The Pickens sentinel. (Pickens, S.C.) 1911-2016, February 18, 1915, Image 2
18, 1915..
..sfsee a seonix.
Maner
Ter in Advance
e
b
OTT, MANAGER I
not responsible for the ,
its correspondents.
o p: Washington's i
offoundhog gave
ys of sunshne.
ho "never had an'
world" is dead.
-thing legal lights
an most light bills.
et to remember to
subscription to your
ngapers, thattown
spiAlog drag.
5erdaps want us to call
nlGuess:- we'll
Slavs Slabs.
Vepression and Gen
0prity are having a
ra Who'll you bet on?
. Moore of the Co
goes to the Knox
s~u>. Sentinel. S'long.
velt says when he
to say he will
superfluous iemark,
n W fd-fishioned man who
t go broke by endorsing
n of his friends is still
] tWiisor say;rs
s. our door. Here's
h an d cane, if you
iS it olday.
~~er7 Moraiiy stumii cit
.ewithout liquor.
Precipitation Mon
our charming city,"
state. Get any of it
" Colonel?"
~vrty Dix, a New c
zewspaper writer, says t
ess the men." But that ~
n~e-way some women say it. g
KaThdline in Greenville Pied- ~
.on: "bGreenville his as cheaps
ate. s Sny other city." -Also r
~s un~a skateessas any other d
K hb'C elegislator has finally a
-adudhis mind that hewon't c
toffice any more. ha fan -
n.rducn
rc; 1w
em tohave afew
at court in the Demo
senate, despite the re
out the ?ec
. - ~e presi- 1
~er f,,~,r old Mexlco. He'll
e god as any of his prede- I
ce s; but that. isn't saying'
I
man died in a New York
s uant recently while wait-(
~'he had ordered.
- uryv failed to
e man starved
- f odage.
ew Jersey has
.?no o three. years for
a Knge. If it was
fcadn Colonel After
Ste dote& on he1
a :.-alynched.
nCi. South can get I
out wheat flour for I
purposes. Most
-~ - bread anyway,
to some of the
the market.
-ule Press and Ban
~~anged hands. T1
joy retire fro he
r. W. P. G ne as
St. Here's
SMr. Greene, and to
d Banner.
has become of the old
statesman who used
ronials for patent
?asks the Anderson
o--him? Why, he is
6usy going back on
he made the 'dear
summer.
ps maPS are be
up would be a]
rour peple to study
e- The average
very little.0ofh
*westerflheinns
what he al~s1
resperity.
A man was shot to death it
exas recently by a "detective'
ecause he was suspected o:
eing a deserter from the U. S
,rmy. What this country need,
s not inv.estigation of charitabli
oundatiohs but of detectivi
gencies.1 And the chances ar
hat after a fair inquiry int
heir methods most of then
vould be dissolved, or should be
Four pysicians care for 170
nmates of the state insan
tsylum, and the Herring repor
ays it is a physical impossibilit:
o look after that many patient
'in addition to their othe
luties." We should imagin
hat a physician with over 40
)atients on his visiting lis
.would be busy enough withou
iaving "other duties."
The supreme court of th
D-nited States has handed dowi
t decision that a workinemai
an belong to a trade union an,
:efuse to work with scabs; tha
m employer can hire scabs an,
Alacklist a man because. he bE
ongs to a union. All of whic]
ias been the case since we wer
;o unfortunate as to be blesse
iith a supreme court.
George Fitch, in his veE
pocket essays, in speaking c
;he astronomers trying to gE
ome sound from this earth t
Kars, says "thus far there is n
ndication that any sound fror
his earth has ever reached ou
brother planet, even when Till
man was at his height in th
United States senate." Jus
wait till Brother Hearst an
ousin Teddy go in for astror
)my.
Somebody wants to chang
;he name of Yorkville by cul
ing off the "ville," but the En
uirer of that town objects t
he change. Which reminds u
)f the speech made in the Arkar
as legislature by a native mere
er on the proposition to "chang
he name of Arkansaw" jus
tfter the war between the sec
ions. Busqe will let ColonE
Iftermath t the State iecit
hat classic, if P ' L
Good Roads
With all the experience of th
>ast in working the roads, wit]
11 the improved, implementi
nd machinery, with convic
abor, with salaried officers t<
tversee the work, we are forces
o the conclusion that after all
be road making is a booming
ilure. In fact, instead ol
iaking them better they art
etting worse. The plowing o2
erapmhg which is done in sum
1er, spring or fall, leaves lOOSE
irt on the old road bed, then
rhen the rain sets in, not only
ie loose dirt on top gets soft,
mid the wheels of the vehicle
it thru, but thce '~-'
er, out we could travel th~r
ittworking the roads.
1W~7h1 ath
rincipal roads of the county b
nade permanent so that the:
~a be traveled any time of th
ear, and that hauling may b
>ne at any time. To get th
ults desired a change mus
* made. We wish to sugges
..,e changes t h a t possibl:
night help.
First. Let the legislaturg/ee
hestate farm and let each 'con
ict serving less than a life sen
ence be put on the chaingan'
o work the roads in the count
vhere he is convicted. If tha
oes not work then,.
Second. Let each county is
ue bonds to put the roads 11
irst class condition.
While we are waiting for bei
er arrangements a n d mor
noney, would it not be well t
iaul sand and crushed stone ani
nix with the mud and fill u:
he worst places in the road
iow, instead of plowing then
i and making them soft fo
he next winter.
This is only a friendly sugges
ion to get the people to thinking
alking and acting.
What we want is good roads
TAx PAYER.
"LET US PRAY"
:e wished to as
luence the harn
21s congregatioi
;he close of lii
21would ask everyone who i
~ill able to pay his debts to ris
rom his seat."
The whole congregation aros
ith the exception of one man
[he parson then asked all whi
were unable to meet their bill
: arise.
Thereupon the solitary indi
ridual got up, a hungry-looking
>oorv-clad man, whose feature
evealed the terrible struggle 0
ne fighting hopelessly agains
he vicissitudes of the world.
"How is it my friend, tha
rou are the only one amoni
hese people who cannot pay hi
lebts"
"Sir," answered the man
iesitatingly, "I am a publishe
>f a newspaper, and those wh<
ose just now are all my sub
cribers, and-"
But the minister interruptet
um hastily by saying:'t
i pra."
COW AND RER PRODUCT
(These lotes are prepared by the
dairy divisionof Clemson College, whict
will be glad to answer any questions
pertaining to dairying.)
The calf should be fed somE
a grain such as corn meal by the
3 time it is two weeks old.
There are laws to proteci
many sorts of animals frorr
hunters, but no laws to proteci
good dairy calves from butchers,
a Farmers who had silage t(
t feed to their cows this wintel
( know now the value of a succu
lent winter feed.
) A calf should not be fed wholf
t milk after it -has reached thE
t age of four weeks. At tw<
weeks, begin to replace wholi
milk by warm skim milk.
If a calf is to be dehorned il
should be dehorned when noi
more than three days old, witt
t caustic potash.
It is just as important to tee
1 the calf from a clean bucket a(
a it is to use a clean bucket foi
I milking.
Calk scours are due to over
feeding, feeding cold milk, oi
using dirty milk. Avoiding
these things is generally to avoi
scours.
1 A Few W ords to Tattlers
r -
Hello there, Old Lady Tattle
e trap! The fool-killer is out aftei
your scalp this trip. You old
longtunged social viper anc
neighborhood nuisance, if . vot
don't want me to run a redhol
pitchfork through your old sliml
e tongue, you had better reel ir
about 95 yards of it and tie -
- blanket over your mouth.
D The tattler's tongue is th<
s nearest approach to perpetua
- motion that has ever been dis
- covered. It is loose at both endc
e and limber in the middle, anc
t forked poison plays over it lik
- lightning on a telegraph wire.
1 It is the devil's jewsharp, anc
he playes on it all the time.
The only thing a tattler knows
to talk about is her neighbors,
and she never lets one escape.
I she hears something good
about somebody she is very
areful to forget it, but anything
tha .be twisted into a
scandal is r greatest delight.
She begins e4 .. and talks late,
and the more its it the
bigger it gets, unti me innfo
cent life is wrecked by the
poison of a tattler's tongu
A tattler is a gossip; a g si
is a liar, and a liar is the dev l'
yaller dog.
Whenever you find a tattler
you find trouble-unless she is
the leading lady at a funeral,
and then everybody is glad and
in a good humor.
Yes, doggon your hateful pic
tures, you've always got youi
Sbig dog-ears propped open tc
Scatch a bundle of news, anc
reverything you catch is multi
Splied by four times the length
a of your venomous tongues and
a published in The Tattlers Trump
6 t wich circulates all over the
rFriends beware of the tattlers
tongue. The man or womar
wh ilbackbite other peoplE
to you will backbite you to othei
people. Remember that. Treal
Stattler as you would a rattler
Skeep out of its way.
tW. B.RoE.
1Child Burned at Seneca
- The two-year-old daughter 01
a Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Nimmons o1
' Seneca, was so badly burnet
I last Tuesday that it died thai
P night. The child's mother wa
a sick in bed at the time and it i~
3 not known how the child'
r clothing caught fire. Mr. INim
-mons is well known in Picken
county and has many friend~
here who sympathize with hirr
in this bereavement.
N. Boone Carey Sick
NB.Carey, a prominent citi
zen and lawyer of Seneca, suf
fered a stroke of apoplexy or
the streets of that town one da3
-last week. He was talking to e
group of friends when the at
tack came on. It is not though'
that his condition is immediatel3
serious. He is abrother ofJ. P
SCarey, of Pickens.
Oh! Doctor!
) The grand old state
3 Is filled with woe;
We're headed straight
For H20.
-The State.
There Is more Catarrh in this section of
tgether aduntil the lat few year
b mny ears doctors pronounced It a lcal
dies an p rescibed loal remedis,o ad
treatment, pronounced It incurable. Sci
tutonals disease, and tereforo requires
constitutional treatment. Hail's Catarrh
Cure, manufactured by F. J. CheneY &
Co.. Toledo, Ohio, Is the only Constitu
tional cure on the market. It is taken In
) ternally In doses fro re10 dropsoa tealo
f'f nymcase I
he ti~aates
- 0
?lfi '.ifuI~iuiilU ever
Dc
and
To raise suppliesfor'the City of Pickens pora
for the fseal year comnfetcing the kebi
25th day of February, A. D., 1915, and
ending the 25th day of February, A. W
D., 19164
Be it ordained by the Mayor and Al
dermen of the City of Pickens, S. C, in
council assembled, and by the authority
of the same, that from and after the Sh
passage of this ordinance a license fee
For the purpose of raising funds to de
fray the current expenses of said city Bu
shall be due and payable annually from j
all persons, firms and corporations doing Sh
business within the incorporate limits of
the said City of Pickens, as follows,
to-wit: Ai
Section 1. All persons, firms and cor
porations, whether individual, mercan- Ju
tile, manufacturing or otherwise, own
ing, operating or conducting any occu
pation or calling, or following any occu- Al
pation, means of livelihood or business
for the purpose of profit or gain, here- Bt
inafter scheduled or designated, shall
ay into the treasury of said City of
Pickens a license fee each, as follows: Hi
For- Per Annum 4
Each street peddler or hawker,
any kind, $50 per day or.---..$250 00
Each crosstie dealer---..------- 2 50
Each agent selling rights or pat
ents, per day, $25, or------- 250 00
Each corn mill -----.--------- 2 50 a
Each hotel keeper----- ----- 10 00
Each restaurant keeper..-------- 5 o eng
Each boarding house (public) waI
keeper .....--.-------------- 5 00 we(
Each wood shop------------- 2 50.
Each blacksmith shop, per forge 5 00 P08
Each livery and feed stable..-- 10 00 Sta
Each sale and exchange stable.- 10 00 Rec
Each two-horse hack or buggy-.. 5 00
Each one-horse hack or buggy..- 2 50
Each two-horse dray wagon--.. 5 00 1
Each one-horse dray wagon-..- 2 50 tha
Each picture agent selling pic- for
tures and picture frames other
than by sample-..----------- 10 00
Each clothes cleaning shop -- 5 00 Pet
Each clothes cleaner not main
taining a shop who solicits busi
ness in the city of Pickens-. 5 00
Each barber shop, per chair...... 3 00 T
Each photographer whose busi- I
ness does not exceed two hun
dred dollars per year------..- 2 50
And over two hundred dollars..... 3 00 J
Each express company or railroad 8
company doing express business 5 00 J
Each telegraph company ------- 5 00
Each telephone company ------- 25 00
Each dentist --...------------- 5 00
Each physician (resident) .--. 7 50 N
Each printing office and job office F
combined ---------------- 5 00 F
Each fertilizer dealer other than
merchant ..---------------- 5 00
Each warehouse other than for J
private use-----....---------- 5 00 F
Each pawnbroker or moneylender 20 00 E
Each boot and shoe mending shop 5 00
Each bottling works..---------- 5 00
Each ice dealer other than meat G
market-- ---------------- 5 00 V
Each life or fire insurance com- j
pany ------------------- 10 00
Each insurance agent of any kind 5 00 J
Each tinner ---------------- 250 J
Each shoe shiner----- - ------ 1 00 J
Each beef or fresh meat market 5 00
Each fish and oyster dealer_-..-.. - 5 00
Euch sewing machine agent --.. 10 00
Each agent selling organs, pianos D
or other musical instruments G
not by sample--....-------.10 00
Each bank --...--.--.25 00
Each poster and .distributer of L
bills and advertising matter - - 10 00 B
Each lawyer-i.. -.-...
Each surveyor or civil engineer.. 5 00
Each contractor------------ ---10 00
Each architect aihd designer -.-5 00
Each public cotton buyer or bro- B
ker other than merchant.-..10 00 3
Each real estate broker or dealers
in stocks and bonds ---------10 00
Each railroad company --.---.---15 00 I
ach electric light and power
company -------.----.----- 2000
ach cotton seed oil mill -------- 15 00 JC
ach dealer in buying and selling M
cotton seed or hulls and meaL... 5 00 P.
ch dealer in lumber, shinglesj
d lath and other building wa
rial pertaining to t - Jc
nss commonly kno W
n yard not in con as lum
wfat is known er. ection wit
wt;planing ' lumber plants
or" p.. _ -- -_-15 CO
an - mill business or
inill and lumber yard combined 15 00 B
Each dealer in manufactured A
builders' material,such as sash, B
door and blinds, other than 100 r
merchant .---------------100
Each undertaker -.---.......-..5 00 N
Each auctioneer, $5 per da ... 25 00 B
Each laundry...-------------- 5 00 g
Each person selling fresh meats
from wagon or otherwise, ex
cept as allowed by state law, J
per day_-..-------------$1
Each peanut, candy, fruit or
drink stand other than regular Ap
merchants in established b usi
ness, $5per day------------ 25 00
Each non-resident dealer in live- 11
stock, per day------.---85 g3g(
Each slot machine other than2
owned by merchants in connec-2
tion with other licenced busi- ren
ness-..---..--.--.----------- 250qu
Each hotel, cigar or cigarette g3
stand .--.._-------.-------- 250 33
Each pool table .-----.--------15 00 -
Each electrician, wiring, etc-...... 5 00 41
Each tailor--------.--------3 00 3.3(
Each resident machinist---..--5 00 7 3(
Each non-resident machinist-.... 10 00 '
Each garage and repair shop
(with privilege of working any- ser
where in city)--..--------- 5 00
Each jeweler-.--..---.--..---- 5 00 _
Each tray. optician, per day $5-. 25 00
Each resident optician..--..-----750 .TJ.
IEach wood and coal dealer or both 5 00 Gree
Each merchant doing business 25
under $1,000--..-..----- 25
Each merchant doing business
over $1,000 to $2,500-..------5 00
Each merchant doing business
over $2,500 to $5,000i---------7 50 Prai
Each merchant doing business
over $5,000 to $7,C00..---_---_-10 CO
Each merchant doing business
over $7,000 to $10000.-...--- 12 50 -
Each merchant doing business
over $10,000 to $15,t00_........15 00 U
Each merchant doing business
over $15,000) to $20,000..-._---17 CO
Each merchant doing business
over $20,000 to $25,000_.------20 00
Each merchant doing business
over $25,U00 to $30,000..-.......25 00C is
Each merchant doing business
amounting to 830,O00---_---30 00
And for each additional $1.00:) Offic
over $30,000-....----25 cents -
Sec. 2. Said license fee shall be due
and payable on the 25th day of Febru
ary, A. D., 1915, and upon payment toI
the treasurer of said city, he shall issue
to the person or persons, firm or corpor
ation so paying the same a license cer-I
tificate signed by the treasurer and if y
countersigned by the mayor of the city, ers,
which certificate shall operate as a re- the
ceipt for the sum or sums so paid, and ne,
which certificate shall designate the ern
amount so paid, by whom, and the char- ,
acter of occupation or business for -so
which the same is intended to operate solu
as license. "Ti:
Sec. 3. No bills or other signs shall be this
posted on any telegraph or telephone Ii
pole or on any wall on Main street or sple
any street crossing Main street or all
running into Main street without the vr
consent of the mayor of said city ofva
Pickens shall first have been obtained. hon
and then only at such place or places as daui
may be designated by said mayor, and T
upon payment of such license therefor our
as he may determine appropriate in each Clul
case, such license not to exceed the sur
of twenty-five and no one-hundredt
dollars ($25.00) in each case.
Sec. 4. Any person, firm or corpori
tion failing or' refusing to pay his, he:
or its license as provided in this ord
nance shall upon conviejtioiEthereof, t:
required'10ypiio 'the treasury of sa
ei a sum not exceeding one. hundre
'r to +ere a sentence of nr
y such offense hereunder.
ne and ratified in council assembled
by authority of the same and cor
te seal affixed, this 25th day of
uary, 1915.
G. R. HENDRIcKS, Mayor.
F. MAULDIN, Clerk.
Naming the Baby
e ransacked every novel
and dictionary, too,
Lt nothing ever printed
For her baby's name would do;
e hunted appellations
From the present and the past,
d this is what she named him
When they christened him at last:
lian Harold Egbert
Jlysses Victor Paul
gernon Marcus Cecil
ylvester George McFall;
it after all the trouble
Bhe'd taken for his sake,
s father called him Fatty
nd his schoolmates called him Jake.
-Carroll County Times.
Not All the Time
Bill" Jeanes, well-known
ineer on the Pickens railroad,
) very sick several days last
,k, but is able to be at his
' again.-Pickens Sentinel.
ionary Engine?-Columbia
ord.
.report from Columbia says
t ex-Governor Blease will run
governor again in 1916.
It Jurors for February Term
Pickens County Court
. T. Owens,
el R. Griffin,
hn M. Moser,
. A. Hunnicutt,
. Barnett Looper,
. M. Hayes, -Jr.,
. M. Gillespie,
7. Alex Edens,
[. M. Hunt,
.C. Stewart,
0 O. Patterson,
7. M. Sheriff,
oe R. Hendricks,
[. S. Higgins,
. E. Davis,
7. T. Edens,
eo. A. Bagwell,
7m. T. Anderson,
as. A. Couch,
. R. Jackson,
. E. Gilstrap,
. E. Garrick,
. M. Griffin,
hn P. Simpson,
. E. Garrett,
to. H. Reeves,
A. Pickle,
.H. Ballentine,
C. Young, -
. .LaBoon,
uben P. Boggs,
1. Callaham,
mes E. Parsons,
A. McAlister,
W. Christopher.
GRAND JURORS
hT. Carey,
L.. Martin,
J. 'Brown,
. 'Hughey,
syp Looper,
as. A. Rotbinson,
)hn P. Smith,
.L. Henderson, (In country)
.Norman Alexander,
.T. Winchester,
.C. A tkinson,
.L. Biv'ens,
.F. Hester,
.F. Murphree,
7. E. Edens, Jr.,
.Ed Robinson,
no. M. Williams,
>ointments for Central Circuit
for 1915
;t Sunday-11 a. mn., Central;
Sp. in., Gap Hill.
1 Sunday-11 a. mn., Law
ce Chapel; 7.30 p. mn., Issa
ena Mill.
Sunday-il a. in., Central;
i p. m., Gap Hill.
b Sunday-11 a.mn., Central;
Sp. n., Lawrence Chapel;
Sp. m., Issaqueena Mill.
,et everybody come out to the
ices. ELZIE MYERS,
Pastor.
icSWAIN SA3I B. CR AIG
iville, S. C. Pickens, S. C.
4cSwain & Craig
LAWYERS
tice in State and Federal Courts
Greenville Office Phone 210
Pickens Office Phone 39
r. L. L. Jameson
ysician and Surgeon
Easley, S. C.
ases of the Stomach a Specialty
:e over Easley Bank. Res. Phone 135
Pree Flower Seed.
lastings' Catalogue
"ells You A bout It
you are engaged in farming, or
'ou plant only vegetables or flow
you cannot afford to be without
big catalogue published fresh and
every year by the great South
seed house, H. G. Hastings &
ipany, of Atlanta, Ga., and sent ab
tely free, postage paid, to all wh'o
:e for it, mentioning the name of
newspaper.
Sthis catalogue we tell you of a
ndd offer of free flower seed to
our customers, five magnificent
etles that mean beauty about your
te d a pleasure to wives and
ihters hat nothing else can give.
ts catajhgne tells you, too, about
big cash prlse offer to the Corn
> boys of your''state.'-It teHs'.411
yielding varieties of
1--the kind we grow on
acre farm. It tells
-seeds of all kinds for
Se South. It should be
-hern home. Write tO
-'.a~cnd it to you--. G.
JUS'l
Another car. Fur
Nails. Ev
from
Odd Beds from
to $25.00; Bed
Parlor S
A full and complete
Springs, Mattresses, Sa
Boards, Wardrobes, and
We also carry at all
Matting, and Linoleum.
Don't forget when i
Sgoods, there are no bette
+Take a look througtZ
+where prices are right,
+in the Furniture and H<
FOLGEf
Clothing, Shoe
Sole Agents for Walk Ov,
Machines, Iron King Stoves
Mitchell Automobiles.
Pickens Circuit Appointments
First Sunday-Por ter's Chap-.
el, at 11 o'clock a. m.; Friend
ship. at 3.30 p. m.
Second Sunday-Mt. Bethel,,
at 11 o'clock a. m.; Twelve Mile,
at 3.30 p. m.
Third Sunday-McKinnev's
Chapel, at 11 o'clock a. m.; N ew
Hope, at 3.30 p. m.
Fourth Sunday-Salem, at 11
0'clock a. m.; Mt. Tabor, at 3.30
p. M.
I extend to all the people who
ar4nraho>teecuce
Snotieher gientar Furlmk
pliato Nals . wey Eq.
plctOndca Be hd fom levet
. B.Tosdecesed anbend
42 SprinsMstrssesx.
Expoadosg adobes Aond
S>ting and Twenolefur
onds, ther Taren Vnobtt
Coinh Mis.:ke" am oo cityotax
I4asi wheeprce rundow conditios
ment Inined ritue and ow
haegmdtwnypudsi>egt
mor Clowl n esefcuthn Sho
get thilte Appets por alk Oves
Minwach ines, Iour deiou coiver
andirntocthe Autoobis.ntee
ickeats Caci godhAlppetitent
istungtsday-Ptioenncs Chpe
elo, atmprovccation. Frnd- i
Snata Snnrbdy-Mt. Btethel,
atn1o'lka invi. feeblven-on Miev
ourthn SndaySalem afi osnt do
l exendt sayweill theypeople yo
vices Du oicesC
Notice ho an cattle wn-cag
Noes hereby ginow that Iwillmak
apcation to a B.o Newbeystive
Judge orateor edcontin
freon more ason thaferussi
aplCatonditian hadPorwdevrt
maeletteto the eoniton ate of
staB. It udbeasedad btinths
Meuarit. T cns. THOslag
42kae Adeiguaratixd
of Febles by aie
Steng andPn Courty oura
Poundrs B aking VSop
clerand eveY-ouryars Wo Done.
Nextdrtoe Mydugs Pu
RECEIVED
niture, and a car of Barb Wire and
erything in the Furniture line
the kitchen to the parlor
12.00 to $15.00; Dressers from $5.00
Room Suits from $20.00 to $75.00;
Lifts from $25.00 to $50.00
line, with nothing overlooked, a large assortment of
fes, Bed Lounges, Center Tables, Dining Tables, Side
Chairs in all styles and at all prices. A
times a full and complete line of Rugs, Art Squares,
t comes to Stoves, that we are right there with the p
r Stoves to be found than the Loth and The Iron King. +
L our rooms, and you will find it will pay you to buy +
and where you can always find everything you need
use Furnishing line.
Yours truly,
,THOR NO
s, Hats and-G is urn
3r Shoes, Hawes Hats, Carhart Overalls, New Home Sewing
Chase City and Babcock Buggies, Mitchell Wagons and
All PF
the wc.x..
under cork disk will be redeemed
at 5c each.
Ask the Merchant
There's a great reason why you should
drink PEPSI-Cola. It is healthful.
EVERYTHING which it brings you is 100
per cent. PURE benefit and enjoyment. Flavor -is
delicious---rare. Effect is wholesome, satisfying
quick to refresh. It QUENCHES thirst with its
tart, fruit flavor.
"There's a Difference"
~R. MI. BA K ERI
SGeneral Merchandise, Norris, S. C.E
I wish to inform the buying public that I
Skeep on hand at all times one of the best lines of
General Merchandise to be found in this section.
I handle good goods and sell them as cheap as
Sthey can be bought anywhere.
A few of the lines T handle:
Dittman Shoes, made in St. Louis, for men wo
men and children. They are as good as you can bu}
Sanywhere for the money. Stetson and other makes
+. of Hats. Calicoes, Outings, Ginghams, Percales, SVt
+ ges: Bleachings, Underwear for men, women and
g children. Men's ready made Shirts and Pants.
4 Tailor made clothing as good as can be had anywhere.
+ We take your measure and guarantee fit.
SI handle a full line of Groceries. Sugar, Meat,
+ Coffees, Canned Goods, Tobaccos, etc. I handle
* Capito a, a good patent flour, and Dixie brand, one 4
* of the best self-rising flours.
* I also sell meal and hulls and buy cotton and
+ cotton seed, and pay highest market price for same.
+ You will find a gasoline filling station at my store
* with plenty of Gasoline at 18Sc per gallon.
*Give mL a call and I will treat you right. A
+ square deal to all is my motto.
*R. M. BAKER, - Norris
+ Phillips Building.
I handle caskets, coffir's and burial robes.
Frienids- of Pickens 00111
Sf OR twenty-three years we have done businesto
gether, I have tried to give you god se o-c
and Full Value for Your Money. I have enjoyeds aice
patronage from you and arpreciate it, and ask aon
tin uance of same. My stock is full and complete on
all seasonable Dry Goods, Underwear, Hosiey d
Shoes, Blankets. etc., at as low prices as depen bld
goods can be sold. We Do Noet Talk War. Eurbl
will take care ot its war. We war against High P
and try to give values and service. Notwi
prices on shoes have advanced, we still- g
Prices. .-. Our Underwear and Blank
you warm. .'. All goods as adv
Scash for my goods, so when .Ip
market I get them, n nt
jA . ~11iWest En
SOUTH CAROLINA
&