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Sisfe KATHLEEN, NORRIS. ^ S, CopynOMT $ , MTW,tEW NOftRI? . CHARIER IV. Meanwhile the hot train sped on, and the drab autumn country flew hy the windows, and still the bride sat wrapped In her dream, smiling, musing, rousing herself to notice the scenery. When Martin asked her If she llk?d to be a married woman, traveling with her -husband, she smiled and said that It seemed "funny." For the most part she was silent, pleased and Interested, but not quite her usual unconcerned self. After dinner they had a Jong, murmured talk; she began to droop sleepily now, although oven this long day had not paled her cheeks or visibly tired her. At tdn they stumbled out, cramped and overheated, and smitten on tired foreheads with a rush of Icy mountain air. "Is this the pl-l-ace?" yawned Cherry, clinging to b'|3 arm. "This is the place, Baby Girl; El Nido, and notjmuch of a place!" her husband told ner. "That's the Hotel McKinley, over there where the lights are! We stay there tonight and drive out to the mine tomorrow. I'll manage the bags, but don't you stumble!" She was wide-awake now, looking alertly about her at the dark streets of the little town. Mud squelched beneath their feet, planks tilted. Beside Martin, Cherry entered the bright, | cheerful lobby of a cheat* hotel where : men were smoking and spitting. She was beside hitn at the desk and saw him write on the register, "J. M. Lloyd and wife." The clerk pushed a key across the counter; Mprtin guided her to a rattling elevator. She had a fleeting thought of home; of Dad reading before the Are, of the little brown room upstairs, with Allx, slender In her thin nightgown, yawning over her prayers. A rush of reluctance?of strangeness?of something like terror smote her. She fought the f homesickness down resolutely; every thing would seem brighter tomorrow, when the morning and the sunshine came again. There was a brown and red car- ; pet in the oblong of the room, and a j brown bureau, and a wide iron bed j ? nr.MAn/1 on/1 o nonl I n or I Willi U 111II 1? Dyicuu, uiiu n !?.? ?(, brown washstand with a pitcher and ""basin. The boy lighted n flare of elec^ trie lights which made the chocolate nnd gold wallpaper look like one pattern in the light and nnother in the shadow. A man laughed in the adjoining room; the voice seemed very near. Cherry had never been in a hotel of this sort before. It seemed to her cheap and horrible; she did not want to stay in this room, and Martin, tipping the boy and asking for ice-water, seemed somehow a part of this new strangeness nnd crudeness. She began to be afraid that lie would think she was silly, presently, If she said her prayers as usual. . * In the morning Martin hired a phaeton nnd they drove out to the mine. Cherry had had a good breakfast and was wearing a new gown; they stopped another phaeton on the long, pleasant . drive nnd Martin said to the fat uiun | in It: "Mr. Bates, I want to make you ac- ! quninted with my wife!" "Pleased to meet you, Mrs. Lloyd!" said the fat man, pleasantly. Martin told Cherry, when they passed him, that that was the superintendent of i the mine, and seemed pleased at the u encounter. Presently Martin put Ids arm about her nnd the bay horse daw:|fe dlod along at his own sweet will, while Martin's deep voice told his wife over and over again how adorable and boaut If ill she was and how he loved her. Cherry listened happily, and for a W little while the old sense of pride and ^ achievement came hack?she was mar- | rled; she was wearing a plain gold ? * T>.,f nfton a fnm slave Ihnt fooJ. JMI'K . Ulll mill CI evil MU,in ...uc ,v>. Jng vnnished forever and Instead it began to seem strange to her that she had ever been anything else than Martin's wife. For several days she and Martin laughed incessantly and praised each other incessantly, while they experimented witlj cooking and ate delicious gypsy meals. B.r lahiu infer Cherry had settled down to the business of life, buying ha^r and lai d and stigfvr ap.d raVcbes at thti store of the mine, cooking nnd cleaning, sweeping, and making beds. She still kissed Martin good-by every morning and met him with an affectionate rush at the door when he came home, and tliey played Five Hundred evening after evening after dinner, quarreling for points and laughing at eacli other, while rain sluiced down 011 the porch, hut sometimes she wonl dered how it had aJI come about, wondered what had become of the violent emotions that had picked her out of the valley home and established her here, In this strange place, with this man she had never seen a year ago. Of these emotions little was left. % She still liked Martin, she told herself. and she still told him that she loved, him. Hut she knew she did not tiiL love-hiill,' ariil-lri~5uch"ah association as theirs there can be no liking. Her thoughts rarely rested on him; she ' was either thinking of the prunes that ] were soaking, the firewooi} that was ' running low, the towels that a wet breeze was blowing on the ilne; or : she was far away, drifting In vague ' realms where feelings entirely strange ' to this hare little mining camp and ' this hungry, busy, commonplace man, 1 - ! neiti sway. The first time that she quarreled 1 with Martin she cried for an entire 1 day. with the old childish feellug that somehow her crying mattered, some- 1 how her abandonment would help to ' straighten affairs. The cause of the 1 quarrel was a trifle; her father had ' sent her a Christmas check and she 1 Immediately sent to ^a Son Francisco 1 shop for a clock that had taken her ( fancy months before. Martin, who had chanted to be ' pressed for money, although she did ' not know It, was thunderstruck upon i discovering that she had actuaUy dls- I posed of fifty dollars so lightly. For i several days a shadow hung over their ] intercourse, and when the clock came. < rrs large as a banjo, gilded and quaint, he broke her heart afresh py pretend- I ing not to admire It. i But on Christmas eve he was de- \ layed at the mine and Cherry, smitten 1 suddenly with the bitterness of having their first Christmas spoiled In this i way, sat up for him, huddled in her ] silk wrapper by the air-tight stove, i She was awakened by feeling herself i lowered tenderly Into bed and raised | warm arms to clasp his neck and they | kissed each other. ( The next dny they laughed at the , clock together, and after that peace ( reigned for several weeks. But It was , Inevitable that another quarrel should , come and then another; Cherry was , young and undisciplined, perhaps not . more selfish than other girls of her age, but self-centered and unreasonable. She had to learn self-control and she hated to control herself. She . had to economise when poverty possessed neither picturesqueness nor in- ( tcrest. They were always several weeks behind In the payment of do- ' mestle bills, and these recurring re- 1 minders of money stringency maddened Cherry. Sometimes she summed 1 'it up, with angry tears, reminding him ( that she was still wearing her trous- 1 senu dresses, and had no maid, and 1 never went anywhere?! 1 But she developed steadily. As she 1 grew skilful In managing her little l house, she also grew In the art of 1 managing her husband and herself. ' She became clever at avoiding causes 1 of disagreement; she listened, nodded. agreed, with a boiling heart, and had 1 the satisfaction of having Martin's < viewpoint veer the next day, or the ! next hour, to meet her own secret ' conviction. Martin seemed satisfied, t and all their little world accepted her 1 ns a matter of course. But under It > all Cherry knew that something young : and irresponsible ntid confident In her i had been killed. She never liked to think of the valley, of the fogs atyl the i spokes of sunlight under the redwood t aisles, of .Mix and the dogs and the l dreamy evenings by the fire. And es- | pecinlly she did not like to think of i that eighteenth birthday, and herself ] thrilling and ecstatic because the > strange young man from Mrs. North's i had stared at her, In her sticky apron. . Willi SO new ailU uisiuruiuy a siunc | i in Ills eyes. , CHAPTER V. < i ' So winter passed at tlie mine and ( at the I)row 11 house under the slioul- ] der of Tinnnlpnis. _Alix stiJi kept her i t bedroom windows open, but (lie rain tore in, and Anne protested at (lie en- , suing stains on die pantry celling. | (.'berry's wedding, once satisfactory i ly over, was a cause of great satlsfac- \ lion (o her sister and cousin. They , had stepped back duly, to give her ] (lie center of the stage; they had ad- i mired and congratulated; had helped < her in all hearty generosity. And now ( that she was gone they enjoyed their own lives again and cast over hers the ( glamor that novelty and distance nev , er fall to give. Cherry, married and keeping house ami managing affairs, ( was an object of romantic Interest. , The girls surmised that Cherry must ( be making friends ;'that everyone must . admire her; that Martin would be rich some day, without doubt. i Chery wrote regularly, now and then i nssaririL' them that she was the same ' old Cherry. She described lier tiny house ] 1 right at the mine, and the long sheds ; ' of the i>Jaiit, and tlie hare ldg hulld1 log that was the men's hoarding house. Martin's associates brought her trout and ducks, she wrote; she and Martin j had driven three hundred miles in the superintendent's ear; she was preparing for a card parly. ? "Think of little old Cherry going off on week-end trips with three men!" Aii.v would say proudly. "Think , of Cherry giving a party!" Anne per- , haps ivonid make no comment, but she <, often felt a pang of envy. Cherry ] i sveiiisd to have everything, Suddenly, without warning, there was n newcomer In the circle, n sleekbended brown-lialred little man known as Justin Little. * He had been Introduced at some par-, ty to Anne nnd Allx; be called; he was presently taking Anne to a lecture. Anne now began to laugh at him nnd sny thnt he wns "too ridiculous," but she did not allow any one else to say so. On the contrary, she told Allx at various times thnt his mother had been one of the old Maryland Percles, and his great-grandfather was mentioned in a book by Sir Walter Scott, nnd that one had to respect the man. even If one didn't choose to mnrry him. * i, (To be Continued.) SOUTH CAROLINA FORESTS Notod Authority Call* Attention to Neglected Condition. . By James Henry Rice, Jr. Owing to the rapid disappearance of the state's forests, the waste in lumbering, much of it preventible, the destruction by fire, and likewise the vital need for wood in the whole range of construction, from house building to making containers for shipping vegetables, it is intended to lay the matter before the public. The facts are well known. There is sufficient remedy, if the remedy is applied in time and relentlessly followed up. The average citizen knows in a general way (he knows everything in a general way, except the business he follows) that inroads are being made on the forests and that lumber prices keep climbing, despite low prices at present, due to widespread depression. I can myself recall a region, filled with small saw mill3 in 1876, where lumber could be had almost for the asking. Practically all the farmers In that entire region are now buying coal for fuel, and lumber is shipped in from a distance of several hunired miles. This is not an isolated case. It is Irue over wide acres. In order to get' in adequate view of the situation, it >vill be well to go back and take a lasty survey of. former conditions. Modern saw milling began in South Carolina in a romantic way. Henry Buck of Bucksport, Maine, left his native state between suns in a schooner )ound for South Carolina. The story s that he was about to be imprisoned "or debt. However, that be, he came pn to Charleston, filled a pack there ivith merchandise and peddled along "rom plantation to plantation until he -eached Georgetown, where the pack vas replenished and he started north jp Pee I>ee, crossing over into Horry xt Yauhannah ferry. What he saw along his route was plain enough to a Maine man. On jvery hand were giant "pines, tall, itraight, thick, a lumberman's paralise. The swamps contained cypress pf the finest quality and of immense dze. It was a virgin land, ovcrflowng with resources. Il?ir?Lr hn/1 nn mnnnv nmpnt thfi lit tic hoard derived from selling trinkits; but, like most Now Englanders, ie was a man of resources; so he got two negroes from Colonel Allston on Pee Dee, who lent them, but would neither sell nor hire. Also he bought i small circular saw and set up a rig for sawing logs, at a place on Waccanaw river, which he named Bucksport n honor of his native town In Maine. Next he wrote to a friend In Maine, tvho owned a schooner, telling him to :omc on down and get a load. The schooner came- and loaded with 10x12 stuff, paying $120 per thousand for it it the wharf, and paying in gold. Buck always sold for gold. This jchooner on its return trip brought mother and both loaded at Buckspert. , In no great while Henry Buck built - _ the biggest lumber mill in the world it Bucksport, and was shipping lum?r all over the world, still selling for gold and reselling the gold to tho Unl:ed States government at a profit. Lumber from that Bucksport mill was sent to Mandalay, to Itangoon, and to ports throughout the East Indies ind the Asiatic main. A big trade was carried on with South America tnd with Europe. Buck made a great fortune, of :ourse, and lived like a maharajh until his death in 1S70. When the war same on he made over his ships to a S'orthern partner and thereby saved them from confiscation. The late James McCall of Florence Bounty once showed me his order book, for he was with Henry Buck for a long time. In that bo'k was an order from the Bank of England, for a shipload at' lumber, consisting of sticks 83 feet long that would square 15 inches at the small end. The order was filled within a week, the timber being out >n Lynch's river. It is a matter of doubt if such an j ruder could be filled todav in the i whole south, even with no time limit. Twenty-five years after Henry Buck died I stood over tiie ruins of his mill, and lower down the river over Ihe ruins pf another large mill, built md operated by his son. These ruins marked the end of the first great drives made toward cutting the forests of South Carolina. Of the revival of the Industry, which I witnessed, something will be said in mother article. , Her Explanation.?A sightseer noticed I'ncle Rastus sitting before his rr.bin and inquired of the old negror "Have you always resided here?" "Suh?" "Have you always lived here?" I'rHe Rastus was still looking blank when Aunt Dinah appeared in the cabin door and explained to her | spouse: "Wlia* for you don't understand, Rastus'? He means did you live here hufo* you was horn, or was you horn after you moved here." IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL StindaySehool T Lessonf (By REV. P. B. F1TZWATER, D. D., Teacher of English Bible in the Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.) Copyright, H2t, Weatern Newepiper Union. LESSON FOR DECEMBER 11 PAUL WRITES TO A FRIEND. LESSON TEXT?Philemon. GOLDEN TEXT?Whosoever would b4 ?V.Is ?M U* Kim Ka vaiip aorir. CJIiCl ailivilfj JUU, 1CV IKIW V/V ^ W?ii nvt ?ant?Matt 20:27. REFERENCE MATERIAL?Deut 15:1216; John 13:14, 36; I Cor. 1:26-29; Col. 3:9-11; Jas. 2:1-9. PRIMARY TOPIC?The Story of a Runaway Slave. JUNIOR TOPIC?Paul's Kindness to a Runaway Slave. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC ?Paul Pleading for a Slave. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC ?The Social Teachings of the Letter to Philemon. Tills Is a .private letter. Phllemop was a member of the church at Colosse. Oneslraus, his slave, wronged hira, perhaps stole from him, and fled to Rome. There he came under Paul's Influence and was converted. Paul sent Oneslraus back to Philemon with tills letter. This Is one of tte most tender and beautiful letters ever written, and the first anti-slavery petition ever penned. I. The Salutation (vv. 1-3). His aim was to touch Philemon's heart, so refers to himself as a prisoner, and links Philemon to himself as a fellow-laborer In the Gospel of truth. He makes mention of Apphla, Philemon's wife, and Archippus, the son, who hed already enlisted as a fellow-soldier. IJ. Philemon's Reputation (vv. 4-7). Paul paid a fine tribute to Philemon, reminding him that he never prayed without bearing him up before God. This is a fine example of tact on the nnrt of the minister. 1. His faith and love toward the Lord and all saints (v. 5). It was his hope and desire that this faith might bear fruit In Christ Jesus. 2. His ministry to the saints (v. 7). Philemon was generous In his help to the poor saints. III. Paul's Request (vv. 8-10). He requested Philemon to receive back Oneslmus, the runaway slave, as a brother in Christ. 1. He beseeches Instead of commands (vv. 8-10). Though conscious of his right to enjoin, he pleads as the prisoner of Jesus Christ for love's 6a ke. 2. He makes his plea on the grounds of grace (vv. 11-14). He admitted that Oneslmus had been unprofitable?had forfeited all claim upon Philemon, and that on grounds of Justice his plea might well be rejected, and yet Oneslmus was begotten In his bonds (v. 10)?was In a real sense a part of his own suffering nature (v. 12)?he ventured to suggest that lie should be accepted. Though Oneslmus hitherto had been unprofitable to his master, now was profitable to both Paul and Philemon. Paul would gladly have retained him as a personal attendant, but sought first his friend's permission. 3. Paul desired that Oneslmus be received back not as a slave, but as n Ki*nfhnH I r% / W 1 ^ TTnrO a ut"i uci ii? v^??. *cw \??* *w, *w/? 1r the real fugitive Rlave law. Paul never attacked slavery, though It was contrary to Christianity, and therefore hateful to him, but emphasized principles which destroyed it. The establishment of Christianity changes the whole face of human, society. The wise tiling to do is to get men and women regenerated and thus transform soaiety instead of seeking change by revolution. In Paul's request $ou can hear the pleadings of Christ for us sinners. All iren have broken loose?gone astray? and have become unprofitable. We are reconciled to God through the interceding of Christ. lie has made ut profitable. We have been begotten in His bonds?through His passion, agony of heart, we shall be changed. ill. The Basis Upon Which Onesimus Is to Be Received (vv. 17-21). The debt of guilty Onesimus is to lie put to the account of Paul, and the tnerlr. of Paul is to be put to the account: of Onesimus. This is a fine illustration of the atonement of Christ. Whatever wrongs we have committed il.iKf Innni'fflil oil A11P chitrtAAmlntrq ure debited to Ilim. Jesus Christ, on behalf of the whole universe, has said to God: "Put that to ray account; I have written with ray pierced hand; 1 will repay." Onesimus was taken hack, not as a runaway slave, but a beloved brother In Christ. ? IV. Paul Requests Lodging (vr. 2225). He expected a speedy release from Imprisonment, and purposed to sojourn wjth Philemon. In all probability this was realized What a welcome he must have received! .Tesus Christ is saying to every one of His redeemed ones, "Prepare me a lodging." City Famous for Canaries.?*Ihe city of Norwich is famous for its canaries' song, beauty and hardiness. They came to Norwich with the weavers of Flanders, banished from home by the Spaniards, and ever since the exiles' descendants, now mostly bootmakers, mustard millers and steelworkers, have been canary lovers and fanciers, almost to a man. In the pre-war days there were known to be 4,000 canary breeders in the city, and 30,000 birds passed through the hands of the principal dealer in a year.?London Post. ? Wasps do good by reducing the flies and caterpillars. ? A gallon of moonshine doesn't reduce a man to maudlin aslninlty much quicker than a gal in the moonlight. ? Out of the 1,277 characters in all of Shakegpoare's p'ays, 157 are females. IfllllllSlllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllSillllllll | ?and it Still looks good! | I* That is tiie remark generally ? 15 made concerning our jobs long Zt 3 after executed. f SOME PEOPLE i' 5 5 have learned that there is quite 3 5 a difference. ? Are You One S Of those who have learned the * 3 difference? 3 = = Autos Repainted, Retopped and 3 Recurtained. ~ | Pyramid Paint Shop | Jas. A. Johnson, Manager 3 ROCK HILL, 8. C. ? "iiiiiiHimniinHHiiimniiHmiinmiuiiT s IIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIICIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I CAMPBELt-HICKLIN BREEDERS OF H] ~ SHELDON, BEAl | HAMPSHIRE S : IT IS TIME THE FARMERS . MAKING PLANS TO BEAT T 25 Why not turn at least a part of yfl S Little trouble. , WE SELL NOTHING BUT -I REGISTERED. WE FURNI : LITTLE PIG TO A CAR LOA 3 Write Our Mr. WADE H. HICKLIf - tell him what you want.' ? Campbell-Hicklin Li^ j WAbE H. HICI " Sheldon, Beaufo a. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii W l night?n w ?25BI ings?a \ V able saving I h* air-tight I end guarant I iyjSejSHBPS conilxisti *^ingforj?i V IMF ^our fu?l pi York Furniti] ! Mr. Farmer: ]! Now is the time to buy a1 ?tt a mm a vnnn a IUX1A1 1ADUUVTA HOOSIER GRAI1 STALK CUTTER We have them. Come ii FEWEIL &' W. J. FEWELL YORK, - NEW LOT OF CHOICE I We have a choice bun now?arrived a few days ; for a Mule or two come ar exchange and give you a MULES JAMES B1 ? Besides showing a well developed interest in higher education Japanese girls are keen sportswomen. ? The knocker is a nuisance unless he is knocking somebody you don't like. !' WHAT? Are Your Needs in the FURNITURE Line, Our stock of Medium Price, High Quality, Material and Workmanship is complete. Let us show YOU. ALSO Stoves, Ranges, Heaters, Rugs, Paints and Varnishes, Oil and Turpentine. Stove Pipe that is guaranteed to stay together. PEOPLES FUBNITUBE COMPANY iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiUj LIVE STOCK COM*. I [GH CLASS HOGS s J FORT CO., S. C. L" DUROCS = 2 OF YORK COUNTY WERE -HE BOLL WEEVIL. ~ tur energies to hogs? Big Profits. 2 BREEDING STOCK?ALL I8H ANYTHING FROM A ~ iD. r si, a former York County Man and ~ | e Stock Corporation ^ KLIN, Manager rt County, S. C. i iiiiiiiiiiuiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiuiiiiiiiTi IM floors for tKe little folks? yflf evenly Heated House da? and \\l o fires to build on cold morn* \l warm room to dress in?remark* ? in fuel mone^ With a Cole'* Origin*! hieeter. I construction, powerful radiating bod;} 9 f KJ L E, w g V^HOTBLAST*} | UEL SAVING SYSTEM J ion maens i-j to i-% fual J du. CoU'f Hot Blast makaa /j?Ku0cMn iU last. NkBSSHt I tk about oar fuel J icing guarantee ire Company TURN PLOW / 11 i DRILL, or a i i and Let Us Show You. j | THOMPSON LUTHER G. THOMPSON - - s. c. r A I I - 9 'W *r '' JCKBflK ' ?S MULES? ; L cli of Mules at our barns ago. If you have a need id see us. We will sell or fair deal. MOTHERS H0ESES !j mammmmm1 I ff YOU WANT | y ? X v 4 t ' f Sure Enough Cotton 8?ed MaalJ <? Jf Wo have It In 8 PER CENT. ? I ^ COAL I X In ariy sized load that you want \' v If you want a half ton, tell' us; ?? !! if you want 100 tons, let us o ;t knQ*v- * | * OUE GINS \[ ? * Arm Ready to Gin Your Cotton at o ' I Any Hour of tho Day and We J' < Are Mighty. Anxious for Your ? > Y Business. \ \ *> 4* : CteVBB COTTON I I OIL & GINNING I I COMPANY, Clover, S. C. I iV?? ' *. * ; ' NEW MOM DODGE Best/Car for the Money on the Market. ' I HAVE THE EXCLUSIVE Agency for this well known car on the Western side of the York County. AUTOMOB^E OWNERS generally know what the DODGE Is and all are agreed as to its SUPERIOR MERITS. THE NEW MODEL, possesses some features that are well worth Investigation. and I am In a position to enllghion all who may be interested. /] CALL ON OR WRITE ME. j n"r ' C. F. SHERER 69 h YORK, S. C. Mt Buy At Home.. ' *" ''t-v NO NEED to go elsewhere when you can ga^such a large selection froip one of the^argest firms dealing in GENERAL MERCHANDISE. ' OUR STOCK IS LARGE and varied and his been recognised, for yeara as one of the leading stocks in this section of the state. We carry all of the HEAVY GROCERIES and rant* iudi rue NT# "" "" """" "I ' *-? For the farmer S? well as the hous^keeper. , , C, S. PRATT < t Headquarter# for the Farmer and Hie Entire Family 8HAR0N, 80UTH CAROLINA PROFESSIONAL CARDS. J. A. Marion W. G. Fin Icy MARION AND FINUBT , : | ATTORNEYS AT LAW Office opposite the Courthouse. Phone 126. YORK,8. C. ' i-iq-iisa TVr f! T. WnnTEN "?dentist"?T i OFFICE OVER THE POSTOWCf Telephones: Office, 128; Residence, 53, CLOVER, - a c. 71 _ tt 6m BETTY LINK, D. tt " CHIROPRACTOR Diseases of the Spine and Nervous System and all Organic Inco-ordination. Consultation and Analysis Tree. 331 Chatham Avenue. ' Phone 39S?J ROCK HILL. - - 8. C. YORK FURNITURE CO. Undertakers ? Embalmers YORK, - - s. c. In All Its Branches?Motor Equipment Prompt Service Day or Night In Town or i/uuau-jr. DR. WM. M. KENNEDY ? DENTAL SURGEON ? Office on Second Floor of the WyJio Building. relephonoa: Office, 99; Reridjaoce, ISA YORK, - 8. C. * Dr. R. H. GLENN Veterinary Surgeon CALL8 AN8WEREO DAY OR NIGHT Phono 92 ? YORK, 8. C. W. W. LEWIS Attorney at Law Room* 206 and 206 Pooploo Bank A Truat Co.'a Building, YORK, - - 8. C. Phonea: Office 63. Realdenoo 44 1 ' JOHN R. HART ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW. 'rompt and Careful Attention to All ' Bueineae Undertaken, reiephone No. 69. YORK. S. C, 76 f.t U J. 8. BRIGS V. tl ?LtWJl JJWy Ai littW. ' Prompt Attention to all Loffcl lusinea* of Whaterw Nature. Pront Offioe* Second Floor. P?...la? Bank d Tr -t Co.'a Building. Phono No. SI, fr, a, Cog. lb* t * . ?'