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GOOD TIME IN STOR PALMAFESTA QUE1 OUR COUNTY'S FLOAT CA $500 PRIZE The club women of Columbia have just organized to act as hostesses tc the queen candidates, and are making every preparation to give them the best time possible. And, of course the men are making their own preparations. too. We have been asked to keep the many good things in store for the young ladies a dark secret for a while longer so their surprise may be complete. The Palmafesta Association has received numbers of letters from former queen candidates expressing their unusual pleasure last year and they ; tc unanimous in saying, "It was the best time I ever had." Queen candidates have the best seats already reserved for them at every stage performance at Palmafesta. They will see the spectacular fireworks display, the gorgeous exhibits of wearing apparel at the style show, will hear the :f..i ? ? uvnuwiiii music <?i nanus nna opera star now being engaged by the chairman of the entertainment committee, Mr. L. Ij. Propst, who is in New York with the determination to secure the best star irrespective of the expense or trouble. There will be dinners, dances, balls and?what will be the most beautiful of all events?the queen's coronation will be enacted by the queens themselves, arrayed in the court finery whiih characterized the coronation of the que ?. of England in the days of chivalry and Knight Errants. Po the g;rls of South Carolina want to be at Palmafesta? Interest is running high all over the state. Girls want to enjoy this good time?and thorn is the $r?On Hinmnrut rinrr nwnit_ inn the fortunate girl to be chosen Queen of Palniafesta. Last year the contest was close. Up to the very last minute a dozen or more of the young ladies had practically the same VOTING QUEEN OF 1 "PALMAFESTA" The Union Daily Times. Gentlemen My choice for < Name Address This coupon good for one vo subscription to this newsp I NEW LOV I ?c Kg I ?mw yMvvwv vtv *1 /ivti raiimiN KtbUi 30x3 1-2 Cord .... 32x3 1-2 Cord 31x4 Cord 32x4 Cord 33x4 Cord 34x4 Cord . 32x4 1-2 Cord .... LESS 5 PER Michelin was the fi ever built and remain tires made. Factories: London, Turin, Italy; and Millt COUNTY D1 HAMES GROC We Guarantee These 1 Iron Ore Traffic On the Great Lakei C.|pv<?lnr?l. March 26.? speculation never was more rife, loca marine men predict that the iron on traffic on the Great Lakes will lx from r?0 to 75 percent greater thii season than last. It is generally con ceded that the season will open latei than it has in past years, operator: being almost unanimously of th< opinion that a late start will not onl; be advisnle but neeessary. No boat will be sent out prior to April I, i was declared. The combined movemeiW' of ore coal, grain and stone last year wa 68,033,575 net tons. Of this, approxi mately 24,976,813 was iron ore. With a widespread coal strike loom ing, little coal probably will be lef for the boats to handle until th< strike ends. Undr favorable conditions man; boats bring grain or ore cargoe down from the head of the lakes, am return with coal. If the coal suppl; is blocked, the boats must go ligh to the ore docks and grain elevator and the one-way cargo must bear tb expense of the round trip, vesse owners declare. E FOR Bil iN FROM THIS COUNTY ' To; iN WIN dai : IN THE BIG STATE PARADEito I ser rec s number of votes. Who knows but what g^ , this county will be the honored one , nnd our candidate bring back the dis- ^ tinction of being Queen of 1922 . Palmafesta? ,n 1 AU of the young ladies will assem- ^ ble in Columbia on Monday, April 17,1 '' i when Palmafesta starts and will be1 no the guests of Palmafesta until Satur-,lu day, the 22nd of April, when 1922 Palmafesta will close. All expenses . will be paid by Palmafesta and all the; young lady must do to win the dis-1 Y , tinction of being Palmafesta Queen; ' . is to be elected in her own county and stu . go to' Columbia and compete with the, other young ladies assembled. The !)U' candidates do nothing in Columbia to, win the ruling place but appear be-' P"' fore the voters and be introduced. | stn The beauty supplement this year!an will be widily circulated over the *as state and the cooraty Queens will not P<'l , only have their pictures in this beau- s*a tiful page but their pictures will be Sel put in the Palmafesta program to he em preserved in permanent form. I All a f ft,.) vAiinc Kn ?i iv II ii sonally conducted about the bipr show 'l*'1 of automobiles and trades displays *u> where the many industries and products of the state will be demonstrated es^ to the public. j The $500 prize for the best county float is bringing many registrations, j Hambone says, "Last year you, couldn't buy nuthin* for a dollah, and, this year you cain't get a dollah to i ^ buy nuthin' with," but here is a wayj of to get $500 in gold. This county can ear easily design a good float to show the pul natural resources, the industries or! of some,historical event and have as good j the a chance to win the prize as anyone.! 1 Just write to Mr. James C. Holmes, j daj 1215 Lady Street, Columbia, and telljwh him you want to enter a float. The (sea parade will be on Thursday, April 20.| shi and will be a mammouth affair. Cos f j wa ( COUPON ; red PALMAFESTA | me I por | the h Jueen of Palmafesta is: ! nqi ! Caj j ere | C# ^ i son >te. A yearly paid-in-advance wa< aper counts 100 votes. ccr bol I ing a lan V PRIUtb ... ! low )N? 'beu nel LAR CORD TIRES | $16.00 rin $20.95 "*< $19.50 of a?97 or hul I ?OD sea $28.50 $29.75 X $30.80 ? bio CENT CASH # nei rst pneumatic auto tire s today one of the best nc I>a wh r l j_ n _ r aci cngiana; rans, r ranee: own, N. J., U. S. A. bC( ISTRIBUTORS: " nb( ERY COMPANY ; rires to Give Satisfaction |J ' Constitution Causes ?l > Wide-Spread Rejoicing i Jerusalem, Martfh 22.?Publication I of the newly proposed constitution f I for Palestine which was completed J[] b j after long discussion between repre- l| * sentatives of the British government -, and of Arab and Jews of this coun- II r ^ try caused wide-spread rejoicing and I s (h good deal of-dissent. It is evident E e i H^at the extremists on all sides of H 17 I I tin HAnf * nntiaAi.il 1.1.4 1 1 , | ...V wilt! UVCI n; NI L' IIIII. muinucu ?"1 |1 s on the other hand there is an appar- jl t vnt majority who regard the new Ijj draft as a compromise which should , satisfy the aspirations of all concern- j" s ed. These generally express the hope j j - that the new constitution will he to speedily adopted and confirmed by ^ - the League of Nations. t On the other hand the dissentists, pi b Arabs and Jews alike, have organ- be zed themselves to ob'tain the modili- P* y cation of some of the terms in the ^ s draft. The natives want the grant- co rl Ing of nationality to be made contin- co y gent upon a residence of five years ^ t instead of almost no residence as pro- cij s posed. fie ei The Zionists object to giving tlv* ^ 1 Arabs a majority in the legislative af council. ay ble Published in Serial Form ropeka, Kan., March 27.?The peka State Journal is the first ly newspaper in the United States begin publication of the Bible in ial form, in accordance with the ent suggestion of Dr. (Charles M. eldon, of Topeka, editor-in-chief of ; Christian Herald, rhe four gospels will bo published: weekly installments of about J,000 I ids, Arthur J. Carruth, managing tor of The State Journal, anunced. Tlie Weyymouth text of ? New Testament, a translation in ?ryday English, will be used roughout. The first installments e "The Good News as Recorded Mark." In a recent address to journalism iilcnts at Washburn College here, . Sheldon declared the newspaper Idishing the Bible serially would only give its subscribers an op tunity to read the most interesting ry in the world but would render important service in developing a to for Bible literature. The Tota divine later made the same tenient in a talk before the Medill iool of Journalism at Northwesti University, Evanston, III. >r. Sheldon is the author of In i Steps" and numerous other books iling with practical Christianity, is a thorough believer in the power the press and has advocated the ublishment of religious dailies for semination of Christian ideals. quor Smugglers Hoverig Along the Shores Washington, March 27.?Romance the ('oast Guard service of the !y days of the new American re :>lie has been revived by the fleets liquor smugglers hovering along country's shores. Prohibition officials discussed to; the problem of rum running ieh has become serious along both boards declared that the whiskey ps have brought back to the list Guard the duty for which it s originally setablsihed. 'rented in 175)0 "to prevent dep at ions laong the coast" the ear;t duty of the Coast Guard was to r on the pirates who preyed on the reliant shipping in and out of the ts of the new nation antl who had ir strongholds on the islands adont to the southern shores. Nowadays, officials remarked, the ior ships following in the wake of rtain Kidd and his swashbuckling ws are giving the men of the ist Guard the stern chases and letimes the bloody battles that * the .daily portion of their predesors in the stirring times of the d black flag. is an instance of history repeat itself, officials declared, the isds of the Bahamas, where rum ugglers now make their headirters, were once the base for fol'ers of "Jully Roger" and it has n reported through official chans that one of the families of the md of Bimini, now a fountain i<l for illicit spirits, is directly dendcd from a famous freebooter 0 made the Florida waters a maers graveyyard two hundred years 'oast Guard seamen today, ort?Is maintained, search the waters the South Atlantic for bootleg lis where once their forerunners nned the seas for a pirate sail or Lened at the mouths of - Florida ers for the put-put of the gasoline ft with its contraband cargo where ears of the newly formed sendee re attuned to catch the creak of ek and tackle or the scrape of oar ks. Hut besides the war on rum run's in the South officials pointed out 1 Coast Guard is kept on the alert ng the whole Atlantic coast, off w York and Boston, and on the | cific, in the waters of Puget Sound, j ere the Canadian smugglers bring j oss the line imports forbidden by tional prohibition. Nearly one-fourth of the land in otland has changed hands since the mistice, due to the changes in the ners' financial position brought out by the war. RAMPS, PAINS AND BACKACHE K I Allit Wnmnn Raliov?d Kv Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound St. Louis, Mo.?"I was bothered ith cramps and pains every month and j H?????? ??ad backache and ad to go to bed as 1 ould not work. My ) o t h e r and my rhole family always ook Lydia E. Pinkam's Vegetable impound fob such roubles and they nduced me to try it nd it ha9 helped me ery much. 1 don't tave cramps any ' and I can do f housework all through the month, ecommend your Vegetable Compound my friends for female troubles."? rs. Della Scholz, 1412 Salisbury i eet, St. Louis. Mo. Just think for a moment. Lydia E. nkham'a Vegetable Compound has en in use for nearly fifty years. It ia epared from medicinal plants, by the most pharmaceutical skill, and supe>r methods. The ingredients thus mbined in the Compound correct the j nditions which cause such annoying mptoms as had been troubling Mrs. holz. The Vegetable Compound exerles a restorative influence of the most sirable character, correcting the trouf in a gentle but efficient manner, lis is noted, by the disappearance, one ter another, of the disagreeable mptoms. ^??? The Greet L?r?>i Withstand Flood Merhphis, Term., March 27.?Flood warning that unusually high water would send the Mississippi river beyond the flood stage in its lower reaches gave the people of the lower Mississippi Valley comparatively little concern this spring. Ten years ago such a warning by the weather bureau would have caused immediate preparations for an inevitable general overflow over an area of hundreds of square miles. The absence of fear I this year is due to the great levee or embankment system which has been completed in the last few years to hold the Mississippi to its floodway. River engineers say that the levees along both sides of the Mississippi from the mouth of the Ohio to the Gulf of Mexico are now constructed to such dimensions that they will hold the river even should it go four or five feet higher than it ever has gone. Thoy say there is but one point in the entire system toward which tinleast anxiety is felt and this section of the embankments will hold a flood stage this year equalling the record high water of 1913. Near Helena, Ark., some 60 miles down stream from Memphis, a short link has not been completed to standard dimensions. Elsewhere, even at places where ! construction is comparatively new, I the huge embankments have settled | and are strong enough to withstand! far more pressure than the Missis- [ sippi, in her most terrific rampages,! ever has displayed. Only seven times since river sta-j tistics have been compiled, dating; back to 1^72, has the Mississippi gone j over the 40-foot mark on the Mem-! phis guage. The flood or bank-full stage is 35 feet. The levees, engi-\ neers say, will resist a 50 foot stage. The last serious overflow, when a wide area was inundated and much damage done by flood waters, was in 1913 when the river climbed to the unprecedented height of 46.5 feet, Memphis guage. At that time, however, the levee system had not boon built to the standard that government engineers had mapped out as necessary for all time. Jn the spring of 1920 the river reached a stage of 40.3 feet, Memphis guage, but there was no overflow. The levee construction between 1913 and 1920, due largely to aid in the form of a $50,000,000 appropriation by congress in 1917, gave the people of the lower valley full confidence that the levee system, would forever end the disastrous floods. For more than 200 years, or since] the city of New Origans was laid out' by French engineers in 1717, embankments have beep built along the river banks to hold the river to its channel. Prior to the Civil k-ar considerable headway had been iWle to protect the lowest and bertg^^feltural lands but the. sA-ie?-y>femnKintfnta were not connected up and the overflows, where there were n^-estraining walls, always threatencflHhose sections which had only loc;X^roteetion. The cost of building the embankments was tremendous, so much so that it could not be done with desired rapidity either by local districts, by the counties or by the states. Long effort was made to get Federal help hut it was not until 1017 that funds in sufficient proportion were forthcoming. Since that time, however, the work has progressed very rapidly. The Mississippi river now is lumnied in by a chain of levees from Missouri and Tennessee to below the city. of New Orleans, embankments th:U i are continuous and that total more than 1,500 miles in length. At some places they tower more than 50 feet high and their crown is as wide as an average street with the base often more than 300 feet wide. Before the levees were built, the area of land subject to overflow was in excess of 15,000,000 acres, or an area greater than the combined area of Delaware, Connecticut, New Jersey and Massachusetts. Since the levees have afforded more and more protection, the region has been reclaimed rapidly and put into cultivation so that it now ranks as one of me most productive areas in me entire country. Nearly 1,000,000 people, dependent mostly on agriculture, live in the region. Where there was but one banking institution in the area in 1880?that at Helena, Ark.,? there now are more than 500 flourishing banks. Where there were no railroads whatever in the territory prior to the '80s, the mileage now is in excess of 3,200. Spring Dreaded in Russia Moscow, March 27.?The spring sunshine that brings warmth and wildflowers and promises of harvest to Central and South Russia after months of winter snows is dreaded this year as the harbinger of pestilence. The winter cold, though encouraging typhus and increasing the suffering of the half clad famine victims of the Volga districts, nevertheless has acted as a germicide. The bodies of the thousands of famine dead froze stiff where they lay yand they were taken to shallow graves and handled with little danger of contagion ex< ept from typhus which is spread by a particular type of louse. The workers had no fear of cholera for the cold rendered any microbes of that disease almost harmless. The spring sun, however, will change all this. Both the Bolsheviki government and the American Relief Administration physicians and sanitarians who are active in the famine regions realize the danger that warm weather will bring. They are taking all the steps that their limited facilities accord to guard the people against an epidemic of cholera in the spring. A A A if. A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A - ?. A A A A AAAA rVVVVVVVVVV V> %*%*% V%'V*rV VWVVVVVVVVVVV! The Salvation Army f Home Service Appeal! ? ;* 1 Commences Monday, April 3rd 1 y ? We are askiag Union Coan'y for $3,009 Ve finance this organi- *? ?j* zaticn here for another year. Remember, the tambourine is not X passed to you for help oniy in the devotional services. Give all the X 4 cash you can then sign the pledge card for more to be naid during X the year at your option. Remember, this is not a dollar campaign. X 4 Don't give a dollar when you can give $5 or $10, f m # ^ # Y The Sah/a ion Army preaches the g' spel upon our streets, in y 4 churches, in homes Cc S? k ^ S i ?.' j ll ol ^ Sv*.!'Jc.y schools, young peoples 4 Y meetings; 'hey have fed ma^y of e; r worthy aoer, have gotten V X young gMs av/ay from bad surroundings, found homes and work X lor the neaJv, pa'd h/ansportatxn for many, assisted the probate ? 4 jnJge an:' ncl'ca deyartimcr*t in,many ca es an! many other things 4 X are behr; done ever/ day that is nere-srry. X ^v X Do nox fai' rs?kindly have your donation ready, or mail it at X 4 once to the under sk'ned 4 X R. HAYNES HARRIS, 4 X Financial Chairman. 4 i^peciacsi I For Saturday Only f $ 4> y We are going to offer you some of the prettiest Gingham that you y have ever seen for the price Saturday. We have bought too much <|> . j y is the reason we are going to offer them at the following prices: y I All 25c Ginghams to go at 19c X All 15c Ginghams to go at 12 l-2c X All 12 ~2c Ginghams to go at . 9c X All 15c Bleaching, Cambric finish to go at, yard 10c X All $1.22 Paula ds to go at, yard $1.25 X $ Prices on White Waist Goods 23c, 35c 39c and 49c 4* % Organdies, Pink, White, Blue, Yellow, N 'e . . . .25c, 39c and 49c *? A m . *r 11 r* ?*r*i - ~ ? ? Eeauimn'y iirureo Voile life, !5c, I9c, 25c and 39c * The pretties?: Tisspie Gingham in the Sla e for 59c !> X White Woo! Serge used for making Spor^ Skirts, Y !* 75c, $1.49, $1.98 end $2 98 ? X All $15.00 Crepe ce Chine and TaOeia S: k Dresses for . . . $9.98 $3.50 Gingham Dress for $2.95 | X $2.50 Gingham Dress for $1.98 Y Gingham Jumper for 98c X $1.00 Ladies' S5?'k Hose, all colors, f!u!e rrown, Palm Beach and J X Gray,for 75c $1.50 Fancy Clock Work Hose, t \',j neT? est thing yon can huy. J. X for $1 00 X A beaulifn] line of Ladies' Ready Trimmed Hals from 98r lr $4.98 X % A!! 50c Beys' Overalls for 39c * A?) 5fic Men's Work Shirts to go at 39c % Al! $1,00 Men's Work Shirts to <?o at 75c % 4 Ah $1.09 Men's Overalls to go at 89c X Boys'Wash Suits 98c X y Boys' Wash Knee Pants, dark and 1 ght colors, at 75c | Just keep coming, good people. We w 1! make life easy for you. A y We pay cash and sell for cash. A herefcre we can give you the lowest possible price on anything that you m:.v need! A ? We have a beautiful line of Star Brand Pumps and Oxfords. All )) <|> leather, black and tan, for ladies, children and men. Don't take 4 X any substitute. Be sure the star is on the heel, then you are right. X ono <>vfi kaf^at1 F VAM r nor1 nriinvo v%4/v a J J ^ J UiUl JL/1 UliU UIIVV9 CHI I. WbllVX > *J7 Vt f ijiaai aillCCU IU UC 5U1IU *|* X 'eather or a new pair. X J. L. JOLLY | SELLS IT FOR LESS | A monster crawfish measuring over The American Relief association is A wave of thought takes a minute three feet in length and weighing 801 feeding 1,300,000 children in Poland. to travel a mile of nerve, pounds was captured recently off Compressed air is used rn-nr Allan- Pansy is the official flower of the the Florida eoast. ta, (ia., in quarrying granite. t ity of Butte, Mont. / \