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THE UNION TIMES Publiiknl Daily Except Sunday By I HE UNION TIMES COMPANY Lrwii M. Kicc Editor lt> wintered at tile Pontolliee in Union, S. C . I ? second clai.'< matter, I ones Uuildi | Main Street Bell Telephone No. I SUBSCRIPTION RATES II ie Year $1 00 S< Month-. 2 00 '1 .roe Month.. 1.00 ADVER IISEMEN TS One Snuare. first insertion J 1 00 T cry sut? . iuent insertion &0 Ol'itua-y notice., Church und l-odtfc n dice-, and notice;- of pub'ic meeting*. int. rtuinm- nt. and Cards of Thanhs will be charged f< r at the rate of one Cent a word, o -h n- pan. m- the order. Count the \* -rd. and i wi I know what the co.t w II he MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS Th. A ted Pro.. i* exclusively entitled t t>- use for republication of new* >1 .patches -ted * ! to it or not otherwise e-edited i it 'li paper, and nlso the local r. ws pulil h-d therein Till* USD AY, JUNK 8. ll>22. The boll weevil, alone with other i >ntributinp forces, is poinp to help lis to a complete change of method in f irniinp ami to a very radical change in the > i f : he a'aiajtt farm. The farm of larpe area will have to po. 'i he unproductive acres will have to 1? idle, Viifs will be a blessinp, not a curse. It will mean hipher cultivation. pivater production. The countiy would soon be in very much better shape if the number of small farms was mul'iplied. I arpe farms, allowed to po down, cannoi yield a profit, canit >t even hoid topether. Dr. Walker, who l a ' " n preachi; p for ten days in evan,;'"listie 1 .eetinp at the First Baptist church said in his sermon last nipht: "Fruit is the manifestation of abundant life." And there was never a truer word spoken. "The sap rises. rises and after a time pushes through the rente. >? twigs and fotves fruit." It was a beautiful way to express a profound truth Fruit i- the product of abounding life. Nothing dead bears fruit; nothing sick hears much fruit. Full fruitage reveals heali.ii. strength, vitality. If We know the other man's bur dens \w would often judge him more mercifully. If we had to assume hi. responsibilities we would probably fail to meet them as bravely as he meets them. We exact of others greater faithfulness than we ourselves would render, and set a standard for them that we do not measure up to. It would be a great thing f ?v all of us if we could put ourselves in the other fellow's place before we condemn him. At M * e vil day s in.i liu- p . To nun nee of one (jood deed. * Our i a! ays Ilcmy 1'ord as president. tijjit not he so had. < O 9 Our eat says governments that are wasteful will nmie to poverty. ? ? Our eat says much money is out hid int.'. # Our eat says those who carry hale it the hi'a t will come to tfrief. + ? Our ml <nys graf.ers n >ver helo build a nation. * Our i r say- laws honestly enforced tend to the safety of the state. * Our cat says less talking and mare doing is needed in th land. * Our cat says a ri'/ht beginning pre diets a right ending. Our cat says lovers of truth delight to speak it. Our cat says he makes his ]>o!iticn! bow to the new mayor. % *? ?J? % ?|? *** *? J# ?J? ?J? ?* ?* *? ?|? | DR. H. K. SMITH j | Dentist | I | T Office Over Itiallo Theatre 3 T Office Hours: 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. $ ? i Notice to Public I will serve ice cream at the city park Saturday night. Music will be furnished by the Union concert band. 'I he candidates are invited. Everybody tenie and have a good time. 6-6-8-9. J. W. Dridgers. Prince of Wales Purchases Fine Horses Calgary, Alta., June ">.?Four thoroughbred race stallions and five mares have been shipped from England by the Prince of Wales to his ranch near High River, Alta., which he purchased when he visited Canada in 1919. One of the stallions was purchased in England recently by his royal highness for $">5,000. The other animals are said to represent some of the best racing lines in the British Isles. The consignment of horses arrived in <. barge of a special staff sent over from one of the prince's English farms. The animals will be used for breeding purposes. Two years ago, Prince Edward sent over his shipment of horses, cattle and sheep which were to form the foundation of the herds on bis Alberta farm. In addition to thoroughbred race horses, it included Shorthorn cattle, Shropshire sheep and Dartmoor ponies. These animals have been exhibited at fairs in Western Canada and have carried otr many blue ribbons. They have increased substantially and there is a promising number of young animals in the prince's pastures. Most r it. i :a :.. i l rr i oi ino mail'*, u ijs sum, wui uo unorou for salt* to raise the standard of Western Canadian stock by the introduction of this new blood. Working Women Organized Waukegan, 111., June 4.?Organized working women from all parts of the country and from virtually every occupation will attend the eighth biennial convention of the Women's Trade Union League here starting today and continuing until June 10. The Women's Trade Union League of Chicago will be the hostess organization. The meeting plate is about thirty miles from Chicago. Committees of delegates will be appointed to consider unemployment, foreign affairs, education, legislation, organization of Leagues and the ccopcrative movement. The affiliated membership of the League included national, international and local unions with women members affiliated with the \nierivun Federation of I>abor, as well as thousands of members-at-large, among them many women and men not themselves wage-earners but allies of the labor movement. The organization seeks to further the organization of working women into trade unions under the American Federation of Labor, to broaden the educational opportunities of workers, and to "create a public opinion which understands the labor movement." The officers who signed the convention call are: president, Mrs. Ray i n m /-*!-: _ mono iiooins 01 v,nicago; vice pres-1 idont, Miss Rose Schneiderman of New York of the Cloth and Cap Makers: secretary-treasurer, Miss Elizabeth Christman of Chicago of the Glove Makers Union. Baltimore plans to spend $.r>0,000, 000 in thfr development of its poit facilities. Subscrihe to The Union Time?. GO TO J. 0. FOR PRIC Pure Apple Vinegar, per gallon . Kinghan lib Sliced Bacon VL'lt) Walter Baker's Cocoa .. .. >1 lb Walter Baker's Cocoa Cigarettes, per carton Kerosene, per gallon Post Toasties and Corn Flakes, pe 2f>ib sacks sugar '! 100 lb sacks Sugar r* 8 lb buckets Lard Loose Compound I.*ard, per pound ^ 81b buckets Snowdrift \ Heavy, fresh Fatback, i>er pound 1 pint Wesson Oil 1 quart Wesson Oil 'u Vi gallon Wesson Oil All 20c Cigarettes for 1A11 10c Snuff .1 for All 2.r>c plugs Tobacco, 2 for . . Pineapple, sliced and grated, No. No. Dessert Peaches, per can .. lioose Vinegar, per gallon Best Pink Salmon, per can .. . . , Plain Flour, per barrel Self Rising Flour, per barrel .. . Buckingham Flour, per barrel .. Best drain or Ground Coffee, per i 1 lb can Franco-American Coffee 1 M. ir c./r? * ii/ ?t nut* ii?u>e L/Uiit'e Maxwell House Coffee, per pound Host Cream Cheese, per pound .. Home Ground Meal, per bushel .. Arm & Hammer Soda, 6 for .... 6 boxes Searchlight Matches for . , Chicken Feed, per 100 pounds .. . Horse Feed, per 100 pounds .. .. . 7.">lb sacks Bran and Shorts, whi 11 1 IT) Best Red Salmon, per can . . ; l.oose Garden Seed Beans, per qua ?| 2111) Peerless Plain Flour 'IK 1T> Peerless Plain Flour < 2111) Occoneechee Self Rising Flou is lb Occoneechee Self Rising Flo LJ. 0. G I'hone :m IBHBMHMHHHn Recalls Charge of The Light Brigad< Cedar Rapids, la., May ft.?Elli Cutting of this city rode into the va! ley of death with the immortal 600. Sitting at his home here this ma who rode "into the jaws of death, int the mouth of hell," recalls the chart; of the Light Brigade at Balaklava i the Crimean war. He saw Capt, N< lan, suave young aid-de-camp of H British commander, Lord Raglan, das up and hand Ix>rd Lucan, cavalry con mander, a note. Mr. Cutting, then 17-year-old British trooper, did ni know what the note contained. Hi tory says it contained these terse o tiers: "Lord Raglan wishes the cavalry advance rapidly to the front and ti to prevent the enemy carrying aw; the guns?French cavalry is 0:1 yoi left." Cutting saw his commander thru that note into his glove beL.ro i bearer rode away. "Forward, the Light Brigade." The command rang. There was flash of sabers. Down into the va ley dashed the line of British hors men, to certain destruction. Cutting, who for 45 years was railroad employe at Iowa Falls ai Cedar Falls, retired two years ago ai is now making his home in this cit He is enow 8ft years old and was when he enlisted in the Eleventh IIu sars of her Majesty, Queen Victori Mr. Cutting believes he is among tl last, if not the last, of the men wl were immortalized by Tennyson. He vividly recalls the charge. I says he saw nothing, knew nothin heard nothing but felt within him tl insane urge that drove him forwai with a furious desire to bury his sab* in a Russian breast. "The Light Brigade," Mr. Cuttir says, "was composed of the Fouri and Thirteenth Dragcons, the Eighl and Eleventh Hussars and the Sevei teenth Lancers. It was command* by Lord Cardigan. The men wore r< trousers and blue jackets which gaii ed for them the name of 'Cherrylegs. "The Brigade had been lying ina tive during the progress of the figh hig until the order to charge cam The battle had hardly begun until was over. Blindly a few straggler clambering over moaning comradt struggling through heaps of dead ai dying, horses and men in death throe pools of blood, fought they way to tl rear of the line." Mr. Cutting disagrees with histoi as to the number who returned. I says there were only six. He was asked what was the seed of the futile and merciless comman Cutting said Lord Raglan denied Lord Lucan that he had ever given tl order to charge, and that then Lo Lucan pulled the order from his glo' where he had tucked it. "Is that your handwriting?" Lo Lucan asked. Mr. Cutting does not know wh the reply was, but for ten minut he saw them engaged in a battle words. He believes Lord Raglan ga it in good faith but that instead rushing in the cavalry, the infant should have been sent in to maneuv< After the Crimean war, Mr. Ci ting went to India with the Briti troops, and passed through the mu ny. He marched from Delhi to Luc now and fouerht in that famous siet Once he was wounded. He pass through Egypt and was in active s< vice in South Africa in 1857. In Jul I860, he received his discharge frc the British army, and in 1871 he cai to the United States. lULT E AND QUALITY 50c 45c 20c 10c $1.35 15c r box 10c $1.65 $6.20 $1.30 15r $1.10 14c 30c 50c 95c 15c 25c 45c 2 25c 30c 40c 15c $7.75 $7.90 and $K.OO $7.90 pound 20c 35c 40c 40c 30c ...... in 2.r?c 35c $2.25 $2.00 and $2.25 te cotton baprs $1.55 25c irt 30c $1.25 $2.40 r $1.30 ur $2.50 AULT N. Pinckney Street Speakers at Institute s Of Homeopathy js Chicago, 111., June 6.?Three hundred and twelve physicians and surgeons are listed as speakers or leadn ers of discussions on the program of ? the seventy-eighth annual meeting of I the American Institute of HomeoII pathy, to be held here June 18-23. One hundred and fifty-six Chicago ^ doctors have been appointed on 21 committees on entertainment of delegates. Speakers will include Brig. ^ Gen. C. E. Sawyer, President Harding's personal physician and head of S, the United States Public Health Service; I>r. 'Royal S. Copeland, to health commissioner of New York; ,v Dr. Fergie Woods, of London, Eng., secretary of the International HomeLU. opathic Congress; and Admiral W. C. Braisted, chief medical officer of the st United States Navy. ts Topics on the program will range from the soles of the feet to the functions of the brain, a a . ...... l'* Advertise in The Times; get results. e- . a TIME IS THE TEST id id The Testimony of Union People y. Stands the Test. 17 s- The test of time is what tells the a. tale. The public soon finds out v.hen misrepresentations are made, and merit alone will stand the test of time. lp Union people appreciate merit, and ft. many months ago local citizens pub1C licly endorsed Doan's Kidney Pills; l-d they do so still. Would a citizen make fr the statement which follows unless convinced that the article was just as represented ? Below is testimony such as the sufferer from kidney ills ^ is looking for. n" Miss Beatrice Hughes, 103 W. Main St., Union, gave the following ?ti statement March 4th, 1918: "I had n~ trouble with my kidneys. My head ached so that I sometimes thought c* it would split with the pains. I also had nervous and dizzy spells. My ie> kidneys did not act right at all. I 1#' bought a box of Doan's Kidney Pills R' at the Palmetto Drug Co., and they !R' soon relieved me. After I had taken 1( two boxes of Doan's I was cured." 's' On January 26, 1922, Miss Hughes e added: "When I used Doan's Kidney Pills some years ago they gave me relief from kidney complaint. I have hud but little use for a kidney medicine of late. I gladly confirm by former statement." ^ Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy?get r(j Doan's Kidney Pills?the same that Miss Hughes had. Foriter-Milburn 16 Co., Mfgrs., Buffalo, N. Y. rd " ==? at "The Best ionDuug Store Goods, es the Best In Drag Store Service." ?* Motto of the International As%<" sociation of Rexall Clubs. of l. ??*?. MBled with Blue Rlbboa. V/ k" m eh Wl T?ho mb other. Hut of ramr V re PL- 2r ? 5 V V* H jrc?r? knows B*B?<t.Sa(c*t,A1wayiRelUblB 1 "N r Rfil ft RY flftllfifiKT^ FVFDVUMFDF ? WE HAVE 110 JUST THE THING 1Y0U WANT IN DRUGS Try us and see. "The Money Savers." PALMETTO DRUG CO. The Home of Pure Drugfl and Druggist** Sundries. IHER AILMENTS ALL GONE NOW Mrs. Sherman Helped by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Lake, Michigan. ?"Aboutoneyoar ago 11 Buffered with irregularities and a weaknneas and a t times was obliged to stay off my feet. I doctored with our family physician and he finally said he !"WW. KEEP!H my case, so 1 aocuiea |'jp - w? ami totrvLydiaE. PinkliL hamTa Vegetable Iflli rttfml Compound. After I 11 If |M1 had taken the first II' *'*#38*11 bottle I could see wwbI that I was getting better. I took several ottles of the Vegetable Compound and used Lydia E. Pink ham's Sanative Wash and I am entirely cured of my ailments. You may publish this letter if you wish."?Mrs. Mary Sherman, Route2, Lake, Mich. There is one fact women should consider and thatis this. Women suffer from ; irregularitiesand various forms of weaki ness. They try this and that doctor, as t well as different medicines. Finally they ! take Lydia E. Pinkham's Compound, andMrs. Sherman's experience is simply another case showing the merit of tnis well-known medicine. If your family physician fails to help you and the same old troubles persist, why isn't it reasonable to try Lvdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound? Taste is a matter of tobacco quality We state it as our honest belief that the tobaccos used in Chesterfield are of finer quality (and hence of better taste) than in any other cigarette at the price. Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. 'J ( 20 for 18c 10 for 9c Vacuum tins of iiO - 45c SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS I THE MASTER CORD TIRE is the I tire for your pleasure ear or deliv- I ery wagon, using 30x3% inch or I 31x4 clincher rims. Price $14.00. I For sale by Smith's Tire Shop, Un- I ion, S. C. E. M. Hightower, Buffalos I S. C-. and C. O TTio-Vitnwer Mnn. I arch Mills, Union, S. C. 1399-2tpd THE BEST TONIC in the world is Dr. M. D. Huiet's Chill Buster. For sale at the Palmetto Drug Co. FOR SALE?Soy and velvet beans. .Now is the time to plant. J. W. Gilbert. MONEY TO LOAN?$100 to $500 on city or country property. Also in terested in discount, paper. S. E. Barron. 138fi-tf WE CAN NICKEL PLATE your automobile radiators, head lights, head \.,At reflectors, spot lights and I bumt>*rs. Never junk a piece of metal Because it looks bad, we can replate it. Columbia Electro Plating Works, 1110 Taylor St., Columbia, S. C. 1382-30t YOUR DOCTOR'S PRESCRIPTIONS can be filled at "The Money Savers,'' Palmetto Drug Co. AS BARNES' SHOW CASE you paTs by, just pause a little while; look "Tootsey Wootsey" in the eye and see the babies smile. 1392-tf FOR SALE?Knabo piano, in splendid condition, reasonable price. Apply to Mrs. S. Krass, S. Mountain street. 1382-Th-tf FOR RENT?An ideal house, close in. all modern improvements, bath, built in china closet, garage, stable orchard, big lot, sleeping porch in splendid residential section of city. Apply to Mrs. S. Krass, S. Mountain street or The Wonder Store. 1382-Mo-Th-Sat-tf FOR SPEEDY RELIEF for croup, give the baby and children Dr. M. D. Huiet's Croup Mixture. For sale at the Palmetto Drug Co. FOR QUICK SERVICE PHONE 167 We call and deliver your clothing in a dust-proof motorcycle. We remove spots and stains from clothing without injuring either the fabric or the color. Our modern methods make clothes look like new, in the shortest possible time. Give me a trial. I certainly will appreciate it as much or more than anyone else. Hames Pressing and Repair Shop Nicholson Bank Building Phone 167 ; ALL KINDS OF CEMETERY WORK I Union Marble & Granite Co. Main St. Union, S. C. H. W. EDGAR I Funeral Director And Embalrtier Ambulance Service Night Phone 311?Day Phone 129 ! Ne*t door to Flynn-Vincent Shoe Store Yellow was the popular color for wedding gowns in ancient Rome. strength. In f>4 cases in a hundred the I left Is stronger than the right. Chesterfield CIGARETTES of Turkish and Domestic tobaccos?blended * iLiA J' HOME CANNING MADE EASY! Food conservation is a mighty factor in the progress : of civilization. With the above machine the problem is j solved. You can can from your garden all.you will need t ' of fruits, berries and vegetables for the entire year. ; Come in and let us demonstrate the value of the wonder* ful little machine. No soldering, no standing over a hot fire. Simple, scientific, sane. LEWIS M. RICE At The Union Times Office. _ .. Winter Cold and Absence J jg Renew the health, strength ami vitality of your horses, mules, cattle, I hogs and poultry. Get maximum results in health, growth and pro9 dnetion. Spring ie the time for renewal in all nature. You can best j$ caro for your worn out and sick live stock by using I Remedies | They restore health, bring back vigor and strength, and inercaso fl production. Thero ip a specific Caro-Vet treatment prepared by th? I ablest veterinarians lor each live stock disease and disorder. | A Few Special Remedies 1 ^or Spring Use: X. Caro-Vet Condition Powder for w X.. \ horses, mules and cattle, price 75c. M aBff 1 Caro-Vet .Swine Condition Pow- I H J Caro-Vct Egg-Produecr, price V AgUu^g^JB 3 Caro-Vct Tonic for rnulos H g Sold by general stores and drug stores, under a positive guarantee I of satisfactory results, or money refunded. Your dealer carries a com- "' H plete lino of Caro-Vct Remedies. By, ? We are sending FREE to each farmer an authoritative book of 8 0 48 pages "Farmers' Veterinary Guide", which gives the symptoms R S and tells how to treat live stock diseases. Ask for your copy. * ffi 1 CAROLINA REMEDIES CO., Inc., Mfgrs., UNION, S. C. I NOTICE! I , THE BOSTON SHOE AND ELECTRIC' SHOE REPAIRING SHOP Has moved to South Pinckney St., in McLure building. Your patronage will be appredated. We are doing cheaper work. than anybody in town: Men's half soles, $1.00; Ladies', 85c, using best grade leather and guaranteed work. # .