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. If BORN THE SCHOOLS BOOKS 1 Our ever hopeful friends, the intellectual radicals, bear an amazingly close'resemblance to the donkey with the bale of hay roped to a pole projecting beyond its head. Their revolution is always just one , jump in advance. They spend a season hastily reforming the world and predicting just how and when the great earthquake is going to seize us. And when not a tremor results upon the Appointed day they stake cut a brand new method and a quite n"Qi4nrn and trn to Work as 11 VWi U*V4VW4.. .. cheerfully and expectantly as before. War was impossible, quite obviously impossible, in July, 1914, foi , any one of a dozen reasons. Then when war came * ?* to;-, the rest of the world the thing was for us to stay out of it, c ? Cr; . I Attention ? Aka Maw In Pi V* A ^ W V 4mmm mm I Make of Battery. I We are Agents Foi * J BATTERY With E For 18 Months. ? Drive By For a t | Water. J City I I Mm A IV J When you hai | j | WRITE, PHC : v "' j' . j The SOUTF REALTY \ ; \ ;;i ! ; r i V '''A Home Office GRE % ' * . *a s V ' is. The Land i % \ IM || COOKIE ; I %, Fr< WHEN the childrer romp in hungry a; young bears, here are som< wholesome, economical de I lights that will not only b< ; received with glee, but wil satisfy the most ravenou: appetite in a most whole , some manner. I* 00 DCS 94 cup shortening 2 cups susrar % cup milk i 2 eggs | % teaspoon grated nutmag r4 I 1 teaspoon vanilla extract or I grated rind of 1 lemon i 4 cups flour i 3 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder Cream shortening and suga together; add milk to beatc; jjf eggs and beat again; ad slowly to creamed shorten ing and sugar; add nutme and flavoring; add 2 cup flour sifted with baking pow der; add enough more flou to make stiff dough. Roll oi very thin on floured boarc cut with cookie cutter, sprir kle with sugar, or put a raisi or a piece of English walni in the center of each. Bal about 12 minutes in hot ovei Cocoa Drop Cakes 4 tablespoons shortening 1 cup sugar legs H cup milk 1*4 cups flour 3 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder , Vk cup cocoa >? teaspoon salt y 1 teaspoon vanilla extract "Bake . | Mr. Wilson was a great man to! | these intellectuals as long as he did J not know what the war was about, j As soon as he discovered he was ! anathema, and the pacifists transj ferred their hopes elsewhere, prini cipally to the Germans' by some :! strange perversity. | While the peace was being writ* , j ten it was the leagae of nations ! that was to remold the world. But, i 11 alas! those fond hopes have utterly i! vanished from the radical creed. i Nothing is more disliked than this i same league. Even Bolshevism has i! lost its bloom. It is beginning to be conceded that no complete guide to Utopia is likely to be written by . Messrs. Lenine and Trotzky. Thus our radicals come out at the next and last chance, educai tion. They are conceding the stupi! dity of existing generations and the , folly of trying to convert them. Car Owners i osition to Repair Any jj the EVER-READY I Written Guarantee ' rree Inspection and ? ? i Garage ( ' . , I I ncE j ire land to sell i )NE or WIRE ! i i atlantic r co., inc -fia i . I, :enwood, s. c. Auction People / I ~ 1 = Another Royal Suggestio S and SMAI jm the New Royal Cook 1 > a I s ROYAL ; BAKING ! POWDER it Absolutely Pure a it :e n. with Royal and Therefore, presto! let the revolu-J tion be shifted to the next genera- j tion! Burn the existing schoolbooks, { teach children that peace is every- ; thing and all men everywhere are j brothers, and then at last will come \ the millennium. As Mr. Jerome K. < 1 ] Jerome douches the latest pacifist hepe in Common Sense: j] "To the generation that is fling-- j] ing aside its school satchels and.] pouring out into the world mis- \ chief ha~ already been done. The ! joys of battle have been installed j into our youngsters. The man on } .the nrancinc horse, slaving and 4 laying waste the land, has been duly held up to him as the model hero. Our empire days have come 1 and gone, the Union Jack has been j duly waved and the fact impressed i upon his mind that the English-. man's God-appointed duty is to re- j lieve every other country not strong enough to defend itself of the burden of its own possessions,' that he sun 'has no right to\ set upon ' any part of the earth that does' not belong to Great Britain. Every boy you speak to dreams of' one day driving a tank or dropping bombs> from an aeroplane. Whether upon' Germans, Russians, Frenchmen or Americans, he is?to do him justice?impartially indifferent. Whiit every high-spirited girl dreams of being shot at sight? as a Red Cross j nurse and having a hideous me- j morial erected to her memory in 1 Trafalear Square." J It is something to have the revolution postponed a generation. But we do wish our pacifist friends would go a step further and, examining a few boys and girls, would find out just how much wars and enmities are dmplanted in their soul by education and just how much native scrappniess is congenitai and indelible. Perhaps some of 'the unnatural national animosities could be extinguished by the truth. They i are being so lessened, as a matter j of fact. But the will to fight needs j r.3 culture in the average boy. It ; f tows in him along with measles j r id baseball and calf-love, and woe ! to the parents who try artificially ; t suppress it. Witness the clergy- ; mat's son of sacred tradition!?N. < Y. Tribune. tuit fpnfrai. TWILIGHT ZONE/* . . . r The Republican advisory commit- 1 tee on policies and platform has 1 carefully summarized the atgu-1J merits-for and against larger Feder-!< al activities in the fields of educa- ] tion, public road construction and : public health. These fields have been 1 in the main, state fields. We have no national university, although i George F. Edmunds, of Vermont, j i >^hen he was a Senator used to ] introduce a bill to create one onj] the first day after each Congress i organized. The Morrill act laid the.< foundation of the state agricul? n j -L CAKES Book I Cream shortening; add sugar j I and well-beaten egg; beat I <i'a11 A A A millr elnurlv* ciffr I i VYtl* ouu auu uiiitb g*v *v I w..? j . flour, baking powder, salt and cocoa into mixture; stir until t smooth, add vanilla. Put one tablespoon of batter into each greased muffin tin and bake in moderate oven about 20 minutes. Cover with boiled ! icing. _ _ , Orange Cakes 4 tablespoons shortening 1 cup sugar % cup milk 1 egg 2 cups flour 3 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder % teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon orange extract grated rind of 1 orange Cream shortening; add sugar slowly, beating well; add milk a little at a time; then add ! well-beaten egg; sift flour, baking powder and salt together and add to mixture; add flavoring and grated orange rind; mix well. Bake in greased shallow tin, or individual cake tins, in hot oven 15 to 20 minutes. When cool cover with orange icing. COOK BOOK FffEE Just off the press ajid finer than ever before. This ' new Royal Cook Book containing 400 delightful recipes, will be sent to you free If you will send your name and address. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO. II no r niton otroofc H I Kow York City 1 be Sure" I Hj v !: i ii |! f New . . I' I . j . K^:j \ ' /T...~ -M ' jl ' / 17 . \[ While extremely 11 and distinction c more expensive i They are truly d the woman of tas If you are in neec erately priced, y< WEL WORTH. Fashioned of de\ perfect fit. THE SAME LOW PR THE NATION C PHD i' ' ^ ;ural college syBtem by <granting' federal public lands to the states for educational purpose?. Recently Congress has gone further and appropriate Federal funds for the support of secondary grade vocational schools. (The Blair bill, so long before Con?res, sought to make the government a contributor to the state public schools. It never pased, although many Southern Democrats suspend-J ed their state rights prejudices ii} order to support it. Now there is a movement to ereate an executive Department of Education, with the Secretary of Education a member of the Cabinet. Federal fsnds, perhaps $100,000,000. yearly, are to be apropriated to improve state primary schools, especially for the purpose of overcoming illiteracy. Universal education is a moral and economic asset for any nation. The | chief political objection to national infiltration in this field is Jthe still widespread fear of an abridgment of state autonomy. The construction of public roads has also been almost exclusively a state task. There was an attempt in the period after the War of 1812 to commit Congress to the theory that roads were public improvements, on a par with river and harbor betterments. National turnpikes GEORGIA FARMS FOR SALE 1 2650 Acres $40 per acre 700 Acres $50 per acre 300 Acres $35 per acre 200 Acres $35 per acre 245 Acres $25 per acre I All thp above is adioin ling or near Hazlehurst. ;Ga. E. L. THOMAS, Hazlehurst, Ga. , \ CHARMING Welworth B ' I I r - V ' ' ' ... fc FRESH and dainty1* the flowers of Spring an Fashioned in the lat< priced at just $3.0i WITHIN REACI modest in price they hav >ne ordinarily expects to f models. ainty Blouses and are cer te and thrift 1 of a charmingly distinct 3u will make no mistake >endable fabrics?careful z \ ice 11300 I >veri ^u,uu the 1 \ H i HQ > ' e>r\r n UCDC rWI V OVJL.LS Jl ijkii\<u v1 ii-< i \ ' ' were projected. But the state rights bogey soon halted these plans. Con- i gress recently appropriated $108,- < 000,000 to be apportioned for road j construction to states which were 1 ready to spend they: own funds for i that purpose. Good roads are popu- 1 lar and economically advantageous, i The objection to Federal aid on a 1 large scale is the danger that road i appropriation bills may become \ | "grab-bag" measures, like the pub- (! lie buildings and river and harbor : 1 appropriation bills. The creation of (i a Department of Public Works,' 1 which the committee recommends, < is not contingent on an extension bf ' ' the government's present activities. J j It is justified a$ an economic con- ( 'solidation of the many Federals 1 ncpneies already engaged in con-11 struction and engineering work. < || ' :\ THE UN IVI j' *. The Ford 0;-.e Ton ' . f '? just as faithfully and < i v,? Ford Touring Car serv and economically. Th , . . t sity to the grocer botl in bringing goods frorr I' from the country. I I , . . because there isn't , B , business man that it d I of quick transportation Come in, examine the over the subject. I f7'-* y-m "-si 1 AM innr? I e these Blouses. f est modes and | i ; II 4 OF ALL : I I e all the grace I ind only in the | tain to appeal iu 7 ive Blouse, mod- 1 in choosing a I workmanship 1 ' 11 * ' THE SAME STYLES , : ^ NATION OVER ^ fltV J As to public health, pressure it now all toward much broader Fed- : jral control and regulation. After 1 long* dispute th? Fedaral authorl- m ties took over the quarantine service. The Department of Agriculture : f.V.^ looks very carefully after the heahfc ; af farm animals. Why shoudnt Ji there be. an extension of the-' func- tions of our present rudimeatary , Federal Public ' Health Service? ? Health is an economic and fecial factor of the highest importance. Can't the government at least try bo do as much for men, women and " children as it does for pigs??I. Y, ''/$ Tribune. i -1?Amorican Hrtier stores J\. CIlcWll Ul a . will be established throughout China a$ rapidly as arrangement# :an be made. .. -! ;.?=, g/'' rnmmmim?mmm?mm?m?? 9?^/ j tKSAL tAK ^ r t ij - .. . | 'A 1 ruck is serving Business f economically as does the If e all the people faithfully jj c Ford Truck is a neces- . ? If 1 in delivering goods and ' K i the stations, docks and ! jj t is an ideal motor car H want of the farmer or jj oesn't supply i:i the way , n l at a minimum expense. || : Truck, and let us talk 'If Arnold | niSSPtam I! . / >' / /