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GARNERED WITH SCISSORS News From Within and Without the County. CONDENSED FOR QUICK READING I # 80me Items of Fact, 80ms of Comment and All Helping to Give an Idea of What Our Neighbor* Are 8aying and Doing. Cheater Reporter, September 26: Another smash-up is reported as having occurred at South Fork bridge late yesterday afternoon. Two soldiers on a motorcycle ran into an automobile that was stopped at the bridge, when not knowing the lay of the land and the dangerous character of the place they plunged into the car at high speed. Both vehicles are said to have been considerably damaged, but no one was hurt. Another accident is said to have ocourred at the Mobley's creek bridge ? p?rrv road, caused by UU IIIU * V..rf , two cars colliding At a meeting of the directors of the Chester Sunday School Baseball league this morning, the report of S. E. Wylie, who audited the books and records of the association, was received and adopted. The total receipts of the association for the season were $1,717.39. Bills pajd and audited, $309.73; cash items paid. $18.71 ; cash in bank, and disbursed among the four Sunday schools, $1,388.94. The receipts from the posts'-ason series, amounting to $137.74, were turned over to the High School Athletic association, and Superintendent Brockinan was given a check for this amount this morning. Mr. J. B. Bank head was the efficient secretary and treasurer, and Mr. Wylic'j audit showed all records to have been accurately and carefully kept Superintendent M. E. Brockman, Captain James Brlce and Mr. Beemcr Harrell /*vnnnt ivo anenaea a. mcrmiK mc committee of the South Carolina High School Athletic league in Columbia on Saturday ,the object of the meeting being to arrange a football schedule for the various high school football teams of the state. Owing to the fact that many of the teams had already made their schedules, this committee found it difficult to proceed, and teaens like Chester, whi^h had not made a schedule, found it difficult to arrange one. Chester's schedule, as far as arranged, which is subject to change, is about as follows: Friday, October 7th, Clinton at Clinton; Friday, October 13th, Fort Mill, here; Friday, October 21st, York here; Friday, October 28th, Lancaster or Kershaw; Friday, November 4. Rock Hill, here. Friday, November llth, Winthrop Training school at Rock Hill; Friday, November 18th. Kershaw or Lancaster; Thanksgiving Day, Abbeville, here. Effort is being made to arrange a game with Union on the Chester grounds mr Friday anernoon of this week Mrs. W. S. Brown, who has been ill for two weeks at the home of her daughter, Mrs. J. H. Barber, is improving slowly Dr. C. M. Rakestraw has called our attention to the following from the Savannah Morning News, and if any are induced to try this method of fighting the boll weevil, and are able to raise cotton successfully, and incidentally increase the egg output, we'll accord the entire credit to the genial "doc." J. Hammond Eve, superintendent of the Southern Cotton Oil company, vouches; for this story because he knows the! man who told it to him to be thoroughly reliable and trustworthy: A farmer near Forsythe, Ua., has Uiscov- ' ered a new, novel and copper .rivited, if not copyright, method of beating the boll weevil at his own game. The method is the simplest imaginable. The farmer experimented with a tract of twenty acres on which he had planted cotton. Before the plants reached the j age at which they were susceptible to j the weevil's onslaught he turned his1 chickens loose in the field. It happened that he had a great many chickens, so he scattered, them about 50 or so to the acre. To get tliem accustomed to the range he did a little preliminary feeding. When the boll weevil showed ut> the chickens were on the job. As fast as the bugs would appear the chickens would gobble them up. The chickens did absolutely no damage to the cotton.! Neither did the holl weevils. The chickens didn't give them a chance.' The farmer raised more than a hale to the acre. And his chickens thrived. He i w uhl like for other farmers to konw I of his successful experiment, lie unhesitatingly declares that his nnth> has all other weevil-destroyers backed off the boards. Lancaster News, Sept. 27: The body I of Stafford Graham, lirst Lancaster J boy to fall in battle in the World war, rests in Westside cemetery beneath a mound literally weighted down with: beautiful floral designs. Funeral services over the dead hero were held on Sunday afternoon at 5 o'clock in the First Methodist church, conducted by! Rev. E. it. Mason, under the auspices! of the American Legion, the local post of which is named for the deceased. .. A big item of news along construction lines comes from Great Falls, in that the Republic cotton mills, K. S. Mcbanc, president, will erect, starting at once, fifteen or more modern store! buildings on Main street of that place, i The dwellings now on that street will be torn down and erected elsewhere. The new stores will be thoroughly up to date, brick and concrete, plate glass j fronts, illuminated with electricity and , equipped with waterworks and sewer- 1 ape. The construction of these stores and the removal of the dwellings to. other streets at Great Falls involves an expenditure of considerable money, which will help stimulate business.! throughout the entire county. Quay; I). Hood sustained painful injuries Fri day night about four miles out the! Charlotte road, when a truck which hoi was driving turned over. The truck was loaded with cattle which became unruly and the track took the ditch. No bones were broken, but Mr. Hood was confined to his home for a day or two Residents of the southern and western part of the city underwent a mad. dog scare early this morning when a stray dog of the "pointer" family entered the city and began to roam around, sending citizens over fences and into their houses. Officers and residents chased the animal several blocks when it was finally killed on one of the streets in West End Mrs. Ella Harris, actress, who was a resident of Lancaster for some time, was badly injured Friday at York, Pa., when she fell 50 feet while doing a "butterfly" feat from a trapeze at a county fair. The apparatus held between the woman's teeth, broke, causing her to fall. She suffered a fractured collarbone, an injury to the spine and internal hurts. Mrs. Harris was here about two years ago with a vaudeville troup which gave a week's performance at the opera house. Cleveland Star (Shelby), Sept. 27: Sheriff Logan ruptured a still Sunday afternoon near Mr. Clint Owens at the old Devenney Parker place, six miles above Shelby. This is one of the best communities in the county and it was quite a surprise to find a still in operation there. The still was made of two galvanized tubs turned together with a bucket fof a cap. It had been in operation Saturday night # The Shelby high school football team won its first victory of the season or. Friday afternoon over the CJacney high school team. The score being 12 to 7. Under Coach Gurley the Shelby boys arc showing up fine and indications arc that they will have a very successful season. Both teams played a great defensive game with Shelby taking advantage of the breaks Miss Winifred Beck with, a member of the Shelby school faculty, has arrived from a trip to Egypt, the Holy Land. Italy, France and England, but is ill with influenza at her home at Rosemary, N. C., and will be delayed on entering upon her duties here. She arrived at a Canadian port several days ago and was immediately taken sick with influenza A new four-room school building is being erected at the Eastside Mill. It is nearly completed and will soon be opened. The boundary of the district has not been settled. It is understood that there are about 100 children ^of school age in the proposed district and that three teachers will be necessary. CHRISTIANIZING CHURCHES Too Much Denominationalism Says Dr. Fullerton. One of (he greatest difficulties confronting the church lies in Uie fart that there are 175 varieties of churches in America, Dr. ilaxtcr I'. Fullerton. of St. Louis, told the World's Alliance of Presbyterian and Reformed churches at Pittsburgh, Pa., recentl/. Dr. Fuller is secretary of the Presbyterian Hoard of lloine Missions and was telling of the difficulties of home mission work in the United States. Denominationalism, he said, was one i of the greatest most serious of these. Each of the 175 kinds of churches was endeavoring to promote its own work both in the city and the country, among native and immigrant alike and, consequently, there was not only over-lapping hut also% overlooking since there had been no cooperation in the location and development of these various local churches. Continuing he said that the greatest problems before the agencies of the Christian church is to "Christianize the church itself." He declared that there are communities in America where four or five different denominations are at work, each church receiving home mission aid, when one or two churches could be both self sustaining and self respecting. Vft'.x.do W...1 rMoJo bo oo i/1 ii.mi i>ww? uinuv, ill" n?iiu, iw change this "shameful situation" but up to the present it existed "to the embarrassment of the work and a scorn of the ungodly." An attempt had been made t<? unite denominations having similar doctrine and government into one large unit and in this way unite the local churches into one for better service for the community, but Hr. Fullerton said that extreme denominalionallsin prevents any very large application of this principle and strong peoples remain apart because of some nnimpoi tant or Mibsi iiary <iucstion on which the salvation of no sou! or i oinmi.nit\ depemis. "It is apparent. tin refore," he went on "that tliis larger union will never lie aceomplished until the kingdom of Clod bulks larger in the minds of people than the church, until the salvation and service of mankind becomes a greater concern than the establishment of a specific church." MARRIED SEVEN SISTERS Iowa Man Wedded Them According to j ?Age. A dispatch from Atlantic. Iowa, to the New York World says: l-'red Harris, Itit, lias just married j Ills seventh wife. All his wives weir | daughters (if I'eter Yost, \v 11?? lived in, Milwaukee ami sailed a freighter ?' the 'In >t I? ; kes in Hie sixties. Harris la-Ran l?y marrying the oldest riaughtei <>| Y??at and lias gone right down the line. The last live were widows. Mrs. (lustave Ridel- ' tiia.n 11 is the last bride and slitis now seventy-eight years old. She has been married twiee la-lore. Harris, who was a hack driver and later driver of a. horse ear in Chicago. 1 after the great tire, recently bought a small fruit farm here on which to pass his remaining veers. A Frame-up.?"I'm sorry to have to do tliis." said little Johnny, as he > spread the jam on the hnbys lace, j "Inn I can't have .suspicion pointing its finger at me."?Everybody's Magazine. a GERMAN RAILROADS RESTORED A Miracle of Rehabilitation Performed by General Groener. Germany s rauroaos arc iii'iiig r.ipidly restored. This fact is even more important for agriculture than for industry. The disastrous collapse of the I crops of 1920 \v;is due mainly to a lack of cars and locomotives, which prevented thousands of tons of nitrates, phosphates and potash from being moved to the fields. The rapid restoration of railroads is the German Republic's greatest achievement so far. It is the achievement of a single man. and he a poldier, the General Groener who was chief of field railroads during the war. j and first chief of staff after the mili- ; tary collapse. Groener has remained in office throughout all cabinet vicissitudes. The obstacles which he faced seemed insuperable. The permanent way and rolling stock were worn oyit; 000 of the best locomotives and 150,000 i of the lust ears had been surrendered i under the armistice; the roads were operating at a loss, which last year reached 18 billion maiks; the emfloyecs were unskilled, idle and mutinous; efficiency in the state construction and repair shops had fallen off 47 per cent of pre-war level. In August, 1917 only 17 per cent of the pre-war number of trains were being run, and these at half pre-war speed The passenger cars were dirty, un- j heated lettered and tattered; and hardly a car had all its windows whole. OlUes froze and mills stopped work for lack of fuel at a time when, through car shortage, millions of tons of coal were accumulating at the pits' mouths Op'imists declared that the railroads would not be in tolerable conditions for at least t'-n years; pessimists hold that without miracles one of which must lie the hanging of half the demoralized employes, tluy would never he restored at all. Greener has restored them. I?y January, 1920, lie was running 23 jier cent of the trains of 1914; in May. I <A.k< 1 ....... ? ? ? CO ?> mam! I,-, l?-i, lit- wits i nuniv] i'li ,iiii>. in eighteen months the average speed of trains was increased by 15 kilometers an hour. Today the trains arc clean, sufficiently heated and punctual; and 'industry is well supplied. The methods of Greener who is nominally a Democrat, differ little from the methods of Grocner when he was a junker officer of Ludendorff's staff. Germany's military collapse has cleared the ground for the electrification of her whole railroad system an ambition proved to be impracticable in her days of military power. The technical and commercial advantages of electrification were proved eight teen years ago when a test stretch between Dessau, in Anhnlt, the Bitterfeld, to the south was electrified with success. But general electrification was vetoed by the general staff on the ground that a single enemy bomb or the act of a single rpy might interrupt transport on a long stretch of road. That obstacle has vanished with all the other obstacles to efficiency raised by pretensions to military and naval greatness. The preliminary work of electrification is being done with full speed. Through electrification Germany will, even if she uses coal exclusively for power, save half her present railroad coal consumption, j which is IS per cent of her whole coal I output; and she will gain the use of , the cars annually engaged in transI porting this great part of her coal.? I j Saturday Keening Post. TO GET SON S INSURANCE. Polish Peasant Woman Falls Heir to Riches. An old peasant woman was made the i richest woman in her village by a lot- ! tor from tlie War iu.su insurance mi- ; I reau of the American government. j The incident is told l?.v a member of , the Friends' Relief Mission in Roland ] ! who writi s: "We were just driving into the town ' of Hruhieszow in the war-ravaged district of Roland wlien a peasant woI man. clad in rags, and barivfootcd, I ; came up to the wagon and presented i a letter which she could not read. It , j i proved to he from the War Risk Insurance bureau at Washington, stat-: ing that her sen had died in the American army and that his insurance would coino to her at the late of $""> a month lor twenty years. \treadv , tle-rc war- staiO waiting for Ik r. which would he .-"lit shortly bv check. 4The woman's face shadowed as : lie heard of her son's death, hut it bright! encd with amazement when she heard of the money. The soil had not heeii heard front for three years and his death had hoon taken for granted. She had other children and they had all hern living in a dugout, with no wood for building a house and no imph rmonls to farm with and only a diet of ' rye and potatoes. ' "The .$!IU<> in American money makes , at the present rate of exchange, over 1 1 ..".oo.tHtit Polish marks and would 'make her the richest woman in the 'village and probably in the country. "I consulted the post master for her ;iml he said that when she in;nle j ( mark 111><>n the rhcck the local ban* | . would pay her the money. Only, of! course, no local hank wotdd he aide In 'cash so large a check without first' Retting the timncv from Warsaw. , "'This is a lair sample of the differ- | . ence in exchange between America}, and Poland." ( , * * * ! I ALASKAN GLACIERS Speed Being Studied by University Student. j t The speed of Alaskan glaciers is he- t ing studied by I'rof. William S Coop- i er of ihe University of Minnesota, lie ( is making- a special examination of c t Muir Glacier at Glacier Hay. Miiir Glacier lias receded sixty miles in the last 17 years. When Vancouver visited the glacier in 1791 lie found the ice extended to the mouth of Glacier Bay. Giter John Muir left his scientific observation of the glacier, and five years ago Prof. Cooper maracd 0111 areas tJicre for study. He plans further observations at Ave-year intcivnls. Fortified with these records, Prof. Cooper hopes to determine the time that has elapsed since many parts pf | the earth now free were covered with ice. I CORNCOB COMING BACK Scientists are Discovering New Uses For It. Deep in the limbo of agricultural products of Iowa, corn king state, rests the lowly corn-cob, says an Ames, Iowa, dispatch. It's useful?yes, chiefly because corn grows on it, and incidentally because, it makes good kindling. Then too, Missouri gained fame by making what the hogs left into the justly rennu-nnd Palt.Minn Iivnuvu 1 :iit scientists of the Iowa State ngricultuml engineering department ;it the agricultural college iiero arc discovering new values of the tahglihly commercial nature in the lowly corncob. They have not yet formulated processes for commercial utilization of the products, but work is continuing very satisfactory, they declared. Here's what the corncob will produce under the eorreet treatment: Pitch, acid tar, charcoal, wood .llcohol, formic acid, pure acetic acid, crude pyroligenous acic: jxiper pulp for making a strawboard substitute. [ furfural. And the gcatcst of these is furfural. Furfural is a rare chemical, with a market value of $10 a pound now. "I! f the millions of pounds of furfural potentially available in corncobs ' were j produced the price would be broken, j and the chemical cog hi be put to a hundred uses in essential industries," declared O. II. Sweeney, head of the engineering department. Even the famous ".Missouri meerchaum," product may he supplemented by a byproduct of the disintegration of col>s, for one of the derivatives of corncobs is an amberlike sub- i stance which may be used for pipe j stems. The nation produces about t'O.nno.- . 00ft tons of corncobs annually, it is j estimated, and the state of Iowa is j credited with about 3,000.000 tons of this amount. The experiments may ! even lead the use of cobs as a source of sugar, in both animal and human 1 food, scientists said, although this angle of experiments has not yet l?een developed enough for conclusive resuits. PURCHASE 700 REINDEER Hudson B,iy Company to Start Herd in Baffin Land. A representative of the Hudson Hay company recently paid a visit to Kinmark on behalf of the Canadian government and bought a herd of 70rt reindeer which are to bo shipped to Baffin Land, says a Christina, Norway | dispatch. A number of Laplanders were also engaged to take care of the animals, which will be dispatched in S< ptcmher. A plan for converting the Arctic and South Acetic regions of Canada into st giTsit wool, milk and meat pro- , ducing area was presented to tiir Canadian governin<nt by Villijalmcr Stofansson. the Norwegian explorer of the Canadian Arctic, more than tivn veais ago. His project involved the introduc- j tion into the Canadian north of larg" herds of reindeer and also the domestication and development of great herds of musk ox. lie ertimrled that then-j were from l.ftftiMiOft to J.Oft",100 si|ua;*e miles of land available for gross-1 ing in :i climate to servo for cattle, but where reindeer and musk ox ? xLt all the >? ar round. In proof of his argiuiv-nt he cited the introduction by the American government of reindeer herds into Alaska. The explorer deelaivd that the growth of those animals in the far north would help to solve lie food shortage Mien existing. The Canadian government ap|>ointe.l a eoiiuuitli e to investigate bis plaint P was ropie enled that there is ii abundant growth ol vegetation in the Aretie regions of C.aiail.i in the SUIIIIII-. r and that the r. i>k ox and rcindror could ginze on it tiimughoip the entire year. Why Newspapers Fail. Kor tlm following editoiial on the above topic we are indebted to the Aiken Journal ami Review: i Tin* lenson I In* nowspupei tfrnvey.-ird is so full is shown by ni: editor who lies boon in\( sii;c;itin^' tlio onnso of ih< hi:h iiMolo.lily. lie (inures out ih.it in r.M'7 w.i'.'os were ;il It'll. In 1011 t1 . y linil udvanced to IT"*, ntui in ltd. !'; fiivui's were Newsprint from I1 jumped to IT in 1011, nnd to J:; in, I tlft". Newspaper poSt;iK<* W.'is I ' i ii It'll, ind :::17 in l!ii'l. Ink. which -i I lie norin.'tl of I on in !!'"7. -'"I in It'll, .ml lo(l:iy slitnd.s nt 3M. "Kditorinl expenses .idvnneei! from Inn in itniT to l.'n in It'll. nnd -II in It'Jl. Mi:c( ilnneons expenses went rotu Inn in |;iu7 to l.*> in It'll, nnd i(( .'II in I! !' 1. i;> taking1 the averag' if nil newspMp? r costs, it w:o. foiled hut while the :?\ i r.i'4>' or index niiiit ?er of 11MI7 was Inn in It'll il w is l.'.'.i. itnl ii: It'i'l. it I'enehed Hie high til. t if 411. "Mure tSi;i 11 I.Otei nowspn|n-r pnu*; 'Minns Ivtve thus yone out nt' e.\i>i !iue in the i'niteil Strifes .ill'! :i i espomliny nniuher <>l' tlinn in In."?O \in.t?el?urp Times md Domornt i SCARE FOR CROCER Can Holding Dead Man's Ashes Looked Like Bomb. Stolen Island had its bomb scare today, says the New York Sun. .\nd while the wire covered "eaiy containing what was supposed to ho an explosive failed to qualify as a bomb. ; it did turn out to he almost as interest in k. though considerably less dangerous. The "can" was a receptacle whose shape and size is prescribed by law and the gray powder within wore the r< mains of ;i man who na?i imcn cremated seven years a.70. "The "l.omb" was left ia the ttollr. ten grocery store on Cnstleton ave- ; nue. West New Brighton. early this j morning l?y a young Italian who rushed in without hat or coat, made a few purchases, and then asked permission to 'leave it for a couple of minutes." The young Italian was the first ' customer John W. OTfarn. manager) of the store, had this morning. The police are now lot.king for him, wondering where he got the ash s of John ! Aetle, whieh were inside of tlii | square tin he left on the counter and never came back for. Aollc, a< cording to mortuary records, verified by an inscription on tiie inside of the receptacle died and v.as cremated in April of 1914. O'llara legan to regard the tin left on his counter with suspicion when Ids store was empty for the first time and he had a chance to look around. The can, covered by a wire inevh. j looked dangerous to him. The gray powder inside look. .! more so. When lie remembered that an Italian !i::o \ left it he made a beeline for the < K - , phone and brought *a policeman and : detective from tin lUmatt of Combustibles op to loo!; at it. They ton ml the inscription inside of Uic tin and pot the information they n e-h d fro: i ,.n ttndertaker. Going Up.?An Knci!' lnn."i went to a baseball panie. and holii sides made one run each durinp the first innln-;. The Knplishmn.n watched the semelion til intently, as each Leant fails 1 to is the a run innirrr i*l"tinnii:p. The panic had pone sixteen inninps and the lipure one and the zeros followinp had left their impression on the mind of the Knpiishman. '"toinp down tiestreet after, the panic, a small toy PRESCF WORK WITH US \\ (' iliv plt'liscil ]<> .'III! lion Department is now i Dr. A. A Registered Rlinrnmeisl rience. Ymi are assured ACCURACY . CARE PROMPT# AND I IK YOU XKKI) THE i and wo will get iiii MACKORELL D. SEMI TIIK Ci fMaara?MinnBmrB?Mar4rjjMirrjiKj:^mraaBraKu^ so mamma ? ? ? WMMMWMMMi . ? ^ j f;. ' i AMIM j "The Bank With the C OaUlNUBBEtMiaMUMir .U. in .'JI/ftA'lk MVLiiAt (-ipi-ril him and asked what the score | wan. "tMi." said tlu' Knsrlishman. "I Inst all track of the panic; it's way up; in the millions."?The .Nrponnut, S.iti Francism. Ho Might Have Known It. - "On my J last voyage," a. youivfT sailor remarked, | "I . aw wa rs forty foil hi^h." "(let out:" cried an old sailor. "I ] was at son for til'ly years, and I never | saw thorn that hif*!i." "Well." the yonn'T sailor retorted, i "l.hinys or. higher now than they nso.j ; In I.p."? I adit < Mor.ie Journal. Fountain Pens? ! IX THESE MODKKX DAYS everyj man. wonnn and school girl and boy| carries a Fountain Pen or ought to do] so. And the BEST Fountain Pens arc i the cheapt t, because the most satfsfaetnry. Wq sell the BEST pens to be had anjjwh* re? THE CONKLIN ancl WATERMAN IDEAL Bern selling them for years and they give satisfaction to the people who use and know fountain pons. We are showing a splendid assortment of these good pens?suppose you give one to your son or daughter who is now going to school?it is a great gift? Priced $2.50 to $5.00 YORK ORIIf, STORE WE WANT TO BUY All the good VEAL CALVES THAT YOU HAVE FOJi SALE. SANITARY MARKET LEWIS G. FERGUSON, Mgr. f OPTION IS A SPECIALTY mmicr thai mir Prcscripii charge of F. DOTY I nl* fourteen rears' expe(),? ESS I REASONABLE PBICES. tOCTOi;, Phone Xo. 31, n for you (|iiick. RUG COMPANY :>uirr iiorsic. n^-.-xunr ?B?n?l ummnmmmmmmmmammmmmmmmm *|f 1 have pi ^Slll I ^ k> *2 coi J I?' v Pe] ..V $ pr( jy i i jj||... | ^ ?av {limes Clock." - H3V ^ JOtlBM *. ?!! ! If?BfiW iHJMaii*' .A . /.wmim?B wnwiwuiMW-miLt I. tr VS*?--JP * ? fjru-wrwwui IM?IJ1!??w School Bells Are Ringing And As Usual Our Drug Store V/ill Be Headquarters for SCHOOL POOKS, TABLETS, PENCILS, SLATES, INKS, t ERASERS. CRAYONS, CHALK, NOTE BOOKS? And in fact everything needed in ?1 , ? C!/iKaaI Rnnm Pnmo <-.irlv Remember?School Books are Sold STRICTLY FOR CASH. Please do not ask us to credit you for School Book3. CLOVER DRUG STORE R. L. WYLIE, PROP. Clover, S. C. All kinds of Typewriter* Riboons at The Enquirer Office. "WE PAY YOU .? TO SAVE"- % VI. "There Is a Feeling "OF COMFORT in the knowledgo that no matter what the future has In store for you or your family, you are assured against want by a Bank Account. You can enjoy this feeling by starting a Bank Account with us and adding small amounts to ?it at your convenience." BM OF HICKORY QvE HICKORY GROVE. S. C. SLOW DEATH Aches, pains, nervousness, difficulty in urinating, often mean serious disorders. The world's standard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles? CCOMEDAL bring quick relief and often ward off deadly diseases. Known as the national ----- ' -V. OAA remedy ol Holland lor more ?o?u 1 years. All druggists, in three sires. Look for the some Cold Modal on erery box ftnd accept no imitation REPLACEMENTVOUR CLOTHING, your household ; furniture, your automobile, etc., will | sometime need replacing. Vou have i perhaps already experienced a time when ti.o many of these things rcquirI ed replacing or repairing at oncc. i When such, things demand attention, in N | addition to regular living expenses, the question arises, "Where Is the money < coming from?" I To prepare for such occasions a good ; plan is to deposit a certain portion of your income in a SAVINGS ACCOUNT I : fore making any expenditures. Your .unds then will be earning interest while waiting tor use. FIRST NATIONAL BANX OF SHARON, S. C. # Where the Farmer Is Welcome. J. H. SAYE, J. S. HARTNESS, President. Cashier Rub-My-Tisni is a great pain killer. Relieves pain and soreness, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sprains, &c. ? nlressive ice is our object to make is l?:mk a convenient nee of reliable ofiii'ii inn Mini r<rtlll1SPl ;<ll linniiftiil i ?1 )lcn is. ./ iy present. sire our patrons and to feel at liberty to lemselves at all times facilities which we [ ovidecl. i 5 assure you of iponsible isideratioii and q, rsonal interest in any )blems which you Gnatt Sc miga Srntb III YORK, ?. C. HI 5RE, President IRICE, Vice Pres. :GUSON, Cashier McCORKLE, Asst. Cashier