The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, February 06, 1922, Image 2
THE UNION TIMES
Published Daily Except Sunday By
THE UNION 1IMES COMPANY
i ewi* M Rice Editor
K. -nt. r. .< at the I'mtoAict in L'niuU. S. C..
as second fins* mutter.
1 1:1 c.- lluildiny Main Street
lirl. Tfiifphont No. 1
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Y ar ; # 1.00
- - Month . 2.00
7 hre- M'tii hs J.00
ADVERTISEMENTS
line N|i.. i. ! t insertion . ..<100
lAtfi. < i-itnt inaert on SO
Obit .in: . notices, Church un-I Lodge
notices a i lu'-.tft of public meetings. en'
. * i CnrtU of Thnnki will be
? vi i t :i {I;.* rate of one cent a w ord.
" h pai.vir. the order 0 Count the
' tii! u will know what the cojt
MEMBER Oh ASSOCIATED PRESS
' i pre . is exclu ilve'y i nfer
republication of news
[> " c it. 'I t<> It or not otherwise
I ! '!. paper. nn<l also the '.oca'
r - : ' ri ' therein
MOXUAY. FEBRUARY 6. 191!2.
Xow that wo arc npproachinc the
*'~,0<" mark with our subscriptions
a cannery we are ready for the
cm ! move in the matter: We pro- j
pes. to co to the farmers of the eoun
with %the following proposition:
W, will take ?50 or? 100 subscrip
An to rho tannery, allowing you to
pay for your subscription in produce.
That is. we will take, say threo and
h fraction tons of tomatoes in payment
for one share of stock. Many
have complained that the farmers
'!id not respond liberally to the proposed
movement. Some even went.
far as t -> say that the farmers
hould build the t annery. We know
very w.-il why many of them have
not sub- ril they had no money.
The prosperous farmer, in many infantes,
is as hard run as is the hoj>elessly
involvi i farmer, for the farmtr
is still holding his cotton. That's
his business, and we have ro sujrgestion
?o offer him. But we know certainly
of (juite a number of farmers
who wiil acroe to take stock and pay
'or '.ho took with the first year's
nop of product*. It ran readily be
-eon that this will bo as real a help
to th? movement u.s would the cash
payment, now that we have in sight
the necessary cash to buy a plant.
In fact, it will take more cash money
to buy 'hi* produce to bo eanned than
to buy and build a plant. We could
Sot make this proposition earlier in
the movement for the reason that it
is point; to take the entire five thousand
pood, hard dollars to pet ready
ro can. Until we pot this far along,
it is manifest that we could not, with
,;ny degree of safety, go to a farmer
with the proposition we are now
ready to make. We could not even
go to the farmer and ask him to sign
up to plant and sell at. a certain
price one acre of tomatoes. This we
will soon be able to do, and we believe
fho cannery is now an assured fact
We are almost over the $5,000 mark
and hope to go over it this week.
Then we will be ready for the other
two moves, above mentioned. Jus*
.as soon as we get the remaining few
subscriptions necessary to the $5,000
total we will call a mooting of th.?
-ubscribers r.t the courthouse and
g ? into the details of the nee-, >ary
future operations. Ir. the meantime,
we propose going after subrip:.
-us "in kind" from the farm
^ >f the county. And, unless we
are very much mistaken, we believe
'. ill meet with a success that will
open the . yes o* some of the T\: ubting
Thomases. We arc more and
111o* coii\inc.-d ihiit the farmers of
T'uion Cou:;*y and the general prosper*
of the county can be assured
t.. , ing in the direction wc are at
tempting. There is no limit to the
possibilities. I)o n<?t think we have
forgotten the potato drying house.
Tha* can wait a month or two, and]
v. ' function this year; but the cannery
must be put into motion at once
if i* is to function this year. We
must order the seed for planting
within two or three weeks, at the
latest You can readily see 'hit w
are in need of hurrying.
. Our cat pnys some people radiate
meanness
.* *
Our cat says this is an opportune j
time for progressive conservatism.
i
UA . M. .
Our cat says it is the man who is (
i
willing to help himself that is worthy!
of the help of others.
*
Our cat -ay? try to da a kind deedj J
today. : (
i
Our oat says you have no right to! (
be going about with a razor edge on | <
your temper. <
! ?
Our oat says it is sorry comfort
one gets* out of giving others dis-i <
I
comfort.
* * * v j I
Out cat says don't tell him to keep ]
a secret that you cannot keep yourself.
! '
* *
i <
Our ctit says he roads in the Bible:;
"A lying tongue an abomination to j
| the I?rd." ! 1
t
1 ? t? * '
Our cat says the trouble with most j 1
governments is that too little of the I
n\su- h i ne r v 1" unc t ion s.
I - * ?
Our cat says inflation i:> ulway?;
overtaken by deflation.
Our cat says watered stock cannot
help being weak.
* if
Our cut says why shout when you!
can be heard when speaking moder-i
ately.
Our cut says do not try to master;
everything1, l>vit he sure to master j
mo thinq.
* ?
Our cot says it is nice to have kind
neighbors
Our cut says a radicul of today is J
often a conservative of tomorrow. |
% *
Our cat says the Washington arms
limitation conference is a reflection '
of the League of Nations conference. .
+
Our cat says the movie actors and '
actresses seem to be getting a hit
groggy.
* *
Our cat says he hopes to find many j
farmers willing to take stock in the '
cannery, paying for it in produce.
?
Our cat says it is not a question of .
how much money you made last yeo* :
but of how much money you lost. j
* i
Oil!- eat says the internal revenue I
collector will have a vacation this
year. * i
Ourcat says honest competition is !
an aid to business; dishonest competition
cuts its own throat.
Our oat say ? bo a conservative .
critic- but never a destructive criti<\
Our cut says a doer responds to
kindness more than some people respond
to it.
I
Uur cat says go through today
without telling a hard luck story.
'" ur cat says ho finds it quite
enough to attend to his own business
? A <*
Our eat :-ays those who arc? harping
upon the folly of giving advice
usually hand out chunks of it themselves.
Our cat says if you do not like a
cannery nor a potato drying house,
suppose yu start somethting you do
hk>.
u 1 v
0*11" rat says too much red tapekills
business and destroys governme?
t.s.
Oui- rat says those who were t? 11itvr
lH v-'*' were not going to have any
winter forgot to rerkon with February.
Our ml says those who make Inlinnce
with evil often find themselves
entangled.
? ?
Our cat says it takes some nerve
to drink blind tiger liquor.
3 * *
Onr cut those who buy blind
tig?r liquor should require the seller
to take the first drink; if he does n?-t
go blind or curl up and die, you may ;
safely drink it.
Our rat says a lie does not prosper
in the sunlight.
?
I
Our cat says you are meaner than
you think your neighbor to be.
Wnshinprtnn, Oregon, and California
produce 20 per cent of the barley
raised in the United Stater..
Germans Complain of Preneh Sol
tlitrs on Rhine.? Headline. Is Lhm
the celebrated Rhino whine
Bronchitis |
At bedtime rub the'throat and
cheat thoroughly with?
VICKS
V A poRum
Over 17 Million Jan Vttd Yearly
Government's Attitude
Denounced by Lawyers j
Calcutta, Feb. 4.?The action of the
.- dian government in arresting many]
hundreds of agitators in the non-co>porntion
movement and others known
is congress or Kiialifnt volunteers in
"onscquenoe of the riots and other incidents
which attended the visit of
he Prince of Wales to Indians evoked
several formal protests.
The government's attitude is denounced
in a protest signed by 150
lawyers at Madras as "a campaign of
repression and abuse of the ordinary
provisions of the law for political purposes,
involving unwarranted and unconstitutional
interference with the
liberty of citizens."
"We consider," the lawyers assert*
I'd, "that the wholesale find unjustifiable
arrests and imprisonments of
public-spirited citizens for political activities
constitute a grave menace to
public safety and express our firm
conviction that such measures inaugurated
in a time of law and order are
^,niu. . .u ~ i J 1-- ?
-)iurn;i?nv lilW illiu (irocr,
Sewn leading members of the Model
ate party in Calcutta have issued a
manifesto deploring the initiation of
a repressive policy simultaneous with
the visit of the Prince of Wales. They
declare that coercion is no remedy
for political unrest and that a policy
ut repression will defeat its own end
and lead to serious results.
Lord Reading, the viceroy, however,
contends that the government policy tf
not one of repression. Defending that
policy in replying to an address presented
by the Bengal Mahnjan Sabha,
he declared that "no greater fallacy
exists than to suggest that the gov;
^COE MOl
Quality I
RELIABLE CR<
GROWERS FOF
SIXTY YEARS
Formulas
s
S. R. AYCOC
E. L. LITTLEJOF
-A,
MKXAUi'fllA*
r r
BRING THE SKI
j OUT OF YOUR
I EXTRA i
j $3.00 1
I There's a ske!el<
closet?a coat ar
only a pair of ext
vert it into a brant
Bring them out!
We have the trou
pairs, all kinds an
your price, your
monize with or ma
year ago.
l isle and Silk Host
Men's Soft Hats .
J. Coll
HOUSE OF SA
- - l '_i- __ U ii*j\ _ : . . , ,,,1,., mmmsssS!
HELP UNION COUNTY I
BY
HELPING TO BUILD I
I CANNERY I
AND A POTATO I
DRYING HOUSL I
: SUBSCRIBE TO 1 SHARE I
1 $50, OR $100?OR BOTH! I
DO IT NOW- I
f
I ernment means only to govern by re
sort to force."
He pointed out that the govern
mont was bound to maintain law am
order and protect law-abiding citizen
had defied the low for the purpose o
being arrested and obtaining sympn
thy.
Then, he said, demonstrations ar
made to force the government to innk
more arrests.
That he said was the situation dis
passionately stated. Although h
would be sorry to say one word tha
would inei'ease the state of tension nl
ready existing, the viceroy said tha
the policy of the government in pro
venting intimidation and unlawful op
pression and of enforcing due regar
for law must persist.
The viceroy reiterated statement
he had previously made that ther
is no intention by the Indian govern
ment to interfere with opposition t
the government or with the expres
sion of strong feelings against it, pre
and that it became necessary for th
government to exercise power and au
thority to combat intimidation and co
ereion brought to bear upon person
to force them to take action in whic
they did not believe.
The viceroy charged that the ni
rests in Calcutta were in most in
stances forced upon the government
He asserted that the political leader
vided that the law is observed.
"The government has never wishe
to shut out dis< ussion," he assertec
"quite the opposite. I have on man
occasions since I arrived indicated tha
my government wished to know an
remedy legitimate grievances. Noth
ing that has happened lias change
this policy."
i ?-? Jaannmi nmniw?sam
{TIMERS 1
;ertilizers U
ip II
w
for all crops
51 '3
; 5 J
EE: ri l
K, Union, S. C.
IN, Jonejville, S. C.
1 ?Ij ji
'.war^w^ 7*? T:**!?r-rptr'<^5',
?-t ?? ?- .
A^Stowe-'i'S^a^'riE.- ? ?- r
5LET0N
CLOSET
RIOUSERS
'O $8.00 1
on in nearly every
sd ves! that needs
i i. _
.d litfiisers iu
1 new sirt.
sers? hundreds of.
d colors, your size,
pattern---to haritch
year taste of a
i . . .25c to $1.00
. . . $2.50 to $6.50
en Co.
TISFACTION. I
MmmmmemmmmKttKKmmmammam
PHONE NO. 1
AND SAY "YES!"
SAY IT NOW.
I!
11
! :
j j
SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS
m r W 1 COAL $8.50?Cash on delivery. Ton
^ sms* a m lotB- Excelsior Knitting Mill.
saving s in lutte ^
O WEST SPRINGS WATER?Deliv!
eries made only on Saturday and a
kU yuith the Season SSr&gJL,/
| WANTED ? Generators, starters, V
Indeed, this 13 the season for saving, the time to plan lna?T!ietoSj ant* sy8t?*ns. . '1
' n .i_ . u i * ... ,, tested and repaired; parts for all &
tor the year and our Bank is open to you with all makes. Julian E. ffughes, Auto ~
facilities at your service. Service. Opposite old stand.' i
- . We would esteem it a privilege to have the opportu- 1277-Mo-We-Fr?tf
nity to serve and cooperate with you during the year. r AI T AT, I" ~
-?? uuxuno Qli/nci LOT your
.1 18 going to be the greatest year for .saving money- supply of grain> h su
and we are fully equipped to serve every individual with coffee> ^ A]hq q ^ Une of
equal pleasure and to the best of our ability. We invite chewing tobacco. Your trade is apyou
to call on us at any time. predated. J. M. Jeter, Jr.
"large Enough to Serve Any?Strong Enough to Protect All." FOR RENT Building in "Poverty
Flat." A good location for cafe or
_ . _ _ store. See Union Marble & Granite
i T I T JT |H C?" Main St* 2-2-4-0
AAA ^ / AJ / 1 V NOTICF?We are in the Smith block,
NATIONAL BAN 1^? offering to the public a reduction on
i Barber Work for the first five days
jjj " in each week. Hair cut, 25c; man.
___ #age, plain, 25c; Steam, 25c; Sham|hk),
plain, 25c. J. C. Deadmon Barit
TH HHP niCTAMCDC A MB CDICMnC I .DNO MEN. women, over 17. de
I a ivvuh mw riULsim/o w?
monthly, write for free list of posiA
., . , i , .. , , ... tions now open, J. Leonard, (former
g Another trying year has reached its close and while Civil ^rvice examiner), 1236 Equi- <
1921 was, perhaps, the most disastrous business year in table BIdg., Washington, D. C.
B several decades, the great world questions are gradually 1293-3tpd
H assuming shape where it is possible to predict safe and ? ~~7. T.
ltl . , . , ... ^ - - . , . .... . WANT ED?Representatives to sell
n 8ane settlements which will have the effect of stabilizmg monuments; attractive proposition.
g business, both domestic and foreign. The future holds Write Charlotte Marble & Granite
promise of a steady, if slow, readjustment and return to Works, Charlotte, N. C. Largest in
I normal conditions. the Carolina;*. , 2?1-4-C
At this season, the beginning of 1922, our business en- ^HICHESTHR S PILLS
a | ei"gy and commercial affairs are embued with the Spirit l?rrA
^ of the times, and we are glad to have the opportunity ?iu lu^'^TSlui
m 1? express to all of oftr customers and friends the pleasA
ure we have derived from their loyal interest and sup- Itf v?mtmomw-n???.AiwinS?wn>bS
I I port which helped us to weather the financial storms and r SMIllttMISTSEVHnilljl^
g n business depression of the times. Danger of Solid Food
We are now entering a new era in the life of our busi- For Starving Russians
^ fl ness affairs that of adopting the cash system in the Orenburg, Russia, Feb. 3.?The danV
e conduct of our business which we hope will not in- ger of giving of solid food to starving
t J convenience our customers to any great extent. Russians was illustrated on the platI
J form of the station here.
We purpose carrying a full line of oats, corn, hay, Then the through train from Tasguano,
etc., and a substantial table menu in groceries, ^ent Moscow halted here a woman
which we will sell at the closest cash margin and which 'uf'"' ?ne
i , ... . . .. , , pity on n small boy begging at the
J we hope you will inspect and get quotations before buy- car windows. She gave him a part
ing. * of a loaf of white bread, which he be,
fan to eat ravenously. Within a few
Now in closing we hope to have a continuation of your minutes he went into choking convulmuch
appreciated patronage and reciprocally hoping siona and within a 1 ilf hour was dead,
that this new year may have many joys, many realized "
hope., many succe.sful endeavor., good health and much Subscribe to The Union Timea.
prosperity to you and yours is the wish of ^ _IWL-| , , ,
_ ^ i %a/ i.rrirrnl
BEA1Y & THOMSON 1ft* "SZKST
| SUCCESSORS TO THOMSON & BEATY
: ! Cures CbidsfnMHcurs The
cinnamon is one of the most Napoleon always shaved himself 7, ?tanimhp ,tmc4r i-^?t
j abundant treo* in Ceylon. until lie became too 111 to do it. f "/"<>.;
Smelters of the United Staaes fur- Put a spoonful of vinegar in the Kiw'iurt.*"
nish the world with a 65 per cent of water with which you wash glass /*??#????MCm..
its copper. and it will be brighter. . ...v "5 ,
V i , ' ' "m
'm . y \
v w, ? A % V i
. *;?I i