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THli UNION TIMES; "ublitkcd Daily Except Sunday By THE UNION TIMES COMPANY Lewi* M. Rice Editor Registered at the PostofHre in Union, S. C . second dsss mutter, Timet Building Main Street Bell Telephone No. 1 SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Year $ 00 Six Months 2.00 Three Months 1.00 ADVERTISEMENTS One Square, first insertion $1.00 Every subsequent Insertion 60 Obituary notices, Chu*ch and Lodge notices and notices of public meetings, tntei tHininentn and Cards of Thanks will be charged for at the rnte of one cent a word, onsh accompanying the order. Count the words and you will know what the cost will be. MtMtlt.K OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated |'re? li pxrlusl vely entitled to the u>e for republication of iipwj dispiti-hi'i credited to it or not otherwise <m dited in this paper, and also the local news published therein. HI HAY, JULY 7, 1922. A shipments of machinery nr' is urgently necessary that :ipti< ns tt? the capital stock of i annery be paid. Let every one that enn do so pay up in full. If you eannot pay Jill, pay at least a g<?o 1 part. The habit of thrift is good, very Rood, provided that it. does not degenerate into a spirit of miserliness. It is not always easy to go just far enough without going further. We are creatures of habit and the habil of thrift is not different from othei habits. It grips with hooks of steel, ami frequently is centered to the point that it drifts into sordid, unsavory scrimping and scrambling for money. Thrift, true thrift, spends, but spends wisely. I The brewery that "made Milwaukee famous" is now turning out chocolate candy by the ton. Many other breweries in the country have turned to the manufacture of something other . than beer. Those who cried aloud over the destruction of "a great industry," should now have the good manners to own that they were mis taken. Anyway, n question settled on the money issue solely is never set tied correctly. If there had heen nothing for the idle breweries to do but stand and rot it would have been right to outlaw them. With the coal strike still on and a railway shopmen's strike well undei way, the country faces a coal famine. The public pays while mine operator and miner squabble. The question of who is right we are unable to determine, but this much is true: The public, the goat in every case, is getting to the point of manifesting more than passive resistance in the face of the law deal. Why should the public shiv r and the wheels of industry stop while owner or operator and miner settle their disputes? There is no sense in the situation, and, unless all signs fail, the government is rapidly coming to realize ihat measures of stern nature will have to be employed to prtitect the public and the indus tries of the country. ") frM/m Our cat says guard your appetite and your appetite will guard you. Our cat says folly sows the seeds 'ii luturr surruw, ? Our cat says it is better to "Stop, Look and Listen" before than after. Our cat says it will be a fine time row to plant for the fall garden. ? Our cat says many who purpose to do right fail to execute the promise. Our cat says those who think advice is to be given, not taken, are dangerous advisers. Seven trainmen were recently asphyxiated in a tunnel near Bourg, Friinre by the coal gas fumes from a. -? nit- i-il^nies. Railroad crossings have killed an averago of 18,000 persons annually for the past three years, according to the general safety a^ont of the New York Central Lines. Subscribe to The Union Daily Times j M Cowboys as They Really Are J Princeton, N. J., July 6.?When the movie funs get the truth about the cowboy from this stately seat of 1 learning they may be surprised. The I word does not come from this seat of learning exactly but rather from a i product of it, Philip Ashton Rollins, < trustee of Princeton, and some time cowboy when the West was raw. ' Football was not rough enough for < Rollins in the old days of the flying wedge so he tucked his diploma under one arm and a gun under the other, ( took Horace Greeley's tip and went 1 out to see the country. One of the first things Rollins discovered when he got out West was that he had little or no use for the gun and even less for the diploma. The fact that Rollins had made u very important touchdown against Yale at one time did not cause any Western mayors to meet him with a band. This cowboy historian says the real cowboy was not much like the one seen in the movies these days. The nu| killers and bad men of the West in the days now gone were not cowhoys at all, hut just "tough guys." The pistol had one use to which the average cowboy would, from time to time, enthusiastically devote it, and that was the production of noise. When put to use the weapon was fired either directly upward into the air or slantingly downward at the ground for the West had no blank cartridges. On such occasions the pistol's effects would be supplemented by Indian-like screeches and coyotelike howls. As to the bad man, he was more often a boaster, this historian says. Tazewell Woody, famous as Col. Roosevelt's guide in the West, was standing in a saloon with left elbow on the bar, right hand hanging by his side, and eyes luckily pointed at the mirrow behind the bar. He caught in the mirror the reflection of a head poke momentarily into the suj loon's doorway, and belonging to a man who had publicly stated his purpose of killing Woody at sight. This man, having apparently thought the coast to be clear and that the saloon contained a sufficient audience, turned his horse, rode through the doorway, and bold ly said, "Has any gent here seen a feller Woody? I'm huntin' for him." At that instant | the man realizer, for the first time, that Woody was in the room and he realized also that, though he himself was facing Woody's hack, the mirror negatived this advantage. He saw wuti ngnt nana hanging idly down. The bad man backed out through the doorway and on his own initiative rode out of the state. Unique Yacht Race Yalaha, Fla., July 6.?A yacht race, unique In that every craft was Identical ?nd that most of the skippers never had been aboard them before, wa? an event for today on Lake Harris under the auspices of the Yalaha Yach' club, which recently received from Sir j Thomas Lipton a perpetual cup to be I competed for annually. Lake Harris is in the central part I <>f Florida and it was impossible for visiting skippers to bring their own craft, unless by rail. The Yalacha club thereupon hit upon the idea of issuing an invitation to the yachtsmen of Florida to come here, man the club craft and try their hand at fresh water sailing. Members of the club own 15 or 20 speedy sixteen foot racing machines, cat-rigged and identical in all measurements, including sail area, and the entire fleet was at the disposal of the visiting skippers, who were assigned vessels by lot. Each boat carries a , crew of two men and the visitors who did not bring a sailing mate were permitted to select a "crew" from amonj the Yalaha yachtsmen. The outcome of the races was expected to depend solely upon the sailing ability of the skippers because no craft had an advantage over another. CJreat rivalry resulted between the salt and fresh mater men nd the controversy over the sailing practice of the two was the outstanding feature before the start. The contest for the Lipton trophy will be held next winter. ! County Unit Plan Is Recommended Boston, July 6.? By the country unit plan the rural schools would be able to compete with the best city schools, Agnes Samuelson, superintendent of Page County Schools, Clarinda, Ohio, said in an address Wednesday night before the National Educational Association, now hold- ! ing its GOth annual meeting here. "The county unit plan means the abolishing of the small district system and the inauguration of business efficiency standards in all that per-1 I tains to the rural school, the | strengthening of supervision, the unifying of admin'stration, the facilitating of consolidation, and the elevation of the county s,i ^ intendency to a position of hi^h profi sional standing," said Miss Samu Isn. "Of pivotal importance in this program of reconstruction is the I county superintendent of schools, t who should become the executive official appointed by the county board of education for qualifications, not for political reasons. His salary, tenure, and the recognition due him should be commensurate with the duties, possibilities and responsibilities of the office." i The rainbow trout has been sue- i cessfully Introduced into the streams \ qf Louisiana. 1 \merica the Place For Leadership Boston, July 6.?If opportunities For training leaders were a sufficient guarantee of the safety of the state, Americans would be living in a political millenium, Dr. James E. Russell, dean of Teachers' College, Columbia University, said in an address tonight before the National Educational association. "Nowhere else in the world is pro- j vision made for so many aspiring can | didates for leadership or for so many! different kinds of leaders," Dr. Rus-1 sell said. "Coincident with the extra ordinary increase in the past few years of those seeking higher education is increasing distrust of the integrity and unselfishness of those he ,t equipped to lead. In fact, expertnens | in technical lines is no longer syno.iy-! mous with leadership in professional j service. If to the broader culture and' more scientific knowledge now d -I manded by those schools is added the J spirit of patriotic service, the profes- i sional schools of America will have done their full duty. "From our standpoint we see in tho| German system of education and its] logical outcome in the war, a horribV j example of what not to do, but wo must be impressed by the fact thai Germany has demonstrated that a vast population can be molded by edu cation into the likeness of an Ideal, even if that ideal, when realized, turns out to be, not a God, but a golden calf. "What German teachers have done American teachers can do. We can set up an ideal characteristically American, and we tan realize >t if the public will give us the necessary support. Not blind obedience but voluntary cooperation shall be our watchword. We shall seek contentment through intelligent exercise of our individual talents, and find happiness in the possession of our own attainments. I grant that our problem is infinitely more difficult than the one submitted to German teachers. It is far easier to quench ambitions than to rouse them and direct them aright. Never before has a nation been founded on the proposition that all men are created equal, and nowhere in history has intelligent self-direction been set vi> an a imuiuuai iaeai oi education. "The need for an intelligent electorate goes far beyond the choice of political leaders. My view is that tinright spirit comes from enlightened public opinion that voluntarily chooses to follow expert guidance in every phase of life. Confidence in the integrity and unselfishness of leader.? is the first essential in the democratic program of social reform. "The maintenance of civil order and social security logically preceds the vise of leaders. Population is shifting from the country to the city. Elbow room is growing less. Every year makes it harder for some to maintafri a decent standard of living. The old world with its woes stands begging at our doors. Discontent is spreading like a fatal disease among great groups of our citizens. This tendency, unless checked, can have only one result?our experiment in denfocratic government will surely fail, and with it the hopes of a world worn out with travail of new-born ideals of freedom. The outcome rests with the teachers of America. Are we ready to do our ~1 O ?> r?iirtre : Motion Picture School In Los Angeles Ix)S Angeles, Calif., July 7.?The Famous Players-Lasky Corporation has established a motion picture school for its aetoors and actresses here and has stipulated that any "puj)i!" who fails to maintain seventylive percent standing in classes, attendance and general deportment is liable to dismissal from the company. Every member of the Paramount Company, which is owned by the corporation, is eligible for admission to the school. "Unlike the student body of most schools," reads a pamphlet outlining the work, "the students in this company are persons who already have established reputations in their life work of acting for the screen. Therefore, tl^e purpose of the school is not to instruct in the fundamentals of scree* art, except as such instruction may correct minor faults, but to broaden the working knowledge of the members of the company to the end that they may increase their versatility and have a wider outlook on their art." Two pages of the pamphlet are devoted to rules and regulations for members. Among the regulations nie: "Avoid alcoholic stimulants and late hours. "Although the stock in trade of the members is their ability to portray emotions, the place for such portrayal is on the screen and not in the studio. Temperament is a valuable asset, but temperament out of control is a nuisance to yourself and everyhodv about vnu. "Be careful of the choice of your associates outside the studio. "Members are expected to avoid places, people, circumstances and conduct which might, in any way b? ing themselves and the motion picture profession into disrepute. Any member failing strictly to observe this rule is liable to instant dismissal from the company." Americans from many states paid tribute recently to Pocahontas, the Indian maiden who saved from death, famine and utter confusion the first struggling colony of white men of this nation, when they attended the un veiling ceremonies on the historic ( ?round of Jamestown Island, Virginia. | Wha.t-a.-ya say for j STROLLERS ; fyeyve got theiPEP} ' f 1CM [ \ fifteen A Movie Star in Every Package t Nol4 I Artists liet Toor fay j _____ i London, July 5.?An income of $1,- 1 f.OO in four years from the painting of pictures has been confessed by C. R. W. Nevinson, an artist known both in England and the United States. Seeking an explanation, a representative of the London Morning Post heard some hard things about art Mr. Nevinson, both in this country and America. Across the water the stud;* of art 1 is most discouraging, worse than in England, Mr. Nevinson declared. I "Was there ever a country with so I many hundred thousand million art I schools?I am never any ' good at American noughts?and so few artists," he asked. "No wonder the American public only buys the giltedged dead masters, and second-hand junk r from European auction rooms. America is admittedly only interested in the dead and the antique, so she might as. Well close her art schools." The latest method of sinking con- J crete piles was recently demonstrated j in Omaha, when four piles were sunk, j the first, 40 feet long, in 90 seconds. . One pile, weighing more than six ^ tons, and 45 feet in length, was sunk ^ to bedrock at a depth of 84 feet. Each f pile carried a water pipe set in the reinforced concrete. Water is forced ( at a high pressure through this pipe, j digging a hole as the pipe sinks by its own weight. ' -i .* V x onv\ lalotaps . A WUBl MAItK \ for the liver1 ' Beware of imitation*. Demand ' the genuine in 10c and 35c package* bearing above trade mark. 1 I Destructive Fire I_ /\ir? 11 O. . a in v/ ^unneu aireei Dublin, July G (By the Associated Press).?Twenty buildings in O'Connell street, a Dublin main thorough fare, were destroyed by tiie ufter the surrender of the insurgent Republicans who, it is said turned the buildings into fortresses in their resistance to the free state troops. Pour snipers were shot dead during the night and it is believed the damage will reach to several hundred thousand pounds. DOES UmT WORK ANO HOUSEWORK TOO Surprised to Find Her sett r eeling bo Well Taunton, Mass. ? "I used to have pains in my back bjuX lag* so badly, with other liiiii'iiimiij?iiiiiiiiItroubleB that women sometimes have, that lie * me to stay in bed a Ufa week in every month. m It dnin't do me much INp a, good,soone day after S!' 11 llil shout the same trouH bios I had, I thought P IMIV would try it arao. I (bid that I can work in the laundry all through the time and do my housework, too. Last month I was so surprised at myself to be up and around and feeling so good while before I used to feel completely lifeless. I have told some of the giriH wno worK witn me and have such troubles to try Lydia E. PiiibhamV.Vegetable Compound, and I toll them how it has helped me. You can use piy testimonial for the good of others. ? Mrs. Blanche Silvia, 69GrantSt, Taunton, Mass. i> It's the same stery?ohe friend telHng another of the value of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Union Route 2 Miss Maggie Cody spent Tuesday rith Miss Julia Young. Mrs. J. C. Young is spending a few lays with her niece, Mrs. J. F. Wilard. Mrs. J. C. Gregory and little son pent Sunday with Mrs. J. F. Willard. W. P. Edwards eof Carapton spent Saturday night with his sister, Mm. < L F. Willard. H. W. EDGAR 1 Funeral Director And Embalmer Ambulance Service Night Phone 311?Day Phone 129 < Next door to Flynn-Vincent Shoe Store Democrats, Enroll! Enroll! Every Democratic voter In the coun y win nave 10 go to his or her nearest voting precinct and enroll between low and July 24. After July 24 you >annot enroll. If you fail to enroll, rou cannot v\>te in the August prinary. This applies to men and wonen voters. All must enroll. 1420-10tpd ALL KINDS OF CEMETERY WORK Union Marble & Granite Co. Main St. Union, S. C. . LIE AD COLDS I | Melt in spoon; inhale vapors; I apply freely up nostrils. VLCKS Ooat 17 Million Jan Uwed Yam* CONFEDERATE COLLEGE No. 62 Broad Street Charleston, S. C. V Hoarding and Day School for Girls Jegins its session September 26, 1922. Historic Institution situated n a healthy location. Advantages if citv life, with larce rnllf??r<? vur<) or outdoor sports. A well planned ourse of studies in a homelike atnosphere. A business course open .0 Seniors and elective courses to (uniors and Seniors. A Domestic Science course open to seniors, giving practical and theoetic knowledge of cooking. A Sewing Course for Seniors and Juniors. A well equipped Library Primary Department for day ptijpils. For catalogue and further informaion apply to the college. 1 U ! Palm Beach Suits Cleaned We can clean and press your Palm Beach suit very quickly these days. We have the equipment and the know how. Clive me a trial. Will approbate it as much or more than my one else. Phone 169 and we will call promptly and return your suit looking like new. Haines Pressing & Repair Shop Nicholson Bank Bldg. Phone 169 and motor cycle will call. Pimples Keep Young Men Down! They Make Women, Too, a Puzzle! How S. S. S. Stops Skin Eruptions Positively. Pi in pi os and skin eruptions have a price,?you pay tor every pustule, black-head and pimple on your face. Pimples produce prejudice and prevent prosperity. Your heart may be gold, )<L? S. S. S. Will Kid You j j of the Crushing PUn- /A* jslljjl . ple-Cuhuulty. but who wants to kiss eruptions! Pimply men don't look like the owners of anything. Pimply women, too. are puzzles, with no prospect* asra tie power. Young men and women, here's ths positive way out Physics and purgatives will fell. "What yon need i Is a scientific blood-cleanser, a. 8. & In one of the most powerful destroyers of blood Impurities. You can prove this u u diiuii niiio. a, o? 0. nas D6t)ii passed on by a Jury of millions of people just like yourself. It is considered i one of the most powerful vegetable blood-purifiers and flesh-builders In existence. That's why you hear of so many underweight people putting on lost flesh In a hurry, why you hear of so many rheumatloe being freed from this , scourge, with 8. S. 8. Start today with B. 8. S. and see your face clear and your akin get ruddier, your flesh firmer. It wTll give you a boost in your career. 8. 8. a. is sold at all drug stores. In two sizes. The larger slits is the more economical, THE UNIVEI Don't Wait Another 1 BUY II an Pay as Y WE'LL BE EXPLAII JULIAN W. The Man who Always has an; JONESV1U For ?Iectric Wiring a You will do well to consult good quality of materials an< my estimates before placing W. T. SI SPECIAL WEE (FROM UNI ?Vi SOUTHERN RAI TO Asheville, N. C $4.25 Arden, N. C , .... 3.80 Brevard, N. C 4.25 Black Mountain, N. C 4.95 Charleston, S. C 8.45 Fletchers, N. C. .* 3.65 Flat Rock, N. C 3.18 Hot Springs, N. C 5.90 Hendersonville, N. C 3.30 Round trip tickets as above are c week until September 23rd, 1922, wit! original starting point on or before i of aale.. No stop-overs allowed. For further information call on Ticket Agent or address: R. C. COTNER, . District Passenger Agent, Spartanburg, S. C. F=HV7T ^nter Cow Y 1 of Green Stu Bwffl8i%X|V I Feed Leaves ! Run Down Renew the health, strength and vit hogs and poultry. Oet maaimum duction. Spring ie the time for re care for your worn out and aiek liv 1 They restore health* bring back production. There is a specific Ci ablest veterinarians tor each live A Few Special i For Spri Caro-Vet Cond \ horses, auiles and 1 Caro-Vet Bwin I der, price 25c. i Caro-Vet Egg J 60c. 9 Caro-Vet Tonit p and cattle, priee S Bold by general stores and dru 9 of satisfactory results, or money re plete line of Oaee-Vet tteettttbes. I We are seadiag FREE te eac S 48 pages "Farmers' Veterinary G 8 and tells how to treat live atoek d I CAROLINA REMEDIES CO , The brewery that made Milwaukee famous is now turning out chocolates uy Lne tun ana neiping uie candy industry to maintain its position of fifth place in the industries benefited by prohibition. SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS REMEMBER the Dollar Day Sale is on and will close Saturday night, the 8th, at The Wonder. 1423-2t KOR SALE?One. (1) ton Republic truck, in good condition. Truck c?fn be seen at plant of Southern Cotton Oil Company, Union, S. C. 14C8-8t ^Ott SALE?Lookout Mountain and Peach Blow See Irish Potatoes. J.< L. Calvert, Joneavilte, 3. C. 1416-lf MONEY TO LOAN on city or country property in large amounts oa easy terms. S. E. Barron. 1446-tf < [DANE MILL OUTFIT for Mia. MIR, furnace, paa a?d wagon. Goad as new. Whole outfit for $60. Address "Cane Mitt" eare Th* U*4a? Times. m ? *SAL CAR Day for a Ford Car! " NOW d ou Use it GLAD TO V HOW LIPSCOMB y Part for a Ford or Fordson -E, S. C. ? ???? . ind Electric FithirAt ! me. Expert workmanship, d at reasonable prices. Cet your order. NCLAIR K-END FARES ON, S. C.) ^ ia LWAY SYSTEM TO Lake Toxaway, N. C $5.10 I>ake Junaluska, N. C 6.40 Skyland, N. C 1.86 Saluda, N. C 2.80 Tuxedo, N. C 3.00 Tryon, N. C 2.40 Tybee, Ga 9.T0 Walhalla, S. C 4.T* Waynesville, N. C 6.50 >11 sale Saturday and Sunday of eacfc i final limit returning so as to reach nid-ulght of Tuesday, following data nearest Southern Railway System L. R. PARTLOW, Union. S. C. and Abaenoe .W iff in Winter I yJBWftJB Live Stock in 1 JJQ^Pvl$ffl Condition in V liAuJmmn1 :ality of your horses, mules, cattle, I results in health, growth and pro* 1 u?wal in all nature. You earn nest I ettock by using Remedies I vigor and strength, and increase I ?ro-Vet treatment prepared by the I stock disease and disorder. I ^ Rottsdiei 1 ing Use: ? ition Powder for g i cattle, price 78?. # e Condition Pow- f Wm m| -Producer, price V for horses, in alos B g stores, under a positive guarantee V funded. Tour dealer carries a cobs* h farmer an authoritative book of S iuide", wUek gives the symptoms iaeases. Ask for your copy. C Inc., Mfgrs., UNION, 8. 0. | MONET TO LEND on TMl MTtftt* tn ebenta. J. K. Hambltn. M.-W WANTED?Several saw miH outftte to contract to out an* saw timber. (/\ For further particulara write or eae ' -" S. G. Leftan, link*, S. C. 7-1-6-7*4 AT THE WONDER?Half price aal* on all spring and summer dresses, coata, capes and suite. Safe aada Saturday night, the 8th. The Wonder. 1423-2t WANTED--Experienced Industrial Insurance Agents, by eld well-established Southern company, writing all forms of life insurance. You make your own check. Only produce need apply. References required. Address A. B. C., Union Timet Office, Union, 3. C. t4t9-2tp6 FOR SALE?Unknown, Clay, Icon, J&rahkana and mixed peas, 0-tOOtan, Biloxi and Mammoth Yellow Beya beans and other farm seeds. ^ Write me for anything: wanted ts the Reed line. J. L. Calveft, Jones* ville, S. C. im-tf tSEk l?M