The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, June 14, 1922, Image 4
RIALN
TODAY
Famous Players-Lasky Coi
presents o
"GET RICH QUICK
WALLINGFORD"
A Cosmopolitan Productii
He breezed into town lik
circu.; parade, a.-d found
folks just ripe for picking!
Come and watch him "k
the coin from Hicksvil
With the wildest, crooked'
funniest schemes that e
made an audience roll
laughter.
I?ir?-? I. <1 h\ I'rank Hor/age
Scenario h> 1 uther I
I-mm ^onie of the Wallinglord st?
and tl?e ?la\ hi t urge M. Col
A DDK I >
CLYDE COOK
?IN?
"THE SAILOR"
Sunshine Comedy
TOMORROW
GARETH HUGHEIS
ALSO
"1 CAN'T EXPLAIN
ASKING
at 1
Why notWe are
within those limits in
course he conline?l. Ai
ic<juest, we shall duel in
(let the most out of o
we want you to do. At
for you to do.
"Large Enough to Serve t
citi:
N A T ION.
MILLIN
MISS DORRIS WS1
AND WE HAVE
| HON TO SELL f
I !Y REDUCED PF
I A HAT AT CLO!
I OUR MILLINER\
I WEEK. EVERY I
I EARLY.
I WILBURN C
unMnHBnBBHi
[ Thurs
I With every
of J. arid F
With pvprv
Palm Oft
Jergen's \
l With every
^Oc large'
AI.Wj
i Wilbm
(DELAYS ARE DANGEROUS! |
Friday, June 23rd, will positively
be the last day for paying
City Taxes and Licenses,
| without penalty. In order to
save extra expense and trouble
it will be best to pay now.
W. D. ARTHUR,
r,>" City ^Clerk and Treas.
i:s-14-ir>
[ SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS
FOR SALE?One buggy left for repairs;
been in shop nine months
Will sell Saturday, June 17th, in
front of shop. LI. S. Crawford. Itpd
>n
FOR SALE--One of the "Clifford!
p a lots" on Main street. Will accept
the bank stock for same. 1'. K. Switzcr.
1405-lltpd
KOK SALE?Onu itundred shares
le! (100) Carolina Remedies stock, par
est, value per share of ten dollars ($10<
veri i-ssued in the name of Hughes
. i Jenkins. Bids received up to Mon,n
day, June I'd, 1922. The Bank of
Union, Agents. 1404-51
r?s
t,.,.d Ice Cream Supper
tries """""T.....
There will he an see cream supper
and fiddlers' conventon at (lault
chool house Saturday night, the 17th.
, Everybody is invited. Come and en
joy a good time. Part of proceeds to
go to school.
Frank Morgan.
T. R. Kelley,
L. 11. Robinson,
ltpd. Committee.
Theiv were 359,839 fewer meat animals
slaughtered in the United States
J? under Federal inspection during April
' this year than last, according to tin
United States Department of Agriculture.
To this shortage sheep am
Inmhs contributed 301,511, hogs 57,'
l 533. cattle 577, and calves 218.
Favors
rhis BANK
here to render you any favor
which our operations must of
id even if we cannot grant your
e as courteously as we can.
ur Services! That's exactly what
id it's a mighty good thing indeed
Uiy?Strong Enough to Protect All"
AL E>ANK^
ERY SALE
II LEAVE US MONDAY I
GIVEN HER INSTRUC- I
U.L HATS AT GREAT- I
UCES. IF YOU WANT I
5E OUT PRICES, VISIT I
r DEPARTMENT THIS I
HAT INCLUDED-COME I
IRY GOODS GO. |
iday and
%
$1.00 cash purchase we wi
Coats Cotton Thread for .
$5.00 cash purchase we wi
ve, Cashmere Bouquet, J(
rio!et Glycerine Soap for . .
$10.00 cash purchase we
rurkish Towels for
4YS SOMETHING GO
n Dry Go
Notice of Sale <
By virtue of authority contained :n
a certain Title Retention Contrnc. or
Chattel Mortgage, executed by F. E.
Few er to C. Cretore Company, on thi 1
Is; dey of June, A. D., 1920, and duly i
receded in the Office of the ?'lcil of '
'ho Court for tho County if l.n on, i
State of South Carolina, on the 9th 1
day of July, 1920, in Mortgage B ? ?!.
K-IB, page C24; I will r.ell to the
highest bidder at public auction, for
cash, before the Court Ho.i.'.j doei* at
Union, South Carolina on the 3rd ! ;y
or ?uly, A. I). 1922, at ton oV- k
A M., the following personal property
covered by the said mortgage alio v.*
mentioned, to wit:
Jno. K. Hand)".!!,
Assignee-Moriy: e;o .
Union, S. C., June 14, 1922.
C : ! -21-28 ^
Tribute of Respect
Whereas the Lord has called one ?f
our dear members, Mrs, Mary Law an.
who departed this life May 17th, l'.?22
i therefore be it resolved:
First, That we, the member; of
Lower Fair Forest W. M. U., do g at
ly miss her and sorrow for h ?r loss.
Second, That we extend to her lo.-ed
ones our deepest sympathy.
Third. That we record these re :ol i
tions in our minute book and a crp>
be sent the family and to The Baptist
Courier and Union Times for publication.
Mrs. C-. M. Bailey,
Miss Emma Sparks,
Miss Mason Blankenship.
Lee Re-elected
Cleveland, O., June 14.?The reelection
of W. G. Lee as president of
the Brotherhood of Railway Train '
men at the convention of that organization
in Toronto, Ont., recently, is
" taken to mean indorsement of his
conservative policies of the last three
' years. Mr. IA-e was re-elected 011 the
first ballot over Val Kitzpatrick and
A. F. Whitney, vice-presidents.
In 1920 it was Mr. I^ee who broke
the unauthorized strike of switchmen,
most of whom were members of
his organization. Shortly afterwird
he counselled the acceptance of a
moderate wage increase which was
lower than the brotherhood had demanded.
Last fall, almost sing'o
handed, Mr. Lee opposed the movement
to strike against the reduction
in pay awarded the roads last July.
Mr. Lee has taken prominent part
in all joint wage movements of the
railway brothei hoods for twenty
years, including the one culminating
in the Adamson law in 1910.
He joined the brotherhood in 1889,
served local committees in the West
and then on a special committee of
the Union Pacific, became vice-presiI
dent in 1904 and was first elected
president in 1909.
Coeburn Mayor Shot
Bristol, Va.-Tenn., June 13.?J. M.
Quillen, mayor of Coeburn, Va., was
shot and seriously wounded today
about noon by John King, a farmer.
Reports from Coeburn tonight said
that the mayor's condition is regardI
ed as critical. Three bullets took effect
in his back and one in an arm.
Witnesses say that the shooting ocI
curred on Main street while the mayor
was sitting on a bench talking
I with a friend. King is said to have
approached him and demanded to be
; told why his son was sent to the re,
form school by the mayor. Before
Quillen could reply, it was said, King
drew a pistol and began firing. King
was placed under arrest by John I jits
and held until Sheriff Miller was call
i cd. several persons saw the shooting.
King's 15 year old son and two
other hoys were arrested several days
j ago on a charge of having broken
into the Coeburn Grocery store. King
:de lined to make a statement.
Dr. Irene Morse, who has been decI
orated by the French government as
professor in the University for war
' services, was the first woman professor
in the University of Wyoming.
A plan is under consideration to
amalgamate all the shoe workers' organizations
in America into one big
union which shall be independent of
the American Federation of Labor.
A tusk of good African ivory sells
for as much as $.'{50.
I
fpilloi/ 1
A. ? 1UCKJ
II sell 12 spools
50c
11 sell 10 cakes
ergen's Cocoa,
50c
will sell three
50c
OD AT
ods Co.
'I
O. C. Ham Speaks to I
Advertising Clubs of World
Milwaukee, June 14.?Co-ordinaLion
of manufacturers and dealers in
advertising was recommended at the
Convention of Associated Advertising
Clubs of the World here today by
0. C. Ham, advertising manager for
the National Lead Company. "The
manufacturer knows his product as
110 one else can," said Mr. Harn; "he
should be able to present its good
points in the njost convincing manner.
The dealer on the other hand
has the local qontact and the prestige.
lie can repeat the manufacturer's
message with a local emphasis
which is very telling."
Mr. Harn declared that in the majority
of cases money often spent in
expensive literature "would be much
more effectively used in buying more
newspaper and magazine space and
in co-ordinating the work of the distributor
with the newspaper and
magazine advertising." He conceded
that in the case of the concern which
has a rather complicated or unfamiliar
product the "need for intensive
education probably justifies intensive
and extensive foljow-up."
"There is only one thing in advertising
practice," said Mr. Harn,
"as bad as neglected to co-ordinate
I Vtik iia%*i/\iio ?/l?m?d 5o!nn? I
| uic vui iuud auu inonip wimi*
one is using and that is to leave entirely
unused some form of advertising
or sales cfTffort which would
render what We are doing more effective.
'There was some excuse in the
early days for the advertiser to he
ignorant as to whether he was buying
the advertising force which his
plans called for and which he aimed
to buy. Since the advent of the
Audit Bureau of Circulations a few
years ago, there has been no such
excuse, at least in so far as the buying
of newspaper and other periodical
space is concerned. And here I
wish to pay a tribute to those publishers
of newspapers, magazines
farm papers, business papers and
other periodicals who at the request
of advertisers set aside their individual
ideas and preferences on many
points and Joined with the advertisers
and agents to solve an intolerable
and 1 idiculous situation. Advertisers
and agents owe it to th^se publishers
to select these publications as against
those who refuse to co-operate. You
owe it to yourselves, first, as you
would owe it to yourselves t buy a
metal tested by an independent laboratory
as against one which covered
by the manufacturer's own test. But
you owe it, more acutely, because you
yourselves asked the favor and you
cannot in honor prefer those who do .
not comply with your own request."
Affect of Women's Modes
On Auditorium Acoustics
Chicago, June 14.?Women's modes
have a direct effect on auditorium
acoustics, according to Prof. F. R.
Watson of the department of physics
of the University of Illinois. 'Speakers
and singers can be heard more
easily when their audience is composed
chiefly of women than when it
is preponderated masculine," he said.
"This is because women, as experiments
have shown, absorb more sound
than men, owing to the clothing
worn."
Professor Watson, who analized the
acoustic properties of -the Municipal
Pier here, and whose recommendations
for improvements were adopted
by the city authorities, has devised
an instrument that simplifies accoustic
analyses. It is an arc-light reflector,
which sends its hissing together
with a beam of light to inaccessible
ceiling surfaces to determine
the presence and pahts of any echoes.
As the sounds and the light take the
same path, the light indicates the
point in the c&iling surface where
the sound strikes, and the angle of
sound reflection is then mathematically
computed. A standard organ
pipe is blown and the time taken for
the sound to die out is measured with
a stop watch.
"The usual trouble in an auditorium,"
said Prof. Watson, 'results from
the fact that the wa'ls do not absorb
sound to any great extent, and
consequently the word uttered by the
speaker takes 'a long time to die out.
In the mean time other words are
spoken that become confused with
the sound of the first words. In
some cases curved walls produce
echoes and concentrate the sound in
unexpected ways. Sound absorbing
materials are the usual corrective;
cushions in the seats are quite efficient,
but in some cases hair felt
should be placed on the walls. The
amount of felt needed is readily calculated
from the acoustic properties
of the room. *
"In a small room there is almost
never any difficulty, but in large
rooms the troubles increase, so that
it' is necessary to add sound absorbing
materials in addition to the 11
natural furnishings. The closer the *
walls are to each other, the more 8
numerous are the reflections of sound ^
per second, and the more rapid is the n
absorption of sound."
"Round travels from a speaker at 81
the rate of about a fifth of a mile a y
second. It is reflected from the walls 8
of a room and very rapidly fills the P
entire volume. Because its action is c<
a mystery to many laymen, though a
the theory has been carefully worked
out by scientists, wrong ideas ^ave ei
grown up about acoustics. h
"For example, as much as seven fi
miles of wire has been strung in an m
auditorium although wires as a prac- k
tical corrective for acoustic difffflcul- O
ties are useless. ?
*
?? ?????????
The We
wa
II Oreful attentic
II personal charm that
J | / * To Negl
|| We have engs
JI Specialist, for the v
|| Union each day, to
|| on the care of the si
This is an E:
|| Step into the st
JJ stand, Miss Hawk's
Miss Hawk '
Storm's Drug i
What
"Hello, Bill, what
along as slick as g
"I'm using Havo
and U pays. Coul
tried it, but it* s
repairs, and fewer
Any user of Havo
for a month (you
Havoline sign) ar
can equal Havolin
THE U1
DISTRIBUTORS
HAVC
n
Vnti-Christian Movement I
In the Far East
? <" mL "
??i..wjr, vjiima, .nine \e..? ine reiig- |
ous world of the Far Fast is stirred ]
y an anti-Christian movement whicn |
tarted early i nMay among the stu- j
ents of Peking University, and is j
ow rapidly spreading among the stu- <
ents of private and government (
chools throughout the country. These \
oung people term Christianity a j
uperstition and harmful to Ihe peo- (
le, taking away reverence for an- j
estors and freedom of thought and (
ction.
The new movement has begun an i
nergetie propaganda, which in turn c
as brought Christian leaders to the \
ront, many of whom look upon the I
lovement with grave misgivings, not v
nowing what will be the outcome, v
thers think it is simply the result of J
desire to organize something, and a
MISS HAWK
own Toilet Goo
1 Give You a Free Massaj
in Your Own Home
By Appointment
)n to your skin will insure the
every woman craves.
ect Your Skin Is to Forfeit Its
iged Miss Hawk, the well-km
/eek of June 26, to call on a n
give free massage and individu
tin.
iceptional Opportunity for One#
ore, write or phone us. We'll d
massage and advice are free.
Will Also he Glad to Talk to An
Club in Union Free of Charge
Store 7
iranGl
Oil Do You Use?
: oil do you feed to that tractor?she !
rease".
line, Jim. Been using it many a ye;
dn't see much difference when I
time that tells the story?less cost
stops for adjustments."
line will tell you the same story. Ti
can get it from the dealer displaying
id you'll know that there is no oil
e.
WON HARDWARE C
>lIne
WWW?WP???
that the beat means of defeating it is
to ignore it.
Conditions provoking the organization
of such a movement are said by
Christian leaders to be the rapid progress
of Christianity in China, taken
together with much talk and advertising
of the recent World's Christian
Student Conference and other confer?nces
of a like nature held in this
tountry. The students are declared to
)e unconscious tools in the hands of
eaders who are seeking favorable
tonditions for the breaking up of or- 1
ranized society and the working of
Communistic ideas.
The leaders of this anti-Christian 1
novement are Dr. Tsai Yanpei, Chan- 1
tellor of the Peking National Uni- 1
rersity; Wang Chaoming, secretary to
Dr. Sun Yat-sen, and Chen Tu-siu, <
vho is a Socialist. Sub-organizations
vifl no doubt spring up. A Free Love
Society has already been formed ;
nnong tb? students of Amoy Uni- I
% ,
i i sag??? ?
II
ds Specialist
;e
attractiveness and
Beauty
own Toilet Goods
umber of ladies in
al help and advice
Week Only
o the rest. Under- i r>i
y Woman's
V
II
frg Storm
\
7
the ;
that . - i
OMPANY
UNION, S. C.
i
; oil
veraity.
Considering the possibility of an
unti-foreign movement resulting, the
local consular bodies have taken up
the matter with the commissioner of
foreign affairs who, however, pronniinnna
UimoAlf Ll* - ?* ~
......wo uuuDcii unauic w? (jive any
promise of protection in case of persecution.
Already in a few places minor
outbreaks of a hostile nature against
mission work have been reported, in
spite of the claim by leaders of the
movement that the purpose is to be nothing
more than passive resistance
Prices of dairy and poultry products
suffered the least in the rapid deflation
of prices of farm products which
began in 1920 and continued through
1921, according to the United States
Department of Agriculture.
?? $*>
Between thte ages of five and. six
years is the usual time ,for the betrothal
of a .girl in AfghanistapM