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Where To Worship * * * * ******* First Baptist Church. All of the regular services will be held tomorrow. Sunday school at 10 a. m. Morning worship with preaching by the pastor at 11:15 a. in.; subject, "A Challenging Question." B. Y. 1'. U. at 7:15 p. in. Kvening worship at 8:15 p. m. The public i-- cordially invited. Kdw. S. Heaves, Pastor. (ireen Street. Sunday school at lo o'clock. Sermon at 11 a. m. by the pastor. Song service at 7:45 p. m. Song, praise and prayer service at 8 p. m. Kverybody who will is expected to take a part in the evening service, interesting ami helpful. i <>u me curuiany invmu J. B. Chick, Pastor. First Presbyterian Church. There will he no services in th First Presbyterian church tomorrow. Sunday school at 10 o'clock. The pastor. Rev. J. F. Mutltoson, is; at Clifton conduct :ng a revival meetin g. Episcopal. Sixth Sunday after Trinity. Sunday school and Bible el iss at 10 a. m. B. F. Alston, Jr., superintendent. Service with sermon at 11 a. ni. A welcome to all. \V. YV. Johnson, I.ay Reader. Corinth Bap*.i: t Church (Cdored) At 10 a. m. Mr. W. T. Kennett, of the white Baptist church, will address the Sunday school. At 11:30 a. in. preaching. At 7:30 p. m. B. Y. P. U. At 8:30 p. ni. a special sermon to the young people. The public is invited to attend these cervices. J. S. Daniel, Pastor. Bethel A. M. E. Church (Colored) 10:00 a. ni.?Sunday school. 11:30 a. m.?Preaching. 7:00 p. m. A. C. E. League. 8:00 p. ni.? Preaching. Dean I. II. Alston of Dickerson's School of Theology, Columbia, S. C., will nreaeh mornintr anil nic-lit Everybody welcome. Ij. P. Gamble, Minister. Ships Made Subject Of International Brief New York, July 22.?Fifteen Bra i.-li ships alleged to have been supplying American rum runners craft has bet n made the subject of international brief, according to John P. Appleby, general chief of the enforcement agent t.f the New York prohibition officers. The brief has been forwarded to Secretary Hughes, so Mr. Appleby saitl, and if considered of sufficient important it will be taken up with the members of the British embassy. State Cavalry at Cokeburg, Pennsylvania Cok? burg, Pa., July 22.?The state cavalry troop; arrived here at 7 o\ lock this morning and pitched their camp on the hillside overlooking the mining village. It is understood that tn 1.1 headquarters will be established her#?. English Woman Introduces New Marriage Vows I,<in<lon, July 20.? English women arc equalling their American sisters in the scope of their occupations. Women legislators, lawyers, physicians and sc ulptors are fairly common in hoth countries. Hut now London comes along with a woman "marrying parson." She is the Rev. Constance Cullman, a graduate of Oxford University, and joint pastor of one of the West End's fashionable c hurches. Some women like to he married by .Miss Colt man; she does not ask them to use the word "obey," in fact tells them to avoid it. She requests the bride and groom to present each other with a ring, repeating the words: "As this ring now encircles thy linger, so let my love surround thee all the days of thy life." I | ?S i^VAK * Our hosiery department is silk stockings by VAN R/ for their smooth ankle fit yourselves on pretty ankles new designs are beautiful i f of styles and colorings fron There's something exc IVAN RAALTE GLOVE SI1 WILBURN DRY ( Experience With Boll Weevil Whitmire, S. C., July 20, 1922. Hear Mr. Editor: l'lease allow me space in your paper to tell of my experience with the boll weevil. 1 have eight acres of the heaviest fruited cotton for the time of the year 1 ever had 1 am using calcium arsenate in the powder form applying it with a thin flour sack, and find 1 am getting great results. The day before I put on the poison I go over my cotton and pick the punctured squares, as I really do not believe the poison would do much good unless the punctured squares are picked up, because if those weevils were allowed to hatch out they would soon destroy the crop while the poison was being applied. In picking the squares I very often find a dead weevil, which Is proof enough that the poison used in powder form will do good. I started I catching the old weevils about the 15th of June. The first day I picked I averaged about 100 weevils to the acre. Now I can hardly find a punctured square in my fields, and in the fields where they have not been picked nor the poison used the majority of the squares are punctured. I have been using the poison since the 21st of June, applying it every morning while the dew is on, and I have worked some at night while the I fit ton ic il'linn TKn fil'uf nnnlinnfioM -liKuvonuu 1 put on with buckets with a whole cut in the button with a thin cloth tied over it, and it did not put it on to suit me, and I went to using the sacks and have been using them ever since. I have applied the poison five times over most of my cotton. I have generally been making three trips over my cotton a week, once picking the squares, once poisoning and once plowing. While working tn my cotton since Hsing the poison I keep my mules muzzled and wash their legs oif every night. We will have to Jo lots of ways if we raise any cotton under boll weevil conditions. I regret I did not start to working at mine soon, but experience is a good school, and we will all have to learn to fight the boll weevils. Thanking you for the space, I am,' Yours very truly, C. C.Rochester. American Packers May Break German Meat Prices Berlin, July 20.?American frozen meat promises shortly to release Germany's army of bread-winners from the ring of high prices which has for some time prevailed among the retail butcher shops of Berlin. Local dealers are being inundated with offers from packing firms in the United States, and Hugo Stinnes, the industrial magnate, has contracted with the Argentine government for deliveries on a large scale. Representatives of wholesale dealers in Argentina also are reported to be negotiating big contracts here. With shops charging 100 to 120 marks per pound for roasting meat and proportionately high rates for other cuts, the German laboring man or the middleclass worker finds it too expensive to have meat in his menu more than twice a week at the moat <>n his wages of four to live thousand marks monthly. It is estimated thai frozen meat from the United States can be delivered in Hamburg at 60 marks a kilogram. At this rate, a pound would come to some 10 or 50 marks in the retail shops of Berlin. The situation has become so difficult 'or many of the poorer Germans that hey have resorted in some places to consumers' buying "strikes.-' Shops which formerly were busy from morning till night have been obliged to < iose except for two days a week. The effect has been feenly felt in the Berlin stockyards, where reduced < onsumption has forced 500 employes out of work within the last few weeks. One of the causes of high prices is said to be the necessity for wholesalers and stockyards to buy livestock at prices quoted on the hoof. They have fought this practice for years, claiming that 50 per cent of an animal _ i i A_:\ ?? t : i* hiisi/ mi jiMnituuie reiau in uuyin^ it accord in j? to live weight rather than to the poundage after slaughter. An ad. in The Times gets results. iPECIAL ADVERTISEMENT.* FOR SALE?Ford touring car in good shape, 1020 model. Phone 2800. J. M. Bennett, Jr., Union, Route 2. ltpd |pF respler.dent with the new VALIK, wh:ch are famoun You women who pride 5 should pay us a visit. The and there is a wido variety n which to choose, eptionally fastidious about JC UNDERWEAR. JOODS COMPANY 1 Second Body Found F Wellsburg, W. Va.f July 21.?The finding of a second body today, shortly after noon, brought the list of tj known dead since the gun battle of p Monday morning at Clifton mine to t] seven. The last to be recovered was ^ the body of a white man, found in the v Cross Creek in close proximity to the a scene of the fighting. It was discov- 0 ered by Sam Logan. - j On the body of a man found this j morning 011 a hillside near Clifton- t villc, after attention of depu:y sher- j, iflfs had been attracted by circling buzzards, was found an automatic c pistol, it was learned later. a The coroner's inquest into the ^ deaths of Sheriff H. H. Duval and j members of the attacking party ad- e journed today until Mond.iy. v Salvation Army ?? t On account of the shortage in j, finance for the expenses of the Salva- ^ tion Army, we are compelled to do something to raise some ext.a funds , .1 . , ___ 8 mereiore arrangements nave ueen r made for the ice cream festival Satur- g day night at the City park, at which ? time all candidates are In.itcd to t come and be prepared to make a speech. There arc to be similar nuet- ( ings at Monarch, Ottaray and Excel, sior Mills at a later date. V/e again urge the musicians to turn out and play for this festival, making the evening a pleasure f<".r all, and kindl> 1 ask the ladies to donate cakes and leave at the Union Drug Store or call 1 Miss Frontis Winn. Do your shopping 1 early and come and spend the evening J at the park. Letter From Sunshine 1 1 Miss Mayme Sprouse, who underwent an operation at the Wallace 4 Thomson haspital, has returned home. Her many friends are pleased to 4 know she has returned home so much 1 improved. Mrs. Emma Farr, who has been 1 confined to her bed for five weeks, is 1 able to sit up. Due credit is given ' to our neighbors, who were so kind to us during her illness. Among the visitors at the home of this writer Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Toy Proctor and children, Gist Howell of Wilkinsville; Mr. and Mrs. 4 Robert Bailey and little son, Misses 4 Lily and Christeen Inman, Hawley and Russell Inman, Clarence Garner and Mrs. J. Garner, Otis Garner and Sidney Bailey. Sunshine. Route 1 Local* Farmers are laying by but are hindered just now by u wet season and the boll weevils are on the increase. It is too early, anyway, to Inj by, according to recommendations given for cultivating cotton under wee\ il con- I ditions. This scribe attended, by special invitation, the picnic of the Mon-Aetna Baptist Sunday school, held in Parrin's grove at Union on last Saturday and wishes to state how much the excellent barbecue dinner was enjoyed. The occasion was great and can bat result in inspiration to greater service by this, one of the best, if not the best Sunday, Sunday schools in the county. I wish especially t) thank ' by good friend, Mr. Johnson Crosby, superintendent of the school, and also Mr. Micager Rogers for their kind- ' ness to me. Mrs. William S. Coleman and little i daughter of Brownsville. Penn.. visited i heir cousins, Miss Ellen E. Gregory, and family here recently. Mrs. Coleman and daughter will leave Union this week, accompanied by Mr. Coleman (who has now joined his family. I arriving one day last week) for their home at Brownsville. , Miss Wilks Hawkins and Mrs. VV T. Wiiliford attended the Mon-Actna ' picnic last Saturday. Miss Leila Gregory was at home recently from Greenwood. Mrs. Sims McDaniel has improved * considerably. ' Mrs. Gordon Williams has been able c to visit relatives in Spartanburg re- ^ cently. s Rev. H. Haydock preached a splen- * did, though fearless, sermon at MonAetna church Sunday evening which was greatly enjoyed by some from this section who attended the service. The preacher touched in no uncertain way on the evils of the skating rink and socalled amusements of the present day which some ministers, as well as church members, are afraid to denounce on account of fear of becoming unpopular but the rightthinking Christian never falls out with (he preacher for calling their attention to duty or warning of danger for this is his business. DeA. Gregory and others attended the meeting held at the First Baptist i church on last Sunday afternoon, look- I ir.g to the organization of a county wide B. Y. P. U. association. This will be a great thin?? for the country churches as well for the town. Mr. | J. L. Baggot explained the work. "G." 1 Frequently Used I ?A little girl in Sunday school was asked, "What is a lie?" j Quick as a flash came the reply: | "An abomination unto the Ixrrd, bul a very pleasant help in tome of trouble."?Philadelphia North American. J 1 1 ( In New Holland the women cut | themselves with shells and, keeping ' t h?* wounds open a long time, form ( scars in the flesh which they deem i very ornamental. < There arc 773 officers and 1F?ilnK 1 filiated men in the New Ycrk State { National Guard. < 'olice May Force Turkish ?' Woraert to Dress Alike Constantinople^ July 20.?Some opimistic and determined Turks are atempting to persuade the women of he land to adopt a standard form of Iress. Optimistic, because Turkish /omen seem no more inclined to wear uniform than Would their sisters f Lxrndon, Paris and New York, and letermined because the Committee le al Mode is thinking of calling upon he police for help in carrying out ts plans. "Where are the women who would onsent to .have imposed upon them ;n antique and strange costume found oday only in museums?" is one of he questions hurled at the reformirs. "Where is the woman who vould recommend such a costume to mother? Can a Turkish woman of ild world Stamboul dress like a modirn hanoum of aristocratic Peru ? Nationalist fanaticism is an excellent hing, but only 'within limits.'" The committee, in answer to these ind sundry other attacks, has an lounceu darkly it is working on a cheme to put over its project, the ap>lication of which will be placed in he hands of the municipal police. Germany Invents New Way to Tax Foreigners Berlin, July 20.?The Prussian government has drafted a bill for the egalization of taxation, in a'" communities of over 1,000 inhabitants, on ill persons who rent rooms for a soiourn of a period under six months. The tax amounts to 40 percent where he lodging charge is more than 500 narks. In the case of persons who lave not resided in Prussia previous ;o January 1921, the tax is 200 percent. While the proposed assessment is istensibly applicable to all persons, ncluding Germans, the stipulated ive-fold assessment indicates a universal lodging impost fundamentally limed at foreigners. Officials exilained that local communities par.icipate to a very limited extent in :he nation's taxation proceeds. Hence :hey are obliged to look around for fresh sources of revenue, and the odging house tax affords one of the >asiers ways for communities to increase their income. WASTBMKENDOWN WOMAN Then I BeganTaking LydiaE. Pinkham's Medicines ... f Donaldsonvillej La. ?"I write with doasure to praise your medicine?Lydia llllllllllllllllllllitl^*' Pinkham's VegeI MMrf i'IIIh Compound ? u^wruii which has done bo Mf ^^11 muc^ to restore my ^ health. I was a IB * 1 broken-down woman HP * until my husband ft. ^ J| brought me a bottle I ?, ?w 4,i t f your Vegetable It illl Compound and one of I II' * 's jllll Lydia E. Pinkbam'e 1 UU * '1??^ Medicine. I fMJ had been having Sm Sail'every month and at intervals between, was weak and Beemed to be smothering at times, but in a week I felt like another woman. I also used Lydia E. Pinkham's Sanative Wash. It did me a 1 it of good too. I cannot praise your medicines too much and will be move than glad to recommend them to any woman who is suffering from female troubles. You may Krint my testimonial, as it is true."? Irs. T. A. Landry, C12Miss. St., Donaldsonville, La. Note Mrs. Landry's words?"as it is true.'' Every letter recommendingLydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is genuine. It is a statement telling the merits of these medicines just as the women in your own neighborhood tell each other about them. For fifty years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has sold on merit. John Porter Killed Anderson, July 21.?John Porter, 9 year old lineman, employed by the 'iedmont & Northern railway, was lectrocuted this afternoon when a ruy wire fell across a trolley wire, ending a current of 1,500 volts hrough his body. Cigars of the best quality art? made mtirely by hand, the tedious work of lolling them being relieved by an entertainer who reads aloud to the workers. BILIOUS JHILDREN Black-Draught, Long ii Successful Use, Praised by an Arkansas Mother, "Soon Does ha Work." Marmaduke, Ark.?Bpeaktng of Thedford's Black-Draught, which fr#m long uaa In her household has become regardod as Hthe family medicine," Mrs. Marr BL HU1, of Routs 1. this place, says: "When the children get bilious, I give them a couple of good doses, and when we hare sour stomach, headache, r any liver or stomach trouble, w? IIAim Dlaob.noaMwVl I# 4 as a? U?* WWW KU?U(, IV M ?U V?V| 1?A? tire, and soon'does the work. I cor talnly think it la ono of the best rem dies made." Black-Draught acta on the laded llrer, gently, bat positively, and help* It in lta Important function of throw Ing out waste materials and poison* from the system. In thousands of households BlaekDrau^ht is kept handy for Immediate use in time of need. Prompt treatment often Is half the battle, and will often prevent slight ills from developing in* to serious troubles. Its well-established merit, during ' more than 70 years of succoseful nee, should' convince yon of the helpful effects obtainable by taking Mask Draught for llvej and stomach die orders. Get a package today, aa< , keep It in your house. Bee that the package bears the werds. "TWIord!a - NOddj ' ? I 3s?88 I v ? MR. Y X 4t ft X 4 % V r VWT T Y will be at this store witl V mestic woolens in the p I TA | THl V !* T Y Select your Fall and Wi * tailored to your individi Remember the da T | | MULLINAX nBHn ^^5 . Citizei R. P. MORGAN, Pre The famous Ferris wheel of Paris being torn down to make way for more profitable investment. The ax of the structure alone weighs 72,0( pounds, and is set at a distance < 164 feet from the ground. It was bui ?t A A A >. A A A A A A A yvVV V V V Wv V V V V V V C. H. HUMPHI DIRECT FROM HE NATION'S LEADING TAILOI i the season's most coir-lcte chowin iece for a 1L0RING DISPLAY M IRSD AY?FBI DAY?S ATU1 JULY 27 28-29 inter suit and overcoat during this lal measure, for delivery whenever tes. Be here onrlv ??"'H -FAUCETT CLOTHING IE NEW WAY CASH STOI A^A j^4. A^A A^4. A^A A^A A^A A^A A^A A^A A^A I ^u.uitrr.v^yxi: ?,-JlJl B ^jjsawaa^'r.:fvw ^ M rS^S^wnv.v.ttniA ^g H^B ..S ^ K - I w|h Hh ^ChedtP without a Given to Our 1 'TO combat the numej i- "raising" checks* we 1 tectu Check System. Ba ^ series of numbers lithogn Mk tbe end of each check [li QHh a cutting device provided VHii the end can be torn so tl i ij?J ? w uimuucg uii tiie margin < ^ I the maximum amount of fj This special size business c K to a page, is suitable for a Protects checks may also b If you are considering < count, by all means corneal ?8*VtCB<ihat we are gMi EQUALLY FRACTtC l>B8K AMD MS is National sident JOHN W. Y is in 1900, at the time of the Paris ex* hibition, from plans of Ferris, an ur 'e American engineer. ;,f | BBtj? pl( It Subscribe to The Union Daily Timea gr ~ 53 %T0.J | ing!! I UES | j J*? ? RS' I O T g of imported and do- V HE ! WAY | v event and have them Y you say. V get first choice. A ^ | COMPANY | RE I w srg|g?: toteetion i Machine kout Cost *et>osltors pus ftauds caused by eh Protbectu check has a Lpned in indelible ink at I _ I 1 n kjc a. moncv oraerj. pv I with earn check boos, tut the highest amount of the rYi+rSr represents cK?*V heck book, three checks ill business firms. * had in two pocketdfce*. O jg free to our psfffpa ;al for rogxnv t waix \m r . r ; ^ i t* v ^ V^i V 1 > W*tl . I Bank VILBANKS, Cashier Mo.iumentu to military heroes are' iknown in China. ? . ' filii Belgium wom#fi have been em-;*;, jyed in the railway, postal and tale aph service since 1882.