The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, April 11, 1913, Image 2
A try* ting pl*c??
We Will Be
Pleased
To (trntiiK** with you for tho
cuIh of lucHt, ?ll|i<*r ?>>'
i?iioim or ui our counter. Thin
1m h rwntjoju voiim for for
ihoHo wlio uru purtliMilwr about
<h?v kind ilioy tfUll
Our n???l nuirk?'t, iKt'ttUKo no iu"?> RmC
arrange ^ their inert# l.ertff l^aUipDCII ?I U3.
Why You Should . Buy
. . * ? * * ? ' M
at Home
Tho following reasons "Why you should buy at Howe,"
will convince you that It is to yojir luterest and benefit that
you Hhoulil mend your ways and buy from your home merchant;
You buy at home because your interests :tro here,
liocuuse you want to tutf* (lie goods.
Jiocauso you soil what you produce here fit homo.
ItncdUHO you want to get what you pay for.
Hecauso tho man you buy from pays his part of tho city
and county taxed.
liocauso tho community that in good enough for you to live
in 1h good enough for you to buy in.
necause you believo in transacting business with friends,
y Hocauso tiie man you buy from stands back of his goods.
Because every dollar ?pont at home stays at home and
works for tho development of the country.
Uocauwo tli? man you buy from helps support your school,
your church, your lodge' and your homo.
liero 1h where you live and here is where you should buy.
Adopt t hose resolutions and thereby help to make your
own community a better and more desirable one in every respect.
BUY YOUR HARDWARE FROM
Malone - Pearce - Young
Hardware Company
Springs * Shannon
Wholesale and Retail
Grain, Corn, Oats, Flour, Molasses,
Sugar, Cow Feed and
Poultry Feed
SPECIAL BARGAINS IN SEED IRISH POTATOES
Agents for Arab Horse Feed and Larro Cow Feed.
Congarce Fertilizers are the best ? full stock
on hand of Top Dresser and Nitrate
of Soda.
Dealers in Buggies, Wagons, Mules and Horses
Full Line Latest Improved Farm
Implements.
Springs & Shannon
CLEANING ? PRESSING ? REPAIRING
yon arc looking for the R1GH T suit at the
RIGHT price, come to the RIGHT place.
We have some of the best Tailoring lines in town. Come
and look over our lines before buying.
CITY PRESSING CLUB
Phone 145 531 E. DeKalbSt.
CLEANING ? PRESSING ? REPAIRING
HJIX>8 AKl> HILAUK.
Hnuth (kn?llu? Kuwriuumt Wtation,
I'rwiH liulHiii No. 110,
Tbo dairyman i?"<l feeders of beef
cattle in this 8tat?> are realizing
more and more the ucottuiolCAl vul
no of silage ah a food. If you keep
dairy cows or beef cattle and havt* !
not a hIIo, thou you should make
an of fort to build ono this sou son
so that it can bo filled in the fall ?
for winter feeding. No person hav- I
tug an many an leu oows can afford !
to 'I" without a silo.
What iM a silo? A ||to is a tank
or pit, prtUrnlfly round, with air I
tJgtM wuIIh, in whh-h green and hu<' - '
culent feed can ho preserved in a
slightly fermented condition for t u
t ure uMi Bijago in ono of tho boHt
and most economical bulky or rough
feeds for cattle. A number ot tho
dairymen aro now paying $ 10.00 a
ton for cotton need hulls when thoy
might have produced silago for $1.6 ,
to $3.00 u ton. This includes tho
entire expenditures for the crop
from the tlmo you bogin cultivating
tho land until the silage is stored
in the hIIo. Tho coat of silage de
ponds largely upon tho quantity of
<Wl er wghum that you can jjrow
to tl^ acre. Sojgpe people In this
State have produced as louch an 0
tons of silago to the ac Wf while
others have not made more than 3
tonH to the acre, Threo tons to I
tho acre, however, is an exception- j
ally low production. lCxperlments
Jiave shown that by tho use of sil
age dairymen have gotten one-third
more milk at one-third loss cost
than where hulls were used. We
aro prepared to give you personal
assistance in the construction of a
silo, as weil as advise regarding
the growing, cutting und feeding of
a crop for silage. A Silo can bo
put up with your own farm labor.
If you begin work on a silo - thin
spring, or early in the uummer,
porsonal assistance can be given to
more people than if you wait until
August or September. A bullotln on
"Silos and Silago" will be ready
for distribution at an early date.
For further information along thla
line, address tho Animal Husbandry
and Dairy Division, Olemson Agri
cultural College, 8. C.
*X>KE(;iiO8UItI0 SAliK.
State of South Carolina,
County of Kershaw.
In the Court of Common Pleas.
Camden Wholesale Grocery,
Plaintiff,
against
Dawaon Alexander,
Defendant.
Under and by virtue of a decree
in the above stated case made by
the Honorable T. S. Seaae, Presid
ing Judge, dated March 18th, 1913,
1 will offer for Bale at public out
eiy, to the highest bidder, in front
of the Court llouso door, in the
City of Camden, S. C., during the
legal hours of Kale, on the first
Monday in _April, 1913, being the
Vth day thereof, the following des
cribed real estate:
All that piece, parcel or lot of |
land with brick atore house thereon, !
situate in the City of Camden, Coun-j
ty of Kershaw, and State aforesaid,
on tho East side Qf Broad Street,
being tho .Northern part of lot one
thousand and forty-four (1044) and
having a front on Broad Street of
six (G) feet, and oxtcmling back
Eastward with it uniform width to
a depth of One Hundred Fifty (150)
feet. Also the right to the use of
tho party wall on the North side as
fui back as said wall extends, to a
height of twelve (12) feet, from
the ground. Also the ri^ht to the
use of the party wall on (lib South
as far back as said wall extends and
to a height of about fourteen (14)
feet up to the bottom of window sills
in said wall. Said lot being bound
ed North by property of W. E. John
son;, East by property of A. J.
Beattie; South by property of David
Wolfe, formerly of I?\ M. Zemp, and
West by llroad Street; being the
same conveyed to me (Dawson
Alexander) by Archibald J. Beattie,
by deed of date November 1st,
lyOi), recorded in tho Clerk's office
in Book A. C., page 189. ?
? Tcj urn of sale, Cash. " *
W. W. Huckabee,
Sheriff Kershaw County.
March 19th, 191.3. 47-48-40.
_ ? IiOIXJK DIIII3CTOHV
Rising Slur Chapter No. 4, H. A.
M., meets third Tuesday in each
month. J. B. Wallace, E. II. P.;
N. II. Goodale, Scribe; J. W. Wil
son, Secretary.
Kershaw Lodge No. 29, A. F. M.,
meets first Tuesday in each
month. R. T. C.oodalo, W. MV;
W. Goisenheimer, Treas.; J. W.
Wilson, Secretary.
Camden Lodge No. 119 I. O. O. F. ;
moots second and fourth Tuesday
in each month. H. T. Goodale,
N. G.; C. W. Birchmore, V. G.;
I. C. Hough, Secretary.
Jr. O. U. A. ,M., meets fourth Fri
day night in each month. C. W.j
Hirchmore, C.; J. F. Bateman,
U. S.
Live Oak Camp No. 4 9, W. O. W.?
moots first Thursday night in
each month. C. W. Blrchmore,
C. C., W. E. Johnson, Clerk. i
DeKalb Lodge No. 41, K. of P.,
meets second and fourth Thurs
day nights in each month. W.,
G. Wilson. C. C.; M. H. Heymaif,
K. of R. & S.
Poplar Camp No. a 6 9. W. O. W.,
moots Monday night on or before
the full moon in each month. B.
K. Sparrow, C. 0.; J. IC. Camp
hollo, Clerk.
Antioch Lodge, No. 29 3. A. F. M.,
meets Thursday night on or bo
fore full moon in each month. D.
W. Joy. W. M.; W. It. Davis, S.
W.; L. H. White, J. W.
Richard Kirkland Council, No. 130,
Jr. O. U. A. M., (Antioch) meets
Tuesday night on or before full
moon in each montKr~~ F. B. Boy
kin, C.;, C. W. Shiver. R. S.
Lafayotte Council No. 2, R. k S. M.,
moot s second Tuesday in oach
month. C. H. Griffin. T. 1. M.;
R. T. Goodale, R. I. D. M ; C. P.
DuBobo, Recorder; J. C. Rowan,
I P C. W.
PURCHASING A PIANO
By JF.NNIC CONNF.RY.
'
' UU? I -LI- I ' "" ' ~1 "
"M> wifs ftntf i hav^ ti jyn buying a
piano," >utd tbo man in tho amoking
car. "if you uovar woo< shopping for
a piano you'd bolter g&t me to tell
ypu how If I# done. Anyway, you
can't keep wo from t< lling you.
Flint, you decide tUat you might
Juki Mb well quit hoping oyer to hava
(doukIi money to buy a piano* and
then you take the bull by the horns
and nay: 'Ob, well, we'll go In debt
for It. That's tbo only way aome
folks will ever bavo anything, and we i
happen to bo tbat kind o^ fojka. Ho
heii) goes. We're Buro always to bo
iji debt anyway, und one might as
well be banged for a aheep aa a lamb.' |
"Then you ask a number of mual- j
clans what kind of a piano la beat. If j
you asked only ono that would be u\\ j
right. Hut you ask aovoral of them,
and that way Ilea madness, Each
tails yvi> one piano that Ib right.
No other one is- Especially tjj^e one
recommended by tbo musician you
asked yoaterday? -that one Is the last
Word In euporlatfve worthleaflneBa.
"So after you have aeked all the
musicians you know you are whera
you began, plus a alight buzzing be
ueath the hatband.
Then you decide that yop'd better
pick out a dealer, bo you atart on the
rounds.
"You are received with open arms
at each place end each dealer ahowa
you what ia without doubt the beat
piano made. You believe it yourself,
when ho aaya it that way. Besides,
he shows you an inferior piano that
Is Juat as good as the better pne. Qet
that, carefully! The Inferior one ia
just as good as the other, every bit
made by the aafne people.
"Iiut you'd be foolish to buy one of
the cheaper ones, It is decidedly in
ferior, though it has the same work
manship and material and guaranty
aa the other. Don't waste your time
trying to understand how this can be,
but it roust be. They all tell you that.
No piano shop la complete without
Rome good pianos and somo other
poorer ones that are equal to the best,
only they are not.
"You tell one dealer that you want a
player piano. He gets out a selection
the 'The Gander's Retreat From the
[ Harnyard,' or 'Moonlight on the Pump'
or a descriptive piece called 'Cats on
tho Hack Fence.' Just Bome little thing
like that. It Is In a box, and when it
is unrolled you see something that
looks like a piece of wrapping paper
that had been shot at with a muzzle
loading army musket used for busk
shot. Yen, and every shot had struck.
"The salesman places this embroid
ery pattern in the jigger in front,
where the cuckoo doors open, and
proceeds to wiggle his feet while he
mysteriously manipulates some per
fectly simple levers under his hand
Then, with wrlthlngs of agony, as if Ilia
whole soul were going Into his job,
he works the thing through. You are
thrilled and you firmly believe that is
the beat piano made.
"Tho next day, or the same day if
you stand the strain, you go to an
other dealer and he does tho same
thing. They all tell you the price is
nine hundred and fifty dollars. But
you are fortified with stories of how
Smith got two huudred dollars off
from the list price on his piano and
Jones had one practically given to
him to keep the other dealers from
selling him one. In fact, if one be
lieved all that one's friends have said
one would be led to think that a piano
costs so little to make that it la
cheaper to hire some one to haul them
away and burn thom than to pay taxes
on them in tho storeroom.
"One thing you will learn in each
place is that the beat musician in the
City? always a different person, by the
way ? has just bought a piano of that
particular make and recommends it
highly to everybody.
' "I must not neglect to tell you that
the salesman finds, just as you are
starting to leave, a piano he had for
gotten. Just before he rings the bell
to send for the elevator that they uae
to haul passengers on. he thinks ?
with a clap of his hand to his fore
head ? of a piano that has just come
in. It has been used for about fifteen
minutes somewhere, and for that rea
son he will knock seven hundred dol
lars off the price. D6n*t ever atart a
music store without a piano of that
Bort In stock. It would be a poor
store.
i "These are some of the things you
find out when you go shopping for a
piano. I do not go into the buying part,
for that part is never quite clear to
the purchaser. He remembers many
things up almost to the moment of
purchase, and then ho goes into a
trance and lets the man Bell him al
most anything to. got tho job off his
hands."
t , j
| Their Parting.
i All too short had been their associ?
| tlon. All too soon had como a parting
I of the ways. This being the case,
Mary Jane and her mistress consid- ]
ered It an apt moment for the throw- |
In* off of a few romarks.
... "I hopo you will leave in a respectr
able manner," said tho mistress tartly.
"You came with your box in a low
down, plebeian wheelbarrow."
? "And I'm going away !n a "motors
car," snapped tho domestic. "My now
missus id sending one."
"Then," cavilled tho mistress of tho
past, "why doesn't it drive up in a
rcspectabio manner to the front gate?"
"Well," replied Mary Jane, "perhaps
they don't want people to think they*r?
on visiting terms hem"
Phoenix
/' , vv .? . ^ v & '' ^ ,
Silk Hose
' ? - . . I ? ,';v\
... ' t; ? ; v
? * ' . f , V . . V" ;? ? ' 7 ' 7 ' ? ? ? ' .
Guaranteed Every Pair
|Over the Counter
Silk Stockings at the
Price of Lisle
women who appreciate silk hosiery for everyday
wear. We are now showing a full line of the
famous Phoenix Silk Hose which sells at 75b a
pair. Think of it! This hosiery, every thread
of it except the lisle garter top* is pure silk ? soft, rich
and lustrous. And it wears* We will replace any pair
that doesn't. The toes and heels are re-enforced by a new
process. Shaped in the knitting ? no seams. Come and let our
clerka show you this beautiful hosiery. We carry all the popular
shades, including the staples, black and tan. Remember? 75c a pair.
This is the
teed Hose on
V
"r; . . -V- /l?
Market
Baruch-N ettles Co.
?
"The Store That Sets The Pace/*
? . .. - f " ? r ' rTTT