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w FIRST RULER OF EGYP * ^ Fuad, the new King of Egypt that he will aid them in their que: the ancient and submersed Temple THlTEGYPT OF TODAY Peasant Glass Shows But Little; Change From the Past. MAJORITY PEOPLE OF ANCIENT RACE ' Country l? Now Free from Suzerainty j Rut U R+;u Held Under 1 Mortgage of the Britiah?Moet of the Territory is Desert Waste. King Fuad succeeds Cleopatra. King Fuad succeeds Cleopatra! **When <lreat Britain abandoned its protectorate over Egy pt and the sultan of the Nile country* changed his title to king, he became the first king of Egypt since the Ptolemaic regime," says a bulletin issued from the Wash- ] ington, D. C., headquarters of the Na- tlonal Geographic society. ] .The old Egypt of milleniums ago is j In many ways more familiar to the , world at large* than the Egypt of to- ( day, continues the bulletin- Pictures j of its great pyramids and sphlnjces, its , columned temples and rock-hewn j tombs fill histories and encyclopedias; , and inevitably the reader's attention is centered, not on the problems of today, < but rather on tho evidences of a dead | civilization. i Monuments Background for Hard Life, j ' But aside from the fact that mummy < hunting was for many years one of the 1 leading private industries of the coun- i try; and that now convicts, instead of i building roads, excavate tombs and temples for the government, the old ] monuments are merely a background , for a life hard enough to center local < thoughts mostly on dally bread-win- ] ing. | Superficially Egypt seems a large country. The eye sees its color spread over a considerable part of the norths ; eastern quarter or me map or Airica, j and statistics credit it with an area of I more than 350,000 square miles. But the real Egypt?the habitable part?is like a cord with a frayed end; the narrow valley and flaring delta of the Nile. Except a few scattered oases, most of the rest of the nominal Egypt ,?is parched desert sand, gravel and rocky hills. Of its more than a third of a million square miles of territory, about 12,000 are estimated to be capable of cultivation, and a considerable part of this has not yet been actually j tilled. Peasant Like Figure From Carvings. In comparing the Egypt of today with that of the dawn of history one is divided between wonder at the marked J changes on the surface and the lack of | change in some fundamentals. The j Egyptian of today docs not speak his old tongue, but instead, Arabic; his old: gods are forgottbn, and he has?with J. the exception of a small minority?; adopted the religion of MohammedBut in spite of numerous invasions, the blood of the great majority of the ; population has been altered hardly at [ all. Practically the fellaheen, or peas- ; ants, might have stepped from the a cient carvings; they are but a fresh generation of the men who dragged the great blocks of stone into place to build the artificial mountains of the Pharaohs, or who dropped seeds into! * the mud of the receding Nile thou- i sands of years ago, even as they are 1 dropi>cd today. Egypt's resources are almost wholly agricultural, and in the agricultural scheme the millions of fellaheen are the ultimate units. They work long hours scratching the soil with crude implements, or tediously raising water in skin buckets attached to pivoted i puil'if mat me iiiiii Mrtiim ma.v save | their plants from parching. Taxesarcj heavy, and it is the lowly fellaheen i who keep the treasury supplied. Liv- j ing conditions are very poor; mud! huts house most of Egypt's thirteen: millions. In the fields they wear little more than a loin cloth, and the younger children of the villages go naked. When the fellah is "dressed up" he wears a rough shirt and loose .trousers. One of the Earliest Governments. There is little cause to marvel at Egypt's checkered history- A simple reason is that she began early Here j is one of the earliest places in which , man lived an ordered life and left records of his activities. Some anthro T SINCE CLEOPATRA INSPEi I""1" H" m A Mf'IWi'il ii' 'ill > illil VI? 3 and the first Egyptian king In 2,000 st. He Is shown here (In gray) with M i of Philor. I ? f ^ pologlsts, in fact, look upon central Africa as the place of origin of man, ind upon Egypt as one of the first way-stations in his diffusion over the Jther continents. After the long reign of the Pharaohs Egypt had its Grecian and Roman rerimes which brought but few changes. Then in 641 A. D., came the invasion tho Saracens, from which .time be?an Egypt's Mohammedan history. For a time the country was a province of the Arabian Caliphs; later it was independent, though still MohammeJan, under the Mamelukes; and finally, in 1516, it became a province of Turkey, which controlled it first :hrough a governor and later through i sort of hereditary viceroy or khedive. Khedive-Sultan-King. For the third time Europe, took a band in the affairs of Egypt in 1798 when Napoleon won his battle of the Pyramids, The British drove the French out in 1801 and turned the :ountry back to Turkey. In 1869 came the building of the Sbez canal by Dc Lesseps, which has given Europe an jver-growing interest 1n Egyptian affairs. To protect European bond-hold?rs France and Great Britain made a joint Intervention in 1789 and for a while controlled finances. The up-rising of 1882 against the khedive was suppressed by the British alone, ahd ifter that they controlled finances without assistance.. The government was in effect Egyptian with British assistance and with the nominal suzo-alnty of Turkey acknowledged. When the World war began Great Britain established a protectorate, xboltshed Turkish suzerainty, deposed the Germanophile khedive, and appointed another prince of the family to be sultan. The British protectorate is now being withdrawn, but instead of the former Turkish interest being restored, Egypt is set up as an independent kingdom. TRAPS TO CATCH THE FARMERS. They Ar? More Dangerous Than the Traps to Catch the Boll Weevil. "Not only the constellations but the other 1,000 billion stars point to an exceeding prevalence of traps to catch the farmer in the many, awkward moves which he will necessarily make in his first conflict with the boll weevil. Lacking fixed rules to guide him against these pitfalls he will prove an easy prey to the wiles of the trained diplomat. When Philo Gubb would become a detective he got himself a rule book which directed him under all con ditions. When he scented danger he hid himself behind a tree and consulted this book. Every farmer needs to get him a similar book at once. When a stranger drives up to your house for the sole and unselfish purpose of conferring upon you a great benefaction, you are to get behind a tree and consuit your guide book. It will tell you that he is fixing to pull your leg and that you should well anoint same with o'possum grease before again adventuring into his presence. In times passed when he wished to sell you an oil well your guide book would have told you that you should have required him to deliver the said well in the left hand corner of your front yard and then wait on you to pay him from the oil obtained thereon. If the kind visitor had wished to sell you a fish scrap factory the book would have advised that you smell over the proposition for a year. "If he offers you apparati which will destroy the boll weevil, be kind to him for it is a wonderful thing he has accomplished. Gq with him to your demonstration agent and gather together the farmers who have gotten good results from this said machine. If the man's time is too valuable to do this, by no means detain him long enough to carry off a note for any of your money. This guide book will also advise that you sign no papers, especially those that are not to be used, or which are guaranteed to yield a dividend sufficient to pay the entire amount of the adventure into which you are being enticed. All of us have much wondered how it is possible for these polite well dressed friends of ours who visit us in fine automobiles and silicon socks to so nutpror.per fi* | when all of their time was consumed - ??? ?~?-?? CTS ANCIENT TEMPLE. r jf A"p:' vfr *3? iSj^n years, haa assured Egyptologists . Lacon, noted historian, inspecting Improving on Babylon.?Knowing that we are not like Ancient Babylon ?forty-two young men of this city? Montgomery. Ala.?Have set out to cure the flapper! After a solemn symposium the following resolution has been adopted: We, the young unmarried men of Montgomery, In an assembled meeting do hereby solemnly declare that: Whereas, there has arisen a modern fad among "young women of wearing their galoshes unbuttoned and rolling their stockings downward to a point of impropriety, bobbing their hair which the beautiful hand of nature has given them, and smoking cigarettes, all of which, In our opinion, are slovenly and unnecessary. Now, therefore, be it resolved: 'That we hereby agree not to escort any young woman to any play, picture show, party, dance, or reception who practices these useless and nonsensical fads. By way of explanation this statement is issued: The young men of Montgomery are not prudish or saints, but they have a better notion of propriety than did th$ young men of Ancient Babylon. Yours truly, The Unmarried Men's Clnb. ?Montgomery Journal. A sand deposit containing zirconium and titanium has been discovered In Florida. Titanium is a white pigment used in certain paints. Zircon silicate Is a refractory substance, which is exceptionally well adapted for laboratory apparatus, electric porcelain. spark plugs, and so on. It does not shrink Or expand in cold or heat and is not affected by acids or alkaloids. in uplifting us. We had finally concluded that they were able to so greatly outshine us even when we followed all of their advice simply because that it is more blessed to give than to receive. When however, we consulted our guide book it said look in the glass for the goat. Economy is a jewel but we find thut prudence is an even more essential adjunct in our dealings with our friends."?Mclvpr Williamson, in The State, March 14, 1922. No Oilier Company Would Have Paid One CentIN DECEMBER, 1920, the Mutual Benefit Insurance Co., issued $2,000 of insurance on the Life Accclerativc Endowment plan to a Utahi farmer. ,He | was 30 years old and a perfect physical I specimen, close to six feet tall, with a I family record that any applicant would | envy. The man's .wife \vas named as i the beneficiary. An annual premium ot $54.34 was prepaid. The second premium WAS NOT PAID WHEN DUE The insurance was therefore automatically extended for 139 days, or unti! ; March 21, 1922. The insured died on February 4th, 1922, of influenza-pneumonia, and tiie Mutual Benefit PAIE $2,000 to his widow, without deductins one cent, and NO OTHER Life Insuri ance company in the United States ! would have paid ONE CENT. THE MUTUAL BENEFIT PAID J Because its contract provided THAI IT SHOULD, while those of all othci I companies do not. Don't you. think a Compuny that sells policies with sue! ' guarantees should be investigated bj those who WANT THE BEST? SAM M. & S. E. GRIST PEOPLES BANK BUILDING. w if u mou ??? I W REALBSTATE AGENCY FOR SALE i 97 Aores?Xew 4 room dwelling; I room tenant house; fine orchard an< ; pasture, near Charlotte road, six mile from courthouse. Five Room House?On Wright ave 1 !,? Oh*.?J7A? Uffilni' llchtu u rwl unur I u U , IUL OVA-1V, n?ivi| .. ! erago. Fifty Acre Tract?Near New Zio church and school; three-room hous '{ and barn; lot of good saw timber. Fifty Acre Tract?Near New Zloi j church and school. Residence Phone 111 and Office Phone 71 C. F. SHERER ? 1 1 _ l> , ... t ^^AME Conducted by Jas. 0. Grist ; Rock Hill Legion Auxiliary. The only Woman's Auxiliary of.thi American Legion in York county la it IJock Hill, the auxiliary theriv havlnj Just received its charier. Mrs: T. W Huey is head, of the auxiliary in Rocl Hfill- There are now .thirty units 01 the American Legion Auxiliary in th< state. Insurance for Soldiers. S. C. Groescheli, cub-district man*' ger of jthe XL 8. Veterarts* bureau, wit,l headquarters In Columbia istfUes th< following stat cm oat in rbgalrcK to government insurance for ex-service miete! "It is the desh-e of this fl VeteraaJs Bureau sub-district offtCd t6 CriJ courage and solicit the lj^ltistatemenl and conversion of government Insurance. JBvery iy-service with who applied for and carried government "wurtlrae insurance Is privileged to applj for reinstatement of hts insurance, <01 to convert same into government noilverted insurance. < V "There are six types of gOvernmefi converted insurance, vis, ordinary fife thirty payment life, twenty paymen life, twenty-year endowment, thirtyyear endowment and endowment a age 62; all of which offer exceptlona advantages and beaaflts to the intfiirfed '"jTo encourage the ex-servlci > 'mat to reinstate his government instiranc* this district has inaugurated an 'insurance campaign which wili contlnu* throughout the week of April 10 to 1] inclusive, and we respectfully en&oufage and solicit inquiries and applications for the reinstatement and conversion of government insurance^.1 "To reinstate insurance,. It is pnlj necessary to pay one ninth's ;.pre mium jvar-time insurance and 'on< mpnth's current premium and submi a brief medical examination. Thli medical examination Is furAwtved fre< of cost by any Veterans' Bureau salaried physio'fan. Examination for Disabled Wen. The service officer of Meeoh Stewart Post No. 66 is making arrangements to bring a representative of th< Veterans' Bureau to Yorkvillc to examine those ex-doldlers whp bellevi that they have a claim for Compensation against the';^overnmcn| as thi result of injuries received while In tgi servico or resulting from that service Any e;x- soldier of York county wh< thinks that he has such a clafm is invited to send" his n?|rae and address to; "Service Officer, ijieecb Stewart Posi American Legion, liox 281,. Ifork, S- C,' He will be notifledrwhen to meet th? representative of the Veterans' purest here. ; " " Victory ^Aedatp. / ,* Remember If you were in the armj you are entitled to'a Victory Medal if you have not yet,obtained this medal you should. Commander T. Macl Ferguson of Meech Stewart PostiWil bo glad to obtaA it for you. All yot have to do is to bring your discharge paper to Mr. Ferguson. It's a mattei that should be attended to without delay. 'mj Why Not a Baseball Taam. What's the matter wfth the Idea ,pl * w ? >' Mi f. <?! n. | BETTER [ v. , J. b? K ' i [ We believe t.ie day 1h fas (* this section will "live at htftfte a < > skying goes. In our opinion tht ! < devoted, to diversified crjp^s thi i < ever before., i J' Numbers of farmers are pi (, crops, sweet potatoes, cane, pekr < > who have never done this before < Right here we wapt to saj < * Association is going ahoad in e 1 * that ample acreage will, be pit . (, Picker. In'fact, the punohose'o < > by some of our most successful < Starr Stacy, Harfip Stdwe, Arthu; <> Jeff Davis and others. Those who have not hand - li 11.1- 1 _1. - _ .I! ,1 - 1*r <> CH.II tiliw I'tmiy aim uu ow, t?' > < for Seed Peanuts from, any who l he First I lU CLOVER, SAFETY F1R8T . - ' .. . .. ' IYORKVILLE C0TT< Millers, Ginners, Manu: Meal and Hulls, and E BARGAIN TTvi + il Afnw.li f>fVl \VA W vyilill O.IXU1 Vll M V ?? I r ! | of 7 per cent Meal f< ^ 1 i . V : (FIGURES Egg Jellico : 1... Ttinolc .Tollino I Blue Gem Jellico Prompt attention given YORKVULE COlTi - eAcht Legion Post In the county putl ting out a baseball team this summer? The membership of each post Includes plenty of good baseball material and ; the boys would be glad to play. Will somebody In each post start some- I (thing? . Back to the Homefolks. In a statement Issued this week < Hanford MacNIdei, national com- t . thander of the American Legion ad- ! Vises ex-scrvlce men of the country to i go back to their home towns and get t [! Jobs, saying that the unemployment i V situation in the big towns Is growing 11 worse because of overcrowding there, t The legion's efforts to And cmploy1 mcnt for the 700,000 Jobless ex-service r men, .beffun three weeks ago, Is gain- e 5 lng in effectiveness, Mr. MacNider 1 said. "Biit the stlffest problem with [ which the legion has had to deal froni ' >' the inception of this effort," Mfr. Mac- i r- Nidcr continued, "has been the floater, ' J or tourist tfass of Uneriiployed. Iii or der to benefit the worthy the first ! jNrinclple of otir efforts has been for ' bvery community to take cbro of its * oU-n. I cannot emphasize too strongly < t that the first obligation of a commuri- t tty is'to the men who claim that com munlty as their home. The drifter "t who has not thought enough of any J r community to became identified with r It and assume his fair share of the ob ligations of citizenship and community t responsibilities has no reason to be- a t lleve that community to bo under any 1 ; obligation to him now. There is coht gtfetlon in the great cities. Here un employment is at Its worst; .'He is a 1 t poor man, indeed, whp in his own 1 home town has not a job waiting for j t; htth, if lie,'win but put himself In the | i way of yetting it. The Legion's adi vice is: "Get back h<pne. Get back . among your own comrades. Get back 9 tomong the people who have watched " T jrou grow from bdyhood to manhood . and who naturally feel the greatejrt - gratitude toward you for your service in the war. Back with the homefolks "lies your chance of honest, profitable I r employment among friends. Among - strangers you cannot expect to be 3 treated other than a sfranger. Other t things being equal, the boy from home j will always be preferred and the i stranger will be passed by." Leg ion Memorial Day. / Confederate Memorial Day comes on May 10, and American Legion Me modal Day comes on May 30. Amerl can Legion men should have a part In i both memorial <iay exercises. Is your post planning anything yet? Its time ? to begin thinking about it The posts In many towns will hold Joint services - with the Confederate Veterans and U. p. C.'s on May 10, and those organir rations In many instances vdll be ask> ed to participate in Legion Memorial day on May 30. Each Interested per: son Is asked to wear a poppy?a red 1 poppy on May 30, as a token of thank' ifulness for the pacri/Jce. a i ? . '' v GRANDMOTHERS GARTER. ( Aftor All It Was .the Most Sensible t Thing for the Purpose. Grandmother's old-fashioned round j _ garter has come back. Corsets are no j f more, and tlie custoih of "rolling 'em | 1 d?wii" or twisting the stocking tightly j i below the knee, has droppod out of | ! tfivor. Trained observers for the New j ? York World noted that there are fewer j stooping figures in the comers of the i mihwnv at rnirirHne to "make them ! stay," than laat year. Why? CI Because the good old piece of clas- 3 ? J 6 _ t approaching when the Farmers in < > ] nd board at the same place" ag the ' 1 j :re will be more acres of farm land J ( j s year in the Clover territory than <, ; ii lanning to plant, In addition to grain ? iuts, etc., and among thesp are many * * j I f * r that the Clover Peanut Growers ? > l businesslike way. Indications are <> inted to juatify the purchase of a <> f this machine has been guaranteed <' farmers such as Lucius Jackson, < ( r Quinn, Darby Smith, Martin Smith, ^, cd in their names and acreage may 4 e hive agreed to receive orders also J | wiih them. .* ^ j, National Bank | J** - S. C. I ? THEN PROGRE88 | IN OIL COMPANY | facturers of Cotton Seed !; >ealers In Coal, Ice, Etc. IN MEAL ill give you 2,200 pounds | j )r One Ton of Sound Seed. |! ! IN COAL |j $7.50 Per Ton. ? $8.50 Per Ton $9.50 Per Ton to all orders. ON OIL COMPANY jj tic with a safety pin in it has been found to do the work with half the trouble and less danger of tearing the stocking. No longer kept in camphor till the opening of the bathing season It forms a necessary item of the daily wardrobe. . Sometimes the round, garter is made >f quilted vxtln with a lace frill. Some- / Limes it ... decked with orange blossoms. Most up-to.datc of all is the -ound garter that comes attnehed to he top of the stocking, exactly matchng it ih color and material. This kind s'not easily lost. If anything goes, it j ill goon! X* Senators and congressmen were isslgned experts by'the treasury deMirtmont to help them with their tnjome tax returns. , I Garden Seed IT 18 TIME YOU WERE GETTING I READY FOR YOUR GARDEN? 2ome and seo us for the Seeds that I rou wjJl need?You want dependable J seed?That's our only kind?Grown by ho well Itnown Seed Houses of WOODS AND FERRY 1 rhey are always dependable?been ' jsed about here for generations. We lave these Seeds In BULK ANO PACKAGE8. And when you plant your garden to >e sure you'll nc9d some protection J igain Insects and Pcsta that destroy 1 ho plantB?Use our LIME SULPHUR and ARSENATE OF LEAD 'or Spraying. They Insure crops. * a-* ... 4am f?r\ rrlnn QnaHu \ CLOVER DRUG STORE! Quality and Service. Phon# No. 2 CLOVER, 8. C I DO YOUR EYES Ij NEED ATTENTION? Do You Have Eye-Strain Hoad-M Williams' Scientific IS I System of Pitting I h I Glasses ? H ? Means all that is Best in Eye-V n . Examination with Quality inH material and Skill in work-M y I manship. fl j, Broken Lenses Duplicated. 1 Examinations Made By I i1 Appointment, S ? Hampton 8treet I r I " "* J 1 ? 1 JIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH I CATHOLIC BOOKS I i I' S SENT FREE ON APPLICATION. 5 E. GET YOUR INFORMATION B FIRST HAND. 3 E QUESTIONS AN3WERED BY ? ? MAIL. ? I WRITE TO .. ... : I REY. W. A. TOBIN i Saint Anne's Church : ROCK HILL, 8. C. \niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiimiiiiiiimiiiiiiuiiiT DURING 1922? HERE'S HOPING that everybody in York county will have a year of great prosperity and be enabled to largely overcome the shortcomings of the year just gbrie. It could have been worse? . this year can be much L etter?Let's Go. Whatever your needs may be In first class Livestock?Mules, Mares or good | ^ Horses we believe we will be able to supply that need. JAMES BROTHERS flee, Phone or Write to THOS. C. O'FARRELL FOR High Grade Monuments Tl/T^mUI a am/1 A?iam?4>a i ' iu xtjlcu. uxc aau vriouiuc . Plant on Eaat Liberty 8traet, Adjoin- I ing Ro?? Hill Camatary. FOR FINE FURNITURE V <f '!. . \ 3omc to the' OLD RELIABLE FURNITURE STORE. Y'V* Jf- ?* 'AijrV M. L. FORD $ SOKS JNDERTAKEP8 AND EMBALMER1 CLOVER. ?. C. ? \ r L C. Br*(kli|(?a r. L Dnul W. H. Itm 'almetto Monument Co. YORK, - - ji. C. iVhy Fay an Agent Profit 1 We knoW that the Agent has to lire, >ut let the other felloe keep him up, ?eal Direct With the - ' ' PALMETTO MONUMENT CO, York, 8. C.; Phone No. 121. If you wish us to call we will be glad 0 have one of our firm call on You. Ve do net trivel agent*. ' We can and will do ydur work at-ae -ow a Price and da Good in Quality ?e iny one in the holiness. Try Us, ts aU :bat we ask. Yob be the iudga.;l PALMETTO MONUMENT CO. "Honor Them With a Monument* 'hone 121 YORK, S. C. I. C. WILBORN EItate MONEY TO LOAN 821*2 Acres?In town of Tirsah. A eautlful 2-story 8-room house; two iarns. i One. big new barn. Vefy pHouctlve land; good orchard. An Ideal iomo. 40 Acres?Ten acree In timber; Jolnng landa of.John Lindsay; 11-2 miles f Delphos. The property of Mrs. MIn Ic Moore. Price, :$f,000.00. Two 4-room Residences?And one acint lot, opposite the Hawthorn Mfll 1 Clover, "property of Mr. H. B. Prldfe. 'he lots afe 66x290 feet. Thin Is ia fine roperty and is pfaced on the Yriarkbt or quick sale. Win sell separately or 11 together. 155 Acres?At New Zion Church and chool. Nice five-room cottage; 80 ,cres in cultivation; good orchard; 86 crcs in timber. M"ch of this acreage s in fine saw timber?pine. Three niles of railroad station. Price, |2SX0 >er Acre. For Quiek Sale?House and tot on Jncolnr -Street, York; two stories, Sooms. Known as the Bell House. >rice, $4,200.00. ' LC-WILBORSI^ " '* ?X 1 1 Typewriter Ribbons and Papers at The Enquirer Office. - ? 11 . .1.1 Jl uj U ' J PEOFESSIONAL CABD8. i* c. L. ? DENTIST ? OFFICE OVE* THE "POETOFFICE . reiephonest Office, 128| Residence, 5S. CLOVER, - S. C. 71 ' ? t. Em , J. S. BEIGE Attorney At Law. Prompt Attention t6 all Legal business of Whatever Nature. Dffice on Main 8treet in the Moore Building, First Flopf. formerly occupied by 8. E. Spencer. . ; ? DB. WM. 11 KENNEDY ? DENTAL SURGEON ? . ... )ffics on Secpnd Floor of tho Wyllo building. " ... r.v> telephones: Of floe, 90; RenMcnoe, 1M, YORK. - 8. C. . . .;? I. A. Marion , W. G. Flnloy MARION AND FINLEY ATT0RNEY8 AT LAW Offlce opposite the Courthouse. Phone 128. Y0RK.8. C. YORK FURNITURE 06. Undertakers ? Embalmers YORK, - - a. c. n All Its Branches?Motor Equipment Prompt Service Day or Nlfht In Town Or Country. JOHN B. HABT ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT~ LAW. 'rompt end Careful Attention to All Business Undertaken, releohons No. 69. YORK. 8. C, 78 tt It BUILDER'S SUPPLIES THAT IS OUR SOLR BUSINESS ?supplying the needs and demands of Contractors and Private Individuals with the Lumber, Mill Products, Brick, Cement, ,Paints, Oils, et?., that are used Hi constructing buildings or repairing buildings and other work that requires these materials. . , . * We are on the Job every working day. We have the plant necessary to handle all these needed and supply them on short notice. . ? We solicit orders for all kinds of Mill WnrU?Honrs Snsh RlindS'Frames. Dressed Flooring, Ceiling, Siding, etc. We also invite you to see us about Paints, Oils, Putty, etc. Wl assure you of profnpt service and good materials at fair prices. LOGAN LUMBER YARD