The Clinton chronicle. (Clinton, S.C.) 1901-current, October 30, 1919, Image 6
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MS PUN
8AKAT0RIUM AT EL PASO, ESTABLISHED FOR THIS PUR
POSE, WILL GET FINANCIAL AID FROM 75 MILLION UAM-
- PAfGN—EPUCATIONAIr PRtJPAGANDA TU INTORWPEOPCE
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ON HOW TO COMBAT PLAGUE WILL BE CONDUCTED.
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Administration building of Southern Baptist Sanatorium for treatment of
tuberculosis patients, located 4500 feet above sea level. ^
Do you know that tuberculosis' is
more prevalent in the South than in
any other part of the country?
That the death rate from tuberculo
sis here is 14.2 per cent greater than
for the nation as a whole, and greater
than in an)' civilized nation on the
globe with the exception of China?
That more than 160 people a day, or
67,782 a year, die in the South and
the Southwest from this dreaded dia-
ease?
That there are within the territory
of the Southern Baptist Convention
276,000 persons actively infected with
the great white plague and an equal
number have inactive infection?
That the money loss to the South
each year from tuberculosis is $176,-
000,000?
These startling facts were brought
to the attention of the Southern Bap-
75 Million Campaign this institution
will receive $500,000 for the erection,
of additional buildings and $500,000
for an endowment that * will enable
the sanatorium to minister to those
Indigent patients who are unable to
pay for treatment.
That there ig an imperative need
for an institution of this character
is shown In the fact that all institu
tions in the South and Southwest for
the treatment of tuberculosis have a
total capacity of only 8,757 beds, or
one bed for only one person out of
every aixty in thla section who are af
flicted.
Everything connected with the Bap
tist Sanatorium is modern and of the
very best, but its present equipment
is far too small to cope with the de
mands that are made upon it. Of the
improvement fund that is to be* pro
vided, $100,000 is available already
tlst Convention at its session in 1916 and architUrts are already designing
and a resolution was at once adopted | new buildings worth $450,000. These
to try and check the spread of the
disease and provide relief as far as
possible for those already Infected
with it.
As a result of this movement there
was established in the high, cool, rare
atmosphere of El Paso, Texas, the
Southern Baptist Sanatorium which
will be constructed just as rapidly as
possible.
While the sanatorium is being op
erated by the Baptists, it will be open
to the people of all creeds and no
creed. Due to the crowded conditions,
however, it is necessary that arrange
ments be made in advance by commu-
MttiDAY CIRCUS DAT.
The Kids are Planning a Big Holiday.
At Clinton, Monday, iNor. 3, Sparks
World’s Famous Shows will hold forth
for a matinee and night exhibition, and
the rare, unique and wonderful things
that have been promised on paper will
become a reality. . «
The airy riders who, in diaphanous
skirts have been pirouetting on the ex-
pansive backs of beautiful and speedy
efreus horses" ’ Von the bill boards)
will be seen in all the gorgeousness of
sir
/ i
lean amusement that appeals to all
the people, - %
The merit in a big circus like the
Sparks Shows ia in the fact that ev
erything in the show is the very best
of its kind. There must inevitably be
riding acts, but the riders are the lead
ers of their profession. There must be
acrobats, but the acrobatic artists and
aerialists are gathered from the wide
world, and are the best that money
It is this superiority in the quality
of the performers that makes the s
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. We have on hand 2 Ford »
Touring Cars, practically
New.
SEE US QUICK
Ellis-Hatton "V Co.
Clinton, South Carolina
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tulle and seductive smile; the ele
phants will copy their pictured acts
of comedy and go them one better; the
contortionist will proceed to disen
tangle himself from the knots he tied
in his responsive body last year; the
acrobatic families will turn dizzy som-
f
ersaults and the clowns will work off
their latest comedy stunts to the
great delight of the crowds present—
we all like the clowns.
There is nothing on earth like the
circus. It is the people’s show par
excellence. It is the one great Amer-
Sparks Shows such a welcome visitor.
The*show will arrive in Clinton via
Seaboard Air Line, on their own trains,
early Sunday morning from Elberton.
Ga., where they exhibit Staturday. Un
loading, moving to the circus grounds,
erecting the city of tents, feeding the
stock, watering the elephants, the cook
house and its 300 boarders, with many
other interesting scenes, will be the
first real view of a big circus for many
of Clinton’s children. Visitors are al
ways welcome and courteous treat
ment-to the public is an established
rule with the Sparks management.
Their Medicine Chest For 20 Years
alms to minister to as many patients | nicating with Dr. H. F. Vermillion, su
ss possible and to disseminate
throughout the South and Southwest
the information that will result in
checking the further spread of the
disease and enable those who have
Just contracted it to obtain imraedi-
ste cures by proper methods of living.
With the active assistance of the
business Interests of El Paso a mod
ern sanatorium, located upon a beau
tiful tract of 143 acres on the side
of Mt. Franklin, at a height of 4,500
fee*, was opened fqr the healing of
the people, and through the Baptist
perintendent, at Ei Paso.
The sanatorium is under the gen
eral supervision of the Home Mission
Board of the Southern Baptist Con
vention, and in addition to treating
patients who have already contracted
tuberculosis, it will seek, through a
campaign of publicity, to so Inform
the people of the South and South
west on the nature and prevention of
this disease that the alarming death
rate from the white plague can be im
mediately, lowered and finally reduced
to the minimum.
Law of Falling Bodies.
Since n body falls to the ground
In consequent of the earth’s attrac
tion on each of Its molecules. It fol
lows that, everything else being the
same, all bodies, great and small,
light and-heavy, ought to fall with
equal rapidity. The fact that a stont
falls more rapidly than a feather is
due solely to the unequal resistance
Hjiposed by the air to the descent of
these bodies. In n vacuum all bodies
fall with t-qual rapidity.
plying these needs that the $20,000,000
• apportioned to Christian education will
jbe expended.
To these institutions the denomina
tion is looking for its trained leaders
to hVlp carry forward the work along
I every line contemplated , in the $75,-
000,000 campaign. In Texas alone
I there are 700 pastorless Baptist
SOUTHERN BAPTISTS PLAN MUCH church es and probably the same pro
portion holdsJn the other states. It is
LARGER PROVISION FOR ALL
THEIR INSTITUTIONS.
WILL AID RURAL SCHOOLS
*hoped the campaign wllLcall out 5.000
volunteers for ministerial and mission
ary work and these institutions will be
asked to equip these young men and
women for their work.
Last y£ar, reports show, over 6,000
students in these institutions took vol-
| untary courses in Bible and mission
excess of 75 Million Campaign Will’study; nearly 4,000 of them attended
student prayer meetings; ministerial
students pastoring churches raised
more than $80,000 for church benevo
lences and led more than 10,000 people
to frofess Christ. The campaign hopes
to result In enrolling 35,000-young men
tlst 75 Million Campaign, $20,000,000 an d women In Baptist schools wfthln
Mean Strengthening of Educational
Forces All Along the Line In
Next Five Years.
Of the total sum sought in the Bap-
Life
Was a
Misery
Mrs. F. M. Jones, of
. Palmer, Okla., writes:
“From the time 1 en
tered into womanhood
... I looked with dread
from one month to the
next. I suffered with my
back and bearing-down
pain, until life to me was
a misery. I would think
F could not endure .the
pain any longer, and 1
gradually got worse. . T
Nothing seemad to help
me until, one day, .,7
1 decided to
TAKE
RESERVATIONS PROPOSED BY
LODGE BITTERLY. OPPOSED.
Washington.—The democrats will
not accept the treaty if the Lodge
reservations are adopted. They pre
fer to defeat its ratification. Some
of the leaders are very bitter in thelt
denunciation of the Lodge reserva
tions. f
i " “We shall stand firm if we go down
! n defeat ’’ said Senator Underwood
'“It would be better to defeat the
>treaty than to ratify with the reserva
tions proposed. But. I do not believe
that Mfi Lodge can puf through” hir.
program. I can’t believe that the sen
ate will go with him.”
“I shall vote against the ratification
of the treaty If the reservations pro
posed by the foreign relations com
mittee are accepted." said Senator
Simmons. "The reservations offered
are an insult to the American peo
pie.**
rill go to Christian education
But the educational program of the
the next five years.
The South-wide institutions that will
Baptists will not stop there. It pro- benefit from the campaign include
poses to lend itself to the creation of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary
a public sentiment that will result in an d Women’s Training School at Louis
ville, ; Ky., Southwestern Baptist Theo
logical Seminary and Women’s Train-
Louisiana and New Mexico, along with
one somewhere in the region of the Ap
palachian mountains yet to be defi
nitely located.
more efficient public schools in the
territory of the Southern Baptist Con
vention, especially it the rural dis- ing School at Fort Worth. Tex., Baptist
trlcts. In this connection it i 3 pointed j Bible Institute, New Orleans, and Ne-
out that 37 per cent of the total ele-; ^ro Theological Seminary at Nashvillu
mentary scholastic population of the , while aid will be given to every Bap^
nation is found in the South; that the tist institution of learning in all state*
rural scholastic population of the of the convention territory, and to new
South is 77 per cent of the whole; that’Baptist colleges that will be estab-
only one-sixth as much money per Hshed in Arkansas. Florida, Illinois
capita is expended on the education - - -
of the children of the South as on the
children of other sections of the coun-
Iry; that only 37« out of every 1,000
pupils in the South enter high school
** against 87 from other sections; and
only 10 from the South enter college
as against 21 from other sections.
Distributed throughout the territory
of the Southern Baptist Convention
are 142 educational institutions, in
cluding academies, colleges, unlversi-
,tles, seminaries, and missionary train
ing schools for women. . These have a
tots' enrollment of 18,000 annually, but
all them are crowded, greatly in
need of larger facilities in every way,
ai}d many of them must hive an en-
^g'ment if they are to meet the de-
BA p T!ST CAMPAIGN COMES
CHEAPLY.
ruafU: upon them. It is in sup-1 oouatry.
Expense in raising the $75,000,000
sought by the Baptists of the South
in. their 75 Million Campaign will
amount to considerably less than on*
per cent, Dr. L. R. Scarborough, gen
eral director, announces. This includes
the expenses of both the general head
quarters and the eighteen state head
quarters. This ir prebab'y the lowest
overhotu. expense fn the history of
iarre mioney-raising blforU in this
The Woman’s Tonic
“ 1 took four bottles/*,
Mrs. Jones goes on to
say, '’and was not only
greatly relieved, but can
truthtully say that 1 have
not a pain. ‘ < .
“ It has now been two
years since 1 tookCardui,
and I am still in good
health. . . 1 would ad
vise any woman or girl
to use Cardui who is a
sufferer from any female
trouble.’’»
If you suffer pain caused
from womanly trouble, or
if you feel the need of a
good strengthening tonic
to build up yourrun-down
system, take the advice
of Mrs. Jones. Try Car
dui. It helped her. We
* believe it will help you.
AD Druggists
1.68
T is characteristic of
folks after they past the allotted
“three score years and ten." to look
back over the days ihat are gone
and thoughtfully live them over.
X And myself, at seventy-one, frequently
drifting back a quarter of a century, when
I see myeelf in the little drag store 1 owned
at Bolivar, Mo., making and selling a
vegetable compound to my friends and
eustomers—what was then Known only as
X>r. Lewis’ Medicine for Stomach, Liver
and Bowel Complaints. %
For maqy yoars while I was perfecting my
formula I studied and investigated the
laxatives and cathartics on the^market and
bseame convinced that their main fault
was not that they did not act on the bowels,
bqt that their action was too violent ana
drastic, and upset the system of the user;
whieh was due to the fact that they were
not thorough enouhh in tneir action, some •
simply acting on the upper or small intes
tines, while others would act only on the
lower or large intestines, and that they
almost invariably produced a habit re
quiring augmented doses.
I believed that a preparation to produce
the best effect must firatr tone the liver,
then acton the stomach and entire alimen
tary system. If this wsx accomplished, the
medicine would ' prcdfuce a mild, but
thorough elimination of the waste without
.the usual sickening sensations. and make
the user feel better at once.
After^experimenting with hundreds of
different compounds, I at last perfected (he
formula that is now known as Matpe's
■smsdy, which I truly believe goes further
and doee more than any laxative on the
market today. The thousands of letters
from users have convinced me I was right,
and that the user of NsSarv’s Remedy as a
family medicine, even though he may have
used it for twenty-five years, never has
to increase the dose.
My kpowledge of medicine and the re
sults of its use in my own' family and
among my friends, before I ever offered it
for sa1e,_caused me to have great faith in
from the very first. ^ -
And now as I find myself nearing the age-
taole
to another life, my greatest pleasure
kit each day and read the lett
mail brings from people
vno tell of havi
d myse
when I must bow to tne inevitable and go
i pleasure is to
tiers that each
as old or older
than I, who tell of having used Matars’s
Rsamdk for ten, fifteen and twenty years,
and now they and their children and
grandchildren have been benefitted by it.
It is a consoling thought, my friends, for
a man at my age to feel that aside from
his own success, one has done something
for his fellow man. My greatest satisfac
tion, my greatest happiness todav, ia the
knowledge that tonight more than one
million people will take a Nature’s Wsmsdy
(NR Tablet) and will be better, healthier,
happier people for it. I hope you will
be one of them.
A. H. LEWIS MEDICINE CO.,
8t. LOLH~, MO.
YOUNG'S PHARMACY
/
18 cents a package
What you pay out your good money for
is cigarette satisfaction—and, my, how
you do get it in every puff of Camels!
E XPERTLY blended choice
Turkish and choice Domestic
tobaccos in Camel cigarettes elimi
nate bite and free them from any
unpleasant cigaretty aftertaste or
unpleasant cigaretty odor.
Camels win instant and permanent
success with smokers because the
blend brings out to the limit the
refreshing flavor and delightful mel-
„ R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY, Winston-Salsm, N. C.
low-mildness of the tobaccos yet re
taining the desirable “body.” Camels
are simply ^ revelation 1 You may
smoke them without tiring your taste!
For your own satisfaction you must
compare Camels, with any cigarette
in the world at any price. TheflT
you’ll best realize their superior
quality and the rare enjoyment
they provide.
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