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T t Tirsde ere 2 % ? I 1 CLOTHING! $ fir Everybody welcomes i |iwthemanwh?isdressed |> - in style?who has his > 11\ ||fjy clothes to fit. He looks < : | well and why shouldn't >* 11 JL ft he, his Suit or Overcoat llctiiu lauuicu iu 11 ao X individual measure. X Consequently his appearance is X the best, and men of good appearX ance are welcomed everywhere. % Have your Clothes Hand Tailored. X To be sure that you get the BEST jt* in hand tailoring let US tailor X your ciotnes. j ? I -I f ; t H# ^ ^ Y YICTORY MUST BE COMPLETE, j HARNESS THE STREAMS. | Lloyd George Says It will Never l)o Water Power' is Running to Waste in to Make Temporary Peace. United States. "There will be no peace in the! 0f the 60,700,000-horse power of world until the shrine of the war: water P?wer in the Cnited States, all spirit of Potsdam is shattered and its but 5.300,000-horse power is running io HicnorcoH HicsnrpHit- to waste> writes Thomas P. Logan, tne representatives ui auici i^a ?mi ^ ?..v, ~--x the new Russian democracy will "I had hoped." he continued, "that! attend. i the enemy's power might be broken j "American participation in this this year, but the temporary collapse! conference is of inestimable advan-j of the Russian military power has tage. America's man-power is the! postponed victory." best fighting material in the world." i Mr. Lloyd-George dwelt with emAs his main augument for war tojphasis upon the absolute harmony of the knockout blow, the premier said: action and thought on the part of "Brute force must be dethroned; the Allies. > sight which will leaa to enauring nc 0.*^^. u^.v.o peace. The only terms now pos- to consider how much more ferocious J sible would mean an armed truce would be a conflict after thirty years i ending in an even more frightful of scientific preparation. Such a. struggle. ' holocaust, he said, would destroy j "Beware of people who try to sow civilization, dissension, distrust and suspicion. In pointing to the importance of; The enemy is trying to rattle our America's entrance into the war, the; nerves. Keep steady and we will win. premier spoke of the swift growth j "I am not going to predict when of Britain's "contemptible little the war will end. No man in his j army" and of the vastness of Ameri-j senses would prolong it *an hour 1 ca's resources. longer than is necessary to secure| The resources of the United States; a lasting peace, not a prelude to a in man-power alone, he said, were; more devastating war. twice those of Great Britain. If; "Our real enemy is the war spirit peace were to be concluded at this; fostered in Prussia. stage the speaker asserted, Germany! "We are now on the eve of the would only benefit by the war and! most important inter-allied confer- that would "encourage every bucaence ever held." For the first time.neering empire in the future to re ~ c \ .... A noat tho dYllPvimPTlt 1/1 I^OtUWU W v%? v _ . , ___ . , . . - m Leslie s. The water is at pres- * ?u forever. , _ . ti ^ i-t ? i _ ent locked up against utilization by Premier Lloyd-George thus spoke , , . 1 the laws governing the forest reat a meeting at Albert Hall last. ? * _ , . .. _ . - , serves, the general public domain and Tuesday, inaugurating a nation-wide. * . u. the navigable streams. Congressmen! economy campaign. His speech? ? , , , . , ; the most important of the year-was have not hesitated to advocate higher marked by absolute confidence of rates on mail matter ot the second"j , . , . owri class, but have not found time to victory, high praise for America, and; ' . . . . .. ? - - ? .* open up these water powers so that; inspiring enthusiasm for the right-; * eousness of the "great cause." With Print Paber can be made cbeaPer for! every sentence he showed that he the P?b'ishers. It has been estimat-j has not in the slightest changed his ed by Secretary of Agriculture Hons-1 mind regarding his contention that ton that there is enough timber going; to end the war the Allies must fight t0 waste ia the forest reserves and 011 until the "knockout blow" has been cut"over lands t0 ^P1? w00d PU'P delivered to militarism. , indefinitely, if the question of its "Time is now on our side," said manufacture by water power could _ the premier. "Time was once neu-; be solved. Three bills now pending -* in Conerress?the Sheridan bill, the; tral?but not since tne aaveni 01 ? ?? ? ? America and the failure of the Ger- ^alsh aQd the Small bill are p_ man submarines." .designed to release the water power I The premier said more than twice t0 Pr' te development in the three as many German submarines were ^e'ds mentioned. lost during the first ten months ol Watermans Ideal Fountain Pens at: this year, as in all of last year. Herald Book Store. The most striking passages in the ? ; prime minister's speech follows: ' for ever." j "I have scanned the horizon j The speaker pictured with elo- j intently and can see no terms in quent force the terrors of the pres-j " * " * * ?* ? ? T#3 V* a i o Vifto r*orc? ! kAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA v v^rv v v^rv>T >" yr^ryr and jgl^l We ask you to remember that we always have your size and style in E. & W. Shirts and Collars. Try us and see. Collars, 20 ceach or two for 35c. E. & W. Shirts and Collars are worn by men who realize that appearance is the best index to one's standing in life. K Telephone 13 _ ?"in 926-W Oa.il] ^^MOKKEEPER tate to start one because yaur Enterprise Bank 5 Per Cent. Interest Paid on Savings Deposits. Bamberg, S. C. rhe Human Factors In Good Service There are three parties to every telephone conversation?the party calling, the trained operator, and the party who answers. All three share alike the responsibility for quick and accurate telephone service. 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