The dispatch-news. [volume] (Lexington, S.C.) 1919-2001, June 08, 1921, Image 7
it DRIVE TO
See another week
mxfc.T
Tfcnn., June 4.?The
I
i through which South- j
:s are seeking $33,000,-1
.
stian education will be j
other week. According j
: at headquarters,. this j
HmA is ^ranted at the I
the connection; and those,1
?u] &any a battle has been
I<p|bon th? faithfulness ( zeal and |
Bl&iasm w:th which pastors, pre- (
HS?e?ders. directors and members
?&' > , 1 fi ' 1
Rfele mony churches throughout!
Bnnection have raised their!
pfc, and mure, a large number will |
gfauneh me drive until Sunday,!
Era,. which will necessitate more .'
p is .securing pledges during the :
jgr of June G-12. Ample opportun-'t
ft be given hy this extension of
Irfoc every church which has not
ed its quota to continue the work
' I . J J
I
? \ i
| do mice, once they eat RAT- j
KTAP. And they leave no odor be-1
nd. Don't take our word for it? |
nn,1 .lnno '
" va is auu uvgs r? uu t, :
i j^jloach it. Rats pass up all food to.j^
^^get RAT-SXAP. Three sizes. j^
size (1 cake) enough for!
I* W;Pantry, Kitchen or Cellar.
65c size (2 cakes) for Chicken \
House, coops, or small buildings.
. $1.25 size (5 cakes) enough for;
t all farm and out-buildings, storage?
H|. buildings, or factory buildings.
; Sold and Guaranteed by Lexing-?
; ' K ton Pharmacy and Harmon Drug;
jlHI Company.
If Blood Cell Serum i
H ' Doctors Who Have
The Patients Clai
?"' Would Be a C
I It:
Probably the greatest advertisi
E.i that of the Liberty Loans by th<
no one ever questioned its object
advertise is a derivation of the w
to," and that the word advertise n
e So we conclude that anything in t
the mind and attention of the pul
advertising.
Business cards, newspaper anc
> recommendation of patients woul
gory of advertising. The questii
answered by the definition: To
coverv with the object of turning
JT - - this
new system of healing: the si
BE-'*
If *"
Webster defines ethics as ''per
the moral question"?I. e., the qu
the question might be stated as fc
the public that a great new disco\
of getting the sick well? When tl
L itself. It is as though one were
tise where food is to be gotten t<
right to give notice of the diseov
dying of thirst in the desert?
If blood cell serum is what the
ir*. patients claim it to. be, it would
sick world. If it is half what tl
and every ethical consideration
merits to proclaim them. Of cot
Sick with serum made from their
ijr merit, or if it occupies a relative
fice, such claims as are publicly r
condemnation and penalties.
c-"
The reports from physicians fr
?the results obtained covering <.
cent good results?and here in C
pressing enthusiasm of patients p
- - V
What people onject xo is.
fraud. ' The public wants to kn<
and advertising: is the medium thi
Like every other good thing, ad
used for ignoble ends, and in this
to advertise, but it is wrong to lie
vertise what we do. We do what
We regard this system as th
brings more good results and gi
other medical knowledge and 1 el
terested we invito you to investig
% freely show you.
"lie who investigates and tin
He who condemns before lie
Hi* Inlin R ll/Iffiillfinrrl-i
&/! vv/uu Jluvwuauu '
S1A
120?> U Main Street
Hours i) a. in. to ? ]>. m. s
>
i
I
with renewed enthusiasm. Many
churches have done nobly during the
past week, and in hundreds of cases
gifts from indivduals living in the
financiaily depressed sections have
been sacrificial."
^ *T4 ' Tnrn'c rr rpinvT
Xi.l If V 11VV V o uuui
WORSE THAN A RIOT
One Show Ihul Historic Experience
With Tusker in Kansas City
In the circus menagerie wild animals
are always held to be dangerous.
In the performing area this
assumption is the first rule of train- i
ing. No animal can be trusted. The
most tractable and obedient beast
will turn and attack at any time the
mood seizes it. Trainers know this
well, and the successful ones are always
prepared for a sudden spring
or a sweeping stroke of unsheathed
claws. But, until an animal has once
rebelled successfully?broken down
man's mastery temporarily?it is not
"bad" in the sense that trainers use
the term. * ' A bad elephant is
ever biding his time to kill, or watching
for a chance to lead other elephants
into a stampede. And nothing i
in circus life is so fraught with ter-1
rifying possibilites as an elephant j
stampede.
Of all the bad elephants ever in
America, "Snyder, the tusker.", came
nearest to dying "in character," as
theatrical slang has it. For Snyder
died with "his boots on." It was at
Salina, Kan.. Monday, September 13,
1920. Snyder had done nothing un-?
usual since the engagement of the
circus at the Chicago Coliseum. How- ,
ever, one of his trainers had been
left ill in a hospital along the route, j
The bass elephant man was the day j
before called home on urgent busi- J
ness. This left a trainer in charge
who had not been with the herd for
three years.
This change made the herd restless,
especially Snyder. After parade
that Monday forenoon, the general
manager of the show ordered a rehearsal
of the middle-ring elephants. :
among which was Snyder, the preeminent
feature. Xo sooner had
Snyder reached the ring than he
turned and raced out, with two at
tendants clinging to him with bull
hooks jabbed deep into his trunk.
Out of the big top into the menagerie
tent Snyder plunged and shook
Is What the
Used It and
m It to Be, It
!rime to Conceal
From the Sick World
ng campaign ever conducted was
3 United States Government. Yet
or ethics. "Webster says the word
ord advert, which means to "turn
leans "to notify," "to give notice."
he nature of a notice, which turns
>lio to a person, object or thing, is
I magazine articles and even the
d properly be placed in the cateon
then, of why we advertise is
simply give notice of a new disthe
attention of the public toward
ck. But is it ethical to do this?
taining to conduct and involving
estion of right and wrong, so that
>llows: Is it right to give notice to
erv has been made in the method
??/ ? ctntr>/1 it nriswPrs
U UVOU?'JI ?7 V. V?.
( to ask: Is it ethical to adver- {
o those who are starving, or is it j
ery of a spring to those who are \
I
doctors who have used it and the ?
be a crime to conceal it from the I
ley say it is every moral impulse ;
would urge those who know its 5
trse, if this system of treating the l
own blood is a fraud, if it lacks
ly small niche in the health edinade
would merit the most severe jj
inn till parts of the I'nited States
>ver 200 complaints with SS per- S
olumbia pages of testimonials ex- {t |
reclude such conclusion. H
ot advertising, but untruth and
)w every meritorious proposition
rough which this is accomplished. 11
yertising can be prostituted and :
: lies the wrong. Jt is not wrong
and bear false witness. We adwe
advertise.
e missing link in medicine. It
atitude to our patients than all
sources at our command. If inrate.
We can and will gladly and
it i
|i
mi condemns i> a wise man:
investigates is a fool.'
i
[ I
Dr. ?/. R. Register
Columbia, S. C.
nnday 10 a. m. to i! p. in.
I
|
? ^?1 I
off the attendants, striking at them
with his trunk. The tucker's small
eyes were red with bloqd lust, and
circus men, forming a line of skirmishers,
headed the crowds on the
lot onto the streets outside the fences. ?
Others, led by the elephant men,
formed a great circle about tne elephant
in order that he might be
headed if he turned toward the townspeople.
For three hours the big elephant
spent his time in turning over
immensely heavy pole, seat and baggage
wagons. Once he picked up a
cage of lions and hurled it thirty feet.
'He started for a den of leopards, but
the snarling cats, rearing against the j
bars with their claws extended, scared |
him off.
All during the excitement the elephant
heeded his name. So. as he
would start a charge, the circus men
would divert him by calling to him.
Thus, the field of his activities was
restricted. Outside the menagerie was
a small tent in which the elephant
I
men were wont, to rest oetween shows. I
This the elephants knocked over, |
stamping upon every square foot of j
the flattened canvas in the apparent
hope that some one of the men was
underneath.
Once he rushed for the great six- j
pole lop in which 300 of the show's >
finest draft stock were stabled. As the 1
elephant approached, a quick whistle!
I
from the boss hostler sixty drivers!
and grooms with pitchforks felt in line 1
in front of the tent. There were men j
In that line who had driven and
nursed their six and eight-horse i
teams for .years. They were there to!
die rather than see their pets harntcd. j
The sun glinted on the thin line of |
pronged steel. Snyder, charging with |
long, lumbering strides, saw and un- f
derstood. He came to a full stop,
turned and went back to the menaeerie
tent, where he wrecked the
I
candy stands. I
I
Meanwhile the general manager
'had sent for rifles. He also had prepared
apples with cyanide of potassium.
These were thrown to the elephant.
He ate one and then tossed
the others aside. Jt is likely he detected
the poison. That contained in
one apple had no effect on him. The
manager had managed to get Trilby,
Snyder's mate, chained at one side of
the show lot where people would not
obstruct the line of lire, if he should
decide to shoot the mad brute. When j
the poisoned apples failed to slow
up Snyder's rushes, he gave the word.
It was then a matter of luring or
driving the^elephant to a point where j
he could see Trilby, for it was almost j
certain that he would attempt to j
loosen her when lie sighted her. Such j
proved to be the outcome. But, as
Snyder neared her the assistant manager,
armed with a 4 ">-90 rifle, fired.
Tiio lmitpt r-nncrht. the tusker in the
hollow over the right eye, piercing the
brain. Three ex-officers of the army
also opened fire, but unnecessarily, for
the manager's shot was fatal. Slowly.
without a sound or a struggle, the
elephant sank to his knees and
stretched out on his right side. So
ended the only elephant hunt ever
held in the heart of Kansas.?Frank j
Eraden, in Popular Science Magazine. I
I
NAPOLEON TO JOSEPHINE
i
i
From the first Josephine was a j
heart-breaker. In girlhood she had !
one or two love affairs in Martinique, j
Then, while still in her teens, she
married Viscomte Beauharnais. The
union was not happy. Her husband
was beheaded during the French
Revolution and she only escaped
through winning the heart of the allpowerful
Barras.
Josephine was 32 years of age when j
she met the young Corsican officer,
Napoleon Bonaparte. She was the
foremost love of his life. He adored
her from the moment they met. She
cared little for him. for there was
little about him t<? attract women.
I
But Barras told her the young Corsi- j
...... tmil f-vcrv urosnect of a great I
career, so with Barras as a go-between:
the marriage was arranged. Bona- '
I
parte at the time was compelled i?> >
l>e aw.'iv from .Josephine freouentlv;
i
and for long periods, hut no lovesick !
swain ever wrote more fervent love j
notes than the man who :>V. but ?- m- j
quered the world,
I'ndouhtedly to the woman lie j
!
married and later divorce.] for amhi
lion's sake lie gave all the passion of;
his life. Three months bet"or?. their!
\
marriage Xapoleon wrote to Jose-,
phinc as follows:
"I awakened this morning tilled.
i
with thoughts of you. Sweet and in
comparable Josephine, what strange'
spell have you cast over my heart?
When you are annoyed, or 1 see you
sad and anxious, my heart is bruised I
with sorrow, and there is 110 rest fori
i
your lover, but is there more for me,!
when giving way to the deep feeling
which masters me, I place on your j
lips, on your heart, a flame which !
i
burns me? You leave at noon; I shall !
see you in three hours. Till then, j
i
moi dolce amor, a thousand kisses, i
but don't give me any. for they in- !
flame my blood."
This was to Josephine, the betrothed.
Five days after their marriage,
when Napoleon was compelled
to leave her because of war's demands.
he wrote her from Fhanceaux,
March 14, 179C:
"Each instant separates me further
from you. adorable one, and
I
at each instant I feel that I have less 1
power to bear being separate*! front i
you. You are the perpetual object '
of my thoughts. ***** Write to me.
my tender love, and receive the j
thousand one kisses from the truest j
and tenderest of friends."
I
Napoleon was ever jealous of Jo-]
sephine and her letters to him were
never full of the lire that his disposition
demanded. He became fre-1
fluently piqued and this is shown j
early in their marriage, as early as |
one month following, when he wrote |
her: "The fear of not being beloved j
by Josephine, the idea of seeing her
inconstant, of her being?but I am
frit' nn-uolf TVlPrf>l
niitMiig nuiiciiiib iin>Uv?. ~
is so much that is real: must one
I
manufacture more? You cannot have
inspired a boundless love in me without
sharing it. and with your soul,
your mind, and your intelligence, you
could not give in return for utter devotion,
a death blow."
When Napoleon was absent in
Egypt campaigning he heard that
Josephine captured the heart of M.
Charles, a military dandy. In jealous
fury he rushed back to Paris, swearing
he would divorce her. Josephine
- ?- 1 -''-'-I" Vwii* innocence and
wepi anu uvutti * u ii> ?
she was forgiven. Hut never again
did Napoleon love Josephine as before.
In spite of her silly, insincere mind,
Josephine loved Napoleon, and when
she died on May 24, 1X14, her very
last thoughts were for the ambitious
man who had broken her heart. He
had divorced her, seeking to strengthen
his position by a more advantageous
marriage?with Marie Louise
of Austria. But he gave her an allowance
of $400,000 a year and let
her keep her cherished title of-"Empress."
From the moment of the
divorce, oddly enough. Napoleon
Bonaparte's star began to set.
Advertisers. Please Note.
The best of newspap- r presses will
run amuck sometimes, chewing up
paper, making unsightly smears, tearing
out portions of the sheets and often
eliciting imprecations of a rathe
'
xLj
I L i|L j iJlilii;
1 lip I Mm?
I i tigti } iFJpr?:- '
[9 |? !l!|;||!ljj| life
Si if jT'l N
ji III |! -%m:
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1 i-w) 1\ * "~v. " "
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| Anti-Skid. ?2 rcr/ Tree
I SIKVE&TOW?
B:1. ;-?ia-fnr~r:T:.-.- t- - '
I
emphatic sort. A few weeks ago one I
1
of our local subscribers got a copy j
that was minus a few square inches j
and seeing us during the same after- j
noon asked for another. He confided
to
us that the fear of wifely wrath i
moved him to make the request. Had J
he gone home with the copy sent
him, he declared with a tremor in"
his voice, the ties of domesticity
would have been severely strained. !
The lesson of this little story is ohI
viotis* Thp ?i Hvorf mtrr* in I
The Standard reaches the individual, j
the unit with whom the business man
must deal.?Saluda Standard.
Tenement Amenities
.Mrs. (Taney was returning from!
[ shopping, and, with the crush and I
the high prices, she was in no pleas- [
ant humor. As she approached the
door she saw Mrs. Murphy, who occupied
the street floor, sitting at her1
window.
"I say, Mrs. Murphy." she called
out in dee}) sarcasm, "why don't ye
take your ugly mug out of the windy
an' put your pet monkey in its place?
That'd give the neighbors a chance
they'd like." |
Mrs. Murphy was ready for her.
"Well, now, Mrs. Clancy," she retorted.
"it was only this mornin' that
I did that very thing an' the policeman
came along an' whin he saw the
monkey he bowed an' smiled an' said.
"Why, Mrs. Clancy, whin did ye move
downstairs?"
Whose Whose.
They were discussing the very
charming woman who had just entered
the already crowded reception.
"How well Mrs. Gaye looks tonight:
She is really a most beautiful woman
and knows how to keep herself at her
o "J.
oaniicir;
134-5 Main Street,
The Best and ]
in Colu
Home Cooking and Reason
"Little D
i! Ouiek, Polite and attentiv*
11
.T jm'.irr'r rm~r"rw?<v.t'" x. ? gr'.T"
L .li si JiL d.
&&& Mm n 1f%GW
last ward. ?a& %
3 est word in 2
5 VdPKf?C3- ^/v^?
k # 0?e?-0 If '.' ? ^ vi
&Jf Sir E| K# \A t
.J& d f "'. y%4i\ M:
\ f -JIT iTT ' " "
ft CILVERTCV.
.Ji OTKOTSEasKrx'si'sj
jV|i SI 2T. jj ' Anti-S.xiu !<.'
I 1^1 HMi
? RS5J i i $ - ^ 1
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d TSiS B.?. GOCBllICH Pc
QAhjGTi,
*Jjr... rr ? .'.?-o,Th 253BSSEB35Bw.?: ^ 3BS3B3C Hferi
best," said Mrs. Witto.
Mrs. Oaye? She isn't Mrs. Gaye
now," answered Iter friend. "Don't
you remember site got tired of being
Gaye's widow and married Jaye last
summer? She is now Mrs. Jaye."
I
"Oh. dear, yes!" Mrs. Witte replied.
"I forgot. Out 1 would like to
i know how any one can hope to keep
in mind all the matrimonial changes
nowadays. Some one ont?hr to r?nV?
lish a reference hook to help us. It
| might he called '"Whose Whose?"
Tried to Ho Tactful.
Houston Post.
Miss Greene had been invited to be
' a bridesmaid at quite a smart wed^ding
and spent much time in planning
her new frock.
! At last it was ready, and when she
| tried it on she asked Mrs. Jones from
i next door to come and see it."
f 'It's sweet, my dear," said the
i good lady admiringly. "And certainly
j you look a lady, whatever you are."
| Miss Greene's face told her she had
made a mistake, so she corrected lierj
self hurriedly:
"Xo, 1 mean you arc a lady whatever
you look."
tiiiuinmimmitmniimttiirinniiim mm
! t
Mi !
| i| Dodson's Liver Tone j
| ii Instead of Calomel j
Calomel is quicksilver. It attacks
I the bones and paralyzes the liver. Your
i dealer sells each bottle of pleasant,
i harmless "Dodson's Liver Tone" under
| an ironclad, money-back guarantee that
I it will regulate the liver, stomach and
1 bowels better than calomel, without
? _?.i ? _.i! i! iif :ii:
| siCKening or saiivaung you?10 uuuiuu
bottles sold. _____
y Cafe
Columbia, S. C.
Newest Place
mbia.
iable Prices, 1
ifferent" from the others
3 service.
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sality
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