The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, August 19, 1922, Image 3
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The Rev. E. A. Fuller, D. I
tist church Sunday morning a
11:15 a. m., and also at 3:30 <
Court House. The public is cc
Dr. Fuller is well known ii
the High School some few yec
turned to the Southern Baptist
a post-graduate course, and he i
Street Baptist church at Green\
_ .^4* J
scrvanun, aeep rengious lire, ai
speaker. Dr. Fuller will also ai
at 10:00 a. m.
Pacolet
Aur. 17, 1922.
The protracted meeting will begin
at the Methodist church on the fourth
Sunday night, August 27th.
Paul GoSsett and two daughters
spent last week with his brother, L.
A. Gossett, of Union, Route 1. J
C. F. Coleman and family spent}
several days visiting his brother, C
D. Coleman, of Anderson. * |
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Vnughan of I
Spartanburg are visiting their daugh-|
ters, Mrs. Paul Gossett and Mrs. Carl
Coleman, this week.
Mrs. Beaty Fowler and Miss Virgie
Coleman of Route 2 spent last
week with Mrs. Eva Kenney of Zion
Hill.
Mrs. Mandy Spencer of Union spent,
last wek with her brother, R. R. Coleman.
C C. L. Gossett and family motored
***<? to Laurens to see Mr. Reid, who is'
VAVM ill
?V* JF ?!!
R. R. Vaughan of Spartanburg
spent Sunday evening with Mrs. Paul
Gossett.
Mrs. Beaty Fowler and Mrs. R. R.
Coleman have gone today to attend
the funeral of their eausin.
Little Miss Kathleen Wood is sick
at this writing, but we all hope she
will soon be well.
Mr. Tom Bryant and family spent
Sunday with Paul Gossett and familyMr.
Ben Coleman spent Sunday
with Mrs. R. R. Coleman.
C. L. Gossett and family will motor
to Laurens today to celebrate the
Patterson reunion.
Weekly Crop Report
The following crop report for the
week ending Wednesday was issued
bv R. H. Sullivan meterolncist!
Temperatures have been rather too
low for best crop developments, and
heavy local rains in many sections
have been attended by overflow and
land washing. Com is in good to excellent
condition generally, and field
truck, peanuts, late gardens and for-|
ST
iUBfen
IS- -
a 33# N '
BK^X^HPRT;'. ;
jjfl
Hprajr ,jjfr* *
JBM
>., will preach at the First Bapt
the regular preaching hour,
o'clock in the afternoon at the ^
>rdially invited. al
n Union, having taught here in ^
irs ago, since that time he reTheological
Seminary to take st
is now pastor of the South Main
vood. He is a man of wide obnd
is a popular and interesting
ddress the Baraca Class Sunday,
'
age have made good growth. Corn ^
fodder pulling is in progress. Sweet co
potatoes have grown rather too luxu- nv
riantly for satisfactory tuber developnient;
sonic of the early crop has appeared
on market. Watermelons,
kpeaches and vegetables continue plen- ^
tiful. Tobacco is in fair condition,
and curing continues. The week's or
weather has been generally very discouraging
as to cotton on account to
of considerable shedding and the rap- sp
id increase in boll weevil numbers
and ravages, and serious inroads have or
been made in the young crop in all tr
sections outside the upper Piedmont;
me crop nas neen blooming and
fruiting well, but weevils are now J1'1
more numerous than ever before'
known in the eastern, central and tr:
l southern counties, and infestation has P?
extended to good sized bolls; the ^
early crop is openihg slowly in the Pa
southern counties, and the first bale 3U
was ginned at Bamberg on the 9th. Pa
'Haying has been materially delayed ?*
by the rains. All crops need dry
weather. ' c
i ? sti
Union Methodists en
Were Agin Suspenders of
Once Upon a Time th
m<
Mnj. J. C. Hemphill has the follow- wj
:ng under the head "Impropriety"
not "Immorality" in a recent issue of j,a
the Spartanburg Journal: -p,
"Touchin* on and appertainin' to" 0f
the very interesting and to many per- ^e)
sons vital matter of dress, Mr. James gr
H. Carlisle told the story yesterday
of the trial in a Methodist Confer- Qf
once at Union, South Carolina, about ^
seventy-five years ago fo a member
of the conference for wearing sus- ^
penders with his breeches, or trous- m)
ers, or "pants" as, this article of mas- gtl
culine apparel is called by the strictly wj
vulgar and unlettered. It was con- sjs
tended that in doing so the Brother
was guilty not of an act of immoral- Wf
ity but of very gross impropriety.
Mr. Carlisle was not present, of
course, at the trial, but there is not.nij
'ANI
REG. U. S. P
SVSOTOF
woi
OUT OF
IF NI
BUT NC
STANDARI
\
)
(
I
\ . ' . T "
,
Mr. W. W. Goforth, direct<
egimental Band, who, with his
: the Court House Sunday after
me the Rev. E. A. Fuller, D.
ige. The public is invited.
e least doubt that the offense was
mniitteed and that the offending
ember was convicted by the Con- '
rence to the increasing worldliness
the community in which he lived. y
Exactly how he was expected to '
:eep up his breeches" we do not
iow and there is nothing in the recd
to throw light on this point, we
lieve. The story is revamped here
advise the vamps of the present
acious times that it is lucky for
em that they did not live in Union,
anywhere in this part of the eouny
seventy-tive years ago- it is cerin
a large number of semi-respecttle
people now living regret that
ey did not. What became of the
fending brother in Union after his
ial and conviction we do not know?
issibly he may have drifted over to 1
e Presbyterians or to the Episco
mans, me iiiusi 01 wnom nave worn
spenders since the beginning of the '
mtaloon 'period in the development 1
the human race. '
How the men kept them on before (
e invention of the suspender is not
ated in any of the books of refer- 1
ce at hand?they may have bee i 1
what is now called the union suit 1
yle of the men or the "slip-on" of !
e women, or in case any other garent
was worn under the trousers to !
lich the trousers may have been
lined and the underclothes may '
ive been?but what's the use? '
ousers have caused a great deal *
trouble. In one of his letters writ- '
n over eighty years ago, Sidney 1
nith said: "Correspondences are 1
:e small clothes before the invention '
suspenders; Tt is impossible to 1
ep them up." The matter of dress '
s caused no end of trouble since
e affair in the Garden of Eden and 1
my careful observers do not under- 1
md how Eve could have gone about '
th fewer clothes than some of her 1
iters of the present day wear when 1
ey are on dress parade.?Green- '
>od Index-Journal. 1
Days are getting shorter; but then
ghts are getting longer. l,<
DM
AT OFF.
I GASC
*TH GOIN
YOUR WA
iCESSAR\
>T NEC ESI
D OIL CO
NEW JERSEY)
/
1 t 1
>r of the First South Carolina
i band, will furnish the music
noon at 3:30 o'clock,* at which
D., will deliver a gospel mes*
The Right to Murder
Baltimore Sun.
This little dispatch from Chicago
vas published in yesterday's Evening
Sun:
Robert Johnson, Illinois Central
employee, ' was beaten to
death here today by four unidentified
men.
Johnson was on his way to
work when the four men approached
him. Persons driving
by saw the men knock Johnson
down and beat him. When po
lice arrived Jo&nson was dead.
Johnson was employed in the
Burnside shops (fid refused to go
out on strike, pcpce said.
Of course, the nen were "unidentified,M
and, of courie/ they grot away,
rhey may have fcjen footpads and
bootleggers, bdt tie circumstances,
indicate that tfrls jgg was beaten to
ieatlf on tH6*tW?jfip"5r Chicago in
t>road daylight' by Bikers because he
:hoae to work. i|
This is a trivialUncident compared
to the massacre ofnelpless non-union
miners at Herrin, 111., who had surrendered
under a w|Ite flag of mercy.
But it is a brothenof the full blood
to the Herrin slaughter, and was inspired
by the same spirit.
It is this kind ' of thing that is
creating horror and suspicion of
unionism in the public mind. Whenever
a great strike occurs, this sort
5f thing ci'ops out, and it is rarely
rebuked by union leaders. The unions
in fact, are now preparing to defend
:he Herrin assassins instead of joinmg
in the efforts to have them punshed.
We are hearing just now a great
leal about union rights. Does unionsm
also involve the right to murder?
[s that part of its code and creed? If
t does not, it is about time that the
'espectable elements of organized laior
took aggressive measures to
irove the contrary.
"Let's go" seem? to be the slogan
jur money goes Dy.
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ji: WE ARE PUNNING TO T
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| PRODUCE. YOU WILL HELi
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| OF STOCK IN THIS ENTERPR
| HELP US TO HELP UNION
| DIRECTLY, YOURSELF.
| OUR ONE AND ONLY
| OPERATIVE CAPITAL. TAK1
.1 I ? * '
| union canning & I
| LEWIS M. RICE,
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LARS ADDITIONAL ?
IN THE CANNERY. ?
AKE CARE OF FIVE |
HJSAND ACRES OF |
P A GOOD CAUSE |
S A SAFE INVEST- X L
$50, $100 OR $500 | s
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