The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, October 18, 1922, Image 4

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HERE'S A BRAND IRENE U IN? "SUM SHOI IRENB.? SLIM SHOW hockinsom ADD] "STRAIGHT FRO A Sunshin* TOMOI ETHEL C ii "HER 0W1 Who Si Where You may not be able to i self?but when you s<-e a money?you can feel sure ceeded on what he has th When a man spenus mi for it, there is nothing for the alert one stands where Htie otfier Has thro\ "T>arge Enough to Serve Any CJTli NATIONS The Long Christmas Gift There are many good ijfts that o can choose at Christmas, but for 1: gering satisfaction, long-drawn-o what is there, after all, that can named ;n the same breath with T Youth's Companion? The fun is or begun with the first Christmas nui her. Thereafter throueh thi 52 wee of the long. long year, it is constant supplying fresh sources of anm< tv.ent and information. Now it is i. beginning of a new serial, then it a contribution of vital interest the youth interested in sport or s tnce, next it is a brand new story C. A. Stephen- or A. S. Pier, or tale of wild adventure in the old I (ban days, by men who have actual lived among and powwowed with t redskins. But why say more? I other Chrstmas gift is welcomed wi so much 'easure. Try it and see. The .12 issues of 1923 will be crov; ed with serial stories, short storii editornls, poetry, facts and fun. Su scribe now and receive: 1. Tli'j Youth's Companion?f>2 sues in 1923. 2. \11 the remaining issues of 19; 3. The Companion Home Calend for 1923 All lor $2.50. 4. Or include McCall's Magazii the monthly authority on fashi< i Both publications, only $3.00. THF YOUTH'S COMPANION, Commonwealth Ave. & St. Paul ? Mass. Subscriptions Received at this OflTn It Card of Thanks We v/ish to thank our many frien who administered to our nephe Clyde C. Coleman, during his illne and death. We ask God's rich< blessings to guide them all throuj the journey of life. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Iluske^ Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Colema Paul and Porter Coleman. It SPECIAI, ADVERTISEMENT FOR RENT?Rooms, unfurnish< one or two. Apply to Mrs. Joe S* well, Pine street. It Women jurors have proved a fc success in England, especially in ins ters of sex. life: mmmmmmmmmmmm wt?? NEW PLOT kSTLE spend " PO??, JIDERS" 5 In tl r?Tfp ^ ?ur 1 iOlL? skies LDBRS" and , PEcruiiK^^2^^H^8^3^ Upon 8WlH|^^^BB^B| si BSH|n|^^^l| BMag?gj^Mi pigNunnKHI MiwMRfl^^K^^^QI^^II ',er ^SHniir i ||r I ;pa Love and Intrigue. I ^ th a Thrill in Every I ? table Style Show. I ED v M THE FARM" d ; Comedy 8 h RROW LAYTON 1 V MONEY" icceeds You Fail? answer that question for yournian who has failed to save that some one else has sucrown away. ji.ey and has nothing to show but failure ahead for him? ' ready to snatch up success vn lY-do^n"" Strong Enough to Protect All." Zs'kl, IN >3 k I_. E> A. N K? 1 Funeral of Clyde Coleman Held Sundaj no n" Tin- funeral of Clyde Coleman, o ut* Washington, D. C., who passed awa; *H" arly Saturday ntorninpr at the honv of his aunt, Mrs. .las. M. Huskey, ft '' v j Monarch, was held from Mon-Aetni 111" B.lptist rhurc'n Sunday at 3:30 p. m ks| The services were conducted by Rev T. F. Matheson, assisted by Rev. H ,e"! Kayd>ck and tho interment followe* j in Rosemont cemetery. Although thi ls weather was very inclement th i church edifice was filed to overflowing c,"j end this, together with the man; i beautiful floral tributes of differen aj designs, contributed by numerous rel n" | atives and friends, attested to th high esteem in which this worth; ^, young man was held. Mo * ^ Mr. Coleman was only '24 years o age and was a native of this count; (l being a son of the late Mrs. Auri Johns Coleman, and is survived b; , 'i the following brothers: Wm. S. Cole man of Brownsville, ePnn.; Pau Coletnan, of Washington, D. C., am H. Porter Coleman, of Union. ?i) Young Coleman was reared in th "ar Thornwell Orphanage, located at Clin ton, S. C., and was a member of t.i Pdesbyterian church. After leavini the orphanage he entered business ii Washington and through industry am us' frugal habits saved considerable o his earnings. About five months ag | his health failed and during man; ' " j weeks, including those spent with hi aunt, was confined to his bed, bu CO \ bore his afflictions without murmur o ;L complaint. Rev. Mr. Matheson, in the cours of his well chosen remarks, exhortei young men to lead good and usefu ds lives, calling especial attention to th w> fact that many die young and of ho\ !8S he had been impressed with the lif Jst of Mr. Coleman during the short tim< P*1 he had known him and also com mended very highly his aunt and he family who had ministered so faith n? fully to the young man's needs, re gardless of the danger of a contagiou pd disease. Misses Minnie Sparks and Marthi ' Turner acted as flower girls and th ;d. pall bearers consisted of six younj men and were as follows: Thomsoi Pd Turner, Charlie Sparks, Willie Le? Robert Stutts and Carl Cordelia. >ig it- Proctor, Vt., has the largest mar hie quarry in the world. * 4 I is th? Matter $ftfi With Union? jentlemar, Who la keenly in tar- 1 in the upbuilding ?f Union and ves is time e~d money for that pur- sur was tnking to a Times repre- cor tive this morning and among va- res things, the home football team ' up He said if any other town fro re state of South Carolina had 00< team they would boost it to the 00< i, build a beautiful athletic Held ro: encourage the team in attendance i the games and respond to the u for transportation. w] hat is the matter with Union, w< ,vuy? She used to be more public m ited and willing to help; now ev. m >ody sits back and waits for the iu :r fellow to do the work, with the jj, sequence that it is never done, but %v ome soul makes bold enough to go J vard he is criticised and knocked e of the notion and gives up in de- v ir. This is not a wail, but an aw- 0 reality and if Union expects to 0 w and flourish, she must change s tactics, and get on the wagon that | moving and pulled by the full cit- f nship. 1 \ few weeks ago a call was sent 1 t for cars to take the football team ( Newberry and not one soul re- , onded?not one, and Mr. F. J. Par- ( m, treasurer of the Caro-Vet sent e team over in his truck. We ask ;ain, "What is the matter with Unn?" The Tree of Knowledge In 1671 a governor of the Colony of irginia uttered the following conemnation of learning: "I thank God that there are no free chools nor printing presses, and I iope ye shall not have them these tundred years; for learning has >rought obedience and heresy and sects into the world." Reading these words one recalls the 'Fall of Man," because Eve disobeyed God and ate of the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil. Two hundred and fifty years hav? passed since the colonial governor expressed himself, and we have printinj presses and free schools everywhere Learning lags a little, and remain the possession of the few. But non we incline to the belief that we migh well thank God if we had mor .through free schools and more ger erally diffused learning. Nothing is ijiore certain than thi our industrial and political troubh spring from ignorance, for whi< there is only one cure. "We mu educate or we must perish." Igno ance in a republic is a crime." With wide economic theories and ^ cious hatred of government and coui widespread in labor organizatioi how can we hope for peace until t sway of learning is felt in then Men's emotions control their actio; liefs due to insufficient knowledge truth, only disorder can follow. 1 need more and better education e< cation not only in the comm branches, but in the rewards of thri industry, self-denial and accumu tion. It is not, perhaps, too strong statement to say that one-half < population is ignorant of the pro] use and function of wealth. While strive for it. onlv thp few are ei ' cated to conserve it. Great indeed our.need of education in sound e r* uomic principles.?.Journal of Co merce, Chicago, 111. f Poland to Establish v A National Curren e t Warsaw, Poland, Oct. 17.?A co plete reform in the existing finan of Poland has been announced Finance Minister Jastrzebski. j His program includes a monenti p readjustment to be effected in fr e three to five years. Also he wo increase and simplify taxation. 1 y time has arrived, M. Jastrzebski t ^ clares, for the establishment of a 1 lish national currency. The unit e to be the zloty. The treasury has P its disposal 100,000,000 gold frai for this purpose, and also 150,000,( j gold francs for industrial aid. The minister's tax program ^ volves a general increase in tax particularly land taxes, which he p ^ poses to increase 20 times. . Despite the many difficult jj which the nation has faced, indus has been successfully revived and o now bouyant. Although the print: of money has resulted in deprec e tion, it nevertheless made possi ^ the award of credits to manufact n crs and agriculturalists, and it p mitted state aid in the matter f tariffs and rates for the benefit of 0 poorer classes. y It now remains necessary only s establish gradually a gold secui 1 currency, and this the state is now r in a position to do. o No. 38 to Arrive in New d York One Hour Earli e Atlanta, Oct. 14.?Southern R v way System passenger train No. e the New York-New Orleans Limit e will arrive in New York one h - earlier, at 12:30 p. m. mstead of 1 r p. m. as at present, after Novem - 5th, on which date a new sched - with reduced running time will s put into enect. rso. jjb win leave in Orleans at 8:26 p. m., as at prest a arriving Atlanta at 11 o'clock the 1 e lowing morning; leave Atlanta I 11:15 a. m., arrive Washington a 7 o'clock the second morning, le Washington at 7:26 a. m., arriv Pennsylvania Station, New York, 12:30 p. :n.l Advertise in The Tim<e. f 0,000,000 Ir nvMtod m South?; rn Cotton Mills 'he South now las $860,000,000 inted in cotton mills, Which conned last year 9,733,000 bales as n pa rod with 2,1 T8,000 bales for ths t, of the countr f. rhe developmer t of this industry im 180 mills in 1880 with $21,976,) capita, to 970 i nills with $850,000,[> capital at pre sent, is one of the tnanrcs of Amer can industry. The Southern cdtton mill has been great missionary to the operatives, no before the Joming of the mill ere without employment. These ills nav created ; profitable employ, ent; they have ! inspired with new fe not only their operatives but milons of others. In proportion to the ealth and the newness of this inustry, they have done more for the ducational, religious and moral adancement of their employes than any ther great industry in this or any ther country. They have built plendid schools, often operated wholy at the expense of the mills; and rreat Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A mildings; they have laid out attrac -ive towns, and built dwelling: equipped with all modern improve ments, and rented1 them at a nomina cost. The operatives in these mills an almost all native Americans of th purest Anglo-Sa; on stock in th world. They have developed an initi ntive and self-relj ance and ability t do expert work vhich makes thei preeminently todly the greatest pc tential power for i otton mill advanc< rnent i/> be found' n this or any othc country. t In this issue vt 11 be found the sti tistics of cotton nill development i the South, which | hould stimulate e1 ery man in the S uth to a realizatU cf what the tutni will bring forth every line of act rity. Following tl cotton mills will lome textile machi cry plants and aifaned line of man f&ctures which |8 inevitably devel< around this greal' industry when on ' iirmly establishaL as the cotton i - dustry liow is i^jthe South, and tl f will spread to |keVy other line human activity. J s There is still for an enormc e gradual expansion of the cotton n >t industry in the ftvth and the Sout e ern Eextile ExpdKUm,which opens Greenville, Sj. C.jfcext week will b to concentrate Me thought not 01 of America bund other countr 38 upon the achieflneqts which hi -h been made and M the.. certainty tl &t this sect^n is pmdestinfed as the c r- ton "onufactuimg center of wo?d.?Manufacturers Record. taUenry Ford ^Correct r -Jrlnk Queui Greenville Electi^ l^t'l De-'fi xienry r* " " ? < of ency of * SVe drunken m. isiness iu- drinking thtopp< it or + li ion peddled rather a al "Q \ ^ De ift, His mechanicalare la- highly organized ^ ^ \ ?rresp ble workman migl K <* ' the \ a factory systeth oi ..andinar. Bei >ur Henry has iqora ?iews on the per ject. So he prop lgated the fo all ing order: du- "From now on t will cost a I is his job, without A V excuse or a co- being considered, ^Jiave the od >m- beer, wine or liqiM his breal to ha ye any of tnse^ntoxicanl his person or in hi hoiV^. The eighteenth Amendment is cy of the fundamental law of this try. It was meaat to be enf< m. Politics has interfered with enl ces ment of this law, but so far ai organization is concerned, it is : to be enforced to the letter." iry This is drastic action, but ] om comment on the whole seems to port the manufacturer. To the ^he ment that he is interfering impr ly in the personal habits and 1 pQ_ cf his employes it is answered nobody is obliged to work foi at Ford, and that he has a right t ncs ^OWn own roles of conduc those who choose to accept enr ment from him. The Manufact in_ Record upholds him, and the ma eg of big employers plainly appro his policy even when they hesiti adopt it themselvao. Certainly this is an effective LlLlJ nil. . u> m?x? proniDiuon prom Dir. were followed generally it woe , more to enforce the Volstead law all the enforcement machinery ble yet ^en a^e It should be evident, however no such policy can succeed if th ployers themselves are known ^ breaking the prohibition law. is moral for a workman is mor his boss, and incompetence d booze is just as harmful to effl , in the office as it is in the facto r 18 - m There were 8?9 women st? medicine in the .medical collej the country last year, or 61 mor in 1919-20. They comprised ( cent of the merictil women, ail 38( Subscribe to Thd Union Daily ' ed" . , our N< ?tacn *0 a regular asi embly of Pii ber Council,. N< lule Jt<. . t> jl a m XV. *ve degrees will be c mfetfed. ing Visiting Comp? pions welcom? at By order, I K. BrennecV V/m. C. Lake, 1 Secretary . J / [CTaj | SPECIAL SALE OF I KNEE AND HEEL Bll I PRICE, FORMER PI | THEY | DF i THE PRETTIEST I i | THE CITY, AT FRfl ;f $io.< CO; I SEE OUR $25.00 II AND TRICOTINES, in ^ 4 ALL THE NEW THI op ?* 11 Sport Sb IUS till th" X in * ??????^^???*?1 af BILL1KEN SHOE S| GOOD YARD Wl the ^ -jC.A' men Citation to Kindred And Creditors t so onsi- State of South Carolina, rhole County of Union, jides, Court of Probate, aub- Whereas, Con Allen has made suit How- tx) me to grant him Letters of Administration on the Estate and effects man of W. T. Powell, deceased, ppeal These are, therefore, to cite and ador of monish all and singular the kindred -M " 2-1 TIT ffl T>?.? h or 4111(1 creanera 01 me stuu n. x. iwwtg on e^? deceased, that they be and appear, before me, in the Court of Probate, part to be held at Union C. H., South Carcoun ?Hha, on lst day ?* November, >rced. ne*t, after publication hereof, at 11 force- o'clock 111 the forenoon, to show cause, s our i' any they have, why the said Adgoing ministration should not be granted. Given under my hand and seal this public 16th day of October, Anno Dotatini, sup- 1922. W. W. Johnson, argu- Judge of Probate, oper- Published on the 18th and 25th days ights October, 1922, in The Union Times, that 10-18-22 . Mr> ^ ? Jjj Dried Baby Unas, dried White iploy- Navy, Pinto's and Birdeye Beans urera arrived ***** ** jority HARRIS-WOODWARD CO. ? Good Things to Eat. 1 wfiy It pays to advertise in The Times. If it . ild do r*"???? r i ldying | Personality Times TF you want your Fall Hat I ?/X l/\/\U v# fl/?W VVA11 ??? IU XV/v/A. X# VI J WU, B instead of <sr^*rf from you, I ickney let us expertly harmonize | o. 27. your hat with your head. ?*" ?=??? ", 3.00 up m pie ,922, J. Cohen Co. \ , P. m. Ro o, gatiofactio* S. M. | FBATURINO j MALLORV ! v, HATS ! I612-2t ?^aacgar irni'f i r m i ' ? p ? lien < BOYS' EXTRA HI ISTER BROWN HI aCE SO CENTS. LAST, SALE PRIC 25c iESSES POPULAR PRICE! IM )0 to $45. vt sun COAT SUITS IN I THE BEST AT Tl mm oes and Sw FOR THE V 5 FOR THE KIDS. DE SEA ISLAND lten A A A A A A A FOI RED! $5( On AU THIS IS THI THAT A FORD SOLD FOR. ivtn nn v ah nt atLL un YOU. CARS ON Anderson ANY PART FO THE FO ' ; Miss Brett* Nilsson, of Karli uona, Sweden, has been ^elected ? *est typifying the prevailing fern line ohysical characteristics of tl country. 1 t Dr. M. Carey Thomas, retirin president of Bryn Mawr colleg tfter 28 years of service, is the fln Aoman to receive a degree froi John Hopkins university. iAVY DOUBLE f )SEAT HALF $ AS LONG AS | 1 | > ) DRESSES IN I 00 I ? I !OIRET TWILLS I 1 PRICE. I /eaters f /HOLE FAMILY. | ioc THE YARD. 1 CoJ ^ "J * X 1 r.>Ti ?3?* \ IDS LJCED ).00 Styles l LOWEST PRICE HAS EVER BEEN TERMS TO SHIT ii Aim rlAINu. > Motor Co. >R ANYTHING IN >RD LINE r ??? i. Gifford Plnchot, candidate for govls ernor of Pennsylvania, says that if he i- is elected women will be given seats le in his cabinet. If the problem of using atomic en~ g ergy ware solved, instead of using' a e, thousand tons of coal to drive a , it steamship from Liverpool to Mfew m York, the same result could be oh- . tained from a bit as big as a wahrat.