The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, May 25, 1922, Image 3

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GEISER THRESHERS Osborne Binders?Feed Mills?Corn Mills?Corn Shelters. All sizes of Oil and Gas engines, Hand and B Power Pumps for deep and shallow wells. HarrisBrockman Fresh Water Systems. We are proud of these lines of tools and and you will be too if you OWN them. We can furnish repair parts for all farm machinery. GEISER THRESHERS ARE NOW IN STYLE. HUTCH1NS & CO. 171 North Church St. Spartanburg, S. C. 1 ^Telephone your Ill grocer tor a case? ?I (Sia M I Delicious and Refreshing yj IS / s\ I union coca-colA b6ttling co. I UN1QN' s- c- - - TELEPHONE 126 ?'*> I HOME fANNINC I MADE EASY! " Food conservation is a fnighty factor in the progress of civilization. With the above machine the problem is solved. You can can from your garden all you will need of fruits, berries and vegetables for the entire year. Come in and let us demonstrate the value of the wonderful little machine. No soldering, no standing over a hot fire. Simple, scientific, sane. LEWIS M. RICE At The Union Times Office. I FARMERS! Beginning TUESDAY, from 9 a. m. to 12 Nnrm anil avsrv Tiiacilatr o?J PwiJatr I-Iiava twvu unu v?v? j i uvouajr anu i lua j uiuc" after Cream Station AT HARRIS-WOODWARD CO., UNION will receive PURE CREAM in any quantities. (Cream with onions or bitterweed not acceptable.) Prices based on Chicago market. Payments made 1st and 15th each month. Bring in your accumulations. If kept in a cool place for three or four days it will be acceptable. _ Will Send Players to America more than a year spent in detailed scenic preparation before the first per" formance at the main theater. Moscow, May 20-The Moscow Art ? nt ^ matl,ri?lized Theater which will send a company of ^ wQu|d |(,ayl, M(1S. players to An.er.ea late this summer cow (nr (n A t ,n Alm,ri(.? ,h(,y i, considered in Hussm to produce the wou)d t ^ s ,n ^ |(|? highest form of .Iramatie art. sil>n ,an ;' It is a government subsidized insti- ^ tution and maintains n number of studios where Plays are reh sod and , S"m" 2r'? S"'?ra children in acU?rs trained before they are per- England were sent to school with niitted to appear at the main theater, pipes in their catchels, and the schoolIn some instances, plays have been re- master called a halt in their studies hearsed as many as 200 times and while they all smoked. Monarch News MUs Hattie Wood and Miss Mary Wright jointly had a birthday party last Friduy night. One was 11 and the other 12. About 20 boys and girls were present and the attendance showered d >wn lots of nice presents. After ar: evening of pleasure refreshments were rerved and all voted Miss Wood and Miss Wright a happy couple of hostesses. Claude Bates attended the fish stew ot (?. Cm Hodges last Saturday afternoon and he reports a fine time. Tlvrt were PG9 in Mon-Aetna Bar>j fist Sunday school last Sabbath and i ut of this number the Bible class furnished 140. Our class continues to grow and our teacher, N. P. Hendrix, is a fine one. All visitors find a hearty welcome in this class. The series of revival services that were to have begun at Bethel church sonu> time ago, began Sunday and a good crowd was in attendance. The new preacher delivered a fine sermon and it seemed to us he is going to open up something good all this week. Preaching each night, beginning promptly at 7:30 o'clock. The choir rendered some good music ami Superintendent McNeil and Pastor Cogburn have a good church and Sunday school in the Bethel Methodist church. Everybody has an invi tat ion to jitten.i u v..x ..v o?i vivco ci1111 yuu find a hearty welcome and handshake in this church. We will have more ti say along the mid-week services. Miss Minnie Crisp, who was confined to her room all last week with an attack of appendicitis, is again able to leave her room, I am mighty glad to state. Mr.s. Raymoth Floyd, of Hernial!, , Cherokee county, spent the week-end as guest of Mrs. Chalk, her sister. She had her children with her. As the correspondents have set Boatman Springs as the place for the Union Times' picnic meeting, I congratulate them and think they made a nice choice. I am planning to b-? present and hope every writer will be there. I look back to the enjoyabl-? one we had theje two years ago. Un less something goes wrong (and 1 certainly hope not) I will be there. I want to have the old cat another wash pot of good coffee end let him feel the writers all love him and honor his good leadership. Old cat, take this from the least of your writers in the good will it is given. Miss Estelle I.ackey of Whitmire spent the wek-end with her mother | Mrs. J. J. Crocker. Mrs. J. L. Whitner, who has been real sick, is much better now. As I have been using entirely too much of The Times space here lately 1 will close. Hope to meet all the correspondents next Saturday, and also to hear a good address from our editor. C. T. C. Bald Rock May 22, 1922. "More rain, more grass," as the old saying is and we have had plenty of both the last few days. I would like to see some pretty weather so the farmers could get busy and try to kill General Green. Most all the farmers in this community have a good stand of cotton; some are through, planting corn and some haven't started yet. I notice that the grain in this community is ripening very fast but it is not as good as I would like to see it. There has been lots of cotton sold out of this community the past week. Mr. and Mrs. Duncan Hart of Kelton spent Sunday afternoon with Mrs. J. H. Fowler near Bald Rock. Vernon Garner. Lonnie Greeorv and Miss Viola Garner were visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. G. S. Sanders Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Almon of Kelton spent the week-end with their biother, Mr. A. C. Alman. Miss Birdie Vaughan of Adamsburg gave a party at her home Saturday night. There was a large crowd present and every one reported a good time. respondents are going to have a picnic and I hope that I can t>e present. Everyday Worker. ARE YOUR KIDNEYS WELL? Many Union People Know the Importance of Healthy Kidneys. The kidneys filter the blood. They work night and day. Well kidneys remove impurities. Weak kidneys allow impurities to multiply. No kidney ill should be neglected. There is possible danger in delay. If you have backache or urinary troubles. If you are nervous, dizzy or worn out, Begin treating your kidneys at once; Use a proven kidney remedy. None endorsed like Doan's Kidney n:n r-ins. Recommended by thousands. Proved by Union testimony. Jesse Davis, officer in Salvation Army, Douglas Heights. Union, says: "About two years ago my kidneys I bothered me. My back was pretty sore and when I stooped it hurt and I I had a dull, numb feeling in my back just over my kidneys. My kidneys were not normal in action and the secretions pained and burned in passage. But thanks to Doan's Kidney , Pills, I was soon rid of the annoyance. One box was all that was necessary to fix my back up in A-l shape again and I haven't been troubled since." ' Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't sim1 ply ask for a kidney remedy?get Doan's iKdney Pills?the same that i Mr. Davis had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. p State Short Course for ??< Home Demonstration ^ Club Members ?r T The State Short yourse for Home A Demonstration club members of South Carolina will be held at Winthrop college June 9 to 15 inclusive. About % 400 women and girls from every part f of the state are expected to attend. V Five women and five girls are sent from each county, these delegates be- A ing selected for excellence in home ? demonstration work and their ability X as leaders. *In addition to the regular j delegates, the County Farm Women's V Councils will send special representa- ??> tives. A An interesting and instructive pro- A gram has been arranged by the State Home Demonstration Agent and her X assistants. Prominent demonstrators r.nd lecturers from all parts of the country will be on the program. A Among the speakers are Dr. C. B. ?, < Smith, Mr. O. B. Martin and Miss Florence Ward from the U. S. De- J partment of Agriculture, Washington, V1 D. C. Dr. Ruby Green Smith, Associate State Home Demonstration lead- A er, New York State, Dr. Leon C. Pal- ?, ? mer, general superintendent, South Carolina Sunday School Association; Mrs. Chauncey B. McDonald, Secre- i V tary, S. C. Tuberculosis Association;!^ and Dr. L. A. Riser, of the State Board A of Health. Demonstrations along many A lines of home-making will be given by the specialists and the county home X demonstration agents. ^ Recreation will be an important fea- ^ ture of the program. A trained diroe- A tor will have charge of the work in A the gymnasium, including drills, games, folk dancing and swimming. J Mr. R. E. Mell of the Rock Hill Y. M. ^ C. A. will conduct the community sing- ^ ing each evening. In addition to the A entertainments mentioned above, there A will be moving pictures, parties and i "stunts." X A feature of especial interest to the V girls will be the course in health edu- y cation, conducted by Miss Harriett A Wedgwood of the U. S. Bureau of A truncation. Mere the girls will be ? taught the "Rules of the Health j Game" and "Right Living." V Indications are "that this Short V Course will be the best ever held. I la1 President D. B. Johnson has generous- fy iy given us the use of the Winthrop ? college buildings and equipment, and ^ is cooperating in every possible way to make the Shorty Course a success. V I *< | Governor Allen Presents His Argument !? Chicago, II., May 23.?Gov. Allen in ^ presenting his argument quoted his ^ opponent as saying that he (Gov. ^ Miller) had left uiyead a stack of ^ evidence more than [seven feet high. ?*l D.-scribing the deepwaterway prijcct * ? as "rational in the highest sense,' the Kansas governor charged that New % York opposition W&IHnspired by pro- ^ vincia! self-interest and that Gov. Mi'- ^ lor v as using "not the method of the <*> just judge, but of the trained lawyer." A "Gov. Miller has indicated," said' Gov. Allen, "that the evidence from ? the middle west (before the interna- ^ tional commission which investigated i V the project) is prejudiced. It is pos- *? sible for that reason that he did not A read it, but made his conclusions from ^ the only evidence which he knew of that was not prejudiced?that of the ^ New York Chamber of Commerce and ; other organizations from his home state. He asks for a re-hearing for th the nurnnsp ovwlontlw nf .. . 1 J v?v?..ll"6 ?| delay until he ran get some evidence jn more agreeable to his point of view pC The advantage of the position taken j th by this international commission over th that assumed by (lov. Miller at this' pt moment, it seems to me, is that the fr commissioners read all the evidence of which he has ignored." The project, the speaker asserted it? would mean to wheat growers of 18 th states an added profit under all condi tr tions of $290,000,000 a year, and would add to the grain alone of midwestern t.(j farmers, value amounting to more n, than enough every year to pay its en- retire cost. be "The west get* out of this project er only navigation, while the east gets w, Allen. Later, he added, "The saving it: of coal by the use of this power would el alone amount to $150,000,000 a year, ci and the production of this added en- w ergy for the use of this great indus- ft. trial district would be a blessing foi el the eastern section of the country bt equal to the blessings of transporta- \ eT tion bestowed upon the middle west tr by the project." a( The governor represented western farmers as dama&ingly handicapped Gf under present transportation condi- gi lions. "In aKnsas the lack of box Si cars has been so gTave during mo- p< ments of our peak roads that at times! b< 20000,000 bushels of wheat have been p< piled upon the ground waiting for! transportation facilities. jo Agricultural prosperity, which is <M the fundamental basis of all pros-, tl perity, is measured by the difference t., between farming cost and the pric?? of 0| farm products. The farmer in central (j| Iowa, shipping oats to the Atlantic seaboard, gets paid for one bushel in n three. The cost of transportation E takes the other two bushels. The farm ni price is the market price with trans \y portation deducted and the export f, market, where the surplus is sold, sets the price lor the whole crop. , "Wheat in Kansas and Nebraska is further from N? w York market than (j wheat on the Argentine farm. Wheat, fj at. the foot of Lake Erie is as near to, (} Northern Europe as it will be when s< it gets to New York. When the lakes are open to ocean-going commerce anu the lost motion is eliminated, the sav- w ing in freight will add from five to g< seven cents on the market value of ni every bushel of wheat produced in ol t t?t >. A . . . t?t A A AA %^"/%"/VVVVVVVVVVVV>V%^"???^? REVIVAL! ?$ ; AX * First Baptist) Church Y BEGIN NING | SUNDAY, MAY 28! ; = Rev. W. L. Walker, D. D. ? X A Noted Pasfnr list of Danville, Ky., will | conduct a series of meet- $ ings at the First Baptist 1 Church, beginning Sun- I day, May 28, at 11 o'clock f A. M. The public is in- | vited to attend these | meetings. I % <> > > > < > > } > : > ? ~~ > midwestern fields. 'The eighteen states asking f<?>' this provement produce pract ically 'ill I \ f} ? 'jt' r cent of all the wheat jrrown in I |j\/ ? 'J J, JJ,, U/tUl-i I e United States; cuht per cent of K van vmrv wm mmm* * It vr ii 1 i\1Uj rtllU 1{U ill.' Kalian lib Slice.I Hncon U ',11. Walter Hake's Cocoa . . products on a lonper rail radius ] Wa]u.r Hilkt., s ( o,?a . m an any other section which cm Cigarettes, per carton .. ibutes to the world s food supply. Kviwrn-. per gallon "The international commission ca II- ^ ftn<| ( ||i; , ^ p, , (l . attention to the fact that in the .b. . ^ ^ ^ * lies of canalization in the St Law- u)^ ^ | nee river within the international ^ ( undarv it was possible to cieate *, . . ' . > , Ijoose ( omponnil Lim, i a- pound lit ot hydro-electric power whan . . . . .. ,t -4 i c. . I nre Hard, per pound ... mi d supply to the United Stutis a . . o,? . i. i.. Mb buckets Si tow 11 r i! t i share of energy 1.400,000 h>dro , Ilea\ v, tivsh cutback pei pound ectric horse power. It was pointe*. | it that the 5272,000,000 of expense I 1 P'nt Wes>on Oil hich the creation of a canal of .'?( I 1 <il|art W . .ssoii Oil et draft and the attendant hydro- ig 1 - Wesson Oil ectric horse power would entail could ( iuarettes for I met by the marketing of this pow- All 1(,(' SnutT "1 for in the great manufacturing dis All ~ n' plugs Tohat-i J foi icts to which it would he reasonably I'ineapplo, sliced and crated. No -J Ijacent. j 3 Dessert Peaches, per can 50(. "At present there is being carried I<oose Vinegar, per gallon . 10i. l by the United States Geological Host Pink Salmon, pei can ?-, arvey an investigation known as the Plain Flour, per barrel s- tt(| uper Power Survey. The broad pur- ^df Rising Flour, per burr. ! . . Ss on ,IU| s->-, >se of the scheme is to bring into Rockingham Flour, per bat el sx (a ?ing a vast inter-connected system of Rest Grain or Ground Collet . per pour on. >wer transmission. 1 lb can Franco-American Coffee -j-,,. "In the accomplishment of this pro- 1 !t> White House Coffee et will be the opportunity to develop Maxwell House Coffee, per pound /cry possible water power site ii> Rest Cream Cheese, per pound tat section and to market tit a prop- Home Ground Meal, per bushel $1 r carrying charge all of the hydro- Arm & Hammer Soda, 6 for *>' B ectric energy that may be pro- 6 boxes Searchlight Matches for I ^<*< <1. Chicken Feed, per 100 pounds ^2 >', Referring to opposition from some Horse Feed, per loo pounds $2 00 and $2 ew Yorkers, Gov. Allen said New 7.',lb sacks Rran and Shorts, white cotton bags ' ngland had "responded in a way to 1 lb Rest Red Salmon, per can 2*' I lake every American proud" of her Loose Garden Seed Roans, per quart V?? I rendth of vision and genuine unsel Sweet Pntatnna ... . 1 4 shness." I 2ttt> Peerless Pla'n Klour .S1.2S "The middle west will Tie satisfied I -IStl? Peerless Plain Flour $2.1(1 I > take the project upon whatever I 2lll> Oeeoneechee Self Rising1 Flour $1.30 I rms congress requires," ho said, "if I islh Ooconeeehee Self Rising Flour $2.i?0 I lose who fight this project insist thai io lrt states shall meet the cost of | J. 0. GAULT ie navigation feature, then these IS I ? MM will Ki?diyw>rt that c?.?." I Phone 372 ... - N. Pinckney Slreet 'f The peasant women of Korea wear hite entirely. They wash their ______________________ owns annually?have sort of a picie and do it up all at once?by way Kv,',y ynrd of wooh'n cIo,h oonta,ns Th<> stcclhend salmon and the ram? celebrating the Korean New Year, nbout a mile of yarn. bow trout are identical.