The Dillon herald. (Dillon, S.C.) 1894-????, December 08, 1921, Image 6
I"
PERSONAL MENTION
?.. :
l* H. A. Bethea of Latta was a busi|
ness visitor here Monday.
W M. D. Davis spent Monday in Flox-Bnce.
fr? Mrs. A. B. Welch visited relatives'
wt McColl Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. John Diebler spent
feunda'y in Bennettsville.
I Mrs. T. S. Iiichbourg is visiting
kelatives in Kingstree and Charleston.
08 Louise Manning of the Marion)
>ol faculty spent the week end
^.ih Mrs. D. M. Michaux.
Mrs. C. L. Wheeler spent a few
*s recently with relatives in Cliar>n.
sb Reba Nettles is in Mc's
Infirmary recovering from an
ation for appendicitis.
). W. Ramsey of Ha?nlet spent a
days last week in town with
larents.
he play "The Minister's Wife's
Bonnett" has been postponed on
'nt of sickness of the director.
Rebecca Pickens Chapter D.
meets Tuesday afternoon at
clock with Mrs. Lutie Bethea. .
* r ?
L. R. Craig returned home:
t after spending some time
a.
C. Allen is attending the
ist Convention at Greenreek.
irlon Easterling and Co-land
spent Sunday in
i relatives and friends.
Vdams and Miss Lacey
led the Eastern Star
tta Monday night. I
ies of St. Barnabas Episrch
will have for sale at
*rmacy delicious home made
es every Monday, WednesSaturday.
I
J]
/?
/
j 1 GREAT
1 I
1 MEN'S A!
^ t+j @ ra ra nsn raj r
j,l ? ui
^ IS S r*i ns
^ ffl B" ???
\ /? ? White homespun
U ? E for 10c, special p
&l aa ?
I m IS Chambray in all e
t ? [ ) ue, per yard
I HI ~ ^
i.ffl a 9c
a ?
a a S
|1- P
Dillon's Lar
Saaasissi????
I""
jtMra. J. A. Wilson, wife of tbe fornix
%stor of the Presbyterian church,
has been visiting Mrs. D. A. McCallum.
Mesdames John R. Watson and W.
V. Jones left Tuesday morning for
Batesburg, S. C., to attend the U. D.
C. Convention.
Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Salmon and
daughters. Misses Hattie Blanche
and Mae were in Dillon Sunday visiting
friends.
?o?
Dr. and Mrs. W. B. Smith and
daughter. Miss Marie, returned home
Monday after a trip to Florida and
Cuba.
?o?
T. L. Manning is in Columbia this
week attending important committee
meetings of the American Cotton
Growers' Association.
The Ann Fultnore Harlee Chapter.
U. D. C. will meet Saturday the 10th
by order of the president, instead of
Friday, at the home of Mrs. C. L.
Wheeler at 3.30 oclock.
The Dillon Improvement Club met
on Friday afternoon. The president,
Mrs. L. Cottiughum, presided An
interesting talk was given by Prof.!
W. H. McNairy on the needs of the
school. There was a good attendance
ui ieacners ano. trie meeting was
very interesting.
o
Announcement of Dillon County
Teachers' Association.
The monthly meeting of the Dillon
County Teacher's Association met
Saturday. December 3rd in the Dillon
Public School building. At 11:00
o'clock the teachers assembled lor
the departmental meetings. At these
meetings topics of vital interest to the
teachers of the different departments
were discussed. At 12 o'clock all the
departments assembled in the school
auditorium for a general meeting.
The meeting was callel to*order by
Miss Ruth Allen president of the Association.
The devotional excersiscs
were conducted by the Rev. W. B. S.
Chandler. A quartet by Misses Braddjt
Fass, Bethea and Oliver of the
Dillon High school was enjoyed by
all.
After the business meeting the Association
woo ?--- n??
"? ? ?uu? vooru uy jrror.
Durrett Dean of Coker College. Prof.
Durrett gave the teachers an inspiring
and helpful address, using as his
subject, "The Teacher."
I Mr. Moody County Superintendent
j of Education made Borne announcements
concerning Educational Week.
After the meeting had adjourned
the teachers went to he Palmetto
Cafe where arrangements had been
made for lunch to be served.
The next meeting of the Association
will be held on the third Saturday
in January.
SBSSSEBSSSSS
REDUC
SB BOYS CL0THISC-,
"ii mi mn r.xi rsp nr. rn mi mi rminn i
IIES AND GENTS' TURN
iramnsirsarsnrarsnrorxinsni
formerly sold Men's
er yard wear, sp
olors, 20c val- Ladies
value, n<
10RRIS I
P
gest and Best Stoi e
? a ? ? ? ia sn? is ? si
%
?? < yft ^oOTH CJlROI
??????? *
Dama^en School Building.
A fire that originated in l.he cloak i
room of the sixth grade did between i
$1500 and 12000 damage to the Dil- '
ion Public School building Sunday <
nfternoon. The origin of the fire is t
unknown, but the presumption is that .
it was caused by spontaneous com- !
bustion. The fire department respond- ;
ed promptly, but the fire was confin- i
ed to the space between the ceiling
innd roof and the firemen had difficul- '
ty in reaching it. There was no school i
Monday but school opened at the us-? I
ual hour Tuesday morning and will j
continue until the holidays when the
fire damage will be repaired.
There was a small fire at Jackson 1
Bros. Company's plant Thursday *2
I night, but it was discovered before
| the flames had gained much headway
and \erv little damage was J
Idoen.
There was also another sm ill fire
|at the Dillon Mills Saturday night
but the watchman discovered it and
the flames were extinguished before
they gained inuclt headway.
The Greenwich Village Follies, the
"tevusical" couiedy of life in New ?
Yorks Quartier Latin which for the t
past year has been the accepted Vogue
in New York and Chicago for 1
that fraction of the amusement seek- 1
ing public ever on the alert for en-,'
tertainment that fractures the bord- 1
era of convention and tradition, will '
flaunt tlie Playhouse Theatre,
Hennettsville, S. C. 1
The "Follies" is a staccato succession
of travesty, satirical mimicry,1
vivid stage pictures, droll comic episodes,
fantastic dances of the Orient,
uproar ing burlesque, flippant salvos
ot jazz, and daring fashion parades.
, The revue boasts a chorus of the
, twenty famous artist's models, a refreshingly
new type oT stage beauty,
'which has been substituted for the
, statuesque and that supplied by stolid
show girl of the ordinary musical
jcomedy. These artist's models were
! flinched front the studios, from the
shops of the smart modistes, and
; from the workshops of sculptor and
etcher. Theirs is a naive and distinct'
quality of beauty that has hitherto,
been unknown upon the stage.
. The "Follies" had its inception in !
tllffc nnoinl 11? ? : i- ,T!n
I .-v .1U?.1I| 1III1V Uict-Iiwicil > IllUgC
Theatre in New York. The theatre
lies in that section of New York
where the artistically ambitious?
verse libre poets, jugglers of cosmic
heories, exponents of divers fads and i
sundry "isms"?congregate to give I
voice and expression to their varied '
notions and emotions. But the revue
was not long for the village. The
cramped dimensions of the theatre
could not cope with the immediate
popularity of he revue, and soon the
"Follies" was moved to the larger
theatre in the very heart of Broadway's
famous circle. For seven
months it was the mecca to which
smart audiences made their pilgrimage.
There followed an all summer
isasssEESsES
TIQNS 7A
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my mm e
*1 nsn r^i nsi r^i 5
1SHINGS |
"5Ti nsi nsTi r? " ;?.
; i_
I ^
Fleeced Lined Under-^
ieciai at t
ffi
48c IS
IS
IS
Ribbed Vests, 75c. IS
aw BB
39c |
IS
IS
PASS DEI
f
IS IS IS IS IS IS ffi IS IS 13 IS
JXA, THURSDAY^ >IOR MISC., PE
engagement in Chtcigo. It will be
presented in this citjl as in New York
and Chicago with a cast of exceptional
entertainers, prominent among
whom, are the Hickoy Brothers comedians
and dancers. Ray Marr, Mayme
Gehrue, Judy Carson, Matt Heaiy,
Lester Carboy. Billy Bann with
iiis inimitable imitations of Pavlowa
and Farrar, "Japouette" who dances
i.i the Javanese scene, the McDnugal
Ally Svnoopators Kings of Jazz. Robert
Dilts, Victor Fay, Alice Humph-1
ries and the Bohemia Quart? tt< . al!
purveyors of fun for the multitude.
KII.I.INC AT (..\DHVs Ml I.Ii.
At a negro frolic Saturday night j
near Caddys Mill John Ib-thea, a j
r< ung negro man. was shot bv Jim i
Floyd, eolored. ami di? d Tin sday at a !
[.umherton hospital. Floyd u.-> d a gun j
and the shot was fired at close range >
Kloyd is in jail.
nil-: no<m si.ams on ii mmmm:ss.!
1'imr Wood Make* Dad lfcultli?Then
( omes (lie "Hliies."
Once the vigor of rod blood heroines
sapped of its strenptli, the door
to happiness is literally slammed.
Weariness of body follows and it unfailingly
engenders depressed
thoughts. To be reserved ami cheer
Uss becomes a habit. After a time
(lure is an almost filmy dimness in
the expression of the eves and a pallor
to the skin. Days seem dull and
dark and difficult. A sons.* of insuffoiable
gloom pervades the spirit.
Then it is that Glide's l'epto-Mangan
is the great lulp. it is a red
blood builder. It puts ted into the
blood- increases the number ol corpuscles
which make blood rich and
red. When lie- blood Is r- tor?d to its
natural healthy state, the sensation
..i neii ufinic i turn- Instead ??i
shuffling : Ion;r rarh ssly. tin r? is the
lirm and springy ' 1 . '1' bright 1nstovful
eyes, tin dear < omplexion.
itlotifIfi?*tl wit! <:str< ;i?th and \ i^??i
of good health. Tlu- druggist has
Glide's IVptn-Mnngan in both liquid
and tablet form. Adv.- 12 S It
SI'KCIAh XOTICL*! ? Owing to the
present conditions I will bo forced
to put my business on a cash basis.
I have sold very extensively on a
credit this year and lots of the
people failing to pay their bills
has made it very embarrassing to
me. It is a pleasure to do business
with people who pay their bills
promptly and I wish to thank niy(
customers for their kind and liberal
patronage and I solicit a continuance
of your patronage. If you
wish to pay your bills at the end
of each uionth I will be glad to
do business with you. otherwise
please do not think hard of me if
no further credit is extended, because
I cannot carry accounts indefinitely
as I have to pay for all
my goods In from ten to thirty
days time. Charlie Salceby. 11 17 tf
i ? si Hi ? in ? a ? s
av is"^.
/ L VER
| mi
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N
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Men's Genuine Blue Ch
Shirts, special
48c
Men's $2.50 and $3.00
now
$1.48
pIrtmen
r
CE* VK 8, 1021. \
? ? I I
P AYHODSE Bennettsvih
Tbe Original Greenwich Village I
AUGMii NTF.O COMPANY YMP:FA
MOTS ,\11TI> I s MOl?KI/
Customed in the latest creation of th- m
Chiffon, a hit ?>f hu e and miles and mil*. o
l'riees T.. to $?.r?o. Seat sate at (Ynslan
I'hone 2f t
! " 1
| The CAP
Department 5
I Tl-.e Ln St ,-c 126 HAY ST.
FAYETTEV1LLE.
i December Apparel ai
Sale on Ready-to-^s
ment and Shoe departm<
Friday morning, c. (
and will continue for ei
It is not nec.ssary f(
details as to prices,
knows what The Capif
when they advertise 01
The Capitol De
I FAYETTEV1I.LE,
3SSBiEaS!Slffiii6SSSI9B
W\? rrssi
DP PA R T1
JL.* Jt A M. >?? < 2. -fA
iES COATS AND ITS
;xi rxi nn rxi rxi rx rsn rx . rx
ILLINERY, SHOES
in nsn rsn nsi nsi rti 1 -1 r^n
ambray Men's 82.50 Dre*
fine quality, specie
98c
D 250 Paii- Womens
iantSl Black H. C. shoes
up-to-date styles
$2.48
T STORE
|
Dillon, South (
s s si ? Si a si ? ? ? is ? si s
?
\ MOW., DEC.;
Co. and Production
^E-VtSBD fc /
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PL Vvv \VjEMvJRIiAyJ
y fc=u.
IONY ORCHESTRA
"i,
odist?*'s art. A wi?p of
1 ribbon in rainbow lnifp.
i?l Hi Tywui's Office,
1TOL I
Store
Always Reliable ft
NT C. I
nd Shoe Sale |
Vear depart- ft
ent; will start
9tk, 9 A. M., |
gKt days only.
>r us to go into 1
as everybody |
"ol sales means
pt. Store I
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;7v IS
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>s Shirts of <:j 2
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Brown and 5)
new and S ?
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