The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, October 13, 1922, Image 3
fFoT
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ALL THOSE WH
POTATOES FOR T
REQUESTED TO C
WE FIND THAT IT ?
TO DISPOSE OF
CANNED. WE HAVI
TO GET THE $3,50
BUILD A DRYING I
WE ARE. IT HAS (
THE CROP IS EXCE
THIS COUNTY, AND
WILL, AFTER THE ]
BE GOOD. THIS GN
WILL YOU CALL AN
WE MAY TALK IT C
THE UNION
PRftDlIf
I LEWIS M.
To Our Si
i Mr. Roy V^ughan,
collectorfor TheTime
e 1.1 I
1 irienas to drop in and
I tion. We haye not at
. in the field, and will ap
1 * . " J m '
in and renewing you
fall of the year is hen
i
tions are expiring this
give us your renewal <
i ^
for renewal.
j ?
'
.
,
*4 ... p
\ Tile Unit
J LEWIS
Georgia at it Again
The political pot in Georgia 1b boiling
again. Hardly had the state quit
y talking about the last primary for
governor before another senatorial
campaign, brought about by the death
of Senator Watson, has thrown the
state into another bitter fight with
Governor Hardwick, decisively and
rather ignominiously defeated for renomination
last month ny Clifford
Walker, as one of the leading candidates.
And the welkin in the Cracker
State will ring again until next Tuesday,
the 17th, when another primary
will be held.
The Aftgusta and Atlanta papers
this morning are running over with
political news (save of course quite
some 'steen Or so 'c?iunUh set aside
for the Candler mess) the burden of
i which is the challenge'. Issued by
Hardwick to his four opponents on
the League of Nations Issue. Hardwick
won the governorship on his
f)ght against the league in the aame
battle which proved victorious for
Watson, and he is now ridiculing the
stand taken for the leagne by his op- ;
poaents then. It will be interesting to
see if Hardwick can come hade so sqon
after his overwhelming defeat.
%
FIRST FEW WEEKS,
res US A WAY OUT.
ID SEE US, SO THAT
>VER?
CANNING 4'
IS CO.
, RICE, President. I
tmmmmmmmmmui m win iwiJ
ubscribers I
*
, having resigned as 7 i
?, we beg to urge our \ <
renew their subscrippresent
any collector
preciate your coming "j
r subscription. The f
s and many subscrip;
month. Call in and :
>r mail us your check ]
i
m Times I
M. RICE, Editor., I
8 - - - L - 1 . . - -. ?
We have rather warn? polities over
here every two years, but Georgia has
that bran,I all the time. Their campaigns
dove-tail into one another, It.
seems almost month after month. If
Hardwick happens to win the nomination
for the senate and is elected in
November someWw ?hii ? ??
vaovf TT III Iia T O IV
succeed him as governor because Walker's
term docs not begin until next
July.?Greenwood Index-Journal.
i m * i
High Insurance Paid
On Champion Bull.
Buenos Aires, Oct. 11.?"Faithful,"
the shorthorn bull that took the
cnampionship at the 1920 show of
the Argentine Rural society?the
leading exposition of its kind in the
world?and which 'was sold a few
years ago for 110,000 pesos, has died
suddenly.
The bull was out of action for the
greater part of the last two years,
but ft is believed that he left about
21 calves behind, while there are still
more than a score of Shorthorn matrons
to calve to his service.' "Faithful"
was insured for 70,000 pesos.
Some orange trees bear fffett tantilj
they are 160 years old.
MP' %
ATO
vers
0 PLANTED SWEET
HE CANNERY ARE
ALL AND SEE US.
TILL BE IMPOSSIBLE
THE CROP WHEN
? NEVER BEEN ABLE
10 OF CAPITAL TO
10USE. SO, THERE
.OME ABOUT THAT
ETMUrMrV CUADT IAI
bi/ulULl iJUVSKYl 111 I .
i HENCE THE PRICE I
Radical Discord to be
Aired at 1. W. W. Meet
Chicago, HI., Oet. 12.?Thfc interns 1
disagreements in radical circles ct
A merles will' be given an November
13 wtoft die Industrial Workers
of the World hold theft annual
convention here. Since the War time
"Conviction of nearly 100 of Its leaders
and the subsequent flight to Russia
of "Big Bill" Haywood, the general
secretary who is under a twenty
year prison sentence, the I. W. W.
has been less active.
Members complain, however, that
the general public has grown so accustomed
tc. Muming everything gav- 1
oring of radicalism on the HAywood
organization that they have been given
Ynuch unsought credit for the nc- 1
tivithis of others. 1
The I. W. W. cup of wrath flowed '
over when the Communist national '
convention, which met secretly in the '
Michigan sand hills south of St. Jos- '
eph last August, was raided by federal
men, and the public and some '
newspapers referred to it as an I. W. 1
W. organization. 1
The Communist party of America 1
and the Industrial Workers of the 1
World are the open enemies itf'Amer- 1
ican radical circles. So, one of the I
topics on the agenda of the I. W. W. '
convention November 13 will be I
"Means of Combatting the Commun- 1
:stic Tendencies of the Militant Work- <
ing Class." 1
The I. W. W. and the Communist i
Party, which is the official representative
in this country of the Moscow In- <
tern^tional, disagreed over the ques- <
tion of how to accomplish the revolu- <
tion they advocate. The Communists i
propose to overthrow the government I
first, while the I. W. W., according to i
Communist literature, * entertain "the 1
absurd theory that the revolution can
be accomplished by the direct seizure i
of industry without first overthrow- <
ing the capitalist state." i
Communists are said to have under- I
taken to overcome the syndicalist |
prejudices of the I. W. W., and con- i
vert them to the Russian idea, and
hence the I. W. W. are planning some i
counter poparganda at their forthcom- i
ing convention. . i
Germany Unable to ,
Trade in Argentina <
^ (
Buenos Aires, Oct. 11.?Dr. Walter ?
Simons, former German Minister for t
Foreign Affairs who is in Buenos i
\ires in connection with the Inter- t
lational Law Conference, declares <
.hat the commercial relations betureen t
Germany and Argentina have coins <
ilinost to a standstill. The reason is t
tie explains, that Germany has no i
money with which to do business, all
ler cash supplies having been turned I
iver to the Reparations Commission. *
Prohibition Issue Not j
Raised in North Dakota '
* - i
Bismarck, N.' D., Oct. 12.?Gandi- 1
datefe opposing the reelection of North 1
Dakota's representatives In congress, *
ail three of whom have supported pro- 1
hjbition programs, have not raited the 1
wet and dry issue in preelection cam- s
patgning. The present represents,
tives, O. B. Burtness, George W. c
Young and F. H. Sinclair, have the c
support of the president of the North 1
Dakota W. C. T. U. c
J. W. Deemy of Bismarck, opposed f
to Mr. Young in the Second district, r
in an "Independent Progressive" tick- '
?t, while not announcing his position, 1
is credited with being a dry. f
- i ?
baptist Re-enforcement
Campaign |
Corrected List ? Appointments for 1
Four Minute Men, Sunday, '
October 15, 1922. 1
r
At 11:36 A. M. Hebron
Ed. B. Smith, Guy H. Wil- 1
burn.
Lower Fnirforest?J. A. Sawyer, D.
Fant Gilliam.
Padgett's Creek?Frank Clay, Ernest
K Spears, Rev. J. R. Moore.
Philippi?B. F. Kennedy, Thos. J.
West.
Gilead?Dr. J. T. Jeter, J. B. Compton.
Prnilflh I A PoHw Hon^-i
Mt. Lebanon?J. K. Hamblin, F. M.
Willard.
Sulphur Springs?Prof. Davis Jeffries,
W. li. Jolly.
Salem?A. G. Kennedy, J. A. Crosby.
Tabernacle?C. T. Cleary, W. R.
Hill, F. Lockman.
Jonesville?J. A. Meng. x
.
Bet'nesda?Prof. Hunt, J. Wiley
Sanders.
Putnam?Paul Wilbura, C. C. Sanders,
Rev. J. R. Moore.
Upper Fairforest?B. F. Kennedy,
Thos. J. West, G. W. Going.
Brown's Cre??f?.?Ed. B. Smith, Guy
H. Wilburn.
Fairviev;?J. A. Petty, Noah Hendrix.
West Sprinrs?Prof. Davis Jeffries,
W. R. Jolly
Carlisle?J. A. Sawyer, D. Fant
Gilliam.
Mt* Joy?J C. Cudd, Dr. Edw. S.
Reaves.
At 7:30 P. M.
Westsidt'?Dr. Edw. S. Reaves,
Prof. Hunt, Rev. t,. M. Rice.
Mon-Aetna?Rev. W. H. Stone, J.
K, Hamblin, K. M. Willard.
Buffalo?C. T; Cly*y, W. R. HiU,
'Frank Lockman.
Union, 'FlrAt^RSv. A. T. Stoudenmfrfe,
Rev. J. A. Weftfc, J. C.Cudd.
i m i
1 That* are duly ISO 4AWs?' on the
Samoan Islands.- The entire I population
is 8,058. The purchase dt land
by Whites Is fottdddea.
1 * *?'
?
Opens StoekyqpU
1a Maori qi
M?tico City, Oct. 11.?-Approxj
mstdly 1,000 bMi of cattle, hop
sheep and goats art killed for utea
In Mexico CHty daily, and of thi
number at l?ast W percent are im
ported either frdfta the United State
or Argentina. Seventy percent o
the imported stock comes from tb
United States, usually four days b;
train from the border, and the re
mainder is brought from South Am
erica on steamers that traverse th
distance between Buenos Aires am
Vera Cruz in 17 days. In view o
these figures J. F. Primra and Le<
Russell, both well known to cattli
men of the southwest, are just com
pleting a stockyard here which a
present has a capacity of 7,500 hea<
jf stock and can be enlarged as ne
:essity demands.
Thfi rWItuok/I ' !!*> ? !?? I--?
? ? --vv.mjr utuf wv maov vj. vuc all?
sver established in Mexico on moderi
plans, adjoins the "city slaughter peni
and a working agreement has beei
made whereby a IT the city kill is firs
received in the local yards and then
prepared for market. Cold storage
is an unknown thing in Mexico, th<
natives preferipg , their meat freal
killed, but according to Mr. Primm
who is in active charge of the yards
a storage plant Will be started a;
soon as the other enterprises an
safely on their feet.
The inauguration of the American
owned stocqyard is said by its back
ar to be the forerunner of an earn
jst attempt by United States stock
men to replenish the Mexican herd:
that have been depleted by years o
revolution. A branch of the Pun
Bred Live Stock Association of th<
United States has been establishe<
in Mexico City and is offering it:
services free of charge to rancher
Mid farmep in the selection of pun
3red animals.
figures there were some 15,000,00<
native cattle in Mexico before th<
According to the best availabli
revolution which started ten year;
igo. There are less than 3,000,00'
low, and these are of low grade. Be
'ore the revolution conservative esti
nates say there were 40.000,000 sheej
ind goats compared to the scant 7,
)00,000 ''ow roaming the hills. Hoj
aising has always been neglected ant
he number of swine in the countrj
s almost negligible. Indicative ol
he natives preference for meats oth
sr than pork is the fact that out o1
hp 1 Ann animate HIIpH in Mpyi'pi
lity daily, less than 50 are hogs, am
;hese to supply a city of a millior
nhabitants.
In order to .facilitate shipment)
from the United States and to off
let heavy consignments from Argen
ina, which are groalng every month
American cattle meh have secure*
lumerous concessions from the Mex
can gaveraBicaXvaehenthy, .animal
nay be brought into Mexico with ?
ninimum of difflculty. Inspectior
-egulations have been relaxed a:
nuch as possible, and the railroads
ire making serious efforts to inovf
itock trains on bx^res schedule.
Strange as it may seem, Argentins
attle can be shipped to Mexico Citj
heaper than can animals from south
rexas, although the former stock
loes not compare in quality with thai
rorn the United States. Cattle shipnents
from all foreign countries tc
dexico during 1921 were more thar
68,000 head, of which 140,000 camt
rom south Texas.
"The League of Nations is a Jew
sh idea, and Jerusalem some day wil
>ecome the capital of the world's
jeace," says Dr. Nahum Sokolow,
he Zionist Jew. The statement is
nteresting in view of the fervid dodais
of last year.
Blackheaded
Pimples Quit
Willi S.S.S.
Why? Pimple-Poison Co? When RedBlood-Cells
Increase! S. S. S.
Builds These Red-Blood-Cells.
Ton ca? be sure ef this, nature has no
Substitute for red-blood-cells. Pimplepoison
eant live in the red rivers of youi
blood as long as there are enough riot
red-blood-cells in it. More red-blood-cells!
' shame
/ rit r>. ( * . ? i
ojauetmshedjacel
That la What you nibd whn ton see pim
Mos staring at younn tte mirror. Black
wtadbd'fcmiples nr#?worse! Bcaema t
worse yet] Yea esniry everything undei
ike Hud.-i-you'tl flit only one answer
more coll-pirtver, In year blood! The tre
mendoui result*, piOtncod by an increaa
iu red-bleed-ealts I&ono of the A. B. <Vi
Of medical . -feclencef Red-colls meat
'Clear- jlure rlcV blodw. * They mean clear
nirttr, "levsWp -coinylealons. They meai
nerfe poWijrj been die all yonr nerrea an
fed by yo?r blood. They ruenn freedon
foterer from pimples, from the blnckbeni
pest, from botls, from ecr.etna and skli
eruptions, from rbcumatiana Impurities
from that tired, exhausted, run-down feel
Ing. Red-blood-cclla are the most Itopor
tant thing In the world to each of us
R. S. 8. will build them for you. 8. R. f
haaMteen known alifce 182th.aa one of th
r rent cut Mood-builders, blood-cleanser
sud -fcyatonr atMnaUteneaa ever, produced
8. R, S, t? sold a Jin drutr Stores in tw
rises. Tile Inrrfea sis* bottle la ttm mor
u-uumulral.
0t(9t0a Vr** yometfapan
S. 8. a ta sold by Union Dm* Slot
4*^ 4* j l,/vi - t
t ' > "v ftR \ ' fuw *95 t,V'
?
?
;
fifteen G
I Better
J cigaretti
<or 10
t
i
1
: i
s
f
Every cigarette full
3 weight and full size
s
, CoPYRir.Hr 192.2, LiOfjF.Tr & Myers Tor
)
. Dangers of Creating
> | Static Electricity
-i.
'; Washington, Oct. 10.?A big tank
- : truck transporting gasoline was
' j blown up by a terrific explosion on
' | the street recently, because ? nnaner.
" by who didn't know what he was do
' ing picked up a piece of chain. He
J saw the chain dangling by one encl
from the truck and thought he would
1 possibly save the truck from being
wrecked through fouling the chair.
' in one of the wheels.
The man didn't know the chain was
hanging there for a> purpose. II j
| i didn't know that gasoline, unlike
water, is a non-conductor of electricity.
Possibly he didn't even know
5 that flowing gasoline, especially when
\ strained through such materials ac
' chamois skin filters, sets up consider
5 able frictional or static electricity
' But that was what caused the truck'
5 destruction. z
Usually when the big tank true..
1 backs up to the filling plug at a serv
ice station or other storage place, th
1 metallic nozzle from the trucK
' touches the metallic intake pipe and
' thus forms a ground for any charge
of. static electricity that may collect
in the truck. Sometimes, howevei h; !
1 the nozzle does not touch a ground ->*
ing point, and with no other metalli fio
ground for the truck, the car is per ir
fectly insulated, standing as it doc la
I on rubber tires. Sometimes, also n
me nozzle of the truck outlet pipe f'oi
vests against a wooden piece in thj >vli
intake pipe and is thereby likewise 1
insulated, for dry wood is also an t>h
insulator. St:
While the gasoline is poured into roi
the storage tank a certain amount cf sh<
vapor arises, and there is certain to ;>k
be some about the intake and the pl<
truck. The flow of the liquid will se' an
up a static charge in the truck. A* aii
the charge increases, it may become tra
strong enough to leap the gap to tK> ?x
nearest ground, or the two points
may be brought into contact. There he
is a spark, a flash, an explosion and >1>
untold damage may result. rei
Consequently the careful tank driv- si\
1 er always has a metallic pait hang.
ing from the truck to the ground, a Gi
[ rod or chain, to drain off the electric
charge as it collects, as long
the gasoline is being drawn off.
The same basic fact has been
the cause of numerous smaller Ares 0t]
and explosions in garages, both pri- f.i
vate and public. In one instance a cai nil
was being filled with gasoline from a cr<
can. While the employee ran the ga- tic
into the can ne strained it through be
a chamois Alter in a funnel. To make j,
the funnel sit up straight in the hole re,
in the tank a wooden ring was placed
in the hole and the funnel was placed aj,
in that. Thus the can was insulated |je
After pouring some gasoline into thi du
tank, the man brought the can spout f0
* into contact with the tank. There w]
* was a spark, a flash and the result- ha
' ing explosion. ar
* A man was pumping gasoline into
a can in his own garage. He hung wi
" the pail on the hook over the spout |er
i of the pump. He did not notice that pi
I the pail had a wooden handle. By yf
1 reason of the wooden handle the pai< dt
was insulated from the pump. The ar
flowing? gasoline set up a static ht
l*. charge in the pail which leaped thj gj
' gap to the pump and another fire was ei
c (darted. si
Friction. ?1 silk cloth will produce
static electricity, and fires have beta cl
caused* it has been reported to gov- la
' emment agencies, when silk cloths st
* soaked with ben sine or gasoline wexe w
re used to rub the grime off mechanics' | w
1 i J.; 1 -JLiu..1
GARETTES
IACCO Co.
THE BIG ois
Avalon Farm;
?Hi Liquid Huq CumdMummr,
?THE RUIN
THEY both started life at the st
given the same feed under tbe
tioBL. Tbe big one got hla regtila- <1
the liqud Hog Tonic. Conditioner and Ft
Tbe big one to the kind that tops markets
and u rings big profits to the pockets
of ttar hog raiser. The runt cost more to
ratoe than he will ever bring in the market
And the difference was bru igl t
about by 20 cents worth of AVAIXJN
rnr%mo n\ArIUPirj, FlUlr 1 U.AI i
puts new life into hogs?makes them esit
more and grow fat nt an umnxlng -uts.
It helps them to cotnhat disease ar.< e.'iImUmmm
FOL Zt
GLYMPH'S PHARMA
uds. Sparks are a prolific source j
gasoline fires, especially spark? [
un open flames, broken electric a
hts. and from friction. Even the i
sh on a concrete pavement of the
",1s in shoes have been known to I
m sparks which resulted in fire:
len gasoline vopor was present.
If gasoline is stored in an open
ice, such us a pail, the United
ates Bureau of Mines reports, thi ,
im in which the pail is left will ,
artly be filled with an easily exisible
mixture. The limits of uxisihility
are between 1.5 percent
d 6 percent of gasoline vapor in ;
*. In other words, only a little
soline vapor is needed to render air <
plosive?one and one-half feet of ,
soline vapor for each 97 and one- <
If feet of air. One gallou of gasne
can, under perfect conditions,
lder, 2,100 cubic feet of air explore.
ermany Producing Heavily
An Essential to Ammunition |
London. Oct. 10.?"Germany today
in a far better position to wage anier
war than is Great Britain;
lgland is dismantling her ammution
plants, while Germany is inlasing
her production of ammuni>n."
This statement has been mad.
fore the British Association by Dr.
A. Marker, formerly director of
search in the Ministry of Munitions, j
Dr. Marker declared he was not an 1
firmist, but simply recited facts as!
saw them. In 1913 Germuny pro-!
iced 90,000 tons of nitrogen chiefly!
r agricultural purposes, he said, I
lile the smaller Germany of today1
is produced more than twice this1
nount. ,
"At the end of this year Germany!
ill have at her disposal," Dr. Mark- j
went on, "an internal capacity for j
oducing 200,000 tons of nitrogen a;
ar. This will make her entirely in-1
pendent of all nitrate importation,!
id in esse of another war she will \
ive all the basic materials for a gitntic
output of munitions and j
\- M till
uugu lermizer 10 grow a large 1
lore of her food.
"It may be justifiable," he con-,
uded, "for the allies to allow our'
te enemies to put themsalves in so
rong a position so soon after the
ar, but it may also be that those
hose function it is to see that some,
mM^K0'
0
?better Turkish
? better Virginia
? better Hurley
5 HOG-TONE
Fmttwr ontf Worm toinif
IT V/ASNT
une time and weight. They were
same conditions - with one excepose
of AVAIiON FARMS HOO-TONEitterT?and
the runt didn't.
minate the worms that are tb~ hoi? miser's
greatest foe to profits. Splendid for
pregnant sows?helps to produce hcsVhicr.
sturdier pie>. Come in the stote?
tell us the number of your herd-and we fl
will give you enough HOG-TONK to k
treat all yunr hogs 60 days You don't I
give us awnny now. f t e rcsul: o! )J
the HCXVTONK treatment fail to so'is- M
fy yo j. It will toat you nothing. + b
iLE BY
iCY, UNION, S. C.
it any rate. of. the provisions of tho
?eace treaty are carried into effect,
ire not aware of what is happenng."
_
Report of
Agricultural Statistician
Saluda, S. C., Oct. 7, 1922.
xcii'idinc *<> report of B. B. Hare,
uprri ultuval statistician in South C.'arDhm.
for tho Division of Crop and
Live Stock Estimates, United StaU
Department of Agriculture, condition
jf cotton in the state on September
?3 was 38 per cent normal, against 4<j
per cent on August 25 and 150 per cent
[>n uJly 25. The conditio on Septem
be?* -out, the ten-year average on the
l espondiiig date being 62 per cent.
Tne indicated production is 620,000
bales, against 7;"5,000 last year a?..!
'.<139,000 in 1920.
Speaking d the report Mi. tint
Mvs: "The condition figure ui
per cent js probably the lowest i
record and is due more to th<* exce?
sive rains in u.?ne. July ana early An
ust than bull weevil infestation, al
though the weevil did considerable
damage in many sections throughout
the state."
Condition for the entire United
Slates oil September 25 was 50 per
cent of normal, compared with ',7
per cent on August 25 this year and
12.2 per cent on September 25, In^t
year, the ten-year average being 59.5
per 11 nt. The present condition fore
cants a production of 10,135,000 bales,
the production last vear beinc 7.953 -
041 bales: two years ago, 13,439,003;
three yeaia ago 11,420,703 and four
years ago 12,040,532 bales.
Condition in other states is as follows;
Virginia 63 per cent.; North
Carolina 59; Georgia 37; Florida 55;
Alabama 55; Mississippi 54; Louisiana
53; Texas 52; Arkansas 57; Ten
easee 56; Missouri 70; Oklahoma 42;
California 80; and Arizona 80.
A TIAW HaviOO AAMoiotlnev A/ AAA/JIIA
. - .? ivv) wilOIOVIItm VI VVIIUUVtor
wires submerged in the channels
of New York harbor, enables liners
to guide themselves safely through
to port. Sensitive wires slung over
the vessel's side and trailed below
the surface, serve to communicate a
buzzing sound to the bridge when the
vessel is safely in mid-channel.
Historical writing in Greece began
about 600 B. C.