The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, July 05, 1922, Image 3
I 's 01^ for
I SiorTcoc^cou
111 UNION, S. C.
Winter Cold a
gT^^r 1 ?* Green Stufl
I Feed Leaves L
Run Down C
the Spring.
Renew the health, strength and vita
hogs and poultry. Get maximum re
* duction. Spring ie the time for rem
care for your worn out and sick live1
(50^ R
They restore health, bring back v
production. There is a specific Car
ablest veterinarians lor each live ?
I A Few Special C
I For Sprii
Caro-Vet Condit
horses, mules nud c
1 Caro-Vet Bwine
I der, price 25c.
m . Caro-Vet Egg-1
I Caro-Vet Tonic f
1 ., and cattle, price '
Sold by general stores and drugI
of satisfactory results, or money reft
M plete dine of Caro-Vet Remedies.
H We are sending FREE to each
B 48 pages "Farmers'. Veterinary ?h?
I and tell* how to. treat, live stock dia
I C AEOXJNA KTFiTWF.S CO., ]
-J # .? - -? - --v*?
SUMMER EXCfl
(FROM UNIt
?*Vii
SOUTHERN RAU
TO 1
Asheville, N. C $ 6.65 IV
Atlantic City, N. J 38.62 ^
Anderson, S. C 6.60 >
Black Mountain, N. C. . . . 6.60 h
Rpnufnrt M P 1,0 ,ft *
v, *1* AV X
Brevard, N. C 5.65 li
Denver, Colo 80.25 S
Flat Rock, M. C 4.25 S
Greer, S. C. . 2.75 S
Georgetown, S. C 10.70 S
Greenville, S. C 3.50 S
Hendersonville, N. C 4.40 7
Hot Springs, N. C. , 7.90 7
Isle of Palms, S. C 12.30 7
Jacksonville, Fla 21.85 rI
^ Lake Toxaway, N. C 6.85 7
Lake Junaluska, N. C. . . . . 7.20 V
Lenoir, N. C 8.50 V
In addition to the above Summer
practically all Southern Railway System
mentioned above, May 15th to Septem
turning so as to reach original starting
1922. Stop-overs permitted at any and
trip within final limit of ticket.
For further information call on
Agent or address:
R. C. COTNER,
District Passenger Agent,
Spartanburg, S. C.
Tourists Fleeing F
from High frices
Coblenz, July 2.?American and
it British tourists are flocking to the
larger cities in the occupied areas of n
Germany in order to escape the high ^
. prices for living now leveled against '
Allied nationals in the interior of v
IP Germany. a
Hundreds of visitors on their way L
to and from the Passion Play at ?
Oberammergnu are making their
headquarters during their stay in 1
Germany in this city, and reports F
from Cologne, ocoupied by the British
and from Mayence and Wiesba- ^
?. den, occupied by the French are to n
.the same effect. In the occupied ^
? areas they are protected against ^
profiteering by laws which prevent ?
German tradesmen from discriminrft-' J
i ing against Allied nationals.
Prices in the occupied zones, however,
have- taken a jump of about
76 percent since the mark went very f
low a few weeks ago and its gain j
41 ? a M J % ? -
w iLiuii nit- pusi iew nays nas nau no j
effect whatever on prices. All tour- ?
ists returning from the interior are ^
^ warning their friends not to plaice fl
themselves at the mercy of the Ger- ,
man profiteers- who are charging v
visitors from 200 to 500 percent more
than the German nationals.
, j'jjs | | \1
You? J!
cold, delicious j
el refreshing ||l
your grocer |K
y^/ i
i BOTTLING CO. i
TELEPHONE 126 M I
^WinipiHiSpnJ
lity of your horses, mules, cattle,
'suits iu health, growth and pro- '
?wal in all nature. You can beat j
stock by using *
emedies
igor and strength, and increase
o-Vet treatment prepared by the 1
itock disease and disorder. <
Remedies
ig Use: ^
ion Powder for A . JBfe
rrouueer, price* %
stores, under a positive guarantee
Ukded. Your dealer oerries a com farmer
an authoritative book of
ide", which gives the symptonia
eases. Ask for jrour copy.
Eac^Mffrs., i TOION, S. 0.
RSiON FARES ~
>N, S. CC.)
.WAY SYSTEM .
o
iorehead City, N. C., . . . .% 21.90
furphy, N. C 12.75
lorfolk, Va 20 05
liagara Falls, N. Y 52.80
'ortland, Ore 125.80
loanoke, Va 20.85
ialuda, N. C 3.75 ]
Iky Land, N. C 5.15
lalt Ijflke City, Utah 100.25
an Francisco, Cal 121.45
t. Petersburg, Fla 35.40
'ampa, Fla 34.00
'uxedo, N. C 4.05
'ryon, N. C 3.20
!ate Springs, Tenn 11.35
'allulah Fall. G?. ... o in
Valhalla, S. C 0.30
Vrightsville, N. C 14.30
Excursion tickets are on sale from
i Agencies to many other points not
ber 30th, 1922, with final limit repoint
by mid-night of October 31st,
all points on either going or return
nearest Southern Railway System
L. R. PARTLOW,
Ticket Agent,
Union, S. C.
ieavy Taxes
Levied on Visitors
Vienna, June 30.?Following the ex.mple
of other tourist countries, the
Upine resort provinces of Austria
iave begun to levy heavy taxes on
iaifAra *
..icic is a 11*a ur ruom rent,
i tax on food and drink, and another
o cover music and similar attractions,
ilotor oars are taxed heavily for eacn
lay of stay, and there is a federal luxiry
tax on every article except the
ilainest food and clothing.
Vienna papers declare the Austrian
Upine resort regions are as expensive
8 any place in the world this season.
Nevertheless, it is virtually impossi>le
to secure a room at any of them
or July and August. Every farm
lome and country boarding house is
looked up and small country houses
tre unobtainable at any price.
The first sawmill within the Arctic
Circle will soon be established at
Ierschel Island, at the mouth of the
Mackenzie river. The engine accomlanying
the mill is of the two-cycle
ibid, without carburetor or Ignition,
ind can be run on fish oil or crude
>etroleum from the Fort Norman
trells.
. ^0^ m
Advertise in The Times; get results.
4 4
Volcano is a
Friend to Mankind
Washington, July 2.?It might be a
surprise to many to be told that the
fire-spitting, lava-spouting, earthrocking
volcano is one of mankind's
best friends rather than his arch enemy,
but such is the surprising declaration
which will be explained to the
Conference of Geography of the National
Educational Association in Boston
July 3.
The most tremendous volcanic eruption
of history, that of Mount Katmai
in Alaska, in 1912, will be described
in this connection by Dr. Robert F
Griggs, leader of several parties sent
to the scene of the cataclasm by the
National Geographic Society, and who
discovered the Valley of Ten Thousand
Smokes, Katmai's neighbor wonder
of nature.
Mankind's debt to the volcano has
been more fully recognized by results
cf recent researches, says a bulletin
of the Society describing the upheaval.
Without volcanoes, it is now believed,
there would be no ocean, and
to volcanoes we are indebted for carbon
dioxide, without which human life
could not exist.
The explosion of Katmai, the conference
will be told, was unnoticed be
cause it was so far from the centers
of civilization. Had the eruption occurred
near New York City, the bulletin
declares, the sulphurous fumes
would have polluted the air everywhere
east of the Rocky Mountains;
the noise would have reverberated like
an artillery duel across the Central
States. The lower Hudson itself
would have been turned into a gigentic
tomb.
However, due to the lack of population
in that far region, there was
no loss of life, and the eruption provides
scientists and geographers now
me of their greatest opportunities to
study the phenomenon of volcanic action.
Though generally unaware of the
eruption until long after, every inhabitant
of the country, and almost of the
world, felt its effects, one of which
was the cold damp summer of 1912.
This was caused by the interception of
sunlight by the long-hangi.ig dust
:loud in the upper air. Even in cloudless
Saraha, it was declared, the sky
was overcast.
A succession of such mighty explosions
could plunge the earth into another
ice age, it is believed.
An area around Kulmai,"larger than
the State of Delaware, was coverea
il A *
uiHi summer Dy more than a foot of
volcanic ash, which was enough to
destroy all but the hardiest of vegetation.
When the explosion occurred
two cubic miles of material were
blown off the top of the mountain, and
the present whereabouts of the mountain
top is still a mystery to scientists.
The Valley of Ten Thousand
Smokes, from which arise virtually
millions of steam jets in a scene of
unsurpassed awe and beauty, is believed
to have been an aftermath of
the cataclasni.
President Wilson turned aside from
the stress of war to make this region
a national monument second to none
in the world. While the country is so
remote that the few white men who
have viewed its wonders have been
members of the society's expeditions,
the educators will be told, it is easily
accessible from a sheltered bay
christened in honor of the society, and
a 50 mile roadway will some day place
it within the compass of the automobile
tourist.
Publishing Bigle Great
Newspaper Feature
Topeka, Kansas, July 3.?Is printing
the Bible a good newspaper feature?
Will the average person read
the Bible if published in this way?
After printing a weekly serial from
tne eiDie ior tnree months, Arthur J.
Carruth, managing editor of The Topeka
State Journal, declares that the
publication of the Bibte has proved to
be the greatest success of any feature
ever printed by The State Journal
Moreover, it is being read by many
subscribers as would be the install,
ments of a popular novel, Carruth
states.
"The publication of the Bible serially
has had a marvelous effect," said
Mr. Caruth. "It has shown that the
ubscribers are sincere in their demand
for reading matter of a religious
character, and also has shown
to the public that the newspapers do
not print only the sensational, that
they do not attempt to appeal primarily
to the masses and that they do
not neglect the church."
As an indication of the interest tak
en in the publication of the Bible, Mr.
Carruth stated he has received inquiries
from every state in the nation,
many letters from Canada and a number
of communications from foreign
countries. A number of Kansas newspapers
have taken up the publication
of the Bible since The Journal started
it, Mr. Carruth stated. , He said out
of about 60 ministers in Topeka, he
has received communications from all
and that in only two or three cases
had they criticized the publication.
The publication of the Bible was undertaken
by The State Journal at the
suggestion of Dr. Charles M. Sheldon,
oi lopena, eaiior oi The Christian
Herald and well known author. Each
installment includes about 3,000
words. The Weymouth text of the
New Testament, a translatio in everyday
English, is used. Already publication
of the Book of Mark has been
completed and the Book of Luke is
well under way.
The shifting sands of the desert of
Gobi are gradually burying large portions
of the great wall of China.
Plea for Safe Celebration
New York, July 2.?A plea for a
safe celebration of Independence Day
has been made by the Safety Institute
of America, which at the same time
issues the warning that if greater
care is not taken this year than in the
past, approximately 130 persons will'
be killed and 3.000 others injured in
fireworks accidents throughout the
United States on the Fourth of July.
"The total of persons killed in
Fourth of July celebrations since
these were inaugurated is greater
than the number of men killed on the
American side in the Revolutionary
War," says the statement of the In- j
stitute. "During the past 14 years
alone 1,832 persons were killed and
42,089 injured as a result of Fourth
of July accidents from firearms and
fireworks, and these do not include
drownings or automobile accidents."
While the number of accidents
caused by the use of fireworks and
firearms is being gradually decreased
through the regulation of the sale of
such products and the growth of the
community celebration idea, the decrease
is more than counteracted by
the community celebration idea, the
decrease is more than counteracted by
the heavy increase in automobile fatalities
and drownings incidental to
the modem reckless celebration of Indepence
Day.
The Institute has issued the following
list of protective suggestions:
If you must have a bonfire, let your
father build it and watch it with you;
better still, don't build bonfires. Scores
of children are burned to death and
millions of dollars of property are lost
each year as the result of bonfires
built in fun.
Ordinary firecrackers are harmless
<i usea witn reason, but they should
never be held in the hand after being j
lit because the'Slightest powder burn
may result in lockjaw and death.
The sparks .themselves fro ma fire
toy .are not, as a rule, dangerous, but
the glowing metal cores constitute a
serious hazard, -and have caused fatalities
Don't put powder, ammunition for
canes, or cartridges on street car
tracks; this has caused many fatal
accidents through wrecks, runaways
and pnic mong passengers.
The most prolific ruse of ourth of
July accidents ia the "I didn't Know It
Was Loaded" person. Don't look into
the muzzle of ft gun to see if it is
loaded; don't point a gun at another
person even if you think it is not loaded?you
may be. mistaken. The "I
didn't know ib was lit" and who is
almost as deadly. Before trying to
relight fireworks, wuit long enough
to be sure they -are out.
Furm&n Summer School
Greenville, July 1.?With an attendance
of 407, the Furman Summer
School is now thbrounghty under way
and, in point of enrollment, takes rank
as the second largest institution of its
kind in South Carolina.
Despite the fact that the summer
school is not yet three years old, the
attendance this session represents -an
increase of 100 over last year's enrollment.
There are -three classes of students
in the school?teachers, college
students making up work they failed
to get off during the regular collegiate
session, and; high school pupils
Iivpiug W gum ciiuu^u C1CU1V3 LU C||able
them to enter college this fall.
There are 270 teftehers.and 137 college
and high school students enrolled.
The Furman Summer School is supported
and directed by the five Baptist
colleges of South Carolina, and
the faculty is made up largely of professors
from these several institutions.
Here and there a professor is
taken from unaUxer college or high
school. Those instructors coming from
other than the Baptist colleges of the
state are: Prof. C. B. Gosnell, Bessie
Tift College, Forsyth, Ga.; Prof. J. P
Coates, superintendent of Seneca high
school; Dr. L. L. Carpenter, University
of South CaroJina; Prof. M. E.
Brockman, superintendent of Chester
high school; John E. Carroll, county
superintendent of education, York
county; Mrs. E. S.. Watkins, supervisor
intermediate grades, Columbia;
M rs. W. D. Rice, supervisor primary
grades, Rock Hill; Miss; Janet McKenzie,
supervisor primary grades,
Greenville; and Miss Theresa Wicker, .
primary grades, Greenville,
The summer school will come to a
close on July 21.
F nntnvint* F nilnit
In Lava Flows
Honolulu, T. H., June 30.?Stories
told by native Hawaiians of footprints
in the lava flows on the slopes
of the extinct volcano of Haleakala,
"House of the Sun," on the island of
Maui, which would indicate that the
island was inhabited centuries ago
when the volcano was still active,
have been verified by K. P. Emory,
of the Bishop Museum, who investigated
the reports on behalf of the
institution.
Emory, who is assistant ethnologist
at the museum, originally decided
that the prints had been made
by natives fleeing, bewore the last
flow of lava down Haleakala, when
the lava was still hot and plastic. {
Further investigation showed that
the prints could not have been made
by persons who had been running, as
the toes were not more deeply im
pressed tnan tne heels. <
Scientists here are puzzled over the t
prints, which range in size from four i
inches long, two inches wide at the '
toes and one inch at the heel; to ten i
inches long, four inches wide at the j
toes and three inches wide at tho
heels. The toes in the prints are i
natural in size, as is the curve of the
foot, Emory said. i
> .1 ?
Taste is a matter of
tobacco quality
Wf 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.
LtagtU & Alyert Tubacto Co.
fjlA
it?(
20 for 18c
10 for 9c
Vacuum tins
* of 50 - 45c
Perhaps you have heard
gasoline?they're all alik
well say that shoes are s
or tires are tires.
Just what (
A
vol
all.
lar
Mo
Finns and Swedes Cease
Making Faces at Each Other
Stockholm, Juno 14.?Finns and
Swedes arc no longer making faces at
each other across the Baltic. The cordial
relations between the two countries,
interrupted in the past by various
incidents, political and otherwise,
are now being resumed. Both sides
are gratified at the change, which is
apparently a result of diplomatic efforts
made at Genoa by Iljalmar
Branting, the Swedish premier.
Postal rates already have been re-1
duced; direct telephone connection as
well as radio will be used for the mutual
exchange of pleasant words, and
recently a group of Swedish newspapermen
journeyed to Helsingfors, met
their Finnish colleagues, and buried
the hatchet.
Orders American
Missionaries to Leave
Adana, Turkey, July 2.?Kemal
Pasha, head of the Nationalist gov
ernment at Anfjora, has issued orders
that all American missionaries
resident in Cilicia discontinue their
work and leave the country immediately.
The Turks appear to be working
on a deliberate plan to get rid of
minorities before the Peace settlement
in the view of observers here.
Dr. Ward of the Near East Relief
Commission, confirms reports that
CIGARE
of Turkish and Domestic
this: "Gasoline is
e." One might as
hoes, soap is soap
r~>rlrives
tliat mi
-M- V K-/ ^
in
MIXTURE of from 12 to 15 p;
l of gasoline vapor does it. Mot
atile, so that it will vaporize re
The composition of that one p
gely determines how well the 11
tor gasoline must he more tl
mid he properly balanced. It n
>portion of light, intermediate
nts to alford instant ignition, ti
1 mileage.
tandard" is a 'carefully balan
counts for the consistently gooc
tens of thousands of motors to<
nays to disc riminate in having j
larine oils are just as depend
>tor Gasoline. Don't take oil i
me.
f f A a bb " m
STAND#
it.*, u.s. p?t. off.
The Balanced Gt
STANDARD Oil* CO
(New Jersey]
| 10,000 adult Greeks in Asia Minor,
alone have been massacred and that t
the Relief Commission was not al- ,
lowed to shelter their children.
Great Britain seems to be now the j
center of attack by the Kemalist
press. One newspaper recently pub-{
lished the following:
"It is the British who sow discord |
and trouble among you, oh servants I
of Christ. You should therefore
know that if the commandments of
the Holy Spirit are ten in number,
the eleventh should be hatred against
England.
"And you followers of Mohammed,
every time you kill a Christian, you
are pulling down one of the cornerstones
of the British Empire. TJtere- j
fore for God's sake massacre, for the
love of your country massacre, in the i
name of crying humanity massacre, j
for the salvation of the world nms-1
j sacre."
President Harding has a copy of the,
Marion Star, his own paper, delivered)
at his executive desk every morning
and he reads it before he does anything
else. Throughout the day it i
neatly folded away on the left-hand
corner of the desk for ready reference.
.
Blood contains about 8 per cent of
solid matter.
^ i
Bark of the leather wood tree is
k used in making rope.
field
TTE S
tobaccos?blended
3tor >
t your car?
arts of air and 1 part
or gasoline has to he
adily, hut that is not
art of gasoline vapor
notor performs.
lian just volatile; it
lust eontain the right
! and heavy constit11
II III I ?l II t llitU'OP II ml
corf gasoline, which
I results it is giving
day.
gasoline, and oil too.
lahle as "Standard"
without k nowing its
\RD"
i soli ne!
UVIIWm
i
Palm Beach Suits
Cleaned
We can clean and press your
Palm Beach suit verv oui< tclv
these days. We have the
equipment and the know how.
Give me a trial. Will appreciate
it as much or more than
any one else.
ni ?
rnone io? ana we win call
promptly and return your suit
looking like new.
Hames Pressing &
Repair Shop
Nicholson Bank Bldg.
Phone 169 and motor cycle
will call.
"The Best in Drug Store Goods,
ihe Best in Drug Store Service.'*
Motto of the International Association
of Rexall Clsba.
I ? I
The company operating the omnibuses
in Ix>ndon pays $1,000,000
\ear for the licenses for their vehicles.
J