Yorkville enquirer. [volume] (Yorkville, S.C.) 1855-2006, October 31, 1919, Page Page Seven., Image 7

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I FACT,FASHIO | Paragraphs That Ai I Interest - What Women are Doing. r- Mrs. S. E. Cox. who recently completed an aerial trip from Houston. Tex., to Buffalo, N. Yu lays ctyini to making the longest aerial cross country flight'of any woman in this coun* try. While the plane "was piloted l?y ? nrinnt Mrc . PnY ist J an MI nij Hvuivtmnk ? *( v _? thoroughly competent herself when tho occasion demands?-President Polncare, of France, has promised to have placed in the archieves of the government a - great American petition demanding the protection o{ women under international law and signed by 40,000,000 members of women's organizations throughout this country. ? In thp Philippine Islands there are at least a half dozen women lawyers, any number ofv female physicians ana nurses, a good many pharmacists and a' large body of teachers. ? At the present time there are thirteen foreign countries In which women may vote in municipal or other local elections, and twenty countries or states including the United Kingdom, where women may vote for mem^ bprs of the provincial state or national legislative body. ? Only in the last twelve or thirteen ' . years have women entered the business world in Porto Rico. One of the first women who worked there went from this country thirteen years ago. Now it is almost as usual tjjerc for girls and young women to go to work as it is for them to do so here. ? Dr. Etta Gray, of Los Angeles, president of the. Medical Women's National Association of which the American Women's Hospitals forth Jhe war and reconstruction committee, has % been sent to Serbia and the Near East i to investigate conditions and to arrange for the establishment of hospitals ivhere most needed. ? Women and children do most of t the ruling and governing affairs on the Eskimo-inhabited Little Diomede, one , of the Diomede3 Islands that are cut i In two by the international boundary | line across the Behring Sea between Alaska and Siberia. ? The women of Persia are still bound down by a host of conventions that would give pause to a Spanish duenna. She must be veiled jyhercvcr she, goes, is not allowed 10 eat with her husband and not supposed to be seen unveiled by any other man save her very near relatives. mi>i' * < Meat Scraps Necessary. One of the most significant fact in , feeding fowls for egg production, as ' brought out by experiments at the Ohio Experiment station, is that rations containing approximately 12 per moo t wrra n rlnnrojisr* thA mat nf feed under present market prices more than 20 per cent, and increase the egg production more than 50 per cent, as compared with a ration containing only 2 per cent, of meat scrap. This comparison has held true with botn the light and heavier breeds of poultry. A ration in which the grain mixture was made up of three parts corn and one part wheat and thtf dry mash t mixture of two parts by weight ground corn, one part bran and two parts meat scrap has given satisfactory results. The fowls consumed twice as much grain as#mash. ? A net return of $2 a hen over a four \ months period is the remarkable rec- I ord of a North Carolina poultry club ; member who, about the middle of January, mated fifteen White Leghorn hens with a standard bred male of the same variety. During the ensuing four months these fifteen hens laid . 1,108 eggs. Of this number fifty were J placed in the incubator, from which forty-one chicks were hatched and all I'ALtJH 1IVU ?CIC 1UIOCU. i lit V ?' IIV1 marketed six cockerels for $3.60. He now has on hand thirty chicks. He sold 304 eggs for hatching purposes ^ for $30.50, as well as 545 dozen market eggs for $20.07, making a total income from his small flock of $54.80. The cost of feeding the tiock during this time was $21.40, which leaves a net return of $33.40. o ? To ~ By Lillian datlln To have had no boyhood and not to resent it; To have gone hungry and not to have begged or stolen; ** To have been in dire need and not to have succumbed to temptation; To have faced and weathered adversity and not to have become warped, by it; k To have lost one's foothold many times and to have remained courageous; To have seen others profit by short cuts, yet to have remained honest and not to have grown bitter or cynical; * To have clung to hope and -determination and not to have drowned tn g> <1 poi'l/pv BUl-IUCl} , To have kept one's self-respect | shining brightly: To have achieved good fortune and recognition without permitting one's ego to become inflated; * To save others from heartbreaking ! experiences rather than to desire so- i called satisfaction by seeing them ( suffer: To sljare: to be an exponent o? the i law of compensation: To meet the present by peering into the future and giving an upward lift-! Jng hand to the younger generation: ' Hand fancy ! ? 1 e of More Especial | j Women | to deliberately bore d/wn through the strata of accumulated years, locate the springs of boyhood, and to let them well up bubblingly into one's middle age? That is virile manhood ' " Coat Suit6 Awkward Indoors. Nobody can dodge tho difficulty of managing a coat suit, if one must wear it both in the open and under the roof. It is not neccsnary to recount to women the vexation of having to remove a coat in the house because ol tjie warmth to reveal a wash blouse la ma* o rwl enm/i^lmno nnf Uiav * '3 UUV liVO"!* UIIU WVI*?V ?1V? clean. The way out of this problem Is the colored blouse, and until all the women acpept it there will always be a question raised as to the serviceability oi a .coat suit as the mainstay of a winter wardrobe. The French tailors advance the colored or white silk jersey blouse with a short peplum below the waist. The American tailors advocate a blouse tlic color of the suit with a white or cream collar a blouse that does not tuck in unil,er the skirt belt. If one wears such a blouse, there is no difficulty! in removing the coat at tbc theatre, at a restaurant or at any public place. These blouses are often embroidered with bullion threads; they are partly chiffonr they havo an ornamental belt, and they form, with the skirt a fwJGj. '"J * * Pumpkin Pie. Pastry. 1 cupful of flour, i tcaspoonful of salt, 2 -teaspoonfuls of baking powder, 4 tablcspoonfuls of shortening, i cupful of Cold water. Sift the dry ingredients together; rub In shortening; very lightly with finger tips; add water slowly, just enoifgli to make a stiff dough; roll oqt on a floured board and use for bottom crust of pic, beihg careful to fold the pic way over the edge of pie plate. Fill plate with following and bake aboui twenty-live minutes: 2 cupfuls of stewed and strained pumpkin, 2 cupful3 of rich milk, or part cream, 1 teaspoonful of cinna mon, J teaspoonful of ginger, 3 cupiui of granulated or brown sugar, J teaspoonful of salt, 2 eggs. Mix In order given. ! Filled Cookioa. One-third cupful of shortening 1 cupful of sugar, 1 egg. 4 cupful of milk, 1 teaspoonful of vanilla. 3J cupfuls of four, 4 tcaspQonfuls of baking powder, 3 teaspoonful of salt. Cream shortening: add sugar, beaten egg, milk and vanilla. Add the flour, which has been sifted with the salt and baking powder. Roll out thin on a slightly floured board; cut with a cooky cutter and place one teaspoonlut of the filling 6n each cooky, cover with another cooky, press the edges together and bake In a moderate oven twelve to fifteen minutes. Filling. J cupful of chopped raisins, J cupful of chopped figs, h cupful of sugar, 4 cupful of water, 2 tcaspoonfuls of flour. Mix flour and sugar together: add water and fru:c, and cook until quite thick, being very careful not to burn. * * Wash it in Sunshine. 1 Few housewives know the cleansing value of sunshine. They know the good effect of sunshine on themselves and their children. They know thai if baby has had an outing in the sunshine he is rosy and good naturcd. They know too that their own spirits aro brighter and life seems pleasanter wlier. they have spent a row houis in a rooui where the sun has been shining. But that sunshine can actually be something that is Just as valuable as soap and almost as valuable as water in that eternal task of the housewife?keeping things clean?they seem sometimes to forget. No housewife likes t Have gouu woolen blankets washed more often than is necessary. And there is little need ordinarily in washing them provided they arc given a good sunning once every week or ten days. This cannot in any way injure the blankets. To, be sure, we are warned not to hang woolen things when wet after a washing in the direct sunlight, but that is because the combination of sunlight and water is rather too much for themBut the sunshine alone can do no harm. And it docs much good. It makes them fresh and actually gives them a sweet scent that is apparent to the one who uses them after they have had such a sunning. Especially sweet is the effect of this sunning if it has been given one a day when the air is dry Vnd crisp besides. All beddings should be occasionally sunned. This applies to mattresses and pillows too. In the house where there Is a baby much attention should he paid to the value of sunshiRe. Baby's pads and mattresses should be hung out in the sun as often as there is a sunshiny day. Even the sunshine on your lounges should be Riven a sunshine bnth once in a while and it is a good thing if once in a while you can have heavy upholstered furniture rolled on the veranda and brushed and then left to be sunned for an hour or so. H Getting a divorce in Canada costs so much that it is proposed to establish numerous divorce courts in the provinces so as to place divorce within reach of the poor. * STATE NEWS IN BRIEF < \ ??? i Items of Interest From All Sections of ? South Carolina. } ? J. I<\ Wise, member of the hi/use of representatives from Charleston county has sent his resignation to the clerk of J 1 tho house. ? Annie McCall and Lizzie Smith, colored women of Greenville, were . killed in that city this u'eck when they were struck by a freight train. ] ? Contracts for fifty miles of Ander* j son's improved highways , were let ? Tuesday nftcrnoon in Anderson' to the i Newell Contracting Company, main 1 offices of which arc located in Bir- i mingjuim, Ala. The roads will cost I $5,500 a mile. . . . ,1 , . * * K.'f ? Resolutions against "the I. "W. W." 2 and the National Association for the ( Advdheoment of Colored People and tho election of eighteen delegates! to * the Minneapolis national convention 1 were the closing events of the state 1 convention of the Legion held In Co- 3 lumbia, this week. ^yYawrenct Brownlee, of Due Wept, Is'in a critical dbnditlon in the Anderson county hospital suffering from hiccoughs brought on by an operation for nppendicitls, when the ether is supposed to have given him' hiccoughs, which hiccoughs the doctors have been unable to stop. ? Mrs. J. II. "McAMster, a young 1 bride only 19 years of age committee} ( suicide in Greenville, last Friday by j swallowing a half douen bichloride I tablets. She didn't toll anybody why J shb killed herself so'far as is known. , She had been married a month and ) before her: marriage wau a clerk In ; Woolworth's in Anderson.. \ ?'Calvin Casoidy, white farmer of 1 Patrick is in jail at Wlnnshoro, charg- | cd with the murder of Will Poison,'also s white. It is alleged that the two men became involved in a difficulty which | resulted in Cassidys* cutting Poison | with a knife inflicting wounds from which he afterward died in a hospital at Hamlet, N. C. ? The Record Publishing Company ] of Columbia, publishers of the Cor i htmbia Record has paid a judgment of ] ?8,000 awarded to former Lieut. .Governor Andrew J. Bethea by a jury last summer in the libef suit brought by 1 Mr. Bethea because of alleged incor- , root statements made hv the naDer In 1 an article having to do with Mr. | Bethea'a tfnr record. The" paper also 1 paid interest on the amount from the i date the judgment was rendered and J also the court costs. i HOPE OF RELIEF Additional Freight Cars Arc Promisod i to South Carolina.- J Immediate relief for the shortage of I freight cars existing in South Carolina j is promised by the United States Rati- l road administration according to u ( statement madc' by Frank W. Shealy, < chairman of the South Carolina Rail- i road commission: While at the conference of the Na- i tional Association of Railroad and Utility commissioners, held la6t week at Indianapolis, Ind., Mr. Sliealy took ! the situation with Max Theland, direc- i tor general of public service, who promised to have cars sent into the territory after consultation with Region Director Winchell at Atlanta. According to Mr- Theland, said Mr. ( Shealy, there was a surfeit of empty I box cars in the west, sent there to | handle the grain harvest, which arc 4 standing idle on the side tracks of the . railroads. These cars have some defect, such as holes in the flooring or leaky roof, and are not for the hauling of grain, but will do all right for the transportation of cotton, cotton seed and lumber, sucli as are piling up in the south through lack of car3The freight car shortage has been acuto in the southeastern territory, particularly South Carolina, for some time, and the South Carolina commission has made many efforts to have this condition rectified. The shortage is particularly felt now, as fanners In every part of the state are selling their THE BEST GROCERIES d .* ' f ' That is exactly the kind of Groceries we sell?that is why we sell them. Our trade expects good Groceries from'us. Our stock is fresh and we olwntrc nnrlnnvriv in mnlrPi UIHUJUVUUVU.VA V~ - our prices fair and reasonable. Our service is dependable and prompt. When you want something to cat, remember us. SHERER & QUINN "Everything to Eat" 4 CANDIES-' We are offering our Rood IlomoMade CANDIES at ?0 Cts. the I!>. The kind we used to sell at 4 0 Cts.? The same kind of Candy. Buy a pretty box of tine Candles for THE SWEETHEART, 'PTTI7* i UiJ Hll AJ, THE MOTHEItPound Boxes at $1.25 and $1.50. Half Pound Boxes?50 Cls to 75 Cts.; Other beautiful boxes in various i sizes. We carry Hershey's, Auerbach's and other kinds as well. JUST ARRIVED Brazilian N'uts, Apples, Oranges, Bananas, Spanish Onions. Yorkville Candy Kitchen JOIIX I) EM AS,. Proprietor. / :otton. Froight sheds and the grounds iround freight stations all over the ? itate, say railroad officials, are filled I ,vith<cotton ready for shipment. * F YOU HAltE COMMON SENSE lAT EXTERMINATOR used about x our premises it. is "good night" for als, mice and roaches, especially the ats and mice. C.ommon Sensj Rat iivterJr.inator is a paste poison, and f iftcr the rat gets a good tfisto ot Jt it. \ S all off., with the , rat. It will glvo.na either trouble, as the poison kills It ' it once and then mummifies the cai^- i :ass so that there is no odor left. t " Dozens of opr customers havc.psed Common Sense Rat Extorminator with lomplcte satisfaction to everybody ex- """ :ept the rat. Suppose ybu try it on :our rats and mice. O * YOEK DRUG STORE * f tl TO THE FARMERS- , Possibly you have already thought of T f. I?dt we want to suggest that one way >f insuring iceeplng tenants Is to ha^e "T lomfortabfo tenant houses. Suppose roii see about fixing yours up.now and fet them in shape he/ore1 cold weather x lets in., Seo us for DUMBER and oth r needed materials." We know that ?p ve can givte you ad good service and a? * LrOWl'RICES as you can find anj"vhdre . f V . , B WIIKfT YOU JVANT LUMBER, Rough orDressed, Shingles, _ ftooflng, Laths, Lime, Cement, Paints, C )Us; Glass, Putty, etc., see Os. We aro mre that our prices are RIGHT. LOGAN LUMBER YAM): Pyotie^COTO [ Gins Cotton, Buys Cotton I ! MeaJ and Hulk. Als( I Patent Flour, and Con [ perior. I Also iSells COAL and ICE. I OUR CORN MILL?Has b< ! in First-Class Condit ? have been re-dressed, a I ously improved. Ther( ! had anywhere. ' BRING- US Y6uR?Seed and your w&eat and coi TRY OUR RICE BRAN> for liog feed. { We are selling Cotton J I Cash. j If we do not give absolute s | customers we want to k I YORKVULE COTTON i , 1 KIDNEYS WEAKE* V ??.*/ Kidney troubles don't disappear or 1 themselves. They grow slowly tfut m steadily, undermining health with deadly certaln/y, until you fall a Tie- 01 tim to Incurable disease. at Stop your troubles while there is time. O! Don't wait until little pains become big ai aches. Don't trifle with disease. To fq avoid future suffering begfn treatment H with GOLD MEDAL. Haarlem Oil Capsules now. Take three or four every day until you are entirely free from in pain. M This well-known preparation has been tti one of the natlenal remodles of Hoi- ss land for centuries. In 1(96 the govern* g] ment of the Netherlands granted a tti sp.ecial charter authorising its prepare* ai tlon and sale. th f I MAS I Wmm IT MUST BI have goodrich f tikes an d tubes | . In stock. j . <? ~ Sec 111c for your needs. ;; ' ' r iuinn wallace I 4 >. -j' / > ? <5 gent for Oakland and j; Buick Cars. I! I' . 4 I ARLOAD OF N BUGGIES f t o ust received? ;; he Buggies are right? x he ,Styles are right? i he Pricep are right? | he Tonus are right?' letter see us quick, though, ! j ' 1' ! i ARROLL SUPPLY CO.:; ,r/ J, ^ : ?i * W. O. W- Receipt Books on sal? < i Tlii> RnauirAr office. Mall OrtlorS ' 1 led promptly. _ } 'J I OIL COMPANY |1 > f - r '1 Seed, Sells Cotton Seed '! ! i > makes Best Straight ! [ J: a Meal that has no Su~ j | \ ecn overhauled and put | ion. ^The . mill stones ! j | nd the output tremend- I | i is no better meal to be !: | {t > Cotton to be gihned, 11 ii to be ground. [ ! \ -At $3.50 per hundred !! * . 1 111 14 1 Seed Hulls at $10 a ton, .'! ' ' ' | t i ' atisfaction to all of our j | now the reason why. o i nn rAMDAMV II I viii vvtutmii |: ?NG? r 1 LOOK OUT! ; A? housewife of Holland would al oat aa aoon bo without food aa wl.thit bar yr&mi "Dutch Drops," aa ipbo ,, jointly calls GO LD HEDaL Haartsm II Capsuls*. They restore strength < id are respooalhle In a great measure tr the sturdy, robust health of the ollanderm. - ' , . V I Do net delay. Go to your druggist tfl ' slat on his supplying you with GOLD < ED>AL Haarlem Oil Orpsalea. Take iem as directed. aad IT you are not ktlsfled with results your druggist wtt! adly refund your money. Look fir ie name GOli) MEDAL od the. hey \ id accept no other. la sealed boaeu, , reo sizes. "" '*? .5 Cffisa I haveanyrange that does not embody the | ^B j wonderful new principle B| ] whereby the j^B | Heat Goes All I | ,Around Oven | . I t ^B Ana inatprinciinciop.i- ^ ented and found only in the MASCOT *AiIG& It abaolntely - -4 Mascot Stove Mfg. Co* . < Chattanooga. Teancaaaa 3 RIGHT * THE YORKVILLE' EN * n ' *' ... . a ; .- i * 7 ,.?h " ? < v >1 Reduced Rates of Subsci In 01 * \t ?.? >/ , J. ; i " * >OV/ ' * 'J 1 1 CASH COMMISSIONS r 1 : jifcl' ttfiHMMViA'M 1919,tdN?Wtt I , ' ' f; :*.4< t A >; - ? >' % * ' v.". > ' ' >; . ' With largely'increase - with editorial staff augito supply of white liaper. T1 now more interesting and; ,. been, and it is the purpose further improve it during , i In order that It may be still m N per should have *- much larger clri 6,000 copies per issue, and aavthis in through the co-operative efforts Q paper and know what it' is, wc ar v scribor do what he can to help.swc To individuals the price Of a sjr is 92,60, and to Clubmekers who r< - subscriptions the price for an ahnu OFFER TO CI We have, the following-liberal o . / all conditioned on ttye aame .rulies a ing, Including .. - CLUBMAKErtB ma? fcturn nt understanding tjiat the ClubmaJter tipsy at the rate of 5 cents per weei '/ " ALL^*AME9 MUST BE PAID . DAY, FEBRUARY 14, mo) WOODSTOCK 1 \ '.?v 1 J9' I To tb? Cist maker returning- and'pay i tions by February 14, 1020, we will give i the very'beat visible'writing type machini drcd Dollars In (Wi."" SECOND PBEMU For the .Second Largest Club we will ; ' Thbd Premium, 112 For the Largest dak wr Will * $30.00, or if the winner of the Third Prom instead of She Dinner Set. , , , . . -b?'TWO 42-PIECE ] For the Fourth Largest Club yn will together at $;S>.94).. ,. y' , TWENTY DOI Fc/r the Fifth Largest Club we Will giv< FORTY-TWO PIEjC For the Sixth Largest Club, we will I12A0 Cash. V -? SAME AS For the Seventh Largest Club we wi 112.60 Cash. . "L* i **'. ,-r- t .Vrivwit' >.i\i% ^ TfiR DOtlAII Forvtbe Eighth largest Club we wllj ? eight, dolla For the Ninth Largest Club we.Vlll OTHER Fl . * . V . . , ?** '< * %i . FOR FIVE NAM&S?Three-Bladcd Pi the handle, worth 11.50..' , . . . FOB BIGHT NAMES?Wiihtrd Self-: Four-Biadcd Pocket Knife, with nam* and FOR TEN NAMES?Yaw's SobMrip! Willard. SclfrHlllng Fountain Pea, that r FOR FIFTEEN NAMES?A Thiriy-on FOR TWENTY-nvfi NAMES-A Fo 112.56.; For a leu number than FIVE NAM COMMISSION on aU names over and abt of Premiums mentioned above. THIS IS W Please rcmembet^ That under no Win the paper for LESS thab the Sutacrfption The PoMiihers are boaild net to violate ( ' i r 1*7 ..a ? NEWSUBSC ALL NEW SUBSCRIBERS w> ($2.25) with their subscriptions, w quirer until January 1, 1921', wlthot January 1, 1920. Np EXT] Last year for reasons that Were extension of the tlmf* flaring wfilc club rate^, $2.25 per amTutn. The ary 1 to March 15. this year the) cl ib rtfte of *2.26' Will b4 eontlniifed all. unpaid subscriptions will be )d r tho Bnhnnrintion nrice from then 01 > At the' rate at wfycW the court of w quite possible that the subscription [ ' >3.00 or more'. t ABETTER! Kind words, of commendation Bcribcrs and others who ,are pot >u ' tlon,1 ahd a largefi iclfcvlatlon of T mbhe valuable newspaper , Wo w I. makers, and those who pannot con feel aspufed that their yrorda of cii both by fhe'CiubnlaJiers and publb Our books for the Glub cam pa NOVBMBKIt 1, and closed SATU subscribers who pay the ClubJhalte scriptlons, will receive the paper ehargo for the pbriod previous to 'J L. M. aRKT'S SOS T .ij/T S. L. CO 17RTNEV, Pr?tU?NL \ * . h ! FORBSON v j n* r r ^; .fc ? * , No. 46 Soiith Main r ' * J.'.VTT? QUIKER FOR 1920 i , t*. r I. >' *. . t . r V r l.?: r V' j riptions to Subscribers j ubs. " i ?i <!! > jaitx . < > ,ry,r. ' VV* To trL# .""-i? .1 no,'I: >.< ^ - r " fit 1,W lb Mi btuofijj' rnxm> 4rjrl4il920;'' * -!; V. " *.(>*' gVb' c , 1 - f ,.ii / i>*<. i .iV. a:*'#* [ ' (** f( fdtj J S ' d mechanical facilities, # ,.^1 ented, and aft'dftpifont! te Yorkriile 'Enqtiif e* is ji raluabie than it,lias evpj? *;\ | of the publishers ^ ( >j the year l^Ov < i 1j ore useful to thp public this jwc < culation^soq^ethln^WHe. 4,^Q0t.Qr * j ^ 4 crease caiv bcst be>rolight.About .1 3 f those Tvhp tako afcd. pea<M&? ( o asKi^lK that eacji ,prei?qt u^, vTW *" M 11 the present jpallin* JfcL., ? x > igle subaci iptlon tp Thel^nqulre^ A eturn and, ^ ^or,thre?^r:ina^t . ,j ul subscription ?1 .^MAKSIM? . | Hera to make to CLUBilAKEBjfc nd i^gulations heretofore obtain'-' : imes as they get thexn? with' the ?' reeR0t^btejf9r,?*ch.?hffrtj>^ v*3 c until February 14, \W0, ! | . ^ FOR before ?.00 P. M.,'SATUfc- ~ \ TYPEWRITER ng for-th*-largeet *ate?fecr ef; aubaerig- X i WOODSTOCK TYPEWBITOJ. oaa Z ? on the iparVct, ,at?d 4worth One, Hen- | JM, $50.00 CASH i t-Piece Dinner Set ". .... j -A rive one 11 --pis^s Dinner ^ yahle^ at \ ft iufn prefers he may have $80.00 to cad} - Z 1)1 XXICR SETS X give Two 42?Picee Diner Sett. vnlaed v i iLARS CASH -? ' j i TWENTY DOLLARS. CASH. j E DIXNER SET ! give a 4 J-Picce Pinner Set, valued at j $ ...; ABOVE? ,A ll.give a-42-Piece Dinner Set. vahMfl at' :r A i :'f \\&.:i '? y,Sw-"i.' v'JtfSk'. , 4 18 IX CASH. .Jrtqii* P give Ten Dollars in Cuh. BS IN C^.-r?' .",jk give Eight Dollar* jn Cash. /I I ^ jpmuMS xtort Knife, with' name and address Ih < .... . . " : ; | Filling Fountain P*a. wtoeth ftM. ar '"'1 ! address In the bap** wgrth W4ft ^ v\ i .ion to The ' Yorkvllle Engulrer. or a 1 ! , etails at |8.00. 1 e Piece Dinner Sot. valued at I7.0T - . "v^ [. ' ) 'i ' i\. < \ rty-two Piece Dinner Set that reUtye at , . - * ; " "" L ES, Cash Commission, and. also CASH" '? ,y? iam UU.UW ? 1 [POBTANT V f . *{ '" * *. * 1 * ' \ ) ' * 'if mmiUnccs matt Uu Sakacrlhtr riled ? , { Price advertised for CXltll,fU|'a Ak v '.( I; - i\ IBIPTIOKS j v to ffiv'e the Ciubmakere the Caa? , ill be entitled, to,'receive Tha Bn# J > it charge for the time preyloujl fb tvi CNSION hV-;l ?; -ijt? ,r*. deemed euficient, there wn fn mi# V anVaprlntlnn? WAfA rACulwit li K. V Jhtll February U.-.QMMt'dM*'tv f ^ ?zr '' rV'tfi ^ I INQUIRER ;,' * > . and apfcrddutlon from our. ??-, , ftacrlberB. trtw^u tarter dl>catfc J , /j i ?"? :'. r .i: s&s" mtemmt A i r the Cash alonr wlth twfjtub-'' J j until'v January jy, .192t-'Wltftodt . ; anuary 1, 1920. ryt ' >. ,; "[ 'W< >' rs, Yorkville,;S. C. ; ij | ' . .'?* '"^xS: >MMM JjMtM I* *&Ml R C0MPA8Y; ifc'j ... -\A Ji A. rt&DMJ; ttfe-ltitt rj i. . vo..i??:j' j Jr. t.fl.tl- * TRACTOR v - < V- ' \ ,*+ !' ' i i ; . ! ML. Street,. York, S,?. : \ , j: 1 ? '?' ?* ; v^;, iV. /.fg Hi:-' ../ ' ^ ;': .'.-v. ?.V.r .C&