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Politics is the Barrier Odessa, March 30.?The economic deadlock from which Russia is now suffering can be seen best at such a port as this. The wide sea is at the gates of this once rich city, yet a barrier more potent than water separates the land from new prosperity. This barrier is politics and the result of politics. Free trade between the citizens of Russia and the outside world is not now possible between, individuals. Russians must deal with foreigners through the Foreign Trade board, headed byy I,enoid Krassin in London. This poliey just now is blocking trade prospects here as elsewhere. To this port once came yearly 700 ships. Today a few Greek trading ships call here from Constantinople carrying flour and sugar. Now and then a British vessel delivers a cargo of coal paid for in London. American vessels and landing seed grain purchased in the same manner. Local business men say there can be no veal trade with Russia until all the Communist regulations are thrown overboard, private property fully recognized, a stable money secured and Russia restored to production, through long-time foreign loans. These men are not anti-Communists just for the sake of politics. They want the Communists to stay in pow? or. provided they will make trade possible. They say the Communists are the-only people capable of holding Russia together, that any new government would mean another revolution and more ruin. The first task of Russia and especially of agricultural Ukraine, is to grow wheat. Here in Odessa there are still the representatives of half a dozen American, British and German agricultural implement firms. In the old pre-war days they sold each millions of dollars worth of machinery. Today they are ready to be Kin again under the right conditions. Their agents could save next year's harvest in this granary of Europe if free trade were permitted. The'r steam plows could do the work of the horses killed off under the Communist regime. They could get spare parts and repair the old machinery now in the villages. Hut this they are not permitted to do. The government, if it supplies such machinery by payment of gold abroad, is obliged to turn it over to inexperienced farmers or ones without capital. Machinery bought by the government in small quantities has in certain parts of Russia, been resold by the receivers in order to get bread. Jugoslavia Looking To U. S. For Aid Belgrade, Jugoslavia, March 30.? Jugoslavia is looking to the United States in the hope of obtaining aid in solving her grave financial and economic problems. The little Slav state believes it cannot overcome them without foreign assistance. Its obligations amount to nearly $1 000,000.000 including an indebtedness of more than $50,000,000 to the United States and twice that sum to England. The dinar, the country's unit of currency, (normally worth about 19 cents) has reached the pitiful exchange level of a cent and a quarter. The amount of outstanding paper money is nearly 5,000,000,000 dinars. Of this sum only 400,000,000 dinars is covered by ygold reserve or securi lies. i lie scaie s uuieoieuness 10 me National Bank is 4,500,000,000 dinars. The budget for the new year has reached the staggering total of 6,000,000,000 dinars. This is 30 times greater than pre-war budgets. Moi"* than a third of this is for military and defense purposes. The nutional revenue is much below the total of the budget. The government is faced with tremendous problems of reconstruction which are believed to be impossible to eompPete without loans from abroad. Throughout the southern part of the kingdom most of the instruments of industry are either destroyed or are seriously insufficient. Railroads are out of order or function very poorly. That the government does not despair of the outlook is shown by an optimistic statement of the Minister of Finance to Parliament, in which he said: "Our state possesses within its frontiers all the elements necessarry for great prosperity and the means of securing a more rapid restoration than any other country which may have suffered the same losses. Our coal, our iron and other mineral products, our varied agricultural production, our great watei power, exhaustless forests, immense river traffic, our contact with the great nidustria) centers of Central Europe and the apportionment oi property union# the people?all oi these conditions, I am sure, will contribute to the rapid restoration ol our kingdom. There is no economk reason why we should despair of oui future." Cheating contractors and crooket officials of Sumerian covilization ir Mesopotamia 5,000 years ago wen tried briefly and thrown into the river according to recent scientific discov cries. Among other things, they ha< nn elaborate banking system, with i reserve bank comparable to'our owr of today, a postal system with a parcel p?st branch and circulating librai ies, which distributed clay tablet books. Sells Material t And Buys it Back Chicago, 111., March 31.?The United States in normal times sells "approximately two billion dollars worth of raw materials to the art centers of Europe and buys it back in manufactured, artistic forms, such as textiles, wall-paper and cretons of the best design, for some six billion dollars," says Col. William Nelson Pelouze of this city, president of the new Association of Arts and Industries. "Our organization seeks to help the country save the four billions it pays for European industrial art. We shall work chiefly in the Middle West." The association has just been formed by the amalgamation of the Alliance of Art and Industry, which was originally the Art Alliance, with the National Art Service League. While making its argument in financial terms, the organization represents both manufacturers who want better business and artists and art lovers who want a more artistic America. The board of directors includes on the one hand John M. Glenn of Chicago, secretary of the Illinois Manufacturers' Association and George II. Meyercord of Chicago, former president of the same body, and on the other Robert Harshe and Frank G. Logan, director and vice president respectively of the Art Institute of Chicago. ! "We must train American artisons and designers in order to survive ' competition otherwise ruinous," says ' Mr. Logan. "Europe has numbers of ' schools for this great purpose; Amer- J ica has been singularly negligent. At last the manufacturers are beginning to wake up. This is a great hour for 1 American industry." 1 The program of the association is three-fold. Primarily it seeks the establishment of an industrial art school or schools in the Middle West. Mean- 1 while it will seek to make the most 1 of the American talent already train- 1 ed, chiefly through the placement se:-- ' tion designed to bring together the designer and the employing manufa-*- 1 turer; and to "educate" the public < taste. The association looks to manufa:- 1 turers for the support of schools or departments of schools which tea< h industi ial arts. ! It is believed the placement section ] will enter a field hitherto hard'y i scratched. Executives of the organi- i zation, who are communicating with < existing employment agencies with a view to their cooperation, say that i the other day a Chicago agency re- ] ceived an application for work from a designer in steel and wrought iron, a I type of craftsman who is somewhat unfamiliar. This is believed to indi- ' cate that there are trained designers in the country of various types though there are no channels specifically for placiAK such persons with employers. The organization will avoid the word i "employment bureau," holding that the title, "placement section" will seem more dignified to the arstists | and craftsmen who are fitted to do the work demanded. When the war threw ^ America on its own resources, according to members of the association, it ' was discovered that there was talent 1 in America equal to the tasks formerly delegated to Europe. In the "education of the public taste" leaders of the movement see one of their hardest tasks. "One lion in our path," says Col. Pelouze, "is the infatuation of consumers with the words 'made in Europe.' We mean to destroy this lion through lectures, literature and particularly exhibits which will prove 1 that America <jan produce artistic things as well as Europe. We must also teach people who buy Americanmade goods to demand the tasteful 1 rather than the trashy." Oldest Center of * : if r? i Learning nas i\ivai Dublin, April 2.?The Royal Irish Academy, Ireland's oldest center of learning, is now to have a rival. It ( has long been famous, especially in , its contributions to science. However, it has mainly looked to England rather than to Ireland or other coun tries for its models and inspiration , and, in the light with the British, it , expelled Professor John MacNeill, , speaker of the Dail Eireann and a , distinguished Irish historian, in consequence of his political activities. The new academy is to be thorough! ly national and, in addition to its . scientific work, aims at securing foi | the Irish language, literature, and history their primacy of influence and inspiration at home and for, all Irish ( work and research an extended measure of appreciation among the learned r acamedies of Europe and America. A drafting committee has been ap. pointed to draw up the constitution of the new body. At its head is Pro. fessor Conway, Fellow of the Royal , Society, who is a professor in the ( National University. | | v/i-uci |/i wicn.iui .1 ui uu" 1^1 ui/lUliuit t including Professor John MacNeill, j are also on the drafting committee as well as some professors of St. ^ Patrick's College, Maynooth. Trin, ,jty College is holding aloof, for it i has a very strong representation on the old academy, amounting perhaps to 80 percent of its membership. ) There is on the committee one profesi sor from the Queen's University, > He 1 fast, Professor Robert M. Henry who, however, does not claim in this . matter to speak for his university. | He is a very distinguished I^atinist, k hut is chiefly known to the man in i the street by his hook on "The Evo. lution of Sinn Fein." I Women are staging boxing bouts in London. % Nation-wide Investigation i Of Unembployment New York, March 30.?A nationwide investigation of unemployment i in the United States, as affected by i the business cycle, is being made by i the National Bureau of Economic < Research. t This inquiry is defined as an en- I ieavor to reduce economic waste, to t increase production and to formulate i comprehensive policy and program * Tor the better control of the factors v in business and industry hitherto left e largely to chance. i It is expected that, together with the companion inquiry on seasonal h unemployment which will follow, it c will disclose definitely the causes, u trends and distribution of unemploy- 1> ment. o Wesley Clair Mitchell, the bureau's il lirector of research, is conducting the inquiry under the auspices of the t standing committee which was left in h ueing by the President's Conference f >n Unemployment and of which e Secretary of Commerce Hoover is g hairman. I On the basis of the information a jbtained, the committee hopes to rec- c jmmend a concrete policy and pro- o ?ram of control to displace tempo- t rary pallatives and emergency nieas- o ures in dealing with the unemployment problem in this country. I The whole movement, the bureau t says, has the interest and cooperation C >f numerous organizations, including s the Sage foundation and the Federat- f ed American Engineering Societies, i The inquiry will consume six months ii The scope and importance of the a material to be gathered is summa rized by the bureau as follows: "Description of unemployymenl: What the present statistics show. Types of unemployed. Under-em- t ployment. Reliability of present pay- s roll data as an index to unemploy- s ment. Can such data be a trust- s worthy index ? "Relations of unemployyment to i the business cycle: Present social t ?osts of cyclical unemployyment. a "Proposed pallatives and preven- v Latives of cyyclical unemployment: I Long-range planning of public works, : 1 i i -ii i *- * lumuciu aim oiner largc-scaie con- < struction. Methods of stabilizing I production of textiles, clothing and i novelties. Unemployment insurance and out-of-work benefits paid by < trade unions. Employyment offices, i Financial devices and measures for ( controlling the business cycle. Im- > provement in methods of compiling c and distributing information as to ( business conditions." f I Church Has its Best ] Opportunity in the South I Newark, N. J., March 30.?There ' are 11,000,000 negroes in the United * States, Rev. I. Garland Penn told the a members of the Newark conference 8 of the Methodist Episcopal church j here tonight. "Thirty per cent of the population of the South is negro," be added, "yet over forty per cent of all the persons engaged in agriculture in the South are negroes. It < is here that the church has its best 1 opportunities for the uplift of the i masses of the negro people. ' "Five hundred thousand negroes . have recently shifted from agricul- 1 tural life of the South to industrial centers of the North. In Harlem, 1 New York Cityy, there are 150,000 negroes, the seating capacity of the negro churches of Harlem is only 20,000. This unchurched situation has its counterpart in Chicago and is an ' acute problem in every large city of the North. The Methodist Episcopal church has developed negro institu- 1 tional churches in New York, Phila- 1 delphia, Baltimore, Detroit, Chicago and other Northern cities. Approximately 250,000 young people have been enrolled in our institutions. Only about 18,000 can be classed as graduates, but the fact that they have been enrolled and have had training in our institutions has had a marked influence in the uplift of the negro people along all lines. Many of the under graduates have gone into other institutions and grad- | uated. Shipment of Brick and Stone Manila, P. I., Feb. 20.?(By Mail). ?After traveling more than half ' way around the world, a shipment of what was supposed to be cotton textiles, turned out to be bricks, paving stone and hay. On February 12th the freighter, Ocean Monarch .arrived here from New York and way ports bringing a ' cargo of general merchandise. The ship's manifest showed that a ship- , ment of cotton textiles was consigned to Lim Tuico and Company, a Chinese firm. When the cargo was unloaded, the cases were taken to that concern's warehouse where they .. r i-i.... ii ii ii ii ml r i n 11 fin..-.il 4a ~ 4 1a ? vvcic uj/rncu auu lUUIIU IU I'UIUU 111 only bricks, granite blocks and hay. The manager of Lim Tuico and Company told the surveyor of the port that the paving stones which were carefully packed in cases, were about one foot square and very similar to the stone used in pavement of streets in New York. The surveyor said the fact that the stone was carefully packed in cases led him to believe that the substitution was made at New York before the cases were placed on board ship. An attempt to circle the earth in a sailboat, 46 feet long and of 12 tons displacement, will be made by four Austrian sportsmen. The first leg of the journey will be by way of Gibraltar to New York. American History to Be Studied in England London, March 28.?An appeal foi leeper and more syystematic study n England of American history and nstitutions has been made by Dr jeorge Peabody Gooch, a prominent )olitical author, before the Society ot Experiment and Research in Educaion at the University College here. One reason for the appalling nejlect on this side of American history vas, he thought, "the deep and in'radicable conviction that American listory was dull." "People here have a sort of idea," le went on, "that when America beanie independent she didn't concern is any more, and to this day we ;tiow more about the American colnial period than about the period of ndependence." American literature, Dr. Gooch coninued, has been carefully studied ere but thejre were extraordinarily ew books by English writers on Amlican history and institutions. While ;iving due praise to the works of ami Bryce, Sir George Trevelyan nd Lecky, he had come to the contusion he said that English people nly read American historians when heyy were not writing about their wn country. Professor Harold I,aski, of London Jniversity, advocated reforms in the caching methods at Oxford and Cambridge, contrasting the American yystem with the English much in avor of the former, because, he said, t left something to the student's magination and stimulated his cretive genius. Cabinet Responsible for Evil Santiago, April 1.?Instability of 'hilean cabinets is largely responible for the "great evils now beetting the country," President Alesandri said in a communication to nembers of his latest official family n which he asked them to withdraw heir resignations, given last month ifter a motion of lack of confidence vas rejected by the Chamber of Deputies. The president has taken the stand hat cabinets should only resign in ace of a frank vote to that effect n parliament^. Observers of politics here agree :hat the ministerial crises usually ire provoked through personal pique >r, as one publication expressed it, vith the "deliberate intention of ipening the way for a scramble for iffice." Three ministries have come ind gone in President Alessandri's irst year in office while there were 18 different cabinet's during his jredecessor's term. The newspaper El Mercurio, bittery attacks tha methods of "plotting he fall of p^uamm*nt" which it lays is creating parliamentary anirchy. Methodist Press Centenary Movement Nashville, Tenn., March 29.?Dr. .1 J. Stowe, secretary of the stewardship and tithing department of the Missionary Centenary movement of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, ha:just returned to Nashville headquarters after a round of visits through Mississippi, Georgia and other sections of Southern Methodist territory in the interest of "World Sunday* 2G the church-wide collections campaign in behalf of overdue subscriptions to the world program of Methodist missions. Dr. Stowe announced that in th< 12 or more places visited by him he conferred with pastors, presiding el ders and laymen, held district group meeting and congregational gather mgs, ana wia* everywnere ne I'ncountered a spirit of optimism and was assured of the hearty support of all the agencies of the church in bringing the collection of overdue centenary money to a successful consummation Dr. Stowe stated that the present movement was not an effort to secure new money but to meet the shortage in collections, due to the fact that the centenary amount is now due ane third annual payment on the e-ntire lacks 20 per cent of realization. Dr Stowe expressed the belief that when the centenary forces retired from the field the week following "World Sun day" a sufficient amount would have been collected on unpaid subscription' to assure the final success of the movement and the uninterrupted! progress of the missionary program made possible by the subscription of $35. 000,000 for world missions. Printers' ink pays. 100 BOWLS ro BE GIVEN AWAY! WHERE? Total Grain Yield of Russia | Moscow, March 28.?Russia's total . grain yield for 11)22 will be only , about one-half the average before the I war, the Commissar of Agriculture estimates. He forecasts the total as ' 2,000,000,000 poods (of about 3G pounds each). This would allow only , a little more than one and one-third pounds of bread a day for each in, habitant. To make such an equal distribution, however, would be impossible with Russia's disorganized i ail ways. The 1022 crop will be small, it is estimated, principally because of the failure of the seed campaign. Some of the seed purchased in America for the government may arrive in time for use but, up to the present, out of the 11) ,000,000 poods of seed grain which the government hoped to furnish, only 7,000,000 poods have been received. Much of this according to the State 1'lan Commission, which was charged with its gathering, is of poor quality and some absolutely useless. The unexpected famine in the Ukraine also contributed to the lack of ?eed and grain. The government has decided, it is said, to lix the natural tax levy this year at 380,000,000 poods, or about 11) percent as compared with 2GQ,- c 000,000 poods requested but not all secured last yea p. The 1922 tax is to be based solely upon rye yield, eliminating special taxes on vegetables, hay. etc., but assessing these products upon a basis of their equivalent value in rye. The produce secured by the tax would be used for government rations feeding the Red army. Dishwashers are not "Down and Out" San Francisco, March 28. All hotel and restaurant dishwashers are not "down and out," according to M George P. M. Howns, San Francisco _ dishwasher, a leader in the union ? movement and one of the best orators I in labor ranks in this eiiv I "The average dishwasher is well educated," Bowns said recently. "A large number' of them are college or university graduates. You will find in our ranks men who have graduated in law, medicine and other professions. I am a dishwasher by choice." Bowns says he is a graduate of Union College, Schenectady, N. Y., and asserts he attended the Nationa.' Catholic University in Washington, t I)., for some time. He was raised in 1 Troy, N. Y. At present Bowns is vice-president j of Cooks Helpers' Union laical No. j 110, president of the local joint ex- t ecutive board of the culinary crafts, * financial secretary-treasurer of the J San Francisco Isabel Section and s member of the law and legislative t committee of the San Francisco labor J council. During the last fifteen months, 1 Bowns has helped increase the mem- ' bership of his union from :t8t> to j t 807. placing men in positions where | they receive a minimum wage of $21 per week. I ? t Americans Not J , Popular in Mexico i i , Mexico City, March 28.?-The cap- j ? ital of Mexico is no place for an ( American cabaret. Itestauranteurs < from the United States who have ' risked their money in such ventures 1 here have found that they are not , , popular and, within the past few i , months, a number of professional entertainers from the United States , have returned to the border as best . they could after finding that there i . are no opportunities here for their special line of work. I Mexican cafe frequenters have - found American jazz acceptable but ' affAvfa .? * ; ?1 r v.wt 1..1 iw iMMMiuu i/.r ui uicaaiuiiill . 1 dancers and singers have met with no success. I ? i World Alliance of Churches Copenhagen, April 2. The fourth ' conference of the World Alliance o: Churches at which representatives of 2('? nations will be piesent will be ! held here from August t> to Angus' I 12 under the auspices of the World ' Alliance of Churches which seeks to promote an international union of church denominations. The president of the Alliance, the Archbishop of Canterbury, hopes to ; be present. I)r. Henry Atkinson, of j the American Church Peace Union | has been visiting Copenhagen to ! make the final arrangements for the j holding of the conference. NOTICE OF ELECTION j State of South Carolina, County of Union. Whereas, the (Jeneral Assembly of j the State of South Carolina, did at | its regular session in the year A. 1) I 1922, pass the following Act, which I was approved on the l.r>th dav of | March, 1922: An Act?To Authorize the Holding I of an Election in City of Union on the Issuing of One Hundred and Fift> Thousand ($1.10,000 00) Dollars of serial coupon Montis lor Building and Improving Streets in Said Town; to Name Three Commissioners to Kxpend the Proceeds of Said Ponds and Other wi?e Define Their Duties, Powers and Term of Office, and to Provide a Sinking Fund for the Retiring of Said Binds and to Provide for a Tax for the Interest and Sinking Fund of Said Bonds. Section 1. Be it enacted by the GenI oral Assembly of the State of South Carolina; That on the 2J>th day of April. 1922, there shall be submitted to the qualified electors of the Town of Union the question of issuing One Hundred and Fifty Thousand ($150,O(K).OO) Dolars of serial coupon bonds, bearing not more than five (fi) per LO! Fouml.?lliut cliirimm fm-linir tlmt < rvnics with ? ilvar, j>ur?*, n.J?lj ?..inulrxlou. HOLMES-CALHOUN GARDEN, FIELD A1 PLANTS, POUL A Postal Card Will I SPARTANBU THE BEST BATTERS BEYOND A Vesta lsolai GUARANTEED TWO , Let us show you one that I and is still charged. HUGHES PHONE 161 ..... WE WELD ANYT1 For Electric Wiring ? You will do well to consult good quality of materials anc my estimates before placing W. T. SI flit, interest for building and repair ug streets in said Town. See. '2. This election shall 1 e hob .inder the laws governing the hold ng of general elections of this State; be ballots shall be provided accord'ne 0 law, on the one ballot shall be print >d the words "For Building and Improving Streets?No." If a majority ,'f the ballots cast at said election diall be for the issuing of said bonds he three Commissioners hereinaftei provided for to be known as the Stree' 'ommission of the Town of Unio: tall advertise for serial bids on said nds. No bids shall be considered for 1 ss than the par value of the bonds. 1'he Conimi?s:o!i shall l ave the right 0 reject all bids a id re.nlvet t ise for nds until the loads are sold Sec. d. Upon the acceptation of any i'd, the Commission shall have pr.nt | *il serial coupon bonds, to ran not' ess than twenty (2b) years nor mom, 'iinn forty (40) years, with the right lo the Town of redeeming ?my or all >i' them at any time after thirty C'.tu , rears. These bonds shall ! . signed >/ the Chairman and Secret a rv of the Commission, and the signature may lithographed. The interest on these 1 >nds shall be paid semi annually, en die first day of January and the first lay of July, each and every vear. and there shall be levied annually on til" property in said Town a tax sufficient 0 pay the interest on these hands and to pay one-fortieth or 11101 of the principal. Sec. 4. As soon as the funds aris n g from flu- sale of the s id bonds shall be received bv the said Stree' C'nimission, they shall he deposited 1 v them in the several haul s of the iiv ?>i i mini, iiii-orpine ' > :<11<I u 11 oportion to I ho combined icta' i'oek and surplus of each I. nk. at : rate of interest not loss than four i ti i -r cent, por annum to bo paid by t he o.nk at said rata from tin* dato or I bo said doposit until tho said find: ve withdrawn from timo t timo by bo said St root Commission ; s poodod S.' tbom in tho performance of thei> I tins undor this \ct; PROVIDED, That should anv bank or hanks in City >f Uiron doolino to roooivo such d< r.?s't from tho pr oods of tho s o :f said bonds, ov d line to pay into. " t on tli?' said deposits ;it a ra'o intorost. of not loss than four < It p? , cent. per annum, fl < pro rata of do n -sits duo to suob hank or banks ?< declining1 or refusing to pay said interest, shall ho pro rated anion" all the remaining banks of Citv of I'nion n proportion to tbmr comli ncd cap tal stock and surplus; PROVIDED further. That the Street Commissi >p i a'l withdraw suob funds from the s id 1 anks in whi h same are de'sited in an impartial manner, and shall, in so far as possible, withdraw s"ch funds proportionately and on the same basis that the deposits are made :n said banks. Sec. r>. The Street Commission of tT.e Town of Union shall e< nsist of hree members as follows: Fmslie \* />VlAIOAM I? I* \1 Aunmn H?u) I I*' 1 Cheek. Any vacancy in the Commis sion shall "ho filled hy the remaining remhers suhiect to the consent and approval of the Town Council of the Town of Union. The Commissioners hall receive no ompensation for heir services, hut shall be reimbursed for actual expenses in the discharge f their official duties. The life of the Comm ssion shall be five years, or un'il they have expended the funds re "eived from the sale of the bonds, for (he building and repair of the streets :n the Town of Union. See. 0. The said Commission shall have thv authority to employ a competent engineer who shall be bonded n the sum of Ten Thousand ($10. 000.00) Dollars for the faithful performance of his duties, the premium to be paid out of the funds in the hands of the Commission. His duties shall be to pay out all streets to be constructed by the said Commission and to see that the work is properly performed. Sec. 7. This Act shall take effect immediately upon its approval by the Governor. ST! 550 Pimples, 736 Blackheads and 3 Boils! No reward Is offered, because they ire lost forever! No question will be sked. except one question, "HoW ltd >ou lose them?" There is but one mswer,?"1 cut out new fad treatneiits and guesswork; I usetl one ot lie most powerful blood-cleansers, ,loud-purifiers and f ! e s h-builders i.own, :i!nl that iv> S. S S.! Now my :oI-, pinkish, n.y skin clear as a . . , ?! > < heel s a o f;lied out and my : > .on itl.-ni, t o, is gone!" This will c our experience, too. If you try 9. S. It i.s } ".aranteed to bo purely t ible in all its remarkably effective tiiediclnal ingredients. 9. 9. 9. neans a n -w history for you from now ii! S. S. S. is s*tkI at all drug stores n two vl/ts. The larger 6lzo la the ,.oro economical. SEED COMPANY MD FLOWER SEED TRY SUPPLIES Bring Our Catalog RG, S. C. f FOR YOUR CAR DOUBT IS tor Battery rEARS IN WRITING, lias been used for four years GARAGE - - GADBERRY ST. TING IN METAL. ind Electric Fixtures me. Expert workmanship, i at reasonable prices. Get your order. NCLAIR Sue*. 8. All Acts or parts of Acts i?) ( iillfl ?? -- * 1 ... i. wmi art* uereuy reponied. THEREFORE, It is now ordered that an election he held in the Town f Union, South Carolina, for the purpose of determining whether or not Serial Coupon Bonds shall be issued f the Town of Union. South Carolina, in the sum of UNK HUNDRED AI? M FIFTY THOUSAND DOLLARS for building and improving Streets in the said Town under and pursuant to the provisions and turns of the said Act of the General Assembly. That at raid election ballots shall be provided in accordance with the laws governing such elect ons; and that upon said ballots shall bo printed: FOR BUILDING AND IMPROVING STREETS? YES NO. and that the voter shall indicate his choice ly striking out on the ballot one of the words?"YES" or NO." The Books of Registration will be ( lulled for said special election at the ( dice of 1). VV. Mullinax, Supervisor f Registration, in the storehouse of Union Clothing Company, on Main Siieot, Union, South Carolina, for a period of ten days, beginning on the at! day of April, 11>22. The qualifications for voting are prescribed by the provisions of the Constitution < f the State of South Carolina, and the Constitution of the Un te. 1 States, and amendments therein. and tlie laws of the State of South ( ai din.i with reference to the Regist atii.n of Municipal Electors and Mu n.cipal Elections as found in Section 220-227 of Volumhe 1, <\ de of I aws of South Carolina. 11*12, inclusive; and. An Act of the General Assembly of ' i* Stat.* of South Carolina. Approved ! - 7th day of March. A. D. 11)21, enit led "An Act to Confer Upon Women the Right to Vote in All Elec..ii's and a- further contained in Sectio,. :iur?0-20al. and 21*41 of Volute. Code of Laws of South Carolina. !.<12: and a eerti'icile of l'egistrat oi l v said special election will be is m d by the Municipal Supervisor of Registration upon product in of State s nd County Registration Certificate, pi' ' of re-idem e in the City of Union .i ' i ?.II miming prrcnun^ .1 eie Hon and proof of payment of Saves, State County and Munic ipal, > - ed and due and collectable for i :ihi> lise.il year. At said election the polls shall be ' .ed at eight o'clock in the forenoon < !.; shall remain open until 4 o'clock in the afternoon, and such elec! '<? shall be conducted and is now ncov (Jed by laws governing such elections. The following are the polling places and the managers for said ele< ' ion .to wit: Ward 1 At Oil Mill. Managers, Miss Emma T.ee Duekett, W. F. Caldwell. R. .1. Allen. Ward 2 -In Smith Block. Managers: Mrs. .1. T. Storm, Haskell i homas, K. /. Hodge. Ward 3 At Union Bakery. Mana "la s: S. M. Rice, Pack Davis, W. T. Deason. Ward 4 At Eire House. Managers: Arthur I.awson, A. A. Humes, F. L. BoIm>. R. P. MORGAN, W. 1) ARTHUR, Mayor. City Clerk and Tveac Union, S. C., March 30, 1922. 4-4-11-18 Try Ny-Denta Tooth Paste It cleans and whitens the teeth, preserves and hardens the gums?price 50c. Peoples Drug Store Phones 68-69 / L Si