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RIALTO TODAY Happiness For a Year?and Then? She signed the bargain he wrote. It meant a fortune, but only one year of life. <~ouid She be Happy? Could You? LOUIS B. MAYER Presents ANITA STEWART IN "HER MAD BARGAIN" A First National Attraction ADDED PATHE NEWS A R0L1N COMEDY TOMORROW WHEELER OAKMAN "THE HALF BREED" STATIONERY We have some very attractive boxes of stationery?all reasonably priced. See Our Window. UNION DRUG STORE Phone 116 and "Look for the Boy." SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENT VVHII.K ATTENDING t'no Raoolet River Association, at Ml. Olive church, some one was kiknd enough to take my overcoat and left theirs. This party can save some embarrassment by leaving my coat at; J. W. Beaty's undertaking puHor, or my home en Henrietta street and get his. Rev. II. B. Worthy, 12 LY :-XX Ox TT>! ?- r. o nciint'ua 01., union, c>. u. ltpd FOR RENT?Betsill house on South' street; al! modern conveniences;' rents reasonable. Mrs. J. D. Arthur.1 ltpd FOR SALE?One rubber tire pony buggy, practically new. New sot of harness, n:ce pony five years old, weighs 450 pounds?all for $115. See Frank Gossett. ltpd ? If you want to wake up famous sleep with one eye open. W e a1 c Great RgI 1 p\7f^r ^ m Quality CJ. We have always ^ 11 * ' I : relieved .n..t ... re | is no better ranov ;.r made than \V h;tman's. ^jJWe find a growing number . .. o\; our behef. CjTo eve**y: t/is. bcoc ^n^wCaa Oi . "call on us ihr Wintry Wchick -i ' real v.. v PEOPLE'S DR Prompt Service Is Monej Great* A banker's own exneri'-nce lust of mere money?and mo man who values money accord Money is the supreme serva is surpassed only by the influ And a goodly share of wealth i Jeaves no doubt of its quality. "I^arge Enough to Serve Any?St CITIZ NATIONAL HAJlL.li One of Man's Real Friends C I ihv Augusta Chronicle. They have been printing tributes to the horse and to the dog and to other animals as "man's friend." ^ There now comes the champion of tl e cow. We tind the apostrophe vo \ the quadruped in the publication gotten out by the Missouri State . **oard of Agriculture. 0 Little do we realize the debt we * owe the cow. During the dark ages of savagery and barbarism we find 1 her early ancestors natives of the 1 wild forests of the old world. As the bright rays of civilization penc- '' trnted the darkness of that early " period, and many called upon the cow, she came forth from her seclu- e sion to share in the efforts that gave ^ us a greater nation and more enlight- " ened people! I1 For 20,000 years she has shown her allegiance to man, sharing alike in his 1 prosperity and adversity, responding li nobly to all that was done for her, ' until through her development she ' v. ;j?i .. r 4.i__ 1- ? i I un univ <4*i iuui ui me people 01 ncr native country. When Columbus made his second ' voyage to America, the cow came with 1 him, and from that time to the pre.*- I ent day she has been a most potent factor in making this, our own coun- * try, the greatest nation, with the 3 highest type of womanhood history J has ever known. s Her sons helped till the soil of our t ancestors and slowly moved the prod- I uets of the farm to market. They v went with man to th? dense forests of the new world, helped clear them for ' homes and made cultivation possible I for the coming generation, and when i ^h< tide of emigration turned We3t- t ward they hauled the belongings of ' th< pioneer across the sun-scorched plains and over the great mountain ' ranges to new homes beyond. Truly, the cow is mans greatest benefactor. Hail, wind, drouths and floods may come, destroy our crops , and banish our hopes, but from what , is left the cow manufactures into the ( mi it nourishing and life-sustaining | foods, and is she not foster moster , and life itself to countless thousands ( of little children all over this world ( of ours? We love hei for her docility, her beauty, and should misfortune , overtake us as we become bowed down with the weight of years, we know i that in the cow we have a friend that i was never known to falter. She pays the debt. She saves the home. God , bless the cow?little do we realize the . debt we owe her. Naming of German Consuls Sydney, N. S. W., Oct. 7.?The fed- j eral ministry has declined several requests by the German government for permission to appoint consult^ representatives here, although such ap- . pointnnents are not included in the prohibition of Germans for five years from 1920, which was decided upon oy , parliament. The prime minister explained that the objection to the presence of German consuls arose out of the war. Ou? objection to putting Europe on h -r feet is she wants to sit right back down again. ??' | : ** |jgpt ^ 1 ( , ; i'srorncrr- sparine * 1 r x" "v vjnt. - numty, t J we say, 1 <3 . '. r,V !;.' ; 1 UG STORE Phones 68 and 69 ; r I I ? - .'"J" f the |" 9 rinol p ^ W W tfl t( 0 . n teaches him to despise the ^ re truly to appreciate the >ng to its worth. , b< nt of mankind. Its power w ences of religion and love. to is a mark of character that T1 g< ec se rong Enough to Protect All." ar lei F.NIv3 s E> A.NK_ In in< Jjw i ,. jafca, . a ^ . . n inolumbia Offer* $50,000 And Site for Hospital Shriners Will Build Columbia's offer to the two Shrine inples of South Carolina for the roposed $250,000 hospital for cripled children has now assumed defiite form. The committee engaged 1 the movement to induce the Shrinrs to select Columbia as the home or the hospital, has been working uietly but effectively and to date he proposition is a pledge of $50,00 and 18 acres of select land situted on the crest of a commanding till in the Camp Jackson reservation. The grounds offered are surround d by stately trees and the air is ialmy and invigorating being ladend with the refreshing odors of the tines. The committee has left no stone inturned that could contribute to the ittractiveness of the offer that Coumbia will make in its endeavor to and the hospital which will be the )iggest institution of its kind in the South. The institution would be sup)orted by a regular assessment upon hi memoirs 01 umar aou nejuz vem)les. The two temples will hold their ?emi-annual meetings late in the fear and by the first of the new rear, the building of the hospital ;h?>uld be well under way, provided he two temples act unanimously on he matter, as the imperial shrine vill require. Columbia, it is argued, is not only favorably situated geographically "or the home of the institution, but s the only city in the state that conains a large number of members of >oth temples. Fate of Pacific Great Eastern Being Determined Vancouver, B. C. Oct. 10.?(Canadian Press).?Recommendations concerning the future of the Pacific Great Kastern railway will fee made t?y the government at the next session of the British Columbia legislature. Premier John Oliver announced on his return from an inspection trip. The nature of these recommendations will be determined inthte meantime The premier's survey followed publication of the report of John G. Sullivan, consulting engineer, who condemned the entire undertaking and held out no hope for the future of of the project which has cost the taxpayers of the province more than forty-four million dollars. As originally surveyed, the Pacific Great Eastern was designed to serve the territory between North Vancouver and Prince George, a stretch sf four hundred and seventy-two miles. The line has been built and is in operation from North Vancouver to Whytecliffe, a distance of ;welve ahd a half miles, and from [j :.L *1 1 ? ,1 ...,,1 oquuiniMi in v^ucanci, LHICT IIUIIUICU and fifty miles. From Quesnel to Cottonwood, seventeen and one-half miles, steel is laid but the road is lot in operation. Between Cotton wood Creek and Red Rock Creek, 45 miles, ties and steel fastenings are in the ground, but the track is not aid. From Red Rock Creek to the junction of the Pacific Great Eastern and the Grand Trunk I^aeifiy, one mile east of Prince George, the track s laid but not in operation. This listance is eighteen miles. Two and one-half million pounds of rteel, nearly enough for the construction of a bridge over the Cottonwood river, has been fabricated at Walkerrille, Ont., and is awaiting shipment, ft has been paid for. "fo complete this bridge 190,000 pounds more of steel must be purchased, concrete 'oundations must be built and 840,000 "eet of a total of 8,000,000 feet of trestles required must be purchased, rhe remainder of the trestle work ias been provided. Completion of the gap between Quesnel and Prince George would ost about $2,000,000 ,more and the vhole line from North Vancouver to ^rince George, an added $6,000,000, according to Mr. Sullivan's report. Necessary renewals in the next ten rears, Mr. Sullivan believes would ost about $8,000,000 at present construction prices. ilectric Companies Have Good Customer Growth Chicago, Oct. 10.?The addition of icarly one and a quarter million new ustomers uy electric light and powr companies during last year depite the industrial depression indiates the rapid strides of that idusry, according to the National Comnission of Public Utilities. A survey completed by the commission showed that five states?IIinois, Indiana, Michigan, Wisconsin nd Ohio?have 2,850,000 light and ower customers, 26 percent of the mtal number in the country. Illiois possesses more electric lighted omes than any other state in the juntry. California is far ahead in the numpr of industrial power customers ith 64,000, about one-sixth of the tal for the nation, the survey shows, hat state also showed the largest lin in power users, 6,400 being add- ~ I during last year. Illinois ranks ^ cond in this list, Pennsylvania third id Ohio fourtht. New York, the er sding manufacturing state, is fifth. ac The total number of industrial pow-1 customers in the country on Janiry 1 was 429,584, an increase of CI 4,191 during the six-year period to oip 1916* The largest yearly m owth was in 1919, when 44,657 new th dust rial customers were added, cr hile power customers are only about m . II || II II III i' j0m XX1 Jfete I I II 11 I 1 II 1 I 1 1 I w 1 I 1 M-fr For I You IN Extra big values Dresses from . . Extra big values Coat Suits from Latest styles, new i from WE CARR! Children's Shoes fr< Ladies' Shoes rangi from Men's Work Shoes, frnnt M VIM ....... Trac I. Y0 " I m i 111 M?? 1111 s-t i n i i n 11 re percent of the number of resi-, i ntial customers, the power custom- j { 8 use much wore electrical energy, . cording to the survey. j j _ 3 Judge Jams* E Peurifoy came to r H>Hter heralded as a judge who hews t the line, one who believes in the j ajesty of the law, and is convinced i at the only wag to put a stop to t ime is to iniposefnadequate punish- J ent : and iribstil snlendidlv did he c \ DON'T! ' OUR ( li:4 ALUM1NI IWsA Tiff ID Pimm MOR 9 A See Our Any ArticI Worth m i?f#K COME PRO YOU W pgugp DJSAPP fir TBEI JJV HARDW) ' HARDWAR] Union, VJMJkj' ^ ? 1111111 M l M l 111 1 1 ? 1 I 1 1 I 1 l"l'? Lov\ leed Not ( ?_ n i i* ? in uresses?Ladies $5.00 to $16.95 in Coat Suits?Ladies' . . . $15.00 to $28.50 models in Ladies' Coats, $4.98 to $25 00 i A GREAT LINE OF SH >m . . . 85c up to $2.50 ing in price, $2.50 to $5.00 the best in the country, $2.50 to $4.5? at nuiue * . FF UR MONEY'S WORTH WE MAKE THE HH l I I t I 1 1 1 I II I l I I 1 1 I I I I i vake good. As has so often been said,' ar ind as is generally recognized, fine3j *e ire no deterrent to the average boot-1 J11 egger. Possessed of a trade that fields him remarkable revenues at aj e ninimum of labor, a fine is no more han a license; and the minute it is mid, or before it's paid, he's resolved to n his heart to outrage the law anew, o retrieve his losses to the court. fudge Peurifoy, however, gave some 'im if this ilk a different kind of dose, at ? 1 . L A A A AAA A AAA A A 3REAT jgSk ,M SAlE M SDAY WP NING Igg /ML Window, le For 90c |Q And Up. MPTLY OR J|P ILL BE OINTED |jp1 jnion \re co. I LEADERS S. C. j/f&i 'A A A A A A, A A . . .?. * * V V V V V tf+f+fof+ip+f+t I ! I 1 I I 1 I 1 1 1 1 I I I ! 1 l i 1 : -H-l"H I Pri Ho Out of Men's and Young ifien from These suits are hont L fl?P ?\ save you irom <5o.u suit. Boys' Suits from . . . . These are exceptioi will save money by I OES FOR THE ENTII Men's Dress Shoes, fro Big line of Sweaters fo Women, priced from V and Trade 1 B Ik 11 OR YOUR MONEY B/ PRirp^ Rini4T a mv or I%1UI a A H~i I I I I I I I I 1 I I 1 I 1 I I I M I I I I 1 id l>v the ,time they compete their ntences, whether it will hnve had \y reforming effect or not, it will at ast have kept them inactive for that ngth of time.?Cheater Reporter. A dollar goes far enough nowadays forget the way back. Charles Valentine, of Yonkers, has proved the phonograph but is stilli large. ? - \ % ii m) <4IT XX |f XX W^mim H ft m-^ I ?? . i^iMk mmmmA ft _ ^| A^AA^A A^A A^A A^A A^A A4A AfA a4A A#> 4^V :: Town' | 's Suits, $10.00 up to $22.50 sst values. We can >0 to $7.50 on each ;; . $3.95'up to $12.00 rial values, and you buying thent. * 9 9 Ifc FAMILY. m . .$2.50 to $5.00 r Children, Men and i .. .$1.00 to $9.00 !; & m *? Willi A MX i l l Ml ill I 11 I I I I I ? I l I 11 iii * The school of experience Is always n hiprh school. ^ Another Shipment Nice Fryers. I Ala/* ??J* ? ' rkiau nonil nu i>l>iy oaruin r.arm I Butter. ?AT? S HARRIS-WOODWARD CO. Good Thing* to Eat. ' . ... . . V Jh