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RELIEF^FOR FARMER8" ^|N (Continued From Page One.) ducts, the producer must be placed on * footing of equal Opportunity with the buyer. First (and this is the cornerstone of the whole subject matter), I believe that sufficient storage warebouses for cdtton, wool and tobacco, or elevators for grain, must be provided f at primary points to carry the/ peak lnsri in th?? distribution of the product. "These warehouses or elevators styould preferably be under private ownership. But, if private capital is not forthcoming, they should be under state ownership. But under any condition, they should be under Federal supervision. The question as to who should own biHd theSe elevdtors and warehouses requires some thought. BUt that adequate warehouses and elevator facilities of 'he most modern typO should be established is beyond question. The vsry well being and prosperity of the different states anil all' of their citizens depends upon the proper marketing of their major products. "The modern warehouse makes possible the handling of agricultural commodities at reduced costs because of the saving effected in Insurance, financing and marketing. It also, will play an itnmenaely important part iti the development of a practical plan of cooperative marketing. ,,"Wh#n products are delivered to the warehouses or elevators they should ut" property wcijjjjru, giaucu auu ???fled by the licensed weighers or graders. For lack of a better term I call this process a 'certification' of the product This certification should be so hedged about that under payment, overcharging and unfair grading will be avoided. It will be the basis of sale, or, in case thW producer does not desire to sell, it should be and could be, made the basis On which he eould borrow money until he is ready to sell. "As d rule, the farmer's products move to the market when there is a great congestion both in the money market and in traffic conditions. Arrangements , therefore, should be made so that he can borrow a reasonable fcmount properly margined upon the products of the farm. Bstter Methods Sought. "I wish to imply no improper or| sinister motives to any of the factors that take part in the marketing of our crops. They would not have survived if they had not been fulfilling a useful purpose. There may be too many of them; but most of them are performing a service. No changes should be made that would destroy those factors, or any of them, unless something better be established to take their places. "Preparations are made each summer for the movement of the crops hfc tbfe fatt^ Yet every year jve run Into difficulties. Last year they were accentuated by world conditions and the huge speculations and' .Hoarding which took place in 1919 and 1920. Bankers, financiers, promoters, speculators and jobbers always can obtain more and cheaper credit than the farmer. r"In connection with the warehouse facilities, corporations should be. established for the purpose of making loans on the warehouse receipts. They should be large enough and so officered as to gain the confidence of the investing public. Their capital stock should be open to public subscription: They might be made co-operative, but they need not necessarily be so. They could advance monej to the individual (for the financing o' the crop marketing), Just as banks do now for any time from thirty days to s,x months or a year. "They would not take the place of the present arrangement wherein the merchant, the banks and the Federal Reserve system finances the marketing, but would supplement.it. How it Would Work Out "The finance corporation would deposit in Its treasury in trust the farmers' notea maturing at various dates, jUld secured by the warehouse receipts fBr the non-perishable product. It would issue agalns? the notes' bearer certificates, as is now done by the large corporations, in the issuance of shorttime notes in denominations of $100, $500 and $1,000. mere wouia oe no oexier sngn-urae Investment or collateral than these obligations. The present.process, where, in the farmer gives his i ote to the merchant, the merchant the note to the bank and the bank sends it to the Federal Reserve bank, amounts practically to the same thing. The only difference is that these secured bearer certificates .would be in negotiable form and would attract the private investor. "There are large sums of money, even in localities in which crop production takes place, that would seek investments in small amounts if it were easy to buy these negotiable, well protected instruments. The finance corporation being responsible for the repayment of the loans,, would see to it that they were properly protected at all times., And these bearer certificates would have back of them (a) the resources of the corporation (which would be essentially the character of credit which is behind the operations of the Federal Reserve?the mobilized and in a true sense the co-operative credit of the more liquid commercial and industrial institutions), plus (b) the farmers' individual credit, plus (c) the security of the warehouse receipt based on a certification of the amount and grade of and insurance on the product covered." Mr. Baruch is making his plan andj in offering the recommendations accompanying it as herein quoted in part, thus cautions against the iconoclasm: of too hasty innovation: ' Difficulties and opposition will be' greatly increased if too much be at- j tempted at once. Many a good business; enterprise has failed by undertaking! too much at first." Dr. Chandler's World Wide Vi#w. Still another angle of considering this question is presented by Dr. Chandler, economist of the National Bank of Commerce of New York city, who ties the question of agricultural credit'* with our foreign trade thus: "It is necessary to keep in mind that our whole intricate web of American industry is attached pn all sides to the buvinsr capacity of the more than 10, 000,000 persons engaged in agriculture, who represent possibly 80,000,000 persons living on the farms. Neither largpe crops JtOr opportunity to. sell 'at a price* is sufficient. If profits are reduced or wiped out by an unforseen change of price, the farmer must reduce his purchases of farm machinery and automobiles, as well as those of clothing, furniture and other things." , Dr. Chandler bases'the foregoing oh the assertion that our trade is also Unked up with our foreign economic relations, and no better case cen be cited than the Present'condition of the American farmer. Estimates as to the total buying capacity that the farmer possesses vary, but iri recent Joint coii-, ferences of business men, bankers and economists, it was generally agreed that the maintenance of his buying caipacity is of outstanding Importance id our trade relations." . The Inseparable connection between the status of our agriculturists as to credits and buying power, and their relationship to foreign trade are thus established by Dr. Chandler. Troubles and Remedies. A summary of these facts shows that: 1?The bulk of agricultural products is dumped oil the markets in top short time, straining capacities (a) of credit facilities, and (b) transport facilities, causing (c) unscientific marketing not employed in any other ind^ptry; that this too qukJC marketing does not give the public cheaper food prices, beer use the middleman absorbs the advance ih price over that paid to producer, and (e) the producer gets less than he would, under normal, scientific marketing, while (f) the whole financial side of operation ami selling the farm production is hami>ered by the lack of'credits of a character suited to the longer period in which agricultural paper may be regarded as liquid; and (g) it is possible thus to provide credit facilities to cure the wrong marketing methods without imposing on the excellent and necessary liquidity of the Federal reserve, or modifying the longtime land mortgage loan system of the Federal farm loan board, but using each in the finally completed credit nation&l organization. II?That governmentaily supervised, privately financed warehouses and elevators storing and certifying to products, non-perishable, store therein, would (a) cure the too rapid dumping of products, (b) Improve the foreign marketing of our surplus agricultural products by adjusting to the changed fiscal status in other countries, (cl create a new mobilization of private credits for agriculturalists without lessening, but rather strengthening, existing credit facilities, and finally, and by all means one of the most valuable features of the proposajs, (d)1 remove the question of rural credits from the field of politics and move it to that sphere of calm, scientific consideration where ahd only wherein it might be worked out to a wW and permanent conclusion.?New York World. KEEP ON THE JOB. General' Assembly Doe? too Much Soldiering for too Little Work. The Yorkville Enquirer says: "The general assembly commenced today at noon as usual, will probably drag its session along till about the last of February, or perhaps into March. If it so desired it could do its work in twenty days or less and it. would be much better for the state. There.is no good reason for all the time killing into which the general assembly has fallen. We have never seen a good reason suggested. The sessions are dragged up to an unreasonable length so that a few members can do what they want after having tired the majority out. That is about all there is to it and it is a highhanded. dtfigraceful and unconstitutional proceeding. It is time for the people to rise in their indignant might and put a stop to it." There * is no good reason why the general assembly cannot complete its work within the period specified by law. When it extends its session beyond forty days, it simply takes more money out of the taxpayers' pockets, for the hired help of the legislature costs $1,000 per day, according to the joint legislative committee which recently investigated the state's expenditures. The suggestion has been made that the general assembly should change its procedure so that it would meet for a period of ten days in which all bills would be introduced, adjourn and go home for two weeks so as to attend to private business and get the sentiment of the people is to measures introduced, and then leturn and devote the remaining morth to feglBlation. This would be an improvement on the present system. Even better would be biennial sessions of the legislature, so that the legislature would meet just once in two years for a period of forty days. If ihnt lvci'o 1h? casp fhev wnnlrl he mnro likely to get dnwn to business from the beginning and stay steadily on the job until it was finished. This would not impose hardship on busy men who can ill afford to spend forty days away from home every year. Another gocd plan would be to limit speeches to 2f minutes in the first half of the session and 10 minutes in the last half. That would save both time and money. The legislature needs to get down to business now and stay with it until it is finished. If it were to adjourn in 20 or 20 days, i would greatly surprise and please the people?The Oreonville Piedmont. ? SAVING THE FORESTS Few People Are Giving .Thought to an All Important Hatter. TOO MUCH UNNECESSARY DESTRUCTION PpIm rt* timber Go?t ub as Trsas Be* com* Scarcer?Uses For Wood Have Multiplied Beyond Calculation? Sdmething Must be Done and That Quickly. By James'Henry Rice, Jr. People are not considering how the forests, go. Tire uses of wood have been multiplied ojit of ill calculation. One .issue of a Suodny newspaper clears the trees off an acre of ground; fcnd soirit' of therblg metropolitan newsr papers require several acres for a single Sunday issue. ' The moving,picture business struck !the forests of the wbrld vttth a besom of destruction. Few of the real needs of humanity ever made' the draft on the forests that this worship of folly has done. Then came the mqtor business, , reqiilrlhg even for legitimate uses vast amounts of timber; but nslng far and away beyond all reason. Both these lines, however, have already struck' trouble and the cure IS worklpg by the ruin of vast numbers of smaller concerns. Necessity for Carriers. Then there arose necessity for car-' ia'w in tho shinment of vegetables and fruits. Recently In the New York Times Colonel Greeleiy, head of the Division of Forestry, stated that 13,000,000 boxes are required to move the citrus fruit crop of Florida alone, some two and one-half board feet being required for each box. This uses up annually" over seventy million bbard feet. But California Has a large citrus fruit Industry, and so have other southwestern states. Moreover this is citrus fruit alone: not other fruits} nor is thero any allowance for the immense volume of vegetable trade, where the carriers require more lumber, as in potato barrels, for example. Again there are Georgia peaches and cantaloupes; same for South Carolina, North Carolina, 'Virginia; Tennessee, Kentucky*, Maryland, Missouri, Arkansas, Louisiana, Texas and Alabama. Add in the lumber for the' vegetable trade, and" what a'stupendous total we have! I shall give figures later; but does not this make you think? In 1898 a man could have carried the strawberry crop of Horry in a bowbasket. A few years later the crop of Conway and of the Chddbourn region In North Carolina required eleven miles of freight cars to move it, three hundred and odd crates to the car, as I remember. To the strawberries Were added beans, cucumbers, potatoes and other crops. Then Lake City woke up and began planting beans and other crops, requiring an Immense amount of lumber for carriers. Meantime the tobacco crop requires more lumber than an army in cantonment. Demand for Wood Grows. Twenty years afco a fair-sired sheet would have wrapped up the truck crop of Beaufort. Today it is one of the greatest movements in tho South and growing so fast that. I cannot keep track of it. There is a big box and crate factory at Beaufort, put to it to get lumber for making carriers. There is another at White Point Cross, near Pon-Pon river, both immense concerns, using great quantities of timber. They are annually taxed to their capacity and must keep on increasing their capacity to meet trade requirements. ? " *" ? 1 ~ t. ? nn^ ! .prices ior ouxe?, u?u>n.cie, barrels continually move upward. There Is no way to avoid It, since timber is growing scarcer yearly and harder to get. This means that Northern people are paying more for early vegetables;- a;id they retaliate by charging more for what they ship us. Remember that what is going on In South Carolina is going on in every Southern state. This is not one of the greatest, but one of the least vegetable growing states. People must eat; the growers must have more carriers, and the mills more timber. The remedy here Is less bushmen. HUNTING HOOTCH. Uncle Sam'a Champion Booze Hunter Talki of the Game. "How do ycu do it?" I asked Izzy Einstein. Thus began the first authorized interview with Uncle Sam's champion rum hound, writes E. M. Thierry. "I don't like that?I'm no rum hound," f "I'm a prohibition agent." "All right, then. To what do you attribute your success as a hootch hunter?" "Three reasons," said Izzy. "First, I don't drink. Second. 1 haven't got big feet. Tilled, I've got a nose for booze." "What! You don't drink?" "Certainly not. YotI don't know much If you think a prohibition agent drinks. None of us do. We wouldn't have our jobs if we did. It's the most important question they ask you when you apply for a job as agent. And they check you up, too. If you drink you ain't got a chance." "What's that about big feet?a joke?'' "Oosh, no. It means we've set a new style In detectives. All detectives are supposed to have big feet. We hootch hunters fool 'em." "How do you nab bootleggers if you don't drink?" "Smell it! That's all a sane man dureH to do with most of the stuff they are selling as booze. There's almost no real rye whisky to lie had and very little real gin. Scotch is about the only real thing that's left?and the hoot Scotch'with creosote." "You never taste it?" "Oh. sometimes we touch our tongues to the stuff. Some of the agents Just can't drink?oven pure whisky. They hold it in their mouths and then slip it through a funnel into a small bottle in the vest pocket. That's the evidence. It saves the agent's stomach." "How many h^yer, you arrested for selling liquor?" "About 1,800?since prohibition went ihto effect." "Can you tell good booze from bad booze by smelling it?" "Sure. That's easy." "You're lucky!" I told him. "Do'you have trouble buying a drink in a saloon where you are not krrown?" "Sometimes. But it's easy if you play your part right." Just what the secrd^is'l couldn't discover. Izzy, wno Is typical of most New York agents, uses disguises. He has as many disguises as Philo Gubb, the correspondence'scfibof detecka-tlve. He was a College boy, with a skull cap, the' other day. Also a truck driver. And a longshoreman. Arid, a musician ?with his son's violin under his arm. And a thirsty English tourist. During the milk strike he was one of the striking milkmen. "Where do you make most of your arrests?" "It varies. In tough Joints one day, another day wearing evening clothes In swell cafes." "Do you really believe in prohibition ?" "Certainly," said Izzy, seriously, "mnn< n cpnts " Now, in ending this unusual interview, I cah only describe him partly, such as to say he has two eyes that see most things, a keen nose, lips that very rarely touch liquor1?and his feet aren't big. You'd never recogtiize Izzy, or any other hootch hunter. They don't look at all the way I thought hootch hunters looked. f' Atad they certalqtijf have the edge on the public?they <9Ui tell bad hootch from good hootch byemeMing it. - A Difference in Degree.?A: former Judge who had becomfe cashier in a western bank once declined to honor a cheCk that a stranger had presented. 'The check is a'.l right,' he said, ' but the evidence you offer ih identifying yourself as the perspn to whose order It is drawn is scarcely sufficient." "I have known you to hang a man on less evidence,? Judge," was the stranger's response. "Quite! likely," re'pifed'.the ex-judgc, "but whdn we're givlqg pp cold cash we have to be careful."?The Lawyer and Banker. -,c * I IMPERIAL PLOWS i.. H< YOU NEED a Turn Plbw by all ! ipeans buy an IMPERIAL, To be sure * we sell it and we are Interested; but ' more than that, we know from obser- 1 vation and from what others say, that i the IMPERIAL Is ffte best Turn Plow . on the market : We also have Repairs ( for Imperial Plpwa I See us for GALVANIZED ROOFING. I WAGONS, BUGGIESHARNESS and LAPROBES?If you need either of these articles, we are ' very sure that wk. cari interest you In ! Qualities and in Prices. Yes, see us. Ballard's Obelisk Flour? < Has been ton the market for nearly a half century and It Is today the pre- ' eminently good flour. Try it if you)1 tW' DPCT Vlnn 1YOIII UIV 4JC/0X flVUli See Us for SWEET FEED, MILL 1 FEED and CHICKEN FEED. ' J. F. CARROLL You Are a Free Agent IN THE RATTER of buying Life Insurance you are a Free Agent and , have a perfect right; legally and morally, to give your application to any j agent that may solicit it, regardless of < your motive, and no one has any right j to question your motive, But anybody j who is familiar with the 77 year record J r\t IKo \fnttinl KnnnVlt* T .ifr> Innnranrf! ! Co., fpr square dealing, low net cost < and Its new 1922 model policy, will se- ( riously question ypuf JUDGMENT if J the application is,not for a Mutual J Benefit policy. No man should buy life J insurance to help the agent unless he is | absolutely satisfied that his company 1 has an untarnished record covering a J long period of years for square dealing, J low net cost, etc. The average insur- 3 er buys the agent's gab and takes for ( granted that his company and contract I are as good as any other and often, < after several premiums have been paid I that he would not have bought it at all ; if he had known what the Mutual Benefit's agent would have offered him. It Is always our purpose to so explain Mutual Benefit policies that the "prospect" knows what he is tc get in advance, and as a result if there is a single one in our territory who Is dissatisfied we do not know it. We can show you that there is a difference. SAM M. & S. E. GRIST DISTRICT AGENTS DURING 1922? HERE'S HOPLVG that everybody In York county will have a year of great prosperity and be enabled to largely overcome the shortcomings of the year just gone. It could have been worse? this year can be much-better?Let's Go. Whatever your needs may be in first class Livestock?Mulesa Mares or good Horses we believe we will be able to supply that need. JAMES BROTHERS , HAMBOtfE'S MEDITATIONS dev tells me a pool en he money soon pahted, But shucks! he don' hatted be no*=ool~me en mah - i ^ I MONEY DO1 * J | Copyright, lflJ by McCkirt K*wtp*o?r Syndicate. w mn 11 Hii? ih IN OUR FACTORY j ON THE- PREMI8E9 Wc design, make and famish H '.'i ' ;-.j for your individual eyo needs B any kind, style or shajie lensB known to |he optical worid. WE ARE SPECIALISTS IN I EYE^NEEDS FOR GLASSES. , Byes examined?Glasses Fitted. B Broken Lenses Duplicated WhieB H \ You Walt. 9 i ^B irfjy* I I cOMRWO^ I ?**! Hampton Street M ROCK' HILL, 3. C. B All kinda of Typewriter Ribbons at The Enquirer Office. TAX NOTICE?1921-1922. Office of the County Treasurer of York County. fooTICE is hereby given that the tr TAX BOOkS for York County tvllLbe opened on TUESDAY, the 15TH DAY OF NOVEMBER, 1921, and will neranin ope A, until the 31 ST DAY OF DECEMBER, 1921, for the collection of STATE, COUNTY, SCHOOL and LOCAL TA]jjES, for the fiscal year 1921, Without penalty; after which day ONE PER CENT penalty will be added to all payments made h. the month of JANUARY. 1922, and TWO PER CENT penalty fof all payments' made In the month of FEBRUARY, 1922, and SEVEN PER CENT penalty will be added to at! payments made fhom the 1ST DAY OF MARCH, 1922, to the 15TH DAY OF MARCH, 1922, and if tor this date all unpaid taxes will go Into execution $Jid all unpaid Single Polls will be turned over to the several Magistrates for prosecution in accordance with law. All of the Banks of the county will offer thcip accommodations and facilities to ifefpayers who may desire to make use of the same, and I shall take pleusure in giving prompt attontlon to all correspondence on the subjec t. All Taxpayers appearing at my office will recdive'prompt attention. Note?Tho Tax Books will be made up by Townships, and parties writing about Taxes will always expedite matters if they w.ill mention tpe Township or Townships in wl.lch their property or properties a J located. HARRY E. NEIL, Treasurer of York County. * o r i n r\ ! o. L. u THE UNI VE 48 S. Main St. WWIMWWWWIWWMIWIIMWWV Ion MILL PR0DUC1 See us for a good cx( We have nice bright J GINNERIES ARE J ' - >" I THAN THEY HA^ ROLLER MILLGrinds Wheat, Corn ai Feed, Chicken Feed, H "Hay, Flour and Corn money. ! ; DEALERS IN COAL AND YORKVILLE COTTOI g. : R. C. Brockrneton F. L. Hinnant W. M. Browa ? Palmetto Monument Co. YORK, 3. C. - ; Why Pay an Agent Profit? We know that the Agent has to live, but let the other fellow keep him up. Deal Direct with the PALMETTO MONUMENT CO., York, 8. C-l Phone No. 121. If you wish us to call we will be glad to have one of our Arm call on You. We do not travel agents. We can and will do your work at ar 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." Phone 121 YORK, 3. C. SODS FOLKS SAY THAT WE FURNISH THE BEST FRESH MEATS TO BE HAD IN THIS TOWN. We believe these folks know what they are talking about, as we are very particular about the kind of beef cattle that we buy; we use every precaution as td sanitary conditions after it is killed and we know how to cut it to the best advantage. If you are not buying your meats from us try u? a few times. You'll like our service. FRESH PORK Besides always having choice Fresh Beef we also have fresh Pork, and also have first-class pure pork sausage for those who want it, and also make and sell lots of mi^ed sausage. ' FISH AND OYSTERS Every Saturday?usually on Fridays? SANITARY MARKET LEWIS G. FERGUSON, Mgr. Take a look at these Prices ON 8TANDARD HAND-MADE TIRE8 AND TUBES. CORD, Ribbed or Non-8kid 32x31-2 $25.00 33x41-2 _ $34.25 32x4 $26.50 35x5 $40.25 . FABRIC, Ribbed or Non*8kid 30*3 $10.60 32x4 $17.75 30x31-2 ? $12.2? 33x4 $10.75 32x3 1-2 $1330 35x4 1-2 $28.78 Laminated Tube* 30x3 $1.90 32x4 $2?5 30x3 1-2 $2.00 33x4 1-2 $275 32x3 1-2 $2.00 35x5 $3.78 Can you imagine these Low Prices on a Standard Rated product7 Well, it is true. v Compare thtfce vylth' others?then come and eee us before you buy. CITY SERVICE and REPAIR STATION. C. H. Siebenhausen YORK, - - 8. C. Phone No. 156 Next to Police Station ANNUAL A38ESSMENT FOR 1922 Notice of Opening of Books of Auditor for Listing Returns for Taxation. Auditor's Office,.December 2, 192L 1 PURSUANT to the requirements of the Statute on the subject, Notice is hereby given that my books will be opened iq my Office in York Court* nouse on jxlw*?ja i, jai\uai\i 1922, for the purpose of listing for taxation all PERSONAL and REAL PROPERTY held in York County, on January 2, 1922, and will be kept open until the 20th day of February, 1922, and tor the convenience of the Taxpayers of the County 1 will be at the places enumerated below on the dates named: Fort Mill?Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, January 16th, 17th and 18th. Rock HiU-r-Monday January 2 3rd through Saturday January 28'th. All males bdtweea the ages of twenty-one and sixty years, are liable to a poll tax of $1.00-and all persons so liable are especially requested to give the numbers of their respective school districts In making their returns. BROADUS M. LOVE, Auditor York County. Dec. 2, 1921. f 96 4t. URTNEY | Service jl R5AL CAR- ! ; YORK, s. a jl . WWWIWWVWM^feWA^V rs- jl ihange of Meal for Seed. ! j Hulls. IN BETTER SHAPE 11 /E EVER BEEN. id Oats. Sells Flour, Hog j J. orse and Mule Feed, Oats, j [ Meal. Try us and save j > 1 ICE. N OIL COMPANY jj i . . ^jcASA DURING 1921 r?T ti a r*rr? Tii?\fWLflK?n f *. a f tva ?t? rijriA^fi xuj.f -???v TTV My preciato tho business given us during the year 1921,vand whfle the year perhaps was not as good jlk it might have been to us, we" believe it was -as good to us as it was to most other folks and we therefore have no complaints. FOR THE NEW YEAR wo extend to all mankind our heartiest wishes for a Happy, t'rosperous Year, filled with the joys of real accomplishment, health napplncss, and promise to do our levlest best.to do ouc'fuW share in mak 5ng the year 1922 all that it should be. WE INVITE-TOUR patronage during the" coming year and will do our best to Serve you satisfactorily and Well. THANK YOU. * \ :> '' SHERER & QTJINN REAL ESTATE IfYnit UT tTTTT 11| I* Want Them, See lfUj 80ME OF MY OFFERING81 Five Room Reel dene#?On Charlotte .street. In the town of York, on large lot. I will sell you this property for lees thttri you can build the house. Better act at once. McLain Property?On Charlotte St., In the town of York. This property Ues between Neely Cannon and Lockmore n.ills, and Is. a valuable piece of property! WIM sell It either aa a whole or In lota. Here to an opportunity to make von:e money..' "J 90 Acrep at BrattonevUle?Property of Estate of Mrs Agnes Harrla Will give a real bargain here. j /.van* art?yi?ed .or. farming land a . GEO. W. WILLIAMS . KLAI, KSTATE ' . . '1 ; 1 % - ' *'"* f TO MAXWELL AND CHEVROLET OWNERS ' ? " ? - '1 . . 7. . We have <unked (I) one 19L9 year Maxwell, (1) one 1920 Maxwell and (1) one 1920'4s0-Chevrolet These pa rts are pretty nearly as good as new; We can give you a bargain In them as long as they !a?tl "Save the difference in' the price." * We also carry at all time as com?-IVxlA A/1 PA*<I nnHe tUoa JJiDWC tt.1 JJUDWUlt H?V f VI ^ ]/Ht VO| VliW ard tube* of fill sizes.,*. OUR REPAIR DEPARTMENT Is aiways in readiness for that small' jcb or that large Jdb. It will pay you to have us attend to that car. When In town call around and see us. Anything that we can tell jrou that will be of any help to you we will be slad to do bo. r Plsxico's CASH Garage 8haron, S. C. J. Clyde Pfexfco " jV A. B1 Plexlco ; ; S_i _ | TO OUR I CUSTOMERS ;i V* < I We beg to advise You that on < ' ant* , ? 3 > After November 15th j; Our terms wit| be < i STRICTLY CASH j Wr have adopted.a Cash policy 3? in paying fop our supplies and < > will thertfore have 'to sell our < PR0DUQT8 FOR CA8H. u After November 15th 3 [ IT We will nave no new acuuums, x X so please do not {\ I Ask Us to Charge. ; \ i CLOVER COTTON $ OIL & GUNNING | COMPANY, It | Clover, S. C. | PROFESSIONAL CARDS. J. A. Mario/i W. G. Finlsy' MARION AMD FETLEY ATTORNEY8 AT LAW ' Office opposite the Courthouse. Phone 126. Y0RK.8. C. ?. ' 1 Dr. C. L. WOOTEN ? DENTIST ? OFFICE OVER THE POSTOFFICE Telephones: Office, 128; Residence, 53. GLOVER, - - S C. 71 . t. t. 6iu YORK FURNITURE CO. Undertakers ? Embalmers YORK, 8. a ^, In All Its Branches?Motor Equipment Prompt Service Day or Night In Town or Country> W. W. LEWIS Attorney at Law Rooms 205 and 205 Peoples Bank A Trust Co.'a Building, YORK, - - 8. C. Phones: Office 62. Residence 44. JOHN R. HART ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW. Prompt and Cartful Attention to All Business Undertaken. Telephone No. 69. YORK. 8. C. 76 f.t , It J. S. BEIGE Attorney At Law. Prompt Attention to all Legal Rualr.eBS of Whatever Nature FroHt Offices, Second Floor, P.. lee Bank & Tr .t Co.'e Building. Phone No. 51, V. - ? . ' " ?.7-jj?L;2>ii5?S