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llumorous Department. The "Distant Husband" and the Bear.?The following missive was received by the forest ranger of the Pasadena district .and read recently at the r.nnual dinner of the Sierra Club In Los Angeles: "Kind and Respecterd Cir: "I see dn the paper that a man named J? S? was atacted and et up by a b..re whose cubs he was trying to fit when the she bare came up and fitopt him by eatin him up in the, mountains near your town. What i want to know is did it kill him or was he only partly ct up and he from this place and all about the bare. I don't know but what he is a distant hus/ band of mine. My ftrst husband wa9 of that name and I supposed he wns killed in the war but the name/Of the man the bare et being the same i thought it might be him after all and f thought to know if he wasn't kiUcd cither in the war or by the bare for I have been married twice siooe< and their ought to be divorcfe papers got ouit by him or me if the bare did not eat aim an up. n ? is mm you win know it by him having six toes on the left foot. He also sings base and has a spread eagle tattoed on his front chest and a ankor on his right arm I which you will know him if the bare | did not eat up these parts of him. If alive don't tell him I am married to ! J? \V? for he never liked J?. Mebbe j you had better let on as if i am ded j but find out all you can about him I knowing anything what it is for. That is if the bare did not eat him all up. If it did i don't see you can do anything and you need'nt take anv trouble. My respeks to your family and please aneer back. 'T. S.?Was the bare killed. Also was he married again and did he leave any property worth me laying claim to."?Plywood Panels. Valuablo Cop. ? lie was cycling j through a quaint old-fashioned Kng- ! lish village, when he was thrilled by j the wuind.of a woman's cry for help. I followed by the muffled tones of a ' man's voice. He quickened his pace, to find a woman holding on to the handle of a cottage door, while from within it was evident that somebody ' was endeavoring to force it open. "Give me a hand, mister," she cried. "I daren't let him come out!" '' The cyclist dismounted and, by adding his strength to that of the woman, the door was kept closed". "Your husband, I suppose?" he said. "Yes." wtts the breathless reply. "He's got one of his crazy tits on to- I day." "Well I should think you would b? ! picas'u to let him out." "Not till the policeman's passea. ^ wanted the woman. "You see, Bill's j very nasty with policemen when he's 1 like this, and this one's too valuable pto lose. I do his washing." Criticism of Mother.?Daddy came \ home from the office early one even- 1 ing and mother had not returned from i some friends whom she had been visit- | ing for tea. Little four-year-old Gwennic ran up ' to hc-r father's side. "Daddy." she cried, "I've been wanting to see you for a long time when I mother's not near." "Why, Aty little girl?" asked father. "Well, dad," answered Gwennio, "please don't tell mother, because she's an awful dear, but I don't think : she knows much about bringing up children." "What makes you think that?" ask- . ed her father. "Well," replied Gwer.nle, "she makes ' me go to bed when I am wide awake and she nukes me get up when I am awfully sleepy." His Method.?He tapped on the back door and asked for something to eit. The housewife replied that she would feed him if he was willing to earn the meal by cleaning out the gutter. The tramp agreed, and when he had eaten his way through several sandwiches she came out with a reliable looking hoc. ' You needn't have gone to that j trouble, madam," said the weary on?\ I sizing up the farm implement. "I i never use a hoe in cleaning out a gut- | ter." "Never use a hoe!" said the woman. "What do you use. then?a shovel?" "No, madam," replied the tramp, j * *.j ? * ? **?? *%? mntlwul i%J M.in.Hig IUI me Kn?'i i to pray lor rain." Like Father.?At a cottage in an iso- j luted part of the coa.st visitors wore so rare that many of the children have j never seen any men folk except those ] of their own household. Ono day the children wqre playing happily together, when a man was esoied on the hillside, evidently making for the cottage. One of the children, who had been gazing at the unwonted apparition, remained staring open-eyed from the door of the cottage for a moment longer, and then rushed indoors, shouting in amaze: "Oh, mother, here's a thing like father, coming!" An Even Break.?Townly?"Do you often have to rush to catch your morning train?" Subbubs?"Oh, it's about an even break. Sometimes I am standing at the station when the train puffs up and other times it is standing at the : tat ion when I puff up."?Boston Transcript. Precedent.?"What'll we <h> with the ark now that the big trip is over?" inquired Japhot. "My son." replied Noah, "we've had trouble enough without starling in immediately on any shippinr problems." ?\Va sh i n g ton' St a r. fell CI ? Bill Dale, closely shadowed by on< lanky Samuel Heck with his Inevitable j ever-ready rifle, went among the work j era with a cheer that he did not feel For Caleb Moreland was in Jail, am Caleb Moreland was Innocent. Bu there was one sincere delight fo: Dale: Hayes was driving the lltth railroad ahead with all his might aw all the might of his men. Hayes wo: in hlch favor with those under blni they worked even harder when he wn: absent than they worked when he wa: standing over them. The days ran on, and there was n< Blgr of a hostile demonstration fron the Ralls and Torreys. Judging from appearances, they were wholly satis- , fled with Caleb Morclcnd's fcelng In JalL Henderson GofT had disappeared. Dale hoped that he was rid of the man for all time, but he wasn't Guff was n<jt so confident as wns Major Bradley that he could establish his Innocence In the matter of the dynamiting of the two buildings and the trestle. He wished very much to steer clear of arrest, for reasons of his own, and he was biding his time In a llttl^ town In western North Carolina. When the dynamiting affair had blown over, he would go back and try again, perhaps by an altogether new scheme, to get himself into possession of the Moreland coal. Then tiiere came to the neighborhood n man whom no Moreland, and none of the Uttlefords, had ever set eyes upon before. He was a very uncputh mountain man, with long black hair and shaggy beard; his clothing was outlandish and ragged. He had not much to say; there was about him, somehow, an air of mystery. Two days after his arrival. In the afternoon, the stranger met Dnle midway between the Halfway switch and the opening of the coal vein, and ^topped him with an unpralsed hand. "Do you know good coal when ye see''It?" lie drawled. . "Why?" asked Dale/on Ids guard. The stranger looked sharply In all directions, as though he wished to make sure that no nerson was within earshot of them. Evidently satisfied, he drew from a trousers pocket a shining black lump of coal, which he held out for Dale's Inspection. "What do ye think o' this here?" he wanted to know. Dale took the lump and examined It closely. It was apparently as good as the Moreland coal, which had sent the expert Hayes Into raptures. Dale "What Do Ye Think o' This Here?" He Wanted to Know. / thon looked closely at the stranger. He appeared to be honest; his gaze was steady, and seemed very inno cent, "Where did you get this?" Dale asked. The alert eyes narpowed. "Do ye think this here vein you're a-fuln' to mine is the only vein in the whole country?" "Where did you get this?" Dale re pea ted. "Do ye think." drawled the other " jit I'm nlumb fool enough to give my find away fo' notliin'? I been pore all o' my life, inlstor!" "How am I to know," frowned Dale "Hint you've really got n find?" "l'e'd believe jrore own two eyes , wouldn't ye?" "Yes," Dale agreed, "I'd believe my own two eyes, of course. What's youi name, and where are you from?" "What do I git outcn It? I don'i own the mountain It's In, but It short can be bought fo' fifteen cents n acre And nobody knows about It but Je*; me. It lays closer to the railroad 'at this here Moreland vein, too. What I do. J git. on ten ItA mlsterj." gygj 31991 jCALlI fapjhurg Liebe ? iMUffTrauons uy ^Ii-win by Doubladoy . Pog?*~ G>fe, The mountameer~seemed more honest than erer, but Dale was still ot> his guard. He aslced again: "What's your name, and where are you from?" This time the answer came readily: ! "My name It's Walt Turner, and I'm from Turner's Laurel, Madison couiity. s*ite o' Nawth Ca'Iincr. But my find It ain't nowhars dost to home. 'Tain't no more'n about two hours o' walkln' from right here,' mister. Ef you'd Jest I up and go along wi' me, I'd show tt to ye." IJ?.1 rr-i. ? ? Ink, Ka . Uilie cunsiutrreu. iutrre migui uc a considerable velo of this new coal. Even if he was sent to the state penl f tentinry for a terra of years, Hayes was entirely capable of carrying on the mining operations. "I'd like to take my mining man I Hayes? "NoI" quickly objected Walt Tur ner. "I don't want nobody else to 1 know whar tt'a at but Jest yon and f me. That awaj, ye see, ef I'm treated crooked I'll know edzactly who done It ?and I'll shore git you! Rut I heen! toll? tt you was pow'ful square, mis j tef." "Could 3 get back here before night fall?" Turnpr's eyes lighted. "Shore I" "Theu lead the way," ordered Dale Walt Turner from Turner's Laurel. : Madison county, state of North Carolina, crossed the little creek on stones and went straight to the northeast, missing the I>n4l settlement by a good mile, and hard on his heels followed j the Morelnnd Coal company's stalwart i general manager. The wa.v was exceedingly rough. The two men climbed rugged cliffs, ; threaded dense liiickets of grea* laurel, mountain laurel, sheep laurel, and huckleberry buShes. They were one hour in a stretch of woods where the hemlocks, poplars and hickories stood so thickly that the Interlacing branches overhead shut out completely the light of the sun and half the light of day. Fearing n panther, or a wildcat, Dale kept his revolver loosened and ready Id Its holster. Walt Turner armed himI self with a long staff?for snakes, he ! said; and then lie proved It by killing i a rattler that hs:d eight rattles to Its 1 tail. Itut they traveled rapidly, notwithstanding the fact that the going was difficult; and two hours after the beginning of the llrtle journey Dale saw before him a small and almost circular, level-bottomed basin walled In by low j clifTs. A small creek ran through this basin and made iwo easy ways of en I ranee. In the hc?l!ow they saw clumps of luurcl and hu.'kleberry bushes, and wild grasses knee-high; toward the center stood a so itary big and gnarled black walnut tree. They entered e.t the point at which the creek ran In, and went to the walnut tree. There Turner halted and faced Kill Dale .vith a peculiar glint I in his eyes. Da'e was looking ut the I rugged walls of stone, and at the thick green forest that rose above them; he was narveling. as only a true lover of beauty can tnnrvel, at the wonderful grandeur of It all. Walt Turner, of Turner's Laurel, opened his slit of a mout# and spake. "Here's the kitty I" Dale was brought out of his enI Joyraent most redely. From behind i clumps of laurel and huckleberry i bushes, from the tall grasses, from , everywhere?it seemed from nowhere , ?there sprang dozens of IJalls and ... Bill Dale Had Walked, as Cently as a Kitten, Straight Into a Trap. I Tnrreys wlfli rifles In their hands 1 Hill Dale had walked, as gently as a kltlen, straight Into a trap. 11 is right hand moved toward the | Ullll l?i ill* irumn, mv?? | at his side. It_ was. foolish, worse TRUE MARKET VALUES Only Way to Get Them is by Cooperative System. "I think you are exactly right in saying that cooperative marketing would be worth all it costs just to insure the farmer accurate grading and the lull price that each grade should bring, even if we can not control prices. But some say v/e can get accurate official grading without going into a cooperative association." Yes, we can get government graders to grade, our cotton for us. So we can. but even those of us who do so cannot compel buyers to recognize these! grades?there is the difficulty.4 I know this from my own experience in selling my own crop. You can lead a horse to water; but you can't make him drink. And the pitiful fact is that the more ignorant a man is and the more desperate his need for having government grading, the les3 likely he is to know how to get and use this sort of help. In one market I visited recently this thing happened. A farmer said to a cotton buyer: "I believe I will sell my cotton. Please grade it for mc." The' buyer reported that in all the lot only two bales were "midd'ing or better." The farmer decided to wait, and a few days ago another buyer graded the | same lot of cotton and reported that there were twenty-six bales ^''middling or better." ' That phrase "middling or better," by the way, like charity, covers a multitude of sins. The farmer gets penalized for grades below middling but does not get the benefit of grades above middling. Under the co-operative marketing associations ''middling or bettor" will never be heard. The farmer will know exactly how rtiuch "better" than middling every sing'e bale is, and will be. rewarded accordingly. The cooperative marketing association will not buy cotton on one grade and sell it on another, as the present system enables buyers to* do. With our association it will be to the interest of our selling agents to get as much as possible for every farmer's cotton?not as Utile as possible. This is true because the better prices our selling agents get, the more liberal the association will be in the matter of salaries | for these selling agents. They mtist help us to help themselves.?Clarence) foe in Progressive Farmer. TRAFFIC STOOD STILL. I Man Forgot Clothes In a Turkish Bath and New York Was Startled. Traffic ^t the Brooklyn end of the Manhattiui bridge came to an absolute standstill during the rush hours this morning when the "absent-minded professor" of movie and comic page fame came to life, says a New York | dispatch. Frank Bye of the traffic squad was swinging the "stop" and "go" semaphore at the entrance to the bridge j j when he noticed a crowd coining down Nassau street. He halted motor traffic to let the pedestrians cross the i niazn when he found himself the cen ter of a swirling mob. Somewhat to the front of the crowd he spied Albert Hackermnn walking briskly as if to work, but without a stitch of clothing on his back. Bye made a dive at the nude figure and wrapped his coat about it, shoved it ir.to the police booth nearby. "Where are your clothes?" the policeman demanded. "On my back, where do you think?" Hackermnn replied. "No, they are not; you're stark naked." "Well, I had them on a moment ago." The policeman, puzzled, looked closely on the modern Adam before him and noticed the body shone as if freshly scrUbi>ed. When Bye asked Hackermnn whether he had taken a bath he replied he had. and mentioned a Turkish bath about a quarter of a mile away. "I lay down for a while after the bath," be added. "Then got up and started for work." In the ^shelter of an ambulance from the Cumberland street hospital IIne.<erman was taken to the baths, where his clo/hing was found. The Teacher.?As was so neatly expiTssed in one of the welcoming addresses to the city teachers Thursday, the opening of the ichools is the signal for a revival of interest in the business and social life of the town. With the children to get off to school, steps fire uuickened. interests arc revived and inanv activities that have lain i than useless, to show fight; dozens of rifles were staring at hlrn with their frowning, murderous eyes, and their bullets (Would riddle him If he showed light. He glanced toward Walt Turner, kinsman of the Balls. .Turner was laughing openly. 'Tore little kitty 1" "If ever I have the chance," muttered Bill Dale, "I'll thrash you for j this cute little joke of yours." *?*? nAimn linen tlto oh?in?f M It'll WUll I IJOtt IIUIC uie vuauut, laughed Walt Turner. The Bulls and the Torreys began to close in on all sides, and a solid ring of dark and for the most part bearded, wickedly triumphant faces formed itself around Dale. Adam Ball's father, the acknowledged leader of that band of cutthroats that was now the Bnll-Torrey faction, glared at Dale Willi black eyes that were filled with the fire of Intense hatred; then he seized Dale's revolver and thrust It inside tlie waist-bnnd of Ids wcrn : Joans trousers. Dale felt the i;rlp of rough hands on his shoulders and arms. lie fully realized bis great danger; but he strove to keep all si^ns of fear out of his countenance, and be was not unsuccessful. "I presume this Is what you call taking the Inw Into your own hands, i l>u't it?" he said jvith a smile that was forced. .. (To Ve.-Coutinued.) i i dormant throughout the summer months are reorganized. With books and clothes for the children to be provided, the merchant feels the quickening of business life. The coming of the teacher is the signal for many of the women^s clubs to begin to function again. For those and many other reasons, tho city of Gastonia welcomes the teachers. This welcome has been expressed to them from several organizations already, but it is not amiss to tell them again that the city is glad to have them in her midst again. The faculty this year is one of the strongest that has yet been secured for the Gastonia schools. The school board and administrative authorities have promised the patrons of the city schools one of the best years in the history of the s>stem. To that end they have gathered together a fine lot of teachers. I3ut, no matter how fine a teacher a person may be, there is not going to bo a successful term for net* and her pupils unless there is co-operation from the home base. The hardest job that any teacher has to tackle is the i teaching1 and training of a child that | has been accustomed to following the distatos of his own will, unchecked and unrestrained. A spoiled child in j the home is a sorry enough spectacle | but in the school ^oom in the presence ] of others, and in view of the example set. and the effect ,upcn the teacher's influence, a display of temper, disobedience or stubborness is well-nigh tragic. If the child is not amenable to discipline and obedience and instruction in the home from the parent, wh^t do yoh think the. teacher can do with him aJong with L'5 or 30 others? Have a heart for those teachers. TiOt it he understood that the teacher is to be respected and obeyed. Let it be understood that a thrashing in school means another one at home, rather than a row with the principal or superintendent, as was the custom when yod were in school forty years ago.?Gnstonia Gazette. SOUTH CAROLINA NEWS ? Two large unoccupied barracks buildings at Camp Jackson were destroyed by fire of unknown origin last Saturday. ? Rev. Dr. J. S. Moffatt, former president of Erskine college, has been called to the pastorate of the Associate Reformed church of Spartanburg, 'but has not yet indicated his acceptance. ? J. E. Sharp, a white man of Camden, aged 55 years, was shot and killed by his son, Robert Sharp, last Saturday, Robert claiming that his father was abusing his mother. The father, before he died, said he did not know why his son had shot him. ? Rev. F. C. Hickson, of Gaffney, S. C.. who was convicted in the federal court in 191S of violation of the espionage act and sentenced to six months imprisonment was elected moderator of thp Rroad River Baptist [ association last Thursday. Owing to the minister's advanced age President Wilson commutted the prison sentence to a fine of $500, which wa3 paid. AUTO TRUCK SERVICE T AM prepared to do Heavy Hauling of all kinds on short notice, and am giving special attention to moving household goods, etc. L. G. THOMPSON. Phone 175, York, S. C. 20 tf v _ n \T I _ I our Grocery neeas? BIUNG THEM TO THIS STORE. We can supply Uicm?been doing it? will continue to d so?Deliver them too, If you wish?See us for Beech-Nut Chipped Beef, Peanut Butter, Mustard, Cranberry Sauce and Catsup. Del Monte Peaches and Apricots In Cans?Finest ever. Olives?Stuffed and Plain. TEAS?Ileno, Peril Walla, Chase & Sanborn and Tetlcys?good selections. National Biscuit?Fancy Cakes and Craekeis?Bulk ar.d in Packages. Prem'er Salad Dressing?the best. Cherries?White and Maraschino. Premier?Tiny Trp Peas and Aspatagus. Crab Meat and Herring Koe, Salmon. Puffed Wheat, Puffed Rice, Corn Flakes, Post Ton sties. Pineapples?Grated and Sliced. W. E. FERGUSON deTmom CANNED GOODS WE WANT YOU TO KNOW that we have these popular Canned Goods? Peaches, Pineapple, Corn, Tomatoes, Beets and Pimentoes, and we want you to know that DEF. MONTE products are the highest quality put in cans? See Us or Phone for Prices on the Better Kind of Canned Goods. Inqleside Syrup?100,per cent Cane. FARM HARDWARE Our Farmer Friends will do well to see us for Farm Hardware. Heavy i Trace Chains. 90 Cts. Pair; Have Cow Chains, Shovels, Forks, Hoes and Plow j Steele. Have a few Shop Forges. If j you can use one of these?Just make I us a reasonable offer. You'll buy It. Have Early Amber and Orange Cane | Seed. Let us supply you. J. F. CARROLL f?,e NOT SEPT. 3RD TO PoIawP Pi IV/C11U1 IV A A Winter SEE US NOW. Doa'l I Without This Real YORK HARBWi H. C. Brocklngton F*. L. flinnant j W. M. Brown Palmetto Monument Co. YORK, - - 8. C. Why Pay an Agent Profit ? | We know that the Ajjent has to live,; [ but let the other fellow keep him up.; I Vv _1 rVJ 4. ...liU 1 ueai uireui wuu mc , PALMETTO MONUMENT CO., York, S. C.; Phone No. 121. If you wish us to C.-11 we will be glad ! j to have one of our fli.-n call on YouJ We do not travel agents. We can and will do your work at as Low a Price and as Good in Quality as any one in the business. Try Us, is all that we ask. You be the judge. PALMETTO MONUMENT CO. "Honor Them With a Monument." FALL PAINTINGIs considered by all paint authorities as the BEST time of the year to app'y House Paint. We are selling and guaranteeing "GLIDDEN'S" Paints, which we believe to be second to none on the market. One of our local painters, when ask- ' ed by a prospective buyer, what he thought of GLIDDEN'S, said: "I HAVE BEEN PAINTING FOR THIRTY-FIVE YEARS, AND FIND I THAT IT WORKS BETTER AND j COVERS MORE SURFACE THAN j ANY PAINT PER GALLON THAT I HAVE EVER USED." Its analysis shows ninety-one per cent lead and zinc, tjnly nine per cent inert matter to keep it from "crawling." ASK FOR PRICES THEY ARE RIGHT, and the most at.Iractive terms ever offered by a paint conearn. Paint Up and Preserve Your | Property, with GLIDDIJN'S. PEOPLES FUENITUBE COMPANY "prescriptions The real work for which the Drug Store exists is the compounding ef medicines. No matter how many other lines of merchandise are carried nor how many new departments .are added the Prescription Department is the foundation of the Drug Store. We make our foundation the solidcst an3 4 strongest part of our business. I ' Accuracy. Twenty-one years of exj perience and honest dealing. The drugs and chemicals of the best. These give a distinctive exce'leuce to our ; Prescription work. CLOVER DRUG STORE ft. L. WYLIE, PROP. Clover, S. C. I TRADE WITH US. . '/I We have the coolest place! : in town. Sec US for? Ice CreamPure Fruit Drinks? Fine StationeryEngraved CardsToilet Articles? , Tobaccos, Cigars, Etc. \ Mackorell Drug Co. Near the Court House SHINGLES WHEN YOU WANT ANY SEE US. We have them?Good Shingles, too? ! as good as you can find anywhere?and i you'll find too, that we have tjie price i that wilt interest you. !LUMBER? To be sure. That's our long suit and of course we have it. Lots of Lumber - -Hough, Dressed, manufactured up as you want it?Flooring, Ceiling, Weatherboarding. Doors, Rlinds, Sash, Window Frames, Door Frames?just anywav you want?and you will tind that our PRICKS ARE RIGHT. BUILDERS' HARDWARE? Have any need for such goods? See us if you have. We can supply your needs?Priced right here, too. SEE US FOIt DEVOE PAINTS! LOGAN LUMBER YARD LOANS AT 7 % INTEREST J ARRANGED for on York County; Farms. Long-term. (6% through j Federal Land Bank). Why not stop < paying higher rates? Charges reason- i I able. C. E. SPENCER. I f C Phone 1 ^ L 153 ' SEPT, 10TH epare For I Week ; Let This Winter Pass Comfort. IRE COMPANY I 1 I 4 ' . ; 4 PROFESSIONAL CARDS. Dr. 6. L. WOOTEN ? DENTIST ? OFFICE OVER THE P08T0FFICE Telephones: Office, 128; Residence, 53. CLOVER, - - S. C. 71 t. f. Gm< rDr. T. 07 GrTgG ? DENTIST ? Room 202 Peoples' Bank Building vno^ a c. - - - - 62 . w. 26t* BETTY LINK, D. C. CHIROPRACTOR Diseases of the Spine and Nervous System and all Organic Inco-ordina* tion. Consultation and Analysis Free. 331 Chatham Avenue. Phone 396?J 1 ROCK HILL, - - 8. C. YORK FURNITURE CO. Undertakers ? Embalmers . YORK, - - s. c. In All Its Branches?Motor.Equlpment Prdfcipt Service Day or Night In Town or Country. s Dr. R. H. GLENN Veterinary Surgeon CALLS ANSWERED DAY OR NIQHT Phone 92 YORK, - - - 8. C. W. W. LEWIS Attorney at Law Rooms 205 and 206 / Peoples Bank 4L Trust Co/a Building, n YORK, - - 8. C. Phnn..- f?fflr-n ?aN Residence 4i J. A MARION . vflNEY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW Office opposite the Courthouse. Telephone No. 126. York Exchange. YORK. 8. C. JOHN R. HART ATTORNEY AND C0UN8ELL0R / AT LAW. Prompt and Careful Attention to All Business Undertaken, felephqne No. 69. YORK. 8. C. , 76 r.t it J. S. BRICE Attorney At Law. Prompt Attention to all Legs! Business of Whatever Nature. Front Offices. 8econd Floor, P< lee Bank & Tr -t Co/s Building. Phone No. 81. , REAL ESTATE $$$$$ If You MP Want Them, See SOME*OF MY OFFERINGS; / 40 Acree? Seven miles from York, bounded by lands of J. B. McCarter, C. /W. Carroll, H. Q. Brown and others; ' 3-room residence, barn and cotton house. Well of good water; Ave or six acres bottom land. Buck Horn creek ai.d branch runs through place. About 4-acre pasture; 5 or 6 acres woods? mostly pine and balaace work land. About 3-4 mile to Beersheba school. It ls/golng to sell; so If you wanr it see me right away. Property of H.,C. Farrls. 60 2-5-Acres?4 1-2 miles from York, and less^han half mile to Philadelphia school house, church and station- Four room 'residence, besides hall; 4-room tenant house; barns; 3 wells of good water, and nice orchard. About 8 acres in pasture and woodland balance open land. Act quick if you want it Property of C. J. Tliomasson. 90 Acros at Brattonsville?Property of Estate of Mrs- Agnes Harris. Will give a real bargain here. 144 Acres?Five miles from Filbert on Ridge Road, bounded by lands of ' W. M. Burns, John Hartness and others; 7-room residence, S^stall barn and other outbuildings; two 4-room tenant houses, barns, etc ; 2 wells and 1 good spring; 3 horse farm open and balance in timber (oak, pine, &c.) and pastutp. About 2 miles to Dixie School and Beersheba church. Property of Mrs. S. J. Barry. 33 Acres?Adjoining the above tract About 3 or 4 acres of woods and balance open land. Will sell this tract separately or la connection with above tract Property of J. A. Earry. 195 Acres?Four miles from York, on Turkey creek road, adjoining lands of Gettys, Queen and Watson; 2-horse farm open and balance in woods an I pa' ture- One and one-half miles to Philadelphia and Miller schools. The price is right See me quick. Property of Mrs. Molly Jrnes. Five Room Residence?On Charlotte street, in the town of York, on large lot I will sell you this property for less than you can build the bouse. Better act at once. McLain Property?On Charlotte St., in the town of York. This property lies between Neely, cannon ana ijwmwio mills, and is a valuable piece of property. Will sell It either as a whole or in lots. Here Is an opportunity to make some money. 89 acres?9 miles from York, 6 miles from Smyrna and 6 miles from King's Creek. Smyrna R. F. D. passes place. One bond; farm open and balance 'Ji woods?something like 100.000 feet saw limber. 12 acres fine bottoms, 3 room residence. Property of P. B. Bigger. 210 acres?3 1-2 miles from York on Pinckney road. 8 room residence, well of good water, 2 large barns, three 4 room tenant houses and one J room tenant hou?e. 40-acre pasture. Good orchard. About 150 acres open land, balance in oak and pine timber. Property of M. A. McFarland. Tarranged on farming lands. a EO. W. WILLIAMS REAL ESTATE For Best Results I T.j* W9G fSsVW LIVE STOCK REMEDIES Sold by Dmggi?t? and Dealer* I ! ' > VN - (; ) '