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cAJW L 1% sI. :abl &VILLE, 5. G. ;Stock DB iiel L0 C N ek has been placed in the SC. W. Perry, who is under to dispose of same. Prof n eliminated, and prices hNIe bone. Perry don't care QUALITY v been our Watchword. ve never handled Junk or Gods. Only a few items Camed here. A visit will ow that right here is a rare io get GOOD GOODS at Sain Prices. Go log Up, 00Dbl IC gIgg D61w: LITED) 15 -Yd wide ALL WOOL Serge <~~L>i -sc Black and all colors....40c __5c Linen Department 8F tBest selectedl stock in Ge much o vlie. Table Damnask in new ___ 4cand beautiful designs, all at real saving piices. 11c White Goods,Em-~ 1~9e broideries, Laces Must be seen to be appre S25c ciatedl. Prics, spli open. oWeis Genuine Bargains for Big, - t to the Little, Old and Young. :Ki)er lo All, Wool Under wear at.le'ss than cost. Ml:Kind Rugs, Carpeting alit to Squre pn1 s .Prices Dynamited in this dept. They mxust all go. ~ ewa re Men's and Boys' nt f aterial. Sh*t Ort lengths Work shirts, Dress shirts sort l!negths at prices that speak louder Sto 1-4pi .thnwrs . pc.Union Md ases .Overalls -lme rices Stanrdard Qualities at prices - ~ ~ ~ ods thact will sav you money. SCoat Suits and Skirts 1A~5thn SAle [VERYt N1TIL SOLD uster&Beati N "OW-A-DAYS the f* U ou wvear just asg as the man on the The 11 MITCHELI car who wants a god on to go where you're going The M1''C I E' L i 21le the Mitchell farm to last and give service. city or country car. Four Cylinder, Five Four Cylinder, Foui Four Cylinder, Two They are all ftchells Clothing, Shoes, Sole agents for Walk-( Sewing Machines, Chase Cit: HOMES FOR SALE To Those Who Wish to Get Near a Christian School At Six Mile, Pickens county, I have about 300 acres of land, part inside the incorporated lin its of the town of Six Mile, all in less than one mile of Six Mile Baptist Academy. which I will cut in tracts to suit purchaer; will build houses on some if de sired. Will sell the entire tract of 300 acres, over half in fine state of cultivation, has pienty good pastures, one good 2-story 11-roomi dwelling, furnished with ;fas lights, out buildings, one large 60x70 -ft. barn. three splendid tenant houses, also an almost new ginnery, consisting of 3-70 saw ginning section, dou ble bo~x press. etc., all cornplete and in a good dotton system. Apply to A. D. Mann, f Pickens, S. C. R. 2. Notice of Final Settlement and Discharge. N OTICE 1s hereby given that I wil make application to J. B. Newberry Eq., Judge of Probate for Pickens coun ty, in the State of South Carolina, on the 7th day of March 1919, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, or as soon there after as said applicatio~n can be heard. for leave to make final settement of the estateO of w. L. Ellis, deceaee and obtain1 disoharr~o as A .ministratrix of said ostate. Feb 5M Mr.. Delis Elis, Adminssratrix. Notice to Debtors and Creditors ALL Persons holding oisims r~gainst the estato of the lato W. Rt. A r mut prese'nt the s'am.e duly proven on or before the 15 day of Airch: i913, or be debarred paymil; and all persono i~dbti to said estate, nusi miahc pay meut on or before the above date, to the undersigned Feb 8S8 J. P. Anders, A dministrabor Notice to Debtors and Creditors ALL Persons holding claims against the estatejo! "the late T. kH. Parsons= must present the same duly proven cn or before the 1 day of Aprd 1919, or be debarrd payment; and all person: in lebed to said estate, muss mnahs piy ment on or beore the above date. to the mdersigned. W. S. Parsons. Susa A. Pareeria. Adarinistrators otice to Debtors and Creditorsd ALL Persons bolding:r claims age-inst he cae of hlaeW. ,L. B~smut iresent the some duly preven en er be are the 7 day of Mareh 191), er be do arod paymer; and all p -,s.:n' indebt dito s~aid es ist, must mi .a. payment n or before she above .to, the un-d ersined 'eb S 3 '1. Della hlis, otice to Debtors and Creditors( A LL Persona holding claims agains be estat eof the late (olumbus Griffin sat present same daly prov.-n oz or efere the 15 day of iarch 1919, or be earred payment; and all persens in ebd to rsaid estate, mus1 mrnku pay. ent on or before the abxwe date, ~a the ndergned J. R.-J. A:.thony, b, Sy Admuiniotratorr. W haejust gotten inacr f Tennesee mules and horses. )ur prices are right and we enn ae yon money. See us before r buy. Will sell for cash n :ood papers. Come and look he stck over and see for your aines & Gassawav's Mdse Co. ror Infa~nts and Children. [e Khid Yos Hus Alway BeqMt It i ; and k nsg wnt t tomobi he s:un1 o sple who have vagoi for -7 y. m jade in the sa e thlorough way The, New Six Cylid(t r 18-liorse Power. is a fgreat Passenger, 30- H. P. Mitchell $1,350.00 Passenger, 30 H. P. Mitchell $1,150.00 Passenger, 30 H. P. Mitchell $1,000.00 and they arzv fM .oor. At A fully qeipped. NO us ihr demonsteation( Youirs trulyV ,ThornlleydCo Hats and Gents' Furnishing Goods a Specialty. )ver Shoes, Haws Halls, Iron King Stoveg, New Home r' Buggies, Mitchel Wao and Mitchell Automobiles. I Buster BroWna GUARANTEED HOSIERY HARn a -a PEIN DCKREN & iNTUNTEST PAIL) LNEPOk h __bener.andwlarBlonges. PComedend. I.nunnunnuu uuunnuushier WoAND SURLUS. NTER ES AI N EOST 51 J c Bue reiet I. M Maldin Cahie . 4 I ave n-c'o!'wiy fr, a o myO* Blacksmit an A Wood e hop a ' i - ~~~Crl k you ' -r : tuck a* tot in. - n PikesS. C. Hape yej~ e dn Done while yous Wait 4 ~ . e Analysis of Our Goods This Yea7 We want to show you how our goods anlyze this year. Our 16 per cent Acid analyzes-- -17-4 Our o-4analyzes -- - ------25 Our E-3-3 analyzes-_. -- -- 8.91-3-11-3.28 Our 9 3 analyzes.--.... 9-52-4.24-3-78 Our 10-3-3 anrlyzes..-.--- 10.68-3-40-3.78 O'ur 10.4-4 analyzes- .-- ----- 10-75-4-34-4-44 We havan't an analysis of our 8-44 at hand but anyone who has ever seen the crops made where our 8-4-4 is used would not step 10 ask Tbout an analysis. The crops speak for them I selves. It refreshes a man's soil and the earth yields up her pB!svie g8.i. is like biying an Ames shovel, or a Disston saw. (r a R vWrrs knife, or a Re.nibgton type-writer, or deal ingu the rrs:' and Merchants Bank at Andrson-you dont maoelnv mlstake. You run no risk and take no chances because vou are )retting the very best in the respective lines. The an -is of fcrtilizer does not mean anything until you kn-.w the soerce of ammonia in the fertilizer. The di7erence in the phoaphoric acid and in the potash of the different man u;facturers 01 fertilizer does not cut much fi.;ure, because it is all practically the same. One is about as good as-another. The differencin fertilizer depends upon the ammonia used. We use a little of nitrate of soda to make the crop start off nicety, and then we use blood, tankage, fish, cotton seed meal and sulphate of ammonia. This makes the best goods put in sacks and it makes a goods that will analyze well. A manufacturer can get ammonia from hoofpieal, horn. meal, and ieather meal, and make a fertilezer that w alyze higher than ours, and can make so that it will sell for $3 less than we can sell ours and make more profit per ton than we make on ours. This may account for some of the low prices you hear of. But the goods won't make the crops that -our goods will make, for the reason that hoof meal and horn meal and leather meal are available as plant food. Thig are not available as plant food. They are not available as plant. food. They are not available for the simple reason that they are not soluble in water. Hoof meal, and horn meal and leath er meal are hoofs and horne and leather ground finely, just as corn meal is corn ground finely. You can take hoof meal and horn meal and leather meal and put it in water and let it stay for a year and go back to it and the hoof meal aid ha.mn meal and leather meal are not dissolved. They can't possibly be come plant food until they do dissolve. Now sorn and cotton are planted and get their growth and maturity within seven month. If hoof meal and horn meal and leather meal cah't be dissolved in water in a year, they can't become plant fogd in seven months. Now frankly, we don't suppose any fertilizer mauufacturer. gets his ammonia sokly from hoof meal and horn meal and. leather meal. We don't doubt that those who use it mix if.. with tankage; for very few manufacturers use blood and fish. They mix it with tankageor cotton seed meal, but the amonii in their fertilizer is unavailable just to the extent that they use the hoof meal, horn meal and leather meal. When you rememqer that ouly about 1-3oth of an ounce of ammonia gets to each plant, you can see that it will be neces sary for all of this 1-3oth of an ounce to be available. - You can m ike but one crop year and as cotton in this country is the money crop, it would seem to be desirable to get the best fertilizer for it. WVe don't use hoof meal or horn meal or leather meal in our factory. We don't suppose that anytmanufacturer in cre ation would admit the use of it if he did use it, but you are at leberty, and anyone else is at liberty to visit our factory .at such times as he wishes, with or without notike to us of your 4 camning, stay as long as you please, go through the buildings, take samples of any and everything you see and have it analy zed for your own satisfaction. You may have an analysis made on suspicion at auy time or any where you wish. We run an open shop al the year 'round. The law requires the fertilizer manufacturers to put th e source of ammoniate used in his fertilizer on a tog to be at tached to each sack. The tags on our fertslizers show that we get the ammonia from blood, tankage, cotton seed meal, sul phate of ammonia, and fish. The tags on most other -fertili zers give the source of ammania as "organic" and mineral." Mineral sources are sulphate of ammonia and nitrate of soda. Organic may mean anything, you cant tell what it means frora -~~ the tag. When you buy fertilizer with a tag on it you are buying a pig in a poke. This may also account for some low prices you hear of. When a man has a thing to sell he usually* gives the best description of it that it will stand. Son e people every v ear mix their fertilizer. They buy acid, cot:On seed meal, kainit and muriate and mix their awn goods Their only source of ammonia in this goods is cotton seed meal, which is-very good while it lasts. It gives out about the time - the cotton begins to fruit and that cause it to shed. NE w, if blood, tankage, sulphate of ammonia, and fish. ,are worth anything in fertilizer, our goods must be better than your home mixes goods, where you use none of these ammoniates. By using cotton seed meal only as an ammoniate, you may - make a 8-3-3 for $2 a ton less than we ask for it. That $2 a ton represent a difference of from from 40 to sixty cents an acre on your fertilizer bill. We don't think there is any doubt t'lat 8-3-3 ammoniated as we ammoniate It will make 100 pounds of lint cotton to the acre more than a hame mixed fertili zer with cotf on seed meal as the only source of ammonia. This. 100 pounds of lint cotton is now worth about $10.50. - We don't know what it will be worth next fall- off hand we should say $8 to $12. 11 doesn't seem likely that cotton will bring over 12c, next fall, and we sincerely hope it won't bring less than c. Where farmers have been using the best fertilizers and using it freely- wi wish to suggest to them impropriety of using an in ferior goods, and using it less f rely, as if they do their lands will become run down. Most farming lands in this section are in a good state of cultivation. It will be cheaper to keep them that way thatn to let the land run down and then bring it up. If you have a fat horse it will take less corn to keep him fat than it will to let him get poor and then fatten him up again. It is the same wvay in fertilizing your land, and besides you will lose the extra crop that you failed to make while your land is run down. Our 10-4 and 1o-6 are good fertilizers to use where your lands are fiat or where cotton grows very rank and somle of the bolls fail to open. This extra percentage of phosphoric acid in the 10-4 and 10-6 will give the cotton boll an early maturity. And when a cotton boll is grown it opens, just as when a water-mnelon will ripen when it is grown and it' won't ripen until it gets its growth. We want to urge you to use on your ordinary lands our 3-3-4, 9-3-3, 8-4-4, 10-4-4 and 10-3-3. You will get more ammonia and less filler and you will get more fish in these fertilizers than in any others, We can make any analysis you want. Making fertilizer is like making clothes. You can take a bolt of cloth to a taylor and from that bolt he can make a spit of clothes to fit a 1o year old boy,- and by using more cloth he cant make a suit of clothes to fit a man weighing 250 poundsl. And o\ a last word to the home mixers. If you use the same am ae we use your goods will cost you more than we ask you io ours, and your goods won't be as well made as ours be m uare not equipped for it. If vou don't use the ammoni d euse your goods will not be as good as ours, nor as well mn ;i ulated. If you give two cooks the same material for making baead one will make better bread than the other. The more experlenced ook will make the bread. And the fertilizer man who gives his ime and thought to it and has the equipment, is bound to mixi it letter than the man who only mixes a few days in the spring of he year without the equipment. ANDERSON PHOSPHATE AND OIL CO.