The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, November 17, 1922, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

. HE lSlON TIME 'S"uilS|<y muff COMPANY7 / ... ~w*a M. Rice lUh at tb? PuatoAe* in Union. S. ( a* ??eond cUhm nutUr. tte?aa BnMtbnn \ Main Stw BeU T.Dehaa* Nn. 1 SUBSCRIPTION RATES ;?ue Year 44. IU Month*..... t rfcr-p Month* I ADVERTISEMENTS ^ ? S^urt. Irtt insertion II <very vbtpqntat InitrtiM Obituary net ice*. Cnnrch and I x>< otic** and no tiro* of pub'tc meetinr*. < "t?linn?nb and Card* of Thanh* will ' appmI for ?t 1h* r?te of one eent a wo aeh p <>yinf the order Count I '?ril? and ynti will '? now what th? ? ill he. MEMBER OP ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Prea# 1r ercHmirelr > tied to the n?* .lor republication of n? , ?i?r*ichee credited to it or not " edited In thh naper. and al?o -*-w? ouhlUhed therein. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1922 This land of ours is most wondi iul and we are blessed beyond won Our climate is ideal, for here it the middle of November and very 1 tie coal has been used and our gi dens are full of turnip greens, torn toes, lettuce, collards, salsify, carflo etc., and we are free from many of t ills that have afflicted other comraui ties. Let's give thanks and cou our many blessings. The new school building is som th;ng of which the people of Uni should be proud. It is a credit to t public spirit and the generous uns< f.shness of the citizens of the coi Tr.unity. The building is a model convenience and it is a thing of bea ty. It tells to the world the gl message that we, as a peoplerare d tcrmined to carefully guard our b? asset?our children. The Kershaw Era has, in part, sol cd the problem of the scarcity money. The Era says: Several of the subscribers to T lira for their paper with wood a: vo ucrvooH tr? nernrH thpm with th "ri/ilege. Now is the time when i toed the wood at this time if th went to pay for their paper in th way. The scarcity of money is not real as people thing. There is a h and cry that is not warranted. B the fact remains that if I have soir thing that you want and you hi something that I want, and a sati factory basis of exchange can be a ranged, we need no money to do bv, ? iness. Newspapers can take wo ' for subscription or a couple of her a ham, potatoes, eggs or some oth farm product. The farmer who h; a crib full of corn can exchange wii a neighbor who has no corn, but willing to exchange some other cor irodity, or give in exchange a day labor. Our cat says time and tide wait f< no man, yet hold out opportunity all men. \ \ I Our cat says a vision of what v w might have been makes us shudder ( what we are. * Our cat says the kingdom of righ * eousness has no room for slackers. Our cat says destructive critics co etantly pull down the work of co structive men. # Our cat says the timidity of mom often amounts to cowardice. e Our cat says the deceitful man d celves himself more than he does an; body els*. Our cat says the Idle tattler di rupts many friendships. + Oru cat says the way to a better j< is .filling the one you have. Old "Siamese Twina" Of The Tree Worl ^ What may be called the "Siamei r Twins" of the tree world is found c an island formed by two branches < the Mississippi river at Rockland, 0 The Hand occupied by An arsenj of the United States government, en braces 200 acres of luxuriant fores comprising many varieties of tree ' and almost in the center of it is th * - ~ twin tree, an oak and an elm, th trunks of which, having grown cloi together many years ago, appear t he merged into a single bole to height of five or six feet. At this height the trunks are ei tirely separate, each bearing its ow peculiar bark formation and foliag< \f The twin has been estimated to be 1 hundred years old, but is still of vig ' Vk orous growth. ? St. Louis Post-DU M <*7- pateh. ^ . German dealers have been able t ? Phiee Chinese rice in the markets o fa Vt Colnmb'a, South America, at a lows price than the American dealers. ,s ;> Mrs. Swiak. Was j > Bine Over Her | ? ? - ' Health > .? v; : .? . \\ Among the th6u*ands of North I Carolina people who have realized ( #( the fact that Tanlac brings health,; 3 strength and happiness, is hire. Jsnic, y Swiuk, Myers Millls, South Gasto- j nia. N. C., Mrs. Swink says: ! f J! "Btfltoi* I took Tanlac I could not j- work haK my tyroe, ai\d when I did, vork night - w^uld find ine complete- ] y exhausted..' "I .could hardly eat ] rt>- muhgh to k6ap me alive, and night; . .fier night I would tois and roll with; . n awful headache. At times I felt. ( 10 discouraged and blue I could hard-i ; l7?; y stand it. ! ; 7. "If it hud not heen for Tunlnr I .vould still be a sick woman, for | nothing else ever did me a bit of. l __ rood. I have taken four bottles now j nd haven't a trouble in the world. ] 8r" ( eat anything: I want, sleep good | is. ivery night and don't know what a ; is 'leadache is any more." ' , Tanlac is sold by all good drug- ; rists. I lr~ . ] ? Old Furman Footbal IMen . , to* To Witness Gam# Not. 25 t he . I 1 oi- Greenville, Nov. 16.?When Fur- 1 mar* University's Purple Hurricane < Int.tles the Clemson Tigers here on i Saturday, November 26, the fray will < be witnessed by thousands, if colls 1 for reserved seats is to be taken asJ 1 on an indication. The fracas will decide, ? he in all probability, whether the visitors I el. will bear off the title of stute cham _ pions or whether the coveted honor I ^ will be shared by the "Big Three" of ! football in South Carolina?Carolina, l?" Clemson and Furman. ! i ad Occupying a conspicuous place in ! |e_ the grandstand when the Tigers and !S^ the Hurricanors clash will be the ' remnant of an ancient football team I ol Furman's that spread terror into ' atveral southern states 20 years ago.' 1 v. , For the surviving members of the old 1 gang of 1902 have decided to hold; their first reunion since they turned iu their uniforms a score of years ago : n(j and began tackling problems a little 1 n.ore serious than opposing pigskin 1 rcg t'lters. From the wind-swept plains! i ? f Oklahoma to the breezy shores of' ' ^ i-hc Great Lakes and from "way down < in Alabam" to the hills of "ole Vir-j I ginny,' these patriparchs of the grid-] 1 ron are coming back for a night and j ! ue a day of reminiscence in the vale of j Ut >oars that have gone as a tale that is I < i le- ???u. Three members of the old team ure dead. "One i^ ufWWWfWfifetf^ter. Of ls~ the 20 known living, all but two have < lT- written that they will, in all probis ability, be here for the reunion. They i od Jk'e to be the guests of honor of the < l8 Furman Club of Greenville County I ' ul a banquet to be held Friday night, I er November 24, in the new refectory i 88 at Furman. Even the old roach, s th Charles S. Roller, Jr., now head of a . js boys' military academy in Virginia, 1 n writes that, he is coming and will 1 bring along his wife and 12-year-old t 3 son. 1 Ancient records, resurrected in! I preparation for the reunion, reveal a > t hedule of games played that sea-! v son that is all but astounding. From 1 he schedule it would appear that "a 1 game every other day" was the order 1 of play for those huskies of a day t when "beef and brawn" was the most : \ital factor in deciding a contest. For t 'ample, the team went on the road r >r and played eight games in 23 days, t kj S".eh teams as the University of North Carolina and the A. & M. of North \ Carolina were taken on but one day's t intermission for resting, no, for trav,e tllitfg from one college to the other, i at This famous eleven took on Georgia t and with but three days' intermission i gave battle to Clemson's team of f t giants. Then in six days after the t fierce struggle with Clemson the Fur- \ manites battled Georgia Tech to a 0-0 < tie in Greenville. a n* The old warriors will gather about n- a table reserved especially for them ! at the Furman alumni banquet on Jhe t night of the 24th, and the following ' day they will look down on "the Fur- t j man-Clemson mixup from a section p of the grandstand reserved especial- t ly for them. ? ?- Following are the names and pres- * y_] eat addresses of members of this j ancient and honorable team: W. H. LaBoon, Chickasha, Okla.; J. T. Lawrence, Spartanburg; D. K. McColl, Bennettsville; Pratt King, Chicago; F. H Shirley, Westminster; G. C. Scaifc-, Millers Creek, N. C.; J. G. Holland, >h( Edgefield; J. L. Webb, Greenwood; I McKellar Townes, Birmingham; WisI tar Sharp, Atlanta; Alva T. Subiett, j Westminister; R. H. Subiett, Greenj| ville; J. E. Attaway, Saluda; W. C. Clinkscales, Bclton; A. S. Fant, BelI ten; R. A. Gentry, Anderson; Glenn ie Tarrott, Concord, N. C.; J. Boyce Duckett, Whitmire; Julian ClinkjV scales, Montgomery; Charles S. Roller, Jr., Fort Defiance, Va., (coach.) I" Wilhelm Cuneo to Form New Cabinet ie Berlin, Nov. 16 (By the Associated ie Press).?Wilhelm Cuneo, general ie manager of the Hamburg-American jo steamship line, has accepted the task a of forming the new German cabinet, it j was officially announced today. ? 4<Family nccommodation" cars, sevB or. rooms to each car, each room ac a c<?mmodating five persons, will De * placed in the Chicago-California serv. ^ ? icc of the Santa Fe railway for fall r and winter travel, according to recent ll ' cnnouncementa. There will be 18 care h o of the new atyle. Each room will con- h f tain upper and lower double bertha, c tr a day lounge and bed, with lavatory t! I and toilet equipment. J n } * ihuk aMaaaBananwHHBi Gipsy Smit Last i xsxxxxxs%xxsne%xx%xxs%%s%9 Mr. Smith took his text last even ng from the second book of Kings tecond chapter, and the 6th verse Hut he was a leper." Mr. Smithaaid that all through th< [>ible leprosy is used as p type of sin [ don't know bow much there is ii m analogy, but it is) remarkabl vhen you study the pathology of th< l.sease, to find* how similar lepros; ind sin are. First of all, it is smai n its beginning. Leprosy starts wit] i spot no bigger than a pin's head oi lac body, and spreads until the bod; becomes a mass of sores, and ther n tbe last stages of the disease, tb limbs begin to slough off. Sin is jus Luc aaqwi It ia small in the begin ung. If the devil could show us th nd of sin, he could never get us t ike the first step, and society, today Lakes no note of the beginning of sic It will welcome the young fellow inb their parlors and let him drink a their tables, and then, when societ; iienis that the young fellow is abou to become a muttering, staggerinj drunkard, society, horrified, rises uj md shuts the door in his face. So :iety takes no note of the girl wb Flirts promiscuously with any Tone Dick and Harry, until her name be .-onus an easy mark among the younj feliows of towWi. Society waits unti t hears that she is about to becom Lbe mother of ait illegitimate child u then society, horrified, rises u] m.d shuts the door in her faco? Sii s small in its beginning, as is leprosy Secondly, leprosy separates. When i 1< rson contracts that dreadful dis '. ase, we have to separate him fron rus loved ones and banish him for tb ?ake of the community. And sin ai ivays separates. There is nothing ii Ll.c world that can separate husbam <r:u wife like sin. There is nothirtj Li> the world that can separate i young man or a young woman fron tier home like tin. Thirdly, it is abso utely incurable by man, so is sin. Tb crcat medical societies of the worli ivait to wine and dine the man wb an prescribe a permanent cure fo eprosy, but as far as I know, no mai tias been able to prescribe that cure Siu is also incurable by man. Yot nay try this and that and the othe Lhmg, and you can rush to the quack . f the world, but your case is abso t-1 - 1 * V - luiny lucuruoit* oy man. I nave OI on thought4itftfJi could tsec Naamai nn his horse before the great Syriai troops, and anybody passing migh Imve been tempted to say, "How un equally Providence seems to divid bet favors.' Here Is this great cap Lam with prestige, fa mo, position money and everything that seems pos ibie to make a man happy. And her s another man who has nothing, bu :he meanest beggar in the city o: Damascus would not change place vith Naaman, because he was a leper . have sometimes thought I could heai lim give that famous command t< ;ome of his troops, telling them to g< sat and raid the Israelites, and thei [ have imagined 1 could see that lit Je Jewish home on the side of th< lill, with the father and mother am laughter retiring for the night. An< ifler they have got to sleep, beinj iv/akened by the rough shouts nnc urges of the soldiers who break int< he house, and tear everything opei n the main floor, and not finding vhat their heart is after, they g< .pstairs and turn the occupants out >1 bed and drive them doyrn the stairi .head of them. And after they tun vcrything over upstairs, they com< lown disgusted because they have nol onnd the loot that their heart was afcr, and afraid to go back to camj vithout. ?nvthino> thow UU tin laughter and put her on horseback ind in the early morning they return u camp. I have,sometimes thoughl could see these Holdiers coming oul o meet them and say, 'Well, whal nek?' and finding that all they have nken for the night's work is a little fill, they begin to jeer and say, 'Is hat all you could do? All your equi>age for a little girl. All your trainng and expense of keeping up this 'rmy, and is that all you have got? lut the Syrian army little knew thai hat little maid was going to bring a dossing to the whale of that country have imagined I could see her taken nto the humblest position in the pal. ice and have watched her in imaginaion climb until she becomes the maid o Mrs. Naaman. And one day, Mr? laaraan comes into the room and sit ing down, she buries her face in he? lands and sobs as though her hearl vould break, and the little girl comer jp to her and says, 'What's the mat,ei ?' And Mrs. Naaman ansu/pm Why, don't you know that it is jusl >ein& whimpered that my husband har he leprosy, and if it once gets out le will have to leave us and gt ind make his1 dwelling in the lepei wlony, crying, unclean, unclean.1 Why cheer up, ma'am, there is a mar n our country who can cure leprosy tnd Mrs. Naaman answered, 'How dc rou know it? Have you ever knowri tim to cure a leper?' And the little rirl says, 'No, but the other day there vas a little boy who had sun strokf tnd died, and the mother sent for ou* ?rophet and he came and took the litle boy into the barn and stretched ilmself over the boy, and in a few noments he came down again, bringng the little gellow with him, and he ad brought him back to life again, nd then if he can give life, surely he an hedl disease.' And immediately tie word goes to Naaman and Naa'an gets his horses and chariots and in ' i .1 aea , . ' ' I % ' * The packa : Yniir tflfttf Ml h's Sermon J Veiling , 1 -J sbqut half jr.mUl&P in our xux. i, ivncy, and goes over to see the proI, phet of God, and when he get?, there, the grqphft nays, Tell him. to go and e wash ip the river Jordan seven times.' i. And the point that >1 want you to get s hold of la this, that God never holds e peat ihoatility against you. Though e this man was an enemy to God's chos. y en people, yet God is willing to heai 11 him, if he will obey the conditions, h That is one of the great marvels ef * the Gospel ef Jesus Christ. It doesn't y matter how far down a man gets, no i, matter how he blasphemes God, God e is willing to heal, and to forgive, and t fcc claanse, if you are willing to f bey. 'Though yourndns are as scare let. they shall be as white as snow.' o Ttien again, 'For the Son of God came, r; not to .call the righteous, but sinners k. .to repentance.' I can prove it to you, 0 also by experience. And the second t point that I want to make is this, that y God .take* no account of your station t in life. Of course, this man was a 1 great man. The Bible admits it, and p dionorahle, and m mighty man of valor. . The Bible admits all of that, but the 0 Bible insists on saying after it cjll. i, 'But .he was a leper.' As it is there, - let ine put it here. Granted you are 1 a mosai man, a good father to your kl Children, and a good husband to your e wife, and that the men in town look 1, up to you and reppect your word, but p in the final analysis, if you are outn side of God and of Christ, you are a leper. As it is there, let me put K a here. Grant that you are a good wife, . and a good mother to your children, n and that the women of the city vie wii Vi ASAV> nfttAi* * % AnA?%i%*s? c '?? . v??v* vvuvt 111 V|TOIUH^ MICH . homes to you, but if you are out of n Cod and out of Christ you are, in the d f.nal analysis, a leper. Educated? I Yes, but an educated leper. Winsome? a Yes, but still a leper. a And when Naaman heard the condi tions for cleaning he got mad. Somer times it is a very healthy thing to get d mad, glad or sad. You are like an si old ditch puddle. There is no rise or r fall. . Naaman lost his temper and !i said, 4I thought because of my posi. >. tion, he surely would have come out ii and healed me.' Aid he turned away r in rage, but his servants went to him a and said, 'Why, he hasnt asked you . to do much. He hasnt asked you . for a nickel, and you have brought a n half^e million^dollars to give him if n he wanted it fan 3 you have come 160 c miles to see him. Why not do it? _ Then Naaman lost his pride and said,! e 'Why nofcf' And he went down into . tjae jrivdr (md having lost his temper, [f and lost his pride, then he lost his . leprosy^ and that's the way God heals. B His flesh came back again, not as the t flesh of a full-grown man, but as the ?%... V - 11&AU AI1J V I i * vdu ui a u>wt) mum, pun;, wnuiesome B and sweefc The finest touch of the, whole story is that when Naaraan, r finds he is healed, he goes to Eliaha 5 and says, 'Haw much?r Aud when he , finds that the prophet doesn't want, , anything. he says, 'Please give me . enough dirt that two mules can carry. 3 That was a remarkable request, j wasn't itt But Naaman said, being I the next man to the King of Syria j P when the king goes to worship his. } gods, in the bouse of Bimmen, I have, > to go with him, and I am not going to i worship these gods any more, and if ; you will give me this, I will build a ) Utile altar in the house of Rimman l to the God of Israel, so that when I , go in with my sister, I shall sea , that altar And remember what God 3 has done for me. As Kipling sayB. t 'Lest we forget.' , People Combine . N And Take Coal 1 A disjatch from Scmnton, Penn., says: ;; Headed by poliesmen, fireman and councilmen, school directors and N Burges P. B. Dempeey, several thou' f ard citizens of Oliphaitt, fire miles 1 north of here, recently marched on the Delaware and Hudson railroad and confleaated four ears of coal-to | supply churches and schools that have ficen without fuel for weeks. The federal government and state 1 fuel commission had been accused by the Oliphant people of Ignoring their 1 pleas, ani) hence they took natter* into their own hand* and aeised the coal. I , , . w , . He Wat Not From the South When the train ahowed up at the station of the little city of Gordons 1 \ ille, Va., you are sore to be greeted vith that ever familiar call, coming from the old Southern darkies "Nice fried ehicken rite aretmd on dis aide." ' A passenger who had ^enjoyed a [ chicken sandwich and was leaning out , of the window "to buy another, asked of the dueky salesman: "Where do you get your chielcana?" The darkey rolled his eyes. "You I' 'ill f'om de no*th, aint you, suh ?" he queried. jem," wu tne repiy. "not wny do you aslr that V "Case, sahl No genTm*n fom de south eber aika a trigger what he gite . irit chicken*." : ? "T1 " ' ' Many a boh' wMte rounds out its full period of extatenee without ever going ten milaefrem *he -neat whOre it war hatched. Denver'haa approximately the earae number dt telephones aa Greece, Rumania, Central America, Luxembourg and Egypt combined. % ' V " a Sv :$k M rd^^ikxM . i ' Over f bill t .t' ' : 4t 1 , '* - ; ! " ' I ^ A ' ' , ' ' : 1 VT V1 i < . . ? I > ' ? " _ i J i ' : f .. . ! * t I >. ' _ i Liocrrr 8i mrro Toiacco Co. I ?%r* a ^ ? ^rtciAL AUVfcKT15EMENT fOR SALE?Appier and Red se oats. Peoples Supply Co. 1538WHLN YOU WANT fresh beef, pot sausage, !isn and oysters, pho 333. S .P. Fant and J. D. Chark No. 35 M. Gadberry St. 1528-1 HANK STOCK FOR SALE at bs gain prices. E. F. Kelly & Bi 1624 i.K'l tS FILL your prescriptions. V till any doctor's prescriptioi Union Drug Store. 1502-Mo-We-Fr i rOR RENT?Store room in Smi block, by the week, month or yet Apply to Mrs. Newell Smith, 8 Hampton Ave, Greenville, S. C., C. F. Hart, R. R. Crossing. 1508-Fri-TuSAVE 25 to 50 per cent on aito piVl New and used parts for alt ca and trucks. Mail orders giv , prompt attention. Whitton Au Wrecking Co., Columbia, S. C. 1624-3 202 ACRES at a bargain; new 4-roc dwelling, plenty of timber, 40 act of good branch bottoms, a rood ua ture, in a good section. $10 p ere for quick deal. E. F. K?1 A Bro., Union, S. C. ' 1521FOR SALE?At big discount. Pri a revelation. The beautiful ha! grand piano used at the Big tabe uncle. For caah or easy terms. Baby Grand! The ideal Cbriatm present. Address Marchantla. Mm Uousq, BIO. fiaat Washington S Greenville, S. JC. 1636FOR RENT?One handsome* n< store roory-ou South Gadder street. Price reasonable. See Ben Foster. 1636-1 EXPERT REPAIRING on starte: generators . and ignition systen Official factory service station t all JEhe leading electrical systen We .ship parts immediately. Yo business appreciated. .Odoms Bi tery Service, Inc., Spartanbm 8. C. . , . 1584t OU RE^IT?Fresh land, cloae school and cbiucl to individuals share crooners. of about six or eicr ' ' plob*. B. If. White, Santuc, S. 16S7-2tj Alw?o>* Zimd.Lo Stem's Lotic Dear Dr. Storm For at least -fifteen |am I ha been troubled with .an itching hum off some kind. I tried year Storm Amotion and after the third applio tion the trouble disappeared and am enjoying real fodt oomfert f the flnt time since I was a bey. have recommended your preparatk to a number of friends sad will s ways fed glad to reoomfmfend H. A, 'F. Clatb. 2 Hart St. Union, 8. ( Adv. Not. 2, 1222 - -1-1 ? ! '> TONStLITIS I Apply teddy evec itail cover edt^D^ftanpel-r^ y $a"?G3 A HMI | 7 Affile XM VM ' *" ' " An Indian tmfty bowl was f*c*nt! found'in Britlih CfchttriWa whi?ih Wi mora than 15 faet ion* and mtitgf* GOO pounds. % -lil M . ? ' *- " 11 I i ill * ige suggests it. !. confirms it. nH ion sold yearly Mggjjgjl (jSestei CIGAKE' lsi ?? * j t?a? ? There la no exeua nod real money-maker *?* The wonderful poultrj Ot " make* early lajrera of | prodMM Chat aaewtfa in young chick*. SI ? We carry a complete line of Caro-Vet. 8 ir- Hoc* and Poultry. We will gladly refund ^ reewlta from the uee-of amy Care-Vet raw ,tf - authorized dealer J. E. Fault r Union, 8. C. y_ - Statins l>rug Store Union, 8. C. , J. ilobley Jetor Union. 8 C. U?. East Hide Drug Co.. * Union, 8. 0. flly-nph'a fhnrmacy Union. 8. C Vowler'a 1'h.trmacy Monarch U J. B. Hcdenhough, Route 4.t.Union, 8. C. ?jj ??? 11 ?-< hi ??mjmmmm?? ur. " ? 1 "**" ' 38 Alaska Has no Flits Of Houat Variety tf. V . ' (From Philadelphia Ledger) la. Everybody knows .that mosquitos r:t are a frightful pest in Alaska; but it en is news to learn that honaefliss do ito not exist there. This interesting fact was definitely ascertained by Dr. J. A?' If 11J-I-L ? *? ?T .. . ? - w i iu, j-viurirn 01 me uniiea states Na> ? Itional Museum in the course of a re'm J cent expedition whit h he made for <?a .the purpose of studying Alaskan in,3~ sects. ? |?r He" found two entirely new species lly uf mosquitos. Horseflies were abund'^jant everywhere. But ih^re were nr> ~ jouse flies. In vain did he exp'ore . 'grocery stores, restaurants, canneries i garbage' dumps and other likely 21 places for them. j^j The iact is that the ,housefly' is by ||c' origin a tropical insect. It cannot ;t endure cold weather. In temperature latitudes a few houseflies man_ age to live .over the winter in heated iw houses?enough of them, that is to ry 'eay? to start a fresh crop in the folj lowig spring. ? Woolen Goods Require Great Care in Z Cleaning urj it-J We, have been very euccesaful in g, I cleaning woolen goods and other' fit heavy fabrics?you can profit by our ? experienoe. We sterilise every piece to with live steam and drive out all dust or and dirt. Why take chanees on hav ht ??... ...b .11.1 i 1 ? ?? m>b /vh> ouii* tiKkw up <suia scoreii C. ed by the old way? Phono 167 am pd dust-proof motor cycle will oall an ?. deliver anywhere. Special attentim to parrel post. Agent for two laro ! est dye Houses in the South. ' * HAMES PRESSING aad 5 REPAIR SHOP * Nicholson Bank BoBdfafts 1 Phono 167 i ~~ Give He Baby * DR. M. D. HUIET'S * CROUP MIXTURE * ^ and yon wiB rejoice at I the remits. For Sale at The 6 PALMETTO DRUG CO. M Ml Hn Smm if Ptts Drat* aad Druactota tmdrtm. j r '^1 4 V ^ I nn I imj Conveni?mtpmdmgB fgkf ? glauimi-wrqfpmL field rTES tf" j. ti 1 I 'I om Every Ken for ? iMln kitL You ran i * out of ovary solitary h?n you own. ! 1 Egg Producer ' tonfe. davolopo tba ofg-prMuoWir <>> . t yojuw^jmlMu; loops poultr horftr.> u i -I lb. box, M oanta. J tandanJ Uomadlao for Horns. Muta*. Covw . ' your aaoaay if you fall to ret tui4lxl^ru>.v't if idy. S IN UNION COUNTY H. T. Hlnins UiTiln. .'1, V I Keller's Drug -Storo s. f. j B. K. Brown Buffs*), }?, C. i J. I. Mlnter SOI., lb. H. C.' Mutual Supply Co OetlW'.c, S. <\ I * Pautlala /leak II ll_. ' as .? I vanwi? vii^u W. ? i f THTK. O V. I Mumh's Phurmney ;... '" !?.-K.'-C. 1 lonearllle J>rux Co. .... Joiwilile, f. t*. 1 .1 . ?r-HTn-- Tzar.iim-Tsr 1 Applet From tht OrdoUSl The Albemarle Pippin, ?ween Vic* tori a's favorite, known as-the Jtoysl Apple, is the .finest flavored apple .in the world. It and the Winesap, grown in the mountains of Virginia are unsurpassed. We ship our applpp to our regular customers in roost of ^tfce stales, a box, a barrel, or *a carload. Uest references if desired. Wo will appreciate an order from yon. Will exchange a few barrels for-pens. ALBEMARLE .ORCHARD 4>O, Charlottesville, Va.; 11-9-11-13-15-17-20-22-26 27 20 l j f FOR JSAlf SEED WHEAT Red May and Leap* PseKftc . SEED. OATS fulghum, Appier end Red ro Rust Prpof SEED RYE ? < Abruzzi and North Carolhl CLOVER v Jrimaon (in rou|b)f' CriMtM, (cleaned) and Burr Cktarir V inter Hairy Vetch, Rape aed Beardlesa Barley. A Look* like there %rlll he-ao ixcuse fbr not aowieg |i|d* hi. fall. Mix Vatch ladAiU or fide forage crop. ' J. L CALVERT JONESVUAE, *. C. ' FREE * A BOWL OF GOLD FISH ^ I