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I ' ' *. In Competition With Santa Clai * % , 1 ^teoston, Auk. 19.?Hundreds l^ys and girls of the Mary Hemin way public school in the Dorchest district have Kone into competiti< with Santa Claus in an open air w6i shop here and Christmas time w find their handiwork scattered many Kift packaKes. With work benches set up undi fraKrant fir trees in a natural pai on Lonsdale street, the youngstei whittle and saw away making toy furniture and unique , gewgaws out < any material that comes to hand. Toy ducks, horses and pigs, o tanks, soldiers, chairs, dolls, guns at airships?all are Droducts of the e: pert hands of these young enthus asts. Even the refuse heaps furnis materials. A sardine can becomes cooky cutter, a salmon can shapt into a cruller cutter and beer bott tops make excellent caps for tin so diers. A jig-saw in the hands of capable youngster .produces a monke on a trapese that rolls around lik a performer in a circus. Chair caning is a fascinating jo and mother's old arm chair gets man a new seat. Work is carried on from nine unt four under the supervision of Mis L. Gertrude Howes with two manut training teachers to show th<> dents how to manipulate the toolsPj house that is used for a bad weathe shop has been equipped with furni ture made by the children. Kentucky Cardinal Refuses to g< Dubuque,'la., Aug. 20.?Bereft c his wild bird pets, 1*'. . Khoinberi Dubuque's nature loving hermit, i a changed man. r'or more than a score of years h has surrounded himself in his hom on rolling bottom land of - the Mis sissippi river with song .birds tha learned to. love their captivity. Bu as the years ran on the * state la> . makers forbade caging song birds and recently the old man was ai rested, lined, and the birds set free. In one cage larger than the rest brilliant Kentucky cardinal lingere when a recent visitor called. Its doo was open. "He will never go," said the ol man wimnap Kio Kvaut wifU o mmmmmmm ncpwifi, Itio Wl V ?? VT1VU U UailUaU as "he Razed upon the row upon row o empty cages. "He is the one frien I have left, because the law tells m , . that I am abusing my 'friends th birds, for whom I have always laboi ed and loved. * "There you see," and going to th vrindbw that overlooks an orcharc meadow and strip of rolling hills h pointed to a host of bird houses an natural bathing pools. "If that is abusing the things love," he said, "then I am guilty." Squirrels, rabbits with young, cat that refuse to bother the birds, an two great mastiffs, held in leash b heavy log chains, complete the lif of the litthr farm home-. --The birds were his dearest posses sion. Hundreds more of them .buil in the vicinity of his home. Fearfi of the law yet with a desire to ai the creatures he has ministered to s long, the.old man still prepares foo for the songsters and watches ther lovmglv as thev flv to him for th delicacies he always has. be does not fondle or caress ther now. He is afraid of the law. PUT ON WEIGHT IN FEW DAY! % ??? Scientists Discover that Vitamines i Yeast Build Up Rundown People ?Can Now Be Taken in Tablet Form Scores of people who eat plenty c food, and seem* to have good appc , tites, remain thin, anemic and rur down, and only recently the rei real cause has been discovered. It i lack of vitamines. Vitamines ar tiny vegetable elements, now know to exert a mysterious power on th bodily cells, and thus produce energ: strength and glowing health in hi man beings. Yet they are almof wholly lacking in the average moder diet, because of our methods of foo preparation seers to kill the effect c vitamines in food. And now scientist have learned that ordinary yeast i wonderfully rich in vitamines A lit tie yeast added to'the meals has s helped run-down people that the have put on flesh in a few days. 1 renews the youth of prematurely ol people and makes children grow m01 sturdy. Numberless experiments in the greatest medical institutions ha\ proven these facts conclusively. Bi the common yeast cake, containin only 20 per cent yeast and 80 pc cent starch and water is ineffectivi After thorough investigation authoi ities agree that the ideal yeast i brewer's yea^t^and this form of yeas has now been prepared in highly cpi centrated tflblets, containing grei vitamine strength and combined wit Lonics such as iron, which make yeast more effective. These tab'ets are called IRONIZE VP A OP Pl.?? -II i un^x* xncjr ai c ouiu ujr an ui uj prists and are the approved vitamir tonic treatrpent. IRONIZED YEAS tablets are convenient to carry ar peasant to take?they never nausi >ate. IRONIZED YEAST costs on . 4^ little, more to the dose, than con ' mon yeast and is much more effectiv Each packaprc contains 10?days' trea r>ent *nd costs only $1.00-? or on 10c. a day. Get a packapre toda Before you have finished the first b< you will know/they are helnin<* v< and building you up. IRONIZE YEAST also quicklv removes boil ' , pimples. facial blemishes, etc Sp ^fcpial directions for children in ea< package. Made by Ironiz^l Yea Co., Atlanta, Ga. HIGHLY OOHCCNTWATCO VtTAMlNC TONIC , P Annual Meeting of is Bar Associatio _ V. oi Cincinnati, Aug. 24.?It is report* K- that the matter o>f enacting, laws i er govern rental of residence properl sn will receive serious consideration i fk the annual convention qf the Amer ill can Bar Association, to be held in Cii in cinnati from August 30 to Septemtx er The Committee on Notewortl rk Changes in Statute Laws, in the r< rs port which it will present to the coi s, vention at the session on Thursda af evening, September 1, will say: "In the field of landlord and tenar r law, we find recent examples of ui id usual legislation. Shortage of houi t- ing accommodations has given ribe t i- an abnormal dehiand, with r<sultai >h high rentals. These in turn have bee a made the justification for legislativ ;s regulation of rentals and terms an le conditions of tenancy. Rent" legislt 1- tion has taken the form either of (1 a statutes like those in New York, n y pealing or varying statutory remedie ;e of the landlord in such a way as t compel or induce him to accept reasor b able rents, or (2) comprehensive legis y lation like that contained in the A< of Congress applicable to the DistrU il of Columbia, which treats rental proj is erty as affected with a public interes il and subjects the relationship'of lane i- lord and tenant to commission regult tion. 1 r "The Ne\fr York type of statute, sirr i- ply takes away the remedy of evictio where the contract which the landlor claims is breached is considered o the courts to be unreasonable, as, fc example, where the rent demanded b [) the landlord is, in the opinion of th court, excessive. The New York Lej islature has declared as "excessive any rent \vhich is more than 25 pt ? cent in excess of the rent of the prev s ous year. The landlord can not evi< a tenant who pays the reasonabl d Cental. c "The act of Congress authorizes th '* Rent Commission of the District < Columbia to adopt standard forces c lt lease's to fix reasonable rentals an v terms of tenancy and to determir j' semi-judicially controversies betwee landlord and tenant. The authority < the Rent Commission and its proci ? dure are analagous to that of the Ii d terstate Commerce Commission in tl r field of interstate commerce. Bot types of statutes have now been u] d held by the Supreme Court of tl & United States as justifiable Veguli * tion of public property in the interes d of the public welfare during: the al 11 normal housing conditions followin e the war." The committee further reports thi one of the most striking features < e our recent statutes is the absence < 1. any lar^e amount of "reconstruction e legislation, with less, rather tha d more in the line of regulatory legisli tion. 1 Humming birds are so called b< s cause the vibration of their winf d makes a humming noise. y " * 1 e Each cubic yard of tfie air contaii about throe, hundred-million par tic h i- of dust. [t , 'J [Written Texts o or 'Oral Lecture d n Paris, Aug. 26.?Whether childrc ? learn better from written texts or or; lectures, is a question under investigJ n tion in the schools of Paris. . A technical committee pf tl League of Mental Hygiene has set < work in a boys' school to study tl processes of teaching and learning. 2 Pedagogical experts assert thi ^ some persons' brains receive deep* impressions by the sense of heariri n and others by the sense of sight. Tl Luiuuiiti.cc [it upunca tu ncciv auii method of education that will take a< vantage of these facilities and poss bly, also, try to find some way to di ^ vdlop the pupil's receptiveness. Another question is the desirabilil " of developing either the hearing < 7 sight sense, when found particular! I keen in a pupil or whether it wou ls be better to develop the dormant fa< e ulty, in an effort to attain a certai n standard of keenness in both sight ar e hearing in all pupils so tl|ey might a be taught by the same method. i ? Beginning Life Anew d . ? Chicago, Aug. 19.?To Corpor ;s Christen 1'ouisen of the United Slat< js Marines, his discharge from an am j._ hospital in February, lyly, meant b 'Ql*ginning life anew?the life of a blir I man. In two years time, he has cor ^ pleted that readjustment and tddt i Poulsen is in the fuel and feed bus ness in Chicago, does a full dav work every day and, with the aid . his wife, is taking a corresponded course in business management. '? Poulsen was with the Sixth Rep ^ ment of the Marines when a fc ? thousand troops were chosert fro !r the vanguard of the American arn B* to help block the German advance < Paris in June 1918. The Sixth %M is rines gave their aid to the allies* b st among those who were left on tl l- battlefield was- Corporal Poulsen, ft it ly conscious, but'bleeding and sigh ;h less from the burst?of a high expl s sive shell.' Poulsen was wounded ju one year to a day from the date 1 D enlisted. He has been totally blii ever since. ,e Following his discharge- from t! T army Jiospital, Poulsen entered Eve |fj green, the Red Cross School for t Blind, in Baltimore. There he toi lv'courses in typewriting. Braille, En lish. Civics and learned to make snn '" useful articles. He was getting $ ' a month from his War Risk Insur&n but wanted to earn his own, living ly addition. y- A vf?ar later his father offered ** give him work in his feed store 1,1 Chicago. Young Poulsen entered t ^ office and began to le?m to take < Is. ders and direct deljveries. Today e- is a full partner in his father's bu ch ness. Now he feels 'that he nee st still further technical training business and has begun a corresnor ence course under the Federal Boa for Vocational Education. He studying this course in his snc time, with the aid of his wh< he married last year and who , n< acts as his readet. I CO-OPERATIVE I n COALMINING! New York, Aug. 8.?Co-operative1 coal mining is Raining favor among ^ Hungarian miners in the United States. Several large enterprises in the bituminous fields are now being 1" operated by them* # 'lTie foreign language information service here in making public this ,y fact said the Himler Coal Company, B_ of Himlerville, W. Va., is the largest i. of these co-operiative mining con^erns and that it is owned and controlled by its 1,400 Hungarian workit ers. i- These miners are receiving good s- wages, it was stated, and are also x> sharing in the profits of the enierit prise, which they financed at a cost in of $500,000. They are now planning re to raise $2,000,000 to obtain control (1 of additional coal land and workings, i- The co-operative company was ) founded by Martin Himler, .an ex: perienced Hungarian coal miner, who is came into West Virginia and estab;o lished a small newspaper about two i- years ago. The company has now i- built the entire town of Himlerville. :t There it maintains a bank and pub:t lishes a weekly paper in the Hun) garian language, the Magyar Banit yazlap (Hungarian Miners' Journal.) t- It also recently built a power house i- to supply homes of the miners with electricity, i- The governors of Kentucky and n West Virginia are said to have comQ mended the company and its promoter y for the erection of a railroad bridge >r connecting Himlerville with Kermit, y Ky. Across this structure the^ corn's pany is operating its own transportaC tion. The bridge has also made it possible for, the Norfolk & Western 'r Railroad to make the mining town a 1 rerrtjlur station ^ Although the workings of the co'e operative company are located iq the lower Tup: river district where there has been considerable labor trouble, the Hungarian miners have been steadily working with no fear of 'd strikes. The company "stockholders ie at a recent meeting invited public in" spection of their books, mines and " workshops. ' Another"similar enterprise, the Nebo American Coal Company, has been incorporated in Kentucky, with a caph ital of $240,000, all owned by the >_ workers themselves, ie J" ROYALTY COMPLETES >- TOUR OF ISLANDS g St. Helier, Jersey, Aug. 8.?King George, Queen Mary and Princess Mary recently completed a tour of the ? Channel Islands, which had not beet. 1 visited by a British sovereign for 75 in years. The islands are the only portion of the Dukedom of Normandy now belonging to England, to which they have been attached for more T than 1,000 years. French remains ^ the language spoken by the inhabi-' tants. 1S King George, who on this occasion assumed his old title of Duke of Nor" mandy, was received both at Guernsey and here with quaint old-time ceremonial. Royal fiefholders knelt before him and swore fealty in prfejq cisely the same rpanner as did their ancestors to William the Conqueror on the eve of the Norman invasion. !n Tenures of land were confirmed by offerings such as a pair of gilt spurs a* or a brace of wild ducks. In Guernsey, the , seigneurs of ie Rozei ant} of Des Augries arc onto joined by thfiir tenures to ride into ie the water up&O: the saddle, girths and carry their duke to land. R. Lem^ priere and Maj. J. F. Giffard, the Jr present-day holders of these sejgneuries, so far conformed to ancient ,e usage as to meet the king at the water's pHitp 1 "Where are your ropes?" asked the king banteringly, as he greeted them. e~ "I am afraid, sire, this water would be too deep to ride into," replied Mr. 'y Lempriere. "Ah," said the king, "the world has y moved a good deal since that 'old duty was imposed." F" At the chamber of the states, the 'H local legislature, the royal party was 5. received by halberdiers carrying arms given to their ancestors by Sir Walter Raleigh, the governor of the island in Elizabethan times. The halbreds had been handed down from father to son. The king also occupied Sir Walter n) Raleigh's carved oaken chair. L,s The Jersey and Guernsey breeds, of ,v cows are famous throughout the e'_ world, and the most valuable of them was shown to the royal visitors. This animal produces a ton of butter iy each year. Another fine Guernsey ,j_ cow was presented to the king by the ?3 local agricultural society. of " 7 ce w The next time m you buy calomel ut ask for lie t~ ? I alotabs v!> in !? Tho purified and refined calomel tablets that are )r, nausealess, safe and sure. he > m # " I si- Medicinal virtues retainda ed and improved. Sold *n only in sealed packages. 'rj Price 35c. ,, r is ire . >m ow In Cuba tobacco is planted, (crown and gathered in 90 days. r^??? 1VI O 1 EXC (Ba SOUTHER! FRIDAY, : From all Principal Poi (o Asheville, Hem ern North Carolina S FROM ? | 2 i 9 J= b c < < i Abbeville I$5.75|$6.25|$C ? Anderson I 5 00 5.50| f Helton .. ..... .. ..| 4.75| 5.00 t Carlisle ! 4.00; 4.25' f rtonald* .. I 5.501 5.75 t Greenville I 3.75; 4.25| i oreonwood J 6.00 6.50 * mm vireer i i5.Yi>| 4 B Honea Path j 5.251 5.50 ( Bj Pc'xer I 4.50 4.75! f VS Piedmont j 4.25 4.751 f Prosperity v. .. '. . | 5.75 <>.00! ( B Seneca .1 5.251 5.75| ( H Spartanburg ..* I 2.75 3.00 f B Union j 3.75' 1.23! j S PROPORTION AH H ** Excursion tickets go I turning to and including ; n Excursion tickets wi I > Baggage Checked. I Plan now for your I Carolina Mountain Resor 'f f ^K? T .<s .. Ms Bf B$ Social Reform Work Richmond, Ind., Aug. 15.?Social reform work in which American Quakers Lave taken a prominent part was reviewed here today at a centennial celebration of ( the Indiana Yearly Meeting of the Friends, the largest body of Quakers in the world. Ninety-two year old Timothy Nicholson, the "grar.d old man'! of the Quakers, presided. For nearly 70 years he has been active in prison reform, and he has been president of the Indiana Anti-Saloon League since ifQ nrfroni-7afirm Prof. Rufus M. Jones, head of the department of philosophy in Haverford College, spoke on "The Future of Quakerism," and Prof. Harlow Lindley, director of the department pf archives and history of the Indiana State Library, bead a history of this Yearly Meeting. Later in the day incidents in the history of the Quakers were represented in a pageant on the campus of Earlham College. Slavery was one of the chief causes for the early Quaker movement from the Carolinas, Georgia. Tennessee and Virginia to eastern Indiana and western Ohio. The chief labor of members of Indiana YeafTy Meeting in behalf of the slaves was exerted through the "Underground Railway." Three branches centered in Fountain CitJ, nine miles north of Richmond. Levi Coffin, a member of the Indiana Yearly Meeting, was head of the underground system. He is credited with assisting 3,000 slaves northward, and another member of the meeting with Jielping 2,700. Beginning mission work among the Shawnee Indians at Wapakoneta. Ohio, in 1821, Indiana Yearly Meeting has continued its activities among the Indians to this day. This Meeting is said to be the only Friends body that officially has undertaken prison work. Its first committee w$s appointed in 1807 and it has since done notable work in this state. S Edgar Nicholson, presiding clerk of / Indiana Yearly Meeting, is secretary of the Anti-Saloon League of A morion r PYORRHEA Q8BQ8ERal~| i Mmwm | |* G? jll THUI MMUM1. MLM.TMY OOMXTtOH A \1/hho ?AVC vov* teeth. WIUL AL*oJj \ MOVENT VTOftftltCA. f I AT ALL DRUGGISTS j fw? mmm mmm mmm ? mmm m mmm a am ? mmm IM<4 Mrs. Carlina C. Carrington, who has been appointed state juvenile probation officer of Indiana, is a prominent attorney of^Fort Wayne. ' Air weighs 75 pounds per 1,000 feet, i The Baltic >ea has an average depth of only 43 yards. vU * 1 /' '' LJ 1ST X URS1 ck to The Good Old 1 ?VIA? N RAILWAY SEPTEMBEI ints in South Carolina in lersonville, Waynesville ummer Re sorts as folic ! r .s' t 2 h f 5 k * c ; 5 S 8 ? I * tS ' S ? "3 o * c 3 -S ? ? o caa ca o a R j cs (x I W > 33 33 J-s JH r.7 r, I $ 6.25]$ r?. 2 r> I $ 5.5 o7?7 . 2 51 $ S .001$7.?5I$7.00|: i.OOl 5.501 4.50 4.60) 7.001 6.751 6.501 6.75| 1.001 5.001 4.001 4.25! 6.75J 6.60) 6.26) 6.00| >.501 4.25 3.75 4.00! 5.00| 6.00! 5.501 5.251 (.25 5.76 4.751 5.00! 6.75) 7.26 6.76) 6.50) 1.75 4.251 3.251 3.501 5.25! 5.501 5.25 5.00! f.OOl 6.25| 5.501 5.50! 7.25! 7.75! 7.251 7.00 1.25! 8.75 3.00! 3.00' 1.75! 5.001 4.75| 4.50 (.251 5.50 4.75| 4.751 6.50| 7.001 6.501 6.25| ?.501 4.751 4.001 4.001 6.00| 6.25| 5.75| 5.50' (.25 4.751 3.751 4.001 5 75' 6.00 6.50 5.50 ?.75| 6.00| 5.251 5.25 7.001 7.50! 7.00[ 6.751 !.25| 5.751 4.75| 4.75! 6.75 7.00' 6.50! 6.25| 1.75| 3.00! 2.25) 2.25] 4.25) 4.50l 4.001 3.75 1.751 4.001 3.251 3.25' 7.001 r>.50| 5.001 4.751 ["ELY LOW FARES FROM INTERIM (WAR TAX TO BE ADDED) od going on all trains Sept< lit trains leaving destination 11 be good in Pullman, Sleej vacation and needed rest ts. _Make Pullman Reservai Apply to Distric Melting Snow in Summer to Provide Watei Yellowstone Park, Wyo., Auk. 23.? MeltinK snow in midsummer in ordei to provide water for cement is th< means adopted by the Landscape Fn Kineering Department of the Nationa Service in the construction of a nev lookout station and shelter at the to] of Mount Washburn here. Situated more than 10,000 fee above the sea level, the building o this picturesque stone structure pre sented !a water Droblem that threat ened to stump the engineers. Thej hit upon using artificial means o* melting snow but, recently, the sum mer weather has melted it so rapidh that work has had to Jae rushed t( keep it from running out. New rangei stations and community houses foi motorists are also being built by th( landscape division. HALF AJENTURY Oklahoman Praises Black-Draught, Having Used It "Can Safely Say for 50 Years." Grandfield, Okla.?One of the beat known farmers of Tilman County, Mr. G. W. Tisdale, who owns and manages a wagon yard here, says: "I have used Thedford's BlackDraught?I believe I can safely say for fifty years. "I was born and reared in Texas, Freestone County, sixty-four years ago. I have been married forty-four year^ My father used Black-Draught before I was married, and gave it to us . . . "For forty-feur years of my married life, it has had a place on our medicine shelf, and is the only laxative, or liver medicine, we use. We use it for torpid liver, sour stomach, headache, indigestion ... I don't think we could get along without it, knowing what it has done for us, and the money It. has saved, lt-ls just as good and reliable today as it was when we began Its use. My boys use it and they ate satisfied it's the best liver medicine they have ever used." Thedford's Black-Draught Is purelj vegetable, not disagreeable to take and acts in a prompt and natural way. So many thousands of persons have been benefited by the ae of Thedford'e Black-Draught, you should have nc hesitancy in trying this valuable old well-established remedy, for most livei and stomach disorders. NC-139b. Charlotte, A.og. 22.?Orders for 65, 000 tickets for the Made in Carolina! Exposition have beon placed, it wa announced today at executive oflices o the exposition. The main building, 22 feet by 200 feet, of fire-proof cor struction, has been completed and th decorators and electricians are no> engaged in their part of the worl These tasks will be completed by Sepi 1, the date when the first exhibit ire scheduled to arrive. ONS I V ?ay?) I SYSTEM I ^ R 2, 1921 I eluding Augusta, Ga., I -t and all other West- I >ws: * H u C U c ? % ^ ooort >* e - ^9 - J *. 0 t x ^ x 5 c C b tj 3 -r h ? <? 3 t- ? c >* -3 Jz * 1 5? ^ c ? x u H J & 32 v- to (A H > > Hj l8.tOI97.oo $6.25 $5.2.v$6.oo:*b.oo:$7.25 x 7.501 6.75' 6.00 4.25 5.25! 1.Q01 6.25 .* 7.001 6.251.5.25 4.00 4.25! 3.T5! 6.25 6.251 5.501 4.50 3.25! 3.751 3.00 6.75 H 7.501 6.75| 5.75 4.501 4.TP 4.25! 6.75 6.00| 5.25! 1.25' 3.00| 3.00 2.501 5.25 *H X.0? 7.251 6.50! 5.25 5.151 4.50 7.50 BP 5.50! 4.75| 3.751 2.25 2.50! 2.25| 4.75 Bh 7.25' 6.50' 5.50! 4.25| 4.50: 4.001 6.50 6.751 5.751 5.00 3.75! 4.00 3.261 6.00 6.50' 5.501 4.75 3.50 3.75 3.251 6.75 H 7.751 7.00 6.001 4.751 5.25! 4.501 7.25 7.50! 6.50' 5.75 4.50 4.75| 1.00! 6.75 9 5.001 4.00 3.001 2.00 2.25| t.50i 4.25 ~ 8.0QI 5.001 4.25 3.001 3.2B| 2.501 5.25 H EDI ATE POINTS. - i eiribef* 2nd, and good re- I i Sunday September 18th. H * jing and Parlor-Cars and , I in the Western North . I tions early. B Ticket Agents or R.C.COTNER, I :t Passenger Agent, I Spartanburg, S. C. H t' jf ^e0-p\ ' * ' - f I f It ij ; V4**?#/ J Bottled By N. W. A. BOTTLING CO., Union. S. C. DRY CLEANING Eliminates the soil from the tinest and most delicate garments without loss# of color or shrinkage and cleans your garments clean. VVw have the I aAiiin?viAnf nn/l 1 1 *L-i 5 i (.xjMijJiiicui, aiiu int.- IMIIIW I1UW, L Ilil I 1H what counts in cleaning clothes. 'J 1 will appreciate your business as much as anyone. Special attention to Par' eel Post. We will call and deliver in a dust-proof motorcycle. Hames' Pressing and i Repair Shop' ' ^Ucholson Hank Building, Phone 167. i Agent for two of the largest Dye Houses in the South. ! = i - For Best Results ? Use i &po\/^ir LIVE STOCK REMEDIES Sold by Druggists and Dealer* ' . ' y? Infancy and childhood are the dans per periods for tuberculosis, says the f U. S. Public Health Service. To pro0 toct your child, pasteurize the milk or i- use certified milk; protect infants and e young children from contact with the w sick; and keep the growing child c. strong and well by seeing that it drinks milk, eats vegetables, avoids s excessive fatigue, and get* enough sjeep. % V* m