The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, July 02, 1920, Image 7
WHERE THE STATE
. CAMPAIGNERS MEET
*
State Offices.
.'"Walterboro?Saturday, July 3.
w Charleston?Monday, July 5.
^ St. George?Tuesday, July 6.
Bamberg?Wednesday, July 7.
Orangeburg?Thursday, July 8.
St. Matthews?Friday. July 9.
Sumter?Saturday, July 10.
Rest?Bight days.
Manning?Monday, July 19.
Moncks Corner?Tuesday, July 20.
Georgetown?Thursday, July 22.
Florence?Friday, July 23.
Marion?Saturday, July 24.
Conway?Monday, July 26.
Dillon?Tuesday, July 27.
Bennettsville?Wednesday, July 28.
Chesterfield?Thursday, July 29.
Bishopville?Friday, July 30.
Darlington?Sunday, July 31.
Rest?Eight days.
Camden?Monday, August 9.
Lancaster?Tuesday, August 10.
York?Wednesday, August 11.
Chester?Thusdav. Aucrusf. 12.
Winnsboro?Friday, August 13.
Union?Saturday, August 14.
Spartanburg?Monday, August 16.
Gaffney?Tuesday, August 17.
Greenville?Wednesday, August 18.
Pickens?Thursday, August 19.
Walhalla?Friday, August 20.
Anderson?Saturday, August 21.
Abbeville?Monday, August 23.
Greenwood?Tuesday, August 24.
McCormick?Wednesday .August
26.
Laurens?Thursday, August 26.
Newberry?Friday. August 27.
Senate and Congress.
Columbia?Saturday, July 3.
Spartanburg?Monday, July 6.
Union?Tuesday July, 6.
Gaffney?Wednesday, July 7.
Walhalla?Thursday, July 8.
Pickens?Friday, July 9.
Greenville?Saturday, July 10.
Anderson?Monday, July 12.
Abbeville?Tuesday, July 13.
McCormick?Wednesday, July 14.
Greenwood?Thursday, July 15.
Laurens?Friday, July 16.
Newberry?Saturday, July 17.
Eight day's rest.
LiUAiii^wii?inunuay, JUiy 2D.
Saluda?Tuesday,? July 27.
Edgefield?Wednesday, July 28.
Aiken?Thursay July 29. <
Barnwell?Friday, July 30.
Allendale?Saturday, July 31.
Hampton?Monday, August 2.
Beaufort?Tuesday, August 3.
Ridgeland?Wednesday, August 4.
Walterboro?Thursday, August 6. ,
St. George?Friday, August 6.
Bamberg?Saturday, August 7.
Eight day's rest.
St. Matthews?Monday, August 16. i
Orangeburg?Tuesday, August 17.
Dillon?Wednesday, August 18. i
Conway?Thursday, August 19.
Marion?Friday, August 20. ,
Florence?Saturday, August 21.
Kingstree?Monday, August 23.
Manning?Tuesday, August 24.
Georgetown?Wednesday, August ,
25.
Moncks Corner?Tnursday, August
Charleston?Friday, August 27. ?
The State
SWEET BREATH
A SOCIAL CHARM
Unpleasant Odors Caused by Germs
That Produce the Acids that Decay
The Teeth; Gums Become Infected,
Causing Pyorrhoea; Infection
Spreads to Tonsils and
Throat?Mouth Should be
Sterilized Night and
Morning
The price of pure, sweet breath, that
most attractive social charm, is sterili- '
zation of the mouth, as a regular part 1
of the daily toilet. Dental Science
teaches that unpleasant breath is an
unfailing symptom of an infected (
mouth. * i
To keep the breath pure and sweet, i
to prevent decay of the teeth and infection
of the gums, tonsils and throat,
Dental Science has perfected a moet
delightful sterilizing solution fdr the
toilet, called Steroline, which absolutely
frees the mouth, teeth and throat of
. all germs, penetrating even the most 1
minute crevices between the teeth
which cannot be reached in any other
way. , (
Used as a mouth wash and gargle,
mgni ana morning, Steroline quickly ,
becomes -a, most enjoyable ^nd indispensable
part of the daily toilet. It
imparts a delightful sensation of
cleanliness, freshness and comfort to
the mouth and throat, purifying and
sweetening the breath of even tobacco, '
preventing pyorrhoea or Riggs' Disease,
tonsilitis, throat trouble and 1
many other contagions that might <
otherwise gain entrance to the system
through the mouth.
Telephone your druggist now for a 1
bottle of Steroline and begin today to
enjoy ita delights and protection. A
large bottle, enough for the entire <
family, may be had for half a dollar.
* -
HOW THE WOMEN
WILL ACT
For the benefit of the Columbia
State and others who have come out
of an anti-suffrage trance and realized
that in this good year the women of
South Carolina are going to vote, let
us quote from an account of the recent
Texas Democratic convention,
written by one of the most famous
paragraphers in the United States,
George M. Bailey of the Houston Post.
Hundreds of women sat in that body
as delegates.
These women were not ''he women,'"
says Bailey, but "good Texas women
representing the best of Texas citizenship."
He adds "Those who doubt the
ability of women to acquit themselves
creditably in politics would have been
disillusioned had they witnessed the
women delegates engaging in the ordinary
work of the convention with
quite as much self-possession as tho
battle-scarred male warriors of a hundred
conventions." They made motions,
raised points of order, made
nominating speeches, caucused, served
on committees, discussed public men
and measures, all in the most matterof-fact
way.
The noted Texas newspaperman
goes on to say:
"And they were not mannish, bold,
immodest or foolish, nor were they
treated with the slightest discourtesy
or disrespect, and in all respects they
proved that sex did rot disqualify
them for the duties of suffrage and
that politics did not make them unwomanly.
''The men of Texas may rest assured
on that point. The new idea is
not going to break up the homes of
the land or create other problems or
menaces to disturb their serenity. The
women of Texas are to be depended
upon. They are going to help the
cause of good government materially.
They have the courage of their convictions.
They are independent; they
are intelligent.
"They came to the convention from
well ordered Texas homes, where there
are husbands and children . They attended
to the business for which they
came intelligently, attentively and industriously
and returned to their
homes knowing that politics constitutes
no menace for them or their
self-respect."
Do the women of South Carolina
differ from the women of Texas?
When the women of the Palmetto
State sit in the State Democratic convention
of 1922, their conduct will
evoke comment just like Bailey's.
Giving women the ballot will have
no more tendency to break up the
home than giving it to the mere male
of the species.?Greenville Piedmont.
HIS BOOK DID IT ,
Savannah News.
"How did I happen to nominate
Coolidge?" I'll tell you " said the
Oregon lawyer who touched off the
match that sent the Coolidge nomination
skyrocheting to success. ''Some
one dent me Coolidge's book, and I
read it through many times. I knew
the man who wrote those speeches
was a patriot!'" Governor Coolidge
was nominated because of his book
and his book was the basis of the telling
campaign waged in his behalf.
When the senate committee was investigating
the expenses of the various
presidential possibilities last
pnonth the head of the Coolidge campaign
stated that of the $68,375 subscribed
for the Coolidge fund, practically
the entire amount had been spent
in connection with the book "The
money," he said, "has been expended
in the purchase of books, clerk hire, in
wrapping, mailing and postage."
"Have Faith in Massachusetts" is a
collection of addressed beginning with
the governor's speech on being elected
president of the senate in 1914?probably
the shortest speech of the kind
ever made?and ending with the fall
of 1919* The Bay State governor is
a writer of real ability and a clever
maker of phrases "Unless good citizens
hold office, bad ones will." "Let
men in office substitute the midnight
oil for the limelight!" "Men do not
make laws, they do but discover
them." 'There is no right to strike
aganst tne public safety by ai\ybod$r,
anywhere, anytime." A man of few,
but telling words and a man of many
and vital ideas, Governcr Coolidge's
book is a true reflection of his character.
GERMANS TO
BE DEPORTED
Wellington, New Zealand, July 1.?
It is understood that the Germans in
Samoa are soon to be deported. Police
lately sent from the Dominion to
the islands are to assist in the process.
It is alo undertood that the New
Zealand auhtorities are to take over
the German cocoanut and other plaivtations
in Samoa, valued at about
$6,000,000 and that by way of compensation
this amount is to be deducted
from New Zealand's share of
the German war idemnity. j
%
COOLIDGE SELECTS ALL
CLOTHES FOR HIS WIFE
Boston, June 25.?Should a husband
choose his wife"s clothes? This question
is being widely discussed since
Mrs. Calvin Coolidge let it out that
the Republican nominee for vice president
selects all her clothes.
Mrs. Coolidge, with smiling reassurance,
explained: "Oh yes, every
dress I wear and every suit the governor
picks out. This way?on his
walks he always look into all the shop
windows. What he sees he likes he
always jots down. Then at night I
am advised: "I saw something v.;ry
fetching in the line of a dress in such
a shop. Guess you better go get it,"
says the governor to me.
"So I go and find the dress mentioned
and 'I get it. Nothing could be
simpler."
The governor's wife, with the girlish
enthusiasm which is hers, genuine,
simple sincere, laughed. "There's just
one drawback to this method of choosing
my wardrobe," said she, and that
is the hats. The governor seldom notices
hats, or else they are less seldom
displayd in the windows; so we have
to go hat hunting together. That's
the way I get them all. I would
never consider a hat unless first'it
had passed his approval."
BLACKBERRY
WINE BARRED
Washington, June 29.?Blackberry
cordial and wild cherry wine were
today added by the bureau of internal
revenue to the list of intoxicating liquors
and may be sold by druggists in
retail quantities of less than five gallons
only to persons who have obtained
permits to purchase intoxicating liquors.
Instructions were issued to federal
prohibition directors today detailing a
number of nrenarations cnnfoinini* o1_
cohol whch are to be fit for beverage
purposes and are therefore regarded
as intoxicating and subject to the prohibition
regulations.
ADMIRAL SAM McGOWAN
Current Opinion has a strong article
on Rear-Admiral Samuel McGowan.
The magazine story is a narrative
of the McGowan system in the navy,
which has preven so meritorious,
especially in time of war.
Admiral McGowan is told of as the
man >Vho disburses thirty million dollars
a day, and could have answer:
Where was our major batallion fleet
operating? What waters were our
flotillas of torpedo-destrftyers patrolling?
Where were our hundredS*of
submarine-chasers. What routes did
our transports take? And, able to
answer all these questions, spoke on no
one of them.
To make sure that Admiral Sims
could keep right on with his day and
night task of smashing the emeny
subs without hitch or delay, Admiral
McGowan, paymaster-general, issued
an order to the effect that whatever
Sims wanted and wherever he wanted
it, it was to be shipped that same
day, and the wishes of the fleet admiral
were always to be considered the
wishes of the paymaster-general. To
insure this Admiral McGowan selected
as his help commissioned officers
whom he knew to be perfectly fitted
to the work. And his orders were
obeYed; and his was a thorough success.
The article in Current Opinion gives
a pen picture of the activities in Admiral
McGowan's offices and pays high
tribute to this fine South Carolinian,
who learned to work when he worked
himself through the College of South
Carolina?learned a lesson which he
has never forgotten.
Admiral McGowan stands high in
the estimation of every man in the
navy department.
WILSON OFFERED
NUMEROUS JOBS
Washington, June 30.?President
Wilson, on leaving the White House,
will have the opportunity of taking
any kind of a position he wants.
Every day there comes to the executime
mansion numbers of offers
that include about every kind of a job
there is in existence.
He is known to have been offered
the leadership of a score of big universities,
and hundreds of newspapers
are more than willing to have him at
almost any salary he might name, and
last, but not least, more than one film
corporation has made tentative offers
for his services in moving pictures.
Admiral Grayson, his physician, said
today that he knew nothing of a reported
offer from the University of
Philippines of a salary of $50,000 to
$100,000 a year to the President to
serve as its head.
"Just what the President will do
after his retirement no one cAn say
at this time," Dr. Grayson declared.
"The chief concern of kvery one about
him is to make him well as quickly as
possible.''
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83 ' soap is the best
11 [ an ever had.
p| I scrub board ?
bfi f in the back and
[Hr don't have tc
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raj ? Here's the
ih-j * Get a cake <
E# * Naptholeine
Kg w Shave off half
|Si k gallons of wate
Bo ^ solve. Boil yoi
gjjj ^ for ten minutes
ffll ^ a stick. Presto! 1
8B > is free from dir
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P Follow direction* r
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^ wrapper
AUTOMATIC TELEPHONE
INTRODUCED
Buenos Aires, July 1.?The automatic
telephone wiil be introduced in
Buenos Aires in 1922 under a contract
signed between the city authorities
and an American concern which
has agreed to install the system. The
city already possesses two telephone
systems operated in the ordinary way,
but there is a shortage of telephone
of /\?.AnUliL! ? t...
lllQi/iuiiivutg, 112) CSiauillllU^ new
businesses here have a great deal of
difficulty in obtaining them and some
have been obliged to forego them.
Many persons have profited by surrendering
their apparatus to others at
a high price.
ENORMOUS CATCHES
OF FISH
Berlin, July 1.?After the long war
Interval, North Sea and Baltic fishermen
report enormouc catches of fish.
At Hamberg and Cuxhaven alone,
10,000 tons of fish have been landed in
one single month. From Kiel and
Luebeck come similar reports of immense
shoals of herring and other fish.
Nevertheless, fish does not seem to
become any cheaper on the Berlin
market.
To Reduce fever
Relieve Headaches i
and Neuralgic Pains |
V?m
jpPI 55 k
r
Aspltone Is very efficient and absolutely
safe to use as it does not depress the heart
even In extreme cases of debility or weak
heart, neurasthenia or anaemia. Manufactured
by a formula in use by leading physicians
generally. 19 parts pure Aspirin, 1 part puro
Caffeine, 4 parts ezclplent, in convenient
tablet form. 35c per package at your druggists
or by mall from the manufacturers,
Pledaioat Laboratories, Ino.. CI la ton, - 6
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>d-by Old j|
R Wasla i |
eers for Clean* The dirtiest overalls, shirts 4 ra
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Forget the old a D
those achings There s nothing like it. We a
knuckles. You wish every woman in the a B!
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' Remedy- could be saved! ^ fe|
of Clean Easy j (ga
Wash Soap. Just think! Ten minutes of ^ S3 .
of it into 4'/2 boiling?and wash day is over! $S
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Every garment are here to stay in the Clean 4 am
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eV b |
your grocer's. <
M NeverSubstitute
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S Peoples Drug I
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SUPPORT GIVEN
TO DESTITUTE
Stockholm, July 1.?The Swedish
government has asked Parliament for
25,000,000 krone credit to enable substantial
support to be given to the destitute
populations of Central Europe
and the Baltic states.
\