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PANACEA LACKING FOR FINANCE ILLS Tibat Is View of British Experts?Recovery to Be Slow and Only Possible by Hard Work. London, Feb. 8.?An official report iyf the financial conference issued tosiight shows that Chancellor Chamber .-W, . J nrtnfoi'OrK1** f f?r th(' vttJU twinrucu HIV vvim.1 V..W ourpose of discussing the recent :memorial of bankers and others to "'the premier in favor of calling an in:cemational finance conference. The memorialists explained that "the memorial had not been prepared " with special reference to the exv change situation, but was the outof a series of conferences held rat Amsterdam a month ago with a vlew to finding remedies for the -A economic collapse in many pans 01 Europe. In further explanation of their views they urged the imperative reed of European countries to bring "their expenditure within the compass of their revenue as to the first condition of obtaining assistance through public or private channels, and pointed out that, once this was accomplished private credits would immediately become available. JNo Panacea for Disorders. A general exchange of views followed and it was unanimously rectvgnized that there was no panc?ea for the existing financial and eco nnH that recovery was I'lVlil IV. UlOUIUVtu ? . certain to be slow and could only be achieved by hard work, increased production and private and public retrenchment. Mr. Chamberlain promised to report on the matter to the cabinet council tomorrow. He discussed the subject tonight with Premier Lloyd<ieorgre, Svho did not attend the conference. The fact that this is the first oc1 1 ^asion the labor leaders nave uc^n called into consultation with the government on questions of high JSnance has attracted considerable ?comment. It is supposed that the ministers are seeking their aid in the project of stimulating the workers to increased production, the belief being that the United States is clamoring -for British goods, especially textiles -which, if they can be produced in sufficient quantity, would provide a surplus after satisfying home demands, and this surplus could be exported to offset the adverse trade balance. wGreat Crowds Watched Conferees. <Great crowds witnessed the arrival ' -1? J- J T J of the conferees, wno mciuaeu x>uru Robert Cecil, Reginald McKenna, former chancellor of the exchequer; * Robert Kindersley, chairman of the \wslt savings commission; J. H. Thomas the labor leader; Walter Leaf, t chairman of the London county, tWestminister and Paris bank; Sir 'Auckland Geddes, minister of national service and reconstruction; G. H. Stuart Bunning, secretary of the Postman's federation; Sir Richard Wassar-Smith, president and chairman of the Council of the Institute of Bankers, and Sir Donald MacLean, 51. P. I I PROFITEERS ARE NABBED j Ordered to Buy Goods Back or Con- ' tribute to Chr.rity. I ! Mew York, X. Y., Feb. 3.?Sixteen1 percent was set as the maximum profit for woolen merchants today by .Arthur Williams, federal food administrator. Mr. Williams gave the 'firm of Binder and Hvman, who had i made a profit of $1.85 a yard on! 1,272 vards of woolens which they1 i * i bought for twenty-four hours 1 to buy back the goods from the com-1 plaining firm, H. P. Belsinger and Company, at the price paid and resell at a profit of not more than ten per cent; return $1.25 for each yard to Beismger and Company or turn the $1.25 a yard over to charity. The food administrator declared that merchants should work on a basis of cost plus fair profit regardless of market conditions. ' < ? < > <$ MADE-TO-ORDER COMMUNI & TIES. **.* ' $ <i ?*N ? *- > '? ' x Greenville News. -"Almost anyone who wears clothes - p? ? ^o/in-tn-nrHpr varment to preiers <t mauwu v.?._ 0 one of the ready-made or hand-me vdown variety; and if he can afford it Vie -gets it. It isn't that the ready arafie is not serviceable, or that a .? /airly decent fit cannot be sometimes r-secared, but that if one can have the ; garment made from his own measure; a?ents and secure a perfect fit with j ?0od workmanship out of material selected by himself, he prefers it. ' Communities can be made to order or they can be had ready-made. Most of them are the latter variety. Or rather, they are not made at all, but Ike "Topsy," they "jest growed.'* .Most of them are accidents; and some are mere incidents. Their projectors and promoters were simply hunting for a place to live and work. There have been a few instances. here and there, in which communities have been made to order from the j whole cloth, altogether new; and the} are examples and models of whal community making should be. There are other cases, more numerous, ir which communities have been remade to order and very greatly improvec in the process. Even a rather worn hand-me-down suit can be recut, re fitted, re-dyed, and made to look anc serve better than ever, if the materia was good to begin with. s There is a pronounced tenoencj now-a-days to make or remake communities to order. People are becoming a little more interested in the places where they live and work an<i :the conditions which prevail there They are becoming convinced that1 i1 is possible and desirable to have theii ~? j i - -1. environment nt oeuer ana iook. ueitei and render better all-round service. ! In the great majority of cases it is re-making which is necessary. And there is much of it going on. From all accounts, Holyoke, Mass., is a notable illustration of a town re, made to order. It is a paper town, but it is far from being merely a town on paper. Paper manufacturing ! is perhaps its greatest business, j There may be some connection between its business and its re-making. Its business is to take old soiled, | worn out, or crude material and change them into new, clean, and 1 CPWlPPfl hlf* nmdUCtS. ! And it has set about making a similar transformation in itself. The results | of its efforts in this direction are | likewise wonderful. It is an organized j town. Its organization centers around ' a remarkable live and effective Chamber of Commerce. This cham! ber is larger than its name implies. ! It is not merely a board of trade or a chamber of commerce; it is a comJmunity organization. It has realized J that trade or commerce in a com: munity depends upon a number of ' - o r>n ysi Kar OlflCr UHIlgS clliu mat a i iuihuvi vi. other things grow out of it. So it concerns itself in ?n organized way with all allied, vit' immunity interests, i Its announced, "major working program" includes the following planks: j 1, Housing; 2, Trolleys; 3, Industrial | Development; 4, Streets and Alleys; 5, Parks and Playgrounds; 6, Advertising Holyoke. It has made three big and successjful ventures in municipal ownership land <$?ration. It owns the majority r stock in a railroad; it owns and operlates its gas and electric plants and | its v at arorks. It advertises the | lowest water rates in the state and the lowest electric lighting and power rates in New England; and all its ; municipal service .is eminently satisfactory. ; Its ''supplementary working pro^ gram" includes: Good Roads, Traffic ! Laws and Ordinances, Freight and Railroad Facilities, Law and Enforcement, Public Forums and Social CenTirmrovpment of Mercantile Con ditions, Extension of School System, New Station. It has a public forum for the discussion of all civic matters and when a measure has been threshed out in the forum, it is promoted to the working program if the forum i so decides. It is needless to say that a Cham; ber of Commerce run on these lines has secured hearty and general cooperation. And it is rapidly re-making Holvoke to order. It is a fine illustration of the working of the new community spirit. It exemplifies the New Democracy?a free people erecting: a superstructure of organized liberty in action upon a foundation of law. The Band Hadn't a Chance. From Pearson's Weekly. To make the fixture more attractive if possible, a brass band had been hired from the nearest town to play during an important match of the Studfurrow football club. A " />wntfi4 QceorviVilofl ir? TV) fl ^UUUltY innvu aoo^iutu vu>. *.*v%%v. : o\v, but the musicians failed to materialize. | After watching the football for about half an hour, a bucolic-look ing gentleman, who had been giving ; vent to frequent snorts of disgust, ! made his way to the gate and indig. nantly demanded his money back. ! "Never seen a match before today," he explained, "and I never 1arte* lnnttaov' Tliom font aiit IV ov. v, uuvwti VI . A * w... ? v v v bailers are too jealous for my likintr, they don't give the band a chance!" | "But the band isn't here!" observed the gatekeeper. I "There's one of 'em come, at any i % rate," came the answer. "That chap jwith the whistle yonder; but as soon as ever he starts to give a tune the footballers stop playing and threaten j to punch his head!" The modern Turkish woman of the upper classes is one of the most I highly educated women in the i world. Being denied by custom and ! ftHnnpffp most of the pastimes in j dulged in by her western sisters, the i Turkish woman spends much of her j time in reading and study. It is no | uncommon thing for Turkish ladies to be able to speak half the languages of Europe, and to have, in addition, a knowledge of ancient Greek, Persian and Arabic. j Three : ' Drop ' r?*n ;i WVIU !j Killer ; *! ii * i "Gets-It" Stops Pain Immediately ;: and Corns Go Quick. , [ i ; The way to handle corns Is the , tried and proved "Gets-It" way? ' j the way that millions have found : quickest, easiest, safest and most i reliable. A few drops of "Gets-Tt" knocks the hurt out of any corn at once i and soon loosens it so it lifts right i off without any feeling-. Oh. what comfort! How grand to walk and ! dance and jump without a single ! ; twinge! Why not? "Gets-It," the never failing, guar- i anteed money-back corn remover, { costs but a trifle at any drug store, i Mf'd by E. Lawrence & Co.. Chicago. Soul in Aewtierry anrt recommended J as the world's best corn remedy by! W. G. Mayes. i Rub-My-Tism is a powerful antisep* tic; it kills the poison caused from infected cuts, cures old sores, tetter, etc. l-13-10t U Reasons! k k i Why you should use Cardui, the woman's tonic, for your troubles, I ^ W1 have been shown in M thousands of letters from actual users of this medik. | cine, who sgeak from personal experience. If the results obtained *>y L~i ^ ] other women for so manjr years nave oeen so xmi- rv tormty good, why not L ^ 1^1 give Cardui a trial? ^ Take ^ CARDUI ^ The Woman's Tonic ; Mrs. Mary J. Irvin, of |k Cuiien, va., writes: i^w r ! ^ "About 11 years ago, I j i KW suffered untold misery 1 with female trouble, bearing-down pains, headache, numbness ... I 1^ would go for three weeks nlmost bent double . . . ^ ! ^3 My husband went to Dr. Hj j M for Cardui ... < j After taking about two ^ ^ , k | bottles I began going Sraj around and when I took ' three bottles I could do c all mv vrnrk " F-SQ I - ! Rub-My-Tisrn is a great pain killer. It r<J;cvcs pair* and soreness caused I by Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sprains, 1 etc. l-13-10t ; UiKM~ fio.ro fi WEAK I UWIMFII WviiR ?E 3 Protects Young f | j GIRLS f! | Regulates, tones up, drives % % away "the blues" and makes ? g them glad they're living. | ji | The prescription of an old f | Southern doctor who treated g E and cured thousands of suf- ? 5c j fering women. H j STtlUVIT# l| is also good for young: girls? g ! g to bring them safely through s ! | the period of adolescence which ? i g all mothers know is a time at ft j j | which their daughters need i i I g the utmost care. i | At all drug stores. MONEY I | REFUNDED if the first bot- J % tie fails to benefit f ? -- fl ji jf THACHER MEDICINE V.O. i I Chattanooga, Tenn., tX. 8. A. I 1 I Mrs. Faralee Frailer, Lonfjview, Tel., ? H expressed appreciation of STELLA- s | VITAE in these words: "I cannot 1 g sav too much for this wonderful # 1 5 medicine. f had taken other female ^ | medicines for two years with no % = results. I am truly grateful for the B r-: good STi:i.L\-VITAK ha* done me." e r J i UNUSi INI We have now fo grade cars we have exceptionally fine c< 1 T *i 1 * ical condition, ures advancing price of < now. At the price v, Our price is on the t will be much higher, for a year. Come in One Studebaker Perfect condition. One Studebaker unusually good valu | every way. One Studebaker car looks and runs lil One Studebaker condition and a bars Onp St.nHpha.kpr V VV? Vfc V New tires, new batte One Dodge Torn Battery. Perfect cc One Chalmers Si tinn A hare-airi at One Maxwell Tc TIM McH \ Phone 300. SEED OATS FOR SALE ["be Hammond Oats. Best early oat* on the market. $1.75 per bushel. H. O. Long, Silverstreet, S. C. 666 has proven it will cure Maaria, Chills and Fever, Bilious Fever ^olds and LaGrippe. 1-13-1 Ot Pulaski Lodge No. 20, I. O. O. F. Meett every Friday at 7:30 at \lettner's Hall. Members urged to itter.d. Visiting brethren welcome. C. W. Douglas, ). B. Chandler, Noble Grand. Secretary. ForFLir Your Liver Active, Your " JL~ ? System Purified and Free From Colds by Taking Calotabs, the Nausealess Calomel Tablets, that are Delightful, Safe and Sure. Physicians and l>ni^i>ist.s are advistheir J'ricinis to keep their systems and their organs in perfect ki;i? order as a protection against in* return of infhicnza. They know ha! a closed up system and a lazy i\cr l'avor colds, influenza and serious <?::: ;>lirat ions. T" cut short a cold overnight and to jv ?* j ?r serious complications take one - -*- - - 11..,.. ,'al??tali ;it bruinm* wtui a. swuuu? .vator?(liar's all. No salts, no nausea, no griping, no sickening after effects. Next morning your i.oid lias vanished, i*.nir li\er is active, your system ij purified and refreshed and you are feeling line with a hearty appetite for breaktV.st Eat what you please?no danger. Calotabs are sold only in original scaled packages, price thirty-five cents. Every druggist is authorized to refund ' ""i* rnmirv if vou are noA perfectly l-'lijilted with Cnlotnbs.? (Adv.) NOTICE TO DELINQUENT TAXPAYERS. Executions will be issued February 16th, for unpaid taxes due the Town of Newberry. Please save yourselves this trouble. Hv order of the Council. J. W. CHAPMAN, Clerk and Treasurer. l-l t UAL W r sale the best collection ever been able to offer, ondition in every way?a and batteries. In view < ears it will pay you to sell re can offer these cars we >asis of last summer's lev* You can save enough n : and select yours before 1 n -* - - in T 1 O A T aeries juigm oix, * r A bargain. Six Series 18, 5 Passeng* e. New tires, new fatter Six Series 18, 7 Passeng< ke new. Qiv So viae 1,9 7 PasspriON kJ I/V k-'VX 1V/4J V/J -A- ' *ain at the price. Series Six 18, 7 Passer >ry. Splendid value. ring Car. New tires, m )ndition. r._ m ; nAll ix .turning uar. j-vh new the price. ?uring Car. Fine conditic E PAYMENTS ARRAN< fardv M< Distributor. r BRANI mncMAi ! ULilS^lTlVJ Touring Car. Exa buy from Oldsmobile this car at a consider pay more when we ci McHarch ! ! I ^ Distri Phone 300 ! | SALE OF PROSPERITY LOTS Instead of offering my place for t sale February 2, I have decided to * i ! cut it up into cuuning uns, upcmu^ , up a street in the center. Plats : of these lots may be seen by call! ing on me. Will be sold at the Court j House in Newberry Salesday in I March. Will be first offered in lots | and then as a whole. The place conj tains eisrht (8) acres in the center I nf thp tmvn of Prosperity. Terms: One-third cash, balance j one and two years at seven (7) per} cent, interest, secured by inortirac:e of the premises, purchaser to pay for \ the papers. S. L. FELLERS. Subscribe to The Herald and News $2.00 a year. SPECIAL SCHOOL ELECTION EXCELSIOR DISTRICT, NO. 35. Whereas, one-third of the resident freeholders and a like proportion of the resident electors of the age of twentv-one in the Excelsior School District No. 35, the County of New-1 berry, State of South Carolina, have j filed a petition with the County Board of Education of Newberry County, South Carolina, petitioning and requesting that an election be held in said school district on the question of levying a special tax of two (2) mills on the taxable prop-! erty within the said school district | for school purposes: A VLUES . ^RS i of slightly used high These cars are all in .ppearance, mechanDf the high and still . ect one that suits you can save you money. 4H 3I. By spring values M ow to run your car Jfl ;hey are all gone. fl '~Roadster' 1 er Touring Car. An y. In fine condition sr Touring Car. This A sr Touring Car. Fine j lger Touring Car. J 3\v Willard Rubber ^1 tires, perfect condi* * >n. Good value. GED Dwer Lower Main St. ) NEW SHE SIX f \ .ctly same as you can dealer. We can sell able discount. Why in save you money? f Mower butor Lower Main St. Now, therefore, 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 Excelsior School District, No. 35, to hold an election on the said question of levying a 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 Excelsior School House in the said 4 School District No, 35, on Wednesday. the 4th day of February, 1920. at which said election the polls shall be opened at 7 a. m. and closed at 4 p. m. The members of the Board of Trustees of said School District shall act as managers of said election. Only such electors as reside in said School District and return real or personal property for taxation, and who exhibit their tax receipts and registration certificates as required in genera] elections, Shall be allowed to vote. Electors favoring the levy of such tax shall cast a ballot containing the word "Yes" written or printed thereon, and each elector op- i f/> c<?y/iU Intnr oVioll cf q KqHaI J/USCU blS OUS.11 It ? J otmil vuco u vunvv containing the word "No" written or printed thereon. Given under our hands and seals this the 19th day of January, 1920. C. M. WILSON, (L. S.) 0. B. CANNON, (L. S.) J. B. HARMON, (L. S.) County Board of Education, Newberry Cour.ty. South Carolina.