The Chesterfield advertiser. [volume] (Chesterfield C.H., S.C.) 1884-1978, August 03, 1922, Image 4

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^ l' j Get Fu I For Yoi Clothes I When it comes to for clothes it is n i i what you get that < A cheap suit is mighty e in a hurry?or even if b> tracts from your prospen is most economical beci faction and more wear f( thing about a Suit or O that it not only gives you wear and satisfaction bu ate price. !We are showing exce] $12.50 to $25.00 the si patterns. We will conside in and let us show you 11 Furnishings. TEAL-JC "The Home o Scotch Theology Soon after the new minister can to the little church in Drumtoelity 1 surprised and shocked his flock I preaching that there was no hell. One day he met the sexton ai said: "Sandy' mon, hae ye notici that the congregation is getting smal er and what is your opinion o it?" "Weel, my opinion is that a Kii without a hell isn't worth a damn RAZ Guaranteed ij Our Saturday S\ July 27, is the gre i with its wonderful it rr rv ^ "? and I Ra> FARMERS _ _ _ The Win^ An accredited Baptist seconds 32 miles east of Charlotte on tl lotte-Wilmington Highws High grade literary work. A Piano and Teacher Trail Training will receive Sta diploma. 510 Sunday School and B. Y. Plant consists of four model* Principal. Electric lights, mis A thlptifs oneniifoirQc New $50,000 Baptist Church Sunday School rooms?a 8 teachers with college trainir Expenses for nine months inch room rent, lights and fuel Next opening August 22. For further information, addre C. M. BEACH W1NGA State of South Carolina, County of Chesterfield, Court of Common Pleas, State Bank of McBee, a corporation, PlaintilF, vs. J. H. Johnson, Jr., The First Nntioanl Bank of Hartsville, and Pee Dee Horse and Mule Company, a corporatlpn. Defendants. To the defendants above named, J. H. Johnson, et al: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the complaint in this action, a copy of which is herewith Mired upon you, and to serve a copy of jour answer to said complaint on the subscriber hereto at his office in II Value II a ir i f> ^ Money i; the m jney you spend f ot what you pay, but * counts. ! it xpensive if it goes to pieces I < r losing its good looks it de- ( 1 jrs appearance. A good suit j uise it gives greater satis- j ' n* each dollar. And the best j 1 vjrcoat, made by Marks is j the full value of Extra Long | t does it at a mighty moder- ) i a ? ' ptionally line values from | lit in the new models and t r it a favor to have you come } le Clothing, Shoes, Hats and i )NES GO. 1 f Good Clothes" i I NOTHING LIKE IT le Recipe: Take one reckless, naturalle born fool. Two or three big drinks >y of white mule. A fast high-powered motor car. Soak the fool well in the id liquor, place in the car and let him go. ed After due time, remove fool from the II- wreckage, place same in black, satinlined box, and garnish with flowers." rk Serve cold.?The Southern Telephone ." News." _ ] ;ors ij For a Lifetime ! i jecial for Saturday, ! iat Shoematke Razor \ i guarantee. I &4.00 | tr ck a a ' sors at ftZ.UU | HDW. GO. I I I | |ate School _____ ? ( try school for boys and girls. he S. A. L. Railroad and the Char- ! ty. lso courses in Bible, Art, Voice, * ling. Graduates taking Teacher 1 do Certificates for teaching with * i P. U. awards given last session, n brick buildings and home for 1 water and sewerage, lfi-acre cam- t 1. I l?auditorium seating 1000; 30 i djoining school property. ig and successful experience, uling literary tuition, fees, board, t I, $175. t iss, ,, T> - ( Principal? TE. N. C. c: a Hartsville, S. C., within twenty days h after the service hereof, exclusive of a the day of such service, and if you fail R to answer said complaint within the w ' time aforesaid the plaintiff in this ac- ir tion will apply to the court for the relief demanded in the said complaint, y Hartsville, S. C., 27th June, 1922. , I), Carl Cook, Plaintiff's Attorney. ^ To the defendant, J. H. Johnson, Jr.: You will take notice that the com- jf plaint in the foregoing action has been rP filed in the office of the Clerk of Court ^ for Chesterfield County, S. C., this the 11th day of July, 1922. I 3t-31 I). Carl Cook, S" Plaintiff's Attorney. '1 ed WHEAT ON SUBSCRIPTION?The to Advertiser would like to receive ar several bushels of wheat on sub- tlv LOCAL ITEMS Mr. Preston Hurst visited in Mor> nlast Sunday. Mr. A. W. Hurley was in Columbia few days this week. Mr. Lloyd Rivers was in Char>tte last Tuesday. Miss Mary Bell Welsh is visiting riends in l^aekobuig. M iss Dora Westbury is visiting rela- I ives in the mountains. Mr. C. L. Melton spent Monday in yadesboro on business. Mr. Eugene Abbott is spending a ew days with home folks. M iss Doris Laney is visiting Mrs. I V. G. White at Xork this week. Messrs. Lindsay Odom and Henry " usser visited in Pageland Tuesday Mrs. F. E. Bittle was taken to the Charlotte Hospital last Monday for reatment. Messrs. Julius and Hubert Stanley jf Marion, were in Chesterfield Satlrday evening. Dr. L. II. Trotti and family returned Sunday after several days visit at IV i 1 liclnn S O. Mrs. G. K. Laney and Mrs. Tommie Breeden visited in Camden and Lanlaster this week. Mr. Walter Tarleton, former assistant agent here, has accepted a position in Hamlet. Misses Vera and Nell Melton have returned after a visit to friends and relatives in Jeffrson. Miss Leala Gaskins is back with Craig & Co., after attending the summer school at Winthrop. Mr. J. H. Johnson and family visited at the home of Mr. Lonnie Campbell in Latta last Sunday. The Womans' Missionary Society will meet at Mrs. J. T. Hurst's Thursday, August 10th, at 5 P. M. Miss Elease Buhanan entertained a few of her friends on Wednesday evening in honor of her house guests. The Chesterfield Home Demonstration Council will meet at the court house Friday afternoon at 4 o'clock. Miss Madge Gaskins has returned after spending six weeks with her sister, Mrs. Steve Keziah, of Monroe, N. C. Messrs. Grayland Douglass and Hall Odom returned last week from training camps at Anniston, Ala., and Norfolk, Va. Dr. D. T. Teal made the convicts on the chain gang happy the other day by presenting them with 100 watermelons. Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Redfearn have renovated their home on west Main street and it presents an attractive appearance. Messrs.. Rich and S. B. Poston, of Johnsonville, spent a few days recently at the home of their mother Mrs. T. B. Owen. Messrs. F. S. Blair, W. P. Odom and "Take" Greenberg visited Monroe and Charlotte last Thursday, chaperoned by Mr. J. W. Griggs. St. Paul Sunday School has rented the home of Mrs. H. D. Tiller, next to the Methodist church, for use as extra Sunday School rooms. Miss Marguerite McDonald, who was a guest at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Welsh returned to her home in Charlotte Saturday evening. Misses Emmy Smith, of Liberty, Pauline Buddingfield and Edna Earl, of North Carolina visited at the home ..f T~*.. ivt..~ \tr t r? *i-;_ ?/1 ui. aim mho. t? . ?j. rerry mis week. A "Friday night social club" was organized last Friday evening by the younger set at the home of Dr. D. T. Teal, with a membership of about twenty. Mrs. Steve Keziah and children of Monroe, Mrs. L. E. Ogburn and children of Darlington, are spending some time with the formers' parents Mr. uid Mrs. Tom Gaskins. Messrs. F. S. Blair, J. W. Streater, Jr., and "Jake" and "Joe" Greenberg visited Dillon and Latta last Sunday. The latter continued the jourley on to Savannah, Ga.f his home. Quite a crowd went from Chesterield county to Lancaster Tuesday o hear the state candidates. They >resented Senator Laney with a landsome floral tribute and "whooped t up" generally. The following boys left Chesterfield klc t a a i. ? ilia iui muiiMuii, /\iu., wnere hoy will enter the Citizens Military fraining Camp: Jackson Adams, Jule 'underburk, Walter Davis, Burch 'ole, William Jackson, Edward Buff nd Robert Lee Mangum. Miss Lillian McEllveen, of Lake lity, who has been the guest of her unt, Mrs. J. A. Welsh, returned ome Monday by automobile. She was ccompanied by Mrs. Welsh and Mrs. .. L. Hurst and J. A. Welsh, Jr., who ill visit other points before returnMr. J. L. Woodard, of the Woodard [ill section, will celebrate his 78th irthday anniversary the 15th of Auust. While Mr. Woodard's heath is eble,he is able to be "up and about." e would like for all his friends and datives to join in a picnic spread on is occasion. The Indies' Aid Society and the jnday Scho^ of the Chesterfield . esbyterian Church, having presentI me with a liberal purse with which finance a vacation, I will not fill . ly more of my appointments until . e fourth Sunday in August. 1 Mr. MartU8 Rivers is now with the real-Jones Co. Mr. Joe Lindsay of Cheraw wsb in .he city Wednesday. Mr. W. T. Lucas was in Charlotte Saturday on business. Mr. John T. Hurst was a visitor to Wadesboro Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Odom spent Monday in Monroe, N. C. Mr. J. F. Alexander of Middendorf was in Chesterfield Wednesday. Mr. J. Aaron Sellers and family are going to return to Chesterfield. Mr. Gordan Kimball spent the week-end with his brother Mr. Ney Kimball. Mr. I. P. Mangum attended the state campaign meeting at Lancaster Tuesday. Owing to a change in the 2300 volt j lines the electric current will be shut >ff until 6 . M. Friday. Chesterfield polls the second heaviest vote in the 5th Congressional District, only York county being ahead of us. Mr. W. P. Odom is having material placed on his lot on east Main street preparatory to erecting a handsome dwelling. * Mr. David Vaughan is acting as Night Policeman this week while Mr. t/\Ln ic diitiT nn nnnnnnf of J Willi 11UIII 10 U1I vtvtvjr vii mvvvuiiv sickness in his family. Mrs. B. S. Funderburg, who has been in the Baptist Hospital at Columbia for about two weeks has returned home. Her improvement is marked ar.J her speedy re*. >very is now hoped tor. The County Commissioners held their regular monthly meeting Wednesday. All members were present. Mr.-J. L. Craig, has succeeded Mr. G. W. Duvall as Commissioner from Cheraw Township. Mr. H. M. Odom has moved to Easley, S. C., where he will engage in the mercantile business. The Advertiser joins in the general regret at losing Mr. and Mrs. Odom from Chesterfield. They have endeared themselves to a host of friends, whose best wishes for happipess and prosperity follow them to their new home. One can travel a fine gravel or top soil road all the way from Cheraw, via Chesterfield, Ruby Mt. Croghan and Pageland to Jefferson, forty two miles in length. In addition, twelve miles of the Columbia highway from Cheraw is nearing completion. The balance of the loop around the county will be built this fall and winter. The people are getting something wortli while for their road taxes. Last Saturday special officer Vaghan captured the stock of blue mule belonging to Edgar Hinson, colored. Hinson had three bottles of the bluish-white liquid that passes for booze. Mr. Vaughan also captured a portion of Hinson's shirt but the koon ran away. The seizure was made as Hinson was in the act of pouring the joy water from one of his quart bottler to coca cola bottle, preparatory to serving a thirsty customer. Hinson, at the time the officer came upon him, was in the cemetery just back of the cotton warehouse. LANEY?TWYFORD Miss Mildred Laney, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. D. H. Laney was married Friday evening to Mr. William H. Twyford of Charleston. Mr. and Mrs. Twyford left immediately after the ceremony for the mountains of Virginia and will be home to their friends this winter ill Charleston. CHESTERFIELD STRONG FOR CHECKERS The fascinating game of checkers is absorbing the interest of many Chesterfieldians. There have been numerous strenuous contests of late up and down Main street. Mr. R. L. Hurst so far holds the championship for the town. He is said to tremble only at the name of Gratton McFarlan, of Che raw. In the terriffio struggle for championship a number of contestants are thought to have suffered minor injuries, Mr. Hurst, however, being the only one to require medical attention. He still carries one finger bandaged. BIRTHS Born: To Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Hunt, Friday evening, a girl. To Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hunt, July .10th, a boy. To Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Campbell, July 30th, a hoy. To M.\ ar.d Mrs. Wush Privett July 30th, a boy. To Mr. and Mrs. I. J. Davis, July 28th, a boy. To Mr. and Mrs. Everett Therrel, July 2Gth, a boy. SMILE A WHILE ? A boy follows in his father's foot steps by taking after his mother?" The first lesson in charity is to give away things you don't need. Few men can resist the tempatation to swallow undeserved praise. ' "We want an alert office boy." "Yes, sir," said the applicant for a job. "Are you alert?" "No sir. I'm Aleck."?Birmingham Age-Herald. SHINGLES?Beat ?rade r?d cednr. GROWERS CAIN $6.80 A BALE RJ Clemson College, July 31.?South Carolina cotton growers will read with interest the story below of the cu outcome of the co-operative market- co ing sale of Oklahoma cotton for the va 1921 crop. fo "Oklahoma'City?With the <listri-(W bution last week of checks totalling so more than 1 1-4 million dollars in Hi final settlement with its members by dc the Oklahoma Cotton Growers' Asso- ar ciation, there was brought to a sue- st cessful close the first session of op- 14 eration of the first state-wide coopera- it tive organization ever formed by w I growers for the orderly marketing of th cotton. The final payment brings the total turned over to members to 8 ol 1-8 million dollars. That amount rep- m resents the proceeds from the sale of fi 91,300 bales of cotton of the 1921 d crop handled by the organization. tl "The average 'basis middling' price d received is 18 cents a pound. That av- a erage is said to be remarkable. It was f f. o. b. Oklahoma points and was ob- s tained where cotton was selling at ports at prices ranging from 12 to q 20 cents a pound. Reports on associa- t tion sales in comparison with sales t made on the street by nonmembers n have shown a gain for the association n members of approximately $6.50 a bale. That also is remarkable, it is stated, because of the determined c fight by street buyers early in the sea- 1, son on the rising market. In that pe- i nuu uuytrs paia as mucn as $1U.UU and $15.00 a bale more than the cot- i ton price. That resulted in a nar- t rower margin between the associa- < tion's average price and the price 1 paid on the street. i Expense Well Below Limit s "The sales and general operating i expense has been but 2 1-2 per cent t of the gross proceeds from the sale of cotton handled, this covering 1 fourteen months. That also includes ! the purchase of much equipment 1 " which will not have to be duplicated I ' another year, and heavy expense in- 1 cident to building front the ground up machinery to transact an 8-million- ' dollar business. The amount allowed under the contract with the members for such expense is 4 per cent." OF INTEREST TO HUNTERS i The open season for doves comi mences September 1. ! The open season for all game birds and animals in the state is as follows: ! Deer, bucks only,September 1 ;bear, mink, raccoons, skunks and squirrels 1 bits, raccoons, skunks, and squirrels, 1 i October 1; fox, September 1; black- ! birds, October l^wild turkey, Thanksgiving day; doves, September 1; wood > or summer ducks, no open season; 1 . migratory ducks, coots, snipes and 1 i gallinules, November 1; rails and ' marsh hens, September 1; plover and 1 t yellow legs, September 1; woodcock, November 1; reed birds may be shot i from Auirust 15 to November 15 to protect rice crops, meadow larks may I be killed to protect crops from No- ' , vember 30; patridges (bob white), Thanksgiving' day. PREPARE FOR FALL FAIRS NOW ' Now is the time to prepare something for fall fairs. It is a rather dif? ' ticult thing to go into the fields in the , fall and find something that is worthy of being exhibitcod in the fair. But 1 if attention is directed towards the , crops and stock now, with that 1 thought in mind, a more worthy show- ' ( ing can be made. It will have a favorable effect upon your crops if you will begin now to care for them; as if they were already entered in for competition at the fair. And if a fair is worth having at all, it is justified only as it is an inducement to improve agricultural practices. If you did not learn anything from the fair last fall, even though you took first prize, the fair has not justified itself. The necessity of giving attention now to the fair, however, is especially important for the live stock exhibits. The herds and especially the calves, i^ould be chosen now as far as pos- o sible and given attention with the ex- i hibit idea in mind. You can not fit an r animal for a fair in two or three a weeks time. It is a long process and I; you should begin early. Charles Myers of the Untied States n Savngs and Loan Company of Tulsa ii tells this one. A negro cam^e into his office and asked to use the telephone, s "Hello, is this you, Mrs. Smith? I f see youah ad in the Sunday papah a I two weeks nfi) Is vnn oil ontiofi/..! _ ?-?- ?- 0?ViDIIVU W HI ? <li man you hired? I see! Ia you contemplatin' a change soon? You is not? v All right, thank you ma'am." tl Desiring to be friendly, Myers said: c "Too had someone had the job." d "That's all right," replied the re- n gro. "You see I'se de nigger dat got P de job two weeks ago, and I was jus, " checkin' up." II a How Beautiul f< The patter of tiny feet was heard ?] from the head of the stairs. Mrs. Kinderby raised her hand warning the w others to silence. ei "Hush," she said, softly. "The chil- rc dren are going to deliver their good- d< night message. It always gives me a feeling of reverenc to hear them, they to are so much nearer the Crea'nr than a< we are, and they speak the love that is ti in their little hearty never so fully as cl whe nthe dark has come. Listen!" w There was a moment of intense silence. Then? be "KTamma," came te message in a vi t' ' ' ' ^ ULWAY EXECUTIVES REJECT PEACE PLAN ?" le New York, Aug. 1.?-Railway exe- w tives of the nation today firmly but Cl urteously rejected the program ad- cc need by the Harding adminstration 0, r the settlement of the rail strike. jn illing to accept conditonally two ^ ggestions put forward by the White 0j ouse?that both sides abide by wage w rcisions of the railroad labor board ai id that law suits springing out of the f.( rike be withdrawn?the heads of Q. 8 roads declared emphatically that ^ was impossible to reinstate strikers w ith unimpaired seniority rights, the n lird provision in the president's plan. After beng told by Robert S. Lovett p f the Union Pacific that there was no jj oral or practical reason for budging n rotn their position, the executives v isbanded, caught the first trains for jj leir respective headquarters and in- ^ icated that they were going ahead ^ nd would operate their roads with a orces they had assembled since the hopmen walked out on July 1. The decision not to yield on the juestion of seniority was made known o the White House by telegraph after ( he rail heads had listened to a 20 , linuto address by Secretary of Coin- ( nercc Hoover. I Union Leaders May Accept ( Chicago, Aug. 1.?Full acceptance ( >f President Harding's peace plan by , Jie striking shopmen was declared by . inion leaders to have been practically , insured as a result of today's meet- , n of the shop crafts policy commit- ( ee. Final action was expected at anither meeting to be held tomorrow. Following the meeting none of the inion leaders would comment on the uiuation ieit, as it was, in mid-air I with a very definite trend, however, f, ;oward acceptance. ) The rejection of the seniority proposal by the railroad executives in Mew York and their qualified acceptance of the president's other two mints were received without comment >y the strikers. VIILK COWS?Will sell, swap, trade or buy. J. M. Iledfearn. Itp, WEEVIL INFESTATION IS IRREGULAR Weather Condition* Favorable to Weevil Development. Continuation of Control Measures Advised Clemson College, July 31.?"The most striking: feature in the boll wo?, eil situation is the irregularity ^l the imount of infestation, not only in the various counties but on individual farms and even in single fields," said Prof. A. K. Culls adi, Entomologist, at the weekly boll weevil conference lere today, after hearing reports from the field specialists who were present for the conference and from the county agents over the state. At the close of the conference the following statement was given out: The weather during the past week, was moist and generally favorable to weevil development. It should be explained that hot and dry weather is the weevil's worst enemy, but with the exception of a few calities we have had no such weather during the past week. Showers have been frequent find the atmosphere moist, which offset the benefits that would have been derived otherwise from hot weather. The nprcpntncp c* ? v. wx oijuaics IIUUScd varies, as shown by reports, from l small per cent, to 60 or 70 per cent, rhis condition frequently is very misleading to farmers who are giving the credit of low infestation to one or >ther of the control measures they are ittempting, when as a ri^ntter of fact he infestation was not there to begin vith. We know this to be the case, because there have been accumulated >ver a period of years a series of most daborate data in experimental work howing what results may be expected rom one or the other of these various ( :ontrol measures under the best conlitions. Keep Up Control Meaiurei Square collecting when done thoroughly on the plant and on the ground s still advised throughout the Piednont section, and in other sections tnd areas where light square infesation occurs. Frequoht shallow cultivation should ie continued so long as cotton does ot sufficiently overlap for this to be : rijurious. It is very necessary that the labor ' ituation be controlled during August c or the purpose of square collecting ' nd cultivation. Failure to have labor -l vail able may mean much loss. Fruiting over the state generally is f cry good. But it frequently happens ( fiat individual farmers have a small rop of fruit set at this time, a con- 8 it ion which would hardly be due to 1 atural conditions but probably to c oor soil and seed. It must be kept i mind that good soil and coed sec. ; must be kept in mind that good seed re two things most necessary be- ^ >re one may expect profit from any peration for boll weevil control. Frequently we are asked to advise hether dusting should be undertaki where square infestation has ^ ached upwards of 60 per cent. This ~ jpends on: 1. Whether the farmer is prepared i dust immediately. If so, then we Ivise him to dust, but there is no me left now to secure dusting madnery and poison, showing that eevil dispersion is about to begin. 2. Wherever the schedule has been !gun it should be continued with a ew of reducing these high infesta* ? >n* before the dispersion begins Jk ? ^ COURTESY ^ One of the greatest factor* that ad* to success is courtesy. If we ould win the good will of our istomers we must learn how to be mrteous and considerate to them in lr dealings. Courtesy is very cheap, ^ face, it cost only a littleself-control, at it pays large dividends. Right 'ten we come in contact with people ho are irritable in their buisness isociations and we don't go back > deal with him again. Its a sign f bigness of mind and of character to e patient and courteous at all times rith every customer. And it is the lan with a big mipid and a big haracter that always carries his oint in every buisness deal. Irritation i a sign of littleness of character and > ^ lind. The irritable are weak, and the " feak always lose out in the race of Lfe. It's the strong and big that win he victories in the battles of life. Take hold of yourself with firmness nd force your weakjrttributes to take i backseat.? Winder News. Indictments Name Sixteen Persona Pensacola, Fla., July 31.?The iniictment of 16 person, alleged to be nembers of a well organized ring of Chinese and liquor smugglers that had been operating extensively between 3uba and the United States for mora than a year, became known here this afternnon after Assistant United States Attorney George Earl Hoffman had been notified of the arrest of Louie Ying alias Quon Yick, a Chinaman in Philadelphia. Poilu's Widow Geta Indemnity Paris, Saturday.?An indemnity of 20,000 francs was accorded by a French court-martial this week to the widow and the daughter of the soldier l.ucicn Bersot of the Sixtieth Infan- ^ try, who was unjustly condemned to death by an irate colonel. Bersot received an issue of filthy jlothing, which he refused to wear, and immediately was sentenced to ightj days in prison by a lieutenant, i'he next day, however, the regiment's colonel, Auroux, decided to revise the sentence, and ordered Bersot shot or disobedience in the face-of the enemy. A non-commissioned officer, who iTered to plead for Bersot was condemned to two years at hard labor. Bersot was executed, but his comrades took up the fight after the war to have his name cleared. Renew your health bf purifying your r.iTcf aw? bAfi f] i / A faletaDS V J The nut >i iCw! e.-.d refined calomel tablets i he t are free from nausea and danger. ^ No salts necessary, as Calotabs act like calomel and salts combined. Demand the genuine in 10c and 35c packages, bearing above trade-mark. TY EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE AND ALL OTHERS INTERESTED The Democratic Executive Committee is called to meet at Chesterfield n the Court House, on Wednesday,, August 2nd., 1922, at 10 o'clock A. VI., for the purpose of examining the Club Rolls and doing such other things in reference thereto as required by :he laws of the State and the Tules of :he Democratic party. All persons interested may appear U/v/ iL. ci niuit inu v>omnuitee at such time ind place and they will be heard as to my irregularities, errors etc., of enrollment and as to any names being niproperly enrolled or left off the va ious club roils and the Committee vill consider any other matter which nay be properly brought before ic. The rules require that the club rolls >c sent to the Chairman of the Executive Committee promptly after the ast Tuesday of July and the Commitee requests those in charge of the lub rolls to see that they are sent in it once so they may be copied as reluired. This is a very important meeting ind it is hoped that each member of he Executive Committee will be presnt. D. F. Brock, M. J. Hough, Secretary. Chairman. 'OR SALE?We are offering our home place for sale, containing o~ ? v ? acres, about one-third in cuitiv tion; fcood improvements, situated* six miles southewest of Cheraw. tp-33 E. H. Stafford, Cheraw, S. C. INEUNIVIRSALCAt CARS, TRUCKS, TRACTORS SERVICE PARTS