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RIALTO TODAY WILLIAM FOX Presents WILLIAM FARNUM "HIS GREATEST < ? SACRIFICE" < 1 ALSO LATEST FATHE NEWS' TOMORROW 1 THOMAS MEIGHAN ?IN? si "A PRINCE THERE \? WAS" ! !'l t'j _] We fill any doctor's I -I prescriptions. I , Union Drug Store I * Electrically Lighted Course t __ ( St. I.ouis. M >., May ?An clcctri- ' cally lighted nine gold putting course' - i const rue led hy the North 1 Hills Country clul here. Otlicials of the club declare the miniature course 11 is being installed to c uourage n'ght v paying. j < Approximately Tu,(>< < women in the Cnite.l States ;.rc on tile pay rolls of; 1 >ail roads. There are over Jon women enrolled t a< students in the School for Citi/.en- |, .-hip at Vale University. | A A A . rvvvv%T v v t f Y t ! Bums % i 13 $k Hfe } Com ! You: f the I Y ! PICK OUT ANYTT | LIKE THE PRICE, ? AUCTION. ITW1L I THE STOCK OVER. | ?REGARD' ESS 0 WILL HAVE TO B! t 1 AUCTION S i ? Y nmnBUMj T I ecialist in Boll j I Weevil Poisoning 1 ] \ . Williams, Now With Tullulah Laboratory, Will Direct Work in This State. Clenison College, May d.?V. v.., illiains, a specialist in boll weevil j ?i<oning. has been secured jv the ^tension Service from the Delta j iboratory, Tullulah, La., to have urge of demonstration work in pot-1 ning the bo'.l weevil by the use of .leium arsenate during the present ason, according to antiout cement "f ireetor \V. W. Long. Mr. Williams j gins his duties in this connection j >out May 10, and will have charge i six demonstrations in different j irts of the state and will give in-1 ruction to county agents regarding .e details of successful poisoning. j At a lecent meeting of the board trust-es of Clenison college, proision was made for the purchase of x dusting machines and for securing specialist to supervise the work on \ dusting machines and for securing specialist to supcr\ ise the work on \ demcnstration farms to be selected y the Kxtcnsion Service for this pur use. Director Lony announces that 10 demonstrations will bo on tin* srms of the following farmers: Alto i Scarburmiyh, Richland county; any P. Jenninys, Sumter county; T. . Kinard, Greenwood county; C. P. lance, Lauren-- county. From these emonstrations on the control of the 011 weevil much valuable information ill be secured and disseminated for ho benefit of South Carolina farmers. In this connection also the Kxtenion Service will hold in the near funic three district meetings of the aunty ayonts throuyhout the state i?r the purpose of haviny Mr. Wiliams instruct the ayonts reyardiny he details in the use of calcium arinate and the proper nianayement of lachines. In turn the county ayents ill select in their respective counties t! to 1"> farmers with whom they will onduct demonstrations on poisoniny. hose farmers will be selected laryely ront the standpoint of accessibility in heir communities and nciyhhoriny aimers will he notified from time to 'me when dustiny demonstrations will e yiven on the farms of the 10 to 1"> armors selected. In this way it is ?? Fiirnitur 1 Bill M !al! JLL B ie and r Shar< Bargaii HNG IN STOCK AN HAVE IT PUT UP ,L PAY YOU TO C( . WE HAVE TO SE1 f THE PRICE, AS VACATED IN A ] ALE AT 7:1 loped to rea h a maximum number of armors with authentic instructions on >oisoning. Coleraine News I " i May 8, 1922. ^ The health f this community is t eery good at this writing. f Mrs. 1'.. Smith was visiting her | father, It. Cathcart, of Pauline ( route, Sunday. t John So it*i spent the week-end with | his son, It. .1 Smith, of Paulino route, j Mrs. F. J. Lawson of Greenville i spent last wick with relatives and , friends in this community. , Carlisle Sherhert and children were j visitors of our Sunday school Sunday \ Mr. and Mrs. I.. B. Smith spent the ] week-end with relatives near Enoree. . Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Harrison attend- | ed the convention at Lockhart. They j reported a nice time; also heard some Vood singing and speaking. Barne Williams and Paul Lawson spent the week-end with relatives and friends of Enoree route. There will be Sunday school and preaching at Mt. Lebanon Sunday, May 14th. Sunday school at 2 o'clock. !'reaching at 2 o'clock by Rev. Trogden of Buffalo. Come and bring some cne with you. There will be an entertainment at Coleraine school Friday night, May 12, 7:30 o'clock. The public is cordially invited to be with us. This will he the closing night of the school. It is a custom in China that a bride must not walk across her father's threshold. SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS COME ANI) LAUGH ? Spartanburg Minstrel at High School, Friday, May 12, at 8:30 p. m. GAGE HATS?Get your Gage Hats tor one-hall price this week at The Wonder Store. 1374-3t KOR RENT- The Trefzer cottage, 5 rooms, linht and water. Apply to J. A. Brown. It JUST THE PEACE to buy your spring suits and dresses. All the lovely models in crepes, taffetas, satins and crepe meteors. The Wonder Store. 1374-3t . ^ t jgjffllrhwh? y a i Co.! Y I | i a onr I LAM i X Cjr C t I e of | is.... | D IF YOU DON'T ? AND BUY IT AT | (ME AND LOOK ? I EVERYTHING | THE BUILDING | FEW DAYS. | i - ? * ' JU P. M. | S 1 < t , . ! ? Hospital Bond Tickets i , There have been different reports! villi reference to the error in the hospital bond tickets, as to who was esponsible. Any honest confession is cood for the soul. I want to set at est all reports. No one is responsible or it except myself, no stenographer, rinter or anyone else. I made the* rror in my own handwriting. Mr. W. iV. Colton of the Progress press .elephoncd me to prepare the iekets, because I was county atlorney. I did it, and tried to do it right, but in preparing the ticket, 1 iiade an error, and no one else made it. When Mr. Colton first asked me to prepare the tickets, I was extremely busy and asked him to go ahead and have them printed, but he insisted that I fix the ticket, and in so doing, made the mistake. The first time the error was called to my attention was by Mr. Tom F.stes last Monday morning, over the telephone, when he wanted to know how long before I would come up to my office, and I told him in about half an hour, as it was very early in the morning. He told me of the error, and at first I was so certain I was right until I told him I thought the tickets were alright, but when he told me of the error and said he thought it best to have some more printed, I told him to go ahead so that the error could be corrected. Some have suggested that I fixed the tickets erroneously so that it would bring a law suit and I could thereby make some money. If they would take the second thought they would realize that I am on a small salary as county attorney, and I do not get any more for trying a dozen cases than I do for trying one case for the county, they would readily see that it would mean more work to me. What I had to do with reference to preparing any of the papers for the hospital bond election was strictly as county attorney, working under the direction of the county authorities. It has been stated Mr. Colton callec my attention to the error. This is t mistake. Mr. Tom Estes was the firsl man that called my attention to th? error. Some have stated that it was i scheme on my part to put the bone issue over the will of the people. This is incorrect for the reason that I per sonally voted against the bonds foi the hospital, and when anyone aske< me of my position on the matter, ! 1 ave so stated it. I have been veto Lusy and have taken very little tim< to discuss the matter. Some have blamed mc for permit t'ng the bill to go through the hous< of representatives. My reason for this action is that representatives of abou' one-third of the taxable property 01 the county came before Senator Dun can, Mr. Kennedy and myself and asked for an eledtivrM this question, ant we thought that this minority had t right to have the matted submitted t< the people and let them pass on th< question. I thought it was their constitutional right to petition the legislature and let the matter be submitted to the people and let them pass on the question. I though it was their constitutional right to petition the legislature and let the mattei be submitted to the people, and no1 that I sanctioned the bond issue foi the hospital. Mr. Duncan is not tc he censored any more so than Mr Kennedy and myself for the question being submitted to the people; howover, as I have stated before, I exercised my right as a citizen to vote against the bond issue. Some have suggested as a lawyei I was trying to work a scheme in order to deceive the people. If any person wt uld take the second thought they would realize that as county attorney, Mr. Askew would not permil mo to do this, and why should I undertake to deceive the people on a mattei to which I was personally opposed? Could I hope to continue as eountj attorney, knowingly doing such s thing? I leave it to the fair-mindec people as to whether in my 41 years that my life wi,th its errors and manj tVlinrro Uof T _..?U i:l._ i? ? *? % ?,? VI.el. i nuuiu 11 rv * uj recall, in the main, has it been such, as a man that I have done things of this kind? As a lawyer have I been guilty ol thinps of this character? A man whe has been honored by being three times elected to the legislature, have I dom thinps of this kind? Jno. K. Hamblin. The connection Mr. Jno. K. Hamblir had with reference to the tickets foi the hospital bonds and the preparatior of the election notice was that of county attorney, which was his duty to do T know that he was npninst the hospital bond issue, and that he made f mistake as to the tickets, which mis take was corrected, and any statement that Mr. Hamblin was trying to mislead or deceive the people is erroneous. J. V. Askew. Students Demand Resignation of Professors Constantinople, May 8.?Four professors have resigned from the Uni varsity of Stambou] at the demand of the students on the ground that they were "strangers to the sentiments of ndependence, nationality and sacred 'ights." Riza Tewfikbey, professor of phlosophy, who was one of the signers >f the peace treaty of Sevres, also was 'equested to resign but did not do so. The peace treaty of Sevres aroused he opposition of Turkish Nationalists >n the ground that it took away Turkish territory and resulted in placng the sultan under the domination f the Allies.| It was recently revised it a conference in Paris but the rtdsion has not been accepted or jTut nto effect. -1 ? J ??ma This Mother's Prayers Won Yesterday, a 30-year-old drunkard and gambler, "broxe," given but six months to live. Today the prosperous owner of a chain of 16 shoe repair shops scattered about the country, with the prosnect of an extension to 300 in a short time, wealthy, and the founder of one of the most beautiful memorials to a mother ever erected. That in brief is the story of E. Howard Cadle, builder of the Cadle Tabernacle at Indianapolis, just completed. It co3t approximately $375,000. A similar- one is in process of erection in Louisville, Kentucky?all to the memory of a mother whose prayers, plus personal hustle and effort, have regenerated, made over and made prosperous a man who five short years ago was about down and out. Cadle's story is that of a man who not only "came back," but a man who, thankful for what the dice of fate had won for him, has given to Indianapolis one of the finest tabernaclei ever built in the country. A bronze tablet which adorns the entrance of the new Indianapolis tabernacle epitomizes Mr. Cadle's turn in life. The tablet reads: "Cadle Tabernacle?.erected by E. Howard Cadle in honor of his mother, whose prayers saved him from a drunkard's and a gambler's grave.-' Only five years ago Cadle, his wife and children were living in poverty ir. Orleans, Indiana. He was a porter in a saloon in that little town. Today he has a six-figure income, a fine home, servants, a luxurious town car, a walnut-finished, down-town office, the respect of the city and state, and, ' what he counts for most, a love of ' God in his heart. 1 Cadle, who was born ut Salem, Indiana, 37 years ago, has told Indian' apolis and Louisville audiences of his craze for gambling and drink. There ! seemed to have been nothing on which 5 he would not place a wager. He said ' that he one time placed a bet on two raindrops running down a board, gamI 1_1 ? ? ' ~ o:ing on one nrop to reaen trie bottom 1 first. He went from bad to worse, ^ until one day the doctor told him that i he had but a few months to live. Despondent, he tarried to hear Gip1 sy Smith preach. That night, with * tears in his eyes, he went home to his 5 prayerful mother, and on his knee:; promised her that he would live from r that day forward a Christian life. It * was not an easy task to regenerate ' himself and make good for his famf ily's sake. It was not an inspiration - to be forced to wield a mop on a janitor force at the Indiana state capitol, " but Cadle wielded it until he graduL ated from that lowly job. ? Finally, he got a job as an autcmo1 bile salesman and in his zeal to mak ^ good, he sold a car a day for a year " With the results of his efforts he paid " off his debts and invested $300 in a shoe repair business. Later oil, its ' the company developed, he disagreed ' with the other members of the firm ! and it was a case of get out himself or buy them out. He went to James P. Goodrich, former fovernor of Indiana, under whose administration in 1 the state house he was a wielder 6f ' the mop, and told him of his business 1 affairs. He asked for $25,000 and Mr. Goodrich, impressed with the story, ' wrote out a check for that amount. Cadle became president of the com1 pany and Mr. Goodrich became vice president. 1 Today Cadle's firm has a string of ' 16 shoe repair stores in nine cities of Illinois, Indiana and Ohio. ! There is a large-framed picture of the olive-skinned English evangelist, hanging on the wall of Cadle's business office, and to that picture every ' day Cadle lifts eyes of gladness as he ' bows before the memory of the man ' who helped him. In Louisville, a year ' ago, Cadle bought a lot and erected a permanent tabernacle in which to carry on the evangelistic work begun by Gipsy Smith. A bronze tablet r bears the same inscription that is 1 placed on the Indianapolis tabernacle. ! Postmaster General Issues Statement I ' Washington, Mav 2.?There is no f unimportant person or part of the i postal system, declared Postmaster 5 General Work in a statement which > he has issued to postal employes throughout the United States. Postil duties, he added, are accommodations performed for one's neighbors an-1 i friends and should he so regarded r "rather than as a hired service peri formed for an absentee employer." "The postal service of the United States," Dr. Work said, "affects more - people in this country either directly i or indirectly than any other agency - whether it be public or private. It t was established and is maintained for the benefit of and use of the people, by the people and for the people.' Our ideal service therefore, is that service which discharges all of the functions of the postal establishment to the sati isfaction of all of the people all of the . time." m Orchard and Garden Notes 1 Clemson College, May 8.?Spray [ grapes with Bordeaux Mixture as soon ps the flowers have dropped and the fruit set. To protect from birds and to prevent rot, bag the grapes when the berries are about the size of okra seed. Use No. 2 manilla bags for the Delaware and other small bunch varieties, and No. 3 bags for Niagara, Concord and other large bunch sorts. ! Make a slit in the bottom of the bag for drainage, and then slip the bag over the bunch and fold the comerB over and fasten with a pin. Cultivate the grapes throughout the growing season. Spray the apples with Bordeaux Don't Let >1:1 Your Money Loaf I i>< rvj ji >11 Money that you are not | *S<w3^Lusing right now in your I fanning or other business A 7 operations can be invested I / profitably with us in a I l^rE^BiSL ^ Certificate of Deposit. -I Certificates are made out I to suit your convenience M as to time, so that when- 1 , ^Q%tNn ever you nee<^ your funds I v> they will be available. Jj Interest begins the day the money is deposited. Nicholson Bank 8C Trust Co. I Union, S. C. | Union County's oldest, largest and strongest bank I Member Federal Reserve System I U. S. Government and State supervision I m* tcniirowCT I SPARTANBURG MINSTRFI. I 32 BLACK FACE COMEDIANS AT THE UNION HIGH SCHOOL Friday Night, May 12, at 8:30 Come! Plenty of Fun! Proceeds go to High School | Athletic Association. Admission 25c and 50c. ? sag A BANK of all the PEOPLE Our caption at once expresses a present fact and an ambition which will govern the policies of our bank throughout its future life. We believe that the nature of our business involves us in an obligation unto all who desire to enjoy the benefits of banking. These benefits are too valuable to be limited to any class or group. And it is our pleasure ?as well as our public duty in our opinion?to offer our facilities to all who choose to command us in their service. "Large Enough to Serve Any?Strong Enough to Protect All" C^IT l2LELNv3 NATIONAL BANK? Mixture and arsenate of lead during - the last week of Mav. I Remember that the peaches must I To Ladies Who Have be sprayed every two weeks with lime-sulphur Rpray for the control v 11 . n / of brawn rot. 1 Ollfct IT 6I6rCIlC6S Spray tomatoes with Bordeaux Mixture every two weeks fur the Ladie. can a)way, de. control of leaf disease. Plant tomato seed in May and pend upon us to supply any transplant during July in the garden or field. These will produce tomatoes thing and every thing in during September and October. Stone is a good late variety. toilet requirements. Not Cultivate and fertilize the asparagus bed so that the crowns may de- only do we carry America's velop properly during the summer , and be able to produce a heavy crop representative lines, but the of shoots next'summer. Remember . - . that the yield and quality of the most ">?"? ? ? ?arparagus depend largely upon the porte<j product*, too. treatment given the asparagus this year- Our prices are open to Plant bunch beans every ten days or two weeks fur succession of snap comparison. Remember, if beans. Bountiful, Black Valentine, . . , . and Giant Green Pud are Kood vari- " * ,n town w? h*ve " eties for the home garden. it?# no| Jn town, we'll be Cultivate the gardert after every rain to keep it absolutely free from glad to order it for you. grass and weeds, and to preserve Dust the Irish potatoes with arsen- 11M10M (10110 0T0DC ate of lead to kill the potato beetles. |lnl|ln IIVIfill A I BI f| f Also dust cabbage plants lightly with UIIUU V I Ullft. arsenate of lead to destroy cabbage * worms. Strike Disorders in Calcutta . . , . , u , Administrator s Notice Calcutta, May 8.?Some disorders h"ve '"""T1 ,r"m thf ?trike ?'em- All persons having claims against ploye-i of the East Indian Railway ^ of Ama?da Parr.v.ugha.i. which began February 22 ,n conse. de0<.aaed wj? ?t th? aa?c Ju| quence of a disagreement over wages. batad for ,ett|ement and p,r. The strikers at Anasol burned the Bons ow| the ,ajd e8tate temporary quarters occupied by the forward at once and ma|le Mttl,m).nt. workers there and this started a fra- ^ j g gcw?eH cas between the worker, and the strik- Administrator. era. two of whom were injured. Mag- Union, s. C? May 9- 1922. 6.12.19.26 istrates at Allahabad and Dhanbad _ have prohibited gatherings of more than 10 men because the strikers were I holding mass meetings and intimidat- I Yf . EDGAR. 3 lasso Iks, 1 L n. ?- -A tug vi*?; cmpiujrrD WflU WttllLl'U U) WOrK. More than half the Calcutta subur- Funaral Director ban trains, which usually carried And Embalmer about 30,000 passengers each way daily, have been discontinued owing to Ambulance Service the*tr,ke- s . . . . Night Phone 311?Day Phoae.J29 The secretary of the Indian Labor Association has called for a confer- Next door to Flynn-Vincetof ence of railway delegates to be ,beld . Shoe Store ' at Anasol to discuss tetms of atttlt-: W- t *1. 1 L. ? ment which have been offered by the .WW-. * -M East Indian Railway. Subscribe to The Union Timet, 1 * " . 1