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RI ALTO Last Showing Today /gj^ \ H\A ^pBl i a ^ _ THE SHEIK ? eronec MCtrow Mwurr'wi Ct (paramount Chilian ALSO Fathe News TOMORROW Heiene Chadw-ck and Richard Dix, stars of "The Old Nest" and "Dangerous Curve Ahead," in Mary Roberts Rhznehari's "THE GLORIOUS FOOL" Card of Thanks To the Public: 1 v h to thank the people ol" I'n'or county who made the musical cntertaiumi mi a success by their afti ndanci and special thanks to The Time." foi it-- willim publicity through tin pa for and much credit is due Mrs. W. T Ceaty and those who took part in thii entertainment who have also m\ heartiest thanks for all their kind ness. Everybody seemed to bo weli pleased with this program and it is * he wish of many that another be given at a later date. Axrai? I ftm, RespectfuTly yours, J. Davis, Ensign. SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENT.4 SHOVEI 8, price $1.15. Peoples Supply Co., I). Fant Gilliam, Pres 120G-3t. WANT MY FRIENDS to know 1 will take orders for home-made candies Mrs. Don I., berry, Phone 9082. lpo FOR RENT One six-room hou'C $25.00; one three-room house $8.00 R. 1.. '11 Nally. 1296-6 COAL $8.10 Mill grade coal in toi lot.- $*.10 ('. O. D. Genuine Ret. Devil Coal, $10.50. Phone 3-19. 1 is Army Field Axes at $100 each Peoples Supply Co., D. Kant Gil liam, Pres. 1290-3 Describing himself as a "Sparkler, and bo ng asked what it meant, a wi' ness in a London court said, "I sel I imitation diamonds to servant girls, j ii. Spain a woman's mantilla is hcl. . acn<i, ami it cannot be so!?l fo .!< !>!. Out pal ? f aluminum has risen mor ".!*nn !') ? per cent since 1011. New Y-> . !'. ;\v its mily .-s ip|> 1. fi' .n a r.alius <;f 2n0 to 300 miles, V<tgUfcMUU"lllUiaM]U?Mltf IMMUHUMtllUUMMSTMUtillMtUaii PATIENCE i Link Patience with Vision, w and they will in the end enters of systems and the wreck of t Vision and Patience stand i who are in much too great a h That is expecially true, as far our social relations are concert it would probably be found tl Isent a national crisis unless tl who are in a very great hurry Patience and vision are wise much by reason of being served creatures are brought into nor thoir fellows. Therein lies these is now conceived. 11 is not so r Service the individual is minis Community Service the indr munity. Community Service, orgnni constitutes an open door. Tin can pass and be something in order to unite tho-^e who may passion, by misunderstanding, them in a common objective. ' same end cannot forever contin Community Service has in both an Organization and for Community Service lias back o Service is the medium through munity get together and truly consequent real interest in ( perity and stability. Can the thing be done? Not day after tomorrow, or even by Patience and Vision both an AMWMmsMMNMCjRiiiHiumrir niCMMMMtrriniflMfjau L Competition's Twilight Zor* If a salesman gives a factory forean a ten-ecnt cigar as he sings the n aises of Smith's oils or Jones' 1 ills, is he guilty of bribery'? asks t le Nation's Business. s "No," is your answer without 1 uch thought. 6 If he gives the foreman a $100 bill 1 he guilty of bribery ? "Yes," you probably reply. Let us ussuine that both answers e correct, and the question that iturally follows is this: Where bevcen the ten-cent cigar and the , 100 bill do we sten over the line Nipping the Rat in the Bud C No one is better equipped than Mr. Samuel Lntcrmeyer to talk turkey in; about open-price associations. He pr made a speech in Boston recently dr upon this topic. According to a press T1 report he denounced these and other | combinations as "festering barnacles m on our industrial life that are fairly choking it to death." js Mr. Untermeyer is 100 per cent as a prosecutor of iniquitous organiza; lions, but as a maker of metaphors ui he would have to be scaled down m : -onsiderably. Barnacles (1) do not t\ , tester and (2) have never been known $1 i to choke anythting to death. This fr i figure of speech deserves a place be- st side llrit famous outburst of the I Irish parliamentarian who shouted at T ; he presiding officer, "Mr. Speaker, I Si smell a rat. I see him floating in tl he air, but mark me, sir, we shall hi nip him in the hud!"?The Na ion's tl j Business. ei Rippling Ripples f, From the Rills . e Very little sorrow comes to our p ; door, we always bring it. u The woman has not yet been found 11 that has a faithful love for her hats. , , c , >ome men are too quick to say yes; i sonic women are too quick to forget saying it. It may look foolish to worry, hut a J lot of fellows who didn't worry are e I i.oiv looking for work. t Necessity krows no law, hut it c knows a iot of lawyers who are a! ii i ways glad to give you a life??? a | We always think that the one thing t I the boss doesn't know is the one t ' thing we know ourselves. t There is room in this country f->i f 'every un-American, but they arc f padded rooms with strong locks. C The girl who gets a job on her looks soon realizes that peaches are about v the first things to get canned. I | Funny, how men will drop into a > show just to see what's on and then (] ' stay two long hours in order U> see t what is oil'. I ' You cannot preserve happiness in t family jars. This is where the for ] I mentation begins and soon explodes if 1 j shaken hard. Sonio fellows who drop into a for- 0 , tune seldom stop until they drop right i on through it; these are the fellows i; who fall the hardest. This seems like a free country until j you drive down into the city and : undertake to park, then there arc . > igns as thick as ticks in Georgia, , "don't park here." Taking The Mystery Out of Banking i A hiirk ook A/vl i? j ... im^u o\ iivyni stuuinv picscuicu a check not long since for payment to a bank teller, and was told "Please endorse it." After hesitating and showing considerable embarrassment, he \ inquired, "Just what is it that you , with me to do?" ^ It seems incomprehensible that a i young man of eighteen should he sc J unfamiliar with simple business pro i cedure and ordinary banking routine. Few people have an elementar\ knowledge of banks and their func lions; not one in a hundred has tnt slightest conception of the meaning j of the statements which the law re quires the banks to publish for theii 5 benefit; few understand the ditferonet between National, State, the Savings i [tanks and Trust Companies, and tin i functions of each; what a deposit is ! and how it should be safeguarded what reserves are and now and wh> . maintained; what arc the essentials ^ of a good investment. It is to meet this situation that at tlueation.il rumnnicn now hnintr eon. cuctcd by the American Bankers' As ^ ocintion, through its Committee on ^ Public Education, of which Mr. John i. I'uelicher, of Milwaukee, is chairnan, has arranged a series of lectures o the student body of our educational nstitutions, beginning with the sevntl. and eight grades in the public schools.?The Nation's Business. Water constitutes nearly three'tiarters of the total weight of the ''e human bodv. ^ ' th AND VISION p' to ork the two in double harness st ;e triumphant from "the crash al vorlds." .pits a constant rebuke to those m. ,urry. Haste makes for waste. ini as the problems arising out of ned. And, in this connection, ge iat social problems never pre- ,<| here are a "reat many people t l to do something or other. They know that it is not so I I as it is by serving that human I , $ mal community relations with I ; h cretof Community Service as it k " f nuch that through Community I tered to as it is that through 8 idual ministers to the com- ! zed by Patience and Vision, j ough that door the individual | ' i and for the community. In I be separated by prejudice, by g of it is only necessary to unite I <u Those who are working for the I h' ue working against each ?ther. 8 & our time come to stand for I on Tzloo A o 1 cifti iva a. ni ciii ui ^diu/idliuilt ifl ' f it this prin :iple: Community I th which the residents of a com- I (? become members of it, with a "? immunity well-being, pros- I : over night, perhaps. Not by *' next month. But, in the end? I lb =>wer for it. ; ? om the courteous commonplaces of desmanship into a forbidden field? ' There lies the field of the Frdera! rade Commission in carrying out ection 5 of the act which created ( lat body. The section is long, but ere are the two sentences from i*. ;at carry the dynamite: Unfair methods of competition in >mmerce are hereby declared unlaw ' 1. The Commission is hereby enipow red and directed to prevent persons artnerships or corporations from sing unfair methods of competition 1 commerce. 'ooperative Marketing Association Grows Columbia, Feb. 7.?Saturday provd to be the banner day up to this ime in the cooperative marketing of otton campaign, contracts representng f>,436 bales having been received t the headquarters of the South Carolina Cotton Growers' Cooperaive association in this city. Con racts representing 4,888 hales came rom Darlington countw, 420 hale:rom l.ee county and 128 bales from )conee county. Darlington county has now signed ip more than 15,000 bales and B. D ->argan, county director, and A. II iVard, county agent, predict that 25, 100 bales will be signed up in that ounty before the close of the cam rnign. The 4,888 bales received yes erday represent the efforts of las Cuesday, which was observed a: sign up day," when 20 automobile illed with progressive farmers tour (1 the county visiting farmers wh lad not signed. "South Carolina seems to be aflam vith enthusiasm for cooperative ma) acting of cotton," said Harry G vaminer, president of the associ: ion, yesterday, "and the rcpor vhich are coming in from over th tate by every mail tell of great i: crest everywhere in the niovemenf Vio on fr^rTinqq nf crrnwprn i ign the contract. It simply is uestion with us now of getting cor litteemen to get the contracts sigi d. It is a big job but we are mal ng headway and every grower -i he state will be given an opportuni >cfore May I, the date of the clos f the campaign, to sign the coi racts. I make this statement in ai wer to numerous inquiries fro armers over the state as to when tb ampaign will be launched in the articular vicinity, some expressin npatience at the delay." G. B. Briggs, county agent i ?conee county, in forwarding six a< itional contracts from his count esterday wrote that in the Keowc chool district of that county th rowers are working for a 100 p< ent sign up. He said the enthusias rns fast spreading in that count R. C. Hamer, chairman of the can aign committee, returned yesterda com Williston and Denmark, whe: e spoke on Friday. He reporte plentlid meetings at both places an lid the plan was received enthusi stically at both points. He think amberg and Barnwell counties wil r?th reach their quotas easily. A meeting of the organization com littee of the association has beer died for Friday, February 10, a' >on. Notice Notice is hereby given that the un rsigned intend to file with the Hon. '. Banks Dove, secretary of state, on e 10th day of February, 1022, o: , creafter, a declaration for a chaiv for "The Bates Company," which oposed corporation is to have its incipal place of business in th< wn of Carlisle, County of Union at*' ot South Carolina, lhe gener nature of the business which v oposes to do is that of a genera* eroantile business, buying an*i sell g merchandise at retail and whole le, dealing in livestock, owning and lling real estate, and the doing o' things incident to the above mat i's set forth. i The capital of the proposed corration is to be Three Thousand J .'{,000.00) Dollars, divided into . nrty ('{()) shares of the par value One Hundred ($100.00) Dollars eh. i The undersigned, L. S. Hates and It. W*-loh, are residents of the c? ivn of Carlisle, County of Union, I ate of South Carolina. i Notice is r.lso given that a meeting '< the subscribers to the capital M-k of the said company will b" o M at the offices of Barron, Barron '' Barron, attorneys at law, Union, tl C., on Friday, the 10th day of Feb- h ary, 1922, at 11 o'clock A. M., for b e purpose of organization of the e mpany and the election of direc rs I.. S. Bates, L. B. Welch, '< Corporators. lion, S. C\, Feb. 7, 1922 8; An electric invalid chair has beer " vented. 'i Japan's Siberian Policy Two yean ago the Japanese p renter made the declaration that "Japan as absolutely no territorial ambiions in Siberia; she will not take a ingle square foot of territory, and he minute the Red menace is settled he will withdraw every soldier." Now he Japanese ambassador to the Unittd States has assured the Far East Jonference that the" military occupaion of Russian territory "is only a emporary measure and will naturally ome to an end as soon as a satisfac ory solution of the question shah iave been arranged with an orderly Russian government. It is the fixed ind settled policy of Japan to respect he territorial integrity of Russia to ibserve the principle- of non-intervention in the Internal affairs of that country." Commenting on Premier Ham's datemcnt of l;(20 the Louisville Post remarked at that time that it was not altogether promising, since "Japan is k> be the judge" of an 'orderly' condiion in Russia which would make withdrawal possible. Further the. utter lack ol any suggested time limit on the occupation reminded the Post that "England went into Egypt 25 or more years ago with no intention of staying ;herc, but England is in Egypt today." The Post was expressing the pre vailing newspnner sentiment on the Hava declaration of two years ago but it is just as good an indev to the pinions of the press on Baron Shidehara's declaration of last week. Japan's position is a "classic" one, the Nlew York Times reminds us, and tin Siberian question is obviously "no ne to start a shower of stones throwi "rom international glass houses." Tin eply of the Japanese government, i oitns out, "is much the same as tha vhich the English government fortj cars ago gave in regard to withdraw ig from Egypt." Even our own gov rnment "is always consumed wit nxiety to remove military pressure' rom Haiti, Santo Domingo and Nic; agua, and "to leave them free to d( elop their own institution, but some Sow the exact hour does not arrive." But in Japan's case it is a matte, f "a violated pledge," as many writ rs see it. The Providence Jour no ells the story thus: "The Japanese went into Siber: ;ith the Americans, British an'rench during the war. The Czechc 'ovaks, fighting by the side of th 'ussians were then in danger and v.V able military stores at Vladivosto ceded guarding. The agreement wr hat each, nation should furnish ap proximately seven thousand troop. hich were to he withdrawn when thriginal purpose of the expedition h een carried Out. The Americans, Bri' ;h and Franctwetired long ago. N< ily have the flbanese remained, lv hey have. IncKaed thejx' forces t ' tjibusan uen. " 'ffly ! nfcurpe(\' the'- trad r. the regionAw'occupy',' taken ov? he fisheries IK in dther ways in ringed on Isian rights under th ruise of self-protection." Thus Japan in the opinion of th? Washington t*ost "stands inthe att! ude of changing the nature of the ei -and of her troops, contrary to he oromise to the United States." Nevei heless the Utica Press holds that "th 'acts, so far as known," sustain Jo an's contention "that maintenance < icr forces in eastern Siberia is net ssary because the country is in --ordered and chaotic state." Ac .dingly it is reasonable thatevac tion should not be undertaken "unt; here is a stable, responsible govei lent established there." But "who is to be the judge of \vhml it ical stability' is?" asks the Lc igton Leader, or "when it is attainc< id what Japanese security demands { is perfectly evident that, restin j or promise of ultimate withdrawal < uch a basis, Japan can remain i 'astern Siberia as long as it suits he mrpose." That purpose, as the Louis ille Post sees it, is not territoria' vnMUii, iill I- i-U |>ci/ UiU IIIOIIIM lussia owes her. That she will have, nd the Post thinks Japan has 110 ider ?f withdrawing her troops until sheets it. "It is idle to talk of any peoph establishing a strong stable govern nent while a foreign army occupies h< ir territory and hampers and sui> erts the governmental efforts of theople," declares' the Wati-rhurj Conn.) Republican and "it is obviou hat Japan continues to occupy east ' n Siberia and foHow the same nolle T he has been following the Russian ill never be able to establish a goanient that Japan will consider si; !e.' To get around the difficult hieh the Philadelphia Public I,edg? nd.) also sees in determining "U ability of any government anywhei - an unstable Russia," the Spring eld Republican suggests "interna onal investigation, from time to linn f the need of continued military oc upation by foreign troops." While there is "nothing sensational' 1 the policy announced by Japan'.epresentatives, since "she doesn' ir/,., r.~ .. . i? i ? i. *vji jia n utur tor iivi *ci>ii t-iin iit, he Baltimore News sees a distinct ain in the fact that "Japan stand: armally committed" to that policy l?t\ L'ason of its incorporation*in the roc rd of the Far East conference, and we need not impute any motive on tie part, of Japan for going back on or word." "On the background looms ig, plain and unmistakable the solmn engagement that Japan will 'rcpeet the territorial Integrity' of Rus in," and since the United States has officially accepted this statement at is full value" the Minneapolis Triune thinks the "American citizen annot well do otherwise" for in the ame position the United States would countenance any "going beind the returns' to appraise its sin cerity." #<i The promise "must be taken on 2 faith," th# Pittsburgh Qazette Times ^ agrees even though, as the Wilkes Bane Record says, it "may mean ab- ? solutely nothing." But in the opinion ^ of the New York Post it is "the right J| and the duty of Americans to see that ( \ the promise is translated into action, for "to see that the near future does not get itself, prolonged into an in- ? definite future is the least we owe to ^ the Russian people." J .?. ) Street car fare in Moscow is 1,000 ^ rubles n half mile. ? " m V An average of 130 pounds of salt J per person was. used last year in the ^ United States. ^ i Christmas season costs King ^ George nbout $40,000. 3 ? Notice B. P. O. Elks < ? : There will be a regular meeting at 4 the Home Tuesday, February 7th, at ^ 7:30 o'clock. Please be there prompt- J ly. I. K. Brennecke. < 1295-2t Secretary. *< Subscriptions to $5,000 ? Potato Drying House ^ Thos. McNally $100.00 F. J. Parham 100.U0 <; Dr. J. W. Buchanan 100.00 _ Lewis M. Rice 100.00 J. D. Hancock 100.00 I 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 National Bank .... 100.00 Macbeth-Young 100.00 J. L. Bolton 600.00 Citizens National Bank .... 100.00 Harris-Woodward Co 100.00 I. From 100.00 I)r. Theo. Maddox 100.00 Dr. J. G. Going 100.00 Bernard Fant 100.00 J. L. Jollv 100.00 W. S. McLure 200.00 C. B. Sparks 100.00 Dr. Russell Jeter 100.00 W. B. Murphy 100.00 Total $3,100.00 Unless $5,000 is raised, no subscription will count. If you don't like J annery, conic on into a potato dry louse. We need both. Both will help. The potato dry house will pay quicker dividends. Come on! Phone No. 1 and say $500, $100 oi $1,000. Subscriptions to $5,000 Cannery Lewis M. Ric? $ 50.00 r C. K. Hughes 50.00 . R. M. White 50.00 I. F. McLure 5Qi)0 W.-.D. Wood ......... feO.OO Dr. Russell Jeter gfl.Oo J. E. Minter 50.00 R. W. Beaty 50.00 T. B. Strange 50.00 F. H. Garner 50.00 II. L. Davis 50.00 I. R. Whit mire 50.00 Roy Willeford 50.00 hani Berelowitz 50.00 ham Kassler 50.00 C. R. Lancaster 50.00 I. V. Askew 50.00 >. Krass 50.00 j Macbeth Young 50.00 , \. M. Garner 50.00 Claude Wilburn 50.00 I. Mobley Jeter, Jr 50.00 L. G. Young 50.00 F. W. Carnell 50.00 !). Jean Whitlock 50.00 \. G. Kennedy 60.00 Victor Smith 60.00 I no. W. Gregory 50.00 R. N. Sprouse 50.00 W. W. Johnson 60.00 C. B. Sparks 50.00 U. U. Amnions 50.00 P. B. Gault 50.00 Dr. A. P. McElroy 50.00 George Willard 50.00 Gordon Bishop 50.00 R. T. McMehan 50.00 R. II. Harris 50.00 F. J. Parham 50.00 Dr. J. W. Buchanan 50.00 H.J. West 50.00 J D. Hancock 50.00 _ Dr. W. N. Glymph 50.00 B. F. Kennedy 50.00 4 Goyan Austell 50.00 | L. J. Browninrr AA E. VV. Stone 50.00 Mrs. J no. R. Mathis 50.00 J. Cohen Co 50.0c Citizens National Bank .... 50.00 II. C. Wilhurn 50.00 Dr. Then. .Maddux 50.00 Miss Mahnla .7. Smith .... 50.00 Miss Edna Tinsley 50.00 Bradley-Fstos Co 50.00 VV. S. Mcl.nre 100.00 (i. B. Barron 50.00 P. D. Barron 50.00 Union Bakery 50.00 Will Humphries 50.00 Mrs. Ida Bailey 50.On I.ouis Gault 50.00 W. B. Murphy 50.00 I R. W. Beaty (additional) . . 50.00 ? Lewis M. Rice (additional) . . 50.00 Q 11. R. Jeter (additional) . . . 50.00 I L>. Norman Jones 50.00 S C. C. Sanders 50.0' C. K. Morgan 50.00 Tlios. McNally 50.00 R. Lee Kelly 50.00 C. Allen 50.00 r. E. Wilburn 50.00 Consolidated lee & Fuel Co. . . 50.00 Union Marble & Granite o. . . 50.00 Roy Willeford (additional) . . 50.00 Found 77 ? wanted 23 more subscriptions. Who will be the next? Unless we can secure 100, no subscription will hold good. No solicitors, no sales promoters. 'Phone No. 1and ?nv "'Yes." Unless we can get the entire 100 by Friday of next week, it will be too late to go forward this year. The tomato seed should already be ordered. What we do, we will do between now and Friday, February 10th. t A CONVENIENT INVESTMENT FOR $ BUSINESS MEN | ^ Business men often have lump sums of money 4 which they want to place at interest, but which they do not want to tie up indefinitely. ? In cases of this kind we recommend the Certifi- V ? cates of Deposit issued by this bank in convenient V ? amounts bearing a spceial rate of interest if the money V ? is left on deposit six months or longer. V f C SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES FOR RENT. JC ? ? Capital and Surplus $400,000.00 A ( NICHOLSON BANK & TRUST COMPANY| t* Member Federal Reserve System T EMSLIE NICHOLSON, President M. A. MOORE, Cashier JL W. S. NICHOLSON, L. M. JORDAN, J. ROY FANT \ Vice Presidents V A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A rv %*>*VVV >??V HOT WATER HEATERS FOR EVERYBODY We have at last secured the agency for the most wonderful water heater on the market barring none, and as an introductory price we are offering the first six sold at the extremely low price of $40.00. Remember that we will sell only six at this price, and if you want one you had better place your order now, as the stoves will arrive in the next few days. The carload left Detroit on Jan. 27, 1922, via B. & O. railway, and should arrive here the latter part of this week. KIRBY ELECTRIC SERVICE CO. Telephone 205-J for yours now. BY EVERY TEST T"" INTEGRITY STANDS AS THE BASIS I OF CREDIT AND SOUD BUSINESS. E WE OFFER YOU OUR SERVICE PLUS OUR DETERMINATION TO BE FAITHFUL IN OUR SAVINGS DEPARTMENT. LET YOUR EARNED DOLLARS EARN MORE DOLLARS FOR YOU. BANK WITH US, THEN BANK ON US. FARMERS BANK AND TRUST CO. C. H. PEAKE, Pres., E. L. LITTLEJOHN, Vice Pres.. C. K. MORGAN, 2nd Vice Pres. REAL COMMUNITY BUILDING Consider the tumbleweed and the oak. \ For a season the tumbleweed grows green. It flourishes in spring and summer. Then cooie the fall and the early gales of winter. What of the tumbleweed? Hither and yon it flies across the prairies, the sport of every vagrant breeze. No \ wind is too light to stir it, no ofc*itruction too small to halt it. I But, does the oak go swirling around, a moving part of the autumnal landscape? Not that any one has noticed. The oak stays put It roots deep in the soil. It is a member of a colony of oaks that have grown up together, that have weathered the winds of winter together. The tumbleweed serves a punpose if it calls attention to the permanence of the oak, and if it drives home the fact that the practice of rooting deepdnto the soil has its virtues. In these times there seem to he a great many men of the tumbleweed variety being swept hither and thither. There are so many tumbleweeds scurrying about that the oaks may be overlooked. Start to count them though and there are plenty of oaks?men who have struck their roots deep into their home soil. One of the present day problems is whether it is worth _.t-: 1 _ x _ - .. ? - * - wiiiie io attempt tne tasic 01 increasing the number of oaks and decreasing the number of tumbleweeds. The first thing to be noticed about the oak is that it is of slow growth. It does not spring up to a day. The next thing is that it establishes itself by taking root. \ ; Community building is oak growing. Raising colonies of tumbleweeds will not do the tnck. Before men begin to root deeply in a community they . must have an abiding interest in it. That community must be more than a chance fence comer into which they have been whirled. Too many communities are simply stopping places for the people that live in them. In driving home the fact that community building brought about by a real community life is a constructive work, the present day Community Service movement has performed a distinct service. Community building means more oaks. A lack of it means more, tumbleweeds.