University of South Carolina Libraries
? THE HISTORY S; R^vcaIs the fact that more | great wealth, in this land < * country on the globe. ' There was no secret i < abled them to win fortune i J They were fighters aj $ were workers imbued wit $ There was another c > most every one of them. / They were savers. T $ made. They were willing t y their expense so as to leav / saving account. \ We Invite Your i n will astonish you t< money. Let us put life int< '' Tho R?inL > i it v umm S C. C. SANDERS B. F. ? President Vice-1 VVVVV\N\\\\\\\\\\\\NV\WV ! THE BEST HE.4 ?! > Is Found In I IHILLCREST DAIRY y X It is the product o | grazed on clover pa: X sanitarily from the til cow until you receiv daily, morning deliv< V afternoon 4 to 5 p. m promptly at any houi | HILLCREST X PHONI A . . A Silver 7 /I ... ^ i There's joy and recreate ?when there's silver in t t iun easy. And in the Savings Acct there should be silver to and to make them peacefu "l.arye Enough to Serve Any crrii NATIONA lie --outhern pine forests since 100 have supplied more than ">() per cer of the soft wood used in America also nearly all the turpentine an .1,- ...... c.r?i, ..t . i I V .->111. Wiii\ * * I I - J I I I II III VII*- " I I K * 1 1 < yellow pine forests remain but if r? foresting is beirun at once on i-h proper scale the South can suppl America for all time. SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENT: 1 Oil SALE Three or four hutulre white feed bajrs in good condition ."( each. J. B. Becknell, Sardi Farm. ltp FOR SALE?Bicycle in good cond tion: used very little. No furtb< use for it. Cheap. James BocT nell, Sardis Farm. ltp WANTED BY LITERARY DICES ?Subscription canvassers, wonne or men, to look after renewals an iret new orders for this national I advertised well known periodicwith two million readers. Whole o part time. Commission 2.r> per eon and salary dependent on amount n business produced. Beginners ca earn $2"> monthly spare time; ful time workers $">,000 and upward annually. Write for terms to Special Representatives. The Literar ni?ae> irj A.,? D... O A 1 New York. 1 tp< SACRIFICE SALE Owner expects to leave the city. Automobile: Chevrolet. $125.00. Renulife Violet-Ray Machine witl electrodes, $30. Will sell for $15. White Cross Vibrator, $3. Two volumes International Library of Technology covers surveying in al phases, Geometry, Trigonometry Railroad Location, Construction an< Structures; worth $12, will sell for $5 An Electrothermal outfit, wort'r $20, will sell for $8. Encyclopedia of Freemasonry: Nov --never been used?worth $16, wil sell for $12 to a Mason only. Address P. O. Box No. 49, Union S. S. 1473-21 y.\ ? >11 yv>>vvvvvvxxx%xxxvvyyv%3t!xxx c OF AMERICA | v men have amassed wealth, 0 b of opportunity than in any h I 0 about the process that en- A ( and fame. J n Fraid of nothing, and they a s h a determination to win. | rharacteristic belonging to \ ' hey did not spend all they t o deny themselves and plan j % e a little each week to the A Savings Account. | ] > see how easy it is to save ift o your sluggish dollar. 0 ' ; of Union ' KENNEDY W. W. ALMAN :g \ President Cashier 8 t _???? I lLTH insurance | ivery Bottle Of ?|? milk and cream | f strong, healthy cows X sture and is handled ! me it is taken from the X e it. Deliveries twice sry from 7 to 8 a. m., X i. Special orders filled V | dairy farm I : 227-W | ...X ''hreads : the Gold an in the ape of silver threads 1 he bank to make that recrea1 I iunt of every man and woman, provide for the silvery years, ] Uy beautiful. ?Strong Knough to Protect All" LiiLNi. L. E? A N V 0 Craft Await Destruction ' London, Sept. 1.?One result of the d Washington Disarmament Conference l! has been to provide employment for - thousands of idle men, who will be ,(1 ultraired for nianv mnnttia in ??o/ln/?_ >' ing Britain's sea monsters to scrap. There are 11 battleships, several lirrht cruisers, and considerable smallS er craft awaiting destruction in ac(I cordance with the Washington Naval Limitation Treaty. It will require is many months of laborious work to d completely dismantle them. i The largest turtle ever Imported to r London from India was killed recently for soup. Its weight was 450 pounds, d ? WEAK; RUN-DOWN Carolina Lady Got So Sbe Coal* A Jut Drag.?"Cardni Built Ma Up," She Declares. f Kernersvllle, N. C.?In an interest 1 n In? statement regarding Cardni, tki ,, Woman's Tonle, Mrs. Weslay Maba, o I 11 naar hare, raoantly said: "I har? , known Cardui for raara. bat n?*?i knew Its worth an til a year or bo ago v I wu la weakHned, run-<Jow* con ' dltiea. I became draggy?didn't oat ) 1 sleep to do any good; couldn't do any , 'I thing without a great effort. I trie* different remedlee and medlelnoe, ye l I continued to drag. < "I decided to give Cardul a trie. , and found It waa Juet what I reall? , needed. It made me feel much strong er soon after I began to use It I be ( gan to eat more, and the nerrou* r weak feeling began to lears. Soon was sleeping good. "Cardul built me up an ne ethe v tonic ever did. . "I used Cardul with out daughte. who was puny, fslt bad and tired eu all the time. It brought her right out 1 I and soon she was as well as n glr j could be. We think there In nothim like Cardul." ( Do not allow yourself to beeomt 1 weak and run-down from womanl) 1 troubles. Take Cardut Tou may fln? ] i It Just what you really need. Foi more than 40 years It has been used D; ' thousands end thousands, end fount' < Just as Mrs. Mabe describes. t I at your druggist's. NO-141 ase of Mrs. Corp. Lou Vfa^ya m Atlanta, Ga., Sept. 2.?h\e csbp of Irs. Cora Lou Vinson, sentenced to e hanged for the fatal shooting of ,er husband, W. D. Vinson, in his qfice March 30, 1922, which was appaald to higher tribunals, is expected to ie decided sometime this fal. Vinson, ,n Atlanta physician, received one hot in his body as he sat at his ofice desk, and, after he had fallen to o the floor, his wife shot him throe nore times. He died immediately. "He told me I was worn out and hat he wanted a young and pretty1 voman," Mrs. Vinson testified at her I rial. She did not intend to kill him, .he said. "I went to his office to! alk over some matters with him,! >ut he made me so mad I just ouldn't keep from shooting him." The fatal shots were fired from a ovolver which Mrs. Vinson said was jiven her by Louis Vinson, a son of. )r. Vinson by a former marriage, for ler protection. Mrs. Vinson, a frail woman of 43 . . it the time of the shooting, hail been separated from Dr. Vinson, her sec>nd husband, for sometime. "He spurned my love," she said, charging iim with unfaithfulness. Following the shooting, counsel for :he defense filed a special plea of insanity in Mrs. Vinson's behalf, alleging that a disordered mental condition was responsible for the killing. After a hearing by a jury In Ordinary's Court, however, she was pronounced sane and placed on trial for her life. Hhe wao convicted on June 3 and sentenced to be hanged on July 28, the jury returning the verdict without recommendation for mercy after deliberating one hour and forty-five minutes ; Appeals to higher tribunals held up j final disposition of the case. Mrs. Vinson heard the verdict read ' and the sentence passed without any | show of emotion. "I don't believe they will hang me," she said the day afterward, "for what any woman would have done under the circumstances." Mrs. Vinson, according to the records of the state historian, is the fourth white woman to be given the death sentence in Georgia. Two of the otherB were hanged and the third pardoned after serving ten years, Polly Barclay was hanged in 1806 in Wilkes on conviction of paying a half brother $200 to murder her husband so she could marry another man. ^ Susan tiberhardt was hanged at Preston in 1873 after conviction, together with Enoch F. Spann, of the murder of Spann's wife in Webster county. After serving ten years of a life sentence for stabbing Narcissi Coward, a girlhood friend, to death for dancing with her husband of a few weeks; Kate Mamerick. was pardoned by Governor Stephens in 1883. Governor Colquit had commuted a death sentence to life imprisonment upon learning that the young woman was to become a mother. Large Profits From Slot Machine* Juarez, Mexico, Sept. 2.?Although < most kinds of gambling are prohibit- I ed in Mexico, a large number of slot i machines are operated here, a part ! of concessions owned by Gen. J. J. 1 Mendez, commander of the Juarez military garrison. Operators de- I clare large profits are derived from i the machines, some of whom have ' announced thev would cive twentv- * five nickles in change for one dollar, ' provided the customer plays them in the machine. ' One operator's profits on three machines here showed an average of $117 a week, which is forty per cent of the net earnings of the three de- I vices. The owner received an aver- < ane of $17o a week on the three, or I sixty per cent of the profits. The ] keeper received forty per cent. All 1 machines, however, do not return as ; much profit. General Mendez's concession con- i tract, which expires December 31, ; calls for $2,700 a month and approx- I imately $500 for repair men and < other helpers. 1 ? ? I Japanese Customs Costly Tokio, Aug. 10.?The Japanese people pay out thousands of yen yearly in the observation of customs which have long since lost their original meaning. In the spring it is the cherry blossom season which loosens the purse strings of the head of the household and every member thereof who has earning capacity. About mid-July cofes the Kawabiraka [Opening of the River) festival, instituted 183 years ago to celebrate the opening o? the first bridge across .he Sumida river near Ryogoku, To<io. Half the thousands who gathered there on July 15 this year, in ill probability did not know the origin of the festival. Holiday prices elgn and sake, beer and tea flow avishly, the people coming by gaily lecorated boats, by automobiles, jin iekishaw and afoot. Card of Thanks On account of the rush to pay taxes icfore any more cost was put on I a lave not had the time to pro over the n rounty and shake hands with and ex- ^ press my appreciations to the people * for the support they grave me in the ast election. ; I thank them just the tame. I ?m as ever, at my post of h luty, looking after their business in e he treasurer's office. f J. H. Bartles. p Ikuu DM M 34 to 48 boat rw, 45 cnitl Maaa V Ski' i lifck M SU?* 24 (o W waist 45 c?nt? 1239 and 1266 in medium size 6 3-8 yards 4<>-inch crepe de Chi $2.00 2 3-4 yard* novelty trimming at 3J 1 yard 86-inch lining for underbo< 00c 1 Pictorial Review blouse pattern 1 Pictorial Review blouse pattern Findings Will cost you complete 12B0?Size 36 requires4 3-4 yards 40-inch satin at $1.50 1-4 yard 40-inch contrasting sati vestee at $1.50 7-8 yard 30-inch lining for unde at 60c .. 1 Pictorial Review dress pattern Findings Will cost you complete Wholesale Prices Advance in Tokio Tokio, Sept. 2.?The Bank of Japan's index-number for wholesale mail prices in Tokio in June showed an ad\ance of four points over the preceding month and more than eight points over the number for the corresponding montfi of last year. Rice jumped Iff pR?ls in June, due to the drought and the fears of a bad harvest. It is now 100 points above what it was in June, 1921. Bailey and wheat, on the other hand, continue *o fall. Beans showed substantial increases, tea rose 94 points and eggs 12 points. The only decrease recorded in food eituI food products is in the cases of .ereals (exclusive of rice) sake and bonito. In bx^les, the only decrease is in flannel. Cotton yarns have risen 26 points. Timber and steel continue to fall and are now well below the 1921 eve. I'a per also is among the few articles in which there is any fall in price. Prices as a whole in June were 107 per cent nbove the level of July, 1014?that is, practically double what they were before the war. Missionaries Sail For China and Japan Nashville, Tenn., Sept. 2.?Of the r?0 new missionaries from 12 Soutb?rn States being sent to foreign fields this season by the Foreign Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention, the majority sailed from Seattle today, for points in China and 'apan, while top largest mission work >f Southern Baptists is being done, tccording to an announcement by Headquarters ??f the Baptist 75-million ampaign. Included in this party were preachers, evangelists, educa:ional workers, physicians, nurses, ind William Karle Hines of Spartanburg, S. C., the first architect ever lent out by the board. He wili have Headquarters at Shanghai and will iupervise all construction work done n China by Southern Baptists. Next to the Orient, Brazil receives he largest number of new workers, vhile still other countries that are reviving additions to their missionary ;taffs this season include Africa, Palestine, Chile, Argentina, Uruguay and Mexico. Four American workers go o Palestine this season, where more vork than ever will be done. As a result of the larger funds nade available through the 75 Million Campaign, the board has been enabled to open up work in Spain, Jugo lavia, Hungary, Rumania, southern tussia and Siberia, though the misionary programs in those countries /ill be carried out largely through renforcement of the local workers and he establishment of schools, semilaries, publishing houses and other nixsionary agencies of like character Many a man suspects he can have s much fun talking about owning an utomobile as having oi)p, and after uying one he knows he has more.? <~1?I, DI.JA ? JUIOUU. Rather than dfelay the departure of is machine white he dressed, an air xpress pilot, who had overslept, flew rom London to Paris clad only in his ajamas. m$:' It -Li" . L* -N Whv Pay 5(lc?,45 cents \ >. ' When C< %. Pictoriaji' ' Dress re I I \ the best, most styl #1x1 I economical of w; ;l%0) " 20? mm' Hi M'm *4cUUcml*y omtm \ PICTORIAL RBVttK i I I Pann ilOniilafl I CoMtractkn GuUm I 1}\V T^A8HrON*S demands /) \ T and trlnmlng* for thai ^ Y I rfways^starta a paw era fa w ?T?aujuiy rvrMM in tlx M IN* mants in the frocks. sldi for lata Summer wear. If observing, one will kave n< have become longer, th< cfeaead in width, especial preparation for the drcula be launched very shortly, require la rerTiain with ue but it ne at fulness which we have be . . $12.75 associate with it.?A grea '' og ?'ery and elaborate effect! ^ J"> clasps, girdles and ornani' dy at | WILB 50 $15.51 DRY G< ... COMPj n for * 38 You save from Vs rb?dy 53 material wi 35 Review Pattern*, 1.00 ing from 50c to $ garment. $9.39 Pan-Pacific Congress to Meet j _____ Sydney, N. S. W., Aug. 10.?(Byj Mail).?The Pan-Pacific Scientific j Congress will be held in Australia | next year, as the federal government' has agreed to the proposal, provid-1 ing the cost to the commonwealth does not exceed ?5,000. Eminent' scientists from the United States and all other Pacific countries are expected to attend, according to the Australian National Research Council, which is sponsoring the congress. It was explained that the last conference, held in Honolulu, decided that the next meeting should be held in Austmlin in 1Q9M if wealth government would agree to act as "host." Sir Edgworth David urged strongly that advantage should be taken of this opportunity to enable great American scientists to visit Australia, and his appeal was successful. Among the questions to be discussed at the conference are the problems arising from pests in wheat and fruits, diseases in sheep and cattle, the blowfly, the tick, hookworm, malaria and other diseases of the tropics and semi-tropics. One of the most famous trees in the United States, Richard Oak, near Rising Sun, Maryland, recently had a tablet placed upon it giving the part it has played in American history. It is estimated that the tree is 600 years old. It is 70 feet high and spreads its branches over a circle 105 feet in diameter. ********** * Where To Worship * * * a* a, a- a T-rTTT?JfT?? Episcopal. Eleventh Sunday after Trinity. Sunday school and Bible class 10 a. m. B. F. Alston, Jr., superintendent. Service and sermon by Rev. J. J. D, Hall 11 a. m. Evening service and sermon by Mr. Hall at 8 p. m. Come and hear this powerful preacher of Goa. L. W. Blackwelder, Rector. First Baptist Church. Sunday school tomorrow at 10:30 a. m. .... Morning worship with preaching by the pastor at 11:15; subject of sermon, "A Perplexing Problem in Providence." The B. Y. P. U.'s, Junior and Senior, will meet at 7 p. m. Evening worship, with preaching by. the pastor at 8 p. m.; subject, "The Tears of Jesus." The public is earnestly invited to attend all of the services. Edw. S. Reaves, Pastor. Green Street. Sunday school at 10 o'clock. i Revival meqting begins torryorfow morning. Dr. Morgan Lee Stark^ Is expected to preach at 11 a. m. and R p. m. Miss Stoddard, a well known singer from the West, will render beautiful solos at each service. Come early and get a comfortable seat. J. B. Chick, Pastor. | forOiher Patterns Review itterns ish and moat f/ll I /y vjl/1 patterns, at /[]yl// /fcjL 35? jm\M I l\ IJ jj ml wwitbrn ^ ^ || | ^ 2~=~l In Styles fabrfoa /A V \ Pail Maton.nUali Afc/ VJV a drew, are being yj s recant develop- V ti, etc.. Intended _ DroM l)M one he. been very uHJti >ted that a> skirt. "" ry have alto In- J ly at the ride., tn ir skirt which I. to The basque waist will be minus the 1248 en accustomed to 0 . , .n t deal of embrol- 3 3 4 yards 40 i including fancy $3.00 . . .. cnt. will be used. 1 1-2 yard braic 1 yard 36-inch 1 I TDM 60c 1 I JC 1^1 1 Pictorial Revic V/ L ^ Findings [)0DS Will coat y \NY 1259? 3 3-4 yards 40-ii ====== 2 yards 40-inch I to 1 Vi yard for trimmin ith Pictorial 7'8 je-incl at 60c .. thereby ?V? i Pictorial Revi< 10.00 on each Findings Will cost y 1 wettefmedisgl TkSY fouiffiiiPen Come in and let as s School Pens. Union Dri TO THE PATRONS OF Now that your children's eyes ha tor, remember that if ha doaa not mi work, that I am prepared to fit fflase attention to this work and guarantee times to make gooJ my guarantee. Let me name to yon some of yon satisfied nsera of my glas^i. Yours For Better Eyes F. C. D STATE LICENSED I I Mirui Regulai Cord r Compare These Price The Best Fabric Tir? SOFT BEAD CLN 30 x 3Va 31 x 4 STRAIGHT SI 30 x 31/2 32 x 3Va 32 x 4 33 x 4 34 x 4 32 x 41/2 Quality Cords at Less l vj Come in and get a comp cent off for cash. HAMES GROCER UNION, f P.' ' L.. ? f V I Drw ill) m ^4 to ? boat * -Size 36 requires? -inch Canton crepe at $11.25 I to trim at 25c 38 ining for underbody at 60 >w Dress pattern 35 1.00 ou complete $13.58 Size 36 requires? ich orepe satin at $2.00 $7.50 printed Georgette crepe g at $3*00 6.00 i lining for underbody .53 aw dress pattern 35 1.00 ou complete $15.38 BBBBBHM wsrnrnsmm J how yoO one of dor < ug Store i ^ ' UNION SCHOOLS: I boon examined by your doe- R nke a specialty of this kind of I ??. I give my whole time end I satisfaction. 1 am here at all i| ar neighbors or frleads who or* m For the Children, 3 IUKE I OPTOMERI ST. r? ' i * i i M ELIN r Size Hres s With Those of ?s of Any Make (CHER TYPE $12.75 15.50 DE TYPE $15.00 18.90 22.50 23.35 24.15 26.45 Than Fabric Prices let? price list. Five per Y COMPANY C. t i