Fort Mill times. (Fort Mill, S.C.) 1892-current, February 13, 1913, Image 5
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FORT MJLL, S. C. {
8ENERAI INFORMATION. (
Crfiy GOVERNMENT.
i A. R. McELHANEY Mayor i
S. W. PARKS Clerk .,
J. J. COLTHARP...Chief Police
DEPARTURE OF TRAINS.
No. 81 Southbound 5:35 a. m. I
? ? ? No. 85 Southbound 7:12 a. m.
I No. 27 Southbound 6:12 p. m.
1 No. 86 Northbound 8:50 a. m.
No. 28 Northbound 6:30 p. m.
No. 32 Northbound 9:27 p. m.
i Note?Trains 31 and 32 atop at ? .
Fort Mill only when flagged.
1 V MAILS CLOSE.
v For train No. 36 8:30 a. m.
For train No. 27 4:50 p. m.
i For train No. 28 6:00 p. m.
Note?No mail is despatched on
trains 31, 32 and 36. Trains 27
I And 9ft dn nnt hondlo moil Qnndou
SPOSTOFFICE HOURS. 1
Daily 7:30 a. m. to 7:30 p. m. 1
Sunday 9:30 to 10 a. B to 5:30 p. a. 1
SHORT ITEMS of INTFRFcto
TIMES READERS.
Born Monday night to Mr. and
Mrs. D. G. Cu!p, a daughter.
Born Monday night to Mr. and
Mrs. Chas. Carter, of the township,
a daughter.
S. Ferris, a local Syrian merchant,
is carrying his left hand
in a sling as the result of the
accidental discharge a few days
ago of a pistol, the bullet from
which passed through the flesh
part of his hand.
In the House Saturday a bill
by Representative Hutchison, of
York, to enlarge the discretion
of the supervisor of York county
as to building and working certain
public roads in said county,
was passed to third reading.
A party of young1 sports, merely
boys, who were engaging in a
game of poker, were taken in
tow Saturday night in a patch of
woods just north of town by
Constable J. C. McElhaney and
Police Officer Coltharp. The
boys were fined $10 each.
Mayor A. R. McElhaney has
issued an edict to the effect that
any person, regardless of age,
color or sex, who is found guilty
in his court during the year of
^ selling whiskey will be punished
by a fine of not less than $100 or
a road term of thirty days.
Next Thursday, February 20,
is the last day on which tax returns
for 1913 may be made.
The returns may be made up to
that date on blanks provided for
the purpose and sworn to before
an officer authorized to administer
an oath. Better attend to
this if you have not made your
return.
Telegraph companies operating
in this State have submitted to
the South Carolina railroad commission
scale of reduced rates
for transferring of money by
telegraph between points in
North America. These reductions
were approved by the commission
to become effective on
March 1 of this year.
The secretary of the national
treasury has ordered the engraving
of the plates for the
new $1 treasury notes. Eighteen
months will be required to put
in circulation this new money,
which will be only two-thirds
the size of the existing currency.
A vignette of Washington will
adorn the face of the bill.
The firm of McElhaney & Co.
have on display in their west
show window the $400 grand
piano which the firm will give
away as a prize on August 1,
next. Interest in the contest
for the instrument has waxed
warm during the last few days
and several contestants already
number their votes well up into
the thousands.
Times readers should not fail
to read the opening chapters of
"The Women's Candidate," a
new serial story 'which begins in
this week's issue. "The Women's
Candidate" is a story of ten
girls and one man at a summer
resort, in the days of universal
suffrage, and is replete with
situations as ridiculous as they !
are daring, but wholesome and
up to the minute.
Rev. J. D. Moore, of Columbia,
secretary of the State Baptist
Sunday School association, will
visit Fort Mill on next Sunday, |
and in the morning will address
the school of the local Baptist,
rhnreh In the afternoon Rev.
Mr. Moore will speak to the,
Flint Hill school, both his addresses
beitiK in the interest of
Sunday school work.
/
I
Hey ward Hutch, a negro whose j
reputation is said to be anything i
but good, was brought to Fort
Mill from Charlotte Monday
afternoon, having been arrested :
in the latter city hy Constable
Edward Garrison upon a warrant
charging him with assault and
battery The assault with which j
Hutch is charged was committed
in the Gold Hill section of Fort
Mill township last fall, when he
attempted to end the earthly
career of one Nat White, colored.
oy lining White's lower ex-,
tremities with shot from a double-1
barrel gun. Hutch was com-,
mitted to York jail Tueseay to
await trial.
For the third time within the
last few months, the store of
McElhaney & Company, Main
street mercharcS, was entered
by burglars sometime during
Sunday nigh.. By the use of a
knife a ho1 ? large enough to insert
a cro- < bar was cut between
the rear joors and the doors were
then prized open. The burglars
- tempted to open the safe in
the office, but were unsuccessful,
only damaging it by prizing off
the combination knob. Up to
this time Mr. McElhaney has
missed no goods from his stock,
and there is no olne ns to who
entered the building.
The News of Gold Hill.
Fort Mill Times Correspondence.
Gold Hill, Feb. 11. ?A great
many progressive farmers of
this section attended the corn
show in Columbia last week, and
they were very much pleased
with the various exhibits.
Rev. Hair enumerated to his
congregation at Flint Hill Sabbath
morning the proceedings
of the National Lay mens' Convention,
which was held in Chattanooga
last week. He quoted
from many of the strikimg addresses
delivered before the convention
in his own forceful manner.
All who were present enjoyed
it very much, and those j
who were not present missed |
something they should have
heard.
Tne Gold Hill school is running
along smoothly with an enrollment
of 87 and a good average
attendance. The honor roll students
for the month ending Friday
were: Earle Bailes, Winnie
Crook and Rrice Windle.
The hunters of this community
are anticipating a regular oldtime
fox chase in a few nights.
Should anyone hear the sweet
anisic ol the hounds between
midnight and day, say to yourself,
"Oh, it is a real fox chase."
The writer is glad to see that
the Legislature is quiet on the
compulsory education subject.
The gentlemen in Columbia
should not fail to increase the
tax for the benefit of the common
schools. That is what we needtaxation
and not computation.
"Dr. Ehrlich Kurr."
A Mother's Devotion.
Mother's love is a love that
passes understanding, and it exhibits
itself in all animate creation.
The mother hen would fight
an elephant in the defense of her
young, and a mother always exhibits
wonderful consideration
for her offspring. That is why a
mother is thoughtful for the
health of her child, and the Mother
is the one who sees to it that
a bottle of Gowans, King of Externals,
is always in the home,
because Gowans scatters inflamation.
Croup is inflamation, Gowans,
just rubbed on, scatters
colds and croups, and often prevents
pneumonia. Ml druggists
sell Gowans and guarantee it.
No dangerous drugs. It absorbs
and is the thing for the infant.
Buy today.?Adv.
Wax-Oil
Is a splendid Furniture Polish
and a bottle should be kept in
every home.
Wax-Oil
Is less expensive and less troublesome
to apply than any wax
preparation for floors and any
wood work. It renews the lustre,
disinfects and prevents the:
Stain or Daint from WPflrinor aurau
? w....D M?f MJ
and keeps down the dust.
25 cents the quart
and a quart will go over the
entire house. Just saturate a
cloth and rub over, then polish
with a dry cloth.
Ardrey's Drug Store,
nrwnnnnp f MWgjnrx
' " y.'
1 The (
;z
H Saw
<T %>
If
III
I But that won'l
11 We are already
f Sewing, such as
* Goods, Etc.
if <
H W re show
I all the very new
ft hrench Calf, Vic
ft more shoes than
ft
ft the shoe busines
11
t how we keep it.
+ the new ones.
11
ft Men if you w
f| what we are off'
* and we need m<
ft
^ > T i- ^ ? J
. . ^[-JCIICU. cX
jl no rival. Old s!
shirt at 50c to $
?1
S Mills
>
4>\Z
}' >
Frost-Procf Cabbage
Grown in th
We are prepar< d to ship from now ur
MENT of CABBAGE PLANTS, tied in I
ed, with an Extra Hundred Plants FREE
Plants are raised from
Frost-Pro
which are grown especially for us on I
sprayed with Lime and made free fro
thousand delivered, count guaranteed am
We refer you to Peoples National Banl
hilit V a !?n to Pnatmoufoi- Qr?ri A
-j , ?ww .v - www...m?'w*-* uuu ua coo rv
Our Lettuce Plant
also, and we will put on at same figures,
at each station; commission deducted froi
and secure agency.
The Enterpri
Megget
The largest Potato Plant and Cabbage
voted in South Catolina and Florida to pi
INDIGESTION FIVE YEARS
I
Relieved by Vinol.
Strength and oven life Itself depends
upon the nourishment and
proper assimilation of food, and unless
digestion is good, the whole body suffers.
Mrs. L. D. Cook, Vlneland, N. J.p I
says: "I was sick five years with Indigestion.
My stomach seemed to
have a heavy load In It, and at other
times It seemed to be tied in knots.
Kobody knows how I suffered.
"I tried a great many doctors and
& great many kinds of medicine, but
nothing did any good until I took
"Vinol. It has helped me wonderfully.
1 am improving fast, feel better and
am getting my flesh back again. Vinol
has done me a world of good."
We know the great power of Vinol,
our delicious cod liver and iron
tonic without oil. In curing chronic
stomach trouble and building up
aU weakened, run-down persons, and
that is why we guarantee to return
your money if it does not help you.
W. E. AUDREY. Drugffist,
FORT MILL, S. C.
Dr. King's New Discovery
KILLS THE COUGH. CUBE* THE LUNGS.
I
m >
h
V V *
J '
$+$+i*&+<$+&+<*+$+&+*+W+* ?N
iroundho
r His Shadow
t stop Spring Goods fr<
showing quite a lot of
Ginghams, Percales, F
)xfords, Pun
ing about twelve hund
est creations, Pat. Lec
:i, Kangaroo, White Bi
. all the well, we wc
is of this community.
"Better shoes at mo
ear Pants and want a |
ering right now. Sprii
are room and money.
Best Shirt Made
big lot of Ferguson-IV
hirt men "on the road'
1.50.
& Your
Dry Goods, Clothin
and Lettuce Plants, 1
e Open Air. P
_ !j
itil April 1st. the FINEST ASSORT- P
lunches of Fifty (50), correctly count- L
1 to each Thousand purchased. These Jj
u
of Seed jj
Lonfc Island, N. Y. Our plants are Jj
m tferms. Our prices are $1.50 per []
:1 prompt shipments. n
C. Charleston. S. C on to on. "
gents, Meggetts, S. C. |
s are Frost Proof jj
We want Agents to handle our plants p
n price of plants 10 per cent. Write L
G
se Plant Co., ;
t8, S. C. r
Farm in the South. Fifty acres de- f
ants alone. [12-5-3m] Jj
II
t
A Word About Lumber.
Our bif? yard contains materia!
for ail purposes. We've the
variety. Our prices are within
the reach of sensible buyers.
Good Judgment
invariably results in the selec
t 1 * '
liuii im L/umutr irom cur yards I
and sheds. Get an estimate from I
us on all jobs ?larpre or small. 8
J. J. BAILES.
OLD NEWSPAPERS for sale at I
The Times office.
KING'S NEW LIFE PILLS !
The Pills That Do Cure. I
^SSSSl
==ss=sseaaammamm '^-:^M
g Came Out, |
and Went Back. J 'tl
Dm coming in on every freight train.
new Cotton Piece Goods for early
^iques, Linen Suitings, Crash, White |i:
ips, Sandals. |
red pairs of Oxfords and Pumps in ||
ither, Gunmetal, Tan, Russia Calf, II
jck and Canvas. We buy and7 sell | :
n't say it, but do know that we have | I
And you know hov we got it and ||
derate prices, see?" You should see |f
pair downright cheap you should see j |
ng Pants will be here in a few days < |
Hence, a Big Reduction in Pants. +1
i For the Price. i |
IcKinney Spring Shirts which have * *
say that no shirt made equals this f f
it
I::
~~ ~ ill
tg Company, |
g and Shoe Dept. |i>
^ v $*$* $*??
3]5H5gggSH5H5aH5H5H5a55a5H}B5H55a?IBga5H5a5g5tSa5g5c 15
WE HOPE
U That January 1st, 1913, found B
3 each of our friends enjoying good S
3 health and prosperity, and we ft
3 liope further that good health K
jj may attend you during the New a
| Year and that when another year
3 has rolled around you may have ?|
j| added much to your bank acount. |j
3 Buying Groceries here will aid |
C both your health and pocketbook. ?
jj Parks Grocery Company, 1
[ E. S. PARKS, Manager. [3|
3lH5H5E5H5ga55H5a5a5S5-g5a5lH5a55H55Ha5H5a5rg555H5a5aBl
THE SAVINGS BANK WM
"THE OLD RELIABLE."
Capital $25,000.00
Surplus 12,000.00
Liability of Stockholders. 25,000,00 J
(Protection to Depositors $62,000.00 I
A quarter of a century of conservative banking |
_ ? i -
enaoics us to otter our patrons ABSOLUTE SE- j?
I CURITY. Have never lost a dollar on loans. (I
J You are cordially invited to open an account IJ
i with us.
J Savings Bank of Fort . Mill, ||
J Leroy Springs, Prest. W. B. Meacham, Cashr. ||
* I