The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, July 03, 1922, Image 3
vlii
D.K
This new
sugar-coated
gum delights^^
young and old?^|
It "melts in your
mouth" and the g
center remains to s
a brighten teeth and s<
and throat*
There are the other
friends to choose fro
aH|^^E^^\ of Green St
IKl|fflKu\>AA, J Feed Leaves
|U|Run Down
the Spring.
Renew the health, strength and v
bogs and poultry. ?Uet maximum
duction. Spring is the time for r
care for your worn ouc and sick li
<5?V^t
. Tliey restore health, bring bafck
production. There is a specific (
ablest veterinarians lOr each liv
A Few Special <
Caro-Vet Con
\ horses, njules an
flnffipfjQK. I der, price 25c.
WBUgLMZM? a Caro-Vet Eg
9 Caro-Vot Toni
! and cattle, j>ric
a Bold by general stores and dr
1 of satisfactory results, or money r
I plete line of Cairo-Vet Remedies.
H We are sending FREE to ea
B 48 pages "Farmers' Veterinary
| and tells how to treat live stock
4 I CAROLINA REMEDIES CO
SUMMER EXC
(FROM UIS
\
SOUTHERN RA
TO
Asheville, N. C $ 5.6F
Atlantic City, N. J 38.6S
Anderson, S. C 6.6(
Black Mountain, N. C. . . . 6.6(
Beaufort, N. C 22.1C
Brevard, N. C 5.61
Denver, Colo. 80.21
Flat Rock, N. C 4.21
Greer, S. C 2.71
Georgetown, S. C 10.71
Greenville, S. C 8.51
Hendersonville, N. C 4.4(
Hot Springs, N. C 7.9(
Isle of Palms, S. C. 12.3(
Jacksonville, Fla 21.81
Lake Toxaway, N. C 6.8!
Ijake Junaluska, N. C 7.2<
Lenoir, N. C. . . 8.6(
In addition to the above Summ
practically all Southern Railway Sys
mentioned above, May 15th to Sept
turning so as to reach original start!
1922. Stop-overs permitted at any s
trip within Anal limit of ticket.
- For further information call <
Agent or address:
R. C. COTNER,
District Passenger Agent,
Spartanburg, S. C.
In England the adoption of childrei
cannot legally be secured.
The giant been of India build comb
10 feet high.
life.
ms
?
Jr ,, g, i
:
IWin in the*^ ?
ltd digestion. tc
oothe mouth tt
m
WRIGLEY
? e
itality of your horses, mules, cattle, 3 Q
results in health, growth an?l pro- 5 I
enewal in all nature. You can beat J w
ve'tock by usiug ^
Remedies r
vigor and strength, and increase 8
)aro-Vet treatment propared by tbe ti
e stock disease and disorder. t
C2?\/et Remedies [j
ing Use:
dition Powder for g <l
d cattle, price 75c. # '-jSMy SH v
ne Condition Pow- f Hifm u g
ic horses, males
ug stores, undor a positive guarantee
efunded. Your dealer carries a com-*
u
eli farmer an authoritative book of v
Guide", which gives the symptoms
diseases. Ask for your copy.
., Inc., Mfgrs., UNION, S. C. \
^mm*
URSION FARES |
HON, S. C.) . ,
fa? 1
ILWAY SYSTEM
$
TO t
? Morehead City, N. C., . . . .$ 21.90 c
5 Murphy, N. C 12.75 i
) Norfolk, Va 26.05 c
) Niagara Falls, N. Y 52.80 <
> Portland, Ore 125.80 f
> Roanoke, Va 20.85 >
> Saluda, N. C 3.75 t
j Sky Land, N. C 5.15
> Salt Lake City, Utah 100.26 t
) San Francisco, Cal 121.45 1
) St. Petersburg, Fla 35.40 i
) Tampa, Fla 34.00 I
) Tuxedo, N. C 4.06 <
) Tryon, N. C 3.20 i
> Tate Springs, Tenn 11.36
> Tallulah Fall, Ga 9.10 1
) Walhalla, S. C 6.30 1
) Wrightsville, N. C 14.30 <
er Excursion tickets are on sale from !
tern Agencies to many other points noi
ember 30th, 1922, with final limit re- j
ing point by mid-night of October 31st, t
ind all points on either going or return (
in nearest Southern Railway System
L. R. PARTLOW,
Ticket Agent,
Union, S. C.
n More than two-thirds of the people
in Jndia are Hindus.
? The domestic fowl is not mentioned
in the Old Testament..
f t
Memorial to
George Washington
Alexandria, Va., June 30.?Witt
he turning of the first sod on a
teautiful spot on the outskirts of
Alexandria overlooking the National
Capitol, work has begun on a memoial
to George Washington which will
e a fitting companion piece to the
.incoln Memorial at Washington.
The edifice, a stately temple inpired
by Greek and Roman archi;cture,
is being erected by the comined
efforts of all the Masons and
lasonic orders in the United States,
nd will be a tribute to Washington,
le man and Mason. It will be two
undred feet from portico to obserution
platform on the top, and Will
e surrounded by an extensive land:ape
garden to be known as George
Washington Park. It is expected the
lemorial will be completed.in from
>ur to five years, The cost will be
pproximately $2,500,000.
Constructed of snowy marble and
hite concrete, the columned strop
ire will tower high above the river
rid will stand out from a backround
of densely verdued hillsides, a
Lting tribute, visible for miles, and
ithin a short distance of the Naon's
Shrine, Mount Vernon.
Every Mason has been asked to
intribute a dollar toward the fund,
id already more than $700,000 has
?en collected. Additional pledges
ring the figure to almost $1,600,000.
iasonic orders and individuals conibuting
$1.00 toward the fund will
i placed upon the honor charter roll
> be kept among the temple archives.
The building, according to archircts,
will be after the style of hero
lemorials placed at the harbor enhances
of ancient Greek and Roman
ties. It will be erected on a ridge
50 feet above the Potomac, and from
s tower, 200 feet higher, a grand
anamora of the City of Washing>n
will lie under the observers' feet,
s well as the country bordering upon
lount Vernon, so lived by Washing>n
himself.
Pilgrims to the patriot's former
ome and tomb will pass under the
tiadow of the temple, going eithet
y land or river.
The first floor will be given over
irgely to a memorial hall, the cornlanding
feature of which will be a
eroic statue of Washington. Howver,
as the memorial as a whole will
e dedicated also to the memories ol
ther great Masons of the country,
here will be available to the grand
>dges of each state space in the melorial
hall in which they may enhrine
portraits or other tributes to
lasons whose deeds place them beides
the First President.
Such men as Paul Revere repreenting
Massachusetts; DeWitt Clinan,
New% York; Benjamin Franklin,
'ennsylvania; Henry Clay, Lewis and
{lark, Blair, Randolph and many othrs
have been suggested to be relembered
thus as prominent historylaking
Masons.
The temple will be the active lodge
uarters of Alexandria-Washington
lodge No. 22 A. F. and A. M., of
rhich Washington was first master
rhen it was lodge No. 39. Other
ooms surrounding the trium will be
iven over to the uses of grand naional
bodies of the order. At all
imes, except when used in ritual by
he Alexandria lodge, the entire
emple will be open to the public.
Above the hall, which will rise ir
clerestory from tne ground floor
all be a museum and Masonic art
allery. Here will be placed Maonic
portraits and the mtany historic
elics of Washington and several oth
r noted Virginians who from time
o time have been members of the
Alexandria lodge.
A replica of the first lodge house
ised by Alexandria lodge, and whicl:
/as dedicated by Washington, will be
ncludeeL Other souvenirs include:
he clock which stood beside Wash
ngton's bed, and the pendulum core
>f which was cut at the moment o:
lis death; a pocket knife given Wash
ngton by his mother and which was
arried by him as a boy and man
lis old hour glass; the chuir he occu
>ied as worshipful master and whicl
vas used for 122 years; and the Wil
iams portrait of Washington o:
vhieh he approved.
With these will also be placed thi
ipade used in the ground-breakinj
:eremony by Louis A. Watres, presi
lent of the Masonic National Memo
rial Association. As this simple
:eremony was planned hastily, am
ompleted on an hour's notice, m
special tools were provided, but i
vorkman's spade lying nearby at th
;ime was utilized.
The 32 acre tract surrounding th
;emple has already been obtained b;
ihe Association. The laiger portion
ibout 22 acres, valued at more thai
M ,000,000, was bought of the cit;
>f Alexandria at a nominal flgur
vhich made it a gift.
Ceremonies of cornerstone layini
vere planned for next November '1th
:he anniversary of the inauguratioi
>f the country's first president, !,u
lave been advanced to early Octobei
The day has jiot yet been set, but th
program includes participation b;
President Harding, Chief Justice Taf
ind many other notables and higl
government officials.
In Indianapolis the school childre
celebrated Arbor Day by plantin
more than 6,000 maple trees.
|nfluinza?_
B hale night and moraine?
VISM
??
Granada, Home of *
Beautiful Women?
i Granada, Spain,"July 1.?Americans
i have quit coming to Spain in search
1 of the beautiful and wealthy princess
[ imprisoned in a dark, damp tower by
. a greedy uncle who ia anxious to annex
her fortune.
The historic eld Spanish swindle apparently
has gone out of fashion in
the United States, hut it is still in
vogue in other parts of the world
Germony has recently supplied quite
a crop of kind-hearted gentlemen who
advanced money for the release of the
dark-eyed Spanish beauty who was
:;ufTering in a rat infested cell and
slowly dying on a diet of dry bread
r.nd water while the bats hovered
about her head and added to the terrors
of her solitary confinement.
Granada has always been a popular
center for the men who have contributed
to the relief of imprisoned beauties.
Washington Irving and scores
of lesser writers have credited Granada
with having more beautiful women
than any other city in the world.
The legend of the Rose of the Alhambra
and the stories of the three beau
uiui princesses, zayda, Zorayda and
Zorahayda, hover about the Alhambra
and make it the natural refuge for
disappointed investois In distressed
beauty.
Vaudeville stars always have found
the names of Moorish princesses
profitable on playbills. They carry
with them the atmosphere of the . harem,
of the veiled fuce and the oriental
dance. They suggest the Alhambra
and millions of gold, and the
priceless Moorish jewels which Boabdil
and his court are reported in legend
to have secreted in their beautiful
palace before it was surrendered
to Ferdinand and Isabella. Boabdil
and his queen are supposed to be
hiding in a cavern in the neighboring
mountains waiting for a magic call I
from Mohammed which will restore |
them to their old glory in the Alhambra.
Every tower, every turret, every
minaret and every dungeon In the old
Alhamba has its legend.
So it is not strange that searchers
, for princesses should come to Granada
after having sought vainly for mythical
castleB in mythical mountains.
Most of the modern Spanish princesses
are being held captives in castles
by the sea. Castlei by the sea
j are so much damper, and then it is
, much more romantic for rescue parties
to approach the rocky coast in
| ships and wave to the Imprisoned
princess, who will promptly tear her
clothing to bits and make a rope with
which she will lower herself from the
gloomy tower.
Many of the imposters who are
marketing adventure to credulous investors
give their princesses the
names of famous women who have
' been dead for centuries. Moraymah
and Aishah, queens of the Moorish
regime who have been dead for over
400 years, and many other celebrities
of history and legend have lent their
uniiicD IU fullnesses KUppusea U) DC*
1 in distress.
Hotel keepers in Granada have become
skilled in detecting visitors who
are searching for imprisoned beauties.
They usually make very guarded in!
quiries and seldom admit they have
been duped. Frequently they inquire
' for gypsy fortune tellers, or astrologers,
who probably charge well for
! their services. Letters concerning the
distressed princesses are usually
1 marked confidential and instruction:-,
are given that nothing must be said
' to anyone lest the life of the princess
" be endangered. Most of the dupes
are too much ashamed of their plight
" to confess openly that they have
! teen gulled, but an occasional victim
! approaches some om the foreign consuls
or seeks the aid of the Spanish
s police in trying to recover money ad1
vanced to the swindler?,.
i Americans Affected by
New Land Law
i
"
Chihuahua City, Chihuahua, Mexico,
July 2.?About 200 Americans
* owning more than 10,000,000 acres of
' land will be affected by the new land
law which has been approved by the
1 state legislature.
Nobody in Chihuahua can own more
^ than 1,000 hectares of land, (about
2,300 acres) that is entirely under cula
.
* tivation, the law provides. Nobody
? can own more than 2,000 hectares of
" land that is half irrigated, or more
* than 4,000 hectares of dry farming
1 land. However, holders of the fore^
going amounts of farm land may hold
0 as much as 40,000 hectares of grazing
a lands.
6 Under the law, within the 60 days
from now (about September 1) pere
sons holding more than that permitted
y by the law, must make a selection of
'? what they desire to keep, and the bal1
ance must pre parceled out under govy
ernment supervision and offered for
e sale. Contracts of sale must allow
the purchaser 20 years in which to
? pay, under partial payment plan. In
i> terest must not exceed Ave per cent.
n
t At the time of the Civil war only
.. three per cent of the population of
a the United States lived in cities, while
y today more than one-half are city
t dwellers.
^ The Chinese prefer a paper of much
softer quality for their correspondn
ence than that made for the use ol
g Americans. This is because the Chi.
nese write entirely with brushes and
^ ink. Wrapping paper of a soft, thir
variety, light cream in color, is usually
found in the better stationery
b shops, while the native shops sell c
cheap brown paper.
^ If all the mountains in the worh
| were levelled, the average heigth ol
p the land would rise nearly 260 feet
I BIG
1 DOLLA
|
! CLEAN SI
|
| THE V
I WEDNESDAY, JULY 5T1
|v 5^ 8TH, I
X* Here again is your greatest op]
X we feature regularly on our Dol
JL* - - -
Y days and you should not miss tl
%
|> Voiles
Fine figured, dark and light colors, i?
a large variety of patterns, 38-inci
wide, values up to 50c yard, (?"|
Dollar Day Special 5 yds. for^-"-*^^
, ;
<? Bleaching
Advertiser, 36-inch, fine soft finish' *
?* smooth cloth ready for the needle
worth 25c, Dollar Day d*-|
Y Special, 6 yds. for
f
^ Chiffon Special
<Y Very fine quality dhiffons, 30 to 4(
*?4 Inch wide, in all colors, formerly sol<
V, up to $1.50, very spceial, A/1
Y 2 yard* for ^
x
% Shirt Waists
J Made of fine white, plain and cordei
t voiles, trimmed?some with hand
X drawn work, some with filet or va
laces, circular and large shawl collars
X long and short sleeves, worth (I* "| Af
$1.50, very special
Skirts
Y
Wash skirts in light and dark stripe
and plaids, values up to "| Af
Y $2.50, clean sweep sale . . . .tPX*^v
Towels
Y A lucky purchase of heavy Turkis
Y towels, which were manufactured t
t sell for 50c, large size 22 x 44 incL
Y Dollar Day Special, 4 Towels $1.0(
f ??.I
> Brassieres and Bandeaux
Manufacturers' samples. Body c
i good grade brocade and grenadine, (i(
X ured pink cloth, trimmed around to
with novelty ecru lace, shoulder strap
values up to $1.00, very
?$ special, 4 for V
X
V Ladies' Hats
x?
A special assortment of trimmed hat
?* values up to $3.50, Dollar (I*-!
|> Day Special tpJ-.Ul
X GAGE HATS
% HALF PRICE
|
X CLEAN SWEEP SALE OF W<
| AN
I AT HA
Our policy is not to carry over
X another, and we shall clean th
choice of our entire Spring lin
X at Half Price!
| COME EARLY A
i Tur u
I n Eh W
, X S. KR ASS, Prop.
r
H|gg
4 BIG f
R days!
AND- |
WEEP SALE I
A
-AT? %
/onder!
t
I TO SATURDAY, JULY f
INCLUSIVE I
?
portunity to secure the Big Bargains
liar Days. You have 4 shopping ^
lis Biggest Saving Event. X
4
X
Underthings?
1 Night Gowns >
1 .V
| Standard count pink nainsook with ^
' embroidery design, handsome color,
sizes 15 r.nd 17, Dollar Day AA
Special, 2 for tP ^
1 Ribbon drawn embroidery beading %
across front, sleeves triir med with emk
broidery edge, fine quality soft finished
" nainsook, V or square neck, values up ??
to $1.50, Dollar Day ^ 1 00
? :
] Petticoats Y
1 ... Y
| Made of soft finished nainsook, deep
" under ruffle, 6-inch embroidery ruffle
in assorted designs, Dollar
Day Special, 2 for A V
Y
i f
Umbrellas V
i Y
. Strong, durable, fast black cloth,
7-inch iteel frame, asserted handles, for
| women and men, Dollar Day 0* ~| AA
Special tP??UU A
1 Shoes A
S o
v Ladies' and Misses' white canvas 1
V 4#
| shoes, miliary and Loui.; heels, values Jt#
up to $2.50, Dollar Day ~| AA X
Special JPI.UU Y
X
? Hosiery |*
?? Ladies' imported !irl<* lace work in ?
\ beautiful designs, full fashioned, seam Y
^ up back, black, white and brown, Y
~ \ cry special, 2 pair3 41*"! AA t
for tbl.UU Y
f %
Men's Union Suits X
p ;
s> Nice quality medium p.vama checks, y
)i loveless, knee length, elastic web inser- j
tion at back, flaps with buttons, 75c j
value, Dollar Day Spec-is.!, d*
2 for . Jpl.UU V
T
a
j Men's Work Shirts ^
Good quality dark blue chambray y
cloth, full size3, worth 85c, Dollar f
DaySpecia., jgj QQ V
f
V
3MEN'S DRESSES, COATS, CAPES |
ID SUITS |
iLF PRICF. |
any garments from one season to X
lem out regardless of cost. Your y
e of Coats, Capes, Suits and Dresses 2
i N D GET THE PICK! X
VONDER
UNION, S. C. I
i