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I FACT, FASHIOl | v\ : ' ? | Paragraphs That At f .'. ' Interest to I , ,;nXKKKKKKKKKK"I"X*<,,M,,X,,X,,W4X'' The Breakfast Cap, There are those times in the affairs of the fair damsel when it is necessary to crown even the crowning glory, but" nobody minds when a bit of lace and & few beads are the gay confiners. .Way down in her heart every worn an wishes to be charming-, not just once in a while, but all the time?even at that most trying hour of the day? the breakfast hour. When there is not much time between the time one goes to bed and the rising bell there is not a great dqal of opportunity to primp and to prim, and then a friend indeed is the dainty little cap that hides all the sins of which one's locks may be guilty when the day is young. Yet so fetching are these breakfast ; caps that they deserve to be loved for j their beauty .alone, not just because' they are so ready and willing to serve l as first aid to the hurried. What sort of cap is. the most becoming? Milady's query is being answered in any number of delightful ways?variety is here rampant quite as much as in any other of fashion's realms. . Sometimes the bit of headgear depend" its appeal upon the arrangement of a length of ribbon, upon a touch of embroidery, upon n drop of lace. Wearableness is invariably blended "with charm, and each style of cap is an exponent of. a different' mode. We have had much in common with % tur cousins across the seas during the last year or so. and this "(retting in . touch" with things foreign has influenced Daine Fashion to a considerable degree especially in capdom and Miss America wears a bonnet from Bulgaria, from Serbia, Holland, Turkestan or Petrograd with cciual ease and chalm. Have You a Shawl? ? Strange how the old things return to favor!. Little great grand... mother; wore a shawl when the air was chill, and little great-granddaughter has decided that it was a very sensible thing . to do?and quite chic as well. What is the result? Miss Manhattan dons ?he shaiwl not only for practical purposes, but when she feels need for a light wrap at the ball. 1 s- thnr And the snawi is puimvu. uui. , is not the least nor the last of its charms. There are rumors that the shawl is to he edged with fringe, fringe that is knotted and knotted with silk. Speaking: of ribbon fringe, it is somewhat new in America, but over in the once again gay Paree it is reported being used lavishly. Which means, of course, that the least! strong minded among us are certain to affect it and before long, and if we follow the examples of our fair Trench cousins, we will see to it that the transparent net skirts of our evening gowns are edged with it in gold and silver. The afternoon frock of crepe de Chine may have its skirts tufted with hunches of grosgrain ribbon. Hints That Help. To 'add to the comfort of goldfish, paint the bottom of the bowl (on the outside) and two inches above the bottom in dark green paint. A kneeling pad is an excellent thing to have for scrubbing floors, &e. It is made of several thicknesses of cotton flannel covered with ticking. Odds and ends of wool can be knitted into a filet sweater and dyed black. Any slight difference in the size of the wool is not noticed in crochet. Instead of grating cheese for sand- | wiehes, an easier way is to pare cheese with a vegetable or apple peeler, and the kind with slot in the curved surface. The coffee pot will he entirely freed from musty taste or odor if washed in boiling borax water two or three times "a week. if you use a small safety pin to tie elastic in a boudoir cap instead of sewing, the elastic may be'removed easily when cap Is'to be laundered. To clean the mouthpiece of a telephone and to avoid germs use a few drops of carbolic acid on the damp cloth with which you wipe it off. A handful of hay put into a pailful of water will obviate the smell of oil paint in a room. When making boiled starch stir it round several times with e candle. This will prevent the starch sticking to the iron and save much trouble. After using cold water starch let it settle. Then pour off the water and allow the* starch to dry. When dry ' - J,? L.tnwll I if?V Jl can oe ii-ihih; ... ?,..v for future use. i'lace a small hag of unslacked lime inside the piano. It will keep the strings from rusting. Always put the sugar used in a pie in the centre of the fruit, not at the top, as this makes the paste sodden. A lump of camphor placed in the china closet will prevent the silver which may he in it from tarnishing. A leaspoonful of sugar in the stove blacking will add to the lustre of the stove. About Women. The Arab women are claimed to he J more backward than most of the women of the Orient. in the early seventies there was a newspaper published in St. Louis thai was set entirely by women. The custom of wearing black for x?x?xx~x"x~x~x~x~x?x~xV AND FANCY I r y e of More Especial f ' Women | * X~xk~XK^~X"XK~X~X~X"X~X?;mourning was originated by Anne, the queen of Charles VIII, of France. Mary Halloak Greenwalt has invented a device which it is said, will revolutionize stage light effects. Women's institutes located throughout England have started a. campaign to "swat" needless ornaments. Thayer, Kan., with a population of 100 is ruled by women. Every office. from- tho mnvni' down. is hold hv a woman. British suffragists are urging the boy-cottlng of the Church of England until women are admitted to the ministry. According to investigation made by bureau of women in industry, women stay on .their jobs a shorter time than men. At the ager of thirty-three years Mrs. James Morris, of Oklahoma City, Okla., claims to be the youngest grandmother in the Southwest. Miss Mary Peterson, elected Mayor of lied. Cloud, Neb., by seven votes is the first woman in that state to hold such office. Kansas City housewives arc being instructed how to care for milk bottles so a9 to minimize the spread of contagious diseases. Women in colleges study harder apd get more marks than men, according to Professor John H. Latane.-'of Johns Hopkins University. < Mrs. Thomas WhilYen. who has been on the stage since 1RC5, is credited with being the oldest actress in the United States. Miss Alice J. O'Neill, first woman justice of the peace of Greenwich, Conn., is tho first woman to hold such a- position in the Nutmeg State. Women detectives connected with tiho police force in London, got the same pay as the men of equal rank and cooperate with them. Paris has a charm school the object of which is to teach wives, past middle age the art of holding the love of their husbands. During the last four years the number of women bank depositors and the amount of their savings have been doubled. Maryland may soon have its first woman Mayor, since Mrs. Mignonette P.. Harmon has announced her candidacy for the Mayoralty of Mount Rainer. gull fight fans in Mexico are making strenuous objections to girl toreadors. claiming that the girls are making a burlesque of the "noble sport." A monument dedicated to American womanhood is to be erected in Washington in memory of Jane A. Delano, leader of the American Red Cross in France. Senora Bergelio Pansdo, of Lyons. Kan., at the age of 107 years, claims, that her longevity is due to the use of cigarettes, which she has smoked constantly since childhood. In order to keep themselves in as good physical condition as was the case during the war, when they dicl war work, many British society women are taking up gymnastic exercise. * # Apples with Rice. Pare and. core a dozen medium sized cooking apples and rub each apple with a cut lemon to keep it white. Boil in a thin sugar syrup until tc: tier, >but not broken. Drain on a sieve. Have ready some rice cooked as for croquettes and spread a smooth layer about half an inch thick on a rair snrinklp u'itli rmwdered s U car and glaze in the oven until a. light in-own. Then with si small sized biscuit cutter cut out rounds of the rice and arrange on a flat .baking dish for sweetmeats, t Place an apple on each round and til! the cavity in each apple with peach or orange marmalaVle. Ornament, if you like, with candied fruits; reduce the syrup to proper consistency?that of honey?and pour over the apple. Serve with whipped or plain cream. Apple Omelet. To make two large omelets take the yolks of eight fresh eggs and heat very light with four ounces of powdered sugar and grated yellow from half a lemon rind. Add a pound of line sifted flour, alternately with the whites of the eggs beaten to a stiff while froth. Mix well hut lightly and then fold in a cup of whipped cream. Bake in two large flat omelets in a moderate hot oven for live minutes, then carefully spread with rich, thick apple sauce; roll each omelet up and place them both on a heated platter, side by side; sprinkle with powdered sugar and slip in the boiling oven of your gas range for a few seconds, turning the flame down quite low. Serve at once. Apiicct Dumplings. Apricot dumplings, arc made in the same manner as apple dumplings (baked) and the sauce is simply the apricot juice thickened slightly. Dried or canned apricots may be used, and if the crust is made rather short they are so much the I letter. Jersey Tart. Line a 10-inch wide pastry circle with puff paste. Place the circle on a baking sheet: line and paste with a buttered strip of paper and fill with flour or comment and bake as you would a pie. Remove the flour or eoinmeal and the paper and pare and cut in halves eight large green ap pies, removing: tne cores. Rub them with half a lemon to prevent the apples turning- dark and cook them in a syrup until just tender. Drain on a fine sieve. Spread a layer of thick, lich apple sauce on the crust and arrange the cooked" apples, the rounded side upmost. Add. a cup of hard cider to the syrup and cook down to a rich syrup. Cool partially; pour oyer the apples and serve cold. Brown Betty. Six quarts of bread crumbs, two quarts of apple sauce, one quart of corn syrup, one and a half cupfuls of oleo, two tablespoonfuls of cinnamon, two teaspoonfuls of nutmeg, one tea spoontul or salt. Mix fat with seasoned bread crumbs and place in baking: dish in alternate , layers with the apples. Add the syrup to entire "mixture and top with ] crumbs. Bake thirty minutes, adding a little more apple sauce if too dry. Serve with brown sugar sauce. STRIPES AND PLAITS \?/ With the stripe plus the plait, designers are endlessly ingenious. One of the new skirts.for spring is shown above, made of material having a plain stripe alternating with a checked one. By means of box plaits the checks are almost lost sight of. ? ? j The Story of J i Our States j * i: I t By JONATHAN DRACE I * XIV.?VERMONT | " T derlva- ? : 1 tion of 11 i f the name Ver- ? | mont comes f 'lJ /HI f r 0 m the I * French "verts ? i green moun- ? I tnins, and it was likewise the ! i French who were probably the t | first white men to see those lofty ? landmarks which so appropri- ? , I ately give this state its name. ? f This was in July, 1C09, when ; I Chumplain made bis memorable ? ? voyage up the lake now called ; I after him. ? f The first permanent settle- I i- meat was made in 1724 at Brat- f ? tleboro, where the Massachusetts f i colony established a fort as a ? I buffer against invasion from the t i north. The territory us^l was ; ? part of what was known as the i i "Equivalent Lauds," which were I t sold at public auction in Hart- ? i ford for about a furthing an ! I acre, the proceeds beiug donated j t to Yale college. Shortly after \ I this, settlers pushed eastward \ ? from New York across Luke s ; Chauiplain and westward from * ? New Humpshire. This led to dis- | 1 putes between these two colo- ? ! nies as to their boundaries. Un- I der the leadership of Ethan Al- ? 1 len New York's claims were re- i f sisted by a local military force, ? I which proudly called themselves ? f "the Green Mountuin Boys." It ; | I was these suine men who played ? ? such a brilliant part during the I . Revolution. ; t In 1777 a forrnul Constitution ! ? for the state was adopted and t | Vermonters are proud of the fact t that theirs was the first of the T | states to prohibit slavery by t f constitutional provision. For a I | number of years Vermont re- | t mained us a separate republic, I i but in 1791 It was admitted to { I the Union as the first addition to ? ? the original thirteen states. ; I In size Vermont has 9,904 f square miles, and its congres- I I sional delegation numbers lour, f f It tlius casts lour vote's for the I j i president. ? | ; * <? by McCIure Newspaper Syndicate.) i i ? - -4 , 0 i FLOOD IN ARKANSAS. More Than 100,000 Acres Under Water Alnnn ProoU Measures were being taken' Friday to afford relief to residents of the Bayou Creek region, northwest of Helena. Arkansas, where a break in tlie White river levee Thursday, resulted in the flooding of more than 100,000 acres of land, much of which was under cultivation. No casualties were reported, but many families were said to have been driven from their homes. A largo shipment of tents went forward from Camp Pike, to afford, temporary relief for the refugees. National Guardsmen also were sent 1 to the Hood area for guard duty. " _____ CCfYllCMT It VlSTOtrl Ntvif*rl* UNION . FALSE VANITY'S HOME. The hoy and girl adventurers were very- anxious to see Madame False Vanity. Among other things. Master Thoughtfulness told' them that she would call thom fine and beautifuL And that she would want them to believe It. They laughed at that. When the boy and girl had started out on their adventures at first they had had 110 idea that they would meet .so many creatures.- They had thought they might meet a few, but they had'no idea they would meet different ones all the time and the old friends from time to time. And they, didn't think that they would get to know all of them so well that they could call everyone they met by name. They tulked about, this us they got up the next morning in time to meet Master Thoughtfulness for!breakfast "We know them by name, and they're all like their, names, too," said the girl, and just then, for they were now on their way .to breakfast,*. Master Thoughtfulness said: "Qood morning, and I must tell .you before I forget it. which, of course, It would never do for me to do, that everyone can't recognize us along the road, even If we wiitiUiHa .<nu;^H? ' are like our names. You see us as brownies and elves, and gnomes and witches, and yet you see that we've real names which we try to live up to. That's because you understand those you meet and their ways, for you're real adventurers." They had' breakfast and hurried through it, though from time to time Master Thoughtfulness said: "Madame. False.Vanity lives only a short dis-. tance from here, so we have a? whole hour, or almost a whole hour, for . our breakfast. It wouldn't do to wake her up .and get her up ahead of time." She would be quite insulted if. we did. So we mustn't hurry too much." The boy and the girl tried to eat their breakfast more slowly, though it was hard. They weVe looking forward to having their fortunes told and hearing what Muiiame False Vanity had to say to them. "It's about time now," said Master Thoughtfulness, as he saw that (tlie boy had finished the last bit of the eggs on Ids plate and that the girl had finished her toast, which had been made by some little wood elves. They were off in a few minutes, walking out from the fields to the road. "The road doesn't seem so bumpy and so rough this morning," said the girl. "I suppose It is because we had such a wonderful rest" juiey waiKeu aiong a nine uisiuoce until they came to a thicket. "This Is where she lives," said Master Thoughtfulness. They had a very hard time getting through the thicket, but Master Thoughtfulness, who had brought his jack-knife along, cut down much of the underbrush, which would have sera tolled their faces as they went along. "Hello," he called, as he got quite a distance into the thicket, "we've come to have our fortunes told." The boy and the girl followed Master Thoughtfulness along. They heard a voice. "I'm ready to teil fortunes now," the voice said. "1 will tell such beautiful fortunes. Come and have your fortunes told." "That's Madame False Vanity," said Master Thoughtfulness. "She Is sitting on a moss covered stone a little further through the thicket, and we will see how she Is gazing at herself in the pool, which is very tiny, and by which she sits all day. It's a rather dirty pool, nud she can see herself but dimly." They went just a little further, and there they saw Madame False Vanity sitting just as Master Thoughtfulness nati said. At lirst tliey thought she was very pretty, and then they changed their minds' For nothing about her seemed very real. And then they saw the reason for her name. Pretty Soft Job. At the lunch hour the following conversation was heard between the office boy and his evidently unattached friend : "How long you been workin' here?" "Ten days already." "Good job?' "Swell." "When do you hafter get to work?" "Any lime I want to." "Aw, go-wan! Whutcha t.yin' to do, kid me?" "Nope. I c'n go to work any time I feel like it, just so I ain't no later than seven o'clock."?hoys' Magazine. ? Aiit.nl llic only time some women of use to talk back is when they accept tome man's seat%in a crowded street air. CHISEL FORMERLY USED Pre-historic Indian Surgeons Knew Its Value. Prehistoric Indiana of South America, had crude medicine men who removed splinters of ai^row-heads and stone bludgeons from 'wounded warriors by cutting- through the skull with knives of stone of obsidian and other simple instruments wrought from copper and bronze. Sometimes the patient lived; frequently he went to the happy hunting ground. . These uncomfortable treatments of serious casualties from tribal' skj^rnishes still continue in remote areas of Bolivia. Evidence of this has been garnered by field workers from the American Museum of Natural History. \ * _ Of nearly". 1,200 skulls collected in South America by the late Dr. Adolph Bandelier for exhibition in the Museum, about five per cent, has been operated ftpon. Among surgeons the practice is known as trephining. It consists of removing a disk or button of bone from the skull'with-a saw called a trephine. " * > ' ? Complex fracture", of the skull with depression of the bony plates friust have been common' occurrences during the ancient tribal wars when # \ clubs headed with stone and copper along with slings, the "Bob" and the "lliui" were offensive weapons, said the reports of the Museum's investigators. ; A natural procedure, they opined, with victfms who survived skull fractures must have been attempts to remove the splinters of bone that pricked the brain, or to cut out fragments pressing upon It. \ . ' Warlike .clans fight Intermittently even today in J.he wilds of Bolivia and skull fractures are common. Other heads are-perforated now and then.'in the bacchales and festivals whoopdd up occasionally with great quantl-1 ties of intoxicants, the- investigators reported. Wh^en the laughter and the free-for-alls quiet. down, the medicine men got their sharp pocket knives and make incisions into the injured skulls of the sufferers frequently coving the aperture gourd. During the operation they scrape around the wound with a chisel. Modern anaesthetics are unknown to the medicine men. They put their patient into insensibility by constant use of the "coca1* plant. This also is employed for healing purposes, and is commonly applied ~ to wounds, bruises and contusious. ' MASKS FOR BATTLESHIPS Inventor Outlines Plans for Protection S* >Against Poison Gas. \ A .-plan for the protection of battleships at sea against an enemy's poisonous fumes by the installation of a "gas mask" for a whole ship was outlined in an ijddress to officers and students of the military academy at West Point, New York, by Prof. W.- Lee Davis, head of ' the. chemistry department of Northwestern university and inventor of the deadly pas "lewisite," perfected just as the World war closed. "We face the possibility in the naval warfare of the future of armor-piercing toxic and tear shells, smoke screens toxic smoke clouds and invisible toxic fumes," said Prof. Lewis. "We also may consider in this connection parallel defensive measures such as a gas mask for a whole battleship. "Gas weapons are capable of a much greater development than are the explosive weapons and the future will see worked out a great deal of scientific refinement in the development of gas weapons for all types of military operations. . . . 1? til fA fKo r ULurt* Uctii.ic9 nin uvw uc vv v*?v strong, but to the superior Intelligence.. Warfare will become less a matter of brute strength and relative man power, and more and more scientific acumen. . Battles will be shorter and more decisive, and hence innocent populations will suffer less." Professor Lewis declared that the prevailing impression of the uncivilized and inhuman character of toxic gases as a military weapon is not well uinmunmiiitmmumiiiimmimmmiii | Spring M Neces 1 ICE CREAM GLASS! = BETS, GLASS PIT< I BOT'i | And various Dishes that' | warm weather season. I PYF = Yes, we have a complete s | ?Call and see it NOW. I TO BE SURE Y 1 NEED ATTEND j| See us for Lawn Mower | supplies and tools that yo | Buy Your Hardware N | Store. We are waiting to I The Red 1 I Watch | YORK HAR] T7ii32i!nii]|]iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiniiaiii substantiated, i The purpose of warfare is to break 4 down the enemy man power as quickly as possible," he said- "The three criteria by. which the humaneness of any .n particular method might be judged * are: First?The efficiency of the method ? to produce widespread casualties; $ Second?The per cent of deaths among the wounded and finally the ^ competentness of recovery of the f wounded. . ; , ? "The efficiency of toxic gas to produce widespread casualties was amply \ demonstrated In the last war. . As to ^ the test of humaneness the death rate j from bullets and shrapnel wounds in the last war among American soldiers r was in round numbers 24 pex'.cent; and r from gas wounds two per cent, the Brit- jj ish rate running about two ana one- r half per cent. Thus a soldier wounded I from gas has twelve times the chances of .recovery .over : a soldier wounded c from shrapnel, without the chance of J permanent disfigurement." 1 I A ? Forest service laboratory workers {.<at Madison, Wisconsin, have discover- < ed that kiln-dried timber is fatal to i some if not all the wood-boring/grub^ t This fact is of: special'importance to 1 users of hickory, ash- and certain other < woods which are subject. to attacks from these insects., ^ ; DO RSI IT'S 5 HARNESS AND SHOE HOSPITAL ] Corner Congress and Jeffersons Sts. r We have an ... < , . ' V EXPERT SHOE REPAIR MAN? ! \ Capable . of doing any Shoe Repair wnrlf. Your renair work solicited., and '? if you will let us know we will call for j it in town. Telephone. 144. ;i We repair AUTO TOPS.t1 A. D. DORSETT, Prop. 1 ' " ' " ' '*'* t - c THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA \ V*- York County. . ' , j V "':' v ; By -J. L. Houstpn,. Esquire, Probate i \ Judge of York-County. ' ' In the Probate Court. : VUHEREAS JOHN D. STEWART, has * ** applied-to .me for Letters of Ad- c ministration,, on all and ..singnlaiv the goods an'd chattels, rights 'and credits of REBECCA J. STEWART,' l(lte of the .County aforesaid,'-deceased!' . ' < These are, therefore, to cite and admonish all and singular the ^ kindred ahd creditor^ of the said deceased, to he':and appear before me at' oiir next Probate Court .for the said County, td be holden at York Court House, on the lfiTH DAY OP MAY. 1921. td shew cause,' if any\'why -the 'said ' Administration should not be. granted. i Given under my hand.and seal .thls'29th day'of April, in;.,'the year of our Lord one .thousand,: nine hundred and. twenty-one and'in .the I45th year ''oi American. Independence;'- ' ' . (Seal) . . .'J. L\ HQUSTON, Probate Judge' of York County. 35 t f2t ... . * TAX EXTE N8)otyvt: V; ' Office of the County Treasurer of York County. % V * )? York S. ., 'Mjarfch-? 1921. PURSUANT to Act of the\Geheral * A.anmKlv fa h?riW. plvpil that the time for the payment^ taxes,. di\e between October 15 and "December' 31,' 1920, has been, extended' to 'May 1,1921, with a' three "per', cent ' penalty , added to all payments made Matter 1 March 1. From .May, 1 to May 15, 1921; r there will be a penalty of .7 per cent.' and after May 15'dll unpaid-taxed wtJJ go: into execution. Unpaid poll taoteS will be placed in the hands of.thetlj magistrates of the several- townships; for prosecution. All of the Banks of the county Are' offering their accommodations and facilities to Taxpayers who may desire to make use of the same, and' I am J taking pleasure in giving prompt at- ; tention to. all corresportdence on the < subject ' ' i All Taxpayers appearing at my of- 8 j flee will receive prompt attention. . . 8 Note?The' Tax BoOks are made up ? 1 i . wAwflao wVlHnrr I uy luwnsuipa, a>iu jjaiuga about Taxes will always expedite mat-. ^ ters if they.will mention the Township 1 or Townships in which their property ? or properties aire located.' ' 4 HARRY E.' NEIL. Treasurer of York County. a . s . _ - f All kinds of Typewriter Ribbons at t The Yorkville . Enquirer Office. \ T J, iiiiiiiinrfiiiiiiiinniiiiifiiieitriccErrfcrErtrr _ e Summer |j isities |i ES , FOOTED SHER- Mi 3HERS, THERMOS |j "LES, ( |, will be very useful in the ? t s I k i-? *r si? IL A is tock of this popular ware |.: i OUR LAWN WILL I S eiON = f, E n s, Lawn Hose and other i ,, u will find at this store. E: c eeds at the 4 4RED W" S * i Serve you. = r iS T Store IS for it | fi DWARE CO. |; iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiinT I. C. WILBORN life! .48 1-2 Acres?.3 room residence,v,,ttf^B rilies of York; 1-2 mile good; scnoc^B ?roperty of J. J. Nivens. Price ier acre. . I 146. Acres?J, miles of York, one tei^B lanft i4o.ugie. XSJots of saw timber." lOiOOper-'acre. Property of acres , under cultiv^^J ion*S?000 "feet of saw.timber, 3 rooi^B e^^^^eT j^^vOO per acre. The pr?j^M -jfliftflferclffi. 1-2 miles , of SantiagB iChool; - 3(r^acres under cultivation^ '5^0Q0;Yeei^?Lw timber, some.origiruaH V*?V $45.00. per acre. VOP&ty qx .R ^. Blgers./.'; PO frcrosf&jsix mlie^ of Smyrna, .pnM tnle^ -of ."Santiago . school; one . .threH oorn dweliiDc> twenty-five (25) acrcH mde'?r=puitiV?ton; balance in pasttfH md. .timber;;.'two. tenant, houses, banS 1ce,' $)^Q0>OQ?r. The property, of Jiggers. * *' 1 4QC 1 A A -VTI i ww \Mmmr xx ocvcu iuuut' i.co( lence, two good tenant houses,'gbo >arh;. all ne'cessary outbuildings. Ptlci 5?2L?0 pefli^rp.^The.property Parsley.. Formerly kno^TOaft,thffi?v Hatthews home place. 'ry:'x " " -.1 .Vi'af . 37.-.A(sf#<-rtOne-,half miles of Rapw -hurch and Santiago Schoolr ' one /si oom dwelling;- twenty-five' (25):iafcre inder cultivation; good orchard;-, gov Darn.- Pric6' $2,100.00.: The propert >e J. Er&gg&sr;" V?-- I. C. WILBORN fgja :;"J :'j-; r VpRk. v :- ' PYRAMID PAINT SHOI ^PMl^Gr~the-aeasoii-pf-'.thfe year tha halr& y.du T^ant to :.tjer out 3n the opei Ls'miich as pbss'lble1?Is here,? anff;'nov S, tbeHtlme to-fliave'"'that Automobile 6j roiir'a. painted. Painttngr-rrightly -doii ?wlll addj-much .to Its-appearance aitf ntfcfcritqM<s life?we do Tit' right. vacores or our customers giaao ;estify .to the quality 'arid w.Orkmanshjj it <QW.jAutaiPainting, Us*## ThlnK't. oyer.;v Come tihff/see'.us. ;TKii sbat? isn't soiriuch and yoU'll,be *:?br< haiffpleasaa $ith the 'job;to;'do. & ?&. \JUTOTdPs?. " ' *' ' :rc ,#i2-a-.i v, --r,-. .To be sure we make. Auto Topa^-rea ropsrTT^op^.lhat are as good as iire*a',tj&tteb tbp. See u&rabout'Itr r*. HPiglnal b^ld^r madfrr-bettenif y9U, doJAS. A. JOHNSON, Prop. 3-1 J-'?'* * *r fy>' t' 'v ';>? "iff OYSTERS vc>'?5> 1?|t Spanish Muckere r * ' >'."V "? eV/fv? ^?RIDAVr(/VND SATURDAY OF? THIS WEEK WE WILL^HAVE^ CHOICE FRESH OYSTERS, FRESH FISH? v1 SPANISH MACktREt: ' M PHONE YOUR.ORDERS.- ##/?$ - CASH ON DELIVERYt--V' ' - ' - ' ' ?' ' TV**' SANITARY Mfilf# uniuimi i ziiniuiui r rp.. :I LEWIS G. FERGUSON. Marvel ' . .. 7\. ::'' .V ;'.*^$?5 .? ?. " ? See The Enquirer Office-;for/Title* ?nd Mortgagesi. of Real- Estate./ ?-/Mi; REAL ESTATE Thein, See "Wt; . 40' Acrea^-Seven miles .from York;jtfunded by lands of J. B. McCarter.C,' Brown and other*';' l-room. residence.. .,bata.^.and: cotton louse.j -of, good/water; five or. nixLores bottom land. Buck Ho^ri" cridk; itid branch* runs through place. About' l-aare =paatwcB> 5 or.6..acrea, wood*-", nostly , pine' and balance work, land." Ibout 8-4'mfle to Beersheba school:t,!ls,'ieoinjrHxr sell: so'If voii want; It/ lee \ me right/away. Property. of .It- C. 602-5 Acres?-41-2 mllbs f^ni York, ind less than,half mile to Philadelphia > chool-house.'cHyrcb and station* Fqu*, opBi^residence; \ besides jmll; 4-room enant hbtf&T;^barris;'3 Cells' of good, rater, an^jiicejorhhafd.1 About 8 acre* n/irast'urb4ind woods and; balance open and. - Act qUiclc if you want it.. Prop-'; a?*# <??:? |I;v^bmaiipon;-""*. . % 90 Aore? at Brattoftsville?Property if Estate of Mrs* Agiies Harris. .Will ;IvC a~r&il bargain here. ' W^cPes?Five miles. from Filberti in Ridge ?Rpftd, bounded by lands of Burns, John Hartness and burrs; T-room residence, 5-stall barn.and ither outbuildings; two 4-itoom tenant touses, barns,'etc.; 2 wells and 1 good pring;* 3- horse farm open .'and balance n timber, (oak. pine, &c.), and, pasture. Lbout-J" mile's to Dixie School and * Seersheba church; Property of Mr^'.S. S ; .Barry. ;:;^t 98 - 33 Acres?Adjoining the. above .tract, (bout 3 or 4 acres of woods and' bal.-. ;rice!:open3 land. Will sell this tract eparately or in connection -with abovAract, Property;of J. A. Barry. . : -V 195 Acre's?Four miles from York, ?m,' ?urliey creek road, adjoining lands ,<St lettys,. JQueen and Watson; 2-horse arm...open -and- -balance In, woods/and lastiire* One and one-half milbs' to 'hiladelphia, and Miller schools'- The imIAa In v*inrVi9 ' Qan ma niilrtV I1JWC U) li&iiU WCV UiW \^U?VAl . f Mrs. Molly Jones. ;.. "I- jve ^6brr. 8e?}denc*-0tvCharlotti. treet, in the tbwn of York, on large )t I will, sell you -this, property for < isa' than you Vcan. build the house, letter' act.at' once.' McLain Property?On'Charlotte S& , l the-town of York. Tbia property .lie* etween Neely. Cannon and Lockmore illls, and is a' valuable plece of proprtyJ'/'WiilseH'lt either* as a whole/or a -lota. Here ia an opportunity /, to . lake -spine money. ' ( . . / . . 89 acres?9 miles from Yotk; S miles rom Smyrna and"5 miles fronv"King^s :reek. . Smyrna R. F. D. past Pa, place. )no horse farm. open and balance in mods?something like iOO.OPA feet few [mber/"12 acres fine bottoms. 3 room esidence. Property of P. ,8. Bigger. 210 acresr-rS 1-2 miles from York on 'fnc.kney road. 8 room'residence', well f good water, 2 large barns, three 4 oom tenant houses, and one 3 room snant house. 40-acre' pasture. Good * rchard. About 5.50 acres open land, * stance in oak and pjfne timber. Prop-* rty of M. A. "McFarland. / T/onn*. nrrangeo on farming-lands. iE 0. W. WILLIAMS REAL. ESTATE . ^ .