University of South Carolina Libraries
'"""" ' Tip* Fort Mill Times. I DEMOCRATIC JJ. W B?A?irQKI,h - ISO. J>iul Prop. j ( )ri* ye:>r *1.00 | Six months i _. ; ! A_>n tt|jpll( atluii u* tliv x>^Vl*.h?'.r, utl.\ i thlii^ j ule.i are' yuAJe Uuuwn to 4.'>ot?r lntt i est"il. Entered nt the postoflice-iit Fort Mill, ?>. t'.. as second c 1.1.7, matter. AUGUST JL5. 11)07. The street force has about .completed its annual working tour cf the streets and as a whole there is a decided improvement in appearances. There -are some streets, however, that look as if the> did not get the share of work that was due them. This is due largely to the limited amount of cash which the town has to spend for street improvements, Unci the large urea jof streets that have to be gone .over. Forest street, for one, is in bad shape between Oonfeder.at * and Academy streets. There is only one side walk on this particular portion of the street, and it is well-nigh washed away. A deep gully has been washed out i ^ along the street and the side! x walk is gradually caving and; washing inu> this gully to be carried away and deposited in t the swamp beyond. This section of Forest street is one of the town's principal highways during the school term, as a majority of of the children of the town use j it in going to and lrom school. In its present conditiou it would be passable, but when the wet ana freezing weather of winter; sets in that part of tlie walk which is left will doubtless become so slick and muddy as to cause many a youngster to per- form an acrobatic feat, the result of which will be a soiled .suit and books and an empty dinner pail. Some kind of curbing should be placed along the; sidewalk to retain it. " The Rock Hill Herald notes the I fact that the county chaingang! will visit Fort Mill township in < iin 1'*.. "-1 but I .nil J UlllI f illlU NVOMMt r.H how long it will he before the gang will work in Catawba township.^ The Herald adds that it has been nearly throe years: since the gang has been in Catawba. We have not kept tab on the movements of the gang, but venture the assertion that it that it has visited every township in the count.v since its visit to Fort Mill some six or seven years ago. It is but just that Fort Mill bo visited by the county road-makers and they should be sent over at once. The two and one-quarter cent rate on railroads in North Carolina became effective Thursday. The enactment of this law will ' effect a saving of thousands of i dollars annually to the people of that State, provided the railroads do not make even otherwise. Already some bf the roads are charging full fare for children. ' and one road is collecting full fare for infants. We do not biame the roads. "If it is just for a State to say what fare shall be charged by railroads, it is likewise just to say what price be charged by a liveryman or other commom carrier. ?Aneut the ''Community Pjc- 1 nic" to be held next Wednesday The Times would like to make one suggestion. It has been a custom, or practice, for several years for some of the ladies to begin refilling their baskets or boxes from the table before the crowd had scarcely begun to eat. This practice, not only looks piggish, but it has been known to cause several who were a few minutes late in arriving to miss dinner. We would suggest that; the crowd be given at least thirty minutes in whicn to eat and if at that time there be rations left f t the basket and box-fillers step up. While our friends over in Mecklenburg already have the best roads and more macadam than any county in the South, an 1 perhaps as much as some of the States, they are not yet satis-, lied, for at an election held a few days ago it was decided to spend $300,000 more in tne improvement of the roads. We wonder how long the people of adjoining counties will sil by and watch M-zckieabunr in its for., ward strides without at least making an effort to l.oop in The citizen?? of any prosp vous town are always public spirited and united. Stand together, work for the interests of the whole town. Always stand ready to do your part. Don't Kfl . | grumble and spend your time in 'prophesying failures, but help Lie to make every enterprise a success, be it grsat or small. Be energetic and enterprising and your example vill be imitated. The News and Courier says to cat but !he pruee<. hi-; f tl Thaw trial wiuch is to come up ngap 1 hi Octob - r. >"Iut>j>y thought!. ft J ."-w / % I I I H ? I AH^nyl >>- I ? After reading this issue, send it to your friend-in the distance: or better yet, call at the office and fiend it to your friend or | relative for six months or a year, for you can expect just such a I paper as this for fifty-two weeks j during the next year. Throw in | "your mite toward placing our city and county where they belong upon the map. This paper will do its part; you do yours. Alabama is the only State in the Union whose legislature meets but once in four years. Then its session is is limited to forty days and the members of the legislature get $i a day. And at that the State seems to get along as well as South Carolina and one or two other commonwealths whose legislative assemblies are in session every year. One thing certain, the far-; mers of the South have the cotton situation down pat and are paying little attention to what the speculators and Wall street boars have to say about the price this fall. Our farmers are at last learning a .hing or two. There are some people who are mighty careless about throwing old truck into the alleyways. ! Such people should be taught a little civic pride by a modest tine. It is impossible for the authorities to keen places clean if people will persist in such practices. Now that the melon season is on in full blast, the authorities should see that the rhinds are not allowed to accumulate and rot in the alleys and back lots. There is no greater breeder of disease than a rotten watermelon rhind. Many more towns die for want of confidence cn the part of the business men and lack of public spirit, than from opposition of neighboring towns and adverse surroundings. I . A - i J y *? it ir.t.v.s 10 r;\iu me advertisements of enterprising homo mer-; chants. They are the people who make it possible to have conveniences right at your door, so to speak. The picnic season is now upon us with the usual accompaniments ?fleas, mosquitoes, grass, daggers and gnats. But there is bushels or fun in a day's outing, anyhow. The rains of the past few days have made the farmers smile like receiving overseer's wages. Our Schools. While this paper has always been a warm f riend to the schools of our town it intends to take a deeper interest in them in the future. We believe u is the duty of every citizen to take a live irt- ; terest in our schools. During j the years that are passed scores j of diplomas have been handed out as class after class of our young people have stepped out of school life into life's school. Would that wo could in this weeks issue place before its readers1 the familiar face of each and every one, but such is among the impossibilities, for Grim Death, on his white horse has thinned the ranks and as "Death loves a shining mark." manv of th^i most primiaing fell before reaching' the noon-day of life, but we can assist in keeping green their memories. Our school home! What words fall upon the ear with so much music in their cadence as those which recall the scenes of .school days now numbered with the memories of the past? intervening years have not dimmed the vivid colorings with which memory has adorned thosjoyous days. While we all graduate in much the same manner, how dilTerent has the wheel of fortune turn? 1. Som j with plaintive tongues have had to! walk in lowly vales of life's weary way, others in loftier hymns, have sung of nothing-hut joy as they have trodden the i mountain top, but no matter how near the summit or base of the mountain of fame you meet with i a graduate of cur schools, you meet with one who is a credit to so.;-i ety. "As the t v. i; >: is b< n t so is the tree inclined,'' and habits: were formed under the moulding power of a moral atmosph re which seemed lo perm- ate the l- r i . . t - . M. IHKM.S oi our little ciiy which stays by one through life. Our school life is indeed the golden link thai binds youth to golden age, and he is still but a child, however lime may have furrowed ' his cheek or .silvered his brow who can yet recall with a softened heart, the happy school c!uy:>passed in our little city. The Times is requested to extend a < o-rdiul invitation to tin* public in general to attend the annual Brown's Shop picnic, \vhich is to be held Friday in the grove ne< r the home of Hon. 8. Ii. Kyms. ft is expected that a record-breaking crowd will be present and that the day will be cue of much pleasure to ail. ? Mr. Aver?- Ballard and wife, j of Hr.stpnia, N. G., spent several1 da: " of' he past week with Mr. : and .U.. Gamble, cast of own. frf* ' Prohibition a Hindrance to Progress? A high official of the immigra- ( tion bureau is authority for the J statement that the prohibition movement in the South will seriously interefere with the efforts to get immigrants to that section of the country, says a Washing- ] ton special to the Columbia Roc- . ord. "It is none of my business/' he said, "although I have been cu-upcraiiiig, us mr as possiDie, ( with the immigration bureaus of the States* of South Carolina, Virginia and others. So soon as the class of people being sought , in.the South find out that prohibition laws encumber their per- i sonal liberty they will refuse to , go South and those there now , will leave. The German, Aus- , Irian, Swede, Finn, and nearly all other classes of Europeans will not go where they can not get beer. Besides that they re-1 sent any interference with what) they shall cat or drink, believing !, that these are matters of person- :. al liberty. They do not hold the view that so light a drink as , beer, when taken in moderate 1 amounts and undei circumstances , to which 111ey are accustomed, is , either a sin or crime. They look : < down upon whiskey drinking in , this country as a mora! weakness j. to which Americans should not . be addicted, and probably would ( not care what happened to the . ardent spirits, but they object to J being deprived of beer. In Finland, for instance, the govern- , Vncnt and the intelligent class i < encourage the use of beer as.;, keeping down heavy drinks, ; ( which threatened to increase in \ consumption, arid Finland is con- \ sidered the model temperance na-, i tion of the earth. j i "Personally, I think a great < mistake is being made in the' \ South. If these prohibition laws j j are being enacted to make the j. negro a sober citizen, -the error', will be discovered in a few years, j The negro will soon be an imbi- j < ber of the cheapest and most j < !i u\v grades: of mean whiskey, , and I will venture the prediction that in prohibition States of the ' < bouth crime wiil increase. It is i. history that prohibit ion runs out ] the mild drinks like beer and \ brings the worst of the ardent i class. The negro naturally likes ; ihe stealth that goes with blind \ tigers and it will not he long be- j lore he will take the lead in defiance of law and hypocricy. He j will copy after the white man it j is true. When lie sees prohibi- ( tion laws defiied he will pay less ; attention to other laws. It is | weil known that in many portions < of ti South where prohibition , is in force through local option i t he negro has turned to cocaine > and dregs and has become so ( wort hless that he is a menace. "What the South should do to j help the negro be a better citizen , and encourage the immigration ; of useful and intelligent F.uro- , pean workmen is to enact laws ; that will favor the sale of beer j i and the lighte I wines. This ' course is now advocated in many ] States of the country by distinguished churchmen and thinking ; citizens who want to find a me- ! diuro between the radicalism of I prohibition and the extreme wide open conditions. Commissioners ! j from Finland who recently came < to study license laws in this;' country were horrified at what 1 they saw in the prohibition State 1 ot-Maine and went back home i V. lib iwnir.mi>n(la1iimu own laws, showing partiality to j 1 the light drinks, were the be t in existence. They saw more drunks 1 in Maine cities than any place1 else they visited." Negroes Honer R:emery of White Man. | A Lancaster special to the News and Courier says that an unusu- 1 rd, it* not unprecedented, event is scheduled to occur In Lancas- < ler county this week the un- ' veiling by Colored people of aM monument to a white man. The congregation of Mount Moriah, a '< negro church, about four miles west of town, will on the 15th instant unveil with appropriate1" ceremonies a monument which they have erected in honor of the I memory of the late James VV. Williams, who donated the land ; on which the church and cemetery are located. Mr. Williams, who has been dead some years, was a prominent and influential ; citi .cn in his day and time. He 1 was a brave Confederate soldier, ' navr:'t>" scrvea irorn tne begin-[' ring La Lhc close of the war. A Ccricriion. In writing up our trip to James! ?wn i ma Jo some reference to the Foil Mill Ma m? factoring (Vs not ha\ hit?: an exhibit 1 at the exposition. 1 have since invit informed that i* has an exhibit there and have be*' 11 told by some members ul* the company that they saw it there. I am 1 very sorry that I did the company an injustice as I made it a point to look for its exhibit but in some way I did not see it. It 1 would have been a pleasure for : me to have given the mill full credit for its exhibit, had I seen 1 iu J. II. Thorn well Jr. )' - Miss Grace McDowell, of Steel Creek, spent the past week v with Mi.:. 11- \i (b on Yfhito 1 street. j ? " % ' 1 !! i i York County News | Yovkvilh- Enqnitvr. ? Messrs. Ebenezer Gettys of Rock Hill, and John Newton T.m ? ^ 1-- ? ucuuuiciB ui Ducimer luwiKsuip, are the winners of the two vacant scholarships to which York county is entitled at Clemson college. ?The plan originated by Mr. John Anderson same time ago to secure cement sidewalks for the j town of Rock Hill is working; nicely and at the rate the work of cementing is now progressing, it will not be a great while until the sidewalks of the entire city are beautifully paved. Mr. Anderson's plan provides that the city pay a part and that the property owners pay the balance, the property owners having a long time in which to complete their payments. ? Out of about eighty applicants who presented themselves at the leeent examination of public school teachers, first grade certificates were awarded to less than twenty. The county board of education was careful to give every paper all that it was entitled to; but was also careful to -;ee that no answer was accepted at more than its real value. The ^"ntiment of the board is in favor >f making it so that the holder of a first grade certificate must necossarily be a first grade teacher. - We do not believe that many more than one-half of the otherwise qualified voters of York county are registered. There are on the books something like three thousand names, but these include all the people who have been registered sines 1896, of whom many have died or moved out of the county. There ought to be at least three thousand Five hundred white voters. There ire that many in the county who ire entitled to registration, and , .:ie ume is coming when a'l those kV'ho are not registered will have >ccasion to regret their negligence. - The act extending the limits >f school district No. II to two i;id a half miles from the court louse, carries the extended )imabout a mile over into di.-ti'ct No. 33. The exact distance of, the overlapping is not clearly es- 1 :ablished: but on the official map t looks like it is about a mile. No. 33 is a special district with a two mill tax. No. 11 has a three mill tax. No. 33 was regularly constituted by the county and State boards. No. 11 was centituted by special act of the general assembly, aided by the supreme court, and that area In ivhieh the two districts overlap looms to be subject to a lax of, three mills plus two mills, or five . mills. Either that, or it's a question as to which jurisdiction the overlapping tori itory belongs, and this will depend upon whether the special .act of the general assembly takes precedence over the general ac t creating No. 33. t There appears to be considerable mixture in the situation. C&tawla P^wcr For 67 Milli. The Southern Power Company, with headquarters in Charlotte j and with gigantic nowpr nbi.u ; on the Catawba i iver, has contract? with 07 mi lis to supply them with power for the operation of their spindles and looms, says the Charlotte News. This does not in< lude a number of water works pumping plants, such as the one here in Charlotte, and those in Rock Hill and YorkvUle. S. C., nor does it take into consideration the almost innumerable small plants which take only a few spoonsful of the electric fluid to run little baby plants, which the existence of this cheap power makes possible, but which are destined some day 10 outgrow the bottle feeding and become gi?At, substantial industries. Of the (>7 mills 20 of them are now one s, and show what a Ironic minus mag ic: the C mthcrn Power Company is for the attraction of new frctories in the piedmont section. The 67 mills will use about 40,000 horse power. Miller Family Reunion. Yesterday at the home of Mr. T. R. Miller, in York county, l-'outh Carolina, four miles v. est of Pinoville, a pleasant homecoming of the Miller family was held, snvs the Charlotte Observer of Thursday. There were present Mr. John Miller's family of Pinoville; Rev. R. A. Miller, of Gaston county; Miss Katie Miller and Mrs. Mary Campbell, of Clover, S. C.. an 1 "Prclc ! George," the only remaining servant of the family. Also there were present the sons-in-law of Mr. J. R. Miller r nd their families; J. C. McNeely, Dr. C. M. Strong, of Charlotte, and Eugene Henderson cf Hopewell. About thirty were there in all. Dinner was served on the lawn. The day was spent .in pleasant communion. The senior members of the family a>v, most of them, in the sear and yellow leaf', but death has not yet brola ; the circle. ?Miss Beulah Hoagftind, of[jfiarlotte. vi ited 11 r parents l&re y'uu-P.y, i I Senator Tillman 60 Yars Old. Senator B. R. Tillman, who is now on a lecture tour of the West, was GO years old Sunday, having been born Angust 11, 1847. Capt. B. R. Tillman, as he was then known, was first elected to j office in 1S90, when he was only , 43 years of age, and his first office was that of governor of j South Carolina. The campaign which he made in that year as head of the farmers' movement j had been preceded by about five years or more of agitation in the public press against the then ! dominant element in South Caro- j lina politics and the letters which I Capt. Tillman wrote in these j years to the News and Courier i and other papers largely paved the wav fnr the nnlitinnl i?nmln- I tion of which he became the leader. The campaign of 181)0 will live forever in South Carolina history, second only to that of 1S76 when Wade Hampton was elected and the republicans were put out of power in this State. Sad Death in Steele Crecb. The funeral of Mrs. J. Frank Neely, of Steele Creek, who died Saturday afternoon, took place at her home yesterday afternoon at 1 o'clock, Rev. George F. Robertson, pastor of the Steele Creek Presbyterian church, officiating. Mrs. Neely was about 40 years of age. She has been j in bad health for three years and died practically worn out with her long fight against disease. She is survived by her husband and four childrenthree boys and one girl, also by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. ; Frank McLean, of Shopton, and two brot hers and one si ?ter, these being Mr. Robert McLean, of Bennettsville, S. C., and Dr. Frank McLean, of New York, and Mrs. Thomas Dixon, of Texas Mrs. Neely was a faithful wife, a devote;, mother, and a good woman who wii be sorely missed in her community. Charlotte Chronicle. Monday. "BEGI7LAE A3 TUS S7-7" is an , xpression as oltl as tin* race. No doubt the rising and sotting of t ho sua 1 is tho most regular performance in the universe, unless it is the action of the liver and bowels when regulated with i Dr. King's New Life Pills. e? aaruu j teed by all druggists. ? ?Misses Mabel and Mary, Ardrey are spending a few weeks at Tybee, near Savannah. ? ? - TtrjTi ft r ?? ? ull'ili V"! Lli Si* The most, eminent iuedic.nl scientists arc uuauimons in the conclusion that the generally accepted limitation of human life is many years below the attainment jtossible with the ad enticed liuowledgo of which the race is now j possessed. The critical period, that do- J tenuities its duration- unnmu in t??- 1 t-weeu bound the proper care of tli* body during this decade cannot be too strongly urged; carcl-.-ssnc.ss llicn l>? i fatal to longevity. Natnro's best lumper aiiir bo is Electric *Bittors. the bcientilic ionic modi.itm that verbal7,ms every organ ol' the !> ?iy. (.iuauiutoed by all druggists. be.;. ? ?Miss Hest' r White left Friday for M on treat, where she will spend a few days. EHBOESSD BY TEE CCUITTY "The most popular remedy in Ot eg<> County,-mid t!i host friend of my family." writes Win. M I >iv*t /., editor ami publisher ot the Ostein Journal, <iilbertsville, N. Y., "is Dr, King's Kbw Discovery. It has proved to be an infallible cure for toughs and colds, making short work ol't he worst of them. Wo always keep a bottle in the lion e. I believe it to be the most valuable pre script ion known for Lung and Threat diseases" Ctnaranteed to never his api>oint the taker, by all druggists. Price 5 )c and $1.00, Tiialbotth uv,-, ?Miss Mary Nims is visitingher grandmother, Mrs. E. W. Rankin, in Mt. Holly. ?Mr. and Mrs. 1*' P. Gatli vr, < of Hallsboro. N. C.. who haw been visiting relatives in this 1 place, left Tuesday morning ' >* Cleveland Springs, N. (| TO THE PUBLIC! I have opened a Bark i* Sh ?y , in the room in the Bank building: recently vacated hv Mr. fur! is 3 n and will appeeci:it<j a share of your palronapre. Pro:apt service . and first-class work. , Give m 1 a call. I W. j>. MpXinnoy. r-'iVnuicr Notice is hereby given that p.irsrmut to ill.- provi.-l ns <>f an Art entitled 'An A' t to provide Hiirli Schools for the State" an elcc'ion will bo hold nt i Fort Mill on Saturday U14. *ith to determine \vl th r or not a liig;: School b * estal li.di ivi'hin the terri-| tory embraced in tin* adj lining Sehool ; District*; of Nos. 4, 10 and es of Y >vk (Wanty S. C. Alt <j iali '. <! electors li s ing \\ >< iiin 1 he prop -led J i igfi Sole. . 1 territory huvo ti e right to participate j in this electiou if rjrsr*liIi?*r1 ninlcr th Constitution and lews of this State. Said elect 1 ?*i will b. conduct e 1 under Sectiou 1,'oS, of the Civil Code of PJJ-J, ; in reference to apodal levies for school i pui'poses. The polls will bo opened at 1 1 a. in. and closed at 4 p 111. ol' sain i day. Those favoring the High Soli' 0! \ will vote a ballotcontaing the words "For High Scho ?1" Thoso optwscd t > establishment of said High School will vote a ballot 1 cit.'iniug th" words "Agaiust- iligdi School." By order of CouutjrBuuvd of Educa- ' tiouof Yorlt (vonty.'S. C. - T. K. McMackin (Jnuit'ian. r -Aug. li 1 J?. ' ' M **' fpr * - i ^ ? i \ i o ^ ^>k /r, -j. -.!-. 4?i ? . ,v* * V< SC r5i --V# ^ " T:- v ' ?{? V *> * > .'", f -"V * ?n rf;gii .?fe'8?5 k 1' you perish, it is not ables 21 re here for j on, a Koodsfor Hie least mom where and broke, don't trade with its live well am are not one <d them, hui r Good Livers. V/e ..so pi public with all kinds of La sible prices, quality com new to the trade and kiic Call or 'pUone No. '2b Fancy Groceries, Fresh IV) i Yfcurs for b 'W. "JL,. 32 ? When Your are handku McOaskey | the)' eannot grow, j while you sleep. Jones uses a Ho also Soils 1 JONES,] <r- ""*?%-? .* ?? ift r WC PA 8 gTME FIRST ' o y y Riv.\??e?JL^av!i?f3rgymys-^g^^ aarr^> >v.. ?-o.? Jf lyTMPgaPtt^jngr.TJiii^ HCM?auarrrs^,\..(g-:.? -&?. w fl f> in life towards wealt u in saving a port ion A homeless wand ere \+ likely to be the fat is improvident in 1 $4 5^ yourself or a comic * j , . cultivating (lie savin ?* Our Savings Departn * autees absolute seem W ?<> deposited, but pays v est compnuiiticJ qu: |* open an account wit I i j^THE NATIONAL i # (ABSOLUTELY ||hogx hill, V a ^ ^ ^4 1 *?*-'. ' * t?-s Vv?. -V\- ^ t i^BIfS e-f&sfrwM'irrii r?7^f;-?r I; SOUTH?.RN | L-j ,gj VAZ SCBTH'S GF.'?i Si s*tfj I iii Xk-.-ISt (S Di ii'i_i ('.?rSci\ i( rill (' iivi i i.-iit Si*|ji'(iii.i h n f.li j?!j Ti'.fOtlull I'lllilllKIl S>1? . pill" ('? -nil " Jamestown Exposition Rate; Js! ,-ttj is] 1* i full infonnnti >n its to rules, r rU Southern itnilwuy Tivl.i t Ajei.t | 8, B. SLLEti, S " A R. P. A , Athnfc, Ca. e > ?A -ffi.i&(^|C7f3-^l{~" ::AJfu-A ^U?.*vf i,; < ^ W, F, HARRIS & SC ^ FORT MILL ^ Sober Service da} and nitrht. ^ able. For movim in v/a^ons a !>? ; ! -ad. Fas ;. ' : i ? ^ each 25c. Surry on street or a' 'sT h<?iik'.s. ii you ii? > < ;i nice i i.if ^ for it, rate $1.00 j *r hour, A pa fp Here for business?. Jk , L~ i-J /. tZ> I.. ! Accounts 1 oil a Register as tlu> grass, n a ? ivici>asfiey or CASH. I-I s: G\ ROCEF?. | = M V YOU T O S.AVEI.fJ <45 $j $ x* ******* **? *> --^r sm . UCKSMflirCI F ' ? J li a ml case consists? cf >vhat yon earn,.J r in his oki ai;e is$ ;e of the man wliofl ? .. *1 lis y on ill. As sin c >i*tahlc old a.ne by $1 i> habit. lent not only guar- fl n*y for all moneys J| on 4- per cent inteiv^f } irterly. ^ on can ?j[ k one dollar. t\ UNION BANK, jjj SAV E ) - - - >. c.|j wvs?Vs* ? ''-<VW.? r?<o-r > 'M for4>_;4i f'[" ? ' -:. Hi b ] VJ RAILWAY. | &TS57 SfSILft. (| : a n? rS Local Train*. jffij trs on Through i'mitif. |[cJ i now in efffet. L^j] I , !' , o< nsult in'ureal j^| ' 01 .^1 K. W. HUNT, f' 0. v. a , Ch^rffeston, G C. ,j?l [?| ;;p? j*f; ,~'sv"v" ^.?V *7s> -r V ' Vr- f 'l - ^?V ^ V7 w )NS, Liverymen jj| .? s. c.. ^ Rates for tc:\ms reason- ^ n.v place in ti. M-ity, 50o. oi! i loj >t, . >c. Trunks ^ ! Railway Repot at ail ^ > n?i > ??##* mends call 'Jv ssengc rs. w $ '? <Si- '-rJ O Ni^ -? J?y - A. ... ? +" \S-/ 7P* ?2 /. vv' i? f*j* i "<.> cfi j oar fault. 'J he cata ad we sell the best :v. If you buy elseblame us. All who .i are happy. If you i and join tii'e host of a. pared to ser\e the | tables at the best pos- vt' I due red. We are not vv what you want. for your Heavy and it eats* Lie. usiiiess, S