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Palmetto Theatre TODAY'S PROGRAM Empire Musical Comedy Co. Presents "The Imposters'11 IVlovlcs for Today "THE DISILLUSIONMENT OF JANE" -A Broncho Two Reel Comedy. "OH DADDY!"-A Beauty Drama. "Your Money Back If You Want It" is our motto. We close at 6:15 and re-open at 7:30 P. M. Bijou Theatre Unlike Other Girl?"-Rex. A two part drama with Pauline Bush and Wm. Clifford. A story of a girl versus a corporation. Shaved in Mexico"-L-Ko. A giddy riot of fun with Hank Mann. "How Mary Fixed It"-Imp. Presenting Mary Pickford. . AU Contest Tickets Will Bo Honored At Box Office. 4 BIG REELS-5c and 10c Good Music -j? Universal Service Suburban Market New, Clean, Sanitary, Pleasing Fresh Meats and Fish Country Produce of the very best grades only. Pish dressed, and cleaned perfectly without additional expense. Free and Quick Delivery Anywhere. S. C. HAYN IB and R. B. TUCKER. Props. 457 W. Market Ph^ne 887. Barrnig thc unforscen, each retail buyer of a new Ford car, between August 1914 and August 1915, will receive from $4o to $60 as a share of the Ford Motor Company's profits. (j Anyone can drive a Ford-it!s so simple in con- . I struction. No complex mechanism to learn. In town or country, for business or pleasure, Ford cars serve everybody, for about two cents a mile to operate and maintain. j ! Runabout $440; Touring Car $490; Town Car $690; Coupelet $750; Sedan $976. f. o. b. Detroit with all ?qulnnent. On display sale at M TODD AUTO SHOP I $7,500 Is R Eve of Bi TO BE CARRIED ON THIS WEEK TO LIFT ST. JOHN'5 CHURCH DEBTS TO RAISE $35,000 BY NEXT SUNDAY Committees Will Begin Whirl wind Campaign This Morn ing. A total or $7..*,oo wa*, subscribed al Hi" Initial mooting last nicht of ibu :oiumlttccH which uro lo conduct this week, a whirlwind campaign for thc purpose of raising something like $:<.'..nini lo lifo thc Indebtedness or f?t. Johns M-'thoilist church. This meeting was r.?r thc purpose >r organization. Actual canvassing will begin this morning and win be carried ?ia vigorously throughout lin day. Tonight the committees will meei nt St. John's church again for tin- purpose or comparing notes. Meetings or the committees will be held each evening this week for the purpose of ascertaining how much money lias been raised each day. It is not generally known that there ls a debt of IH&.OOO on the beautiful Ht. John's Methodist church. Thc time lias com,-, when the congregation must lilt this debt oil Hie church, and they have planned to do lt in one week's time. Tho whirlwind campaign will be carried on by rive teams or commit' tees, as follows: ? - '.The Addisons." \v. M. Addi son, captain; A. M. Sharpe. I ?. E. Moseley, T. L. Cely. A. ?. Bceland. 2.- "Thc Hells"-T. Joe ?ell. cap tain; W. A. Power, V. C. Caudle. Ralph Templeton, Clifton Llgon. :>.- "The Dugans."- Ernest Dugan, captain; J. D. Hast. John Major. M. F. McGee, H. S. HiKon. I.-'The (Seiners."-G. H. C?elger. apUiri; S. L. Prince, G. ?. Greene, J. P. Noblett. W. M. Wallace. ."..-"Thc Marshalls." W. F. Mar ikaM, captain; O. H. Walton. W. L. Brlssey. J.K. Mosley. C. C. Gribble. The directing staff it-: composed ot J. n. Humbert, colonel, J. W. Speake. l). M. Hoard, Earnest Dugan and 0. Il, Heitrer. To show dally results, the commit tees have devised a large chart. SxlO feet, representing a stone wall stand ?or li front of th? church so hig?i that only the steeple shows above. Tho church debt lr, represented hy i'.r>(> sqitaros or blocks of stone in thi* wall. The ohjeet ls to tear down this wall Hy raising money. As soon ns n cortaln amount ls rained one or these blocko will be taken down. It lo thc nim of the committees to re move all blocks by next Sunday, this raising the wall that stands In Trout if the church and thereby lift the debt on tho edifice. ERSKINE COLLEGE rite contests for the Mower nn?l Kilpatrick medals look plac? on Fri day and Saturday evening, respective ly, of last week. Nine young men contested for tho Mower and five for the Klrpatrlck. Tho inculty aced as Judges. The literary societies held thriV lnnt meetings of tho yea-' on last Friday afternoon. All business was tended to and closed. At a recent mooting of the student body the following officers wove elect ed for tho next school year: President ntudont body. W. W. Wolff; pr?sident athletic association. D. It. Kennedy; manager baseball. T. Ti. Miller; as sistant manager baseball, ?. H. Mc Donald; president tennis club. R. S. Galloway. Jr. All recitations v/lll be closed on Tuesday an ' examinations begun tho following day. The Seniors began last week nnd will close a week earlier than the other classes. Mr. A. M. Simpson was a visitor on tho campus for r few days last week. Glass of Salts If Your Kidneys Hurt Eat Lesa Meat If Y* u Fcc! Back achy or Have Bladder Trouble. Meat for.ns uric acid dwhich ex oltles and overworks tho kidneys in their efforts to filter U from the '.?yatem. Regular eaters of meat must flush the kidneys occasionally. You must relieve them like you relieve vonr bowels; romoving a? tho acids, waste and poison, else you feel a dull mlsecy tn the kidney region, sharp pains in the back or sick headache, d'sxlness. your stomach sours, ton gao ts coated and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine ls cloudy, full of sedi ments; the channels often get Irri tated, obliging you.to get up two or three times during the night. To neutralise those irritating acids and flush off the body's urlnous wost*? get about four ounces of Jad Salt* from any pharmacy; take a table spoonful in a glass ot wa'cv before breakfast for a few d?7" and your kidneys will then act fine and bladder disorders disappear. This famous salts ls made from the acid of grapes sod lemon joice, combined wita llthta and baa been used for generations to clean and stimulate sluggish kidneys and stop bladder Irritation. Jad Snits ls inexpensive: harmless and makes a delightful effervescent llthla-water drink which millions of men and wo men take now and then, thus avoiding serious kidney and bladder disease. lised On g Campaign 4 WALTER HICKSON Resolutions on Hit? '/colli hi Town lille Illili SIIMM.I. Whcrcar, ii baa pleuscd Mic Supreme linier of Mic universe lo lake from UH Mr. j. Waller Dickson, chairman of iur board ol trustees, be ii resolved hy thc patrons, teachers and pupil. if the Townvllle IMKII school: Finn* : That we how in humble sub mission tn thc will ot our Father who (Ioctl! all things well. Second: That this go on record nu a token of our appreciation of bia loyal support of every phase of school work. Third: That wp express our pro found grief to the members of tho family of the deceased. I-our th: That a copy or these re solutions bc sent to tho family or the deceased, and that a copy be recorded in the minutes of thc hoar i of trus tees . Fifth: That a copy of these reso lutions also he sont to the Anil' rson dally papers. W. T. HI XT. L*. C. KAY, (.Miss) BUNA STEVENSON'. JOSEPH THRASHER, OTIS HOLT, (Miss) Nell Kellett, < 'ommlttcc. DEATHS j ?BMBRBKBSSSBBHsYHSnHRBBBi .Hr. Walter Simpson. Mr. Walter Simpson died at Iiis father's home in southwest Georgia last Friday. Ho was the son or MT. Sam Sim'.?son who until n tew years ago lived here. Mr. Z. c. Simpson, who lives north of Anderson. Is his brother. lin leaves n large laniily connection and a host ot friends herc In this county who will bo pained to learn ot Iiis death. Herbert Morgan. Hie two years old s'?n or Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Morgan, ot No. H. street. Progon Mill vil lage, died at the home Monday morn ing The funeral services will be held this afternoon at o'clock. CH EDDA li Mrs. Harris Kelly of Heizer ls sp"i)diiiK this week with relativ?.:; ip Cheddar. Dr. nnd Mrs. John Walker of Eas ley. and Mr. and Mn, \V. A. Howell of Williamston wore guests at thc home of Mr. J. J. Copeland Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Miles Ellison, Mr. Charley Johnson of Anderson, and Messrs. Mn v King and Lola ('ope land wcrp guests at thc home of Mr. W. T. Hruee Sunday. The Cheddar seimol will close on May 21st. A j icnlc will bo given on Saturday. Mav 22nd* on tile School and church grounds. HoglnninK .m. 10::t0 a. ir. tho school will give a short, mother's dav program alter wlrjtch addresses will be made by several prominent Speakern. In the nfternoon the school boys will have a game or baseball. binnet" will bo served (/ the ground and wo cor dially Invited thc public lo ho pre sent with well rilled dinner nasKCts. Ladies! Look Young, Darken Gray Hair Usc thc Old Time Sage Tea and Sulphur; and Nobody Will Know. Gray hair, however handsome, de notes advancing age. We all know thc advantages of a youthful appear ance. Your hair is your charm. ,lt makes or mars tho face. When it fades, tunis gray and looks dry. wispy and scraggly. Just a fow applications of Sage Toa and Sulphur enhance. Its appearance a hundred-fold. Don't stay gray! I*ook young! Either prepare the tonie at home or get from any drug store a 50 cent bot tle of "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound." Thousands of folks rec ommend this rendy-to-uso prepara tion, because it darkens thc hair beautifully and removes dandruff, stops scalp Itching and falling hair; besides, no one can possibly tell, ns lt darkens so naturally and evenly. You moisten a sponge or soft brush with It, drawing this through the hair taking one- ?mall s rand at a time. Ry morning the gray hair disappears; after another application or two, Its nr*.ural color Is restored and it be comes thick, glossy and lustrous, and you appear years younger. RIMED QUOTATIONS. Think not ambition wiso because tia grave. -Slr William Devenant The paths of glory lead but to tba grave: -Gray. What la ambition? Tia a glo rious cheat, -Willis. Only destructiva to tba bravo and great -Addison. What*s all tho gandy gtttor ot a crown? .-?Dryden. The way to btise Ilea not oa beds of down. -Francis Quarte*. TM Fire Sale Is Now on in Dead Hard Earnest Since Saturday morning wc have been . handing . out Perfectly Good Clothing, Hats, Shirts, Shoes, Haberdashery of all kinds at Remarkably Low Prices, and to a Steady Stream of Satisfied Cus tomers. HUNDREDS of Wide-awake men of Anderson and vicinity, who keep posted have been here and bought clothing, etc., for their pres ent needs, and some have anticipated their wants for months to come-at thc Tremendous Sacrifice Prices at which we arc Cleaning up this stock. Just a Sample We have just received a big shipment of Brand Uew Gray and Blue Serge Suits, which sell for FIFTEEN DOLLARS all over the Country. We are closing them out at d* g^u g\f\ only ...q>?U.UU We have a big stock of Palm Beaches, in a great variety of colors and styles, which we are selling at greatly reduced prices. Wc are also closing out our stock of New Spring Hamburger & Co. cloth es (none better made) at Fire Adjustment Sale prices. Everything in our stock is Going Out the Front Door By the Cut Price Route. Nothing is to be reserved. We. will re-open with a perfectly new stock of goods. If you have not been here, to take advantage of this great sale Come At Once! R. W. TRIBBLE "The Up To Date Clothier.' ^?ew York Gangster Makes a Confession. "Doney Benny." "Dopey Bonny" Fein, gang leader in iew York City, who several month? ince pleaded guilty lo a charge of xtortion, and was on thc way to tho cnltcntlary for a long term, has mado o the district attorney of the county confession which has resulted In thc ndlctment of thirty-four persons, Ight for murder.'- -Mont or those are abor leaders, who employed him and is gang to heat up employers in the net orv garment business or laborers tho would not obey them. Ho told a ale of oppression and murder about he east side of Now York that those ? ho don't live there found it hard to vedit. Ile made the confession after he alt Tortain his followers and alleged rlends would not go to bia aid and et him ont of his trouble. Ills record ls said to show more han 500 assaults growing out c? fill ia Hons between gangsters and thor union leaders. According to the statement Fein sade, he and his chief rival, Joseph iosenswelg, better known ne ".Too he Greaser." who ls Indicted for mur er in the f'rst degree, got big 1n omes by making a speciality of iron g arm work. Fein placed his ln ome at $12 a day for personal s?rv eos and a rake-off of from $8 to $5 a ay for each strong arm man he em >!oyod, for whom he says he charged be nnton leaders $8 a day. In pros perous times, he says, he made $10,000 . year. in a few Instances when bo had a ob ltke beating up a factory fore nan, a straight price for the job waa rom $50 to $500. GASOLINE When our front entrance becomes impass * able, come through the back way-down Whitner Street to C. & W. C. Railway there's a good road running beside Anderson Mill into our back yard-fine service ready both gasoline and oil-big yard to turn around in PETROLEUM OIL CO. FOR Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday Choice any Suit in the House $10.00 Values up to $30.00 - ?>. Gehberg