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tSTOP, LOOK AND LISTEN,- PLEASES' I Musical Corned), Made up Mainly ot, "Vaudeville Specialties, Made Hit Ml at the Paramount Winston-Salem Journal, Sept. 21. ""Stop! Look! Listen"! How ;._nil? j iar these words are to evei"* and 22ot content with having to see tnem | vji railroad signs everywhere, we. .?iust now even see them at the the-; ."iters. But that will never cause us ~to die of melancholia or a kindred disease, just so long as we are entertained as we were last night. One would be almost at a loss to i _^G RAIN ! The United States Government guar tushel of wheat harvested in 191S. It ought not to be a very difficult raise wheat at $2.00 a bushel. SoiUh( -erease their wheat acreage 47 per ( -easy to accomplsh. Two dollar wheat means high flour, ?nd then pay the miller's toll, railroj your flour will cost you a pretty stiff 'to make the kind of flour the most o? : -dealers have ther profit, they won't 1 selves. The result is you can make : -St. ; * And besides it, will pay a man to so an considerable trouble the last few3 3>ut there has been no trouble to get 1 planted after stubble. An early stana vhen the boll weevil strikes you and i ' does the early cotton is all you will comes it will be July crop or no crop, ^ery heavy on cotton that comes up i -that you will pick and stubble might "Tou can't sow down all your land at - "when you are guaranteed $2,001 ^^ ^Three acres of wheat and three acrc 'Wm prepared and well fertilized 9 for your farm needs and if it is a gooc I "When you sow with a three disc % j ?ow and vou have about as safe a crou e three disc grain drills but there are -?ra:L drills?but we are selling fertii very best put in sacks; the best byt want--the best by test of results ^ last spring nor the spring of 1916. ? it must be a pretty good ferti-2 ;?e41s the goods, at least we have been 1 ^ays did not add to the sales to speak the goods that makes the c " We have It now fine and dry. See If you can uu it in bulk (unsackod) ~~ Bags which is nigner uiis year uian i ~ the labor of bagging it, which is also i See us and get the best.. When it i ^reat manjT people will use 1C per c - will top dress in the spring, if needed. The Virginia farmers use 16 per c not top dress in the spring, ?.nd crops. fWte can supply you with acid and r see ua. Anderson Phos Comj W. F. FARME Fertilization "The folowing statement concerning t *' Issued by the department or agncuui a July 31, 1917: The fertilization of the wheat will be this fall. From every part o xesults secured from fertilization anl cured from unfertilized soil. By ferii : eagles. " Evidence ,n the profitableness or f "^In 1816 L. W. Waggoner, of St. Jo e ; "giounds of acid phosphate to the ac r ?n*s in wheat. From the fertilized a - to the acre, and oil the unfertilized, 2 bushels, due to fertilizing." This year two hundred pounds of and wheat Is worth $2 per bushel. On Mr. Waggoner would be worth 19.8^j applying fertilizer and paying for xreased crop would be more than ?5 0 v 3?wapping dollars for eagles it com The Ohio experiment station of Wo " lin utv-twn years. has secured an in?] ; twtc from ax: application of 160 poun Tb& utipliosphated yield has been 11.2 ?3boshels. Where 1,000 pounds of potai yield has been 20.4 bushels to th more than was secured from phophato i -wheat and before-war prices for pofcas "was not sufficient to pay the cost of h< "3tertilizer containing phosphorus and s-applied to clay and loam soils. INlne farmers out of ten should ferti ir&dy increases the yield directly, but h< **?dqcl makes stronger plants that wlths insects better than those unrertTl; stsj expect a return cf at least five ( -reheat fertilizer this fall. THe importance 01 orueiuiig ?anj <. wfco order early will get what l 3eto will "be compelled to take what s M^nderson Phosp F. FARME ANDERSO determine just what to call the performance. Billed as a musical comedy. we found it composed almost entirely of vaudeville specialties. The plot, if there was such a thing intended, was so concealed by the work of the cast that it was lost in the melee. Anyway, Violet, (and by the way we learned something new, that the way to pronounce it is Vee-oh-let, so don't forget, boys) is a chorus girl who has, wonder of wonders, an ambition. Who ever heard of such a thing as a chorus girl * .. if with ambition. Wftv. posmveiv it isn't "being done this season. Her 50 w Tng antees a minimum price of $2.00 V o * matter to induce a patriotic farmer to Carolina farmers are asked to indent this year. This also should be for when you pay $2.00 for wheat id freight and the dealer's profit, price. It takes six bushels of wheat fou buy?millers and railroads and a'ork for nothing and board themrour flour cheaper than you can buy vheat for the stubble. There has been rears to get an early stand of cotton, in early stand of cotton when it is is going to be exceedingly important ; is going to strike you and when it have to pick. When the boll weevil And your July crop will not be 11 June. It will be the early cotton y nearly guarantees a quick stand, once and it is a good year to begin >usnei ror your waeai. is of oats to the plow on land that Is .vill turn the trick and make enough i year will leave some to sell. jrain drill you can fertilize when you is you can plant. We are not selling people here who do. You can set the zer, and the best that is made; the est of result. And that is wnat you 17e could not supply the demand :old out and swept the floors. ;er for there to be such a demand for it. eliably informed that our winning of. It is just the natural inherent rops and that creates th* demand, us /or prices. Cash Dq^pmber first, we can save you the cost ef the ve have ever known and the cost of nore than it has be|n heretofore. s all the same price, get the best. A i est acid by itself when sowing and ; 7 . "" I r* :ent acid by itself when sowing ani < Virginia afrmers make fine grain ' nixed goods, just as you prefer. Come phate and Oil mny i!R, Secretary I of Wheat he fertilization of wheat this fall was ,1 ^extension at Purdue University, p was nev^r more important than it Indiana come reports of the excellent 1 the very poor yields' of wheat seizing, the farmer swaps dollars for j I ertilizing tbe wheat is abundant." ph county, applied two hundred e, cn all but a small part of a field rt he secured 22.4 bushels of wheat .5 bushels to the acre?a gain of 9.9 . : t . id phosphate will cost about $2.25, . this basis the increase secured by nd the profit after counting expenses harvesting and marketing the in0 an acre. If this isn't a case of very near to it. oster, as an average for ?3 last rease of 8.0 bushels of wheat to the ds of acid phosphate to the acre. bushels and the phosphated 19.2 3h has been added to the phosphate, acre, or an increase of 1.2 bushes ilone. Even at present prices for sh the increase in the wheat crop * potash. The addition of potash to nitrogen will not be profitable when J I lize wheat this fall. Fertilizer not 3 greater supply of available plant ?tand the attack of fungus diseases j zed. At present prices the farmer j iollars for every dollar spent for :annot be too stronerly emphasized. ! they want, vhile those who order left, or do without. >hate & Oil Co. 1R, Secretary' N, S. C. \ I great desire is to see her name glitt^rin. aniwiig the Li.g^t 1.^. o. Broadway. Violet meets i'p with Abe! Conner a press a^ent. and they hie themseiv| es oft to Honolulu, where Viole. ! emerges. At this point we lost con ! nec-tions, and only in the concluding i lines of the last ac:t did we learn tiiat ! she was really to have her chanco al I the "big time." From a standpoint of plot, it -as j perhaps a failure, but otherwise,, a j success. Filled with musical numbers and specialties, it ;.le33e:I, with i out a doubt, every person in the au j dience. Once or tv.ice. though, th'ngs. j , happened that would haie been con- j i demned by our local board cf censor?, j | and we, too, wculd like to register j our voice against the sugges-1 tive s-n^rs and sayings that seen t:1 j i be rapidly becoming inseparable fro'?- j I musical corned v. A.-ido from th:s on^ I thing, we would make no criticism. j Raymond Freeman and Billy Dun! ham were the ones who delighted us j most. Both of them kept the audi- J | ence in laughter almost all of the time! i they were before us, and their spec- j I ialty in the last act was by far the j i best part of the show. With vaude ! j ville written all over their perform- ! I , ., 1 i ance, they gave us as fine an exh:bi-! j tion of singing and small talk as one j j could wish for Dunham, especially' j had a pleasing voice, and wasn't; , afraid to use it a 1'ttle. Miss Grace O'Mally, ac; Violet, the; little chorus girl and star "n -embryo i , hardly came up to the work of Free-j 'man and Dunham, but her personality, and voice made- her part .-come on* j strong. Her song. "Take off a Little I ' * ! j Bit More," was most attractive, and j , she lived up to the name of the sonn: : just so far as the law permits. We. ah ci iroro tV>o nlr f 111 tliof r> r\ 7 o r? ! ?. w J> ^ < ly mil u:uui i-jitii, uv/ *wu; | | j could see the blush en our chee?. i Shaw and Lee. dance par exce?-, ; lenee, gave as fine an exhibition o", | soft-shoe dancing r.s ha? been seen: ; here in years. Their work. too. show- j ed that they have seen days on the j vaudeville circuits, and they were, | more than delighted with the way they j | "cut those steps," as the lady behind I us was Kind enough to express it. ! I I Stan Stanely gave another special-! ty in his song and piano special in' j the third act, that "brought down the house " The most dainty bit of femininity in the production was Zella Rambeau, who sang in the last act only. We! fail to see how the management man-' aged to keen her voice so successfully 1 concealed during the first two acts, j unless it was because of the del5ght- i ful Kurnrise thiw wishprl tn anrinor at the last. She sang "Sometime You*:: Remember Ms" so sVeetly that the ai*-! dieree couldn't let her stop at tha* ^ and called her back to sing once j more^ the selection being "There's One Born Every Minute," concluding it with a patriotic selection that madfl us want to-throw'up'our hats an-1 - ) say. as Lee did of North** Carolina, j "God Bless the United States!" All in all, it had its faults, but ft pleased mightily, and may those that come be only a3 good. Handicapped by a very small stage, they gave us the best they had, and we give to them the best we can. A very good show.? A. J. Fox. Succeeds Xr. Bozeman Greenwood Journal, 24th. Mr. aonn H. Koon, of Newberry is expected to arrive this afternoon to begin work as foreman of the county chaingang which has been under the management of Mr. Bozeman for I some time. Mr. Bozeman tendered1 his resignation to Supervisor Lip I sccmb Saturday afternoon. Jir. noon tommp Saturday Greenwood Journal, 25th. The Daily Journal was a little ahead of time in stating yesterday that Mr. I J H. Koon would arrive on the af- S ternoon train to take the place of Mr. Bozeman as foreman of one of the chain gangs. He is expected to ar- j rive Saturd^v, having filed application j with Supervisor Lipscomb. Mr. Koon has lived at Ware Shoals a number of years. I i Recummended by .~ #... Doctor Cothram Dr. T. E. Cothram is a well-known Eharmacist of Alexis, Ala. And when e gets bilious or needs a purgative medicine, what do you suppose he does? Out of his whole big stock of liver medicine he selects and uses Granger Liver Regulator. He says "There is none better." That's a pretty strong endorsement, don't you think, from a man who knows all about the merits of the different medi- j i cines on the market ? Granger Liver j i ?"> V ? _ >? J I ! regulator is purely vegeiauie, uues not gripe nor irritate the delicate lining of the stomach and bowels and always gives quick and pleasant results. It is the best system purifier known. Your druggist can supply you?25c for large box. Accept no substitute, 9 PLAYED THE SECOND VIOLFI\ Lesson Drawn From Incident in Lff< of Student Which Showed Disregard of Personal Ambition. Tn a recent issue of the Record ol Christiuu Work there is a brief memorial of a splendid young life that car rirs so great a message that it muj well be sent on to other lives. old j?n'j young alike, says the Youth's Companion. He was a student at Mount Herman strong, gifted and popular. His death ?he was drowned while skating?was a shock and a grief to the whole school. On the day when his funeral was held in his own home, a memorial .. i 1 . i. ^ i IT /, mtvicc was jiiso ihmu ai uit1 simhhji. xit had been prominent in athletics, but the student who spoke of that part of his life had a bigger tiling to tell than the record of his prowess: he spoke of his unfailing Christian courtesy. "lie was never heard," he said, "tc kick against the umpire's decision." Another told of his willingness, courtesy and pluck in doing the humblest i__** _ l; i.; - n uuars?u conuununuu 01 quaimes worthy of consideration. Many persons do humble tasks, but how many bring to such tasks all the courtesy, the study, the enthusiasm, that they would bring to larger duties? It was that same spirit of enthusiastic service and i utter disregard of personal ambition that shone in the incident that made the deepest impression of all. It was told by the leader of the school orchestra, one of the teachers in the music department. The sftudent whose memory they were honoring was a good musician, one of the first violins In the orchestra. Not long before his death he had suggested that the work of the orchestra would be greatly improved by an increase in the number of second violins. As everyone knows, the second violins merely furnish a background for "the first violins?there IS very nine upjiuriuim.v mac 1V1 oinj. work. Yet this boy, planning for the thing that should mean the greatest efficiency fcr the orchestra and the greatest service to the school, made his suggestion to the leader, and at the same time proposed that he himself should play second violin instead of first. The brief, young life, so soon ended here, had learned the secret of great living. He could leave no greater heritage to his school, or to young Uvea everywhere; not self, but service, and a service that demanded, even in lta humblest tasks, al! the best of body, mind and soul that he had to give. FARM BY-PRODUCTS OF VALUE Missouri Agriculturist Sells Contents of One Automobile and One Wagon for $1,380. We learn from the Cape Girardeau Republican t>at a farmer of Mlilersville, that county, drove into Jackson, J ? - i-t. J ? AA Y\ r% tne connry seat, me oiuer unj wu jiu6 In one automobile and one wagon byproducts of the farm which sold for $1,380 cash, says the St. Louis Republic. The by-products consisted of wool, feathers, poultry products and garden truck. Time was when the average farmer would not have fooled with any of these products except wool, considering them good only for use by the women folks in trade at a village store ?as, indeed, they were. But the world is calling for the prod acts and by-products of the American farm as never before. The farmer who neglects the call and aMows things to gw to waste for which there is an active cash demand is the one who will still have a mortgage on his place instead of a tractor and an automobile. Value of College Education. Dean Holmes of the Pennsylvania State college, after spending months gathering statistics and reducing them to orderly form, has discovered that the money value of tour years at college is $20,000, or a financial return or for every year so spent. f)ean Holmes' Investigations re^al the fact, which at first seems a little disconcerting to the advocates of university training, that the average earnings of a bachelor of arts amounts to $1,1S7 a year, not quite $25 a week. But the situation brightens for the colleges when we learn that the average earnings of the noncollege man are only $518?not $10 a week. The difference between these two sums is $669, and since the aver ? OA Trcore offop 1 Dfl vine age man uvea ;cuio college, his financial reward for four years of more or iesis arduous undergraduate toll is evidently something more than $20,000.?World's Work. Despised Rabbit Comes Into Ow? You never know the value of any created thing from one day to another much less from one year to the next, says the Los Angeles Times. But recently, as it were, the Australian government was offering large bounnoc r>n mhhif skins and encouraging In every way possible the extermination of this pest of the antipodes. Having lately received from Great Britain an order for $2,056,000 worth of cold storage rabbits, this same government has reversed itself and now prohibits, under a heavy penalty, any canton destruction of the revenue-producing bunny. So the foes of our prosperity mnv in adverse times become our best friends. Wherefore it is well to "love one's enemies." No one can foresee future developments. Hatching War Eagles. France hatches her war eagles at the flying school at Avord started a year before the war. Here 5,000 men work night and day, and 3UU pilots are turned out a month. A war pilot costs the state 54.000, not counting demolished machines. I OLD TITLE TO BE REVIVED > Use of Word "Dame" in England Expected to Bring Ridicule That Awaits All Novelties. ! ^ ' The title of "Dame," to be revived In the new order, is old enough to be new to members of the present generation, ' and will doubtless undergo the gentle I ridicule that awaits all novelties, says the Manchester Guardian. Was it not said of the now nlmost venerated Vic , toria Cross CO years ago that if a t man were to stand with a tTay of ? crosses at a country fair he would not > sell them at four a penny? I The Primrose league was probably [ the last institution to be associated ? with the title of "Dame." r.nd its use ? of the appellation was not uniformly s successful. In one Scottish village a > Primrose habitation was created, and i titles distributed with a lavish hand, but the institution did not survive Its > first meeting. A titled ladv came i down specially, and at a preliminary 1 . "swaree," in her endeavor to be affable : and properly respectful at one and the > same timo, addressed one or two of the i i local ladies by their Primrose title of : ; "Dame." s As a phrase on a parchment the terra [ was not amiss, but to be addressed to : one's face as "Dame" was another I matter. " 'Dame,' indeed!" exclaimed j l ono matron, bristling with indignation ; 1 i ! "did ye ever hear the like? I'm sure ; I'm nae aul'er than her. I min' as a i . woe lassie she was a muckle hempie i ! r praun tae the schule," etc. And hence-; . forth "Dame" became a word of re- j [ proach on the lips of wicked (Liberal) j l children in that Tillage. j ; : HE QUIETED BABY'S CRY j < Stranger, at Station, Took Child and i Called Him "Tommy" With Surprising Effect. i ! ? L lie sat all humped up on a bench In'" a waiting room at the Union depot, in j Chicago. He was rather shabbily; ' dressed, tired and dejected. Soon there! < came a couple with an infant n..d the \ baby was hot and cross. Cry after ^ ' cry rent the air, and people began to u frown and make remarks about noisy children, pests and the like. The 1 ; couple sat near i:he tired-looking man.! Finally he touched the father on tho < arm. "Let me take him," he said. j ] A smile told the father no harm1 1 would come to the offspring and the! baby was placed in the stranger's arms. 1 "Now, Tommy," he said, in a gen- i . tie tone, "we'ze goin' to be a reg'lar! i rener an* top our noise, am i we, ] i Tommy?" j ( He petted the youngster and cooed to It and in five mlnntes the wail had ! ceased. The crowd grinned. "Much obliged," said the father, as' the stranger returned the child. "But," < he added, "his name ain't Tommy." A far-away look came into the | stranger's eyes and mingled with just a touch of that form of moisture; known as "suspicious." ; < ^'Mine's was," he said. And then he' j settled down again, all humped up. S. | < Sartorial Requirements. ? - -> i.. /J I { JfOSteG directions uu sinpuuaju, s , which he who rides may read, instruct-! 1 !ng the crew exactly v/hat they are to , 1 do when the boat takes fire, or some < other calamity happens to it, make one inspect the life preservers with an Interested eye, intent on which one would be the best fit; for we can im- j 1 agine nothing more mortifying than a' ] misfit in an emergency. One wishes. < to look his best even in the most try-1 ] Ing moments. We always seek to be , rfpr'prf nut as a eentleman should be; < ? - ^ - j , in company and would not even care ; to appear In an unbecoming life pre- * server in a mixed assemblage. Life preservers seem to be made in the flat ( front style this season with large horl- \ zor.tal pleats. You tie them on, of, i course, to suit the individual taste.? ] St Louis Globe Democrat. Communication With Dead. Sir Oliver Lodge, discussing in the T>n-iL-mnn thp nnssihilitv fif fommimi ~'V - x- V ? , eating with the dead, says: "The right method of attack is to ascertain first, by experiment and observation, whether communication is possible; anil then from that fact, if it becomes an established fact, to infer that after all the dead do know something, and thfct they have a personal existence. . , . Whatever the method, perception of sentiments of survivors is undoubtedly a fact; and one great merit of "he communications received in such cases is the relief and comfort they have brought to the feelings of those on both sides of the veil. Once those on both sides are made fully aware of undying interest and affection, the few yecrs of separation can be endured; and the main work of life, whether on that side or on thi3, can be attendoH f A ? I tv? _______?? Would "Gas" Tsetse Fly. A British official named Timmler, stadoned in territory that was formerly part of German East Africa, proposes to take a leaf out of the book of European war experience and apply the process of "gassing" to the extermination of the tsetse fly. His plan is ??ither to use a gas destructive to the flies but harmless to man, or to have the operators use gas masks in r* Li /Inn rrr\r?r\M c fn Tin mo n. tils - lur guo 10 Wii-Q 1.U iiurnou Ity, and he thinks that the monsoon wiDd of that region would carry the gas across the fly-Infested area. Nature, in repeating this proposal, e> pre;?jes skepticism concerning the' results, but says that "an experiment would be better than any expression of a adverse opinion."?Scientific Ameri- * can, b - 3? | .? VOl DO XT BELIEVE IT THY IT 0>CE You Folks With Tender, Sore Corn ;ind Bunion Feet Had Better Trj a Little Iron j KEAD HOW IT CAME TO 1 BE DISCOVERED YBAKS AGO They little knew thirty odd years ago, when an old man in digging a mill-race discovered natural medicin- ^ a1 ircn in a huge deposit, that doc-? ^ tors would be prescribing iron for rundown, weak, anaemic, nervous, J blood impoverish people. 1 This old man had terrible sores up- * dii his limbs, pronounced incurable, but working in that strata of medicinal iron which Nature put there, he was cured and chemists and students were amazed. Analysis proved it to contain not only iron in three forme but calcium, sodium, potassium and free sulphuric acid, and here is snown where the point of the story comes in. Found to be a wonderful external remedy for old sores and that it would stop bleeding as quick as J lightning and act as an antiseptic ^ too, surgeons began to use 11 m operations, dentists used it to prevent infection and prevent profuse bleeding when extracting teeth. Now, after several thousand testa, we find that if applied to sore, tentier. sweaty feet that are burdened with corns and bunions it not only A brought relief, but cured and remov- ? ?d the cause. It sounds funny at first, but when one understands the rowerful effect iron has upon tha^B Jlood. the question is answered. Get^ a bottle of this highly concentrated^^ A.cid Iron Mineral. Make a solution^! with about a tablespooriful in a glass r>r two of water' and bathe the feet tcnight. Pour a few drops of it undiluted between the toes and watch results. To demonstrate what iron will 5o, pour a few drops on a cut and watch it stop bleeding, act as a germicide, antiseptic and healing agent. ft prevents soreness and festering ansi [eaves no stain like, for instance, [dine does. Your druggist has Acid Iron Min ?ral. Get a bottle tonight. Tomorrow morning and all day long your feet will feel right. If your druggist iiasn't it, send a dollar to the Ferroline Chemical Corp., Roanoke, Va., 'or a big bottle prepaid.?advertisement. I SUGGESTIONS TO PREVENT FIRES AND SATE PRO PERM Columbia, SV3pt. 22.?Help to reluce the shingle roof fires by advising the people at this season of the year, that they should put a piece of Did sheet zinc or an old discarded dry ^ell battery in their fire places and , stoves. The fumes from this will rid :he chimneys of soot and save money and hou-ses. Help prevent fires by urging peo- 8 to rid their cellars, garrets and A premises of trash. Have no greasy^B pags about the house to start spon- ^ ;aneous combustion fires. Do not i put ashes of any kind in wooden box- ( Replace weathered shingles with ;in or some non-comb-ustible roof and ?ee that their electrical wiring has not H ;he insulation worn off and is in good * )rder. Help save the property of the people. This may not reduce insurance * * A 5,1 ~ + / ? TTLanV rates Out it "v>m ium \.\j lAiW"j itizens. Very truly, F. H. McMaster, Insurance Commissioner. Cah * Aabih DaaISmut 1 mi a wiu-i vcimg \ Pionic, Use "Gets-It" ' s \ Fain Bases at Once, Corn Just Pies! Do your corn-ridding easily, w'th a smile,?the banana-peel way. That's the "Gets-It" way,?the only way,?your corn or callu3 comes off complete as though it were glad W get off. -CS i fBAI l&J/Y "#jM Woxld In Corn Agony, 1 *' Use "Gcts-It.? "Gets-It" has cured more corns than all other remedies combined. It's as sure as the sunrise, and as safe as water. Used by millions. Don't take a chance with your feet; you can't afford to experiment with unknown mixtures when ycx? know "Gets-It" never fails. "Gets-lt" wiil remove any corn or callus. Y/ear those new, styitell shoes or pumps if you want to,?' . go ahead and dance. ** Demand Tt 99 onhctltntua r\o /"?tG on the counter! 25c is all you nee3 pay at any drug- store, or it will be sent direct by S. Lawrence & Co., Chicago, 111. boiu in .sewberry and recommenced s t^e world's best corn remedy fcy \ S. Way, W. G. Mayes ai*d Newerry Drug Co. ^