Fort Mill times. (Fort Mill, S.C.) 1892-current, November 03, 1910, Image 9
THE WORLD'S MOTHERS
The strength of a nation lies
in its mothers. The Spartans
recognized this, and trained their
girls to be brave, to endure hardships,
to be self-sacrificing and
pure, and their sons were sent
out into life strong, vigorous,
chivalrous atid fearless.
Behind every invention', heroic
deed, poem or story stands a
great soul, and back of this creat
ness is the mother who formed
the character and was the inspiration
and power.
The greatest place in the world
is not in kings' palaces or in
beautiful temples or where the
laws of the nation are made, but,
as N. McGee Waters beautifully
says, "It is in the homes of the
people, where by night and day,
women tend little children and
train them.
"Unconsciously we uncover our
heads when we meet a mother
with her little child. She may
be young, like Mary; she may be
Eoor, like Nancy Hanks; she may
e inexperienced, like Mary Ball;
but she has power to work mysteries
and perform miracles.
"In sickness and in health, in
toil and in ease, at home and
abroad, she lives for the life that
is grafted upon her own, scornful
of pity, conceivingof no higher
honor than by and by to lean
upon the arm which has been i
made strong by her strength, and !
to trust to the heart which has
been made pure and true by her
own purity and fidelity.
"So she lives her life. 'Drudgery,'
silly people call it, but imto
her who is wise it is a holy mystery.
"So she lives her life. 'In a
prison house,' unknowing ones
ma V SflV' hut nnfn linr luVinon
j M.IW nvi *??iuoc
eyes have been opened to see
mysteries, and far into the future,
it is a queen's domain.
"And then one day, when the
world may have forgotten her
work, because it seems so commonplace,
she stands up and puts
judges and statesmen, and inventors,
and poets, to shame, for
she has done what they cannot
do. She has given a man unto
the world, to rule it, or a woman
unto the world to mother it in its
sorrow. Her work is beyond
praise. Her ministry is above
ordination. Only Christ can compare
with it."
Learn to Laugh.
Learn to laugh. A good laugh
is better than medicine. Learn
how to tell a story. A well told
story is a welcome sunbeam in a
sick room. The world is too busy
to care for your ills and sorrows.
Learn to keep your own troubles
to yourself. Learn to stop croaking.
If you cannot see any good
in the world, keep the bad to
\rAni*enlf T aamm t^ K T J ~
uv*(i[ii n.? uiiitf your
pains and aches under pleasant
smiles. No one cares whether ,
you have the earache, headache,
or rheumatism. Don't cry. Tears
do well enough in novels but are
out of place in real life. Learn
to meet your friends with a smile.
A good humored man or woman
is always welcome, hut the dyspeptic
is not wanted anywhere
and is a nuisance as well. Above
all, give pleasure. Lose no chance
of giving pleasure. You will
pass through this world but once.
Any good thing, therefore, that
you can show to any human
being, you had better do now; do
not defer or neglect it, for you
will not pass this way again.
+. ?
Boost Your Business.
If there is a chance to boom
business, boom it. Don't put on
a long face and look as though
you had a stomachache. Hold up
your head, smile and look for
better things. Hide your little
hammer, and try to speak well
of others, no matter how small
you may know yourself to be.
T. W. DIXON T. J. WITHE1
m
Utensils from the cheapest Tinware to tl
We are expecting you to call to see v
Dixon-W ithersp
121 South Try on St.
Dynamite Crop Yield.
The dynamite corn crop, which
was cultivated on Spartanburg
county land ploughed by the use
of this powerful explosive, has
been measured, but the owner
has refused to give out the
amount of corn that was pro- !
duced.
This crop is to be entered in
ft-Vts* i. _i_ -
tuc ocvciai cuuiesis at trie ounce I
fair. What J. H. Caldwell, the i
originator of the idea, intends to 1
do with it is a profound secret, L
and every one in the city is won-!
dering how much corn was
gathered. Neither of the men i
who weighed the corn would say j
how much there was. However, i
it has leaked out among the
neighboring farmers that if the ,
first four rows of the corn could j
be taken as an average that there
would be a total of 89 and a fraction
bushels on the place. The
corn raised on the land ploughed
in the new manner is 33 per cent. ;
better than that cultivated on ad- :
joining land, which was ploughed
in the old-fashioned way, but;
which otherwise was cultivated
in the same manner. There is
said to be much disappointment
in the fact that the crop was not
larger than is reported.
Death of Mr. Stacy Howie.
Mr. E. S. Howie, a prominent;
and well known citizen of the
Belair community, died at his
home last Friday morning about
3 o'clock, says the Waxhaw Enterprise.
Mr. Howie had been
in feeble health and under constant
treatment of a physician
for several months past, but his
condition was not critical until
just a few hours before his death.
He was sixty-five years old the
day before he died and had prepared
to celebrate his birthday
with a number of his relatives
and friends, but early that morning
he was stricken with paralysis
and died in less than 24 hours.
We Are Hearlniiartfirs1
?1 ? ~
For the Following:
Hardware, Crockery and Stoves,
Ruck's Steel Ranges, Lime, Cement !
and Plaster, Elwood Field and Hog
Fence, McCnrmick Mowers and Rakes, .
International Gasoline Engines, Shrill- 1
ders, Corn Harvesters and Disc Harrows,
Sewer Pipe and Farm Drain Tile,
Grates and Tile, Chattanooga Turn and
Disc Plows, Cole's Hot Illast Heaters,
Wilson Heaters, Machinery, Fittings
and Supplies, Window Glass and Putty,
Roofing of all kinds, Farmers' Favorite '
Grain Drills, Stalk Cutters, Spokes and
Rims, Guns and Ammunition.
Rock Hill Hardware Company,
Rock Hill, - S. C.
?
LINEBACK & ELAM
(1 'OPU1 ,A R .) EWELERS)
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
West Trade St., Near Square.
"The Little Store with the
Big Stock."
We are getting in tremendous
stocks of the most select lines of
Jewelry, Watches, Silverware,
Cut Glass and Holiday Goods.
Our stock has the variety that
you want when you selects Wedding
or Holiday Gift.
Come to see us and we will always
give you the hest goods for
the least money.
SSI'OON O. M. NORWOOD
Going to China
for Chinaware is not neceessary since
The New China Store
? ....
uuer* sucn splendid values in all kinds
of Domestic and Imported Dinner
W ares.
We have for your parlor, the prettiest
Japanese Art Pieces; for your bedroom,
Toilet Sets from the cheapest to
the best; for your dining room, an elegant
lint' of Table Glassware, Damps,
Table Cutlery and Carvers; for your
kitchen, the best there is in Cooking
he best Enamel and Aluminum Ware,
is.
K>on Company,
Charlotte, N. C.
* s'
THE FORT MILL TIMES, NOVEM
WE ARI
PA
vVe are after your patrc
Values ever offered in Fo
unwary, but the goods ar<
other store in this section <
DAIL
J I *
Seeing is believing. If
various lines of merchandi
satisfied customers we alr<
cents value and often mor
EVER DAY IS SALESDAY AT THIS S
A lot of Sample Shoes for Ladies
and Children at 10c up.
Dress Goods ir. Wool and Cotton.
Suiting that retails at 25 to 50 cents,
at 15c per yard.
Nice line of white and colored Dress
goods, worth 15c to 25c, that we are
selling at 8c per yard.
Brown Sateens and 40 inch Percales,
10c and 12 l-2c values, at 7c per yard.
Calico, Ginghams and Outings,
8c and 10c values, at Gc.
Colored Calicos and short-length
Ginghams at 5c per yard.
T nf Af T ntirno Pnlm/xf'
AJV/w v/i xju? no, V_ ci 1ILUC5 clIlU V'CUIIUMC
at 3c per yard.
Nice lot of Ladies' Skirts, something
that will interest you, at 98c
Best Oil Table Cloth, per yard, 18c.
Nanirog Damask Table Cloth. 15c.
The above are only a ft
your fall and winter goods
C. B. MAC
|=ie ?i = 1 ;
THE
FORT MIL
TIMES
Is the Fastest Growing
In the Fastest Growing (
In the Fastest Growing
It works for York county and So
lina. You never see anything pul
its columns that has even a tinge
gain.
Do you want a paper that publis
of interest to every member of you
Then read the hort Mill limes.
i__ . c . ^ i it
wccks in me yeai ror
All the latest 'aces of type for Jot
Orders promptly filled at reasona
T."E: FORT MILL Tl
FORT MILL, - - S. C.
IL
BER 3, 1910.
IHBSSHHIHHBflHXrSHHUHHBEIiHHHHHBBEHBEHHHilHHi
AFTEI
TRONA<
>nage with the greatest sT:
rt Mill. This is no idle bo
s here and the prices sp<
offers the bargains that are
Y AT MAGII
you will pay this store a vi
ise we carry, you will agre
*ady have that this is the p
e for seventy-five cents.
1T0RE. READ THE FOLLOWING PRIC
Men's and Boys' Furnishings.
Men's 75c and $1 Dress Shirts at 38c
Men's 50c work Shirts at 38c.
Men's 25c work Shirts at 18c.
Boys' Shirts at 14c.
Men's heavy Underwear at 75c per
suit.
Men's summer Underwear at 13c
per garment.
I .iiion P nllnw fn..-.
xj>iivii vvnuio, i>vu iui ?)C".
A good Sun-cured Chewing
Tobacco at 5c per plug.
Half Hose, 5c and 8c.
A lot of Men's $2.50 Sweaters, now
43c each.
Men's Duck Hunting- Pants, 69c.
Men's Kahki Pants, 69c.
Nice lot of men's Pants at $1.48
per pair.
Boys' long Pants, former price was
$1 to $2, now 48c.
iw of the many bargains I
i and I will save you a com
1ILL, Fort
"HI I 1
r l 1BUI ?
L Every faei
tion of busir
making- and
indeed, even
to further bu
PINEVILLE L
PaPet" . The po,icy
^OUnty banking will
carefully saf<
State. courteous tre
We respect
iUth Carobbkrfij.f
The Pinevili
or selhsh
, I PIltfEl
ines news
r family? | mm
Filly-two J0g !
> Printing.
w. P . L Save money
|MES by placing)
?J THI
If
#YOURI
5E
? 1\/T C I
iATAfinrv I\/l w
ivTr mg ivmiiey-octving I
ast to catch the eye of the 8
sak for themselves. No I
to be found \
LL'S.
sit and look through the
ie with the hundreds of
lace to get one hundred
!ES AND YOU WILL PROFIT THEREBY,
Boys' Suits, $1.98 to $3.48.
Men's and Boy's Caps from Gc to
48c. These are genuine bargains.
Boys' 50c and 75c Hats, now 25c.
A line of Men's Sample Hats, worth
$1 to $3, at 37c and 67c.
Men's Overall Pants at 34c.
Tinware.
I still have a lot of Tinware left I
that I offer at the following prices^
Lanterns, each, 35c.
Tin Dish Pans, each, 10c.
2-<jt. Agate Coffee Pots, each, 20c.
3-ot .
4-qt. " Rice Boilers. 44 20c.
10-qt. 44 Dish P ins, 44 20c.
12-qt. 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 25c.
Agate Frying Pans, 3 for 10c.
A nice line of 8-day Clocks at an interesting
price.
Pocket Knives and Table Cutlery
at greatly reduced prices.
have. Come here for
siderable sum of money.
Mill, S. C. I
>?e Offer You I
lity for the prompt and careful transac- |
accounts, every accommodation for I
developing business investments, and,
/ advantage that modern banking affords
isiness interests, is offered by the
OAN AND SAVINGS BANK.
, . 8
of this institution is as liberal as sound
permit; every dollar deposited here is
eguarded, and every patron is accorded
atment and careful consideration.
".fully solicit your account.
le Loan and Savings Bank,
GEO. W. BUNCH, Cashier
i/TLLiz, - - - nr. c.
____ . i
PRINTING
and secure first-class work
four next order with
i TIMES.