Newspaper Page Text
~ v<- <ii i * :> ^utmocBitji llqiarimtnt. To . Pliase ^ tHfe Children.?Hoggins was traveling at: a Mir^rate of fended, but .thete. would'* n^er^h'a've beehva disaster \ had not' SQjfo? fools . watered the road., ^ ' .< * The neural chinffUiappened. As he turned a corner the ?ar turned turtle. Fortunately Hoggins landedVin' a wet hut soft ditch. V?: ; : . 'V- ' A few minutes later, when he had scrambled out and was mournfully regarding the machine, a friend came along. ''Hello, - Hoggins!" exclaimed the fool. ' "What's the matter? Has your. car turriedrturtle?" "Oh, no! Oh," nrn-n-n-no!" answered Hoggins ' sarcastically. "These children here'wanted to see ho.w the machine worked, so I had the car turned upside down to please them!" Should Have Remembered.?A young theological student was being asked isome questions by a bishop, who was what is generally termed "a good sportsman." "What were the names of the people living in the house into which St. Peter went after his escape from prison?" The student thought a moment and then said: "I can remember the name of the girl who opened the door to him." "Ah, Mr. ?replied the bishop with a. smile, "you wollld remember that!". Well! ? The judge adjusted, his -pincb-nez and laid down his quill pen . on the dedk. For a moment he pondered in, correct judltial manner, then his worshipful eyes rested .upon the prisoner. He coilghed. . ' . "I seemed to know your face," he remarked. "Yus," returned the prisoner, with a smirk. "We was boys together." "Nonsense!" he exclaimed. "Oh, yus, we was,", persisted the, prisoner. "We're both the same age, so-we must have been boys together." Natural Error.?Reveille had been sounded and Private Pence came running out with hie leggings on wrong. He jumned into the ranks and snapped into attention, but not until after the top kick had noticed his lapse from military sartorial perfection. "^ ivate Pence," he demanded angrily, "why have you your leggings on wrong?" "It was just a personal mistake," answered the offender. "Mistake?" "Yes. I had my legs crossed when I put them on." R-r-rcvenge!?He had been bitten against the old top sergeant and used to give a vivid outline of what he was going to do to him when he got out of the service. Great was the surprise of a friend on meeting, him about a year after he had started wearing civvies again to And him carrying a parrot which he intended giving to his old enemy. "How come?" asked the friend. "I thought you were sore at him." "Man, oh man!" gloated the other. "I'm getting even. I taught this bird every word he knows." ? "? Hot Stuff.?Some of the corn liquor being made dowh south nowadays has a potency all its own. They tell this story In Illustration. In the North Carolina mountains two darkles opened a jug and in doing so spilled a little. One drop fell on a tumble bug, who immediately dropped his ball, clicked his heels together, threw back his shoulders and, backing up to a bale of cotton the two negroes had been carrying, snorted: "All bight, big boy. Let's go!" i -At. .Jl A lA inenociivcr i i emmcm..? n nuicu physician had recommended walking to a nervous patient. The nervous one started to cross the street after leaving the doctor's office. A truck skidded and hurled him against the curb, where he lay until t.hc doctor, having seen the accident, hurried to his side. "Aren't you hurt?" inquired the physician anxiously. "Well," replied the patient, "I can't say I feel much better." Oh!?The proprietor of the secondhand store was not so tidy as he might have been. One day while standing in front of the store an-Irishman approached him and said: "Have ye any clean shirts in yer shop?" "Sure. T have," answered the clothing mtin, anxious for a sale. "Lots of them; as clean as anything." 'Well," said the irishman, moving, away, "go in and put wan ol' them on." Appropriate.?It happened on the transport coming1 back. "Show me your identification tag." demanded the medical officer of a colored private. "Ah done chucked it ovehbo'd, suh," confessed the other. "Ah jes' naturally ain't got no ambition for no more of dcm death checks." Qualified.?Employer?'You say you have held an important executive position?" A pid'cant: "Yes, sir." "What was it?" "1 was hangman at the state prison." A Sweet One.? Sign at ail Allen~ -t<>wti..Uarmsvlva ui :l. e:tling house iluring the economy days: save the si:tiAi: stir like 11 el.i. we don't mind th]? noise GERMANY'S REVISED OFFER. (Continued from Page One.) "8. In the event the, "Cnited States . and the Allies so - desire, Germany is ! ^Willing, according1 {o the extent of their ability ar\d capacity, to assume the Allied obligations to ?he United States. "9.( Gc^rpany proposes to negotiate, with the assistance pf experts, as to the w^y. in ^hich' German deliveries for reparations will be reckoned as against the total of Germany's debt, particularly respecting the way irt which" the price value will be fixed. "10. As security for credits accorded hep, Germany is willing to pledge public revenues and properties in a manner., to be determined between the contracting: parties. "11. With tiie acceptance of these proposals, Germany's other reparations and obligations will be annulled and all German mandate property in foreign countries to be released. "12. Germany declares the present proposals only capable of being carried out if the system of penalties is discontinued forthwith and she is freed from all unproductive outlays now imposed on her and that she be given freedom of trade. Would Have Corn-mission. "In the event of differences of opinion arising from an examination of the proposals, the German government recommends that they be submitted for examination to a commission of recognized experts acceptable to all interested government. She declares herself ready in advance to accept as binding any decision reached by this commission. . "Should any other form of proposals in the view of the American government facilitate further negotiation of the question, the German government would ask to have Its attention drawn to any points in which alteration is," in the opinion of the American government, desirable. The German government would also welcome other proposals from the American government." Finally the note says: "The German government is too deeply convinced of the fact that the peace and welfare of the world are dependent upon a speedy, just and fair solution of the reparations question not to do everything within its power in order to enable the American government to direct the attention of the Allied governments to the matter." ELEPHANT'S TOOTH Found in Vermont Has a Very Curious History. . The fossil tooth of a preh'storic elephant found in Vermont in 1819 and presented to the Zoological Mustr ??* ?? ivl 17nivf?i*fiitv in 1849. as its first anecimen has only recently been rceived at tjie museum, after a curious history, says a Cambridge, Massachusetts dispatch recently. The director of the museum is Samuel Henshaw. a grandson of Samuel Henshaw of Boston, who found the fossil and presented it to Harvard. The tooth which is nearly a foot long and several inches thick, was found with other fossil elephant bones while the Rutland Railroad was being constructed across the slope of Mount Holly, a few miles south of Rutland, hofnrn h.id the remains of a fossil elephant been discovered in the northern state. Samuel Henshaw, one of fhe promoters * of the railroads, gave the tooth to Professor Louis Agassiz, the great Harvard naturalist, to serve as the first specimen in the newly opened museum. However, instead of being placed on exhibition it was lent to Dr. C. J. Warren, of Boston, who had obtained the other elephant remains and was writing a book on the subject of mastodons. No stops were taken for its return to Harvard and it remained in Dr. Warren's collection, bought by the late J. I\ Morgan and presented to the Museum of Natural History of New York. Last year Walter Granger of the New York Museum discovered that the tooth had originally been presented to Harvard and really belonged there. Thereupon the museum authorities returned it to Cambridge, together with a present of other elephant bones. AMERICAN AVIATOR ESCAPES, j Capt. Cooper, Wfio Fought With Poles, | Is Safe At Riga. Captain Marlon C. Cooper, of Jacksonville, Fla., the Kosciusko squadron flier, who was shot down on the Polish front and captured by the Russians last July, escaped from a prison camp near Moscow on April 12 and -arrived in Riga last week. Captain Cooper was accompanied by two. Polish officers. The American aviator, while serving with the. Poles in their operations last , summer against the Bolshcviki, disappeared behind the Soviet lines in Galicia on July 13. It was learned last .September that he was a prisoner in Russia. Numerous efforts had been made since to obtain his release, " but without success. Captain Cooper's airplane was brought down by Cossacks connected with General Budehny's forces, it was learned. BABY BORN WITH TEETH. His Nurse Threatens to Feed Him Corned Beef and Cabbage, Wilbur Harrington, or Harry Hur- ; rington, of Enid, Okla.. whatever name i his parents, Harold Harrington and ! wife, decide to give him, is much old- | er than many children horn last Tues- ! day. lie has two shining lower from j teeth. hospital nurse stated the infant i c!amp<"ri iTo'wh 7nr"<VffP"<if her- finger.-; when she gave him some medicine, and j added, "we'll give hi.m corned heel' and call ha go for dinner." | SUSIE IN THE CITY| .'K By DOROTHY DOUGLAS. ^ jt? 1921, by McClurt Newspaper Syndicate.) J Susie stood gazing nt her vines that already had trailed their green way to the: tops of her window frames. A slight pucker formed between her brows as she tried to solve the problem of their further ascent. She did not know who lived in the studio above. Had she known who was up there she could easily have gone up with her 81ring and tied it to the rusty nails Which she had seen from her own window. But Susie feared for her quiet, restful evening, should she become acquainted with near neighbors. However, she did want her string wound over those rusty nails in the window lodge above and, as her vines began to plead desperately for support, Susie determined to find a way of giving it to them. She decided to tie a string to the pole, and hoist it to the window above. She realized that her act was a trifle unconventional, but her vines were perfectly conventional vines and needed support Just as any vines need it. So she scribbled a few lines on a bit of paper and tied the note to the end of her flagpole. When she heard footsteps near the window above she put her po)^ outside and hoisted it, after having tied a ball of twine to the note. Susie called up a soft "Thank you, very much," when she knew the string had been tied and the ball came tumbling down to her. She knew no more about the person above her than she did before. It was a man, however. -Capt. McGJ11 of the Gordon Highlanders, returned to his adopted home in Ameri 1 1 rttvMic-Arl of t Ho CU, 1111 u. HC ?u? 11IUV.1I auiuKvu ??. request to tie the string for the' tiny burden to climb on. Vacation time arrived for Susie. She worried about the care of her little garden and realized that she would have lo be at the mercy of God's good rain just like all farmers if her garden was,, to remain green. Cnpt. McGill, the man In the studio above, happened by lucky chance to see Susie descend the steps with her suit case and in a flash realized that he wanted very, very much to know her. He didn't know for a second whether or not to make a most perfect idiot of himself and rush out, follow her, purchase a ticket to the same place to which she went and track her to the very hotel in which she expected to spend her vacation. Rut McGill decided to keep his head on his shoulders and Just trust to fate. Consequently lie remained nt tlie window while Susie disappeared toward the [ singe that carried her to the railway station. lie felt decidedly lonesome when Susie had gone from the studio building. even though he had never spoken with her. He looked down each day at her small garden and it was only a few days after her departure before he realized that If the products were to-be saved for Iter return he must And some way of watering them. So after deliberate thought the hero from the battlefield contrived an extended watering can by means of his bath spray and a long-nozzled can. The rubber was sufficiently long to all hut reach the garden roots. Each night after dark McGUl watered that small garden as if It were the fodder for an entire army of cattle or men. He waited for dark lest any passerby see him and laugh at his folly. When Susie returned, browned and fnollnir erontlv tipnpfited for her lioll (toys, her first glance upon rounding the corner of her street was for her garden's fate. She knew from reports that scarcely a drop of rain had fallen In the neighborhood. When she saw her precious beans, peas and flowers green and blooming she was curiously puzzled, but delighted in no small degree. It^go. .happened that McGlll again stood at the window when Susie came homeward and his' Scotch heart rejoiced. He knew that by fair means or foul be was going to become more than merely acquainted with that small neighbor of his. It was toward evening when he ,heard a soft knock at his door. He opened It and there stood Susie herself with n dainty and very tiny basket of,.fresh pulled peas and beans and u few colorful flowers on the top. She blushed beautifully when she saw that her upstairs' neighbor was * man and she felt a Quick pity when she saw that he had lost one ieg. "Oh." she said swiftly, "I brought you up these vegetables from my tiny garden, hut being a man I suppose you can't cook them. I somehow fancied a woman lived up here," i:he added. "How did you know I cared for your garden?" McG'ill asked, by way of detaining her a moment longer. "I saw the long rubber tube and watering can out of your window," she promptly replied; then, throwing convention to the proper place for silly convention, she said. "I will cook the vegetables for you and you may come down and have dinner with me tonight?if you like. I see you are a wounded soldier and all women should do all they can for the men who have fought for them." McGill laughed quickly and most buppily. All was going well with his heurt heats and lie knew that ail would continue well. "I am glad to have fought for wo- ' men--s'jto as you," was what lie said, i both then and later when he liud wou | her for his own. v. ? Nature was preoccupied when she put lung hair <>n hunting dogs and filled Uic woods with burrs. ATLANTIC CROSSROADS Virgin Islands of Very- Great Strategic Value. UNCLE SAM PAID A LONG PRICE But There Was Reason to Believe that if Some Other Nation- Should Get Hold of These Islands Such Possession Might Prpve Costly to America. Just what did Uncle Sam get for the $25,000,000 he paid to Denmark for the Virgin Islands? A recent spectacular airplane flight by United States Marines from Wash? J. 4.U- 1 + mgxun over me targrec. lawmuo yi cut , West Indies to map out an air line to these latest lands to come under the American Flag has' raised the question anew. An answer is given by the following bulletin issued from Washington, D. C., headquarters of the National Geographic Society: "The Virgin Islands are not remote from other United States soil. They are hardly more than a stone's throw from Porto Rico. St. Thomas, the westernmost of the three larger Virgins, is only 40 miles from that island, and the presence of Culebra Island, belonging to Porto Rico, midway between the two, tics the new possessions still more closely to this elder American brother by adoption. The truly beautiful view that rrtay be had 'rom the 1,500-foot peak of hilly St. Thomas includes .to the west the dim outline ot. the Porto Rican coast. Close to British Territory. "St: John, the smallest of the three principal islands acquired by the United States, lies only two miles to the east of St. Thoma's. A climb to the rugged hills of St. John will demonstrate that. the American Virgins are also not remote from foreign ter ritory. A mile to the north lies Thatch. Island, a small bit of land belonging to Great Britain, and less than three miles in the same direction is Tortola Island of the British Virgins, almost as large as St. John. "St. Croix, the largest of the newly purchased islands, lies 40 miles to the south. It i. not a part geographically of the Virgin group, but was included with St. Thomas and St. John for admlnistratlve purposes by the Danes and is classed by the United States as one of its Virgin dslands. St. Croix is a little over three times the size of Manhattan Island, containing approximately S4 square miles. St. Thomas, with an area of 28 square miles, is about 14 miles Jong and has an average width not rpuch over 2 miles. It is therefore almost exactly the size of Manhattan Island, containing approx^xtreme length of 8 miles and a width somewhat oyer,.2 miles, its area is approximately 20 square miles. The entire group, including the numerous tiny islands of #mall value, has little more than twice the area of the District of Columbia, the smallest of the main divisions of the United States proper. Our Highest Priced Territorial Pur* r.! qhase. "For these ' islands the United States paid a higher price per acre than for any other of its famous purchases. Only 3 cents an acre was paid for Alaska. 14 for Florida, and 27 foi the Philippines. The Canal Zone cost $35.83 per acre. The price per acre paid for the Virgin Islands was approximately $295. ' The features that give the chief value to the islands from the point of view of the United States government ire St. Thomas Harbor cn which is situated the principal town of thi group, Charlotte Amalie; and Coral t-> ?. 1U? ,.r InViM I Da> un liic loiauu tji.i uuuii. .'?.? Thomas Harbor is probably the best developed harbor in the West indies, and is naturally protected except from exceptionally strong hurricanes. Coral Bay, though entirely undeveloped, institutes an even more commodious and better protected harbor of refuge, i These harbors. were valuable to the! United stairs in themselves, but it was even more important that the United States prevent their falling into the bands of possible enemies. An Atlantic Crossroads. "The Greater Antilles, made up of the larger of the West Indies, and the Lesser Antilles, composed of the smaller islands, together form a gigantic crooked arm enclosing the Caribbean Sea. The Virgin Islands are at the 'elbow.' the closest point to Europe. Past this point streams the traffic between Europe and the Panama Canal, between New York and both the east and west coasts of South and Central America, and between the Greater and Lesser Antilles, rt has been said of St. Thomas Harbor and the town of Charlotte Amalie that tun tr? nvervwhpri).1 To this fact lias been due the importance of the town; and the town in turn has given to the islands of St. Thomas and St. John what importance they had in recent years.. Us accessibility, its good harbor, its facilities for coaling and storage, arid lotdry dockage and repairs to steamers, gave Charlotte Anialie a place of preeminence among all the harbors of the West Indies before the war. The falling off of shipping during the war was a hard blow to its prosperity. "In November 1917. soon, after they were taken over by the t'nited States, the American Virgin I.lands had a population of s'igluly more than I 215,000, This was not a great deal I over half the population in 1S3.7. | Nearly !>.'! per cent, of the inhabitants j in 1!U7 wi re negroes or inulattoes. A Ini-j?e iki-nniii-l i.ei ni' I he few whiles are ! IX'wi.os. . Knv.lish h:& .always". heen the J ljre>?!<>i 11 in;si11 .iunjftiujfc. however,' 'lif*- j cause l!ii? trade of the isiand lias* 116011 largely with the raited States and with the Ihiijli.sli West Indian anionics. "The Virgin islanders have shown an eagerness to become Americanized. In its administration of the islands the Navy Departmei. . has increased and bettered school facilities, and has cleaned up and enforced sanitary regulations in Charlotte Amalie and the other towns, both on St. Groix: Christiansted and Frederieksted. The American authorities, in fighting typhoid, waged one of the most thoroughgoing campaigns known to modern science. They cleaned every cistern and innoculated with anti-ty phoid serum every person on the islands. Not a single case of typhoid has occurred since." WHY THE MORNING YAWN Blood Must Be Drawn to the Muscles and the Brain. (From the Philadelphia Record). Many of the secrets of health and disease are hidden in the simplest disguises?for example, a laugh, a yawn, a sigh. Doctors are only just beginning to wake up to this, and in America the subject is already engaging a great deal of interest. An American doctor, Professor Crile, made a study of the expressions of fighting men during the war, and .by so doing added greatly to medical knowledge. A study on the same lines is being carried on in England now, and is already bringing enlightenment. Take a yawn and a stretch, for .example?the ordinary man's beginning of his day. Why does one yawn on getting out of bed? Why docs one stretch one's limbs and get comfortable from doing it? Why does one rub one's eyes? These are in the most ordinary acts in the world, and yet their meaning is cn'y just becoming understood. Blood Must Be Moved. Let us glance at the sleeping- man before we try to answer the questions. As he lies in bed his muscles are all relaxed end soft. His chest moves very little; he breathes with his body, and that slowly and regularly. Nov/ we know that Inactive muscles and an inactive brain have a smaller amount of blood in them than active muscles and an active brain. We know, too, that when the chest is moving very little the lungs arc not opening very widely. We can infer from that that less than the usual amount of blood is present in the lungs. * t There are several parts of the body which can hold a great deal of blood ?the muscles, the lungs, the .brain, o.nd finally the organs of digestion. The bulk of the blood of the sleeping man is not in his muscles, his brain, or his lungs. It must therefore be in lis body proper. Experiment has shown that that is where it is. Therefore when he awakes i:c is not fit for immediate exertion or activity. He must first bring his reserves of blood to his brain, muscles and lungs. Pressure and Suction. There are two ways in which this can be done. The first is by pressure on the body itself, and the second is by suction. Pressure in this case means the pressure of squeeze of the muscles of the front of the body. Suction means the opening up of the chest, and so the drawing into it of blood from the veins. The waking man on getting out of bod draws a deep, long breath?what is called a yawn. At the same moment he throws his shoulders back,'and so brings his shoulder-blades nearer to each other. The strong muscles of his hnrdr heroine taut, and thanks to the position he has assumed, his chest is puiled open. Thus the 'stretch," the deep breath?the "yawn"?are part of the some process. It is the stretch which makes the yawn. Forms a Suction Pump. But the stretch achieves another purpose. In stiffening himself up and throwing1 back his shoulders, our waking man also stiffens the muscles over the front of his body so that they press strongly on the bodily organs. This pressure naturally tends to drive blood upward out of the body into the chest and lungs. The suction we have spoken about comes, from the chest itself. When it is pulled open by the "stretch," air rushes in and blood also rushes in to fill it up. We have an effect like a suction pump. At the same moment of our waking man often begins to rub his eyes, '-le is now fully stretched, with his head thrown back and his body taut. His chest is widely expanded, and is filled with air and blood. So far, however, hlcM't is not being sent ouickly enough to his brain and muscles. Jt is necessary to whip up his heart to stronger efforts. Now the heart can increase its working- power in two ways. It can make bigger beats and it can beat more quickly. Eyes and Heart Connected. In the first case its output of blood per beat is increased: in the second its output of blood per ruinute, in order to give bigger beats it must open more widely and so lake in more blood. This process is controlled by nerves which connect the heart with the brain, and so with the eyes and ears and skin. The reason is obvious tlie moment one thinks of bow an animal or a man wards off an attack. If a man sees someone coming to attack j hint he gets his muscles ready to light. Hut the muscles need a great : deal of extra blood for their work. I So a message is telegraphed to the heart In take lugger una is. li thus comes about that there is a .nervous connection between the eyes, ears' Vim! sirln rnitl tiio heart?in sl'.nrt. between The senses and the heart. On this accoinit if you rnh your eyeballs u u make the heart lake bigger beats. URGES JAPANESE EXCLUSION. McClatchy Says We Do Not Want Any More Mongolian Laborers. Absolute exclusion for the future of all Japanese immigration with permission allowed for only temporary'residence for tourists, students, commercial men, artists and teachers, was proposed before the house immigration committee in Washington this week by V. S. McClatchy of Sacramento, CaL, as the fundamental basis for pcrma A ' * ' ?lorrleln tinn * neni iiiiiiiifti auvn Mr. McCIatchy presented a dec'.ara- | tion of principle drafted by the Japan - J cse Exclusion League of California, i and approved by the California legislature and other western states. He appeared as the official spokesman of the league. The declaration called first for absolute exclusion in the future of all Japanese immigrants,'"not male, but female," as well as laborers, skilled and unskilled, and those of all trades and professions, as recommended by former President Roosevelt. KING SOLOMAN OUTCLASSED Siamese King's Father Had Abcut 8,000 Wives. The Siamese royaX dynasty is in no danger of dying out even if the king I 5 r\ i*j i Cre 5 , - HpHE SUPERIORITY of our Ice X 1 Cream mado anywhere ranks 0 Cream we manufacture here ii 1 The popularity of our Cream 0 the fact that those who have thoi a there is no better cream and that f v the equal of our product. "VVe wish to reiterate the stat ? making our cream are pure and of J cess of making; is held up to a hig <5 Cream that has pleased thousands V people day by day. e ilt is unnecessary for us to m 9'ar customers, they already know want others to know, also. We w 0 who have not tested our Cream, \ ^ convince them. -J uur uream is suiu m uui ? MAIN STREET AND TRV j IN ROCI J and 9 * THE YORK DRUG A J? and we arc prepared to fill larg-c o V brick ice cream to order, and the la I ? to'vhat they want i'or a Special O ) vice. So matter what kind of ere ^ we can supply it. f Rock Hil! Cane V A MANUFACTURERS OF J FACTORY OX TRADE STREET EwwaHMwangaBwaiJii fiiwrni i ! NEW LOT OF CHOICE Wc have a chqicc bui now?arrived a few day? fot' a Mule or two come a exchange and give you ; | j MULES JAMES B | PRICE R | The price of Fordson Ti i Come anil talk it ovi I Ford Sales C f ff I . Ford Service l,a ^ slicks to his intention (ft remaining a bachelor, relates a Constantinople dispatch. . v For the king has 70 brothers! The king's father had 90 wives and his grandfather had between 7,000 and S,000 wives. The news that the king has decided to remain single follows his announcement cancelling his engagement to 3 Princess Vajiraoudh on account of the girl's ill-health. m , . I OLDEST POILU DEAD Veteran of Franco-Prussian and World ,jWars Passes. Charles Surugue, "the oldest poilu of France," veteran of both the FrancoPrussian and the world war, died in Paris, last week, aged 82 years. iWugue, who served as a volunteer . throughout the war of 1870-71, volun- teered again in 1015 at the age of 77, and was assigned to duty as u sapper. He joined the army at Souchez, and was in constant service / thereafter. He was cited in orders three times, was made a second lieutneant after the Verdun campaign, was awarded the Legion of Honor in 1017 and was made an officer of the Legion in 1910. ' ^ 1 t ? The good time we bump into is a good deal better than the one we plan. I _ _ ; I ' cy ice lam 11 | */ Cream is in the Quality. No Ice r ^ higher in QUALITY than the Ice ^ a ROCK HILL. .j i and its increasing: sales are due to # roughly tested it have found that . ew manufacturers are turning out L V ement that the ingredients used in . ! the highest quality and the pro- A h standard. The result is Ice ' Z i and is pleasing more and more akc these statements to bur rcgu- ^ the merit of our product, but we P ant more customers, and- to those 9 re say That a trial will,'certainly ? ?? f \DE STREET PARLORS A < HILL - at I STORE IN YORK " r small orders in hulk. Wc make . C dies win oniy nave iu nuuiy ua <10 w rder, to pet I he best possible sar- (J am is wanted on a Special order,' ^ ? !y & Fruit Co. \ QUALITY ICE CREAM ? PHONE 302 V ? MULES? icli of Mules at our barns . T C b.io AArl ) ago. J.J. > UU JJ-clVU U XItuu. lid see us. We will sell or i fair deal. ROTHERS H0ESES EDUCED : or.fnvc lirtu hnrm r?nt 5-165. I or with us. if BTMFY Ford Cars f Uii i iiEi I por(j Tractors * 1H5.2*