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GRAND TODAY W. K. ZEICFIELD Present FLORENCE REED in a quarter of a million dolla motion picture extraordinar "THE BLACK PANTHER'S CUB' Directed by Emile Chautard ALSO ELMO LINCOLN "THE ADVENTURES OF TARZAN" Rialto Tomorrow Special return engagemei Cecil B. De Mille's "SOMETHING TO THINK ABOUT' Usual Admission Catch the Cold Before it Catches Yon Colds are easily contract ed during the changeabe weather of February. B? prepared. Get a box oi Lawson's Grippe Capsules K-W Brand, and as soon a: the first symptoms appear, begin taking them. They act promptly, usually check' ing a cold in one day. Aj usual with all good prepara tions, you will find cheapei and inferior remedies, said to be the "same thing,'* 01 "just as good." To avoid this and get the original formula, specify Lawson'j Grippe Capsules, K-W Brand. Peoples Drug Store Prompt Service Phones 68-69 Rule Violation Caused Traged Pittsburg, Fob. 12.? Rapid firing o Masts, against the rules of the H. ( Friek Coke company and the stat mine code, is given as the cause o the accident which cost 25 live among the miners at the Gates min in Fayette county February 2. bv th committee of mine inspectors whic made an investigation. A well established rule, looking t preventing the firing of shots in rapi succession, forbids the firing of mor than one shot at a time, but per mission to load n number of shot holes in a working place at one tim invited the very thing that the rul attempted to prevent," said the re port. "The evidence, although possi bly not conclusive, indicates that botl the company's rules regulating blast ing and the law were disregarded.' The commission recommends tha fhe rule for blasting "be revised an< with such revision ample provision! should be made to keep such reviset rules in force." Head your yellow label. (Notice Notice is hereby given that the un-1 dersigned intend to file with the Hon.', W. Banks Dove, secretary of state/ cn the 16th day of February, 1922, or thereafter, a declaration for a charter for Carlisle Grocery & Feed Company, which proposed corporation is to have its principal place of business in the town of Carlisle, County of Union, State of South Carolina. The general nature of the business which it pro-: >IT poses to conduct is that of wholesale j y and retail grocery, general merchandise, feed, fertilizer, live stock, and! the doing of all things incident to the above matters set forth. |4 The capital stock of the proposed' corporation is to be Two Thousand ($2,000.00) Dollars, divided into forty I (40) shares of the par value of Fifty ($50.00) Dollars each. The undersigned L. E. Gist and J. G. Itice are residents of the town of Carlisle, County of Union, State of South Carolina. Notice is also given that a meeting of the subscribers to the capital stock! cf the proposed corporation will bej held in the offices of Barron, Barron & Parron, Attorneys-a t-Law, Union, S. C., on Thursday, the 16th day of February, 1922, at 11 o'clock a. m., for the purpose of organization of the .ompnny and election of directors. L. E. Gist. J. G. Rice, Corporators. Union, S. C., Feb. 13, 1922. It j ? Rialto Theatre TONIGHT lf "The Big Show" ! A n/?5? v?. 3r:iW / I f>.7<?0UC7KrJ ?F '/fflWlSf fflfri \ issKMwr* '"W'lTt wm fil A ? otnmv ,/ f\ I 1! HMWll. ^MATlVt < ) X {') VaJ| :!, MULA OAHClRf, ' I C ' 1]| UKUSLK P1.AVIRC ^SO; iihgik^* J V 1 SPECIAL SCENERY | COSTUMES 1 liTinvn imm ; Prices 50, $1.00, $1.50 SEATS ON SALE SATURDAY i - | Subscriptions to $5,000 Potato Drying House I Thos. McNally $100.00 F. J. Parham 100.00 ' Dr. J. W. Buchanan 100.00 I Lewis M. Rice 100.00! i J. D. Hancock 100.00' L. J. Browning 100.00 J B. F. Kennedy 100.001 3. 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 500.00; Citizens National Bank .... 100.00 Harris-Woodward Co 100.00 I. From 100.00' Dr. Theo. Maddox ..... 100.00 Dr. J. G. Going 100.00 Bernard Fant 100.00 J. L. Jolly 100.00 W. S. McLure 200.00. C. B. Sparks 100.00; Dr. Russell Jeter 100.00 i W. B. Murphy 100.00 : i Total $2,100.00 i Unless *5.000 is raised, no subscnp- J tion will count. If you don't like a J cannery, come on into a potato dry house. We need hoth. Both will help. The potato dry house will pay quicker ! dividends. Come on! I'hone No. 1 and say $500, $100 or 5 $1,000. e The strange stones found in a pa-' 'f tient by a New York surgeon prob8 ablywere synthetic giill stones. Well, trusts may solve the world ? problems if trust in God is one of* h them. 0 ! SMOKERS Cigars, cigarettes, pipes, e tobaccos; cigar and cigare ette holders. About ail things that men who smoke j ~ desire. Remember we specialize in quality and that is * more preferable than price, t yet price is fair too. 1 ; Union Drug Store Phone 116 and "Look for the Boy." j, Kelton Route 1 ' There has been lots of sickness in our community since my last letter. Mrs. R. L. Howell and daughter, Essie, have been real sick, but am glad to say they are much Improved. This will be good news to their many friends. Mrs. Will Howell and children have been sick with colds, but are better now. | Mrs. Emma Farr had a very serious attack of rheumatism a few days ago, but seems to be Improving some. Mrs. G. L. Inman also has been suffering with rheumatism. Mrs. Robert Bailey and little son, Robert, Jr., and Mrs. R. C. Fai r were the guests of Mrs. Emma Farr Wednesday. Mrs. Bertha Trammell and son, Ralph, spent Tuesday with Mrs. L. E. Garner. Miss Ida Gamer spent Monday with her sister, Mrs. Bob Brawlcy. W. N. Gamer spent Sunday afternoon with Grandpa and Grandma Farr. Grandpa and Grandma Farr are getting along fine, and seem to be in very good health. Misses Mildred, Lily and Ila, and i Hawlcy Inman, Miss Madge and Whitney Farr attended a nice sociable given at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Seth Garner. A large crowd was present and all kinds of games were played until n late hour. In spite of the bad weather all had a good time. We congratulate Mr. and Mrs. Gamer, who are just beginning housekeeping, on giving such a nice uuu uiuusiug pany. Dewitte Gamer and Sidney Bailey attended a party nt Mr. and Mrs. Hetties McCullough's Saturday night. Gee and Hoyle Garner and Bryant Sanders motored to Spai*tnnburg Saturday night to hear Billy Sunday. Vero, I must congratulate you. I certainly wish you a long life filled with joy and happiness. Sunshine. Taxation Problem Will Hold Stage With the luxuries tax bill now virtially assured of passage on third reading in the house interest in the sixth week of the general assembly, beginning today, will once again be centered on questions of taxation, the new revenue measure occupying the attention of the senate while the introduction of the annual appropriation bill will monopolize the thought of the lower house. The final passage by the house of the luxuries tax bill, expected either tonight or tomorrow, will throw the entire weight of the responsibility of tax reform and the consequent radical reduction of the state levy on visible property upon the senate. This accomplished, the ways and means committee can safely rest upop its laurels, having in the two years framed and secured the passage by the house of the entire series of new revenue measurs, which, it is estimated by members of the committee, will produce revenues sufficient to eventually elim inate state taxes on tangible property, which for a century has borne almost the entii-e burden of state and county government expenses. The elimination of the state tax visible property tax levy would allow the various counties to derive all their needed revenues from this one source and to do so without undue hardship upon the owners of such tangible property. Two of these new revenue measures, the inheritance tax and the gasoline tax bills, have been passed by both houses, but both were amended in the senate as to arouse opposition to the proposed changes in the house and so throw both measures before conference committees. The retroactive clause of the inheritance tax, which would have made it an immediate revenue producer, was eliminated by the senate, which also amended the gasoline tax bill as to materially alter the measure as passed by the house last year. Notice Notice is hereby given that the undersigned intend to file with the Hon. VV\ Hanks Dove, secretary of state, on the lGth day of February, 1922, or thereafter, a declaration for a charter for Union Cannery & Products Co., which proposed corporation is to have its principal place of business in the town of Union, County of Union, State of South Carolina. The general rature of the business which it proposed to conduct is that of operating a general cannery, dealing in dairy and other farm products, storing farm products and the doing of all things, incidents to the above matters set forth. The capital stock of the proposed corporation is to be Ten Thousand I ($10,000.00) Dollars, divided into two hundred (200) shares of the par value of Fifty ($50.00) Dollars cnch. The undersigned I^ewis M. Rice, R. W. Beaty and C. K. Hughes arc residents of tho County of Union, State of South Carolina. Notice is also given that a meeting of the subscribers to the capital stock of the proposed corporation will be held in the offices of Union Chamber of Commerce, Union, S. C., on Thurs-' day, the lf>th day of February, 1922, at 11 o'clock a. m., for the purpose of organization of the company and election of directors. Lewis M. Rice, Robert W. Beaty, C. K. Hughes Corporators. Union, S. C., Feb. 13, 1922. 1301-31 The farmer's stock usually is inrreased in value when crossed with rolllrg stock. Legal Controversy 1 Over Pardoning Boy Ducnos Aires, Feb. 10.?A ponderous legal controversy, has arisen between President Irigoyen and the courts over the president's right to pardon a boy who had been sentenced to serve two years in the penitentiary for stealing a dozen pairs of cotton socks. .1 o3c Ibanez, the 19-year-old youth, who was employed in a Buenos Aires clothing store, did not steal the socks for himself, but for a poor boy who had none. Nevertheless, the judge gave him the full penalty of the law. Appeal fas taken to the criminal court of appeals and Jose was kept in jail for 11 months while the judges deliberated. President Irigoyen Intervened and pardoned him and Jose returned to his home. The court then ordered the police to arrest him and return him to prison, aserting the president had no I ower to pardon a person whose guilt oi innoceuoe had not been legally determined. They said, as Jose had not been convicted pending their decision, he could not be pardoned. However, the usually efficient Buenos Aires police have thus far singularly failed to locate the boy classed by the court as a fugitive from justice. Meantime the appellate judges and the minister of justice are engaged in a lively debate as to the con stitutional rights of the president to pardon the boy. Ln Epocn, the government organ, prints seven columns quoting precedents and authorities including those of American jurists in support of the president. Janesville News Jonesville, Feb. 10.?Mrs. Albert MeWhirter, of Charleston, is the guest of Mrs. W. A. MeWhirter for a week. The friends of Arthur Gallman are glad that he has recovered from his recent illness. Rev. and Mrs. A. B. Geobel, of Madison, N. C., arrived last Friday, Rev. Geobel filled his appointment Sunday morning at the Presbyterian church. The community extends a warm welcome to this new minister within our midst. Little Miss Ada Free, daughter of Mr. and. Mrs. I). B. Free, is very ill with pneumonia. Mrs. Annie E. Geer, of Belton, spent Tuesday and Wednesday with her grandchildren, Billie and Dorothy Geer, at the home of Mrs. S. C. Southard. Mrs. C. W. B rown, of Greenwood, is the guest of Mrs. S. C. Southard. Misses Frances Jet^er and Millie Crawford spent last week end in Charlotte as guests of Mrs. Luther Hill. ^ Miss Bertha ^Gallman is spending this week end *1 Newberry. | Little ElttS flwICtssick la Very sick at the home of his mother, Mrs. Lila McKissick. Edward Eison, of Gaflfney, was a recent guest of his mother, Mrs. Ann H. Eison. Miss Kathleen Gallman left today to spend the week end with her mother in Kelton. C. N. Alexander, of Clover, was a recent guest of Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Spears. Our high school basket ball team went down in defeat against Spartanburg high school Tuesday after-1 noon in tho Y M. C. A. buildiner. I Today in Blacksburg, the Jonesville high school basket ball team defeated the Blacksburg team; the score being 32 to 16. Mrs. Mary Ransom, of Atlanta, is the guest of Mrs. E. F. Kelly. Miss Eila Sams, of the Textile Institute, Spartanburg, spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Sams. Dismissal Brings Sharp Criticism Washington, Feb. 12.?Discharge without warning of thousands of navy yard workers whose services were no longer required because of the aramament limitation agreement was characterized today as "extremely inconsiderate, heartless and inhuman" and an act of "broken faith" in a letter sent by William H. Johnston, president of the International Association of Machinists, to President Harding. The administration was asked to provide for the men by taknig all forms of armament manufacturing out of the hands pf priyate contracts, by speeding up plans for naval auxiliaries allowed by the disarmament treaty and by arranging for manu facture of supplies for the civil government in the navy yard plants. Killed From Ambush Huntington, W. Va., Feb. 12.?"William Meade, aged 35 years and at A - - AS ? ?- . e i i tacneu to tne state stan 01 pronimtion enforcement agents operating in Wayne county, West Virginia, was shot from ambush and instantly killed tonight on a road near Dunlow, according to information sent to authorities here. "Esquimo Pies" (Chocolate Coated Ice Cream.) They're making a "hit" all over the country. 10 cents?Try one. Union Drug Store Legal Education Conference Meets in Washington Feb. 23 Washington, Feb. 11.?With the main idea in view of improving educational standards in the profession, the Conference on Legal Education, authorized at the last meeting of the American Bar Association, will be held here on February 23 and 24 and judging from the character of the men ?n charge the occasion will be of memorable importance. The conference on Legal Education was authorized in order to secure the cooperation of the state and local bar associations and to formulate plans for the frutherance of the plan to improve educational standards. The standards were adopted by the American Bar Association at Cincinnati last summer and consist of those resolutions: "1. The American Bar Association is of the opinion that every candidate for admission to the bar should give evidence of graduation from a law school complying with the following standards: "a. It shall require as a condition of admission at least two years of study in a college. "b. It shall require its students to pursue a course of three year's duration if they devote substantially all of their working time to their studies, and a longer course, equivalent in the number of working hours, if they devote only part of their working time to their studies. "c. It shall provide an adequate library available for the use of the students. "d. It shall have among its teachers a sufficient number giving their entire time to the school to insure actual personal acquaintance and influence with the whole student body." Sweden Facing Curious Dilemma Stockholm, Feb. 10.?Sweden is facing a curious dilemma as the result of her well-meant hospitality in granting temporary asylum to Emma Goldman, Alexander Berkman and Alexander Shapiro, formerly deported tc Russia from the United States. Since this trio arrived, several other Russian anarchists have come into th( country. 1^44 4 4^4 a^A A^A 4^4 A^AA^AAV r]|y T^r T^r T^r I JUST ? 1 LADIES % if IN ALL WOOL TRH | LINED, SILK EMBR I EFFECTS, THE VER I Prices! } GIVE US x v Y Ladies' seam up bacl A Ladies' full fashionei ? Ladies' Muslin Night A Cotton Crepe, pink ai X 36-inch Soft Finish 1 Ladies' Pumps and ( X Best 25c quality Drei j* Good quality Dress ( X Best Outing Flannel, f Work and Play Clotl | 36-inch Flowered Cti ? 36-inch Cretonne, ya A 40-inch Figured Voil f f | *!* urk?, n vwiiy r J. F. DRY A^A A^A A^A fUY *Y 4 V^ A I OUR DIRECTORATE i % X Exercising active supervision over the business of the bank, and bringing to this work the ability and ^ experience which has won them success and prestige, the following men compose our Directorate: J. Cohen W. N. Glymph R. L. McNally y J. Roy Fant R. P. Harry Emslie Nicholson y R. F. Fowler L. J. Hames W. S. Nicholson y ^ H. L Gaffney H. B. Jennings W. E. Thomson 1 F. H. Garner L. M. Jordan W. R. Walker t Y X f SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES FOR RENT. V t I Capital and Surplus $400,000.00 <|? | NICHOLSON BANK & TRUST COMPANYf ? Member Federal Reserve System V i EMSLIE NICHOLSON, President M. A. MOORE, Cashier 1 X W. S. NICHOLSON, L. M. JORDAN, J. ROY FANT JT V Vice Presidents Y A .P. AAAAAAAAA .A 4^4 4^.A % e e e e *jp As matters stand at present Sweden an international anarchist bureau in may either have to deport the anar- the Swedish capital, presumably bechists or cope with a movement, said cause Stockholm is now the temporary to be on foot, of making Stockholm abiding place of so many leading anan international anarchist central. archist lights. The press emphasizes But to what country can these an- that it would be most unfortunate if rrchists be deported? Nobody wants Sweden's hospitality should lie abused them. Since their arrival in Stock-1 by thus making Stockholm an anarholm, Emma Goldman and other r.n- chist central and the same papers asarchists from Russia have so roundly sert that energetic stesp will be taken denounced the Soviet government that against any attempts of this oharacf they are returned thither, the B<>1- ter. shevik authorities, never noted for - ' their leniency, may send them all to, jail or deal with them in a more sum- 1 M a (T 1 7 1 T1 f ^ mary fashion. a g d t 1 11 C 3 Germany has already pat up thej w . commenced bars against these agitators as was' . shown recently when Miss Goldman handling magazines. The tried to enter Germany for the pur-! March Cosmopolitan arpose of attending the international an-1 rived today. We will conarchist congress in Berlin. Freund, slantiy add to our iist until Austria's representative to this con- . - .. clave, was arrested on the border by ! we have most of ,he P0P" the German police. I ular ones. Now the Stockholm press states. 1TITIA\T i\nftCTT^DC that a resolution was adopted at the i UINlUlN Berlin anarchist congress to establish ' ammm~mmm~mm"" RECEIVED 1 X ERY SELECT LINE OF - | SPRING SUITS 1 X VOTING CEPfEC A Nil DAI BET TWIIIC CI! If . VlinL, ULUULJ 1*1111/ 1 UlULl 1 TVILL^ J1LH A OIDERED, BOX, TUXEDO AND TAILORED f Y LATEST THING IN SUITS f S9.95 to $40.00 j > A LOOK BEFORE BUYING ! ? { Silk Hose 35c to $1.00 d Glove Silk Hose $1.50 to $3.50 X Gowns 50c to $1.50 V A nd blue, yard 18c A Sleach, yard 10c ? Ixfords, black and brown . . .$1.95 to $3.95 ss Ginghams, yard 19c % jingham, yard 10c <! yard 10c % i, yard 10c *f irtain Scrim, yard 10c ? rd 19c ? les, yard 15c ?? f I av Mfirp Fkpwhprp "J *"v' v 2 McLURE GOODS CO. |