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At Prices According to the Times. Ladies’ Half Soles Reduced to 75c Men’s Half Soles from 75c to $1.00 SEWED Seigel Shoe Factory Next Door to Farmers Union - - Barnwell, S. C. inner ° / IjLj or two will put a Frigidaire ™ inyoUr home / • • ' ■ * i . ; ■ vMlf XV/ITH a constant, cold-storage dinner or two, we*ll put a Frigldaire ▼ ▼ temperature that is actually in your home. Then charge off the lower than U. S. Government Stand* balance with a few monthly payments t» . —so small that they’ll J never be missed. Visit our Displary Room today and see the new models. Or write or phone for an inter* , esting illustrated Book let— now sent free. ards, Frigidaire wards off the menace of food contamination and safe guards health. Yet this year-round health protection is so inexpensive! For the price of a Thanksgiving * ^ r r*—* - WILUSTON HARDWARE CO. Williston, Soulh Carolina FRIGIDAIRE PRODUCT OF GENERAL MOTORS Senator Watson says'^c very thing that CAN be done, wi]1~~be done, by Congress to" stop the Missis sippi floods. If that programme is carried out Mississippi floods will be stopped. Congress can, if it will. —— . Herbert Hoover will show how it can be done, with the assistance of other able engineers. If this country doesn’t think it worth while to spend half a billion once and for all to stop floocls that cost a billion at a time, ir is a foolish country. Social and Personal News from Ellenton Ellenton, Nov. 19.— Mrs. William Bu»h entertaimil the Thursday After neon ( iub recently. Heart dice war played at three tables. The prize wan won hy Mrs. I>. ('. Bush. Aftct- 1 ward a sweet course vas servid. Those present were: Mrs. M. E.J Bush. Mrs. J. C. Bush, Mrs. D. CJ Bush, Mrs. II. C. Fanning, Mrs. E. H. Green. Mrs. W. H. Green, Mrs. J A. Stokes, Mrs. J. B. Smith and Mrs. George Seago.^of Savannah. Margaret Fanning entertained a group of her littlu friends Saturday afternoon in honor of her 4th birth day. Mrs. Fanning, assisted by Mrs Mike Cassels, Mrs. W. D. Bush, Mrs. Snuth .. "children enjoy a number of games. I^ter they marched into the dining room which was beautifully decorated, carrying out the color scheme of pink and white. Here they enjoyed ice cream and cake. Favors were baskets filled with pink and white mints. The regular monthly meeting of the school improvement association was held Friday afternoon at the school house. Mrs. Elmore Ashley, who was! elected president at the last meeting, handed in her resignation and Mis A. A. Foreman was reelected to serve she having sieved as president- for several years. Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Turner enter tained a few fiiends with a candy party Monday evening at their lonely country home. Several kinds of candy were made and everyone had a most enjoyable tirmi The following en- jcyed this affair: Miss Gladys fhVens, Miss Tutt Youngblood, J. M. Blake ly, N. S. Brinkley and Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Youngblood. The following attended,the annual meeting of the Savannah River Bap tist Association, held with the Fair fax Baptist Church Wednesday and Thursday: Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Ham mond, Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Cassels Mrs. H. M. Cassels, Sr., Mrs. C. J. Ashley, Mrs. F. M. Youngblood, Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Turner, Mrs. W. TI Jones, Miss Elizabeth Miller and Mrs C. G. Youngblood. -" ' Rev. V. T. Smith and C. A. Smith were visitors in Augusta Friday. ' The following attended th® meeting of the r.th zone of the Methodist Mis sionary Society held with Cave’s Methodist Church Wednesday: Mrs. Joseph Ashley, Mrs. I). W. Brown Mrs. K| R. McElhenney, Mrs. G. C. Helmly, Mrs. Ida Brinkley, Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Maddox. Miss F.lr/.abeth Brinkley recently visited Miss Francos Reid in Auguc- ta. Miss Ruth Nicholson spent several days in Allendale with her sister, Miss Katie May Nicholson, who re turner! home with her for a short visit before accepting a position in Harts- ville. J. B. Bagnal, Jr., has accepted a position with Lyons garagt. in Au gusta and will begin work Monday. Mrs. Me White, of.AJ Mrs J. B. Bagnal. * Dr. and Mrs. Jbhn Hood were vid- tors in Augusta Monday. Mrs. W. D. Bush let Thursday for a visit in Columbia with Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Etchison and family. She will* attend the marriage next Wed nesday of Miss Elizabeth Etchison and Aubrey Stroman, of Orangeburg. Mrs. Joseph Ashley entertained Monday night with a turkey dinner in honor of Mr. Ashley’s birthday Those prusent on this occasion were Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Ashley, little Miss Jane Ashley, Mrs. C. J. Ashley Mr. and Mrs. W. F!. Ashley and little daughters, Catrie Gone, Ethel and Clarice, Miss Annie Foreman and Miss Ruby Brown. Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Youngblood spent Friday with Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Smith. C. G. Youngblood was a business visitor in Augysta Thursday. Miss Lillie Kennedy left Saturday to spend some time with her cousin. Mrs. Alice Easterling, in. Augusta. Mrs. W. A. Hayes, William Hayes and Mrs. William Duncan visited rela tives near Allendale Friday. Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Foreman mo tored to Augusta Wednesday after-S noon to meet Miss Fletcher Jacobs of Scottsbcro, Ala., ‘who will visit them and Miss Louise Cassds for several days. Okt I'rucucal Pattern No. 1247 * Having now dispensed with “Oh, Promise Mt M at weddings, we might say \het the first grest step in stamp ing out per jut y has been taken. Velveteen for the jacket, checked wool tweed for the skirt—we can t imagine anything more swagger than this combination' for school,' business or semi-sports wear. Black velveteen with a black-and- white check is smart, so is golden- brown velveteen combined with a brown-and-tan check. What we • like about it is that you don’t aN ways have to wear the jacket and skirt together. Fob instance, if you have a pleated silk or crepe skirt, a velveteen jacket to ftiatch would go very well. May be obtained in sizes 14 to 40. _ Siz^_ 18 requires l#-yards of J4 inch material for jacket and 1 yard of 54 inch material for skirt. Patterns will be delivered to any address upon receipt of 25c, in cash or U. postage. Always men tion size wanted. Address Pattefn Dept., this newspaper. A. N. Garber, of Williston, was business visitor here Monday. Marcelme, ''famous clown, rose to the top of his profession. Mil lions Jaughcd at him, children especially, as he went ‘about, with bright pink nose, baggy clothes, always - serious. He is dead today. He sj-.ot himself to death, alone, poor, :n a miserable furnished room. Pho tographs showing him in, the day of his glory were spread before .him on the bed, as he kneeled to blow h.is brains out. This Car bM ban ranMV cfeaclnd aaiTWM- diilancd v Motor vRodUUor vRear Axle | v Starting, v Lighting ii v Ignition v Battery vTlm vUphoUUry vTop Buy Used Chevrolets from Chevrolet Dealers! Aa Chevrolet dealers, we sons why it pays to buy are particularly interested in Chevrolet performance. We do our utmost to make every used Chevrolet de liver the dependable transportation for which Chevrolet is famous the world over. That’s one of the big rea- rny used Chevrolets from Chevrolet dealers! An other safety factor Is the rfed “0. K.” tag which we attach to the radiator cap of each reconditioned car. Look for it on the car you buy—and KNOW that you are getting superior value. “Laugh, and the world laughs with you. Weep, and you weep alone.” F.lla Wheeler Wilcox wrctc her well known poem the j morning after her first party I when she was seventeen. ]. In the train, going to the party, she saw a woman weeping. Her dead husband was in the baggage Causey-Youmans Chevrolet Co. BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA 'tf. .Q,ua-lTt-y* at- ; tow .cos.i - never smile —. crying with that poor woman. But I went to the party and danced all - night. I wrote the poem when I woke up in the morning, ashr#ncd to think how easily I had for- I gotten.’’ * Poor Marceline, now in his last sleep, learned also that the world forgets easily. Platinum has been found in Alaska, where one rmo makes $200 a day by primitive mining. That will start travel to Xlaslca and what used to be called “Seward's Folly” because Seward paid $8,000,- 000 for it. Eight thousand million dollars would not buy it now, and a hundred thousand million dollars wouldn't pay what it is really worth. $400.00 AND UP. APPLY TO Ninestein & Baxley BLACKVILLE, SOUTH CAROLINA. John Seybold, seventy-one. a farmer, wants back $7,500 paid a medium. Seybold talked to a spirit named “Sarah,” liked Sarah’s voice, paid for §arah's wedding dress, at her request donated $500 for wayward .girls. Then, after he had spent $7,500 to please Sarah, on her promise to tome to earth and marry him, “Sarah,” says the farmer, “never showed up." # Do not laugh. This old farmer simply paid in advance for happi ness to come later. Believers in some of many religions on earth, the false ones, arc now doing the same and will be disapffointed as Farmer Seybold was disappointed. Their disappointment will come hereafter. j t FOR SALE ? % . I Coker’s Pedigreed Fulghum Oats, free ftom smut. De- ^ I * «?♦ partment of Agriculture test, purity 99.66 per cent, germination. v 94 per cent. 100 bushel lots 8oc, 50 bushel lots, 90c, 25 bushel jF lots, 95c, less than 25 bushel. lots, $1.00, fi o. b. Blackville, S. C. J T f f f v Simon Brown’s Sons BLACKVILLE • ‘ SO. CAR. !! LONG TERM MONEY to LEND William Hohcnzollern’s sister, Pp&fcgii*- Ytctufia -Sehamnbm’- <» -Fwie. ^to j > marr^T young Kussitin only twen ty-seven. Lutheran clergyman re-, fuses to marry them,, saying the difTerencc in age makes, it “un- . ethical.” To refuse marriage to those en titled to marry seems unethical. The spirit alone counts and many a woman of^sixty-three is younger in spirit than thousands of others at twenty-three. r'SM'y.'irv Private funds for ’srilalMoans. < > ===== • > • * r; ► ;; LAWYERS And what about Sarah, whose husband, Abraham, was 100 years old when her son Isaac ,was born, and Sarah not so much younger? Do Lutherans lack faith in this twcntictttTcntury? Let them read the Txvcnty-ffrrt Chapter of Gen esis. ' . • BROWN & BUSH BARNWELL. SOUTH CAROLINA. A lady who manages a night clok—marries her daughter to a British peer, and the world wonders for a minute. It need not wonder. Read the memoirs of the Duke de Saint Simon, and learn how eager were men, with the | greatest names, to marry any sort of illegitimate datightcr of a queer king. The history of Eng-' Ifind will also tell you on what many of the great “titles’’ are based, namely, on “easy virtue, royal caprice.” A . night club keeper is a REAL lady compared with some well known duchesses in history. REWARD! One Hundred dollars ($100.00) re ward for evidence that will convict the person or persons breaking into our warehouse situated on the A. C. L. right of wayadjoining The Farmets’ Ginnery, we will pay the above re ward. Burglary was committed on the night of Nov. 8th or 9th. Farmers’ Union Merc. Co., M. B. Hagood, Pres. SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSIST 1 Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you Ire .not gettihg the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years for Colds Headache Neuralgia Lumbago • * * Toothache. Neuritis Rheumatism Accept only “Bayer” package which contains proven directions. Handy “Bayer” boxes of It tablets Also bottles of 24 " Ajplrta !■ the of B*r*( Maamfaetar* •< Eiff 100—Druggists, •f BalkrttaacM : SEND US <¥GUE ORDERS FOR JOB PRINTING.