Fort Mill times. (Fort Mill, S.C.) 1892-current, October 11, 1906, Image 3
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In the Local Field.
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Mr. J. L. Kiser has been seriously
ill for some days at his
home two miles north of town.
Mrs. F. G. Whitlock and children
returned Thursday evening
from a week's visit to relatives
in Charlotte.
Mr. James Potts has moved
into the Pegram house, on White
street, which he bought recently
from Mr. A. R. McE'haney.
Mr. Marvin Whitlock, of Aiken,
spent several days last week at
the home of his brother, Mr.
F. G. Whitlock, in this place.
Mrs. Darby, the mother of
Mrs. Harvey Witherspoon, is
snendini"' a vvhilp at- tho hnmo
of the latter on Forest street.
The Millfort Mill was closed
the greater part of the past
week on account of the burning
out of a motor which drives the
spinning department.
Mr. B. C. Ferguson left Sunday
evening for Worthville,
N. C., where he will be employed
for the week by the Worth Mfg.
Co.
Mr. W. Henry Coy, superintendent
of the Lockhart Cotton
Mills, spent several days of the
past week with Mr. J. S. Potts.
Mr. Coy was formerly with the
Dover Yarn Mills, atPineviile.
The condition of Miss Lulu
Wolfe, who has been ill for
several months at the home of
her mother, Mrs. M. II. Wolfe,
in Sprattville, is reported to be
less hopeful than at any time
during her illness. The young
lady is gradually growing weaker
and her relatives have grave
doubts as to her recovery.
State Superintendent of Education
O. B. Martin will visit
Fort Mill on Friday, November
2, and at 7.30 in the evening
will deliver an educational lecture
in the town hall. The
lecture will be free of cost and
the public is invited to go out
and hear Mr. Martin. ?
Mr. J. Q. Cousart, who went
to Walterboro a few weeks ago,
spent Saturday and Sunday with
his family here. Mr. Cousart
showed the reporter two large
specimen of Japanese persimmon
grown, at YYalterboro, upon an
apple tree by the grafting processs.
The persimmons were
bright yellow in color and about
the size of a baseball.
Mrs. Catherine Massey, the
aged mother of Mr. L. J. Massey,
sustained a very painful injury
Friday at her home on Booth
street. Mrs. Massey, on entering
the dining room, stumbled
ind fell heavily upon her r'ght
irm, spraining her wrist in such
a manner that she has been unable
to use her right hand
since.
Miss Alice White left several
days ago for Black Mountain, N.
C., where she will make her
home in the future. Miss White
has purchased a handsome mountain
home near the Vanderbilt
estate, where in a short time she
will be joined by her aunt, Miss
Lizzie Culp, who will resiue with
her. The White homestead, two
miles south of Fort Mill, is being
occupied for the present by Mr.
and Mrs. H. E. White.
A series of meetings began
r-i j i -l. _ i ii ' i v .
ounuay nignv at me ivietnocnst
church which will continue
throughout the week, services
being held each night at 7.30
o'clock. The pastor, Mr. Chandler,
is being assisted by Rev.
E. K. Hardin, of the Yorkville
circuit. Presiding Elder Stackhouse
will be present at the
services Saturday and Sunday.
The community is cordially invited
to attend these services.
All of the machinery is in
place at the new ginnery of
W. J. Stewart, near the coton
warehouse, and the gin will
>e in operation just as soon as
the electric motor arrives and
'he wires can be connected. The
ielay in the arrival of the motor,
.vhich was shipped from New
York some days ago, is proving
an inconvenience for the farmars,
many of whom are compelled
to haul their cotton several
miles to be ginned.
A marriage of much importance
to the people of Pleasant
Valley and vicinity will take
place the evening of October
23rd, when Miss Bleeker Mae
Faris wili become the bride of
Mr. Robert M. Cousart. The
marriage will take place at the
home of the bride's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. I. L. Faris, and will be
witnessed by a large number of
relatives and friends of the contracting
parties. Miss Faris and
Mr. Cousart are both popular
and well known young people of
Pleasant Valley and their friends
there and elsewhere will be interested
to learn of their approaching
marriage.
Mrs. Jas. T. Younff visited
relatives in Charlotte Thursday,
i Mr. Ira G. Smythe has taken
the position of cotton seed buyer
for Spratt and Culp.
Messrs. J. M. Spratt and FVed ;
! Nims left Monday for a short j
; business trip to Black Mountain,
In. C.
I Mr. "Ed Broom has been ill J
I for some time at his home near
Sprattville.
Mrs. J. L. Spratt visited her
parents at Ardreys, N. C., the
past week.
The little son of Mrs. R. M. ,
Erwin who has been ill of fever j
is reported to be much improved. I
Hazel, the little son of Mr. and
Mrs. Z. y. Bradford, is reported I
as much improved from an illness
of fever.
Mr. C. F. Rodgcrs, Jr., has
accepted the position of bookkeeper
in the store of Mr. A. O.
Jones.
A meeting of the stockholders
of the local Cotton Warehouse
will be held next Saturday afternoon
at 4 o'clock in the town hall.
, Every stockholder is urged to be
present.
Sell your cotton and cottonseed
on the Fort Mill market. The!
buyers of the staple here pay the j
! highest prices, and as for seed,
i each one wants all he can get,
consequently there is ginger and
snap in the bidding for them.
The next session of the York I
; Baptist Association will convene ;
with the Baptist church at Clo:
ver next Tuesday, Oct. lGth, I
at 11 o'clock a. m. Full delega;
tions from all churches of the
! Association are expected to at|
tend.
| The case of J. W. Elms vs. ]
the Southern Power Co., will be
called in the court of general
sessions at Lancaster the coming
week. Mr. Elms will ask for
damages in the sum of $10,000
for a broken -leg and other injuries
alleged to have been received
in an accident at Great
I Falls last February.
The latest order issued by the
j the postofhce department, looking
to the expeditious delivery of
mails, was that providing for the
! discontinuance of the back
; stamping in large cities. It is
! probable that back stamping
I of letters by the office to which
i they are addressed will be universally
abolished.
In the presence of a distin1
guished gathering at Great Falls,
! S. C., Friday arternoon, Miss
i Mary Duke, of Durham, laid the
corner stone of the large power
house there dedicating the plant
i to "the upbuilding and uplifting
I of the South, hor rw>nnlr? Vior
industries and her institutions."
From the Charlotte Observer
: it is learned that relatives of Mr.
I J. S. Huddleston, who waa killed
by a train near Concord, N C.,
some time ago, have accepted a
compromise verdict for $1,900.
Mr. Huddleston and family vvere
1 residents of Fort Mill some years
J ago.
Dr. Louis Friedheim, a veterj
inary surgeon of Rock Hill, v/as
! here several days of the past
! week examining the herd of cattle
on the dairy farm of Mr. T.
| B. Spratt. Each of the sixteen
j cows in the herd underwent a
i close medical examination, with
the result that not the slightest
trace of tuberculosis or other disease
was discovered.
Good roads are the cheapest
roads. The nnnual expense
growing out of the wear and tear
to vehicles and the delay and
sometimes failure in marketing
crops would make a sum sufficient
in a few years to build
j and keep in order the most exi
pensive system of improved
highways.
James Adams' Railroad shows
struck the town Monday and
have given performances each
niirht at 8 o'clock in a hitr t nnt"
; near the head of Main street,
i Those who have watched the
performances speak highly of
j the character of the show.
A telephone message Monday
from Charlotte announced the
death in one of the hospitals in
that city of a Mr. Erwin, a resident
of the Pleasant Valley section.
Mr. Erwin had been ill for
several weeks. He leaves a wife
and several children. The funeral
and burial took place Tuesday
at Six-Mile church, in Lancaster
county Tuesday.
The autumnal equinox has
been making itself felt with
much more than ordinary force J
this year. The beginning was
the Atlantic coast, storm which
' swept Wrightsville Beach at
Pawley's Island. Since then
i this section has had clouds and j
| driving rains, and the result of
I the hurricanes and typhoons
: that have been prevailing in
1 different parts of the world,
l uwiiiM.
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SPECIAL NCT1C^S7
LOST?About two weekt mro? two
white piK*. niulo nuo lomalo, twol
months old. Howard for ruturi t
I W H .TONES. ? I
Frosh Fakers' l*v*\|,1
every Saturday at JONES'. \
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^ will always lia\e (dud Bread.
^ You can always fiul it at ^
$ A. (). .TONES'
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W>\\\WA\VA\N\\VvN\\\\N
| W. H. HOOVEI
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Vy DEALE
WINES, LIQUCRS, CI(
1 $1f 125 East Council Strtet,
?* We quote you the. folio
V Brandies, Wines, EtcA
? I Gallon New CornxWhis
% 1 Gallon 1-year-old CI rn \
1 Gallon 2-year-old Cirn \
\s 1 Gallon 3-year-old Clrn \
?> 1 Gallon 4-year-old CA ai \
1 Gallon New Rye Wldske
t 1 Gallon 1-year-old Rye \
1 Gallon 2-yea:*-old Rye \
\t 1 Gallon James E. Pepper
1 Gallon Old Henry Rye \>
%? 1 G illon Echo Springs R
i *z 1 Gallon Apple Brandy (n?
1 G illon Apple Brandy (o
4 Quarts 7-year-old Corn (
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jl^ v^.iai to lUiniiiuun v>?;i il
I 4 Quarts Old Henry Rye
a/ 4 Quarts Rose Valley Rye
4 Quarts Malt Rye
| sv 4 Quarts Hoover's Choice
j We can furnish you anyth
I si orders will receive prompt a
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d is now filled from
[k\v and fashionable goods.
just received a big shimn M
tidies, Children and Men aiB
dioe trade for Fall and AY into
sure that if you will look thro
>11 will find just what you wa
B3ERGCCDS.
almost everything to kee]>
during the winter. Ivul
er boots, over shoes of everv
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RPFHI A !
s 5lull Curtains, aii good col
i ?3.50 to 87.00 a pair, will
tual Factory "Prices,
ndorwear for everybody.
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of Heavy Lap Robes can If
rtb from 8*2.50 to 810. They i
samples, no two alike. i
! will sell them cheap. Come
11 us your cotton aiujf^eed at
rket prices an&1>u^;our gc
ist prices.
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Red. Your liver i
Diggest trouble
If you would be
Ramon's Treat.
)nly 25 cents* . ' ^ \ H
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