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Rt*' * ?????? p' THE FOET MUX TIMES.! Democratic? Puufcliahed Thursday*. B. W. BRADFORD Editi r and Proprietor. *': vMcmtmox Rates: Om Y?r 11.25 Six Month* 65 Vh*Timaa invites contribution* on live subjects, bat doM not arree to publish more than 200 words a any subject. The rlsrht is reserved to edit . iftty common moon suoinuuM iur puumawu. On Application to the publisher, advertising rasas are made known to thoee interested. Taleobona. local and long distance. No. 112. 0?' FORT MILL. 8. C.. JULY 13. 1911. Buy * Home. An exchange prints this piece IB of good, sound advice which we hope will be followed by the working men of this community: "Every laboring poor man should buy himself a town lot, get that paid for, and then work to make, the necessary improve| * me&f A little here and a little i*? HJWUwill in due time produce you a home of your own, and place you out of the landlord's grasp; remember that fifty dollars a year saved in rent, will in a very few years pay for your home, and the money it costs you to move and shift about, without the loss of furniture and time, pay the interest on a five hundred dollar judgment against your property, until you can gradually reduce it to nothing. You can alt buy that way?why do you not risk it? If you fail you are no worse off?if you succeed, as any careful man is sure to do, you have made a home and established a basis equal to another's, which will start you in business." NOTE AND COMMENT. The "epoch of the open mouth" was very much in evidence in Couth Carolina on the Fourth. At Cowpens the principal event of the day's celebration was a speech by Governor Blease. Of course the governor had a good I deal to say. Not all that he said bore the hallmark of wisdom. Some of his remarks appear to have come from where they started and were going where they went. For instance, among the divers observations of the governor we learn that he agrees with an unnamed United States senator that Representative Joe Johnson, of Spartanburg, has more sense than all the other South Carolina congressmen put together. Mr. Johnson is well placed in Congress. He is a man of fine sense and has proved his worth to the country. The voters of the Fourth district do well to keep him in Congress. But Mr. ? ? 1 At. Johnson is not oiessea wim me major portion of the brains of the State's delegation "in the House of Representatives, and the wonder is that he did n?t*enter a disclaimer when Governor Blease went out of his l/ay to thus attempt to belittk&4ind insult the other Palmetto congressmen. If we are to ryreasure the worth of a congressman by the influence he exercisesin shaping legislation, by his ability to save the country hjj?i?ecls of thousands of dojjj^j by the application ?f inffiffgent effort in checking ?Jjjjrcriminal waste of the peopTe s money?if that is what constitutes sense, Congressman Joe I Johnson loses by comparison with at least one other South Carolina 1 congressman, whose name is D. E. Finley. I * One of Fort Mill's greatest I needs at this time is a good, live real estate agency, and we doubt if there is a town and township ^^B in the State which affords a more inviting field for such an enter prise, in iow 11 uicic is nttu ivi street extension and the opening new streets, while in the im^^^^nediate vicinity there are hunJ^^^k-eds of acres of land which if ^^^^Hyided into small tracts would readily at good prices. It ^^^Knay be doubted by some whether j this land could be bought, but The Times has it from reliable r parties that the owners would let the land go if bought for the purpose of development. We would like to see a real estate agency ? -, here composed of Fort Mill men, but if none of our people care to try it, let an outsider come in and reap the harvest. Fort Mill township has enough idle land to } furnish homes for fifty settlers, and a live real estate agency can bring them here. 'The Times is pleased to note that a number of our young men Ife who almost immediately upon reaching home from college sought employment and will spend their summer vacation in ^^Kearning dollars rather than loaf^^^Rjng the streets. The employers |P^>i the country have an eye out for the industrious young man and when the summer loafer and | S& summer worker have finished > i school the latter will land a good - ' job while the former scans the employment ads in search of a I position. The farmer who can produce a hundred bushels of corn on an of York county dirt and tell he did it is worth something ^^KEjr^^cwnty |nd the country at South Carolina as well as Georgia would do well to follow the suggestion of Governor Hoke Smith to cease the sending of militia into counties where heinous crimes have been committed to protect defendants during trial. It would be much better could the governor order a change of venue and have the prisoner tried in a county where the people were not inflamed with hatred and vengeance. The ends of justice cannot be met when such conditions exist. The government's guess of fourteen and one-half million bales of cotton from this year's crop is thought by all the farmers hereabouts to be very wide of the mark as will be shown when the harvest is over. Cotton is a very uncertain p'ant and no one can tell through what it may have to pass before the crop is gathered. There is no more interesting proof of the Indian's adaptability ; to modern ways than that the military stations of the West have lost their former import ance. At the present time mere is not a single army post maintained east of the Missouri river for fear of an Indian outbreak. Blease and Felder Swap Criticisms. The following extracts are from the speeches July 4th of Governor Cole. Blease and T. B. Felder of Atlanta: What Blease Said About Felder. With regard to charges made against him by Thomas B. Felder, of Atlanta,-Governor Blease said that if Tom Felder would produce a letter asking a bribe or acknowledging the receipt of a bribe, and any three men familiar with Blease's handwriting would say the writing of the letter was his, he would resign the governorship in 15 minutes. On the other hand, he said, if he could not prove that Felder had offered a bribe to a State official, he would not only consent to resign the governorship, but would move to the Philippines. Governor Blease said he was not averse to Felder's being given a change of venue if there was any doubt as to his being able to get justice in Newberry county. What Felder Said About Bleas . ??t_ i?~! ill IIitJ lct?i guuci iia> ui lai illation the criminal element of that State succeeded in electing one j of their number to the governorship. I am in possession of evidence, written ai d oral, which, in my judgment, would not only justify, but demand his impeach-1 ment. If I coul 1 read in this presence the hundreds of letters from the good, but graft-ridden, people of that once glorious commonwealth. in which their grateful acknowledgements tendered and their prayerful Godspeeds are wished" me in the great work .at hand in ridding j them of this moral and political j leper, his confederates and allies, ' I am sure I would receive from this audience such shouts of approval as would make the welkin ring." Increased Pay for Rural Carriers. The 40,000-odd rural free delivery carriers in the United States are to receive salary ina result of a recent order by Postmaster General Hitchcock. The order provides for the disbursement during the | current fiscal year of $4,000,000, which will mean an increase of $100 over the present salary of $900 for all carriers on standard routes, with proportionate increases in shorter routes. The rural delivery system was started fifteen years ago with 83 carriers, who were paid only $200 a year. On July 1 there were 41,562 carriers, their aggregate salaries being $35,793,000. Steel Creek Barn Burned. A telephone message received in Fort Mill early Tuesday morning announced the burning of the barn of Mr. John Davis, a young farmer who lives just over the State line in Mecklenburg county. The fire occurred at about 11 o'clock Monday night. Together with the barn, was burned a horse, two mules and a quantity of feedstuff. The building was all but cmsumed when the fire! was disc\ered. It was not stated whether Mr. Davis carried insurance on the building or stock. Tuesday evening it was reported that a negro man, who was believed to have fired the barn, had been ai rested and taken to jail in Charlotte. The arrest was said to have been made as tiie result of comparing the negroe's shoes with tracks leading from the scene of the burning across the hekis in the rear. Newsy Notes From Flint Hill. Cornffpondence Furl Mill Times. Flint Hill. July 11. ?Messrs. Asker H. Bailes. Edward Bailes and Porter M. Bailes have returned from Washington, D. C., where they spent the past week seeing the sights of the city. Mr. Lewis Patterson, who was killed by a street car in Charlotte Saturday night, was buried at Flint Hill burial ground Sunday evening. Mr. Patterson was 64 years of age and was born and reared near Fort Mill. There have recently been good rains in all the neighboring communities. but in this immediate vicinity there has been no rain of consequence since June 7. Our crops are greatly in need of water. B. J m I s?'\ Mr. Finley Indorses Champ Clark. Correspondence Fort Mill Times. Washington, July IT. ?Washington is, of course, the political center of the country and the question now most discussed is: Who will be the Democratic nominee for president in 1912. The House of Representatives is the popular and representative body, the members being elected directly by the voters by districts throughout the various States. A number of prominent Democrats have been mentioned for the nomination, but with the rank and file of the party in Congress there is no doubt of the popularity of Speaker Champ Clark, of Missouri. In congressional circles the belief is growing that of the men thus far mentioned Speaker Clark would be the strongest candidate the Democrats could name. Mr. Finley stated to The Times correspondent today that the party had in the past won its victories on the tariff question. He is also strongly of the opinion that Speaker Clark is the strongest available candidate and should be nominated. "The Democratic party.is in better, shape today than it has been at any ' time within the last 18 years," said \1?> Finlov "In AU.U9 thf* nartv was united on the tariff question and swept the country, gaining tor the first time since the Civil war the presidency and both houses of Congress. In 1894 the unfortunate division within the party on the money question cost us the control of Congress. Happily the money question is noV out of the way and the tariff is again a live issue. "For 16 years the Republican partshas perpetuated itself in power as a result of Democratic division on questions other than the tariff. Now the Republicans are divided on the tariff to as great an extent as the Democrats were during Cleveland's second administration. The old-line Republicans, the party of Cannon, Payne and Dalzell, stand for a protective tariff. The socalled insurgent Republicans who hail from the agricultural States of the West proclaim their opposition to a protective tariff unless it is on some product of their immediate section. But generally their attitude on the tariff is well illustrated in the vote in the House of Representatives on the passage of the farmers' free list bill and the bill reducing the tariff on wool, when practically all of them voted with the Democrats. Today there are no divisions in our party on any subject. Next year we shall enter the national campaign with a record of achievement in the tariff reform and lessening the high cost of living which we exp< ct to carry us to victory. "Much is being said in the publicprints and by individuals in ? very walk 1 of life as to who will be the Democratic j candidate for the presidency in 1912. Fortunately for the country the Democracy is in a most favorable condition | today. This condition is creditable en- i tirely to the splendid record of the : party in the House of Representatives 1 in the last Congress. We were a mi- 1 nority party in that Congress, of course, | but thanks to the wise, able and patri- | otic leadership of Champ Clark our party was able to make such favorable , I showing of its purposes in the way of 1 correcting abuses and bringing about a | reduction of the oppressive taxation r and discountenancing the waste ful exnenditure of the nublic mmev by the t Republican party that the people in j \ the congressional elections last fall gave j the Democracy an overwhelming victo- i ry, changing a Republican majority of ' 45in the Sixty-first Congress to a Dem- ? ocratic majority of 65 in the Sixty-sec- j one! Congress. "The Democrats in the House were not slow to recognize the potential Itadership of Mr. Clark and when Congress met < n the 4th of last April he was unanimously nominated by the 2 Democrats and < lected speaker of the 1 House of Representatives. The speak- ^ ership is a great oflic< unquestionably i the second greatest office in the country. Speaker Clark has more than fulfilled ' the ? xpectation* of his friends. C "Whatever hope the Democracy has j for 1912 is necessarily bast d on the well- | doing of its representatives in the House in the last Congress and what they have 1 done and will do 4n the present Con- I gress. Under the leadership of Mr. ? Clark the Democrats have put through j the Canadian reciprocity bill, which will enlarge the markets of Canada to * American products. We have also put 1 through the House the farmers' free ( list bill, placing thereon something like , 10U articles, used almost entirely by tlu* farmers, following inis tne nouse bill will reduce the oppressive woolen ( schedule of the Payne-Aldrich tariff \ law more than 50 p r cent., meaning j an annual saving of millions of dollars to the American people. "No man in Congress or in America j ( can compete with Mr. Clark in the j ( matter of carrying out the Democratic | ( program. The country realizes this and there is a very large and growing ( sentiment that he of all Democrats is ( best qualified to lead the party in 1012. t There are other great Democrats , <. in the country?in fact, the party is well off in this respect, but objection 1 is made to practically \ i ry one of them. J The only objection that has been urged i to the nomination of Speaker Clark for ? president is that at some during the iast few years a Democratic State con- * vention in Missouri gave out an intima- ( tion that it was at that time for the i nomination of ex-Governor Folk, of . Missouri, for president next year. At the time he was given this more or ( less useless and valueless indorsement, I ex-Governor Folk was a supposed or j avowed candidate for the United States Senate from .Missouri. There were politicians who eliminated him from the race by making a vague and indefinite promise tbat they would some day sup- \ port him for president. The public is 1 of the opinion that if any politician in > Mi- -our; profite i by the agreement ; with Folk he is that much ahead ut the j game: but the country as a whole i.- i nut bound by any such polit cal scheming. Certainly Mr. Clark was ii"t a ' candidate for senator and din not profit i by any agreement between the Demo- j cratic candidates for senator in Missouri i two years ago. 1 "The impression is growing among public men mat uu- country is turning . to Speaker (.'.ark as the most available i Democrat to nominate for the presidency in 1!>12. His friends are becoming active in his support. If he is the nominee his election will follow." i The Cotton Crop. Reviewing the weather and the crops, The New Orleans Picayune i says the past week lias been a:i period of favorable agricultural ' conditions as a whole. It opened with the drought still prevailing in the western portion of the cotton belt and it closed with the . drought relieved botli in Texas ] and Oklahoma. It is not believed 1 that the drought did any im- j portant damage. As a rule crops ( in the western belt were well i worked and in a fairly flourish- 1 ing state, and although a con- j tinuance of the drought would , no doubt have done damage, the i advent of timely rains has only i served to accentuate an already : favorable condition. Outside the ? western belt the rainfall has i ^iir ? Men's ai Odd Panl We offer a 20 f mentioned. TKes /-?ori Kht7 l-nnwinnr L-Ul i UUJ U11V T I affords. Ladies' I We are contem] pay you to buy a ; be alright for anot all the popular go( can suit the boys. LISTEN n We cannot affoi anything sold and McELI 3een ample and well distributed, A*ith the possible exception of a few districts in the western por:ion of the Carolinas. The Texas 'ains, while not as heavy as could je desired, have undoubtedly aeen general, and the crop vastly benefited rocs without saying. The outlook is now good all over ;he cotton belt for a bumper r'ield this year. The acreage is he largest on record and there las been no occasion to warrant my abandonment of acreage danted.?Charlotte Chronicle. Shade Your Stock. For the past several weeks tnimals have suffered from the | leat, and there is little proba-1 )ility for a change of conditions; 'or weeks to come. It is therefore the duty of every animal] nvnerto take steps that will add .0 the comfort of the dumb) jeasts under his care. An atmosihere that is broiling will trouble .hem considerably, and when no; shady place can be had to keep j .hem from the effects of the scorching sun they will become ;ery restless. Horses can stand he sun probably more than any I niumol l-.l it nPVPPtVlplpSS ! SlUCI ClIMUIClI, UlU, IIV TV! VUV.v. w, :hey fully appreciate the shade. Jows become much harassed by he heat, and show it largely in :heir milk flow. It will be lot iced, on the evening of a hot lay, that the supply has fallen )tf, in many cases a decided deTease. The cows, too, lose in . ondition. In young cattle the iepression is not so much noiced, but, notwithstanding, they ;uffer equally. Sheep l'eel it nternally, and often pant and rasp for breath. Figs show heir suffering by becoming ex-; remely unhappy, and suffer I rreatiy from scorched skins. Ex-j . essive heat is a decided disad-! vantage, and there is no getting iway from it, as it will occur,; jxcept in gaining relief in shady daces. So, then, it is important hat these be provided. Ki Is More ihan Wild Beasts. The number of people killed yearly by i.'ild bests don't approach the vast numer killed by disease terms. No life is , safe from their attacks. They're in dr. water, du.-l. even food. Put grandj protection i- nil a i \ Ki, etrie Hit ,ers. which destroy at. e\pel the dead\ disease germs from the system, that's why chills, fever and ague, all j malarial a.vi many d diseases yit id iiromnth to this wonderful blood nuri- 1 tier. Try them, and enjoy the glorious health and new strength they'll >rivtyou. Monev hack, if not satisfied. Only aUc at Ft. Mill Drug Co., Parks Drug Co., and Ardrey's Drug store. Thomas J. Thomason, of York county, died late yesterday afternoon at the Confederate Home. He was stricken with paralysis on Sunday. Mr. Thomason was 68 years of ajre, and had boon at the j infirmary since April 8. His relatives were notified. The State, Tuesday. Escaped With His Life. "Twenty-one years ago I faced an awful death," writes 11. B. Martin, Port Harrelson, S. C. "Doctors said I lad consumption and the dreadful cough 1 had looked like it, sure enough. I tried everything I could hear of for my ough, and was under the treatment of the best doctor in Georgetown, S. C., 'or a year, hut could get no relief. A Tier d advised to try Dr. King's New Discovery. 1 did so. ami was completey cured. 1 feel that 1 owe my life to this great throat and lung cure." It's i aositively guarantee d for coughs, colds and all bronchial affections. 50c and $1. Trial bottle free at Ardrey's Drug j tore, Parks Drug Go. and Fort Mill Drug Co. BIG SAL id Boy's 1 ts and Low-c )er cent reduction in p ii .i * e are all tnis season s that you are getting th ^ow-cut Shoes at the plating a change in ou suit whether you need her season. We hav( xls, sizes 34 to 42, an I These goods are go ! prices. It will pay y ERMS, CASF rd to charge goods at not satisfactory, cash 4ANEY f^<SH8J5S?0???00?( 1 Summer ] ? 25c Hats now.. S 50c Hats now 5S $2.00 Hats now J* $4.00 Hats now ?y $3.50 Oxfords now. ? $3.00 Oxfords now ? 10c Bleach Domestic now <?j 10c Ginghams now... X 10c Lawns, Duck, Etc., now.. Best Calico at @ 50c Silks now ? $1.00 Silks now ? 10c Embroidery now O) 30c Jap. Rugs now 50c Jap. Rugs now X 75c Jap. Rugs now All Summer Goods must go I L. J. MA |j000000000000C Taxation of automobiles going from one State to another, the money thus derived to be used for the improvement of roads, is contemplated in a bill introduced by Senator Simmons of North f Carolina. The bill is a general good-roads bill. i < A P?ek Into His Pocket, would shew the box of Bucklen's Arnica Salve that E. S. Loper. a carsenter, of Marilla, N. Y. always carries. "I have never had a cut, wound, bruise or sore that it would not heal," he writes. Greatest healer of bnrns, boils, scalds, chapped hands and lips, fever sores, skin eruptions, eczema, curns and piles. ! 25c at Ardrey's Drug store, Parks Drug i ('<>. and !"nrt Mill Drug Co. Metropolitan Policies the Best. Form North to South, from East to West, The Metropolitan policies are known ' to be the best. Better get one now, while you can, From S. B. Collins, the Metropilitan t man. With this Company a first-class line you'll find. Of liberal contracts of every kind: When volt buv Lift* Insurance, buv the best. " P < all for S. B Collins, he'll do the ' j rest. Will write you a $5,000 Ordinary Life j Policy, age 35, for a yearly premium of ' $100.55. Can you beat this. I S. B. COLLINS, Agent, Boom 20S. People's Nat'l Bank Bldg., , ROCK HILL, S. C. fete I visit Fort Mill Friday and Sat- ; urday of each week. i We Are Headquarters1 For the Following: Hardware, Crockery and Stoves, Buck's Steel Ranges, Lime, Cement | and Plaster, Elwood Field and Hog Fence, McCormick Mowers and Rakes, International Gasoline Engines, Shredders, Corn Harvesters and Disc Harrows, Sewer Pipe and Farm Drain Tile, Grates and Tile, Chattanooga Turn and Disc Plows, Cole's Hot Blast Heaters, 1 Wilson Heaters, Machinery, Fittings and Supplies, Window Glass and Putty, Roofing of all kinds, Farmers' Favorite Grain Drills, Stalk Cutters, Spokes and Rims, Guns and Ammunition. Rock Hill Hardware Company, Rock Hill. S. C. ELECTRIC - Th0 Ssi jj BITTERS Family Modicul?. j Clothing, ut Shoes trices on the lines goods and you e best the market same reduction, r lines and it will it or not. It will ; suits for men in d we are sure we ing to go at these ou to come early. L these prices, but will be refunded. & CO. . I I 3000?00?0G?G^ j| Bargains. ?j / We & J 2oc ca X 50c Xj $1.90 X ' $2.50 <C $2.25 ?: 7 l-2c i 7 l-2c 7 l-2c X' ZIIIIIZIIIIITZIIIIIIIIZ 25c ?! 75c ?! regardless of cost. ' kSSEY.f] 5 0?0??Q?0OS?? ' Go to "Haile's on the Corner" ; for I I The following odors of the American Perfumery Co.'s quadruple ' extracts: .1 Crushed Rose, 1 Crab Apple, La France Rose, J Heliotrope, Magnolia, Rose Geranium, Sweet Clover, j 1 Musk, Tube Rose, Baltimore Belle. 50c an ounce. Will sell you any quantity de sired. "i? * 1 1 - _. .1 _ n M nane's on me uorner Phone 43. + OOOOOOOC? + g CURED THIS MAN f J OF RHEUMATISM jj J 0 8 Mr. U. C. Maupin, a ? ft prominent insurance man ft a of Salisbury, N. C., says, g jj after using numerous so- * 0 called cures for rheuma- g tism, he used one 25c j J 9 bottle of Mullen's Hor- 0 J net's Nest Liniment and g a cured a bad attack of g ' s rheumatism. He also x t 0 says that as an internal 9 |J remedy for bowel com- jj g plaints, it can't be beat, g 8 Ardrey's Drug Store. 9j * Fort Mill, S. C. * HOOO(OXXOOOO+ 1 11 ![= And Still Tli t Pouring in Evei We are certainly selling th = merchants are sitting around : To sell goods, one must hav the price?we have both. Jusi Our Big 8-Day Cui is a success from the beginnii sales are increasing. There days. If you care to save come, and don't wait until th? Just read our "Anybody T cular and you can't stay awa E. W. KIMBR "The Place Where Qur T 11 SB I II ZD F=It I (OOOXXOOKOOKOi { Call for? | "TEM | The best Tea on the markc It comes in 1-4 pound pacl j for 15 cents. In each pa< jj ticket calling for a valuabl j ware. This ware is no fab 1 imported stuff. 1 JONES, Ti j : *3* x ? *3* IVII It To The Town Tl If You Order Whi Do Not Overlook 1 All Goods GUARANTEED Unde HIGH GRADE CORN 1 Gal iunting Creek $3.00 -11 Corn 2.75 tocky Creek. 2.25 )ld Times 8.75 'ure 100 Proof (white or yellow) 2.60 HIGH GRADE RYE )ld Reserve (bottled in bond) Uellwood (bottled in bond) 3.75 lefTerson Club r 3.75 )rland Rye 3.00 Virginia Valley 2.50 HIGH GRADE BRANDIES Apple Brandy 2.50 Apple Brandy 3.00 \pple Brandy (old) 4.<?0 Peach Brandy 3.00 Peach Brandy (old) ... . 4.W Other brands of Corn, Rye, Brandy, Gin, W jlete price list free on request. Remit bv P. O., Express M. O. or registers r q miiCH Vy k> V/V W -w* P. O. Box 718 o? J M /< ^IMSA 'v^ _~T-' ^ ; ROCK f Proof of the Pudding of Chewing tl Rock Hill Buggy Co., Rock Hill, S. C. Gentlemen: Knowing that you are inte rarding your Buggies, I deem it my duty to w juytrv I am now runnintr. This buggy was bought in HawkinsvilU )een in constant use since. During this time ive or six times?a distance of 200 miles each ;his job until last year. Your "Long Distance" axle lasted thro jy, and the springs did likewise. It has always been the lightest running ?ver ridden in, and the wheels you use can't b I gladly volunteer this testimonial as naking what I honestly believe to be the best Your buggies are "A Little Higher In [ have ever used. Wishing you continued success, and ass jooster from conviction, I am, MILLS & YOUNG ? aJ ... -iffiy-Ai iniii i I I I III?? ey Come ry Door, e goods, while other 0-* reading the "Daily." A.\- - l?i_ 3 e me quality uuu t as we had planned Price Sale ig and each day our 's just a few more money be sure to c last day. w*Vant My Job" Ciry ELL CO., ility Counts." i i[=?ii ir=l O ******g 0 8 PO" | 8 it is "Tempo" Tea. | cages, full weight, Jj :kage there is a jj * e piece of China- ?[ :e. It's the real Q 8 8 8 he Grocer. Q 0 irout?]i The l imes. iskey By Mail These Prices. r the Pure Food Laws. 1 Gal 4 Qts 6 Qts 12 Qts $10.00 $.'1.25 $5.00 $8.25 9.50 3.00 4.20 8.00 7.50 2.50 3.00 7.00 12.75 4.00 6.00 12.00 8.75 2.75 4.25 7.75 4.50 6.75 12.00 13.00 4.75 6.75 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 10.00 3.50 3.00 8.25 14.00 4.50 6.75 12.50 10.00 3.50 5.00 8.25 14.00 4.50 6.75 12.50 iru , etc.. furnished in our comI letter. Address? Manager, RICHMOND, Va. pi 0 1 f or 11LL >, After 18 Years le Bag. Lake Park, Ga., Feb. 10, 1911. rested in hearing praises sung rerite you relative to a Hock Hill , Ga., 15 years ago, and it has it has been run to Hawkinsville trip. I never had any repairs on ug! *he whole service of the bugand easiest riding buggy I have ie beat. I am confident you merit it by - buggf made. ?? Price But?" far superior to any luring you I am a "Rock Hill" Very truly yours, E. W. MASON. COMPANY.