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PYTHIAN GRAND LODGE MKT Oroonville- Next Session Will Ho ni G roon wood, May, 11)21. (Greenville Piedmont.) With Col. O. .J. Hond, Orand chan cellor, presid? MK. and several hun dred delegates in attendance, tin ?lilil? session of tho (?rand Lodge ol South Carolina, Knights of Pythias COUVOItod in (In; Ked Men's Hall, coi ner Main and Washington streets, on Tuesday afternoon, .May 2?th. The delegates hogan arriving early in the morning and were mel al lin depot by members of the Ureonvilh lodges, A banner, welcoming he visitors to the city, was stretched across lia st Washington street, al most in front of the mooting place. Tho address of welcome at thc opening session was made by H. A. Morgan, of Greenville, who bane thc visiting Pythians feel at home while In Greenville. Tho response wan made by P. I?'. Henderson, of Aiken. Tho opening prayer was offered by Kev. i). w. mott, of Easley. Wednesday's Session. Greenwood was selected as_4ho meeting place for the 36 th session of tho South Carolina Pythian Grand Lodge. Tho convention will be held on tho fourth Tuesday and Wednes day in May, 1921. (.rand Innige Officers, P. 'I<\ 'Hendorson, of Aikon, who held tho position of Grand Vico Chancellor, was elected Grand Chan cellor for tho coming year. Henry C. Tillman, of Greenwood, was elected (5rand Vice Chancellor. Judson C. Giles was chosen Grand Prelate. C. D. brown, of Abbeville, Grand Keopor of Records and Seal. Wilson G. Harvey, Charleston, Grand Master of Exchequer. E. It. Cox, Darlington, Master at Arms. Tho Grand Outer and Inner Guards wera rc elected-w. D. Mor rah, Inner Guard, and 10. D. Lamack, Outer Guard. Tho newly elected officers wore in stalled immediately after election, tho ceremony being most appropriate and impressive. The convention ad journed at 3 o'clock, having contin ued in session until all matters be fore tho body were settled. Because of the large number of delegates in attendance the sessions Tuesday night and Wednesday morn ing were hold in the court house, tho privilege coming through tho cour tesy of H. A. Dargan, Clerk of the Court. Tho llrst meeting was held in tho lied Mon's Hall, but this proved to bo too small. Last night's session was a joint meeting of the Hine Ridge and Row ena lodges, both of Greenville, at which time a joint team conferred tho Amplified Third Hank. The ses Hion proved a distinct feature of the program, especially to Pythians not members of the Grand Lodge. Approximately 4 00 delegates from all parts of the Stato were in attend ance, according to the registry kept by E. M. Moffott. chairman of the committee on entertainment. Lift off Corns! Doesn't hurt a bit and Freezone costs only a few cents. With your lingers! You can lift off any bard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, and the hard skin calluses from bottom of feet. A tiny little of "Freezone" costs little at any drug store. Apply a few drops upon the corn or callus. In stantly it stops hurting. Iben shortly you lift that bothersome corn or cal lus right off, root and all, without one bit of pain or soreness. Truly! No humbug!- adv. DESTROY CEDARS OE LICHA NON. Famous Trees, :t,000 Years Ohl,Wore Cul Down for Fuel in War. Tho cedars of Lebanon, famed in history, are reported to have been almost wholly wiped out during the world war. First tho Turks cut them down for fuel lo ho used in their locomotives,?md then the conquerors of the Turks continued tho destruc tion. No doubl military exigency de manded thal (bese celebrated forests should be sacrillced, and since senti ment plays small purl in warfare, the famous trees are regarded with no other oyo than that which saw in them common material with which to produce motive power. A writer in the San Francisco Ar gonaut deplores the fact that stern necessity led to the disappearance of these trees, some of which were said to be nearly three thousand years old. They were historic even in the time when the army of Sennacherib. ('?OS years before the Christian era, laid waste the country, as related in the Psalms of David. Pliny, the Ro man historian, said tho durability of their wood was everlasting, and the Arabs regarded the trees as endowed With tho principle of perpetual exist ence. Timbers unearthed in the ruins of ancient Assyrian cilios have been found practically unchanged after tho vicissitudes of two thousand and moro years. Individual trees often attained a girth of forty-two feet and height of ninety feet was common. The spread of the branches, exceeding even the neigbt. made a profound Impression upon those who behold thom. PFACE RESOLUTION VJiTOKU. t President Sends Message to House Suys Stain on Honor of l\ S. Washington, May 27.-The Re . publican peace resolution was vetoed to-day hy President Wilson. Such a method of making peace ? with Germany, the President said, 1 would "place an ineffaceable stain . upon the gallantry and honor of the " United States." 1 Without announcing his intention regarding the treaty of Versailles tho Presiden) declared that Hie trea 1 j ty embodied the important things 'omitted hy the resolution, and said that by rejecting the treaty the Uni ted Slates had declared in effect that it wished "lo draw apart and pursue objects and interests of our own." Tho Message. The President's message follows: "To the House of Representatives: 'I return herewilh, without my signature, House Joint Resolution :t27, intended to repeal the joint res olution of April ti, lill 7. declaring a state of war to exist between tho United States and Germany, and the Joint resolution of December 7, 1917, declaring a state of war to exist be tween the United States and the Aus tro-IIungarlan government, and to declare a state of peace. "1 have not felt at liberty to sign this joint resolution because I can not bring myself to become a party to an action which would place an Ineffaceable slain upon the gallantry and honor of the United States. The resolution socks to establish peace with the German empire without ex acting from the German government any action by way of setting right tho Infintie wrongs which it did to the pooples whom lt attacked, and whom we professed it our purpose to assist when we entered the war. Have wo sacrificed the lives of more than 1 00,000 Americans and ruined the lives of thousands of others and brought upon thousands of Ameri can families an unhappiness that can never end. for purposes which we do not now care to state or take further steps to attain? The attainment of iheso purposes is provided for in the treaty of Versailles by terms deemed adequate by the leading statesmen and experts of all the great peoples who wero associated in thc- war against Germany. Do we now not care to join in the effort to secure them ? "'We entered tho war most reluct antly, Our people were profoundly j disinclined to take part in a Euro I pean war, and at last did so only j because they became convinced that it could not in truth be regarded as only a European war, but must be regarded as a war in which civiliza tion itself was Involved and human rights of every kind as against a belligerent government. Moreover, when wo entered the war we set forth very definitely the purpose for which we entered, partly because we did not wish to be considered a morely taking part in a Europea contest. "This joint, resolution which I n turn does not seek to accomplish ar of these objects, bat in effect imrk< a complete surrender of the rights of the United States so far as the German government is concerned. A treaty of peace was signed,, at Ver sailles on the twenty-eighth of .lune last which did seek lo accomplish the objects which we had declared to bo In our minds, because all the great governments and peoples which united against Germany had adopted our declarations of purpose as their own and had in solemn form em bodied them in communications lo the German government preliminary to the armistice of November 11, ISIS. Mut the treaty as signed at Versailles has been rejected by the Senate of the United States, though it has been ratified by Germany. Ry that rejection, and by its methods, we have in effect declared that we wish to draw apart and pursue ob jects and interests of our own. un hampered by thc connections of in terests or of purpose with other gov ernments and peoples. "Notwithstanding tho fact that upon our entrance into tho war we professed to be seeking to assist in the maintenance of common inter ests, nothing is said in this resolu tion about Hie freedom of navigation upon the seas, or the reduction of armaments, or the vindication of the rights of Belgium, or the rectifica tion of wrongs done to France, or tho release of the Christian popula tions of the Ottoman empire from tho Intolerable subjugation which they have bad for so many genera tions to endure, or tho establishment of an independent Polish stale, or tho Continued maintenance of any kind of understanding among the great powers of the world which would be calculated to prevent In tho future such outrages as Germany attempted, and in part consummat ed. "Wo have now in effect declared Hint wo do not care to lake any fur ther risks or to assume any further responsibilities with regard to the freedom of the nations or the sa credness of international obliga tions, or the safety ol' independent peoples, sucli a pence with Germany 0 pefice in which none of Hie es sential interests which we bad at heart when we entered the war is safeguarded-is, or ought lo ho, in conceivable, is inconsistent with the dignity of the United States, with tho rights and liberties of ber citi zens, and with the very freedom con ditions of civilization. "I hope that in these statements I have sufficiently set forth the rea sons why I have felt it incumbent upon me to withhold my signature. "Woodrow Wilson." "White 'louse, May 27, 1920." Terrors of the Deep, (Washington Star.) "There is nothing moro terrible than a storm at sea." remarked the old sailor. "No," answered Senator Sorghum, "not unless it's a naval investiga tion." Alligator teetli have great value as ivory. Hi wtBmm'twwoRwmaa IMBU? I! Why a Majority of the Smaller Cars ? Come on Goody Hpo JL JLA CS Last year more cars using 30x3-, 3Qx3Vi?, or 31 x 4-inch tires were factory-equipped with Goodyear Tires than'with any other kind. This is plainly a result of the high relative value produced in these tires for the smaller cars hy Goodyear's enormous resources and scrupulous care. They represent the same intense endeavor to supply utmost satisfaction in tires that has laid the basis for the marked preference which exists everywhere for Goodyear Tires in the larger sizes. This real Goodyear value in tires is available for your Ford, Chevrolet, Dort, Maxwell, or other car using one of these sizes, at our nearest Service Station. Go there for these tires and Goodyear Heavy Tourist Tubes. 30x3V2 Goodyear Double-Cure <jj^ ^> 50 Fabric, All-Weather Tread. JU J 30 x3'/; Goodyear Single-Cure ?fc-^ ?% ?50 Fabric, Auti-Skid Tread. * L 1 Goodyear Heavy Tourist Tubes are thick, strong tubes that reinforce casings properly. Why risk a good casing with a cheap tube? Goodyear Heavy Tourist Tubes cost littlemore than tubes of less merit. 30x3'/2 size in water- $ A 5Q proof 6ag...."_._. ?f ; v.r.? ...? ' ii^, TUNAS MIST NOW QUARANTINE Ti? Provont Unnecessary Spread of Pink Holl Worm. Austin, Texas, May 27.-Warning thai Texas will face "a country-wide quarantine" if the State attempts "half-way measures" in dealing with tho pink boll worm pest was served on tlie Legislature to-day by Secre tary Meredith, of the Department of Agriculture, in a letter read in the opening of a special session called to ratify a recent agreement between the national government and Texas and Louisiana representatives. Immediate needs. Mr. Meredith said in his letter to Governor Hobby, after expressing regret that he could not address the session in porson, was the declaration of "non-cotton /.ones for-the infested area of Texas I and the plowing up of holds already j planted in such areas." "It should be borne in mind that! as the quarantine lias already been | taken by several other States, the! modification or abandonment of, which, I understand, is contingent upon action Kken by Texas io carry out the program outlined, would ro sult in effect in a country-wide quar antine of Texas, entirely independent of any Federal action. It was deter mined upon by an interstate conven tion, without consultation with this department, and was based on the responsibility which tho officials of those States felt for (lie protection of their own cotton industry." Jffas macioyour Com/ort * Cert&in thru~~ MOTHER s FRIEND Which ?prend* lt? influence upon the nerves, cord? and ligaments in volved, rendering them pliant to reacT* ily yield to nature's demand. There ia an absence of bearing-down pain?, strain and general discomfc?, more often than otherwise experienced when? nature is unaided. Mother's Friend ia used cttcmally. K At all Druggists. ?* Special Booklet on Motherhood f I n.it,y fie'-., Br?d6cldKk?ulitorCo>. Dept. F-9, AtUnt?. Om* TIIEKE'E ONE WET SPOT LEFT. Barbed Wire Fent e Doesn't Keep tho Mexican Liquor Out. (Popular Mechanics Magazine.) Prohibition is the least of the wor ries of Americans living along the Mexican border. An American has but to sally up to one of tho fences thal separate the United States and Mexico. The ?OV-| eminent has erected heavy barbed wire structures on the line at all the ports of entry, but they do not com-] pletely close the border by any man ner of means. A Mexican on the! lookout for this kind of business pro duces the desired bottle, holds it close to the fence and hands the American a straw. The straw is again passed through the fence, but j this time the end that is in Mexico I goes into the neck of the bottle and I the end that is in the United States ' goes into the American's mouth. The ! rules of the game are that the Amer ican exhales before going Into ac tion, then he shuts his eyes and sucks as much liquor as he is able to swallow without taking another breath. For sanitary reasons many Americans carry their own rubber tubes for this form of prohibition dodging, but the Mexicans limit the size that may be used to one-eighth of an inch interior damcter. --*.>.> A Dig Tire Contract. Probably (he biggest Uro contract ever awarded in the State of North Dakota \v;is recently given to Ibo Fisk (lubber Co., of Chicopee Falls, Mass. The contract was awarded through the Massachusetts Compa ny's Bismarck llrnnch by tho State highway commission, and it called for equipment for SOO military trucks and 50 louring cars, which tho commission has borrowed for rood work in the state, A few of tho trucks, (he majority of which are of tho four-wheel drive type, and which range from one and a half lo five-ton capacities, will bo equipped with solid tires, but a considerable number will bo mounted on heavy pneumatics. These trucks are distributed by districts and are used for hauling materials, patrol work mid upkeep. They enter into the maintenance of tho roads already constructed, each of the larger trucks being capable, of keeping in good condition a size able stretch of highway. Fisk tires were chosen because of tho wonderful results being obtained all over the United States by tho well-known Fisk truck tires. We generally think of tho wooden shoes as being typical of Holland, but shoes with wooden soles aro very common in Spain. ELLISON SMITH WINS HONOR. University Freshman Takes TAMKI in Literary Society Contest. Tho Courier is in receipt of the following account of tho recent ora tors' contest at the University of South Carolina, in which very high praise is bestowed upon one of our Oconee young men: "The regular annual orator's con test of the Clarlosophic Literary So ciety, at the University of South Carolina, was held in the society hall on Saturday night, May 22d. This was one of tiie most successful and closely contested events of the year. There were originally eight students trying out for the contest, but in a /preliminary held Thursday night they wore all eliminated except three. These three, who spoke Sat urday night, were E. M. Smith, a member of the freshman class at the University; Pant Kelley, another member of tho freshman class, who won the State high school oratorical contest last yenr, and Ii. H. Folk, a member of the sophomore class. This contest was open only to members As. Dead Every druggist in town-yi gist lias noticed a great fallin all give the same reason. 1 place. "Calomel is dangerous am Liver Tone is perfectly safe prominent local druggist. Take "Dodson's Dodson's Liver Tone is personal guaranteed by every druggist w sells it. A large bottle costs but few cents, and if it fails to give ca relief in every case of liver sluggis ness and constipation, you have on to ask for your money back. Dodson's Liver 7 me is a pleasnn tasting, 'purely vegetable remod harmless to both children and aduli of the freshman and sophomore classes. The speeches made by these men were not only a credit to the Clariosophic Society, but to the uni versity. The winner of tho contest was El lison M. Smith, of Walhalla. Mr. Smith is a very promising member of the Clariosophic Society, and will most likely win many honors for her beforo be leaves the university. Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic .??tores vitality and energy by purifying and en riching the blood. You can soon feel Its Strength ening, Invigorating Effect. Price 60c. Senate Turns Down Mandate. Washington, May 27.-President Wlson's proposal for an American mandate over Armenia was disap proved to-day in the Senate foreign relations committee. Only four Dem ocrats opposed adverse action on tho President's request. liv a vote of I I to i the committee reported a resolution declaring that (?ongres3 respectfully decline to Kraut to the Executive tho power to accept a mandate over Armenia. our druggist and everybody's drug g off in the sale of calomel. They Dodson's Liver Tone is taking its J people know it, while Dodson's and gives better results," said a Liver Tone" Instead I Take a spoonful at night and wako up fooling fine; no biliousness, sick headache, acid stomach or constipated bowels. It doesn't gripe or causo in convenience all the next day like vio lent calomel. Take a doso of calomel today and tomorrow you will fool weak, sick and nauseated. Don't lo?o a day's work! Take Dodson's Livor Tono instead and fool fine, full of vigor and ambition.