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YOUl'LL LOOK NIPPY When you buy one of our good looking, well wearing, up-to-date, Suits Look as Well as Your Friends There is no reasoh why -you cannot appear as elegantly attired and properously economic as the best of them. Ladies, put your thinking cap on and then come and buy your Winter Outfit to fit it. Satisfactory Clothing ! &artety jBrattb (Elptliga No Money to Waste--No Time to Waste Which exactly describes the condition of the most men in these days of hurry and high prices. We Meet Thse Conditions. Our immense Stock of Men's Clothing was as sembled with a view to quickly satisfying the the busy man and the man with a limited purse. We have goods to suit all, and, considering the prevailing high prices in all lines, you will be astonished at the cheapness. And you'll get what you call for without delay and without Substitution THE NEW IDEA COMPANY, MO R RIS N ESS. Manager. AYE SEED FOR TWO YEARS FROM THIS CROP Of CORN ess Time Required to Save It Now Than to-Scour the Country fr. It at Planting Time in the Spring 7 of 1921-And There Are Other Advantages. The 1919 corn crop is a wonderful rop from which to select seed corn. )ver most of the country it is well eveloped, fully matured, hard and I ound--just the sort of corn that a ellow can bank on for a good stand nd big yields. But it takes time to select seed orn. You are busy. Some other job s calling you before you finish one rou are at. You guess you will not ake the time to select any seed corn o speak of. All right-it's your business. But ;hink ahead a little. Imagine that it is he spring of 1921. The year 1920, say, was a poor corn year. Frost came earl yand nearly al lof the corn was soft. You haven't any that is fit to plant. The busy spring season is at its busiest. A score of things are :alling to be (lone at once. You have o hitch up the horse or crank the car and start scouring the county for some man who has a crib of old corn. Probably you fail to find hini and have to wait while the county agent or sornlerody "sends down Sout " and gets you some hard corn to plant. Some waste of time connected with that process, isn't there? After you get it, perhaps it is unadapted to your locality and yields a poor crop of immature corn. Save for Two or More Years. That is one of the reasons why the corn experts of the United States De partment of Agriculture urge farmers to select out of this year's 'crop enough seed con to meet their needs for two or three years. No farmer, particu laly in the northern potion of the United States, has time not to do it. Still, the mere saving of time is not the only reason. By getting two or three years' supply of seed corn out of a crop like . this, the farmer takes out an insurance policy that he can continue raising a variety of corn that has proved its merits. If he neglects this opportunity of providing himself with a good supply of the right kind of seed, he may have to start over with a variety that he knows nothing about, that may not be adapted to his locality or his land, 1< Why TA E ~Whena f Vulcanizi: Mi more mil< The Hai located al care for 3 perience, We are ii gi up-to-the 3 ment it i: your tire: We arery Service a H. A. STAND ALONE "er Suffering From Headache, Sideache, Backache, and Weak ness, Relieved by Cardin, Says This Texas Lady. Gonzales, Tex.- Mrs. Minnie Phil ot, of this place, writes: "Five years igo I was taken with a pain In my oft side., It was right under. any oft rib. It would commence with an tching and extend up into my left shoulder and on down into my back. By that time the pain would be so levere I crould have to take to bed, md suffered usually about three days ..I suffered this way for three years, m4 got to be a mere skeleton and was so weak I could hardly stand alone. Was not able to go anywhere and had a let my house work go...I suffered awful with a pain in my back and I had the headache all the time. I just was unable to do a thing. My life was a misery, my stomach got in an awful conditio caused from taking so much medicine. I suffered so much pain. I had just about given up all hopes of our getting anything to help me. One day a Birthday Almanac was thrown In my yard. After reading its testimonials I decided to try Car dui, and am so thankful that I did, for I began to improve when on the second bottle...I am now a well woman and feeling fine and the cure has been permanent for it has beet two years since my awful bad health I will always praise and recommenc Cardui." Try Cardul today. E 78 that may bring with it some disease o insect pest, and that, mn any event he will have to experiment with fo several seasons before he knows wha it will do for him and what he mus do with it. Where Every Day Counts' The saving of seed corn from a cro of the right kind is a matter of impor tance everywhere, but more particul arly so in the northern portion of th country. That is where the vicissi tudes of the season are most likely t bring about a soft crop.I There, als< low vitality means the heaviest hand cap. The South, with its long-grou ing season, might sometimes afford corn crop that gets away to a slo' start, but in the North every da counts, from the time the corn is pt in the ground until the crop is safel harvested. Anywhere, however, the so ing of the right kind of seed has IOTIC trow A way Your ew dollars spent oi rig will probably giv 3s. ey Vulcanizing 4 : Harvin Motor Co., rour tires properly. and we guarantee all 1stalling an electric,i minute plant, and wi s impossible to bu: ; by having them vu >repared to give 5 r nd 24 hour Casing! IPEN OCT. 15,:] HA LEY, Pn4 m1 U U , r r-I1 t direct and important'.bearig on fo duction. The Department of Agriculture be lieves that every farmer can better afford to take the time, however much his labor may seen to be needed else, where ,to select at least two years' supply of seed corn from this .year's crop, than to run the risk of being caught, spring after next, with- no' suitable corn to plant, with the re sultant delay, annoyance, and actual reduction of yield. The day or so that the farmer puts in selecting his seed corn. will probably be -the most profitable day's work he does in the whole year. 0 STORE COTTON AID STOP LOSSES Clemson College, October 7.-It is estimated that cotton growers in America are losing every year about $30,000,000 from weather damage to cotton -left unstored and unsheltered. The estimate is conservative, for qvery bale left in the open roses enough "picking" to represent $2.50. Great er losses are frequent. An instance that is not far from typical concerns a bale that was left exposed .to wind and weather for 'six months. The bale lost 76 pounds, which at 23 cents is $17.48. South ern farmers are urged to store their cotton and stop this unnecessary and inexcusable waste. There are now licensed and bond ed warehouses under the United States Warehouse Act, in which cot ton can be stored and receipts ta ken, these receipts being good for cash at banks. Such storing of cot ton carriers cheap insurance and good service. But, whether stored ~1n govern t ment warehouses or not, cotton should be protected. There are commercial warehouses available, and it is possible for farmers indi Vidually or cooperativ'ely to have privately owned storage facilities at reasonable cost. Store your cotton e now. - -o ADVERTISE IN THE TIMES NOTICE OF DISCHARGE a I, will apply to the Judge of Pro bate for Clarendon County on the 13th v day of October 1919 at 11 o'clock a. Y m. for Letters of Discharge as Admin it Istrator of the estate of Samuel E. y Johnson, deceased. Oscar P. Johnson, - Administrator. a New Zion, S. C. Sept. 11, 1919. Old Tires? 1 First-Class Syou 1,000 30. will be and we can 11 years ex [of our work. nodern and i th this equip- i rn or injure leanized. inute Tube >ervice. [919 )prietor.