University of South Carolina Libraries
^tumorous Ilrpartmrnt An Expert Diver.?A South Dakota congressman tells a story of the old coaching days when a certain Pete McCoy, one of the most skilful of the old stage drivers, operated a conveyance that made a circuit of Deadwood, Carbonate. Spearftsh and Bear Gulch. Pete was famous for his fast, furious, daring driving, savs Lippincott'a Magazine. One day, the story runs, Pete tore into Carborate on his usual dead run. Up to the hotel door clattered the stage. There, suddenly, as it stopped, one of the four horses fell dead. "Kinder sudden, that. Pete," said a bystander. "Nuthin' sudden about it." said Pete. "That hoss died at the top of the hill, ten miles back, but I wasn't goin" to let him down until I got to the reg'lar stoppin* place." Suspicious.?"How did the accident happen?" asked the reporter on the scene of the railway horror, according to the Philadelphia Ledger. "Somebody stopped the train by pulling the airbrake cord," answered the conductor, who was among the survivors. "So the second section ran into us. . It will take six hours to clear the track so that we can go ahead." "Six hours?" screamed a passenger who had not yet spoken. "Six hours? But I was to have been married today!" "Have you any idea who pulled the rope?" continued the reporter, disregarding the interruption. "I didn't have till this minute," whispered the conductor. "But what's the matter with telling the detective to watch that fellow that just butted in?" Weakened by Travel.?A new minister in a rural district who wished to make the acquaintance of the members of his congregation, says the Pittsburgh Chronicle-Dispatch, and also to discover whether they were pleased with his discourses, met an old farmer whose face he recognized as one who had attended the church the previous Sunday ana. slopping mm, said: "Mr. Brown, how did you like my sermon last Sunday?" "Well, parson," replied the old man, "you see, I didn't have a fair chance to Judge. Right in front of me was old Miss Smith and the rest of that gang with their mouths wide open Just a swallerln* down all the best of your sermon; 'n what reached me, parson, was purty poor stufT, purty poor stuff." Would Run In the Bunchy?Frank B. Kellog tells the story of a forlorn man who was brought before a western magistrate charged with drunkenness and disorderly conduct. When asked what he had to say for himself, he gazed pensively at the judge and launched forth: "Your honor, 'man's inhumanity to man makes countless thousands mourn." I'm not so debased as Swift, as profligate as Byron, as dissipated as Poe, or so debauched as?" "That will do," thundered the magistrate. "Thirty days; and. officer, take a list of those names and run 'em in. They're as bad a lot as he Is." ?New York Globe. No Robbery*?The question of the wedding fee is one that ministers are apt to leave to the generosity of the bridegroom, says the New York Post. | Sometimes this happy person is too impecunious iu p?y uu?> or >.o uuvi anything as its equivalent. This was not true, however, of the bridegroom who took the minister aside at the close of the ceremony and said: "Say, parson, I'm sorry, but the fact is I am too near broke to pay you any cash for this job, but I am a gas fitter, and I'll tell you what I'll do if you want me to. I'll go down to your cellar and fix your gas meter so that it won't register but half of what you say." An Old Man's Fate.?A war veteran's wife, whose shrewish temper was well known throughout the state, demanded that an old servant, who had served with her husband in the war, be dismissed, says the New York Times. "Sam," said the old man, "go to your room and pack your things and leave?go away." "Me?I can go!" he said, in an ecstasy of gratitude. Then suddenly his manner changed, as with the utmost compassion he added: "But you, my poor old friend, you must stay." Punctured.?Private Yeoman?Wonder what's wrong with the bally 'oss? 'E went off all right, an' now 'e won't move. Small Boy (pointing to the spurs)? Did yer touch 'im with them things? Private Yeoman?Course I did. 'E? Small Boy (interruptingly) ? 'E's punctured. guv-nor?that's what's wrong with 'im.?Tit-Bits. He Got There.?The man was reading the front page of the newspaper as he walked across the busy street. "G he mused, "I'd like to get my name in big type on the front page of a newspaper." Just then a street car bumped into the man. He got his name on the front page of the next edition of the paper. But he missed the story. Told What He Wanted.?The newly arrived citizen from Italy was trying his best to buy a colander, but could not make the clerk understand what he wanted. The clerk showed him several kinds of pans, but at each he shook his head. Finally he got an idea. "Give-a me dis-a kind," he said: "Ze water go ahead, ze macaroni stop." Explicit.?"Are you of the opinion. Jones," asked a slim-looking man of his companion, "that Dr. Smith's medicine does any good?" "Not unless you follow the directions." "What are the directions?" "Keep the bottle tightly corked." For Immediate U?e.?An old Rip Van Winkle of a fellow went into a country drug store and asked for some powder. "Face, gun or bug?" asked the clerk, leaning far over the counter. "Bug.'* replied the old man, "and ne'an to mind about wrappin' it uj>? just blow it on my whiskers. At the Boiling Point.?The cat settled himself luxuriously in front of the kitchen range and began to purr. Little Dolly, who was strange to the ways of cats, regarded her with horror. "Oh, gran'ma. gran'ma!" she cried. "Come here quick. The cat's begun to boil." EDITORIAL VIEWPOINT What Various South Carolina NewsPapers Think of Various Things. England may have plenty of food, but Canada Is commandeering wheat Just for luck.?Charleston Post. ? v Very Grave Matter. Out In Tennessee a firm has been convicted of shipping whisky in cofi fins. The court thought It was a very grave matter.?Anderson Dally Mail. Warm Territory. Loo9e-en-Gohelle is the name of one of the towns which the Germans occupied in the present war. Judging from the name things must be pretty warm around there.?Greenville Piedmont. Another View. We notice that Winthrop college will ask for its annual new dormitory again this year. Winthrop is a fine institution, but it is about big enough for one college.?Newberry Herald and News. A Worthy Cause. Winthrop college will ask the legislature for 1100,000 for a new dormitory, and she ought to get it. The present enrollment of Winthrop is 900. and 600 were turned away this year for lack of room. The state must not stint her daughters in educational facilities.?Newberry Observer. The Value of Life. Your Uncle Andy Carnegie was 80 years old Sunday. With his many millions, he would no doubt gladly exchange places today with any poor and respectable boy of thirteen. Which shows Just how much life ought to be worth to a boy. Pity he does not always realize it.?Newberry Observer. Mam Ki*firAAfl All small towns in the south are much alike. In all of them are prosperous white men who need the assistance of one or more 1i)lack men. If these white men are so fortunate as to find a negro who will work, and who can be trusted to do a simple task without direct supervision, they cling to him through the years, forgiving his Impudence, overlooking his vices, paying his fines and generally acknowledging the fact that they are under bondage to the black rascal. The natural and logical result of all this is that the negro becomes lawless. Pick out the "mean" negroes of any community, and you will find that their cussedness is but the outgrowth of the knowledge that a good white man stands ready to pay their fines and keep them off the gang. It is a bad situation, but white men assert that they cannot help it. The one time slave has become the master merely because he will do nasty, disagreeable or hard work that white men feel above doing.?Fountain Inn Tribune. I 1 War and the Tariff. j The main object of Republican tar- i riffs have been to secure the American | market exclusively for American man- i ufacturers with very little concern | about what happened to the American s consumer in the meanwhile. It so hap- j pens that as soon as a Democratic ( tariff, whose main object Is to safeguard the average American pocketbook, is safely Inscribed on the statute books, the European war begins and destroys the chance of foreign competition in American markets so that the manufacturer gets just about the same advantage under the Democratic tariff as he did under the Republican tariff. Democratic tariffs are framed with the American consumer as the main chance; Republican tariffs are framed with the American manufacturer as the big idea. The result of the war has been to change a Democratic tariff into one that serves Republican ends. Meanwhile it is amusing to hear Republicans begin their ancient wail about lack of prosperity that the country suffers under a Democratic tariff.?Columbia Record. * * Politeness. On two occasions recently the writer has been on train carriages that were crowded, and on each occasion a large number of those in the carriages were working men. Their clothes were of the coarser texture, which bespeaks their occupations. And on both occasions there entered these cars a number of ladies, who looked 'round in vain for empty seats. Straightway these men, perhaps tired after working at the loom or in some machine shop, or at some other form of endeavor commonly known as labor, arose and offer- i I -J lj ntlal, . ru uiru acaia. kjiitr vuuiu iiui uui u kjji that some of those who say that politeness is disappearing in the south could have been in these cars. It cannot be successfully denied that much of the old-time punctilo has gone, and neither can it be said that all the former politeness is yet extant. But when men who are tired arise from their seats as these men did, a true southerner cannot but feel glad. Oh, politeness is more or less foolish, some folks say. But this is not true. Even in a busy and commercial age when men pride themselves upon common sense and practicalness, this form of chivalry has its prettiness. It should be preserved. Let the useless and the meaningless observances pass into romantic fiction, if you choose, but let this attractive virtue of true politeness remain with us. Consider the other person?that is courtesy. Now it sometimes happens that persons to whom courtesy is shown are not appreciative; that they impose upon it. In that case, one scarcely knows what to do. But the general rule?the* principle yet applies. Be courteous, be polite, and thus make yourself feel better, and make others feel better too. Possibly we are old and fogy in our notions, but we cannot avoid such notions. Politeness, or the broader term, courtesy, is pretty; it is more than that. It just makes life iiiuir \M?i in living, uii'UK? iiiiii mf t*p:c existence, and .adds a little attractive color and sentiment to the daily routine.?Greenville News. A FINE EXAMPLE York County Farmer Began With Nothing?Now on Easy Street. About seven years ago, John Allen, a grandson of Henry Fudge of West Main street, bought a farm of 100 acres on credit in the Edgmoor section. Today he owns that farm and does not owe a dollar in the world. Mr. Allen, who is about 31 years old. is a living illustration of the fact that if the young men stay on the farm and work they will make an independent living. Too many young men of the farm dock to the cities in the hope of bettering their condition. As a matter of fact, the man on the farm today is the most independent citizen of us all. Mr. Allen works two plows. He hires & negro man, his wife and a girl, and with these he managed his farm the past seven years and realized a profit of $2,500, it is alleged. He sowed 13* acres to cotton and made 19 bales. He also made 40 bushels of wheat, 96 gallons of molasses and has 3 hogs in a pen which will total 1,300 pounds of meat. He hasn't bought a thing the past year except what his wife paid for with butter, chickens and eggs. He aid noi use much guano, and what he did use he paid cash for. Wis negro helper made 10 bales of cotton, besides' raising foodstuff for himself and stock. Mr. Allen has all his machinery and stock paid for and, better still, paid for out of the profits of his farming operations, not with borrowed money. Starting seven years ago with absolutely nothing, this man shows the people what can be done by hard work and the use of brains.?Rock Hill Record. PIGEONS FOR MARKET Squabs Can be Raised to Advantage in South Carolina. The climate of South Carolina is Ideal for growing pigeons, according to the poultry husbandman of Clemson college. The winters of this section are not too cold, nor are the summers too hot for the production of squabs on a commercial scale. It Is only in the moulting period that the number of eggs and young pigeons will be decreased. No special pigeon house Is necessary In this state. An open-front chicken house, 10 feet long and 8 feet wide, and with a height of 7 feet in front and 5 feet in back, will accommodate 30 pairs of pJgeons. The house should face south and should have the east, north and west sides boarded up tightly, as described in Farmers' rv,>,^oo ?t,,l1oHn Ifi nf Plem ivtaviiiift wuiov uv?..w?.. - ?i w- ?.?? son college. To complete the plant, erect in front of the house a frame 16 feet long. 100 feet wide, and 6 feet 6 inches high, using 2x2 inch posts and 1x3 inch boards. Cover the frame with 1-inch mesh wire netting. This "fly" gives the pigeons the necessary exercise and the small wire keeps sparrows out. Good varieties are White King, White Homers, White Swiss Mondaines, and Red, Yellow or Splashed Carneaux. White pigeons are preferred because they can be sold alive at good prices when a surplus of stock arises. For some time the demand for good breeding stock will take care of the supply and the squabs can also be killed, chilled, packed in ice and sold in Atlanta and other markets. GARDEN OF THE BALKANS Poor Man'* Paradise?Beggars Were Scarce and Poverty Unknown. "Serbia was Just winning recognition as an undeveloped agricultural bonanza at the.outbreak of the war; and the propaganda which the Serbians had pushed for years and years to attract French and British capital to their country was on the point of bearing fruit," says a bulletin just issued by the National Geographical society, in which the economic condition of the Serbia of pre-war days is reviewed. "Serbia has been justly known as 'the garden of the Balkans,' ind in its valleys are found some of :he richest soils of Europe, not excepting the 'black earth' belt of Rusda and the verdant Frluli. Unlike Russia's black earth belt, which has seen losing Its fertility, so that some jf the northern provinces are out anking those of the favored south, :he Serbian lands have barely begun :o give their wealth to the farmer. "The sturdy middle kingdom of the Balkans is composed of a nation of 'armers?soldier-farmers, for every Serbian is a soldier?and manufacturng industry has hardly appeared imong them. The fabricated products lsed in Serbia, and these were only of he simplest and most necessary kinds everywhere in the land outside of the eapital city, were almost wholly made jp of imports by way of the Hunga-ian frontier and by way of the Greek curt, Saloniki. The wealth of the and came from its farms and its grazing fields, and from these sources jut a tithe was taken of that which night have been produced with the nvestment of the needed capital. "Among other characterizations of his much-nicknamed country, that of the poor man's paradise' tells a fuller jtory than any other. Before the out)reak of the war, which by now has iwept away crops, live stock and tillers of the soil, Serbia, throughout its ength and breadth, was more truly i land of sufficiency than any other and in Europe. There was no probem of an urban or Industrial proletarat. Beggers were scarce and helpess poverty all but unknown. Even he Serbian agricultural laborer has seen said to be as well off as the small 'armer in England. More fertility of soil, and more picturesque beauty of andscape is found in the middle kinglom than in any other Balkan state. "Pigs formed the chief element of Serbian wealth. They were corn-fed pigs, like those of our western plains, ind were fattened in autumn and summer on the beech-mast and icorns of the extensive Serbian 'orests. Despite keen American competition and the unfavorable tariffs pf neighbors, Serbian pork products 'ound an ever increasing export. The pigs are mostly of a native breed, pure vhite or black, though some foreign preeds have been introduced during ecent years. In relation to its popuation, Serbia possessed more pigs md sheep at the time of the war's putbreak than any other country in Rurope, having more than 1,000,000 pigs and about 3,600,000 sheep. 3oats, also, are raised in great numpers, and the favored Serbian cheeses ire made of the milk of goats and ;wes. "Methods of farming and stockrasing have never risen above the [primitive in this land of plenty, ivhich 'tickled* with the peasant's poe always 'laughs back with a hardest.' Indian corn, the basis of the diet of the Serbian farmer and of [he Serbian livestock, is the principal prop of the land. The normal annual vield exceeds more than 5.000,000 Pushels. Important quantities of ivheat, flax, hemp and tobacco have [peen regularly grown. In 1910, the mgar-beet was Introduced into the crops of Serbia, and this new industry ;rew with astonishing rapidity, until it threatened a future serious competition for the beet-sugar in lustry of Austria. All the fruits of central Europe thrive in the middle Ralkan kingdom, and from one of hem. the plum, is produced a nationil drink, called shlivovitsa. Sericulure and beekeeping were encourag C AN t T\ jir.n SUTAtOOT ) *'"'( Otic ) *V'. *\ loo (10*1 J// r? ] .1 vV*'A ??lloni nmjc,. " v '' y.'typs ?.,* Showing conditions about the e the express agent as to what would drawn by Mr. Grover Page of Gastor ed by the state, and added materially to the people's welfare. "Lack of capital has kept the little kingdom from taking a prominent part In the world of commerce; and, until recent years, this lack of capital was due to the facts that the outside world knew little of Serbia, and that little had been placed before It In a way unfavorable to this people's Interests. The riches of Serbia were unguessed, and grave rumors concerning the security of life and property In the Btate were widely printed in the world's press. Austrlans were among the first to take advantage of the country's richness, and Germans. Bulgarians and Englishmen followed them." Coins Short in Paris.?Notices have Kaaw rv/\otnrl (n manv t\t V( a Parisian uccu pv/ovcu SIA 111U1IJ V/i. tltv A IV* lomil cafes that patrons who do not have the right change to pay for refreshments will have to accept postage stamps or checks for change for any sum less than ten sous, says an Associated Press dispatch. This is another indication 'of the scarcity of coppers, which numerous collections for charitable purposes have withdrawn temporarily from circulation, and the fact that since small money became scarce there has been a tendency on the part of the people to cling to what they have. Some people are said to be hoarding coppers because they are afraid they will get entirely out of them, and others, it is charged, are collecting them with the less worthy motive of making five francs premium on every hundred francs in copper coin delivered at certain confidential points. It is the old story of the Germans trying to drain France of its copper. The real reason is thought in official circles to be simply that the absence of gold overworks all the minor denominations, copper and nickel, as well as silver. The mint is handicapped by the mobilizing of some of its machines for other urgent work for the national defense and the copper coinage fell last month to 100,000 francs. Wife Made Pet of Snakes.?Zephany Osteen of Preston got a divorce from Sarah Osteen because she had joined the Church of the Followers, known by some as the "Snake Eaters," because of their belief that they could handle poisonous reptiles without harm to themselves, according to a Pratt, Kan., dispatch. Osteen said that often his wife would fondle her baby in one arm and a rattlesnake in the other arm at the same time. He said that while they lived on a claim several of the socalled prophets died from the effects of snake bites. A brother was badly bitten and once Mrs. Osteen incurred the enmity of his snakeship and he set his poisonous fangs into her flesh. R. H. Brown, a minister of that church, swore that Mrs. Osteen handled large snakes often and when her children were in danger. He denounced her as a false prophet and explained to the court their belief. SMOAK-BROWN CO. HORSES, MULES. VEHICLES. THAT NEW IiUGGY f/v ?*? ?? tkln #?119 xuai xuu iiiiciiu iu wu/ nuo iau . Why not take a look at the TYSON & JONES before you decide on the kind. The TYSON & JONES Buggies have been sold on this market for years, and they have always measured right up to the Highest Standard of Quality for the price. They look well and wear well in use. They are built of best materials and we sell them at the Lowest Prices possible for a Buggy of like grade. YES, we believe you will find it to YOUR interest to see US before You buy a Buggy. You'll like the good points of the TYSON & JONES if you'll look it over. We'll be glad to show YOU. Come around. SMOAK-BROWN COMPANY SERYICE-That's It . It is a well known fact that when it comes to Fire Insurance, there is no difference in the rate charged per $100 by all the reputable companies, but it is a fact that the rate charged by agents who are not on the job?the kind who are writing Insurance principally for the commission?could often be reduced materially if certain changes were made and the agent who knows, and iH not in the business solely for commissions, will, at least advise his clients how a rate can be reduced. Service of this kind is and has always been my specialty, and I have saved hundreds of dollars for my clients. Some of them, in fact the majority, have appreciated it, but some have not. but I will continue the policy because It Is right. I do not ask for business on any other ground than value received. One of the most serious handicaps of the business is that after a minimum rate has been se cured and policies Issued correctly, the novice can issue a policy Just as well as the expert, and some lnsurees will give him business from various motives. MUTUAL BENEFIT INSURANCE What has been said of Kire Insurance above does not apply to Life Insurance. No agent can give you as much for your money in Life Insurance as I can in a Mutual Benefit Policy and I can prove this claim to your satisfaction if you will ask to be shown. Wise people look before they leap. SAM M. GRIST W All kinds of Typewriter Supplies ?Pnpei, Curbons, Ribbons?At The Enquirer Office. 'mj&i 11 *1 ihi J ( ,0?N'T clo*C\ ' " ^^i<it y' ^ ^ The Tar Heels in Clover. xpress office up to the time when Magiis [ happen if any more liquor should be d lia, and reproduced In the Gastonia Gazei Word Mother His Salvation.?The word "mother," which saves lives and spares ihe honor of innocents in the melodrama, has actually restored reason to a soldier in France, whose mind had been left a blank by shell shock, rays an Associated Press dispatch from London. A concert party had gone over from England to cheer up the sick, and one of their number, a well known tenor, sang the old favorite. "Mother Machree." Among the audience was a nerve-Himiierru auiuier wuu came uui of a bombardment not only blind but almost an idiot. He could understand THE OLD i Roi BAKING Absolute No Alum?No I J i The RAYO LAMP ! SAVES TROUBLE : YOU don't have to spend the greater part of your time cleaning it?and won- J dering why it won't burn. The Rayo is simple in construction and in design. It lights without removing the shade and gives the best sort of light?the kind that won't hurt your eyes. ifoyd Lamps Rayo lamps arc an ornament to any home, They require very little attention ? yet always add to the attractiveness of the room The Rayo is the symbol of efficiency ? economy? ( convenience Use Aladdin Security Oil or Diamond White I . Oil to obtain best results I J in Oil Stoves, Lamps and j Heaters. < ?] The Rayo is only one of our c many products that briny comfort and economy to the farm i Ask for them bv name. ;i Matchless Liquid Gloss j ' Standard Hand Separator Oil i. Stand*, vi Household I i I nkriranf | t Parowax > Eureka Harness Oil Mica Axle Grease > ( If your dealei does not carry ' these, write to our nearest station t a STANDARD OIL COMPANY .1 (New Jeraey) j BALTIMORE Waahinfton, D. C Charlotte, N. C. Norfolk. Va. Charleston. W. Va. Richmond. Va Charleaton. S. C. V Iv f v*itrate Qulnn gave warning through elivered to aliens. This cartoon was tte of last Tuesday. nothing, babbled meanlnglessly and had to be treated like an infant. He was still blind when taken to the concert. The word "mother" recurred in the song and the soldier caught at it. When the song was finished, he was still murmuring the word to himself. But It proved the key to his memory. He began to recall detached incidents about himself and later recovered both his mind and his sight. Singers visiting the hospitals say mai me wounaea iiKe jony songs cither absurd or of the old fashioned rollicking kind. They have a particular dislike for the purely patriotic song that has no humor in it. RELIABLE rAL POWDER ly Pure i Phosphate ' CIGA RS and PIPES IT IS A LITTLE E/VRLY, possibly, but If you have a gentleman friend who Is a smoker, there Is nothing you could give him as a Christmas Souvenir that would be more pleasing than a BOX OF CIGARS or a PIPE. You can't go wrong on the Quality of the Cigars you buy if you buy them at THIS STORE. We know that Our Cigars are good, because our customers?smokers?tell Us this is true. IX PIPES? We have a dandy line, ranging in price from 25 CTS. to $0.00?Briers. Calabashes and Mcerchattma?Call and let. us show You our Pipe line?You will find choosing easy?Only governed bv the Drice vou wish to Day. Se lect early for best choice. YORK DRUG STORE Send The Enquirer your orders or high grade Commercial Stationery, 3ooklets, Law Cases, etc. BUGGIESAre we selling Buggies? You can aet we are. Sold them so fast last nonth that we got out. Have plenty 'or selection now. We must have the | SOODS and the PRICE or we ceralnly wouldn't be selling them like xe are. If you are thinking of buying < i Buggy. Now or Later, see us before mying. It is to your interest. Yes. we sell Wagons?Piedmonts in<l Xlssons?Roth Guaranteed. FARM TOOLS AND IMPLEMENTS See us for Disc and Drag Harrows, D liver Plows, Etc. See us for Wire Fencing, if you want the Best. IUCE JIEAL, ETC. Fattening hogs? See us for RICE BRAN and MILL FEED. Also see us for FLOUR?Best qualties at Lowest Prices. TIME AND SEE US? Always glad to see you and we'll do jur best to make you comfortable. CARROLL BROS. TAX NOTICE?1015 Dffice of the County Treasurer of York County. York. S. C.. Scot. 16. 1916. NOTICE is hereby given that the TAX BOOKS for York county vill be opened on FRIDAY, the 15TH DAY OF OCTOBER, 1915, and remain .pen until the 31ST DAY OF DECEMBER, 1915, for the collection of STATE, JOUNTY. SCHOOL and LOCAL TAXES, for the fiscal year 1915, with?ut penalty; after which day ONE PER ENT penalty will be added to all paynents made in the month of JANUVRY. 1916, and TWO PER CENT penilly for all payments made in the nonth of FEBRUARY, 1916, and SEVEN PER CENT penalty will be idded to all payments made from the ST DAY OF MARCH, 1916 to the 5TH DAY OF MARCH, 1916, and afer this date all unpaid taxes will go nto executions and all unpaid single foils will be turned over to the sev lal Magistrates for prosecution in ac:ordunce with law. For the convenience of taxpayers, 1 vill attend the following places on the lays named; And at Yorkvllle, from Monday, November 22d, until Friday, the 31st day >f December. 1915, after which date he penalties will attach as stated ibove. Note.?The Tax Books are made up >y Townships, and parties writing ibout Taxes will always expedite maters if they will mention the Townihip or Townships in which their roperty or properties are located. HARRY E. NEIL, **- You will find All kinds of Typevriter Ribbons, Carbon Paper, Typevriter Papers at The Enquirer Office, tfail Orders filled promptly. SHINGLES THIS WEEK WE received a carload of HEART CYPRESS SHINGLES? 4x18 Inches?They are so good looking that even a boy would not object oriously to being paddled with one of them. IF YOU NEED SHINGLES and want a SHINGLE that will be on your roof for years to come, buy and put on u HEART CYPRESS?they last alr.-ost Indefinitely?they're the best you can buy in Wood Shingles?almost as good as the very best Iron. We can Interest you with the price. See u*. LUMBER, ETC. When von want LUMBER?Rough lor DRESSED, oh LUMBER PRODUCTS. See US before YOU BUY. BUILDERS' HARDWARE? Need any? We can furnish you anything from a Nail to the finest Door Locks and Metal Trimmings. See us for what You want. Prices Just right. JNO. R. LOGAN Dorsett's Cafe AND LUNCH COUNTER IS NOW OPEN AND READY TO 8ERVE ALL KINDS OF GOOD THING8 TO EAT AT ALL HOURS We wish to announce that we have secured the services of Mr. Gaines MahafTey, a restaurant man formerly with the famous "Gem Restaurant" in Charlotte, who will have charge of our CAFE and LUNCH COUNTER. We can serve anything that Is good to eat ROYAL PRESSING CLUB. We Invite you to Join our PRESSING CLUB. Five Suits Cleaned and Pressed Each Month for $1.00. When you want your Clothes Cleaned and Pressed RIGHT, send them to the ROYAL PRESSING CLUB. R. D. DORSETT, Prop. urni V FROM AH OVl WE GET LETTERS LIKE TH] Gentlemen:? Enclosed you will find a two please send me one of your catal I have just begun using Luzli best I ever used. Can't praise i special pleasure in recommending Youri IR. SAVE THE COUPONS out of your beautiful and useful presents. Beg THE REILY-TA? NEW ORLE REAL ESTATE LOOK! Now Isn't This a Nice Selection? The J. K. Uo|>e I Mace: 70 acres, near Tirzah, on Rock Hill and Clay Hill and Yorkville and Fort Mill roads. < 6-room dwelling: large barn; 2 tenant J houses and other buildings: 2 wells? , one at house and other at barn. Adjoins T. M. Oates, F. E. Smith and < Mrs. Olenn. This is something nice. < See ME QUICK. j The U. T. Carson Place: 186 acres; i 8-room dwelling; 3-room tenant | house; large barn; crib, etc. Plenty i of wood. Adjoins W. R. Carroll and j others. Now is your time to see me. I Two Tracts?One 63 acres and the other 60 acres?about 6 miles from 1 Yorkville on McConnellsville-Chester 1 road. First tract has 4-room dwell- 1 ing; barn, crib and cotton house. Other tract has one tenant house. Each i tract watered by spring and branch, i Plenty of timber. Good, strong land, i and the price is right. Better see me. < Town Property: My offerings here < are very attractive. Can suit you elth- , er in a dwelling or a beautiful lot in almost any part of Town on which to 1 erect one. Let me show you. ^ Geo. W. Williams < REAL ESTATE BROKER. W 8end The Enquirer your orders < For high grade Commercial Stationery, ( looklets, Law Caaea. etc. a U MOLASSE Red S mm HorseandMule] Hf It's something the horses and fl|ygr appetite?starts the saliva ri Far superior to an all grain f W/jk mules a treat, and at the same ti mm Our RED SHIRT (first grade) H contains Corn, Oats, Ground Alfa and pure cane molasses, and analy W Protein 10% i Fat ?% t Fibre i HEDHOWr HORSE i MClf MOUSSES ^ 12% l Carbohydrates 65%, I SWAMP FOX HORSE 4 MULE MOLASSES FEED I PERFECTION HORSE & MULE FEED fljgj; $ Protein 12%; Fat 2%; Fibro 12% I Carbohyd i grain and (round Alfalfa Meal. | RED SHIRT E x First Grade: A balanced ration containln s keeps them in rood condition. Increases the it at a reduced cost of feedinr. Contains frc [D Ground Alfalfa, Pure Cane Molasses and & ? Fibre 12%: Carbohydrates 59%. | PIEDMONT DAIRY FEED I MT SHIRT HOC FEED W manufacture also HED SHIRT 8crstch ] BR aEVEN EGGS AWEETHEW MASH Rice, Cottonseed Meal, Cow Peas, Meat MA Protein 18%; Fat 4%; Fibre 12%; Ca As shown on the bars in our ad. nearly i vNXyfe- products, eren to the bays and twine. for Oats, Com, Wheat, Alfalfa Hi We also carry a full st? ^ AND ST] /S ^ Our feeds as shown ?77 iTN / y Vk ?n scientific principl l %/f m \\ Vastest nourishmei I w/a , \\ cost. Let as shei I 1} cut y?ur feed bill lL Jc J Colony i ( CHARLES1 "00-y! My Corn-n!" m H-m, Use 'Gets-It.' 1 Then You'll Have No Corne to Bumpt Your Corne Will Come "Clean Off," Quickl Did you ever see a corn peel off after you've used "Gets-It" on it? a Well, it's a moving-picture for your life! And you hardly do a thing to it. "Sore Corn Bomped . Vg! Put a little "Gets-It" on, it dries at once. There's nothing to stick. Put Bhoes and stockings on right over it. No pain, no fuss, 48 hours?corns gone. "Gets-It" never hurts the true flesh, never makes toes sore. If you have tried almost everything else for corns, you will be much more surprised to see how quickly and easily your corns and calluses will come right off with "Gets-It." Quit limping and wrinkles. Try "Gets-It" tonight on that corn, callus, wart or bunion, and you'll be glad you read this. "Gets-It" is sold by all druggists, 26c a bottle, or sent direct by EX Lawrence & Co., Chicago. 00* Typewriter Ribbons?All kinds? \ At The Enquirer Office. A Before the "Stroll"- mfflj1! I 2 In 1 m I Gives the * best shine lHMPVWH B Does It easiest If M 1*F. F. MtyCa,Ui, m K2Li,l JUBS i/R the oUU l HI [S ONE 1 Shelbyville. Tenn., 1 November 7th, 1915. I cent stamp for which you will ^ ogs for Premiums. * anne Coffee and can say 'tis the t enough. Will take it to all my friends. ^ b very truly, ? Mra W. 8. McCONNELL, F. D. No. 9, Shelbyville, Tenn. LVZIANNE Cans, and get these in saving them TODAT. LOR COMPANY I LANS, LA. REAL ESTATE AGENCY FOR SALE Store House and Lot?In Sharon; lot 90x200 feet; double store room, 4bx&u reel, ruuy equippea wun sneiving and counters, ready for occupancy, and in good condition. Known as Shannon & Hope store. A real bargain for quick buyer. 149 Acre Farm?1 1-2 miles from Sharon, known as the Stanhope Love place. There is a good 7-room house, good well of water, 2 tenant houses, 2 good barns for horses and cattle, 2 good pastures for hogs and cattle. Fine land with lot of good forest timber. g Buildings alone worth price asked for ^ the place. King's Mountain Street Lot?60 feet front and about 260 feet back, aetween lota of J. A. Tate and H. E. Ferguson. Bargain for quick sale. a Farm of 185 Acres?With good six -oom dwelling house and three four W oom Tenant houses, well of water, and veil watered with springs and b ranch?s; good orchard and pasture. Located on Howell's Ferry road, 4 miles vest of Yorkvllle, adjoining lands of J. ' ?->^mster and E. N. Stevenson. Will ?ell all or part W. A. Queen?Sixty acres of good Farming land, with 3-room house hereon, within less than one mllfe from corporate limits of town. C. F. SHERER. Real Estate. w Buy your Typewriter Ribbons, Carbons and Paper at The Enquirer )ffice. Prompt attention given to mail ind phone orders. * ^ MS feeding V/ ^ V* ^ 8. It c. ts ' rrfcTl m builds up the stock. VL-^SSSw* W HIRT 1 MoiiSSEsFffiT^B mules like?gives them an inning and aids digestion. eed. Give your horses and ime save money. orse and Mule Molasses Feed Ifa, made appetizing with salt ^ zes as follows: = 12% I Carbohydrates 57% rrrn Second Grade ? Analyse*: Pro- M 1 tLLU tein Fst 1*4%1 Fibre ^ ^ (Srd Grade) This analyses: Protein %! a Fat t% i Fibre 1Z% f Carbohydrates 55%. | gad). We Manufacture also a dry mixed (no \ 4 s) Boise and Mule Feed, which analyses t | rates ?%. This Is composed of straight J )AIRY FEED j f MoImw. Cattle in very fond of tt ? } flow and tnrichea the quality of the milk j and Corn. C. 0. Meal. Wheat Middling ; lit. Analyaea: ProUin 14%; Fat l%| | nalyiea: Protein 11% j Fat 2%%; Ffbra | tea 44%. A Plxeatlre Tankage, Ground Corn, Rico | ttenin*. Keepa the nogi In food-ondltlon. fir* Peed and RED SHIRT Baby Chick Food. Jji ipooed of Ground, Corn, Groand u||fl tl, Groand Wheat, Barley, Malao, ^91 Meal and Linaeed Meal. Analyaisi ^ r bo hydra tea 44%. II of oar feed la made from Carolina We are, therefore. In the market jgg ly and any other kind of Hay gk of GRAIN. HAY ^-""4B18 above are mixed // .^Qh. . da ea to famlah the //vm itt at the loweet II VP ' m yon bow to I \i V e do^rn. Write || /