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? LIFE AT ITS BEST Advantages of Dwelling in Country Town. City Man Knows Nothing of the Sweet Contentment That Is the Lot of the Resident of Rural Places. Observing the inconveniences and sometimes discomforts of city life, some of the brethren of the country press are taking a snot ai ui? cuy ' dweller and emphasizing the fortunate position of the citizen who contrives to spend his life in some quiet town \>f the country, says a writer in tile Seattle Post-Intelligencer. The | counti'y gentleman never cares whether the street cars run or not; he is , not concerned with the electric light plant or the water supply, having his reliable1 kerosene lamps and a good well in working order for emergency use. He is not afraid that 400,000 of his townsmen will run out of coal at once and freeze to death, because the old grove on the east forty is capable of furnishing his fuel should his supply of five cords of sawed and split wood that he has in his woodshed be -? fonrn come uepieieu. uvea ovmj uum the mass, and his small wants are not pushed and crowded by the small l wants of hundreds of thousands of ft other people. He feels that if there I is anything that he really needs that he does not possess, he can go out and procure it any morning without much trouble, and he is generally quite right about it. Charles M. Eorton, of Hadley, N. Y., cites the cases of the city and the country citizens in a recent issue of Collier's Weekly. Writes Mr. Horton: The man who started the back-tothe-farm movement had something! The man who shouted "Back to na*ture," said something; The advice was directed at city dwellers, of course, * because folks who 'were living out of the cities already did not need It. He takes up the case of the $25 a week married man, who hardly exists in the city, and shows what he is accomplishing in the country town: A clerk in the store here gets $25 i a week, owns his own home and a I. boat on the lake and a jitney, goes ft hunting in the north woods in the fall, fishes evenings and days off without f number, picks berries, kills his own b6ef in the fall, raises his own pigs, has a piano and a library and a silver service and linen, modern pictures on . the walls, good rugs on the floors, misl si on furniture around the rooms, twin ft beds; a dog, two cats, a bear rug, low & ceilings, plain wall paper, electric flxr tures?everything, in short, that the U(jr uyvciici ua>, ui wauio, uui ?.au t have?and he is a clerk in a grocery store at $25 a week. And he had these things when he was getting $18?six months ago, before he got a raise? had more, in fact, because he owned a trotting horse that could go some; this animal has since died. The writer himself was beguiled from the country to the city under the cmmon belief that the city is the only {dace for the man of ambition who would go far. He had brains, in a measure; he had money, in a measure, and then he tossed the whole thing up in the air and made back for the conntry, where he now exists in contentment And when one sees city folk bedeviled and harassed and bepinched by every human want living from hand to mouth, and worrying le4t some necessity of existence be cut off by some whim of man or vagary of fate, one is inclined to give the argument of the country citizen large value and credence. J Carnegie Doubly Interested. One more statue was unveiled, recently, of the immortal Robbie Burns, this time in Boston. Andrew Carnegie spent much of his holiday time in Scotland, and divided it between dedicating free libraries, opening church organs, and unveiling Burns statues. Meeting Mr. Carnegie at a St Andrews dinner in New York, a braw Scot but recently come over said, "Mr. Carnegie, I would like to shake you by the hand; you unveiled a statue of Bobbie Burns last summer in my home town." "Aye," said Mr. Carnegie, after a pause, "that would be Montrose, the only place I ever had anything to do with a Burns statue that 1 didna pay for. On that account I'm doubly pleased to meet you."-?Chris> tian Science Monitor. i ' " Modest Linguist Prof. Robertson of Louisville has ? published a little book of his own on the Greek of the New Testament, a book weighing more than eight pounds and containing 1,540 closely printed napes Tn thA nreface Prof. Robertson apologizes for his small linguistic attainments. He is not, he says, a specialist in the Semitic tongues, though he knows Hebrew and Aramaic and can use Coptic and Sanscrit. He knows Latin, Greek, French, German and Anglo-Saxon, but beyond those languages only Assyrian, Dutch, Gothic i and Italian are to be added to his "modest linguistic equipment." k Cement's Adhesion Iron. ^ Hie adhesion of cement \ iron that gives strength to reinforce concrete HB is found by Vasilesco Karpen to be unwB like the gluing effect of mortar on wf bricks. The cement does not stick to the iron ftrmly, if at all, but the adhesion U given by a gripping of enclosed Iron as the concrete contracts Idsetting. Ber ~ '' ' * & ? ' V Why You Need Zemerine Ointment The same healing, soothing ingredients that make "Zemeri:vj" so effective for skin diseases, also make it an ideal household remedy for: Burns Wounds Ulcers . Chafiings Scalds Bruises Felons Stings Cuts Sores Pimples Piles Scrratches Boils Cold-Sores Irritations KKEEP A BOTTLE IN YOUR HOME vSold by All Leading Druggists (Mailed upon receipt of price by Zemerine Chemical Company, Orangeburg, S. C. A1% A A A A AAAA A A V Y Y Y f f X X ^ A funny thing happened ^ the other night, <! The man in the moon saw jf t S> a brilliant light, 1 Like midnight turned to i 1 f * noon-day bright. <? ? y Y Y |> Said he to himself, "What ' y a wonderful light; Y Y Y Y I wonder what makes the world so bright? And the earth replied, <! ^ 4 4 Tis Delco-Light.'' ^ f T V Y V f 4% Local Dealer A f Faulkner Electric Service Co., ^ Bamberg, S. C. ^ A^. A. A^A A^A A^A A^A A^A A^A A^A A, A^A A^A jftk, I ^ l ? We are pleased to announce that we have obtained ? ^ for this city the exclusive sale of the National- X , ?|> ly known and the Nationally favored * 4 Wirthmor and Welworth 4 | Waists ' ! T Y $ After a very careful investigation we have ar- ? ? 11 i vlw <? ranged to distribute these two nationaiiy-Known y y and nationally favored lines of Waists in this city, y y Before deciding on this step we learned the Wirth- y y mor and Welworth Waists were being handled by y y' many of the,best stores in America; that they had y y attained through their unvarying excellence a na- y y tion-wide popularity; that because of the unique y y Wirthmor Plan under which they are made and y sold they always represented the highest possible y f standard of value in popular price Blouses, and y further because of the very unusual method of mak- y ^ ing and selling Waists we would be able to show y y the new and wanted styles first, in many instances y y long in advance of their appearance, in the market y y generally. ' y V V Under the Wirthmor Plan you will be en- A y abled hereafter to have the same new y y Styles in Waists at the same moderate y y prices and at the same time that these y % Styles first make their appearance in the ? X recognized Style Centers of the Country. ^ V These are America's only known priced Waists, Y Y and they are sold at the same low price the Nation V Y over. Y x $2.00 $3.00 f (for the Wirthmor) (for the Welworth) Y i Y The first shipment of these very desirable Waists Y Y has just arrived and will go on sale tomorrow. We Y Y urge that you come in and see them; for we know V Y that acquaintanceship will mean substantial sav- Y f ings for you whenever you're in need of a popular V Y price Blouse. ^ 3; La Feme Thomas & Co. f X DENMARK, S. C. I Now is t) I f B T H Y W e will allow money placed THIS ment to di'aw interest the same as |> 1, 1920. This is the beginning of the second Y to change that deposit so that it wi TEREST. Did you ever take time to figure hov Y ^et by changing from four to five ] $2,000 for five years at 4 per cent, c Y est amounts to - ~ 1^ g&,UUU for live years at o per cent, c est amounts to Five Per Cent. Amoun DOES THIS MEAN AN | Enterprii "THE HOME 01 IX W. A. KLAUBER, DR. ROBT. President Vice-Pn X DIRECT Y Aaron Rice, J. D. Copela Y Dr. Geo. F. Hair, C. J. S. Broc Y Dr. J. B. Black, W. E. Free Dr. Robt. Black, G. A. Ducke X WE PAY 5 PER CE WATCH TJ jftk A^A jjfek i^A i^A jdfek A^A A^A i^A i^A i^A A4j Horses ai f f WE HAVE A FULL STOCK 0 Y MULES. OUR STOCK IS SELI & MEMBER OF OUR FIRM, AND f THE JONES BROS.' GUAR)! X WHAT THAT MEANS. WHE1 MULE, DON'T FAIL TO COME 1 f TAKE PLEASURE IN SHOWIN X WAYS IN GOOD CONDITIO 6 SOUND AND SOLD SOUND. | I Buggies, Wagi % WE HAVE A SPLENDID LIN 7 HARNESS, LAP ROBES, WHIP V DUB nT? STVT.THS TN BUGGIE." fjJlliV VJ> M* * . CAN SUIT YOU. WE HANE T , HICLES TO BE HAD, AND 01 X BIGHT. COME TO SEE US; YO I | Bought Right a & | Jones X BAMBEBI WEEK in our Savings Depart- I if it had been deposited April ^ I [ quarter, and it is a good time S n t i i i r-n -rx-r-*-r\ /N"0\Tm TAT aTa IH il draw Jb lVJUi jfJDK UJiiJN t. irs- y m v much more interest you would I per cent? ^ , H ompound inter- V I $2,220.00 f I V M omponnd inter- & 1 $2*540.00 X.1 | ts to $320.00 More. % B YTHING TO YOU? B I _ | I v ;e Bank IIS T f SAVINGS." % B y B V 9 ; BLACK, W. D. COLEMAN, X B esident Cashier A 9 || ORS:# X I |J nd, B. C. Cram, *f |f iker, W.D.Coleman, V / , F. B. McCrackin, V 9 sr, W. A. Klauber. 9 NT. ON SAVINGS. . X 1 rS GROW. A 9 HHHHBHHil A^A Jl4A t^Ty "^TyTy ad Mules j N HAND OP HORSES AND f 3CTED PERSONALLY BY A % $ i EACH ANIMAL SOLD HAS ? iNTEE?AND YOU KNOW * f YOU NEED A HORSE OR I ?0 OUR STABLES. WE WILL X G YOU. OUR STOCK IS AL- f )N?THEY ARE BOUGHT X ?v ? % rns, Harness f 1 E OF BUGGIES, WAGONS, S, ETC. WE HAVE A NUM- Y 3 AND HARNESS, AND WE X iLE ONL7 THE BEST VErR PRICES ARE ALWAYS Y U ARE ALWAYS WELCOME i ind Sold Rigfht | Bros. I;] Gr, S. C. f .