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I !(?'<! Crotis Notn. Lfr Ai'iiic O'Dell. or MouutalnvIHe, i'y tvht? gmdualtMl Mif JF.III19 Ut , CaOK^i U0?pltiil, litis aiwpted the jflon ?? Hed Cross IMntrlcr Nurse . (^iiuI.ii uih! KflPibiw <'ouiii\, \Ni||, at tbe Hoorn uud f^uirtrrv . jU ii^dr??y warn brought t?? ?i?>r ^?e, rfea^Ki?Uui*? iijfci J. ? M-li- vviirk l?.ts IM'KUII hikI will ^juur tbryujjh nil flu- goute* ?llt| f y ? . ? .? H'jfh' School. AW aiv |UI rl U'litu c fortUUflt* *11 <>"|>rll mill I lit' Chapter { hope* to 4'oiitlniHv tu well fmv work anil will appreciate the ftKf^UUC* Of ev?l\v ik'isoii, white ami colored. Mr*. H. e. voitTresckow, Chairman Of Camden QftauHeh Sixteen luuulrtU Protectant elmpllns S?*|\T(1 in til.- fiiiiiMl Httttffcg army Itml navy duriii),' the worhl war. p-TT . r. Great Convenience ? Small Cost Business concerns and traveling nun using STATION TO STATION long distance service to great advantage in reaching* branch managers and the home office, where some one who can transact business is likely to be always present. This class of toll service is rendered at much lower rates t f 1 un the person to person service SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY If Savings Be Your Companion You Will ^ Always Have A Friend ? . ?' > ? ?? > What a true, loyal companion "savings" really is, can only be fully appreciated when the tidal wave of adversity threatens you Like a life long friend, it comes to your assistance and enables you to weather the ? V ? ? . storm. _ Start a saving account at the First National Bank and experience the satisfac tion of financial security and mental relief. Life Insurance Protects mortgaged real estate. A **I .ife" 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 Service and Quality Wi* established our business on the principle of tain# lair with our customers, giving them full value tnc money they leave with us. W e have continued that policy throughout the }ears we have been serving you, and we are pursuing ? it e-persistently than ever in this era of price in fit' ation today. But we never lower the standard of our *00 (K ' ( this high plane of commerciality we solicit your patronage. V* P are-Food Stm PHONE 66 e View of Foldklrch. : rTTVTCKKn In between Bavaria, T Switzerland and the Austrian I M. . ? Tvrol, In the midst of the moun tains, lies the district Vorarl berg, which after ?the war tried to es ' cane from the domination ot Austria by votltiK i" flivor of joining i land. I'robahly very few persons In. i the United States had ever before even heiml of' V?nir?,r, which ?m.? * 'tins been mistakenly lumped In the Tyyol. Th^re Is a perfectly \\eli ! defined boundary between VoP"r,bJ*|M : nmi the Austrian Tyrol-namely. the i watershed between the Rhine t,ic I l>Hnube, says the New York Tlims. | Travelers over the Arlberg pass im ! see this boundary duly marked \\lth in monument. The name \ orar ?? means the "land beyond the Arlberg | pjiMs" ? "beyond," that Is. from the ' nolnt of view of a person looking j westward over the pass from the Aus T h J1" spr '' n gs of the Rhine in Swltz ' erlaud lire not far from the ?".?<hein boundary of Vorarlberg. across the mountain known as the Rhatlknn . In ? this part or Switzerland Is the far j finned Kngadlne, with Its health re. ? sorts such as DflvM-FlaL, ? verv much better known to the world at large than the region to the north ! ?fIn the north Vorarlberg reaches the beautiful lake of Constance; on the | shores of that lake is Bregenz, Hli; I"'* 1 Htlcal capital of the land. Bregenz vlelds precedence, so far as size Is con cerned. to Dornblrn. up in the moun i tains behind the lake, but It Is "pver^" i loss the most Important place in Vor arlberg. The other leading towns are ? the railway of Fp1dklrc'h' where the lines from Tyrol, Germany 'and Switzerland meet, and Rludenz. Domblrn, has about 15.000 Inhabitants, Bregenz about 10.000, FeKUdrch and Rludenz in the vicinity of 5.000 each. Grabbed by the Hapsburgs. Previous to the break-up of the Aus troHungarlnn empire, Vorarlberg was administered by a "statthalter res d 1 ink' at Innsbruck, capital of the Austrl an Tyrol, but It also had a governor of fts own arid an assembly of 21 mem i hers. It used to send four represent 1 atlves to the relchsrat. or imperial par 1 lament, at Vienna. v ? The Hapsburgs began by adding V r Hrlberg to their motley collection of ! territories back In the fourteenth cen ? turv Feldklrch was Incorporated In their dominions in 1375. Blndenz and the picturesque Montavon va,j[<'v 1394, the Bregenz region In 1461 and 1523 Sonnenberg In 1455 ajid Hh e ems In 1765. It was ?ftpr the^an^ex ntlon of the latter to Austria that Km nress Maria Theresa united all the dls ? rrlcts of the region under the name ! Vorarlberg and placed a governor over j thorn with his residence at I In 17?2 the region was made a part I of the Tvrol. nnd In 1804, during the | Napoleonic wnrs. It ?"s "7"?' { Bnvnrln. It was not until 1814 that ! VornrlbtfrK ???* separated from Ba vnrla nnd restored. will, the exception ! of the district of Tloheneek. to the Ana crown, In the following year the i ronton received It- present status. ; Th<* nron of Vnnirlh^rjj I* snuare miles, nnd I' has something like. I 1VI000 Inhab innts. practically all of , who,,, speak the except on Ihcimr th.so wh- still clinc to that l s|nner rMalert known ns "Romansth ! nr '.'Hntoa.il.-." ? h'eh the Roman set. , tur< -imp rimed upon the inhabitants of rtits re~,or when 1. was known as 1 Rhaetin. How Its P?oplc Live. In the nv.ro mountainous sections of i the little land tli- inhabitants are pas ' f#,rii I ? in the ?'>? ?)< the spinning un.l I we vln!r of cotton >?d risen before the i . , n..Mvl?hir.e condition. hs had ' lit, line, "f "idustry. Tr?.le wlth ,h? mrro, countries also "r"? rapldlv ,n the years before the wnr: schools were Improved. f?etorle? ,,p In the iomuh. roods nnd bridges were built, and railway connec Hon established northward. we?f"rd. <nd enstwsrd From the b-ndlne ,HI,ert* rent, r: Itn-irenr. ?eldKlreti. f:l?den7.- -one TO, in ? few | hours to L!nduu, *the Bavarian port on the Lake of Constance, HQCl thence to Munlcli, eastward to Innsbruck and VjiMina, westward Into Switzerland and France; The Auatro-Hungnrian gov ernment also carried out extensive har bor Improvements at Bregena, thus en hancing the Importance of the lake I trade centering at that port. The Vorarlbecgers are distinct from the inhabitants of Bavaria, t hi? nearest part of Germany. They claim descent from the Alemannl, who, .after their defeat by Clovls. k!ng of the Franks, In the seventh century, flowed back eastward and settled In the valleys of the ancient. Rhaetla. Thanks to the mountains that ring them round and cut them off to a great extent from the rest of the world, the Vorarlbergers haVe presented a certain Independence of attitude through the centuries, and have refused to be over awed by the noble lords who have sought to browbeat them. They are lof an essentially prattlcal nature, num bering In their midst more mechanics and builders than sculptors, poets and musicians. They are Industrious, fru gal. even If given a bit to comforta ble living, and talkative to a degree. They garnish their speech with many a witty remark, but are inclined. It Is said, to become cantankerous jwid dis putatious upon slight provocation. They are ve&y patriotic and religious. Many of the people live. in fine wood en houses of a pleasing style of archi tecture. The contrast bet-ween these domiciles and the poorer houses of the Inhabitants of the Swiss sections Im mediately west~of 'Vorarlberg at once strikes the traveler's eye. The na tives still wear picturesque costumes in some parts of the region, tftough by 110 means to the extent that was com mon as recently as *25 or #0 years ago. BRITAIN HAS 80,000 ?ADDIES Future of These Indispensable Golf Ad visers Is Worrying Club Offi cials of the Country. Almost 80.000 caddies trudge the golf courses In the United Kingdom, mostly youths between fourteen and eighteen. The question of their future Is seriously exercising the minds of the golf club secretaries, who have the welfare of the race at heart. Carrying golf clubs leads to nowhere as regards a man's career. St. George's Hill Golf club at Wey brldge, the most fashionable club In England, has tackled the problem man fully. and its example Is to be followed by other clubs throughout Great Brit ain. During their Idle hours when not carrying clubs the boys and dis abled soldiers, of whom a number are employed, are to be trained to trades that will ultimately enable them to obtain employment of a regular and progressive nature. After three years' service with the club the caddie will receive a bonus of $f)0, provided he wishes to leave In order to follow a trade he has learned. A first-class bootmaker has been en gaged to instruct caddies in boot mak* Ing; In order to make the plan profit able members of the club send their repairs to the school. Under (he head j trreen keeper the caddies are braining i the art of market gardening in the j club vegetable trnrdens. They are l>ty i inp Initiated into ;he Intricacies of j >:reen keeping also. ?Cotton's Varied Uses. The United States Is certainly the "land of cotton." Nowhere else in I i hi? World is rot i on grown to *uch ! abundance mid put to such u variety of uses, says "he Snn Francisco Chron icle. The fiber, of course, is made In to doth; the oil from the seeds Is used as n good substitute for olive oil and as a hnslH for lard, and now the Kee<l? themselves are befog ground into (lour and used for food purposes. To make the cottonseed sauna tee three pounds of sanjagc meat Js mixed wltb pound of cottonseed flour. This flour | is snid tn contain as tcurh nutrition I as pork, sausage. Morv tluui half I lit* Aiuorhun sol diers hi lotted in tin' world war Imvp u'iru<l.v Uh'H tin ln?'d for living au?i wutn* without their night at th<i icr<i Otqm I list ittitc lit' ItUml. noar Hull more, \ld. Take Your Cotton - t ? . . . ? . ; . 1 " V- ' : , ? - ' . ' ? ' \ Around to ' \ : ;? '? . . \ . _ . - ' , F. M. Wooten . and Get Top of Market. V' ; . * ? * .?*, ' ' ' .'/? fV / ? V* 4 ' ? Office back of Loan & Savings Bank cm Products oftke czi PIEDMONT MILLS For Fifty Years - ? the famous old Piedmont Mills have been making flours of unequalled quality. You will find PIEDMONT PURITAN ARGUS SELF-RISING FLOURS best for all your bakings because only the finest Red Winter Wheat is used in their making. Piedmont Mills, Incorporated High-Cjrade Red Winter Wheat Flour Lynchburg, Va. ? The "Service" of^this bank is planned to relieve you of vexatious details and to co-operate with you in the discharging of financial worries. To assist you politely and promptly. To make banking easy for the customer. To spread wide our facilities making them available to all and thus really bringing the bank to t you. Does this kind of co-operation seem desirable? Does it appeal to you? Our depositors tell us that they like it. Perhaps you will like it too. Loan . & Savings Bank OF CAMDEN, 3. C. STRONG SAFE CONSERVATIVE WE CAN SAVE YOU MONEY By Making Your Old Clothing Serviceable We are doing it for thousands of others ? why not for you? We believe a trial will convince you. - FOOTER'S DYE WORKS Cumberland, Md.