The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, September 19, 1922, Image 2

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THE UNION TIMES t llihi 4 Daily Except Sunday By .MM UNION TIMES COMPANY -e1wva M. Rica Editor -a t tMiitmd at the Poatofflca in Union, 8. C aa aeeend rlaaa matter, rimaa Buildina Main Street Ball Telephond Ne. 1 a SUBSCRIPTION BATES One Year $4.00 8ix Month. 2.00 Three Month. 1.00 ADVERTISEMENTS * One Sq'iare. flrat inaertion $1.00 Every aubaequent Inaertion 60 Obitoary notice., Ohurcb and Lodtr noticea and notice# of public meeting., entertain menta and Card# of Tfcanka will be charged for 'at the rate of one cent a word, a.h accompanying the order. Count the aorde and you will know what the eo.t *>11 be 5 MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS iut nnwwm rrm is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of news dispatches credited to it or not **v .at red 1 ted In this paper, and also ? Wl new* published therein. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1922 Wo hope to have our cannery ready to can sweet potatoes by October 15. Our next aim will be a crop of beans and beets, then tomatoes. Many of those who planted tomatoes this year have said they will put in several times the acreage in tomatoes next year In the meantime we arle striving to get the ad - , ditional subscriptions to stock. We believe the outlook for success is brifhter today than at any time heretofore. The "unspeakable Turk" is rampant, out to burn, kill, destroy. England stood between the Turkish empire and dismemberment at the close of the recent war. Now it seems, England is to have the task of bringing the Turk to terms, and it is going to be a big job. Manned by expert German officers, the Turkish army is not a thing to be despised. With a almost limitless resource in timber for soldiers, and with expert training, there is no telling how far Turkey may go. The whole Mohammedan world is a unit, and it is n pnnnflaoa Tf wtahI/1 Ka mm VVWUVIWUU UV4UV* JL. V HVU1U IIUV su"pris:ng to see another world war, h's time it would be Mohammedan vs. Christian. Some day that event is sure to arise, and it may be that we are entering upon it even now. Between now and next spring we hope to induce some several hundred farmers to plant a half dozen fig trees. The reasons for this are it is so easy, and it is a way to get some easy money. With our cannery runfK. . . ' ning. it will be quite an aaav matter to pack a thousand cases of figs in tin cans. The product sells readily, at a good price. To add the fig canning to our list will cost practically nothing. We hope to induce one thousand farmers to plant six fig bushes. Six thousand fig bushes, two years hence, would yield a generous supply of figs. The figs would bring in good, ready cash. It is also true that the care of the trees is an easy matter. Six fence corners, six waste spaces about the lot and barn could thus be utilized. Here is the beginning of our drive for six thousand fig hushes. fcssNr Our cat says this is no time for looking backward. # a Our cat says business this fall will be what we make it a a Qur cat says it is hard to please everybody Our cat says crowded schools predict intelligent citizenshiD. Our oat says get ten dollars in the bank and thus join the capitalistic class. ( Our cat says the unspeakable Turk , is to be allowed to continue his 1 butcheries. ' ... > Our cat says a task wall dons is . a ateppipg atone to greater oppor- , tunity. i 1 Our cat saya liberty ia purchased in < blood and by the same token main- ] tained. V # Our cat says It is folly to attsmpt i o appear wiser than you are. Our cat sjgw It U * tea Unas to >egin systematic adrurttaiag. ? 0 Our cat says confidence abused is n loon killed. 8 t Our cat says it will soon be time * 'or the land hog to begin operations. ? t Our cat says speak a good word * 'or someone today. I a Our cat says the fall gardens look B tick, owing to the dry weather. Our cat says it is a mean fellow I | hat sets a trap for others. Successful Year t Begins at Furmsm ? <3 Greenville, Sept. 15.?With an en- i rollment fully up to expectations, the t 19*22-23 session of Furnian university 1 got under Wuy Thursday morning. ( With several students yet to be ma- v triculaled, it is believed that the attendance will finally come up to last . year's figures, which were 416, the { laigest in the history of the institu- / tinn flnp crrntifvincr fnntnrn ^V?a enrollment is that a wider distribu- c tion of students over the state is ( shown. Every county except two-- ' Beaufort and Lexington ? is represented in the student body. Several states and one foreign country are also represented. The enrollment ? from North Carolina alone is more * 'han n dozen. * Important announcements made at * 'he opening exercises were that the James C. Furman hall of science, which was badly damaged by lire last !u!y, will be ready for use by Christmas and that a portion of it will 1<. in use within two weeks; the rV.c new f *,80.000 gymnasium will be completed ; before Christmas; that the college ? opens for the first time this I'.ill a ^ no dern, steam laundry for the u.-e of r he student body; a change .n the ! management of the library; the a.ldi- a tion of three new professors to the faeulty, and the creating of two new courses and addition of other features , in the college curriculum. The new professors are A. M. Ar- ? nett, Ph. D., Columbia uaivers.ty, 1 head of the department of histoiy; < Iv. I. Allen, M. A., of the Uoi-'er.-'ty ' of Georgia, assistant protessor of I physics, and John L. Plyltr. alumnus of Furman and graduate of the ilui- . vard law school, who will be assistant , in the department of law. Succeeding Miss Albert^ as librarian is Miss Eva Wrlgley, formerly librarian at Emory university. She will be assisted by Mj*s Lott'e Crossland of Lake C't.y, a graduate of Coker college. * ' A newr coufse In biologv M toi b? given this year, to be less technical than the course given heretofore 'ihis is intended primarily for pre med1. :al students. A course in health and sanintion, compulsory for freshmen, 's tc he given this year tor the drat time. The university has also added a director of music. Judge League, an alumnus of Furman and a professional musician, will have charge ?f 4-u? IL. --ii ?i i 1 me Liuiiimg ui nie cuncge give ciuo. band orchestra and will give instruction in piano. The freshman class is particularly i pleasing to the university authorities, I it being readily admitted that tlr:? is, < cn the whole, the finest set (if new men that has ever been matriculated at Furman. They ire more mature than previous first year men. and the ? great majority of them are graduates of eleventh grade and recognized ( preparatory schools. "There is every indication," said , President McGlothlin, "that we are ( going to have a remarkably fine ses- I sion at Furman this year." t Plan Crop Rotations Now Clemson College, Sept. 18.?This i3 J a good time of year to plan a sys- , tematic crop rotation and begin to put it into operation. The wisdom of j using a crop rotation has been proven ; h \f nnmprnuu ovnorl m onto ??/l ^^-'1 ? -~1, .. wv.., N.A1/VI1IUCIIVO wu *jy titv v experiences of our best farmers. It is i now more important than ever before. ' P. very farmer who has not already done so should make a start on a relation now, advises Prof. C. P. Blackf well, chief of the Agronomy Division f Land to be planted in small grains ( can be planted now. Land to be , planted in cotton next year should be i set aside now and should be plowed I deep this fall if it is a heavy soil, and if it is a light soil it should be plowed early in the spring. It should v be* worked into a firm smooth seed * bed early in the spring in order to , give an early growth of cotton. t I>and to be planted in corn next , year should be planted to a cover crop carl ythis fall. If the land has cotton on it this year, the cotton stalks should be plowed under before plant- t ing to small grain as a cover crop. I m . t Lyceum Association Meets Chicago, 111., Sept. 16.?History of the lyceum and chatauqua movement ivill be discussed at a meeting of the International Lyceum and Chatauqua < association to be held here Septem- I >er 16. 1 At the evening session of the meet- 1 mg addresses will be made by Sir [iilbert Parkert Bart and by Fred- J trick William Wile of the Phlladel- J phia Public Ledger, who will speak ( jn "Chatauqua Through Journalistic | Eyes." 1 - - * " ~ c Advertise in The Timet. I ?1??? ??mmmmi???mm {ROUGH! BACK TOvVi r.P/.ES inolent Off iota I Had Brief Pay of Qlory When Only Daily Nrwspatter Was Bursal Out The connection between the town Tier and the newspaper wuh demontrsted recently when the plant of the ilacon (Mo.) Dally Chronicle-Herald, he only dally newspaper In the couny, wus so badly damaged by fire It tan put out of commission for several reeks, according to the fourth ate. Some Important announcements vere waiting?a big stock sule, a pubIc meeting, features at the movie iliows and spacta! soles by the nerchants. There were weekly p?>ers, but these would not be out In Ime. Then someone thought of Dick Mc vlnney, the old town crier, who had teen off the Job for a decade, and vhose retirement had been the effuse it pinch storied sentiment as indlca lve of the passage of the old to the godern method which came with the lally newspaper. IMck said he was eld and rhenuatlcky, and that his voice was not vhat It used to be. but they dug him tp a bell, gave him a megaphone and Old him to iro out and tell the people vhat was coming. The old town crier did the best he ould. but It wns evident that years lad weakened his vocal organs, so hat the bell was the most valuable enture of his service. While the dally paper was ont of 'ommlsalon the town slipped back s Iccade 01 more. No mafket reports lothtng about the weather, nothlm: "rom the eonventlons. no announce nents of choir practice and socials. The town crier wns all in when tht >nper resumed publication and too' lis place. Rut, -while his resurroctloi vas brief, the town crier came Intr. inch fame ns he had never known lr lis previous humhle history. Protecting Australian Animals. At the present rote of extermlnalon Australia's marsupials will have iraetienll.v disappeared within 2<? r?mrs, Rays Pr. OVdln Mackenzie, h. m article In the Melbourne Argus I'he revival of shipping after the wn? vlth Its opportunities for exporters. Is riving point to his warning, and It Is trohahle that some steps will ho al:en to control the export of live medmens of Australian fauna or o? 'i:lns. At present the protection of Auts rnii?ii nuiiiMi in i?'ii ri,* n oiuic innrer. thougn the commonwealth ha. ustoms regulations prohlhttlng the tport of certain skins and of the Vathers of specified hlrds. Th? mlque character of Australian mar mptala has long been recognized b; 'he zoological gardens of the world ind it Is not likely that legitimate urchanges between zoos will he pro tiblted by any Australian protective egulationa Utilizing Solar Heat. The scarcity of fuel has natural!? urned attention to solar heat In sun ly regions. In a late paper, C. Le ftoy Melslnger states that. In Egypt tie Punjab and South Africa, gias? topped t?Mtkwood boxes, blackened In Me and Insulated, serve as ovens for coking, and find many other uses rhe midday temperature Inside has >een fonnd to range from 240 degrees to 275 degrees P., while an auxiliary ulrror may raise It as high as 820 de trees. The "solar eooker" devised at he Smithsonian Institution comprise* I loop of pipe containing oil, a portion >f the loop passing through a bos roctalnlng'sn oven, while another potion receives the solar rays concen rated upon It by an Iron-hacked glas; nlrror having the form of n half oyl nder. The unenunl heating cause* he oil to circulate throughout the tube FTeat Is thus conveyed to the oven ami Htoklng Is done without fuel. Not Altogether Birdlike. At a social evening one very tun deal young lady sang a song entitled 'Sylvan Sounds." Tt was very fine, ndeed and all the old ladles and ge?lemen waxed quite enthusiastic. "Most delightfulf" gushed one dee* >td Indy to a young man who ha need to ho near her. "Isn't she a ovel.v singer?" "Yea. quite good !" replied the yount ellow coolly. "And didn't It remind you of th* dnclng of hlrda? In fact," went or. he good lady enthusiastically, "one night almost helleve It really wua i> >1rd singing." "Well, I don't know." remarked th?nan; "T never saw a hlrd sit down < i table and drink three cups of tea ind eat two helpings of veal-nnd-hau. de and enough cake and sweets '< itock a school treat." Famous Men Look Alike. Houghton Mifflin company recent*: erelved a request from a distinguished nemher of the British parllBnrv?*?? 'or an engraving of Hawthorm inch as appears as n frontispiece In he standard edition of his works t was, said the .correspondent, for a s|>ecl?l purpose." Another lettpi old the pun>ose of the picture. I? vas framed apd presented to Lloyd loorge, whi. has heen. writes the M "much Impressed hy the resem dance as snown'by the portrait he ween Mr Hawthorne and the prime iiimnitsr. Iinmenee Coal Dump. The coa. damp of the Snowden Cok* ompany at Linn, Pa., la an Id to he th* arjjost In the world. It takes care n< wenf.v '.ight ronl rnrs nl one tlm-? hMtiplr?? them slmnltnnfonsly nt or rcrntlor In uljrM Wnndi Mad* for flHenoe loo* la the moat fertile and bountiful if the Hebrides of which there are K>me CO") scattered about the water* lo the west of Scotland, ao exchange rtates. Utaly about 100 of ?heae lo ands are inhabltod at all, and the (Tester part of these latter aupport em Chan a doten people each. It la i region of,*afn and mist, with rare ilear days thvt are like the Infrequent aagh ojta aad but kindly nature-god. Nm atflBphoro of Dm archipelago lo ado for dseams and silence. It soeaM art of the modern world. SEES GOOD IN Tr?~ TEA, VJ? Ooctor Eliot. Aged Educptor, 0<e? nu Rocord Hav.ng Faith hi I hat* Mod*rat* Stimu'ant. IV Charles \V. Bllpi. now in his eighty-sixth year. confesses t>? :i d?vl atlon from the strict role of ahstcml ousnoss which canaot hut muse concern In the Inner circles of nmral reform. says the New York World. Though he has always indulged Id "stimulants like tea. coffee and alcohol," and In tobacco not at all for more than half a century, he yet finds a certain virtue In ten drtnfeing. have used tea most," he says, "because tt *e<-ma to me to facilitate the men! ^al effort of wnting and speaking." If the venerable ex-prefddent of Harvard university had merely said that he -derived some dletlc benefit from tea, oo exception would be taken to the statement. It Is hla frank admission that he uaes tea as a stlinuj lant and finds that It helps his mental processes which will be challenged. Can there be good In any atlmulahtY Can the wltlfnl excitation of the mind by any kind ef brew he other than Immoral In Its essential nature? All simon-pure reformers of the dr)nk evil will feel sure that the use of tea has iiruMKeu yunur ciiioi r lincneci tuiu robbed It of It* highest productivity. But what the world has lost in that particular will count as nothing to the self-revelation that this distinguished champion of temperance la not 100 per cent perfect In his prohibition views. ! NEW ROUTES OF NEAR EAST , Railroad Linos Will Bo Materially B? tended as the Reault of Operations of the Qreat War. The military operations of the war gave a material boost to railroad development In the uear East, says Lewis lleck. In Aala. After their suocessI ful campaign at the end of 1017, the British eaResided their track line from Egypt to Palestine, connecting at Ku retell near Jerusalem. The line then went on .to Haifa, which the British are planning to make their great port In the East and the principal terminus I on the Mediterranean for n new shortline railroad to Bagdad and India, connecting Egypt and the African possessions with India. The war gnve the Bagdad railway extensions In Clllola j northern apsis and Mesoi>otnmla- British prisoners of war furnishing cnnch of the labor. The tunnels i through the Taurus mountains were i completed. Trains now run from Con! stanttnople through Aleppo to Nlshln. J At the eastern terminus of the line? Bagdad?trains run norilnvard as far as Tekrlt. Between Nlshln and Tekrlt Is an unfinished section of a few hundred miles. Before the war, train* did not ran at night on this line, but. | this was -changed by stewi necessity. When normal traffic conditions Are re, established, the Journey from Constan| tlnople to J$ngdad 5nd on to the Per I slan Oulf can be.made In a few daya. hakpepfckre Farm to Bo Bold. Among tee numerous landed JPop? wH? coming into ttufeet I daring thd next few months Is one of i more than ordinary Interest, nsimdy, ! the Grendon Urtderwood estate, BuekI taghamshlre. says the London Tele! graph. This belongs to Mrs. Pigott, a ' member of s family resident In the dls' f-rlet for cenfuHoo irhn hna duiMoil U ; sell. This village has many historical ' and literary associations, which chiefly I center round Its westerly portion, where stands the old Elizabethan hab! I tat Ion now known as Shakespeare | farm. Tt was here, when the house was a wayside hostelry, then named the i Old Shlppe, that Shakespeare, It tl i affirmed, used to stay when Journeying to and from Stratford-on-Avon. Find New Fertilizer. An important addition to the ferj tfllzer supply of the United States Is ; to be made. About 2,500,000 acres of tands in j Wyoming, Idaho, Utah and Montana, ; containing valuable phosphate deposits have been divided Into areas not exceeding 2,500 each, according to the Journal of Industrial and Engineering Chemistry. For years those tea As have been awaiting congressional legislation In regard to the leasing of phosphate deposits In public lands. Ampliations In this connection have now been approved by Searcftary of the Interior Payne. Applications for leases are to he filed with the local land office for trafisnilsmon to the secretary of the Interior.?Chemical Round Table. Peanut Production. Alabama Is -the leading state ta peanut production, with 9,840,000 bushels to her credit In 1910, while fire other states produced from 8,400,000 I bushels to B.600.000/ huah?l<? ?<*?? The total production of peanuts in ihe United Skates Inst year was 88,888,000 bushels, hnvtnfr a cash value of $80(000,000, Last winter the averi'pre price pnld -for peanuts was $3<40 per haishel. Trucks Grow In Favor. There were 053,003 trucks In use at he end of the year 1010, as compared .' Ith approximately 700,000 for the irecedlns year. This Is a gain of 27 er cent. 10 per cent (fester than the i'reuse slmwn b'y passcneer cars. ??rl.v eighteen states make compliant of truck registration. Now York .] wit' iters following in this or" > - ihh> I'ennsylvurilii, Call "'i ptl Ti \iis. Nevada wtth . . o* '}?' Do you kt>w how to prevent icing from running? Sprinkle a little fiour over the top of the cake before vou ice it. Sin -e the "war Turkish women have been dressed for the street it modern European style, without wearing veils. Mrs. Ella \(. Wcilman of Augusta, Me., has a hobby of collecting pitahtra and st the present time has an rsaortment numbering more than 700. > Wf Be I ? ? i: 'i < ' v Ptf AND GET < 1 We have bee the hard summer here, will you no! Mr. Roy Vau calls upon you, > - pay him? THE ? > ? ? I ? ? ? ? rTTWTXTTTTTTTTVTTTTTTTTT SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS HOT ROLLS?At the Bake-Rite Tuesday, 6 to 7 p. m. STOLEN?One female getter, white with brown ears and spot on back. Name, Bell; reward for information leading to recovery of dog. L. E. Brown, Jonesville, S. C. 1486-flt WANTED?Salesmen for the beat selling necessity on the market. Protected territory, and an A-1 proposition if you cap produce. Act quickly, territory going rast. Slade Rubber Co., Box 405, Florence, S. 0. 1486-2tpii WE TRUST ANY HONEST MAn or woman to take orders for 100 absolute necessities, and remit our share to us. A special proposition make3 prices lower than "cut rate" stores. Our representatives clearing froin $25.00 to $60.00 weekly everywhere. This is the most extraordinary direct selling proposition ever offer, ed. Write today for particulars. A. Rasmussen, Dept. 10, Herrs Island, Pittsburgh, Pa. 9-19-21-26; 10-3pd HOME FOR SALE?A six room house, practically new, and attractive, sewerage, water and lights, on Blassengame street in West Union, a nice locality and desirable place to live, price only $1,600. S. E. " Barron, selling agent. 1476-tf FOR RENT?'-One 6*room house. Lights anl -water. Located on Ma-> brey Ave. Apply to Mrs.-M., J. Ma *bey- ^ | 1 A NICE four room cottage on Sardia! t road, and near City cemetery. This is an attractive house and a vary1 large lot, nearly acre, wired in, and running water. This-is the Kohn z place. This nice ancT attractive lit-j tie home can be purchased forj $1,800. Suitable terms can be ar-j ranged on both these pieces of property. S. E. Barron, 1 selling agent. 1476-tf HOT ROLLS?At the Bake-Rite Tuesday, 5 to 7 p. m. MONEY TO LOAN on city or country property in large amounts on easy terms. S. E. Barron. 1400-tf HEMSTITCHING AND PICOTING Anacnmeni ius any sewing: ma- | chine, easily adjusted, price $2. Per- I sonal check 10c extra. Marsh ^ Brothers, Wilmington, Ohio. 1482-6tpd FOR RENT?Large, commodious ga 1 rage located on Gadberry street f equipped with lights and sewerage f connection. Has lathe machine with 1 electric motor. Surrounded by * streets except on one side. Gas ^ tank and pump, also . stand for ^ washing cars. For terms and rental See W. S. McLure. 1427-SaATu-tf J WANTED?To rent five or six room house with conveniences or apartments in some nice neighborhood. ,r Application must be in writing and 11 address "X", care The Times. 1486-4t Most indelible ink stains contain nitrate of silver, the stain of which I may be removed by just soaking in n solution of common salt and water Mid afterward washing with ammonia. ti Pahn Beach Snitft Cleaned Wa cao olau and press your Palm Beaoh suit vary quickly thin days. Wo ban Iko equipment and the know how. Give me a trial. Will appro- \ date it aa much or more than j ; any one else. ( Phone 167 and we wHl call ^ promptly and return your suit 0 , looking like new. I C Hames Pressing ft ? Repair Shop I Ninhilnw Bank RM|. ? eh on. MM Mil motor c vol. f will calL \ WUR SUBSCRIP1 YOUR LABEL DATE n slow to insist upon pa ' months. Now that the t send an your renewal? ghan is our collecting a| will you not receive hin UNION DAILY T ? m H? t HI I '?'? I ? M H OLD BO YEARS ? A 1 1/ not ?Id hr roor ii?w ?*? wii Rheumati >i .*mmQH i, |] How (loHoai 70B will fool, motbw, J wbon yoar rhsonutkm 1* *11 (OM. M i ft. 8. 8. do It. It will kttlld roo op, too I !5e^^. . ? Our Cit: Wm i m Ours is a city in which* for it is a city of fine ideals, tion, expansion?these are a for which "Bhe stands. And the ideals of the city We are proud of what she I she is going to be?and w every forward movement! "Large Enough to Serve Any? CI I 12 NATIONA The centenary of the decipherer of he Rosetta stone is being commemrated in Paris. The Rosetta stone ontains the key to the ancient writng of the Egyptians and was disco v^?d by a French officer in 1799, at losetta, near Alexandria. Champolion, the French Egyptologist, found he key to the writing after eight 'ears' labor. He was only 11 years f age when he started deciphering he hieroglyphics on the stone. MOTHERS m~ DAUGHTERS lead This Letter from Mrs. W. S. Hughes Greenville, Del.?"I was under the tnpteseion that mv eldest daughter hail ttftififfAliiitfikimrieome "^rnel1trouble ever 8*Bce t^e first UH HUilllPaired she had to go to bed and even had to quit school ones 'or a week. I always JMn take Lydia E. PintIfc./^NMHH barn's Vegetable U Compound myself so U I gsve it to Mr and II She has rsceived II * FwKr greatbansflt from H. ILwJbMdUhJiou can use this later for a testimonial if gov wish, as I tannot -say too much about what your nedicine nas done for me and for my laughter."-- Mrs. wM. 8. HOOBBs, 'Wen v iliSy Delsesr?. Mothers and oftentimes grandmothers isve taken and have learned the value f Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Comound. So they recommend the inediine to others.? tim mat s?- " a# brit mmM4i ?-*- ? i '* ? ?w ? ??w www w* ?/ JI1VUIVIUV XO ff BIW : has done for others. For Mori^ fifty cart we have published letters from tothers, daughters, and women, joqng nd old, recommending the Vegetable impound. Thee know what it dM lor item and arewiad to tell others. In our ow? neighborhood are wwsn who now of it# great value. Mothers?daughters, why sot try it t < i i; m D AHEAD lymentthrough 'fall months-are jent. When he a cordially and ? ? 1MES < I 1"M !> < ? '11 I 11 (SMITH'S xIonic F^oiwauL yowo sm at 60 < S.ft.8. Thoroughly RMi A? Body mi HhMUMliiiii Imparities. Bom ?body's mother Is suffering tonight I The eoourge of rheumatism has wrecked her body; limping and suffering, bent forward, she sees but the common ground, but her aged heart still belongs to the sterst Does anybody carer & 8.8. Is one of the greatest blood-purifiers known, and It nupa build more blood cone. Its med* Iclnal Ingredients see purely resemble. It never disarranges the stomach. It Is. In fact, a splendid tonlo, a blood maker, a blood enrloher. It banishes rheumatism from Joints, muscles and the entire body. It builds firm flesh. It la what somebody's mother needs tonight! Mother. If you can not so out to set a bottle of 8.8,8. yourself, surely somebody .in your family will Somebody, set a bottle of 8. 8.8L now I Let eomebody*e mother begin to feel Joyful again tonight Maybe, maybe It's swur mother! 8.8.8. Is sold at til drug stores. In two stsee. The arger dse la the more eoonomlcaL M", V Of # tie Meals * v wo 'feel a righteous pride, Beauty, strength, co-opera inly a few of the big things ' are the ideals of this bank, is, *We> are Confident of what re will stand behind her in *Stron^ Enough to Protect jA.ll." r ?T KJ. ^ L. BAN R, Better Stationery Batter Price* $1.00 Double Package Pontex Linen at ... . .65c ' STORM'S DRUG STORE Phone 76 HOT ROLLS AT THE _ ft kvr nrrr DrtMrlU 1L Tuesday?5 to 7 p. m. 1 1 I H. W. EDGAR Utdertafclif Parlors Cilia aamred Jay nd Ighl Prompt tad Ifldrnt Strides Pay Fiona ? ?Nlgfct Hi?a ill I .1 1 P m . ii?i i ALL KINDS OP CEMETERY WORK Union Marbla 4b Granito Co. * Main St.UM.n, S. C. AUSTELL'S SHOE STOEE FOR BETTBR SHOES v i <?- k ' v