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A A A A A A A A AA A A A A AAAAAAAAAAAA A | Rialto The | Tomorrow and Thu :| CECIL B. DE MULE'S DRAMA f^^pVV" : ' v'' ' '< ' | iljp^'' ' ztjk.' "ma ^feC'V' : ?V$ Tk % A picture beauti I JsilpSfc., y?u wi"recomi frfcnd *;*" ^ Admission: Adults 4 r '& JPv^*~~' CT @<*mm?1' 4 ; '< ,.-, ff I X v V%> "*<7 X v - Kk ^-?V . - ? ? I -u^.. -\ ?. *" - - :>i ^ >, ^-4 ! IS THIS Trwe of Our TOWN? Financial experts all aiiivr that every town may more thai iJntilili' its working capital l?y employing: its cash t>> make ami maintain hank reserves. t nil hankinir system is a jjreat manufactory <?f credit ami credit is working capital A single dollar in our pocket i Just that and no more, lint when you put ii .11 the hank it forms the reset e for many dollars that work to enrlcti every rail no or our people. I a Knouyh t<> Serve Any?Strong Kn .utrh to Protect All" N A T IO N A L BAN K ' Women Admitted to l1"'* '^-ntSy a blinded of,ice. . r, ... r^u:. ? eaten in the float low o. the auo. Ail Public Offices enee rose and exclaimed, I am blind. Make me able to see. I have tried Stn< h !m, May 1.- Admission of to make I'lysel.' believe that ! 1.1:1 s. e w.. , . to reavl; all public ofli< es on 1 inn't. Now you try." an .a. i-' itini; with men is pro- M. t'oue endeavored to explain that \ ided .11 a bill soon to be submitted ih. e were limitations to auto-suj*to the Itiksdai; hy the government, est ion, but the blind oflicer was not I'h' principle of eipiality of the sexe- to be appeased . He insisted that m p ildii service was virtually ac- his eyes were still there ai.d that epted l>\ the Iliksduu last year and therefore M. Com* outfit to he aidthe purpose of the present bill is to to work the miracle and he sat down pip it into pi u tice from .January 1. oliviously skeptical of this new faith 1 in*;;. The measure provides that women hid! l-e admitted to all governmental I *1 po t except in the army ami navy. | n-.i r dinlomit ic ami consular service, flie Kertect service, which it is felt cannot he fiilc<l l?y women. They are also (lis- Tooth Paste ! fIti;t11fic<I from occupying positions as officials of prisons and asylums for inebriates and of the customs and! frostry service, involving work which; men can perform better than women. Women will not be called upon to perform guard duty nor teach gym | Use Ny-Denta. It cleans nastii - to ( lasses of men. 1 . Tlere will be nothing to bar wo and whitens the teeth, hardmen from other high executive offices i , in piildii life heretofore regarded as i ens and Preserves the gums, " 1 ' ' ' '"en alone. antj |,e|ps prevent pyorrhea. I he Minister of Justice in discussing the bill favors admitting women to jiniieinl offices. No distinction is made in the bill between married and unmarried women. Hut the Minis-, ti r stated that no special discrimina-j t ion would he dinwn to married wo-j men in public office as regards her j l]n/.M| _ _ |luil#i 01 ^ ^ ho,., of work ?r fu Hilling her duties .j |j]0p|g5 UniQ UlOTB Advocate of New Faith Stumped Prompt Service f Phones 68-69 London, May I. In the course of a lecture which M. (lone, the advocate ____________? of the theory of auto suggestion, was| n atre | irsday | SUPREME : | 11 tt )('Miile IS I tion" mwm Y w f // f |&g v iraaise |B | 19. Con vad Na<?el, f, L/av:a>c-;i, JuhaFaye I ^1% / V iful?one that Ijij I j. I? 4 uend to your Jm ?$ fcgffijgj ?? 5, G:30, 8, 9:30 ^ 40c, Children 20c ^ ^ ^ *1 !S ^ ^ I MB lgS?3^ * ~ i \ % Corner Stone of Peace Riga, Latvia, May 1.?The Balti i "Entente" formed by Poland, Es tbonia, Latvia and Finland, in a con vent ion held at Warsaw in March i hailed by the Baltic piess as a corn | or stone of peace for this part of Eu i | lope. Details of the* agreements contain I ? <I in tin- convention supplementini the main points of which were cablei at that tin e, have now been mad public. In view of the Russian suspicion that Poland was trying in this wa; to arrange an anti litis: ian militnr; alliance, it is interesting to note tha the four states agreed that if on of t lieni was attacked by anothe state without provocat e n the othe three would observe a favorable at titude toward the state attacked s tha. < ss nti;tl st"ps could be takei without delay. Representative.; of the four coun tries mat aii'y Dial all con (lifts and disputes between then should be settled in an amicable man nor only. All important questions upon whie! the four may be unable to agree ar to be referred to a court of arbitra tion in accordance with t he rules o the League of Nations. I'.ach of the four contracting state is obligated in future to inform th other three states of agreements con eluded by that state with any othe nation. 'I he convention is to hold good fo live years arid to be automatically re newed then-after from year to yea unless a six month's notice of its ah rotation is given. It is saiil in diplo matii ' 'iclcs that Lithuania may joii (In- l.altie Kntente cordialc later. Monarch Little Miss Virginia Shirley, wh wen' to Atlanta, (la., last week t {.gain enter a sanitarium for treat merit, returned home Tuesday, aerom [tallied hy her mother, Mrs. Hutl Shiiley. The surgeons say she is do ing tine and will he aide to he at horn three months longer. 'PL ? i tit* rex ivai services at Mon-Aetfl; htirch continues to grow in interest Something over 20 conversions hav already hern recorded and Rev Thomas I). Toler is a faithful am forceful preacher. The choir is ren doing excellent, music and is ver; popuiai wit It the people. "The Oh Hugged Cross" has heen beautiful!; rendered several times during thesi >ei vires and the meeting enters todaj into i! closing lap of these reviva services. file good people of this churcl pounded Mr. II. Ilaylock, the pastor Saturday night It was a grand scen< when the rais d door of one of th< (lavs rooms was thrown up and tin "grocery store" came into view. Tin good people here love their pastors. C. T. C. Ottaray News g Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Moss of Jones- l| ville spent Sunday with relatives of I Ottaray. B Miss Louise Elsmore spent Sunday with Miss Eileen Crocker at her home , ?.n Fifth street. , Rev. Mr. Toler is carrying on a revival meeting at the Mon-Aetna Baptist church. He preached a sermon to the ladies only Sunday afternoon at 1 3:30 o'clock. The subject was the i "Prodigal Daughter." All sect ed to , he interested. Everyone is invited to the services throughout the week every evening at 8 o'clock. ' Mr. David Hall visited in Spartan> burg Saturday. M ss Pauline Blair is spending the day with Ambero/.ine Meadows today. Miss Lottie Meadows of Spartan' burg spend the week-end at the home > of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. O. > Meadows. Mr. Vernon Banna's brother of Greer spent Sunday with them. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Mattox entor* tained a number of young people at i 1 liidr Viftmn Q?4-i????1.i ?? A -1 ' w.i.v wwvuiuu.v iiif^nv. n Kuuu ? v time was reported by all. ? : .T-=a? ivi SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS FODDER FOR SAFE?At $2.50 per 100 bundles. Pea vine hay not in bales at $1.25 per 100 lbs. Vetch ' and oat hay mixed at $1.00 per hun- u dred lbs. J. McJ. Fant, Santuc, 1,1 S. C. 13G8-2tpr? " ?? la Trial of Corbett il Will Begin Today ( i re Orangeburg, May I.??The May term (r of the court* of general sessions for Orangeburg county convened today j){ with Judge I. W. Bowman of Orange- ^ burg presiding. Several important ta cases will be tried. The case against ^ Carlos Corbett, charged with murder w for the killing of Hugh Fanning will begin Tuesday afternoon at 3 o'clock, j while the caSjr against Claude J. Rast, ^ charged witK attempted criminal as- j sault, will begin next Monday. )|| ? ' ' Sentenced to Hang . 1)1 DeLand, Fla., May 1. ? Aubrey u, t 11 Niehols of Greenwood, S. C., was today sentenced to he hanged by Circuit " Judge Perkins after he had entered a plea of guilty to a charge of criminal ? assault resulting from his attack on a } white woman here last December. *5 ! I'rogs are used as barometers in f many European countries. The green ^ tree frog is placed in tall glass bottles J with little boodeti ladders, to the top *1 oi which they climb in fine weather, *5 descending at the approach of bad weather. J Honor RofTtbT Buffalo Graded School ? 3 The following is the honor roll for s Buffalo Graded School for the month 4* ending April 21st: 4? First grade?Dorothy Smith, Vera J McCombs, Nathalee Jones, Janet 3 White, Leroy Webb, Eula Vainer, ? Carlisle Gowan, Hillord Thomas, Ora ^ Dill, Nellie l.awson, Willie Mae Wore ley, Ed Brooks, Robert Brooks. Advanced First grade?Nannie Mae ?,? s Wright, Gertrude White, Bonnie Me- J| y Call, Fannie White. j y Second grade ? Vera Goudelock, i t lie: ma Sanford, Lucy Justice, Reuben j+4 e Willard, Lila McPearson. 4$ r Third grade?Naomie Petty, I-ucile r Peak, Nellie Sally, Lucas Varner, Cor- ^4 - tez Wright. } o Fourth grade?Annie Brown, Agnes ^ n Brock, Lottie Mass, Thelma Millwood. *4 Geneva Nix, Lloyd Shelton, Violet ? Sumner, Kilgo Webb. Fifth grade?Edith Maness, Fay ^1 n McCombs, Clara Ramsey, Frances J Sally, Lewis Varner, Loree White- 4 sides. *4 ^ Sixth grade?Irene Kassler, Norma i ( Kassler. 45 Seventh grade?Melda von Hollen, ^1 j. Rernice Carver. ! f'ighth grade?Eulala Dupree. 1 i ( Better to Fail When Young ^ When Robert Dollar was a young lumberman in the Canadian woods he jJ began keeping a diary. With the uncomprising method of the true diarist he has kept it up ever since. i ^ "I find," he observes, "that it is \ery valuable for checking up names ?,? ^ and dates." 1 But names and dates were not the 1 only things that he entered. Incidents and nanatives found places in the \ diary's pages. tFrom a basis of these ? y notes. Tile Nation's Business has pre- ^ ) pared a scries of articles the first of which appears in this number. Mr. J Dollar describes in his own words the ^ () events and lessons of his long and K active commercial life. He agreed to ? I heir publication on the ground thai ^ they would be a real help to less sea- J| soned executives now at grips with a ^ 14 difficult depression. ' J The Dollar enterprises are not ^ strangers to slumps. One of his storie ? tells how in 1873 New York's "Black ^ ' Friday" reached into the woods of ' Canada and wiped out the lumber bus- J ^ iness he had just started. At that ' time a friend said to him: V "Happy is ihe man who fails when ? l> he is young." A Robert Dollar was not in a moor! to 2 1 be philosophical, and he did not then J realize the "ignf flea nee of what his ^ i friend had said. But when he had paid ^ , off his debts and started over, he ?S ' proved the truth of the observation by ' adopting a new plan; he determined to X > build cautiously and solidly from $ ' small beginnings. And this Is the ^ rule that still applies to whatever he V undertakes. ?^i \ ( M ALTO! TODAY s Daredevil TOM MIX ?IN? A Lightning Western "A ROUGH RIDIN' ROMEO" ALSO PATHE NEWS TOMORROW Cecil B. DeMille's "FOOLS PARADISE" loscow, City of Mud and Slush Moscow, May 2.?The shielding anket of snow has left Moscow and wealed a city of mud and slush and irepaired, cratered pavements like battlefield pock-marked by shell )les; and the city stands out in all s revolution-torn ugliness. Droshkies or Russian cabs, drawn y disconsolate looking horses, ea en from melting ice hillock to slush ater, jogging their passengers like bumping device in an amusement irk. Here and there is a sleigh, a jpeless relic from the more chariible days of winter, drags painfully em bare pavement to slush oasis ith a load of wood. Automobiles, which seem recklessdriven by hard-faced chauffeurs, ilutter, chug and whir past, throwg muddy water over pedestrian and eshky passenger aliku. To the stranger, Moscow seenis ti the place designed as the Hades here all bad automobiles go when icy die. There are a few good, new | Alumin ! Saturday M f ONLY BIG PIECES f CF > 24 Large Water Buck ^ 12 Large Tea Kettles ^ 12 Medium Tea Kettle ^ 36 10-Quart Dish Panj ^ 48 Octagon 8-Cup Pei ^ 24 Large Mixing Bowl y 48 Roasters k /to rv 11 r? to uouoie noilers ^ 1 I I111ll I I? NOTICF1 ?If not conveni o'clock, select v for it in advanc * per cent of any t Saturday mornii ^ more satisfctory Sec Ou ! Wilbun A Ban Young Bus A young man starting counsel of experienced me The officers of this insti give you the benefit of t nelp you in any way possi Whether you positor here o [ ^ are cordially i Nicholson Banl Union, Union County'* oldest, lar Member Federal I U. S. Government an oc??. an. dm mo tux AN ANNOU I have opened my I'ndertakii Vincent Shoe Co., Main Street, and and satisfactory service. I have a r response to calls. Day 'phone 129, H. W. EDGAR, Funeral models but, for the most part, the': touring cars, runabouts and lorries! I which speed through Moscow's' s streets, generally ladened with rough-J ly dressed Soviet officials or Red I I army officers, are of a pre-1914 vint-; i iipjo, one-lunged ghasts from the < scrapheap, coughing bad gasoline and' 1 pouring out smoke barrages of oil fumes. j ? The sanitary condition of the city 1 is almost unimaginable to western | ' strangers. A report of the Moscow ] Soviet recently said that there were millions of barrels of refuse and um War [orning, May 6th, 1 - QUALITY BRAND ? $2. IOICE SI. ets 24 Large 24 8-Quarl s 24 Drip P i 18 6-Quart rcolators 18 6-Quart s 12 Tea Pot 24 Puddinf 24 Dairy I ent for you to attend sale Sati /hat you want (except Tea Kett e, and get it after the sale. We articles. Positively every article ig at 9:30. We do this that we ip Show Wi n Dry Go A| A*^A i k For jj iness Men II in business needs the II icution will be glad to |fi heir experience, and to || k 8C Trust Co. HI gcst and stiongest bank II Rcaerve Syatrm d State ruperviaton NCEMENT ig Parlors next doer to Fiynnl ant prepared to render efficient tew hearse and ambulance. Quick night 'phene 311. Director and Embalmer. sewage in the dump yards, unable to ae moved because of the transport shortage. Less than 30 percent of Moscow's houses have complete sewage and running water facilities and many Jrain pipes are so blocked with the refuse of years that they are uselessSome efforts are to be made this oming summer toward sewage repair and, here and there, the city's ilinginess is being relieved by a bit if paint as private shopkeepers touch up their new establishments. Subscribe to The Union Times. e Sale | D:30 O'clock | 00 to $5.00 VALUES | oo I Tray# Y t Preserving Kettles an? A Potato Boilers Strainer Kettles & 5 <* f Pans X or Milk . Pans A T | X $ irday morning at 9:30 ? I _ 1 *% ? v A tea ana uisn ransj, pay ^ i will not reserve over 50 9 advertised will be on sale ? may handle the crowds ndows f ods Co. I