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THE UNION TIMES ^ukluhed Daily Except Sunday By iHE UNION TIMES COMPA.4Y i 'Wis M. Rice Editor lit Kisteltd at the Po-toll'ice in Union. S. C. a- second clas. n-.attcr. I intra Building Main Street Bell Telephone No. 1 SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Tear $4 0') sa x Mont In 2 0') IT.ie Months 1.00 ADVERTISEMENTS One Square. first insertion. $1 00 Every subsequent Insertion 00 Obituary notices, Churclt and l.oditc notices and notices of public meetings, entei taiiiiii.-nta and Cards of Thanks will bCharyed for at the rate of one Cent a word, cash ac<-iiiipaliyin*; tb-- order. Count the wortls mill you wi I Know what the cost will be MEMBER Ol ASSOCIATED PJTESS I \ ociat- -I Pr- s Is exclusively entitle-l t the u e lot- republication of news I p.i- . r. |,t ,1 to it or not otherwise r-'-lit-.l in tin- paper, and a. <u the local it- \t - put.I.-bed therein FRIDAY, JULY 28. 1922. EM* all lilt* .urcm-ic.s Itfinir pniplttyetl ?. i....i .,.).. i. .. !... .hi ?...i |> """ *? '??; 'ac know "f n > siiiitle one that is doitur -uch effective, 1 ar-reachini' ami la<' ii ir ) <m.i1 i-- ii?*hit|.ii i> liy tin- county <,- :n?i*i. i r.ii ion work. The throe days' hoi? colll'Sc Mow iroinjir mi hero um 1**i the cliI'c-c-1icm of Miss Alalia!.i Sniilli ii.-siste<i by Mr. W. 11. ?oiI, is a revelation to many who iliii not know of this plend id work. What is rroiiiy < n here this week is liut a repetition, on a larger scale, >f cmirie, of tin* worl I eino done by Mi-s Smith and those who ate ad in this j^reat moveino'it, .n each community. The home demonstration work yets rieht down to the practical f<sfucs. The irirls are tauirht to cook, sew, culti vate trardens.j raise chickens and to carry on the detailed work of the home. Mr. Wood's field is a bit wbler, for lie deals with the farmer proper, teaching better methods, rotation of crops, soil buildr. tr. and lines lending in independence on the farm. T... vcorn of both Miss Smith and Mr. Wood is of null a nature that there is nothituj spectacular about it. but it is iroinjr to show up to yreat advantage hereafter. Indeed, it is already beginning to show up in marvelous decree. Those who criti< !<#? t 11?. fni-.vi i till Itnmn il.minnct enl Sm? work are but showing a great. lack of information. It is the greatest single agency at work toda> ?. out the country upon a sound economic bisis. The Times carried the foil?ir.ii news item yesterday that tells its c**~: tale: > Cheraw, July 20.?Th?> boll weevil " on over the Chesterfield county farmers this year. Since the rainy 1 pell ceased weevils have hatched out by the millions and bolls are dropping : o fas', that some farmers have ceased picking these up. Many have stopped burning them and are either throwing the bolls in water that has been covered with kerosene or are dumping them by the wagon load into the I'ee Dee river. We are reliably informed that practically every plow in Chesterfield county is equipped with tin- brush boll weevil destroyer. The farmers have not only lost the > . 00 each which they paid for these machine::, but depending on this to k<ep the holl weevils under eolltl'ol I I.e lost their entile cot Toll crop. I'll is is the machine that would have been largely sold in ITiion county had not i'-- worthb - ness been exposed by Mr Lowndes Browning. Mr. Browning has bei i) worth more to Union county in thi? one respect than bis v. hole -alary tor a year would have amounted to. He constantly warns the people against fads and worthless 11111i bines for exterminating the boll weevil and begs them to use the methods the government approves of. M-.n\ f.. 11.let in Union county have followed lii" instructions and those onl.l. I....I .< . I.... " i , - .. V. ??! ? I II.I\ III llil* J?<1 |Jl*I and 'A.tli this persistent work will iiiak? i fan l\ good clop of cotton. We hope they wi|| get large money for it Our cat says marking time may get vou further than marching. t Our cat says he hears tTiat the boll ! weevil is getting in his work. ! Our cat ays merciless judgment is' _ not just. 1 i - - - - i Our cat says deception is poor bus- r mess policy. Our cat says a full corn crib is a pood defense against the boll weevil. * Our cat says compromise with evil Lriiitfs fellowship therewith. * Our cat says he is delijrhted to note that the holes on Main street are to be patched up. Our cat says play fair or quit the pa me. Our cat says make promises carefully and keep them scrupulously. ? Our cat says Union county has an abundance of wood to meet the coal T strike. * m Our cut says every idol has feet of < lay. * i Our cat says lampant political heel- lus are useful only when an election 1 approaches. . . . j Honduras Building a New Motor Roads b A Tegucigalpa, Honduras, July 27.? <J The now motor highroad across Hon- ' duras from ocean to ocean will be I' finished .vithin three months. ' It runs from San Ijorenzo, on the r Pacific to Tegucigalpa 120 miles; (hen to fomayagua 102 miles; then to Siguatepeque 40 miles; then to ' Lake Vojoa 42 miles; then to Potre- 1 rillos 50 miles. v Work is also in progress on anoth- '' ' r highroad to unite San Pedro Sula.1" important city on the Atlantic coast, ' with the territory bordering on the ' Salvador frontier, a distance of about ^ a 200 miles. Several other roads for j * motor traffic in the interior have been | ' started j As there are no railroads in this i f country except on the Atlantic litto- s ral, all traffic is now changing from]'' the old fashioned ox-carts to motor 11 cars and trucks. 1 German Citizens r Compensated for War Loss e 1 Tegucigalpa, Honduias, July 27.? ' The government of Honduras has al- ' lotted to certain German merchants 1 resident, in the republic the sum of :I $120,000 to indemnify them for "losses :l suffered as a a result of the 'black v lists' and other measures taken dur- ' ing the war," in which Honduras sid- j ed with the Allies. 1 The comment of some portions of v the local press is ironical. "Why," v it is asked, "should the Allies compen- 1 sate German citizens for losses as a ' result of the war? Honduras has v many urgent local needs for all the v money it can spare." Some Dam?If They Dam It s The control of the Colorado river ' for power, flood prevention and irri- t gat ion is an intensely interesting I ^ problem that now absorbs public in- j,n tcrest in the southwest, says Herbert Hoover in The Nation's Business. t There is general agreement that a s gigantic storage dam shall be buil' probably at Boulder Canyon (or its continuation, Black Canyon) and that it should be built by the Federal government. This dam will serve several purposes; first, control of the flood waters, and thus remove the grave (nace of Imperial Valley; second, in crease in irrigation supply; third, relieve the strain upon title questions; fourth, supply large volume of power. < The Boulder Canyon dam ultimately! will be twice as high as any existing! dam and will hold l ack more water ! ? than any other, making a lake over! SO miles long. It will even the flow between n.OOO second-feet at low wa-! tcr and HaO.OOO fe?t at the spring freshet, and it will help even the flow I bit ween 0,000,000,000 acre-feet in! dry years and 25,000,000 in wet years. It will require nearly two years' flow ; ..I I ll/i rii'iic I / . 4.11 Ui , 1..I*- C . .4.. Ix.-U I "i in* iivvi iu mi in* icirvt' IU nr> m^Ji | level. I s -?-? j h Australian Boxers ; t Defeated in England J >' v London, .July 27. Throe Australian K boxers Albert Lloyd, (Jeorge Cook' ' and Frank Burns came to England,!'1 saw, and have been conquered; in fact, f so much so that they are ready to pack j e up for the long journey home. i L Filled with high expectations on the v basis of what they ha| heard about the! 1 lack of real boxers in the British Isles, i t? the trio of Australians came here and h found they were not nearly as pro- i >' ficient as they believed they were, j t< Then they met some English boxers r< and the facts were demonstrated. " Most English critics say Frank d Burns is the best of the trio. He was w defeated by Kid Lewis but Tie exhibit-; si id real pluck and undeveloped ability n that won him admirers. He is being iU urger to remain in England or to go, to the United States, where, assert the tl critics, every boxer should acquire the w * - l . ? . I niiismiijr uincncs 10 nis puginsuc etiu- tc cation. tl The most recent defeat of I.loyd, tl cruiser-weight championof the An'ije tl udes, was administered by Arthur ei Townley, who won on points. in Of the '22,000 criminals examined by [he superintendent of New York's date reformatories, only four were e< ollege graduates. Seven per cent in F i group of 1.000 prisoners had high w ichool education, 2.r? per cent had fin- m shed grammar school, and <14 per cent hi iad attended only primary grades. j hi Ga "fl 1 cigarettes 11)^^ s They are ? GOOD! in< ' coi loi Bay this Cigarette and Save Money t ? . er urKisn deportation Methods Described J'" By Witnesses London, July 27.?Two American of clicf workers, J. H. Knapp and Miss an 5. Banncrman Munlock, who have ar- th ived in Constantinople from Arab- Vi ir where they have been organizing Gi elief among refugees, gave further T1 etails of the deportations of Greeks re nd Armenians described previously je< y Major Yowell and Dr. Mark Ward, trabkir is in the interior of Anatolia, ce 0 miles west-northwest of Kharput. to hey estimate that 10,000 departees lei assed through Arabkir between July b^ 921 and March 1922. The signed eport given by them to the British of irmenia Committee reads as follows: ra "Beginning in July 1921 the first th list aliment of 000 deportees of Greek ag nen of military age arrived. They se cere all from the Konia district. One lei iitndrcd and fifty of these were Ar- to nenians, and were sent on to Egin. Jie balance were Greeks. About no of these remained in Arabkir, Li nd the balance were sent on to the 1,41 vharput and Diarbekir districts ""hen came an instalment of about 50 to 200 deportees, mostly Greeks, SP rom the Ordu district. There was 30 ometimes a man with his whole fam- be ly, but generally women without any Pr nale members of the family with W) hem, and children. "To a large portion of these it was t? lecessary for us to furnish bread very day for the whole winter. ["here was another group of about u' 00 men over 50 years old; some ap eared to be 90 years old. These re- Ps nained a few weeks and then all but l few were sent on to the Kharput ilea. A large drove of over 1,000 vas the next installment to arrive in e<^ Vrabkir in the late fall. They were C1 icrded on a hill above the city with- ^ n 200 yards of a running ditch of vater. They were not allowed to get nc vater from this ditch, but were com- er >elled to buy it from vendors. On a hi >leak, cold morning a few days after- n vards they were started on their P? vay towards Kharput. It was a sight hat one can never forget, to see mid- ^ lie-aged and old women and men, to crl ;ay nothing of the younger women ^ md children, carrying on their backs arge loads of bedding, food and fagrots, and in their hands pots and settles, and perched upon their load G< i child. m "Many of these were destined never wi 0 reach their destination, as the at torm which was brewing in the early be tunning on the mountains soon de- wl 'eloped into a blizzard and the roads nr vore left strewn with dead bodies. ori ,'hese things were personally seen by th is, and in visiting one of the Ar- wl nenian buildings where those who Jei cere unable to go on were left be- bli 1 i tic I, we discovered several dead iodies on the floor and a number of us ther persons dying, with their chil- n' Iren hanging over them. These or cenes were only examples of many thers which we witnessed during the ar leportations. Many of the women bi i-ere unable to carry their children long, and were obliged to leave them n the roadside. We took into our ,ni rphanage about 20 of these children, nd several of them were unable to w' urvive the starvation and exposure ^1" hey had undergone prior to reach- c0 ng Arabkir. w' "Personally I visited in Kharput to everal hospitals that were full of undreds of Greek deportees, ill with ! ?^ ypnus, and from one hospital it was eported that as many as 20 a day /ere carried to the cemetery Tlie 4 tories of robberies and extoi t-ons ar old us by the deportees were nJlost universal. We were convinced rom the policy of the Turkish gov- 'a rnment in forwarding these deporees to other places 011 days when the ,eat her was extremely severe, that ^ heir intention was to subject them [> such exposure that they would j' erish. Their policy of giving two ations of bread a day to the deporL*es who were working on their ' uads, whiih was insufficient for their ' . Pj< ourishment, and then cutting it J own when they showed signs of j ^j( eakness to one ration, showed that ^ low starvation was also another I ^ lethod for accomplishing their ox- ^ rminat ion. "On our way from Arabkir, 5^ trough Kharput, Diabekir and Urfa, e encountered these Oreek depor>es in every village and city, and tousands of them were at work on no' to road. Personally, we examined. 'll< ic rolls of deportees to whom Am ieans were giving bread every day Kharput, and the number averaged KO\ r>oo." thr not Pipin made ot paper by an improv- am 1 process is the invention of a ant renehman. This piping Is made by mo inding paper in a very tight man- nut r?r together with the use of an ad- ing esive compound. It is almost un- to reakable and very light. nnt .ndhi is Well Treated In British Jail Bombay, July 27.?That Mahatma ndhi has been receiving every posile consideration from the authoris of the Sabarnuiti jail, where he is ilined, is evident from the reports the many friends who have visited 11 there. Gandhi spends at least if an hour each day In spinning, d is devoting his villaining energy literary work. He is allowed to ve his own food brought to him. iafs niilk, toast, oranges and rails constitute his usual diet. One who visited Gandhi In jail reatly describes his life there as folvs: "Ever since his arrest, the authori>s have been very kind and considate. They place no restrictions on terviews, but grant as many as it is ssible to arrange for. At these inrviews, either the superintendent or e jailer is present. "Gandhi sits in the veranda in front his cell with a quilt on the floor id with two pillows at his back, in e same style as in his own home. sitors are taken inside the jail, and indhi receives them in his veranda, ley discuss all sort of questions, r.o strictions being made as to the subcts for conversation. "The Mahatma is allowed t > reive all his letters, and even to replv them, with the condition that the tters are countersigned and pas e l ' the superintendent. "The prisoner's usual food consists goats's milk, toast, oranges and isins. These are brought to him ree times a day. Several months [o Gandhi made a vow not to take his cond meal without spinning for at ast half an hour. He has been able observe this, even while in jail. "I was really surprised to see the .^JL*ss he has mado In spinning, ist year, when he was in the Punjab, was a mere *iovice, hardly turning t yarn of five counts. But now he s impro.ed so much that he not only ins faster but the yarn is of 25 to i counts. I do not think there will any difficulty for the government in oviding him the simple food he ants, as it will not cost the authori;s any more than they are prepared spend on an ordinary prisoner. "One noticeable fact was that at no me did he break any of the jail regations. If he is treated lifferently. is not due to any request on his irt, but due rather to the initiative the authorities themselves, who are try courteous and anxious to oblige. "He was always cheerful, and lookI upon his arrest as a matter for cat rejoicing to the country. To all lestions as to what would happen in e future, he gave the answer that. >n-co-operation, if carried on proply, was hound to succeed. "Gandhi intends to devote much of r time to writing about his past exigences. He may even write an uubiography. His immediate task in is line is the writing of a pamphlet i the movement in South Africa." roundcd at Walter Reed Hospital Washington, July 27.?Walter Reed sneral Hospital, here, at which so any Muuiiui-u veterans or tnc world ir hnve been restored to health, and which there are still many patients, iats of the strangest rosters in the hole army service. It is a list of en, hospital attendants, who are not ly willing, but anvious, to give of eir blood to those of thrtr comrades ho can be cured only by having incted in their veins the healthy red ood of a strong man. ' There is a long list of these men, ually not less than 50, who have sighed their willingness to give a pint more of their rich blood to rengthen weakening soldier patients, id hardly a day passes, doctors say. it what there is a call for a trans sion. When the physicians decide an ailg patient is in need of new blood, a ecimcn of his is tested to determine hich of the four classes of human ood he posseses. The test is then mpaivd with those of the listed men, ho,have been previously examined. find one that "matches" the paint's. There are usually a number each type on the list and the transsion is quickly accomplished. The men who volunteer for the larity are chosen among the clerks, nbulance drivers, special police, and hers on active duty at the hospital Nthe five hundred men there, it is id, more than half have given blood Although elsewhere there Is always high premium paid to the donor of ood for transfusion, these men ask r no payment, their only reward is ten days' leave to recuperate, for e .operation, especially if more than pint is given, is very weakening on e system. For that reason only the rongest and healthiest men are ?ked. No man is permitted to (five his >od twice within two months, but as ten as there are calls for the service, ere are always plenty of volunteers keep the list full. ate Orchestra To be Disbanded Sydney, N. S. W., June 14?Anincement of the impending dissoion of the State orchestra has own the New South Wales musiworld into consternation. The remount has given the musicians ee months notice following the anincement that the deficit last year ounted to approximately $50,000 I that the annual expenses were re than $100,000. The pleas of sic-lovers to the government aska reconsideration of the decision abolish the orchestra havo been ivailing thus far. State Campaign Meetings s Manning, Saturday, July 29. Canulen, Monday, July 31. Lancaster, Tuesday, August 1. York, Wednesday, August 2. Winnsboro, Thursday, August 3. Chester, Friday, August 4. Union, Saturday, August 5. Rest eight days. Newberry, Monday,, August 14. Greenwood, Tuesday, August 15. Laurens, Wednesday, August 10. Abbeville, Thursday, August 17. MeCormick, Friday, August 18. Anderson, Saturday, August 19. Walhalla, Monday, August 21. Pickens, Tuesday, August 22. Greenville, Wednesday, August 23. GafTney, Thursday, August 24. Spartanburg, Friday. August 25. Palm Beach Suits Cleaned We can clean and press your Palm Beach suit very quickly these days. We have the I equipment and the know how. I Give me a trial. Will appre- | ciate it as much or more than any one else. Phone 167 and we will call promptly and return your suit looking like new. Htames Pressing & Repair Shop Nicholson Bank Bldg. Phone 169 and motor cycle will call. ALL KINDS OF CEMETERY WORK Union Marble & Granite Co. Main St. Union, S. C. American Legion Notes New Orleans, July 28.?New Orleans will be a center of national interest during the American Legion national convention, October 16 to 21. as a result of the presence of numer-" ous famous political and military leaders. President Harding has written convention headquarters that he will attend if the pressure oi public affairs does not interfere. A similar rreply ' has hen received from General John J. Pershing, who led the Legion men in France, and who met with' thefff in Kansas City las afll. Major General John A. ijfjeune.t commandant of the United States Marine corps and a former resfclertt Iff ; New Orleans, has definitely accepted the convention invitation. During the ])lgf woplf nnntrpnf IA*> - v W..TVUWIVII uvuui^uai ici' has been ndvised that SamueFGompers, president of the Amerieirir^ Federation of Labor, and Knesaw Mountain Landis, high commisslone^'of organized baseball, will be among the distinguished guests. Within the next few weeks, the Legion expects to receive word that a number of distinguished world war leaders of allied power will come to New Orleans. The convention committee hopes to entertain more notables than the convention In Kansas City last year which was attended by M:.i : h;.l Foch, General Diaz, General Jacques, Admiral Beatty, General Pershing and Vice-president Coolidgc. Honduras to Establish National Bank Tegucigalpa, Honduras, July 27 ? The total revenues of the repub'ic of Honduras will for the present be colic :ea, and the outgo expended, by ?he Banco de Hcndmas, a prt 'ate banking institution which thus he conn s the f.o\'ernine.U's exclusive fir.ancal agent. The revenues amount to $10,000,000 yearly. The bank will open a government crdeit of $500,000. Subsequently a national bank of the requblic will be creat.nl and will absorb the Banco de Honduras. All directors and officers of the new oi- , ganizations must be Honuuranean citizens. SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS PIGS KOR SALE?Duroc-Je.sey pit?5?entitled to registration; all ages. Price $5.00. M. E. Pittman, Carlisle, S. C. I'OU SALE- Unknown, Clay, Iron, Brabham and mixed peas, O-too tan, Biloxi and Mammoth Yellow Soya beans and other farm seeds. Write me for anything wanted in the seed line. J. L. Calvert, Jonesville, S. C. 1416-tf SPECIAL SATURDAY SALE?Bran and shorts, $1.50; corn meal, per bushel, $1.15; Lu/.ianne colFee, per can, 25c, Libby's baby evap. milk, per can, 5c, pure apple, and while wine vinegar, in bulk, per gallon, 50c; Sunbrite cleanser 3 cans for 25c; all 20c package crackers, 1 fic; ^ Reynolds sun-cured tobacco, regular 25c plug for 15c; Brown & Williamson sun-cured tobacco, regular 25c plub for 15c; Missing Link tobacco, j regular 25c plug, 15c. Cash and you carry. No charge, no delivery. Saturday only. Harris-Woodward Co. FOR SALE?One Lexington touring car; perfect mechanical condition; cheap. Hughes Garage. 1439-5t MONEY TO LOAN on city or country f property in large amounts on easy terms. S. E. Barron. 1400-tf HERE COMES THE STEAM ROUER Of % C I HOUSE OF SAT H. ^ l^l ^l J K I ra&jSSLs y I of Green Stu B^ n%XjX I Feed Leaves 1 l||iuvl/ Run Down the Spring. Renew.the health, strength and vit hogs and poultry, (let maximum 1 duct ion. Spring is the time for re: care for your worn out and sick livi I They restore health, oring back production. There is a specific Ct ablest veterinarians lor each live A Few Special 4 For Spri \ horses, mules and 1 Caro-Vet Hwin WMbWBBi I der, price 23e. ?KSHWmJrguMMj 1 Caro-Vet Eg^> I Caro-Vet Tonic 1 aml cattle, price S Sold by general stores and dru I of satisfactory results, or money re C plete line of Caro-Vet Remedies. B We aro sending TREE to eac ? 48 pages "Farmers' Veterinary ( Bj and tells how to treat live stock d I CAROLINA REMEDIES CO, LO! Fonnd,?that glorious frellnr that ronnw with a clear, pure, ruddy comnlexlou. VE WILL SERVE A BARBECUE at City I'ark on State Campaign day, August 5th. J. I). and A. T. Charles. 7-21-a8pd 'OR RENT?Downstairs apartments, furnished beautifully throughout, ull modern conveniences, hot an I cold water, built-in closets, garage, f.u v.l.irt (mil nl/io 11 in A nr\l.. #.? Tim I K,o'ui ii <11111 tiuoc v iw ?ii* Wonder Store or Mrs. S. Krusse. ' 1430-Fri-t# 'OR SALE?Lookout Mountain and Peach Blow See Irish Potatoes. J, L. Calvert, Jonesville, S. C. 1416-lf We don't care a str; does?we're not going hat of ours over. Out they go-?in y 33 1-3 per cent savin were never made to be like this. All sizes, 6 3-4 to as but don't take this seri once, shoot while the w fl?r AA O. IV - ?o.uu straw flats now $4.00 Straw Hats now $3.00 Straw Hats now $2.00 Straw Hats now $1.50 Straw Hats now SEE OUR J. Colt " j *? 1 r nrpn aiitoi I MKAWd! )FF iw what anybody else to carry a single straw ou come?-for a fine j g on straw hats that 5 embarrassed in a sale | ? big as heads grow? ously? investigate at reather is here. ^ . . $3.35 $2.65 $2.00 $1.35 .$1.00 WINDOWS V en Co. ... n ISFACTION. f t. A' tttB ,|P k- i E and Ab8enoeA A . Live Stock in V x ' Condition in v I^VkLffy -* * ymm ality of your'hofsos, mules. cattle, results in healtli, growth and pro* iicwnl in ull nature. You can best eTitock by using Remedies vigor and strength, and increase iro-Vet treatment -prepared by the stock disease and disorder. Remedies it ion Powder tor J ffK ;'** yjjL B for horses, rWhtos gj g stores, under a positive guarantee ffi rnnil^ V 1 --I S-- - " a uuuuu. i uui urttiri currios u CUIU* f h farmer an authoritative, book xof Initio", which gives the symptoms iscascs. Ask fob yoirr copy. , Inc., Mfgrs., UNION, S. 0. ST! 250 Pimples, 736 Blackheads and 3 Boils! No reward Is offered, because they nre lost foreverl No-tjuestlon will be asked, except one question, "How did you lose them?" There Is but one answer,?"I cut out new fad treatments and guesswork; 1 used one of the most powerful blood-cleansers, blood-purlflers and f 1 e s h-builders 'known, and that Is 8. 8. S.! Now my face is pinkish, my skin clear as a rose, my cheeks aro filled out and my rheumatism, too, is gone!" This will bo your experience, too. If you try 8. B. 8. It is guaranteed to be P"j^ly vegetable in'all its remarkably Mctin a m Ail Inino I I n otpa/1 lonto Q VCI means a. now history for you from Cow oh! H. 8. H. is sold at all drug stores In two sizes. The larger size la the morn economical. MONEY TO LEND on real estate for clients. J. K. Hamblin. Fri.-tf FOR RENT?Rooms for light housekeeping. Air modern conveniences. Price reasonable, tall at No. 101 South Street, Union, S. C. 1441-tf H. W. EDGAR Undertaking Parlore Calls answered day and night Prompt and Efficient Service Day Phone 129?Night Phone Sit i. I v>