Yorkville enquirer. [volume] (Yorkville, S.C.) 1855-2006, November 15, 1921, Page Page Seven, Image 7
Sisfe
& .
mthlipl
NUKH1S .
CaCynOMT ^
MtHCEEW NORRI? '^Sf'
"Marry Tiirn!" Aliz had echoed In
simple amazement. Marry him?what
was all this sudden change in the
household when a man could no sooner
appear than some girl began to talk
of marriage? Stupefied, AJIx watched
the affair progress.
, "I don't Imagine It's serious!" her
father said on an April walk. Peter,
tramping beside them, was Interested
but silent. i
* "My dear fatlier," the girl protested.
"Have you listened to them? They've
been contending for weeks that they
were Just remarkably good friends?
that's why she calls him Frenny!"
"Ah?I see!" the doctor sajd mildly,
as Peter's wild laugh burst forth.
"But now," Allx pursued, "she's told
him that as she cannot be what he
wishes, they had better not meet!"
"Popr Anne!" the old doctor commented.
"Poor, nothing! She's having the
time of her life," her cousin said unfeelingly.
"She told me today that
she was afraid that she had checked
one of the most brilliant careers at
the bar."
"I had no Idea of all this!" the doc a*.
/?nn^necn/1 nmovprl "T'vo gppn thp
ll/| VVU1COOVU, UIUUWVUI * ' V VV? "
young man?noticed him about. Well
?well?well! Anne, too."
In June came the blissful hour In
which Anne, all blushes and smiles,
could come to her uncle with a dutiful
message from the respectfully
' adoring Justin. Their friendship, said
Anne, had ripened Into something
deeper.
"Justin wants to have a frank talk
with you, uncle," Anne said, "and
of course I'm not to go until you are
sure you can spare me aud unless you
feel that you can trust him utterly!"
Anne's engagement cups were
ranged on the tnble where Cherry's
had stood, and where Cherry bad
talked of a coffee-colored rajah silk
Anne discussed the merits of a "smart
but handsome blue tailormade."
The wedding was to be In September,
not quite a year after Cherry's
wedding. All* wrote her sister pages i
about it, always ending with the emphatic
declaration that Cherry must
come down for the wedding.
Cherry was homesick. She dreamed
continually of the cool, high valley,
the scented aisles of the deep forest,
the mountain rearing its rough summit
to the pale blue of summer skies.
June passed; July passed; It was
hot at the "Emmy Younger." August
came In on a furnace breath; Cherry
felt headachy, languid aud half sick
all the time. Martin had said that
lie could not possibly get away, even
for the week of Anne's wedding, but
Cherry began to wonder if he would
let her go alone. *
"If he doesn't, I shall be sick!" she
fretted to herself, In a certain burning
uoontime, toward the middle of
August. Martin, who had been playing
poker the night before, was sleei>Ing
late this morning. Coming home
at three o'clock dazed with close air
and cigar smoke, he had nwakered
liis wife to toll her that he would be
"dead" in the morning, and Cherry
had accordingly crept about her dressing
noiselessly, had darkened the bedroom
and eaten her own breakfast
without the clatter of a dish. Now
she was sitting by the window, panting
ii. the noon heat. She was thinking,
as it chanced, of the big forest
ui home and of n certain day?just
one of their happy days I?only a year
ago, when she had lain for a dreamy
hour on the soft forest floor, staring
up Idly through the laced fanlike
branches, and die thought of her father.
with his mild voice and ready
smile; and some emotion, almost like
fear, came over her. For the first time
she asked herself. In honest bewilderment,
why she had married.
The he.it deepened and strengthened
and increased as the burning day
wore on. Martin waked ud. hot and
headachy, and having further distressed
himself with strong coffee and
eggs, departed into the dusty, motionless
furnace out-of-doors. The far
brown hills shimmered and swam, the
"Emmy Younger" looked its barest,
Its ugliest, its least attractive self.
There was a shadow in the doorway
; she looked up surprised. For a
minute the tall figure in striped linen
and the smiling face under the flowery
hat seemed those of a stranger.
Then Cherry cried out and laughed,
and in another instant was crying in
Alix's arms. 1
Alix cried, too, but it was with a
great rush of pity and tenderness for
Cherry. Alix had not young Jove and
novelty to soften the outlines of the
"Emmy Younger" and she felt, as she
frankly wrote lutor to Iter futher, "at
last convinced that there is a hell!"
The heat and bareness and ugliness
of the mine might have beeu overlooked,
but this poor little house of
Cherry's, this wood stove draining
white ashes, this tin sink with its
pump, and the bathroom with neither
| faucets nor drain, almost bewildered
| Alix with their discomfort.
Kven more bewildering was the
change In Cherry. There was a cerloin
hardening that Impressed AJIx at
^8lfei
once. Tliere was a weary sort of patience,
a disillusioned concession to
the drabness of married life.
But she allowed the younger sister
to see nothing of this." Indeed, Cherry
so brightened under the stimulus of
Mix's companionship that Martin told
her that s$ie was more like her old self
than site had beeD for months. Joyously
she divided her responsibilities
with Alix, explaining the difficulties
of marketing and housekeeping, and
Joyously Allx-assumed them. Her vitality
infected the whole household.
She gave them spirited accounts of
Anne's alTair. "He's a nice little academic
fellow," she said of Justin Little.
"If he hnd a flat iron in each
hand he'd probably weigh close to a
hundred pounds! He's a?rwell, a sort
of damp-looklug youth, If you know
what I mean! I always want to take
a crash towel and dry him off!"
"Fancy Anne wltn a shrimp like
that!" Cherry saia, wun n pnmu iuuk
nt her own' man's fine height "He
sounds swful to me."
"He's not, really. Only It seems that
he belongs to the oldest family In
America, or something, and Is the
only descendant?"
"Money?" Cherry asked, Interestedly.
"No, I don't think money, exactly.
At least I know he is getting a hun|
dred a month in his uncle's law'offlc^
| and Dad thinks they ought to wait
until they have a Uttle more. She'll
! have something, / you know," All*
i added, after a moment's thought,
j "Your cousin?" Martin asked.
"Well, her father went Into the fireextinguisher
thing with Dad," .AUx
elucidated, "and evidently she and
[ Justin have had deep, soulful thoughts
about It. Anyway, the other day she
said?you know her way, CherryTell
me, Uncle, frankly and honestly,
may Justin and I draw out my share
for that little home that is going to
mean so much to us?'"
"I can hear her!" giggled Cherry.
"Dad Immediately said that she
could, of course," Alix went on. "lie
wns adorable about It. He said, 'It
will do more than build you a little
home, my dear!'" .
| "We'll get a slice of that some time,"
I Cherry said thoughtfully, glancing nt
her husband. "I don't mean wheu
[ Dad dies, either." she added, In quick
I affection. "I mean that he might build
us a little home some day in Mill
Valley."
"Gee, how he'd love It!" Allx said,
| enthusiastically. ,
"I married Cherry for her money,"
Martin confessed.
"As a matter of fact," Cherry con|
tradlcted him, vivaciously, animated
even by the thought of a change and
a home, "we have never even spokeD
of it before, have we, Mart?"
"I never heard of it before," he admitted,
smiling, as he knocked the
ashes from his pipe. "But it's pleasant
, to know that Cherry will come in for
i a nest-egg some day!"
Presently the visitor boldly sug1
gested that she and Cherry should both
! go home together for the wedding, and
I Martin agreed good-natyredly.
"But, Mart, how'll you get along?"
. his wife asked anxiously. She had
fumed and fussed and puttered and
toiled over the enre of these four
rooms for so long that it seemed unbelievable
that her pluce might be
| vacated even for a day.
"Oh, I'll get along fine!" he answered
indifferenfly. So, on the Inst
I day of August, in the cream-colored
i silk and the expensive hat again, yet
looking, Alix thought, sti mgely un- i
like' the bride that had been Cherry, |
she and her sister happiiy departed
for cooler regions. Martin took them
to tlie train, kissed his sistcr-ln-tnw
gaily and then his wife affectionately.
"Be a good littJe girl, Babe," he
said, "and write me!"
"Oh, I will?I will!" Cherr looked
I after him smilingly from the car win;
dnw. "He really is an old dear;" she
fold Alix.
CHAPTER VI.
But when at I lie end of the long 1
! day they readied the valley, and when
I her father came innocently into the
| garden and stood staring vaguely at
her for a moment?for her visit and
the day of Allx's return had been kept
a secret?her first act was to hurst
into tears. She cJung to the fatherly
\ shoulders as if she were a stormj
beaten bird safely borne again, and '
a 1 though rlie immediately laughed at
I liersotf .iiid told the sympathetically I
watching Peter end AIlx that she
didn't know what was the matter with
her, It was 01J.v to Interrupt the words
with flesh tears.
Tears of joy, she told them, lnttgh-1
Ing at the moisture In her fnther's
eyes. She had a special joyous word
for Ilong; she laughed and teased
i and Questioned Auto, when Anne and
Justin came back from an nflernoon
concert In the city, with an Interest;
and enthusiasm most gratifying to
| both.
i After dinner she had her old place
j on the arm of her father|s porch chair;
A llx.'wItlTBuck's "smooth head In heir
lap, sot on the porch step beside Per
ter, and the lovers murmured from
the darknesa of the hammock under
the shadow of the rose vine. It was
happy talk. In the sweet evening coolness;
everybody seemed harmonious
and In sympathy tonight.
"Bedtime 1" said her father presently
and -she laughed In sheer pleasure.
"Daddy?that sounds so nice again I"
"But you do look fagged and pale,
little girl," be told her. "You're to
stay In bed In the morning."
years ago.
, He says the Chinese played it with
a round leather ball, stuffed with goat
hair. Players wore silk clothes and,
when tired, fannarf themselves.
"Tz'uk Kuk" was what the Chinese
called football.
The Greeks had n similar game
,which somehow reached them from
the Orient. So did the Romans. Ancient
Eskimos played it with a mossstuffed
leather hall.
Cromwell was a football fan 300
'years ago. Chaucer and Shakespeare
saw the' game and wrote delightedly
about it. Time and again. Hnglish
kings put the ban on the gridiron
game, fearing it was undermining the
game of archery, which developed
bow-an-arrow experts for war.
The reason football originated in remote
antiquity jjnd was played by
every important ration, is because it
embodies nearly every branch or war
tactics.
The big Herman drives during the
World war were nothing but attempts
to plunge through a line that held.
| If an army exposes a flank, the enemy
makes an end run.
As for artillery, it corresponds to
forward passes.
When West Point plays football
with Annapolis, it is a contest of military
tactics between Army and Navy.
That bnsebr.ll in America has taken
the lead in popularity away from the
older and ^ miltary game, football,
simply goes to show that normally we
are not a military nation. In a contest,
the American public most admires
headwork and minute skill?
baseball.
Going Slow.?The two men were
adrift in an open boat and it looked
bad for them. Finally one of them,
frightened, began to pray.
"O Lord," he prayed. "I've broken
most of Thy commandments. I've
been a bard drinker, hut if my life is
spared now I'll promise Thee never
again?"
"Wait a minute, Jack," said his
friend. "Don't .10 too far. I think i
see a sail."
ARE YOU A (iflOD RISK?
Bonding Covpaoles Favor Folics
Who Write Bad Bud.
..." f . , t.
*100,000,000 EMBEZZLEMENT YEARLY
Man Who Cdaaea a Lot la Good Risk
"". !?? Ma la Human?Ex-Convicta
"Oh, I'll t>o down r sne nssureu mm.
But she did not come In the morning,
none the less. She was tired Id soul
$nd body and glad to let them spoil
her again, glad to rest and sleep In
the heavenly peace and quiet of the
old home.
Late in the afternoon, rested, fresh,
^and her old sweet self in the white
ruffles, she came down to Join them.
They bad i^ettled themselves under
Late In tne Afternoon one vamc i/wnn
to Join Them. ?
the redwoods. Anne and Justin, Peter
and Allx and Buck, the dog, all Jumped
up tp greet her. Cherry very quietly
subsided Into a wicker chair,, listened
rather than talked, moved her lovely
.eyes affectionately from one to another.
. _ .
(To be Continued.)
FOOTBALL
Popular Gam* Agitated in China
Thousands of Years Ago.
How many footfall stars know that
they are playing a game Invented In
China 4618 years ago?
The Inventor was Huang TI, the
Yellow Emperor, husband of the woman
who originated the silk worm industry.
' Footfall Is the oldest outdoor sport.
Compared with It, baseball Is a youngster.
The first diagram of a baseball
diamond was drawn In 1839 by Abner
Doubleday of hoopers town, N. Y.
In 1907 an investigating commission
found that the "national game of
baseball" originated with the Knickerbock
Club, which was organized In
New York in 1845.
You can, of course, trace baseball
back to "town ball" of early New Eng
land. That, in turn, leads you 10 xne
English game of "rounds." But,
alongside football, baseball is a babe
in arms, though fans may insist that
It originated before man, among monkeys
tossing cocoanuts at each other.
Dr. Stewart Culin, of the Brooklyn
institute Museum, is the man who has
traced football back into China 461$
"From my study of the handwriting
' of crooks," ho says, "I believe that
j vanity and the desire to deceive have
i a great deal to do with the cultivation
! of a certain type of very fine penmanFOR
PROMPTNESS
and ACCURACY
In Prescription work brina your Prescriptions
to us to be filled.
We carry a full line of First-Class
Drugs and are confident we can do
your work at lower prices than any
other Drug Store.
OUR PRESCRIPTION
Department is in charge of Dr. D. L.
SH1EDER, a Registered Pharmacist of
many years of experience.
Call No. 31, and we Will Get Any Doc-!
tor You Want and Get Him Quick.
MackorellDrugCo.
i Near the Court Houie
"My opportunities for studying such
handwriting follow the opening of each
new embezzlement case," says Mr. Cole,
"for the first procedure is to study the
application which the accused man Ailed
out with his pen before being employed
in a position .of responsibility.
And I'm not speaking only of bookkeepers,
bank tellers and other men In
positions requiring a good hand, for we
are called upon to bond ofAce boys,
salesgirls, railroad conductors, restaurant
cashiers, and others required to
handle money without any tall feats of
penmanship.
"In looking over our Ales of business
criminals, comprising examples from
every kind of trade everywhere, I come
across few specimens of poor handwriting?not
more than one to every
Afteen that are above the average of
excellence.- In other words about 93
per cent, of the defaulters in our flies
have been first-class penmen. And I
have examined thousands of applications
of men who afterward went
wrong".
Richard M. McKenna of the detective
division of the New York police department,
who has made a special
! study of handwriting in connection
with criminal investigation, supports
Cole's interesting observation.
Art Poor Risks.
By P. J. Haskln.
New York City.?If you want to make
a favorable impression upon a bonding
company, be fat, profane, married and
have bad penmanship. All of these
characteristics, usually looked upon as
handicaps by the general public, are regarded
as highly desirable by the big
New York bonding companies which
underwrite thousands of embezzlement
risks each year.
It is estimated that the large total of
$100,000,000 Is annually embezzled in
this country.. The total number of
known embezzlers whose defalcations
are discovered is around 15.000. These
startling figures explain why the bonding
companies have found It necessary
to make an elaborate study of character,
environment and psychology In underwriting
embezzlement risks. After
many years of such study and experience,
they have been able to definitely
label some human traits good risks and
Others bad. '
According to William B. Joyce, president
of the National Surety company
of this city, the toian who cusses a lot
is a good risk, not because he is profane,
but because he is Essentially human.
"His mind," says Mr. Joyce, "has
a safety valve through which he pours
his excess emotions. He is far safer
than the quiet, suppressed individual,
who stifles his natural impulses."
Mr. Joyce has been studying the
characteristics of erabezalers for more
than twenty years, awing wmcn nine
h? has formulated the following guides
for underwriters:
"It is always the 'trusted employe'
who gets away, with the most money.
"There is no age at which embezzlement
ceases.
"Young and unformed characters are
the chief offenders.
"Margin speculation leads to more
embezzlements than cards or dice; betting
qn the ponies ranks a close second.
4
^"Ex-conYicts are the poorest risks of
all. * ?
"Since prohibition, many embezzlements
have been caused by the high
cost of bootleg liquor."
Fat people are considered better
risks than lean ones, because the obese
are on the whole more placid and content
wltt) their lot, and less inclined to
morbl^ recklessness. Married risks are
preferred to single risks, as tame
hordes are preferred to wild ones.
Cranks of every kind, moreover, are
readily accepted by the surety companies
for the same reason that profane
meik are favored. In other words, peo-,
pie who flaunt their idlosyncracles sufficiently
to be termed "cranks" at least
get the poison out of their system.
Good Penmen Often Bad.
Perfect penmanship is regarded with
the deepest distrust by most bonding
companies. H. T. Cole, inspector of the
American Surety company here, who
in the last twenty years has accumulated
handwriting specimens of hundreds
of emb'ezzlers, says he believes
that superior penmanship is an unfailing
characteristic of embezzlers. He
does not deny that many an honest
man writes a tidy hand, but it is extremely
rare to And a defaulter who
writes ooorly. , J
? W
% ?
ship. The normal man in forming his
handwriting has the ideal of writing
freely, legibly and speedily, but the
man with the makingh of a crook in
him has the ideal of showing off his
cleverness, winning admiration, and
concealing his own true efla racter with
a false appearance of highly ornamented
perfection. That's the feeling I
|ecm to read in crook handwriting, and
I believe I could distinguish it eight
llmaa /lift rtf
Environment ?nd Crime.
The environment in which a risk is
located is also an Important conslderatiou
to the bonding companies. Movie
cashiers rarely embezzle, but a good
deal of money has been lost on people
associated with musical comedies.
There is something about a musical
comedy?probably Its gay, ca/ptree at?
mosphere of wine, women and song?
that seems to pave the way to easy
embezzlement.
It is ajso interesting to note that in
the new, rich sections jpf the southwest,
particularly in Texas and OJklahoiua,
where fortunes are often made (and
lost) In a night, there is much more
embezzlement than in the northeaster^
states, where money-making is a hard
and slow business.
The flies of the large bonding companies
contain many strange and romantic
stories of the rise and fhll of
embezzlers. Some day, perhaps, the
movies will realize the screen possibilities
of such material and buy the movie
rights to a bonding company's flies,
thereby turning poor risks into good
ones. What could be more movlesque,
for irfstance, than this melodrama with
n hnrtnv Andlnar. related bv Mr. Joyed
of the National Surety company,
One day a young teller In a small
middle western bank missed four $1,000
bills from his cage. He searched all
over the place, took*'everything out of
the -safe, checked, and rechecked his
figures, but the four thousand dollars
had completely disappeared. After
worrying about the matter for a couple
of days, he went to the president of
the bank and told him of the loss, askI
ing for a little time In which to And the
missing money.
| The president scoffed Indignantly at
tne young man's story and reminded
him that when four thousand dollars
vanished into thin air, the loss usually
! could be explained. "Either you will
make it good," said the president, "or
| you -jvlll go to the penitentiary." '
This terfible threat was not carried
out, however. The teHer was merely
discharged, but the stain on his character
made it difficult for him to get
work In the vicinity. No other bank
yr business firm would employ him,
and he was compelled to do manual labor.
r
Ten years later the bank decided to
remodel its interior, BehityL a loose
panel in the wall of the teller's cage
the missing $1,000 bills were found. It
was the teller's opportunity for righteous
retribution and he took advantage
of it. fiavlng lost his job ^nd his reputation
through the dilapidated condition
of-the bank's .interior, he brought
suit for iWa motion of character and
received a great deal more than the
missing four thousand dollars. Thus,
as D. W. Griffith would say, was manly
virtue rewarded.
For movie comedy material there is
.
| Mr. Farmer:
|! Now is the time to buy. a
CHATTANOOGA
HOOSIER GRAF
; I STALK CUTTEB
j ! ' We have them. Come i
|i v FEWELL &
< I W. J./FEWELL
YORK,
%
.
f
\ *
NEW LOT OF CHOICE
We have a choice bui
now?arrived a few days
for a Mule or two come a
excnange ana give yuu u
wnxa. JAMESB
> ' , : , -...
*
the case of a young clerk, also In a
middle western bank, who was. dispatched
to the railroad station with
$600 requested by a wealthy-depositor
who was passing through the town. It
was a breezy M&roh day, and as the
clerk waited for the train he strode
briskly up and down the platform,
whistling and tossing the bills int<^ the
air. Suddenly they were caught In the
wind and swept down the railroad
track. A hog foraging Hungrily along
the track sniffed the money and swdlk
SOW GRAIN
THfi WEEVIL la here god
likely be more pientirui next year, we i
have had fine seasons. Now! Is a good
time to sow Wheat, Oat?, Vetch, Clover
and set out your Onions. We have
Red, Appier and Fulahum Oats,
Leap's Prolific Wheat, and
Danvsrs Onion Sets.
AJ#p Fertiliser 'or grain.
Do you need a good Turn Plow? We,
sell the Vulcan-; also parts for satpe
and the Oliver.
BUILDING MATERIAL
We are well supplied In .everything it
takes to build or repair a house from
the pillar to the roof. We drill not undertake
to mention thfe different articles
that enter into a house, but please
bear in mind we have everything It
takes.
Please 8e?U? Your Account Vyjth Us.
YORK SUPPLY CO. '
Wholesale and Rptail. '& \
* I ' .Mil M^i'l a
AITTAMADVV 1? TVDCC
HU1UMUD1LL lillLO
LO?K AT THE8E PRIC3$-i-THEN
TAKE APVANTAGE OF TH|?
OFFER.
Expecting them to |0e here not later
than Saturday, the 12th, and jrhat
prices. Yes, and they are Standard
make Tires:
30x3 Noq-Skid 4 7.75 *
30x3 1-2 Non-Skid *75
3fic4 Non-Skid _1 12.75
32x4 Non Skid u 13J5 '
33x4 Non-Skid __.:_14.25
34x4 Non-Skid 14.%
Also see US for that good GREEN"
FLAjG Tractor and correct grade Ojl
for your car. And don't forget the
WESTINGHOUSE
BATTERY. It's a peach.
Plexico's CASH (Parage
Sharon. 8. C.
J. Clyde Plexico A. B. Plexioo
COTTON SEED Wanted
WE ARE TRYING HARD to help
make York a Cotton Seed Market. We
want to see our farmer friends get ev- J
ery penny they poaaihly cap for their
need. What is good for them is good
for us. Bring us your seed and let us
help each othpri .
ANOTHER 100 BARRELS
Of that good VIRGINIA VALLEY
FLOUR rolling that wo'can still Sell at
the same price?f3.75 per Sack /or the(
Best Patent in the plain, and |4.00 per
Sack for the Self Rising. ;> '
We are still selling LARD and COFFEE
undir the mancet. If YOU don't
trade with,US WE both low. /
Expecting every day to reoclvo a car
of Genuine y.
Harlan Block Goal.
T.* price is per ton at tbe car
We have Bagging and Ties, Crimson J
Clover and Vetch Seed,Guano and
Acid.
FERGUSON & YOUNGBjLQOD
, \ " I
f I
_ ' ' * !
, TURN PLOW
K DRILL, or a
\b *
q and Let Us Show You. !
, i
THOMPSON .
LUTHER G. TH0MP80N |
- - s. c.
MULES?
i<Vl-> nf TVTnlng of nnr Kni'nq i
i ago. If you have a need
nd see us. We will sell or
i fair deal.
s .! 1
ROTHERS R I j
L* J
N V
N .
loured it. The poor cierk went In search ffi
<4 Ahe man who owned the ho^ and *
bought it. Then be had It butchered. v
hoping that ite Stomach would contain >
fragment* of the money that wou^l he
redeemable at the treaeury department.
But the hag masticated too ef- ^
flcjfeptly. The 1(00 was ruined, aiad the
surety company had to mute iwa um
bank's loss. ' ?
'I 1 III I r t I M
Look Before Yon Leap
'IT H^S BEEN the fixed policy of }j
the management of the MutuaPBenefit
Ltfe Insurance Company of "Newark, j
J., since the day it commenced busines^Jn
1846, to gtuuuntoe to each poflfcy j
noiaer <evej-y cviniuennivii i < ? - .
penenee taught It could be gugranteed
? Absolute Safety and as a result if
always been recognised as the
leading policy holders' company of
America. THE FACT, that it ?u *1ready
guaranteeing its policy holders
naare than any other company has nevefT^aused
Jt to hesitate about giving
MORE, if amir investigation
and-consideration it was sure it could,
wllh safety do so. It has recently announced
changes In its. contracts tbat
are the moat radical, startling and val- ?
uable tbat havs been announced by any , i
life Insurance company during ]the past
twegty-flve years, and tbe change is
retroactive and applies to every policy
in force. We will be pleased to explain
mm all old policy holders who desire S
tmdttaow about It, and also to all who
are'.sot so fortunate as to be policy
holders. "Let us demonstrate how you
can carry Insurance In the Mutual Ben- 9
eflt without it aetuaily costing you a
?SAM 11 * S. K. GRIST M
WtTKIST ACtENTg , 'i
?
NEW MODEL DODGE
gwtCar fortto Honoy on
L3-' #.1ia Ifa/rlmi.
I HAVE THJB EXCLUSIVE Agency . t
for this well known car on the Western
sfce of. the York County.
AUTOMOBILE OWNERS generally
know what the DODGE la and al} aro
agreed as to it* SUPERIOR tyBBITS.
THE MODEL poiseaseb ^omo
features that are well worth Investigation,
and I am In a poettlon to enlighten
ail who m%y be interested.
CALL ON OR WRITE ME.
0. P. SHEEEE
W YORK, S. Q. J?t
? 1 11 i' 1 je. .
Buy At Home ...
NEED to go elsewhere when you
oan get such .a large selection frow one
of^ht largest Arms dealing la n>. -y .
general merchandise. j;
tfCR STOCK 18 LARGE and variad
a nd? has been recognised for years as
Oa^of the leading stocks In this Motion
of the stats. We carry all of the
HEAVY GROCERIES and
^ FARM IMPLEMENTS II
Writhe fanner as well as the house?
?tn a ??xr
u. a>. riiAi i
Headquarter? for the Farmer and Hie
Cntire family >
AHARON. AOMJH CAROUNA
PBOTESSlONAlt 0ABD8.
J , n__
J. A. Marion . ' , W. Q. Flnrey fc
"MARION AND KlILBY
ATTORNEV8 AT UAW
. Office opposite the Courthouae.
Phone 126. YORK,A. C.
Vj > ; ' - V'- ;:$j
Dr.. C. L. WOOTBK
./ ? DENTIST? H
OFFJCE OVER THE FOATOFFICE
Telephones: Office, 128; Residence, 63.
1 CLOVER, t - 8.C. 5
71 t,1. 6m
l '! 1 f 1 1 "
: tfiTinr mm, D. O. \
CHIROPRACTOR
Oieeana of the Apinh and Nerveue
Syetam and all Ortaaie Ineo-erdina*
- Phone 396 114
A >ROCK HILL, -..r-Afc.
fg ' , .. j| "M
TOSS FURNITURE CO.
Undertakers ? Embalmers
YORK, - . e. c.
M'
Id All It* Br*nche??Motor Equipment.
Prompt Service Day or Nlfht In
Town or Country. . H
Dr. R H. GLENN V
Veterinary Surgeon v*
CALLS AN8WERED DAY OR NIGHT
. Phone 92
york, v . . s. c, ^
W. W. LBWIfl
v Attorney at Lav
Rooms 211 ami 208
People* Bank A Trust Co.'* Building,
york, - a e.
Phones: Office 69. Realdeno* R
JOHN R. HART
attorney and councillor
AT LAW.
Prompt and Ce.rfful Attention to All
Businoee Undertaken.
Telephone No. 69. YORK. 8. C.
ft it
J.a BRICE '
Attorney At Law.
Prompt Attention to *1) Logs!
Ruataess ot Whatever Nature.
Front Offleoe, Second Floor, F?...lee
mink 4 Tr it Co.'e Building. Phono
No. II, ... , I
- i: { -J.1../mdiflutA I