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tumorous Department Tom Corwin's Retort.?A brilliant sally may extricate a man from a perilous position where all else would fail. Tom Corwin furnishes an example. He was so dark skinned that he was sometimes mistaken for a mulatto. Once while addressing a Whig mass meeting at Marietta, O., he was taking special pains not to say anything that could offend the abolitionists, who were just then strong enough to make and unmake politicians. A sharp witted opponent in oraer 10 put mm in uu einuaiiBoooing position, asked, "Shouldn't negroes be permitted to sit at the table and eat with white folks on steamboats and at hotels?" That seemed to be a poser. If Corwin answered yes the pro-slavery men would "knife" him. If he answered no the abolitionists would defeat him. Answering neither yea nor nay, he turned like a flash. "Fellow citizens," he replied, with his dark and mobile face lighting up with merriment, "I demand of you whether It is proper to ask such a question of a gentleman of my color?" The crowd yelled with delight, and Black Tom carried the day?Champ Clark, in Youth's Companion. Easily Caught.?The clerks at the Bee Hive are telling a good joke on Sam Bailes. The other afternoon an old colored woman came into the store to buy tablecloths and she stated in the beginning that she wanted something "new." Sam was patient and showed her everything in stock but nothing suited. "Oh, me!" she exclaimed, fussily, "haven't you anything different?" And Sam brought out one of the discarded tablecloths that he had put back on the shelf, and said without an air of interest: "Here is one of the very newest designs, Auntie. You see, the centre is in the middle and the border runs right around the edge." "Ain't it so! Let me have that one," she said eagerly.?Anderson Daily Mail. Speculation,?In a certain village down south there was a physician noted for his reckless automobile driving. One day when he answered the phone a woman's voice asked him if he were going out driving that afternoon. "No, I hardly think I will have time this afternoon," replied the doctor. "But why do you ask?" "Well," replied the annonymous questioner, "I want to send my little daughter down town for some thread if you are not." Dad Must Be Lazy.?By way of enlarging the children's vocabulary a certain village school teacher is in the habit of giving them a certain word and asking them to form a sentence in which that word occurs. The other day she gave the class the word "notwithstanding." There was a pause and then a bright-faced youngster held up his hand. "Well, what is your sentence, Tommy?" asked the teacher. "Father wore his trousters, out but notwithstanding." Not a Romance Reader.?"I say, is this here the novel you advised me to read?" said the cabman to the librarian. "Yes," replied the librarian, "that's the one." "Well." said the cabman, "you can just take it back. There's nine peo pie in ihe first four chapters who hired cabs, and each one of 'em when he got out flung his purse at the driver. Now, when I want that sort of literature I'll go to Jools Vernes and get it pure." Same True Here.?Here is a story told for professional platform people by a Boston Yale man: One day a visiting clergyman, who was to preach before the students at Yale University, asked how long he was expected to talk. "Of course, we put no time limit upon you," replied President Hadley, with his usual pump-handle gesture, "but we have a feeling here at Yale? that no souls?are saved after the first 20 minutes." No Cause for Alarm.?A San Francisco clergyman recently, at the close of his sermon, announced that in the course of a week he expected to go on a mission to the heathen. One of the parishoners exclaimed: "Why, my dear doctor, you have never told us one word of this before. It leaves us unprepared. What shall we do?" "Brother," said the minister, solemnly, "I shall not leave town." The Grand Fall Guy.?An unknown man was found dead in the outskirts of a small Kansas town recently. A revolver and 5100 in cash were found on his person. The coroner held an inquest and it took $75 to defray the expenses and bury the body. The police judge fined the corpse $25 for carrying concealed weapons, and confiscated the gun. The local editor, who published his obituary, got noth' ing.?Altoona (Kan.) Tribune. How It Happened.?One New Year's morning a Kentucky colonel, who is a regular guest 01 a i^ouisvine uuiei, came down to breakfast with a bandaged head. "What's the matter with the head?" asked several fiiends. "Confound it all!" exclaimed the colonel. "We had a little party last night, and one of the young men got intoxicated and trod on my head as he was walking across the room." A Horrible Finish.?"Now, Jose," warned the Mexican mother, "you had better obey me. You know what happens to bad Mexican boys who disobey their mothers, don't you?" "What happens to them?" asked little Jose. "They become presidents when they grow up," replied the mother. Transients.?"Do you keep any servants?" "No, of course not." "But I thought I saw one in your kitchen ?" "Oh, we have servants on the premises a day or two at a time; but we don't keep them." His Own Trade.?"If you don't mind, sir," said the new convict, addressing the warden. "I should like to be put at my own trade." "That might be a good idea," said tlie warden. "What may your trade be?" "I am an aviator." said the newcomer. MR. BRYAN EXPLAINS Former Secretary Wants to be Properly Understood. IS OPPOSED TO DOCTRINE OF FORCE. All His Public Career Has Been As a Follower of the Prince of Peace and He Wo.<ld Continue Along That Line to the End, Kegaraiess or rreceaeni [ and the Opinion of the World. Hon. Wm. J. Bryan on last Thursday gave out the following address to the American people: "To the American People: "You now have before you the text of the note to Germany?the note which it would have been my official J duty to sign had I remained secretary of state. I ask you to sit in judgment upon my decision to resign rather than to share the responsibility for it. I am sure you will credit me with honorable motives, but that is not enough. Good intentions could not atone for a mistake at such a time on such a subject under such circumstances. If your verdict is against me, I ask no mercy; I desire none if I have acted unwisely. A man in public life must act according to his conscience, but however conscientiously he acts, he must be prepared to accept, without complaint, any condemnation which his own errors may bring upon him; he must be willing to bear any deserved punishment, from ostracism to execution. But hear me before you pass sentence. "The president and I agree in purpose; we desire a peaceful solution of the dispute which has arisen between the United States and Germany. We not only desire it, but with equal fervor we pray for it, but we differ irreconcilably as to the means of securing it. If it were merely a personal difference it would be a matter of little moment, for all the presumptions are on his side?the presumptions that go with power and authority. He is T o q nrlvotp oiti7Pn y uui yicoiucui. x u.n* ?* without office or title?but one of the hundred million of inhabitants. "But the real issue is not between persons; it is between system; and I rely for vindication wholly upon the strength of the position taken. "Among the influences which governments employ in dealing with each other there are two of which are preeminent and antagonistic, force and persuasion. Force speaks with firmness and acts through the ultimatum; persuasion employs arguments, court investigation and depends upon negotiation. Force represents the old system?the system that must pass away; persuasion represents the new system ?the system that has been growing all too slowly, it is true, but growing for 1,900 years. In the old system war is the chief cornerstone?war which, at its best, is little better than war at its worst; the new system contemplates a universal brotherhood established through the uplifting power of example. "If I correctly interpret the note to Germany, it conforms to the standards of the old system rather than to the rules of the new, and I cheerfully admit that it is abundantly supported by precedents?precedents written in characters of blood upon almost every page of human history. Austria furnishes the most recent precedent; it was Austria's firmness that dictated the ultimatum against Serbia, which set the world at war. Every ruler now participating in this unparalleled conflict has proclaimed his desire for peace and denied responsibility for the war, and it is only charitable that we should credit all of them with good faith. They desired peace, but they sought it according to the rules of the old system. They believed that firmness would give the best assurance of the maintenance of peace and faithfully following precedent, they went so near the fire that they were one after another, sucked into the contest. Never before have the frightful follies of this fatal system been so clearly revealed as now. The most civilized and enlighted?aye, the most Christian of the nations of Europe?are grappling with each other as if in a death struggle. They are sacrificing the best and bravest of their sons on the battlefield; they are converting their gardens into cemeteries and their homes into houses of mourning; they are taxing me weaim ui luuaj auu ia; me a burden of debt on the toil of the future; they have filled the air with thunderbolts more deadly than those of Jove, and they have multiplied the perils of the deep. Adding fresh fuel to the llame of hate, they have daily devised new horrors until one side is endeavoring to drown non-combatant men, women and children at sea, while the other seeks to starve non-combatant men, women and children on land. And they are so absorbed in alternate retaliations and in competitive cruelties that they seem, for the time being, blind to the appeals of humanity. A tree is known by its fruit. The war in Europe is the ripened fruit of the old system. "This is what firmness, supported by force, has done in the old world; shall we invite it to cross the Atlantic? Already the jingoes of our country have caught the rabies from the dogs of war; shall the opponents of organized slaughter be silent while the disease spreads? "As an humble follower of the Prince of Peace; as a devoted believer in the prophecy that 'they that take the sword shall perish by the sword,' I beg to be counted among those who earnestly urged the adoption of a course in this matter which will leave no doubt of our government's willingness to continue negotiations with Germany until an amicable understand is reached, or at least until the stress of war is over, we can appeal from Philip drunk with carnage to Philip sobered by the memories of an historic friendship and by a recollection of the innumeiable ties of kinship that binds the fatherland to the United States. "Some nations must lead the world oui <n me oiacK nigni 01 war iniu imlight of that day when 'swords shall he beaten into plowshares.' Why not make that honor ours? Some day? why not now??the nations will learn that enduring peace cannot be built upon fear?that good will does not grow upon the stalk of violence. Some day the nations will place their trust in love, the weapon for which there is no shield: in love, that suffereth long and is kind: in love, that is not easily provoked, that beareth all things, believeth all things, hopeth all things, endureth all things: in love which, though despised as weakness by the worshippers of Mars, abideth when all else fails. (Signed) WILLIAM J. BRYAX." GENERAL NEWS NOTES Items of Interest Gathered from All Around the World. A severe snowstorm continued for more than twelve hours in portions of Montana, Friday. Sunday school children to the number of 115,000, paraded the streets of Brooklyn, N. Y., Thursday. It is reported from Rome that the pope will receive the $40,000 Nobel peace prize this year. President Wilson expects to spend .the 4th of July with his family at their I onmmnr hnmo at Pfimlsh N. H. i Two British fishing boats were sunk in the North sea Friday by Zeppelins. This is said to be the first feat of t-he kind in the history of aviation. Officers and several members of the crew of the German raider Prinz Eitel Fredrich, interned at Norfolk, Va., have broken their paroje and disappeared. Five hundred refugees from Mexico City, one-third of them American citizens, left Vera Cruz for Galveston, on board the army transport Buford, Friday. Up to June 10, more than 150,000 horses have been shipped from East St. Louis, 111., to the governments of Great Britain, Franch, Italy and Belgium. John Strando, a Sicilian, was lynched by a mob at Johnson City, 111., on Thursday. Strando had murdered a wealthy farmer and wounded his daughter. Francisco Lagos Chazaro, a Villa delegate from Chihuahua, has been elected provisional president of Mexico, by a convention sitting in Mexico City. A silver pew plate bearing the autograph of George Washington, has been stolen from Grace church, Alexandria, Va. A sight seeing tourist is suspected of the theft. General Christian deWet, one of the leaders of the South African rebellion against Great Britain, on trial at Blomfontain, pleaded not guilty to treason, but guilty of sedition. Mrs. Ida W. Freedley, a well known Philadelphia woman, and Duncan Mc Kenzie, her chauffeur, were killed at Cross River, N. H., Friday, when an automobile went over a 25-foot embankment on a curve. Fire destroyed 100 Red Cross ambulances and 200 army motor vans entailing a loss of $500,000, when the automobile plant of Brian, Huges & Strachan at Park Royal, England, was burned Thursday. Seventeen persons confined in the penitentiary at Santiago, Panama, revolted Friday and ten of them escaped to the jungles, all heavily armed. A policeman and a guard were killed and five guards were dangerously wounded. Gustav Stahl, the German reservist, who made an affidavit alleging that he saw four 6-inch guns mounted on the Lusitania before she sailed on her last voyage, was arrested in New York Thursday, by Federal officers, charged with perjury. The Alabama court holds that the new anti-liquor advertising law of that state to be constitutional in all its details, and further that the law abrogates all contracts for liquor advertising between advertising agencies and newspapers. Nine military training camps have been established in Canada for training soldiers for European service. During the summer 100,000 men will be instructed in the various camps. The instructors will be officers from the front of the invalided home. Anthony Comstork, for 40 years a United States postofflce inspector, will soon retire from the service. He has made a specialty of all kinds of vice and it is said that enormous pressure has been brought to secure his retirement. In the investigation of crooked methods in the Annapolis Naval academy examinations now in progress, it was testified Friday that there was only one cadet in all of the four classes, who did not use "dope" in the examination work. Jacob Miller, aged 20, who on March 20, fatally wounded two Philadelphia police officers, has been sentenced to electrocution by a Philadelphia Judge. Miller was a dope fiend. At tne same time james xteiuy was sentenced to electrocution for the murder of his wife in November, 1912. Five thousand horses broke out of stockyards at East Alton, 111., early Friday morning during a storm, and did great damage to growing crops, lawns and fences before being recaptured. The horses were intended for the British and French armies. About 700 of them were captured by German farmers, who refused to surrender them until indemnified for all damages done. The twentieth annual convention of the Wholesale Liquor Dealers' association, ended at Cincinnati, O., Thursday. In a closing address the vice president said: "Such machines as the Anti-Saloon league are apt to do harm that will be great. The evil which lies in such a system is plain, for no matter what kind of a man the legislator may be, or what principle he may present, or what methods he may employ, just as long as he Is a 'dry' voter and a 'dry' advocate he is boomed by the Anti-Saloon league." Science and Slaughter.?Without question, man has every reason to be grateful to science for her assistance in the favorite pursuit by which the most part he reckons history, writes Henry W. Nevenson, in the June Atlantic. Nor is he remiss in taking advantage of her progress. This war is probably the greatest and most destructive, as well as the most scientific since creation. Mr. Asquith tells us that 6,000,000 men are now trying to kill one another as fast as possible in Europe, and his is a low estimate. There they stand, in long opposing lines. On one front the battle line is said to extend nearly 400 mites; on the other nearly twice as far. In the west, sheer numbers and the accuracy of industrious science almost prevent movement. For nearly five months now those men, in their effort to kill and escape death, have lived below the surface, like rabbits or primeval troglodytes. They have floundered in oozing mud?"the fifth element," as Napoleon called it. They have stood day and night in trenches, soaked to their middle by cold water, until their limbs swelled purple and threatened gangrene. The occasion of exploding shells has driven their eyes into their heads so that they see no more; shock and horror have struck them speechless. Their reason is overturned; some weep without ceasing; some gibble like ghosts. Limbs are scattered over the countryside. Hot-smelling blood pours from their bodies in unexpected quantity. 4^BT Att^iii^^^HP^ ^?1E ^Hf. jHR f9v ^^BBEE !^K<.\ j * t^K * '^3iA,,i ,SS j^H^,\ 5 rflMK1.. ^^K, i 'jJH^' '^Mn,* ^^KIR lj| 77ze Chewiest M Wk Chewing Gum JP l|jkever Ch Chew Bobs" 5c. the packet or two "Bobs" for a cent at all the better stands and stores. AND now Hearts are trumps in chewing gum! "Bobs" made it hearts ?raised the bid on the pep, the flavor and the chew?and put over a grand slam. Look for the candy-coated chewing gum hearts?"Bobs." Everywhere ifs "Bobs" Get Better Results From Your Kodak a. Lst U* Do Your Finishing?Exc?l[wO>|^Sm K\ lent Workmanship, Best Materials ^25 Used, Orders Filled Same Day. HI WE ENLARGE THE BEST ONE IN fSMl I HiDSI EACH roll free of charge. vSmi n I JILWyV, Our Prices Are No Higher Than You IHI [5 > Pay for the Ordinary Kind. NOVELTY ART CO., ^ Box 251, COLUMBIA, 8. C. This Is Top Dresser Year If you have fertilized your crops lightly at planting lacking in potash, it is not too late to remedy this, Side dress with a fertilizer containing sufficient pre necessary elements of plant Food?Phosphoric Acid, Do not make the mistake of using a material thi (Ammonia) only, such as Nitrate of ^da. To get tl as well as stalk and foliage, use ROYSTER'S TOF not only provide ammonia in quickly available forir acid and POTASH. ROYSTER'i TOP-DRESSE TRADE MArtK ? PS hr f r t REGISTERED. Will stimulate the growth of your crop, increase unfavorable seasonal conditions, and check the t blight and shed. BRANDS Available PRESTO TOP DRESSER, ... 4. ROYSTER'S SPECIAL TOP DRESSER, 4. MAGIC TOP DRESSER . . . Royster top dressers, like all Royster Fertilizers, are compounded on scientific principles: plant-food for proper time and in right proportions: mechanic; Look for the trade-mark on every bag. Send postal for book on Top Dressing and nam'- of neares F. S. ROYSTER GUANO COW Norfolk, Va. Charlotte, N C. Tarboro, N. Spartanburg, S. C. Atlanta, Ga. Macon, Ga. Montgomery, Ala Baltimore, Md ft i iiiiiM LI i?Pii:fHpRHH LJ I 1 i!llH||| iiiiH I?i i?i ' CdyVM MVp j: | I | y ^ /-" / J La Lasting. EXCURSION TO ATLANTA, GA. VIA Southern Railway I?renilor Carrier of the South. Thursday, June 1 FROM ROCK HILL, YORKVILLE AND BLACKSHVKG. Schedule. Rate. Lv. Rock Hill 6.60a.m. #4.00 Lv. Yorkville 7.22a.m. $4.00 Lv. Hickory Grove. .7.53a.m. #4.00 Arrive Aiiania, ua.. .4.4up.m. EXCURSION TICKETS Will be Rood going Only on SPECIAL TRAINS and Regular Train to connect with SPECIAL TRAIN as mentioned above. EXCURSION TICKETS Will be Good Returning on All Regular Trains except New York-New Orleans Limited, No. 38, to reach original starting point by midnight Tuesday, June 22, 1915. FIVE DAYS IN ATLANTA. For further information apply to Ticket Agents, or W. E. McGee, S. H. McLEAN, Asst. Gen. Pass Agt. DIs. Pass. Agt., Columbia, S. C. Columbia, S. C. DT Send The Enquirer your orders for high grade Commercial Stationery, Booklets, Law Cases, etc. Another jETNA Check Came This Morning ISNT it fine, John 1 Your eighth week in bed just gone by and we've received two of these checks for $200 each. We can buy that new diningroom set nowas though nothing had happened. Every husband ought to take out an /ETNA DISABILITY POLICY. John. We women are so dependent on what you men do for us?especially when we have children. Just think?$50 a week as long as you're sick, up to a full year. And at such a trifling cost, too. Oh, John, why will men put off these things until it's too latel We women were never meant to fight hardships that a few cents a day could save us from. /CTNA-IZE ?get the greatest insurance in the world. Protects your salary and leaves your savings snug in the bank Call, write or phone. SAM M. GRIST, Agent, Yorkville time, or used fertilizer provided you Top or portions of all three Ammonia and Potash, at contains Nitrogen le increase in fruitage, * DRESSERS, which i, but also phosphoric s :rs the yield, overcome endency in cotton to i Ammonia Potash 10. 4. 7.50 2.50 9. 3. backed by experience: the plant at just the al condition perfect. z noysier Lreaier. IPANY, C. Columbia, S. CL Columbus, Ua. Ill yj j g(g)pr^ POL n 1 Shine Brinps the Smile of Satisfaction! In the "Eaojr-Opening" Box. F. DALLEY CO., Ltd., BUFFALO, N. Y., ? THIS BANK J 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? h If you have any Surplus Cash that F you may not need for Three Months or longer, deposit it with this Bank on a "CERTIFICATE." Let it earn c you something while it is "Resting." We are always glad to get acquaint- s ed with new folks?Come in and take t a look at us. ^ T Vi r\ n ?-> 1r a-P 1 ATTAr I 1 lie DdLJA UI ^iUVCI Al. L. Smith, Pres. J. A. Page, Cash. CLOVER. S. O. Ice Cream Freezers Every family should have an ICE CREAM FREEZER. Ice cream is always an acceptable dessert and It Is easily made with a good freezer?the . kind we sell. Come and see us about ' a Freezer Today. GROCERIES? People who know, will tell you that we sell as good a grade of FANCY i GROCERIES as are to be found In t Yorkvllle, and they will also tell you t that our varieties are as great, and J also that Our Prices are as Reasonable < as prices can be made. When next I you are buying Groceries, make it a 1 point to see what we can do for you. ? FARM TOOL8? 3 Whatever you may need in the way J of Farm Tools you will generally find 1 it here, and furthermore you will find that our PRICES ARE RIGHT. R. E. HEATH COMPANY POSITIVELY > J ONLY FIVE 8UITS PER MONTH ALLOWED TO MEMBERS 0p MY 1 PRESSING CLUB. EXTRA PIECES j WILL MEAN EXTRA CHARGES. i I have moved my Restaurant and Pressing Club to the Williams & Bar- . nett Building opposite the Shleder Drug Co., and am better prepared than ever to serve good meals and lunches. T hnv? secured the services of Mr. D. M. Hawkins, an expert presser and , cleaner and will guarantee satisfaction in the work of my pressing club. ' WClub members, Again?Only five < suits per month allswed members. ] It. D. DORSETT, Proprietor. ( I'lione 149. ...LIME... The next time that you want LIME ?Lime for building purposes, for . plastering or for sanitary purposes? come to us for what you need. We make a specialty of LIME. Have the old fashioned Unslacked Lime in barrels?lumps, and also have the New | kind?HYDRATED?ground almost as < fine as flour and especially adapted j to plastering work and also for sanl- i tary purposes. Put up In paper sacks. CEMENT i We also specialize on CEMENT? have it in stock all the time and can supply any amount from a sack to a ! carload. LUMBER PRODUCTS? When you want Doors, Blinds, Sash, j Mantels, Railings, Door and Window 1 Frames, Flooring, Ceiling, Siding or 1 Framing, come and see Us. We can supply your wants and at the right prices. See Us for SHINGLES. J J. J. KELLER & COMPANY Toilet Articles Now, with the hot weather comes a growing demand from the ladies for more or less TOILET necessities? TALCUM POWDERS, FACE POWDERS. FACE CREAMS. TOILET J SOAPS, Etc. As usual, the YORK DRUG STORE is ready for this service. Never before have we had a larger or more varied assortment of TOILET ARTICLES of real merit than we have right now. Ladies who desire anything in this line will find it worth while to look through our lines of TOILET ARTICLES. YOUR TEETH Be sure that you take care of them. You can preserve them almost indefl- . nitely by proper treatment. Use the ( Tooth Brush frequently and with the Brush use some one of our many Dentifrices?Pastes, Powders, Liquids? whichever you prefer. If you have a choice, we have it for YOU. YORK DRUG STORE professional Cards. T. L. GLENN | Veterinarian OFFERS his Professional services at reasonable rates, to those in need of the same. Address, Yorkville, S. C., or Call J Telephone No. 92. 46 f 13t J t DR. WM. M. KENNEDY j ? DENTAL SURGEON ? g Oillce On Second Floor of the Wylle jBuilding?Opposite Postoificc. c Telephone?Office, 99; Residence 166. 0 0 JAMES B. SHIRLEY } DENTAL SURGEON * First National Bank Building r YORKVILLE, S. C. a fW Office Hours: 8.30 A. M., to 5.30 P. M. 3 f ly e a e Geo. W. S. Hart Jos. E. Hart J HART & HART ATTORNEYS AT LAW Yorkville S. C. q Witherspoon Big., Second Floor, Front. C 'Phone (Office) No. 58. a Quick, Brilliant, IAMILTON, CAN. 4 THE CITY MARKET WE BUT AND SELL CHICKENS WE BUY AND SELL EGOS WE BUY AND SELL BUTTER? Good Butter. We handle the finest HAMS to be ad on the market, Wholesale and tetall. All the BEEF we sell Is of the hoicest to be had?carefully selected iiail-rea animais?trquui 10 anyiiiius o be had in any butcher shop in imerica. WE WANT YOUR TRADE. C. F. SHERER, Proprietor. SMOAK-BROWN CO. HORSES. MULES, VEHICLES. TYSON & JONES BUGGIES Before YOU buy your next Buggy? taw or Later?come and see us about he matter before you buy. We sell he well-known, thoroughly tested TYSON A JONE8 BUGGIES Vnd we know and you doubtless know, hat there is no better Buggy sold on his market than the TYSON A TONES Buggies. Scores of York bounty people will tell you that they lave never owned or used & Better 3uggy than the Tyson A Jones vehicle ind few of them that are as good. We can supply the kind of Buggy rou want and you will And that our jrlces will give you the Maximum of Buggy Value for the Price You Pay. Come and see US about it whenever fOU are in the notion of buying a New Buggy. SMOAK-BROWN COMPANY lord Calvert Brand COFFEE For some time past we have been lunting for a Coffee that we could >ffer our customers with the assurince that It would give Absolute Satsfaction. We've found it. It is the LiORD CALVERT COFFEE? We offer our trade this Coffee with he following 'Guarantee: (See that the Label Is Not Broken). If after using Entire Contents of this Can, You are Not Satisfied in Every Respect, Your Grocer (that nieuns Can-oil Bros.) will Refund the Money You Paid for It. rhis Guarantee means just exactly what it says, without twists or turns. LORD CALVERT COFFEE is 8teel Hut. and is DUt up in One and Three Pound Air Tight Cans, and sells for 15 Cts. for 1 Lb.; $1.00 for S Lbs. If You want the Best there Is in Toffee try LORD CALVERT BRAND. CARROLL BROS. UFE IT CAN BE A 3UCCE88 OR A FAILURE. WHICH WILL IT BE WITH YOU? ?? ?????? Look at the men who are successful n the eyes of the world. Ninety-nine jut of every hundred started a Bank Account when they were young?and ituck to it. And now, look at the failures. Very Few of them have a Bank account new. Mot speaking of when they were young. Perhaps you think you have not enough money to start an account. Haven't you a dollar? That's all It takes it THIS BANK. Just try It for a year or six months, [f you do not wish to continue It you lave lost nothing by the trial. Which Will It Be?8uocees or Failure? IT'8 UP TO YOU. Bank of Hickory Grove HICKORY GROVE. 8. C. WEDDING PRESENTS~ STERLING SILVER PLATED SILVER CUT GLASS FANCY CHINA lome and let as show you how easy you can make selections at this good store. T. W. SPECK, Jeweler REAL ESTATE iOOKI Now Isn't This a Nice Selection? The J. K. llope Place: 70 acres. tear Tlrzah, on Rock Hill and Clay 1111 and Yorkvllle and Fort Mill roads, i-room dwelling; large barn; 2 tenant louses and other buildings; 2 wells? me at house and other at barn. Adoins T. M. Uates, F. E. Smith and ilrs. Glenn. This is something nice, ee ME QUICK. The E. T. Carson Place: 186 acres; i-room dwelling; 3-room tenant louse; large barn; crib, etc. Plenty if wood. Adjoins W. R. Carroll and >thers. Now is your time to see me. Two Tracts?One 63 acres and the ther 60 acres?about 6 miles from T nrl/iril\*%. An MnPAnnallaullln-PhnatAr oad. First tract has 4-room dwelling; barn, crib and cotton house. Othr tract has one tenant house. Each ract watered by spring and branch. Menty of timber. Good, strong land, nd the price is right. Better see me. Town Property: My offerings here re very attractive. Can suit you eithr in a dwelling or a beautiful lot In Imodt any part of Town on which to rect one. Let me show you. jeo. W. Williams HEAI, ESTATE BROKER. W Buy your Typewriter Ribbons, larbons and Paper at The Enquirer ffice. Prompt attention given to mail nd phone orders. IBBHfSB mm inmm ?