The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, June 30, 1922, Image 4
Giving
to thi
Whosoever would have
of a< hievement, let him sj
saving.
For no man's ambition
And thrift is that element
all substantial accomplishi
t no re I ore?and save your
"I^argo Enough to Serve AnyCUT
12
NATIONA
/
/
BOUGHT I
WHITE OXFORl
At big reduction, f:
urav
f? UJ
$4.00" While Sheepsl
$3.00 Black and Wh
$2.50 White Low H
$2.50 Keds with leat
Austell's
I SPECIAL
I EIMF MA DPI E
i A iiiL mnuuLL
MONUM
JULY Af
^ ' ? 'm \ .
I. H
TIIIP IP a uniir a ?i
into id A INtW AI>
made in three sizes$325.00,
$400.00 a
axed finished on grai
or M. M. finish (or
makes an appropriat<
plot, elegant in its si
class by itself and att
crable comment whei
sents character and s
refined taste and sent
See us or write for <
AUGUST PRICES on
ment in either marble
I or cement coping and
BAILEY MONUI
Old Fair Renewed
Nizhni Novgorod, Russia, June 28
?Buildings h ?v*> been put in ordei
for tbe revivi.l this year of the Nizhni
Novgorod fair, the centuries old
market at which the merchants of tju
East and the West met to exchange
the famed silks and spices of the Indies
and the furs of Muscovy for thf
woolens of England, the wines of
Spain and the best craftsmanship of
other lands. The Council of Labor
and Defense at Mosci w has spent 34,000,000,000
of Soviet rubles to this
end.
'
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Wings
e Ambition
his ambition soar to heights
jeed it on wings of thrift and
is truer than his character,
of character from which comes
nent. lA't your ambition soar,
money!
?Strong Enought to Protect All"
T r> a tv r t r
. i_? A 1"N j
SIG LOT OF
IS AND
STRAP PUMPS
' oing to sell them same
tin Oxfords . . .$2.95
ite Sport Oxfords $1.95
eel Strap Pumps $1.95
her inner sole . .$1.50
f\l A.
snoe store |
OFFERING
: AND GRANITE
[ENT FOR
ID AUGUST
:
>?.r
/'" , c i'^^IH
ID POPULAR DESIGN
-4 ft. 7 in. high, price
nd $475.00. All fine
, i.i X'
nue ana tne new chisel
marble. This design
e memorial for a family
mpHcity, it stands in a
racts attention and fav ever
erected?it repretability,
and reflects the
iment of the purchaser,
our SPECIAL JULY and
any design of monuor
granite, also granite
I iron cemetery fencing.
MENTAL WORKS j
| To be England's first woman surveyor
is the distinction won by Miss
Irene Martin, who has just passed the
| final examination of the College of
Estate Management, Miss Martin
I has specialized in town surveying, and
it was sympathy with had housing
conditions that first led her to adopt,
her profession.
"Mourning postage stamps," now
on sale in Germany, bewail the loss
, of the German colonies. One example
shows a flag at half-mast, and has a
wide black border.
Mistletoc has recently appeared on
pine trees in Bavaria, having come,
from the south. I
RIALTO
TODAY I
SNOWY BAKER
?IN?
"THE SHADOW OF
LIGHTNING RIDGE"
A Western drama that will
thrill you from start to finish.
ALSO
CHARLES HUTCHISON
IN
"GO GET 'EM HUTCH"
ADDED
"THE WOLF IN
SHEEPS CLOTHING"
A Comedy Scream
SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS
FOR RENT?Five room cottage,
broad halls, just outside corporate
limits, apply to Fletcher Horn.
6-30; 7 3tp<]
CALOMEL IS NOW
DELIGHTFUL
No Taste, No Nausea, No
Griping, No Danger?Purified
and Refined Calomel
Tablets Known as "Calotabs."
You can now take your calomel
without the slightest fear of unpleasantness,
or clanger, for 'Calotabs retain
all of the liver-cleansing and
system purifying qualities of the oldstyle
calomel without any of the objectionable
qualities.
One Calotab on the tongue at bedtime,
with a swallow of water,?
that's all. No taste, no nausea, nc
griping. You wake up in the mornin
feeling fine, your liver active,
your system thoroughly purified anc
with a hearty appetite for breakfast
Eat what you please,?no danger
The transformation is wonderful
You feel bright, cheerful, clearheaded,
energetic and strong.
Beware of imitations! Genuint
Calotabs are sold only in "checkerboard"
(black and white) packages
bearing the copyrighted trade-mark
"Calotabs." The large, family size
sells for thirty-five cents; vest-pocket
size, ten cents. All dealers are authorized
to refund the price if you
are not delighted with Calotabs.?adv,
English and Foreign
Languages in Libraries
Detroit, Mich, June 28.?A platform
on library work with the foreign bom
submitted to the American Library
association at its conference here tonight
by Mrs. Eleanor E. Ledbettei
of the Cleveland public library,- 011
hnhal# 1 - 1 '
uviiou ui me luiiuiiiiive on worn witil
the foreign born, stated that the public
library should be absolutely democratic,
giving equal service regard.
Uss of the place of nativity; that
where funds are insufficient, preference
should be gicen to those portions
of the community having least opportunities
at their own command.
It stated that reading matter, both
in easy English and in foreign languages,
should be provided by public
libraries.
"Assistants," says the report,
"should be trained for work with immigrants
as a special field of library
work. In communities having considerable
immigiunt population the
library should be given prominence as
a social institution and should be
made in actual fact a community center."
In South African waters swims a
fish, something like a toad, and rejoicing
in the name of billy-blowup.
This is derived from its practice of
puffing itself out when caught. Another
of its peculiaries is that of being
poisonous.
Germany is making socalled tapestry
stair carpets and hall rugs entirely
of paper.
unuiLJ IV
H1LLCREST DA1I
are stronger, health:
than all others. Wha
. babie; it will do for ;
only the highest quali
it in (he most sanitar
?
not how cheap but hi
up to it all the time.
HILLCREST DAIR
| PHONE
.
SPE(
1 Men's an
T m
? The once-a-seaso
? I CL - *
'Hi' 'Mtfi p
Explorer and Naturalist 1 <
Op Socwad Expedition <
! ? Z~?r-r M
Shanghai, Jung 24.?Arthur de C.L
Sowerby, explorer ahd naturalist, who ^
is engaged in making biological survey
in China for the United States M
National Museum arrived in Shang-M
hai in May from a second expedition N
into the province of Fukien. L
On the trip that he has completed i
Mr. Sowerl.y first-went into the district
south of Foochow where hel
hunted tigers, but without success M
though securing many other interest- <
ing tilings, lie next proceeded up the I i
Niin river, held to be one of the most L
beautiful streams I in China, to Yen-1
pingfj. lie camped for several weeks I
in the high mountains behind this city 1 *
making valuable collections. Here he|<
secured some rare reptiles and amphi-|<
bians, birds of gorgeous plumage and],
u large series of bats and mamals. I
He reports the flora of this district I
the most Wonderful he has ever seen I
and says the place is a veritable j
botanist's paradise, yet until he via-1
ited it, unexplored by any profes-]
sional botan'st. j
Full Fledged Patrol Woman I
Duluth, Minn., June 29.?Three and I
one-half years in an office convinced I
Miss Eileen Carroll, 21-year-old Min-1
neapolis girl that a person perfectly!
at home in the great outdoors had]
, no business doing stenographic work]
> for a living, so she applied for a pohition
doing patrol work in the Su-j
I perior National-Forest. She impress-]
ed Supervisor Calvin A. Dahlgren and]
now she is n full-fledged patrol wo- J
man, the first to be permanently sta-1
tioned in the north woods.
Miss Carroll plans to continue in |
forestry wdrk the year around. She]
said she wasn't afraid of bears, so the
forest service promptly gave her the
acid test and assigned her to a post
deep into the forest. Here she was ]
virtually lost for three weeks. Finally
she received a letter asking for an
mterview. Apologizing for the delay
in answering she explained that "n|
I lookout's hours gre rather long?IJ
haven't had time to answer sooner." |
' New York to |
Welcome Str*noA>-? 1
, New York, June 28.?New York.
. the second largest city in the world
?some claim it is the largest?is goI
ing back to the favorite boom method
of the small town. It is going to appoint
a "Welcome Stranger Committee,"
figuratively to extend to the
. visitors the keys of the city.
This action was decided upon after
, tne New York Hotel Association set
forth that folks in oilier parts of the
, country had got an entirely wrong
idea of the city from what they had
, read about it newspapers. !
The job of tfie new committee is to
make it known that, despite the ac!
counts of murders, suicides, holdups
and scandals that have been featured
in the news, New York is just as safe
as any Gopher Prairie?with better
water, milk and police protection to
boot.
New York is particularly anxious
to get this idea across immediately,
for it is in the summer that honeymooners
flock to the city from the
ends of the land. ?.
I And the hotel men feel that these
| visiting couples, perched atop buses
touring the city, are somewhat neglected.
They need someone to
shake them by the hand and show
' them the invisible ropes of the town
leaving them to pick out Lady Liberty,
Grant's Tomb and the Woolworth
Tower for themselves.
A 'meeting was called at which
shopkeepers, transportation lines and
theatrical interests were all represented
and it was decided that the
visitor must be personally shown
that the idea is all wrong that everybody
is out to rob him as soon as he
sets foot on New York sidewalks.
Reads Bible to his Troops
Peking, June 28. ? General Feng
Yu-hsiang is known throughout China 1
as a Christian commander who reads j
to his troops from the Bible. He led ]
Wu Pei-fu's soldiers in the battle outside
the gates of Peking. To him is ^
credited the first victories which re- i
suited in the rout of the Chinese capital
to a point north of Tientsin.
When the wounded from General
Feng's division were treated it was 1
found that each wore on his left arm *
a strip of parchment upon which was
written:
"All officers should die loyally,
1
AISED ON
IY FARM MILK
ier and grow faster tF
t it has done for other ?
yours. We produce ci
ty of milk and handle *
y way. Our motto is p
>w good, and we live i<
Deliveries twice daily
Y FARM, INC.
227-W , i
fi rig I
'** <. jf. >v ;
' > ^2'&l' * ' - * k
S ^ ',tl
faithfully and bravely for God ar
country.
"The enemy must be killed; if tt
rifle is broken, use the butt; if tl
butt is broken use the flst; if the ft;
is disabled use the teeth.
"If o9ne loses his life in rescuing
wounded companion, that is true bra1
try."
A "new costume society" has bet
organized by women in Japan, wit
the avowed purpose of bringing abo?
the general adoption of modern drefor
the ancient garb.
"Please Follow
These Instructions"
"Set the refrigerator levelKeep
the ice chamber wel
filled with clean ice and d<
not cover ice with anything.'
Do not allow doors to remaii
1 .a
upcn any longer tnan is necea
sary and when closed be sur<
they're tight. Clean refrigera
tor at least once a week witl
soft cloth and warm .water
These instructions accom
pany one of the high grade re
frigerators constructed t<
maintain the lowest tempera
ture at the lowest expenditure
For ice.
Our ice is clean?made
)f pure distilled water, and
tone of it need be washed
iway.
Consolidated Ice &
Fuel Co.
PHONE 103
Palm Beach Suits
n j
v,ieaneu
We can clean and press your
'aim Beach suit very quickly
fiese days. We have the
quipment and the know how.
iive me a trial. Will appreiate
it as much or more than
ny one else.
Phone 169 and we will call
romptly and return your suit
?oktng like new.
Barnes Pressing &
Repair Shop
Nicholson Bank Bldg.
Phone 169 and motor cycle
will call.
? low onoes at a Dig :
t Spring and Sumn
% A few of the man
t
?:
1 * " . - -
?* ? r. .,??
y Patent 1 strap Flap
X Patent 2 strap Flaj
|> Patent 1 strap Flap
X Patent 1 strap Grec
y Patent 1 strap Grec
Patent and Gray F
? Patent and Gray F1
Patent and Brown
X Patent and White 1
y Brown Calf 1 strap
X White and Black 0?
White and Black 1 j
X White Flapper Pum]
a r .?; & / ;
x
* Black Kid Welt Ox
1 Brown Kid Welt 0
Y All Men's and W
| $1.00 reduction |
v
i SE
1 Flynn-l
.
LV
^A A^A A^A A^
(r^>^^^rV V <3r<J
JAL S
d Women's Lo
n opportunity to buy Flynn-\
saving to you.
ler styles, including Oxfords, J
y we are offering:
WOMEN'S
f
p^r Pumps $7.00, now . . .
>per Pumps $7.00, now . . .
per Pumps $6.00, now . . .
:ian Sandals $6.50, now . . .
:ian Sandals $5.50, now . . .
tapper Pumps $7.50, now . .
apper Pumps $7.00, now . .
Oxfords $8.0 0, now ....
Elk Oxfords $7.00, now . . .
Flapper Pump $6.50, now .
cfords
(trap Pumps
ps
SPECIAL
fords $4.50, for
xfords $4.50, for
omen's Low Shoes from $6
per pair.
E THEM IN OUR WIND0\
fincent Sh
fcoi
VAND
COME
IF YOU WISH
- MONEY. WE HAVE
: AND WE HAVE 1
SEASONABLE MEF
B
DRY GOODS, DR1
PALM BEACH SU1
11/1 miAnn ?
IWb, SHUEii AND
! WHEN YOU PASS B
BARGAIN COUNTE1
YOURSELF AN
L FR
jYourMonqr^^
Kelton Circuit Methodist !
South
Sunday, July 2, is Patriotic S
ences will be made in the regi
place:
Wesley Chapel at 11 a. m.
Flat Rock at 3:30 p. nrs.
Lockhart at 7:30 p. m.
J.
"
ale]
iw Shoes |
rincent Shoe Co.'s v
Straps and Pumps. X
$6.00 |
$6.00 %
$5.00 ?
$5,50 X
$4.50 4
$6.50 f
$6.00
$7.00 i
. $6.00 t
$5.50 X . )
$5.00 f
$5.00 X
$3.50 |
V ?
$3.25 % '
$3.25 X
.50 to $10.50? X
f
i
? " J
oe Co. |
Ml E
AMIAIIl li
yUlUKLY
TO SAVE
: THE GOODS
HE PRICES.
tCHANDISEESS
GOODS,
ITS, CLOTHSLIPPERS.
!YI FROM'S
? mm m. amv*V4
RS, YOU DO
INJUSTICE.
OM
four Money Back
Episcopal Church, I
inJau C.iU.LI. '?
? uuimuic I CI CI " gfl
ular services at thase 1
* ?
F. GOLIGHTLY, I y
Preacher in Charge. 1
wmmmmmmamhJ ^
i