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I WANDA HAWLEY 1 "FOOD FOR SCANDAL" I Based on the play "Beverly's Balance" by | PAUL KESTER \ Directed by James Cruze ? Scenario by Edith Kennedy ?ADDED? EILEEN SEDGWICK IN 1 "Trnnnn Tnm? 1 | lEKRUft I RAIL | I Last Episode. | i I, _ __ , / # % 1922 Sends us a MESSAGE 1922 sends word that he will arrive on January first ?bringing new hope and opportunities for thrifty folks. V' 1922 advises that we save throughout the year? faithtfully and systematically. It will pay handsomely to save in 1922. The New Year will ring joyfully to all who have decided to make this year yield them a big bank balance! "Large Enough to Serve Any?Strong Enough to Protect All" CJXI2 NATO NAL BAN Jl^a^ditch is l4o*"ieet A ! ; ? I ,/Z.-O IT'S CHEAPER TO RIDE IN THE NEW 1922 MODELS Than it used to be to stand on the running 1 board a year ago. g Good O'coats today-Michaels-Stern Coats in every conceivable model and fabric, $16.50 to $26.50. Same qualities brought $35.00 and $50.00 at the start of 1921 and the same grades are still being heard of at $30 to $42.50 in lots of clothing departments. But here?self praise isn't convincingself appraisal is. The coats are here where you can examine them?and we are selling them to people who I i -? ' nave worn ciotnes tor years. Our big clothting sale is now going on. Watch onr windows. J. Cohen Co. HOUSE OF SATISFACTION. I Gold Fields Being Worked slightly more than an ounce of gold - to the ton. The showing is so satisVienna, Dec. 29,-Gold Held, that ,ac*?V that the Kovernment will-Join have not baen worked since the 16th i,h,tha <""vner. of th<! land '? tha gfe and 16th centuries are to be exploit- development. v., government. The deposits . > ... i. . Vtot be Zffier and Lnwnt valley. That woman Jumr ln ?>* Arbuckle on the i'yrol-Salabwrg frontier, and. ?" ?"? 10 have had 11 very obeli prospecting has given a yield of I nate companions.?Boston Globe. National Canning A mnii^l Louisville, Ky., Dee. SO.?Plane are rapidly being shaped tor the fttUmtjf annual meeting of the N?tionafe*lj?$i ners Association, Canning Machinery ' ft Supplies Association nad the Ha- i tional Food Brokers' Association to be | held in Louisville, Jen. 16 to SO. It , will be a get-together convention of ( canners, brokers and distributors from all parts of the world, jrA new feature to be introduced at this gathering will be a special convention of which details for is Canada Foods Week will be disclosed. The committee on national "Canned Foods Week" will announce that it will he held throughout the country March 1-8. Along with the general sessions, of the convention, there will be meetings of separate sections, such as the corn, fruit, ketchup, kraut, milk, molasses and syrup, pea, pork and bean, pumpkin, sweet potato, tomato and wad and greeu bean sections. Through the courtesy of the United States Department of Agriculture, the Bureau of Raw Products Research of the National Canners Association has received assurance of exhibits and demonstrations which are in preparation for the Louisville convention. These will be accompanied and explained by the Department's scientific experts. The latest knowledge in regard tc. diseases of sweet corn and methods for controlling them will be presented. Valuable additions to the knowledge of the corn root rot problem have been made since the last convention, and these results will be shown. Organizations of Farmers Pittsburgh, Dec. 29.?Townspeople and fanners friust put themselves in an attitude of making concessions or as an alternative, cooperative stores established by combinations of farmers will ultimately drive local merchants out of the business, John M. Gillette the University of North Dakota told the members of the American Sociological Society at its annual meeting here today. "That organizations of farmers has intensified the strife between city end country is geenrally recognized by students of the subject," continued Dr. Gillette. "To often the blame is attached exclusively to the farmers as if they have no rights of self-protection. It is not always perceived that the business elements of cities have been organized as a profit-getting class for a long time and that the tendency is for all these elements to present a united front when ameliorative agricultural legislation is proposed or when farmers attempt cooperative enterprises. "If the farmers are right in their contentions that they received an unduly small proportion of the proceeds from their produce, then they have a right to organize both economically and politically to protect, their interests. But be it remembered that their cooperative efforts evoke about as much hostility as do their political attempts. "There* are many directions for formers and townsmen to take in their teamwork together. Good roads are mutually desirable. Both sides have r common interest in promoting local industries. They make nearby markets for certain kinds of farm produce and serve as the basis of diversified farming. "Since it is chiefly over matters of trade that country and town are arrayed against each other, the question arises "s to hew they can compose their differences. The local merchant insists that farmers and other consumers should patronize home industries and grow quite bitter over buying from mail order houses. The farmer, in turn, insists that local prices of the things he buys are too high and for things he sells, too low. "If both sides will be sensible and fair, there is a basis of compromise; but townsmen and farmers must put themselves in the attitude of making concessions. The farmers should not bo expected to sacrifice all of their gains from buying from mail order houses, for example; nor should they expect small merchants to meet the prices of such huge and efficient establishments. The merchant should be willing to cut prices and farmers to pay a margin for local convenience. "The alternative would appear to be the development of cooperative stores by farmers that will ultimately drive | local mechants out of business. The | latter would become managers of and sales men in such undertakings. This would remove the reason for strife." Death of Miss Grace Coppock Shanghai, Dec. 29.?From many of the near and remote centers of China as well as from other parts of the world messages of condolence were sent into Shanghai through the fall season following the sudden death of Miss Grace L. Coppock, who since 1912 has served as general secretary of the National Young Women's Christian Association. It was held that her passing on October 15 takes ( from China one of its greatest Christian leaders. In the period of her service in China Miss Coppock built up a staff that now numbers 126 young women who are at work in widely separated centers of the country and particularly in , 12 Chinese cities in which the Y. W. C. A. hag been established. Miss Cop- ] pock is buried in Bubbling Well cenu etery at Shankhai beside the grave of Miss Marie Belleville, who was a for- j mer secretary of the Y. W. C. A. in 1 Shanghai. Reptile are not found in che < Arctic region. feiL"' ~ vir 1 ChW Want High?r Education Chicago, Pec. 30.?A desire fox woman's higher education ts" ftwjifcptag jVw the orient; the girl a of India, China and Japan are asking for a better preparation for life, according to Mrs. Marray Fraft*e, of Yenching college, Peking, who has . just com' pleted a toUr of the United States m the interest of better education for woman in the Orient. Within the last few years seven colleges for women have made their beginning in the Far East, according to Mrs. Frame. Five of them are Arts colleges and two Medical, she states. They are located as follows: two in India, at Lucknow in the north and at Madras in the soutfi; two in China, one in the northern capital, Peking, the other in the old Southern capital Manking; one in Tokyo, the capital of Japan. The two medical schools are in Vellore India and Peking, China. "Last winter, when North China was in the strangle-hoid of that terrible famine," Mrs. Frame states, "students of Yenching (Peking) College gave Maeterlinck's 'The Bluebird,' in Chinese, through which they raised $1,500 for the sufferers. Then a small troup were excused temporarily from college and went out into the nenresi famine region to investigate. They found such numbers of poor little girls either desetred to die or about to be sold by their desperate parents into a life of shame, that they begged the use of two Buddhist tern pies to serve as a harem. There they cared for over 200 famine victim? through the lcng winter months, other girls in the college securing money and clothing, and coming in relays for two weeks at a time to help in the work. Among other ways of raising money the girls gave 'Merchant oi Venice' in Chinese. "Are the girls ready for these op portunities? Every year they come in eager groups, many of them several days' journey, to enter this land of their dreams. But every year many must be turned sadly away for lack oi room. A year ago 178 applicants came for admission to the Mcdica College at Vellove. Only 28 could be received. One hundred-fifty would-be medical workers for the suffering wo manhood of India were turned away for lack of room. "What is happening in the schools of Japan is of more importance tc mankind today than what is happening in her dock yards." Remedies for Unemployment Geneva, Dec. 26.?A recommendation that an international conferenc< be called to consider remedies for unemployment was adopted by the Thirc International Labor Conference re cently held here. The conference alst favored a further consideration of th< question of establishing an eight-houi day for farm labor and also of widei adoption of the half holiday on Saturdays, known as the "English week." Of the seven conventions adopted three dealt with farm labor. One oi these provided that children under 14 can be employed on farms only outside of school hours. Another woulc give the farm hands the right of orCTAnizAtlon AniiWAil hv inilnotr-io workers. A third convention woulc extend to them rights to indemnities for accidents arising out of their employment, as enjoyed by other work crs. Two of the conventions applied tc seamen, one forbidding the employment in bunkers' and stokeholds o] boys less than 18 years old and the other requiring a yearly examinatior of every youth under 18 employed or ship. Another convention adopted provides for a minimum rest period ol 24 hours in all industrial establishments every week, wherever possible on the same day. These were in addition to a convention for bidding the use of white lead and sulphate of lead in interior decoration, as cabled at the time of its adoption. The conference also adopted recommendations to protect womer employed on farms before and aftei child birth, for the proper housing ol farm hands, for instruction in scientific agriculture and application tc them of laws providing pensions when they become ill or old. Improvement in . Financial Outlook Liverpool, Dec. 11.?Stanley Baldwin, president of the board of trade, has just told the shipbrokers here that there were more indications of improvement than .the reverse in the industrial and financial outlook. He was advised that in the United States they considered the corner was being turned; in India the botton had been reached; there were signs of re vival in Japan where the slump was first experienced, while in the British Dominions and South America the feeling: was more hopeful. One thing: upon which they put a definite finger was the fall in food prices. The harvests of the world had been good and as a rule plenty of food meant plenty of orders. In regard to wages the concessions generally speaking had been satisfactory. There was a batter spirit and temper in the country and a greater willingness for cooperation and mutual help. If they could get through the next year without industrial stoppage they might look forward with hope and confidence, Mr. Baldwin said. -4 On lif^s wide ocean diversely we all; Some (hissing port and some missing ale.?Boston Herald. Theatrical critics had hoped Landls would fine Babe Ruth a Million. ?Pittsburg Press. * M sa For McLURFS I X X t i I AS SOON AS OUR LOSSES HAVE BEEN I 4 ADJUSTED BY THE INSURANCE COMPANIES f I WE WILL PUT ON ONE OF THE GREATEST f 4 SALES UNION HAS EVER SEEN. WAIT AND I i WATCH FOR IT. ? : ? ? | J. F. McLure Dry Goods Co. f ; r *v-< ?**> Undertakers to nection with the raid indicate that Judging the distance of stars from Prosper in 1928 $5??ooa had been "cleared" during the earth almost at n glance U the the past year thtrough sales of the rare accomplishment of one American f . labels to bootleggers in Kansas City, woman astronomer. 1 Cleveland, Ohio., Dec. 20. Under- j^ew Yorkf Chicago, Detroit and oth- ? . takers will have a prosperous year pr citics Former Kaiser Wilhelm had 73 1 about 1926 in the opinion of analytic ? castles and other residences. . and consulting chemists here, be- Bonnet of Spinsterhood * , I OAimp. t-hpv olnim tVip firini Rpnnpr is ' WilH plnnini?f? " ? * " _______ ?ic generally caught I whetting his scythe for a harvest of Paris, Dec. 29.?St. Catheiine's 111 nooso^* , m t i prohibition liquor drinkers. Day is the day when all young England is dependent for six-sevHundreds of persons aifj slowly French girls who have attained the enLh3 of her bread upon foreign but surely asphyxiating themselves, age of 25 without finding a husband sources of supply. according to J. M. Kovachy, assist- put on the bonnet of spinsterhood, . . = ? and city chemist, by unsuspecting as- although this does not necessarily SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS similating the poisons found in al- mean that they forthwith abandon all AUTOMOBILES repaired and wash-. f most every sample of what was be- hope of finding a suitable mate. etL Gilliam Light & Motor Co. ! lieved to be "pure bonded" liquor. The girls who work in the Paiis 1263-6t 1 Hundreds of samples are brought to dressmaking establishments made - ' Kovachy each month for analysis, he high holiday on that day, and those * OR SALE- Several desirable buildsaid, and all thus far analyzed have who had become "St. Catherines" JJJJjj Pooie^streJt. ^L^ar^S6 " contained a high percentage of fusel Wore lace bonnets made by their com- wejj drained, levei, with city water] oil in the raw. In large quantities, rades. sewerage and electric lights acces consumed by steady drying, _fu?l In group3 thcy walked alonK the J'Xrhood". .^within" oil changes the blood fiom oxyhenu bouievavds, generally live or six minutes walk of bu mess portions V" globin to metheminglobin, he insists. abreas^ arms linked, with the bonnet of town. Easy terms. For prices, In other words, Kovachy says, fu wearers in ,he front rank and all etc- sec p- D- Barron, Union, S. C. 1 sel oil removes the oxygen from the thei), escort of friends following. The 'A 1263-3t ' blood, causes the lips and body to worjcjntf girls vjgd with each other ttcmj oat*? *? . ? ? onui,? we win sell before the j turn blue and bas the same eltcet a1 ?n fnncy costumes they wore. court house in Union, S. C., between asphyxiation. I>vo rirtrklli?1. w;iVi the ,e,?al hoi,rs of sale, January 2, I "illicit neddlers of whiskey use ^efdmg groups are popular w.th 1922, to the highest bidder for cash I Illicit peddlers ot vni.K y the ?<bntleM beautifully dressed in two hundred (200) shares Carolina ethlylacetate for flavoring purposes siiks> accompanied by a "bridegroom" Remedies Company stock, par value in some cases and this very injurious .n comic cogtume $10.00 per share. Bank of Buffalo, , if taken in any quantity, acting as a ^ MusketeerSf with cloak U 'I i6a j ePre8sen * 0 0 iemiK e and sword, slouched hat and white FOR SALE?Desirable small farm? clared. feather, were to be seen walking with good dwelling, and other nec| M. E. Curtis, proprietor of the proud,y a)ong the boulevard# fouow., J-?"* Sefp D Chemical Laboratoiles, advises the ed ky their admiring friends, but th ' 1263-3t ! present day drinker to "analyze well Musketeers. voicc8 proclaimed then .. i before using." Traces of adultera ?jrjg N OTICE?I am running business in ' tion that clip year after vear from a ' , _ G* Gallman's old stand on Noftfb ?,e have boon'fou,;,. b, aln.oat ov ry Gr.ndmotW ?? WSSO^J&TSSi ? . , ; bottle of alleged bonded liquor h( pound, 25c; roast, per pound* v" has analyzed, he asserted. fcriterea college 20c; stew, per pound, 12Vtc; mixed ? I "It is true a portion of the contents . 2QcL ^ _ _ , , < i ? . r |Knrtv Mo Doe 20 ?Mrs Marv sliced, per pound, 30c, porlc roast, of most bottles is pure bonded whis- Iil^erty' Mo" Uec* Mary per pound, 25c; pork sausage, per key. That gives it the color, flavor A. Church, a grandmother, h is en- pound, 30c. Your patronage will and taste," Curtis added. "But the tered William Jewell College in Lib- be^ appreciated. H. E. Hill, Phone good liquor is mixed with ingredients erty after the flame of desire for a 1 lo-W. | that are harmful to the human sys colJc?e education had burned with p0R SALE?ThoromrhWii" rem ana me quesron uppermost in umauering ueiermmauon ior more buy calf?extra flnV Yreedfng""One the minds of those who come to me than thirty-five years. Mrs. Church, week old, price $5.50. Hillcrest for analysis of their liquor is how to who has five grown children and live Dairy. It remove the ingredients and leave the grandchildren, matriculated with her pqr RENT OR SALE About 15 ' bonded stuff." two sons, C. A. Church, 18 years old, acres of land, situate right at Mon- I That "bonded" whiskey is being and Jnmos M- Church, 19. A grand- arch Mill. A good truck propostgrc.ly misrepresented by bootleg- child, George W. Billings, 6, attends t>?n. See P. D. Barron, Union, gers was revealed recently when a sc'hool in Neosha, Wis. :?. raid of a printing shop in the down- Finishing high school in Detroit, TIIE UNION TEA ROOM will serv* vm town section by federal and police Mich., in 1885, Mrs. Church, then a psyters, salads, sandwiches of ^ officials uncovered a plant which is her teens, longed for further j said to have been devoted exclusively education. Continuous illness n: her sertst The Union Tea Room. it to the manufacture of counterfeit la- '?mily made it compulsory for the JMH bels and bottlcd-in-bond revenue Kirl to help support her family fcl- FOR SALE--My place located pn ctomnn lowing her graduation. ** ? tl? street, known as the* stamps. _ , , , McLure Place. Contains 42 acTfut^Sli The labels were similar to those But lfc was not long before more ^en room house. All outbuildings^ used by prominent distillers on popu- important respons bilities claimed 25 acres in cultivation. Terms oirSSS^ lar brands of intoxicating liquors her, the girl marryingDr. Frank sale, one-half cash, balance in 12 previous to the becoming emectlve Church a young Baptl.t mlnl.ter. tV of the eighteenth amendment. When the children came the young Inman. ltpd Ten thousand alleged counterfeit mother was too busy caring for them ? revenue stamps were confiscated to be active in her efforts to obtain TYPEWRITERS iill i^hMy in Federal secret service operatives de- the college education. The mother 10 Can arranKe term* to clare that statements made by some and her two sons entered coilogo here responsible parties. Calhoun Office j of tfcfc six persons arrested in con- as freshmen this year. Supply Co., Spartanburg. 12-30-B1 .n ' -'>' * -*v ju