The Lancaster news. (Lancaster, S.C.) 1905-current, April 14, 1914, Page 8, Image 8

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8 FIRST OF THE SUFFRAGETS Tracts Recently Found Prove That English Women Sought Votes Many Years Ago. The title of a tract In a recent catalogue published at London, England, merits notloe. It Is: *"Hey, Hoe, for a HuBband; ur The Parliament of Maides; Their l)esire3. Decrees, and I>etermlnatlons. The principal members are Mrs. Beatrice Blinks, Mrs. Sarah Sale Woman, Mtb. Margaret Maundrlng, Mrs. Priscllla Prick-Song, Mtb. Dorlthy Doewell, Mtb. Tabi.'ha Trlptoe, 4to, 1647." It begina as follows: "Not able any longer to forbear the very many inconveniences, occasioned by the general backwardness of men, who contrary to the law of God and nature, are wooed to that which Instinct (were they not degenerate) would prompt them to proffer; wo the maids and virgins of Great Britain nave tnought ut, to the end a speedy remedy of this evil may be attained, to choose members flt and able to sit In parliament," etc. So apparently the demand for "votes tor women" did not originate with MilL Another tract is as follows: "A parliament of ladles, with their laws newly enacted, 1647," and Mr. Barnard states that the title to the first edition. Issued In 1640, Is: "The parliament of women. With the merry laws by them newly enacted. To live In more ease, pom pa, pride and wantoness; but especially that they might have superiority and domineer over their husbands." USED A LITTLE DIPLOMACY Detroit Wife Got Everything 8he Wanted and Wasted Only a Short Time Ln Argument. "Of course, you can't posBlbly afford a new bonnet for me?" "Not at prosent, my dear." "And 1 presume a new gown la ah Bomteiy out or tne question?" "That's true, just at this time."* "1 suppose so. And a few simple dresses would cost too much?" was hoping that you could get along without them. I need all the money I have in my business right now." "That's what I thought You can't posaibly afford to buy the things I absolutely need. So far as 1 am concerned you must be very economical.** "Say, what re you driving at?" "But you can afford to go on the board of commerce cruise and spend ! as much money as you like on your own selfish entertainment." "O, I see. Well, since I've made my reservation, perhaps you might Just as well go down and order those things yon need. There are circumstances that alter cases."?Detroit Free Press. For tha Earache. "I am afraid I have greatly Interfered with my own practice," said a celebrated aurlst, "by giving the following advice to many of my friends: At the first symptoms of earache, let the patient He on the bed with the painful ear uppermost. Fold a thick towel and tuck It around the neck; then with a teaspoon fill the ear with warm water. Continue doing this for li or 20 minutes; the water will fill the ear orifice and flow over on the towel. Afterwards turn over the head, let the water run out, and plug the ear with warm glycerin and cotton. This may be done every hour until relief Is obtained. It is an almost Invariable cure and has saved many cases of acute inflammation. The water should be quite warm, but not too hot."?From the Family Doctor. Fell Victim to Octopus. A tragedy of the coast, the roogh jiuruun 01 wwifirn Tasmania, has been cleared up by a discovery by two young men, Goninon and Cooper, at Cornwall. They caught a monster ootopos twelve feet six inches long, three feet thick from chest to back, and three feet across the back, and on opening the stomach found a man's shirt Inside. The shirt was similar to that known to have been worn by & miner, Richard Shaw Burke, who was lost on the coast several months ago, and supposed to have been swept from Trwmpetnr rock, 80 yards distant from where the octopus was killed. The octopus Is the largest known of on the was* ooeet of Tasmania Yea, He Remembered. Chortle Is the cashier of a country hank. He and May were engaged to he married. bat a quarrel separated them and the ring was handed back. "And, remember, please," May added, "that when next we meet we do so as pea fee t strangers." few days taker May entered Charlie's bank and presented a cheek tor payment. Chartic took the check ami examined tt critically and then, hestead of cashing It, he handed tt beek. 'To so sorry," he said, "hot tt*a against the rules of this bank to cash cheeks for pesdect utrafwcora Yen most And some one In town to wfj you." Panama CanaL tt Is more than probable the bttfMlng of the Panama canal would never have been possible bat tor the discovery?by Dr. Jesse Laxear of the United States army who, by the way, sacrtftoed his life wtilie making the experiments leading to the discovery ?that yellow fever was transmitted by tha bite of the deadly stegomla .iis(]Qito. But for that wonderful and timely discovery the mortality, and at wlsnt mlBArT of tha ??u li ive been a handicap too gxmml %a have been borna WHERE RAIN SELDOM FALLS y Two Thousand Miles of South Amer- yy lean Coast Line Almost Absolutely Waterless. For 2,000 miles the coast, as more Americans than are at present in- ^ i formed will doubtless discover as soon as the Panama canal develops ^ I more neighborlinesB between the North Atlantic and the South Pucilic. Y( one need not carry an umbrella ex- ^ cept to keep off the sun, the Provi- ^ dence Journal observes. aE In Peru, on the sea side of tho Andes, they build out of mud what seem j to be magnificent palaces, and clap- | *e board effects are popular ulso, though wood is worth its weight in gold. ^ Stucco, a paint brush and a lively ^ fancy serve for this stagy decoration. but there is not even the pretense of cultivating lawns, though that might bo indulged in, too, with the help of QC a pot of green paint. Rain enough would not fall in a generation to wash the green off the front yard or the ^ patio. J] That stretch of coast is one of the most remarkable of all nature's dem- ^ onstrations of waterless desolation. ; It is an elongated Sahara. From Co! quimbo, one-third of the leugth of ue I Chile below the Peruvian border to ^ Guayaquil, In Ecuador, vegetation Is wj i unknown. An agreeable efTect is to rei lleve the equatorial heat along the l coast and the slope of the Andes of ? humidity. MAKE A TEST OF STRENGTH ? kti Peculiar Contest Waged by Elephants F*11 In Dispute Over the Companionship of Female. Wiics two male elepnanis compeer. ... for the compnnionship of a fema?c. says the duke of Montpensier, In Wide World Magazine, they do not forget ^ their dignity ho far as to tight for the lady. They simply face each othe? squarely. Then one of them pulls dowt ( a branch from a tree with his trunk ^ and lays it at his feet. The other da takes a larger branch, or pulls up a big shrub by the roots, and also lays it ,a< at his feet. No. 1 then tackles a still n bigger branch, and this strange coin- an petition goes on, turn and turn about. re' until at last the contestant try to pull ub down trees wholesale, and the one who Hn fails to uproot his tree In turn is abnn- do doned by the lady elephant, who has to been an interested spectator of the strange duel 8hc departs with the to possessor of the largest tree, and the t h vanquished elephant retires shame- bll faced This trial-of-strongth species of bti courtship is very remarkable when an contrasted with the ordeal of battle un of most other animals, and shows the th highly developed Intelligence of these ?t' enormous creatures. tei HI Jy Saw for Newtyweds. .. Many of the small towns In Europe ^ have distinctive wedding customs which must bo observed, and of these w the old mountain town of Wildermann, In Germany, claims one that Is particularly interesting and quaint. On the day before the w<*lding the young he mwii niuureasoa m me ooujue place a ca sawhorse on the top o4 the house mj where the bride la lodging. usually up- pe I on a chimney, and the bridegroom has all I to take It down before the wedding T1 On the wedding day the ooupla find a & rope barring their way after they \ tli leave the church, and they are not al- ca low?>d to pans until they have sawed in re two the knotty log lying upon the a i horse. The Inhabitants of the town an ' gather around to watch the sawing th J which 1b supposed to show whether i be or not ihe couple will pull well to- ak guther.?Popular Meohanftea. | di ! ti' l Ql Rabelais Always Humorist. R&botais was a monk king before he m wrote his drolleries, but that he was & humorist first is evidenced by the ln many practical jokes which brought down upon him the punishment of his spiritual superiors. In his case the w priestly profession became too con- 4,1 fined for his talents and he made a *a better doctor of the body than he had been of the soul, but It was his career te as a wit that brings fame into our day. His Gargantuan stories stand as his record, and their grim, grave humor reflect the man; that they read ooarse to us is merely the accident of ** their age. Rabelais hit hard, but he was returning blow for blow and fierce M irony was a necessary weapon of the m time. *T Coal Was Used 3,000 Years Ago. ^ i urtmB wiy?n ouu yearn Doiore me Christian ?pa mention coal In their ** works, and it wan no oneommon thing in FQgypt &00 years before that. A lone gap apparently cornea after that, apd coal la not heard of again ^ on til In England, somewheres about the time of WtTttam the Oooqaerer In ^ the 'eleventh century. Records are found granting the pvtrMege of mining I It to the people. t was not until well along In the teeath century that coal was used m jtn any azlnot In Parte, and fo Germany the date of lta beginning waa even later fa OuMca of Prevention. ** When Uttle visitors come In to play Im with the children mothers vrtn do well te to pot certain toys away, such aa writs Lkea, horns, and any musical Instru- w ments that must be placed to the Jt tips. It Is unsanitary for general use to be made of such toys. An unsus- p< pected sore throat or mouth may tron- w ble one of the little visitors or entertainers and the ailment be thus trans- ts mltted. It is a good plan to sterilize ol such toys occasionally, using borrut in I si hot water, drying in the oven to pre- nt Wk IMk f THE LANCASTER NE LSTM, GARDEN OF IRELAf riter Pay* High Tribute to t Scotch-Irish Who Have Made the Country What It Is. It would not surprise me in the leu the late J. P. Morgan bad the bio the Ulster-Scot in his veins, as yo rrespondent hints at, says the writ a letter to the editor of the N< >rk Tribune. The Scotch-Irish we on more Scottish than the Scot emoelves?stern, shrewd, energei id thoroughly reliable. When James VI. of Scotland?Jam of Hhigland?offered facilities for t ttlement of Ulster, thousands :ots availed themselves of t ance. and by their energy helped ansform that district into a gard Irelaud. Belfast, one of the most pcacof id LirosDerous cities in the world thing more or less than a secoi asgow. To Scotland, Indirectly, to Ulster i ctly, we are indebted for Buch m Andrew Jackson, James K. Poi mes llucbanan, John C. Calhou jester A. Arthur, T. A. Hendricl jrace Qreeley, C. D. McCutchec mes G. Maine, Charles Foster, Sa 1 H. Grey and many others wl lped to make the United Stat lat she is today. Robert Fulton, though an Irlshmi 8cottlsh descent?his father beii reed out of Scotland In Cromwel ne? is scarcely an Ulster-Scot. Bi en, if it were not for the Llvingst) mily, who were descended from tl rigs, nobles and lords of Scotlan ilton could never have accomplish) lat he did. ELPLESS IN SNAKES' COIL Sherman in Order to Escape Threi ened Death From Reptiles Rolls in Fire. George Ensc., a business man Is city, while fishing near Mountai las u PioHmnut W V? Hlunnf aJi 8 New York Herald states, was I 3ked by anakes, which come frc rotten log on which he was eittir d before he could beat them off t ptiles had entwined themselv out him, binding his arms, han d feet. The snakes, more than *en In number, measured from to six feet in length. Mr. Ensor, after vainly endeavorv work his arms and feet looBe, h e presence of mind to roll down 11 Into a fire he had built to co s breakfast. His clotheB caught 11 d the snakes, scorched and sizzlti twined from his body and made 1 e old tog. Mr. Ensor ran to t ream and threw himself into the v r, extinguishing his burning cloth is body, arms and face were seve burned, but he managed to ma b way to Mountalndale, where phy ins say he has a chance for rec< y. Pain of Wounds. There Is a great deal of mlaapp insion as to the intensity of the jm ' hia aoRver, "I'm not r? ally so int lrprtaod about you; but mumm; 0, I don't see bow mummy m&nai > gat growad u??" used by the entrance Into the ] an body of various object*. Ma irsons fancy that if a man Is shot I he must therefore suffer intense ve reverse Is true. A slight woui mere abrasion of the skin, is sor nes far more painful than a wou need by the entrance of a ballet clly into the muscles or even li bone. The skin 1* filled with nen id when any of them are torn e ball the pain is extreme. If t Lllol plunges directly throogh t ;ln Into the body the onty i*or\ aturbod are those in the oompa .^y small space the bnllet strik not1 there are few nerves In t uscles. the nerves of the skin o ry the bensation of pain to the bra the same way the greater port! the pain experienced In the am tion of an arm or leg is occasion hen the skin is cut, and the sub lent cutting of the muscles and 1 iwlng of the bone. In which all 1 iln is popularly supposed to be c red, amount to little in com parts Harper's Weekly. All Modern Improvements. Sparker and Plug had Just returr on a Klorlous SDin in HnarVl -and-new automobile, and aa tt it In Sharker's library they talked any things deepUe the noiae Spa 'a youngsters were making. Tefl yon what, Sparker," m hig, "you're a fine, healthy kit klldren. By the way, how many hi ?r "9w?," said Bpartnr, proudly "You know. Pre often wonders eot on Phkg. "whether yon peo tth ao many children hare any I enlar terorUea." "Well, no," answered Sparker, l* flngty; "that ie to say. yon kn< e (kaA hare faeorttee exaody. hot nrw yon can't help being more sated In this year's model than iroe of the earlier oaeaf" No Fear of Father Dytofl Youskg. When ttCOe Dork efhribed ap to 1 Cher's knee. It wee qwite obrV act asm deeg> prohiem was trootoi sr mind. PMnatJy she onhasdei weetf of the momentoas (joeetkm "Papa," she asked, "was It a v< tee person who said "The good >ungr* " "Yes," replied her father. "I s me he mnst have been very, w toe" "Well," said the child, after m< itlng for some time on the imn WS, APRIL 14, 1914. JD (HARD TO DRIVE FROM NEST Remarkable Case of Devotion to Home i | Shown by Nesting Meadow Lark in Massachusetts. An endearing trait in birdB is their od love of home, and the bravery with ,ur | which they face danger in protecting er I their eggs or baby birds. They seem ,w j to become very tame at such times. ,re ; not seldom a person who approaches ch j them quietly may, after a few gentle Ho attempts, stroke a mother bird as she broods. Hut it is really courage, and eg not enjoyment of the attention, that he i displays. of An interesting example of the strong he attachment of a bird to its home, as to well as its adaptability to unusual ciren cumstances, was given by a meadow lark that found itself day after day -U1 under gun-fire, and learned not, to i8 fear It. nd At the practice grounds of the United States marine corps at Wakedl. field. Mass., some low mounds were ep raised on the firing line. On the llt> front Bide of one of these mounds a in, meadow lark built its nest, and had lBi laid its eggs when the season's prac,n> tlce in target shooting and skirmish ra. drill began. The rille of the man ly- <,,, [jo ing on the mound was directly over oe the nest, and not more than two feet above it. m an At first the birds would fly away, ar when the firing skirmish line was still fe j-8 at some distance; but as the practice continued, they became accustomed to m on* the noise. They would wait until the V [je men came very near before flying, and jn 1(j wuuiu reiurn liiuiieuiaieiy ariur. A8 the tline came for the eggs to hatch, one of the birds would stay on the ' nest during the firing, even if a rifle were held Just above her head. The .S marines were very careful not to dia- ar turb the little family. When the young ?i< >t- came, they were nourished amid the su smoke of battle, an it were, and linally it? left the nest unharmed.?Youth's Comot panion. m m. ;;; J? AS THE GROUCH SEES GROCER ^ itl' d< i in |1( Most Useful Member of Community |( Unkindly Dealt With by Ex(>H pert Fault Finder. A grocer is a man who sp^ndB his S' a time In exchanging adulterated foods ur for unadulterated money. The best time to visit any grooer is nf nR after you have had a large, square k ad meal; the worst time to visit him is in fo a the afternoon about 6 o'clock, when' gr 0k you are half starved ami everything' m iro In his pluce looks more or less real. Hut after you huve given him an or- A or der under these famished conditions, ~~ do not go home to your wife It is ^ better to give her a few days in which B8 to recover, and Incidentally get even oa re. with you by ordering two new Paris ? ke hats and rhododendron kitnonas. : U! Bj. To be a successful grocer one must have sand, a rich Oriental vocabulary jn that can describe the same tea as If " It were in each case really different ^ and a complete knowledge of aniline m dyes. af r*" Also, every grocer should b? mar- rt 1111 ried. He can then explain to his cub- bj au" toxner when he js trying to sell her (; some oombinatlon of wood pulp and at asbestos for nourishment: "My wife ' ' has tried this for three weeks and ? ad- still lives."?Life. ne Estimating Your Supplies In large institutions the time that certain supplies last has been tested . down to a tine point. Only by know^ Ing very can-fully bcrw long certain ^ tmpptio.s wfH last oan the army and ree other large institutions buy tnteMlgently ami thus tafce advantage of the . reduced price given on large orders, f . While many women are "good managers," many more should more dofl- ^ Jn nltely test how long certain supplies oQ last the family under average conditions. It Is possible to estimate how ^ lcug coffee, tea, staples, cereals, etc., will last, and make large quantity orders on which the housewife can ob\ j tain a generous discount. Hut unless this quantity buying is based on careful estimates it will not result in the | an saving of money and time It otherwise would. t>|j Vegetables as Hair Ornaments. Now that fruit has reached the hair, In the shape of Mttle oranges for the ^ bride's coiffure, will It come to vegerk table again, as It did among the absurdities of Marie Antoinette's time? >l1j "Ask my niece, Mraft, de Matlgnon." ^ we read In the memoirs of the Mar I quia*' de Oregny. "If ft is not true that ' In 1785 she had ner head dressed a la Jardiniere, with a red check duster. .? inu> wmcn M L^eonard (Ux> qoemn hair dresser) had artistically inserted *"! a email artichoke, a broccoli, a One carrot asd some radishes. When Don ^ don PI cot (the Comtesae de Lamethu Plcot, a rich Creole) taw It she wu ^ ho delighted that she exclaimed, "I win never wear anything but vegeU| tables It la no nlmpie, and more j natural than flowers." C t Were Not Discussing Picture. His pride was natural, tor be was . quite a young artist; and there it waa " *"? ?there could be no doubt about It? I e to? his picture, his great picture, wm ' ti hanging In the Royal academv. What'a 8 u more, two people stood motionless In C sry front while the artist stood afar, gas* t die lug at them. Then, "I say, Charlie." ^ he asked hie friend, "do saunter care- jj up- Icssly by and fiud out what they are M7 saying about my picture. Perhaps tbey ? want to buy It." Forthwith Charlie Hfl- set out to do a careless saunter. Pres- v ort ently?to the expectant artist the wait ich aeomed an eternity?he returned to y? hiR friend. "No business doing," be ted sighed. "She's only blowing him up trj- leaving off bis flannela too soon.-* Pri U/ anrrecommended rV( $7*' // i exuetimenter. He i^wKf?- U parts of Aci Side di//s cotton v when rte hlui?mJm rust, iwdtllnt, ion per arrV^ 'I^nis is a on corn, if applied early enatigh. 1 Ordei Kainit now ^je^yre t Kainit and Potash Salts,^1} GERMAN L Whitney Central Bank Building KiV> NEW ORLEANS. LA. AB CITATION. rATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA. County of Lancaster. Whereas, C. Ross Hlackmon li atle suit to me tc grant hm letters lniinlsti^lon of the estate and < cts of AlmhfU^J. Hlackmon. Thsse are. the^^Wi^to cite and a onlsh all and slngurhw the klndr id creditors of the said decease at they be and appear before n the court of robate, to be held ears Complexion?Removes Sk Blemishes. Why go through life embarrass id disfigured with pimples, eru ?tts, blackheads, red rough skin, flering the tortures of Eczem "h. tetter, saltrheum. Just a Mir druggist for Dr. Hobson's Ecs a Ointment. Follow the slmr ggestions and you skin worries a or Mild, soothing. effective. E llent for babies ana delicate, te r skin. Stops chapping. Ahva Ips. Relief or money back. 5 your druggist ring liAXittive and Blood Cleans* Flush out the accumulated was id poisons of the winter month sanse your stomach, liver and ki lys of all Impurities. Take F lug's New Life Pills; nothing bett r purifying the blood. Mild, no lping laxative. Cures constipatlo akes you leel fine. Take no othi >c at your Druggist. Bucklei rn'cr. Salve for all hurts. Check Your April Cough. Thawing frosts and April ral iill you to the very marrow, yi tch cold?Head and lungs stuff -You are feverish?Cough conti illy and feel miserable?You ne r. King's New Discovery. It sooth flamed and irritated throat ai ngs, stops cough, your head clea fever leaves, and you feel fit r J. T. Davis, of Stlckney Corn* e.% "Was cured of a dreadful coui te'r doctor's treatment and all oth >medies failed. Relief or mon ick. Pleasant?Children like et a bottle today. 50c and $1.00 )ur Druggist. Bucklon's Ami ilve for All Sores. hg cans p?<t only zj Let HE lot Y> ur Compost 1 am the champion rotter of the world. I'll rot leaves, straw, sti.lks, manure, sawdust or any o'her vegetable matter, ov< n dirt, into a rich, n.^u-Kradc fertilizer, in less than two months. Just ke p me on the Job and I will save you a big lot of that fertilizer "money. If you want to tno-r n.l aimut this compost rottiu ;, t.n well as spraying and preventing hog cno era, write ' lied Devil," 619 N, becond Streot, Ht. Louis, Mo., and I'll s nd you a little hook, free, that tells how. I am Red Devil Lye 5c. Tor Bin CANS Almost as bin as those ousting 10c. fiAVK NT I.AHIIIA ruf m i a 11tv ft I|1U A 1 \ YOUR When you "^nt something lorton. We buy^the very b arry. When you sentt^rour o ing the very best the\nark< oing your trading here, why^ on't get a better grade of gc lsewhere. There is one thin o using the very best goods i omething that is inferior. V an eat and enjoy it that artic hing that you cannot eat, yo oodh from the very best and ri the United States. Everyi uaranteed to give you entir unded. When you get in a hi /ill get it to you at once. EDWARDS WE SELL SHIN J otitable Side Dressing use of side dressing is increasing on 1 COTTON and CORN ,ys to do it, if one uses the right goods. ! application* of 200 pound* each per acre hy a well-known Southern investigator and suggests a 5-5-5 formula, or a mixture of id Phosphate, Kainit and Nitrate of Soda. AIN1T then the plants are 10 inches high and again gins to open. Where cotton is inclined to iking two applications of 200 pounds each Iso effective against root lice and cut worms It will pay you to try it, for Potash Pays. he supply is exhausted. We sell r quantity from one 200-lb. bag up. \LI WORKS. Inc. Irr Building Savannah Bank A Trust Building GA. SAVANNAH. f,A. Lancaster court house on the 14th day of April, next, after publcatlon horeof, at 11 o'clock In the forenoon, to show cause, If any they have, why the said administration should not be ' f granted. f Given under my hand this 31st day. of March, Anno Domini 1914. ** d_ J. E. STEWMAN, ed >d, ie. ??????????????? at Young Ladies ed ^ Pia. get ready for the tomato 8 k io- club that Lancaster county >1P re will hae before long. Ix- > ** n. We yfll have to arrive in oc Lancaster on Tuesday, the IT s A c\ a. a S A ? zisi oi i i\pru, ju,uuu ?tre Tomato llants, frost proof ; and all Hands. Send in )r your ordeN early. Have er 1 n_ now on hai*l 20,000 early n; w ir- Wakefield <1 abbage Plants. IB 1 Send in your orders for Potato Plants at once if 118 you want your order filled. ^ w ed | in- Will have Nancy Halls to od arrive about the 25th of nd rg this le. Kh Yours for business, er ev It. = j Mackorell's Grocery * > ? Teacherw Examination. jj The next regular teacher's e^am? lnation will be held at \he court7 house on Friday, May 1st. mhe county board of education feels that the school children are I looking tov^them for protection I I against incompetent teachers. We have, therefore, kecided to raise the standard of efiicftncy of teaching by not permitting a^one to teach with out qualifying legalto. No claim will be approved for a tlacher which inj eludes the salary of\ne who has not ' a teacher certificate. ^ All who expect to teach the next% ) school session will be given an opJ portunity to qualify at the above J time. V. A. LINGLE. i " Notice. , ' Notice is hereby given that on May i 6th, 19lKj will apply to the Farmers I Rank & Trust Company, Lancaster. S. i C., for the Issuance of a new certl! flcate of stoclc^xtherein, in place of ' Certificate No. aVfor Ten Shares of { its captal stock Issued to me on July t 30th, 1910, which has been lost. J. W. FUNPERBURK. 11. Lancaster, S. C.. March 81, 1914. STORE WANTS*' TRADE nice to eat, come to Edwards & est quality in every line that we rders here you can depend on gjtjt aords. If you are not already not give us a trial and see if you Ws from us than you are gett rig gX^jre, when you get accustomed no onfc-van ever change you oil" en yhen yo^nuy something that you ;le is cheapw When you buy soireur money is wasted. We buy our most up-to-dafe wholesale houses thing you buy rhqm us is strictly e satisfaction or yffcir money reirrv fnr .. . J > ? Dvuivkilillgi |insmv UH. Yours truly, "X & HORTON / fGLES AND BRICK i