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AlNT ICM6 \mn NEED MORE OFFICERS FOR ARMY OF SAVERS NOW BEING JRECRUITED BOYS AND GIRLS INVITED TO BECOME MEMBERS OF ORGAN IZATION OF YOUNG CAPITALISTS Generals and colonels of fourteen years, majors, captains and liauten ants ol ten or twelve and sergeants and privates even younger are now the rule In Uncle Sam's Army of Sav ers, which is hoing recruited among the school boys and girls of (his dis trict. Plans for this army were re cently completed and were announced through the medium of an art poster sent broadcast to schools and post otil?os. Within the first live days after the distribution of this poster, eleven young "officers" had received their "commissions" In the army. Nearly 6,000 have now enlisted, every part of the district being represented. The boys and girls earn their pro motions in accordance with regula tions explained in the poster announc ing the organization of Uncle Sam's Army of Savers. Their insignia is conferred, and a formal "commission" la sent by the Savings Division of the United States Treasury Department in this district. Regulations for promotion in Uncle Gain's Army ot Savers state I hat every purchaser of one Thrift Stamp in 1021 ? is entitled to a private's button The j purchase of four Thrift Stamps en titled him to a Sergeant's button. The purchase of one War Savings Stamp, issue of 1921, entitles him to a Lieu tenant's button; three War Savings Stamps to a Captain's button; Ove to a Major's button, and ten to a Colonel's button The purchaser of twenty of the 1921 War Savings Stamps gains the award of a General's hutton, em blazoned with a star to Indicate thc rank. DO YOU KNOW THAT If you invest in one $25 Treas ury Certificate every month for ten years (average price $20.87%) you will at the end of that time have received back from the Treasury Department $1,500 in cash, and you will have $1,500 more maturity value, payable $300 a year for five years longer. MORE THAN BILLION HAS BEEN PUT INTO SAVINGS SECURITIES REDEMPTIONS ARE GROWING ?MALLER AS WISE INVESTORS RECEIVE INTEREST ON THEIR MONEY Moro than one thousand million dollars ha\3 been invested in Thrift and War Savings Stamps and Treasury Savings Certificates by wise and thrifty persons iii this country, ac cording to an official report recently compiled. Of this amount, over $730, 000,000 is now outstanding, and In vestments are steadily increasing. The banner year, of course, was 1918, when there was a strong patriotic appeal. Total sales for 1918 wore $971,913, 000 During 1919, when the sales cam paign was based on national thrift rather than patriotism,, $165,300,000 was brought into tho Treasury, and in 1920 the total was $43,892,000. Re demptions to date include $378,254,000 of the 1918 series, $33.441,000 of the 1919 series, $8,080,000 of the 1920 is sues and about $135,000 of tho 1921 series. Ofllclnls of the savings division point out that by far the greater pro portion of the redemptions are of tho 1918 series, which Indicates that the moro recent issues are being pur chased by individuals who plan to hold them to maturity. The certificates pay 4 per cent in terest, compounded quarterly, which is equivalent to approximately 4 Vi per cent, if held for the full five years. Thoso who present the certificates for redemption prior to the maturity date receive about 3 per cont. Interest. Sav-a tho "small change" usually .pout; it may mean a "big change" In your later life. Subscribo for Tho Courier. (Rest) STOCKS AND BONDS ARE NOW USED FOR WRAPPING BUNDLES BUT WORTHLESS RUSSIAN NOTES ARE JUST AS VALUABLE AS MANY FAKE SCHEMES OFFERED HERE Destitute peasants at Milau, Laiivia, are carrying home lood wrapped lu thousand -rouble securities, but they are not a bit elated over the facL When an American Red Cross unit reached Mltau recently and opened up headquarters in u vacant bank build ing, bales of formerly valuable securi ties were lound heaped in a cornel-. They vere beautifully engraved on tine bond paper, but their value was absolutely nothing. As paper was scarce, the crisp bonds and slocks '.vero utilized as wrapping paper by the lied Cross workers. If the safe deposit boxes and bureau drawers and trunk trays of America were emptied, thousands of bales ol securities equally valueless would be uncovered. Millions have been in vested by Americans within the last year in stocks which are worth no more than the securities of the de funct government of Imperial Russia. Some investors are continuing to buy beautifully engraved certificates good for nothing but wrapping paper a!, the price of prod table investments. Warnings by the hundreds have been Issued against Cake steck sales men and fraudulent promoters, but lt is often difficult to determine between a fake investment and one which has a chance of success and profit, and vic tims continue to lose their hard earned savings. One sure method of protec tion is to invest in the securities backed and protected by the govern ment of the United States. Treasury Savings Securities (War Savings Stamps and Treasury Savings Certi ficates) will return a sure profit,, are proof against loss or depreciation, and may be had at your post office. The stability of the (Jutted States, not of Russia, guarantees this and the prom ise to pay of this nation, never yet broken, is a better surety than the promise of any "get rich quick," sales man or promoter. HARDING URGES THRIFT AS AN IMPERATIVE DUTY SAYS RIGID AND SANE ECONOMY MUST BE PRACTICED BY NA TION TO RESTORE NOR MAL CONDITIONS Tho note struck by President Hard? ing In his address relativo to the nee essity of putting "our public house? hold in order," is one fraught with meaning to millions of individuals in this country who have made iittle ef fort to put their private households in good shape. The urge of thrift and economy is strongest with too many only when a financial pinch comes. Yet this pinch will seldom be felt if, as President Harding says, we prac tice "a rigid and yet sane economy attended by individual prudence and thrift which are so essential to this trying hour and reassuring for tito fu ture." Thrift ls commendable at all times. Individual financial emergencies aro continually arising and to set one's household in order by planning a pro ginni of "rigid yet sane economy, at tended by individual prudenco and thrift" is to ward off tho serious con sequences of such emergencies. Among the millions of American wage-earners those who were thrifty havo been least concerned about high prices or busi ness depression. In getting a good work started, there Is no time like the present. And in getting the good work of thrift and economy started, there is nothing like getting interested in the Savings Movement of the United States Treas, ury Department. The home of every American citizen who neods to have his household put in order will be hap pier in all that that work can imply, when tho message of thrift and econ omy of thc Savings Movement reachea lt. Thrift takes you up the ladder; ex travagance drags you down. Subscribe for The Courier. (Best) j WILL NOT ATTEMPT TO lUtlvA K ' Tho Textile ?trike-Prefer to Walt ou Pleasure of Operatives. Charlotte, N. C., June 2.-There, will be no attempt at strlke-brena lng on the part of the cotton manu- ! facturers whose plants are idle as a J result of the strike of ten thousand j operatives at Charlotte, Concord and I Kannapolis yesterday, according to i statements issued to-day. The plan | of the managements of the mills is . to allow their plants to remain idle ! indefinitely, or until such time as. the operatives desire to return to; work on the same basis on which j they wore being paid when they left. | Information to-day from States-j ville is to the effect that the four mills there are anticipating a strike. ! Union forces are reported to have i I been rapidly recruited there. ! There was no indication of a ma- ? ! terlal spread of the strike over into ?easton county, where there are 100 j j cotton mills, nor further south, but \ j Vice President 'McMahon declares j ' that the strike will become South- ! wide in the course of a few weeks. I ! ! j Ituh-My-r/istu is a great pain kill- . I er. Relieves pain and soreness, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sprains, tM-c. ' I - -adv. Tallest Man in ?lu? Wm bl Dead. ! j _ _ I '.. I Siuox City, Iowa, .lune L\ - 'Her nani Coyne, said to be tho tallest ? man in the world, died to-day al his home In Oto county. Coyne was 1 known as "the youthful giant." hisj height measuring eight feet one Inch and his weight being ?100 pound?. Ile wore size 2 1 shoes. Ile had been ill for several months. Ile was 21 ! years old. Many Persona Were. Hurl. Edinburgh, Ind., June 1 -'Prom fifty to sixty persons were injured, j two of them probably fatally, and .several seriously, last night nt 10.-10 o'clock, when a Pennsylvania freight train crashed into the Dixie Flyer, a fast Indanapolls, 'Columbus and ! Southern traction car carrying a trailer, at a track Intersection here. j Greenwood Mun Marries in Europe. j Creer. S. c. Juno 8.- Aunounce 1 h;ts boen received here of tho inar I ringo of Lieut, A. U. Alexander, for merly of Greenwood, lo Miss Josica Tommascu, daughter of .Barone-.;? Matilda Tommasca, at Castle Cam ba, Dalmatia, on Friday, Feb. 18th, 1921. I The bridegroom is well known j here, having often visted his aunt, : Mrs. Eula Mayfield, In this place. Ile . is now in the service of the United i States navy. i UNIFORM PRODUCTS FAVORED Find Better Market, Bring Higher Prices and Are Handled at Less Expense Than Others. Without uniform standards for farm produce there is no recognized bnsls ; for the business of buying and selling, says the bureau of markets, United States Department Of Agriculture. Standardization of products gives seller and purchaser a common lan guage and a set quality upon which prices may be compared and fixed. Ex ! porlence has shown that the products which are sold by grade find a better market, bring letter prices, and can be handled at less expense than thostvsold without reference to standards. Stand ards have already been fixed for many farm commodities, such as American j Upland cotton, shelled corn, wheat, i .atts, and for small fruit containers. j These Federal standards apply only j when the product is intended for In j terstate or foreign commerce. It ls I highly Important to secure state co i operation so that the provisions that j apply to a few products will apply to nil that are offered for sale. DIARY OF MUCH IMPORTANCE Well Adapted to Cost-Accounting Rec ords When Information Wanted on Few Enterprises. A diary is well adapted to cost accounting records when Information ls wanted on only a few farm enter prises, soy specialists of the United States Department of Agriculture. If the diary ls written up each day lt takes but a moment to enter the hours and minutes spent In working the crop, and the necessary notes regarding the eost of seed, fertilizer, and equipment. The common form of diary ls a book containing n blank page for each day's record and with space In tito hack for financial accounts. Another form has a page for each doy divided to give space to the records of two yearn. A similar type furnishes space for a five year period. Business Failures Decreasing. Now York, June 2.-Tho tide of business failures continues to recede slowly, according to reports received by Bradstreet^ for the month of May. These reports showed 1,3 38 failures for the month, a decrease of 7.4 per cent from tho April aggregate, and Hie smallest monthly total recorded since November, 1020. CLEMSON COLLEGE SOUTH CAROLINA'S COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING and AGRICULTURE W. M. RIGGS, President. 1571 ACHES OF LANI). VALUE OF FLA NT OVER $2,800,000.00. ENROLLMENT FOR H>10*'20, 1014 OPERATED UNDER STRICT MILITARY DISCIPLINE, DEGREE COURSES Agriculture. (Seven Majors,) Architecture, Chemistry, Chemical engineering, Civil Engineering, * Electrical Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Textile Industry, Industrial Education, Gonernl Science. SHORT' COURSES Agricultural. Textile Industry, Premedical. SUMMER SCOOIIL June 18-.Inly 28. Agricultural Teachers, Cotton Graders, Collogo Make-up. Removal of entrance Conditions. Agricultural Club Hoys. VALUE OF A TECHNICAL EDUCATION. A technical education is the best insurance against hard times, in earning capacity it may equal an estate of $50,000. For tho un trained are Hie positions of pov erty and obscurity. Times aro hard in South Caro lina, hut (he cost of an education at Clemson College is comparative ly low-sufficiently low to be within I lie roach of any ambitious young man in South Carolina. Scholarships, freo tuition and the payment by tho United Slatos Government to H. O. T. C. stu dents, still further reduce Hie cost. Do not allow the financial cl i Ol - cullies to keep you from entering J college this fall to prepare your I self for the opportunities that lie I ahead. SCHOLARSHIPS AND EXAMI NATIONS. The collogo maintains ono hun dred and 80Vonty Four-Year Schol arships in the Agricultural and Textllo Courses. Each scholarship moans $-100 to help pay oxponsos and $100 for tuition, apportioned equally over tho four years. Also, llfty-iwo Scholarships In the One-Yoar Agricultural Course'. Those scholarships aro worth $100 and tuition of $40. Tho schol arships must bo won by co ni pott Hive examinations, which aro held by each County Superintendent of Education on July Sill, lt is worth your while to try for ono of thoso scholarships. Credit for examinations passed al the county seat will be given to j those who are not applying for I scholarships, bul for entrance. H. O. 'I*. C.-Clemson Is 41 member of tho Senior Division of the Reserve OHioers' Training Corps. All H. O. T. C. Students receive financial assistance from tho Federal (?overuinent, this reaching about $200 per year during tho Junior and Senior Classes. FOR IT'LL INFORMATION WRITE OR WIRE THE REGISTRAR, Clemson College, S. C. APPLICATIONS WI LL RE CONSIDERED IN Tl 1E ORDER REOEIVEl). 20-23 ,-^J. TEST-DON'T GUESS \ 1. Plant fewer acres of corn J but raise more bushels per acre. 0 2. A dead ear planted means t 900 missing stalks. * 3. Missing stalks mean lost t land and labor. * 4. Testing is not expensive and t Its advantages are certain. ' 5. By testing there ls every- t thing to gain and nothing to J lose. . * -. ? HANDY FEED BOX FOR STOCK Barrel Cut in Two and Strengthened by Boards Placed Inside la Quit? Convenient. A bardy feed box tor us? In open lotti or ferraro cattle are fed upon gnu/w Is show ii In this sketch, writes Claud* ptecknifca of Nebraska In Farm Jour nal. Cut a barrel in two and strength en the halves by placing a frame of Handy Feed Box. two boards across the Inside, ns shown. This will prevent the tub from being smashed and will allow four ani mals to eat out of the box without bothering each other. A strong barrel must bc selected, and tho hoops must be nailed to each stave. MANURE IS BEST FERTILIZER Contains Plenty of Humus and All Other Necessary Plant Foods Add Aold Phosphate. The home gardener who- cnn get a load of well-rotted stable manure need not worry about fertilizer, anyone who has ever done any gardening is well aware. Manure contains humus In plenty and all the necessary plant materials, as well ns bacteria which put these materials into the most usable shape for crops. To get the full benefit of stable manure, however, it should be balanced with acid phosphate, which is comparatively inexpensive, garden ers at the Iowa state college of agri culture say. An application of one ton of stable manure, which is about an average two-horse load, ls not too much for a garden 30 by 00 feet, and 50 pounds of ach? phosphate muy be used with lt. Fresh stable manure should not be applied in the spring. It contains too much readily available nitrogen and may cause in some plants a growth of stems and leaves at the expense of fruits. This ls especially true of to matoes. UTILIZATION OF FARM LAND Value of Plaoe Depends Upon What Proportion ; of Total Area Can Be Made Productive. Kffcctlve utilization of farm land mentis a high percentage of income producing area, say specialists of tho United States Department of Agricul ture. The value of a farm depends upon what proportion of Its total area ls productive. Compare a farm of 100 acres at $200 an acre, 0& Acres bern* in simile to yield available products, with another fa i'm of the same acre age at $150 an acre, but With only Of? productive acres. If all the other fea tures of tlie two farms are similar, tile former should be the most prolit able because its profit-producing land costs but $120 an acre against $280 an nore on the second farm. CORNS Lift Off with Fingers Doesn't hurt a blt! Drop a little "Preesone" on an aching corn, in stantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly you lift it right, oil" with lingers. Truly! Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of "Freezono" for a few cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, sofl corn or corn between Ibo toes, and the calluses, without soreness or irrita tion.- adv. .Mote. Than Thousand Stills. Asheville, X. C., June 2.- More than one thousand blockado. stills have been captured hy officers work ing out of Asheville headquarters since Jan. 1, 1021, according to an announcement hy Chief Prohibition Agent J. Henry Reed, who stopped work, with his assistants last night following receipl of orders to that effect from Washington. During the past 17 months f>00 blockaders were apprehended and "enough beer to float a battleship," said Mr. Reed, had been destroyed. During 1020 a total of 720 stills were captured and destroyed, and since then tho average has been just about sixty a month. At the recent term of District Court here fines of over $0,000 were imposed upon violators of prohibi tion laws, and more than paid tho expenses of running Ibo court. To Stop a Cough Quick toke HAYES' HEALING HONEY, a cough medicine which stops tho cough by healing the inflamed and irritated tissues. A box of GROVE'S O-PEN-TRATE SALVE for Chest Colds, Head Colds and Croup is enclosed with every bottle of HAYES' HEALING HONEY. Tho salve should be rubbed on the chest and throat of children suffering from n Cold or Croup. Tho healing effect of Hayes* Healing Honey in side tho throat combined with thc healing effect of Grove's O-Pen-Troto Salve through t!io pores of thc akin soon stops a cough. Doth remedies aro packed In one cartoo and the cost of tho combined treatment is 35c. Just ask your druggist for HAYES' HEALING HONEY. Hegins Long Sentence. Columbia, June 1.- Lawrence Mc Donald, a soldier, is to begin a sen tence of 20 years In tho State peni tentiary, possibly this week, for a criminal assault on a young Colum bia girl, for which ho was convicted in the Richland County Circuit Court inst Sa turd? Tho man pleaded guilty after tho State restod its caso and asked 'or tho morey of tho court. Judge Townsend instructed tho jury to bring ir a verdict of guilty. INSU RANCIO 111 HOI <;il TUM MA I li Warning Issued by liiKiiranco Com missioner .McMahon. Columbia, Juno 1.- Insurance Commlsslonor 'McMahon yesterday issued warning about unlicensed in surance companies. Ile says: "lt. frequently comes to my atten tion that some one has taken Insur anco in an unlicensed company, tho business hoing solicited through tho mails. Hut when the. limo comos to collect, on the policy there is no way to enforce compliance with the con tract except to sue in tho homo Stato of tho company, "This practically defeats tho claim, especia Hy when it is a tlhiall amount and thi' insured, ls of limitad mount) and ability to pursue the company "livery one should he careful not lo take ont any insurance unless in formed authoritatively that tho in suring company ls liconsed to do bus iness in this Stato. "In the case of a liconsed com pany the lawyer bringing suit has only to send his summons and com plaint, willi Iwo copies, to Ibo In surUnco Department for ncceplance of service upon the defendant com pany and the action may he. brought in any county in this Slate." To Cure a Cold In Ono Day Ink.' LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE (Tablets, j it .,to|j? the Cough and Headache nnd works off tho Cold. E.W. GROVE'S signature on each box. 30c. Heyan Will Ho a Floridian. New York, May 31.-'William Jen nings Bryan will vote in Florida in tho future. While hore lo-day ho an nounced that his actual residence in that Stale would be come his legal residence. He was Influenced in making the change, he said, by the state of Mrs. Bryan's health, and in his new homo expocls to concern himself as much as over with public affairs. He said: ".Mrs. Bryan's health is such that it is necessary for us to live In the South, and having lived in Miami for eight years we have chosen that city for our permanent home. For some lime I have been, politically speaking, in ii state of suspended animation, living in Florida, but vot ing lu Nebraska. Being as much in terested as ever In the problems of government, and desiring to make my remaining years as valuable lo my country as possible, I have deci ded to transfer my citizenship to Florida, and (hus make my actual residence my legal residenco also." Charleston to (Jet. Improvements. Washington, Juno 2.-'By a vole of :i8 to 2 1 the Senate, to-day re affirmed its action on the navy ap propriation bill providing 120,000 men in the navy's enlisted personnel instead of 100,000 men, as voted by the House. Proposals by Senator King, Demo crat, of Utah, to suspend construc tion of six ba'tleshlps and flvo of tho six now battlo cruisers, were defeat ed without a record volo. Without a record voto tho Sonato restored tho provision to continue an appropriation for a now dry-dock at tho Charleston, S. C., navy yard and for dredging a channel. --?--flo*? Piles Cured In 6 to 14 Days Druggists refund money if PAZO OINTMENT fall? tocare Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Pile?. Instantly relieves Itching Piles, and you cnn get restful sleep ofter tho first Duplication. Price 60c Subscribo for Tho Courier. (Boat)