University of South Carolina Libraries
SPECIAL ADDEI R1ALT0 I + w^. '" ,,-fy "BOE The fifty thousand dc does everyth U s ua 1 A ( * ********* * Whore To Worship * * ********* Episcopal Church Fifteenth Sunday after Trinity. Sunday school and Bible class at 10 o'clock; at this time Mrs. Barron will give her third lecture on the best methods of Sunday school work. The day for the Bible study is changed from Friday to Wednesday at 8 p. m., vthe next subject is "The Holy Communion." Everybody is invited. L. W. Blackwelder, Rector. Church of Christ Sunday school at 10 o'clock and baptising at 11 o'clock. Breaching at the tent on Pervin .Venue every evening at 7:.'iU throughout the week. Welcome awaits you at every service. Preaching at the tent tonight. Subject tonight, "The Necessity of Studying God's Word." Thos. H. Burton, Evangelist. The Solvation Army Sunday school 3 p. m. Preaching. 8 p. m. Sup.lay school at Excelsior mill ! 1 a. m. Services next week Tuesday, Thursday ai.d Friday nights. Adjutant J. Davis. First Itaptist Church Sunday school tomorrow at 10 a. m. Morning worship at 11 a. m., B. Y. P. L'., Junior and Senior, at 7 p. ni. Evening worship at 8 p. m. The pastor wiil preach morning and evening. The public is invited. Edw. S. Reaves, Pastor. CreCn Street Methodist Church Sunday school at 10 o'clock, sermon at 11 a. m. At the morning service baptism will be administered to all whom may apply. The reception of applicants into full membership of the church will follow the sacrament of baptism. The Y. P. will meet at 6:45. Song service at 7:.'10. Evening sermon at 7:45. J. B, Chick, Pastor. ( race Methodist Church 10 a. m. Sunday school. Preaching by the pastor at 11 a m. nad 8 p. m. Epworth League 7:15 p. m. Let each member be present tomorrow to do worship to our Heavenly Father. Visitors will receive a cordial welcome. Jas. W. Kilgo, Pastor. Bethel A. M. E. Church (Colored) 10 a. m.?Sunday school. 11:30 a. m.?Preaching by Dr. C. W. Dunlap, Presiding Elder of Winnsboro district, subject, "Thy Kingdom Come." 8 p. m.?Preaching, subject, "What Wilt Thou Have Me To Do." The first Sunday in October Miss K. G. Randolph, of Ohio, a great evangelist will preach for us. Come and hear this wonderful woman. Everybody welcome. L. D. Gamble, Minister. 5?ECIAl. ADVEHTISEMFNT NUNNALLY'S CANDY?The Cand-J of the South. Fresh shipment just received. Storm's Drug Store Phone 76. It i - JB ) ATTRACTION I MONDAY t IBIE" dlar wonder dog who ling but talk. J m i s s i o n imHHHBnHWI ! Notice to Baptist Church Clerks Please send in your associationul letters to me at Santuc before Tuesday, 2Gth. If any clerk has failed to get a blank letter for making the report, if he will notify me, I will send him one. I have mailed out the blanks to every clerk. Dr. J. T. Jeter, 1491-2t Clerk. Revival at Green Street TVw? W?V Iufll olfkunrl Tnoo/lnt? ?>;?.!%* .? * - ? m. -v. . ..mi viwovu & uvouujr 1115111 aw Green Street with a wonderful testimony service. Many confessions and decisions were made. We feel our hurch and community at large was b nefited bv this great evangelist and his co-worker, Miss Stoddard. While many of the Southern people did not approve of his methods because of heir dignity or misunderstanding he tv-achod from the Word of God and brough him the power of God was manifested. P " .g c'csely a?.iOji:dec with Mi3s "3 oddard in her work while here I can g fely say she was filled w.iii good v irk and a great insprration to our your g people and her memory will linger in the hearts and minds of many of them throughout tne ages. Her life is a sweet example for our young people to follow. The Y. P. will meet at 6:45 Sunday evening. Scripture lesson, Matbew 2. Every member is urged to be present. Blue Eyes. CANDIDATE'S CARD I hereby announce myself a cand date for election as school trustee, Union Graded School, District No. 11. If elected will strive to serve faithfi:lly the interests of the public and the welfare of the schools. Wm. C. I>ake. I hereby announce myself a candidate for election as a trustee of the Union graded schools, District No. 11. If elected I will do my best to fulfill 'he obligations of the responsible position. B. B. James. Daily Newspapers Again Selected for Advertising Of Globe-Wernicke Co., Cincinnati 1 The marked success of last season'3 advertising in daily papers all over the country has resulted in The GlobeWernicke Co., makers of sectional bookcases and office devices, deciding mon n repetition of that campaign through their dealers and branches. The Globe-Wtrnicke Co. found that advertising in the local daily paper, n cities where the goods are on sale i id where interested parties could see end buy the goods, produced definite ' and satisfactory results. And the public was better served 1 id benefited by having its attention ailed to modern and progressive de- 1 vices nnd the local dealer handling ' the m. The decision of this company, the largest of its kind in the world, is but * i" more strong endorsement of local ( lewspt. per advertising. c - t Lack of sunlight has been found 1 to result in a general wave of deprer.- f ion. i - UL J j .!.! S I ' I I McCmhnU Efta Ed McConnall, noted song writer tod humorist, now appearing at the itialto Thoatra In this aity, is a rath?r sorpulsnt parson. Ha dsnlad being fat" but admits of "plump-nasa." Ho * x frequently the objaat of good n&- * .ured bantering by those who intro- ^ iuce him from time to time. How- ^ iver, he is just as quick witted as he s corpulent and those who have gone i bit too far have felt the sting of lis wit. A few months past Mr. Mc- K Connell was appearing in a western s ;ity. He was introduced to a large ? todienca by a gentleman who, in or- * ler to liven things up a bit, began to refer to him as the very'"fat" gen- " Lieman from Georgia, saying, in part, ^ that if he (McConnell) was anything 11 like as good an entertainer as he was 'fat" a great time could be expected by all present. Other remarks re- s gar ding his corpulency were made V> ^ the delight of the crowd. When Mc- 11 Connell took the platform he thanked * the gentleman, a Mr. Jackas by name, e for his kind introduction and said that * his introductory remarks reminded a him of a story. He said: "I am reminded of a story regarding a very v fat old farmer who was proceeding c nto town one day when be was ac- f costed by several small boys. They c slopped the old gentleman by yelling: 1 'Hello, there fatty.' The old fellow * stopped his team and asked: 'What { can I do for you boys?' 'Say, fatty,' i said one of the boys, 'did you ever i read your Bible?' 'Oh. ves. bovs.' re- v plied the old man, 'I read my Bible a 1 great deal.' 'Well, fatty, did you ever 1 read that part where it says: 'AH I flesh is as gras?' 'Yes,* replied the ' farmer, 'I've read that.' 'Well then,' < said the boy, if that part is true you < must be a whqle load of hay, ain't I you?' 'Well, boys,' returned the old fellow, 'I hadn't thought much about ' it, but come to thing of it I rather > guess I am judging from the way the donkeys are nibbling at me.'" Following this the gentleman who had I introduced McConnell was conspicuously sober for the remainder of the evening. j < , . 1 Deserted Petrograd Hopes For Return of Better Days I Petrograd, Sept. 22.?Hope that some day the capital of Russia will be transferred back to Petrograd is bouying up the spirits of many residents of this ghast like city that Peter the Great built to serve as the center of Russia's power. No official word, nor even a semiofficial hint, has been given that the Bolshevik regime will return to the capital here from Moscow, but many Petrogradites base their hopes that this will occur on the fact that Petrograd was built for government purposes and is far more fitted to house government offices than overcrowded Moscow. 1 If the time does come that the Bol shevik officials lose their fear of attack from outside, these Petrograd residents say the government inevitably must return to the city that offers it comfortable quarters and immediate proximity, by land and sea, to Western Europe. While the l'ear of attack exists, these same features of Petrograd's location make it , a dangerous site for a capital. Fin-1 land is too close, and the Finnish! j Gulf and the Neva offer anchorage j for foreign warships. 1 Shrewd citizens are now buying up Petrograd's property and holding it i against the day when the now almost depopulated city shall again be the crowded capital. The Petrograd port has shown | great activity this summer, but most ( of the factory chimneys of the city j and suburbs are still smokeless, and j , the streets, as compared with busy\ | .Moscow, seem like thoie of a coun- ( try village. ( A few pedestrians; an automobile , or two; now and then a slow moving , horse-drawn truck, and the scatter- ] ing of cabs in the great broad ave- , nues laid out by Peter the Great to j make Petrograd magnificent, seem , lost in the city's spaciousness. Great government buildings that j border the plazas and squares are ( now occupied by small bureaus of the j main ministries at Moscow. Huge t palaces are emotv. occupied onlv bv caretakers, or transformed into museums, open but a few hours each . week and even then visited only by ( sightseeing tours, ana now ana then . a little group of art students. f Many shops ara open, selling most- ( ly second hand furniture and costly < bric-a-brac from the houses of the v once great, but business is dull and t money is much scarcer than in specu- . !ation-mad, seemingly prosperous < Moscow. Civil Case Continued e c Magistrate Brissie's court was busy yesterday afternoon hearing the case f of J. A. Orr, of Union county, against ? C. M. Crews and W. J. Nickles, do- c ing business as the Spartan cream- f ery. This is a suit for $37 for but- ^ ter fat alleged to have been sold by the plaintiff to the defendants. The t case was not completed, but wai ? continuned until 8 p. m. Monday. Cornelius Otts represents the plain- r tiff while the defendants are represented by J. G. Galbraith.?Spartanburg Herald. * The ice bill of the people of the !* Jnited States is about $1,000,000 a 11 lay, the northern lakes furnishing >ne-fourth of the total production of t he country An automobile, packed n knocked down form, was shipped rom Detroit to Cleveland by aerial d reight. n 4 i ^ lONGRESS FAILS TO CONF1RJ TOLBERT Waahfngtso, #ept. a?CongiiH I djourned sin* di? today with leadera J en orally expeating a call from Proa- j iant Harding for a special aaaaion i lovember 15, preceding the regular J )ecember session. The president was in attendance to- f ay for a few nynutes before the final -avels dropped to sign the usual < heaf of eleventh hour bills. The !j nly important measure to get i hrough on the last day was the de- J icieucy appropriation bill, the ad- i ninistration Liberian loan bill and i he Dyer anti-lynching measure go- | rig over until the next session. j The most important nomination to i ail of confirmation today when con- [ :ress adjourned was that of Joseph | V* Tolbert, Republican national com- <1 nitteeban for South Carolina, to be i Jnited States marshal for the Western (South Carolina) district. Con- j irmation had been opposed by Senitor Dial. Lacking in the adjournment today vere many of the popular features iftcn attending the death of a con- < tressional session. The gallery :rowds were small and undemonstraive and there were few floor wrangles. After disposing of the deiciency appropriation bill the senate lassed a number of minor measures I ind listened to a few set speeches while house members made one minitc addresses, mostly for publication luring the next few days in The Congressional Record, and heard Representative Blanton (Democrat) of Tex?s defend Attorney General Daugh?rty and criticise Republicans for alleged neglect in that respect. Speaker Gillett, after a brief speech 'wishing all members godspeed and good luck, banged the adjournment gavel promptly at 2 o'clock. The senate adjourned two or three minutes later, having to stop the clock briefly Wtiile necessary bills were signed for submission to President Harding waiting in his room off the senate chamber. A few political speeches marked the closing hours of the session?the second of the Sixty-seventh congress. Representative Mondell, Rieptiblican lender in the house, and Senator (| Smoot, in the senate, praised the dominant party's record, which was attacked in brief speeches by Senator Harrison of Mississippi and McKellar of Tennessee, Democrats. Leaders and rdhk and file now "go to the country* on the record, entering the fall! campaign. Trains and automobilefc leaving Washington tonight carried scores of congressmen released foi the campaign. Statistical sharps tonight were busy calculating Hhe work of the session, prominent,^which was enactment of the UtAn*. l*w and passage of the soldiers^aonus bill with its death after the- president's veto. About 300 laws Were said to have been enacted out of 3,498 bills and 358 resolutions introduced in the house and 1,249 bills and about 280 resolutions in the benate. Appropriations of the sessidn aggregated over $2,751,917,000 and, with authorizations, $3,751,917,000 was made avail auir iui tuc ^uvciviuciit o iiKtai ycni needs. About 9,000 nominations were sent to the senate by President Hardin p, which were confirmed with but few exceptions. To Rehabilitate Marquesas Islanders Honolulu, T. H., Sept. 23.?The French administration of the Marquesas islands is to attempt to rehabilitate the inhabitants and to elevate them morally and materially, largely as the result of the visit of the Bayard Dominick scientific expeiition to the group two years ago jnder the auspices of the Bishop Museum of Honolulu, according to a etter received by Dr. E. S. Handy, ethnologist on the museum staff, from G. de Poyen Belleisle, the administrator. Dr. and Mrs. Handy spent a year n the Marquesas investigating the -ivilization, culture and charactersties of the inhabitants as a part of ;he museum's efforts to trace the origin of the Polynesian race. The administrator's principal purjose is to develop commercial opporunities for the natives and to esablish schools, the letter said. The ommercial development depends upon lirect steamship connections between 3an Francisco and the Marquesas, vhich have been the scene of much of he popular literature purporting to )ortray the languid life of the South >eas. Such connections would cn tble the natives to eliminate the niddle-men of Tahiti, who have reaped enormous profits from the efforts >f the Marquesans, Dr. Handy said. "Commercially, the Marquesas irpspnt crrnaf nnu(hiliU?a " ho aHHorl 'There are many expansive valleys >f unsurpassed fertility, which fornorly supported a dense population, rhese were cultivated by the natives nd produced breadfruit, taro and ananas. Today all is neglected here being only scattering cocoanut dantations." There are a number of excellent arbors in the Marquesas, Dr. Handy aid. He also expressed the opinion hat some day fueling stations might e established there for vessels passing between Australia arid Panama. Fangs of a rattlesnake replace hemselves as rapidly as they are lout. 1 A plant has bedn discovered in In- ! ia which is an iff active remedy for i lalaria and blacMwater fever. I YOU A SAVINGS ACCG FORTUNE COMES. ' CAN MEET AN EMEi TO SEEK SOME MORI OUT OF A TIGHT PL ji IT INCREASES AI IN THE BANK, ji WE OFFER YOU 1 \ YOUR MONEY WHILE SMALL ACCOUNTS I BANKWITI Farmers C. H. PEAKE, Pres. E. Bank No. 89 Statement of the Condition of the is BANK OF JONESVILLE I -oca ted at Jonesville, S. C., at the ^ Clowe of Business, Sept. 15, 1922. RESOURCES ~ * L/Ouns and discounts . . .1112,318.94 Overdrafts 2,122.64 Furniture and fixtures . . 750.00 Banking house 5,000.00 Due from banks and bankers 32,435.66 Currency 3,689.00 Gold 362.60 c Silver and other minor coin 828.30 h Checks and cash items . . 1,261.37 c r Total 168,668.40 fc n LIABILITIES ( Capital stock paid in . . . 60,000.00 ' Surplus fund 1,300.00 s Undivided protits, less cur-" rent expenses and taxes paid . . . 2,279.38 Individual De- 11 posits Subject ^ to Check . . . 68,137.83 v Tiipe Certifi- * rates of* Deposit 46,741.19 r Cashier's C'ks. 200.00 106,079.02 I Total $168,668.40 c State of South Carolina, j County of Union, ss. c Before me came Paul E. Free, j Cashier of the abovej-named bank, j who, being duly sworn, says that the [ above and foregoing statement is a j true condition of said bank, as shown j by the books of said bank. 1 Paul E. Free. | Sworn to and subscribed before me J this 22nd day of September, 1922. ? C. M. McWhirter, I Notary Public. < Correct?Attest: J D. B. Free 1 T. A. Murrah, Jr. ' Reuben Lindsay * Directors. ' Bank No. 490 Statement of the Condition of the FARMERS BANK & TRUST CO. Located at Union, S. C., at the Close of Business Sept. 15, 1922. RESOURCES. LoanR and Discounts . . .$242,293.15 Overdrafts 1,162.15 Furniture and Fixtures . . 2,079.51 Due from Bans and Bankers 49,492.99 Currency 2,622.00 Gold 175.00 Silver and Other Minor Coin 218.85 Checks and Cash Items . . 1,184.32 Unearned Discount .... 8,749.93 Total $307,977.95 LIABILITIES. Capital Stock Paid in . .$100,000.00 Undivided Profits, less Current Expenses and Taxes Paid 3,233.30 Indivilual Deposits Sub. to Ck. . . . 142,840.06 Savings Deposits . . . 9,910.12 Timn r.nr. r r tificates of f Deposit . . . 11,510.01 ^ Cashier's ^ Checks . . . 482.46 164,742.65 t Bills Payable, including \ Certificates for Money p Borrowed ...... 40,000.00 p Total $307,977.95 C State of South Carolina, f County of Union. ? Before me came C. H. Peake, Presi- ** dent of the above named bank,k who, *being duly sworn, says that the above * r.nd foregoing statement is a true con* dition of said bank, as shown by the ^ books of said bank. ' Sworn to and subscribed before me A this 22nd day of September, 1922. ? Thomas McNally, Notary Public. 1 Correct Attest? ? J. L. Bolton, B. B. Going, ? P. K. Switzer, n * Directors. ' 0 During the 10 years' life of tha ^ treaty for the limitation of anna- 1 ments, the United States, the British M Empire and Japan will realise sot- C ings x of from $600,000,000 to $800,- H )00,000 a year. j' L WILL F IUNT IS A GREAT COA ITOUR MONEY IS ALW IGENCY QUICKLY. Y( E FORTUNATE FRIENI ACL MAN'S SELF-RESPECT EVERY REASONABLE : ON DEPOSITE WITH WELCOMED. IUS, THEN BAI Bank & Ti L. LITTLEJOHN, Vice Pres. While driving autos of bargains it i safer to keep to the right. UBSCRIPTIOHS TO $20,000 CANNERtf IOTICE; All wkufle names appear aelow with five stars may call upon Paul E. Wilburn, Secretary-Treasurer, and get their stock certificate. The certificates are ready for delivery. On Monday, July 24, we put into peration our canning factory. We a\e a capacity of 20,000 cans, 833 ases, a day. We have growing and ipening in the fields a fine crop of omatoes. There is but one factor ow that hinders an assured success: >ut capital is too limited. This leads o two additional statements. xEvery upscription should be paid up at once jid new subscriptions should come in. Vill you not help? We ned evory dollar we can get to nakc the first turnover. R< n.epiber; Ve must can for 30 or 40 days before ve will be able to realize on our first eturn from sales Help us to help Union county to a tew and better way. ^ewis M. Rice *****200.?PU ;. K. Hughes * -****50.00 i. M. White * 50.00 3am Berelowitz **60.00 \ H. Garner *****60.00 r. E. Minter *?'**50.00 )r. Russell JeUr *****30.00 t. W. Beaty * ** *60.00 '. P. McLure ***"60.00 V. D. Wood **60.00 I. L. Davis *****50.00 r. R. Whitmire *****60.00 3am Ka&sler * ***50.00 toy Willeford . . TV . . . *****50.00 3. R. Lancaster . . . 50.00 f. V. Askew *****60.00 Hacbeth Young *****50.00 S. M. Garner *****60.00 V. 'J. Wilburn *****50.00 '. M jbley ^eter, Jr *****50.00 .. G. Young ***',i*50.(?0 J. Pnrham *****50.00 >r. J. W. Buchanan . . . *****50.00 3. J. West *****6#.0U I D. Hancock . / *****50.00 Jr. W. N. Glymph .... -"' OOiOO i F. Kennedy *****30.00 3oyan \Austel1 . . . *****50.oC J. Browning *****50.00 L. W. Stone *****50.00 '. W. Carnell *****50.00 jnion Falling Station . . . *****50.00 L G. Kennedy *****50.00 Victor Smith . ./ *****50.00 no. W. Gregory *****604)0 t. N. Sprouse *****50.00 V. W. Johnson ****60.00 '. B. Sparks *****50.00 P. B. Canlt . Kn nn )r. A. P. McElroy .... *****50.00 ieorge Willard * ** 60.00 Jordon Bishop *****60.00 I. T. McMehan *****50.00 a H. Harris I50.0C drs. John R. Mathis . . . *****60.00 . Cohen Co *****160.00 iitisens National Bank . . *****60.00 1. C. Wilbum **50.00 )r. Theo. Maddox .... *****50.00 diss Mahala J. Smith . . *****60.00 diss Edna Tinsley .... *****50.00 Iradley-Estes Co ** *60.00 V. S. McLure *****100.CC ?. B. Barron ' . . *60.00 \ D. Barron ****50.00 Tnion Bakery *****60.00 Vill Humphries *****60.00 drs. Ida Bailey .... .*****60.00 iewis M. Gault * 50.00 V. B. Murphy . . . *****50.00 t. W. Beaty (additional) * 60.00 ). Norman Jones *****60.00 !. C. Sanders *****60.00 K. Morgan *****50.00 I. Led JCelly *****60.00 'hos. McNally *?***50.00 '. Allen 60.00 ' E. Wilburn * 60.00 tonsol'ted Ice A Fuel Co. * 60.00 toy Willeford (eddit.) . . 60.00 Jnion Marble A Oran. Co. * 60.00 l. W. T. Ravenscroft'. . . * * 60.00 B. Going 60.00 , K. Brennecke 60.00 >r. O. L. P. Jackson . . . * 60.00 itorm's Drug Store . . . ** *60.00 . M. Wood 60.00 I. A. Owens 60.00 . A. Hollingsworth . . 60.CC J. Vinson * 60.00 ?. E. Smith 60.00 [erbert Smoak *60.00 hos. H. Howe ..... .*** 60.00 Irs. P. B. Barnes * 50.00 'ash 60.00 Irs. L. if. Jordan ..... 60.00 . B. Godshall 5a00 \ V * L ? , : . _ > IMIIMKMSEmHK9SKRMKSMIB6IP5SOOOL _____ | 1 IFORT WHEN MISAYS READY. YOU 3U DO NOT HAVE i ) TO HELP YOU | TO HAVE MONEY f SAFEGUARD FOR 1 US. LARGE OR | d ft ?K ON US j 'list Co. C. K. MORGAN, Cashier J W. J. Tucker 50.00 W. B. Aiken 50.00 R E. Foster 50.00 Eagle Grocery Co * 50.00 Mrs. Jno. R. Mathis . . . *** 100.00 Lewis M. Eice *****100.00 Cash * 100.00 Dr. J. W. Buchanan . . . * ****50.00 J. E. Kelly 100.OP I. From *** 50.00 J Louis Jolly . . . '" **50.00 J. L. Bolton " *500.00 Dr. F. M. Ellerbe *****50.00 W. T. Powell *****50.00 W. T. Sinclair ***50.00 S. Krass ' 50'.00 J. L. Duncan *****50.00 Dr. J. G. Goinc Rfl nn C. E. Bailey .". * > **50.00 William Coleman 500.00 S. R. I.ybrand 50.00 ^ K. Haydock 50.00 J. V. ivoy 50.0U H. W. St,?ne 50.00 A. T. Stoudenmire 50.00 E. ^Nicholson " **** 50.00 L. L. Wagnon *****50.00 ITios. J. West * ***50.00 T. F. Wallace 50.00 Cash *'50.00 T. A. Murrah **50.00 Mrs. .H. L. Gaffney * 50.00 J. Ben Foster * 50.00 F. M. Moore 50.00 T. E. Bailey 50.00 J. J. Willard ** 60.00 R. C. Williams *** 50.00 S. R. Garner * ** 60.00 H. W. Edgar . .' * 50.00 John H. Wilburn ***60.00 Roy Burney 50.00 J. Wiley Sanders *****50.00 A. Kerhulaa 60.Q0 J. C. Mitchell ..... ."I . ! 60.00 Dr. D. H. Montgomery .... 80.00' W. R. Jolly *50.00 L. D. Smith 50.00 J. A. Going 50 00 R J. Allen ** *50.00 J no. R. Mathis *****50.00 C. R. Wilburn 50.00 navio Jiiffrioo A/% Ii a Mae Wilbum F0.00 \ T. C. Duncan *'* * 100.00 J. M. Bates *****5Q.OO N'orman-Murphy Co. . . . * *50.0'.) Dr. Geo. T. Keller .... *****60.00 W. Gilbert .r>0.00 Crescent Filling Station . ****50.00 Mi'?e L. B. Jeter. .lr 50.00 R. P. Jeter *****50.00 Miss Mnry Emui? Foster "***"*50.00 C. H. Peake * ***50.00 , Grover C. Wilburn .... ***< *50.09 Mrs. Ora B Fant .... *****50.00 J. B. Betenbaugh *50.00 Cash *****50.00 Cash ***** 50.00 W. T. Jones * *60.00 Jno. R. Ma this (additional) . . 50.00 / Stuart Smith *60.00 W. H. Gibson 50.00 Frank Clay 50.00 B. L. Fowler *****50.00 I. From (additional) **50.00 Mrs. May C. Peake .... *****60.00 N. C. Palmer *****50.00 G. Epps Tucker *****50.00 J. A. Hollingsworth (addit'al) 50.00 J. E. Tinsley *****50.00 A. A. Hames 50.00 H. B. Jennings ** 50.00 B. B. Anderson *****50.00 Mrs. Hettie V. Foster . . * . 60.00 L. B. Jeter, Sr. . \ . . . . *****50.00 Robt. J. Fowler *****60.00 T. M. McNeil . . \ . . . ~*?*60.UU C. T. S. Wilburn ..... 60.00 R T. M<-Mull,, soon J. R. Charles 50.00 L. J. Browning (addit'nal) 50.00 Cash 50.00 R. Lee Kelly (addi^onal . 50.00 W. H. Wilburn 60.00 J. A. Smith 60.00 J. C. Cudd 60.00 T. A. LitUejohn 10.00 1. B. .Kelly 60.00 W. W. Wood 50.00 Reuben Lindsay w!00 J. W. Lipscomb 60.00 D. 3. Free 60.00 Robert Little 60.00 J. L. Calvert 60.00 T T AA o. w. uniuor DU.UU T. J. Bishop * * 50.00 S. Krass (additional) . . . **50.00 J. A. Orr *50.00 T. O. Harris 50.00 Brown Bros * 50.00 ? Total $11,400.00 Amount subscribed in produce 1450.00 %' , Grand total $11,550.00 We want more subscriptions. Will you not take one or molf shares T , Union Canning A Products Co., Lewis M. Rice. Pres. ' ' / ittM