The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, December 24, 1921, Image 4
I' GRAND MONDAY h
SAMUEL GOLDWYN Presents I L'
HOUSE PETERS 11
Katherine Newlin Burt's I
"THE MAN FROM LOST RIVER" lii
ALSO I
ELMO LINCOLN 11
"THE ADVENTURES OF TARZAN" I"
We wish to extend to our friends and patrons I 1
our heartiest Christmas greetings and be it p
wishes for the New Year. I '
;
MERRY CHRISTMAS
Christmas and New Year to us are seasons j
of recollction, appreciation and inspiration,
as we extend our greetings, with the I
with that you may share bountifully in the
prosperity of the years to come.
Year after year there is a great satisfaction
in renewing the friendships of a lifetime
of business; and we count ourselves
! fortunate in their number, good will and
loyalty. j
With appreciation of your confidence and
friendship; with every good wish and the ,
heartiest good will; and with the most
earnest desire to help you realize all the !
good things in store, we are, 1
Sincerely Yours,
J. COHEN COMPANY ~ !
THE HOUSE OF SATISFACTION. <
i i
1
~~ ~ ~ " """ _ - - I
MERRY CHRISTMAS
ONE AND ALL j
j i
A Merry Christmas one and all. May you t
enjoy every happiness in the glad season.
May your health remain supreme. . May
we in turn have the benefit of serving your
drug store requirements that your further ! t
pleasure may te assured. We again wish
j you a very merry Christmas and a happy,
prosperous, healthy New Year. ;
UNION DRUG STORE
Phone 116 and "Look for the Boy."
i
NOW COMES the
Sion c/iti n i TOY I
^ ^ V X i
: i
As Christmas days approach we hope you have something
saved to make the occasion happier for you and
yours. i (
, Christmas pretty well illustrates the whole idea of i t
thrift. We can truly enjoy its spirit wh- n we have f
accumulated means to make enjoyment perfect. This
is true throughout our lives. Thrift assures us happy
days and makes us happy in the knowledge that we need
i fear no want.
"I,arge Enough to Serve Any Strong Enough to FVot.c? VI"
CIT IZENS |
NATIONAL BANL
25 Calibre BRONCHO Automatic
Pistol, seven shot, safety ( '
on side, blue steel, rifled barrel,
checkered grip. Regular price lUHil
OTHER BARGAINS
32 Cal. AI.KAR Military Automatic, 10 .shot, 2 magazine* . . .<12.00 :
25 Cal. Genuine MAUSER Automatic Pistol 15.00
32 Cal. Genuine MAUSER Automatic Pistol ... ... 16.00
32-20 Cal. KING Side Ejector Revolver $17.50
30 CaL. LUGAR Automatic Pistol 28.50
38 Special Col. KING Side Ejector Revolver ; 18.00
All goods brand new and guaranteed perfect. Money back if
not satisfied. Send express or postoffice money order. No
checks accepted. Rank referenre?Peoples Trust Co, Brooklyn,
N. Y.
TAIT, Desk 39, 5824 Fifth Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y.
.
Tribute to J. C. Mobley
Konawa, OJda,
Dec. 19, 1921. IS
on. Editor of The Union limes. b?
Union, S. C. w!
ear Sir: a?
If you will be so kind 1 will great- m
appreciate it if you will allow me pi
little space in your valuable paper
> say a few words in reference to di
le late J. C. Mobloy, of Jonesville, m
ho has recently passed to the great fc
?yond. fi
It wus my pleasure to know this tc
nod man. He was my friend, he was
iy father's friend and it is because oi
f my admiration and esteem for the lc
eceased that I write the following.
Mr. Mobley, I think, came to Jonesille
some eighteen or twenty years
go. I remember when I was a mere
oy he was keeping books for my
ather and he worked in this capacity >
,nd in the Postoffice, which for soim
ears was located in the store, uj
mtil a few years of my father's re ircnient
from the mercantile busi
Jeing associated with this man am i
icing in his presence continuallj
vhile he thus worked, I early learneo I
.o respect and regard him highly.
io know Mr. Mobley was to admire
md esteem him. '
in his business relations he wa:
punctual, he was efficient, he wa
thorough, he was stern and what t 1
would call a matter-of-fact man. Ik
.vas very precise. He had a set way
of doing a thing and he would do i
lis way regardless. In all his dealings
he was fair-minded, he was hin- '
. si, he was square. He was a man '
that could look the world in the face
for his life was clean. Everybody
that knew Mr. Mobley had profound i
omiuence in him, for it was not hit s
vay to practice deception in his deal
tugs, it was not his way to say h
.vould do a thing and then not do si
In selling goods behind the oountc
le would not lie in order to get th>
;ale of a bill of goods. Would t<
iod that Joncsville had more sue!
nen as J. C. Mobley. A man o
sincere and strong convictions wa I
10, and he stood by them. I
In the death of this good mai |
Jonesville has lost one of her best !
icr truest citizens. Everybody tha |
\new him there shall miss him, fo
hey know the life he lived in thei i
iiidst. I, too, away out here in Ok
ahoma will recall him as he so faith
'ully labored in the employment o i
ny father in store and Postofficc, re 1
all him in his declining years, and <
low closely attached he then seemed t
:o my father's interests, recall hir i
friendliness toward ne and my fath
m's family. Yes I. too. shall miss 1
lini. 1
Mr. Mobley left to mourn his death 1
ine daughter, Mrs. Wright, of Jonesville.
Mrs. Wright has my hcartfel t
sympathy in this sad hour. It i
should be a great consoloat'on to he- i
ind his many friends to recall and '
hink of the clean, unseltish life he 1
lived. Let us not feel that our friend 1
s dead, but just away. Let us hope I
hat he lives In a brighter world than I
he one ho left behind, where happi- <
less is eternal, where sorrows never
enter. thWe awaiting the familiar 1
forms of those near and dear to him <
:hat he left behind. 1
Mr. Editor, I will thank you to pub- 1
lish the above few lines of tribut'
to my friend in your valued paper '
Again thanking you and wishing
eou much success and BnwnnHtw in
tho oominjr year.
Yours vroy truly, ?
J. C. W. Scott. |
i
Palace of Versailles, near Paris i
is said to be the costliest ever built. j
There nre 220,000,000 Mohamme- ,
lans. i
First income tax was passed by the t
United States Congress in 1862.
m c
Krunp's works at Essen have 40,- i
)0() laborers and 8,000 ofhcials em- ?
rdoyed at. peace work. c
The Russian peasant believes that *
'ne first star to appear in the t
leavens on Christmas Eve is the very V
;tnr that led the wise men to Bethehem,
and that whoever sees it first
s assured a hijrhlv prosperous year. s
? \
One of the loftiest peaks in the Ta- f
oosh Rantre in Mount Rainier Na- ional
Park has been named Mount *
ane in memory of the late Franklin
C. I,ane, former secretary of the inerirr.
The mountain has an altitude
f 6 000 feet. e
HHMHIMBI
OUR BANK
Extends the greetings
its patrons and frien
auuuuu wiui jujr anu g
dividual one of you.
We thank you for y<
the past year and '
friendship mere than v
May Christmas che<
your heart.
FARMERS BANK /
C. H. PEA HE. Pre*., F
C. K. MORGAN, 2n
S
y
Notice to Taxpayer*
From January 1st to February 80,
22, the County Auditor's books will
i open for making1 returns. All
ho are liable to taxation will please
o that their returns are properly
ade. All real estate and personal
operty have to be returned. All1
returns must be made by school
stricts. If you have property in |
ore than one district make return
>r each district. Poll tax collected
om 21 to 60 and road tax from 21
> 50.
I will be at the following places
a the following dates, as slated be-1
?w:
Monarch and Ottaray, January 18.
Union Mills, January 19.
Buffalo, January 20.
Lockhart, January 25.
Excelsior Knitting Mills and Gau't
lanufacturing Co., January 26.
Carlisle, January 27.
Santuc, January 31.
ioshen Hill, February 8.
Cross Keys, Wilburn's Store, mom- ]
ng, February 9.
^edalia, Minter's Store. evening, j
February 9.
Jonesville, February 10.
Kelton and Adamsburg, February i
15. Adamsburg in morning and Kel !
on in afternoon.
West Springs, W. J. Bet sill's store. |
February 17.
J. S. Betenbaugh,
County Auditor.
24-31-Jnn. 7-14-21-28 Feb 1-11 ;
Famous Screen Actor Wont
Play in Unclean Tal^s
"I have never yet played in a p'.c-:
Lure that wasn't clean and whole-:
some," says House Peters, one of the ;
screen's best-known actors, who plays
he leading role in "The Man From
- L T">: tt _ rt i- r 1 ~ 1 .
.osi MVfr, a r rufiK muyu jjiouui
ion for Goldwyn, which will be
;hown at the Grand theater Monday.
Mr. Peters takes the position that
here are so many decent stories in
he world that he sees no reason in
the world why the other kind should
ae produced. He said that his lates:
production gives him the type of
strong, virile part which he likes to
portray.
Another thing about House Peters t
is that he will never accept an en
jagenient to play in a picture with
>ut first having read the part. No
natter how much money he is offered ;
le will not take it unless he consid-1
;rs that it offers him an opportunity
:o show his talents to the best ad
. antage.
Mr. Peters was bom in Bristol,
England, but came to the United
States when he was only 16 years old.
He has li^ed an adventurous life,
vhicli has taught him the ways of
;hc great outdoors, such as are seen
n "The Man From Lost River." He
?erved in the Boer War with the New
Zealanders and has at various times
ived in different parts of the world,
[n the back yard of his California
iome he has a great collection of
yirds, chickens, dogs, squirrels and
wen a big gpher snake.
Some of the pictures in which he j
las been seen recently are "The!
Ireat Redeemer," "The Invisible!
Power," "The Great Divide," "Lying!
L,ips" and "Isobel."
Chile Abolishes
Capital Punishment
Santiago, Chile, Dee. 21.?Abolition
^f capital punisment and flogging,
provided in the Chilean penal code,!
s asked in a bill sent to congress by
he Ministry of Justice. Life im-;
srisonment would be applied in cases
vhere the penalty of death is deter- J
nined under the existing code.
Referring to capital punishment,
he measure says, "it offends, by its I
ruelty, the moral sentiment prevail
ng in cultured nations; it is irrepirable
and, eonsenquently, it does not
omprise the possibility of impeding
he consequences of the errors which
he administration of justice might
lave incurred <>n applying it."
"Flogging is barbarous in itself,"!
ays the bill. "It is rejected by uni-|
'ersal consent and among us it has
alien into disuse as it is not even
tossible to find executioners willing
o apply it."
Rubber was first used as pencil
raser.
oi tne season to ail
ds. May Christmas
gladness for every injur
business through
we appreciate your
rords can express.
:r come to gladden
IND TRUST CO.
d
v
L L. LITTLEJOHN, Vice Pres.. d
d Vice Pres. _ ^
a
/
I
?RIALTO THEATRE?I
* ' ' 2 Days Starting Monday, Dec 26 -? ;fi I
TWICE DAILY - - 3 AND8P.M. I *
Prices: Matinee, 50 and 75c; Night, 59c and $1,00, plus tax 9
O. W. GRIFFITH'S I
AMERICAN INSTITUTION I *
"The supreme picture of all time." "An Amrican film epic." I
?N. Y. Mail. ?N. Y. Telegram. B
H "Anything more thrilling never seen." "A triumphant achievement."
H ?N. Y. World. * ?N. Y. Times.
S WITH AN ORCHESTRAL ACCOMPANIMENT OF THE ORIGINAL SCORE.
I TRUTHFUL?THRILLING?TREMENDOUS
B THE GREAT AMERICAN STORY TOLD IN THE MOST SPECTACULAR FORM
OF ENTERTAINMENT EVER SHOWN IN THE THEATER
H "Nothing has ever equalled its cumulative power to make the masses get up on its M >''
H toes and root." ?N. Y. Sun, May 3, 1921.
ft ft
II GOOD WILL TO EVF.EY LIVING SOUL! ||
We desire to express our best wishes for a merry, merry Christmas X i
t 1 tn nnp anrl nil? Wr. tn-naf tka konmr ...til ~ 1? 1 I? * l ?
^ ^ .. ~ .. ?. ...v "?rrj auuunu in oiessings
X Jt to you, and that the New Year will usher in for you a year of triumph- A\.l
XX ant success. JLZ.
YI ... It
y Y We rejoice in the great numbers of friends that have united to make YY
YY our business a success. We are more determined than ever to merit Y^
YY your patronage. We believe that we have just cause to be proud of YY
YY our successful year. We owe our success to our friends, and to the
YY further fact that we sell reliable merchandise. We believe a business YY
YY builded upon honest value and honest service will stand the stress of YY
the years.
VV YT
&& May good cheer, right hearts and warm friendships abound in the
life of every one of you, this Happy Christmas Season.
II WILBURN DRY GOODS COMPANY II
%% THE LADIES' STORE XX
II YY
H %%
-< iB? -^^9IR9KKSX2S?^f&3s8?2K3flHGRB|^^
PALMETTO FISH TANKAGE 1
Will help you heat out? the Boll
Weevil by Riving your crop a quick ~~dl~ P
Guaranteed Analysis 8
Ammonia 7% |j^3if
If your local Agent cannot supply I lj
you communicate with us direct. I^r
A. F. PRINGLE, INC., - - - CHARLESTON, S. C. I
___ .
Art. Underwood Dies i Korean mission field since 1K84. Her son, Rev. H. H. Underwood, re- X)
At Age of 70. Years Mr:,. Underwood came to Korea as cently laid the cornerstone of Under- 9
a pioneer woman doctor and was at wo?d Hall, one of the buildings of the
Seoul, Korea, Nov. 1.- Mrs. Un- one time attendant on the late em- <^10sen Christian College, which is h
. .. , ? ? ? ou . J . monument to Dr. Underwood's eferwood,
widow of Horace (?. Under- press of Korea. She was marr.ed in forts in the cause of thp hjgher e<ju
mod, was buried here today, having Korea to Doctor Underwood, who was cation of the Koreans.
ied at the age of 70. With her hus- a brother of the manufacturer of that ?
and who died a few years ago after name, and was associated with her The first white woman to reach
lifetime of missionary work in Ko- husband in educational work in Ko- Nvassa, the wife of Rev. Dr.
oa. she ha. bean a worher in the rea. J