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YOUR C % HjgH '."ULiLUlL m-*' l!_l Bulgarian Premier For sees General European Upheava Sofia, Bulgaria, Sept. 18.?Alexan der Stamboulisky, since his adven to power as Bulgaria's peasant-pre mier, has heen furnishing Europe with no little amusement hy the un ceremonious and defiant way he ha: been treating King Boris, and by hi: indifferent attitude tnword tVie present question of reparations. No long ago he told the King if he di< not do the bidding of the masses, h< might tind himself without a thron< and in the midst of a republic. H< added a warning that young Borii must not keep his eye on both sidei of the fence; that he could give hii support only to one party, and'tha party the group in power. The stalwart Agrarian leader als< has given voice to equally novel ex pressions on various questions o the day. "My enemies," he says "asked the King to throw me over But that would not be in conformity with constitutional usage. And thei they do not know the King. I hav< him well trained. I treat Mm'91k< ' a son. I have been teaofetihg^hin -politics for t^ree years, and he i quite devoted to me. We ate goirQ to amalgamate the Agrarians, Radi cals and Social Democrats for thi telections of 1924, rfMess I am as sassinated in the trlehattene. - > Hll?*? Hfl Htllfl lllH UNION CO HQN-iEHUJ "SETT The Union ( <ber 28th with; lowing i* the ?i 10 A.M.?I 10:30 A.M. llt00A.M:12:00 M.?; 1:00 P.M.2:30 P.M.2:45 P.M.? 1I> | Ministers. 3j45P.M.~ 4:15 P.M.800P.M. 10:00 A.M. 10:30 A. M. lltOO A. M. 11:30 A. M tioMamlMini 12:30 P M . 1.-00P..M.2JOP. M.P. M.3:15P.M. nuttee's Repor 3:45 P. M.4:15 P. M, MOt 'Every chore :; . ?* v g*te?. ' llHM W1 >1 n'l'II M I I 11 M > . C ' / m i ?? MMBBM?aggggMear*---*? - jjjBiBBtg AR IS BAI HOW Afi JSE "STA I THE I G / STANDAR < | "I like the Bulgarian Commun| ( ists," Stamboulisky declares, "bej cause they support men without any ! engagement on my part, which is * | convenient for me. The Commun*! ists are practical people, and they "! will shortly become a party fit to B j govern. They are forgetting their ", principles more and more, and they 3 know how to accommodate themselves 3! to circumstances. Theq know how to " | talk so as to please people." e I The premier savs he does not e?re *[a snap about reparations. "Repara5! tions are humbug. My connections B; abroad are much stronger and more 91 numerous than were those of King 8 ["'Ferdinand. Ferdinand knew only 8 j crowned heads of no importance 9 i while I am on intimate terms with t the rating politicians of the whole world. There is no danger. Nobody y will touch Bulgaria. I have got i promises. And then we have come f to an understanding with Kristo . Rakovski, Commissar in the Ukraine. ' The Soviets will not abandon us." f M. Stamboulisky has voiced a i warning as to the future. "Evan 9 should nothing else happen," he deft clares,' "there will be a general mixi up before long. Russia is persiatentI If preparing a debacle which, ,1s fof fevitable. We shall plunge mbo tlds - upheaval -too, and something is sore ft to come out of it. Wait' and see." Look at the'little yfeHtiw label. hH I I Hit ? 1 M*M 1 + I++ UNTY BAPTIST A! CHURCH, THURSDAY I EMBER 28 ADD 29, bounty Baptist Association the Mon-Aetna Baptist chi uggested program: First Day devotional Services. ?Organization. ?Missions: State, Home ai T5 Million Campaign. ^Dmner. "Devotional Services. - -Benevolences: Orphanage, -'Religious literature. -Miscellaneous business an -Service of worship with p Second Day ?Devotional Services. .?Temperance and Public ?S. S.. B. Y. P II ?~I r* Lr?Education: The Coma sterial. r -W. M. U. Work. ninuKr# -Devotional Services, daymen's -Work. -Stewardship and Tithing;'! t -Digest of Church Letters. ?Miscellaneous Business h is urged to tend'its fuD / .ANCED. (OUT YOU m IIUA REQ. U. S. PAT. OFF. BALANC tSOLINE D OIL CO NEW JERSEY) New Airplane Camera Surveys Great Areas Chicago, Sept. 19.?Photographic maps taken by a new camera used in airplanes, make possible the surveying in a few hours of vast areas hitherto inaccessible, accordine to J. M. Mercer, editor of the Western Society of Engineers. This camera, Mr. Mercer asserted, was developed by Maj. James W. Bagley because experiments made immediately after the World War showed inaccuracies in the method of aerial surveying then used. The camera has three lenses and a photographic transformer by means of wh;eh photographic maps can be made which will be "exceedingly accurate," stated Mr. Mercer. Recently an aerial survey was made of the city of New York," Mr. Mercer continued, "for use in connection with the location of certain important railroad and tunnel properties. The same mpas were used by the zoning commission, and for such work they are invaluable. "During the war, our air forces were an indispensable means of obtaining maps showing the most complete detail of enemy Operations. The lessons learned In wartime ate being put to good use." An ad. in Th? Time, gets results * JCAflATIAM t UW/IAUUN i IND FRIDAY, 1922 meets Septemurch. The fole I ? I I ? I ? t ? ? ? i i f id Foreign. < < VI 1 A + nospiuu, AgM v 0> d adjournment, reaching. | :: Morals. Iportage. union, Institu: . f * > Executive Cora< . / 1? / .. and Adjoorn0 - ' 14 t 'qi^^de^ | * fr ?*-s n . " I R FUEL? i RD" rED I I MPANY CONTRASTS THAT ARE VIVID Qood for Pessimist to Dwell on Difference of Life Today and Three Center lee Ago. Just to learn how far we hare come, take a look at the present and then glance backward anywhere from three centuries to times within the memory of men who are yet scarcely grayhemled. Take a walk down Leyden street and gaze on the model log cabin of the type which was once one the best dwellings in the chief residential section of ?the town (Plymouth), back In 1621 and 1622. Imnglne what the Interior would be like ou a winter day with only one fireplace harnessed to a chimney which needed a woodlot to feed It, but was a fine ventilator. Oonsider what the furnishings must hare been and having completed this mental picture drop down several generations to the time of your great grandmother who used a smaller fireplace to do her cooking, or else had s brick oven instead of a Dutch kitchen or bake kattle for hsr bread and such, and ths bathing facilities were?well, primitive to sav the least Tes, and she used candles dipped at home and made her soap In.the backyard. the sort which took off dirt all right and seemed to carry along cuticle with it Later cune woo<$jpuhalng stoVes and still later some coal was used, bat not so very much, for wood by the cart load was brought Into town front the back lots and sold daily In town square not 60 years ago. Lumber was an wed by hand at times and the lnniber mills used the old/ slow single sash saw: shingles were rived by hand and spilt laths can be found In houses about here even now, but they are old ones. Nails were made and window sash formed the winter Job for the carpen | ter who was building a house. Plenty j more contrasts will occur If one srops ! to think a moment ahd thinking ItJust what the really successful preacher tries to Ret his audience to do. The foregoing Is only the outline of the heads of the sermon about houses and their contents and surroundings.?Old Colony Memorial. SEES LACK OF IMAGINATION Cleveland Writer Thlnke Blunders of School Children Are Less Funny Than They Were. "It doesn't seem to me," says the Cleveland observer, "tl^gt the blunders nchool children make nowadays are as i uuujr m ui?y uh?a to do. Ann tnis, as the sociologist will tell you, argues that the school children haven't the imagination they used to have. It talfes imagination to produce entertaining* blunders of this sort, a? any school teacher will tell you." Here are two related by a Cleveland teacher. To the question, "What do you know about George Washington?" a ten-year-old replied, "George hit the tree With his hatchet sn' his father sed, who dun it, an' George sed, I dun it, and hla father aed, enny American boy can get to be Pref>*dent, an' he did." The other question waa, "Who was I Commodore Perry?" This was the answer: "He was out on the lakefighting an' he said, we have meet the ' ennyray an' then they turned him Into ketone."?Cleveland Plain Dealer. "Dead Nebulae." There haa been photographed a t moat singular objsct in the constellaitlon Taurus, the appesrance of which j suggests the term "deed nebula." It | la a long, atraggttng maw, which j seems to ahnt oat the stars behind It. Ail round It the stars are streWh (thickly, bat within Its boundaries Tory few appear and It la suggested (that these may lie on this side of It. i At one point there is a small, bright nebula, which gradually fades out. 'The feebler portions of the nebula '.would almost suggest that a large (nebula exists here, but that tfte major (portion of It is dead or non-lumlaous. h seme places the dark object la manifestly darker than the starless rparta of (he sky around It?Washington filter. The testinsr laboratory nf nno if I the biggest writing paper factories in America is presided over by a wo. man, Miss Helen U. Kiely. He who never ventures will never cross the sea. ; 1 1 1 ? 1 II I I I H t 11 II 11 I I I 1 I II 1 I I I I I III I 1 I I I I I I I I I I H I; TAkf A Something to Think About By F. A. WALKER OUR WASTEFUL, HABITS IT IS frequently remarked by cloeeobserving Englishman who visit America, that our people are shamefully wasteful, and fling away money without any apparent thought of the proverbial rainy day. Whether these alien commenters have penetrated deeply Into the subject is not definitely known, but Judging from their oft-repeated averments, assuming at times a form of caustic criticism, there is doubtless more troth in the matter than we suspect. It Is not without a'pang of regret? a ruffling of our pride, perhape?that we Americans, who are disposed to analyse conditions with unbiased minds, reluctantly admit that our English cousins are right. We recognise that we have many spendthrifts, constantly setting a bad example to the young, that they are extravagant and decidedly foolish. Money Is poured out like water, an though, like Topsy, "It Just growed." There Is consolation, however, In the thought that these profligates come mostly from the ranks of the newly rich and thoughtless Inheritors. They have no Idea of the stern realities of life, nor the long dragging years of Incessant labor and self-dental that are necessary for a working or professional man to accumulate evVn a moderate competency for old ag?\ These people congregate where the mode flows, where the tables are heaped with dainties. They smile and ' ha< khite, puff themselves up like frogs and Rpend recklessly. They fall nature ally Into a state which Is common te their kind. If we could follow them through their Improvident course to the end, we would find them in pitiable plight*, repentant snd likely as not homeless The necessity of conserving time and money ought now he impressed up,>n nil of us with considerable more stress thnn It has been in the recent pn*t. and particularly upon the inconsiderate .Toung men and women. l et high thinking, hard work and j thriftlnes* form the Important part of our spiritual bill of fare, so that In the end we may be robust of bod.f and soul, sound of purse, unafraid of landlords nnd In poRltlon In old age to accept all the vagaries of life with supreme confidence and complacency. (Copyright .) LYRICSOF LIFE By DOUGLAS MALLOCH v WHY NOT TELL HER SO? OP OOURfUD you lore her fast the same As when at first you wed. Perhaps with not so hot a flame, But still the coals are red. The new-made blace Is bright with heat And ruddy with desire; But time shall give you something sweet? I'eace, and the quiet fire. Of course you love her as of old, Your love she ought to know. New loves burn hot, new loves turn cold, With all the winds that blow. But time shall bring the steady blase. The flame that never died; Yea, time shall bring contented days, The quiet lngleelde. Of course you love her as of yore? The vears that you have shared Have made yon love her even more Than ever you have cared. Of course you love her Juet the same, J UUi IV/IC sue UUgUl IV tovw, For tliai* has brought the steady flame? Hut why not tell her so? (Oopyrlffht.) ??(> : HOW DO TOU SA? IT? ij Br C. N. LUR1E ' Common Errors hi English and ? | > How to Avoid Them "SPOONFUL?," ETC. IN CONSIDERING the proper form of the plurais of such words as spoonful," "cupful," armful," ate., It must be borne In mind that the unit considered Is not the spoon, the arm, the cup, etc.,; but the material that flllH the spoon, etc. Thus, the unit Is the spoonful, not the spoon, and as 'spoonful" Is the name of a thing In itself, the proper form of the plural Is found by adding an "s" to the'word "spoonful," and not to the part of the word "spoon." Of course, there are times when the ;<nit Is the spoon Itself; that Is, when two or more spoons are filled. When, for example, you have before you two spoons filled with sugar, you should say "two spoons full," and not "two spoonfuls." But when you take a spoon, fill It with sugar and empty It IMS^ nA..M /BAJPAA ???-? ? ? A - * 'uiu jwui vuiiee vitp, niiu repenr in?' nrocess, you have taken two "spoon rulfT c? sugar, and not tvr? "spoon* rulk" (Coyy right t Of course there are exceptions cases, biit the only man we ever khejv who was boss of his own home was i widower.?Dallas News. Station, in stationary is not a gasoline station. . Nations that would lead, shoull lead with the right. The swimming instructor has the preferred job these days. Possession of the long green keeps a man from being long red. 0 % ni\L n SHARE WE ARE STILL PRESSING THE MATTER OF GETTING ADDITIONAL SUBSCRIPTIONS TO THE CAPITAL 1 STOCK OF THE CANNERY. WE MUST HAVE i THE TOTAL SUM OF $20,000 TO FUNCnON TO Hh? GOOD ADVANTAGE AND TAKE CARE OF THE CROPS WE CONTEMPLATE TAKING ON NEXT SEASON. TAKE X UMJ A SHARE. UNION CANNING AND PRODUCTS CO. LEWIS H. RICE President ' i n 111 n 111 n i n 111 n 1111 n n n 11 m 11 n |! M | M | M:;