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PAGE TWO SAYS THAT HE DESIRES TO OWN BIG POWER SITE NOT FOR ' THE PURPOSE OF RICHES BUT FOR THE GOOD OF COMMON WEALTH. Florence, Ala., Dec. 6.?"I don't want Muscle Shoals to own it. I want Muscle Shoals to complete it. It's a wonderful job, one of the great est opportunities ever offered any man. "I want Muscle Shoals so that it can never be exploited to greedy pri vate ends. I want to complete is so that it will always remain in the service of the people and not to be exploited Dy a greeuy miantiuo auu | so-called bankers against people. ]1 "I want Muscle Shoals because I Muscle Shoals properly built will help to put an end to war." , Standing on the uncomplete Wli- ( son dam Saturday, Henry Ford voic- i ( ed his real reasons for desiring to undertake what he regards as the ] greatest job in his career. Thomas A. Edison, tall, angular j stood by his side a wisp of his White hair blowing ip the breeze, shading i his eyes with his hand against the j blinding rays of a declining sun. j "I've got all the money I can ever ] want, more than Edison can ever f want more than I can ever hope to i spend if I tried to spend it on my self, Mr. Ford continued. "Now as 1 ai? losf trreat war. the I f uic rcauA-v uj. m*v <MwV 0 , chance has come to me to undertaka ( the completion of the project which 1 if built as it should be ought to be < a source of national wealth and well < being for 1,000 years. 1 "Muscle Shoals should become < America's greatest asset out of the i World war." Gigantic steam shovels with four ^ to six times the capacity of the * ordinary contractors steam shovels, ' will enable Mr. Ford to complete the ' , great Wilson dam in half the time and at almost half the cost previously 1 estimated by the government engi- i neers, 1 It was the inventive genius of Mr. Edison applied to the problem of construction of the JVilson dam, that evolved the plan for the new shovel ^ with its gargantuan maw that will soon be crushing its way across tha ~bed of the Tennessee river. - - " i. ; Not only has Mr. liaison pexicticu the plans for the new power shovels but he already has completed shov- ' els working at his plant in New Jer sey. ' It was because he knew of Mr. Edison's shovel and its effectiveness on great constructive enterprise that Mr. Ford was so confident his organ ization could successfully handle the completion of the dam project, Mr. 1 Ford announceed after turning from his inspection of the dam. -Winter Dessert Recipe Pare, core and quarter sufficient , apples to make two quarts. Place in a well greased pudding dish. Mean- ] while sift together two and two- . thirds cupfuls of pastry flour, one- ( half teaspoonful of salt, and one and j one-third teaspoonfuls of baking powder. Rub in thoroughly one-half 1 cupful of shortening and then mix i about one and one-third cupfuls of ; milk or sufficient to make a dough , just stiff enough to roll. Roll the ( dough out to fit the pudding dish and make several gashes in the center. Place the dough on top of the apples and tuck in around the edges. Bake in a moderate oven for two hours or until the crust is well browned and the apples are soft. Then remove from the oven and allow to cool slightly. Take off the crust and cut it into thin pieces. Then add to the apples two-thirds cupful of brown sugar, one tablespoonful of butter and one-half teaspoonful of nutmeg. Arrange alternate layers of the apple and crust in a deep dish or moid, pressing the layers down carefully, cover, and let stand in a cool place overnight. Unmold, cut in slices, and serve with sweetened cream, plain or whipped. Mrs. Sidney Sharp is the champion farmer in Oklahoma especially as a producer of oats she having yielded from her farm lands seventy bushels i to the acre. 666 cores Malarial Fever. GERMAN GAINS BREATHING SPACE THREE YEARS' DELAY FOR IN DEMNITY PAYMENTS?AGREE MENT SAID TO HAVE BEEN REACHED WITH ONLY AC TUAL DETAILS REMAINING. Paris Dec. 6.?'Germany will prob_ f-ronud a f-.hrp? vears' delay auijf uc 6'""? ~c ? in her cash indemnity payments, the Associated Press is informed from the most reliable source. Nego tiations are now going on between reparations officials of France and Ghceat Britain and the responsible of ficials of both countries virtually agree that Germany must be given a breathing spell. All that remains to be done is to work out a scheme ac :eptable to both countries. The suggestion of a three year moratorium has been abandoned at :he. earnest solicitation of France. The French represantatives explain ed that the word moratorium was especially offensive to the French people in connection with the indem nity inasmuch as it was understood is meaning complete suspension of! payments of all kinds. I The greatest progress has 'been nade in the last few days in bring ng the French and British view points together; the result of this progress has been the decision to jive Germany a chance to regain a lormal status. i The reparations holiday can not| je used by Germany as a means of j ;vading all future payments of in- j lemnity, French officials explain' | >ut it is being considered so that ) Germany will better be able at the I ind of two or three jjyears to fulfill aer reparation obligations and she ;hen must be prepared to pay in full i "reasonable indemnity." The whole problem will be formal-1 !y placed before the reparations commission when the German reply i ;o the last reparation note is receiv ed probably at the end of this week, [n the meantime the officials are working hard to reach a common plan of action. Numerous sugges tions are under consideration. PRUNING OF FRUIT TREES P?acH- Plum and Ad Die Trees Should Be Pruned In Early Winter Clemson College Dec. 6.?Fruit trees such as peaches, plums and apples should ibe pruned during the late fall and winter months.. At this season the farmer as a rule has more spare time than at any other. The trees may be pruned when the soil is too wet for general farm vrork. It is necessary to spray fruit trees if a profitable crop of fruit is to be produced say the Clemson horticul turists. In order that the sprays may be applied properly It is essential that he trees be pruned before the spray is applied. The time for apply, ing the winter spray is during Janu ary and February immediately after the trees have been pruned. The surplus large branches should be thinned so that the sunlight may reach all parts of the tree and thus oause the fruit spurs on all lateral branches ' to develop. If the tree is left too thick fruit will form only on the outer branches where the sun_ light reaches them. After the tree has been thinned properly the limbs should be shortened back to at least one.half of the previous season's growth. If this is done every fall the limbs will become stocky and better able to support a heavy crop. In pruning apples it is not neces sary to prune back the branches of the previous season's growth if the tree has reached bearing age; all that is necessary is to thin out interfering limbs and shorten in any branches that may be growing too rapidly so that the tree may be properly bal_ antcu. ?f aici opivuM vi *-j?uv branches near the fork of the tree should be removed. Both peach and apple trees should be pruned low so the branches when weighted down with fruit will almost touch the ground. This will protect the body of the tree from the sun and at the same time aid greatly in the harvesting of the fruit. Mrs. Charlotte Cameron explorer author and lecturer says the African native discovered the permanent coiffure long before the wave struck this country. f CHICAGO WOMAN KILLS NEIGHBOR'S BABY GIRL When Polic? Find Body in Base ment Stove She Takes Her Own Life With a Bread Knife. Chicago Dec. 3.?The dismember ! ed and partly cremated body of I three_ year, old Margaret Coughlin j was found today by the police in a . stove in the -basement of the home of Ralph Penses. In a bedroom up stairs the police found the body of Mrs. Penses, 42 years old. She had committed suicide with a bread knife while the police were battering down the door. The little girl was the daughter of a Sputh Park policeman who live$ across the street. As neighbors go the Coughlin and the Penses families 'were friendly and the child crossed I the street'most every day. On Wed uesay afternoon she disappeared af ter she had gone to the Penses home to play. Mrs. Penses pretended to help in the all-night search which followed, j She sat in the Coughlin home caring | for Margaret's younger brother until j 3 a. m. This morning she hurried her j husband and her daughters off to | work and school kissing them good j bye A3 soon as they had left she locked 1 the doors and windows and went to the basement. With saws and a hatch et she cut up the baby's body. The legs and one arm were wrapped in newspapers and stuffed into the stove where a brisk fire had been started. The torso was hidden in a wash boiler the head and one arm were bundled up in papers and Mrs. EjiflI3/SISMS?3fSJSJ3i3J3JS?SM3J3J3l3I5fSMS An Al Safe 1 JHIS Bank and of the based upon t able and pru< progressive b These are Bar can conscientiously rience. Condensed S of Abbevil r e s o Loans and Discoun Overdrafts Domestic Bonds ... U. S. Liberty Bond; Municipal Bonds .. Furniture and Fixt Real Estate cash on hand from bank TOTAL 1 BECAUSE OF ITS 1 UNDER WHICH A I A FINANCIAL ST Farmftr< JL All Vt R j| DR. F. E. HARRIS' JHiafajajaiaiafejaaraf5jejasjaJSieE/aasMM^ POWDER AND PAINT Di*cu*tion of Whys and Wherefore* To Make Red Eye*. Atlanat Ga. Dec. 6.?As an inten sive student of human nature it has not escapel the notice of this corres pondent constantly on the look_out for news features that nine females out of ten 'between the ages of 14 and 68 seen on the public streets of Atlanta look as if they had been dip ped nose downward in a flour bar rel. This focus must be the way it appears to others, too since the cor_ respondent is delightful to note that a reportorial Sherlock Holmes of one of the local newspapers undertakes to ascertain the reason why. On a recent evening the reporter stationed himself in the lobby of the Peachtree Arcade, the heart of At lanta, through which thousands of women shoppers pass daily and ask ed the first 30 unescorted women whd passed him VWhy do you powder your nose." He solemnly assures this correspondent that some of the wo men accepted his inquiry in a spirit of levity and interpreted it as a de sire on his part to cutivate their ac_ Penses took them upstairs with her. Meanwihle the police had put a watch over the cottage. A policeman saw smoke coming from the base ment windows. When his knocks were unanswered he broke down the door and found the burning (body. "Pathological insanity?she killed the child in a fit of mania and then killed herself" was the verdict of Coron%r Physician Reinhardt. "Pure mania, not uncommon" as serted a psychiatrist who visited the scene and looked at the principals. jsolutely is a business instil highest. It is sal he soundest busir i . i _ aeni ousiness mei tusiness men and ik FACTS^ not theories? ' verify, and which we wo tatement of Cond le County at close u r c e s ts $277,934.79 1,649.43 4,100.00 3 65,000.00 21,102.00 ures 1,300.00 3,062.00 and due ;S 123,023.54 $497,171.76 5 ample resources ILL its affairs are RONGHOLU. ) Bank of ON, President. G.C. SWETENBURC ajajgiaiDi iuaintance without the formality of in introduction. Others manifested 1 jigns of unjustifiable indignation; r jthers entirely ignored the question ind one answered that she powdered ler nose to conceal the luster. 1 All of which this correspondent t ivers is highly interesting as well as nstructive. This correspondent has ong wondered at the women for the t various methods they employ and has i: inally decided they do a great many foolish things to make their women friends jealous for they certainly are * lot silly enough to think many of f :heir habits please the men. \Here's the opinion of the "beauty specialist" of this news service: I The cure for the shiny nose lies, lot in the use of^ cosmetics, which frequently clog the pores of the skin I ind aggravate the disorder, -but to lealthful and useful exercise and I above all, abstention from rich and 1 5ily foods. Another thing to prevent i red'slick nose exercise the muscles >f the nose daily flby elevating it to- 1 tvara tne eyebrows, mis program e lan be facilitated by reading this news story to any number of the lalf-Jbaked persons who give more at tention to the powder bag than they io to their baby. There Wa? No Hurry Houston Post. "Oh, Gap," called Mrs. Johnson the other evening. "Come out here on the porch and take a look at the eclipse of the moon." "Im a-settin' in the rockin' chair now," answered Gap Johnson. "But I read in the paper that an eclipse like this'n wouldn't happen again for 210 years." "Aw, Well, that's soon enough." 3fSfSJS/3JSMSJSrSfSISf2/3J5fSJSEI3IS?3I3J3ISrSJ3 tution in the sti fe and up-to-dat< tess principles, si 1, and patronized firms. facts which every patron uld like to prove to YOl ition of The Fai i of business Dec L I A B I L I 1 Capital Stock Surplus and Undivided fits Bills Payable Dividends Unpaid DEPOSITS TOTAL avi\ tuu c A DTCT II /Al^U l A lu vntxiui wu i CONDUCTED, THIS E J. CALVERT TH< I, Assistant Cashier. Birds are believed to have eyes 00 times keener than those of hu nan beings. Smallest silver coin of the United fatts was three-cent piece issued >etween 1851 and 1873. Graphite is mixed with pipe clay o give various degrees of hardness n pencils. Rub-My-Tism for Rheumatism. NOTICE TO CREDITORS OF AP PLICATION FOR DISCHARGE n the District Court of the United States for the Western District of South Carolina, n the Matter of Sarah Weinraub, Bankrupt, fo. B 267 IN BANKRUPTCY. To the Creditor* of the above named Bankrupt: Take notice that on November 12, .921, the above named bankrupt fil :d his petition in said Court praying* hat she may be decreed by the Court o have a full discharge from all lebts provable against his estate, ex- - * :ept such debts as are excepted by aw from such discharge, and a hear ng was thereupon ordered and will >e had upon said petition on Decem >er 15, 1921 before said Court, at Greenville, in said District, at 11 'clock in the forenoon, at. which ime and place all known creditors - ind other persons in interest may ap )ear and show cause, if any they have vhy the prayer of said petition should lot be granted. D. C. DURHAM, Clerk. [>ated at Greenville, S. C., Nov. 12, L921. - Itw. Dec. 12.5t rictest sense s depository ipervised by rw most LA A. A A l of this institution J by actual expe \mcrs Bank .8, 1921: riES $ 75,000.00 I Pro 32,893.96 NONE 544.00 388,733.80 $497,171.76 MANAGEMENT &ANK IS TRULY PAimfu lA/imij j 3MS0N, Cashier. i 1 ujsjgftJ^iEISMSISJSfSISiSlSJSIS/SISEJSitjiL ^