SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM Keeping pace with the South The first American locomotive to enter ac tual service was the "Be$t F^riend" of 1830. Built in a New York foundry, shipped by sea to Charleston, it hauled the first passenger train on what is now the Southern Railway |\ System. Jf Twenty-two hundred locomotives, some of them fifty times as heavy as this famous ^ pioneer engine, and 70,000 cars, operating on K 8,300 miles of Southern Railway System lines, are now doing the work that was be gun by the "Best Friend." From the Ohio and the Potomac to the Gulf, from the Atlant ic to the Mississippi, the far flung rails of the Southern reach across twelve states with 40,000,000 inhabitants. The Southern serves the South ? from the northern gateways at Washington, Cincin nati and Louisville ? and the western gate ways at St, Louis and Memphis ? to the ocean ports of Norfolk, Charleston, Savannah, Brunswick and Jacksonville ? and the Gulf ports of Mobile and New Orleans. Operated by men of the South, who have been bred in its traditions to understand its problems and its needs, the Southern keeps pace with the South. The investment in its properties is now more than $710,000,000, - of which $285,000,000 has been expended in the past two decades. W ith the continued cooperation of the people } of the South, we will be enabled to com mand the capital for the greater transpor tation facilities that Southern development will inevitablv demand. P Southern Railway System last year spent in the South $20,000,000 more than it received from the South. ?* j ' /i ?J THE "BEST FRIEND" G^Ihe SOUTHERN SERVES THE SOOTH NOTICE perior Court of Polk County for John M. Carson, for the location To Zeb Carson and Lelia Car- the appointment of three ap- of a school building, son: praisers to lay off and assess This the 30th day of August, You are hereby notified that the value of not more than two 1923. on Monday the 1st day of Oct- acres of the land in Green's E. W. S. COBB, Superintendent ober, 1923, the undersigned will Creek or Columbus township of Public Instruction, Polk apply to the Clerk of the Su- conveyed to you by the wiM of County. The New Models in Anderson and Chevro Motor Cars axe ready for delivery. Deliveries can be made to purchasers within 2 weeks from date order is placed. The new Anderson Coachbilt Aluminum Six models give the utmost in luxury, Power and comfort. A substantial reduction is announced on all Chevrolet models. USED CAR BARGAINS Stripdown Ford, bucket seats - - $100 Dodge Touring, 1921 - - - $500 Dodge Roadster, 1922 - - - $300 Ford One Ton Truck - - - - $150 If nothing in this list meets your Requirements tell us and we will get it for you. P. H. BAILEY Phone 52 or 57 - SALUDA, N. C. SPARTANBURG'S SECOND GREAT Next T uesday, Sept. 25, to Saturday, Oct. 6. 4 Grand Prizes to be Given Away 2 New Chevrolet Touring Cars 2 New Ford Touring Cars One Chevrolet Touring Car and One Ford Touring Car will be given t out-of-town shoppers and one Ford Touring Car and one Chevrolet TouriJ Car will be given to Spartanburg city shoppers. ' . ? Spartanburg's second big Trade Event to be held under the auspices of the Retail Merchants Bureau of the Chamber of Commerce will start next Tuesday, September 25th and end Saturday October 6th, at 5 o'clock, it will mark one of the greatest merchandise events in Spartanburg's history . Following is a list of merchants who will participate in this great Trade Event. Ligon's Drug Store White-Parks-Belk Co. Nissen's Shoe Store Greenewalds's Inc. Wright-Scruggs Shoe Co. Aug. W. Smith Co. Floyd L. Liies Co. Herring Furniture Co. Edward A. Farley H. H. Sheridan's Army and Navy Store Harry Price Hobbs-Henderson Co. Myerson's Inc. Piggly-Wiggly Baker's Inc. Ernest Burwell Wallace DuPre Spartanburg Hardware Co. The Elite Outlook Cloak & Suit Co. Cohen's Co. Spigel Bros Cfty Service Station Standard Cl<>ak Co. Littlejohn Bros. Wilson's Drug Store Dupre's Book Store Becker's Bakery Kennedy's Drug Store Hardy Bros. Magnolia Oil Co. Mimnaugh's Shoe Store Ballenger's Paint Store Carolina Cash Co. Maxwell Bros. & Jones. Hammond, Brown Wall Co. The Fashion Vogel & Son Cannon & Fetzer Co. Paul E. Crosby Farmer & Long G. R. Kinney Co. G. D. Kinney Co C. D. Entrekin Sanders Racket Store Economy Shoe Shop The Chapman Rogers & Layton Willard's Filling Station. Bishop's Soda Co. City Motor Car Co. J. W. White S. C. Gas & Elec. Co. Thom & Rumble (formerly Miss Lillie B Thom) Odom's Battery Service Co. H. Lee Smith Montgomery & Crawford Exceptional Values For Spartanburg's Second Great TRADE EVENT Beginning] Next Tuesday, Sept. 25th We are listing below a few of the unusual values that we will offer during Spartan burg's Second Trade Event which begins next Tuesday. One Big Lot of Men's Fine Worsted Suits Specially (TOC.OO Priced Knit Ties Men's Handkerchiefs 50c values 25c valoes 3 for. $1.00 per dozen $1.00 % Children's Hose IS per cent Reducton 50c values on all suit cases, hand All sizes, per pair 25c. bags, trunks and all lug 5 pair for $1.00 gage. ? i 1 1 DP ^ In addition to the above specials we are offering a most complex 1 ^ Hart Schaffner & Marx and Fashion Park Clo&es, Florsheim . ^ Stetson and Dobbs Hats, Manhattan Shirts and other quality m dise. i GREENEWALD'S INCORPORATED ] \ Men's Dept. Spartanburg,