The Lancaster news. (Lancaster, S.C.) 1905-current, September 14, 1917, Image 6

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V k i ' e ~ 1.111IIII mil mm BifclitOTroW RAH.ROAD I) Commisiiloner McMa*t?r to Knter Other Business. til VF. Tf Columbia. Sept. 11.?F. H. McMaster, State insurance commissioner, stated today that he would Interesting and H not be a candidate for re-election at the expiration of his present term. F,ank Thoni This decision was reached within man> address R. F. C the past forty-eight hours, accord- bJa g ^ says: "If ing to Mr. McMaster. His succes- a remedy' that has d aor will be elected by the general jg ironjzed Taw-Pa assembly at its next meeting. flicted wlth 8tomach In speaking of his decision to re- gish liver and nervo tire from this office Mr. McMaster in the newspapers said he had decided to accept an of- were doing I decide fnr tn on trn op in a linn of work not trinl <l!1 I CO U 1(1 liet connected with Insurance which since your remedy w gives very much greater promise of all." but componded making old age comfortable than troubles as I was su his present position. While it was gave it a most thoroi a high privilege to serve the people it strictly according in official station, he declared, yev The result has been just as valuable service may be 1 feel now full of ene done in private life. acting quite norinul ach feels like new? feeling has left me. . ..a estly say that Iror //i l l ilW\ does all you say it w \V . i ill)# w'" always have som Y.SA.UXU1/ 1 's good for old and ; j So the good report I every section. One I.' spreads the news to X'^ij |lK ; this clepneilable toni ^ j old stomachs almost ' "'A " land so the wave of i and on. People who i RFft WP'$S\CC I iblort for years w,th s tt El ? tv" ? ; >. 4 I jthat since taking Iro I *"*]) <f* I ! can a'e?P all ni I *- jJb - feeling strong and r? i CHILL gfj* FEVER j need a tonic, f you j I land good cheer, try a | fcfcT-. lZO(l Paw-Paw and b< j^iiLL*.ji S ^ yi J as ^ir Frank Thoraa Ft P CHILLS AND FEVEP YOUF drU**ISt P c^M3Aoue riLious fever but if he doesn't, it i inttrmitt il nl t f?v2r and all mala; :al diseases caster bv the Standai , AND LA ORIPCE. riRECTions I Ironized Paw-Paw, ! two teaspoonfuls in I Korniula on every b< watefi evjiiy THRttHOUPP 1 , ,, i until it acts wll. then l| decs promptly atten ' times A DAY 11 ; . , _ ,, CHlLDdtN IN PROPORTION TO Afll || ' StfllO UTUg V ()., lHC., I*KICK 25 CENTS I Old Lestorlch, nr i "ii'?ou?iRs I | husband, who used ti ft JAC*\5lNyILLE. FLA. j i Austrian paper Floh; s NiLTflTyiS;>fllfflll1111111?11 Jy j "If nature had made - -11 11 ' , perhaps I could eat Buy it at druggists and -That would be fine, general stores or postpaid imperturbable wife. " from the manufacturers. some plumes for my , Register. WE WILL BE GL To Have I vol CALL and INSPE ! i 1 =-- our I 1 NEW LINE OF UP-TO-DATE STY I =? in = LADIES' CO A T SU ! CO A TS s MILLINE I HIRSCHS B I *- ' ??"W"^W,iI SEN SHORE BIRDS ARE MYSTERY I ini?IIIA>1ir l^u > Known About Thoir Brooding \ I |M|IRj V Haunts and Habits Than of Any 4UllHlvil 1 Othor Feathered Trlbo. Swift and tireless of flight, late in tellable Facts. May, the hordes of migrant shore birds are gone as suddenly as they appeared. No one sees them go; probias. a railroad ab,y the gtQrt lg (n fhe evenlng But . No. 3, Colum. j,y tbe time we miss them they may be ever there was a thousand miles farther to the north one me good it ?that fs, when they have really decldw. I was af- ed to be on the move. Previously they troubles, slug- m?y have fed leisurely along from n.nm Upuriine beach to beach, and marsh to marsh, the good you recuP^ratlng from their long flight . across southern seas. But now the ver!( ? * nal influence sounds the clarion call, no lolef anc an(j they forthwith strike the real Umlas not a "rtire-l i ? ? i-uiiut? paw. for just such Where do they go? Less Is known ITcring from. I nbout the breeding-haunts and habits ugh test, taking of this mysterious tribe than of any to directions, other In the system of ornithology, very gratifying. While a very few of the species linger rgy my liver is' on our 8?uthern coasts, the great mass and my atom- ?f th*m *? ?,n?f,,r thf f?rI11n^th" ,, Nor do the bulk of them stop till they a e \ ous wj,ere (jle curiosity of man can and I ran hon- seldom disturb tlirlr privacy. The eggs ilzed Paw-Paw nn(i nesting habits of a number of 111. I certainly these species are hardly known to scle at home as it ence. Their summer home Is the baryoung alike." rpn ground arouml the Arctic sea. In the damp moss near some pool upon s come in irom .. , , , .... , , the cold ground still frozen undercured person jn the early part of June they his friends of scratch a slight hollow, build a rude, c which makes frail nest of grass and lay four eggs, as good as new pyrlform or pear-shaped, drat) colored health goes on and heavily blotched with bluck or have been trou- brown.?All Outdoors, leeplessness sav nized Paw-raw WASTED A CARLOAD OF FOOD ght and get up ?= ? sfreshed. If you ^ i t Because food dealers In this town need strength ... did not find it convenient to handle n ' ?" ron- car]ontj Gf fresh food, the food Is now jcome as happy flonting out to sea as refuse from a ' 8- garbage dump, says the New York isibly keeps it. Mall. is sold in Dan- Before the dealers threw away this rd Drug Co. food they made an effort to have the ; price SI 00 henlth department condemn It. The deit tie Mail or Partraent refused. It found the food . "'perfectly sound and fit for use. < e( ^ to. n ei-i particular curloud of food conAdv. | slsted of 107 baskets of radishes. ! Radishes are retailing for from 5 to j j 8 cents, a hunch. ,, , In this case either the radishes incompllmentary . , , , . ... ... could he passed on to the city s niiir> appear In the , . . ,, . ., , , , . , ' , , kets at a slightly reduced price or said to his wife: ..... . . . they could he destroyed, me nn ostrleh. * , , 1 , . ? If passed on they would have the efyour cooking. ,, , . , feet of hearing down the price of the answered his . , tiiiiro 'i 11 t'tii'f i vi) Tinu iipo wo IIipv \vi?rD Then I could not . . , , ' . . . . hat."?Christinn a,,d the prlce8 ut u hl?h i level. Growing in the Mind. ^?It Is said that Coleridge once exclaimed to Charles Lamb: "I could ' write plays Just as well as Shake- 1 A speare, if I had u mind to!" "Yes," /\ I W said Lamb, "that Is Just what you 1 * I lack." It Is a blessing, however, thut | even though we inuy not be able to do the work of a great genius, we . may count upon growth In strength ' and breadth of mind. You can do j with.your mind today what you could ' not do five years ago. If you will give your tnlnd an opportunity to ; J grow by hard, honest, faithful, severe work, you will be able to do much j J more five years from now than you | are able to do today. If your mlrtd becomes poisoned with low Ideals, with poor literature, with wrong con- ; ceptlons of life, you may as well ex- j pect it to grow, us to expect a plant to grow In your garden when you I have allowed every sort of plant en- I emy to burrow about the roots and feed on the stalks und leaves. ] ^- r?l. .... II. r ...ui.. ! i OCd VJIVC5 up CdldUICS. I 1 CT; Early strollers on the benches as i far north as lielmar recently recov-1 ered from the surf enough food to stock a country grocery, says a Sen Girt, N. V., dispatch to the New York Times. The tlotsam Included canned goods of many sorts, hut mostly toniatdtes and asparagus; one man carried home three tubs of good butter and many clotheshuskets full of lemons, all of 1 I which were fresh and hard. Submarine activity was scouted as a cause for the pickings, hut one guess as to their 1 origin was that some vessel, a warship. 1 or possibly a big yacht, returning from 11 m a long cruise had passed up the const I I M and her crew had emptied the larder j i B dm dlmJ overboard so as to he certain of ahso-I . lutely fresh provisions when next they | put to sea. ' War in Ye Olden Times. In Gen. Sir George Iilgglnson's in-'' terestlng book on the Crimean war, the \ { following passage In which Higglnsonjt writes home from Malta occurs: "You i have heard, I dare sny, of the adven- t ture of the Fury steam vessel which;. ^n<' 'n *l,e Rhick sea. She took a , | rf Kussian prize while on a cruise recon- ^ m M nolterlng Sebastopol. The Russians ? M sallied out with three frigates, and the : poor Fury was obliged to cut her tow- i rope and leave her prize, which she j could not sink, for after taking the { I crew out as prisoners she found that gM\ W i one unfortunate man had been left be ? hind in her. i 1 Saving Home Garden Surplus. Often in the huinu garden there are enough vegetables wasted to keep the 1 table supplied all winter if they were I 7Q\7 put up in glass jars. It Is possible to ^ |[ put up vegetables in such n manner thut they will lose little of their at-; L' tractive color and flnvor, and through <1? i canning the surplus from the home, ' garden will do much to reduce the costj of living next winter. The Lancaster "We Shall Fight for the Things Hearts?for Democracy, fc thority to Have a I WONT \ s ^ L ^ f WHO WYO' V, I Nev. I UTAH I COL. ii ?uiut;uiiies at-fins as 11 woman an ivnpr suffrage must win by the force of oils, its own momentum, and in spite of If pat rather than because of the advertis- can go I ed attitude of some of its advocates, help ma After being dragged to jail in the mocracy, wake of the pickets, the cause was the balk haled Into the United States senate mocracy and made to sit in solemn durance while United State senators halted Win the attention of the country with the Wome naively male insisence that it was. mers in more important, in their eyes, to ad- War ii minister rebuke to a group of wo- kisli wo men of whose conduct they do not "Ministr; approve than it is to further the for office most'fundamentally democratic pro- comment ject ever put before the country, the month." enfranchisement of its women. North* In view of the country's frenzied (,m appeal to women for war work, it is >'ar,'sbad enough to hold back woman The i suffrage on the ground of its being Associati a woman question and so not a war 'isti r* n I An ? zx hnl J <* i U ^ I tO l)t) Ol muc^uuii, iw mini li uuift tin me ground that this senator or that | {'ans ?I does not approve of the conduct of are mo<l' some woman or group of women, rnen hos coming as it does on top of the summer heat, intensifies life to about fc'o 200 degrees F. for some 2,000,000 In ans suffragists who are vehemently op- who are posed to picketing but consider that frage b? suffrage is quite too large a matter not wan to be held at the mercy either of has an anybody's conduct or anybody else's Interest temperament reaction to that con- "Worn duct. all wonn ^ to the q reason w Wants Tlieir Illoo<l If Not Their . , ed becat are not Women are now called*to "go sec- will helj onds on" the fighting line. An ar-'the balli tide in the last Medical Record ; growth calls upon them to form a brigade) to be a( as "blood donors in war surgery." , all men. rhey are to be on call for contribut- extended ng blood to be used in transfusion , frage un to save the lives of wounded sol- t been esl diers. The doctor who writes the, is recogi article wants this to be a routine citizen h practice and believes that it will be regard lei VOI R PATRIOTIC DUTY. fall. 2. By farmers of Lancaster County: beat var| Grow more wheat. Produce flour 3. Uy it home. It Is safe and profitable, and thor What preparation are you making ^ 'or the production of your own jread for next year? It is time to :iegin now?don't delay. Three * e r'Kh acres of wheat yielding ten (10) 6. By bushels per acre will furnish sufflEvery dent flour for a family of five. You . .... have at >an increase this yield to fifteen . . Others i jushels, yes to twenty bushels per icre if you will. When our needs A, _ time. B ire demanding and the world is cry- . ..... . The besl ng for more food, is it not the pa- ? are Purp iriotlc duty of every farmer to make j.^c in effort to aid, at least in a small .. the prepi way, in this great problem of feed.u your pre ing the world? ! horse dri Can the farmers of Uancaster or Oottor county produce sufficient wheat to (pft] ?lve bread to all the people of both three ga the county and town for one year? tho 8mu, Yes, this can be done. Hut the over whc rjuestlon Is, do you farmers realize thorough and appreciate the necessity for do- blanket lug so? When you do the supply of flpray yr flour now heing shipped Into the (|on county can be released for other sec- to j^over tlons not so fortunately situated In plication the matter of soil and climatic con- acj(j an(| ditions. equal pa You can do your part toward In- by a toj creasing the wheat crop by observ- |n Decei Ing the following rules: you goc 1. Hy sowing more wheat this nitrate ( .... ... a ^ . . > . ?< S'i'i-i M * I . 'it' i P Equal Suffrage Leo Which We Have Always Carried ) >r the Right of Those Who Submit to Voice in Their Own Government. n.Q. I KAN. arkan.^hh^^HH ovement on present meth. as a right, a di I Having been t of a woman's life blood all men it is n jack into the trenches to tend the right < ke the world safe for de- men. But how why can't some of it go to men regard th> >t box as a part of the do- point is whethei the world is fighting for? ciple that won . I hand and voire r Service For Women. as well as mat n will he employed as pri- John Kenrlck navy torpedo plant. |s a firm bellev s bringing freedom to Tor- frage. lie beli men. Announcement that man's vote wn y of War requires women any community and warehouse duties at a The Woman (' ing salary of 400 pistres a know what for I have visit >rn Pacific R. U. is employ- states in the eo en to build ears at St. Paul |(?r's work. I 1 hie to investiga nodical Women's National nrmn nnH ntho on has planned the estab- ftmj conditions of a series of war services j)y jj,e influenc< onducted by women pliysl- Oorta.in parts < this country. They. too. who fought th< cling after the Scottish wo- naj|, now that pi tain. have told me t jever induce thf r Woman's Suffrage. , former conditio iwer to those antis In name ators from the not In favor of equal suf- East to plctur? ?ceuse "all the women do ditions which t it It," the Portland Argus their own lmag editorial which furnishes womanliness to| ready in South Carolina: antagonists of an suffrage must apply to servations havii en. and this fact gives rise fact that would uestion if there is a valid of court by any ,'hy it bhould not be adopt- outside of a lu ise a proportion of the set "In fnlnrnrio in favor of it. Perhaps it man has not b< [> sonic to remember that tact with the v ot is a privilege of slow , voting boot has which has taken centuries contact with wo rcorded to and accepted by the saloon no Hut gradualy it has been American votinj I until universal male suf- an's influence ii ider a free constitution has glory of the A lahlished in every demo- right to govern lized as right, and all male med by contact lave been given the vote, | corrupting thin ss of whether they view it on election da] a top dresser ii securing good seed of the por further eties now. your county ag preparing the ground early . . Yours oughly. treating the seed for smut. using farm manures and t kind of fertilizers. sowing early enough. two-horse farmer should least five acres of wheat. I n proportion. Seed wheat j scarce and high at sowing j e sure of your seed now. S ^3 t varieties for this section ?????? le Straw, Pultz, Leap's Pro_ The most caster and Red May. Hegin jng and pre iration of the land now. If Ryes. StOCi paratlon is late use the one- pcrior <iuali 11 and sow between the corn destined, in l. One ounce of Formalin take the pi r cent Formaldehyde) to Rye. lions of water will prevent _ t. Sprinkle this solution YfOOQ S 1 at one gallon to the bushel. G|yc(| f(il, dcsc ly mix and cover with old tion, and also t for six or twelve hours. crpnVJl iur drill with the same solu- OLLU ff 1 ?,V. , 1 r V. i fl W 3 'VV yuui w llCttl UtUMIDI ion* I | ?*nc nber 15th. A moderate ap-1 ? IP 11 i of an 9-3-1 fertilizer or I ' * ' 1 cotton aeed meal mixed j Write for C rts at sowing time followed! any ) dresnlng or Htable manure i mber or January, will give' T. w. wo >d reaultH. 100 pounds of SEEDSMEN >f aoda may be advisable as j _______ ' HBHHHIIHKIHIIHHHHBHlilWHMHHHHHliilHHHH M?? I !>- PI I j f i igue. I Nearest Our > A a I J r \ ity or a nuisance. H extended to include B ow proposed to ex- H of voting to all wo. fi ever tindividual wo- B c ballot the real H r it is right in prinicn should huve a in the government \ i. Hangs, the author, or in woman Bufeves that the woiiiid he beneficial to >*. In writing for iti/.en he says: I am talking about ed many of those urso of my last winuive taken the troute in California, Orr Western States there are bettered 5 of women, and in r?f California men ^ e cause tooth and f it has been tried, hat nothing could >m to go back to na. Garrulous orWest have come ? demorlllzing conlo not exist outside j ;lnations. The un>ic of these precious the cause, their oblg no foundation in not be iaugned oat judge and any Jury r.atic asylum. and California vvcaen lowered by conotlng booth, but the been disinfected by man. The thug and longer beautify the ? place while worns felt," and the chief tnerican citizen, the himself, is not dlmt with debasing and gs as It used to be r." 1 the spring. information call on ricultural agent. ? for service, W. ORAGBER, County Agent. Wood's Seeds n Rye vigorous grow>ductive of Seed Is oi:t better, suty of grain, and our opinion, to ace of all other all Catalog rlption and Informatells al>out the bcKt 1EAT.OATS. I Other Seeds Sowing utalofc and prices of tired. / >OD & SONS. - Richmond. Va.