The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, November 08, 1922, Image 4
RIALTO
* ' " % *
TODAY ,
f WILLIAM RUSSELL
?1H
THE LADY FROM
w LONGACRE"
ADDED '
."ABRAHAM
AND LOT'
The Second of the Bible Storie
ALSO
"HIS Wirt'S SUN
A Sunshine Comedy
TOMORROW
GLORIA SWANSON
IN
"HER HUSBAND'S
TRADEMARK"
Study Local Conditions,
Bab son Advise:
"If your products arc consumer'
Roods?that is, bought by the geni-rt
public dather than any particula
group or industry?it is safe to sa
that your marketing plan should h
built for the city as a uni?," saj
Roger W. Babson, the well know
statistician, in Forbes Magazine (fr
* >
"If you are in the retail busines:
^ obviously you must operate on thi
unit; but if you are doing a "attorn
business you can readily increase you
sales efficiently by following the sam
plan.
"Conditions are not alike in any tw
cities at one time, and sales possibi
-j:.;-: ?
ibitrs in uujuimiiK' localities may an
fer by as wide a* margin as 50 to 6
per cent. It is ridiculous to assure
that the campaign, designed to se
the country as a whole, will be 1C
pej cent productive in each of the<
various communities under all <
these different circumstances. It
Eafe to say that sales can be increasi
" 0 to 30 per cent on every dollar yc
spend in advertising and sales effoi
if you will take the trouble to stuc
each city and fit your plans to loc
conditions whatever they may be.
"Many business concerns will re
- , take the trouble to get this knowledg
They are governed as the old-fas!
ioned, one-cylinder gasoline engii
was governed?by the "hit or misi
method. This will not be admitted l
some sales managers, advertising me
and credit men who claim they ai
not operating by luck and chance, bi
by intuition.
"Intuition is a wonderful thingwhen
it works. I have great respet
for it?when it works. But it doesn
always work. Intuition is wha
prompts a hen to sit on china egg
as optimistically as on the real art
cte. Intution is what tempts the se
ter pup to point at the parrot cag
Intuition is what leads many businea
men into the embrace of the receiver
Condensde Items
For Ready Readin;
It is just 50 years since America
national park policy was inaugurate!
Half a century ago congress vote
that an immense tract of land in Wye
lr.ing, since called Yellowstone Par]
should be dedicated as a "publi
pleasure ground and a game pri
serve." Today there are 19 nationi
park reservations in the Unite
States, covering a total area of coi
siderably more than 10,000 squai
miles.
Premier Lloyd George will recei\
90,000 pounds for his memoirs.
Nearly 14 per cent of the quail
food for the year consists of anim;
matter, such as insects and their a
lies. The quaril has no superior as
weed destroyer. It is a good range
and will paLol every day all the fielt
in its vicinity in search of food.
In order to keep American ej
change stable, England is caling i
all the gold hoarded by individual
druing the war. tl is estimated thi
$!f>,OGO,QOO worth of gold is held b
2,000,000 persons in England. Gol
is being shipped to New York at ir
tervals.
The brass-bound mahogany tab!
desk belonging to Sir Walter Scot
recently sold for $132. At this desl
''The Lady of the Lake," "The Lay o
the Last Minstrel," and "Marimon
were written. "Walter Scott of Ah
hotsford" is inscribed on the bras
border of the desk.
A record-breaking sale of eggs wa
niAde by a Waukon, Iowa, dealer, wh<
utilized the long distance telephone V
New Yorw City and disposed of 1,101
cases of eggs at a price approximate
ly $10,000.
The centre of the earth is about
1,000 miles beneath us. The deepest
shaft ever bored reached a depth ol
lest: than one and one-half miles.
bS %
In the fourteenth century old men
wore beards and the younger generation
shaved.
HSk .
ik'
'! ? " " "lu-i - -iUniwodnt^ftrman
May Grow Tobcacco
A* a Money Crop
Nooct Yoari
At a tecent meeting of interested
farmers Mr. W. E. Lea, a prominent
tobacco man of Florence, gave an able i
talk on tobacco growing, curing and
marketing.
"I have ridden over a considerable
portion of your county," said Mr. Lea,
and I find some land which will make
a good type tobacco. The big trouble
lies in lack of uniformity of soil type
ti.aking it difficult to secure sufficient
acreage in one body. This lack of i ni-:
formity in soil type would be a haudi-i
cap in the proper curing of tobacco j
grown under such conditions.
I feel that your hope for success as
tobacco growers lies in the flavor1
which you should be able to produce,
he you have conditions somewhat sim-j
* ilnr to the Piedmont sections of North'
Carolina and Virginia. The farmers1
in the Piedmont of these two statesj
usually realize as much per acre as
the growers of Pee Dee section of this
state get for the light type.
In developing tobacco growing in
this county I would suggest that you
get at least two experienced tobacco i
men to assist the farmers who are
growing the crop for the first time.i
One of these men should be secuced!
from the Biedmont section of North (
Carolina as your conditions here are
similar to those of the section mentioned.
The duty of these men would
" be to assist farmers in making soil
selections, planting of bed. instruct-!
ing as to proper methods of cultiva-;
tion, curing, packing and marketing.j
, You should use different varieties
^ | from tho.Pee Dee section and should
sell your tobacco in one of the No^th i
1 ' Carolina markets where this grade of
yl
' I tohacco is appreciated.
It is jyi erroneous idea that it takes
rS I
a lot of money to grow tobacco, esj
pecially is this true in connection with
" the curing house. The inexpensive log
I house will cure tobacco equally as
?'| good as any of the elaborate expenj
sive houses which you occasionally
: find in tobacco sections. Plans of Uie
lrj inexpensive house can be seen in
16 Georgia Buletin 171, which bulletin
can be secured by writing J. Phil
1? Campbell, Athens, Ga.
~ | Tobacco is a much more scientific
crop than cotton and any man who is
' not planning to treat it as such should
by all means leave it alone.
At the beginning I would not ad
\ise any man to attempt more than
** four acres of tobacco, regardless of
bow much land or money he may
have. Four acres is a very good unit
of work and if you can get 25 good
>u | farmers to grow four acres each un.
' der the supervision of expert tobacco
^ men I believe that the plan is worthy
i of development and should prove fair.
^ ly profitable.
?\ French Are Seeking
t~| Business in Moscow
rj
,y, Moscow, Nov. 7.?More represents,n
tives of French commercial houses
re have been visiting Russia this fall
,t than at any time since -the war. Some
have come to negotiate with the gov_
emment for concessions of various
it kinds, while others are here to buy
?t or sell goods.
it: The first concession to be granted
r8 a French company under the Soviet
j_ regime was that of the municipality
t- of Moscow, by which deal a group ol
e. capitalists from Paris are given a
5S 49 year lease upon certain city
city blocks. The buildings are to be
improved by the French and sub- ,
leased for business purposes, or as
g living quarters, the company paying
_ . .
?g me city governmeni eacn year a eer- j
^ tain percentage of its income.
d 'Pussyfoot" Johnson
: In New Zealand
Ic'i
Sydney, Australia, Nov. 7.?W. E.
*1 Johnson, the American temperate ad;d
vocate, recently passed through Svdi
ney on his way to New Zealand to
re help the anti-liquor fight there.
A lunch hour meeting was held in
Sydney Town Hall to welcome him
on his arrival, and in the evening he
addressed a big meeting: in the Hippodrome.
He declared that prohi V
bition in America was a tremendous
al j success. Experience had shown, he
said, that prohibition was for the
a benefit of the race and the advanee?r!
ment of civilization.
Is
South Union
1.1 Miss Bessie Brock spent Friday
n I night and Saturday with Miss Grace
|si and Miss Gertrude Nelson at the Unlt
ion Mills.
v I Miss Maggie Betenbaugh spent
j a short while with Mrs. Cal Jolly
,_! Sunday.
Lynn Keisler is on the sick list.
Mrs. J. A. Tucker l\?s been seriouse
ly ill for some time.
.? \1ioo TnVinaio Moo Voiolov otyoo* rl,?
c.i week-end with her parents on Route
f 8.
" Misses Hattie Vaughn and Mary
^ Rochester of Monarch spent Sunday
g afternoon with friends in this community.
The writer and 'spent spent the
s week-end with friends and relatives
o in Goshen Hill. Some of the farm-!
!> ers of that section made very good
3 ciops, although Mr. Boll Weevil got|
- over his share of the cotton.
As against more than 7,000 deaths
t in the country yearly in tailroad act
ridents, there are 97,200 deaths due to
f disease spread by insect carriers.
A forest, at maturity, contains
scarcely 5 per cent of the trees that
started life there, the d-^ath of the,
, other 95 per cent having been necessary
to the survivors' development.
? 1_ *JL 1,1 UJ II III J II I II II
aittWEves--i#-?*Es?r
i . . * *
HMmktMbr cf Itirt Relates IXRii
?hm WMsh H? DMtana to by No
Mnna Uncom^M. I
The securing of public safety la out)
bbo of many Improvement* tbo Brit
lab have mad* to Mesopotamia bat It seems
to be the one that has chiefly
'13pressed the public mind. Tbo first
person who spoke to me of It whs an.
Oriental a teacher of Arabic, Maude
Radford Warren writes In the Saturday
Evening Post. We sat in a house
in Basra on a cloudy evening, looking
out of the window, watching tbo shad
owy forms of pa use ruby.
"Too will notice that' tho irtt
houses have blank walla facing the
street," he told me.
"If the walla are broken by window*
these are barred. If there are door*
these are amall or else secured. LH;
Dot think this Is done for the sake 01
keeping the women sheltered or the
sun off. It la to keep thieves out,
**000 night I was sitting In this
house with my friends when a knock
came at the door. First I looked out
of the window. I saw a number ot
people on two sides of the house. I
went to the door and I said: 'Who I*
thereT* The answer was: 'I am
thief.'
"I suppose In America If anyone was
so lunatic as to say that, yon would
telephone for the police. But here under
the Turks It was wise to let tb*
thieves In. Why not? There were to?.
many of them, and they would bav*
been angry and would have killed some
of us in revenge some day. So we
let In the uian who knocked, and some
of his friends came with him.
"They did not make polite greetings,
hat they took all the people Into
separate rooms, tbe women in one. the
children in another, and the men in
third. This was because If they had
been left together they might have secretly
encouraged one another not tc
tell where money or Jewels were hidden.
?
"All the people In the house were
ery much afraid, and they told wheiw
their hiding places were, but said
that they had been robbed ouly a few
j weeks previous and they had nothing
left
"The thieves were very angry. 'We
must have something.' they said. So
they sent for a cart, and they taok
what furniture aud bedding and cooking
dishes they wanted, and then want
away. They left us our Uvea, and
that was about all.
"Ton see bow quiet these streets are
even now. about nine o'clock? That Is
not entirely because Arabs prefer to
go to bed early, though they do not
keep late hours. Rut they have ths
old habit of not taking risks at sight."
Odd Japanese Legends.
There are man> delightful legends
ahont old statues of the gods la Japan
In tbe Hase temple at Kamakura, high
on the crest of a hill overlooking tbe
hay, la a great glided kwannon of camphor
wood?an eleven-faced Image of
the Goddess of Mercy?which for cenI
tnrtes has hearkened te the prayers
. of the fishermen. A long time ago, In
I the dim past when dragons were
| abroad in tbe land and gods condej
scended to play with men, sotne fisher
; men saw a great light shining ont at
' sea. writes Rlsle F. Well in Asia. They
sailed In their junk toward the light
and fonnd the Image and ever since
have worshiped at her shrine.
At the same time a similar Image of
Kwannon, also made of camphor wood
floated In at Yamato and was placed
In the Hase-no-Kwnnnon, a temple
that was the favorite resort of conr!
tiers In the Nsra period." It Is still todsy
a popular temple for pilgrims
who come In the spring, when the
cherries are in full blossom and all the
lanterns are lighted to transport themselves
back to the daya when the gods
were young.
The Mango Industry.
TKa Pnt.nl/*.. * ?
mi vimt UI luirixn M-eu una piBUT
tntroductlon of the United States Department
of Agriculture has assembled.
through the work of Its explorers
and through exchange with the British
Blast Indian departments of agriculture,
one of the largest collections of
selected mango varieties In the world
There are no\f fruiting at the plant
introduction held station, Miami, Fla..
about twenty varieties this year, and
these represent the selections from
more than seventy sorts of this great
fruit. Some of these have scarcely
! iuore fiber than a freestone peach and
can be cut open lengthwise and eaten
as easily with a spoon us a Rock.v
Ford cantaloupe. They have an Inde
acrlbably agreeable aroma remlnlsceni
' of pineapples. The mango tree, when
It Is in hearing, is a gorgeous sight, foi
It Is a large long-lived tree and the
golden-yellow fruits as they hang 1r
! great clusters from the dark gre-w
! foliage make one of the great tropic il
| plant sights of the world.?ludlanap >
lis News.
Wanted Further Information.
The suddenness with which th?
great war broke out. and the cenfuslor
a# minH fliof nif??r?nhb
| wa tuitxi ? ? w?vi iwvaa nuup w ill.
1 were not !n a position to follow closely
i the course of events flay hv day. It
i amusingly shown by this story cah! <n
, Bveryhody'a Magazine.
A Brltlsh'artrnlnlstratlve official, sui
I tloned In a village 'n the Interior nt
! Africa. JuRt after the outbreak of W?t
received the-following telegram frou,
hla bureau chief: "War declared. Ar
reat all enemy aliens at once."
Two days later the bureau chief
was handed the following reply
j 'Have arrested two Krt-nchmen, ?
j Dutchman three OermanR. two Aroerl
cans, a I'ohirider, three tlusslaNi aue
an Italian. Plense tell n?e whim w
*?* a* war wfth*"
Atlanta, Nov. 8 (By the Associated
Press).?The Democratic solid South
is again a reality as a result of the
general election.
In Tennessee Governor Taylor, a
Republican lender, was defeated by
Austin Peay, a Democrat, and Cordell
Hull, chairman of the Democratic
committee, regained his congressional
seat ,
In Virginia a Democrat carried the
disticf..3fjti?h has been won by the
Republicans for 20 years.
. ?. u . uwmiwiu L IIJIIII ill m
? 4\ H^*4r .. i
lt*km,.UW.N?r. 8 (By the Associatad
Pre:>). ~ fl wrsoty-seven men, <
member* of the tjjpited Mine Workers <
of America, u*e scheduled to face 1
Judge D. T. Hartwell in Circuit Court ?
Nc^embe^ ?; vhatrrW; *to- W?'indict- >
meats, with murder, conspiracy to 1
murder, rioting .and assault to rour- <
der. ; ' ; l
Vhe charges are the outgrowth of 1
the killing of 19 non-union men 'near
Herrin June 22, following the attack i
on the -1 .ester strip mine. <
Ninety-two of the indictments i
charge murder, 59 allege conspiracy 1
to murder, 58 dioting, and the remain- i
ing 54, "assault to murder. 1
The first case on the docket ac- <
| cuses 48 of the defendants of the mur- i
dei of Howard Hoffman of Hunting,
ton, Indiana, a Steam shdvel -operator, i
Judge Hartwell has indicated that i
this case, because of its position on
the docket, will be called to trial first, 1
although Attorney General Edward J.
Brundage, who directed the wodk of |
the. grand jury, said he preferred firBt i
to try Otis Clark, the first man indicted.
charged with the murder of C. K.
McDowell, the mine superintendent, i
und the first mine man killed.
Since the original indictments were
returned the grand jury, at an adioi.rned
session, reindicted the 48 men
mimed jointly for the murder of Hoffnmn,
charging them with the murder
r>)' Ignace Kubinis, one of the nonunion
men wounded in the mine fight,
fti.binis died in the Herrin hospital
after the first session of the grand
juvy had recessed.
If the attorney general carries out
a threat to disniiss the joint indictment
for the murder of Hoffman rather
than go to trial with it first, the
next case up will be a joint indictment
charging 18 men with the murder of
Antonio Mulkavich. ,
The Herrin troubles were the result
of an attempt to operate the strip
mine in the heart of a strongly unionized
county during the coal strike last
summer.
In its formal report the special
g'-and jury which investigated the af
inir declares that the noting and
murders were the result of a conspiracy.
This conspiracy, the jury
said, originated among the mine union
officials. Hugh Willis, of Herrin,
member of the state executive board
of the union, who is under tment
for murder and a. sault to niuvjer,
was said to have guaranteed that "the
union will pay'' for guns and ammunition
seized in ITerrin hardware stores
before several hundred armed men
took up the march on the mine.
The grand jury did not return any
indictments in connection with the
fatal shooting of the union men the
afternoon preceding the riot. In its
report the grand jury staled that jio
evidence justifying indictments was
oilered.
According to a statement made by
Allen Findlay, timekeeper at the
mine, before the coroner's jury, C. K.
McDowell, mine superintendent, shot
two union men with a high-powered
v.'lle as they were in the woods n^id
the edge of the mine property. Findiay
told the jury that he saw the men,
throw their hands in the air and fall
immediately after McDowell fired.
Col. Samuel H. Hunter of the Illinois
Ntaional Guard, testifying before
E. J. May, arbitrator of the state
nriustrial commission, said that Mr.
McDowell, mine superintendent, was
instrumental in starting the trouble.
Col. Hunter declared that McDowell
telephoned him the aftamoon of June
21. the day before the riots, and said,
"We killed two or three union men."
Personal investigation developed that
men were shot down by McDowell,
Col. Hunter testified.
The grand jury report incorporates
s telegram from John L. Lewis, president.
of the United Mine Workers of
America, sent to State Senator William
Sneed, president of the miner's
local here, concerning some of the
nftn at the strip mine. They were to
ui iremun as cummon scriKeoreaKers,
Mr. Lewis said, because- the steam
shoveler's union to which they belonged
had been outlawed by the American
Federation of Labir.
Following posting of this telegram
in Williamson county, the grand jury
report says, preparations for the attack
on the mine began.
Practically No Escape
As a present to their first baby
Major Henry Vaughan and Mrs.
Vaughan, who moved to New York
from Spartanburg, S. C., were given a
fancy bred Pekinese dog. They moved
out to the country for the summer
and sent for Sallie, -the old negro
cook, to come up and look after the
baby and Ming Toy, the dog.
Ming Toy had never seen a cat before.
So, when a big tomcat came to
the back porch, Ming Toy, in the
strongest bark he knew, promptly
Layed at the cat, showing great bravery
for such a foolish looking dog.
Sallie looked out the back door.
"Ming Toy," she advised, "lemme
tell you sump'n. You'd better <Juit
yore projekin' wid dat tomcat. Fust
thing you know, 'at cat gwine to git
mad and 'at ain't gwine to be no place
lor no dog laik you. Ef'n 'at ole cat
gits started he's gwine turn you ever
way?but loose!"?Saturday Evening
Post,
Our store wil clot* each terming
from 8:5$ to for morning
prayer service. ;r
HARRIS-WOODWARD CO.
Good Thiafh to Eat
V-jtejs
u-Nai ?K*j?uaa i mm
London, Ho*, t i|(fa 3w}VyC> Iit
shipbuilding returns ft' 'h-^ ytv j
tor ended in September, ; > that
merchant tonnage W :
itrOction in the United ' V v> .k -vi*
September 30 amounted . v .o t'
tons. This represents a i .^uctiop o? ],
about 802,000 tens as con. lared wi * it,;
the total at end of thtf1 pet\ o\\ , ;a .V ;
ter. ~ \\
. The total, however, induce ; *.. JU
Btderable amount of tonnr. ? ..i . J
000 tons) on which work . ,v r.
suspended for some time. 1/ t:.v ? i
htis amount for purposes of ~r fp.ptw ;
son with figures for normi.t >
the merchant tonnage actual v t dor
construction in the United Iv ;*?*.m
amounted to 1,198,000 tons.
The average tonnage untie f onstruction
during the twelve rvtntha ,
immediately preceding the v. was
1,890,000, or 692,000 tons m< ~c than
the present figures. ' ^
The total merchant tonna/e now
building abroad amounts to 1,086,511
U..i .L.?i oca AAA
LUCID, UUW IUVIUUUIO AUVUt LUU)VUV IVII1
upon which work has been suspended,
leaving about 829,000 tons actually
under construction.
The tonnage building abroad is
about 230,000 tons lower than the
total building at the end of .June
last, the figures for the leading cOun^
tries pre: Italy 210,114 tons; France
197,065 tons; Holland 177,024 tons;
United States 147,066 tons; and Japan
96397 tons. These figures do
not take into account the tonnage
building in Germany and at Dantsig,
for which no returns are available,
but it is estimated that the tonnage
under construction in Germany at the
presen time is abou 350,000 tons and
at Dantzig 40,000 tons.
Two Dark* Sides
"Cyrus Rasp ran a grocery store
down on the corner for about 26
years," related old Riley Rezzidew of
Petunia, "and as he done so utilized *
about half of his time in denouncing
the public far a lot.of thieving, hypo- !
orites, who prayed loudly with one \
hand on the Sabbath and beat him *
olit of hii just due's with the other on
week days, figgeratively speaking, of *
course. Said he ort to know, if any
body did, that 65 per cent of all hu- !
inanity was intentionally dishonest. \
"Well, then a feller came along and
gave him about twice what it was .
worth for his store. And ever since j
he has been declaring that 90 per cent
of the retailers are-and always have
been thieves and robbers, and men- '
tioning that he ort to know if any*- *
body does. And as far as I can make
out, he's pretty nearly right on both
propositions."?Kansas City Star. *
Hooch Mill Blew Up .
' > J
Charleston, Nov. 6.?Mathias Mid- <
dleton died yesterday about noon at '
Foper hospital as a result of injuries \
sustained when a still that he was
said to be operating on James Island !
exploded. Arthur Champagne also *
being injured and Dick Singleton ea
raping unhurt. After Champagne '
was given medical treatment he was '
lodged at the county jail for a preliminary
hearing which was given !
this morning, Singleton was also ar.
iested. Champagne was place under
$3,000 bond to appear at the court
of genera) sessions in February for
violation of the state prohibition act.
Magistrate Gerarty holding the hearing.
Singleton is held as a witness.
Middleton's arms and left leg were
broken and badly scalded. He was
about 25 years of age. Coroner Mansfield
held an inquest into the death today,
and it was found that Middletpn
"came to his death November 5, 1922,
at the Roper hospital from injuries'
leceived when an illicit still, which |
he was operating on James Island, exrloded."
-
Dots of Delta
This section is having a nice shower
of rain this morning and it is very
much needed.
This community is free from crop
gathering. Com and cotton are very
short around here, .while some few
ore making plenty of corn to do them
another year.
Our community has had several
cases of that painful dengue fever
and it is "bad stuff." If any and
wishes to know the symptoms of the
disease, it really starts like the "flue",
sneezing, sore throat, headache, a
high fever rises and it makes a complete
chill and doesn't cease until the
fever is gone. The truth of the fever,
you become completely crazy and stay
in that fix until you are ready to get
cw or neo. zi comw at. once ana i
leaves at once and generally it spends
about a week with any one,
I want to praise Union town for
being honored with such a preacher
and I want to praise God for sending
such a man as Gipsy Smith to our
town and I hope he may stick to the
Bible truths and fear no man's toes
and bruise his heel and s(cin his head
if needed. I am glad The Union
Daily Times can furnish every sermon.
*
Black Rock school has started in
full blast with two beautiful young
ladies as teachers?Miss Rogers and
l&iss Campbell. Mile.
Decile Sorel, the well-known
French actress who has come to
America "to give a series of lectures
on Parisian fashions and Parisian ltfe
has brought with her half a hundred
mtcrnlflrAMt. crowns and shout as m?nv
hats. This superb warkrobe is carried
in 86 large trunks and is fdid
to be insured for a sum in excess
- f $160,000.
c - *
; ' \/. -
ttmr- OP ELECTTC
FOR
. . t HARRIS
JAMI
vtri House 7 . . ! 106 899
* >D*rch ....... 68 188
L K. Mills ..... 66 64
~:>tal 814 481
/ ' James, McAlpine and
1 7"' . \"
DOING THE RIGHT TH
At the right time to fulfill the requi
ihe quality of the service that we a
It is such Service that has given us
Bailey Undertj
A Show
In SA
At some not very distant t
may be forced to think very i
.And when it comes to a shov
ladder of success will you cl
A show-down in savings is
[ saver. And the only remedy
start early with honest appli
lr.; > with determination and regu
Y VC
j "Large Enough to Serve Any??
cniz
.NAT ION AJ
, t
1111 I I 1 1 1 1 I 1 I I 1 I 111111 1 I I 1
OUR ST(
! Colui
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IS NOW C
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i All the latest song h
; Hawaiian selections, h
* Garher-Davis [
j BRADLEY-ESTI
It 11111111 n 11111 m i u 111 i
Mr. C. D. Mitchell
subscribers on the Western
way. Mr. De Aubrey Grefl
scribers on the Eastern side
Each man will have the
county on the given side,
subscribers. Heln us by ri
Men's Prayer Program
For Gipsy Smith Meetings
Meetings held from 9 to 9:30 every j
morning, at the Gipsy Smith Taber-I
nacle. 1
Our purpose is to begin on time'
and stop at the appointed hour.
.Thursday Morning, November 9:
H. F. Alston, leader; W. C. Lake, alternate.
Friday Morning, November 10: S.
M. Rice, leader; B. B. James, alternate.
Men and brethren, God has blessed
or id is blessing the mep who are coming
to these meetings. We make, no
pretense of formality; we come not to!
criticise or to sit in judgment, but to
humble ourselves before God, to invoke
his spirit, to divest our lives
and hearts of anything and everything
that would prevent our usefulness
and service to God and our
fellow men.
It is a glorious sight to see m'en
who never fed a public devotion,
standing up and witnessing for Jesus
Christ, as they lead these meetings
and pray and testify, and to you, men
and young men, who have not as yet!
attended the men's prayer meetings.
Listen, if others are willing to come,
to leave their businesses, to pray for]
you, for your life, your health, yourj
soul's salvation, for the blessings of
God up^n your hearts, your homes,
yopjf town, yopr business. Is it not
the least you c?n do?to come and
wait with us through this halif hour
season of prayerT We are praying
for yon and your*.
Tomorrow wa want to devote a season
of prayer for specific blessings
and mercies, let every man come with
a petition in hi* heart, and when the
opportunity la offered, do not fail to
make that petition to the God who
hear* and answer* prayer, if only a
sentence, a single petition; God hear*
not for our much speaking, but for
the earnestness of oar plea.
"War plea backed -by the prayer* ef
IS LAKE McALPINC fdUAftB )
210 186 146 .1
76 164 vm 1 /?<
76 16 ; '47 ' ** - >99
861 864 866 "
Pollard are elected.
UNG '
rements of our profession constitutes
re at all times in position to render,
our present reputation. y
-if
iking Company.'
t -|
* , ? ''v?
Down .
k * .
VINGS!
r V'
ime in your future life you
seriously of money i.atters. ^ y..
v-down,. which round of the
aim?
often disappointing to the
we know of for this is to
ication of system combined
larity.
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Strong Enough to Protect AIL"
L BANiC
n n i n n i n nm in nu|
)CK OF if
mbia
i?
>rds
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OMPLETE : i; I
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its, dance music and :
' j ; ?
winding the famous J r - j
lance Records
ES COMPANY 1
? ;
1111 n 111 m mi t ii i in i' ^
will collect from Tim?
side of the Southern Rail- 8
;ory will collect from sub- il
i of the Southern Railway. 1
territory throughout the fl
We commend tham to our I
rzS 1
- v
the praying men of Union can move
heaven to bring things to pass, the 3j
)ike#of which we have not seen in Un?.
ion. Meet with us tomorrow and let
us not fail to enter in.
L. L. Wagnon, ^
For the Men's Prayer Com.
SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS
FOR SALE?Imperial coal; fine lump
coal. You will be pleased with it. ^
Phone 153-W. R. W. McDow. "
152S-4t ^
FOUND?On court house steps election
day, an Ever-Sharp pehciL.
Owner can get by paying for this
ad and calling on R. A. Oliphant.
Upd
' * .4 * ' ,<
* Green Street Church
The Indies' aid society has finished
their report for the year's work and *
I am glad to say it has been a spies-.
did success and especially do I scant
to thank our efficient treasurer, Hrs.
W. C. Culberson, who has been treaa? ,
uier for the last Ave years, and also
| each member who has so nobly iei~ ,
kponded to my call >> ( J
| Mrs. Mildred Lybraad, V,-'
1 Preeident. j. i
| Notice, Confederate Veterans!
? aW
1
All Confederate Veterans of Union
county are respectfully invited to Join ?&
Camp Giles, No. 708, on 8*tnn|ap
next, November 11th, to partteipato . '
in the Armistice Day parade.
Meet at the Union high school 4#
building ot 10:80 o'clock.
J. M. Otdon , N
Commander. : ' U
F. M.Farr, ; '
i530-2tpd ^ AdjqtanO ^ -mb
Miss Marie Lleyd, the popular Mag*
lish actress who passed away in ten- ^ ;j
don recently, is said to have earned .