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? H E UNION TIMES DtUy Except Sunday By HE UNION TIMES COMPANY <awi? M Uicc Kdilu Kettiat?re<i at the 1 oatntlice in Union, S C ii second class matter. Times Uuildin* Mais Street Bell T. 1- phone No. 1 SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Year $4 0( Sim, Months 2.0' Th re9 M nths I 0C ADVERTISEMENTS One Square, fir t insertion Jl.Ot Every subsequent Insertion 5< Obituary notices, t'hureh and Lodg< notices and notices of pub'ic meeting*. en tertainm i.X. and Cards of Thanks will b. chr-ged for at the rate of one cent a word cash act on.pnnying the order Count thwords and you will know what the co will be. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Preaj I* exclusively en titled t?> the use for republication of newj dispatches cred'ted to it or not otherwise treililed in this viper, and n'so the loca p.-v. < published therein THURSDAY. AUGUST 17, 1922. We have secured the services o Mr. Roy Vautrlian to canvass for sub tenpucn rvntwais. lie is a goon iris tier. Receive him kindly und pay bin your renewal. The county campaign meeting re opens at Snntuc Friday (tomorrow morning. This may be raid to be tin virtual beginning, there having heei but one meeting several weeks ng? held in the courthouse here, and whirl was arranged for the purpose of hav ir.g all the candidates pay their as sessment and get matters shaped uj for the race. You will see the v.-heduh of appointments elsewhere in l'h< Times. Do not forget to plant a nice ful garden. Be sure and get in some rutn baga turnips and some Koon cabbage Loth will stand the winter, and hot! ninke mighty good eating along witl a small chunk f meat. In going heri and there o\er the county we havi reached the conclusion that Unioi enlint.tr will linvr? !in iitnn/l'inl fr>nt i ply this winter. It is the way t< lick the boll weevil to a frazzle I-ood end feed stuffs, plenty of them will be a wall of defense that even th< boll weevil cannot overcome. The coal strike seems to be at tin 1 etjinningr cf the end. The rail strikt ?nobody knows just where it stands But the public pays the price, and wil keep on paying the price throughou' the fall and winter months. We dc rot believe any aggregation of men whether workers or operators, shoulc be allowed to fight each other by lam basting the public. A combine is no' usrn when 'neiffTed.? ' * " J ( Its wo -Bu tflvinf, * ' *v - ... A a good thing. It means the advantage of a relatively small group at the expense of the general public. If President Harding goes before a joint session of congress today, it will be up to congress to enact laws looking lo the abolition of the strike as a means of settling disputes. The appeal of the future must be to law. not outlawry. A combine that embraces workingmen of all sorts, colors and kinds is as much an engine of oppression as is the combine entered ir.to by capital. Long ago capital hm been forced to bend to law in its operations. So also, will organized labor have to come to the reign of law i arbitrary and self-made unpen t! ism. .9f 2V **V V"' **$r . - v. > . ".W >V v?\"iiSw ' * Jr *' * v J. > *sss&t Our cat says some of the people who preach sermons against cruelty to ani mals are unkind to children. + Our cat says .here are many r formers abroad in the land. * * * Our eat soys nobody now doubts tk arrival of the boll weevil. 0*0 Our eat says go out to hear the candidates who are to begin campaigning the county. * * * Out* noi u *\ \f s r\ 1 /itar irw< ?? ?.?? !? ' nol j ?. wi?? vmv ocijo pivmu^ <i limn: icjjvo c. man's religion. Our cat says it might be a good thing for the country if we all went on a strike. * * Our cat says our gold reserve has been increasing while our pocketbooks have been shrinking. i Our cat says the times are seme ^ what out of joint. Our cat sayi it often happens that the tr..1 wags the head. ^ * ? 1 1 Our cat says cooperation is the se- ' let of suceess in building a city. > * ? ( i . < , Our eat says energy wasted is ( v.>i>e than useless. ! , I -ar cut says it will soon he time for i Johnnie to get back into school. ' Our cat says it is a good sign when j . 'i ?tion is at work. , ? ? i Our cat says the worker builds; the j t shirkir destroys. 5 * Our cat says quick fortunes rqst ep??n unsteady foundations. Our cat says those who want noth' miu ofti u wish for more. A SWELL TIME i You have read of many swell afr .....i ..r ......... .......n ... ?n < iiiiu VI Iiuiuk> ovvvii Uiini'd, awfii ;!i!ngs an.I swell doings?of large tivngs, growing things, and rising things, of swell heads, big heads and ' rising heads, but of all the best re1 numbered of glowing or rising things, is the lising you suffered at the end of , hat old to.'ih ?It sure was one Swell t Time. The Dentist?The Joy Killer?however, might have stopped the Swell Affair had he known. > DR. H. K. SMITH, Dentist Union - - South Carolina The Pope Decides And His Priests Obey, Home, Aug. 15.?"'Priests and sol-1 ' '.tiers receive orders and must obey i them,'' were the words of the Pope in r, deciding the question who should become papal internuncio at the Hague. "V;?u will be the right man in the L right place." Monsignor Orsenigo ' ir \.*ed, and the matter was closed. \ The monsignor had hesitated for conscientious reasons, not considering himself fitted to deal with the responsibilities of the position. But the pontiff thought otherwise, and thus ? disposed of a problem which for some time hud caused speculation in Vatican circles. , Monsignor Orsenigo's life, for the past 25 years has been devoted to " works of charity. To be torn from the paths he had chosen for himself ' 1 made him hold back; he was perplexed r by the possible difficulties of a diplo) matic post which has acquired special importance in view of the Russian i ' conference recently held at the Hague. j 1 Usually the representatives, abroad j . of the Holy See are chosen from , i among the .young priests Who have . >1-*$r,1^^actt'rn'"'-r-7^0b'e 5i"Jj nuCnucu AtMuBiny of iv J ""** T?*ss clesiastics in Rome, which has sfb'aptly been called nursery of Cardi- ^ r.nls." They are^enerally first sent | out as secretaries, and are later pro- j moted until they reach the rang of Papal Nuncio. The Pope had met Mon igr.or Orsenigo in Milan, where he had collaborated with him in a church paper called "St. Charles Borromeo." Ph., TI noticed then his great cultrre; his fluent knowledge of most ^ modern languages, and the historical; ? insight shown in some books which Consignor Orsenigo had published. These qualities the Pope remembered ^ when th question arose of who lu i . I t< .< rd to the Hague, and the decision1 .as quickly made. J ^ CVJe Buying Railroad Equipment in Pittsburg v ! Pittsburgh, Aug. 17.?The largest I p single, consignment of electric appa-|n rates for railroad electrification ever n made in this country started from Pittsburgh recently when the West. I'ighouse Electric International com- s pany despatched the "International s i i in- r>|n.-iuti, i>n us way to int'1 " const. i f The special, made up of 33 cars, car- n lied ""li ipmcnl for the electrification s if the siate raihoads of Chile. It was: f the second such shipment, the first! .. h.vinjr been made several weeks airo.! A third will folow shortly. The con tract with Chile involves $7,000,000 and in . lodes 30 locomotives. The con- j itrnmcnt now on its way to South j America is valued at $730,000. From Pittsburgh the "special" goes j to South Philadelphia, where the ma-1 I I 1* I 1 1 tfill )ui lrtn/lllfl /.? ? ?? e4/>?l I vv >?! II| I?v i M Wll (I 1111*1 l*/I j I transit to Valparaiso by way of the I Panama Canal. The waters of the Rio Colorado will j be utilized in the generation of the! power to be furnished to the Chilean ! State railways, the initial electrification of which will include 144* miles of track, 110 miles from Valparaiso t> Santiago and 2K miles from Las Vegas to Los Andres. Poland's Imports Exceed Her Emports Warsaw, Aug. 16.?Polish imports today consist largely of cotton and metal manufactures, while her exports are oil, timber and textiles. In -.pile of the high rate of exchange, ihp 5sfi?tr*e hi?l<L c/w./vnd '*1 ooo in (he list of countries supplying Polish imports. Poland is still importing larger amounts than she exports. The foregoing is from "The Statistical Magazine of Poland." Rev. Henry J. Cauthen, aged 48, pastor of Trinity Methodist church in j Charleston, died Thursday night. He I is survived by his wife and five children. IWaiting American Student* Welcomed in Denmark! I Copenhagen, Aug. IB.?After u -reek's visit to Denmark, a party 01 18 traveling American students lias eft here for Norway and Sweden. The students are visiting the Scan-* iinavian countries under the auspices , >f the International Students Tours *nd in cooperation with the American Scandinavian Foundation. James Creese, secretary of the latter organization, and Professor Benson, of Columbia University, are conducting the Lour. After a short visit to Germany and France, the students will join the rest of the 850 American studen's: who arrived in Europe on board tiie Saxonia, and return with them to the states. During their stay in Copenhagen the students, mostly undergraduates from various American universities, have been entertained by the Amer-j ican minister, the Copenhagen muniei pality, the Copenhagen university and the Danish Students union. They have visitei museums and other places and institutions of interest under the gudancc of first-class Danish experts. Cuba Predominated by Foreign Interests Havana, Cuba, Aug. 15.?Economic readjustment of governmental services resulting from the inauguration July 1 of the 1922-1923 budget of approximately $35,000,000 and causing the dismissal of thousands of federal employes, struck a heavy blow at the only remaining stronghold left to Cuban citizens?the government service. According to Jorge Tloa, in the Diai-io Dc La Marina, the only thing Cuban in Cuba is the state, and he claims statistical backing for the following .statements: Railways and street car system are under Anglo-American control public lighting, American; city property, GO per cent owned or pledged to foreign interests as security for loans; rural property, 66 per cent American; sugar interests, 56 per cent American controlled and 44 per cent other foreign control; tobacco, 70 per cent Anglo-American; mining, Anglo-American; b: .iing 75 per cent foreign, shipping, foreign. With Spaniards doing almost 100 per cent of the reta'l business of the island and foreign interests dominating importing and wholesaling opei'ations, Cubans have been forced into minor positions Vn every line except law, medicine and official, posts to which Cuban citizens alone arc eligic ble. |h< Briand Mistaken V For Chicken Thief/ ;] Rouen, France, Aug. 16 (By thfc Associated Press).?Police headnu**1*3 ;ers here, following an epidemfne *r petty chicken coop thefts, sent out instructions for all tha ?rc 8kout for suspicious chara^^s I < He > demand their papers tt ?**^Juntee! young ambitious gendarn r appointed, hailed a pfedestrian long the high road today who was ot so armed. ] The gendarme escorted^his prisoner > the nearest police station, two liles west of here, for further examtation. "You made a wonderful capture,,H .J le prisoner told the youthful officer. You are certain to receive a lot of redit for this arrest." Upon arriving at the station house, ic prisoner was allowed to telephone -> the public prosecutor here, who rdered his immediate release. He roved to be one Aris'dde Briand, even times premier of France, who ended the French delegation to the Washington conference last Novem or. Ho had forgotten his identity apers and was going fishing a few dies from his summer home in a earby viilage. "How are you getting on in chool?" asked Willie's uncle. "Fine," aid the boy. "Get any prizes?" Two." "What did you get them or?" "One was for good memory nd the other?" Willie halted and oratched his head a moment?"I orget what I got the other one for." -Hoston Transcript. <r ?j ^ jj ?'1-4 l'-ju ^ f fcii'tr :' i iii ^ i i Llli==bdlX_J What a little? paint will uo 1 pt. of No. It Cvrlu'.nteecl White )*':.a:h i vvill give your Y itchen c 'hinet two confi. It costs but a trifle- to keep your kitchen furnittm k oi.ing fr.icli tirhitik o ? i > ?vnn*i (1IKI wir;cilit You can do it easily. Come in and let us tell you how. Headquarters for Painting Needs. Union Hardware Co. Wholesale and Petail UNION, S. C. I mm*e=zxm0m*sera= , 11 sm Palm Beach Suit* ' Cleaned j w? can clean And prese yoijr i Palm Beach euit very quickly these - day*. We have the ! equipment and the know how. ^ Give mc a trial. Will appro- ^ d|ite it an much or more than any one else. 4| Phone 167 and we will call promptly and return your nuit 'j looking like new. { V* ' 1 Hames Pressing & ) Repair Slop -j 1^: hoi son Bank Bldg. ^ Phono 169 and motor cycle J will call. J ?, 1 INSURE THE LIVES OF 1 i YOIJR SICK FOLKS i -JUJ- ~ ? ^ By h iving your doctor's ?j prescriptions filled *j at the " PALMETTO DRUG CO. j The Home of Pure Drugs and J Druggists Sundries. J 9 i SPEdl M. A OVERTISEM F. NT. ] WE HAVE several nice building lot. } /An C, :ge avenue for sale. C!o^?. *5 easy terms. Citizens Real < Estate & Loan. Co. 1453-41 $2.00 WOX of Dr. Turner's Black \ Ton We Remedy cured my dog in 5 or 'Ldnys. (Signed) J. A. Crosby < D^^wurner'e Black Tongue Remedy sol^kt Storm's Drug Store. ltpd <>< MO.^' TO LOAN on cltv n." rmmtm in large amounts on easy $ tejy^ 8e8. E. Barron. 140G-tt < ft mniutceJUST RECEIVED a fresh *1 k*? of Huylei's candy. Pal- *< foort vmle f Co J oaled jrto th * bad pen d?Large,.commodious ga Jj g youp; mi ted on Gadberry street } |n globing with lights and sewerage % whpi BL shem. Has lathe machine with h?ut ^Lervi niotor. Surrounded by ? most ^thloxcent on one side. Gas bitte? expv pump, also stand for J ' *k^WPitai ^J^'Wrns and rental j ^ Jd27-Sa&Tu-tf *4 heinf ? ? brougft- thp young woS^ftfty idly aiM oL the or Nicholson Union Jjtatir A am Co f or on Main V red to >ay ^cj^hese banks. Finder <? ket to her Times cffice or Will ^ ltpd [I i|i HAVE any city or farm filing ky for sale list it with U3 V I hat r^n^Real Estate & Loan Co. I i?>n >md n " 145?- !t A tn a fragrnoj Bunco and erW position-to fill orders ^ for fljkkpk nnd pies. Phone order day before he*nted. Union Tea Itoom. -i% ltpd ? I AM .SELLING Watkins' Chewing Gum^Bom my father's "store on wheel!?' which..is open for business anywhere you see it on the roads of Union county. Master Scott Strang*. 1 tpd ,lj t -r?? Advertise In The Times: get resuits ML< ' ALL VARIETIES of Turnip Seed can be had at the Palmetto Drufr Co. ^ BUILDINiS LOTS and small farms for sale, near the home of Mr. A. I.. Stutti, Citizens Real Estate & Loan r Co. 1458-4t WANT??You to come to our stor< i Saturday, August 19th, for Special; Saturday Sale. Very low prices on fiouv, .meftl, bi'an and shorts, lard |j and several other articles of mer chancuse. come and get our price - j; whetlifj&r you Uuy or not. II arris Wootfrfard Co. FOR REJNT?5-room residence in city ^ 'of Urkfon, all conveniences, garaj.-"> and garden, good location. Seo| Henry Smith, Jonesville, Route 2, 01 C. D. Sparks, Union. 9-17-19pd FOR RENT?Rooms for light house keeping. All modern conveniences. Price "reasonable. Call at No. 101 ~ South Street, Union, S. C. 1141 -tf FOR THE CONVENIENCE of my _ customers I will be at the PeopleY Garag# dn Saturdays with a com-;| pleLo lines of Watkins Products. \ T. B. Strange, Union, S. C., Tele-j phone 217-W. ltpd BANK STOCK WANTED ? Narw lowest price on what you have to offer. Box 306, Union, S. C. 1458-tf 1 HE IJNlON NATIONAL FARM LOAN . ASSOCIATION Is now ?c I ceptir.g applications from farmer? | for fiirm loans at C per cent inter- I est. This is a wonderful opportun- ~ lty for the farmers of Union county. Farmers interested can apply through R. L. Kelly, secretarytreasurer of the local association. 1442-tf' YOU MAY REST ASSURED that you have li e best drugs, if you get them 1 at the Palmetto Drug Co. I A ! NE\ ARR F S i. ? ? SPECIALS :* 40-inch Sheeting . . I /*.?? ; curtain Scrim . . . C 36-inch Bleach . . . [ 32-inch Dress Gingl t 36-inch Gray Voile . f Lakeside Chambray >f Apron Gingham . . t* Chambray > 20c Dress Gingham ? 27-inch Red Diamoi [ 36-inch Pajama Che C 9-4 Bleached or Unl [ 32-inch Peggy Cloth t Ladies' Silk Hose fot f Ladies' Cotton Hose [ JUST RECEIVED i t AND LOOK TH1 \ SPEC [ Young Men's Suits ? from > Men's Conservative ? Boys' Two Pants Sui > Boys' Single Pants S > Men's Good Overalls :* Boys' Good Overalls > A lot of Men's New1 I BIG REDUCTI { : Mr. From has heei * # 3? Money9 A^A i^4 i^4 j^4 i>\AAAJ y T^r V^f State Campaign Meetings Abbeville, Thursday, August 17. McCormick, Friday, August 18. Anderson, Saturday, August 19. Walhalla, Monday, August 21. Pickens, Tuesday, August 22. Greenville, Wednesday, August 23. GalTney, Thursday, August 24. Sparfnnhiirc. Friday. A'.igust 25. County Campaign Meetings Folowing are the regular campaigi leetings, as fixed by the committee: Friday, August 18, morning, a antuc. At night, Union Mills. Saturday, August jir, a o ciock p. in lonarch. Monday, August 21, morning, Car sle; night, Excelsior K. Mills. Tuesday, August 22, morning, Blue lock; night, Ottaray Mills. Wednesday, August 23, Cross Keys Thursday, August 24, momin< ^est Springs; and Buffalo at 'clo(k p. m. Friday, August 25, morning, Joner il!e; and Wallace Mills, night. Saturday, August 26, morning, Ke on; and Lockhart at night. Monday, August 28, 8 o'clock p. n Inion, at monument. An ad. in Tl.. Tim.. rfeta results. "HOT FOOT" Did You Ever Have It? I have had what I call "hot foot" for about 6 yours. I couldn't walk behind by plow. It was terrible. Storm's I,otion relieved it at once. (Signed) Dock flood, Kelton Route 1. Storm's Lotion is sold at STORM'S DRUG STORE Price $1.00 ? .. AI L KINDS OF CEMETERY WORK y Union Marble & Granite Co. Main St. Union, S. -C. - V GO( IIVING Di ?AT? "pon > FOR FRHMY AND :S I m iam . . . . - # iid Diaper Clo'Ji (18-yard scks for bleached Sheeting (Peppei i s (all colors) \ LINE OF NEW FALL EM OVER. ; 1AL IN MEN'S \ (Sport Models) in new shi ? Suits, from it for uit for (for for Sample Hatsfor ON ON ALL SUHOHE ? to thy noftfaem mar* are coming m. FRO s Worth or Mone I TO J. 0. Gil FOR PR1CI l'ure Apple Vinegar, per gallon .. Kinghan 1 lb Sliced Bacon Vjlb Walter Baker's Cocoa 1 11* Wfnltoi* Dol/nw'a r^/v/iAo 1 Cigarettes, per carton Kerosene, per gallon Post Tonsties and Com Flakes, per 251b sacks Sugar 100 lb sacks Sugar 8 It) buckets Lard .. .. Loose Compound Lard, per pound . 80) buckets Snowdrift Heavy, fresh i alback, per pound . 1 pint Wesson Oil 1 quart Wesson Oil M: gallon Wesson Oil All 20c Cigarettes for All 10c Snuff 3 for All 25c plugs Tobacco, 2 for .... Pineapple, sliced and grated, No. 2 No. 3 Dessert Peaches, per can .. , Loose Vinegar, per gallon Best Pink Salmon, per can .. Plain Flour, per barrel Self Rising Flour, per barrel .. Best Grain or Ground Coffee, per ] 1 lb can Franco-American Coffee . 1 lb White House Coffee Maxwell House Coffee, per pound . Best Cream Cheese, per pound .. . Meal, per bushel Arm & Hammer Soda, 6 for .... 6 boxes Searchlight Matches for .. Chicken Feed, per 100 pounds .. . H^rse Feed, per 100 pounds .. .. , 75ib sacks Bran and Shorts, white I lb Best Red Salmon, per can .. Loose Garden Seed Beans, per quai 21 tb Peerless Plain Flour 48tb Peerless Plain Flour 241b Occoneechee Self Rising Floi 481b Oconeechee Self Rising Floui 41b bucket Lard fel J. 0. GJ Phone 372 Better go home and make a net than , to jump into the pool after the fish. )DS 1 MLY I it's 1 lATURDAY I 10c | 10c 10c % 19c | 15c X 15c $ 10c 1 10c | ISC 4. bolt) $1.25 ? 15c I ell) 49c $ 18c ?? 35c ? ... 10c t HATS. COME IN | $ VEAR I adeS$ 16.95 to $21.50 "k . . .$14:98 to $22.50 <?> Q5 V $4.95 <? .98c .? 75c $ .$2.25 I R CLOTHING. | <?, ari Hie jpoyH f jr ? >]\^[ | iy Back 1 9 Et E AND QUALITY r?oc 45c 20c 40c $1.35 . 15c box 10c ..$2.00 $7.75 a> i n - H $ 1 .?-> IB 15c I $1.40 I 15c g 30c U 50c B 95c I . 15c I 25c I 45c B ! 25c j 30c 40c . .. 15c $6.75 - $7.00 )ound 25c, 2 for 45c'* 35c (} . ' 40c 40c ' 30c $1.15 25c 35c $2.25 $2.00 and $2.25 cotton bags $1.40 25c rt 30c ' $1.15 $2.25 $1.20 . $2.30 AC. k MJLT N. Pinekney Street,* It isn't nlwnys tks fighting parson who puts his congregation to sleep. I \ , 'J