The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, July 14, 1921, Image 4
RIALTO I
TODAY S
t
Thomas H. Ince Presents j
ENID BENNETT !
2 T
I FRANK M. DAZEY'S j
"SILK HOSIERY." !
also j
IIINF fAPRIfF ANH r.FORr.F R WIT7 I
U VI I JLl Vi ? l%?VU 4 111 V VMJV/llVfU *-? UUI I U
IN
"THE SKY RANGER" !
EPISODE NO. ? ]
= h
TOMORROW '
CONWAY TEARLE J
?IN? ?
"MAROONED HEARTS" i
MONEY SAVING PROPOSITIONS \
i;
Celluloid Starch, 6 for . . .25c i
Best White Tuna Fish, per can 30c
Best Red Pimentos, 2 cans for . ,.35c b
1 Pint Wesson Oil for .30c /
1 Quart Wesson Oil for . .50c J
1 Pound White House Coffee for . . .. .36c }
Kin can's Reliahlp Piptiip Hnm< rkov 1V? 9**^ *
_ _ _ A A 'C/ A A VA AA Ak.;^ V A 1 M fc< W?
Sugar per pound 7c ISugar
per 100 pounds. . . . ... .$6.50 J
One pound Roast Beef . ,. . . 15c, 2 for 25c
10c Foil Wrapped Cigar , .5c 5
Fresh Onion, per pound . 10c t
Fresh Irish Potatoes, per peck. .... ,. ,.50c ?
Octagon Soap, large cakes, two for 15c t
P. & G. Soap, two for. . . . . ,. . . . . . 15c f
All Pork Sausage, per pound ,.25c J
Loose Compound Lard 12c <
Pure Lard . .15c t
Best Rice, per pound 7c {
1 Pound Keter Salmon .. . . .. .. . ?. . .. 10c *
lPound Best Pink Salmon, 2 for . ,. . . .25c t
Vinegar, per gallon 40c J
Can Tripe, per can ,. .30c
4 Pound Lard, Buckets .55c
8 Pound Buckets Lard . . ,.$1.00 !
Searchlight Matches, 6 boxes for 35c *
All 30c Plug Tobacco t 25c f
All Snuff, 3 for ....... .25c !
All Brands 20c Cigarettes 15c a
T-TnTYlO nvnnnrl 1\Tno 1 V\aw Vv?-inV?/-wl 1 OC
^ vj.iv/viim mvui, I lUCl^IlCI I . . . ?p 1 X J
Best Coffee, ground or grain, per lb.. . .20c t
Franco-American Coffee., . 35c t
Brands and Shorts . *.$1.45 "
Chicken Feed, per 100 lbs ,.,.$2.50 1
Snowdrift Lard, 8 lb. Buckets $1.10 h
Best Cream Cheese, per pound 25c }J
Large Tomatoes, No. 3, per can 15c 2 for 25c ?
Canned Corn, per can ...... 15c, 2 for 25c *
English Peas, per can . 15c 2 for 25c
Plain Flour, per barrel $8.00 e
Large Pineapple, grated or sliced, can 25c
18 to 20 lbs. Fat Backs, per lb.,. ,. . 13c
Best Ribbed Meat 15c J
Arm & Hammer Soda. . ,. . .5c u
Horse Feed, per hundred .. .$2.35 (t'(
Self Rising Flour, per barrel $8.25 J?
Best Dessert Peaches . . . ,.30c t
J. 0. GAULT, i
7 t
Phone 372, North Pinckney St. p
e
exporting wine abandoned |
increases furniture distributed \
b
Paris. .Tulv 12.?An inowtoan in tVi/. P/..-,.) 10 n- *
.... _ ... W..V ivvxu, IJOVIIUIIKI, UUI.Y XL*.? i nu rc- ?
exportation.* of wines and liquors trograd Soviet has decided to dis- C
from France in the first quarter of tribute to the workmen there all of n
this year as compared with the same the household furnishings left in a
period of 1013 is a surprising dis- homes abandoned by Russians who
covery. have fled from the city, and also to s
In the meantime France has lost permit the workmen to live in the f]
two of her biggest customers for houses in the best state of repair. n
wines and brandies?Russia and the At Moscow recently some 20.000 ^
United States. "brain workers" were moved to less j
Of the brandies and liquors fjor- comfortable quarters to permit the ]j
many took about half. Argentina, "hand workers" to * occupy their ^
Turkey .and England followed in that homes. n
order. _ f
_ ... . Landscape gardening began in Ja- h
The convention of the international pan 1200 years ago. o
organization of carmen will be held in ** m . ^
Atlanta, beginning September 11. ...... , . .. . , a
In India the lizards are hunted for *
All educational and professional in- their skins. The skins when tanned 11
stitutions in Italy are now open to are made into women's and children's
women. shoes, purses and bags. P
VMER1CAN LEGION
MEMBERS TO
VISIT EUROPE
New York, July 14.?The 250 mem>ers
of the American Legion, who
vi 11 visit France in August and Sepembcr
at the invitation of President
llillerand, will represent every secion
of the United States and all arms
)f the fighting forces in the war.
ivery state will have its quota and if
possible every combat division will
lave representation, says an anlouncement
by the Legion.
A fixed quota, based on Legion
Membership, has been allotted to each
>tate. Not all who have asked to
>e included can go. but it is the puriose
of Franklin D'Olieivthe former
lational commander of the Legion
vho is in charge of the pilgrimage, to
liake the party "a cross section of
>ur former fighting forces." Selection
>f the members is in the hands of
he state organizations of the Legion.
Details of the tour in France which
lave just been made public show that
he Americans will visit again the
principal American battlefields, atend
various dedicatory ceremonies
ind will be entertained at numerous
eceptions.
The party will sail aboard the
iteamer George Washington on August
3 and will return about the
niddle of September. The principal
vents of the visit will be the dedicaion
at Flirey of a monument to the
American army, which is the gift o?
he French municipality and the peo>le
of Lorraine; and the laying of the
orner stone of the new bridge
'Pont Roosevelt" over the Marne at
^hateau-Theirry.
President Millerand. Premier Briand
md the marshals of France are exiccted
to be present at the eeremones
at Flirey. Flirey is familiar
rropnd to the A. E. F. It is situated
n the old Toul sector which the
American troops took over in 1917.
"he village itself is only 2,000 yards
rom the old front line of the sector
t'hich held at one time or another
iy 17 American divisions.
Another reception of note to the
Americans will be hy the little town
f St. Die in the old Duneville sector.
lso loner held by Americans. St.
lie's claim to special attention in
itrht. of the Legion visit rests on the
act that in St. Die stands the house
n which the continent of America
eceived its name. It is the' one-time
ibode of Waldsee-Muller, the Alsaian
monk, when he wrote the letter
uggesting that new world take the
lame of the Italian navigator,
Amerigo Vespucci.
Marshal Foch will be "at home" to
he visiting Legionaries. He will reeive
them in the house in which he
cas born in the town of Taubes in
he Pyrenees mountains.
There will be receptions to the pilrrims
at Paris, Bordeaux, Toulouse,
..yon, Metz and Strasbourg. At Verlun
the party will sleep in the famous
itadel.
At Rheims the veterans will attend
he presentation of the 8,000,000ranc
gift of the Carnegie. fmn>dutiot>
o the city library there. At Blois,
>t. Jeanne D'Arc will be honored. The
A'gionaries will witness the dedieaion
of a statue to the French heroine
vhich is the gift of the Joan of Arc
ommittee of New York.
Under the terms by which the Lerion
accepted the hospitality of th<?
'"rench government, the expenses of
he expedition will be home by the
lelegates themselves or by the Le-'
rion organization.
Mr. D'Olier says that the proposal
or the visit has been received with
uch enthusiasm by the American
eterails as to constitute a striking
nd spontaneous tribute to France .
s a former ally.
"The American veterans feel that
he forthcoming expedition marks ]
he entrance of the Ix'gion on the <
tage of international affairs and !
hat it will tend to knit more closely ]
mutual understanding among vet- ]
raiis, tioi orny 01 franco and the <
Jnited States, but of all allied conn- ]
ries," he said. It shows that in the t
earts of Americans who wore the j
niform there surely dwells an abidig
affection for France and the ]
oilu. It is noteworthy that many
pplications come from men who did
ot see foreign service during the
ar." I
1 ? i
.XHUMING AMERICAN
DEAD IN GERMANY i
?
Berlin, June 24.?The work of ex- (
uming the bodies of the American
oldiers who died as prisoners of war !
i Germany has developed such diffi- 1
ulties that some uncertainty attaches
t> the identity of the few which have
ecu unearthed among the unnamed j
lerman and other dead in the ceme- j
eries near the old prison camps.
Many of the graves were unmarked .
nd the names of the men buried in
ome places were unknown, so that
iuch guesswork entered into the c
ask of the American Graves Regis- .
ration service, in charge of two Am- (
rienn army officers, which has su- .
erintended the operations. J
"The bodies exhumed comprise what ,
re thought to ho the remains of Am- }
rlcan soldiers who died in Germany," (
aid a member of the Registration
Service. "We have shipped 15 from ?
,ei'psig to Antwerp for transportation <
0 America. Our operations have i
een carried out in Strasbourg, Stock- ;
,ch (on the northern enrV of Lnke ]
Constance), Lindau-am-Bod<fisee, Mu- j
iich, Damstadt, Coblenz, Stuttgart
nd Hinclenburg, Silesia."
To exhume and remove J he single j
oldier buried near Hindenl urg?in a
lower covered grave shadc< by chestiut
trees?it was necessa y to obain
permission from the Interallied
Iigh Commission at Oppelp, Ithe Poish
representative there, tpe (head of
Herman Self-I)efense organizations,
nd the leader of Polish insurgents,
or the grave was in territory held
y Polish insurgents and the trucks
f the Americans had to pjss between
ines oT fighting Germans and Poles.
1 member of the American military
mission in Berlin negotiated and obained
assurances that the American
arty would not be molesUd.
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cold at pressed frtim csratyici, ^
| I ^^nl<^ 1 ,j-rn ^
4 '
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> ..
LUCK
? .
I) Is only a word to most people. As a practical conside*ra- "|
t ion there isn't such a thing as luck. If you expect to ..
; win, you must deserve success.
Saving regularly is the surest way to fortune. Spending
carelessly leads you the other way.
Savings means success. Savings with the NICHOL
I) SOX BANK & TRUST COMPANY means success in pro- , "j
tecting funds while getting a liberal rate of interest on .!
them.
We pay 5 per cent per annum on Savings of $1.00 or '
more, and a higher rate on Certificates of Deposit of six
months or longer. +
I
CAPITAL AND SURPLUS $100,000.
NICHOLSON BANK & TRUST CO. $
$ EMSLIE NICHOLSON. Pres. M A MOORP! c ..v.i..r A
|4 ? " 4*
W. S. NICHOLSON, L. M. JORDAN, J. ROY FANT, T
Vice Presidents. J
?
L____?_??___! - \
i
Strictly Cash
TO ALL
HUGHES & JENKINS
' " "
A Regular Custor
little folks can safely enjoy \
Orange-Crush, Lemon-Crush and
Crush. Protected purity, v/holesoi
and quality, fine f-agrance and
make them ideal when served icythe
fountain or at home. Be s
get the genuine.
at fount a i n s or in bo,
Guaranteed under pure food laws. Federal a
Prepared by Orange-Crush Conipan
Plant and Laboratories, ChicaRO
Research Laboratory, Los Angeles
Bottled by
N. W. A. BOTTLING CO.
UNION, S. C.
Two bodies were exhumed near
Berlin, one at Tuchel, Poland and anhor
nnnv Tirac/lnv* Tb.. ~ ? 1 - ? ** ?
....... uiboucn. me worn or me
section, it is expected, will be completed
about July 15. Captain Eugene
M. Dwyer and Captain G. Cole have
conducted the work with a civilian
personnel of 24 men, comprising
. hautfeurs, embalmers and technical
tssistants.
RAINBOW DIVISION
HOLDS CONVENTION
Cleveland, O., July 13.?The Rainrow
Division, one of the most fanous
American divisions that paricipated
in the World War, will
rpen its second annual convention
lere tomorrow. < Several thousand
ire expected to attend the three day
went.
The Cleveland chapter will enterain
25 wounded Rainbow men still
n hospitals.
The division was recruited from 2(1
states. The infantry regiments came
?rom New York, Ohio, Alabama and
Iowa, the artillery from Indiana, IIinois
and Minnesota.
After training at Camp Mills,
Long Island, the division sailed for
France in October of 1017, the fourth
livision to arrive.
rtiier inree montns oi intensive
:raininjr in France the men went in:o
the trenches near Baccarat. From
hen on it was continuous heavy
TKhtinj; and hardships, at Chamaatrne,
where the division was a
done wall against the frreat German
offensive, from there to Chateaurhierrv
salient, and then followed
3t. Mihiel where in two days over
J.000 prisoners were taken. The division
was eneracred in two import>? .*
r,U,.e?r. + ~ J- A
no ifiKintrn ill UIU niKUIIIIf"
Meuse offensive and finally ended up
*t Sedan on November 7.
Colonel M. A. Tinley, of Council
Rluffs, la., is president of the divison
organization.
I'hone 304 Cuisine Unexcelled
Hot and Cold Water in Every Room
Private JBath
When in Hendersonville Stop at
Carter Villa
MRS. BELLE T. I)1CK
Corner 3 Ave. and Washington St.
. HENDERSONVILLE, N. C.
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