The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, May 17, 1922, Image 2

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THE UNION TIMES Published Daily Except Sunday By THE UNION TIMES COMPANY Lewis M. Rice Editor f Registered nt the Postofliee in Union, S. C . ' as second class matter, I Times Building Main Street Bell Telephone No. 1 SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Year $4.00 Six Months 2.00 Three Months 1.00 ADVERTISEMENTS One Square, first insertion $1.00 I Every subsequent insertion 00 Obituary notices, Church and Lodge j notices anil notices of pub'ic meetings, en- | tertainments and Cards of Thanks will be charged for at the rati- of one cent a word, cash accompanying the order. Courtt the | words and you wi I know what the cost will be. O ; jl MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS jg The A-.socinteil Press is exclusively en- H titled to the use for republication of news H dispatches credited to it or not otherwise KJ credited in this paper, and also the iocal n news published therein. < -?* * WEDNESDAY, MAY 17, 1022. Do r.ot forget the meeting of tin,. 1 l,v farmers and business men to be hold in the rooms of the Young Men's litis-j iness League Thursday night. There I i.? also to be a meeting hold in tht ! y( Rialto Theatre on Friday at 11 o'clock.) ,0 At that meeting Mr. Turner, general j agricultural agent of the Southern Railway, will speak to the farmers ac and all others who will attend. lie; will tell of the advantages of organizing to sell cream. He will bring a' fr message to the people of Union conn- hi ty. Be sure and hear him. One of the farmers who signed tojl'<) plant tomatoes for the cannery came to us a day or two ago and said that | he had set out his acre, and still had '' I J enough plants to set out another acre.) ' 1 Wo told him to go ahead and put out the additional acre. This he agreed to! tic do. Our fear is that we will not have enough, not that we will have too many. We can can all we can get and . more. We say to all: increase your acre to two acres, wherever you can. ^ We will take them ail. Many have al- I ready set out their plants; others are I now ready to set out plants. It is! just now the right time, not a hit too late. Do not let anybody talk you into not planting your acre. Stick to j ? your signed contract, and we will win _? a great victory. We are preparing to| be able to can ten tons a day. That is very good capacity for a beginning. Next year we will have very! little trouble getting two hundred and fifty acres planted. And we will be able to take care of that output. One man who signed to plant tomatoes was approached by a neighbor and told that now since cotton was going up he had better plow up his acre of tomatoes and plant cotton. That was foolish advice. Nobody knows that cotton will bring 20 cents next fall. The probability is that it| will be nearer 15 cents than 20 cents. .Moreover, the world is being planted in cotton, that is, all of it save the Mississippi Valley, where the floodarc raging. Everybody has gotten the idea that cotton is going to be high. The idea is just floating around. It I is well to remember that many are' increasing acreage. It is well to re-1 member that during the month of; April both our exports and imports to' foreign countries fell olf many mil-! lions of dollars as compared with April one year ago. Trading with oth- ' er count ries is one of the ways thai i good prices are maintained. If we are s.h'pp'ng less of all export articles and receiving less of all import articles, it. does not look like very high prices for cotton. Of course we know that it is the farmer's business whether he1 sells .it 20 cents or holds on for higher prices. But today, if we had a thousand bales of cotton we would seli it before night at 20 cents. We do 1 ( not believe any gnat higli level is going to be reached. Certainly if we < wed money and had the cot Ion, the cotton would have to go. Quite a I number of our friends have told us 11 at when cotton reached 20 cents thej, expected to sell. Now they say they will wait, a bit longer. Th-'t is their iiuniiK'^i IIIIU Vllfy IIlHy Dl' VVPII 10 hold en, bat we . eriou !y doubt it Then, too. there is this fact to face. If you st the nil on .1 cotton crop ir Union county this year, the boll wee \ iI may wipe you out entirely. We have all about forgotten the boll weevil. We think that by some hook o? crook he will not tret our crop this year. But it is well to remember that he is due here this year in large nam- I? hers. We may not make any cotton! Certainly we need not hope to make much more than a he If crop. ^ Let us say, in passing, that if you fnile,j to get tomato plants sufficient for your need, we have 100,000 plants now rendy. You may have them ac| $1.00 a thousand. ? I???iwfiimwa? mi 1 ' We fill any doctor's ? prescriptions. I 1 I wh Union Drug Store I a. ikf,y Ou i > he , VI Funu the rooms of the Young Men's Busess League Thursday night. * * * Our oat says farmers and merchants ould go to hear the lecture at the lung Men's Business League tomorw (Thursday) night. * Our eat says hurry and set out your re ?f tomatoes. * * Our cat says few people ever died 0111 overwork, not in the South, ecrinly. * Our cat says the day of reckoning mes to all wrongdoers. * * * Our cat says pin not your faith tc ie theory that the boll weevil will % no damage here tin's summer. * Our cat says the crosseyed man does >t chop where he seems to look. + * Our cat says the cannery will ady to operate by June 13. "The Best in Drug Store Goods, the Best in Drug Store Service." Motto of the International Association of Rexall Clubs. H. W. EDGAR Funeral Director And Embalmer Ambulance Service Night Phone 311?Day Phone 129 Next door to Flynn-Vincent Shoe Store FOR THF SWEET GIRL GRADUATES Eversharp Pencils. Waterman's Automatic Pencils. Waterman's Ideal Fountain Pens. Eastman Kodaks. Whiting's Stationery. Compact Powder, large size. Whitman's Sampler. Norris' Candy. Perfumes ? Houbigant's, Mary Garden, Djer Keiss, Gardenglo, Azurea, Floramye and Hudnut's. Peoples Drug Store Prompt Service Phones 68-69 M I. KINDS OF CEMETERY WORK Jnion Marble & Granite Co. Main St. Union, S. C. ad Company Plant Destroyed by Fire Perth Amboy, N. J., May 16.?The ite It-ad department of tho United , ad Company's plant was destroyed fire today. The damage amounts to 500,000. ( THE CITADEL The MUita-y College of South Carolina Scholarship Examination On .July 14th, a competitive examination will be Held at Union to till one vacancy in the Citadel scholarships from this.^l-ounty. Applicants must not be under sixteen and not over twenty years -of age on the opening day of the next college session, September 20, 1922. The subjects for examination will be as follows: Algebra, through quadratic equations. Plane geometry. English grammar,, rhetoric and literature. Ancient history, and American history. The winners of the scholarships must meet the requiremetns of the Associated Colleges of South Carolina for admission. Application blanks, catalog, and further information furnished upon request. Address: Col. O. J. Bond, President, The Citadel, Charleston, S. C. Notice of Final Discharge State of South Carolina, County of Union. Court of Probate. Notice is hereby given that on the 30th day of May, 1922, at 11 o'clock a. m., in the Court of Probate for said county, the undersigned will make his final settlement as administrator of the Estate of C. G. Estes, deceased, and that thereupon he will apply to the Judge of said Court, for his final discharge us such administrator. C. C. Sanders. This 29th day of April, 1922. Published in The Union Times for 30 days. 5-3-10-17-24 Notice in Pasturing Cows I am now prepared to pasture a limited number of dry milch cows and heifers. No other kind wanted. Price per month $2.00. J. McJ. Fant, Santuc, S. ('. 1380-ltpd "Easter Day proved religion is gaining," runs a local headline. Re ligion always gains on a pleasant Easter day, but slumps badly on the succeeding Sunday. ? Peoria Transcript. Caro THE SOOTH'S FINE! MEDICATING LP POULTRY. UNION. Exercise your local pride and yourselves whether or not it is the Get a package of it and take home Your enthusiasm and comment constant use of Caro-Vet products. Caro-Vet is covering the Sou household necessity with the livestc orders are coming in daily from me 3 Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi, G 9 Virginia, North and South Carolina f l something of our product. Caro-Vet is anxious for every I behind it and if you have no lives bring millions of new dollars to our It is your business to boost Ci busy. Our plant is second to noi equipment is the last word in mod manufactured from U. S. P. drugs, compounding of human prcseriptioi the part of Union county and city < in the United States. All of our stock has been subsc amount of the stock available for participate in the profits of the cor for home products. Visit our plan \vj are doing. Every citizen of I-Vl'ivo fif ftlie rvoi' ??l?? <t 1 A Al ! >%> w */. ?>iiio ovwvn, jmi *?iuc ?pi.vj.vn Mail us your subscription and of stock with unlimited earning pov instead of tens. CAROLINA REMEDIEI Phone 417 slmerica's Horn ' Makes yoi Male* tha daily i ^ t^l SHINOLA Home J ?UI_J. I which clean* tli HomeSat I and aa.il; Home Sat | brln## tho ,hiM ^BBSSBSCm H'a best ti Many and varied are the new sea- SI ton's parasols, striped, cretonne, crepe ^ ie chine and jazz patterns appearing Lo the most popular. a ,.' -| 1? - | UNION I UNION, S Bottled Umde I ?--^T^ -Vet >T PRODUCT FOR /ESTCfCK AND MADE IN S. C. tret behind it. Find out for South's best product of its kind with you today. dation will be aroused by the It is manufactured in Union, ih and is rapidly becoming a >ck and poultry owner. Repeat i chants and farmers over Texas, loorgia, Florida, Virginia, West are writing us wanting to know ' Union County citizen to get tock, talk Caro-Vet and it will town and county. iro-Vet. Come on now and get ne in the United States. Our ern machinery. Our product is , the same that you get in tht ns, and a little civic pride on citizens will make it the largest. rihed; however, there is a small those who wish to invest and npany and become v.v.l boosters t and learn something of what Union county should own one 3 per share. check for $10.00 f- r one share r.-r. It can grow into hundreds S COMPANY, INC. I -' Union, S. C. I s Shoe Polish Jf . j lit shoes neat and trim, ves the whole appearnes for all the family. Whit*, Ox-blood and Brown ways lOc. thine en easy habit?get the ?*t ? A genuine brittle dauber te thee* and applies polish f. Large lambs' wool polisher with a few strokes. > say "Shinola" i? 'F.CIAL ADVERTISEMENTS dr RENT -RjDoma with all modern convenience*. Apply to Mrs. J. Hay Fant. k 1381-3tpd I % JE' "You'reNext! I , Delicious and Refreshing I j j| ^fh the beverage you J HI W J want for whole- |B|| COMPANY 1^ . C. TELEPHONE 126 II :r an Exclusive License fromJhe Coca - Co i. a Co mpany, At l h | I r? I I i Taste is a matter of tobacco quality We state as our . belief that the tobaccos in are finer quality (and hence better than any other cigarette the Myerj |^ /yk I iMf)) - r Chesterfield 20 for i8c CIGARETTES \ 10 for 9c of Turkish and Domeitic tobaccos?blend*d J Vacuum tins * \ "f50'?<= rJ^H j J BAYER AND PRAISE SERVICE? ??? We extend to you a special invita- ^ tT! ! tion to come to the prayer meet- a \ I I li I E m \ Mm /#/* ^ JOj talks and Rood fellowship will char- __ __ _ _ _ ^ acterize the meeting. Come and M ^ a - ill A E# Ej^ B bring your friends. 1380-2t g ' E fl ]? FOR SALE?One 32-B. Oakland tour. 1 ing car, 1910 model. Fair running I _ , ... order. Will sacrifice for $125, pro- I *ather and are you giving thought to the vided the buyer takes the car off financial future of your children?by the establishment my hands within the next week. of a 8*vinK? account for each? Phone 61 or see T. J. Glenn, Ottarav v . ... ... .. . . . You are busy with many things, that's true. And " this may seem a small thing. But, in our opinion it is CROSS KEYS N. F. A. has an al- one of the biggest things in the life of a child. For no lotment of iand bank funds to be child will ever meet failure, if he has learned thrift loaned to farmers in the next 90 (in his youtht. days. Applications will be received till these funds are exhausted. H. C. "Urge Enough to Serve Any?Strong Enough to Protect All" Wilburn, secretary-treasurer, Union, S. C., Route 2. 5-17-20 TWENTY THOUSAND Surehea<! and ^ [ I | '*in v Wakefield cabbage plants, and .best ??** B. Jk. B. ; J X ^^1 Vn , , J varieties of tomato plants. Also liro- t y* > ? ^~v t^t a v * TWT \JT ited amount of potato slips. All u\, 1 X v~/ -/*. J / JLJ ^TL ?w ~ guaranteed to be the best. See J. C. Mitchell, Arthur Boulevard, Un- ?????? ion S C ltnd ^ , t:'L+ -?.TVe?rifciWE _____ ___ WEST SPRINGS WATER?Deliv MILCH COWS FOR SALE?Several WANTED-To do plain and fancy lu^in^Ld^ tl^Si "thJ milch cows for sale, price. 4teaw>nsewing at reasonal le prices. Will winter months. Phone 2320. J. ?ble. Mrs. M. E. Pittman, Carlisle, sew by the day at your home or the Boyd Lancaster. ]200-Mon.Wed.tl S. C. a'trial WM," J E"porter' MAN 0R WOMAN WANTHD??40 ALL CANDIDATES an urged to an Porter, S Church .tract "h0-? weekly ful time, $1.00 an hour .pare fame, andI get on th. troat page. time, selling guaranteed hosiery to Let your friends have a. look a MRS. MARY HART please call at The wearer. Experience unnecessary. you* 186i-tf j /. Times office for her pocketbook Guaranteed Mills, Norriatown, Peiuf. ? - ? -* found on streets. ltpd 1818-12t-Wed Read your yellow UM. * ili A iJm' *5 2 ./*