University of South Carolina Libraries
lull' Merchandise of QUA14ITy sel We are grateful for the satisfactory and hearty r4 DUCTIONS., These price reductions we are continuinj merchandise. For you to keep up Avith tWesq most exti dise we beg that you make our store ydur headquarters ful savings. You ci4nnot realize .how, far your money i througkt our departments. This places before you many articles at pire-war pi you know there is 100 per cent value back of the price. BOY'S AND MEN'S FURNISHINGS. Following at pre-war prices: , Boys' Fall and Winter Suits sizes 6 to 18, with extra Men's Fall and Winter suits $20.00 to $40.00, former Palm Beach Suits formerly $20.00, now $11.00. All summer underwear 10 per cent below cost. Wash ties 50c. Large assortment of handkerchiefs, formerly 25c, Overalls $2.15 per pair, formerly $2.75 and $3.00. READY-TO-WEAR AND MILLINERY. A splendid assortment of fall and winter ready-to-, Suits and Coats-Bolivia, Tricottne, Silvertone, Ser Dresses-Serges, Tricotine, Duvytine, Charmeuse, Chine and Crepe Meteor, $14.75 and up. Skirts-Plaids and Plain-Accordion, Box Plaits, I Blouses-Jersey, Tricolette, Crepe de Chine, Georg Petticoats-Jersey, Satin, Changable Silk, $6.75 and Furs-A beautifyl line, womens and misses, $20.00 Remember, we have Dresses, Coats and Suits in Sto Gingham Dresses $1.14 to $9.00, formerly $2.00 to Children's Gingham Dresess 74c to $4.80, formerli Children's White Voile and Organdie Dresses $1.: Women's and Misses ribbed underwear 35c to $2.75, In our Millinery Department we have bats of sty and up; KNICKERBOCKER HATS $8.00 and up; GA "Lids for Kids," $2.75 and up. DRY GOODS DEPARTMENT. Following pre-war prices: Dress Poplins 75c, formerly $1.25. Dress Linens $1.00, formerly $2.00. Large assortment of Ladies Purses and Hand B Large assortment white skirt goods 75c, forme Cari Popins 75c, formeray .2 p5. .Light and dlark Percales, 20c, formerly 35c andi 4 Skirting 25c per yard, formerly 35c per yard. Light Outings 25c per yard, formerly 35c per ya: Heavy Cotton Flannel 35cper yard, formerly 50< Unbleached Domestics 25c per yard, ftormeirly 35< Best Quality Van Guard Bleached at 30e per yard, Carolina Fine LL Unbleached 20c per yard, fornic White Skirting 75c per yard, formerly A1.76 per 3 Fancy Light Voiles 50c per yard, formierly $1.25, Dark Fancy and Plaid Voiles', 35c, 50c and 75c per SHOES. ' Mel-6ween Shoes for Men, $6.25, formerly $12.75. 40 pair Boy's Shoes $3.00 and $4.00, formierly $7. 200 pairs Women's Shoes, $5.00 to $8.00, former] 43 pairs Women's Opera Pumps, $5.00, formierly 18 pairs Women's Bronze Pumps, $7.00, formerly 56 pairs Misses Shoes, $4.00 and $4.25, formerly 32 pairs Childrens Shoes, $3.25 and $3.75, former1 Above are pre-war prices. All Spring and Summer foot-wear at cost. BOYDEN'S Fall and Winter shoes for Men, $18.00 RETAIL GROCERY DEPARTMENT. 4,000 lbs. sugar at 19c per pound. About 300 lbs. roasted coffee 15c per pouind. WHOLESALE DEPARTMENT Sugar 18%/c per pound. Cotton sheets 80x80, 59c. Cotton bagging, 2 lb. new jute at 23e; :1 lb. new u New cotton ties $3.25 per' bunleC. Fancy patent self rising flour $13.00) per' barrel. HARDWARE. 50,000 best gradeC Cedar Shingles at $9.00 per M. American: wire fence all sizes, $8.50 to $14.50) pe Barbed wire $4.00 to $6.00 per roll. S Roofing paper, one p)ly $2.00; two ply $2.75; thre FURNITURE AND) HOUSE FUJRNISI Clearance sale of Summer furniture, furishi.iings Porch rockers $2.50 to $5.51), formerly $ 15 to $E P'orch swings-fumed oak finish $3.2o formierly Porch settees $7.50, formerly $12.51'. Fumed Oak Settees $3.75, formerly 8;.50. Refrigerators $19.00 to $56.00, formerly $27.51) t Ice Chests $7.00 and $22.50, formerly $11 .001 andl One Refrigerator and Kitchen Cabinet comb~llined ( Lace curtains 50c to $2.00 per~ pair, formerly $l.2J One lot of bedroom chairs $1.50 to $:t.75, formiel Twvo Glolden Oak Chiffoniers $38.51 formerly $' One Mahogany Chiffonier $50.01), i,, merly $85,0) One Mahogany Bed $52.50, formerly $85.0l0. One Solid Mahogany Dresser $65.00, formerly $! SOne Solid Mahogany Vanity Dressinig TFable $75.0) Golden Oak Chiina Cabinets $35.00 and' $:38.50, f< Kitchen safes, glass dloor $18.00, formierly $22.01 LIVING ROOM FURNITURE: One, four piece Fumed Oak suit $05.00 special. One, six piece Br'own r'eedl suit tupholsterecd in ta One, Blue Reed Chaise Lounge $38.50, formerly One Golden Oak Book -case $38.50. forme'rly $ One, TIhree piece Reed Suite upholsteredl in Cret Solid Mahogany Library Tables Special at $38.5 Golden Oak D~avenports $32.50, formerly 90-100 AlIterations Ext ra. No Returns. Your Pantronage is most re~ [ALDE R CLARENDON'S ST4 20 Stores in One 1ER1 ling at Pre-War Prices. sponse shown our announcement of PRICE RE r and every few days they are extended to other aordinary bargains in our QUALITY merchan for we want everybody to share in these wonder vill go at ALDERMAN'S, until you come and go -ices, and when you buy anything at Alderman's The following are a few of our price reductions: trousers, $6.00 to $19.50, formerly $12.00 to $35. ly $30.00 to $85.00. now two for 25c. vear for women, misses and juniors. ges, Twill Veloir and Poplin, $19.75 and up. Tricolette, Satin, Crepe back Satin, Crepe de 2eather Trimmed, etc., $6.75 and up. ette, and Voile, $2.00 and up. up. and up; Juniors and childrens, $7.50 and up. uts up to size 56. $15.00. $1.15 to $6.75. 15 to $2.75, formerly $2.00 to $5.00. formerly 65c to $5.00. le, quality and artistic workmanship for $5.00 GE HATS $15.00 and up. For children- we have igs, $1.00 and up. rly $1.25. Oc per yard. ed. and 60c per yard. per yard. formerly 40c. rly 25c per yard. rard. yard, formerly $1.50 to $1.75 per yard. 95 and $9.90. y $9.75 to $15.00. p10.00 and $11.50. $14.50. $9.50 and $9.75. y $7.50 and $8.50. formerly $22.00. te at 29c. r roll. e ply $3.25. [INGS DEPARTMENT. andl~ odd pieces. .50. - o$85.0)0. 317.50. 100.00, formerly $145.00. to $6.00. -ly $8.75 to $12.50). ;5.00. )5.00. ), formerly $100.00. >rmerly $45.00 and $52.50). pestry, sprIig seats, $1 45.00 seil $50i.00. 52.50. >nne, $85.00 special. 0 and1( $10.00. pe(ct fullyI~ solicited. MAN'S 3RE~ OF QUALITY MANNING, S.C ARIMCAJAND&Off. IN MGSWINNEY.AffAIR Refuses to Interfere With Great Brit ain's Business IS NOT AMERICAN CITIZEN 19ot in Position to Make Protestations; Says State Department. New York, Sept. 6.--Peter J. Mac 8wincy, brother of the lord mayor of Cork, who is reported dying as the result of a hunger strike in Brixton prison, London, has made public a copy of a letter which he said he had re ceived from the State Department Washington, setting forth that it was "not in a position to make protesta tions to the British authority" against the lord mayor's arrest. Mr. Mac Swiney had requested the State De partment to intervene in his brother's behalf. The leter dated August 24 said: "The receipt of your letter of Au gust 18, 1920, and your telegram of August 21, 1920, is acknowledged call ing the department's attentio nto the alleged arrest and imprisonment of your brother, Terence MacSwiney, by the British authorities. "In reply beg to inform you that, from precedent established in cases of this kind, the department finds it is not in a position to make protestations to the British authorities against the arrest and imprisonment of one who, like your brother, is not a citizen of the United States." Report Weakness Increases. London, Sept. 6.-At 9 o'clock to night Lord Mayor MacSwiney was still living, but his weakness was increas ing and the pIison doctor suggested to his relatives that he be not alleyed to converse because of the waste i'o his strength. His wife and sisters spent several hours in the prison today. On leaving this evening, his wife said: "You can hardly imagine that hc ec-uld be so bad and still survive. Oui only hope now is in America and foi American financiei s tu withdraw thhe money from English securities. Ap. parently labor in England can d< nothing for us." Would Release on Conditions. London, Sept. 7.-A dispatch to th< London Times from Liege, Belgium c,utes David Lloyd George, the li; ish prime minister, as sayiag that i guarantees are given that the murde of policemen in Ireland will ce~ie th premier is convinced that Lord Mayi MacSw'rcy and the other hunge strikers will be released from prisor Other special dispatches tend to em firm the interview printed 'n th Times. --o USE OF TELEPHONE IN SOUTH AMERIC,' Net Work About 100 Times Mor Dense in U. S. Other Figure Cited. New York, Sept. 6.-There is onl; one telephone for every 300 populatioi in Central and South America accord ing to figures madle public after; survey by the A merican Trelephone an< Telegraph Company. In the othe American republies the tele'phone far from being the univeversal mean of communication that it is in thi country and the main detvelopmen Ithere is in the big cities, the othe areas being very poorly served. Th tele-phone network is about a hundre times as dense in this country as whole, as it is there. In point of th number of telephones per hundred c popula tion, the service here is mor than thity timites as goodl. The total of .425,403 telephonesi ail Ilthe Soth antd Central Amnerica connitries, including Cuba and Ilait should be coimparedl with the twelv I mill ion in the Un Iitedl States, whie have about the same total populatiot Argentine leads with 105,205 tehi p~hones, or ne:. 'ly a thir'd of the tot: The other countries having more thu HORSI ACa SSaddle Horst Several Spee< good Mules c U See us for IIcoFF 10,000 telephones are: Brazil 67,366; Mexico, 440,211; Cuba, 28,152; Chile 23670 and Uruguay, 19,486 Haiti with a total of 2500,000 people, has eighty two telephones. Telephones Scarce. Only one telephone for about every 300 population is found in the whole area, as compared with 11,39 for every hundred of population in the United States at the same (late, or about thir ty-four for every 300 population. Uruguay leads the Latin-American countries in point of telephone density with 1.34 telephones per hundred peo ple. The only other countries having as much as one telephone per hun dred population are Argentine. Cuba and Panama. In the three countries having the highest telephone develop ment, the systems are almost wholly under private ownership. The total telephone wire mileage is 905,587 compared with 29,800,000 in this country. Taking into considera tion the fact that the total area of the South and Central American countries is 8,476,600 square miles, compared with the 3,027,000 square miles of the United States there is only about one tenth of a mile of wire for every square mile -in the Latin countries, while there is nearly ten miles for every square mile here. This means that the telephone network is nearly a hundIred times as highly developed here as down there. Extent of Service. h'le extent to which the countries are served by their systems is indi cated by the figures showing the tele phone (levelopment in the largest city in each country. Havana, Cuba, is the most highly developed with 5.5 tele pliones per hundred population. Tak ing in al lof Cuba, however, there is only one teleplhone per hundred peo ple, Mexico City has 3.9 per hundred Mexico as a whole has only 0.25 tele T N 11 - 111 Your Succ< Is Our Suc< It has alwvays bec manifest a friendi welfare of deplosito for the success of for their success,1 of the bank are clo; fare of its custome W~e sto~v to me banking, ) prin1)ciple First Nati< ~I W. C. DAVIS, President. ,J. T. ST U ~Sand!I rload Just A1 ~s, Driving Horses Istersin the bunc ame in this car. Up-to-date Farr E Y& R phones per hu figures show I countries the in the large areas are he. condition. is. the Urted StV New Yjr1C Citv hundrec \Ae" a whole Here is a smallest fa. BITTER CiA Concord, N. H., Sei shire men and womt the first time, will v,0te maries tomorrow for Repubi Democratic candidates for States Senator, Congress ant ernor. Chief interest in the I can fight has been aroused by fort of Huntley H. Spaulding State food administrator, to Senator George H. Moses for i nation. The contest has been wage much bitterness. The Sp; forces have made much of Most sistent opposition to woman s' in an effort to swir g the w vote to their candid te, wh; State Anti-Suffrage Associa' published appeals to womer opposed suffrage to rej' primaries and vote for a. --- O DIE- FMOM POISONOUS Baltimore, Sept. 7. employes of Edgewood this city, are dead anc perately ill as a resui, some from of poisonous a. ary authorities said they (lid no% whether the 'men brought their in with then or drank some < alcohol kept on the post for i purpOses. ONAL BANK. :ess au eit or;w cizigthtthJn J .A. WEN E G , areHsss bs. Welsot ae loyt ofW Machde~oin~" ey.T .caizG BYatte n Fe~imbund mI)mwihmth