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\ PEACE RESOLUTION i PASSED BY BIG VOTE Washington, June 13.?By a vote ' of exactly 5 to 1 the house tonight passed the Porter resolution to terminate the state of war between the United States and the Central pow- . ers. As a substitute for the Knox resolution, already passed by the senate, repealing the declaration of war It was put through 303 to 61, as a Rex , publican measure with the loss of only one Republican vote, Keller of Michigan. Forty-nine Democrats joined in the landslide. First throwing out on a point of ( order a motion by Representative Flood, Democrat, Virginia, to. send the resolution back to committee with msirucuona 10 report a BUDSUtute requesting the president to negotiate ( with the enemy countries for a.treaty 1 of peace, the house voted down, 254 * to 112, another proposal relating to f disarmamentThere was no debate on tho latter motion, which provided for an amendment to the pending measure reserving the right under the treaty of Versailles "to enter into an agreement with Germany and her allies and tho powers associated with the United y- n States in the war for joint disarmament." The vote of the Democratic leadership to hold the party in line against the resolution failed, and the minority crumpled on roll calls. The crack of the gavel ending two solid days of debate which leaders agreed had not / pVinn rrofl * ? ?*?" ?#MU ? WW, UIUU5HI Ur bl^Il OI relief to weary members. ( Springing: a surprise at the last moment, Chairman Porter, of the foreign affairs committee in charge i of the fight, presented Representative ' Burke Cockran to make the closing argument for passage of the resolu- ( tion. There had been taik during the day that Mr. Cochran would not be found in line with his party but put- ' . ting him forward to end the debate upset calculations. In the end; how- , ever, the New York member did not> I > Rat-snap! KILLS RATS Also mice. Absolutely prevents " odors from carcass. Qne package 1 proves tills. RAT-SNAP comes in cakes?no mixing with other food. Guaranteed. 35c size (1 cake) enough for Pantry, Kitchen or Cellar. 05c size (2 cakes) for Cliickcn \ r Hoiise, coop?, or small buildings. 1 , (5 cakes! enousH, for^ all fhrm and outbuildings, storage^ buildings, or factory buildings. ; Sold and Guaranteed by Harmon j Drug Co.* and ^Lexington Pharmacy. * # w , ^' / t * . r % y " 4 . A pipe wo tongue if yc G secti can chec fete who ^ ? agio Prince Alttort Is Alhf mold in toppy rod UC bag*, tidy red tins, ? handsome poand A! and half pound tin > ? humidors and in tha A10( pound crystal glass r humidor with XlTCBl '.? . sponge moigtsrier _ t> . . Copyright 1921 M I* jw J. Reynold* |WpEr Tobacco Co. Winston-Salem, ? N. C, v ' fv- r-' ; ' ' / JI ' ' ' . ' <:s . ? a " " '\ ' . - \ r > \ k \.\ V '-" actually vote, as he was paired. Mr. Kelly, who is chairman of t house conferees at work on the na\ bill, with, its disarmament amen ment, made a bitter attack on t resolution declaring . congress won live .to apologize for its act, which described as making peace with mere clasp of the hand, after t fashion of professional wrestlers. The principal attack on the resol tlon was based by Democrats on t ground that it did not properly pi tect American rights and that t United States attempting to neg tiate a treaty with Germany and h alllef would sit down with feet a ^.IIU i. liuiiuo ucu. auu wiLiiuuL ueing uoie hold the right won by war. Repub cans held .however, that all rlgl were safeguarded. Representative Garrett, Tennessi acting Democratic leader, Represe tative Connally, Democrat, Texas, a Mr. Flood made the princij speeches against the resolution, declaring'' that the chief argument pupport of its adoption was that Iwould pave the way for greater tra with Germany. Failure of the. senate to accept t house substitute will send the whi question of peace to conference. M< of the Republican speakers declar congress ought not to repeal the w declaration itself holding it would regarded as a repudiation of the w but Democrats reminded them that Republican house twice had adopt a peace resolution with that prov Ion. ? Among the 49 Democrats who v< ed for the resolution were: Crk Georgia; Domihick, South Carolin Fulmer, South Carolina; Larst Georgia; Lankford, Georgia; Loge South Carolina; Overstreet, Georgi JPark, Georgia; Smithwick, Florid Upshaw, Georgia, and Vinson, Gee gia. / m mm m WORLD COTTON CONFERENCE Liverpool, .Tulle 13.?The poi chiefly emphasized at the opening the world cotton conference here t day was that the present glfit in rt cotton is a temporary condition a that the return to normal will dema greatly increased production, this connection,' Richard I. Mannir former governor of South -Carolii 3peaking for the American delegatic said there was no limit to Americi rapacity to supply raw material pi vided it was done on a just and prof able basis. He added that it w their dtjty to solve the new econon problems in the same spirit of c termination wand cooperation whi England and the United States ha fhown during the war. CT^avid Hv-Cokcr, of Soutil 'Cjtrolli said there was still lamentable ignc ance of scientific methods of prodt tion. among American farmers and ucation was badly needed." The fii n't burn yo >u smoke R et that pipe-party-bee buz ion! Know for a fact whal and will do for your peac k up the men in all walks < certainly get top sport on W with fragrant, delipht jrt! r nd, you can wager your we irt's quality* and flavor ai dom Srohi bite and parch ( patented process)?will rii j old smokemeter the likes re could believe possible! E)U don't get tired of a pipe Lee Albert! Paste that in 3 tld. lUSt bfitWPPri niircolwoo - , j t of rolling 'em? Get son nakin's papers?quick ?? that will prove a revelatio tlNCE A the national joy \ >. " i'. "*' ' l/essentl^l, however, was to abolish la-| he bor conditions prevailing in the South] al which.left the laborers in dire pover-r d- 'ty and bring back the price of cotton ] he 'to a profit level, ' |lf4 r .. ' DOTS FROM STEADMAN. he, Si / We are now having some warm Veather. Crops are suffering for rain. 1} Mr. Clifton Rlsh, from' the navy, . is home on a furlough, visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George. Rish. ohe / Mr. Perry Thornton and little Q_ daughter of Columbia visited his parer ents recently. nd Mr. and Mrs. Melton Thornton, Mr. to and Mrs. Joe Barr, visited Mr. and li_ 'Mrs. T. B. Barr -a few days ago. .A? f Mr Paul n.?? a 1123 *??. * uui v^uacvicoauin ttUU llllie 'sons of Columbia visited his father 3e( fand other relatives and friends. ,n_ ' Mr. and Mrs.1 George Rlsh, with a nd large crowd of frlendfe celebrated a ,aj family reunion Sunday, all - Mr. T. R. Quattlebauni mado a in 'business trip to Columbia one day 'last week. do ' A large crowd attended the revival 'meeting at Batesburg Sunday night. he|T,ie meeting will continue for sev.eral 5ie 'weeks. Jst Our meeting here beginB fourth ed ^Sunday in July. ar l WATERINGFOUD NEWS. | bc \ . ' ? ; 1 ar ' Whew! how hot and dry! I Hold you ' a l that a wet May called for a dry June. e Farmers are well up witfi their Js" work, and wheat is being Jttireshed, the yield being below the average 5t~ hereabouts. ' Mrs. H. A. Howard visited her sisia' ter, Mrs. Frances Gunter, near Oak in* 'Grove last Saturday evening. in* . Mrs. Ruth Hallman is confined to ia" 'her bed at this writing. Her many la* [friends hope to see her out again >r~ soon. f Mr. H. R. Smith, who has been in ? the Columbia hospital for the past *three months, is able to return to his nt iThome on Little Black Creek. He is ofKstill in a feeble condition. Air. ana Airs. ti. S. Crout were l guests last Sunday of their son. Maxie lW nd w n<l ; Mrs. B. F. and F. A. Miller of Columbia worshipped wftSi the foiling Springs, congregation last Sunday a morning. )n Mr. and Mrs.vM. R. Crout and x,J* 'family, paid .old "Uncle Henry" a brief (visit last Sunday evening. l Mrs. B. F. Miller gave the home ag /folks a short visit L*st Sunday and 1jc /Monday and returneu to her home in [o_ (Columbia Monday night. ch ' Mr. I.6nnio, Price, wh^o, it was ve /stated in thfcse columns had been thrown frpm lit wagon in a .runaway ia iind- u<icl(](iipt(iUy injured, fcfcl int^ Crlti,cal condition at the home of his >rt?c /father, Mr. *C. P. Price. / L,6ok out, girls! Mr. Coke Smith, rst and Mr. Qulncy Gunter are both homo now from Woltord College, both look' i, = ur V ! ^! 2k? . :zing in your smoket a joy'us jimmy pipe e and content! Just of life you meet daily it of their pipes?all fill, friendly Prince lek's wad that Prince id coolness?and* its cut c%t by our exclu-. ag up records in your ; of which you never * when it's packed with rour hat! ! Ever dip into the le Prince Albert and ind cash in op a cigaJLBERT smoke t 4 ' t * T i"\ ' ' ' K ** * * ' ing fresh as the picture of health. Mr. F. M. Taylor of the Boiling Springs section has some of as line 'a corn as wo have Seen this season. 'Mr. Taylor says he hasn't much bug food planted this year, but is trying to make his hog and hominy. ' Old Uncle John Kyzer, one of the old boys of the "Sixties," is visiting ^at the home of his son, Mr. S. It. .TCyzer, on Black Creek. Uncle John is 'eighty-three and ? has a remarkable memory for a man of his age and can tell many things of camp life in the strife Between the Sections. ?*v11 persons interested in the Sunday School contest now going on at Boiling Springs will all please be president the third and fourth Sundays in (this month if possible as there will be /something of importance to be considered, the secret to be made known in these columns at an early - date. You may take the hint, Mr. Editor. Everybody conic! Everybody wel'come! PARENTS AS PROPHETS When a Gainsborough sold the other day for 10,000 guineas few people recalled the fact that the sale falsified a very confident parental prophecy. The Gainsboroughs were a clever family. One brother was nicknamed Scheming Jack. He made himself a pair of jvings, though he failed to fly. He succeeded, however, in making a cradle which rocked itself and h cuckoo which "cuckooed" all the year round and never migrated. The far more famous Thomas, the great painter, at an early age startled his father by forging his signature to a message addressed to the local schoolmaster, which ran as follows: "Kindly give Tom a holiday." The signature was wonderfully done, and its accuracy and cleverness provoked the parental prophecy. "Tom will be hanged one day." Tom was hanged? In the Royal Academy. So that prognostication was right and wrong. Tennyson was the subject of two prophecies, one by his grandfather and the other by his father. The first was wrong and the second right. ^Alfred wrote a poem at the early age .of nine on his slate and showed it to his grandfather, who gave him a guinea, with the worcls: "The first money .poetry has I brought you. my boy, and, heliovenne, j the last." < Seeing that Tennyson holds the record as a money-making poet, and quite legitimately, this prophecy went remarkably wrong. His father, during an illness of tin boy, said to him?and he was a hard man who did not indulge in flattery: ''If Airt ed rtiw England" will1 mit^J one of her greatest poets." Charles Darwin, who lies in Westminster Abbey next to Newton, was the subject of a very drastic parental I prophecy which went very far wrong. He was very fond of country life, and as his father's taste did not lie in the same direction, that stern parent said Now Se Price L< ? * BBHBnnHI *- i I * 4 r to Charles: "You care for nothing; but shootingf dogs and rat catching, and you will be a disgrace to yourself and all your family." But"foI^^ord Clive Indla"Tnight be ruled "by another power today and' the whole history of the last century altered. Yet his father concurred with his schoolmaster's verdict that he was qr hopeless fool, and, prophesying total failure, packed him off to India out of the way. It was only when he dropped his clerk"s pen and took to the swni'fl wS-.<i l?i IiIq was certainly mightier?that he disproved the parental prophecy and gave Britian a new empire and its King an additional title.?Toronto Globe. Natural Register. 'Why do you ask me if the fa! mous singing dog selects nautical songs?" "Because it is natural to think his bark is on the C's." Not His .lob A Yorkshire man who was very bowlegged entered a tailor's shop to lie measured for a pair of trouseifi. He selected the cloth and the tailor proceeded to measure him. Better DEAD Life is a burden when the body is racked with pain. Everything worries and the victim becomes despondent and downhearted. To bring back the sunshine take GOLD MEDAL w msaaEB The national remedy of Holland for over ^uu years; it is an enemy of all pains resulting from kidney, liver and uric adcS troubles. All druggists, three sixes. Look for the name Gold Medal on evary be* and aceept no Imitation *' Catarrh Can Be Cured Catarrh Is a local disease greatly influenced by constitutional conditions. It therefore requires constitutional treatment. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE is taken Internally and acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. HADE'S CATARRH MEDICINE destroys the foundation of the disease, feives the patient strength by improving the general health and assists nature in doing its work. All Druggists. Circulars free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio! WHEN in Columbia, Lunch with us at Creamery Hunch Room 1210 I,ady Street, 1-2 block from-.Main. You will be as welcome as the flowers in May. The"' best of everything and reasonable prices. Creamery Lunch 121(1 Daily St. Columbia, S, C. . 0. filing at the evel in T*re 30x3^ 32x4 34x4^? (And Other Sizes in Tire repair men, who judge valu< having the sturdiest carcass n grade car manufacturers use thei They are the quality choice of co This new low price i^made possi and specialized production. Plant No. 2 was erected for the 30x33^-inch Non-Skid fabric tire of 1 6,000 tires and 20,000 tubes, I production on a quantity basis. All materials used areMhe best c Uniform. It is the best fabric tin owner at any price, Wlllll IHIIIIHIIIIHIHI1 i When he passed the tap down the "bow" of the leg the man tapped him on the arm and said: yjm on, mate. Thee mak' em. straight. Ah'll bend 'em!" Ancient History ? He was the only one of all the wedding guests who did not appear in a happy frame of mind. He only adorned the wall, and looked lugubrious. "What's the matter?" cried out an exuberant young man. "Haven't you kissed the bride yet?" "Not lately," he said with a gulp. Nothing Much "Pa, what are ancestors?" "Well, my son, I'm one of yours.'" Your grandpa is nnothej-." "Oh! Then why is it people brag about them?" NOTICK. j\u :'?-jhuiih owing i. Will, iviltcnell of JJatosburg, S. C., who has been nd.iuO?t-d non compo' mentis and all persons whom said J. Wm. Mitchell is owing will please notify the undersigned at Johnston, S. C. II. G. KIDSON*. Committee for J. Wm. Mitchell. 2t. Ride Right Get Your Buggy and Harness From Sam Sweeney Side Spring and Bolted Buggies Black and Red $100 for steel tired $105 for rubber tired Fresh Shipment HARNESS AND WAGONS I A FEW GOOD HORSES Sweeney's Stable Assembly St. Columbia, S. C. THE CITADEL The Military College of South Carolina CHARLESTON, S. C. Ranked as "Distinguished Military College" by the War Department. Offerjs a four-year course in liberal ? arts, with electives in civil engineering, sciences, and modern languages. Vacant Scholarships. One scholarship irx Lexington county will be filled by competitive examination July 8th, 1921. For application blanks, apply to COL. O. J. BOND, Suprliitciulent. Ct-35. N 13^ llEs ' Lowest History $24.50 ar **n m. v cvr v 54.90 Proportion) >t * ss beat, cjass these tires aa lade. Forty-seven highm as Standard equipment, rd users. ble by strictest economies 5 sole purpose of making s. With a daily capacity .his plant permits -refined f btainable. The quality is e ever offered to the car y #