The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, June 19, 1922, Image 2
THE UNION TIMES
fublisbcd Daily Except Sunday By
I ME UNION TIMES COMPANY
l.v wis M. Kiev Editor
KrgisU'rnl nt the PuntulVxi' in Union. S. C .
u.i -t'Cond class matter,
limes Building Main Street
Bell Telephone No. 1
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
One Year $100
Six Months 2.0<1
Three Months 1.00
ADVERTISEMENTS
One Square first insertion $1.00
Every subsequent insertion 60
Obituary notices. Church and I.o.lge
ii.iii.e- and notices of pubic meetings cnt.
rtainmeiits and Cards of Thanks will b.
.-barged fur at the rate of one cent a word.
ia-h aeeompanying the tirdcr. Count the
words and you will know what the cos:
a ill lie.
MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS
Ph.- Associated Press i< exclusively en
titled to the use for republication of news
di.- patches credited to it or not otherwise
credited in this j"ij an 1 also the locii
new i published therein.
MONDAY, JUN1-: 19, 1922.
I'nioii hail a very .severe rain and
w'r.,1 tmni late yesterday. It amount
d to almost a cloudburst and the
President Asked to SI
Take a Hand
Washiiurt* n, June 1">.? President n,'i
Hardin^ was asked today to take -tops
to end the coal strike in a joint appeal
presented to hint by the Commission
on the Church and Social Service of
wiiui r< . in ii'.gh \eioeiiy. ftiayhe,
havine stii h wi'iitht'r now will prove
:i drv .Inly, :m?| thus destroy the boll
weevil.
The bonus question seems to be giving
the Republicans a very lively till.
They tin not know what to do. They
know i! is a j. rave thing to put a
yet hea ier burden of taxation upoiij
the people, yet they fear to refuse to
lu'ed the demands of the leaders of
the American I.gion t ; a h-mus he
forthcoming.
The conservation and distribution
of food, more than the production of
food, are the questions that need to
be settled. With an eight months'
season to produce, with land that rt*\\
easily be made to produce, the question
of pr iduet ion of things to feed
man un<l boast is already solved. And
meat progress has been made in the
matter of conservation. We do no-,
allow the useless waste that once we
did allow. We can our fruits and
vegetables; we tak" better care o'
? ur harvested crops, and we are making
progress along this line every
nay. but destruction, which dependlai-'a'ly
upon transportation, is not
quite so thorough. All this will gradually
improve, and living upon the
earth will be made less burdensome.
The Kaiser has completed his memoirs,
and having lone so, finds there
is little demand for the story of his
life. X'o doubt this self-centered man
who plunged the world into the most
horrible war ever known, will not
understand it, hut the fact remains
that tin world has moved forward
some distance since the German emperor
sat upon the throne. X'ot many
years have elapsed, it is true; but a
wide distance away from despotic
government has been attained during
that, period. The memoirs are said to
devote only three out of the la chapters
to a discussion of the war. It is
said thai even in these chapters he
seeks to exculpate himself from responsibility
for what happened ami to
disclose few facts not already known
to the world. Poor old Wilhclm! lie
does not realize that a fallen idol lies
unnoticed along the pathway. lie
perhaps has less to tell, less real
knowledge of the situation to disclose
than nu n who never occupied such an
exalt'<1 position as dd this niiirh'y
ruler.
Olir < ; i i ^ ^ ' li ii '?. (Iixlfr lib
I ill collector.
Our cat says most of the things we
worry about arc not worth a second
thought.
Our cat says many a hasty act has
been repented of behind prison bars.
Our cat says the point of observation
has much to do with our interpretation
of life.
? *
Our cat says do not rIvo nie to the
talebearer.
Our cat says precocious boys do
not always develop into wise men.
Subscribe to The Union Daily Times
ine reuerni council of Cnurches, with
which arc affiliated HO great Protestant
communions, the Department of
Social Action of the National Catholic
Welfare Council and the Social Justice .
\
Commission of the Centra! Conference j
of American Rabbis. This is the first
time, as far as is known, that these
representative organizations of Pro
m
testants, Roman Catholics and Jews
have taken joint action in an industrial
matter. The churches in their 1
J\\
apical asked the President?
I 11
To call a national coal conference;
To get the facts of the coal italustry
through a government investign- j
tion;
Not to wait until the suffering worn
n and children of the mining camps ^
has become a national calamity and
To end the coal strike now. !
The statement expresses gratlfiea- 0
tion that the press, as a whole, has it
hern succi fttl in recording the fa ts ! '
in he frikr. The appeal of Ire ?
churches in full is as follows: I)
"To t lie President of the Uni'ed R
States: 1"
"\Ve desire to express to you, on
Is-lt ilf of the three great religious or- M
v:.! i/.ationg that we represent, our II
eonvietion Ilia* the time has arrived J,
when our government should net to it
living about a conference ;n tho hituminous
coal industry to e id tho ?
present strike. We believe that the
majority of th<* people of this country ,
.are unwilling to have its vitally ini- ,
port nr. i industries snbjc ci to ec>nniii:c J
combat as a means sending ciisputes.
j
"Whenever either disputant in a
controversy declines to employ the
methods of conference ana arbitration, ,
it becomes proper for the government
to intervene. It is inconceivable that ,
public action should wn't until the suffering's
of women and children in m;n- .
ing towns should have reached the ..
proportions of a national ca'amuy.
"On March HI, 1022, representatives ,
i f the Commission on the Church and
Social Service of the Federal Council
of the Churches of Christ in Aniciva j,
and the Department of Social Aition ^
of the National Catholic We!fa?o ._
Council, but before you a resolution
adopted by their respective bi dies
urging government action looking to- .
ward the settlement of the coal con j
tjoversy. At that time it was pointed ,
? nt that the operators in the Central (
Competitive Field, comprising tin- j
nois, Indiana, Ohio and Western Peaa- ,
. yivania, had pledged themselves two .
years previously to confer with F. j
union in order to negotiate a new ec ntract.
We wish to express our ap- .
pi oval of the action of the adminir.tr ?- j.
tion in publicly fixinfi responsibility .
for the failure of such a conference ^
upon certain of the coal operators who
were unwilling to he governed by the
terms of their agreement. Our ioso~ '
lution further called the attenti >u to
the lack of accurate information on- J
cerning the facts necessary to a jusi
settlement of the controversy and
urged that a thorough investigation ,
of the industry should he made by fed- "J
eral authority.
"The administr.ition at that time did J!
not feel warranted in taking action,
beyond the issuance of the slat'-incut (
to which we have referred, ft con- !
fercncc was held, the strikek en1 ici',
and it has now continued through ten .
weeks. Exclusive of the anthracite
ta Ids where conferences are still in ,
progress, there are not far from half ,,
a million men idle in the industry. j*
"The strike lias ben more extensive
than was anticipated since the miner.- ^
in several non-union fields made com- "
mon cause with the United Mine *
Workers. Following a period of inti
nso business depression, the strike "
I as caused much suffering to the rain- ^
ers' families, and this suffering is rap !)
idly increasing.
"It is a matter of profound satis- 1
faction that the strike has been remarkablv
orderly. We have also been ''
1 'It
v ratified to note that the press Ir s
made an unusually successful effort to
ireord the facts of this conflict. N'cv- ^
ortheless, nothing effectual has been
i'.one to bring it to an end.
"In spite of the desire of the government
to avoid interference in the ^
controversy, it has become necessary
for the secretary of commerce to re- ^
* v
finest the operators in the non-union
fields, and the retailers, not to take
undue advantage of the situation by
excessively increasing (Tie price of ^
coal. This action, manifestly neces- '*
sary under (he eir< umstanees, neverfheless
serves to show the helplessness
of the nation and th" increasing danger
to the public in the face of so ^
great an industrial struggle. The coal ^
reserves are being steadily depleted; ^
the suffering of the miners and their ^
families is becoming more acute and *'
the bitterness attendance upon the
conflict will) inevitably increase. ^
"We therefore are impelled to urge ^
once more that the government take
ste|is to end the coal strike by bring- "
ing the operators an:| miners into con- *'
r o:_ .. - "
...v... <. oimo me laimro oi early "
attempts at securing a conference' ac- A
cording to precedent in the Central ^
Competitive- Field, and the consequent
suspension of mining in the union Tl
fields, unprecedented importance has T.
been given to those fields in which the
minors have not joined the strike, and ^
where operators and miners are en- M
joying a temporary advantage because
of the strike in the union mines. This '*
setting of one section of the industry *'r
and ?>f one portion of the country over C.
against another, makes for instability,
insecurity, discontent and bitterne s.
? T.
Advertise in Tht? Times; get result.. Jr
JBSCRIPTIONS TO S
$20,000 CANNERY ^
II
OTICE: All whose names appear j
below with five stars may call ii|> ?? -y
I'aul E. Wilburn, Secretary-'Tre.\s- ^
urer, and tret their stock certificate.
The certificates are ready for tie- ,
livery. j
/
We have built our canning house,
stalled a boiler an 1 will in a day o>
vo, install our wagon scales. \v*t
?ve ordered machinery, cans aval
,'erything necessary to operate a ca.i
?ry. We are calling for the i'ull pay
ent of the capital stock subscribed.
We have begun a canvass for $10,O h'* j
lditional capital. We have been on
asy planning to get the ma- h'n . v
i operating condition that we h-'.<
ml little time to give ..? the tn.lt..
I soliciting subscriptions 'o r. :.s<
ip cnptal stock to $20,000. We \. i.;
i>w press that matter. So\cr".l new
ibseribers have been secured do. ne.
ie last two days.
ewis M. Rice **200.'?I> :
. K. Hughes *T>0 :
M. White *5u. ? (
. II. Garner *>** :'50.oo ,
E. Alinter .>0.o i ?
r. Russell Jeter ****' fiu.ut I'
. W. Llcaty " w.'ie i
. B. Strange f?n.o! I
, F. Mcl.ure .".u. ,,
f. I). Wood 41 .. ?.0<
I . I)o..o ...
. ??. Ml (
, R. VVhitmire *****50..H- ,
loy Willoford 5o.:> ,
am Berelowitz **50.00
am Kassler ***50 '
!. R. Lancaster 50 !K .
. V. Askew *50.0( !
lacbeth Young ****;'50.0?
!. M. Garner *"50.00 '
V. C. Wilburn **** '50.01 '
. Mobley Jeter, Jr *****50.00 '
(J. Young ***50.0 !
W. Carncil 50.0m '
>. Jean Whitlork 50.00 1
i. G. Kennedy *****50.00 1
ietor Smith *****50.00
no. W. Gregory *****50.0?
1. N. Sprouse *****50.o<> ;
V. W. Johnson ***50.Oe '
It. Sparks ***50.00
'. B. Gault **50.0< 1
M*. A. I'. McElroy **50.0( 1
Jcorge Willard ***50.00 1
Jordan Bishop 50.00 1
1. T. McMehan *50.00 '
t. H. Harris 50.0?
'. J. Parham ***50.0:
?r. J. W. Buchanan *50.0*. 1
I. J. West *****50.0( '
i). Hancock 50.0(
>r. W. N. Glymph ***50.00
J F. Kennedy *****50.00
ioyan Austell ***50.00 1
.. J. Browning *****50.00 '
!. W. Stone ***50.00
Irs. John R. Mathis **50.00
. Color. Co **150 0-' ?
.itizens National It .nk . . *****50.00 I
I. C. Wilburn **50.0i 1
r. Theo. Maddox ***50.00
liss Mahala J. Smith . . . ***50.00 1
Tiss Edna Tinsley ***50.00 '
liadley-Estes Co *50.00 5
V. S. McLure **100.00 ,r
r. 1?. Barron *50.00 '
. D. Barron **50.0 ; '
inioii Bakery **50.0o ^
i'ill Humphries ***50.00 *
Irs. Ida Bailey *****50.00 1
ouis Gault 50.00 '
R. Murphy *50.00 1
L W. Beaty (additional) . . *50.00 I
>. Norman .Tones *****50.00
!. C. Sanders *****50.00 <
. K. Morgan *****50.00 *
hos. McNally 50.00 1
:. T.o.2 Kelly * *50.00 1
:. Allen . *. *50.00 1
10. Wilburn *****50.00 ?
Innsolidatcd Tje & Fuel Co. . . 50.0o 1
loy Willeford (additional) . . 50.00
fnion Marble & Granite Co. . **50.0o >
.. W. T. Bavenscroft **50.oo
. B. Going 50.00
K. Rrennecke *50.00
u-. O. P. Jackson *50.00
loim's Drug Store **: 50.00
, A'. Wood **50.00
i. A 1 Hvens 50.00
A. 'bdlingsworth . . *****50.1Y
. J. \ i: son **50.00 il
?. K. Smith 50JM j
terbert Smoak **50.0t) i
hos. II. llowp *****50.00 t
Irs. P. B. Barnes *50.00 !i
ash 50.00 (
Irs. I.. M. Jordan *****50.00
i. B. Godshall **50.00 n
J. J. Tucker 50.00 <>
/. B. Aiken ' '*50.00 ,|
. K. Foster ***50.00 q
-agle Grocery Co * *50.00
Irs. J no. R. Mathis . . . * ** *100.00 j,
cwis M. Rico **100.00 v
. J. I'nrham 100.00
r. J. VV. Buchanan 100.00 (.
, E. Kelly 100.0V |)
From *"***50.00 t.
Louis Jolly *****50.00
L. Bolton *****500.00
r. F. M. Ellorhe ***50.00 |.
r. T. Powell 50.00 ?
T. T. Sinclair 50.00 I
. Krass *****50.00 ,
L. Puncan **50.00 (
r. J. G. Going 50.00 ,
E. Bailey 50.00
William Coleman **500.00
R. Lybrand 50.00
. Huydock 50.00 ..
V. Ivey 50.00
. W. Stone 50.0(/ *"
. T. Stoudenmire 50.00 "
. Nicholson 50.00 11
L. Wagnon 50.00 ?
hos. J. West 50.00
F. Wallace 50.00
*sh *****50.00
A. Murrah 50.00 ?
rs. II. L. GafTney 50.00
Ben Foster 50.00
J. Alien r>0.(H)| J
10. R. Matin: r.0.00 1
R. VVilburn 00.00 %
avis Jeffries 00.00
a Mae Wilburn 00.00
C. Duncan 100.00
to. R. Mathis (additional) . . 00.00
tuart Smith 50.00
I. H. Gibson - . 50.00
rank Clay . 50.00
. L. Fowler ' . 50.00
From (additional) 50.00
Irs. May C. Peake . . . . . 50.00
[. C. Palmer 50.00
I. Epps Tucker 50.00
. A. Hollingsworth (addit'nil) 50.00
. E. Tinsley ? . *50.00
i. A. I lames 50.00
Total 58.150.00
Amount subscribed in produce
$1,150.00
Grand total $9,000.00
Wo want more subscriptions. Will
ou not take one or more shares f
Union Canning & Products Co.,
L.ewi3 !Y1. Kice. Pves.
Restoration of Youth
Chicago, June 17 (By the Associtcil
Press).?The restoration of
>uth to the aged, attempted recently
>y means of animal glands, was also
i tempted at least .'1,000 years ago,
< tording to Dr. James II. Breasted
f the University of Chicago. An "In.intation
i?f Transforming an Old
Ian into a Youth of Twenty" is set
' rth in the Edwin Smith papyrus,
he Egyptian document which Dr.
Ireasted has declared contains unparalleled
evidence of advanced ktmwidge
and seiontilic spirit on the part
1 Egyptian physicians of 1800 LI. C.
r earlier. The incantation, on the
i ntrary, he said, is characterized hy
iliance on hocus-pocus. Dr. Breastd's
theory is that an extraordinary
. ok on surgery and external medicine
t 11 into the hands of a quack who was
?.ore interested in charms for making
Id men young, and who had the in
ngruous texts combined in the same
, oil. Thus in the papyrus magical
formulae jostle an exposition of deliate
surgical operations heretofore heroved
to be decidedly modem.
The handwriting indicates that it
vas probably written about 1800 B. C.
md it is thought to be a copy of a
.manuscript that is at least a thousand
ars older. The original may have
.. in written as early as 51-100 B. C.,
,t is thought hy some of the words
ivhich appear in the manuscript and
ivhich were long out of vogue in 1800
II. C.
ni>mup<.ii|ib <ii?u iniiiuwis ill*'
incantation of Expelling the Wind ?>1
iie Year *>f Pest." This shows the
Videly prevalent notion which has persisted
to the present day that the
.vinds winds carry malignant plagues,
l'he last two parts of the papyrus are
.vritten in a very dilFercnt handwritng
from the front page. .
The columns in front treat of the
ie.id, then the lower head, the mouth,
he neck, and the spine. Here the
lapyrus stops but it is evident thai
he remainder treated the lower body.
Tha lirst group of ten cases which
ire described trout of wounds of the
lead of whi :h seven arc knife and
iwoi-d woun ls. The surgeon is intruded
how to probe tho wound and
n case of a severe knife wound told
'You should have made for him a
vooden brace padded with linen (and
lave) the head fastened to it. * * * His
reatment should be sitting, placed
jotwoen two supports of brick, until
,ou know whether he is m'aking any
irogress."
Case eight deals with "a fracture
n ine slant under I he skin." The
surgeon is told to operate, to open at
he point of contusion, and "to elevate
he depression outward." It is posside
trephining is involved here; if so,
t is the earliest mention of it in luxury.
For n cut in the forehead, physician
ikin, a kind of linen bandage, is to hi
lsud or a double bandage applied s.->
is to cause "the lips of the wound to
oin one another."
ndutrial Plants
Register Gain
Cleveland, 0., June 17.?One hunIred
of Cleveland's largest industrial
dnnts registered a now gain in emiloyment
figures in May, according
o the monthly survey made by the
iibor committee of the Cleveland
'hanibcr of Commerce.
The 100 factories, .each of which
lormally has a complement of 500
r more, had on their pay rolls on
line 1, SO,557 persons, compared to
S,I -1-1 on May 1.
Business in the garment industry
ere is ahead of last year's in the
olume of merchandise sold and apparently
is close to it in dollars and
cuts, according to reports obtained
y the Cleveland Garment Manufacturers
Association from the larger
oncer lis in the local market.
Construction work started in Cloveind
during May, this year, jumped
1,000,000 above the record for the
nine month last year, according to
gurcs compiled hy City Building
ommissionor Myers.
BETTER NOT FORGET!
ir neglect paying your city taxes and
eonsos by Friday evening, June
3rd, as a penalty of 20 per cent
'ill be added, beginning with Satrday
morning, June 24th. Hy orders
f city council. It will be well for
ou to listen to me.
W. I). Arthur,
!07-3t City Clerk and Treas.
"Cross Crossings Cautiously."
"HIIBRENTS COLDS
should not be "dosed." Treat
^ them externally with?
VICKS
VAPORUB
Ovt / 7 Million Jan UteA Yearly
Notice
All persons indebted to the Blui
Cross Electric Co. will please maki
settlement with the undersigned. IIother
person is authorized to collect
W. S. Nichoson,
1407-tf. Pres. and Treas.
H. W. EDGAR
Funeral Director
And Embalmer
AmLu!arice Service
Night Phone 311?Pay Phone 129
Ne> t door to Flynn-Vincent
Shoe Store
...
ALL KINDS OF
CEMETERY WORK
Union Marble & Granite Co.
Main St. Union, S. C.
"The Pest in Drug Store Goods,
the Itest in Drug Store Service."
Motto ?-f the International Associal->n
of Itexall Cluhs.
FOR QUICK SERVICE
PHONE 167
We call and deliver your
clothing in a dust-proof motorcycle.
We renice spots an?J
stains from clothing witboul
injuring either the fabric ci
the color. Our modern methods
make clothes look like
new, in the shortest possible
time.
Give mc a trial. I certainly
will appreciate it as much 01
more than anyone else.
iiaiaes Pressing
and Repair Shop
Nicholson Bank Building
Plion? 167
Citation to Kmdred
And Creditors
State of South Carolina,
County of Union.
Court of Probate.
Whereas, John W. Austin has math
suit to mc to grant him Letters ol
Administration on the estate and of
feels o? Minnie Austin, deceased,
These are, therefore, to cite and nd
monish nil and singular the kindrcv
and creditors of the said Minnie Aup
tin, deceased, that they be and appear
before me, in the Court of Probate, t*.
be held at Union C. H., South Caro
lina, on the 28th day of June, next
after publication hereof,- at 11 o'clocl
in the forenoon, to show cause, if anj
they have, why the said administra
tion should not ho granted.
Given under my hand and seal thh
12th day of June, Anno Domini, 1922
w. w. Johnson,
Judpre of Probate.
Published on the 12!h and 19th day;
of June, 1922, in the Union Times.
SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS
WANTED?To pasture stock;
per month. Would also like to havi
a pair of mules for their keep. R. M
White, Santue, S. C. ltpc
MEN AND WOMEN to handle citj
trade and retail the original anc
genuine watKins products, remc
dies, extracts, spices, toilet requisites,
household specialties, automobile
accessories etc. Over l.r>0 pruarantecd
products. Our values are unequalled
and Watkins quality is ir
a class by itself. Write today foi
free sample and full details of oui
offer and what it means to you. The
J, R. Watkins Co., Dept. 77, New
York, N. Y. 6-5-12-19-26p<l
T.OST?Automobile jack, with droy
head, one or two miles beyond Buffalo.
Finder please notify Jno. R
Mathis, IDS South Church St.
G-lG-19-21
WB CAN NICKBL PI.ATK your automobil<>
radiators, head lights, head
lipfht reflectors, spot lights and
bumpers. Never junk a piece ol
tviof nl ' '* * *
.iitvMi inciiuni; 1L IOOKS DiUI, WO OA I)
replate it. Columbia Electro Plating
Works, 1110 Taylor St., Columbia,
S. C. 1382-301
WEST SPRINGS WATER Deliveries
made only on Saturday and
upon standing orders, through the
winter months. Phone 2320. J.
Boyd Lancaster. 1200-Mon.Wed.tf
BASEBALL?Wednesday, .June 21st,
Union vs. Bloomer Girls, City Park
Game called 5 p. m. sharp.
6-16-10-20-pd
AS BARNES' SHOW CASE you pas?
by, just pause a little while; look
"Tootsey Wootscy" in the eye and
see the babies smile. 1392-tf
HAVE YOUR LOT in Rosemont cemetery
cleaned ofl* by experienced
help, men who will take care of the
monuments and the shrubbery. See
or phone us. The Union Marble &
Granite Co., Phone 155. 1107-31
MILCH COWS FOR SALE?All ages,
some good milkers in the hunch;
prices reasonable. M. E. Pittman,
Carlisle, S. C.
Subscribe to Ths Union Times.
I I II ???Hi
I HOME CANNING
J MADE EASY!
Food conservation is a mi]
of civilization. With the abo>
solved. You can can from you
of fruits, berries and vegeta
I^omc in and let us demonstrat
ful little machine. No soldcrii
fire. Simple, scientific, sane.
LEWIS M
At The Union T
T\ *
J -^cc^ Leaves Li
Run Down C<
' I the SpringI
Renew the health, streugtli ami vital
t- liogs an<1 poultry, (let maximum ref
I duct ion. Spring is t In' time for rent
I care for your worn out and sick liven!
r
Tlicy restore iiealtli, bring back vi
y production. Tliero is a specific Caro
t" ablest veterinarians lor each live si
p A Few Special 45
S r ^Pr*n
P Caro-Vet Conditi
tlR*\ horses, mules and ci
i 1 Caro-Vet Swine (
jj der, price 2fie.
J Caro-Vet Tonic fc
and cattle, prico 7;
ra Sold by general stores and drug f
f 9 of satisfactory results, or money refui
I plete line of Caro-Vet Remedies,
a We are sending FREE to each :
rj^ 48 pages "Farmers' Veterinary Gui
, Ej ami tells how to treat live stock disc
;j | CAROLINA REMEDIES CO., I]
> ?
I "? Rfl
|
I VACATION SUITS
FOR THE BOYS WHC
DREAM OF KNOCKIN<
i| $7.50 to
1 A knockout value foi
?i
| that solves the big probi
boy when he isn't in sell
Or?here are extra
j $2.50 or waists at 75c,
i underwear, or the dozen
I that every boy wears in
V/e're giving the best
cal sun?-for your son a
trip to find out that we s|
advertisements.
Bovs* Khaki Pant* 7?
Boys' Vacation Waist
Boys' Vacation Stock
Boys' Vacation Caps, J
New Ties?New Undi
J. Cohc
HOUSE OF SATI
FOR SALE Soy and velvet beans. MC
Now is the time to plant. J. W. Gil- j
bert. t
jhty factor in the progress
re machine the problem is
r garden all you will need
bles for the entire year,
e the value of the wonder*
tig, no standing over a hot
. RICE
imes Office.
rid Absence j tIIi
ity of your horses, mules, cattle,
uilts in health, growth and prowal
in all nature. You can best
dock by using ^
imedies
gor and strength, and increase
-Vet treatment prepared by the
iock disease and disorder.
Remedies
on Powder for f
Condition Pow- i
>r horses, mules B
itores, under a positive guarantco I
tided. Your dealer carries a coin
farmer an authoritative book of I
do", which gives the symptoms K
ases. Ask for your copy.
QC., Mfgrs., UNION, s. O. I
)
G DEMPSEY COLD! <V
?19 CA
(P1L.IIU
r a Knockabout suit
lem "How to dress a
100I."
pants at $1.00 to
or new stockings or
and one other things
June.
values under the loud
it only takes one
peak the truth in our
' )
ic to $1.50.
s, 75c to $1.00.
ings, 25c to 50c.
50c to $1.00.
irwear.
in Co,
SF ACTION.
)NEY TO LOAN on city or country ^
property in Iprge amounts on easy ?
crms. S. E. Barron. 1406-tf