University of South Carolina Libraries
How Ironi Fills Out fAnd Puts N in Thin, Nei Hundreds of thousai t sic In* IRONIZED Yf In many esses are sctui pounds or more on the pUnions blotched with up within 10 to 14 d apparent "miracles" ar down, weak, and lacklx 7REE! SS t Three Day Trial Treata F IRONIZED YEAST. W e Results! quires that we get a pn systems. But thee* t modem diet. That Is \ Yeast B The thin* to do is to two tiny IRONIZED concentrated form, a s strictest supervision fo for It* richness in the BilHIilAn ! Mintalns Ihs ?F?t Soluble A and W BkS Unt to health. TImm tl ?Sg U taken alooa?but wt aaalmllated organic Irot an secured o/l#? ta Jtuf A Wat< Not* how 1RONIZ1 appetite?how It enable* food you eat. Bee how c ate., and how your new! ? a pleasure Instead of < Pleasant to take?will i stomach. Each IRONIZBD YK AST tabl wh*n mad*, thus assuring 100% purity and i Go to your druggist or maQ coupon today? WARNINGt rs~ Not all yaast will (Its the is- 1 slrad results. Thsrs ara csrtalo I ? types of jrasst which have ?h- I ?t eolutely no Talus medicinally. I . By Insisting on tha smuIss I .J I RON I ZED VeAST, andrefue- I M Ini ohaspar Imitations or sub- I u. stltutss you can ba sura that I you ara taking a rltamlns tonlo Ad treatment which Is unsurpassed I _. In affactlveneas, convenlanaa J u and ranulna health-huUdlag J Tslus. ? Note:?I RON I ZED YEAST U told 0/ complete tat it fact ion from the ftrr Questioning Poland's Right ; Riga, Jan. 15.?The Latvian govern- ] mcnt has become irritated by Poland's attempt to prevent free transit of for-! vigii passengers through the Danig coriidor without. Polish vises on their] passports. The Latvians questioned Poland's right to this partial closing of the corridor and declare Poland's action is in direct contradiction to the terms of the Versailles Treaty which set us the famous corridor giving Poland access to the sea. Poland's practice in demanding that foreigners crossing the corridor must have Polish vises on their passports has caused complaint by travellers between the Baltic states?Lithuania, Esthonia and Latvia?and WesterEurope for more than a year. For many months Polish gent; i * merle have boarded trains at the t trance and exit to the coridor that d vides Germany into two parts and ii many instances, have ejected passengers who did not have the Polish vises, oven when they were only in transit through the corridor between countries or. both sides of it. An American traveller was required to pay the equivalent of $10 for his Polish vise. Mrs. William H. Haskell, wife of Colonel Haskell, head of the American Relief Administration in Russia, recently complained to the American Commission in Riga because of experVnces she underwent at the hands < f Polish customs examiners while crossing the corridor. Now Polish authorities have closed the coridor absolutely to Latvian ci'. ! r/.cns by refusing to visa their pass j ports. Latvians who desire to track to Western Europe have to lake ,1?1 4. ,.4? V... ?... ... I IVHIIIUUIMHIU IUUIC uy UUilt 1*1 V1U1 llltcr | Famine Cqndition in Cape Verde Islands Lisbon, Jan. 15.?Many residents of the Cap;- Verde Islands are advocating | en appeal to foreign countries for re-1 lief from the famine conditions which have prevailed there for many months, say3 Jcaquim de Macedo, an engineer, who has just returned from !!.. ' .lands. The Cape Verdes are controlled I y Portugal but the people declare that the mother country appears to have forgotten its colony and to have left thousands of Portuguese to die of famine. Senor Macdea described conditions in the islands as horrible. He said that 200 persons had died each day in the town of Praia in the summer months when the famine was at its woi^t and that the bodies were left unhuried to he devoured by dogs, ravens and hyenas. The people, like living skeletons, staggered about the streets until they fell dying. The population of one island, he said, had been reduced by one-third and the silent, deserted streets "resembled a gigantic necrepolis." The chief cause of the famine was LO! 7oonil, '"u4 florloua frrtlnr romoa wUit n ?!?;?? , purr, ra?!?!y com\irftnlOBi fek*. : 11 '"" I ized Yeast | t Figure ew "Pep" and Energy vous, Rundown Folks ads of people ell over the country are now l EAST tablet* for health with results which tlly astonishing. For thin folk* to vain five 1 vary flat package Is nut uuusual. Coin- i pimples, etc. .are very often entirely cleared aye. As for Increasing "pep" ana energy, e reported by folk* who were formerly runtg In physic*! and mental vigor. . Here Is The Secret! i be- i NatureIntended that voushould """ have a well developed figure, with I i eat the clear skin. sparkling eyes. strong nsr and rugged strength ! that goes with It. And if you am now thin and nin-down It Is ba_____| cause certain of Nuture's lews here been disobeyed. Nature reaper amount of vltamlue* and iron lntoour wo essential element* are lacking In the shy so many of ua are thin and run-down. est When Ironized i supply this lack by taklDg with each meal YEAST tablets which contain In highly t peclally cultured yeast grown under the r medicinal purpose#?a yeast unequalled 1 essential Water Soluble B vttamlnea. In ; i correct amount of tbe two other vitamins* mter Soluble C?which are equally tmpor- i tnee vltamines bring excellent results even isa taken with a proper amount of easily l as In IRONIZED YBA8T, these results iafy (As sswel fists/ :h The Results! ED YEA8T immediately Increases your i you to get real joy out of every morsel of lulckly It drives away pimples, blackheads, y acquired "pep" makes hard work or play k task. Try IRONIZED YEAST today I ( not cause gas or In any way upset the et wrapped air-tight in waxed sanltaps itrength. Special directions for children. NOW! Free Trial Coupon j ( m IraolMd Tiut Oo.i l*aU. Oft.. Dftpt. I I ' PleftM ftftod me the famou? three day tree > el trefttaeat of IRONIZED YEA8T. I . i I ? I | tj SUte | Only One Trial Package to a Family 1 at all Drug Store* on our guarantee t f package or your money refunded. j uiought foi '..he Jast three years. Senori 1 Macedo si?id C;> ? V'erd.nns had j appealed to iottuyal yor aid but had'' received or.-y c?ro .. . ' !: -oald not bo ' i cater, by the weal' a -., "loir.'no stricken : ' ' people and *.hvi ti e j .,i were ' | unable to L.y < Senor Maced or-j >r trying ' to induce the Po* . .v e. /eminentj: to arrange a methou ' % 1 .ich the is landers can raise sufficie. i funds from J the use of their cables to pay for an ' irrigation system and this plan has i been approved by the Portuguese i president. Tins gives promise that the ; situation in the islands will be im- t proved. 1 _ 1 Christian Endeavor Used 1 In Every Country 1 t Chri. dan Endeavor wus started by ( Dr. Fr...\ces E. Clark in tho Willis- 1 ton Congregalicual church, Portland, Maine, February 2, 1881, with no thought of tho movement ever being used Ovi- ide of that'one church. Chvisti 1 Endeavor is now used in evci 7 e 0.1 the globe, and has 80/v.O . i-j with 4,000,000 memLei" : 1 *o u v 1 in 87 denominations. , T! cu.r' t I Vic world the Meth- ( odisL- ) :ii! in Co number of their ChvisL'an I ...ioavpr societies; thoj PrcsLy'.,. >i-ns of various names come next; the l)' :ciples of Christ and the Rupti.C (''' d; the Reformed churches ' fourth; the Congregational ;sts fifth; the Lutherons sixth, etc. During tho first five yeavs of the extension campaign in Dixie there veil* 2,!UM new Christian Endeavor miotics organized, and almost a half mi 'on dollare given to donomij nation.".1 ' sions. | Duri :nast year there were 176 tie- . ' Endeavor roci"ties | report c ' - but because of "war recu. i.s i. . ; early all new I societies were reported During the part y ar more than j 200 Dixie Chvi.-!ian Endeavorers be| came Life Wo I; Recruits, and many are now in school preparing for their work. The fourth All South Christian Endeavor convention will be held at 1 Hot Springs, Ark., July 13-17, 1922. The governor of Arkansas, Hon. Thomas C. McRae, will deliver the opening address. Mr. E. P. Gates, general secretary of the United So- ' ciety of Christian Endeavor, lloston, Mass., will also speak on the opening night, and will remain through the entrie convention, and other speakers of national prmoinence have accepted places on the program. A San Francisco man in a divorce complaint against his wife alleged that she was in the habit of screaming in order to make the neighbors believe that he was beating her. ? Every day think up some advice for somebody else?and then follow it yourself. ErF" ? I a ? / 250 Pimples, 736 Blackheads ana 3 Boils! No reward Is offered, beer.urto they ire lost forever! No question will ho tsked, except one question, "How 3I?1 you lose them?" There is hut ?no answer,?"I cut out new fad treatments and guesswork; I use I.one of llto moat powerful hlood-r Icannera, blood-purifiers and f ! e s h-liulldcru known, and that Is S. 8. S.! Now my f <co ia pinV.ii.h, my nkln clear as n rose, my checks are filled out nnd n>/ rheumatism, t<*>, ia gone!" This wi'l ho your experience, too. If you try 8. 8. 8. It. is guaranteed to ho purely vegetable in all its remarkably effective medicinal Ingredients. 8. 8. 8. i near a a now history for yon from now onj 8. 8. 8. U rohl at sill driijf scores In two elr.es. Tho lamer bizo la tho more economical. Lockhait Junction f We Kavo had a few snow flakes, not enough to cover the ground. t thought there was coming n boll weevil remedy, a six or ten inch snoW j und lay about a week and it would be \. i good dose of poison for them. ^ I am learning something new every ^ Juy. The pi ess is educating if you j Will read it. A L'oiul nmn to mo the other tiny when ho renewed! ^ liis suhscription to the^papor that he j, liiln't know what to think of n man R who did not subscribe to his tluily n 'oiinty paper und keep up with things ^ going on, for nine times out of ten the editor of the pnpor is on the n light side ami giving us some whole- ^ tome medicine, nnd there are others giving information along all linfcs, and there is always something to o earn. t' R. J. Allen's letter was good, as y o his taxation, I agree with him. |j Our legislators should look well to ^ he burden of taxes, make no more (i tew laws, create no new offices un- , SI ess they do away with some wo ul eady have or take otV the salary of ( tome of the higher officers in the j state to help pay taxation. u Whore are we traveling? What ro.ai are we going tj take? Are wo j. hilling away from the Thomas JclVer:-;>n rules? I think we are. . )ur legislatures, senate and con.".ess ^ eght to he filled with the wisest and j, >est men, those with cool heads, warm heat Is and clean hands. t. We are now under oppression and ^ m'-dens that we have to bear, hut g( we should not bring ubout something that will burden our children and Iheiv thi'.dnn for you would like at ( hat great day for them to rise up . tr.tl call you blessed. .,( We have had all kinds of moves _ and associations being organized or [lying to be in the last few years. , Some honest fellows cut their cotton .. acreage while others didn't, they ^ planted more. Some held their cot- ^ ton while others sold. Some crits icized the other fellow for selling ^ and the other criticized the other-one (| for holding, so there you are. My jpinion is that those who did hold j helped you to get what you did, no t Joubt of it. If all the cotton had o been dumped on the market as soon as it was picked I believe it would j >oon have gone to six or eight cents a pound. Now we are fighting the ^ soil weevil, but it might be a blessing ^ n disguise. You wouldn't cut your 1 urcage, you wouldnt' join or stick to /our resolution. Mr. Boll Weevil nay help those who tried to help ^ themselves. Yet we are trying to sring up another issue. Are we not to blame for many things? Yes. v We won't organize. I do not want j. to make more cotton and then take 0 five to ten cents per pound for it, just y what we will do. We will go against e >ur own fntrtest and then grumble ^ ibout it. (j Mr. Boll Weevil may be organizing s 'or our good. If you don't make but ^ hree bales of cotton to the plow you j, nay get more for it than you would ^ for eight or ten with over-production j like you hnvehcard of in the past, y Why can't we get right and do right? v Should we be beaten more yet before we will mind and do right? There v may have to come a cotton panic or j famine before prices will be right. 11 t 'an come. There is coming a change, v the bottom rail is going to get on ^ top. i I will leave it with you. I have r iiui t i iiH r/.ni any jmincumi uur, uui F am going to try to work out my [>\vn salvation. Moxy. Big Feed at Elks Home ' Or. Tuesday evening, Jan. 17th, at 8 o'clock we will hold our first gettogether meeting of the new year, and every member is urged to be on hand promptly. b Menu: Baked Jakie with all the p trimmings. 'Possum and taters anc f everything. I. K. Brennecke, 1276-3t Secretary. j A twenty-million-dollar Christmas j gift from Uncle Sam to Russia. Can't tel us it pays to be good just before Christmas or any other time.?Arkansas Gazette. A SWEET LITTLE BABY BOY : ! p Makes a Bright Spot in Every 11 Home. A Comfort in i Years to Come 1 f Park Rapids, Minnesota.?"I have 1 taken your medicine ? Lydia E. PinkE|A|HII|lham'.<i Vegetable ''lllllll Compound?when 1 m[\\\ was a girl for pains 'II and before and after iI my marriage. I now H have a sweet little j baby boy and will - A send you his picture % ill I' y?u wish to publish U'l it. My sisters also take your medicine ^ and find it a great s help, and I recomit to those who suffer before their babies are born." ? Mrs. Wm. Johnson, Box 166, Park Rapids, Minn. To marry and arrive at middle age without children is a great disappointment to many women. Think of the Joy and comfort other women have in their children as they grow older. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Oempound has helped to trtng great happiness to many families by restoring wo* men to health. Often the childless home is due to a run down condition of the wife, which may be helped by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, is brought health and happiness into the home of Mrs. Johnson. Why not to yours T ? neS9SS9BSSSE9aBSaBBH^9^=S=Se 'forth Carolina Man Exhibits $1,000,000 Claim on Trwtjury Atlanta, Ga., Jan. 10.?-An elderly, ignificd gentleman of what is popuirly colled the old Southern type, '1 th an indefinable hint of military earing about him, walked into The ournal's editorial room Monday and xhih'tcd a roughly circular sheet of aiufucied copper, with the following ascription, rudely but legibly enraved thereon: "As I came from the hi country I deposited $9,000 (nine liotis.ind dollars) in the U. S. trcasry in Philadelphia in 1795. I doate this money to the finder of this lante, as I am wounded and hound J die, 11. A. Baikley." "I am the finder," announced the Id gentleman oracularly, then in reducing himself as Major J. I,. > hitc, of Rowan county, North Caror; a retired physician, ho said, an-* ne "youngest major in the ('on fedrate army in the war between the tales." I'M crawled into a rock-bound cave - get out of a terrific rainstorm," a went on, "and in it I found this1 >pper plate. Thut was in 1911. 1 utui'ully went to Philadelphia t > u- North American bank, which took ( ver the affairs of the United States "casury about 1821, and the old recrd was shown me, where one H. A. arkley had deposited $9,000 in 1795 he president of the bank told me lat with the accumulated interest te original deposit now was worth jmething like $1,000,000."" Tt... u?..i lirua i lit- uniiivci, auucu iuajwi it uiif, d vised him to put off the business of ollecting this very considerable mount of money, "owing to the untitled conditions attending the beinning of the World war." "I knew it meant a lot of red tape t> be unraveled," said Major White, and 1 decided to wait. . I showed the late to William G. McAdoo, then ecrteary of the treasury, and he aid it was a perfectly good obligaion against the government. I have ecided now to leave the plate and Is obligation to my three children, have had it registered in Washingi>n and in Philadelphia as my proprty, and only myself or my heirs an collect the amount it represents, don't need the money now; but it's comfortable feeling that Uncle lam owes me or my heirfc $1,000,00." Letter of Criticism Ir. Editor: 1 see in the paper fcome^hmg about ur representatives employing a bo".' veevil expert and I.jdftt wanted U> ;now something about it 1 -am jw.iv ut here trying to/mnLa little onetorse farm and I cad&Keep up with verything his Work be done IB the county emonstration agent? or is his work o heavy he can't do ft? I do not ;now Mr. Wood, or whoiver the agent s, but it seems to me piat he would ic the best man to do ^his work and guess he knows as miich about the oil weevil us any one here amongst is. Mr. Editor, you give us enough adi.I.? * :? i ?vc Ml icvuiUUUIIlAC Hit? AKrilllllK UU.'iness if it were given more heed, unu here is Moxy with his round of nd'ice, four or five times n week and you >oth are expected to keep it up; it is n your line of business and the most f us are benefited by your advice, just n proportion to how near it comes to uir own idea of things, and let me 11 you, the best thoughts culled from he best authority and given to us by >ur county paper and a few examples f how to do it by our county agent s all the advice we need. The poor 'nrmer has been deluged with advice rom every vocation in life since I can emember. A lot of it was paid for it a big price and a lot of it has been ipparently free, as we had nothing .0 do but hold our hold till the other 'clow could spit in his hands. Now, since our taxes have been ligher, higher, higher, we have to o\yer them by adding another burlen? Now that brings me to the point 1 vant to get at: Is this new office a alaried position? Who is this new nan we are fixing for, ain't .he the lame man that has always been sayng something about reducing taxes ? hain't he the same man who ran igainst Cole Lyles for the legislature nee, away back yonder and was electd on that platform and when he was lut on a committee to do that work I hink we were raised about 1-2 a mill ? Now the next point I want to know: f K is a salaried office, who pays the lill? Does it come out the county igcnt's fund? Does the delegation >ay him out of funds provided for outdde of our taves or does the delegaion have a right to employ any one o carry on any work without consultng any one else? Now I am not ask ng these questions in a spirit of critcism nor to get up a newspaper conroversy, but would be glad, Mr. Editor, if you could just tell roe privately some time when I conie to town. You *ee I get your paper regularly anc when I see things of this kind it get? me to trying to think and the more ] think the more mixed up I get ant then I go to asking questions, ant when my neighbors come in and be gin to ask me things I don't knov about I tell them if they raise m: taxes T?Oc more I reckon I will havi to try to pay it and one of them saitl "D d if it didn't look like thn that straw was the one that was goini to 'break the camel's back.'" I hope you will "excuse this not but I just felt like I wanted to get i ont of my system. I hope Moxy won' think hard of me for referring to hir personally, as he is the only one o BANK DAY of National Thrift Week WHENCE comes the enormous ? urn of money that is J necessary for the commercial and governmental business of this country? There is o.Jy a small proportion el the required total in cir.?ul -lion or held in the Treasury. There is, in fact, but comparatively little need for actual cash in our financ; .! scheme, for our banking system creates a more faci'c. elastic, adaptive j and useful medium of exchange?credit. Given a few I thousands of cash, our banking machinery turns out "Mlk? Deposits hundreds of thousands of its equivalent. So, in br'ef, we Mount relation of the Bank to the Nation. Th ,1 ^ *' ? ? j:!ain, at a glance, that the Bank is the econr f w In I our tainhead from which flows the unique and uo ir'"" f! Honk wealth that this country enjoys. And, in the ' -' i s '\vCOUnt" analysis, it is clear that every American owe measure of his comfort and well-being to the e \ *-r of our banking system. As the Bank serves the Nation, just so wi'l , you! This, surely, is one of the great, inspir* > * that thrills the American Youth with his a r.o? boundless, irresistible ambition. Any young ma^ i:? thicountry may hope to command the Bank to do Uuc < ? that for him. Yea, if he will enforce command of his 5 own qualities of integrity, energy, and thrift, the Bank will beg to do his bidding! The CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK X _ I 11 3 |2 f PRICE SALE j || ?AT? | N. SHAPIRO'S! I ALL LADIES' COATS, COAT SUITS AND J DRESSES ARE OFFERED AT HALF PRICE. f | ENTIRE STOCK OF LADIES' READY-TO- f | WEAR IS INCLUDED IN THIS SALE. ALSO | | A BIG ASSORTMENT OF CHILDREN'S COATS \ 1 TO GO AT LESS THAN HALF PRICE. ALL I I WE ASK IS THAT YOU GIVE US ONE DOHA" Y ?? A ui\ i/rrrh irnr Aiwinn t\At * ? t mv IVr.tr ItIC UltltK DULLAK. lOf.L ; I EARLY AND GET YOUR SELECTION. | N. SHAPIRO 1 y the correspondents that I know per- F.lforc! Grove The physicians of the Middle West, sonally and I hope I can fix to enter- 3(500 of them, declare wine and beer tain him some time when he passes E,f , Jan ir,._p|oase ai- ;,r? not 'w?*^ine. Who in the mischief , | h?.. I""-" " '''I ?? this way. i"-.' *??" ,u w , , . , ... ^<it> ...... uir nunuaj " ?. .?<?? wn.? art" oianti es W'^ school is growing better every Sun oring for them don't want to get well . i . ono>. day, and on next Sunday Brother on <>m? but t? H'1'* headaches with 'em. [Note - The home demonstration Wdchell, of Clifton, will preach at -Houston Pom. agent, the farm demonstration agenti01 oc ' and the boll weevil advisor, all com- Misses Lilly and Mary Harnett were 1 ,u* ,1,an who travels over the road bined, will cost each taxpayer II cents ^ isitinjjr their parents Sunday. behind you is in a position to sidest p on each thousand dollars that he pays Mr. J. II. Parks and .1. L. Knox were your missteps. taxes upon. This, it seems to us, is :n Union Saturday on business. Melbourne, Jan. Id. With the adenough to say in reply to the above. Mrs. J. G. Garner and little daugh- vance of the Australian summer, bu?Editor.] ^ ter. Mertie, of Union, were visiting bonic plague in Queensland is slowly _ their brother, Darby Horn, on Sun- increasing. Up to November 5 there t Sliver Tea (jay> Scribe. were 55 cases and 29 deaths. I The Willinm Wallace Chapter, U. .. ~~T~i ~ D. C? will give a silver tea on Thursj day, January 19th, Gen. R. E. Lee's FVffJCS FVfirSl I' VPPV HPTI ! birthday, a. Iha residence of Mia. A. l *-1 J nKM , H. Foster, from 4 to G o'clock. SS i Sol Ki? A very cordial invitation is extend- ^Tffa m. 0^ _ , ed to all the b'dies of the town. * <g5Y*T Egg Producer * j . Mrs. T. C. Duncan, The wonderful poultry tonic, develops the egg-produclnc OTaj.tna; Cnr Spa . , . makes early la > era of young pullets; keeps poultry healthy and v c,or. nec. produces fast growth in young chirks. 2 1-2 ll>. hoi, 80 cents. I Mrs. F. M. Fnrr. .. We carry a complete l.lnc of Caro-Vct Standard Itemedles for Horses. Mules. Cattle, j '? .ran. , ' ,, Hors antl Poultry. We will gladly refund your money if you fall to get satisfactory ^ 1271-titpd t res. results froin the uso of any Caro-Vet remedy. pr . * AUTHORIZED DEALERS IN UNION COUNTY * December seems to have been an K. Fowler Union, 8. C II. T. Hicpins Buffalo, a. c. I. ?ni?X Ca*. ??i?k..; ;.<? Storms Drug Store Union, 8. C. Keller's Drup Store Buffalo, K. C. C unlucky month fbr llteiary celtblltlts. Mobley .lefer Union, 8. C. ?- B. Brown Buffslo. 8. c. t George Elliott, Robert Browning, Lo. J : ii..at Hide Drug Co. Union,' ?. c. M.iLf'alJfli,; r>A 2 ? 't Macaulay, Anthony Trollope, Robert <>l?mph'M Pharmacy Union. 8. C Carlisle Cnsli Co. '..7.7.7. Carlisle, H. c . " j ' ' | fowl rs I'harmacy Monarch Murrah's Pharmacy .... Jonesrllle 8 C. ft LOUIS Stevenson and many others have j| t n Ucdentinush, Route 4. ..Union, 8. C. loncsvlllo Drug Co. 7.7 Jonesvlllej a! c. >f died in December.