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NEWSPAPERMEN IN ^ PRESIDENT'S PARTY j KILLED IN ACCIDENT ] Portland, Ore., Sept. 16.?I^n F. } Allen, of the Cleveland Plain-Dealer, ] .member of President Wilson's party, } and James R. Patterson, of Canyon ? City, Ore., were killed, and two other newspaper men injured in an auto- j mobile collision on the Columbia ] \ highway this afternoon while the : Presidential party was returning to ( Pqrtland from a tour over the high- j way. . i The injured are: Robert T. Small, ( Philadelphia Public Ledger, and ( Stanley "Reynolds, Baltimore Sun. \ The extent of Mr. Small's injuries ( had not been ascertained at- the hospital where he was taken, but friends < said they were not considered sen- } ous. Mr. Reynolds suffered a broken ^ shoulder. " ] Mr. Patterson was driving the au- j tomobile. He had volunteered his , services to assist in taking care of , the presidential party here today. i The others were occupants of the . Patterson machine. Witnesses said , Mr. Patterson was trying to regain \ the position his automobile had lost j in line. h It was seventeen automobiles back' | from the automobile bearing Presi-'* dent and Mrs. Wilson. While Pat- ; terson was attempting to regain his ? position-in line, a spetator's auto mobile is said to have crossed ahead of him and in trying to avoid this ? - ar his machine struck another and overturned. NEW BUSINESS SEASON. In the South the new business season opens September 1. There is.already a touch of Fall in the air, the cotton wagons are coming in, cotton gins are in operation, general harvesting operations are being pushed, new stocks of merchandise are being received, and there are in evidence the thousand and one things that denote the turn o' the year, both from a seasonal and a business standpoint. j The South anticipates, with entire confidence, a busy, prosperous Fall 1 season. The crop yield, although disappointing in sections, is as a whole satisfactory, and prices are recordbreaking. The season opens withy godo grades of cotton bringing over < ii - nm Capfc I anni II 9 Greatest 8how 01 I GENERAL PER I ' Hear the Only Jazz 1 Kind. This i&the s; 1918, until sai been seen by 1 manded the 3< son said after show the D. S. HICKORY N S F. C III PRICE?25c, ! 8 / SO cents a pound, and with attractive prices for corn, meat, potatoes, hay, E>eanuts and other farm products. Industrially, the South was never more active. There is a steady market and good prices for every staple article that is manufactured in our section of the country. Labor in the South, as in other j parts of the country, is receiving the | i>est wages ever paid. There is a demand for labor, a demand that exseeds the supply, owing to certain fundamental conditions, partly American, partly world-wide. Every man >f even fair capacity who wants work :an get work, and at remuneration >hat is at least reasonable,' if not iownr\ght attractive. There is far more money in the 3oulk than ever before. The business nen of the South have far more conidence in themselves, in their customers and in their section of the country than ever before. The South 3tood the stress of a world war and 3tood it well, ' notwithstanding the fact that war-benefits, in a business way, went largely to other sections of the country. It is now the South's turn to cash in on the business blessings that the present world-conditions bring; blessings, it may be ob served, that are brought about by peace and not by war.?Industrial Index. , ? WANT CONGRESS TO ACT AGAINST INFLUENZA SPREAD . Washington, ?ept. 15.?With some ases' of influenza already reported by the United States public health service, efforts will be made this week to spur congress into taking step3 that will prevent a general- recurrence of the disease as it Occurred, last year. . ; . Representative Fess, Qhio, who ha> introdued a bill providing for gov ernment investigations in the hope of finding a cure for the plague, is planning to point out to the house this week the great danger of congressional" inactivity. His bill has been slumbering in a committee for several months. - - .. . All scientists agree that the only way to find a cure. for the disease is to isolate tne germ tnat causes it, Mr. Fess states, and this probably can be accomplished only through EM ain Irving G'Ha1 iE I A * * - * ritt Kind I ?TIREO?ST i,Hm? fti.n Hif Band of Its w " ^ 18 Real Soldiers?Real ame shojv played in Fran ling for home March 17, General Pershing, who p }th, officially stated that the last performance (\ M." Gen. L. D. Tyson si [UTS." OND 50c, 75c. $1.00. Plus W expensive experiments in government I iaboiatoiies. "Congress apparently is showing a distinct apathy on this legislation/' he said, "and despite its great 'importance there seems to be little interact. in if. f!oncrpss must either appropriate a comparatively srnpll j amount to find a cure for influenza, | or we may be confronted with the necessity of providing large sums for relief work, if a general epidemic accurs, as many medical men predict.' He urged that communities hard hit by the epidemic of last year write their congressmen urging action on the bill, before the epidemic comes upon the country. This Greenwood Woman Grateful Declare* She Found Tanlae Fine Medicine?Say* This Medicine Made Her Feel "Entirely O , Well and Strong." Mrs. Ola Anderson, of 116 Smythe St., Greenwood, S. C., declared she "found laniac to be a very nne medicine for a generally broken down condition and nervous prostration," in a statement she gave some time ago in indorsement of Tan^ac. "I had suffered from a general break 'down and nervous troubles of a very aggravated nature for some time," continued Mrs. Anderson, "and I was so nervous and irritable I could hardly stand it. "My appetite had left me and I was very weak. I managed to keep going ,though, and I did my housework the best I could under the circumstances, but I never felt like doing anything. "I finally deided to try Tanlac for this condition and I took two bottles. The Teniae gave me a good, appetite right away and built up my whole system and restored my strength. I felt a great deal better in , every-way when the second bottle was gone and I quit taking Tanlac. The medicine relieved my nervousness, and when I took the last dose I felt entirely different and strong and was again able to do my housework well. I am glad to praise Tanlac, for I found it to be such a fine medicine." , (Adv.) ORYNl y, Headquarters THE GREATE8T LAUGHI HCK< AND ORCHESTRA COMPRISED :kory division ORCHE Performers, Company o ice during the long drear; 1919. The Hickory Nuts i ronounced it the greatest 4-Vi a rlirl mnvn -prtv +} tllV/ Oiiv VV U.1U. lliUlV/ XVX VI vhile the men were still ii lid: "Be sure you come tc :: AN] rar Tax. (Matinee: j" . ?- ; .' * \ James H. Austin A - I Austin r~ * We beg to anno; " ville City and C the Bowden-Sii " eluding stock o # . The business wi quarters and w: Penny until Oc m~' will arrive to ta ney will remain : preciate the ? ' * friends. We expect to J proprietary me tionery, candies baccos of all k; carried in a firs Special attentic fj tions, which wil and accuracy. Your businet I Austin-Per - JHHH ITC^OPEI I I ll AB'VILLE f Jl M MATINEE A NIGHT Troop, Thirtieth D NQ SHOW OF A.E.F. DRY v / > . OF MEN AND TWO WAR BRIDES 0 i^Hindenbergl STRA if 36, 3 Decorated, 17 Wounc y months after the signing of t entertained the men from Dixi< laughing show of the A. E. F. le morale of the division than i i service): "If I had my way 1 > my home town." Ask any re NUAL 3:3tf?Night 8:46) TICKET; * V 0 f f Lewis I Perrin Di Company _ ince to our friends in iounty that we have \ iipson Drug Compa f goods and good w 11 be continued at the ill be in charge of. Di ttober 1, when Dr. . ,ke active charge. D] l with the firm and ^ patronage of his i seep a full line of dicines, toilet articl< 5, cigars, cigarettes, i inds. Everything, ii t class drug, store. n will be'given to pr 11 be filled with prom ;s is solicited and wil appreciated. rin Drug Com] -v k HOUSI asygj _ -4 division, Prese NU1 c THE SOUTH'S C ma Seats on Sale UlllC Avold the RlI 18 Reservati 1 _ J 1A A iea?iv /VC18. he armistice, Novel 3 as well as 100,000 Gen. E. M. Lewis, iny other work. Gei [ would give every ir turned soldier abc t n S ON SALE AT B< - v " '* * * & ? -?i HBO Perrin -.s. I ug I Abbe- - ^ / I )OUght I ny in- B Sb i same I Geo. I Austin r. Pen- - m ill ap'nrmer _ __ js, sta- I ind to- i t I i fact, H escrip .ptness - i I. >?? ib. I I m I ??g HittMBinpiMk ^ ? wll > ? .->> ants 'S" IWN SHOW . I at Box Office. sh, Make Your ions Early. mber 11th, others, has who com1. R. S. Failan in the >ut " THE >~U~R )X OFFICE j j | =X?