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r z_ _ . Make This Bank Y I Draft Youi r l / n Arir]p linw mil V WWJkVtV ? V WW aaawa "V each month, th I Account and m posit that much (When the war i you have saved This bank ailov 4 * . 4- St?Interest on The Excha Y Of Newbe x "The Bank of "Every act con If a man lifts i | high he mast ri I bodythatamoi ; F I Thjp energy is obtained from f proteins, carbohydrates and othe compounds contained in Schlitz F * Schlit Famo is made scientificallj ily it is a drink/ a worth-while c firage?but finally it is food. Drink i FAMI It induces appetite, aids digestion L the tody with muscular energy ar ft . It gives you protein as do eggs, m; Bjm ptc.?carbohydrates as do veget ft cereals?mineral matter and watei Schlitz Famo is refreshing and It is non-intoxicating good and goc On sale wherever soft dri j|^ 158 are sold. Order a case t Lwjar9 Made Milwat OTICE OF ELECTION IX MT. PLEASANT SCHOOL DISTRICT L NO. 29? Whereas, one-third of the resident! free-holders and a like proportion of i the resident electors of the age I twenty-one in. the Mt. Pleasant school district Xo. 29. the county of New- ! berry, State of South,. Carolina, have J 1 filed a petition with tfie county board | ipl of education of Newberry county South j < |f^|' Carolina, petitioning and requesting j < that an election be held in the said | school district on the question of levy, j Iing a special ax of two (2) mills on | V the taxable property within the said school district. Now, herefore, -we the undersigned composing the county board of education for Newberry county, State of South Carolina, do hereby order the board of trustees of the <Mt. Pleasant L school district No. 29 to hold an elecHnn rm the <?3id Question of levying Ea special tax of two (2) mills to be collected on the property located within the said school district, which said election shall be held at the Mt Pleasant school house in the said school district Xo. 29, on Saturday, the 14th day of September, 1918, at which election the polls shall be opened at 7 a. m. and closed at 4 p The members of the "board of < our Eusir ess Hcr.:e 0 Dollars? ch you should save .en open a Savings - 1 * ake it a ruv=? to dei each monui. | is over you will find a good round sum. vs i SdViBfS?-4 gent .V ' '* ' nge Bank ito n rry,;p. the People" wmmmammmmmmmmaummmmmammmmmmmmmmm?mmmmmmm .. \ : : somes energy, i pound a foot II :pronnce in net int of energy." ood?from r essential amo. r yji LiLiai - 0 t, supplies id heat flk, wheat, gS Telephone No. 88 R. D. Smith & Son Y Newberry, S. C. iItaa Famons trustees or the said school distric shall act as managers of the sail election. -Only such electors as re side in the said school district an< return real or personal property fo taxation, and who exhibit their ta: receipts and registration cerificates a required general elections, shall b< allowed to vote. Electors favoring the levy of such tax shall cast a bal ' * t If iot containing ine wura >cs win :en or printed thereon, and each elect opposed to such levy shall cast z ballot containing the word "No" writ ten or printed thereon. Given under our hands and seal this the 28th day of August, 1918. C. M. Wilson, (L. S.) 0. B. Cannon, (L. S.) J. M. Bedenbaugh, (L. S. County Board of Education, Newberry County, S. C. i:l ONE SPOON, PLEASE. :: Make one spoon of sugar :: Do the work of two. :J N ! < T>Tppn tba nrno-mm cnlnc ? Until the war Is through. | ,r. ... . LQUDEF THAN ANY THUNDER Modern Guns Make Noise That !s Far Above That of "Heaven's Artillery." Every big noise is compared to thunder, as if heaven's artillery were the greatest noise imaginable. We speak commonly of "the thunder of the guns," and the poets have always ? ~ ~ -3 i.V?. OTA/M /\r? AO n. spreau *es vu uic innuv. cannonade of a thunder storm. But the plaio fact is that man's artillery beats the clouds into fits, if the distance &t which each can be heard is any criterion of the intensity and volume of sound. The gunfire in Flanders has been heard in London countless times, while it is quite impossible to say how far the famous mineburst on the ^rr* ?J -3 ? - Ktt Vitvmnn vimy nuge, yiuuutcu uj uuumu agency, though not gunfire, could be beard. But it is doubtful whether the loudest thunder that ever pealed has been heard 20 miles away. One of the greatest thunder storms of recent years occurred in the RichEaond area, but not a sound of it ' reached London, and it is on record that when the church steeple of Lost* * * ' 1 ? ^ V. t t 1 i f r* 7 n fT f/\ wnmei was uesuujeu uvv u^uLmus ^ the accompaniment of such a roar of thunder as the oldest inhabitant could not remember, no sound was heard 3j miles disiant. The explanation of this seeming anomaly is possibly the fact that thunder is produced in the air, and the sound is conveyed by earth waves rather than by air waves.?London Chronicle. i WOMEN HANDLE BIG SHELLS y i ??? Young Mother Gave Practical Demonstration of Their Physical Fitness to Do So. Whpn women first were put to work in shell factories In England they , handled only tha light field-gun shells. ! Later it became necessary for them to turn out larger shells, and doubts were ' raised as to whether the women were strong enough to handle them. A young mother settled the question. "Let me heft the shell," she said, picking one up from the floor. "Aye," she commented, "this shell is a mite heavy, 'tis true, but it's not so heuvy as my baby." There is a shell factory in the Liverpool district operated almost excln.sively by the daughters of business and professional men. Many are young girls who had never done any kind of work other than needle work - ?'?1_ _ j* and cooking. The neavy worn ui mc establishment is performed by the wives of sailors. This is a nonprofit-making factory and it is the reply of the Cunard company to the Germans for the sinking of the Lusitania. j ____________________ i i Rip Van Noah. It was the first twilight game at the local ball park, and the little fan with | the whiskers just had to tell something j to celebrate the occasion. "Bovs. here's a new one my son i wrote me," he said, as he climbed into the bleachers. "Well, spring it! Spring it!" begged j the "gang." "Let's get it over with." "Yuh know my son's at the Nation- ' al army camp at Chillicothe. leh, he j came out flat-footed fer the war. Hah- , hah!" said the little man, as he bit j into ar cigar which everybody knew . ^ WKAnlincr h pfp J w ild Luauc 1*4 it uc^uu^. ?t v*4f ?? ( Is what he wrote me this morning: 'Dear Pop?Here is a joke. I hope you see the point. What put the chill . In Chillicothe? Why, the draft, of ! course. Jimmy. P. S. This is some city.' Now wasn't that just like Jimmy. Some little joke. He-he!" "" v- 4-Vio. "les, some niue jua.e, sam mv crowd, "you old Mr. Rip Van Noah." ! Imitated Kopenick Captain. An' extraordinary7 instance of Tentonic servility where uniforms are concerned has occurred at Essen. A party of three armed individuals, two in soldiers' and one In a policemen's uniform, made a round of all tbe schools of the town, representing themselves , to be authorized to collect the ehildren's satchels. They paid a trifle in r each case for the leather 6fraps at* tached to them, and carried away their - jbooty. After a few days, the whole ? -a a- :^^l^ l airair was aiscovereu iu ue ? swmutc. f "How it is possible that this could have been carried on for days without anyone having the courage to challenge their authority remains one of " the mysteries of the war," says the ? Rhenish Westphalian Gazette. I i j Flying Temperament. - ; The most eminent of British scieni tists have devoted special study to the ! . psychological and physiological aspects ; of flying. One authority says that i : good eyesight, normal hearing, gootf ' 5 i "muscle sense," .and equilibration are J indispensable qualifications. But most j important of all is the right tempera- j ment?not an easy thing for a medical ) board to examine. Of the types?the imaginative and the unimaginative? the imaginative youth is said to make j the better pilot if he can keep his imagination under control. Two Prize Captives. j While on sentry duty one night one i of the men at Camp Colt, who had I hppn the butt of numerous company j 11 jokes, halted two of his worst tormen- { | tors as they were endeavoring to slip i | into camp after taps. In response to j t his challenge they stated that they i t were Kaiser Bill and Von Hindenburgi ! ' rantrv r?Q 11 Orl for the ' ? 1 Ilfi t-UJMfii lllU OCIllM. * vuuvu -.v* , [ officer of the guard, reported his dis- j : linguxslicd guests, and had the satis- i : faction of seeing them headed directly ! * Cor the guardhouse. j Conde TT?o Nihn JL iiv nauu New! From repoi Snowina CnnHitin Loans and h Liberty Bone U, S. Bonds /^? t 11 Cash and du U. S. Trea , \ \ Capital Stocl < Surplus and 1 Circulation . T\? 1 1 ? T uivvaenas u: Deposits Bills Payable erty Bond: Rediscounts THE NATION; 8. c. Matthews, t. * - President. State, Com Mernh \ * ___ TERRORS GIVEN INDIAN NAME! Mrs Wilson Credited With Idea Tha Really Has a* Good Deal to Be Said in Its Favor. Selecting names for the many ne\ vessels soon to slide from America] ways is a task needing patience an* application. It is one of the duties o Assistant Secretary Roosevelt of th navy department, who, though he find maEy volunteer assistants, is alway hard pressed in his pursuit of suitabli names. The wife of President Wilsoi has now come to his aid with a list o names. Mrs. Wilson is a descendant of Po cahontas. The names she suggest may be calculated to spread terro amcng the enemies of America afloat They are taken from Indian history. When an enemy vessel sees the Sin nairahoning approaching flying tin Stai's and Stripes, the captain is likeU to think one of the devils of the deej is iri pursuit. If the Sinnamahoning i: followed by the Sisladobsis and th< Sisladobsis by the Skaneateles and th< Shawangunk?all names conferred b] the president's wife?the enemy maj -well believe that the day of legendar] ? 1 A 1 otm iciiurs ims reiurueu. Suppose, again, that the Saccarappa the Sagaporack, the Tobesofka and th< Tonganoxie were to sail forth together Is tliere any power on the sea's surface or t eneath that would court encountei with such an orthographical onslaught' Tnere is a warwhoop m every name If v:he Shickshinny does not suggesi scalping, or the Sheshequin an ambush it is because one is unfamiliar with In dian nomenclature. COST TO THE OONSUNER W.tf wM adjfccf To ftic coet b?ta.-cen. WVMtf/'A ftpur iff me n-JU door una ti->e Y/////,7.'//A Df#?o on "the. consumer's tabic What $\e miller edded "!b 1ft? cost[Dotted portion, indicates cott of cco^ M What the feeder gar- for hie wheat ..QCKHTS ||g| YS.wmi Rwyw?/. ' i. H Pf Q ! 4* '"[ia8? 6? Isf f 3" * ? s ^ ^ 1913 !9!4 1915 l! Perwitoce -figures aho.v ttie Telsrhre p*of>< rf ?,?>trrt3 rcKt- td \tift conetrn-iep <_^Gec sr eac. 1S44 snsed Stafo OF nai Bank of >errv, South Cai t to the Comptroller of th n at the Clos** of Busir RESOURCES lvestments . . $ is e from Banks and isurer .... $5 LIABILITIES Undivided Profits $ ? npaid . . . . ? , 1i :L : v sec urea oy l,ius) . ? , .. . wiih Federal Bank $i if DAMif nr Msrm Ah emm m iiLiii L JOHNSTONE, H. T. CANNC Cashier. Assistant G nty and City er Federal Reserve . / % i vr i . " '' *V" - % U. &Itood Admlitf ' s 01* Squire 'Tater 'low he goin* to | r be mighty nign King er ae rocs i 'mong garden sass folks. V?Te alls I kin eat him as a 'tater boiled, baked, fried, stewed, cooked wid cheese en | - ' dey gettin' so dey make im inter | s flour; so's we kin "substi-tute" him ; fo' wheat flour. He's ?le "suh?titu- J f tenest" of all de vittles, he sez. ) De udder garden sass folks lak j 3 ! inguns, tomatues, cabbage en turnips j a , en squash don't need to git peeved, I " i 'cause dey's goin' to be room in de \ ~ pot fo' de whole tribe. Ev'y las' ; j \ one on 'em can he'p save wheat en j . i meat fer de boys dat's doin' de fight* ; ; in' over yander. 7 j i ! I ? j ;! I; EAT I !i :coknJM '! rsAVE :j vheat i J : _ I OF A POUND LOAF 0? Bft^D ~ lO CENTS j I mm ? ? -- * ?I UtwfiJ YW//' l^f 482 k J SoV _ /=. - -._ I } */ P! * ^ ^ i 916 1917 1917 1918 Hi 3rt.br. FIRST LAST FiRST i Stage HALF HALF HALF ^ [ sment Newberry j rolina e Currency less June 29,1918 738,414.41 105,400.00 100,000.00 62,213,80 1,006,028.21 7 100.000 00 16,37154 i on a ah An X w^wv vv 4,044.00 .582,80714 101,000.00 101,805.53 1,005,028.21 i'BERRV, i C. >N, W.W.CROMER tshier. Assistant Cashier. Depository System ???????I CO LIE OK OF CHARLESTON. Founded 17So. A co'ilege of highest standard, open onH wnmori An inf pntinnallv LU illCII O.XJL\jL it vmvu. ? limited enrollment insures individual instruction Four years courses lead to the Bachelor's Degree. The PreMedical course a special feature. Military training, established in 1917 under War Department Regulations, 19 in charge of U. S. Army Officers. Address, Harrison Randolph, Pres. Charleston, S. C. ker 1" K n n i/l Kitclien ' idfe sac is , at I-', S. .v! doing her , part to i help winwar Are VOU doing yOTO ?. uwrreo states pooo administration - HOM E!/v Kulturiz^<i ''* f'i- If ^ ?mmmmm??.nu " ?1???? 666 contains no alcohol, arsenic nor other poisonous drur j. 8-5 tf