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IRIALTO THEATRE ISSf I GEO. E. WINTZ PRESENTS NEW YORK'S GREATEST I MUSICAL COMEDY I ? TW G ' B- 'TVI I IRENE 8 WITH J- ;v I NYRA BROWN AND JOHNNY GETZ I AMERICA S MOST BEAUTIFUL ACTRESS THE PERFECT NUT || AND H A veritable harem of beautiful Girls, the Flirtation Walk extending I 15 rows in audience, the Ball of Mirrors, the greatest electrical ef- 8 1 feet ever on stage; the highest salaried chorus in the world. For I the first time at these prices. I SEAT SALE SATURDAY. PRICES: 75c, $1.00, $1.50 PLUS TAX m MAIL ORDERS NOW. y. DOWN GO THE PRICES Beginning Monday Morning, Jan. 23, For 10 Oays Only WE WILL PUT ON SALE THE FOLLOWING MERCHANDISE AT I LESS THAN REPLACEMENT PRICE: ALL MIDDY SUITS. COATS, ' COAT SUITS, SKIRTS, HOSE, GLOVES, CORSETS, SHOES, BOYS' SUITS, SWEATERS, ETC. IF MONEY MEANS ANYTHING TO YOU, ATTEND THIS SALE. KID GLOVES BLANKETS $3.00 Kid Gloves _ _ $2.25 $6.50 Blankets $2.95 $2.00 Kid Gloves _ _ _ $1.39 $7.00 Blankets _______ ~$3.50 $1.50 Kid Gloves 98c ___? Colors black, brown and ffrav. nrn doou cunrti I-?-?kiui/ 1V\ /\/aT1 OH\/I^kl LADIES SILK HOSE $1.50 I tod Room Shoes $1.00 li $1.50 All Silk Hose $1.00 $2.50 lied Room Shoes $1.50 | $2.00 All Silk Hose $1.39 | $3.00 All Silk Hose $2.25 $4.00 All Silk Hose $2.95 BOYS' SUITS t Roys' Buster Hose _60c $5.00 Roys' Suits, 3 to (> $2.50 | Roys' Heavy Hose _ _29e $12.50 Rlue Serge Suits _ _ _$6.75 $16.50 Middy Suits . . $5.00 Last Call tor Coats and Coat Suits at 4/2 Price Sweaters V3 oil : Skirts *4 ott Billiken Shoes from 50c to $2 pr. off IGood Heavy Outing .... 10c ATT TMkT Pearl Market Suffers Slump Campaign of Courtesy Concealed Fields j Under Cultivation Paris, Jan. 10.?The pearl market, Louisville, Ky., Jan. A cam of Paris which considers itself the paign of courtesy for the year 1022 Mos,.,)Wt jan. 20.-A special cornmarket of the world has suffered a has been inaugurated by the Louis- mission named to locate grainftclda slump. A necklace of Oriental (ville Railway company. Instead of which were cultivated this year, but pearls, valued by experts at 1 ,."00,0001 the "step lively" or "all aboard" or- upon which the cultivators had f.tUed francs has just been sold by public dor f)f the conductor, he will politely to make any tax returns in kind, have auction for only 460,000 francs. , invite his passengers to move as located over 5,000,000 acres of conThe slump is ascribed to general rapidly as possible, if the plans of ceal cultivation, tightness of money, to the fact tha* James P. Barnes, president of the The tax upon grain is about 10 porwar profiteers have by now got rid company, are carried out. cent of the crop. The government of their superfluous millions and are "Trent everyone coming into your is having great difficulty in colloctnot buying freely as in the days just office, or meeting you in the course ing this levy in remote sections, csafter the war, and to various other of your work," Mr. Barnes said in a peeially in the Ukraine, where bancauses, but not to the competition of letter to ul subordinates, "with dits and peasant bands resist the Japanese cultivated pearls. courtesy and always more courtesy." government agents. 1 ***** * * * * *T Where To Worship * ********** I Episcopal. Sunday school and Bible class with, service at 10 o'clock. A cordial Welcome awaits you. W. W. Johnson. Lay Reader. | First Baptist Church Sunday school meets at 10 o'clock J tomorrow. Services of worship with preaching: i by the pastor at 11 a. m. and 7:30 , p m. The B. Y. P. U. meets at 6:30 p. m. The mid-week prayer service is held ' on Wednesday evenings with teaehI era' meeting following. The public is invited to attend all I of the services. Edw. S. Reaves, Pastor, j West side Baptist Bible school at 10 a. m. Preaching at 11 a. m. and 7 p. m. A cordial welcome to strangers and friends. A. T. Stoudenmire, Pastor. Corinth Baptist Church (Colored) Sunday school at 10 a. m. Preaching at 11:30 a. m. Theme, "An Example of Faith." B. Y. P. U. at 6 p. m. Preaching at 7 p. in. Theme, "Weights and Sins." ? ?ai?<a oil* " wine v?ic| vi'inc <111 y tur wnui v ii ir* the place to.go on the Sahhatli. J. S. Daniel, Pastor. I Bethel A. M. K. Church (Colored) 10 a. m.?Sunday school. 11:30 a. ni.?Preaching; subject, "The Fruits of a Thought." 7 p. m.?A. C. E. league. 8 p. m.?Preaching; subject, "Why Should the Kettle Call the Pot Black." i Everybody volcortie. L. D. Gamble, Minister. [SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS I PARTRIDGE WYANDOTTE EGGS for hatching; $1.50 for 15. CockI erels, 2.50. 'ure bred line stock. W. B. Deneen, 34 Perrin Ave. 1282-3tpd ' FOR SALE?House and two fine lots on South street, just aci'oss from the hospital Must be sold. You : can buy this on easy terms and really at a low price. P. B. Smith or S. E. Barron, Phone 349. i CHILDREN CRY FOR IT, mothers bless it, doctors praise it?"Whoop Not." It's at Storms. No dope I opiates or alcohol. ltpd j YOUNG MEN. WOMEN, over 17, i\Z siring government positions, $130 montniy, iftite iot tree list of positions now open. J. Leonard, (former Civil Sendee examiner), 1235 Equitable Bid?., Washington, D. C. ?' ltpd A . A\*it? fbr Ford Repeats regularly. Reduces operating costs. Increases life of car. No competition. Universal demand. Your territory open. Case Lubricants Co.. 4500 Euclid, Cleveland; Ohio. ltpd Cats, owls and tigers see in the dark because they have tme power of enlarging at will the pupils of their : eyes, and thus collect, all the seatJ tcred rays of light there are, which | are present even in "darkness." Napoleon's fate threatens the Creek army if it attempts to hold during the winter the great territory won in Anatolia. The high cost of living is seriously reducing the student population in the Latin Quarter. Subscriptions to $5,000 Cannery Lewis M. Rice .. $ 50.00 C. K. Hughes 50.00 R. M. White . . * 50.00 J J. F. McLure . . 50.00 W. D. Wood . 50 no Dr. Russell Jeter 50.00 J. E. Minter . 50.00 R. W. Beaty 50.001 T. B. Strange 50.001 F. H. Garner 50.00 II. L. Davis 50.00 J. R. Whitmire 50.00 Roy Willeford 50.90 Sam Berelowitz 50.00 Sam Kassler . . : 50.00 C. R. Lancaster 50.00' J. V. Askew . 50.00 S. Krass 50.00 Macbeth Young 50.00' E. M. Garner . t 50.00 | Claude Wilburn . / 50.00 J. Mobley Jeter, St. 50.00 L. G. Young . . . .' 50.00 F. W. Cornell 50.00 D. Jean Whitloc* 50.00 A. G. Kennedy 4 50.00 Victor Smith 50.00 Jno. W. Gregory 50.00 R. N. Sprouse 50.00 W. W. Johnson . r 50.00 C. B. Sparks . 50.00 U. U. Ammons 50.00 T. B. Gault . . 4.- 50.00! Dr. A. P. McElrt?y 50.00 R. T. McMahon 50.00 George Willard 50.00 Gordon Bishop 50.00 j D T Ifii 'a aaI | ??. A. ITIVlTICimil * .. OU.UU | R. H. Harris r>0.00 F. J. Parham 50.00 ' Dr. J. W. Buchanan 50.00 H. J. West 50.00 , J D. Hancock 50.00 Dr. W. N. Glymph 50.00 B. F. Kennedy 50.00 Goyan Austell . 50.00 1 L. J. Browning 50.00 E. W. Stone . . C 50.00 Mrs. Jno. R.. Mathis 50.00 J. Cohen Co. 50.00 I Citizens National Bank .... 50.00 H. C. Wilburn 50.00 Dr. Theo. Maddox 50.00 Found 52 ? wanted IX more subscriptions. Who will be the next? Unless we can secure 100, no sub-: scription will hold Rood. No solicitors,! ; no sales promoters. 'Phone No. 1 and fay "Yes." I i People of Union ^ Hear Billy Sunday Mr. Sunday wont "to Union this ^ morning and preached to a congrega- ? tion that packed every inch of stand- Jl ing room of the First Baptist church, ^ the largest auditorium in the city. So eager were the people to hear him that some went to the church as early as 8 o'clock. And Mr. Sunday never J had more attentive hearers. They ^ drank in every word that he said. ' Mr. Sunday preached one of his < best sermons, using as his text the ^ 15th verse of the third chapter of ^ the First Epistle of Peter, "Sanctify ?> the Lord God in your hearts, and be j ^ ready always to give an answer to J every man that asketh you a reason * of the hope that is in you." He told ^ of the plan of salvation, and the +< peace and happiness that come through acceptance of the offers of 4 God, and then he exhorted his hear- ^ ers to be ready always to give a rea- { son for their faith. The sermon was somewhat different from any that he has delivered in the tabernacle here, <i but was as impressive as any, and ^ made a deep impression. ^ When Mr. Sunday agreed to go to ' Union a committee of citizens asked * him what his charge would be. 4, "Why, nothing," was his reply. "I have never yet set a price on my preaching, and I am too old. to begin now. But I'll tell you what you can do. Up at my home, Winona Lake, we have a great Bible conference evi ery summer. Ministers of every dei nomination come from all over the country, and we read and pray and study together, trying to learn to do more effective work. Wre charge no tuition fees, for many of the minisI ters who come are not able to nav I anything. But the conference costs money, for we bring the foremost preachers anil Bible scholars from all over the world and they have got so they sort of look to me to finance it. If you feel like making a contribution to that cause I will be glad to take it, and you may take my word for it that you will be helping in a good cause." The suggestion appealed to the Union people, and when the collection plates were passed at the close of the sermon they came back filled. A substantial sum was gladly given for the Winona Lake Ministers' conference. Mr. Sunday was greatly pleased with the singing of the congregation, i One old-time hymn, "I Am Bound for j the Promised Land," appealed to him very much. He said he had never heard it before, and he asked to have the chorus repeated. "Fine," he said. "I like that. It has a kick to it. We'll tell Body about it when we get back home, and I think we will soon have a new song in the tabernacle."?Spartanburg Journal. Japan has conferred the Third Order of the Rising Sun upon E. M. Sutllff In recognition of 24 years' service in promoting trade between the United States and Japan. Turkish Success Stirring Mussulman World | Baku, Azerbaijan, Soviet Republic, , Jan. 20.?The success of the Turkish ' { arms against the Greeks is stirring | , the Mussulman world, and may in I ! i - * ?_ . i I winf iiaw a iar-reacning cnoct on! : Russian influence throughout the Can-j I casus, Turkestan and Persia. ! I There is a tendency on the part of | Moscow, tired of settling interminable' I dispates, to let these various outly- j | ing republics, sovietized by force of circumstances and Red army greed, to j go their own way, temporarily and ! certainly the republics have not been slow to re-asert their old local power.! Imperal Russia formerly had a sort i of blanket rule, called a vice-royalty,; functioning in the Caucasus, consist-j ing of seven provinces and five terri- j tories, for a region populated by 12,000,000 persons, three times the size of New England, and threefourths as large as Texas. ! Moscow has lately proposed to revive this old central form of govern- i ment, in order to eradicate the boundary, commercial and customs disputes among the republics of Azer-' baijan, Georgia, Paghestan and Ar-i menia, including lively sideline dis- j putes with Turkey and Persia. But if there is any union, it may be rather against than for Moscow. Out- j side of Georgia, if even not there, the j iui iv <uiu, generally speaaing, tile ls" | I lam influence* is stronger than that of | Russia. . I Islam is certainly once more in the saddle at Baku. Even the coachmen _ refuse to speak the Russian language., Knver Pasha, former Turkish war 51 minister, who was sentenced to death a by a Turkish court martial for plung-1 ? ing that country into the world war, 1 has been here lntely apparently try-! ing to show that due respect to Mos- ( cow should be continued, is plan of ? campaign is now to hold on for a while j 1 longer with Russia. He claims that! a the British influence can be cleared j a out of all of Turkey, Persia and the Irlamic peoples of Turkestan and In- j ^ dia, by working with the Russians. He! argues that when Britain has been de- j feated and Turkey is once more polit-! J icnlly independent, Russia can he dealt j T with, the Soviet rule overthrown here | * and in Turkestan, and the old order E reestablished. E Communism, backed up by the J Eleventh Red Army, is still inclined E to joy ride in Tiflis but in Baku the B form is turning. It has had enough 3 of the Cheka and the slaughter of ?T its business men. Andriev, its minis- ^ ter of foreign affairs, is a Communist J in name only nnd Moscow is obeyed J insofar as Moscow's mandates suit C Baku. Dr. Nariman Narimanov, in- IV stalled as president of tbe Azerbaijan J republic by Moscow because of his C Communism, is after all a Mussulman F A4^ a^A A^A A^A A^A A^A A^A A^A A^!? A^A A^A A^A A^A A^A J^i. l^ A^Ty a^ "A" fy "A^ "yT|" ^y^y^y^yiy^y I PEOPLE WHO ARE NOT WORRYING f * 4 In these days of business depression and unemploy- V r ment are those who SAVED MONEY WHEN TIMES V f WERE GOOD. r ? . V % Be prepared for still other times in the future when A L such things as dull timeq or ill health may prevent you J>+ |? from earning. f Save now in the NICHOLSON BANK & TRUST ^ COMPANY which pays 5% on Savings Account of V p $1.00 or more and a higher rate on Certificates of y I Deposit for six months or longer. V L X SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES FOR RENT. > r V Capital and Surplus $400,000.00 Y | NICHOLSON BANK & TRUST COMPANY 1 h A ^ Member Federal Reserve System ? * jj^ EMSL1E NICHOLSON, President . M. A. MOORE, Cashier X t W. S. NICHOLSON, L. M. JORDAN, J. ROY FANT $ Vice Presidents Y A^A A^A A "^y x> ^ ^ $ $ $ "y ^vv^v^v V^f ^ ^ ^ yr WE ARE I MEMBERS OF A. B. A. Members of the American Bankers Association are protected by a world-wide detective service. Pur- ' suit by this service of criminals who have robbed or defaulted member banks is so relentless that burglars have been known to return stolen* money when they learned that the bank robbed was a member of the A. B. A. In one such case the returned money was accomu.. ?i? 1 1? ?1?i ?U/L.. ujr ?* nuic lit miivii itic uui ^iai a^ivcu, ny didn't you hang your membership sign where I could see it?" 9 There are, of course, other advantages in A. B. A. membership, but this one should be of interest to our customers and prospective customers. THE BANK OF UNION C. C. SANITFRK R P WFNNFnV President. Vice President. ^ W. W. ALMAN, Cashier. WHY COMPLAIN? Things are seldom as bad as prophecied. Men, since the dawn of civilization have been talking Hard Times. There is no such thing, in fact, it lies in fancy, ome people are always having hard times. It is often their own fault. They will not plan while the sunshine lasts for the day when the rain is sure to come. Systematic savers seldom experience hard times. Our bank offers a safe place for your savings, and your savings grow while left with us. FARMERS BANK AND TRUST CO. C. n. PEAKE, Pres., E. L. LITTLEJOHN, Vice Pres., C. K. MORGAN, 2nd Vice Pres. ,ri<l can not side with strangers I. From 100.00 gainst his own people. There are not Or. Theo. Maddox 100.00 nly bread lines, but oil lines in Baku, Or. J. G. GQing 100.00 he richest oil region of the East. Bernard Fant 100.00 For these and other reasons, if sue ess crowns, definitely, the long fight Total $.3,000.00 f Mustapha Kemal Pasha, in Turkey, Unless $5,000 is raised, no subscriphe cards will be shuffled anew here tion will count. If you don't like a nd the Caucasus mountains will cannery, come on into a potato dry gain become political headliners. house. We need both. Both will help. ? The potato dry house will pay quicker ubscriptions to $5,000 dividends. Come on! Potato Drying House N?' 1 ?nd say $5??' $1?? ?r ^ J |VW? . H. Riley $500.00 'hos. McNally 100.00 Notice \ J. Parham 100.00 >r. J. W. Buchanan 100.00 state of South Carolina, ewis M. Rice 100.00 County of Union. D. Hancock 100.00 Court of Common Pleas. ,. J. Browning 100.00 . , .. - . . !. F. Kennedy 100.00 M?$t?ck Manufacturing Co., Plain1. R. Gamer . . 100.00 ' Vs. . R. Charles . . . . ' 100.00 W. F. Bates and W. B. May, co-partIrs. Jno. R. Mathis 100.00 ners. durinf? business under the firm ^ Kci|v 100 00 name and style of Carlisle Cash Co., ' ' ? ' Defendants. . Cohen Co. . . 100.00 Notice is hereby Riven that the sale litizens National Bank .... 100.00 0f the stock 0f Kootjs jn the above lacbeth YounR 100.00 entitled case is postponed until furth. L. Bolton 600.00 er notice. itizenn National Bank . . . .. 100.00 p |j [arris-Woodward Co 100.00 u Receivers for Above. * ? < v , d