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iftt Contents 15TluiADriria gTOl.OL-OF'WOgfJ tln^lh*Stomacfcsw^2sa Ctettfldness iuidBfist neither 0 >Iincral. tMT Vfcwr Ahe1pfutRem?^y^a. ConstipaUonandDUrrho /0.ntl FcverNhncssaod J,o?* ofSIT?E?*v resiitti rac^ImlteSijn^01 rT1FPC4y vr)U j| Kxact Copy of Wrapper. For Infants Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Always Bears the V ? . Signature of Iff II Si For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA THC CCNTAUR COMPANY. NCAf VO*K.CITY. MKT AT SPAKT/VNIKIKC; Itipori of Colored Hlut^ TfWliei!^ Association. The State T<?ttflhoi* Association of Sdiiili Carolina uit't in Spa rt an burg, Mar Ii L'.'i *J"?. Moving met In tlx* IMed mount Siotion thoaiic daiico frun the Southom M'rUou ?va,s not represented m v widl as ii whin last year. We are ylarl. Ii ? ? \vi'v(*i" that Kevhaw County vxji- r? *i *!"?? -*'i> t ?-tl . The teachers were yUfii Thursday ami Friday to attend the Association. Might teaoherN alonn with tin* ("nun i\ Sujxrvl-or Uift <*am?ien Thursday! iHnnii.it! for Spartanburg. We arrived in Spa rt tiibur*: aix-nt I o'oloek. There w r parted to go to out assigned ! Ii'tincv to refresh ourselves for the first i ovening session. Thursday night we nsscnil?l"?l in Silver Kill Methodist i Chureh s <?o p. in., nrvcr t?eforo have wo had Mioli a vnnvd at our first uieet < npr. In this mealing wo weru made welcome t<> the city of Spnrtnnlmrg by Principal II. M. Alexander of i>eftn striMt Sfiioot. Supt. I'rauk I) vans iiKidi* a brief welcome address also. I { i'?p >11 - ? ? to the ?vMloomo address was inado' 1 1\ I'rof I). II. Sim- vl?v prc.-*f .jo; t of All. mi ( * it i \ ei'Mty. No little jnai.-c \v.i? giv<j|i to tin* iih"hImtn of tit** I'roirrani Cnimnlltce, .who entertained' us so royally ? Uh 1 music during every session. | l?'rldtty morning wo wet iu Mt. , M"riuli Baptist church witJi I'rcrf. <*; . j W. Howard, Georgetown, presiding. \W were favored in this meeting ?with | the president's Annurtl Address whlcli was ns usual very Rood. J. B. Folton st a to Agent Ntffro ?Sffliool ?lso address- I i d us. Very interacting three ? -minute talks won> made by tin? Janes Suixm- , visors from twenty ? fchreo counties of the State. Our couuty wan well reprc- ! ntetl by it.s Jeans worker, Klease Me- ' I. ester. At 11 :ltt a. m. wo adjourned to our group meetings wltlch were held in ' ?i.?* <?t' tho city schools. 1 :GO j. m., wo reas?sombh?d in Mt. Mothh Baptist Church and hoard a ywy important address ? grades an<l flash's of Touchers Certificates, by J. II. Khoaioy, State Board of Kxa miners. I only wish that more of our teachers ? ?ould have hoard this sjHeudld address ( ?'U tho importance of making nil the professional i in prominent ix>9sil>)o. At .TOO p. in., we mot again In Mt. Moriuh Baptist Church W> wore In f.i <t that tho Stat" Supeiinten- [ ? '?mi <<f I !? I ti? t? t ion iiD'1 l>r. .Tames II I ? i 1 - lard pre-Ulent <>f the State aud .Toaix KiiihK could ii? ?! t>o present with u>. ; _ .The Ja.*?t xotixiou wa ? hold again i tt Mr. Morlnh Baptist CImroh. Very go??<l ? Newspaper MUe?" ?rf l'uWk'* Um The country newspaper editor and j i nW|flifi i ? 1*1 .t i 11 1 \ bftii tu ttjUuul lui a |<>t in t)?is world. In what ot her On earth would Homebody dam to offer the has- ' ines.s mail $100 <for ^1,600 of )|U *i'io duct, an actual luippeiilwg, as reported j U the news column* of this issue of i "Tim Amerlcuu Vress." What high brow or pedant WOillil I <laro to appear before a meeting of big dully newspaper editor* attd ad vine them to iuaUo accuracy a part of their code of ollik'H? A* If their ?praellfV whs to (Ml their impers witli 11c*k ! Tin- iit^vHpupt rs aVQ an accurate M> day as the great mass of highmrnded American editor*, city and country, can po*wible ma.ko. them. Newspapers of the twentieth eeutury are far more ac curate than they were under your first Kennett, under Horace (Jreorey or even under l>nna*and fifty years henee thc.v will have progressed to far greater nc enraey than today. Newspapers will In* perfect in this re* r-i i t wlieu the time arrives that edi tors and reporter's will not have to go to the public to get news. The fticfa In news items are dug out of people who are .supposed to kumv them, When they ap|H'ar in the pa?per, and are fouail to he untrue or misleading, it Is practi cally always the fault of the person or lH*rson? to whom the reporter or editor wont for hl.s fuets*. This i? particularly the ca?c when you find inaccuracies in count ry newspapers. And it isn't to be >rondered at when it Is remembered that. If you are a Judge, you cannot get the same st o ry of uri event twice from half do7.cn eye witnesses all under oath. When not one i /orson out of a <K?zen will correct ly repeat a lvinark mad 'e in the pres ciiee of nil of them Talk accuracy to an^ditor and you 'irsult him! Because that is already the high aim of the vast majm'ity of them The American Press. Auto speeders in Jefferson County Tvxa>. have a fear of Mrs. Anna I.. Hart, a young widow, recently appoint ed a deputy eon stable. She rides around in a high-ftpced car, specially geared, so that .--he can catch any stock car she desires. Iu ItHgium, women have been em ployed in the railway, postal and tele graph service since 1S8L'. addresses from Professor John O. f 'linkscaleH, Wofford Col lego, Spar tin* burg. Pres. It. W, Mauce Allen Univer sity, Prin. C. A.I>awson, Sumter, and Pres. J. M. Johnson, Newberry Tvero made. Prof. W. T. It. Williams brought us warm greetings from Tuskegee Tit st it Ute. After all business, we went down tu (lie basement, of the church whero tho women of Spartanburg had prepared :i banquet for the visiting teachers Let us as ti-achcrs look forward to the Assooiathm of next year so with our co opcrution we can make the Colored Slate Teachers Association what tf ? li^lit to l?e C-ontributed. PREST-O-LlTE Quality Up! PREST-O-LlTE Prices Down! Here is ? double-bar relled reason Tor buying the Prest-O-Lite Battery: Quality: The backbone of Prest-O -Plates. The plates with peculiar por osity, combined with un usual hardness. Ready, dependable power in coldest we a t he r ; g re a t non-buckling heat-resisting strength in summer. Price: Our 1922 prices, lowest in years. ? $19.90 is the trade-in price for fi battery for popular makes of light cars. Prices corre spondingly low on batteries for every make of car. These are not special mod els; they are regular Prest O-Lite batteries, backed by the regular Prest-O-Lite guaranty. A definite, gen erous obligation, plus a spirit that says t lie car owrifr must bo pleased. Prest O Lite batteriesare specified as original equip ment by 87 leading manu facturers, and this list is growing. If your battery shows signs of weakening, no mat ter what make, come around and let our experts diagnose its trouble. It costs you nothing. We'll do everything we can to wring the utmost ser vice from it to prolong its life. We never telljyou that you need a new battery un til you do. That's an un variable rule of Prest-O Lite, the oldest service to motorists. CAMDEN BATTERY AND VULCANIZING WORKS Camden, S. C. THE OLDEST SERVICE TO MOTORISTS ^ Pull up where you this sign >1Q90 and up <We in ftricc . - (Headquarters for Prett-O-Lite't special battery for radio purpo?*?] MILITARY STATUS FOR ARMY NURSE i _ ? : ? .. I Army School of Nursing Soon to Be Brought Under Federal | Control. j ALWAYS DEMAND FOR NURSES Picsent Training School Exist# Only by OicJor of Secretary of War ? ? Want School Put on Perma ncnt Basis. Washington.? That the array school ui' nursing will soou be mude an In* tegral part of tin* army orgim!/. ation Is the hope of Maj. Julia Stlmson, su perintendent of the army nurse corps. The lmrsv corps livlieXkd-. !u 1"'? paredness for service ? in peace or an emergency, And preparedness. from tin? point pf view of the corps, means a training school tor nurse.<, spondlng In a general way with the j training school for officers at West] "ohtt. We have such A school, hut It exists j only by an order of the secretary of I war. 'This amy be a permanent enough existence, but It has an Indefinite sound. Congress Is to bo asked, there fore, to give ibis Important school a military status so that it nifty he a part of lite army and so that the student nurses may have the relative rank of cadets. Instead of the status of civilian employee* of the medical department of the army. Until the recent war the army main- ! tallied x small standing corps of nurses i Id time of peace ami when ii needed large numbers recruited them from the lied Cross nursing service. But dur ing the World war the amiy opened its own training school to tit women for service, and It proved a successful venture. The first class of 5(X> young women was graduated last June. They served during their training at Walter I Heed and I.ettennan General hospitals. | ayd other army hospitals in this coun I fry. and in that nay rendered valuable ; service. Trained for Civilian Service. The school of nursing cannot use all of Its graduates In ordinary times, but i those who are not needed go out well trained to give service In civilian tieidM. Home of the army nurse gradu ates have gone Into the newest line of nursing, public health work. Others have gone into private hospitals, homes. Institutions and factories. There is need for every one of them, for there are never enough nurses graduated from first-class schools, It seems. It Is because of this great need for well-trained nurses and because It Is an economy to the fcovernjuent to get lis nursing done partly by stu dents ? as moat hospitals do ? that the army school of nursing expects to con tinue. The school is really *wo schools. Walter Heed hospital In this city takes t lie greater part of th? students, but to make if easier for Western girls to take the course, training Is also given j In San Francisco at the l.etterman : (ieueral hospital. ^ Is interesting to visit the school j at Walter Reed. One goes with the I vague Idea, perhaps, that first aid Is j the prominent subject In any army | nurse's course. He would not be sur j prised to find one of the demonstra j Hon rooms #Med out like a camp with j dummies dressed in khaki to be used | ss models for dressing Imaginary ! wounds. ! One rtmla. however. thai iliere is very little of the cmer^eney atmos phere in the aehooi. Hospital and : transportation facilities Cor wartime nursing have heen developed so bigldy dnrinfc the laie wnr flint the army nurse rati <?.unt on having practically the same apparatus as the mirne In 1 any civilian hospiial. Nor I* the army nurse lan^ht only ; the tei hnique needed iti t renting buttle eases. She goes through the same : course of trunlnc 'hat tin* < ivillnii ( , nurse docs. Olio of the t 1^1 motors points out . with patriotic | ? i i . i ?> that t !i?> army ? HCl:<?Ol l*> OlM' of !io- few >1 hools of nursing in f 1 ? ? ? ??ouiln that is aide fo i ovi>r tin* ? i ! t" < mir^o iv"in mended liy tin* l.ciuiin' of n ursinjr edin ation. 'Tl.r army e.m <i.? ihi<" ?a:d the, nwr-e hislno ;-.r '!???? .nine i i j ?? studenfN i are mi ward ? 1 1 1 f > less than io most ; . ho-pita's Aid 1 1 ' i ? 1 1 . f'?n there are ko ( 1 1 1 n r i \ I !i? i : i!< t tr?tn tin* ;? !*i i ? v nu'di. j , ?it >> i ?? i iv \ t- < :i!l?'il mi Tn Ipf run* for :?? "II. >i?l? > ill' :i! ii|i|to?*r unit \ of studying ^'tii <?* ui:mi\ ?|hm i.ili*.t ?. the army i ? ? : t * .?> ! ? !.:*?? an oppuriuultv . fo \?"ii mnj sotilv ,p nfli?i ln'-pltals. Then* s I'" pr?*\ .? "it for I ? ? It ' n puh. lie health nursn ?* :it W it 1 1 j l(e?<! nor for mental nnr.^inr. nor ? are of < h'l dren nor in * * ? cii'tx e*??u?*. !'<>r these *?uhjei-'?< 'lie >? T* ii ? \ ;ifHlintev with hn? . pita!* in ?on-h ease*' S'u , dents sprtu! !?..>: a third o* ?l?pir ? three \,'nr? l?> '1 e*.. other liO-pltn's ' Kor prihll. ? I * ?. r? ; j i n jc thev lu?\p ? ?.???ijitr t" thp fatuous Henry Street Settlement in New York and f??r other ' <n!?je. I x lo Ww V??i w \f Hf>n eh u**ef ts. ; Pet iti<?\ Ivanis nod to S, I'.li/.ahw h'S. I the jf- 'vei ninent hospital for the ln j sane I* Wn shington " Berwick. I'*.- There \\~n* real *x : citeinen' W??re when Mr*. fctamnel '/Am ; merman, ? pinlDf downstairs the otter ! morning. Htcovarad s largt black b#*r I on tfc* iro^t portt Dm animal qul?k> W#run Find? B??r on Porch A. M WVIfi widely (Liicwii 1 1? ?ou>-lj ouf flu- youth for ftU UAW^papor urtU Us* utulvr tlu-. }xui uauie of "Suis*" PIunkH t , rtttd at J)N tronttt m-ar Hrr? tin. lust Snlimlny. Two women pifnvetf ?uehlte7t a in i 1 1 ;t l inns v\ it h *iult ilMlm-tiou In I'ui'li mviiib? that iUicdu l lwiitluu was unirtr tn ttin prcsoncp of forty-m'** III II If cVilMlilHT . - : .. THE Fisk Premier Treaj is a tire which yields an honest, generous measure of service at a low price. See this tire and compare with any at a competing price. It is your best pur chase if you want a low priced tire. It is a FiskTire.and is Fisk character clear through. There 'jt aflsk Tire of extra value in every size, for car, truck or speed wagon ?tSW s -No*. Tim* to Ra*ttr?? (Buy rum Million disease-free, pure Porto Rico potato plants, for delivery April 15th. Dollar twenty-five per thousand; Lots of five thousand, one dollar. Place order now and fret plants when wanted. Fairview Plantation C. B. McCaskill, Manager Camden, S. C. Have You Tried It ? Aside from the convenience of being able to use the mails to pay bills by check, many people have actually found a Checking Account helps them to save money. Your balance becomes more than a mere figure after a w'hile. It becomes a friend whom you would rather see * grow richar than poorer. Open your Checking Ac count here at the First Nation al Bank of Camden and save money. WE CAN SAVE YOU MONEY By Making Your Old Clothinf Serviceable ** We arc doing it for thouaancU of others ? why not for you? We believe a trial will convince you. FOOTER'S DYE WORKS