The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, April 29, 1922, Image 4
R1ALTQ
WEDNESDAY
and
THURSDAY
JsJeMille V/'
l>T?OT5UC7tON
\ r:tjls Paradise
with
Jorothw Oalton
Milotvo Harris
~"onrad Nadel
1IU .kodure Kosloff
Jv '-)hn Dat'id son
Ml Julia
Ju d (yki/u mount </V< iiwt
V'(
H
yt _
Kathleen Clarke, 14 years old an
six feet in height, is the tallest git
in England. Medical men declare th
girl to be perfectly normal in ever
1 expect and are of the opinion tha
she will continue to grow until she i
17 or 18.
Delivery Service
Unexcelled
Phone 116 and "Look for
the Boy" is a fact and not
a mere collection of words.
i . _
l.ci u? prove 11 lO you.
UNION DRUG STORE
Prescriptions given careful
and prompt attention.
ft
tf
8 To
YT
if
TY
if
ff
Section Si:
the Hospital r
ff
H* "That in tl
A A annually, by t
VV Union County
?*
A A fall due, and i
YY said tax levy r
Y T
M able property
The above
YY ly no income i
tr
Yy cf assessed va
YY Thirty-Seven j
XX
cents, etc.
YY
YY The Hospi
A A the County, fr
f % the $25,000 ac
A A additional roc
pacity, for the
dining room a;
YY heating plant i
a
I Wa
XX
XX
V V
II
..
Clotig Exercises
At McBeth School
The annual commencement of McF.eth
Street High school will be held
Friday evening, May 5, 1922, Union,
S. C.
Motto: "Climb Though the Rocks
Be Rugged."
Class colors: White and blue.
Class flowers: Cream, roses and
ferns.
Monday Evening, May 1?First Division.
Chorus?"When the Twilight Comes
to Kiss the Rose Good Night."
Invocation.
Chorus?"I Will Love You Till the
Old Mill Stream Runs Dry."
Essay with Salutatory, Regret?
Sallie Moore.
Essay?Home Hurmonies?Eloise
Duncan.
Oration ? "Refining Influence of
Art"?Willie Davis.
Essay?"The Possibilities of Life"
?Janett Porter.
Essay?"Labor Brings Its Reward"
-?Isabel Young.
Trio?"If You've Never Been in
Dreamland."
Oration ? "Blessings of Agriculture"?Roosevelt
McMahan.
Essay?"Rendering Service" ? Ida
Dorthea Young.
Oration?"The Outlook for Our
Youth"?Walace Lewis.
Essav "A dentin Honrt" TTlwn
J beth Young.
Solo?"To Be Worthy"?Allen Victoria
Nichoals.
Essay ? "Obedience" ? Ruth Cor5
nelia Benson.
d Essay?"How to Avoid Evil"?Lil 1
lie Coriner Goudlock.
e Essay?"One Step Toward Educay
tion"?Theodora Elizabeth Hampton,
t Essay with Valedictory?"We Build
s the Ladder by Which We Rise"?Sallie
Gilliam.
Double quartet?"Rebecca of the
" Sunny Brook Farm."
Presentation of prizes.
Quartet?"Crying for You."
Friday Evening, May 5?Second Division.
Chorus?"One Wonderful Night."
Invocation.
Chorus?"Ain't You Coming Back
to Old Virginia."
Essay with Salutatory?"Refinement"?Allen
Victoria Nicholas.
Essay?"Courage" ? Theresa Clotelle
Johnson.
Essay?"Hope a Tonic for the Present"?Blanche
Weddington.
Duet?"Dream Kiss"?Ruth B?nson,
Junita Worthy.
Essay?"Woman's Place in the Elevation
of the Race"?Penola Sims.
Essay ? "Preparedness" ? Bertha
Belle Benson.
Essay?Youth the Time for Development"?Ephania
Rebecca Mims.
Sextet?"Drifting Apart."
Essay?"Love of Learning"?Juanita
Worthy.
The
x of the Act authorizing ?
eads as follows:
lie event that the Bonds si
he proper County official?
, a tax sufficient to pay t
also to pay the principal <
lot to exceed three-fourth
in the County."
section frknt if
mm HIV
From the Hospital that th<
lue Seven and one-half <
and one-half cents (37 1
tal is now rented for $3,6
ee of debt, for $50,000, i
Iditional which will be av.
>m can be provided, whi
operating room, X-ray i
nd kitchen are ample for
md plumbing would need
Haw T
EM!
???????
\ " ^
wV.-J! . fcj?wiiVv*1(^^rtifrrtrtYi* - <, , t iJitjiJLjU 1
J J ? ^T !
Essay?"The Power of Music"?
Nell Russell Nicholas.
Essay with Valedictory?"Womanly
Success"?Bernice Aldine Rosborough.
Solo?"You Made Me Cry for You"
?Ruth Cornelia Benson.
Address to the graduating class?
Rev. J. S. Daniels, Union, S. C.
Instrumental solo?Nell Russell
Nicholas.
Presentation of certificates?Supt.
Davis Jeffries.
Class song?"Farewell to Thee."
Appeal to Baptists
Next Sunday closes the first half of
j our five year period in the 75 million
campaign. There are the most urgent
reasons why every single one of
us shall do his utmost to pay all arrears
on pledge. If there are those
who will voluntarily pay more on
pledges than is now due it will help to
meet an emergency. Let every one
do his very best. Church treasurers
will please forward all funds in hand
so as to reach Dr. Burts not later than
May 3d.
1365-2tpd Edw. S. Reaves.
Intense Interest in
Cooperative Marketing
Columbia, April 27.?With only
three days of the cotton cooperative
campaign remaining, interest in the
outcome of the effort to sign up 400,000
bales by May 1, is becoming intense
and inquiries as to the probable
outcome arc pouring in from all over
the country. Several New York papers
have wired their South Carolina
corespondents asking that they
keep in close touch with the situation
and advise promptly of the result. The
luupcinnvf niurKCling OI COltOn IS
now the principal topic of conversation
in Columbia and in many other
sections of the state.
A telegraph message this morning
from Spartanburg said that ten teams
of business men and farmers from
that city went out this morning on a
canvass of the county. Spartanburg
will surely sign its quota, a message
from D. B. Anderson, county chairman,
said:
Marion County has gone over the
top, marking the tenth county in the
state to reach its quota, the other nine
being Marlboro, Darlington, Sumter,
Calhoun, Dillon, Lee, Dorchester,
Richland and Kershaw. Several.other
counties are expected to reach their
quotas today.
In only two or three counties of the
statj are the business men not giving
their active cooperation, officials of
the association said today. One of
these counties is located in the Piedmont
section and Litter disappointment
of the failure of the business
men to join with the farmers is experienced
by the farmers of that county
and by the officials of the association.
$? $?
V oter:
in election on the Bond i
lall be issued, there shall 1
upon all the taxable pre
he interest coupons as tl
r>n 8?.id bonds as it may 1
s (3-4) of one mill upon
County should receive i
ere would be levied on e?
:ents (7 l-2c), on eac
-2c); on each $1,000, Sevi
00 a year. It has been oi
iltho it cost over $72,00(
ailable, if the Bonds ar<
ich will more than dnnhl
room, sterilizing . room,
the enlarged Hospital
only small additions.
Iiomso
SLIE NIC
'VirTWVw VWW"
-J L-mJJ MWipW II ? !
**********
* Where Tfi Worship *
**********
Episcopal.
Second Sunday after Easter.
Sunday school and Bible class 10
a. m.
Morning prayer with sermon 11
a m.
A cordial welcome awaits you.
L. W. Blackwelder, Rector.
First Baptist Church
Sunday school tomorrow at 10 a. in.
No preaching at morning hour.
B. Y. P. U. at 7 p. m.
Evening warship at 8 p. m. Dr. Lee
Davis Lodge, president of Limestone
college, is expected to speak for at
the evening service.
Edw. S. Reaves, Pastor.
First Presbyterian Church.
10:00 A. M.?Sunday school.
11:00 A. M.?Morning worship.
4:00 P. M.?Junior C. E.
8:00 P. M.?Night worship.
Monday, 8:00 P. M.?Senior C. E.
Wednesday, 4:00 P. M. and 8:00 P.
M.?Prayer meeting.
J. F. Matheson.
Green Street.
Sunday school at 10 o'clock.
Sermon at 11 a. m. by the pastor.
Annual Sunday school exercices at
7:30 o'clock. Recitations and songs by
the children. A complete program of
intense interest. We especially invite
you to the evening service.
J. B. Chick, Pastor.
Bethel A. M. E. Church (Colored)
10 a. m., Sunday school.
11:30 a. m., preaching, subject,
"Spiritual Fortification."
7:30 p. m., A. C. E. League.
8 p. m., educational program.
Everybody welcome
L. D. Gamble, Minister.
Pope Pius Anxious to
Visit United States
Rome, April 26.?Pope Pius XI harbors
at least one deep regret and that
is his failure to visit the New World
before his elevation to the Holy See.
"I was so anxious to visit the United
States, Brazil and Argentina," he
said recently. "But I thought I had
plenty of time. I never dreamed that
I would be elected Pope."
Diplomats and ecclesiastical dignitaries
are playing an important part
in the new Pontiff's efforts to familiarize
himself with the affairs of his
church in every land. Cardinals are
usually accorded interviews lasting
two hours or more, while ambassadors
are seldom dismissed before they have
spent on houe with the Pope.
"He is evidently feeling his way and
trying to understand the complicated
machinery in-all its parts," said one
ambassador, as he left the Vatican
cilices. "It fs quite a striking cons
Of
issue for It ia f
$7,000 a
County m
3e levied an assure
>perty in on a 8*x I
. _.1 it will take
? , equals $4
Fall due, est and pi
the tax- Then
ers? NC
ibsolute- t;me the 1
ich $100 If
h *??
snty-five to eight
Is the
rr i . ed and g
ffered to acCessibil
). With surgical e
e voted, expenses
e its ca- Can y
office, be 8ick or
, . that we d
and the of its cost
issue, and
nHos]
HOLSO!>
mmtmun
JljSS.
trast to Pope Benedict, who used to
go straight to the heart of the subject
in hand and exnaust it in a few
moments."
His sympathetic attitude toward
the American continents has encouraged
Latin-American representatives
of the Catholic church to hope for an
increase in the number of cardinals allotted
them. Senor de Azaredo, Brazilian
ambassador to the Vatican, has
pointed out to the new Pope that the
United States, smaller in area and
with a smaller Catholic population
than Brazil's has two cardinals while
Brazil has but one.
One of the chief objects to granting
cardinals in Latin-America
brought forward in the past is that
the Sacred College cannot exceed 70
members, and that the Pope, following
traditional law, must leave a few vacancies
to be filled by his successor.
This aragument is controverted by
Senor Azaredo on the ground that the
present limitation to 70 cardinals was
established nearly 400 years ago,
when no ore could foresee the development
of the American continents.
| _ t
Refuge for Human Wrecks
Stockholm, April 22.?A refuge of
rest and physical rehabilitation where
the human wrecks of German war
prisoners from Russia and Siberia
may be treated and salvaged is being
purchased by Miss Elsa Brandstrom,
known throughout Central
Europe and Russia as "the Angel of
Siberia."
Miss Brandstrom is negotiating for
a village in southern Germany which
she proposes to turn into a human
reclamation camp for the derelicts
that once marched proudly under Hindenburg
and other Teutonic military
leaders against the Russians and
were captured and sent to Siberial
concentration camps.
They remained in Siberia till long
after the world war was over and
there are still thousands of them left,
free to return home if they could
Hut they h:ive neother the means nor
the physical strength to do so.
Miss Brandstrom is a young Swedish
Red Cross nurse, the daughter
of the late General Edvard Brandstrom,
for many years Swedish minister
to Russia under the Czar's regime.
Leaving her comfortable home
in Stockholm and the aristocratic set
in which the had been brought up,
she led a small Red Cross expedition
into Western Siberia and has succeeded
in repatriating thousands of
German and Austrian war prisoners.
But she found that when the former
soldiers reached their homes
they were unable to assume their former
places in society. They were
wrecks that had to be attended to.
So she has collected a considerable
fund and hopes to purchase a village
and have it ready for occupancy this
autumn.
Union
\
air to assume therefore
y^ar, especially when i
ras an untried experimei
;d success and crowded
jer cent basis (we certai
the higher basis to illusi
1,500 per annum. $7,0(
rovide a sinking fund su
what will the enlarged
>THING but loaning th
Bonds have matured pa]
bonds are voted, the mi
Board of Trustees, app<
n of the County delegati
'ears.
Hospital an advantage
food? Is its location i
ity in case of accident t
attention mean anything
to another town?
ou say that you will ne**
hurt, and have to go to
0 not believe that it will
ing you a few cents a yc
1 ? ? - ?
I possibly cause the sell
*
pital A
J, F*resicj
* *?
fi^
^ A checking accot
m to pay bills conv\
keep receipts and
Mi of your expenses,
^ at your disposal
facilities of this d
M institution.
Z Nicholson Bai
Unior
Union County's oldest, 1
.J Member Federa
U. S. Government i
mi nm> mo to*
MniMMMMBaM
As to the war prisoners still wandering
about Russia and Siberia
many of theni will never be found
and none of them will ever be able tc
get back without outside aid. Miss
Brandstrom proposes to continue
rounding up these waifs and bring
them to her haven of rest.
In Holland Easter eggs are used foi
gambling. Placed end to end, the}
' are knocked one against the other
The loser is the player whose egg is
broken, and he has to pay whatevei
I sum is at stake.
The basin of the St. I
river contains more than half 1 h?
fresh water in the world.
FISH STEW
I will serve a first class fish stev
at my place at 5 o'clock this after
noon, Saturday, April 29th, cooked b}
I Tom Estes. Music by O'Shields strint
band.
ltpd G. G. Hodge,
^Notice
Thrasher's Great Healing Fluid ha:
relieved many cases of the flu, eczema
pains and aches. For sale at Pal
metto, Peoples and Storms' I.)ru*
Store; also Buffalo Co. Store. II
will pay to try it as it has n<
equal for all your troubles. N<
humbug. J. S. Thrasher.
4-29; 5-3-6-pc
Coui
that the income could be
t is remembered that a h
tit until August, 1921, ar
I with patients. The ba
inly believe on a 5 1-2 pe
trate), $75,000 bonds
30 income per annum wi
fficient to retire the Bor
Hospital cost Union C
ieir credit, for the incoi
V the Bonds and all the
anagement will be in the
minted by the Governor
ion, and their terms wil
to Union County? Hai
it the County seat desiv
0 you or yours, of need
1 to you? Will it save yoi
/er need its facilities, th
SOME hospital? Whe
I iL! Ml
i wDi jruu anyimng, Wilt
;ar cause you to vote ag
ing of the Hospital for i
issocia
lent
4^a i
vV V V V V V1
U.^A i^A iaL A^A A^A A^A A^A A^A A^4. A^A 4
^n^r^Pf^P vT*Vir v'^r^lr VT (|T^r
Advantages ;
Of Paying Z
By Check Z
m
int here enables you ^
eniently by mail, Co
[ an accurate record
, and it also places ' m
the many valuable ^
ependable financial M
m
tik & Trust Co. Z
1, S. C.
largest and strongest bank
il Reserve System m
an^^tat^^upervisio^^^^
.'SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS
i
FOR SALE?An upright piano,
| Knabe make, in first class condition.
.! Apply to The Wonder Store.
!| 4-29; 5-1-0
'| CALL ON US for Goodrich tires and
tubes, Goodrich Speciul tire No. 55,
' size 30x3 1-2 for $10.90. Gilliam
;' Light & Motor Co. 1366-6i
WANTED?Boy for general office
work, must be at least 17 years old.
' Apply in writing to "H," care Union
Times. 13GG-2t
\ FOR SALE?A few of the latest
j style capes and sport coats at one|
half price. The Wonder Store.
4-29; 5-1-5
FOR RENT?A nice five-room bungalow,
close in, on Mill street, with
I
lights, water and all modern conveniences.
Immediate possession
'r given. J. D. Arthur. Itpd
COME TO THE WONDER and eec
one of those beautiful dresses at
; greatly reduced prices. Now is your
chance. The Wonder Store.
4-29; 5-1-5
, LOST?On streets of Union, one bill
folder with tax leceipt and other
f papers. Finder please notify. B.
t W. Sparks, Union, S. C., R. 2. Itpd
)
> LOST?Today on streets of Union, a
brown kid glove. Finder please reI.
turn to Times office.
J* ?$
ft
Xj
X x
nty: 1
xi
v v
doubled, or say - XX
ospital in Union X
id that now it is
nds can be sold YY
r cent basis, but | |
at 6 per cent XX
11 pay the inter- XX
ids at maturity.
ounty's taxpay- XI
me will by the XX
interest.
hands of a nonon
the recom- Xx
1 run from two ?Y
xx
XX
i it accomplish- Vy
able? Will its XX
I nf mAr1i?*al t *
? VI %
u any travelling
XT
at you will not
in we tell you
you let the Tear {
ainst the Bond jf
t. debt.?
XX
IT
ilion 1
|j
?> "l* > >?j? }