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iwell Sentinel, Barnwell, S. C RHM | use v»- v* /w«> JIMMIE’S JOB Investment Features Of Victory Loan i: H« haw almost flulshod his How about you? Are you ready to «ay, •*] have dour my part?*' ’ When. Jimmie conies marching back, with grid stripes on both sleores and maybe*' a cross on his chest, axe you ready for the glad home coming? • Ready? you ask,—as if you had no^i been waiting and longing all the** j mouths! As if you had not visualis'd htm again and again, pictured him fronp babyhood on up. and loved each meiporv of towsled hair and grubby facer yes. and toothless grin, too; I Iot<*, hu way of calling you "Mum- j eieyL” when he had tracked mud on the beet nig again, or come home from a most apparent encounter with the enemy. You loved him most of all that day when he came home, very quiet and serious, and put his arms around you while he told you that he wanted to go to serve his country. That day you Drat knew he was do longer a boy. but a full grown man, ready to assume his own responsibilities is the world. That all seems a long time ago. doesn't It? Since then, he ban. proved himself. He has served his country faithfully and well, even "beyond the call of duty," until now his services over tjiere are almost ended and he will be coming home soon. Up is coming home to you—but he 4* coming back a different man from the boy you, knew. The boy will be there, too, but he has known the feel ing of dedication that comes from of fering his life for an ideal, from lay ing bis all at the feet of Liberty. His eyes have seen the vision—have yours ■sen it too? ^ Ha has almost finished hia job. hare yea finished yours? Hia was to drive the Hun to his knaas where now he Is groeellfhg; snd years has hesn to back him up—clear to tha Rhine. You hewa dona that, hut you hays not fin ished. Your boy Is stM over there. Ha must not be deserted now when he hi islmoet finished. When he Is ready to come home you met be ready too; ready to look kim ta the eyes with the knowledge that you have served your country at least so tar as the call of duty. There Is one more big effort neces sary—one more pall. All together for the Victory Liberty Loan! CAPTAIN SWIFT’S TALE r 0. Captain Swift, of the Twenty - 1 fifth, tell us a warrior’s tale, of the rifles' rattle and the bloody battle and the shot that fell like hail. "It was at Belleau.” and Captain Stow, or Swift, as the cans may be," and my brave command * plowed up the land tin support of Battery D. And from over the hill, irhen aU waa still, came the Boehe at double quick, and I thought for the nonce that gone was my sconce till my sergeant saved the ■trick. With a hand grenade and a bomb, home made, ho hid by a shat tered tree as the crafty Huns all trained their guns on the boys of Bat tery D Then over the top on a darn-; ad fast hop came the rest of the shouting horde, and snorting tanks on both our flanks came near to ^av- - ing-us floored, when Sergeant B. from behind that tree tet~ toose hto itand grenadb, and the tanks stopped short and censed to snpH: and a pause in , the dash was mafle. W’ith great -» aplomb he looeed his bomb and" the •laughter was good to'see ba tho (Jer man hounds into bits *erC ground by . that blast of TN-T And,I’m pleased Vo tell we *m*- them betl that das in. ^Bellaaa Wood, and all of you. if you •ranted to could do a deed as good. {< > As an investment the Victory Liberty Loan notes, according ‘to the terms officially announc ed by the Secretary' of t^ie Unit ed States Treasury, offer un usual attractions. The securi ties are convertible four. pert cent rn^d notes dated M:.y 20. 1919. ahd due May 20. 1923. bolng issued in denomina tions pf from $50 to '$100.Quo. They are exempt from all lochl and state taxes and United States normal income taxes. Further, they are convertible into United States of America 3%i per cent four year golt notes of the same date and ma turity which are exempt from all. taxation—local. State. Unit ed States—including surtaxes, excess profits and war taxes, but subject to estate* or inher itance taxes. By virtue of the Victory Lib erty Loan act additional tax ex emptions are granted to ether holdings of Liberty bouda The act increases to $160,000 the ag gregata holdings of Liberty bonds (besides first 2Vfc‘8 free from all local. Slate and United States taxee. except estate and ' Inheritance taxes. These new exemptions are: . \ 1. —Liberty Loan 4’s or 4Vi’s to an additional amount of $30.- 000, extending for five years af ter the termination of the war as fixed by proclamation of the President of the United States. 2. —For every dollar subscrib ed to the Victory Liberty Loan an additional exemption of three dollars on 4ll previous is sues. not bo exceed the aggre gate of 120.000. thy extending for life of the Victory Liberty Loan so subscribed for and held. Installments are payable aa follows: 10 per cent on (nbeeripthMi. It per cent on July, IS, Tilt. 20 per cent on Aug. 12, 1919. 20-per cent on Sept. 9.1919. 20 iwr cent on Oct. 7. 1919. per cent on Nov. 11, 1919. !syments may be- made in full on or before May 20, 1919, or on any Installment date. Con sult your bank if you desire to borrow money with which to subscribe to the Victory LUfsrty < Loan. X #*+ WHOSE WAR WAS ITT Was it Smith.the banker’s war or Jones, the truckman’s war. Was it Labor's war or was it Capital’s war* as it Autocracy’s war or was it Lib erty’s war’ Whose war wan it? Figure! it out Then subscribe to th« Victory Liberty Loan. For it was th< People's War. * It isn’t paid for. It must be pak’ for Tha Victory Liberty Loan wil pay for it. The people must buy be cause it was their war. The people are Smith and Jones, Labor and Ctipi Eliminate the “ifs” from life and in stead build up thrift. ? , **r +4 WATflVi THE 8TOCK: PEOPLE RS~ I Though the fighta's la won the bills fuss Ians and the Oar .141 be paid; Get the names and addreisea of all persons and companies offering you speculative or doubt ful stocks and securities, par-, ticulariy * If in exchange for your Liberty Bonds or War Sav- Isjrt Stamps, with copies of their ’literature.** Mail them prompt ly ta tha_ *i Treasury Presents Film of Events in Qreat Conflict Showing What Victory Lib- • erty Loan Bonds Pay For. / t Secrets of the war recorded by the motion picture camera and only now re I eased by the denyirs are re veal ed in “Th§ Price of Pace,” an official film issued in behalf of the Victory Liberty Loan, and being shown aU- over the .A* country. •- * “The Price of Peace" is the only official picture ever assembled which purports to cover the war-from tha day it was declared down td~ date. The purpose of the picture aa an nounced by the Department of the Treasury, through Frank R. Wilson, director of* publicity, is to put before the public a graphic accounting and to make clear why there is now a Vic tory Liberty Loan. The picture opens with a scene in President -Wilson’s office and a refer ence to that momentous April 6, when war was declared. It concludes with a remarkable view of the Status of ’Liberty, iii New York harbor, and the homecoming of our army. But there is a vast deal between. Including the embarkation of troops, their landing in France, final training over there, then the desperate reali ties of the front line trnchs, gas at tacks. army railroading under fire, the great attack from Soissons tq, Chateau Theirry. infantry and artillery under heavy bombardment.' a battle between aeroplanes, and the downing of an enemy airman, the observation bal loons under fire, then the battle dead, ‘he prisoners, captured prune, our •jrops marching over the* Rhine Into Germany. General Pershing and his men in Prussia. Christmas with the Army of Occupation in Germnay, and the homecoming. - — Probably the greatest thrill of the picture is in the scenes where our troops are seen* going "oarer the top" and into the wheatflelds at 4:35 o’clock on that famous July 18. 1918. There is a dim, misty light, that gives these scenes a peculiar gitensity. Other scenes of desperate fighting show an American battery under heavy firs from enemy guns in the Argonne. In yet other scenes American soldiers are shown bravely advancing under shrapnel fire across an open glade. Two are shot down near the camera. The activities of the American,navy furnish another important chapter of the picture, A number of impressive scenes show the German fleet steam ing to surmder. % AIR SERVICE _,HELPS VIC TORY LOAN-—LET’S HELP AIR SERVICE. When the appeal was sent 'to the air service by the. Liberty Loan Organization for using the airplane in helping the drive, the_ response was immediate, and Liberty Loan . committees all over the f-oantry are now co operating with the air service to encourage enlistments. IT | - T * t The air service needs men and offers a number of attract ive inducements to those who enlist. Those who have had ex perience and re-enliat are offer ed tnes, following privileges: One month’s vacation at ones. Bonus of $60. Furlough far* certificate en titling you to ride to your home at one cent a mils, with an addi tional five cents a mile for travr eling expenses. Month’s pay,, and ration money on return from furlough. Feat clothing medical atten tion and quarters and board. *r- - No loss of pay while sick. Furloughs with pay. Insurance* at low rates. Pay ranging from $30 to $121.50 a month. Langley Field, Hampton, Va., ► hi a recruiting center and Lieu tenant Joseph Mac Lean is in charge. _ /■“ AGED MINISTER LIKES TO DO AUTOMOBILING MIMMtMIstMniq GehlnHgn June 20-July 13. REV. ALBERT VOGEL. Aged Minister to Attend Methodir Centenary Celebration. . Rev. Albert Vogel of Geanette, Pa. at the age of 102 is praying every day that his life may be spared ta enable him to be present at the Meth odist Centenary celebration whick win be nr Columbus, tX, Trcm Juni 20 to "July 13. Entering the ministry before th« age of 25, he has occupied the pulpll for more than 80 years, hr the earl) sixties he was pastor in Bucyrus where he established lifelong friends When 100 years old he visited tha' city, the event being the laying o' the cornerstone of the .Methodis’ church. / The centenarian has a keen senw of humor ami believes in practicini some of the heditli rule? as set fortl by* T5r7 OiafTes" Barker, 'the nations health expert. Vogel looks like *i man of C*> and his hearing and Ugh are unimpaired. His step, too.j ii spite of his old age, is firm ant steady. All of these things he at tribute* largely to long walks am •arly rising. Sacred Views Also ti Be Shewn at Methodist Celebration. Would you like fo fly from Cairo to' Jerusalem;? : Would you like tq hover over the pyramids and icross, in a few min utes, the coiintry over which the Ti^'Mrsl N. D, Ellis, id raelites .wandered for .40 years? you like" to stand in thej cave of Machpelah. before the tombs bf Abraham, of Isaac, of Jacob, of Rebeccab, of Rachel, where only tjiree Christians have ever stood? r Would you like to go “nose-diving" over Bothlehem at the rate of 150 mile? an hour? , — Would you like to see Allenby’s soldiers capture Jerusalem and Jeri cho and Christian sentries guarding the Mount of Olives and tha Garden of Get haem art*? The opportunity to do all these will ue presented at the Methodist Centenary celebration at Columbus. O.. June 29 to July 13. ia the Lowell Thomas travelogue. “With Allenby tn Palestine.” For. In this talk, illus trated by amazing moving pictures and still photographs, the first au thentic eye-witness account by a fully MMTIN HEWS fftlft. Martin, 8. 0; Jtme Mr. and Mrs. J.S. Carswell and children, of Angusta, Ga„ were the guests? of Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Furse last-week. Miss Elizabeth .Rice, of Allendale, js spending several weeks with Mrs. N. D. Ellis. Mrs. M. B. Furse tained Tuesday in honor of her gU9ts, Mrs. J. J. Carswell. - Mr. G. G. Vick, of El Paso, Texas, - is the guest of Mr, and PROSPEROUS FARMER SAYS HE CAN NOW DO AS BIO A DAY’S WORK AS EVER. “I had rather lose my whole farm, accredited observer of~jthis dashing "*^ 0r ^ ,n< * everything on If then to campaign will be given. Tbey show the great military oper ation from its beginning to its end. whan the Turk had been driven out of tha Holy Land and Allenby stood astride the Rerlin-Ragdad railroad at Aleppo, ending the Mlttel Europe ecbeme of the kaiser and the pan- Germans forever. But they show more ,than that They show ail the sacred places ot i which Christians have beard sine* | their childhood They show how tht places look today and how^^e peoph of Palestine arc actually lifiDU. The> show almost everything that oik wntjld oar»* to *ee or know of Pnlg^ tine—certainly more than any >mll nary traveler could see in /half, t dozen visit* to that country; These travelogues have obtainer the unanimous ir.dorsrtaent of th< clergy of New Yark/city. They wil appear at Columhue during the entir* time of the 1 tuu. _ . / Method 1st celebra RUBBER HOSE FOR ALL PURPOSES \\'e have Garden Hose, Water Hose, Radiator H se and Steam Hose. Our garden hose at 25c per fopfis by far the cheapest hose you can ’ buy, for ij will last from siVfo eight seasons, which means an average of about 3c to 4c per foo> a season. While you can get a hose fori |0c you know as a rule the 10c hose wiU last you about one season. With an order for 50 fe*! or more of garden hose we give a lawn sprinkler. Hadiator Hose in 1 inch, 1 1-4 inch,d 1-2 inch, I 3 4 inch, 2 inch, 2 1-2 inch, inland 4 foot lengths. COLUMBIA SUPPLY COMPANY H23 West Garvala St. ~ ' • * ^ ^ Columbia, S. C. IOweMjr^ifeto PERUNAl Mr. McKinley’s letter brings cheer to all who may be sufferers as he was. Read it: “I can honestly say that I owe ssy life to Pervoa. After some of the best doctors in the country gave me up. and told me 1 could not live another month. Peraaa •■▼ed me. Travelling from town to J°. wn * throughout the country and having to go into all kinds of badly heated stores and build ings, sometimes standing up for hours at n time while plying my trade aa auctioneer, it Is only natural that I had colds fre quently! so when this would occur I paid little attention to It, until last December when I con tracted a sever* case, which, through neglect on my part settled on my lungs, Whcs al most tea lata, I begas doctoring, bat, withovt avail, nntll I heard of Peraaa. It eared met so I ^jnno^prsJiiM^^o^ighiyJV^ Cured ^ Mr. Samael McKinley, 2507 2L 12th SL. Kansas City, Mo., Mem ber of the Society of U. 8. Jewelry Auctioneers. • Bold Tablet UgsM -Mis?* - Kj-fri#-- -ElliS’ 8|>c*Pt week-end with friends Allendale. Would Not Take Farm For Taniac’s Benefit in Jot M. Vinson Declares He Has Gained Fifteen Pounds. OVERCOME TROUBLES. io the fix I waa before Tanlae ret my health, 1 ' said Joe M. Vioaon a well known and protperoQi farmer living on Route 2 oat of Love, Mim ‘‘Three jears ago my atoma -h got tut of ahape and I haveyfteen going down ^till ever aince, 1 not digest my ftfod. and eight months I ha<1 to live ph the whiten of eggs and buttermilk, 7 waa ao nervoua I coaid not aleep^ and autfered ao much miaery f rom indigestion that I felt good for nothing all the time. Gaa would form my stomach and swell me up sol could not button my cluthea, ray head ached like it wnuld’pop open, and I would get eo dizzy and blind, I would nearly drop. I would have awfol smothering epella and would almoat choke to death. t “I sure am a different man none smee I took Tanlae, I can eat anything I want and never have any trouble from it. I have gained fifteen pounds in weight and my strength has coma hack so I can do a* big a day’s work aa I ever did. All the miaery and swell ing has gone from tny stomach and tha headaches are a thing of the paat. I have got such wonderful relief from Tanlae I feel it my doty to let the world know about it." Sold by J. A. Porter. Barnwell; Rear- ■oo DrugOo.. Allendale; J. H.Sender*.. B’ackviiie; H. M. Oaaaela, Jr. Baldoe; Fairfax Drug Co, Fairfax; Keodall Lumber Sorr' Allendale^ . Belfast Plantation Co., Millietteville; J. M. Smith and Ron, Willieton, and W. H* Wilkinson. Ulmers. CITATION. STATE 07 SOUTH CAROLINA. COl"STY or SAENWBLL. . By fohn K Snelling Esquire, Probate. Judge. Whereas.G. P. Hogg hath made eait to ma 11 grant unto him Letters of Ad ministration of the estate and effeeti of Julius Williams, deceased; These are, therefore, to cite and ad monish all and singular the kindled and creditors of the said Julius Williams, deceased, that they be and appear before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Barnwell, oa Saturday, June 14th, 1919, next, after publication thereof, at eleven o’clock in the forenoon, to ahow cause^if any thty heve.^why the aaid Administration should not be granted. Given under my hand this 29th day of May, Anno Domini 1919. John K. Snelling. Judge of Probate. Published on the 5tb day of June, 1919, in the Barnwell Sentinel. DOES KINDS OF INSUR JMEr BON DING,-STOCK INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE DEALERS " Prompt and fair treatment r Office second floor over