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tumorous Jcpartmcnt Doing Hit Best.?The recruit was having his first turn on sentry duty. "Now, remember your salutes," the corporal warned him. "If you see a lieutenant wearing one star, slope arms. For a captain, with two stars, slope arms also. The major has a crown on his straps, and you present arms. For the colonel, who has stars and a crown, you present arms and turn out the guard." When he was left alone the recruit went over these orders again and j again. Suddenly his musing was interrupted by the approach of an offl- I cer. This was a general, and the I recruit did not know what to do for I him. "And which might you be?" he ask- I ed, bluntly, unable to recognize the I badge of the officers' rank. I "I'm a general," replied the officer affably. "Sure now, and are ye?" exclaimed I the recruit in consternation. "Then I ye'll want something big. How'd It dol if I give ye a bayonet exercise?" Pardonable Mistake.?The following I incident took place at a party some I time "ago. Our friend, the "funny I man," Introduced a young gentleman I to a young lady, whom he (the young I gentleman) understood to be thel daughter of the Countess of Ayr, and I In consequence he was very deferen-1 tlal to her. By and by, after a dance, the young I fellow ventured to ask after her I mother, the countess. "My father, you mean," said thel young lady (the mother being dead.) I "No, no?no," said the bewildered I youth. "I was asking after your I mother, the Countess of Ayr." "Yes, I know," was the reply, "butl that's my father." Whereupon the young gentleman I rushed off and told his hostess that I the young lady must be quite mad, asl she told him the Countess of Ayr was her father. "So he is,"' answered the hostess. I "Let me introduce you to him. He is I Mr. Smith, the county surveyor." ! Lower at the Top.?A recently re-1 turned American tourist tells of en-1 tering a hotel in a French town notl far from Paris, says Everybody's Mag- I azine. He asked for a room and the hotel keeper took him to the topi floor, where he showed very com-1 fortable apartments at the surpris-l ingly low figure of five francs a day. I Marveling, but well satisfied, thel American took the room. Later in the day while walking I about the town he met an acquaint-1 ance, who inquired where he was liv-1 ing, whereupon the fortunate tourist I told of his excellent, inexpensive ac-1 commodations. 1 "Aw," said the mend, "wnat noor are you on?" "The top floor." "Yes. You have one of the Zeppelin parlors. Try to get a room in the basement and see what they'll charge you." Eligible.?A Canadian named Cassey was appointed to a government place. Technically, it had to be held by a lawyer, which Cassey was not. The benchers of the law society, however, undertook to obviate the technicality. "Well, Cassey," said the examiner, "what do you know about law, anyhow?" "To tell the truth," replied the candidate, "I don't know a single thing." The examiner reported In his affidavit, "that he had examined Mr. Cassey as to his knowledge of the law, and to the best of his information and belief, he had answered the < questions that he had put to him correctly." The aspirant was therefore admitted.?Law Notes. Why They Fought.?Mrs. Carnes i had a new maid and while she went i on a day's motor trip she ventured to leave the children In charge of the girl, relates Harper's Magazine. "Well, Annie," asked the mistress on her return, "how did the children behave during my absence? Nicely, I hope." "Nicely, indade, mum," replied the girl, "but at the end they fought terribly, mum." i "Fought!' exclaimed Mrs. Carnes. "Why, Annie, why did they fight?" "To decide, mum," said. Annie, "which was behavin' the best." A Limit to Learning.?A political orator, after delivering an election address, was heckled from all sides. The subject was education, and when a man in the audience began a question: "Now. sir, I've a school in my ele"?the candidate did not let him get any further. "Pardon me,'1 he interrupted, "you really ought to see a doctor if what you say is true, because you ought only to have one pupil." Not F. 0. B.?The motorbus stopped, and the conductor looked earnestly up the steps, but no one descended, and at last he stalked up impatiently. "'Ere, you," he said to a man on top, "don't you want Westminster Abbey?" "Yes," was the reply. "Well," retorted the conductor, "come down for it. I can't bring it on the bus for you." Associated With Death.?"When I was a boy," said the gray-haired physician, who happened to be in a reminiscent mood, "I wanted to be a soldier; but my parents persuaded me to study medicine." "Oh. well," rejoined the unsympathetic druggist, "such is life. Many a man with wholesale aspirations has to content himself with a retail business."?Stray Stories. Merely An Epidemic.?"You criticise us," said the Chinese visitor," "yet I see all your women have their feet bandaged." "That is an epidemic," it was explained to him gently, "which broke out in 1914. Those are called spats." ?Pittsburgh Post. I neory uiscrranca.? i?tu> nier?Yes, this is better weather now. S?>me people think all the rain we had a little time ago was caused by the firing of heavy Runs in ItelRium. hressfitter?I don't see how that can be, for I remember we mostly had very fine weather during the South African war.?Punch. A Militant Wife.?"I>oe.s your wife show any interest in the war?" "Yes, indeed. She talks about it." "What does she say?" "Why, she says that she wishes I could ro."?Tit-Pits. FACT, FASHION AND FANCY Paragraphs Calculated to Interest York County Women. Scalloped and piped edges on skirts and jackets have much to do with the charm of the present fashions. This revival is a pleasant one, as it adds a piquant note of contrast to a costume. * * An excellent way to keep ornaments from marking a highly polished table or piano is to paste soft blotting I?aper on the bottom. No matter how often they are moved, they will neither mark nor scratch. Stains on the hands can be easily removed by using salt and lemon juice. Put a little heap of salt in a iHifflniont lpmnil JSlUCCr UUU ?^urr*ju ouiuv*v?t? ? juice into it to moisten it. Rub this on the stain until It disappears, then rinse the hands in clean warm water. When you are frying in deep fat, test the heat of the fat with an inch square piece of bread. When it browns in two minutes the fat is hot enough for uncooked food, and when it browns in one minute it is hot enough for cooked food. Lizette wafers: Mix a cupful of peanuts, ground fine, with enough mayonnaise dressing to spread easily. Spread on Saratoga flakes, cover with meringue made of beaten white of one egg and one teaspoonful of sugar. Place in oven and brown. Serve hot with Creole salad. Potatoes should, of course, be served Immediately when done, but when, for some reason, delay is unavoidable, try this method of keeping them fresh. Thus, as soon as done, drain them carefully and shake the pan over the fire, until they are both dry and mealy. Then stuff a clean towel closely into the top of the pan and keep in a warm place. This cloth will absorb all the steam, so preventing sogginess. * An old-time antidote for alcohol, opium, prussic acid, strychnine and all poisoning is that of a heaped-up teaspoonful each of common salt and ground mustard stirred quickly in a glass of warm water and swallowed at once. This will cause instantaneous vomiting. When the vomiting ceases, swallow the whites of two eggs and then drink freely of strong coffee. m m m All beds should be stripped before breakfast and placed where they can get plenty of air and, if possible, a little sun, too. Mattresses should be half turned and allowed to stand in a draught, so that the air will play around them. Pillows, too, should be treated in the same way if you want to keep them from getting musty. Mattresses should be cleaned and remade every three years if you want them to keep their springiness. It is worth while to buy good mattresses in the first place if you can possibly afford it, as these clean again and again and come up as good as new. Cheap mattresses are not worth remaking and almost invariably get humpy after a year or two's wear. * A linen cushion cover could be very quickly embroidered in white wash silk or flax thread with insertions of cluny lace added. Should a touch of color be desired, the cover might be drawn on over a colored cushion, which would show through the lace. Where a strong color efTect is desired, the cover might be of corn flower blue linen, with nut brown silks for the embroidery, the cluny lace being in a deep tone of twine color, or it might be in lettuce green with white embroidery. The most approved style of edge is a band of its own material cut on the bias. Place a thick sheet of cotton wadding under the cover which you have embroidered. Both the appearance and the feel of the cushion are improved by this treatment. Did you know that: Too many articles should not be put in the hot fat at any one time, or the temperature will be lowered and they will cool the fat. Articles should touch each other as little as possible while frying. Baked beans will be better if they are parboiled before they are put into the pot for baking. When frying, be sure that the fat is hot enough to answer the test before the article is put in. Pieces of stale bread may be saved for Brown Betty pudding, Queen pudding or bread muffins. a ?i 1^ uiiu iisii suuuiu ur iai\cii iiuiii the ice some time before frying or they will cool the fat When separating yolks from whites of eggs, sometimes a speck of yolk slips into the white. To remove this dip a clean cloth into warm water and wring it dry, and it will cling to it at once. The well bred woman is more than particular in the matter of calls? calls of common courtesy, dinner calls, calls of condolence or of congratulation. For the woman of few social obligations there is absolutely no excuse for ignoring the few rules to be observed in calling. Only the woman whose social life is one mad round of entertainments is justified in making her cards serve calling duty without her presence. In a large city women call between the hours of three and half-past six o'clock in the afternoon. If the woman on whom you intend to call has an afternoon at home, always select that day for your call. In the small towns, the suburbs and country colonies, calling is permissible both afternoon and evening, but even a suburbanite does not like to be caught unawares in the morning. ? Are you just the same at home as you are on the streets. Just as smiling and as pleasant and as sweet? Are you just the same at home to your family as you are To the comrades and strangers that you meet in shop and car? Are you just as kind and thoughtful to your children and your wife Ac VAli 'i no to otiwin?ai>n in t Ii i c I every-day life? Are you just the same at home as you were down town today, Just as happy, and as hopeful, just as full of joy and play? Are you just the same at home to the loved ones that need it so. Just as comfort inn and cheering, just as full of fun and flow? Are you just as true and loving: to the ones that need your care As you were to some acquaintance in the hurly-burly there? Are you just the same at home as you were with us tonight In the sparkle of the revel in the glamour and the light? Are you Just the same at home as you are to friend and foe Whom you meet along the highway in < the paths you have to go? i Are you Just as fond and tender to the hearts you owe it to As you are to all the others as they smile and bow to you? GENERAL NEWS NOTES Items of Interest Gathered from All Around the World. An American flag, 150x78 feet in size, was presented to the city of St. Louis, Mo., Monday. Agents of the Italian government are buying an average of 200 horses a day at East St. Louis, Mo. Chester, Pa,, is to have a new ship i building yard, with a capital stock of 81,000,000, and employing 1,500 work- 1 men. Nelson O'Shaughnessy, secretary of the United States embassy at Vienna, ' in V(vw Vnrli Mnnitnv hflvlne ' returned home on cable advice from ' Washington. The Southern Publishers' associa- j tion closed a two days' session at ( Asheville, N. C., Tuesday. W. T. , Anderson of Macon, Ga., is president , of the association. f Governor Major and Speaker Champ Clark worked side by side on the roads | near Jefferson City, Mo., Tuesday, in celebration of Missouri Good Roads day. Up to May 31st, according to an an- 1 nouncernent in London, 13,547 officers 1 and men of the British navy have been killed, wounded or reported missing < since the beginning of the war. < The British house of commons on Tuesday, voted another war loan of 31,'250,000,000, making, with previous sums a total of 34,310,000,000 already ' allowed for war purposes. * ' Speaker Champ Clark has sent out a general invitation to everybody in Missouri to attend the wedding of his daughter, Miss Genevieve Clark, at "Honey Shuck," Mr. Clark's home, on June 30. Congressman Jacob E. Meeker of St. Louis, was arrested at Monett, | Mo., Tuesday, charged with criminal i libel in statements credited to him in a local option campaign preceding an election held Tuesday. ( The Interstate Boon Trail committee , of North Carolina, Tennessee, Vir- ] ginia and Kentucky, and the Daughters of the American Revolution, will j unveil a monument to Daniel Boone at Cumberland Gap, Tenn., on June 30. A report received at Washington < Monday, was to the effect that General Hernandez, one of the Villa officers, Karl K *-vl (1 nr? t\irr\ nora a# Pari Ppaqq I itau iiciu w o v* ??vii v?w supplies, destined for the town of Monclova, where many Mexicans are starving. A party of 25 French aeroplanes raided Karlshrue, capital of the Grand Duchy of Boden, Tuesday, dropping bombs on the city and causing great damage. This was the largest flight yet taken by the French air men. Twenty-three of the aviators returned. The steamship Mexico, arriving at Havana, Monday, from Progreso, Mexico, brought information to the effect that General Oarcilisso, a Villa officer and his staff, were captured by Carranza forces on Saturday, and that all of them were to bo hanged at once. The first $50 gold piece ever authorized by congress, was struck at the San Francisco mint Tuesday. On its obverse side is stamped the head of a laborer and on the reverse two dolphins, emblematic of the meeting of two oceans. The new coin commemorates the Panama-Pacific exposition. The Spanish ambassador at Washington, has announced that Spain has opened her doors to the Jews, and that the iron bars of inequality and disfranchisement which have existed for 400 years have been lowered. American Jews are especially invited to assist in the development of Spain's commerce with I^tin-America. An inventory of the cargo of the German steamship Bayern, which has been interned at Bozzouli, Italy, on the Bay of Naples, since last August, shows that hidden in the double bottom were 14 quick-firers, four cannon, a large Taube aeroplane, the parts of one submarine and 20 cases of gunpowder. The explosives were thrown into the sea. The Bayern was bound from Hamburg to the Orient. Agents of the German government are reported to be making strong efforts to buy certain machine shops in Philadelphia, that are equipped for turning out war material. It is also stated that the Germans are trying to buy the fuse factory that is turning out the fuses for most of the shrapnel shells being made in this country. If the German agents succeed in buying the various plants, they will be closed up, it is said. MUNICIPAL FINANCES 1 Publication of Financial Conditions a Proper Safeguard. Since the shortage has occurred in the treasury of the city of Bennetts-^ ville, we wish to again call attention to the advisability of publishing statements, showing what is done with public funds. The legislature of South Carolina recognized the need for the publication of municipal statements when it passed the following act in j 1912: Section 1. Be it enacted by the general assembly of the state of South Carolina, That all towns in this state of more than two hundred population shall keep an itemized account of all receipts and disbursements, and shall publish quarterly statements in some weekly newspaper in the county in which such corporation is situated, or by posting at some conspicuous place or places in the town. The Marlboro delegation in the legislature had Marlboro county exempted from the provisions of this act. After the passage of the act, it was sent to Gov. Blease on February 2. 1912, for his signature. He did not sign it, but it became law without his signature because he did not return it within three days. It is now the law of South Carolina, but Marlboro and a few other counties are exempt from its operations, and the towns in Marlboro county are not required to render any account to the people as to what they are doing with the money paid to them by the taxpayers. As has been proved time and again the few dollars required to publish statements is money well spent. Hut the law quoted above does not require that the statements be publslied in newspapers. That expense can bo saved by sticking the statement up in the po8tofflce or on a street corner, where it can be seen by at least a few of the people though not near as many as would see it in a newspaper, which is the natural medium for communicating information to the public. Why should Marlboro be exempt from this law??Pee .Dee Advocate. JUNE A BLOODY MONTH Some of the Most Noted Battles of History Fought in This Month. The month of June appears to have been a favorite time for fighting. Many a famous field has been drenched in blood during this summer month. No doubt the same can be said of nearly every other month, for men have fought and nations have fought Bince the world began, and their fighting has been distributed throughout the year. But in glancing over a list of battles and their dates one ? ~ 4 4 ? ----- ? ' ? ? ?# tk* m/trtf k /\# nines me pruuuueuuc ui mc mvuiu ui . June. There are reasons not hard to find why this should be true. Formerly armies were wont to go into winter [luarters. When the freezes and the snows came there was comparativly little fighting. Then in the spring the campaigns were renewed, and June was just far enough removed from winter to allow the armies to be in full strength and free to maneuver. Here are some of the noted battles fought during this bloody month: Bunker Hill, June 17, 1775, and Waterloo, June 18, 1815. f It was also on June 18 that the . United States declared war on England in 1812. The Alabama-Kearsarge battle, inding with the sinking of the famous Confederate warship, occurred June 19, 1864. In our revolution, the battle of Monmouth took place June 28, 1778, ind on the same day In 1776, the battle of Fort Moultrie, at Charleston, was fought. Among our many Civil war events cf June was the capture of Memphis, June 6, 1862; the opening of the seven Jays before Richmond, June 26, 1862; the battle of Cold Harbor, June 1 to 3, 1864; Winchester, June 13-15, 1863: Lynchburg, June 17-18, 1864; Mechanicsville, June 26, 1862; and Gaine's Mill, next day; seige of Petersburg. June 15 to 30. In the war of 1812, the ShannonChesapeake, a naval battle, took place, June 1, 1813, with victory for the British ship. Admiral Blake defeated the Dutch at sea under von Tromp, June 3, 1650. The French took the Mamelon sarthworks at Sebastopol, June 7, 1855, in the Crimean war. June 14, 1645, witnessed the battle jf Naseby, the final defeat of Charles [, by Cromwell; June 14, 1800, was the defeat of Marengo: June 14, 1807, saw the Russians overthrown by Napoleon at Frledland; June 14, 1809, Napoleon beat the Austrians at Raab. At Kolin June 18, 1775, the Austrians lefeated Frederick the Great. June 23, 1755, Lord Clive won at Piassey, the victory recorded as making Great Britain mistress of India. June 25, 1876, Custer and his troops were killed by the Indians on the Utile Big Horn.?Greenville News. ODDS AND ENDS Some Things You Know and Some You Don't Know. One Inch of rain equals 101 tons to ;he acre. The thread of the silkworm is oneihousandth part of an inch in diameter. Nine years ago the Duke of Connaught was made a Prussian field nurshal. A motorcycle street sweeper has jeen invented which gathers refuse uto a sort of side car. Py means of a secret process a French scientist converts flowers, fruit ind even animal tissues into metal. General JofTre only became generalssimo of the French army in 1911 on he refusal of General Pau to accept hat office. An eyeless needle that has been patented is made in two parts, thread neing inserted into the bottom, which s tubular and fastened by screwing )n the point. The Dardanelles are about 33 mile? long. In places they are some four or five miles across, but in one place, the Narrows, they are only 1,300 yards. The average width is about three miles. In New Caledonia heads of infants ire squeezed into different shapes, the races of boys being lengthened to look like warriors and the girls' faces are made oval by pressing up the chin. A German vaccum ice machine for household use does away with the use of dangerous acids and can be operated by hand or a small electric motor. Ernest William Brown, who has been awarded the gold medal of the Royal Society of Great Britain in recognition of his remarkable work on lunar tables, has been professor of mathematics at Yale university since 1907. During the war with the Turks in 1807, Sir John Ducworth succeeded in getting to Constantinople despite the fact that his wooden vessels were assailed by the Turks with stone cannon balls so great that two men were required to roll one of them up a plank. Dr. Yang Ming Feng, special commissioner of the minister of agriculture of China, has arrived in this country to study labor and commercial conditions. He will make an extensive tour of the United States, gathering ideas which will be employed in solving the present difficulties of the oriental government. Alexander Vouras, the new Greek minister to this country, is a man of ripe e\|>erience, a diplomat of ability and endowed with those mental attainments and graces of heart which make for success. He was here five years ago as secretary to the Gre?'k legation at Washington and was for a number of years charge d'affairs. GRASSHOPPERS DESTROY CROPS Cause Famine and Want in Parts of Central America. In the last crop season in parts of Guatemala, Salvador and Honduras, the cliapulins (grasshoppers) wroughf mucn navoc i<> crops ami mis pest, taken in conjunction with an unprecedentedly dry year, caused actual | famine conditions in some sections. particularly In Honduras. Great quantities of corn, beans and rice wece Imported from the United States by U1 of the countries mentioned, and this will continue until perhaps August, when the new crops are available, If the grasshoppers do not appear in great numbers again. This reappearance. It seems, is extremely likely. Millions of the small Insects are reported from various Bections, and Costa Rica, which was comparatively free from them last year, is now genuinely alarmed. Not only are the small ones appearing, but a. dispatch from San Juan del Sud, Nicaragua, on the border, Mny 13, reports a flock of full grown grasshoppers moving into Costa Rica, the flock being at least three miles wide unH hI* miles long. Plans for fighting the insects were the subject of a considerable debate in congress and i planters and business men generally ire very apprehensive: The grasshoppers appear to be working south. Those appearing in Guatemala are from the state of Chiapab, Mexico, and now that they ire in Costa Rica it means an invasion of Panama also. As this is the beginning of the rainy season and the tender young corn is Just getting a start and as the voracious creatures prefer the corn to anything else it would seem that the United States will probably be called upon to assist Tentral Americans with shipments of 'ood for perhaps another crop year. ! This Is Top Dres If you have fertilized lacking in potash, it i Side dress with a fert necessary elements ol Do not make the m (Ammonia) only, suet as well as stalk and f< not only provide amn acid and POTASH. F th Will stimulate the g unfavorable seasonal blight and shed. PRESTO TOP I ROYSTER'S SPI MAGIC TOP D1 Royster top dressers, compounded on scien proper time and in Look for the trade-mi Send postal for b F. S. R( Norfolk. Va. Spartanburg, S. C. At! 1 A Year Without a Summer.?The year 1816 was known throughout the United States as the year without a summer. January of that year was so mild that most people would have let their furnaces go out had they possessed any, and February was only occasionally colder. March and April coaxed the buds and flowers out, and May was a winter month, with ice and snow. By the end of May everything perishable had been killed by the cold, and the young leaves had been stripped from the trees. June 5 They Come Froi ? | Of the Compass 5^ The General Manager of one 1 United States, writing from New h "As we always enjoyed yc x kept house In St Louis, I wo y some here. SEND A CASE. # that the way you spell it?) g k it. Send same on one of tl ? any other boat line sailing t< If You are not drinking LUZIA! r and you will be a convert, just Ilk 5 The QUALITY f 99~ Save I.UZIANNE COUPONS J cles for your home with them. iser Year your crops lightly at planting i is not too late to remedy this, ilizer containing sufficient pre : plant food?Phosphoric Acid,, istake of using a material th< i as Nitrate of >oda. To get th oliage, use ROYSTER'S TOf lonia in quickly available form tOYSTER'; P-DRESSE TRADE MARK REGISTERED. rowth of your crop, increase conditions, and check the t BRANDS Available IRESSER, ... 4. iCIAL TOP DRESSER, 4. RESSER ..... like all Royster Fertilizers, are tific principles: plant-food for right proportions: mechanic; irk on every bag. ook on Top Dressing and name of neares )YSTER GUANO COM Charlotte, N C. Tarboro, N. anta, Ga. Macon, Ga. Montgomery, Ala Baltimore, Md Chewir, everC > was as May. Both snow and Ice were common throughout the month all over the corn belt, and after having planted corn two or three times the farmers threw up their hands. Snow fell ten inches deep in Vermont. The following winter was the hardest the people of the United States have ever known. One had to have a stockade around one's smokehouse.?St. Louis Past-Dispatch. ? A movement has been inaugurated for the erection of a monument to Sheriff Hood of Fairfield. 11 All Points j ? ( of the Biggest Concerns in the York, says: C ?ur Coffee so much while we C uld like to have you ship me 1 I want the "LUZIANA" (is .7 ground with a little chicory in W he Southern Pacific boats, or P j New York." ? NNE COFFEE, brother, try it out, A e this busy New York man. 2 is in LUZIANNE J >, and get beautiful and useful artl- X <-?r> oo ??> <-?*> time, or used fertilizer provided you Top or i portions of all three Ammonia and Potash, it contains Nitrogen le increased fruitage, ' DRESSERS, which i, but also phosphoric S RS 1 I the yield, overcome endency in cotton to i i Ammonia Potash 10. 4. 7.50 250 9. 3. backed by experience: the plant at just the al condition perfect. t Royater Dealer. IPANY, C. Columbia, S. C Columbus, <iu. ' i I' i, hewiest ig Gum hewed Corn-Mad? Use "GETS-IT," It's Sure v Makes Corns Vanish L ike Magic. A hard cap of skin makes up every corn. When you put 2 drops of "GETSIT" on it, it shrivels up and comes right off?and there's your corn?gone by thunder! Simple as taking off your hat! That's why corn-millions have gone wild over "GETS-IT'?nothing like it ever known. Some folks to this Dou't Wut. Tim* "HolWin*." "GETWT" World'* Simplest Corn-Cur*. N*r*r Folk. * day, putter around with bandages, sticky tape, thick plasters, corn "pulling" salves, gouge corn out with knives, snip them with scissors, make them bleed and then howl because they can't get rid of sore corns. Use "GETS-IT." There's nothing to do but apply 2 drops. The work is done. "GET-IT" does the rest No pain, no fussing, no changing shoes, no limping. It never fails. Try It tonight for any corn, callus, wart or bunion. Be sure that you get "GETS-IT" and nothing else. "GETS-IT" is sold by druggists ev- M erywhere, 25c a bottle, or sent direct M by E. Lawrence A Co., Chicago. S 8 HeU Be Here Quite A While ? U?f vmi n nt wniTV. Mrs. Morehouse. He's a wise man and had the forethought to take out an /ETNA ACCIDENT AND HEALTH POLICY. That means my operating fee will be paid and $50 a week ? payable monthly?will be your, as long as he's here. After that, $25 a week until he's well and strong again. That ought to lighten the load. We've hed some pretty pitiful eases in this hospital?men brought nere for weeks at a time without income of any sort Their wives have had to work, their children have been kept from school in order that they might earn a few extra pennies to keep body and soul together. And all this hardship could have been avoided, for it costs very little to >ETNA-IZE Over $13,500,000 have been paid to /ETNA ACCIDENT AND HEALTH policy holders. Write, phone, or call and arrange for YOUR policy today. SAM M. GRIST, Agent, York\1 lie SEWING MACHINE REPAIRING YOUR Old Machine, that runs sc heavily that you dread to use it, can be cleaned up, readjusted and put in such condition that you will be delighted with it, and would as soon have it as a New Machine. The cost is not very great for this work and you will be please! at the expenditure. Better get your m.xchlne In shape now for the spring sewnrg. You'll find me at The Enquirer office. LEWIS M. GRIST. IWThe Enquirer Office has Just received a No. 10 Model Smith Premier Typewriter, Rebuilt, such as sells for $35.00. Will be pleased to have any one Interested In buying a Typewriter, to call ami see this machine. VtTShImP