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tumorous jDfpartmrnt. " * ' " ' ' ' " - ' ' A $iim Chance-?Men don't stand mufeh chaiice with women nowadays. This is ftfdiy being brought home to man^ .a. member of the suspendered sex. For instance: "I may not be so big a fool as I look." aid he to her. They were having a * .1, "NAr'.^s^^rcrtled sweetly., ' "Then you have & great _4$al to be thankful " 'A SW*r VJ: ?u.; , , . . , "f aqa\t believe- In parading my virtues," said tpe rightcourf husband to bis wife. , ' ' "That is wise, my dear." said the wife, "ii jdways tak,es a nurhber, you know. for'a parsdeA Oudh! ' ? c -ri e?: ~ Mentioning Hhe Unmentionable.?A millionaire Jam manufacturer, having retired from business and married an hter, >was ashamed, of thi trade whereby he had piled up his fortune. .n One day fier wrote to a neighbor an 'tgrtu; flatter complaining of the wgy m which the other's servants were I trespassing on his grounds. The neighbor wrote back: *. "Doar.8ir,?I sm very sorry to hear tbkt niy servants have been poaching "" ?wir? AMONG THE BOLSHEVIKI Clover Man Recently Returned From Red Russia. CONDITIONS STRANGE AND TERRIBLE John Knox Brings First Hand Information About Dreadful Disease? Tells of Country Where Money Has No Value. Battling with the Bolsheviki, seeing them every day, breathing with them, studying them all the while as best he could and without allowing a single symptom of the deadly doctrine to enter Into himself, has been the experience of John Knox, well known young I man of Clover, son of Mr. Geo. W. "P. 8.-?EXCuae my mentioning your pi$serve?."?Ixindon Tit-Bits. Per Social P?<rpoae?^?"Do you'reallie tfcte razor "waa made in-Germany ?". i r asked the judge. "I reckon it muata. been, syh.. I procured it offn a, dald German pusson out In Nobody'a JLand. 1 knoyved he was diad^ because 1 had just pulled my bay en#t'out?n him;" * "Oh. you. fought in tranee: exclaimed the court. "Tea; suh,-I was a black devil, an' 1 thought this rator might be valuable I'SY!. J "For shaving?" "No, suh;-"for social pu'poses." > . > Very Likely.?"If yoh Husban' beats you. mebbe yoh' kin hab him sent to de whipping pot'," said Mrs. Potomac Jackson. i "Lis'n here. Mrs. Jackson. ,If my husban' beats me," said the other lady, "day kin send him to de whippin' pos' it dey wants to, but dey'U have to wait till ha gits out'n de hospital." ? r Sura Ma U<VM&n la a tyrant, an absolute- tyrant/' said his wife to a company,of friends. "Isn't he John?" ohe asked turning to her husbapd. . ; "Why It all depends, upon?" or ia^fce not?" she asked as I she fixed her eyes upon him. "Ha is." Wk ?*? Lively.?Supporting our CQAte&Uon Ubat dbjs Bolshevism is "Old 8tu0.^'fee'quota Volumnia in Shakesper$*fi" "?orlolaous," act four, ?ecene one," line thirtefn, to-wtt: "Nqw the. red pestilence strike all trades Jn_ Rome, Xnd "/occupations perish!"?Little Ro$k, -Ark; f Democrat. _ . 'v \ 1 . ' War .Economy.?<"Are you going to j pay any MtenUon to these epithets I that1 ire being hurled at you?" ' 'Tbl. indee^,'1 answered Senator So%>imn. tl'l'n having them all carefully' copied and filed away. I may need them when it comes my turn to cgll names/'?Wasbington St'.r. '? ' JW|<ihfe|tk.?.'"How. do you like that fclgar,I gave you. old man ? For two hundred bands off that brand they give you a gramophone." "YOu don't wty! If I smoked two hundred of - thpse cigars I wouldn't want a gramophone; I'd want a harp." ?London Yjt-BUs. U -Usuilly Works. ?When Theodore TtOMOVflt- was police commissioner of New York he asked an applicant for a position on the force: "If you were ordered to disperse a mob what would you doT. ? . .... ' Pass around the hat. sir," was the reply.-rSen Francisco Argonaut. ' y * 'J t Corrset.?A soldier from the front applied \0 the hotel for a job as cook. * "Whft can" yqu cook?" asked the ".Aivthjng:,' sir," was the replt. "Well, how do you make hash?" "TCoji don't m^-ke It, sir," said the soldljn ;"ft ju*t accumulates." Y 11 H ( . Plea.?Mrs. Jones?"The cook refuses to get up earlier than 7:30 o'clock." Mr. Jones?"Ask her if she won't do it fQr a couple of days until I can arrange 'thy business,"?Philadelphia In- j qulrer.. v* ( "? T > ? : ' * 1 .Mean M*n.?friend?"Is her father the kfl^ ~dr maif Who would pursue you if ..you eloped?" .Poorer"Rip, he's the kind of man Who'd niovp so' that you couldn't find JhtP When you came back."?Boaton Transcript. The Diplomacy of Politeness.? "George." said the teacher, "I am ^lad to stii that you are polite enougn to offer yotrr sister the oranges first." "Yes'm." laid Geprge: "'cause then she's got to be polite an' take the little one."A Live Wire?I don't think I'll buy the hous*., but I've enjoyed the ride out here. You run a good car." "Yes, I'm agent lor this make. Can T book your order?"?Kansas City Journal. Reprtarkehlei?The Blind man picked up a hammer?and saw. Till1' dumb fnrrn pitted - -rtfr???and spoke. Knox of that town, who has recently received hl6 discharge and returned to the home of his father after serving more than two years in the United States navy, most of the service since May having been rendered on the third class cruiser "Des Moines" at Archangel in far Russia. While engaged in no actual conflicts with the Bolsheviki 'himself, the young sailor has come in contact with a number of soldiers of a United, States Infantry regiment who had been in brushes with them and he also came across soldiers of Great Britain and other Allied coun j triee sent to Archangel monms ago xo aid in the fight against a doctrine and against propaganda that has grown until it has torn Russia asunder and has been responsible for the organization of an army of more than 1',000,000 Russians who, when the Des Moines went away last September appeared to have things its own way and gaining recruits all the while. Young Knox .talked most interestingly Wednesday afternoon regarding his experiences in bleak Russia and he painted scenes ifi that stricken land that were far from pleasant. Meaning of Bolshevism. "Although I have been In and among 'em for quite a bit I must admit that I don't know as much about this Bolshevism and its scope as I would like to know," he said. "But I have read everything about 'em that I could get mj hands on and I have gotten all the first hand information that I could. Bolshevism as I got it from Bolsheviki around Archangel means 'one for all and all for one,' that Is, that everything belongs to everybody?to one person as much as another. All the lands belong to the people in common, all the money, all property of every kind?all property owners who do not subscribe to the belief are enemies of the people and should be killed. And there has been quite a lot of killing and it is going on at a rapid rate still. Nucleus of Bolsheviki. "At the beginning the Bolshevists were about the lowest down rats in Russia?gamblers, thieves, murderers? the lowest and the meanest and the vileqt in Russian civilization. Most of the leaders in the movement are Russians who have lived in the United Staies at one time or the other and who, having accumulated wealth in this country returned to Russia to stir up malice and venom and hate and bloodshed. And they have and are succeeding wonderfully. The soldiers of the Bolsheviki army, the great majority of them are the poorest and most ignorant men imaginable. They know not what they are fighting for, they have not the slightest conception of principle. They are simply poor, helpless humans who have listened to the words of wily agitators thirsting for power and who have roped them In with promises of wealth and position. Were other agitators able to get to th#?m thev would soon desert the ranks in which they now fight and join any other army that might cater to them. They fight because fighting is the most profitable business in Russia just now snd bids fair to continue so for a long time to come. "They are being told that they have j heen down trodden and oppressed for hundreds and thousands of years?I that all the land and all the wealth is rightfully theirs because they and their fathers and forefathers have worked and sweated and died for it and that the only way to get it is to commit robbery and murder and rapine until the 'upper classes' are wiped out entirely and they are in position to take it. "They are being taught and they believe," said young Knox, "that there is no God, that the Christian religion I is a false doctrine, that the church in | Russia is an institution which has, proved one of the most powerful tar*ti\ra in keening them in bondage? I that all that is, is wrong. Many Forced to Join. "And still they gain ground. There is no question but what they were I gaining ground on September 15, when JI left there. Ignorance reigns supreme in Russia. They have gained recruits land are gaining recruits among hundreds of people who do not for a j moment sympathize with their doctrine jand know that it is wrong and impossible; but who being so unfortun- I ate as to reside in sections where the j Bolshevlki are the stronger, realize j I that they must either join the movej ment or die and they prefer to live. ! Why even in the city of Archangel, a I city of 100,000 inhabitants or more, a i I large number of the people either! openly or secretly avow their sympa- j I thy with the Bolsheviki. And that in j j spite of the fact that Great Britain | i and France and the United States have j (had soldiers and sailors there for the : I purpose of maintaining order and a | I government opposed to this socialistic' propaganda and worse than that j j which is gradually getting all Russia I undei its control. "Yet money was never more plenti- J ful in Archangel than it is now. Every- ! body there appeared to have plenty of' - and still . .nobody .ivork<'d- j I There wore few Russian laborers to] be seen. In fact there were no real laborers. Those few who did labor received a small wage and girls who served as waitresses in the city were paid only 10 kopecs a week which in United States money is about $1. Whence comes the money I do not know but I do know there was plenty of it. Food is Scarce. "Still foodstuffs and clothing Were very scarce among the people. United States army shoes if they could be procured would bring $30 and more a pair right along. Anything that is edible could l?e sold for large sums. There is indeed a scarcity of everything but money?paper money. There is no geld. Russian people have a pass-ion for Jewelry. Were one to buy out the jewelry and brlcabrac in a 5 and 10 cent store in this country and carry it to Russia he could sell it at his own price. Flew Over American Lines. "Still they starve and die and the Bolshevism goes onward. Nobody appears to worry. They accept it as a matter of course. Their army is fairly well equipped. They have some fairly good fighters. Their aeroplanes are good and their aviators skillful. More than once have these Bolsheviki airmen flown over the camp of American aoldiers and dropped from the clouds among the soldiers Bolsheviki tracts and pamphlets inviting the soldiers to desert their ranks and Join the Bolsheviki and telling them further that the Bolsheviki do not want to fight them but would prefer that they come in as friends. But this propaganda has not resulted in any recruits from among American soldiers to any extent although it is possible that one or two thoughtless ones, tiring of the routine Oi army life have deserted their ranks and joined the Reds. I have heard one or two soldiers of this country remark as they were returning homeward that 'here is one socialist going back to the states.' "But it has not affected very many. American soldiers and British soldiers could not subscribe to a doctrine that teaches there is no God, that there is no virtue in womankind, that the Christian religion is false and that he who is criminal and beastly by nature, who does not work and who will not work is entitled to any and all of the property of him who does work. It is a terrible situation that is prevalent in Russia?one which I am incapable of describing. It is a doctrine that is catching the unwary, that is getting a hold upon those who grope in darkness and that is continually spreading disease and death and desolation in a wonderful land." * ' : cfliiTu rAoni IMA MFWS. OVU I If vn . ..... w. ? Boll Weevil has been discovered ir Anderson county. ? Practically every town in Soutl Carolina observed armistice day in some manner last Tuesday. ? James E. Dobbins, Anderson county farmer, recently sold a quantity of long staple cotton in Anderson for 68 cents a pound. ? Fire last Sunday destroyed the tobacco atemmery of T. D. Martin at Florence entailing a property loss 01 $75,000 fully covered by insurance. The origin of the fire is unknown. ? James T. Crews, for the past 35 years a member of the Laurens fire department and for many years chief of the organization, has tendered his resignation. ? Thomas B. Madden, for many years assistant postmaster of Columbia has beerj, nominated to be postmaster of that city by Senator Dial. ? Kafer'B bakery in Florence was damaged by Are to the extent of about $7,000 this week. Insurance was carried in the sum of $4,000. ? Anderson College at Anderson, Rev. John E. White president is to have an additional dormitory which is to cost $160,900. ? According' to a report from the state highways department for the year up to November 1, the total receipts for the period are $390,875.01. ? Charles W. Stansill, Jr., student of the Columbia high school, died at the Columbia hospital this week of spinal meningitis. ? Rev. E. R. rcndleton. pastor of the Baptist church at IVndleton, Anderson county has resigned his pastorate. ? Bamberg county farmers are considering the idea of going into the livestock industry and diversified farming in an effort to defeat the boll weevil which is making rapid advances in that county. ? Mrs. Sally Cunningham, a well known and highly esteemed la<4v of Anderson, was run over and almost instantly killed in Anderson, this wees when sho was struck by an automobile driven ,by Sam W. l'ower, a rural mail carrier. ? Sixteen pints of blockade whiskey carried in ginger ale bottles with the roo-itin inn eo/lu uiolor nvntvn r??i nf 111'Pli in Greenville last Sunday resulted in the arrest of Porter Owings who with two other men had the whiskey in his possession. ? The supreme court on last Tuesday held in a majority opinion that the primary election held in Charleston on August ID, is not effective in so far as the office of mayor is concerned. In the primary, the incumbent. Tristam T. Hyde, was renominated by a majority of one vote on the face of the returns, the vote being 3,241 to 3,240. This count did not include 77 contested and mutilated ballots. The executive committee delegated consideration of these 77 ballots to a subcommittee which found that John P. Grace, the defeated candidate, according to the first returns, was entitled to enough of the votes in d'soute to give him a majority of 14. The executive committee adopted tne report ot tin sub-committee by a vote of 13 to 12. The case reached the supreme court by a writ. The court passed only on the legality of the procedure and not as to questions of fact. The Charleston executive committee will be called upon to designate a date for another primary. The general election is scheduled for December 4. The petition of the Hyde supporters sought to liuve the present mayor declared the nominee but this the court declined to do on the ground that from the record before the court the justices could not determine "which of the candidates for mayor received the majority of the votes that were and ought to have been counted. Associate Justice Hydrick delivered the majority opinion which is concurred in by Chief Justice Gary and Associated Justice Praser. Assoeinted'.fustiee Watts and. Gage dissented. ABLE WOMAN CAMPAIGNER I # ' Nancy Astor Seeks- Election To British Commons CANDIDATE OF THE UNIONIST PARTY 1 Canidate for the Unionist Party American Woman Shows Fine Ability 1 in Taking Care of Herself on the Stump?Good Speaker: But in For 1 Hard Fight. Lady Astor, , In her speech on her adoption as unionist condidate for parliament, according1 to a London dispatch, told those who had gathered to hear her that it was because .-he had "the mirth of the British Tommy who could laugh while going over the top," she was able to face the tremendous responsibility of attempting to become the first woman member of the house of commons. "I realize that it depends on how I behave myself there," she added, "whether women will get in." A moment later she said: "It took the spirit of Drake and the faith of the Pilgrim fathers to get me here tonight." Viscount Astor came forward to present his wife, saying: "I* have been asked to introduce to you my successor?your future representative." This was greeted with loud cheers and laughter, and Lord Astor went on: . "I have been asked presumably because I know more about her than any one else. Although she is light of heart, nevertheless she is mindful of the responsibilities." He concluded by expressing regret at the necessity of stepping aside owing to his elevation to the peerage. Opponent Withdraws. The independent 'lnionist candidate, Lionel Jacobs, who had the support of a number of unionists opposing Lady Astor, on the ground of sex, tonight withdrew his candidacy. The truce arranged by the political parties of the Sutton division of Plymouth for the period of the municipal elections having expired the strategists of the three dominant political camps prepared for the most novel and vigorously fought parliamentary battle in Plymouth's history. Lady Astor, or rather Nancy Astor ?for that is the name by which she is most widely known?will be the central figure, a,nd apparently is most eager for the tilt. She lost jno time in firing the opening guns of the campaign, and early this afternoon drove into the wharf-side fish market in an open carriage drawn by a pair of beautiful horses with.bridles decorated with red, white and blue rosettes. A battery of press photographers, a swarm' of children from the adjacent slum district an^ miscellany of dock 11?u,markot workers immedi-I ately massed about the carriage. Smiling towards the photographers. Lady Astor asked: "Why can't you let.us have our little election down here In Devonshire?" Then, turning to the croWd, she exclaimed: "Aren't these foreigners awful persons?" This elicited much laughter. Lady Astor then stood in her carriage and made a brief talk, exchanged repartee with the crowd and answered the hecklers, generally silencing them with a few barbed words, but with all evidences of good humor. Some of her shafts were convincing. Working Man's Friend. "I think you all know who is the working man's friend." "If some people had what we have they would not be down here bothering for votes." "You should go down on your knees and thank God you've got someone honest to represent you." "I like for people's children to be treated as I treat my own." "But for, the fact that there are wo- i men none of you would be here." She concluded by asking: "How! many are going to vote for me? Hold up your hands," The men, women and children, almost without execption, extended their | hands. Then one of the photographers ; asked Lady Astor to pose aboard a mnnrert a few vards I15IIII1& stliuuiici ? awaj. "I am not a movie actress " she pro- j tested. Nevertheless she descended from the carriage and walked across [ the slimy pavement of the fish mart j and stepped nimbly aboard the boat, assisted by a policeman and a fisherman. Several pictures were taken. Then the grizzled captain of the boat was posed beside Lady Astor by the 1 photographer and the candidate improved the opportunity while the I cameras were oliking by asking the; captain: "Will you vote for me?" He readily! nodded assent. "Cross your heart," insisted Lady | Astor, and the sailor complied, to the j amusement of the onlookers. The Labor candidate, VV*. T. Gay, and j his Liberal opponent, Isaac Foot, have | indicated that Lady Astor's American birth, the possession of wealth, the fact ! that she is a woman and her attitude | regarding prohibition are points upon | j which her candidacy will be attacked, j Power of Advertising.?It used to I take a generation or two or three, to J build a big business, no matttr how | good the merchandise, nor how able I the management. Now there are cases I | galore where a manufacturer of a few ' hundred thousand pounds of something ! has advertised his output up to 5, 10 or 20 million pounds, and done it'in 1 live years. dance at our infant giant, the automobile industry. Born somewhere t i about 1900 A. D., and now running at a rate of two billion per year. Of course, this industry was hound to igrow great in time, because man want- ! |ed Individual"Transportation. But it took advertising to do it quickly, to let man know that what he wanted was ready at hand at a fair price for immediate delivery. And it took advertising to make him an intelligent purchaser and an intelligent user of the darned thing. So with many industries, great and small, but all greater and better because of their direct contact with that simple yet' powerful force, consumer understanding. Our supply of periodical literature? daily, weekly and monthly?is nothing short of a marvel both In quality and quantity. There are now some 23,000 regular publications printed in the American language. Advertising makes this possible. This one benefit to the people is so far reaching and so far beyond estimate that one dare not say how vastly our civilization is indebted. Doubtless the most direct and obvious benefits of advertising have to do with the variety, quality and condition of the things we buy. In the old days when goods of unknown character were sold by a merchant of known character, both he an<T his customers suffered many disappointments and injustice. Nowadays a manufacturer puts his name and address on his wares and says in public print to all the world "These goods are O. K.?I know because I make them. My reputation and my fortune are behind them as a perpetual guarantee of quality, condition and falrdeallng." Poor, disappointing wares will not long stand up under that kind of 'pitiless publicity." But honest goods honestly advertised soon build up a mutual good-will between maker and consumer which is little short of personal friendship. This results In better merchandise and better business to the economic gain of everybody.?Rhey T. Snodgrass in Leslie's. ? Capt. Louis L. Ligon of Anderson commander o^Company B, 118th Infantry, Thirtieth Division during the late war has been decorated by th* French government with the croix de "uerre for distinguished service rendered at Grancourt on October 8, last year. ? J. B. Hubbard, a white man was run over in Anderson this week by ! Ford driven by Jesse Hamp, a negro. After running over the white man the driver did not stop until he war caught In a different locality. He was arrested on a charge of reckless driving. IS31313 FORDS THIS OUTFIT IF ONE THING IN AG TABLISHED TH ARATION OF T CULTIVATION That poorly prep* who has ever tried it knc J . Any land, 110 matt II sufficient horsepower; b no longer obtainable as i The FORDSON 0 problem of both labor am highest results. York County Fan Smith, J. B. Scott and e of putting their money ii There is no longe elsewhere, and may be n This FO Se I We regret to say of immediately catching sons to plaoe their order at the earliest possible n COURT! El |jklBE]= SAVE AUTUMN LEAVES Best Soil Builder Known is Nature's Own Compost. There is more truth than poetry in the statement of a contemporary who said that "people who burn all their leaves and then spend money for com- I mercial fertilizer need to have tl.eir heads attended to." The time is close at hand in this latitude when autumn leaves will cover the ground, each day's falling being a matter of dread to the small boy whose duty it will be to keep walks and lawn free from the tiees discarded habiliment?. Tho traditional and customary manner of disposing of autumn leaves that clutter the streets and private grounds b to rake them into r.ilos and not tiro tr? thorn* hut that constitutes only another proof of our lack of thrift. Loaves contain every element that is necessary in the development of floral life. For that reason they can be converted into the best fertilizer known. The process is very simple, furthermore, consisting merely in letting them decay. Piled, or, better still, dumped into a pit, and permitted to rot by nature's own process of decomposition leaves become what the gardeners call compost?a commodity of rare value both ao a fertilizer and a permanent soil l builder. Put on th#land and spaded in, this compost not only supplies all the elements of plant food, but in addition to the chemical properties essential to plant growth, it puts humus into the soil?vegetable matter that aids in the , conservation of moisture and in keeping the ground loose and friable, thus aiding root development. All of which properties are lost? 1 with the exception of the noncombus- j tible mineral ingredients?when the leaves are burned instead of returned , to the soil' The richest type of soil known is leaf , mold, which is formed by nature's process of making compost of the fallen leaves.?Atlanta Constitution. ? Corp. Geo. W. Batson, of Greenville , son of Policeman Eugene Batson of that city has been notified that he , is to receive from the British government a decoration at the hands cf the prince of Wales for distinguished ser- ' vice in the late war. | < ON FOR SE SAVES LABOR A? EFFICIENCY RICULTURE HAS BEEN ] AN ANOTHER, IT IS THAI HE SOIL AMOUNTS TO 75 ired land cannot be properly c >ws to his cost. or how rough or lough, can he lit efficient horsepowci and tl t once was. utfit has solved the problem c d power, at the least possible ( mors like John Q. Hall, John fliers, have approved the For 11 it and all of them are deligh r any question of experiment ogarded as proved here. RDSON Outfit is rvice and It Serv< that we arc behind in deli verb up with orders; but we advi s with us once so that we nia; loment. KEY TRACT YORK, S. C. 4 ? The number of patients at the United States Public Health jervica hospital at Camp Sevier has recentlybeen increased to more than 800 on1 account of the transfer of many pat*-} ientx from Camp Johnson at Jacksonville, Fla., to Camp Sevier. ? Louis Bennett, negro fell from the edge "of the porch of his home In' Florence this week while engaged In , a spell of coughing, and broke his . LET'S GO NOW11 No use in waiting for lower prick.' They are not in sight. I havex tjagoods bought and they will be sold it Right Prices. Crown Patent Flour, at $5.65 |00. > Best Coffee, 3 pounds for $1.00. / Full Cream Cheese, 2 lbs. for T5 CJfr' Shorts and Bran, at $2.75 Sack. d Cremo Dairy Feed for your mlks % oows, at $3.50 a Sack. ' f M Seed Rye, at $2.85 3ushel. Best Launcn-y Soap, at 5 Cts. a Barl Chester Bread every Monday aid Thursday. Everything in Canned Goods. \ Headquarters for Vegetables ail Fancy Fruits. See my Candy Counter. It pleases. See my line of Shirts, Hosiery, Overalls. You can't beat 'em. I sell the Mayer Honorbilt Shoe-it real leather Shoe. ] I'll be glad to have your buslnek. See us for your needs and wants. | J. D. HOPE, Sharon, S. C. j THERMOS BOTTLES j'j i Something that every home shoijr have is a Thermos Bottle?keeps |l contents hot or cold as may be desirek Filled with hot liquid It will stay IrtL for 24 hours. Filled with cold liquid I will stay icy cold for 24 hours. Esp$ , daily fine where baby's milk has to ft kept warm for night feeding. Haft , Thermos Bottles in pints and quarts! several styles. Also have Therm? Lunch Boxes?dandy for hunters or a workers who piust be away from ho? at dinner time. Call in and ask to sp them. !,! '. STATIONERY? We are showing an elegant line o Correspondence Stationery?the desired by folks who know. Shieder-Snelling Drug Cc < SV Ileal Estate Titles and Real E? tate Mortgages on sale at Hie Eoqulrt if flee. ' SEIEH^ I RVICE I ID INCREASES i ii r" w il * vl \ VTORE CLEARLY ESP THOROUGH PREP- 1 PER CENT OF THE \ j 1 sultivated, every farmer i properly prepared with lie labor to go with it is lsewhcre and here?the ;ost in keeping with the C. Kirkpatrick, J. D. ?; dson way to the extent ted. ; \ I 4 . It lias been proved ; S Built for * ; ' es, and wc have no hope ise all who want Ford- > y be able to serve them j X)R CO. Q