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W Jtt/iJJM?;fc>J->A X , AUgUOl XV, j A TIP PROM ? A Kilni / ,Y/s if/JU r WByJKii^K^LuBPifl * To His Nieees and Nephews: Bting 'just as good' for your Governme: ? te= College Educations Possible By ? ? Director of War Loan Orgaaizal to Explain Method to All V Invites Requests 1 Perhaps In no other thing Is Uncle pun more interested than in the future of America in the citizens of tomorrow?the children of today?and he gonacQuently realizes the tremendous Importance of inculcating in the minds of the children the principles j Of thrift itni enkindling in their hearts : a desire to improve their condition in ! life. With these things in view the i government is suggesting ways where- j by a higher education may be had by ; nany hoys and girls who otherwise voull never receive the benefits of e x>liei:e course. "In the 2,000,000 homes in -Mary- j land, the District of Columbia, Vir- j ginia, West' Virginia, North Carolina 1 and South Carolina," said Albert S. j Johnstone, director of the War Loan Organization, Richmond, Va., "there arc perhaps 1,000,000 boys and girls, ? ~1,l 41 W 1<I J coi a uiu, nuw au * iwiwuij j forward to entering college?come j day. Their parents realize, if the j Soys and girls do not, that this! ??oma day' will come very, very soon, j "It is not merely a question of money. Enkindled ambition, steadiFILL OUT AND MA Mr. Albert S. Johnstone, Director, War Loan Organization, * j Richmond, Virginia. Dear Sir: I have read of the method, prov ment, by which the accumulation < j college education is being encourai j about it. Please write me fully. (Name) f Address'! (Business) I WAR SAVING STAMP ' VALUABLE SECURITY ! Ttere art tight points of excellence that are possessed by War Savings Btampe which are especially appealing and which are not combined in any ?ther security now to be obtained in Iftny market War Savings Stamp (Workers would do well to get these tight points and to see that their adjrfcat&ges are not lost sight of. (1) Every War Savings Stamp is a tftfrect promise to pay on the part of rtb* strongest government in the (World, (1) It bears interest at the rate of U P*r cent compounded quarterly if ?h?!6 utfi maturity. (I) The amount of money required I <Ri i lrsva?4ntanf li ?? trntll tVl t ?rrtry parson can own at laast on* iniorsst baaring aacurity. (4) It la raadily obtalaabla. Any post offto*. almost any bank and any #Ck?r scanty win supply them. /?* 1* 4. .1^.. t? aail ?>v v*; *? mwiyi am mmm am> ij jfe 9STC&MM4 ?t BB7 Hm?. : (I) Its principal is always tnaini tallied with an accrual of interest. fl) It is the most liquid of all setairlttee, readily cearerted into cash en short notice and is redeemable upon maturity at convenient places. (I) Its interest is received immedj lately at the time or purchase, instead i q periodically dunng the life of the ' w? * " - - I UNCLE SAM ' * J | HnlHKI are of the man who offers you someQt securities." \ are Made Government Plan ! ~ ^ i # A f aon or this District is Anxious SHio Are Interested and He for Information. ly adhered to by both the dhfld and h(s parents, It necessary. Otherwise the money will probably not be accumulated in time, nor appreciation of the value of a college education be so developed in the minds off the boy and girl that they will stick to their purpose to get it regardless of the obstacles in their paths. "There is a method?provided j by the United States Government? j by which this money can be accumu- ; lated gradually and be ready ^hen* it is needed Meanwhile it will be ebeolutely safe will draw a solendid rate of interest and be exempt from al: state, county, and city tax<-s, both a; to principal and interest, except estate or inheritance taxes. Moreover, the orooess of retting this money ahead Is ao simple, so direct, that i all the members of the family may ! share in It, though no one can get it j except the one to whom it belongs." Mr. Johnstone says he would like to tell every interested parent, boy, or girl more abont it. He asks simply that you fill out the coupon below, j clip It out, mail to him at the ad- I dress given on it. He promises a prompt reply. IL THIS COUPON ided by the United States Govern>f money in advance to secure a g;ed. I would like to know more I I i ! ?: | ARE YOU CIVILIZED? |j "The difference between the ciyil- j ized man and the savage is thrift. Keep expenditures always below income; save something," said Andrew J Carnegie. How far are you civilized? Do you simply live in today, as does the savage, or are you preparing for i the necessities of tomorrow? Will j you be ready to take advantage of fu- 1 ture opportunities? Will you be able i j to own your own home, to travel, to j change vour D03ition or enlarge your i business? Are you confident of what old age will bring, and what opportunities you will be able to give to your children? In other words?ARE YOU SAV-! ING? You can do it. Join the great move- j ment for a Thrifty America. Make a ; tart with your odd quarters today, j Thrift Stamps may pave the way to a happy, comfortable and more civil-1 ized tomorrow. Are you traveling: this smooth road, or is yours an un- ! paved one? Choose between the two. ! i Lincoln said: "Be a patriot Don't j mar the immortal emblem oi human- ; J 11/, U'113 UCtiaiailUII v?>l muc^HUoins. Buy Thrift and War Savings Stamps. ! I _ ! Thrift is shorthand for "Waste not, j want not" Buy War ferlztffa fltaaCps. j . i i ? 4 Its d ^ 1 ili I?vp\'^ VALUE OF SAVINGS ! BECOMES APPARENT! One of Great Lessons of War Is That of National and Individual Thrift, Now Rapidly Growing Now that the new German government has accepted the inevitable, and has officially signed the peace terms dictated by the allies and the countries associated with them, the greatest and most disastrous war that ever scourged the world is ended. For nearly five years the world has been topsy-turvy. The things that were needed yesterday are no longer required, and the activities of the great war establishments and munition plants are being diverted to the manufacture of implements of peace. There must now be a readjustment, j Governments that have thought in billions and spent money with a lavish hand, must retrench and think in millions and even smaller amounts, and must gain a new perspective. Viewed in the retrospect the part played by America "r. the great world war is one of the mes: glorious rhr.p tors in history. And in the making of this brilliant hi- or nlhin Am*ri fan eiizo:; played a sieilar role. The mountains of munitions, the equipment for the millions of soldiers, the great ships that carried the men across the ocean, could not have been provided had not the common people o? America provided the money. Much of this money was obtained through the sale of Liberty Bonds and War Savings and Thrift Stamps. This great volume of money has not been wasted. First it brought permanent peace to the world, and now that real peace is here, every cent that was so invested will come back to those who aided their government, and it will come back with interest. This war that is now happily ended has taught the people the value of saving. They went into the saving game as much through patriotism as anything else. But now that they are reaping the returns, and see that what they did with a patriotic motive is a real foundation for future fortune, they have gained a new confidence in their country, and they will continue to buy the securities the Treasury Department offers, and will make the country many-fold more prosperous than it would have been had not the war instilled the lesson that will prove invaluable in future years. PAYING OFF THAT MORTGAGE Theodore Roosevelt said: "Thrift is merely the use of hard common sense in the spending of money." Paying off the mortgage on the installment plan by buying War Savings Stamps is one of the uses of this liaru common sense. Not only does this plan offer a practical way of saving small amounts of money, but small amounts may be earning interest as soon as they are set aside toward the collecting of the larger sum. This interest in turn | materially helps to reduce the 6 per cent interest rate commonly charged I on mortgages. When the mortgage cc-mes due it j may either be paid off in whole, or in j part and renewed, the method of saving through War Savings Stamps J being employed until the principal is j liquidated. i ' ^ *1? * *..4-1 ifn + Vinvn ir\ ' Tvlriy^inP VUSl llltuio mul uh it iv i lament that you neglected it." Buy Thrift Stamps and War Sayings Stamps. Is the glue on the back of War Say- j irgs Stamps flavored with peppermint or vviutergreen? Buy one and lind OUt. & i i - CANNOT LOSE MONEY I? INVESTED WISELY Funds Put Into War Savings Stamps Are Absolutc-iy Safe and Yield Handsome Profit to Holder i Government securities afford the I safest and most practical investment j in the world. A War Savings Stamp is a promisory note for $5 if redeemed at maturity, or for the original cost cf the stamp plus accrued interest if redeemed before maturity. It wa3 only after America entered the great world conflict that the small wage earner in this country was afforded the opportunity of investing in government securities; of becoming co-partners with the government. That there are today more than 20,000,000 holders of government securities is a fact which speak3 for itself. When you buy a War Savings Stamp you are helping the government. To be able to make a loan to the government, even as small as the sum represented by a War Savings Stamp, is a proof of patriotism and . Iso ? nrartiI cal manifestation of thai c^irit of na| ticnal thrift grd indiv-dual savings i which hits come to us as a permanent I heritage from me war. WEALTH OF NATION CROWING RAPIDLY la Washington some of those experts, who are masters of figures and who have a mind attuned to statistics, frequently dig np queer things. One of ghis type has figured out that the total wealth of the United States is $30D,000,000,000. Then ho figures out the new wealth produced annually, which he terms "net income." This gets into dizzy figures, too. He estimates that last year the national wealth increased $18,000,000,000, which he admits is going faster than the normal. Another, Washington official points out that one of the best ways I a /.anna^ifa + V1I0 n ,*? + 1 r\rt n 7 In aatvio In {.U K. KJU.srzl rc luio uanuuai IUV/WUI^ i" wealth is for individuals to buy War Savings Stamps. ? ONE SAFE PLACE FOR LIB- t | ERTY BONDS?THE BANK? | f PUT YOURS THERE x The Cumberland (Md.) Eve- % \ -$> ning Times prints the following, Z ,t which should be a reminder to j <|> all who are now keeping their <| | |! Liberty Bonds or War Savings x j> Stamps in bo*C*s around the <? Z house or in broken tea pots or X x in mattresses: j> j> Mrs. William Dover, wife Z X of Fireman-Eng'-neer Dover, J> Baltimore and Ohio railroad, of J> Rowlesburg, W. Vu.; threw $1,- x <$> C50 worth of Liberty Bonds into y J> the Cheat river. h-'?ck of her x ? home, by mistake, -"ith rubbish <c> she had cleaned from their % x home. The valuable bonds have /X t* rvt 1 \/Tkn n vooaa'0?'0/1 /ilf hr\iifrh M X w 4..1/V ucrn i t/V w * v i uiun/u^ii <i < / x diligent search of -.he Cheat y ? river bottom in that ricinity has |> X been made. x 4 W. B. Dever's great loss of <| X bonds has a parallel. W. W. X T Wood. Baltimore and Ohio rail- 4 & rc>?d engineer, lost $-50 worth % T of Liberty Bonds from his pock- $ 1> et. They were a SlOO and $50 4 X issue. Engineer Wood intended X to Cepofrit the bonds in a local 4 I A hont' Thov Viaro nnt V?o?n In- A w uwxn. ' -'-J ' ~ jjj catcfl. IP < A laborer unloading a car of T * I crfTiV - at Paw Paw, Saturday, x J> found a $100 bond in the coal. ? X It Is thought to have dropped X from the pocket of a car loader v X at the mines. The laborer re- X y polled the matter to the com- 4 a par.y's station agent at Paw % i x Paw, it is said, with a view of ? Y . ^ I ? retiring it to its owner. ^ 4 I OUTLOOK FOR THE flEXT BY CHARLES , Soil Improvement Comm _ The approach of wheat and oat so-.v- i | ing time raises a question in the farm' ers mind as to the outlook for these , crops. It is well known that under; ! the stimulus of Government price an ! enormous wheat crop has been pro' duced, a crop of approximately 1,200,000,000 bushels. ' It is estimated that this country rei quires 600.000,000 bushels and that j Europe will require from 410,000,000 ! to 460,000,000 bushels. If these figures i prove correct, there will be a very lit| tie surplus left of the big crop of | wheat this country has grown. ! Since it appears to be probable that ! there will be no trouble to dispose of the present crop the next question is, what are the planting prospects for other wheat growing nations? i Of course the nations south of the j equator, like Argentina and Austra; lia, that have their summer when we ! are having our winter, have already j sown their fall crops, and will hari vest them near Christmas time. These i nations have, thus far, good prospects; j but they would hardly compare with I any two leading wheat-growing states ] ! of this country; therefore, they are! i not important factors, j Russia is the great granary of Europe and Asia. Those who have watch-1 ed the political trend of that country | ! see nothing but war and paralyzed1 agriculture ahead another year, if not' for several years. I WHAT IS ACID Raw phosphate rock is a substance | In which phosphoric acid and lime are : combined together in practically the ; same proportions in which they are j found in bone/-'and which is known j ! as phosphate of lime. I In this condition the lime and the phosphoric acid hold to each other with such a tight grip that the phosphorus cannot be dissolved by wa-; ter. It will readily be seen that but | for such a combination the phosphoj run would have been dissolved out and | washed to the sea before ever man ' came to inhabit the earth. But It i has been locked up and held for us in j this way, just as the coal has been ... j i HEllg vS m Cook i I j Just received new s Come and : | SEE US FOR MO ! AND R ! I Caughman-Ks Lexingt( j I ??1 ' !? JMM? I : ! bbpwb?????aaa?8?i t L ?k? ^ I Newber ^ I-v^r-T- A / ] n /I n f Wlieift tiit: uwl cuucai positive Christian influenc Full literary courses leadi: elor of Arts, Splendid pr eering courses. Nine larp able and devoted scholars instruction and individual tions of honor and moralit record of educating big under the direction of a sp wholesome, with a high p< tificates from accredited h examination. Sub-Freshr undergraduates. "A saf * -V . ~ ~ ^ V", r boy." rsext session upenc For further informatior S. J. DERRIC ?i T-? .. m .n... ? miiwm ?m?nm BRING US YOU } ! WHEAT ANO OAT CROPj A. WHITTLE, ittee, Atlanta, Georgia. r? European countries in general are* short of labor. Demobilization ofarmies progresses slowly and the pe-t riod for fall sowing of small grain j in Europe will have passed before any material change can be made through recovery of labor from the armies. ; Therefore, there is going to be a 1 continued shortage of small grain in j Europe, making it probably necessary for this country to supply as much grain next year as this. But instead of the nation maintaining its wheat acreage, it is feared the withdrawal of the Government's guarantee will result in a reduction. In the South it is not only a good farm practice to grow wheat, oate and rye enough for home needs, but it is vprv desirable. (1) to have winter cover crops that will take up the plant food that would otherwise wash out of the soil with the winter rains; * (2) to provide light winter grazing for livestock; (3) to furnish in early spring some fresh cereal hay which will be the better if it has vetch or bur clover growing with it; (4) to furnish vegetable matter or humus to turn into the soil at the spring plowing. If all the cotton and corn fields were sown to small grain in the fall, it would mean more cotton and corn, b^tter soil, larger returns from fertilizers and greater farm profits. Too little attention is given to obtaining good wheat, oats and rye seed; too little attention is given to preparing a good seed bed, and too little fertilizers are used in growing the small grain crops in the South. What is worth doing at all, is worth doing well. ^PHOSPHATE' held under the hills, and in th* raae of the phosphorus we have been given the key for its unlocking by the use of sulphuric acid, which converts the insoluble rock into a soluble form. If the soluble phosphoric acid were separated from the lime which carries It and dissolved in water It would be much more inconvenient to handle than to leave it still combined wkh ; lime in the dry powder which we call acid phosphate, this lime simply serving the function of a bottle to carry the phosphorus, and saving the much ^ larger expense that would be involv- \ '^5 ed in the complete extraction of the phosphoric acid, converting it into liquid form and providing bottlee i? which to carry it.?Monthly Bulletin Ohio Experiment Station ? j : * Y\ iff 1 ; ?j Stoves ! \ 1 - >j> hipment, all sizes. see them. | 'LINE MOWERS | AKES. ; s iminer Co., )n, S. C. ry, S C. I ional advantages, under j es, at a minimum cost. ng to the degree of Baehe-medical and pre-engin>"e buildings. Faculty of i and educators. Personal 1 attention. High tradi;y. A small college with a men. Physical training, >ecialist. Athletics clean, mcentage of success. Cerigh schools admit without nan class for high school ? , e college for anybody's ; 5 September 25, 1919. < v t i, address A 'K, President ' i II Mil? III Mill lllllll " (R JOB WORK