The news and herald. (Winnsboro, S.C.) 1901-1982, November 21, 1906, Image 5
PUBLISHED WEEKY jNNSO ; C WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 190, STBSIEI
J. L. MIMNAUGH & CO.
GREAT
Department Store
COLUMBIA, S. C.
Our Ladies' Tailored Suit Department
is one of the very IMPORTANT DEPART.1ENTS of our Mam
moth Store. We have spared no pains or expense in putting in a
complete Up-to.date Stock of Ladies' and Misses' Suits and Cloaks,
Handsome Tailored Skirts, Shirtwaists, Silk Petticoats, Handsome
Evening Gowns and Opera Wraps; also Rich Robes for balls and
evening wear and Tailored Skirts.
Our line of Raincoats is unsurpassed for style, quality and
special value.
We employ a corps of experienced tailoresses to make necessary
alterations in garments purchased of us and will guarantee a per
fect fit.
Our Carpet Department
is the largest in Columbia and second to none in the State. Our
line comprises the best makes of Brussels, Velvet and Tugrain Car
pets. Fibre, China and Japanese Matting, Lace and Portiere Cur
tains, Window Shades. All the different makes and sizes in Rugs.
A great showing of the best Oilcloths, Curtain Poles and Fixtures
in fact everything that is carried in an Up-to-date Carpet Store.
Window Shades made to special measurement at short notice. Send
in your orders and we will gladly give you estimates.
We show great values of the Best Goods in all other depart
ments, such as MILLINERY, DRESS GOODS, SHOES, LINEN
and WHITE GOODS, CLOTHING, HOSIERY, BLANKETS and
DOMESTICS.
A Great China, Glass and Crockery
ware Department.
We show in this Department a wonderful array of beautiful
Glassware, Crockeryware, Chinaware and Kitchenware, Lamps,
Pictures, Plated Silver Tableware, Table Cutlery, fine open stock
French China Dinner Sets, plain white or decorated. Hotel and
Boarding House Crockery in great variety. We show wonderful
values in this Department.
Mail Orders!Receive Our Prompt Attention.
r , Lever i Shoe Man
, 1613 Main St., COLUMBIA, S. C.
Choice Styles in
WOMEN's FALL SHOES
N ,tice the new features in the style
Sof Women's Shoes? The new Shoes
are characteristic of true feminine
~* daintiness. The new last avoid all
appearance of Clumsiness. A woman
can bie just as comfortable in a trim
Jocking shoe as in a clumsy one.
We'r showing some of the prettiest
Women's Shoes ever manufatred.
/ Our Shoes at $3.00, $3-50 and $4.00
are certainly models of style and
beauty.
These Shoes are worth'coming miles to see.
LEVER The Shoe Man.
sigLOOK TO US FOR NEW THINGS.
RAWLS BROS.
ARTISTS-=PHOTOGROPHlERR.
1615 Main St., Columbia, S. C.
Your only opportunity to have your portrait
made by these artists, is to have it made while
injColumbia. They never accept offers to to
leavegtheir Studio.
BANK OF FAIRFIE~LD
WINNSBORo, S. C.
cAPITAL., $so,0oo
Organized and Began Business February 1st, u9o6.
Young, but very healthy and growing rapidly; bring your business
here'and grow with us.
If you havermoney to deposit, we will be pleased to take proper Y
care of it for you. If you want to borrowinoney, we will be equally
as well pleased to talk the matter over with. you and always hold
ourselves~in readiness to ext#sCevery accommodation and courtesy
- consistent with'sound banking principles.
We'pay interest on deposits in our Savings Department at 4 Per
Cent per Annumn.
W.iR. R ABB, J. M. JENNINGS,
President. Csir
T. W. T RAY LOR, HUGH S. WYLIE,
The Good Old Farni
If You own a farm hold it in
your possession as you live.
If you have a mortage on it do
not yield to temporary discourage
ments and sell out, pay off the
mortgage and be free. This you
can do; any tract of productive
agricultural land will pay for it
more than once in a decade of
good times. A farm that has
grown old in one family becomes
the realm of sacred, happy
memories; it nourishes the spirit
of the past, inspires with whole
ome purpose and makes a subtle
plea for kindly, loving care.
Think of the farm as a living
hing, as sensitive abuse, as ap
preciative of zealous management,
is the benefactor of your ances
ors, and your posterity.
There is good in everything,but
,he farm is the habitat of earth's
nost coveted bounties, for from it
omes all that is essential to
nankind.
Sentimental love for the old
arm, whereon your boyhood days
were spent, is praise worthy; cher
ish it, keep it ever alive. That
which we love is capable of giving
as the greatest pleasure and sat
gfaction.
Blessed is that man who at the
ndof his earthly journey in calm
happy resignation can say:
"On this old farm I was born; on
his kind, generons old homestead
[ shall close my eyes in eternal
sleep."
Although this is the greedy age of
old commerce, there lurks within
avery healthy man a leavening
orce which for want of a better
iame we call sentiment. He who
s without sentiment is deficient
n all other noble attributes. Life
s empty, devoid of a world
ower, if it be without sentiment.
A iaan with sentiment will. love
the old farm and hold fast to it,
ror it is good.-Farm and Stock,
R. Joseph, Mo.
A Young Mother at 70.
"My mother has suddenly been
made young at 70. Twen years
Af intense suffering from dyspep
ia had entirely disabled her,
until six months ago, when she
begin tAing Electric Bitters,
which h..ve completely cured her
and restored the strength and
activity she had in the prime of
life," writes Mrs. W. L. Gilpatrick,
of Danforth, Me. Greatestrestor.
stive medicine on the globe. Sets
Stomach, Liver ard Kidneys
right, purifies the blood, and cures
Halaria, Biliousness and Weak
nesses. Wonderful Nerve Tonic.
Price 50o. Guaranteed by Jno.
E McMaster & Co., druggists,
A NonpossbllK .
He was a large, rag-bow, red
aced lawyer from Maine, lately
ettled in a Southern s t a t e,
md, of course, ambitious of mak
ng a reputation in his professioD,
ays the Green Bay. His mouth
W'as o large that it was unnecessry
ror him in uttering a word to more
~han half open his mouth, the
~orners thereof being the parts
alled into requisition.
He had on the inquisitorial
>Idec a backwoodsman as a wit
ess. The witness had replied
0 a question f rom the interrogat
g lawyer that "Itj was a nonpos
~ipility."
Qoth the lawyer, "A 'non
ossibility.' Now, will you tell
his court and this jury here what
you mean by a nonpossibility?4
.iive us an example."
Witness: "Well, I think it 'u'd
ye a nonpossibility to make your
nouf enny bigger widout setting
y-our ears furder back."
Of course the dignity of the
ourt was suspended.
If you have lost your boyhood sirits
~ourage and conadence of yot, we
>ffer you new life, fresh courage and
reedom from ill health in Hollister's
Rocky Mountain Tea. 35 cents, Tea
rTablet&Jno. H. McMaster & Co.
A slight shower was falling, and
Mr. Ferguson discovered, when
>n the point of starting for
hurch, that there wasn't an umn
rella in the house fit for use.
"You can borrow one from the
Phompons next door," suggested
MIrs.. Ferguson. "They never go
to church."
"No," he answered, with iron
armness. "It is wrong to bor
row umbrellas on Sunday. I
hould have bought one yesterday.
I shall punish myself for my
carelessness by not going to church
this morning."~
Thereupon he proceeded to
punish himself still further by
reclining in an easy chair and
reading the morning pa's.
Chicago Tribune.
This is the season of decayand weak
ed vitality. Nature is being shorn
of its beauty and bloom. If you would
retain yours, fortify your system with
Hollister's ocyMountamn Tea. 35
cents Tea or Tblets. Jno. H. Mc
BIRTH OF A HoMN. I.
story of the Origtn of '"In the0swee
By and 87.
A song of national circulation, "I:
the Sweet By and By." written by S
Filbnore Bennett of Elkhorn, Wis., had
Its birth in a country store. Mr. Ben
nett told the story, which Is given in
"Wisconsin In Three Centuries," as fol
rows:
It was about time for closing busi
ness in the evening when J. P. Web
ster, whose melodies have made Wis
consin famous, came into the store
feeling somewhat depressed.
I said to Webster, "What is the mat
ter now?"
He replied, "It is no matter; it will
be all right by and by."
The Idea of the hymn came to me
like a flash of sunshine, and I replied:
"The sweet by and by. Why would
not that make a good hymn?'
"Maybe it would," he said indiffer
ently.
I then turned to my desk and penned
tha, hymn as fast as I could write. I
handed it to Mr. Webster. As he read
It his eyes kindled and his whole de
meanor changed. Stepping to the desk,
he began writing the notes instantly.
In a few moments he requested Mr.
Bright to hand him his violin, and he
played with little hesitation the beau
tiful melody from the notes. A few
moments later be had jotted down the
notes for the different parts and the
chorus.
I do not think It was more than tir.
ty minutes from the time I took my
pencil to write the words before the
hymn and the notes had all been com
pleted and four of us were singing it
exactly as it appeared in the Signet
Ring a few days later and as it has
been sung the world over ever since.
A NAVAL REBUKE.
Two Admimais, a Captain and a Fool
In Manila Bar.
When Dewey's fleet was at Manila
the late Admiral Chichester was then
, captain. On one occasion Admiral
Diedrichs, the German, sent out the
rene on an unrevealed errand and
without the customary notification to
the commander of the blockading fleet,
Admiral Dewey had suffered, he
thought, sufficlently from that sort of
thing, and so the admiral sent a vessel
icross the Irene's bows and notified
2er captain that she would not be per
nitted to depart without a statement
is to her destination. It was not Ad
mlral Diedrichs' mission to quarrel
with both the Amerlcan and the Eng
Ish fleets on this critical occasion, so
se sought to find out Captain Chiches
ter's purpose in cace of a collision. Go.
ng on board Chichester's ship, he an
grily exclaimed, "Did you see what
Dewey did to my ship?'
"Yes," repiled Chichester.
"What would you have done if it had
een an English ship?'
"Well," said Chichester, convenient
y assuming that the Irene's captain
lad sailed without orders from Die
richs, "I'd have put my captain in ar
'et, and then I'd have gone on board
:he Olympia and apologised to Admiral
Dewey for having such a fool in comn
nand of one of my ships."-Harpei's
Wekly, _____
A Poet's Nomsely Paes,
The poet Rogers was affieted with a
~otably uznpleasaxnt, cadaverous coui
enance, which, with all his intellectual
ower, was a mortideoation to him, To
ide hWs annoyance, he joked about bi$s
agliness incessantly and deceived his
trIends Into supposing him indifferent
to t. He once turned to Sydney
Smith, who, with Byron and Moore,
was dining with him, and said:
"Chantrey wants to perpetuate this
iserable face of mine. What pose
would you suggest that 1 should take?'
"If you really wish to spare the world
is much as possible," said the wit, "I
would, If I were you, be taken at my
rayers, my face buried In my hands."
Rogers laughed with the other per
ons present, but he shot a malignant
gance at the jester and, it Is said, nev
ir fully forgave him for the bonmot.
Thanktulne.
I am no friend to the people who re
eive the bounties of Providence with
>ut visible gratitude. When the six
ence falls into your hat you may
augh. When the messenger of an un
ixpected blessing takes you by the
iand and lifts you up and bids you walk
rou may leap and run and sing for
ly, even as the lame man whom St.
Peter .healeti skipped piously and re
joced aloud as he passed through the
yeautful gate of the temple. There is
io virtue in ~enIndifference. Joy
as much a~8t as beneficence Is.
hankfulness is the other side of mer
y.-Henry Van Dyke.
Paeia1 Hlortie=Iture.
"A new milkman left our milk to
ay," announced Dorothy.
"Did he have whiskers?" aaked her
nother, thinking perhaps it was the
propretor.
"N," said the four-year-old; "he
Iidn'thwe whiskers, but he had the
mots."- arper's Weekly.
Why she Co=Ian't.
"No, I didn't have a very good time,"
he said. "I wanted to talk, and there
rasn't a man there."
"But there were plenty of other
girs."
"Oh, of course, but that was no sat
sfaction, for they' all wanted to talk
DUnair.
Another nnfa thing in life- the
bri" with a wealth of hair, wears a
v-eil, ..ut the groom, who has a bald
ipot and really needs a veil to cover It,
is denied the privilege. - Atchisen
The noblest motive is the public good.
-Virgi1..
Why Dela
If blind people ask qu
is growing and that land
prosperity of the country
when you are ready or wl
make selections and inve4
acsumulate. Remember
lost and how they have b
All prices quoted subj
Chester County
CITY PROPERTY
No. 319-Large brick sale and livery
stable in Chester, water works and elec
tric lights. Elegant mule pens, box and
open stalls, feed and harness rooms, fine
stand for livery and trading, as Chester
has a large country trade in addition to
three railroads. The land measures 140
by 155 feet and should be worth almost
the price asked for the property. .$6,000
No. 376-- lots in Chester: No. 2,
72x21S; No. 4, ISOxISS; No. 6, 72x125;
No. 8, 72x114; on Epworth street.
Each ,,,,,,.......................$150
No. 635--Two 3-story brick stores,
fronting wesf on Main street, Chester,
population 7,000. Abort 25 feet front
each by 100 feet deep on lot about 200
feet deep to alley .............$9,000
No. 636--Several houses, 6 to 14 rooms
and one store on corner, lot about
225x468, on Gadsden and Walnut
streets, Chester, bringing a rent of about
$85 per month, electric -lights, city water,
barn, flower garden and other improve
ments. Adjacent to the Southern Rail
way passenger and freight depots, join
ing the Carolina & Northwestern shops
and Springstein Mill property. Good
location for manufacturing purposes,
dwellings, or stores to rent. Long estab
lished general merchandise business. This
is the place to plant your capital for safe
investment. Price ..............$15,000
Will also sell stock of general mer
chandise amounting to about $4,000 at
75 cents on the dollar.
No. 671-Two lots on Acadamy and
Pin. streets, Chester; No. I fronts 147
feet on Academy street by 290 deep on
Pine street; No. 2 fronts 122 on Pine
street by 295 deep; both containing
1 8-10 acres, known as the McLure
place ...........................$,000
No. 695-Corner lot Main and Second
streets, Fort Lawn, S. C., 3Sx170, small
warehouse, good stand for store, two
railroads, good farming country.
Price .............................$350
Will also sell stock of general merchan
dise, amounting to about $4,000, at 75
cents on the dollar.
No. 722-6 acres joining lands of
Southern Railway; M. Haffner, Ed.
'I3raham and others, Chester, S. C.
This porperty can be cut into building
lots .............................$1,350
Nos. 724 and 725-Two 7-room houses,
east side of Saluda street, Chester, S. C.,
lots 56x322, modern sanitary plumbing,
cabinet mantels, tiled ,bath room,
wired with wall switches, city water,
flue under same arranged for hot water
heating, best neighborhood in Chester,
each.........................S3,250
No. 726-Vacant lot east side of
York street, Chester, S. C., 219x378.
Price ....,...,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,..$650
FARMIS
No. 12-600 acres abLewis Turnout,
school and church, 400 cultivated, 150 in
timber, black soil, level, 6-room dwelling,
large barn, fine pasture, 4 settlements, 4
wells, 2 streams, near railroad. Per,
acre...........................S2
Nr . 391-314%/ acres, 3 miles north of
Fort Lawn, church and school, public
road, 150 cultivated, 50 timber, sandy
soil, orchard, rolling, 2-story 7-room
dwelling, barn for 8 head, 100-acre wire
pasture, 6 settlements, cotton house,
crib, smoke house, 2 wells, 4 springs and
branch. Would. exc'iange for a farm
near Rock Hill. Price ...$10 per acre
No. 539-35 acres 1% miles of Chester,
Experien
Observation and Expe
value since our days of C11
course of nature. Buy Di
you may go to sleep or go:
keep the taxes paid.
Write for our comiplet
J. Edgar
"Cuts the
All propositions must
they are binding on him
A. (I. Quattlebaum,
Dentsst.
Winnreborc, S. C.
Office same as occupied by the late
Dr. B. J. Quattlebaum.
HELP IS OFFERED~
TO WVOKTHY YOtG' PECiEELL
iNe earnestly request aisun::- rcr, rmr
ho limitecd their means or educ icn, (4. '
obana thoaugh business trai. :.. good
tion, to write b:.- first mail fo~r ot r. --t. haf
o.ffer. Sucesa, indemand~er.ceanomribn.T for tus
-re guarn.te.e.!. Don't daar. Write today.
estion# they will find that
is coti nually advancing,
Thq time to buy a hom4
en yqU seo somWethingto P]
tments the edrlier you will
the ajage about delays. S
en ixgenvenienced by mov
ct to fluctuanions.
churches and school, 30 cultivated, 3
in wood, clay loam soil, S-acre or
chard, rolling, 8-room dwelling, barn
with 6 stalls, tenant house near dwelling,
poultry, wood and carriage house, well
and good spring, telephone line, all- under
fence, all in good repair .........250
No. 543-673 acres, 5 miles Catawba
Falls, Bascomville and Fort -Lawn,
churches and school V to 2 miles, 200
acres in cultivation, '92 acres timber,
mulatto, black and sandy soil, small
orchard, undulating and level, 50 acres
waste land, 6-room dwelling, 2 bras, 4.
and 8 stalls, 100-acre pasture, 3 tenant
houses, 2 3-room houses, cotton houses
and cribs. Country remarkably healthy,
high elevation, 5 miles from -the great
electric power plant at Catawba Falls,
Rocky and Beaver Dam creeks; some
good bottom land; wells and springs; $800
Income, Price per acre...._................$10
No. 548-100 to 125 acres, 61%: miles
Chester, % mile Lewis. Church and
school % to I mile, lies well, sandy and
red soil, 2-room house, well and two
springs, 2-horse farm open, plenty of
wood, good pasture land, .2. good
house sites ................$15 acre
No. 633-955 - acres, 2% miles Fort
Lawn, church and school, 650 cultivated,
300 timber, grey soil, orchard, level and
rolling, 6-room house, barn. 11 tenant
houses, creek, etc. Per acre ........$15
No. 670-284 acres, 6 miles of Corn
wells and Blackstock, church and school
2 miles, 100 cultivated,-25 timber-sandy
mulatto soil, 3-acre orchard, the fiest in
the county; rolling, 6-room dwelling,
barn, 100-acre pasture, 3 settlements, 9
miles south of Chester, 6 miles of it ma
cadam road, creek, spring and good
well..... ...............$12 per acre
No. 72% -83 acres % mile of- Chester,
all cultivated, diversified, 2 settlements,
barn; on public road, branch and
well ........................$45 acre
No. 752-1.50 acres, 3 miles of Fort
Lawn, church two miles, school % mile,
100 timber, oak, hickoy, pine, diversi
fied, nearly all orig'ltimber- of the
finest kind; creek and branch. Per
acre ...............-- - - ........$12.50
No. 780--1,400 acres, Dunnovant place,
3 miles of Leeds, church 2 miles,
school % mile, 150 cultivated, 1,000
acres timber, sandy soil, orchard, rolling,
7-room dwelling, good barn, 4 settle
ments, about 125 acres, river bottoms, 25
acres branch bottoms, well, -river and
streams. Per acre........ ...... .._.
No. 781-1,100 acres, Triplett 'place,
3 miles Leeds, church 2 miles, sebool /
mile, 200 acres 4nitivated, 700 timber
sandy soil, rolling, 3 tenant bouses
and stables, large amount of good
bottoms, creek, streams-and springs. Per
acre................:-.---. ......... S0
No. '782-270 acres, McCollum place, 9
miles of Chester, church 1 mile, school %
mile, 75 acres cultivated, 100 timber,
sandy and black ifack, level, 4--room
house, stream and springa.Per acreS7.00
No. 818-100 acres 5 miles Leeds,
church and school 2 miles, 30 cultivated,
25 timber, sandy soil, rolling,'- tenant
house and barn, spring and branches.
Price ...............$4.00 per acre
No. 819-67 acres 4 miles Leeds;
church and school, 4 miles, 35 cultivated,
15 timber, sandy and black jack soil, roll
ing, good bottoms. Price. .$6.00 per acre
Fairfield County
CITY PROPEBTY
No. 375--1% acre lot at Blythewood.
1100 population; church and school,
frame building 25x40, 2-story gin house,
four and grist mill, engine and boiler,
extra engine ................$1,000.
ce the Best of'
'rience teaches us that lar
idhood. Then why expec1
L-t, with good judgment;' fo
ishing and you wHi find y
list of offerings.
Poag, Brc
Earth to Suit Yoi
be approved by "the signati
3r his office,
COTTON GIINNERS .ANI
Write for prices
Babbit Couplings -Gaug
Drills Gauge Cocks Oil C1
Hack Saws 011 Cans Belt,:
Fittings Injectors Pipe
Lace Leather Packing all kinds, Shafl
else in mach
Columbia Supply Co,
the population of the world
partly owing to the general r '
.or make an investment is
ea. yo; - The: soemyou
commence to Ifnpi vQand -
e how much some -have
ng, time after time.
No. 788-4-acre block -on Calhoun,
Garden and Vanderhorst streets,
Winnsboro, two 2-room houses... .$1,150
No. 789-1%4-acre lot, Winnsboro $550
No. 790-9-roora brik- - elling
Main street, Winnsboro, on lot 65x1
feet, orchard, barm and outbuilding.gar
den ...................... ,
FARMS
No. 576-137 acis 8 inles 1(idgeway
and 7 miles Blytiewood,.S. C. church
and school in sight, 70 cultivated, scme
in timber, mixed soil, orchard, consider
able improvements in buildings, streams,
well and springs, rents for 3,000 pounds
rotton ..........................$2,003
No. 593-218% acres 8 miles of Winns
boro, % milk of White.oak; church and
school % mile, 87 cultivated, 40 timber,
sandy loam soil, orchard, rolling, 7-room
dwelling, barn, pasture, 5 settlemexs,
two 9-room houses and' two 3-rcfim
houses, cotton house, crib, well and m, at
house, 2 gardens and flower garden 5
streams, spring and well. Desirahie
home ........................... S,500
No. 730.-527 acres 2 miles of Winns
boro, on Peay's Ferry Xoad, schoo %
mile, 150 cultivated, 100 1imber, gray soil,
hilly, 6-rom house,~'ha,- 150-acres pr,;
ture, 4 settlements, creek and spri-irs
............. .......$4,000
N). 735-;8%/ acres on the Monticello
road, just outside of Winnsboro, suitable
for building lots, bounded by the Winns
boro Park ..................-,.... $300
No.- 7 36-20acres adjoining Winns
bofb, fi-nting on Peay's Ferryem 'for
one mile, diversified, 6roan cottage,
large barn, 4 settlemt!!its, ensilage pit,
dairy, shop and cotton house, well,
branches and springs ......... .$7,000
No. 737-171 acres 13 miles from
Winnsboro, church -en4 school one mile,
60:cultivated, 50 timb&s gray soil, hilly,
4-room cottage, barn, S0 acres bottoms, 3
settlements, spring and creek. Price
...........................$1,000
No. 791--670 acres 7 mies Ridgeway,
40 cultivated, 400 timber, level, 4-room,
house, 165 acres virgin tnker, 220 acres
sccond growth pine, about million feet of
lumber. Per acre ...............$1.50
No. 794-300 acres 8 miles of Winns.
boro, church and school 2 miles, 70 culti.
vated, 100 timber, gray soil, diversified,
6-room hoise, ain,'200 acres pasture, 9
tenant houses, 50 acres bottoms, well,
springs and creek, income $200 ....$,,000
No. 795--178 acres 9- miles Winns;
boro, church and schoc- 1 to 2 miles
100 acres timber, 7gray soil, diversilled,
4-room house, barn, all fenced, spring,
branch and river, fine pasture, income
$20 ............ .........
No. 796-425 acres 9 mIles Winns
born, church and. sclvl 1 mile,- 100
cultivated, .200 Mimber, May loam- soil,
level and rolling a00 as pasture, 4 -
settlemnts, stabls gooc river bot
toms, spa ng, branches and': river, in
comie $450 .......... ....25.. ..$3,400
No. 844-149 acres 4 miles Ridgewey,
church and school %A to 1% miles, 60
aexcis cultivated.40 timber, gney, gravel
soil. diversified, 6-roont~ house,~barn, cot
ton house, shop, tenant house, springsA
railroad and R. F. D. through place. Per
acre .......... ...-............ i0.00
No. 857. 142 acres 2 miles Longtown,
church and school 1 and 2 miles, 40
cultivated, 25 timber, loamr and red
soil, hilly, 2.settlements, barn, prng
and creek............................... , -
No. 858. 600 acrea.3 miles Winnsboro,
church and school3 -niile' 300 culti
vated, 100 timber, red soil, .diversified,
11 settlemients'2 and 3 roomaf-barn
well and springs, good for ..cotton,
Per acre............ ............$12.00 --
d hias been increasing in
a change in theigeneraf a
r re-safe or to hofd, and -
Durself .better ojf if you
kerRock Hill,
.ar Taste."
re of J. Edgar Poag~ before
MACHINERY OWNERS~
on the following
Lubricators' Belt, Gundy
ips Belt, Rubber Drill Press
leather Ejectors Hammers
,, Files Pulleys
ing; Collars for shafting and anything
mnery supphies.
- - - Colu mbia, sRc