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at Ba These i Buines near th TERMS Sale C01 J. L. B SAYS PROHIBITION MEANS BIO SAYINGS Governor of aMine Credits Dry Law With Much Good GREAT BOON TO CHILDREN Declares Future Citizens of Nation Will Not Be Afflicted iWth Drink Habit.. Washington, Sept. 26.-Prohibition was credited with producing a sav ing of two billion dlollar~s for the na tion in the last year by Governor Milliken, of Maine, in addressing the closing session tonight of the fifteenth 4 International Cogress Against Alco-. holism. "Prohibition," he declared, 'has made mo'st kinds of business better and has injuredl no legitimate business except that of the. undertaker." "The three outstandling results of prohibition," he said "are the saving of about two billion dollar;' waste in expenditure, a tremendlous increase in the eficeiency of labor and startling decrease in crime with its attendant poveryt and wretchedness. "From the standlpoint of practical government, however, the most im portant contribution that prohibition has made to the welfare of the nation is to be found in the simple fact that a newv generation wvith be growing up untainted by the liquor habit andl un hampered by the conditions of squalor andl wretchedness which the liquor habit has imposed upon so many thousand innocent children in the past." Into Legitimate Trade. Referring to the economic benefits of prohibition, overnor Miliken deC clared that the nation's (lrink bill for merly amounted to two billion dollars annually, and this money he declared. "now finds its way into the normal channels of legitimate trade." "The grocers, the clothiers, amuse ment proprietors and the banks," he add~edl, "are getting the money that formerly went for dIrink. Hotels that fancied themselves dependent on the liquor business are doing the best bnsiness in their history without it. "Prohibition has not onlly edliiatedl an enormous waste in expenditure, but it has greatly increased the efficiency of labor. The average life of a la boring man is longer under prohibi tion; he (inoe bettr work wvhile he is I O I nmNWI"wna" DmO mm ma ns 10 row 'S iLre all nice c s Lot in a goc is Property. 1-3 Cas Takes ne and be wi ARROW, Tired I was weak and run-down," relates Mrs. Eula Burnett, of 4kq Dalton, Ga. "I was thin and just felt tired, all the time. I didn't rest well. I wasn't ever hungry. I knew, by ft this, I needed a tonic, and g t as there is nione better than- h I CADUI : jThe Woman's Tonic E . ., beanusing Cardul," Yjv continues Mrs. Burnett. "I' ''"After my first bottle, I slept Ibetter and ate better. I took four bottles. Now I'm well, 3 'j Sfeel just fine, eat and sleep, my skin is clear and I have Sgained and sure feel that . Cardul is the best tonic ever made." Es l I Thousands of other women i have found CarduI just as a SMrs. Burnett did. it should r help you. At all druggists. r it it and he wvorks more steadily. A 'eport from one large labor agency n an industrial section is typical. It a stated that out of 35,000) men em-'t >loyedI by that agency when the coun ry was wet, the' alvelage length of ~ime that the man remained on the job wvas less than thirty days. The verage more than dloubtledl with the First year of prohibition.'' - -o- - l'IIE BlltD)S '-iOUJLI) Mr I. Ed~(itor:) Ini traveling over the state meweting many farmers of my race, I have tried to fh~d time to call attention in puh lie andl private to the necessity of pro tecting and preserving the partridlge or- quail. T1h e grmeatest exterminator of the boll weevil is; the partridge. -U 300 X Ro ioice Lots, an id neighborhc h; Balanc Pay Place at 12 O'c th us on this Jr. - colored man that he had killed a )vo and had found boll weevils in his *aW. I Birds of other kinds are scarce in iis state. Boys are allowed to throw )cks at the birds. Men find time to loot any kind of birds they come I :. c ba!l bat destr1y s mnn i y iosquitoes but is shot down fre uiently. The toad frog is a useful and help il creature. Ile is the greatest enemy iat the army wormi and other worms ave. I saw a piasture the other (lay wvherej strange worm had moved the grass own andI was making its fay to the elds of hay and fodder. The farmer can do a great wvork if e wvill preserve on his farm (whether I e owns it or not) the partridge and a ther birds.I Let the toads have free access to the ardIens and fields. I learn this not ery long ago when I took a trip to. exas, and Alabama.I Richard Carroll. ' W() KILLED) AS PLANE DIVES INTO WATERI Richmond, Va., Sept. 26.-Lieut Wil I ni Farmer Bell, Jr., of Acconmac, I 'irginia, and Iharry Beailter of Wach-i preaguae, Va., were killed this after-j 01n0 in a sea plane flight at Wacha - reague. Bell wvho was flying the. miachine, had1( made several flights uring the day and was returning to is base with everything apparentlyi oing well, when suddenly the plane| ook what seemed to be a nose (live| nd( pitehed in that p)ositionl in Wacha rengue lInlet in about ten feet of vater. Bell was .a forn'er aviator and estedl airplanles at Kelly Field, Texas, nd Dayton, Ohio (luring the wvar. i~e s survivedl by his w'idIow and an in-| ant son. Boulter was an observer. UJNIQUE LAW FIRM Wilmington, N. C., Sept. 26.---North araol inta's really unIique lawv firmui has ust hung out its shingle at lFayet te pille, the copairtners becing I lenry Mcl) lolbinsoni, a leader of thec Cumbherland ~ounty bar, and his daughter, MIiss Kathaerine McIermid Robinson, who 'evently Passed the State Supreme ~ourt first in a class of eighty-live. 666 quickly relieves Coast ipat ion, Filiousaness, Loss of Appetite and~ heaaesn (Isn to Tnrpidl Liver.--.2-1O .. . ..........-. .- I U LOTS ids, Near Union Church d it is -an opportunity to own a iod. Good School and a Church e in One and Three-Year ents. OCTOBER 12 lock. day whether you buy or not. - - New Zion, S. C. I OUR Business Is I Growing ! It has inneased over last year which was our boomer year. We thank onr customers for this increase and hope they will continue to help us grow. We try to give .a D*4lar's 'worth of MerchamlIise for your Dollar. New Fall Suits-.--- ...----- .-$30.00 to $150.00 New F'all Coats ~$22.00 to $135.00 Newv Fall Dresses 4--~ 15.00 to $98.50 New Fall Skirts - - - -.L$5.00 to $25.00 New Fall Shoes .$5.00 to $20.00 IF ITS POPULAR PRICE DRY GOODS-WE HAVE I McCollum Bros.,