Yorkville enquirer. [volume] (Yorkville, S.C.) 1855-2006, June 02, 1914, Image 4
tumorous fjrpartmrnt.
Hot Weather Yarn.?The roof garden
lifted twenty stories up towards the
stars, was swept by the breezes of a
thousand electric fans. Palms rustled,
ice tinkled, syphons gushed, and De
Wolf Hopper, his resonant voice easily
audible above the silvery music of
feminine laughter, told a hot-weather
" yarn.
"Mrs. Blueblood von Blueblood," he
said, "was dissatisfied with her fourth
man, and resolved accordingly to discharge
him.
"So, the other morning, as the fourth
man, in his shirt sleevs, dusted the
ballroom with a huge feather duster,
Mrs. Blueblood von Blueblood opened
u-ith thu r?m;irk '
" 'Simcox, I am dissatislied with you.
You haven't done a thing the whole
morning.'
"'Haven't done a thing?" fried Simcox,
hurt and indignant. 'Haven't done
a thing, eh? Well, ma'am, just you
lay your hand on the back of my shirt
between the shoulder blades, and that'll
show you if 1 haven't done a thing!"
Six Years After.?A young man and
a young woman lean over the front
gate. They are lovers. It is moonlight.
He is loth to leave, as the parting is
the last. He is about to go away. They
swing on the gate.
"I'll never forget you," he says, "and
if death should claim me my last
thought will be of you."
"I'll be true to you," she sobs. "I'll
never see anybody else or love them as
long as 1 live."
They part. Six years later he returns.
His sweetheart of former years
had married. They meet at a party.
She had changed greatly. Between the
dances the recognition takes place.
"Let me see," she muses, with her
fan beating a tattoo on her pretty
hand. "Was it you or your brother
tt'hnm I iiumI tn knuW?"
"Really, I don't know," lie says.
"Probably my father." Weekly Telegraph.
Too Much Cavity.?One afternoon an
esteemed citizen went into a barber
shop to have his briers reaped, but no
sooner had he taken a seat in one of
the chairs than he dropped off into a
heavy slumber. Apparently the shave
artist was having his own troubles in
manipulating the customer, and after
making several attempts he thoughtfully
paused.
"Excuse me, sir," said he, gently
shaking the man in the chair, "but
would you mind waking up? I can't
shave you while you are asleep."
"Can't shave me while I'm asleep,"
exclaimed the victim, with a wondering
expression. "Why not?"
"Because," explained the barber as
softly as possible, "when you fall into
slumber your mouth opens so wide that
I can't find your face."?Philadelphia
Telegraph.
Fixing the Bishop.?A venerable
and pompous bishop was having his
portrait painted, and after sitting for
an hour in silence, he thought he
would break the monotony. "How are
you getting along?" he inquired.
To his astonishment the artist, al>
sorbed in his work, replied:
"Move your head a little to the right
and shut your mouth."
Xot being accustomed to such a form
of address, his lordship asked:
"May I ask why you address me in
that manner?"
The artist, still absorbed in his work:
"1 want to take off a little of your
cheek!"?Pearson's Weekly.
Just as She Suspected.?A woman
wearing an anxious expression, called
at an insurance office one morning, re
lutes Everybody's Magazine.
"I understand," she said, "that for
$5 I can insure my house for $1,000 in
your company."
"Yes." replied the agent, "that is
right. If your house burns down we
pay you $1,000."
"And," continued the woman anxiously,
"do you make any inquiries as
to the origin of the fire?"
"Certainly," was the prompt reply,
"we make the most careful inquiries,
madam."
"Oh,"?and she turned to leave the
office?"I thought there was a catch in
it somewhere."
Expecting Too Much.?Claude had
been promised a motor ride with his
father, and his mother had sent hint
upstairs to get ready, says the I-a dies'
Home Journal. As he came down his
mother asked:
"Have you washed your face.
Claude?"
"Yes'm," answered the boy.
"And your hands?" queried the
mother.
"Yep," said Claud*'.
"And your neck?" persisted the
mother.
"Oil, see here, mother," said llie I ??>*
in disgust. "I ain't no angel."
Easy Time.?The man who learns
many languages does not always enlarge
his mind. A porter in a Swiss
hotel who spoke many languages with
equal facility and inaccuracy was once
asked what was his native tongue. He
replied that he did not know, hut that
he spoke all languages.
"Hut in what language do you
think?" asked the persistent questioner.
"I neva tink," was the prompt reply.
?Youth's Companion.
Paternal Consideration.?"Do you
want your son to follow in your footstep's?"
"Well. I can't say that I do. At least
I hope he will never he compelled t >
crawl upstairs on his hands and knees
when he happens to he a little late in
getting home."?Chicago Record-Herald.
Horrid Creature!?"Doctor, is your
patient sure you can cure him hy your
new method?"
"How did you know my patient was
not a woman?"
"1 heard that you were going to try
the silence cure."?Rallimore American.
How She Does It.?"Ma never has
any trouble keeping her accounts
straight as treasurer of the club."
"Does she always balance to a pen
n y V"
"Oh, no. I>111 whenever she's short she
makes pa put up the difference." Detroit
Free Press.
Nasty Brute! "You don't have t>>
talk to ine if you don't want to." snapped
Mrs. t'.ahh. "Furthermore, I want
you to understand that 1 am never in
terested in anything you have to sa> "
"Not if I am awake when I am saying
it," responded Mr. fluid*. Cincinnati
Enquirer.
iUisccUiincous grading.
ISSUE OF GREAT STRUGGLE
Correspondent Upholds tne Idea of
Rich Man's War and Poor Man's Fight.
The Columbia State prints the following
from a corresp? .ident at Staunton.
Va:
My protest against the publishing of
Civil War stories having met with the
disapproval of the editor and a correspondent.
1 wish to give my reasons
for such a protest. One of the chief
reasons why I disapprove of these
stories is that they serve to blind their
readers to the real issues at stake and
prevent the southern boy and girl of
today from realizing just exactly what
their fathers were fighting for. I am
afraid that too many people, veterans
included, have always been too intent
upon the events of the struggle to carefully
consider their own relation to the
issues, and consequently they have
never realized that what is commonly
nppantsii ;i? nntriotism was in reality
a tremendous blunder.
It is an established fact that aboui
70 per cent of those who enlisted in defense
of the south had all to lose and
nothing to gain by the establishment
of a Confederate government. In substantation
of this statement I quote
from "Hart's essentials of American
History:" "In the south slaves were almost
the only form of great wealth,
and the 300,000 slave-holding families
were as much a governing class as in
colonial times. (Jut of these families
came also nearly all the doctors, lawyers
and ministers in the south. The
most numerous type of the southern
white was that of the 'crackers,' or
'poor whites," illiterate and unprogres
sive, but born lighting men. iMost of
them believed that the interest of
slavery was their interest also and
therefore supported the planter at the
polls and in the trenches." Mr. Hart
further states: "Most of the profits of
farming went to the great slave-holding
planters." And in regard to legislation
he has to say: "In the south the
states legislated less for social welfare
than in the north; partly from long
habit, partly because there was no
class of free mechanics to demand legislation."
Finally, in regard to education,
we have, from the same source:
"The slaves and free negroes had no
form of education, and the country
poor whites had little or none, .some
of the well-to-do families sent their
sons to southern state or denominational
Colleges or abroad, or to northern
colleges, and the ruling class was
highly educated and intellectual." The
facts quoted above no one can dispute.
They describe actual conditions.
Now, what puzzles me is that these
veterans, many of them now so poor
as to depend on charity for a livelihood.
are still worshiping those old
landlords who never had ahy sympathy
for them, never provided for their
education or uplift, but who under the
name of "southern rights" enlisted
them in the struggle to perpetuate the
system of things which would keep the
aristocrat on his horse and the poor
white man in the ditch.
If the south had gained her "rights"
there would have been a political and
social upheaval ere this that instead
of being the mild struggle it was in
1N90, and is in 1914, would have rivaled
that which marked the overthrow of
Bourbon aristocracy in France, or that
which we are now witnessing in Mexico.
What I want to know is why these
veterans still consider it an honor to
have followed these semi-feudal lords
to battle, and such .an honor that they
have not finished talking about it yet.
During all these r>ft years have they
never realized that they were fighting
against their own interests? They have
repudiated aristocratic domination at
me pons; can uiey m?i k" ?? i??tlier
back and sec that they made the
mistake of their lives when they supported
them in the trenches from 1 SCI 18C5?
And seeing their mistake, can
they not turn their thoughts from it. as
is the natural thins; to do; and recognizing
the Yankee as a real benefactor
of the masses of the people of the
south, emulate him in his thrift and
go forward with him in the best of
fellowship?
We of the younger generation, Mr.
Kditor, should be without grudge or
prejudice, and we shall be if our fathers
will let us.
COCA OF THE ANDES
Wonderful Plant Has Strange and
Valuable Properties.
Cocoa and coca are two words which
are very much alike, so much so in fact
that they are often confused in the
mind of the average person, and perhaps
by seine thought to be the same
thing. The presence of the o in the
last syllable of the lirst word, however,
makes a portentious difference, for
there is absolutely 110 similarity between
the products bearing these
names. Cocoa, which is hut chocolate
with the fat ex tract I'll, is tne wen
known drink and food made from the
cacao le an, the fruit of the tree known
hot a ideally as Theohroina Cacao, while
coca is the extract of the leaves of the
coca plant, or shrub whose technical
name is Krythroxy-lon Coca, and from
which that powerful alkaloid known as
cocaine is derived. Hot It products are
indigenous to certain Ijutin-American
countries, both were in common use
bv the natives of these regions forcentuies
before :i western world was
dreamed of in the eastern, and both
were first introduced into Europe bv
the returning Spanish explorers. Their
place of origin is about the only thing
common to both plants.
The medicinal properties of the oca
leaves are manifold. That remarkable
property possessed by the alkaloid,
cocaine, of producing local anaesthesia
has made the plant a boon to suffering
humanity and a wonderfully beneficent
agent in the hands of the surgeon, even
if there were no other uses for it as a
curative. Coca, however, has many
other uses, and among the Incas, of
Peru it was known as tlie "divine
plant" because of these varied properties.
In the May issue of the Hulletin
of the Pan American Cnion, Washington.
I?. <\, William A. iieid deals with
III.. Iiisi. .IV ,,f ?*. .< :? The Wonder
Plant of tlx* Andes, and tells "f many
strange customs of tin- Incus in connection
with their veneration of the
coca plat, its peculiar properties, and
describes the plant itself in its wild
stale and the methods <>f cultivation,
lie writes:
"Many years ago when Inca civilization
reigned over a vast section of the
western part of South America, the
young men of the tribes engaged in
athletic contests atid anions the most
coveted rewards the victors could expect
were little pouches tilled with certain
dry leaves. Kaeh pouch perchance
hole the handiwork of some dusky
maiden, marvclously wrought in accordance
with the teachings of Mamma
(kilo, the famous character who tradition
says, came forth from mysterious
I^ake Titicaca to teach the world
the art of spinning and weaving. Accompanying
the pouch of leaves, or
Chuspa, as they called it, was a small
gourd known as the Popora, containing
lime, the leaves had been carefully
plucked from the "divine plant" coca,
while the lime served to make them
more pleasing to the taste. The two
substances combined formed a strength
producing element of wonderful power.
Subjects of the Incas who thus fortilie
dthemselves by chewing coca leaves
believed their bodies possessed superhuman
endurance.
"The leaves were used as offerings to
the sun; to make the smoke at sacrifices;
tied up in packages they were
thrown into streams and the faithful
followed them for days as a demonstration
of their fidelity; and at death
a supply of the leaves was always
placed with the body of the deceased."
The original home of the coca plant
is in parts of Colombia, Ecuador, Peru,
It..1 ii*i ! .-mit ltrjiv.il while it i? now nil
tivated in the West Indies, Ceylon, India,
Java, etc. The plant, Erythroxylon
Coca somewhat resembles the blackthorn
bush of the United States; and
grows to a height of 6 or 8 feet, according
to altitude and climatic conditions.
In southern Colombia, at an altitude
of 8,000 feet, and in some other sections
of the Andes, it occasionally
measures twelve feet in height, but as
elevation increases the bush degenerates
into a small shrub. The branches
are straight and the leaves are green,
thin, opaque, oval, and tapering at the
ends. The pretty little Howers form in
clusters on short stems. The flowering
season is followed by the production of
small red berries. When grown on the
coca plantations, or Cocales, the seeds
are sown in December and January on
small plots of land sheltered from the
sun. When tlie plant reaches a height
of 1 feet it is transplanted to larger
spaces, and it becomes productive in
about two years and remains so for 40
years or even longer. The leaves are
gathered by pluckers who are skilled
in their work. Both hands are used and
usually only the best leaves are gullied.
These are carried to sheds and
and spread upon stone beds or hard
ground to dry. The drying process is
i?-? nlw.iii Vtoiirc onrl t l?rt
best leaves are worth from 35 to 45
cents at the seaport. In lit 12 Bolivia
exported $300,000 worth of coca leaves,
while Peru, where cocaine itself is
manufactured, exports annually about
$350,000 of that product.
FALACY OF FIGURES
They Hold True Until Mixed With
Imagination.
Kvery once in a while some scientist
comes forth with figures to prove that,
at the present rate of increase, the
population of the I'nited States will be
300 to the square foot in 3014 A. D.
or that, if things go on as they are
now going, there will be no children at
all born in 1000.
Or that in a certain time there will
be more insane people in the country
than sane; and the sane will be locked
up in asylums.
Or that in a definite number of years
every house in town will be a dance
hall, and there will be more tangoists
than there are people.
Or that tuberculosis, cancer and the
hookworm will use up the entire population
and go after the dogs and cats.
or that, with the present rate of increase
in automobile business, every
human being in 1996 will have tnrec
machines, and there will be no room in
the streets to move; two deep, all
stalled.
<?r that, considering the trend of
things In Washington, we shall have a
king or dictator in a little while.
Or that, taking capital and labor for
our statistics it will not be long before
two or three generations own all the
money, and the millions will be gnawing
bones.
Or that religon is dying out, and at
a certain date the last church will be
converted into a livery stable.
Statistics are grand. Take 'em with
a liberal dose of imagination, and they
are about the scariest things you can
find.
The one thing that the ligure-jugglers,
from Multhus down to the trust
buster, leave out of consideration is
this:
That when anything in human affairs
gets to be about so big, it becomes
topheavy, and falls.
Human institutions lust about so
long; then they topple. That is history.
Have you read the record of ecclesiasticistn
and how it bred tin- heresies
that gnawed it, or have you read the
stories of Caesar and Napoleon and
their empires? If so, never fear about
military preparedness; it will grow so
monstrous some day that it will just
naturally go to pieces.
Also, don't lose any sleep over the
growth of trusts. Secretary of Commerce
Ftedtield, in his last annual report,
made some common sense points
that ought to cure our hysteria of statistics.
Ho said, in substance, that:
"There is a limit to the efficiency of
large combinations. Economies of management
do a good ileal to reduce the
cost of production; and a large working
capital should make it possible to
adopt the most progresisve methods of
pioduction. Hut after a point, the organization
begins to lose that alert
personal ipiality which is the essence
of commercial success.
In other words, combination is automatically
"sell-busting," either by
stimulating independent competition,
or by arousing public antagonism, or
by accumulating bonehead.s and sons
of boneheads in its management, or by
simply getting too fat and heavy for
its feet of clay."
"The present rate of increase" in
anything is not eternal. After a while
it develops its own cure."?Dr. Frank
Crane in Atlanta Journal.
Both Sides of It.?The Yorkville Knquirer
writes a very strong and logical
, editorial on the tragedy at Laurens
last week in which Lawyer Cannon
was killed. As will be remembered t ie
shooting occurred at Cray Court and
was the result of a speech made by the
attorney in a case being Hied in a magistrate's
court. It was very wrong for
Sullivan who shot the lawyer to death
to put a pistol in his pocket before go
in
llli; HI llle II I.II. ll nun, iiiiiw uiwiir, ...
tin* l.iwyi r tn stand in tin* public cm i t
niul use epithets with the express purpuse
i>f degrading the parties mi the
other side of the case. It is not conimemlnhle
in any attorney to do this,
and it is absolutely unnecessary for
any lawyer to resort to such tactics in
order to represent his client. If an attorney
cannot win by a manly, dispassionate
presentation of the facts in his
case then the law has poor means of
vindication. Here are two facts which
stand out: first, if Mr. Sullivan hid
left that loaded pistol at home; seem d
if the attorney had calmly present *d
liis case to the jury lie would have wc n.
and there would be no new-made grave
in the Laurens cemetery, no widow left
to mourn, and no defendant to sta id
trial for his life. Chesterfield Advertiser.
'
/C^
" In Our Nev
"Easy-Open
"Twist the
rSk
jPH
PER]
RRAI
A steak broile
Perfection Oil
tender and de
The New Pe
special broiler
sits away from
which gets all
broils both s
All the flavor <
saved.
New Pe
"onCoc
means easier w
clean kitchen.
Made with 1,2
ers; also a ne
fireless cookini
At all hardware and c
STANDARD 0
Washington, D. C. (New
I Norfolk, Va. UAL r
Richmond, Va.
3*- A man is judged liy tin* clothes
In' ucuN?Likewise li?' is judged by
liis Itusincss Slatioiii'1'.v?I'S1 Tlic Eni|iiit'ikimi?It
will pass judgment.
nct
j No mc
I suits you.
5 Not after
I bodied?yet
jj Convenient
I O-Cent Tin, the Poun
i 5'
i
; Foi
I "EVER-l
i
1 c?'n"
sr.~a
FECT
LING
d on the New j
Cook-stove is
Jicious.
rfection has a
, a hood that
the flame but |
the heat. It
ides at once,
of the meat is ^
r/Sction
If M j Wi l!T
>k-stove
ork and a cool,
, 3,and4burnw
stove with !
g oven. |
lepartment stores. i
IL COMPANY
Jersey) Charlotte, N. C.
IMORE Charleston, W. Va.
Charleston, S. C.
PF" Send The ICnquirer your orders
I'or Commercial Stationery, if you are
a user of the better grades in your
business correspondence.
>re hunting for t
i
you've found STAG?
exquisitely MILD.
Packages: The Handy Half-Size
d and Half-Pound Tin Humidors and th
TA*
r Pipe and Cigarette
ASTING-LY GOC
anuE i
The f. f. Dalley Co.. Ltd.. Buffau
Kodaks
WHEN YOU GO ON YOUR VACATION.
BE SURE THAT YOU
TAKE A KODAK WITH YOU?
MAKE PICTURE RECORDS OF
THE PLACES YOU GO AND
THE NEW FRIENDS YOU
MAKE?YOU'LL ENJOY THE
PICTURES IN LATER YEARS.
GET YOUR KODAK HERE.
REMEMBER. THAT WE CARRY
A FULL LINE OF KODAK
S U PPLIES? FILM S. PA P E R.
DEVELOPERS. ETC.
IF WE HAVEN'T JUST WHAT
YOU WANT?TELL US?WE'LL
GET IT FOR YOU.
YORK DRUG STORE.
\K: nu fac^
Sold by C. A BONEY, Yorkville.
Garden Plowing
STABLE MANURE?We can furnish
Stable Manure for garden use in
any quantity at any time. See us.
In addition to our regular Livery
and Draying business, we are also at
all times ready to do your GARDEN
PLOWING. As soon as your garden
is dry enough to plow, let us know
and we will do your plowing for you
without delay. Phone us.
LIVERY
If you want a turnout, single or
double, for pleasure or business driving,
we can furnish what you want
and you will find our charges most
reasonable.
I)PAYING
We are always ready to do all kinds
of Light and Heavy Hauling, either in
town or country. Let us do yours.
M. E. PLEXICO & SON
There is Only ONE Best
Every man who has ever been
talked to by a life insurance agent,
will, no doubt recall, that one of the
claims that the agent made was that
the special company he was representing
at the time, was the BEST in the
business, and issued the most liberal
contract, etc. It is a FACT that there
are a number of good companies in
business today and that most of them
issue very liberal contracts as compared
with those issued previous to
1906?before the great upheaval in
4> tfW l ui i\ oiaiCi ?> ucn lano ??v? v v..
acted that forced all companies that
should do business in that State, to
Ouarantee in their policies what the
Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Com*
imny of Newark, X. J., hud been Cuoru
11 teeing Voluntarily for Many Years
Previous. It is a fact that the New
York law was based on the voluntary
practices of the Mutual Benefit and it <
did not have to change a word in its
contracts to comply with the law. It
has always, during the 67 years it has
been business, been recognized as the
leading policy holders' company, and '
is so recognized today. It is the Best
Company and issues the Best Policy,
and if I cannot prove it to your satis- j
faction after you have learned about i
all the others, if you care to learn, I ,
do not want your business, as I recog- |
nize the fact that the man who insures ,
in one company when he has reason ;
to believe that he would have been
better satisfied in another, has not
done himself justice. I/>ok Before
You Leap!
SAM M. (JBIST. Special Agent. I
ss
he tobacco that
rich?ripe?mellow?fr<
5-CentTin,the Full-Size m. ..
e Pound Glass Humidor.
"No Bite, i bjyj
gHM "No Sting, | HL f
IYL
\ f>?f P. Lerlttard Co. H||llW?|({/?"
I ml
POLISI
3. N.Y. Hamilton. Ont.
FIRST GREAT
ANNIVERSARY
Is Now Oa, and Wil
Days. Buy your Di
Shoes, etc., while yo
to 50 per cent. Come.
LACES AND EMBROIDI
MEN'S AND BO
MEN'S $15.00 an<l $20.00 S
Vent VorL- vifliM-! < (! fro
Serges and Cassimer?
MEN'S $10.00 Sl lTS?Nc
MEN'S $7.50 SITES?Nov
BOYS' SUITS, in Norfolk
Blue Serges, Brown an
and $7.00 Suits?Extra
please your Bovs?Fric
BOYS' WASH SUITS?Y
LADIES' 1
LADIES' $1.98 DRESSES
Lawn Embroidered
LADIES' $1.48 DRESSES
LADIES' $5.00 CREPE S
and nicely trimmed
SHC
MEN'S $4.00 SHOES?lat<
We have them in I
$3.50 SHOES?Now
$3.00 SHOES? Now
$2.48 SI M )ES?Now
$3-oo Kaw Hide Bottom SI
heavy outdoor work
$1.98 SHOES?Now
LADIES' SHOES and SLI
Now
LADIES' $2.50 SHOES?I
LADIES' $1.75 SHOES??
CHILDREN'S SHOES?A
YORKVILLE BA
Summer School?
HOCK HILL JUNE
16 TO J
FULL COUHSES OF STUDY will
ments of Superintendents and
Primary and Grade Teachers,
FACULTY?A large Faculty has b<
ists and Leaders of Educatior
SPECIAL FEATUKES?Model Sci
Special Course in Rural Scho<
tice and Lectures on Montessoi
Entertainments?Best Feature
Accommodations Unexcelled.
County Boards of Education are
still in force of all Teachers v
Summer School and take Fina
For Rates and Further informatloi
letin, to I>. B. JOHNSON, Pre.Rebuilt
Typewriters for sale at The
your orders to The Enquirer Office.
TO DEBTORS AND CREDITORS
ALL persons indebted to the Estate
of JOHN' \V. WELLS, deceased,
ire hereby notified to make payment
lo me at once, and persons having
laims against said Estate are notified
to present them, duly authenticated,
ivithin the time prescribed by law.
3t* 4Ot J. C. WELLS, Executor.
Send The Enquirer your orders
I'or Commercial Stationery, if you are
i user of the better grades in your
business eorres|M?mleiice.
J G I :
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i i
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agrant?full , 1
rnrnrnummmmmm
a I
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Popular I
Polishes I
Black, Tan 9 K
and White 9
10c 1
HESI
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1 Continue for Ten
y Goods, Clothing,
>u can save from 25
?
2RIES i CENT Yard
YS' CLOTHING
>UITS, just arrived from ^
m the best makers?Blue
Price $8.98 Suit
>w $6.48 Suit
v $4.98 Suit
and Bulgarian Styles?
id Venetian?$5.00, $6.00 .
ordinary values that will
ed at $3.98 Suit
ou'll find them here?
r*rnc* j T T 1
49 V/io. ana upwara
*
DRESSES
lr?in Linen and Crepe?
$1.48
?Now 98 CTS.
UITS, beautifully made
$2.98
)ES
?st styles, Kovv Quarters
$2.98 Pair to
(ubber Sole Tans.
$2.79 Pair
$2.48 Pair
- $1.98 Pair
IOES?the Best for the f
$2.29 Pair
$1.48 Pair
PPERS?$3.00 Values?
$1.98 Pair
tfow $1.69 Pair
*Iow $1.48 Pair
.11 sizes 25 CTS. Up I ?
RGAIN HOUSE
Winthrop College
---SC.
ULY 24- 1914
be provided to meet the requirePrincipals,
High School Teachers,
Rural School Teachers. j|
?en secured, composed of Special
i in this and other States,
lool through first Six Grades;
jl Problems; Kindergarten Pracri
Methods; General Lectures and
s of the Best Summer Schools?
authorized to Renew Certificates %
vho do Satisfactory Work in this
1 Examination.
n. write for Summer School Bulddent,
Rock Hill, S. C. 22 8t w
FOR SALE
136 Acres?The Wells Place, the
property of R. N. Plaxco, a very fine
farm. High state of cultivation.
I have had many inquiries about the p
County Home Lands?First Tract: 90
acres, on Rock Hill road; also 137 acres
join J. L. Moss. I must sell this land
At Once. .If You want it, see Me at
Once?It is a good money maker.
County Home Farm?90 Acres, joining
T. I,. Carroll, $25.00 Acre. k
140 Acres?Joining R. R. Love, J. L.
Moss and others. Magnificent bottom
land in this tract. See me.
Cottage Home?Of W. C. Miller, on
Charlotte road, near Ancona Mill.
300 Acres?Property of D. A. Whisonant,
joins J. \V. Quinn and others
Price $16.00
40 Acres?Property of John Barnett,
joining farm of J. R. Connolly and Wm.
Harrison Est. lands.
100 Acres?Known as the Dorster
place, about 1 1-2 miles from Phila- %
delphia church and school. If sold
during February, I will take the small
.sum of $20.00 an acre for it.
409 Acres?Near Lowryville, $25.00
per acre.
I desire to say to my friends that I
have property that I can cut up in m
small tracts and sell on long terms.
The Quinn estate land?On King's
Mt. road, adjoining Frank Riddle's
Neil place and others, am willing to
cut this into smaller farms to suit the
uurchaser.
The residence of the late Dr. J. B.
Allison, joining the new Presbyterian
Manse. Can be cut into two beautiful
building lots.
The property of Dr. Mack White on
King's Mountain Street, also 2 dwellings,
property of Quinn Wallace, et al.
on Kinc's Mountain Street. This prop- a
erty will be sold quickly and if you
want it, see me.
I have for sale three of the Finest
[ "arms in York county, and they are
r-ery cheap at the price; to wit:
The John Black?Henry Massey
lomestead.
600 Acres?The R. M. Anderson
^arm.
410 Acres?Of the S. M. Jones-Ware
Farm, about 4 miles from Rock Hill.
Also 18 acres, and a nice cottage,
jeautifully located within the incor>orate
limits of Yorkville. Read my
ist of Farms and send me some ofers.
Two (io<Hl Houses?On King's
Mountain Street.
J. C. WILBORN
4 Fitting Tribute
To those who have pass<1
into the great l.eyond, is something
rhich every family owes to its departed
members. No memorial is so
lerfeet an expression of love and re- ^
pect as a MONUMENT CARVED
^ItoM ENDURING STONE.
Will YOUR Cemetery Lot be in
roper condition (his year?
Call and See Our Stock at Our
hops?You are always welcome to inpect
it. ^
>ALMETTO MONUMENT CO.
JOS. SASSI, Prop.
'Iione 211 Yorkville. S. C.