Yorkville enquirer. [volume] (Yorkville, S.C.) 1855-2006, August 02, 1921, Page Page Seven, Image 7
SOUTHLAND STORIES j
Larry liantl Gives Seine Interesting
Recollections.
TILLS OF THE MEN OF OTHER DAYS
Pe sonal Recollections o.' Henry W.
Grady, Orator and Journalist.
The suiith, nor America, never pro- !
duceJ a more captivating and eloquent
orator than Henry W. Grady. I have
j.een hint sway vast audiences as a J
field of grain before a gale, at one
moment having them convulsed with 1
laughter, the next silent with the
closest attention as he discussed
some intricate subject, and then with
tear-dimmed eyes as he depicted a
pathetic scene. Grady had not only
a most captivating voice and rare eloquence.
but the few addresses he made
wire exquisite word-paintings and yet
his language was so beautifully plain,
and his illustrations so vivid and
pointed that he charmed and captivated
alike the learned and illiterate.
Henry Grady was a literary gleaner
and miser. When not at work or in I
conversation his mind was kept busy, i
Wherever Grady went Jim Holliday,
his faithful stenographer and secre- ,
tary, was at his side, pencil and note- |
book in hand. When a bright thought j
or expression flashed through Grady's
mind he re|>eated it tb Holliday and
lie jotted it down. Each night the
secretary would read over to Grady
the notes taken during the day and
all deemed worth preserving were recorded,
under suitable captions in a
notebook kept for this purpose. So
when Grady was to deliver an address i
lie drew on these notes for sentences i
genua in to his subject, it was like
stringing pearls.
Grady was a delightful companion
and one of the most genial and pleasing
men I ever knew. Everybody
was his friend and enthusiastic admirer,
and Grady loved the whole human
race. 1 never heard him speak
an unkind word of any one and when
he dit i it could be truly said of him
that In; left not an enemy behind.
Grady died in the very zenith of litrfame.
I was with him on a pleasure
jaunt of several days and the next time
I looked upon his faee his body was
lying in state in an Allan|u church
and an unbroken line of sorrowing J
friends and admirers slowly filed by the (
flower-embowered casket. As a muni- I
testation of their love for and pride in j
Henry \\\ Grady the people of Georgia |
erected in Atlanta a heroic bronze
statue to perpetuate the memory of
Grady?but the figure does not d?> hlni i
justice, as it is more like llokc Smith ,
than Grady. But llenry Grady has a i
monument far more enduring than I
marble or bronze implanted in tnej
hearts and affect ions of every Georgian '
and Atlantian tint will endure as long
as memory remains.
Grady had a soul and heart as largas
the universe, and a nature so hopeful
and buoyant that not even adversity
cou'd daunt. Ailanta was unquestionably
built by Grady and his'
laith in the future ol the place never j
wavered.
Grady had always bee n my true and !
loyal friend and 1 never called on him !
for a favor but it was unhesitatingly J
granted. He cared only for money to
spend it and dud comparatively poor j
and in debt.
To show the great and care-free
heart of Grady, one Christmas eve a j
farmer admirer sent him a big fat tur- t
key. After dark he started home, a ;
i
darkey trailing behind with bird In
hand. He had gone a few blocks when
he met an old crippled beggar, who approached
him with tlie plea:
"Mister, will you give ine a quarter
to'ard gittin' a dinner for inv folks, as
we ain't got *er thing ter eat at my;
house?"
"Sure, I will,,old man," replied (Jra- |
dy, as he ran his hand into a pocket, I
when he remembered that he, too, was!
dead broke.
After 'thinking an instant he called
the darkey to him and told him: "Here,
give that old fellow the turkey. His
family needs it worse than I do. I'll
have half a dozen invitations to dinner !
and no one will think of inviting him!" <
So with muttered thanks the mendicant
marched away carrying Crady's
Christmas turkey.
Hut no plutocrat ever got more enjoyment
of the good things out of life
than Henry \V. (Jrady. No trouble or
adversity could daunt his buoyant, happy,
hopeful spirits. Atlanta idolized
him and gave him her best. (Jeorgia
loved and honored him and whatever
< Irady did was right with his people. I
The state legislature was in session
when (Irady received a telegram an-j
nouncioK tin' assurance of Cleveland's
election. With i nthuiastic audacity
in* went to tin- capital, marched up to
the speaker's desk and seizin;; his navel,
rapped the house to order, and ad- :
jotirned that body in the name of the
lirst Democratic president elected since
the Civil war. The "session ended in
howling, riotous enthusiasm.
At that time (Irady was editor of the
Constitution and his paper owned a
small cannon that f,rad\ himself loaded
and tired from the roof of his office
building to ce|ebiate a Democratic
victory.
toady loaded his little cannon to .*iti
nounce the re-election of .Mr. Cleveland,
hilt we Democrats were defeated.
When the news came in (irady wrote
on a sheet of paper the wolds, "A
' ' ' " fl.iu i.-.i.ei- Ik.
pasted i?v< r tlie loiieh-liole Ol Ilia' little
loaded million, put it awav and
stated that the Kim was not attain to
In- lir? d until another iJniioeratie pi'-pidoiit
was eleeli d.
Cut when Cleveland was attain rlei'iid
tirady had passed away, hut he lefi
in his name to Ceorgiu one of its1
proudest heritages. I was at that time
editing the Columbia (S. C i Hilly U>-^.
ister, but went to Georgia to vote. For
some time the result was in doubt, but
it was understood that if the Detne- 1
crats did win the first news should be j
proclaimed to the state by the little
cannon that Grady loaded. I went front
Athens to Atlanta to hear the earliest
returns and as the reports fluctuated j |
from party to party public feeling was
intense ami every ear attuned to hear
the voice of that little gun.
It was then the news was flashed
over the wires of electricity, that the
Republicans conceded Cleveland's election
and their party's defect. In an instant
the sheet of paper that Henry W.
Grady himself had pasted over the
touch-hole of that little cannon wasji
torn away, a match applied and the!
charge of gunpowder that Grady himself
had rammed home belched forth |
the great tidings. It was almost like
the voice of Henry \V. Grady himself i
proclaiming the news. The cheers that
responded to the voice of that little |'
gun almost sec mcd to shake the % ternal i
hills around Atlanta.
Only a short tihie before Grad\'s <
death, on invitation of Phil Davis, <
George Grogan, myself and other
friends, Grady visited Elberton (where <
1 was then living) and spent several i
days with us. He delivered fourspeeci.
es to immense audiences, one in Elher- 1i
ton. one at a point in South Carolina 11
where the Tuga'oo and Seneca rivers .
unite to form the Savannah, and two |
in Elbert county. i
We arranged to take Grady e n a two
days' trip down the Savannah river, j
using a flotilla of old-style boats, propelled
by negro boatmen with noes,';
such as were used by planters to carry j
their cotton to Augusta.
Grady thoroughly enjoyed that trip;
and acted like a boy just dismissed
' ? ? - I..,,,11,.,1 I.
I rum SirmMjj. nit" 11ualn I' jiiv.u x'?? i
the thousands that followed Grady to
the river bank bade him farewell with i
cheers and waving handkerchiefs. Hut
as soon as the boat rounded a bend in
the river CJrady shucked his pants and
was in the river trying to duek a i
darky. It war. hard to believe him the
same eloquent orator whom an hour n
before had thrilled and delighted thou- ji
sands and had them laughing or with
tear-dimmed eyes as his subject was1'
amusing or pathetic.
The first night our party p:.c..ed
camp at llrown's Kerry on the Georgia ;
side in Hart county. Soon after we I
landed Graded asked me to take a stroll i
with liini and walking up the road a
short distance we took a seat 0:1 a log.
I asked Grady wiiat his aspirations '
pointed io, assuring him that tie could!
always command me to the utmost extent.
His reply was: "Gantt, there is imposition
or office within the gift of the j
American people that I desire or would I
accept. .My mission and work is to;
bring together the North and South,
and have; once more a united country."!
That night Grady eo'leetrel the negro
boatmen around him and had the-m
singing their quaint melodie s. Just be-!
fore I dropped off my last waking remembrance
was Grady sitting on the
ground with his- back against a largewhite
oak tree and his colored choir
standing around him singing. "Jo.su*.
I
Lucked in the Lion's Jaw."
1 was waked by Grady shaking mo.
"Clantt, I never had anything to so
touch and impress me as those negroes
singing. There is a peculiar wail and
pathos in their voices that nothing but
forty generations of slavery could pro.
dure." As he stretched himself on the
pallet beside me, lie added, "The fact
is, the more* I see of white folks the,
better 1 like tlie darkey."
NOTED NEGRO DEAD
Rev. Charles Walker Was Foremost
Preacher of His Race.
Rev. 'Charles T Walker, commonly
said to lie the greatest negro preacher ]
of his time, died at his home in Au- j
gusta, Ga? Friday.
Dr. Walker was vice president of the
National Baptist Convention of the
Cnited States; vice president of the
Georgia Baptist State Convention: i
moderator of th Walker association;
and pastor of Tabernacle Baptist
Church, Augusta, for the past forty
years, excepting five years when he
was pastor of the Mount Olive Baptist
church. New York City. He founded
tlie colored men's branch Y. M. C. A.
1 :t.-)th street, New York and also founded
the colored V. M. C. A. in Augusta,
and was president of tin- latter organization
from its foundation some nineteen
years ago to tin- time of his death,
lie lias travelled extensively in Kurope
and the holy land and was the author
of a number of books of travel as well
as sermons. As an evangelist he was
known from the Atlantic to the Pacific
!~ i*..uiuii,u ! n/1 nn
irtKiffL ill in* i miiu ikuwpi
colored man -not even Hooker Washington?over
drew larger crowds thaJl
Walker did xvlien people (locked to hear
him preach. His church in Augusta 1
was tlie place of worship of hundreds
of northern winter tourists, anion;;
them Former ^'resident Taft, John I >.
Rockefeller, the late <iclieraI Rush <
Hawkins; the late Dr. David (Jregjr
and Lyman H. 'Joff. The institutional
church at Augusta, erected l?y him, hut
which was not quite completed at the
time <>f his death, cost $1X5,000.
1 1 "
? Where the new I'acilic highway
crosses the Canadian holder :iI Ulaine, |
Washington, a gateway is heiny erect
ed to commemorate one hundrid year:: J
without fortitications or armies alone)
tin .'{.utat miles of international boundary.
Inscribed over the doorways a re I
,1< - !,.? Idii \* i i i ; mill
"May These Doors Never IS<* Closed."
- I'rillee Willi ill). ;'i>11 III the liillK "f
Sweden, lias trapped, single-handed,
l wen! \ -11die gorillas, fourteen lions
ami many otliei animals, whieli In- is
takini; to tie- Sioekliolm museum.
? Money often costs too much, anil
power ami pleasure are not cheap.
JCmerson. i
BLACKSTOCK !
S. B. Lathan Writes Remlnisences
of Chester Com ty Town.
NCIUENTS UF SEVENTY YEARS AUG
The Coming of the Raiiroaa?Recalls
Amusing Scenes cf Early Days?
How the Town Got Its Name,
S. B. Lathan hi the Chester Keportt r. |
Blackstock got its name from a 1
family <?f this name who formerly lived
there and one of them was postmaster
and had the office in his du'cTling. This
was before any railroad was ever
thought of in this section. Tile mails !
were carried by stage coach lints. 1
North of town near the Methodist
church was an old field known as the I
muster ground. Here one Alex Shelly, i
who was a school master, poet ana
captain of a militia company, assem- :
bled his men ont*e a month on Saturday
and instructed them in the art of
war. One very amusing thing occurred f
in connection with Capt. Skefy's men .
of war in 1S:12. A report was circulated
in the * neighborhood that the.
negroes were going to rise and massacre
the whites. There was not over
one negro to five whites in a radius of
five miles. Nevertheless, Capt. Skelly
thought it wise to be on guard with bis
company on duty near where the Hap
- - - ,i P
USl cmircil linn Hiuuuii. nu'.ui. in>
o'clock they heard something running
through the woods. They quickly
formed rank?as the thing moving got
nearer they beat a hasty retreat and
formed line of battle near where Mrs. |
Bell lived, and waited the approach or
the enemy. But to their great relief
they heard some dogs barking and
hunters cutting down a tree for an
opossum.
Near if not on the very spot where
the ddpot now stands was a wood shop
run by Joe Pullet-ton. in which was
rn ide and repaired spinning wheels. I
i(member visiting it in 1X41) with my
mother, and how wonderful it appeared
to me. Whatever became of Fuilerton,
or his factory I don't remember.
The land in and around Hluckstock
formerly belonged to J. Walker, and'
was sold by him to David Hemphill,
father of the late Mrs. Margaret Gaston.
In 1Sr>2 it was sold by the Hemphills
to George Hooper and by Hooper
to Thus, lioulware. In 1X4!) and '50 the
railroad was graded through this place.
The contract for the part running
through B'aekstoek was given Dr. J.
D. Douglas, who did the work by slave
labor from his own plantation under
Hugh Bruce as overseer. The road
was completed to Blarkstoek about
the 1st of July, 1851. When the first
passenger train ran that far, the whole
country for miles gathered to see it. j
1 suppose there was at least a thou
HT1!! HH
| i Jll6 a c
The ir creasing poj
a period L?f oars Inn ?iv?
lire with a capac ity of 16,
I benefits of this bivl suit".
standard tor years?fou
nun-skid tread Thegn
VI rno nrr . t 'n rt\ 1 * r?
gum-dipping earli |?S> ?'
with oxua thickness i\lu
car ug: inst slipping and
Firestone (
I.it lihstor
There are Tires
W. F. JACKSC
i m?n?
I
sand people there. As soon as it ar- j
rived the crowd gathered around it for
a general inspection. When one old
lady leading a small hoy by the hand
got opposite to the engine the engineer
gave two loud blows of the whist'e. ]
The boy jerked loose frt.ni the old .lady 1
and made for' the tall timbers. She
followed culling "Joint, stop." The
crowd took up the call, "Stop, John."
And for awhile all interest was directed
to the race. John was never overtaken.
Shortly after the completion of
the railroad to this place DeVega &
DeGraffenreid, of Chester, opened a
store in a wooden building where the
llarlcim Mi iiMnlilc Co is iloinir hnui.
ncss. J). F.int ran the busings for
tliem. In about one year DeVega &
JJeCraflfenreid soid out to I). Pant and
Henry Pratt, who did business under
the name of Kant & Pratt.
Ceo. Hooper, who owned all the land
continguous to the railroad station
opened up a barroom, not far from
Kant & Pratt's store. This was the
occasion of much rowdying and fighting,
as drunk men have always been
the same. On the elevation near where
.Mr. Sigmon's barn is located, Iliram
Steele built and ran a carriage factory,
tie built up a large business. Afterwards
he moved it to the John Mackerel
place.
In 18n?J Ceo. Hooper sold out all his
real estate to T. M. Boulware, who I
moved to Hjackstock and made his
home there. Soon after Fant & Pratt
closed out their store and Hiram Steele
moved his*carriage factory. The only
tiling left of the place was the railroad
depot and Boulware's home and
it continued thus until after the Civil
War. I'p to this time there was neither
church or school in the plage. A.
C. Elder ran a large high school at the
Jack Morrison place. Hiram Steele fieir*g
a devout Methodist had the circuit
riders of that day and time preach
once u week at his factory, generally
on Wednesday evening. Mr. Steele organized
a lodge of tlie Sons of Temperanee,
which somewhat counteracted
the influence of Hooper's barroom.
One young man who was fond of imbibing
determined to change his manner
of life, joined one night the next
morning in relating his experience to a
friend, remarked, "Sam. I saw the
grandest sight of my life last night,
fifty grown men sitting in a row with
white gloves and aprons 011. and al|
sober." The war came on and the
bulge was broken up.
Reason Enough.?First Ex-Doughboy:
"What's the idea of Slack Sylvester
elaituin' a bonus?" Wasn't he
workin' in a munition factory mnkin'
ten bucks u day while we was in
France?"
Second Ex-Doughboy?"Sure, but lie
say's he overslept one mocnin' and lost
a day."
istest Sellir
n America
mlar demand 1or die Firestone Standa
n us t>ic volume. Our Plant No. 2 dev
000 tiros and 20,000 tubes per day cutsc
iped our price to $13,95 passing on t<
volume and this labor-saving plant,
r plies long staple fabric?extra gurr
i-atest value ever ottered cat owners. ]
Cord fire Vali
is .ire made exclusively in Plant No. i.
cord gi.es thicker insulation. The i
/re wear s most severe, give, rea; effe<
adds man. extra miles of service.
lord tirer art- sold at he lowest pric<
y: 30si! 524.50- 32x4. $46.30: 34x4
tone Deaiers Everywhere
>., R. F D. No.
StiARON NEWS LETTER '
Molhudist Church Building Is faring
Completion.
-?
sunn: street work now under way
Interest in Baseball Growing?People
Looking Fcrward to 125th Church
Annivertary Celebration?Crops Giving
Evidence of Need of Rain.
) (By a Staff Correspondent.)
Sharon, Auk 1.?Construction work
on the jfirst Methodist church edifice
of Sharon will probably be completed
1 this week, according to a statement
made Friday afternoon by Contractor
K. W. Hope, in charge of the building.
That is, it will be completed with the
exception of the seats which are also
to be built locally and which will re'
quire several days extra to finish. The
; job has been held up for several weeks
until last week when work was resumed.
The church is to be painted white
and even that will be done this wees. '
The church building complete will
have cost the congregation about $3,600
and according to those who know
about such things, It is a good Job and
well worth the money. It will huve a
| seating capacity of between 250 and
I 300, quite adequate for the needs of
the congregation for years to come.
There are about 60 members in the
congregation.
Street Work Being Done,
i Mayor D. A. Whisonant is giving hi s
personal supervision to considerable
street repair work that is now going
on in Sharon. Just now the big Job is
in n moving a lot of the small rocKs
on the principal streets that have resulted
from washing rains removing
the thin surface that formerly covered
them. The Sharon end of the Sharqn-Yorkvilie
load is getting in bad
| shape again because of hard rains
which have washed the dirt down to
gravel and Mayor Whisonant said that
the council proposed to do some work
on that end light away. There is a
decided improvement to be noted on
the streets of the town that have been
worked already and the mayor ana
councilmen propose to do as much r?
pair work as they are financially able
to do.
Interest in Baseball.
The baseball bug has infested a lot
of Sharon people, just like it is infesting
Yorkville and Clover and Koch
j Hill and Chester and other towns
around and some good games are expectod
here' during the month of Au
gust. The advertising columns of The
Yorkville Enquirer on Friday carried
i'a notice of a Fiddler's convention to
. he held here Friday night and the uh,
derstanding is that the receipts from
i that entertainment will go to the base/
i
I
f I
\
j
ml
'
rANDARD
3N-SKID
ig Tire
|
rd 30x31$ inch tire over
ofed wholly to this size
osts on every operation.
j che car owner the full
This tire has been our
1 between plies?heavy
Insist on Firestone.
nes
Our process of double
missive non-skid tread, M
.tiveness in holding the
I '
?s in cord
$54.90.
2 to Serve You
(
7, York, S. C. j
1, York, S. C. |
ball club. The Sharon Sludgers cle- 1
feated "Pacer"' Burris's "Outlaw" i
team of Yorkville on the local lot Fri- i
day afternoon, 11-9. According to i
"Pacer." the Sharon bunch hit 'em so i
hard and so often that the "Outlaws" '
could actually hear the balls whine 11
when they came sailing by. p
Rain is Needed. <
Farmers of the community say that
the crops are beginning to need rain '
again ana. tnat me sooner 11 comes xne p
better it will be. There has been prac- 11
tically no rainfall for a coup'e of
weeks and cotton and corn are showing
the need of it.. Despite that fact,
howevet. it is a mighty good prospect
and really there is no reason for com- i
plaint. ' 11
Interest in Celebration. i
Members of Sharon A. ft. ft. cjiurch j .
and people of the town and communi- f1
ty generally are looking forward with
much interest to the observance of the |
125th anniversary of Sharon A. R. P. \
church to be observed here on August I (
18. Speakers of the occasion, accord- ]
ing to the programme arranged by the
committee in charge will be Rev. R. M. j[
Stevenson, editor of the' Associate Re- , j
formed Presbyterian; Rev. W. A. j,
Kennedy, Rev. R. R. Caldwell anC Hop. |
J. S. Brice of Yorkville. The 125th j
anniversary celebration will be an all,
day affair and it is proposed to have (
a basket picnic dinner on the church
grounds.
I
Let 'Em Get Away.?The Yorkville
Enquirer quotes Prof. John W. Thorn- ,
son of the faculty of Winthrop college
as saying: '"I have been struck !
with the fact that original manuscripts
relating to the early history of I
South Carolina are very scarce. Some '
years ago I visited the archives of
the University of Wisconsin and while
there I found more original papers re- |
lating to the early history of South
Carolina than I have been able to find i
anywhere else." Quite true. Surely
no other people have been as careless
<in preserving their history as those of j
South Carolina. The collection at |
Wisconsin was made by Lyman F. J
Draper, the historian of King's Moun- j
INCREASE OF
FIFTY PER CENT
YOU MAY NEVER have been acci- ,
dentally injured in your life?that is I
seriously: but that is no guarantee
that you will not be within tlie next 12 !
months, especially if you occasionally
or regularly ride in an automobile. Ac- j
cidental injuries and deaths have in- I
creased ab9ut 50 per cent during the j
past five years on account of automo
biles.
YOU MAY Bfc very careful yourself,
but an accidental injury caused by the
other fellow would either kill you just
as dead or lay you up just as long as
it' caused by your own carelessness and
besides, the kind of Accident Insurance
we sell PROTECTS YOU' against all
accidental injuries, regardless of cause.
SEE US ABOUT IT.
SAM M. & S. E. GRIST
DISTRICT AGENTS.
BUY IT HEREWE
WANT TO THANK YOU FOR
VISITING OUR STORE ON THE
FOURTH. COME AGAIN. %
No matter what you may want or
need in the way of FURNITURE or
HOUSE FURNISHINGS come and see
what we have to offer you. If our
goods and prices do not appeal to your
sense of good values and good qualities,
why of course we'll not expect'
you to buy of us. BUT WE BELIEVE
THAT WE CAN PLEASE YOU IN
THE QUALITY and THE PRICE.
GIVE US A CALL ANY WAY. ,
PEOPLES FURNITURE
COMPANY
SERVICEIs
Our Watch Word
|
BUY YOUR
GASOLINE and
OIL from US and
SAVE MONEY.
J. H. CARROLL i
| S. L. CO
Sa,es
THE UNIVE1
I 48 S. Main St.
mmmm
- -?*?" *" ? * *"" *"?*v-1
CALL ON UST0 SU]
TOILET ARTICLES, INCLUD
TOILET WATERS AND PI
If You Need the Doctoi
TUC DETVAI I /STmTT T^TT i
STORE rnJ
Prompt and Accurate Service
1111 ui wt \m i it m ?t utiw wwm in u
tain, who spent many months In going
up and down in South Carolina and
\ , W . i t
gathering all he could lay his hands ;
an. Then he took them to Wisconsin
md gave them to the university. Jf you
want to look at the letters and documents
of Calhoun and many other
worthies, you will have to go to the
Congressional Library at Washington.
It' you want to see the papers of Joel
R. Poinset, who did much for early
Greenville, you will have-to go to ffilK '
adelphia. Some earl}* state papers antd
records of South CarolinaAvfcre rece
ly sold In London. The archives of
the state were kept lorwly in Koxes
In.an olt\ room in the state house until ,
the South Carolina Historical comthisBion
rescued them about ten years
ugo. In' preserving * an#Tj||4,inJftg,-#utf?
history and historical naierluls, South
Carolina has been woefGH** ndglifgnt
?Greenville Piedmont. I
? Germany now has four air routes
out of Berlin. The longnn of these are
the Berlin-Dortmund artd'the BerllnKoenigsberg
routes, each about 300
miles In length. Other Tirtes ore Berlin-Bremen
and Berlin-Dresden lines.
ill
' " 1 1 .
1 ' t /
CALL? ?1W
"Jimmie's"
I - . . > < rhp* <
No. 74
? ?'? *? , '
#
AND GET SOME BOILED HAM
AND ALL KIKD8 OF GOOD
MEATS FOR THE FILBERT
PICNIC.
WE ARE ALL GOING ALONG.
THE CITY MARKET
< V
R IT ?
"NEVER SAY DYE?SAY 4RIT'"
For dyeing all kinds of Fabrics?
Have it in all the wanted colors?
Will not stain the hands?
Will not Injure finest fabrics?
No boiling?
Fast Colors?Fast Acting?
10 CENTS A CAKE.
ZET
For dyeing and shining shoes?
Puttees, Handbags, Suit Cases, * k I
All Leather Goods?
Fast Colors? - s
Preserves the Leather?
Price-30 CTS. a bottle- , in ti |)(J
Both Sold Here. Try W"
YORK DRUG STORE
See, Phone or Write to
THOS. C. O'FARRELL
FOR
High Grade Monuments
In Marble and Granite
Plant on Eaat Liberty 8tr?tt, Adjoining
Rose Hill Cemetary.
Phone 211 olcY0RK, 8. C.
The saving habit
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.. BUY YOUR GROCERIES AT THE..
CASH & CARRY STORE
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ON EVERY THINCj.
JUST RECEIVED A LOT OF ARMY
CANNED GOODS?
12 Lb. Can Breakfast Bacon $2.25
2 Lb. Can Roast Beef .... 25 CT8.
1 Lb. Can Roast Beef...., 14 CT8.
BRING YOUR BOTTLES AND JUGS
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And Get Vinegar at .48 CT8. Gal.
CASH 4 CARRY CO.
URTNEY |
Service I
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YORK, S. C.
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ING TALCUM POWDERS,
ERFUMES
Call No. 65, Clover.
^RMACY J? E. BRISON, |
Proprietor ? !
CLOVER, S. C.
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