The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, April 28, 1922, Image 4

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RI ALTO TODAY \V. II. CI.I .NK Presents NELL SHIPMAN ?IN? "THE GIRL FROM GOD'S COUNTRY" I?ir(?-?! Its Nfll Shipman and ltert Nan Tu> If from an original story by Miss Shipman. The "something different" you've been waiting for. \ I.SO RUTH ROLAND ?IN? "WHITE EAGLE" END OF MO FRIDAY?SATU 600 yards beautiful I 60c yard for, yard 75c Imported Ginghai $3.00 quality, 40-inc I shades, special, ya* 50 dozen extra heav 25c Lad-Lassie Cloth, 45x36 Wearwell Pil! sale 1,000 yards good 3 for, yard 9 cakes assorted Je very special, box . IOne cake Palm Gliv< size Palm Olive Sh $2.50 quality 80x90 I each Ladies' Summer Munj sizes, for 20c genuine Lakeside yard Dove Undermuslins a Itiful Gowns, Teddie One special lot early $10.00 values, for . 20 per cent discount < and Silk Dresses fo WILBURN ?? %We've Oof X Buy A X Infants' Strap S1 ipp Y Ladies' Strap Slippy Y Men's Goodyear \Y< )) pair A Misses' Patent Leat A Hoys' Tennis Oxforc x Men's Tennis Oxfoi Y Ladies' Tennis Oxfc Y Ladies Silk Hose in A pan* ....... A Men's Silk Socks, pa A Straw Ticking, yard Y Lad-Lassie Cloth, yj Y Lest quality, fast co X ('otton ('repe in Pir A Men's Socks, all col A Ladies Hose, pair . A Men's extra heavy \ Y Men's HIue Pin Che< Y Men's White Shirts, A value, our price . A Men's Madras Shirt Y each . . Y Men's Russian Cord Y colors, each . . . X Men's beautiful Silk A teed fast colors, ? 'XT. 1 .j ust received a new y cerized, in solid c i WHY P/ i J. F. Mcl ? J Laymen's Missionary Movement Chicago, April 27.?With Dr. Wil I liam S. Abernethy, of Washington, P. C\, pastor of the church President' Harding attends, as the principal! speaker, the Laymen's Missionary! Movement Conference will meet here May .'Ird and 4th to consider means to J rejuvenate the organization's activities. "The Laymen's Missionary Movement is an asset that the Christian forces of America cannot do without," Pr. Abernethy said in an announcement sent out by the committee arranging the gathering. "I know of no agency which has fulfilled its mission moiv effectively within the last two decades." American typists are said to surpass those of (Ireat Britain because they learn the "touch" system. During rush hours trains pass through the Charing Cross Station in London at the rate of one every 40 seconds. NTH SPECIALS RDAY?MONDAY Madras Shirting, worth 29c ms, for 3 days, yard 50c :h Crepe de Chines, all 1 $2.39 y 50c Turkish Towels, ' 35c, 3 for $1.00 , end of month sale . 18c low Cases, worth 39c, ? ? ? 29c 6-inch Pa jama Checks 12 l-2c rgen's fine toilet soap, 50c e soap and 15c sample p ampoo, all for . . . 14c ! >est Krinkle spreads for, $1.95 ring Wear Suits, regular 90c Chambrays for, 15c t special prices. Beaus for . 90c, $1.35, $1.78 Pattern Hats, $6.50 to $5.00 on all Coat Suits, Capes r 3 days only. rv GOODS CO. We'll Get It, or d Our Price is >ers, pair jrs, pair Bit Russia Calf Oxfords, her Slippers, pair .... Is, pair ds, pair >rds, pair Black, Brown, Nude, Gr; ir ird lor Gingham, yard . . . . ik, Blue and White, yard ors, pair Chaki pants, pair Rants, extra heavy, pai with Von Hausen col la s, extra full cut and guai ed Shirts, extra full cut a Striped Madras Shirts, 1 >2.50 values, each .... shipment of Children's ? jolors and stripes, pair . . iY MORIC ELSEV LURE DRY G( Sketch of Judge Newberry I Indianapolis, Ind., April 27.?Judge ^ Leonidus Perry Newberry, who has been active in Masonic affairs for ^ many years, was born on a farm in j Henry county, Indama, April 1), 1856, and has lived in Knightstown, Ind., ^ since 1872. He has held various pubw lie offices as a Republican, serving as president of the state senate eight in years and as acting lieutenant governor four years. He has been an oftieer of banks in Indianapolis and elsewhere, and director in 16 corporations. ? Mr. Newbery arranged in 1919, as |T special commissioner for the grand encampment, Knights Templar, for the adoption by the encampment of ^ 500 French war orphans, and also en- e tcred into an agreement with the Knights Templar of England for the rebuilding at Jerusalem of the Hos- . pital of St. John of Jerusalem, which n was constructed by the order in the ^ tenth century. He is the author of u "Sidelights on Templar Law, which ? has been adopted generally through'- 11 out the grand encampment. ' Mr. Newby married Miss Mary ^ Elizabeth Breckinridge in 1876. They ^ have a son and a daughter. . m c Child Life Pageants ,J By Sunday Schools c g Spartanburg. April 26.?Much interest is being aroused over the state in me series 01 community child life j, pageants which are being promoted ( by the South Carolina Sunday School association and which will be held j in practically every county in the state. In most of the counties from * five to a dozen of these pageants will be held. Co-operating with the South Carolina Sunday School association in the work which is something entirely j new in this state are the State Board i of Health, the State Department of ; Education, the Stae Home Demonsration Service and the State Federation of Women's Clubs. 1 Miss Laura Blackburn of Columbia ! has been engaged as secretary of the pageant committee and has already begun her work. She is eminently fit- j ted for it and is now engaged in visiting a number of the counties that are contemplating putting on the pageant. The theme of this educational pai geant that is to teach a statewide lesson is, "The Riglis of the Child." It ' presents five rights, namely, "The | Right to Health; The Right to Educa ^ tion; The Right to Protection; The Right to Home Training and The | Right to Religious Nurture." It is announced by Leon C. Palmer, superintendent of the South Carolina Sunday School Association that no admission will be* charged at any of ^ the pageants since they are being promoted in the interests of the children ( of South Carolina and not as a mon- ' ey-making enterprise. The railway which crosses the St ' Gothard, one of the most famous ' passes in the Alps, travels over 324 1 bridges of more than 32 feet span and through SO tunnels, the main one 1 of which is nearly 10 miles in length. dr Organized workers in Massachu- ( settssetts are using a recent wages by- law award to support their con ti nt ion that wage setting by this ' method is less effective than trade unionism. SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS 1 i YOUNG LADY desires room and board in private family where no ' other hoarders are kept give very ' little trouble and box No. 331. Money Can't | Nays Right 1j 50c ? i $1.50 ; $5.Oft value, y i $3.95 ' $i.69 x; 89c A t 95c ; 89c f ay and White, V ' 50c |; 25c a ? 5c 1 19c r 19c f 18c f 5c X'l 5c $1.50 j. $1.50 y v attached, $3.00 J? $2.50 % ranteed fast colors, & $1.00 | ind guaranteed fast V $1.50 5! ull cut and guaran- % $1.95 X ^ocks, highly mer- & 25c y ^HERE? % )0DS CO. I a^A A^A A^A j" "a" "AT "A" "A" "A? "A" "AT fUy^Af V^r^r i Go to Church or Pay a Fine Ixmdon, April 24.?The alternate going to church on Sunday or paj g a line is suggested by the Re obert Forman Horton, one of Erq ind's most nonted Non-conforniis linisters, as a means of raising su L'ient revenue "to run the countr ithout plunging it into bankruptcy uch legislation, he declares, woul i?t ?80,000,000 a year. Dr. Horton's suggestion is said 1 i! based on a law passed in the reip f Edward VI, when anyone absen lg himself from church "withoi rwful or reasonable excuse" w. ned one shilling. The law was r ealed, but re-enacted and rigi <1 nforced in subsequent reigns. The 50 or more churches in tl qua re mile amound the aBnk i Ingland contained full congrogatioi i those days, but few persons e it hem on week days now except An rican tourists, and the Sunday ce Tcgations, Dr. Horton declares, "< ot exceed a baker's dozen." Tl lishop of London has evm gone ! ar as to suggest that some of the e demolished and the valuable sit old to provide funds with whii hurches could be built in other par f the city. This suggestion brought a deluj if complaints upon the Bishop, b trange to say, they were not fro lersons identified with church alTaii Vlniost without exception they car rom financiers, who maintained th lie sight of these old churches serv i very good purpose in softening t learts of "money-mad crowds" w ;ozed upon them as they hurried 1 Ra ?? A ? _i_ wv a^iii vi niiinmio cvb Kansas City, Mo., April 25.?"Tl is my week," says Mike. These, at least, are the words ; tributed to him by H. H. Jacobs Kansas City, Kans., his interpret for Mike is a dog. The faithful f low, who was rescued after underf. ing torture, cannot ordinarily must the words of humans to plead t ?ouse of his kind, but H. H. Jacobs, liumane worker, has selected him a? worthy spokesman of all animals. What the interpreter imagines t iog Mike would say about Be Kind Animals Week, April 24-30, set asi annually and about the relations tnan and beast, and the importance beasts of the relations of man man, follows: "This is my week. Mine and r mothers'. The brothers that live [ do about your homes and the brot _'rs that live in the woods and t mountains. This wek is for them i "Have you ever realized how ve lear we live to you? Can you thi jf anything you do that does not tome way touch us ? The war, bu aess, depression, changes of seasi .ho fashions, sickness and death, mi riage and?oh, your quarrels and yo livorces, they break loose our moc ngs. "This week is my week, mine a my brothers', and altogether we a you this week to leave the hurtii >ut. "We want you to be happy tl week. Happiness makes food pier ind beds soft and sold nights war Ror happiness is kind. "Angels in heaven have look lown and seen us in traps, seen liunted and driven, seen us slaug tered by slow and terrible methoi <een us entertaining you by our d?*a igony and our terror. Seen us hon less and starving." Winthrop College SCHOLARSHIP AND ENTRANCE EXAMINATIO The examination for the award acant Scholarships in Winthrop C< ege and for admission of new st lents will be held at the Coun Court House on Friday, July 7, ) a. m. Applicants must not be le han sixteen years of age. Wh Scholarships are vacant after Ju I they will be awarded to those ma ng the highest average at this e unination, provided they meet) t auditions governing the award. A dicants for Scholarships should wri o President Johnson before the e imination for Scholarship examin ion blanks. Scholarships are worth $100 ai ree tuition. The next session \v pen September 20th, 1922. F urther information and catalogu iddress Pres. I) .B. Johnson, Hoi 1 ill, S. C. 4-28; 5-28; 0-28; 7-0 | Notice I will serve a first clafu barbecue onesville on county campaign day. -28; 5-5-12-19-pd. W. K. Smith. USE THE BEST Cheaper and "copy cat" soaps are injurious to the sKin (they contain free alkali, an irritant). We sell and recommend the genuine French imported Lemon Soap and the Lemon Cleansing Cream. Recommended as a bleach for sun burn, tan and freckles.. UNION DRUG STORE Phone 116 and "Look for the Boy." T' Series of Battles in Progress re Constantinople, April 27.?A series r~ of battles for the possession of Tav briz, second < apital of Persia, has ?" been in progi ess since the British 1 troops were withdrawn last year as a result, of which the city has rey ccntly ben taken by I^autih Khan, ac' cording to advices received here from Teheran. , Lautih Khan was commander of the n Persian gendarmerie forces in the re- | t gion of Urmia. He set his troops in ' t movement against the Teheran gov- j ernment on the ground that they had j not been paid for five months. His j y forces surrounded the Persian Cos- j sacks and Armetiian battalion at She- J u> refhane and disarmed them and some j. of the prisoners joined his ranks. 1S With an army of 10,000 men Lauer tih Khan then organized an expedi- 1 (l_ tion against Tabriz which was de- | ii. fended by the Shah's loyalCos sacks | jo and Persian gendarmes commanded J no by Swedish oflicers. so Overcoming their resistance, he m made a triumphal entry in Tabriz, es occupied al public buildings and isch sued a manifesto to the people pi*o ts claiming his intention to work for and assure the prosperity and independi?e ence of Persia. The Shah's governor ut and his assistant in Tabriz have been in arrested and tried by Lautih's courtrs. martial. nc I^ick of money to pay the troops i at and gendarmes, Bolshevik propagan0(' da and brigandage appear to be the causes of most of the revolutionary movements in Persia, say the Tehe-1 >y- ran advices. ? f The Esquimaux, and most African1 tribes, have broad. Hat noses. This j his is due to the fact that the mothers of those races carry their hahies snup--1 at- gling against the breast or shoulders of at the time when the nose is in its er, most plastic state?the frequent presel sure making the nose flat. CO- _____ ter he " ~??? Modern i a Mail Order Service he Shopping by mail has be(|f come a fixed habit with to most folks, especially those to who trade with us and are familiar with our policy of "y PROMPT DELIVERIES as f .1,. During bad weather you can 1 he save that drive to town? j just write or phone your i needs. Goods not sati^fac- F nk . r jn tory are always subject to j c si- exchange. But, our large ; t )n? and well selected stock en- c kr ables us to always send just ' )r_ what is ordered. ^ .... UNION DRUG STORE sk t ng Agents Waterrr-n Ideal I i Fountain Pen, Hollings- 1 Vs worth's Unusual Candies, ity m Kodak supplies. 1 ed _________________________ I When to ( of i YOU N ss Mair he # GOOD MERCHA1 s PRICES. IF YOU or I. I Special price in White Sport Slippers .... Black one strap, rubbc Brown fancy Oxfords Children's White Slipp< Extra good Overalls, w Extra special on Everf price If money is any thin) and prices over. I. I YOUR MONEY'S ,-mA =r 2 Advantages 2 2 Of Paying jj 2 By Check 2 w A checking account here enables you m tm to pay bills conveniently by mail, to M ~ keep receipts and an accurate record m of your expenses, and it also places M at your disposal the many valuable ^ H facilities of this dependable financial ! M institution. K Z Nicholson Bank 8C Trust Co. Z Union, S. C. 5 m Union County's oldest, largest and strongest bank sa Member Federal Reserve System n U. S. Government and State supervision j? m BJTO BIRD VtLSON A CHAT About Your AFFAIRS There's nothing we would enjoy more than a sincere and neighborly chat with you about your plans, your problems, your troubles, and your triumphs. The highest service in banking is that which inspires your good will and confidence to the extent that you would regard your banker as your most intimate and trusted friend. And this is the service that inspires in us our highest and best desire to serve you. "Large Enough to Servi Vny?Strong Enough to Protect All." crnzELNvi) NATIONAL E?ANK_ 3ourt of International Justice Bustamente of Cuba, Senor Altamira and M. Huber are the only regular r?. ? . B , , members. John Bassett Moore, the I he Hague, April 24.?Rules for . . , . .. *1 , . . . only American member of the court, iroceedure and the naming of com- in r. r. v? u ? , T, , . .. ? . .. and D. G. G. Nyholm of Denmark, nittees for the first ordinary session , ... . , ., n . * . are substitutes, if the Permanent Court of Intemaional Justice on June 15 have been The committee for transit disputes ompleted by the preliminary session Presided over by M. Weiss, ueeting here. Senor Barbosa of Brazil, Yorueo Oda Dr. B. C. J. Lodeiyof Holland, has of JaP*n? Mr- Moore *nd M- Nyholm leen named president of the commit- are reKu^ar members, and M. Huber ee for Summary Precedure. Charles and Signor Anzilotti have been Udre Weiss of France and Max Hu- numed substitutes, ler of Switzerland are the other reg- The first committee as composed ilar members, with Viscount Robert will sit until January 1923, while the ?A nf Vinrc urill ram oin o o nnwafif ntoJ nn. llllciy VI VJlUclL Villain UHU IVUiat'l Wfc,,vl " " ?VII???II V vnovii M v*. v? ? Utamira, of Spain, as substitutes. til the end of 1924. Viscount Finlay will head the com- * nittee for labor disputes, of which Lead pencils have not changed in lionisio Anzilotti of Italy, Antonio design for a hundred years. You Come Dur Store IAY EXPECT TO FIND ir Rnrd?in.? WE AT LIVE AND LET LIVE I DESIRE TO SAVE MONEY COME TO "ROM'S Low Cuts, from 98c to $3.98 $2.25 ;r heel, worth $3.50, special price . . . $2.95 worth $3.50, for $2.95 ers, from 50c to 98c orth $1.25, our price 98c _ a a - ?- ? ast Suiting, sold everywhere tor 39c, our 25c y to you, come to I. From's and look the goods FROM WORTH OR YOUR MONEY BACK. ",. . .;; .-' :V3. '. ' {&& ?...