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4 f SCHWAB ON COliliGOK MEN Training Helps if They llealize Tin Have Not Eearned Everything. Charles M. Schwab of Bethelhe eteel fame has written an article fi the November American Magazine which he tells some of his opinioi of college graduates. He says: "The college man who thinks th: his greater learning gives him tl (privilege of working less hard the the man without such an education going to wake up in disaster. I r gret that some college men enter ii dustry with an inflated potion < their own value. They want to ca italize at once their education, ar the time they spent getting it. Th( feel it is unfair to begin at the bo torn, on the same basis with a be of 17 or 18 who has never been I college. "A college man. entering industr is worth no more to his employe than a common school or high schoi boy, unless he happens to be takin up some position in which higher ec ucation is directly applied. Eve then he has to adjust himsel Neither knowledge of the classics no mathematical proficiency can be cor verted overnight into a marketabl commodity. "Higher education has its chanc later, when the college boy has ma? tered all the minor details of th business. Then, if he went to col lege with serious purposes, am studied hard and systematically, h has the advantage of a thoroughl; trained mind to tackle larger prob lems. a mind which should be broad er and more flexible because of it greater powers of imagination a*n< logical reasoning." MllillDltKDlW HAIR REMEDY Crow* Hair and We Prove it b; Hundreds of Testimonials. It never tails to produce the de sired results. It enlivens and in vigorates the hair glands and tissue1 of the scalp, resulting in a contin uous and increasing growth of tin hair. Letters of praise are eontin ually coming in from nearly all part: of the country stating that Mllderd tna Hah Remedy has renewed th< growth of hair in cases that wer considered absolutely hopeless. / lady from Chicago writes: "After i short trial my hair stopped fallini and I now have a lovely head o hair. very heavy and over one and i half yards long." Milderdina Hair Remedy stimu lates the sralp, makes it healthy am keeps it so. It is the greatest seal; fnvfgorator known. It is a whole som~ medicine for both the hair am the scalp. Even a small bottle of i will put more genuine life in you hair than a dozen bottles of an other hair tonic ever made. 1 shows results from the very start. Now on sale at every drug stor and toilet store in the land. 50 and 91.00. M:Mredina Hair Remedy is th only certain destroyer of the d:inr ruft microbe which is the cause r 98 per <ent of hair troubles. Thcs pernicious, persistent and destrut live li'tle devils thrive on the ordir ary hair tonics. WHEN IS IT TWELVE? The Atlanta Constitution asks: Is it twelve o'clock when th clock strikes the first time n twelve o'clock at the last stroke? This interesting discussion earn ed a remarkable legal dispute in th superior court of Fulton count about twenty years ago when tli i?in juufttt .tiai snail j. ? larue \va presiding. By a court order a certain pape had to bo signed before 12 o'c'ocl The lawyer with the paper rushe into the court room and signed th paper as the court house clock bt gan to strike. The lawyer on the other side cot tended that the paper was signed to late, as it was 12 o'clock just as soo as the first stroke sounded. Judge Clarke ruled that it wasn 12 until you've counted all th strokes, if the clock is not in sigh The ease was appealed and th supreme court sustained Judg Clarke. Carefully Treat . Children's Colli Neglect of children's colds often laysth foundation of soriotis lung trouble. Oi the other hand, it is harmful to continu ally doAo delicato little stomachs with in teraal medicines or to keep the childrei always indoors. Plenty of fresh air in the bodroom and i good application of Vick's "Vap-O-Rub' Halve over the throat and cheet at the firs sign of trouble, will keep the little chapi free from colds without injuring their dl gestions. 25c, 60 *, or $1.00. ? VKK5V"?SA1M TI | KARMKRS' CONGRESS 1 WOULD CHANGE LAW py Recommends Amendment to Nmithliever Act in Connection With 1 ni Distribution of Funds. 1 or Indianupoli8, Ind., Oct. 20.?Reso- < in lutions favoring the Susan B. An- i is thony equal suffrage amendment to ! the federal constitution and recom- i at mending changes in the Smith-Lever ] law so that funds would be distribut- l in ed according to acreage under tillage i is and not according to population, ' e- were adopted at the closing of the ? n. National Farmers' congress here toof day. It was said the delegates fav- t p.jored Houston. Texas, as the next con- 1 id vention city and that the executive < ?y committee probably would accept I t- that choice. i >y The congress today also went on j rppnrH f'Jvnrincr wUhA>.nurAi IU ? ? . ...... 11IV n Iiuuianai of the Shellds, Myers and Phelan t v waterpower bills pending in the sen- I ^ ate; administration of the jarm loan > jl! board law for the benefit of the far- s ^ mers; no increase in freight rates as 1 j compensation for increased wages, f and an investigation of the manner In i f which the fight against the foot and > mouth disease was conducted in 1914 f ' and 1915. t John Skelton Williams. United I e States comptroller of the currency, s spoke today on "Federal Reserve e Banks and the Farmers." 1 Virtually all the old officers, in? I eluding President II. E. Stockbridge ~ I of Atlanta and Secretary J. F. Grif- h (l fin of Tiptonville, Tenn., were re- n e'elected o r\ g - BAKER REPUDIATES R CHANGE OF HUGHES c s cl :1 Characterizes Statement of l,alter as ?i Too Absurd to He Worthy of a Notce. a Elmira, N. Y., Oct. 29.?Newton u 11). Baker, secretary of war, last night n | was shown a clipping quoting him i k as comparing the Mexicans with the ? | American revolutionists. a "It is too absurd to be worthy of tl notice." he said, not concealing his displeasure at being misquoted. "I P couldn't think of such a thing, to r P say nothing of saying it. It is en- q tirely wrong. I didn't say anything t ,that could possibly be interpreted j< that way." f a THE BEST TEST * Is the Test of Time. ? S f Years ago this Eancaster resident a told of good results from using j Doan's Kidney Pills. Now L. P. Cly- t I K..~r. ~t I.-i- ?. -A uuiu, ui r rencii sireei connrms tneja former statement?says there hae ; ^ been no return of the trouble. Can p Lancaster people ask for more convincing testimony? ^ . Mr. Clyburn, says: "My kidneys were inactive and I I had backache. Doan's Kidney Pills, r procured at the Standard Drug Co.. * vi rid me of the trouble. "(Statement . given March 25. 1911.) II OVER THREE YEARS LATER, '.Mr. Clyburn said: "I have had no e further trouble with my kidneys c;sinc0 I used Loan's Kidney Pills." I Price 50c, at all dealers. Don't c I simply ask for a kidney remedy?get s I Doan's Kidney Pills?the same that Mr. Clyburn has twice publicly recommended. Eoster-Milburn Co., l '"| Props., Buffalo, N*. Y. t " e STORMS JOIN FORCES v WEAKEN IN INTENSITY j ?- Washington. Oct. 19,?Reports to- j night to the Weather Bureau said t that the Southern storm after joining forces with the Central West din- j turbance. appeared now as a weak j depression of wide area, covering the great Central Valleys and Lake re- . e I gions. It has been attended by ^ ir bc'vy rains throughout the entire |district east of the Mississippi River '"[except in the East C.ulf States, where ? the rains were local and light. v 1 8 | Temperatures are abnormally high ltfi in the South and East, but much ^ s colder weather Friday or Friday night will obtain from the Lake re- ( u gion to the Glllf States with lio-ht ' frosts Friday night in the (lulf dlsd rift. 8 "i The storm of the Atlantic Coast ^ 5"ihad not subsided tonight and storm f warnings still were displayed front ( '* ?' Oastport to Ilatteras. ^ 0 | 11 CAMl'AKJN TO (?KT $541,(NNt , KOI1 WOFFOItO (OLhKdK 't e| Spartanburg, Oct. 10. ?The cam- f 1 'paign to raise $56,000 for Wofforcl ie College, in Spartanburg, began to- < :e clay which is Founder's clay for the j 'college. Last night at the city Y. M. < C. A. the final organization of the ( I forces for the campaign was made ( | when the various committees who ] | are interested in the campaign, and , members of the Rotary Club, direc- , tors of the Chamber of Commerce, , , end ministers of the churches of the . i 1 ? icity met for a last conference before B 11he launching of the campaign today. ( ! For several weeks the various com- , ? imittees have been holding meetings $ to get the campaign started. On the * cancassing committee are 46 of the , ibest citizens of the city, and besides . I t'^ere will he probably 50 men con- < | meted with the movement. IE LANCASTER NEWS T KOUR DEAD, $100,000 LOS8, TOLL OK STORM Mobile, Ala., Oct. 19.?Reports late today from southern Alabama, increased the death toll In Wednesday's storm from two to four and the property damage by upwards of (100,000. Andalusa, a small town iear the Florida boundary line, appears to have been the chief sufferer, nany buildings being unroofed and several residences blown down, rhere one person was killed and sevjral others Injured. The other deaths reported today vas in Coffee county where many souses were said to have been levsled and all wires in the county >lown down. Several persons were njured during the gale, the reports iaid. Further investigations in thic city md Pensacola, today revealed that first reports of the storm damage vere approximately correct, loss on ihore being confined chiefly to un- , "oofed buildings and broken plate , ;lass windows. There were several ( narine disasters in each harbor. ( Vith the passing of the storm ship- ting today had again become nor- ] r?al, a number of vessels which had , i i >een tied up here because of the torni getting under w?v I FATHER TOLD HER TO SHOOT , AND KILL. MOTHER ? Asheville, Oct. 19.?Declaring that j er father had told her to kill her lother, Sallie Bryson, the 14-year- x Id Jackson county girl, who plead ? uilty to murder In the second deree recently in connection with the j rime, took the stand as the State's j hief witness against her father to- j, ay. The little girl declared that bout two weeks prellous to her j wful deed, Mr. Bryson and her lother had a "row" about another j lother, and that shortly after that?i( Iryson told her (Sallie) that her|c lother was going to whip her, andi^ dvised her to kill her mother if. lie mother used a whip. The little girl said her father load- f d the shotgun with buckshot and [ ilaced it w here sl%? could get it ^ Uickly. She said that Bryson! hreatened her with death unless she :illed her mother and that finally, earing that her father would keep lis word, and kill her. she took the hotgun and shot her mother. On cross examination the little ;ir 1 said she had visited several rel- , tives between the time her father I old her to kill her mother and the j imp when the killing took plac? nd had not told any of them about t. ilAN ATTEMPTED TO ASSASSINATE THE PRESIDENT?! \ I legod Machinist .lumped on Wilson's Automobile?Had Knife and Clieutieiti in Bottle?Placed I'tiller Arrest Pittsburg, Pa., Oct. 20. While 'resident Wilson and his party, ln-| hiding William J. Bryan, former! leeretary of state, were making an lutomobile tour of the city today, a nan with a bag of tools jumped 011 he running board of the president's lUtomobile, but was knocked off by a lecret service man. The man chases he president's conveyance for a dock before he was arrested by local letectlves. The prisoner gave the name ot tichard Cullon, aged 22, a tnachinst of this city. On his way to the lolice station he told the police thM le was not at all satisfied with Presilent Wilson's conduct of the Eurolean war. In the bag he carried was 1 knife with a blade five inches long ind a bottle of a liquid the police ire endeavoring to analyze. The prisoner is held by the police or observation. U'KMN't; (AMI* CHKKk S( HOOI, The first session of Camp Creek' ichool under the new arrangements vill open on Monday the 30th inst. it It o'clock. Kvery patron in the listrlct is requested to he present. We want all the scholars present so! we can organize and get supplied1 vith hooks. On the followinf Friday. Novemjer 3rd, will be picnic day and a grand educational rally. State Ku-j perintendent Swearingen, County) Superintendent I,ingle and Judge [ra Ft. Jones will deliver addresses We want everybody in the district !o come and bring big. full baskets jf something good for the Inner man. A cordial invitation Is extended to everybody. We want your presence, your co-operation ind your help to make the day a tureens along all lines. Don't forget the school, the day, the speakers, and last, but not least, don't Torget those big. full baskets. C. A. Plyler, Principal. Drives Out Malaria, Builds Up System rte Old Standard general strengthening tonic, GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC, driven out j V larla.enrlclu- the blood.and butlda up the ay*-1 lew. Atruttouic. For adulta and childten. 50c. I UESDAY, OCT. 24, 1916. RUB OUT PAIN* with good oil liniment. That** the sureft way to stop them. , The best rubbing liniment is MUSTANG LINIMENT I Good for the Ailments of j] Horses, Mules, Cattle, Etc. Qood for your own A ches. I Pains, Rheumatism, Sprains, Cuts, Burns, Etc. 25c. 50c. $1. At all Dealers. GOLDSMITH IS ACQUITTED OF WHITT 0LAVB ACT Richmond, Va., Oct. 19.?It took a Jury in Federal court today less than five minutes to acquit Aivin P. Goldsmith, 21, 416 Gower street, Greenville, S. C., of violating the Mann white slave act while on his honeymoon with his girl wife, formerly Eula P. Noble, of Greenville. \ccording to Federal agents, the 'ouple were forced to vacate their "oom in the Hotel Bellevue, Balttnore, a few daya before they were irrested here June 26. at Stumpfs lotel while en route home. It was brought out that Congressnan Wyatt Aiken, of the Third >outh Carolina District, recently vrote a letter to Judge Waddill sayng that Goldsmith had always borne i good reputation for industry, soiriety and honesty. While being held as a witness drs. Goldsmith occupied the same ell in Henrico county jail which leulah Binford, the other woman in he famous Beattie murder case, ocupied while held as a witness. On he walls are these words scribbled n pencil: "I spent forty-seven ays in this place.?Beulah Binord." RUB-MY-TISM Will cure Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Headaches, Cramps, Colic Sprains, Bruises, Cuts, Burns, Old Sores, Tetter, Ring-Worm, Eczema, etc. Antiaeptio Anodyne, used inte^all" or externally. 25c AT' r |? P We < * If you A cotton | ness ar rGive uj M F. R ? p; U your c< ?We your & LANCAS HAYS BIG EATERS GET KIDNEY TROUBLE Take a Glass of Cold Water and Kidneco to Flush Kidneys if Back Hurts. Omit All Meats From Diet If You Feel Rheumatic or Bladder Bothers. The American men and women must guard constantly against kidney trouble, because we eat too much and our food Is rich. Our blood la filled with uric acid which the kidneys strive to filter out. they weaken from over-work, become sluggish; the elimlnative tissues clog and the result is kidney trouble, bladder weakness and a general decline in health. ! When your kidneys feel like lumps of lead, your back hurts or the urine is cloudy, full of sediment or you are obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night; If you suffer I with sick headache or dizzy, nervous spells, acid stomach, or have rheumatism when the weather is bad, get from your druggist about one dozen kldneco tablets; take one with a glass of water before each meal for a few* days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famouB remedy is made from perfectly harmless ingredients and acts quick- | : ly and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate clogged kidneys; to neutralize the acids In the urine so it no longer Is a source of irritation, thus ending bladder disorders. Kidneqo is inexpensive; cannot Injure, make no mistake, insist on kidneco. It belongs in every home, because nobody can make a mistake by having a good kidney flushing any time. NEW FEMINIST MOVE. Springfield, 111., Oct. 20.?A bill that will make the parents of a child born out of wedlock husband and wife as soon as the child is born, will be backed by the Illinois Equal Suffrage association. Such a measure was proposed at the convention of the association here today by Dr. j Lucy Waite of Chicago, who an- _ nounced she would introduce the ? bill in the next general assembly. \ TENT! ire prepared to gin your c want the best turnout let us gii for you. We appreciate your id will do our best to satisf; 3 a trial and let us prove it to ; \ / I I / J will save money if you let otton. will pay you the market pri eed. TER COTTON # 1 * r-JI. ' / THE REASON 1 *[ WE'RE V?TV FROM M0RNIN6 ZT ? W ' To Nl&MT tZJuWJiS&'rzk ouRL yT^i meats v \3k"//> ? 7) and our. VV SCAi.ES >SANPOOC /?oJ\^K\? Me 0I>s ^ \ IT)/ I ri&HT? YOU GET EVERY OUNCE of meat you pay for if you trade with us aud a lot of courtesy and quick, pleasant attention that doesn't cost you one penny. Drop in and take a look at the well kept assortment of meats we offer?they'll tempt you and you'll buy. CATAWBA MEAT MARKET Phone 210 Lancaster, S. C. "What Congress has done concerning a | Government Armor Plant and what peopla ara 4 r thinking about It** la Editorial Com man! TW? ii the title of a booklet we have prepared. We hall be glad to send a copy free to any ! one interested. < Bethlehem Steel Co. South Bethlehem, Pa. ?e Do First Class Printing. II iON ~nlE :otton. T* i your * busi A Y you. L1 you. R M \ c \ K R ?I O us gin ^ ce for | OIL CO. ' t i