The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, October 06, 1922, Image 4
RIALTO
TODAY
DICK HATTON
IN
"THE
FIGHTING FOOL"
ALSO
"THE
LEATHER PUSHERS"
Round 4
EXTRA
/ESOPS FABLES
Feeding of Russian Children
Stopped by Local Bandits
Kiev. Oct. 5.?Efforts to feed the
hildren of Chigirin, southeast of
Kiev, have been abandoned by the
American Reliet \dministration because
of the continued activity of
bandits.
Chigirii. a village 30 miles from
the railroad, is situated in a wild
country \shich for years has been infested
by robber bands. Government
officials would not give guarantees
for the safety of the A. R. A. warehouses,
so finally endeavors to estabblish
food kitchens in the Chigirin
district were given up.
We Are
ta crnirr vait
1U OLilv V E. 1UU
EVER IN
Fresh
And only the kind tha
Health Inspector is u
markets.
For tomorrow, we <
tion:
Choice Steaks ;
Chops, Pork Roa
Cutlets, Mullet
Fish. Sliced Cu
Boneless Hams, P
ape, links and
Cheese and Drc
Handled Sariifary. W<
GODSHALL W
TELEPHON
Successors to Gods
40 MAIN
WE HAVE IN STOCK i
5 X BRITISH
Cec
i *
E i
I THE BEST ROOF KNC
I PFHAR SHINOIF Rfl
VMfl/4k?i m+m mm* m ^ mm mm m mm-w
YOUR ROOF
Bailey B
Suppl;
PHONE
Will deliver to any part of
__
o r
Notice, Camp GJtoat C
, The members of Camp Giles, U. C.
are requested to meet at Union
donday, October 9, in the court house Q
it noon. All members are urged to n
>e present; business of Importance to ^
>e transacted. J. M. Greer, 4,
K. M. Farr, Commander. u
Adjutant. n
' * Sp
Card of Thanks
We desire to express our sincere up- e
l-reciation of the sympathy and kind
ministration of our friends and neign- ^
bors during the illness and death of
our dear husband and father, Wm. V. ?
Powell. We will never forget a single
kindness shown us in our bereave- *
ment. May God bless each one of '
you. c
It Wife and Children.
m 1 <
Singing Convention (
Come to the singing convention 1
Sunday at 3 o'clock at the comt
house. We are expecting the Union
Concert Band to be present. Rev.
L. L. Wagnon will be present and
make an address on the importance ,
of music. We also hope to have with j
us all the singing teacher and all ^
choir leaders in the county and wc
extend to each of them a hearty '
welcome to come take part in the ex- ^
ercises. ?
1502-2tpd Committee.
Indian girls picking huckleberries j
in the Cascade Mountains wear silk (
dresses, rolled-down socks, fancy lin- |
gerie. bobbed hair, short skirts, no ,
corsets and use up-to-date flapper
language. They do not, however, dis- ,
lard the primitive tribal mantle of an
Indian blanket thrown over the shoul- (
dor, shawl fashion.
1
Prepared
BETTER THAN
CHOICE
Meats
!
I
it is approved by the
sed in either ol our i
<
affer for your selecand
Roast, Pork
sts, Choice Veal
and Mackerel
red Ham and !
'ure Pork Saus- !
bulk, Wieners, I
issed Chickens.
1 <
e Give Quick Service. s
OS. MARKET
IE No. 52
I 11 KM 1
?uau marwci v^u.
STREET. I
!
ONE MILLION BEST ;
COLUMBIA
lar
gles
)WN. PUT ON A
OF AND FORGET
TROUBLES. l:
is
Guilders ;
y Co. s
Wi
106 os
t'n
County at 10c per mile.
dc
iermu Coins Prohibited
*In Now Gateau
Sydney, N. S. W., Oct. 6.?The use 1
f German coins or currency In the
isndated territory of New Guinea
as been prohibited by an ordinance
jsued by the federal government,
nder a penalty of 100 pounds or six
lonths imprisonment. Natives, howver,
may pay to the administration
ierman coins for fees, taxes or othr
excises.
The ordinance also prohibited the
ise of token and counters for trade
urposes or wages and provided that
i portion of a shell known as "Gold
ip" may be used as legal tender at
he rate of 12 shillings a pair, except
'or the purchase or barter of trohus
shell. I
Religious or charitable institutions
>perating in the territory are ex mpted
from the prohibitions of the
>rdinances.
Railroad Restaurants in
Russia Offer Food in Plenty
Tver, Russia, Oct. 5.?The old
:ime scenes at American railway
junctions, when the brakeman cam':hrough
the train shouting: "Blankrille,
20 minutes stpp for supper,"
are being duplicated in Russia as
the normal conditions of travel aro
being restored and railway station
restaurants, foodless and closed for
four years, are opened again.
Passengers during the revolution
had nothing to eat on long journeys
except what they brought with them,
but now practically every station restaurant
offers almost a pre-war bill
of fare. As the trains pull in a
scramble for food ensues that would
rival an American quick lunch counter
during the rush hours.
Some of the more important
through trains have dining cars, but
they are patronized only by first-class
passengers, and even many of these
jnjoy the rush at the station restaurants
more than the decorum of the
kvagon restaurant.
Singing Children
A director of public school music
proposes to introduce a music-teaching
system which v.'ill enable the average
eighth grade pupil to sing a
bynin at sight.
There may be some schools or
classes in which this end is already
achieved, but much public school music
in the past has been chiefly
training in following others. Tint
is good, as far as it goes. It is better
for boys and girls to learn to
sing a little by listening to others
than not to learn to sing at all. But
every child ought to know how to
read at sight the notes on the music
page as well as he does the words
>n the reader page.
There are some children who seem
Jtterly unable to carry a tune or to
sing a song correctly even when they
know the musical notes. But the
great majority of pupils need only
more careful teaching and more welldirected
singing in the school room
to enable them to sing simple songs
with real pleasure to themselves and
little discomfort to their hearers.
The ability to sing ? not as the
great singers do, but clearly and happily?is
one of the most desirable
sifts which can be cultivated in the
:hild. It is well enough to atteid
?xcellent recitals and concerts all
>ne's life. It is better to be able to
?ing for oneself at home or in church
}r in any community group.?The
Greenville News.
iPECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS
ASSORTMENT of fine, fresh chocolates.
No better to be found anywhere.
Georges Sanitary Place.
ltpd
EXTRA SELECT NORFOLK OYSTERS
arriving daily, served in all
styles; also sold in bulk to housekeepers.
George's Sanitary Place,
Phone 440. ltpd
^RESH KALAMAZOO CELERY Fifteen
cents a bunch. George's
Sanitary Place. ltpd
\
VPPETIZING ROAST PORK, chicken
salad and fried oyster sandwiches
at George's Sanitary Place.
ltpd
>ET US FILL your prescriptions. We
ft 11 Q ntT WV MAn /??? AVI n
i ?i aujr UVV.IA/1 o j/ivavi ipnuiw.
Union Drug Store.
1502-Mo-We-Fr-tr
WANTED?One thousand people at
the singing invention Sunday af
tornoon at 3 o'clock. Come and
bring your friends. This will be the
first singing convention old Union
ever had. It is for the good of
each and every citizen in Union
county and it is hoped that great
good may be derived from the con- *
vention. It *
The office of a gasoline service sta- f
on is located where a storehouse of
ilitary supplies and a magazine exted
when Bedford, Pennsylvania, f
as a frontier post in the eighteenth
ntury. It is a little stone house alost
hidden among several low, ram- J;
ing frame sheds. During the Whis/
Rebellion in 1794 more than 5,009
oops were quartered on the grounds
(joining it and President Washingn
and his first cabinet were once esblished
a block away. The old house j
as also used as a detention place for >
Mttvts wuu were ntugni on {
e underground railway. ,
Ninety-five per cent of all business
>ne in the United States is transited
by check. h
*
SmdmUfi Nmti
Sedalia, Oct. X.?Rev. J. R. "Moore
and family attended the association at
Mon-A?tna Baptist church last Thursday
and Friday.
A parent-teachers' association was
organlfad last Friday night in the Scdalia
school building. The following
were fleeted officers: President, Mrs,
J. M. Dukes, vice-president; Mrs. W
J. Murphy, secretary; Mrs. J. R
Moore, treasurer; Mr. J. M. Dukej
The association is to meet the last
Friday |n each month.
Next Thursday afternoon Miss Lor a
Clement, a missionary to China from
the First Baptist church of Union, will
address the woman', missionary society
of Padgett's Creek in the
church.
The William M. Gist chapter, U. D.
C.. will hold 'Its regular monthly
meeting in the auditorium of the So.
dalia school at 3:80 next Friday afternoon.
The members are requested to
attend, as offlcers'are to be elected and
dues are to be paid.
The Cross Keys chapter, O. E. S.
held a meeting in the Masonic hall
at Cross Keys last Saturday afternoon.
The Masons also met.
Misses Florence and Agnes Bobo, oJ
Clinton, spent the week-end with
home folks.
Little Miss Alice Hollis, who hac
her tonsils and adenoids removed ir
Greenville last week, is doing nicely.
"Mrs. L. W. Webber is much improved,
after being quite sick at her home
here.
Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Browning, oi
Union, attended the Eastern Stai
meeting last Saturday at Cross Keys
Mr. and Mrs, A. J. Taylor took little
Frances to Greenville last week foi
treatment. From Greenville Mr.i
Taylor and little daughter went tc
Laurens for a short visit to relatives
Little Miss Mary Alice Rice spem
a few days last week with her grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Rice.
Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Humphries returned
yesterday from Greenwood
where they were called to the bedside
of Mrs. Humphries' father, Mr. Pinson.
After a week's sickness Miss Lillian
Bailey is able to be out again.
The Sedalia school children are requested
to bring their report cards ?c
the school building next Friday afternoon
at 3 o'clock in order to be ready
for school opening next Monday
morning at 9 o'clock. "B."
Urges Government
Monopoly-to Stabilize
. -Haw Silk Trade
Yokohama, Oct. 4.?An increasing
amount of attention has been paid tc
the importance of stabilizing the raw
silk trade so that the market may be
made free from the violent fluctuations
to which i^i is frequently suoject,
says Diamon a financial newspaper.
??"When
the market slumps the mer-1
A _ - * -
counts ana manuiaeturers try to keep
the price of raw silk at a certain level
and among these means are the restriction
of output, and withholding
of sales under a certain figure," says
the newspaper.
"If these devices fail, they ask foi
government assistance on the grounc
that raw silk is the most importanl
article of export in the country. The
government hafc been doing everything
to propitiate them.
"As the 1920 stock is being disposed
of a new situation has arisen which
promises to develop into difficulty at
the season advances. When the spring
cocoons appeared on the market the
raw silk market at Yokohama maintained
great activity and high price
with the consequence that manufee
turers bought cocoons at a very high
price. The market, since has suffered
a decline and raw silk is now quoted
in the neighborhood of 1,800 yen. The
cutting down of output and the re.
striction of shipments to Yokohama
have agTeed upon, but it is thought
doubtful whether' these artificial
means will be effective in turning the
tide of a declining market in the
manufacturer's favor.
"Those who have carefully studied
the causes are of the opinion that
speculation enters too much into such
?.i..rvivauo muusMjr aim uauc, r *ji
this reason they suggest that the
speculative spirit be eliminated to a
large extent if the trade is to be
placed on a secure and sound basis.
"The carrying out of a government
monopoly of raw silk may be one
of the means that will secure stabilization
of the silk nruyrket. This would
not only guarantee the interest of co(oon
raisers and silk manufacturers
but the foreign importers also would
be protected against loss as at present
they are frequently the victims of
a fluctuating marke^"
Come to Singing Convention
Shall we expect you at. the Singing
Convention Sunday afternoon, Oct.
t, at 3 o'clock? The Scripture says,
'Come, let us reason Jogether," and it
ilso tells us in the' 100th Psalm,
iviane a joyiui noise unto the l?rd,
11 ye lands, serve the Lord with
rladness; come before His presence
vith singing."
The First Baptists have kindly conlented
to let us use their song books
or this occasion. We mean business.
1602-2t.
School Motice
On account of the crowded condition
n our schools no more new classes
vill be formed in the first grades unit
January, 1928.
Bavia Jeffries.
Supt.
1
Wheat prices are tt& low the grower
as his bushels of trouble.
i 9r" " \
......
1
I m Mil ....UU.LUWI.it 11
|111 ? I u n < I I I I I ? I 1 I I I I 1 M I
I ANN0U1
| Bobo's
SATU
i;;
l"l 1 I 1 I 1 1 11 1 I 1 I 1 1 1
Men! One
:: :: suitings ever sli
:: this shop.
;I have over
, | . :: shades in Wors
:: "Dixie Weave,"
no more than ti
. r Suits to mea
i " A1A<VQII4 CAIAAIIA
-j- i vivgaiu ocivvuv
:: workmanship.
To my old p
jj invitation to thi
\\ pleasure of sho\
:: 111 m i m 11 n 11111
| Bobo's
(Next Do
ii MAIN STREET ;L
Ti111111111111 m 1111111111
No Rest?No Peace
There's no peace and little rest for
, the one who suffers from a bad back,
and distressing urgiary disorders, Union
people recommend Doan's Kidney
Pills. Ask your neighbors. Be guid(
ed by their experience.
I J. B. Lawson, furniture salesman,
. 4 Long St., Union, says: "Not so
, long ago I had awful pains across niv
| kidneys which were like a kiufe
thrust. At night it was impossible
. for me to rest on account of this
I trouble. During the day there was a
. dull steady ache in the small of my
, back and my kidneys acted irregularly
and the secnetions burned in passage.
Between this weakness and the
I trouble with my back I certainly did
{ suffer. Knowing that Doan's Kidney
. Tills would relieve me of this trouble.
. I bought a box at the Palmetto Drug
1 Co. They gave me wonderful relief
and in a short time I was feeling just
, as well as ever."
GOc, at all dealers. Foster-Milburn
( Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.
The telephone systems of the United
States comprise 34,000,000 miles of
wire.
i ???????^mmm??^>???^?
The Only Big Circus Coining
To Union This Year!
CIRCUS PRICES
Al I CHILDREN OIL.
, nLL UNDER AGE OF 12 Ullu
ADULTS 75c (including war tax).
CIRCUS
A NATIONAL
INSTITUTION
COMING TO
UNION
2?PERFORMANCES?2
Street Parade 10:30 a. m.
I
THURSDAY, OCT:
/
V *
gg^3eg?ggg?g*??^ppil | || ?
uiiiimmnmi111mi in
VCING 01
S
Tailoring
RDAY, O
1 I 1 1 1 1 I I 1 1 I I I 1 1 1 1 1 I 111 1 I 1 1 1 1
of the biggest selections
iown in Union awaits youi
500 patterns of the newe:
teds, Cassimeres, Serge ai
and last, but not least, the
le suits you "pick off the pi
SlirA as Inw as $70 AO ran ti
n. Satisfaction guarantee)
atrons and friends I extend
s opening arid trust that I
ring you the greatest suit vi
I I I 1 1 1 11 M 1 1 1 1 1 I 1 I I 1 1 1 1 I I l-M-l
Tailoring
or to McMillan's Barber
;e Bobo and Have a Fit,
-H 1 1 I I 1 1 I 1 Mill 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 1 I 1 1 I
SATUt
CDFP
Jl
Yard Wide Black Mess
40-inch $2.00 grade Ci
all shades (or, yard
70-inch Mercerized Ta
$1.00 quality (or, ya
Lakeside Chambrays, j
' yard
.
New Shipments o( Coll
Wool, all colors, reg
now'
Coty's Face Powder, re
(or
FREE with every cake
at 10c we will gh
Palm Olive Sham]
NEW HATS RE(
WILBURN DRY
Notice
A stated convocation of Poinsett
J' Chapter, No. 16, R. A. M. ^
will be held in.the Masonit in
Temple this, Friday, evening: pi
WP/l at 8 o'clock p. m. October 6.
Visiting: Companions invited.
By order of
Goo. T. Keller,
Wm. C. Lake, H. P.
Secretary. tl
~ ,i? k*
Fresh Country Butter ,
Sardis Farm Cream Butter a
Pork Sausage, bulk and link
?AT? _
HARRIS-WOODWARD CO. J
Good Thing! to Eat.
i
?=?~
1 I I I I IIIH1II I II H II I i IM ;
*ENING
: Shop
CT. T
1111 11 HH
of seasonable
' inspection at
st designs and ::
id the famous |
; cost to you is ::
le" elsewhere. ::
>e found in this
das to fit and-;
a most hearty ::
shall have the : ~
slues in Union.
i |.| i.; mum;; i ti,t- ;;
[ Shop (
Shop.)
- UNION, S. C. j!
ff y.
i ; i
111111i11111111111 iTi 111''
(day
j ' I ^ a.
Ials
aline Satin, yard 98c
rnno An CU'^n t
L V|?V UV VUIUV^ 1
$1.45 I
ble Damask, 1
ird ..... . ,69c I
(or Saturday, I
17c |
unbia Knitting
;ular 50c balls
40c
gular $1.00 value
75c
of
Palm Olive Soap
ire a 15c bottle of
poo Free.
MED DAILY
cnnne r?n
UUUUU UU. I
French Enter Protest
Paris, Oct. 6 (By the Associated
ress).?The French government has
structed its minister at Athens to
notes t against the Greek governents
having sent reinforcements to
ie Greek army in Thrace.
NOT IIIST HATS
it real millinery creations in
1 of the season's most popur
materials, shades and
yles.
HE HAT SHOP 1
/ * " * 1
Main St.?Opposite Poet Office
\