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RIALTO v.-] TODAY ; NORMA TALMADGE | in J? "THE " WONDERFUL THING"? h< also 1 "WHAT i A WHOPPER" ? A Pnthe Comedy j P _______________________ ! u Cowless, Sowless, Henless Farms? jli John Fields. editor of Tlic Okla- ? ho ma Farnit r, is opposed to cow.ess. V sowless and henless farms. Are \ o .' 1 herewith be.i.w is what Mr. Fields v had to say recently. ? ! M It is a fact that those who control > hind and credits largely determine' 0 what farmers do. Wnatever is the | ? matter with agriculture in tiie South ri tcday, responsibility for most of it * rests with the landowners, tankers r and credit merchants of the Souih. j " A study of reports of conventions''1 and conferences to consider the stare," of South rn agriculture leads to the ' coneius on that, hitherto, they have ' been long on oratory and short o.i op- 11 eratimi. the end to be sought was! neter better expressed than by lie.iry ' W. Crady, when he said: 1 * "When every farmer in the South s shuil cav bre.iu from ins own held.- and J1 meat from Iris own pastures anil dis-j 11 turbed by no creditor and enslaved by ' . no debt, shall sit amid his teeming ,! gardens and orchards and vineyards 11 and dairies and barnyards, piuhing v his crops in his own w.sdom and g.ow- v ing th.em in independence, making cot- 0 ton his clean surplus and selling . in a his own time and in his chosen mar- s ket and not at a master s bidding? 11 getting his pay in cash and not in a receipti-d mortgage that discharges l! his ht but d? es not restore his free- ! N dom- -then shall be the breaking of 1 the furncss of our day." 1 1 muse senumenis so Leauuiuny ex- ? pressed are always applauded when- c e\er quoied?applauded and that is all. ; v Dr. Seaman A. Knapp started the 11 agricultural demonstration work in v the South and laiil the foundation fur F its agricultural rejuvenation. Amonj; 1 his Ten Commandments of Agrkui- ;i ture are there: 1 "Increase the farm stock to the ex- ?' tent of utilizing all the waste prod- ' ucts and idle lands of the farm." "Produce all the food required for > the men and animals on the farm." ' On many occasions he reiterated.; v "One i f the foundation principles of j r our work is that the farmer should 1 raise the food for the family and f >r 1 the farm stock so that his principal v cash crop may be all profit." j v Those who have been carrying on the agricultural demonstration work 1 in the South have failed to obtain the 1 results for which Dr. Knapp hoped. r That cotton farmers generally have 0 not been influenced by agricultural ^ oratory and have not practiced the e * sound precepts is clearly shown by c some recent r. ports of the Bureau of Census. This table shows the number of farms in eat h 100 farms in the ? cotton states which raised no calves and which raised no pigs in l'J18: Percent Percent Calfless Pigless, v North Carolina . . . 02.8 <>2.9 ' South Carolina . . . 03.0 62.7 I Georgia 56.4 57.6 | . Alabama 46.2 54.1 j Mississippi 44.2 54.1 i I-oui iana 57.6 54.7 J Texas 46.5 61.6 I v "Good i * VV ',, / 7/// \vjA. 7 /'/.v V//^ ^t*gs<s * VSV*^-'Xi3 V k'lrsns '.^.2 53 7 p snnessee 3 ">.4 4'< 1 tlakcma 37.3 53.3 Oratory has been ino.Fectlve. Demstraticn has fa led to <lo the n.b. le men who have controlled land an I . edit in the cotton states ha e to a ' rge e\te t !1 c < <1 the ear.n * \v r t it' liirh county a? ents and h- me d nt - v ration agents have been doing, ankers and men hints have pat up . i e\ fi r c:t t clubs, pi ? clubs a nl ultvy cluls becau i i: l.as been ! nablc?uuito the thing ? to do so. gave tl em ge< d audi' g ii ngi'i- ji iltural society, 'they sou; lit to bay ieuKur i ini * . i.iviit and > ' ?rity. Yet In their daily wovl ? ti issing neon fa lueis' cv nliir.. a. so ( line l>a In s : ..<! re . -bants ! a e >ntinucd patting entj ' a i-- < n . ai. l iv.Mi.v**- > i ,aui> to pick i.'.e >t:or wi'.kout pay. Tohn Burr ifhs \vrof : '"Whn* the >w is, there is Arcadia; so f.-.r ar influence prevail.', the;e i iotiinii mm ii.v end sweet honi ly 11 fe." All of us < in i.i camp ig s ' d K'e e y el i'dren to drink more ' Ik. '?'t vvi* "d- ? no thought to t let that more than third c f th ten h i:ig on the cotton farms of t < 1 o ith do n >t know what milk v. I ke?they haven't tested it since they j ore weani'd. Ii e d of hi gaslined . (1 . 'veil ?:h . I by a dr i. o* ttritiens 11 " v'-. a v avy with el en- f i:ig or picking cottoa, tic y : re j .i1 p w.th a d j-- of .hill tonic and t? ' i ( In po 'o it . TT?..? l!.. nlnln r \v S-V " V ' ' 1 "" " 1 If every farmer i 1 the cotton . ' *i (I i i lwJ . (I l.'Jl i'j 1 and iv.ii (i ; ne cow, bred and I\<1 o:.e sow utlened and ki'led and cured the ?m ( rem hev litter, and m <i ull '.so < f ' ."hat two ii<n hens, assisted ' y a o * * r, w uid ir? a product d, til n's rould be very different now. If bankers and mercha s had r.o xtended credit for the produ ti a < ni "ii to an) t? nant farmer who d'<! ot ha' e at least one cow, on vow. wo dozen bi ns : nd a rooster, and :: ental contract under which the I uidwner provided suitable shelter ! > hcs'.oek a.id permitted the pr. dueti .i f feed on a hare-crop ba is. fe? and <w!ie>-s, cot on farmers, binkr; ,nd merchants would he in trouble low. Ilavinjr pott-en into a variety of d f'culties throuph linnncinp ru. - . armors upon what luis be ? pro . I 0 conclus u1 y to l?e the re ors of : noiicv nia'-i basis iiist before raisap any cotton ? I am s"c mat tlio time to do this s now. You can't buy your way mi f the present situ lion. You mv.-o vork your way out. As a star. w. vhen any farmer comes to y u ; redit and confesses that he la- \ 1 cow, a sow and a flock of lie s \ hould repistcr amazement. a>. ;i: ! .nent, surprise, approhensii n, o icai dp and con o iaiation; pet red a the face and pound the tabs- at t -v ery thouphi th it any f rn r w . 1 i ;e ;le ted to supply himself wit i nniooim of f miiy-feeding livestock . liould think tl at lie can p'c t ... y rcu.t ou which to make n cotton crop. Th n t: im dcwn a <1 talk ii ?>.* *:ih him and try t<> ;vt 111 in s'a . is cheaply as p ssib'.e with livstoc eh eh ni"* he 11 ?r? hns d 1< c ly i - 1 iressinpr him with the fact l a r ; , lutr icon.it? ; iid care arc as imp t m j is 1 rood in fx in jjettin;; profitable v.-| urns. A cow, a sow, two dozen hen ; ii.d a rooster, properly cared fir. will*, irodure irore fo d before next full | han their present cost will b ly. If rou have customers of tenants who mst bo fed until they m kc a crop (< oith which to pay interest on th; old:, lotos and a counts, you can' fee ' hem mere cheaply than by putting 1 hem ir. the wov of feeding themsel .c , c th I ho p d c's of the livestock vhich should he on every farm. ' Farming should lirst of all ' e bo , n p ns which mal e ?.f it a li inej i' line in?: ci eh in=te*d of merely r. 1" noncy-makinir t ha nee. Those \\T.v antral eicd'tf* in ayricul:oral en: i nunitms c n'vt escape resn inslbi'k i or the d'saster which in >*.* ; h ' cl.ii s from ui.sound farm pva.' lc s. j ? i ncplc prefer 1 lie crayi'i. . o the lobster. The first public school for th bli ras established in Paris in 1731. ? Knights of Columbus now nur.' no re than 8n0,00o pi the new w ?ri i. Denver has nearly 30,000 w. .. . ^'age-earners. to the Lcisl RCQ.U.S MAT.OPr. '4 M'J ! / 'Jf > e'.lt'on to President ' S and Congress L II nolulu, T. H., Jan. 20.?Prsei- C at Harding and Congress were F ' > ! to maintain and extend the J of the Unied Statos Naval com- V liratior.s service for press mes- t after July 1, 1922, when the J - nt arrangement expires, in n ' . .i I n signed by the officers of the j, I'a-i 'c Press Congress, the Hon- 1 ' s S ar-Bulletin, Honolulu Adver- ?j a.id the Honolulu Chamber of J .'.reive, which was sent to Wash- < vr < n. ( The pet tion. containing the bulk | : a resolution adopted by the re- i o:;. Cress Congress of the World | v stated that the temporary serv- < re now being rendered by the Naval ? under act of Congress, is ex- I client. I .' <tion to broaden the scope of the I - ice to include foreign countries ' reeling the Pacific, now hampered lror h government regulation, also < ; s requested in the petition, which aid th it the Pacific forms the -'n ipal theatre of the world's ?v?nts" and "one of the chief causes f war is national ignorance of the mi-noses, aims and ideals of other (lint rics." Wide dissemination of n' national news, made possible by * - i * . - _ 1 l_l_ A. .;riem service nc reasonauie races, v ?il(l correct this condition, the pe;ti m said. Washington state's developed water power is 4>3,5.'>7 horse power. A Michigan couple have had <ive c' :Mron in one year. TTni'cd ciatcs army in 1789 con;istcd of 840 men. vibseribe to your home paper SAY IT WITH CANDY AND SHE'LL LISTEN. HolKngsworth's Urasrjal Candies WILL SAY IT BEST. UHON DRUG STORE Phone 116 and "Look for the Boy." SPECIAL TRAIN LJn'on to Spartanburg and return Friday, Jan. 27th ?Via? Southern Railway System Special train will be operated Union to Spartanburg, -r.d return, leaving Union, S. C., 5:50 P. M. Friday, Janjarv 27th, returning leave Spartanburg 9:45 P. M. same J^te, account Billy Sunday re;'v*al, there have been 300 eatr rererved at Tabernacle for the people of Union, S. C. liclets are now on sale at c!e~ct office, $1.53 round trip. A.'I holding the round trip i'11 et-5 will be provided with ro crved seats at Tabernacle. Purchase tickets at once. 1... Jh Prrtlow, Ticket Agt., Union, S. C. Phone 245. R. C. Cotner, D. P. A. Spartanburg, S. C. j 285?2t. : X)rop^| Bi623B3Si^&5 ( KfwJffflgra jkE|85B|| SBBSafi^BiKa | 8BSB8 Eu(9n9aK ? ( ubscriptions to ( $5,000 Cannery .ewia M. Rica . ; 60.00 !. K. Hughes 60.00 < L M. White . 60.00 . F. McLure 60.00 V. D. Wood 50.00 )r. Russell Jeter Rp.00 < . E. Minter 60.00 < {. W. Beaty 50.00 r. B. Strange 50.00 , \ H. Garner 60.00 , 1. L. Davis 60.00 i '. R. Whitmire 50.00 toy Willeford 50.00 | sam Berelowitz 60.00 i 3am Kassler 60.00 2. R. Lancaster 60.00 I. V. Askew 60.00 S. Krass . - 60.00 Macbeth Young 50.00 5. M. Garner 50.00 Claude Wilburn 50.00 i. Mobley Jeter, Jr 50.00 U G. Young 50.00 F. W. Carnell 50.00 D. Jean Whitlock 50.00 G. Kennedy 50.00 Victor Smith 50.00 I no. W. Gregory 50.00 R. N. Sprouse 50.00 W. W. Johnson 50.00 C. B. Sparks 50.00 U. U. Ammons 50.00 T. B. Gault 50.00 Dr. A. P. McElroy 50.00 George Willard 50.00 Gordon Bishop 50.00 R. T. McMehan 50.00 R. H. Harris 50.00 F. J. Parham 50.00 Dr. J. W. Buchanan 60.00 H. J. West 50.00 J. D. Hancock 50.00 Dr. W. N. Glymph 50.00 B. F. Kennedy 50.00 Goynn Austell 50.0.0 L. J. Browning 50.00 E. W. Stone 60.00 Mrs. Jno. R. Mathis 50.00 J. Cohen Co 50.00 Citizens National Bank .... 50.00 H. C. Wilburn 50.00 Dr. Theo. Maddox 50.00 Miss Mahala .). Smith .... 50.00 Miss Edna Tinsley 50.00 Bradlev-Estes Co 50.00 W. S. McLurc 100.00 Found 57 ? wanted 43 more subscriptions. Who will be the next? Unless we can secure 100, no subscription will hold good. No solicitors, no sales promoters. 'Phone No. 1 and fay ""Yes." Subscriptions to $5,000 Potato Drying House J. II. Riley $500.00 Thos. McNally 100.00 F. J. Parham , 100.00 Dr. J. W. Buchanan 100.00 Lewis M. Rice 100.00 J. D. Hancock 100.00 L. J. Browning 100.00 B. F. Kennedy 100.00 S. R. Garner . 100.00 J. R. Charles 100.00 Mrs. Jno. R. Mathis 100.00 J. E. Kelly * 100.00 J. Cohen Co. 100.00 Citizens Nation^ssrnk .... 100.00 Macbeth Young . 100.00 J. L. Bolton 500.00 Citizens Nations Bank .... 100.00 Harris-Woodward Co 100.00 I. From 100.00 Dr. Theo. M*vldox 100.00 Dr. J. G. Coinp: 100.00 Bernard ^'ant 100.00 T. L. Jolly 100.00 W. S. McLure 200.00 C. B. Sparks 100.00 Total $3,400.00 Unless $5,000 is raised, no subscrip tion will count. If you don't like a cannery, come on into a potato dry house. We need both. Both will help. The potato dry house will pay quicker dividends. Come on! Phone No. 1 and say $500, $100 or $1,000. Leper Settlement has Fewer Patients Honolulu, Dec. 25.?(By Mail).? The leper settlement on the Island of .Vlolokui contains fewer patients than it any time in the past fifty years, recording to the statement of .1. I) McVeigh, Superintendent of the colmy, on a recent visit here. The tlo:rease, he said, was due to the treatnents with the ehaulmoogra oil spe ific evolved by Dr. A. L?. Dean, presilent of the University of Hawaii. Practically all of the 485 patients it the colony now are taking the Dean treatment, Mr. McVeigh stated, n commenting upon the popular bief that the children of lepers are lillicted with the disease, Mr. McVeigh, who has been superintendent, if the Molokai settlement for many rears, said that "both mentally and ihysically, the children of leprous >aieni.s measure up as well, if not tetter, than those of healthy paen ts." "These children arc not only nornal, but they also have the advantige of the training that is given in he splendidly conducted homes fur he children of lepers throughout th ; vorld." Permission to purchase 600 pounds if ehaulmoogra oil, from which the Dean specific is derived, has been riven by Governor Wallace R. Far ington to Dr. F. F. Trotter, presilent of the territorial board of lealth, in order that the territory's lupnly might not be exhausted. Dr. rrotter, in a letter to the governor, >ointed out that Dr. Heiser of the tockefeller Foundation announced re ently that the Philippines governnent would purchase three tons of he oil and that this would virtually onsunie the world supply. The territorial board of agriculture ins established a chaulmoogra planation at Waiahole, this island, where everal thousand saplings have been ilanted. in order that the increasing lemand for the oil mav be satisfied. Bolshevism has obtained a foothold n the Fiii islands. A recent six ponths strike paralyzed the sugar industry and caused a heavy loss to lanters. De^si'tv of Mars Is three-fourths hat of the earth. Jack was an| old English term ipplied generally to aervants. Zitation to Kindred And Creditors ^ 3tate of South Caroline, J County of tJnlon. *4 Court of Probate. ? Whereas, Robert W. Hamilton has Jj made suit to me to grant him Letters ^ jf Administration on the Estate and ? effects of R. W. Hamilton, deceased, J These, are, therefore, to cite and % admonish all and singular the kindred ? and creditors of the said R. W. Ham- J ilton, deceased, that they be and appear, before me, in the Court of Pro- ? bate, to be held at Union C. H.. South j Carolina, on the 9th day of February. < next, after publication hereof, at 11 4? o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause a if any they have, why the said Admin- < istration should not be granted. 4> Given under my hand and seal this a 24th day of January. Anno Domini < 1922. W. W. Johnson, Judge of Probate. a Published on the 2"?th January and < 1st day of February, 1922, in The 4; Union Times. ^ Bids for Supplies i 4 Bid for Union County Home. 4 325 lbs. flour (plain), 12 lbs. Kite . tobacco, 25 lbs. sugar, 15 lbs. coffee, 12 bars Octagon soap, 10 boxes gold 4 dust. ( Bid for Union County Chain Gang. 100 lbs. self-rising flour, 3 bu. corn 4 meal, 90 lbs. fat back bacon, 10 lbs. . lard, 3 lbs. coffee, 12 lbs. sugar, 20 lbs. ^ grits, 10 lbs. Apple tobacco, 1 car No. 1 choice Timothy hay. ^ These bids must be submitted to me by 27th of January. J. V. Askew, It Supervisor. Receiver's Sale State of South Carolina, County of Union. Court of Common Pleas. Morotock Manufacturing Company, Plaintiff, vs. W. F. Bates, W. E. Bates and W. B. May, co-partners, trading and doing business as Carlisle Cash Company, Pursuant to an Order of Judge T. S. Sease, bearing date the 9th day of January, A. D. 1922, appointing the undersigned as Receivers in the above entitled action Notice is hereby given that we will sell at Carlisle, S. C.t on February 4th, 1922, at one o'clock p, m., at the place of business of the said Carlisle Cash Company, all the goods, wares nnd merchandise of the abovenamed Defendants, consisting of groceries, dry goods, fixtures and various and sundry other personal property as will more fully appear by reference to an inventory, which is approximatey $3875 01, and may he seen at the office of Jno, K. Hamblin, Attorney, Union, S. C., terms of sale c ash, to the highest bidder. F. H. Garner, J. V. Askew, As Receivers for Carlisle Cash Co. 1-25; 2-1 SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS ? \ FOR RENT?House on South street, ? formerly occupied by J. S. Crews, t modern conveniences. L. G. Young. < It ? Swiftest velocity of wind ever re- ' corded was 186 miles an hour. 1 Thirty thousand persons ara iivjured daily in the United State. , I X. W T? TW /V i UMU V I B. I SUN1 } COIS T T 1 FIRST I i OF I SUNDi I | 10:00 A. M.?S< X 10:15 A. M.?Oi | 10:45 A.M.?Ba | Edw. S. Reave f 11:45 A. M.?F Y i ur a c y IIICIIl, Vf rt. J t 12:30 P. M.?At X 1:30 P. M.?Son ? 2:00 P. M.?Baj ? man, A. T. St | 3:00 P. M.?Ac j > A BUSINE5 t ^ When you open a C ^ NICHOLSON BANK & TRl ^ a real asset to your busine ^ service enables you to get th< L business activities. ( ? Furthermore, in additic ^ unquestioned safety for yi I* special feature of courtesy, f enjoy doing your banking he 4 ; |4 SAFE DEPOSIT BC Capital and Surj: | NICHOLSON BANK S ? Member Federal ^ EMSLIE NICHOLSON, President J w. S. NICHOLSON, L. M. t Vice Pre ; fea AVA A A sTk jTA A A A A A ^ ^V^" T^VV^T ^ ^ ) CERTIF /eaJ fc Certificates of Deposit And splendid investments \v success. Investments have been co been lost. People now st wealth. Certificates are absi stays in your own commi Indeed, you gain in many > "Large Enough to Serve Any? cr nz N A X ION A: Choked by His Tongue Walsall, Eng.?Erich Ferguson was itranglrd to death by his own tongue, vhich swelled suddenly to enormous > :*e. This form of disease, accor l>>.g .0 physicians, is angioneurotic >edema. Londoners consume 1,200 tons of plum-pudding on Christmas Day. Armenia is the oldest Christian nation in the world. Satin and velvet were unknown in antiquity. iN COl APTIS DAY sen [VENT MEETS WITH THE BAPTIST Cr JONES VILLE, S. AY, JAN. 29TH, >ng and Praise, L. G. Sui rganization and election < iptists and Their Origin, I is. baptist Conception of C tevenson, J. M. Trogdon. Ijourn for dinner, ig and Praise, L. G. Sunn tists and Their Achieven oudenmire. Ijournment. W. T. T. J. H J. A. I IS ASSET I Kecking Aocount in the % 1ST COMPANY you add )) ss resources, because our ^ e fullest benefit from your 1 x X >n to efficient service and ^ our money, we make a ^ and we are sure you will V ire. Y ?XES FOR RENT. I T >lus $400,000.00 X i TRUST COMPANY f Reserve System Y M. A. MOORE, Cashier $ JORDAN, J. ROY FANT $ sidents Y ICATES >r 1922 nre splendid investments. 'ill lead 1922 for thrift and nfusing?many a dollar has ;arch for safety for their olutcly safe?and the money jnity. And interest too. ,vays by investing at home. Strong Enough to Protect All." L BAN Notice A snecial convocation of Poinsett J/ Chapter, No. 16, R. A. M., will be held in the Masonic Temple Wednesday evening, wkThW January 25th, 1922, at 7:30 On -s 'W/ o'clock. The Mark and Pastmaster's degree will be conferred upon a class of votaries. By order, Geo. T. Keller, Wm. C. Lake, H. P. Secretary. 1284-2t INTY J V T | 100L ! TOM i 1 1URCH I c. | 1922 :| mner. of officers. % f. W. Stone, Dr. 2 hutch Govern- y $ tier. ?? [tents, J. F. Pit- Y KENNETT | rEST I 'ETTY | ? J . iM