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f. . I S E I I Prettiest |, | And |:; | Best p* | Dressed I, -1 Chorus I | That I 1 Has fe." | Left. || 1 New W 1 York |' 1 .This H I Season 11 j Hear | | IMPERIAL j'i Quartette, | I Krices: . IflNMMHMNMi 5, If ytSft GSocer'S ,rMAXVEU HOUSE I ; ] COFFEE J S ; ' ' ? - ?7??? * LET THE SOUTH EXERT ITSELF TO THE UTMOST TO RAISE MORE FOOD PRODUCTS (Manufacturers Record, Baltimore, l Md.) Briefly but in a throroughly broad Briefly but in a thoroughly broad - vin Coolidge of Massachusetts urges that the South shall exert itself to the utmost to raise more food and feedstuffs. In an interview with a staff correspondent of the Manufacturers Record, published elsewhere in this issue, Governor Coolidge takes the position that while Massachusetts wants cotton, he believes that "we shall, in the end, get more cotton if the South raises more food products." "We want something more than one-crop men," the Governor further declares, and he continues: "Let the South be independent by a diversity of interests and there will be no trouble about securing a steady supply of cotton." Governor Coolidge has no sympathy with the position taken by sonic of the cotton mill men of Englanc and elsewhere that the South should go largely into cotton production, sc that prices may be drastically re<lnr>r>H thrrmo-li f-hr> rsii'siricr nf a irvoat. ly increased cotton crop, for he holds that the cotton farmer is entitled to a fair price for his cotton and that "no one has any right to ask the cotton farmer to sell his cotton at ?i price that does not bring him ?i i ^A^^ORRof By r ^WCTffwS j58k II !l E /BEAUTYe !! E JICHORUSb L SUPERB /> P ^COSTUMES.<^"v $.50 .75 1.00 r^jps^-"' Add .10 Per C ^ . HI profit." He would not have the.cot-[th< ton farmer and his family thrown j 75 (back into the economic slavery which , tio jthey endured from the time of thejpr* j Civil War until recent years. Thejthi 'opportunities for education, decent;at living condition; and comfortable ! surroundings which prosperity brings tio | should not be denied to the cotton pr< grower any more than to any other i ha' man who works with his hands- But!80' .jl(: believes that t'nc Z'Zy t-0 economic U e) ' inrlononrlpripe lies in the ereatest I iri/ ? --- ? - O" , possible Increase in all products of ma the farm. "The South," the Gov- wh ernor says, "should by all means the more largely grow its own supplies thi in grain, fruits, meats and its feed-'eri stuffs, for livestock, and it should j So also raise as much as possible of the 'trc crop for which it is especially adapti ed, cotton." | In this position the Governor is ?n but following out a consistent policy g0 jhe has adopted for his own State of seJ i Massachusetts, where he has urged [productivity in every line. It is men !who bring about developments andj prosperity, he points out, and only by j greater diversity and more energetic |pa j diligent activity 'by men can pors-|0f perity be accomplished and main-'ha ' tained. In his own State he is con- j Ai : stantly urging greater agricultural' ' development, more planting of or chards and a return to sheep raising th : and stock growing, in which lines all'wh ijNew England has greatly fallen be-'me 1 hind the achievements of former' . i I _ l years. UC ? :co; QUESTION OF MERGER jPh UP TO CONFERENCES na 1 icai ! Louisville, Ky., Jan. 21.?Merger av< 1 of the northern and southern branch under a new constitution and assum-jtrj ing the name of the Methodist: fin : church was agreed upon by the im * commission of unification of the j bo . Methodist Episcopal churches in pa: joint session here last night. The re-!tio [ commendation, if adopted by the ; general cwijgjences, would -eliminate ha: C-I CI & lUUdC ^TWEwrami)^ ^ VERYTHING itw (h 1.000 mwoih %lkmm *^AM8< ? OEWITCHING Q ^15 ROADWAY DOLLS ? BIGGER/BETTER THAN EVER 1.50 2.00 I seai entTax. I v . i 2 breach which came .about nearly jmember must years ago over the slavery ques* from deportatic >n and which has kept the a])-'revolutionists b aximately 6,000,000 members of bers and are au ; northern and southern churches what they pleai differentiale. tion! Included among; the recommenda- wonder ns of the joint commission, was a Federation of iposal that the reunited church through which I ve a supreme general council of eminent. Its tri 0 members chosen from the seven I special legislate ?ional conferences. Six of the re- ^he Bolsheviki. )nal bodies would have approxi-jup a vast and 1 AAA AAA mnmKavc oonll 167111116111 cXIlcl tl" ICCluy .i,vv/u,uvv iuc,iiutlo v?v.? ile the seventh would comprise | they appreciate > negro membership of 303,000. In (do later is to se ee of these conferences the North- j ment and the I i branch would predominate and be theirs. uthern congregations would con- The very facl '1 three others. seek control of The Northern church will vote on eration of Lai i merger next' May, it was said, cIothe the Fede d if the merger is approved the and extraordina uthern church will call a special {^le with ruin?sion to act on the proposal. Service J ? - . . . Winnsboro, J Beware 1 his f rankenstein! fJag of the Zj0I was demobilized Documents made public by the De- servjce, * w rtment of Justice prove that one c;ses There w the objectives of the revolutionists Lg( tw0 of wh s been to obtain control of the [gold' stars stood nerican Federation of Lalbor. j Cants Douglass, Samuel Gompers is quoted as say-jg ^ * "we must have inghts beyond j ose of other men. If we do not TYPICAL lat is to become of the labor move:nt?" (Manufacturers It is a popular pastime to paint tmpers and his following as great j Washington i nservatives, and to excuse the;panda agencies \ vt m i ?-i tliniv tin n/lp n vf vn AVfl! ... U < n U fnvni-U t lllllg 111 Itlicil ilCWIVIO VI. LAWittVlUi- | WIIl^Il XUI111.U * iry power by averring that so only men cute enoug n the triumph of radicalism be j leagues to whicl erted. 'scriptions. But what will happen to the coun-j In the solicits j if it wakes up some morning to,by*one of the.' id that it has conferred a general January 1 the munity on the Federation of La-j ends his appeal r nad the Federation of Labor has been in debt u ssed into the control of the revolu-; hopped out of nists? jnot want the le Already the crreat union oligarchy need your help \ s announced that every union j Isn't it rcma: Monday Jai ^Vbuwkfaoe 1 > JCOMEDIAN a i HAROLD SJ re--,0RO iNEWSj rQ QA1 F AT RDY : kj vyi i unjuu JTI. i llllillllllllllliiillllllllllllliMIIIWiBIBllilHIIIiliilllllllllllllillllllllilllllllllillllllll be legally immume ! >n. What if all the'" ' ecomc union mem-lfij Hi 1 thorized by law to do I ;e without molesta- 9^11 J B 9 the Reds see in the j Labor the medium " :o overthrow the Gov- . umphs in the field of < >n cause no crying of ? ( They see being built invincible inner govley rejoice because that all they have to _ ize that inner govern- * VV f* I13.VG egal Government will i ;r^rd men to instal >or proves that to j (ration with special, ? ,1 try powers is to gam- ^ | ing ror tne pi _ i F'ay ?u"fu;1:d- i the factory, t an. 20.?The service, J 7 i Presbyterian church j I at the Sunday morn-j C-rw o mon ith appropriate exer- a. Ulan l(J ere 28 stars upon the lich were gold. The . .1 for Lieut. James Mc-j IIlC OCX Vil. and Paul Crosby, U. j when you n TO THE TYPE Record, Baltimore tjme an(-J is filled with propn-i ? of all kinds, most of; jasy jobs for young h to organize various h they can invite sub-il /iUlU ition for funds issued I 7-^ ??, CAT ?e organizations on<l D. JlL, "business manager" by declaring: "I have 1??????BIB-mM n to my ears since I' ' the cradle, but I do,haVe nover shown L'rou?!'1 c,u:ra ague in debt: so we,to be a^e to manage their own ; to offset this deficit." sonal affairs with anything rese rkable that men who ^ling efficiency should be the c wmmmmmmmmmmm n. 26th | B nr~ n 1 | The | | ji Most 1 I ! Elaborate | II And s | |j_ Beautiful j 1 |i Costumes | 2 !I Carried | { I By A I 9 I I | M VV/UU 8 | Production | j See | : I || Vogel ' I I j I And I J I J Miller | .'1 (Ij Eccentric 3 <_ j || Dancers OFFICE NOW I I ^5 IIIIIIIIIIIIIIl i Tractors V' Mid Service 1 the parts and the I i-U \U V I lilClll. i ^(U wqiiLarts to come from J hen another wait put them in. You i :e on the Fordson eed it. No lost s crops waiting. and Tractor Co. )LER, Manager . 3? who insist on going to Washington per- and undertaking to tell the Govern- _ mb- merit exactly how it should be con>nes ducted?