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THE FORT HILL TIMES. Democratic ? Puublished Thursdays. B. W. BRADFORD Editor and Proprietor. Entered at the poatoffice at Fort Mill S. C.. at ail matter o>f the tecond class. I0MCHITION RATCS: Om Year. $1.25 81s Months 65 The Tints* invitee contributions on live subjects, does not agree to publish more than 200 words en any anbjeet. The right is reserved to edit very communication submitted for publication. On application to the publisher, advertising rates are made known to those interested. Telephone, local and long distance. No. 112. FORT MILL. 8. C.. APRIL 20. 1911. Lot's Name die Cemetery. Shakes pears asks: "What's in a ? ?.??" Wa ontvor thpro in a cood deal sometime*. The Fort Mill cemetery ought to have a name. We know it only as the town cemetery. Every city of the dead is just as much entitled to a name as a city of the living. If our readers will send in suggestions for a name, we will be glad to publish them. Then by making a request to the council we feel sure they will be willing to adopt one. If the people do not suggest a name, we hope the council will select one and adopt it officially and not let the sacred spot continue to be known only as the town cemetery. Pardoning Criminals. There is more than a suspicion that1 a strong tendency exists not only in this State but elsewhere toward a looseness and leniency in the matter of ; pardoning criminals. The maudlin sympathy expressed by some toward criminals or those accused > of some heinous crime is usually considered as the manifestation of an . abnormal sentiment which verges on hysteria, but there is an illogical and mistaken leniency toward criminals suf- J fering long terms of imprisonment, expressed by men usually of well-balanced ' minds. A man who commits a coldblooded murder and is sentenced to imprisonment for life, should not be pardoned. He may have a good record as a prisoner, he may even have honestly | and sincerely repented of his crime and it may be conceded, for the sake of argument, that he would no longer be a menace to the community if allowed to go at large, but the argument against his release is based upon grounds which art not affected by these facts. The nurpcse of punishment for crime should ' never be for motives of revenge; it KnunH nvwvn tu-n orrrtiiniisi iind OUV/UIU IX l/OOV*l MJA/II Vl? V ^* vw. ?, two only, the prevention of subsequent criminal acts upon the part of the criminal himself and its deterrent effect upon others. It does not require any labored ( argument to show that this effect in the latter instance is seriously weakened ' when a practice is made of pardoning criminals, and especially in the case of those serving a life sentence. A man who commits cold-blooded murder, de- , liberately puts himself outside the pale ( of human sympathy; he should not be , treated with cruelty or unkindness, but J he should expiate either by death or by t life imprisonment the results of his ( crime. New Zealand Leads. New Zealand is comparatively a new f country, but nevertheless is able to j, furnish us some new ideas in govern- ^ ment. That country is, to a large ex- gj tent, run on the idea that the people ^ must rule. There they do it in fact; p here we have only done it in name. We t do it out of the mouths of our rulers, ?* - ? i ?,? , WOO lOO OX It'll unit i mIII! 111 bv mi | (. habit of regarding themselves and t their own interests as the people's v and of ruling accordingly. Here the t corporation has risen to the control of things from which it has now to be torn down. New Zealand seems to have taken it by the ear in time, and to have 9ecuied the development of industries 1 without undue cost to the people, by the ' simple expedient of stepping in with ! governmental operation of monoplies ' and a hand on conspiracies seeking to ( suppress competition in business. The government operates the railroads and 1 telegraphs and such things as need to be monopolized for their successful and j cheap development. The government keeps the manufacturers in check by its duties and taxes. It is seemingly, a very paternal government, but perhaps ] not more so than is necessary to seure ! to the individual citizen his liberty and equality, which we declare for them, j but fail to secure to them. 1 We will get there after a while, we 1 \ hope, but New Zealand seems to have j 1 stolen a march on us. They hav? street ' ear fares there for a penny and a seat for every passenger. When the seats j are full no more are taken aboard; an ' ( arrangement recommending itself to the good sense of everyone save the 1 transporter, no one of whom has ever ( seen its propriety. i They say the proposed passenger would howl if excluded; and so he < might; but the way to pacify him is < to give him a seat in another car?also ' remedy which the transporter 111 this 1 country finds too costly for his taste. 1 1 The Cigarette Fiend. Our readers will pardon us if we use a little slang in expressing our views of the victims of the cigarettes. Say, c you young kid, you're a nice snipe with 1 that cigarette under your nose, ain't you? You're the kind of a soft, plia- i ble, flappy piece of a boy, all weakness 1 and moral imbecility, which the toughs take as apprentices and educate in the I deep, dark mysteries of how to be bad. i You are marked as a little fool by every t decent man who sees you, and every 1 time you indulge in the foolish and hurt- s ful habit you are lessening your oppor- i tunity of being respectable. You want ( to be smart but you know it isn't smart, l nobody thinks it is smart. If you go into a strange town your cigarette 1 spots you as a little hoodlum and you j will have to do a lot of good things j before yon can convince any one that \ you are worth having. It impairs ] your health and ruins your reputation i and makes a eontemptable monkey j 2 out of what might be a respectable boy. Your friends are ashamed of you. | { If you are far enough along in your j 1 habit you glory in your shame and stick to it through pure cussedness. You ought to be transformed, but your r mother hasn't given you up yet and c wants you near her as you are. No- s body respects you, nohody ought to. f You are the blossom that yields the J lTuit of idleness and shame; you are the pprout from which a worthless bum ' will grow in time. You ought to quit ' it and you know that you ought. Why don't you? Get rid of all tin cans and decaying matter of every description, and that will help to get rid of flies and mos- j qui toes. Thursday, the 20th, is the day to got busy. 2X*' OM Vet? Get Their Money. The pension money for the veterans of Fort Mill township has been placeo with the Savings Bank and is being paid out to the old soldiers. Following is the Fort Mill list of pensioners with their classes and amounts received: Class B ($72) ?Robert Burns, A. H. Merritt, W. C. Perry. Class C-l (48)?J. Y. Starnes, Mary 0. Youngblood, Cynthia Abernathy. Class C-2 ($20.60)?J. M. Armstrong, W. T. Alderson, W. H Armstrong, R. T. Bailey, James Bums, Jno. W. Barnhill, W. A. Fisher, R. A. P. Merritt. W. F. Patterson, Joseph Parks, R. G. Pearson, J. S. Snead. I. G. Smvthe, J. W. Thompson, E. J. Bennett. M. M. Bennett, Sallie M. Billue, Elizabeth Bunch, M. M. Bayne, Mary Gordon. Jennie E. Hoover, Harriet I.. Kimbrell, Mary J. Nivens, Elizabeth J. Ritch, Jno. R. Kimbrell. Rer. William J. Wylie Dead. The Re.-. William J. Wylie, the popular end much beloved pastor of Bowling Green, Alison Creek and Beth Shiloh Presbyterian churches, in this county, died at his home at Bowling Green Thursday morning at about 4 o'clock, J of gastritis, aged 'M years. He had been pastor of the churches named since j November, 1908, and had accomplished - 1- IT- _ VI ? a gOOCl worn. ne was a ?<jii hi 1ui. and Mrs. James Wylie, of Westminster, S. C. The remains were accompanied to his old home, where the interment took place Fridav, bv the Rev. Messrs. E. E. Gillespie, W. A. Hafner and H. J. Mills, together with a number of the elders and deacons of the three churches of which he was pastor. He is survived by a widow and three children, two boys and ti girl. Rock Hill Man Dies Suddenly. J. H. McFadden, a well known citizen of Rock Hill, was found dead in his office early Sunday morning. .Mr. McFadden did the collecting for the Rock Hill lodge of the Fraternal Union of America and usually on Saturday nights was kept rather iate at his office. Saturday night not returning t<? his home his son set out early Sunday morning to locate him and found hirndead in the office. Mr. McFadden at the time of his death was about 50 years of age, and ?'?? t in York county near Rock Hill. He leaves a wife, who was Miss Margaret Williford, also of this county, two daughters, Misses Willie and A nice McFadder, and two sons, Harold and Church McFadden, all of Hock HiU. Mr. McFadden was prominent in fraternal orders, being a member of the Woodmen of the World, Fraternal Union of An erica. Kt d Men. and Hankers' Union. Southern's Fast Train Wrecked. Southern railway train No. .'11. the ; Souhteastern limited, which passes Fort Mill as f>:<IU a. in., was wrecked Thursday near Blackville. All the cars except the rear Pullman left the rails, but nobody was seriously hurt. The triin was running an hour late and was riaking 50 miles an hour when the accident occurred. It is not known what caised the mishap, hut it is thought the wreck was due to a broken axle or flange. The engine tender was the rirst to leave the rails. It ran over :he cross ties, tearing up the rails and he other cars following completed the vrecking of the track. The tender was hrown ten feet from the track. The mail car was nurieu aooui ininv eet, but none of the postal clerks were ljured. The baggage car was also umped to the side. The colored pasenger coach was so maneuvered as to e left perpendicularly across the track. ! Iverv truck was pried from under it. he car being merely a shell. The white ay coach was badly damaged. The lining car also left the track, but only he front trucks of the first Pullman vereoff. The rear Pullman remained on he rails. Train Orders by Telephone. After a trial of several months of lespatching its trains by telephone and inding the telephone superior to the old style telegraph, the Seaboard railroad j recently placed an order lor telephone quipment for a large portion of its lines. The contract provides for the erection of telephone stations along dot' miles of the Seaboard road, and will place 36 stations on the first division, between Wilmington and Rutherford- 1 ton, a distance of 268 miles and a branch front Hamlet to Columbia, 1061 miles. Another branch will be installed on the second division, extending from Jacksonville to Tampa, and 27*> miles of auxiliary lines. The telephone is rapidly supplanting the former method )f dispatching trains by telegraph and s now in use on 37,000 miles of the best railroad lines in the country. Not So Alarming as This. I'harlotte Observer. Representative Finley of South Caroina has been assigned to the committee >n printing, and The Fort Mill Times totes the body as "important." Rises The Chester Lantern, merely to exemplify its mean disposition, and declares that oth-r folks regard the won! "important" in a different light from . ts contemporary. Thus far no casuallies have been reported, relations ire badly strained. Sad Death in Bethel. News was received in Fort Mil! Sunlay morning of the death Saturday in Bethel township of Mr. Cleveland Phompson. The announcement came as i great shock to the many friends of VIr. Thompson in this township. Mr. Thompson was employed in the >ank at Sharon ami about two weeks ?go contracted measles, when he went ;o the home of his sister. Mrs. I.. B. Brown in Bethel. The young man seemed to be getting along fairly well intil Wednesday or Thursday when complications set in anil he gradually jrew worse until his death Saturday, ifr. Thompson was 21 years of age and i young man of excellent habits. He vas well known in Fort Mill, where a 'ew years ago he attended school, iving at the home of his brother, the ate Dr. D. G.Thompson. Besides Mrs. Brown, Mr. Thompson is survived by mother sister. Mrs. Frank Krwin, of oteel Creek. The funeral service and burial was conducted Sunday afternoon from Bethel church. Lewis Gamble, a negro farmer of fork county, died suddenly Thursday tight at the home, in Lancaster county, >f his wife, from whom he had been teparated for years. The woman testiied, at an inquest held Friday by Coroner King, that Gamble came* over Thursday morning to vi>it her: that he complained of not feeling well from the effects of a drink from a quart bottle of whiskey, given him in payment f<>r some work; that, nevertheless, he ate during the day two or three meals, prepared for him by her at his request. The jury returned a verdict of death from natural causes. However, the bottle of which Gamble told his wife he had left in a trunk at his home in York, will b? sent for and analysed. Famine May Follow Rebellion. Conditions in Mexico are, according' to press despatches, rapidly shaping themselves in the States of Chihuahua , and Sonora for a crisis more 9erious than the loss of life in battle. Americans in these two States declare that unless | the rebellion is ended with peace overj tures very soon, all Mexico will ex- j j perience a disastrous famine. Because of the spirit of unrest and general discontent prevailing last autumn littie wheat wa3 planted then, and so intent upon rebellion have the Mexicans been that scarcely any fields < have been tilled this spring, so that ground has not been prepared for the corn crop, the mainstay of the people of northern Mexico. Supplies on hand to tide the population over the sum- j mer and into the fall are well nigh , exhausted, for not only has there been no producing population, but the country has been overrun by rebel bands, who consumed the stores laid by. The rebel general, Blanco, entered Sonora from Chihuahna. and in his wake, from Baseras to the American I line, left nothing but broken houses and empty corn cribs. What men have not joined the re! bellion as fighters have fled from their I homes and fields to escape impressment I into the federal ranks or to avoid the j1 payment of war tribute exacted by the j rebel leaders. Would Discontinue Free Seed. Congressman Morris ShepparJ of Texas does not approve of the present method ; of having members of Congress any longer made ordinary seed distributors, and he would take away to a large extent this part of a member's duty, in a bill that he has just introduced, says a Washington despatch to The State. For many years members of the lower house have been ridiculed and made the laughing stock of the country because 1 of their activity in securing and sending to their constituents in the agricultural districts seeds, bulbs, trees, ; vines, cuttings and other plants of various descriptions. Mr. Sheppard would stop the promiscous use of the congressman for this purpose. In the bill that he has just introduced i he proposes that in place of the present 1 method of distributing seed and other such matter the following plan shall be adopted: That not more than $242,000 shall be spent for this purpose in any one year, and that such seeds, bulbs I and plants shall be distributed to actual experimenters, only fur experimental i tests, and that the secretary of agriculture shall cause a record to be kept, of all persons to whom such matter shall be sent in order that reports on experiments may be secured. It is also orovided that the secretary shall, so far as possible, cooperate with State ex-) ] peri men t stations regarding tin- result j of the experiments on the seed, bulbs, J trees, etc., etc., sent to them. If the bill becomes a law, it will stop j the promiscous sending out of many tons of seed each year by the congressmen. It will save the postoffice department not a small amount in gross matter carried annually, and also the time of the secretaries to the various members, , a large part of which is spent in some ] cases in assorting and sending out many ! kinds of seed and trees to be planted in . remote parts of the country. It is probable that the bill will meet opposition. Gov. Biease Visits Baltimore Specialist. Governor Cole L. Biease has gone to | Baltimore for medical examination. He left Columbia Sunday evening without previous intimation except to his close friends and relatives. At the q executive office Monday it was stated by Secretary Rowland, who had just returned from New York, that he did not know where the governor liatl gone. ' Inquiry revealed the fact that the J governor had gone to Baltimore. An- j .c nouncement was made to visitors to the | f office that Governor Biease would re- I turn Wednesday morning. i It is understood that Governor Biease ( < was called to Washington on business and decided he would make the trip ' doubly useful l>\ going on to Baltimori ; to consult a specialist at Johns Hopkins j J hospital about a stomach affection which has been troubling him. -Columbia Record. Article VIII of the Military Code of South Carolina. Sontinn Anv niTii'pr or enlisted man who shall, contrary to the lawful I order of the proper officer, retain in his I possession any arms, equipment, or | other military property ' * * or who shall when not on duty wear any such property without permission * * shall be tried therefor by a magistrate and upon conviction fined not exceeding1 one4 hundred dollars or imprisoned not more than thirty days. Sec. 67. Any. person who shall sell, dispose of, purchase or retain * * * any arms, uniforms, or military property, and any person who shall wear any uniform * ' * prescribed for the use of the militia or similar thereto * * * shall be fined therefor by a magistrate and upon conviction fined not exceeding one hundred dollars or imprisoned not more than thirty days. This law will be strictly enforced1 hereafter. T. B. SI'KATT. ('apt. Co. K. I TEACHERS' EXAMINATION. Office of the Superintendent of Educa- j tion of York County. j Yorkville. S. (*., April 17. 1911. The regular spring examination of applicants for certificates to teach in j the public schools of York county, | will lie held in the court house at Yorkv i lit- on Friday. May"), next, beginning j at 1' o'clock a. rn. 1 he questions on pedagogy are based on .McMurray's "How to Study and Teaching How to Study," one of the reading circle texts for the current year. The examination in agriculture is based on "School Exercises in Plant Production" and "School Lessons on Corn," two bulletins issued by the United States department of agriculture. Applicants will be required to furnish writing materials. J. \V. QUINN. Supt. of Education for York County. You'll Need 'Em More Later. Let us sell you a 3-cake hox for 2">c of this new Soap, just received, straight or assorted in tne box, both delicately and heavily perfumed and the odor lasts with the Soap. Plenty of odors to select from, but Oatmeal is especially fine. White Clematis is just elegant. Florizel i- perfectly grand. Imperial Lilac is simply a dream. Almond Cream is j g<M*l enough to eat. We are authorized to cash theeoujmns for the new E-Z Seal Fruit Jars. You , will find then-, appearing in some of the leading magazines. Ardrey's waL-^Kf "Haile's on the Corner" Spring time is here and perhaps your blood needs toning up.! We offer the following remedies: Burdock and Prickly Ash, Celery Tonic. Hobson's Sarsaparilla, B. B. B. s. s. s. Reach's Baseball Goods for ev- J ?rybody. Port Mill Drug Comp'y! I. R. HAILE, Prop, i'ooonoaotoaoio'i' 1 CURED THIS MAN ? | OF RHEUMATISM j 5 0 J Mr. U. C. Maupin, a ? j prominent insurance man R a of Salisbury, N. C., says, g * after using numerous so- * a called cures for rlieuma- a. J tism, he used one 25c j 3 bottle of Mullen's Hor- 8 j net's Nest Liniment and jj cured a bad attack of g J rheumatism. He also Jc! J says that as an internal fll J remedy for bowel com- J J plaints, it can't be beat, jj 3 Ardrey's Drug Store, 6 J Fort Mill, S. C. J J 0 ( oorooooo<s<i> WHITE LEGHORN EGGS. I have for sale for hatching purposes pure Wycoff strain White Leghorn Eggsi it one dollar for 15. D. A. LEE, Fort Mill, S. C. FOR SALE 200 bushels of pure . 2ulpeper Cotton Seed at 75c per bush-) 1. Apply to Edgar Jones. JERSEY BULL Eminent of Oakwood, whose dam j >roduced six hundred and forty-two wunds of butter in 1910 under authen- j icated le?.t and whose grandsire sold at I motion I'o! >10,000 and was resold the ollowing da\ for $12,<tOU to Col. A. M. 3owinan of Sal- m. Va. No better l>ull 11 the world for milk and butter probation. Fro for breeding $2.00 in advance. )o not bring or send your cow unless ,'ou bring or send the money. If more han on*- service is required there will ?e no charge. R. M. BRYANT. R. F. 1). 2. Fort Mill. S. C. ! <fy>r\ mf* Now ) zpAoi d t, | TSE TRI-WEB ! j THE I I ' ^ , j ITH THESE you \\J Human Life, of Ruralist, of Atlari ; r? - - farm wisdom. ij " The Tri-Weekl newsiest, best, brightes Almost a daily, yet a Tin- Tri-W eekly Lou events. The new- "f the c -tie. I. ? 1 eek t he depar 1 )cli\ ei v. ! ' 'ultr\ and others ?lre>-e?l. Ii you want The Trij can ijet it at Si.oo per year 1 -ent free "ii request, givin Thn rrmcfifiltinn I?IC wimiiuuvii | A club of 40 or 50, or I required f?>r daily mail servi j 401 >d in tlie gulf -tates as o Clubbed with The A OFFERS shown frc (1) TALKS FROM FAR> he iii thr hands of every practica sttutom under same title an.l rna be mailed to you immediately upo (2) TIIK SOUTHERN RU monthly, edited by a farmer on h 00 HUMAN LIFK, of Bos people living in the public eye m j (I) MeCALL'S MAGAZIN to the mother and the homekeepe 01 Remember, our own Monday, Wednesday and Ft ne from lite alternate tree o Send at once. (Jet r combination to When Yo Drink pure, cle CARAJA ( Largest seller ii WHITE HOU is the wor Good Grocers I . i.ir ?A 7 A i ncn AU< EVER1 It is surprising, even to us, which comes to us daily, prov First. That our efforts ; Second. That we have i ; Third. That the masse: Fourth. That we are c Fifth. That the public Sixth. That the public j A warm welcome awaits yo small. Come to see us early j The Pineville Loan PINEVILLK mmmmm g?@?8>@???????( IMarke The average gain steer in our barn ^ That is growing ^ liurry. Our steal (necessarily com]) A trial order wi L. A. Harris ?@ ??O?0?00?0 ?( cor your name on our list he 1911 Subscription Offer. KLY ATLANTA 0 and <ORT MILL ' may order any one o f the altera Boston, Mass.; McCall 's Magazine, ita, Ga., or "Talks from Farmers to Your choice of only o ne and both ly Constitution rZft and biggest newspaper. Ann t the price oj a weekly istitution present s, at one -weepii ounty, -late, nation and the world tments of Farm and Farmer-. Wo of wide interest, edited bv expert* Weekly Constitu tion alone, witho >v addressing The Constitution. At! g with it the na mes and addresse fc thp P*npr For Rural Fr< AJ UIV A w|rva * ? more, will keep a R. 1". D. route ; ee. It is the gr eat news purveyo n the Atlantic se aboard. tlanta Constitution, we h im which you may make IKUS TO FARMER3," a symposium of Soi 1 farmer, young or o M. The unifies hu\ ,de oue of the great est features of this n reeeipt of order. RAL1ST, one of th e best agricultural p is owu farm, and is intensely practical a ton, Mass., giving current and iriterestini ow?that you want to know something al iE; of New York, the <|iieen of he lion :r. It is just what you want. JR GREAT PROPOSITI paper one year and I HE TRI-W riday, three times a week, tor one ffcrs, all tor $1.75. ight on. Don't miss a copy. A THE FOET MILL TIME: ' - * ' *r: '* ; u Prink an Coffee like COFFEE, 1 theCarolinas SE COFFEE Id's best. Everywhere. COUNTS j[ I m < DAY to note the new business ing? ; to please are appreciated, the confidence of the people, s think well of us. onveniently located, likes 4 per cent, interest. ' also likes quarterly interest. ur account, no matter how and often. and Savings Bank, 1 P * ?I? C, xa 0 'I $@?@@? 3??@@?0 g 4- T^llrll II i per day of each x g is two pounds. Sy* 18 beef steak in a ? jj vs and roasts are x | el led to he goodc @ ? .. io II convince you. @ g ? ntt & Company. | l_ 3@?@??@@?0$??? Ii ? ?| ? ; l "?'"r $L75 Ife |j 01c DNSTITUTION |!? Jei Or riMEs ; 1 Ap Ap ate free magazine offers of Ap of New York, or Southern J'*' re Farmers," a 16-page folio of ( newspapers for only $1.75. 1 ph' f y, Wednesday, Friday? Times a week. The Dollar a Year j 1! ig view, the wiiou" area "i |j( i-> given in each complete i?- ; 1 man's Kingdom, Rural Free j . appeal directIv t<> t!i?a I .... li nt any dubbing otters von anta. Ga. One sample cop\ i, : - of -dx of vour neighbor >. ?e Delivery Route ?__? above the minimum average r of the whole Southland, a-ave t!:e superb FREE your choice of on CI J j _ jfliern i.trrii knowledge that sliou?<1 { ^ ? all appeared in Tri-Week!y '"ont|>len<lId farmers' jiu|ier. It will aper# in tho South. It is a semi,nd helpful. Rr. i biography. It is about folks lout. It has not a dull line in it. Ka bu le fashion monthlies, verv helpful be fiv th ON EEKLY COXSTITrTIOX. I ... ev year, anri your selection ot 1 m tdilrcss ali orders for above I I S, Fort Mill, S. C. j *> 'i spec! SPECIAL QUALITIES This Week; Beautiful Line of La Attractive Lace Collars, 50c to Something nice in Lace Jabots . Lace Jabot and Collar combined Dress Trimm The most up-to-date line of Ore seen this spring. Prices, l'roi Ready-made I Big lot of Gingham and Percale at $1.50 to Underskirt Just received a fresh shipment skirts in blue, black and Pers values, 50c to Saliy Gap We took the most particular pai of this special goods and are i something nice. Swiss and Ei med Caps, special this and ne Shirt Waists-Somi Assortment of Butterfly Waists Nicest Lawn Waists that we ha Don't fail to see our Silk Waist? Lace fronts, best quality, at Big lot of 6c Calico at. per yard Our smart line of Ladies' Trimr the town. Don't fail to see E. W. KIMBF snonotCKOtonoiO ? tc = MILLIN Special displays of in Pattern Hats, be American styles; also Tailored Hats for stre MISS LILLIE Rock Hill Rooms upstairs in Mutual Dry C By appointment I will meet F to Rock ! lill on the early morni turn home on the 9 o'clock trail ft ot tot ** iOf X tc* tOiK <C oil It To The Town I F You Order Wt Do Not Overlook All Goods GUARANTEED Unc HIGH GRADE CORN 1 Gat nting Creek $3.00 1 Corn 2.7"cky Creek 2.25 1 Times .. 3.75 re 100 Proof (white or yellow) 2.?>o HIGH GRADE RYE i Reserve (bottled in bond) llwood (bottled in bond) 3.75 Terson Club 3.75 land Rye 3.00 -ginia Valley 2.50 HIGH GRADE BRANDIES iple Brandy 2.50 iple Brandy 3.00 pie Brandy (old) 4.00 ach Brandy. 3.00 ach Brandy (old) I. on Ither brands of Corn, Rye, Brandy, Gi.i, te price list free oil request. {emit bv P. O., Express M. f>. <>r ivgistei C. S. COUCH, P. O. Box 718 IH :'' M ?= V. ROCK'roof of the Puddins of Chewing >ck Hill Huggy <'??.. Hock Hill. S. < Gentlemen: Knowing that you an- in riling your buggies, 1 deem it my iut\ to ggy I am now running. This buggy was bought in Hawkinsvi en in constant use since, During this tin; e or six times?a distance of 200 miles eai is job until last year. Your "Long Distance" axle lasted th and the springs did likewise. It has always been the lightest runmr er ridden in, and the wheels you use can'i I gladly volunteer this testimonial . nking what I honestly believe to be the b< Your buggies are "A Little Higher I lave ever used. Wishing you continued success, and ; oster from conviction, 1 am, MILLS & YOUN< 4 v . v . - . ??n? I in ii.i in? 51 lEF^I i[=| ALS SPECIAL PRICES, and Next tlies' Collars, ... ... ... $1.00 it 25cand .... 50e at 15': ings. [ ss Trimmings we have m 10c to $2.50 the yard. Jresses. dresses, nicely trimmed $2.25 Is, of the newest Underian Mescaline, all good $3.50 s, ; ns in buying our stock n position to show you mbroidered, nicely trinixt week. 50c and $1.00. e Beauties, . I <*>4 r. a $1.UU ve ever had.. .. 50c ; with Embroidered and .$1.75 I I ... 5c j ned Hats is the talk of all of them. $1 to .$0. IELL CO., 5L IF?rrrdL IF=ffi OOOOOOK JERY = ? = 8 all the new ideas ? )th French and 9 the New Gage | ^et wear. x B. THOM, 8 0 , s. c. { ioods Co.'s building. X ort Mill ladies who come U ing train and wish to re- jj 0 3>atOnC*iC34?C?<C**3J:: lirouu'li The? Timers. liskey By Mail These Prices, !er the Pure Food Lawi. 4 Gal I Qt8 6 Qts 12 Qt> $10.00 $3.25 $5.00 $8.25 0.50 .'{.00 4.20 8.00 7.50 2.50 3.64) 7.00 12.75 4.00 6.00 12.00 8.75 2.75 4.25 7.75 4.50 0.75 12.0O 13.00 4.7;? 0. i.? 12.50 13.00 4.00 5.80 10.00 10.00 3.25 5.00 8.25 8.50 2.75 4.50 7.50 lo.oo 3.50 3.00 8.25 14.00 4.50 6.75 12.50 10.00 3.50 5.00 8.25 11.0)) 4.50 6.75 12.50 Wine. etc.. furnished in our com red letter. Address Manager, RICHMOND, Va. I km , ? . / ' HILL \ After 18 Years the Bag. Lake Park, Ga.. Feb. 10, 1911. t> re>ted in hearing praises sung rewrite you relative t-? a Rock Hill lie, Ga., 1"? years ago, and it has ie it has been run to Hawkinsville :h trip. 1 never had any repairs on rough the whole service of the bugig and easiest riding buggy I have i l>e beat. as 1 am confident you merit it by ?st buggy made. n Price Hut " far superior to any issuring you I am a "Rock Hill" Very trulv yours, ]E. W. MASON. j COMPANY.