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' . # HOW TO CONSTRUCT ICELESS COOLER Helps to Conserve Food in tho Country During the Summer. Washington.?Refrigerators can be nxttdt to do their part in conserving food this summer. Preserving milk, f* butter and other supplies and keeping . Jeft overs and unused portions until they are needed will be their service. * i If ice is not obtainable, an icelesa re frigerator, cooled by evaporation, can be easily constructed. Women demonstrators in PYtonsion vi-nrt Smith of the United States department of agriculture, tell how to make such a cooler at a small cost. T,his refrigerator consist of a wood <M\Wrame covered with canton flannel burlap or heavy duck. It is desirable that-, the frame be>, screened, ^ although this is not necessary. Wicks, ^ made of the same material as the covering, resting in a pan of water on top of the cooler, conduct the water over the sides and ends of the pan and allow it to seep down the sides of the box. The evaporation from this moistened covering causes a lower temperature inside. On dry, hot clan's a temperature of 50 degrees has boeAi known to be obtained in the cool er* This is the way to build it: Make a screened case three ami one-half feet high with the other dimensions 12 by 15 inches. If a solid j top is used, simply place the water pan on this. Otherwise fit the pan closely into the opening of the top frame and support it by one inch cleats fastened to the inside of the frame. Place two movable shelves in the frame, 12 to 15 inches apart. Use a biscuit pan 12 by 14 inches on the top to hold the water, and where tinrefrigerator is to be used indoors have the whole thing standing in :* large pan to catch any drip. The pans and case may be painted white, allowed to dry and then enameled. A covering of white canton flannel should be made t<> fit tho frame. Have the smooth side out and button the covering on the frame with buggy or automobile curtain hooks and eyes, arranged s0 that the door may be opened without unfastening these |f hooks. This can easily he done by putting one row of hooks on the edge of the door noar the latch and the 4 other just opposite the opening with . tl'.t hem on each side extended far enough t0 cover the crack at the edge o' the door, so as to keen out the warm, outside aid and retain the cool | . ed aJr. This dre.vs .or covering will y*' have to be hooked around the top edge also. Two double strips one-J half the width of each side should be sewed on the top of each side covering and allowed/to extend over abou*: two and one-half or three inches in ( the pan of water. The bottom of the covering should extend into the lower pan. Place the refrigerator in a shady place where air will circulate around it freelv. If buttons and buttonholes jft are used on the canton flannel instead of buggy hooks, the cost will be reduced. TRjf IT! SUBSTITUTE FOR NASTY CALOMEL 1 Starts your liver without Mak|fe ing you sick and can not ' salivate. __________ Every druggist in town?your druggist and everybody's druggist ' has noticed a great fafWng-off in the ! sale of calomel. They all give the same reason. Ddoson's Liver Tone is taking; its place. "Calomel is dangerous and people know it. while Dodson's Liver Tnno is perfectly safe and gives better re-1 suits," said a prominent local druggist. Dodson's Liver Tone is personIk ally guaranteed by every druggist | who sells it. A large bottle cost 50 | cents, and if it fails to gjve easy relief in eve#y case of liver sluggish. ness and constipation, .you have only to ask for your money back. Dodson's Liver Tone is a pleasant \ tasting, purely vegetable remedy, harmless to both children and adults. < Take a spoonful at night and wake ' up feeling fine; no biliousness, sick * headache, acid stomach or constipat- , ed bowels. It doesn't gripe or cause inconvenience all the next day like , violent calomel. Take a dose of calomel today anl tomorrow you will 1 feel weak, sick and nauseated. Don't i lose a day's work! Take Dodson's i Liver Tone instead and feel fine, full ] of vigor and ambition.?adv. i DIPPING DOES NOT REDUSE MILK YIELDS Washington, D. C.?"Dipping cows to kill fever ticks actually increases n.ilk yields," says the United States Department of Agriculture in a state event issued today. "This is proved in actual experiment and in results obtained in thousands of dairy herds the owners of which are thorough bilieveis in tick eradication by the dipping-vat mchtod. .Careful records prove that lightly infested cows pro <Iuce 18.6 per cent less milk than free cows, while cows heavily infeste<l produce on an average 42.4 per cent less milk than similar cows freed from ticks. This was establish ed by records of yields kept over con siderable periods for ticky herds before they were dipped and for the same herds after they were dipped. "A herd of twenty lightly ticked cows produced 29 quarts less milk per day, or a loss of 5,800 quarts in 200 days' milking, than 20 tick-free cows of the same kind. Twenty heavily ticked cows produced 67 quarts per day less, or a loss of 17,'i00 quarts in 200 days' milking, than 20 tick-free cows of a similar breed. The monetary gain from dipping o Jthe lightly infested herd would hav? been $280 a year; from the heavily ticked herd dipping would have given increased profits of $660 a year. nvrc is an uciuai record irom a Hairy herd: A dairyman in heavily infested territory dipped his cattie. One week after (pipping, his herd of 42 cows gave 10 gallons of milk a day more?an increase of 16.6 pel cent from the start. The milk sold for 3? cents a gallon, and he got $3.50 more per day from his herd from one dipping. He had begun to feed the cows instead of the tioks.? "Those who assert that dipping diminishes milk flow judge entirely from the milk production for 2 or 3 days immediately following the trip to the vat. It is natural that for 2 or 3 (fyiys after a milch animal has been >driven a few miles and gone through the excitement of dipping her milk flow will temporarily fall oft slightly. The actual figures show that for 2 or 3 days there may be a reduction of an average of 10.6 per cent or about 0.8 of a quart for an 8quart cow. In 3 to 5 days the temporary falling off disappears and if the dairyman would keep records over any long period he would fina that getting rid of ticks was increasing his acuta! milk production from 18 to 42 per cent. "That dipping cows to get rid of cattle ticks must increase milk flow can readily he reasoned out by-any one who will approach the subject with an open mind and not let his prejudices fight his pocketbook. Cows can make milk only from blood. It follows that the more blood ticks suck out from them tinless material the cows will have t > turn into milk. When it is realized that the ticks on a heavily infested animal consume as much as 200 pounnds of blood a year, it can be seen that a heavily infested cow will u se t>y tiio tick route a large ami important amount of milk-making material. When it is realized that the cow can make blood to supply her milk glands only from the feed she consumes, it can be seen that the tick by sucking blood is wasting a lot of good feed that ought to be going to increase milk production. "It is as unreasonable to estimate the effect of dipping on a cow's yield from the milk she gives for 2 days after she has been dipped as it would be for a purchaser of a cow to expect that cow to give her full milk record the first day after she had been driven to a new farm and plac3d in strange quarters. No sensible dairyman would send back a cow bocause she did not live up to the guaranteed record for a day or two after she had been shipped to his farm. All the Department asks of anyone is to use fair records. Experience I with millions of cattle dipped proves conclusively that dipping increases materially and in no way diminishes the year's milk yield, or injures the cattle." o To Cure a Cold In One Day Take I.AXATITTt wrtOMO Quinine. It stops the Cough and Headache and works off tho Cold Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. k. w. flnnvwft ??- 1? ___ ^ W atKur.iu^c U U CilUil l^u * 'X 1 ? 1 So We Think. Prohibitionists hate like the mischief to give up any victory that they have won, even if it be rather on the arder of a foul tip that they scored. It is more than likely that they will have to give up the food bill amendment, for it will not do to sink that measure by piling on a now .Jonah. It has a hard enough road to trave anyhow. Florence Tim.a. THB HOBBY gj i mmk/ I!'^4;11 jy ^ I 1 ~ Through Out 1 in the Federal Reserv I are placed in a 3trong I before to take care of J all our depositors, wl I whether they keep 1 accounts; and at the a I the most modern ban I Why not open an 1 begin at once to par! 1 fits and the additional 1 system gives to yoi I th U3? PEOPLES 1 Conwt ORI'lTA RY* On Saturday night .June 00th, the j death angel visited the home of Mr. | and Mrs. J. M. Thompson, Jr., and] claimed for its own their darling j son, Homer. He was born on August 14, 1906, and died June 110, 1917. He was sick 40 days. All was done for him that loving hands and Dr. J. A. Norton could do to stay the cold icy hands of death, but the good Lord knew best and took him to live with Him where there will be no more parting. His remains wer laid to their last resting place in the Lee cemetery. Oh, it was so hard to i | give dear Homer up, but we mourn j not as those who have no hope, for we feel assured that he is resting with the Savior. Dearest Homer, thou hast left us, And our loss we deeply feel, But 'tis God that hath bereft us, He can all our sorrows heal. You are gone hut not forgotten. Never will your memory fade, Sweetest thoughts will ever linger 'Hound the grave where you werej laid. . Oh, that dear one, how we nusse I him, Oh, how hard to give him up. But an angel came down for him, And removed him from our flock. His Loving Cousin, ?EDNA. o FOR RENT. Cottage formerly occupied by Mr and Mr. Jas. J. Scales. Cottage next door to Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Harrison. J. J. pitman place with land fenced in. Repairs to any of these places made to suit the applicant. Apply to H. H. Woodward. 1785 COLLEGE OF ! SOUTH CAROLINA J 133rd Year beg:i Enrtance examinations at all 11 9 a. m. Four-year courses lead to the 1 pre-mcdical course is given. A free tuition scholarship is as: Spacious buildings and athletic unexcelled library facilities. Expense moderate. For terms HARRISON FOLLLOW . with Mcl WIDE TRFin - - vmm m wmmmw %W* A simple arid effective device convert: rolet (Four-Ninety) into the 60-in. sti Ford owners using this attac away with all steering troub der complete control either f< Helps to keep wheels in alinemen md less gasoline. This attachment c Price for complete set, $13. If your dealer can't supply GIBBES MACHINERY C( M. G. ANDERSEN, See them o CONWAY, ? ItD. OONWAY, 8. O ??? I .11 P^JsMBER^^ J^WEOIRAL RESERVH^> ,:^ -i i * AlL?^ Membership A Rantrtnrw ??? ^ V* Lruili\ll*^ OICU1 wc ^er position than ever I ' the requirements of 1 lether large or small, 1 checking or savings 1 tame time to give them 1 king service, 1 Account with us and I \ | licipate in these bene- y [ protection which thi3 S dX money deposited JS ! NATIONAL BANK i ly, South Carolina. ? ADMINISTRATION ' OFFICIALS ELATED Over Defeat of Two Attempts I by Submarines on Troop I Transports. Washington.?An air of elation pervaded administration circles over I the safe arrival of the first Ajrterican overseas expedition after a voyage in which submarine attacks were twice repelled with the loss of at least one of the underseas raiders. The forces landed intact at a French port without the loss of a man, ship or animal. The first encounter, on the night of June 22, was a complete victory for the convoying destroyers, whose accurate gunfire directed on the enemy craft as revealed by the moving rayS'of the searchlights speedily rout ed the attacking force. American gunnery told effectively in the secound skirmish a few day* later. A 'protecting screen of destroyers thrown around the trans purrs neni tne raniers at a safe (lis-1 tanee while the presence of oil and ! wreckage on the surface of the sea after the batt'e indicated tho destruction of one, and probably more, of the undrosea vessels. Both attacks were made far out on the Atlantic beyond the ordinary I rtmge of submarine activities. This is taken to indicate that the German admiralty had been furnished with information concerning the precis:i route to be taken by the American contingent. Every effort is being made to run down the spies who are belie veil to have furnished this information to the enemy. 1917 CHARLESTON 3 OLDEST COLLEGE ns September 2 8th county-seats Friday, July 13. at B. A. and b. S. degrees. A two-year signed to each County of the State, grounds, well equipped laboratories. and catalogue, address RANDOLPH, President. THE RUTS ij Waster's ATTACHMENT | ing a narrow gauge Ford or C'hev- J ndard tread for Southern roads. I hment sav that it does I lea. Your car will be un- . [>r country or city driving, t, easy on tires, causes more power an be put on in one hours' time. , i t you, write direct to )., Mfrs., Columbia, S. C. ^ LOCAL AGENT n his Car ? SOUTH CAROLINA O ???J I , J I THIS PRACTICE IS WRONG IN SPIRIT New York, June 27.?Men of miiit.uy age are being discriminate! against by employers since the enact mont of the selective draft and it ;s becoming increasingly difficult for them to obtain employment. Help wanted advertisements in the great oaily papeis show this, the grniter majority calling for men "over 31" and otherwise indicating that preference will be given to the men not subject to the nation's call. The injustice and disloyalty of this was .1 ? ^ ' sium n oy ur. scttuyler IS. Wheeler, past president of the Amei ican Institute of Electrical Engineers, who is head of a firm employing several thousand workmen. j "Employers only willing to hire men over the military age," he said, "are disloyal, un-American and unfair. In addition, they are shortsighted, as only about one in twenty ot the ten million men registered will be called. Refusal to employ men between the ages of twenty-one and thirty-one penalizes the very class on which the future of the nation reper.ds. These men are the fathers of i the coming generation. I "Men should be given employment on the same basis as before the war. If a man is called from his work to | take aims to help 'make the world [safe for Democracy' the employer I should be proud that one of his men ! has gone to the front and should , wish him God-speed. The thought j that his work may have to he done h\ a new man should never occur? j there are millions who cannot go! I "If employers are not careful they1 j will make it a disgrace for a young man to brt called to the colors. Instrad, there should be rivalry between the shops and factories as to which sends the most men to the front,' for only the best are wanton and the fittest to work are the fittest to fight. Give the young men their chance! They took it wheN they registered?now, let the employers take their chance and give them work!" The movement to employ men regardless of their liability to military service was started at the plant of the Crocker-Wheeler Company, electrical machinery manufactures of Ampere, N. J., and is being adopted ' by many of the large concerns, o REDHCROSS] | CHILL m& FEVER worn run *? - - nviH I OUM3 AGUE. BILIOUS PCVIR ' I INT&BMITTINT FIVER AND ALL MALARIAL OI9IA&U I AND LA GRIPPE. DIRRCTlOns TWO TEABROONFULf IN WATER EVERY THREE HOUR* UNTIL IT ACTS WILL. THIN THREE TIME* A OAT children in ffoportion to asi PRICE as CBNTS I JACKSONVILLE. FLA. grr rimp^T]|p|in i iiihihjJ Buy it at druggists and general stores or postpaid from the manufacturers. GH1P mSTAiL i OFF BIT BY BIT : Am anonymous writer from I-T>ri!a. mi a note to the HeraM last week. t..i.. . 11. - 1 ... in.- .> Lni? way nc would naniile tiu Kaiser, as follows: "I am not an Irishman, hut 1 feel , .hat we shou'd have the same amount | >f 'Dog-ship' for the Kaiser of v mr- i nany, as the Irishman had for Ins mister's dog, when he was told to I ut off the puppy's tail. Not careing o hurt him more than was mvessar ig cut off a little every morning to nake it easier for him. An i t'? i.ake it easy for the Kaiser we wi akc him in sections until we hav he last piece." -o | Vhenev?r You Need a General Tonic Take Grove's The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless hill Tonic is equally valuable as a General Tonic because it contains th?* /ellknown tonic properties of QUININ H l; nd IRON. It acts oti the Liver, Drives ut Malaria, Enriches the Blood ami luilds up the Whole System. 50 ctuta. | ^ SBVW CRUEL TfllVTi^T Cr Ttc msm Sy*>r.i.V.'r."y Dr:riv:d of .-oo.1 if Thoy Do Jot Work i )f Germans. H > ' -?> ?T'm Ro'g: in ?r..>yr? nment has received from various sources evidence which accords in every detail proving that deported Belgian civilians arc subjected systematica !y t-? mistreatment to bring them to forced labor foi the German army. This evidence exposes insufficient nourishment, cruel punishment, brutal intimidation and hard conditions o* labor under which a great many succumb while a large proportion returned so reduced and weakened that they are incapable of physical effort. This is the regime of the camp of Slotau described by one of the men, who escaped. "In the morning, a third of a litre of a beverage resembling coffee, hut seeming to have been made of acorns; at noon, a half litre of soup generally made of hoots, but somotimos of potatoes; in the evening. fifth of a litre of porridge made of corn meal or barley; the ration of bread is about a half pound per day; it is made of a mixture of corn meal and rye. The interned men are m vor given meat, fish or cheese. Lo certain camps, the evening ni> il u t. suppressed altogether, and even the other meager repasts were reduced for those who refused to work f <r the Germans. "Other principal measure.* resorted to to bring the deported men to submission were the supplies of ti e post; stoutly fettered to posts, the men are exposed to heat or cold, according to the season, for days togc.ther, during which the food rations are reduced systematically until they reach the proportions of a half ration only for two days' subsistence." o IN MEMORY. The death angel visited the homo of Mrs. LueUa Shelley .Tune 17, 1917, and took her loving husband, I), ft. Shelley, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Rubin Shelley. He was born August 25, 1S70, and was 40 years, 9 months and 22 days old. He connected his membership in Honey Camp Baptist church in early life and lived a faith ful Christian life. H.? leaves a wife, 5 children, a father, 2 brothers, one sister, to mourn their loss, but their loss is not like those that have no hope. A mother and one sister proceeded him to the better world. Our loss is his eternal gain. He was dear ly loved by all who knew him. tie suffered seven long years with Rheu mutism and the last three weeks of his life he suffered very much with the pollairra. H?? horo - ^ . v oui c; with patience without a murmu *. Whenever you saw him you could see a cheerful smile. The funeral service was conilucte I on the following day by the Rev. Mr. Rogers, his pus to *, and Dr. Lord. He was laid to rest ut Honey Camp Baptist cemetery. H:s Loving Neice, ?Esde Tonip<ins. H DM Kit THOMPSON. On June '?)ch the death angel vi u iied the home of .Mr. ami Mrs. Joe Thompson, .Jr., ami took from then their oldest boy. Homer, who was i i the eleventh year of his life. H >m >r had been down 40 days with Typhoid fever. All was done for him that loving hands a:id a kind doct< r could ilo but could not stay the icy hand > of death. (Jod knew best ami called him home. He leaves a father, moch E?r, tw > b others and two sisters, !> sides a host of rehifives and frien Is to mourn t'ne loss, but we mourn net is those who have no h me for we feel tlv.t we shall meet him again .vkcro wo shall part no more. His Coving Cousin, Annie Be'le Munvll. Magnolia Balm LIQUID FACE POWDER. 1 Ke beauty secret of women who know how ijL^ Tr to take care of the com"y I plexion. Cannot be ^7 VV(I detected. Heals Sun\ / \ burn, stops Tan. Soothing, " 7 cooling, refreshing. }Ht P"*. WW i s 75c. at brunttnts or by mall diredL Sample (either color) for 2c. Stamp. .yon Mfg. Co.. 40 South Fifth St.. Brooklyn. N. Y. o NOTICE.. I have at Toddville 3 clamps and pine logs. Owner can get same ?: proving and paying charges. JOHN H. DUNCAN, t Toddville, S. C.