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HRf ' A A A. A- A A A A A A I ^ 1U?< For genera South Carolina, men baptised ii shameful years negro rule, it is of our soil shout* birthright, breat and mingled wh the birthright ol hosts of lesser in Shall this generc Cole L. Ble governor of the S is an honor that of a State is as a look, seeing in 1 YY Yy This spirit i< Y Y erning white rac V that we hold for Y Y w? ">ear it a Y Y any man who see with this faith t YY its core? yy it YY Has Cole L. YY without which no YY Or has he staine< Y Y who would weak< Y Y ment of this Stat* YY Y J Do we not r* YY which he told th YY women to daman* YY "Shell Shock" no Longer Recognized in England London, Sept. 6.?If Great Britain should have the misfortune to be engaged in another big war, it is safe to predict that no cases of "shell shock" will appear among her list of casualties. The first recommendation of the War Office committee on Shell Ol 1- 1 - - onvcK, wnose report nas just been published, is that the term should bo cut out of the official language. "War Neurosis" is considered to be the best general term. "Shell Shock" is declared to be wholly misleading, because it occurred to patients who had never been even within hearing of a shellbgrst. "It is no surprise tin* find that the general lay conceptis*** of the term was very loose andlfiidormed, th< Committee state. "There was such anxious solitude during the war as to the incapacitated, and such was the appeal of the term "shell shock," that this class of case excited more general interest and- sympathy than any other, so that it became a most desirable complaint from which to suffer. "No case of psycho-neurosis, or of mental breakdown, even when attributed to a shell explosion, should be classified as a battle casualty anv more than sickness or disease. "In many cases," say the committee, "it is extremely difficult to die iinguisti cowardice from neurosis, since in both fear is the chief casual factor.n Colonel Stubbs, D. S. O., expressed the opinion that efforts should be ma.de to get rid of the idea especially prevalent among young soldiers, that it was disgraceful to feel scared when in action. "I do not know, but I think I was in an awful funk the whole time," he told the committee, "and I think most people were. If the young ad dier were given to understand that everybody is very much afraid and that It is a natural condition to be in, but he should overcome it, and if he 'were told also about the effect of bhells end that it was un to him to control himself, I think it would nave Bonne effect." Only a brave man will voluntarily acknowledge tint ha was wry orach frightened dtt?iU| the war. hi i ss a i i. Tha St. Joeeph team, loaders of the Western league, while only an average good town, fans come very noari beings unbeatable on the borne lot. The Vatican contains 11,000 apartments. tttsuiuuQp " v * * tall So the Fi tions Democracy has been the Born in days that tested the 1 it the fires of war and purified of suffering under the heel of H a faith that every true ton and d be m jealous of as honor itself, hed into us in the wombs of out th the milk that fed our infancy. ! Hampton, Butler, Gary, Tillman ten who supported them in their i ition sell it for a mess of pottage ase is again a candidate for the itate. It is the highest honor in 01 should not be given lightly. The i light set on a high hill, on whon tim the spirit of the people who i necessary to our very being as a e.. To uphold and keep it pure i the honor and safety of our worn thould be betrayed? Can we sut Its our utTiewi thniiM ! ? ?? 1 - ? umv i?uioa hat carries our very political fr< BTease kept this faith of pure D< i man is held worthy of our publi< 1 it by dealings with our political sn the firmness of the white man'i 9? scall his Allen University negro s] e assembled audience of negro 1 1 their rights, which he explained I Nicolet Followed Waterway Route l Green Hay, Wis., Sept. 6.?Jean Nicolet, the adventurous Norman, , who discovered Wisconsin and found- ' I'd what is now- Green Bay in 1634, made the trip from Quebec to Green 1 t Bay over the projected Great Lakes St. Lawrence waterway route. Just fourteen years after the Pilgrims landed- in Plymouth, Nicolet 1 with seven Huron Indian savages, started the treacherous trip in ca- ' noes, from the Canadian city; came ( down the St. Lawrence river; crossed ' Ijakes Ontario and Erie, followed the ' coast line of Lake Huron until they ' leached Lake Michigan which they crossed and arrived at Red Banks on ' the shore of Green glay in 1634. He 1 made the 1 OftO mil? trln -*? *' sary of Governor Champlain of New * France, which is now Canada. After ! fpending approximately 10 years iso^ ' lated from the rest of the world in ' Indian camps fitting himself for the < expedition. ' 1 Nicolet's companions were sent 1 into the camps of the Winnebago? 1 with the announcement that the < "Manitouirinion" or "a wonderful < Inan" was coming. As h# < ashore he f.red a musket which sept ' women and children running into 1 their tenta fearing the "God of Thun- i der." To him goes the glory of be- < ing the first white man to sail that 1 section which is now destined to be- t come the greatest waterway project < ever attempted. Red Banks, where Nicolet and his i helpers landed, is a clay bluff stand- 1 ing about 80 feet above the water of 1 Green Bay. A huge boulder to which < a bronze tablet ie attached commemo- < ratee its discovery. This section is now a conventional 1 summer resort lined with private cot- 1 tages. Archaeologists ntill And relics ( believed to have belonged to the Win- t nebago and Pottawatomie Indian t tribes which once inhabited this re- a gion. . > Contemplate Sale 1 Of War Properties Washington, Sept. 6.?The British embassy has Informed the United r States government that a sale of ex- t enemy properties in the Oemsroons, e German Africa, is being con tern plat- h 4 I The Mb will take piece in Lon- a dn cariy in October and wMl include v various estates, cocoa, oil palm and F rubber plantations, and , shipping, . trading and residential sites. f >uth ( iith c faith of to them? Do hearts of Wilson durinj through for Congress, erpublican denounced by daughter He said: "Li It is our ' mothers - n There si not know of i and the , , . n _ overlord of H .truwle.. w>rren G H ing. He is th and Tan." 1 office of heart the goo ir gift; it lations with tl governor * all men Cole L. B put him of approval o! in South Care years of servit self-gov- to *tren?th?r is a trust which then s< en. Can secret, not h in unit that dorsement of or trifled tedom at "You ar< please, or pul knows that 1 quences. I he imocracy do. I am a 1 : offices? but a Jeff era* enemies election and t ? govern- of Cole L. Bl? ~ other democrt seech, in No word nen and Blease. He * in detail everybody kne L4a *v??. . * , *1 " T'v . . ! vw-vvve.eevv'vvv Esquimeau Liberal User of Soap Chicago, Sept. 5.?(By the Associated Press).?The 'long standing libel that the Esquimeau objects to soap deserves to be corrected in the interests of truth," according to reports from the Rev. William A. Thomas, Episcopal missionary among the Tigaras at Point Hope, Alaska. Point Hope is about 300 miles north if the Arctic Circle, and is the farthest point north of the Episcopal :hurch activities. Mr. Thomas and his wife are the only white residents if the settlement. "The fiction that the Esquimau loesn't like soap is absurd, for the wholly practical reason that he must keep clean in order to stand the rigirs of the climate," Rev. Thomas <ays. "On our way east from the -oast a friend asked Mrs. Thomas low she kept herself supplied with cold cream up in the North to pre/ent her face from freezing. The reply is that the application of any;hing that might close up the pores >f the skin and prevent the free circulation oi the blood is the quickest way to have the* face fro sen What applies to a white peifeon apilies with equal force to the Esquinau. If he used seal oil or whale >11 or any ot the other lotions Which le is charged with preferring to Kmp, he couldn't stand the bitter cold >f the Arctic climate. "As a matter of fact the Esquinau uses a whole lot of soap. Also ike the red Indian, they pull the lair from their faces by the roots, in irder that their faces may be kept ilean. "I am speaking of the Esquimau at iome, in his native igloo or hut. This gloo is not necessarily the unclean lugout of snow which it is someimes depicted. The snow igloo is a emporary affair built for overnight helter. The igloo in the native comtiunities is a aeat compact affair. tm. - /?-!- - - iituc WIVDTKIM CO Auxiliary Convention New Orleans, Sept. 6.?Queen Male of Roumania has been invited to he national convention of the Am* rican Legion. Auxiliary In Near Organs October 16-20, Mrs. ^Lowell F. Kobart, Auxiliary national prldint, nnounced today. An hnhaiai ela> raa extended* to Mra. Watren O. lending, Mra. Hobert said The invitation to Queen Marie wan orwarded to Bucharest through V V i. v/ ^l . 4 . ^aroln f Thei 1 | ./ not *11 men remember hi* bitter abu B IV17 and 1918? Did h# not attain in 1919, a* an Indepiiiiidit?an ii ' Wade Hampton as worse them a Rey fct my friends stay out of the primal e few Democrats in South Carolina Joseph W. Tolbert. He J* the "h* Republican patronage, on dhw? the arding have been laid in approval a e giver of all power, the ruler of "T s it thinkable that a Democrat wh d of his party and peopM^Would hav< bis man in politics? lease wrote Tolbert, on May 2\, 1921 f Tolbert*s leadership of the Republic line; a letter strongly commending ce and devotion to his party; a letter i Tolbert's position as Republican semed to be in danger. There was g private about the letter. Followin Tolbert, Cole L. Blease wrote: |p? ? at liberty to read this letter to wl blish it if you wish, as 1 presume ei speak what 1 think, regardless of th ive written you freely as you request democrat; not a Wilson so-called D )nian Democrat, who rejoiced at H he downfall^ of idealism." Why this sase in Joe Tolbert? Can you poin it showing the same interest? of that letter has ever been denied b) cannot deny it; he meant it. "I ] ?ws tnat 1 speak what I think." Wha Ifi- ' J. % X- ... _ AAAAAAAAAJUAA AAA^ >*V V V W V W V W V V | Frederick C Nano, Roumanian charge |sha d'affairs at Washington. Distinguished for her work among soldiers of the Allies during the World War, g^ the Roumanian queen is one of the Dort, most popular rulers in Europe among gtat< American legionnaires. The Auxiliary plans to entertain t some of the most prominent men and ^ 1 women in the country during the na- d:igj tional convention to be .held in con- g^an nection with the annual gathering RCCOl of the Legion. John J. Tigert, Unit- ^ ed States commissioner of education, has accepted an invitation to address To the convention, and a similar acteptance is expected from George B. $2i ( Utley, president of the American La- hal^ brary Association. Inclu Other notables invited include: Mrs. M. P. Higgins, president of the ^ National Parent-Teachers' Associa- jjaW) tioa; Mrs Herbert Hoover, who is ^ president of the Girl Scouts of Am-1 V.'. u r? ?" -? " * 1 ?iw, mis. vreuKge minor, piMiaent , of the Daughters of the Attyarican s Revolution; Mrs. Philip A. lfoore, pi?(] president of the National Council of oni?' Women; Mrs. Agnes H. Parker, pres- em, r ident of the Women's Relief Corps of fn I n p vf the G. A. R; Mrs. Livingston RoWe Schuyler, president of the United ( ria( Daughters of the Confederacy; Mrs ,u a Cora A. Thompson, president oi the ?poi Spanish-American War Veteran** Auxiliary and Mrs. Thomas Wfyktera, ?j>0 president of the American Federation flays of Women's Clubs. mosq Mary Roberts Rhinehart and a ten(J number of other well known women jujy writers are also expected to attend the Auxiliary convention.. flcial Rockefeller Foundation CnnlriKuf a? fn ml* - e Peking, Sept. 5.?Peking hendquar- cape ters of the Rockefeller Foundation charg announce* that, in line with ita poli- office cy to develop scientific education in toget China and to support Chincse-operat- Un ed schools, its China Medical Board minis will contribute one-half of tin? ex- ment pense of buildings, equipment, .end some salaries for instruction in science at comp the Southwestern University at Nan- centlj king and at Nenkei College at Tien- l*nde tain. To each institution $125,001 Is <iay , to be contributed for boildingg^MBd Tokic equipment and $5,000 per .year, for nesda three years is to be ghren for nidi* print* tional salaries. The condition Is that to th each sdsool provide an amount equal to that given by the Foundation. Co. In addition, the Board agrees to of to send to sash iustilttttMi vMMing 'of hi professor for one or two years. ;The A. A Board ansmnm* *? ?- ? ****** - to encourage the advance of mdtteail Bu science in China. | ntost I u A A A A A A A. ,S. A A TChXrt^Xrt^XX^n lians r Fa M of Mr. Scripturei pt to run Was the adhridual letter the >ublican ? stands in y.M written ol u ui??u *?. 1KIUIVCU who do oss," the Are I hands of heirs of I nd bless- governme He Black viser and ? Has at Scalawag] b any reShall . ^ answer th t a letter ;n I920 f( en party Tolbert's Q, . . , , Shall intended , . , . , in his heai leader. , . . ' comrade < nothm, over the ? ff is in- of Democi , The < hon you ,eader of rerybody Soutl) Cat ie cons** . , _ rupted at Bd me to emocrat, T, , , These love is for interest conscience t to amy Proof r Cole L. presume ' it do the Co % > nghai Exports To U. S. Drop anghai, Sept. o.?Declared exi from Shanghai to the Unitet is fell off $15,546,488 in the halJ ended June 30 as compared witl otal for the corresponding periot 921, according to a report com by the American consulate a1 ighai. The decrease largely ii anted for by a decrease of nearlj >00,000 in gold bar shipment! year. tal exports from Shanghai foi half year period were valued & 154,797. The total for the firsi year of 1921 was $37,198,285 ided in the total given are ex i to the Philippines of $515,221 gainst $608,333 in 1921 and ti aii of $35,184 compared with 77 in the preceding period, rtually the whole list of products ' decreases including antimony nets, porcelaine, jade ami, othei tnents, albumen, cotton laces anr oideries, eggs and egg product: hair nets, tungsten ore and silk sases are shown in the export ol ? camphor, raw cotton, feathers lo and cow hides. kio Deserted in Summed kio, Aug. 12.?The hot summei which, with their continual heat, uitos and other discomforts exfrom mid June until the end ol are days of additional worries te business men of Japan. Ofand political affairs virtually to a standstill, those who direct business of the country leaving he mountains and seaside to esthe heat, while those left in re behind find a few hours in an trying to keep health and nerves hear. til this year, when the Kato try increased the hours, governofficee closed at noon, even departments of the post office lying with this regulation, fte/, when an American mail which d at Yokohama early*on a Monmovniag was not distributed in i until late the following Warf. JS. the Japanese newspapers td it aa 'feigning illness owing e hot weather." ach Bresnahan of the University wa is arranging to taKe a group m star trade performers to the l. U. championships at Newark month. 7 tterfliee only live for about two ha. t 'w 'w ; Betr thers i say ? "As a man thinketh in h thinking of Cole L. lilease wh > thinking of a sound and tri cold typo, the most complet? 1 the Democracy of Cole L. Blec 1 the white people of South Care dampton and Tillman, prepare nt to a man who is the confes comforter of Joe Tolbert, the p< i and (Jarpet-baggers? a man sit in the governor's seal e direct, simple question wheth< ir the nominees of the Democi we lift to our highest ofhce a 1 rt to rejoice with Joe Tolbert, le >f the "Black and Tan" politic election of Warren G. Harding racy? Governor of South Carolina is pi the State's Democratic forces, 'olina want to set up a Demoi its source? s are questions that every loyal his State should answer honestl ! before he votes in the coming is held of every statement her ntributed by Democrats Court For War Abolishmenl t San Antonio, Texas, Sept. 5.?A . International Court of Arbitratio I '"whose purpose and function shall b f the avoidance of war, and the peace j ful settlement of international dis j putes," is formally resolved upon b . the Pan-American Round Table o ^ San Antonio, according to announce s ment today by Florence T. Griswolc j director general. } Dispatches from Washington re cently giving prominence to a pre r posed American League of Nation t have occasioned the sending of lei t ters by the director general of tli local Round Table to Dr. L. S. Row< director general of the Pan-Amer I can Union, Washington; and Pres: j dent Brum of Uruguay, South Am { erica, suggesting that a Pan-Amer; ' can Court of Arbitration would be c j greater significance. The republic of South America, for many yeari r frequently have made effective us j of the principles of arbitration, read { a resolution of the local body, sen to Washington, and "in one instanc the president of the United State tendered the services of this countr alone, or in conjunction with othe countries of this hemisphere, to rer der all possible assistance in solvin an international dispute betwee . Chile and Peru." It is also the earnest desire of th local bodv. haSoH fill it? nrnvimitw on > closeness of connection with Mexicc ! to "stimulate a stronger friendshi with Mexico by creating a commo ground where out people can mee with Mexicans for the purpose o , solving our international problem upon a basis of free acceptance b; the people and not upon a basis o the material interests of any favore. group." The Pan-American Round Table o , San Antonio, its officials declared, in vite the cooperation' of the Pan-Am erican Union, the Pan-American So ciety of the United States, the Pan American Department of the Women's International I/eague for Peac< and Freedom, and other organiza tlons leading to the creation of th proposed court of arbitration, U bring about peaceful settlement o international disputes in the Westen Hemisphere, officials declared. H. W. EDGAR Undertaking Parlors Calls answered day and night Prompt and Efficient Service Day Phone 129?Night Phone 211 kA# JT T T J X X x yi ay I ? I lis heart, so is he." yj ien he wrote that * ie Democrat? It TV 3 indictment ever /V ise and he wrote ; T ?; >lin?, the political VV d to entrust their IT sed approver, adolitical heir of the VV XX xx : who dares not to AA sr or not he voted AA ratic party? T T H [nan who found it ader and political ians of the State, T X and the downfall jMr xx resumed to be the VV Do the people of VV :racy that is cor- Vy 1 democrat whose VV y at the bar of his y primary. VV if ein made. aA if of 76. n II H _ t? XX w Payment of Chinese Loans Sought n , e Tokio, Sept. 5.?The government and hanks of Japan are trying to devise some scheme whereby what are known as the Nishihara loans to Chi? na totalling: 100,000,000 yen may be recovered or at least the interest of ^ 7,500,000 yen a year, which has not been paid since the loans were nego. tiated in 1918, may be secured. When the loans were made by the Indus* ls trial Bank and the Banks of Korea and Formosa, it was expected that u China would give the banks certain -oncessions, but these have not been forthcoming. The hanks have had i_ to pay the interest to the investors !. .vho bought the bonds and there j_ seems no prospect of China being ,f able to repay the interest, much less 9 ihe capital which was to have been s> <pent on railways in Manchuria anl i3 Mongolia and in the development of |a mines in Amur and Kirin provinces, it Of the total, 50,000,000 yen was e to have been refunded in July, 1928, a and the balance in 1924. At a meety ng of representatives of the banks r wd government three plans were i- suggested but no definite conclusion ? was reached. The pluns were: new n loans to be readjusted by means of enewals; a fundamental readjuste ment to be effected by raising China's d ustoms tariff. The first plan was >, rejected as contrary to the retrenchp ment policy of the government, the n second as well-nigh impracticable t since China is unable even to pay inf terest on the existing loans. The s third plan had too many difficulties v before it Vcould be made practicable. ] Will Ignore Copyright Lew* 9 t Moscow, Sept. 5.?International copyright laws, excepting only with countries with which tha Moacow government has treaties, will be ignored in Russia if recommendatlona of the Soviet state publishing departe ment are adopted by the Commisaar. iat of Justice. e The publishing department, which . has been considering the question f many months, takes the view that all a hooks once within Russia are state property, and that the state has tha free right for the use of publication* it sees fit. There are more ducks in China than in all the rest of the world. Roy Thomas Fort Smith outfit has been having a hard struggle trying to keep out of the Western association cellar.