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m IS HOST INJURIOUS OF ALL assistant surgeon general DISCUSSES SITUATION WITH STATE. HbALTw OFFICER. DETAIL SANITARY ENGINEERS Useless Expense to Make Surveys If Communities Do Not Put Into Ef fect the Program Outlined. * “Where malaria seriously prevails, •4 • H does more injury than any other disease," said Col. H. M. Carter,* as sistant surgeon genera of the United States public health service, s in dis cussing with health officials, the m&- 4arfa» situation ih'^mtltlr CWtfttn'gr"'— Colonel Carter is .in Columbia for the purpose of conferring with Dr. James A. Hayne. state health officer, with regard to malaria control. Re cently the state board of health effect ed an arrangement with the public health service by which the health ser vice detailed a sanitary engineer to this state to make surveys with a view to controlling malaria. Captain Fisher of the public health service is now in the state becoming acquainted with the situation. j “It will be a useless expense," said Colonel Carter, “to make a, survey of a community that has no idea of put ting into effect the program outlined. First, the health department should select towns where malaria seriously prevails. Then it should assure itself that the community being surveyed will put up money sufficient to carry out the program made by'the sani tary engineer. Remember Tuesday, September 16th will be Kings Millinery opening date. Everybody invited. Notice Because I have no use for it, I will sell my Saxon six Automobile, 1917 model. Good as new, the Speedome ter shows 1,881 -miles, has been on blocks to save the pressure in tires, in a private garage at Spartanburg for 18 months, now in my barn. The first check $800. gets it. Mr. Jack Anderson of E. W. Ferguson’s Garage has gone over it, cleaned up all the parts and says that it is in perfect condition. J. W. Copeland, Sr. v Clinton, S. C. Abbeville—Greenwood Mutual Insurance • Association E TU WORK TO BE DONE BY BUREAU OF MARKETS, ASSISTED BY THE EXTENSION SEWV1CET“ TO WORK IN SEVEN COUNTIES Addition to the Engineering Building Abandoned Several Years Ago la 'M To Be Completed. Clemson College.—Drayton E. Earla, formerly of the textile department at Clemson, now with the bureau of mar kets, United States department of ag riculture, was here to perfect arrange ments concerning cotton grading work to be done, jointly by the bureau of markets and the extengiion service m several counties of South’ Carolina during the coming season. An expert cotton grader will be stationed in each of seven counties Orangeburg, Dar lington, Sumter, Laurens, Clarendoa, Anderson, and Greenwood, for the pur pose of classing and grading cotton for the benefit of farmers. Dr. J. W. Buchanan, assistant state veterinarian, who has accepted a posi tion In Union as city and county health officer, has given up his work here and movwd to Union. T. S. Buie, a graduate of the clafs of 1917, has acepted a temporary posi tion as assistant in agronomy and will work here for a few months until a permanent assistant-can be secured. Mr. Buie will then go to the Georgia experimental station where he will work as agronomist of the station. Work has begun on the addition to the engineering building, the founda tions of which were laid several years ago, but abandoned then on account ot war conditions. PRESIDENT AT DES MOINES i Mr. Wilson Heard by Vast Throngs at Every Speaking Point Along Self- Imposed 10,000 Mile Journey. Des Moines, Iowa.—The Versailles treaty with its league of nations cov enant was explained here by Presi- dent Wilson as a pnrpjy Amroiran Charleston.—Prospects are now as sured for a movement in the next fe* months, taking shipments already made into account of 500,000 tens of coal for export through this po.'t. Brig. Gen. W. W. Moore, adjutant and inspector general, will make in spections of four more proposed com panies for the South Carolina National Guard the next two weeks. published reports with regard to cases of diphtheria, in Batesburg, a careful investigation fails -to disclose the ex istence of a single case. Several phy sicians have been interviewed. Columbia.—The organized strength of South Carolina’s National Guard is but 29 per cent of its organised strength. Beaufort.—After a long and exhaus tive Investigation of the live ntock and packing house business Throughout the South, the people of Beaufort and vicinity have decided to build a pack ing paint and make a horn.) marks! for live stock. Wind one .Protects against« looser* by and Lightning as well as Tire. Loosers paid promptly. Only assessment Annually Oct. 1st. Policies written now, not assessed until Oct. 1920. Has never cost over $8.00 per $1000. This year it is only $5.00 per $1000. J. D. AUSTIN, Clinton. G. W. BAILEY, Clinton. Joe. R. ADAIR, Renno. i t . WANTED LUMBER—At all times, Gum, Poplar, Ash, Oak, Maple, Jun iper and Pine lumber. Never sell your lumber without consulting us: theres a reason. We pay 90 per cent cash on receipt of shipping papers. EAST CAROLINA LUMBER CO. NEW BERN, N. C. 30 YEARS EXPERIENCE IN FITTING GLASSES E. B. GARVIN OPTOMETRIST Orfick Hours: 8:30 a. m. to 12:50 p.m. 1:50 p. m. to 6 p. m Office Commercial Bank Building Wanted—To buy Liberty Bonds. , See Guy C. Pitts Spartanburg. — The Spartanhurg County Warehouse Company was com- missioned by W. Banks Dove, secre tary of state, with a proposed capital stock of $300,000. This amount was subscribed in the recent campaign In that county for membership in the South Carfolina Cotton Association. * Florence—With Are eating its Way 4 through the mountain of coal - at the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Com pany’s large coal chute on the yards here, and no possible means of getting at the flames, which are at the bottom of the chute, the railroad company Is faced with the task of removing 50.- 000 tons or more of coal from the bins. Rock Hill.—Trustees of-Winthrop College •warded scholarships for next session and elected teachers to fill a number of vacancies in the faculty. Dr. D. B. Johnson, president of the In stitution. said 1,150 young women had been admitted to the institution out of 1,400 applicants. The school opens September 17. Cotton Mills Join Association. Spartanburg. — The Spartanburg Cotton association, according to re ports compiled here by John B. Can non, county chairman, has 1,750 mem bers. The county furnishes 1,664 of these and has paid in dues to the as sociation $2,426.75. The canvass of the city brought. 196 members with fees paid totalling 2,009.76. In addition to these the 27 cotton mills of the county will become members of the association, paying $100 each. It was stated the banks have not reported. document extending democracy over the world and shifting foreign rela tions from a basis of force and war to one of arbitration and peace. Making his second address of the day, the President spoke in Des Moines coliseum, said to seat 7,500. Every chair was taken and many were standing.' Earlier in the day he had spoken at Kansas City, Mo., more than 300 miles away. Describing the world as desper ately in need of the settled condition of peace, the President said the United States, the last nation which the world expected to have to wait upon, was delaying the coming of that peace. The treaty, he said, not only would, establish peace but it would end forever "ffre rule WT few*mcn over the destinies of the many. Citing what happened in Europe with the rise of bolshevism, Mr. Wil son said the move of radicalism and disorder was spreading. “Do you honest’v think that none of that poison has got into the veins of this free people?” he asked. “Men look you calmly in the face in America and tell you they are for that sort of revolution. “So long as the ruestion of what kind of peace the world was to have and what guarantees were to be be hind it remained open, the poison would continue to spread. “How long shall we be kept wait ing for the answer whether the world will trust us or despise us?” he con tinued.” The President said he had not been able to work out the solution of rail way problems until he knew when a peace basis came. The conference of labor and capital in Washington next month, he continued, also would have its deliberations affected by the an swer to the treaty question. Labor “all over the world is waiting,” he asserted, “to see whether the United States accepted the treaty’s provision for an international labor organiza tion.” The United States, said the Presi dent, could not participate in the world labor conference to be held in Washington soon snder the treaty un less the treaty was accepted by this, country. Such a condition would be “inconceivable,” he added, and would lead to the greatest “mortification.” “The world is waiting,” said the President, “to see not whotheci we will o take part, but whether we will take the lead” The fathers of the republic, Mr. Wilson said, intended to set up a standard' to which the world could come for liberty. From all nations, he continued, men had come by millions. Opponents of the league, the Presi dent asserted, were saying, “yes, we made a great promise to the world, but it’ll cost too much to redeem it.” If by deliberate choice the United States became a rival and antagonist of her neighbors instead of their friends, said the President, then it would reap the same reward as a busi ness nian who proceeded on that ba sis. If the United States tried to get all it could selfishly, he continued, then the world would see that it got nothing at all. Just as American soldiers restored the morale of. the fighting peoples of the allies, said the President, so the United*States could now restore the peace morale of the* world. ^“Arfi you going to institute a move against France and England and Ja pan to get Shantung back for China?’ 1 asked the President. On the contrary, he added, estab lishment of the league would be a power to which China could appeal for future justice. Mr. Wilson also discussed Article 10 of the league covenant. Pan-Ger manism and similar plans would be “torn up by the roots.” Of the ultimate outcome of the treaty he had no doubt. “The only thing that can be accom plished,” he said, “is delay: The ulti mate outcome will be the triumphant ^eeptance of the treaty and the league.” The Monroe doctrine provision, he said, had been objected to as vague, because it referred to “such regional understandings as the Monroe doc trine.” , . ' “This language was written,” the President said, “in perfect innocence, and was ‘intended’ to give right of way to the Monroe doctrine in the western hemisphere.” “The language was put in,” he con tinued, “be.ause the other delegates thought it unwise to make specific reference to a polmy of one country without leaving the way open ^ for other. nations to develop ..imilar poli cies in their own localities.” i Greenvlll^ Cara Running. Greenville.—Street cars resumed op eration here after having been idle more than three weeks. A contract drawn up by H. E. Thompson and B. E. Geer, of the state board of concilia tion, was signed by representatives of the strikers and officials \)f the South ern Public Utilities company. Includ ing President Z. V. Taylor. Mr. Thompson, who Is a locomotive engineer, represents labor on the con- clDitf’wn board, and Mr. Geer, a prom inent cotton mill executive, of Green ville, represents Industry. GALLOWAY’S RESIGNATION IS FORCED BY BURLESON Washington.—Charles M. Galloway retired as a member of the civil serv ice commission. He was forced out, he declared, by Postmaster General Burleson, who tried to dominate the commission. Mr. Galloway is a South Carolina man. He came to Washing ton with Senator Smith. He had a brother ard othei* relatives in Char lotte. The President asked for his resignation some time ago because ot a row with the commission. Clothes are a powerful factor in gaining favorable impression for-a man and favorable impressions at first sight are a great advantage to men in busi ness. Distinctive clothes are the sort that are neither too loud nor too characterless.' Distinctive clothes are v . * . the sort that are rich in textures, precise in tailor- ormg, correeL-in-styler trim 4n fifr- refined in- pat- ~ - terning. We can show you distinctive Fall Clothes here more readily than we can define them, and it will be a pleasure to be permitted to do so. M. S. BAILEY & SONS 44 The Big Store With the Big Values * jocf: —~Z)|[cz=)|.cr^ ic ff j)[c=5)[o] . . "■rv—vr: - I ; • 1 I . iii! I 1 ff-! m 1 ty I ' " a t y i ' 1 j ’ 1 11- > v X " j ' ’ •*'./' \ 1 ■ * \ : ! I I I'M* •••' \ t. w '.''' v ■ - ‘;!ri! '-'I ' i--h • i 'Si (;.j i' ilv/fjlijh: vhL • : j-fi f!!«' V / ■ i'll l.l!4J,d Jirr i" s • iliii. i/ jj i ■ j i I I 1 hrs-. , I :■ .... v Tl r -, p i! The Tudor—No. 963 It is made of Simmons SeemiesH Sqr.are and Rectangular TubinK throughout. Artistic cenler effects-decorattorrs in relief. Ea^y running casters. Has the Simmons Patented Pressed Steel Noiseless Corner Locks. Choice of Double Width and Twin Pairs, enameled m the accepted Decorative Colors.. — 4 At Last— _ - Here are Metal Beds Deserving : ' of a Place in Any Bedroom _ A NY WOMAN, knows that even L old-fashioned metal beds were sanitary— ( The thing that jarred her sensibilities was the way they looked in the room. Until recently the general run of metal igns dec jy bed designs have not kept pace with interior decoration. Now, Simmons Beds are in accord with the accepted ideals of line, form and composition. The new Tudor design, illustrated above; in Twin Pairs, is an example. Now, a woman can select a Simmons .Bed or Twin Pair which meets her every requirement of form and color. Exquisite in finish and color—because the enamel holds perfectly all over ta the smooth surface of this new Sim mons tubing—not affected by changes in temperature and seldom chipped even by a hard knock. Everyone knov/s Simmons Beds — Built for Sleep. The quiet, restful beds. The beds with the Simmons Patented Pressed Steel Comer Locks, which prevents rattle and squeak. The beds that invite complete relaxation and deep, sound sleep. Come in the next time you are in the neighborhood of this store and select your new bed from this superb display. \