tumorous department Why He Went to Augusta.?In court at Aiken the other day, a small negro was on the witness stand in a damage case. He had stated he was on a street car on a certain day in Augusta. Counsel was attempting to shake his testimony. "You are positive you were in Augusta on this Thursday?" "Yes, sir." "Could not have been some other day in the week?" "No, sir." "Why are you so sure it was Thursday?" '"Cause I go over every Thursday, sir." "Why do you go over to Augusta wcry 1 IlUi auajr ; "I knows It ain't any of your business, sir; but since you done ask me, sir, I tells you. I goes over every Thursday, sir, for the same cause as you gemmens goes over to 'Gustay so often, sir." Remembering that Aiken dispensaries are closed, the negro boy's rejoinder met with a hearty laugh, which the court had difficulty in frowning down.?Augusta Chronicle. Travel in Haste.?"Drive like the duce!" shouted Smith, springing Into the taxi. With a lurch, the car darted forward, and away they went like lightning. Crash! They took off the wheel of a passing wagon. Hi, hi. They missed flattening out a small child by a hair's breadth. Clang! They upset a milkcart. People shouted, traffic officers held up their hands as the taxi dashed up one street and down another, taking corners on two wheels, and threatening every lamppost with destruction. At last, after half an hour's furious racing, they slowed up in a narrow thoroughfare, and Smith poked his head out of the window. "Are we nearly there?" he asked, breathlessly. The chauffeur turned In his seat and shouted: "Where did you want to go, sir?" Charlotte Was Desperate.?Little Charlotte accompanied her mother to the home of an acquaintance where a dinner dance was being given. When the dessert course was reached the little girl was brought down and given a place next to her mother at the table. The hostess was a woman much given to talking, and, in relating some interesting Incidents, quite forgot to give little Charlotte anything to eat. After some time had elapsed Charlotte could bear it no longer. With the sobs rising in her throat, she held up her plate as high as she could, and said: "Does anybody want a clean plate?" ?New York Times. Was Evidently a Single Man.?"And have you named the baby yet?" "Oh, yes." "Did you have much trouble deciding?" "I should say so; wife went over a list of over a hundred names and I had a collection of about fifty. She took some from her side of the house and I took some from mine." "Well, was the little angel finally named for some of your people or hers?" "Single man, ain't you?"?Jacksonville Times-Union. He Knew the Man.?T. H. Moll, who Is a candidate for judge of the supreme court, recently met a man in the court house who appeared to know him. "You are running for something or other" aren't you, Mr. Moll?" he asked. Moll told him he would like to be a judge of one of the superior court rooms. The man asked Moll who his opponent was. Moll told him. "Oh, yes, 1 know; he is the present incumbrance!" the man exclaimed.? Indianapolis News. Compiling Statistics.?"Lady," said Plodding Pete, "do you keep a dog?" "Yes." "An' a cat?" "Several of em." "An', I suppose, mebbe you have something to spare to feed a hungry wayfarer?" "Yes. Are you hungry?" "No. I'm compilin" statistics fur de Society of Useless Information to show de reckless extravagance of de rural population."?Washington Star. Just Like a Man.?"Tom," said the bride, "didn't you promise faithfully to give up smoking the day I married you ?' "Yes, my dear," replied Tom, "I believe I did." "And now," she continued, "I find you puffing a cigar, just as though I weren't in existence. What explanation have you to offer?" "Well, I kept my promise," replied the husband. "I didn't smoke a single cigar on our wedding day." Good Apprenticeship.?Billy Mooney, after running a barber shop in Centerville for two or three years, decided to become a dentist. His uncle Si, upon hearing of his decision, dropped in to talk it over. "Yes, Billy," said he, "dentistry is about the easiest new job you could tackle. You know how to work the chair already, so the rest ought to come easy enough." A Future Suffragette.? "You can't teach a hen anything," her mother said. "They have done more harm to the garden than a drove of cattle would. You can teach a dog, or a pig something, hut a hen?never." exclaimed the child, indignantly. "I think they know as much as the roosters!"?Youth's Companion. She Should Worry.?"Why are you so thoughtful?" "I've got to address our literary cluh this afternoon." "And you are trying to decide on what to say?" "More important, I am trying to decide on what to wear."?Houston Post. Out of His Mouth.?His youngest grandchild had managed to get possession of a primer and was trying to eat it. "Pardon me for taking the words out of your mouth, little one," said the professor, hastily interposing. Sermon Effective.?"That sermon you preached the other Sunday on thrift had a great effect on me,'1 said Origgs to the minister. "I went out before the collection." FACT, FASHION AND FANCY Paragraph* Calculated to Intereat York County Women. Written for The Yorkville Enquirer. The new styles In handkerchiefs are as usual, many and varied. One of the prettiest of the new ones shows a ruffle about an inch wide, of violet tulle as an edging. The center is of very sheer linen and the ruffle is very soft and full, and the little handkerchief is decidedly fluffy and dainty. * * A Yorkville lady, who, by the way, I has the reputation of being a splendid cook, uses this receipt in making potato salad: Six or eight new potatoes, two hard boiled eggs, one onion sliced thin, one head of lettuce, a little chopped parsley, one-half teaspoon of salt, and one-fourth of a teaspoon of pepper. Ushe only freshly boiled potatoes. While warm, slice or cut into cubes, add onion, parsley and French dressing to saturate potatoes. Mix well and then set aside in a cool place. Serve on crisp lettuce and garnish with eggs and a little pickled beet. "Is there no new way under the sun by which I can entertain the little folks?" asks many a mother; and the problem is indeed a perplexing one. If one will take an old magazine, and on its page carefully paste cuttings and news ilustrations, the book will be made quite attractive. Save the fairy and other stories which are published in the Sunday newspapers; ask a friend or two to do the same; supply the children with blunt pointed scissors and a jar of paste. The result will be many happy hours and an amusing as well as Instructive book. Of course, a blank book or a scrap book is more substantial, but for economy and pastime an old magazine will answer. Pictures from old calendars are good, as they usually picture some noted spot, about which mother or nurse can readily weave some story starting with the time honored "once upon a time." Since skirts are becoming shorter and shorter as the season advances, a good deal of prominence Is bestowed upon the feet and ankles of these abbreviated modes and to go shabbily shod or clad in cotton stockings is an impossibility in inese aays or iuu skirts which swing fully eight or ten inches from the ground. Now maybe every woman cannot afford to wear silk stockings. They are looked upon by many as a luxury. This year, however, many will wear these stockings who never wore them before. And the point is?don't buy the cheap kind. Women who wear the kind that wear out after being worn two or three times really cannot afford to wear them. When you buy don't buy the kind that sells for 50 or 75 cents. It is an extravagance to wear them. Buy those that sell for $1 or $1.50 and you will find that instead of being extravagant you will have really been economical because a pair of the good kind will last five times as long as the cheap ones. Here is a little bit of verse which John Quincy Adams has written. Maybe some little boy or girl who has to take part in a "Children's Day" celebration or other festival, might like to recite it: One day between the Lip and the Heart, A wordless strife arose. Which was expertest in the art His purpose to disclose. The Lip called for the vassal Tongue, And made him vouch?a lie. The slave his servile anthems sung, And braved the listening sky. The Heart to speak in vain essayed, Nor could his purpose reach? His will nor voice nor tongue obeyed, His silence was his speech. Mark thou, their differences, child of earth, While each performs his part. Not all the lip can speak is worth The silence of the heart. "What's the matter, Mrs. Tyson?" asked Mrs. Crimm as she perceived a worried look on the face of her neighbor. "Oh, dear," replied Mrs. Tyson, "it is so hard to think of something new to get up for dinner. I wish I never had to prepare a meal." "Why, I know there are lots of dishes you have never tried," replied pleasant Mrs. Crimm. "There's egg and tomato scramble, for instance. Have you ever served that?" "No," replied the lady of the worried countenance, "how do you make it?" "Why," replied Mrs. Crimm, "simply melt one tablespoon of butter and add one pint of tomato sauce which has been previously stewed with a little chopped onion and a high seasoning and then strained. When it is boiling hot slip the waterpan underneath and add six eggs which have been slightly beaten. Also add a half teaspoon of salt. Then stir continually until the mixture is quite thick and creamy, and then serve quickly." Several days later Mrs. Crimm again saw Mrs. Tyson and the latter said, "Oh, Mrs. Crimm, I tried that receipt and the dish was fine. The whole family enjoyed it ever so much." "I am glad," replied Mrs. Crimm. "Maybe I can furnish you with more receipts some time." GENERAL NEWS NOTES. Items of Interest Gathered From All Around the World. William Shaw has been nominated for the governorship of Massachusetts bv the Prohibition party. The National City bank of New York, has negotiated a loan of $1,000,000 to the government of Bolivia. Two tramps killed, two seriously injured and six missing, was the result of a freight train wreck at Belmont. O., Friday. A Paris dispatch says that it is reported that John D. Rockefeller has sent $7,000,000 to Servia for Red Cross work. Irvin S. Cobb, the noted war correspondent, is ill in a New York hospital, and will be unable to return to Europe in June, as he had planned. The striking street car motornien and conductors of Detroit, Mich., have agreed to arbitrate their differences with the street car company. A New York dispatch says that since the sinking of the Lusitania, the number of (Jermans applying for naturalization has increased nearly 300 per cent. Lieut, von Muecke and a landing party of f>0, who escaped from the Emden, when sunk in the Indian ocean on November 10, have reached Damascus. Col. Roosevelt's name has been rubbed from the rolls of honorary members of two leading German so cletles of New York, because of his utterances following: the sinking: of the Lusitania. A thousand or more completed shells and material for 6,000 more 6-lnch shells, were destroyed by fire at the plant of the Standard Steel Car company at New Castle, Pa., Thursday. The White Star liner Cymric left New York Friday, for Liverpool, with 965 passengers on board, including a crew of 400. Not a single American was on board. The New York police force have begun a nation-wide search for a $20,000 pearl necklace stolen from a woman guest of a New York hotel last week, while the woman and her husband were asIeeD. John D. Rockefeller's Income lax this year will amount to $3,690,000 on an income of $60,000,000. This will be nearly 4 per cent of the total income tax collected, estimated at $100,000. John Welsh, an engineer, and Certa Keilson, a millionaire, who escaped from the wreck of the Lusitanla, were married in London Friday. They met first on the day the Lusltania sailed from New York. Washington correspondents say that senators and congressmen in that city are finding that there is a widely growing demand for better preparation for war, and especially a demand that the United States navy have more submarines. The steamer Michigan sailed from Philadelphia, Saturday, for Liverpool, carrying an immense cargo of contraband war materials. She will load 1,100 horses at Newport News. The cargo also Includes 58 automobiles for war uses. James Morrison Darnell, a Unitarian minister, was last week convicted in the Federal court at Milwaukee, of violating the Mann white slave law, charged with having transported a young woman from Wisconsin to Illinois, for immoral purposes. A proposal that the Texas Equal Suffrage association endorse the Woman's Peace party, failed of adoption at Galveston, Texas, Friday. One woman said: "I am opposed to war, but if our country is subjected to insult I will willingly give my four sons to assist in wiping out that insult." District Attorney Perkins of New York, is after a number of lawyers of that city, charging them with being patrons to illegal agreements drawn up by gangmen and manufacturers. The district attorney believes that there are a dozen lawyers mixed up with crooked deals with the gangsters and he proposes indictments and disbarment proceedings. Officers of the steamer Northwestern, arriving in Mobile, Ala., says that conditions along the Mexican coast are very bad. One officer is quoted as saying: "At Tampico we fed 100 starving residents. Every steamer is besieged by starving people, who beg to be taken away from that port." Famine conditions are said to exist at Mexico City. William B. Pettus, a skilled steam fitter of Richmond, Va., has been arrested in Philadelphia by Federal authorities on a charge of mutilating a mail box at Newark, N. J. Pettus deliberately mutilated the box in order to get back to the Atlanta prison, from which he was discharged some months ago, and has since been unable to get work. A petition containing 55,000 names and over one mile in length has been presented to Rev. Billy Sunday, asking to conduct a campaign in Chicago. Mr. Sunday has accepted the invitation and the campaign will probably begin early in 1916. Seventy-eight clergymen, representing every church in Bridgeport, Connectlctut, have invited Mr. Sunday to conduct a meeting there. HAPPENINGS IN THE STATE Items of Interest from All Sections of South Carolina. Five negro convicts escaped from the Newberry county chaingang last Tuesday. Rev. Chas. D. Holland has resigned the pastorate of the Presbyterian church at Walterboro. A new Masonic temple will be built in Columbia, the construction work to begin about September 1. "The Headlight" is the name of a paper which will be published at Olanta, in Florence county. Samuel B. Carter, a stone cutter of Columbia, was drowned in Hampton's creek near that city, Friday. The British steamer Hurst unloaded a cargo of 8,000 tons of Chilean nitrate of soda in Charleston last week. The Greenville county grand jury has recommended the purchase of an automobile for the use of the supervisor of that county. Elias H. Cain, president of the Mills Drug Co., of Columbia, and one of the best known druggists in the state, died of heart failure in Columbia Friday night, aged 48 years. A great scare was created by tire which broke out in the Magdalene hospital, Chester, Friday evening. The blaze proved to be the result of a defective stove flue. The fire was quickly extinguished. W. S. Searcy died at his home at Donalds last week, of injuries received when he was recently thrown from his buggy, when his team of mules became frightened. M. H. Miott of Collecton county, has offered a reward of $500 for the conviction of the parties who burned his barn recently and which fire destroyed property valued at $5,000. At the meeting of the Master Plumber's association which was held in Greenwood last week, a resolution was passed asking that Governor Manning appoint a plumber as a member of the state board of health. John Karlos, a youth about 20 years of age, tried to commit suicide at Yemassee, near Charleston Thursday, by shooting himself in the temple with a pistol. Despondency over his inability to secure work was the cause nf his art. According to assignments made at the college of bishops, St. Louis, Mo., recently, Bishop Collins Denny of Richmond, will again preside over the South Carolina conference and Upper South Carolina conference of the Methodist church. The commencement exercises in connection with the closing of Chicora college, Oreenville, were begun Friday evening and will be concluded tonight. Twenty-one young ladies will receive diplomas from the institution this evening while certificates will be presented several others. Eighteen small children of Greenville, were poisoned last week by eating chewing gum which had been given them by Harold Jones, a small boy. Young Jones took a Jar of chewing gum from his father's store and distributed it liberally among the children, many of whom were made seriously ill. The United States navy department has placed the tug Waban at the disposal of the South Carolina naval militia from May 15 to June 30. The department is urging all officers and men of the state naval militia to take advantage of every opportunity for cruising and getting acquainted with the sea duties. Ed Grayson, who was convicted in Bamberg county in 1899 of horse stealing and bicycle stealing and sentenced to serve two and one-half years on the gang, made his escape five days after his commitment. Last week he was captured in Valdosta, Ga., and he has been taken back to Bamberg, where he will complete his sentence. John Green, a convict on the state farm near Camden, was shot and killed by Guard J. M. Bankhead last Tuesday. It seems that the convict, who was serving a life term, attempted to snatch the guard's pistol and had succeeded in the undertaking when two other convicts took the weapon away from him. Green then attempted to run and was shot three times by the guard. A wholesale jail delivery was prevented in Greenville Wednesday night by Sheriff Rector and Jailer Neely of that county, the officers happening to hear sounds that made them suspicious. An investigation showed that two prisoners had attempted to drill a hole in the floor. About thirty other prisoners were singing the song, "It's a Long Way to Tlpperary," at the top of their voices and making other noises in order that the attention of the officers might be detracted from the sound of the drill. Thomas H. Peeples, attorney general, in an opinion given Comptroller General Sawyer last week, takes the position, as no provision is made in the statutes, that the comptroller general has no authority of law to instruct the auditor of Abbeville county to impose a road tax, or to instruct treasurer of the same county "to im-1 pose a penalty and collect any tax from delinquent road tax payers from last year." Both the comptroller general and the attorney general have scrutinized the statute and no provision is made for a road tax In Abbeville county. Governor Brewer of Mississippi, has written Governor Manning urging that he pardon or parole Nero LittleJohn, a negro, who escaped from the Cherokee county chalngang several years ago and who has recently been located at Holly Springs, Miss. The Mississippi governor has informed the South Carolina executive that he will grant a requisition for Littlejohn if it is insisted upon but states that the negro iias married since going to Mississippi and is held in high esteem by the people of his adopted home. Governor Manning will hold further correspondence with Governor Brewer In the matter. WEEDERS-- 7 WE HAVE ABOUT SIX OR EIGHT WEEDERS THAT WE WILL CLOSE OUT AT COST. These are farm implements that should be on every good farm. They make better crops easier. RUBBER ROOFING? We have a lot of High Grade RUBBER ROOFING?We want to sell it? and want to sell it quick?If you can use any of this Roofing we will make you a price that will interest you? give it a trial, but don't wait ROASTED COFFEE? A lot be'tter than you would expect at the price?8 Pounds for $1.00. FARM TOOLS? Before buying any kind of Farm Tools come and see us. We have in stock pretty nearly every Farm Tool that you could want, and our prices will interest YOU?Try It. CARROLL BROS. MELROSE FLOUR Good Housekeepers who know good FLOUR, and who are acquainted by experience with MELROSE, will tell you Jhat it is without exception the best flour ever sold on mis market. We have a fresh supply. It is BEST for Biscuit, for Light Bread? Salt Raised?and for Cakes and Pies. People who use MELROSE once are not satisfied with anything else. A trial will convince you if you are at all skeptical. It costs a little more than some Flours, but then its Satisfying Quality makes it worth the difference. FARM HARDWARE? Let us supply your needs In Farm Hardware?Wagons, Plow Shapes, Plow Stocks, Cotton Hoes, Shovels, Pitch Forks, Trace Chains, Collar Pads, etc. We'll save you money. Yorkville Banking & Mer. Co. THIS BANK While not as large as some others, is here to serve you and will serve you in every way that a good Bank can. We want YOUR Checking Account? Large or Small?and will give you efficient service both ways?Coming In and Going Out. SURPLUS CASH? If you have any Surplus Cash that you may not need for Three Months or longer, deposit it with this Bank on a "CERTIFICATE." Let it earn you something while it is "Resting." We are always glad to get acquainted with new folks?Come in and take a look at us. The Bank of Clover Al. L. Smith, Pres. J. A. Page. Cash. CmVFR, S. C. ?a WL/ #%3?So?r3r# * ^BSnawfK/ V^fettBKr^ * m90 ^jPHtte">x jj MANUFACTURED AND GUARAN STONEGYPHER DRUG & CHEM ttytyMiti mi antt>?iaii mi ?m 111 m u WEDDING PRESENTS~ STERLING SILVER PLATED SILVER CUT GLASS FANCY CHINA Come and let us show you how easy you can make selections at this good store. T. W. SPECK, Jeweler J. H. SAYE, J. L. RAINEY, President. Vice Prest. First National Bank SHARON. - - 8. C. There is a lot of loose change scattered over this section that ought to be in This Bank where it will be safe and where it will be doing more good for everybody, > including the owner of it. | This loose change is much more available to tne owner wnen it is In Our Bank, subject to check that when It Is in the owner's pocket. Come and let us talk to you about It. JOHN S. HARTNESS. Cashier. DIRECTORY OF YORK COUNTY A DIRECTORY of the White Men of York county of voting age. together with the postoffice address and occupation of each, may be had at the Bank of Clover, the Bank of Hickory Grove, the First National Bank of Sharon, the People's National Bank of Rock Hill, or from The Enquirer Office at 25 cents a copy. This directory contains more than 4.000 names, and is of especial service and value for commercial purposes. Published by L. M. GRISTS SONS. ^lill n Chewii everC / se STONECYPHER'S Irish Potato j BUG KILLER ON YOUR IRISH POTATOES ! < It will Kill the Bugs and Not In- ! jure the Potato Vines. I Sold on an Absolute Guarantee or Money Back proposition, by Reliable Grocers and Druggists. ITEED BY | ICAL CO., Westminster, S.C. I The Agent of Another Company But Who Carries insurance un His Own Life In the Mutual Benefit, says: "It the average business man were in position to personally observe the extraordinary liberality of the Mutual Benefit in the treatment of its policyholders, the claims it pays (which no other company would pay) and the privileges It confers (which no other company ever conferred), I repeat, if the average business man had personal knowledge of these facts, you could sell all the insurance you wanted without a sales force." While the agent above quoted states an exact truth, it is also true that the "average business man," as well as all other kinds, leap before they look and buys life insurance from the agent who first presents the matter to them or for personal reasons rather than taking the trouble to see whether or not all companies are "about the same." I am prepared to prove all the companies doing business in this section are "about the same," except the Mutual Benefit, and that it is in a class all by itself. Look before You Loup. SAM >1. GRIM, Special Agent. REAL ESTATE IXJOK! Now Isn't Tills a Nice Selection? The J. K. Hope Place: 70 acres, near Tirzah, on Rock Hill and Clay Hill and Yorkville and Fort Mill roads. 5-room dwelling; large barn; 2 tenant houses and other buildings; 2 wells? one at house and other at barn. Adjoins T. M. Gates, F. E. Smith and Mrs. Glenn. This is something nice. See ME QUICK. Tlie E. T. Carson Place: 186 acres; 8-room dwelling; 3-room tenant house; large barn; crib, etc. Plenty of wood. Adjoins W. R. Carroll and others. Now is your time to see me. Two Tracts?One 63 acres and the other 60 acres?about 6 miles from Yorkville on McConnellsville-Chester road. First tract has 4-room dwelling; barn, crib and cotton house. Other tract bus one tenant house. Each tract watered by spring and branch. Plenty of timber. Good, strong land, and the price Is right. Better see me. Town Property: My offerings here are very attractive. Can suit you either in a dwelling or a beautiful lot in almost any part of Town on which to erect one. Let me show you. Geo. W. Williams HEAL ESTATE HKOKEIt. I^SHOl Three kind Easiest HH At all dealers a one price M > hewiest ig Gum hewed 5 ^{9IBk7 MRVi M? W Rebuilt Typewriters?Aa Good As [~ Ever?At Enquirer Office. i SEWING MACHINE REPAIRING YOUR Old Machine, that runs so heavily that you dread to use it, 1 can be cleaned up, readjusted and put I in such condition that you will be de- ' lighted with it, and would as soon have it as a New Machine. The cost is not very great for this work and you will be pleased at the expenditure. Better get your machine in shape now for the spring sewing. Tou'li find me at The Enquirer office. LEWIS M. GRIST. frolftagional (Cards. DR. WM. M. KENNEDY ? DENTAL SURGEON ? Office On Second Floor of the "Wylie Building?Opposite Postofflce. Telephone?Office, 99; Residence 166. i JAMES B. SHIRLEY DENTAL SURGEON First National Bank Building YORKVILLE, 8. C. W Office Hours: 8.30 A. M., to 5.30 P. M. 3 f ly 1 Geo. W. S. Hart Jos. E. Hart HART & HART ATTORNEYS AT LAW | Yorkville S. C. |r Witherspoon Big., Second Floor, Front. ^ 'Phone (Office) No. 58. " A1 I fin) Dntfnp One li C l ? YOUR OWN BROTHER WOUL] CHANGING TO A .. TRAVEL SUP I THESE MERCHANTS GIVE Y< PLUS A MILE IN TRAVEL THE THOMSON CO.? DRY GOODS, MILLINERY, N( SHIEDER DRUG STORE? DRUGS, MEDICINES, CANDIES, S. L. STEELE? GROCERIES, FRUITS, WHITE ] YORKVILLE HARDWARE C SHELF AND HEAVY HARDW4 LYRIC THEATRE? n/wivo ni/vriTD re AC I TRAVEL SLIPS RE F1RST NATIONAL R EPOLIS s?Black, White io use?Best for all t the _ n ?i I ^ f f CP MM Biro? HaMH^. ?j?^^KS 9^sHHen if; 'iSHK; *iBHHr '*J3bR? * * "iB ^L* *^^B> * raMp> ' *CwhH^^S? * *^5j B^ * ' jVm^g/. Aj^sflB^r^ SKSBiiT* nBt Rv' p\* # 4 Parly of Fishermen- Out of Mt Croghan, sitting around the camp Are, were discussing the COFFEE they had Just drunk. ALL OF THEM agreed "IT WAS JUST FINE." One man said, while they were talking, that he "Just Could Not Stand That "LUZIANNE COFFEE," but wanted Straight Coffee. The cook told him that "IT WAS LUZIANNE" they had Just finished drinking, and actually had to "show him" the can before the would believe it. The trouble with this fellow was, He Had Not Taken Proper Care in making Coffee out of LUZIANNE. ... LUZIANNE... IS GOOD ALL THE TIME. W Typewriter Ribbons?All kinds? t The Enquirer Office. ults From Your Kodak Je Do Your Finishing?ExcelVorkmanship, Beet Materials )rders Filled Same Day. iLARGE THE BEST ONE IN I ROLL FREE OF CHARGE. cee Are No Higher Than You or the Ordinary Kind. fELTY ART CO., , COLUMBIA, 8. C. 3 N'T BLAMF YOU FOR MERCHANT.. JU THE REST mONS, CLOTHING, SHOES. MAGAZINES, PAINTS, OILS, HOUSE COFFEE, TEAS, ETC. :o.? LRE, KITCHEN WARE, ETC. ) AS CAN BE SEEN?COME. :deemed at \NK Of Yorkville nu and T an Shoes I F. DALLEY CO., LM. o, N. Y.?Hamilton, Can.