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THE UNION TIMES' PUBLISHED DAI I. Y BY THE * I'MON TIMES COMPANY EXCEPT SIM)AY TIMES Bl ILDINO, MAIN STREET i BEI.E PHONE NO. 1 I.EWIS M. RICE. Editor Iii'tri>tered at the Postofliee in Union, S. C., as second class matter. SUBSCRIPTION KATES One Year . . .$4.00 o:.. xr ? iu . o nn r>i.x ^iuiitn> - -'vu Throe Months . .? 1.00 A 1?V KIV". ISKMKNTS One square, 1 >t insertion $1.00 Kvery suhso? omit insertion- .fit) MKMBKK ' ?! " \SS<H IATK1) l'KKSS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to t : use for republication of all news spatchcs credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. \V KDNKSDA ?( T?)l KU 21. ' 'IT. It is not every <lay that a -unit finds confronting him so many and such momentous questions. The war is at least creatine' hi^ ptohlems as well as settling other jsreat issues. I >o not foruret the nicotine of the mcmhership of the Chamber of Commerce Thursday nieht. Kvery member is urtred to lie present, as business of great importance will he transacted. Why not turn at least a part of one hale of cotton into a liberty bond. Mr. Farmer? You lose interest when you hold cotton; you draw interest when you hold a bond. These bonds pay t per cent and they are as safe as any investment can be made. .Make your arrangements to attend the Union County Fair, November 7. 8, and Oth. It. 1". Alston, Jr., Secretary of the organization is now in Columbia planning to bring attractions to our county fair. You help boost your county when you boost your county fair. From all accounts that we are able to };ather, the German submarine is becoming less effective on sea and the German air lighters are fretting the worst of it in the air, and on land, except the Russian front they seem to be getting the worst of it. All of J which goes to prove that they will | soon get enough of it all round. One would think the German Kaiser would be ashamed to hobnob with the Sultan on Turkey, but such seems not ... i.? .L_ - - hi in- nit* i-uM', as is evidenced in the recent banqueting togethe of Kaiser and Sultan on Turkish territory?fitting yoke fellows?both red-handed murderers and standing for the socalled civilization founded upon no moral code except the will of those mighty rulers. More people are reading newspapers today than ever in the history of the world, and it goes without saying that the habit once formed will be adhered to. This is one good result of the great war. People are informing themselves; they are being taught more real geography than they ever learned in school and they are taking a broader view of affairs than ever before. Men, who, a few years ago, were content to go for weeks and never look at a paper are now daily readers of some newspaper. It is to be hoped that those guilty of hoarding up and storing great quantities of sugar will be severely ; dealt with hv the a i nu.vl IIIMVIlt. /-v nulldreu and fifty car loads, it is said, was ' stored in one warehouse up north and discovered by government agents. There are doubtless many other ca v., : where the same thinvr has been done 1 that have never come to li^ht. A man ' who speculates in the necesssities of ( life in a crisis like that which faces I the people of these United States, is ' too mean to be allowed to go free. He * should bo locked up. A (Treat many farmers in the lowei ' part of this State made a small fortune from their crops of Irish po- ( tatoes this year. We have been won- I dcring why our farmers could not s have done the same thing. We have | not noticed the price of Irish potatoes ( going down to any great extent, and n t ,ve do know from actual observation ;hat many of our farmers know how to raise potatoes to a high degree of perfection. We are wondering if it would not be a very great advantage to plant Irish potatoes another season we do not believe they will reach any low level in price for another year. The following timely advice is given by Prof. A. A. Sims, editor of The Negro Journal, to the members of his race; the advice is pertinent, and might be heeded bv all our people, white and colored: Now you can hear some one saying, "I wish I had some cotton to sell, I wish I had a crib of corn and a couple of pigs." These very same persons have had the opportunity to raise all of these things, but they did not use their opportunity. They wished too late. Now is the time to make your next fall's wishes. We are going to need cotton, corn, wheat, potatoes and all omer lootisuiii just as had next year, or worse, than we (lo now and if we do 11. t put our wishes into operation now we will he in a worse li\ than we are now. l.et us t>e up now and on with the plowman's sonic. Put the light grain in the ground now and prepare for next year. Any fool can wish when it is too late. f N | Editorial Clippings j You may have observed, as we have done, how intensely loyal to the United States pso-Gerntan editors of seditious newspapers become the moment they are placed under arrest.?Now Orleans States. Thousands of men breathe, live and move; pass otf of the stance of life and are heard of no more. Why? They did not a particle of good in the world; none even blessed by them; their light went out in darkness, and they were not remembered more than the insects of yesterday.?Chalmers. The government is printing "-cent stamps at the rate of 2">,000,000 a day. Down in Charleston, S. C., a negro walked into the postofliee the other day ami bought one dollar's worth of twos. He said he had heard the price was going to cents in November and he believed in preparedness.?Philadelphia Evening Ledger. Uncle Sam has already defeated the kaiser?at finance. As we start on our second Liberty Loan the (German citizen is being asked to subscribe to the seventh for the fatherland. And the serious part of it for the Herman is that his government's promise to pay is based merely on the hope of German victory with the victor's booty. Germany is flooded with flat mosey; resources yet untouched are h< hind the Liberty Loan and Uncle Sam has never yet failed to redeem his promise to pay. -Ashevilli? Times. Their i- talk of again mukimr Wood row Wilson the nominee of the democratir party fc- president. We believe that Wilson is one of the best and greatest presidents this country ever had, but we are opposed to giving a third teim. It would be setting a dangerous precedent. While we are trying to destroy oneman power in Kurope, let's not establish an autocracy in America. Nor do we favor the continuance of family power by allowing the President Wilson to be succeeded by his son-in-law, Wm. (1. McAdoo.?Pee Pee Advocate. Union, whose principal suburbs are Spartanburg and Santuc, now points with pride to The Union Daily Times, its first daily newspaper. It is very trim in appearance; it carries a lib era I quantity of advertising. as it amply deserves, and it has The Associated Press service. The local news is live. The Times is a very old newspaper, founded long before the War Between the States. Its present editor is I,. M. Rice, a Furman alumnus and a Baptist minister, who for a number of years has had charge of it and transformed it from a relic into a lively journal. Its policy will ho justice and righteousness. Editor Rice is fair and "broad, a man of warm sympathies and kindly disposition toA'ard all the world. He hits the line mid, but he is no fanatic, nor narrow '.eulot. The Union Daily Times will, 10 doubt, aid materially in winning L'nion a larger place on the map. It "epresents a good deal of courage "in hese parlous times" and a vast lot ol energy and enterprise. The New.-. vishes it mighty well.? -Greenville )aily News. President Lyman Powell, of Hobert 'ollege, just back from a tour of 'ranee and England, where he was out to investigate conditions as a epresentative of the Association of Residents of Colleges and Universiies of the United States, brings a ricssage which all of us should read. ' S^jp2il "Tires of n Story of a Soul Oppressed. Ida May Park, lntroducin ported by Lou Cheney, Wir best photoplayers. t Admission *< I The Citizens N Y of Y UNION, Y ? Offers to the Farmer X and Wage Earners of ?? Conntv F.vprv TnHnep jy We encourage sa^ IA thrift and thrift make of the county. Y Y Interest Paid on 0 Open An Accoi ! X Let your spare dollars w "Money Talks" but?1< only says: Good Bye. 11 R.P.MORGAN, ' Y President. It is a warning based upon what Dr. i Powell saw on the other side of the t Atlantic. He bids us dismiss from our 1 minds the comforting idea that the 1 Herman atrocities were exaggerated 11 in the reports that we have read. The J; accounts of those atrocities were not 1 propaganda, he declares; they were j t the truth. ,\ Dr. Powell visited Chauney, evac-j 1 uatcd by the Germans last summer, j s When the Germans were about to \ leave, he tells us, "they herded all the \ young women and young men into a r parking space and selected the young s men for service of one sort or another t behind the lines. Then they lined up I it he young women according to rank in j 1 beauty. The highest official chose the .< fairest as his servant, the next officers \ made their selections, and finally the | common soldiers took their pick." ^ I Dr. Powell is an American educator of high reputation, lie speaks as the representative of a great association of American educators. It is beyond ! question that he speaks truthfully, jthat the Germans actually did these ' , t hings which he tells us they did at 1 | Chauney, the ruins and the wretched survivors of which he has just seen. 1 Can Americans, pondering these c crimes, be lukewarm in their support 0 ' <?f the righteous war which America * ! is waging against, this ninnstor r>f ^ j Prussianism ? Can we bold back and ? hesitate when the call of the Liberty 1 Loan gives us a chance to help?? \*ews and Courier. g V The Kaiser has been visiting his I friends and ally, the Sultan, and has ti been making speeches at banquets I given in his honor at Constantinople. c It is a jdty that more details of this t visit are not available for publication. ( It ought to be given the widest pos- s sible publicity in America and the Al- P lied countries for it serves to reca'l t to our minds again the abominable thing that we are fighting. Celebrat- t ing together on Turkish soil under the v Crescent flag, the head and front of c the bloody tyranny of the Turk toasts s the head and front of the bloody ty- v rannny of the Prussian. The hands c VI HIV- Iinr nic i vil WIIU me IIIOOII OI V slaughtered Armenians; upon the oth- c or rests the responsibility for the f murdered thousands of Belgium ami P for the unforgettable crime of the Lusitania. A notable banquet, indeed! q Is there not some great painter to I portray it fittingly? S Press dispatches give us part .t least of what the Kaiser said in re- i sponding to the Sultan's toast. One o observes that in praising the deeds of r this ally the Kaiser made no reference I to that other ally whose name, upon c most formal and public occasions, s a so often upon his lips. What William o sam anoui me war was 01 tne usual n bombastic sort and of little interest n or significance, but at the last there t was this interesting sentence: "In 1' peace time our peoples will he welded s still more firmly in peaceful work of s kultur." Here is another reminder of the r MHcleuropa plan, of the Hamburg-to- t # / / > A Y Rebellion" Written and directed by g Dorothy Phillips, supi. Stowell and Bluebird's 5 and lOc ational Bank ] T Y s. c. Y Y s, Mill Operatives Union and Union A ment to Save. ring for that brings )s for the well being A Y Y Time Deposits. V > int At Once. A X ork while you sleep, :> the Spendthrift, it A C. C. SANDERS, Cashier. Y dagdad dream which Prussian anibi ion cannot yet bring itself to sur ender. The German statesmen ar eticent about il for they know hov )otent it is as an incentive to th< tllies to light on. Hut the Kaiser i ess prudent, no more prudent thai he German professors and journalise vho will not let the world forget tier nany's imperialistic aims. The Kai m* tells his ally, the Sultan, thu vhen peace comes German and Turl vill stand together "in peaceful worl >f kultur" just as* in war they havi tood together in warlike work of kul ur?excellent examples of which nia; >e found in the recent history of Bel tium an dof Armenia. The Kaiser' ipeeeh is one more reason why thi var must jx? on.?News and Courier ft'liy Wc Send Troops to Franct (Manufacturers Recordt Because we have realized the char icter of the German people, domi lated as they have been during th< ast (|uarter of a century or more b; he most devilish doctrines ever un icasingly preached to any people 01 tarth, and because the German peo )le as a whole, and not merely Kaise Vilhelm and his immediate following tie responsible for the war and all o ts horrible atrocities, the Manufac urers Record has, from time to time aken issue with President Wilson' itatement that we are not at wa vith tlie German people, but witl "Vussian militarism. Until we get i leep down in our souls that back o 'russian militarism is all of the lif f Germany, and that the preacher md the teachers' and the people i 2ermany are upholding kaiserism ani til of its atrocities, we shall not be rin to comprehend the magnitude o he task upon which we have entered There is no room in any honest learted man for any pity for a natio vhich has been guilty of Germany' rimes any more than there should b entimontal pity for the murdere vho deliberately, in cold blood, for hi iwn individual, material gain, indis riminately killed the women an hildren who stood in his pathway, o or the rapist who commits his unfor fivable crime. Commenting on this situation, an luoting a striking presentation of i >y Frederick Harrison, the Wal 5treet Journal says: "To those who are overemphasis ng the claim that this is a war no if the German people, but of a domi lant military faction headed by th Iohenzollerns, attention may b ^11 i 4, ~ ~ e c-^,1 ?: ~i. it : itnt'u tu ii ifiit'i r iciitTicn nan i on in the London Times. At. the atf if 86, he is now the dean of Englis etters. His life record shows that h lever was in sympathy within mili arism and has always had all a phi Dsopher's horror of war. But h tates an inescapable truth none to tronffly. He says: " 'The Prussian people are of on nind with kaiser and army. In al he world's history no race has hqe 1 % % | UNION < FARMS ? f A | For Good I | Right P If F M X kill I1UII! ? UNI( STOP! LO AND LIBERI And knell the doom of together in red guilt ai the waves and the whi for Justice. The worl t upsprings. Don't just i THROUGH. It is bel .1 freedom, than to we; e Therefore S Call at : With the t and we will be glad to k be Patriotic, but at the < Sound, Profitable Inve; * Bond. \ F. M. FARR B. F. R] Pres. V.e NOTICE TC We wish to thank our cus to inform them that we have Shop, where we will he pleas e as faithfully as we know how, y. will strive earnestly to pleas THE PALACI I Now Owne ~ J. H. QUINN ^ f ~ - so drilled, schooled, sermonized intc (i sort of inverted religion of hate, en' s jealousy, reed, cruelty and ar r f*ance. Man and woman, frirl and bi h have been taught from childhood tl t inhuman vainglory and lust of pow f It has (jrown to he their sole gosj e creed, hymnal and prayer-bo s Britons and Americans cannot co II prehend how a great and intellect! '1 I neonle can have come to a cult - Satanic.' r "This is true, and it presents I real peace problem. Peace can 01 be obtained by the reeducation of l n German people. Their foreign min s ter submits that might must not nu *' right, but it is the merest phrase, :i 1 the people have been taught diflfere s ly for a half-century. (l "To any but those who from int r ested motives or sheer perversity v not see, the talk of a peace ba; upon German pledges is the mer (l wind. The German people themseb have been taiurht that the fovernmi U is not hound by pledges where it o siders its interests are concerned; tl they are made to deceive, to secure ^ advantage, to take the rival or j_ trade competitor off his guard. compromise peace means no mi 0 than this, and would establish a c dition of competitive armament o less intolerable than war, with a s ^ greater conflict to follow. e "At whatever cost, and nob< i- doubts that the cost will be hea i- tlermany must be bound by pled] e which she cannot and dare not bre o Her national honor is utterly fo sworn. The world will be compel e to do business with her in the futi II politically and commercially. 1 n agreements then made must be * COUNTY | cheap! f T t "arms at the X T rice?See X I r & Brother i t )N, S. C. ?? IT LISTEN! BUY A Y BOND the Devil's Brood, huddled id black hate. The winds, imper of the waif's thunder Id weeps, but already Hope see our boys off, SEE 'EM iter to spend our Dollars for ir the collar of Ferocity. the Bank Chime Clock show you how, not only to s same time make a Good, stment by buying a Liberty F.MMFTlV T n A R Hnf-TT TT? Liim j-ixy a. ?/. xy i xiv x HUIV Ej Pres. Cashier 1 > THE PUBLIC! tomers for their past patronage, and bought out McMillan's Palace fJarber ed to continue to serve our customers We will appreciate your custom awl ;e vou. s barber shop (1 and Operated by lM> C. M. HAWKINS. > a that drastic kind which would he yy. made, of necessity, with a convicted ro- liar and cheat. oy. "We cannot and dare not connive at his peace based upon the whitwashing of er. the German people, whose guilt must. >el, be brought home to them by the diok. rect and forcible methods which they m- can alone understand. This is why ual we are sending troops to France and so why we shall ultimately send them to Germany." l',c DR. CLAFLIN COMING. Illy [jhs? Will Speak at Several Places ike In County Next Week. in<i Lecturer of Wide nt- Reputation Dr. A. II. Clafiin will deliver a seer ries of lectures, illustrated with stereopticon slides on the subject: "War to a Finish"?meaning, of cousre, war on the liquor trafTic. I)r. ^ Claflin is a distinguished lecturer, a man of wide reputation, and he has ^ ^ a message worth hearing. It will not he a sleep-producing lecture, but an eye-opener, and those who attend will ^ be fully repaid. He will speak three times in Union Sunday, as follows: oro _ J West End at 11 o'clock a. m., Ediso^ ^ nia, Theatre 3:30 p. m., and Monarch Sunday evening at 7:30 o'clock, lie will speak Monday night at Lockhart; Tuesday night at Buffalo; Wednesday >dy night at Padgett's Creek church; vy, Thursday night at Jonesville, in the pes mill school hall; Friday night at Mt. ak. Joy Baptist church. These dates cov>re er the period of Dr. Claflin's visit to led Union county, October 28 through Noire, vember 2. Do not fail to hear him; ru? :n L. _i J > * i "c you win ?B pieasea ana mteresiea as of well.