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SHORT ITEMS OF NEWS PICKED UP ABOUT TOWN R. B. Bennett left Tuesday for At- ' Utnta, where he has accepted a positicn. , Miss Isabel CJrier, who has been teaching during the past year In Oswego, Sumter county, is at her home for the summer holidays. Miss Nelle Mae Ferguson, daughter ol Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Ferguson, is spending the summer with her brother, llalle Ferguson, in Sumter. IJr. A. lu. Ott was in Columbia Tuesday and Wednesday attending thr "golden Jubilee" of the State Oentnl association. The meeting ad nn.l Itil- I j- iiiui miltChildren's day exercises are to be held Sunday afternoon by the Mas. scj Sunday school. A number of spoakers have been Invfted to deliver | addresses of interest to the children. . The automobiles of the Ttev. V! I!. Bauknlght nnd A. L?. Parks collided head-on two miles north of Port Mill Sunday afternoon and the cor of Mr. Bauknlgbt was badly mieeked. Fravor Kimbrell and "Billy" Mack expect to leave Fort Mill the latter port of the week for a 'visit of several weeks to relatives in Oswego. N. Y., and New York city, respectively. James H. Patterson has been appcinted substitute carrier for H. C5. Koilgers, R. P. P. 4, whose route traverses the section of the township between Orattan and the Flint Hill r etghborhood. Among the visitors to Fort Mill , Sunday wore Miss Thelma Fayssoux of Charlotte, W. H. Poole, Jr., of Cnatonia and T. P. and Durwood Morrow of Pineville, who spent the aftvmoon here with friends. Many who heard the sermon hy TUshop U. V. W. Darlington at St. John's Methodist church, Fort Mill, last Thursday evening considered It < ne of tthe ablest discourses ever delivered from a local pulpit. Mrs."3. P. Tlmnterman and childten have returned to their home near Trenton after 'visiting relatives la Fort Mill for two weeks. Elliott, llennett returned home witn Mr?. '"hninerman, his sister. J. Cal Steel of York was In Fort Mill Monday shaking hands with his - fi lends. Mr. Steele is In the race this year as he was four years ago for sheriff of York county. For soxer i! months he has been chief of police of York. i S MERCH ou RE Lr There's no net | from it! Yet we f I in your fight again All Low Sh< reduced 1' S All Low Sho I All Shirts, u{ All CL^i. f /ah jnins, o I ALL MER REDUCEE y This is your i saving on your pu this store sells. Nothing C. 0. Nothing charged a Diehl-M ... The Rev. W. R. Bauknight attend, ed Monday nd Tuesday the com. mencement exercises of the high school of Epworth orphanage in Co* lumbla. The sermon to the ^raduatlng class was preached by the Rev. J. W. Speake of Rock Hill. L. B. Simpson of Uesslle has accepted a position at the Hutchinson pharmacy. Mr. Simpson is taking the pharmaceutical course at the Medical College of South Carolina, from which he will be graduted next year with the degree of Ph. G. Fort Mill council of the Junior Order United American Mechanics will march in a body to the Baptist cnurch next Sunduy night at 8 J o'clock, to hear a special sermon by1 the pastor on "Juniorlsin and Its Re. | llittnn tn Phrtallnnllv M TKa t.?11.1'? ' Is cordially invited to be present. Ite-orgunlzatlon of the Fort Mill i cbupter of tlie Order of the Eastern j F'.ur is contemplated at a meeting to held in the Musonic hall at 8 j o'clock Friday evening, June 2 5, and the worshipful master of Catawba lodge, No, 56, A. F. M? F. E. Ardrey, j requests that all Masons and others j eligible to membership in the order bo present. Several years ago the Fort Mil chapter of the Order of the Eastern Star was a thriving institution and much interest was taken in its work and purposes. Now with a much larger number from which to_ draw its membership, owing to the growth of the Masonic lodge, the < hapter probably will enroll many Masons and their wives and da igh. *ers. Work is scon to be begun on Ini i'iu\enieni? 10 me interior of the hull of Catawba lodge. No. 56, A. P. M., the contract having been awarded a Columbia firm, which will put up metal ceiling instead of the beaver board the lodge originally intended to have placed in the main hall. The work of repairing the aide walla of the hall will be done by a local contractor. Catawba lodge is one of the oldest Masonic bodies in the upper section of the State. It was instituted in 1858 and notwithstanding the upheaval caused by the Civil war, the mcelngs were held regularly during the four years the war lasted. The lodge hus always numbered Among Its members many of the best citizens of the community. Lumt>eiing in tlie Soutli. Leaders of the lumber industry say that supplies of pine in the South will be exhausted in ten years and that within about seven years over 2.000 mills will go out of existence. ANTS' JUN1 (R CONTRIBUTION TOWAI DUCING THE HIGH COST ( yiNG &d for a ''general clearance" eel it our duty to help you as at the high cost of living, the >es in stock, up to J| 0 per cent, es, over $10, reducec p to $10, reduced 1( ver $10, reduced $2 CHANDISE IN TH ) TEN PER CENT. saving opportunity. A chanc rchases of high class merchan D. Nothing Returnable. No it these Reduced Prices. oore Shoe 0 T. A. MOORE, Manager. HILL, SOUTH CAF MOTSHil f * - rV ' - . -* X .'r. fomuLL Taaa, i ? fc . WCKIE SAYS ' [ wtnm' ?Dtfoa.*c* ?ot*t ?AN \ ' J NOAJL HNFTA OO TO HVWV 9?a Ik / ( MkMO* V? \P NCHjW MJLt*4* t\M?\ \ MIM 1WUNMNt TW V\M*AOO?4 tWtOl ( wiA^NoUu-weoeKSut ? our<*k/ 1 \JOCM., TCfc OV*\N / B VtOfcMkN.'Kf* AULA ili?ll (V* uS||lP| 4 " :T' J A*? ???***n pa||L^ *4<v?. GHATETOL FOR IIELP. Xcgroi's Thank White Contributors to Cliun-li liulldlitK Fund. Editor Fort Mill Times: The members of Indian Hill African Methodist Episcopal Zion church usk space In your paper to thank their many friends for helpir.g them to raise $600 on May 30, last. They have the best eoloreb church in that iart of the country. It Is easily w< rjh $5,000 und they have It nearly Puld for. They have for their pastor, the Rev. I. C. Tims. On the filth Sunday in May they came to? get her and the clubs reported ; $500 was the result. The following white nun gave checks to help out in the rallv: Messrs; J J- Halles Smith and u man from Charlotte gave $15. T he Rev. I. C. Tims, the pastor, gave $10. The Rev. W. M. Thomson of Enncuster preached at 11 o'clock. T he Rev. E. 8. Anderson of Fdgiuoor Pleached at 3 p. m. There were some white people at this service who helped financially. Written by -he Rev. K. 8. Anderson of Edgmoor for the officers and members of Indian Hill church. li I.. Culp, James Oladden and other trustees, the Rev. I. C. Tims, paster. E SALE ID 3F I ikl. n litis scasua. xtti much as possible refore? A >10 per pair, I $2 per pair. I j ) per cent, each. 1 E STORE | * I :e to make a real f diae?the only kind < thing on Approval. ompany j tOLlNA I j 4 ""In HH'tfPWFI' "1111 " OK B9B11 : . Vv * rORT MLL, a 0. Our Gi Every decrease in the pr hasten the day of a food shor emment. In lessened food supply Every consumer who rei for grain, cotton, livestock an turned to mourning. Cheap er supply and famine prices 1 The questions of the Lei Republican supremacy are m the mighty food supply quest of labor are like great magnel cities, decreasing the number csnsumers. Economic forces will eve swing back and force people the swing turns that way foot we are wise, wreck our Gove This the nation's supr themselves with a full realiza f In connection with the al will pay our farmers to buy t! high the price of cotton. We hay being shipped here for th tion this year to the fertilizing THE FIRS Capital Assets . HH * | I I How is1 J. E. Healen, coi m i ] i? ooo *i muu rour ^oo mm Carolina, using 9 j of oil. This establishes per gallon of gasol Can you beat itf Rock Hi ROCK II The Rock Hill Overland iniS3SE55c5Gc5 fcacatnacfrtfagaca SPECIAL NOTICES. (Advertisements inserted in this column must be paid for in advance; minimum charge 30 cents.) WANTED?Colored laborers for sawmill work near Blythewood, S. C., 13 miles from Columbia, $4 per day and board. Apply to J. J. Bailes, Fort Mill. S. C. HOLSTEIN BULLS FOR SERVICE? I have two registered Holstein Bulls whose seryices are offered the public; one at Wateroak Farm and the other at my home in Fort Mill; fee $3; Osmond Barber. 4t READ THE TIMES $1.25 PEE TEAR reatest Pro ice paid to farmers for foodstufl tage so acute as to endanger I may by batched the egg of revo oices in reports of decrease of ] d dairy products will soon reali: rniik or bread or meats today w ater cn. *gue of Nations, of soldiers' bo ere soap bubbles blown by chil ion. Heavy pay to industrial v :s drawing men and women I of farm producers and increasir tntually push foodstuffs so high from the cities to the farms to a \ scarcity and the misinformatk rnment and our civilization. erne problem. To its solution t tion of its import.? Manufactur ^ove warning, which we reprodu heir own foodstuff, corn, oats an : rtgret to see the tremendous ar e use of our farmers, and urge t ; and cultivation of corn and tht >T NATIONAL and Surplus... $ 40.<hm> 500,000, rasHasasHfal sasasaEa sasasa SlB* / I; ' This for a R ltractor, of this city, es, going to the mou gallons of gasoline a mileage record ? ine. ) >11 111 . ill Motor t ILL, S. C. ? Phonu No Dealers. Corner Tra< \ sasasasasgsasasasasasasasa A First Cla; Grocery Sto Our experience of in the Grocery Busir how to buy goods ol our customers get tl knowledge. Your p ited and appreciatec O. vTC blem 4 fs will merely serve to a the safety of our Govlution. prices paid the farmers ze that his joy will be ill merely mean a small unty, of Democratic or I dren as compared with B I workers and short hours from the^ farms to the ig the number of food that the pendulum must I ivoid starvation, but ere ? 0 >n about it may, unless : he people must address , ers Record. j . i ce, we do not believe it id hav. no matter how nount of corn, oats and hem to give more atten; gathering of hay. BANK, tHl .00 mgasH5rrf,asBSd5SeSBSja| ecord? ? drove an Over- | ntains of North 3 and one quart jj af 26 5-9 miles | omp'y, I . | de and Black Streets sasasasasasgsapasBSffia | ss >re over thirty years less has taught us f first quality and he benefit of this >atronage is solicl D1TES