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Skin Clear and Flesh * Firm With Yeast Vitamon t Concentrated Tablets Easy and Economical to Take?Results lm; man or woman who has heard of the wondrous health and beauty-making power of the vitamines in yeast, fresh vegetables and other raw foods mil be glud to know of the am. sins results being obtained from the highly concentrate 1 yeast?Mastin's VITAMON t?l>lets. There supply a proper dose of all three vitamlnes (4 $, and C) and are now used by thousands W & appreciate their economy. e><it- , venienco and quiox results. Mastin's VI I A MON mixes with your food, helps it to digest and provides the health-giving, strength-building nourishment t^at your body must ha\*o to n.aki; /( \ \ keen, active brain. They will not cautw- gitf or IJ \\H upset the stomach, but, on the contrary. nrr a v )^r (treat aid In overcoming indigestion or chronic . ISJ? W/ constipation Pimples, l>oils and skin erupt ion.* ^ seem to vanish as if by magic, leaving t'*o 1 _ _ ~ ~ complexion clear and glowing with health 1!?> , ..A** ,, sure to remember the name?Mnstin's VI-TAof v^outH T>ka Mastin'a MON. Do not accept imitations or substitute. i Yeast VITAMON Tablet*. You can get Mastin's VITAMON Tablets at all j K(KXj druKKist?. ( ^MASTINSw- Are Positively Guaranteed 1 to Put On Firm Flesh, Clear the Skin and Increase tmomanm yeast Energy When Taken With ctNumDf VTAB,LETt Every Meal or Money B?*ck j Close to Perfection VALDURA Asphalt Paint i3 a quality product, made from II the highest grade raw materials, including Genuine 99.5% pure t Gilsonite Asphalt?the be3t. I There is no room for "dope" in VALDURA. It is produced \ by the American Asphalt Paint Co. of New York and Chicago, } the largest exclusive producers of asphalt paint in the U. S. VALDURA has had the test of time, proved itself under the y most trying conditions and those who know it longest like it ( best. ! It is high-quality preservative paint which bows to no II superior for renewing and preserving the life of all types of roof- 1 ing and affording protection for silos, tanks, bridges, farm imple- 1 ments. elevators isnr.ol'#? ctaclre liciln. 1?>?? ? ? - - ? v Mwttvi * i wato, oiuiagc uaiicucOi fencing and posts, etc. 11 v/ill waterproof any surface you apply | 5 it to, whether that surface be metal, wood, cement, cloth or 1 paper. It is highly acid resisting, will stand the hottest weather ( without running, and the coldest weather without cracking. 1 VALDURA ASPHALT PAINT ; Black - Red - Green has exceptional covering capacity, is supplied in containers from 1 Gal. up, II 1 comes all ready for use, and can be applied in almost any weather. j We have sold VALDURA for years and know that it is the best paint j ^ of its kind obtainable and we recommend it to you with the assurance that if j you do not find it all that it is claimed to bo and perfectly satisfactory in every respect, we will promptly refund your purchase money. May we send you the VALDURA Booklet and a free test sample if you i wish it? Come in, phone, or drop us a card. , * ( DISTRIBUTORS ? THE UNION HARDWARE CO. j| Wholesale and Retail Hardware and Paints i UNION, S. C. Send U3 Your Mail Orders and Enquiries. ATTENTION, FARMERS AND LIVE STOCK BREEDERS! We will again offer to you the chance to buy Pure Bred Duroc-Jersey HOGS AT AUCTION ON DECEMBER 15, 1921, AT 12:30 O'CLOCK Bred Sows, Bred Gilts and Two Spring Boars. There are no better Duroc Hogs than we have to offer you. These are all bred to our Prize Winning Boars. We also have pigs weighing from 30 to 50 pounds at 25c per pound. SARDIS FARM, ^ J. B. Becknell, Supt. - Union, S. C. WITH BUSINESS PROSPERITY COMING ' You will want your house or store fixed up electrically. | I do House Wiring, and my work is first class. ; I sell Electrical Fixtures, and the quality and prices are right. 1 will use my best endeavor to give you good service if you en trust your work to me. ..Let me figure with you. W. T. SINCLAIR Wheat will grow almost anywhere . Hawaii has 175 foreign language except in the tropics. schools with 20,000 pupils. ' , # Amateur Wireless Stations Everywhere Hartford, Conn., Dec. 6.?Amateu wireless stations in each state and ii practically every city of the countr; ire ready today for the first exten jive trans-Atlantic wireless tests evei planned. These will begin tomorrov it 7 p. m. Eastern Standard time, un< lose Dec. 16. In all, between 15,000 and 20,00( itations will transmit daring the tests vhich will be under the auspices ol he American Radio Relay League. I s estimated that more than ]O0,00C itations will "listen-in." To date there is no authentic record of an amateur station having jeen heard across the ocean but it is jredicted by Major E. II. Armstrong "ormer chief of the U. S. Army radit research division, who is cooperating ,vith the amateurs in the tests, tha' fully 12 stations will be heard on th< >ther side. Hiram Percy Maxim of Hartford ]?nn., president of the Radio League uelieves if the experiment is success *ul it will mean that amateur com munication between this country an< Europe will become a matter of every lay occurrence, and that the non-com mercial operator in any part of thi: rountry or Canada can forward.mes sages to friends across the ocean a will. Paul Godley, well known wireles inventor, who five years ago perfecte< fhe regenerative receiver for amatcu use, is now in England, cooperatini with 300 British stations which wil attempt to catch the messages fron America. Mr. Godley is acting as the repre tentative of the Radio League over seas, and will be in touch with ama teurs in France and Holland, as wel as with those in England. One re leiving station he took"with him ha been installed near London, anothe n the north of Scotland. - Stations at Hartford, where na iaonal headquarters of the League ari ocated at Brooklyn. N. Y., Savannah Da., Cleveland, Chicago, St. Ijouis Denver, San Francisco, Los Angelei ind Roswell, N. M., are among thosi :onsidered most likely to meet witl success. ^iew Way To Train The Younf 'New York, Dec. 3.?A new table o; Mn commandments, designed to trail joys and girls to kindness to God's lumb creatures, was issued today b] ;he Presbyterian Board of Temper ince and Moral Welfare. In it, hunting, fishing and the rob jing of birds' nests for sport are con iemned, as are attendance at al )loody sports, such as cock fights ive pigeon shoots, dog fights and bul lights. Coveting of furs and thi plumage of birds also is prescribed. Supplementary rules of conduct, is ?ued witn tne "commandments" urg< children to refrain from going to cir :uses or other shows where traine< inimals are exhibited, asserting tha mch animals are "nearly alwayi cruelly treated and must live a lift >f misey." Here are the "commandments,' vhich were drafted by William F. H tVentzel, director of the board's de jartment of humane education, an< ,vere adopted by the board as a guidi to children?and to grownups, too: 1. I am the Lord thy God who mad jvery living creature after his kin< and gave man dominion over m; works, wherefore thou shalt be guar ;lian over beast, bird and cattle, am ;o them thou shalt be in my place. 2. Thou shalt not delight thysel in graven images but rather in ten der mercies to those who depend o l.hy guardianship. Thou shalt not la; blame or punishment unwarrante upon them who know not wrong, wh cannot speak for themselves and wh have no means of asserting thei rights, wherefore thou art to ther the adjudicator of righteousness i their midst, for I the Lord thy Go am a jealous God, remembering th unfaithfulness and thy cruelties to a my creatures and visiting the erroi of thy way upon thy children dow through the generations, in that tho hast set a bad example unti them an hast by word and by deed lead thei to disrespect justice and mercy i dealing with my defenseless creature: 3. Thou shalt not curse thine cat tie nor inflict vengeance upon an of God's creatures for the Lord wi not hold him guiltless who disregard his creation. 4. Remember the sabbatical right of my creatures and practice them st HERE House of ? f And it will continue tc circumstance which no oi Indeed, the home in whi the strongest institution i The household banking the House of Thrift. It sj It prevents extravagances grocer; provides for the egg, indeed, that time wi didly happy home! "Ij?rge Enough to Serve Anj CITI/ NATIONS I1 I I | credly. Every beast of burden and , 9: every animal in thy service shall have i its day and fitting seasons of rest whereby the drudge of toil in they ser- i r| vice may be comfortably mingled with the joy of living. With reason and ^ j consideration thou shalt assign their "! tasks and with equal care thou shall' r provide food, rest, succor, mercy and ; ' those things which make for the nat-, ural joy of living. Honor and respect thy guardianship over the animals which have been ' fchy faithful servants and desert them not in an evil day; for by so doing! thou mnyest prolong thy days and increase thy joys in the land which the Lord thy God giveth thee. 6. Thou shalt not kill, for the j?>j 1 * of killing; for sport in hunting, for! 31 contest in skill, or for selfish gain.; 'I For the righteous man regardeth the * i life o{ his beast. 7. Thou shalt not commit thyself , to the lusts of bloody contests nor; seek to look upon the cock-fight, tl. i live pigeon-shoot, the bull-fight ant ' all such atrocious acts. ' 8. Thou shalt not steal, destroy oi take unto thyself selfishly or wantonj ly that which belongs to the comfort ' and needs of thy animals. 9. Thou shalt not bear false witness I s for paltry gain to thyself whereby . God's creatures suffer hunger, anguish or torture. Let the testimony of thy guardianship be above thy lust for 8 Kainl' 10. Thou shalt not covet the bird's r plumage, nor the animals fur; thou r shalt not covet the robin's nest noi 1 her young by her side, nor the pigeon ii the freedom of the nor the deer the joy of his lair. CHILDRENS COLDS should not be "dosed." Treat; them externally with? i VJCKS VaroRub Over 17 Million Jan Used Yearly # e Canadian Voters Elect Members of Parliament j s Ottawara, Dec. 6.?Canadian voters went to the polls today to elect mem1 bers to the 14th Parliament of the Dominion. For the first time in Canadian history, there are four parties in the field, Government, Liberal, f Progressive and Labor. Another unique feature of the contest is the f fact that today all women will vote I on equal terms with men. 3 The main issue in the present elecf tion is the tariff. The Government party, headed by Premier Meighen, stands for protection. It demands tariff revision "to safeguard the in~ terests of the Canadian people in the existing world struggle for commer' cial and industrial supremacy." During the campaign the existing emere gency tariff in the ifnited States has not been used by government speakers as an argument in favor of retaliatory measures on the paret of Can~ ada. t The Liberals, whose leader is W. L. 8| Mackenzie King, advocate substantial ? reductions in the tariff, for the purpose of diminishing the high cost of >? living, and also of "reducing the cost of the instruments of production in the industries based on the natural rej sources of the dominion." e The Liberal platform also stands for a further reduction of the tariff e on British goods to one-half the genii eial tariff, as a British preference, and y asks that the Canadian free list in - elude wheat, wheat flour and all prodd ucts of wheat, the principal articles of food, farm implements and machinery, f farm tractors, mining flour and saw - mill machinery, lumber, gasoline, oils, n nets and fishermen's equipment, eey ment and fertilizer, d The Progressives, who are made up o largely of western grain growers, and o led by T. A. Crerar, former minister r of agriculture, favor "an immediate n and substantial all-round reduction" n in the tariff; a decrease to 50 per cent d in the tariff on British goods and such y further increase in the British preferII ence as will ensure complete free s trade between Grat Britain and Can I n ada in five years; reciprocity in natu ural products with the United States d on the basis of the Taft-Fielding 11 agreement of 1911. The proposed free n list would be similar to that of the 3. Liberals. t- The Labor party, which is reprey sented by a few urban candidates, has 11 no specific tariff plank in its platIs form, but asks generally "removal of taxes on necessities of life" and ts "abolition of fiscal legislation that i- leads to class privileges." Stands the THRIFT I \ I ? stnnd against every adverse ther kind of home can resist, eh true thrift is practiced is n America. account is the chief aid in /stematizes all financial affairs, i, fosters saving. It pays the unexpected need. It is a nest i 11 turn into a t/uly and splenj?Strong Enough to Protect All." ?:eiNv3' lL bank. On All Men's and Boys' J J r-^~i A CUT THAT WILL EQUAL - ^ *?l 60 PER CENT WAR TIME \ PRICES. SO BOYS IF YOU g HAVEN'T pnnruT vniiD f ? I M0N?^ AND IT PONT I COME AND LOOK OVER H /WL I OUR UP-TO-DATE STOCK Jlf 1 I OF MEN'S, YOUNG MEN'S .v > jp / m I AND BOYS' CLOTHING. ., ^ I Also our Men's Hats are reduced to $2.09* $2.50, $3.00 and | $3.50, which have been selling from $3.59 to $7.00 each. We I don't ask you to take our word for it, we jus!: ask you to come and * Ej e te I see tor yourself. A big line of Men's Fine Shirts, Collars, Ties, Belts, Suspenders g and Socks. 1 IWhen you get ready for that next pair o: Shoes try a pair of 11 STAR BRAND SHOES-they are better and cost you less-for men, ll women and children. 1 Anything you want for the whole family, we have it. Every m thing guaranteed to give satisfaction or your money back, that's g our motto. 1 Your Christmas Money will go further it you spend it here. Old |J Santa Claus himself may well afford a visit to our great Money- m Saving Sale of seasonable and choice merchandise, gj Qi Bi KB m rr^ me S. LESS! r"ForBes7Res?lul " . p.. I Jse frankness, wit, fidelity and cleverness ^ tMNStmaS Ulft ?r 1 U& in turn. The majority put wcaltn tilabout half-way down the list, an^, js serviceable, of excepSAROX/ET morc surprising st\U, beauty \\a. utility and lasting senK * placed Inst of ?H. > f ..... ? ?? ft-- OT given wiin confidence JLlVHi ^ 1 | Five hundred American companies ; an(j received with pleasure remedies hive established factories in aCnad i. Waterman's "Ideal" Fountain . ^ , .. I : * . pen. Sold bv Drug guts * "<* Oealtr? 1 1 ? ?? Baby's Sour peoples drug store Air transportation service makes it Stomach 1 rompl Service possible for a citizen of this country ?j, oth? in ejector b.d action can be Phone. 68-69 to fly to Cuba at an average expense ^ ^ of $150; or he can remain at home //ff// + , and get it from the bootlegger.?Lex- &v3K&fe64K9BBBflHKaMHMBMKfl ington (Ky.) Herald. ^ ?? In India about 15,000.000 people go fat/tl t//t7 A in Kalamazoo Mich., has " . . FOR CHILDREN opened a day nursery, where women on hut one men a^ a. Exactly what the name implies visitors from the country may leave Savayea commonly ?? the how and ""%? their chXm while they do their , . n 1 ? m 1 shopping, arrow to shoot fish. " " " , % ?/ ; <& .. <i * . .. f / .