The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, September 23, 1921, Image 2
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also the local news published then
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 ,1021
Plan to destroy your cotton ata
early in October, men set your
termination to pick bugs next spri
By doing this you can raise uil
cotton you should raise and with
plenty oi food and feed studs. Do
pay any attention to the man v
* * scotfs. Go ahead and light your b
ties. You will win, if you will 1
fight.
We believe in athletics in our c
lagee, but not in the present tr?
in the athletic situation. Rea dug
the opening days in the cuiie es
the state, both state and dcnomii
tional colleges alike, one feels tl
something is out of joint. It is i
fieult to escape the conviction that,
the mind of many students, at let
the chief end of a college life is
j become a star football or has el
player. The whole sy-t ni is wro
and for several reasons. The t
players developed will but a s.v
portion of the student body. T
small group will gradually assu
practically the whole held, and
larger number of students will d.
into neglecting athletics almost
tirely; the smaller group, the actu
ly successful team men, will, in ms
, cases^ come out after four years w
9 some permanent bodily injury, l
result of over-development. Ma
will come out with enlarged hearts,
say nothing of broken limbs and otl
bodily ills. The trouble with the pr
ent day athletic situation in our c
leges is that it results in overdoing
011 the part of the few an 1 of the i
gleet that falls upon the many.
- schools the situation is \
bo discouraging. Every man w
goes through +he four years of dr
ing will get all the exercise he nee
But in many other colleges this
uot true. Of course it is not a poi
lar thing to take this position up
the question. A man who does i
\ approve a popular fad finds hinis
the target of many criticisms. Y
time will tell its own story. We 1
lieve our colleges are making t
mistake of over-emphasizing ai
letics. What man is there \vh
brought face to face with the iss
would be willing to spend $500 a yc
to educate his son in football? I s tl
the chief end sou lit in an oducatio
We do not believe so.
- Providence conies to the relief of t
farmers who, for the past twel
months, have been waging a stt
buttle. The battle was fought wit!
determination that challenges the i
miration of the world. Thousan
at great sacrifices, he'd their cott
held it all the way down from
cents to 10 cents, and are sti 1 ho
lng it. At one time it seemed tl
the battle was lost. Brave farm*
who had put up a stiff light, lost th
nerve and s?!d for whatever th
could get. They felt the bat le 1c
and it did seem so. Others fouj
on, except where they were forced
sell, and it was not of frequent occ
ence. Then c.iiv.e the help of natu
I Weevil condit ur.s joined in and, w
the work bet, an in reduced acrea
\ less fertilizer and the holding of c
\ ton, came rboui, the sm illest c
ever known i. a quarter of a centu
> So, it comes about that the battle
not lost, it is really won, and 20 cc
prevails as the present price vv
the prospect of yet higher prices,
all the farmers had sold last yes
eotton, the price wou'd now perh
gsSr be 7 or 8 cents, wi^h little prosp
R? of a very much higher pric . Thus
comes about that the f .rmer, tryi
: to help himself, and aided bv an ;
of God, has gained the mastery. A
he is not gor.ig to forg-1 ho lessi
7 million bales bring:' g n > nri h
11 million bales, and fu n hi g
f opportunity to ra:so d an 1 fe
k" ituflfs on all the acreage saved by f
HE.' Smaller cotton crop has forced hoij
its lessons. We hnar some peof
KL saying: "The South, having a mono
^ oly of the cotton growing industry,
tmder the moral obligation to riot]
V* the world." This we do not believ
We are as much entitled to a ju
Kf ?|?rofit on our ehief product as is tl
wheat grower, the wool grower tl
/ ^k^ora grower, the cattle grower, tl
grower, the grane growe
Sy wrult grower and all the rest i
we cannot get a reasonab
cr?P' when we rail
?& v 'JXkbales of cotton we on
Bfet* Jiaked while we ea
BPr.- HV/HEBg&akmillion hales, get
HySNk it is hut just ar
Hja^ir *
? | right" that we refuse to produi
big crop. It may nound vary n
,y talk about clothing the world a
that stuff. But wa haar aotklnj
? about feeding ua at laaa that
*?r while we are about that chai
an, business. And we dou't expect
fed at less than cost. Another 1
? The farmer of the South it 1m
Btft that while he is producing his
Hun bale crop he has time and
to produce most of the things i
.UU Miry to feed his own stock ar
00 own family. He is now on th<
00 I to real prosperity. Let no one 1
? him if he should became a bit
,m tip over it. lie has been the goa
'jy enough, heaven knows.
[IQ^ ^ ' ' ' ^
Our cat says the dlsarmamer
ference, behind closed doors will
. a row.
:ol- ? ,
Our cat says secret diplom
.. sure road to war.
Our cat says when those wl
clare war will be forced to fig
first battle there will be no mor
*
Our cat says he expects to s
fur fly next year, as it is can
vcar.
n .
Our eat says he is astonisl
fu.d so many people who kno\
now lo run a newspaper.
Our eat says the man who
1 how to run his own job has n
. little time to run the other f<
al Ob.
iny
^ Our cat says he hopes the \
will not he so busy talking
each other that they will fori
vote next election,
lier
^ Our cat says it is a mean n
woman who strikes down a i
being that is trying to rise,
tie- .
If
Our cat says those who fling
, need not be surprised to find
.nj' selves dodging.
A 35x5 cord tire for autom
main- 30,Obit feet of cord 01
->u- five and a half miles,
ton
f The Tierra del Feuga.ns eat
' finding the fat therein really no
e1' in jr.
e', 1
3C. Canada had about 5,000 fores
1^, In tween April and September, 1
J?n 1200 Girls and Women
ue Apply for Appointir
jar
lat New York, Sept. 21.?More
n r> 1,200 girls and women recentl\
applied for appointments as f
missionaries, according to Mis
belle Ilae McVeigh, candidate
he tary of the Woman's American
. , t.ist Foreign Mission Society. A
1 " applicants, Miss McVeigh said,
?rn from 14 to 43.
1 ' "Probably one reason for tl
id tonishing increase in the num
ds applicants," Miss McVeigh sai
( ' the fact that the war has ma
? ' world seem smaller, so that t
40 lands no longer seem as disti
d- they formerly did."
IHt " 1 ^1
B..s 656 quickly relieves C<
eir pation, Biliousness, Loss ol
iev petite and Headaches, dt
lSi Torpid Liver,
rhl ?
ith a. changes the
T. - h^htecl, uninviting ro<
ge I s**' '? to n brilliantly li
4* I ^ cheerful placet
Ot- I / ". ^ expense and
i | Isayac?"
iry. | iMiiir, i,i -ja 400 cnndle i
, I if! light without
J jj chimm-y, smoke, a
n's ' FTy4 grease, dirt ot trouble
it 1 Tilt re is really no e
' La now-a-days for the
Jf j ruining, old-fash
-J lamp.
ir s ri Call and See 1
lP' Wonderful Lai
u* eT ' 's'n '
I i* <\J( ?M construction, "h
A ^ * m J quickly uith a to
n g _ f$*S) mate it."
? Id-ral for the farmer,
c' iry man and afore- J f
l]p ; k-.-eper and for nightejg jTITTT I
I and early morning chor jf fl JjJ I , f
P* ins i round the house, B'IphI,' '
js barn, milk-ahed, feed- , 1
^ A 400 candle-power BQfljJA '
'P. light coats one cent for ImHm *
) tours burning. I
i" DropinloOvrStoft jflpREl
Let ua show you this
1? powerful storm-proof i i Sin
light. It equals 20 ordw-^^^^C^^V
cry wick lanterns. ML.
1
'e T!ie Union Hardware 1
DISTRIBUTORS
ln I NION, SOUTH CAROLS
n | Dealers: Ask as for moneyi<lj
ing proposition on this lamp.
wish that the development of wiret
fires *ess communication will help to knit
920. closer the bonds of unity which
bind the British Empire to all other
states.
Within half an hour x-eplics were
lents rece*ved from Malta, Paris, Christiana,
Posen, Prague, Denmark, Budapest,
Rome and Berlin,
than Mr. Kellaway said in an address
' h,?ve that at the imperial conference great
ore'Kn interest was taken by Prime MinisSsecre"
ter ^loyd George in the possibilities
Bap- wir<?lcss telephony. If those pos
Jjf sibilities could be realized they might
range yet hftVe Premier Hughes in Melbourne
talking to Mr. Lloyd George
in Downing street.
"It sounds like fairyland," said Mr.
?js Kellaway enthusiastically. "It wili
de the ma'<e the world a great family in a
oreign 'serise that they have never been beint
as fore." ,
Rub-My-Tism is a great pain
on&ti- killer. Relieves pain and soref
Ap- ness, Rheumatism, Neuralgia,
ie to Sprains, &c.
Cancer Treated
jsgs With Radium
New York, Sept. 22.?Stimulated
dimly by the recent visit to the United
ghted Srates of Mme. Curie, its discoverer,
,t less scientists in this country are making
with pew progress in treating cancer with
than radium, acording to R. B. Moore,
chief chemist of the U. S. Bureau of
ijov.'cr .
wic V, Mines.
mell, Thn hitrhlv snionfiUp troafmonf. nf
disease by the use of radium, how 'igh?.
ever, Mr. Moore says, is successful
ioned only when applied with the greatest
s'.: .11.
'his "All cancer cannot be so cured, and
mp. it requires a skilled surgeon who
iim !? thoroughly understands the proper
dosage in order to get favorable reimrrwn
salts," Mr. Moore states.
"At the present time the United
^ J States produces more radium than all
|K the rest of the world together.
MiS "From the beginning of the indussy
' V Itlhl to January, 1021, approxi E
Tritely 115 grams of radium element
^ have b"en produced in this country.
M Frobibb not m'>re than 40 grams
y Hre been recovered from foreign
^ ^rrs since the discovery of radium by
Mme. C"rie."
Mr. Moore said that most of the
\ domestic production of radium is from i
I at mines in Colorado.
' I \ 666 has more imitations than J
Bpal any other Fever Tonic on the
^ 7 market, but no one wants imW
itations.
Since 1910 the number of farms in
Kansas fell off by 7.1 per cent.
Alber Horn, member of tho Reichp
tajc for 44 years, has never made a
LO., speech. _
666 cures Malaria. Chills
and Fever, Bilious Fever, Colds
-mak- anfJ LaGrippe, or money refunded.
E\S| TWO BEST MC
* said
THEBOU
-i table J? s ~ ~ t0
** i r No,
things ~
nSC / FAL,L OBSTRUCT
room / Bureau of Bntamolx
necea- Isolated area *400 acres 15 mi
id his
I'es'.ioyed during tirst ten days of
? road Only one weevil found in Ma
blame { where stalks were left weevils w<
One had ten bolls to stalk and
t long more than other.
STALKS SHOULD BE
Newell of Ixmisiana Experime
stroyed on plantation before Octob
the winter. October 15 to 27, 15
per cent. November 30 to Decern
and later, 43 per cent.
W. E. Young of Smithdale, Mil
"My experience is that the be
in September and October. Destr
will have little picking of weevils
little picking of late because I c
ard they have nothing to eat. M
to take my four mule disk and go
cuts each row twice and one dial
I then flat break the land with a
covers the stalks. I believe the
than all other methods of fightinj
attribute my success in growing
made a complete failure. I havi
under bad weather conditions and
jjWjjSu a good year."
||i PICKING EARLY WEI
C. R. Byrne, of Naches, Mi a si i
"Destroy the weevils and pun*
and rush surface cultivation and
under weevil conditions."
^ L. M. Calhoun, of Gilbert, Loui
"We are making cotton and i
conditions. We are not doing it 1
it con- t^e j?b 'rom daylight 'til dark. W
hread ginning about middle of May and 1
negroes are expected and require
as they are to keep the grass. o
it docs not cost us a cent extra t
acy is much a question of labor to do th
control and direction of the abur
Negro farm labor in the South or
time anvwav. So if
ho ile- what to do himself and seeing ths
ht^fhe Mr. Cnlhoun has made as high
e war. less than 1,000 pounds seed cotton
over ten years ago. He is located
ee the timber in the uncultivated areas.
ipaign y
j
First Station in Imperial
led t0 Wireless Chain
v just
London, Sept. 1.?Postmaster-General
Kehuway has just opened at Leaknows
field, Oxfordshire, the tirst station ir j
nighty the Imperial wireless chain which.. ,
dlow's wkeft completed, will link up almosi 1
every part of the British Empire.
The Leatield station, wnich has
been designed entirely by the post
vomen office will communicate with the
about corresponding station at Abu Zabal,
t to liear This station is expected
b to be completed in three months. It
will also be used for communication
with Mesopotamia and probably for
lan or broadcasting news to India.
'ellow- Leaficld and Abu Zabal will form
the first pair of a scries of four stations.
The third being in East Africa
and the fourth in South Africa,
stones The lirst' message sent from the
them- siation, as a part of the opening ceremony.
was a message of greeting to
all British and to all European and
... other foreign wireless stations with
ver *n ran?e- to British stations
? expressed the wish that the station
would "help to knit still closer the
soan honds which bind together the differurish
unt pari a of the Empire." That to
the other stations concluded with the
11
> 11 n -| '
IVES TO BEST
.WEEVIL
> ,
TON OP STALKS i
Hey Tatt In Tmat
!cb from other cotton. All stulle*
October. I,
iy in check plot. 80 miles away
:re so numerous no squares were 1
i
other three; one made 600 pounds
DESTROYED EARLY
nt Station found where stalks de>er
15 3 per cent weevils survived I
per cent. November 1 to 25, 22
ber 7, 28 per cent. December 15
ssissippi, says: ]
st time to fight the boll weevil is i
oy stalks by October 1C and you
and squares to do.-, I have done ]
lestroy my stalks by October 10 !
'y method of destroying stalks is <
up and down each middle. This
z will destroy six acres per day. i
two horse plow, which completely <
ire is more to stalk destruction
? weevils combined and to this I
cotton when my riWghbors have
b averaged a half bale per acre i
believe I can make 1200 to 1500 <
i
SVILS AND SQUARES !
isippi, says: j
:tured squares early in the season
you can t,row cotton, successfully ,
siana says: c: !
making it profitably under weevil
>y sitting in the shade but are on i
e pick our weevils and square's bokeeping
it up until AQgust 1. Our i
d to do this work just as much !
ut of their cotton* In th a way i
;o produce tha crop. It is not so i
is work as a matter of intelligent ji
idance of labor we have already. 1 <
ily works about one fourth of the 1?
ftstion of the land owner knowing 1
it his tenants do it."
as 80 bales on 80 acres and never 1
i since the weevil struck his farm 1
on bottom land and there is heavy
1
Scores our Customs M
l
Angora, Sept. 15.?"The seclusion j'
of the harem is best adapted to wo- !
man's nature and it is best for the, 1
social order that she should be'J
there," declared Mufide Ferid Haneni.'
the Nationalist novelist and beautiful ]
wife of Ahmed Ferid Bey. ex-minister ]
of finances, to the correspondent in
an interview. "The harem grew out '
of the intelligent understanding of the ;
marriage relation. It represents the;
wisdom of the East. j
"I am a reformed woman's right >
advocate," che continued. "I used to .
yearn for the independence of the .
American and European woman, but;
r.ow I believe the mistress of the ha- j
rem is a superior product t>o the i
spendthrift Russian woman, the sen- |
timental Austrian. th? nagging Eng-1 f
lish woman and the calculating, self- j *
centered American wonu*n.
"To these women, woman's rights i'
means the right to spend money on i *
foolish finer:/, to marry late, and be|*
ohildloss. They live for the store and ; r
the theater. Trey are responsible for
a good deal of factory labor expended ,
in useless directions. They won't work
with their hands to make their clothes, .
their minds are filled with fashions,
novels and candies.
"Men have become their slaves, and |
yen call this western eivili*ntmn -
Turkish women have had our heads1
turned by the effort to become like1 ,
these cilized women, and in do so some [
of us have lost our sterling old-fash- j
j ioned qualities and become a costly,:
vain, destructive creature like our sisters
of the West. ,
"We Nationalists are in favor of
abolishing the theory of polygamy,
I though in fact it has long since ceased (
as an institution. But we are sure ,
woman's place is the home, and the
best way to keey her theme is the
harem, which gives her much liberty
but not license. We are good house- j
wives, we wear more or less a uniform j
gown and veil, in the streets, which
prevents ua being victims to fashion,
and at home, if we do not wish to see (
our husbands we are not obliged to do
ro. Surely that is liberty enough."
We are proud of the confidence
doctors, druggists and
the public have in 666 Chill
and Fever Tonic.
XBBI j
n.i i? Kf AUirr j
|^*NO TOUR TLttH. WILL ALSOf// \
I Mtvi.nT rtMMIIA. P
I AT ALL DRUGGISTS j
? ? ? ? ? ? ??? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? tm j
The first iuvenilc court was estab- \
fished in Chicago in 1899. \
l" ' I
For Bost Results i
Use i
i sy
LIVE STOCK
D .. ah vn 11? c
[ i. *. /. v L T il I
j i
Sold by Druggists and Dealer? ;
I I
OFFFICE EQUIPMENT
AND SUPPLIES
BOOKS?STATIONERY
ENGRAVING OF ALL
KINDS
RED FREW
i
Stationer and office outfitter.
Greenwood, S. C.
1 1 H <
i
i ii.I i
Armenians Love Us
Erivan, Soviet Republic of Armenia,
Sept. 17.?Pax ton Hibben, a
. pies>eiiiau?e oi tue i\eur iin
ief, has just had an interview with
.lie Soviet President of Armenia in
which the Praaident told him that the
'tcling of the Armenian* toward
Americans for their help was "something
deeper than gratitude."
Mr. Hibben explains that the preaiicnt
is really the president of the Rev:oma,
a double abbreviation of "Revolutionary
Committee," and that thi*
committee corresponds to what would
be called in most other countries, "the
Cabinet."
The Armenian president came into
in office where Mr. Hibben was talkiig
with two members of the cabinet.
Hie re?ief agent describes the incident
hus:
"The door opened in the casual way
hat people have of butting in and out
>f anybody's office and breaking into
anybody's conversation in this Comir.unist
land and a common soldier entered
in the cotton khaki, high black
boots end shirt outside his pants. His
head was shaven like that of any soldier
of the Red Guard. It was what
writers call 'a bullet head.' He pulled
up a cl.air and sat down, his elbows
in the table, listening.
" 'What do you want to ask the
president ?* asked one of the ministers,
waving liis hand at the man dresseo
as h common soldier, without mark of
iis' inct cn of any kind on him. We
made very little progress until I asked
liirn about the American relief work
in America; then he opened up a bit."
[<?r. Hibben quotes the Armenian president
as saying:
"You Americana must have heard so
much about the sufferings of Armenia
that I can quite understand that you
hould sav to yourselves: 'What's the
matter with these Armenians that
they are always starving to death?'
rhc only trouble is that you cannot
undarstand because in the United
States you da not know what has been
;ring on out here In Transcaucasia,
nor what haa taken place in Armenia
itself since 1914. It has all been just
3:10 disaster after another, in a succession
so hideous that it is almost
unbelievable."
The president reviewed the chapters
of Armenia's tale of woe?the
wrvld war, Turkish and Russian invasions"
and Armenia's war with Georgia.
The final Turkish horror, he said,
was only in April last, four months
ago. He went on:
"In all these seven years from 1914,
there has not been one moment of
peace or security for anybody. Not n
?l;ance to get on our feet. Everything
destroyed, pillaged, burned. Eveiybody
homeless. Everybody starving.
A regular hell.
"There's a free Armenia, today.
And when everything's said and done,
there will be a free Armenia. It has
-09t a great many lives, and nn incredible
deal of suffering. But it's
worth it.
"But all through this struggle we
Armenians felt that we could count,
ind we did count, on you Americans,
i ou alone were disinterested in your
elief work. You didn't mix in poli:cs
and you didn't tyy to- exploit us.
"Just to say that we are grateful is
lothing. What we feel about it is, of
:ourse, something deeper than mere
iruntuue. it is nara to say wnat it is
hat we feel. But you go out among
lie Armenian people?you, an Amercan?and
you will find that to them
rou are something different from othsr
men. Whatever you Want of tham,
/uu c:m have?to the last man of
hem. You don't need a passport or
:redentials or anything else. You are
in American. That's enough.
"We've only had peace in this coun;ry
four months, now. We are workng
our heads off, all of us, to try to
aut the country on its feet again. But
,-ou cannot undo the terrible damage
>f seven years of destruction in seven
nonths. We need help now more
,han we ever have, for it's now or
lever with ais. We've got our chance
?but we can't swing it alone. We
iave to have help from somewhere,
[n a year, if ho new disaster hits us,
sve should be all right. But until then
?well, you Americans have been the
mly real friends we have ever had."
Who is to Blame for Jazz?
New York, Sept. 17.?It is almost
impossible to find out who is to blame
for jazz dancing.
Really, this is a question which
many consider by no means inconsequential.
At first thought, one might
pin the responsibility on the dancing
teachers, but if you ask them, they
will shrug their tuxedoed shoulders in
a rhythmic manner end plead not
guilty, its the fault of the composers,
they will tell you, passing the buck
in double-quick time.
The denial of the composers is
sharp, their contradiction flat and the
explanation of the why of jazz music
natural?they give the public what
it wants.
Seemingly the public is divided in
its opinion on this big question. Some
say the younger generation is to
blame. Jazz dancing and jazz music
are, to repeat their own words, just
exactly what one might expect when
the youth of land gads about in sporty
automobiles, simulates contempt for
Mrs. Grundy's ideas and shows a determination
to do evervthinc in a fnst
md snappy.way.
Others maintain that jazz is a natural
reaction to Victorian customs. A
Few of their neighbors, almost abanioring
hope, resign themselves to the
thought that that something called the
spirit of the age is really the reason
for fitful dancing styles, expressing
.vender the while as to just what this
it tie o'd world is coming to.
The manner in which the dancing
instructors put the blame on the
haps who create tunes is exemplified
by It. W. Vizay, president of the
American Society of Dancing Teachers.
"Dancing is wholly a matter of music."
he said. "The reason a waltz
is out of dule is because there is no
St/aurr. today to compose a reil one
U:d make the people glide to it. When
crt od rv.i.vlc is c mposed, good dancing
wili result. As long as you have
)n?/z music you will have jazz dancing."
A very small oroportion of couples
dance p/operly these days, Mr. Vizey
remarked. Take the ordinary ballroom,
he said, and you will see 20
coviplrs toddling, five shimmying,
three dojrg the "Chicago" and ten
dancing properly. The teachers sl>r\v
their pupils how to dance properly, he
continued, but when they leave and begin
reacting to the jazz tunes of the
cabaret and the roof garden?well,
now, how are you going to keep 'em
From shaking a mean ankle?
Rub-My-Tism is a powerful
antiseptic. Cures infected cuts,
old sores, tetter, etc. I
/ . '
Modi Suffering Caused by
Waste Products in the Blood *
What Scienco Know# About tba Matter and How lb la .
Beat Treated. ^
The blood is mora important than It is not infrequent for waste prod*
any of the organs. It is thru the ucts to settle in the muscles and joints
blood that the whole human body is and cause rheumatism,
directly sr indirectly nourished. The Listen to nature s warning. Your
ni?a ??_ m iVio hlood is your fountain source of ener*
blood gets ita nourishment from the therefore keep your blood rich
intestines. The intestines .also con- pure.
tain waste products ? undigested por over 50 year3, thousands and
foods, acids, gases and refuse, which thousands of men and women have
sometimes get in the bleed. relied on S. S. S. to clear their hlocd
When waste products get in the of waste products- f?. Lh S. will in*
blood, nature will strive to cast them prove the quaiily cf your blood by
out. If your resistance 'is strong relieving you of the waste product*
enough, nature will prcbablj succeed, ^'hich cause impoverished blood and
But if you are "below per," weak, ?ls allied troubles ? skin disorders,
run-down, and nervous, nature will rheumatism and a lowered vitality,
begin to show signs of distress. Get S. S. S. at your druggist. BeAs
a result, you will have that ware of substitutes. Write Chief
feeling of fatigue. Yr>u wih lack the Medical Director, Swift Specific Co.,
energy you need for tl ? da. 's duties D-720 S. S. S. Laboratory, Atlanta,
and pleasure. Minor uih. ;nts will Ga. for special medical advice (withbegin
to affect ycu?pimpl s, black- out charge). He ia helping people
heads, and boils. every day to regain their health and
If the waste products are not gotten strength. Ask him to apnd you his
out of the blood at this point, it is illustrated booklet, "Facts About ths
possible a more serious skin eruption Hlood"?free. S. S. S. is sold by all
or disease will begin to show itself, drug stores. j
Note
Strap
y/ p-' i 1, | invisible rrht.1 warn
CmlfmtATrTJ?Jtr~
TFINE & LEVY
HE LATEST addition 696-702 Broadway Nc.v York City
to the cap family might
well be termed a "comfort ^
cap." Its wearer may bo rcgardless
of shrinkage7*bair- hcut
or windstorm. Heknows
hiscap will fit. Hecantighten
or loosen It et will. /' ? 7^%
If it shrinks, let itoutjafter ^
ft hair cut draw it in; for ) /
motoring tighten it up? \
unusual features neverbe- \
lore shown in any cap. J / ?\
AU colors, fabrics
and ahapea? /fgf Strap invisible
popular price. W when worn
J. COHEN CO., Union, S. C.
I "SMILE AND THE WORLD SMILES
WITH YOU"
Nobody weeps alone these days. The chronic
weeper has more support than the booster. He
can find plenty of help every time he sees fit to
hold a "wake" over the remains of business. The
price of cotton is advancing rapidly, so smile, and
get rid of that terrible disease of gout, caused by
feeding too much on prosperity.
WE PAY YOU
Most business houses you go to, expect you /
to pay them, but when your money is left in the
savings department of this bank, WE PAY YOU.
You can always feel perfectly free to approach
any of our officers on any matter, with full assurance
that you will be met in a hearty, sincere, manto-man
way.
OURS IS A THOROUGHLY HUMAN
ORGANIZATION.
CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK
Search for Oil Continues ,
Sydney, N. S. W., Sept. 22.?The
search for oil which has been going Tl_. j. .
on with meager results for years in 1 OC IlCXl tllYlC
the large island of Papua, has been
extended to the portion known as Ger- vrm Kitv ralnmJ
man New Guinea, where it is said yOU DUJ
there are much better indications. I r
This territory is now under Austral- cXSK lOr
inn mandate.
Experts of the Anglo-Persian Oil
company, which haR an agreement
with the commonwealth by which each ^ ^
will share in the benefits ofany diseovery,
are prospecting thoroughly. A
Several private parties also are in the K Tj T
field. m * I |
Oil prospecting is being fetarded, M I J 5
however, because the Australian gov- Rfl I 4
eminent has not decided on a land pol- y? C&JL^/ i*}
?cy for mandated territories. \ffla
For Indigestion
Dyspepsia, Up-set Stomach
? The purified and refined
kc/j/g/ calomel tablets that are
nausealesr., cafe and sure.
Pf/fyfiMedicinal virtues retaintd.
"?d 8wpro?rf. Sold
Eeaetly whet the name Irpllee ?',!>r I"eBrn package*.
Clean*'*. twftMen* anil rogulite. the atom- f* ICO oOC, f
ach and bowal*. a*
ask your druccist . v
I IT .1*. I? " ^