University of South Carolina Libraries
f FACT, FASHIO X 9 | Paragraphs That I Interest h ,., ,'ix *. ' " ,,' ' * > :.' ' : i <; Lata Fashion; Notes.. f r '?) ' * * f Lace of virtually every character, it Is predicted, will be used extensively fi\>' trimmimr nn both dresses and blouses this coming season.. " Many fine lingerie blouses are designed with long shawl collars. Some Of these collars are edged with lace, v bthers are hand-scalloped, still others have plain edges, but are trimmed with inserts of lace applied with embroidery stitches and motifs. Most of this type of collar are seen on blouses of voile and batiste that are supplied with wristlength sleeves. The cape and cape dolman wrap is to continue through the spring, Judging from reports from Paris and the advance models seen in Philadelphia. Leather coats in a more pretentious type of designing than the straightline coats already in vogue have been shown for spring by some of the Paris houses. ' Lavin uses as the only trimming for a lace frock a quaint bunch of roses made of silk ribbon encircled by a frame of conventional foliage, not unlike In appearance the lace paper bouquets of Civil War time. An American designer has conceived and developed some lovely spring frocks entirely of wide plain and of flowered ribbon, thus effecting some pleasingly unique and picturesque models. Leather fringe on a wool scarf for sport wear is repeated as a tassel on the four-cornered tarn that completes the set. Colors for spring millinery include the delicate sweet-pea group, colors Renown as sunset hues, the name adequately describing them, and blues or the porcelain order. Velvet and suede applique on wooi scarfs and on matching hats Is the unique trimming on some new and charming sport sets of English origin. Ribbon and satin loops as lowdrooping side trimming on hats ana turbans of satin and of velvet are more I aind more in evidence as the season advances. So also are the fringe or cur tain effects of lace, net or chilton tnat drop over the front brims, veiling- the eyes of the wearer. Roman striped ribbon weighted at the ends with large bead tassels of equal brilliancy are used on some lovely youthful dresses of the Eton type developed in navy blue Poiret twill. -Plaited skirts are a feature of many i youthful - spring suits?not straignt! Raited, but group or elustpr.plaltea.. ^Princess lines for dresses still persist and are noted on dresses for both street and evening wear. *The use of two fabrics in combination for dresses and for suits is now quite a definite feature of spring fashions. Even lingerie frocks are affected by this style trend. In navy serge is an Agnes dress re- j e'ently seen, designed with a tight fitted [ \<raist or bodice, to which is attached a very full skirt, the fullness being confined almost entirely to the sides, giving a sort of bunched or extended [ hip effect. Winter Menus. virt.i't Ti-nt-i-vr a limit what to have to i eat. Use these menus: BREAKFAST Oranges Cereal and Cream Broiled Calves' Liver and Bacon Potatoes O'Brien Watercress Egg Muffins Corec DINNER Puree of Celery Celery Radishes Roast Shoulder of Pork Brown Gravey Apple Sauce Souffle of Sweet Potatoes String Beans Coleslaw Orange Pie Codec BREAKFAST Sliced Bananas Cereal and Cream Creamed Beef Toast Codec LUNCHEON Shrimp Salad Whole Wheal Breail Orange Pie Cocoa DINNER Celery Olives Sliced Cold Pork Cranberry Jelly Baked Potatoes Spinach Coleslaw Baked Apples Codec BREAKFAST Grapefruit Cereal and Cream i French Toast Codec LUNCHEON Pork Pic f Coleslaw Baked Annies Tea DINNER Salpicon of Oysters Mayonnaise Celery Roast Shoulder of Lam Rolled Brown Gravy Cranberry Jelly 7 Mashed Potatoes I'eas Fruit Salad Coffee BREAKFAST Stewed Raisins and Prunes Cereal and Cream Panned Scrapple Toast Coffee LUNCHEON Lamb Broth With Rice Cheese Sandwiches Potato Suhul Apple Suuce Gingerbread Tea DINNER Oysters on Half Shells Celery Reheated Lamb in Brown Gravy Boiled Rice Peas Lettuce Tapioca Pudditin Colfee * Activities of Women. South Amboy, N. J., litis tt woman jailer. Miss Annie M. Brown is Norfolk's first woman lawyer. NAM FANCY I ? e of More Especial | ) Women $ I ' 1 ; !V * - : !; 4 ; Chinese, wom'ciV arc adopting: European footwear. Minnesota has more than 4,000 women trade unionists. ? Gonnccllcut leads the nation with five women legislators. h The intuition of women is claimed to be greater than that of men. Miss Sarah 1*. Clark has been organist for ill! years in an Essex, England,, church. Women voters in the new republic of ! Czecho-Slovakia. outnumber the men by liberal margin. More than 40,000 women are employ- ' cd in industry in the Island of Madeira. The membership of the Young Woan's Christian Association is now well : past the 500,000 mark. Applications for domestic work in ! New York city have increased COO per 1 cent over those of two months ago. ' Of the more than 1,300 jurors drawn \ for duty in the Philadelphia courts dur- 1 ing January, 185 were women. Lady Auckland Geddes, wife of the' ' British ambassador in Washington, is J passionately fond of children. 1 In Turkestan wives can be purchased ; for a box of matches and each man can 1 have as many wives as he chooses. A bill before the German relchstag provides that women be made eligible to serve as judges and state attorneys. 1 Mrs. A. B. Stevenson, the woman, ^ chess champion of Great Britain, begun *' to play chess when she was two ? years of age. Infirmities of age arid increasing ( deafness has caused Dowager Queen * Alexandra of Great Britain to forsake " society. 1 In the. newly organized university of e Rio de Janiero women will be eligible for all teaching and administrative posts. Tho ppntpp nf the 1 United States is now in Seattle Wash., where during the last year more than 2,500 divorces were granted. At a recent convention of the Democrats in Germany a resolution was passed which favors a woman's section of the foreign office. * ? "Blue Eyed Mary." Como. toll me. blue-eyed stranger. Say whither dost thou roam ? O'er this wide world a stranger. Hast thou no friends, no home? 'They called me blue-eyed Mary. When friends and fortune smiled, But. ah! how fortunes vary? I now am sorrow's child." "Come here, I'll buy thy flowers, ' *' And "case 'thy ""hajtless lot; Still wet with vernal showers, I'll huy forget-me-not." "Kind sir. (hen take these jiosies: They're fading like my youth : Cut. never like these roses. Shall wither Mary's truth. t "Horn thus to ween my fortune, Tho' poor, I'll virtuous prove; 1 I early learned this caution, t That pity is not love." I "Look up. thou poor forsaken, * I'll give thee house and home, f And If I'm not mistaken. Thou'll never wish to roam." "Once more I'm hnppy Mary; 1< Once more has fortune smiled; , Who ne'er from virtue vary May yet bo fortune's child." \ Value of Advertising.?Men who * pay taxes cheerfully are rare, writes 1 Richard Spilla.ne. It. is notorious that thousands of * corporations and firms increased their " advertising appropriations greatly in * the last few years because profits 1 spent, in that way were not subject to Federal tax. 1 u effect the govern- 1 inenl paid a big slice of the advertis- A ing bills. 1 J'ossibly some of these concerns ( figured that what they paid on this score was an investment. At any 1 rate, they argued that way whether they believed it or not. Probably the | majority, even if doubtful of tho virtue of the larger expenditure salved their conscience with the hope that some of it would come bach, and anyhow, it was better to spend it that way than let the government have it. J -Many of the advertisers got one of ' the surprises of their business lives. 1 Their advertising pulled?pulled big. " It brought orders they never had J dreamt of getting. It. demonstrated to them that they had not known the possibilities in their particular lieldo of activity and that they did not ap- ' predate the market they might com- ' mand. Now they are planning advertising ( campaigns on the broader basis as 1 sound business. They've learned that ! it pays. And some of them arc n??t j1 going tp wait until the present clouds |' roll by. They're going to help push i. them away. OF LITTLE VALUE. 1 < caucaior ueciares Employers nave Little Respect for College Degrees. ' A man with bachelor of arts degree from a college lias little better chance of getting a job than a. man without a degree. Dr. Frank J. Good now, presi- j dent of Johns Hopkins university (1c- ' clured in an address at L-taltiniore, rc- ' j cently, adding that there was no reai son why be should have a. better ' chance, lie said further that praetleall.V inind ed leaders of business and industry j were justified in having little respect j for the "high mark" in college studies jand for the A. D. degree of a college. ? The United States navy has one hundred ships of various types, in process of construction. SOURCES OF PERFUMES Luxuries for Which America Spends pillions. VEGETABLES FURNISH MOST SCENTS Mediterranean Countries Center of Industry?Roses are Cultivated,in Bulgaria as a -Field Crop?Gums and Resins are Also Important. Milady America paid $4,972,541, during the last year for perfumes, cosmetics and toilet preparations, a fact which 'has led to confused speculation by mere man as to what she did with them. The real romance and adventure in the statement lies not so much in the uses to which these imports were put as-where they came from?a story which is related in the following bulletin from the Washington, D. C., head quarters of the National Geographic Society: "When you pay the apothecary a sum that seems like a dollar a whiff for something that delights your senses, or if you are especially fastiiious, have him compound the scent that 'suits' your personality, did you sver stop to wonder where his precious ngredients came from? The sunny isles and lands along the Mediterranean probably grew some of the flowers, sthers perhaps were plucked by dark Moorish hands in Algeria, and mayhap 1 in animal in the brooding hills of .vestern China gave its life to. furnish me constituent of the perfume. "The vegetable kingdom is necessari- ' y the most fertile source of perfumes. Yoni its flowers such as the rose and essamine, and from its seeds, woods md barks such as the spices and jandalwood, even the most fastidious :onnoisseur would be able to select jither some simple ordor or a complex jouquet. Nor are they for perfumes 1 done, but for scenting soaps, cream, jomades, and in making flavorings and (xtracts. Ophelia an "Unfailing Naturalist" 1 "Rosemary, thyme, sweet basil, and narjoram are found in great profusion ' if Mediterranean countries, and here 1 he .chemist can distill the whole plant 1 tnd not bother about picking the lowers. Shakespeare, the unfailing laturalist that he was, made no error vhen he chose for Ophelia the flowers : .he scattered. 1 "The old-fashioned lavender flowers 1 n which our grandmothers used to 1 jack the household linen and their rich 1 )ld laces grew best in France and England. A temperamental flower it ' night be called too, for unless the cli- 1 onii nrtrl altitude suit, it refuses 1 o breathe forth its usual frdgrance. 1 'ine grades of the plants are err own J ii th'- Drome region, Frartce, at an alti tide of 12,500 feet, while the flowers renerally considered to have the most igreeable fragrance come from the ' tfitcham district of England, where the ' :onditions of soil and altitude are de:idedly different from those in France. "The rose geranium, which has such ' in exquisite odor is also grown and 1 listilled in France, but Spain, Algiers. 1 uid the island of Reunion engage in i lie industry. Unlike the lavender, : lowever, the perfume of the rose ger- 1 mium comes from its leaves and not ' rom the flowers. 1 Rose Crop Vies With Tobacco. "But the country that might well be -1 mown by its scent is Bulgaria, for its ' ose crop is second only to its tobacco. 1 Dver 1:2,500 acres of land in the pro- ' ,'inces of Philippopolis and Stara Zatora are given over to the growth of 1 o.scs from the petals of which attar 1 >f roses is distilled. In the wonderful .' rardens at Kazanlik, Karlovo. Klisoura, < ind Stara Zagora, the best of the ' lowers are grown. The fieltfs are ar- ; anged much after the fashion of the 1 rineyards of France and Italy, and the ,1 - , | I lalf-open, dew-iaoen uuus, wmcu rcry few petals, are snipped off by diluent girls, boys, and women in the ' mrly mornings of May and .Tune. 1 "About four thousand pounds of ' oses are produced on an acre of land, lut it takes about two hundred pounds >f petals I produce an ounce of oil. ' .'or .an altar which before the war cost 1 ibout $230 a pound. 1 "Roses are grown in other parts of ' he Balkans, as well as in Asiatic Tur- ' toy where they were introduced by ' \hmed Vcfik the noted Turkish 1 statesman and men of letters, in the 1 lineteenth century, and in India, Per- 1 >ia, the Fayum province in Egypt, and 1 n France. The industry lately has : ieen introduced into Germany. "Many of the countries of Europe lave for centuries successfully distill?d oil from such seeds as caraway, inise, and fennel for flavoring and scenting purposes, and the citrus fruits >f Italy and Sicily yield quantities of valuable oil. In fact so fragrant arc :he flowers and shrubs of some of the stands of the Mediterranean tnai mcy ire called the Spice Islands of Europe j is the Molucca Archipelago in the Dutch East Indies are known as the Spice Islands on account of the nut- ! negs, mace, and cloves that they pro- , luce. Napoleon said that he would know his native land. Corsica, with his eyes shut by the odor of the whiteflowered cistus. Frankincense Derived From Gum Resin of Tree. "Frankincense, which is one of the chief aromatic constituents of the incense burned in churches, is the gum resin of a tree found in East Africa. Arabia, and on the island of Socotra in the Indian Ocean. "Ladies and gentlemen in the time of Napoleon used the ton<|Uin bean, a native of Guiana, to scent their snuffboxes. "The animal perfumes are extremely | limited in number. Ambergris is sec- | re ted by I lie sperm whale, eivit by the animal of tin? same name, and musk by the musk-ox, the musk-rat, and the musk deer, which is found in the high Himalayas. Tibet, and eastern Siberia, About 15.000 ounces of musk, usually in the grain form, arc annually imported, to the ITnited Slates from China and India. Musk has one peculiar and almost inexplicable character- j istic. One grain of ILkept freely exposed. to the air of a well ventilated room, will impregnate the atmosphere for ten years without sensibly diminishing in weight." CENTRAL AMERICA The Romance of the Banana and of j Coffee. When the American small boy eats j Ills uauy quuia 01 oanunaa, uuu . his father and mother sip their breakfast, luncheon, or dinner coffee, j they are making- important eontribu- ] lions to the prosperity of fellow Americans of whom they icnow very little?the residents of the five Central 'American republics which have lately heen discussing the formation of a sort of 'United States and Central America,'" says a bulletin issued by the National Geographic Society. "Central America illustrates strikingly the effects of geographic factors oh a region's development," continne's the bulletin. "All the five republics lie on the relatively narrow isthmus between the narrow ribbon of Panama on the south and Mexico on the north. The Spanish settlements made soon after the discovery of America were all on the Pacific side af the isthmus, for the most part on the plateaus and mountain slopes and in the mountain valleys of that region, which temper an otherwise tropical climate. Practically the enLire Atlantic side of the isthmus was a low plain, covered with a dense tropical JUU??JU* i Ilia uuttu u I great 'Chinese Wall' erected by nature which discouraged or aotually cut off intercourse with the Atlantic coast and turned the faces of all the countries toward the Pacific. Isolated Both by Nature and Man "The isolation started by nature tvas continued b^ the colonial policy 3f the Spaniards, who for three hundred years permitted the Central American settlers to trade only with the mother country and greatly restricfed even that commerce. The various groups of settlements which finally became the live republics of --a * - <-? - 1 -1 ~ couay?uuaiemaia, oaivauui, nunumas, Nicaragua, and Costa Rica?were also effectively separated from each other by the mountainous nature of the country and the lock of means of communication. "At the time of the throwing off of the Spanish yoke in 1821, therefore, Central America was made up of a group of communities of rather primitive development scattered along the Pacific Ocean. The settlements were is effectually cu.t off from the United States as if they had been many thousands uf miles away instead of being across the"Caribbean Sea. Steel Rails. Steam Shovels and Coffee | Bring Prosperity. "The story o'f Central America's growth in prosperity and importance in the nineteenth and twentieth cenLuries is a chronicle of engineering ichievement in the outside world and x' romance of "horticulture In the isthmus itself. With the settlement of the Pacific coast of. the United States, the building of the Panama Railroad, ind later the construction of a transMexican railway, the Panama Canal. incl railways across iiuaicmaia uuu Costa Rica. Central America has become easily accessible. "Shortly before the construction of the Panama Railroad coffee was introduced into Central America from the West Indies and was found to grow to perfection in the lava soil on the slopes of the volcanic mountains ilon.er the Pacific coast of most of the region. Coffee soon became an export 3f prime importance and has brought much money into Central America. The acquisition of a higher standard if living in the four republics in which culture Is directly traceable to the tittle bean. ? Where the ^Banana Comes In "The remainder of Central America's horticultural romance has as its motif?the banana. In order that the | great American hunger for the slender golden fruit might he appeased, large fruit growing and distributing corporations from the United States icquired extensive tracts of land in tho Atlantic plain, reclaimed it from the jungle, and planted great banana sjroves wmun pruuuut- iiinnuiio ui TAX NOTICE?1920-1921 Office of the County Treasurer of York County. York. S. C., Oct. S, 1920. VTOTICE is hereby given that the TAX HOOKS for York County will be opened on FRIDAY, the 15TII DAY OF OCTOBER. 1920. and remain open until.; the 31ST DAY OK J DECEMBER, 1920. for the collection of STATE. COUNTY, SCHOOL and LOCAL TAXES, for the fiscal year 1920. without penalty; alter which day ONE 1 'Kit CENT, penalty will be added to ill payments made in the month of JANUARY, 1921. and TWO PER CENT, penalty for all paynfents made in the month of FEBRUARY. 1921 and SEVEN PER CENT, penalty will be added to all payments made from the 1ST DAY OF MARCH. 1921 to the 15TM DAY OF MARCH. 1921. and after this date all unpaid taxes will go into execution and all unpaid Single Polls will he turned over to the several Magistrates for prosecution in accordance with law. All of the Banks of the county will offer their accommodations and facilities to Taxpayers who may desire to make use of the some, and T shall take pleasure in giving prompt attention to alt correspondence on rthe subject. All Taxpayers appearing at my oflice will receive prompt attention. Note?The Tax Books will be made up by Townships, and parties writing about Taxes will always expedite matters if they will mention the Township or Townships in which their properly or properties are located. HARRY E. NEIL, Treasurer of York County. SI Fri tf. bunches of bananas yearly. "The by-products of this developineni have been as valuable to Central America as the money thai has I flowed directly to laborers and to the government. Important cities have sprung up along: the Atlantic coast, railroads have been built, and what is probably most important of all, lines of fast, well-equipped steamers, carrying both passengers and freight, have been established between the Atlantic ports and those of the United States. In effect the banana has shifted Central America several thousands of miles closer to the outside world. ? The war department has announced the testing of a new long-range machine gun firing 400 to 500 bullets a minute. The gun carries a bullet five times as heavy as those fired by the Springfield rifle and will shoot twice as far as an ordinary machinegun. YORKVILLE ENQUIRER FOR $2.50. Any of the following Clubmakers will receive and forward subscriptions to The Yorkville Enquirer for $2.50 per annum: Miss Bertie May Alexander, Yorkvilel Mrs. J. E. Adams Clover No. 2. W. IX Alexander Filbert No. 1. Jis. Robt. Barnwell Yorkville J. II. Bigham Sharon W. A. Burnett Clover Miss Olivia Brandon No. S, York Mrs. E. N. Brandon Nor 2, Clover Miss Maggie Bolin York No. G. C. P. Bennett Smyrna No. 2. Miss Nannie Burnett Yorkville Mrs. I. P. Boyd York No. 7 Miss Willie Boyd York No. 8 Arthur Lindsay Black York No. 1. Miss Emily C. Eoyd York No. 8 Miss Eula Bigger, King's Creek No. 1 J. W. Bankhead Lowryviiie E. Wyley Btgger :... York No. 2 W. D. Bankhead Sharon No. 1 Mrs. S. L. Blair Sharon Mrs. Lottie Barnes Harper York No. 7 D. C. Boheler King's Creek No. 1 Miss Edith Burns York No. 1 Claud Burns Smyrna No. 2 Jas. Diggers Clover No. 4 R. A. Barnett Rock Hill Miss Mary Brison Clover No. 3 Miss Ruth Brandon York No. 4 Miss Edith Burns York No. 1 Miss. Cora Clark Gastonia, N. C. A. B. Clark York No. 5 Miss Dessie Childers York No. 2 D. C. Clark, Jr York No. 1 Mrs. Raymond. Carroll .... York No. 4 Mrs. Dennis Chamber?-.... York No. 2 J. H. Clark Filbert No. 1 J. C. Choat Rock Hill No. 6 Miss Nancy Cook Yorkville W. F. Costner Rock Hill No. 6 W. H. Crook Fort Mill No. 1 E. M. Dickson York No. 5 Mrs. M. C. Dunlap Rock Hill No. 5 Frank Dagnall, Hickory Grove No. 1 J. C. Dickson ....... York No. 1 J. B. Dickson Bullock's ureek Mrs. L. L. Dowdle ? : Bullock's Creek No. 1 S. G. Dixon York No. 2 Robert Davidson York No. 5 Mrs. \V. E. Feemster .-.? McConnellsville No. 1 Mrs. Edgar M. Faris York No. 8 Edward Faulkner Yorkville Miss Catherine Faulkner -Clover No. 4 I. F. Ford Clover No. 1 Miss Alice Garrison ...? Yorkville S. M. Grist Yorkville J. Glasscock Catawba Mrs. Belle Gwin Sharon No. 2 Airs. S. S. Hartness : York No. 7 Mrs. J. Howard Jackson Clover Mr?. V. D. Howell, : '.Hickory Grove N<?r 1 Mrs. W. H. Howell York No. 1 .T. P. Hutchinson, Jr, Rock Hill No. 3 Mrs. M. E. Harper York No. 8 Miss Bessie Howell, Hickory Grove No. 1 Miss Mary J-Iucy Rock Hill P. D. Hopper Clover T. .1. Hopper York No. 0 Mrs. W. w. .jacKSon ioir r\o. u Miss Marie Jenkins Sharon Mason L. Jackson Tirzah W. P. Jackson York No. 7 Miss Mary Jackson Rock Hill Miss Emily Jackson Clover No. 2 Miss Hester Jackson Clover No. 3 Mrs. C. L. Kennedy Sharon C. H. Keller Yorkviile Geo. \V, Knox ? Clover J. Stanhope Love Yorkviile Boyd Latham York No. 4 W. S. Lesslie ... Lesslie No. 1 A. W. Love King's Creek Miss Alary McFarland ? York No. 3 Mrs. T. C. McKnight Sharon No. 2 Mrs. J. A. Maloney Sharon No. 2 Mrs. TV. IX Morrison Yorkviile Harry Miller York No. G Mrs. E. B. McCarter, Smyrna No. 2 J. B. Matthews Rock Hill No. 4 Miss Marie Moore Y'ork No. 3 Miss Grizzle Mullinax ' King's Creek No. 1 J. J. McSwain Rock Hill No. 7 Mrs. J. P.. Mickle .... Rock Hill No. 4 J. M. Mitchell York No. 1 Miss Pearl Meek ? ... Clover No. 3 Fin ley McCarter Y'ork No. G Miss Sallie McConnell McConnellsville L. G. Nunn Rock Hill TV. A. Nichols Smyrna No. 2 Brice Neil Yorkviile Mrs. R. B. Oates ? Tirzah Mrs. K. F. Oates ^ York No. 2 Miss Mary Love Plexico Sharon S. Lee Purslcy Clover No. 4 Miss Lucile Plexico York No. 4 Mrs. J. S. Plexico Sharon No. 1 Ray Tarrott Yorkviile Powell Patrick Y'orkville Miss Lola Parrott Filbert Brice Qninn Smyrna Lloyd Jtevels Y'ork No. 3 IT. V. Russell snaron ino. x C. IJ. Rutchford Hickory Grove Mrs. T. H. Riddle Clover No. 2 Miss Lillian Robinson, Clovor No. 2 J. P. A. Smith York No. 1 Mrs. J. R. Scott York No. 3 Mrs. Fred L. Smarr, Bullock's Creek J. K. Scoggins Rock Hill Jeptha M. Smith York No. 4 Miss Clara Stacy Clover Miss Ruth Smith Rock Hill Luther Shiliinglaw Tirzah J. W. Summerford Clover No. 1 .las. A. Shiliinglaw Sharon No. 2 H. J. Sherer Sharon No. 2 Lee Sherer Sharon No. 1 J. I'. SilTord Clover Mrs. John M. Smith Clover Miss Julia Sherer Yorkvillc Mrs. J. It. Stephenson Catawba Miss Pearl Shiliinglaw .... Y'orlc No. 7 Miss Frankie Stanton, Clover No. 3 Mrs. H. C. Thomasson, Filbert No. 1 Miss Edna Thomas....Uock Hill No. 1 Mrs. W. B. Thomasson, Y'ork No. G Mrs. Ernest Thomas Clover No. 1 R. J. Williams Clover No. 1 A. C. White King's Creek No. 2 G. W. Whitesidcs Sharon JefC D. Whitesidcs Hickory Grove No. 2 W. AY. Wyatt Smyrna J. C. Wells Clover No. 1 William Wray Yorkvillc Miss Catherine Wylie Yorkville Pinkney Whilesidcs Smyrna Miss Mary Wingate, Rock Hill No. 1 W. M. Wallace Smyrna No. 1 Miss Susie Wood Clover Mrs. IT. O. Wallace Filbert No. 1 Geo. W. Williams. Jr. Yorkvillc .1. A. Willi ford Rock Hill No. 2 Miss ldxzio "Wood York No. 8 Mrs. J. E. Y'oungblood, York No. U ? The motion picture industry in America lias pledged itself to raise two and one-half million dollars to laid starving children in Europe. i I i ?? ?A' V' ,. 11 \ . Mules, Man i I SHOULD YOU have nee< MARE Oi a XIORSE, just remembi needs whatever they may be. Of selection as we often havo at our 1 no doubt that we-can meat your r Anyway, if you have a need for a to see what we have to offer in qi MULSS JAMES fil sannHnranBMHi | W, J. FEWELL I Phone NASH CANS j l.H. C.TRAGTORSAI ! TRA( !full line of machi: WEBER 1 I FEWELL & ' I YORK, PROFESSIONAL CARDS. D. L. SHIEDER DOCTOR OF OPTICS Office Hours: 11 A. M. to 4 P. M. YORK, - - - S. C. " ' i i T7rtT>xr -t?ttt>-mtt,TTT?T71 nn I I A \J?\JJLX A' V/ JLUll JL ju 1/J.V^I Wi Undertakers ? Embalmers YORK, - - s. c. / In All Its Eranchos?Motor Equipment. Prompt Service Day or Night In Town or Country. Br. R. H. GLENN Veterinary Surgeon CALLS ANSWERED DAY OR NIGHT Phone 92 YORK, - - - S. C. i W. W. LEWIS Attorney at Law Rooms 205 and 206 Peoples Bank & Trust Co.'s Building, YORK, - - S. C. Phones: Office 63. Residence 44. J. A- MARION ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT j LAW Office opposite the Courthouse. Telephone No. 12G, York Exchange. YORK. S. C. JOHN R. HART ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW. Prompt and Careful Attention to All Business Undertaken. Telephone No. 69. YORK. S. C. 76 f.f It J. S. BRICE Attorney At Law. rrompt Attention to all Legal Rnsiness of Whatever Nature. Front Offices, Second Fioor, Peoples Bank & Tr st Co.'s Building. Phono No. 51. ? Final returns indicate that the volume of tourists travel to our national parks anil monuments exceeded the million mark for the year 1920. 2S Horses ' * ' I for one or more MULES, a good er, please that we can supply your . course we haven't quite as big a jam, but at the same-time we have equirements to the very last word.. . MULE, MARE or HORSE, come uality, size, color and price. MOTHERS; =0ESES L. G. THOMPSON t i v > ?''?%&' *.* : > X VvVJjfJJ A 1 *7?^ 1:1 A 9 V ' *, .lij . i v r. H... f. ' -- ? ind trucks m! * ND . ft i :tor implements i; ' I i" $ 0. I. H. C. FARM J NERY .- . | WAGONS I MOMPSON ! - - s. c. I ANNUAL ASSESSMENT FOR 1921. Notice of Opening of Books of Auditor for Listing Returns for Taxation. Auditor's Office, December 3, 1921. "PURSUANT to the requirements of the Statute on the subject. Notice is hereby given that my -books will be opened in my Office in York Courthouse on SATURDAY. JANUARY 1ST, 1321, for the purpose of listing for taxation all PERSONAL and REAL PROPERTY held in York County, on January 1, 1921, and will be kept open until the 20th day of February, 1921, and for the convenience of the Tax- . payers of the County I will be at the places enumerated below on the dates named: Rock Hill?On Monday, January 24, through Saturday, January 29. At York from Monday, January 31, to February 20. All males between the ages of twenty-one and sixty years, are liable to a poll tax of $1.00 and all persons so liable are especially requested to give the numbers of their respective school districts in making their returns. BROADUS M, LOVE, Auditor York County. Dec. 3, 1920. f 97 4t The Best to Eat Almost every person requires more or less meat diet to keep in the best of health, and we just want to.tell you that FIRST-CLASS MEATS?the tenclerest, juiciest beef, the choicest and best of fresh pork, sausage that are all pure pork and rightly seasoned, are all specialties with this market. Every day in the week, we have the choicest meats obtainable, and we are especially careful in the preparation and the handling of our meats?Cleanliness being our constant aim. When you want First Class Beef, Pork or Sausage let us serve you. FRESH FISH AND OYSTERS? Every Friday and Saturday, and of the very best qualities. We could buy cheaper stuff, but we don't want that kind. If you want the BEST, let us serve you. Phone us. SANITARY MARKET LEWIS G. FERGUSON. Mar. LOANS AT 0 % INTEREST A RRANGED for on York County ^ Farms. Long-term. (5 1-2 % v through Federal Land Bank). Why not stop paying higher rates? Charges reasonable. C. E. SPENCER,