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THE UMIOM TIMESr ^rtE^UNlON* SQBjyj - wii M. Rice !. < .WH?r l? , <e?i stored at th.- Po.?toftice in Union. S. O as iffund class matter, 1 Times Buildlat Main Street Bail Telephone No. t SUBSCRIPTION RATES On*.e?r.?^.w.vij $4 on Six Months V 2.on Three Months 1.0C ADVERTISEMENTS One Square, first insertion S!.00 Every subsequent Insertion !it> Obit.ia-y notices. Onurch and I.od tt notices and notices of public meetings. en tor tain'ii > ntu anil Cards of Thanks will ' charged for at the rate of one cent a wot.1. cash accompany in?t the order. Count tin words and you will know what the cm will be. MEMBER OK ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated I're.;s l> exclusively c.ititled to the u^e lor republication of news dispatches credited to it o.- n.-l otherwi .e credited in this paper, anil also the loc ti news published therein. FRIDAY, AUGUST 18. 1922. Tin Floi elite Daiiy Time.-* reports that schools in Florence county will have an unusually larjre attendants this year ov ij? to the poor cotton crop. Anyway, this is one pood in the h ?H weevil has revealed. If the schools are to increase in atten Innt the v evil s r.jt an unmixed evil. Tit * trouble about it is that unless son v ay be found to whip ihe boil w. e\ . we are wondering how the school will continue to operate. We mm pupi'n to run schools, tertaiii.. I3av we mu-t a-so have money wit.i which tn l-ini tliem. -in .. a-: I . ion county gets away fiom. ?';e money crop?cotton?Union con.n will have sohcd tlic problem. \U en. Ue p our schools gomg and our roai. improved, and our children in schoc . For .">C years the cotton crop has kept the children of the farmers in the cotton fields when they should have bee i in school. All the Southern farme.got out of it was his meat and brcai . and none too much of even that humble diet. The truth is, he took what little he got for other products and made up the deficit in the cost of growing the cotton to give away. If the world of workers, dissatisfie 1 with the job. desire to strike, that is their business. If, having struck, the striker stands by wtih big stick to prevent others from working, that', everybodys business. When the shop men in the railway yards and shoj walked out, that was their business When they assemble in hundreds, with poles and big sticks to prevent othci\-> from taking the placet left-/vacant / ttikt ia~^fealiy Awl ogatf*^pJ?e ?bvernment. I This is no time for playing t? the galleries. This country is face to face with a very grave issue. We mus either come under virtual soviet'si or the business of the country mus have the protection of law. At a ti;n like this, when, owing to the buildir. of good roads and better schools, leas iness is taxed to the uttermost lima cf its endurance to pay the tax asses sor, here comes t'.o nlr.f\st complete paralysis of transposition and the consequent interruption of bus'ii'-t and enterprise. Wht n the o isi:... . r.nd enterprise of the country enm bles to a downfall, who will keep the institutions aforementioned, going" Will ;.bor unions? Thru nre n?a !->- ?. incorporated. They pay no taxes. Who supports the schools and keeps up the roads, and pays for the machinery of government? The hanks, th merchants, the manufacturing organ: zations. They pay most or it, almost all of it. We know it is the habit i f demagogues to lambaste capital, can italists, merchants, any and everybody that by lambasting may serve 1o arouse the passions and prejudices of the uninformed. But you may think if out for yourself. We know it to be a fact that there has been the hard est sort of task upon the merchants and other business interests of Union during the past. 15 months to keep g >ing. In the face of this has stood the cver-incrcasing tax burden. Con | ditions cannot go on us heretofore, w thout resulting in catastrophe. When hy violence and arbitrary wii!, in disregard of law and vvifh little accountability to law, the striker qui's his job then stands over it with a stick to brain the man who attempts to take it, we say it is to be condemned utterly. Besides, it will pet the workingman nowhere. If he succeeds in carrying out his will, the whole business structure will collapse. When the farmers, the producers of the wintry, and the people generally begin to realize those fundamental facts, they will demand relief?and get it. What has become of the gay old! . farmer who always replied to the I question concerning his rye yield that' he opined it would "go about four gal-| Ions to the acre"? The second National Radio Exposition will be held in Chicago next Jan-1 v uary. I 1 ('in- difficulties have been surmounted. * ? Our eat says help I'nion county farmers by taking stock in the can nery. * * * Our cat says it is about time for the farmers and business men to strike. % * * Our ri't says when the government cannot keep the wheels of transportation turning, the government has beer, overthrown. * * * Our cat says be just in your judg-1 ment of others. * a Our cat says a day is not well spent in which no kind deed is performed. Girl Pretender Tells About Her "Gang" Girl Who Lived as Man for Years Tells of Her Life's Experiences. By Anne Dunlap. New York, Aug. 14.?"To be a boy for ten years then get caught! Just shows how a girl's always found out. "Sure, I'd rather be a girl. Don't have to be afraid all the time, and can be natural, and cry when you feel like it. But I'll say when I was a boy I was there!" This compromises just about the whole philosophy of Florence Gray, nee ' Whistling Jack McConnell," leader of one of Philadelphia's most burdensome gangs. "Eggs," Flor?:ice called them, when she was interviewed in Philadelphia, and the term embraced herself, meaning "tough.'' In the flapper togs to which she has been reduced by the majesty of a Philadelphia municipal court, Flor^^^^p^^^^slu^^wiry, ^Qjtuigster, pate blue eyes and teeth that won't add to her feminine charms. Her speech is breezy, slangy?the lingo of her gang. But it is wholesome. She's been "picked up, sure. Fighting, comer lounging, vagrancy. And this last time." (The terms are hers.) She's 22. and has masqueraded as a boy since she was six. She had to confess her fraud eight months agoj because a troublesome young thing' tried to force "Whistling Jack" into a' marriage and hauled him into court. But the public wasn't informed until last Tuesday when Florence hod onej of her old bunch up for "landing nj ! ayniaker on her beak." Klo? ? life i? lV>" ..< , . . ..V y . UIIIUKIU^IIII I ?M J,tines Gray, a little man with a long, pedantry of his kin?l, for he is a retired Southern judge, living frugally at No. 1112 Green street, Philadelphia. As she sat, cross-legged, in a Philadelphia hotel, she told this story of her life, and the adventures that for her began almost in the cradle. "I was b<>rn in New York City. My! father was a Buckeye boy. My mother was a New Yorker. She died when 1 was two years old and my father1 married again and is living in Asheville, N. C. My grandfather Gray took me when I was four years old. He's supported me since the day I was born, bought my first baby clothes, and I've traveled all over the country, from coast to coast with him. "TraveJing around that way seem ,1 t . attract the attention of some i a ddlosoni" people who said they were going to put nie in a home. I cried, and grandpa dressed me up in boy's clothes and we slipped away from whatever town we were in then in the night. "The first place I remember much about was Washington. I went, through the capito] building and up iu the monument. Once I was on a stone where you hear sounds like! whispers. j "I got my first job in Cincinnati, driving a grocery delivery wagon. I guess I was 1T then. | "I always got in with a gang of kids wherever we went and in Cin-; uiiiiau i soon got initiated into the corner crowd. Tret's how I got to I ho a fighter I made up to the girls. * just the same as the other hoys sa 1 they wouldn't get suspicions. Wnsi( I foxy ? : 1 "And I walked home with them af- J t i- " ' ' vn oviiwif ?*i(i wioie notes to in em 1 ?'Roses are red and violets arc blue' 1 ?the old stuff. 1 "Grandpa was always after me t about the Kanpr. He tried to teach t me at heme, or to make me stop work and pro to school. He was always tell- i inr* me those ?>lder fellows would get < me into some t>-o iblc and leave me ^ to poll th^ red hot chestnuts out of 1 the fire. He wanted me to be a pron- I llemon, like he said he'd raised my father, who wasn't allowed to leave ? the house without a servant. J a "But I was of another mind. Want- i d to be husky and rough. ] "Many times I got chased by the i rops. Once when we were shooting j raps on a saloon corner in Cin- i rinnati, a copy pearly got me. I laid . ow for* a couple**of" nights, bttt he ( lad it In for me, and-one night when i [ was" down- on- my ?knaes.rolling the , :>ones he" nabbed mC.' He yelled, 'I've arot-you at last, you little bum. Now I'll give you a nice long ride in the taxi with a bell.' "I went along to the box and he rang for thfe wagon. He had me .by, the back of the neck, and while htv was ringing I said' to myself, you'" ran. have my coat for a mfi?,"<CopOGr, but not me. I wiggled out and b-al it. It was a new trick for me, and he fired and chased me. But I ws:: too fast. Climbing fences, I tore my hand all to pieces with nails, and gr;> blood all over my clothes. I had t-> tell grandpa, and again he took r..'i away. "We went to Cleveland then an i 1 (Tnf n iaK qc o unrou 1 i<i.i monhinicr h"v jv/wr ao n|/|/? vuuvv; iiiuvki-ii?v> Wanted to learn a man's trade. I used to wonder how it would fc< 1 to he a girl, and sometimes get sorry for mys< If. But I was afraid if I tried to change hack to a girl I'd get pinched. "It. was a good while before I b -oke into the gang there. They were the toughest lot I'd seen. Gee, it was a bearcat what happened to me there. The fellows had a ring, and a trainer, and they'd have a bout at lunch time That's how I learned to take heavy punches and get knocked down. That's what made me hard all right. And when they learned I was nicking up and could spar pretty gocd, they let me into the crowd. "I'd learned to run a truck and one night the gang planned to take a joy ride with a lot of girls. They always put me up to the dirty work, because I was scared not to go through with it. If I showed yellow they'd give me a beating I wouldn't forget. They wouldn't have a guy with a streak in that crowd. "We, my buddy and me, jumped a truck, but it was locked. Of a sudder. a man came out and yelled and a vice squad was on us. We beat it and the gang broke up for that night. Next r.ight., though, we pulled it, changed the license on the car and chiseled off some of the number. Then we went for the girls and took a ride. I was driving at high speed and ran head-' long into a Ford. I ran too fast to see what happened. "One boy and a g'?-! wore caught, but they didn't squeal. They're not rats, and if any of them ever got sent up they did their time and kept their mouths shut. After that we kept scarce, just coming around the corner as usual so as not to put the coppers wise. Oh, we looked green, and got away with it. ' "Next place we lived for any time was Brooklyn. I was 18 then. Got a job with Brist & Company, making tthtrtlif dtnthigf thrWaf. Thl supefl tendent lived in the same house with grandpa and mc and he spoke for me. They put me to running an electric crane inside, but the superintendent knew I was pretty husky and thought I could throw coal. So he made me fireman of a steam crane outside. "The engineer took a liking to mc and taught me to run the crane. I was proud, of course, and later took his place when he was sick. "A girl in our house got dippv about me and tried to make me give up my job for office work. But 1 figured if I was going to be a boy I couldn't go and get soft skin and white hands and look like a girl. Well she used to come down to the yard and never gave me any rest till I quit. 1 was making ?200 a month, too. "I got a job driving a truck for a produce firm, rassling barrels of stuff and putting in a long day. I didn't I have any special crowd, went swim-j ming at the Y. M. C. A. and that wa? 1 all. "Grandpa got tired of Brooklyn and went back t.o Asheville. We hadn't sen my father lor eight years, and hej didn't know his daughter. There was the deuce to pay and I pot a lickingl and a girl's dress, my step-mother! tried to break me in on girl's work,| but it didn't take, a.id grandpa and I pulled out again and went back to Brooklyn. Par Association Condemns Pistol i I San . rancisco, Calif., Aug. 15.? By the Associated PrefB).?Declaring that the pistol "serves no useful purpose in the community today," Lhe committee on law enforcement ncludod in its recommendations subnittcd to the American Bar Association one for the prohibition of the manufacture and sale of pistols, and )f cartridges or ammunition designed to be used in them, "save as such manufactures shall be necessary for ynvoinmonlal ami /.(Vminl . ttltM V/lilVKU HOC UI1UU1 ?roper legal refutation and control" it their convention here. "We find that more than ninety j >er cent of the crimes in this coun- j .ry aie committed by the use of pistols," continued the report of the lommittee, of which Judge William! S. Swanep of Chattanooga, Tenn, vas chairman. "We find that the aws prohibiting the carrying of irearms or deadly weapons are inef'eetive :n fact, that they work to he benefit of the criminal rather than he law abiding citizen." Other members of the committee vere Judge Marcus Kavanaugh, Chicago; former Governor Charles S. Yhtiman, New York', Wade H. Ellis, iVashington, D. C., and Charles W. rranham of St. Paul. ine criminal situation in the Unitid States, so far as crimes of violence ire concerned, is worse than that of iny other civilized country," the re- < port ftaid. "Her? there is less rospecV for law. From all availab e sources of information, we estimate that there were more than 9,500 unlawful homicides last year in this country; that in 1820 there occurred ? not -lea* than 9,000 such homicides, i and that in np year during the la:t * ten years-did the number fall belo* j 8,500, In other words, during the last ? ten years no less than 85,000 of our s citizens have perished by poisons, by c the pistyl or the .knife, or by some * other*) unlawful and deadly instru- ' mettt* i ^"Burglaries have increased in this cCuwry" during the last ten ' yean., ? V,200"?percent. e "Deliberate murder, burglary, robbery Vili seldom be attempted unless .tji.e .criminal is armed. In European- j countries the criminals, as a rule pro j not. armed. "On the other hand, in crimes which c i diqc?? the dishonesty of the people, j such ;is lareenv. extortion, nnuntp f? uing. forgery, fraud and otht r ( <. nraeb-^of swindling, a comparison ( of conditions demonstrates that th morals of this country better than in -tr.y other of the larger countries cr ( the world. ( "It is our united opinion that the , eans provided in the United States , for coding with crimes and criminals r.re today neither adequate nor c!T. cionttlbr example: "First, we iind that the parole an p pbation laws, as administered, very generally fail to accomplish the pur poses .for which the laws were desi nated and weaken the administratioi of criminal justice. We recommem that first offenders only should be eli gible for probation. We recommend ; that- the indeterminate sentence laws should be modified so as to apply to first offenders only, and we believe, too, that neither probation nor paroh should be permitted those convicted of homicide, burglary, rape or highway robbery. "Second, we find that more than ninety percent of the murders in this country are committed by the use of pistols. "Thirtl, we find the cause for delay in criminal cases so varied and thccondiMpns so differing that we hesitate m make specific recommendations.!? Dilatory motions?and many other^uses for delay, all accrue tr the fit of the law breaker. "VPjBrecommend that every stat." he gilii every right of appeal now enjoyed by a defendant?except from- verdict of not guilty, and we rocomsnd that the prosecutor in a criminal trial shall have the right to (tall' thclattention of the jury to the fAct' th k the defendant has failed | himaeMb - contradict or deny testiI -JLu^tfie prosecution. '^fl^^^Ag^jithat the state be yj^amend the indictm!d\y ^?\jnion ptt Jed to 'fej|mend that there should feet to J#pea* ^rom a judgment of coiro^jijK^thc trial court. ' :^Veltff4plLnend that there be enacted pgiBlatfon limiting the time during whVh judges or coui.s may hold under; advisement dilat >ry morions made in criminal trials; that a! the expiration of such time, without action, such a motion shall be deemed to be denied. "Fourth, we find that in some of the state? the jury is the final iud&rel !>*>th of the law and the l\.cts. We believe that such a condition is ab- ( solutely subversive of a government j of law an4 we recommend the repeal of such Itfctutes. "Fifth, we find in various juris- . dictions glaring abuses in the matter of bail, both in the amounts imposed and in the efficiency of security of- , fered. "Sixth, we find that further legislation should be enacted by the con gie.ss to punish and prevent lynching j and mob violence. "Seventh, we find that more stringent laws, limiting and controlling immigration should be enacted and . enforced. ' . . _ ... . .. V "ftighth, we find that the bill now t pending in the congress, increasing the number of United States district judges an conferring powers upon the chief justice and serior circuit judges to have supervision over the work of the courts and see that the c dockets are kept clear, should be en- c acted. ; a "Ninth, no meritorious case, whether civil or criminal, that is ( cognizable in the courts of the coun- ( try, ought to be denied the services of an able, courageous and loyal ad- r voeate. And no man or woman, however humble, ought to be able to say j, in any American community that jus- j tice is too ^expensive for the poor. We therefor* urge that in every com- r munity the members of this associa- j tion volunteer to aid, without fee, the worthy poor who art being opressed y defrauded or otherwise wronged, and j who have not the means to employ counsel. "Tenth, first offenders must b f'to.at'd from veteran criminals for th" jails throughout the land to ''ay are i -esding places for crime, and the young and thoughtless, who rvrry often be reclaimed, are taught by professional criminals to scorn th' ( restraints of society; and in this connection we mfy well consider the extension of psycho pathic laboratories established as adjuncts to the criminal courts." V The committee also proposed the < establishment under the control of the department of justice, of a fed- j eral bureau of criminal statistics. ( For maximum power for an automobile, gasoline inust burn in less than one one-hundt?dth of a second. i St " Dardezs Crossera Vie With Rail Trespassers In Gamble With Death Washington, D. C., Aug. 17.?In:leased safety for passengers and smployees was achieved bx the fiQJitlinn Railway System during the first We months of 1922, but fatalities iniong persons who were neither pastengers nor employees showed an inrrease of 24.64 percent, according to in announcement by the Southern's Safety Department. During this period not a passenger vas killed and fatalities among emiloyees decreased 27.2 percent as :ompared with 1921, but 86 other persons were killed as against 69 in 1921. Of tl^is total, 42 lost their lives vhile trespassing on tracks, 13 while ;respassing on trains, and 28 were tilled in highway crossing accidents. 'These figures show,' the statement jays, "that while the Southern has jeen able to protect the passengers vho pay to ride on its trains and the imployees whose duty it is to opsrate them, it has not had equal success in controlling fatalities among persons who insisted on walking on tracks or climbing on Unins where :hey had no business, or among persons who nttciv >ted to cross its tracks without t king the simple preaution to sec tint no train was approaching." Vri.tccrat'c >~?u3sion Bandit D^es With His Boots On t'umboff, Russia, Aug. 15.?Alex-1 ndcr Antonoff, who.a his followers msidered in the li .ht cf a reincarnated Robin Hood, but whom the Soviet government clashed as a Jesse lames, fought to the last when surrounded and willed by the state poice at his hiding place in a tiny vil- ( age near Tamboff late in June. Antonoff once was in the old Russian army. When the Bolsheviki took >ower he opposed them and, gathering Fabout him thousands of followers?fast horsemen from the Steppes?he harrassed the Red army in' the south of Russia for several years. Last September Antonoff's band was broken up by the Reds. For months the state police sought ouc tiis hiding place. Finally some of iis former confederates were promsed amnesty and be'rayed him. Early one June evening eight men ed by Policeman Pokulukin came to the hut of peasant woman, Marie KaLosanova, whose name will go down n the fantastic legends surrounding die life of Antonoff. In this hut in he thick woods near the river Voroaa, Antonoff was hiding. The police ailed to her and she came out of the louse denying Antonoff was there. Mo sooner had the woman turned way jthan two men started firing upon Sho-polic^ froj^fthff^indowS ' hut. --PeSisants, attracted by the shooting, ran to the village church and rang the bells and hundreds of peasants armed themselves with xtickc3 and stones and formed a corJon .about the hut. For several hours the battle continued until, with night at hand, the police ran very short of ammunition. Two of them crept up to the house and set fire to the roof. As smoke iiegan to pour out of the windows, two men broke from the house and started running toward the woods. With each step they turned to fire dieir revolvers at the police. They aad almost reached the woods when hey were shot d. vvn. Their bodies were immediately identified, one being the famous chieftain, and the )thor his brother, Dimitri Antonoff. To epnvince the population that the miuiiis never nau oeen worKingmen, he Soviet authorities had autopsies performed and doctors issued statenents saying that neither of the n-others ever occupied himself with lard work, "for their hands were .oft like those of noblemen and there ,vas fat all over their bodies, showing hat they had fed themselves very veil at the time when the famine in he villages carried away many iouls." Brown's Creek Most of the farmers have about [uit picking up the squares as they ould not keep up with them. Some ire hunting the boll weevils. Rev. II. Haydock, of Monarch, is (inducting a revival at Brown's ".reek this week. Miss Vera Farr spent Thursday light with Miss Bertha Ivey. Misserf Eloisc and Liltie Gregory pent Monday with their sister, Mrs. dillus Garner of Kelley's. Miss Janie 1'almer spent baturoay light and Sunday with Miss Vera arr. Miss Nellie Jolly has returned ;ome nfter spending a few days at iOckhart. Miss Bertha Ivey spent Friday .ight with Miss Vera Farr. .VI r. and Mrs. John Bentley, of nion, spent Sur-day with their uncle md aunt, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Hanock. Mrs. Smith Ivey spent a' short vhile with Mrs. J. D. Hancock Monlay afternoon. Mis3 Vera Farr spent Sunday night vith Miss Janie Palmer. Mrs. Jeff 'Sinclair, of Meadors, is 'isiting her son and daughter, Mr. ind Mrs. S. A. Sinclair, near Brown's >eek. ? Mr. and Mrs. Millus Gamer, of ? << ley's, spent Sunday with their ineie, Sam Gregory. Tulip. Don't forget that it is always the lotto m dollar that counta. 1 "V { FEVER ted at Home i in preventing attacks and for from sneezing, wheezing, and head, Vicks VapoRub will be due. up the nostrils at all times, parhen exposed to dust. To claar nelt in a spoon, and inha'e 'ho "The Remedy of 100 Uses" WICKS v VapoRub Ovttt 17Nuucm Jaks Usso Ykahly mi at 60 Body of Rtoaaattoi laparftiM. *' ? 11 1 - , . i im.'i ' ^Aha> ?Wt^r Trea \ As 6X1814 jJ^k j\ ' ; relief i / x cold in the KeepVicks the head, n vapors. At bedtime, apply Vicks as directed for Asthma, to ease the breathing and make sleep possible. Vicks is good, too, for Summer colds or cetarTh; for insect bites, sunburn, cats, bruises, sore muscles, tired feet, and poison oak, or, as it is otherwise called, poison ivy. ^ Rheumath jjj bi! mt rh( ^ ./VVB toi A ybILMB ou su Bo ^ Le How rlorloue yon will feel, BMtttr, It'l when your rhenmntlam le nil rone, let all 8. S. 8. do ft. It will build yon op, toot lair | Small Cash I Payment C~ I THE UNIVER S WHEN YOU 1 FOI THINK OF The Man who Always has any JONESVILL! County Campaign Meetings I Saturday, August 19, 3 o'clock p. m., Monarch. Monday, August 21, morning, Cariislc; night, E::celsior K. Mills. Tuesday, August 22, morning, Black ? Rock; night, Ottaray Mills. t Wednesday, August 23, Cross Keys. e Thursday, August 24, morning, ^ West Springs; nnd Buffalo at 8 o'clock p. m. c Friday, August 25, morning, Jones- a ville; and Wallace Mills, night. Saturday, August 26, morning, Kcl ton; and Lockhart at night. ^ Monday, August 28, 8 o'clock p. m. i Union, at monument. % Daniad Ismail Hakki, who married che daughter of, the Sultan of Turkey, has been divorced. Ilis mother suggests that his in-laws are calling him names.?Louisville Courier-Journal. SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS = ? MONEY TO LEND on r-ial estate for clients. J. K. Kumolin. Fri.-tf BUILDING LOTS and small farms for sale, near the home of Mr. A. L. Slutts. Citizens Real Estate & Loan Co. 1458-4t Advertise in i'he Tines: Kef results MONEY TO LOAN on city or country propi rty in large amounts on eaty terms. S. E. Barron. 1406-tf IP YOU HAVE nny city or farm property for sale list it with us L Citizens Real Estate & Loan Co. ? 1458-4t FOR RENT?Rooms for light housekeeping. All modern conveniences. Price reasonable. Call at No. 101 South Street, Union, S. C. 1441-tf BANK STOCK WANTED ? Name lowest price on what you have to ~ offer. Box 306, Union, S. C. 1468-tf " WE HAVE several nice building lots on Gage avenue for sale. Close prices, easy terms. Citizens Real Estate & Loan Co. 1458-41 THE UNION NATIONAL FARM ?LOAN ASSOCIATION is now ac- cepting applications from farmers for farm loans at 6 per cent interest. This is a wonderful opportunity for the farmers of Union coun- . ty. Farmers interested can apply through R. L. Kelly, secretarytreasurer of the local association. 1442-tf I a8F**ap?Tm mower is suffering tointl The scourge of rheumatism wrecked her body; limping and fferlng, bent forward, she mm bat "common ground, but her aged |rt still belongs to the stars! Does ftoriy care? & 8.8. Is one of the a8*1?*! blood-purifiers known, and It build more blood cells. Its med_ Ingredients asp purely vegetai? It never disarranges the stomach. Is, la fact, a splendid tonic, a blood deer, a blood enrlcher. It banishes Bumatlsm from Joints, muscles and b entire body. It builds firm flesh. * . what somebody's mother needs light I Mother. If you not no t to get a bottle of 8. & 8. yourself: rely somebody In your family will, mebody. get a bottle of a 8. S. now? t somebody's mother begin to feel rful again tonight. Maybe, maybe i your mother! a 8. a Is sold at drug stores, In two sixes, t The ger sue Is the more economical. Balance As You Drive :SAL CAR MNK OF A ?D UPSCOMB I Part for a Ford or Fordson 1 Palm Beach Suits Cleaned We can clean and press your 'aim Beach suit very quickly hese days. We have the iquipment and the know how. live me a trial. Will appreiate it as much or more than tny one else. Phone 167 and we will call >romptly and return your suit ooking like new. Hames Pressing & Repair Shop Nicholson Bank Bldg. Phone 169 and motor cycle will call. "HOT FOOT" j Did You fcver Have It? I have had what I call "hot foot" for about 6 years. I couldn't walk behind by plow. It was terrible. Storm's Lotion relieved it at once. (Signed) Dock Good, Kelton Route 1. Storm's Lotion is sold at STORM'S DRUG STORE Price $1.00 ALL KINDS OF CEMETERY WORK Union Marble A Granite Co. Main St. Union, S. C. H. W. EDGAR Undertaking Parlors Calls answered day and night Prompt and Efficient Service Day Phone 129?Night Phone 311 State Campaign Meetings Anderson, Saturday, August 19. Walhalla, Monday, August 21. Pickens, Tuesday, August 22. Greenville, Wednesday, August 23. Gaffhey, Thursday, August 24. Spartanburg, Friday. August 25. ? . .v,,.. i