The Union daily times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1918-current, December 21, 1922, Image 3
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SBI
New
I* I^oTE
Equipped wit
ing and lighti
raoun table riir
non-skid tires
Ford Sedan, a
prion of $595,
is the greatest
l| ever prpducec
HI oar of comfo
|j| and beauty. B
| asSfM
1 * a
SOME USED CA1
ANDERSON
Let HoDmgfworth
ewer to yoor gift pro
A large assortme
1 lb., 21bs., 3
Make Tour Si
Union Di
Phone 116 and 1
- MM BM 9 l| liH I
Weather Bulletin Ipiw
For Caribbean Sbfppiai
Wasking ton, Oec. 81.-~9pecta.
weather buhstfe f?r bm*
v fit of shipping in the Caribbean Sei
has bean atosnead for berths ffhibri
aa SUtes Weather Bureau through th<
radio service of a WemWfcH steam
ship company. The bulletins will b
, flashed twice daily from the com
pony's station on Swan Island, in th?
western Caribbean.
The morning bulletins wtt bo son
out only during 4fc? toeMtee* twin
which lasts from June through No
vemben and will be in spin parti
|w The fimt part will contain wontka
V Vbservations from tan idWet ?%
W/jlona throughout the W?at Indies an
I ^^oarby coasts. The eaanad pest wti
I m contain daily foracaata of wfe4 en
I 11r Ueathar for the Golf of JOebs a*
III the CshUwao west of Iseylbyfo T
Ji degree^ am) advices and eglhlnga re
W S' garding the location and ?to*ae*s* o
| hurricanes in wasm weather em
"northern" in the winter.
I The eight toM* wW * toe*
L cast dsHy throughout the year da
p will certain foracaata, advice# en
iwarmnjp wnnimr w vhww i-u?uw
in tbo ogcond part of tbo morning M
Wtint. _
Womgft'aQM*
Aethr* ia Sharif lu
Shanghai, Doe. SI.?Enlarged a<
tlvitioi
i/irf Shanghai. With a momhonhip <
f about tho wet* of tfa club it fy
I tag carrM fbnrartf bf a number ?
unite ox dgpoiiwaWi
Dr. Am* Walta* ftoam te pom
j dent o* Iht atata tohkta ta M
I ?
)AN i
Price Ijj |
>. Detroit J fa
iiL
h electric start- J;S g?
ng system, de- L d?
is, extra rim and Vt
all around?the >u
it the new low *
F.O.B. Detroit, b!
motor car value
1?an enclosed
nu
rt, convenience po
uy now. Terms. pr
ca
Bwi
er
CO
va
ta
di
W(
J; th
I so
SO HAVE
RS AT BARGAINS
MOTOR CO. J
hi
a i V. ^ Ir
tl
wmmmmmkmmmmm
IDY LIKES I
> "
rs Candy be the an- ;;
blemi. *<
hi
int to select from. "
lbs. and 51bs. ?
01
Section Today. "
rug Store
Look (or the Boy." I p
I;
?.... i ... ??- *
Santa CUu. Not Such 'J
[ A Myth in Alaska t]
Washington, Dee. 20.?Old Saint ?
'Kick, with his packed sled and bar- g
?j nosaed reindeer, prancing over the v
1 country with tingling bells, and dig1
ging hie way through piled snow g
I, drifts, is not so mythical after all? > ^
*' for he really does appear to many ?
5 people just that way.
It is in Alaska, where Uncle Sam's ^
? mails are delivered in winter by fur- t
ebd carriers riding ia reindeer drown
t sleds to the tune of merry climes. Far ^
i away places in Alaska get few dettv
erics of mail, but the schedule is nearw
b & always arranged so that aaeh
r pioneer camp in out-of-the way place* r
l- whare the deep snow prevents muah *
i intercourse with the outer world gets
Br its Christmas mail near the holidays. e
d. The postofflce department sends out *
d! 24,000 first assistants to oh) Santa
31 Ctaus, and although they don't wear
K nift livery ox rea ana xur ana navvy
f blade boots, their gray uniforms an y
d just ss welcome along toward the last \
days of December. Every day is
Christmas for the postal workers tbs
j month before December 25. It is a
4 hectic season with them to get the un.
d told quantities of mail to those to
|. whom they are intended.
But tbsy do their work with a* will
and a smMa, say Dapartment dM4l
who ask your help in thair work hp
li making it easy for them to deliver
all the gifts by Christmas day.
.. "Please don't remove your hat in
;tMa elevator. Keep it oa and >?
fe. apead up elevator service." Thie is a 1
if sign the mayor of Cleveland proposes i
|. to plaee in all elevators in that city, i
if "Fallows who have to be so polite 1
and take elf their hats just jam thing* 1
. up," said tha mayor. "They hold f
their hats over their stomachs and i
* take up room that other people should 1
a- have end block the way in getting in i
and out of elevators." I
{shops Ask Nations to
Kopont For Port in War
Chicago, Dee. tl.?Scoring what It "1
ana "unjust accumulation and in* 1
luitsble distribution of buga a?r> P
us -profits by financial corporations9
id the distribution of "rewards of y1
a quest in the form of government c<
roopolies;9 the heard of bishops of w
Methodist Episcopal church, in a ^
stement issued here, calls upon na- w
ms to "individual and national re- ir
ntance for whatever share we may ?(
ve taken in the defense aad sup- c
rt of un-Christian programs of eI
war/' The statement was adopted
' 26 bishops in opnferencow
"America," the stats meat says, t]
hould unhesitatingly accept her full n
sponsibility for leadership in the
winuon oi a Droaeu woria. one
aid refuse to sanction any war ul
cept for strictest self-defense of w
insanity. She should continue to ^
vocate universal disarmament and
ould not hesitate in asking that
i internrthmet runfenais be called
r this great purpose." ''
The gasesth si "personal and oriBissd
greed has limited and often C(
fee ted" the ideals of Christian so- f!
ity, the statement continued. "The *
st corrective of the world's woe is r<
score repentance. The second cor- n
ctive Is the orgemaatloa of political r<
d eocial life everywhere upon the y
sis of the welfare of all.
"We deplore the unjust accumula- a
a and inequitable distribution of r
tge surplus profits by financial cor- .
irations. We insist that Christian '
inciplea shall be applied alike to "
pitdl and labor.
"We deplore the distribution of resrda
of conquest in the form of gov- f
nment monopolies and territorial
ntrol for personal and selfish ad- P
ntage.
"We deplore the investment of c
ixea in (armaments and pompous ^
splay, and urge the nations of th<j }
arid not only to limit but to destroy a
is bulwark of hatred. It is our p
leran judgment that nothing short |
the actual application of the prin- j,
pies of Jesus in governmental, econ- c
nic, religious and racial life today t
ill meet the need."
ustria's Unofficial 1
Armies Breed Trouble
Vieana, Dec. 21.?Besides its little
anding army of about 26,000 men
id its state gendarmerie, Austria
is two other armed and organised
trees, both irregular and both probity
without the pale of the treaty,
i the opinion of many observers here
te two last mentioned organizations
isy lead to trouble. They are adtittedly
well armed labor battalions,
nd the growing "heinwehr" or conirvative
armed organisations of the
rovincea.. ^ .-.-V.
The latter ate composed UragpNbf
easaats and' lesser profAsional
asses and ex-offlcers, and are parculariy
strong In Styria and the
yrol. Just how and wham they got
rms, ammunition and equipment is
ot known. The Allied Military Con ol
Commission was supposed to
are stripped the country at military
laterial, but the fact remains that
oth these, organisations are fully
quipped apd number many thouinds.
Recently the police found in
no of the "taeiuswehr" headquarters
ot only guns end loaded clubs but
and grenades and poison gases.
Incidents in Styria recently showed
le danger of these factions. In one
Etae strikers^captuned and disarmed
endarmes seat to subdue disturb nces,
whereupon the governor of the
rovincs ordered out the local detachlents
of the army. The army is preonderantely
aeeiaHat and sympa- ]
hetic with the workers, bat the soJiers
obeyed orders, subdued the
rouble makers, and released the pocsmen.
The explanation is-found in
he hrt that the arnvernnr had. at the
ame time, assembled 2,000 of hts
heimwehr" and pat them behind the
oldiery to see they did what they
rere told to do.
The two forces narrowly avoided
serious clash recently in Judenerg,
Styria, and this incident showed
ven more elearly the latent danger
bat lies in this condition of affairs.
Workmen from some factories enered
the homes of "heimwehr" peasnts
at night and ssiesd their arms,
"hey were arrested in turn, and,
rhen a first demand dan their release
raa refused, nearly 2,000 workmen,
nilttarilf armed and organised, ssembled
and marched on the town,
tendarmes were mobilibed, reinforcd
by dhidents from the two state
iniversittes thara and fan twa days
he two forces daeed taah ether over !
I little bridge. Then the gesnaa I
rdered the release of the arrested
vorfcraea? and farther trouble was
tvoidnd.
rhe recent disclosure thit the large '
nduntriai concerns of Austria are
laying te their central body a re guar
tax greater than their state tax,
for the maintenance of ^technical
nen,? .which is merely a disguise for
>Mk. ?- ??
I?i l?M m MJU BWIVV nan
lot served to leesen the 111 feeling of
he worhtngmen, end this condition
a used bf them a* a justlftcatton for
heir own organisation.
When m American offered the Paa.
4am players of Oberammergau a milion
dollars , for the prirtlege of flhnng
the lesion Play without a change
n cast, the plaqpTO aarijfceri their \
ocfca en&aaved Apt Mlf and
vonqr. Owing to the depreciation of
he mark* thertompfcaMaw t? viola** a
iacred tsadifioi wao great. Anton
Lang's philoeophg it that riches do
lot bring contentment and happiness,
wo assets the plAyera now pntstes.
Speeding up litfc*
TV justice, m *eeryono will agree,
peed end dispatch are ototiotial. For
lis reason theao seems to be need
eriodically for tilief of the Supreme
ourt of the United States. Thirty J
ears ago the cases coming before the '
xirt had so increased that legislation
as enacted placing1 in tha hands of
le court itself the right to say 1
hether or not. it was to rthe public v
iteresl that it should hear cases of '
>me classes which defeated litigants,
fter going through two lower fed- *
ral courts, wished to afpeal.
Since this legislation reduced the '
urden on the Supreme Coot, in 1891, 1
isre has gradaully developed a recur. 1
mce of the old trouble; the constant- *
1 widening held of federal legislation "
83 multiplied cases of sorts which a
nder the old legislation the litigants 1
>uld in effect compel the Supreme
ourt to hear, even though the court c
>uld find in them no new question of 1
iw. Income taxes and prohibition are s
terely two of a number ad new quas- c
one that give rise to numerous cases, f
egialation of 1916 aoma*fcat increaa- t
1 the court's control over the cases c
anting before it, but did not bring 1
lem hvthin manageable bounds. The
Mult is that the ordinary case con- ?
ot be heard for 16 months after it r
caches the Supreme Oaurt, and last
ear the court was not able to keep
kren with its docket, ending the year
bout 20 per cent farther behind than
1 October, d'21.
The Supreme Court made three of
s members a committee to suggest
leans for reducing- number of
&8es that in the future reach the
ourt's docket. This committee recmmended
that Congress should still
urther enlarge the' court's power to
revent cases coming bsisre it which,
i its opinion, do not raise important
uestions of law that hava been undeided.
Bills for this purpose ate pendig
in Congress.
'he type of lawyers who used invar ibly
to attempt to pacify a disupointed
and doubting client by declarig
the case should be carried to the
upreme Court is in a fair way to beome
increasingly obsolete ?The Nalon'a
Business.
riquoia Indiana Will
, Ramain In Canada
Toronto, Dec. 21.-?Th* Iroquois In.
lians have made poaaa with the Doninion
government Threats of miration
to the reaervntsuas of the naion
in the United Statue* because the
dominion would not recognize the red
uen as an independent vaumon, have
jeen forgotten. Tht hatchet was
juried and the peace pipe,was smoked
it Ohsweken early in Dumber. " ,
Chief Desraheh, le^jAf the fac- {
ion fighting for ix^^Hence, car- ,
ied the issue to the house of (
he nation, but accei^^^fefeat stocally
when the other^Hfs at the ]
iow-wow outvoted hira^Ke and his
followers had maintains -that their ,
grievances were properly matters for
ui international court <f law, their
ndependence having been recognized
>y a British sovereign. *!
Leaders of the Loyalists, the winling
faction at Ohsweken, were cbiefy
from the Christian tribes of the
Mohawks and Delawares. They were
well satisfied with the outcome at
;he pow-wow, but now propose to go
jven further. Their tribes have virtually
no representation on the hereditary
council, members of whieh are
sleeted for life by the women of the
tribes. The Loyalists, it is announced,
will work for an elective council, "to
conform with the democratic trend of
the times and to do away with a remnant
of feudalism."
Executioners Ask High
Rate For Services
/
Niagara Falls, Ont., Dec. 21.?
Wetland county officials are wosrying
about a double hanging which is set
wo wane piace in tne county j?n uu
January 12th. One of the chief cauaea
of concern ia that no official hang,
man has yet been engaged.
In response to a recent advertisement
several applications were .filed,
but the fees demanded, ranging from
$200 to $800, were considered too
high. In the paat, officials said, $50
was sufficient to get a man to fasten
the black cap on a condemned man
and spring the trap.
The men sentenced to die are Harry
Rutka and Nick Thomas. They killed
a neighbor in a row over a reek estate
deal.
Dowager Empress of Russia
May Lire in EnglaJNl
Copenhagen, Dee. 21.?The Dowager
Empress of Russia, Maria
Feodorovna, who is now in England
on a visit to her sister, Queen Alexandra,
may prolong her stay well beyond
the limits originally set for it.
First it was said the widowed queen,
who was a Danish princess before
she married the late emperor Alexander
III, would return to Denmark
in five or six weeks; now it is rumored
in court circles that the visit
may be indefinite.
Maria Feodorovna crossed the
Channel at Oatend. She was accompanied
by the Russian princes Dotgoruld
and Vlazemsky, Countess
Mengen, and the well known Cossack
Jachtchouk, who used to carry the
little, lame eon of Emperor Nicholas
in hie arms in the days before the
eaeeutione at Ekaterinburg ever
three yearn age. Thin little boy wee
Maria Feodorovna's grandson.
1* 1a nadselsud locally that the
Rmprees will be followed to. England
shortly by her daughter, the Grand
Duchess Olga Mid her husband, Colonel
Koulikovsky, and their children.
? ' r - MI
r?ua?u fm % > '
Hill, Waitint Tidal Wan ,
But it Didn't Com*
Papeete, Tahiti* Dec. 21 ?(By the
\jaociated Press).?Tghitians, but
tot Thhiti, experienced a reverberaion
of the recent earthquake in
Jbile whea they fled to the high
nountains before a great tidal wave
vfafch the wineieaa aaid was sweep
ng across the Pacific.
"Heavy earthquake in Chile with
idal wave, may reach you," read a
irivate radio message received here
November 12 from New Zealand. The
nessage was shown the governor of
he colony but the governor reckoned
he 4,000 miles of sea between Chile
ind Tahiti, where a wave would have
imple space to spread out, thought it
limi'fVKanfn ?l??~ "" ,-LL"
? j -v ? ?in me iiuiuuiiaiu3.
Next day, however, came the press
liapatches, making known the news
o other resideK+a of the islands,
imong them the mayor. The mayor
f Papeete, being the only elective oficial
on the island, is a aort of tribune
o the people and he aaw at once a
hancs to loom large in the eyes of
lis constituency.
The mayor gathered about him his
oothsayers, astrologers and mathenaticlans,
and they figured and measired
and cast horoscopes about that
idal wave and finally reached the
onclusion that it would strike the
sland with devastating fury on the
light of November 15 or the morning
f the 16th.
Native heralds were sent out with
iass drums to warn the nihabitants.
'anic resulted in many sections. The
Chinese storekeepers piled their
vares into all immediate transportaion
and headed for the high hills
vhere they were joined by a goodly
)ortion of tta population bearing
tanging lamps, family Bibles, eight
lay clocks, racking chain, portraits
>f deceased relatives and utter preci>us
possessions. Two days and
tights the refugees camped in the
ipen, scanning the horizon for the
vail of water. On November 17 they B
-uturned. H
What actually happened was a B
phenomenon of irregular tides on the B
;vening of November 17, when the I
;ea ebbed and flowed at intervals of
Ifteen minutes, five or six times from B
xtreme low water to above the usual g
ugh water mark.
In the Marquesas Islands the sea
-ose 12 feet above the high water
nark on the same date but no damwas
reported
Strange Monster Cask
Up From the Sea
Lima, Peru. Dec. 21.?The tidal
ivaves which recently devastated
parts of the coaai of Chile cast upon
he beach a* the same time a strange
ieniaen of the deep whose like has
not been seen in these waters in
many years.
It would eg pear to he a cross between
a whale and a turtle.
Fishermen at Lerta, 2* miles from I
Lima, reported a huge cetacean
(loundering in the shallow waters of
the bsy. Then they sent out word it I
was an unknown monster of the sea, I
and that they had killed it. 9
The director of the Natural Historv 1
Museum of the University of San I
Marcos and the official taxidermist 1
made a trip to Lurin for the purpose ?
of studying and classifying the ~
strange visitor. They found an ani
mal with the body of a whale, but
with a head and extremities resembling
those of a turtle. After examination
they came to the conclusion
htat it belonged to the family of
"Balaenidae" cetaceans, inhabiting
the South Pacific waters. It is supposed
that it was carried along by the
Humboldt current and thrown up on
the beach by the tremendous surfs
following the tidal watves of the
Chilean earthquake.
The specimen will be brought back
to Lima for mounting and will be preserved
in the University Museum.
Among the most marvelous pieces
of recent art is the new bronxo statue
of Theodore Roosevelt unveiled in
Portland, Oregon, a short time ago.
The figure of the ex-Premident and his
horse towers nearly 18 feet above the
granite baae and depicts the spirit of
the West in a splendid manner. A.
Phi mister jrroctor, a itew iu? scuii/jot
and friend of the former president,
did tha track.
FOR SALE
To make good bread you
must have good flour. Try
one of the following brand*
and you will be perfectly satisfied.
You will find it will
make you more and better
bread. Etrery bag guaranteed:
Capitol a Plain, Miss
Dixie Self Rising, Tellico Plain.
Olympia Self Rising, P. P. P.
Plain or Always Good Self
Rising. Bug it from or
through
I L CALVERT
JOWESVILLE, S. C.
ALL KINDS OF
CEMETERY WORK
Union Marble fi Granite Co.
. Mafa ML Union, 9. C.
Cold tsa rubbsd on varnished furAiturs
win ghre ft a brilliant palish.
1 '- m
.1 t
Gil
FROM A Vli
FOR A
Wt)'ve planned to
Chrklmas for our cusl
store full of fresh, ne^
tides of every concer
suit men's tastes.
Smoking Coats
Suspenders
Motor Coats
Silk Hosiery
Auto Robes
Mackinaws
Neckwear
Silk Mufflers
Knitted Mufflers
ww a
Values are so great
decide on two articles i
planned to give. And
is the store of
Michaels-Stern Fi
You can make Chr
by investing in a fine s
Overcoat. Plenty tc
kinds of fabrics and m
$25 t
Other Good Makes
J. Coh
The House o
PUDIC
UIIIIIO
EVERYBODY IS HA
HAS GOOD CHEER.
YOU REMEMBER SA
QUARTERS FOR
GOOD
FRUITS GALORE. <
VARIETY. FIREWOi
REMEMBER: WE
TERS FOR ORANi
NANAS, RAISINS
THINGS THAT ADD
MENU.
FRESH SHIPMEN1
AND CELERY. W
TURKEY BE WITHO
SEE US.
A. Ke
Santa Claus' Head
Marion Talley, age 15, the daughte
of a telegraph operator of the Mia
souri Pacific Railroad, is an America]
vocal prodigy, according to the dc
. 'ri li
Us
wrs STORE
MAN
1
make this a happy
tomers. We have a
w merchandise?arI
TO kl A J
TOUIC ucsti ipuuu (U I
Tuxedo Vests |
Belts 1
Belt Buckles I
Bath Robes 1
Lounging Robes I
Umbrellas I
Gloves-all kinds I
Leather Novelties I
Wardrobe Trunks I
that you'll probably 1
nstead of the one you I
I remember that this I
rst VqIiiq r.lnthpQ I
IUI VUIUU UIUIIIUU
istmas doubly joyous
iturdy Michaels-Stern
* choose. from, in all lodels
at
o $ 3 5 ,
$12.00 to $22.50
en Co.
( Satisfaction
tmaT
PPY. EVERYBODY
WE INSIST THAT
NTA CLAUS' HEAD
IHfcfcK
CANDIES IN GREAT
RKS IN PROFUSION.
ARE HEADQUARGES,
APPLES, BAAND
ALL OTHER
TO THE CHRISTMAS
r OF CRISP LETTUCE
HAT WOULD THE
UT CELERY? COME
I I
mm
quarters for Fruits. 1
im ii ii
r <ision of the directors of the Metro
I'oliten Opera company. She le te
n h tudy for four year* before attempt>
injc aerioualy to become a great artist.