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THIh UNION TIMES falUibrd Dally Except Sunday By TIE UNION TIMES COMPANY Lewi* M Kictt Editor Registered at the PostotFice in Union. S. C.. as mvond class matt* r. Times Building Main Btreet licit Telephone No. I SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Year 14.00 Mx Months .. 2.00 Three Months 1.00 ADVERTISEMENTS One S.uare. first insertion fl.00 Every subsequent insertion 00 Obituary notices, Churoh and t.odgc r tiocs ami notices of public meetings, entertainments and Cards of Thank* will be barged for at the rate of one cent a word. c:i-h accompanying the order. Count the words and you will know what the eoot will be. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press Is exclusively entitle 1 to the use for republication of news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local news publi.-hed therein. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1&U2. Mr. Samuel Littlojohn brought us live nice, well-rooted fig bushes, and instructed us to "give them away," which instructions we have followed. We most certainly ngvec with Mr. Edison when ho savs we should continue c ur research along the line of inventing weapons of defense, poisoned gas and all the rest of it. It is quite right to decrease the size of army and navy. It would be well, however, to keep on with laboratory work. The farmer, and it is said there are three thousand of them in Union County, has some advantage over the town dweller, that's certain. He has plenty of room ?too much often, for the average farm is entirely too large; he has also the opportunity to feed himself and family with fruits and vegetables, and that is the diet that is row recognized best for man. Plenty of sw( e*. fresh vegetables, milk, but ter, buttermilk?the farmer has a diet fit for a king; that is. he may have it. Most of them do not. If they have vegetables they sell them, so with butter, milk and fruits. Of course it :s all right to sell, but the farmer's family should have the best of the fruits of his fields. There is room in Union County for many more people. The population could be trebled, and yet leave plenty of room. There is but one way the increase can come?through the development of the agricultural industry in the county. A multiplication of small farms?50-acre farms, is the direction that will have to be taken. With good roads this happy result is very much nearer than it was former ly. The country districts are too sparsely settled. Neighbors are too far apart. Tlv?re is too much idle land. There is not enough highly improved land. All these questions will solve themselves. The large landholder is going to frnd it unprofitable to hold on to his land with an everincreasing tax levy and will soon seek to unload it. The big, idle farm will prove more and more unsatisfactory to its owner and he will be glad to sell. The small farm will come into its full opportunity. That we have an almost limitless capacity to produce all sorts of farm products, and with the advancement being made in marketing these products, the future is bright Patience, determination, team work, improved methods of farming? these and other 'hings will help the ?oming of a new day. Our cat says modesty is an beautiful a virtue today as over before, albeit it is a bit scarcer. * . ; Our cat says here's hoping the Young Men's Business League may have a long and prosperous life. i Our cat says every farmer should take one share of stock in the cannery, agreeing to pay for it in product from his farm. Our cat says we must soon complete the subscriptions to the potato drying house. * Our cat says those who attain preeminence often experience difficulty in Jiving up to its exalted position. Our cat says the savers of yester I day are the masters of today. | Our cat says be an American o ; move on to Turkey. ! Our cat says the thinner the ice th : less cujH*rs the skaters dare cut. ? * Our cat says you will never have bv the one body, therefore you had betu take care of it. Our cat says he is "declighted" wit the response the farmers are makin to the appeal for subscriptions, i kind, to a cannery. Our cat says it is easy to stop J smull leak. Our cat says we would have less t J retrnct did we but allow the other fe i low to talk some. * i Our cat says find your weak spd j and try to mend them. p i Our oat says misdirected kindnoi i is often as destructive us malicioi wrongdoing. ? I Our cat says it would bo a fine ol old world if there could be four a bit nvorc of unselfishness. Our cat says one good look at Ru: ! siu will cure nr.y case of parlor bo | shovism. j j Our cat says "isms" of all kint i arc less in evidence than they wei a year or two ago. Our cat says the bonus question proving a hard nut for the Republ cans to crack. What The Farmer? Accomplish?' One impatient farmer at the Pre ident's agricultural conference is r ported to have described the meetir as an affair of "shaking hands ar eating ice cream"; but while its r suits may not be immediate, it seen to be generally felt that the benefr of the gathering will at least la: i longer than the ice cream. The vet j fact that the conference was called ' a matter of encouragement to tl I farmer, the Houston Chronicle (Dem I believes, for "it indicates that th public servants in high places has at least awakened to a realization thi the time has come to give attentlo to the interests of the farmer, i One of he interesting development of the conference, the Asbury Par Press (Ind.) says, "has been the dii covery that farming is a busines much like anything else," and that tli delegates, instead of being the "farn era of the comic section," were bu: iness men "with cost sheets and st* tistics at their fingers' ends." An moreover they were given an oppoi i tunitv to show that thev "understnn j the economics of the situation f i clearly as any man in Washington c j any other man in Wall Street" an j "to tell what they know," the Pitt! I burg Trader (Prog. Rep.) observe i The Newark (Ind.) rejoices that th l conference demonstrated that "tl I farmer is doing his own thinking," fc I "when half the population takes 1 ; thinking for itself instead of havin , formulas worked out for it by tnos at the top of political organization: 1 there is much hopeful leaven in th i political loaf." Agricultural interests in the gat) ! ering formulated and presented " i program for the consideration of tli 1 administration and of Congress," t) ' St, Louis Globe Democrat (Rep.) r< ! ports which, according to the Burlint ton Free Press (Ind. Rep.) "can t ; summed up as aiming at three thing? } credits, marketing and co-operation, i It was felt for a while after the deh gates got into action that a radici element with rather fiery tendencic was in control, but, as the Portlan ) Oregoninn (Ind. Rep.) poitns out, "th most radical proposal" made was tha r?r? 11 ir> rr fsw n * * ? ? - t ........f> u ^vTviiiiiiruv ^uanuun: u minimum prices, and in thnt matte the conference went not further "thn . to ask for a careful investigation, i The idea of the guarantee proposn as the Raleigh News and Observe j (Dem.) explains it, "was to tax a ! the people to give the farmers th j same profits guaranteed to railroads, ; hut "the wiser and better view prf I vailed," and instead of claiming th i same privilege the delegates "demand i ed the repeal of the guaranty policy l as applied to railroads. The Spokan | Spokesman Review (Ind. Rep.) als commends the Round judgment of th | conference In rejecting thla proposn , for "its adoption would have any o ! its conclusions." But while repudiat I ing price fixing as a policy the farm ! era "showed an even more childlik faith in the power of the government, the New York Post (Ind.) thinks, "b; demanding that congress and th President take steps which shall Mm 11 _ A. -t? i-tt' * * * mcamtery reesuiDiisn 8 iRir excnanf* value for all farm products.*" How ever, "any plan for accomplinhini this," the Canton (O.) News (Ind. suggests, would be merely legislatio: "that would permit the formation o poo la among growers of cotton, graii and other agricultural products, th pnrpose of which would be the mar koting of 'heec products In a way tha would secure an average for ccrtaii products." Indeed "this grrmp of farmers gath erod from the four corners of th country" brought out "in sinking fash ion" the arguments in favor of "group production and group sales of farm commodities," says the Manchester r Union (Ind. Rep.) and the Augusta Chronicle (Dem.) nnds that "the central Idea developed at the agricultural conference was co-operative market- ( ,c ing anything." In co-operative movements, "the Pacific coast producers have demonstrated, Is the great opporit tunity for improvement, the Kansas City Times holds and it is reasonable to expect, as a result of the conference "practical legislation" by which "obstacles to co-operative movements h will be removed. g But whatever his marketing faciln ities, what the farmer will stand nee 1 most, the Chattanooga News (Dem.) asserts, "is a market," for "when that fails him other expedients fail with n it," and in their search for "essentials" the farmers at the conference "realized that the fundamental need :o was not any legislative program, but J. markets." Hence the development that apparently has casued considerable surprise in editorial circles?the recommendation by the conference s "that this country should have a representative on the Reparations Commission, and should also go to Genoa." >s For, as one writer expresses it, in the t<? search for markets "all roads lead to Genoa." "What has become of the old-time provincialism of the country ?of the West and of the farm?" asks the Topeka Capital (Rep.) when such an attitude is possible. "This interest of the representatives of agriculture in a European economic confers_ once having to do wholly with Euroj pean problems," the paper continues, "is a striking proof of change of front toward all world affairs, and of the broadened outlook that has necessarily 's come to Americans in considering e their 'enlightened self-interest'. " So far as the political aspect of the gathering is concerned, the Chi- ' js eago Post (Ind.) looked upon it as "an. effort to take the wind out of the l~ sails of the agricultural bloc in congress." But if such was its purpose tne Forth Worth Star-Telegram (Ind. Dem.) thinks "it has failed signally and has accomplished precisely the op posite effect," for that legislative I group was heartily endorsed by n res5-| olution "adopted unanimously." e- 1 1 ik Lepers to be Cured ld With Own Products eis 1 Manila, P. I., Dec. 20.?By Mail).? Lepers of the Philippine Islands are y to be cui-ed with the products of their own land, according to Dr. II. I. ie Cole, organic chemist of the bureau .) of science, who has just returned ie from from an extensive investigation 'e through the southern part of the it archipelago where he wounl in abuntlin anee the Hudnocarpus Hutchison, the tree which bears the nut from which |s chaulmoogra oil is obtr.ined. This k oil is made into ethyl-eater which hae already been used successfully In IHe " ts Hawaiian Island? and other places in ie hte cure of leprosy Many of these trees were found on j. the island of Mindanao and Dr. Cole believes that he has discovered ltj enough to yield ten tons of seed on r_ nually. He has arranged to have the l(j nuts gathered for shipment to Mats nila where the oil will be extracted ,r at the'bureau of science, d "Chemically the chaulmoogra oil j. from the Philippine seeds is as puie s> as the oil from India," Dr. Cole said. "It takes one ton of seed to care . _ f i nnn in?? ??? L ??>?. 1(1 ivt * jvuw ?rj/ci a iui a )CHi? 1" I' lirt vc ,r a supply large enough to care foi x) 10,000 lepers and we may be ablo to K find a larger supply. In that ease 10 we will probably send some of the oil s, to India, China and other Far Fast ie countries which have leprosy." At present there are 5,000 lepers i- on the Island of Culion in the Philip'a pine group, several hundred of whom ie are now receiving the chaulmoogra ie oil treatment. Governor General s- Wood who has expressed special interest in the treatment of these lepers >e has ordered a large quantity of the j: medicine and he plans to increase the number to whom it is given as fast >- as possible until all have been given 11 the benefit of it. >s (l The Curse of Prize Fighting ie it The press, of January 22d? reports ,r that Tex Itickard, who promoted the n Carpentier-Dempscy fight, has been ? arrested on charges involving the moI rality of a 15-year-old girl. This girl, T with another 11, and another 12, told jj their story to the Society for Prevene tion of Cruelty to Children, and to the ? police. >-! Of course, we haven't the least e idea whether or not Rickard is guilty. I- We are willing to give any human bc" ing the benefit of the doubt when it e comes to charges so nearly unbelievo able. e However, it is pertinent to remark il in this connection that nastiness of f. this kind is, according to rumor, fre-] quently to be located around prize i- fighting camps and the stables of race ( c tracks. Prize fighting, because of its , " brutality, and gambling, because of y its degradation of character, seems ^ e to produce as a sideline unnatural . - vices. e It Is absolutely impossible to promote prize fighting in a community g without indirectly promoting every > anti-social influence. Boxing is healthn ful and beneficial. Prize fighting is not f remotely like it. One boxes with his , n brother, but one certainly does not , e prize fight with his brother?not if , - he has any natural feelings, t n Movies ruined the stage, is the ; plaint of some. Looks like it waa the ^ - other way 'round. Most movie acte ors were formerly on the stage.? - Fort Worth Star Telegram. t Sweetened Poisons rh* Carsfully Conducted Experiments Show no Real Merit. Clomson College, Feb. 10.?That socalled binders, stickers, and spreadors have no material merit in making poison spray stick to the cotton plant; th*^ no material advantage seems yet to have been secured by the use of sweetened poisons in carefully conducted experiments; and that calcium arsenate in dust form after careful study of conditions and requirements for poisoning is advisable ?these sum up the recommendations of the entomologists, says Prof. A. F. Conradi, in a statement on th.i much discussed subject of sweetened poisons for boll weevil control. Little baby "Poison Sweet" was born in Texas, says Prof. Conradi, shortly after the weevil crossed the Rio Grande in 1802. It could not thrive there and had to wander eastward with.the weevil, because only the residents in a newly infested territory would entertain it. South Carolina is entertaining it now. Numerous formulas and receipts for making sweetened poisons for boll weevil control are being recom-1 mended and a number of commercial j brands of sweetened liquid poisons j are appearing on the market. Equal-1 ly numerous devices are put forward ! for aplyping these liquids and pastes i Catchy expressions in connection i with some of these formulas include i "sticker" and "secret binder," which i convey the impression that these j mysterious discoveries will cause the; material to stick to the plant and, remain good until eaten by the wee-; vil. Whether the poison is applied as i a spray or as a dust the rate of decomposition goes forward in the j samo manner and as a weevil poison j its decomposition is complete in j about four days. Binders and spreaders are in use! by entomologists and serve a useful purpose under certain conditions in binding the spray ingredients and giving body to the spray, but they have no mnterial merit in making the spray stick to the plant. The fundamental condition that makes the spray or powder stick to the plant is fineness, and the finely divided spray or dust properly applied has a most effective sticking power. Demonstrations to show the stickiness of a substance by pouring it from a sprinkling pot have no sem mnnce wnaicver to a natural rainfall where the drops travel downward hundreds of feet before they strike the plant. Only Carefully Conducted Tests Worthy of Attention. No material advantage has yet been securwl from the use of sweetened poiso* in carefully conducted experiment! throughout the last 22 years, except .apparently la one inrfiiflce vvOn i ?ppiiel to tery young I plants in hot, dry weather, which by itself would have little significance. In this experiment the weather was against the weevil, and as no evidence' has been secured so far that the weevil is attracted by any sweet, it may be assumed that tho weevil was attracted by the droplets of moisture. Some one says: "John Brown triec it and made a bale to an acre." Was it checked ? How did he know that j the sweetened poison was tho de termining factor in making his crop? Bill Grimes tired it and got nothing. John Brown also says he treated his seed with sulphur and made a crop. Now would you believe this just be-; cause John Brown said so? Sam. Stokes says the weevil lives in the1 roots of cockle bur. Now this not so, but would you swallow it just because Sam says so? Hit** mnn/lof Inn a o??n Knt-o/l ..I together on the results secured from ' carefully conducted experiments regardless of who made them provided it was a qualified experimenter who j made provisions for determining by checks the value of the varoius fac-! tors that entered into the problem. Careful Study of the Situation Advised. In our recent office letter, "Boll Weevil Poisoning in 1922," we set , forth as accuritely as we could the | conditions under which poisoning may be expected to pay. We confine ourselves to the use of calcium arsenate in dust form, on account of( the available records of positive re-1 suits and also on account of the com-1 parative economy in time and labor, j We recommend that e^ery farmer j who intends to use poison obtain im-1 mediately full information in regard :' to the use of poison, as well as dust-; ing machines, and study the problem j with the greatest care and effort. A careful study of,the methtod and conditions under which poisoning may be expected to yield profitable results ' constitutes the first step in a poisoning program. Anyone unwilling to do this, we are sure, makes a serious, ' mistake to invest money in poisons or machines. Manufacturers are now studying the probable output forj 1922, and those desiring to learn something about the matter should; i. .1 U ...111 1? 1^.1 .... not wait untu tne ia?t moment to purchase a mnchine, because they may upset the entire poisoning problem. A definite schedule for poisoning will be issued in ample time before the poisoning season begins, and those interested* should send their names to the Extension Entomologist, Clenison College, to be put on the mailing list for this purpose. It may be that the mills of the irods grind slowly because they get paid over-time. . am ' ? A little earning is a dangerous hing also.?Asheville Times. i. , r?i Eczema Cured After Five Applications Of "Storm's Lotion" I have had eczema on my face for two years. After five applications of J Storm's Lotion the skin is in a per-? fectly healthy condition. I heartily recommend its use to all sufferers cf skin trouble. (Signed) J. B. Betenbaugh, Union, S. C., R. F. D. No. 2. Sold at Storm's Drug Store. Phone 76 for a bottle today. Second Lap in Subscriptions to a Cannery We hereby subscript to one share of stock in the cannery at Union, S. C., to be paid for in produce, and of the par value of $50.00: J. E. Minter $50.00 Lewis M. Rice 50.00 C. E. House 50.00 C. K. Hughes 50.00 Robert W. Beaty 50.00 T. B. Jeter 50.00 W. O. Jeter 50.00 J. G. Sumnor 50.00 W. R. Kelly 50.00 Marion H. Gallmnn 50.00 Arthur Ci'ocker 50.00 We will gladly receive subscriptions to the above from farmers in any section of the county. The cannery is an assured fact; we wish to make it an assured success. Who will phone 'No. 1" and say "Yes, put me down one share"? No sales promoter; no red tape; sane, honest administration and wholesale team work. Come on in! Weevil Treatment Shown on Screen Washington, Feb. 12.?"Dust 'em right or let 'em bite" is the sloganic title of a new motion picture of the United States department of agriculTurn rlpnlincr urifV* fhn holl menace to the cotton planter. The new film is a one reel sequel to "Goodbye Boll Weevil," and treats intensively with the subject of poisoning this important cotton pest. The screen story is built about a lecture on boll weevil poisoning by a department of agriculture export, and scenes visualize the practices which he recommends to his audience. Selection of calcium arsenate for poisoning, dusting machinery, methods of application, schedule of rfoisoning, end other matters of importance to the boll weevil victimsare emphasized. But the trouble with civilization is that it will stand considerable strain. ?Syracuse Herald. QUEER FEELINGS AT HUDDLE AGE Women Should Know How Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Helps at This Trying Period Sheboygan, Wisconsin.?"I was run down, tired and nervous. I could not IIIIIIIIIUIIllllllllllevcn d? my own housework, could not all icinds of^queer m to me. Finally I Hfgave up going to the % doctor and a friend IPiPiiffl me Lydia E. j' Pinkham's Vegetah "f^Hmlll hie Compound, i I After the first bottle i I could sleep better 3 land 1 have kept on improving ever since. I have taken seven bottles now and am so happy that I am all over these bad feelings. ?Mrs. B. Lanser, 1639 N. 3rd St., Sheboygan, Wisconsin. For the woman entering middle age Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound can be of much benefit. During this time of life certain changes take place y/hich sometimes develop into serious trouble. "Melancholia, nervousness, irritability, headache and dizziness are some of the symptoms. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is a natural restorative, especially adapted to assist nature in carrying you safely past this time. Why not give it a fair trial? Japan's Tennis Star Soon to be Married Tokio, Jan. 1.?(By Mail).? Zenzo Shimidzu, Japan's tennis star, is to be married soon to Miss Setsuko Fukushima, daughter of a prominent resident of sendal, and will leave with his bride almost at once for America. Shimidzu was a member of the runner-up team in the Davis Cup Championship tournament. He goes to New York in the employ of a large Japanese commercial corporation. The bride-to-be is likewise a tennis player who has won great popularity locally. She is a musician of considerable talent and is much interested in artistic floraculture. People Delighted With New Discovery to Bleach the Skin AtUotl. C.? ? I that recent teate hnve proven wi.h* i out doubt that I i.war'.hy oc aallow 1 ? ><fl6r complexlona can be ! s&Sm made liyht by m Bm4fll fflS fid new treatment r??TB!j W rently diecovered KjEff p by a man in AtlanA t*. Juat aak your Vyp / druggist for Coco* .HK \ tone Skin Whiten* >CfiSB er. People who have uaed It are I'.'yifc-?! timn/.rd at ita won* a - <( dtrful effect. Rid 1 your face of that awfal dark color or grcaay appearance la a few minntea. It coste ao little that you can't afford to be without It. Juat think how much prettier you would look with that old dark akin pone and new aoft, JIght akin In Ita place. Men and women today ma eft earn for thotr complaxlona to nter aocletr. If your drunrlet will not anpply Jrou with Cocotone Skin Wbltener, a end Me fir a larjre yckapp to CoeotoM) Co., "S. S. S." Makes Skin Clear and Beautiful?Your Body PHunp! Amaxinf Results froan lnereete el - ^ j ? ^us* Blood Cellsl S. S. S? sRemarkaMe ft Blood-Cell Builder. f -^2 Do you khbw that your lose of flesh J M due almost entirely to the email ajgs^y number of blood-cells In your blood? Arrf/ jjafti\rrs ^ Do you know that you can build up your whole body, from your face to . ) - vour feet, to the normal, natural. Nu ^ i^SSf RVf% n beautiful plumpness which It should ifv^i ^^r7fK E. have, by ugkig the grsat blood-cell I k ^ builder, S. 8. 8.7 You don't have to I i x&v\i* (V, 2w change your diet, or figure out the liilrSal/* guess-work theories about fate In I iBP1 '2ZmmZS& foods, or use new fad treatments, or /[ IMlvw /-^BKn nnythlhg of the kind. Take 8. 8. 8. r Ii I' bKL" TP Your skin will clear up remarkably. r1 inl! your complexion will he like a rose77?BeS9 petal, your lips ruddy, your eyes clear. mmt3C ?uj53lmm your neck and cheeks will fill out. Abo 8. S, S. being one of the most This show* what S. S. S. can do In powerful blood-cleansers, your skin filling out your cheeks, brightening eruptions, pimples, blotches, blackyonr eyes, clearing your skin. It means g* gflmg years In appearance stricken off of atores, in two siaee. The larger SllS your facet Is the more economical, - i ?-e-e-sxi in i ?eneweWM How Much Money can YOU Save? It's not so much tho amount you save?but the regularity in which you save the little you may be able to spare for your savings account. System works the same wherever it is applied. Whether it be in managing your home, your business, or in saving your money. It is the one method th:it can be successfully practiced in all we do. "Large Enough to Serve Any?Strong Enough to Protect All." cnizK.NJv3 NATIONAL BANIL I/W-% Eggs From Every Hen | BaL>r There In no excuse for a loafing hen. You can mnke layers and real money-makers out of every solitary ben you own. ?75 Egg Producer The wonderful poultry tonic, develops tbo cgg-produelng organs; m . makes early layers of youug pullets; keeps i>oultry healthy and juimi uri's iasi growth m > nun? chicks. '? 1-2 lb. box. MO cents. Wo carry n complete line of Caro-Vet Standard Remedies for Horses. Mules. Cattle, Hons and Poultry. Wo will gladly refund your money If you fall to get satisfactory results from the use of any Caro-Vet remedy. n AUTHORIZED DEALERS IN UNION COUNTY # J. E. Fowler Union, 8. C. II. T. Hlgglns Buffalo, 8. C. Storms Drug Storo Union, 8. C. Keller's Drug Store ?. & J. Mobley Jeter Union, 8. C. {J- ?.ri0Ta ??.Yfn e" ?' _ . .... t. en J. K. Mlnter SedaHa, 8. C. East Side Drug Co Union, 8. C. Mutunj guppiy Co Carlisle. 8. C. Olympics Pharmacy Lnlon, 8. C Carlisle Cash Co Carlisle, 8. C. Fowler's Pharmacy Monarch Murrnh's Pharmacy .... Jonesville. 8. C. * J. B. Bcdenhough, Route 4...Union, 8. C. ? lonesvllle Drug Co Jonesville, 8. C. ???????? ?????? I Notice well, if France can't make a deal _______ with the 'dove, prudence would raf- ? m Notice is hereby given that the un- f>e8* s*ie ?-et on K001* terma with ' (Tersigned intend to file with the Hon. Btork. Baltimore Sun. W. Banks Dove, secretary of state, on the 16th day of February, 1922, or Winter is just one ton of coal afthereafter, a declaration for a charter ter another.?Detroit Journal, for Union Cannery & Products Co., . , which proposed corporation is to have SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS its principal place of business in the town of Union, County of Union, FARM FOR RENT?Two-horse farm State of South Carolina. The general six miles from Union on new cut top rn)lll,n ,v,? i.:_i_ , soil Moansville rrvnH ClnnA rlwall. .... ^u' ing and outbuildings.""S^ifiraposed to conduct is that of operating proved. Apply W. S. McLure. a general cannery, dealing in dairy 1241-Tues. Sat. tf end other farm products, storing farm ~~~ . ~ " products and the doing of all things, ?* ... . . ? .. ' ? spring or ring and pinion gear, incidents to the above matters set bearings or other auto accessories forth. for any car, see me before buying. The capital stock of the proposed I can save you money. I have the corporation is to be Ten Thousand |)e"t Vr? on-^e n\ n n .. ., , . . low price. Jno. R. Mathis, Aauto ($10,000.00) Dollars, divided into two Accesoriea. 1276-10t-eod hundred (200) shares of the par value of Fifty ($50.00) Dollars each. The WANTED?you to know that we have undersigned Lewis M. Rice, R. W. just received a big supply of fresh Benty and C. K. Hughes are residents garden seeds. No left over. Union of the County of Union, State of Drug Store. 1298-Th-Sat-tf South Carolina. ?? . Notice is also given that a meeting COAL $8.60?Cash on delivery. Ton of the subscribers to the capital stock Excelsior Knitting Mill, of the proposed corporation will be * ' 1^62-tl held in the offices of Union Chamber IT IS WITH PLEASURE we anof Commerce, Union, S. C., on Thurs- nounce wo have just received a full day, the 16th day of February, 1922, line of Columbia Records. All the at 11 o'clock a. m., for the purpose latest sacred songs, including those of organization of the company and sung at Billy Sunday's meetings in election of directors. Spartanburg, the popular songs and Lewis M. Rice, dAnce hits of the season. BradleyRobert W. Beaty, Estes Co. 1301-6t C. K. Hughes Corporators. WANTED?To sell you the famous Union, S. C, Feb. 13, 1922. 1301-3t Ve8t* . Battery, ^aranteed two ' ' ' years in writing. We have one to show you, been used four years FOR QUICK SERVICE Auto-Service. Opposite old' stantf PHONE 167 1278-Tu-Th-Sat ' 0WANTED?Salesman and district We call and deliver your manager willing to work hard and .... . , . ? . show that he is worth $150.00 per clothing in a du.t-proof motor- woek Moat? ProducUon cycle. We remove spots and tion, South Bend, Ind. ltpd stains from clothing without injuring either the fabric or WANTED To purchase three or four the color. Our modern moth_ , . t ? ? months old. Price must be right. ods make clothes look like s w Mitchell. 1301-3tpd new, in the shortest possible ? _ time* NOTICE!?We are in the Smith block, "V ... . next door 10 Express office. We are Give me a trial. I certainly offering to the public a reduction on will appreciate it a. much or Work for the day, more than anyone else. sage, plain, 26c; Steam, 25c; Shampoo, plain, 25c. J. C. Deadmon BarHames Pressing J * na>-M..Th-s.-tt J D # CU SPECIAL PRICES AXES, shovels, 3.71(1 Kepair ollOp shoe soles and curry combs. The Nicholson Bank Building PeoP,e" SuPP'y <*. 1299-6t Phone 167 SOMETHING NEW under thT^uiTln Barnes' Studio. See for yourself. Dame Fashion advises women to 1298-tf uncover their ears. The dears be __________________________________ careful; they might hear some of the I MAKE MF.DICINE8 for all animals, things that are said about uncovered j have practiced for 39 years. My knees.?Arkansas Gazette. phones are 296 and 351. No charge ? for examination. "Whoop-Not" reSome of the members of the farm lieves whooping coughf 1300-3tpd bloc are regarded as more skilled in - ^ - - . blocking than in farming.-?Washing- OIL FINISHED PORTRAITS?-See ton Star. Barnes' show cases 120B-tf