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fi cigarettes io? They are GOOD! Two York Men Killed. York. Aug. 28.~A shocking tragedy in which two young men of York lost their lives came to light this morning when I). I*. Lattluiore of Hickory Grove was notified hy long dlstauce telephone that twcf of his sons, lirat eher Lattimore, 28, and l>an riat.ti jrnore, 20, were shot and killed last TUB CONFEDERATE COLLEGE. No. 62 Broad St., Charleston, S. C. A hoarding and day gohool for girls tH'glns Its session September 26, 1022. Historic institution situated In a healthy location. Advantages of city life with large college yard for out door sports. A well planned course of studies in a homelike atmosphere. A business course open to seniors and elective course to Juniors and seniors. A domestic science course open to Keniors, giving practical theoretic knowledge of cooking, A fcewlug course for seniors and juniors. A weLl equipped library. Primary de partment for day pupils, For cata logue and further Information apply to the college. COLUMBIA LUMBER MANUFACTURING Cft ? MILL WORK SASH, DOORS, BLINDS AND LUMBER . PLAIN A HUCER STS. Ph.n. 71 t COLUMBIA, S. C. uteht la Camnk, Ua..vby a railroad Epjard. WhH<^ details of the affair ai't* mea ger, It seems that tlie two young men wen? going to the station to meet a third party and arrange a \ hunting trli? when a ratlrad guard, who evi dently mistook them for intruders, shot them\down, ouo in the hack ami the other in the head. The man thought to havo doue the footing Is under arrest. Dan Lattlniore has boon in Caiuak for several years, hoing in tho employ of a> power company. His brother, Hrateher Lattlmore, was vlidtiug him, it In khid. Both aro veterans of tho World .War ami aro well known throughout western York. 1>. 1*. I-aittiintffe of Hickory Grove, father of the two young men, aceora panied by two other of his aons, left for Oamak this doming, making the trip through the country in an auto mobile. "Uncle Charlie" Tice UeacL Mr. Qharlos Tice, better known to his hundreds of friends along the Georgia Railroad as '"Uncle Charlie" died yesterday afternoon at his resi dence, 510 Walker Street, after an ill ness of four month#. ? Mr. Tloe was 7\l years old at the time of his death. % Mr, Tlee was one of the oldest en gineers on the Georgia Hailroad, hav ing entered the service of the road shortly after the Civil War, aa a fire man on the main line. He advanced rapidly and was soon promoted to en gineer, a position lie held for many years.?Monday's Augusta Chronicle. Hoy Causes I/>ss of Half Million. Winston-Salem, Aug. 20.?The en tire Nissen building on North Main street was destroyed and the surround ing structures damaged by fire this morning. The ? loss is estimated at half a million dollars. A part of the Nissan building, occupied thy the SmoftW Harness company, was blown up with ga-sollne. It is alleged that William E. Chatham, an 18-year-old ^boy, who is said toi have confessed that he saturated the upper part of the building because of an alleged grievance against W. W. Smoak. The Canton Christian college of South China is importing American domestic animals and numerous plants and fruit and nut trees in an effort to Improve the agricultural situation in that section. Digging for Gold Her Life/ row i tens, Aug. 20.?Believing that fche was instructed by Oo<l to dig for gold under a certain large* riiWk, and following those Inst ructions cost Betty Miller, an old negro woman 00 year* of age her life. The old negress lived alone with her son, two miles cast of here, on W. Iu MQoore'a plantation. Aeeording to neighbors, the old negro told them that'she had received in structions from Hod through a vision, or dream, to dig for gold under this boulder, aud she would he made weal thy. Following this supposed vision, she dug from time to time until fi nally a large excavation some lli feet deep and aix feat lu length was made under the designated stone. Thurs? day morning her son made a trip to Spartanburg aud upon returning Fri day evening about 4 o'clock missed his mother. Upon search he discovered her dead body, along with a pick, shovel and other digging implements, under, the stone, the rock having caved in upon her during the day. The cor oner of Cherokee county was called and at 'the Inquest a verdict was re turned to the effect that the old worn and had met her death while digging for gold under' a large boulder, death being due to internal Injuries caused by the caving in of the stone. Hermitage Mill News. Miss I^essle PJayor was the gnacious hostess at a birthday,party on Satur day evening. The rooms and porch were attractive with varicolored rut flowers and ferns and here tables were arranged for cards and other gaiuop., Beneath the pines many games were played and the half hundred guests who came to wish their popuar hostess many more such happy birthdays, found the pleasant evening passing too swiftly by. ? At a lute hour ice creain and ipound cake were served; and as a climax to the evening's pleasure all took part in a cake walk, the fortunate couple winning a delicious cake as a prize. Many beautiful and useful gifts wore received by the hostess and all present joined in thanking the young hostess for an evening so lelightfully pleasant. Miss Dessie McLcndon is the guest of Miss Bessie Crowley* Mr. N. C. Arnett 1ms returned from a ten days vacation spent in Virginia. Mrs. Thomas A. .Edison has been elected a trustee of the Ohautauoua Institution. ? Don't get caught! HE thought all gasoline was alike. He started with twelve gallons, enough for his trip, but the tank is dry with some miles yet to go. Full mileage is oidy one of the strong points of "Standard" Motor Gasoline. It is balanced?as dependable in mile age as it is in starting; powerful on the hills and economical in idling, always sure and always satisfactory. Standardize on"Standard."Thousands of motorists do who drive the same kind of a car as yours. "STANDARD" iu? u a p*t off. The Balanced Gasoline! STANDARD OIL COMPANY (New Jersey) mum lGASOUMF tOSttfll NO MIRRORS IN BARBER SHOP TohtorUi Parlors for Bobbing Ml. lady's Hair Aro Now Without Looking Qlasso*. Speaking of the piny of Hamlet without the Dane, what do you think of tin1 mlrrorless harber shop? Surely as an egregious thing, revolutionary and ruther ulurmlng, almost a eonira dWtl?>n In terms. Yet It ban arrived. It flourishes, It proves Itself tin an swer to a need of the hour. But not for men. No, no! The barter shop without mirrors 1b for the bobbing of women's half, remarks the New York Sun. It seems that women are too emotional to watch the am putatlon ?>f "wonjan s crowning glory" without raising a fuss Interfering with the work of the hair surgeon. They twitter and fidget, and get ex cited and give directions, and make the operator so nervous that he Is sometimes prevented from turning out what he considers a neat Job. The Idea of mlrrorless surgery for ,(he mutilation of female heads seems to have originated up Boston way. When the bobbing crate first struck New York barber shops were fitted up for women with a special eye to ab\in> dant and brilliant Illumination of mir rors. Indeed, the mirror, woman's firmest friend, was banned upon us the supreme attraction sln the new style of shearing parlor.* But It.was found the reflection of the victim after her tressoa recelvcul their flrst slash was so unnerving to her, and stimulated her to ho many criticisms, warnings and minute Infractions that It was soon seen that the mirrors would have to go. AntV now milady must lenrn to take her shearing like a sheep. TO MAR ST. MICHEL'S BEAUTY 8lltlng Up of the Bay Is Ovualng Much Anxifty to the People of Normandy. The steady slltlngup of the Hay of St. Michel Is a cause of much anx iety to the good people of Normandy. It threatens to spoil the beauty of the famous Mont St. Michel's, which at present Is linked to the mainland only by an artificial causeway. Formerly the Mont, whlc)i In the course of Hie centuries has been by turns a I>ruld Ical shrine, a Benedictine abbey, and a state prison, and which, since Its restoration by Violet-le-Duc, Is Jea lously. preserved as an historical monument, was as Inaccessible at high tide, except by boat, as Its Corn ish counterpart, St. Michael's Mount still Is. But .the causeway enabled a light railway to run to the very foot of the Mont, nnd this causeway Is stated by experts to ..be one of the great causes of the silting up, which It la predicted, will eventually make the Mont just part of the ordinary coastline. Electric-Lighted Handbag. The latest novelty from London?not Paris?Lb a rttdy's handbag equipped Interiorly with an electric light. Just as If It was necessary for a woman tfo need a light to empty her purse I Nevertheless, the novelty handbag Is about the cutest thing to arrive this season from the other side. One that was a gift to a young matron was the sensation of a section of the lower floor In a theater, Raymond Q. Carroll recently wrote from New York to the Philadelphia Ledger. She opened the handbag, a function which automat ically flooded the Inside of the bag with light from a tiny electric bulb, located about half an Inch below the clasp, and fed from a miniature stor age battery covered with oil skin, fas tened at the bottom of the bag. Tangled Tongues. Spoonerisms, like the poor, we have always with us. Two new and rather good ones came to our attention re cently. The other day a Chicago wom an, testifying against her husband in her divorce uult, declared: "He loads, me, his awful wife, a lawful ufe." There was a loud titter In the <(ourt, and blushing with embarrassmentshe hastened to correct herself. N> The other concerns a young woman who was dining at a strange house? On the table wps t^dish of boiled onions, and ' whciV her hostess was serving these and remarked that, of course, she liked them, the young woman remarked enthusiastically: "Oh, yes, Inderal; if there is one veg etable I like It Is oiled bunions." Just think If her hostess* husband had been a chiropodist.-?Boston Trnnserlpt. Took a Long Journey. Last fall an inhabitant of Osthelm, Alsace, captured a swallow nesting under the gable of the roof. He re leased it with the following message attached on parchment: "During the summer of 1921 I lived with a farmer at Ostheim. He would be glad to learn where I have spent the winter when I return." Tfca bird returned n^ently to its Alsatian home, bearing the fol lowing inscription : "I have been stay ing with a shoemaker, Joseph Hady, on the Island of Martinique, who salutes my pregent host." Surprising. "Gosb-all-beeswax!" exclaimed the country cousin. /'Who in the flghtln' world would ever believe there was such a lot of folks Ln Kay See?" "Hut you must remember," returned the city cousin. "that Kansas City has nearly four hundred thousand Inhabl tanta." "Yes, but, great governor, who'd have expected to S4?e 'em nil on Twelfth street at once."? Kansas Cltj PUT. FRUIT JARS We still have some Half Gallon, Glass T op Fruit Jars at a very low price, $1.25 Per Dozen W. Robin Zemp's Drug Store Flione 3?, Kodak Films sold and tk'vclopri). Delivery. tnk Waul Bird* Held Sacred. All the world .?over, aud from tlu? earliest llipos much mysterious lorc^ lias attached itself to. birds. It Is a very odd belief that the souls of tl)?> dead pas* jo beftvon In flu* form of birds, and in the Kast it Is st ill believed that some of those souls flutter about us in bird form. Some Indian trltoos will never hurt or even tomb certain birds, regarding them a* the abodes of animated souks of their dead chiefs, Obi prints and carving nearly always pictured the soul as leaving the body in the shai>e of a bird. In this country and in Scotland es pecially, thf robin is regarded as sa cred. Its rod breast Is supposed to Ih? of tbat color because a -.jlrap of 'Christ's blood foil on a robin, and ?thenoefortlr all robins weroso markod. It is deemed unlucky to kill a swa 1 - low or to destroy Its nest. That is he cause swallow* were said to have flown round the Cross of Calvary ery< ing: "Svala ! Svala !"* which moan* "comfort." It will too noticed that the swallow gets ifs inuue from the i>eeuliar cry of "Svala." The wren is another sacred bird bo cause, a (.'cording to an old belief, |A brought fire from heaven to the earth wlw>n the human race had no knowl edge of how to create fire. The dove has always been an em blem of fidelity and gentleness. The thrush Is a bird of luck, and to have one buibl in the garden of your home is said to be a sign of com ing good fortune. Peacocks are unlucky. I'M rat to Sell Oottou. Columbia, Aug. -8. To T. S. Evans of Choraw goes tlio dUlUuitlon of lie lug the first oottou grower In South Carolina to deliver cotton to the South Carolina Cotton Growers' Cooperative. association. Mr. lCvana last Friday de livered INS bales of ohl cotton to that organization. Delivery of this cotton was optional with him under tin? tonus of tho contract hut ho stated that he wished the association to sell the cotton for him. "I believe the organisation of the South Carolina Cotton Orower*' C/oop erativo association moans much for the future welfare of the atate and I am delighted that to me lias come the privilege of l>elng the first grower In the state to turn cotton over to the association," said Mr. Evans. lie de clared that he believed firmly In the .... w- A * principles of cooperative marketing. Mr. Evans l* a director of the Sand Hill Fruit Growers' association of Ab erdeen, N. O., one. of the largest co operatives of the eountry, and sold over $ 100,(KM) worth of launches through that nssoeintlon this year. Ho ways that tho results attained through that association h?v# convinced him of the power of cooperative selling. Tho sand hill association sold over $2,0(ft> ooo worth of peachcs this year. At an auction said President Hard ing's picture brought $40 against $20 for that of former President Wilson. The nale was held in Staunton, Vir ginia, the birthplace of Mr. "Wilson. 666 quickly relieves Colds, Con stipation, Biliousness and Headachesr^2^ Fine Tonic. 7-26 For Future Delivery We are now making Importers Nitrate of Soda Contracts for Spring and Fall delivery. Write or phone us for prices. F. ML Wooten HERE ONE WILL FINI) A VARIES STOCK OF SILVERWARE LASTING REMEMBRANCES AND SI' ITA BLE FOR ALL OCCASIONS, BUT REMEMBER. WHETHER YOI'R DEMANDS MAY BE SILVER OR DIAMONDS OR ANY OTHER LINE OF JEWELRY, YOU ARE ASSURED SATISFACTION AT THIS UP ; TO DATE ESTABLISHMENT GLELAGKWELL JEWELER Q OPTOMETRIST CAMDEN SOUTH CAROLINA