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p * J jisre 6y ... ; S NORRI$J L ^ MTttUEW NORRtf 'jSF^ j^p CHAPTER VII. K|j H The last (lay of March and<of Cherry's visit broke clear and blue, and ifcjgk'B with it spring seemed t<^ have come gap on a rush of perfume and green/beaumU ty. Days had been soft mid. warm j$i!" before; this dny was hot, uid flushed WB with color and splendor. si| Alix and Cherry washed eacji otKW er's hair in the old fashion, and came W trailing down with towels and vombs I to the garden. The doctor Joined them in the midst of their tossing and spreading, and sat smoking peacefully on the porch'steps. "Oh, heuvens, how I love this sort of weather!" Alix exclaimed, flinging - her brown mane backward, her tali figure sl<jnde.- in a- faded kimono. "Dad?and Peter," she went on, suddeuly sitting erect, "will get all this nice clean hair full of cigar smoke tonight, so what's the use, anyway?" "Tonicht's the nieht we to to i'e ter's?" Cherry stated rather than i asked. "Do you remember," she j glanced at her father, who was read- ! ing his paper, "do you remember I when Dad always used to scold us j for being rude to Peter?" "Well, I'd rather go to Peter's for dinner than anywhere else I ever go!" Alix remarked, dreamily. "Seriously, 1 mean it!" she repeated as Cherry looked at her iu amused surprise. "In the first place, I love his bungalow? j tiny as it is, it has the whole of a little canyon to itself, and the prettiest j view in the valley, I think. And then j I love* the messy sitting room, with all the books and music, and I love i the way Peter entertains. I wish," j she added, simply, "that I liked Peter ; half as well as I do his house!" "Peter's a dear!" Cherry contended. ; "Oh, I know he is!" Alix said, quickly. "Peter's always been a dear, of course. But I menu in a special sense?" finished Alix with an entirely unembarrassed tgrin. / Cherry, through n glittering cloud , of hair, looked at her steadily. Suddenly she gave an odd laugh. "Do you know I never thought of Peter like that?" she said. Alix nodded with a cautious look at her father, who was out of hearing. "No, nor I! We've always taken him rather for granted," she admitted. "Only I've been rather wishing, lately, that Peter wasn't such an unflattering, blg-brotherlsh, evcry-dayneighbor sort of person." Cherry regarded her steadily, with.; an awakening look iu Iter eyes, . "Why lately?" she asked. .< ' "Because." said Alix, briskly and unromnntically, "I think Peter would like me to?well, to stop taking lilni i for granted! I Imagine lie's awfully lonely. And then I imagine it would plense Dad?" "Dad has always been ridiculously fond of him," Cherry said, tl oughtful?7. retor?possibly in lovo with k Alix! She had never ev.-n suspected it Well, there was eowti.ing rather pleasant in the thought, after all, If didn't mind his tftglhiens and h 1 nness. Cherry thought about it all B^lay. She had no thought of money a year or two ago; but she was more experienced cow. And Peter was rich, ordinarily she would have said that rslio wus not going to change for Peter's dinner; but this afternoon, without mentioning t lie fact, she quietly got into one of her prettiest dresses; a dress that had been made in the long-ago excitement of trousseau days. Peter as a rather autocratic and critical neighbor was one thing; as a possible brother-in-law lie was another. She came downstairs to find her father waiting, and they walked away through the woods together. Alix 1 had already gone up to Peter's house to play tennis. Tlie.v walked slowly through the lovely aisles of the trees, crossing a road or .two, climbing 4 steadily upward under great redwoods. Cherry's skirt brushed, the gold dust from masses and masses of buttercups. The tennis was over, but just over; I'eter and Alix were sitting, still panting, on the rail of the wide, open j porch,- and . shouted hs the others L came pp. "You misted doubles!" called Alix. j "The grandest we ever did! Doubles with the Thompsons and three sets straight to us?six-two, six-two, and six-two again! They've gone. Oh, j heavens, I never had such tennis. Oil, ' peter, when you stood there at the net ' ' < ??*? r-nrveil vonr hand like a enn" UIM1 ,|U.-v v... .v.. ~ [ ? Allx gave an enthusiastic imitation ?"and over slie went, and game and [ set ; Cherry, sinking white and frilly into a chair, smiled indulgently. The walk had given her a wild-rose color, and even Alix was struck with iter extraordinary beauty. Allx had wheeled j s about on tlie rail to face the porch, and l'eter had gotten to his feet and was hospitably pushing basket chairs ahout. Now he gave Alix a critical look. " *..11.. t? )l0 "YOUTO Ul^liiirciuiij uiu,I , ..v 4 Mid, fraternally. "I know it." slip answered, calmly. ' "Have I time to till)?" "AH the time in the world!" he an- 1 , , v ~ *!V " swered. i Alix departed. , "It's very pleRsnnt to me to have Alix so much nt home here," Cherry \ said, when Alix was gone, and the doctor wandering happily about the garden. "! don't know whnt we'd do if any one ever usurped our places here!" She had said it deliberately; the fascination of her recent discovery was too strong to resist. Ttye man flushed suddenly. For a full minute lie did not speak, and Cherry was surprised to find herself a little thrilled and even frightened by his silence. "What put that into your head?" he asked, presently, smoking with his eyes fixed upon the valley far below. "Perhaps it's because there are so many changes, Peter; my marriage. Anne's?everything different! It Just came to me that it Is nice to hnve this always the same." "Perhaps Alix will come up here and help keep It so some day," the man said, deliberately. Cherry's look of elaborate surprise and pleasure died before his serlohs glance. She was silent for a moment. "Why don't yon ask her?" she said in a low, thoughtful tone, trembling, eager to preserve his mood without a false note. "I have," he answered simply. Cherrv's heart tumped with a sudden unexpected emotion. Wlint wns It? Not pleasure, not all surprlsc-Vurel.v there could be no jealousy mixed with her feeling for Peter's plans? But site was dazed with the rush of feeling; hurt In some fashion she could not stop to dissect now. "And she said no?" she stammered In confusion. ? "She said no. Or, at least, I Intimated that I was a lonely old affectionate man with this,and that to offer, and she Intimated that that wasn't enough. I ought to have said?I ought to explain?that I had told her< only a few days previously, that I hnd always loved somebody else!" "Oh-li-h !" Cherry was enlightened.; She visualized an affair In the last years of the old century for Peter. "Oh, and?and she didn't love you?" Cherry asked. "The lady? She was unfortunately ' married before I had a cliattce to ask her," said Peter. "Oh-h-h!" Cherry said ngaln, impressed, "and you'll never get over It?" she asked, timidly. "Peter, I never knew that!" she added as he wns silent. "Does?does Dad know?" "Nobody knows but Ailx, and she i only knows the bare facts," he as- | sured her. "Oli!" Cherry could tl^lnk of nothing \ to add to the sympathetic little mono- j syllable. ' "Finished with the shower!" i shrieked Alix from the warm darkness inside the- doorway. "Hurry up, ! Peter, something smells utterly grand!" "That's the chicken thin?!" Peter j shouted Imck. springing tip to disnp- , pear in the direction of the bathroom. Cherry sat on. silent, wrapped still in the new spell of the pleasant voire, the strangely appealing and yet! masterful personality. The dinner straggled as all Peter's i dinners did; Mix mixed a salad dress- j ing; Peter himself flashed in and out | of the tiny, hot kitchen a hundred i times. Kow, In immaculate linen, j came hack and forth in leisurely j tahlesetting. Suddenly everything ( was ready; the crisp, sniok!ng-hot | French lopf, the big. brown jar of hub- i bllr.v m l ndoroua clilrke!). (lie lettuce i curled in it;- bowl, tlie long-necked j bottles In '.heir straw casrt, and cheeses nnl crackers and olives and tigs and tiny lish in oil and niarrons in tinted paper that were a part of all Peter's dinners. After dinner they watched the moon rise, until Alix drifted in to the piano and I'cter followed her, and the others came in, too, to sit beside the lire. As usual it was midnight before any niii> MiniiL'ht of midimr one of Peter's evenings. * And ;ilJ through the pleasant, quiet hours, and when lie bundled them up in his own big loose coats to drive them home, Cherry was thinking of him in (his new light; Peter loving u woman, and denied. The knowledge seemed to fling a strange glamor about him; she saw new charui in him, or perhaps, us she told herself, she saw for the first time how charming he really was. His speech seemed actually the pleasanter for the stammer at which they had all laughed years ago; the slight limp lent its own touch of Individuality, and the man's blunt criticisms of books and music, politics and people, were softened by his humor, ids genuine humility, and hi? eager hospitality. Next day sue took occasion to mention Peter and his a flairs to .Mix. Alix .turned fiery red, but laughed hardily. "If he considers that an offer, he can consider it a refusal. I guess," she said, boyishly embarrassed. "1 like hint?I'm crazy .about.hint. But I don't want any party In ringlets and crinolines to come floating from the dead past over my child's innocent cradle?" I "Alix, you're awful!" Cherry laughed. "You couldn't talk that way If you loved him!" Alix laughed. "I suppose I ought to be a mass of blushes. The truth Is. I Hkc kids, and I don't like husbands?" "You don't know anything about husbands!" Cherry laughed. "I know lots of men I'd like to go off with for a few months," Alix pursued. "But then I'd like to come home again! I don't see why that isn't perfectly reasonable-?'* ' * "Well, it's not!" Cherry declared almost crossly. "That Isn't marriage. You belong where your husband Is, and you^-you are aUvays glad to be with him-1-" "But suppose you get tired of him, like a job or a boftrding-liouse, or any of your other friends?"- Alls persisted Idly. "Well, you aren't srpposed to!" Cherrv said, feebl :. Allx let her have the last word; It was oniy due to her superior experience, she thought crossly. But half an hour Inter, lying wakeful, and thinking that she would miss dear old Cherry tomorrow, she fancied slje heard something like a soh from Cherry's bed, and her whole heart softened with sympathy for her sister. (To be Continued.) KU KLUX PRDBE ORDERED k Indictment Charges Usurpation of Powers of Coui-ts. .. * An investigation of the activities 6f the Ku Klux Klan in Abbeville was ordered last Friday by Judge Walter K. Brook, who charged the Superior Court grand jury in AshevUle, X. C., to conduct such an inquiry and return true bills of indictment against persons found to have usurped powers of the courts contrary to law. The court order was made following developments. In the Recorder's Court, where ^wo women who recently forfeited their bonds and tried to evade appearance In vagrancy charges were brought hack to the jurisdiction of the court from Saluda by two men acting as officials but?who had no authority from the duly constituted officers, and whose identity is as yet urdetermined. The second development came when the case wr.s called for trial and lawyers appeared for the prosecution v/ho stnted that they were employed by L. L. Fronenburg, when the court insist etl on knowing the source of their employment. Froner.burg, it is said, is trie lender of the Ku Klux Klan in Asheville. . f ? Irish immigrants to the number of 4,338,199 left their native shore^ for other lands between May", 1)151, and December, 31st, 1920. I TO OUR x | CUSTOMERS | ? We beg to advice You that on ?! X ant* X After November 15th ? Our terms will be STRICTLY CASH I X. We have adopted a Cash policy X * in paying for our supplies anil > V will therefore have to sell our ? PRODUCTS FOR CA3H. V Y After November 15th ? ? Y *:* We will have no new accounts, ? X so please do not X X X Ask Us to Charge. 'i | CLOVER COTTON | OIL & GINNING i | COMPANY, J I Clover, S. C. | mirr nuniTirriTrkr MJNt lUKMlUKfc We Want to Figure With You on Your Needs in the Furniture Line. Our stock is still growing and we invite everybody in the Clover vicinity to call and see what we have to offer. Our Aim Is to Please and Every Article We Sell Will Have a Guarantee Back of It. OUR STOCK INCLUDES Cook Stoves and Ranges, Iron Beds Cots. Feather Beds, Springs, Sewing Machines, Dining Tables, Mattresses Blankets, Comforts, Rugs, and Arl Squares, Window Shades, Kitchen Safes, Kitchen Tables, Wood Beds Davenettes. Trunks, Suit Cases, Hand Bags, Chairs and Rockers, Kitchen Cabinets, Heaters, Bedroom Suits in Oak, Walnut and Mahogany, etc. We Sell for Cash and On Installments Store Next to the Postoffice C. L. PARKER & CO. Phone 144 CLOVER, S. C PICKLES We have -a lot of very choice SOl'R , .?r/-?i.-r in hiilli- Alsn ana ?h rjra rivi\ui<u u> ........ a good line of Pickles in bott:!es. MORARA COFFEE? Our customers who have tried Moraj ra Coffee say it is good?as good as the best Coffee to be had. Try a pound. | KL1.M?The whole niilk in powdered form. Some of our customers prefer it to the condensed milk. VEGETABLES? We have Bermuda Onions, Rod On' ions. Cabbage, Sweet and Irish Potatoes, Dried Beans and Peas. AUNT JEMIMA? Pan Cake Flour and Buckwheat Flour and it is FRESH, too. PREMIER SALAD DRESSING. Best MELROSE FLOUR? When you want the P. 10ST Flour just order a sack of MELROSE. It is recj agnized as the REST by ill good housekeepers. We have a fresh supply. SHERER&QUINN , OLD HOUSE OF SERVICE KILLED BY LION'S CLAW Animal Trainer Talks Interestingly oi King of Beasts. ! "No. the lion's ekiw is not poisonous if kept clean," remarked Capt. Turf trainer in Wests' shows at the Fail grounds last week, to a Herald representative. As he talked the trainei i put his hand through the bars and l gently stroked the paw of a huge king of the jungle that slept in its steelbound cage as innocently as a kitten "The average person has an idea,' continued Capt. Turf "that a lion's claws carry a certain deadly poisor and that a, small scratch is as fatal as the bite of a rattle-snake. This is a mistake. The lion's claw itself is not poisonous. It contains no more poisor than a man's finger nail,-but it is the filth their claws pick up that causes infection and results in bloodpoisoning. There are numerous case) on record where men have died irt- a few hours after jccoivlng a scratch froir a lion's claw. If cages were disinfected every day there would be nc danger of contracting blocd-poisoninj: from a lion's scratch, but there is a lot of work connected with a big circus that moves every day and these details canrvot be attended to. I wni with tho cider John Sparks, whose show whs here last week, when he was clawed on the hand by a big lior and died in three days. No better man ever lived than Johr Sparks. His men loved him like t father because he was a father tc .every man in the circus, from the stake boy to the Hghest salaried mar in the outfit. He did not sit back ir bis private car and read reports. He was everywhere, looking after the smallest details, and you never knew when to expect him. The day he war wounded I had charge of a bunch ol lions, ft was one of those off day: with the. Hons when they appeared tc be particularly vicious. t They have those days just like human beings. /II ,waa feeding time and thp lions were hungry: A door catch 99 the cage was loose and Mr. Sparks reached uf to exnmine it, and as he raised his hard the lion reached out his paw anc struck his hand, tearing the flesh for several inches. I don't think the lion meant to hurl him. I have always had an idea thai R. C. Brocklnjrton F. L. Rinnan W. M. Brown Palmetto Monument Co ' YORK, - - 8. C. Why Pay an Agent Profit? We know that the Agent has to live but let the other fellow keep him up Deal Direct with the i. PALMETTO MONUMENT CO., York, 8. C.; Phone No, 121. If you wish us to call we Will be glai to have one of our firm call^n You We do not travel agents. We can and will do your work at a . Low a Price and fs Good in Quality a any one in the business. Try Us, is a that we ask. You be the judge. PALMETTO MONUMENT CO. "Honor Them With a Monument." Phone 211 YORK, 8. C I REAL ESTATE $$$$_$ If You _ Ml Want Tnem, aee ? 80ME OF MY'OFFERINGS: 40 Acres?Seven miles from York j bounded by lands of J. B. McCarter, C W. Carroll, H. Q. Brown and others 11 3 - room residence, barn and cottoi ,I house. Well of good water; five or si: > I acres bottom land. Buck Horn creel and branch runs through place. Abou ' I 4-acre pasture; 5 or 6 acres woods' mostly pine and balance work land ' l About 3-4 mile to Beersheba schoo , It is going to sell; ao If you want 1 - see me right away. Property of H. C Farrls. )! 60 2-5 Acres?4 1-2 miles from Yorl >1 and less than half mile to Philadelphi ? school house, church and station- Fou N room residence, besides hall; 4-roor ; tenant house; barns; 3 wells of goo ' i water, and nice orchard. About 8 acre j in pasture and woods and balance ope I land. Act quick if you want It. Prop l erty of C. J. Thomasson. 90 Acres at Brattonsville?Propert of Estate of Mrs- Agnes Harris. Wi) 1 give a real bargain here. 144 Acres?Five miles from Filbet on Ridge Road, bounded by lands o W. M. Burns, John Hartness and oth ers; 7-room residence, 5-stall barn ani j other outbuildings; t^o 4-room tenan , houses, barns, etc.; 2 wells ar.d 1 goo spring; 3 horse farm open and balanc in timber (oak, pine, &c.) and pasture About 2 miles to Dixie School am , Beersheba church. Property of Mrs. ? J. Barry. ! i 33 Acres?Adjoining the above tracl ! j \bout 3 or 4 acres of woods and bal ance open land. Will sell this trac j separately or in connection wtth abov , tract. Property of J. A. Barry. , 195 Acres?Four miles fronr York, oi Turkey creek road, adjoining lands o i fiottvn Queen and Watson: 2-hors farm open and balance in woods an , pasture- One and one-half mll?s t Philadelphia and Miller schools. Th price Is right. See me quick. Property ? of Mrs. Molly Jones. Fiva Room Residence?On Charlott . street. In the town of *York, on larg lot. I will sell yotj this property fo less than you can build the bouse Better act ai once. McLain Property?On Charlotte St | In the town of York. This property lie between Neely .Cannon and Lockmor mills, and is a valuable piece of prop erty. Will sell It either as a whole o in lots. Here is an opportunity t make some money. 89 acres?9 miles from York, 6 mllei from Smyrna and 6 miles from Klng*i Creek. Smyrna R. F. D. passes place One horse farm open and balance fi ! woods?something like 100.000 feet sav timber. 12 acres fine bottoms, 3 roon residence. Property of P. rf. Bigger. 210 aores?3 1-2 miles from York oi Plnckney road. 8 room residence, wel of good water, 2 large barns, three . .? i'oiieaa nnrl rtna 5 rnnn | tenant house. 40-ncre pasture. Goo< [orchard. About 150 acres open land : balance In oak and pine timber. Prop city of M. A. McFarland. Ixians.tirr.mged on farming lands. GEO. W. WILLIAMS RKlTi ESTATE I ' | Chattel and Crop Mortgagee at Thi 1 Enguiroi; Of.tics. -j*.,. . I he meant to play with the boss. We I always keep a bottle of Iodine handy P and Mr. Sparks got the bottle and soaked the wound. He bandaged his i hand and went ,on about his business. , The next day he was taken ill. We sent for a physician and the physician pronounced it a case of blood poisoning. We put him on a special I train and rushed him over to Cincinr nati, but despite the efforts of skttldd physicians he died on the third fRy. . It just happened that at this particu' lar time the lion's claws were infected i with filth he had picked up in his cage i and ihe poisor got Into the blood heI fore it could be counteracted with the i iodine treatment. The claw of any : c&gcd animal is poisonous, the same as i the ifhger nail. The best way to dis! infect their claws Is to let them walk i in sand. It is not a.diseaso peculiar tP the lion family. I have been bitten and clawed by lions, but as luck would r have it there was not filth enough on i their claws at the itime to set up ' blood-poisoning. A few weeks ago," continued Capt. Tyrf, exhibiting a bad ; looking scar on the outside of his i hand, "a monkey that has bccfo giving treuble bit me through the hand. I ! used the iodine treatment and the hand got well, but believe me I was i uneasy for several days. A monkey's i bite is poisonous and they are dani gerous animals with thcit* teeth." "Where is the monkey that did the hltlr.g?" inquired.The Herald man. A broad smile overspread Capt. Turfs > face. "He is gone where all bad morki eys go. I killed him on the spot." i 4 ?Women cannot stdnd physical - strain as well as men, according to a > London specialist, who lays the blame on weaker nerve centers. ' JJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlilllllll ! WINDOV j g For several weeks i 5 scouring the country by n ' S various sizes. We have \ . | our list that we thought n t | requirements. Finally v : | ment?not very large?a: 1 | ones who has asked us a | you still need it?SEE . | the Glass and can supply 5 when nor where we will g 1 AND LIKEWISE , | We have been having ca ' I grates. We didn't have | them f-or quite a while; hi j 5 and the Grates are now ] > = wanting a grate come an ? 5 can supply you?we do nc ' s another supply. Attend I York Fun ' a ' TTflllllllfflllllllflllllllfllllHfHlllllltlllilllll i 11 1 ff ? ?1 1 ' ' MM; Mr. Farmer: v j! Now is the time to buy a! 11 CHATTANOOGA I HOOSIER GRAI1 I STALK CUTTEE We have them. Come ii FEWELL & W. J.'FEWELL YORK, u = % t ' t a '-1 t a e >. i a }. t.' n ~ ; ^F -j! JyjcjujRBBg ?bMB ^Iw , ;' NEW LOT OP CHOICE 3 We have a choice bur . i < now?arrived a few days I for a Mule or two come ai exchange and give you a j ? wttt.pb t i mm tv I ?v* jAiraarc ;il CAN LIVE ON $48 PER 1 College Girls Refute Eugenist's Recent Charges. Gouchcr College of Baltimore, Md., seniors have just'contravened to their 1 own satisfaction the charge made by j speakers at the recent eugenist convention in New York that the American college girl Is a? slacker?that she is I' unwilling to marry unless she can j have many comforts and luxuries. A referendum vote taken among: the 103 seniors showed that they were of the opinion that a couple could marry safely and live in a city on an income, of 348 weekly. ^ ' I ? One of the most annoying problems J a president has on his hands is congress. ' THE CITY MARKET " ' ' \ THE CITY MARKET WILL HAVE ! some of the BEST STALL FED I BEEF this week that has ever been in York. LET US HAVE YOUR OR- I DERS and we will give you something i good. i WE WILL HAVE SOME Cl^DICE j &HJTTON ON FRIDAY and SATUR day, ana aiso an tunas ot miaed FISH. WE WANT YOUR? Good FAT HOGS and your VEAL CALVES. Let us know about 'em. Buy at the CITY MARKET? Get the choice Stall Fed Meat. When you get it from a wagon, You know not what you eat. ?O. G. THE CITY MARKET iiiiiiiiiiiiiimHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiimiiiimiu V GLASS I we have been literally | nail for Window Glass in = vritten to every house in | light possibly supply our | re have secured a ship- | ud if you are one of the | bout Window Glass antl ? LTS NOW while we have ? t you. We do not know s ;et another supply. ^ I AS TO GRATES | II after call for fireplace g them and couldn't firid, 5 it finally we landed them v liere. If you are still ? d see us NOW while we e it know when we may get | to this TODAY, please. g liture Co. | iiiiimiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiHiiMHiiiiii | TURN PLOW . $ DRILL, or a i and Let Us Sliow You. THOMPSON . | LUTHER G. THOMPSON ( --s-c. *M M 'A. ' > . i MULES? i icIi of Mules at our barns , ago. If you have a need * "*TT Ml 11 ud see us. we win sen or , fair deal. ? ROTHERS B0BSES WEFIXrr rffATT HARNE88 REPAIRING. We tfow have a thoroughly competent Harness Maker who is here prepared to do any and all kinds of Harless Repair Work. May"we serve you? SHOE REPAIRING. When your shoes are worn hring 'em :o us. We use first-class materials, do llrBt-class work and charge only the most reasonable prices for repairs. DORSETT'S SHOE & HARNESS HOSPITAL Opposite Calhoun Drug Co. Phone 198. r. - ' m p Look Before You Leap IT .HAS BEEN the fixed policy of ' the management of the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company of NeWark, N. J., since the day it commenced business Jn 1845, .to guarantee to each policy holder every consideration that its experience taught it could be guaranteed, with Absolute Safety and ta t result it has always been recognised as the leading; ^ policy holders* company Qf Amerled. THE FACT that It was already guaranteeing its policy holders more than any other company has never caused it to hesitate about giving MORSi if after careful Investigation and boKsideratlon it was sure It could, with sAfety do.so. It has recently announced changes in its contracts that are the most radical, startling and valuable that have been announced by any life insnrancp corflpAny during the past twenty-five year*, and the change 1* retroactive and applies to every policy , in force. We will be pleased to. explain it to^all old policy holders who desire to know about it, and also to all who. are n,ot so fprtunate as to be policy holders. Let us demonstrate how you can carry insurance in the Mutual Benefit without it actually costing you a cent.' I I SAM M. & S. E. GBIST DISTRICT AGENTS NEW MODEL DODGE tr . v" ' Best Car for the Money on P tfc& Market. I HAVE THE EXCLUSIVE Agency for thfe well known car on the Western side of the York County. i AUTOMOBILE OWNERS generally know what the DODGE Is and all are agreed as to Its SUPERIOR MERITS. THE/NEW MODEL possesses some feature* that afle well worth investigation, and I am in a position to enlight- ' en all who may be interested. j CALL ON OR WRITE ME. C. F. SHE BE B 69 tV YORK, S. C. 26t \ s. Buy At Home ... ' NO NEED to go elsewhere when yon can get such a large selection from one of the ^rgest firms healing in GENERAL MERCHANDISE. oyJF^eTOCK IS LARGE and varied and haft, been recognised for years as one of the leading stocks in this see- ? tion of the state. We carry all of the HEAVY GROCERIES and ' ? FARM IMPLEMENTS For the farmer as well as thl housekeeper* ^ . C. S. PRATT Headquarters for th'e Farmer and His Entire Family SHARON, 80UTH CAROLINA ' i t | it PROFESSIONAL CARDS. : 1 J. A. Marion ? W. G. Finley MARION AND FINLEY ATTORNEYS AT LAW Office opposite the Courthouse. Phone 126. YORK,8. C. * Dr. C. L. WOOTEN ? DENTIST ?V OFFICE OVER THE POSTOFFICE Tfll?nhnnea: Office. 128: Residence, 53. CLOVER, * - B.C. 71 J t f. 6m YORK FURNITURE CO. Undertakers ? Embalmers /! YORK, . 8. c. In All Its Branches?Motor Equipment. Prompt Service Day or Night In Town or Country. . Dr. R. H. GLENN Veterinary Surgeon CALLS ANSWERED DAY OR NIGHT t - .. Rhone 92 ?" YORK, - - - 8. C. n itift t I. ' 1 ii.II. f W. W. LEWIS Attorney at Law ' Rooms 206 and 206 Peoples Rank d Trust Co.'e Building, YORK, - - 8. C. Phones: Office 61 Residence 44. JUtttt it. HAJBT ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW. Prompt and Careful Attention to All Bueineae Undertaken* Telephone No. 69. YORK. 8. C. \76 f.t It .? ; . i ^ J. S. BRICE Attnrnev At Law. Prompt Attention to all Legal Ruslness of Whatever Nature. Front Office*, Second Floor, P?..l*a Bank & Tr *t Co.'a Building. Phono No. 81, l. . .' , ;;.ii