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I FACT; F4S///0 | Paragraphs That At f Interest ti * Vegetable Dinners for a'yWeek. Monday?Tomato soup chilled, parsnip cutlets with Lima beans, escalloped potatoes and inarshinnllow raspberry fluff. Yo two cupfuls of mashed parsnips aud one cupful of prated cheese, one tablespoon fill of melted butter, one teaspoonful of salt, half a teaspoonful of pepper and the yolks of two eggs. Mix over the Are and turn out to cool. Fottn into neat cutlets, coat with egg and bread crumbs and fry* in deep hot fat. Drain and arrange in a circle on a hot platter, the center being filled with fresh Lima beans cooked as follows: Moil two cupfuls of Lima beans; melt two tulilespoonfulx of butter, add one teaspoonful each of molasses and mustard, two teaspoonfulls of onion juice and the juice of half a lemon mixed with one cupful of hot water; add the beans and cook for ten min- j utf*3. Serve with this dish a piquant sauce made by mincing* a dozen pick- | les and olives and mixing into drawn- j butter sauce with a tablesjtoonful each of onion juice, lemon juice and vinegar and some capers. Season to taste with stilt, pcpjH-r and paprika, and bring 1o j a boij. For marshmallow raspberry fluff whip a pint of thick cream very stiff. Fold in the beaten white of an egg and sweeten to taste. Have ready a cupful and a half of raspberries and half . a cupful of finely chopped soft marshmallow s; sprinkle these through the twain, mix and serve very cold. Tuesday?Clear soup with noodles,) tomato baked with potato, cucumber j salad with French dressing, pineapple nut dessert. Slice four boiled potatoes and four tomatoes in layers in a baking dish, add one tablespoonful of oil or butter,. I season with salt, pepper and chives, i cover with bread crumbs anil bake in j a Tpiick oven. For the dessert slice a fresh pineapple, cover with sugar and let stand overnight. Drain off the sirup thus formed and lioil until .sugar is dissolved, add three tablespftonfuls of cornstarch moistened with cold water, and boil five minutes longer. Itunove from the lire and add two tablespoonfuls of sugar, two tablespoon fills of chopped nuls and the stiffly beaten whites of two eggs. Chill and serve decoiated with the sliced pineapple and chopped nuts. Wednesday?Onion soul tie, potato pears, tomato salad, huckleberry pudding. For onion souffle melt two tablespoonfuls of butter in a saucepan, add Ihrce large sliced unions, and si on in unlil tender. Heniovo from the" tiro, mash the onions, add one tablespoon- j fill of flour, the yolks of three eggs and three tahlespoonfuls of sugar beaten together, one tablespoonful of butter. j two tablespoonfuls of cream, a ?|iiar-j tor of a teaspoon fill of salt and the beaten whites of thd three eggs. Pour into buttered ramekins or a casse role, sprinkle a little sugar and chopped nuts over the top. and hake until brown. Potato pears are shaped of mashed potatoes with cloves for stems, rolled in heatcn egg, hrowned in the oven and served on lettuce leaves. For huckleberry or blackberry pud- i ding, cream together one-half cupful of butter and one cup of powdered sugar. beat in the yolks of two eggs, add ono-hall' teaspoonful of cinnamon ami onc-thir<l teaspoonful of salt. Silt( two <-upx of flour with three teaspoonlitis of linking powder, reserving two) tahlospoonfiils of the flour to mix with the berries. Add the flour and threeouarteis cupful of milk alternately to the first mixture, fold in the beaten white of eggs and add the floured berries. Hake forty minutes in a moderate oven, and serve with lemon or orange sauce. Thuisday- -<'renin of corn soup, celery rice, spinach salad jvith bard-boiled eggs, hot muflins and fresh rhubarb pie. For celery rice, cover with water and cook until tender two cupfula of chopped celery; meanwhile, boil one cupful of rice in three cupfuls of salted water in an uncovered pan. 'When the water has. evaporated pour tliV lice over the celery and let simmer for twenty minutes. Turn into a hot di.'h. mix in two teaspoonful: of butter, and 1 gai nish. Friday? t'ariots and barley soup. cecuHoped litsh vegetables, salad ol c|ieriie>', prunes or apricots stuffed with en am cheese, with 1'ieiirh diessing, and chocolate sponge. The e'calloped Vegetables are |Kirticularlv attractive if cooked in a gins; casserole. I*111 in the dish, liut, crisp slici s of hacon, and tln n la>ers ol the following vegetables, each layer sprin filed wit 11 salt :iI> I ||riivin il with l?nlt?*r?*?l Ihv.hI ciimihs- sliced potato) I!? ?I tomatoes, iji'i'i-ii |- *. 11"? : 11 <>111. and hcans. A ! I liaii ;i ciiplnl of milk and a kit of I?u11 r. Hake twenty-live minii'ns in a Int. oven. T>i make ehoeolate |> 1111* . cream UK -kail i*i11ti'i11 nl kiilk-r ami add a quarter ??t" a enpfnl nl rncna. tIm* wellIkati-n yolks ol two e;;a:s ami one t-| of sn:;ai ilissolvt <1 ill llall a <-111>1 III nl water. Add alternately to this mix L t II If tin- keat< II willies nl ll:e > ami i.in- cupful nl fl'iiir mixed ami sifted with three teaspoon! ills of hakin;; k powder. Hake in shallow tins ahoiit fit teen minutes. I'm the ieiiiB and ttil ^ in/ hoil one cupful of ei annlati <1 sue N AND FANCY I I ?> e of More Especial i Women :j """" . 1 -k | ar to n thin sirup, heat stiflly two cku i whites ami add several tablespoonfuls ' of finely grated apple or ouoked apri- i oot passed through a sieve; then pour i the sirup gradually onto the egg t whites, heating constantly until the : mixture becomes stiff. Spread on I cake, decorate with preserved chp l ies | and serve immediately. Saturday?Baked stuffed onions ' , corn fritters, popovers, princess rasp- ; i berry loaf. ! Parboil in salted water for thirty minutes eight Inge onions, cool and i | remove cento's. Pill with equal parts ! of minced ham, buttered bread crumbs i and chopped onion pulp, thorughly j 'i rw2 crtfiunnpfl IMflPP in n hut- ! to red, shallow bukinj pan: sprinkle! with buttered crumbs, and Imke in a j moderate oven until soft and brown. Princess raspbery loaf is delicious, i Bake a good plain cake mixture in a I hexagonal paij, scoop out the interior | and frost the outside with pale green | icing, flavored with pistachio. Whip I a pint of cream, sweaton, add a tea spoonful of gelatin dissolved in a little 1 hot milk, and fold in a capful of chopped raspberries. Kill the cake with [ this mixture, chill thoroughly, and j serve topped with, whipped cream and raspberries. About Women. New York city has a woman lawyer's association. 1 There arc 2G1.553 women farmers in the t'nited States. Women of .the Moslem faith are for-' j bidden to appear on the stage. Peeresses in their own right now number twenty-live in Kngland. More than half the industrial workers in Philadelphia are women. Women farm hands in Kansas de- i tnand the same pay as that paid the men. I p. 1020 women owned 4.S per ecni of the farm area in tlte t'nited Stales. Canadian railroads now provide smoking compartments for women on all trains. The little island of Ilaebijo, off the coast of Japan, is governed by women. Sural) Bernhardt, the famous French actress, has started a fund for war mothers. Of the gainful workers in Washington. D. C.. in 1920. 92,001, or 39.2 per rent, were women. f< )f the 1.S2 law student:; who parsed ' l.nr examinations in Kansas this yeai j nine were women. Swedish women recently obtained the right to occupy pulpits on the same terms with the men. To become a member of the newlyI'onned Veteran Ladles' (Jolf association of (treat Britain, one must l?e at ' least fifty years of age. University women in ten countries , have formed national associations to join the women of Or eat Britain and America in an international federation. By a unanimous vote Miss Jane Addams has been-elected president of the j International Women's Congress. Mrs. J. K. McKac has an income of more than $30,000 a year from a tea , room which she operates in Atlanta. I (Ju. Mrs. L. D. Brewery, Cincinnati so- J ciety woman, has gone to Florida for | the purpose of breeding and raising I cattle. Mrs. Wi'lii.m M. Oi^ham, divorced ' wife iti the millionaire oil magnate. J will establish an interior decorating 1 shop in New York. FACTS ABOUT AUGUST Many Things About This Month That You Did Not Know. s Augustus Caesar named the month after himself, and gave ii 31 days to make it e?iual to July?Julius Cae-1 sac's month. August's precious stone is the sar- [ donyx, which aeeording to an old and | popular belief symbolizes married happiness. It is cnitaideri d fortunate to he horn in August, as success in life and a j wealthy and happy marriage are assured. An August hri?U according to the o!<l belief, has an aniiahle spirit, isi even-tempered and praetieal-minded. 1 August was originally called "Kxtilis" the sixth month, when the year hud hut ten iimnlhs, ami the Cost was March. There were eight declarations of war in August, la 14, involving Austrii, S rhia, llnmany, liussia, J- ranee, Knglund and Japan. .Mo, e great hat t'i have heeii fought i >ii August than any other month i itleiilu-im. I'levna, (S.uvolctte, Char- | liroi, \loii', An/.ac Cove, Chevy Chase,. i."km. in ii iiu.i ii i i , i ikui.iiki, i..*,... : 111 < I .Mi ii.iS.i: ii'- Si-rnllll I 1: 11 1*1111. Aiii'ii'iit Ik .] I' i-!:is-i<1 Au;;ii;"l Mil .mil Kill. .1.' 11111111-1-.; ilsiys. iii.l :<I u pill hi isti.i I. t? mi tin- siri?inl Munil:i.v in Aiiyiisl .*is 111 i11 tin- ihiy mi \v11i? 11 Smli'in :iml ' lniiim i iIi win- ili-.slroyi-il. The Usual Tiling. "I *u I ! it * spiriti-l. is In- niit?" "K\iii-ilin^!v :n!" ri-plii-?! nlil <!:niiil N. <li'iiniii. "I|i- js tin - ni ni lilii-rtiM;> ill |-I|||| n vm iliK tn |i:-l S(|.-|il.' ??t ||?-|- |H-nl?!i tn s|h-iii| thi-ir miiiioj I'm l In- puli A Time to Pause. Wlu n a girl l>efilling ><mi hy y?nn first name, ' watch out boy! Sli<- iik?*. your last one.?Judge. i FRECKLES AND f OVERALLS ! \ | By H. LOUIS RAYBOLD | (?. 1920, by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) "Why don't you hunt up some of your old friends.around town?" asked Jim's mother solicitously. This son of hers, just back from France, was a very welcome visitor indeed, but, nevertheless, presented -somewhat of a * problem. Now that the first warm flush of enthusiasm and novelty at be- i Jog home was over, time was hanging heavily on his hands and the job in the oflice was not ready for him. "Well, I have seen about everybody,"** said Jim. "Who Is left?" "How about calling on Marion Da vis?" suggested his mother. "What, that little kid with red hair and freckles, that was always hollering about?thought she had a voice? Oh, no, mother! never!" "Very well," said his mother; patiently. "Anyway, you may have noticed that they have moved away frqiu next door. They live over the other side of the town now?moved just after you left." She reme'm lered now thnt when' Jim was home Marion had been one of the "small fry," a)ways tagging around the older "crowd." hut quite beneath notice, so to speak. . I "Guess I'll hike along downtown," | and Jim rose lazily, giving his mother a farewell -pat on the shoulder as he pnssed her to the door. His mother looked after him lovingly. Sometimes she hardly knew this tall, browned son of here. A couple of years' wearing of the trim, wellgroomed uniform "had developed in him a taste for dress which had hitherto Iain quite dormant, and he now made an attractive figure to her eyes in his well-fitting civilian suit, silk socks, brightly polished boots and hat | set at just the correct angle. Downtown, Jim had a stroke of luck. Coming out of the post office, he was hailed by the occimant of a passing "We^|l," Marion Hesitated. . automobile, who turned out to ho none , , alhor than Stanley Hrayton, an old | comrade-in-arms, who lived In Klin- j ( .l.iI., tin* lii-lvln<r voutirr town nunp ! , """ "" ' I I miles from Jim's village. "Hello, you Jim!" culled Stanley, n ; , broad grin on his good-looking face. j "Just the man I want. My'sister Is engineering some sort of dance at the j , Klmdule town hall tomorrow night, i , f'ome along and help out. There's n . good follow!" It did not take Jim two minutes to ^ accept the Invitation. It .would he a pleasant break in the monotony, and who knew hut what Stanley's sister might he quite as friendly and nice as her brother? And, as a matter of faet, Stanley's sister Peggy did turn out to he pretty and delightful enough to charm any man's heart. But it was not to he the - 1- t 1 ... I heart or .inn. csoiiieyouy iiciu hit i" that?ami the somebody was no less a prison than a very slim, very selfpossessed yonnjr siren who sat at ihe piano during intrrnilssions ami Itv request sain; soni? after son/, rnnulns; from the army lyries to iray little love lyrlrs with hauntinir refrains. "Who is she?" said .I'm, cornetIn>r Stanley at leinrlh. "oli," replied licit youth absent-! mindedly, "some friend of i'e/'s ?I didn't cat eh her name. Some girl,, though." "Some ftlrl Is ri/hf," breathed Jim fervently. "Some voire and some hair ?waves of tawny jtohl breaking on the while hearh of her forehead." 'Good Lord!" said Stanley, turning1 suddenly. "('an 111i^ lie my n|<l mmpaninn of tin* K. I'.? I never thought when 1 heard y???ir flow ??!" language as you peeled 1 liree hundred spuds llnit ynii land such a vein of sentiment in you!" TTnd<M- tin- flimsiest "f PXeusen, then*-1 after, Jim tonic tile trolley to Kimdale, and r.itnlessly paraded Hie street, liorinjr tn meet Iter eomiug from the ''I rr.ry, walking in 1 lie shopping district or watehing the water fowl in *hu ci-.-.qH civie park. Just what hie G66 cures Malaria, Chills ard Fever, Bilious Fever, Colds and LaGtippe, or money refunded. II address, he rhi^st be excused on tKe grounds of being so utterly head over heels In love as to be not qilte sensible! And at tlmt he met her in front of his own door?and with his own mother ! "You remember Marion Davis?" said that lady, hoping .Tim would see how inevitable the meeting was and not reproach her for forcing "that red-headed kid with freckles" upon him. "Oh?er?oh, yes," stammered Jim. "I remember her. Oh, yes, I remem- j bcr her!" "What is the matter with the boy?" thought his mother in disgust. But aloud she said: "Marlon and I have been on the same committee for the Welfare league, and as we linve some lists to go over, she very Jcindly offered to come up and help me. I thought you were not going to be here to supper." "Oh, but I am!" said Jim. "And I am glad to have the opportunity to tell Miss Davis how much I enjoyed her singing recently." Considering that Marlon had avoided an Introduction to Jim, It seemed : strange that Immediately after supper was over and the lists made out, she did not go home. Yet ten o'clock found her popping eorh In the fireplace and listening to Jim's war stories. Jim's mother, looking on, could not help thinking what a pity It. was that Jim was so prejudiced?and yet lie did not act as if he were really ' bored to death! Nor did he need his mother's hint that It would te very nice of him to walk home with Marlon. It was so late, and she lived so far away. , Jim blessed the distance. Three i years had made great fhanges In "the kid with freckles." As they walked, not too fast, along the winding, mnon-v lit country road Marlon said suddenly: "I really ought to confess, Jim, that Stan said you wanted to meet me, and I ducked It." "Why did you?" asked Jim reproachfully "Well," Marion hesitated, "to tell the truth, It's been some time since I saw you. And when he said who you were, all I could remember was a?a kind of long-legged country boy In an old straw hat and overalls?and you u.nnt n-itii n emivil tlint nev- I I\ in ? >? JUU ?? \.ii c nibM u v .. v. ? or wanted tfio rest of us around." Long-1 egged?overalls! Well, thank heaven, he didn't look that way now. The army, with Its drills and regulation uniform had changed all that. "I'll forgive you," he whispered gent- I iy, taking her arm to help her over a rough hit of the road. "And how did you remember me?" she asked hopefully. Things move | swiftly these post-war days when ! young people want to make up for lost i time. "ITow did I think of you?" In the darkness, remembering his words to hla mother, Jim blushed, then on^ swered like a gentleman: "As quite the most adorable person I had ever known!" And evidently the powers of retribution (are like everybody else in lov- j ing a lover. For nothing happened, j At least nothing beyond what might lie expected when a fcoft haial nestles contentedly In the crook of one's elbow and a pair of beautiful lips draw invitingly near. THE SNAKE WAS TRUE And the Preacher and. His Brother Were Bitten. William Edmonds is in a critical j ondition and his brother, Rev. Albert 1 Edmonds, is seriously ill from the bite f a snake, which was said to have j been used in the rites of a religious; service at a revival near hero last Kri- j lav niirht. savs a Xauvoo. A'a., dis-! patch. Itev. .Mr. Edmonds is said to have told the congregation that the "true >x Mover" was impervious to tlic bite <?f j eptiles and invited non-believers to tiring any kind of poisonous make to ( the meeting. William Edmonds assisted the minister in demonstrating! :o the congregation the manntr in vhich prisonous reptiles could be ^ I Furniture WE HAVE TOLD V REPEAT IT NOW, IS THE I JEST TIM J Tl'li'E AM) IIOtJKI TH AT VOU 11A \ vorr c\v nuv i now Til a \ num> . BECAUSE THE FA <51VI X(? MORE AT' QUA LIT V THAN rI HACK. DURING T QUANTITY PRODI 0 X BY% CO Ntt 11) E11A JUMPED AT A X YT (JET. NOW THEY i !ALOX(J WITH BE'I TIIEY ARE GETTI ('nine in mid talk ii n 1 ics and 11m Low Pri< YORK FURr handled. He and the minister were bitten and immediately became ill. William Edmonds, doctors said, will die. When Water Was a Mystery.?tip to 1781 water meant either nothing at ail or else u great mystery to the scientists. In that year Henry Cavendish, teacher of chemistry, discovered that it really consisted of a number ,of gases that hud been chilled into liquid INCREASE OF FIFTY PER CENT YOU MAY NEVER have been accidentally injured in your life?that is seriously; but that is no guarantee that you will not be within the next 12 months, especially if you occasionally or regularly ride in an automobile. Accidental injuries and deaths have increased about 50 per cent during the past five years on account of automobiles. YOU MAYi RE very careful yourself, but an accidental injury caused by the other fellow would either kill 4*ou Just as dead or lay you up just as long as if caused by your own carelessness and besides, the kind of Accident Insurance wc sell PROTECTS YOU against all accidental injuries, regardless of cause. SEE US ABOUT IT. CJATW TW Xr fi V. rtPTST umu iu> \ju DISTRICT AGENTS. SERVICE--/ Is Our Watch Word BUY YOUR GASOLINE and OIL from US and SAVE MONEY. J. H. CARROLL See, Phone or Write to THOS. C. O'FARRELL FOR High Grade Monuments In Marble and Granite Plant on East Liberty Street, Adjoining Rose Hill Cemetery. Phone 2>1 YORK, S. C. BUY THE WIFEA HOOSIER KITCHEN CABINET. IT WILL LIGHTEN HER BURDENS AND CAUSE PEACE AND HARMONY IN THE FAMILY. We Have Them In All Styles? Priced at? $37.50 AND UP. M. L. FORD & SONS UNDERTAKERS AND EMBALMERS CLOVER. S. C. Buying | OU BEF01U3 AND WE THAT iflGHT NOW 1 3 TO BUY FUKNI- 4 S FURNISHINGS J E HAI) IN YEARS. 7 BETTER FURNITURE k s(j THE WAR TIMES J .(TORIES ARE PENT I ON TO HOOD 4 'HEY I)Ir? AWHILE HE WAR PERIOD . 1 JOT ION WAS THE 1 lT I ON- PEOPLE 1 *111 v/ mm n;v mm n Ja 1 i i .n \ 1 i i i i j i v "i ui' AW XT (C>1 A LI TV ANT)' I TKU QUALITIES | \(j LOWE IJ J M? ICES. voi'with us. Tlio Quali- fl os will surprise you. 11 OTURE CO. 1 I . 'I form. It remained for the French savant | Lavoisier to bring about, in 1783, the decomposition of water into oxygen | and hydrogen, and seven years latei asan I'UMMMayw | Just Rect I A choice assortment of C< pleasing of patterns that mid-summer dresses?let you'll be pleased?the pri One Lot?A SPECIALA pretty lot?Priced the . One extra pretty assortm I si ruble Light Colors?L 25 CI I Solid,Colored VOILES? A ery fine WHITE OR(L i v we have been getting i the Yard SILK P A very good qualify?Ya BATHINl ' We have a few Bathing S want one, see us?Priced KIRKPATRI | ^ Sells It For Less PS?5 The CaloriC Pipeless Fu June-like warmth in every r< guaranteed) fuel bills cut \ | nience?clean rooms?safetj The I ^ THE' ok 161HAL 'pi PE L E S5 FUP I Is. l. ca S*? THE UNIVE 48 S. Main St. >r*V\AAAA/WVWlAAAA/VWWA*W\< i CALL ON US T0 i * i j TOILET ARTICLES. INCLUI TOILET WATERS AND F ! If You Need the Docto j THE REXALL CITY PH 3 STORE < Prompt and Accurate Service I llfllll lW IH Hi lit HfWIHrWHIIIWWIf READING FOR TH j ? THE YORKVILLE ENQUIRER h Subscriptions FREE OF Ch the Twelve "Lay-By" Scboo'i TIIKSK SI'MStMlll'TFONS :u in e.i'-li school, roprosontativ.'s of !> ! progress in Ri .uliriK, Writing lays. ALL AWARDS? arc to 1w> mni sportive toaohois.clJjo only couditi. r.'i' is rone im tl is that no t^vo nv L. M. GR two other Britons improved on this method. They were Nicholson and Carlisle, who succ^ecled In separating the two elements by meAn# of the vol. . . ^ . . . V' laic uuitcryj . . . , ? ~, "r~; ' ~ WSk MunnnBn IHHi :.1 4, ? S sived I I l>1o rod'Voiles in the most* ; will make up \^all into us show fheui toyWu? I. LC6S ui'e attract .. Yard i^O* OTS. I vard J.15 CTS. IV . v HI ieiit?mostly in the dcViced the yard?' fS., 29 CTS., and 39 CTS. I yijrd i 39 cts. i . $ \kl)Y?the kind that I' J (JliOO a yard for?Now 75 CTS. ONGEE rd 98 CTS.- I < a suits i nifs that are nied. If you ') right. I CK-BELK CO. Sells It For Less IMHHaHnfi EM ePKfi3^^Wn^\ t/ not You? r you ft i w/c#m\ I rnace offers your Family: 4 to Yi?unequalled conver?heat protection. CaloriC gives you the great ad-' I age of one efficient central heating t in basement instead of several is in different rooms. Co6ta less I stoves necessary to^heat same i. _ For old buildings or new. No ibing or alterations. No pipes to ' I e by largest manufacturer of warmurnaces in world. Over 100,000 many in this neighborhood. Our antee?"Your satisfaction or iy back." Come in and see this ierful beating system. York ' I j URTNEY r^c/y Service | RSAL CAR. YORK, S. C. | i PPLY ,YOUR NEEDS IN 31NG TALCUM POWDERS, >ERFUMES - ; >r, Call No. 65, Clover. ! ARMACY- J. E. BR,SON. Proprietor ? CLOVER, 3. C. ItWIWlitlUlllll III IWMIIIIIU IWW> ? LAY-BY PUPILS ereby offers Three Three-Months IARGE, to the Pupils of Each of s to be Conducted in York County. e t?. go to tin* THREE PUPIES lifTt ivnt families, who make the and Arithmetic during: the thirty ' * .S ile on the certification 06 the re- : >n f*u fur as The Yorkville iwniui- < raids go into the same, family. IST'S SONS _____ .sm,'. _ ??. _ *!, A.. a