The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, July 26, 1922, Image 3
SPEC
CLEA1
SA]
OF LADIES' DR
WAISTS, CO
HUT <
writ i
FOR THREE DAYS
FRIDAY, SATURDj
One lot of Gingham Dr<
$5.00 values, sale pri
One lot of Dresses, $7.
price
One lot Ladies Wirthm<
$1.50 values, $ale pri<
^ All Spring Coat^&nd Co
JUST ARRIVED? Ne
all colors, at
Ladies' and Misses' Ba!
* (Bradleys) at from .
Water Wings, Bathin
50c 65c t<
* i
10 per cent oil on all
C. Allt
Germany Seems to be ta
Real Winner of War no
tie
Ann Arbor, Mich., July 26.?Germany
aeems to be the real winner of ?
the World WarT Prof. William H p,)
Hobbs, 'head of the geology depart- co
ment of the University of Michigan, p|
said before the Rotary Club here in 1
an address in which he cited the present
industrial and commercial posi- *r'
^ion of that country. Prof. Hobbs re- ve
cently returned from a year's trip m)
around the world. Declaring that 'n1
reports representing Germany as ,n
facing bankruptcy were unfounded,
he pictured her as a beehive with w<
plants working night and day, yet un- ?
able to keep pace with the contracts
and with industry and carrying trade
gravitating into- her hands.
'It is undoubtedly true Germany is
. to play the major role in developing th
Russia," said Prof. Hobbs. "It seems no
Germany is the real winner of the co
war and she may continue to hold th
this position provided present condi- ne
tions are maintained. The onlv fac- ....
pi
tor that might halt this development wj
is early revival fo American competi- fu
tion.
'Outside the United States industry
and carrying trade have been gravi- ce
|| "Good
SI to the
I La. st
. Drop"
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V-UP s
LE
ESSES, SHIRT i
ATS AND j
nil TITO
5UII3 ;
ONLY?
\Y AND MONDAY i
h
esses, $3.50 to
ice $2.49 \
50 values, sale h
$4.95 c
or Waists, i
ce 79c [
at Suits at 1-2 price. "
!W Silk Sweaters in t
$5.00 *
thing Suits, o
. . $1.50 to $7.50 I
g Shoes and Caps ?
o $1.50 35 to 50c
other merchandise.
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SlOaMBSBIMBBCaCSHMBHHBHB ii
ting into the hands of Germany, v
w supplied with a great merchant e
et constructed since the signing of
e armistice. Germany is a beehive ^
industry, with her industrial
ants working day and night and
ntracts made on favorable terms
ling up faster than they can be ^
led. r
'The country largely is exempt t
om the labor troubles that^ hpve f
xed its rivals. The tle'preciatlpd
ark favors external, as opposed to t
ternal contracts and work goes on v
Germany at a phenominal pace. s
"In Germany the capitalist, shop f
irker and farmer are prsperous." I
s
aising Loans For A
Refunding Purposes h
Tokio, June 23.?The president of {
e South Manchurian railway in an- ^
uncing that 30,000,000 yen of the |
mpany's debentures would fall due |
is fall and another 35,000,000 yer. N
xt spring, said negotiations were in t
ogress in New York and London
th a view to raising loans for rending
purposes. '
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uiue unu vumisn are maciu iroui
rtain seaweed. ! 1
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'lucky Mountain
Climbers Praised by
Sir Francis Younghusb&nd
London, July 25.?"Mountaineering
roper is not necessarily rashness,
ut is entirely a question of prudencs
nd of courage, of strength an<J
teadiness, and of a feeling for naure
and her moat hidden beauties,
vhich are often awe-inspiring, but
or that reason the most sublime, und
o a contemplative spirit the mor^'
uggestive."
Sir Francis Younghusband, speakng
before the Royal Geographical
iociety on the Mount Everest expeition,
used the foregoing words to
xpress the sentiment which has animated
all those connected with the
xpedition, and then said they werq
written 33 years ago by a certain
ather Ratti, who has now become
'ope Pius XI.
After describing what the expediion
had accomplished Sir Francis
aid: "The experience gained this
ear shows that skilled mountaineers
re able to take those unskilled in
icrVi mnimfnin nroff
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ltitudes. Geoffrey Bruce had never
limbed a snow and ice mountain beore.
Yet under Finch's skilled j
eadership he was able to attain i
eight of 27,300 feet. And the Sher>a
porters, though they were practially
untrained to snow and ice
itork, were able, under General
Jruce's stimulating influence, to cary
loads up to 25,500 feet, some of
hem making the journey four times
nd so earning the unstinted praise i
f the best mountaineers.
"By careful organization and com-'
ination of effort, using experience to
;uide inexperience, and by the display
of indomitable pluck on the part
f tlie highest climbers, the expedi- j
ion has at a bound brought the recrd
up from 24,600 feet to 27,300 feet
nd thus left only 1,700 feet to be
limbed before the crowning summit
3 reached.
'The standard of human achieveient
has thereby been sensibly
aised. And many another traveller,
nd many another straggler upward
a every walk of life and in every
ountry will be braced and heartened
i remembering what Finch and Malory,
Somervell, Norton and Bruce
ave this year accomplished on Mount
Ivei'est. And this, to my mind, is
acomparably the most valuable reult
of the expedition, and a resu't
/hich makes their efforts in the high
st degree worth while."
German Sailors Serve
On British Vessel
Berlin, July 25.?Shipping circles
lere note with satisfaction that ucrnan
sailors are again in dcman ] for
he personnel of ships sailing under
oreign flags.
The most recent instance cited is
hat of a modernly equipped salvage
essel which an English company has
ent to the Baltic sea to stand ready
or assistance in all cases of distress,
t is said here that, although the
hip's captain is English, as is also its
lag, the crew consists of 36 Germans
ailing from Danzig.
According to methods of 100 years
igo, it would take ] ,000 men to do
he work of a combined harvester.
Society women in Paris are now
vearing hats to match the color of
heir motorcars.
There are nearly 20,000 known medeinal
remedies.
The Northern Pacific is spendinp
lineteen millions for betterments.
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Banks Behind Cotton
Growers' Associate
Columbia, July 25.?That the ba:
oi soutn uaroiina are strongly
hind the South Carolina Cotton Grt
ers Cooperative Association is <
denced by the strong letters being
ceived daily by the association fr
institutions in every section of
state. Tuesday morning's n
brought letters from approximat
100 banks assuring the association
their desire to assist it in every j
sible way.
The Commercial Bank of Newbei
of which John M. Kinard, a forr
president of the South Carolina Bai
ers Association, is the president, ea
very strongly in a half page adv
tisement in the Newberry papers
uay auvising its uuswJinerB 10 sign
contract. "After a thorough inve:
gation of the cooperative market
plan, we wi9h to state that we hea
ly endorse it and without hesitat
further advise every cotton growei
this and adjoining counties to-joir
they have not already done so," s;
the bank. "If the plan wasn't a g<
one our government would not h
agreed to loan the association $1
000,000 for South Carolina. We
going to back the association; to <
limit and in doing so we feel thai
means a long step fottrard in bring
independence and prosperity to
farming industry and putting it U]
a more secure and solid foundati
Cooperative marketing sjtells prosp
ity to all of us and we want to
the county sign up 100 per c
strong." The advertisement conta
some strong statements, for coope
tive marketing. Many Ijankers
over the state have notified the as
ciation on their intention of waging
vigorous advertising eampatgn in
'half of the association, declaring tl
it seemed to them to offer a real h<
for a prosperous South Carolina
the future.
.. .
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CRUSH Get ac
CRUSH , "Crijnl'
ented d
the pur
ciousnt
the "C
selling
5m?gC| in the
r=|ff pensed
ATENTEDX 2 !
rSSSsj
only in the ORANGE Cf
ktyBottle w
54
flavors are prepared by Orange-Crush Co., Chicago, Win:
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"I
be- reSB^^y
?w- ^HH?gBg||w bHeb k
aBBa &
re- fcSra ?j
JBL ML
?f
I OS- W Makes tidy-Too ki
Jg Brighten up you
ner sS? And preserves le
me ^ f EcOZfOO
*r~ ^1 ^ Black, Ta
in? get the Shino
in fcriritle daubei
> if >!Bv and applies
ood Lar^je lar
ave
the shin
jon
ior.
?ee * - Burying Place Discovered
ent
ins New Smyrna, Florida, July 25.?
ru- Removal of part of an inconspicuous
all mound from a lot adjacent to the
so- Dixie Highway on the outskirts of
I a this city for the earth it contains
be- has developed that tt was the burying
hat place of either a prisoner of war or
>pe a slave of the Ei^opeun or Indinn ?nof
habitants of Florida of more than
one hundred years ago. The mound.
fruit-flavored drink
world. Also dis
ice-cold at fountains
Ingredients
The three "Crush" drin. 9 ,
get their flavors from the
delicate fruit oils pressed '
from the fresh outer skins I
of oranges, lemons or limes, (
to which are added juices
from these fruits, cane I
sugar, U. S. certified food f
color, carbonated water. ,
and citric acid?the natural
acid of oranges, lemons I
and limes. ^
Distributed exclusively by
UJSH BOTTLING I
D. ARTHUR, rianag
UNION, S. C.
n oes and London. Send for free pamphlet. "How
rica's Home Shoe
ng feet?thattgiva the,right im;
r dull-looking shoes. Shinoli
other and makes shoes wea
licaJ ? Con veniffn t?Easy
n. White, Qx~blood(end Brow
urevta 1 H/t ^
* ajr o ivv*^ FAMILY
USELa
Home Set. A genuine J
r' which cleans^ thej shoes /
polish quickly/and feasilj*. it
nbsv wool' polisher (bring? K
e with, a fferw strokes. ,\J
>*art fo say^SHTNOLA'^Y
?~ ?? e
about five feet in height and of sina
area, has been a familiar object sin*
*s far back as the oldest inhabitani
can remember and tall oaks and pa
mottoes, are ((rowing upon it.
A mal estate dealer who had tl
property listed noticed recently thi
some unauthorized person had be<
removing earth from the mound ar
upon investigation he discovert
what he at first believed to be a shi
of peculiar form. It was identifu
J
y >'i v i jf jr w w i u
\ cMford1s
rangeSUSB
:quainted with th<
ly" Bottle. Its pat
lesign insures to yoi
ity, quality and deli
iss which have mad<
Jrushes" the larpes
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Orange-Crush Is Made." TJt
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press ion,
i softens Wb
r longer
ji.iai.fr are pari 01 a numan skull and
e further excavation disclosed the skelts
eton of a man who was about six
I- feet in height. Kusty chains were
about the neck, arms and letfs, with
ie all sections of the chain joined tout
tfether.
,n The body had been placed upon the
ul level Kround and the earth had been
heaped over and around it
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?d Advertise in The Times.
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