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R I A "What5! Wo ? "M ? t I What was in her woman s heart that cried A man she was ashamed to introduce to her And yet, in his presence, every barrier of only knew that he was her mate?her maste Come and see what Destiny did with their A LOIS WEB! WITH CLAIRE WIND ADt Eileen Sedgwick s I In "TERR( I Universal's Great S I Also SNUB POLLARD i 1 A Rolin * 1 YOU ARE IN DANGER! I | If you are i t the habit of keeping money or val- IP aw r.ables on your person or about your house, you are m I certainly in danger. gj g Vou are in danger, not only of being roobed, E g| but of having some worse fate befall you. There k || are, sad to say, those who would not hesitate to com- w || mit murder, if necessary, to expedite a robbery that j| jU they had planned. js| | You will he safer and your money certainly will, M if it is deposited in bank . We not only offer you B 100 per cent safety, but will add G per cent interest H to your balance each year. yj As ' > your valuables, you can rent a safe deposit || box in cu* vault in which they, too will be really safe, pj | Yew accounts came to us since last report, making jgj I 2705 | I The Bank of Union I B <\ C. SANDERS, President. E. F. KELLY, Vice-President. |zj P W. W. ALMAN, Cashier. SJ || Safety Deposit Boxes For Rent. sd IWiTHIN YOUR INCOME I or beyond it?HOW DO YOU LIVE? | Spending less than yon earn leaves something for p your Savings Account, and if you are in the IIARIT of R 5 spending less, your account grows automatically. gjji ^ In thtis hank you can save th extra money at f? per ' ent compound interest. U NICHOLSON BANK TRUST CO. | I CAPITAL ANF? SURPLUS S 100.000 KMSLIE NICHOLSON, Pres. M. A. MOORE. Cashier. ? W. M. NICHOLSON, L. M. JORUAN, J. ROY PANT. | Vice Presidents. a Ltp JL y a Y ? rth Whil (or the love of this uncoui cultured friends, birth and breeding was r! lives! ]R Prodm SOR AND MONA LISA )ED 1 />! It is possible that some of the taxpayers living1 in our school district do not understand that the state pays our high school $1940 a year for high school pupils residing out of the district and who attend our high school. Xot understanding this may argue that "If we need a school building for our own children we are willing to vote for it but not for children living outside our district who do not pay any school tax in our district." These pupils being scattered in the different classes in the high school, on an average not over three to a class, do not necessitate the employment of an additional teacher and hence are little <>r no oxpenes to our taxpayers. In fact, it is a money making proposition for our taxpayers as we receive $19-10 annually from the state for those pupils who do not have high school advantages in their district and come to us. Under the law we would not receive a cent from the state if we did not allow these high school pupils to attend our school. By all means let them come. The state does not provide for pupils outside our district below the high school (pupils, from the first to the seventh grade, inclusive). Hence our board requires all pupils residing outside the district and not paying tax therein to pay tuition which is deposited in the school treasury. Surely 110 one, under such circumstances, would object to their coining, as the tuition they pay will help to decrease our special school levy. As to the small additional tax which would he necessitated by the erection of a new school building, let me say that small taxpayers like myself are certainly standing in their own light to vote against bonds. A man who owns a thousand dollars worth of property valued on the auditor's books at $400, if an additinal levy of one mill were necessary would pay only 40 cents additional annually. And with this 40 cents additional would have the advantages of a new school building for all children in his family Railroads and other corporations pay about three-fourths of the tax in ot;? district. Why should we parents, who certainly should have the inter< Is of our children at heart, vote against a small tax like the above when 20 other towns in the state have recently voted bonds for new school buildings that their children might have the advantages due them. Yesterday I visited Spartanburg's $.100,000 school building now in the CH.rS" of erection and loneerl for nn> children to have the advantages that Spartanburg's children will have. They deserve just as good. The present tax levy gave us a surplus Inst year, practically all of which was used to add new rooms to the already out-of-date Central school building. Shall we go on in this way adding wooden rooms to brick build ii;g:. or renting rooms outside which we shall be compellbd to do if we do not have a new school building? i Davis Jeffries. ? i Resolutions on the Brection of a New School Building Whereas, The advancement of a state depends upon the education of < t? < itizens; and . Whereas, The greatost*asset of a < state ia its children; and Whereas, The educational advancenent of our children is being hamwued by the crowded conditions of >ur schools; and Whereas, The Compulsory Educn ma ueorge i )R TRAIL ecret Service Seria n ?Fr.ii.nw nnit Comedy Additional Arguments Favoring School Bond Issue I ~ o I e" th man of the plains? jfo swept away. She | ction I Larkin I 99 I 1ANS" I Hon Law has brought into our school a greatly-increased enrollment; and Whereas, Central School is now overcrowded, grammar grades have been removed to the High School; and Whereas, The lighting, heating, and ventilation of these basement rooms are insufficient for comfort; and Whereas, The High School has been deprived of Domestic Science and Manual Training Departments in order to accommodate this overflow; and Whereas, Two recitation rooms have been cut from the High School auditorium for the same reasons, thus marring its symmetry, beauty and comfort; and Whereas, All these conditions above mentioned have tended to deprive the City Schools of Union of the distinction of being placed on the accredited list of Associated Schools and Colleges; therefore, be it Resolved, That we, the William Wallace Chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy, consisting of 142 members, do place ourselves on record as approving the erection of a new school building of such size and dimensions as to accommodate not only the present, but also the increasing future enrollment; and further be it Resolved, That we call upon our friends and associates in every walk of life to give their active support towards securing the erection of this building; and further be it Resolved, That, to show'our interest in this movement and in education, we do pledge one $.">0.00 Liberty Bond, hi Id in trust by the Chapter, the same to go toward the equipment of a modem Domestic Science Department in the High School, provided a new school building is assured; and further be it Resolved, That a copy of these resolutions be published in the county papers, and that a copy he presented to the superintendent and board of trustees of the ei;y schools, and that a copy be inscribed upon the pages of the minute bc.k of the chapter. Mrs. M. C. Wharton, Mrs. M. C. Malpheus, Mrs. W. W. A!man. Educational Com. Fish industries of California, both in value and volume, exceed those of ar.y other state. FOR SALE 86 acres of good land, one and one half milp? fr^m R?f ... Vk/ m. * vail l/ul falo, on the Appalachian Highway. 2 good tenant houses, one two-story barn, tine pasture, also hog pasture; land lies well. With this farm goes 10 I)uroc sows, all bred, and one herd hear, weighing around 400 pounds, 2 mules and al1 farming implements. For a quick sale, $5,500. $2,500 cash, balance in five equal annual installments at 3 per cent interest. E. F. KELLY & BR0., i unk>n,s.c. L 4 r 4 A ?? ?--ggg | Annuals for Fall-Sowing F< Many of tho hardy annuals may be sewn with great advantage in the tpm ground this fall so they will appear bright and early in the spring, d? Tying the frosts and being ready to furnish bloom before the seed planted ? even indoors next season will be ready O to flower. Some of these annuals will germinate this fall, make growth until freezing weather checks them and be none the worse for the experience and j '-.tep right on growing next spring and | siart into bloom by the first of June. | ? The annual larkspurs, the shirley M poppies and the bachelor buttons or cornflowers are c2 this class. They ? may best be sown the last of Septem- F ber or early October and thinned next yea r. A thin sprinkling^ of shirley poppii s in the tulip beds" will give a beau-j tiful display and the poppies will growl ? fast enough to conceal the maturing F tulip leaves. The annual larkspurs " ill perform much the same function. | The poppies shold be sown among j the late tulips and the larkspurs among the early, as the larkspurs make so rapid and so tall a growth! ? they interfere with the late tulips if; they get a start this fall. Bachelor buttons liSay be sown in some convenient corner and trans-! planted where they are wanted next. ? spring. The larkspurs and noppies do; S' not stand transplanting well. The beautiful Chinese and Japanese pinks are good subjects for fall sowing. In fact, any annual which is known to self-sow readily may be planted in the fall. Snapdragons, fall sown, come up with the first warm days and are more robust and come into bloom al-! most as soon as those grown in boxes j or hot beds. The pot marigolds or calendulas self- ? sow readily and the seeds may beiM planted (his fall where they are wanted to bloom next season. The dainty little Swan River daisy. ? he yellow coreopsis. Golden Wave, I F and the tree eeholtzia or Hunnemania, that beautiful yellow member of the poppy family, also do well when fall sown. According to estimated, between1 M 25,000,000 and 50,000,000 quarts of! hard liquor a year are passing through tho underground channels of the Unit-; ed States. ^ It is estimated that $5,000,000 is j spent yearly by the Federal Govern- j ~ ment in correcting incomplete and | V erroneous addresses on letters in the United States. 120c 1 Buys more goods at ou I where. Short profits |S Ladies' Soft Sole B n Children's Soft Sol Is Boys' All Wool Seri g Little Boys' Blue F] f| Misses' E. Z. Union Hj Men's Fleeced Shirt |jj Men's Heavy Ribbe H Men's Blue Work S jg U. S. Army Blankel Plaid Cotton Blank White Bed Spreads jjp^j Uncf C'n Lr?rw/\/>i yc\ru. Dress Ginghams, y; Rest Apron Gingha Rest Mottled Outin, 36-inch Soft Finish* 36-inch Pajama Chi Ladies' All Wool Ti Krinkle Crepe in co Santico Chambray, 36-inch Englsh Lon 36-inch All Silk Taf 36-inch Flowered C 36-inch Percales, ya 72x90 Hemmed She 45x36 Hemmed Pill 72x90 Hemstitched 45x36 Hemstitched Huck Toweling, yar Large Huck Towels Rath Towels, each . Roys' Extra Heavy Misses' Silk Lisle H Men's Cotton Hose, Ladies' Cotton Hos< D. * LM 1 Iouy em wnue we n; the more you will pay, Don't Sat i DRV # Special Advertisements Vi DR RENT?Call on T. C. Duncan * if you wish to rent a house well located and equipped with all conveniences. House large enough to take care of any family demands. 1144-tf ? : W YSTER SEASON is now open at Royal Cafe. Fresh shipment just in; 80c qufrt or 45c pint. You will ? find us stocked with fresh cream- Ft cry butter, fresh eggs, cream cheese, boiled ham. Let us supply your wants. Royal Cafe. 1168-tf iONEY TO LEND on rea/estate for i clients. J. K. Hamblin. Fri.-tf OR RENT?-Stpres, 3 sizes, reason able price, apply to Mrs. Newell Smith, 151 Thurston street, Greenville, S. C., of Mr. C. F. Hart, at c? Smith Block. Tue-Fri tf. OR SALE?One black mare horse, |?|j five years old, excellent qualities; j! weighs about 900 pounds. Also practically new top buggy and harness. is,( Will sell cheap or trade for Ford ^ touring car. J. D. Shields. 1178-4t "a Used parts for all makes of cars at ke bargain prices. Columbia Vulcan- a izing and Truck Co., Columbia, S. C. 1170-26tpd in fo 1'OP! LOOK! LISTEN! When you 19 buy Disinfectant you want the bast ac at the lowest price. Buy Caro Vet Disinfectant; three sizes; five times to stronger than carbolic acid. Sold or by Storm'8 Drug Store, Glymph's as Pharmacy, Eastside Pharmacy, Su Mobley Jeter's, Roundtvee Drug __ Store, Keller's Pharmacy, Fowler's Pharmacy. Buy home-made goods and keep your money in Union. 1I71-15t ONEY TO LOAN on city property, from $250 to $1,000, for one, two or three years; quick loan. S. E. OR SALE?42 acres of land and 8 lots, known as the McLure place; Located on West Main street, Union, S. C. See or write W. L. Inman, Kelton, S. C. 1177-4tpd tONEY TO LEND We are in position to place loans on farms or city property. Parties desiring real estate loans should file appli- i cation now. These loans can be placed without delay. Barron, Barron & Barron, Attorneys. 1087-tf /ANTED?Room in private family; close in. Address Box 154, Union, S. C. 1178-2t 101 ir store than 40 cent cottc and quick sales keep us edroom Slippers, pair e Bedroom Slippers, pair ?e Suits, each lannel Suits, each Suits, each ;s and Drawers, each d Union Suits, each Ihirts, each ts, each __ ets for double bed, each for double bed, each ird ms, yard gs, yard *d Bleach, yard gcks, yard .. ? icotine and Serge Dresses lors, yard yard g Cloth, yard Teta and Messaline, $?.00 vali urtain Scrim, yard ,rd ets, eacft aw Cases, each Sheets, each ! Pillow Cases, eacli d ;, each Ribbed Hose, pair ose, pair pair i, pair ave 'em at these prices. > in? Till Y McLl ' GOODS i Mi ' s ^ ^ & Jl> 3R SALE?Buick toqring car, equipped with now Cord tires. For quick sale, $800. Better see m? quick?leaving town Saturday afternoon or Sunday. Also Chandler stripped, in good condition, $200. R. C. Longshore. ltpd ' ^ ANTED?Furnished rooms for light housekeeping. Apply to F. W. Sweet at 10c Store. It 1R RENT?One 4-room cottage located on Wardlaw street. Has elec- Wr trie lights. Apply to W. E. Green. 1180-2tpd ivestock Associations in Iowa Ames, la., Sept. 22.?There are 610 operative livestock shiipping assoitions in Iowa, covering more than 0 towns and villages and doing a , tsiness last year estimated at $103,0 000, according to Dr. E. G. Noursc Iowa State College here. Dr. Durse, who is head of the college's :ricultural economics department, s .just completed a state survey. Average saving of farmers in marting expenses is estimated at 35c hundred pounds. Cooperative shipping associations Iowa doubled last yeqr, 310 being rmed. The first was started in 04 and in 1916 there were but 57 tive. Approximately 27.5 per cent of the tal livestock business of the state, 49,754 cars were handled by these sociations in 1920, according to the rvey. SPARTANBURG AUTOMOBILE RACES Saturday, Oct. 1st 2 P. M. 7 high powered and high class automobiles and drivers. Spartanburg Fair Grounds ton) >n ever bought any- B i busy all the time. B 50c $3.45 $2.50 $1.25 7|/2c 10c 10c 10c 10c 10c $6.95 and $35.00 18c 10c 12 i/2c les, yard __$1.50 10c 12'/2c 75c $1.50 $1.50 I The longer you wait M 0 Sgl ou Get to URE CO. v