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r A Hum whncAi mnm Good to t r^nrcB ww REV MEE AT GREEN ST. M. E UNIOI BEGINNING SW AN OLD TIME RE jfllllllllll^^ UK ^ h^BBB i^HB^^^^^hBBb^H^HBKs CONDUCTED BY k REV. L. ST THE NOTED EVANGEL1 COME-YOU Hear This Strong Preac Won Thousands t< CDDMAMO M ?ill ocnifiuno: rLAtw SINGING: SOUL-ST SPECIAL CH Miss Mollie Stardard, is a trained worker amo worker with Dr. Starl solos at each service chorus choir. Services Every Night an A Yritfl SL -BV M. Huma One never sees a pair of a surge of pity for the poo Yet how many human nec yoke?Extravagance?and This human yoke need n< has anything of grit. The ance for him, and it is gi on a Savings Account. "Large Enough to Serve Any CITI/ NATIONA - L_L . . .... I.I A junior church, with membershi limited to persons between 6 and t years of age, is being successfull operated in Indianapolis. There ax ?. ' I I M i I hp Last drop Mid IVAL TING THE . CHURCH, SOUTH 4, S. C. Y, SEPT. 3, 1922 HVAL OF RELIGION WWT^: J>'; t' -m jHht m v?. IODERN EVANGELIST ARKE, D. D. ST OF BROOKLYN, N. Y. ARE WELCOME her Whose Sermons Have > The Christian Life. POINTED POWERFUL IRRING SONGS AND ORUS WORK. , of Meridian, Texas, who m - ng young people and a coke, will render beautiful in addition to the large id Three Times on Sunday For 1 m Necks plodding oxen without feeling >r necks under the heavy yoke. ? - kb are bowed under a greater ! harnessed with debtl )t be permanent, if the wearer re is a sure means of deliver* lined through steady deposits / ?Strong Enough to Protect All" 2T 11T ^ I_. E? A N Fv^ p CC children members of the organisa6 tion. They have a room to themy selves for services, which are of 80 e minutes' duration. , Wpuld CW Capital-Labor BrtHh Chicago, Agg. 3k^-Db eiose br ewr "the aliening breach betwlton tapital and labor" la the lain pirphe of the Society ?l Amerifem Commonwealth which reedntly deceived its charter as a corporation trader the laws off the state of ttinois for the purpose of formulattag an organisation throughout the limited States. "Our work is sash that we cantet admit to our membership those tthp oeiong to labor unions or those known us the capitalistic class employing labor," states a booklet issued by <hp society, in whi,oh its principles are outlined. "We do this that we zihy be able freely and boldly to hp\d the scales between them," Men and women of American ottizenehip mad eighteen yea re or vatm iu age are eligible to membership. The society is not incorporated for profit. "This society is an outgrowth of the numerous strikes that have bCgQt this country and which, we belhfwe are fraught with grave peril to the nation," said Marvin V. HinshaW, founder and Supreme Commoner. "The object is to awaken the great masses to dangers we are facing because of wasteful, useless, havocmaking strikes such as the doal strike, rail strike the recent car strike in Chicago and many other forms of industrial warfare throughout the country. "Through all these ordeals the public, bearing the brunt of the burden, has gone on watchfully waiting with a saint-like patience. This is not a call to arms nor the views of alarmists. We believe it is high time that the public so organize that its sentiments may crystallize into a stern and powerful voice that will become so effective that these useless industrial conflicts may be doomed." London Shows Faith In Polish Industry Warsaw, Aug. 30.?Lodz, the taxtile center of Eastern Europe, has owed English exporters ?'2,000,000 for raw materials since before the war. A committee from Lodz reently went to London to find a method of payment. It was finally agreed that the Lodz debtors are to iquidate in 20 installments, one eve y ix months, but if conditions improve, the installments may be sent forwaru A shorter intervals. ?hc relations between Lodz and English dealers in textiles always have been close. Lodz bought its .cotton and other rough materials in ix>ndon. War and the German occupation, followed by German requisitions and the failure to receive monies due from Russian customers, prevented the Lodz spinners .from meeting th&r English obligations. As a further evidence of British faith in Polish inHnatrv t.ho bankers agreed to help the Lodz interests collect from Germany for materials requisitioned daring the War, and also to extend to them new credits. Latvia Decides to MMake Gambling Easy Riga, Aug. 30.?If your income is not less than 600,000 rubles a year, and you would gamble, you soon will be able to do so with every comfort and convenience at Riga, on the shores of the Baltie. The Latvian government, with an eye to needed 'revenue, has granted a gambling concession to certain French interests, and this month sees the opening of a Casino which, it is hoped, eventually will cut into the popularity of Mont'? carlo. The project is not unpretentious. It embraces the construction of a permanent Casino to take the place of the temporary building for use this summer; there will be horse racing and sea bathing; a new hotel with 300 rooms is to go up, and an existing hotel is to be renovated in a manner calculated to suit the most modern European requirements. There will be a motor bus service from the center of Riga to the Ca sino, and two steamers are to ply betwen Riga and Helsingfcrrs, Reval and Libau, all for the accommodation of those who may flhd Motite Carlo too far away. Also a bank neat the Casino will give financial help to those whose rating passes a close scrutiny. Among the regulations of the Casino is one which provides that any person desiring to gamble mtolt have an income of 600,000 ruMrtfJ Or |2,-j 400 a year. American Woman r a rn m ?? c.mera ivsosiem faith Woking:, England, Aug. 14.?Tbe Woking mosque presented a gay appearance recently when over 200 Moslems from all parts of the world assembled to celebrate the festival of Eid-ur-Azha in commemoration of the sacrifice of Abraham, the day of the great festival at Mecca. After prayers, says The Star, Princess Hassann (Miss Otle, of New York) whose husband is a nephew of the ex-Khedive of Egypt, was received into the Moslem faith. Among those present were Princess Amir-ur-Santamat, the Persian Minister, the Afghan Minister and suite, and Lord Hedley represented thi English Moslem Society in London. The Forest Products Laboratory of the Forest Service has evolve* a type of crate that will car**' in ah aircraft 1/BOO-pound bombs. * ScandaJ4fo iwCqlooy Yellowstone Park, Wfo., Aug. 80.? Bsetteihent * vtft <* t>4*Ud UhJmal OeUunaBrity 4& the pB*fc tfnce the scandal about Mr. Fstkiau ihcslrad public attention. The ducks afe quacking about it, the SqufiWUH are chattering It and the Mb-4Mr*?ft scattering it broadcast tn tholr ahnll voices. Tbsoavhout ?ll tfco Whiapwt and fiUdgua of nSfjpfcbdVft as he passes, Mr. Pslfeftn tadfBttflhs his stately mien, sMftnlhgiy Uncthssc'ious of the jibes of the iinUlNMi. His actions would indicate he stftl holds bis val- , ued place in the iWWllkumty, xai? vrouwie usatmii mm the charge by POctf. H?**y B. w*ri, head of the ' department Uf ffolilMr. pf the Uolver. ' sity of IlltnoiB, ti*t hu la a trout "Whr* u*dVlol*fbr4fcMl the tenets of , f?Od S*mam*ttib%>. ""Proof of these ' charges piftiiy^l fctean that Mr. 1 Pol lean wlU BOO??ah outoatt with J wfeyadm* foof Mtt to hiftf tfnd < evtoyOhdY hand fgttlttt him. Profepgor Ward U conducting ah , exhaustive fiiVOiHgd^h for the federal bureau of AflMp at Lake Yellowstone th ^lSUFMont) National Phi* an ? the MtSMfethnhlh between the peliedit S8tiBwi<Wht supply. His UiVeSMfhtMh, WhiBflbeen progressing seteihl wedks, will continue through the prdWht'etason. The flodk of peltOlfts that live and breed on Lake YelUHrstone numbers about '400. TlWy "Ohmmer" artistocratlc&lly St the like, "feasting on the beet the land affords ftom spring until September, then go to their Winter resorts alOhg the Gulf of Mexico. The bird dJOts SlifMit exclosively on fish, end so fhr OS Yellowstone and other Rocky . Mountain lakes and streams are concerted, this means ex. clusively on trout. He estimates that the 400 pelicans consume more trout than are taken duifttf an entire season by sportsmen. The peliban hf ^tTlfllhpecter of size limits or open dfcfflons, Professor UTo.J ?!. ? - ii?u vunigvB, xxe qeciarea ne Had seen a platoon of ?6 pelicans ranged across a stream In 'Veguiar forma- * Hon, praying on the trout as they ' swam up to spaWn. * Hitherto, the stream had yielded trout eggs by the , millions but hatchery men this year could* gather only a fraction of the normal amount. * The fact is granted that Mr. Peli- < can's home life is dbove reproach, i He is a good profldnr, a good hus- i lnnd and father and 14 9tvictly monogamous. For the 400 birds in the T ake Flock, there a"re just 200 nests; 1 one for each couple atfil one mate for ' each bird. There ate no "triangles" ? in iho Yellowstone "Wo." , If further investigations justify it, Professor Ward will ask the federal povernment to bar the pelicans as 1 summer visitors frolls the park. < )ir Herbert SemuA**Explains , *. .-jimSituation Jerusalem, Aug. 3flN*(jrevMah legraphic Agency).?Sir HerbflH Samuel, High CorruiUakioneT for , Palestine, in a statemdht submitted at the meeting of the Attviaory Council, hM made' the following declaration explaining the sltMatibh of Pal- 4 eetine: t*. < "I have returned to Palestine to , find that the confirn^^h of the Pal estino Mandate'Wy tfcS^^ague of Nations is giving rise to a remarkable series of false rurnore1 which have I been spread amoiur the tteoule It has once more befcn asserted that the Moslem possession of the Mosque Al-Aqsa and the Harani Esh-Eharif is threatened, and .representatives have been sent to Meecfc to defend Moslem rights. It is not necessary to go to much trouble to repel an attack which no one has made or will make. The Moslem possession of the Haram Esh-Sharif is absolutely guaranteed, not only by ^ihe declarations of the British government, but by Article 18 .of the Mahdate itself. "It is rUMored also' that on the passage of the Mandate the British flags over the governoiWtes will be replaced by Zionist flags; the government of the country Will be transferred to the Zionist Organization, and 30,000 Jews will immediately enter the country to occupy it. I am not much surprised that mischiefmakers should spread fantastic stories of this character as I am that any Bane hiimah being should believe them. Yet, I am assured that so credulohs are sections Of the population of this country that there are mahy individuals who really believo that events such as thaae will *hapMflfc "The appfbvfcl of the' Mittdate Will make no difference winner er m the present administration of the county, or ih the loWfc reHRttJt to immigrtfttfth. It WT11, hbWdlW, be followed by the eifictmetft Of a constitution Which Will proVidd fot the establishment of a legislative assembly containing a majority' of members freely elected by the people. The drawing up of the list of voters will begfti as soon as the constitution is promulgated, and when thht is compitted?it must necessarily take - _ .? a a(dKSrt? ? , ?-i - some nine?tne election will take pwr i Thousands of magntfleent bull elk hate been slaughtered UkgHlly in the YelWfhitohe Park region for the two tOMh that may be obtataed ffem each aWd aold to be worn as ornaments. AfeMfft the Indiana the bVnvgfe decorated themselves with tffctklates made ortfftiily bears and only the squaws *0rfc elk teeth as deeoratfons and *ney usea oniy uoie irem the alffmftla killed for clothing and ffod. 1^^?? "???? tilt J aft music will not be pifhtftted in the public parka of TkWJtito. Comnltinlty singing will ta^* Jts place. h | We Wfll | Our P } TO GO FORWARD WIT | MATOES, BEARS, BEETS I ONE OR TWO OTHER PR< | SOON AS WE HAVE SKI | SARY CAPITAL?$20,Of | UNDERTAKE TO CAN | TOMATOES WITH THE C } CURED. EACH CROP 1 |: NECESSITATES MORE ( | NOW HAD THE $20,OW | AHEAD-MAKING "CONTI ^ wm * . ? ? ? ?? t FALL CHOP OF BEETS. S I ADDITIONAL DOLLARS | QUIRED TO PUT US IN Al ? WORKING CONDITION, f ASK YOURSELF THE QU I I HELP THIS GREATLY f PRISE?" IF YOU ANSWE I MAUVE. LET US HEAR ? YOU WILL TAKE ONE 0 i OF STOCK. I X A | Union Canning & ? LEWIS M. RI< T ? ? v 'A. A^A A^A A^A V^A A^A A wwwwwwwwww w w - - ^ +&**$ I . it o.'.- .;* .* V. . * i. 4 Make | Lans | H CANNING TO- 1 ! AND POSSIBLY I ODUCTS, JUST AS | IRED THE NECES- I 10. WE CANNOT t ANYTHING SAVE f APITAl, NOW SE- 1 fO BE HANDLED f :apital. if we 1 i we could go t tacts for the i 1even thousand | will be re- | 5solutely safe, I 1 estion: "should | needed enter- f r in the afftr f YOU SAY THAT ? R MORE SHARES I T T I Products Co. ! y 3E, Pres. t | ?? f?t t ??+????+ ?:.?f ... . " i?iS?