University of South Carolina Libraries
IflN OUNCEMENTS I mhv i IJSKK or < ?i'KT. t.-Ai 4iiuouiicv u)y#e}f ?? a cauUi I, . .1 on to tin- oAc* ..t ("i. ik R, ' , f,,r K- islmw Ivuuty ut the ? V. t,, )h hcM this su?ujk?i\ if ?V j jirowioe t<? faithfully perform Ku{j, . 11?? Wltf 'II the future ;is f* nMI S II CI.VKl'HN. Emir ?'1 OF KDtfCATHW I k. ,, i.\ ;l IllloUlltV IH.N KcIf MX M tvia.ll I s .. < (< inl<-ut of N<lue?tiou flyr ftfct* (Vuutj ili the ai>|>ix??c-hiu(f trf.jfiniciry iltK-tuMi to bo held [uutft. I )>lt'?fce "?>solf to u strict Kart' of. .?>" the 'linics of the qAm r ai.j.ia m. x4i;i<ouigoN I | OK M \<;iSTK \TI. I Ih'i* annouuce ui.vm'U as a can L. for :? lamination n> the office of nitrate o/ 1>?-Kalh Kor t Caiinty. t?? th?? titles of bh.. |t?e ratio i'r unary. I SAMI KI. N. .NICHOLSON. [ KOH CONUKKSS hereby aiiuo.UOce to the voten* o/ thy b| t\hikiI District of South; Eli,),!, that I Hin a Camlttate for ne^l liniktioii (of OoUfl^W iu Mid Dis ? siilihfi to the tuition of the Detao ?> Primary election ; ami I take thfe Lkni t<> thank tho voters for thair Lit '? the ]?as)t uud to awiiro than livU'd to servo th?n iu the future to jbrnt of ju.v ability jih I have emkavor L do in tho past. W. b\ S^TKVRNSON. Wreck <mi Northwestern, The -XI11 'I n'ii \' \ initio Wllbn) >ainl on the Hack of the Norllnvt'-U'i'ii mil n?.ul lo -.iich mi o\uiu i li.ii ill** r.u lv luorutiiir tni'hi from CtumKii was whk<Ki?(I ihwt \Vlrib? SUHiitf, about titrm tutfe* fivtiu tills olty, Tuestlay iuotuUik Tli*' locomotive left the i rack ami lurn $d over on its shle. \11 oil (imk car was also tleratUnl No One wa<s Lujur ?Sl KnglUeor lUviWJl, wftK> \N*U8 >yKI?11.\ hmir*'<l a-> ho jmnjM'd from the n?b of (lie ovorl in ning Uh-oiiioi no The won- Inoii-ht to town in an tomobll** by Mousix, .1. Herman Mycin aiwl J. M llhtulhain, who lmitpptMuxl to Ik' noar the scene Of I he a?v'ulent. On account of the wreck near Olmrleston at the time of the a<vi<ient, tnflki was tied np ou thin tunl ?>f tba lino for sev eral (la.vs.- Humtor lieraUi. Two mvhUnts at t'lm-rleMon, ivsult Ul lit txH* death* <>f Honry .V. Qrowu. (onuorly of savannah. who was'futul ly injured wticqi an engine struck Win, and of Mb* ,h>sei?h3no Orftlg, a traine<I nurse*. wlui waft lilt, by an automobile. Hvth died at a hospital a ?a?ort time af ter helnn iaijnwd. Mr. Ilrowu was ft yard crew foreman for the Aaltuth Coast lAno railroad. Cotton textile un lolls in 15 iva t Britain have 200,000 female member#. Your Next Tire Should be a Brunswick The name Brunswick is a pledge of quality, backed by a reputation of 75 years for building quality products?a reputation too valuable to risk on any but the best tires that money and skill can produce. jw Brunswick Tires are made in Cord and Fabric types ? plain, ribbed and skid-not treads. Buy one. Keep a rec ord of its service. Judge for yourself. You'll soon be riding on four Brunswicks. CITY FILLING STATION H. S. Zeigler, Prop. Corner Lyttleton and DeKmlb EYE NEEDS REGULAR BATHS On# oil ftltiftg and th? Oth?r on R# j tlrmg I* Recommended to So- j cure Cood Results. Foi* the dlBly rare of the eyea there ; ?*nui!<) ?.?? h\n tl?v bnd.v mnsi i hu\C IIS liiltll. The !:(<??? 111u^I liUVC itH | ?l*'i?usjnK. Why not-the eve? Fspe- , ? ?Inll.v }|S 11 If cy,., with lis Illicit ll?l | and i.Imi fringe of eyelashes Is a iliixt : trap. Mini Uu> slightest ?-1>?? k ? i dust allowed to h'liVarn Ivm'iHli the Mil may en Utfe IrrltatfOD of the iui am) inihuu tynttoti of tiu* ejr. l'?>i th? *?>??'? d;iil> i..nil I ,.ilVr ,\oa tin) choice of several lotb'm*. My fa vorite Ik: Ten miner* of purest rose water, Apply with an eye cup, turn lng the. eye cup upside down so iliat the half-open eye U completely wualu o<i by the content s of tho cup. llold It thus for !10 seconds. or. If not un comfortable, for a full minute. Throw away this rosewater. Klnse tho glass and give the eye a second hath. If the eyes are unduly Irritated the hath can ho repeated several limes. Ordinarily a bath In tin* morning on rJalflg and another at ulgtlt on retir ing, a re enough. Some of my friends who have beau tiful eyes prefer elderllower water 1o rosewater. It Is e<pially good and should be applied In the same way. Another excellent eye bath l? one half an ounce of witch hazel; one half?ju*?euu4e?of?dintlHed water. Shake well In bottle and apply with an eye cup. One other bath 1 must tell you about that Is most excellent for strengthening the eyes: Six drops Of (boraeic acid, one wine glass of dis tilled water. A hath in borax water Is highly henetlclal and has the advantage of being always convenient. l-Xen while traveling one may always carry a box of borax. Moreover It Is safe, because borax will only form ft-4 per cent solu tion. that Is, only 4 per cent of It. will he absorbed by water. A borax bath Is very strengthening. If the eyes be delicate or the /person so prejudiced against experiments tlujt she is not willing to introduce this substance di rectly Into the eyes, ,a silk handker chief or a soft cloth dipped Into borax water and pressed upon, the eyelids Is both efficacious and soothing. The old-fashioned remedy of cold tea leaves pressed upon the lids has value, not from the tea leaves Intrinsi cally, hut from the cool, moist con tact. Cloths dipped ift uater are quite as good.?New York American. Cultivate Reading Habit. Much 'has been said of the Impor tance of forming the. right physical mid moral habits Yarly In life, but the value of the oifrly formation of reading habits has received little at tention, according to Miss Dove of the Agricultural college at Fort Col lins, Colorado. The practice of dally reading should be begun while In sehool'and should not be discontinued luter on account of time. Thirty min utes a day spent In reading will keen one up with the current events and thus widen one's horizon. Thoughts may be gathered that will relieve the monotony and drudgery of the daily task. Reading not only adds to \>ne?s daily life but It paves the way for greater enjoyment later.*-It Is as one grows older that the habit of reading becomes most valuable. Fortunate In deed is the man who as he -withdraws from the more active side of life, finds a world of hip own through the open doorway of good books. Popular Alabama Statesman. In very recent years Alabama was represented In the senate by two Con federate generals, John T. Morgan and Edmund W. Pettus. Morgan's great reputation as an orator and statesman had long eclipsed his reputation as a soldier. Pettus was one of the most original and delightful patriarchs who ever sat In the senate. lie had fought in the Mexican war as well as In the Civil war, and didn't come to Wash ington until he was seventy-six years old. l'ugh, his predecessor, had re fused to Indorse him for appointment as a federal Judge, on the ground that he was "too old." "If I'm too old to be a Judge," said Pettus. 4 I'm not too old to be a senator." So he made a campaign for Pugh's sent and won It. ?New York Tribune. Called Himself an American. The blood In my vein* is mingled. English, Scotch and Irish. With a somewhat similar uncestry. some years ago, Baron Speck von Sternburg, who was ambassador of Germany tf? the United States prior to the recent war, boasted himself an American. I was present at a banket in Berlin one night when, responding to n personal toast, he rose and said: "My father was Herman, my mother was Scotch and I was born " in England; that makes me an American." The baron's conclusion was received with more enthusiasm at that moment than It would be today.?Melville E. Stone In Collier's Weekly. Getting Acquainted. While traveling recently I beguiled the hours by trying to win the confi dence of a winning but shy child. My efforts were In vain, *o I took refuge In my book. Soon after a aoft little hand crept Into mine slowly, and ? tiny voice said: "I am use-ter to you than I used to be."?Chlcafo Trib une. Compoaltora. i?frell, all the heroea have re turned from war. Martha?Bat. say, Es. who are tboa? heroglyphlcst ALIENS LEAVE BY WHOLESALE 6,000 Are Sailing Weekly for Europe Where Dollar Is Potent. CAUSE OF LABOR SH0RTA6E Difficulties of 1 raveling In Europe and Danger of Losing Their Money Has No Influence on Alt4hs Eager to Return. New \ork. Wholesale re-omigratlon of aliens in America began lust April and Is continuing In ever growing numbers. Steamship ticket iigents agree (hut 0,000 are leaving for Europe weekly, although (he Immigration Is confined to Italian* and Heljflans. I have been In contact with a great number of alien laborers in the United States sine* my return from Europe In January and 1 flnd that a great per centage of them are preparing to leave the .state*, write* Joseph Sxebenyel In the New .York Tliues. Among tho Hun gariaiiH and those coming from the newly formed states In astern Eu rope, no per cent are about to return tu ihf old' cuuutry. ? 'I he resultant labor shortage espe cially Is being felt already, and em ployers or alien labor are forced to advertise continually In order to re place . the hands leaving week after week. They are spending thousands of dollars on advertisements In Slovak and Hungarian papers. Mining com panies especially prefer Hungarian Worker*! because thev are steady and hard workers, doing Jobs no other* would do, and earning In most cases up to $120 a week. Causes of Re-Emigration. TJbe causes of the "'holesale re emigration may be found in the follow ing facts: 1. Allen laborers have saved up mon ey during the war, when they wore' -barred from sending It Dome, and, Ac cording to bankers dealing exclusively -With I hem, they have an average of $3,000. If we take what a dollar is worth in eastern Europe, it Is easy to comprehend that the worker ex changing his dollars Into kronen be comes the richest man In his village, a lure very fei* could withstand. For $.*1,000 he gets ?s much as 750,000 kronen, enough to buy out the richest landlord In his district. 2. Prohibition. 8. The laborer has pdt seen his fam. ily, many have not even heard from them, for six to ten years. 4. The high cost of living in America, (iez.a D. Berko, managing editor of the Hungarian Dally, who has his fin J ger on the alien, movements In Amer ica more than any one else, when questioned on the subject said: "The re-emigration Is slow because there Is not sufficient shipping. There are only five steamers weekly avail able for eastern Europe at present, and yet 0,000 are leaving by them. Should the sailing facilities Improve, and the passport qnestlon be simpli fied, It will grow by leaps and hounds*" Cannot Be Dissuaded. The manager of Emll Kiss' banking house, the largest ticket agents on the east side, said that they Were dlscour aging re-emlgratlon as much as pos sible, and explained to applicants the difficulties of traveling in Europe, the danger of their losing their kits und money on the way. "Yet it is impossible to persuade them to stay," the clerks assert "There are letters from former travel ers who say that they have been cheat ed and robbed of their possessions, arrived home stripped oi everything, yet you can't Induce them to stay." "Do you discourage 'exchange of dol lars as well?" I asked. ' 1 "We do, but the constant fall In the exchange makes it difficult By the time tho man arrives home he gets more for his dollars, so he prefers tak ing It in cash, as most of them are ignorant people who mistrust drafts. Now, in traveifng through Europe the victim?for you can't call him by any other name?encounters laws In ev? ery country prohibiting the export ol dollars. If he lands In France bit money is exchanged into francs, In Germany into mark#, in Austria of Jugoslavia Into kronen, being 10 oi more, per cent everywhere." Some of the re-emigrants travel through five countries emd thus lost BO per cent of their money on forced exchange. In France there are even graver difficulties, for even the export I of .French money to exceed 1,000 franca la prohibit**]. The traveler must get a state permit, a procedure taking sometimes weeks. The whole of Eu rope Is hungry for dollars. 8hun Powder, Says Photographer. Atlantic City, N. J.?Will FT. Towlei of Washington. I). f\, addressing the annual convention of photographers ol the middle Atlantic states here, de clared that If girls want to look beau tiful In a photograph they mint not powder their faces, since powder flat tens expression and obliterates line* necessary to bring out beauty. More Railroads for Alsace. Paris.?Extension of railroad facili ties in Alsace is now progressing rap Idly. A n?w nnrrow-gauge line from Bussang to- Weesedllng, northwest of Thann, la the first of Its kind opened In thfa section of the country. Con atmcflon In the Vosges region will be taken up next. Hon. It. It. W'Umhi IfcNMl K.h'K 11111. AjM-tl SO. Tim Hon \YU itttui HIniX'kUurn Wll^oiW utfwt scvonty, a loading Uiwyw of till* oo\UU,V an?l ouo of South 4>iroliuu'?i iiromlnont u>w\ a folMiUM' uhmuIhm' of l?? ?t h \urtUiiHlVtf W I lu? U>k)k)uiiiiv an?l *i|" i!*?? nation al 00>l\I' ll toll of IKR5 it I lli-. holUO ??!<? lo.li\ al'.i .ill Uiin'^v of WVVWll III! IlllU, Aii air flight from Miami, Flu., to Now York, with oiu* sto|>, in fiftoon ljour> m11?t thirty ftw minntos. flying thuo. was uiaiio Frhla> hy tho pu^on u<M ^i-aplano MK^ Mhiini." UilOttHl >0 Hiiry Ittwtn**. of tlio Amwrloan Fjylu# t'jnh. Tho |oug jovipioy of uoarjy 1,500 tiliUv> along tho const Mno was >iutorrni> r<N| at Motvhoatl Ol-ty. N. C\. w^oiv n vt?>)> wax nja?lo for fuol, Sonator Hugh .Moi1ut<'h?'H <llwl at l.U homo in KIiiknIiav Friday morning at tioA'hK'k aftor H|i illmw of Urn*1 months. In his < loath WtllWtmshurn Conntj Josos mto of Its host and nio?t 11111\1I \ lio|o\?i| an) i>v4??vU'd rili WMl*. ? t Court SlisthIhs (toveinor Columbia. Aiirll ;H). That (.'nvornov [('ooptn' was fully wifh\n Ills rxomiho nnlhorWy in ivniovlny .1. Ollu Sander* sheriff of Andorson County, for allotft'd tmuigifel ?oonduof, w(m opinion of i!h> fttalo Supivino Conn. handed ilowu lU}j? aftonioou si'ortiN after adjourn* niont <> tl. Kiuv. it|>|m?(ut?*?) hy Hovornitr lAmper wlion Hio pim*lanwi Hon \v?h l*uod .January li'l, 10l!0, will *u<v ?\hs| $atKli>l*v Tht? ?|ir.||||SN;| | (|| Sil tftv\v OUI of oiiapcw |>ivfor\rod by a polbvimm of AimUtmmi. who allom'd that h?> nin^'hi Sanders' and the polhvman's wife In a tkoiiipiN>tnisinK position on (MoIkm* 1i?. UMtt, Aft or ji hourinjj on tho matter [ iJovoriKU*. C<?opor decided t'liat tiho u<' CllHOti ??IT1< In I hud not made a Niiffl I lout show hand ho ousiod Vilm. Dixie Fabricated Bungalows give every man a chance to own bin own cosy, substantial. endurable. weather-proof, enjoyable home. Four walMayer construction wun qeaa air space Dot ween ITTmTO insulation against Summer heat and Winter t-old. Shipped in eaay-to handle Hoctlons?quick ?y erected by any handy man, by plans we furnish. Whst you uvt in rsnt will soon pay for a Dixie Fabricated Bungalow. 1)1X1 IC HOUSE COMPANY CUARl.KKTO.N. ?. C. Write lor illus trated catalog of Dixie Hoyee* priced from 93*4 to 83800. full door plan*. ? pacific at|on? Mtd prion. QmUk Shipment* Service and Quality ^We established our business on the principle of being l>iir with our customers, giving them full value for the money they leave with us.. (We have continued that policy throughout the years we have been serving you, and we are pursuing it more persistently than ever in this era of price in flation today. But we never lower the standard of our gooftar ;; v " : ; . '? On this high plane of commercially we solicit your patronage. ure Food Store PHONE. 66! HUPMOBILES We are noiv accepting orders for imm^ diate delivery on the new Hupmobile 1920 Model. Can make delivery within one week's notice. GEORCE T. LITTLE Life Insurance Protects mortgaged real estate. A "Life" Policy pays the mortgage if the bor \ rower dies. It gives him time to discharge the obligation if he dies. An "Endowment" Policy pays off the mortgage whether the borrower lives or dies. Southeastern Life Insurance Co., L. A. McDowell, Agent ? Mention The Chronicle When Writing Advertiser*