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a'week with frienda at Alpemarle I / and Raefiord, N. C. ? ! H ?t: m: o '_i?i -A rr *U I TJBMfc 1*1 is? Aiizauein oa?M^ of u Springs is the guest of -Mii lfartha Dycbiea this week. "* James Jeter of Santuc. Union county, wis the' guetit this week of his sister, Mrs. 0. T. Gulp. MrS. Maggie Garrison is visiting rejatrives in the Steel Greek section of Mecklenburg' county, N. Miss Elizabeth Capell of Char, lotfe. N. C., Sunday was the guest, of Miss Hattie Huntley at the Home of Mr. and Mrs. Vf. B. Ardrey. Miss Inez Ardrey of Norfolk, Va., and Mrs. Herbert Lew^n of Charlotte, N. C., were guests this week of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Pat- I terson. Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Gregory of Clover, Va., are spending a few days with their daughter, Mrs. J. i 4 W. H. Dyohes. at the Baptist pastorium. Tillie, little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Mills, returifed home a few days' ago after a pleasant visit to relatives in the country near town. Mrs. E. G-. Quit her ofc Statesville,, N. C\, and Mrs. Allen J, Graham of Greenville were guests this week of their parents. Dr. and Mrs. T. S. Kirkpatrick. Prof, .lames H. ThornweU and Mrs. Thornwell of Hartsville are guests for the week at the home of Dr. J: B. Elliott. Prof. Thornv.ell is superintendent of the publie school of Hartsville. The guruge building and lot on Confederate street adjoining the Fort Mill telephone exchage which was bought by J. J. Bailes from W. A. Watson some months ago has been sold by Mr. Bailes to W. B. Meacham. who is considering improving the property. * The Rev. ,T. R. Moore, pastor of the Fort Lawn Baptist church was the guest of the Rev. J. W H. Dyches Wednesday rtighOoli last week. Mr. Moore was on hie way to Charlotte to attend thr State B. Y. P.^U. convention ol North Carolina which, was held at the First Baptist church of thai city. At a special service in the Fort Mill Presbyterian church tonight under the auspices of the Christian Endeavor society, an address will he made by the Rev. S. W. Dendy, State field secretary. Special music will be rendered and an invitation is extended to the people of the community to > attend the service. J. T. Henderson of Knoxville * Tcnn., general secretary of the Laymen's Missionary movement of .the Southern Baptist convention.-will address a men's meeting at the Fart Mill Baptist * church on Tuesday night, duly 5. A cordial invitation is extended all men to hear this eminent speaker on a topic of vital interest. G. E. Flow of Monroe, N. C. official appraiser of- the Federal Li^nd bank, Columbia, spent two days in Fort Mill during the last week appraising farms which were offered as security for loans iindnf* tKa fn^avol i ~ A . .... >vui AI JOI III iliaII III"I. He visited the farms of 16 applicants who are seeking loans and membership in the local associ' ation. James 1). Orist. city editor of the Yorkville Enquirer, spent several hours in Fort Mill Saturday in the. interest of the first annual reunion of York county veterans of the World war to be held in York July 4. While in Fort Mill Mr. Grist secured a definite promise ihat. the Fort Mill military company will attend the reunion. Maj. James;J). Fulp, superintendent of th? Abbeville city schools. with Mrs. Fulp and their sous, is spending the week at th'e home of his mother, Mrs. A. O. Jones. Maj. Fulp expects to go to Columbia next Wednesday to .teach in the summer school at the University of South Carolina. He will .be accompanied to Columbia by Mrs. Fulp. Announcement was made Tuesday that the Rev. W. D, Hatchford ,pastor of u. group of churches in Ijaurens county, is expected to preach at the Fort Mill Presbyterian church nexJ .Sunday ?aftcrriton. Considerable interest attaches to the coming of Mr. Rutchford not only because he is a forceful preacher hut also becruse he is a grandson of the Rev. W. W. Ratchford of Waxhaw. N. C., who waa pastor of the Fort Mill ehnrch AO veara ago and who is still an active^ uflAfater, notwithstanding his 90 years. <?pid growth iu wrnmerw, the Meetent run of Jfie Butted States udiefe it to^kwMlHfcet of the world 'a oceaAs ia becoming one of the country'fa most important boundaries." says a bulletin issued by the National Geographic qpiety from its Washington head-' quart era. "This rippling line of Pacific surf marks the end of the great Aryan migration, which began ages ago in some mysterious unknown land of central Asia, surged through the deep alleys of the Himalaya*,- and has since poured ever westward,making the greater part of the world's history as it went. Across this boundary of white colonization yellow people of the Easht have shown thernseles ready to flow in a counter current, making complicated racial problems and giving the western boundary an ethnic importance which none of the other three boundaries possess. "For centuries after the discovery of the Atlantic coast of Amer!fiu nvan />/\?? f o ?? Q ?? I ?vu, vf en iui eciiiiii irn mirr i ??i inoa first looked upon the Pacific it Panama after his compatriots sailed ships actons its vasf expanse, the Pacific coast of what is iu?w the United States remained practically unknown. Cabrillo, ;he Spanish navigator, it is true, entered San Diego hay near the present Mexican border in 1542 ind his expedition later sailed north as far as the big bulge in the coast line. But the two priceless features of the Pacific coast was missed: San Francisco bay, one of the greatesl. best and safest of the harbors of the world, and the entrance to Puget sound, where land-locked Seattle and a group of other fine harbors now tandle* a large part of th? commerce between America and the )rient. "This failure of early navigat?rs to find San Frauciseo hay, i hough many of them passed up 4>d down the coast and the Spbtish even made a special effort to discover a satisfactory harbor, constitutes one of the mysteries ?f the Pacific seaboard. Francis Drake is supposed to have an hored in Bodega bay, about '40 miles northwest of San FYancisco. and numerous other explorers vis.ted the tiny Drake's hay, only 30 miles northwest of the Golden Gate, and * the Parralone islands, an equal distance due west of the great bay, but none of these sojourners appears to have "obtained .he slightest inkling of the existence so close by of the matchless harbor. The bay was first sighted from the. laud in 1709, more han 200 years after the Spaniards began their search for a Pacific coast harbor, and it was six years later when the first ship sailed hrough the Golden Gate. "The'Pacific coast of the United States is markedly different from he Atlantic coast, especially thai part of the latter south of Massachusetts,' with its relatively low mndy shores and its ontlvinw i>nl. . # ? wark of sapd islands and sand spits. San Diego bay, only ten miles north of the Mexican border, is the only bay of major importance on the Pacific coast of the United States land-locked by a sand spit. Point Loma. forming the northern boundary of San Diego bay, however, is a ridge several hundred feet high, and from there northward to Canada with only a few miles of narrow lowlands between the sea and hills or mountains by way of exception; the coast is bold and rugged. Parts of it are Avhat geologists call a 'drowned coast,' where mountains have shrunk.so that the water meets their steep slopes. Parts are 'uplifted coasts.' where, mountains once tinder the sen have partlv emerged, and their slopes are still lapped by the waves. ''It is the mountainous and bold character of the Pacific coast Iniuvii ii on aisnncny troin the coast of the Atlantic. From a point 50 miles north of San Fran-1 cisco one may sail northward for hundreds of miles alongside bluffs and promontories, finding hardly any indentations of importance. It was this region which made the Spaniards despair,before they discovered San ' Francisco bay, of finding that essential to commerce in afl ages, a safe, commodious port. Today the problem has been solved on a small scale at least by th*. construction of cable tram-1 Ways extending from the heights to outlying* rocks. But lack of ports and the roughness of the country immediately inland have held back the development of X X LOOK | CULPBR X FOR 1 6 GrocerC 0 Gasoline, ffc ft Motoi jo WHOLESALE fi PHONE X i oO<X>OOOOOOOOOC much of coastal northern Califor- i ] niu. " ! "North of the main bulge of j the Pacific coast. fapc Mendocino, small hays are more numerous in , California. Oregon and Washing- ^ ton. and-about many of thein r^it- | roads have been bnih anil e.in.iirl. . ! rrable commercial develop-iuci)! | ! has taken place. Finally, at iho mouth of the Columbia river. oxe* 500 miles north of the Gohlen | Gate, a good deep water harbor is readied at Astoria. Ocean vase Is may even ascend the river to Portland, nearly 100 miler inland, "More than 850 miles north of San FVanciseo is the ten mile wide Strait of Juan de Fuca, the entrance to Puget sound, tlie great sunken vailey which carries deep water, for more than u hundred miles into the heart of the State of Washington, and affords many miles of matchless laud-locked harbors. The center of the entrance to the Strait of Juan de Fuca is the northern boundary on the Pacific of the United States proper. "After an interval of nearly 600 miles where British Columbia fronts oil the Pacific, the Pacific coast again 'becomes territory of the United States as the southernmost point of Alaska is reached. . I For more than a thousand mites to the roots of the Alaska penin- j sula the waters of tJhe Pacific ( be tile the shores of this territory, and for an eveti greater distance j the long arm of the peninsula and the Alueti&n islands oft its point f sweep out into the Sceaa. Prne- , tieally all of this seaboard is a , "drpwned coast,' rugged oeyo.ul t description, with countless bays. . golfs, islands and channels. When all these convulsions ar<? "?tinted ( Alaska lias more than In (UK) miles t j of coast line. The shores south of r j the peninsula are*^ for the most part heavily wooded, of*en to the t very water's edge. Snow elud y mountains tower abova ships as , they sail through the inland pass- y ages and glaciers discharge a never-ending succession of icebergs into some of the hays." I a word of appreciation: We are very much indebted to relatives and friends who so thoughtfully and faithfully assisted us in caring for the needs 1 ami comforts of our father, J. H. 1 ('oltharp, during his long illness. . Many comforting words and kind < deeds helped him hear his burden of suffering. No less at his death did friends render most valuable service during the try- ( ing hour of placing his body to . rest. For all of this we are indeed grateful and extend our sincere thanks. THE CHILDREN. ??- -j. -.i'.? 666 cures Malarial Fever. Summer Shoes must go regardless of cost while it is gonig time, at Massey's. . ? .? i > 666 cure* Bilious Fever.. > We hope shoes will be cheaper < next year, so we are selling off c our Summer Shoes at greatly re- J duced prices. Many at half price. , I.. J. Massey. Rub-My-Titm kills pain. j 40 cents a pound or 10 cents a . yard buys perfect Sea Island ! Domestic at Massey *6. No scraps, ( ; all in one piece. \ : 4 . 666 cure* Biliousness. j New lot Ladies' and Children's 1 'Hats at half price just arrived at i Massey's. i TO X OTHERS | rouR x (oaf andice c trosene a S hOffs | AND RETAIL % Q NO. ,15. ? X >ooo<xxxxxx>oo< Rub-My-Tism cure* sores. .VOriCK Ob' ELECTION? Ill ? --? 1 * xnrvuirui I II 4l pn II ion iilgueu O; i majority of the freeholder^ o the 'I own of Fort Mill, as showi t>y the tax books, and filed In ?i>id freeholders with the Towi Council, praying that a specia dection be ordered for the pur pose of submitting to the quad Tied electors of the Town of Fori Mill the question of the issunnct if the bonds as hereinafter sei forth, and in accordance with tht aw, notice is hereby giveu that i ipecial election of the qualified zoters of the said Town of Fori Mill be held on Tuesday, the Itfll Jay of .July, 1921, between tht lours of seven A. M. and four 1* W., at Young & Wolfe'R storo it ^ort Mili, S. C., at which elet tioi :here will be submitted to tht pialified*' voters the following question: "Whetlier for the purpose ol paying outstanding indebtednesi uid for permanent street improve roent, the Tojyn of Fort Mili, S 3., shall issue coupon bonds, ni provided by law, to an amount ?ot exceeding Ten Thousand Dol ?rs. same to hear interest at tht rate of six per cent per annum payable semi-annually." The ballots shall he prepared n aceordanee with law, and sha! ! on tain thereon the following: "For the issuance of streei aonds." "Yes or No." Those voting in favor of the is uie snail deposit a ballot with th< ?ord "No" erased thereon; am those opposed to the issue shal leposit a ballot with the wort 'Yes" erased thereon. Books of registration will h< >pen in the office of the Clerk and Treasurer, on Trade street, in tin Town of Fort Mill, on the !5tl lay of June, 1921, for the regis ration of the qualified electors ol he Town of Fort Mill, ahd will emain open until and including the 4th day of June, 1921. The following are appointed managers of the said election Herbert Harris. J. M. Belk, and T. C. Saville. A. L. PARKS. - t Mayor Pro Tem. Attest.? C. S. LINK, Clerk. IV. B. WILSON, Chairman, W. P. BOYD, f. D. SMITH, ?oinmis?ioners of State and County Elections for York County. 366 cures a Cold quickly. Pyramid Paint Shop BOCK HILIi, S. O/ P AIWTIMP a mil i liiu If your car need* painting we will jalnt It for you and do it in such a vay that you will be surprised at th< Hfference It makes In the tooka ol 'our old car. Our corps of palnten ire the best that can be obtained and inly those who are experienced. In ar painting are on our force. ooks of your car Is Just like the ooks of your person. It goes a lani ' y JAMES A. JOHNSON. Proprietor. i ? ^ Rub-My-TUm cures Rtaaatisai The condition of the 5-year-old laughter of Mr. and Mr*. L. M VTassey who had been critically 11 for several daya yesterday wa# *eported considerably improved >y the attending ^physician who tow holds ont hope for the early ecovery of the little girL SSHHSHH^sssssssasaasssasss : npi ii n i 0 i ' The Vulcanite H \ I Shingle offers um I HflW rative possibilii distinctive tilt I surfaced with cn * [ p t in its natural color ) I green or deep red \ I I the appearance of } I And this roc * Bw' exceedingly du ) ISSt resisting and cc BhHl weathertight. It i } applied without ev * I aa marking off the * - chalk line. J You can see thi k j Vulcanite shingle \ will call and show y f this sliixigle at ; Fort Mill Li i ? (T ; FORT MIL] l 1" ' t= =11 i i _ FOI PRICES AGAII Another reduction has been nui types of Ford Cars ami Ford 'I atelv. The list prices, f. o. b.. 1) > TOURING CAR ...... __ 1 RUNABOUT .. I ? COUPE __ SEDAN *_ ' CHASSIS ... TRUCK-CHASSIS TRACTOR __ ? 1 The big reductions hist fall wei I I low material costs which the n I I ting the benefit of, and this fae s manufacturing efficiency und tl tor Ford Cars, particularly duri 1 permitting maximum productic ..price reduction possible, i Can you of ford to be without < Fords are selling at these low j f now why you should delay put I Truck or Fordson Tractor. HEATH MC I / Help Your t, Moulters % ! Moult j} r 11HINK of the amount of hen en . ! r -1 inquired to grow a thousand featl I B > A.cnouttiug heu needs good health?g * Dr. Hess Poultr; 1 helpa poultry through the moult an I | ueriK 10 jaymg. it contain* tonics ft .? digestion. It tones up the dorniai iron that gives a moulting hen rich, J?o disease where Pan-a-ce-a is fet g moulting hens Dr. Hess Poultry Pan 1 I k # Wm hanJI* thm Dr. Hmat t i I Lytle Drugi i p Tell at how many hens you have. 1 JOB PR II ' AT THE TIMES OFFL f ' Old newspapers for salet r * AO AIOU lj^ limber Co. { Li, S. C. r IF- =11=3 *D V REDUCED idein the list price of ull 'rucks to take effect immeetroit.ure now as follows: ^ $415.00 $370.00 t $695.00 ... $760.00 $345.00 $495.00 ? _$625.00 re m?\le in anticipation of nanufacturers are now get-' t. together with increased le unprecedented demand nig the past .three months, m, haw made another a ear any longer wli^h trices Y There is no reason chasing a Kurd <'ar. Ford >TOR CO. T??--n?: crjfy, vitality and red bW.rf lcrs?the averago plumage I ooJ appetite?good digestion. y Pan-a-ce-a <1 starts pullets and moulted >r the appetite, tonics to aid ut egg organs. It contains >red blood and a red comb. 1. By all tueaus Iced your -a-ce-a. Lin*. Call an Company I K't hove ti package to suit. E NTING CE - - PHONE 112 ?The Times office. ? -sit'