University of South Carolina Libraries
TO MY U1STOMRS I take this means to inform you that I am noy carrying the largest assortment of Fancy Groceries that I have ever had in stock. They were bought right and I can save you money. I also wish to thank you for your past patronage and assure you that I will take care of all your future? needs if you will trust it to me Beginning the first of October I have adopted a few rules that have become necessary in my business and which I hope you will observe so that there will be, no embarrassment to anyone. 1. We will require payment the first of every month. 2. Place your orders early in the morning or after noon. We cannot send a loaf of bread or a yeast cake alone, unless we are passing that way with the deliv ery. Don't give hurried orders; remember there are a dozen others who are doing the same thing in a differ ent direction. Anticipate your wants early; by so doing you lessen our work and cost to you as well as to our selves. Remember we guarantee everything we sell. 'If it is not right we make it right, and you iftay rest assured1 that you will always receive that same polite and cour teous attention when trading with us that has made our store famous. Come to our store; send the boys, send the girls, send the small children. Let's get better acquainted, let's CO-OPERATE. Yours for honesty and square dealing, C A. ROBINSON To Holders of Cotton Cotton is crowned King again The fleecy staple is too valuable and too scarce. for you to run the risk of having yours burned. without insurance. Your whole year's labor may go up in smoke. We can protect you against just such a loss. The cost is small. Get our rates. We Are Experts on Insdrance Winnsboro Insurance and Realty Co. s. D. Eilison. Winnsboro, S. C, Phone 133. A. R. Smarr 'LAs Copeland Goes, So Goes the Fashion" LEARN THE WAY We come with a message and. an invitation. The Fall season 'is here. -Change of season change of clothes We are now showing H-IRSH-WICK WIRE ALCO STYLEPLUS Clothes for men and young men -'$25.00 to $60.00 Come in and let's get acquainted Order by Parcel Post---We Prepay New Fall Hats BOY'S DEP'T B E 2nd Floor CONNTT C S - Take Elevator $3.50'te $12.50 * 1535 Main Street Columbia, S. C. FOR SALE-TWO setter pups, dog The Ideal Purgative and bitch, well marked and in good condition. Apply to J. E. Wylie. I'As a purgative, Chamberlain's Tablets are th~e exact thing-required . WANTED-To buy a small grocery Strong enough for the most robust, business, or half interest in one. ml nuhfrcide.Te as HAds , cr f N w n an agreeable movement of the bow Herad- '--' - els without any of that terrible grip -D-Operator for day work. ing. They are easy and pleasant at telehon ofic. toi take and agreeable in effect. NOTICE TO 8CHD3COL TRUSTEES. All school trustees "of the county 're requested to meet at the court house at 11 o'clock a. m., Tuesday, October 11th. State Superj4itendent J...E. Swear 'ngen will be 'iere .4o"ddress the trustees and toidiscuss withW us the educational statis of -our county and pont out plans for improvement. I hope every tristee. in the county 11 be present* J. L. Brice, Co. Supt. Education. IVN Is your to- insure . pruciatioa air P-e 0" r a words. Know fa-aningi war terms. Increm your M wbichre wii mpower and sw .. WEBSTER'S NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY is w j ing teacher, a aniwerer mad 3 needs. It isin b y hundreds of tc cesful men and women Or. 400,000 Wprds. lustradons. 12,000 tries. 3,OO sAlubets. REGULAR and1AMU 50&?. .. eWRITE for SMeeten'Psges 49RE0 Pocket ma, e ae Yoam- pa. 4. a c. uanmai cui. ringftd, Mi,. U.S. A. MOTHER GOOSES WAS -A SURE ENOUGH PERSON. This question is often asked, was Mother Goose a real person? She was born and educated at Charles ton. Elizabeth Foster, known to all the English-speaking world as "M ther Goose", was -born in Charles' ton, where she lived until she -mai ried Isaac Goose. After moving with her husband to Boston, Mrs. Goose invented nursery stories and rhymes, with ,which to entertain the ten step-children she acquired with the "name G3ose. These stories in prose-and verse were col lected by a Boston printer and pub ished under the name "Songs for the Nursery, or Mother Goose's Mel dies for Children." Mrs. Goose ied in 1757, but her book still lives. RJNGLEADERS MANAGE TO, SAVE THEIR SKIN'S: A ringleader in any sort of' ques-' ionable enterprise gets out ?nd gets, away in tinme of trouble. Being a ringleader, he is a resourceful per son and generally able to get away while fellows who are not ringlead ers are still gaping and wondering ,hat it is that has happened* to hem. He is one of the survivors in he survival of the unfittest. Back f him is the experience of maily du bious doings; he has learned to riggle and writhe and squirnr. He as got out of many a holei he nows all the tricks of the liunted. The poor fools he has got together go to jail, though. They ~have not the foxy intelligence of the leaders who misled them and when the .au horities tell them to come on they are right here to be told. They- had ot counted on failure; their leaders ad told them that they do great hings. Not counting on failure; all hey know is that something has' hit hem and are led off to jail. As long as revolutionists are led y folks who haven't the courage'to ake their medicine along with the ersons they lead, revolution will get owhere. That is -.the differencebe ween the radical, the anarchist a'nd rty-Joving revolutionist is not ;a st. The latter stands up and takes is punishment along with his fdl-' owers. If they cannot get away he tays vwith them. The genuine lib rty-lofing refolutionist is not a whiner and he asks no man to d' more epthan he does. He does not eave somebody else holding .the' bag. A crook makes a poor leader. Not for lack of intelligence; some crooks are very intelligent. Not for lack of energy; in their line 'most crooks show amazing energy;; they are al. ways up to something. What they lack that makes them poor leaders s courage. They are ~cowards when it comes to the test. They run. Whatever a ringleader is he is noth ing nies he sticks with his dupes. I The Tea Room (Next Door to News and Herald Office) LUNCHES DINNERS REFRESHMENTS and BANQUETS PLANNED AND SERVED Stock of NOVELTIES FAVORS aOME-MADE CAKESAND CANDIES "MEET YOUR FRIENDS AT THE TEA ROOM EVERY DAY. Open Next Week Let's Have Something Good to Eat Fresh For this Weel Fresh Oysters Steaks of all Kinds Pork of aji Kinds Sausage Breakfast Bacon, Morris' Supreme Lettuce Celery Grape Fiuit, *Basket Grapes Oranges Cocoanuts Also a full line of groceries We deliver goods anywhere * W. B. Porter: Cash Grocery Phone 1*