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' "^7 I'm m i nil 11111 < 1111 PAY AND GET We have bet I d: the hard summe: here, will you nc Mr. Roy Vai calls upon you, pay him? 1! THE - ? -? , , *< ^ ? . V -. . N . N i i - loomanos a UNION COU MON-/ETNA CI SEPTE1 The Union Co ber 28th with tt lowing is the sug 10 A.M.?D? 10:30 A.M.11:00 A. M.12:00 M.?75 1:00 P.M.?I ,i30 P*M.?I 2:45 P.M.?B Ministers. . 3:45 P.M.?F 4:15 P. M.?I * ftocprM.?s | 10:00 A^M.'' 10S0 A.M11:00 A. M.11:30 A.M.'tioiu and Minkb 12:30 P.M.? 4'' 1KM) P. M.?1 (\\ 2i30P."M.?L 2:45 P/M.?rl 3:15 P.M.?S jnittee's Report. 3:45 : v 4:15" P. M.ment. ' very drarch "gates. Thar* are some 8,000 bail ding and loan associations .4n the | United States. i 'AN I REQ. If'. S. MOTOI wo Al IT AC IF N BUT N? STANDAF J!! i i .11.11 ? an I i > HUH M I I I MIH--H YOUR SUBSCRIP1 YOUR LABEL DATE in slow to insist upon pa r months. Now that the it send in your renewal? L. ll-i* agiaou 19 uur tOUCCUng will-you not receive bin \ UNION DAILY T I MM l< I I >l1 ?"t ?#M M?l I I 1^ NTY BAPTIST A! UURCH, THURSDAY i HBER 28 AND 29, unty Baptist Association le Mon-Aetna Baptist ch Igested prpgram: Fwef Hau ivotional*Servkes. -Organization. Missions: State, Home ai Million Campaign. Nnner. )evotional Services, enevolences: Orphanage, > Religious Literature, liscellaneousbusiness an iervice of wofthip With ( Second Day -Devotional Services. -Temperance and Public S. S., B. Y. P. U., and Co -Education: \ The Comn M. U: Work, j )inner. pcvouoii&i services* ?yi?'i Work.. tewardship and Tithing; )igol?i Church letters. -Miscellaneous Business \ V v ^ b urged to send its lull The annual production of coal la the United State* amount* to about lix ton* for each inhabitant. ^ , ? "e / . . ' * ? DAI PAT OFT. R GAS< f?TM GOIN YOUR WA ECESSAIT OT NECES: ID OIL C< (NEW JERSEY) f ~ N * mm i limn inn 11 iii> ? hon . D AHEAD tyment through (all months are % 1 ' . \ \ jent. When he n cordially and > '' s> DUES | * * I D t*m?iitHtiIIMnf SSOCIATION AND FRIDAY, 1922 / * .meets SeptemUich. The fid? ? ad Foreign. - Yk< t < ? Hospital, Aged 1 reaching. .? ; {4, < I ? < .Morals. ilportage. ji diss ion, Institn i 1 / V < ?.' X ' T! : | Executive Com?' ! 1 ? / 4 > end Adjourn- . ? > I quota of dele. j t II I I ' Store dlttn **),**>,** eqrda ?f flrowodd were produced on the forms of the United Stetee h* 1918. _ ; 'if , ^ ^ 1 ??p??I ?D" ^ ' ? >L1NE G X FOR ir? 5ARY >MPANY Strange Burial Accorded Poet At Own Behest London, Sept. 19.?(By the Associated Press).?One of the strangest burials ever known in England was that to Wilfred Scawen Blunt, poet, diplomat, traveler and fierce opponent of British rule in Ireland,. India and Egypt. "I wish," his will said, "to be buried in the simplest manner, to be laid in the ground wrapped in my old eastern travelling carpet, without coffin or casket." These instructions were faithfully carried out when he was buried in Sussex last week. His daughter, Lady Wentworth, and his grandchildren and a few personal friends were present. He desired to be buried by men employed on his own estate and to the pall bearers he bequeathed 10 pounds each. The- will further requested, "that my.v nurse, Elizabeth Lawrence, shall accompany me to and arrange me in my grave." A remarkable feat of modern surgery was performed recently by Dr. H. B. Russell of London, when a man whose brgathing^and heart beat ceased for more than an 'hour was restored to life. The patient, who was 27 years old. underwent an operation of the throat, apparently dying before its completion. Efforts of artificial respiration failed. A stimulant was injected through the chest into the heart and it was massaged but failed to function. A further injection was given and the'heart was massaged with the hand inside the pericardium. Adrenalin then was injected into the heart and it resumed beating after fifty minutes had elapsed. At the end of an hour the man breathed and lived again. The beating continued 27 hours, when the patient died. "It was the most remarkable case I have ever known," said Dr. F. Decaux an eminent surgeon. "There have been cases when the heart beat after a few minutes' massage, but the restoration of life after an hour of death is a great advancement in science. The man was dead, and he lived." British prohibitionists are evincing interest in the appeal of Norway for international co-operation in its effort to suppress liquor , smuggling. According to the appeal Norway recognizes the hopelessness of a single handed struggle against rum runners and has called upon other European countries to take Steps to Prevent Norway * being flooded with bootlegging, presets. Denmark has declared her willingness to assist her neighbor, but says she cannot do so te the full extent asked, as for instancy she cannot violate the international, maritime laws by refusing clearance papers to ships carrying spirits. She is willing to .keep Norway informed regarding the movements of ships of that caracter. The 'Sherlock Holmes" of the home office announces that he is giving up the work which for many years has proved invaluable in the assistance of Scotland Yard. He is Dr. Stillsbury, who has an uncanny knack of describing* after a close examination of, the wounds in a victim whose case is being investigated, the height of the assailant, the respective positions of the assaildnt and his victim when the crime was committed and the order in- which the wounds were in dieted. For a long time Dr. Stillsbury waf baffled by what wu known aa the "brides in the bath" case. The defendant in the 'Celebrated case George Smith, testified that each ol his three wives fajpted in the bat! and were, drowned. ..Smith's plea wai borne.out by the fact that ther? were no signs of struggle, that the other i?nat?-of his house had heard no cries and. that nf water hr.i been Splashed qn the floor, of the hw?-oom. Dr. Stillsbury eventually, in tne ' / j- "V -Vk course of bis experiments, prevailed on a couple of hospital nurses to take turns flopping about in a bath while be tried to drown them. In this way, he sueeeeded in demonstrating how easy the murderer's task really bad been. English scientists are investigating the case of a boy who never laughs, Dr. Kimmine, psychologist and educator, told about this peculiar child in nn address before the British association, which is now meeting at Hull. The lad, who is 14 and normally intelligent for his age, declares that he never saw a funny sight. When asked if he ever went to the movies, he replied: "I go because the other boys go but I have never yet ^een anything in the cinema to laugh at." I)r. Kinimine disputed Prof. McDougal's new theory that one laughs in order to avoid pain from his sympathetic tendencies. "1 can't imagine the sight of a fat man on the street pursuing his hat, injuriously affecting the most sens! tivo onlooker," contended Dr. Kimmine. who concluded by saying that Ch irlie Chaplin is popular with the young because he always is doing whit the children are forbidden to do. for the old Adam is still strong eve n in the youngest of us." Vange, the picturesque little village in Essex, was invaded this week by thousands of halt, lame and blind, all in quest of "miracle water." This water is supposed to be found in a wel lnearby on the farm of Edwin Cash. So remarkable are th : cures supposed to be effected by the water's medicinal properties, that the well is threatening to rival the fame of Lourdes, itself. Rich and poor alike are making pilgrimages from all parts of the country to the magic well. Even a baroness was found in one queue awaiting her turn to drink from the cuus dispensed by the farmer and his daughters. The expressions that some of the benefited sufferers use read like pater t medicine testimonials. "Thank God, I am cured," exclaimed a young engineer after his second cup. He had arrived at# the well a physical wreck. An octogenarian, who was a martyr to gout and rheumatism, after drinking several cups of the magic liquid offered to bet any man of 40 that he could beat him in a footrace. The well originally was a boggy spring from which ev^n the cattle refused to dring. An aged resident of Vange discovered the curative properties of the water when he went into a mudhole during a drought to obtain water for his family in ordei to make tea. All of them, after drinking the tea declared that they felt an unusual sensation of freshness an4 vigor. ^ ~L Nijni to Get Lessons In Cleanliness. Nijni, Russia, Sept. 19.?A sanicary school where pupils will be instiucted in cleanliness and the purposes of disinfection as a precautionary measure against conditions which may develop this coming winter has been organized here by Dr. Mark D. Godfrey, of Columbus, Ohio, in charge of medical work for the American Relief Administration in this district. This step by Dr. Godfrey is a part of the nation-wide scheme inaugurated by the A. R. 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It coihpels skin l spots, muddlness, sallowness, pimples, blackheads?all beauty thieves I ?to vanish! In their place you will notice your complexion blooming out in new beauty like a chrysalis Into a beautiful butterfly. This Is not a , vision, but a fact. Nature does It. [ that's all we know. Start using Iron. lied Yeast today. Sold at all drug 1 stores at $1.00 a package. Bach pack1 age contains 00 tables, each tablet la sealed. They never lose their power. * M'f'd enly by Ironlsed Yeast Co., At. lantn, da. You will feel like bagging ' yourself after you have used Ironlsed | Yeast a short time. Then with the rdded use of your favorite cream and l powder, you * 111 own at laet the exquisite complexion you have always dreamed of having. Beware at w'lbstltutea. : v ' ?- * ; 11 11 I I 11 II IIIII I I I II 1 I II 11 I 1 I I 111 1 1 I Ml I I IIII1111,1; TAKE A share" . % WE ARE STILL PRESSING THE MATTER OF GETTING ADDITIONAL SUBSCRIPTIONS TO THE CAPITAL STOCK OF THE CANNERY. ? urr RffiinT mvrr I Kit Ml'M riflVt THE TOTAL SUM OF $20,000 TO FUNOTON TO GOOD ADVANTAGE AND TAKE CARE :i OF THE CROPS | WE CONTEMPLATE TAKING ON I NEXT SEASON. f | TAKE A SHARE. UNION CANNIN6 i + AWLP PRODUCTS CO. LEWIS M. RICE President i: " ?M 11II111II111111111111111 n n?n 111111111111111 lf;; I