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SEC0 SECTION <5bc lantbcrg Ijmtlb pag9estois $2.00 Per Year in Advance BAMBERG, S. 0., THURSDAY, NOyEMBEK 13,1919. Established in 1891 " REVENGE TAKEN BY ANIMALS Story on Record of Huge Mastiff That Killed Thoughtless Groom at First Opportunity. Cartful observers have put on ree4 ord some very extraordinary instances of dogs and other animals which have remembered injuries put upon them, and have eventually retaliated, says London Answers. There is a terrible story on record of a dog, a huge mastiff, kept as a watchdog by a Staffordshire gentle- ! man. The great brute was kept \? chained in the stable yard, and during , the very hot weather one of the ; OTrtnmc nntirin<r the creature panting with heat, threw a bucket of cold wa- j ter over him. A week later the dog was loose , when the same man entered the yard. I He sprang upon him and caugkt him by the throat and killed him. j - A touching little episode happened a few years ago in a Worcester vil- I ; lage. A boy was the proud owner of , , * a very handsome pair of fox terriers, j named Mick and Jerry. Jerry went off one day into a wood near by and tackled a badger, which killed him. Raymond, his master, went out to look 7 for him, but could not find him. But two days after Mick was found mourning over the dead body of his com-! panion. He was brought back. One day he did not return. His master searched and found him laying dead, his teeth ^ in the throat of the badger, which was also killed. An amusing incident was that of an Indian elephant whose revenge on a : new mahout whom he took a dislike j to was rather funny. He picked him , up and deposited him in the branches j of a thorn tree. NO NEED FOR FURTHER TALK . * \ . ' * ' ??? - Argument Had Convinced Man That Arctic Expedition Was Just the Place for Him. ? A middle-age# man, with what appeared to be a load on his mind, visited the arctic steamer just before it started on the expedition, and seemed greatly interested in what he saw. j "Say," he said to the officer on deck, *Td like to go with you on this ex' pedition of yours." "It's awfully cold up there," remarked the officer, discouragingly. "I don't care for that." "You have very little to eat, and you might starve to death." "That wouldn't be pleasant," ob^ served the visitor. "I should say not," returned the officer. "And you might be eaten by I ' your comrades." f - "And then," continued the officer, I "you wouldn't see your wife for three , years, and possibly longer. You know ; you can't take her with you." "Oh!" returned the would-be explorer, after a long pause, "then you * can put my name down on your books. Your last argument captures me." *** .1 < France Seeks Mauritius. There is a movement in France to ask Great Britain for the return of Mauritius, the Beloved Isle of France, which was lost in 1810. It is contend" ed that, in spite of being under British rule for over a hundred years, the island is still essentially French, and that the people desire union with their mother country. Great Britain has no particular reason for keeping the island, says the * Newcastle Chronicle. It has no strategic or economic importance, nor has it any sentimental associations, so far as Great Britain is concerned. For the French, on the other hand, it is the place to which many of their nobles emigrated, and is the island which Bernardin St Pierre immortalized in his idyl, "Paul and Virginia." The islanders gave proof of their feeling for France by sending many <rf their sons to fight in the French army. % ' Labor and Christenings. W. Wallace Alexander, associated with the Elkins estate and a leading light in the Orpheus club, at a campfire gathering was humorously describing his troubles at a Pennsylvania coal mine which he was seeking to put on a paying basis. "The miners were getting out coal two days a week?the other five days were devoted to christenings. For every christening the whole neighborhood took a day to prepare, a day to celebrate and a day to recover. "CMmoIItt fVio nrAhloTn true SrtlvPd hv r luaixj iuv ?/* I* w ? ?k, hiring a brass band, arranging a parade an' having all the christenings take place on the same magnificent, uproarious, welkin-ringing day. ^ Who says a business man has no need for the creative imagination?? Philadelphia Public Ledger. Bee and Worker. How doth the little Busy Bee, Improve each shining hour? He gathers honey all day loaf. From each and every floorer. How doth the worker in our land* Insure some future rest? Hi navfls anmft money every day, Wiseriy to invest. V A SAFE STOC OLD KING SOLOMON WAS A WISE OLD BIRD Knew How to 8ave His Shekels By Putting Them Into Safest Investments Bankers Could Find. Old King Solomon was a wise bird. He distributed a lot of mighty good advice. But he is dead. You are alive. Yo.u will have to make your own decisions and determine your own course of action and your own future. It will not do you a bit of good to try to communicate with Sol and have him solve your problems for you. If you got his ear, you^ probably would not take his advice. You will have to acquire your wisdom as Sol acquired his, by gaining a broad view-point and taking advant age or your own experience ana mat of others. Solomon was a mason before he was a king and a miner as well, so his viewpoint probably would hot be much different from that of wise workers of the present day. You may be sure that the high cost of living was a problem in Solomon's day as well as in 1919 and that the purchasing power of a shekel, minted from the gold of Ophir, fluctuated just as deee the dollar minted at Philadelphia. But Solomon knew that thrift and saving, the stimulation of production and the elimination of waste would solve those problems just as the wise working man knows it today. He laid up a lot of coin through safe and conservative investment just as wise men and women have put money for the future in Liberty Bonds, Treasury Savings Certificates and War Savings Stamps. Also there is no record that anyone ever took any of that coin away from Old Sol by inducing him to speculate in wild eat stocks. He left one bit of advice, the wisdom of which the years have not changed. He said: "A good man leaveth an inhert&nce to his childsea's children." Tou can follow that advise Dy steady consistent saving and investment In War Saving Stamps 'and Treasury Savings Certificates and in Liberty Bonds at prM?&t prices. These seourities bought now will be an inheritance for your children's children. Sol had to get wise. Tou oaa get wise Just as he did. If yon fail to save you will repent through many years. ARE YOU AN AMERICAN?! Are yon an American? The 1919 Barings Campaign is an all-American movement. That means it is lor every man, wuiuau | and child resting under the sheltering folds of the Stars and stripes. Do ytra belong to a lire soring* society T If so, ycm hare mode the right start. Keep on Baring and investing in War Savings Stamps and j Thrift Stamps. Attend the meet- j ing of your society and learn the habit of happy thrift. " MAXTOXE?The guaranteed tonic for chills, fever and malaria. 25c and 50c bottle. ;k for all COLLEGE PRESIDENT OUTLINES REMEDY ? Tells How High Cost of Living Pfotv lems May Be Solved by Every Man and Woman. President Nicholas Murray Butler, of Columbia University, in A recent discussion of the high living costs said: "Punishing profiteers is a good thing, but it won't reduce the cost of living. If we had all their hoarded goods it would do little good. "Only the operation of inexorable economic laws can bring ux back to tolerable condition*. The remedy ia to save, to practice public economy and private thrift. We must save and invest in productive industry. Boprowing for non-productive reasons means bankruptcy.*' In the opinion of the best economist in the United States the peoples' greatest weapon against high prices is the government's Thrift campaign. Every family should have a budget, just as every successful business has a budget The first thing on that budget should be the amount to be saved from the weekly or. monthly income?not the amount to be spent. Make what you save govern the amount you spend, not what you spend govern the amount you save. War Savings Stamps bring 4 per cent interest, compounded every three months. Hit high prices below the belt by investing in United States securities. The dollar you save today may be worth twiee as mush five years from now. SING A SONG OF SAVINGS STAMPS Slnf a song of Sayings Stamps, The cost of living's high. But hare you counted all the things These Sayings Stamps wil bar? Thej help to take that little trip. Or buy some needed elothes. How many things they'll help yon get Goodness only knows. OUR NEW VIRTUE In fog or sunshine, snow or rain, tt*a comforting to hare this thought?I hare not spent my erery gain, and thus reduoed my funds to naught?it's pleasant through the muggy days to sit inside a cosy room, and realise the dismal hase cannot surround yon with its gloom; to know, through pur chase wisely made, investment planned with sober care, your income's bulk will never fade, but through such rainy days upbear! Last year and this, an agency for teaching folks this gospel bright has strenuously impressed on me the way to duck the waster-bright; "A dollar saved?the interest gained"?thin is the lesson sound and true, which keeps the wayward dollar chained and makes the 4 per cent accrue. Thrift! That's the answer to you, sir! The thing ! that flamed our battle lamps, and helped to down the Prusian cur; | in ether words, WAR SAVTNOi | STAMPS. ! ^ \ >#SS^^ i %k Jm I ?% KdI fsn s&i Bjn y rolling 'em with | I ~ $00*') hrince j Albert 3 the national joy smoke ROLLING your own cigarettes wit > about as joy'us a sideline as you your grip! For, take it at any angle, yoi flavor, iragrance anu coomwis m a iu life as every "P. A. home-made" will p Prince Albert puts new smokenotions u: delightful rolled into a cigarette?and, so easy to it like you been doing it since away back! and a cinch to handle! It stays put?and yoi start to hug the paper around the tobacco I You'll like Prince Albert in a jimmy pipe a; rdled cigarette, too! Bite and parch are cut o process. You know P. A. is the tobacco that 1 pipes where one was smoked before.. Yes way. * And, me-o-my, what a wad of smoke: every time you fill up! W In Building I Q-Ul D BUNQA j|H A complete bungalow, built to give the aB stantial, attractive, well-built home, at a re h| rTW/l Uf^DT It is closely built to stand the sev Jr \JI\ I "weather. Well' lighted, well ventil H| easily heated. The plans, prepared after i ^Bfl VH>1 yIJOll VxXL-fui study by the best and experienced of architects, are so designed to cover every of the average family. niJPARir FTY- Ma(Ie w'th the very best of 1 l terials. Designed for gre - strength. Each part securely locks into the other. Eri after perfected patented locking process. Will stand roughest of tempests without strain and will far outlast average house. DC A 1 /7*VLThe designs are graceful and represenl K| I I ,11()St modern architectural art. It will 1 ^^B readily with its surroundings and furnish a beautiful, a] priate home H FCClNCkMY- QUICKBILT Bungalows are built i KJlwl f immense plant in which hundred other houses are being built simultaneously. Every short c Hl perfection and economy is used and thereby, you gain tin vantage of the low cost of quantity production. l{?*y architect's and contractor's fees are avoided, for Al are furnished free a complete set of specifications fl^B plans, and with them the erection of the house simple that any carpenter of average intelligence fH:^|j!j|H i ^u i c i lt b u r; g a lo w d e p artm e nt, . j J a. C. TUXEURY LUMBER CO., Charleston, S. C. Please send me a copy of your book "QUICKBILTBungalows" No. D | T Am especially interested in a room house. j A NAME | ')dress | 1 .... i ' 1 k*-- ^ jT Awaiting yotit say-so, you'll f find toppy red bags, tidy re<9 tins, handsome pound and half pound tin humidors ? and?that classy, practical pound crystal glass humidor hi** m ? . with sponge moistener top* Prince AlDGrt IS JUSt that keeps Prince Albert ire . such perfect condition 1 ever carried around in R x Re/nolds Tobacc<> i never got such quality, ^ompa?jr . , . . Winston-Salem, N. C akins cigarette in your to roll! And, you just take You see, P. A. is crimp cut $ t don't lose a lot when you \ 3 much as you do in a home- | |B|jg \ sir, Prince Albert blazed the a sport will ripple your way M 11 AhV 1 T k"? I i * 5 % ? 9 Your New Hone. j CKBV\Hl .LOW NO. SO small family all that can be desired in a modern, sub? <l asonable price. 1 erest ? >1 T7CJ7A CTICh'M- 0nce ln >'our QU1CKBILT I ated, OiH I lOr 11\JIV Bungalow you will be highly satisfied with its convenient arrangement. Us artistic finish and its coziness. rare ~S COSTS LITTLE TO ERECT. With the material already prepared for the house, waste is eliminated from the cost. As a large portion 0/ the house ma- comes already built in panels, preliminary preparation is atest avoided. The systematic, simple, thorough plans and inected structions save time and make it possible for a carpenter and the two helpers to erect the house in less than 10 days. A saving ; the in waste, labor, time and material is A SAVING IN MONEY. slend Shipped complete F. O. B. Charleston with all necessary ?pro- material except brick work and plumbing. A cozy, attractive, bungalow of six rooms. Size over all 33-ft. 7-in. x 21-ft. 5-in. Two large bed rooms, one 9-ft. x 12-ft., and one 12-ft. x 12-ft., a n an spacious living room 12-ft x 15-ft., a cozy, convenient dLning s of alcove 12-ft. x 6-ft., kitchen 9-ft. x 12-ft, bath room 9-ft. x 6-ft. ut t0 Closets and attractive front porch 12-ft. x 6-ft. Woodwork of ad- the best erade of North Carolina Pine, "The Wood Universal." The Walls in panels of siding lined with heavy paper to insure you warmth. [ and Durable, fire-resisting, Standard Asphalt Strip Shingles, with is so slate green or red finish. Artistic paneled inside finish. All i can necessary nails and hardware furnished. House comes with 'n exterior walls stained any one of a number of standard colors, >'.ou or painted with one heavy coat of priming paint. Exterior imis- trim and interior finish with one heavy coat of priming paint. K WRITE TO-DAY for a copy of our book "QUICKBILT Bungalows" No. D-10T. It will give a full explanation of No. 50 ami many other attractive Bungalows. Or better still, if No. 50 pleases you instruct us to ship it immediately and give us the color desired. JUICKBILT Bungalow Department, C. Tuxbury Lumber Co., Charleston, S. C. MB