The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, February 19, 1904, Image 6
AN ORDINANCE.
Sewerage Ordinance in Town ol
Union.
Be it ordained by tl?c Mavor and A1
derman of tlie Town of Union, in Coun
cil assembled:
See. i. The Sewerage System of the
Town of Union shall be under the con
trol of the Town Cauncil, and the dut}
of securing and enforcing a full compliance
with all the rules and regulations
governing house connection with the
public Sewers shall be vested in the said
Council, or their authorized Agent. The
duly authorized Agent of said Council
shall be an inspector of Sewers and
Plumbing, who shall be chosen by said
Council lor a term of years with salary
fixed and approved by said Council,
duties of said inspector are defined in
subsequent sections. It shall be the duty
of every person, firm or corporation carrying
on a business of plumbing or house
drainage in the Town of Union, to register
in a book to be provided for the purpose
at the ollice of the Inspector of
Plumbing of the Town of Union, giving
name and nlace of 1 usinpu Ii ahull
further be the duty of every person or
firm carrying on business of Plumbing
to give a good and sufficient bond, in the
sum of One Hundred ($100.00) Dollars
to be approved by the Mayor and Aldermen,
conditioned upon the observance
of the rules and regulations contained in
this ordinance, whereupon they may be
licensed by Town Clerk to conduct a
Plumbing business.
Sec. 2. No person or persons shall be
permitted to do any plumbing of any
kind in the Town of Union unless he or
they are in the employ of or under the
supervision of a licensed plumber. Any
person convicted of a violation of this
section shall be lined not more than One
Hundred ($100) Dollars, or imprisoned
not more than thirty (30) days. Should
any property owner refuse to pay for the
class of work and material required by
this ordinance, the contractor will decline
the work and report same to the
inspector, and the plumber who takes
the contract without the necessary
changes shall forfeit his license.
Sec. 3. Before any portion of the system
of any building shall be laid or constructed,
there shall be filed by the
owner of the property at the office of the
Inspector of Sewers and Plumbing a
written application of such connection,
stating the location of the building,
with plans of same, showing in detail
the entire proposed connection from the
public sewer through the house to the
terminus, showing the location of all fixtures,
traps, vent pipes, etc. These
plans shall be inspected and approved,
corrected or modified by the Inspector
of Sewer and Plumbing, whereupon a
permit for the proposed connection shall
be given by the Inspector of Sewers,
upon ascertaining that the work will be
done by a regular licensed plumber; but
in no case shall a permit be granted until
such plans shall have been so presented
and approved. Such plans and applications
tor connection with the public
sew6rs should be filed ten days previous
to the time to make the connection.
Sec. 4. Whenever a house connection
is being made* to the public sewer, the
plumber doing the worit shall, before
any part of the work is covered or hidden
from view, send a written notice to the
Inspector of Sewers and Plumbing, stating
that his work is ready for inspection
and after such inspection and approval
by the Inspector and not till
then can he proceed to cover
upon the final completion of the ruffing
in work shall again notify the Inspector
of Sewers and Plumbing, asking for an
inspection of test in accordance with the
rules, regulations and plans specified by
the Town Council.
Sec. 5. In no case shall the Inspectoi
proceed to make such inspection of test!
and give in his approval until the plumb
er doing the work has paid said Inspectoi
the fee fixed by said Council and said
Inspector delivers fee to City Clerk
and likewise on final approval of fixturt
test the second fee must be naid before
Inspector will issue permit for connec
tion to be made to main sewer, the oil
prsecribed for last test will be furnished
by Town.
Sec. 6. It shall be the duty of the In
spector of Sewers periodically to inspect
plans on file for making house connec
tions as provided in section 3, and tc
accept, reject or make such alteration:
in the plumbing in such houses as hi
may deem necessary to the security o:
proper sanitary house connection with
the sewer.
Sec. 7. It shall be the duty of the In
spector of Sewers and Plumbing undei
the directions of the Mayor and Alder
men to issue all permits, notices and cer
tificates, to keep a daily record of the
work including ail notices and applica
tions received, and permits granted and
certificates given, to report promptly tc
<?jS
Sold by Un
/C
SouthernR
THIS GREAT RAILWAY RUI
GREAT COU
CONVENIENTLY UNITINQ ALL TH
OF THE SOUTH
W.A.TURK. ST
Passenger Traffic Manager, Cent
Washington, D.
W. H. TAYLOE, Aaa't Cen l Pas?. i
j
fer'
the Mayor all violat2^ns of these regulations.
He may inspect ail house conc
nections during their construction, from
I time to time, sufficiently to see that a!I
plumbing, drainage and sewer work is
done in accordance with tlie rules and
regulations. He shall immediately upon
notification by the plumber proceed to
inspect and pass upon the work, reunit ing
sueh test as may from time to time
! be prescribed and have any defects immediately
remedied under his supervisr
ion. lie shall promptly condemn ai d
' order the removal of any defective
! material or work done contrary to the
spirit of tiicse regulations and specilica'
tions governing house connections, and
: sliall perform sucii duties in compliance
with the rules.
Sec. 8. No plumbing work shall be
used until the same has been duly passed
by the Inspector, and a certificate issued.
' Sec. 9. The Inspector, as far its may
be necessary for the performance of his
duty, have the right to enter any build
ing or premises in the limits of the city
without interference or hindrance, and
shall have the power to condemn all unsanitary
work, and report same to the
Mayor. A specified time shall be given
in which the latter can he remedied,
lie shall also report all persons who
shall interfere with him in the performance
of his duties. And any person so
interfering with the Inspector in the
discharge of his duties shall be lined not
more than One Hundred ($100) Dollars
or imprisoned more than thirty (30) days
See. 10. No plumber or any other person
shall make a connection with the
public sewer without being duly licensed
to d? so, nor in any manner except in
strict neenrdnnrr wi 1 !i nil of 1 h?? >r< <-oimr
resolutions and the following specitications,
nor make changes in plumbing |
that have heen completed and approved j
(except necessary repairs) t \tcnd or I
modify in any way plumbing, fixtures or j
otherwise, except they first have permit j
from Inspector of Sewers and IMutnbing i
to do so, and same subjected to Inspector !
as prescribed under penalty of a revoca
tion of his license and a line of not more
than One Hundred ($100) Dollars.
Sec. it. All permits to connect with
the public sewer shall be given upon the
conditions that the Mayorand Aldermen
may at any time before the completion,
revoke and annul the permit when the
work is not being properly executed,
and no party interested shall have a claim
of damage in consequence of such permit
being revoked or annulled.
Sec. 12 A licensed plumber who makes
any house connections with the public
sewer shall be held responsible for any
damage he may do to the sewer or street.
He shall restore the streets to as good
condition as they were at the beginning
of the work.
Sec. 13. No person shall directly or indirectly
connect any open gutter, cesspool,
privy-vault, or rain water conductors
with the sanitary sewer.
Sec. 14. Every house or building to
be connected with the public sewer shall
be separately connected, unless special
permits is granted for combined connections
in extraordinary cases.
Sec. 15. The house drains shall be of
four (4) inch, five or six inch diameter,
standard vetriticd salt glazed sewer pipe
of approved tnake from the public sewer
to within three feet of the point of entrance
to the building, provided same is
not within ten feet of window or door.
The joints shall be made with oakum
gaskets, well corked, and pure, fresh
ground hydraulic cemynt of standard
quality, laid in straight lines with a grade
of not less than one foot in fifty feet for
[ 4-inch, one foot in sixty-live for 5 inch,
and one foot in eightv feet for 6-inch
pipe, connections with the public sewer
shall be made by one-eighth (Ja) bends
' to Y branches; all other changes in
direction from a straight line shall be
made by a curved pipe. (Quarter bends
and tees prohibited.
Sec. 16. The soil pipe shall be of 4-inch
5 diameter iron pipe, extending from the
connection with the house drain (tiiree
j" feet from the building line) through the
' entire height of the building, and four
? (4) feet above the roof at a point remote
i from any chimney or window when this
: is in the main roof, in..case, of shed roof
' stack must go to and above main roof
eves as prescribed, or lit t within thirty
' (30) feet of window and live feet above
| window, Hue or chimney wholly opened
at top and protected by a wire basket.
^ 1 The soil and ^venl pipe shall be of the
" ) following weight and thickness approxi*
matcly:
5 | For cast iron 2-^nch diameter pipe
* | three pounds per foot. For cast iron
1 ! 3-inch diameter pipe four ami one-lialf
' j pounds per foot. For cast iron 4 inch
I diameter pipe six and one-half pounds
' | per foot. For cast irons-inch diameter
r j pipe eight and one-half pounds per foot.
' I For cast iron 6-inch diameter pipe ten
" pounds per foot.
! House traps and fresh air inlets are- ad'
vised for a secure perfect job and preven'
: tation against sewer gass, but only per*
mitled when they are vented in front of
Por Palpitation, Shortness of g
Breath and fulness after eat- I
ng use Ramon's Pills?they E
;ure. Complete treatm't 25c
ion Drug Co.
x ^ #AILWAY
WE RUN THE j
IS THROUGH A , BEST VESTI- 5
P * BULF TRAINS
E BEST SECTIONS a
; r AND HAVE THE |
H. HARDWICK, BFST DININfl 1
iral Puunftr Agent, D"' mn,nu A
?' A r CAR SERVICE i
tfftnt, Atlanta, Ca. g
X
* 1
|Try forttealthl
'222 South Peoria St., 9
1 Chicago, III., Oct. 7, 1902. h
9 Kight months ago I was so ill 9
B that I was compelled to He or sit fl
3 down nearly all the time. Mr I
g stomach was so weak and upset fl i
k that 1 could keep nothing on it I i
| and I vomited frequently. I Bj
could not urinate without great 88
pain and I couuhod so much that H
my throat ana lungs were raw H
and sore. The doctors pro- I i
' nounccd it Bright's disease and H i
? others said it was consumption.
I It mattered little to me what fl I
they called it and I had no de- JB <
sire to livo. A sister visited me fl
from St. Louis and asked me if fl l
I had ever tried Wine of Cardni. fl y
I told her I had not and she -B (
bought a bottle. I believe that fl ?
it saved my life. I believe many 5
women could save much suffer- fl |
ing if they bnt knew of its value. O
I ;
Don't you want freedom from fl '
pain? Take Wine of Cardui 9
and make one supreme effort to fl
ho well. You do not need to be fl $
a weak, helpless sufferer. You fl c
' Kg can have a woman's health and 1
j S do a woman's work in life. Why B
I re not secure a bottle of Wine of fl
j? t'ardui from your druggist to* B
tWM8&CMWHH I ;
trap, vent extending to top of house,
separate from house stack.
Sec. 17. At at the foot of every line of
soil pipe and kitchen waste pipe and
whenever the soil pipe makes change in
direction in a horizontal line there shall
he provided Y's 1-8 or 1-16 bends hand
hold clean-outs with brass screw caps, at
every place where conditions will permit.
All kitchen and pantry waste must continue
to stack vent from trap, to enter
same above lixtures- Tees and one-fourth
bends not allowed. The latter only in
! extreme eases, and then only above all
) fixtures, and by special permission from
j the Inspector, wrought iron galvanized
[ pipe will only be permitted for back
j vents when wholly exposed to view, and
i when not exposed to outside atmosphere
1 and in no cases shall they he smaller
J than \}? inches.
See. 18. Waste and vent pipes from
j hath tubs, wash bowls, basins, pantry
I sinks, kitchen sinks, slow sinks and other
fixtures may be of lead or iron of not
more than 2 inches in diameter. The
diameter of lead pipe for the various
I wastes shall be as follows, viz;
One wash bowl inches,
Row of basins 1% to 2 inches.
I One hath tub 1% inches.
Row of bath tubs 2 inches.
Pantry and kitchen sinks inches.
I.aundry trays 2 inches.
Stop sinks 2 inches.
The weight per foot of lead pipe shall
approximate three nounds for iW-inch
| diameter pipe, 4 pounds for i^-inch
| diameter pipe, and 5 pounds for 2-iuch
I diameter pipe. Wrought pipe cannot
t be used in any case for waste. All joints
I in lead pipe shall be wiped solder joints.
Waste and vent pipes, if made of iron,
shall fulfill same requirements as prescribed
in section 16. In case where
lead and iron pipes joins, the joint shall
he made by a brass ortincd copper sleeve
or ferrule; the joint with the iron pipe
shall be either screw or lead cork with
the lead pipe by a wiper solder joint.
Sec. 19. Every sink, bath tub, water
closet, basin, urinal, safe, or other fixlures
shall be separately trapped, and
back vented. All kitchen and pantry
sinks to have grease traps of either brass,
iron or lead not less than 6 inches in
diameter and not less than 12 incWs
high, with brass screw plates to clean
out same. Bath tubs to have drum or
some approved trap with hand hole
cleanout. Every Syphon trap shall have an
air vent from crown leading into the main
vent or to be conducted separately four
(4) feet above roof. Anti-Syphon traps
can only be used in extraordinary cases
bv special permission from the Inspector.
The main vent pipe shall be of iron,
generally of 2 inches in diameter, extend?>.<>
c_?? _ ? ? 11 _ 1 ?i.L
in- iiwiii uiw luntai UAIUIC |'(u(uhl Willi
I tie soil pi pe either above the roof, with
an open top and wire basket, or it may
terminate in the soil pipe above the
highest fixture. The vent pipe from a
water closet trap shall be 2 inches in diameter,
the vent pipe from all other
traps to be the same diameter as the pipe
with which it ventilates. The vent must
. '.ways have a continuous slope to prev,
i t ti e retaining retention of water
w hich may condense in the pipe.
Sec. Jo. Water closets must be of
dci p seal wash down or Syphon jet
closets or other approved patterns, (wash
out pan and plunger closets being positively
prohibited), and shall be located
in well lighted, well ventilated apartment.
Water closets shall not be flush
by direct connection from the water
pipe except those approved by Inspector
hut from special tanks placed in such
position as to give at least a head of six
feet, except where regular low down
closets are used. The overflow from the
tank if any shall be discharged into the
open air or basin of the closet; in no
case shall it discharge direct into the
soil pipe.
Sec. 21. Water pipes from safes, refrigerators.
cisterns, overflow ?nH
tanks from which water is taken for
drinking or cooking purposes, shall in
on case be connected direct with any
soil, waste, or drain pipe, but must be
discharged into sink or into open air.
Sec. 22. All exit pipes from plumbing
fixtures, except water closets, shall be
.covered by strong mctalic strainers securely
fastened, and of such mesh as to
prevent improper substances from entering
the sewers or drains.
Set;. 23. All fixtures shall be wholljr
exposed when possible or practicable.
All pipes shall be concentrated as much
as possible, and so placed as ttgbe readily
examined and inspected. Where they
are necessarily placed within waK* or
partitions, they Bhalt be covered by
wood work fastened by screws or hinges
so as to give ready access for inspection
and repairs. In no case shall a pipe be
placed in a finished wall.
Sec. 24. And it shall be unlawful for
any person or persons to linve connections
to public sewers unless lliere is a
meter on their service, and in no case
shall a meter be used that is not approved
by the Inspector and the Water Works
Commission. Meters are furnished by
water works at cost to consumers or (
plumbers, and all meters must be provided
with suitable and approved meter
boxes when same is located in yard or ,
underground. Meter boxes are furnished
at cost.
Sec. 25. All material must be of good
standard quality, and the work must be
lone in a thorough and workmanlike
manner, subjeet to the approval of the
Inspector of Sewers and Plumbing.
Sec. 26. No person or person shall injure,
break, remove or obstruct any por;
tion of any man-hole, lamp-hole, flushtank
or any part of the public sewer.
\ny person violating the provisions of
this section shall be lined not more than
One Hundred ($100) Dollars.
Sec. 27. The Council shall have power
to prevent or disconnect any connection
ivith the public sewer which discharges
iny substance liable to injury the sewer
>r obstruct the floor of the sewer.
Sec. 28. No exhaust steam shall be alowed
in the public sewer.
Sec. 29. Terra cotta yard sewers may
ie laid by the property owner or his auhorized
agent by obtaining special permission
in writing from the Inscector of
/v?*. ??, cam I'cuiiu IU IUIIisiiii a clause
pccifying that the* work and material
nust conform to rule and be inspected,
ame as required in section 4 of these
ules.
Sec. 30. All persons having a private
lystem of sewerage discharging into an
jpen drain or cesspool within live hunIred
feet of the public sewer, shall coulee
t with the public sewer system or be
iisconnected with the water supply.
Sec. 31. All violations not herein
specified shall, upon conviction, be fined
my sum not exceeding One Hundred
($100) Dollars, or imprisoned in jail not
fxeeeding thirty (30) days. <
Done and ratified under the corporate
seai of the Town of Union, this the fifth
Jay of February, 1904.
Macbkth Young, Mayor.
Attest:
W. D. Arthur,
[seal.] Town Clerk and Treasurer.
The Dnrlmroud %uttee.
Suttoe, or the practice of immolating
widows on their husband's funeral t
pyres In India, was llrst attacked by
tlio British government in 1S29. It was
on Dec. 4 of that year that Lord William
Bentick carried a resolution in
council by which all who abetted suttee
were declared guilty of "culpable
homicide." In the year 1817 700 widows
were burned alive in Bengal alone,
but since the passing of the act the
practice has entirely died out. Suttee
was really a primitive rite, a survival
from barbarous times, and not sanctioned
by Hlndooism, the passage In
the Vedas supporting it being a willful
mistranslation. But 110 previous governor
had the courage to violate the
British tradition of religious toleration.
Lord William Bentlnck also suppressed
thuggism, which made strangling
a religious rite to the goddess
Kali.
St. Faarnn'a Castle.
St. Fagan's castle in sojth Wales is
named, like the parish In which it is
situated, after one of the earliest missionaries
to this island. According to
the Venerable Bede, St. Fagan was
sent to Britain by Pope Eleuthcrius in
the second century. Fox in his "Acts
and Monuments" records the settling
r?AWrk lr? thnf rvn%?t *-vP IXTaIaa
x*?s,?aa iU (UUl [Mil l Ul IT aiuo U1 u uauu
of teachers and preachers known as
Pagans. The castle is a picturesque
mansion, with high gables, built within
tlie walls of a castle erected in the
twelfth century by Sir Peter de Vele.
The parish is noted as being the scene
of a fierce battle in 1G48 between the
parliamentary forces under Horton and
the Welsh royalists, the latter being defeated,
leaving 2,500 killed on the field
and 3,000 prisoners in the hands of the
enemy.
Knklmn Taitf*.
There is certainly no accounting for
tastes, and surely the strangest is thnt
of tho Eskimos. Tallow is their candy.
It is put up in bright red packages
made out of the feet of waterfowl. The
women cut off the red feet of this bird,
which is called the dovckie, draw out
the bones and blow up the skiu so as to
make pouches, which they fill with the
reindeer tnllow for their little folk.
None of the food that the Eskimos
eat seems very inviting to us. but thev
are extremely fond of it and are very
apt to overeat. It la said by explorers
who bave gone Into Greenland that It
Is no uncomtnon sight to see r.n Eskimo
man who has eaten an enormous meal
of the raw, frozen flesh of the reindeer,
aeal or walrus lying on his back and
eating blubber until he cannot move.
Don't Haye an
ing D
IWe are rec
supplies, and h
Don't pay 25c p>
by parties who
will be put in.
| will guarantee
I Bailey Lumb
-**?rDR. I. -M
ifc .DENT
Drown and Bridge
Work a Specialty.
I)re ; !??* (!n:nkc ClKar*. 5
There is no r:v.son wliy a dromedary
should not bo parti;;! to a good cigar.
Most dromedaries, according to a meuagcrie
proprietor" are particularly
fond of tobacco smoke and can bo uiade ,
to do almost anything under its Influence.
"Travelers in Egypt," ho asserts, "rely
more on tobacco snioko for their control
over these huge beasts than any-,
thing else. When traveling on long
journeys the dromedaries are In many
eases required to travel night and day
without rest, and the beasts are kept
up to their tasks by smoking cigars.
The driver carries a triangular piece of
wood, which is pierced at one point
like a cigar holder. This is inserted in
the mouth of the benst, the cigar being J
lit and pressed into the bole in the same <
fashion followed by man.
"The dromedary Immediately closes!
Its eyes and puffs away through its nostrils
until the cigar is burned away.
The indulgence appears to refresh'it,
and the keeper has no difficulty iu persuading
the animal to plod on without
further rest."?-Pearson's.
Errorn ninl Excnira.
Emperor Sigismund of Germany, who
reigned in the fifteenth century, in the
speech in which he opened tbo council
of Constance uttered an expression
which Cardinal l'laccntinus ' corrected.
The emperor replied. "IMaeentinus,
however agreeable you may be to others,
you please us not when you assert
that we have less authority than the
grammarian Priscianus, whom you say
I lmvo nffondoil M
Napoleon used to excuse his errors in
orthography with the saying, "A ninn
occupied with public business cannot
attend to orthography."
Voltaire upon receipt of his first letter
in French from Frederick the Great
told Frederick that he was a better
French scholar than Louis XIV., who
committed many mistakes. Frederick
replied that Louis was a great monarch
in many respects, and a mistake
in spelling could not tarnish the brilliancy
of his reputation.
A Turkliili I.ove Story,
Do the Turks love their women? Yes,
both in life and in death. In life, read
the love songs and in death the epitaphs
to the beloved ones passed to the
silent realm.
It is true the Turk goes to the Arabic,
the Greek, the Italian, for love
songs, but he sings these to his lady's
eyebrows, and the story he tells of the
quality of his love ri3es to the purity
at times of prayer:
One knocked at the beloved's door,
and a voice answered from within,
"Who is there?"
Then he answered, "It is I."
Then the voice said, "This house will
not hold thee and me."
And the door was not opened.
Then went the lover into the desert,
where there is nothing .but Allah, and
fasted and prayed in solitude.
And after a year he returned and
knocked again at the door.
And again the voice asked, "Who is
there?"
And he said, "It is thyself."
And the door was opened to him.
Match that in your Yedantas if you
cr. n.?I'lliludolphia lhvss.
Wukiiifc the Sleepers.
In a diary kept in 1G40 is it asserted
that "Allen Hrydges has been chose to
wake the sleepers in meeting and, being
much proud of his place, must
needs have a fox taile fixed to the end
of a long stnfi'e, wherewith he may
brush the faces of theiu that will have
naps in time of discourse." This ener
getic individual was likewise armed
with "a sharpe thorne" for the benefit
of those who "be most sounde." There
Is a i*oeord of the use of this implement
upon Mr. Tom kins, who was sleeping
comfortably in the corner of his pew
when Allen "thrust his staff behind
Dame Hallard to give 1dm a grievous
prick upon the band, whereupon Mr.
Tomkins did spring much above the
floor and with terrible force did strike
his head against tlie wall and also to
the great wonder of all 'prophanelle'
exclaim in a loud voice, 'Iluss the woodchuck!'
he dreaming, as it*seemed, that
a wood chuck had seized him and bit
his hand."
y Connections II
one Until You!
eiving a large stool
lave employed an ea
er foot for having con
> will be gone, when
We are in the busin<
all work.
ar and Manul
SkiL
fcl
Office Bank Building:
Union, 8. .0
Fa da.
"Women nrc not tlie only ohes who
have fads," ?ahl an observing individual
during a discussion on fads. "1
know a contractor in New York who
goes nbout buildings he is constructing
and extracts bent nails from waste
lumber. lie straightens them out and
tosses them into a nail box. It is not
because he is penurious, for he is quite
generous. It is just a fad. I kuow a
Jbanker in Now York who has all envelopes
laid on his desk after the letters
have been tnken out. Then at his
leisure he cuts the envelopes apart and
lays the addressed sides in a pile to bo
used for scratch pads or memorandum
pads. That is his pastime, or fad, if
you will. ' There is a rounder uptown
who never passes a hotel without going
in and looking over the register.
And I know that he is never expectiug
to find a familiar name. Ho told mo
when I chided him about it that be
didn't know why he did it unless it
was his fad."?New York Commercial
Advertiser.
Ailvlce Not Free.
Lawyer?Well, you have at last decided
to take my advice and pay this
bill of mine? Cll.rnt?Ye-c-s. Lawyer
?Very well. William, just add 10
shillings to Mr. Smith's bill for further
advice.
CltliiK a Case.
Mrs. Honpeck?We never kuow who
our best friends are. Henpeok?That's
so, my dear. Now, there's that fellow
you jilted when you married me; He
has never spoken to me since.?Judge.
None knows the weight of another's
burden ?Herbert.
EY^S
ate fioir.elitnes mined by improper
glasses. You can get new teeth, new
hair, but you canuot gftt new eyee that
you can fee with. They will have to
last you all your life. Don't you think
they should be carefully treated? Yet
how many people rfcklessly wear any
kind of glasses whether suited to their
eyes or not. For your* own sake we
urge ynu to let au expert examine your
e)e?. You will never I* sorry in any
way if you come in and see us. Teats
and examinations free.
McCreery Glymph,
OPTICAL SPECIALIST.
Office M. and P. Bank Building.
Take stairway on Main 8t. Honrs
0 a. m. to 1 p. m. Saturdays all day.
THE
Cash Bargain Store.
We have received a full line
of spring goods at the old prices
??wi 4i.:~ ? i
unit in uu? iul we imve some
extra bargains.
j Good yard wide Percale at
8c per yard.
Good heavy Sea Island Percale,
yard wide, 12ic quality
j at 10c per yard.
We have other bargains too
numerous to mention. Call
and examirig our line and get
our prices betore you buy.
Yours tru'y,
Mrs. 13. N. Wilburn.
i
lade or PlumbJee
Us.
s .
k of plumbing ' I
:pert plumber. 1
nections made I
the plumbing 1
3ss to stay and I
acturing Co. I