The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, August 10, 1922, Image 3
VIRG
__ 1
NOTIJ. Virginia ?
tobacco is tho name HQ
given to tho tobacco H
grown in Virginia, net
the Carolines and
Georgia.
LiGogTT & Mykm Tobacco Co.
IKelton Circuit Metho
So
Revival at Wesley Chapel Auj
8 p. m. Preaching by Rev. J. B. C
led by Mr. Lewis Sanders, of Kel
Revival at Foster's Chapel A
m. and 8 p. m. Tent with seatinj
Preaching by Rev. S. T. Creech, o
Lewis Sanders.
Revival at Lockhart Scptemhc
by Rev. S. T. Creech. Singing lei
J
& ??I IBM?il !! I
Put the
~.,.l lilt'
Our Caption fails neithei
express a precept of thrift
For saving requires pui
hitting kind of dsterminatu
thusiasm. This is the qual
antees you success in savini
"Large Enough to Serve Any?
C_IT12
N ATIONA
Ladybugs congregate after the first
frost in the Rocky Mountains, entering
rocky crevasses where they become
dormant. The bugs are then
gathered and put into boxes until
early spring, when they are sold to
orchardists to prey upon aphis and
other plant life.
fr:\ ^
a a mu i 11 -71"
inia to|
*11
E1V.1 ^1IV, V. I 11 '
P Afe
iedm
^Virginia o
dist Episcopal Church,
iuth
?ust 7-12. Services at 11 a. m. and
)hick, of Union, S. C. Singing to be
ton.
L.ugust 13-27. Services at 10:30 a.
r capacity of 1.200 on the grounds,
f Spartanburg. Singing led by Mr.
>r 3-17. Iiarge tent with prer.ehing
il by Mr. II. F. Gault, of I,ockhart.
. F. GOLIGHTLY, P. C. \
v*nBjntBS?mxxM*aMESH3zrTTrmmani
Punch
o saviujg I
? - ? *" mm' r
in dignity or plainness to
in honest words.
rich; it demands the him'.>n?genuine
stamina and en- if
ity of character which guarcr.
i
-Strong Enough to Protect All."
:?Nv5
E? A.N R.
. |
One of the largest men alive recently
left Hungary for his fatherland,
Siberia, to assist his parents in
farm work. He is .11 years of age,
nine feet three inches tall and weight
458 pounds. He consumes more than
four times as much food as the average
person.
REG. U. S
THE I
LONG
3IANUAKL
(?
I^CCO
It
Primitive though it < j
waiythis method cftrans- i r
porting Virginia tobacco,
served the early planters 1
well, \ <
tural sweetness % j \
asfp
acco. It'sadif- i
snjoy. ;
raretie) Virginia c
cco is the best. l
out
i I
garette | j,
' ' s
A Fat Wallet Needed oji lc
Moscow's Gay White Way *
I c
Moscow, Aug. 8.?After one of two! y
visits to Moscow's ? ewly opened and|
gny summer cafes, foreigners visit-1 j
ing Russia usually retire to thair c
rooms to a diet of crackers and ^
choese nnd frantically telegraph home 1
for moro money. The Russian capi- ,,
tal has become probably the most 1 fl
expensive city in Europe from the ^
standpoint of living costs to the for- ^
eigner. Unblushingly the restaurant ^
proprietors furnish third rate meals y
and demand prices which an American
summer resort hotel in the height t
of the season would not even con- r
aider. American war profiteers were ^
blushing, shrinking violets in com- (j
parison with Moscow's get-rich-quick j
trillionaires. v
Two young Americans went to one
of these restaurants and ordered a
beef steak, an omelette, a bottle of ?
near beer and two small cups of <
coffee. The check was the ruble f
equivalent of $18. Four others or- e
dered small portions of ice cream 11
decorated with a strawberry and a ?hin
slice from a pear. Their check
was $6. But it cost them another
dollar apiece in entrance fees just
to get into the place.
The restaurant proprietors say;
that high taxes and the high cost of
operation make these charges necessary,
but their customers suspect
they are trying to make back in one |
summer all the money they sank in
remodelling and equipping their
cafes.
Russians by the thousands pay
these prices without complaint, for
they also are speculators. A billion
rubles a day, or about $250, is considered
a poor turnover for these
speculators.
Foreigners, however, are in a diffar/in
f nAoifinn T7N % ?* w-P
awawaav |iVO>ViUUi A' liOl/ UJL Clll I I
must pay the high hotel prices, for I
they cannot find accommodations else- I
where, and whfcrn they buy rubles I
they have to give up real money for I
them, while the Russians seem to I
pick them off trees. jl
DAI
. FAT. OFF.
2ALANCI
< MILEAl
I SVII AAK
9 vib vvn
MEW JERSEY)
rhe Khalifat
M^vai^ent in India'
EjfitoJ^ty, Aug> 8.?The Khalifat
npiVposant ir\ It\dV? which, several
nonth^ ago, brought about a revirtpa
pf the Sevreji treaty, has had a
arse part In t&P movement toward1
ndlpn home rute. Hindus, seeking I
dohammpdan support for the Swade hi
agitation for self-government,
i we seen fit to Bupport the Khalifat
noveroent in return.
The Khalifat movement, unlike
5wades hi, is wholly Mohammedan in
is aims. Originating in a protest
.gainst tho peace terms which the
Vllies elfered to Turkey at the close
>f the \vav, it seeks the restoration
if the Khalif's temiuu-al power and
he freeing of Mohammedans from
?hristian rnle. The claim regarding
he Khalifat calls for the leaving of
lie Turkish empire as it was at the
mtbrcuk ..i the W?r, except that, al:
hough ike allegations of Turkish
nisruic arc not admitted, the nonTurkish
nationalities may, if they so
lesire, be grafted autonomous govirnment
w.thin the empire.
The minimum demand was stated
>y a deputation to the Viceroy in
li>20 as follows:
"Arabia, as delimited by Moslem
mthorities, and the Holy Places of
slam must remain under the control
>f the Khalif, full guarantees being
aken consistently with the dignity
>f a sovereign state, for genuine*
*rau seit-government, should the
\rabs desire it. We advisely use the
vord 'genuine1 because the present
irrangemcnt is thoroughly distrustid
by the overwhelming majority of
ntelligent Moslem opinion.
"Islam has ever associated tem)oral
power with the Kalifat. We
herefore consider that to make the
lultnn a mere puppet would add iniult
to injury and would only be unlerstood
by Indian Moslems as an af'ront
given to them by a combination
>f Christian powers."
In India the Khalifat movement
ins identified itself with the All-Inlian
Moslem league, which has been
n existence since 1906. Dui'ing reent
years the League and the Inlian
National Congress have, to a
arge extent, joined forces. The aesion
of the League is now a pa'.c!
hadow of the session of the Con-1
rress, and the resolutions coincide
vith those of the Congress, except
hat there is greater emphasis on the
(halifat question.
Although the Mohammedan populaion
of India is only about seventy
nillion, or less than one-fourth of
he total population, the Mahammelans
exert a much greater political
nfiuence than their number would
warrant.
The Canton Christian College of
>outh China is in.,.^l?upr American
lomestic animals an4 numerous
dants and fruit and nut trees in an
flfort to improve the agricultural sitlation
in that section.
Fruit Jars
.T<?11 \r (rluuoac on/1 oil /?nnv.;?/v
iMuoivD unu an ctiiuini};
needs.
We have complete stock. Spe
cial prices on Mason Fruit Jars:
Pints, dozen 75c
Quarts, dozen 85c
Half Gallons, dozen $1.10
Can you beat it? Better get
yours now. They're going fast.
All Canning Needs.
The Union Hardware Co.
Union, S. C.
Mail Orders Quickly Filled
D
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BB9 am
IIPANY
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! ..TO
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! GROW
|
1 PLEASE NOTICE THi
| CONTRACT WHICH SPE
| ARE TO BRING FED
| NOT GREEN TOMATOES
| MATOES MUST BE SOU
| UP TO YOUR CONTRA*
| LIVE UP TO OURS. A
| SQUARE DEAL WEPR(
| A SQUARE DEAL
i
LEWIS M. RICE,
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A
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P.ipe tomatoes; i
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no. PI,ease live |
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il we ask is a |
)pose giving you i
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Products Co. !
, President.
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