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GRAND TODAY Canyon Pictures Corporation Presents FRANKLYN FARNil IN "THE RAIDERS" A brilliant story of the North west mounted police. ALSO RUTH ROLAND "THE WHITE EAGLE" Arcadia Becomes Aerial Center ! ns Angeies, CaFeb. 23.?Arcadia, 10 miles from here, become; one of the great aerial centers in thi I'nited States with the enlargemen of the Army Balloon Si hool at Ros; Field there to an Army Balloon an* Airship School. The War Depart ment has sent the largest non-rigi? airship ever seen on the Pacifv coast, the airship D13 which partici pated in the aerial bombardment o the German battleships ollf Hamptoi Roads, Va. This is added to a pon; blimp, twenty captive balloons an< eight free balloons now at the post It is the first airship school in th< west, and similar to the army schoo at Langley Field, Hampton, Va. Construction work is under wa; for two great steel hangars at th< field. The airship D-3 is 193 fee * long, .r?l feet 3 inches wide and 51 feet high. It has a cruising radiu; of 790 miles at the cruising speed o 4f? miles an hour, and a radius o: 550 miles at high speed, 60 mile; an hour. A crew of four operates th? great airship. There aro accommo dations aboard for three additiona officers. The pony blimp which has been ir operation at Ross Field since Marcl is of the tractor propulsion type, be inpr y;? i-z ieet long and 30 feet wide It has a capacity of 35,350 cubic feel of pas, operated by two men, pilot and enpineer, one of whom also op crates the radio. The speed is 4f miles an hour at cruisinp speed witf a radius of 570 miles, and 55 milef at phih speed, with a radius of 38C miles. The enlarpement of the school pro vides that airship pilots will be graduated in addition to balloon observers. The A type of airship is 162 feet long. 20 feet wide and 17 feet high with a capacity of 05,000 cubic feet of pas, non-rigid type. A crew ol three, pilot, radio operator and engineei, operates the craft, which hnfi a cruisinp radius of 1700 miles at the cruising speed of 46 miles per hour, and a radius of 1150 at high speed, 60 miles an hour. The airships are. equipped with radio telephone instruments, as well as radio telegraph, 'he radius being over 20 miles. Maxim Gorky Visits Germany Stockholm, Feb. 2,'J.?Maxim Gorky, Russian novelist and formerly relief official, looked tired and ill when he arrived here enroute for Berlin, lie said his principal purpose in visiting Germany was to secure the printing of manuscripts which circumstances had not permitted to be done before. "It is a biff parcel," he said, which I bring alonff and its contents are of the greatest importance to humanity for they include a new method for the treatment of tuberculosis. In food and fuel Gorky said Russian scientists were comparatively well off, thanks to the support which they have had from abroad, but what they mostly needed was moral support encouraging them to new efforts and it was from that point of view that it was essential their works should be published. "The position of Russian intellectuals is terrible and practically hopeless " said Gorky. "It means that as dreadful a catastrophe as could ever tali upon a nation has tailed upon Russia. Investigations made by Professor Manukin show that in Petrograd 22 percent suffer from anemia, 29 percent have cancer, 11 percent are drunkards and 16 percent gone mad. "A few days ago two professors tried to escape from Petrograd. One succeeded in pnssing the frontier into Finland but the other one was shot. Gorky said there were no children in Russia now. They were all grown up and death was printed on their faces. They were no more human beings. they were starving dogs. They had forgotten all human expressions except the one "give us bread," and incessantly day and night they cried for bread. Ikfe*/ - First Woman Prohibition Agent Bucyrus, 0., Feb. 23.?Miss Georgia E. Hopley of Bucyrus, the first woman general prohibition agent to be attached to the mobile enforce! ment forces at national prohibition 1 headquarters, Washington, in her new ! work will be carrying on a crusade | started a geenratron back in her famj iiy| In 1872-73, when he who talked of ! prohibition was accounted out of his i head, a valiant band of women brnv! ing hoots and jeers, started to make | this city unsafe for liquor. Mrs. (!eorgiana Hopley, who is dead now, was a member of that bond. She was the ' fust woman general prohibition agent's" mother. Miss Hopley comes of a long line ' of newspaper folk. One brother was the editor of the first and only prohibition paper in Crawford county ! Seven of her brothers and sisters still are in newspaper work, here or elsewhere. The late John Hopley, her father | as editor of the Bucyrus Journal, was ! accorded the title of "Nestor of Ohic ' Journalism." Miss Hopley has another "first" : to her credit. She is said to hav< been the first woman in Ohio to entei ; active newspaper work. Her initial newspaper job was as s rep rN-r on the Columbus, O.. Times ; In lPOn, Governor George K. Nash ap ' pointed her to represent women of the - state :it the Paris exposition. and sh( ; remained in France and England fron May un?.il December. She made trip; ! to England and the continent in 1908 J 1910 and 1911. In 1918. Miss Hopley had charge o1 s | the women's publicity in tho Fran! b, B. Willis campaign in Ohio for th< t Republican nomination for governor sj and in 1919, was attached in the sam< J capacity to the successful campaigr - j of James J. Thomas for mayor of Co ;i ( lunibus. ; In 1920, she had charge of tho pub - licity work for women in the IT pub f l'can presidential campaign in Ohio. i In her new work, site will u ider y take tlie spread of publicity in th 1 na l|tional prohibition enforcement cause :. j and will, it is expected, travel exten el sively over the country. She hopes tc l; have delegated to her, the educ itior | of children of the country in the prop yrj ? r observance of prohibition laws. a I m ' L Low Rate of Pay s For Military Men s| fi Moscow, Feb. 24.?Soviet Russia's C: military appropriation for the firsl sl r.ine months of 1922 totals 1922 totals ?I 556,028,069 gold rubles, or about . j $228,000,000. Its naval appropriations 1 aggregated $30,000,000, bringing the total contemplated expenditures foi 4 army and navy to about $204,000,000 1 according to the budget approved bj . the recent congress. This expenditure is based on the I present size of the army and navy, l' The army, according to latest reports, . I numbers somewhat over 1,500,000 mer jl and the combined strength of the soli1 ciiers, the naval personnel and spelial , j troops is about 1,700.000. j Food and forage for the army i? | provided for in an appropriation ag.; gregnting about $79,000,000 which is greater than the amount of m mey America has already given for the relief of famine in the Volga districts and more than the amounts givc.i by i all foreign countries to relieve dis'' tress in Soviet Russia. ? Western soldiers, particularly A.ner; ican soldiers, will be amazed at the , i iow rare or pay ror military men An ordinary soldier's pay is '20,0000 ru. hies a month, which is only about ten [ 1 cents, or less than the price of a Russian pound of white bread. Captains I tret the equivalent of about I)ij \ ision commanders receive about $.00 ' a month. Budget figures for the Vecheka, or j "Cheka." show that this all-powerful spy system which combines leg'slaj live, executive and judicial functions a'l in one. and has been the chief ob: jeet of attack from abroad, as well as within Russia, is to cost $10,2'>00,000. j The Supreme Economic Council, which Is endeavoring to reconstruct Russia nindustry gets $77,000,000; i agriculture gets $26,000,000; education $61,000,000; and the deportment of health $58,000,000, The contemplated expenditures toI tal 1,877,000,000 gold rubles whilt the 000 gold rubles, leaving a d< ficit i equivalent to about $115,000,000. ; The chief sources from which it is estimated the state's income will be derived are nationalized industries which arc expected to yield $449,000,| 000 and $212,000,000 income from grain and other products taken as I taxes in kind. The income from ; transportation is placed at $49,000,000. . m Large Order For Manchester Firm 1 London, Feb. 2'i.- A contract valued at between ?750,000 and ?1,900,000 for material needed in the olec : iiiiiration 01 nouin rtincan railways . has been obtained by a Manchester i firm, acording to the Times. The I order is said to be the largest conj rernod with main line railway electrification that has ever been entrusted | to a British establishment, and was j obtained in the face of strenuous European and American competition. It involved the supply of at least I 70 electric locomotives destined for | the 120-mile railway line between i Glencoc and F'ietermaritz.burg. Funny, hut aren't the compliments we least deserve the ones that most tickle our pride??orhes Magazine (S. Y.) i Richest County in The United States Lancaster, Pennsylvania is the ,Q; i ichest county for its size In the Unit- 11 ed States. Latest estimates place its ^ agricultural and dairy products at ^ fifty million of dollars for the year n 1920, according to M. M. Carter In an { 1 article in the Fegruary 1921 issue of the Indies' Home Journnl. Certainly a tidy sum to be divided among thy farmers. Consider these facts a minute and leave them quietly rest- 0 ing as a back ground while we go on * ' with the story. ^ To make a little money and stay c at homo at the same time-there lies the crux of the problem for millions 11 i of mothers to day. Basketeering T solves that problem for the women of Lancaster County. Hundreds, if not * i thousands of Lancaster County wo- c -men are today availing themselves of . ?his opportunity instead of working s I in factories or stores or stripping 'obacco. Club Markets solve the prob (em for the women of South Carolina. , Twenty three have been established > in different parts of the state. > Already our state boasts four counties in the list of fifty richest agrioul- 1 ' tural counties in the United Stales. - When our markets are fully developed 1 who can foretell what the result will be? As we well realize that besides i 1 eing a gainful occupation, the club . market is a liberal education, a prac tical training, a means of self expros- ^ ? sion through creative work and sales- c i all combined, in which you can stirt j ? on next to nothing capitalization. If t ho Club Market could be spread a j local to nation-wide cult, it would be f | < no of the biggest things that v I ever happened to the United States, ^ . | American Consular Bulletin j 1 j Washington, Feb. 24.?Details of ^ j l ow the 457 American consids now in the service of the States Depart nient are "gathering information, ex- J - tending protection, enforcing American laws and exerting American in- , fluence" in more than 400 cities of 50 J countries are set forth by Wilburn J. Carr, director of the consular service in the first issue of the American 4 Consular Bulletin, a monthly publishI j ed by the American Consular Asso-j ciation, an unofficial and voluntary ori ganization embracing most of the ! members of the consular service in the United States, i "There is probably NO class of officers of the Government whose func' tions are loss correctly understood t by the public than consuls," says Di- j ! rector Carr. "To one man a consul t i? merely a visaer of passports, to an: other the word consul signifies a 4 florified traveling salesman charged ' with the marketing of American goods 1 . in foreign lands. Many a mother * ' knows the consul only as a good and ^ kind friend in a faw away land who * '. found and sent her wayward son back * to the old home, in the United States 1 , | "It would hardly occur to any of c II these individuals that their ontact had 0 been with an organization of trained 1 I j officers, an organization employing 11 j 2.500 men and women, costing about 0 j M,500,000 annually and returning to j the treasury of the United States in ** ij the year 1921 the sum of $8,500,000, ' I thus showing a net profit to the Gov- 1 I eminent for that year of more than v ! $1,000,000. Neither would it occur ~ to them that the members of that or- ' I gnnization were serving daily ten de- 11 partment* and numerous independent establishments of the Government in 1 r 1 Washington and, through them or dij rcetly, many thousands of individual :1 I citizens throughout the country." * I In supi>ort of that statement, Direc- 0 j tor Carr recites how American con- 0 j suls handled 48,078 cases involving the 1 J protection and welfare of nationals ! of the United Stutes abroad in 1921. v "The many cases of protection and 11 , relief," he adds, "ranged from finding s ! lost relatives nnd shielding well- ' ' meaning hut indiscreet American | travelers from the legal consequences j] i of their rash acts, to rescuing indigent relatives from starvation and death." ^ That the consul was a great letter \ writer last year was shown by the figures on correspondence. In the twelve month period ending June HO, last, consuls abroad received 756,824 I" letters and sent out 871,891. Between times they handled 546,289 consular invoices, visaed passports for 657,968 aliens nnd 150,117 Americans and checked the arrival and departure of 27,888 American vessels. In connection with their passport work, Director Carr asserts consuls t, discovered many frauds, "gangs of n crooks manufacturing and selling fraudulent passports were broken up in many places in Europe,' and count- n erfeit passports, cleverly copied, p rubber stamps for visas, counterfeit z fee stamps and seals?all wer" found _ end destroyed and the practices stopped." Notice A stated assembly of Pinckncy R. & S. M., will J ified Companions I] welcome. , By order, I. K. Brennecke, a Wm. C. Cake. I. M. fl , Recorder. 1310-2t CHILDREN* COLDS should not be "doaed." Trsst them externally with? VJCKS VA^ORyB Ovtt 17 Million Jan Uud Ytarty Hopper-Sprout* "" ' Miss Marie Hopper and Mr. Clyds prouse of near Bonham were united i marriage yesterday afternoon at he Green street parsonage, Rev. J. B, Jhick performing the ceremony. "The larringe was witneased by a few inimate friends. Rev. L. P. McGee's Work Rev. L. P. McGee, who was pastoi f Grace church last year and was ransferred to St. John's at Anderson ias sent The Times a cory of th< hurch newspaper. It is a four page paper and gives ill the church and Sunday schools lews, the announcements, the ofUcia iirectory and many splendid articles learing on the upbuilding of th< hurch and the community. Tho paper is most readable anc hows Anderson to be a live city. Of Interest Here Infiolder Harry McColl, of Union vho piayed at Wofford park last yeai vich the Cowpens club against Shelby ilso has been signed by the Spartans He Coll played third base for Cowpens n that game and crashed out a timey triple, as local fans will remember Ie was considered one of the mosl ikcly semi-pro players in the stati ast season, and Manager Kelly sign <1 him with a view to according th< Jnion lad a thorough trial in th< Spartanburg infield before allowing oire other Sally club to obtain th< ?oy's services.?Spartanburg Journal Union Route 4 Mr. and Mrs. Olin Gallman are al imiles. It's a girl. The stoi'k vis ted their home February 8th, thi it-tie lady to be called Evelyn Raphsy Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Gallman, M. S Inllman, Mrs. Robert Gallman Newel md Maurine Gallman motored t< Spartanburg Sunday to hear Bill} Sunday. The many friends of Miss Ireni Sanders of Kelton will be grieved t< iear that she lias pneumonia. Itinerary For Week Monday?Ottaray. Tuesday?Hughes Johnson School. Wednesday?U nion. Thursday?Kelly. Friday?Bishop. . . Saturday?Union. Miss Mahala J. Smith, County II. D. Agent. ^ocal Men Chased Runaway Freight Carj W. V. Martin, siate industrial sec etary, and George Simmons, loca oys' work secretary,,frf the Y. M. C V., went to Jonesville<}tat night to at end a father and s8n banquet. Th< >anquet was a community affair, anc here were 120 persons present. Shorl iddresses were made by the pastor: T the Methodist, Baptist and Presbyerian churches, and Mr. Simmons nade the principal address of tht tvening. While going to Jonesville, Messrs rlartin and Simmons had occasion tc iass Pacolet. They noticed that about en or twelve ears of a freight trair vhieh was shifting at Pacolet hat1 rotten away and were going toward onesvilie, unattended. They speeded ip their car, but the runaway freight ars beat them until the grade near he limits of Jc _?sville was reached, 'here they caught up with the cars nd Mr. Simmons got out and climbed o the top of one of the cars and put n brakes and stopped the runaway ars. Soon the engine came up and ook the runaways back to Pacolet. It was not until the passenger train .as due. and Messrs. Martin and Simnons felt that it was necessary to <hi omething before the cars met tht DKmHurpr triiin IV?r tlm micrM inve been serious. ? Spartanburg ournal. PECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS VANTED?You to try some mil's that is aerated. Phone 27*20. C. K Hughes. ltpd OR RENT OR SALE?One 7-room residence, with water, lights, sewerage and garage. Located on Easi Main street. Desirable location. See S. II. Wilburn, Union, Route 2, 01 J. M. Jeter, Jr., Union. 1311 -2tp?l The George Washington is the largst American passenger ship in commission. It's more honest to waste your own loney than waste the time your emloyer pays you for.?Forbes Magaine (N. Y.) MILK! MILK! Are you getting milk Llivnror) rlnilv ic IV11 T VI VU UUUJ > ??V ? lerated and cooled beore bottling? If not, (bone me. Milk from ubercular tested cows, flilk tests above 5 per ent butter fat. Phone ?? 2 0 C. K. HUGHES * -t , fj -.-X , v Yiiiv-- > r. Increase in Teachers* Pay Be res, Ky., Feb. 1*4.?Increase i I the maximum salary of $2,000 a yea ; paid to full professors and in the pa . j of assistant professors and teacher: u and the meeting of immediate need j of the institution and pupils, are th ( aims of a campaign now under wa i to raise $1,000,000 for Bereal college j an institution founded solely for tli I education of "American Highlanders "J from the southern states. The fur >i known as "Berea College Necessit , Fund" is being raised under the dire< ( Mon of officials and alumni of the it I stition with the advice of an advisot II board consisting of notable men ar i women from all parts of the Unit* 11 States. ! Berea was founded in 1855 for tl ; purpose of providing education f< mountaineers of Kentucky, Tennesse '| Virginia, West Virginia, Georgia, Ah bama and North and South Carolin i It has never charged students any tu tion and even in the present days* < high prices board is provided for sti ? dents nt $2.75 a week nnd it is sa : that students can live att he collej ?! for nine months for $150 of which : is possible for him to earn $50 1 * | working ten hours a week on the co '; lege farm. Twenty per cent of tl | students earn all of their expensi ^ during the year and another 20 p< J| cent use summer earnings for scho expenses. Fifty-seven per cent of tl *I remainder are partly self-sustainin There were 2,584 students in Bert ?> College last year. Berea provides training of a * kinds. The mountain boy or girl ct come to the school and learning farn i ing, nursing, woodworking, and, j I fact, anything that is of use in norm l'fc. The college department trail teachers who expect to work in moul tain schools. According to Marshall E. Vaugh j secretary of the college, Berea h: ( been financed during the past 28 yea . entirely by the rersonfd solicitation < funds by former President Willia L> Goodell Frost and one or two assoc J atos. During that time forty-gve re buildings have been added and tl student body increased from 354 2675 und the number of workers a? teachers from 23 to 143. The c< of educating each student is $114 a year more than he pays and bi jvAU ! ISM 5 X ; 1 ONLY BY CAR] if T10N OF GOODS if WITH SMALL PI THREE 40-inch Unbleachec 36-inch Cretonne, I :|X 36-inch Flowered S > 36-inch extra fine I X 36-inch Percale, yai 36-inch Striped Mai X 36-inch soft finish t It 40-inch figured Voi 40-inch Organdie, a X 36-inch Suiting, in i 72-inch Table Dam. X 18x18 Hemmed Na] Ladies Voile and 0: X price, each . . . , Ladies' Gowns in W X Men's Hemstitched |* Ladies' Embroidere i Ladies' seam up ba< *:* Ladies' seam up bac X Ladies' full fashione X ? ? t Ladies House Dres j WHY P J. F. DRY i n 0? I A Dollar in A dollar in the ban your pants pocket wl hole". Ever read the story "Ii Pocket"? It's a live one". Ask lor a cop Nicholson Bani id Union, >e Union County's oldest, lar )y r Member Federal 1- I U. S. Government an ^ B co?" mmim :mm ? Jrj ihii " Ol ! 1 - H le year more than BOO students were , turned away. Several old stores arv t ;a used to house different departments > and the women's gymnasium formerly 1 dl was a barn. Dormitory space ia also " in needed. n- j I in Swedish Locomotive a1 Industry Prospering IS '< I ' n"! Stockholm, Feb. 23.?The Swedish locomotive industry continues to n?, profit from the Russian demand for as transport material. i Fifty large locomotives were do- J livered to Russia last year. Conm tracts have been made for the delivery of 200 during this year and v 250 per year during 1923, 1924 and 1 ^ 1925. 1 t. 1 id Tobacco planting in Canada has st made progress during the past few i0 years, some 20,000 acres being plantis ed last year. UE Gil ADEPOSS EFUL BUYING, EXPEI SAND WILLINGNESS T ROFITS. WE ARE UV : OF THESE REQUIRE 1 Sheeting, yard teautiful flower effects, yard crim, yard Pajama Checks yard . . . rd dras, vard leach, yard le, yard white and colors, yard . . . ill the high colors, yard . . ask, yard akins, dozen rgandie Waists, the best y< hite and Flesh Handkerchief s, each . . . d Handkerchiefs, each . . :k fiber Silk Hose, pair . . . :k pure Silk Hose, pair . . . id pure Silk Hose, pair . . ses, each 'AY MORE ELSEM , McL r GOODS l the Bank k is worth two in * lere it may "burn a i a Mummy's Pants story of "a dead y- H k 8c Trust Co. s. c. I gest and strongest bank Reserve System d State supervision Feeling of the pulse and observation of the tongue of a sick person vere practiced by physicians of Tibet L600 years ago. THE BEST rnrA rni a fn Union Served at Our Fountain. PEOLES DRUG STORE Prompt Service?Phones 68-69 SngIIBLE j tIENCED SELEC- f 0 BE SATISFIED | 1NG UP TO ALL | MOTS | 8c | 1 19c ioc r 18c ........ .15c i 25c f 10c X 15c % 25c ?? 25c 75c $1.75 % >u ever saw for the f $1.00 % . . . .50c to $1.75 f 5c % 3c | 35c | 95c ? $2.25 $1.00 % WERE? | UREf co. i r ; .. idti. Si