The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, February 23, 1922, Image 2

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t ' L ' 1 1 ' ' ' ;he union t i m e s| i faUUktd Dally ?xc?pl Sunday By INE UNION TIMES COMPANY l,*wu? St. Rico EdJtor1 Ucg.stored ut the Postothee in Union, fe. C., ?> second class matter. Tiu?e? HuildinK Main Street j Hell Telephone No. 1 SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Y.-ar .. 14.110 ! Six Month- .. .. 4.00. Three Months . . . 1.00 | ADVERTISEMENTS One .Square. Writ insertion 51.00 ! Every *ubsc<iuont in.^ertU. a HO I Obituary notices. Church and Lodge notices uud notices of public meetings, en- J tertninmeuts and Cards of Thuuks will be i chsrued for ut the rate of one ceut u word. . ca-h accompanying the order Count the I words und you tviti know what the coet I a ill be j MEMBER OF .ASSOCIATED PRESS ! The Associated Press is exclu?ive.'y en-! tie ed to the use for ri-publicntion of news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise ( rn dit'sl in this paper, and alt-o the local' news published therein. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 23, 1922-i j Union County will have five big J meetings in the interest of the Cotton (. rowers' Cooperative Marketing As-j - ociation. The meetings will be on< March 2. and l. Trominent speak-' ers from abroad will address these meetings. It js desirable that everyfarmer in '.he county attend one of; these meeting. The following is the1 time and place of each meeting as scheduled: i At 10 a. ni. Thursday, March 2, at' Carlisle. S. ( . At 2 p in., same day,'( at Kelleys, S. C. At 10 a. m. Friday, March 3, at West Springs. At 2 p. rn. same day,: at Cross Keys. On Saturday. March 1 nt 11 a ni.i at Union, either at court hourt house or city park. depending on sue. of crowd. Thi- movement is one of the fur-; reaching events in the life of Southern! agriculture. It is absolutely neces-? sary that the farmers who raise cot-; u-n provide bettor business methods in I seliincr it. i at fish to bite a bait' hook. * Our eat says those who build ?vi-a--| ! ly must needs see to the foundation. J * Our oat says the tyrants nt t?> I ?y t an- th? laves of tomorrow. ( * * " Our oat says take our share in .at rannory. ? Oui ? at my.s a liRhr heart : > un dismayed by a heavy task. * H Our at says those who seek then-nth will find it. * f ' >iu eat says tribulations reveal the tfold. Our < at says try your hand at plant-' intf on" rosebush this season. * i /~\ ... * t * - r .1 1'iir mi says me cotton Tanners, hould join the marketing association.. * * * Our cat says the early worm might not have been caught had he not arisen so soon ( % o.ir eat say.- haste to he rich often it ;?v.. incriminating tracks. * Our cat says master your task; do ?;r?t allow it to master you. Our cat say-, soil robbing leads to |-overt y * Our cat says some people cannot stand prosperity. * * * .1 Our cat says a just judge weighs! the evidence. ! 0 0 0 Our cat say.-, a masterly retreat of-t ten turns defeat into victory. 0*0 Our cat says strikes seldom occur| because the meal barrel is empty. << 11 Our cat says the price of cotton'! appear- to t>e stiffening. j! Metric system is in use ull oven] Kurope except Russia and (ireatj* Britain. J! Sun. if it were a hollow sphere,!, could tontain a million globes us lurge j as the earth. jj Russia was the first country to em- J ploy wood paving for streets. Instrument For L? Recording Air Pressure Washington, Feb. 22.?A new manometer or instrument tor recording sa air pressure on wing and tail surfaces th .>f airplanes at different points simul- "t laneously had leen designed and deve- or loped by F. 11. Norton, an engineer he of the Langley Memorial Laboratory or at Langley Field. Vtrgina, it was an- st nounced today by the National Ad- w visory Committee for Aeix?naui'c<. elc The first experiments were under- ec t ikeii by the Laboratory for the navy th department in order to determine the distribution of pressure over the heri- 17 zontal tail surfaces of an deplane end in to analyze the relation of this pr . >- st sure structural loads and ionp.iti d- th inal stability and were conducted on II full sized plans in the air and on If models in the wind tunnels, lb.* old le method consisted in using i horkonl- al ill tail surface inside of wii. i r .Lle.i tubes connected with a sera - of ho'ts fc on the surface led to a multiple liquid LI manometer. The several tubes of the cc manometer registered the pressure at in each change of speed or air pressure in and the results were recorded by an th automatic camera which photograph- th ed tlv height of the l.quid in the tubes ki every few seconds. th To study various pressures in ac- tl eelerated flights or "stunting," it was ei impossible to use the old liquid mano- in meter and consequently the new man- th cmeter was developed, substituting] ot the deflection of metal diaphragms in and a means of automatically record-! la ing their deflection for the liquid manometer and the camera rospecti-iG vely. , rAmonp the lesult achieved by the cc investigations are: j to That the low average load perj le square foot on the usual tpve of tail' di plane doing steady flight is so small j s< that it could not in any conceivable a way cause failure. ! di That the records taken of the same tl pressures on tail surfaces in aecele- lt rated flights demonstrated that there oi was no large increase in these forces.; u A complete manometer for making I. pressure distribution tests has ben ir sent to the army air service engineer- p< ing laboratory at McCook Field. Day- t? ton. Ohio, for experiment by army experts. j u It was also learned today that the le Langle*y Laboratory contemplates a ti further study to ascertain the pres-1 fi sure on different parts of wing and A tail surfaces at very high speed in; tl the future. In an effort to learn if c; possibule the causes of several act i-' ir dents which occurred in aviation N races, where the planes were making ai very high speeds and for which r.ol cause has ever been determined. J e< b( Volstead-Inspired Situation ( S [01 Chicago, 111., Feb. 22.?One million! s' feet of floor space coverediwith mering glassware?tumblers, goblets " and glasses?and hardly a container 01 among them for anything stronger | T than one-hfilf of one percent! 111 This was the. Volstead-inspired sit- n uation revealed at the annual glass! pottery and house furnishings exhi-jIS bition which has just closed here.: Three hundred manufacturers of irlassi r< ware were represented with exhibits J f' showing ft variety of articles in glass j Vl for home uses, but the dninty liqueur | w containers that formed a glittering t( pait of previous showinpr were miss-! 1 mg. 1 ,s As Allied arms drove Germans out, ?.f Fiance, so the eiprhteenth amend- j ment, aimed solely at intoxicants,: " sideswiped an important branch of the! ? glass industry, forcing it into other l< lines or out of business. Exhibitors of barroom supplies, an t! industry of considerable dimensions ^ four years ago, were conspicuously '' missing. Here and there, however, c< reposing on back shelves where they were hardly noticeable, were occasion- '' a! containers. Manufacturers' representatives at the exhibit showed sliprht interest at 1 the mention of such glassware as de- '' pends upon liqueurs for its usefulness. Quite unanimously they declared tha.t the demand is insignificant. A few r< wine glasses, an occasional set of l) goblets arc all that are being sold. *" Tankards have disappeared <*omplet< - J l.v. w Prohibition has not atTected the prosperity of the glass industry, how, ever, despit the deep inroads it cut. exhibitors declared. Manufacturers who formerly supplied glassware essential to liquor consumption have turned their attention U> making other tableware which course is proving fully as remunerative, they said. m VSIP^OLD RELIABLE REMEDY? for (olds i? MUi?~jiDS won LP'S HlfiH - (HSB88S8S8H c -1-. saBSssistifc^jl y? BltilSs nrting within l?n Wflindn. Soffit nnd runt drprndnblr family rrmfd) for Colds, Hi idirlin nnd la Gripp?. Mo-i'l ?-\prument?iiw.1 upon Mill's Oanram rioniidr (Juinirvf. World's iljnd.tid Cold romfdv lor two iff nr rat ions. 'o ftrmaid rr-d bo* bearing Mr. Hill's portrait and il(fn?lurf. <2?j? At AH Oruttnit?M Cnili (o ^ " ,rn r^Nr.,,-r^:T ^j?| ^ DR H. K. SMITH so : $ w | Dentist ti< : :: f? . !e< r "' L ! 1 <ii L Olht e Ovt-r Rialto Theatre I! ,u r Office Hours: 9 n. m. to R p. m. C " fic H++?'<"5"HWr"{-H"fr 4 jprosy Still S Public ealtht Problem Washington, Feb. 23.?"Leprosy" , ys Surgeon General Cummlng, of ? e U. S. Public Health Service, ) hough comparatively rare in contin- ^ ital United States, is still a public ] faith problem of much greater sen- < isncss than seems to be popularly ^ ipposed. Its virulence waxes and ] anes in accordance with laws that we > not understand; and our present 1 mparative immunity does not lessen ie necessity for being on guard. In the past we have not escaped. In 80 leprous beggars were so common New Orleans that they had to be fgregated in a lepi-osarium. In 1864 iree percent of the population of ihe awaiian Islands were lepers. In ?90 California had to establish a prosnrium, and Louisianan and finly Massachusetts followed suit. In 1002 the Public Health Service >und 278 lepers in the United States, , 15 of whom had been born in this >untry, and only 73 of whom were ider any restraint. Today, accordg :o the best estimate obtainable, icre are from GOO to 1,500 lepers in lis country, a number of whom are ] town to have acquired the disense in Philippines. When we acquired ie Philippines several thousand lep*s had to he and still are segregated i n settlement at Culion. Foci of ie disease exist in the United States I I the Pacific coast, in the Northwest, ! i the Gulf States, and along the At- i intie seaboard. i It was not until 1889 that the U. S. i ovemment took its first steps to revent lepers from coming to this mntry; and the preventive laws are o\v sufficiently explicit. Neverthe-j ss. the long period -during which thei isease incubates before declaring it lf makes it very difficult to shut out ] II potential lepers. To meet this ifficulty the law provides that for iree years after admission, any alien per may bo deported if the cause F the disease existed before he came ? i Wifbin ibn nilod States lepers may not travel) i interstate commerce except under I crrnits proscribing special precaution! i prevent the spread of the disease.! Piotection against the disease is ndered difficult by the fact that' prosy is found in a very large por-' on of the habitable globe, ranging! om Russia and Iceland to Indiu and 1 mi ricn. North and .South, and that! le evcrinereasing ease of eommuni-i iti< n offers many facilities for itsj nportation to the United States.' ine lepers were turned back at quar-j ntine during the fiscal year 1920-21.; In February, 1917, Congress provid-j 1 for a national homo for lepers to j i> administered by the Public Health' er\ ice, but so stonrgly did the varius States object to the founding of] ich an asylum within their borders ant it was not nrrwt Toxrr year* rater r rat the Service was able to carry Lit the provisions of the act by acuiring the State leper home in Ix>uisnia. Part of this home has been re-; lodelod; and work on the remaining' ecessary alternations and additions' proceeding. Tlie gloomy outlook for lepers has | [ ccntly been tinged with hope by the] iscovery of a mode of treatment in-i olving the use of chaulmoogra oil.' hich for 20b years has been reputed) > be of beneficial affect for leprosy, i lie oil itself is abso.bcd slowly and; > apt to cause painful abscesses; but! ic hypodermic injection of its ethly, sters, devised by Denn, have supplied way by which it may be used with-, ut undue suffering. Since 1912 a, )tal of 18.1 patients have been parol-1 d from the Kalihi Investigating Sta-i on of the Public Health Service in j [awaii (140 of them since July 9, j 019) as being apparently cured. Of sin se those who have received the mulmoogra oil derivatives only 12 H percent) have returned for further; reatment. While it is too early to say that a1 peeilic euro for the disease has been ( jund it is certain that the ethly. institute a most valuable agent in ie treatment of leprosy, especially j ir young persons and those in the| nrly stages of the disease; in older' ers ms and advanced cases the indiitii-ns are less promising. On the hole the results have been sofavorl le as to make the outlook distinctly pipeful. But only time can tell. ests Being Made To Determine Strength Of Yellow Pine New York, Feb. 22.?Announceent was made today at the testing boratories of the Department of ivil Engineering at Columbia Uni-i rsity that it would be two months! fore experiments were completed determine the strength of SouthTi yellow pine and Douglas fir timers available in commercial lumber- , irds in New York. The tests are being made under the ispices of the superintendents of iilding in the city's five boroughs ( establish equitable grading rules , id working stresses for submission j ( thn llAtir/l nf A ldprm^n a Kr? ann tiered in connection with recom- ] ended revisions of the sections of , e Building Code governing timber j nst ruction. I The New York Lumber Trade Asciation, Southern Pine Association, 'est Coast Lumbermen's Associa>n and National Lumber Manu- i cturers' Association assisted in se- 1 . tions of specimens. Buenos Aires has more than 600 ug stores and more than 600 per- ; me shops und beauty parlors. i Airplanes hover over California rice Ids to ward off wild ducks coming ] om the north. < Second Lap in !^|i Subscriptions to a Cannery H We hereby subscribe to one share H )f stock in the cannery at Union B 3. C., to be paid for in produce, and of B ;he par value of $50.00: B 1. E. Minter $50.00 B Lewis M. Rice 50.00 ' B 2. E. House 50.00!? 2. K. Hughes 50.00 j B Robert W. Beaty 50.00 ; B r. B. Jeter 50.00 B W. O. Jeter 50.001 B f. G. Sumner 50.00; E W. R. Kelly 50.00 ifl Marion H. Galhnan 50.00 B Arthur Crocker 50.00) B R. W. Adams 50.00j B Lewis M. Gault 50.00 B J. E. Kelly . 50.00 j B We will gladly receive subscriptions: B to the above from farmers in any B section of the county. The cannery B is an nssured fact; we wish to make; B it an assured success. Who will phone B "No. 1'' and say "Yes, put me down i B one share"? H No sales promoter; no red tape; B sane, honest administration and B wholesale team work. Come on in! flj Eczema Cured B After Five Applications &g Of "Storm's Lotion" iE I have hud eczema on my face for Bj two years. After five applications of Hjj Storm's Lotion the skin is in a per- B fectly healthy condition. I heartily B recommend its use to all sufferers cf Bj skin trouble. B (Signed) J. B. Betenbaugn, Union, S. C., R. P. I). No. 2. ffi Sold at Storm's Drug Store. ffi Phone 76 for a bottle today. M Last Resting Place B Of British Explorer B New York, Feb. -Grytviken, B chosen by Lady Shackleton as the last H resting place for the body of her late H husband, Sir Ernest Shackleton, Bi'it-lH ish explorer who died aboard his tiny [ B craft "Quest" last January 5, is im u icebound, isolated habitation of 20 I persons who cling to the frozen shores, H of South Georgia Island, called the'If "Gateway to the Antarctic." Sir Ernest's body was brought from ,B the Antarctic to Montevideo following B his death and .will be accompanied by , B Captain Frank llussey, a member of.B Shaekleton's expedition, when it starts , B again on its journey into the Polar B regions. B Lady Shaekleton's decision to halt B removal of the body to England is in B accordance with a lifelong wish of the explorer that he be laid to rest amid the scenes where his life work had been carried on. Only at the outset of his last voyage, he told friends he wanton irttyftfi hjs boot* on, like an old sea-dog. South Georgia Island has figured 1 several times in Shaekleton's career. cjQ He served under Captain R. F. Scott in 1901 when that intrepid pioneer c^< into the icelands of the south made a ' dash from that island which resulted i inj in discovery of the south magnetic i ^?'e" ods One hundred miles long, with a. rocky, forbidding coast line so indent-, ne ed that its width varies from 20 ;tirr miles to only one-half milo, most of i its mountainous interior is covered wj] with ice and snow throughout the! year. Huge ire clilTs overhang, its m? fords and bays and great icebergs, breaking off from massive glaciers; make it a dangerous haven for the | occasional wandering whaling .-hips which touch its shores. The island was discovered n 1 <"*.75 by Anthony LnRoche. C'apt.?-j Cook."-? in 177.r), took possession ii the lame of the British Empire. Until more i than 100 years later, when it was vis-J ited by a German expediti >:: aboard the Moeltke, it remained unexplored, but the presence of herds of seals and' sea lions made it the occasional ron- ( 1 dezvosu of whalers for the lirst lew J | years of this century, until thy nni- I mals there became nearly extinct. |? Ducks, pigeons and Arctic fowl still are numerous on the islnnd. It was while drifting with the ice past the settlement of Grytvikei . bound toward the midnight sun on t D/ voyage of exploration which was to I t have covered 30,000 miles, that Shackleton suddenly died. His comrades! T removed his body from the "Quest" to a Norwegian whaler bound for Montevideo and continued the expedition, under the leadership of sub-command-' er Frank Wild. They headed in the direction of the ! "lost" Enderby land, a vague eoun-! try just south of South Georgia Island ?\ which was reported discovered 00 fc?years ago, but which no one has been - ry nble to locate since. ? , Shackleton's body has been placed i ^ in a plain wooden coffin, made by the ? whalers at Grytviken, and hermetical-l g ly scaled with zinc. It will be placed; tios in a rock-piled cairn, among the thnr mounds marking the graves of other! ? explorers, adventurers and whalers SPI who lost their lives at the "Gateway! to the Antarctic. b'O] A simple burial ceremony will he' field in the crude church nt Grytviken,' with only Captain HHssey, of Shackle- j A ton's world of admirers, to see that j " his wishes and tho commands of Lady! Shackleton are carried out. ; ni United States uses about 100,000,-j nr 000 cords of wood annually fori fuel. ' i FO] I C This year's championship rowing K regatta will commemorate the 50th anniversary of the founding of the nationnl association. . m ? - w Textile manufacturing plants in Si North Carolina represent an invested ei capital of more than $200,000,000. oi SPRtf REAI WE ARE SHC SPRING WEA YOUR INSPE MEANS ANY WELL TO VI! Ladies Ladies Lad THESE LOW LEATHER, 0 WE CORDIA C0MPARIS01 JUDGMENTi L YOUR MONE )R QUICK SERVICE PHONE 167 iVe call and deliver your thing in a dust-proof motor:le. We remove spots and ins from clothing without uring either the fabric or ? color. Our modern meth5 make clothes look like w, in the shortest possible le. dive me a trial. I certainly I II appreciate it as much or re than anyone else. Hames Pressing ?? J D ammih CliAn aiiu ncpan uuup Nicholson Bank Building Phone 167 OUR BUSINESS^i IS THE )RUG BUSINESS you need us, call on us or phone us. ILMETTO DRUG CO. he Home of Pure Drugs and Druggists Sundries. PIIONE 7 HICHESTER S PILLS TIIK IMAMON0 URANIA. A I.ndh.t Aab jour Hruf glut U /A ( [LjA Chl-rhM-bii 1 IH>moadTlr.ii4//V\ AJjML I'lll. In Red ?n<l Uolil t>oie*, sealed with Blua Ribbon. ?A?k*l>r olVI.cidSH'K* n , 2M 01AMONII IIKANI) nLLH,lortl i* D year* known as Beit, Safest, Alwayt Reliable ?r SOLO BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE pecimens of small species of turhave been known to live more i 100 years. 51CIAL ADVERTISEMENTS I KENT?Very desirable resiL*nce, located in splendid neighborhood. All modern covneniences. pply to Theodore Maddox. 1310-Itt MEMBER that Huiet's Grippe apsules will knock out that cold nd grippe. For sale at the Palletto Drug Co. , It SALE?One milch cow, $40.00. ane seed $2.00 a bu. Also peas. ' . H. Whitney, Union, Route 7. 2 20-23-pd I RENT?One 4-room house with . ater and lights. Located near ] finders' boarding house. For fruth information apply to M. S. Green W. E. Green. l309-2tpd 1 ' I I . I =3 IG GOODS I JY FOR YOU I IffING SOME VERY DESIRABLE I R. THE GOODS ARE OPEN FOR I CTION, AND IF MONEY-SAVING I THING TO YOU, YOU WILL DO I SIT OUR STORE. I i' Spring Coats | ' Spring Skirts I ies' Oxfords I CUT SHOES ARE IN PATENT I NE AND TWO STRAPS. I LLY INVITE INSPECTION AND I N. WE WILL TAKE YOUR I AND BE SATISFIED. I FROM Y'S WORTH OR MONEY BACK I DIMES Here artdV* Dollars THERE It takes but ten dimes to make a dollar and it takes but one dollar to start a savings account. If you would save a dime a day?until you got a dollar to start an account?and then kept on saving each day and kept on depositing every time you got a dollar?you would soon marvel at the snug little sum you would save in such an easy way. "Large Enough to Serve Any?Strong Enough to Protect All." c i riZE,NvS NATIONAL. BANR. /P?%> Eggs From Every Hen T^^flgrffi?r'{ r*S There Is no excuse for n loafing lien Yoti mn make layers Wrfr ? nil rt.il money-makers out of cwry solitary lieu you own xljppw/ <2?V*r Egg Producer To wonderful jxniltrv tonic. develops the egg-produring organs: i , .Kes t'Tlv liners of yotin?c pullets: keeps jmultry healthy nnd a produces fast groulli ':i >?><*n!S ehleks. 2 1-2 lit. box. alt cents. We rarrv a complete line of ('urn-Yet Standard Remedies tor Horses. Mules. Cattle. Hogs and Poultry. We will gladly refund your money If you fall to get satisfactory results from the use of any Caro-Vet remedy. 1.1 ST OF DEALERS IN UNION COUNTY J. E. Fowler Union, S. C. H. T. Higgins Buffalo, S. C Storm's Drug Store .... Union, 8. C. Kel er's Drug Store . . . Buffalo, S. C. J. Mnhlov .IoIop or- a ?? 1 " ~ ?. . v/miviii o. vi r?< iv. fl. %J, East Side l)ru? Co. . . . Union, S. C. Mutual Supply Co. . . , Carlisle, S. C. Glymph'n Pharmacy .... Union, 8. C. The Bates Co., Inc. . . . Carlisle, S. C. Union Drutr Store .... Union, S. C. R. A. Brawley I.ockhnrt, 8; C. Harris-Woodward Co. . . . Union, S. C. Kc ton Mer. Co Helton, 8. C. E. C. Fore Union. S. C. Murrah's Pharmacy . . Jonesvi le, S. C. Porter's Coffee Emporium . Union. S. C. Jonesville Drutr Co. . . Jonesville, 8. C Fowler's Pharmacy . . . Monarch, S. C. Miss Hannah West, West SprinK?. S. C. J. B. Betenbaujrh . Union, 8. C.. Route 2 W. J. Betsill . . . West SprinKS, 8. C. J. E. Minter Sedalia, 8. C. C. C. I.nncaster, . Jonesville. 8. C., R. 2 B. (!. Wilburn & Son . Cross Keys, 8. C. Cheek Si I.awson Union, S. C. WANTED?you to know that wo have FOR SALE?One Reo speed truck, just received a big supply of fresh one Ford truck, two Ford coupes, garden seeds. No left over. Union Will sell at a bargain. Eagle GroDrug Store. 1298-Th-Sat-tf eery Co. 1309-5tpd WANTED?l.r> to 30 acres with house FOR RENT?Rooms for rent in the near Union; cheap; cash. Party in B. F. Arthur house. Apply to Miss another county wants to come to Willou Hicks. 1307-6t Union; has written. Submit what you have to A. D. Cooper, 27 Main LISTEN TO THEM as you go by? St., Phone 392. It those portraits in Barnes' show cases. 1308-tf WANTED?To sell you the famou- 6oAL $8.50?Cash on delivery. Ton Vesta Battery, guaranteed two , t w urn! yean, in writing We have one to rS """ *'""^1282 ^ show you, been used four years ASiisrwsar-f--jst" fo? s?l*-tT * ,h? " ??t de?ir1278-Tu-Th-Sat ab,? bunding lots in town, conven ient to connect with lights, water TAKE THE TONIC that does the and sewerage. E. L. Spears, work, Dr. M. D. Huiet's Chill Bus- 1309-5tpd ter. For sale at the Palmetto Drug IF YOU WANT RESULTS, have your Co. and all dealers. prescriptions filled at the Palmetto Drug Co. NOTICE?All repair work on hand that has been done for 30 days will FOR SALE?Fine building lot. See be sold at once. C. C. McCool & J. T. Storm, at Storm's Drug Store. Son. ltpd 1309-tf