The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, May 10, 1922, Image 4

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RIALTOI TODAY THOMAS MEIGHAN ?IN? "A PRINCE THERE WAS" From George M. Cohan's play based on "Enchanted Hearts'" AI.SO CLYDE COOK IN "THE TOREADOR" TOMORROW ALICE LAKE i "THE I HOLE IN THE WALL" | Safe and Powerful , We Recommend "NO. 6" DISINFECTANT i As the ideal Household Disinfectant M ahes a safe, milk-white I emulsion when mixed with either hot or cold water, contains powerful germkilling and cleansing nroD erties. ' Approximately ten times safer than Carbolic Acid, and yet the most powerful disinfectant of its type that can still be offered at a reasonable price. Two Sizes 25c 50c STORM'S DRUG STORE Bees that swarm in the spring make little honey. SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS MILCH COWS FOR SALE?Several milch cows for sale; prices reason uue. Airs. M. K. I'ittman, Carlisle,' _s_c: I l OR RF.NT?Four ( I) room house on YVnrillaw street; lights anil \vat"r;' $10.00 per month. See W. K. Cireen. i:i7">-2t pn 1 ' | No. 1040 No. XA 10 K..-* C! ">* ?vw vv XU WU3W O'i I Size .'{<> requires? 1010?.'1 1-1 yards /Ml-inch lin dress (a $1.00 2 yards 40-inch organ* Mouse and trimming <>n (ii) 7Re I 1 yards orgnr.dy pod Mouse (td .15c I Pictorial Review Dress Findings Will cost you eompleti Size .'lf> requires? 1017?I :5-K yards 40-inch dotted 0.1c VH yard 10-inch organdy ( 1 1-4 yards frilling (ft) /IRc I Pictorial Review dress | Findings Will cost you cnmplet Women's Emerge Near Ea! 1. Mr*. Philip North Moore. 2. Mr*. Cai Thomas G. Winter. 4. Mr*. Frank A. 6. Mr*. George I Those six women ami over fifty are making: an emergency appeal to t threat of death that hangs over the cl WOMEN MEET CRISIS IN NEAR EAST RELIEF; Sponsor Lives of 25,000 Children to Keep Them Frnm Starvinn I Twelve million women In America are rallying to the cry of the starving j children cared for by Near East Relief in Constantinople and Asia Minor. Lack < f funds has forced the organization to make a 23 per cent cut in ' its orphanage appropriations during the spring months, when relief work ! is more seriously needed than at any ' other time during the year. Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt lias formed a Women's Emergency Committee of representative women from every corner of the land. The committee represents 12.000,000 American women, and they appeal to the motherhood of America to save the 23,000 children [ now under sentence of death because of the cut by Near East Relief. It must be a super-gift, the women say, and must lie added over and above to j whatever gifts their communities may have made during the year to the work of Near East Relief. Mrs. Vanderlip a Witness Mrs. Frank A. Vanderlip, recently returned from the Near East, says: "Galsworthy said that one of the striking American qualities is a deep adoration for nil children. Not just one's own. hut for every child anyone of us meets anywhere. When I saw the pale, thin faces, dumb, hopeless eyes and the emaciated bodies under the scanty clothes of the refugee children in the Near East I longed to bring home to the child-loving people here a poignant appeal tor help tu save their lives and restore childish peace to their hearts. The respect whieh knowing iWfc. Why Pay 50 or 45 C rf-jP When yo !\ Pictorial HI Dress I ;v\ the best, most i economical of mh 20? t None i y-l*-;.;. f j-'J jr dA child can lay out a | / PICTORIAL REV I i l i fHr ?*klke Itrtpif tki VV< ' Patented Cutting an ^ Construction Guide ^ ^ fwrnuktJ free wuh every rr "' "V* J?j Pxtorut Renew Pattern oothful or in ception, the sr relies for its effer 1017 the charm of new m at< to 48 bust out reason, for this Summer fabrics have < creating designs of v hams, particularly, sh< of modish patterns, and cotton Sponges WILB ly fur 2 DRY G r?i COMP c . . . $f>.21 s* S2SI You save frors ?) 7.r?.. .17 yards of mr.terial .11 Review Patterns, rmttern .3? from 50c to $11 r?o garment. - . . . $1.60 i? ncy Committee, st Relief rrie Chapman Catl, chairman. 3. Mrs. Vanderlip. S. Mrs. Jo?ephu? Daniels. Maynard Minor. others equally well-known nationally he women of the land to defeat the lildren of the Near East. these people gives one buses my tH? sire to save these children on a serious recognition of the terrible loss tin world will sustain If this fine popula tion perishes." Near East ltellef officers estimate that if the women of the United States will keep 2.1,000 children alive it wll do possimo id moot me neous ?>r tin other 7."?,000 under erlcan care ani protection in the Nea hist. Anions; the women who compose tin Women's Emergency Committee thai will make every effort to "finish tin Job" are: Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, chnlr man; Mrs. Philip North Moore, Mrs Thomas <?. Winter, Mrs. (leorge May nard Minor, Mrs. Josephus Daniels Mrs. Frunk A. Vanderllp, Miss lUps West, Miss Anna A. Cordon, Mrs. I.em Fake Forrest^ Mrs. Ellie J.lnes Chapin I THERE'S ALWAYS FUN WITH A BR Thousands of youngst pictures, with a Brownie. Playmates, pets, gai chronicle of childhood th working camera makes pos BROWNIES UNION DI II et us develop your serv'ce in town. ents for other patterns u can get J&f*I Review Patterns itylish and most \:?yr ll/l; !-, all patterns, at il l*'o 35c P| Higher fit J tewpahtern ii: le nnd simple In con- VN nart Summer frock \/ rtiveness chiefly upon ?rials. And not with- N?year the makers of Siz?i_34 to < jutdone themselves in inusual chic. Ging- ? -?**" 3W the widest variety and swisses, linens are most attractive. ;URN ~lsy 7 1-4 ya OODS derhody 1 Pictori ANY <s 91)97-4 1-2 ya ham (fi> < , _ , , . 1-4 yard r> 1-2 to 11-4 for trimi with Pictorial 1-2 y?r< , . collar, < thereby saving minf, ^ 3.00 on each I Pict^ri Findings Will Mrs. Agnes H. farker, Mrs. Percy V. I'ennypackec, Mr*. Mary Roberts Reinliart, Misa lana Add.ims, Professor Vlda Scudder, Mrs. Livingston Rowe Schuyler, Mrs. MUlhank Johnson, Mrs. Helen Barrett Montgomery, Miss Mary Emma Woolley, Mrs. George Horace Lorlmer, Doctor Esther Lovejoy, Mrs. William Atherton Dupuy, Mrs. Eugene J. Grant, Mrs. Milton P. ^ilggins, Miss C'hnrl Ormond Williams, Mrs. Frederick Abbott, Mrs. Charles E. Wolberl, Mrs. James W. Reinlck, Mrs. Florence Spencer Duryoa, Mrs. Frank J. Sliuler, Mrs. Robert J. lleed, Mrs. Coleman (lu Pont, Mrs. Robert E. Speer, Mrs. Medlll McCortnlck, Mrs. Lizzie George Henderson, Mrs. Henry Morgenthnu, Mrs. Cleveland II. Dodge, Mrs. William Frnser McDowell, Mrs. Mury LaRocca, Mrs. Clarence F. It. Jenne, Mrs. John S. Drui 1, _Miss Rose Brenner, Miss Ellzalx h Marbury, Miss Mury Mullett, Mrs. Edwin M. Bulkley, Mrs. Harold A. Hatch, Miss Agnes Pelton, Mrs. John 11. Flnley, Miss Julia Lnthrop, Miss Lillian Wnld, Miss Alice Stone Black well, Mrs. Webster Fox, Jr., Miss Jane J. Martin, Mrs. Minnie Maddern Flske. Mrs. H. L. Bobbins, Mrs. Harriet Taylor Upton, Mrs. William M. Cong don, Mrs. Waiter W. Slack. Mrs. Joseph Irwin France. Shop From Which Tea Was Shipped in 1773 London, May 8.?In Gracechurch Lane, an obscure byway just outside "one of London's busiest commercial centers, American tourists may see over a grocer's store the "Sign of the Crown and Three Gilt Sugar Loaves" that marks the location of the shop whence the tea was shipped in 1773 - that ultimately went overboard in ' Boston Harbor during the world's fai mous tea party. Only the sign, which was but re, cently restored and which benrs in big , gold numerals "1650", the year the 1 firm was established is suggestive of j remote times. The grocer's shop, con1 ducted by descendants of the firm's founders, over which the sign hangs, is now housed in a modern brick build1 ing. Inside nothing distinguishes the place from thousands of similar . places of business. First steel car ever brought south was used by Gen. Sherman as an am\ munition car in his advance on At* lanta in 1864. mmmmmammmmmmmmmmmmmm MORE OWNIE ALONG ers are making pictures, good mes?here's material for a tat this efficient and simpletsible. $2.00 to $5.00 ?UG STORE" films. The quickest and best 13* - i 14 ^ 50 Lust) c; I I W sr^Vo6^: | J iize 36 requires? ards 40-inch Voile or B 75c $2.90 10-inch organdy @ 75c .28 rds organdy frilling ? " 2.54 I 36-inch lining for unfa) 49c ,. : 43 ial Review dress pattern .35 60 cost you complete . . . $7.10 iize 36 require*? rds 32-inch check gingr>9c $3.11 I 32-inch plain ginghnm ning hand 69c. 18 1 40-inch organdy for ufTs and pocket trim75c 38 ial Review dress pattern .35 Z 50 cost you complete . . . $4.52 v ? 4 ttt - * , J Repatriation of Russian Soldiers Riga, Latvia, May 8.?Repatriation of the hundreds of thousands of officers and soldiers captured by the Russians during the world war has nearly been completed. Thousands of Germans, Austrians, Hungarians and soldiers of various other nationalities, whom the Russians took prisoner, have married and decided to remain indefinitely in the Soviet country. An ong a detachnent of former Hunj. arian officers passing through Riga recently en route home was Counl Valentine Szechenyi, whose cousin married Miss Gladys Vanderbilt, of New York, the Count being accompanied by his wife, a young Russian woman, Princess Mary Galitzin. The story of the marriage of the Count and the Princess, which took place a year ago, was published in America at that time. The Count was permitted to leave a Soviet prison under guard, long enough for the wedding ceremony. Immediately afterward he was returned to Andronyevsky prison, near Moscow, where there was a wedding breakfast of Hack bread, tea and coffee made of toasted gr-ain, a substitute used extensively in Germany and other countries cut oil from the outside world during the war. The Count and Countess, trarelinp under auspices of the International Red Cross with 300 other prisoner? I of war, were taken from Riga to Budapest. Later they planned to go tc Constantinople possibly to make theii home. Count Szechenyi and the other Hungarians, many of whom were officers taken prisoner in 1915, were exchanged by the Soviets for an equal numhei of Communists who had been in jai in Hungary. The Count learned to speak perfect Russian during his seven years' im prisonment, and before his discharge had beet me a first-class electrician having charge of the prison lightint: system. Countess Szechenyi speak: splendid English, learned as a child Jind nlnnc snnn tn uicil Amorinn Poincare Says Council Is Movie Shovk Paris, May 9.?Premier Poincar< was quoted, before he took up th< reins of government, as chacterizinj the conferences of the Supreme Coun cil as a 'moving picture show.' H announced when he took office tha he disapproved of this sort of travel ing caravan of Allied statesmei around Europe. lie was obviously ill at ease on thi occasion of Prime Minister Lloy< George's flying stop in Paris on th way to Genoa to find himself cornr ed with Lioyd George in the com partnient of a sleeping car with n curtains to shut out the gaze of th indiscreet, no way of escape and doz ens of cameras levelled at hiri through the window. He gave unmistakable signs of re lief when the train pulled out ani gave little chance to photographed or reporters. He jumped to the plat form and strode rapidly to his auto mobile. Peaceful Again At State Prisoi Peace and discipline reign again ii the South Carolina penitentiary fol lowing the mutiny of 150 prisoner; Monday afternoon when 11 prisoner: and one guard were injured, the pen ;tentiary guard, reinforced by county and city officers quelling the insur lection only by the use of firearms.The 150 men, who were locked ii iheir cells immediately after the dem onstration Monday afternoon, wert put back to work at the usual houi yesterday morning and were at theii benches all day without any unto ward incidents, the afternoon and night in the cells having apparently had a salutary effect upon them. Th? men, prison officials report, showei little of the surliness and dissatis faction that was evident Monday when they were marched back to thei> cells under the threatening guns o! officers. County and city officers visited the penitentiary yesterday morning in anticipation of anothei outbreak and would have been ready to lend assistance if further trouble had developed. Of the 14 prisoners injured in thi riot only one, Nathan Rosen, is nov thought to be in a serious condition Rosen, who is serving an 18 months sentence for forgery from Kershav county, was shot once in the abdo men, the bullet perforating the intes tines five times. Rosen was carrie( o the Columbia hospital where lit was operated upon Monday after . tt:~ ?i* a . * .iuuii. ms conumon yesieruay was still considered dangerous, little change for either good or bad being observed. James H, Faulkner, who was also carried to the hospital suffering from bullet wounds in the hip and left arm, was reported as showing expected improvement and is nov thought to be out of all danger. The 11 men, given treatment at the penitentiary infirmary, all showed improvement yesterday and one, Albert lee, who was shot in the finger, wa? released from the infirmary. Severa others are expected to leave the infirmary in the next few days, since all of the men under treatment there, with the exception of Howard S. Clarke, life timer from Florence county, who had his ankle broken by n bullet, suffered only flesh wounds. A bow and a set of arrows, more than 4,000 years old, which came from n tomb in Egypt, are among the antiques owned by the Royal Archery Society of London. ^SSSCSSyBCBSBSSSBSSSBSSSfSSS Don't Let Your Money Loaf r , Money that you are not using right now in your fanning or other business If Islr y operations can be invested i Wprofitably with us in a ^ Certificate of Deposit. I 7? Certificates are made out to suit your convenience as to time, so that whenever y?u nee<^ your funds ifanS v>\ tLey will be available. Interest begins the day the money is deposited. Nicholson Bank 8C Trust Co. Union, S. C. j Union County's oldest, largest and strongest bank Member Federal Reserve System * i 1 U. S. Government and State supervision 1 o.r* vu mrrrw mrn rum ] SPARTANBURG MINSTREL J 32 BUCK FACE COMEDIANS ; 8 AT THE I UNION HIGH SCHOOL - I Friday Night, May 12, at 8:30 ' 9 Come! Plenty of Fun! Proceeds go to High School, < m > I Athletic Association. Admission 25c and 50c. JL^Ul'N 1 IIS. I TO Save MONEY! ri Verily, it will do no good for you to try?unless e there's iron in your blood, and sheer strength in your :1 spinal column. For no mollycoddle ever built up a e really creditable savings account! A savings account proves the mettle of its owner as 0 few other tests could. A savings account shows whether one is bred for success?or otherwise. And -if you can save money?there's no other quality you need for ??? n success and achievement. "I^rge Enough to Serve Any?Strong Enough to Protect All" ! CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK* 1 . 1 . . . ^et us get I better acquainted 1 with the best tJhings of life | : Here is headquarters for Candies ; the Sampler and other n ? -? ? - - Remember Mother's Day, Sunday, May 14 SEND HER WHITMAN'S PEOPLES DRUG STORE Phones 68-69 , . Thank God, pedestrians don't hav-3 In parts of Switzerland a maid be! to lose time changing gears when comes engaged to a man if she secluding a speeder.?Trinidad (Colo.) cepts from him a bouquet of eidelPicketwire. weiss. a . v * - MxL<jn!San