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Shoe Values Worth While At Geisberg Bros, Shoe Co, If you compare the quality of Shoes you get from Geisberg with the other fellows you will agree with us that we have a just claim on our little saying, "Shoes That Satirfy." _ , Welt Oxfords for Men, worth $3.5o, (t?n ?uid black) Tan Rubber Soles Oxfords for Men, worth ?5, but sold here for i : White Canvas Rubber Sole Oxfords for Women, one inch heel, Blucher style White Canvas V?randa Pumps- for Wo men, sold in larger cities for ?2.oo but here for Children's Socks, worth 10c and 15c a pair. We're discontinuing the line so on sale here, 4 pairs for Baby Dolls;* the best Baby Doll lasts sliown in the town; special prices oii all numbers; patents and dull tor .S2.50, sJ.oo and S3.5o. Tennis 'Pumps for Men, Women and . - Children in Whites and Blacks with > White, Red and Black Rubber Soles; they're on sale for per pair $3.00 $4.00 $1.50 $1.69 25c $1.95 a 50c G?isberg Bros. Shoe Co. % . Under Masonic Temple. ' / ' Shoes That Satisfy. tu. s lElN BUILDING HOMES FOR WORKMEN Coat of Uving?Paid P For in installments By the Month. \ t* ; _?_ Bremen, Hay 8.?To keop down the fcost of living for the worklngraan In firemen the city is building homes in he outlying districts for which the laborer pays 600 marks (f 16) a year, fcnd owns when he has paid for 2,0Cr %p 3,000 markB. "On the assumption that the work Bagman rarely has an automobile, ney have reduced the width of the streets in the little colony where the experiment Is being tried out to about pO feet, perfectly paved, and, becAiso of the low buildings, without all glvr Shg the appearance of alleys. I. The tiny little houses contain three land ftur ttBgUL * waah room that Is abottPaa big si the average lamerican kitchenette. The houses Tare of uniform construction and col mr. being a tasteful brown cement. wer a.-UlL.l^.LUL_M^LJ Bach has a tiny grass plot or garden In front, and a garden plot in the rear. The effect of the experiment Is the foundation of a city in miniature which, because of German, cleanliness and care, is comfortable and cosy rather than squalid or cramped. The majority of the workmen who have taken up wtih the plan are employed at a gigantic elevator nearby, where supplies are being stored fvom all over Germany. Nearer the business center of the city are larger and somewhat more in licentious buildings?mostly two famty houses?where' laboring men can live with surprising cheapness. Like the smaller places they even tually . become the property of the families who live In them. I Wedding Without Groom. V Berlin. May 8.?Th?c ity of ABCh has lust wltnesaed the rare spectacle of a marriage without a bridegroom. His place was taken by his brother, -who possessed a formal power of at torney from the bridegroom, who Is in the field. It had not before been .generally known in Germany that paragraph 72 of the code of civil laws provides for marriage by proxy ia cases where the bridegroom is hin dered "by higher power" fr6m being Ipresent. USE FLY FSIes Bring Disease Did yottavar eonslder tb?s lerrfbltMcnlBeaaeaortti* 4aath rate amoaf ? f ^jj^yiiU k-n?w that the oonyuija iiuum M| bring? genta?,easing. lateaillal g ran now. wlut HjuU. Yypfa?lJ K?t?-r au *reMo*t?(<r??(t?r?f <)t?*ac? ire nut known to Wed I UKl-?l?* ut allowing these p*au la jour hornet ion itouae ni Urtoga germa, eauelag, id other ratal dUeaeeet TU* My la known to Medical Science. Can toi ? you afford to a^tacmisstethaia. Km tbtra SHEP?RB'S HOUSE ?LY DRIVER AJND INSECT EX1-ERMINATOR Rare dcMh to Plias, HoaqaUv*. Ued-bUgs, Cock-roaohe*. Vleej, MoUm and sU otbas Jtnrcu.. * 0?v?ratm?srt Otttriatavea? Dr. Marrey. ^Stef^rlateHatfastt *t Ha*l?fc.?? S. HjwSoMKrl^lsur Otf4 kurrui ?U? J wUoa**a? a titinun? ration of Bheperd* Ply DrWer and ?rebtcraa wt?h thaalrortbsrootn. Nvithlna of as tun? all the Bit? lu in? room had bean kti Tba fumw from IbU pr?para Hol, j> ave ii'? f?nr p?r*?as pr?sent Ix. i deraoMt ration, and except foi as _ maaas ara tot aaplnata at. (Slgaad) A. It. MURRAY,M. D., Ti?epufca+aas wn rtrnpac,o.c. ASon* oftheeetsoaipresent when tbaabetademonilratlon d essai berated _ sty JDrtrer "ST no III el room dortng ' " or ytne tar tba aras saadtietad, 1 lake ydaaturr In evbataattatt-ng tba lalbrma Uon uunuuued therein. (Sfjnad) C. HT POPgNOB. Viaaact lnre? tgator.) U. a. Dept. AgrtauUor*. A ?!>?vm ?HKl i U>s ?tut a very bon Tor mla at all Ornaataw aaA a and Qaaoiaayaa by. sfitoPAB** cnaeiCAL company. WBXAMWCnrOM.M.C. American Chen Chance With Bulk of Raw Material at Han< Synthetic Chemical? Would B Center oi Berlin. May 7.?The war affords American opportunity to become the drug and chemical center of the world, In place of London and Am sterdam, if America but knows enough to grasp the advantage, in the opinion of Dr. ?. E. V'anderkleed, chief chemist of a big Philadelphia manufacturing and biological chem ical concern, who has been touring Kurope for several months. This possible leadership can come, however, only in case American ?-h?-mints develop the ability to make synthetic chemicals as Germany al ready has done, out of the raw and crue materials that come largely from South America and Central America, and that now. because of danger to shipping, are being sent in huge quantities to New York instead of Amsterdam and England. Once America achieves some of the highly specialized German abil ity ulong this line, he believes. Hhe will he able to compete for all time with the rest of the world, and at tract to herself the lion's share of tlic raw materials so close at hand. Dr. Vanderkleed's travels through Germany, Austria, Holland and Den mark have shown him that there Is.a scarcity of serums in practically all of the countries at war, as well as a scarcity of some opiates. There js consequently a market here for every ounce (hat can be made in America and shipped over. Practically every labaratory in Eurone. he finds. Is manufacturing to the limit of Its capacity serums for tetanus, dysentery and spinal menin gitis, three of the great war scour ages. Each country, however, is hampered by two things?the length of time that la necessary to produce serums of the requisite strength, and a universal shortage of the high grade horses used in the manufac ture of the medicines. A comparatively small quantity of} tetanus serum, when Injected very! soon after a soldier has been worn."1- j ed in such a way that the dreaded t lockjaw is liable to set in, will save him, says Dr. Vsnderkleed. But in I case there is delay in the Injection? something that frequently happens because of the exigencies of warfare ?It takes an Infinitely greater amount of the medicine to offset the English Officials Using Slanp, London, May 8.?Premier Asqulth Las used th? phrase, "deliver the goods." " The premier is noted for his precise and classical English, and when he puts his seal on an' Ameri canism It Is in a fair way to become incorporated in English usage. "Lloyd George," comments one pa per, "who Is more forecful but not so classical, has talked about 'push and go.' Now it remains for Mr. Balfour, if he can spare a moment from bis new duties at the admiralty. Girl and Prince Princess Lvdovlco Pignatwtll d'Are**? Mini Ruth Morgan Waters, prom inent in society at Palm Beach, Nsr ragausett Pier, and Philadelphia, has defied her papa and her mamma and run. off and married a prince, who j says he Is "related to the king ot j Spain." Prince Pignatelli and Misa Waters went to the marriage license bureau in New York the other day. The prince gace his age aa 37, his resi dence as Merrick. U I., and his oc cupation "a broker." He said that! he was born In Blariita, Prance. Hin father was Louis Pignatelli d'Aragon | and his mother Ida Cavendish. Miss Waters g*ve her residence as j iKlpllii. She wan*.born in At lantic City twenty-two years ago. Mis? Waters met the price while 1 nists Have to Lead World J, Development of Ability to Make rlake This Country Chemical f World. disease. And under the present cir cumstances and shortage, he believes, no country has a sufficient quantity on hand to be able to dose it* patients with the necessary liberality when there has been great delay. In contrast to the shortage of ser ums Dr. Vanderkleed finds that all the nations seem to be 'airly well supplied with the necessary vaccines ?which can be and are being pre pared in great quantities, and in a comparatively short time. The time difference between mak ing the serums and the vaccines Is due to the essential, difference in the characteristics of the two medicines. The vaccine is but a quantity of the dead bacteria of a given disease which, when injected into the blood, causes no harm but does stimulate the growth of live anti-bodies that ward off the disease If It comes. The serum, on the other hand, takes from three to six months in preparation, and consists of a quantity of live an ti-bodies that have bepn painstaking ly brought up to a standard strength. They are created by.' innoculatlng sound and . healthy horses with in creasingly large doses of'bacteria of a given disease. Tho animal, less subject than any other to tho Is ease, gradually and increasingly gen erate a powerful. anti-toxin, and when in the proper state of health will eventually yield from three to four quarts of the serum. Germany and Austria, Dr. Vanderk leed finds, manufacture great quan tities of typhoid vaccine, and have on hand plenty of vaccine for cholera, plague and other diseases to which the soldiers may be liable. Follow ing the example of the United States, these countries have during the war Introduced compulsory vaccination against typhoid in their armies. With the single possible exception of cocaine, Germany at least pos sesses all the opiates she needs. There are quantities of chloroform, ther, morphine and opium on hand. The cocaine is coming in from New York, which gets it in turn from South America. To some extent also there Is a mar ket here, Dr. Vanderkleed believes, j for chemicals out of which can be made materials for combating the Insect pest that is such a factor In i the cast to tell ua to 'get a move on.' Sut our statesmen have yet some dlsUnce to go before they attain the homeliness of phrase of America's" public men." The Lander College pipe organ has arrived and work of . installing it in the college auditorium will begin ?t j once under the- direction of Mr. O. M. Tully, who aold the instrument It is hoped to. have the organ placed In time for commencement exercises, i?Greenwood Journal. She Eloped With. she was visiting her lialf-oistsr. Bar- j oness Jacques de St. Mare at Nice, j France. They met afterward at Nar* \ ragansett Pier. However, when the ( parente of the bride were asked se*- j end days ago aa to the reported en- < gagement or their daughter to the . prince they emphatically dented It. \ saying that they did not even kno-r -, the man. , , Pignatelll haa been fo, this country t off and on for two years. He claims ? toj*e a distent relative of the king i nf Spain. The bride ta the sister of Mrs. i Benjamin Gatlns, who aa Misa ?taro- i thy Waters caused a senaattop social circles by eloping is Gettos in April. 1913. The? : Hempstead, L. I. 11 Puts it Jf?mrHc For a single dolla the famous Hoosi cash price fixed b weekly dues of $ You can search the wh rind nothing that saves i in your kitchen. All th that have made the Hooa 800,000 kitchens are ret Here are some Es save you, recorcb The Remarkable Flou You can judge the whole by the remarkable flour bl This bin. all high grade i so smooth inside no do stick. Dust can't get In. is low?easy to fill. Eni slides off for filling. The I ing glass panel in front k? i tents visible?makes easy. The new shaker sifter? ier patent?is a wonder principle entirely. Shake: through; doesn't grind it wear out. Can't grind grit 3 Cleans the flour It sifts. I fluffy and light. ' Like the rest of the every detail of this bin fected. What Shall You Co< /. (Mrs. Christine Frederic* Guide ansWera this eterni 1cm. Simply turn the di?l you like. A choice of * menus 1b before you that perfectly with that meat. Don't fall to see the for features?seventeen of thei This may l - your hut ? strictly limited by The 9 sold. Come in ton?orr< PEOPLES TO THE PU] of Hooaier Ct $1 weekly?.at THE 1 Hi FRENCH EXILES ARE RETURNING 10 HOMES - Fbif ty-five Thousand Passed Through Germany und Switft erland in April. Geneva, May" 8.?Thirty-five thouB uid exiles from the ?Micupled depert nents of the north of France have eturned to their country by way of Germany and Switzerland during the ?ut month. They are neither hos ages nor elvijan* captives; they are 'xpelied from their, homes by the Oer nans and a printed circular handed o each adu't at th? frontier gives the lerman view of the expulsions as ollows: -y 1 "This-la why Germanr find* her lelr obliged to undertake the .transi jortatlon ?f a part of the civilian >opulatlon residing in occupied ?Yench territory; France refuses cat egorically to send food to its clfi cens. In the laat convey that arrivas at he .Swiss frontier near Schaffhouse .here were 7? men from 65 to 90 rears old and 218 women and girls of ?11 ages. There wero also 177 v-hil> Iren of whom BO were under four rears old, many of them in the bands >f Etrangers, having been separated all kith and kin. Most of >th*rt in the convoy were also imuu ui families that have been itated by the mobilization or sea HHs bjjmk invasion. Their pinch-1 nd vro~n faces tell the s to trial*. o last train was 48 &6 exiles w to their ewu resources tor. ra-j diffarc-nl centers,- the** exiles **-| the Qemutas are encouraging* ?witarer? to reauroe the opern ratetJ I f the scat* ir right now, you can haw er Cabinet, put into our Y iy the Hoosier Company; 1. ole world and ?o much labor e old features ,ier famous In ained. Tmt. the new features aloi extra cost to yoi to the entire coi kitchen cabinet. :clusive Hoosier Conveme i show, millions of steps. r Bin. :hance to buy on these liberal tes rlooaier Company. Regular terms ?w mad (Decide. NEW FURN?1 3LIC: we authorize this abinets this week only the fixed cash price. iOOSIER MFG. CO.. New Ca T tlon of their work and are even.re* pairing bombarded factories where repairs are possible. Where-build rags have been entirely destroyed they are having estimates of the damages made by 'commissions of they intend the population to infer (lerman engineers. It is supposed from this that the German govern ment wiRl Idemnify owners of factor ies but no definite promises hare been made. Post-Bellara Wages. A. T. F. McGregoryt a resident of Beiton. rc^afe three, was among the Confederate soldiers who took in the reunion in Columbia last week. Ho was. accompanied by his > daughter. Miss Lydia, ?ir. McGregory took with hira on his trip a Confederate * ten dollar bill which bears the date of 1718. Mr. Gregory told a represen tative of the Journal that JUKt at the close of the war he worked on the railroad just this side of Columbia laying rails for $1 a month and board. His war experience is still fresh in his mind, though be is 73 years old ? Beiton Journal. Thligs to fepmbfr if Yen Are Lest 2a the Woods. A' contributor to the current issue of Farm and Fireside calls attention to the following things which any body lost in the woods ought to know: "I thought every woodsman and guide knew that by going downhill you are .sure to come upon a stream of water which will in turn lead to a settlement. Furthermore, in our day nearly evreybody depends on a watch Instead of 'sighting rte sun.' When fhe hour hands points toward th-3 aun the point mitiwar between tK? hour hand and twelve o'clock will ?e dike-south. "Another little woodcraft trick is that of carrying ? supply of matches in a ierge mouthed bottle. When fit ted with a tight cork the .matches era sure to be kept dry even though ye*, have to aw'.m a stream with your >sier ch?ri mets ; 'White Beauty/ lome at the law balance in small ne that are added, without I, are equal in themselves avenienco of the average nee?. Th?y will ma. Oar aEoUnent is prevail when these are ruRE eo. \ limited sale for $1 down, stle# Ind. MAKING AMMUNITION SN COFFEE FACTORY Germans Also Manufacture Sheila In Canneriea and Ship ' [;?- ^ I Bremen. May 8.?A' coffee factory In vwhlch artilleiy shells as well as cof jfee are being made,, is to be seen lu ; Bremen and in Luebeck ammunition ils manufactured in< a shipbuilding plant and In a cannery. In fact, in , practically .overy factory where three, is the proper machinery, munition of ;war are being made, Some Of tun plants conceal the work.from the for eigners; others, however, are quite frank about it, and let visitors see some of the unimportant processes of, conauruot?on. Aside from the manufacture of shellu and automobiles,., in* Bremen, "business appears t* have 1 suffered considerably from *h? war?partly because of tho " etifppaga . of export trade by water, partly by the shCSt agc of men. I In Luebeck the corresponder-t was shows the shell-making! in. a canning factory, but ?ras .told .that vthe : larg est, and most important , establish ments of that > Kind in the 'city was unfortunately c-losed-.bcsauso tha gov ernment was using It for hte manu , facture of ?orne mysterious substance. ? In Bremen business men evinced a 'desire to deny that the war has nw -terially changed things; In .Hamburg, the same men frankly sny that ?verry-^ thing is "dead;" fa Luebeck no o?e ils complaining. Leas Werkt Less Voed* Farm asif Fireside e?y? : "When a work hors* is tdts his grain ration oae-thiiv.