The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, May 08, 1922, Image 3
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Regaining Lost Glory
- Adana, Turkey, May 7.?Publica
tion here .of the preliminary peace
settlement revising: the Treaty of
Sevres which would give the Turks
all of Asia Minor and more territory
.4 in Thrace created a happy impression
and was made the occasion for demonatrations
and celebrations.
Mustapha Kemal Pasha, head of
the Nationalist government at Angora,
who happened to be here said
in a speech at a banquet held in celebration
of the proposals, that his
whole life had been consecrated to
the task of regaining for Turkey her
lost glory and lost territory.
He asserted that peace with Greece
would never be recognized as long as
the Greek army occupied one single
foot of Turkish soil.
Replying to the suggestion advanced
by the British delegates at
the meeting of the foreign ministers
in Paris in March that Cilicia, the
southern Turkish province recently
evacuated by the French, should be
made a national home for the Armenians,
Kemal Pasha declared:
"We will not for a moment consider
the creation in our midst of a national
home for the Armenians nor
will we concede any safeguards for
minorities beyond those contained in
the minority clauses of the Central
Europe treaties."
The last step taken by Kemal Pasha
before leaving Adana was >the
suppression of all foreign control
either by commissions or capitulations.
In Armenian circles it iB rumored
that, in return for support of French
diplomacy at the conference at Paris,
the Turkish Nationalists have promised
not only to buy all their future
armaments'from France but also to
trron+ a nt?Afi*eUla L
n.a?? a ,'MM.uiinr W rTCIIt'll
metal and oil industries In the territories
belonging: to the Georgian' and
Azerbiajan republics.
"A large army and navy and a free
hand for Angora in the so-called
Eastern provinces," has now become
the Nationalists.
King George Interested in
Genoa Conference
London, May 7.?While resting at
Windsor Castle King George manifests
great interest in the Genoa
conference and special arrangements
havs been made Mo keep him fully
posted with all that is happening
there.
Foreign- office messengers are kept
busy between Genoa and Downing
Street while a special staff of tele'
-phone and telegraph officials have
bean installed at the castle to deal
with news from the Foreign Office.
An Arabian husband-to never seen
walking on the street with his wife.
WhH
TO 1
THE ISSUES 1
SINCERELY AND
ELECTED YOUR 1
RE ELECT THE F
DESIRE A CONTI
CITY.
THERE IS A F
PEOPLE TO THE
NOT EVEN KNOI
AM GOING TO B1
IT IS TRUE TI
BUT I HAVE MAI
DAUGHTER AT1
BELIEVE THE GR
> ? HIGH ENOUGH I
I HAD RATH!
TO MAN THAN
\ CHARACTER, Af
i MAN ON EARTH.
- POET EXPRESSE
'/'PRINCES AND I
; -GOD."
I WARN MY I
CITIZENS OF UN
THANKING \
o.
Cane
>rV V V V V V V V^VVVV
Aft ? <!
French Politics in
Hands of War Veteran
+
Paris, May 7.?The debates in th
Chamber of Deputies on the militar,
service bill disclosed the fact tha
860 of the 606 members of that bod;
served as officers in the French armj
Most of them have scarcely reache
.middle life and few were active ii
politics prior to 1914.
Observers predict that French pol
itics for the next generation will b
in the control of men with war rec
ords, invery much the same manne
as the American Congress was afte
the Civil War.
i i? ? * "
ucuciai viscount ae (Jastelnau i
the. most notable soldier in parlia
ment but his influence is scarce!;
greater than that of Lieutenant Col
onel Jean Fabry, who was JoflFre'
chief of staff on his visit to Wash
ington in April, 1917.
Vicomte de Castelnau is bette
known as a general than as a deputj
De Castelnau was on the list of thos
whom Premier Clemenceau though
were entitled to be marshals o
France. Clemenceau, it is said, final
ly decided, with great reluctance, t<
leave de Castelnau a general becaus
he had appointed one Catholic, Foch
to be a marshal and he did not lik
to name a second Catholic, de Cas
telnau. The general is a devou
churchman.
Besides Castelnau, there are 40 oth
era in this republican chamber hold
ing titles of nobility.
The Marquis de Dion, anothe
deputy, is a manufacturer of automo
bileB. Baron Maurice de Rothschib
''is well known as an owner of rao
jhorseB.
Two dukes in the house are Du
d'Audiffrey Pasquier, whose title goe
back to 1760 and the Due de Dalma
tie, a descendant through the femal
line from Napoleon's Marshal, Soult
Another Napoleonic name is recallei
by Deputy Prince Joachim de Murat
Baron Albert d'Aubigny has special
ized in aeronautics.
T_ n*i! ?* ? ?
iu uiuive Rivers or Anatoli*
Constantinople, May 7.?A repre
(tentative of a Belgian financial grou]
has asked the Turkish Nationalis
government at Angora for a conces
sion for utilizing the rivers of An
atolia for the production of electricit;
and for providing motive power fo
industry. The government of An
gora however is not disposed t
grant a general concession for all thi
rivers, but only for some of the prin
cipal ones and that on condition tha
industrial establishments shall b
created.
( Sixty-one per cent of the womei
workers in Kansas are single.
Few women workers in the Unite
States earn more than $20 a week.
I
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N THE MAYOR'S RACE A
HONESTLY AND STATE
MAYOR. IF YOU ELECT
RESENT MAYOR HE Wli
NUAT10N OF THE PRESi
LUMOR CURRENT THAT
POLLS TO VOTE FOR M
N THAT THE PARTIES N
MAYOR, IF YOU ELECT
iAT I HAVE NEVER AM*
)E AN HONEST AND RES
IVINTHROP, AND HAVE
EAT MAJORITY OF THE
STATE TO BE MAYOR (
ER BE AN HUMBLE PEA!
TO BE PRESIDENT OF
ID I BELIEVE THAT IWC
, IF THERE WERE A QUE!
D MY SENTIMENTS, ANI
.ORDS ARE BUT THE BR
?RIENDS TO BE ON THE 1
ION TO GIVE ME A CHA!
r0U FOR YOUR VOTE A
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Vast Amount of , >
s Reconstruction is Necessary
e Odessa, May 7.?The vast amount
V of reconstruction necessary before
1 Russia can resume her place as a
y producing nation is typified in Odes'
sa, where more than 60 big facd
tories are rounding out their second
n year of idleness.
While the Communists appear to Iv
" "coming to their senses," as one obe
server expressed it, the bitter eoon"
omic lesson of the past four years
r has left its imprint on the indusr
trial Russia of old. Here are to be
seen many powerful examples of how
8 easy it is to destroy and how difficult
* to build up.
V Odessa once boasted two huge
"" sugar refineries. Together they em*
8 ployed nearly 10,000 persons, but to"
day they are idle and almost in
ruins. Another 2,000 men were emr
ployed in the big rope manufactur'
ing plant on the outskirts of the city.
The factory will have to be practical*
ly rebuilt before it can open again,
f The brick making industry had 20
" factories in and near here in pre-war
0 days, but all of them are falling to
e pieces.
l? There were once three shipbuilde
ing plants, the largest employing
" 8,000 men and turning out vessels
t of 3,000 tons and more. The Soviet
government now operates it, at one"
eighth capacity. Three chemical fac*
tories have not been operated sines
1917, and a French factory for makr
ing soil phosphates shares the same
fate. It once required eight big
^ plants to can the fish caught in the
p Black Sea. The fish are still there
but the factories long ago ceased to
e function.
9 Two jewelry factories have been
closed for several years, as have
e three plants for making vegetable
oils, and two others where matches
l* were made in more prosperous days.
The making of sugar and grain bags
" was a big industry here, employing
thousands of persons. Odessa also
had factories for the making of cloth
1 products, nails, cement, machinery,
glass, shoes, paints and varnish, cork,
" linoleum and carpets, but gaunt, deP
caying buildings are all that is left
* to recall that time.
- Seed Grain
^ Distributed in Russia
r
0 Moscow, May 7.?Every four cat
e loads of seed grain, chiefly wheat,
sent to the famine districts of Russia,
are accompanied by a car load ol
e corn or other food to prevent the
eating of the seeds by the hungry
peasants.
n In an interview published here just
prior to his departure for the Genoa
conference Leonid Krassing, Commisd
sar for Foreign Trade, said the famj
ine districts were supplied with fleed
lOPLE
re clear-cut, and (
;d my position and v
met will know what
x know that a majc
nt state of affairs i
certain parties are
e, and so far as iknc
ientioned are going 1
me, and not those w1
issed a great fortun
pectable living, am
been a law abiding /
people will resent t
)f union.
5ant living by the sid
tiffi united states
)uld be better suitei
5tion mark by his c
) i believe the vast 1
eath of kings; an hoi
LOOK-OUT FOR LATE H
NCE, FOR THEY CAN'T
lND SUPPORT TOMORR
s ivi
r Mayor i
AA 4^4 |[^A ij^A .
ff
gain not only from the United
States but also from the interior
jrovinces of Russia, additional seeds
teing purchased in Poland, Sweden,
tie Bakie states, Rumania and Bulgiraia.
According to Krassin the total
amount of seed grain supplied direct
by the Commissariat for Foreign
Trade, the American Relief Admin-!
istration and the organization head- j
ed by Fridtjof Nansen is 13,418,000
pouds (36 pounds each), to be distributed
as follows: Central Russia,
10,400,000 pouds; Southeastern Russia,
1,034,000 pouds; the Ukraine,
1,984,000.
Just how much of the seeds will
reach destinations in time for the
spring planting will scarcely be
known before some time in May.
Freezing of the Baltic ports caused
three weeks delay, Krassin said, and
in February and March the Russian
railways were congested at various
points. On some lines he said "many
thousand of cars" were held up, while
the return nf <>mntu enrs fn tho Roltip 1
ports and the Black Sea shipping fell
to the minimum.
Recnt reports from various railway
centers showed little, if any,
improvement in Russia's transportation,
and there has been much speculation
among the railway managers
and experts as to how much of the
seed grain would arrive in time for
the spring planting.
Brotherhood Favors
Amalgamation
Houston, Texas, May 7.?Probably
the most pressing question to come
before the triennial convention of the
Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen
and Enginemen, which will open here
tomorrow, is that of the proposed
amalgamation with the Brotherhood
of Locomotive Engineers. The lntter
brotherhood passed a resolution favoring
such amalgamation at its Cleveland
convention last year, and the decisions
now devolves upon the firemen.
Further issues before it are proposed
alliance with the miners; participation
in political campaigns; the at
I titude of the brotherhood toward the
I decision and practices of the United
Staten Railway Board; cooperative
buying and distribution; erection of a
brotherhood building; and establishment
and maintenance of a tuberculosis
sanatorium, and establishment i
and maintenance of a labor press.
Previous conventions have lasted
about five weeks, but an effort will
be made to conclude the business of i
this gathering within a month.
r - >1
, Regular System of
Horse Racing
Jaffa, Palestine, May 7.?Arrange
ments are being made here for horset
racing on a regular system. A site
- for the coarse has been selected near
< /the village of Selmah, in the neigh(
borhOOd (ft Jaffa.
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OF UNION
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)N LAST THURSDAY 1 CAME OUT $
/HAI YOU MIGHT EXPECT IF I AM XX
r YOU EXPECT OF ME, AND IF YOU H
IRITY OF THE PEOPLE OF OUR CITY XX
N THE IMMORAL CONDITIONS OF OUR ? t
XX
GOING TO FURNISH CARS TO CARRY f.f.
>W, ANY SUCH RUMOR IS FALSE. 1 DO
TO VOTE FOR ME. BUT IF THEY DO, I XX
HO VOTE FOR ME.
IE, OR HAD ONE THRUST UPON ME,
EDUCATING MY FAMILY, HAVE A ft
iND PUBLIC SPIRITED CITIZEN, AND I XX
HE PROPAGANDA THAT I AM NOT OF f f
XX
E OF THE ROAD, AND BEING A FRIEND ??
WITH A QUESTION MARK BY MY ?|4
) FOR THE PRESIDENCY THAN ANY XX
HARACTER. SCOTLAND'S PEASANT H
MAJORITY'S ALSO. WHEN HF SAHV
NEST MAN IS THE NOBLEST WORK OF
XX
OUR RUMORS, AND I JUST ASK THE
IURT THINGS BY MAKING A CHANGE.
OW. XT
[ I X H I
XX
City of Union
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My Fellow Voters I
IN WARD TWO
DON'T FORGET THAT TOMORROW IS ELECTION DAY AND I
YOU WILL BE CALLED UPON TO SELECT A COUNCILMAN I
FROM YOUR WARD TO REPRESENT YOU FOR THE NEXT I
TWO YEARS. I HAVE ALWAYS BELIEVED IN MY WARD AND I
IN MY TOWN, AND IF YOU, BY YOUR BALLOT, SELECT ME AS 1
YOUR REPRESENTATIVE IN COUNCIL FOR THE NEXT TWO if
(YEARS, YOU WILL ALWAYS FIND ME ON THE SIDE OF THE I
MAN OR SET OF MEN WHO ARE STRIVING TO IMPROVE I
MORAL CONDITIONS IN OUR CITY. I AM A FIRM I
REI irVCD IM TITDMIMP AWT TUT * I^?"nn ' ?
in luivmiU'. uj> inc. UUH1, AINU FUK I HA ! I
REASON I SHALL FAVOR OPEN COUNCIL MEETINGS WHEN J
THE PUBLIC WISHES TO ATTEND SUCH MEETINGS. I
MY OPPONENT, MR. GILBERT, HAS SERVED A TERM ON I
THE COUNCIL AND I AM A YOUNG MAN AND I ONLY ASK I
THAT YOU GIVE ME A CHANCE TO SERVE YOU. IF ELECTED
I ASSURE YOU THAT I WILL SERVE THE PEOPLE OF THE
CITY AS A WHOLE, AND NOT ANY ONE MAN OR SET OF MEN I
INDIVIDUALLY. E
I R. Haynes Harris
I Candidate For City Council From Ward 2
Immammmnmmmmmmmmamammmmmmmmmmm n n mmi wmmm iitmWiumumm