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" Goot new tir ?lowest cost Will The new base line tin Goodrich, effective Jul1 definite guide to tire p ill4** tllP rlofinif-A ? MVtAtUtV oiauuai know now they can b the one quality Silver! always held its leaden * longer, looks better, an sidered, it costs less tha price. Dealers have bee their customers the big i of buying Sitvertov at such base line prices CTvp BASE LINE 5JIZ.B PRICE 30 x 3$ CL $13.50 31x3.85 CI. 15.95 30 x 3$ S. B. 15.95 32 x 3t " 22.95 31x4 w 26.45 32x4 w 29.15 33 x 4 " 30.05 New base line prices Goodrich F I QiTp BASE LTNE I PRICB 30 x 3 "55" $9.65 30 x 3} "55" 10.65 fr 32 x 3j (ggjr^V) 16.30 No extra charge for excise tax. See your dealer, and p for your Goodrich THE B. F. GOODRICH STLVERTOWN CORDS FABRK - ?mmmmmm?mmm ?- 1 1 The differs is small-th in quality, "Good to tl rrc: U.S. V'i "J "i I gMm Our Ple< Thri) Whoever will prove to i fastly?shall have our ste he undertakes. There is nothing within t will not do to help really ti * offers to you the full Impersonal plans and ambition k "Large Enough to Serve Any? V. cni2 : NAT ION A I I x Swedish Food Profiteers Get Warning Stockholm, July 28.?The profits of the Swedish middleman, dealing in necessities, especially foad supplies, are menaced as the result of the investigation into living costs by a commission of experts appointed by the Swedish government. The com'mission sought information on intermediary profits and their influence on diving costs with a view t oeliminatunnecessary profits, thus cutting down Cetail prices, and has just is suea us report, u ihukcs some mastic recommendations. Official action is expected. The cbmmission recommends a reduction in U>e number of retail stores; that' a permanent national statistical bureau be organized by the Social Hbtfrd to study producers prices, arid that local commissions be appointed throughout the country to check up on price movements. It is suggested that the theory of cooperative work be introduced in suitable schools as h compulsory subject of study, and emphasizes the importance of closer cooperation between producer and consumer. - * * . The commission criticizes the railI f .. ? itich e prices kagc ever known e prices established by y 20th, give motorists a rices as Goodrich Tires :d of Tire quality. They uy the very best tire? :own?the tire that has sbip because ? it wears d because, mileage conn any other tire at any *n quick to point out to ldvantage and economy p r l vnvjurub ? as these: SIZE DApS1f1^NB 34 x 4 S. B. $3045 32 x 4i u 37.70 33 x 4: f M 3835 34 x 4; M 39.50 35 x 4| u 40.70 33x5 " 46.95 35 x 5 u 49.30 are also effective on abric Tires Size base link price 32 x 4 (aSfStV) $21.20 33 x 4 44 22.35 34 x 4 " 22.85 This tax is paid by Goodrich lace your order NOW tire requirements. RUBBER CO., Akron, Ohio ?3 tubes accessories i. nee in price le difference $reat. le last drop" p PAT. OFP. Jge to Hy Folks is his ability to save steadadfast support in anything he bounds of reason that we hrifty folks. And this pledge ^ King of tnis bunk?in your ~ 1L -Strong Enough to Protect All." :e:.N1v3 L, E> A N road administration and the munici pal authorities of Swedish cities foi l J having neglected in many instances 1 , to heed popular demand for suitable and economic organization of the distribution and transport of commodities. The price policies of breweries are especially criticized, while the price of bread is declared to be high, and the profits made by bakers entirely too great. Famous St. Paul's In Need of Repair London, July 28.--rSt. Paul's Cathedral, the famous Valhalla of the British Empire and the masterpiece of Sir Christopher Wren, architect, is subject to the ravages of time. Certain repair and reconstruction work is imperative to save the buildi ing from possible collapse, and 100,i 000 pounds is being sought to pay , the bill. ^ TV*** IT mo/la ??v auwicnt vvuihb of cork. , m ' The average agricultural production p?r capital each year in the United States is $300. In Montana the avercge is $700 for every man, wo. 1 and child in the state. Concerning Eels Washington, July 25 (By the Associated Press).?The common, everyday, niudhole eel, the problem of fish- * ermen, especially the small boy, when ' it comes to taking him off a hook, is 1 an elusive subject, but his life history ! typifies one of the marvels of the sea, i and recent announcements have added 1 to his reputation. Reports have just reached here of ? the success of a Danish expedition to < the Bermudas, in answering the an- ' cient question of the eel's origin, s Headed by Dr. Jobs. Schmidt, direc- < tor of the Carlsberg Laboratory, of < Copenhagan, the party, on the ship 1 Dana, has been searching the seas for 1 seven months to find where the eei ' breeds and is hatched. As the eel in- 1 dustry is of prime importance in Den- < mark, the party was equipped by the 11 government and several societies in 1 conjunction. Dr. Schmidt has been i making a special study of the eel for 1 moije than 15 years. 1 Since at least 350 B. C. scientists have been trying to find the eel'b r birthplace, and by tracking down the 1 route found taken by the young eels. v Dr. Schmidt placed the breeding ^ grounds between th Bermudas and the 11 Leeward Islands, where the seu 0 reaches a depth of more than a mile.' Here the most rem?rW?til? I f try was made: That the European s species and the American, which vary ( 11 so slightly as to bo almost negligible,! v and absolutely so to the layman, breed: s side by side and eventually start for 1 their later homes, thousands of miles ? away, but that neither variety evei goes to the other's fresh water * grounds. P The marvel is, to scientists, accord- r ing to Dr. H. F. Moore, deputy commissioner of the U. S. Bureau of A Fisheries, that of the millions of young making the trips, instances of discovery of the European species in American waters, and vice versa, have been exceedingly rare. And there is A no interbreeding between the two. ji The European species,* Dr. Schmidt 2 found, deposit their eggs and greed m F a section to the south and east of the tl Bermudas, while the other breeds to B the south and west of the islands. f< The first make a thre year migration S to the shores of Europe from the o North Sea to Italy, while the second ti journey to the American coast from u New England to the south coast, tak- A ing only a few months or a year. o: It was found that the eggs are hatched at depths of about 200 metres, d the young larvae gradually rising as tl they grow until some were found on a the surface. It is also true that the S larvae vary their depth in the water li according to the time of day. At this tl stage, and until they reach coast wa- y teds, they are known as "leptocepha- g lide" and are ribbon or leaf-shaped jc and quite transparent; so transpar- ti ent, in fact that under a lens the ver- 0 tebrae may be tounted, the olny means of determining the species. The Eu- v ropean variety, it was found, have more vertebrae than the American. The translucent quality is believed ^ to be a means of avoiding peril, as the r leptocephalus is found In schools a along the coast line in spring and must undoubtedly form a food for larger fish. As they approach sl\oai brackish water there comes a marveleus metamorphosis, they change from r the ribbon shape to the cylindrical familiar form, but are still trans- ^ parent. They become much thicker and are even shorter than before. t| They gradually assume light lines of pigment, though remaining translu- ^ cent for some time, and as the pigment increases the dark color becomes y more and more apparent until they ere of the familiar color. In this connection is pointed out ^ the immense trip the leptocephalide make, those journeying to European j waters being three years on the way, ^ so that, according tc Dr. Schmidt, there are always two migrations on the way, and in early spring, three, before the first reach shore. As it is ^ not until brackish water is reached ^ that the metamorphosis occurs, the question that still puzzles scientists ^ is whether the American species matures more rapidly than the other, or ^ whether the change of water is nec essary for the change from lptocep- * halus to elver, as the young eel is . known. This eel is the same as that cougbt in far inland ponds and muddy streams, and makes a wonderful jour- ? ney to arrive there. They can live for long periods 1 out of water, as is well known among fishermen, and sometimes * travel overland, from .stream to * stream, or up tha faces of dams and ulong the sides of rocks, in search of sufficient water. It is said the male 1 remains along the coastal waters 8 while the female makes the inland C trip. The three or four inch elvers may easily be picked from the faces * cf dams or other obstructions as they climb, after a fashion of clinging un- c der the water film, to the rocks. They live for years in fresh water, 4 the period being variously placed at 8 from five years to as many as 20 and * 30 as estimated by the Englishman, O. * Tate Regan. In the fall, the mature ^ eels journey back to the sea, the males then being from 12 to 18 inches in length, and the females never less r than 18. At the original breeding f places it is believed they spawn and t die, as they are never seen again. * It is during this fall trip the eels ^ fall prey to fishermen, who reap a good harvest as they are a prime food ^ fish. While not so highly prized in * this country, in Europe they are considerable exceedingly high from the fc North Sea to Italy, and the Danish t And Holland industries are of especial c importance in those countries. The fish are caught in traps similar to lobiter pots or rat traps, entering a nar- r / row funnel mouth after the bait, and 4 being unable to find the outlet. < It is estimated by the Bureau of Fisheries the eeljcat^h in this coun- * try is more tlmn.tnjree t^nd a half mil- i lion pounds annually, valued at more i than a quarter of a million dollars. ? Most American commercial eel fish- 4 ing is along the Atlantic from New Kngland to the Chesapeake. While it is not generally known, the 4 eel has scales, which develop after < he elver has lived a year in fresh < ivater. They are embedded in the 4 .limy skin arrangd in little groups set bliquely and at right angles to each } >ther. They may be studied under a) *<] ens and form a mean? of determining ^ he age of the fish, as they are marked ? n zones which correspond to growth ^ ings. Scales are formed In the midHe of the side and if examined in the } ;pring the number of the zones will orrespond to the age of the scale. The ^ el is then one year older for the ? irst year in fresh water, and another ^ or his life as a leptocephalus. Jj By applying thia method a Danish J laturalist, Dr. Clemzoe, has shown | hat some eels captured in the fall rere as old as 1'2 and 12 years, and legan estimates others weighing a nuch as 27 pounds must have been 20 r 30 years or more." | These species should not be con- j used with the lamprey eel, Dr. Moore aid, which is equipped with u sucker T nouth and many sharp teeth with t'hich it attaches itself to other lish, ometimes wounding them deeply. J 'hey even attack large fish, animais ^ nd humans, it is said. *ji Dr. Schmidt's expedition is now on he return to Denmark, where it is exlected, his discoveries, and the other esults will shortly be announced. ] . ~*r?? 5 American Bar Association i To Meet in San Francisco 1 t] San Francisco, July 27.? (By the J .ssoeiated Press).?Lawyers and < adges to the number of more than ,000 are expected to come to San rancisco early in August to attend le 1922 convention of the American ? !ar Association, the National Con- ^ srence of Commissioners on Uniform Jj tate Laws and the annual meeting ^ f the California State Bar Associa- 2 on. The commissioners meet Augst 2-9, the state body convenes I? ugust 7 and the national association i n August 9-12. ? Several noted speakers are to ad- 1 less the organizations, names on ^ le programs including William How- ^ rd Taft, chief justice of the United ^ tates; Vice President Calvin Coodge; Chief Justice Lucien Shaw of J le California Supreme Court; Geo. I. Wickersham, former attorney- ^ eneral; Cordenio A. Severance. nrps. , x- ^ lent of the American Bar Associa- +4 on, and Governor Henry J. Allen <2 f Kansas. It is hoped that Elihu ^ :oot, former secretary of state, also? ? ... , bol nil speak. Addresses are also to be biade wo distinguished visitors, the I Ion. Lord Shaw of Dunfermline, r? firg in esenting the bar of Great Britt nd M. Henri Aubepin, representii _ lie bar of Paris. . Two committee reports, in which . great deal of interest is being takn, will be presented. One is the * eport of the committee on promo- 4 ion of American ideals, which will 4 e presented by Martin J. Wade, of 4 jwa. The other is the report of le committee on law enforcement, resented by W. B. Swaney of Ten- ' assee. 4 /hat do You Put in Your Job? ( Every man or woman who works as three marketable assets?brain ower, muscle power and good will. < le can put his head, his arm and his 4 eart on the job. Ordinarily when an 4 mployer bids for his services, the rice fixed covers only the worker's rain and his brawn. His good will is ither taken for granted or left out or onsideiation. . Of late years we have heard a great leal about standardizing and ellicien- Jl y. Routing of work r.as been ^ irought to an exact science. Time ^ locks and checking devices of van- \ us kinds have been invented to elim- j nate the evils of waste, carelessness, ardiness, etc. Rut in spite- of all the f tficiency and mechanical experts, the J rreat fact remains that the laboring ^ lasses are in many places as dissatsfied as ever, and there is still an an. j lual loss caued by this dissatisfaction ?S lossibly sufficient to more than take J are of the debt incurred by this coun- Jj ry as a result of the great war. Certainly improved machinery and fficient management in and out of the *4 hops are going to continue to devel- ? ip, but the real economy of the future J ?t,he kipd that will carry an organi- J :ation to the highest success?is the dnd that conies from the heartfelt le^ire on the part of each individual * o do his level best for the firm that ? impious him. Such a feeling is in- 4 piled only through confidence and i cood will. It manifests itself only vhen the \yorker's heart is in sympahy with his arm and his head.?The ' Cation's Business. < hjinety per cent of 753 farmers, who eplied to a questionnaire In the eastrn states, consider time saved to be he .greatest advantage received from ^ he use of p&otor trucks. .Nearly one- ^ ourth of ^hese farmers are now sellng at better markets than before they j iad motor trucks. \ ? Loey*t? are appearing in such nuni- ?S iers in .parts, of Spain that they stop J rains, and government aid is being J nlisted against them. j ? i At Vassar College the cooks are nen and the teachers are women. ^ I THE WC 1 Final Cl< [ ?AN 1 Dollar Dj I Begins Wednesday ; a--??a ^- s nuyuSI?QQ | HERE IS ANOTHER AND MONEY ON SEASONABLE AND 1 DEPENDABLE MERCHANDISE. REMEMBER! YOU HAVE 10 I SHOULD ATTEND EVERY ONE ( A FEW OF THE BARGAINS ; SPACE DOES NOT PERMIT THE i I DRESSES, COATS, CA \ 1 AND ? B Not a single garment shall be I season, and we must clean t ? | our entire Hi 2 of Summer * | Dresses at HA $ 9 Lad-Lassie Cloth The well known cloth that needs no f Introduction or description; 28-inch, f fast washable colors, regular 25c value, ^ Dollar Day Special 5 yards $1.00 | I Dress Ginghams Fifteen cent quality Ginghams in a < large variety of nice patterns, Dollar j the Forest there-wms swr tl* "| AA 4 rain and wind, but.no hail. We I J_ UU from reports coming in that n $ damage has been done the crops in l ious sections of the county. Union there was a severe wind J dust storm, but almost no rain. n? 30 to 40-in. ^ wide, in a great variety of colors, forV merly sold up to $1.50 a yard, very special, 2 yards $1.00 ? Voile f* la., j-.-i . >iic 4unuiy uutk ana ugtit patterns, 36 to 40-in. wide, values up to 50c, Dollar Day Special, 5 yards (T* "fl i\i\ for tiUiUU Shirt Waists In White, plain and corded Voiles, trimmed?some with hand-drawn work, some with filet or val lace, circular and large shawl collars, long and short sleeves, worth $1.50, Dollar 1 AA Day special V Ladies' Hats A special assortment of trimmed hats, values up to $3.50, Dollar (I?"| AA * Day special tP A?UU > Skirts * AA OFF on all skirts priced i A?UU from $3.50 up. \ Night Gowns made of standard count White and I Pink Nainsook with embroidery design, > handsome colors, Dollar Day d* ~t AA special, 2 garments for . . . I WE SELL DEPENDABLI PRICES LOWER TE CTADC BUT Cftl \ 1? dlimLi? UU1 I UJ The W S. KRASS, Prop. )NDER'S | sarance1 D- j: iys Sale | ama&a&M-'SE* V Ends Saturday X August 12th V BIGGER EVENT FOR THE *:* rHRIFTY SHOPPER TO SAVE I V SHOPPING DAYS AND YOU )F THEM. ARE HERE ENUMERATED, ? LISTING OF THEM ALL: ? pes i | coat suits at half price | X i carried over for the next X hem out. Your choice of Coats, Capes, Suits and X IF PRICE. f _ v ttUKW Mil H a?? ?? - ^ Petticoats Mnd?: of soft finished Nainsook, deep under raffle, 6-inch embroidery rulfle, asserted designs, Dollar Day J?L special, 2 for l.UU * ?.?_?: | Umbrellas v V . . ^ and durable, fast color black ^ cloth, 7-rib steel frame, assorted handle:., for won-en and men, Dollr..Dy ."pecia' $1.00 t Men's and Boys Caps ? Made of Wool Suiting, dark patterns, pleated ha.k, very latest model, worth $1.00, Dollar Day special 00 ^ . _. i v Underwear v Men' Shirts and Drawers made of fine small chccli Nainsook, sleeveless % rhirt ai d knee draws, 50c values, very ?*? rpecial 3 garments d* "t AM for tJl*"" % Shoes and Pumps ? Patent Leather 1 strap Pumps, for- V* roerly rolci at $3.98, O ^ '' $1.00 off, sale ^ PjltOIlt I O ^ J 1 k'teb le ' *" * " D - - - ?* - v.i ? i/i.v .>n o i> i v> formerly sold at $4.49, WjO i (\ **> $1.00 off, sale b ?/ While Ca ivas Shoe- formerly sold ? up to $3.00, sale d? t at ?l.lKl J*A A Felt Bed room Slippers with ribbon t , + + trimming; colors pink, blue, cherry and J toupe, all sires, worth $1.50 d* *| A A Dollar Day special -* VF\/ White Strap Canvas Pumps, rub- ?* ber sole and heel, worth d* i"W\ $1.50, Dollar Day Sperial . M UU <* * HMBMBW3 mm smmmmmmmt.'smmmmamut+vimn p iiJirnr<iiiin\inr inn I .X t iMimnANUlM A i | | IAN ANY OTHER | I CASH ONLY, 11 briefer j UNION, S. C. |