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r I By Twelve UL'tlT* I Bottles of I IU\v B / _ _....* Greatest Human Vitalizer * "During the winters of 1897 and 185)8, i was so bauiy uiflici.eu \ with catarrh of tho head and ' i thought 1 must surely die from it. After trying many doctors and all other recommondcd remedies made known to mo, I was Induced to nso Peruna. I was eared entirely by using twelve bottles of Detuna and one bottle of Manalin. Since that time, I havo never been without Peruna. I use it ^ for eolds and as a general tonle daring Spring and Fall months and find it the greatest human Vitalizer." \ Sold Everywhere WANTS S. C; TO , HAVE RIFLE TEAM : i rWith the idea of promoting rifle practice throughout the State, looker p to a preparation for military unv?i/.n -.11 A 1- it-_ .1 "> i ?n.u <in wuu us luwurus uie uuvolopmcnt of outdoor sports, Adjutant General W. W. Moore is sending out information and urging the organization in the State of rifle clubs, which he hopes will result in South ^ -..Carolina's having a crack team at tlV National Rifle Club's compcti' t on in August.. Each State in the union is allowed to send one team of 17 members to the national rifle meet, and ?n addition the nation".! guard or reserve militia, and as wcil J the State military institute, cars fcC/nd one team each. The National & Rifle Club furnishes rifles and am-1 " i Horses a IfeL We still have on hand a nic ( Mnles. Also have in this ^ m buggies. Come and get yc all picked. Jen kin Tabor mm?? ??? i i mmmmmmm mm f \ JNA . Entirely Mr. Wm. A. Htirtnan, 217 % S. Second St., Muskogee, Oklahoma, thus describes his case. Read his letter. Liquid or Tablet Form munition for the clubs organized throughout the country, provided each club has a minimum membership of 10. There are at present rifle clubs at only a few points in the State, Helton, Graniteville, Mt. Pleasant, Edisto Island and Lindhurst being among the number. The adjutant general hopes to be able to arouse sufficient interest in the club idea as to have i\ least one club for each county. The National Rifle Club furnishes one rifle for every five members of these civilian clubs, provided each ?1,,U 1 ? 4. 1 4. 4 1 14. I'lUU llttlS UL IOM IIIOIT1IJUI 5S. It n'so furnishes the ammunition for target practice. There is an admission fee of $10 a year for club members. The local clubs now in existence conduct target practices, and coptest;, and the plan is that from the winners in these contests a State t< am will bo selected for the national T a pipe in your face that's fille lbert, if you're on the trail of sn you a song of tobacco joy that ob was to see how much of tl I get away with every twenty-1 iucan "carry on" with Prince A1 II be after laying down a smok< think of the old front line in Fr A. never tires your taste becau slip into your think-tank that I 3atented process that cuts out you can hit smoke-record-hig r week without any comeback 1 Reynolds Tobacco Compa iri Mules :e selection of Horses and veek a car lop*d of Virginia >ur choice before they arc s Bros. , N. C. THE HORRY HERALD, COW irom petition. I Shoot in New Jersey. I The exact place for the 1919 rifle contest has not been selected, but tentative plans call for it being held near Caldwell, N. J. The contest will be under the direction of the secretary of the navy, or in case ho cannot attend the shoot, Wm. C. | Harllee, of the United States Marine Corps, will be the executive officer of the contest. Adjutant General W. W. Moore is a member of the national club. The exact date of the national shoot, which is set for August, will be announced at an early t date. Expenses All Paid. The expenses of the State teams to this national contest are paid by the federal government. Adjutant General Moore is very anxious for a strong team to represent this State, and he is urging that county clubs be organized, from which will be selected the best shots in the State to bo sent to the New Jersey contest. In addition to the State team, there may also be a team from the National Guard, or from the resei-ve is militia, if in time, and a team too^ from the Citadel, or else from Clem !' son College, thus allowing the > Stc'e's military schools to be reprerr ntod. * 1 < In speaking of the plans for pro- . moting rifle clubs, Adjutant General j Moore stated that he believed such i L 11 1 1 ' uigiinizawon.s wouki uo niucn 10- < words promoting one of the best ! forms of sport, and would also give men a certain amount of military training. | illj ' lin''1' N^Ifl I28! Tobacco Co. H! sill' 11J iiifii, pr, || |J Toppy red bage, tidy .( j red tine, handsome pound ilj j||l and half-pound tin humi i' ill dors? and?that clasay, W |)||i practical pound crystal ' ,j11 glass humidor u/ith .( sponge moistener top that keeps the tobacco in such perfect condition, d cheerily brimful of Prince noke peace! For, P. A. will : will make you wish your le national joy smoke you j four hours! bert through thick and thin. ^ barrage that'll make the arice! se it has the quality! And, D. A. is made by our exclubite and parch?assurance h-spots seven days out of but real smoke joy! iny, Winston-Salem, N. C. IN LOVING REMEMBRANCE. Mrs. Elcatha Edwards, the wife of James Edwards, was bom Doc. 25th, 1898 and died March 2Gth, 19l9. She was 20 years and 3 months of age. She was the daughter of W. H. Small of Loris, S. C. She was married to Mr. Edwards last Spring and went away to Greenville, S. C. Coming heme on a visit, before reaching her father, she was taken with Pneumonia and died. She was a loving land a devoted wife, leaving a husband, one child, father, stop-mother and several brothers and sisters co mourn the loss. Dear Eleatha is gone from us to return no more. It is our loss, but her eternal gain, it was hard to part from her. It almost breaks our heart, but on that bright and shining street God grant that wc shall meet. A Loving Friend, X UIIIIIV OIICIIC)'* Tabor, N. C., R. F. D. No. 2. o Orders made public by Gen. March, chief of staff, provide for the organ- j i'/.ation of the regular army at a j peace strength of 509,000 officers 1 and men. > > yAY, g 0 , APRIL 17, 1919 NECESSITY OF WAR REVIVING METHODS "or Preserving Vegetables and Making Easy of Handling < and Shipping ? ] 3ERMAN SUBMARINE IT MAY BE SAID ; Brought up Again the Method , of Drying for Preserving. i i The German submarine may be < said to have revived the dehydrated < vegetable industry in America, and 0 have started it upon a career of J. vide usefulness and importance. L When millions of men were to he , red by transporting practically ev?iything they ate across the Atlantic Jccan, and when chips were anything but plentiful because of sub- , uarino depredations, the United!, States and the allies realized that* 1 VI 1"! i P >' tlvil U'nillil ?>ni!r.nn KnU ... ... . t . >v? V n VUIM A V. VI VIV \ K> V < I 1\ (IO worthy of consideration. And dehy- j iralion dees reduce both the bulk ?.ml we ight of vegetables by from four-fifths to nine-tenths. Put the drying of vegetables had r.< ver been generally practiced on a ve y large scale and, for a long v.h.ile, even small-scale drying had been practically abondoned. Proper methods in preparing the vegetables v ere not known, and the drying pro- j cess itself was something of a mys- ^ t< 1 y. Suitable manufacturing plants and equipment were hardly to be found at all. The soldiers had never eaten dried vegetables, and army cooks knew next to nothing about how to prepare them. There were difficulties?but they were overcome. Research by expevts of the United States Department of Agriculture and the Sanitary Corps of the Army resulted in standardizing methods of preparation, drying, and packing. It was ascertained that many vegetables could he dried in such way that they would retain their characteristic fla\or and quality, and that the process rendered them non perishable. Millions of pounds of dehydrated vegetables were sent to the armies overseas. i Saves the Surplus. While dehydration was being 1 studied as a means of saving ship 1 tonnage, it gained recognition as a means of conserving the surplus of perishable vegetable crops, permitting increased production and at the , . e:... _ A 1 * A :r- .mu mm: I lie mai'lCCl, CX lending 11?c use of vegetables through out the year, making shipment possible to any part of the country or to foicign count)ies at no increase in cost to the consumer. I I The dehydration of vegetables is a promising industry, but the United States Dcparmtent of Agriculture ! warns that it is not to be undertaken I without careful consido ation of cvciy facto- that may contribute to sue! cess or failure. Some of the essen-j tials are: Sound, fresh materials rig ! idly inspected and graded, scrupulous ; care in every detail of paring, trim- i n ing, steaming, and other preparatory processes, and intelligent oversight of the drying process itself. Those details attended to, it is possible to use successfully any one ?>f several types of drying apparatus, though it must be one in winch it is easy to obtain steady, uniform air currents over every part of the drying material, while complete control of the temperatures is retained. The [drier must he of the unit type, each unit capable of operation independently of the others. This is neces- j , snry in order that the plane may be operated at part capacity, as will of- j l< n be necessary, without the ex-, pense of keeping the entire plant going. The drier must be comparatively inexpensive, as dehydrated vegetables must win their way into popular favor not only by excellent quality but by low cost. Tunnel Dryer Relieved Best. The Strong Withstand the Winter Cold Better Than the Weak You must have Health, Strength and Endurance to fitfht Colds. Grin and Influan^a. When your blood is not In a healthy condition and does not circulate properly, your system ia unable to withstand the Winter cold. GROVE'S TASTELESS Chill TONIC Fortifies the System Against Colds, Grip and Influenza by Purifying and Enriching the Blood. It contains the well-known tonic properties of Quinine and Iron in a form { acceptable to the most delicate stomach, : ind i9 pleasant to take. You can soon feel j its Strengthening, Invigorating Effect. 60c. FORMER EMPEROR TO FAOE ACCUSERS Paris.?The responsibility of the German emperor for the war and the means of bringing him to trial bv one of the allied governments, probably Belgium, have been definitely determined upon by the council of four. This follows the definite decision on the terms of reparation for war damages, whereby $5,000,(100 p.tu t bo paid within the next two years, and an interallied commission assess the remaining damage for a period of 30 years, beginning May 1, J 921. Thus two of the great obstacles which stood in the path of the rapid attainment of peace have been r. moved within the last 24 hours, and the period of extreme tension over the inaction and the failure to secure tangible results is succeeded by revived confidence over the great advance made towards a permanent settlement. How far these results yrc due to the intimations conveyed to the summoning to France of the United States transport George Washington by President Wilson is only conjectural, but it is at least n coincidence that the main difficulties began, to dissolve from the time that this decision became known. The exact nature of these difficulties arc not disclosed. Friends of the president maintain that they v ere largely of a minor character, not involving large principles, though the president's adherence to his "14 points" as tho rigid limita- | tu n of the scope of action appears to j have run all through the delibera- | tions during the tense period of the last few days. While the tension has been greatly ITlilK'f'il it W lii?t f>??tivnl\f mmrtw. 1 Cil. as much depends on the continun- ! tion of progress with respect to the remaining obstacles, notably th?4 Sarre Valley, the Rhine frontier, the Adriatic issue and a number of lessor issues which are still short of final agreement. Tim agreement on responsibilities for the war is understood to have been a compromise between divided reports presented by the commission, of which Secretary Lansing is chairman. There was a practical agreement on the general respon.dtviity of the German emperor for bringing on the war, but division e.cleurred on whether it was feasible to i bring hini to justice before an international tribunal. The French and I?i itish view favored a tribunal, but. the American j v.ew, it is understood, favored moral indictment without recourse to pros ecution, owing to I ho lack of an international law as a basis for tri d before an international court. 1 Belgium, on which the war fell first and heaviest, is reported to have taken a view much similar t-that of the United States, while Japan and Italv wore nartinllv in nc cord with the American view. It was owing* to these diverged Viewpoints that the council devi ed a now plan, whorehy one of the al lied nations, probably Ilelgium, would initiate persecution against the foimer emperor and others responsible for the breach of treat!o , the invasion of territory and the deist 1 action directed against this country and leading to a more general spread of the war. The exact nature of the agreement is not disclosed, lot the foregoing is believed to eov or the main lines. In any given district, a dehydration plant will serve as a safety valve for the fresh vegetable market. Its output will increase or decrease with the rise or fall of prices of l res h materials. Occasionally, because o*' crop shortage or high prices, ii may bo necessary to suspend entirely for a eason. Such possibilities render large investment in plant illadvised. The Department of Agriculture belivees that the exacting con ditions arc more nearly met by the tunnel type of drier than by any other thus far investigated. Any district which is engaged in general vegetable growing and which regularly produces more of each of its leading crops than the accessible mvnkotK ran absorb at crood prices should look into the possibil| ities of drying its surplus as a means ,of extending the market and stabilixI inft the industry. Thus far it can not be said that any stable market for dehydrated vegetables has been established in this country. Wholesale and retail dealers are waiting to learn more about them, but a few large firms are handling them. A good deal of "selling work" is still necessary, and any group of growers should investigate the possibilities for an assured market before estbalbishing a plant. 1 MCT TOM SAYS KAISER COULD HAVE HELD THRONE Had Enough Loyal Troops to Have Crushed the Revolution ARMY CHIEFS WERE DIVIDED IN VIEWS Hmdenburg Would Not Tako Responsibility for Civil War. Berlin.?While admitting there was a difference of opinion among German generals as to the practicability of fighting to maintain the imperial regime in November, Count Schulenburg, commander of a guards regiment. maintains in an article on the abdication of Ehnperor William, published in the Froihoit, that there were enough loyal troops to have marched 011 Aux-La-Chapollc and Cologne an 1 put down the revolution. The count says that Field Marshal Hindenburg ami General Crooner, Prussian wai minister, would not assume the responsibility for such a move, however. arguing that things had gone too far ami that only the abdication of former Emperor William could s; \ e the situation. The emprror, he says, was emphatic in declaring ho diil not desire a civil war and that he would not call upon the army to cn| gage in such conflict. I Internal conditions becoming worse, William at length agreed to Count Schulenberg's advice to abdicate as emperor but not as lung of Prussia. Field Marhal Hindcnbuig indorsed this course but in the opinion of Cum. Crooner it was too late, although it might have saved the situation two weeks earlier. Count Sehulcnberg says that William's flight to Holland was duo to pressure brought to hear on him by Field Marshal Von Hindenburg and Ccnoral Crooner. i Wrong, Says Hindenburg. Copenhagen.?A statement by Field Marshal Von Hindenburg on the article written by Count Sclni- .,/ lenlrurg, circulated by the semi-official Wolff Bureau of Berlin, says that the article has "one sided tendoncies and is not objectively correct." "It contains material errors and inaccuracies regarding the views and utterances of the persons concerned," I the stater.v nl adds, "and nrove< thni Si.hulonberg was not adequately int' viiicd on the real situation." The field marshal disclaims any intention of engaging* in a newspaper < r.ti'ovrjsy :is the event has been recorded officially in the reports of the sememe army command. OMrSARMT BELOW THE LIMIT Paris.?The proposed limitation of Clerman armament has at present for the German.^, largely an academic inU rest, as the dependable forces which the State and private enterprises have been able to raise by an incessant advertising; campaign and oilers of good pay and bonuses to volunteers do not reach the lowest figures mentioned in reports as to ; the size of the army to be allowed j Germany by the peace conference, acta i ding to the latent advices from German sources. The Socialists, hi addition, retain their old objections to militarism and are not enthusiastic ahout even the proposed popular militia on the Swiss model. An exception to the general Socialist attitude, however, is furnished by the Socialist war minister, Gustav Noske, who has expressed the opinion that .in case of iinfnvn?>Wo pence, which he anticipates, the army must as quickly as possible be brought to a state of the highest efficiency for a new war. A begin oVtftiiWl i>-?'?<!. > in r%f \ * ' "' -) ? - If err Noske, with the development ot the militia army, side by side with which should go a campaign for the hardening and strengthening of the people by altering the school courses so as to give the coming generation more time out of doors and the enc< uragoment of open air exercises and sports. - a. A young electrician by the name of Thomas was killed at Pacolot i Mills when he came in contact with j one of the large power wires and [was knocked from a 10 foot ladder.