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Jiunwrou* Jepartmrnt Proficient in "American"?A Frencl soldier m ho came proudly uj< to at American in a certain headquarter) town the other day asked: "You spik French?" "Nope," answered the American "not yet." The Frenchman smiled complacent ly"Aye spike Kngleesh," he said. Th< American grinned una me r rtnciinun looked about for some means to shov his prowess in the foreign tongue. A that moment a French girl, very nea arid trim in her peaked hat, long coa and high iacc<l shoes, came along. Thi Frenchman jerked his head tow an her. looked knowingly at the Arneri can, and said triumphantly: "Cheek en." The American roared. "Shake," hi said, extending his hand. "You don' speak Knglish. You speak American. ?New York < Jlohe. The Eclipse to Order?On the even ing before a solar eclipse the colone of a Oerinaii regiment of infantry sen for all the sergeants and said to them "There will lie an eclipse of the silt tomorrow. The regiment will meet 01 the parade ground in undress. I wil come and explain the eclipse befori drill. If the sky is cloudy the met will meet in the drill shed, as usual.' Whereupon the ranking sergean drew up the following order of thi day: "Tomorrow morning, by order of thi colonel, there will be an eclipse of thi sun. The regiment will assemble or the Kirade ground, where the colone will come and superintend the eclipst In person. If the sky is cloudy thi eclipse will take place In the dril shed."- I'ittsburg Chronicle and Tele' Doubly Lost.?A kind-hearted oh gentleman came upon a small, whimpering urchin. "What's the matter, my little man'." he asked sympathetically, placing hi? hand on the youngster's head. "I'm lost. Hoohoo!" "Ix?st? Nonsense! We mustn't uivi up hope so soon. Where do >011 live?" "I d-don't know, sir?" whined tin youngster. "W-we've Just moved and I c-can't remember the uddress." "Well, what's your name?" "I don't know." "Don't know!" exclaimed the old gentleman. "No," sobbed the urchin. "M-mothoi got married again this morning."? Undies' Home Journal. Had Had Treatment?He was a mine sweeper, and, home on leave, waj feeling a bit groggy. He called to see a doctor, who examined him thoroughly. "You're troubled with your throat, you say?" said the doctor. "Aye, aye, sir," said the sailor. "Have you ever tried gargling it with salt and water?" asked the doctor. The mine sweeper groaned. "I should say so!" he said. "I've been torpedoed seven times."?I "it ts burg Chronicle and Telegraph. The Aggravating Sort.?An agent, approaching a house, nicT aHdttle^boy at the gate and asked: "Is your mother home?" "Yes, sir," said the boy, politely. The agent walked across the long lawn, and, after rapping several times without receiving an answer, returned to the youth, saying: "I thought you said your mother was at home." "Yes, sir, she is," replied the boy. "Hut I have rapped several times without receiving an answer." "That may be, sir," said the boy; "I don't live there."?Ottawa Citizen. Mother-in-law Statue in Doubt.? The exact status of a mother-in-law was brought Into question by an Irishman in New York. He was sending a money order to France. In conformity with a new regulation the clerk asked him If the money was destined to uld the enemy in any manner. The Irishman scratched his head. "Is the addressee an alien enemy?" demunded the clerk. "He jabers, I don't know at nil. at all," was the reply. "It's for ine mother-in-law."?Chicago Tribune. W In a iirst-class compartment of an express train a testy oiu nt-miru,.... was sitting next to a young man who seemed to be in high spirits over something, beguilding the time tlrst by whistling and then by humming. The old gentleman was evidently annoyed and become irritable. At last, when his neighbor burst out with, "1 wish I were a bird," he could forbear no longer, and exclaimed excitedly: "I wish to goodness you were, young man. I'd wring your neck."?Life. Not Responsible?The new maid was a war-time makeshift, says the Manchester Ouardian, and at first the mistress bore with her patiently. Hut on the third day she placed a very unclean dinner plate on the table, and patience broke down. "lteally, Mary, you might at least see that the plates are clean." "Well, mum," Mary rejoined. "I owns to them thumb marks, but that dried mustard was there afore I come." I Thank You.?A young clerk was called before the manager. "Mr. Jones, of late your work has been very perfunctory." Just as he was going to ask for an explanation, the young clerk broke in: "Mr. Smith. I've been working here for three months now. and. though 1 have tried fcy best, that's the first bit of praise I have received. Thank you.' ?New York Sun. Had to Do It.?"What did they dc with that fellow that ditched a train shot a woman and brutally beat three children? Hang him?" . "N'o; he claimed his diplomatic rights." "Why, he proved he'd blown up s shipyard and burned an elevator, anti produced his spy credential^, so thej had to intern him."?LJfe. tr Visitor?Have you ever been bitter by a mule? Muleteer?Have I? Say. mister, the longest time I ever went without get. tin* bit was a week I was in the hospb tal from being kicked.?Punch. Her Guess.?"What is the 'escadrllle' I see mentioned so often in the - war dispatches?" "One of the new war dances, I pre gume."?Oregon Journal. THE MAKING OF AN AIRPLANE ] The Operation is Wonderfully Tedi- I , ojs and Expensive. 1 The time. lal<or and material which j go into t>i?- making of a warplane are s?-t forth bv Lieutenant Colonel Hiram ' Bingham. signal <orps. L\ S. A., in a con-muniratioii to the National Geographic society, a i<art of which Is j made public as the following war geo- : graph y bulletin: 'l>-t me try to depict by a rough i picture a plane in the making. Sup- | l?ose. for instance, you were s<-t to , , driving 4,230 nails and 3,377 screws. , , Undoubtedly that would be quite a task?a total of 7,703 separate operations. Well, when you had reached , 2 I j the S.OoO mark you could truthfully be told that you had done less than two- | thirds of the work of this sort required lor a single airplane. (These figures an for a training plane; for a French 1 battle plane 23,000 snows are said to 1 lie needed.) Somehow a plane looks so ' simph and flouts so graceful) through 1 the air that we lose all thought oi tr.o skill that goes into its making. I One of America'e Air Triumph*. ' "Just recently we have teceived I ' some figures of the material which is < required I'oi one of the simpler train1 - ' I-*.? U..1........ (j.'t INK Hlu"rn> 1 Mmiuii^i , V.I I.I.VI 1 stampings must Ik- cut out. 70S forg' ings cast, and z~<> turn-buckles, all for s a single machine. 1 "Think, then, of the hundreds ol thousands ol such pieces needed for t tin- thousands ol planes in the Ameriif can prop in mine and of how utterly helpless the situation would lie if t those parts were not standardized, i turned out l>v machinery in tens af > thousands, and i sable in scores of di'"I ferent factories on any kind ol plane. Trie reduction of aircraft manufacture ; to th< simplest, standardized, quantity 1 production basis has been one of . America's great triumphs in the air and an achievement which very soon will be making itself felt. ' "Hut metal must be used in an air' plane as little as possible. It is altogether too heavy, especially when a few extra pounds make all the mar' gin in speed between victory and defeat. An engine of 300-horsepower is . in itself enormously heavy to rise In' to the air; so that the rest of the machine must attain the very acme of lightness. I "That very lightness, however, en- ' tails enormous strength and perfect adjustment. Think of the strain which 1 is exerted on every wire and nut. ev- " I cry inch of linen, and every bit of wood as this 300-horsepower median- t ' ism rushes through the air at 150 , miles an hour. Cyclones often do not t go as fast, and we can easily picture | what happens to a strongly built -| house when the air strikes it at that j ' speed. t Tremendous Pressure Withstood. "Hut if the strain is great simply because of higli speed, what must it lie when a plane suddenly careens downward, taking a tremendous pros- ^ sure off one part and hurling it upon , another. It is that kind of sharp, sudden, unevenly distributed shock 1 which allows the slightest tap of a a , knife to crack an egg or the explosion 1 of a depth bomb to crush in the tin- ' prepared side of a submarine. Obvi- 1 ously a plane must lie built so skillfully and of such perfect material as to " ViW3taiiu,vrioffc"onTy the pressure o? the cyclone speed, but also the added '' shocks of its sudden evolutions. ^ "The one material which gives this u double characteristic of strength with v lightness is spruce; not the ordinary " spruce, but a super-selected spruce- | from the giant trees of the Pacific 1 , coast. Few would believe that this ii would present much of a problem e with America's vast resources; but t when one considers that only a small o fraction of the very best spruce Is t usable at all, and that the war has a vastly increased the demand for that, p the difficulty will begin to appear. Let c me explain this In detail. "The ideal trees for airplane spruce r are the fine old patriarchs, scarce p enough at best, which have a girth of j about II feet and run up IfiO feet without a branch. Now when this j( splendid wood Is cut 52 per cent is a throws out at once?the part in the ^ heart where the grain Is too circular t| and the part at the circumference where the grain Is too coarse. About y 10 per cent is culled out for various reasons and another 7 1-2 per cent lost to kiln shrinkage. This leaves ns less (| than one-third of our original wood for further selection. "Of this third, however, only a small ^ tK>rtion is tit for the more delier.le u work. Less than 1 per cent of it has the necessary length and strength for ( ailerons, 2.3 per cent is lit for the t wing beams; 4.G per cent for the long struts, and the same for the lending gear. The balance can only be used ' for ribs and the smaller fittings. s Straining America's Lumber Resources 0 These figures show why America's r vast lumber resources are being strain- c ed to the limit to build our air fleet. They explain also why it has been 1 necessary for the United States to * take over the whole spruce output ns f agent for the combined Allied pro- " gramme and eliminate the ruinous v competition which had prevailed, be- l tween the Knglish, French and Italian d governments." c J + , t r* ?,? j i ;**i? Th? H special investigating committee of the Aeronautical Society of America, which has for several months past been studying the aircraft situation with a view to learning the exact cause for the alleged delays in the manufacture und shipping of airplanes 1 to the jeat of war. made its official report to the society at a public meet1 ing in New York last week. fharges that virtually all state' ments issued by government officials with respect to the execution of the aircraft program had been found to be untrustworthy and should be disregarded and that the very rigorous ( censorship over all matters connected with it had been of no military value, [ were contained in the report of the committee, which also expressed the , conviction that the only purpose of the rigor of the censorship was to pret elude the country from finding out the I character of the official statements. . Accidents in training, while not excessively numerous, were of such a nature, according to the report, as to i indicate that they were in part pre-' ventabje and in part due to Improper > organisation of flying and handling of . machines. The committee, in its re port, als6 asserted that the production of fighting planes was lagging because of lack of co-operation between departments. that the entire system of i production was such that delays would grow with the rate of produc tlon and that the Liberty motors, while doubtless of good design basical y had been discredited by exagger ited claims by high officials of.thi government. GENERAL NEWS NOTES. Record of Current Happenings Col lected from Various Sources. Nearly 4,000.000 pounds of sugar <aid to be a record cargo, arrived a in Atliintic port last week. Itepresentativc* William A. Jones o Virginia, died in Washington last Wed l|" ? ?? r.u vwirs. and hi Jt-uth was th?- seventh among th members of the sixty-ninth congress. The war department has announce! that it has accepted all the chaplain that it can use at present and tha there are a large number on the eligi Ide list. Director (ienerul .McAdoo has issuer jrders commandeering the Erie am New York harge canal. The enna .vlll he extensively used in the move nent of heavy freight. Rev. (i. \V. Calhrith, has been re noved from his charge as imstor of tie Methodist church at Cottage. X. Y, >ecause he preached the doctrine tha ivar never was justified. The .Masonic grand lodge of Xev lersey has |?issed a resolution harrint the use of <Jerman in the ritualistii ,vork of subordinate lodges. All wori oust lie in English. Women are to lie admitted to tlx unhulance corps ol the New York Xaional (Iliaid, and are to he eligihh or promotion to commissioned oficers. (ieiieral tieorge W. Coethals, luiildei f the 1'anaina canal, is to lie placet 11 complete charge of the storage ant rnllic division of tin- army, whicl ontrols all shipments to Europe. In a local option election in New fork stalf ia.si rucsuay, :>> iucusc toini', Schenectady and Amsterdan 'otcd for saloons. Gloversville, Jamesown and Auburn voted dry. .Mrs. Klizabcth Miller ol Camden, X I., on Thursday last gave Idrtli to hei llteentli child. She is 3ti years old ind has been married eighteen years Cleven of her children are living. To eliminate profiteering hy claim igents in settling war insurance hums, the lower house of congies.' wis missed a hill providing that sucli laim agents can only charge a inaxiuum lee of $3 for preparing the necssary papers. Two liundred and fifty-thousand ons of ships to he bought and chartred from Japan, probably will be used o bring 30U.000.00U tons of wheat rom Australia to the United States, 'he United States will buy the wheat irovided it can work out a plan for rans|K>rtation to America and to its lilies. NEWTON'S IDEA OF GOD Vhat the Great Scientific Mind Thought of its Creator A reader, referring to something hat I said about the Almighty in an rtiele describing man's place in the iniverse, writes me a letter in which te demands, in what seems a defiant one: "Who is God? What is God? Where s Uod ?" 'In* ftk'dfla"fffl?'on~ this smashing voley of questions I happen to recall what Or Isaac Newton wrote on the subject f God, in a most unexpected place, toirit, the close of his incomparable i'rineipia," or "Mathematical ITineiilcs of Natural Philosophy," of which *a place, the great French mathematical genius, said that it- was "premiuent above all the other productons of the human intellect," while f Newton himself It has been averred hat he was "the greatest man who ppears in the history of science, and lossibly the greatest Intellect that has ver worked on earth." And it occurred to me that my corespondent might be more Impressed y what so great n mind as that of Cewton thought about*God than by nything that 1 could offer on the tubed, particularly since Newton covered II the three points of inquiry, viz, the etsonality, the nature, and the localon of God. in a "general scholium." at the end f his mighty masterpiece of mathematical reasoning. Newton says of the olar system and the systems of the Lxed stars that they could only proeed from the "counsel and dominion f an intelligent and powerful Being." 'hen he goes on to develop his idea f God. in measured sentences that are ike a magnilicent song of praise, urstlng unexpectedly upon the ear as he reailer emerges from the stern, ry logic of the preceding demonstraions. Its beauty is enhanched by the onorous Latin In which Newton, acording to the practice of the learned uen, of his time, put forth the "Prinlpia." "This Being," he says, "governs all hings, not as the soul of the world, iut as Lord over all. The Suireme God is a Being?eternal, intilite, absolutely perfect The rard of God usually signifies Lord, >ut every lord is not a God. It is the lominion of a spiritual being which onstitutes a God. And from Hie rue dominion is a living, intelligent and powerful Being, and from lis other perfections that He is su reme or most perfect. He is eternal .nd infinite, omnipotent and omnicient; that is. His duration reaches roni eternity to eternity. His presence rom infinity to infinity; He governe II things and knows all things thai re, or can be done. He is not eternty or infinity, but eternal and infinite: le is not duration or space, but He ndures and is present. He enduree orever. and is everywhere present, md by existing always and everywhere le constitutes duration and space. * "In Him are all thingB contained md moved, yet neither affects the ither. God suffers nothing from the notion of bodies; bodies find no reistance from the omnipresence ol 3od. As a blind man has no ides >f colors, so have we no idea of the nanner by which the all-wise God terceives and understands all things !e is utterly void of all body send >odily figure, and can, therefore, nciher be seen nor heard nor touched lor ought He to be worshiped undei he representation of any corporal hing. We know Him only by His mosi vise and excellent contrivances ol hlngs, and final causes. We admin ilm for His perfections, but we revernee and adore Him on account of Hli lominions, for we adore Him and Hli lervants, and a God without dominion >rovldence and final causes, is nothng else but Fate and Kkture. Blind netaphysical necessity, which is cer> . tainly the same always and every? where, could produce no variety of things. "All that diversity of natural things which we find suited to different times and places could arise from nothing * but the ideas and will of a Being necessarily existing. But by way of aliegory, God is said to see. to speak, to t laugh, to love, to hate, to desire, to give, to receive, to rejoice, to be angry, f to flght, to ffame, to work, to build; . for all our notions of God are taken s from the ways cf mankind by a cere tain similitude, which though not perfect has nevertheless some likeness, j And thus much concerning God, to K discourse of whom from the appeart ance of things does certainly belong . to natural philosophy." I have quoted so much from XewI ton, not only because of the intrinsic , importance of what he says, but beI cause the "Principia" is not a familiar hook to many persons, while the ideas of such a man must possess a perpetual interest. People who think that science, since Newton's day, has de molished God, are fatally In error. ' Heading only portions of Newton's argument above, some might imagine that God was identified with what ' modern science calls the ether or with '' that all-pervading thing called electriclty, but Newton had no such pan' theistic meaning. He insisted upon God as a Being containing, control' ling nature by His will and providence. If Newton were to visit the world to' day I see no reason to think that he would essentially change his opinion.?Garrett l\ Servlss in Charleston American. I ! JUST GOT OVER A COLD l,ook out for kidney troubles and , backache. Colds overtax the kidneys , and often leave thein weak. For weak kidneys?well, read what a York woman says: Mrs. H. Kapoch, Cannon Mill, says: . "I can always recommend Doan's Kidney Fills, as they have helped me I whenever I have needed a kidney medicine. Three years ago I caught cold and it settled on my kidneys and my whole body netted ami pained. I don't k low what part of my body pained tie the most, because I suffered terribly all over. Headaches bothered me and nervous s|m lis often were so severe, I was all unstrung. <>n top of that, dizzy spelis came on and I fell tired and languid. My kidneys didn't work at all as they should, and I was annoyed on that account. I bought Doan's Kidney Pills at the York Dnin I Store, and it wasn't lontr before i was entirely cured of all those complaints." I fite at all dealers. Poster-Millburn Co., Mfsrs., Muffalo, N. Y. . : One Hundred and !| of Labor and Str THE An < | I battles f government ! j i years ago. J <JAt that b t their realizatk " U' lf T the goal tow j | was vague ar ; I struggled oew J' grew clearer i to its significai gjes and their J! priceless Ante |! The inane- qlw ^ , ! .Hate need structure so I is the invest- dred and fort :: ment of our *wedo of our-energ money in situatioo whic j: LIBERTY p*0*- 11" ! > ?no matter BONDS! the cost may I I MWMVMmg This Space PaM Fo FIRST BAPTIST CHU: WRg I V fn I A CaNImk*? r\44ar> i n ouiuici 9 wiiw.ii heart Is naturally that save him m and greatest enJc ; duly. ! The Flaw I : i truing for the ^oldirrs Working Every Day. The locai Kvd Cross workroom will be open every afternoon, except Monday and Saturday, from four to six (i to 6), o'clock for making surgical dressings. Some one who studied this work will be in charge each day. All who wish to help w ill be welcomed any day. Bring your own scissors and wear wash clothes or an apron and bring a cap or anything to cover the hair. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA County of York. COUBT OF COMMON PLKJLB J. T. Crawford. Plaintiff, against Joe I'uatlis, tiruklvy Castles, and Will Castles, Defendants.?Summons for It. lief?(Complaint Filed.) To the Defendants Above Named: Yl'L are hereby summoned and required to answer the Complaint in this action, which has this day been filed in the Office of the Clerk of the Court of Common 1'leas for the said County, and to serve a copy of your Answer to the said Complaint at his office in York, South Carolina, within twenty days after the service hereof, exclusive of the clay of such service; and if you fail to answer tinComplaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in tile Complaint. Dated March 18th, A. D. liilS. J. S. HKICK. Plaintiff's Attorney. NOTICE To Will Castles, minor defendant, (above the age of fourteen): l'leiise take notice that unless you shall in the meantime procure tint appointment of a Oiiardian ad-lltem. the Plaintiff will on tin- 20th day after the service oi this Notice upon you. exclusive of the day of such service. :it 1t> o'clock A. M.. on said day, or, as soon thcrcaflcr as Counsel can he liranl, apply to John 11. Logan, Clerk of this Court, at his ollice in York Court House in County and State aforesaid, for an Order appointing some suitable person tiunrdian adlitem for you, the said Will Castles, and instructing such (Stinrdinn when ap|toinicd to appear and defend the action in your behalf. York. S. 0. March, ISth, 191S. J. & 1IIUCE, Plaintiffs Attorney. NOTICE To the absent defendants. Bradley Castles and Will Castles: Please take notice that the Complaint, together with the Summons in the above cause I was Hied in the office of the Clerk of Court of Common Pleas for County and State aforesaid, at York Court House, on the 19th day of March, A. 11). 191S. ; j. s. lmicK, Plaintiffs Attorney. ! 29. t. 3t. I Forty-Two Years j nggle j nerican people fought their first Jj or liberty and the rights of self one hundred and forty-two I I I me, and for many years thereafter, j ? of their national aspirations and of i ard'which they were reauj" td indistinct But step by step u ard and upward toward a light which * is their eyes and minds slowly opened J ace. Today, as a-result of their Strug- j S3 CI III CO, WC |WCW auu uw lican institutions. ! < < titutions must be preserved. Use aboriously reared in these one huo- < y-two years will be utterly destroyed J spring to its defense with every atom ! and determination. This is not ft < h may be tnfled with, or evaded, or j one which mutt be met now?today \ what sacrifices it may entail, or what ! be. *? 4 r and Contributed By * hvwhiww| RCH OF YORKVILLE. t?\/universal ^gKY military 'I i a service iW ?um na to bis^^Weet> the sweetmeat lost refreshment lyment when on or Lasts map#CO IN (ecs> tbebowita i? Jffl FIRST NATIONAL BANS BilAHO.N, S. U ? Member Federal ReuerTe System ? LJUKKTY BONDS? THIS WEKK?APRIL $TH?a nev campaign to float $3,000,000,000.00 o Liberty Bonds will be started. We ari hopeful that our people will be mon liberal buyers of this issue than o the bonds prcriously issued. The w& will continue for some time yet. Bu w.. Ml'ST and we WILL, win. To car ry it on. Uncle Sammy MUST hav< money. Western Farmers promise ti be heavy buyers of these bonds, ant special efforts will be made to induci Southern Farmers to buy, because i is believed that the S'uthern Farmer will get more for their products thL year than ever before. Consequent!; they will have more money than ever Lend some of your money to Uncli Sam by buying Bonds. It is an abso lutely SAFE Investment Uncle San will pay you back, and if he ahouh get to the place where he can't pay the money that YOU might have pah for bonds won't be of any value ti you. Help Uncle Sum to win witl your money and More FOOD CROPJ and make what You have worth More J..S. HABTNESS, Cashier The Bank of Glovei CLOVER. S. C. EVERY BUSINESS DAY THIS BANK IS HERE TO SERVE YOU. That's our business and oui pleasure?Serving nther Peoplegiving them the very best of Banking Serviie from the smuiitst ueiun on ui t<> your most important financial proposition. deposit youk moxky here It will be SAFE. and being on deposit here will help vou to protect yoursell against careless spending?the dribbling away of money as money will dribble away when you carry it in your pocket. And then another service that this Hank will render you is (hat it will keep a close account ol your funds?At least Once in Each Month You will know Just what you have paid out by Checks and how much you have to your Credit, and then too the Hank Way is the Correct Husiness Way. Come and see Us. JAS. A. PAGE. Cashier. CANE SEED We have SUOAR DRIP, ORANC.E and EARLY AM HER CANE SEED If You are a wise farmer you will sow a considerable quantity of those Cuih Seeds for Roughness and for Syrui making. You'll need the feed and you can sell the .Molasses that you do not need for your own personal use. Buj Your Seed ut Onc?>?Supplies ore not over-nhundaiit. feeikstuffs? After you have tried all other feedf for dairy cows, if you want the feed that will produce the milk and butter feed your cows SPARTAN DAIRY c,RAINS?the Perfect Balanced Feed for Dairy Cows. Feed your Horses and Work stock PURINA Feed. It goes further and stocks cat It up cleaner. See us. FERGUSON & YOUNGBLOOE EAT AT JOHNS' When You are In town and want to EAT, Just remember JOHN'S Place, I can furnish you with Just what you want and cooked the way you want it, and you'll find that my prices are Jusl as reasonable as can be made under eXlNllIlK CUIIUIIIUIIB. ICS, lit uc to have you eat with me at any time FRUITS r -'Usa.JgJpepiber. Pl?y^4hat I_ oarry < u . If you *?.... dies. I have them. 'andies, I have them. i? See me for Nuts, Chewing < ?. Soft Drinks, Cigars, Cigarettes, Tobaceos. Smoking and Chewing, cte. Yorkville Candy Kitchen IOII\ DFMAS. I'roit. IN} / The merchan in other commm being equal, so I i- t quiremems irom intended as an i undersigned mei your needs at h< Each of the i to participate in say, "Bargain! A better or moi anywhere than that rhantc and thev wi Ill VU?UI?WJ WHO ? ? j APRIL 25th. A.FRIEDHEIM&BR DIEHL-MOORE SHO W. H. HOPE MERCA S.W.PLYLER EL1AS BROS. ROCK HI] 1 r* *&? W2W+ :! Clifford 5* ; $ OF NEW if AT WINTHROP Cfi j i * Matinee and Nij t < 8 * Afternoon Mi " I Two IV e + - * "THE BISHOP'S ;i? Drama in one act adapt J "Les Miserablcs" ! J "DOCTOR BY . + Famous coin ,3 KVKN'IXC! AT 8 (' r f, "THE RO JJv I. X ' m For cadi pcrformant . 1 ; ?| General Admission. 50c - * m AA** +A*? +A*? t ??????? ' REAL ESTATE MORTGAGE LOAN 1 T ON'G term. Interest rate: 6 pi [ cent or 7 per cent, depending u | amount and time wanted. 3 to 1 , >ears given. O. B. Sl'ENOEK, Attorney. ! WANTED I 'FWKNTY-PIVE more girls in oi Sewing llooms. Nice, clean worl We learn you how to sew, and pa you while you are learning. You cn . do your hit by helping to mai i-ioiiirw for the soldier boys. Con quick, or write the SOUTHER MAXUFACTURIXO CO.. Cheater. S. < W The Enquirer solicits orders ft ' all kinds of llluli (irade Comincreh ' Stat ionery?14-1 tor lleuds. |{||| I lead ' Statements Envelopes, Fir. li^g. THIRD . ,tP The greal ! ^ \ Our sons; i \ > Our dolla: Every Man, .Woman an can, should buy a IJHF.ItTY ^ erwlse a siuall one. There is no risk in tlie I iioinls pay I 1*1 I'er IVn In business transactions , They are ns acceptaldc Itself anil no Bank will refuse t You tan make your p county for eush or on easy I application: 21) |>er cent oil > |s r cent on August IS. All genuine Americans a roMpeetlvc alillltles^^_^_a^_ " .s YOU1 s your TJDTJH jicjaj ? YOK I'hiiirnuu VITA T ts of Rock Hill do lities to trade with long as they can i the home mercha invitation to trade rchants whenever y omeindersigned merch; ?nnn ad nAV uv/LLnn i/n 19 >ay" on THURSM re up-to-date class of g< carried by the undersi II be attractively displa; 0. EFIRD'! ECO. MM NTHECO. R.W.C1 CLOUD THE HI LL r SOUTH ( i WW WW WW WW evereux 4 YORK CITY I ILLEGE AUDITORIUM I ght?APRIL 26TH ! j V itinee,15 o'clock? * normalises: *. t ! CANDLESTICKS" it A ed from Victor Hugo s * and & t COMPULSION" + edy by Molicre. $ >'CLOCK: ? iMANCERS" t tost and. 4 e?Matinee and Night: .J Reserved Seats, 75c. ? S +a*? +A** +Av? +A*? +A*?? >?* 8 | our ACCURACY [0 QUALITY SERVICE ?1v? you "WELL FITTED GLASS xr 'y T. A. W. ELMGREN ill j* OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN X 1207 Hampton 8t., Columbia, South Carolina s W in# tnquiror wwmnim - ? for Commercial Stationary. I LIBERTY LOAN generous our dollars ter security for our sons. ^ ire American by preference rs must be no less so. i<l Child In Amerlea, who powiihly HON IV?u liig our if possible; otlin vestment, hjhI there Is no Haeriller. t Interest. lliejr are as negotiable as eurniwy. at fuiv value for <*olluteral aa gold i loan to In- secured by Homls. , urt-liusr through uny llunk in Uie ] installments, ft |ier eiiit cash with lay 28; |nt cent on July 18; 40 re buying Homls to the limit of their It help, ami tlie sorurity of your life ~ future Helf-res|M>ct depends upon 'Y LOAN COMMITTEE >K COUNTY i \v. h. moohi: J. Hf itiui^-:' 81'KXCKR ION not expect people them, all things supply their rents, and this is with any of the ou cannot supply ants has agreed " or we might 1 lY, APRIL 25th. >ods will not be found gned Rock Hill merged on "Dollar Day," > DEPT. STORE 1 DRY GOODS CO. RANFORD COMPANY DRY GOODS CO. B . CAROLINA SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSM 3 ' .. .. ;> x M > v J