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? NEWS ABOUT TOWN, W. P. Cragrton of Charlotte w&s a visitor to relatiffee in Fort Mill last Sunday. (Mr. and Mrs- Bernle Ford of Co* lumbla were vleitore in Fort Mill for a few hours Tuesday afternoon. Miss Iva Beck has come to Fort Mill from her home in Pennsylvania to conduct the millinery department of the Mutual Dry Goods Store during the fall and winter months. Mrs Bannah C. Massey and her two daughters. Misses Bertha and Retells Massey, have returned to their home in Fort Mill from an extended visit to Mrs. Massey's son, the Rer. ' J. B. Massey, D. D., at Hampden-Sidney, Va. According to the report of the town treasurer of Fort Mill for the quar** ter ending on. September 30, receipts from the police department for the month of July, August and September amounted to $317, while disbursements for the department during the quarter were $448. Mr. and Mrs. George Fish had as their guests yesterday Mr. and Mra. h'ruest Nelson of Selma, Ala., where , Mr. Nelson is general manager ef the . Selma Manufacturing company. Several years ago Mr. Fish and Mr. Nelson were associated in the mill business in New England. "Fir^prevention" exercises are being held this week by the Fort Mill graded school in accordance with the proclamation issued a few days ago to the public schools of the State by Governor Harvey,- In the high school department of the local school each pupil was expected to turn in today t an original paper on the subject. A throng of eager buyers Saturday afternoon pushed and jostled each other at the hour aluminum ware sale at the furniture store of Youns & Wolfe. Several hundred people, many of them from nearhv towns, at tended the sale and in less than an hour $500 worth of aluminum ware had passed to the hands of customers. The town of Fort Mill recetly came to a compromise with T. K. Uurnsun by agreeing to pay him $50 tor the loss of a cow which he claimed died from eating grass on Tom Hall street which hed t>eeu treated with a liquid "weed kilter." The item appears in the quarterly statement of the town treasurer printed in The Times this week. Ernest T. Whltesell,freight agent of the Southern railway in Fort Mill, expects to move with his family within the next week or ten days to his farm a few miles south of Rock Hill. He does not expect to give up his position with the railway company, however, but will go to his home at night And return every morning to h?s work hereL. A. Harris and Stanhope Ligon left Monday afternoon for New York to attend the annual meeting of the American Bankers' association, now in aesssion in that city. Mr. Harris represents the board of directors of) the First Rational blink of Fort Mill at the meeting, while Mr. klgon represents the oflicers of the bank, of* which he is assistant cashier. The Rfcv. J. W. H^Dychea, Th. D-, pastor of the Fort Mill Baptist church, writes to The Times from Richmond, Va., to say that he will re' turn home in time to fill his pastoral engagements next Sunday. He had been visiting relatives at Clover, Va., lor severe! days prior , to the first of this week, when he went to Richmond to attend the Virginia State fair. Oscar Gamble left Monday morning - for Columbia to accept a position with >? ? ? ?u ... cicviiitui supply concern which had been secured (or frlm bv | the employment 'bureau of the national government because of disabil-1 ities he received in the service in the World war. For several months he had been employed as a salesman at the store of the Fort Mill cooperative , association. | James B. Bpps, member of the Fort. Mill township road commission, stat-! ed yesterday that he had quit the job, r *hat the affairiB of the commission had not been run according to law. that _ as a member of the commission he \ had not been consulted by the former . chairman, and that he did not think I there was now anything left for him to do, since the funds of the 6ommi?alon are exhausted. There would be less danger of future wars if the nations should agree that diplomats would be' the first to be drafted. a. BOYS'C SWEA ! 5 $1.00 We (kftfe received a <hi] - ; Sweeten, Oxford color, w dal eft $1 each. These " * monev end' von AouU j Abo oJot of MEN'S SWI ^iV: *^'?^'Vt^ ^ ' /*? wTMI -JL? J FORT MILL, S. C. GENERAL INFORMATION. CITY GOVERNMENT. A. C, LYTLE Mayor C. S. LINK Clerk i A. L. OTT Police Judge i N. M. McMANUS.Chief of Police DEPARTURE OF TRAINg. ! ' * No. 31 Southbound 7:55 a. m. ' * I No. 4 Northbound 8:H0 a. m. No. 113 Southbound..11:21 a. m. i No. 114 Northbound..11:55 a. m. > no. o soumoounn d:33 p. m. I ? ? No. 32 Northbound 6:38 p. m. j MAILS CLOSE. For train No. 31 7:30 a. m. i For train No. 82 6:10 p. n?. For train No. 5 5:10 p. m. For train No. 4 8:10 a, m. Note?No mail is dispatched on i trains San day afternoons. POSTOFFICE HOURS. Daily 7:45 a. m. to 6:00 p. "m. Sunday 7:45 to 9:80 a. m. i S. W. PARKS, Postmaster. i Don't fail to see the new Fall Goods at Massey's and note especially "the new prices, which are always the lowest. LUMBER FOR SALE?Pine, oak, ash and guui lumber, sawed any length or any size. See J. F. Moore or W. B. Hoke, fort Mill. EXECUTORS' NOTICE. All persons indebted to the estate ot II. N. Patterson, deceased, ate hereby requested to ?\iake iin mediate payment to the undersigned executors of the said estate,. and all persons having claims against the suid estutc are hereby requested to present them at oiiee to the said executors, who give notice that they will make application to the Judge of Probate for a final discharge as such oil October 14, 1922. W. F. PATTERSON, * B. B. BYltUM, Executors Estate of II. N. Patterson, Deceased. 2 Inactive P ? Liver b *'1 have had trouble with w an Inactive liver," wrote Mrs. 2* ^ S. Nichols, of 4412 Spencer ^ Jj St, Houston, Texas. "When ^ 3 I would get constipated, I would ? (1 feel a light, dizzy feeling In my ^ head. To get up in the morning B_ 41 with a lightness in the head and flp 3 a trembly feeling is often a sign JL that the stomach is out of order. V 3 For this i took Thedford's 2k ^ Black-Draught, and without a ^ aa doubt can say 1 have never Mk ^ found its equal' in any liver 9 A medicine. It not only cleans "i the liver, but leaves you in such a good condition. I have used H* 3 it a long time, when food does V not seem to set well, or the 9 3 stomach Is a little sour." ^ 2 llfitim'tl b I Thedfords | $ j litwtl t Sbuck-draught| 1 I Liver Medicine. I p OTTON I TERS EACH - -1 > . ' * < ! pnpisnt of Boys' Cotton hich wo ore selling speore oil well worth the take sdrentsge -of this \x ^ ' v '2 [ '.ATERS, good values at f. . ? VEATERS in the pretty Come to see us A\ H STORE I r&r-?'* '1 r ' Mfca ; v > ? Sa Pi LYTLE, Mgra. ' I OCT BLAI St TO SATURI / Several Hundred Extremely Low Pri< Advantage of It to COTTQ " > - ^ ARMY 1 NASHIL Plaid 01 - xk' * LORAI1S N " H "iV: VV. f0& %Z REMEMBER YO FORT MILL, ? ??r ' Kngj^B II. I = OBER NKEl & MS? ILC LAST )AY,OCT - / Pairs- of Splendid f ;es. Do Not Allow T Get First Class Bed N BLANt $2 WOOL B] Worth $5. 1 $ 2 A. WOOL r White, 66 - 80, Reg $3 T A ~W ~W "W^r ^ J W Size 70 - 80, Regular $4 THE DATE ? J UNS{ 9 ?l-r; . MWPL^x. \ -r ABM \ . jfcr <- jf t j * - ^?/?4 ' ^. _ . ?* * - -,, A SPLEND ONE E '.7,9A.l few Blankets Will 'his Opportunity to Covering at Bargai rT7rTC GOOI A WOR .48 LANKE" 'his Sale Only .98 NAP BL [ular $7.50 Value,! .98 OOL BL Value $10, This S .98 SATURDAY, ( It WO k 1 ??A - ;**& ??? . ? . . . ID ASSORTMENT JAY M.9P.M. *-> 1.'" Be Put On Sale at Pass Without Taking n Prices. ) QUALITY, 66 -80, TH $4. THIS SALE \ v * ? fc- \ PQ Gray orO.D. - 3 1-2 Pounds / ANKETS c?_i^ n ^aie rrice X ' ' 17 . .' "* " , ' , ?? *. t?" \ * \ * A .ANKETS ale -y \ *' > " . r\ '/A" * iJT ^ * > ' ' V 9 OCTOBER 7TH LFE ??? South Caxohtt 2SSS25S22H552552522S2SS5SSBS55SS3B9B^J(fc?fc,'SErnfsH . H -2^-28 ^ ^