The Laurens advertiser. (Laurens, S.C.) 1885-1973, May 01, 1912, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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1 They interlock and overlap each other in such a way that the hardest driving rain or snow cannot sift under them. Won't pulsate or rattle in wind-storms. They're also firc-proof, will last as long as the building, and never need repaits. For sale by Local Dealers or Cortright Metal Roofing Company 50 N. 23rd, St., Philadelphia, Pa. GATHERS NO moss 1st m WZiY-BE-Ar T^KSaN t? for RENl Buy A Home With Rent Money! The average tenter pays for his place every eight years but the'Jatid lord still owns it. Why Pay Rent? YOU PAY AS RENT ^9* i 1 TS Acres near Mt. (Hive Clutch. Cheap and on easy terms, one-half interest in one of the finest lime quarries in the South. Four miles of Ware Shoals, ( 'heap on easy terms. At $120.00 per year in 10 years. $1,581.68 At $120.00 per year in 25 years. . $6,583.72 At $2-10.00 per year in 10 vears. $3,168.36 At $240.00 per year in 25 years. 13,167.43 We will cnt any of the following into such size tracts as you desire. We buy at wholesale and retail land out to suit the small buyer : Splendid farm and ginnery at Ekom, containing 100 acres, and good dwelling, outhouses, etc., 20-horse engine and 10-horse boiler, two 60 saw gin, all in good shape on easy terms or all cash. About 100 Acres near Watts Mill, known as the Badgclt Land. 552 Acres located near Itoody River Rower Company, on Reedy River, and known as the Dorroh Place. Price, $12.50 to $20.00 per acre, depending on number of acres und location. 200 acres three miles east of Laurens. High state cultivation. Terms easy. 23 acres at Anil's c-oss roads, cheap for quick sale. 10 acres near Watts Mills, all improved, for $1,500, half cash. Iti.r? acres, a part of .1. N. Clardy tract. $8.00 per acre, (iet the bar gain now. Several houses and lots near Watts Mill. 93 acres near Ora, level and good Improved land, $r>0 per acre. 400 acres near Stomp Springs. $11.50 per acre. Wo also have for sale about Twenty-two Acres of land within the Corporate limits of the City of Laurens, known OS Grays Hill, which we will sell in small building lots, at reasonable prices. A good many Of tin so lots have cottages on them, Remember that we cut oft" any number of acres de sired by purchaser and give any reasonable time in which to pay. We want to make il possible for every white farmer in Laurens County to own his home. Laurens Trust Company R. A. Cooprr, President. C. W. Tune,Sec. & Treas. Anderson ?fc Binkeley, Managers Ron! Estate Sales. S P L E N DID S E R V I C E To NEW YORK, PHILADELPHIA, BALTIMORE, WASHINGTON, AND THE EAST Now Offered Dy The SEABOARD Air Line RaUvrar SCHEDULES Leavo Arrive Clinton Richmond Washington Baltimore Philadelphia Now York No. 32 7:09 PM 7:22 AM 10:17 AM 11:35 AM 1:46 PM 3:56 PM No. 38 3:24 AM 5:05 PM 8:36 PM 9:56 PM 1:16 AM 3:60 AM All trains carry through steel electric-lighted Pullman drawing room sleepers, which now enter the new Pennsylvania Railroad Station (in the heart of New York City). No. 32 "The Atlanta-Dirmlngham Special" carries a through observation car. Birmingham to New York. All trains en route serve meals In dining cars?service a la Carte. Any agent of the SEABOARD can furnish information as to schedules, rates, etc. C. D. WAYNE, Assistant General Passenger Agent. t^^^^l^j^THi: MAN WHO SHIRKS 135 YOUTH MIST ?^v' ?tliS WORK HA H? IN OLD AGE. Ordinarily, SUCCESSFUL men prefer to work hard In YOUTH. Most of the lovers of the Ostermoor are COMPELLED to work hard AF TER the energy of youth is spent ; and the Rider of the White Dorse over takes THEM while they are panting from unwilling exertion. They are compelled In OLD AGE to do detail work in competition with young men of a new generation who are full of hope. No blushing Aurora infuses strength and vigor into the gloom of an old man driven to work. His eyes are not turned toward the east, and he knows that VICTORY can scarcely reach him before THE REAPER does. Even if a young man has NO HIGHER AMBITION THAN TO ESCAPE WORK, he should put forth every effort of body and mind between 15 and 30, The human insect who expects to get by for 60 years without doing any USEFUL WORK, is either a fool or the son of a millionaire; which is usually another way of saying the same thing. Every man not in the class just mentioned is compelled by circumstances to work either at one end of his life or the other, and WISE MEN work at lloUi. If a man spends the first .'10 years of his life learning how to render the world a USEFUL SERVICE he is training himself in the way he should go. and When he is old he will not depart from it. Misspent youth is followed by years of joyless labor?for enforced service is slavery, and the peon never sings at Iiis work. Date in the fall, in the days of Aesop, the Ants handed out some informa tion to the Grasshoppers that was worth a million dollars a word. "You have fiddled and danced all summer." said the Ants, "while we have been storing up grain and building houses for the winter. Now you must pay the fiddler." ? j -* f j CITY SCHOOLS HONOR ROLL t w * UrtM **V* ?? * r * * fr ****-?***1* ? t ? The Honor Roll tliis year consists of names of |>n|>ils who have made not less than 95 on Deportment, 95 on At tendance and on Scholarship, To fail on cither one the pupil's name does not appear on the roll. The following is the roll for the eighth school month: First Grade, Miss Emily Meng, teach er?William Vance Albright, Doran Brnmlett, Arthur Boyd, Richard Counts. William Dunlnp, .lack Miller, Houston Roper, Martin Teague, Marion Blackwell, Louise Cronier, May Belle Garrett, Nell Jones, Eula May Martin, Margaret Nichols. Sarah Eliza Swy gort, Grace Taylor, Grace Young. Second Grade, Miss Foronoc Brown, teacher?Jack Bagwell. Fred Bishop. Frank Colwell, Hlbert Copelnnd, Maxcy Richter. Beatrice Babh, Eula Burns, Alsie Boyd. Huhy Dent, Lee Ora Hun ter. Margaret Lake. Nancy Meng, Eleanor Miller. Rosa McGowan, Mary Owings. Frames Todd, Emmie Lou Washington. Third Grade. Miss Ella Roland, teacher Flora Dennett, Marion Boll. Knthcrinc Holt. Sarah Dunlnp, Rosa Gray, Caroline Rankin, Gladys Roper, Emmie Sullivan. Ruth Thompson, Lie Watson, Thomas Barksdalc, Lucius Burns, Montcitll Cain. William Gray,! Coy Heid. Laurence Thompson. Fourth Grade. Miss Elizabeth Bur nett, teacher Mary Dlackwell, Wil Ham Lake, Charles Hughes, Robert Alkon, Cnbell Garrett, Anna Sullivan.1 Bstcllc Martin, Nash Phil pot, Orion Nichols. Robert McCuen, Corrie Stone. Boyd Hay Lawson. Junnltn Wllkes, A B. Madden, Bennic McCnll, Tom Dav enport, Lois Taylor, William 1 Inching son, Beatrice Caldwell. Fifth Grade, Miss Dorcas Cnlmcs, teacher?J. P. Caldwell, James Dunlap, Henry Franks. John Hudgens, Hoheit Lucas, Toni Heid, Calvin Teague. Bruce Bagwell. Annie Barksdale. .Martha Barksdale, Emma Barton, Mil dred Counts, Harlan Crews. La Ulf Emily Dial, Martha Franks, Kathleen MCGCO, Lola McPhall, Bernice Meng. Lena Rountrce. Margaret Wright, IIa; tie Watson. Dorris Young. Sixth. Grade, Miss Annie Davis, teacher -Thornwell Dunlap, McCord Gallegly, Strlckler Rankin. Truman Roper, Charles Thompson. Helle Burns, Margaret Dial, Rebecca Lake, Virginia Sullivan, Daisy Belle Tolll BOn, Elizabeth Young. Sixth Grade, Miss Laura Cronier, teacher --Leuna Adams, Inez Nichols, Nora Nichols, Amy Wolff. Seventh Grade, Miss Laura Crom. ;\ teacher?Ruth Bagwell, Annie Burns, Alice Dent. Sarah Held, Vera Temple ton, Russell Gray. Seventh Grade, Miss May Delle Harre, teacher?Francer. Davis. Mary SulHvnn, Hat die Sullivan, Rebecca Clark, Miriam Brown. Sarah Bolt, Blanche Burns, Jessie Hill. Lucy Mc Phall, Cecil Roper. Martha OwlngS. High School. ' Teachers: Mr. B. F. Ezell. Miss Fannie Creighton, Mf.-s Laura Parks dale. Eighth Grade?Hattle Gray, Inez Hudgens. Hobble Hudgens, Elizabeth Mosel ey, Eugenia Nichols, Virginia Simpson. Lllla Todd, Herbert Sullivan. Ninth Grade?Mamie Austin, Gussle Miller, I lay no Taylor. Tenth Grade?Otis Huff. Edwin Moseley, Julius Sltgreaves. Anna Prcn tlss. Mill School. First Grade, Miss Lila Hart, teacher ?Edna Cobb, Carrie May Vnnboy, Lllu Hughes. Third Grade, Miss Mary P. Simpson, teacher?Donnio Horton, Molllo Pow ers, Nannie Leo Snoddy. Four til Grade, Miss Mary I'. Simp son teacher?Alice Davis, Aileene Lod ford, Eva Robinson, Anise Vanlioy, Dorroli llalrston, Glyiui llnirston, (Marke Tcmplcton, Poor appetite is a sure sign of im paired digestion. A few Josts of Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tab lets will strengthen your digestion and improve your appetite. Thousands have heen benefited by taking these tablets. Sold by all dealers. How Pat Scored on the President. Once when Stuyvesant Fish was president of the Illinois Central rail road he was sitting in his ofllce look ing over the reports. The door opened to admit an Irishman clad in jump ers, who. without removing his hat or taking his pipe out of his mouth, blurted out: "01 want a pass to St. Louis." President Fish looked up in a mild surprise and Inquired: "Who are J you ?" "01 am Pat Casey, a switchman in yor yards here." Thinking to teach the man a lesson I in politeness President Fish said: "Well. Pat. I will no! say that I will , refuse ypur request, but there are cer tain forms of etiquette that men should observe in asking a favor. You should knock on the door, and when' bidden to enter you should remove| your hat and take your pipe out of your mouth as .von come in. Then you should say: 'Are you President Pish?' and 1 would reply: 'Yes. sir; who are you and what can I do for you?" Then you would reply: 'I am Pat Casey, a switchman in the Uli-, nois ('?Mitral yards, and I came to ask you for a pass to St. Louis.' Now, Pat. you go out and come hack in a little while and see if you can't do a llttlo better." Pat Withdrew, and about two hours afterwards there was a rap on Presi dent Fish's door, whereupon he said: j "Collie in." The door opened and in walked Fat, hat in one hand and his pipe In the other. "Good mnrillll.'" said he; 'an' are yes Mr. Fish, ?Y president of th' Illinois Central?" "I am," replied Mr. Fish. Who are you ?" "01 am Pat Casey, a switchman in th' yards." "What can I do you you, Mr. Ca- ' scy?" Inquired the president. "Ye/, can go t' hell?I've got a pass over th' Wabash."?Exchange. FAMILY II \ 1 It DRESSING. Benefits (he Hair of Men, Women and Children. Get a botle of delightful, refreshing PARISIAN SAGE madam, and have everybody In the house use It regularly it's fine for children as well as grown ups and iAiurens Drug Co. guarantees PARISIAN SAGE to drive nwaya dan druff, stop falling hair or Itching scalp, or money bnek. I^irgo bottle fiO cents. "I think PARISIAN SAGE is good as a hair grower. It is good to rid the hair of dan 'ruff and stop the hair from falling out, It Is a beautlfler as well as a scnlp cleaner. I Intend to keep It in the house. I know It helped my head."?Hanna Darkness. Marashalltown, Oowa. Old Hickory Porch Furniture will last longer, Is more comfortable, and looks better than anything* you can use on your porch. We are showing a complete line and would be glad for you to look through. S. M. & E. H, Wllkes & Co. The Magnificently Bred Stallion YELLMAN 4911 Grand Son of ClJESTER DARE 10 Will stand for Season of 1912 at $20.00 to insure standing colt. Limited to 50 approved mares. AT Childress Live Stock Co.'s Stables S Property of R. B. CHILDRESS, Laurens, S. C. ^ I THE COMiWrs OF OF] ^ENJOYED BY Henry H. Rogers was a poor boy. He w orked in a Grocery. He saved his money and put it In the Bank. He left an estate of 100 Million Dollars. Make OUR Pank YOUR Bank. We pay liberal interest consistent with safely. Enterprise Bank Laurens, S. C. N. B. Dial, President C. II. Roper, Cashier t FOR SALE! Store and lot. Also nice now dwelling of ?? Jno. M. Moore. Store near Laurens Mill. Good ;j proposition ? see us at once. Splendid lot and throe room House on Sullivan J street opposite Mr. J. J. Pluss at a bargain. Good House and lot on Martin Street. Fine Farm known as Polly Franks place, four miles above Laurens, near Greenville and Laurens road. 100 acres worth the money we can sell it at. Home Trust Co. N. B. DIAL, C. H. ROPER, President. Sec. & Treae. LAURENS, SOUTH CAROLINA