delegates
with superintendent. i
Let each school elect delegates
COUNTY TA)
State
Ordinary County
Roads
Bridges
Total
Chcraw
Marburg
Orange Hill
Pats Branch
Pee Dee
Stafford
Bethel
Center Point
Chesterfield
Parker
Pine Grove
Ruby
hiloh
Snow llill
Stafford
Vaughan
Wamble Hill
Black Creek
Center
Center Grove
j Cross Roads
Mt. Croghan
Ruby
Wexford
Winzo
Zion
Buffalo
Dudley
Five Forks
Mangum
Pageland
Plains
Zion
Angelus
Center Grove
Ciarks
Jefferson
Macedonia
Plains
Bay Springs
Green Hill .
Leland
Middendorf
McBee
Providence
Sandy Run
Union
Bay Springs
Bear Creek
Bethesda
Juniper
Middendorf
Patrick
Pats Branch Branch
Shiloh
Stafford
White Oak
Cat Pond
Juniper
Ousley
Patrick
Linton
y ' ' !
mmassemmmeaassmmmmmmmtr
*
MMi
_ _
IE RADIO
C^p By A. HYATT^VERIUIX If
OWTH OF THE WAR
r as a disaster and as having done an
rid and Ita people, but It la Very doubtnod.
NVlthln the few years It lasted it
ind lu the tremendous discoveries, ImIclne,
surgery, chemistry, aeronautics,
id wireless communication, and while
erty, the devastation of lands, the loss
i are all temporary and will soon be
trogress and discoveries, which were a
forever and will continue to benefit
h received an unprecedented impetus
it or has a more far-reaching effect to
y. llefore the war wireless telogruphy
and a fairly exact and well-understood
trcely more than a dream?a visionary,
iderstood and literally In Its Infancy.
> been the strides made In the developfihmty
Is an every-dny affair; a simple,
hnn telegraphy?and In constant use,
ss thousands of amateurs. In a way,
tlcnl radio telephony on Its career and
ommercializlng. simplifying and eheap?Octoher
to February, 1921-22->-than
1. so rapid has been Its advancement,
uost overnight, and within a few short
clentlflc curiosity to an almost unlverproflt.
e using wireless telephones?manv of
lemselvos?nn<l In department stores,
sets for receiving may be purchased
)s. music, crop reports, market reports,
as, plays, stories, official time, racing
ad countless other interesting matters
e to anyone who possesses a wireless
nor. miles from the nearest town, the
ests In hotels, crowds about bulletin
an listen to the voices of famous men,
singing of famous operatic stars, the
things, from far-distant points and as
Intervened.
t modern miracle; n dream more fanIglits;
a more marvelous actuullty than
ing carpet, and, best of all. It Is within
Ic In the air" Is free to all who care
ncredlble, thing to think that the air
i constantly filled with sounds, voices,
tis Inaudible as they are Invisible, but
our ears by mean:? of a few wires and .
le that even a child may use.them,;
eacbed. Within a few years or even
ny will be Increased by hundreds or
erlals will be entirely done away with
reiving will be so Improved, simplified
in one's pocket, for while radio tel'Cted,
widely used and absolutely prac'ancy
and no man may prophesy what
at once and send names with that of
superintendent's to R. A. Melton,
Chesterfield, Route 2, so that the program
may be made out at once.
We want every Sunday School in
the county represented the first day
of the conference.
F. W. Rivers, President."
< LEVY 1921
12 mills
6 mills
6 mills
. 1 mill
28 mills
w F Tr< Ui F h*
C" o o o o
5- ? =r f o SST
EL ? o ? fe
? o o ?
f M ~ H 73 v
3 2- td ? o ?
a. & c ? s 1
o B. 3 a. *4
O ? ? a.
c 5- u ! to
S- ' ? I B i
VJ | j " g<
I 28 I 12 I 4 1% 45%
28 ! 8| m 87*4
28 5| H434%
28 8 1% 37%
28 3] 4 1% 36 %
.28 8 J 9 i % s<)
...28 8' 5 ~ 41
... 28 8 30
28 16 4*4 48%
... 28 83 39
... 28 8 35
28 16j 6 4*4 53%
...28 8j 2 38
...28 6 42
... 28 8| 2 38
28 I 8 2 88
28 8 86
28 10 6, 21
" 28 ^
' 28 8 6 6 47
"'28 .? 6 46
"" 28 18 6 4 6 68
' 16 6 4 u, K
- I28 8 61 "
' I28 8 ? 6 IS
" I 28 8 7(4 6 4?tf .
I 28 g 6 48*
I28 S '
28 8 I J 22
? 168 I 88
.... 28 1 8 714 ??
28 8I T*43%
It 2! ? ?
. '.'.12 SI 6 47
I 88 "I ? 6 22
i'lj 1 8i, 3i, , 6 22
a .5 1 1?
. . . .] 28 8, 10 6 62
... 28 8| 6 6 47
" I,28 l18*| | 4 ft | 6 67
... 28 2 6 86
28 8 6 42
28 8 6 6 48
28 8 6
... 28 8 86
... 28 11 89
1*8 3 81
...28 8 6 41
28 16 4 47
... 28 8 t4
... 28 8 2 M
... 28 8 2 t8
... 28 86 4f
... 28 8 8
... 28 8 8)
... 28 12 6 44
28 16 4 4t