Fort Mill times. (Fort Mill, S.C.) 1892-current, April 29, 1909, Image 2
FCrtT MILL TIMES1,
DEMOCRATIC
. W. BRADFORD. - EDITOR, j
On* y?ir\r J1.00
On application to the publisher, ad- ;
vertUInc rates are inudu known to ,
thusa IntKentnd.
I
1..RFJ.- ... 1 JLJ ? .'J-. ..L. > . J. 1.L .... Li I
THURSDAY. APRIL 29.1909.
HUMIUJi'.l. .AI.LJ1-! .'.'J 1X1-' '
A NEW SCHOOL BUILDING.
The lethargy under which Fort
Mill lias been lying was most
effectively thrown off Tuesday i
when by a practically unanimous ,
vote of the electors it was de-1
cided to :ssue ten thousand dollars
worth of bonds to provide a modern
school building: for the youth
of the community. This event'
ma,rk9 a red-letter tlay in the
history of the town. It means
that the parents of the boys and
Riils of school age are at last
awake to the fact that they owe
their offspring a duty the fulfiillment
of which is not to bo denied
because it cntai's the expendi- j
ture of a considerable sum of
money. The result of the election !
anells more for the progress of
the town than any one event
which has occurred in years and
is particularly gratifying to those
who see in it not only relief from
backward educational conditions
which already have been tolerated
much too long but who likewise
recognize in the advanced
step nn augury of further municipal
improvements. Fort Mill
needs waterworks. This should
be the next aim of those who
wish to put the town in the running
with the other wide-awake,
progressive cities of the State.
BRICE THEN AND NOW.
If Mr. J. S. Brice can afTord
to accept the appointment which
Governor Ansel lias tendered him
as a member of the commission
to wind up the affairs of the old
State dispensary, there probably
will be little or no objection on
the part of the public. But it is
interesting to recall?assuming
that Mr. Brice intends to accept
the appointment ? the attitude of
the former York, county senator
toward the whole dispensary
matter. During the latter years
of his service in the senate no
man inveighed more strenuously,
if not more effectively, against
the State's liquor business and
all connected therewith than Mr.
Brice. Indeed, if the speeches
of Mr. Brice *in denunciation of
the "accursed" liquor traffic
were made in good faith, all those
engaged therein, from the highest
offirials fn thp humMpafr Knt
tie-washers, were pariahs, things
to be shunned by every selfrespecting
citizen, and thenceforth
to be treated as out-casts?
from Mr. Brice's point of view.
We do not recall that Mr. Brice
discriminated; everybody connected
with the dispensary looked
alike to him. Now, however,
Mr. Brice's convictions appear
to have undergone a revision.
There is a difference as he sees
it in serving the Commonwealth
in the capacity of winding-up
commissioner and as a member
of the old State board, for instance.
We confess our inability
to see the point of demarkation.
Each position has to do with the
liquor traffic. And we can tell
Mr. Brice that if in accepting
the appointment he assumes that
any considerable portion of his
fellow citizens will credit him
with acting from a patriotic
rather than a seltish motive he is
very much mistaken. The people
know that there is not one
man in five thousand who would
accept service on the windingup
commission but for the money
there is in it. All this talk about
men being willing to sacrifice
their personal interests in such
a cause for the good of the State
is so much moonshine.
Teacher*' Examination*.
State Superintendent Swearingen
gives out the following statement
which will be of interest to
teachers;
"The date of the next teachers'
examination has been set for
Friday. May 14. As there will
be no county summer school i
work this year, teachers might
find it convenient to take this
examination rather than wait for
a renewal of certificate already \
granted. The new boards of1
school trustees will probably be
hunting for teachers early in
July, and applicants for schools
should not run the risk of being
caught without a certificate."
: .
. . V.? " V I. A *"
r " i;
v.
"" ,i
FORT Mill TWENTY YEARS MO. |
While there is, unfortunately,
more or less truth in the statement
frequently made hereabouts
that Fort Mill has not kept step
in material improvement with
her more enterprising sister
towns of the Piedmont section
during the last 20 years, there is
evidence to substantiate the assertion
that the town has not
been as backward as is sometimes
concluded in comparing
its growth with that of Rock
Hill- Yorkville and ot.hpr nwrhv I
towns. Those who were acquainted
with the village of Fort Mill
20 years ago and who know the
Fort Mill of today will agree that
the place has not by any means
been a "dead one" during the
last two decades. While the
growth of Fort Mill has not been
as rapid as that of some of its
neighbors, the advancement of
the town has been such that no
one need feel ashamed of it.
This fact is interestingly revealed
by an examination of the
columns of a copy of "The
Clarion," a local paper, bearing
date of April 25, 1889, with particular
reference to the advertisements
which it carried as affording
an index to the commercial
interests of the village and
as a reminder of some of the
active business men of that day.
Then as now, however, not all
the business houses of the place
| agreed that publicity through the
agency of printer's ink was worth
the price, but most of the
mercantile establishments were
' rnnroaons 1 '
! &vpi vov ftitvu in Liit? auvci using:
columns of The Clarion. Considerable
information can, therefore,
be gleaned from the paper
as to the Fort Mill of 1889.
But, first, a word or two as to
; The Clarion will not prove amiss,
as there are doubtless many
j readers of The Times who do not
know that such a paper was ever
published in Fort Mill. The
Clarion was produced by Mr. J.
S. Drakeford, who has since become
well known in this section
of the State through his
i forceful writing as editor of the
i Yorkville Yeoman. It was a
four-page, six-column paper, issued
Thursdays from an office in
a small frame building on the
site of the brick building now
| occupied by the Fort Mill Drug
Company. Two pages of the
paper, 2 and 3, were what is
known as ready-print service.
The other pages, 1 and 4, were
home print and were devoted to
; local news, editorial, short items
clipped from other papers and
advertisements. The copy of The
j Clarion under review was generously
illustrated with chalk drawings,
the handiwork of the editor.
The body type was what is known
in print shop parlance as brevier
! and was smaller than the type in
which The Times is set. Typegraphically,
The Clarion was
somewhat deficient, but this
shortcoming probably was overlooked
by the readers id appreciation
of young Mr. Drakeford's
enterprise.
A disappointing feature of the
i number of The Clarion in hand,
however, is the editorial announcement
that "this is the
i last issue of The Clarion. It is
now two years old" and "has already
lived twice as long as we
originally intended." No definite
reason is given for the dis|
continuation of the paper. Paradoxical
as it may seem, "the en'
couragement received by the
' publisher exceeded the most
, sanguine expectations." So we
can only infer that the "encouragement"
must have been
of the kind not infrequently
proffered newspaper folk nowadays
in lieu of the wherewithal
that is an indispensable requisite
to the publication of their papers.
But to the advertising columns
of The Clarion: First we find
several "readers" announcing
the beneficence of certain remedies
which the drug firm of
' Watson, Kell & Co. wished the
! public to know they offered for
1 sale. This firm was composed of
1 Mr. W. A. Watson, well known
here as a leading cotton factor
! of Charlotte, and who still re- j
! tains some real estate interests
1 in Fort Mill; Dr. S. A. Kell, for
! years a popular practicing physician
of the community, but now
! numbered with the great maI
iorit.V. his dpnth Via\ri ni~r nnn"??o''
? ^ , * ? V IS vvvui I CU
in Lancaster county a few years
ago, and Mr. R. A. Fulp.
S. L. Laney was the village
shoemaker and did all kinds of
j shoe repairing at all times and at
, reasonable rates. As a side line
I he sold fish or. Saturdays from !
his shop, which was in the old
telegraph office, a very small
frame building afterwards used j
as a laundry by the family of Mr.
L. J. Massey, and which can still
be seen in the rear of Mr. S. W.
Parks" drug store. Mr. Laney
is a veteran of the Confederacy
who contributed to the cause of
the South a leg, left on one of
the battlefields of Virginia.
; Mr. S. M. Mills was one of the
leading merchants in the '80s and
advertised in The Clarion the
arpval at his store, otherwise
known as "The Shanty," of new
spring dry goods. Mr. Mills is
still a valued citizen of Fort Mill, I
but has long since discontinued ,
merchandising. He is now con-.
nected with the firm of Mills &
Young:, his son, Mr. J. B. Mills,
being: the senior member of the
firm.
The late Dr. Alexander Mack, c
whose death occurred in Hawk* t
insville, Ga., several months ago, s
offered his professional services s
to the people of Fort Mill and 1
AAmmilnifi' T\? -1- ?
WIMU1UIU1.J. mjt. itiuck. was a <son
of the Rev. Dr. J. B. Mack 1
and his untimely death was great- ?
ly deplored by the hundreds of t
friends he had in York county, i
Magistrate John W. McElhaney | r
had not set up as judge of i
alleged wrong-doers 20 years ago, I
but he had for 10 years made a c
study of the diseases of horse^ >
and claimed to be able to treat f
successfully spavin, weak eyes, 1
lameness, etc. r
A new beef market had just i
been opened up by H. C. Wil- 1
liams, who 4 'was going to stay i
and wanted your patronage." 1
For some reason, however, he
' did not stay. 1
! A. C., J. H. and S. P. Sutton, i
! Sr., objected to all persons tres-11
passing on their lands; and the 1
public was enjoined not to forget i <
that J. R. Stephenson, the | J
i butcher, was here every Satur- j <
! day with a nice lot of beef. | i
\\atson's pharmacy had just <
! purchased the entire stock of
1 drugs belonging to Watson, Kell (
i&Co. and J. E. Massey & Co., i
j and announced that "Drs. Mas- j
i sey and Kirkpatrick may be 1
i found at their office in the rear '
of Shannon's store." Dr. Kirk- 1
patrick still enjoys a large prac- ! 1
jticeinthe community, and the ! i
i Shannon referred to was Mr. 1
IK. Shannon, who, happily, is;
still a citizen of Fort Mill. For !
years Mr. Shannon has filled ac- !
; ceptably to all concerned the office
of public cotton weigher. ;:
He is, sad to relate, one of the j:
| comparatively few survivors in , ?
! the town of the immortal legions i
i of Lee and Jackson. I <
/\i? a* 1 1
ui trie numerous mercantile l
establishments that were in <
business here 20 years ago just
one is now in existence, and even
this one has undergone a change
I in firm membership. Mr. L. J.
j Massey was then in partnership
with Mr. T. M. Hughes, who
' some years ago moved to Lanj
caster and is now one of the
j largest merchants of that town, I
: besides having been honored by \
his fellow-citizens some months
; ago by election to the office of j'
. mayo**, Massey & Hughes did 1
I "not sell the rich man goods at *
j cost and charge the poor man
I big prices, but treated all alike." <1
1 The continued application of '
1 this policy doubtless accounts '
j for the success with which Mr.
I Massey (who has been in business
alone for several years) has met, j
Probably the largest firm in
business here 20 years ago was '
Springs, Heath & Belk. Theirs 1
was a general merchandise store 1
j and occupied a large two-story 1
frame building on the site of
: the present Jones stores. The j
firm membership was Mr. B. D. | j
Springs, then a resident of Fort j1
Mill, but now a prominent citizen :
of Charlotte; Mr. O. P. Heath, i \
capitalist and banker, of Char- j
, lotte, and the lamented T. B.
j Belk, whose death is yet fresh 1
i in the minds of all citizens of
Fort Mill, Mr. Belk was univer- j'
i sally popular and his death was j'
i greatly deplored,
SHll Mill J
A Ul V ATI 111 in 111 \J 1
I the late '80s was Stewart & Co.,
dealers in clothing and notions.
This firm has long since ceased
; to exist.
Twenty years ago the grocery
store of Mr. R. A. Fulp was for
the people of Fort Mill head- i
quarters for everything good to
eat. Mr. Fulp conducted a mod|
el grocery. He was a splendid
! citizen and his death some years
ago was a source of great regret
to the entire community.
This completes the business
| directory of Fort Mill 20 years
ago as reflected in the columns
of The Clarion. The town has
grown a great deal since the date
of publication of the copy of The
Clarion before us, but it is a
melancholy thought that so many
: of the business men and other >
good citizens of that far day
have either moved away or
gone to the reward that awaits
all mankind. W. R. B.
the fort Mill Monoment.
(Macon Telegraph.)
The women of the Southern i
Confederacy! God bless them!
Now the South will at last honor
them. For some years a movement
has been progressing
throughout the South, to pay a
tribute to their Godlike heroism, ,
and it is now culminating in sue- ;
cess. It is proposed to erect in
each State of the South a monu- j
ment to these glorious women, j
It would be useless to attempt I
to measure out to them full jus-'
tice, or even to show the South's ;
complete appreciation. Such ;
would be beyond the powers of i
men. While shafts have arisen
in every part of the South to the |
heroism of the men who most
valiantly battled for the Southern j
Confederacy, yet but one, a
modest monument at Fort Mill, |
S. C., has been erected to perpetuate
the even greater fame
of its self-sacrificing, devoted, i
peerless women. Thank God, j
that this stigma will not much '
longer rest upon a grateful peo
p!c.
Pkennwl Saov Sixty Yean Agt.
(Lauren* Herald.) g
It will be remembered by the c
lder people particularly that
his day, April 15, is the sixtieth I
inniversary of the phenomenal k
mowfall of 1849, at this place. jj
t began snowing, according to ti
>ur recollection, between 9 and
.0 o'clock, about the time the
Sunday school children were reluming
to their homes?we beng
one of them. The day im- e
nediately preceding the fast-fall- q
ng, "beautiful snow" was a a
jright, balmy, ideal spring-like t
lay. Garden vegetation was u
veil advanced, roses and other J s
lowers were iuil-Dlown, the e
eaves of the forest trees were ^
learly or quite half grown, the c
vheat and other small grain in :he
fields were in the "boot,"
ind corn, in some places, was
tnee high. t
The fall of snow was not mere- v
y a few scattering fiakes, but it f
fell in regnlar mid-winter style, 1
ind continued for six or seven 8
lours, covering the ground, and r
ieep enough to afford the lads
ind lassies an opportunity to in- c
iulge in the sport of snow-ball- J
ng, and they availed themselves ^
>f it. i
The snowfall ceased about sundown,
the sky cleared during the
night, and next morning there was
a heavy, destructive frost,
which wrought havoc to all
vegetation, fruit and field crops. ^
And yet, there was some little s
fruit that year, as the writer \
remembers gathering a few 1
peaches, on his way from this 1
place to a point in North Caro- i
iina, near the line of the two (
States. ^
And another fact the writer
remembers, that despite the {
frost?or it may have been be- 1
cause of it, cotton advanced during
the summer of 1849 to ten
cents a pound. The ruling price
had been up to that time 71-2
to 8, or 81-2.
Old files of the Laurensville
Herald of that year will substantiate
these foeta
? ? ?WMV
Free Pasteur Treatment.
Columbia is to have free Pas- I
teur treatment for those suffering
from rabies or threatened
with an attack of this frightful
disease. So with the approach
pf the good old summer time
cease to worry about getting
"mad" dog bit. The free treatment
is not to be confined to
patients of that immediate vicinity
but will be opened to all
the people of the State. It will
be provided for by the State
board of health in Columbia. The
board is to equip a laboratory,
pne of the finest in the country,
not only for the free treatment
pf rabies but it will also be used
to combat other infectious and
contagious diseases,
This State, as is the case with
practically every other Southern
State, annually sends scores of ]
such cases to Baltimore, Atlanta
and other points for treatment,
and the expense is very heavy. 5
The State board's idea is not only i
to stop this drain, but to method- j
icany combat tjie spread of the j
disease. It has become a frequent
occurrence for some sections
of the State to report a
regular epidemic of the rabies.
Subscribe to The Times.
Brains Th
If It's the man who does thing!
he must do things with his I
money with his hands in a goh
a tread mill, but in business hi
1 There are many men with
don't make money?because th
There are some with fewer 1
get there quicker because they
H And now to the point.
1 The publisher of The Times i
a week which circulates amor
pie?all clashes?of this sectior
them, Mr. Businessman, will b
ment. Now, if you do not s
weekly through The Times yoi
ons for not doing so. First, :
tising; second, you lack the j
necessary to properly place you
If If you don't believe in ad
You know that advertising n
know that advertising pays yo
the big successes in every li
ing?you Know mat the giai
country have built up their
business on advertising-notli
your Uncle sam to carry the m
If You have seen one of thes<
logs?hundreds of pages, the
most as many words as there a
it pay to send them out? W<
dollar apiece for their cataloj
apiece postage if it didn't pay?
National Biscuit Co., Heinz, C
dreds of other progressive con<
back of them?concerns with e
spend millions in advertising if
nessman, the conclusion is s
should not be argued for a min
1! And again to the point. 1
does, why don't you get in
Times?not next week or next
Are Yours
TgngWy'." -*
From what one sees in the
tapers it would seem that demon
could well afford to be Minus
>ne Mell.
JeWitt's Little Early Risers, the best
nown pills and the best pills made, i
re easy to take and act peutly and
re certain We sell and recommend
hem.?Ardrey's drag store. i
Give This a Trial.
Set a post in your hog lot and 1
very hog will rub against it.
Tiis gives the cue for a cheap
,nd effective louse killer. Wrap |,
he post tightly from the ground i
ip with auarter-inch rope, and .
aturate the rope with kerosene
very few days. Kerosene will.
:ill lice, and the hogs will keep
>n scratching against this post. !
TEACH MRS' EXAM IN ATI ON S. ~
Tho regular spring examination for
euchers' cartlticaros to toach in tho
mblic school h of York county will be'
mid in the court bounc at Yorkvtlle on
rriday, May 14th, beginning nt U n. m.t [
ill (I closing at 4 p. in.
Applicant!* will bo required to fur- i
lish their own stationery.
Teachers desiring a icuowal of their ;
icrtiflcatrs should attend this examinaion,
as thero will lie no auutnier acliool
lold anywhere in the State for teachers 1
luring the year, except at Wotford
College.
T. E. McMACKlN,
Couuty Supt. Education.
(St)
-i- - i 1 ag
IF YOU WANT
V Steak or Roast that is tender,
iweet and juicy, I can furnish it.
[ have Steaks, Roasts, Chops,
dam and Sausage, the best that
noney can buy. I also handle
jiroceries and all kinds of Canned
joods. Peas, Beans, Cabbage
ind Potatoes on hand at all
times. See me, it's my treat.
W. LEE HALL,
'Phone 29.
NOTICE.
We Exchange
MEAL FOR CORN.
Toll same as that charged
by grist mills. Bring us
your corn.
The Cotton Hill Store,
L. A. HARRIS & CO. I
' "
SEE THAT SPOT?
How did it get there? Don't
know. Never mind; send the
trousers here or, better, the!
suit, to be pressed, cleaned and
'epaired if need be and you will j
never know there was a spot on
t.
Our charges are moderate.
FORT MILL PRESSING CLUB.
GUY ROSS, Proprietor.
'Phone 146.
at Gount.
3 that gets the reward?and
tead. Any man can make
i mine and with his feet in
i must use his head,
t brains in their heads that
ley can't or won't use them,
baains?poorer quality?that
r use what they have.
s printing a newspaper once
ig and is read by the peo1,
and a word from you to
ring them to your establishjpeak
to the buying public
i may have one of two reasyou
don't believe in adverambition
and energy that's
r business before the people,
vertising, you're all wrong,
lakes you buy goods?you
iw competitors?you know
ne are built up on advertisnt
mail-order houses of the
fifty-million-dollars-a-year
ling but printer's ink and
essage.
3 big mail-order house cata>usands
of illustrations?al
re in the dictionary? Does
ould these concerns pay a
ars and forty to fifty cents
' Do you suppose that the
hiokering Pianos and huncerns?concerns
with brains
nergy back of them?would
it didn't pay? Mr. Busio
simple that the subject
ute. Of course it pays,
f advertising pays, and it
line and link up with The
month but now?
Gounting ? j
1THE HOUSE FLY
kGERM BREEDE
IN TYPHOID FEVER EP
DEM ICS IT IS RESPONSIBLE
FOR
DISTIBUTRION
IS A DEATH 9EAIINI PES
Will Wade Around in Pui
Milk and Put Enough Disease
Germs in it Within
a Few Minutes to Kill
a Whole Family. Also
Carries Consumption.
I CITIES READY TO WA
ON FLY PERIL.
The fly which walks aero;
your food may carry 100, IK
bacteria, the majority dai
gerous to life and health.
The registrar of vital sb
tistics of the Chicago healt
department gave a sens;
tional supplement to h
warning against this houi
pest. He said:
"If an army of invasic
were motilizing for an a
tack upon Chicago, the dai
ger would not be so grrat i
now confionts the city froi
the annual coming of flie;
Fly time i; more to be fearc
than war ime.
"Screen your window;
Begin now in yonr warfai
against fles. You cannot b
gin too soon. Your precai
tion now rray save yoi
life."
MILLS ai
Jl F'JRNITU
j
gjjffl? SB
? SOITHERI
?
I THE SOVTH'S
I D. ,M ~
Convenient Soled ulee c
Through PullmMt.Sleen
aJ
Most direct routi to t\
I
il ^
For full uiformation as to ri
Southern Railway Ticket
| R. W. HUNT,
! . A. Q. P. A., Atlanta, Ga.
IE
You should not delay under any c
cumstances iu cases of Kidney a
Bladder trouble. You should ta
something promptly that you know
reliable, soino:hing like DeWitt'a K
uey and Bladder Pills. They are c
equaled for weak bank, backache, i
flammatien of.the bladder, rheuma
pftiiiB. etc. When von iislc for D?Wir
Kidney and Bladder Pills, be sure y
get them. They are antiseptic. Accc
no substitutes, insist upou getting t
right kind. Sold by Ardrey's ilr
store.
"In the good oli
summer time"
Go to Haile's Fountain for
Delicious and Refreshing
Cold Drinks. We serve
Pure Ice Cream every day.
Headquarters for Cigars,
Tobacco, Cigarettes and
Pipes.
Our stock of Drugs and Patent
Medicines is complete.
Fans and Almanacs free for
the asking.
Come to see us.
Fort Mill Drug Comp'
). R. HAILE, Mgr.
WANTED?To buy land in Fo
Mill township or in the Plea
ant Valley section of Lancast
county. A. R. McELHANE"!
*-1 P _ . ^ - -
$ Evarytklag Tliat's Goad to Eat**
THE PARLOR RESTAURAW
J Baa David, Proprietor,
s Naxt to Skyseiaper, Columbia, S. C.
PI 5
V .
.in
DOORS I
and g
.WHJDOWS! I
A~ f>1g stock now 5
e on haud, all sizes g
and prices. x
: Doors, $125 up. f
Windows, 80c up. |
' ICE CREAM |
>0 X .
Freezers M
h Different sizes and
jg! Prices. gflj
IHAMMOGKS II
SI to 84. !
I Refrig'rators 11
5 Water IJ
jj Coolers. |1
id YOUNG 11
RE DEALERS. |& \
M008080060806S
iSffiS (MiSMS'BjflBjeb SilB
V RAILWAY. I
???? [
GREATEST SYSTEM. 1
?9
li!
Service,
>n ail Local Trains. M
liny Con on Through Trnina. (fi
le North and East. ?
8
[ra
ltea, routes, etc., consult neurest =?
Agent, or [53
J. C. LUSK, |
D. P. A., CharUiton, S C. j|l
1 _____ . m
fijfSM 3? iusiissaiiiiipi
n<i K.6dolFor ,nd*8estk>nko
* Relieves sour stomach.
j8 palpitajon of tho heart. Digests what you eat.
^HBgH^^exPEmeNCE
ga ^hbmhhbhb|
?? ^ ^ J ^ fa
Copyrights Ac.
Anyon# porting a sketch and description may
quickly *ertalt> our opinion fro* whether so W
ln*?titlor*s probably patentable. Communlra- tH
lions strlilyoonfldeutlal. HANDBOOK on Patent* ^
sent treeJotdest agency for seeurms Detents. 1
Patentit&kon through Munn a Co. recelrf
tptcial notes, without charge. In the
1 Scientific American.
A bendeftoely Illustrated weekly, tersest nisi
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