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the Chesterfield Advertiser PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY _________ Subscription. 11.00 a year. Advertising rates furnished on appll cation. Entered as second-class matter at the postofflee at Chesterfield. South Cure _ / ilna. PAUL H. 11 EARN Editor and Publisher. RAGSDALE ON THE WAR Hon. J. Willard Rajrsdale, one of South Carolina's brilliant congress men, made a speech in Congress which was heartily applauded for its vigorous aproval of \he declaration of war against Germany. Mr. Rausdale is a member of the committe that "c ported the war resolution that was adopted almost unanimously. Mr. Rausdale said in part: "1 come from a State that does no want war, but we do not want reconsider once we tro to war. The President of the United States he said there must be war. There war, and we say there is war by ti? declaration. When we take that position, so far as I am concerned it means that every particle of pow-i that I should irive from my State t this Government to defend that 11.. at home, on the hiirh seas, or e! where, shall be jjiven. 1 la id w I hose with whom w.- liyh' < ! in;, under the sun, and all tie- aid ia m\ power shall be vrivon to the !'r? -idea cw i > ( i: <u mis ? u I Li' ?i Mi? : >i ill nil elusion in order that that flag tun be what it has been in the pa.-', a 11;. that fears no foeman, a flag -i) w: be waved in the face <>f Imper al Ger many and not kept at lr :ne -vhei ' shells may not reach the ham's tha hold it." There is a proposition before Conpress to erect a George Washing: m Memorial building. With a big w; . on our hands this memorial buildiiv oupht to wait. Georpe would say . > himself if he were living. The Frankfurter Zeitung admit that Germany is responsible for the war between the United States and Germany. In March, 1017, this pa per said: "President Wilson brok. olf diplomatic relations with Germany not in preparation for war, but t< avoid war. The President does no, want war." If the kaiser does no; get this editor it is because ho is to> busy watching the retreat of his arnn under Von Hindenburg. , ?i?. u. i?i u and wants to quit. It is possible that she is benrinint* to realize that her possessions, won by conquest, mav soon assume the nature of a jfob. brick. SOUTH IS ON THE JOB Thouyh it is well to bear in mind the words of Major \Y. J. Tiller. "The work is not clone; it's only just be^un," the following statement from Carl Vrooman, assistant secretary of agriculture, is encouratrinjr. lie says; "The South is fully alive to the tremendous importance of the duty Oi supplying itself with its own food and feed. Moreover, the South has bejrun the work of nre:unizinj^ and mobilizing an army of food producers and food conservers which bids fair t< contribute vitally to the part w'rl^.,, the United States must play in fuj.n l^^^^^i^i^^oodU^U^dMmn^^hereve,. > ic. "For the next six <>r ei^rht month this war is jroinj; to he a food \?; 1 . and every citizen who contributes t<. the production of food or who pv? vents the wastinr of food is doiin something that counts. '1 he sacrifices of labor which every class in the South will make in this jrreat campaign to yrrow and save food will lie more effective in bringing this war to a victorious end than any other* single thinj; that can he done. lankily in this work financial sacrifices hiv not demanded as food crops pr ?h ihly will sell at higher relative price;; than any other crops. Our allies want. food. We can supply food to them. But first we must make every section of this country a - nearly as possible self-sustaining so far as foodstuffs are concerned. "* * * The federal Kovernment's first demand on the Son I; is for food. Her patriotism will he measured by her response to this d" j^^mand." SEES MUCH HOPE IN VELVET BEAN To the Editor of The State: It is deeply to he regretted that Secretary of Agriculture Houston, in his able advice to the farmers of the country to increase *iie production of food crops, failed to urge the cotton | farmers of the South to plant velvet I beans of the early maturing varieties in every acre of their corn. There is .To other crop which offers such trenendous additions to food crops in the cotton belt as velvet beans in corn j since they not only increase the yield f corn by supplying it with the surplus nitrogen gathered from the air, but yield as many bushels of beans :s corn. Each bushel of beans in the pod is worth in feeding value for all classes of farm stock one and a third bushels of corn. In many cases, the yield of beans in this section the past -oason has been two and three times the yield of corn. High Feeding Value. As a feed for animals velvet bean meal is superior either to corn or to bran. Wheat bran is selling for $40 per ton at the mills, with high freight rates, while velvet bean meal is selling around $32 a Ion, delivered. In order, however, to realize on civet beans as stock feed, it is not sary to grind them. They can >o fed in the pod without treatment of any kind, or they can be soaked for 2 1 hours, which softens the hard ans. so that more will he digested; hey c in be placed in a vat, covered itn water, and live steam turned in '?>; an hour, cooking them, and the . ' hed beans wiil be more digestable; r. ?a"lo can be turned in the field .i,d will eat both vines and beans. If his latter plan is followed, hogs hould follow the cattle to get the leans that shatter. Soil i>uilding Crop. | Velvet beans have an enormous root system, penetrating the soil to a 1< pth id three or more feet, and thus nave a wide feeding radius. In addiion to sub?soiling the land, they .nuke considerable amounts of tile miiuTal plant food in the soil available for the crop that follows, ami atiny are the most vigorous ?>f the ummer nitrogen gathering crops, will it an amount of the free nitrogen of th>> air in the soil, worth from $1" to .< ;o pi r acre! Further, as fully 71 per eont. of all the plant food .11 vines and beans will remain in tlv manur . providing enormous number* of bacteria and a large amount 01 readily available vegetable mattei poor soil will quickly be brou lit up o a fertile condition through theii c.vtensive planting.. Ten bushels of corn per acre will not pay for rent, labor and seed, to -ay nothing of the fertility removed in tin- corn crop. lint ten bushels of corn and J'> bushels of velvet bean ; per acre will be equivalent to a '<<> bushel corn crop, and the soil building velvet beans will put more fertiliy value in the land than the soil robbing corn can take out. Now, Mr, Kditor, the velvet bean is simply a valuable addition to the eorti crop. The corn provides the pole for the velvet bean to run on, and tinvelvet bean more than doubles tile value of the corn. It is preferably planted at the same time as the corn but Can be nroHtnhlv nlnntnd .< as July 1 but six>ui< 1 ho cultivated it least three times. Il does not occupy the land to tin- exclusive of another crop. It will prow and thrive <>n "wilt" and root I.not" infested sue-, where on!' lary cow peas and cotton can not b< successfully provvn. If it s desired to harvest the crop, they can remain in the fields fVffeY * ^rrfT lamape, *"hr!d thus will not compete with cotton for labor. They will prov ide cheaper and better pasturaape in the winter time, and wh -re 'lie crop is prown, that conimunit v111 inevitably raise cattle and hoe. . i'i r mark* t, as well as for home u South Carolina Tests. In lltlo, i secured a )<d of 1M) day ' -d b.-ans in South (jeorpia, and danti d 'Jt>(! acres in corn, in partner Itip with John M. Karroll of I'laei.vi Me, on thin land. In I hit'., ihe onnii prov.n on the land planted to v< ! el h.-an:' the year before showed mar! I improvement and sat : I'm tory increase in yield. Where eor.i followed i rn, \va 'lie he t vr Town in that field. Where oats :ip n v. prowinp after the cotton that followed the velvet hear s, lie crop loo's like a hundred bushels to the acre. Charles J. Martin of lilackvibe ! planted a hundred acres of corn on thin lai.il. vvich velvet beans.. The corn yielded 10 bushels to the acre. Suit the velvet beans yielded when threshed 'J" bushels to the acre, in nlditinn. Mr. Martin could not have cleared expenses with a lb bushel yield '>f corn, but with 20 bushels exi i of velvt i beans, sold at $1.50 per hi he), he made a handsome profi*.' Fie (ells me that the soil is many hades darker as a result of ^rowin r this one crop, and the land is in fine condition for cotton, with economical fertilization. .Fie further states that he is foedinjc the unground beans in | he pod to his horse, and that it was never in finer condition or able to do I so much hard work and stand up well under it. The hulls from the threshed bqans make better rouxhaxe than cottonseed hulls. Or. Matthews laments that he at least half of his corn beans. On the other seven acres, I turned in 40 hogs, and they made big and steady gains and arc in the finest condition. I also grazed my 1 milk cows there all the winter, anil the yield of milk went up right away, and staid up as long as I kept them there. After months of grazing, I still had an enormous amount of vegetable matter to turn under. This year I will plant half of my corn acreage to velvet beans. 1 look to the velvet bean as the best means of fighting the boll weevil. We know that under bell weevil conditions that profitable crops of cotton can only be made on rich land that can be prepared early. We can always prepare : corn and velvet bean land early and we know that as a soil builder, there I is no summer crop better than velvet beans. I wish they had known about these early maturing velvet beans when I was a student at Clemson." Mr. Matthews' brother?Judson?;s equally enthusiastic about the velvet I bean, and will plant a large acreage. rianis 1 houiand Acres. W. I. Johns of Bcldoc has already i planted 1,000 acres of velvet beans : in corn, and states he regards it as the greatest crop ever brought to South Carolina, and one that is sur to make this a great meat produc; ing State. Lawrence Youmans of Fairfax adviaes every farmer to plant velvet beans in his corn. He grew them extensively last year. S. D. M. Guess & Son, J. Konnerly Mayfield, the Sojourners, ('rums ! and a host of others at Denmark, are planting velvet beans extensively, and James Guess, Jr., is requiring J every tenant farmer on his plantation | to plant not less than five acres to the plow because of two years profitable j results. The velvet bean will grow anywhere in South Carolina, on any class of land. It will pave the way to the successful growing of soy beans and peanuts, by increasing the organic matter content, for these crops for good results should be grown on soils containing considerable amounts of readily decomposable organic matit r. It will lessen the cost of produei cotton, because of its ability to gather nitrogen from the air.. As winter pasture it will reduce the amount of eured r<luphapc and prain necessary to finish cattle and hops. II. rvested and fed in tin- pod to work ai <1 other live sloe k it will further reduce the prain and rouphape. CHERAW MAKING PROGRESS Cotton Mill, Ice Plant, Now Passenger and Freight Depots. ? j <'in-raw, April 22.?The Cheraw Hoard of Trade held its iinnuitl meetimr on Thur.-uay eveninp, April |w:th t- president, J. M. Lonp, in the j chair. 'i in- reports from the various commit ices were very interesting and showed ill >1 something of real value has been accomplished for the poo?i of ;1h- town. The committee on newenterprises reported the securinp of an ice plant for Cheraw and this same company will also operate a Hour mill. The Cheraw Oil ?fc Fertilizer company wil lalso operate an ice plant in connection with its other business, lit is at least a fact that the dream of the oldest inhabitant of this town will he realized. Cheraw is j poinp in have a cotton mill and th.it at an early date. Temporary offices 'or this enterprise have been opened in the Bank of Cheraw huildinp on Second street and pround will he broke n and work commenced on the mill within a very few days. i in an educational way the town is jnlsn nuikiny; improvement. The <?!<( i Moillin property on (Irocn str/o-t h;i frrrTrrjinr?ihisec tiyfrre xTustecs of the i :;"i .ule.I school anil another grade wili ' he added. [ Village delivery goes into effect on I May 1, with three deliveries a day 1 in th< business sec'ion and two in he residential. The efforts put forth hy the committee on railroad and frehrht will result in a new passenger depot be. iie' built hy the Atlantic Coast I.ine railrroad, and a new freight ilepo , nearer tin* hu iness part of the town is to he erected hy the Seaboard. The site for thi: latter structure has a! : ready been secured. The president stressed the necesity of impressing the people not ,o overlook tn>- urgent need for an abut; dance of foodstuffs, especially thos t that can la canned and otherwis sept. The canning factory offered in -{ruction and assistance ninny? thi. line. | Plans looking toward the construction of a community ha thi tit? pool were also discussed. There s.re a ! number of suitable streams near i Chcraw which could, with little ex' pensc, he converted info ideal swim lninn pools, thereby lending additional , enchantment to Ihis pleasant pastime, i Before ndj aiming it was moved j and carried that it is the sense of this lax^y that the Administration is I ritfht of) the question of the conscrip- , ; tion hill find that the President should ! win over Congress in support of it i Ho# Could She??A class of little 1 girls, studying drawing, was told by ] the teacher to draw the one thing 1 they most wanted. All got busy except little Myrtle, who remained deep in thought. "What's the matter Myrtle?" asked the teacher. "Don't j you know what you want. "Oh, yes, ma'arj?" replied the child "but I dont ho-vyto , ^jWelU^mtis it^B Germans Ashamed of Cruelty to Belgians Washington, April 21.?A bitter in<lictnient of German brutality in the deportation of conquered Belgians forced labor, written from behind the German lines by Brand Whitlock, American minister to Belgium, was made public tonight by the state department. It came in a confidential report last January when the United States was vainly protesting to Berlin against the treatment of the helpless people, but the department did not dare publish it at that time or until Mr. Whitlock was safe on French soil. The report begins with a story of what happesed immediately after the j army overran Belgium, of arrange- | ments by the Belgian govcrnement to j [continue the wages of civilians thrown out of work and of the conquerors' determination to put these men to work for them. "In August, von Hindenburg was appointed to the supreme command," says the report, "He is said to have criticized von Hissing's policy as too mild. There was a quarrel; von Bissing went to Berlin to protest, threatened to resign hut. did not. He returned and a German official here said that Belgium would now he subjected to a more terrible regime, would learn what war was. The prophesy has been vindicated. Raided Many Districts. "The deportation began in October n the Etapo, at Ghent and at Bruges. ! lie policy spread; the rich industrial districts of llainault, the mines anil steel works about Charleroi were next attacked. Now tin y are seizing men in Brabant, even in Brussels, despite some indications and even predictions of the civil authorities that the policy was about to be abandoned. "As by one of the ironies of life, the winter has been more excessively cold than Belgium has ever known and while many of those who pr?'sented themselves were adequately protected against the cold many o them were without overcoats. The men shivering from cold and fear, the parting from weeping wives and children, ihe barriers of brutal uhlans all this made the scene a pitablc and distressing one. "The rage, the terror and despait excited by the measure all over Bel gium were beyond anything we had wit I t h?? il?v tl?*. poured into Brussels. The delegates of the commission for relief in Bei gium, returning to Brussels, told th most distressing stories of the scene, of crusty and sorrow attending the | seizures. And daily, hourly almost | since that time, appalling stories have been related by Belgians coming to the lego ion. One Of Foulest Deed*. "The well known tendnncy of sensational reports to exaggerate themj selves, especially in time of war and j in a situation like that existing here I with no newspapers to serve as a daily clearing house for all the ru j mors that are as avidly believed as | they are eagerly repeated, should of . course he considered, but. even if a j modicum of all that is told is true there still remains enough to stamp this deed as one of the foulest that history records. "I am constantly in receipt of reports from all over Belgium that tend to hear out stories one constantly hears of brutality and cruelty. A number of men sent hack to Mons arc ' said to he in a dying condition, many of thorn tubercular. At Malines and at Antwerp returned men have died, their friends asserting that they have been victims of neglect and cruelty, of cold, of exposure, of hunger. "1 have hy.d requests from the .'"'W'JVMfrs of the te.7 communes frum ijn I.ouvier asking thai psiTini.s ion hi- obtained to send to the deport.-.' d men in Germany packages of fo<<d similar to those that are beinK sent to prisoners of war. Thus far the German authorities have refused to permit th s except in special instances and returning Belgians claim that even when such packages are received they are used by the camp authorities only as another means of coercimr them to sijrn the agreements to work." Not Paying; Them. . . "It ia said that in spite of the libra! sa'.iry promised those who would sitfn voluntarily no money has yet b<rn received in Belgium from work- j men in Germany. "They have dealt a mortal blow to J any prospect they may ever have had ] of being tolerated by the population j of I-landers; in teaioih away from 1 nearly every humble home in the . land a husband and a father or a son and brother, they have lighted a fire of hatred that will never go out; they have brought home to every heart in the land, in a way that will impress its horror indelibly on the memory of three generations, a realization of what German methods mean, not, as with the early atrocities in the heat, of passion and the first iust of war, Din i>y one of those floods that make one despair of the future of the human race, a deed coldly planned, studiously matured, and deliberately and systematically executed, a deed so cruel that German soldiers are said to have wept in its execution, and So monstrous that even German officers are n<<\v said to be ashamed " Innocent Cut True.?It was the Knfrlish hou\ in the, seventh grade and Johnnie >fad been told to write a sentence u/ng the word "notwithstanding." {When called upon he got and rend: hia . OKFIOh OK g COUNTY SUHEKINTENDE"! I OF EDUCATION It A. HOl'SE | Office often nvcr.v Snlnr ny and thi | irnt Monday of each'month. DK. K. L MoM A iS U *' Di'lltint OfTice over Dank of Chesterfield. Will visit Page land every Tuesday; Other days in Chesterfield. Prices reasonable. All work guaranteed. DR. L. H. TROTTI, Dental Surgeon Chesterfield, S. C. Office on second floor in Ross Building. All who desire my services wil\ ("v?uv ocs iiiv in vjiit'sieniuiu, as l | lave discontinued my visits to other I towns. P. A. MURRA Y, ]r = Ab^iuey and Counsellor At Law Office in Courthouse H A JVM A & HUNLjE} ?A TT<; K N K Y 8? R. K. Hanna C L Hunle Chesi erfield. 8. < . Office ir IVoDiep Hank Building YES! LIFT A CORN OFF WITHOUT PAIN! Cincinnati authority toll* how to dry up a corn or callus so it lifts off with fingers. You corn-postered men and women need suffer no longer. Wear the shoes that neatly killed you before, says thisCincinnuti authority, because i few drops of freestone applied dc. eetlyon a lender, aching corn or eal- lus, stops soreness at once and soon ;lll? I?nm hilPilnnnil ptilltia lnnonne o/v :t can be lifted out, root and all, without pain. A small bottle of Frcczone costs very ittle at any drug store, but will posiively take off every hard or soft corn ?r callus. This should be tried, as it is inexpensive and is said not to irritate the surrounding skin. If your druggist hasn't, any frce'.one tell him to net a small bottle for ^ ou from his wholesale drug house. ! j it is fine stuff and acts like a charm > * very time. 1-Adv. . HOW TO USE THE ROAD DRAG J Clcmson College, S. April. !f a dirt road is properly built, the oad drag will keep it in good condi.ion. Like any other work there is a best way to do it. These rules from the Highway Magazine, tell how to got the right results. * "Use a light drug. * "Haul it over the road at an anode o that a small amount of earth is ( pushed toward the center of the road. "Drive team at a walk. . "Begin at one side of the road, I returning up the opposite si<le. "Drag the road as soon after eveiy rains as possible, but not when the mud is in such condition as to stick to the drag. "Do not drag a dry road. < "Drag whenever possible at all ' seasons of the year. "The width of the traveled way to be maintained by the drag should be from IX to 2(1 feet : first drair a little i more than tin- width of a single wheel traek, then gradually increase until > desired width is obtained. ' "Always drag a little earth toward x the center of the road until it is raised from 10 to 12 inches above t of the traveled way. pP ; J "If the drag cuts ihtich, short- (| on the hit^h.^" I y Tlu^flest results for dragging are ' ?.bfntned only by repeated appliea- P tion." ? i . VOLUNTEERS FOR THE FARM h | v Washington, April 1 0 ? Representative McCormick, of Illinois, to-day introduced a hill for volunteer agricultural army during the war, based ( on the plan worked out by the IJni- .j versity of Illinois, approved by the u conference of agricultural experts at t St. Louis last week and endorsed by Secretary Houston. ft It would enlist volunteers above military age, men of military age, hut C physically unfit for service, and boys over fourteen, if physically fit for farm work, for service on private farms and on government farms. y UGH! CALOMEL MAKES 'i vni ! nCATUI V ct/"ts w I>b.n i liu I ?) 1V, i\ ^ Stop Using The Dnngerout Drug Before It Salivates You! It's f Horrible ! , tl You're bilious, sluggish, constipat- " ed and believe you need vile, danger- " ous calomel to start your liver and ,, i ' clean your bowels. | tl Here's my guarantee! Ask your'y druggist for for a SO-ccnt bottle of i Hudson's Liver Tone and take a f spoonful to-night. If it doesn't start | your liver and straighten you right up better than calomel and without : eriping or making you sick I want you to go back to the store and get J you money. Take calomel to-day and to-morrow ^ you will feel weak and sick and nau- f seated. Don't lose a day's work. < Take a spoonful of harmless, vege- ! 'able Dodson's Liver Tone to-night t *nd wake up fooling great. It's peT- * fectly harmless, *so give it to your j 1 'du^rM^nytiioe. It can't salivate, j iftcdik of "Chesterfield | Oldest Bank In G! e<!erf:eld We solicit your business. We pay interest on time deposit II We Jnvite i(ou to Visit lis Your Patronage wanted. Whether large or small ii will recetve courteous atttn.ion ' SAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES M OUR MOTTO: "STRENGTH AND SECURITY." J R. E. Rivers, President. C. C. Douglass, Cashier. M. J. Hough, Vice-President. D. L. Smith. Assist. Cashier. She Seeple96S^ardi j. J 'l * ESTABLISHED IN 15)11 _. Capita! Stock $25,000 ? U. B. LANKY, 1'ivs. O. I' M ' N' I ? :.-l. G K. LANKY, .1 A CA\ Plil LL. 2 J Vice Prt?S? & Atty. Assistant (Jashnir I We want .your business and will r- it <mi i ;g' ? J When you c me to (" hosiertieltl, cone L ? < n S I pay interest on saving deposits at 11. i l1 ; m per anum tZ7J . i (* l ? -0 * * wicsicmeia, - Douih X . r^ha ? ^ ? ?? o Insure the a Haooiness of Your Little Ones! Any parent charged with neglect of hia children naturally will beiome indignant. Still there arc some parents who, through carelessness, leglect to provide for their welfare. The little ones must be protected. There is no better protection than i bank account. If You Haven't an Account Open One Today For the Children's Sake The FARMER S' BANK SONG WRITER WON IN HURRY I VIEW HEARSE WITH DISTRUST Bridgeport Dentist Met Miss Owen Thursday and They Wed English Farmers Prefer Ordinary on Monday. Wagons forSCoffins at Funeral Services. Hrldfippnrt, Conn.?Solomon Grundy, ?. ^ vlio was horn on Mnntlny, christened London.?The hearse, although by no S in Tuesday, and so on throughout tho means a modern invention, hus not veek to bi-t lunernl on Sunday, had yet penetrated Inlp some of A: ^V,""VS' . ^m..fr~nistrrots of '(ST^ Ml-'sT The coliin of the late duke of Norfolk tnlta Owen, composer of "Daisies when It arrived from Loudon ut his Von't Tell," "Dreamy Kyos," and country estate at Arundel was not put it her sony hits whistled along Drond- -m u hearse, for none wus available my several years ago. there, hut according to custom was After the meeting on Thursday in placed In an ordinary furm wagon and * few York, Doctor Jones invited Miss drawn by four horses to the castle. >wen to a dance here Friday night. jn many parts of agricultural Eng>>n Saturday he proposed, on Sunday the use of a hearse 1h regarded ie was accepted and on Monday they with distrust, the farmers' theory bemro married at the Little Church |?g .that "the Lord's harvest when iround the Corner, thereby cutting gathered should he carried iu tlul lown Mr, Grundy's record by two name way as mail's harvest," ay?. ? j . L. ^ "Love at first sight," was Doctor oiars' explanation. They *iil live at IaOTV'S t ().'{ Golden Hill street. In this city, \vc offer One Hundred 1 hilars Rcpon their return from their wedding want for any im*u of Catarrh that cannot bo cured l?y Hall's Catarrh Cure. Hall's Catarrh Cure, has been taken by coturrh sufferers for tho past IUST ALWAYS BE ON JOB S&J^JSSTSt Catarrh, i tail's Catarrh Cure acts thru hicaao Detectives Called Down for the Wood on the ilutuiis surfaces. ex_ .. ?? p thug tiie 1'otsi.n from ttic lllOod and Reading Newspapers on healing the- diseased portions. Street Cars. After you have tak< n Hall's Catarrh I mru lor h snon nine you will nee a tni. ....... -i .1 . > . I grout improvement in your trener&l hiciigo. OUtslde the privacy Of health. Start taking Halls Catarrh our own apart intuits, the otHco or any Cure at onee and g. t rid of cat<u^lL h.ee Where there isn t a chance you Toledo, OhP^ *' liirhl see people you outfit to he gold by ull DrUK;;icta. 70c. .'utchinjf, don't use your eyes for any liititt else except business." * VOULD HAVE NO TOWN CLOCK Hot.I Keeper Seeks Injunction Agalnrt ACHPDaMee City Timepiece, s.ylng It will n _ . i "" lonomon rowders J Wichita, Kan.?*K. .T. Smnliey, pro rlotor of the CoTonndo hotel, across ^ nign-class remedy for ht^fses ho street from tho city hull, employed ?,,4I *vu!es irt poor condition ar.J ^8 i lawyer to obtain nn Injunction to pre- in nr ed of a tonic. Builds soli.: B rent Mayor Itentley and the commls- muscle and fat; cleanses the ay t doners from Installing a clock in the tern, thereby producing a smooth W ity hall tower. For years citizens glossy coat of huir. Packed U? inve petitioned administrations to doses. 25c, box. Sold bf fl >eautlfy the unsightly honnlod-up tow- u . ?r with a clock, and the Dentley admin- ' " *-ANl?Y st rat ion let a contract for?^^U00 jW iock. fhnnUey alleges