The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, November 06, 1914, Page 6, Image 6
WILKINSVILLE
Wilkinsville, S. C., Oct. 28.?Espec
ially in behalf of the little tots of th<
first, second and third grades of tin
Sunnyside school and also of the par
ents and friends of these lifcile folk,
do we desire to take off our hat ant
thank 1'rof. L. B. Ilayne and Mis:
Bonnie McCluney for what they an
doing for them, by devoting part, o
their time, at least, to lecturing 01
the lessons of the Sabbath s%ool a
they are presented week after week ii
the quarterlies. It is surprising t'
see how much these little childrei
gather from this talk and how intelli
gent they can repeat the substance o
the lessons as they appear from wee!
to week. Sometimes it is a restfu
exercise for children to withdrav
from arduous duties of the schoo
room and spend a short time in th<
study of such great and absorbing
matters as best fit them for this lift
to say nothing of the life to come. T
successfully combine pleasure am
profit is the greatest discovery philos
ophy has yet made or ever can make
Xo one has ever yet made a decide*
success in a work they did not like t
do. This proposition holds good whei
applied to a child as well as to man
i ne nnme must no in sympathy witi
the schools anil the parents with th<
teacher if the child's best interest
are u> be preserved. The home, th<
school, the parent, and the teache
form a mill in which the child is rav
material is to be converted into a tin
ished product?man or woman. In thi
mill there must be no friction
screeching or wabbling in the machin
ery if the output is to attain its high
est possible market value. One singh
defct in it would mar the beauty am
the excellence and c? nsign the whoh
fabric to the junk heap. We yield t<
no one in our respect for the seculai
newspaper that permits its eolunm.
to be used for the advancement of cd
ucation in its several anil kindrei
branches that so vitally effect the in
terests of those whom it serves civil
ly, religiously and politically and wi
frankly confess that in our poor judgment
no other agency is so potentia
in the furtherance of these severa
courses. The reason is obvious. Ii
reaches the homes of all classes- 01
people in which intelligence, virtut
and religion are welcome visitors an*
where true Americanism is the idol <>,l
every heart. It gathers together th
I est thoughts of the rank and file air
stands four-square to every assau't
that may ho made upon it. I hous
ands and tens of thousands road their
county and Slate papers who neve
see the inside of a Bible and who never
take or read the paper of tin
church to which they be'ong. 1 would
not lie understood as discounting tin
church papers or in any way cripplim
their usefulness. Secular papers have
over them in reaching the masses and
cultivating the highest ideals to which
humanity has ever aspired or can aspire.
We know our own weakness and
imperfection as well or better than
any one else and are ready to admit
bur serious environment. But I am in
the fight to a finish on the subject of
thorough education and what it leads
to or makes possible to attain. I stand
by those of ouv Compeers who are i:
the same fight for the same cause
^ Should they, or any of them fall by
I the wayside or be sent to the asylum
for dementia I want them to bear in
mind the couplet as my greeting:
"If you get there before I do,
Please tell them I'm coming too."
During my recent visit to Union
county I had the pleasure of meotim?
my brother correspondent "Sniiko."
When I last remember seeing him. i.
was a mere boy. ^
I want those of my brother farmers
who think they have the "live at
home" problem worked out to go a
see ('apt. J. Wesley Scott's farm m i
New Hope church and find out how !
raise corn on upland. "Uncle Jay'
Spears said long before lie died that
h<> wanted to teach his son Ben that ii
was possible to raise corn on upland.
Ben seemed to think that unless com
was plant* I on I acolet river, Uroa :
or Thickety bottoms, starvation want
the door, hut "Uncle .lay" thought
different and expressed himself so.
Jim MrKnwn was much of Ron's opinion
along this line; he raised corn hy
the thousands on his rich Rroad rive
bottoms. !l<> said it made him fee]
hunirry to fro to Gaffney and see the
poor prospects alonfr the road. !I?.
evt went so far as to tell those people
to quit trying to farm and come
down and he would let them have a!!
the corn they wanted. Rut in IXs? th>
tide chanfred when Rroad river commenced
overflowing the land aril d
stroyed the crops for two or t>o
con-ecutive years and many of th
river lands became practically worthless
for farming1 purposes. What
proved a disaster to the river lands
only put the uplands to making corn
in abundance and Rob Alexander told
Jim one day to come up and he would
let him have all the corn he wanted.
Since then the ?*idge lands have been
owning the best farming lands in
Cherokee county south of the Southern
railway.
As a matter of interest to his many
friends and relatives in Union county
I take pleasure in saying that our
sheriff, W. Wilkes Thomas, who is a
Union county hoy, has been reelect*
for his fifth term in that office over
two formidable opponents hy the largest
majority he has ever had. Fie i
b s<m of f.ieut. P. A. Thomas, late
of the Palmetto Sharpshooters. He
was horn at Santuc 4H years ago; his
*?: . nr:u.'.. ~ e /-.u. ..i_.
HUM III-: ??!> V V I I l\ I'JS 1)1 I IU\SllM
county. During his long term of office
and the manifold duties he has heer
called upon to perform not a hlot or
blemish has been brought against his
character or conduct as a brave officer
or his integrity as an upright honor
able gentleman. "Vox."
F.ighlens Vour Burden.
An in active liver will put a load on
you that is enough to stagger stronger
men and women than you.
Relieved of the impurities that clog
its natural functions this same liver
will double your efficiency in business
in good nature and in your good feel
ings.
Calomel used to do but not now
Science has found a better way ir
Gri gaby's F.iv-ver-F.ax. Sold in f?0
and $1.00 bottles under guarantee b>
G lymph's Pharmacy and every botth
bears the likeness of I,. K. Grigsby a.
a protection to you.
! LOCKHART JUNCTION
Lock hart Junction, Nov. 2.?Sunday
was a beautiful day and a great many
? attended church at New Hope and lis
tened to a very forcible sermon by the
preacher in charge, Rev. J. A. Cook.
1 We are in hopes we will get him again
s next year. The conference year is
[ about to close and we are in hopes
f that every one will come up and pay
i their assessments for that has a great
s deal to do sometimes in getting a
ii preacher returned.
We have had the first killing frost
i of the season and it has killed all veg
etation in these parts. Potato digging
f has taken place and it seems the crop
< is a very good one, for one fellow said
1 he was going to send some to Europe,
c This is a joke you see, but is it not
1 nice to have and make, plentv and
e some to spare. We live in a country
; where we can make everything we
want to eat. even to rice. So begin
0 sowing and fixing for next year some1
thing that can be eaten and do not
- think so much about the cotton. If
. cotton wiis even to go to 14 or 1~>
1 | cents, don't change your notion,
u Farmers are all glad to know that
i cotton has advanced some in price.
i. Mrs. W. C. Edmonds and children
i and Mr. Jo Edmonds attended the fair
e in Columbia last week,
s Mr. B. M. Becknell of the New
e j Hope section had a Hallow'en part'
i at his home last Saturday night and
c > the young folk all report a fine tlui
- { 1 was invited to the home of Mr. .J.
I. Homes :it I .nckhn rl Incl Sntiiivlni'
. j < veiling to attend a party. Mr. Hamos
-1 is a much liked man in that place. He
- J ir- postmaster and also keeps a first
p class boarding house where you can
I be served everything (rood to eat. It
* | would take too much space to tell you
i j all the fun and amusement, but 1 must
r tell you about the ghost and the fortune
teller. I have been to Lockhart
- lots of times but never before were
1 there so many girls down there. I
- sure met them at Mr. Hames' Hallo
w'en party. I felt very much like a
? boy of 21, and I was treated so kind
- by all the girls. I thought I was the
' equal of the boy of 21 on that ot
I casion.
Mr. Alvin McKinney, the son of Mr.
.1. L. McKinney, has joined the U. S
| army and is now on his way.
! ! Mr. Edgar Kelly of this section has
I gone to Virginia to work with the
Western Union Telegraph company. I
! wish for these boys much success.
The low price of cotton may cause
others to go or leave the farm. This
i-hould not be, but it seems it cannot
be helped. Every one has to take care
, cure of himself.
Mr. J. C. Jones of York county
II spent the week-end with friends in
' this section. 1 think Mr. Jones will
1 be coming back again. 1 believe lie
has founu some attraction.^
Ij Misses Bert Porter and Ethel Horn
of Jonesville visited Misses Eva ami
Beulah Gregory on Sunday and at!
tended Sunday school.
Miss Lela Gaidt of Union visited
her brother, Mr. B. F. Gault, Sunday,
j While in Cherokee last week J stopped
at the home of Mr. R. J. Harris
where I took dinner and was treated
I; with much hospitality by Mr. and
Mro Harris- T mot Mr f? ir T5i.
I > - y AV. A-j. JLJI*IV#I.
i while in thai section. lie lives near
j Wilkinsville or Etta Jane. He talks
i interestingly of the financial situation
but it seems Mr. Rlaek is very well
i fixed to meet the low price of cotton
; and says ho has .neat of his own rais'
ing yet. He says he reads The Times
and likes to hoar of the things that
are happening in our county.
"Moxy."
SANTUC NEWS
Santuc, Oct. .'11.?Frost with one
swoop killed all crops. The temporai
ture was 28 degrees. The first killine
frost in 1010 was October 22 with :'.l
degrees; some slight frosts occurred
before that date in 1913 but none this
year.
Mi ss Dot Moss, who is now taking
business course at Johnson City, is
, spending a short vacation with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. It. E. Moss.
Several people from Carlisle came
up and attended services at the Methodist
church Sunday, among them be |
AT-. - - AT / < ? 1
inu aim .ur.s. i oieman and .Mr. w.
F. Bates.
Before this is in print the election
will he over and many men will he
duly elect ! and on their career to
fulfill their campaign pledges. Many
good citizens will not he ahle to vo;
'I because they simply failed to register
until it was too late, .lust "slipped
, up," that's all.
A large delegation from hero attended
the circus in Union last week
?I believe all colored folk, and it i
my candid opinion they could ill afford
it. This I know because there
! was a great scramble to get some
' ?eed money from the bale of cotton
j seed, some trying to borrow on the
I promise of quitting theiv*o\vn work tr
| work for you to pay back etc., and by
1 Saturday night some were trying to
' plan to get a little of meat, or trying
j to borrow a dime to get a package of
, smoking tobacco. The money gone
and day's work lost.
The field pea crop owing to unfavorable
weather conditions is not good
in this section; but where planted in
drills, other than in corn fields, they
are very good. From the looks of
i many fields, seed will be scarce and if
Southern farmers have to buy seed or
do without, either will be bad on them.
They need more peas anyway.
Sunday at the Methodist church.
Prof. I.awton, the pastor, said that
1 considering the blessings that had
been handed down to everybody, and
inai anynooy wno could not; give
' twenty-five cents or one dollar in a
year, needs regeneration. Doesn't it
look so? This was said before the
sermon. Later preaching from th<text,
Hcb. 12; 1-2. He told of money,
i. e., the pockethook, the love of power,
of prominence, popularity, society,
dress, etc., and that some would be
trying to "cuss out" Rockefeller, Car
negie and others when some were be,
ing weighted down with a dollar atu
a half, as much as Rockefeller was
with his fifty or a hundred millions.
. And he said that now when people are
i settling up their debts, it is as much
of an obligation to pay the Lord's
r debt?support of the cause, as a bank
i debt, and when you divide uo between
Dall, don't forget or neglect the Lord's.
J This 1 thought. How about the men
higher up. The bank or men that mat
is owing? Will he let you divide, i:
you have not plenty? Will a bank o
supply men or money lender, if the}
have a grip on you, allow you to di
vide. The Lord will forgive, but wil
man? The Lord may give you anothe
chance, but will man? The Ix>rd per
mitted the unfavorable year this time
of crops, of war, of various things be
yond our power, it may be for tne in
dividual sin, the world's sin, for m;
sin, so far as I am affected and ma
look at it so, but will man ? The Lon
will not squeeze for gain, except :
holy gain, but will not man? This i
a time to test out men. Many mei
cannot help out these conditionscannot
hell) the conditions. Thnmrl
you may sing the song to "boost
boost," and never say hard times, bu
many a grin will be a mighty dry
especially when you go to your cred
itors, the bank, or men, for a litth
time and he say, "No sir, you had bet
ter get the money." One man has al
ready said that is what he was told t<
do. Won't there be others?
Iley Denver.
JONESVILLE
Jonesville, Nov. 3.?Misses Jimmit
Hartley and Margaret Williamson entertained
a number of Jonesville'*
young people at a Hallowe'en party
Saturday evening at the home of Mr
and Mrs. Geo. C. Wood. As tin
witches and hob-goblins arrived, the>
were greeted at the door by a figure
draped in white, and ushered into :
dimly lighted room, where ghost stories
were told and games were played
At 10:30 o'clock the guests were asked
to unmask, which caused wild excitement
among some of the guests
A Hallowe'en luncheon was then
served.
On Tuesday evening Miss Frances
Hicks was the charming hostess to
the teachers of the high school and :t
number of her other young friends, it.
compliment to her sister. Miss Zadic
Ilicks of Greenville. Progressive rook
was the principal feature of the evening
after which tempting refreshments
were served.
Miss Lois Alman returned some
days ago from a visit to friends at
Cameron and relatives at BishopvtiiMisses
Eila Sams of Clifton and
Inez Spears of Cowpens, spent last
week-end at their homes here.
Miss Annie Miller returned Sunday
from a visit to friends at Lockhart.
M iss Miller was one of the teachers in
the school at Lockhart last session.
\Ml~~ -D..J.U CI ? i- - :n --C
ivuiu omiiri win return to tier
home at Pinewood this week after
spending several months at the home
of her brother, Dr. G. W. P. Smith
M iss Zadie Hicks returned to her
home in Greenville last Thursday after
spending a week with her sister.
Miss Francos Hicks at Miss Anna
Hames.'
Mrs. F. M. Farr of Union, accompanied
by her mother, Mrs. Rainev of
Blacksburg, were the guests several
days last week of Mr. and Mrs. R. B.
Smith.
Mr, and Mrs. W. B. May of Carlisle
were visitors at Mr. and Mrs. Geo. C.
Wood's last Sunday.
Misses Maude Lavendar ai<4 Gladys
Jackson of Gafrney are expcctfldFiito
be the guests of Miss
for a few days.
Miss Ruth Vaughn entertained her
; class-mates of the ninth grad.- of the
high school at a party last Saturday
; evening at her home on Pacolet street.
The Silver Tea given at the home of
Miss Grace Farr by the Ladies Aid
Society of the Presbyterian church
last Friday evening was a success
both socially and financially. The older
people were entertained in the afternoon
a?Vl the young people in the
evening.
Miss Pearle Harris of Union was
the guest of Misses Hartley and Williamson
for the last week-end.
Miss Sallie Cunningham spent last
Sunday with Miss Pearle Lybrand.
The ladies of the missionary society
! of the Methodist church are oh-. rving
I this week as their week of prayer.
The members of the Knv.orth
i League will hold a social meeting Fri|
day evening in the basement of the
! church.
Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Hames and Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Hames of ffne\
were guests of their mother, .Mrs. A.
B. Hames, last Sunday.
Misses Smith, Miller and I'.lack
worn visitors to Snartantinnr lou* Got.
urday.
Mr .and Mrs. Julian Lipscomb <pent
Sunday in Spartanburg with relatives.
Miss Elizabeth McWhirter (Flight
fully entertained a dozen of her
friends on last Monday afternoon in
honor of Miss Zadie I licks. The rooms
were beautifully decorated in autumn
flowers and leaves, the suggestion of
Hallowe'en being carried out in the
decorations and also in the score
cards. Progressive games wot played,
after which a delicious salad
course was served.
Malaria or Chills & Fever
Prescription No. 666 is prepared especially
for MALARIA or CHILLS &. FEVER.
Five or six doses will break any c e, and
if taken then as a tonic the Fever will not
return. It acts on the liver bet; than
Calomel end does not f.r'Pe or sicken. 25c
In the Balcony.
As twilight deepened, he and he
Were sitting in the balcony
They were together, side by ,le,
To hold her hand he vainly tried.
"O, no," said she; "I never t-.mld
Permit you to; no lady would!
Besides," she added, "you foig.-t
'Tis hardly dark enough just yet."
?Eugene C. Dolson, in Lippincott's
Magazine. _
Whenever You Need a Gcncrr.i Tonli
Take (irove's
The Old Standanl Grove's \ steles:
chill Tonic is eq4mly valual 1< as f
General Tonic because it contains tin
well known tonic propertiesof (M IMINI
and IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drive:
out Malaria, Enriches the Blond anr
Builds up the Whole System. 50 cents
The breakers and other machinery
used in the preparation of coal in thi
state of Pennsylvania represent an in
vestment of $(>0,000,000.
Only One "BROMO QUININE"
To tf?t the genuine, cull for full name, r,AXA
TIV'K BROMO QUININE. I.ook fori ii. iatureo
E. W. GROVE. Cures a Cold in One l> iy. Siopi
cou^b aud headache, aud works oU old. 25c
; EUROPE SPENDING
r TREMENDOUS SUMS
/ '
' Warring Countries are Spending Each
J Day $40,225,000.
" RICHEST COUNTRY FEELS LOSS
9
' The Total Does Not Include Destruc,
tion of Property Where Fightis
Taking Place.
1 k
i A Paris paper says that the war bill
* which Europe is meeting daily is now
i figured up as follows:
Russia _$14,000,000
i Germany __ __ __ __ __ __ 7,225,000
France 7,000,000
! England __ __ __ __ 5,000,000
Austria 4,000,000
Total $40,225,000
The French appropriation is from
official figures as announced by M.
Ribot, minister of finance; the English
estimate by the London Statist.;
the German total from "an authoritative
source" in a Geneva paper; and
the other sums from various conser
vative estimates which have appeared
in one place or another. The item
- "various" represents the probable ex:
pense to which Servia, Belgium and
the neutral countries of Switzerland,
Italy, Roumania, Turkey. Greece,
Holland and Denmark have been put.
The vast total does not include the
' destruction of property where fight'
ing is taking place, nor the well-nigh
incalcuable losses to Europe of 20,000,000
men under arms being taken
from production. There are no indi
cations in France that exhaustion has
set in, but it is evident that the aci
cumulated treasure of even the richest
country on the continent is being
poured out at a rate that adds $200,000,000
a month to the national debt.
Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days
Your druvgist will refund money if PAZO
OINTMENT fails to cure any case of Itching'.
Plind. Itleedine or Protruding Piles in 6 to 14 days.
The lirst : i-c-ition gives Ease and Rest. 50c.
Europe Buys Meat.
Oklahoma City, Okla., Oct. 30?Announcement
was made last night that
a contract for the delivery of 15,000,000
pounds of canned meats to one of
the nations engaged in the European
war has been placed with a local
packing company. Orders have also
been given for large quantities of salt
pork.
j ^^SEN^^OF^FRE^CaUdog-Circtdai^?||
W Fashion Plate No. 1, copyrighted, 9
9 and the Famous 90 Days Treatment and fl
B McKISSICK'S METHOD gj
B of treating the Scalp, Hair and Skin with No. B
tl |, % & 3 Preparations i
1 W. T. MsKISSICK & CO- :v
9 P- O. Bos 102, Wilmington. Del.
Beady for Arms.
(Camden Chronicle.)
There's a tremendous relief in the
statement of a woman writer "that
the American government needn't
worry about an army?that every
American girl over 15 is practiced in
the use of powder, and a call to arms
is all she wants."
Jl? ?
HOW To Give <)ulnine To Children.
FRBRfT.INKU the trade-mark name given to ntt
i improved Quiuine. It is a Tasteless Syrup, pleasant
to take and does not disturb the stomach.
Children take it and never know it is Quinine.
Also especially adapted to adults who cannot
take ordinary Quinine. Does not nauseate nor
cause nervousness nor ringing in the head. Try
it the next time you need Quinine for any pur1
ise. Ask for 2-ounce original package. The
UailiC lb UIOW11 1U UOlllC. fcD CC!l*L5* I
Three million dollars have been
spent to bring the power of a water- |
fall ninety miles to Bombay for electric
light and power purposes.
RUB-MY-TISM
Will cure your Rheumatism
Neuralgia, Headaches, Cramps,
Colic, Sprains, Bruises, Cuts and
Burns, Old Sores, Stings of Insects
Etc. Antiseptic Anodyne, used internally
and externally. Price 25c.
The Genesee Pure Food Co., of Le
Roy, N. V., who are manufacturers of
Jell-O, advertised as "America's Most
Famous Dessert," and Jell-O Ice
Cream Powder, are among those who
have recognized the gravity of the
cotton situation, and they have
bought a 10e a pound bale of cotton
for each of their twenty salesmen in
the cotton growing states.
Their stipulation that the purchase
should he made direct from the planter
led to some interesting developments,
which are described in letters
from the merchants authorizd to conduct
the transaction. A typical case
is described by Fielder & Brown,
wholesale grocers of Spartanburg, S.
C., in a letter in which Mr. J. F.
Brown, the writer, says: I have
bought a bale of good middling cotton
, for you from Mrs. Fanny Beiter, P. O.
Moore, S. C. She is a white woman,
has one child and is a tenant under a
tenant, Mr. Wm, Bailey? Bailey plowed
her land and she paid him in work.
The premium paid on this bale will
certainly help her through the winter."
_
Invigorating to the Pale and Sickly
The Old Standard penernl slrensrthrnitnr tontc,
r.KOVH'S TASTKI,1>S chill TONIC, drives out
Alnl&r iu. enriches the 1>Iog<1.an<l builds up I he system.
A true tonic. l;oi adults and cbildien. 60c
SHERIFF'S SALE.
Under and by virtue of power contained
in execution directed to me, I
will sell before the courthouse door
in the city of Union, S. C., during the
5 legal hours of sale, on Saturday, the
21st day of November, 1014, at 12
o'clock, ?M, the following described
' personal property, to-wit:
Nineteen framed pictures, 3 brass
bedsteads, 1 brass baby crib, 1 cane
t hatrack, 3 mattresses, 1 lot of books
of various kinds, 1 clock, 2 Japanese
i vases, .1 bureaus, 2 bed springs, 5
' rocking chairs, 2 cain chairs, 1 mat1
tress for baby crib, 2 small tables, 1
washstand, 1 card table, 5 pillows, 2
rolls of rugs, 1 black board, 1 lot of
r bedding, sheets, spreads and window
B shades. Levied on and to be sold as
" the property of L. P. Wagoner, at the
suit of Justice M. Thompson, plaintiff
against L. P. Wagener. Terms of
sale, cash.
; J. HAY FA NT,
: Sheriff Union County,
i. Union, S. C., Nov. 4, 1914.
sgSssj Ounces of
fSgSpllq Concentrat
\ *r/$X A t_2_ "
! ounces in tl
/ for a dime,
inferior in <
In Powdered Lye, IV
teen ounces for a dim
ounces in some other dii
One-Fourth More Ly<
jj Every can warranted full sticngtl
1 pure, Concentrated Lye?That's all. Th
j Mendles
' MOST ECO.
L
A big leader for soap mal
|! Can saponifies eight pounds of gi
K soft soap you ever used. That
I other ten cent can. Mendleson's
making the best soap.
Try Mendleson's Lye for other thi
" etting the grease out of sinks and drair
germs, for disinfecting, for treating Jlog^
can oroves that for every use tlicre'3 no
MENDLBSl
PVRC AMU
Get a fourth wore cf the best Lye for or <
UNION COUNTY?V
EAGLE GROCERY Co.,
The W. D. ARTHUR Cc
UNION GROCERY Co.,
UNION COUNTY.
_ B. G. GREGORY, Carlis
L. B. JETER, Santuc, ?
W. G. GREGORY, Unior
II U I.1T>TT'ir' I^nAonilln
Il/t 1J. 1 UUMUOHIIt,
B. L. FOWLER, Union, !
\ R. J. FOWLER, Union, !
I
i big ;
! China and
T
ranBnnHBHBMBi
| Saturday ai
X
X Must go regard
'I; i make room i<
* "
I MILHOUS I
Y
V Phone 76
i A^A
A^A
y ^r ^|r y "y ^ "y ^r
|Use Du
%
| For Sweeping
? Floors and C<
|: down the dust a
% and molhs.
%
!|! 1 Bbl. Lois at 2%
Y */z Bbl. Lots at 3
V
25 Lbs. for One Do
| b A i :
X Furniture &
X
^tr TF
\
Berne Buys
Either99
tere are Twenty Full
pure, strong Solid ;
ed Lye in Mendleson's
You get only sixteen
he cans others sell you
and many of them are
quality to Mendleson's.
lendleson sells you sixe
against the twelve
ne cans.
e-Satfie Old Price
i. No fillers. No adulterants. Just
tree cans solid Lye for a quarter.
0/V'S Lyc\
WOMICAL
ting. The big Twenty-Ounce
rease, making the best hard or
beats the best record of any
Can gives full directions for
ngs?for cleaning-, for scouring, for
is, for driving away dirt and disease
i and caring for poultry. Just one
thing so good as ^
W'S LYE
SfRtiMti
dime at any of the following deadens
Wholesale Dealers.
Union, S. C.
)., Union, S. C.
Union, S. C.
-Retail Dealers. < i?
ile, S. C.
5. C.
l, S. C.
S. C. i J
s. c. r *
s. c.
rvvv v ww v
|ALE|
Gut Glass!
X"
nd Monday |
x
lless of Cost to X
)r Fall stock. |
i*
DRUG CO. |
rHE REXALL STORE V
A-A.A.A^A A A I^II
y T^r^y Vv
stdown |
%
and Cleaning ?
irpels. Keeps i
ind kills germs 1.
S
Y
cents per pound
cents per pound ^ *
liar, delivered ?|>
LEY |
Lumber Co. 1
A A A A A A A A A A A
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