Fort Mill times. (Fort Mill, S.C.) 1892-current, September 26, 1912, Image 2
THE TOET KILL TIMES. <
Dnceatic ? Published Thursdays.
B. V. BRADFORD - Editor and Proprietor. <
'V~7 <
i "
|BIK?n now Rates:
'>T?... 11.26 ,
I St Maatba 66 J
' ftaTian invitas contributions on liverobjocts
1*1 (W* not agree to publish more than 200 words <
a any subject. The right is reserved to edit j
MO/ i?anaiihathai submitted for publication.
, On application to the publisher, advertising ]
rata* are aade known to those interested. (
Teleohone. local and long distance. No. 112.
,
* Entered ft the poe toffee at Fort Kill, S. C.. an |
% a?0 toatter of the second class.
4>HURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26,1912.
aaaaaatgi i i .n i :
( Piasbytaey ami Praabytorianism.
TJmno ie irorv irlnr) in.
XUV Xlllico u iv? J ...
deed to welcome to Fort Mill I;
the visitors who are here as
representatives of the various
{hunches comprising Bethel Presbytery,
which is meeting for the i
fall session with the Fort Mill i
church. To inadvertence is said i
to be due the fact that the i
Presbytery has met somewhat <
infrequently in Fort Mill in i
recent years. Twice only in the i
last third century has the local J
church had the pleasure of enter- i
taining the Presbytery; but the
rarity of its meetings here
cannot be attributed to a decline
of Presbyterian sentiment among
the people of this section. Devotion
to Calvinism in this com'
munity is as strong as it was a
century and more ago when the
ancestors of many of the presentday
membership of the church
warshipped the Almighty in the
Aide meeting-house then in use.
Fort Mill Presbyterian i
church is a virile Christian in- (
fluence, devoting its energies to (
the advancement of religion and '
morality not only locally but c
in foreign lands where Protest- f
antism has gained, or there is v
the hope of it gaining, a foot- a
N4. What the Fort Mill Pres-1 ^
byterian church has been to this a
community, the other churches a
df Bethel Presbytery doubtless ^
||v? been to their communities, j
j ^-esbyterians glory in the r
tlw^ry and achievements of their
?|Urch. Well they may. Es- e
tabfished in> the troublous times
when no man's life was safe or
hfe ' liberty assured who questioned
the doctrines or censured
the i corrupt practices of the 1
Cm^rch of IRome, the Presby-1 b
tcyrjan Church has grown and
spread out until today branches '
/"of it are to be found in practic00
alfyjevery country on earth and 1
itftlnims the" Largest membership
of^ny Protestant organization in
the iworld. On its rolls are to be
found-the names of many of the I
mostf**Wliient contributors to re- j
ligiom philosophy, science, literature
arid the art of government.
IJbe'illy informed may not have
learned that to the Presbyterian
tihurch more than to any other
B^otestant denomination is civiliJtion
indebted for the religious
iheavals of the 16th and 17th
/uftntnt-ios u/biph pstahlished for
fVer the right of freedom of
conscience m the worship of God,
bit students of history know
that if it had not been for the
unconquerable determination of
the Caivinists to maintain their
religion, even in the face of the
gibbet, the block, the stake, and
the unspeakable horrors of the
boot and the thumbscrew, Charles ,
tbe First and James the Second
vtould have triumphed in their
campaigns of butchery and
tdrture, and Protestantism would
have gone down to rise no more.
In those awful days the Presbyterian
Church contributed by the
thousand martyrs to the cause
of true Christianity. Torture
and death in its most horrible
form were preferable to escape
which could be gained only by
apostatising to idolatry and super-1
stition. What Church would not
be proud of John Calvin, who
"stood alone among theologians"
and who pointed out as no
other man ever did the contradictions
between the doctrines
of the Holy Scriptures and the
theology taught by the Church
of Rome? To the Presbyterian
Church Protestant Christianity
owes a debt of gratitude for the
u/rtrlr nf the trreat Scotch Re
former John Knox, "who never
feared the face of man," and of
whom the eminent historian
Froude says: "The one man
without whom Scotland, as the
modern world has known it,
would have had no existence.
His was the voice which taught
the peasant of the Lothians that
he was a free man, the equal in '
tue sight of God with the proudest
p^er or prelate that had
trampled on his forefathers."
He was an antagonist whom
Mary Stuart could neither soften
nor deceive, and since his day no
king, -noble, prince or priest lias
been able to make the Scotch
people submit to tyranny. Presbyterians
point with pride to the
fact that their Church has been
identified with nearly all great I
movements looking to the advancement
of the highest interests
of mankind; but it remains
to be said, raore's the pity, that j
I of Presbyterians, an {
lommon with thousands of other
Protestants, are ignorant of the
loctrines and history of tbeir
3hurch?they have never studied
their own peculiar institutions.
"W. F. Stevenson, of Cheraw,
must be some potato?all the little
potatoes in the State are
flinging mud at him. The 'littlest'
potato in the hill seems to
be the editor of the Fort Mill
rimes."?Cheraw Chronicle.
Some weeks ago when the unseemly
controversy between the
President of the United States
and Theodore Roosevelt was filling
more columns of the daily
press than the public read with
either pleasure or profit, old man
Joe Cannon was asked if he
thought the President had made
a mistake in noticing the individual
from Oyster Bay. "Yes,"
replied the old fellow, "I have
very little respect for the judgment
of any man who will enter
a squirting match with a skunk."
The affairs of the Democratic
party of South Carolina have indeed
come to a pretty pass when
the chairman of a subcommittee
?f seven of the membership of
the State Executive Comm ttee
can threaten with a selfassurance
that indicates he is
certain of his ground that if a
gubernatorial nominee of the recent
primary is to be declared it
will be on the report of the subcommittee.
If a majority of the
Democrats of South Carolina are
so pusillanimous as to submit to
their rights being taken from
them by four men, they don't
deserve anything better.
Doubtless there is a good deal
of truth in the statement that
the present course of study in
most of the rural schools creates
a tendency on the part of the
children to get away from the
:ountry and flock to the city.
This is for the reason that the
:ourse followed is primarily
ramcd for city schools and natirally
is pervaded with an urban
.tmosphere. This tendency may
>e checked a good deal by doing
way with some of the studies
nd substituting for them studies
ealing directly with rural life,
tmong such subjects may be
ightly included nature study,
:ardening, domestic science and
lementary agriculture.
So gullible are some men that
very gold-brick sheme appeals
o them mining shares, rubber
hares, lost treasure expeditions
it matters not what, they fall
;asy victims. All such should
jear in mind that people who try
lo break into a gold mine usually
find that the entrance leads to
a poorhouse.
Democrats Kept the Faith.
The six principal things which
we promised in 1910 to do if we
carried the country, says Champ
Clark, were: To liberalize the
rules of the house; to economize
to submit a constitutional amend;
mpnf for the election of United
States senators by popular vote
to pass a bill compelling: the publication
of campaign expenses
before the election as well as
after the election; to admit the
States of New Mexico and Arizona
as two separate States; tc
reduce the tariff.
We have kept all these pledges.
In addition, we passed the best
labor law ever placed on the
statute books. We passed the
canal bill, one of the most important
pieces of legislation ir
the history of the country. We
passed bills to make the life oi
our sailors more comfortable anc
so induce young men to take tc
the sea as in the old days. We
passed multitudes of other laws
of a remedial nature.
Frost Dates in Cotton Belt.
Occurrence of freezing weathei
at Denver on Friday night lasl
and the drop in temperature tc
35 degrees, in North Dakota or
Monday night, point to the
prevalence of lower temperature
in northern crop regions, says
the Wall Street Journal. In th<
cotton belt itself, 80 degrees al
Oklahoma City was the lowesl
for Tuesday morning. No fear*
are entertained now for killing
frosts within the next ten days,
Last year the earliest frost ir
Texas occurr,u at Fort Wort!
and Palestine on October 29.
The earliest dates of killing
frosts have usually been much
later. Estimates are now extani
which place the yield of cottor
this year at 14,500,000 bales, il
killing frosts can be kept bad
to November 1. The Texa*
average is a good deal later thar
that. Fort Worth had such frosi
in 1910 on November 18, in 1901
on November 13, and in 1908 or
November 11.
The frost records of Memphis
which are good for the uppei
Mississippi valley, show the oc
currence of killing frosts then
last year on the same date a*
those in Texas. In 1910 Mem
phis had a damaging freeze ir
her records on November 17
The year before it occurred or
November 12, and the year prioi
to that on November 11. Okla
homa City has had frost date:
about in keeping with Memphis
In the Piedmont district of th<
Atlantic seaboard, frost occur
rences are more irregular. In th<
past four years killing frost oc
curred at Raleigh, N. C., befon
the end of October, in three o
these seasons. Columbia, S. C.
averages about November 7
\
Employees Share Mill's Profits.
Perhaps never in the history
of cotton manufacturing in the 1
South was a greater and more
agreeable surprise given to the
employees of a mill than that
wh?ch was sprung on the em- i
Sloyees of. the Walton Mills, i
[oriibe, Ga., * on August 31st.
That date being the closing of <
the mill's fiscal year, the operatives
were asked to assemble in
front of the mill's office. President
E. S. Tichenor then addressed
his men, women and i
children in highest terms, thanking
them for their year's work
and assuring them of the fact
that their efforts were appreciated.
In concluding his remarks
Mr. Tichenor stated that
each person employed in the
mill, from the superintendent
down, would be presented with
five per cent of their earnings
for the fiscal year just ended.
This present to the mill's people
was made as a token of the
appreciation of the work of the
operatives and those over them.
Envelopes bearing approximately
$2,000 were distributed, each
person in the mill's employ receiving
their share.
Josh Ashley Not Paralyzed.
Hon. Josh W. Ashley was in
Anderson Monday and was in
his usual good humor, according
to the Anderson Mail. When
asked about his recent stroke of
paralysis, Mr. Ashley said:
"That was all a mistake about
me having a stroke of paralysis.
I'll tell you how it was: One
night I got to dreaming, and
dreamed I was in a fight. I
reached around to bite the other
fellow and made a grab for him,
with my teeth, and then I woke
up and found I had bitten my
tongue."
Mr. Ashley laughed about the
affair as much as the bystanders
and said he did not know how
the report was started that he
was paralyzed.
Little Prospect for Horseless Age.
Regardless of the increase in
the number of automobiles and
motorcycles the horse and mule
seems to be holding their own
in the United States. The last
yearbook of the Department of
Agriculture gives some interesting
figures to show that the 1
horse and the mule are not on
In 1867 there were 5,401,000
horses and 822,000 mules in this
country, and in 1912 the number
* * ' i - an
of horses had increased 10 zv,-1
509,000 and mules to 4,362,000.
The increase has been gradual.
In 1902 there were 16,531,000
horses and 2,757,000 mules.
The price of a horse in 1867
was $59.05 and a mule, $66.94
and in 1912, $105.94 and $120.51.
Kansas is about the only State
in the Union that shows in loss
in horses during the last year.
Must Not Spit on Floor.
There must be no spitting on
the floors of the new court house
in Union. At the opening of
court there a few days ago
i Judge Frank- B. Gary, of Abbe>
ville, who is presiding over the
> present term of court, took oc>
casion to let it be known that
; expectorating, except directly
into the cuspidors, would not be
1 tolerated. He further gave in;
structions to all the bailiffs to
observe carefully and to bring
5 before him promptly all persons
? ignoring and violating this order
i and he would see that the of
fense was not repeated.
>
Warning Against Swindlers.
The national department of
? agriculture in a report iu uc i.?
sued soon will sound a note of
- warning to the people of the
country against orchard invest *
ment schemes that hold out
* promises of profits far beyond
' what the government experts
1 regard as warranted. Many in)
quiries have reached the depart 1
ment regarding orange, apple
5 and other enterprises, where the
orchardizing is to be done by
proxy and in some cases the
claims of profits are alluring in
, the extreme. It is possible that
t some of these claims will be
J called to the attention of the
. postoffice department, because of
> the circulating of alluring litera[
ture through the mails.
Rhame the State Bank Examiner.
[ According to a decision Satur.
day of the State supreme court,
5 Governor Blease acted without
r authority of law when he ousted
B. J. Rhame from the position of
j bank examiner and appointed in
j his stead H. W. Frazer. The
nnnnintnionl U'DC msHp AnHl 1
appUUlliiiVUk ?? IIIMV4V
r and since that time chaos has
[ reigned. The banks did not
t know which officer to recognize
, and in making their reports they
f put it up to the postmaster, by
. addressing all communications
, to "State Bank Examiner."
J The Supreme Court handed the
t case in an en banc session, with
j the chief justice and ten assoj
ciate justices. There were two
dissenting opinions, and nine
concurring.
' When Governor Blease de.
clared Rhame not entitled to the
] office he refused to vacate and
; proceedings were instituted by
' Attorney General Lyon in order
to get a ruling on the question.
The substance of the decision is
' "that the law does not provide
for the removal of the bank
examiner as it does in the case
" of magistrates."
; Uncle Ezra Says
* "It don't take more'n a gill uv effort to
S't folks into a peck of trouble" and a
;tle neglect of constipation, bilious
nesty indigestion or other liver derange3
ment will do. the same. If ailing, take
r Dr. King's New Life Pills for quick
results. Easy, safe, sure, and only
25 cents at Ardrey's Drug Store, Fart
. Mill Dit? Co. and Part s Drag Cu.
New Weekly for Charlotte.
Mr. F. W. DeCroix, who has
been manager of The News
Printing House, has tendered
his resignation which is effective
today and will start a weekly
paper in Charlotte, says The Observer
of Saturday. He aims to
have the first edition appear
early in October and states that
he has already secured a subscription
of 1,000. He will first
issue a four-page, six-column paper,
planning to increase this to
six pages and more later.
The Men Who Succeed
as heads of large enterprises are men
of great energy. Success, today, demands
health. To ail is to fail. It's
utter folly for a man to endure a weak,
run-down, half alive condition when
Electric Bitters will put him right on
his feet in short order. "Four bottles
did me more real good than any other
medicine 1 ever took," writes Chas.
B. Allen, Sylvania, Ga. "After years
of suffering whith rheumatism, liver
trouble, stomach disorders and deranged
kidneys, I am again, thanks to
Electric Bitters, sound and well." Try
them. Only 50 cents at Parks Drug
Co., Ardrey's Drug Store and Fort
Mili Drug Co.
Teachers' Examination.
The regular Fall Teachers' Examination
of applicants to teach in the public
schools will be held in Yorkville on
Friday, October 4th, 1912, beginning at
9 a. m., and closing promptly at 4 p. m.
The questions will be based on the
State adopted text books. ThOSe on
Pedagogy on the State Manuel for
Elementary Schools, and the State
Manuel for High Schools.
J. W. QUINN.
T. E. McMACKIN,
J. H. WITHERSPOON.
Flower Pots.
We will have a shipment today
of Flower Pots ranging in
sizes from one quart to five gallons.
It will be the best assortment
you have seen before here
and as it is very inconvenient to
store them, we will make especially
good prices for prompt delivery.
The time for transplanting
is almost at hand.
Magazine Subscriptions.
A few of the most popular
magazines will advance their
clubbing prices Nov. 1st. Let
us have your renewals even if
your subscriptions have not expired.
We guarantee to save
you money.
Ardrey's Drug Store,
Fresh arrival of
HEADLEY'S
and
HERSHEY'S
Celebrated
Confections,
All the popular
brands of
Chewing Gum.
Haile's on the Corner.
FOR SALE.
We offer for sale Berkshire Pigs, $10
aeh. Let us breed your sow to one of
our boars, ou! fee, a pig. Reliable
party can have one of our boars on
shares. See us if interested.
L. A. HARRIS & BRO.
House Out of Shape
Sounds funny, doesn't it? But
you have seen them; warped,
settled and shrunken.
Poor Lumber
was tne cause of it. Houses built
of sound, well seasoned Lumber
like we sell, keep their shape.
Remember this when making
your next purchase.
J. J. BAILES.
Electric
Bitters
Made A New Man Of Him.
"I was suffering from pain in mv
stomach, head and back," writes 11.
T. Alston, Raleigh, N. C., "and my
' liver and kidneys did not work right,
but four bottles of Electric Bitters
made me feel like a new man."
I PRICE 50 CTS. AT ALL DRUG STORES.
V
FOR SALE
VALUABLE PROPERTY
One five-room house with large front
and rear piazas, large barn and fine
water, situated on one of the best
streets in town, joins lands of D. A.
Lee on west and Miss Ella Stewart on
east, size of lot, one acre more or less,
property of Mrs. E. K. Barber. Terms.
1-3 cash, balance in three equal annual
payments at 8% interest. Price $2,100.
One 7-room house with large front
and rear piazza, good barn and best
well of water in town; also one of the
best finished houses in town. Halfacre
lot, situated on Booth street. This
is valuable property. Owner and terms
same as above. Price, $2,625.
One 2J acre lot on west side of Confederate
street with one four-room
dwelling and large barn. This property
faces four streets. With small cost
for grading, etc., can be made double
its present value. Owner and terms
same as above.
270 acres fine timber in Lancaster
county on Catawba river, near new Ivy
Mill bridge. Will cut about three million
feet. See it and ask for price.
Owner same as above.
440 acres, 2 miles southeast of Fort
Mill, near Pleasant Valley, on Sugar
creek. Ten farms in cultivation, good
buildings, red sand land. Property of
T. M. Hughes. Will sell on long credit
Subject to present lease. Price, per
acre, $32.50.
462 acres, 7 miles Southeast of Fort
Mill, on Chariotte-Camden road. Twelve
farms in cultivation, and within 3-4 of
mile of two churches and one school.
Property of J. L. Pettus. Easy terms.
Price, per acre, $25.00.
97 acres at Pleasant Valley. Joins
lands of Frank Therrell and others.
Good, new residence, barns, etc., worth
$1,400. Owner, J. 0. Hall; price $4,500.
You should get some of the profits of
steady increasing values of real estate.
"DO IT NOW."
T. M. HUGHES, Broker,
LANCASTER. S. C.
As Much <
Of the Earth
FOR SALE CF
The P. K. Mull property, lccat
C., with 5-room brick residence t
The 7-room residence on lot on
Main street, now occupied as a rt
~ ^ /*/\f 4-nncn An PIAKAMI'
lilt; O-IUUIII un vyicuuui
dence by P. L. Wagner.
The 4-room cottage on Leonida
The 6-room cottage on Elm Str
The 6-room dwelling on 7-8 acr
now occupied as a residence by E
The 6-room residence on Booth
now occupied as a residence by S
COUNTRY
The Wm. Nicholson farm, con
bounded by lands of W. H. Win*
Nivens, located about 5 miles fr<
being offered at a bargain.
The Sam Killue place containin
miles of Fort Mill; o5 pcres unde
es; good well and fine growth of
FOR
The home of Mrs. Jennie Sprai
acres of land. Apply to us for t
If you have property ET)R SAI
we will handle it to your advant,
BAILES & LI
THIS
* in your sta;
^ month, and wc
Menz^'Eaae'*
come to ua. Th
you.
MENZ "EASE" UPPERS KEEP 80PT.
But that i?n't all. Wear a Menz "Ease" for
your regular every-day work in all sorts of
weather and they'll aatisfy you In three i
other ways. They will fit you like a glove? 4
give your feet comfort all the day long and J
wear like you want a ahoe to wear. Always M
look for name on yellow label.
Catalog Ho.12 I
Illustrates the \ilj\
Menz "Ease", all fin \
heights; also the Kyi Jt : 1
"American Boy" \Ji \]fm /
built to g've the ?7 ffl- /
strons. sturdy M \lt/
out-d boy hon- ff f.
#t shoe service. / /
^have made or
ij/ ' ./Jf the Menz "Eai
#(/. y%Sel/or Men and t
/III! erican Hoy" ;
|\\\y\V Boy*. Theon
Lvvvv^~?upper leather we t
it Menx"Ease"Spec
Elk. It'a the beatlcatl
tanned for every-day a
vice. Its toughness and lo
U wear will aurpriae you, and
K aoftneaa will remind you of glove leather.
rnUEUD FOR CATALOG NO. 12 containing
Maample of Men* "Eaae" Elk. We have deali
everywhere in your atate- Ifthere ian't one m
you we can introduce theahoeatoyou direct fri
factory at regular retail pricea, delivery prepa
iMenzloi Shoe Co., Makers, Detroit, MIc
MENZ "EASE" and "AMERICAN BOY" si
length of service, nor to repell water, and tl
they are GOOD aboea worth considering 1
f pos:
^ All trespassing on our
4 hunting, fishing, or other
from management, is fort
t become a nuisance, carry
pay $10 reward for evide:
11 , CHAItLOl
| Woodrcw
I Roose
One of the T1
dent, Pro
IMcElhaney & <
of Clothing for M
for Ladies, Miss<
whole family. W
line, too numerou
Our Fall stock
M'ELI
ar as Little;
as You Want.
rY PROPERTY.
cd on Main Street., Fort Mill, S.
ind well thereon.
Booth Street, 125 x 220 feet, near
>sidence by the Hon. J. R. Haile. '
ne Street, now occupied as a resis
Street.
i i i? t r> r< : ? I
eet, now occupied oy ,j. r>. r,rwm.
e lot, located on Booth Street and
]. W. Kimbrell.
Street, owned by J. W. Kims and
1. A. Epps.
PROPERTY.
taining 134 acres more or less,
:lle, Sam Blankenship and L. S.
jm Fort Mill. This property is
g 121 acres of farm land within 5
r cultivation: houaes and outhousyoung
timber.
RENT.
tt. located in Sprattville, with two
erms.
or RENT, list it with us and
age.
]VT|^" Real Estate Brokers,
IllS., Fort Mill, S. C.
IF YOU SAW
ADVERTISEMENT
te agricultural paper this
rndered where you could buy
and "American Boy" shoes,
ese letters prove the trip will pay
H Meacham & Epps,
| Fort Mill, S. C.
M Dear Sirs;
I I bought of you a|
I pair of Mcnz-Ease Shoes
' and in them ditched 1285
rods in a meadow, plowed
V in them all spring, wore
1 them until I got tired of
them, gave them to a hand
II on the place and he wore
y
them for several months.
or
'jy Myrelf and two sons
for wear nothing but Menzw
Ease. It is the best shoe
ier
tr" T
?* I ever wore.
its
B Wm. Cranford,
ert
% R. F. D. 2,
t. Fort Mill, S. C.
ioea ore not guaranteed to give any certala
hese letters are only offered as evidence that
the nest time you need an every-day pair.
TED! ]
lands for the purpose of +
wise, except by permission
lidden. Depredators have
ing off boats, etc. Will
nee to convict trespassers.
PTE BRICK COMPANY. I
j Wilson, Theodore I
:velt, Wm. Taft. J
iree Will be Elected Presi- 1
ivided? I
Company will sell the greatest line 3
en and Boys, Coat Suits and Suits 9 *
ss and Children, and Shoes for the I
Ie have other things in the wearing jj
s to mention, at enticing prices. j
has just arrived.
HANEY&CO.,
Store of Style and Quality. fa
( 1
11 C" A \ M M r1 C D A M V ll
IOM. v lilua uniiiiL, I
THE OLD RELIABLE. g
| Our purpose is to make our bank a material
| benefit to the community in general and our
patrons in particular. It would be a pleasure to
have your name on our books. We invite you to
start a checking account with us. The advantages
I we offer will be a convenience and benefit to you,
as it has been to others.
ILEROY SPRINGS, President
W. B. MEACHAM, Cashier. J|
|g I?
- ? ?
What Does it Cost
To Live?
Note the following prices and see if they won't reduce
the cost of your living:
Good Rice, per pound, at 5c.
2 Cans 20c Pink Salmon for 25c.
Choice Mackerel, each, at 5c.
Seven bars Octagon Soap every Monday for 25c.
No, we didn't say that "Diamond" Flour would rise
without lard, but we did say it would reduce the cost of
living.
. i J
McElhaney & Co.,
Store of Style and Quality.
[Ul5Eg5555H5E5HE5H5H5H55g5a J H5a55H5g5H5H5Sg55a5H55SHfq
ISI Bj
I We Want This Store 1
a TO IM I.LLN' i: I. VI.ItV DIN. 1
K XKK TABLE IN THIS C1TV. |
It's worth while to run a store that does that?or that does a K ^
S small part of that! QJ
The dinner table is the "assembly" of the home ?the rallying [jj
n{ point, where all the members of the household meet and rehearse jjj
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