The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, June 12, 1922, Image 2

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THE UNION TIMES Cubliikrd Daily Except Sunday By l ME UNION IIMES COMPANY Lewis M. Itiej Editor Itegi ler I at the Postotlicc in Union, S. C . a- set olid class matter, I ones Bui.ding Main Street Bell Telephone No. 1 SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Year $4 0') Six Months 2.0 i Three Months 1^00 ADVERTISEMENTS One Square. lirst insertion (1.00 Every subsequent insertion 00 Obituary fiotices, Church and l.odge notices ami notices of public meeting-, entertainments anil Cnrds of Thanks will b>rhnrgetl for at the i ate of one cent a word, cash accompany iliK the order. Count the words ami you will know what the cost will be. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The A tsoeluted Press i< exclusively entitled to the ii-e for republication of news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and alio the local news published tlier- in. MONDAY, JUNK 12, 1922. It has been planned to food .r>00 at the barbecue to he tfiven at the can uiiijr factory Wednesday. The stack-! holder;, the plant* rs t.f tomatoes and each correspondent of The Times is expected to attend. These will need r.t? ticket of admission nor any invitation ul her than that published. The entire 250 of them is expected. Heentire 250 of them is expected. Besides this lion an invitation has been extended to 2f?0 additional individuals, and it is hoped that every one of them will come. Five hundred?we wish it could have been 5.000?are expected. VV'e do not want a single one to fail to come. Theie vi.i be no charge whatever for admission, nor for cold drinks. All will be furnished free by the canning company. The entertainment will be held in the new building! just completed on North Pinckney street. Some of our very best friends have shown a little bit of impatience with lis in the matter of our having so much to say about the cannery. They appear to think that enough has been - aid and that they are entitled to a rest. We have felt a bit doubtful concerning our right to keep on, and on, and on, stressing the matter. But we have the conviction that an expuiment, a new thing, a radical plan to change the entire scheme of things requires considerable persistence. The plans we are outlining are radical, revolutionary. But we have been so obsessed with the idea that there was urgent need of a change that we felt justified in hammering right on until the end sought was attained. Our plan, though modest in the beginning, is wide in scope, provided we can put the concern upon a sound basis. There is no nuson wnatever for our going, on in tin* old wasteful way, allowing food products to go to waste in our garden.s and fields and then turning right around and buying tomatoes, heans, peas, cabbage and other vegetables in cans brought to us from the gardens and fields of people li\ing a thousand miles away. The process is wasteful, extremely wasteful. Then* is no sense in producing wholesome fruits and vegetables in our gardens three months in the year and then going without fruits and vegetables the remainder of the year. There is no sense in our sending out pll our surplus money each year to bring in the \ery things th.at we should produce and conserve ourselves. We should send out our surplus product and thus bring in money. More money will cir i tl.de in our county. We will then be upon the up-grade, not the down grade financially. There is another (hint? our critics overlook. We need the cooperation to succeed. Publicity enables us to got the cooperation. Three or four hundred earnest men and women behind an enterprise can command success. Success this year, under the great handicaps we have, will bring abundant success another year, and when we purpose canning additional things. The field is almost limitless, that we know, and there is no impossible thing standing in our way of success. "A strong pull, a long pull and a pull altogether" will win. The more we look into the situation the more convinced are we that the only two real dangers are: Insufficient capital and insufficient product. All other causes leading to possible failure are minor Serious Disorders In Coal Mines Terre Haute, Ind., June 10. -Serious disorders broke out in several of the coal mines near here early today, according to reports here. Three hundred men, some armed, are reported forming to march on the Riley Mine, while ?; party of 100 are reported to have attacked the Kern company mine and injured onp of the employes there. The cave man buried his dead with the solemn religious rites as any in vogue today. Hot water heating is the most eflicient in house warming. Our cat says these June days art long and juicy. ? A Our cat says whining gets no bon? s., et Our cat says the new fire engine is ar a dandy. * Our cat says light diet goes ex- a* sc ceedingly well with warm days. * * R Our cat says kindness warms thi cold heart. rs itOur cat says right thinking hears er fruit in right living. w Our cat saws he hopes there will In ni not be a one of the fiOO expected guests at the barbecue Wednesday aj missing. ta * pi Our cat says community building is 1C performed by cooperation. ? P* ... * Our cat says righteous living carries great reward. rc <l< Our cat says those who glory in al their shame are past mending. si * ? b< Our cat says pay your subscriptions ei to the cannery. . is Our cat says most bad automobile ^ accidents occur on a straight road. pi . p] I "The Best in Drug Store Goods, K1 the Best in Drug Store Service." Motto of the International As- ^ sociation of Rexall Clubs. ? P' ALL KINDS OF CEMETERY WORK g Union Marble & Granite Co. Main St. Union, S. C. j.' ' S( I H. W. EDGAR ' Funeral Director ' ?' And Embalmer n ol Ambulance Service B N'ight Phone III 1?Day Plutfie 129 Nest door to Flynn-Vincrnt Shoe Store e !j j. Government Seeking |? Control of Prickly Pear 'L Sydney, N. S. W., May IS (B.\ ^ Mail).?Millions of acres in Queens- . land and northern New S >uth Wales are infested with prickly pear and the government is continuing its endeavors to control the scourge by use of its natural enemies, such as inserts and bacteria. Scientists engaged in the investigat ions announced that they believed t| that they are on the eve of important discoveries. They have drawn ^ upon practically the entire world foi | "weapons" with which to combat th (J, menace, organisms having been reeeived from South America, Texas, jr Florida, Mexico and other countries. ^ "From the laboratory results it j, seems as if there has been established here a complex of organisms which ^ provided they art together in the field f( as they are doing in the laboratory, y and provided the moths breed sufficiently rapidly, may bring about com- .1( plete control of the prickly pear jr menace ultimately," said Professor p Harvey Johnson, one of the scientists engaged in the work. "As the num- o: her of insects grow it is honed that in .1 ?, ... IJ, a few years' time, appreciable prog- s( ress will have been made in those h, districts in which the organisms will <>j have been liberated." sj Air Fighters in Less Danger |!( Paris, June 9.?There was less dan lc gcr of death, in the late war, to of- tt fu-ers who fought in the air than to tc those who combattcd on the earth, sc French statistics show that 29 per- ,r>, cent of infantry officers were killed fo while only 21 per cent of aviation of rn fleers lost their lives.' to The fatalities among officers in general, as compared to enlisted men pi in all branches was nearly equal, be eo ing 19 percent for the former and af 18 r? percent for the latter. wi The percentage of losses by age av show that the 20-year old soldiers, in both officers and men, suffered the ap most. Here the death list was 29.2 per- fy cent, while men from 4!? to 1>0 years yo old lost in killed between 3 percent efl ai.d 5 percent of their numbers. eli ppeal for Broadening Interest Lob Angeles, June 8.?Until "serv i is made the basis of all business,1 e possibility of government contro 11 hover over private and corporat terprise, Preston S. Arkwright esident of the Georgia Railwa d Power Company, said in an ad ess today before the Internationa invention of Rotary Clubs. Mr. Arkwright appealed for i roadening of the interest of ever isiness man, looking toward th neral end of complete understand g and the resultant fairness ths nst be the rule in all bu iness deal gs." Abuses of business, he declarec ust be corrected by the man er iged in business. Failure to d is, he said, "will result inevitabl correction by compulsi n throug jvernmental restrictions." Discussion the recent history c merican railroads, Mr. Arkwrigh lid, "that they practiced unwarrani I discriminations between peopl id localities and their free powt rnsed is unquestioned." "Public sentiment was arouse jainst them. As an inevitable coi quence they were subjected to go\ omental regulation and contro egulation once begun becomes pr< ressively more restrictive. Thei ites were fixed, their earnings lin ed, their services specified, their oj ating conditions prescribed, th ages of their employees fixed. "Duties and responsibilities Wei riposed upon them and the opportl ity to meet them through entei rises, initiative and business mai *ement taken away. As an inev ible consequence, expansion and in rovement of railroads ceased, sen e deteriorated, operation became e: ?nsive, freight and passenger rate rcame high and the whole counti ith all its industries and all its bus coo 10 nuiici 111 ^ i'uiu want U1 I'ttl rnds ni new territory, by the aboi jnment and taking op of railroac ready built, by inadequate and ii itficient equipment everywhere, an ?cause of rates and charges higl than industry can bear." The speaker declared that a rep tion of the history of the railroac occurring in the public utilities, i le meat packing and coal Industrie iron in the administration of rei roperties. "Security from the possibility ? overnment control is a delusion [r. Ark wright continued. "Ar usiness or industry will be held \ i so affected by public interest i > justify governmental control, ublie sentiment demands it." Mr. Arkwright questioned gover lental interference as a remedis leasure. ''Operation of business I overnment," he said, "does not pr ?nt monopoly; it assures it." What is needed among men inte ?ted in business. Mr. Arkwright coi nued, "is intelligent self interes >lf control, refraining from unfa ivantage, determinatoin to gb ilue as well as take it, realirntic mt one class cannot profit at tl >;tiise of another without eventu i.-.s to both, and that all classes ai dually dependent on the servici " each other." iig Tobacco Company Urges Care With Fir Washington, Jun<? 9.?"Besure xtinguish match, cigar or cigaret . fore throwing away." This wan ig now appears on the cigaret ackages of one of tlie largest Ame an tobacco companies and is the fir xample of its kind in the Unit* tates. Secretnrv of Afi'icnltim> Wollo. : whose department the Forest Se ice administers its 150,000,000 acr f national forests, wrote thv^tobaci .mpany expressing liis gratificatu rer their action. "Th.. fire danger incident to the u: f m itches and tobacco," writes Se Mary Wallace, "is usually given li e consideration by the vast army < mokers. Statistics compiled by tl ational Board of Fire Underwrite how that the annual oss from fir iuse 1 by matches and burning toba j in the United States reached tl npressive total of more than $73,OOf IK) during the five-year period 1915 1 [119, inclusive. To this total must 1 dded a considerable percentage ? le unnecessary fire destruction in tl >rests of our country, where ea< ear fires destroy or damage sufttciei mber to build homes for the entii opulation of a city the size of Wasl igton, New Orleans, Denver or Sf tancisco. "In the vast areas of national fo ;ts under the administration of th epnrtment, man-caused fires are nirce of constant danger. Camper miters, fishermen and woods worke] i all kinds smoke in the forests, ngle lighted match or glowing ci| rette carelessly thrown aside mi >st the government thousands of do rs for fire fighting, to say nothing i >e timber destroyed, the harm dor ? waierflow, and the desolation < enic features. During 1921, ov* 100 fir*?c APPiirro/1 at* V*/* -WW .... .. ./.VU...U wit viir liai/iuili irosts. Of these 80 per cent wei an-caused and 732 have been trace careless smokers. "The government alone can do con iratively Uttle toward ridding on untry of this fire menace which yea ter year impoverishes the nations faith. Public conscience must t vakened to the end that we may hav the United States 105,000,000 sell pointed fire wardens. "It is, therefore, particularly grat! ing to feel that the example set b >ur company will materially aid th 'orta of this department towar iminating smoker's fires." Totem Poles of Alaska t Ketchikan, Alaska, June 9.?Indian ~ totem poles of Alaska are as beautiful and as interesting as the Parthe' non of old Greece, according to Dr. P. e T. Waterman, who is in Alaska study ? ing the totem poles for the Smithy sonian Institute. Along the Alaska coasts the totem poles are disappearing and Dr. Waterman was sent north by the insti8 tute, at the request of the United y States goverhment, to make a study of them and record their history before they are all gone. In the native ^ village of Kassan, near Ketchikan, he found a large group of poles. Dr. Waterman says he has found that the totems were used not only l" for memorial shafts but also were ? used by the early Indians as receptay cles for the bodies of their dead, h The first totem poles were beautifully carved by professional carvers ^ who used flat colors, made from local minerals. Dark red, deep blue k" and black were used in coloring and 'e not the gaudy yellow, bright red and iT blue which were found on the later poles. ^ Each totem has its own name and the naming of the pole was the ocT~ casion among the Indians for a pot'1* lach and the giving of presents. >_ "Moving up Higher" was the name of one pole belonging to the Raven l" tribe and "Bear Kneading" was the *7 name of another, getting its name ^ from the way a bear walks, a movement similar to that of a woman kneading bread. In one village Dr. Waterman found r" a pole on which was carved the figure of Alexander II, who was czar of Russia when Alaska was sold to the *7 United States. Alexander was pictured as wearing a frock coat, c~ epaulets and pocket flaps. This, Dr. Waterman believes, was to show 'Y the contempt of the Indians for a czar who "could not hold." *" Dr. aterman expects to spend anl* other month in southeastern Alaska I? studying totem poles before returning to Washington, D. C. He has del<* voted the past twelve years to Indian research work. > i- In Bankruptcy Is in In the District Court of the United 8. States. For the Western District of South Carolina. SNo. B-382?In Bankruptcy. In the Matter of * L. E. Morrow, Unibr.. S. C., Bankrupt, y iy To the Creditors of the above named . Bankrupt: Take notice that on May 20, 1922, 18 the above named bankrupt filed his if petition in said Cohrt praying that he ' may be decreed by the Court to have a full discharge from all debts pro"~ able against his estate, except such it debts as are expected by law from >y such discharge, and a hearing was e_ thereupon ordered and will be had upon said petition on June 22, 1922, before said Court, at Greenville in said T* District, at II o'clock in the forenoon, n- at which time and place all known ? creditors and other persons in interest .' may appear and show cause, if any ,T they have, why the prayer of said pe- m tition should not be granted. >n D. C. Durham, x Clerk. 'f Dated at Greenville, S. C., May 20, al 1922 5-22-29; 6-5-12 re ? - xi?v ssrt _ FOR QUICK SERVICE 8 PHONE 167 e We call and deliver your to clothing in a dust-proof motor- 1 te cycle. We remove spots and stains from clothing without r' injuring either the fabric or st? the color. Our modern meth- 1 ;d ods make clothes look like new, in the ihortest possible e time. * Give me a trial. 1 certainly ?n will appreciate it as much or j >n more than anyone else. Ho m ao ?. se iwiuco m i cssiii^ t- and Repair Shop < r,f Nicholson B&nk Building ,e Phono 1?7 rs - j c- CHICHESTER S PILLS W jpy TRK WAMtiNH IIBAND. A I.ailU-sl Ask y our l>rac(4>t for /\ met '"cyOx > Ck -^wB taaled IHuo Ribbon, to ?A ^wi Take aa alker. ltuy .f rnr " ?c rl /iiiittu'satefe: 1 . \ V n k nown as Ttest, Safest, Always Ra)Uble ot r SOLD BVMU66ISTS EVERYWHERE lc .... t QRU ISiS-SPRA! NS ^ ; re Alternate applications hot and h '\Jf cold cloths?then apply? VJCKS V APoRua is Ow 17 MUlL Jon U$ed Yearly ,s Advertise in The Times. ^ M A SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS FOR SALE?Ford coupe, in good mechanical and running condition. x-rice reasonaDie. rneoaore Mad dox. 1403-6t le PIANO TUNING?Action, regulat- ;r ing, voicing and repairing. Correct- ^ a' ly done. Phone 307-W. Gr, W. "fe West. 6-12-lGpd d , NOTICE ? Three thousand Harris- I Brockman pumps in use; some of * ir them 12 years old?some in wells tr 225 feet deep; some in springs half ?1 ' mile away. If you love your wife x* don't make her draw the water e while you ride around In a?never mind, come and sec us. Hutchins & Co., Spartanburg, S. C. 1403-2t 1 y WEST SPRINGS WATER?Deliv p . eries made only on Saturday and , , upon standing orders, through th# " winter months. Phone 2320. J. Boyd Lancaster. 1200-Mon.Wed.tf ft I \Vhen_y 3o*: \ at r ?_ r vf^3fti58BOUR **re ^ea^er ^ li<s.g\ v^trEi *s naturally f tegjjl enthusiastic r BSpjCTk^ when he shows r you the 30x3'/2 fT USCO at $10.90. ^ To him USCO has alf ways represented a tire f value that he felt more \ than justified in offering r his customers. r At the $10.90 price he p can hardly be blamed for y putting it to the front as T the value he would most r like to be remembered by? ^ * + :> ^ This much to keep in f mind? r f r United States Tires j > f are Good Tires / P Copyright y f n.a.TuuCo. Fiftv-Oirtt mtfirHKjIjMfcaN. I Faetoriea ANDERSC Where You BUFFALC Can Buy J W. LIPS U. S. Tires: LOCKHAF [ERE'S A TALCUM that's as fluffy and soft as most face powders. Perfumed with a delightful Oriental bouquet. Soothing and gentle to the skin. I'd like to show you Watkins Egyptian Bouquet Talcium Watkins Egyptian Bouquet Talcum iet needs that protect your skin from the sun and find and dust of summer. Ask to see Watkins Face Cream, Wntkins' Cocoanut Oil Shampoo, Watkins' Vanishing Cream. Mail order promptly filled. T. B. Strange, Union, S. C., Telephone 217-W. 1403-2tpd ^OR SALE?Oat straw, onions and fresh Irish potatoes. Phone 207-J. W. N. Beaty: 1403-2tpd dONEY TO LOAN?$100 to $500 on city or country property. Also in terested in discount paper. S. E. Barron. 1386-tf ''OR SALE?One-fourth interest in Union Iron Works. Good chance for oflice man or mechanic. C. L. Hicks. 1401-3tpd 'OR SALE?One new Geiser thresher with sixteen foot straw carrier, complete with breaks and hand feed attachment. The price will please you. Ilutchins & Co., Spartanburg, S. 14U3-2t rOR RENT?One 3-room cottage lo cated at West Springs. Fine for summer residence. Price $10.00 per month. W. J. Betsiil. 1402-2tpd )NLY A FEW of the famous White Sewing Machines left from the Bur- ris Furniture Co. Bankrupt Sale. Regular price $75, brand new, now going for $30. Also a bunch of Edisons and other records for less than 1 half price. Above goods can be seen at Clark Clothing Co. 1401-Ct < '"OR SALE?Soy and velvet beans. Now is the time to plant. J. W. Gilbert. ATTENTION, FARMERS?We have a boll weevil trap that is simple and inexpensive; fastens on plow stock, straddles the row of cotton, knocks him off, and catches him. It is now on exhibit at our store. Hutchins ? & Co., 171 N. Church St., Spartanburg, S. C., Phone b99. 1403-2t VE CAN NICKEL PLATE your automobile radiators, head lights, head light reflectors, spot lights and bumpers. Never junk a piece or metal because it looks bad, we can replate it. Columbia Electro Plating Works, 1110 Taylor St., Columbia, S. C. 1382-30t tS BARNES' SHOW CASE you pass by, just pause a little while; look "Tootsey Wootsey" in the eye and see the babies smile. 1392-tf JEN AND WOMEN to handle city trade and retail the original and genuine Watkins products, reme dies, extracts, spices, toilet requisites, household specialties, automobile accessories etc. Over 150 guar- ? an teed products. Our values are unequalled.and Watkins quality is in a class by itself. Write today for free sample and full details of our offer and what it means to you. The J. R. Watkins Co., Dept. 77, . New York, N. Y. fl-6-12-19-26pd i. i ? i rou look at a / jr. J '/a USCO / !| $10.90 / ]U USCO has always sold / ' '] I as a quality tire of known / . i I staiulards and perform' / lyl cnce. / WAI Today at $10.90 it / Id fixes the worth. of / 1 your tire dollar at / * ' I'd a new maximum / ^ ^ 14 by reason of Us / \4 ownautin* / M$ IA g u i s h e d / |j y usco I / *109? 1 cVo Wai^Jax charged | ^ Union, S. C 1 DRUG STORE ... - Buffalo, S. C SCOMB ...... ,lniM>?vill? S. r IT MILLS STORE - - ^ - Lockhart, S. C HOME CANNING MADE EASY! ; 9 Hp H H M: * H Jl, ^^sshbbe^^^b ^Syjn^ Food conservation is a mighty factor in the progress of civilization. With the above machine the pwbUn i% solved. You can can from your garden all you will need? of fruits, berries and vegetables for the entire year.' tome in and let us demonstrate the value off the wonderful little machine. No soldering, no standing over a hotfire. Simple, scientific, sane. LEWIS M. RICE . At The Union Times Office. 1 M I m k i v |^l'A Winter Cold and Absence g y 1 of Green Stuff in Winter | , ?|R^ BotKKV^ J Feed Leaves Live Stock it I MSB J Run Down Condition in 1 the Spring. | Renew the health, strength and vitality of your horsey aisles, cattle, liogs and poultry. Get maximum results in health, growth and pro- ., duct ion. Spring is the time for refcewal in alt nature. You can beat caro for your worn out and siek live stock by using Remedies They restore health, bring back vigor and strength, and increase production. Thero is % specific Caro-Vet treatment prepared by tbe ablest veterinarians tor each live stock disease and disorder. A Few Special CS5V*? Remedies Caro-Vet Conditio a Powder r g .ajjfl ' jjL \ horses, mules and cattje, price 76c. # Caro-Vet Swine Condition Pow- f ,W^ I der, price 25c. i J Caro-Vet Egg-Produ?er, prlea % Snfl^ni Caro-Vet Tonic for horses, sonloa 8 and cattle, price 75c. IBold by general stores and drug stores, under a positive guanustaa. I of satisfactory results, or money refunded. Your dealer carries a com plete line of Caro-Vet Remedies. S We are sending FREE to each farmer an authoritative book* of* 48 pages "Farmers' Veterinary Chtide", which gives th* ?y modems- B and tells how to trest live stock diseases. Ask for your copy.f ! CAROLINA REMEDIES 00., Inc.; Mfgrs., ONION, 0. 0 > 1 ^ . . . 0 TTENTION, TRACTOR OWNERS FOR RENT?'Folly dumMie* *?use ?Hitch a Geyser thresher to your with all modem <W|)ai>omend?nd tractor and it will pay for itself in convenience* at - ndmdnMbioMprice. a few weeks. We have one left. Apply to T)w Wand? dtoof^ef^Mrs. Hutchins & Co., 171 N. Church St., S. Krass, S. Mountain street. Spartanburg, S. C. 1403-2t i 1402-2t i. f