University of South Carolina Libraries
1 IN MKMORIAM In memory of my dear mother. Mrs. ' Barah j. Sturkie. ' ^ \ We miss thee from our holne, dear ' V " mother, f We miss thee from thy place; A shadow o'er o*r life is cast, We miss the sun6hine of thy face. We miss thy kind and willing hand, ' . Thy fond and earnest care; * -? ?- ?Uiknnf f"V* GkC* uur nozne *3 aarx. mutuui. . 'Tis hard to break the tender cord. When love haabound the heart; 1 I? Tis hard, so hard tp speak the words, .: We must forever part. Dearest loved one. we must lay thee, In thy peaceful grave, But thy memory will be cherished ' T1H we see thy heavenly face. , ( . \ Thy gentle voicetnow is hushed. ! Thy warm, true heart is still; And on thy precious brow. Is resting death's cold chill. <,:w V ~ V Thy hands are clasped upon thy breast I have kissed thy lovely brow; And in my aching heart I know I have no mother now. 3 Through *11 pain my .mother would Smile a smile of heavenly birth, , And when the angels called her home, j She bid us all farewelt. / ' . ^Heaven retains now my treasure, ^ Earth the lonely casket keeps; ; ? HEDGEPATH PICTURE FRAMING i- SHOP.?Pictures framed in all i^ItV ; >..? kinds to suit your order. Autcmo ,:C bile wind shields and h'ead lights. Seasonable prices for first class * work. Mail orders given prompt at tention*., Phone 3629, 3 647 Main r street, Columbia, S. C. It-p ^ ijeted Coughs and Colds are a ^menace to the LUNQS". Take no n&r ' chance with a syrup of merely - ; pleasing taste, but use LUNr'vc< GARDIA, recommended and used by Nurses and Physicians, and - - : proclaimed the best, Unequaled for sore throat, difficult breath, ng V;:. etc. 60c ahd 31.20 per bottle. - I' Jourv money back if any other | preparation approaches it for good \ results. Manufactured by Lungari dia,Co., Dallas, Texas. j FOR SALE BY HARM \ DRUG CO. ! 8t-10. f ^ "% ? ft CHRISTMAS W SHOPPING V g' is made t?sy at this store, for 'J!'i several months' pfenning sh) have brought you a splendid (fy/j selection oi bright, new Holi/<r day merchandise?here new yy for your choosing V There are Gifts lor every hod] \ Gr'acdma--Gifts th?t ) appreciation. Our Toy Sectior derful display of playthings fc Courteous service and careful at and every facility is here to ma this Christro&s simple, pleasax J. E. HA Lexington "IMHiiNHBHIIII And the sunbeams love to linger, Where my dear mother sleeps. Precious mother, she has left us? Left us, yes, forevermore; But wc hope to meet her. Or. that bright and happy shore. Lonely the house and sad the hours Since my dear mother has gone, But oh! A brighter home than ours, In heaven is now her own. rareweii dear, but not torever, There will be a glorious dawn; We shall meet to part?no never. In cold and silent tomb. Though thy dearest form lies sleeping On the resurrection morn. Thou shalt have a glorious waking. When the blessed Lord doth come, i i Written by her broken-hearted j daughter. Mrs. M. L. FLAKE. | CITATION-*' NOTICE. / State of South Carolina, County of Lexington.?By W. F. Hook, esquire, probate judge. Whereas, W. B. Hook made suit to me, to grant him Letters of Administration of the Estate of and effects ol Oracle A. Hook. These are Therefore to cite and admonish all and singular the kindred and Creditors of the said Gracie A. Hook, deceased, that they be and appear, before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Lexington, C. H., S. C., on 12th day December, 1922, next, after publication hereof at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show causa. if any they have, why the said Administration should,not be granted. Gven under my Hand, this 27th day of November, Anno Domini, 1922. W. F. HOOK (L. S.) Probate Judge "Lexington Co., S. C. Published on the 29th day of.November, 1922, in the Lexington papei\ 2 weeks. WHY LOOK OLD! Gray Hair Telis the Tale One Visit to the A LaMode Beauty Shop Solves the Problem. 16fO Main St., Columbia, S. C. New Enterprise . now open. ' Milady Shop, 1540 Main St., Columbia, S. C. Headquarters for Xmas gifts, hand made Tengerie and fancy hand work.. - ?: f?from Baby to v r|[ ^ n the utmost in j i has a most won- f jy >r the Youngsters ^ /4v ^ ttentiGn await you \ ,ke your shopping j, v it and satisfying. (J RMAN, , S. C. 1 I ! PUT AWAY "DUBS" i ' ? People of Today Universally i Wearing Less Clothing. <. . I; ] Hoc far this nation has departed I from the ways of its sainted fathers I ! The pious old New England custom ! of sewing up the children from fall to | spring in red flannel underclothes I way still be followed in remote and | God-fearing rural districts, bot in J larger centers of population people i ar?? wearing scandalously little proj tectlon against the blasts of winter. j And they're wearing less every ; f year! That the moderns don't all perI isb of pneumonia is only another- 5 | proof that our grandmothers didn't j I kno.v as much about hygiene as they j thought they did. And everybody who was ever stitched up for six months > j j in red flannel will admit that the boys i and girls of today are happier as well i as cleaner than those of the past With the modern girl exposing her j chest and knees to the blizzards and ' i the modern boy defying February | with loose, sleeveless and knee-length lawn combinations, it Is curious to realize that up to the last generation It was considered necessary to wear \ t wool next to the skin, not only in i r winter but also In summer. ! Listen to You man's "Dictionary of j Everyday Wants," published in 1884, the New York Sun enjoins: I , I: "Dress children warmly, woolen j s flannels next their person during the whole year. By every consideration i protect the extremities well. It Is j Ignorant barbarism that allows a child to have bare arms, legs and feet, even j ! in summer." 1' If the writer of that censorious dec- j laratlon is still alive, having failed to i ? expire from wearing wool next to his hide, he must be terribly shocked at, the "ignorant barbarism" of 1022, with j Its shameless display of arms and legs?or "limbs", as he would probably call the latter. Thosey were the days when people j slept with their windows shut be- j cause they thought the night air was, "poisonous." Don't blame them too! much, for the doctors gave 'em that | i dope about the night air. Yes, and J! the poor old docs believed It them- j f selves. v 11 < It was the doctors, too, who sprang { g that fuzzy one about wearing wool j s next the skin summer and winter. J And then when the victims got fever- j ish the doctors would bleed 'em. A J fear of cold, a tear of fresh air, a j fear of all nature was the keynote of | medical practice in those good old j days of our daddies. The irritated and exhausted wool wearers used to die plentifully from pneumonia, then called inflammation of the lungs. : WheT that happened the doctor? shook their beaks una Wld the v l^rt, must have sneaked out and brer ed some 'poisonous night rJr. - or thi he J must have left oft his flannel r hip cap,_or neglected to take his blu^ ^111 and black draft, or that he should; | have called the doctor sooner and i thereby parted earlier with his first j quart of blopdi \ A New York doctor of today was ? called to a pneumonia case while an Icy blixzard was blowing. The pa- i tlent was a child. Her temperature \ was very high. The windows were \ shut tight 440pen the windows top and bottom \ as wide as you can," said the doctor I to the horrified parents. , L And despite protests and domestic inconvenience the thing was dofle. In " response to the anxious forebodings of the father the doctor said: "Why, If you threw that child Into' a snowbank she would melt the snow, | but It would do her more good thaoi harm." The child lived to be a flapper with! hardly more clothes on her In wintet; t than in summer. \ \i ' Meals on Dining Cars. j Some day when you are traveling on a dining car call the steward over] 7 and ask him about how many mealij are served the traveling public during ' the course Of ft year; his answer surprise you. Acceding to one of thf j Pullman dining car stewards there t are 1.400 stewards employed on the! ' different railroads in tjiis country,. . and he estimated that each steward; during the year attends to the want*' ^ of abf'Ut 30,000 people. When yor! come to figure up the total it will sur j prise you. The road op which h?. runs feeds over three and a half mil lion people in its diners every tweWt; months, and none of these figures . however, include the old-time eatinj houses, where passengers are given 2(; minutes to gulp down a five-course meal. "English As She Is Spoke." I am an English teacher in a smal town high school. Otherwise, the in ? cident which gave me the most em; ^ barrassing moment of my life migh : not have affected me strongly as it did The place was a church social, when j the ruling forces of the town wen gathered. A group of a few congenia j souls was talking nonsense, pure ami imple. J In what must have been a penetrat Ing voice, I said to one opposite m<; apropos of something she had don? *1 seen you when y u done it" , A good old person, of whose prei i once near me I was unaware, patte i vie on the shoulder and said so tha : i the whole roomful could hear, MM; deer, you should say, *1 uaw yon wha j sou d A ?lt ** -Exchange. j? 2 11NAL DISCHARGE. Noiio<: is hereby given that K. C. Executor, of the estate if J. ?>. Oumaiander, hhs the day made application unto me for a final discharge kia auch "Executor; and that the 27th day c" T--icemberv 1922, at 10 o^cloek A. M. at my office, has been appointed ,-)r the hearing of said peti? tvon. W. F. HOOK, ... Probate, Lexington Co., S. C Nov Ji, 1922. awaawui s>. aMOHBDnMBaawn "Modern Eye Service" Dr. E. Mood Smith & Soo Optometrists LEESVILLE, S. C. Office Citizens Drug Co. ' ' i I>nr Accuracy Quality Service five you "Well Fitted Glasses" ELMGREN Optometrist and Optician i 207 Hampton Street COLUMBIA, S. C. nntU^.UlMA 4lilU>L | ^^OUGH f5'\ ; >?0R THE RELIEF OF [ Coughs, Colds, Croup [ WH00PIE6 COUQf, HOARSENESS BRONCHITIS ,-SOlD EVERYWHERE-. , ? ? ' ?* ' M.V Nan Cummings j Has Opened The Hollyhock , ' ea Room, i>2t CERVAIS ST. f W:cl Door to New Post Office COLUMBIA, S. C, j 'wr-horse wagon6 standard make rin; ??;> to $85, And Good standard taiake from $50.00 ' <u*h l.\i fcU V-.ai ifess $15.00 up. Tno pjace to get Bargains. tiK'^GOUT CONDKR MULB CO.. st , Columbia, S. O. mmm SUPPLIES Machinery Castings and j Repairs. Steel Beams, Rods, Ropes, Tackle, j Wheelbarrows, Trucks, j Wire . Cable, Boilers, Tanks, Stacks, Etc. Ven- i tu; tors, Grating, Etc. c mbard Iron Works j t AUGUSTA i V U^.ply CO., GEORGIA j 'V v'J Supplies and Repair* in Slock. i I Easier to Prevent i I' It is human to neglect S health, but it is very unwise. I I It is far easier to prevent I than it is to correct weakness I of body and strength. I ! Scott's Emulsion I is a fruitful source of true* ! I vitamine-nourishment 1 I to help keep the body I strong to resist dis- | (ease. Protect your TW g powers of resistance, <kS | take Scott's Emulsion ! ? | J^coli & Bowne, bioci/ilif jq N .. i I The Taylor Drug Co. i i Druggists 1520 MAIN STRKKT , , Pb?ne 50SS \ rj L* o n bUlUUlDKt, 0. b. Toiler Articles. Prescriptions, Everything that goes to make a First-Class Drug Store. If You Want t< PATRC ^ g?tg^araL-3i?aL!43JLa.-S:-.i'. i rssfgrrz 3 Carolina Ai I | Distri l-=' | MAXWELL AND CHAl p 2000-2002 MaicvSlreer jPfr ^ *- f SI BATTERIES?Ford, Over! >8 PI Chalmers, Essex, $18.75. E i n..u ~ n ecnange. runy guaraniet ?! Battery Service, 1035 Gen fi 3235, I Whitton Auto tj Save 25 to 50 per cent or b Used Parts for ALL,CARS . #3 given prompt attention. fj m y fcS !:?rg -j- .a'^g:-* :tM-^!Hr r; ^^1 Stoneyway Successors to Snelgrovc /.ll kinds of automobile rep Automobile accessories carri< consistent with quality. Acetlene welding of all 1 Chevrolet parts carried i I K. C. SXELG1 | telephones: Night 16 c "Everything AT Sanitai 1345 Main Street, pome Cooking and Reas "Little Quick, Polite and attenti Open Day and Night. i Bring your Job Printing^to The Die; patch-News where it will be promptly ! and neatly executed. ! ; 1 /I /I Cures Malaria, hhh Ct"11*' Fever, Bil | w Wvious Fever, Colds | and LaGrippe. I I ____??. FINAL DISCHARGE. | Noiiec is hereby given that the u?j dersigned will apply to W. F. Hook, judge of probate, for final discharge as executor of the estate of the late I m -\r tt' \Ta*to?v%Xot? [ -Vi. v\ . rwiuu uii j.iiuiauaj', j 23. at 11 o'clock in the forenoon. I MRS. L. E. SHULL,| Executor. I I PROFESSIONAL CARDS DRS. BOOZER DENTISTS 1615 MAIN STREET Over Lever's Shoe Store H COLUMBIA, 8. C. Z"7 PHONE NO. 7211 ' ' ' 1 ' I FRANK KNEEC Real Estate and Insurance ' BATESBURG. S. C. d. J. WlINUAKiJ ATTORNEY AT LAW ' \ No. 12 Clark Law Building Law Range Telephone 1S9 COLUMBIA, S ,C. / a 'Keep Runin' )NIZE lto Co., Inc. I ' h butors LMERS AUTOMOBILES P Columbia. S. C. j HTTT'TTTiESrt'^^ t'f IT1 and, etc., $17.50; Buick, ? >odge and Franklin, $24.90, S ;d for 12 months. Garrick's i| -ais. Columbia, S. C. Phone j| 1 JF? Wrecking Co. | j i i your Auto Parts, New and | I AND TRUCKS. Mail orders 8 I ia, S. C, I I? Garage Co. s's Garage at Old Stand. airing at reasonable prices, id in stock and at the lowest prices ;inds. in stock. ROVE, Chief Mechanic. Z >n 149. . ?r f Good. To Eat" THE ry Cafe Columbia, S. C. onable Frices, ? Different" from the others ' ve service. \