The dispatch-news. [volume] (Lexington, S.C.) 1919-2001, August 24, 1921, Image 5
IP f 4 WITH M
LUTHERAN CHURCH
jgl||j| Rev. Arthur B. Obenschain, pastor.
Divine services at 10:00 a. m. and
?g?| 8:30 o'clock in the evening.
^ On Sunday, August the 28th, the
W morning theme will be: "The Evil
^A-And The Good Whicjx Exists In All."
|gC~. The evening theme will be: "The
fj^^fTord To Accomplish lis Mission." To
gl^gffcese services the public is cordially
g^invited.
S|g| Note* thenehange in the morning
ARTHUR-B. OBENSCHAIN,
- St. Matthew's Evangelical' Lutheran
? Church
They?. . wijl he divjn? services on
Sunday, August 28th at 11:45 a. m.
I^and 2:00 >p. ro?, TheRey. Arthur B.
vObensc^in will preach- ,Qn Monday
|?P$t ll:J0i)m. and 2:00 p. m., Rev.
fe' 4 0?'4 ^hearouse will preach; 'and
S| ^*ui Tuesday the^same hours, Rev.
J. D.,:Sthealy will preach. To. all
.these. 9&ryioe9 -the * public is.cordially
'-invitedfrtc;.- or -.vt-'T
^ QBENSCHAIN, Pastor.
PKO^AM JOINT COXFEREX <?E
V-srcff>v>v.v:o,:v ?>-?, gjj
Providence E. L. Church, Lexington,
SjvCx Jet. jQ' B, Shevpose,
>PlWtor,, Sept* 7-8, 4 ; v .
iv Wednesday, .10:00 a? m.?OrganizaPtiOIL
V':-".- 11:00
a. m.?Sermon?Rev. J. Dy
Kinard, II*-jD., followed by the Hilyj
Communion. . J
Intermission.
?p>' Dfaoufsign^Subjecf: ^One Synod in
1&-, South Carolina," By Judge C. M.
x Efird and Rev* J? D? Shealy.
I|- BtecusaienHrSubjegt: /'What Cona';
atitutef ,J2hureh. Membership in Good
and Regular Standing3"-By Hon. J,
g|: C. l<yferand?*8&: Re*%.-Geo. S. BearK<
d 2L c-J- * ;
^ J Thursday, 9:30 a. m.?Devotion.:
||t 10:00 a. BE?Business.
?& Discussion?Subject: _? : "Christian
jjp* Stewardship." By Judge C* J. Ram-,
gh age and"Rev. W. H. Greever. D. D..
11: OOt D..
ij Thursday, t M.?feevo&on.
|| I. Discussion?Subject: "Training the
i Devattontf/iSfe.*' * la) In the Home.
|' In the
gf Church?Rev; VyBooze^ D. D.
fnsr1 't^presentativesf df church
JE4bh ttp&lig spencer is limL5
minutes in his first speech.
Go&dbn fey^irafi ViM be "met at
ix?0 ta;; W l&x&rgtbrr, 'propite
is'given "to Rev. O. B.
#i:?oxNfeit, :*v/v 1
r H.
S.G& .: M 5>"C AftFJENTE R,
f* - :?.? -.
S? CQTOOT yO MEET
jfcit if<&nfeif,j Lexington PasIll
meet sit the ' pafsonage,
, ' 10 a. m.;" September 30,
O. B. SHEAROUgE,
24, i 921;'
PEMON MISSION
W- H. WHALEY.
B. J. Wessinger, Factor.
HKg Services as follows: \ w
^^'Soly ''Trinity, PeHon-4-!!:! 5 a. nr.
Pj?p7? Sunday; 4 *p. m., third. Sunday.
Join's (Blacl: Creek H*1I a. m.
iQPltf Sunday; 4 p. m.f first Sunday,
fcmlpwrch of- the Good1 Shepherd,
a. m, fourth Sunday;
p. m., second Sunday.
ff^'JSBrang'e Chapel, Springfield?11 a.
'Sundky; 8:3(1 p. m., fourth
;
Re^ H. tn?3teyt Pastor. .
^ Services at Pelfcm 4th Sunday
^Efifcfttlllng and night. Also 2nd SunKing's
Grove?1st and 3rd Sunday
mornings. . . ,
vht... ? Florence?2nd Sunday ^morning
and 4th Sunday, 4 p. m.
Bed Bank?r 1st and . 3rd s. Sunday
'0. nights. v v V? "
^ .
"y/^r * "was .glad when they said unto
1o*' frt untn tV?#? . hfHJSfi Of the
LLord. Come and worship with us.
jf. LEXINGTONS CIRCUIT.
f^frjAppointments for Sunday, August
lifestb, 1921.
tr?? > Red Bank?Sunday school at 10 a.
y J. F. Sharpe, superintendent.
Reaching at 11 o'clock by lie v. .j.
II.. Noland of Columbia.
Horeb?Sunday school at 3 p. in.,
"''6u L. Harmon, superintendent,
^jf^reaching at 4 p. m./'by Rev. D. IT.
|Lexington?Sunday school at I > a.
SlPi
mm
MBS- :
CHURCHES
m., W. D. Dent, superintendent.
Preaching at 8:30 p. m. by Rev. J. H.
Noland of Columbia.
You are cordially invited to all
these services.
. H. A. WHITTEN,
Pastor.
EDMUND NEWS.
Nothing is ever so bad that no
good comes of it. We- get up early
'these mornings, pu\ the cream in the
/churn, then put the pig feed and bid,'dy
mash each in its proper receptacle,
i set it all in the back of the fliyver,
take a turn over these roads to Sun'
* J 1 -1. V
ny SOUtn 111 ctliU uaun ueiuic uj.co.jv.ast,
and lo, when we get back the
'buter is churned>,;the feeds are mixed
to a finish, and all we have to do is to
/dish up the buter and pour the feeds
.'to the pigs and biddies with a great
/saving of time and muscular effort,
I
/though, we'll admit it's rough . on
f rear-systems, bot human and mechanical.
r It seems to-us that it is a por law
\ that protects the fox-and'leaves the
[ chicken and partridge to the mercy
^'of the fox. Here's hoping that when
[the women; get to voting, they'll
/knock that fox law into smithereens,
,-for they kno wthe hours of toil and
care it takes to raise chickens, and
;in many cases, the chicken and egg
money is all they get to spend?and
if you won't tell it, we know some
jthat don't get that much to spend.
WheA it comes to chickens, the hawk
is a [decent fellow compared the
fo*; the average hawk takes only
/those too small for us to eat, while
% w
the fox scorns anything smaller than
a broiler. - - *
. It's always a pity to see a half iViah
on a whoje man's job.
/ Miss Frankie Griffith spent the
. . i . . .
week-end with the home-folks again.
Mrs. W. H.' Sharpe and Guy, her
small son," went over to Columbia
Friday for a few days visit with her
'son, George, and his Wife.''
"M" CnlinoMor \Tre .Vin
Ail 9 V/ ATX U\/4A4tVAUVA f ATA * M* V % ??
'Sharpe's mother, and her sons, John
*v
and Cromer, spent Sunday with Mr.
and I?rs. Sharpe.
i Mr. and Mrs. C. O. Hutto spent Friday
afternoon with Mr. and Mrs,.G.
W. Jefcoat down ear ?Sunny South.
Mr. jluto recently purchased an auitomoible^
and they while away some
of these hot afternoons pleasure riding
o* visiting friends.
Mr?; and Mrs. A. C. Corder of Lex ingtori
spent Sunday afternoon with
Mr. JU A. Griffith and family.
/ Afi^r an absence of ten .years; *Mr.
rChiarlie Bachman of Cordele, Ga.,' is
on an extended visit to nis Droiner>
'Mr. Hi. P. Bachman, and other relatives
.here. . . ; :
" Mr., and Mrs. Jeff Chavis and
children spent Sunday with Mrs.
Chavis's parents, Mr.'and Mrs. M.
M. Spires. ; ---f
Miss Louise Griffith is hoem again
after spending a part of last week as
a house party guest of her cousins,
Mises Vera and Annie Corley at Lexington.
' - ' v*-:
Mr. and Mrs. T. S. Sease and Mr.
I and Mrs. Leon Barre of Gilbert spent
i
Sunday with the former's son-in-law
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Fred W.
Crout.
Mr. J. D. Shumpert and family
went to the baptizing at Zenker's
Ipond Sunday afternoon.
DANIEL BOONE, THE > .
GREAT KENTCCRIAN
.*+' i . li
Daniel Boone ! was the son of
Quaker parents who lived in Pennsylvania.
Although-the principal doctrine
in the Quaker creed is that man
must not kill, Daniel departed from
the faith ;of his fathers early and'
became one; of. the -' greatest Indian*
fighters in American history.
When Boone was* eighteen his parents
moved to -North* Carolina and in
;the Yadkin valley of that state, young
.,Boon$ became an " expert woodsman
and hunter. Attracted Dy me ia,ic?
of a hunter who had crossed the Appalachians
into, the unknown Kentucky
'country, Boone r visited the
Blue Grass State several times until
he. finally decided to make that country
his home. In 1775 he established
Boor.esborough, the first outpost of
civilization in the "Dark and Bloody
Ground," as Kentucky was called be-i
cause it was a battleground for many
tribes of Indians. ,
Boone's adventures with the Indians
in his new home were innum-J
erable. In 1778 he was captured by
the Shawnees, who admired the
scout's courage so much that he was
not put to death. Instead Chief Black
Fish adopted him, giving him the
name of Big Turtle?rather an inappropriate
title for a man so active.
Boone pretended to be well-pleased
with his captivity and after several
months the watchfulness of the savages
rolixcd. Then he made his os<
a pe.
Several years later this same band
of Shawnees came to Boonesborough
to kidnap their former captive. They
found Boone in a little shanty used
for drying tobacco.
"Now, Boone, we got you." said the
Indians. "You no get away this time."
"Yes you have me but I am glad to
go with you," replied the scout, "but
.?r want mv friends to have some of
this tobacco."
He gathered up a number of the
driest leaves and, unseen by the Indians,
crushed in his hands. Before
they could move, he threw the powdered
tobacco into their eyes. As the
| blinded savages rolled on the floor
howling and digging at their eyes,
[ the former "Big Turtle" showed unexpected
speed and was far up the
| trail to the fort before they could
pursue him.
In his later years Boone was cheated
out the rich Kentucky lands he
fiad fought so hard to win and he
migrated to Missouri, becoming a
hunter once more. He died there in
^'1820 at the age of eighty-six. A quarter
of a century later Kentucky paid
him belated honor by removing his
body to the capital of the State and
today Daniel Boone sleeps in the land
where ;he won fame as a pioneer and
scout.
BITS OF RAINBOW
Fancifur Story Accounts for Origin of
the Iris
Preparation for the joint display
by the American Iris Society and the
Columbus Iris Society, held 'in Col
umbus, led to a discussion uie umci
day of the origin, of this beautiful
flower, Prof.'A. C. Hottes, of the department
of horticulture at Ohio State
University, told this story:
"It was the last of the six days of
creation. A rainbow was above the
earth and "on this rainbow sat a group
of angels: Casting their eyes "around
over the vast'universe they discovered
far below them this new world
and were charmed by the beauty of
its mouhtaWrs, its trees, its lakes and
its plains.
^ ''The earth' was filled with all manner
of strange animals, and yet among
them walked something so beautiful
ttyat even the angels marveled at the
handiwork of God, for they saw within
the Garden of Eden, Adam and his
wife, Eve.
"Marveling at the sight of such
great beauty and wishing to' share
this with (other friends, they called
many other angels to their lookout
upon the rainbow, and these angels
in turn called others, until finally the
weight was great and the rainbow
cracked. But they did not know
that 'the rainbow had cracked and so
they continued to call other angels.
Suddenly the rainbow broke into
thousands of pieecs and fell to the
earth.
"Lovers of flowers know that it was
the Iris that received these bits of
the rainbow and that is why its col*'
* *' ;
ors are so delicate and so numerous."
?Columbus Dispatch.
. PAY FOR SCHOOL TEACHERS
* i
.. (Baltimore Sun)
Food for thought is furnished by
the National Educational Association,
whose convention the proposal was
advanced that teachers should be
paid oh the basis of preparation and
efficient service, regardless of the
grade in which they teach. A primary
teacher, under . this theory,
would receive as much salary as a
high schol teacher, provided she was
as well trained and as capable. This
proposal will be regarded as irevolutiohary
by many who are convinced
that teachers in primary grades have
a far easier task than those in high
schools and need far less preparation
for it. But the trend of educational
practice is to lay more and more
stress on the importance of sound instruction
in the primary -and - grammar
grades; and when one remembers
h<!)w few children attend high
[school, it is obvious that the grade
schools should be provided with the
best possible teachers, for it is there
that the largest part of the battle
with ignorance takes place.
None of His Business Anyway
Out in California one year, instead
pi changing the license number on
the autombiles, the bear insignia
which each plate carried was changed
tQ a poppy. One young lady, entirely
ignorant of any such regulations, was
driving h%r absent minded father's
car down town one day and was held
up by a policeman.
"I beg your pardon, miss, but
where is your poppy?" asked the
policeman.
"Oh," she replied, "he's at home
with mommy."
The average doctor's private opinion
of the medical fraternity wouldn't
show up well in print.
"Pa, why do they say in the market
reports that wheat is nervous?"
"I geuss, son, its because it expects
to be threshed."
I
Home Demons
l*se of Milk Doubled Since 1890; Average
Now is Fourty-Four Gallons.
Forty-four gallons of milk is used
by each person in the United States
; annually, according to estimates made
by the dairy division of the United
States Department of Agriculture.
This estimate refers to whole milk
and does not include that which is
consumed in the form of ice cream,
cheese and butter. The amount is
about wice as much as that used in
1890, when the per capita consumption
was approximately 22 gallons.
The dairy specialists point out that
the increase in the use of milk in the
last su years is as great as mat in
the preceding 280 years.
The present day consumption of
milk in the United States, they say,
is equal to about one pint per day, or
as much as two small glasses. That
is not a great amount when it is
known that it includes not only the
milk that is used for drinking, but
also that used in cooking. This is a
small amount compared to the per
capita consumption in some European
countries. In Sweden and Switzerland,
for example, nearly 70 gallons
are used by each person annually.
' .
. In relating the growth of. the dairy
industry in this country the department
specialists say that in pioneer
days each family kept its own cow.
The denser the population became
the more, important it was to have a
well regulated and ample supply of
milk. Gradually the number of cows
increased, and in time a dairy business
grew up in various sections. The
development of modern methods in
the distribution of milk, with economic
and sanitary handling, has been
closely accompanied by the larger use
of this food, they say.
Much of the milk now used In cities
: comes many miles, and recently improved
methods have made it possible
to ship it for long distances in refrigerator4
cars. At the National Dairy
Show in Chicago in 1919, milk shipped
from the Pacific coast took first
prize in the market-milk competition,
with the highest score ever given to
milk in recent years.
Cities have, always used a smaller
amount of milk in proprtion to the
number of people than general farming
comhiunities. There are, howif
\
1
,ft( r.
J
; " \
Now is the t
that new ca
about We
mediate deli1
rnonc
rUALFi
The farmer'
ments now t
a Fordson.
with us, or ]
will be glad i
DuP
A nFtiAriTaH S
(J, lUlllV/i liUV%* Ki
Ford <
J. D.
I
tration Column
, ever, many agricultural and non-ag,
ricultural rural districts where cows
are not kept and wriere modern
i methods of milk distribution are not
equal to most cities. The people in
such places have to depend on canned
milk of various kinds and this,
the dairymen say, is an exceedingly
i valuable means of supplying a need
which 20 or 30 years ago could not
have been supplied at all.
ALCOHOL FROM THE JUNGLE?
We clutch at anything as a substitute
for gasoline. Prof. White
ford of the Yale school of forestry
says that alcohol could be economiI
cally manufactured from the moist
vegetation of tropical forests and
jungles. "The evidence is conclusive,"
said Professor Whitfore, "that
the tropical sun has the power to
store up more energy in the form of
cellulose in a given time than has
the temperate sun. If this is in a
utilizable form it remains for the ingenuity
of man to overcome the difficulties
of profitably applying it. With
the increasing needs of the nation it 1
is reasonable to expect that sooner or
later it will be necessary to utilize
more fully the plant resources of: ,
the tropics." Professor Whitford said j
that the annual production of alcohol!
from the nipa plant in the Phillipines!
was now nearly 3,000,000 gallons and1
that one distillery there had pro:.
duced 93 per cent alcohol at a cost of
about 20 cents per gallon, and if op-j
erated to full capacity could make it
at a cost of 15 cents'a gallon.?Scientific
American. j
IS THE STATE IMPOTENT? ! '
(
Not
in this generation at least has!
there been so much lawlessness in I
South Carolina as there is at the present
time, so many crimes of violence!
Such a condition of affairs is not to ]
be ended by "Sentiment. What is need- j
ed is for the State to assert its pow- :
ers, its majesty, its authority, and to ]
assert it when necessary by meeting j
force with force. Instead of running ]
away from men bent on taking the ;
law in their own hands the State
should be prepared in this case to j
run them down and to teach them j
and all men that South Carolina ven- J
geance belongs to the law.
TORI
iffle for all good
ir you have be
are in position i
very on all mod<
iON TRAI
' * . A
s friend. Mai
o do your fall p
Come in and
phone or write
to come and see
're Auto
Sales and Service
[Jars and Ford T
Lexi
JORDAN, Man
That is the way to break the spirit
01* lawlessness and it will not be
broken otherwise.?Charleston News
and Courier.
SAFE CONTAINING *
$60,000 IS STOLEN
/
Lake City, Aug". 17.?Some-time between
Sunday and Monday night, during
the absence of S. W. Young, a
prosperous farmer, whose home is
about eight miles west of here, his
house was entered and the iron safe
' T i Knrfir Knnrlc \'Ci 1 ?
ill \\ muii lie ftcyt uviiu^ ?v**
ued at about thirty thousand dollars
and almost an equal amount in mortgages
and other securities was removed
and tracks in tha yard indicate
that it was hauler away in a
wagom. Mr. Young was apprised of
the fact upon his return to his home
Tuesday afternoon and is making every
effort to apprehend the robbers^ >
Afraid of Mamma.
"Papa," said Evelyn anxiously,
"when you see a cow ain't you
'fraid ?V '
"No, certainly not, Evelyn."
"When you see a horse ain't you
'fraid?"
"?<fo, of course not."
"When you see a dog, ain't you'
'fraid?" # f .
"No!"?with emphasis....
"\yhen you see a wasp, ain't you
'fraid?"
I
; "No!"?with scorn. '
- "Ain't- you 'fraid 'when it thunders?"
v
"No!" with loud laughter. "Oh, You
silly, sily child?" ' ' y '
"Pana." said; Evelvn solemnlv.
"ain't you 'fraid of nothin'' in the
world but mamma?"
Shark skins are being- tanned for
shoe leather.
Dried cotton plant seeds are used
as fertilizer and cattle food.
HESS POULTRY ^PANACEA
Dr. Hess Poultry Panacea helps to
keep your poultry, healthy and is
guaranteed to make your hens, lay
more eggs. Hess Panacea will re- ,
lieve the diseased fowls and. produce. ,
a strong, vigorous and healthy flock.
Feed it now during moulting season.>
Packages 30c up.
Hess Instant Louse Killer ..kills lice, .
fleas, ticks and certain bugs on vines
arid bushes.
HARMON DRUG CO.,
Lexington, S. C.
V I
V
' I
men to get
en thinking
to make im}ls.
CTORS
: I.... .,: . . .
* /
ke arrange*
lowing with
talk it over
us and we ||
you. I
Co.
ractors, I
cgton, S. C. I
lager. I