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TBFTPI TP' I rUi I Grov I ALL THOSE WHC ,t POTATOES FOR TF I REQUESTED TO CA I WE FIND THAT IT W I 10 tiiSfoSE ' OF 1 CANNED. WE HAVE ^<Srm'*3,5to BUILD A DRYING Hi WE ARE. IT HAS C< 1 THE CROP IS EXCEE THIS COUNTY, AND : , WILL, AFTER THE F BEGOOD. THIS GIV1 ! WU YOU CALL ANI i WE MAY TALK IT G\ THE UNION ' nr?Ai\iT/v IrKUVUL LEWIS M. liiyiHHMM C?i-1-' To Dor Si ' J ^ r \ i 4 ? v' v > o- . ' # We have not at ( in the field, and will apj m and renewing your (alt of the year is here tions are expiring this give ns your renewal 01 * ' lor renewal. ? ? i f * * > ? ' . I. V " * ' The Unio 1 B35 5 5 * ?? Course in Oil' Engineering Opened In England ^ ti Birmingham, Eng., Oct. 27.?A cl cHair of petroleum and oil engineer- ei ftlg nrst 'td be Wstlthted in England has been opened at Birmingham C Chslvliaity. .The first course offered t&students is confined to general mining and technical engineering; the a&orid'and'tfcird years'will tndlude Oil , uHell drilling, pumping and refinery Abstractioh i and 'operation. g| . ^ department of the univer- o stty has oeen made possible through t) money provided by leading men in , ttfe Oil ffriMstry'iri England. ^homen Advisors to Attend [' l.esym of Nations w Sydney, N. S. W., Oct. 27.?The fdtteral Mvernntfnt p*obfebly will foi B ldw tho example 61 Great Britain in Mmding Vhmen Vdfcftssiitativs* in an L'? ' itikde in the bouse to obtain Prefnier mtghes' promise that the women's c< sA'atb^ildlis wtnrid to gis%n repre- f< entattoo at lhe league meetings <i .1 ' ' v $&i-. * v v*'v* *'; * V *' > ' m > ATO vers i planted sweet ie cannery are il And see ds. ill be impossible "HE "CROP WHEN NEVER BEEN ABLE I'dF'CAmAL to OUSE. SO, THERE )ME ABOUT THAT DINGLY SHORT IN HENCE THE PRICE IRST FEW WEEKS, ES US A WAY-OUT. ) SEE US, SO THAT /ER? CANNING & IS CO. RICE, President. ibscribers * V t" _ '. ?? * s v - , . . / resent any collector ireciate your coming subscription. The and many subscripmonth. Call in and r mail us your check \ n Tines M. RICE, Editor. A woman's political party has b< rganized in Melbourne with the < ict of obtaining direct represen on of the interests of women f lildren in parliament and other g* tjmental bodies. Calamities Send Workers To Fortune Telle Tokio, Oct. 27.?Residents of O; la-machi, a shop district of Tdl eing awe-stricken by a series Baths amonor the i????? ? - -w ?- WMV|T ACV|/ViD) w ilted fortune tellers as to the cai f the calamities. They were t lat the deaths were caused by \ pirit" of a gingko tree "angered le cutting down of another giflli *ee in the neighborhood." Acco (g to the stbry the male gingko- ti hich was* accustomed to meet cli estinely the female tree was < own to make room for the Monop* urtau. and its "spirit in rebelt vefirfha Itself upon the shepkeep P the (district by causing a series ve deaths among , thwnv" In Bulgaria, education is free a ompulsory from the age of seven outtein. More than 700,000 s ents attend the schools of Bulger ,/ ' t j . . : wasted " RED CROSS PUTS UP 59,739,872 >-<J I Year's Budget Stresses Rettst and Services at Home and Overseas. MILLIONS FOR VETERA* Alb Over $3,000,000 Allotted to the I ? Disabled?Foreign Work Lessens. . Washington.?Expenditures tetsllsg 19,788,872.4? for carrylng/ through ul program of services sad relief during tha fiscal jeer la the Halted States ; and overseas are authorized In the | budget of the American Red Cross, effective July 1, 1922. This toUl Is 82.785,876 leas than the expenditures far Che last fiscal year, when disbursements reached 812,476^47.68, tt ls announced at National Headquarters lp ; a statement emphasizing tha necessity I ef continued support of the organlzalion by enrollment during the annual V Roll Call, November 11-Novehiber 30 a Inclusive. This total for the hudgat ft Is exclusive of the large daabclal opE orations of the 3,300 active Red Cross Chapters, which, it is estimated, will more than double the total. War Veterans Have First Call Flrsf'cail on Red Cross funds Is far Che disabled ex-service men, of whom 27,487 were receiving treatment from tha Government on June 1 last. This work for veterans and their families la a wide variety of service Chat the Government is not authorized to reader and for which It has neither funds nor facilities baa the call ?a 88^)00,682.90 during the current year, er about 8360,000 mora than waa expended last year tor soldier service. Adding tha funds disbursed In this humanitarian work of physical recoa atltutlon following the World War by the Chapters throughout the country will approximate a total for the cur? rent year approaching 810,000,009. Tit111 work. In the onlnlon of the Bne K, geon General's office, will not mch J* its peak before 1926. t Through lta Chapters the American jt Bed Croaa la equipped to find the In* K dividual ex-service man, help hlM In P hie problems and difficulties, provide | Immediately for his necessities, and K open the way for him to the Goverm* ment compensation und aid to which ? he Is entitled. The extension of this fcj work to the families of such men F proves to them that the Bod Groan f> has lost none of Its sympathy nor win to service manifested In wartime. Similarly the service goes out fm, the .men tin in the Army end Navy, li.ofi? sf whom were under treatment In Gev"" eminent "bo sp l tale* 011 June i, 1S22. Greater Domestlo frog ram This year?after five yearn' of oemntructlve effort during the war and after the armistice?brings with it a greater responsibility far domestic service to the fLmerfcan Bed Ore as. The budget for foreign operations^ however, totals $3,4O4.O0O, but of thlg amount $1,834,000 la far medical relief and hospital supplies far Russia, whlqh Is a part of the gift made by the American Bed Cross In 1021 ta the Russian famine reUef work of the American Relief Administration progxam. The child health service In Bn; ihpo continues, moreover, and $$04j000 Is appropriated far this work undertaken In 1020. Other Items In tht stringently diminished foreign program Include $200,000 to support the T anwn* Dad ^ O?J-ai mown VI WVU VI?PV JVI.IVUOT, f if 000 for nurses' training schools instituted by the Red Cross abroad, and $000,000 for liquidation of die genera) Red Cross foreign relief program. Prepared for Emergencies For disaster relief the Red Cress has set aside $750,000, and' for emergencies in Chapter work $500,000 to be available for domestic, insular and foreign demands. This Is more than $305,000 above last year's expenditures. For service and sssletpncf to the 8,800 Chapters. ,014 their branches $1,293,000 is provided by thq i Nstlonal organization. Other budfet Items ef Importance In the domestic program include $209,000 for assistance to otbor organisations and oducation institutions, for training Rod Ctosp nurses and workers; $190,000 for Roll CSU assistance furnished to Chapters; $100,000 for unforeseen contingencies. . Of the total budget If* Uan ttOO,000 is allotted for raanagshaVttt fit. the National organization. No easiest!? mate, of course, Is possible te weigh the value ef the service by velunteers '?n In the Chapters. 5bin. ' ? nd THE RED CROSS av" SUPPLEMENTS . GOVERNMENT SERVICE BY MEETING THE PARTICULAR NEEDS ** OF THE INDIVIDUAL ?a. EX-SERVICE MAN, -lo THIS WORK CANNOT of . GO ON UNLESS YOU 5n. < i v SUPPORT IT WITH lge YOUR MEMBERSHIP old DOLLAR .. the ' PAY UP TODAY i' .hn? ^d? Educator First Woman Pee In Govrornmont Position in- Osaka, Japan, Octk 2?.?Mrs. Rijut deko Yamamoto, who' has heSn spqly pointed secretary to the Osaka sdulon cation department, is the first womaii Irs in Japan to hold * municipal Job; cf She has been engaged In pfiniary edn cation for'f7 yfeaVs dn& Ht Jul advocate of European drese tot JdfrnMsh Wmd men. She is also* interested inphyr fn* tiriy oit tW Phystdw C&ft Society fot it- Women. v l ?.- 4 French VlLrfXIi Ukraine nd Cleat Kharkov, Oc^.pt^rrtmck of woo in the Ukraine bat Wd French an< German colonists, to JtHiild houses o mud bricks held toffther by 8tyaw These bricks are carefully plasterc over with mud, and when dry the mui is tinted in water colors. One hou? will be a bright blue, another ylloe the next one <pink or green, and th village as a whole makes a coiortu picture. Plots upon which the house stand are surrounded by low wall of the same material and tinted t< correspond with the house. Garden: are well kept in summer, and there ii an abundance of fruit trees. Harold H. Fisher, historian ??f th< American Relief Administration, re cently visited both the German am French colonies in the Ukraine. Th< German villages near the mouth o the Dneister, across from Bessarabia he described as exceedingly pictur esquqe and as spick and span as an: along the Rhine. "Protestants settle' in one village the Catholics in another," said Mr Fisher. "One can recognize the pre vailing religion of the villages by th' shape of the church spires. I als< visited the French colonists in th< Nicolaev district, ittese people weri brought to the Ukraine years ago U establish, vineyards, and to promote the wine industry. They have mad* a success of their viniculture but thii year their crop has been very small They too have been bard hit by th< famine.' 'The French and Cterman colonist) have been in Russia several genera tions, but have not yet been sufficient ly Russinaized to speak the languagi of the country or to adopt its cus toms." ^S2L_ London Planning' Increased Air Psinnger Service London, Oct. 27.?*Tbe London-Ber lin airway, the ftrat section of whici ?that between Ltfhdon and Hollan< ?was opened recently, completes ai aerial service of eleven planes leav ing London daily for the Continent The popularity of the airways among tourists during the' past summer hai led to plans for routs 'a be opened ir the spring which Will connect Lon don by air with all of the principa points within a radius of 500 miles. The plana include daily trips t< Scotland, bDeauville, Denmark, Ire land and Luxemburg. It is prog>ose( also to keep several planes for spe rial trips, a fek'&bre of travelling which has proved' popular with Am erican tourists. The cost of thes< journeyB is about four pence (eigh cents) a mile. The new Londoa-BfSh route is be ing operated ?, arid a double sprvicgbe run ii each direction from Rotterdam dailj I until the rpute' Is dumpieted. Th< trip will take ftro atw^a k ialf hours and will be macte for S4\ or a littl< more than 3 1-2 d. a ipjile. The sec ond stage of the j^upey will be opened about October 80, when th< route will be from London to Ham burg and Berlin. At the present time five planes an making eight trips daily betweei London and Paris, carryirffc an aver age of three persons each trip. Th< routes to Rotterdam^ Brussels ant Antwerp are constantta^filled in ad vance and carry a full capacity o: freight. Remaining "Thonaasites' Hold Reunior ' r. Manila, P. I., Oct. 27.?Out of ; total of 560 American teachers wh< came to the Philippine Islands on th< United States transport Thomas, 2 years ago, only thirty^fotr remain ii the Philippines, and oftly eight an still engaged in educational work While the men outnumbered the wo men more than two to one, there be ing 400 men and only 160 women, th proportion has been radically chang ed until today virtually the entir American teaching corps in the is lands is made up of women. The thirty-four "Thomaaltes" at they are pleased to call themselves recently held a reunion, the twenty first anniversary of their arrival ii the islands. WOMANLY TUMBLES % r _____ Twm Hani for Her te Stop Work BttTfcb Texas Lady Say? Sko Hoi to Go to m? HdpoikrCmy. Satedo, Texas.?'"I MftNl ? fret deal wkh womanly Ojri Mia liiLHIIas Hart, of Route 1, fids plate "f wouM, for a day orHtf^ld droway tobtMrdUd HMeae; didatflMINke Hotel my work. "I would softer palaslfte? tides am * Otfaafl ? ? 4|a^f 4 na, . m ?*CK, ww very severe HHRCMC#* "I am the hooacknptet'ksl It wm aery bard for itvt to stop* lojt I touhl ft taicK^tamtoery I would toma to fob hdC" I kaardol CarduWMdHmttt wt food for fkla wdlerinf Ifet toy fin kOfife I took eetmed to teHfa. I 4t uwt WW W WW, w<? WH n?? " ttCMd. It did to much iMfcr Min wf OKMgk lor Ctrdiblar it ctttata rywwsatriM#taaced/V, _4 Women who (Mi the adMtil omethin |g|l *?? I __ 10 ncip rtucfi, or preTf^ppiirQmici ym:r t^nfcl'^ihow ^sSTmlrSwre NC-H . - fg*T F Sp^aldng Films in German i Useless in Foreign Countri I ? j Berlin, Oct. 27.?Despite the f< . that success has crowned the effo: - of German inventors at producing"* "speaking" film, it is foreseen tl * reels of this kind can never supplr , the ordinary "movies" in the ?xp? trade. The handicap is obvious, sir ? a film produced in Germany coi * hardly be expected to find a marl ? abroad where the language would sufficiently understood to make 8 showing profitable. m 8 Promoters of the invention see a possibility, however, of some d 8 making this type of film elimint 9 the necessity of having orchestras movie theaters. * Two special showings have be given in Berlin recently in which i 1 ventors revealed their achievemer e i nmaking sound synchronize perfet f ly with the movements pictured i, the screen. Besides a HemrmotrnH - during the middle of August at whi ' a number of newspaper men we shown the "phonofilm" of Lee de Ft i, est, of New York, there was recent . exhibited before several hundred i . vfted guests "the "Tri-Ergon," ? acoustic "film invented by Hans Voj j Dr. Jo Engle, and Joseph Massole. i. Five devices from the backbine ? the "Tri-Ergon." They are the kat , odophon, or "electrical ear"; a spec; . amplifying conduit; an ultra-freque ^ cy lamp; the photozelle, or "electric i eye," and the statophon, or "electric mouth." , Seven transformations are accoi plished in order to effect synohroniz , tion of sound and movement in t film. The sound waves to be repi duccd r.re first transformed into elc 3 tricity; the electricity is convert into light; the light is changed in ti separate stages into the silver blac ening of the negative and positi films; these in turn are retransform i into light; the light again becom electricity, and finally the electrici produces the vibrations conveyii - sound. 1 The "electrical ear" naturally i the first apparatus to come into pla i Its outstanding feature is an ordina - metal funnel in which the soundwav . are converged to pass through a no r 7lp OnnAdifo fVvir, 2? ? j ..v. Vfi/VDIW WHS IIVK.ll' 1? (i K1UWH j rod through which a stream of ele i tricity courses. As the rod beconv . heated it influence the surrounding a 1 so that this is "ionized", making capable of conducting a current. Se ) cndary electrical glimmers thus a . pear bridging the space between tl j nizzle and the rod. These flashes re . resent the electrieized sound waves. ^ These waves are magnified by tl . special amplifier and are fed to 2 vacuum lamp. The latter is of sui I construction that it reacts to ai sound, covering wave intervals all tl _ way from only 16 to as many as t thousand a second. Its light gro< 1 stronger or fainter with the volur f of the sound. Ita rap produce smi 3 stripes along the side of the hi These stripes represent the soun 2 and run through the film in exact c incidence with the movements in t , picture. The intervals between th< s \aries according to the wave inU val. The line of stripes runs 50 ce limeters removed from the picture j self. 1 In the reproduction of the soun _ en intense light stream pass , through the stripes to the "electric j eye." The "eye" is a bulb throui which an electrical stream pass< f Its interior surface is partially con ed with a chemical substance pc sessing the property of separatii elections. As this process develoj k the conducting power of the phot sselle increases. The electrical strea passing through it increases or < 1 minishes with the volume of the sou 1 waves. B These phenomena are again amp 1 j fied and recorded by the "electric 1 mouth." This instrument compria B mainly a membrane 30 centimeters diameter which is vibrated by elc * tricity rather than by magnetism. " is claimed to be the first actua B workable telephone capable of trar ' mitting loud speaking. B Thus the sounds issue out into t * air from the membrance at the sai time the picture is projected. T 1 "gramophone" element is eliminat l> entirely, yet to a person in the au< * ence the sounds seem to be eomi n from an instrument of that kind s up imediately behind the screen v/hc the picture appears. I> At the public demonstration t i program included sounds as varied a pig's squeal and the tunes of a bt rol organ, to arias from leading o eras. A short speech of introducti * was given by the same means in G< man, English and French. One nui her was a recitation, other featui were vocal and instrumental, and o act of a drama was reproduced, the last mentioned the tinkling of I hand-bell rung by one of the chari tera was heard coinciding with t movement in the picture, and the t<x S steps of actors walking about a ba * flpor were reproduced realistically 1 sound. In another section of the pi i gram there was ^)e very life-li ba'rkbig of a doz, and the sounds i the ahlmail's claws could be distim > fir b.urA ?? If ninvod rpatleitlv }on \ wooden bench. Generally speaking, the reprodt 1 tion appeared to function better i ? staccato sound, such as the notes the" xytophon, flute, clarinet and dolin. In violin and 'cello playii and In singing tones of every high very low* register, there was cons : doable mechanical Serb ping such * one hedta 'frdm V worn record on j talking macfclfte. ^ AoVe ihah Wlf of the sugar cc j Suited ih the' UVilted States oort from foreigti sources. ...? . ii - n i'.' ggs?BeeJ ^tAMi wt ESa^^^HIHH ice >ld B^^EfRH^HI^B^^^^ByErifl ay ite ^ hbhvsSB^^HI^I ^BB^HBBRHfiw|||gB|^B^^B ^ WBMBBppjgfB^^B! its I^^^H^HB9HHB09fl RMBB|H|B||^n^^EjMB ^BMBB^B^^B^BflBBBEffiB Hbb^^^SBHB9^^^H^^^9^|B GB^QQ?QB9MH|BB3B|f?jBB 'H a] RHHHH ?- v' BSHopBRRSB^i8?9M^^i!H ^c ^^ZTLrrVTSMT*-rw/BlFwSJaSJiM I GYPSY es Z GREAT El y. Will preach at his tabej Z ginning November 2 a ? November 26. Daily, 7 c- dially invited to come. es J ,ir p! Plan 180,000 Miles tie Improved Highway Washington, Oct. 26.?A program for good roads construction during a the next 15 to 20 years which will ch make the road transportation facili. *y ties of the United States far exceed he those of any other nation in the world, en past or present, is the aim of the fedV8 eral government. The highways of ne Rome, even, whose fame has come all down through the centuries, will pale m. by comparison, officials declare. Unds der the program, there will be built, so- during the period, 180,000 miles of he improved highways, which will conun ^titute the Federal-aid highway syssr tern, and an equal or greater mileage n- of stale and local roads, it- Details of this vast program will be placed before the conference of the ds highway education board, meeting es hede from October 26 to 2, by staU :al highway engineers and officials of the gh Bureau of Public Roads, of the United ia. states Department of Agriculture, tc it- whom has been entrusted the work of m- planning and supervising the contig struction of the Federal-aid highways, is, The plan will be presented especi? ally to enable the board to proceed im authoritatively with its work of deli vising aids for schools and colleges nd to which the road-builders of the country are turning for competent li- highway engineers, tal Officials of the Bureau place the les aggregate cost of the Federal-aid proin gram alone at about $6,000,000,000, ;c- spread over the period. They base It their estimate on an average cost of lly $17,000 per mile. The average cost, is- in turn, takes into consideration all classes of improved highways from he the cheapest to the most expensive, ne Approximately one-third of the prohe posed system, or 60,000 miles of im ,ed proved highways, already are either Ji- built or building, ng The program is a new one. Up to jet comparatively recent years, the Bu>re reau declares, road building in the United States has been conducted ,he without special regard to a nalionnl as pystem. Highways had been conir structed where needed without con. ,p_ sidering whether they would link up on the most effective fashion with the ?r- whole network of roadj projected to m- spread over the entire country. Enkam ffinnora Vto/I OAiiarKf m A*?n a ?v.n/vt i?M CO ????** ??V W Ilivt V tillne mediate and local demands than the In broader requirements of the states a and the nation, ic- The Federal-aid program, officials ,he 8aid, will contemplate the construc>t tion of only such roads as fit into ire the national program and contribute in to the national system. At the same ro- time the roads will be so selected as ke to serve the most important local reof quirements. With marked modificaCt tions the system adopted in building >ut the railways of the country will be borne in mind in the constrction of the ic- nation's new highways. There will for. be main lines of highway communicaof tion between centers and thousands of m- miles of feeder roads, reaching back ig, into the more sparsely settled regioni or wad into the rich agriculture sections id,- to tap araaa whose copulation and at product will flow over the new syg. a tern. New roads will be built?thousand! of miles of them?where they will fit >n- in most advantageously with the entee tire program. The Bureau at preeeni I is engaged into research work into IS fANGEUST roacle, Union, S. C., bend continuing through :30 p. m. You are corihe most efficient methods of road building, including the character and wearing power of materials and resisting qualities of various substances ; and has already amassed a great store of valuable information which will be i available to the highway engineers of j tomorrow whom the board especially , is seeking to have educated in prat tical and modem methods. German- Exports Still ^ Far Below Normal ' lierlin, Oct. 27.?"Made m Ger i ... many nas regained only about a third of the popularity it enjoyed in foreign markets before the war, ac I cording to trade estimates on the amount of exports during the tirst juurter of this year. The lirst three months of 11)22 iv onled outgoing products umounting to approximately 58,200,000 double centners (about 0, 525,016 tons) and .allied at some 50,300,000,000 marks. These figures do not include coal delivered on the reparations account It is noted that if coal were left entirely out of consideration both for 1913 and 1922, the amount of Gei iliany's exports for the first quarter would be 16 percent instead of 32 percent as much as was shipped out during the same period in the las' pre-war year. Holland proved the best Continental customer, buying some 17.2 pi r cent of the total exported. Other European nations bought as follows The Scandinavian countries, 11.6 per cnt; England, 7.7 percent; Switzer land, 4.7 percent; Italy, .*5.1) percent; Spain 2.4 percent; Czechoslovakia. Jugoslavia, Hungary and the Iinl kans, 13 percent. Statistics are not available on the export to non-Euro pean markets, individually as to na tionalities. The chief aitic! s sent ai..o -i ?v i chemicals, electrical produ t-, u-x tiles, wares in iron and other meta s. leather goods, trinkets, musical in struinents, toys, wood and wine. German textiles are said to hav< suffered particularly because of the transitions wrought by the war. It is claimed here that between 1914 and 1918 England and France transform ed their textile production and began imitating German patterns and processes. In other European lnnds entirely new textile industries were developed in which, it is asserted, efforts were confined to copying Germany's quqality productions. Spain, which was one of the Fath erland's best customers in this line before the war, has established a textile industry which already is providing noteworthty competition not only in Spain and Portugal, but in me i^aiin-Amencan countries as wen. In the past trade year Germany ha-1, sent out silk goods amounting to 2,> [169,175 kilograms (about 2,611 tons), which marks a decline of 50 percent over 1913. At the same time her silk > imports have dropped to three-twen1 ty-fifths of what they were before the > war. The amount of raw silks ' brought in decreased from 7,934,500 kilograms in 1913'to 3. 347,700 last year, while the silk goods Imported. 1 exclusive of such as were produced : in Alsach-Lorraine, fell from 983, 0# " kilograms to 124,288. > Look at the label on your paper. I V AA