The Lancaster news. (Lancaster, S.C.) 1905-current, October 21, 1919, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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# TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1919 according to his lights watchman and ______ * "Tlui was In Amusing Story That ths Lata ColonsI formetl aod th|] RoomveIt Used to Toll of "rio . were pan3one<J Tim" Sullivan. d,d not tblnl' | pertinent of Ju "Most men. I believe, are good dtl- *ure' "? posltl> ns. according to their lights. Take T0'?,? ' *Blg Tim' Sullivan for example. I ... ,^T* ' "Tim came to me while I was In the **' \ ?n White Bouse to get a pardon for a *** ' to friend. The man was In Atlanta for man , ,florVr< f blowing a post office safe, shooting the of "ls ? d 18 cents a package Came's are sold everywhere in acientificmliy sealed packages of 20 cigarettes; or ten packages (200 cigarettes) in a glasaine-paper-covered carton. We strongly recomtnend this carton for the home or office supply, or when you travel. R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY WiMto^Stlui, N. C. , \ giramaiaraiEJBnnizraM [BIG EA || POLIA I j A fine stock of high grade M II ever, as most of them had be Stl [ ] LADIES' READY-TO-WEAR. | 1 Ladies' Coat Suits, Serge, Poplin at ] $12.50, $17.50 $22.50 $37.50 u [ J LADIES' DRESSES. U Sertrp. Ponlin RllW in nil aVinrloa of |6 .7 '. . .7 ..$4.95 $7.95 $14.95 $22.5 1 [ ] LADIES' SKIRTS. [ J Serge. Poplin, Taffeta, Satin in a K | shades at . .$.'1.95 $4.95 $7.50 $9.50 and u } j LADIES' AND MISSES' COATS. J Broadcloth, Silvertone Silk, Plush in a S J shades and styles at J J . . $4.95 $6.95 $9.95 $17.50 $22.50 $47.5 J J Ladies,' Misses' and Children Sweater; j | $1.49 $1.98 $2.25 $.1.50 $5.00 $7.50 and u j | MILLINERY MILLINERY SM? Complete line of up-to-date millinery fc ladies and children $1.98 $2.98 $4.95 $7.50 $9.50 and u [ | CLOTHING CLOTHING S | Men's Suits, all wool, at I \ $10.50 $14.95 $19.50 $25.00 $35.00 and u I m Young men's Suits I; $14.95 $22.50 $27.50 $37.5 f Men's and Boys' Overcoats at JCj $3.50 $4.95 $6.50 $950 $12.50 $15.0 J 1 Men's and Boys' Pants all sizes J | Men's and Boys Hats and Caps II IvTpoliakoff 4 THE LANCASTER E 1 know cot what." If goes wrong again "he wTll not oi slstent that he had re- be punished to the limit, but will ha it he'd go straight If he to finish out this sentence as w? I. The post office folk There will be no mercy for him. A so. neither did the de- at the end of the year 1 want you stlce. But Tim was so bring the fellow here and let me km e, that 1 decided to fa- bow he's made out.' "Tim agreed to this. He would ha rou this pardon. Tim,' agreed to anything, and kept his agri a condition. You must u?ent, too. He got the pardon a anta yourself, see this *?n' bis way. I forgot all about t > has a chance to see thing until just one year ago. I w pals and warn him that told Tim war waiting to see.me. 1 CAMELS' expert blend of choice Turkish and choice Domestic tobaccos answers every cigarette desire you ever had! Camels give such universal delight,such unusual enjoyment and satisfaction you'll call them a cigarette revelation I gflH If you'd like a cigarette that does not leave any unpleasant cigaretty ^ aftertaste or unpleasant cigaretty odor, smoke Camels! If you hunger for a rich, mellow-mild cigarette that has all that desirable cigarette "body"?well, you get some Camels as quickly as you can! Camels' expert blend makes all this delightful quality possible. Your personal test will prove that Camel Cigarettes are the only cigarettes you ever smoked that just seem made to meet your taste ! You will prefer them to either kind of tobacco smoked straight! Compare Camels for quality and satisfaction with any cigarette in the world at any price! A #1 RC.AINS -AT KOFF'S erchandise at reasonable prices as en bought before advance in prices DRV GOODS All wool Serge, Poplin, Silk Poplin, Tafip feta Satins, at50c $1.25 $1.98 $2.25 yard Dress Ginhams, Fancy, Large Plaaids at i .... 20c and 35c yd Heavy Outing, all colors 25c _ Heavy Cotton Flannel . . . .25c and 35c 36 inches Bleaching . . . ,20c and 35c yd ]] Good Mattress and Feather Ticking at ip 22c 35c 50c 69c yard Good Heavy Shirt Cloth 25c and .'15c yd ^ Good Sheeting at . . 17 l-2c 25c 30c yd Apron Ginghams. . . .17c 25c & 35cyd. 0 s. BLANKETS P Wool and Cotton Blankets, full size for double bed at . . $2.41) $2.98 $3.49 $6.50 up ,r SHOES SHOES We are headquarters for solid leather ? shoes to fit the family Ladies' hightop Dress and Work Shoos \ at $2.98 $3.50 $5.50 $8.50 ' p Children Shoes 75c $1.25 $2.25 $3.50 up Boys' Shoes $2.19 $3.50 & 6.00 j Men's Dress and Work Shoes at | 10 ....$3.50 $4.50 $6.50 $7.95 and up | Trunks and Suit Cases at I 1.98 2.98 4.95 6.50 9.00 14.95 I Our Motto:?Honesty our Foundation, I Fair and Square Dealing our Success. I I JEWS, LANCASTER, S. C. ily | bad an appointment lie told Che afve j tendant. ?U. " 'Mr. President,' said he, when he pd ' came In. "I've come about that fellow to i Blank. You know you told me to bring JW , him here when he'd been out -a year [ and let you know how he's been actT9 Ing. He's outside now.' go. ' "'Yea. I remember," 1 told him. 'How n<j has he been doing?' he " 'He's been perfect, Mr. President,' ,aa said the big fellow. 'When 1 got him He to New York 1 put blm to work be__ i hind a wheel In a gambling house, and = j he's been doing fine ever since.' "That was good bebuvlor, as Big J Tim saw It 1"?McClure's Magazine. Humorous Aboriginal Belief. Australian natives tell queer stories i of creation, each tribe havlm? h differ. 1 ent legend. One tribe says tliat In the I beginning the earth opened up In the j midst of Perlgumll lake and various | birds and unlmals came out. They lay down In the sun to be "finished" i Into human beings by tts rays. Wheu the finishing process v as over they 1 got up and walked away. Another tribe says thnt before man was made a tribe of mng'cal creatures, known as "Mura-muras," lived on the earth. While one of these was hunting a kangaroo the animal hopped out j of sight. Pnrallna, aa the hunter waa | called, asked some old women where It had gone, but they lied to him, na they had killed It Be became angry, and seeing some half-ftnlahed bodies lying on the ground he straightened out their limbs, blew In their ears so they could henr, and rammed some clay down their thronts. and clear through their bodies, to make them stiff. These then became men. and he continued to make more men and women. No German Strong Man. Lamenting the lack of strong personnlltles among his countrymen, Ad | miral Hollweg writes In the Deutsche ! Tageszeltung: "This wnnt of character among our lending men lost us the war. To begin with, the knlser was*p1ulnly un| equal to the tasks laid upon hiin. In I his restless activity before the war j he had used up whatever nerve strength he ever had. I well remember the painful Impression made upon me by the meeting of the cabinet at which 1 was present on March 28, | 1916. We had to discuss the prospects j of the U-hoats. "The chancellor." Hollweg says, ! "sat In a general's uniform In the pres' Ident's chair puffing quickly at a cigar, the picture of nervous prostration. The chief of the admiralty made a long speech, giving a most gloomy outline and blaming Von Tirpltz for all that was happening. Not a man at the table there. It was plain, was strong enough either to end or mend the war. No wonder we lost." * Deadly "Earth Torpedo." Added to the list of Interesting hnt == tardy war Inventions Is a so-called [q1 "earth torpedo" of Canadian origin, Id described by Popular Mechanics mng. J azlne. It bores Its subterranean way | toward the enemy lines, nnd then ex| ' plodes with great force. The burrowf 1 Ing operation Is hydraulic. The nose - J of the torpedo Is equipped with an 1 ingenious boring nozzle, and takes ( ? with It a length of hose, w hich a pump I I ID the trench supplies with water at - J 300 pound pressure. This pnrt of the 1 performance Is silent. In a test, the [ ? device burrowed 200 feet and then [ J | blasted out an excavation 20 feet m ] across. l\ " r J Honor Cuban Generals. J Cuba Is to pay honor to the memorj I ? i of General Maximo Gomez, the Island I I republic's military hero, by erecting a ? costly monument. A first prize of $2fi, 000 was awarded recently to Aide Gnhn, nn Itnllnn sculptor, for a mode! | ? of the memorial. which Is to cost $200. V J 000. Second and third prizes went re| } spectlvely to Huertas Cnharrocas, a 1 Spnnlsli-Cuhnn, and (Jutson Ilorgluin [ an American. General Glomes becanu til n.,n..l..> ??-- 1 ' ' Sffi i us int? iriturr <?i UU' * llimil forces in the war for independence from Spnin. from 1N!>r? to IShS. lit Ha also took (i prominent part in the Ten J ~ Years' vvttr. a revolt which began in r j 1868. '>n tiie day ?>f ills death, June 5tl" IS, lltOo, the penerttl's fiitnily \va pre S sen ted with a pift of $l(H>,ttOO by the government of t'uha. At the conclu p 3 sinn of the Spanish-American war l General (jpmez was honored at a pith I ! lie reception given by the American [ J forces occupying Havana at that time v J ?Popular Mechanic* Magazine. rl : ill More Suitable. I ? The aunts and uncles had come to [ the long-enduring sister's home to have J J their monthly argument over the fam J lly affairs which Interested nil, of * them. They had argued even lotlger [ f thnn usual and the children were getV 1 ting weary and wished that they would go. So twelve-year-old Frances decided she would put a record on the Vlch. trola and "play them down." She played several popular songs, among ru infui wt'iiii; 1111 ne iiirci Again, i 1 After tlmt had been played through L - nnre she adjvittd a fresh needle and ? ^ began It all over again. P I Then Thomas, the fifteen-year-old | J member <>f the family, whose opinion t ? of relatives would not be printable. [ J gave a growl which every one could f J hear "Don't play that one over again J for goodness sake," he commanded. ! ] "Instcud, hunt out 'Farewell to [ j Thee.' " I ?: KWe arc proud of the confidence ?foctors, druggists and flic public have in rP] fMIO Chill and I'ever Tonic. I # m w PAGE THREE ?? ???? i .1 i-i LAND and 1 HOUSES |l S 'i I | We are acquainted with Lj\ncaster County values and I j J j know the people. When you want property sold place it I j j j with one who has the reputation of getting results that 5 J > ] please both the seller and the buyer alike. Listings cost 11 p J the owner nothing unless we make a sale. We can assist p 3 j 3 with arranging terms to suit. Phone me at any time and r 3 rP I will be at vour serviro w'tVi o ? ? ?. v..it ?.vt ;>iiuw you some QJ !j|j REAL VALUES. jP j j j Lei at least talk this matter over. I j ji "DO IT NOW" ;i ji T. M. HUGHES j! r 1 11 , j j LANCASTER, S. C. J j Deer increasing In California. | Though the gnme reserve established bmbmbmmbbbbhbmmmmi In the greater portion of the Angelea ' I forest reserve in California, which In- || 1 "* uuuch me r?nn Bernardino and Sierra j w-w Madre Mountains, hua been In exist- | 1 ?l*0^0?*V I ll*0^l enee but two years, wild deer are inul- j O ? M-JM. tlplylng rapidly, according to forestry ' I.ANC'AH'ri'ilC, K. officials. It Is believed that within a ; few years great herds of deer will be j ? l' >K? roaming the hills. Deer have been on ' K l 1_*1 the verge of extermination in the 1 .A.U lOlTlO DllOS Southern California mountains, but es- I ? _ _ tabllshment of the preserve Is protect- , I ? TUCKS EtUCl lng the herds. Kven now deer often ap- I |P^ pear along the boundary jynes of the I T^T3.CtOTS restricted area, and nt times wander I Into cities near the foothills, seeming to be very tame. The forestry service will establish special patrols along the ? -? reserve during the coming hunting season t see that the law Is not vio- How's This? I.ted ?Christian Science Monitor. offer 0nc ?undred Dollars Reward 1 for any case of Catarrh that cannot b? * t v i -j->. a-. . cured by Hall's Catarrh Medicine. l?I E 3 5 J 2L V Hall's Catarrh Medicine has been taken w a * l-"' a 1_? vi fey catarrh sufferers for the past thlrtyShould not be ' tlcsco1' i five years, and has become known as th? fnr rnlris ;H->nlv t'-c .'r*most reliable remedy for Catarrh. Hall's ''mitsir e"trL rLilt- >?-*' Catarrh Medicine arts thru the Blood on outside treatment V the Mucous surfaces, expelling the PolI c- > ' eon from the Blood and healing the dis? ^ J J eased portions. % Ik. *^#XT?wTirh?tw7 ! After you have taken Hall's Catarrh |( K R VA rOrtPlfV^ ' Medicine for a short time you will 3ee a o?\w/-.iArw\!? ' great Improvement In your general YOUR BODYGUARD - 30f. GO**. health. Stc.rt taking Hall's Catarrh Medl?????? cine at once and Ret rid of catarrh. Send <M1C quickly relieves Constipation, '?r testimonials, free. ' . . ' F. J. CHFNEY & CO.. Toledo. Oh?o. IliliousncMi, Ivoss of Appetite and Sold by all Druggists. "Sc. , _ Headaches, due to Torpid Idvcr. SeePlyler The Live Wire in Real Estate I Because, "If It Can Be DID?PLYLER WILL DO IT" 7 IMionc 107 Over Hough's Store ' Four room house and lot at Tradesville about 2 1-2 acres land good k well and shop that goes with this place. See me for prices. 300 acres belonging to Mr. G. W. Plyler known as Willis Moore t place. 25 or 30 acres good bottom land. Five-room dwelling and barn I both new. Two tenant houses. Yields about 15 bales of cotton also plenty of corn and other crops. Good well and several springs. This is a fine bargain at $17.50 per acre. Don't wait long on this place. Four-room house and lot on main street for on'y $1750.00 I have 4 acres listed with me within 1-4 mile of town formerly owned by Saul Vaughn. This place would make a fine place for a home also a good income could be realized front the 4 acres. It has a 1 nice little house and barn that is worth easily $600. or $7 00. Pro' perty like this goes fast so see ine at once. ' An oppirtunity of a life time. i If you would like to enter into the mercantile business. 1 can fit i you up in grand style. Can sell you 2 stores on Midway also the stock > of goods. Party selling will rent the store rooms provided tluir stone of goods is not sold. Talk the matter over with me ir you are interesi, ed at all. This is a confidential sale so the parties names cannot be divulged unless you are interested. i^u acres two mnes rrom town, on public road; i reek runs through this place; cheap at $6,00o. 100 acres belonging to Mr. \V. B. Plyler, one mile f'otn Antioch 1 school and church; almost new house and barn. Buildings are easily worth $2,500. This is a bargain at $5,000. 223 1-2 acres on crossing of Liberty Hill and Brown's Ferry roads. Close to school and church. $4 0 per acre with terms. Nice, neat almost new 4-room house with ball: 1-2 acre lot; ('an t put this house up for $1,500; house and lot for only $1,7 50. Located on end of South Main street. Three two-room houses that rent for $4 per month each. A good investment for $1,200. Store room on Midway, nearly new- $8,000 From $10,000 to $12,000 worth of lots in town. Six-room house and lot, fine locattbn, only $3,000 Mr. J. K. Helms' nice improved farm within two miles of town. This farm is one of the best bargains that I have. It lias nice 6room dwelling, big barn, cow shed, earn bp rnttnn ' . ? ?uu UURKJ I shod, five tenant houses, two of these houses have three rooms and small harns, fine well of water. In house and machinery, including 2 "1 70-saw gins, hoiler, engine, belting, etc. All of these buildings are in first class condition. Soil is red clay loam, which is the best that you can buy all things being considered. Trice $75.00 per acre. Mrs. Laura Connor's plantation seven miies from town on the ' Wadesford road. This farm has some very strong land with nearly 7 5 acres in iwanch bottom. The bottom land alone is worth the price that I ask for the place. One mile to school and one-half mile to church. Dwelling, barn, three tenant houses, about 20 acres in fine pasture; 232 acres, priced Jjkll.iiO per acre. $35.00 per acre buys Mr. Mobley Parks' plantation of 264 3-4 acres. This place has five building, 20 acres pasture 3 good wells, some branch bottoms. Don't wait long on this place. It is cheap at this price. I have a place that I can se'l you for $20.00 per acre within one ] mile of Tradesville, 1-2 mile of Spring llill Church and school. Nearly half under cultivation, about 8 acres bottoms, 4-room dwelling, barn, 1 15 acres good pasture, 130 acres in this place. See me att onco about |( this place. i I I XKKI) 2HOl'SKS TO KENT TO SUPPLY MY WAITING LIST. #