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Establiihed in 1891. ' rOET MI*L, S. C? THURSDAT JANUARY 8, 1920 * "??? Ttrr
:''; ^ | - ?'
IMPORTANT NEWS
THE WORU) OVER
IMPORTANT HAPPENINGS OP THIS
ANO OTHER NATIONS FOR
SEVEN DAYS QIVEN
THE NEWSJjTTHE SOUTH
What la Taking Plaoa In Tha South
land Will Bo Found In
Ertof Paragraphs
OomHic
The New Year received a widely and
varied welcome in New York City on !
New Year's Eve night. In the big
hotels of the White Light district the
newcomer was welcomed by the private
stock-holding class with all exuberance
of days when prohibition'was
still a reformer's dres and a Jest.
The exuberance of the privateotockless
citizens was, however, decidedly
restrained. The customary crowds
thronged Broadway, but the cowbells
...
ana norns wmcn on previous New
Year's nights threatened the eardrums
of everyone within hearing,
were much modulated in tone and
there was little of the riotous horseplay
that previous years had known.
Prizes aggregating more than two
' million dollars will be divided among
aviators in competitions being arranged
throughout the world in 1920 under
the direction of the International
Aeronautic Federation, according to
^announcement at New York City. All
' American competitors will be selected
by the Aero Club of America.
A survey of the medical centers of
Virginia and other southern states has
begun to arrange for an allotment of
the one hundred million dollar ltocke
feller fund.
Major Qen. Leonard Wood filed a
formal announcement of his candidacy
for the Republican presidential nomination
with the South Dakota secretary
of Btate at Pierre.
Four unmasked robbers, shortly be
fore noon, entered the Farmers and
Merchants National bAnk of Benson,
a suburb of Omaha, Neb., lined six
employes and Ave customers of the
bank against the wall and robbed the
vault of one hundred and fifteen thousand
dollars, most of which was in negotiable
paper and Liberty Bonds.
An experiment in psychology was
tried at the county jail in Chicago in
the grizzly dim hour of dawa recently,
when two hundred prisoners were
forced to witness the hanging of a
convicted murderer. The most hardened
criminals were selected to witness
the execution.
Continuation of government nitrate
plants at Muscle Shoals, Ala., to manufacture
fertilizer products during
peace time, ie urged by Secretary Baker
upon a special house committee
investigating war expenditures. He
Bays only twelve million dollars ia
necessary to be appropriated to make
the venture a success.
Turn K1ru>lra In th? wHoIaraIa rillllrict
were destroyed bv fire on the. water
. front, entailing a losa which early estimates
placed at between $350,000 and
$500,000, and plunging the business
section of the city of Tampa. Fla? into
darkness by cutting off the electric
light and power before the flames were
checked.
p v JiVnchln*rfon
Toe government deficit from railroad
operation during November will
be approximately $64,600,000, a low
record for the year, accordlhg to statistics
compiled by the bureau of railway
economics.
Proposals for the purchase of the
former German passenger ships seized
when the United States entered the
war?the Leviathan, the largest vessel
afloat^ the Agamemnon, the
George Washington and others?will
be received by the shipping board up
to January 20. Only American buyers'
kbids will be considered.
The greatest round-up of radicals
In the nation's history was conducted
ft by the department ot jugtlve agents
in thirty-three cities?the larger citHH
ies .being New York, Baltimore, BosBS
ton, Buttalo, Chicago. Cleveland, Denver,
DesMoines, Detroit, Grand RapIB
Ids, Hertford, Indianapolis, JacksonTitle,
Kansas City, Los Angeles, Lou
isvllle, Milwaukee, Newark, Omaha,
MB Philadelphia, Pittsburg, Portland
(Maine), Portland (Oregon), Provi|^M
deuce, San Francisco, Scranton, Spokane,
St. Louis, Si. Paul, Springfield
(Massachusetts),, Syracuse, Toledo
^^B and Trenton?stretching from coast
W to coast. Over fifteen hundred rad^
icals are reported to have been taken
in cusfody.
New Year's greetings from the heads
of a number of foreign governments
were received by President Wilson.
Messages came from England, Belgium,
Luxemburg, Sweden, Italy and
several other European countries and
from most of the South American reI
HB? Publics.
Evidence gathered by the department
of justice relative to the alleged
leak In decisions ot the United States
8upreme court will be'submitted to a
federal grand Jury in January. It is
announced at the department ot JuaiJ^MLegialation
subjecting the manufacture
and sale of wood alcohol to the
same restrictions as grain alcohol will
be recommended to congress m a re;*alt
of the many fatalities from the
nee of wood alcohol as a beverage.
Commissioner Roper of the bureau of
Internal revenue in Washington baa
%
I
? !
Ellhu Root, former - secretary of
state, at Washington, will be called
upon to give hia assistance and advice
to the launching of the great international
supreme court provided
under the league of nations.
Of the instrumentalities which are
to be set in motion almost immediately
upon the proclamation of peace,
the international court of justice is
regarded by the supreme council as
of ranking importance. Consequently,
that body, through its secretariat in
London, already had gone so far as
possible in advance of the actual declaration
of peace toward the creation
of the.court.
An army M 85,000 enumerators are
at work counting the men, women
and children of the United States and
of collecting certain information about
resources of the country. The taking
of this census, the fourteenth in the
history of the nation, is expected to
require only about two weeks, but figures
showing the total population
probably will not be available until the
I end of April.
President Wilson has signed the Mc!
Nary pill continuing the United States
sugar equalization board through
1920. It was announced at the White
House that his signature had been attached
before midnight, Jan. 1, 1920.
Because the successful solution of
the economic and financial problems
of the coming year domands the concentrated
efTort of every American citizen,
the savings division of the treasury
department urged that each adopt
| and live up to an individual financial
creed and course of conduct.
Celebration of January 18, the first
Sunday after constitutional prohibition,
as Law and Order Sunday was
indorsed by Daniel C. Roper, commissionor
of internal revenue, at Washington,
in a statement appealing for an
"aroused public conscience" with regard
to law enforcement and promts
ing that prohibition would be enforced
strictly by his bureau.
Coat plus contracts fostered fraud
and Inefficiency, Col. Clarence O. Sherrill,
technical expert in the army engineer
corps, testified before a house
sub-committee investigating war expenditures.
Samuel Qompera, president of the
American Federation of Labor, In a
New Year statement, pledged America's
workers to do their full share
in working put the country's problems
in 1920.
Continued industrial activity is predicted
by the committee on statistics
of the chamber of commerce of the
United States in its annual end-of-theyear
review of business and crop conditions.
Manufacturers, the report
said, have orders in excess of their ca,
pacity. and in the retail trade there
Its a feeling of confidence of the continuation
until another harvest at
least.
For el en
| Germany's armed forces are estimated
by the British war office at London
to total close to one million men.
These are divided into the regular
i army of four hundred thousand, the
' land forces of the regular navy, twelve
thousand; the armed constabulary, for'
ty thousand to fifty thousand; the
temporary volunteers, or regular army
reserves, one hundred and fifty thou,
sand to two hundred thousand, and
. the civic guards, three hundred thou'
sand to four hundred thousand, wh}ch
is a formidable force.
The first step toward peace between
Esthonla and Soviet Russia was taken
by the signing of a preliminary armistice
at Dorpat, Esthonla, stipulat1
ing an Immediate cessation of hostilities,
and covering questions concerning
Esthonlan and military guarantees
with regard to the frontiers.
Bolshevik Russia is willing to make
great concessions to the big powers
j in the interests qf peace, but will
not hold out the olive branch to General
Denikine, according to M. Klish
ke, secretary of the Soviety delegation
1 conferring with Esthonian delegates
' at Dorpat. "A j oar ago we would
j have considered peace with General
Denikine, but now it is a fight to the
finish," Klishke said.
M. Tchitchenkin, Bolshevik foreign
minister, has proposed to Italy a re
sumption of relatione between thai
v?< >. j hiiu oviioi nuBSia, uuiumg ouI
that the imminent capture of the
Black sea coast by the Soviets will
open the Bluck sea route to Italy, is
: the news received in London from
| Moscow.
Bolshevists have occupied the importalant
stations of Yusovo and Dolia,
and are marching towards the seaport
of Mariupol on the Sea of Azov,
A quantity of guns and booty were
captured, us was also the entire Mark
hoff division, one of Denikine's finest
corps.
Until the Germane complete the
sweeping of the mine fields they laid
in tne North sea there will be considerable
danger to shipping in waters
adjacent to the British Isles. Even
after that work is ended, some time
next summer, there will be some danger,
it is predicted, but will gradually
diminish.
Three exhausted and half-frozen
men, sole survivors of the crew ol
twenty-nine of the Belgian steamer
Anton Van Driol. were taken to St
Johns, Newfoundland on the steamer
Ingraham. For two days and two
nights the three men had clung to
the wreck of their steamer as it lay
on the Jagged rocks that barred the
entrance to St Mary's bay.
The avalanches which recently occurred
at the mountain resort of Davis,
near Geneva, canned terror among
residents and visitors and resulted
In a number of deaths la the vlilsgs
itself.
> '
THE CONGRESS HAS
MUCH IRK AHEAD
.. . '' |
ONLY EXPECT RECES8E8 WHEN
PARTY CONTENTIONS ARE
IN FALL 8E88ION8.
HOPE TO CLOSE UP TREATY
f
General Tarolff of Internal Revenue
Tax Revision Legislation is Not
EXpected at Present 8eaalon.
Washington.? Congress reconvenes
after a fortnight's holiday with months
of hard work in sight and adjournment
expected by few leaders before
the presidential campaign.
The only recess looked for is a brief
one in summer when the national party
conventions are in session.
Innumerable domestic and industrial
problems await the attention of
Congress, with partisan politics of the
coming presidential election prominently
to the fore. Political speeches
of presidential candidates and mem'
bers of Congress up for reelection are
expected to flood the record.
The senate returns in the hope of
disposing of the German peace treaty \
this month, but without substantial
results trom compromise negotiations (
during the holiday recess.
Many investigations will be pros- 1
ecuted by both senate and bouse. Besides
the house war expeditures inquiry,
senate committee will continue
j the Mexican investigation, here and
on the board.
General tariff of internal revenue |
i tax revision legislation is not planned
during the present session of Con|
gress, although minor house bills af- t
fecting individual tariff schedules will <
reach the senate.
MANY LIVES ARE LOST IN
EARTHQUAKES IN MEXICO.
Mexico Clt>. ? Scores of persons
have been killed in a violent earthquake
which occurred in many parts
' of Mexioo. The center of the disturbance
Is believed to have been near th?
volcano-of Orizaba.
ITALIAN PREMIER TO
MEET ALLIED STATESMEN.
Rome.?Prdmier Nitti left for Paris
where he has been invited to meet
Premier Lloyd George and Premier
Clemenrean. nnH imooiKi,. * 1
?? ?? ? pv/uui uijr a i-i AlllOll*
I can representative. It is understood
an effort will be made to settle the
Flume question.
AN UNRELENTING SEARCH FOR
, REDS AND RADICAL8 GOES ON.
New York.?Armed with more than
800 warrants, federal agents and police
detectives continued their search
for radicals accused of plotting to
overthrow the government, who escaped
the government's dragnet which
has netted 700 prisoners in the past
24 hours in Greater New York.
i .
SECRET TURKISH CIRCULAR
FINDS WAY TO WASHINGTON.
Washington. ?A copy of a secret
Turkish circular, dated November 28
addressed to the provincial authorities
and bearing the seal of the minister
of the interior, reached Washington,
ordering the forcible conversion
to Islam of a few non-deported
Armenians and those who have e?i
raped massacres and death by privai
tlons and sickness.
I
i international market for
i international securities.
i New York.?Establishment of an International
securities market as the
most normal and exnedltlous means of
providing the war-stricken countries
i of Europe with lone term credits, was
| recommended hv Eugene Meyer. Jr.,
i managing director of the war finance
i coporatlon, in rn address before the
Association of Foreign Press Correspondents.
4750000 FIRF IN
DANVILLE, JWIRGINIA
Danville. Vn.?Fir* originating In
the dhhrdl usrdlu hshrdlu uu ourni no
the department store of Z. R. Johni
son, In the heart of the ctty here, at
I I>:30 o'clork destroyed the department
store and eight or ten other buildings ;
i in the block from Market to Union 1
streets and Is still raging. The dam- 1
i ape Is estimated at $750,000. Five
comapnle8 of the local Are depart*
ment are endeavoring to prevent tho ,
blaze from spreading. 1
I
RADICALS HOPE BY LEAVING
TO E8CAPE DRAGNET OF LAW '
New Yoric.?Characterizing the lat- '
i eat government raid on 'reds" as an
i "tdlotle and cruel' method of "perse- {
cutlng and suppressing people," Chas.
i Recht, an attorney retained by many
of the radicals sent to Ellis island, Issued
a statement In which he declared
many of the alien radicals wUl leave I
the country as soon as possible to escape
the government's dragnet This
may, or may not be winked at by government
officials.
Jr.
FIVE YEARS
OF SUFFERING
Eupora Lady Broke, Down and
Was Most Miserable, But
Cartiui Brought Reiief and
Now She Is Well.
En porn, Miss.?Mrs. B. EL Tedder,
recently spoke as follows: "About
Ave years ago ... I broke down
und took to my bed.
What I suffered no one knew, I was
In so much nolo from ni.v knees to my
waist, cramping and drawing, until I
thought I would certainly die.
I grew so weak I couldn't eat. and
to dizzy und faint and every time I
stood on my feet I had the most miserable
and heuvy feeling in the lower
purt of my body.
I began on Cardul. It strengthened
me after a few doses and diminished
the . . . after the first
bottle. I commenced to feel better.
[ regained my appetite ... I
took the Cardul right along . . .
1 am well und strong. That has been
four years. I can do ull my work aud
[eel fine." ?
Curdul has been found to be a valuable
tonic for women. It Is composed
of harmless medicinal ingredients,
which act In a mild and gentle
way on the system and help to build
up the body and nerves.
Youft. druggist sells Cardul. Try It.
Adv. '
There Is n vast difference between
the lay of a pdet and the lay of a pullet.
Two can starve more quickly than
tine.
Watch Your Kidneys!
That "bad back" is probably due to
weak kidneys. It shows in a dull,
throbbing backache, or share twinges
when stooping. You have headache*,
too, dizzy spells, a tired nervous feeling
and irregular kidney action. Don't
neglect it?there is danger of dropsy,
gravel or Bright's disease! Use Doan'a
Kidney Pills. Thousandth h^ve saved
themselves more serious ailments by
the timely use of Doan'a. Ask Your
Neighbor!
A South Carolina Case
E. H. Field, Wahalla
St., Seneca, 8. C.. jeVj
says: "My kidneys
were weak and my
back ached. I wna
nervous and had head- 'eejv \i
aches and was also - M \<J
troubled with dizzy X Jkr/VM
spells when black
specks would come be- ?-L/ J* /
fore my eyes. Sharp -J ,/fl fcspC
pains wo\tld shoot fl J5E5
through me and morn- H41 ri lei
lngs I was so lame tP3f. ttMl.HTQ
ana sore 1 could hnnl-W
!y get around. My
kldneya were weak iw>fct_y/
and acted too fre- * ??? ^
quently and the secretions were highly
colored. I used Doan'a Kidney Pills
.and they made me feel like a new
person."
Get Dean's at Any Store. ?0e a Bo*
DOAN'S "/."JLV
FOSTEg-MILBmW CO- BUFFALO. N. Y.
J| Horse Owner
& who haaerer tried
r Yager's
SJ Liniment
m will readily admit
c? that it is by Or the
* but and ami*conomIcal
liniment for general stable use.
For strained ligaments, spavin,
harness galls, sweeny, wounds or
old sores, cuts and any enlargements.
It gives quick relief.
It contains twice as much as the
usual 60 cent bottle of liniment.
At all dealers. Price 35 cents
YAGER'S
LINIMENT
L GILBERT BROS. * CO.
Baltimore, Ed.
"ONLY ONE THING ~~
8REAKS_MY COLD!
That's Dr. King's New Discovery
for fifty years a
cold-breaker"
NOTHTNO bat sustained quality
and unfailing effectiveness can
arouse such enthusiasm. Noth
us inii sure rener rrom stubborn old
colds and onrushinc new ones, grippe,
throat-tearing coughs, and croup could
have made Dr. King's New Discovery
the nationally popular and standard
remedy It Is today.
Fifty years old and always reliable.
Rood for the whole family. A bottle In
the medicine cabinet means a shortlived
cold or cough. 60c. and $1-20.
All druggists. Give It a trial.
Regular Bowels It Health
Bowels that move spasmodically?
free one day and stubborn the next?
should be healthfully regulated by Dr.
King's New lJfe Pills. In this tray
you aeep the Impurities of waste matter
from circulating through the system
by cleansing the bowels thoroughly
and proibotlng the proper flow of
bile.
Mild, comfortably 7?t always reliable,
Dr. King's New Llfo Pills work
with pieclslon without the constipation
results of violent purgatives. 25c. as
usual at all druggist*.
NERVOUS
PROSTRATION
Mrs. J. Christm&n Proved
That Lydia EL Pinkham'*
Vegetable Compound is a
Kemedy tor this Trouble.
*
Binghamton, N. Y.?was In a very
nervous condition for over a year, my
ild see nought on
/thing, could not
re anyone^ to see
le^didnotlhel^rne
i m^s ^Vegetable
ration."?Mrs. J.
Christman, 193 Oak Street, Binghamj
ton, New York.
I The success of Lydlu E. Pinkham'a
I Vegetable Compound, made from roots
1 ana herbs, is unparalleled. It may be
: used with perfect confidence by women
who suffer from nervous prostration,
displacements, inflammation, ulceration,
irregularities, periodic pains, backache,
bearing-down feeling, flatulency,
indigestion and dizziness. Lydia E.
Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound is the
standard remedy for female ills.
If there are any complications about
which you need advice write in confidence
to Lydia E. Pink ham Medicine
Co., Lynn, Moss.
RELIEVES COLD
THE CHEST
j You can't afford to trifle
with a cold in the chest. It
; may lead to pneumonia, influenza,
on other serious
trouble.
MoteehSJOY jn
^"Ptmd, ftATtnc
lives quick relief and prevents pneu> I
mortis. You Just apply*it to the P
throat and chest, and rub it in. It K
quickly penetrates to the seat of the P <
Inflammation, and congestion dis- I
appears like magic. I
I Mother's Jqy Sal re is harmless I
and soothing, and can be applied to I
the tender est baby akin without u
Irritating effects. Thousands of MM
users testify thct It never foils to MM
relieve congestion and croup.
Caesa Cress*
For CROUP, COLDS,
INFLUENZA A PNEUMONIA
Mothers should keep a Jar of Drama's Vapomrathe
Helve convenient. When Croup, lnflueasa
or Pneumonia threatens this delightful
saiTv HHH Wfell into UJ* Inroat. chml and
tinder the arms, will relieve the ebokiatf, blMk
oBfMtlon and promote restful sleep.
who. hot auin me domes
Ms. Wt el ll.se St sa Irag mm m seat pespalS fcy
BrsmeDrniiCo. N. Wllkeeboro, N. C.
{ SMB v#*i I AflBS
tmj$* I
g a nc viu rviiduiv (
| BLACK-DRAUGHT I
| for Stock and poultry B |
| Ask your merchant! |
I Merchants: aak your Job txria pj
| saloamon sMout B?C Dee! U
Polk Miller's
Liver Pills
The Good Old Fashioned Kind
that have been doing Good Work
(or 50 years without change of
formula. More popular than ever.
Great in Malaria, Sick headaches.
Constipation and Biliousness.
At all druggists. Manufactured by
Polk Miller Drug Co., 1 A.
Inc* Richmond, Va. lUCe
A Bad Cough
If oagbctad, often leads to Mriow trouble.
Bafecuerd yonr health, roUeva your dtitwi
end soothe your Irritated throat by tatHim
PISO'S
Igg9 neither Qgttin,>^r^nen?
BBRSHU I (
Exact Copy of Wrapper. ^
Watch the Little P
They are N
Unsightly and Disfiguring Sig- ui
nals of Bad Blood.
Pimples on the face and other n<
?>arts of the body 'are -warnings l''
rom Nature that your blood Is r
sluggish and impoverished. Some- b<
times they foretell eczema, boils, th
blisters, and other skin disorders pi
that burn like flames of fire. w
They mean (hat your blood needs ly
S. S. S. to cleanse it of these im- at
pure accumulations that can cause Li
MADE HIS ARGUMENT GOOD R
Small Johnny Drew on Biblical Knowl- R
edge to Convince Mother of
Danger He Was In.
Ten-year-old John lives next door
to a little girl near his own age. The d<
mothers are good friends niul insist on pi
their children being playmates. Rut ?U
this doesn't suit John, who wishes to D
get out with the hoys. So he tries his ol
best to start a quarrel whenever play- h<
time with Edith arrives. And the ex- Y
plnnntlons for this trouble, which he s<
offers to his. mother are often elnb- vl
! orate. st
Last Wednesday he had succeeded dt
In making Edith angry. Like a little m
fury she flew at him and pulleda his A
hair. Then John went home to make Q
the announcement that no longer d<
would he play with this girl. "I can't Q
?that's all," he ended. "It's danger- si
ous for me." K
Ills mother smiled. "Oh, I think la
not." she comforted. "It Isn't such nl
a cnlnmlty to lose n few hairs." h(
"Well this Is Just the beginning," ei
John returned, "and remember whnt In
| happened to Samson Just on account In
of a woman." al
G
Politics Is generally the defense when
It Is an offense.
The greater the extravagnnce the m
sooner the crash. fli
~|
j coffee ti
I Vani
[ v/hen the tat
changed froi
\ Postum
Its rich flav
S it fully accei
H -LI -- * ?
mose wno n
but find coff
( like ihem*
( This healthful ia
has not incite at
( At Grocers and C
i Two Si:
j Usually" sold ai
( Mad?"by Po stum'Cereol <
V
|
' **5-Si L-; \ ' ^ ' v.*)?*- "46i iS
'ASTORIA
for Infants and Children.
lathers Know That
Genuine Castoria
Always A,
ears tho
nlr
1 Jr
vX- Use
j For Over
Thirty Years
iASTORIA
TNI OINTAUR COMPANY. N?W TOR* OfTY.
imnlpc*
r?
ature's Warding
ilimitcd trouble. This remedy is
ie of the greatest vegetable
impounds known, and contains
> minerals or chemicals to injure
ie most delicate skin
Go to your drug store, and get <
ittle or S. S. S. today, get rid of
lose unsightly, disfiguring pimes,
and other skin irritations. It
ill cleanse your blood thorough.
For special medical advice free,
Idress Medical Director, 41 Swift
aboratory, Atlanta, Ga.
ARE DOUBLES TO MONARCHS
esemblances, Fancied and Real, Have
Given Rise to Some Highly
Imaginative Stories.
Most inonnrchs possess nt least one . jtkji
mible, hut so far the double of the
resent shah of 1'ersln has not been
Iscovered. His grandfather, Nasr-edIn,
had a famous double In the person
! Edmund Yatee. The resemblance
stween these two was so striking that
ntes* photographs were sold In Brus?ls
as the shah's when* Nnsr-ed-Dln
Islted thnt city. However, ho never *
lffered through the possession of a
juble as another monarch did, if we
my credit a theory of Andrew Lang's,
ccordlng to that Ingenious historian,
ueen Elizabeth and Darnley were
aubles. The second husband of Mary
ueen of Scots was not, as Is generally
jpposed, blown up In the exploslpn of
Irk o' Field, but escaped Into Eng*
ind.. He then somehow got Elizabeth
\ his mercy and ultimately secured
f>r throne, posing as the queen to the
id of his days. Thanks to the amatig
resemblance between the two, the
uposture was not discovered until
Tter Darnley's death.?Manchester
uardlap.
Case of Wait.
"Do you believe In long engageents?"
"No, but where you gonna
id a flnt?" <
n
roubles [|
sh !
tie drink is >
m coffee io )
Cereal j
V/JL lllCLlYtJO >
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ike coffee . )
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