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I FACT, FASH10 | -. -? I Paragraphs That Ar | Interest ti A .; ' The Sauce. .. . .. Many ..vegetables may be combined 1 with^a cream sauce. In some instances tbe'.yegetab'es may be' cooked with the milkdtself-in the top of the double boiler,. as asparagus tips, celery, etc.; in Which case the vegetable is more delicious thanvever. If an escallop is made, two cupfuls or ordinary plain white sauce or milk gravy is used to three cupfuls of. the meat, fish pr vegetables. For creaming, an ordinary sauce is used, and the amount should be a cupful of sauce to two cupfuls of the meat, vegetables or fish. >< THIN WHITE SAUCE NO. 1 For use in creaming vegetables. " 1' tablcspoonful butter 1 tablcspoonful flour 1-4 tcaspoonful salt i Few grains pepper 1 cupful milk MEDIUM THICK WHITE SAUCE NO 2 For' use in creaming meals, fish, eggs, in making-creamed vegetables, sauces for meats, t and ijii certain cscallopcd dishes. 2 tablespoonfuls butter , . _ 2 tablespoonfuls flour 1-1 tcaspoonful salt T TVw crrnln* nenner ' \. s ' 1 cupful milk THICK WHITE SAUCE NO 3. Fori use in binding together croquettes, certain escollopcd dishes and fish and meat loaves. ' 4'tablcspoonfuls butter 1-2 cupful flour ' 1-4 teaspoonful salt 1-8 teaspoonful pepper t . 1 cupful milk Barely melt the butter In a smooth saucepan or double boiler top. Remove from tHe heat and stir in the floor and seasonings, preferably with a wire whisk. , Then return to the heat and add the cold liquid a little at a time, stirring all .'the while. Be sure that the sauce thickens with each addition of liquid before adding any more; otherwise, it' is- liable to be lumpy. Let come to a boil, then set it over hot water for ten minutes. If the article to be creamed is added at this time, tho whole will become thoroughly hot at the end of ten minutes.' Therefore this final cooking is not a waste of time. In making the thick sauce, chicken or veal-stock, or half milk and half oyster liquor, may be substituted, according to the intended usage. , Thin cream may be substituted for the milk in any of the formulas. Oleomargarine may be substituted for butter, if desired. In this case, increase the amount of the salt a little. Or, use half oleomargarine and half "butter. " Be careful not to heat the butter too hot or it will break up. This is why it should be removed from the fire ! when the flour is added. However, in j order to cook the flour thoroughly, it is j necessary 10 lei me sauce sutnu uvei boiling water for the ten minutes as directed. Chicken Pie. By the aid of the casserole left-overs may be turned into novel and appetizing dishes. Into its hospitable interior go pieces of cooked fowl, flesh or fisji, stale bread, odds and ends of vegetables, left over puddings, or what not, and in due time return to the tabic transformed. , It frequently happens that enough cooked fowl is left over for another meal, but its uninviting appearance makes it nectssary to convert it into some new form before returning it to the table. Cut the meat of the fowl into neat pieces and mix it with one-half as much cooked beef tongue, ham or sausage. Make a stock {rom the bones and gravy, adding two cupfuls of water, one chopped onion, a small blade of mace and a bay leaf. Simmer for one hour, strain and cook again until reduced to one cupful of liquid. Arrange the meat in a casserole, pour the stock over it, cover with a thin layer of pastry or mashed potatoes, and bake in a moderate oven for threefourths of an hour. " ! Delicious Frostings. Fudge Frosting.?Fudge frostings are made by cooking milk and sugar torwrvt Vtn%t ? ?* + <! f M enf t ball when dropped in cold water or registers 238 deg. F. on the thermometer. A good recipe is as follows: 2 tablespoons butter 1-2 cup milk 1 1-2 cups su?ar 1-2 teaspoon vanilla Put butter in saucepan, when melted, add sugar and milk. Stir, to be sure that sugar does not adhere to saucepan, heat to boiling point, boil without stirring, to 238 deg. F. Remove from fire, co^l, add' flavor, and beat until of the'rfght consistency to spread. If frosting becomes too hard before it is put on the cake it may be stirred over, hot water until soft, and then poured over the cake, spreading it evenly with back of spoon." Opera Fudge Frosting: Use threefourths cup thin cream instead of milk in making Fudge Frosting. Buttermilk Fudge Frosting: Use one! and one-half cups buttermilk instead! of one-half cup milk in making Fudge J Frosting. Brown Sugar Fudge Frosting: Use brown sugar instead of white sugar In making Fudge Frosting. Maple Fudge Frosting: Use one cup sugar, one-half cup maple sugar and add one-third cup butter and make like Fudge Frosting. Condensed Milk Fudge Frosting: Onefourth.; cup water and one-fourth cup conderised milk may be used in any fudge frosting instead of one-half cup fresh milk. Chocolate Fudge Frosting: To Fudge Frosting add from one and one-hall' to three squares chocolate as soon as the | boiling point is reached. The nmounij depends on how dark a frosting is de-1 NAM FANCY ! ? . ! / f j ! e of More Especial ? ' I ? Women f | sired. Cream may be used in any Fudge Frosting instead of milk. A Party for Children. All our entertaining cannot be confined to the grown-ups, but the children's narty need not be difficult or fatiguing to prepare. It is easy to satisfy them. Let there be New Year's bells, with cut-outs of Old Father Time ana the Baby New Year. These answer for a party any time in January?the baby1 001 liUUU U1 XxJ The good old games of Going to Jerusalem, Hide the Thimble, and Button, are always popular, and what child does not enjoy a peanut hunt? Turn off the lights and have the dining room lighted with bright red candles. 'The table can be made quite attractive with very little work. Make little turtles by sticking cloves in big fat raisins, and scatter them all over the table. In the center have a Jack Horner pie mad,e by covering a white enameled basin with a "crust" of brown paper. From the top of this pie have narrow ribbons leading to each placw.t Use paper napkins suggestive of the season. Places may be found by cutting picture post cards in hal/, and putting one-half of each picture at the plate, and giving the other to a child. Only the Simplest refreshments should be served. Creamed potatoes, peanut butter sandwiches, ice cream, small cakes and cocoa are sufficient; Frost caKes witn oonea irosung, uefore it hardens, stand an animal cracker upright on top. Add a tiny flag to each helping of ice cream. Then the pie! A signal is given tor the children to pull the ribbons, tno crust is broken and out comes a small box of candy or a toy for each guest. Belinda. The quaint and charming name of Belinda is "derived from the Italian. Though most frequently applied in modern fiction to the sweetest of the sex, and pretty coquettes, Belinda means a serpent. So beware, you men, of the baby doll who ans>vers to trie cunning, old fashioned name. How Belinda came .to be evolved is not clear to etymologists. She simply appeared in Italy, and. is believed to have had her origin in the fashionable craze for names ending in "a" which swept Europe in Queen Anne's Augustan age. The first 'Belinda recorded in history was me wnc oi e?ri<inuu, a. uebut sufficiently prominent to spread her but sufficiently prominent to spread the name far and wide. But greater vogue was to be hers, and when Pope chose Belinda for his heroine of "The Rape of the Lock," her permanence was assured. In those days it needed only a famous author to immortalize a feminine name by putting her in a book and. all the fashionable maids of the country adopt her for their own, just as today screen favorites' coiffures and costumes are copied by adoring flappers. Belinda flourished in England ana Italy, but her popularity was negligible in France, and Germany refused her completely. Spain took her from Italy, but despite the vowel ending, she was a bit too harsh for Spanish ears. America welcomed her whole-heartedly, and she flourishes here today, both actually and in fiction, Belinda's gem is the cat's-eye. It is a talisman against evil and disease, and has a mysterious magnetic power which renders its 'wearer irresistible to those whom she wishes to attract. Friday is her lucky day, and 7 her lucky number. HAD NARROW ESCAPE Aviators Nearly Burned to Death Over New York City. A real fight for life! was held above New York last Friday when 15 army airplanes "bombed" the city with smoke bombs and rattled a tatoo with machine guns in a sham battle to stimulate recruiting for the air service. While thousands of persons, out to their noon day luncheon, watched the thrilling spectacle, Lieut. Edward Black, an observer in one of the machines, was fighting, unknown to the crowds below, a "fire which threat/lnoti.nr.t lAn of tho TTinPhinP and the lives of his pilot, Lieut. Ulysses G. Jones and himself. Lieutenant Black was painfully burned. Black. who was in the gunner's pit behind the pilot, was dropping smoke bombs when one of them exploded in the pit. His face and hands were burned and his clothing, and the fuselage of the plane caught on fire. Jones turned and saw the struggle, but was powerless to help. He kept his eye on the nearest river, ready to plunge 2,000 feet below if it should be necessary. Black kept his head, however, grasped a fire extinguisher and pumped its contents on the flames. When Jones saw that his companion had won the grim battle he turned his plane toward Mineo!a field. 20 miles away, making the trip in about ten minutes. Black was hurried to a hospital where he will lie : laid up for several days. ? Investigation has proved, it is asserted. that one in every dozen prohibition agents is open to bribe. The investigation was undertaken by the Federal prohibition agent for the,[division of the southeast, which embraces .several of (lie southern states. WORK OF THE ROADS > . t - . ~ :/ I Nation's Most Profitable and Necessary Task. ESSENTIAL TO WHOLESOME PROGRESS Best Possible Method of Developing Civilization |s by Means of First Class Roads,* Without Which Wbrth While Progress Is Out of the Question. '. Manufacturers Record, Baltimore, Md. Not all the power and wealth!of the nation if thrown into the expansion of railroad facilities could possibly within the next ten years provide adequate transportation to meet the needs'of-the country in that time. V The automobile and motor truck have come into being as a part of the. great economic and social revolution; which rightly used will mean as much for national advancement as the development Of our railroad system, perhaps even more. Wc have come to a point where motor trucks and automobiles are the individual property'of one man or a small group of men and where there can be no such abuses as the country suffered from in times past by the mismanagement of railroads, nor such disastrous results as we are now suffering from in the complete domination of railroads by labor unions, aided by the National government in tne passage ui wie Adamson act. ^ What the sea is to world commerce, free and open to every ship that spreads its sails or every steamer that fires its boilers, good highways will be to the traffic, passenger-?and freight, of this country. The highway must be developed to meet the rapidly expanding motor vehicle traffic. It must be built on a firm foundation, so solid and enduring that it may stand the tremendous pounding of the heavy motor trucks which are to. do much of the traffic that railroads are no longer able to handle. A few years ago Florida began a campaign of highway building. It then had possibly the most intolerable, impossible roads of any state in the Union. They were either a bottomless ~ /-,? nf hntlnmloao mnfl To- I oajiu uaovc ut vi *?.* ?. ?- j day one can motor for a thousand miles over unbroken stretches of splendid highways throughout Florida, and it is literally true that wlthi"i a thousand mile trip one would never be out of sight of other cars, and. often a dozen others.would bo in the range of vision for a greater part of the time. Florida has built thousands of miles of such roads and its appetite has been whetted for more.' These roads have developed motoring by the tourists and by the local people to an extent that few would ever have deemed possible a few years ago. A horse-drawn vehicle is rarely seen on any of these Florida roads. Motor trucks are in evidence everywhere. Motor busses carry passengers on regular routes of 150 miles or more. The vast citrus fruit and early vegetable business of the state is now handled almost exclusively from the farms to the towns and the railroad depots by motor trucks. What Florida has accomplished In the last five or six years in revolutionizing its entire business through the building or good mgnways can oe aone tn every other state in the Union whenever there is a spirit of broad enterprise matching! that of the people of Florida. It is probable that Florida has spent more in proportion to wealth and population on good highways than any other state.. But the success which it has achieved has intensified the realization in that state of the' value of highways, and so Florida keeps on in Its campaign building new and better and wider highways. There is a spirit abroad throughout the south for highways which augurs well for the future. But not all southern and western states have yet realized that the building of a highway is an > investment which immediately brings, not once only, but annually for all the years to come, a profit perhaps as great as the original investment. It must be fully understood that mo tor traffic will develop on a larger scale with heavier cars just as ra idly as good highways are provided, and that the people, farmers, merchants and manufacturers tributary to these roads are the ones who reap the profit therefrom. Their life is boadened, their ability to do business is,increased, the opportunities of the farmer and his family for social life, for educational advancement, for church attendance are all greatly Increased. The farfrier becomes a city man in one sense in that he is within easy reach of the city at any hour of the day. The physician is ; made available and thousands of lives are saved annually by the ability of the physicians to travel at rapid speed to the bedside of the sick and suffering. The merchant and manufacturer have broader opportunities for business. Tndeed, from every standpoint, every ; argument is in favor of the building of good highways, and building so permanently and solidly that they can .^tand 1 IIUI cuaiugi. u (iniv, *.? * jvM?o wv...v. No one can make the mistake of communities in road pioneering work who accepted anything in the way of an improved road, thinking it would last forever. Build for permanence and with a | foundation that will stand hard knocks. The time is propitious for doing the , work. It can he done now to great advantage as to cost of labor and materials. Employment can be given to thousands of men who otherwise would ; be idle, and the creation of employment is absolutely essential to the safe i guarding of the life of the nation. i Unemployment is the hotbed for the propagation of bolshevism. Now is the accepted Lime for public work which will create employment and accomplish i things that need to he done. Road. ] builders will be literally building their own road to national safety and prosperity. . Throughout the entire country, north, south, east and west. we. should carry on an active work in highway construction which would fully match the tremendous activity of railroads in the years gone by when wc were building as high as 10,000 miles: of^-oad a year and sometimes stiij<more. The highway must-supplement and in many , cpes. supplant. railroads. It is not a destroyer of railroad values; it is a creator of business; it'intensifies and broadens the nation's progress and malces'p'ps^ible. the development of better rai 1 road'conditions to the benefit of ? 11 J - hi nnd + rv ni* th A I Icllil VUU . M VI o auu buw 5WW w* countfy^'^s-^ Then orii 'tvith highway work as one of tHe'-sUpiJeme needs of the country, the achievementof which wlll-'bring blessingB^fltold from the material, the moral, thd ' religious and educational standpoint alike; \ CASTE Just a Little Lesson That is Worth Thinking AboutThe king of the' land grew weary of sitting all day on a throne and listening to the monotonous talk ' of his wise men, and determined to dress himself in the garments of a mere citizen and travel'about the country, in search of amusement. He was a ere.it man. was this king?wise and full of common sense, and his word stood against the world, writes'Robert Qulller, In the Baltimore Sun. On the morning of his second day of liberty lie stepped into a. smoking car to roll his own in dempcratid fashion, and sat down alongside a citizen who was dressed much like himself. The king 3miled and made an effort to- start (& -conversation, but his companion would not thaw. The king was not easily discouraged, however, and kept his tongue wagging pleasantly for the better part of an hour. Then he gave up in despair and returned to his seat in the car. As he sat alone he began to commune with himself. Said he: "That cold and distant person who would not yield to my advances is doubtless a very important personage. ! arm sorry he would not talk to me, for he might have taught me a great deal concerning the affairs qf the worid." Back in the. smoking car the un- | communicative one, who was a dry goods clerk , off for his "vacation, said to himself:1 "1 wonder who that ragchewer was.'; 7 Beyond any doubt he was a nobody, else he would not have been so friendly. The nerve of him, trying to force himself on a person of my standing." Now thip'is a fable, but the folly it contains' fs bred in the bones of the , race.' An-l'fibr 'this reason are we-discourteous?to persuade our fellows that we are persons of consequence. NOT SO DANGEROUS Traveling In Mexico Is Better Than It Used to be Say Americans'.,, "Traveling in Mexico isn't what it, used to be!" is the thankful expression of Americans. All the way from Nuevo Laredo on the Texas border to Mexico City one's eye is filled with the evidence of" the tremendous progress toward solid reconstruction made in. two years. Most of the work has been done since Obregon overthrew Carranza last May. Where two years ago sqldiers were carried by the carload to repel possible bandit attacks on the trains, today only two ride in each coach. American Pullmans- now run through from San Antonio to Mexico 1 City, affording all modern comforts. Passports are quickly vised at the | border and baggage is inspected with little inconvenience. v. \ Every city from the- border to the < capital including Monterey, Saltillo ] and San Luis Potosi, is doing good' 1 business. ' ! Mexico City is the mecca of Amerl- 1 can traveling salesmen. , Resident Americans who denounced ' Wilson for not intervening in Mexico would resent it today if Harding were to intervene. I WON'I AOOfcH 1 1-lfcLK Judge Lindsay Won't Allow Kid Friends to the Rescue. "I don't want the newsboys of Denver or of any other city to collect money to pay my fine," Judge Ben B. Lindsay, of the juvenile court, declared in Denver last week when told that plans were under way for newsboys of Denver to contribute to a fund to pay a $500 fine assessed against him foh contempt of court. When he refused to betray the confidences of a twelve-year-old boy whose mother was on trial for the murder of her husband here, Judge Lindsay was held in contempt and ordered to pay a fine of $500 or serve a year in Jail, r The United States supreme court upheld the decisions of lower courts yesterday. Judge'Lindsay declared it was not a matter of monetary expendioncy, but a matter of principle with him. "It's for the newsboys and their friends this principle was founded by me," he declared. "I cannot accept any money from them." It was expected that in accord with Judge Lindsay's wishes, no attempt would be made to raise the money. Back to the Old Days.?That the times are fast returning to normalcy is indicated by the following editorial announcement found in the Dublin (CJa.) Courier-Herald.' "It has been a long time since the newspapers offhe state were in the habit of accepting eggs, chickens, country meat, potatoes, corn, etc. in payment for subscriptions, but in view | of the present very unusual depression and scarcity of money, and because the people of this country have a supply of' such things with a scarcity of money, the Courier-Herald will accept, at market prices, eggs, and cured hams in payment of subscriptions. This'will apply to either the claily or weekly, and is in effect until conditions improve. We ask only that the eggs be fresh, and that the hams be cured, and iri: good, condition. They will' be accepted at market prices'071 the day they arc brought in, and, full credit given on subscription ihem."' ? J UUilV; StLllUUjl UlUlVsCXlC kllUL at least four persons in every thousand stutter. ' ; ^ PROFESSIONAL CARDS. LINK, D~C chiropractor Diseases ' of the Spine and Nervous " System and all Organic Inco-ordination.: . Consultation and Analysis Free. 331 Chatham Avenue. ROCK1 HILL,-- ; S. C. D. L. SHIEDER ~ DOCTOR: OF OPTICS ;'V Office Hours: 1T A. M. to 4 P.,M. - : v -'T rYORK, - - s. C.;;; FORE FURNITURE CO. Undertakers ? Embalmers .1-7 7 yqbk, - - s. c. In,All Its Branches?Motor Equipment. Prompt Service Day or Night In Town or Country. h~ T? TT riT.P"Nr>T ' JLJJL-i. JkVs IXi XJI JJA4A1 ^.Veterinary Surgeon, CALLS ANSWERED DAY OR NIGHT . i .* ' Phone 92 . YORK,,' - - 'S. C. . / ; H W. W. LEWIS , :; Attorney at Law, . ' .'Rooms 205 and 206 Peoples Bank & Trust Co/s Building, -' "^ ^WoRK, - - S. C. Phonies:. Office 63. Residence 44. i ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT If. :/.v; ' , LAW 'J- I r>Offlce,-opposite the Courthouse. . 1 off v?.i. j. i^u, jLuiiv uAuuau?^. ... - '>'A v YORK. S. C. , v J JOHN R. HART ATTORNEY AND. - COUNSELLOR ' AT LAW.. Prompt and Careful Attention to All Business Undertaken. Telephone No. 69. YORK. 8. C. "76 " ' f.t It ; - ; J. S. BRICE Attorney At Law. Prompt . Attention to all Legal KusjpeBs of Whatever Nature. Front Offices, daeond Floor, Peoples Bank & Tr st Co.'s Building. Phone No. 51. i !'w. j. fewell I Phone NASH CARS , !: "FULL LINS OF !: * MACHJ | FE WELL & i|; YORK, ; */ r s ' Mules, Mar< SHOULD YOU have neec MARE or a HORSE, just rcmembf needs whatever they may be. Of selection as we often have at our b no doubt that we can meet your ri Anyway, if you have a need for a to see what we have to offer iu qi MULES JAMES B1 The Best to*Eat Almost everv person requires more or less meat diet to keep, in the best of health, and we just want to tell you that FIKST-CLASS MEATS?the tenderest, juiciest beef, the choicest and best of frefeh 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 especial ly careful In'the ' preparation and " the handling of our. meats?Cleanliness being our constant aim'.' When yoU want First; Glass Beef,. Pork or Sausage let us serve you. s : : FRESH FISH AND OYSTERS?, , Every Friday and Saturday,- and of the very best qualities. "We could;buy cheaper stuff, but we don't tya'nt'' that kind. If yoii want ' BEST, let us serve yo.u^ 'Phone"'us. '**?" SANITARY MARKET LEWIS G. FERGUSON. Mgr. : t . TAX NOTICE?1920-1921 " : ' "V; : Oilice of the County Treasurer of York ' ' , County J" ' ' ' '' York", S.' C., Oct 8, 1920.. "VfOTICE is hereby given that the -V TAX BOOKS for York County will be 'opened'on FRIDAY, the 16TH DAY OF OCTOBER, 1920, and r(S,main' open -until the 31ST DAY- ' OF DECEMBER, 1920, for the collection of STATE, COUNTY, SCHOOL and LOs CAL TAXES, for the fiscal vear 1920. without penalty: after which day ONE PER CENT; penalty will be added' to all payments made'*in the m.onth of JANUARY, 1921,' and TWQ " PER CENT, penalty for all payments 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 15TH DAY OF MARCH,' 1921; and after this date.all unpaid taxes wfir go. into execution and all unpaid Sipgle Polls will be turned over .'to the several Magistrates for " prosecution ' in accordance with law.;": ' " * All of the Banks of1 the county will offer their accommodations and facilities to Taxpayers who may desire" to' make use of the some, and I shall take pleasure in giving prompt attention to all correspondence on the subject. All Taxpayers' appearing at my of~ fice will receive prompt attention. Note*-Thfe 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 property or properties are located, : .' ' ' HARRY E. NEIL. Treasurer of York County. < SI Fri tf.' : ; ANNUAL ASSESSMENT FOR 1921. ___ . ^ NntieA of Onsninn of Bonks of Auditor for Listing Returns for Taxation.' Auditor's Office, December 3, 1921. PURSUANT to the 1 requirements.' of r 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, 1921, for the purpose of listing for taxation all ' PERSONAL ana 'REAL PROPERTY held in York County, on January' 1, 1921; and will be kept'open until - the 20th day- of'-Ffbruary;i>1923; and for the^-convenience of the Taxpayers of the County I will be at the places enumerated below on the dates named: ' ' * 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 $1.00 and all persons so liable are especially requested td-give the numbers of their respective school disI tricts in making their returns. BROADUS M. LOVE, Auditor York'County. Dec. 3. 1920. 1 ' ' f ' 97 4t L. G. THOMPSON I : 175 1| 1ND TRUCKS I 9 ; & I. H. C. FARM ' i 3TERY I thompsoF I S.O; I m^- *, ^gBHr^p js Horses 1 for one or more MULES, a good ;r, please that we can supply your course we haven't quite as big a arn, but at the same time we have jquirements to the very last word. MULE, MARE or HORSE, come lality, size, color and price. MRS H0RSES Garden Seed:WE HAVE JUST GOTTEN.INV* OUR STOCK OF V.;' GARDEN SEEDS?; ' f ' SO WHY NOT SEED 'EARLY AND H^VS-THEK READY ^OI^THE FiBfeT^G^^ DENING DAYS? ^ i ' Wfc >JV}pb'MAjp: Yt^lTHE; w.;| .FAMquViRiMJfe'R r;?ig - ' TOhrATGJSEEP |,:V:i??$l ) FOR FIFTEEN CENTS A^PK^i V I?'S YQU ORDER^^ CLOVER DRUG STOBE'< PrQ?crlptiorr? a 'Specialty.j fLi'Lv^tiE Phone'No."2'., Glbvar,; 0r?C YO R KVILLE JEN QUIR E R'FOR Any of the~&Ubj$ng: ' Qubmakeijj will receive, and fotwai'd siibso-Iptfobl to The ' Yorkville"-' Bhqiiirer&fafett$2.61 .per nnnum:.; V*mvj Miss Bertie May^Alexander, YorkyRe JUrs; J.Ef/Adams7-CldverliNq^2 W. D. Alexander ' " ^ ' Fllberi NfcN Jas. -Rob^BaS^eO^t^^YbrleMli J. H. Blgham ; W. A.' 'Baynett v, r "v-~ Miss' Olivia. Branactn? , n o,;.j? -xdti Mrs'.: E: NV Miss Maggig.BoUh " 7Yo'rk;N<ffijj C. P. Bennetti?Sinyrriflfe?f^:-'2 Miss Nannie Baqiett' Yor^pli . Mrs: ^k'-'MjBSg Miss WilUeiBoyili 'Y.pr%JZ&3 Artlmr Lindsay-Blaclp^-York,Nai'J Miss Emily-?. Bbyd%^ .VdrkrKd;'3 Miss Eula Bigger, King's Creet^sCftg X- W^Bankb'eacT * E. Wyley Bigger, " ' Tork&rdft W. p. Bankhead; ^?; Sharonr'No^ Mrs: s. x. Biaii*"_ir. 'z'r'^'-Sham Mrs;: Pottle1 Barnea>ffArpar,grf^CT - - '^lv--York!.^M D. C. Boheler: Xing'SiCre^^o:s Miss Edith Burns Claud Burns :,.'. .::'.v SmyniytNqfcf! Jas. Blggers' " >.'' Clqvyjwo^ R. A. Barnett Rc?ck: H3 Miss Mary Brison ?Clovet^^Nctrii Miss Ruth Brandon Miss Edith Burns. - '.ziYork No# Mlas.Cora'Clark. GastonIa,NiC A. B. Clark" ?..L _? YbrEgggg Miss Dessie Childers D.'C. Clark, Jr;. Yortc/Ndffi MW- Ray pnd,^rrolJ"21:vYor^^dffl Mrs. -Dennis 'Chambers:' Y6rk;NtK3 J. H. Clark - t '^Filtieft"^o% J. C. Choat " ' . - Ro^Hntar^ Miss Nancy 'Cook . W. P. Costner , ' Rock Hili yo^ W.H. Crook :.u? Port MiirN^ E. M. Dickson - ; :i ^gortc.'Ndfej Mrs. M, C.;punMp:^ Rock Hltt'NdC:' Frank paghall. Hickory. Grove<Nd<" J. C. Dickson..T::' Yorkffioffi T B woWson^^J^'-Bullhck'aVCctd Mrsi;.L. D:-:i)6wdle v-iBuUoc^-'ffCreel<^JftE? S. "G. Dixon L-LZ^^-TbrkVN^ Robert Baylflabn J- " " YoHc He?3 Mrs. W.. E,. Feemster ' ; McConnellsvllle;N^ Mrs. Edgar M. P'arls yorAgKft'-l Edward" Faulkner .^..'U MissCathorlne Faulkner, ; L F..>Ford^...'....".-..??. .C16toVIHp.?3 Miss 'Alice'DafHson "Toi'kmn S. M. Grist " \YbfkjHB ; * Ji-js: Gtesscoek-1:.. a a rlv.. Mrs. Belle-Gwln .;- Sharpn^o,^ Mrs. S. S. Hartness?.?York Nd^ Mrs. J. Howard Jacksoni^_^;_Cl6vel ' Mrs. V. D. Ho well, ?? ?Hickory GjcoveVNbS Mrs. W. H. Howell J. P. Hutchinson, Jr, RocfcHItf No^ Mrs. M.- E: Harper Miss Bessie Howell, ?j.Tflckory .Grove- NoiS Miss Mary Hhey : P. D. Hopper ? ? J^GWp T. J. Jlopper'. : Mrs, w. vy. jautson: Miss Marie Jenkins .i-Sharbt Mason Li Jacksorf _. _^.^_!.TIrzaCl W. F. Jackson ? [ .v. York-No^ Miss Mary Jackson : Rock Hil Miss Emily Jackson L. GlovietMiss Hester Jackson CloverNdl|! Mrs. C. L. Kennedy !?;?_ Sharoi C. H. Keller u 1__ Yorkvilli Geo. W. Knox ' ' 1 Clgvei J. Stanhope Lovfe YorkviUi Boyd-Latham . ..'.i....? York Nq^ W. Si Lessiie ? Ldsslie-NG'Sr* A. W- Love KlngTs Cr^ Miss Mary McFarland 'Ji York No^l Mrs. T. C. McKJnight__SharoriXc^! Mrs; J. A, -Maloriey '. r...Y^hargnJNfc1:! Mrs. W. D. Morrison. ...i:.?:..,l 'Yorkyilli Harry Miller '2iLi::t$~iZF;Yprlc NjoNI Mrs. E. B. McCarter,-SWJ7i7i?'ffti.tiS J. B. MaUhews,,,^ Eock^HlII No5!i Miss Marie l&pbre' Ybrk.NpS Miss Grizzle 'Mullihax/s.. -Kliie'alCreek No# . J. J. McSwaini .BockrHilPl^ Mrs. J. b: MIckle _ popk 'Hill No.^ J. M. Mitchell Miss Pearl'Meek i, .Yi..AC!over Npft! Flnley McCarter:)...-r;..York ^Tow-'i Miss Saiije McConn,ell..: : . " ..r. .Mc"ConnelIsvilto L. G. Nunn... u....-i:^-il":Bockr Hil w. A. Nichols Smyrna Ng^ I Brice Neil ?i.,:y..u^.;Ydrlc^iin Mrs. R B. Oates- ?..- .a'iraac Mrs. K. P. OateS .i'-Y-ork. N Miss Mary Lpv&'Plexi^ ^iShslroi: S. Lee Eurslejr -?Clover Miss Luclle. Plexlco -TTferk- IftjO Mrs. J. S. Plexico ~_i. Sharon No^-j Bay Parrott _~_~U ;Yprkv?U Powell Patrick ?. or kvilli Miss Lola Parrott _^.-L^.?.;pUJ?e^J Brlce Qulnn ?^Smyrna 1 Lloyd Revels.: p. Y. Russell- ^hirfoa'VNo^a C. B. RatcHford ~ .Hickory GroVje Mrs. T. H. Riddle Clover'No;^ Miss Lillian RoblrisonrrClover NrisSj J. F. A. Smith York ^9*1 Mrs. J. RV Scott York No^ Mrs. Fred $>; Smarr, Bullock'sCreeJi J. K. Scogglns: ~z.? . Rock ;H11] Jeptha M; Smith : York Miss Clara Stacy' .3"Clove!! Miss Ruth SmithRoclc^lll Luther Shllllnglaw". ,v... Tlrzah J. W. Summerford . Cloyer No-.vJ Jas. A.. Shlllinglaw __ .Sharon Np;W2 H. J. She'rer 'Sha'rcm -NtKv2 Lee She'rer Sharon J. P. Siftord:: ? ; Clover ,. Mrs.. John M. .Smith Clover *n__ 4 . miss o una. oucici "Mrs.- J. R. Stephenson ?i. Catawba Miss Pearl Shlllfnglaw'^. 'TT6fk:Np^ Miss Frankta ?tanton,-.Clover' Noi^l Mrs. H. C. Thomasson,' Filbert No.# Miss Edna ThomasJ-V.Rock Hill N&M Mrs. W. B. Thomasson, York- Now 6 Mrs. Ernest Thomas ? Clover Nb.ol R. J. Williams ? Clovfer Nb'.vji A. C. White King's Creek Noi; 2 G. W. Whitesldes Sharon Jeff D. Whitesldes ; : J. ....?- Hickory Grove W. W. Wyatt Smyrna J. C. Wells Clover No^i William Wray YorJtyiKf Miss Catherine Wylle Yorkvi^ Pinkney Whitesldes Smyrna Miss Mary Wingate, Rock Hiil'No;# W. M. Wallace .... Smyrna Ntf.il Miss Susie Wood ... ;......?..Cloyer Mrs. R. C. -Wallace Filbert Noul Geo.. W. Williams, Jr. ?..'.::.uiYprk$r.ille J. A. Wllliford Rock Hill W.'-2 Miss Lizzie Wood ;... York No;?* Mrs. J. E. Youngblood. York No.rj -i ' ~ All kinds . of Typewriter. Ribbons -at The Yorkville Enquirer Office. ' - **% .. .