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"NION TIMES aliabed Daily Except SaWay "By Mt UNION TIMES COMPANY I - at* M Kirr Editor Hiyialrrvil at the Postollice in Union. M C. at arcitnil (lata matter. fi,? ItuildiiiK Main Street k t?-1 i Telephone Nt). ,1 SUBSCRIP IK>N RATES tiiic Year $4.00 Six Months .. Z.Oo I hrev Months . .. 1.00 ADVERTISEMENTS One Siiuarr, tlrst insertion $1.00 Kn ry ubsoiiueiit inserts n 00 Obituary notices. Church and I.<h1k? notices uml notices of puhlic meetinifs, en tertainnieiits uml Curtis of Thanks will b? cliarKed for nt the rate of one cent a word, cash accompany inn the order. Count th? words and you will know what the Coal will he. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PREfS The Associated Press is exclusively en litied to the use for republication of l.ews dispatches credited to it or not otherwis? credited in this paper, and also the I oca news published therein. TUESDAY, APRIL 4, 1922. Every t ut ton planter in Union coun ty should join the Cooperative Market iiijr Ascoe ation. Every other a to* re gation ol" ini'ti is hverj tanner save the cotton farmer is inU some sort of organization. Unles: the cotton farmer meets organizatioi with ot ganization, he cannot hope foi reasonable prices for his product. 1 the fruit growers association, selling through one selling agency, can sel us oranges at eight cents a piece am apples at eight cents a piece and lent mis at six cents a piece, we may hopt that cotton sold in the same way maj bring at least a fair price. We have already begun work upoi our cannery building, and it will no be long, we hope, before the buddinj Will be completed. The building wil be located upon the lot which we havt purchased, just beyond CJault's stor< on North I'inckney street. When yot see that we are building remembe tli.it we need money. Pay your sub 11ption to stock as soon as you cai do so. If you have not subscribed P ? lock, think it over and see if you d< Hot feel you should help this enter prise. There are many who couii help, who have not done so. We so b< it help for this movement. We cat sell every tomato we will be able t< can, sell the total output now, befotv a wheel turns. We have yet need of a goodly nuni ber of acres in tomatoes. Two o three new names are added to our lis each day, and we hope soon to hav< required 150 acres. If you eon template undertaking this venture, d< not delay. Of course there is ye time. .Many are just now planting tin seed, and it will be some time befon time to srt out the plants arrives 'I here is no need to try to In tot early. What we want is a big ero| in tine season, not a few dozen toma tot s brought in ahead of the other fel low. Wt* want not only good quality but v.e want a large quantity. It ha: bet n one of the hardest things imag inable to get the farmers to reali/s that we need great quantities. Tin farmer often seems to fear that w< cannot tint! room for so many. ()u fear is that we will not find tomatoe: in sufficient quantities to keep tin wheels going. Our success depend: upon volume, as much as upon any thing else. We need several tons ? day. not just a few bushels. We stil have several pounds of tomato seed and wo hope by Saturday to find : uliieient number of farmers to plan ? t !*v i .rit? 11f t hi?m JK|1 ^ ( 1111* ?**it <!iuu ? ?*ri?^i %_ iicn*t1ltr o Vi/ktin ->'?? vi*v |I*? J .1 (t v i iiiiil unutill jr nil" W i what is in a man. Our rat says dependability is n preat virtue. Our eat says honest striving win! many a hard battle. ? Our eat says hope, too lonj? de ferred, is translated into despair. Our eat says those who earry j, chip on the shoulder will soon meel somebody that will knock it off. Our eat says gormandizing ann clear thinking do not travel in tht same company. Our cat says rabid talk inculcates the_spir.it of lawlessness. * * Our cat says watch Union unfold in beauty as the flowers begin to grow. Our cat says nobedy has a welcome for the man with a grouch, not even the other man with a grouch. 'I [ "Jabon di Castilla" Or in plain English Castile Soap A big 1 I oz. family size bar? Special 29c While They Last STORM'S DRUG STORE - - : ! ORDER OUR SHERBERT OR VELVET ; ICE CREAM r for dessert?50c the quart, j f1 Peoples Drug Store 1 Phones 68-69 1 Important to all Women Readers of this Paper Thousands upon thousands of wot men have kidney or bladder trouble r and never suspect it. Women's complaints often prove to be nothing else but kidney trouble, or l* the result of kidney or bladder disease. 1 If the kidneys are not in a healthy i condition, they may cause the other organs to become diseased. You may suffer pain in the back, - headache and loss of ambition. Poor health makes you nervous, irritable and may be despondent; it l) makes any one so. , Hut hundreds of women claim that Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, by restoring health to the kidneys, proved 1 to be just the remedy needed to overcome such conditions. Many send for a sample bottle to i see what Swamp-Root, the groat k id ( ney, liver and bladder medicine will do for them. By enclosing ten cen's ' to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., you may receive sample size ho'tle by Parcel Post. You can purchase medium and large size bottles - at all drug stores. ' Notice to Winthrop Daughters { ______ The loytil daughters, of Winthrop > College are requested to tell the'r I friends of the Winthrop Pageant picture to be presented at the Grand Theatre on Wednesday afternoon ami L* t veiling, April i>. Proceeds to go to the loeal chapter, to assist the mem? hers in meeting their obligations to ,j their alma mater. Winthrop Pageant Picture . , This picture will be presented at ^ the Grand on Wednesday, April 5th. both afternoon and night. It is brought here by the loeal chapter of Winthrop Daughters who, L* through the courtesy of M r.Willeford p the manager, will receive a per cent , of the proceeds. : In addition to the pageant, "Win-; j throp Day by Day" will also be pre-' lj sented, and there will be a funny sj picture, too. J Odessa Paradise I For Bargain Hunter Odessa, April 3. This port is andj | will be for a few months the paradise i lj of the bargain hunter. A leather v:i-' I lise sold in Paris or London for $~>0 may be had here for $0. Persian rugs go begging at $1"> to j ?20. rugs that in Persia would sell for j $5(1 while the seller swore by his fath- j er's memory that he was robbing his; family of daily bread. Paintings by good artists sell f >r $2 or $3 with a frame thrown in worth $10 or $20. Silver tableware sells for' five to ten cents per ounce. A foreigner settling here for bus-l iness reasons may rent a house fori $50 a year, and possibly buy an indefinite lease on it for $200. The furniture, excepting the table dishes, may ; be had for another $200; but if there! , are any repairs he must ray western Kuropean wages for labor. I The reasons for these low prices of articles are that many of them were stolen, that there isn't much trade and the original owners are selling off all their homo treasures for food. To keep alive a family of five il takes 1,000,000 rubles, or $2, a day and * the prices of food jump as the ruble drops in value. Trade has not been so brisk here as in Moscow as there are fewer strang' ers to buy. Fewer Russians can Ret in to the city because the trains run only a few times a month owing to < lack of fuel. At that, shops are opening daily, as the new economic policy of the Moscow government is applied Diamonds ami objects of value are covertly shown to prospective purchasers in these shops, the dealers still being in fear of the old laws against 1 speculation and free trade. I The city is full of thousands of young men and old who speak and writs' English, French and fJerman ' I men who in the old dnvs of commerce' were employed about the port or with American and other foreign firms' dealing with the interior. Concerning Muscle Shoals Florence, Ala., March 31.?With the interest of the nation fixed for months on Muscle Shoals, an influx of people to the district has constituted a problem that has taxed the ingenuity of town and civic authorities. v Agitation of the potential strength of "the South's Niagara" and the possibilities that were expected to be speedily fulfilled in event of development of the latent war project, turned a veritable stream of humanity in search of the El Dorado. Folks came i n foot, in horse cans, in motor cars, in day coaches and in palatial drawing rooms. There were men with money seeking investments; men in overalls hunting work. There were adventurers looking for anything thry might find. Some spent money lavishly; others were wards of the community and had to be fed. The problem at once became so grave that the town authorities of Florence, Sheflield and Tuscumbia ? municipalities composing the district's "tri-cities"?sent out a warning: "Stay away from Muscle Shoals unless you come on legitimate business and have an engagement in advance." This stopped some of the fortune hunters, but yet they came. The first offer for the government's property caused complete metamorphosis of the district. The community was stunned when war work was stopped the day the armistice was signed. Putting machinery in "standby" condition was a symbol of dissipated hopes. But the resultant somnolent condition was reawakened t vernight when the word went forth: "Muscle Shoals is to be developed." Everybody in the district believed that a bid meant other bids and that competitors in the field would result in acknowledgement by the government that Muscle Shoals would not be scrapped. The people of the district formed tie policy of extending a welcoming hand to builders and the real estate boards of the three cities declared that realty prices should not ascend be\ond unreasonable levels. These 1 nurds, it. is stated, have largely con-t rolled prices of real estate. A few speculators edged in, however, and small tracts of undesirable land have been optioned and sold at figures not within bounds set by the realty associations. It is asserted, though, that actual cheating and faking has trapped but few persons. There are nc swamp or low lands in the region, the realtors declare, but some of the prop erty offered is situated many miles from the Tennessee river and the nitrate projects. Much property is said to have (hanged hands over a stretch of tcrri tory along the river for a distance of 25 miles. The state of Michigan, it is said, has furnished more buyers than all the other states combined, witb jAw possible exception of Alabama. <fowr lots have sold at from a few hundred .dollars to $10,000. Farm land contiguous to the towns has brought from $.10 to $125 an acre. Many of these nearby farm tracts have been optioned or purchased with a view of subdividing in event of looked for develop ments. Authorities of the tri-cities say the three municipalities will constitute the bub from which will radvte one ed the- ndustrinl miracles of the age, n< matter whe? the successful bidder m:i,\ b fe?r the government property. Kxtravagant ste>ries circulated con corning condi tie>ns in the district brought euit "The Muscle Shemb Ileieek," indorsed by town and civie eerganizations and edited by one e>f the community's leading ministers. Ii se'ts feerth authentic data for "those v.ho have the vision and cou-age t< build themselves into the cert iin de v.'Ieepntcnt of the Muscle Shoe's ter ritory." The municipal woodpile at Sheffield Iris afforded scores of adventures tlv opportunity of a square meal. So burdensome became the tas.c o' feeding the jobless that the town ir cooperation with the Red Cross hit upon the no-work, no-soup plan and it worked. Every man who wanted foo'* and shelter chopped wood. As a re suit many householders burned wood and score of hungry men were fed. The new population furnished work for the police. Sharks and flimflam mors came with the honest folks, Mie authorities said. By a process of elimination these undesirables were weeded out slowly. Town authorities have preventer' overcharging on the part of the hotel.' and shop keepers, and visitors are s-u prised by normal price conditioins. Specialist Talks of Dream* London, March 28.? -Dr. William Brown, mental specialist and head of the department of psychology ir [King's College, University of I/ondon has propounded a novel theory of dreams. He rejected the claim of I Ik* psycho-analysists that dreams are always significant, and that every part of them has a meaning which must be looked for in primitive desires lurking in the subconscious mind. He gave them a much simpler significance. "The function of a dream is to guard sleep," he said before the Institute of Hygiene. "In sleep desires, cravings, anxieties, the memories of arlier days, all of which are the lower and fundamental elements of the mind, well up and strive towards consciousness while the main person ality is in abeyance. If they reach consciousness, sleep is at an end, but the dream, which is a sort of intermediary form of consciousness, intervenes. and makes the impulse innocuous so that sleep persists. This hteory covers the entire ground of all types of dreams." ^ Statue of Roosevelt ? Portland, Ore., March 28.?Admiration for Theodore Roosevelt as a man and citizen prompted Dr. Henry Waldo Coe, a Portland phyysician, who c ki|c\v Roosevelt as a cowboy in North Dakota, to donate to the city of Portland an equestrian staute of the for- 3 mer president. The statue is now ?> batnir made by Phi mister Proctor, tl noted sculptor. It is expected to be 0 finished some time this coming sum-j mir and President Warren G. Harding: has been asked to olliciate at the ' unveiling, if the statue is finished at j the time the president makes his pro- v p^seii Western trip. r iwhen Roosevelt lived at Medora, Dr. Coe was at Mandan, and they met as. hunters. Dr. Coe had some hunting dogs that Roosevelt liked very well, and Roosevelt used to visit the Mandan region where the hunting was better than around Medora. In later years Dr. Coe visited with Roosevelt, in his trait\, while the ' president was making a western trip, and relates that when they reached Medora Roosevelt insisted upon shaking hands with every person in the town. The statue is of heroic size, being ^ 13 feet high above the base. An architect is to be engaged to design .the J r base which will be about 10 feet s high. A site for the statue has been J chosen in a centrally located park. Dr. Coe plans to place somewhere in North Dakota the cast from which the statue is made. Mandan, Minot _ and Bismark have asked for it, bu: the place has not yet been selected. Aladdin's Cave of Jewels Open 1 ;r Moscow, March 28.? (The Associ-j" ated Press).?An Aladdin's cave of; s cision of the Soviet authorities to I y confiscate some of the treasures of F the Russian churches ami sell them! to feed the famine sufferers. : j (The Soviet decree issued Feb. 2(5' " jewels has been opened by the de-1C directs the seizure of all precious metals and stones "which would not j interfere with the interests of the various cults." It has been an- j v nounced that the All-Russian Central <1 Committee will determine what articles are absolutely necessary for ^ religious purposes and exempt from requisition.) f Most famous of the church treasures, described by the Moscow news- n paper Izvestia, is the bejewelled ikon, "Our l>ady of Kazan," at the Kazan Cathedral in I'etrograd. It is a representation of the Virgin done in beaten gold, weighing 10 pounds and decorated with 1,055 larger and 1,132 lesser diamonds, 038 rubles, seven sgpjihires, 1,400 pearls and 155 other v jewels; and hung about the neck of N the Virgin is u diamond necklace of 1 huge, tirst water stones. 1 )(y|j|*^eter Paul's cathedral, also in Petfograd, there is another famous | ikon, known as the "Jerusalem Holy Ijady," in solid gold. It is about two feet square, and contains 38 carats of large diamonds, 13 carats of middle-sized diamonds and 11 and onequarter carats of smaller stones. Altogether, in this church, says the Izvestiu, there are 24 almost equally valuable ikons. To St. Isaac's Cathedral, I'etrograd, were presented on the day it was opened, a total of 215 articles I containing 81 pounds of gold and 4,- 788 pounds of silver and later a c .hrine was built of solid silver weighing 4G8 pounds. St. Isaac's also has me ikon, 21 inches wide by 28 inches high, done in gold overlay and bear-! ing a wide wreath in large diamonds. | J There are a dozen other ikons of tre- j mendous value at St. Isaac's alone, j | While these big I'etrograd cnthed- [ rals, which were long favored byy | royalty, probablyy contain the most j ^ valuable treasures of the Greek Or- < thodox church in Russia, nearly every ..ci; t. ,i / i /?>./? ?i I ' *4i*r va viiv. v.niiiidini OljUUU OlIHT athedrals, monasteries, convents and j hurches contain objects in gold and ( silver and jewelled ikons are not at ^ ill rare, even in the smaller edifices. Royal gifts, donations by pious!, oarishoners and church taxes for con- j tunes went largely into ornamenting n the churches. Kazan cathedral was the holy of| holies to the Cossacks. The Cossacks _ of the Don once sent to it 1,4401 nounds of silver, .eking that it be i I made into ikons of four of the | Apostles. Reyond their value in precious metal and jewels, some of the objects might be extremely sought after by "oll^eters. The Ry/.anti magnificence j >f the jewelled ikons, however, might impress the Western world as more ornate than artistic. With a few scattered exceptions, . wherein some looting of churches may have occurred during the early days of the revolution, church treasures have been left practically intact. Patriarch Tikhon, the head of the Russian church, is understood to eontend that, since the church and state have been separated, the title to the treasures rests in the hands of the - _ parisijrt>ners of each church and that, I thcretorc, it is for each parish to de- I cide what treasun s it wishes to sur- | render for the famine sufferers. ? He advises charity in this respect, 1 but it Is believed in Moscow that the ( chuprch a whole will strenuously opposa general confiscation, while 1 willing to surrender those objects < which it does not consider particular- J ly holy or of essential use in sacramental obsei'vanees. i Weather forecasts by wireless are i sent #it>m the Eiffel Tower in Paris to J every part of France each day, per- . mitting farmers to plan the following ? day's work and to take precautions k against impending inclemencies. or quick service : rhone 167 i We call and deliver your I lothing in a dust-proof motor- I ycle. We remove spots and tains from clothing without njuring either the fabrit or he color. Our modern methods make clothes look like tew, in the shortest possible ime. Give me a trial. I certainly vill appreciate it as much or nore than anyone else. Hames Pressing and Repair Shop Nicholson Bank Building Phone 167 Eczema Cured After Five Applications Of "Storm's Lotion" I have had eczema on my face foi wo years. After live applications of itorm's Lotion the skin is in a perectly healthy condition. I heartily ecomnietid its use to all sufferers cf km trouble. (Signed) J. 11. Betenbaugli, Union, S. C., R. F. D. No. 2. Sold at Storm's Drug Store. Phone 7G for a bottle today. Notice B. P. O. Elks There will be a regular meeting ~ uesday night, April 4th, at 8 o'clock i the K. of P. hall. Newly-elected officers will be intailed for the next ensuing year, and ou are commanded to be present. Neither file nor water stops a real !lk. We will expect you. I. K. Bronnecke, 342-3t. Secretary. )ld Fiddlers' Convention At Gault School House There will he an Old Fiddlers' Condition at Cault school house Saturay night, April 8th. Proceeds, after prizes are given, to o for benefit of school. We shall ive prizes according to crowd. There will lie :i Kmsill iwlmi??w?n ce. Come one and all and hear Rood lusic. Frank Morgan A. L. Gault T. B. Kelly 342-3t. Committee Notice All lunch rooms and restaurants vill have to place screen doors and windows at their place of business by Vpril 8th. Dr. R. R. Jeter, 1343-41 Health Officer. i'.;.I77?ii, EASTMAN KODAKS New Line Just Come In, $2.00 to $25.00 Peoples Drug Store Phones 68-69 ioviets Prohibit Sale of Land Moscow, April 2.? The buying and oiling of land will continue to be (inhibited and punishable by cononOscation under a new policy idopted by a commission appointed y the last All Russian Soviet Congress. The title to all land will remain 'ested in the state but will be given iver to the use of communes or leasant's societies as they see fit. The individual peasant may obtain and either by becoming a member of he local land commune or may obain a farm for himself. Further, each peasant may lease lis strip of land to another peasant. Labor may be hired by special per-1 nission. Read your yellow TaT>eI. MOTHERS AND DAUGHTERS ; S lead This Letter from Mrs. W. S. Hughes Greenville, Del. ? "I was under the mpression that my eldest daughter had llllimilllllllllllllllBome 'nterna' trouble II [I11^^U1]|||||I as ever since the first " HW time her sicknessap- ' UapBral^MII peared she had to go |^| J to bed and even had Ejgjt for a week. I always I* ' lUll Lydia E. Pink- 11 III 1|||| ham's Vegetable II lltomiifr * Kave't to iter and V r IHH 8^e ^a8 receiyed I " "fWf great benefit from it. I^h^^Jyuu can use this letter for a testimonial if you wish, as I i-annot say too much about what your medicine has done for me and for my I laughter." ? Mrs. Wm. S. 11 ugh km, Jrcenville, Delaware. Mothers and oftentimes grandmothers rtave taken and have learned the value tf Lydia E. 1'inkham's Vegetable Comtound. So they recommend the medi ine to others. ( The best test of any medicine is what t has done for others. For nearly fifty fears we have published letters from nothers, daughters, and women, young tnd old, recommending the Vegetable 'ompound. They know what it did for item and are glad t.o tell others. In H>ur own neighl>orh?H>d are women who mow of its great value. Mothers-daughters,why not try It? 30 X 31-2 MM Ml MS $16.00 A New CORD Tire for Ford, Maxwell and Chevrolet Cars In order to demonstrate the superior lasting qualities of Michelin Cord Casings over any and all fabric casings we will give away FREE FOR THIS MONTH ONLY one 30 x 3 1-2 Michelin Red Ring-shape Inner Tube with every 30x3 1-2 Michelin Cord Casing sold. Remember, fabric casings will fabric cut. You cannot fabric cut a Michelin Cord Casing. Thi3 Offer Lasts Throughout April Only. 1 HAMES GROCERY COMPANY I COUNTY DISTRIBUTORS I Winter Cold and Absence F Feed Leaves Live Stock in I Renew tlu* health, strengtli niul vitality of your horses, mules, oattlo, I hogs ami ponItry. Get maximum results in health, growth aiul nrojj ductioii. Spring is the time for renewal in all nature. You can uest I care for your worn out and sick live stock by using ?"V5 Remedies They restore health, bring back vigor and strength, and increase production. There is a specific Oaro-Vet treatment prepared by the ablest veterinarians for each live stock diseuse and disorder. A Few Special Remedies Caro-Vet Condition Powder for g fffc \ horses, mules and cattle, price 75c. t *WwW - Caro-Vet Hwine Condition Pow- I IbIy\ B J Caro-Vet Egg-Producer, price \ n Caro-Vet Tonic for horses, mules I B and cattle, price 75c. B B Sold by general stores and drug stores, under n positive guarantee H H of satisfactory results, or money refunded. Your dealer carries a com- B J pletc line of Caro-Vet Remedies. fi B We are sending FREE to each farmer an authoritative book of K fl 48 pages "Farmers' Veterinary Guide", which gives the symptoms B n and tells how to treat live stock diseases. Ask for your copy. B |jUAKU^??^CKMEDIE^^^n^^?gr^^UNION^^J^| DARE you count your WASTE! Our Savings Department would like nothing better than to receive on deposit each year the loss of this community through waste alone. And yourself?do you dare count up what you waste? It would do you good to do so?if you could stand the shock. Anyhow, we promise you you can build u.> a wonderful account by denying yourself no pleasure whatever?but by putting your wa^e to work in the bank. "Large Enough to Serve Any?Strong Enough to Protect All." CLIT IZ:ElNv3 T < *-.i \ -w y?v ?_ -r "w k a ^ S IN A 1 1UIN AL. DAJN IX? PECIAL ADVERTISEMENTSI^QI HC 11LL10N PURE PORTO RICO and I Nancy Ilall potato plants grown ^^0 ? n^d or choat ar* more oaally from be-st prolific potatoes, treated traced externally with?with corrosive sublimate before fl bedded. Immediate shipment; $1.60 ^ per thousand, shipping point. Guar- ^ p q o antee safe arrival. G. J. Derrick, ^ ....... . ?/Lrr . Lancaster, S. C. 1842-4t-pd 2Af,u,onJan Uttd Y??lu 1ARNES is no political candidate, yet It is an old belief that the tail of he has an eye on the dear babies. ? black cat, ir rubbed over the eye, See him about it. 1328-tf will effect a speedy cure of a stye. 'OB SiA t.R. Snm? hnrorninn in nap;! cars. Hughes' Garage. 1323-If People Delighted VEST SPRINGS WATER?Deliv IJ'*C?jr?rr eries made only on Saturday and te Bleach the Skill upon standing orders, through the r> winter months. Phone 2320. J thMt r?c?-nt ??.7ta Boyd Lancaster. 1200-Mon.Wed.tf have proven with. IgtfllgpOffrA out doubt that -T)R RENT?Store room in Smith Jompi?ion^ ?n ?b? block. Apply to C. F. Hart, R. R. MM Crossing or Mrs. W. Newell Smith, W f*nt,y <?|??ov?rej 151 Thurston St., Greenville, S. C. f u. * Ju*t "k^our 1308-Tu-Fr-tf W V to'nf'skln^Whfe ^H| V h*VHP "."..J ' * Wh? CONUNDRUM?Why is Ru-Co si .mVxrdVt iti'wSJ!! much like Billy Sunday? $5.00 will yourU'fa?*Cof that be given to the person sending the SJl^S^ifeSiTao StSTuEt^ correct answer. The contest holds eaa't afford to W without It. Ju?t think for two weeks; the answer is sealed that old^da'rk^akiB and a?w "df* ia au envelope an<l locked in The {?{* f^TktJ'SSJSAiSn Times' safe. Send answers to Tri~ ""J" ocimtj. State Medical Co., Box 177, Union, with <^?to?a*ttinWWhlUBa?nM?4 2?? S. C. 1330-11 'ulA.'Tft ff?-T " ^ 1 ^Hi