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The Unic / Head never hsve to worry a be job if Certain-teed paint quality is in the paint, and it she time. It has so much good i that it spreads better than mc now it ' Sunt ... How t Good < You buy a car on tl dence in the makers an< the same way. Cur lee's guaranteed choice of the man who i ' ? tne cost ot workmamhi] We can skew you a v this line at $23.50tto$3 guarantee mswing yea charge. Wo havedthe $20.00 that can't be di ( cash and will be sohkfw profits you have to pay. charge accounts. Our stock is complel Hats and Furnishings, a turers. Stronger Than The 1 Call and let us show we hope it will please y? MUUWM-FI TheN y x SECURE 1 YOUR SAVINGS \ \ Each year thousands < I means lose what little | saved, through investing j looks like a"get?rich-qui ? For persons of small i , aHavb coriivifir aI S UHV1 o ovvtu ut pilliv ! interest return and ava I when needed. i The Bairiui t C. C SANDERS a F. KW j President Tli i ri^jji I ?<*%*** mm ^samms=sssmmf^=s Fuel no Item 1 ? sup; For Thia Com lit unity hnu t hav Hemakuapoko, Island of Maai, T. this H., Sspt 22.?Coal strikes, warnings hea that the forests of the world may. soon mat disappear if conservation is not prae- by v ticed, predictions that the petroleum mol >n Hard\ Union, S. C. quartei s for P Kit a painting Certain-teed i is used. The cf Certain-tee* ws up every enough for an material in it plus basis, whi wt any paint s last. See us beforeKir CertainHous* Paint Outside Whit I . Bungalow Br< X No. \ 900 Universal Varnish/. 0 33 Dark Oak Varnish S 5v 13 Ivory Interior Enan 1 461 Barn, Bridge and R< "ertaii VARNISH ROOFING LINOLEUM 01 0 Buy Clothe ie strength of its rep 1 in the man who sells clothes are the best considers lasting qua! ;>moro important than wooderfal range of st ilJftandbackup evei IM l? ! I 1 I, ,MI| ?A i ngamn tf^ suit tadi either happens, you g nlinesof mens t clothi ipikated- because the; r cub. The cadi syste when you trade at < te with Men's and Bo nd every article is frei aw Shoes for the whol VA11 AVAf fllie ?fr#w*Lr 1 j w w WW OiWKlt J >u. ' MJCETT CL1 ew Way Cash S ????i ' P ' f i_ ./ is a vi people 01 smaii s money they have ! in something that *1 ick" opportunity. means,. thisBank h ipal,-certainty * of lability of hinds j ri-hnton rBDY W. W. ALU AM j ml CIssMst ply of the world may noon be exsted and the hig^i price of gasoline e no terrors for the inhabitants of small community, for they cook, t theif houses and run their autoriles on alcohol which is generated a newly discovered "proses* from |HHt i ' \ 4 'v. irare Co., aint >aint is made by the makers i Roofing., That is guarantee ybody. It is made on a cost ch explains our low prices. X painting ? it- will pay you. teed Prices hrQtL e (No. 448) $3.15 JWn (No.435) 2.65 Per Per * Per Pint Quart Oat. : $0.75 $1.20 $360 itain .50 .80 lei 1.20 jof Paint 1.70 vteed II CLOTH Cf RELATED PRODUCT*v "t- Mlil' 11 gsy y :S utation?your confiit. Buy your clothes , and should be the ity, latest style and i the price. j ics ana panerns m y suit with a written j ag or the workman* , et a new nit free of " ng from $12.50 to y were bought for m eliminates the long he store that runs ys' Clothing, Shoes, jh from the manuface family. It will please us, and IIHING CO. tore The process was evolved by J. P. Foster, head chemist of the Maul Agricultural company and has been patented in all the sugar producing countries of the world, he said. Heretofore, molasses always had been considered a waste product in sugar milling. ) . Originally, the alcohol produced by Foster was used only in Jhe company tracks and automobiles but later, enough wa? manufactured to supply employees of the plantation, who live in -1 * -i ?- ? nt 11 aiiiai\uai>UR,u. A Simple AppSIltUR composed of a few thin pipes and an open burner is required to bum the alcehol to supply heat for cooking, and these have been placed in* all ot the homes here. .Foster said that Maui can produce only enough alcohol in this fashion to supply the needs of the island's population and that no surplus would be available for uee on the other islands of Hawaii. ? "When Does a Lamb Become a Sheep 1'* asks a-headline. Well, maybe after-Wall Street has made a lamb feel sheepish. There- is very little rest or recreation in a vacation*-but it certainly, imp res see* one with the real dillSht of the old job. Leninp is reported to be recovering from the 57 diseases that the Russian news service has hit or miss afflicted him with. > Rome men go to the beach to enjoy the beaatiewe# the ?ea> while others go to enjoy tho beauties in the sea. "Il'll I ins School Boyi k Matte** la Eijfpiii Polltios Cairo, ?gyp\ Sept 28.?Tbs maug : ration of a strict policy by the j Eg} tian government to deal with the .'.maticfli enthusiae a of the aehool ' boy politicians is re yarded by all the native papers as a necessity of the hour, if the Eg ptian political and educational struct ires are to be saved from disruptioi . The students in the pniversities and high schools of the cofntry who came forward last year and joined in street demonstrations to help win political freedom for Egypt, have now developed a new movement which seems to be a general revolt against all existing customs that con* flict with their own personal aggrandisement. i THs students, conscious of their power, have turned their ^energies to eliminating examinations. Their political slogan a yearN?go was: "We do not want the English." Today they are shouting: "We want no more examinations." And they are keen enough to plan a campaign whic.i will use politics as a lever to make easier their classroom work. The elections for. members of the new parliament are set for October. The students aim to see that only candidates who heed their demands are returned to both houses. Their election cries are now Koine tried nut. in this wise: "Vote for Mahomed Bey and no examinations." Followers of Zagt^ul Pasha are taking advantage of thfo students' over zealottsness and are showering upon them all kinds of promises in return for votes at the coming elections. Mail Order Buying Poular in St. Thomas 1 Charlotte Amaiia, St. Thomas, V. 11., Sept. 22.?St. Thornians have been bitten by the mail order bug Pretty catalogues from American mail order houses are to be seen averywheie, and postal records indicate that goods amounting to (1,000 & day are delivered in St. Thomas alone by parcel post on a C. O. D. basis. Merchants are indignant that their stores should be thus slighted, but give as a reason for their inability to compete in price'with the mail order houses to the fact that they are k still loaded up with high priced goods delivered to them by American manufacturers and exporters as soon us shipping facilities were available after the war. Those who buy by mail say they are able to make considerable saving by buying in the United States, and they are becckniqg more and .more fixed in the habit of ordering from 9ataipgq^vgl|^l order has become %?h e^habit that said to be a frequent occurrence for clerkB working in the stores to buy by mail, rather than to purchase where they are employed. One merchant said it was not only the fact that a saving might be made, but that mail order buyers liked to receive pleasantly wtirded acknowledgements of their orders, and other letters from mail order houses. t * Many of the purchases are for small amounts on wbich the buyer I will send two or three dollars in advance, hoping to have sufficient mon ey to pay me Daiance wnen the C. U. D. parcels arrive. When the shoes or hat or suit comes to hand and the balance of the money has not been earned, many of the parcels have to be returned, and the prospective purchaser loses his initial payment. Post Card Shower For Foreign Missions Chicago, Sept. 22 (1|y the Associated Press).?Between-" September 15 and November 15 them will be mailed to the 3,000 Metfctjdist Episcopal Sunday schools in th? tJnited States 72,000 post cards froin the 24 home and foreign mission school centers of the world. The board of Sunday schools is taking this means of bringing the members of the Sunday schools in America in personal touch with, the schools they help to maintain in all uarters 4k. U U1 uia wunu. Each 'school superintendent in this country will receive a card from students in Korea, Japan, China, the Philippines, Malaysia* India, Africa, Liberia, North Africa, Central Europe, Mexico and Sooth America. x Cards also will be sent from the domestic school centers located at Boston, the frontier school in Montana, Church of All Nations of New York City, Spanish American Institute at Gardens, Calif,, Pittman Center School at Ewierfca fVwo Tonn Pueblo Indian School, Pennsylvania Settlement Schools, Porto Rican Schools, Hawaiian Schools and Wiley College at Marshall, T**as. In each instance the cards will be addressed and a short message written by one of the students of the schools. The messages will be in the way of a personal appeal from the children who^need- help to the children who are helping tftfcm. Moe than rone and one-half million dollars were contributed by American Sunday school students to missionary work last i i When we entered the war we told the world we were for peace at any price?and the blamed world took us at our word! This is the lime of gear when the , backyard gardner laughs at the man 'who laughed at htm far being a backyard gardener, i ': > I SZ Just tell,, the world ~ They've go/ tie PEpj STROLLERS %ats a Cigarette in, i? teen cor i in EveryPacKage *A . ^ " Berlin Dreaming of Luxurious Trans-Atlantic * Air Travel iserlin, Sept. 24.?Will the air over aiu Atlantic shortly be roaring with giant iloating palaces capable of making the transoceanic flight in 60 nours? Some enthusiasts, who claim definite plans are under consideration tor the monster trans-Atlantic air liners, are described in other quarters as mere "pipe-dreamers" dealing in just1 ordinary "castles in the a|p." The proposed ships would each have a gas capacity of 110,000 to 150,000 cubic meters. They would tear through the clouds at the rate of 140 miles an hour, unless there IIO 11 rtrtinl ilnmunti f/M* a nan/1 ?v? which case they would alow down to LOO miles. Such a vessel would be 2 (b meters long, 35 meters wide at its greatest, diameter, and 39 meters high from the top of the gas bag to the bottom of the body. The power would be provided by five motors of 800 horsepower each. its carrying capacity would be 90,000 kilograms, of which 40,000 would be required for fuel, food, etc., the remainder being for mails and passengers. The estimated passenger accommodations would allow for 100 fares in addition to a crew of 50. The mammoth airships would be equipped with all possible comforts and conveniences, resembling in comfort the great ocean steamships now in service. German gossip on the aerial possibilities of tl^e near future does not rest, however, with the channels over the Atlantic. A prophecy is made that many years will not pass before the United States will have inaugurated a service between hor mainland and the islands she holds in the Far Fast. Persia ager to Realize On Her Oil Deposits Teheran, Persia, Sept 22.?Ismail .Agha Simko, the Kurdish rebel chief who for two years has been setting -it defiance the authority of the Persian government, has fled across the frontier into Turkish Kurdistan. His forces have been routed by Riza Khan the Persian War Minister, who is commander in chief of the Persian army. Simko's stronghold at Cherigh, west of Lake Uynia, in Northern Persia, was captured after bitter lighting. Many guns and prisoners were taken. Ttye internal situation in Persia v-ontinues unsettled. In the absence of a stable central government, robber bands and tribesmen have been looting and plundering, and many of the principal roads are insecure. Outside of tales of disorder, oil is the one absorbing topic of conversation. The country haB rich petroleum deposits, and the men in authority are eager to realize on this na tional wealth. And in this connection the following story is told: It seems the government, sortie time ago, considered granting a 50year concession for oil exploitation jointly to an English and an American company. One of the companies thereupon made an advance $1,000,000 to the government, based on the assutaption that the concession ultimately would be made operative. At least that was the understanding of the oil men. Once in hand, the million was ex 1-1-1? fi. A , I'tnueu quioKiy. it went to pay troops in the field, and a lot of overdue salaries to officials. When the government learned that the advance was conditional upon exclusive concessions, there was trouble, for in the meantime it had become actively ^engaged in negotiations with other oil interests, looking to get as much as it conld from the potential wealtht under the ground. It made every effort to get back the $1,000,000, but it was too late. Every cent had been expended. Syracuse worn an, aged one hundred and four, sayst selfishness does not bring happinesia. But it will take many loftger 'than that to reach the same conclusi an. y What wovjld our country do if il were not fpr the retired farmer? There wou jdn't be anybody for the auto tourir ft* to got out of bed and ask directions.. i - -, % H-M-H tM III | M II 1 I I I I I I I 1 11 1 I 1 I 1 I I I II I II II I I I I I I I Ij J! TAKE A cunor OIIHI1L | . . .. WE ARE STILL PRESSING THE MATTER OF GETTING ADDITIONAL nimniniPkwivm?/^?w<? MJBSUUrilONS TO THE CAPITAL STOCK OF THE CANNERY. WE MUST HAVE THE TOTAL SUM , OF $20,000 TO i; 4 FUNCTION TO GOOD ADVANTAGE AND TAKE CARE f OF THE CROPS I urr j l?E CONTEMPLATE TAKING ON NEXT SEASON. TAKE ' A SHARE. UNION CANNIN6 :! AND PRODUCTS CO. LEWIS M. RICE . / President ;; ? j I :i i:' . >1 I I 1 I I I I l> I I I I 11 n'MIHM I 1 111 111 M II II I II II I I I I !! t , M