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THE UNION TIMESH 1 *lhfciil Daily Except Sunday By ' it? UNION TIMES COMPANY s{ -wis M. . Kice Editor ?e* is tared at the Postqttice in Union. 8. C w aa >??ad ?laH matter. k Tianaa Pull dine Mala Street IMM T.jeplso? Np. 1 t] SUBSCRIPTION RATES Jue Year 14 00 ? ^ia MMh? 2.0') n Thraa ^Mithi t.00 ADVERTISEMENTS iJna Square, flrat insertion $1.00 f Rvery subsequent Inaertion 60 ^ Obituary notieee. Church and Lodge .. notices and notices of puhite meetings. en- 1 tertalnmrnte and Carda of Thank* will !> ' , (harped for at the rate ?f one cent a word. ' each accompanying the order. Count the words end you (HII know what the cost ? will be. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS U The Associated Press ts excluilvelv ?.n j titled to the use for republication of n?w? dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the loon B nrtrs published therein. j WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 6, 1922 1 . w. f BLEASE OR McLEOD? t The Democrats of the state will. on next Tuesday, select a candidate t for governor of South Carolina. That t candidate, according to all former 1 experiences, will be the next govern- 1 or of South Carolina. Blease or Mcleod ? It must be one of the two I To our mind, there are many rea- c sens why McLeod, not Blease, be e chosen. Here is reason No. 1: Mr. rBlease claims to be a red shirt Dem- r ocrat, but his democracy is tainted. 1 He is too thick with Republicans, 1 particularly negro Republicans. I ? make this statement upon my own 5 knowledge, not upon charges of a i similar nature made by others. T * know that he wrote to a leading ne- f gro Republican of this county two ^ years ago. The same party told me 1 a few days ago that Mr. Blease had 1 written him again. He refused to 1 CMVP nip thp lpt.fpr fr?r nnWirnHnn 1 saying, "I cannot do that, for Mr. 1 Blcase is coming into our party" < Now, if Mr. Blease wishes to be a * Republican, that's his business. But t I cannot support a Republican who poses as a Democrat. This is no time 1 for letting down the bars. More ne- f groes registered in Union for the c general election on yesterday than > on any one day during the past six < months. It Is rumored that they t will hold a county convention on * next Monday night. What does this 1 mean? If Mr. Blease is writing va- * rious negro Republicans throughout A the state and the negroes are regis- i tering as never before, it looks like r Mr. Blease, if defeated in the pri- * mary, will bolt and run in the gen- s eral election. Can the negro vote, * along with the lawless element elect him in the general election? That's a niiMtinn. nnH nnc tViof tho lom. abiding white democrats must answer at the polls. Reason No. 2: Mr. Blease was governor of South Carolina two terms?four years. Elected chief executive of the laws, he nullified the laws of the state, particularly the criminal laws. More than 1,700 convicts, many of them desperate criminals, were paroled, afterwards pardoned and restored to citizenship. It is inconceivable that the juries, judges and courts of the state could have so far erred and that Mr. Blease was right and they all wrong. He boasts that those he turned loose are now good citizens, and are behaving. The facts do not warrant this statement. Many of his pardon- j ed ones have not been law abiding. } Besides, he took the office with an onth to uphold the law, to execute the law. How miserably he failed in $ this may be seen in the fact that he overrode jury, judge, court and law. His wholesale pardoning was noth- 1 ing short of a violation of his oath of office and a betrayal of the law. Reason No 3: Mr. Blease has held r fi the office two terms. We feel that the Democrats of the state are in poor case indeed if they cannot proT duce timber for governor, but are under the necessity of choosing Blease for n fhirrt form Puon i# T him a good man, which I do not, and knew that he had been faithful on the two former occasions, I would cast t my ballot against him for a third term. Democrats do not relish the third term idea. a Reason No. 4: Mr. Blease has t never stood for the whole people. He has stood by his friends, as he has often avowed, and he has had 1 scant courtesy for his political foes. ' He now poses as a friend to all. Who believes that? Can the leopard change his spots? He would be the . same little, selfish partisan he has always been, if he should again be chosen Reason No. 5: Mr. Blease says he opposes idealism, and will have none t of the doctrine of altruism. To my mind this is a prime reason for not having him as governor of the state, li [is vision is narrow and selfish and a make this charge upon his own tatement. Reason No 0: Mr, Blea^ oj^Kftad 0 ill flood this state with illicit trhli- J ey. Bpp.tl^jg^p? will flourish and c ho prohibition laws will be thflVhrt- a st farce. There will be no enforce ? xl V ?. _ 1 _1 A m L iwul ox me law, no jiuniouniBuv xor iolators of the law, no protection or those who live under the law. If t he moral element of the state are t orced to live under the reign of Mr. ( ilease the oondltion will be lntolar- 1 hie. ] Reason No. 7: Mr. Bleaee'e public, itterances, his disregard of the orlinary proprieties of life, his wild, rratic teaching, are bad enough as t is. To elect him governor for a hird term will give him greater ?ower than he has ever had, and his yranny will be a thing of evil. Reason No. 8: Mr. Blease poses as he poor man's friend. He is no such hing. He is the friend of the lawmaker, rich or poor; but not of the joor man. Reason No. 9: Mr. Blease tells th? jeople he will reduce taxes. He will ] i ? ? u .L : * I i. J _ I,. 1 iu iiu dutu iiiui^, lur nu cannot uu ibf :ven if he tried. What can he do to ( educe taxes? We are demanding ( oads, schools anu greater comforts, ro get these things taxes must b? ' evied. The only way taxes can be educed is by repudiating debts, and south Carolina is not strong for epudiation. We have builded roads ind schools, and we are now paying 'or them. How can we reduce taxes vithout refusing to pay the bonds .ve have already voted? No, Mr. 31ease cannot reduce taxes. Is he to ' >e both law maker and law executor7 1 I [t is the custom of tyrants to usurp joth functions. Indeed, a tyrant is | >ne who usurps legislative, judicial I ind executive perogatives, becoming 1 he "whole cheese." We do not believe Mr. Blease will >e elected on next Tuesday. We eel quite confident .that he will be lefeated. He polled his full strength n the first primary. It was conceded by all that he would get into :he second primary. He is going to '< >e defeated, and he "should be de feated, in our humble judgement. The next governor of South Carolina , vill be McLeod, and he is a man of i rreproachable character. He has nade a clean, high-class campaign, le has advocated safe, sane ideas rnd he will not betray the sacred I rust imposed in him. i Our cat says there is no qu "don nark after McLeod's democracy, and ic should be supported. * - Our cat says people get the kind of jovernment they support. * ? Our cat says the laws are made to >e enforced, not overriden. * Our cat says you will make no nistake if you cast your ballot for Thos. G. McLeod, Democrat. # ? Our cat says moral issues are the eal issues in every campaign. * Our cat says don't be a slacker, go o the polls and vote. * * All * Oof ootffi ki/w ?1 * A v?? oajro uik UUBUtt'lCS Wild he edge of ambition. Our cat says he notes that long ikirts are coming back, but they are , lot pretty. rtftf n r% mm ^1% a am ? ? wu. nil nay n me nuuiril Hie reiUBnp to adopt the long: skirts, and that s something: to be thankful for * * * Our cat says the law is the only I lefense of the good citizen. ? ? i Our cat says the longest day has in en<J. ( * * 1 Our cat says stubbornness is not < trength. 1 < Our cat says take a share of stock n the cannery. ( \ Harding-Tolbert Democrat ? ^ Joseph W. Tplbert, Republican boM I South Carplina, WRej[v^ a letter let year, dat^ed May 21, 3^2A, sJiJOd "Cole L. Blease,',' on tjle ftUVfy* >f 'patronage in this ItaJta," and .aying tha,t "aa fpr as I tywe bpon dfle tp learn, vary Uttle credence la fiven to the Campbell-McLaurin alk; in fact, it is looked upon as a oke by those who have any influence ind who know that these men canlot break into the Democratic ranks." Continuing, in his letter to Mr. Tol>ert, Mr. Blease aaid: "I oan certainly *Wte that you lave been, a lifelong Republican; :hat you have gone through strenjous times and that your life has of:en been at stake, and that through it ill you have been tried and true; and, >f, after all these years of service and ievotion to your party the Republicans would now kick you out, I can lardly think that they would have much of an opportunity to get any )ne here to follow them, because the people here would realize that no matter how devoted the services they might render, their labors would not be appreciated. I can hardly see bow, after a thorough investigation, it could be possible for you to be turned down as the leader of the Republican Party in this state, and as for the forminc of a new nartv with Campbell or McLaurin, or both, such talk is a myth, a farce and plain damned foolishness. "You are at liberty to read this letter to whom you please, or publish it if you wish, as I presume everybody knows that I speak what I think regardless of consequences. I have written you freely as you requested me to do. I am a Democrat; not a Wilson so-called Democrat, but a Jeffersonian Democrat, who rejoiced at Harding's election and the downfall of idealism." But isn't it strange that a Democrat who 'rejoiced at Harding's election," (Harding being the candidate of the Republican Party), who would not say that he had voted or bad not voted for Mr. Cox, the regularly chosen candidate of the Democratic Party, should have been selected as the adviser of the head of the Republican Party in South Carolina about the distribution of official patronage in this State ? That seems to be the role in which Cole L. Blease, twice nominated and elected Governor by the Democratic voters of this state, has placed himself, "regardless of consequences." Is it not strange that this man should be permitted to be a candidate for any office at any Democratic primary election in South Carolina? All the candidates for Governor at the primary election held August 29, except Mr. Blease, when they were asked whether or not they had voted for Mr. Cox, said promptly that they had voted for him. Mr. Blease said that his father (and we believe he was a very good man) wore a red Shirt under Wade Hampton in 1876 and that anybody who said that he (Mr. Cole Blease) had ever done one act that was disloyal to the Democratic Party was a damned liar. There is not the least objection to Mr. Blease running as a candidate for Governor or for any other office *n South Carolina as a Republican; but since he has been rejoicing at the election of a Republican President and conferring with Joe Tolbert about the distribution of the loaves and fishes in this State , it would seem only proper that he should go with the crowd to which he belongs. ?Spartanburg Journal. Girl is Blamed For Death of Atlantan New York, Sept. 2.?The unhappiness caused him by a society girl of Rome, Ga., was the motive that lay behind the suicide of Harry C. Ham* mit, of Atlanta, in a local hotel Saturday, it seemed. Without mentioning the girl's name, Hammitt, connected with thj Atlanta omces 01 tne ooutnern i\ai iroad, loft a letter telling of the despair his affair with the Rome young woman had led him into. From other letters found in the hotel room where Hammit had ended his life hv swallowing strychnin, the medical examiner learned the society girl's name but refused to divulge if. Other letters were left addressed to Hammitt's mother, Mrs. Ella M. Hammitt, of Bristol, Va.; Miss Ida Patton, Judge Harper Hamilton and Mrs. George G. Styles, all of Rome. Ga. Rome, Ga., Sept. 2.?News from New York of the suicide of Harry Hammitt, for five years railroad claim agent here, created a sensation. Hammitt, it is said, left Rome abruptly one day last week, catching a train just as it was pulling out and leaving his automobile at the curb with the engine running. Reports that Hammitt had been intimate with any Rome young woman, or was engaged to marry any young woman here, are denied vigorously. Hammitt, it is known, was divorced from his first wife, and while it was reported he paid attention to a young woman here, no serious significance was given the affair. Rumoi's have been flying thick and fast since the' report of his suicide. The report that the father of a certain young society girl of this city was searching for Hammitt at the time of his hasty departure from this city could not be verified. There are substitutes for almost everything?except work and sleep. r a Found College For Cfeinese London, Sept. 5.?Great Britatyq portipp of the Bo*er amounting, th/e Daljy Mall Understand*, to ?11,000,000 aQjfl due ne^t Uepambor, will be uapd tp found a college either in Great Britain or In China under British administration for Chinese students. The United States, it is pointed out here, real* ized .the great possibilities of Chinese trade 20 years ago when her share of the Boxer Indemnity was put to use to encourage Chinese students to go to the United States. Plans to Establish "Live Church" Moscow, Sept. 6.?The 'red clergy," led by a group of young men, held its. first congress here early in August and discussed plans to establish a new "live church." It was contend cu mat me cnurcn must De orougnt nearer to the masses, and that the "new church' should be as "simple and as humble as was Christ Himself." "The aims of the "red clergy," socalled because of its acknowledgement of the social revolution and the Soviet Internationale, include liquida tion of the superiority of the regular clergy in Russian church affairs; doing away with the reactionary section of higher clergy who, it is claimed, are still hoping for a coup d'etat to sweep them into power again, and preparation of an all Russian conclave at which a successor to Patriarch Tichon is to be elected. The 'red clergy" group, headed by Archbishop Antonin and a number of young Moscow and Petrograd clergymen, came into existence as a result of a split among the Russian Orthodox clergy, brought about soon after confiscation of church treasures was started by Soviet government officials. Because of the opposition which developed among the ruling church authorities, a number of the clergy were prosecuted in various parts of Russia, even Patriarch Tichon himself having been placed on trial. Many death sentences were imposed, some of which were carried into effect, and various other archbishops, bishops and clergymen were given jail sentences. Realizing that the conflict betweetT"th<rstate and church threatened the very existence of the church itself, the group of young clergymen took the initiative and demanded the abdication of Patriarch Tichon. The Patriarch yielded to the demands, and immediately afterward the movement of the "live church" was inaugurated. The new movement, first of all, is against supporters of the old Bizantine church service which demands splendor in all its glory. It is contended that the costly mitres of gold ssacaeu witn jewels, tne magnmcent vu^k^onts, the priceles rugs are too sig^^ant of aristocracy. "In all this splendor," claim the young clergymen, "little room is left for the light of Christ's mercy and love. The church must be brought nearer to the musses?it should be 'proletarized." And it ia on these grounds that the "red clergy" have recognized the revolution, its results, and the Internationale. "The live church" proposes also to clear the churches and parish councils of counter revolutionary clergy and to remove the vow of celibacy for bishops. Colombian President Appoints Defeated Opponent to Office Bogota, Sept. 5.?General Pedro Nel Ospina, who assumed the presidency of the Republic of Colombia on the seventh of August, has apurt I r. f rv/1 n nniiAnnl am Ut n/,4 [/uiiiicu u wavtuiiai v<iuuifi, V 1I1& representative in it to all political parties, and surrounding himseif with some of the most eminent men in his country. It is noteworthy that General Benjamin Herrera, the candidate opposing President Ospina in the recent elections, has been appointed Secretary of the Treasury. Doctor CarloB A. Umeta, former Minister of Colombia in the United States has been made secretary of Foreign Affairs. Doctor Miguel Jimenez Lopez, a man of science and of progressive ideals, was named to head the Department of the Interior. Carlos Velcz Danies, owner and! promoter of some of the largest industrial enterprises of Colombia, was appointed Secretary of War. Mr. Danies is at pj^ent interested, together with certain American business men, in the development of a large packing house on the Atlantic coast of Colombia. The other departments of the government have been placed in the hands of experts along their respective lines. The Department of Finance has been entrusted to Felix SaInznr, a prominent banker and finan cier; and that of Public Works to Alejandro Lopex, a notable engineer who is thoroughly familiar with the communications system of the country. The new administration soon will take up the study of several proposals made by American capitalists for loans and the construction of public works. ' "Dress like a picture, not like a cartoon," advises a fashion authority. But so many girls think cawtoons are pictures!?Greenville News. m I m I W I Three mysteries?Love, Women, and Hash. Carpenter Won Big Sum For Imrentum sow *> abig tyd tfrfc w^y mimi the pceen ? v fhi. Ium ^lw?y^ tyNjjt a puzsle to the overage bttid^nan, ap^i 0 boat ojfi&cerj In Tbq LoOftop Da^ly Mail. fljf pour&e. too lao4M?tfi ban a 9uusy idea ox latitude and longitude, but how these are obtained, and by what means, is generally a mystery. . Latitude may be dismissed in a few words. It has always been possible lor m sailor to ascertain his latitude either by the altitude of the ua or 19090 or by the pole-star at night. With either a sextant or quadrant this is quite a simple operation; but to And the longitude is a very different matter and this is where the ship's chronometer plays the most important part. Without going into the technicalities of navigation, longitude is the difference between the local time at the place of observation?the place the ship is in?and the local time at the place chosen as the standard meridian?Greenwich, which is accepted as the standard meridian by an countries. Over two hundred years ago it was realized that for a ship to be safely navigated it was absolutely necessary to know one's longitude?in other words, always to know the correct time at Greenwich. It was the period when timepieces were not up to the high standard of today and when for them to keep anything like correct time, even ashore, was unusual. Imagine, then, the effect of a tossing ship on these watches! About 1734 the British government offered a reward of ?20,000 for any one who could discover a method of determining longitude at sea within 80 miles of the truth. The following year the problem was solved by John Harrison, son of a Yorkshire carpenter, who produced the first chronometer that would keep a regular rate. It was tested on a voyage to Jamaica and home and found to be well within the government limit, and he was awarded the ?20,000. Nowadays every ship sailing the ocean has two or more chronometers, and they have been brought to very great perfection. In the modern ship they are kept in a special padded case in the navigating room, away from all shocks, dynamos (to prevent magnetism) and sudden changes of temperature. It is the duty of the ship's officer to wind them at the same time every morning and to report to the captain direct when he has done so. It will be noticed that a ship's chronometers are two or thr$e in a case lettered A, B. or C, respectively, and the tyro will be struck by the fact that they all differ in time. But on glancing at the lid of the chronometer case a card will be found giving the daily and accumulated error with a note showing whether the instrument is fast or slow of Greenr wich mean time. The question may be asked: How when ships make a long voyage of two years or more, is it known whether the chronometer keeps this rate? The answer is that at every port of any size there is a time ball on a prominent building which is dropped at a stated hour. By this means the navigator can check the rate of his chronometers frequently. Next to the compass, the chronometer is the most important instrument on board hsip. New Moves in Foreign Trad* Export credits from a government ai agency are to cease in Jbngiana alter September 8. On that date the Exports Credit Department of the British Board of Trade will close its doors. In something like two or three years the financial results to the government \*ill be known. About $40,000,000 in credits have been' made possible, but until the outstanding liabilities have expired the books cannot be closed. Facile letter-writing does not get foreign orders. The letters must give the foreign dealer the facts upon which he can decide to do business. A recent inquiry from abroad points a moral. Fifteen American houses responded. Only three quoted c.i. f., as requested Five hazarded guesses at the freight rates. Most of the letters were so written as to suggest indifference whether or not and business was done. At the same time, competitors from other countries were not only quoting eagerly on a c. i. f. basis,.but were putting their quotations in terms of the local money, offering agency agreements, and in other ways actively invitinir the business. A Carte de Commerce since July 1 will be a necessary portion of the impedimenta of a business man who goes to France to make sales without opening an office. These cards are to be used for Frenchmen and foreigners who sell elsewhere than at regular establishmetns. Their purpose is to make sure that the French tax on sales and the French income tax are properly met. To obtain a card, a traveling salesman has to make a deposit, which he gets back upon showing the taxes have been liquidated.?The Nation's Business. A man in Florida drank furniture polish for liquor?and got a permanent finish.?Exchange. Adivce to girls. Dont many a man t# reform hhn. The rites won't right him. The altar wont altar him. ?Exchange. ? TO THE FATHER | OF UN1Q] f If yon want the I i Shoes for school wear f He sells the same foi | pairs of pants, as you J a better, stronger sh X Star Brand Shoe for I % just gotten in a big | time to buy before sc X ask is a look. | J. L. J V Tk Home of ? < <$><$?<$? ?$??}? The State of Britain's Foreign Trade For all of our exports and imports we do not have figures which are exactly comparable to the British calculations. The Federal Reserve Board has for more important commodities made calculations to show the monthly results as compared with the figures for 1913. These figures tend to show than in 1921 our exports were 8 per cent over those for 1918, and our imports 35 per cent higher. In May, 1922, the percentage of imports was around 99 per oent fit the volume for the same month in 1918, and of imports was 178 per oent. In exports of manufactured articles and in imports of articles for further manufacture we have our greatest increases. In May of 1922 these exports were 65 per cent over the level for 1913 and the imports which were to go into further manufacturing were 127 per cent above the 1913 figure.?The Nation's Business. "Cross Crossings Cautiously " STOMACH TROUBLES Indiana Lady Had Sametkkg Lflu Indigestion Until Ska Taak Black-Draifkt, Tkaa Get AH Right Scraoir, Imd.?"Soms time ago 1 kU a sick spell, NBttkiai Uki tail gesUon." writes Mrs. Clara Peaoeek, el Reata A thla place. MI would set vert especially fia the mernMgs. T1mb I began the ass of Thedfgrdt Black-Draught, after I bad tried othei medtolnea. .The Blaek-Diaught re llertd Me sin than gnythjag that 1 took, and IJftt all right "I haven't found anything bettei than black-Draught when eufferlmi from trouble caused by oonstlpattoa It Is easy and sure. Can be taken to smap doses or large as the case calli ^hen you hare sick stomach, lndt gastloa. headache, constipation, 01 other disagreeable symptoms, take Black-Draught to help keep yen) system free from poison. Thedford's Black-Draught la mad* from purely vegetable Ingredients acts hi a gentle, natural way, and ha no bad after-effect?. It may be safe1 taken by young or old. Get a package of Black-Draught tc lay. Insist on the genuine, Thedfprd'i At your druggist's. NOB ALL KINDS OF CEMETERY WORK Union Marble A Granite Co. Main St. Union, S. C. H. W. EDGAR Undertakiig Parlor* Calls answered day and night Prompt and Efficient Serriee I Day Phone 129?Night Phone til *5?*!# Red Devil Ay rauMMrea burnt grease and makaa blackened iron pott. and pan# look liko now. Senddtr free booklet. <4*awi dewW <* fma#w II t ricE *1 ' 5 AND MOTHERS H COUNTY: | best Boy*' Snits and | , come to J. L. Jolly's, x r less! One and two choose. There is not X oe on earth than die intra wear, ire liixw shipment. Plenty el f :hool upeas up. AD I Z I fOLLY | ?tar Brand Shoes t - 1 1 - ' ?! '? ..M' '- I.ll I I ill I ? SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS MONEY TO LOAN on city or oountry property in large amounts on easy terms. S. E. Barron. 1406-tf FOR SALE?Lot 100x150, two room house, near Monarch Cotton Mills. Price $300.00. D. Fant Gilliai/^ ) 147b=5t WANTED?To do your tuning and repairing of pianos, organs and player-pianos. Phone Storm's Drug Store, No. 76. F. E. Storm. 1474-ot LOWER FLAT FOR RENT?Five rooms and all modern conveniep^pa. Mrs. R. M. Estes, South Cflhirch St. 1475-6t FOR SALE?108 acres farm land, aiffht milpM from Ilninn nn Tloa* river; 40 acres of pasture under fence, balance pine, cedar and land. At a bargain. Citizens Real Estate & Loan Co. 1475-Gt FOR RENT?Three rooms in the Arthur property, corner of Main and Church streets. Rooms with all conveniences on first floor and all together. Apply to W. E. Green. 0-6-6-1 IF YOU WANT to sell City or Country Real Estate, list it with us. Commissions reasonable. Citizens Real Sstate & Loan Co. 1476-5t FOR SALE?Good milch cow. D. Fant Gilliam. 1475-5t MAN OR WOMAN~ WANTED?$40 weekly fall time, $1.00 an hour spare time, selling guaranteed bos- ^ rory Ml ii ?. M|IQi IfliH UIUWC* 1 essary. Guaranteed Mills, Norristown, Penn. 1899-lOb-Wed WEST SPRINGS W ATE It?Deliveries made only on Saturday and upon standing orders, through the winter months. Phone 2820. J. Boyd Lancaster. 1200-Mon.Wed.tf BUILDING LOTS and small farn?, just outside city limits. Citizens Real Estate & Loan Co. 1475-6t FOR SALE?Highest quality hairy vetch and crimson clover seed, delivered at Union, S. C., in lots not less than 100 pounds at 22V6c per pound. Alfalfa at 28c per pound. Inoculation $1.80 per acre for Ave acres; singe aere, $2.00. This price for a limited time as seed are scarce and the tendency is for higher prices. Cash with order. We have a full stock of every variety fall field seed. Don't confusej^ | our quality with cheaper gradas. We sell the most successful farmers, those who get results. HolmesCalhoun Seed Co., Spartanburg, S. C. 9-4-6.8 Palm Beach Suits Cleaned We can clean and press year Palm Beach suit rery quickly these days. We hare the equipment and the know how. Give me a trial. Will appreciate it as much or more than any one else. Phone 167 and we will call promptly and return your suit looking like new. ^ Hames Pressing & Repair Shop NicholMB Buli Bids. Phone 169 and motor cycle w01 calL [ ?urvr erwTH I Did Yo? Ewer Hmlt? ! I have had what I call "hoi foot" for about 6 yean. I couldn't walk behind by plow. It was terrible. Storm's Lotion relieved H at oaaan (Signed) Deck Good# K el ton Route 1. , Storm's Lotion is sold at STORM'S DRUG STORE > Prico $t .00 An ad. in TWTiae? phunllSj ,