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ill UNION COCA-COLA BOTT Jp?f 'hh ? mm ??! .^r awt r'tiTwwtaiaM 1 ^ ?3 itjr \ A 7HEN the final call c * V of the family, it is /jjrju memorial service in which he paid and faith in the la fcyj expressed. SS At such a time, those wh strain of parting must be re fiSJ of arrangement. Furtherm ZS men's arc to l>e perfect, the 1 ighly Uaincd and expcrier fjl There is a funeral director i who, possessing this skill, rt/C that lie is called upon for so professional service?that respon Ability is to carry in the spirit of a lal JuR Reproduced by permission of 7 ke sTl panyf rom a copyrighted message Saturday Evening I'ost of July 2y | BAILEY UNDER! iyjjy English Renatssante Dottier. Symbol < fPHy Message number tuehe. Cofiyrij Islanders by Thousands j Pri Flock to tho Homo e\f I Mycasle-HeAlstl^,, . E San Juan, P. R., Aug. 10.?Extra ypa policemen have been detailed for ,r)^ duty at San Lorenzo to help hand.e Cap the crowds drawn there from Wei- vt,s nesday night to late Friday eaen week by the stories of apparent cures by teni Julita Vazquez, the "heaier of San nijs Lorenzo." jjjj Hundreds, if not thousands, of au- Qjtoir.obiles carrying the sick, lame ( and curiuos have been visiting San f Lorenzo and so great have been the pr.< liufl'ic jams that there have been ,.jj, complaints to the police that the San j(_ur Lorenzo road was impassable. On cre| Thursday, July 20, there was ji line \j(Hj of motors two miles long on each { . side of the roadway waiting for peo- s pie who are rapidly wearing into a one broad train the cow path that leads bla< up the steep hills to the spring from con which the supposedly healing waters snu t ome. a f Thousands go by motor to the his "healer" and more thousands on font. Ion. , ? ? ? From Caguas and other nearby towns left there has sprung up a regular motor T service to and from the place of ceh "miracles." People go by truck loads, at t '1 hey go in carriages, carts and some woi are carried. Stories of "miracles" in i are spread with wonderful rapidity othi through the crowd each day, and C there are reports of people coming tha from Santo Domingo or the Virgin nah Islands to get the waters blessed by ?T the "healer." Some make a fiesta of it; others are almost i*everential. *u' The healing spring is about a mile from the town where the "healer" lives. Near the spring a palmi uvered puvilliou sheltering 400 to wjjj ;>00 people has been erected. There q Thursdays and Fridays the healer ;-i:s in a chair on a raised platform pu. and receives the sick. Waters from ^ j the spring lack healing qualities un- pur til she has blessed or magnetized rp them. After being blessed the water jn ^ is carried away in bottles, buckets, js ( oil cans, anything. And each person ^ea| the 'healer" sees is ^old to bathe, rub , the . fUL'ted portion of the body with ?j. the water, or drink so much of it at tjnn certain times. Frequently the 'healer" is aroused from her trances with great difficulty. Her father and a brother assist her. ?r Her "power" is supposed to have rne been passed on to her, while the j.jn spring waters for many years have been reputed to have healing qualiticj. .ii v.as about two months ago <j that the 'healer" first attracted at- j>al tention. Since then her fame has spread throughout the island. j^ul Advertise in The Times ,n j SUNBURN .2 Apply Vlckfl tightly ?it soothes the tortured 1 VSCKS VapoRijb s" Uvr I7 Million Jars L'tau 1 saris / I 4 -V? -T- - . 'Li ^ u'reNext! 1| j . N ' I b: tattled In \ ;; AlJ and Refreshing I I!' yi 3? i ^ ' I i) m* '' I th y j : - Q sc S yt S3P 3 /y E^OTTLCD UNDER AN j|B|; jc y\ EXCLUSIVE LICENSE I f\ FROM THE COCA-COLA ljW{ xV COMPANY. ATLANTA OA. I Rl! Hi I I * rLING COMPANY ^ TELEPHONE 1211 ji*5 ,'u T- |11 " 1 '.il to ... - th * to : IP : I % il 5 p i:omes to a member - ,,a natural to desire a C? ^ fitting honor shall Sp "e rger future shall be jfflg. 101 &. n\c o arc suffering the ^ lieved of the details snl ore, if the arrange- : ' td -v), y must be placed in >? ?; iced hands. i ? C(j in your community / v pei , also understands ji < 'n mcthing more than ^ '&tV j ^ec the essence of his il.is/itj hei out each detail C'n bor of love. | *; I 0U( Ciifinnali Coffin Cor. . ' i dl'C which appeared in The - 4 , ?. rgiJ. 1 . ; 'AKING CO. !>&i '>? las; 5/ Duration. Sun Dial. IKC**-1. . Illil iv.'2 c. c. c/ m ^ J art .. pr< soner Escapes V From P?>nitoi?*i?? y p,. )ulius Siero, Greek, serving ten '* ? rs for burglary and larceny, hav- ru been sent up from Charleston, es- pi* cd from the penitentiary some time ' terday, prison olficials announced ( iv a thorough search of the penitiarw premises. When Siero was ;se*.l it was thought that he was ! ing out, but a close investigation every possible hiding place failed liselose him. 'apt. C. C. Roberts, head of the >on guard, was of the opinion last El lit that Sie?*o rode out of the penltiaiy under a truck, having seted himself in some way under the y of one of the machines passing md out. ,so' ioro is described as being live and -fourth feet high, 18 years of age, a ck hair, brown eyes, rather fair ;m lplexion for a Greek. He has five ''s ill sears on the back of his head, * r resh knife wound in the back of left shoulder about four inches na ? and a fresh knife wound in his side about five inches long. ceI n * i? " - "1" ne iresn Knne wrunds wore re- ru red by Siero recently in a fight the prison. He had been unable to {'n k since he was wounded and was ' the chapel yesterday with several im ers who were not working. (,oi !aptain Roberts was "tipped oil'" (>?? t Siero was headed toward Sax an. of i and he may be able to locate him. an 'he State. nu rkieh Wrestlers Will sui Be at Paris in 1924 R('! in onstantinople, Aug. 10.?Turkey be represented in the Olympic ties of 1924 ill Paris, The Assoed Press was informed by Prince ^ ner Farouk Effendi, son of the . , . . - eid apparent and chairman of the , ' ' , _ . . Ko kish Sports Federation. , he chief Turkish strength will be veight throwing events and much j expected of the wrestlers. The 11 will be equa'ly representative ^ Llie Greek, Armenian, Jewish and j kish po(>ulations of the Constan- j iple district. m gu What He Didn't Say m( ' roi co; 'he priest was remonstrating with ^ of his flock in an effort to make sei i give up drink. "I tell you, Pat," said, "you should give it up. iskey is your worst enemy." v ? Me enemy, is it, Father?" said , with a twinkle; "and it was yer erenee's self that told us only lsat iday that we should love our ene s " 8* m 'So I did, Pat," retorted the priest, it I didn't say you should swallow >m." : m ' I K* \ new airplane muffler has been j w -footed in Europe which does not! rj luce the efficiency of the motor, j ent flying has now become a fact) or IT. years of effort by engineers, j i:i \ cSucators to Reform tfco "Little Red Schoolhoua^e" I Jew, York, Aug, 10,?Add tp tfyi st of idols smashed to smithorpen y the elfl.cie.ncy of modern acippjA iaj quaint institution of American iral life?the Tittle red school?use"?now denounced by educution experts of Columbia University a? danger to national progress," Experiments conducted for the pan jar in a tiny school in "Warren counN. J., have proved to Dr. Fannie unn, of Teachers' College, Columbia, iat the problems attending the evils the "cult of the little red school>use," as Dr. Dunn calls it, can be dved by the same methods that have ought progress in teaching tfcj nmg u? the cities "h.QW to shoot." Forty-four pupils attenjlad the typ al sehoolhouso in ^Varre.n uuu,irty. hieh was seven miles from a trunl. ic railroad, two miles from a post Rce, and out in the open country. ] single teacher was forced tr? ruct sight grades. There are still j u),000 similar schools in the U"ited \ :ates, just 160,000 too many, Co- i imbia educators say. They hope , cut the number to 40,000. Changes , at seem appallingly revolutionsy ? Americans who remember the rigid , aster-cast demeanor that was ex- 1 tod of every country schoolboy who t is forced to attend the little red < hcolhouse f years ago, are rccom- i ended for those one-teacher insti- j tions that will remain. Unrestrict- < movement about the room, the in- | [illation of pupil helpers for the i acher, a more "clubby" spirit < long the youngsters, and the appli- ( tion of the "automat" idea in 1 lching the children to gain a large c rt of the education themselves from i 2 school library, are part of Liu w plan evolved from the Warr" t anty tests. r Despite Whittier's legend of the 11 t >us schoolboy of the "l'il red built whose "feet of tan" betokened t lendid health, Professor Thomas W. p K>d of the Eye Sight Conservation uncil of America, who is interest- t in the experiments, says that 87 t rcent of the pupils in rural schools e New York s^ate have health de- e :ts, as opposed to 72 percent of un- l ilthy city children. In the whole t lited States, Dr. Wood says, 15,),000 of the 24,000,000 school chil ;n have bodily defects. tin nnnwnoelmr " >"> * " * i tuc tlic xauun V> ? ? country schools, the experts say ' it mucn of the congestion of th a ies results from the inability .'.o 1 ike country life attractive. Effort now being made through meet- c rs at Columbia of such educators ' Miss Charl C. Williams, recent ( L'sident of the National Education sociation; Mrs. Katherine Cook, of ' j Federal Bureau of Education and r . Kenyon L. Butterfield, president I Massachusetts Agricultural Col- ? :e, to bring about the changes in F rnl education that will' end the* v lint of the modern schoolboy: c "I'm getting Oh so sick r Of reading and arithmetic? 0 That's why, we gave the teach?: a the sack, 11 &nd, we're never gonna come back * If she doesn't like it she can sit > \ a tack, 1 We've got the schoolhouse blues." v o i 1<3 Plan Memorial c To War Dead a s i Chicago, August 11.?(By the As a -dated Press).?A circular build-, e r with a giant dome supported by a ring of Grecian pillars, will be the r lin structure of the memoriid to war dead of the Benevolent and t otcctive Order of Elks to be erect- J in Chicago. The national memo- f 1 headquarters commission of the i Ige which met in New York re- t itly on this kind of structure, and r ins and specifications for the $2.- t I),000 home of Elkdorn will b."> c iwn within the next few weeks. On either side of the huge me- ?' >rial rotunda will he small wintrs ineeted with the main building by t iticos. These will hold the offices t the secretary of the grand lodg? ^ d the editorial offices of the Elks ^ igazine. s The structure will be erected next ? miner and will be located at Diver- 1 / Parkway and Lakeview Avenue, ^ the heart of a colony of beautiful ^ idences, and facing Lincoln Park. 11 the rotunda will be placed some f imorial to the members of the lodge 1 10 lost their lives during the war. ' e nature of this has not been deled upon, according to Fred. C. 1 binson, the grand secretary. "The building will be open to the " blic," said Mr. Robinson. "There s 11 he no auditorium or lodee halls ^ connection with the place. The e we have purchased has nearly jr hundred feet frontage. It over>ks Lincoln Park and Luke Michin. The work of selecting the mejrial itself which will be in the tunda is now being conducted by a mmittee. As for the details- and eol ations expressive ?of the sacred ntiments, it is too early to anticite nart.ic ulars hut there is th?? __ , -- ? -- - ? ( >rld's treasure of experience to t" r rrCwed from and better will our /n initiative. ( 'The office of the j?rand secretary f id the editorial office of the Elks ] aprazine will be outside the main ] emorial." , The cast-ofT horns of deer, elk and < oose which annually fall aff are \ ithered in the forests of the North- , est and manufactured into napkin { nprs, umbrella and knife handles. \ Steam locomotives were first shown i France in 17C3. i ,j ) II. ? ?a, T^e n.egroesjlmvp a saying, "That! ^ettfes it," ' Ih bfiji 'a storm, hard wind ajcul a downpour of rain Tuesday 1 at neon and I ifUflfc} 'that settles it" with the f.ompr an,d boll weevil. Quite t number of ||imier3 were sdll tryiej to get up squares and small bolls, wirtch were beginning to drop by the bu< ket full this week; at least, to try to check the spread and now this rain1 will put many squares where they! :arrot be seen. It will open the flood-' errors to the wee\il. The weevils were j getting to bo about the toughest nut for the farmqW wits to bite on anyv; Squares with many injured tinj bolls, probably injured by puncturei | in almost opep blooms, are dropping m fast that it is imjipiaihle tp k^p! up with them, an* Wfi wpre losing | time ar.i monejr ?t it, I VUuve, Sqme yet cttnparatjvigiy young and I do no ? much chance for it now. [ have hecn in the field bucking against them almptt without let-up for nearly four weeks and despite this vigilance they aio increasing. I trave had a lot of practice thai thejry can hardly stand against. I have jeen things that I have never seen 'wait" nor heard spoken by anyone? ?nd I want to gather some squares, sloonis and boUp and show some time ioon. On one field throe-fourth of the squares on the stalkB are already punctured and they have not begun to show sickness. This is now the :ondition here. I don't think I ought ? bo "lawed" into paying one's saliry next year, to tell me how to make otton with boll weevils. I wish I lidn't have to do so this year. It is !lr,? n?(C?_ --14- - * 1- 4 T*rL ?i*vi I'umiiK m ? xieim um. w no | lonceivcd that nonsense?not to put t stronger?anyway. Almost everyone around here went o Union for the atate campaign nceting on the 5th, and speaks of it 'o:ng a good meeting. I did not go. had a chance to get three extra niilcs and hands and I seized this opportunity to put them in the bottoms I 'owing young corn. While I wanted o go, I think I got paid better at the | (argnin that I did Saturday. It is njoyable to listen to the women votrs talk ?bout the speaking, and the inge of disgust they throw in when hey toll of the familiarity some henp-John looking fellow speaks of C? ley." That reminds mc, that I on't ihink any worth while woman! ere would think of voting for Blease. ,et me ho plain, I don't care how nyone else stands, but if I was capa le, and could, o(Ter up a prayer, it oul rot be that any special men be loctea, but it would be that Colo iltaso will not bo, for I am a South Carolinian, and?live in Union county. 1 went up to Mon-Aetna chyrch on '.unday afternodn, ^here there was a neeting trying to get a county-wide I. Y. P. U. association. I have outgrown that -non><- of organization? mssed the limitation?but am a wellwisher, and hoped to enjoy the proceedings, and did, to the fullest. I net quite a number of friends frmi thor churches, and of course there ire friends at Mon-Aetna, and they ihvays make me feel glad when 1 go here. I feel that I was greatly bene- j :t?'d. Quite r. lni'ge representation j vom the Baptist church (Salem) here i.1 mi ? * _ * * wis vnere. mey are trying to navel i good union hero. After the ex or-' ises closed, Mr. Eads, a member there | ind a fine Sunday school worker, howed us through the new addition, he Sunday scliool rooms, and they ire just?appetizing, if I may use the expression, and it is no wonder they ire proud of their building. I am, nyself. Your scribe has been "put to his rumps" with muskrnts cutting eorr. dy corn was late and before it was our inches high they began to cut t, and it seemed as if there was going o be a total destruction, so I deter-j nined to dig out all burrows even to j he extent of annihilating the entire 1 reek banks, so I dug, and threw it | ut in the bottoms, and into the creek, >nd made non-inhabitable five dens? ,11 on that section of bottoms, but 1 hink they had some on my neighbor's lottoms and would come up from that, rhen I tried poisoning. Knowing its loggishness for peaches, I chipped ome up, put that on scraps of paper md then put on arsenate of lead, rhey ate several baits, and now they lave rot cut any in about a week duskrat furs are valuable, but I de lot use them, but I do use corn, and 0 I will not hesitate to poison rats. 1 no other way works. If you are othered, try this. It is no use for anyone to toll j ne, even though he is held up as an j xpert, that if you plant cotton ov.ia ' i distance from where cotton was last ' eason that the boll weevill will nor j tother it much until August, when; hey begin to migrate. I know a man icw who had a big field that laid out ast year, no cotton was real near it, ind about the first weevil he had was n that field. He tried to keep all iquares picked up, used poison, and hey are all over the field, and kept| jetting more numerous. I thought I tad hid a small lot from them, but, hey are "cutting ^buck" with it. I lon't believe you can get any field out: f their reach right at the beginnin;'.' Phey say that over '-n China you can t1 ret out of sight of a Chinaman, and 1 io not believe you can "get out of light" of a boll weevil even now, and [ am told that these are just the A B C's. . Hey Denver. A new invention in the shape of an dectric bundle tier has Just appeared that will speed up parcel depart nent8. The machine ties a strong square knot, cuts the cord and throws :he bundle to one side. Thirty million telephone calls n :c made each day in this country. Jm5? 1 1 X I ? X ? ? V T ? A A X t Y X X I tZE94X%l X ul 1 PLEASE K011CE T | CONTRACT WHICH SI I ARE TO BMC PET | NOT GREEN TOMATO | MATOES MUST BE S( I UP TO YOUR CONTR | LIVE UP TO OURS. 1 SQUARE DEAL WEP | A SQUARE DEAL I k | Union Canning < % LEWIS M. RJ< t t T T ? T T f T T t T i i T T J X Y t i v I ? | T t I T T T y x 0 VERS j HE CLAUSE IN YOUR I 'EOFI.nS THAT YOU 1 rips tomatoes; I ES. ALSO, THE TO- f w 1UND. PLEASE LIVE f ACT, AM WE WILL f aI I a ni7 in i V ALL 'flu &!ih IS A | ( ROPOSE GIVING YOU | f ? | | ? Products Co. | CB, President. *?* 1 t f T i 1 i % t t |