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I RIA1 i TOE s "errs 01 The Very Latest i 1 Photographed bj I 4 Fine Stories Athrob I And 14 BIG I ; ! Wesley Barry, Lon CI J) Bowers, Teddy Sampson, 5 May Wong, Dorothy Ma [j Rockliffe Fellowes, Freder jj bury, Jr., James Neil, Taoouc 3 You'll find aqtipp, di W .t 1 .i t cnnii, mystegry?everytnina duct ion has meant to 7 ou i ?in this unprecedented sv RUTH ROLAND iVT TOMO TOM MIX in "THE ! ?> We shall al' tret a change of elii'iate soon. An optimist is a man who think-, the world is as it is. 11 Clau< I Cand I STANDS FOR STR SQUARE DEAL FOR ATES HIS PLATFOR] FIED TO SERVE AS ! i TAL ABSTINENCE I L_ . _ Vote Foi A MAN WITH * r xk% * f&.-ymMBatfmniV* mm | DOI I By I Is And if e LTO 1 )AY 5 F UFE" I a n Screen Surprise I r David Kesson A With Life That's Real 1 FILM FOLK. haney, Noah Beery, John 1^ Harriet Hammond, Anna gj ickail, Edythe Chapman, I ick Burton, James Brad- I j nany Koung. ? ratna, romance, laughtar, I x ; a Marshall Neilan pro- I n the past?and still more I i irprise. R \ HENMBER QUEEN' I NIGHTHORSEMAN" j Every time we think of the coal strike we put more moth bals in our winter underwear. Subscribe to The Union Daily Times i JeWl J idate For St JCT ENFORCEMENT OF ALL. A MAN WHOSE M. A MAN PECULIARL SHERIFF, HAVING LIVE! ?ROM WHISKEY AND > rClaude \ A CLEAN, WHOLESOR 'tt jKwrrw srr b the El Uh Still the I lected will It interests of in these aw MUU flam id Polish Virgin Formta .. - \ w Hrsaw, Aug. Sjp.?The enormous >reets of Balowieza, containing mny thousands ..of acres of uncut iraber, are engaging the attention of iritish concerns, who are negotiating or leaaea. At the same time Amer. an business interests have sent an gent over here who, in company with I. H. Smith, trade adviser to the iroerlcan legation at Warsaw, is now n a tour of inspection of the forest ?nds. i m | i Notice to Teachers You arc hereby notified that the ounty adopted books are now ready or sale. Before you open your school,! ou are requested to call at this of. j ice and secure a list of the state idopted books as used in grades,-so bjit you may prepare a written list or the patrons to have when they go o the county depository to buy books, fou are also requested to prepare a vritten list of books needed for eacli >upil in your school, so as to avoid iny mistake in buying books. F. M. Ellerbe, Superintendent of Education. 8-28-81; 9-4 Mr. und Mrs. Glenmore Bnrron motored to Lancaster and spent the vveek-eend with relatives. Miss Lucia Miller, who has been the j;uest of Miss Theo Youn^, will leave this week for ^-astonia, N. C., where sh<* has accep.^d a position in the high school. HHHBHflHflHRfllHflHHflflBHHHHHHHNi i I I i : ' < t c I ( c ' h < ! II ^ | c burn i lerif f ! r c THE LAWS AND A ? LIFE SUBSTANTI- ' If WELL QUALi 0 A LIFE OF TO- 1 ficE. : a Vilburn <! f /IE RECORD. " r; II. mwwwaHBWBfiicg 'I m\ jmuii" * E Ml* event! t. a. Lp?irlinn < >nd his besl the whole | ! unhappy di SBmmm?m ? M ! Every voter in Ui | form in our present ! county can get at k |". Taxation from the s | rich, to go to the po Fn_ || If you have any d ; ask the people who ; and hear him speah ; to be applied in ord ? confronted the peoj ; A special invitati J interest to say to tl / Beware of the el< j a man who has live I ice to the people. $3636$XSeS6SiO(S306i6at3OtX$3fS36S80 iorae Superiority Still Undecided Colorado Springs, Colo., Aug. 23 By the Associated Press).?Superiirity of thoroughbred horses over the ow ponies of mustang breeding lor lse on the plains and mountains of Colorado still remains unsettled, honors in the five-day test for speed and tamina over a 300-mile course about Colorado Sprimrs recently being iqually divided between these two .reeds. Norfolk Star, a thoroughbred army harger, was given the Broadmoor re uuuiit eiiviurmicf cup ana nrst prize noney. Rabbj^" cow pony was giv!n sec2r2*R^ Fox, another cow )onvo^ position and t6 Jerry, a cross tanJ^jTp^'- charger. Rabbit rtacedToIn stamina anl Jerry (laced first""iSr-' speed but general rrading brought theip down. In Colorado's early days the breedng of saddle horses was of even nore importance than the raising of attle. Horses were the one method f transportation suited to the counry and his horse and his gun were he most treasured possessions of the owboy. Charging days and a new era of conomics lessened the importance of (oth and the breeding of saddle lorses was rapidly losing place in the tate. Ranchers and sportsmen, beoming alarmed - over the increasing lifTiculty of obtaining saddle horses uitable for Colorado terrain, quickly ook up the plan proposed by Bryant 'urner, owner of" the Trichera ranch, f holding a five-day endurance test ver Colorado territory as a means of rousing interest In the breeding of letter saddle horses. Although the old days of cattle ings are gone, there are many needs or saddle horses of the better type n Colorado. They are needed in reglar work on many of the larger nnches where cattle grazing still is ontinued. Countless mountain rcorts where sportsmen gather in )LL1J i Horn X. eJ uanaiaa I efforts toi people of l) ays into wh ' - ?4<M ? i/*V ^ .. . ? V, . r t' 4 ' ? i-*h,, AN uon County who believes Tax System, Good Roads, sast seven months schooli boulders of the weak and Us tomorrow and vote for d. : loubt as to his ability to pi have followed the campa ; on the issues in the cam( ler to accomplish the resu pie of Union County sinci ion is extended to the lad be mothers of the county eventh hour Campaign Lh d a clean life and who has I ^ j large numbers also have many demands for sure-footed horses capable I of covering the mountain territory. Of the 12 horses making a start in | the contest, three were entries of the United States Army, two polo ponies, one a saddle horse of a New York society girl and the other six were cow ' ponies. Two of the army entries fin' ished first and fourth and two of the cow ponies carried away second and I thii\l honors. | Many ranchers and sportsmen, nou i ing the results of the contest in which speed was counted at 40 per cent and stamina at 60 per cent, declare the thoroughbred is due to supplant the mustang co\y pony. Others, some of whom spent their earlier days in breaking the mustangs for domestic use,, declare that *110 breed can supplant it for sure-footedness over the rocky plains and mountains and speed and endurance in long rides. k The Broadmoor remount endurance cup won by Norfolk'Star will be competed for against next August. In the meantime it will remain at Colorado Springs. Spiritual Revival Seen In Denmark and Finland Chicago, August 25 (By the Associated Press).?A spiritual awakening is abroad in Denmark and Finland which is reminiscent of the revival in England at the time of John Wesley, according to Bishop Anton Bast, of Copenhagen in a report received here by Uommittee ol Conservation and Advance of the Methodist Episcopal church. Norway is also yielding to the religious spirit, he says and business men are tithing themselves in the interest of the church. "In Copenhagen, in spite of a very hard influenza epidemic we had our churches full day after day," says Bishop Bast. "In spite of hard winter and sickness among the people of Sweden, the revival meetings, churches and halls were packed. People of all classes of society hattended. BY I * Prop* FETE te for St; ordc thp IV WAA 1BLI KAB ?l nion Count) ich we have I"1 , " * ? ' * % ' " - -.1 ' ^ I in Democracy, Economy i , Good Schools where ever ing each year and the shift: poor to the shoulders of nil 3IV11 operly represent every inl ign or come out to the C >aign and analyze his platfi Its necessary in this, the \ : the panic of 1914. ies as he will have some is,, brand them as such and i by his own efforts prepai The people and pastors and othev workers came from far away circuits on that large snow covered district, which includes the Lapland up to the arctic part of Norway, Sweden and Finland. In Linkoping, the great St. I.ars Lutheran church was loaned for special services. The crowds filled the pews and aisles to its capacity. "In Finland at the Finnish and Swedish churches in Abo, Tammerfora, and Wasa, Helsingfore, Grankulla and Wiborg, there is a great spiritual awakening. "The state church authorities loaned the Methodists the large Lutheran church in Weborg, Finland and when : we entered it we faced a congregation of more than 1,300 people. It was like the greatest day in the old Wealcyan revival. I saw rich and poor i men together in a prayer meeting. "In Norway 1,100 new members have been received into the church, i 1871 children in the Sunday schools and business men are giving a tenth of their income to the church." Housing Facilities Increase Throughout The Country Philadelphia, Aug. 26.?Building activity in this city during the first six months of the present year has resulted in rnuaaeipnia jumping from eighth to sixth place among the nine largest cities of the country in the number of new dwelling permits issued, the Philadelphia Housing Association announces. For the first half year New York had housing proj'ects which will provide accommodations for 242 per cent of the yearly population increment. Los Angeles ranks next with a record of 214 percent, followed by Boston with 115 percent, Chicago with 113 percent, Pittsburgh with 106 percent, Philadelphia with 92.6 percent, Baltimore with 69 percent, Detroit with 61 percent and Cleveland with 51 percent. As contrasted with last year's record for this period, PhilatUMO laandi CR ate Senai idvancement ' and Stale fallen 0. t * i , "... - ? D! in Government, re- j y white child in the | ing of the burden of | the strong and the j TT 1 IH terest in the county, I ourt House tonight orm and the remedy vorst crisis that has \ j idling of particular j I cast your ballot for ! ed himself for serr- \ r. ! delphia has increased the percentage provided lor its yearly need of new accommodations 7.6 times. Only one other city has a larger percentage of its new housing accommodations under permit in single family houses than Philadelphia, Baltimore tops the list with 90 percent, in single dwellings; Philadelphia has 88 percent; Pittsburgh 68 percent; Los Angeles 68 percent; Cleveland 60 percent; Detroit 40 percent; New York 87 percent; Chicago 24 percent and Boston eight percent. SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS LOST?One bunch of keys with name, ."C. H. Ray," on Union or Carlisle Sunday Please return to Union Times. ^ DR. THEODORE MADPOX, who became ill while taking a post graduate course in Chicasro last Mav. has returned to the city after two months in the mountains of North Carolina greatly improved In health and will resume his practice. It LOST?A large cameo brooch surrounded with pearls. Liberal reward if returned to 74 Hart street. 1468-2tpd ' j W. Frank Caldwell Candidate For Treasurer Union County If elected I promise an energetic, honest administration. DC 1 1st I . ^^1 te I of the I -V ,lr