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Smiuovous gjpavtwfnt. Handling a "Tight One."?A solicitor was making- the roundB of a certain New England town on behalf of a useful community work, when he encountered an ovcrthrifty merchant, upon whom all the solicitor's eloquence was wasted at first. "I believe this a good thing," said the merchant. 4 It deserves to succeed, but I can't afford to give any-., thing. However, you have my good will." "Very well<( Mr. Skinks," said the. solicitor, "if that's all you feel.able to. give, just'sign your name and! write 'good will', after it^ and then the townspeople will know what your gift is." ' ? . * 1 1 ', Tlic paper was signed, out. me mm-, chant put. something more than good will against his name. . "t don't say that all lawyers are crooks," said the doctor, in his final summing up, ' but my opponent will have to admit that his profession doesn't make angels of men." "Ah," quietly retorted Smith, "you doctors certainly have the best of us there." A story is told of a prisoner before Lord Justice Fltzgibbon, at the time when the latter was one of the justices of appeals of Ireland, wliose ready wit probably saved his neck. Lord Fitzgibbon was holding assizes in Tipperary county when a man was brought before him on indictment for murder. The fact was ^proved that the victim came to his death by being hit with a stick in the hands of the defendant: but a physiclart testified that he had what was called in medical parlance a "paper skull." " The case looked dark for the prisoner, however, and the jury returned a verdict of guilty. As the man was brought before the court for sentence it was noticed that his lordship had has black cap in his hand. "Have you anything to say why sentence should not be pronounced , upon you, demanded Lord Fitzgibbon. Tihc man hesitated for a moment and then said: "No, your lordship, I have nothing to say; but I should like to ask one question." "What Is that, my man?" said; Fitzgibbon. "I should like to know what a man wi'th a -head like that was doin^f in Tipperary." The black cap was put away and a , prison sentence imposed. f , ' * ' i Poet's Telltale Pallor.?In a western town they tell a story of a worthy ' lady newly come into money, wno un one occasion while visiting the house of a friend gazed long and thought- : fully at a plaster cast of Shakespeare. ? Then she sighed and remarked: 1 "Poor man! How-pale he looked! 1 He couldn't have been well when that was taken.* . . "He . wasn't agreed his poltte host- j ess, "He was dead." "Oh," continued tho woman, draw- i ing a sympathetic breath, "that ac- i counts for it" i l I No News.?A' regimental band was about to bo organized at one of the war-time contonments iind, after the first rehearsal, the officer in charge ' was signing up the candidates. "Your name?" asked the trombonist "Sam Joneo," returned the embryo "Your station?" "Camp Devens." "Your rank?" "I know it," sighed Sam. Unappreciated Holp.?A Philadel- , phia physician had,been called in to , treat the spoiled child of a certain family. After his departure the mother returned to the room and told the ( youngster that the doctor had' complained that the child had been very . rude to him. "Why, mother," replied the kiddie, ; "he's just an old fogy, that's all! ,He got mad just because I put out my tongue before he told me to." Not All Her Own.?A western editor was favorably lmprossed by a poem sent him by a young lady, and he addressed to hor the following: "The verses entitled 'The Kiss' are extremely clever. I suppose you can assure mc that they are original?" Tu this the fair one responded: "Not <iuite. 'Thfe Kiss' was a collaboration." Useless.?The - fussy stenog had looked at her wrist watch a number of times one morning. "I have a date for lunch and don't want to miss it," she explained to the office boy when she found him watchtn ' r*nrfmi!blv.' ... '* !'v * > - "Iluhl" replied Unit youth scofn fully, "i don't need no watch to know when it's lurich time. I got a belt, I have." He'll Say They Aro.?"Arc the blue laws enforced around here?".asked a tourlrt of Blackpowder Bill of Idolater, Ariz. "You're darn right," retorted Bill. "Only last Sunday Quick Andy shot a tenderfoot, and, by gosh 1 they up and arretted him." Fifty-FiFty.?"Ole." said the preacher to the Swedish bridegroom-to-be, "do you take Hilda Sorgeson for your lawful wedded wife, for better or for worse?" "Oh, well." replied Ole gloomily. "Aye s'pore Aye get little of each." Fizriology.?'Name two Large joints," fi^fa'l^/^be teacher of the clans in physiology. ~~?I'AU'kc's and the Dutchman's replied the r.ophis tTc?ithfr'ptrjHb?ly prohibition's put them both on the blinTT"* TO BUILD HIGHEST DAM. Giant Structure Will Harness the Colorado River. The highest dam in the world, to join the states of Nevada and Arizona and harness turbulent waters of the Colorado river for extended irrigation in the southwest, is to be constructed in the near future by the United States reclamation service. ., .The dam, according to the tentative p^ns, would rise to the-unprecedented height o'f 500'' fir -.609.1'feet, in Boulder canyon, where granite abutments "rfs*. ! more thas 1 000"feet -.atyove ?the water/ surface. Engineers of the rcclamdtfob service, afloat.on barges, are now bor ing ior oeuryuK uyju-cnii. 1 A lake varying from 30 to 50-miles, in length'would So hacked up in the Colorado arid Virgin, rivets; and. in this basin" frould. be held in check for irrigation the-;drainage from almost, the entire Colorado river basin, including parts of six states. The proposed structure would be higher by far than the world's highest' dam at present?Arrowrock dam, on the Boise river, Idaho, which rises 348 feet?and would top other famous dams in the United States, among the highest of which are: Shoshone, on the Shoshone river, Wyoming, 328 feet; Elephant Butte, on the Rio Grande, New" Mexico, 300 feet and Roosevelt, on the Salt river, Ari- ' zona, 290 feet. Preliminary work on the Boulder ' canyon project is being done under authority of congress, which appropriated $20,000 for investigation. An addition- 1 al $75,000 was contributed by local irf rlgators. Engineers have' located a site and are making borings for foundations. While these are incomplete, bedrock has be.en located at a number of points and the outlook is favorable, 1 according to Arthur P. Davis, director [ of the reclamation service. Interests from, the irrigable region are expecting to bring their problem before congress at the present session, 1 and through the committee on irriga- 1 tion seek government aid, it is under- ' Btood., but the exact nature of their proposal, whether an out and out ap- ^ propriation, government loan, or extension of credit has not been announced. So unmanageable has the river been In the hast that it has oftcri changed Its lower fchanhei. Like a huge eleplant with body over seven states it swung its trunk nbout through the soft-silt delta, uncontrollable at flood and destructive to canals and levees. So active did the trunk become in 1005 that it entered the California Development company's Imperial canal, running through part of Mexico to the Imperial valley, and poured the entire rivnf lr?tn thp Raltnn Sink. 200 feet below the sea level. It ate out the canal, enlarged the Salton sink and formed a cataract which threatened to work its way back through the soft land, with great damage. Only the activity of the Southern Pacific railway in building a dam across the widening mouth of the canal channel, after a hard fight with the river, were able to swing the channel back again to the Gulf of California. The Laguna dam, built in 1909, joining Arizona and California, has resisted flood water, but complaints of broken levees, and later scant water for Lhe rapidly increasing area of irrigated land, continue." Complications \flth Mexico in the Imperial canal add to tne problem, and the entire situation is . pressing southwest interests to action. ' In addition to the Boulder dam pro- , jcet, the Imperial Irrigation district is pushing a plan to tap the Lcgunu dam, ( and build an all-American high line canal on a higher level irrigate more extensive acreage and avoid Mexican , relations. The Boulder canyon dam project, located below the Grand canyon near ( Las Ve^as, Nevada, where engineers are now boring, is the most advantageous position of any projected sites, according to the preliminary report made to congress by the reclamation service. A dam there "would intercept most of the drainage of the Colorado riyor, and, therefore, be a more complete solution of the flood control problem," the report says, "Such .res- | ervoir would also be more valuable in the irrigation of lands on the lower river on account'of the great proximity to them, and the consequent possibility of regulating its flow more nearly in accordance with the fluctuating needs. Incidentally it would furnish a large amount of power." A further report of more recent findings is under preparations. The irrigable lands of the lower Colorado river as listed by the reclamation service comprise many valleys and projects, with a total of 1,242,000 acres. They include Cottonwood island, Mahave valley, Chemchuevis valley, Parker project, Palo Verde valtey, Palo Verde mesa, Chucawalla valley. Ciboitt <? nmlant Tmnpi'inl irricu- I VfUlC V , i U1UA tiqn district and these extensions of the Imperial valley; East Side mesa, Dos Paimas. Coachella and West side. SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTIES. . I In Old Days There Were Counties Not: Now On the Map. From Greenville Piedmont. Did you know that on ."March 22 Greenville county celebrated the one hundred and thirty-fifth anniversary of its birth? It was on that date in 17SC that the general assembly of South. Carolina created this county and the enactment by which it was accomplished is as follows; "An Ordinance for Establishing" a County and County Courts in the New Ceded Lands on the North Side of Saluda River. "Whereas, the inhabitants of the new ceded lands 011 the north side of Snhidn-r TTVrr;- belftvc.JJjea Indian line, have '-ex- J perlenccd many ihconvcnicnccs, by being annexed to some of the counties heretofore established; "1. Be It Ordained by the Honorable the Senate and House of Representatives, now met anil sitting in General Assembly, and by the authority of the same, That a county shall be established in the new ceded -lands, by the name of Greenville, and shall be bounded by Saluda river, and the south fork thereof, the old Indian boundary and the North Carolina line, and shall be entitled to county courts to be held on the third Monday, in February, May, August-and November; which courts shall hold, exercise, and enjoy the several po'wers and jurisdictions which are by law vested in.the said county courts n hlIkVipH !' ,. | "In the Senate House, the twentysecond1 day of March! in the year of out Lord one thousand seven hundred and' clghty-aix, and in the tenth year of the Independence of the United States or America. "John Lloyd, President of the Senate. John Fauchereaud Grimke, Speaker of the House of Representatives." Of course Greenville county was settled at least ten years before that, for Richard Paris, the first settler, came here fn 1776. according to tradition. At the time of the creation of this county and for some years afterward, Greenville was called Pleasantburg to distinguish it from Spartanburg. In point of age Greenville is the twenty-second county in South Carolina and third in the Piedmont section. The-followin- 'oi es were existing at the time of the formation of this county: Abbeville, York, Richland, Edgefield, Williamsburg, Clarendon, Newberry, Marlborough, Berkeley, Laurens, Chesterfield, Spartanburg, Lexington, Chester. Lancaster, Darlington, Charinofrm TTnirm. Marion. Colleton and Fairfield. Did you know that at the same time :here were in South Carolina the folowlng counties, whose tiamcs no long;r appear on the map of the state? Win yaw, Granville, Hilton, Lincoln, Kingston, Bartholomew, Shrewsbury, Washington, Claremont, Winton, Liberty, Orange, Lewlsburgh. SHORT HISTORY OF THE WAR Any Ex-Service Marl Can Tell It To You Quickly. "Now cough," "Sign here." "When do we eat?" "Haven't any S's. Take a pair of 10's." 'There's a soldier in the' grass." "You're In the army now." "Treat 'em rough." "Read 'em and ween." "Look at the ears on 'em.", "All we do Is sign the payroll." "it's ereat life if you don't weak sn." i "The first seven years are the hard it." ' Where do we go from here." "You can't stand there, soldier." "Oo-la'la." "Lafayette, we are here." "Let's go." "Any seconds on gold fish." ."Madelon, Madclon, Madelop." ".Encore the vin rouge, see voo piny." "Toot sweet, monsieur." "Is your right arm paralyzed?" "Mother, take down your service fag; your son's in the S. O. S.." "Bon soir, ma cherie. on allez cous?" "Paint it with iudinc and mark him Juty." "Son fairy Ann." "Hoaven, Hell or lloboken by Christmas." "Fini )e guerre." "In the Army, the Army, the demoera tic Army." "So this is Paris." "Hinky-dlnky, parlez vous." "If.I ever get out of this man's A rrn v?V "Who ^von the war?" "There's a long. Ion;; trail a-winding." "When do we go home?" "We've paid our debt to Lafayette? who the heck do we owe now?" "When the cruel war is over." "Say, 'ah-h-h' the high here." "Let's eat."?American Legion Notes. WOULD CHANGE NAME Soma Dakota Residents \ ant State Called "Roosevelt." "A small group of self-seeking politicians are seeking to have the name of South Dakota changed to "Rooscvel^," said Attorney General William Lemkc of North Dakota, who passed through Chicago on his way east recently. "And the reason they give for their wish to change the name is the most ridiculous thing about." he continued. "The reason they advance is because the socialist tendencies of North u ? K...the n:vmp 'Dfl llillV Ul UUgM> V..W - kota' into disrepute and they wish to rid themselves ol" the stigma. "In the face of this claim stands the fact that South Dakota is follow-.! ing in the footsteps of her sister to the north. She hhs a new shite hank-' ing hill up before the next session of legislature, and new home building bill, and she has bought a state coal mine in North Dokatn. "The fact is that the people of South Dakota will not allow the state's name to he changed. They regard the old name with too much veneration to change it, even in honor of so great a statesman as Colonel Moose volt." A Sound Reason.?Herbert, aged four, was irritated bv the crying of sister Harriet, aged two. "Why don't you stop crying?" he asked his sister with great seriousfvesa._ "Vou must, lie sick. You don't k\oly well, and J'OU don't aqund. well!" 1 ?* ? : The Story of: > I . Our States j \ By JONATHAN BRACE \ < ' VIII. ' * ' { SOUTH CAROLINA J J \ As MARY* f ' ' 1 \ ernment, I n * \ t like manner * c \ the territory , \ ( ' extending from Virginia to Fior-. J c | Ida was granted by Charles 11 * ( * in 1GG3 to eight gentlemen as a J \ reward for their efforts in his p <n J behalf. The name Carolina J * comes from the Latin, Carolus, p t "* meaning Charles. It was not J c really named after Charles II, * ^ \ but originally in honor of Charles a p IX, king of France, by Hugue- * .c ' nots who built a fort near Beau- p * fort in 1502. i \ n ; ' The fact that the Carolinas * t ' became later two distinct colo- t L p nies was due to chance. It hap- J * pened that the earliest settle- p t. ments located at points far re- J * moved from each other. The p p. first permanent settlements in [[ , J South. C a r o 1 i na were about t J Charleston, while those iii North J ^ * Carolina were around Albemarle * p sound. The life in the two sec- p * tions also was quite different. * p South Carolina.was largely de- p * voted to the cultivation of rice J ? p and indigo arid the planters ?oon p J grew very rich with their large J ^ p estates on which;the labor was p r i nerformed by slaves... In fact, \ CT * just before the Revolution the j t population'showed twice as many t * blacks as whites. ' t In 1729 the government of the t * Car'olinas was turned back by J t the lord proprietors to the king * J and there was then formed the \ t two separate provinces. * \ South Carolina was the eighth \ * state to adopt the Constitution. ' f the vote of ratification being ; ' passed in May, 1788. The Pal- J i metto state,-as South Carolina 4 * Is sometimes called, extends over J 4 riO.989 square miles, and it par- t * tieipntes In the presidential eloc- (f t tlon 10 the extent of nine elec- t J tors. ( * (? by HcClurc Newspaper Syndicate.I findorco Shaped Plan.?That the farmers of York, Lancaster, Fairfield and Chester courftfes are tally interested in the problem of marketing cotton and stand ready to adopt a sound, practical system for co-operative marketing of their staple was evidenced at a meeting of representative farmers of these counties in Rock Will last Thursday,- when those assembled voted untinifnouslv to enter into | a state cotton marketing organisation. ' ' ,li W. . W. Lon'cy'director of extension ' work at .dllemscm college, addressed : the meeting and* explained in detail , the system of marketing being pro- . nosed. $ix district meetings have been held in as many parts of the. * state and at each place the movement ( met with favor. 'I Mr. Long explained that the six governing principles of co-operative marketing of farm products are as folldws: Organization .by commodity or crop, j (In this instance cotton is the commodity regarding, which the organization is sought, while in the lower ' part of the state other commodity organizations will be formed.) Membership limited to growers and landlords who receive a part of the crop as rental. I Binding crop contracts between ^ grower and association. < Grading of the commodity and ; pooung accorciing iu giuuc The businers of the association to be handled by experts. Organization without capital stock and therefore a non-dividend paying organization. All profits are paid to growers, thus making the association purely co-operative. ? In a letter to Samuel Gompers in reply to a request for the facts about Russia, Secretary Hughes describes Russia as a gigantic econom'c "acuum." He says that trade with Russia is impossible under- present conditions, because Russia has neither money or credit There are billions of dollars worth of Russian orders in America: but these orders are not being filled lor the reason that the recipients of them do not know where they could get their pay. ,The most reliable estimates do not credit Soviet Russia with possessing mbre than $175.001),000 of gold, and the expenditure of all of this in the United States would not have any lasting effect on trade. '"The facts" in regard to the supplies in Russia available for export, Mr Hughes wrote, j "completely refute" statements that if the United States recognized the Soviets. Russia immediately would export I large quantities of lumber, flax, hemp, fur and other commodities. "The facts," he says, show that Russia does not have on hand for export, commodities which might be made the basis of immediate. profitable trade with the United States and he adds that the Russian transportation system is so demoralized that it could not move the.ni if they existed. Mr. Hughes quotes ah official organ of the Soviet government to show that lumber production in 11)20 was one-fifth of the pre-war level although i the industry was in better clrcumstan ! cos than others. A ta hie snows me i , output of eight principal exporting I c nimoditfes at from I'l to 58 per cent of what was expected. ,Furthermore. .jLc rotary lluylies p. hits out, before [jllie war America's trade with Russia constituted only one aiul three-tenths per cent of all the foreign trade of the .'United States, being in the year ending June Jtt, 1&13, at a total of $55.000.000 for both exports and imports, while 'for the calendar year 1020 it was $1.1,-| I otio.ooii' aiul .practically all of that was J with territories l'rec of Soviet dnmina- j |,tion. "It js tuu|tiestioivably desirable." ; i wrote Mr. Hughes to Mr. (Jumpers. ! "thai intimate and mutually profitable I commercial relations on an extensive J sea'e be established between the t-'nil, ed States and Russia, and it is the sin! cere hope of this government that there | may lie readjustments in Russia which will make it possible for that country j to resume it proper place in the ecoi Hemic life of the.world." I ?Isaac Rioom. a lineman in (lie employ of the Southern Rower company, j was kiHed by. static elretricity while | working on the company's lines: in Ln.ii- i 'caster county last Saturday afternoon. I t SOUND THE CHARGE Now Is Time to Go Forward?are You Gcing. - t (Manufacturer's Record.) "Beat a retreat." said Napoleon to a Jrummer boy, when in one of his bat-;les l*e fe'.t that he was losing and hat his army mu:t retreat in order o be saved. 'Sire," said the drummer boy, "I lave never learned to beat a retreat, )U4 I can beat a march that will make .he dead arise and fight." He received >eimission from the. general 'to beat t march, into which.h<j.,threw his very ioul. The tired,j'weary defeated col-Hers caught the inspiration of the iharge, and with new energy and miokpnod fire of bodv and soirit i*ush xl once more to the bat-tie' and won i great victory. ' ... . The people of this country feel that hey have been almost defeated; dislouragement fills i their minds 'and;' leasts. The power* of-the en'enjy hasj. Jm'or-t reached the limit of their eniurance. They have been beating id etreat, but the time has come to beat. l march and catch that new inspiraion which Napoleon's soldiets felt at he stirring music brought forth by he indomitable drummer boy who mew not how to beat a retreat. Every man who Is pessimistic, or vho permits the discoui-a.gemen.ts of lie hour to dominate him, is beating a etreat. He is not only beating a rereat for his own business, but he is . >eatinj a retreat for all with whom le comes in touch. The time has :ome to beat a.charge, tp sound the :harge, to qviicken the life blood' o-f he nation , once more, and out of the i-pparent'^defeat of-., the last twelve nonths rally'for a, new charge a new :rea.tive period of wo'flc and energy, -'orgetting the things that; are. behind, ve must' press forward with 'greater mergy to overcome the difficulties M"h as a nation we have had to ace. ,1 Every man who draws within his >usiness shell, every man who cancels lis contracts or pessimistically refuses o do business because of fear of the uture, is beating a retreat* Every man who goes 'ahead, who ias the optimism of the drummer boy, Lnd a spirit which dares to do. things, s beating a march on, to victory. If throughout the entire nation there an be rekindled the drummer boy's ire, we shall soon have optimism and ninshine and prosperity, where today here is pessimism and doubt and dcipair. It was the drummer boy whose work nspired the great Na,poleon and his ^roop3. It must be the drummer boy )f the business world, the farmer and he small merchant, and the individual justness man, who beats the-march ind sounds the charge rather* than he great business leaders who have mlted so long. The ones wno nave suuereu must i )e the ones to dare and do the most. The men who would beat a march )n to victory, over the threatened dlsister which they have so Ion/? Caned iVill be the red-blooded men who know :hat the nation cannot stand still and vho are determined to lead the : ha rye. The pessimist is the shirker. ' The optimist is the burden-bearer. The pessimist is the man who beats ;he retreat. The optimist is the man who sounds he charge. WHICH ARE YOU? ? W. A.. Colcmnn has been e'eeted ^resident ot' the bank of Columbia, ice L. 1j. Hardin, resigned, and >d chairman of the beard of directors. ? - ? | i Put it on today Walk on it tomorrow Why bother with old, unsightly floors, ? n _ wnen a rew minutes brushing with Granitoid will make them smooth and beautiful CLOVER HDW. CO. CLOVER. S. C. j| ill ' Mrs. Crandall (Iowa) Tells How Sho Stopped Chicken Losses "Last spring. rats killed all our baby chick*. W ish 1\1 known al?iut Rat-Snan before. Willi just one largo package we killed swarms of rats. 1 hey won C got this year's hatches. I'll bet." Rat-Soap is guaranteed ami sells for 35c. 65c. SI.25. Sold and guaranteed by MACKORELL DRUG COMPANY j YORK HARDWARE COMPANY I ? Birmingham, Ala., April 17:'Wki'e no further reports of death have been received from the' "Alabama area..swept by Saturday's storm, property arid cron damages figures have mounted until the estimates are placed at many millions of dollars. Houses and barns were wrecked by the hundreds, and much freshly plowed land was washed flat by ovcrf'owed streams. Information received in Birmingham tonight fiom Waverly says the damage in that* vicinity will total a quarter of a million dollars. Twenty-five houses there were ocmoMshed and a large number persons were injured. Telegraph and telephone lines which were brown down arc being repaired and the debris in the various communities is being cleared. In Birmingham the street car anclf electric ccrjrje'es have been restored.' In some sections nf^the city street paving was washed away. A large number of local, telephones are s'lll out of commission, although lonS distance lines arc. again in operation. Numerous buildings were t wrecked or /inmorrori iir>r*> and trefcs and tele grnnh poles were." blown-over"-in all sections of the city. .i'Down- town streets were , not badly damaged. Committees of the House?South Carolina representative's have been appointed to mino:ity places in the committees of the house as follows: Fulmer, alcoholic . liquor traffic, election of president, vice president and representatives and Indian affairs. Byrnes, appropriations. Stevenson, banking and currency, printing. McSwain, census. enrolled b'lls, pensions and war claims. ' Logan, claims, elections No. 3, expenditures in the state department. Dominick, judiciary. Sto.l, military affairs. ? A puree of gold was recently preserved to landlord in Lynn, Massachusetts. bv his tenants who said ho had a heart of gold. Although owners all about him had increased their rents this landlord had not increased his prices in the last five years. | Received I | Big Close Out In Ladies' = ues up to $8.50?Pric 5 33 inch PA JAMA CHECK, Unb'.ca | SILK DRESSES GALOl = HICKORY SHIRTING?At | M?C0NNELL DRY I MAN, it is 1 & 5 THAT YOU SELEC ? SUIT?YOU WILL 5 ONE?DON'T PUT S Because the Suit that you y would just suit you?mig ? Moil's Mixture Suits i Men's All Wool Serge Su : v cv fabrics j "STYLE-PLUS"?GT I? In Slims, Stouts and Re I i - i - -a..-. h suaacs ior paLiiuuiui mux y $25.00, $30.0C ? MEN'S UNI - Union Suits, for summer comfortable, too?feel go< S 75 ct? ? Men's Dress* Shirts?You then?Buy it here | j Overalls?Good ones .... ! AND AST ? We have them?loads of styles?all prices?for i 1 comfortable shoes for tei v of.men, women and child A certainly please you in c 2 K IRK PAT RI < ^ Sells It For Less L O OT>- ? -rs QT>-O<"S 7 IIIII I NEW LOT OP CHOICE I\\ c J ill \ e a rm an- i.nu now?arrived a few days for a Mule or two come ai exchange and give you a MULES JAMES Bi OYSTERS Spanish Mackerel FRIDAY. AND SATURDAY OF THIS WEEK WE WILL HAVE CHOICE FRESH OYSTERS, FRESH FISHSPANISH MACKEREL. PHONE YOUR ORDERS. CASH ON DELIVERY. SANITARY MARKET LEWIS G. FERGUSON. Mflr. U-: . S AVE 1 '*?lx . : : I YOUR MONEY AND PATIENCE BY , . HAVING YOUR CAR WORK DONE AT THE Peoples Garage ? \ We Specialize on BUICK, HUDSON, STUDEBAKER AND ANDERSON CARS. You will find us at LIPE'S OLD STAND?across the street from the'. City Market. . . * * ' " T / Reasonable Charges^Prompt Service and Work Guaranteed. , B. J. DEVOS, Manager, )y Express I Fine Oxfords?Val- ? ed here at S3.98 Pr. ^ ? ched?At 121-2 CTS. Yd! 5 IE?At $12.50 Each | ....... 15 CTS. Yard S GOODS COMPANY j . ' I letting time ... | it that spring ?. certainly need { it off? | j. . may want?the.one' that f: lit be gone?Act Now. J : \ * T $3.95 to $12.50 X its?Plain and Pan i....-,... ^ ^ $14.95 t faranteed suits j gulars in most desirable .? i-* i 11 ? ? J ii. A i?JXigiiriv pnccu, too v ), $35.00 and $40.00 Each ? OEEWEAE 5 wear?the kind that fit? * od?arc good ?v 93 Cts., $1.48 the Suit j need one every how and ? 93 Cts. to $2.98' | f 75 Cts., $1.48 and $1.98 0 SHOES - . | them?all sizes and all ill kinds of feet?easy, ldcr feet?shoes for feet J ren?call on us?we will.- ? 5VCTV \Y?1V. * " CK-BELK CO. j , Sells It Por Less ? >o<9T>'0<,9r>0':rsi>oor>?^f>i MULES? icli of Whiles at our barns ago. If you have a neediul see us. Wo will sell or fair deal. ROTHERS H0RSES nmBaBMamaammmmBKmammKmmmmtmm j ' kS ' - h m a . ,