University of South Carolina Libraries
GENERA Mmni4tiim(Nun?HNiuitni?fMMunuiiiinifAiiHiiiitiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiirtmumiMiniiiiniiiiiiiiiini! .. Thomas McRie Neely and Earl .Partlow Steele of Roc Hill (whc have been at Camp Sevier, have ~ been commissioned^ as second lieutv e'nanfs in the National Army and ordered to Camp Pike, Arkansas. ? f London, June 8.~"After the land { forces have driven the French and English beyond Paris, it will be the turn of the kaiser's navy to drive the English fleet off the seas," Grand Admiral Von Tirpitz is quoted ,V as declaring in an interview with the publisher of the Kieler Zeitung. . \ Washington, June 10.?Again the Germans have failed to dent the .* American line. Northwest of Cha teau Thierry, said General Pershing in today's communique, the enemy made a fresh attack in the vicinity of Bouresches, but the thrust was -. completely broken down, with severe losses to the attackers. ? " $' ' Berne, June 10.?A reign of terk a** - -xj: .1 ' ... , . , ror exists in Austria-Hungary. There 'Mx- v .is unprecedented shooting and arf resting. Batches of persons are being banished en masse. Deputies, : mayors, priests and political lead;'f -jers are being imprisoned by the tens X '. :of thousands. The state of affairs Ti is exceeding the autocratic regime . of Emperor Charles' predecessor, Emperor Francis Jpseph. IsLondon, June 10.?A dispatch to :, . - The Times from the Hague quotes a . neutral who has arrived there Z?- -..from Germany as stating that an epidemic of black smallpox is rag* inS among the workmen of the y- ..-.j Krupp plant at Essen, with four or five fatal cases occurring daily. Vaccination of every worker is being i _ compelled. The outbreak, the dis^ % . patch adds, is attributed to under feeding and unsanitary conditions. ' - ? .> Washington, June 10.?Immediate dispatch of an American expedition ? ' . into Siberian and Russian territory is provided for in a resolution offer . ;ed in the Senate this afternoon by Senator King, of Utah. The resolu tion calls for sending an American expeditionary force to co-operate ' with Japanese and Chinese forces is combating the German forces which are reported to be sweeping r into Siberia and other Russian terri? $ tory." Provision also is made for P sending a commission from the Unl' ited States to Russia to work }n cooperation with the American ambassador there to offset German fcpjpi:. propaganda. , * In each of the last four months, ' beginning with March, the Germans have struck in the west, as follows: March 21?Offensive against Amiens opened onv the Picardy plains. . ;v April 9?Germans begin drive on Flanders front in what was regard Bp;; . ed as an attempt to break through to the channel. May 27.?German offensive on the Aisne-Marne field begins. June 9.?Germans strike blow between Noyon and Montididier. Dublin, June 8.?A pledge against conscription will be signed by women throughout Ireland tomorrow when the festival of St. Columbcille is ob. * served. The pledge reads: "Because enforcement of conscription without consent is tyranny; ' "Resolved, that we will resist; that we will not fill the places of men deprived of work through refusing enforced military service, and that we will do all in our power to help rthe families of/men suffering through resistance." > .N . . In such acts as this, Ireland is a ^ . traitor to Democracy. $2* *. ' ' An Atlantic Port, June 11.?More . than fifty large passenger and freigh vessels and numerous sailing vessels have arrived at this port in VJ. " the last few days despite the activi'' ties of German submarines in At* lantic waters, it became known today. During the last forty-eight * hours thirty-one steam vessels ag" . gregating 100,000 tons have been < reported safe ih home waters. This * includes 70,000 tons of shipping which arrived today. Two big trans Atlantic liners were among the ar iirafmmiiiumimmmiiumminiMiniiiimirmiiMmtitmiuititmmimMtiittMMmtnMmntMiftiMiiit* lL NEWS [ Washington, June 11.?Unified direction of the Allied-American s supply system will soon be put into , effect. One man?a virtual "direcI tor" or a genral directing board, I will be appointed. Just as the Al- j lies regard it essential to have a sinJ gle command for the armies, it is ] ! now regaraea essential wiai xnere 1 , Should be 'a unified control of supplies. It is regarded just as important to have the hard-tack and bacon, the shells and cartridges, disi tributed properly, without duplication and by the shortest route, as it is to have unified direction for the army. I Js / An Atlantic Port, June 11?-News was brought here today of a triple victory scored over German U-boats by a United States transport May 30?a grand Memorial Day celebration. The deadly fire by naval'gun crews aboard the transport sank one U-boat, drove away a second and crippled a third so that it was speedily captured by the transport's destroyer convoy. ' News of the transport's victory was obtained from members of its crew on its arrival hpro This was on the trans- " port's last eastward trip. On its return trip it was attacked by more submarines, but drove them off. Charleston, S. C., June 11.?One of the first sabotage cases ever tried in a federal court, it is believed, under the act recently passed, was j heard here Monday afternoon when Louis Boette, a 16-year olfl boy of this city, of German extraction, was found guilty with recommendation to mercy. Judge H. A. M. Smith t sentenced him to four years in the < national training school for boys at * Washington. Boette was employed at the Vfilk and ^Murdoch plant, * where boilers for government we're t being made, and placed bits of nails * in a pneumatic drill. * t . v < 5 Washington, June 11.?Solemn ? warning that "the/ war can be lost t in 'America as well as- on -the fields ^ of France" was .voiced today by F , . D President Wilson in a telegram to y the American Alliance for Labor ? and Democracy, in session at St. t! Paul, again urging that no labor d difficulties be permitted to interrupt " ! war work. . "An ill-considered or unjust interruption of effectual labor of the country may fhake it impossible to j win it," continued the President's telegram. "No controversy between capital and lobar should be suffered jto interrupt it until every instrumentality set up by the Government for amicable settlement has been employed and its intermediation ' headed to the utmost; and the Gov- ? ernment has set. up instrumentali- j ties wholly fair and adequate." f KllffilO ; BLADDER BOTHER Take a glass of Salts to flush out your ; * 'Kidneys and neutralize irri- * tating acids. i > 1 TiJno" onil Rloildpr wpolrn?u rMlilt I ^ from uric acid, says a noted authority. The kidneys filter this acid from - the blood and pass it on to the bladder, where it often remains to irritate and inflame, I causing a burning, scalding sensation, or setting up an irritation at the neck of the bladder, obliging you to seek relief j two or three times during the night. I The sufferer is in constant dread, the ? 1 water passes sometimes with a scalding sensation and is very profuse; again, 1 there is difficulty in avoiding it. 1 Bladder weakness, most folks call It, 2 because they can't control urination. While it is extremely annoying and some- 1 times very painful, this is really one of j the most simple ailments to overcome. , Get about four ounces of Jad Salts 1 fwvv* TTour nlioi^nflniaf en/1 a 4oKl O. 1 | 11 ulu j vui puui uiu^/tov uuu vunv w ?* ? ? ' spoonful in a glass of water before < breakfast, continue this for two or three days. This will neutralize the acids in * the urine so it no longer is a source of ] irritation to the bladder and urinary organs which then act normally again. Jad Salts is inexpensive, harmless, : I and is made from the acid of grapes and j lemon juice, combined with lithia, and is UBed by thousands of folks who are subject to urinary disorders caused by i uric acid irritation. Jad Salts is splen- , did for kidneys and causes do bad effects whatever. Here you have a pleasant, effervescent ] lithia-water drink, which quickly relieves bladder trouble An Inside Bath Makes You Look and Feel Fresh Says a glass of hot water with phosphate before breakfast' keeps Illness away. Thli excellent, '.common-sense ^ health measure being adopted by millions. Physicians the * world over recommend the inside bath, claiming this is of vastly more importance than outBide cleanliness, because the skin pores do not absorb impurities Into the blood, causing ill health, while the pores in the ten yards of bowels do. Men and women are urged to drink each morning, before breakfast a glass of hot water with a teaspoonfiil of limestone phosphate In it, as a harmless means of helping to wasb from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels the previous da?s indigestible material, poisons, sour bile and toxins; thus cleansing,* sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary canal before putting more food into the stomach. Just as soap and hot water cleanse and freshen the skin, so hot water and limestone phosphate act on the elimLnative organs. Those who wake up with bad breath, coated tongue, nasty taste or have a lull, aching head, sallow complexion, acid stomach; others who are subject to bilious attacks or constipation, shohld obtain a quarter pound of HmeBtone phosphate at the drug store, rhis will cost very little but is sufficient to demonstrate the value of in side bathing. Those who continue it each morning are assured of pronounced results, both in regard to lealth and appearance. AH OLD RECIPE TO DARKEN HI f 0 ?? n mmm ? A ? ? ' f"M sage Tea ana suignur lurns Gray, Faded Hair Dark and Glossy/ * Almost everyone knows that Sage rea and Sulphur, properly compoundid, brings back the natural color and uatre to the hair when faded, streaked >r gray. Tears ago the only way to get hl? mlrtiirfl tons to mnlrA It at home. vhich is mussy and troublesome. Nowadays we simply ask at any I rug store for "Wyeth's Sage and Sul?hur Compound." You will get a large >ottle of this old-time recipe improved >y the addition of other ingredients, it very little cost Everybody~~uses his preparation now, because no one an .poaalJbly tell, that you^ darkened 'our hair, as it does it so nSturally jid evenly. Tou dampen a sponge or oft%brush with it and draw this hrough your hair, taking one small trand af a time; by morning the gray lair disappears, and after another ap llcation or two, your hair becomes eautifully dark, thick and glossy and ou look years younger. Wyeth's Sage nd Sulphur Compound is a delightful ollet requisite. It is not intended for he cure, mitigation or prevention of isease. wannicgnuM lssuzo anr TB3. UNITED STATS# JPOYERNJAEITJ Buy Them And Help Win The War rOE SALE EVERYWHERE WHAT THE WAR SAVINGS CAMPAIGN MEANS TO THE COLORED PEOPLE OF S. C. t : First of all, it means an oppor;unity to demonstrate how truly parotic they are by showing their villingness to sacrifice some of their uxuries and comforts in order that ;he soldiers, many of whom are col>red, may have all the supplies and equipment they need. When you juy things that you don't need, you leprive the soldiers of things they lo need. The War Savings campaign is a splendid opportunity for the colored seople to save money in case hard ;imes should come again. You buy 1 War Savings Stamp now for $4.17 md on January 1, 1923, you get ?5.00 for it. You invest money ;hat would otherwise be wasted. The vise man looks ahead, and puts aside money for the "rainy day." You jet interest at 4 per cent; you are lending money to the government }f the United States?the strongest inu saiesu nauuii unu guvtjriiiiiem in the world. In case of necessity, you can get the stamps redeemed at any time. It is the best investment in the entire world. You are not giving away your money?you are simly lending it at a good rate of interest. ? . V - ," / . ^5 ** | EVI m m I Ser 1 We have boi I down, rebuildi teries. One c 1 to specialize ir 1 weeks we will U wants electricc (CALL % ' <* |Ut3 ''ililli l: 11:11; III III 1? ITNEW 1 . Ol Ma I Save yourself labor ar I , ?and save coal for > No coal hods or ash p dependable stove tha gas range?for all kir The long blue chimi little as you require. | In 3,000,000 American hon | cool, clean and comfortabli Made in I-2-3-4 burner sis Ask your dealer about the 1 Use Aladdin Security OilSTANDARD I I Washington, D. C. f Norfolk, Va. Every time you buy a War Savings Stamp you are helping to win the war, just like the patriots of your race who are in the army. When the war is over, and they come back to America, you don't want to be pointed out as the man who refused to back them up by not lending the government money. You :rea rice Sta jght a regular ol ing and rechargir kf nnr mpn kac crt 'A V/Ul 111V/11 11UU i this kind of worl be prepared to < illy. * . ON US! fuari Phone 58 v I. / IL COOKSTOVI ke Patriotism I id drudgery?save money by using ii rour country?by using a New Perfe< ans, no soot or smoke. A cool kitch it can be lighted and accurately regv ids of cooking. ley gives clean, intense, odorless h? lea New Perfection it saving coal for the nati e. x?, with or without cabinet top and oven. New Perfection Kerosene Water Heater. -Always available, inexpensive. OIL COMPANY (NE Baltimore, Md. Richmond, V*. Charlotte, N. C J \ . ALADDIN SECURITY OIL STANDARD CILGOMttUft don't want to be the unpatriotic man who wouldn't give up a single luxury for his country's sake. Show that you stand back of the soldiers by pledging to save and to invest in War Savings Stamps. Many of the colored people have shown their patriotism by helping the Red Cross, and by buying Liber tvaummmaamaL lDy| yi '{/ tion I g? ! ltfit for tearing 1 ig storage bat- jS Dne to Atlanta 1 k and in afew gj attend to your I 1 J r j . IS ../ fa- $$ m m . age 1 IMK I ?? j????? ???? W, J I IIS I ay llllljjjl Qjj nexpensive kerosene US M :tion Oil Cook Stove. MB ien and an all round ImH dated as easily as a | Hfl eat?as much or as ! ! !| hH ,on and keeping kitchens 11 111 III W JERSEY) I Charleston, W. V?. j MSfB Charleston, S. C |||||J|||| t KEttj ty Bonds. War Savings Stamps cost so little that every one can HRS8 show his or her patriotism. This isBBHS an opportunity for all. FOR YOUR SAKE, FOR THE^^f SOLDIERS' SAKE, AND FORHH YOUR COUNTRY'S SAKE, BUYHU ALL THE WAR SAVINGS STAMPSH| THAT YOU CAN. 99V