The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, May 15, 1920, Image 2
HTHE UNION TIME!
PUBLISHED DAILY EXCEPT SUNDA
BY THE UNION TIMES COMPANY
LEWIS M. RICE Edlte
H Registered at the Poslofflce la Union, 8. C
a* second class matter.
TIMES BUILDING MAIN STREE
H BELL PHONE NO. 1.
I SUBSCRIPTION KATES
s One Year $G.O
I Six Months 3.0
Three Months I.G
ADVERTISEMENTS
One square, first insertion $1.0
Every subsequent insertion B
Obituary notices. Church and "Lodge n<
tices, and notices of public meetings, entel
tainments and Cards of Thinks will 1
charged for at the ra' ? of ore cent a won
cash accompanying th ord>-r Count th
words and you will know what the coi
will be.
MEMBERS OF \SSQC1ATED PRFSi
The Assdtrw^j'' I' ess is exclusively ei
titled to the use ?,ir republication of a
news dispatches credited to it or not othei
wise credited in this paper and also tt
'oral news published herein.
SATURDAY, MAY 15, 1020
The hotel proposition Rained soni
three thousand dollars vesteidav, th
total subscription now amounting t
$100,000. The solicitors of subecrij;
tions arc continuing the drive. Ever
man and woman able to help shoul
help in this great undertaking. 1
meuns much to the fortune of ou
city, as everyone will admit no pre
pressive town should be without goo
hotel accomodations. If you h ive nc
already subscribed, do not neglect t
do so at an early day. We are mal
ing earnest effort to avoid placing
rdebt on the enterprise. To build wit!
out a heavy debt means that tie r<
turns from the investment will t
greater, (let your heart right in th
matter and make a liberal subscri{
tion to the hotel. Do this today!
THE SALVATION
ARMY'S WORTHY APPEA
Everyone is interested in the wor
of the Salvation Army at this tiir
und in its work for humanity in tl
Ibture.
The Salvation Army 1s asking f<
funds with which to .build a home i
which to carry on its work here f(
the coming years and tjo do that woi
efficiently it is necessar$vUvst it ha\
^^a home. yf
extends a hel;
V are in sickne:
H^^Knd distress and rc /hes a field thi
|HMj|
other organized charity covers.
For the past fifty years the Sa
vat ion Army has been working tor th
gj man and woman who thru misfortur
have drifted to that shore of despa
where life seems lost, but tc th
Salvationist no one is lost and the
work to bring them back to right lh
inc is started.
The appeal for funds" is now on i
this city and under the leadership c
Mayor R. P. Morgan, who is dirictin
the men's ore mzation, and the ladw
committee is under the direction (
Mrs. J. W. Mixson.
publish elsewhere an account <
the trial of a young man in yestei
clay's ml ice. court charged with dis
orderly conduct, in that he caused cor
fusion and disturbance among tl
High School childn during reees
and while the students were bein
drilled into the building after the
were called to study. The offense is
grave one, and the offender, in ou
judgment, got off light with the ser
tence imposed by the court. It is
wellknown fact that discipline mus
^ be maintained in the school if goo
work is to be done. Those who at
tend, go for the purpose of procurin
training. The tax payers carry th
burden of supporting the school b?
cause they believe it makes for goo
citizenship. To have a thoughtles
young man run rough shod over th
whole school, indirectly, over th
whole community, is not to the likini
tpf any sensible man. Parents ar
making sacrifices to send their chil
dren there to be trained, and the;
cannqt fail to condemn severely an;
KUC'1 senseless and unwarranted in
jjjjffi*1 terferenee wl*b the "-ho^is. We mos
rftk heartily commend the school trustee!
fflfrend the superintendent and principa
in the move they made to put a Rto]
conduct. That they did thi
? BSfcfh'ng in appealing to the police
ggjfzjrf^JBotectlon is also manifest. Ha<
' the offender over to th<
&&/ th?y would have heei
1 y within their rights
a fce established for 'he pur
nBKBMHflQHj^fcting those who arc
Hj|^^ffl9^B9^HLr own business againsi
H^nngSslhose who are engaged
btnrfnsss of every
Our cat says it brings contentment sj(
^ to his heart to listen to the singing of m
11 the birds. is
el;
NOTICE
tb
i- A special comunication of Union en
r" a Lodge No. 75, A. F. M. will oa
? be held the 17th day of May, sc
? 1020, at H o'clock in the Masonic
Temple. The M. M. er
Degree will be conferred, st
~ Visiting brothers welcome. ye
iC By order, a
Ben. L. Berry, W. M. dc
Wm. C. Lake, Secretary. 2t
o ~ w;
>- I.OOK PLEASANT a
y hi
j 1 We cannot, of course all be handsome, oi
And it's hard for us all to be p-ood;
' Wc are sure now and then to be
if lonely, Ci
>- And we don't always do as we of
j should. bi
)( To be patient is not always easy. ar
To be cheerful is much harder still, io
? Pu? at least wo can always be
pleasnn.
a If we make uj> our minds that we rc
Will. or
And it pays every time to be kindly, 01
Altho you feel worried and blue, ^
If you smile at the world and look ^
's cheerful: j
j- The world will soon smile back at I
you.
So try to brace un and look pleasant, F
Xo matter how love you are down;
Good humor is always contagious,
k Put you banish your friends when 1
you frown. ~
*k '*
This is one of my favorite poems,
10 and I wish to pass it 011 to the other
le writers, that is if the editor has space
to print it.
It is best to always be peasar,. and
kir.dly, treat'your friends as you
,n wculd have them treat you. Do not
banish your friends by your frowns,
'k it is much easier to smile. Remember
,-e well and bear in mind that faithful T
friends are hard to find, and when
you have found one good and true
r.e-'er change tile old one for the new.
ss We are having a splendid shower
at this morning, which is very refreshing.
Mrs. R. J. Alexander and Mrs. C.
C. Rochester spent Tuesday evening
10 with Mrs. W. M. English.
,e Busy Bee and Mrs. Bee \^ere "
ir visitors to Whitmire Monday afterie
noon.
lr Mrs. C. E. Jeter and daughter Miss ~
Julia spent Monday evening with Mrs.
W. M. English.
Adieu. Pansy.
n s
)f DR. GAMBREL? , AND A RECORD.
K The Southern Baptist convention
has broken its own record in re-elect>{
mg for the fourth ime Dr. J. B. Gambr<
11, of Texas, as its president. That
makes two ways in which the Rev.
Dr. Gam-brell is distinguished?four
5f times president of the convention is
r_ one, and being a big Baptist preacher
._ who was not born in North Carolina
is the other. True, he did not miss it ^
far, hut it is an indisputable fact that
ie lie was born over the line, in South
>s Carolina.
g The Baptist do themselves honor in
y honoring this distinguished member
of the denomination, for Dr. Gam- ?
n
broil is a notable figure among clerics
ir of whatever sect or creed. The coun
i- try still remembers his clash with A
a Major General Funston, and how
Funston miscalculated his man; the
^ general was not aware that before
there was any Rev. Dr. Gambrell ?
there was Captain Gambrell, C. S. A., F<
g who had been mentioned in dispatche
es for heroism more times than Funs,.
ton had been in battle, nnd who was,
^ of all the scouts in the Confederate ?
army, the one who enjoyed to the F<
s highest degree the confidence of
o Robert E. I/ee.
e For that matter, the warrior hlood
^ runs in Dr. Gambrell's veins to this ?
day. In all that extraordinary mili- ^'
tant body, the Southern Baptist convention,
there is nobody readier for a
7 forensic battle than the aged presi/
dent, and none whose assault is more
. dreaded. But the real triumph of his
( life lies in the fact that, terrible as
he is in debate, there is not a man in ?
* the convention more widely or more ^
1 deeply loved. It is an extraordinary '
3 honor that the convention has paid
e him; but it is at the same time an
honor extraordinary well bestowed.? ?
j Greensboro News. ' r
( With the addition of 5,000,000,
) more women to the voting list in i
England, feminine voters there will
now out number the men by probably <
more than 1,000,000. <
,
Apparatus has -been invented for <
I manufacturing sulphur dioxide gas on
shipboard -and pumping it into ail FC
parts of a vessel to extinguish fires ]
and for fumigation 7Ci
\
STUDENTS ABOLISH HAZING
oting and Ducking Obsolete at Univeisity
of Wisconsin.
Hazing was oflicially abolished last
:ek by the student senate, legislate
hotly of student self-government
the University of Wisconsin. The
tion was aimed especially at street
jting and lake ducking, which mark
e height of class rivalry cropping
t once or twice during the college
ar, and declared that the officers
the various classes would be held
sponsible for the misconduct of
lssmates.
Strong opposition to hazing excised
by the faculty, the public and
c newspapers of the state, the leglature,
older students, and student
ntiment in other universities, was
ted in the preamble of the senate's
solution. Hazing is but an expresDii
of over-exuberance of lower class
en, the resolution points out, and
looked upon as futile by upper
ass men.
The enforcement of student tradimis,
such as the wearing of green
ips during freshman year, will be
rried out by other means to be pre
ribed later by the student senate.
Although hazing was supposedly
ided with the establishment of the
udent self-government a number of
ars, ago and was restored to only in
prescribed manner to enforce stunt
traditions, it has cropped out
tain recently, especially during the
;?r years. The present resolution is
reflection of student sentiment that
is been growing in strength throughit
the present year.
Marie C. Brehm, of Long Beach,
!\!., upon whom the Vice Presidency
the United States might possibly
! conferred, is a noted club worker
id white ribbon lecturer of internatnal
fame.
Daisy Norton and Catherine Lochy,
of Jamaica L. I., acted as firemen
i a Long Island Railroad shifting
igine during the recent strike of
lilroad workers.
SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS
, 1
OR RENT?3, 4, and 6 room houses
for rent; modern conveniences,
price reasonable. Excelsior Knit;ing
Mills. tf
IRE INSURANCE?New Franklin
and Cadillac car3 insured at GGc
a hundred in Philadelphia Underwriters.
Other cars reasonable.
Jefferies & Kelly.
'ANTED?You to know that we
have boy's wash suits, $1.48 to $2.98.
J oily-Austell. , 7Gl-3t
RUCKS AND TRACTORS?Republic
trucks that serve you so well,
Twin City tiaictors; these tractors
carry a four cylinder sixteen valve
motor which reduced to a minimum
all unnecessary vibration, thereby
causing it to have more power and
a longer life. Gilliam Light &
Motor Co. 761-Gt
,'E FILL PRESCRIPTIONS and
don't you forget it. Storm's Drug
Store. tf
EW ARRIVALS of silk dresses,
georgettes and taffetas. $19.98 to
$85.00. Jolly-Austell. 761-3t
KCOXD HAND TRUCKS?We have
a International 2 ton truck and a
Chcrvolet 1 ton truck, both in good
condition, at a bargain. We carry
a line of automobile tires and tubes.
Gilliam Light & Motor Co. 761-Gt
JST RECEIVED shipment of ladies
white oxfords and pumps, $1.50 to
$4.00?low and high heels. JollyAustell.
761-3t
UTOMOBILE TIRES AND TUBES
? Buy the well known Racine tires
and let them pay you dividends in
satisfaction. The Peoples Supply
Co. 761-6t
TORM'S DRUG STORE sells talking
machines. tf
UTOMOBILES: Columbia Six. "Gem
of the Highway," Liberty Six,
"Noted for it's famous Motor." Gilliam
Light & Motor Co. 761-6t
3R SALE?Concrete Pier Blocks
and Concrete Brick. T. r.. Harney,
Call 106, Bailey Builders Supply
Co. 861-tf
3R SALE?Several cars rough lumber?framing
cf all kinds and inch
boards. W. T. Jones, Santuck, S. C.
9-tf
I/UNG MEN, WOMEN, 17 upward
desiring P.ailway mail and Government
clerkships, $110 month, write
for free particulars. Examinations
June 16. J. Leonard (Former government
examiner) 1235 Equitable
Bldg., Washington, D. C.
)R SALE OR TRADE?One truck
attachment for Ford car. O. N.
Beaty, Main street, near Ottaray
Mill. 762-2tpd
)R SALE?One Jersey milk cow, 8
years old, fresh In milk. Parties
wishing to buy can sea the cow
milked any evening at 6 o'clock.
Another Jersey milk cow, 6 years
rdd who will be in 1st of July. Both
rows are fine butter cows. Price
for each row $150.00. J. McJ. Fant,
>antuc, S. C. 763-3t
R SALE?Mixed peas. Write J. C.
Mobley, Whitmira, S.
!-2tpd ^
I GLEAN-S
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A^4 MBA I
1 ISJ.
_ fc
The Wo
the Writii
A ? the Eversharf
il sharp yet never
|l the Tempoint P<
a I\ the gold point of s
It 111 and durability.
' -{Mil w the a<
JW its field. Theyai
y $j greatest writing i
il EVERt
IKS The name is
I TEMP
)The Perfect
I
Pencil carries
I ?enough for ?
f i words?and a su
; jj word and every <
i Pen has the famo
3 which automaticall)
-3 of ink. Also ha9 s
j which absolutely \
JL sweating when r.u
Made in both Sc
S Filling models.
v/V' Both Pen and P<
styles. Pencils, $1
SOLI
STORM'S D]
PHOi
vrvrMMaHMMMnii
Stomach
Out ot Fix?
'Phone your grocer or (
druggist for a dozen bottles
of this delicious digestant,?a gluts
with meals gives delightful relief, or ,
; li.ireo for the first dozen used.
i
Shivar Ale
PUPE DIGESTIVE AROMATICS WITH
SHIVAR MINERAL WATER AND GINGER
Nothing like it for renovating old
tired etojnachs, converting food
into rich blood and sound flesh.
Shivar Ale retails at 15c, per bot*
tie. or I1.7S ner down. If vour rp.ee
dealer cannot supply you, teleuUoae
^^^AGLE GROCERY CO.,
for Unjon^^
WEEP SALE
SH^
> * *>
??????????
riders of /
-r < ^ /
n-g world /
> Pencil, always A /
' sharpened, and jna '
en, the pen with | jj
;teel-like hardness IsL
ccepted leader in ?9
e the world's two j?i
aids.
>BARP 1
on the pencil J
'PINT 1
Pointed Pen ill
18 inches of lead
i quarter million
re point for every -1 |jj
us Wahl Comb Feed
r regulates the flow
m air-tight chamber [tSOj
prevents leaking or >wjM
Tied in the pocket.
rew Joint and Self
sncil made in many //
up; Pens, $2.50 upw V>
) BY
RUG STORE
ME 76
I
nHV '**7Tr'^rY'wyt:~ 1 * n
A Chicacroftn if; the inventor of \
hoist to lift either end of an nut<\|| '
mobile or motor truck sufficiently!!
for a man to woik under it without V
lying down.
Jewels valued at $50,800 were ?
st( len from the home of George Gobi
at Waterburg, Conn.
More than 100 women arc employ- !
I'd as chemists by German industrial
rompanies.
ASK ME I
j PHONE 761 |
4^4 A^A A^fc
AT H. SWUM!!
Saturday and |^|
londay Only f *
T ^i
ir Entire Stock of Ladies' Ready-to-Wear V
es, Coats and Coat Suits | 1
25?|o REDUCTION - -f-J
tiown in Georgette, Taffeta and Foulard t V
T Wk
I Coats and Coat Suits i n
tnber Left Over and to Go Saturday and Monday ^ 1
r 25"|, REDUCTION I M
LL LINE LADIES' AND CHILDREN'S % H
READY-TO-WEAR & V
HATS 1 J
ng Shades and Shapes. Prices Reasonably Low ?|> H
lpiro f; 1
/ =*i I
x LISTEN! |\
THIS STORE IS YOUR BEST FRIEND AGAINST > ^
THE COMMON ENEMY OF HIGH COST
OF LIVING.
C*'
BETTER MERCHANDISE, BIGGER STOCKS,
AND MORE COMPLETE ASSORTMENTS.
For some weeks we have been practically offering to give
you as good Flour as the mills make. j
We told you the Flour we were offering you for $12."50
barrel was worth Fourteen Dollars or more. We now teil
you that we have bought Flour already for more than Fourteen-Fifty
per barrel, and in less than Sixty Days we will
not be surprised to see Flour sell for $20.00 a barrel.
Act while we have the Flour. We are just getting in another
big lot of the Finest Pure Winter Wheat, Fancy Pat
ent Flour. Not & mill in the country would sell it to us today
for Fifteen Dollars per barrel, and Minneapolis, the J|
Flour Center of the World, was asking $16.25 per barrel
for it some days ago. We will sell you this Flour until this ^H||
add is removed from print only for $13.00 per barrel, $6.50
per 96 pound bag, $3.35 per 48 pound bag and $1.70 per 24 ^
pound bag. For Plain Flour?if you prefer the Self Rising
Flour, of the Best Grade, will sell this at $14.00 by the barrel,
$7.00 for 96 pound bags, $3.65 for 48 pounds and $1.85 ?
per 24 pound bag.
We invite you to lay in a reasonable supply of Flour.
It will prove a good investment, and that you may know
that we are your friends and the friend of every hardworking,
honest man who wants to economize and get his
full value when he invests his money. We will only sav
that you can wire any reputable mill in the country and if
they will sell you a car load for the prices we ajre,offering
you as much or little as you want, we will make you a present
of a barrel of our best and pay for your message too.
Its up to you. Come to see us every day in the week and
every week in the year. You will find a cheerful bunch
of hard-working, appreciative salesmen and salesladies f
ready and glad to serve you.
Just unloaded a big car or two of the highest grade
Cotton Seed Meal we have seen. Have had it inspected and
analyzed by the State Inspectors, and its the Finest analysis
we have seen. $4.00 by the bag, $75.00 by the Ton.
UNION-BUFFALO MILLS STORES /
L. L. WAGNOK, Manager. w
Buffalo Store, Phone 9. Union Store, Phone 74 JT
V . r- .
ELECTRICAL ELECTRICAL ELECTRICAL
WIRING HELPS FIXTURES
WE DO ALL OUR WORK IN ACCORD WITH STANDARD
RULES ANI) WELCOME INSPECTION.
OUR HELPS FOR MAKING HOUSEKEEPING MOPE PLEASANT
ARE OF THE BEST.
OUR FIXTURES FOR PROPER LIGHTING AND FOR BEST
EFFECT ARE PERFECT.
OUR PRICES WILL SUIT THE MOST CAREFUL BUYER.
i * ;
^^j^MySLECTRICAL COMPANY
NEAR EXPRESS OFFICE Jflfe'
m