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-- m^asasssssssssssssBsssssssss^z ill ill E UNION TIME! ifta' adMr.^" e*l. M Rice Ed ?o iimiiii'ivil ut the Postotliec i . I'm mi, t?. C ? > second cla?? ii ttlcr, Time* Building . . Main Sti e UeH Tclcphtiue No. 1 SUBSCRIPTION RATEti One ^ our 1 I 0 Six Months . '? II Three Months . . . 1 O1 ADVER1ISEMEN . S One S>i'lari> lir.-t insertion #11* Every subsequent insertion .5 Obituary notices. Church .and U"l,' notices and notices of pubic nieeti > i < tertaiinn nt? and Cards of Thanhs ? ?! I. charged for at the rate of one ct. ' e nun1 rash accompany inn th order. fount ih words u? J - > <to wi'l l.tlow What th cos will be. MEMBER OF ASSKIATF> IV *'.35 The Associated Pie s t? exclusively n 'itled " the u e. for iei'uli'i? limn of new dlilmt-hos credited to it >. not otl -rwis rreilited "1 this eripei aid a ... lh? b cs rep ? T>ur%i:*ne?i mervu' FRIDAY, AUGUST 11. Vj'22. So\ i? t Russia has parsed the deal ;tiitt ih upon 14 Socialists ai u- e > f high trea Co, it scents, eve the !>? nighted Hussiun. with hi - nihi listi< theories, is beginning t>? i.a'r,. that law must retail, ami rt igiiii:;: must have power to punish, to pun ish even unto ileath. W e have al .va\ f It that Russia shorn.I he left ah w t work out her destiny. Heine h i alone, it sems that she is really ' inp her problems. I'll K I.I ? IN(. W AGK. There is mm h tall; now, ami h i been for some ti :i a; nag railr. a men, miners, ami otuei .realize vorkers about the living v.ere. It i an appealing phrase for the rear <i that men generally recognize its jr.s tice. Opinion may ililVer as to wha constitutes a living wage, and it i inevitable, perhaps. that there s'.roui. b0 disputes now r.r.d then betwc .. tiv man who works and ll.e man wlv pays, liut few persons have the har dihood to deny the laborer's ri^h. Idecent home, with sufficient food l*?? himself and his family, education i'o his children, and a bit. left over to th< prudent for a rainy day. And this standard of inco,, o, i should I'e remembered. is not alom the right of the organized industtia worker. It is the right of ever) worker. The farmer is entitled to ii. ii< should and does insist upon it, and in should be willing to concede it. no only to the city laborers, but to the s? who help him in his farmin.ee opera lions, whether hired hands or nr. m bers of his own family. These wh< will not pay the living wage can no themselves expect to receive it-. This was made clear last year when farmers, producing 1 w pr; < crops under high cost conditio:.s. wen unable to keep the factories run dug and the city worker found him ! >u of a job. The farmer did not ,r: living watte, and thing went wrung The business world learned its lesson ; nd neither the business world r r ,ie. fanner should forfd, tlr:it lesson now when watte disputes are rife. It i; good time to remember the (ioldei liule. Its practical applica'd< n i easy, even though it may s<etn did. cult.?Anderson Daily Mail. Those advocates of the 1* al -.o< sale 'f light wines- and b< ers, to sa\ nothing of the olitright liquor advo rates, will find little comfort in thi recent Ohio elections. The "wets vent, down before th i "drys," in everj case where the issue was the liqaoi question. At tirst the liquor fore \ ere jubilant. The big cities gave tin majority to the wets. Hut win;:- th? country districts began to he h r. from, the dry. he-ran t < gain am continued to gain to the point oi sweeping victory. It must he remem b< red that it lies always been th? rural cunuminitie that nave bee -UiUiU'h inaugurate! at. I n,rgie ( >:|? iM'ti'. of prohihi"on. i'roiiihPin ?! d not stait with the towns an pr,.n 1 to the country; it siartcd fron the country ;.i ,i spread t > village tow: i-ml city. Hie big cities were the tit's: to fall under prohibition. We fet sure thiit most reforms begin in tin country districts and spread to t!'< cities. The fashionable city <iw dlei may flatter himself that he is settin* the pace in all things, rural, civil an< religious. The fact is. he is doinj nothing of the sort. I'ossibly he do<function as a disseminator of fa hion i.ut even that rule is of slight power The truth is. vice segregates to tin big centres. It is natural th.v it should. There i; room to hiii loom to cat ry on, room to snhmergi ctie's self in the big city that by in means can be found in the country districts. People often criticise th farmer because he refuses to respon. to agreement. The verv fact that I. does respond slowly is one of th. greatest bulwarks of civilization. I is true, also, that the farmer, ir<n erally speaking, having made up h mind, is slow to change it. That, t<.j ! ' , . == 3 is a bul oik of civilization, The boo//: Jfcrces have lost sight of tic fact that the meal communities of the century 1 have outlawed liquo.v Their mind is made up. It will not change. Thank , God that it is so! What happened in Ohio will happen in every state that was won by the "dry" forces?they vv old vote today to keep dry. ' The eiumieii-of prohibition would not admit thi-i. This would have us believe 0 that the whole country is hoping to r get back under the rule of old king booze. They seek, on every occasion, . j to b little the dry law. They point to th j great amount of lawlessness that prevails and place this, also, to the credit of prohibition. But they . are mistaken, sadly mistaken. And 1 ' . cy wi'J have a hard time getting the people of the rural districts tc believe that prohibition is a failure The truth is, prohibition is stronget ' today than it has ever before been in ' this good land; and, as the years g< 1 on, the strength will increase. Th:.1 '. i i not relished by the "wets," bui ti iy will have to make the best of it The county voted dry. It will vote t? stay so voted; and when the liquoi forces take an inventory of the situ" ai'nn they will find that having voted dry, the rural inhabitant, at least ti eantejust what h? said. l> Our eat says be slow to make accu1 sat ion, and then only when you have , the evidence. I * * * Our cat says people cry against high taxes yet go right on demanding t the things which make taxes high. 2 * * Our cat says a rasping voice over the telephone sounds like a frog horn. Our cat says Union needs a new hotel. * * Our cat says wishing the new hotei ' project well is good, hut a subscripI i in \ ill be better. * Our cat says a worthy cause of lor. -is for lack of support. A Fit There are many kinds of tits?a shoe can lit your foot, a ring can fit your linger, a hat can lit your head a speech can tit the occasion, you can imlul;r<- in a lit of laughter or a it of temper and an aching tooth can throw you into a lit of hy.stei ic Why not have the tooth attended to I i. e to avoid the "lit ?" DR. If. h. SMITH Dentist .... Union, S. C. Turkey May Lose Her Russian Refugees Constantinople, Aug. 10.?The Russian refugee problem will be cleared . up in the course of the next few i >onilis is the opinion of Major Claflin Davis, Director of the Constantinople Chapter of the American Red Cross. "Present plans are for the I Ar.g'iican Relief Administration to : oarr\ on with the feeding of refu oes." he said recently, "while the l.eague of Nations distributes them. Huh': i in and Jugoslavia have agreed to take several thousands; 1,000 will i be repatriated to Serbia, and it is hoped Austria will take several thousands. The problem which has puz: I toe world's statesmen will thus ' ! d"iinitely solved." , 1 1 Now York City has formed a "Wel;e Strange Committee." to assist ' visitors in seeing the city and to dis' c! the rumor that the metropolis is i'd and r. s -rvnl toward now<omors. ??????????? ?i | ' ! | j Take aotabs E STARK RCO fcr the liver iiewfi.'': or imitations. Demand i i . n . Cc \id 35c pack i_ * . . 'r j ?V: vo lrr.de mark. 'I Loss to Worker' With the closing of the book:* .it the lirst month of the strike of 100,. Out) lailroad shopmen, employment exi perts figured that the total wage 1 >ss ' to the strikers amounted to something more than $40,000,000. The strike was called as a protest against a wage I cut j.mounting to $('>0,000,000 a year. | These calculations, however, art hy pothctical, and are based upon the assumption that between 300,000 and 330.,000 shopmen have been ou; of work since the strike was called .T i'y 1. As a matter of fact, a large pro' portion of the strikci's vci, not with. out employment. Reports from *art r.ers all over the country It., 1 railroad , officials to estimate that at ' a<t 50,000 shopmen kept at their ..hen the strike was called. Some Switched Shops. In som0 localities the shop ' ?>ces ? v. a iked out en masse; in oth. . :? ions they kept at their jobs all without a break. In additiotf numbers cf striking shopmen sought and obtained 1 employment in other railroad ops taan those in which they had been > working. The extent of this movement appears to have been large j than was at first e timated. O.hers have drifted into other lines < f om' j loyment, especially in automobile ' factories, road construction and har. vesting. I Based on reports from vari* " ; ra ! centers, one estimate was that not more than one-third of one-half of the striking shopmen have been con inu1 usly out of work since July 1. According to these reports, which appear to be conservative, out of some 300.000 to 350,000 strikers, at least 150.000 have taken jobs either in other iail shops or in other industries. On l.,i-.. - i >t- ; >i ?mo mi* HISS lO LIIL' Kill* men is figured to be now running at the rate of more than $5,0(10,000 i week, or about $25,000,000 for the month. Split Over Seniority Question. Thjc strik0 of th,o railroad shopmen I which was called because of wage reductions ordered by the United Scac- ;? Railroad Labor Board, and alsc because the unions charged railron I companies with sending their re pa work to private shops in order to evade wage and working conditions laid down by the labor board, soon developed another phase which prevented an early settlement. Both wages and working conditio.is weve eclipsed by the question of seniority i ights. There was no question but that two weeks after the shopmen had walked cut, a satisfactory agreement could have been reached on the differences for which the strike was called. But there were between 50,000 and 75,000 shopmen who remained at work, and to this number there were added as the weeks went by perhaps 290,000 additional workmen, all employed under the promise of the railroad heads that their jobs would be permanent and that they had acquired the seniority rights which the strikers had forfeited. The strikers, while willing to have | the railroad labor board grant them a rehearing on the wage issue, and | content to take the promise of the , railroads against further 'farmhv ' ut" rf repair work, absolutely re| fused to return unless their seniority, relief and pension rights were return id to them in full. This the railroad companies refused to do, and it wa< I over this point the deadlock grew. President Harding himself sug' g"sted th<- compromise plan for sub lujss'on to nuin sun's. 1 ht. \\ lute iiouse ion was that all old shopmen who remained at work .should j !>< advanced to the head of the senI ii-rity list, but that the strikers .should | he listed next in line, with the now 1 workmen employed during the strike being relocated to the bottom of the | list, as it was held that most of those would soon be out of rail omploym . j with the return of the strikers. Meanwhile railroad transportation continued with but little hindrance. A total of perhaps .'100 mail, expve s and ! passenger trains were canceled during th0 first month of the strike, mostly in the South, the Southwest and the ( Middle West but there was 110 real curtailment of traffic. In fact man;, of the roads, particularly in the Has! and Middle West, reported the large?', | freight movement in two years. South Pacific Island Lures British Youths London, Aug. 10.? Discouraged at the outlook in this country, dissatis(lied with the after-war Britain, bat actuated mainlv bv love of adventure about a dozen engineering students I of Loughborough college are setting (out on September 1 for an uiiir.habit<1 I'acilic island belonging to Ik-undo r. Most of them are ex-rll'n-er.s. Among them is an author, I). L. David who wrote "Ya Brot." lie expects t?? lind in the new settlement work for his pen as well as his hands. A !M)-ton vessel is beiiiv? made ready for the expedition. The thief means of existent e they hope to find by utilizing the i sources of the island itself; the development of fruit growing and the bleeding of cattle. All hands will be retpiired to work, although climatic conditions, it has been ascertained, are ideal and all they will need for food can be obtained without working, if they are content just to "loaf and invite their souls." '1 h? 1 destined home, the advenj Mirers say, is about ~>0 miles from the I'mianm Canal. Denmark has dyk *s that have stood ' the storms for morj than seven centuries. I I * Building Revival in SI Chicago's Loop 0 Chicago/ Aug. 10 (By thD Asocial-. I ed Press),?Deapito efforts Qf tugi- ~ i wiercitttAtQ "civic organizations fighting tlu? congestion within tha iton I circle of. the union loop, that historic' center of Chicago is enjoying an un- _ precedent?! budding boom.-The-bouin, however, iB not at the expense, of the ? ' outlying sections and it is most no- ft ticeable on the fringe of tJie elc.at-d I railroad circle. Three great "sohemes" aro held ce- ? sponsible .for the most noteworthy B building ventures near the heart of the city. They are the South Wat"r street plan, which will change the famed fruit and vegetable market into n double decked thorbughfavc ^ with the. uppnr level devoted exclus- ? ivcly to motor traffic; the union sta- F tion plan, and the Grand Park plan. Those schemes which primarily are trnflic conirol and congestion relief ? ideas have received the cooperation of S the realty owners in the neighborhood I and they art- promising to cooperate by the erection of architecturally harmonious structures. The union station which is to he erected just ;u ross the river from the ^ loop will co ' about ten million dollars but the buildings which belong to the scheme will total as much gain. They include two giant freight termi- ~ nals and a United States mail terminal, the latter nearing completion. Work is expected to start shortly <>n the new Illinois Central station at Roosevelt toad, just south of the loop. The Field museum has just been completed to-the cast of the station. The city is planning to build, just south of the. museum, a titanic stadium ^ which will he hig enough to house the Olympic games, and a syndicate has ^ drawn up plans for a great hotel to be called the Sb vens, to the west of tins group. All those buildings will he of ? Ionic architecture. The Chicago Trihunc has announced ? a contest for architects for the plans ^ for a building to be erected by tin. newspaper, just north of the Chicag) tiver which is to bo "the most beautiful building in the world." Within the loop proper the streets arc filled with materials and side ? walks are occupied by wrecking machinery.' Old land such as the Stratford hotel, the Grand Pacific hotel, the Fir t Methodist church and Mc- n, Vickei ? theater have been demolished f, to make room for modern structure.;. most of them skysci'apers, which rap- \)( idly are winging their way skyward. f, On vhe last named spot a $20 000.- n 000 theatre is being erected, while the si other downtown theatres are Hearing a , completion. The Methodist church is a building a magnificent sky scraper a church in the very heart of the loop. On the site of the Stratford hotel a y,huge office building is to be construct- <] cd, witn*, the financial quarter the ^ Feder/d ^Reserve. Bank is aboui ready for occupancy, while the steel e: framework is lip for the $8,000,000 p Illinois Merchants Bank building, a <; block away. c] The London (iiuv ntee and Acci- jr dent building, another owering strue- v, ture, is .under cor. tructjon at the p southwest corner of t. ? Mich gan ave <. nue link bridge, just across the Chi- s, i ago l iver from the Wait haft of the ti Wrigley building. s Work on Big Mer srial () Will Soon be Started w Atlanta, Ga., Aug. * gigantic i stereopticon projection < >1 tlv side of Bt ?ne Mountain fill b u-<1 to start ? the work of the great Confederate me- 11 morial which has ben p'anned for some time. The machine is now in n the nrocess of mnslnif: ? tl cago, and as soon as it arrives, the an- a tunl labor will start. The picture M which will be carved lirst i- tliat of ^ (bneral Robert E. Lee, (lonei t| Thornas .1. (Stonewall) Jackson. :,nd Jef. ferson Davis. The work will !>< starteil at. flight, for until the pi are is u well started, the stereopt ic >n will be needed to furnish the working out- 'c lines of the group. Sl During the past two months, the I1 workmen, under the direction of (hit- c< zon Borglum, have reopened ?i ,*. work, s' and have been occupied in r< pairing (' aid extending the scaffoldings <?n the ^ side of the mountain. The sea!'"Ming! P - now around to just above wlici . the main group will be when the picture v' is co i a pit ted. ^ l-'o/ th" past (10 days the on is and Mr. Borglum have bet i t.u y ?: planning the machinery whirl, they " will require to complete the .nor-, nous carving. The electric motors have been selected, the wire- to| ^ furnish power are being arranvd' for, and the workmen are i?ret> a in'I d In be.rrin work on the layin.tr oni (,f ir designs and carving. vv A cam)) has been established mi l.v top of the mountain, where there has already been installed the wires for n power, and the engineers are now fur , nishing water, tanks and other net. | h sary equipment for the prosecution d the work. 1 ir It is estimated that by the end I his month Borglum will be in pi lion to place the de3ign of the I.? I r: .laekson-Davis group on the st< ,?j < side, and the real work of the earv- i !l will start the night that the stereo), . i r eon arrives. )' - Mow that it has Keen denied It i mankind is descended from the pit he ennthropus, I am hoping, for proof ,, that we are not related to the hypo.i thoneuse.--Reading Herald-Telegram ! < - - - ! <? Special delivery stamps In use in lt the United States are to he made in n new design which will substitute j a motorcycle for the bicycle at present in the design. s - - . - ST= PEC I At ADVERTISEMENTS VP HILDREN'S FANCY TOP 26c Sux. I | 2 pair for 25c. Austell's Shoe I Stove, 1453-3: k| OR REt^T ?Rooms for light" house-IR keeping. All modern convenience.-*, j Price reasoiHible. Cull at No. 10'.' South Street, Union, S. C. 1441-tf I An ad. m Tk# Time- ?eta results. [ONEY TO LOAN.on city or country j property in large amounts on easy J terms. S. E. Barron. 14UG-U' ED CROSS Oxfords and Pumps; Inland high heels. Your choice $1.50.' Austell's Store Store, for Better |H Shoes. 1451-5t I [ONEY TO LEND on real estate for I clients. J. K. Rumblin. Pri.-tf I OR RENT?Unstairs apartments 11 with all modern conveniences. Ap-IB ply to Mrs. Virginia Estes. 1452-2t I EVERAL SMALL TRACTS of land 1 for sale lying around the depot at | 1 Lockhart Junction, nt bargain il prices. See E. P. Kelly & Bro., The I Land Men. 1442-tf II < B IGS FOR SALE?l)uioe-Je?sey pigs | ?entitled to registration; all ages. Price $5.00. M. E. Pittman, Car- ? lisle, S. C. mmmmm HE UNION NATIONAL FARM I LOAN ASSOCIATION 18 now ac- I coptirg applications from farmers I for farm loans at G per cent inter- 1 est. This is a wonderful opportun- I ity for the farmers of Union coun- I ty. Farmers interested can apply I through It. L. Kelly, secretary- I treasurer of the local association. 1442-tf'I ADIES' $3.00 and $3.50 White Ox- ' fords, your choicc $1.95. Austell's Shoe Store. 1453-3t Advertise in The Times; get results. OR SALE?One Tyson-Jones rub-' ber-tired buggy, in good shape. New pair of single harness, cost $41. Will sell the whole outfit for $50 cash. Frank Gossett, Union. be ? St ranee Prepares For More Deadlier Strife I : Although France played a prom;- J ent part at the various peace oonirences which have been held since le signing of the armistice, Novem- ~~ i 11, 1918, yet, according to reports oin Paris, remembering the million ten she sacrificed in the last war, Tf? nvonnrincr nnvf a?? far greater stale than ever before, scale of such terrifying extent that ^ ^ following war will be impossible. France realized in the last war that >an power .must be preserved for the . uties of peace and that mechanic?.] icthods must l^e depended upon to " ( in the next conflict. Therefore her or sports are bending every effort to toul roduce war machines which will be mos ipahle of wholesale destruction, nvlanical agencies which will make her '*l,n nniune from another German in- ^ asion or attack by any other powc., st!n.' ranee realizes that in a few years 1 tain of her enemies can develop r ^ upeiiod man power. Therefore, with! jUn decreasing French population in conid?'ration, France, born in war and * ghting for centuries, is preparing for ^lon ic next war by developing machines " hose fright fulness is as yet unnown "The airplane," asserts Marshal b 'och. "capable every day of carrying h rcatcr burdens, will provide a fresh >C leans of flooding with poison gases. I mtained in large and small bombs. ^ ot only the opposing armies but also R ie centers of population in the rear. A nd even of making certain districts V uite uninhabitable. Chemical war- I ire will thus be able to bring about C he most terrible consequences, and C lat over huge tracts of territory." S Although France is now working pon artillery plans for "super-3er- 2^^ las" that may make the German H >ng-range bombardment of Paris j mall in comparison. The French lan, insofar as gas attacks are conL-rned, is to depend little upon gas ' hells, but upon gas bombs, to be ropped from huge aerial fleets, thus , estroying the morale of the civilian ^ opulation. Toxic gas, which attacqs the nerous system, did not prove successful 'hen used by the French, nor did tlx ichmatory gasses, which produced nly temporary blindness. Tneiefore. ie favorite French gas, best applica- ____ le for attack upon town because of < permanent effects, is an imnroved >rm of mustard gas. A In the next war the aerial fleets popping mustard gas bombs on cities. 1 addition to causir.fr many deaths. U ill likely make the places absoluteuninhabitable for many days. Acrding to the report of the engineers ow experimenting, the penetrating asses will make populations of cit.es ?1 opelessly insane, killing the chil-< ren and turning the adults into liots. Armament experts are bending e y effort tow.ud develop n?? longinge guns which will ma.iter any .posing army, and they report that """** iey have succeeded to a major ?eree. All the world knows that the reatest artillery feat in history was ie German bombardment of Paris A 1 lblS by the "Berthas," which hurl- the I shells a distance of more than 70 nius .iles. According to General Ilerr, nie, rtdlery leader of Verdun, the French esta -.perts today have succeeded this recid, perfecting guns which will dom- Adn late all of Belgium, the coast of Si ngland, down the coast of Spain and, ~ i fact, the entire English channel. 0 ? prot Subscribe to The Union Daily Times ing I . . ?' : 'J Balance As ! Yoa Drive ? T"Cl . *SAL CAR rffl^K OF A to LIPSCOMB LIPSCOMB r Part for a Ford or Fordson .E, S. C. Small Cash Payment THE UNIVEl WHEN YOU 1 FOI THINK OF JULIAN W. The Man who Always has anj JONESVILL For Electric Wiring s You will do well to consult good quality of materials anc my estimates before placing W. T. SI "HOT FOOT" Did You Ever Have It? T have had what I call "hot foot" r about 6 years. I couldn't walk hind by plow. It was terrible, orm's Lotion relieved it at once. (Signed) Dock Good, Kelt on Route 1.1 i Storm's Lotion is sold at STORM'S DRUG STORE j Price $1.00 I 1NFEDERATE COLLEGE No. 62 Broad Street Charleston, S. C. hoarding and Day School for Girls ins its' session September 26, 2. Historic institution situated a healthy location. Advantages :ity life^with larjje college yard outdoor sports.' A~wein>ftm?ec7f se of studies in a homelike atphere. A business course open Seniors and elective courses to iors and Seniors. Domestic Science course open to ors, giving practical and theoc knowledge of cooking. Sewing Course for Seniors and iors. A well equipped Library nary Department for day pupils, or catalogue and further informanpply to the college. State Campaign Meetings Lest eight days. Icwberry, Monday, August 14. Ireenwood, Tuesday, August 15. ,aureus, Wednesday, August 16. kbbevillc, Thursday, August 17. lcCormiek, Friday, August 18. kndcrson, Saturday, August 19. Valhalla, M mday, August 21. 'iekens, Tuesday, August 22. ireenville, Wednesday, August 23. iafl'ney, Thursday, August 24. Ipartanburg, Friday. August 25. We fill any doctor'* j prescription and in exact accord with his instructions. We can save you money on your preemptions. Let Us Prove It. Union Drug Store LL KINDS OF j CEMETERY WORK nion Marble 8r Granite Co. ! Main St. Union, S. C. H. W. EDGAR Undertaking Parlors ,'alls answered day and night Prompt and Efficient Service iy Phone 129?Night Phone 311 I Administrator's Notice 11 persons holding claims, against; estate of Stars Austin, deceased, j it nresenf thi> uumo anl? ?. I - . ? uu'jr !# *??* n, vu and all persons indebted to said te must may payment to me. (Mrs.) Bessie Austin, ninistratrix Est .of Starks Austin. antue, S. C. 7-28; 8-4-11J range groves in California are j ected from the frosts by operat-1 large fans, on 20-foot towers. \ ind Electric Fixtures me. Lxpert workmanship, 1 at reasonable prices. Get your order. , NCLA1R Palm Beach Suits Cleaned We can clean and press your Palm Reach suit very quickly these days. We have the equipment and the know how. Give rr.e a trial. Will appreciate it as much or more than any one else. Phone 167 and we will call promptly and return your suit looking like new. Hames Pressing & Repair ?hop Nicholson Bank Bldg. Phone 169 and motor cycle will call. ^.koorihii to TV?o Union Tirrn* I WACATION f \M For sunburn, bites, soreness, j V potson iw or summer colds j XflCKS I V Vaporub 17 MiUinr* Jors Lfs?*tl Yearly Notice All members of the Union coun.y branch of the Cooperative Cottor. Marketing association are asked to meet in the court house on Saturday, August 12, at 11 a. m. State officials from Columbia will bo present to give out valuable information. <# L. J. Browning, S-lO-li VV'm. U. Wood. j Nofire ' A stated convocation of Poinsett V Chop'or, No. 16, H. A. M. will be held in the Masonii Temple, Friday, August 11th 1921, at 8 o'clock p. m. All | ; ? >4 duly qualified Companions W are invited to be present. By order of Geo. T. Keller, Wm. C. Lake, H. P. | Secretary. 14B3-2t i Common Sense i About Eczema and Eruptions! Here's Something About S. S. S. That You'll Be Glad to Hear. You might Just as well know it right now,?the cause of skin eruptions, pimples, blackheads, bolls and so on. la right In the blood. There is no getting away from It. 8clt>nce has proved It. We prove It. Tou can prove It. When the cause of skin troubles and eruptions Is in tlio blood, It Isn't com Let 8> 8. 8. Give You An Angelic Hklnt mon sense to simply treat the skin. A bottle gf 8. 8. 8. will prove to you what Is happening In your blood. 8.8.8. Is a scientific blood cleanser,?it drives out the Impurities which cause eczema, tetter, rashv pimples, boils, blackheads, blotches and other skin eruptions. When these impurities are driven out, you can't stop several very nice things from happening. Your Hps turn naturally rosy. Your eyes sparkle, your complexion clears. It becomes beautiful. Your face looks like that of a prosperous, ruddy, well-fed, refined gentleman, or if you are a woman, your complexion becomes the real kind that the whole world so admires. 8.8.8. Is also a powerful body-bulkier, bocause It builds new and more bloodcells. That's why it fills out sunken cheeks, bony necks, thin limbs, helps regain lost flesh. ' It costs little to havo this happen to you. 8. S. 8. is sold at all drug stores, in two sites. The larger slzeTa the more economic^