University of South Carolina Libraries
BY CLINKSCALES & LANGSTON. ANDERSON, S. C., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27. 18?W. VOLUME XXXV-NO 14 Men's Shoes At $3.50 ? We have just received our first shipment of Shoes for Men. These Shoes we had made for us by one of the best manufacturers in the East. We have them in all styles, jae quality, one price, and that is $3.50. We want all you people who have been paying $4,50 to $5.00 for Shoes to ?-.orne in and see ours at $3.50. We think we can save you from $?.00 to $1.50 on your next pair, and you'll think so, - oo, when you wear them. Every pair is sold with our guar antee-your money back if you want it. School Suits For Boys. Our line of School Suits ie complete, and every Suit in our Stock is made of durable, hard-to-wear-out cloth, which .re priced from $1.00 to $5.00. Suits, for instance, in which :he Pants have double seats and knees and are tape-sewed throughout, in which the Coats* are double-stitched and the buttons sewed on with a waxed linen thread. Remember, when you want anything in the Clothing ;:ne that " WE SELL IT FOR LESS." B. 0. Evans & Co, THE; SPOT CASH CLOTHIERS. . WHITE FRONT. _- OUR Buggy and Wagon Trade is on the increase, but we want it to increase more. THOUSANDS ot Farmers can testify that "Old Hickory," "Tennessee/' rtudebaker" and "Milburn'' Wagons are the lightest running and will wear Miger than other makes on the market. Yon may find in this County these Va gone that have been in coustuot use for the past twenty years. We also have on hand a large and varied assortment of BUGGIES and t AKRI?GES, and among them the celebrated "Babcock's," "Columbias," Tyson & Jones," "Columbus," and many other brands. Our record for selling first-class Goods is evident by the blands mou nce! above, that we have .exclusivo sale for in Anderson County." Our "Young Men's" Buggy has no equal. Have a Ison large and select Hue of HARNESS, SADDLES, BRI DLES, &c., and have recently secured exclusive control and sale of the cele brated "Matthew Heldma?" Harness, which is well known in this County, ind needs no "talking up." The Wagon and Bu^gy manufacturers arc advancing prices on ali their ?'.ods on account of the advance in price of all the material,, and in consc ience we will have to advance our prices from 85.00 to 810.00 a job : but *e wish to give you a chance to buy before thc rise, so you had better join ?J the procession aud buy one of ?.ur Buggies.or Wagons at once, for on and liter September let next' our prices will be at least 85.00 higher than at resent. We regret having to do this, but cannot get around it. Bny now and save this advance. JOS. J. FRET WELL. Will still sell you a first-class Boggy for $30.00. Car nage $85,00._ ,:,_. Furnishing Goods. HATS, CAPS. Always up in Styles, down in Price. Novelties in the above lines. ' HALL & MILFORD. THE WOMAN, THE MAN and the THE PILL. "She wai* ? good woman. He loved her. She was his wile. The pie wai good. Hie wife made it He ate it. Buttha pie disagreed with him, and he disagreed with his wife. Now lie takes a pill niter pio and is happv. The pill he takes is EVAN8'. MORAI* : Avoid Dyspepsia, by using EVANS LIVER AND KIDNEY PILLS. I EVANS PHARMACY, BILL ARP'S LETTER. Arp Has to Han1 Help in Answering Ills Lettern. A I lan (a Constitution. lt is a hopeful sign that so many ot tho young girls and boys have a thirst for knowledge. Tho youth's depart ment in tho newspapers and magazines is growing into importance and their letters to tho editors betoken studious, inquiring minds. Thc art of letter writing is itself not only an accomplish ment, but a good part of a polished education. Letters indicate character and good letters require thought. The letters of notablo men and women are tho best part of their biographies. They ure an index to the heart, the emotions, the disposition. Time was when but few could write at all, and the opening of mail in a country town was a small altair. I know from experience, for when 1 was in my teens my father was the postmaster and I had the work to do. There are now at least ten letters per capita to where there was one in those days. One great drawback on lette? writing then then was the cost of postage. A letter to a plaee within tho State was 124 cents and thc postage had to be paid by the person receiving it, und if it was a poor letter he felt like he was cheated. Many a letter was handed back to nie with such a re mark as "Well, 1 reckon it's from Dick Jones, over in Arkansaw, and I hain't got the quarter. Just, put it back outil f come ag'in.'' lt keeps me busy now-a-days to an swer all tho letters I receive. My wife aud daughters help to keep up thc cor respondence with tho far-away boys and thc other kindred, but good friends who write kind letters to me must be answered in person. Such letters are a pleasuro and a comfort. Then, there are many letters asking for charity or a little help for a church that only reminds me how poor I am. Hut these letters from inquiring minds who are in pursuit of knowledge and perplexed about thc mysteries of nature always interest me. and I have to pre tend to be a wise man whether 1 am or not. Now, here is one from a pretty school i girl in her teens. I know that she is pretty, because she writes a pretty let ter and there is not a blot nor an erasure or an misspelled word. S lu? wants to know where the ?lay begins and why, aud where thc navigators lirst lind a change. Of course that is worth knowing, and I suppose that very few outside of tho colleges and thc continental travelers and the sea faring men understand it. Well, my dear girl, the day begins just where man begun-in tho garden of Eden. If tho Creator had chosen ; New York or Charleston for that gar den, the ??ty v??i?i?. have begun over ! here on this continent and extended westward to California, as thc people i multiplied and carried it there. Of course the day kept its name and its dato around, and east of Palestine ns far as tho sea. but "westward the tide of empire takes its way,v and so did tho tide of time. Columbus brought the day with him to this continent. From our eastern coast tho people took it to California, and from there thc; missionaries,took it to the Sandwich islands, and it continued to follow the sun until the navigators got around to Bombay and Hong Kong and Cairo and found they had lost a day and it was Monday instead of Sunday. And those j who sailed eastward and traveled i against thc sun found they had gained J a day and it was Saturday instead of Sunday. But it is not so now, for there is an | international iine in midocean-u mon- j dean that has becu established by the j great powers and accepted by the nav igators' of all nations as the change of j dato line. This line is 180 degrees west of Greenwich and runs from New Zea- j land north to behring straus and goes not far from Samoa. It is just half way around the world from ?condon midis called the Antipode of Green wich. lt is 1.5300 miles west ol' Hawaii and :t,000 west of San Francisco. This lino is check-marked on tho up-to-date maps and Sunday is printed on the west sido and Monday on the east. Navigators tell by their log books and compass when thoy havo reached it. and tho captain or thc mato announces with groat ceremony: "Set the day clock oack twenty-four hours. We ! havo crossed the linc." ! For many years our American rail ways, us thoy pressed their way from tho Atlantic to the Pacific, found the question of time very confusing, and hence by consent of action they estab lished four divisions of ral way time and marked longitudinal lines 1,000 miles npart to indicate them. When tho train crosses one of these lines the < ?iasscngers set their watches back or orward just ono hour, for the sun moves or seems to move just 1.000 miles an hour. These moudean lines divide, time into eastern, central, moun tain and Pacific, and they pass through Now York city, St. Louis, Denver and Carson City, and therefore when it is 12 o'clock in New York city it is only 0 o'clock in California. The railroad companies, however, could not cut thc-iv j lines in two to suit these mondeans and I heneo their railroad timo is a zig-zag crooked line to fit their terminal points, but it approximates tho mondean. This is not all that could bo written about time and where tho day begins, but it is enough to satisfy tho school girls aud boys, and especially the pret - ty girl who writes mo from Mcliac. In those days of telegraph and ocean cables it seems xcry funny to us votc rans that when a message is sent from London it gets hero two or three hours before it starts, and * ? wo send n tele gram to San Francisco to-day at noon it gets there at 0 o'clock this morning. The battle of Manila was fought on Sunday morning, but the nows of it carno on Saturday night before. How is thatt Edgu. Poo wrote a pretty little story caliea "Throe Sundays in a Week," in which he told about a young man who was adopted and reared by a rich old bachelor uncle who had been a sea cap tain, and low the old sailor was to leave kia nephew - a largo fortune if he be huved to suit him. Thc ohl man was awfully uneasy tor fear he would do something to displease him. At last lie fell in love, ol' course, with a very Iiuorbut pretty fjh? uamed Kate. They icpt their love a Beeret and lived on it for about a year, ami thought the old captain didn't know it. but he did. .So they determined to get married even tho'it should make thc oldman mad i and he should turn them out of doors I and not leave them anything when he I died. So on Sunday morning Jack took Kate by the hnnd and boldly ! they went into the old man's presence ? and told him all about it, anti that they ! had come for his consent and for him to Ifix tho day when they should bc mar ried. The old fellow was really glad of it, for he liked the girl, but he couldn't help being contrary and so he blustered around and pretended to be very mad, and finally wound up by say I ing: "Yes, yes, #ou may get married, ! and I'll say when-yes, when. Well. I you may get married when there art; ! threo Sundays ina week. Yes, then ? and not before." I This was awful and the sad young : couple were about to leave when thur?! ' was a knock at the door. When it was ! opened two sailors, sea captains, too. ! carno rushing in ami seized the old man's hands and hugged him. ami all : three got jolly, for they were old ?rhums ! and had not seen each other for a year, i Tlic old uncle introduced them to the < young man and Kate, and said some thing nico about them. He soon ' brought out som?' tine tdd Math* ria i and made everv body take a think. , Alter while Captain Pratt saith "Well, j now 1 remember that tim last, time we ; were together wo hail a royal gamo of j cartis. Slippos?* we have another game as a reminder.'; "Oh, nt)," said thc ol? 1 uncle. "Good ; friends, you forget that this is Sunday, and true Englishmen never play cartis ? ou Sunday." "Sunday, indeed,*' ex i claimed Captain Pratt, "lt is Monday. I Yesterday was Sunday, and 1 had I prayers on board my ship as I always do." Captain Smithson by this time was excited ami exclaimed: "Why you both aro crazy. To-day is Sat urday and to-morrow will ho Sunday. Didn't I make my sailors scrub ship this morn ing before sunrise as we came, int** port, and don't wc always scrub ship tm Saturdav. What are you thinking about?" Thou the tdd uncle laughed anti chuckled and danced aronutl the room ill great glee, for#the wine was titling its work. "Sunday-Sunday!*1 he exclaimed. ? "Pratt says that yesterday was Sun ' dav, Smithson swears that, to-morrow j will bo Sunday, and 1 swear that today I is Sunday. Ila! ha! ha! 1 sen how it is. I Pratt sailed west from London and Smithson sailed, east and have been round thc world in opposite.directions, and I have stayed at home. Three Sundays in a week, bj'Jupiter. Here, .lack, you young dog, go after the preacher anti you anti Kate get mar ried to-day. For it will be a long time he fore three Sundays come together again." 1 haven't tobi the story n> Poe told it. hut that is tho gist of it! Ilii.i. Am*. To Shut Down Southern Mill?. pjiii.ADisi.ru IA, Sept. -About twenty-fire representatives of the Southern Spinners' Association from N'orih and South Carolina are now iu this city. Thc delegation Ls headed by President J. II. McAden anti Sec retary G. li. Hiss, pf Charlotte, N. C. Thc visitors came to set? the National Export Association. They will while herc, it is said, discuss questions which may result in temporarily shutting down a large number of mills in thc South. This is on account of thc an ticipated increase of cost ol' cotton. The present price of material such as the mills in the Association use is G! cents jier pound. It is expected that tu sixty days thc price will he raised to 7 J cents. The question whether or not it would bc advisable, to take orders at tho present prices or refuse them is accordingly the principal subject of ? discussion wit h the committeemen herc and among the members pf the Asso ; chillon themselves. .Secretary Hiss said to-night that the present prices are entirely too low, anti unless ah advance is made if will be im possible to fill orders at the anticipated raise in the price of the. raw material. As a matter of fact, bethought it would he better to shut down than run the mills at a loss. Should there bc a gent rai shut-down it might alicet one hundred and fifty mills in the South. Five Sisters for Wives. William Meictrr, of Kaccoon Creek, W. Va., has married live sisters. Not all at once, of course, hut when one wifedied Mr. Mercer married bereister. In a word, Mr. Mercer fell in love with thc clan of Moffat, and the Moffats agreed that they must keep Mr. Mercer in the family. Miss Anna Moffat, whom he married t>u Tuesday last, is years old. In pursuance of the plan to keep Mercer in the family Miss Anna rejected a young man tit Kaccoon Creek. "Each one of thc Moffat girls has made rac a better wife than her sister,"' says Mr. Mercer. "I can't say more for any of them than that. 1 really think 1 am fonder of Anna than 1 was of Jennie, Ada, Catherine or Mis .sonri." Mr. Mercer, whose age is ?u, married Miss Jennie Moffat when lie was 111 years old. Tho girls' parents have never of fered objection to their marriage with Mercer, although Mrs. Moffat w as late ly heard to complain: "It docs seem strnngo to have had four girls married and only one son-in-law." Each ot Mercer's wives has blessed him with two children, all of whom are really first cousins. They can call their now stepmother "auntie," if they will. .Miss Auna Moffat is robust, but it must gratify Mr. Mercer to know thero is yet one Molfat girl left, who is 30 years old and noted for her patient disposition.-Ph ila (Mph ia JRecord. Cheap Printing. Law I > liefs at 60 cents a Pa KC-Good Work, Good Paper, Prompt Delivery. Minutes cheaper than at any other house. Catalogues in tho best style If you have printing to do. it will be to your interest to wnto to the Press and Banner. Abberille. S. C. rf. Corner ?reek News Th? farmers of this Ruction uro very bus} nowadays picking ?mt their cot ton. The majority are about half through picking. Sumo of our farmer? will not make over half u crop of cot ton, while others will make a very fair crop. Com is generally good in this sectiou, and wc think our farmers will mnke plenty ot corn, etc., to feed stock , on nnotheryear. Muscadines have been plentiful in ' these parts this year, and we have cer tainly enjoyed ourselves feasting on ? them. Mr. J. N. Shirley's mineral spring is tho centre of much attraction these days, for people from fnr and near are drinking it for theirhenlth. lt is prov- : ing a great benefit to several. Mr. Shir- ; ley bad it analyzed at Clemson College, and it was found to contain some min eral. Messrs. Darby and Lomax arc put ting the roads of thia section in excel lent shape. This is the second year that these gentlemen have had thc road machine in their hands,and we haven't heard a single complaint as to their working thu roads. Wc think Mr. Hanks bas the right men in the right place. Miss Modenu Digby, one of our fair belles, visited her cousin, Miss Cassie Fleming, at Abbeville, last week. Hugh Bigby, of the enterprising town of Pelzer, spent Sunday with relatives. Clayton Kagsdale ami Clarence Cle ments, twtUd' Harker'? Creek's dashing young sports, made pop calls on two ot our fair young girls? Sunday night. Com? again, gents, for we are sure you enjoyed the visit. Cotton is bringing a very pood price now, and wo se?' no use ol' tho fanners grumbling, although wo would like to seo it go to seven cents. Cotton seed was bringing lt? cents at 11 (?nea Path . Snturda\\ ami we say let 'or roll on. Tv ia?. - mm o ?rn The public schools will open in Hall ! Township October lUth. Tue trustees will meet at Cars wei I at 2 p. m. on Oc tober 14th to consider applications of . teachers. Xo teachers will be accepted who do not tirst get permission to tench from thc Township Hoard. J. T. C JONES. Ch'in. mm . mm Will Kater Suit Agaiust the Nomi. . Attorney General Hclliuger is pre . paring to bring suit against the bonds : men of Col. W. A. Neal, owing to the I failure of Col. Neal to make any other j settlement of the amount the commit tee linds him owing the State, lt hap pens that all turee of the bondsmen ? aro Columbians aud ure men who stand I high in the community, financially as ! well ns otherwise. Thc bond is signed j by Wilie Jones. P. IL Ilaltiwanger and j Scott Pope. Mr. Bellinger recently notified those bondsmen that they were expected to call to see. him and settle the matter ut once. Of the three Col. Jones failed and intimated to the Attorney general that ho was willing to pay up aud would do so. Mr. Bollinger said yes terday that neither of the other gentle men had taken any notice of his letter io them, and uv would forthwith pre paro to enter snit. The bond was given for $20,000. < >f course the bondsmen will only have to make good thc shortage, which Mr. Bellinger insists must bc considered what is set forth in the legislative com mittee's report. Koch- bondsman is liable for tho entire amount in case the others fail to produce property cover ing their share. lt is understood that the other bonds - mon wiil test the question of their lia bility in the courts before paying any of the money claimed to 1?' duo tho State;. Mr. Popo is said to have^inti mnted that he will await thc bringing of suit in the courts. Thus thc; mutter stands. Of course ail actions on tin bond will bc entirely separate and dis tinct from the criminal prosecution of Col. Neal.-Thc Stair. Submarine Torpedo Hont. liUKKM'OUT, X. Y.. September ?.'2. Thc submarine torpedo boat Holland made a remarkably good showing dur- ; ing the practice run to-day. The trials j were made over the course, in Little Poconic Hay, which will be used for the dive tests tobe held later. Tho vessel was recently overhauled, and duriug the run of to-day showed a con siderable increase of speed. The now diving appaiatns for opcratiog the ! steering engine worked successfully, the boat getting under water and com pletely out of sight in quick time. Be- j side diving, running on Iii? surface i and nuder water for a long length of time, torpedo practice was indulged in. Th? Whitehead torpedo was used, sim ilar in design to those used on the smaller vessels of the United States navy. Sufficient air wan stored in the air chamber of the torpedo to give it a radius ol action of about 500 yards. The trial was in sending tho boat over j a mile course submerged, nt tho end of ! which it carno to the surface mid tho | torpedo was?disehargcd from tho tube, which is about five feet below thc sur face of tho water. The run underwa ter was made in about ton minutes. Tu? torpedo was successfully discharg ed from tho tube, but owing to what is thought to have been a disarrangement of some of the mechanism the torpedo, instead of taking a straight course, took a downward turn and tho vol um? of muddy water sent up showed that it struck tho bottom about fifty feet from the bow of tho boat. There Li moro Cat?rrh ia thin section ol' thu : ronni ry than nil other diseases put together, Alni until ino last few yearn waa supposed to lu- lm-ur- i nota. For u groat many year? doctor? pronouns*! | lt a local disease, nnd preM-ribed local remedie*, und l.y constantly fa-ling to euro ?lilt local treat ment, pronounced it incurable. Science hu proT- ' en catarrh to bo a constitutional disease, *ud I therefore require constitutional treatment. Itali'* ; Catarrh Cure, manufactured bf F. J. Cheney & Co. Toledo, Ohio, it the only constitu? Ional eui o on thc market. It is taken Internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful, lt sots directly on the I blood and mucous surface-, of the sj stein. Tue; offer ou? hundred tottan for any ease it falls tu : cure. Bend for circulars and testimonial. Ail dros*. F. J. CH EKE Y di TO.. Tv.le*.. O. ?JSokl by 2>ru?laU), 75c. Kairi K-rclly HHi aro th? bast 1 STATE NEWS - Mrs. .lohn Kirby died in I'aoolet from tho effects of the bitf of a small spider. - Greenville is to have another big mill and YorkvUlc is raising the ninney for another there. - Gen. (?. Walt Whitman has j eschewed politics and will turn his ; attcution to merchandising in Union, i - Mr. Aaron Radcliffe, the cotton ? weigher at Denmark, dropped dead j Friday, while weighing a bale of cot- ! ton. -- Many farmers in Laurens county arc buying cotton and holding it and very little cotton is being offered for sale. . . Mr. .lucob V lionel), a young larmer in thc Lyons section of Orango burg County, was killed in a cotton gin accident. - The business men of Columbia have organized a home tire insurance company which will do business ex clusively in that city. - .fudge W. C Henel, presiding . iver First judicial circuit, hus return ed to South Carolina from a'visit to his family in Scot laud. - The government has asked per mission of the State authorities to make some extensive improvements on Castle I'inekncy at Charleston. Select specimen:, of your choicest (?rains, vegetables, finely hrcd stock, including poultry, for exhibition at the State Fair. A little effort on your part will secure one or more of > the handsome premiums. --Charleston has quarantined against all points infected with yel low fever. This disease is spreading in Key West, and has assumed an alarming phase at Tampa, New Or ( leans, and Jackson, Miss. - Georgetown county is feeding four little negroes in jail, now con fined in Sheriff Skinner's hotel for larceny. Thc average agc of these prisoners is about ?J and 1U years, j two of them hoing little girls. - Dr. T. IC. Kvins, of Spartanburg, '? has received a regimental surgeon'1 commission in the tilth, with the raul of major. His regiment is of thc de partnient of California, but will beor tiered to Manila at an early day. j - A l?eaufort jury at th?' last Court j brought a verdict for rJfH?l) ngainsi . Senator Doti Cameron for horsewhip . liing a man named Schein some time i ago. Schein was accused of sellij ! liquor to the people on thu SoHator't plantation. Thc whipping is said t< j have been done good-naturedly-thal Schein took it as a joke at first, bu later on decided to bring action. IL would probably like to have a fev more whippings at thc same prioc. - The cutten milln nf Spartanburg unity usc about 150,00(1 hales ol' cotton a year, while the county produces in mimd number but 50.00(1 bales. The Clifton mills alone con sume nearly as much as the crop of thc county. - Larry Gantt seems to have put quite a lively hum on the atmosphere in Spartanburg county. Ordinarily Larry is right smart of a humbug, hut in the present instance thc fact stands him in good stead. Most ol' the mon he is after arc humbugs, too. - Yorfen'He Knouhu r. - .1. M. MucFarlund, a member of the constabulary foroo. has resigned to engage in other buisncss. The Governor announces that the vacancy will not bc filled. This is thc second vacancy not filled. Ile says the law is hoing bettor enforced. - The third trial of Mrs. Hughes, charged with thc murder of her hus band, took place in Greenville last week. Tim jury could not agree and a mistrial was ordered, lt is said that tho jury stood eight for acquittal, throe for murder and one for man slaughter. Thc fourth trial will take place next January. - The three-year-old daughter ol' Mrs. S. H. Owens, of Columbia, was seriously kicked in the head by a horse Tho little child was playing in thc yard with her kitten when tin pot ran under the horse's foot. Tin" chibl stooped down to pick it tip, when tho horse kicked her a fearful blow on thc side of thc head, cutting a gash about four inches long. - Miss Virginia Masscc, thc 'S.'> year old daughter of Squire AV. ll. Massce, a wealthy and prominent citizen of Chesterfield county, left her home recently to walk to her sister's, 1 niLc distant. She did not return that night and it was supposed she had rouiaiued with her sister. Thc next day it was ascertained tho. young lady had never reached her sister's. There is great excitement in the community. The country has been searched over by 100 men day and night since, but no trace of thc girl found. National Export Exposition. Commencing Tuesday, Sept. 10, ami on each succeeding Tuesdays and Thursdays, up to and including No vcmber Sftr?, the Southern llnilway will sell from all stations round trip tickets to Philadelphia at rate one and one-third f are, plus fit) cents admission to th? Exposition. These tickets will he limited "H) days from date of sale. For full information, Pullman car res ervations, call on anv Agent, or address J. ll. IIEYWAIID, T. I*. A., Augusta, Ga. - Self-possession is more than nine points in law-or in anything else for that matter. Every St**T % g *j m~i ^2. We keep oaiy fiaw??es r3ilV/X?Of the BEST. $3.00 Vici, Kid, Tan, Black and Rueset. Equal to any $3.50 Shoe in the market, or your money back. HALI, AL MILFORD. ROOMS for RENT. GOOD LOCATION. APl'I.Y TO THOMSON CYCLE WORKS, NEXT TO NEW BANK. Attention, Ladies ! We have added to our Stock a New and Complete line of FANCY DRESS GOODS, TRIMMINGS, NOTIONS, MILLINERY, And Everything it takns to mike a First Ciass Stora. Our Buyers selected the lattsi and best style? in everything in th? North ci ii markets, ami wv can, beyond a doubt, please you. You ave eipseiallv invited to examine our winde Skick, which we will lak-- pleasure in showing, whether you buy or nut. MRS. D. M. WILSOJN, who spent several weeks in New York, will have charge of our MILLINERY DEPARTMENT, which is supplied with the lat'st. styles and Novelties', and with her experience in this line we know she can interest you. MISS OLA MOOKI.-: will be glad lu show you Dress Goo li, etc She also has experience in this line, and will d<> all she can to please you . We have a big, Stock of SHOE*?, and arc offering some bargain* which yt u can't aliord to pass over. Also, We haudle GROCERIES of all kinds, and will give you spacial prices on FLOUR, MOLASSES and TOBACCO. Special values in every department. .Come, and wc will convince you. Big lot of TEXAS RED RUST VROOF OATS on hand. Your* truly, MOORE, ACKER & CO., K.A.ST SIDE PTJBT.H' SQUARE-CORNER STOIC K. .afc" Free City I>elivery.