The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, June 30, 1922, Image 3
r -i *-' 7- ? ' Sf. . . " ' v. -*.**
'Every I
pull
STRO
fifteen t
cigarettes j|
"S^
A Movie Stay o
??m u m.
No
Found,?that glorious frdlnc that <
eomta with a clear, pure, ruddy cum- <
Olexlon. I
Winter Cold a
y 1 Green Stufl
B3PSt5i**K J Feed Leaves L
J Run Down C
the Spring.
Kenfew the health, strength and vitai
hogs and poultry. (Jet maximum re
duction. Spring ie the time for rent
care for your worn out and sick live*
?"yEf R
^ They restore health, bring back v
production. There is a specific Can
ablest veterinarians lor each live 8
A Few Special C
Caro-Vet Condit
\ horses, mules and c
1 Caro-Vet Swine
MawWli|W|ftj| I dor, price 2.rjc.
# Caro-Vet Egg-I
nHWF^ / 60c.
1 Caro-Vet Tonic f
S vfmd cattle, price '
ISold by general stores and drug
of satisfactory results, or money refi
plete line of Caro-Vet Remedies.
We are sending FREE to each
<48 pages "Farmers' Veterinary Gu
and tells how to treat live stock dis
CAROLINA REMEDIES CO., ]
Movies as Trade Makers
The desire to be shown is not confined
to Missouri. It is universal.
Particularly is this true with matters
of business where one's wealth, goods,
happiness, and livelihood are involved.
For example, imagine with what
cerlerity a Dominican agriculturalist
who has tilled the "sabanas" all his
life with a single plow and an ox
would reward the efforts of a young
Yankee salesman to sell him in nightschool
Spanish on the ease and
rapidity of using a modern tractor
with gang plows. The answer would
A
"Show me, Senor," and without a
demonstration obviously the sale;
would be handicapped.
The latest move of the United
States Department of Commerce of
adopting nidustrial motion pictures
as a means of promoting and maintaining
American foreign trade is
therefore logical. .
The Department of Commerce has
a total of more than 1,000 representative*
and correspondents abroad, located
in practically all the important
trading centers of the world. Thes.*
representatives include commercial
attaches, trade commissioners, Amerioan
consuls and other representative*
of the State Department who report
on business and industrial conditions
in their districts,
ggp The plan is to utilise these exten
live facilities of the department in
the distribution of educational mo^
tlon pictures showing the processes
r
n i. n
is
tody's
tin' on
LLERS
.Ocettts
t the yepr
/'/ '( ;\
n tvery Pgckagp
5T!
150 Pimples, 736 Blackheads
and 3 Boils!
No reward is offered, because they
ire lost forever! No question will bo
sked, except ono question, "How
lid you lose them?" Thero is but ono
tnswer,?"I cut out new fad troatnents
and guesswork; I used one of
he most powerful blood-cleansers,
ilood-puriflers and f 1 o s h-builders
mown, and that is S. S. S.S Now my
ace is pinkish, my skin clear ai a
ose, my cheeks aro filled out and :ny
heumalism, too, is gone!" This will
)o your experience, too. If you try S.
?. S. It is guaranteed to be purely
vegetable in all its remarkably effec:lve
medicinal ingredients. 8. S. 8.
neans a now history for you from now
in! S. S. S. is sold at all drug stores
n two sizes. The larger size Is the
noro economical.
I*Vl _v\
Lity of your liorses, mules, cattle, ?
suits in liealth, growth and pro* hi
^val in all nature. You can best [
igor and strength, and increase p
i-Vet treatment prepared by the I
Remedies |
ft
stores, under a positive guarantee w
inded. Your dealer carries a com- I
farmer an authoritative book of S
ido", which gives the symptoms I
eases, Ask for your copv. * E
[nc., Mfgrs., * UNION, S. C. I
and steps of manufacture of the va-;
rious American products. There is |
no governmental appropriation for
this work, the success of the project
resting upon the cooperation of the,
American manufacturer and business
man in meeting the costs of production
of films covering his own product.
Any American firm may participate.?The
Nation's Business.
Russian-American
Workers Arriving
Moscow, June 28.?Immigration of
American or Russian-American workmen
is becoming an increasingly important
factor in Russian industry.
Ludwig Martens, former "Soviet Ambassador
to the United States," who
is now in charge of this department
In Rlissln r?i>#ntlw t- J -
... ?"?v lopurveu 10 inc
Council of I>abor and Defense that
over ,5,000 of these immigrants have
recently arrived. Many others are on
the way, including mechanics, agricultural
groups and technical ' experts.
..
The council, rof Labor and Defense
resolved to support this immigration
because It does not burden Russia,
but on the contrary lightens the situation
as the immigrants bring their
own food and tools.
Two monkeys in the London 7.00
recently stole from holiday visitors
half a dozen pocket^mirrors, one
purse, a veil, a leather wallet, three,
odd gloves, one pipe, one watcli chain
and one handkerchief.
Government Issues
Brick Road Film
With its latest motion picture re- i
'cafe?a brick road film?the Depart- i
ment of Agriculture, through the Bu- i
reau of Ptfblie Roads, has made avail- |
able to the public, motion pictures on ,
three types of modern paving: as- ,
phalt, brick and concrete. Due to this (
activity of the government the gen- i
tral public, through farmers* granges,
city civic associations and the like, |
can obtain, graphically, information ]
on modern highway construction. ,
The brick picture starts with the
mining of the shale or clay, and gives ,
a clea?* idea of the heavy labor and ,
fuel expense in connection with the
manufacture of this paving material. ,
The shale first is finely ground un- ,
der rollers weighing several tons, and
is then mixed with water in a "pug" ,
mill that looks like a bread dough .
mixer. When it reaches the desired |
mud-like consistency, It Is forced
through a die under tremendous pres
sure and escapes from the opening (
much like tooth paste escapes from .
its container, except that it is per- (
feetly moulded and compacted into a
solid mass.
After being automat rally cut to the
desired width, the brick, traveling .
along on a moving bolt, are lifted i>y ^
hand and stacked on cars for storage (
in the dryer, where the water used j
in mixing is evaporated.
When almost dry they are stacked
i.:i? ?i <*
iii Mills wnt-re, witn a neavy consump- j
tion of coal, they are heated to the
melting point, a process which takes
more than a week. This brings abo.it (
vitrification, or the fusing of the shale
particles. The brick are then allowed '
to cool very slowly, which results in
annealing or toughening. When they *
ere ready to be taken from the kiln 1
they are perhaps 75 per cent as hard '
as diamonds, and so tough and dense '
as to withstand the heaviest traffic r
without cracking, or wearing away.
Extreme care is used to see that
only perfect brick finally get into a
pavement. Thry first are sorted as
they leave the kiln, all broken, crack- f
od or chipped brick being thrown "
aside. They are sorted a second time b
when piled In the cars for shipment.
Then a third time, nfter they have ii
been laid in th? pavement and before p
the filler is applied, an inspector goes t
over them thoroughly and any thnt
will not pass final visual inspection a
are thrown out. f]
The picture shows the "rattler," a e
machin0 in which brick are tested of- tl
flcially. The rattler is like an iron h
barrel in which the brick are placed n
with large and small iron shot, the tl
large shot being bigger than a base. ball.
Tho barrel is then revolved at <1
a set speed a certain number of times a
and if the brick, when removed, have a
lost more than a certain set perent- c,
age of their original weight, they are t,|
refused. t]
After portraying the details of
manufacture and inspection, the film (j
shows the unusual diversity in the ^
use of brick* for surfacing city streets ^
and country highways. (Brick streets ^
in use today range from the more sim- ^
pie designs, where the brick are laid n
on the natural soil without any arti- ^
ficial base, up through the more elab- %v
orate designs to a point where thick
bases are specified because of ex- f>1
ceedingly heavy traffic.
The picture shows in detail several ^
modern methods of layinb brick sur- j
faces on various types of bases and ^
with different kinds pf fdlers between ^
the joints, and closes with the subtitle:
"Vitrified Brick makes a high- l
class durable pavement, suitable for n
the heaviest traffic, expensive in first
cost, but cheaplv maintained."
, m , (I
New Poultry Bulletin
e
si
Clemson College, June 26.?"Farm
fiocks exist on over 95 per cent of all ^
American farms, and with move inter- (
est on the part of the farmer mor-i .'
and better poultry would result 11
which would make poultry husbandry ?
cne of the most remunerative
branches of general farming," says
Norman R, Mehrhof, Extension Poultry
Specialist, in Extension Bulletin
53, "Poultry Raising in South Cam- ?'
lina," just published by the Extension *
Service of Clemson College, to help in f
hastening and directing the greater t
interest which South Carolina farmers c
are nou taking in poultry. s
The new publication takes the place {
of Extension Bulletin 16, but it is in e
every sense a new publication dis- 1
cussing various phases of the poultry i
industry, including the classes of e
poultry, poultry house construction, (
making a start in the business, nat- c
urnl and artificial incubation nnd r
brooding, care and feeding of the c
stock, fattening, illing nnd dressing, n
! marketing eggs and poultry, preserva v
I tion of eggs, breeding, diseases and n
j parasites, exhibiting poultry, etc. fi
There are 30 illustrations that make r
the bulletin more attractive and more e
effective. b
Copies of Extension Bulletin 53 h
may bt> had free by any citizen inter- t
ested upon application to the Exten- n
sion Service, Clemson College, S. C., h
or to the county agents.
' -* ii
New Order of Things s
Moscow, June 28.-? Foreigners and a
Russians entering Soviet Russia may p
bring with them foreign or gold tl
money to the value of 250 gold rubles o
(,but any surplus will be changed by d
the customs officials at the frontier tl
Into Soviet paper money at the of- p
ficial rate, according to a new order ji
of the commissariat of finance. v
The Northwestern North Dakota
Development association has been or- t
ganlsed to conduct- a million dollar in- t
tensive campaign to secure 100,01)0 t
desirable new settlers for Tts section, f
. '?f ??
Why Distribution Costs <
?rT 1
Of the thousands Who annually *
visit Mount Vernon, it -would bo in ?
Leresting to know how many see in 4
this old plantation home n record of ?
the industry of a century and a half
ago. In those days comforts and
conveniences, to say nothing of the 4
ordinary essentials to existence, were *
to a great extent homfl products. ?
The <>1?1 general was a good busi- 4
r.ess man as well as a Rood soldier. ^
He believed in economic independence'
us a basis for political' indep* denrc. *
rbis you will see reflected in the sev- 4
eral small factories ftynkin- tite old
mansion. 4
There is. for instance, ? . , penter
*hop and a spinning hou Sheen ^
grazing on the Washington acres j
Lave assurance that the general ^
A'ould feel confident that the mutcri- j ^
tl used for his greatcoat and silver-1?
out toned dress-coat would be all wool.:
The wool was produced, sheared, i
carded, spun, woven ami dved, no
louht within earshot of the house. 14
There was no problem of transportation
from point of production to
dace of consumption because it. was 4
ilready there. I ^
Not only clothing, but food, shel-1 <
or and fuel were prodm < d within ^
valking distance from tin- Washing- *<
on home. There \Vere many prob- ?i
ems of great importance t > occupy 4t
he attention of Washington and his 4
ontemporaries, but economic ?li.-1 i i- | ^
mtion was not one of them. \
If the visitor to Mount Vcrimn to *'
lay should compare the proco.--.ses beween
the wool on the sheep's back <5
ind the woolen cloth on his own back. 4
to might find that the sheep hail 4
'razed on Argentine pastures, the <
vool woven in Bradford, the suit J
nade in Chicago and sold to him in
Ian Francisco.?The Nation's Busi- ,
less.
Superior to the Crowd ^
. 4
Too many bustnses men, when con- \
rented with a new idea, impure:
Has it ever been successfully tried
efoi'e?"
That may be playing safe, but it 4
3 not an attitude that makes for J
irogress, says Fred Kelly in The NTa- J|
ion's Business. j
Every one of us has both individual ^
nd herd instincts and we are in- <
uenced by one or the other of these ?
very time we go shopping. When 4
he clerk shows a prevailing style of J
at and says: "We are selling a great }
tany of these," he is trying to sell *
hrough the customer's herd instinct
-to do what the rest of the crowd is <
oing. But when he says: "Here's 4
n exclusive pattern?the only one 4
1 town," he seeks to play 011 the J
ustomer's individtfhlistic impulses?j <
ic desire to b? unlike or superior to ^
le crowd. , <
Not long ago I hear?l ?- strawberry
ealer walking by my home crying 4
is wares. I paid no attention to J
im. A few minutes later another }
ealer came along, also crying aloud ^
mt he had strawberries, and I im-j^i
lediately beckoned to him. Not un-j .
1 some time afterwai d did I i-ealizo ?,<
hy I had bought from the second Ji
lan rather than the first. I was be- j J}
;iuse he announced strawberries with }
jolly rising inflection as if he were ^
nthusiastic about those berries and
elieved in them. The first man had
aid strawberries with a falling in- j _
ection that was doleful and dis-! ..
ouraging, as if he had never eared j
luch about strawberries to begin
'ith and had trouble selling these.
I wonder if the tone of our voices j r<
oesn't have more to do with what | a
'e accomplish or don't accomplish J k
very day than is generally under- a
tood. Long ago the telephone com- t
anies recognized the value of a S
hcrry voice by insisting on all opera- g
ors asking the number with a rising s
ifloction, thus: "Number please." | <
> j t]
ndemnity Money to be Used ! |
For Educational Purposes
; o
Peking, June 28.?The Bureau of jd
evenues^reports that a recommenda-!
ion has been received from Japan, i
Jroat Britain, Italy, France and I'or-, I
ugal, that the Boxer indemnity nion- J <
y, naynnents upon which will be re- < *
umed this year, might be used for t
ducat ional purposes following the s
xample set by the United States. 1
rhe money has already been remitted
11 part for this purpose by the Unit- h
d States, and the debt with Russia, '
Jermany and Austria has ben can- 1
elled so that there has been a strong s
novement in the other countries still
ollecting this revenue to return the 1
rioney to China in some beneficial 1
vny. The remission of this debt is 1
lot by any means assured but the s
irst payments which will be again
esumed, the five year holiday grant- >
d as a result of the war having {1
een ended, will bring matters to a v
ead and there is great home among
he enlightened authorities that the h
loney may be used for purposes V
ei|aui iu Vyiiiiui. *
The Burenu of Revenues In speakig
of the suggestion that the money '
hould be used entirely for educaional
work seems to feel that there
re other needs perhaps piore ur- f
:ent add suggests that only one- 1
hird be devoted to education, anther
third to the development of inustries,
and the remaining third to ^
tie government administrative ox- c
enses particularly the judicial de- c
artments and the t famine relief
rork. *
???- 1
The most dangerou^. vegetable irri- 1
ant poison is that of the. itchwood t
ree of the Fiji Islands. One drop of j
he sap falling on the hand is as painul
as a touch of a h<^t iron. j
Is?
| Ladies i
! Pock
I
[ In Genuine
[: Shapes, V;
\ o
: Sped
[ 98c,
\ ...1
\
[: THE C
I BAr
>
Varning to Save the Children ||
New York, dune lis.?Induing; l'rom J
i-liable statistics of previous years,
pproxiinately a.MbO children will be I
illed and 100,000 more injured in
tridents dining the summer vacaion
period throughout the United
Kates unless parents and other 5
uardians give greater attention this
uiumer to the safety of their
harges. This warning eomes from
he Safety Institute of America, with
leadquarters in this city.
He fore July 1, the Institute points
lit, something like *20,000,000 ehilIren
will he thrown on their own
leviees for amusement by the clos
<d" public and private schools,
rhe accident hazards confronting
hildren throughout the year as a
vhole will then be multiplied many
imes by longer hours of play; by the
lUmmcr increase in automobile tral'ic,
and by the lapse of si hool room
liicipline. The ]>linci|>al causes of
iccidental death among children, the
institute says, are fire, drowning and
he automobile. The child of about
even years of age is i:i the greatest
langer of he; iming the victim of a
atal accident because that seems to
ie the age at which -mothers begin to
icroiit children to tane caro 01 memelves.
In an effort to atom tho usual
summer ti<le of violent deaths among
'oung people the Institute has issued
i list of Vacation I >o's and Don'ts
vith the recommendation that tenchrs,
parents and till other persons who
lave the opportunity to roach large
croups of children, pass them on to
he children. The list follows:
"Swim all you can this summer, but ]
lever on a full stomach, or if overrated,
or extremely tired.
"Learn how to rescue drowning
icrsons; hut never pretend yourself 1
o be drowning; you may really need '
lelp some day, and not get it.
"Irarn to paddle youv own canoe, 1
>ut never rock the boat to scare the 1
ither fellow;this has caused the death
if thousands of boys and girls.
"Fly kites, but don't use copper 1
vire instead of twine; scores of boys 1
lave been electrocuted when their 1
dte wire came in contact with electric
wires; also don't climb telegraph
idea to recover entangled kites.
"Hike out into the country, but if
roir go for more than one day carry
ECI
AL
Hand Bag
et Books
Vanity
Leather, all C
allies to $5.00
lally Prict
$1.25, $
EACH.
EE WINDOW
)LD RELL
TT-TT1
ML JL ML?a
?ttt m ~ram
? ^
1
THE UNIVER
PLACE YOUR
1 ORDER T0 0 A\
To insure delivery of a
Surrrrer'f use. FORD ca>s r
shortage throughout the roun
The prices of FORD ca
R The touring still sells at $49f
your door.
Should you not care to
we recommend our THRIFT
when car is delivered and t
month, which includes intere
in fact everything.
I Get Your Ordei
DO IT TODAYCoino
in?let's talk it ov
vestigate.
I JULIAN W.
| The Man who Always has any
g JONESV1LL
LI*111HIII11u
i
n nid ! ". w <h vo'r also learn to
lefrpr.izc poison ivy ami then stay t
away from it; drink a lot of wnf ?r. '<
t>Ut first make sine that its source is I
lean.
Don't loo l.e streets f >. play if j
tnore is a vacant lot, a olein alley, or
a playground nearby; if you nuisi |
jsc the streets for playgrounds pick ^
i street that has no streetcar tracks s
>r heavy automobile traffic. 11
p
"Don't he a jay-walker; in the city
cross streets at re?*u\v crossings,)"
r.ever in the middle of the block; |
when walking on country rands keep
an the left, instead of the righ' hand j
side of the road so that you can see : ^
approaching vehicles. I P
I v
"Finally remember that June is a i t
particularly dangerous month in t
which to take chances; the other dan I j
;? " 1 i =?g~?
AL
Ft
V
t
4
V
* WLm*
T
T
y
S I
)v
and 1
1 Bags I
t
-i X
Zolors and >
and $6.00 f.
id at If
1.49 1
T
T
y
V
T
T
' Y
I
4BLE |
R Y I
ML m, JL :
I
:SAL CAR |
r f
now F- ORF> cat" foi this I
\ro hard to get, t hoi is a K
itrv.
rs have not advanced *
5.00 cash fully equipp ?' .'t
pay all cash on deliver)
PLAN. You pay $183.17 I
he balance at $36.63 per jjj
si, insurance ior one year., |
r in Quickly.
-DO IT NOW.
'er. It will pay you to in
LIPSCOMB
Part for a Fort! or Fordson |
rerous months arc: July, January,
vpiembcr, April, November, March,
Jay, December, October, August and
February."
Bulgaria Taxes Fashion
Sofia, Bulgaria, June 28.?Bulgaria
considers short skirts, silk
lockings, parasols, and jewelry lux
iries, and henceforth wearers of
hese articles will be taxed f>00 francs
year. Men carrying canes will have
n pay 100 francs a year.
A professor of the Sorbonme, Paris,
ins invented a process for seAsoning
imber by the use of ozone. The proess
is said to f?ive the same result in
ibout 20 days as would naturally be
obtained in the course of several
rears.
>