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Take Yeast Vitamers Tablets To Get Job-Winning "Pep5* Easy and Economical?Results Quick. Thin, run-down folks who find that business is had and employment is scarce should try tukinc two of Mnstin's tiny yeast VITAMON Tablets with their meals for a short time and watch how their physicul and financial conditions improve. Maatin'a VITAMON Tablets supply in highly concentrated /T) form true yeast-vitamines combined with the other health-giving f vitamines wliich Science says you must have to l>e strong, f _7\ well and fully developed. ii you are weak, thin, pale, generally /\Qt3 \ run-down, or feel lacking iu brain power and ambition, and j you surely need some of "X rTjfr*' these precibus vitamines in your system at once. Mastin's VITAMON ^ mixes with your food, wu? ??.? r,- ? helps it to digest and f . V .. u-iZ supplies just what your W*il"iU ullll iciiuw ? wnnpicnnourish tlio shrunken tis- t "PeP>" ensues, the worn-out nerves, ergy and a clear the thin tilood and tlto L -_! rA akin flowing with starved bruin. Pimples, I :rffcX ruddy health and boils and skin eruptions WTVi \ vigor? Just take seem to vanish like iiiuric \ \ X \ ........ v under this healthful in- \ \ NiA ^ .(gF .mt'I mAm 4 1 fluence. Mustin'd VITA- \ \ / /VITAMON TabMON Tablets will not A*)/Y AT* n hort cause gas and they help to w time and watch correct constipation. They SylfS tho truly amazaro easy and economical U H ins reoults. to take. He sure to re- ^ ^ * member tho name?Master's VI-TA-MON. You can get Mae tin's VITAMON Tablets at all good druggists. "S^LMASTIMS^" Are Positively Guaranteed t? Put On Firm Flesh, Clear the Skin and Increase the original .*l!^ w u JB5ycast Energy When Taken With cenuine vtablet1 Every Meal or Money Back ?13MMEIEEEHD WW ili\fciBah I ?# V and aids appetite and digestion. ^ ^ I Cleanses mouth and teeth. P -?*? \ A great boon to smokers, ? . \ relieving hot, dry mouth. ^ \ Combines pleasure and *Vr Don't miss the joy of the ^4* new WRIGLEY'S P-K?the sugar^^^^^^^^^coated peppei^ Hastings' Seeds The three wives held a conference t QOO O^tsalrfco- From and a&reed t0 P?o1 their food contriI & V/ u Id lUg butions and leave .the question as tc It's ready now. 100 handsomely 11- whlch one was hig w5fe to be deter. U-.trated pages of worth-while seed , d f his , and garden news for Southern garden ers and farmers. This new catalog, - ,, we believe, Is the most valuable seed , The, d,seaf ,.of book ever published. It contalxui 100 deficient diet, is on the increase full liuecB of the most nonular veirm in the Southern states. tables, flowers tind furm crop plants, 1 tha finest work of Its kind ever at- Apothecaries' bills were exceedingly tempted. high in the 17th century. With our photographic Illustrations i ? .and color plcfhres also from photo- : Cremations are not fashionable ir, graphs, we show you Just what y6u can j pArio grow with Hastings' Seeds even be . fore you order the seeds. Our cata- ' 1 - log makes garden and flower bed TfU,n 1 planning easy and It should be in 1vCglCCClrlg 1 flat every single Southern home. Write us 11 1 n a post-card for it. giving your name V*OlCl Of and address, it will come to you by return mall and you will be mighty I ETTING the old cough or cold glad you've got it. drag on, or the new one develop Hastings' Seeds are the Standard seriously, is folly, especially when at of the South, and the largest mall your druggists, you can get such a order seed house in the world is back PT.ov<;d a?d successful remedy as Dr. of them. They've go* to be the best. 8 New D'seovery. No drugs, Write now for the 1922 catalog. It J"8.1. ,KOod medlt,nc that relieves ... Is absolutely free. y" H. Q. HASTINGS CO., SEEDSMEN, Fo^ ?^er f,ftX yeaft a ?tandard ATLANTA GA remedy for coughs, colds and grippe. ' * t Eases croup also. Loosens up the phlegm, quiets the croupy cough, _ , . . . . . . stimulates the bowels, thus relieving Soviet Judge Arrated; the congestion. All druggists, 60c. ?as Three Wivea IGLKTL^'S Moscow, Feb. 3.?Tangled domestic GW DlSCOVCTV affairs of n Soviet judge have just ForColdsand CoitOKs heen brought to light by his arrest by SBS9S9B9999BSEj|S the Cheka. After he had been taken ( Wake Up Clear Headed. That away from his apartment where he ' t,r?4 ?".t' 'ce''"K niorninga, is due to was supposed to be living alone, three Sy^tT'up the live^and bring?a young and pretty women called there healthy bowel action. All drtiggists, 25c. and each claimed to be his wife and PROMPT I WON'T GRIPE wanted to know his prison address so I If* i vi AV Pillo as to send him food. ||y|L : Revenge Wat Cause of Kennedy Murder Los Angeles, Cal., Feb. 6.?Mrs. : Madelynne Obenchain of Chicago and j Evanston, 111., conspired with Arthur C. Burch, a former college acquaintance, to kill J. Belton Kennedy, a young Los Angeles real estate broker, | according to the indictment in which Mrs. Obenchain and Burch were jolnti ly charged with murder. Burch was placed on triul November 22 last and | on January 10 the jury was dis1 charged after balloting for three ! days without reaching a verdict. The final ballot stood ten to two for conviction. Mrs. Obenchain, the prosecution i contended in the Burch trial, was the instigator of the alleged plot, her motive being revenge because Kennedy | hnd refused to marry her. The relations between the woman and Ken| nedy were established by means of letters identified as being in Mrs. Obenchnin's handwriting, and found j in Kennedy's room and a safe deposit box after his death on August 5, last. From these it developed that they bei came acquainted in Los Angeles about five years ago. For two years a corrospondenco continued, and letters written this time contained expressions of warm affection, and two were signed "Mrs. J. Belton Kennedy." In spite of the apparent intimacy the young woman, who up to that time was Miss Mndalynne Conner was married early in January, 1919, in Los Angeles, to Ralph R. Obenchain, a : young Chicago attorney, who had just returned irom overseas army service. I A month later, however, she renewed the correspondence with Kennedy. After about a year she obtained a divorce in Chicago and wrote to Kennedy she wanted him to go to Chicago to marry her. Kennedy did not go and the subsequent correspondence indicated his parents were opposed to the match. Mrs. Obenchain started West last I June and wrote Kennedy to meet her In San Francisco. He was not there when she arrived, and she came to Los Angeles. There were several interviews, according to testimony in the Burch ease, and Mrs. Obenchain on i one occasion took Kennedy to a fortune teller for advice as to whether they would wed. About the same time, another witness declared, she -said "Belton has not long to live. I can i almost pi^t my hand on the spot where it will happen." On July 17 Mrs. Obenchain wired to Burch, who was in Evanston to come to Los Angeles, adding, "I need you and the friend I had last summer." i Burch arrived here oil July 24 bringj ing with him, according to the porter of his car, a shot gun case. Burch took a room in a hotel commanding a view of Kennedy's office, and watched the office windows for long periods, according to hotel employees. At other times he rented an automobile under an assumed name, and took extended trips, it was also testified. Mrs. Obenchain and Kennedy went driving the night of August 5 and about nine o'clock went to a small cottage owned by Kennedy in Beverly Glen, 15 miles from Los Angeles. As Kennedy was mounting a flight of steps on a bank in front of the cottage two shotgun shots were fired. One truck Kennedy in the back of the neck, causing instant death, an autopsy surgeon swore. Mrs. Ohenchain told officers she sawtwo rough looking men disappear in bushes from which the shots were fired, and that Kennedy, after he was i shot exclaimed, "Good night, Madalynno." A woman living near the j Kennedy place, testified, however, she ! heard a man say, "I've got him," after the second shot and then a man's and a woman's voice mingling in conversation she could not distinguish. Burch, it developed, was out in a rented car that night, and two pcri sons swore they saw him in Beverly Glen. He left Los Angeles the next , morning for Chicago, but was arrested at Las Vegas, Nev., and brought back to Los Angeles. He refused to disj cuss the case, and his attorneys besides denying he had anything to do with the tragedy, made a defense of 1 insanity. One of the two jurors who stood out for the acquittal declared ? she believed Burch was insane, the other that the prosecution hnd not convinced her Burch was in Beverly Glen at the time of the shooting. ' Mrs. Ohenchain's eformer husband ' was retained by her as one of her attorneys, and they secured a marriage license some time ago and announced they would be remarried if Mrs. Obenchain is released. 1 The prosecution contented that 1 Burch, daughter of Bishop Matthew Burch, of St. Louis, Mo., was in love with Mrs. Obenchain and subject to her will in the alleged conspiracy. Erratic Slump In Price of Sugar Honolulu, T. H., Jan. 6.?(By Mail) | The erratic slump encountered by the price of raw sugar in 1921 was reflected today in the announce ment of customs officials here that the value of exports of the Hawaiian : islands to the mainland United States j had dropped from $192,383,185 in 1920 to $71,669,115 in 1921. The heavy decrease was due in the main to the sugar slump. Although the 1921 shipments of the commodity were only 8,745 tons less than the 1920 cargoes, the value of the 1921 production was $47,905,961, as compared with $158,712,237, the value of the 1920 crop. Canned pineapples, the other important product of the islands showed a decrease of $10,000,000 in exports from 1920, the 1921 shipment value being $19,905,416, as against $29,176,104 for 1920. imm?mmammmKm, Adopts Guide To . * < Profession of Journalism 4 T 4 Eugene, Ore., Feb. 5.?Setting a standard based upon truth, sincerity, thoroughnes, justice, mercy, kindliness, and moderation, the Oregon State Editorial Association adopted recently at a meeting here a code intended to be a guide to the profession of journalism in the state. The code was prepared by Dean Colin Dyment, of the University of Oregon, at the direction of the asso-l eiation, and was unanimously approved by a representative gathering of Oregon editors and publishers who pledged themselves to adhere to its precepts. There are seven sect jns to the code and they go in detail into all practices and relationships of journalism. The first is headed "Sincerity and Truth," and declares for accura cy in editorial, advertisement, article or news story. v^ure, vxoupeccncy, inorougnness ' is the caption of the second section, ? which includes among its declarations the following: "By study and inquiry and observation, we will constantly aim to improve ourselves, so that our writings may be more authentic, and or great or perspective, and more conducive to the social good." Protection, within reason, of th?* rights of individuals mentioned in public documents, regardless of the effect on "good stories" or upon editorial policies, is a principle included in the section devoted to "Justice, Mercy, Kindliness!" This section also declares against making "privileged utterance" a cloak for unjust attack, or spiteful venting, or carelessness in investigation, in the cases -of parties or persons. ' "We will endeavor to avoid the injustice that springs from hasty conclusion in editoriul or reportorial or interpretative practice" is a principle laid down in section 4, devoted to "Moderation, Conservatism, Proportion." This section also provides against distortion of news by improper emphasis, skilful arrange- | ments or by devices of typography o The section declaring against partisanship and propaganda~sets forth 1 the following, "We will not permit, , unless in exceptional cases, the pub- ' lication of news and editorial matter , not prepared by ourselves or our staffs, believing that original matter 1 is the best answer to the peril of propaganda." 1 "No man who is not in ethical advance of the average of his commu- ' nity should be in the profession of journalism," is a declaration in the 1 section devoted to "Public Service and Social Policy." Wc will keep our writings and our publications free from unrefinement, except so far as | we may sincerely believe publication < of sordid details to be for the social i good, says one article of this section. On advertising and circulation the code pledges the Oregon newspaper- ] men to cooperate with those special I rL-l-S-T-E-N Renew Y our | Subscription I TODAY! I 1 Only $4 a Year | II If you delay I I you may pay I Jj more later I I Tl i me union I * Daily Times | A A A A A A A iftfc A A A A A 4^4 jfj A 4^4 A A A A AtA A A A A A A j^a a^A ^ A! 4F 4r 4r 4r ^<|r T|r "y "y Ty + % y ^" ^jr | Galvanized Roofing f ! JUST UNLOADED SOLID CARLOAD 3 V-CR1MPED | | AND CORRUGATED I | LENGTHS 6 FT., 8 FT., AND 10 FT. f f WRITE, PHONE OR BRING YOUR ORDERS NOW, WFJIE YOU ] | CAN GET THE LENGTHS YOU WANT. % I THE UNION HARDWARE CO. % J "HARDWARE LEADERS" * '! Union, S. C. * '? ... . - - - . -r ? ? ? * * w V V VVV" ami to bar such a<Ivcrtising wh"ich th? : Eggs From Every Hen | publisher has reason to believe will SSkThere ik no excuse for a lunflng hen Vou ran make layers j , . - . ftn(" rea? money-makers out of every 8<litur\ hen you own deceive the reader. KCTSHMjnBr j + "We will not advertise our own Eflfl PrOCltlCer * newspaper or its circulation boast- ti,o mplbrf,,i .....im ,he ?? pNurinp fully or otherwise m terms not m ,iro),llwl fnst pr(iW(li ft" , 1lU&'n' U" ' ,H"V " " ! harmony with the clauses or this \\.- earrv a complete line of ? iro-Vet standard Uemedhs for in mvh r.tu. I eode of ethics," is another provision Su'rn.m''th^uJof ail! uaroN^'"em.^r m0,,"y 11 >0U f:,i' of this section which concludes with A f% .... . ..... ... , w authorized dealers in union county the following. "We will not make our ... c . it,a ' ' h,w!(kr 1 nlnn, s. c ir t. ilixirtn* fhtt.ilo. s c printing facilities available foi the s-.,r.n* hum'store 'nion. s < K.ivr'4 imuc st??re s v. production of advertising which we ' M"Mo> .i i.t union s r 'j Mrmvn Hurt. i?. s r ' . , ... , ... ! liaui Side l?;ii|f Co Union s c , K Ml""r fed. ilia. S t believe to be socially harmful 01 j s ,rill;1(.v , s' vu o m s1m,,,i> ?\? r.iriisie. s. c fraudulent in its intent." j* M.nn<ii_ Vilr'ahR i'Vi'-rnn.Vy'' j?!n''!iil!v s u ????mmmmmmm?????????? 1 lit ll *tl I if V. 01 9 I .1'lltoil S i J IfilU'llVillC Drilg Co .... 1 o 9|?t?v S (' TO MY FRIENDS ? - _ ???~??~?-AND PATRONS A Wonderf?' Cme PHONE 167 I had been troubled for several yxr . ... Thi* is to notify my friends months with a severe skin trouble . , * , which had been pronounced eczema, WI^" dry steam. We ind patrons that I have moved v'dch covered the greater part of my guarantee not to slick or body. scorch any thing. Special atmy shoe shop to the building In a few weeks' time, using Storm's tei.tion given to Parcel Post. : Lotion as directed, the trouble ha3 , . . , ... ?f the Peoples Plumbing Co., disappeared. Your lotion gave im- CCI ain ^ aPPr?c|?te it j mediate relief with the first applica- much or more than anyone and am prepared now to turn . tjon> an(j cure(j ^hc trouble. els-s for a trial from you. your work out promptly. For!. 1 ctrt:,in|y am Krateful for find-! We call and deliver your ' i >ng the lotion and shall recommend it tr , i . . ,, pressing anywhere. When lixteen years I have been your| h> ?">' of .km trouble. have a hurry-up job we B. W. Gregory. . 'Shoe Man," and I.earnestly Buffalo, S. C., Route 1. 'a,e at y?ur ?ervice. ssk for a continuance of your Storm's Isotioti, price $1,00, at HdlllCS P1*6551111? ?tlld * . Storm's Drug Store. 1269-tf ? oatronage. n oi v ? , ;?- Repair Shop. Nearly half the meteors that havej * FOSTER'S SHOE SHOP fallen in this country came down with- Nicholson Rank Building. in a 300-mile radius of Mt. Mitchell,' IMIONE 167 If the lace curtains are quite had- Agent for two dye houses, ly soiled put a handful of salt in the City of l-ondon, proper hounded b> | lergest in the South. Phone water in which you soak them and municipal and parliamentary lines, is' 167 end Dust-Proof Motorthe dirt can be removed easily. not a dwelling place hut n vast ir.ar- cycle will cell ket. IIoTlrso racing on ice is a popular i.? pastime at. several New England The highest trees have the most "The olny happiness lies in sleep," fioitns winter. ; pointed leaves. declared Napoleon Bonaparte. >