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In our first' tion we were : lack of statioi r 1 equipment, but ' ly gotten in ne and are now handle all busii c!er the head o < irig. We ask f tunity to serve 1 il both chcckin ' accounts. IT IS THE l*' BANK TO Gl\ b VICE. DEATH RATTLE OF T CALOMEL IN SOUTfc Dodson is Destroying Sale o\ Dangerous Drug with His <fLiver Tone.M ['V ;;i-Y ^1'. V n> -? I i You're bilious, sluggish, consti pated and believe you need vile, dan gerous calomel to start your live; > and clean your bowels. Here's Dodson's guarantee! ; your druggist for a bottle of Docl son's Liver Tone and take a spooiifu tonight. If it doesn't start your live; and straighten you right up bettei than calomel and without making yoi f' sick I want you to go back to the { store and get your money. Take calomel today and tomorrow you will feel weak and sick 'and nauseated. Don't lose a day's work Take a spoonful of har/nless, vegetable Dodson's Liver Tone tonight an< wake up feeling great. Ifs perfectly harmless, so give it to your childrer any time. It can't salivate so lei them eat anything afterwards.?ad li - SHORTAGE OMiEN HANDICAP TO NAVY Captain Palmer Testifies in inquiry on Stand oT Daniels. . I ? Washington,?Capt. Leigh C. Palmer, who as chief of the bureau of navigation during the war was reJ. I. ( ^Jransp '' SAVE TIME, LABOR Al ER PL > ALSO LINE OF HAND TR/ (fETERS AND LANTRNS. FOR Si Horry Hart CONWAY # / weeks of operahandicapped bv nery and office ; we have final cessary supplies i prepared to ness coming unf General Bankfor an opporyou. Wc solicig and Savings ? AIM OF THIS fE GOOD SER J iwwi i mm n rM ii ii n i i i xtiks:-. sponsible for obtaining and distribu. ing officers and men, testified todaj that h shortage of personnel was ilhe American "navy's initial handicap in the war." Appearing before the senate com mitt cos investigating Rc?ar Admira1 Sims' charges against the navy dof partment, Captain Palme)* said Secre tary Daniels was responsible for the alleged shortage because of his "procrastination" prior to the entry of , this country into the conflict. Mr. Daniels consistently opposed ! the building up of a strong naval i - reserve forco before the war, the , - navigation chief asserted although j r r.aval offiars Had warned the secretary that after war was declared it ! : would be too late to obtain and - tiain the men necessary. The sec 1 rotary however, always favored r and strongly supported recruiting i* for the regular navy and afior wai ; I W.1S fliil ? ^vi urn UYV;I JUUII|^ | i ble to stimulate it, the witness said. l'o added that "this however, wa;1 r very different from the policy Mr. - Daniels adopted towards the reserve . force." Illustrating' what he declare ! was ' Ij refusal by Secretary Daniels t> loci: > I forward to the navy's 1remcn?leue s war time experision, Cantain Ps'mv L cited the construction of barracks at ! { the Great Lakes Training stutio . i.fter Secretary Daniels h.ad failed * >.j act on his recommendation Captain j Palmer said he ordered the barrack; ! built 011 his own authority and the", t \ told congress about it. Later an even ; greater expansion was found neces- i wry at this station he said. Captain Palmer aaid he cocml ' n~t | agree with Mr. Daniels prim.uTy [ 1 because the secretary "could not soc | Hiings from the viewpoint of the ! naval man" j Capt. Joseph K. Tauseig and Rear: j Admiral C. P. Phinkett, will testify. < - 1 ) Grove's tasteless chill Tonic | :; restores vitality nnd energy by purifying and en 11 riching the blood. You can soon feel its 6'rength- [ 1 ~nlng. Invigorating Effect. Price GOc. j. I II ?? ( ( ! h nor jAdt 'i lanters si MD GIVE YOU STRONG- ' \Vi ANTS : I ! Vf iNSPLANTERS, THERMOM- ! ^ ' Si St; vc \LE BY a | Tr Jware Co. 1 s c . r1 ? ?' v. 4 V i ?A< am \ ^ THE HOBBY HERALD. CON\ iion. w. Mcdonald National Director for the C World Wide SHOWS NEED FOR i NTCRVifeW with director W. | Mcdonald use. LAW ENFORCEMENT FIRST \ ' ,99,000,000 To Be Spent In Fighting Bolshevism By Americanizing Foreigners. ( W. McDonald Lee, National Direc- , tor of the great campaign launched | by the Anti-Saloon League of America, j has made the following statement i ^ showing the objects of the campaign. : < why it is necessary, and to what pur- * poses the funds raised will be de- | voted. x 3 "We have three great aims in this ? campaign," declared Mr. Lee, "all ot j which will appeal to every patriotic \ American who has the welfare of his \ own country at heart and any regard for the moral and spiritual welfare , and progress of our neighboring na- t tions. These aims are as follows: < (J.) To aid home Law Enforcement t (requiring about, nine million). \ (2) To Americanize the Foreigner T (requiring about nine million). i (3) A Dry World by 11)30 (including r Mexico and West Indies). c "A fourth of the money raised in c the campaign is to he left in the State t for object one, "Law Enforcement," which means creating public senti- 3 mout for observance of law, and de- i mand for officers who will enforce the ; t law. Internal Revenue Commissioner ' 3 Daniel Roper and Federal and State j p officers nearly everywhere invite such ' v co-operation by our organization and n Bimilar ones. Liquor interests have a organized?it la \*?ov? ^^" _ ? .Tinm. vivu,UUU,l/UU j fund?twenty-four States, in effort to : p elect a Congress that will increase al- u Boholic contents from one-fourth of | j] one per cent, to ten, or oven forty y ?er cent., and thu* defeat the aims w )f Prohibition and nullify the Eight- ci *nth amendment. 1 ' 'HYSICAL EXAMS Z TAKEN IN COLLEGES S | nil Taking- the action cf the bmver- j jnj ty of South Carolina at Columbia sc] a standard by which all colleges ! . i the State would be cooperating in ^ better health program, Philip B. ^ ramer, Executive Secretary of the j rnth Carolina Tuberculosis Associa- ^ on, sent a query to the heads of the irinns rvhirni.ionnl institutions as to eir methods of safeguarding the j(^1 udent body from disease. His ; atement of the fact that the uni- \ rsily in the capitol city had passed law, appi oved by the Board of i ' jpl ustces, compelling: all student to , dergo at least two physical exam-! "f itions each year ? 'C(' other col- j jes to plan for the adoption of 1 nilar requirements. Out of twenty replies, six co'Iogo1-- "n(J sorted such examinations now boX held and fourteen had no law (1 . . jept thai entrance examinations j ar.d :l doctor's certificates wevo re- wee VAY, S. 0., APRIL 8, 1920. ' LEE OF VIRGINIA, ampaign for National and Prohibition "Another fourth of the money, for object two, goes to the Anti-Saloon League of America for work among aliens in this country. We must mako ;ood and law-abiding citizens of those foreigners who stay with us, through sducation, literature and Rpeakers in the only language they may know. While harangued by anarchists and booze-advocates they remain a menace to our institutions. These scattered colonies within our borders can be reached only through the systematic and studied propaganda of the National Leagne. "Such of the remainder of the funds as may be determined by the "Slate and National Leagues Is to be devoted to object three. All the wnrli9 n >ur neighbor. Five critical years have demonstrated that we are vitally af Cocted by conditions elsewhere 011 the Siobe. One dollar's worth of liquof will counteract a hundred dollars ot ilie money so generously given to missions by Bapitsts, Methodists, Presbyterians, Episcopalians and othei-s. Let's help make effective these missionary gifts. The missionary pleads 'or gut help against the emigrating Iqnor dealer and his wares that are lurrying to other shores. 'Tinder objects one and two the \nti-Saloon League seeks to remove he cause that ,Y. M. C. A., Red Cross, Salvation Army and other noble bodies ire earnestly striving to remedy. Vtyth uw enforcement, proper education i.nd cmoval of temptation there will be ess poverty, fewer dens'' of vice, ?? edomption from misery to women and hiUlren, and the work of those great rganlzations will be made easier and he quicker accomplished. "Under object three it will be possible to "clean up" Cuba and the iahamas from the liquor and vice con* agion that is already affecting our hores. Mexico also, because of which robably a hundred million dollars a ear is spent by our American Govern. ~ 1 *1 icui u) lvc-cp cue* peace, would be lees disturbing element if drink wore bollshed and this can be accom llshed. As an aid in preventing olshevism from spreading to our bores, some countries of the Old /orld should be made acquainted ith ou? customs and laws and their itizens taught to respect such before migrating here." iired. Eight of the fourteen stated tentions of proceeding in the same rcctions as the University of South irolina. All of the responses heary approved of .such a course and the college leaders were for look? after the physical side of the mo! life. While seeking information Mr.? Elmer told his view of the examinon rule, writing "On the face of this is a splendid ruling. It not ly brings out defects in the young n which would probably never he i ind until loo ialo lo be /0*m0uieu, '< : would safeguard the masses of < students from irmoccx-sary con- ' t with contagious diseases. Three ( ics during the past year informa- ] . 1 i i cas dcen given this o.Cficc tbat ci'culosis has born contract d by student sleeping with another > bad it, but a - physical exnmiions were not required it was un-' \vn to his rooininatcx" <k V t. t>. Jenkins wm in Ceo-got wi s Williamsburg conn :cs 1 s' !' :k. H t \ SMALL GRAIN SMUTS Production of Small-Grain Crops Can Be Increased by Proper Method. Small grain smuts may be destroyed very easily by seed treatment, say* the botany and plant pathology divi < sion of Clemson College. There waa a lose of 5 to 10 per cent of our small grain crops in South Carolina last year due to smuts. In view of the fact that grains are of very great importance at this time, and in most cases seed from last year's crop is to be used, it is urged that the seed be treated before planting. Enough! seed to sow an acre can be treated for flvo rr> t v yet it may save the farmer a;* hi0h a'? $>20 for every acre of graiu planted. i . . ... i uye is not sivnject so to smuts, but!, to prevent smuts of oats, barley and wheat use only the very best seed obtainable, and before treating be sure to have, if possible, the seed passed through a fanning mill to remove light imperfect kernels and any smul balls that may not have been remove;, at the time of thrashing. For chemical treatment of seed the! following methods have been founli | to be most effective: (1) Take an old molasses or oil barrel, clean well and fill about two thirds full with formalin solution?' one pint of fonnadeliyde to forty gallons of water. Place about a bushel, of seed in a bag and tie near the toy so that the seed will have free move , ment within the bath. Allow each bag to soak in the solution for about ten or P.fte n minutes. After treat ing from fifteen to twcnlv bushels a new bath should be prepared. As' fast as the sacks of seed are treated) ! and allowed to drip they should be | emptied into a pile and allowed to re-j main over night The seed should! : then bo planted at once or dried tC| prevent damor;e. (?) Plaeo thd heed in a pile or? the or in one e-,ul of a wagon body, | 'V<d as you gradually shovel from on<: j pile to n new one the seed should he j sprinkled wl'h the formalin solution j The sbove'ing mul sprinkling of the j seed should be repeated until the seed j are thorou*rhdy damp. Then place j damp ba'"? over the piles and allow tc remain ever "ight. The former treatment is preferable and gives bettor results as the seed r.r"0 more likely to he thoroughly wot. I Yhe above methods may he varied b$ . the use of Milestone (one pound o! \ r>?uestone to four or fl vo gallons ol j water) instead of formaldehyde. Thr i bluestone is likely, however. to prove i more injurious to germination, csoe [ cialiy oat. seed. Materials for making ? the solutions may he purchased at n i ! drug store. i j THE COUNTRY CHURCH j ' Should Serve ttself and farmers by Promoting Progressive Farming. Just as no stream can possibly rise higher than JU source so no church can make progress faster than its people, says l)r. W. 11. Mills, a well-i known Presbyterian minister and pro j fessor of rural sociology at Clemson | 'College. The piety ami spirituality of! the church are in direct proportion to the piety a:?d spirituality in the homes {and in the live; ol' its members. So; also, tlie intelligence and vigor which j the church shows hi supporting the work of its rienominatio \ indicate the average intrfligence and iinancial ai>iiSty of ihe people c.f its congregation ; A live proven meeting allows that sorno members pray at home; a grow: ing Sunday school shows that the people are interested in the welfare of the children and the study of the Bible. Small gifts to missions must mean little interest in missions or little ability to give. i The Country Church and Agriculture. The country church must be inter esitui in good roads, for upon tho | roads the church attendance largely j; depends; in crops, for upon their yield the church income depends. Thus the ( church roots itself in the lives of ^ the people and unfailingly declares ; the prosperity of the community, whether the soil is rich and well pre pared, or poor, stony and neglected. 1 There is an intimate relation between * a prosperous agriculture and a prosperous church. Suppose the crops are in need of 1 rain, petitions are sent up for refresh- ! ing showers. But again, crops wilt ] from bad farm practice?the soil is ;i not in proper condition to retain moisture. Then ought not the church to be interested and take part in teach- ! ing those who can correct this bad farm management and show the way m to more profitable yields? Since opportune rains, the direct gift of God, ? and good farming, the result of sciontifie teaching, alike produce more bi abundant harvests, out of which the church Income is paid, the church r should have a vital interest in both I should not neglect "J"1"*' ???,> Dblaln the rain in answer to prayer; It can secure the larger income from correct farm management only, as if urges its people to heed such teach lugs. Hnbitya1. Cc>nr?lf1?it!cn Cui^ri lr* 1 ' to 21 Dnyn U I.AX-l-'OS WITi I ITS '[>r is n : ivicinlly. ! " re pa red S y . p 'i'or. i - J ixativo for Habitual u oust ipat ion. It r.!i.;- a promptly but P? houkl bo taken rcOd -v!y fi ; 14 to 21 days vU > induce regular nctirn. U !r timu! ite and cgulateo. Very Pleasant *.o fake. t>0c r bottle. **' PAGE THREE STORM DISTRICTS RECOVER RAPIDLY Swept by Tornadoes Sunday With Loss of 153 Lives and Big Damage PROPERTY LOSS FROM 10 TO 15 MILLIONS Estimates in 8 States Affected? Relief Committees Busy. Chicnf-'O.i Districts of ihc M!<U!o West fuvl Snnfl* Mi"*"1- ' ** 4? 1 mv iuri:an xcs Sunday with a lors of l~3 Ives wore recovering rapidly today and rebuilt hemes and buildings began to rise from the vreel:age. Comrnltb en were organized throughou. t'.e stricken areas to cave for the thousands of homeless i ml injured and funds were being ai Chi for relief an 1 re von true'ion ?voik. pevty Ions suffered in the r;l states affected was estimated ul from $10, 00,000 t > $1". 000,000. With wire cemniuni lion restored and repc Is from praeti ally all is >'. ted. vegiens it wan believe 1 the ,5":vli list would not be changed mate. lady. rub'd- funerals for tornado vic. irr.r wo e held in a number of commi i.ities. The li'-l of dead by states follow: Indiana 37, Illinois 27, Ohio 30, M'.thig ui 12, Georgia 32,. Alabama 12, Nebia-ka 1, Missouri 1, Wisconsin 1. While the hundreds of hcmelesB were h used temporarily in the wrecked. districts of CS i"ago and suburbs, campaigns for relief funds totalling several bundled thousand dollars were opened and collections were authorized at public meetings and in schools and churches. |USE MANURE ON YOUR GARDEN LANDS American gardeners could wc'l afford t'? Ica.ii a. lesson from the French gardener> regarding the us* oc manure op. their land. In some cases where French gardeners are j working on rented land, a clause in tho lease provides that should the i 1 i r he : eqeired to vacate the 'and in? i" p e mitted to renovc the p roil to a specified depth. It is internal,.- la arp'y anywhere from ' to 8 inches oi manure a year o?i F each pardons.- Tins is composte I rd laiye } with the >\il and in the vurso (f a few weeks becomes a part of the soil itsc'f. It is needier j to state that r mo enormoi n ' ( p arc grown on this land. While it v.\ uUi not he possible for \mericoa godoners to secure .?uffi'eui; quantities of manure to apply i at the rate that i; use 1 by the French gardeneis, yet an effort should he ma le to secure as much of 'his, matcrta! as possil le and put it h'rectly upon the land where intcnso crops are to ho grown. Tha dan of having a compost heap in ?ne corner of tho garden where everything in tho nature of manure rn be piled and composte<l together j; a good one. Into this pile should all woods that do nqt bear obtctioi able sood , pieces of sod, clipnngs from tho lawn, loaves and maIII p livf hn?ni?<. ...> vun.i.ig nit* pue ui i literals, a rich, mellow material is prouced which is suitable for top ess'ng the garden soil. Owing to l:e limited quantity of manure avail ble at piesent its use should bo roll icted to there crops that make a nick growth and require plenty of rthity in the soil. a 1 y. F. Shannon was among tho faricrs coming into town last Satin-iiy and spending some time here on usincss. )ye That Skirtr Coat or Blouse "Diamond Dyes" Make Old, Shabby, Faded Apparel Just Like New. Don't worry about porfoet results, s o "Diamond Dyes," guaranteed to givo new, rich, fadeless color to any fabric, briber wool, Milk, linen, cotton or mixed tods, -dresses, blouses, stockings, skirts, ildrcn'/j coats, draperies,?everything! A Direction Hook is in pnekage. . To match any material, have dealer ? ow you ' Diamond Dye** Color Card. *