Yorkville enquirer. [volume] (Yorkville, S.C.) 1855-2006, September 02, 1921, Page Page Six, Image 6

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tumorous Department. Doctor First.?A motor car was ca- j reeling down a beautiful truly rural country lane, with millions vof twists and turns, when, sudden'y swinging around one of the corners, the driver found a hay wagon about two yards ? u ? j aucau ui mixi. As the car was traveling at thirtymiles an hour und the wagon at three miles an hour, the odds seemed on a collision. Before an honest man had time to place the bet with a bookmak- | er, the collision occurred. The driver on the hay wagon was thrown into the road on his head and lay there in a semi-conscious condition until the two occupants of the motor car lifted him to the side of the lane. Another rustic came up at that mos moment and upon Inquiries the motorists discovered that the nearest housOS were an undertaker's shop, two miles in one direction, and a doctor's house, which they had passed, one mile and three-quarters behind them on the road they had just come along. "Shall we take him to the undertaker's shop or back to the doctor's?" asked the first of the motorists.' The victim of the accident raised his head and cried: "Take me to the doctor's first, you ?? IVV19. Confidential.?"Once a very charming young woman presented a small check at my window," said the speaker at a recent bankers' Convention. "She was transparently honest, but had no acquaintance in the bank nor any letters or other papers with her. I asked her if she had a handkerchief or some article of jewelry marked with her name or initials. After a moment's deep thought her face brightened and ! she asked: 'Would an initialed garter j buckle do?" '\pid she get tho money?" asked a ] voice in a tone of detached scientific inquiry from the back of the room. "I must remind you,"' said the speaker, judicially, "that a bank's relations with its clients often are highly confi- ! dential." \ m m ? Fancy and Fact.?She waS pretty and ambitious and had studied the matrimonial problem to a nicety. "Yes, I suppose I shaJl wed eventually," she said, "but the only kind of masculine nuisance that will suit me must be tall and dark, with classical 1 features. He must be brave and yet j gentle, withal he must be strong?a j lion among men but a knight among women." - ; That evening a bowleggcd, lath- ; framfed youth wearing checked trousers and smoking a cigarette rattled the door knob and the girl knocked four j tumblers and a cut glass fruit dish off the sideboard in her haste to get to him.?Houston Post. Delightful Flavor.?An Inexperienced golfer appeared on a suburban golf course and soon showed his prowess in scattering turf. His partner, a complacent person, i stood it for a long time in silence, t Presently the beginner made a magnificent drive, his ball flew over the hori- 1 zon, and several pecks of soil were driven into his partner's mouth. "Fine links," said he. "Fine!" agreed his polite partner, as he wiped the soil from his lips. "The best 1 ever tasted."?Edinburgh Scotsman. Big as a Porfitcer's Heart.?From giants the conversation had turned to dwarfs and then the city prevaricator spoke. "All those dwarfs you've mentioned . may have been very small," he declared, airily, "but none of them can compare with a stunted specimen I once came across. He was so short that every time his corns hurt him " "Well," asked the only listener who had remained to hear the story. "Every time his corns hurt him." said the narrator, "he imagined he had a headache."?Houston Post. A Good Joke, However.?An argu incnt as to the origin 01 bagpipes mm i waxed loud and long between a Scotch- J man and an Irishman, each of whom ! claimed that his own country had pro- j duced the instrument. Finally the Irishman clinched matters by remarking: "Well, ihe truth is, the Irish invent- i cd the |K>ipes and made a prisent av them to the Scots. And the Scots haven't seen the j<?ke yet!"?Houston j l'ost. Time to Move.?An Irishman visiting a friend in the hospital began to take j an interest in the other patients. "What are you in here for?" he asked one. "I've got tonsilitis, and I've got to have my tonsils cut out," was the answer. "And you?"-he asked another. "I've got bloodpoisoning in the arm, ana they're going to cut it off," was the icply. "Heaven*!" said Hat, in hnnhor, "this ain't no place for me. I've got a cold in my head. I guess I'll be going." Wrong!?On returning home from school one day Jackie at once proceeded to the rabbit hut. From inside the house his mother could hear hini questioning the rabbits thus: "Twice two?" no answer. Again, "Twice two?" Still no answer. "Why on earth are you talking to the rabbits in that fashion. Jackie?" she asked. "Well, mother, teacher told us this morning that rabbits multiply very quickly, but I thought all along she was wrong." r\'o symptom?, w no i.s uie iiijmvrious stranger?" "Some kind of an in vest iga tor." "Working for the government?" "I dould it. Flo keeps pretty Inisy," ?Detroit Free I'ress. | faitil 1'be night passed antfauuther bright summer day dawned, and In the Cartersvllle Jail tlnere was one prisoner who had not slept at all. Each of those long and heavy black hours had been an age to this prisoner to whom Jail was so new. ? At noon a furious windstorm, accompanied by much vivid lightning and blinding rain, sprang out of the west and began to sweep the country side and out of the lowering wet gloom there came one to deliver BUI Dale. He was a mountaineer, young and stalwart and strong, and about him there was much of that certain English fineness that was so striking In his father He entered the low, square building of brick and stone ana stopped in tn* rente? e? the corridor, where he stood while water ran from his wet. clothing and gathered In little pools at his fee: and looked to his right and to Ms left Dale saw him, and cried out In surprise : 9 "Caleb!" Caleb Morelnnd walked straight, his head up and his shoulders back, a splendid picture of virile young manhood, to the end of the corridor. He gripped two of the door's hated bars, bars that had long been worn smooth by other human hands; he pressed his smoothly shaven, sunburned face against the Iron, and smiled. 'IIow are ye n-feelln' by this time, Bill? It's some h?1 of a place, ain't It?" Dale took a step toward him. "Well, a queen's boudoir Is nicer. What are you doing here, Cale?" "I've come to set you free," said Caleb Moreland. Dale stared unbelievingly. "But that Is Impossible, Cale. How could you set me free?" "Call Tom Flowers, a.bd I'll sight ye." Dole called, and the officer cn;ne Immediately. Caleb Moreland turned from the coll>\door and faced'him. "I've come here to own up to tfc? "I've Come Here to Own Up to the Killin' o' Black Adam Ball/' Began the Young Hlllman. klllln' o' Black Adam Ball," begnn the young hlllman. lie swallowed, went a trifle pale under his tan, and continued bravely: "Bill Dale thar, he uever done It I am the one 'at done It. Bill lie shot ut Adam, but he missed?Adam had done shot at Bill fust, y'ondersland, Tom. But I dlfin't miss. I don't never miss. I'm a plumb tombstone shot. They alius rules me out at any shootlu' match. I'd ha' ?wnod up to It yeste'day, but the thought o' Jail had me skeerod bed. I jest cnln't let as good a man as 13111 Date thnr suffer fo* a thing I done myself. So you Jet him out, Tom, and put the right man In thnr." * Flowers hnd a good heart, and this touched it. Hut he was not very much surprised. "Tell us about It, Caleb," he re quested. Caleb looked toward Pale, then ho faced the lord of Curtersvllle's little prison again. "Well, shuriff, when I seed Hill Pale go off toward the trustle by hlsseif and a J one, I ? no wed right then he was In danger o' bein' Inywayed by some o' them thar lowdown halls and Cherokee Torrevs. So I decides to foller attcr him and gvnrd him, without hi in n-knowln' anvtblmr aliout it. which same I done. When he met Adam Ilall?" lie broke off abruptly. "(lo on," urged Flowers. ,rI reckon I won't," smiled Caleb, ami his eyes were still twinkling. "1 reckon I won't do no more talkin' Jest now. Yes, I reckon the proper place 'To* me to do my bitf tnlkln* Is In the ciVtoiioni" el my trial. I.ock me up rJiliiflSj mm v t /t\? j _ \i r. Hapsbui^Liebe ^ Iiltwii'ditons by r?<ght by Doubloday . Page 4* Oft, I I j \tflU ye Tom?"" "We'll see," said Flowers. Forthwith he dispatched a deputy for Judge Carter and Major Bradley, who hastened to the Jail. C An hour later Caleb Moreland was the occupant of the cell at the end of the whitewashed corridor, and Dalf was mounting his bay horse Fox to ! ride back Into the heart of the everlasting hills. He arrived two hour? after nightfall. The MoreJands wen ' glad to see him, and the Llttleford* were glad to see him. There was re Joldng there In the broad valley that lies between David Morelaftd's moun , tain and the Big Pine. Everybody hat' , I been expectlhg him, and many wert the pairs of eyes that had been watch Ing for him. He found himself sud denly wishing, with a tightening at hi? throat, that his father could know how much bigger and how much bet I ter It was to be thus esteemed than i to he wealthy. Luke took charge of his fired horse and led It away to the old log barr nnd to some fifteen ears of yellow corn. Luke's father escorted hlnr proudly, the guest of honor, In to onr of Addle Moreland's Incomparable old fashioned suppers, which was nont the worse for being late. Severn - .... A \^rm I>1 IT IPTOrdS BUI in iu luu^f uuiiit* made table.* John Moreland turned up the llgh' I a little, and cracked a worn but time ly Joke; then he looked toward on? of fh>> men whom he had fought i throughout many years, and mutterec I Into his thick brown beard: "Saul, friend, will ye do us the favor o' asln" the blesslu', ef ye please?" "Shore, John, o' course." Snnl Llttleford, the very Illiterate, laced his big lingers together across his plate, bent his head, and Old the good Almighty (hat they wire all very much obliged to Illm for the line supper they had before them, for Addle Moreland who rtad cooked it, for peace, and for Hill Dale. . . . It was almost midnight when the visitors left. They had been sitting outside, on the honeysuckle-scented front porch and In the cabin yard. At last Hill Dale and John Moreland were left together on the porch. "There's a tiling that has puzzled : me since the moment I got here this evening," said Dale. "Why Is It that nobody seems to be grieving over Caleb's being In jail?" The big blllman's answer came almost sharply: "No Moreland ever grieved over a snerlfyce, BUI." Dale sat up straight. "A sacrifice! j What do you mean?" This time the big hlllman's answer ; came slowly. "I mean 'at Cale he's a-takln' all o' the load off o' yore ; shoulders 'at he can. Cale lie's a-takin' i yore place in Jail ontel the trial comes off. which'll be at the October term o' co'te. He trusts you to come back 'j and set him free on the day o' the trial. O' course ycu'II do It; we hain't I novpr doubted that fo' one Jittle mln ! ute, Bill. But It wasn't all done to' yore sake. You're the hope o' the Morelands, and you can do a heap more here 'an Caleb can." He leaned toward Bill Dale and j went on In a confidential tones "And I can tell ye this here, ef J you're found guilty o' klllln' Adam i Ball, and sentenced fn' even one year, the Morelands and the Llttlefords is a-goln' to take ye from the oillcers and tuni y* loose with a good% long start I on the law." "Wouldn't that he rather?" Dale broke o(T because lie hn<* seen j the tnfl figure of n man appear In the J open gateway. It was By Heck, and 1 he spoke. "Hello, John MoreJand!" "Ilello yeself!" growled Morelnnd. who was not at all pleased at the In i terniptlon. Ileck advanced., carrying his rifle by Its muzzle. He halted with one foot on the stone step. "I've got news to' ye, Bill," he said, recognizing Dale even In the darkness. "I've been n-envr.sdrappin' up at old Ball's house, and I had to choke j about ten dawgs to do It. Bill, old j boy, them Balls has done swore by everything on earth and In Heaven and In Torment 'at they'll kill you ef i i?... T,??i vn\i hotter watch inu inn uwii i. i0vu, ,.v ? ~ out, Bill." J,>l,n Moreland rp'|' from Ills ohnlr. -.Much obleeged to ye, By. And good night to ye. Lo's go into tlio house Itlll. I didn't think them d?d pole 1 cats had that much nnrve?and f don't I ' hardly believe it ylt. It might ha* beet white llckor a-talkin. Their kind owhife IlcUer ain't hawnest, like IB Heck's Is, though his'n Is bad enough j Their klnd'll make a man resurrect1 his dead Ineiriles out o' the graveyard and shoot 'em up all over again. It nin'f Ji-L'oin' to do n irreat deal o' hann Bill, of yo don't light no lump whoi J yo go to hod. A mnn cnln't never toll Jost what's a-goin' to happen." "And the Itall-Torrcy outfit?" l>ah begnn, when the Morehtnd ohlof out In:( "Kf the Ball-Torroy outfit peslorsj i you, they're every one purty diirnoi; j | apt to die with what Is Lnowed gon'al , ly In this section as the rifle-bullet dls ! j ease." CHAPTER XIII Sentenced to Hangi Sheriff Tom Flowers and four ablf deputies rode out of Cartersville verj early on the following morning. Thej went to the Big Pine mountain country, nud, by a scheme that entailed sorm 1 shrewdness on the part of tile chief, oflicer, arrested two Balls and tw<. Torreys on suspicion and? took their nwny without trouble. The two Balls and the two Torrey* were lodged In the Cartersvllle Jul' and offered their liberty and eionera tlon from all 'blame In the dynamltlnj j affair If they would give the name?! of the other guilty parties and appeal j against them. The mountaineers de, clnred stoutly that they knew nothing whatever of the matter, and wher pressure was applied they grew suller und refused to talk at all. It was plain to Flowers that the3 did know something about it, and b< finally ordered that they be kept In t cell on a diet of oread and water untl their tongues loosened. At which th?. Balls and Torrcys swore loudly and swore that they woyld rot In jnl first?unless their kinsmen came anc shot up the town and liberated then hv force I "To rae that Is proof that you foui are guilty," grimly smiled the sheriff "And if your folks want to try storm lug the Jail, let them. A full com pany of militia can be rushed hen within an hour, at any time, and we'l give your folks all the fun they want.' It may be recorded that the foui hlllmen never confessed. 1 (To be Continued.) MISS ROBERTSON TALKS Corrects Impression Given Out by Press of th$ Country. Miss Alice M. Robertson, Congresswoman from Oklahoma, made the following statement recently: "The newspapers announced that a delegation of women were to urge the president to appoint a woman member of the Disarmament Commission. On August 16, I went to the' executive office and filed a letter recommending Mary Chand'er Hale, of Maine, for r,uch appointment. A re- ' J porter stopped me in the lobby to a3k whpt I had seen the President , about to which I replied I had merely filed a letter. He asked if my letter , was as to a woman on the commis- i sion I did not wish to give him a direct answer, so I answered with a question, "bo- you know of a woman who is qualified?" "Qualified! What do you mean by 'qualified'?" I said "She must be American born; educated; of an environment which has given her an insight in diplomacy and a' corresponding knowledge of international procedure; a knowledge of French; social prestige; a woman of affairs who has Ijad business experience; to all of which should be added tact, discretion and ability to listen mucri anu una nine. nnu then I added "Show me the woman.'* "By an unfortunate mistake I was misquoted as saying there was not such woman, I admit I was an anti-suffragist, but with the Nineteenth amendment I accepted the_ equal suffrage it made my duty. I cannot accept equality and demand special privilege as a woman. I therefore oppose all organizations of women as women voters, instead of American citizens?.such organizations tending to the most dangerous of class legislation, that of s?x. This attitude causes many good ladies to decry all words or acts of mine and is responsible for the 'tempest In a teapot' which has amused without harming me. "In my judgment very few men in America are qualified to serve successfully on the commission. The appointments so far announced seem to be admitted to be "all right." Probably it may be thought well to call as aids experts from our army and navy to aid in a fair basis of settlement. I should hardly suppose that as the Gospel stands for peace there should be the embarrassment of selecting some distinguished clergyman as an expert, or at the other extreme some representative of war munitions manufacturers whose business interests miirlit Kn Siitf4\Ivnf1 "I do not think that any woman will be appointed. A leading member of congress than whom women in polities have no stronger champion, told me lie thought such action would be a mistake as a seeming act of international discourtesy to delegates from countries leas progressive than the United States. There could, be no better authority than his. "The president wrote me: "I must compliment you on your extreme good sense and your wisdom in discernment. Mrs. Hale is a very remarkable and highly typical representative of American womanhood." . This World First.?There is an Kng- j lish church whore a box hangs in the j porch. It is used for communications | for thv pastor. Cranks put their notes in it. hut: occasionally it does fulfill its I purpose. Recently the minister preach ed. by reuuest, a sermon on 'Rccogni- | lion of Friends in Heaven," and dur- t in?r the week the following note was I found in the l>ox: "Dear Sir?I should he murli obliged if you could make it convenient to preach to your congregation on 'The Recognition of Friends on Barth,' as I have been coming to your church for nearly six months, and nobody tics taken any notice of me .vet.".?J'hri.-tian Register. ? A brewing company at Port Wash- j infjton. Wis., recently offered 1,000 barrels of beer to the United States j Public Ileal ill Service, for use medically in military hospitals and homes j for disabled soldiers. The beer is sealed in the vats of the brewery, which were closed for one year by the federal court. 1 k\ I ?53one NOT ! QFPT IRn Tft LUU1 1 tFiiy 1 V/ CaloriC Pr Winter SEE US ' NOV/. Don't Without This Real YORK HARDWJ | For Best Results Use LIVE STOCK r? r? m m n r\ t r? n Sold by Draggia is end Dealer* REAL ESTATE AGENCY FOE SALE V 61 1-2 Acres?Four room dwelling; 3 room tenant house, on Rutherford road 3 1-2 miles from courthouse. Good level land, fine neighborhood; half mile of Cotton Belt school house. 97 Acres?New 4 room dwelling; 3 room tenant house; fine orchard and pasture, near Charlotte road, six miles from courthouse. 100 Acres?Seven room dwelling; 3 room tenant house; fine orchard; within half mile of Santiago school, nine miles from courthouse. Seven Room House?On lot If0x270 feet, on King's Mountain street. Water, sewerage, bath and lights. Also lot adjoining, 90x200 feet. Last available vacant lot on this street. Fifty Acre Tract?Near New Zion church and school; three-room house and barn; lot of good saw timber. Cottage on Wright Avenue?Five rooms and commodious sleeping porch, electric lights, water and bath. Lot 80 feet front. 280 feet back. Five Room House?Off King's Mountain street, Yorkville. Lot 90x200 feet. Thirty Acres?One mile of Yorkville, on King's Mountain road. Tract of 142 Acres?Two miles of Clover. Has a first class neatly painted eight-rodm house, with good barn and outbuildings; also a well finished four-room house with outbuildings. Entire place is good level land with practically no waste. Will sell as a whole or divide so as to leave settlement developments on either tract. New four-room house?Near Yorkville Graded chool. Residence Phone 111 and Office Phone 74. C. F. SHERER, Real Estate CLOVER SEED, VETCH SEED, RAPE.SEED THE OLD SFRVIPF HOUSE OF oLimi/ii Full line of GROCERIES. FLOUR Our Specialty. JUST STEP TO YOUR PHONE Call No. Si) and tell us your wants. Easy. If you want a spool of thread or anything we haven't got, put it in YOUR list and you shall have it. v SERVICE i3 what YOU want. Try Our Tea?best to be had CARROLL BROS. RIGHT ON THE JOB EVERY DAY IN THE WEEK?THE FOURTH OF JULY INCLUDED? WE ARE ON THE JOB? SERVING OUR PATRONS WITH THE BEST IN. FRESH MEATS AND COUNTRY PRODUCE. REMEMBER OUR GROCERY DEPARTMENT?LET US SERVE YOU THERE. QUALITY AND PRICES JUST RIGHT. SANITARY MARKET LEWIS G. FERGUSON. Mar. DEL MONTE CANNED GOODS WE WANT YOU TO KNOW that we have these popular Canned Goods? Peaches. / Pineapple, Corn. Tomatoes, Beets and Pimentoes, and we want you to know that DEL MONTE products are the highest quality nut in cans? See Us or Phone for Prices on the Better Kind of Canned Goods. Sumn?100 Der cent Cano. FARM HARDWARE Our Farmer Friends will do well to see us for Farm Hardware. Heavy Trace Chains. 90 Cis. Pair; Have Cow Chains, Shovels, Forks. Iloes and Plow Steele. Have a few Shop Forges. If you can use one of these?Just make us a reasonable offer. You'll buy it. IlavV Early Amber and Orange Cane Seed. Let us supply you. -T V CARROLL All kinds of Typewriter Ribbons at The Yorkviile Enauirer Office. I y I T P Phone * t t 153 SEPT, lOTH pnarp For Week " | ; Let This Winter Pass IRE COMPACT ( t It. C. Brocklnjrton F. L? Ilinnait W. M. Brown Polmoffn Mnnnmpnt Pfl I A UllUVllU ilivuuiuvui vui YORK,i - - 8. C. Why Pay an Agent Profit? Wo know that tho Agent has to live, but let the other fellow keep him up. Dea' Direct with the , PALMETTO MONUMENT CO., York, S. C.; Phone No. 121. If you wish us to call we will be glad to have one of our firm call on You. We do not travel agents. We can .and will do your'work at as Low a Price and as Good in Quality as any one in the business. Try Us, is all that we ask. You be the judge.PALMETTO MONUMENT CO. "Honor Them With a Monument." FALL PAINTINGIs considered by all pai,nt authorities as the BEST time of the year to apply House Paint. We ore selling and guaranteeing "GLIDDEN'S" Paints, which we believe to be second to none on the J market. > One of our local painters, when ask} ed by a prospective buyer, what he ; thought of GLIDDENS, sai?* "I HAVE BEEN PAINTING FOR 1 THIRTY-FIVE YEARS, ?AND FIND | THAT IT WORKS BETTER AND : COVERS MORE SURFACE THAN ANY PAINT PER GALLON THAT I HAVE EVER USED." Its analysis shows ninety-one per cent lead and zinc, only nine per cent inert matter to keep it from "crawl 1 Ins" ASK FOR PRICES THEY ARE RIGHT, ahd the most at| tractive term." ever offered by a paint i concern. Paint Up and Preserve Your j ! Property, with GLIDDEN'S. PEOPLES FURNITURE COMPANY PRESCRIPTIONS The "real work for which the Drug Store exists is the compounding of medicines. No matter how many other lines of merchandise are carried nor how many new departments are acidcd tho Prescription Department is the foundation of the Drug Store. We make our foundation the solidest and strongest part of our business. Accuracy. Twenty-one years of experience and honest deuling. The drugs and chemicals of the best. These* give a distinctive exce'lencc to our Prescription work. CLOVER DRUG STORE R. L. WYLIE, PROP. Clover, S. C. ' TRADE WITH USWe have the coolest place | iii town. Sec US for? I Ice Cream? Pure Fruit DrinksFine StationeryEngraved Cards? Toilet ArticlesTobaccos, Cigars, Etc. Mackorell Drug Co. Near the Court House SHINGLES WHEN YOU WANT ANY SEE US. j I We have them?Good Shingles; too??I as noi.d as you can find anywhere?and I ! you'll find too, thajt we have the price j I that will interest ydu. LUMBER? To be 3ure. That's our Ions suit and i r.r miitro h;ivo it. Lots of Lumber ?Rough, Dressed, manufactured up as you want it?Flooring, Ceiling, Woath-i erboarding, Doors, Blinds, Sash, Window Frames, Door Frames?just anyway you want?and you will find that our PRICES ARE RIGHT, i BUILDERS' HARDWARE? Have any need for such goods? Soe us if you have. We can supply your: I needs?Priced right here, too. SEE rs FOR DEVOE PAINTS. LOGAN LUMBER YARD! LOANS AT 7 % INTEREST . ARRANGED for on York Couhty Farms. Long-term. (6% through i Fed oral Land Rank). Why not stop ! paying higher rates? Charges reasonj able. / C. E. SPENCER. TO DEBTORS ANO CREDITORS A LL persons indebted to the estate of A J. SPRATT , WRIGHT, deceased, are hereby notified to make payment to the undersigned, at once, and all pei sons having c!aimt, against said estate arg advised to piesent the same, 2u!y authenticated, to the undersigned, ? within the tfme prescribed by law. r> it aPEVfRR Executor. Aug. 2?7 ll?l.~ * 68 f 3t ? REAL ESTATE $$ $$$ It You MC Want Them, See lwi I SOME OF MY OFFERINQA: 40 Acres?Seven miles from York, bounded by lands of J. B. McCarter, C. W. Carroll, H. O. Brown and others; I 3-room residence, barn and cotton J house. Well of goodjxrater; Ave or six A acres bottom land. Buck Horn creelc w ai.d branch runs through place. About I 4-acre pasture; 5 or 6 acres woods? V mostly pine and balance work land. About 3-4 mile to Beersheba school. It is going to sell; so if you want It see me right away. Property of H. C. Farrls. 4 fino.K a,.**,?a 1-2 miles from York. and leas than half mile to Philadelphia school house, church and station- Four room residence, besides hall; 4-room tenant house; barns; 3 wells of good water, and nice orchard. About 8 acres in pasture and woods and balance open land. Act quick if ydo want it Property of C. J. Thomaason. ? . 90 Acres at Brattonsvllle?Pcopet of Estate of Mrs- Agnes Harris. WiU give a real bargain here. 144 Acres?Five miles /from Filbert on Ridgo Road, bounded by lands of W. M. Burns, John Hartness and others; 7-room residence, 5-stalI barn and other outbuildings;?dwo 4-room tenant houses,, barns, etc.; 2 wells and 1 good ' spring; 3 horse farm open and balance in timber (oak, pine, &c.) and pasture. About 2 miles to Dixie School and Beersheba church. Property of Mrs. & J. Barry. 33 Acres?Adjoining the above tract About 3 or 4 acres of woods and balance open land. Will sell this tract separately or In connection with above tract. Property of J. A. Barry. 195 Acres?Four miles from Tork, on Turkey creek road, adjoining lands of Uettys, Queen and Wataon; 2-horse farm open and balance In woods anl pasture- One and one-half miles to , Philadelphia and Miller schools. The price is right. See me quick. Property of Mrs. Molly Jones. Fivs Room Residenc#?On Charlotte street, in the town of Tork. on large t lot I will sell you this property for iess than you can build the house. Better act at once. McLain Property?On Charlotte St, In the town of Tork. This property lies between Neely, Cannon and Lockmore mills, and 1s a valuable piece of property. Will sell It either as a whole or in lots. Here is an opportunity to make some money. 89 acres?9 miles from Tork, K miles from Smyrna and S mljes from King's Creek. Smyrna R. F. D. passes place. One horse farm open and balance in woods?something like 100,000 feet sew iraber. 12 acres fine bottoms, 1 room esfdence. Property of P. B. Bigger. 210 acres?3 1-2 miles from fork on Pfncknoy road. S room residence, well * J ?three 4 g 01 gOOCl water, u 1SJ6o room *e-?itnV an^ on? * room > tenant house. tO-acre pasture. Good orphard. About 150 acres open land, balance In oak and plno timber. Property of M. A. McFarland. Loans arranged on farming lands. GEO. W. WILLIAMS REAL ESTATE PROFESSIONAL CARDS. Dr. T. 0. OKI GOT ? DENTIST -rRoom 202 Peoples' Bank Building YORK, - - 3. C. 62 ' > i w. 26t* ' BETTY LINK, D. C. CHIROPRACTOR Diseases of the Spine and Nsrvout /System and all Organic Inco-ordination. Consultation and Analysis Free. v 331 Chatham Avenue. ,i Phone 396?J ROCK HILL, - - S. C. YORK FURNITURE CO. Undertakers ? Embalmers YORK, - - 8. C. In All Its Branches?Motor Equipment Prompt Service Day or Night In Town or Country. Dr. r7~H._GLENN Veterinary Surgeon CALLS ANSWERED DAY OR NIGHT Phone 92 YORK, - - - 8. C. ~W. W. LEWIS 1 Attorney at Law Rooms 206 and 206 Peoples Bank A Trust Co.'a- Building. YORK, - - 8. C. Phones: Office 63. Residence 44. J. A MABION ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW Office opposite the Courthouse. Telephone No. 126. York Exchange. VOUK. 8. C. JOHN R. HART ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW. i Prompt and Careful Attention to All Business Undertaken. Telephone No. 69. YORK. S. C. 76 f.t It J. S. BRICE Attorney At Law. Prompt Attention to all Legal Business nt Whatever Nature. Front Officea, Second Floor, P?i ^lea Bank & Tr -t Co.'s Building. Phone No. 51. DR. WM. M. KENNEDY ? CENTALSCRGEON ? Office on 8eeond Floor of the Wyli* Building. rnVnnfi/\?ir>ai f IPHsmx AQ* RACMATIPA. I AIL YORK. - 8. C. i 666 ^uiokly relieves Constipation, Biliousness, Loss of Appetite and Headaches, due to Torpid Liver. '' t