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"*p? ; v">'?.* j-r4 ' 1 V r-r SANITY IN FINANCE I Recent Commercial Crisis in Com prehensive Review. THE DOLLAR SHOULD BE KEPT STABLE " . Arbitrary Control of American Business Progress Is too Great a Power to Be Vested In a Few Men Whose | Principal Concern Seems to Be to Safeguard and Enhance Value of i Accruing Interest?Congress Should Contrbl .Discount Rate. MajnEfaptnrets Record. Man proposes; God disposes. On the* eve of the disruption pf the j Rreatest of the ancient empires a mov- J inir ftnxet traced in letters of fire the | prophecy of the event. Less vividly, but none the less indelibly, the headlong rush of a whole world into bankruptcy has been written into the records of recent months and no prophets were required to interpret the writing. The policies of the Federal Reserve boird, having destroyed values the country and the-world over as in a consuming fire, have been reversed. It was that or stark and utter i ruin. Xot frankly, as behooves men in high position, but grudgingly and after long delay, overwhelmed by the Trrcssure of economic fact and coerced by the executive power, the Fedetal Reserve board at last has loosened to some extent its stranglehold on business and production. It permits a rediscount rate as'low as 4 1-2 per cent, in the Boston district. It enables the War Finance Corporation to bring its current rate* down 1-2 per cent. It allows, at last, reductions which Secretary Herbert' Hoover describes as "pointed milestones in the progress toward recovery." # We accord to Governor Harding and his associates whose basic program is thus utterly repudiated no measure of credit for conversion. They were stiflfnecked in their arrogance when they began their assault on credit and they continued to be stiffnecked until it was ehtlrely obvious that they , would be kicked ?ut of office unless they foreswore their otfn program. However great, their sincerity in the initiation of their ruthless and destructive warfare against prosperity? assuming that they were sincere?it had become abundantly evident to them months and months ago, as their own mouths testified, that they had lost control of the situation. By that was meant that ruin ^ad followed , faster and in a denser volume than Governor Harding had anticipated. They had Initiated their policy when the country was in the flood tide of prosperity,..: .They reduced it "rejthin a fev( short months to condition of panic. They bore in their hands the standards of the pawnbroker and they practiced usury as never before it was practised by any responsible government in the history of the world. All history was against them, ar.d all human experience. They said the crying need of the world was productioij. at'nd that they would increase production by damming the credit reservoirs. What they did was to dismantle the fleets of the nation, turn factories into habitats for spiders, opt tjfee cotton crop in two and curtail .production in virtually I every basjc raw material u? mr of the earth. v ' They almost brought into collapse the credit, of the government itself. "We said that the usurious habits of ?' ' ? the board were equivalent to the government spitting upon its own war securities. book at the prices of Liberty Hocds today 'rtnd compare thtm with the bargain-day quotations when the (Jovernor Harding program was in its zenith! But there is not behind them the same, record of production, the same mighty-vnlume of labor. One thing and one thing only had forced them down'and that was the deliberate intent of the Federal Reserve Board. One thing and one thing only is bringing them back to par and that is a j reversal of the board's policies. If the i government could wreck its own se- ' ent ities, with equal ease it could wreck I all private securities. And so it did. We had piled gold into* the United States until the reserve had become an international scandal. The cries of protest were beginning to be heard ' around the globe. CJustuv Cassel, the I great European economist, speaking with the utmost deliberation, after do- ' daring: that ruthless deflation was responsible for unemployment and non- i pioduction, had declared that gold i had ceased to have a fixed value, could i hardly longer be used as a money j standard and that the possession of so vast a part of the monetary gold of j the world by the United States impair- j ed even the possibility of adhering to the gold standard. What did this mean ? j Simply that the Federal Reserve board had so hoarded gold, declining to permit it to perforin its normal credit ] functions, that the world was In revolt. We do not, we trust, exaggerate the financial intelligence of the men re- I sponsible for the drastic deflation po- J licy when we say that it had finally | dawned on them, too. that they had pulled the string too tight. The iWt ! of the world is headed fast toward a ' new money standard, u was running j with equal swiftness toward bankruptcy. So wrote the finger of fact on the frtiee of current economics. Easier money and a hope of solvency, or tight money and a general collapse. Even | obstinacy could not refuse a choice. How disingenuous now appear the ( long and elaborate defenses of its; course which the Kcderul Reserve { In mi i'il indulged in! The'-confession ??r its error is the icversa! of- its ' program. It may search ;he vocabularies from end to end and buy as many writers as are lor -sale, t but never again can it foist its fallacies ?111 an intelligent people, bei-ause I :>U that they said would happen did not happen, and all that they said would not happen did happen. They have left the black horse on which they rode | and jumped to the white one. They have headed it back to the highways they deserted and will spendithe approaching months ii: trying to get back to the old trail that they abandoned. The world could never have paid even the interest on its debt under the credit and currency terms the Federal 1 Reserve board proposed. Hut while j trie l-ecierai rveservp nuaru u.m wvn lem-ning that obvious fact, the pawnbrokers have been taking their toll the world over, and the railroads alone will pay millions, for years to come, j in exorbitant bonded interest that the board required of them. < , The rate of disc^nt is not yet right. It is still scandalously high, Hyt it, ? wilt* go down. It is part ot the t>ro-< p-am we believe, of the gentlertien who ' are engineering a formula for the ^eonomic reconstruction of the world to bring about a new era of what they will later describe as inflation. The stage must be set right. That is what citizens not ordinarily suspicious will believe. How do they know, if they borrow money -now on decent terms, that the Washingon board will not again suddenly and luthlessly raise the rediscount rote to ruinous heights without warning? What con fldence can business men have in the ! permanence of financial conditions j when the power arbitrarily to change . them is vested in a tiny group of bureaucrats in Washington? .And the more so when the chief of those bureaucrats is the very person who turned the trick before? Cnn business get anywhere without confidence? Can business have confidence in Governor Harding and his associates? By their acts they have confessed to an error in judgment, long persisted - in, the consequences of which have been so overwhelmingly destructive,'that it is remarkable they have the hardihood to show their faces, much less continue to pose ns financial statesmen. Until these men are thrown out of office, business cannot and will not recover. And the burden of them is passing to the shoulders of President Harding, who, for some unknown reason, retains them in office. When we seemed to be a voice crying in the wilderness, we never once doubted that events would fully vindicate and overwhelmingly justify the campaign of education which we have waged against the Federal Reserve board's warfare upon world prosper^ ity. Economic laws are, in truth, un- . changeable and unchanging. So. when the board talked blithely about?its own autocratic and arbitrary decrees as the mere evidences of natural law. we knew that the actual natural law, so utterly different, would prdve itself so completely that all men could understand. And.so it has. "Milestones in the progress toward recovery," sjiys Secretary Hoover. Millstones removed from the neck of business! The bar Tiers mill ougni never iu nu\t- umi erected are being torn away, that is all. So complete is the demonstration of the board's betrayal of prosperity that con jress can no longer, in mere decency, refrain from the enactment of remedial legislation. It should prohibit any change in the rate for money, as it does in the rate for transportation, without due notice and full hearings. It must take from a little board of seven men in Washington their unPICKLES We have a lot of very choice SOUR ' and SWEET. PICKLES in bulk. Also] a good line of Pickles in bottles. MORARA COFFEE? Our customers who have tried Morara Coffee say it is good?as good as the best Coffee to be had. Try a pound. KL1M?The whole milk in powdered form. Some of our customers prefer it to the condensed milk. VEGETABLES? We have Bermuda Onions, Red Onions, Cabbage, Sweet and Irish Pota- j toes. Dried Beans and Peas. AUNT JEMIMA? Pan Cake Flour and Buckwheat j Flour and it is FRESH, too. PREMIER SALAI) DRESSING. Best. MELROSE FLOUR? When you want the BEST Flour just i order a sack of MELROSE. It is rec- j ognized as the BEST by all good i housekeepers. We have a fresh supply, j OTTTt'DT?T> Xr nTTTKTlff UXJ.JLJXVJUJLV U/ Ywaavav OLD HOUSE OF SERVICE REAL ESTATE AGENCY F#OR SALE 61 1-2 Acres?Four room dwelling; .1 room tenant house, on Rutherford road 3 l-2Aniles 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. Seven Room House?On lot 110x370 feet, on King's Mountain street. Water, sewerage, bath and lights. Also lot adjoining, 90x200 feet. Last available vacant lot on this street. PIW.. A -A Vm.. r my ncm iiati?uiun 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 HO feet front, 2S0 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 or (/lover. Has a first class neatly painted eight-room house, with geod harp i and outbuildings; also a well finished four-room house with outbuildings. Entire plaoe 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 Yorkvillo Graded chool. Residence Phone 111 and Office Phone 74. C. F. SHERER, Real Estate . I limited control over the fortunes of 1 men and over the industrial well- i being, as it happens, of the entire world. j l Habit.?Scientific mpn have learned i many things concerning the human^J | brain, and tney nave mucn yei iu-| i loarn, says Dr. W. E. Barton. One of the things which they have j i come to know is that the brain has 1 paths or patterns. The things we do 1 habitually make a kind of track in < the structure of the brain. It is easy | to do a certain thing next time because we have done it often before. j In a certain sense, nothing done 1 habitually is well done unless' there is '] no! consciousness of the effort of do- J ing. . < A husband watches his wife sewing on buttons. "Why isj it," be., asks,' "that when you iew on buttons the needle strikes the hole, while with me it strikes the button?" She does not know. She watches to see why it is. And as soon as she j begins to watch, she begins to hit the button. A great musician was asked why he car tinuously practiced. Hp said: "If I omit my practice for a day, I notice the result. If I omit it for a HAMBONE'S MEDITATIONS t MISS LUCY 5AY SHE jts! KNOW AK KIN EAT MO'N ENNY-BOt'Y .SHE EVUH SEEP, EN AH SPEC' J)AT So , CEPN AH A IN' NEVUH HAP ' PAT" MUCH 5^T ^ Bi Copyright 10 21 by McClura New?pip?r Syndicates' FINE FURNITURE |! Wc Want to Figure With You on Your j Needs in the Furniture Line. j OtJr stock is still growing and we In- 1 vite everybody in the Clover vicinity to ] eall i?nrl ?pi> what we have to offer. I < i/WXAAAA/WWWWWV^VWWW i| OIL MILL PR0DUC1 See us for a good ex( We have nice bright 11 OUR GINNERIES ARE THAN THEY HA7 !! n ai i rn n/iii i IIWLLLK HULL? Grinds Wheat, Corn ai Feed, Chicken Feed, II Ilay, Flour and Corn money. DEALERS IN COAL AND YORKVILLE COITO *AAAAAA^WVWWIIWWWW>yi#lllll#K ' " I iveek, the critics notice it. If I omit it :or a month, every one notices it.'' No man ever becomes so expert | hat he can afford to neglect his prac- i lice. If he lets it go, those paths J n the mind are overgrown and when j te begins he has to break his way as; if there had been a fall of snow. There are certain things that we ! need to do and for the -sake of doing i I hem we'] we need constant practice' We are doing something with our muscles when we practice, but we are treading paths in our minds. It Is' well for every man to learn | what are the things which he is certain to need to do habitually and ^kill himself in the doing of them. There Is little danger that he will learn to jo them too well.' The paths of habitual action should ' .1 1 Buy 'Em Anywhere1 The following are some of the stores selling the best and most popular; remedy for Headaches and Colds: YORK DRUG STORE, NIVBNS BROS.. MORRISON'S STORE, J. It. A. WALLACE'S STORE, W. W. BARRON'S STORE. ALL In YORK. W. E. LAND' STORE.' Filbert. CLOVER DRUG STORE, GEORGE WILLIAMS'S STORE, At Clover. PLEXICO DRUG STORE, SIMS DRUG COMPANY. At Sharon. HOOD DRUG CO., Hickory drove. SMYRNA DRUG STORE, R. J. CASTLES, At Smyrna. GUTIIRIESVILLE MERC. CO., At Gufhrjesville. J. P. WILLIAMS & CO., J. P. BARNES, I At McConnellsville. w .mmTi^itrn o A? f\\A Dolnt Our Aim Is to Please and Every Arti-i cle We Sell Will Have a Guarantee < Back of It. I OUR STOCK INCLUDES }i Cook Stoves and Ranges, Iron Beds,!] .'Cots, Feather Beds, Springs, Sewing i Machines, Dining Tables, Mattresses, ( Blankets, Comforts, Rugs, and Artjl Squares, Window Shades, Kitchen j Safes, Kitchen Tables, Wood Beds, h Davenettes, Trunks, Suit Cases, Hand ; Bags, Chairs and Rockers, Kitchen t 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., SOME FOLKS SAY I THAT WE KLMtNIsfi THE BEST) I j:i:SH MEATS TU BE HAD IN I THIS TOWN. We believe those folks know what I' they are talking about, as we are very i , particular about the kind of beef cat-1' tie that we boy; we use every pre- ( caution as to sanitary conditions aft- i or it is killed and we know how to cut [ it to the best advantage. If you are' not buying your meats from us try us a few times. You'll like our service. FRESH PORK Besides always having choice Fresh Beef we also have fresh Pork, and also have flrst-elass pure pork sausage for' those who want it, and also make and! sell lots of mix< d sausage. FISH AND OYSTERS Every Saturday?usually on Fridays?| SANITARY MARKET LEWIS G. FERGUSON, Mgr. | iM All flCiW O CV V^U., Ai v/iu i uuiv, WYMOJO COMMUNITY STORE, | At Rock Hill, f If you want quick relief don't forget to try one box of PINKSULES and be convinced. 25 Cts. a Box. YORK DRUG STORE TAX NOTICE?1921-1922. Office of the County Treasurer of York County. VTOTICE is hereby Riven that the TAX ROOKS for York County! ivill be opened on TUESDAY, the 15TH DAY OP NtlVEMREK, 1921, and will J -emain open until the 31ST DAY OF" DECEMRER. 1921, for the collection of STATE, COUNTY, SCHOOL and LO- I CAL TAXES, for the fiscal year 1921,! without penalty; after which lay ONE 1 PER CENT penalty \^ill be added to ill payments made in the month or JANUARY, 1922, and TWO PER CENT penalty for all payments made n the month of FERUUARY, 1922, and . SEVEN PER CENT penalty will be idded to all payments made from the ! 1ST DAY OF MARCH, 1922. to the L5TH DAY OF MARCH, 1922, and lfter this date.'hll unpaid taxes will go ! into execution,and all unpaid Sinjje J Polls will be turned over to the several Magistrates for prosecution in accordance with law; All of the Rinks of the county will jffei their accommodations and facilities 'to Taxpayers who may desire to make use of the same, anl I shall take pleasure in giving prom.it attention to ill correspondence on the subject. All Taxpayers appearing at my ofIce will receive prompt attention. Note?The Tax Books will be made i jp by Townships, and parties writing! ibout Taxes will always expedite mat- | ters if they will mention the Township : 3r Townships in which their property )r properties .^re located. HARRY E. NEIL, Treasurer of York County. 86 f _ 4t DOG TAX DUE. All. Dogs Six Months Old on October 15, 1921, Must Wear Tax Paid Tags. J^OTICE is hereby given that in accordanee with the requirements of in net of the 1920 session of the Geni*raf Assembly, from and after October [ 15, 1921, all dogs that were six months old, or older, on that date are liable to j in annual tax of $1.25 per capita. This tax is collectible and payable at j my office during the time prescribed I for the pavment of other State and | County taxes. For each $1.25 paid I will issue a proper receipt nnd numbered brass tax paid tag, the receipt to be held by J the party paying the tax and the tag to be worn by the dog, except while in actual Use for hunting. Penalty for failure to secure the tax tag within the time for payment of other State and County taxes is not less than $5 nor more thar! $20, one-, half to go to the Informer. Applicants for tax tags, whether in person or by mail, must advise me of the r umber of the School District in which they reside, or the tag cannot be issued. H; E. NEIL, Treasurer of York County. 86 < f.t. tf is- 11 ^liangc of Meal for Seed. | [ Hulls. 11 IN BETTER SHAPE jj /E EVER BEEN. jj nd Oats. Sells Flour, Hog < | !orse and Mule Feed, Oats, J' Meal. -Try us and save | [ i ICE. i! N OIL COMPANY j ? A. be Well marked, and .should run in the right direction. When we have made ! them and worn them deep, we shall 1 not find it easy to avoid them. ? If a man expects to have enough ' money to pay his bills, he' must ta?e the risk of appearing stingy now and then. ? Some men just look mean?in self-protection. / ? When Fine : V4*' s I Furniture . I" i V. J , y : is NEEDED, COME TO T^E OLD RELIA^E STORE. YOU'LL SAVE MONEY1 \ f BY BUYING AT "THE STORE" WITH NO RENT OR INTEREST TO PAY." THRIFTY PEOPLE ALWAYS GET FORD'S PRICES BEFORE BUYING. M. L. FORD & SONS j * ? UNDERTAKERS AND EMBALMER8 CLOVES. 8. C. See, Phone or Write to THOS. C. O'FARRELL FOR t) High Grade Monuments In Marble and Granite Plant on East Liberty Street, Adjoining Rose Hill Cemetery. J. C. W1LB0RM Utate : 90 Acres?4'atawba township; one residence: two tenant houses. Just beypnd Hock Hill, Pric6, $48.00 per Acre. ? 821-2 Acres?50 to 60 acres'in cultivation; four miles from Clover; one 5-room residence; ono tenant house. Price, $5,200.00. 55 Acres?One 5-room residence; 40 acres under cultivation; 2 1-2 miles of Filbert, one mile of L'nion school. Price, $3,683.75. 57 Acres?New Zion school one mile. One gcod residence. 25 acres under cultivation: good water* all necessary outbuildings. Price $2,600.00. The property of S. O. Steele. ' 100 Acres?Forty, acres under cultivation; 6 miles of York; 5-roofn residence; 1 tenant house; good new barn. Price, $80.00 per Acre. Terms to suit. J.C.WHB0RN %s?ATE Take a look at these Prices ON STANDARD HAND-MADE 'TIRES AND TUBES. CORD, Ribbed or Non-Skid 32x3 1 -2 $25.00 33x4 1-2 .... $34.,25 32x4 ...L $26.50 35x5 $40.25 | FABRIC, Ribbed or Non-Skid 30x3 $10.60 32x4 $17.75 I 30x?1-2 $12.25 33x4 $19.75 32x3 1-2 ...... $13.50 35x4 1-2 $28.75 ( Laminated Tubes 30x3 ..._ $1.90 32x4 $2.25 j 30x3 1-2 $2.00 33x4 1-2 $2.75 ; 32x31-2 $2.00 35x5 $3.75 Can you imagine these Low Prices i on a Standard Rated product? Well, it is true. Compare these with others?tlrjn. come and see us before you buy. CITY SERVICE and REPAIR STATION. C. H. Siebenhausen R. M. Iriman YORK. - - S. C. Phone No. 156 Next to Police Station SIMRILL OIL CO: YORK, S. C. ALWAYS THE BEST QUALITY OF PRODUCTS, AND AT PRICES THAT ARE FAIR AND JUST. PROMPT AND EFFICIENT SERVICE ALWAYS. TELEPHONE No. 242 I Let Us Have Your Orders by Mail or Telephone, or See Our Drivers As They Passs By. SIMRILL OIL CO. FRANK M. SIMRILL, Manaaer. SEEUS FOR PAINT ARE YOU GOING TO TAINT? It I is important that you do if you would preserve your buildings, aside from the fact that appearances count .or much. WE SELL DEVOE PAINTS. I Ask anv eoo<f painter. lie will tell you 1 right i.IT the bat that DEVOE (JOES jFURTHER AND LASTS LONGER. Ask the man whose house has been painted with DEV'OE. lie knows, and he will tell you too. Good stock of DEVOE paints on ; hands. Ask us for prices for either the OUTSIDE or the INSIDE PAINTS and PAINTS FOR FLOORS. LUMBER AND PRODUCTS. Don't buy Lumber or Lumber Products until you see us for prices. We have the Lumber and Lumber Pro; ducts and the Prices. LOGAN LUMBER YARD ?* " ?i ? *" ? ? ? i "hows the'time to start your bulbs ; WE HAVE A COMPLETE LINE OF HYACI?llrH8? BOTH SINGLE AND DOUBLE?ALL QpM>R8; SACRED LILLIES, TULIPS AND NARCISSUS. ? PHONE NO. 65. WE'LL HEAR YOU. 1 if^oreexall city pharmacy > i Prompt and Accurate Service CLOVER, 8. C. Special Preniium Offer V >f.%v * P, ' < ' . a 1 r * THE Y0RKV1LLE ENQUIRER'S , ' ANNOUNCEMENT FOR 1922 reduction in price to subscribers attractive premiums'to f , .clubmake'rs. - v , i ; ? '{W\, " ( In Clubs of Three or More Subscription Price is $2.25 Per Annum.- * * ? NEW SUBSCRIBERS GET PAPER TO JANU\ ARY, 1, 1923, FOR PRICE- : OF j YEAR'S SUBSCRIPTION. <Now Is the Time to Subscribe and" Now Is the i % . Time to Begin Making Club: All of the hundred or more Clqbmakers who have heretofore been assisting annual work of renewing and paying for the s^weijiption list of The Yorkville Enquirer, and otlifers who desire to become Clubmakers, are cordially inyrjxjd to pair- ticipate in the campaign for 192^*?. /, % /' * CASH premiums; i - -V .v -.flk * The premiums for this campaign wilt be large-' ly Cash, as follows: \ I One Hundred Dollars to the ClubmaJ$: who re- ' turns and pays for the Largest Cllgk Seventy-five Dollars to the Clubmafctr who returns and pays for the Second Lament dub. Fifty Dollars to the Clubmaker who returns aad pays for the Third Largest Club., ,, < . PREMIUMS FOE OTHER CLjfBS. For TEN names returned and paid for we the Clubmaker a year's subscription to Jhe Yorkville Enquisff. For FIVE names returned and paid for, we win"gWe the Clubmaker a Three-Bladed Pocket Knife with Name and~ftdaress on the handle. A LIBERAL COMMISSION, ti e amount of which will be made known #>n application, will be allowed to all Clubmakexf w>o elect # to take Commissions in lieu of other premiums. ? * NEW SUBSCRIBERS f AS A SPECIAL INDUCEMENT TO .NEW SUBSCRIBERS, clubmakers may offer to send them THE YORKVILLE ENQUIRER TO JANUARY* 1, 1923, for the price of a year's subscription, in Cluba at $2.25. a; 1 . . s A NEW SUBSCRIPTION means an addition to the mailing-list. ' No kind of substitution by which" the same grqup readers may have the use of the paper under the New Name-js to be recognized, i and no name that has been on the mailing list sitlce July last will be counted as a NEW name. . \ . . .,<> CONDITIONS Uv ' IT IS DISTINCTLY UNDERSTOOD that the Clubmaker Is financially responsible for all names returned, until Th? same are paid for. The Clubmaker has the right to discontinue any unpaid subscription at any time an paying for the same at the rate of 5 Cents a week during the time it may have been going to the subscriber. All names not paid for by SATURDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 18, 1922, at 6 O'clock, p. m., are chain cable td the account of the Clubn$aker returning the name. NEW AND OLD SUBSCRIBERS count the saiae for the Club maKer, eitner in cuiiipeuuun ur uy ?a.y ui BOOKS ARE NOW OPEN ' v' THE CLUB BOOKS ARE NOW OPEN and, $?"ew and Old Subscribers may be returned as vapidly as secured. IT IS DISTINCTLY UNDERSTOOD that there can be no trans- ' fers of npnes from one Club to another after the names have been entered on our books. * ' IMPORTANT INSTRUCTIONS IN SENDING NAMES CLUBMAKERS are especially requested to write names and addresses plainly and in case of a name already , on our mailing list, it is desirable that it be written in the same manner as it now appears on the printed label. Clubmakers will confer a favor if in sending Renewals they will begin the letter with "Re- j new" or in the case of a New name if they wlU'begin with the word "Enter." That will save the bookkeeper trouble in having to hunt the list to avoid entering the same name twice. AND LET IT BE REMEMBERED also that this nffer of the paper at $2.25 a year will be withdrawn on February 18, 1922, and that after that date the price will be $2.50 a year. V L, M. GRIST'S SONS, York,' S. C. ! I 3 pnrri*i niMMrn err ACTED ortUAL MMiLft on urrcn li . ? ' ' i . > . 11 ' V ' , I] ? > '. ' WE HAVE ON HAND A LIMITED NUMBER OF 31-PIECE DINNER SETS, WORTH $8.50 EACH, WHICH WE OFFER TO * CLUBMAKERS PAYING FOR FIFTEEN ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTIONS TO THE * YORKVILLE ENQUl'RER AT $2.25 ! EACH. . \ , h ' > ,'j. ' : ] > * **9 / These Dinner Sets will be delivered to the Clubmakers on demand immediately the Fifteen Names are Returned and Paid For, provided the limited number on hand has not already been exhausted.Dther- . ' wise we agree to procure other Dinner Sets or ray Commissions at ] Hit' UpWUII UI lilt' J5 t'llllllt'U IU tuv aauiQ, ? ?/ f L. M. GRIST'S SONS, York, S. C. " i mmk m m m mrmm m m m m mrmmmm m m m mm m m m m ??