% ? ^1'? ''
? i*> I ' I I 1 I * Ma ii I.
FORT MILL TIMES
DKMOCKATIO
11. w. u i< .\ i >K*or? i >, i'*m rou *} ? Plop**
f>ne year * SI.00
Six months 60
Entered at the postoflico at Fort Mill,
&. C.. as second class matter.
? ?_ ' *
<m application to pie publisher, ndMf'tlning
rates ?re made known to
"those Interested.
THURSDAY. AUGUST 2,7 1908.
The Fort Mill Times has no
joys or regrets to express over
t he result of the primary election
in York county Tuesday. Of
course, we had men of our
choice for each of the offices, but.
at the qame time, there were
friends with whom we did rot
agr??e politically, and we could
never see th? propriety of
jeopardizing personal friendship
lor the sake of politics. Hence,
The Times neither worked for or
against any of the county candidates.
We are free to admit
that Tuesday's primary did not
result in every instance as we
# would have had it, but the voters
of the county have spoken and
the Fort Mill Times will cheerfully
support the nominees.
As a matter of justice to all,
we want to see a strict enforcement
of the local dog tax law.
It has now been several weeks
since this law became effective
and there are still a number of
canines running at large without
?ax tag or collar, and it is very
evident that the owners of these
dogs do not intend to pay this
tax unless compelled to do so.
It is indeed unjust to make one
citizen pay the tax and allow anot
her to escape it. Council should
collect the tax from every dogowner
or refund the money collected
from this source. <*
The Times joins with many
citizens in protesting against
the use and abuse of the town
ball as a dance hall. We arc informed
that when the new seats
were placed in the hall some
months ago a resolution or agreement
was made by council that
the hall should not again be used
for dance purposes. 1 hi; ruling
or agreement has failed to hold
good, as several dances have
bien held there recently and it is
not imnrobable that, as n rosnlt
of the reckless throwing aside of
the seats in the hasty preparations
for these dances, a number
of the new seats are now unfit
and unsafe for use. The taxpayers
of the town object to payirk?
taxes to maintain the hall
and have it thus abused. We
are satisfied that conucil would be
commended by a majority of our
citizens if it would put an immediate
stop to this practice.
MARRIAGE.
Theodore Parker has wisely
said that men and women, and
especially young people, do not
know that it takes years to marry
completely two hearts, even
of the most Uving and wellsorted.
But nature allows no
sudden change. We slope very
gradually from the candle to the
summit of life. Marriage is
gradual, a fraction of us at a
t me. A happy wedlock is a
lo ig falling in love. We know
young persons think love belongs
oniy to brown hair and plump,
round, crimson cheeks. So it
does for its beginning, just as
Mount Washington begins at
Boston bay. But the golden
marriage is a part of love which
the bridal day knows nothing of.
Youth is the tassel and silken
llower of love, ape ia the full
corn, ripe and solid in the ear.
Beautiful is the morning of love
w th its prophetic crimson, violet
purple and gild, with its hopes of
days that are to come. Beautiful
also is the evening of love,
w ith its glad remembrances, and
its rainbow side turned toward
heaven as well as earth. Young
people marry their opposites in
'omper and general character,
and such a marriage is generally
a good one. They do it instinctively.
The young man does
not say, "My black eyes require
to wed with blue, and my over
vehemence requires to be a little
modified with somewhat of lullness
and reserve." When these
opposite^ come together to be
wed, they do not know it, but
each thinks the other just like
himself. Old people never marry
their opposites; they marry
their similars and from calculat
ion. Each of these two arrangements
is very proper. In their
long journey, these young opposites
will fall out by the way
a great many times, and both
will charm the other back again,
and by and by they will be agreed ;
us to the place they will go to,
and the road they will go by, and
become reconciled. The man
will be nobler and larger for j
being associated with so much !
humanity unlike himself, and she j
will be a nobler woman for hav- ;
ing manhood beside bar, that
seeks to correct her deficiencies
and supply her with what she
lacks, if the diversity be not too
crent, and there boreal piety and
love in their hearts to begin with. ,
The old bridegroom, having a
much shorter journey to make,
' must associate himself with one
like himself. A perfect and complete
marriage is, perhaps, as
rare i s perfect personal beauty.
Men and women are married
fractionally - now a small fraction,
then a large fraction. Very
few are married totally, and then
only, we think, after some forty
or fifty years of gradual apj
proach and experiment. Such a
, large and sweet fruit is a cpm!
plete iparriage that it needs a
! Very long summer to ripen in and
1 then a long winter to mellow and
I season. But a real, happy marriage
of love and j udgement be
tween a noble man woman is one
of the things so very handsome
that if the sun were, as the
Greek poets fabled, a god, he
might stop the world in order to
feast his eyes with such a spectacle.
DOES NOT GROW WISER.
The world does not grow wiser
as it grows older. There are
certain errors of calculation,
based on a mistaken estimate of
human nature, which repeztt
! themselves with each generation,
i though they have been found
out, exposed, labeled and widely
announced five thousand times.
Such, for example, is the case
of the sanguine young woman
who marries a rake for the purpose
of reforming him. Such is
' the case of the father who takes
' his indolent and shiftless son
into business, expecting that
1 responsibility will steady him.
! Such is the case of the church
which elects a person to office in
! order to seoure his active inter,
est in the work of the church.
Such is the case of the old people
; who make over their property to
their children, hoping to enjoy
the proofs of their gratitude j
through the declining years of j
their life. These things all work i
one way, perhaps an exception j
so rare to be quite undeserving j
of attention, and their method '
and result pretty generally j
known, and yet, such is the con- .
ceit of men that almost all who '
try the experiment believe that
they by reason of superior sagacity
will be able to do what thous
ancls of others sorrowfully failed
to accomplish. The law of the
heavenly kingdom is, "Make the
tree good and the fruit good," be|
ginning the roform with the tree
: and not with the fruit; and that:
law cannot safely be trans!
grossed.
A Worthy Tiibutc to Dr. Thormvcll.
In an address before the District
convention. K. of P.,-at
Bowman, S. C., on Aug. 5th, Mr. !
Hunter A. Gibbes, paid the fol- i
lowing tribute to the late la-'
1 mented Dr. J. H. Thornwell:
The well-beloved Knight whom
we thus seek to honor was born
in the President's house on the 1
campus of the South Carolina ;
University in Columbia on May
13, 1810. His father, Rev. Dr.
James Henley Thornwell, one of
I the most eloquent and scholarly
ministers the South has pro- j
duced, was for many years Presi-;
I J 1- - 1? If T .. ? I
ueiit ui tne university. Dr. i
Thorn well, the father, was a!
noted educator in his time, and
was famed for the uprightness
' of his character, his piety and
learning.
The subject of this brief
sketch received his early education
in the school of Mrs. Peck,
in Columbia. Afterwards he became
a student in the Franklin
Academy in the town of Lancaster.
Although a mere lad of j
sixteen years when the Civil War
broke out, young Thornwell
served in the Confederate Army 1
with credit and honor. In 1866
he entered the South Carolina
College, from which institution
ha was graduated in 1868. In
1869 he began the practice of
: law, but soon thereafter felt the
call of God to the ministry. Dr.
j Thornwell began the study re!
quired for his new calling in
' 1871, and in 1874 he was licensed
j as a minister by the South Caro-1
1 lina Presbytery. He entered upon
this new field of activity with
enthusiam and faith, and con- i
tinued as an active worker until:
1 the day of his death.
Or' Thornwpll n'oe
? _ - ...?* **( v?? n V1WV l/^/V.4
Grand Prelate of the Grand
Lodge Knights of Pythias in
1900. Before his term of ofhce
expired he was appointed Grand
Keeper of Records and Seal, and
heboid this latter office there-,
after continuously until his
death, which occurred on December
30, 1907.
This , well-beloved, genial
Christian gentleman was the exemplar
of all that is noblest and
best in Pythianism. The record
of his life is one of manly Christ-:
ian service, full of charity and j
deeds of kindness. He was a
good citizen. He fought a good
fight and kept the faith. Such
is the judgement of those who
knew him best and loved him ,
most. I
XOTICK.
We want agents to sell our
new and popular subscription
books. We give splendid terms. !
If you want work, or if you want
to better your position, let us
hear from you at once.
C. II. Robinson & Co.
Charlotte, N. C.
nbe to The Tliiiff*.
- - - -
THE DEMOCRATIC) PRIMARY ELECTION
The following is the re9ult of
Tuesday's primary election in
Fort Mill and York county as
nearly correct as it was possible
to learn up to the hour The
Times goes to press:
State Ticket.
Fort York
Mill Co'ty
For U. S. Senate:
John Gary Evans 205 1,097
John P. Grace 0 8
Geo. Johnstone 6 275
W. W. Lumpkin 9 97
O. B. Martin 17 123
R. G. Rhett 42 811
E. D. Smith 20 568
For Governor:
M. F. Ansel 108 2,208
Cole L. Blease 195 1,060
For Lieut. Governor:
Thos G. McLeod 302 2,956
For Sec'y State:
R. M. McCown 302 2,933
For Comp. General:
N. W. Brooker 23 585
A. W. Jones 275 3,041
For State Treas'r:
R. H. Jennings 297 3,070
For Adjt-Insp.Gen'l:
J. C. Boyd 255 2,103
H. T. Thompson 45 1,023
For State Supt. Ed:
E. C. Elmore 29 874
S. R. Mellichamp 238 885
J. E. Swearingen 29 1,397
For Atty. Gen'l
J. FrazierLyon 235 3.038
For R. R. Comm'r;
James Cansler 68 1,497
B. L. Caughman 125 729
F. C. Fishburne 3 158
H. W. Richardson 10 145
J. A. Summersett 89 513
County Ticket.
Fort York
Mill Co'ty
For Congress:
T. B. Butler 22 418
D. E. Finley 262 2,751
W. P. Pollock 21 277
Solic'tr 6th District:
T If T T r* mr
o. iv. nenry ZOO ?}, lfD
For State Senator:
J. H. Saye 91 1,566
W. H. Stewart 214 1,682
For Representative:
S. H. Epps 260 1,794
J. S. Glasscock 214 2,249
J. P. Hollis 123 1,911
W. E. Hurt 80 1,622
S. L. Johnston 165 1,068
O. L. Sanders 85 2,151
W. B. Wilson 245 1,968
For Sheriff:
H. G. Brown 246 1,877
S. S. Plexico 55 1,415
Clerk of Court:
J. R. Logan 62 1,559
J. A Tate 240 1,755
Countv Supcrv'r:
T. W. Boyd 162 902
W. G. Duncan 10 184
Clem Gordon 65 920
C. C. Hughes 50 548
A, J. Parrott 5 605
G. L. Suggs 12 120
For Coroner:
J. L. McGarity 17 453
L. W. Loutliian 289 3,173
County Supt. of Ed:
T. E. McMackin 262 3,151
For Treasurer:
H. A. D. Neely 258 2,869
For Auditor:
W. P. Crook 46 381
J. J. Hunter 80 1,101
B. M. Love 33 1,037
W. B. Williams 149 789
For County Comm'r:
W. A. Aycock 132 1,432
M. S. Carroll 102 1,444
J. C. Kirkpatrick 136 1,241
J. A. C. Love 60 839
L. J. Lumpkin 155 1,543
B. R. Walker 13 318
According to the above figures
the successful county candidates,
are as follows:
For State Senator: W. II. Stewart.
For Representatives: John P.
Hollis, O. L. Sanders, J. S. Glasscock,
W. B. Wilson.
For Sheriff: Hugh G. Brown.
For Clerk of Court: J. A. Tate.
For County Supervisor: T. W.
Boyd and C. F. Gordon will make
a second race.
For Coroner: L. W. Louthian.
For Supt. Ed.: T. E. McMackin.
For Treasurer: H. A. D. Neely.
For Auditor: Second race between
B. B. Love and John J.
Hunter.
Lumpkin, Kirkpatrick, Carroll
and Aycock must run a second
race for the two places as county
commissioner.
The Election in Lancaster.
Returns from Lancaster county
give Butler 733, Pollock 588, and
Finley 752.
W. P. Robinson and J. Harry
Foster were nominated representatives.
Hunter was renominated sheriff
over three opponents by about
1000 majority.
L. J. Perry and G. L. Mobley
will make a second race for supervisor.
Thos. L. Hilton was nominated
treasurer.
There will be a second race for
auditor between H. H. Horton
and J. W. Porter.
Second race for Supt. of Education
between C. N. Sapp and
A. C. Rowell.
Second race for coroner between
J. M. Caskey and John
King.
? As a result of a washout on
the line of the Seaboard railroad
between Chester and Monroe, all
Seaboard trains yesterday were
detoured by way of Charlotte to
Chester. i
The State Election.
Returns frojn the State election
up to an early hour this
morning1 for the senate and
State offices are as follows:
Senator.
Evans, 20,300.
1 AOA
Johnstone, 9.621.
Lumpkin, 2,928.
Martin, 4,331.
Rhett, 18,169.
Smith, 20,564.
Governor.
Ansel, 45,071.
Blease, 30,866.
Comptroller General.
Brooker, 15,098.
Jones, 43,515.
Adjutant General.
Boyd, 38,914.
Thompson, 31,473.
Superintendent of Education.
Elmore, 20,557.
Mellichamp, 33,135.
Swearingen, 26,964.
Railroad Commissioner.
Caughman, 19,713.
Cansler, 17,343.
Fishburne, 7,056.
Richardson, 7,501.
Summersetc, 14,512.
Clemson Boys to be Reinstated.
Clemson college has passell a
crisis and its future is assured.
This is the opinion of the faculty |
and the trustees there for commencement,
and quite naturally
they are discussing the fatal
April fool joke which brought
; the question of authority squareI
ly to a head.
The details of this trouble are
familiar to the public and are
hardly worth repeating. As |
President Mell exoressed it. the
position was that the students,
many of them absolutely uni
familiar with familiar with disci|
pline, must be made to obey or;
ders. The committee in charge
1 settled that, although this ques- .
tion of discipline had the presi- j
I dent in similar trouble in 1901,1
now that the affair is settled the
discipline committee is receiving
applications from many of the
dismissed students, nearly all, in
fact, requesting reinstatement.
In about 100 cases, after very
careful investigation, reinstate)
ment next year has been ordered,
j This is no backward step on the
' part of the governing board. |
| There are among those dismissed
a large number that have been j
given to understand that they
i cannot return. Others have
shown themselves sincere, peni- !
tent and after individual investigation
have been remitted.
The lesson has been a whole-'
some one, according to the au,
thorities. President Mell has
i received letters, one from a college
in Kentucky, one from
North Carolina, and two from 1
, Georgia, stating that the dis- i
missal of these students effectually
stopped trouble in other
institutions. It definitely fixed I
the authority of the faculty and
no further outbreak need be ex- ;
pected for years.
Old Yeoman Plant Sold.
What was left of the printing
nlonf fViof urnc? *-/v
f/iunv uua ?uc uiuu^lll Ul I UI IV I
: ville for the purpose of establishing
the York Enterprise, and
afterward used in the publication
of the papers known as the !
Yorkville Yeoman and York ville
New Era, has been sold to
Messrs. J. H. Schroeter & Bro.,
of Atlanta, Ga. The plant con-1
| sists of a Country Campbell
printing press, a small job press
; type stands, cases and other maj
terials in various stages of wear.
Messrs. Schroeter & Bro., paid
$300 for the outfit. A part of it
they will repair and resell, and a
part of it they will consign to the
iunk heap. This old plant has
had quite an eventful history
locally; but a truthful review of
that history would hardly add in
any considerable measure to the
pleasant recollections of any of
those most directly concerned. ? |
Yorkville Enquirer.
Watching Fort Mill Grow.
Mrs. A. VV. Taylor spent last
! Friday in Fort Miil, the guest
of her cousin, Mrs. P. K. Mull.
While in that hustling little
town she took a peep in at their
fine bank, where she met her old
friends, Messrs. E. Russell, j
'Bobbie" Grier and W. B.
Meacham, Messrs. Russell and
Meacham showed her over the
bank where she saw piles and
piles of money?greenbacks of
large denomination, and silver I
money of all sizes, and although
J she'jknew not a cent of it be- 1
lodged to her, still she enjoyed
seeing all that money. She
thought it looked "real pretty." !
Fort Mill is building up rapidly.
Numbers of handsome new residences
are in process of erection,
among which is Mr. Walter
Meacham's beautiful home '
which, when completed, will be j
a decided ornament to the little ;
city. Pineville correspondence '
Charlotte Chronicle.
) 1
1 '
?It is reported on the streets I
this- morning that Doby's bridge, i
(> miles south of Fort Mill is gone 1
as a result of high water in 1
Sugar creek. t
i_e: comment 1 (
E3v A.. ISI. IDLER. 1
.... - - I <
Men who refuse to pay their I
honest debts will drop a coin in i
the church plate and imagine ,
themselves Christians. (
Why is it that so soon as a man i
stains himself he seeks to rub it i
off against church pews and pure ,
Sunday school children ?
The idea of teaching every girl
to thump the piano and every
boy to be a bookkeeper, will
make potatoes worth $8 a barrel
in 20 years.
Land is sold on its record.
When you buy land go ask a good
abstract man how to get a clear
title. Many a poor person has
paid for a poor title. There are
men who would tleece even a
washerwoman in land deals.
When a man points a gun at
you, knock him down. Don't
stop to look if it is loaded, but
knock him down and don't be at
all particular what you do it
with. If there is going to be a
coroner's inquest, let it be over
the other fellow, he won't be
missed.
The church, bell?how its melodies
ring, as its tones vibrate and
linger. The fashionable belle,
with a beau on her string, has
a beautiful ring on her finger.
A political ring is a very bad
thing?it scoops in the fool and
the scholar; but so pleasing a
ring has no earthly thing as the
ring of the bright silver dollar.
Thanks to Providence, they are
growing fewer. I mean that type
of man who is continually sneering
at the local paper because it!
is not big, cheap and newsy like
the city papers. And you can
S!lfplu ll-iof Vif> i" ?
_ V, Mini, nc IS Ill/L LJcl1I?
dering any of his wealth in assisting
to make it bigger and better,
and that generally the paper has
done more for him than he has
for it. The man who cannot see
the benefits arising from a local
paper is of about as much value
to his town as a delinquent tax
list.
Every young lady may mark it j
down as a fact that if she flirts :
and associates with "pick-meups"
she will soon have no others
for associates. No matter how
unjust it may seem, there will
always be a suspicion that those
who form quick acquaintances
are not as pure in heart and mind
as they ought to be. It would be
unjust to say that no pure minded
girls flirt. They do and many
lose their purity by so doing.
Others, though n??t so unfortunate,
subject themselves to suspicions
which every woman should
be above.
Many persons feel offended because
their comings and goings
are not mentioned in the local
paper while those of others arq
and wonder what the matter can
ne. ine explanation of the mat- ;
ter is that the editor means to be j
impartial, but some escape mention.
The likes and dislikes of
the editor have nothing to do
with it, and while it is not pretended
that the editor is more
than human, he knows that the
success of his journal depends on
his fairness and impartiality to ,
all. It is best when a notice is
desired to always mention it to '
the editor, or notify him through 1
the postofhce. No one feels worse
about any seeming neglect or;
partial performance of duty than j
the editor himself.
If you are not well don't talk
about it. To do so only exaggerates
your consciousness of physical
discomfort; also it casts a
shadow of gloom over other people.
They grow hesitant about
asking you how you feel. It gives
them the cold chills to be continually
told that you "are not very
well" or "not so well" or "about j
the same." Do you know that a ,
good deal of this is imagination?
If you braced up and told people
/lUnnviitr ^ * 1
Liicci njf kimi ^'UU It'lL LlJJ-tOP, '
nine chances in ten you would j
feel tip-top pretty soon. You'd
forget the ailing habit. Don't
let yourself become a slave to
such a miserable little disorder of
health and happiness as the per- i
petual habit of "not feeling well." j
? j ^
How does the village editor
manage to make the newspaper ,
he does, is a question often asked
and never answered in but one :
way. By work. He is his own J
editor, reporter, business man-' ,
ager, foreman, mailing clerk, j i
pressman, and frequently com- 1
positor. Alone, or with an as- 1
sistant or two, he turns out each ! .
week a paper which, while perhaps
not brilliant, contains substantially
all the general news of i
the day and all the news of the
locality. The paper has an influ-'
ence far greater in proportion to <
its circulation than the great
metropolitan dailies, and it does j
as much, if not more, to educate
and reform the people than the \
churches and public schools. The i J
country editor is not properly ap- ,
predated, fo'r he does more for
the community in which he lives t
than any other individual. He '
must have a firm belief in a reward
hereafter or his nerve
would forsake him early in his
career. * i
- *
S???0?0??@G'*? ?
1 Mills & ^
1 "Patriot"
| for me
| "Society"
ifor
Those are "St*
made in one of tin
factories of the Bo
Hand Shoe Co., St
tal daily capacity ?
terv of "Star Brail
which is t he lare.es
operated by any 01
@ turer in the world
I 52,000
g
0 One person out <
g in the United St;
0 Brand" Shoes, an<
^ recently placed an
0 nails of them to
Qg *
g) wards.
? Try a pair of tli
Cr5 *
0 will find, as we ha
| "STAR BRAND" SKI
| Mills & Y
?@S??>?3?@<8@? C
Does your back ache'/ Do you have
sharp pains in t hesidc.nnd the small of
the back/ This is due, usually, to kidney
trouble. Take DeWiit's Kiduoy ami
Bladder Pills. '1 hey will promptly
relieve weak back, backache, rheumatic
pains and all Kidney and Bladder disorders.
Sold and recommended by1
Ardrey's drug store.
? Miss Alice Gulp, of Charlotte,
spent Saturday and Sunday with
relatives in this place.
?< ?DeWitt's
Little Early Risers, sale,
easy, pleasant, sure little liver pills.
Sold by Ardrey's drug store.
A prirl can love amost any man
that her parents are willing to
object to.
?
The little attacks of stomach trouble
and stomach disorders will undoubtedly
lead to chronic dyspepsia unless you
take something for a sntlicieur time to
strengthen the stomach and give it a i
chuuco to get well. Jl you take Kodol
in the beginning the had attacks of
Dyspepsia will be avoided, but if you i
allow these little attacks to go unhced
ed it will take Kodol a longer time to .
put your stomach in good sonditiou
again. Get a bottle of Kodol today.
Sold by Ardrey's drug store.
A supar-coated pill is one thinpr
which successfully combines business
with pleasure.
Summer complaints and other serious
ailments common in hot weather can
be traced to the stomach nine times
out of ton. Keep the stomach in good
order right now by keeping a bottle of
Kodol handy in the house all the time,
but especially during this month.
Take Kodol whenever you feel that
you need it. That is the only time you
need to take Kodol. Just when yon
need it; then you will not he troubled
with sour stomach, belching, gas on
the stomach, bloating, dyspepsia and
indigestion. Sold by Ardrey's drug
Store.
People who have no troubles
don't know what they have to
be thankful for.
While Kennedy's Laxative Cough
Syrup is especially recommended for '
children, it is, of course good for adults.
L'hildren like to take it because it tastrs
nearly as good as maple sugar. Its
laxative principle drives the cold from
the system by a gentle, natural, yet
fopious action of the bowels. t-old by
Ardrey's drug store.
NOTICE TO ROAO OVERSEERS.
Ml Sections Must Be Put In FirstClass
Condition at Once.
All of tho Road Overseers of York
bounty are hereby called upon to call
nit the HANDS ON T1IKIR RKSl'KC
1.TVE SEOTIONS and put the Roads in
Kirst-Class eoudition at once.
All able-bodied male citizens between
the.ages of Eighteen and Fifty !
if ears ami not specifically exempted by
aw, are liable to road duty, ami must
tvork Five Days of It) hours, or u<> hours. |
The road should he well ditehed on
he sides and the loose earth pulled to'
he centre, till holes should he tilled in
is permanent manner as is practicable
a iih the facilities at hand.
i HOMAS W. ROYU,
Su|s'rvisor of York t 'oanty,
Hazel Orist, Ulerk of Board.
. j
wsemeietw I
'oung Oo. I
rt a /^? - ?
Shoes I ,
and ?
IMS Shoes I
3ixien.
ir Brand" Shoes, ?
* ten big specialty $
berts, Johnson & ?
. Louis. The to- @
of this great bat- ?
d" shoe factories, (
I group of factories ?
ne shoe nianufac- (
Pairs. g
>1 every thirty-two ?
ites wears "Star ?
I Lucie Sam has ^
order for w21,470 q
he worn by his
icso shoes and you ?
ve, that
)ES A3E BETTER. ?
oung Co, | (i
3. EUQiENE BASSEY, ft?. D.
Office in Bunk Buudiug.
Night calls answered from Phone 121.
| JUST RECEIVED jj ^
5 Car Load of best Virginia &
1 ? <v
y "B -z *
| Car load Portland-Atlas ^
3 Cement J
^ | j
J Can sell you cheaper than 4
* the cheapest. 4
I V, B, Blankenship, |
* 4
Cleaning', Pressing,
and Dyeing.
Join the Fort Mill Pressing
Club, membership $1.00 per
month. Dry, chemical or wet
cleaning. Besides Clothing, we
clean or dye Furs, Skins, Rugs,
Mats, Feathers, bleach Straw or
Panama ilats; old Neckties and
Ribbons made new; cleaning and
dyeing of Gloves.
'Phone orders to 140, or call on
us up stairs over Parks Drug Co.
GUY A. ROSS, Proprietor.
u ^ a V V vuo
Inflammation of the bladder,
urinary troubles and
backache use
DeWitt's Kidney
and Bladder Pil?s
A Week's
Treatment 25c ,
E. C. DcWITT & CO.. ChicugOr IIL J
Sold bj Ardrey's Drugstore. M
H O LI 1S T F R' 3
?.9eA'j HosniaiitTea Suggeb
A B jsy Medicine for Bu-y P- pie.
Brings Golden Health and R. ew.l Vnfor. flH
m
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m
mil lUi'U. V,o. Ii -i Kooky hlonritnin Ton in lnl?-< BHHB|
30LDFN N'JGGETS FOIt SALLOW TFOnitl
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