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The Index-Journal from Greenwood, South Carolina • Page 4

The Index-Journal from Greenwood, South Carolina • Page 4

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The Index-Journali
Location:
Greenwood, South Carolina
Issue Date:
Page:
4
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THE I NDEX-JOURNAL, GREENWOOD. S. WEDNESDAY, NOV. 18, 1141 Paga Four frrrc rxmrv. TnTll) A Ti DONALD E.Y.M' NEW YORK Day By Day By B.

DSJSCOLL THE DAILY WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND ISrjOliIIJATED The Leading Newspaper af Weatera Booth Carolina The Greenwood Jnnul establishes Anm Tba Greenwood Index stWiahed Normbsr T. 1T tW Journal and The Inoea eoae oUaatad J. It. UU Psbliihad Dally Except Sunday By' -TBS INDIX-JOCRNAL COMPANY At 114 Maxwell Avenue H. L.

WATSON. President ARTHUR LEE. Sec-Trees. Title sitr4 V. S.

Pateal Office By DREW PEARSON New York The New Yorker re eently printed an exnellent series of ment of the colleges and perhaps three articles about the late Wil Washington U. S. experts who have studied the successes and short-comings of the British army find that its greatest defect is a J. B. BAILCT, 1919-1931 some of the high schools.

At present the colleges and uni son Mizner. The articles were well worth printing as a commentary versities face a serious crisis. The dearth of good officers between the upon our cny loixways. Mizner is shown as a confidence ages of 45 to 60. This II the age 20, 31 and 23-year-old men have left, and now without the 18 and 19-year-olds the colleges will be almost Catered at Lb Qreenwood Poatoffioe Mall Matter of Um Baopnd Class TMMS OF SUBSCRIPTION Al Payable la Adraaee bracket from which commanding man, thief, dope fiend, "off-the-reeord" and nothing he said In that was quoted ia the press.

But the eighteen hundred who heard both cannot help letting out' some of the things he said. Mr. Grew said the "off-the-record" rule was enforced by request of the State Department. XI r. Grew said what he has said, over and over again, the only way to win this war with Japan Is to utterly conquer and crush the military ruling class.

These men neither give quarter nor expect it from others, he said. men now controlling Japan are ruth-lean, unscrupulous and dangerous," said the diplomat, who was held' a prisoner long enough to see the Doolittle Squadron ot raiders blast Tokyo. "They are not Impeded by the moral scruples which are the basis of good government and of sound international relations," he added. "They give no quarter and they seek none. They know what they want, and what they want Is nothing less than world domination.

No means are un- justified In their eyes which will take them toward that goal. "They are possessed of a dangerous and fanatic belief, that Japan'a domination over all the world Is not only possible but desirable and attainable. We cannot treat with such men. jW can only defeat them." This, remember, is the solemn warning of a man who was our Ambassador in Tokyo for the past twelve years. He knows Japan and the Japs.

empty, except for women. Br Carrier Daily officers are drawn, and a commanding officer can lose or win a battle. Reason for this deficiency la the gambler, charlatan, beggar, bum, liar, traitor to friends, peddler of Indency, agent of bawdy bouses. 1 year -II. Receives a i ty Vote In.Special Primary Yesterday For Alderman Eugene Y.

McDonald, former chief of police of Greenwood, was nominated over Paul B. EUls by a majority of 139 votes in yesterday! special primary election in Ward Two as successor to Pierce T. Seago, resigned. The totals' were: McDonald. 164, and EUls, 29.

Included in the totals were 23 absentee ballots. 30 ot which went for McDonald and two for Ellis. Mr. McDonald win fill the unexpired term of Alderman Be ago CM fact that la 1814 the cream of Bri and all-around low-down crook. Therefore, it has been proposd that the colleges be used in the same manner the Air Corps Is using hotels in Miami, Chicago and other cities.

Housing an army la one of tain's youth went singing into battle, to be slaughtered In Flanders Fields. It is estimated that a good part of Its biggest problems. New buildings Yet I have known a dosen respected citizens who were proud of his acquaintance or supposed acquaintance, boasted of having been robbed by him, and even talked of him admiringly in the presence of one generation was wiped out In require strategic materials, labor, and part of the army's own per those early days of the last war. Now that our Congress has re sponded quickly and efficiently to nice women. There waa a time, not so long a- sonneL The fewer men required for housekeeping, the more effective an army is.

That ia why the physical rquipment of the colleges, now partially unused, could effect such a By Mall Daily A To aT Bo Section par rear fW.fit Rural Pre Delivery: 1 rar -II0S I mo. MM i VHML t.M 1 HK. These rataa apply within radius ef 11 miles aad waar aa attar mi iIm it a rail By Kan Dally beyond radlaa of mllaa City Carrier rataa effeetlT, Mall subscriptions dlamatiniMd at sspiratloa. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED FUSS Th Associated Press la ssclustraly titled to th aaa ef rapublloatlon of all news dispatches credited to it ar aot otherwise credited in thla paper aad also tb looal news published hereto. 4U rlrht of republication of sped! diapafcjhee tar la ar alaa ressiMd.

Make All Remittances to THE INDEX-JOURNAL COMPANY Oreenwood, a a the national need by voting the teen-age draft act, some Army leaders believe that the Arm, 10, when it was smart to know Mizner and to quote all kinds of low better trained 'than the average lieutenant to the British or American armies. Capital Chaff Tears streamed down the face of crusading Senator George Norris when he was defeated after forty years in Congress. But now that he has been reading the flood of complimentary letters received from an over the country he la glad he made the race. "If hadnt run again," says Norris, "1 never would have known, what people thought of me Senator Tom Conally of Texas diagnoses the recent election this way: "The Democrats who opposed Roosevelt got re-elected. And the Republicans who supported Roosevelt got re-elected.

It must pay to be Independent" Senator Jim Mead of New York complains to "I was the President's fall guy when he wanted me to run for governor of New York, though I dldnt want to run. And now he lets Leon Henderson appoint a Republican as OPA director in Buffalo, my own home town." Ambassador Joe Da vies and wife will go out to Hollywood to start the screening of his book "Mission to Moscow" by Warner Brothers. Walter Hutson will play the part of Ambassador Da vies, and Warners would like to have statuesque Mrs. Davles play the part of herself. U.

8. rest Office In Africa Uncle 8am 's army is leaving nothing undone to see that the mail men makes deliveries to U. 8. forces a- which expires in March 1941 should reciprocate the trust that has wit attributing it to him. great saving.

One plan would be to make each been placed Ui its hands by working out a careful system for thorough training of these 18-19 year olds. A typical Miznerlsm, quoted by the New Yorker was his remark to a clergyman, as the unrepentant college virtually a short-term West Point, in which the 18-19 year olds would get a thorough military There Is unanimity of opinion in thief lay upon his deathbed. Com the Army and also on Capitol Hill tag out of a coma, the blackguard MIGHT RE REMEMBERED that it would have been a mistake is alleged to have said to the mln training, plus as much academic training as possible. This would mean not only improving this age group for actual combat, but also to have tied the War Department's National Representatives WARO-QJUFVTTH CO, WO, later. "Oo "way; I've Just been talk ing to your boss!" Anybody who thinks that is smart preparing the next generation for hands regarding the exact time necessary to train these men for battle.

But now that a vote of confidence has been given the Army, there Is Increasing opinion among high would love Mizner. "Song of the Bomber Command Tha publiafcer assume no liability for merchandise aeorrseUr priced throufh typographical arrar and la a event will llabulty be assumed whar food ar eold at tha Incorrect price. TELETHONS: Business Offlo Dial CTII S-trsrUalag PepartaMat Dial Mli Editorial Rooms Dial Hi SucWty Editor Dial Mil WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER IS, IMS People who hsve and gasoline ration cards might take a tip from thla Incident: Last Friday one hundred and fourteen people In automobiles with and ration stickers attending a race track meet on Long Island were arrested by OPA men. If you have been allowed and Stickers this does not mean, for all of you, that you can run around to football games and horse races. Better watch out, the OPA may get you.

may turn out to be one of the war' Army leaders that the Army must be extremely careful not to violate that confidence. better leadership after the war. Nad Army Training The period of training proposed by some Army leaders Is one year. But if a crisis in the war should arise before that time, whereby the men were needed at the front, the miniature West Point course could term time musical hits when It gets go ing. As a result, various plana have Anyway, that's the hope nourish ed by Gene Marvey, Lieut-Col.

FJ been advanced whereby the 18-19 year olds would be trained aa lis Keller, and Paul Taubman, all inate. of whom are mixed up in the mak tag and presentation of the song. Those who propose this far-sight group unit, not mixed with older men and sent off to battle In three or four months. MRS. ROOSEVELT'S TRIP Marvey is a muscular lad whe broad.

Believe It or not, but when the V. African Expeditionary Fore landed, a unit of the Army In England, the British Army used to be basketball champ a The Weather Charlotte. Nov. 18 UP) Official Weather Bureau records of the temperature and rainfall, for 34 hours ending at 7:30 a. In the) principal cotton growing areas and elsewhere; StaUen Max Mas RTB tshevlUe 44 jOO Unta TS 54 JOO Birmingham ..78 64 JOO Charlotte ..70 63 JOO Chicago .60 37 JOO Columbia 75 48 jOO facksonvlUe .77 61 SO 'ioulsville 68 60 JOO lemphis ..77 69 JOO liami ..80 73 JOO UoMle 77 58 jOO Tew Orleans 77 64 JOO Tew York 56 jOO Torfolk ..12 59 jOO ttchmond ....74 56 jOO "avannah ..76 59 JOO "ampa 81 49 jOO Vashington ...71 54 .00 VUmlngton ..79 51 jOO 'an Antnolo ..84 66 jOO GREENWOOD WEATHER Greenwood -Weather Bareaei report far 34 bears ending at 7:38 a.

Temperature: Maxim aa 70; Mmhwans 49. Sunrise today ssmeet 4e sy Rainfall to the past 24 bears: nene; rainfall since Jan, 1 35.73. Clear. Continued mild tonight with 'lightly higher temperature north ed plan prooably are in minority among Army leaders at present Some cf the more conservative generals favor throwing' the boys into the ranks more or less indis Yonkers High Schol. Col.

Ellis 1 postal corps was right in the van has adopted the system of training its younger men In one group. This, it has been found, gives more exprlt from Plattaburg, and Taubma: guard. plays piano, organ and other instru Immediately it got ashore, it set criminately. de corps', and Increases fighting ef However, it has been pointed out ficiency when the group finally gets ments, largely in night clubs. Who first used the expression "God's Angry Man" that there la nothing more demor up facilities for handling man.

As the troops fanned out toward Tunis, the postal corps fanned out with into action. alizing than bringing men into the Army, then keeping them marking Miniature West Faints One provisional plan at first pro and will be augmented by Doubtless the answer ia easy, but I mqremen later. So you can begin time, never getting a chanoa.tQ writing to the men overseas right fight, and with no clear picture oi posed by some Army men waa to draft the 18-19 year olds immediately. Then out of the total of about now. what the war is all about If not This is the first time to history L500.0QO men, some 60,000 to 80,000 handled carefully the 18-19 year olds may fall into this category.

that, a postal service has gone a would be sent back to the colleges to get more training to become shore with landing troops. The ser Meanwhile, it is urged by Army THE WHOLE TRUTH When Senator Msybauk, Democrat of South Carolina, explains that the so-called anti-poll; tax bill "aimply a bill to deprive the South' em 8Utea ot their he tells the truth but not the whole truth or rather all the truth For this anti-poll tax bill is the opening wedge to deprive ALL the States of their righta to regulate suffrage within their borders. Again, yon may need to remember this and to realise anew why the extremists of the New Deal are so set and determined to. put this bill through. They will then be able to follow It up with final mores to take from the States any and all restrictions on Toting and they will then be able to do what the Black Republicans tried and failed to do after the War Between the States.

The goal of bid Tbad Stevens and his fellow-workers was to "fix" it so that the freedmen ot the South could vote without restrictions or qualifications and they believed these votes would perpetuate the Republican party in power. Today the drive Is by forces working within the Democratic party, The aim la the same but for the benefit of a new set. That is why the fight on the anti-poll tax bill Is what it Is. Roosevelt Is all for the anti-poll Ux bill. President Roosevelt has said no word In public one way or the other but the Administration spokesmen and leaders are working for It like beavers.

vice was organized from post men recommended to Gen. Jim Ulio by Now, however, it is being urged a tableful of Phi Beta Kappas a a brain center on the East Sid oouldnt give tt off-hand, las night I talked with Vivian KeUems tr the day after her political riva' dare Luce, was elected to Congres Mrs. Luce defeated Miss KeUems 1 the primaries. Miss KeUems wouldn't talk poli tics. Not that I wanted her to, but Just thought I'd try, to see whethe.

she was mad at anybody. She la all immersed tax her man Postmaster General Frank Walker. Brig. Oen. Clayton Adams Is the training specialists that the youngsters can help win the war sooner If they have been given the same kind of thorough training received by the bulk of the German army.

For the average German sergeant during the first year ot the war was guiding genius. that Instead of keeping this small group of men in the col-, leges, the entire 1,500,000 be given tough military, semi-educational training, using the physical equip (Copyright 1943. by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) Mrs. Roosevelt has returned from her trip to England and must be ready to tell all ot us all about how the English ought to do it and so on. Wheelock B.

Sherwood, of Baudette, Minnesota, Is still not enthused over the trip of Mrs. Roosevelt and has written the following letter to his favorite Minnesota newspaper about It as follows: I have been unable to leara any reason or even excuse for the yislt of Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt to Obviously It-was not for military reasons. I have not noticed that she did not travel at government ex-pense, but even had the cost been her own, I can think of many other uses to which the money spent could have been put. Needless to say, many war bonds could have been purchased with this money.

I also feel certain that the plane or other means of transportation that was used could have been put to much better advantage. Surely If she lir vieing tor the honor of being the First Lady of the United Na- tions, she has quite a campaign ahead of her with auch company as Madame Chiang Kai-shek and Queen Elizabeth, who are re-raining at home during times like these. Such trips and waste of money and pre-clous equipment do not help the morale of our own people nor that of the rest of the people of the United Nations. People who remain at home may not get much publicity and yet they may be doing a lot to help win this war. Mr.

Sherwood seems to be quite wrought up over the trip. I central portion. uf acturlng business, which Is or" Nobody's Business Bf Gee McCee) hundred percent in war service. 81 makes the'gripi with Which ste Fair Enough cables are gripped, to pulling ther GREENWOOD ON THE SQUARE HELP AXD 15F0RMATI0X WANTED deer mr, eddltor: through conduits. Now the grips are being made fc the lifting of explosive shells.

The something ought to be did about work on an age-old principle, tr -by Westbrook Pcgler the high tax that the gowerninlnt baa put on tobacker, cigarettes, seegara, and whiskey. the ony nt-ed-cesstties of the poor man Is FULLY ANALYZED New oYrk, Nov. 17. Let us waive he aforesaid Items, and he ass to pay as much for his as a our country there would be great trouble over this subject of religious for the moment the fact that the grip tightening like a noose as the pull becomes harder. 1 Miss KeUems is a nervous.

Uvel: high-strung lady who might be tak en for 38 or so. 8he waa bom In Dr Moines, daughter of a preacher She and her mother graduated it the same class at the University Oregon. A fine source of scrap brasr word democracy Is mentioned no milly-nalre. la that right? teaching to these public lnstltu llrtbday Greeting The Index Journal extenda lrthday greetings to all those vhose birthday occurs tomorrow Nov. 19): Roy Young Alfred Mclnvllle Robert Corbin Frances Merrill Dorothy Davis Mrs.

George N. Ousts H. Brooks Purkerson Mrs. P. M.

Partlow Philip K. Davia. Greenville L. F. Shaw Mra.

M. C. Smith Miss Louise Loveless where In either the Declaration ot Independence or the Constitution and consider the meaning of that phase of democracy which Vice we ao witnout one meal a day without, hurting ourselves, but noboddy has ewer bena so poor to go without tobacker snd slight In President Henry Wallace advocat tions. Having no established state religion, and the establishment of such being forbidden, we would have no agreement on the religion to be taught if we were to permit such teaching at all. And there would be some who would Insist that no public institution of ours had any right to concern Itself at largely untouched.

Is the brass spit Editorial Comment toon, heretofore exploited in thfc toxicant, but this tax will break down the morrals ot millions of column, but not ye exploited by thr men who depend on the above in scrap collectors. There must be a million bras Readers who may have an appetite for an "analysis" of the general war situation and the details of such affairs as the victory over the Japs last Week will find all that served up In the best possible manner In the Associated Press dispatches and the words of staff commentators usually found on the front page of The Index-Journal. Sometimes they may be crowded on to some other page. These men are either on the spot or have been there with the fighting boys or have been there before the war began and know the country. The comments of these men are often worth reading.

That of some others, to be frank, are space-fillers ot ponderosity but ot little else. NO COFFEE HOARDING grediments for whst little pleasure ed recently as' democracy between the sexes. He polntd out that Russia makes great use ot the physical, industrial power of women as workers and yearned for a similar condition here, not only in time of war, when it ia necessary to get things From Ninety Six: tbey get la this old world of weal spittoons available for scrapping in all with religious instruction. this country. Some thousands car It is not merely sentimental to Llla Mae Lowery James Hancock Andy Long snd woes.

awaawswawaaaw noboddy is kicking about the In be had in New York's Brooklyn anc Insist that there is no state substi East Side Manhattan ban. done by any hands that are able to The owners are ready to glvr tuto for the influence of the mother on her children. The state institutions would not be necessarily do them, but permanently. them up. They've put too mucl Mr.

Wallace did not elaborate, come taxes; the man who makes enough income to hsve to pay aloh taxes has encugh Mt to live on lot a year or so. It te taxes on Mat, Causes Epilepsy? A booklet eontalnin tha nnlnlnna nf but it seems plain that if, as a per harsh or cold and might to' money into the shining of them, and would be happy to change to manent condition, women are to be deed, be warmer, brighter and more doctor on this Intereetin subject will tobacker and whiskey that hurts paper cuspidors. used equally with men in the tasks. Interesting than the homes of many if this tax had of benn put on Torpedoes need lots of brass and light and hard, of a great industrial of their individual little clients, but i mm rre. wnne iney Mat, to aar Bufferer from epilepsy.

Amour th topioa diacuaaetl In thla booklet ar: What la anllapar? Tha oueetinn of clothing and shoes it would of copper, and we need lota of torpe nation such as ours is. then some they would be impersonal in their does to put the Jap at the bottom bona o. k. a feller can gc Learly lu-ked and almost bare footed, but substitute must be iound for the atmosphere. These would be Instl tutlon children, ignorant of the in of the Pacific.

diet What cause epIlepeyT Auto-In-tiixlcatlou. Principal kin da of epilepsy. Heredity. What ar the chanoea of rrowlnic out of epilepsy Can pllep-y be cured? be cant do without his tobarterJ STRANGE BEDFELLOWS From Anderson Independent. War, like politics, makes strange bedfellows, And they all have nightmares.

Look who'a fighting. Germany. It is figured out, la now warring with 2 4-different countries; Italy Is battling twenty-two governments; Japan is at war with eighteen; Finland has fewer enemies only three; Rumania, Bulgaria and Hungary are warring with only six: Russia is not at war with Bulgaria, although Bulgaria Is a member of the Axis. Britain, having taken Madagascar and chased the Vichy French out of Syria, still Is not at war with France. China is at war with Germany, Italy and Japan.

There are twenty-one neutral nations. Iceland, however, la garrisoned by Allied trOOpS. Iraq Is In a slmllsr position. Egypt, another neutral. Is becoming thoroughly battle-scarred while keeping entirely out of the affair.

It is all very confusing. But we have to be aatlsfied with it home. A woman cannot keep the home together, minding and teaching the children, if she and her fluence of motherhood, knowing James Ronald, author of "Old Soldiers Never Die" was worrying snso forth. nothing about home. The KKNKHOL treatment what an odd worry when I met him the it la, how It la taken and what It w.1 husband both go swinging off to Why is it necessary, anyway that we have got to win this war, but millions of folksv would soon work together in the mornnig and this nation, with Its machinery and other day.

Movie want his book, but he wants it as a Broadway ran ao tor ino relief oi in symptoms of epilepsy. If you ar a aufferer from epilepsy. At first the news from Washington was that the coffee ration system would be put Into effect without requiring the loyal and patriotic American housewives to make a "declarations" as to the amount ot coffee on hand. That statement is "definitely out" now. You must tell oath, how much eoff ee you have on hand if you want a ration book, when the time comes.

It you have bought enough coffee to last, you until next Summer you may avoid doing this. War, you may slowly begin to realise, Is not a soft an deasy way of life. Cheer up. however, the worst is yet to come. she puts In a full day in the fac marvelous productive ability, pro lose i as give up their babbits.

play first The movies say the war tory. By night she ia as tired aa he is and not able to catch up on the ru can receive a free copy of this booklet by writlnir to tha Educational Itfvlelon. tii Fifth Annua, New York "Itv. Dept. I7.

tome coffee drinkers are alreldy getting red-eyed and manny snft wont last long enough to give a war play a Broadway run before responsibilities of motherhood and. making a picture. How long a run duce twice as much of everything by aoubling the manpower by' ualhg all but a few women for such work In the great world of the future Arent there men enough to do it or arent there men enough, the drink drinkers have lost sleep and flesh onner count of what hitler do they mean? has done to them that they acruse Released by McNaught Syndicate, Inc. Icon hendersoa of. it woulddent moreover, by that time, it Is too late.

The children have been into all kinds ol mschlef and are running wild. As long as the husband and wife continue to live together in the married state, this would not be so hard to pay these new giv whole lot ot American men, to pro fngatremeat Eitraardlaaryt aerial Betara Skawlag sf Havte "BLOSSOMS In the DUST O-Starrlar Mr. a Mr. XiaalTar OREER CARBON WALTER PI DO EON IN NATURAL, COUR! duce what it takes to run the Industries and homes of the country. SWEET POTATO CASH vermlnt (fedderal) taxes war 3 not that our cltty and state and couny and scholl taxes hsve got USE VS.

THEORY Bamberg, Nov. 17 Cash from be called a broken home, but prac potatoes hss feroved this to be paid or else, and noboddy tically It would be a broken home and criminologists are always tell year to be another good source of income for Bamberg county wants any "else to take holt of farmers, according to reports Friday Soralag Her. tvth Shews at 10:30 and 12iH STATE THEATRE them, not at pressent nohow; that means giving up our cars and bomes. from County Agent Craven, A complete car of Bamberg county ing us that a high percentage of those who get into trouble with the law are the victims of the disruption of the home. sweet potatoes has been sold In a cooperative shipment at 31.10 a Assuming that men and women bushel f.

o. b. the platform. "This Textile Industry In State Sets Top Records For Year are equal in numbers and equally employed, there would be no Am For a long time many high Army men opposed the adoption ot the Carand automatic rifle. It is Interesting to note the high praises of this rifle given by the men on Guadalcanal island.

They say It is the real thing and all that can be desired. Rear Admiral F. Halsey Jr. (the men In the navy call him explains his success by saying he does things which the rule book says must not be done. The trouble lies in the established fact that man can and usually does get in a rut and has to do things the same old way, day after day.

To be able to see a better and clearer way Is the gift of genius. i erican home. It would disappear from our scheme of life and a sub gives ns a start with sweet potatoes and will be of great value for next year. Inasmuch aa not only the farmers growing potatoes bat also their laborers have, learned the type and kind of sweet potatoes the markets desire." says Mr. Craven.

1- stitute would hsve to be found. Columbia. Nov. 17. W.

The substitute In Russia has been without closing the homes and calling on the women. And what are we going to do with the surplus, remembering, Incidentally, that Mr. Wallace, himself, found that our trouble once was "not too little but too much There are those In Washington snd in positions of influence, too. who appear to think of the whole state, the nation, the American people, as one greet ever-loving family together. But there are others who believe this Is too large a group for good family purposes and hold out for the home and the family as they have always been before.

Democracy has come to have unfamiliar and alarming meanings. Americans came to love the word as meaning personal freedom and Jus-, Uce in the other war. but some of the advocates ot Cie newer and. by most of the people, unsuspected meannlss. are making it a word to be feared.

state Institutions, parking lot or "LET THEM COMET From the News and Courier. In the line-up ot a football team of "a prominent South Carolina educational Institution" only one "native son" was listed. The Index-Journal, Greenwood, observes and wonders "how he made the The News and Courier ia not grieving about It. The more native sons ot other states, of special and powerful gifts, of muscle er of mind, shall come into "South Carolina and make It a distinguished state again, the more win The News and Courier take heart. John C.

Calhoun and James H. Hammond were sons of Immigrants and William Campbell Preston was a native Son of Virginia. In the tional life illustrated In Washington and Columbia we cannot see men tall and sun-crowned, as they were. The News and Courier's hope for South Carolina Is the coming Into it of native sons ot Vermont, Iowa. Kentucky, New York.

Chicago and other foreign states; new blood is needed in South Carolina, and the make-up of the football team Is a sign that we shall have it. checkrooms, in which the young one are left for the day. Lacking Rhett Harley, state labor commissioner said today South Carolina's textile Industry had reached heights of production, employ meet, wsges paid and volume of FATIGUE causes reliable, detailed information we may assume that the Russian gov operations never before equalled in thla state. During the fiscal year which ernment does undertake to keep them out ot mischief and probably with fair success and that they arc put through courses of education. Weal eneld man Wtxpae.

In the twedee be eM-4 timet kr earfure Ml Tak law, Htevwtkr drle skiaeau. haras them "thirsty." Skin barn man raw may crack and bleed. Soothing Menthoistum acta medieiri all y.beJpst 1) thirsty oalia as they eaa ra tain needed moisture; 2) Proitei chapped akin from further trritatioa. At tha first sign of chapped akin, smonta ea eooiiog MenuKuatum, Jars 1M, ended June 30, Harley said that "NO QUARTER FOR JAPS" Former Ambassador to Japan Joseph Grew made two speeches to an audience of eighteen hundred people at the meeting ot the Chicago Council on Foreign Relations in Chicago last Saturday. His first speech was "open" and was quoted in the press.

His second speech was Cap-Klin. It relieve a auirklr. eaaafona the 33S textile mills la the state turned out products valued at errmfke are a reatijr. re II eVtichtea. However, in Russia, religion would not be one of the ubjects taught at directed, lue.

Sue. Sue. more than (23,000,000, compared with the previous high of 1241,000.000. i i'T I. and, on the contrary, atheism and contempt for religion would be.

In WHEEL.

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