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?VBOWBE COURIER (Established iKiD.) Published Every Wodncsdny Morning SUBSCRIPTION PRICK Ono Your.$1.00 Six .Mont Iis.BB Tinco Months.?*<> Advertising Kaus Reasonable. Hy Steck, Shelor, Hughs & Shelor. Communications of a personal cltuructcr charged iov au advertise ments. Obituary notices and tributes ot respect, of not over IOU words, will be printed free of charge. All ovor that number must be paid for at the into of one cent a word. Cash to i.ccompany manuscript. WALHA LIiA, S. C. W HUN KS DA Y, A Hit! li ?Bit, 1010. COOK I NC TH K ISSI IK IN TH K KYK. 'l here are one or two things about our war debt which wo might as well look squarely in Ibo oyo. To begin wit li, wo authorized Hie bills; we owe tho money, and it's got to be paid. Moreover, it's going lo be paid. To light the war took money; to win. si i ll more money- and we hail lo win. We were ready lo light as long as necessary. We wore ready to subscribe to loan after loan as many as might be needed. We were willing to give to sacrifice without slim. We liad lo win al all costs, costs. (>!' course wt- knew Ilia! Hie war would end some timi-, but no man knew when, Therefore, to make the war as short as possible, we pre pared for a si i ngulf of indefinite length, lt was necessary io plan in advance - and we prepared on a si upendons seale. 'I'liis mean:, of necessity. Ihal no maller when the lighting stopped lhere wimbi bo bills unpaid. 'flu fact th.?j ?lie war (Muled sooner than anyone expected ?loos not relieve Ul ol' the obligation to pay Hu* bills Indeed, it should make ns all Hu moro willing, for if the struggle had continued twelve months longer om dedtt would have been thirty-six bil lion dollars moro than il now is. and (he loll of dead would have been fright lui. Mut wo are not being asked tc sacrifice--lo give. Wu will not havt to subscribe to loan aller loan, 'flu war has been won, and Hie bond is sue that is being offered is not mere ly the "fifth" loan -it is tho "Vic tory" loan tho one that finishes Hu joh. Now, there is another matter the question of taxes. There ?ire only two ways by which the government car raise the re quired money--by bonds and by taxes. And it may he set down as a matter of certain conviction that tho government is going to raise thc money. lt has no Intention of re pudiating its honorable obligations Mut every dollar paid out in taxe* is water over the dam. The mono) is gone - for a good and proper pur pose, hut gone nevertheless, lt draws no interest-at least, none foi you. No man ever yet re ceived interest on the taxes be paid Money invested in bonds is st il on the job. It strengthens youl credit; il makes you a share-holdei lu your government, and day and night it is working for you draw ing interest. Taxes or bonds-which? Bonds, of course .Vietory-I.iherly Bonds. Not only because we ow? tho money, liol only because we I ave won the war, bul because we want lo settle the bill and get it behind us. fhe government has pledged ils faith We are tile government Want Bm b-on < lusted. I lin .is wirk. (?a., April ! , Beso Bilious were passed ..: the nw-ting ol' Hie ; ioorgia Kedera i on ol' : ainu here to .lay (tailing lipon Bro dent Wilson lo remove from olllce Bo i master Ceueral Burlosnn. Tho rose lillian wai offered by "li . telephone opera t firs and Hie MMe I l-'.lecirb ! Workers, ?md his removal was asked on the ground that the i'oslmaslei Cen o ral, in the en pa el ly of une cb iel had been unfair to organized labor and unfair lo Ibo public because lele phone and telegraph rales had been unreasonably increased. A Utimbei of amendments won; offered, bm tin resolution was adopted as intro ducod, .he Courier, $1 per year. Bay in advance. FOUR MILLIONS ARK SUFFERING Message < nniCH from Hilde Lands ; (dat Many aro in Nord. Now York. April 17. -From Bible lan ls Ka s I cr messages bearing a new appeal bave como by cable to the national headquarters of the Ameri ca? Committee for Armenian and Serian Itolief in Now York. These messages are supplemented by re ports from relief workers in tho field that conditions throughout Western Asia are very grave. The following is from Dr James L. Harton, chairman of the commit tee, who is in (be near Kast in charge of the committee's relief work in Palestine, Armenia and adjacent countries, where "hearty 4,000.000 people aro reported to be suffering: "After four years of wandering in the wilderness of persecution, hun dreds of thousands of children and willows, homeless but not without hope, turn to great di on rt ed, benevo lent America this glad Kastor season with gratitude and with prayer that il become not weary in Its work of mercy for a stricken but grateful people" From Hoi ru I .Syria, come tho greet ings of the children of Syria to the children of America, transmitted hy Major .lames ll. Nicol, who suggests that the children of Anu-ilca estab lish a little city for the orphans of f yrla. i t follows : "Tell the children they are holp ? nK lo feed and clothe 30,000 out of li a.nun people investigated and found nei il.v. also J.nun children in our orphanages, with supplementary diet to ll,OOO more. "Can Ibo children <>l America help lo oslablisb a sheller city for "?.OOO j orphans, willi homes, shops, schools.; farms, stores, and government con- ? ducted by children under guidance, lo make them a great asset lo the future of the country? "One hundred are now having sight saved in the commit tee's eye (dinics. Fifty thousand garments were carefully distrihnted in March and ."?nu,nop more are needed. "Children of Syria send grateful Kastor greeting to Hie children of A merion." At the sanie t i me delayed messages reached thc committees from Krivan, at tho fool of Mount Ararat, where Ibo ark rested when tho great Mood abated, declaring thal typhus was raging in thai region, medicines were exhausted, and conditions wore "in describabl) had." Ono of the messages follows: "Food shortage terrible. Supply now in Krivan will last . days. Kvory week s delay costs 1 """ands Of lives." According to the estimates of Ibo relief workers there wer?; ?Cid,dui) refugees in the Caucasus alone who required aid. This is hut a small section of tho territory dependent on the American Committee for Armen ian and Serian Relief for help. FOUI CAIiOMKL MA Iv KS VOC DEATHLY SICK. Stop I sing Dangerous Drug liefere lt Sullvates Von! lt's Horrible! You're bilious, sluggish, consti pated and believe you need vile, dan gerous calomel to start your liver and clean your bowels. Hero's my guarantee! Ask your i druggist for a hollie of Dodson's - Liver Tone and take a spoonful to . night, if it doesn't start your liver , and straighten you right up hotter than calomel, and without griping and making you sick, I want you to ? go hack to the store and get your money. I Take calomel to-day, and to-mor row you will feel weak and sick and nauseated. Don't lose a day's work. . Take a spoonful of harmless, vogota I hie Dodson's Liver Tone to-night and wake ni) feeling great. It's perfectly harmless, so give it to your children my Hine. lt can't salivate, so Iel I hem eat anything afterwards.-adv. st \ DA Y SCHOOLS AT WORK. Opportunity for an Over-tlie-Top Of fering for it Coed Cause. To the Sunday Schools of Oconee I'ouuty, om- and All Creeling: C] ristian Comrades: Our county vi I, months ago, it-; pledge to I he ii . Association. Since then our toaders have planned for larger things to pul I wo more expert ivorkors ;i; ibo Held, and are calling hom io do so Tho schools of ibo idly ?>!' Sparlanburg have niven ahoui S'J.'inn for ?his purpose, Hrlug the i|Ue lion before your school, give op liortnnity lo your people lo ronlrih nie, abd send amounis received '<> nu r ? <>..:i; > I rea surer, Coorge Sea horn. Walli.ila. Fraternally. Wm. S. Morrison, I*res Oeoneo County S, S. Ass n. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always hears the Signature of rho Now Xau son IONS Calomel that is Entirely Purified or All of (ho Nuusoatin- and Salivating Efforts. Do you ever iiave a bad taste in your mouth in the morning-heavy breath, coated tongue, headache, in digestion, nervousness, with a let down feeling? You need calomel, bul dread to lake it. Try Calotahs, the nausealess calomel that ls de lightful to take and delightful in its effect, lt is calomel with all of its honetits retained and its unpleasant qualities removed. One tablot at bed time with a swallow of water-that's all. No taste, no griping, no salts, nor nausea. You wake up In the morning feeling like a two-year-old bright, cheerful, energetic, and with a hearty appotite for breakfast. Kat what you ploaso-no dangor of sali vation. Calotabs are so entirely de lightful lo take and so pleasant in effect that your druggist offers to refund the price as a guarantee that you will he delighted with Calotahs. For your protection, Calotabs are sohl only in original sealed packages, price thirty-live cents. At drug stores everywhere.-adv. MAKE PASTURES FOR YOUR PIUS Old Methods of Caring for Swine are Xo Longer Practical, Clemson College. April IS.-A few years ago farm boys "slopped" tho hogs or ".pitched" them some ears of torn. To-day tho pig club boy gives Ins pius a balanced ration. Ile is gaining a scient ilk: knowledge of , leeds and feeding. He is loaming j i ha i it' wa- aro to produce pork cheap- , i ly. a gr?ai deal of attention must ?Le given lo pasturo building and to ?tile growing of forage crops. Only I in very rare cases can money be made in feeding a main ration alor.e the j . year round. Quite often forage is I li e deciding factor between prellt and j loss, says \V. c. Parsons, pig ( lal: i agent. His suggestions will be of ! value to the pig club members and jollier good farmers as well. Forages are not alone valuable for I cheap feed, bot they are a great'aid j in developing bone, muscle and con stitutional vigor in pigs. A good pig, when kept in a pen, very often be comes unthrifty. Therefore, any plan of pork producion which does no' have in it tho use of forage crops is very likely to provo unprofitable. And now is the lime to plan for tho pro duction of these crops. It will he too late io do this next fall. I The hog is a grazing animal, ?ind j to be grown cheaply must be provided j willi pasture crops. Among the val- j j nable pasture crops for hogs are Bermuda grass, lespedeza. the clo vers ?md alfalfa. Clan now to have a succession of these pasture crops th ron ghoul the year. Feeds that are rich in protein, such ? ?is shorts, middlings and tankage, so j essential to the proper development , I of hogs, are high in price and hard ! lo get. lt is. therefore, important I lo have home-grown crops thal are j known to be. rich In protein. Bow peas, soy beans, peanuts, velvel j boil ns, oats, rye and rape are good 1 substitute feeds. Your county agon; ; ls anxious to tell you how to grow these crops. j Hut a protein supplement should! be fed for economical gains. The j hog makes greater and cheaper gains \ if ho has a balanced ration, (live your pigs plenty of green feeds plus' ?i light feed of corn, shorts, middlings j or ground oats or tankage, and then wa I (di them grow. LEMON JUICE FOR FRECKLES I Girls! Make beauty k)tion for a few cents-Try It! I Squeeze the juice of two lemons into a hollie containing three ounces nf orchard white, shake well, ?md you h. vc a quarter pint of I he best freckle I ' I and tan lotion, and complexion bean | tiller, ai Very, very sin;?ll cost. Your grocer lias Hie lemons and any drug store or toilet counter will apply three ounces of orchard white, lor a few cents Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion imo the. face, neck, arms and hand- cudi day, and SOO how freckles ami blemishes disap pear, ?md hms (lear, soft and rosy white Hie skin becomes. Yes: it is harmless and never irritates, adv. Colds Cause Grip and Influenza LAX ATI VF, PROMO QUININE Tnblcta n?movo th? cause. Tliere ls only one "Bromo Quinine." E.W. GROVE'S Munnturo on the box. 30c. -* mt - - - Cay in advanco - Courier $1 year. RAINBOW DIVISION IS ON WAY. .Moro Hum -1,50o Mon Duo to Roach America April 127th. Washington, April 27.-More than 4,500 Olllcers and men of tho 43d (Rulnhcv. ) Division were included in troops announced hy the War Depart ment to-day as having sailed from Franco. The Rainbow Division men are aboard four warships, the battle ships Minnesota and South Carolina, due at Newport News April 27, and tho cruisers North Carolina and Mon tana, due at New York on the same dato. Tile units announced to-day as having sailed include the headquar ters of tho 83d Infantry Brigade, which is commanded by Brig.-Cen. Frank M. Caldwell; the lt>7th Infan try, which was formerly the 4th Ala bama Infantry; the l.">lst Machine Gun Battalion, originally composed of three companies of the 2d Geoi gia Infantry, and the 117th Signal Battalion, which whoa it went over seas was made up of Missouri troops The battleship Minnesota has aboard the .151st Machine Gun Bat tallon complete; Companies L and M of the 167til Infantry; a casual company each for Connecticut und New York, and two casual officers Tho battleship South Carolina has on board the 117th Field Signal Bat talion complete, and 25 casual com panies. The cruiser North Carolina is bringing the Meld and staff, head quarters and supply companies, med ical detachments and Ural battalion of the 107th 'Infantry; casual com panies for New York and Iowa, and I 2 casual olllcers. "'he cruiser Montana is carrying the headquarters of the S3d Infantry j Brigade. 2d and 3d Battalion Head-j quarters Machine (?un Company, and Companies K. F. H. I and K of tho HiTth Infantry: Mi casual officers, I among whom i's Brig.-Cen. Caldwell, j Tho transport Matoika sailed on ! April IO for Newport News with base' hospitals Nos. 1, ll, 17, 52, 58, H7. 68 ' and evacuation hospitals Nos I, 2 . and I: headquarters detachment, j 69th Infantry Brigade; 1 1 Oth sup-; ply train, staff, tlrst battalion, sani-j tory detachments, and Companies A ! to l>. inclusive, of the 340th In fantry; three convalescent detach ments and three casual companies. ? The Irnsport Antigone also sailed, on April 1(1 for Newport News with II otb Field Signal Battalion, ll nth sanitary train. Midd hospitals Nos. 1.17. 138, 131) and 110; 129th and 130th Machine Cnn Battalions. The War Department also an nounced that the headquarters and medical detachments and Companies A t<> I-', inclusive, of the 12th Fmgi-! noers were aboard the transport Capo May, duo at New York April :\0, : instead of the I Oth Engineers, as previously a noon need. ?HESTER SPILLS DIAMOND ??jd^?i BRAND LADIES f ""^?-*~r >?Ji your Uniftfflit for CM-CHAVfBR S jIAMOND 1IKAND PII.I.S in Ri:o %Oi.r> metallic boxes, sealed with Ribbon, TA vu NO OTIIF.?I. liny o'. i)?Uffffllt ?nd auk tar Hll.( IlKH-T ?1AMONJ URAN!) PII.I.H, .or twenty-fir.? ,C.MS rcfnn?ra Pv l,F ifc?l, Always RelinMc. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS vRjKzj EVERYWHERE TKST??L? Rainfall nnd Temperature. Below is a record of meteorological observations taken by II. W. Brandt, co-operative observer of tho Weathor Bureau of tho U. S. Department of Agriculture, during the week ending April 13th, 1919, at 7 p. m. (The instrumental readings aro from gov ernment standard instruments ox posed in the manner recommended by the chief of tho Weather Bureau): .- f KR s /, ti? Btuev??) o', your V/ i-Tr.K? V Character of Day. Date Tempora tu ro. A pri I 7 Cloudy ... T 7 .> |<; April 8 Clear... . s.". 18 April !? Cleur.... sc, ;, ; A pril . n Cloudy. . .02 . s A pri 1 i i Pt ly cldy ! .20 7.". April I 2 Clear. . . Vs II' April ! :; Clear. . . 82 50 Total rainfall... I .22 (.'nod Old Mule '"Old Ham." ti mule belonging lo a f irmer in Southern Missouri, died the other day, aged :', I years. "Bul it wasn't Hie ?gc thai attracted so much attention," says tho Altamont Times. -!i was tho fact thal tho good old mule had taken its owner lo church more than one thousand t i mes. "' Itominds us of what Hank Wither spoon said to an agent who tried to sell him a tractor. "I've spent nigh forty years learning tho tomporn mont of a mule. I ain't n-goln' to waste all that experience now fooling with no tractor." Weighed 90 P< PEREJMA Recommends it to Her Friends "1 don't need Poru?a any more I am all well. I have taken ni: bott lon. I weighed ninety pound boforo I started with Poru?a, was just aa poor and no weakly, had Klven up hope? of ever Kel ting ?veil} such a cough and spll tiiiiT, and could not ?at anythlnR Now slnco taking* Pcruna I wclgl one hundred and thlrty-flv< pounds. All ray friends said would never get well. I was jus a shadow. I have surely recom mended your Poru?a to many o my friends, and they are using- lt I will recommend Perunn, for am so thankful for what lt hai d?jT^e for me.'? TUG SINKS, SHA M14 X DROWN, j Kel urning Soldiers Witness Catas trophe in N. V. Harbor. - i Now York. April 17.-Tho home coming joy of 1,302 American troop? on Hie steamer Saxonia was dashed i this afternoon when the soldiers,clus- j tered, cheering, at the rail, saw the i naval tug Freehold sent to the bot tom of thc Hudson river hy a blow . from the Saxonia's propeller, as she j was working to warp tile big liner j into her pier. A muster of the Freehold's crew I to-night showed three men missing. Rescued members of the crew said i that they saw Harry Lanallan, chief machinist's mate, sink after a short I struggle. lt was thought possible that the other two mon unaccounted i for had been picked up by small boats | and taken ashore. > Tho sinking of the tug wes one of | the most dranr.lie marine accidents that has ever occurred here. The cheers which a moment before had i been echoing back an 1 forth from transport to dock were suddenly hushed, as from the stern of the grout vessel came the so,nu! of rend ing stool and wrmd. Ouiel to Rescue. The Srr.oai?. s decks, crowded to tho rail with returning troops, hale and wounded alike, were tho soon of the greatest confusion, which lasted, however, hut for an instant. , Then quick-thinking lighting men. alive to the hazards of Nt) Man's Land, put their thoughts Into ellon. ? Ropes were thrown overboard, and live seamen were pulled front the I Hudson. .Meanwhile tho naval tan Craw-. ford, also engaged in warping the Saxonia into her dock, weat to tho rescue and saved three more lives. ' Police rescued three other: . and a rou boat hastily put nut from Ibo1 shore brought the to: .1 of those who were saved to l l. Sunk in Throe Minutes. The Freehold was loss than three ; minutes in sinking. According to witnesses, it was shortly before 4.30 when the tug, pallin..; the vessel's stern around, received Its death blow. i Witnesses said that the comman der of tho Saxonia evidently intend ed to aid the tug hy giving the larger craft a "kick ahead." The quick rush ahead, however, sucked the tug in under tho stern and tho Snzonia's 30-ton propeller 'dado descended like a knife on the stern of thc smaller vessel. Those on the dock hardly had time to run to the peer head before the tug's stack disappeared beneath the water of tho Hudson. Only the Hps of her masts remained above the sur face. Heavy Earthquake Kelt, Washington, April 17.-An earth quake of unusual severity was re corded late to-day by the seismo graph at (leorgetown University. The earth tremors were first recorded at 1..V.? .and lasted until ti.IO. reaching the point of highest intensity at ."..lb. lt was estimated nt the university that the center of disturbance was localed approximately 2.Hub miles from Washington, and probably in Central or South America. Coming Events Cast Their Shadows Proparo Now to Withstand tho Crisis. ... ? >'Vj'^V'*?l-iMi . : ontlclpnto with a shuddering dread /. twa ni I fill event of childbirth. You cnn . .lid cl ??rom fort dur I mr ttio period nnd . train nt tim crisis bv prepnrlng ymir system ii'.:? putting yourself la splendid condition lo meet thc time. For Just this purpose, women nil over tho tandi In every wnlk of life, hine iMCd for i vcr bali n century tho time-honored nnd rimolin remedy, Mother's Friend. It ls pre mired to ?;IVO tho niother-to-he Hint direct help sho needs. Tho muscles, nerves, ten dons And cord? oro mndo nnd kept soft nnd clastic. Tiltia strnln in avoided, nnd ns a result nervousness, nnusen, hen ring-down and stretching poins nro nvoldcd. Tho abdominal muscles cxpnnd cnslly nnd pently when hatty ls born. Nnturnlly. pnln is less nnd tho hours nro fewer. Tho system io prepared nnd tho crisis 19 ono of much less di.ngcr. Write thc Bradfield ftegutator Compnny, Dept M. Lnmnr Ibiildlner, Atlnntn. (leorgln, for their 1 elpful Motherhood Hook, nnd ob tnin a bottle Of Mother's Friend from tho druggist today, It ls Just ns standard oa nrythlnr yo? cnn think of. And remember, thcro Is nothing to take the place of MOTHER'S FRIEND. >unds Before Taki Now Weigh 135 Pounds Mina Clara Lohr, 21 N. Gold St., Grand Rapids. Mich. . " . In hor lotter opposite MlsBLonr tolls In convlncfnsf words of the benoflts sho rocolved from Po ru?a. *" _MfluM or Tablet Form $25,04)0 for Limestone Qa ff ney, S. C., April 17.-Dr. Lee Davis Lodge, president of Limestone Coll?ge, made the announcement to day that James A. Carroll, of this city, had subscribed $2 5,000 to the endowment fund of Limestone Col lege. The young ladles who have the matter of the endowment in hand are bubbling over with enthusiasm over this handsome gift, feeling that Mr. Carroll, by reason of bis princely gift bas, to no small extent, lightened thb task which they bad set for themselves to raise $100,000 for the endowment. Clove's Tasteless chill Tonic .cstorcs vitality aod energy by purifying and en riching tho blood. You can soon feel its Strength ening, Invigorating Effect. Price 60c. Tho Courier, $1 a year, advance Pay in Eve Sufferers Who Need Glasses! I'nil rend far?1 paid one way l<? our Oconcc County Patients Wln> Purchase Glasses. Ryes examined by specialists and (.'.lasses made while you wail. Kodak Films Developed by Experts. Odom-Schade Optical Co., A. A (?dom. A. II. Schade, President. Sec'y ?<: Treas. Consulting Optometrists, Masonic temple, Greenville, S. C. \OT1C10 OF FINAL Sly PT LIO M KV AM? I USCH A UGH. .xotlce i3 hereby given that tho un dersigned will make application to V. F. .Martin. Judge of Probate for Ocouee County. In the State of Sonta Carolina, ut his o?flce at Walhalla four! House on FRIDAY, tho 2.">th i day of APRIL, lill?, nt ll o'clock ! in the forenoon. or as soon j thereafter as said application can be i hoard, for leave to make dual settle ment of the testate ot 'irs. C. M. ; DAVIS. Deceased, and lo obtain final I discharge as Administrator of the j said estate. J. X. DAVIS, Administrator of tho Rs tn to of Mrs. C. M. Davis. Deceased. March 16, 1919. 13-16 ST< M ! Iv IIOLDK RS' >U0 KT IN?. HY RESOLUTION HOARD OK DIRECTORS. \ious lo ::. Thal Hi. .uer he direct tl;n lands in hilo his hands, tho >rporal lon. That a Stockholders' Meeting be called on FRIDAY, tho 10th day of MAY, 1919. at ll o'clock A. M., at the warehouse of the Company, at richland, S. C., for the purpose of considering the following resolution: 1. That the corporation go into liquidation and wind up its affairs and dissolve. 2. That the warehouse and lot upon which tho warehouse is situ ated be sold by the Secretary and Treasurer al public auction, to the highest bidder, for cash, at. the ware house, at Richland, S C., on the .... ii i;/ nf . I ti I !). beginning >t deven o'clock in Hie forenoon, ami Uti I such sale be advertised for three w '.-ks hi The Keowee Courier, pre uich sale. ? Secretary and Treos e<i ir> pay, from any of his hands, or lo come indebtedness of I lu l. That tho Secretary and Treasu rer 1)0 directed to pay to the Stock holders their pro rata share of the ucl ?jaseis of Hie corporation, after payment of debts and expenses of winding up its affairs and dissolution of Hie corporation, lui ve been paid .">. Timi Ibo corporation bo dis solved and charter surrendered. T. i). 'A LION* AX ORR, Presiden!. April Mi.Iii I!). 16-19. KOTICB TO RKRTORS A Xl) CREDITORS, All persons Indebted to tho Es? lille of MRSSIAH CORR, Deceased, .ire hereby notified to make payment to tho undersigned, and all persons having claims against said estate will present thc same, duly at tested, within the time prescribed by 'aw or bo barred. A. L. CORR, Administrator of the Rstalo of Mes siah Cobb. Deceased. April 16, 19 19. 10-19