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PAGE FOUR
SUMTER TO HAVE
RESIDENT NURSE
Decision Reached At
Meeting Addressed
By Miss Gibbes
Sumter county is to have a resi
dent Red Cross nurse, to go into the
home where needed, assist the health
officers in public health measures and
education, and act in any manner
called upon or where there a oppor
unity in her line of work.
This was decided at a .meeting of
local Red Cross officials thi- morning
at the Red Cross headquarters at th
postoffice, at which Miss Virginia
No 15c I
Bread I
Because two sizes of Bread is
not satisfactory to our custom
ers, we will make but one size,
1 3-OUNCE LOAF
Retail Price
12 CENTS
In other words, this is the same
size loaf we have formerly
made, with an advance of price
of
ONLY 2c A LOAF
Please remember that this is an
advance of ONLY 2c per loaf.
Model
Bakery Co.
- . °
I ANSLEY’S 51st ANNIVERSARY SALE
I Couldn’t All Be Done in a Day--So Sale is Continued Until Clean-Up is I
Complete-Many Lines Could Not Be Reached, But They Are Now Ready for You.
I Now Here You Are Men’s Anniversary Clear-
51st Anniversary Sale of . ance an( J White Sale
WOMEN’S READY-TO-WEAR ( j 0 f I t'J (1* vahw w v mvv, Kymv
One Lot of $1 5.00 Coats for $ 6.95 You have seldom seen bargains quite so great as we shall
One Lot of $19.75 Coats for $ 8.95 offer to clean up all odd lots, remnants, etc., before “tak-
One Lot of $25.00 Coats for $11.95 C ing stock.”
One Lot of $35.00 Coats for $16.95 g X .M
One Lot of $45.00 Coats for $21.95 g S iI | J REMNANTS OF Ginghams, Suitings, Madras, Cheviots,
One Lot of $50.00 Coats for $23.95 JL jL JL JL Percales, Linens Galateas, Kindergarten Romper Cloths,
Suits, Coats and Dresses at Higher Prices Reduced In ' Curtain Stuffs, Woolens, Silks, etc.
„ , P e . .. r , . Ours is one of the best stocks of Men’s Clothing WHIT E SALE will include fancy effects and plain sorts,
al. n i j S° a . tS R ed uce d m Similar Proportion such as Linenes, Nainsooks, Long Cloth, etc., and all Rem-
/ ill Jdds and I .ncls in C oats, Suits and Dresses will Be in this part of the state, including such makes as nants of every sort. Towels, Sheets, Counterpanes, Table
Sold Regardless of Former Prices. Damask, etc., to go also. NOW IS YOUR CHANCE.
LOOK AT THIS FOR YOUR TAILORED SUITS. “ADI PR POrUFQTCD”
Up to $25.00 Suits for $ 795 AULLK-KOCHEb lER FOUR SPECIALS
Up to $29.75 Suits for .. $12.95
Up to $39.75 Suits for $16.95 and SPECIAL 10 Yards 50c Long Cloth for 39c Yard
Up to $59 75 Suits for $25.00 CCUI OCC DD AC O Limit 10 Yards to Customer.
lUp to $75.00 Suits for $29.75 ' XnLUdO DRUd & CO. SPECIAL—IO Yards 59c 40-In. Nainsook for 39c Yd
DRESSES. Limit 1 0 Yards to Customer.
What Dresses we have in stock will be sold regardless NOW IVII7N SPECIAL—A 70-In. Fine Table Damask, worth $1.75
of former prices. 1 hey are in Serges and Silks princi- IN WVV Yd. at $1.19 Yd.
pally and the styles are all excellent. . . , ,
, . ... you know what the above means to SPECIAL—A 70-In. Fine I able Damask, worth $175
INo Alteration Without Charge. No Exchanges and • • f .. . . . , , Yd at $1 39 Yd
Refunds. you in view of conditions now existing, and those iu.
IT’S UP TO YOU TO ACT QUICKLY. we dealers are facing—so this will doubtless OTHERS JUST AS GOOD.
51ST < 51ST cause you to act promptly in securing one of our
! C1 UP N ’ ZaINOLILI Cl u£ N " suits, the goodness of which you already know. AND WAIT A IVQI F ' AND WAIT
SALE Anniversary Sale SALE er Y truly CHAS L ANSLEY. F ° R X Ik clean up <?ai f FOR
I . MONDAY >2TH CLEAN-UP SALE MONDAY 12TH.
Gibbes, of Atlanta, connecte: with
th’e Southern Division of the Re<.
Cross, made a brief addtess outlinin:
the needs for sueh a public nurse
and the benefits to .he cjmniutiity to
accrue from maintaining one.
The action of the officials, howezer,
was only tentative, as all the officers
were not present and th two county
branch Plain an 1 Leslie,
! were not represented, and it is de
i sired to consutt -v'th them.
Miss Gibbes < mphasiz 1 that th?
Red Cross is not a charitable institu
tion; that its r.urpose is up.ift. t<>
pu: those nee.Lng its assistance in a
position to help themselves. Particu
larly is this true in the work in the
home. Much of the work of the
.resident nurse, it was pointed out,
will he found in th * homes of de
pendents of soldier- and ex-sold>er.-,
i several hun Ired of whom are located
i in this county and rainy of whom, it
is said, would bene'.t by the assis
tance of such a nurse
The salary to be apportioned for
lithe resident m’. v se is tc be deeded
later at a •<> i rem- >f the oilfials
of the Surnt t conntv chapter, at
which plans will b.? laid for the early
I coming of th< county nurse.
Blame Nightmare on Demon.
In some portions of the continent <>
SJurope nightmare Is believed to be a
ipectral creature that comes and takes
I Rent on the breast of the unconscious
ileepe". half smothering him and not
I lermltting him to me n As those
vho have suffered therefrom say they
1 'ttnnot no much as bend the little finger
luring those moments of nngulsh. It
: s not surprising that the superstitious
| 'xplnlned the condition ns a malicious
lemon crushing his victim.
World’s Smallest Violin.
Perfect In every detail, and so small
it will lie within a space covered by
I two half crowns laid side hy side.
I London now boasts of having the
Innnl'est fiddle In the world. It was
unde bv the well-know violinist. B.
| Vandermeulen, and Is exquisitely con
structed as to scale. The exnet rneas
' urenients tire: Violin body, 1 11-16'
j lnches; violin, over all, 2% Inches;
| now, 3 946 inches. Philadelphia
Record.
Community of Black Cats.
“The Island of Black Cats” Is a
name applied to Chatham island in the
Pacific ocean. It is overrun with black
cats; Indeed, cats of no other jolor
are seen there. These animals live In
the crevices of the lava foundation
near the coast and subsist by catching
fish and crabs, Instead of rnts and
1 mice.
$35,000 COST OF
ONLY ONE SCENE
OF KELLAR FILM
• ..t
... -W
MRGEORGL .U,'-,
’ t HELEN KELLEN iW
j DELIVERANCE I
Miss Helen Keller.
A great deal has been said and
j written about the cost of making mo
i tion pictures, and yet the public has
no adequate realization of .the im
: mense amount of money invested in
the entertainment that is presented
to them for such a small comparative
admission price. Many big features
involve from three to ten times the
cost of production that some of the
biggest musical and dramatic plays
: do; for which the public pays two
I and three dollars a seat. One scene
i in the Helen Keller picture “Deliv
erance” cost more than $35,000.
There are ten thousand people in the
scene and a whole day was devoted
to it.
• Helen Keller in “Deliverance” will
be th’e attraction at the Opera House
i Saturday, Jan. 17.
Unlucky Stiff.
I called the farm hand boy to come
and eat his breakfast. While, he was
■ eating I went out to feed the chick
ens After feeding the chickens I went
back to the house and as the boj’ had
eaten I started to clear off the table
! when, to my surprise, I found that in-
• stead of eating his regular breakfast
I ; he ate the starch I had prepared for
the wash. —Chicago Tribune.
AMERICUS TIMLS-RECOnutJt
Great Literature-Ancient,
Medieval, and Modern
-
A Systematic Course of Reading in the Greater Literature of the World
Will Widen One’ Horizon, Deepen one’s Current of Thought, Quicken
One’s interests, and Make All Life Richer and Fuller.
HOME READING COURSE NO. 2.
(A certificate, bearing the seal of the United States Bureau of
Education, signed by the Commissioner of Education, will be given to
each person who gives satisfactory evidence of having read all the books
in the accompanying list. You are invited to join the great national
reading cricle, making you, own selection from the reading courses pro
vided.)
IT IS difficult to estimate the value
of a systematic course of reading
■ in the greater literature of the world.
!It widens one’s horizon, deepens
: one’s current of thought, quickens
one’s interest, and makes all life
richer and fuller; not only the life
of the .individual, but of the nation
as well. That individual and nation
alike may be thus enriched, the Unit
ed States Bureau of Education is is
suing, through its Home Education
Division, several carefully* planned
courses in reading.
To each person who submits satis
factory evidence of having read all
the books on this list within three
years from the time of joining the
circle, a certificate will be awarded
bearing the seal of the United States
Bureau of Education and signed by
the Commissioner of Education. All
young men and women who wish to
lay a good foundation for a knowl
edge of the best literature are invit
ed to join this circle.
Charles Alphonso Smith, professor
of English in the University of Vir
ginia; Charles Forster Smith, pro
fessor of Greek in the University of
Wisconsin; Richard Burton, profes
sor of English literature in the Uni
versity of Monnesota; and William
Lyon Phelps, professor of English
literature in Yale University, have
assisted the Bureau of Education in
directing this course of reading.
In writing about this course, refer
to it as “United States Bureau of
Education, Home Education Division,
Reading Course No. 2,” or “Great
Literature —Ancient, Medieval and
Modern.”
Reading Course No. 2.
1. The Book of Job. Moufton’s Mod-
ern Reader’s Bible.
2. Deuteronomy. Moulton’s Modern
Reader’s Bible.
3. Isaiah. Moulton’s Modern Read-
er’s Bible.
4. The Iliad of Homer. Lang, Leaf
and Myer.
; ■>. The Odyssey of Homer. Butcher
r and Lang.
Or, The Odyssey of Homer. Wil
liam Cullen Bryant.
, 6. The Prometheus Bound of Aeschy
; ius. Janet Case.
j 7. The Aeneld of Virgil. Taylor.
Or, The Aeneid of Virgil. Wil
liams.
.8. The Nibelungenlied. Needier,
j 9. The Divine Comedy of Dante.
Cary.
Or, The Divine Comedy of Dante.
Norton.
I Or, The Divine Comedy of Dante.
Henry Wadsworth Longellow.
, 10. Cervantes’ Don Quixote. John
son,
11. Shakespeare’s Merchant of Ven-
ice, Macbeth, Hamlet, and
Othello. Any edition.
12. Select Plays of Molliere: Tar-
tuffe the Imposter; Shopkeep
Turned Gentleman; The Misan
thorpe.
13. Milton's Paradise 'Lost. Mas-
son’s edition.
'< 14. Goethe’s Faust. Taylor.
Reference Books.
Gayley’s Classical Myths.
Classical Dictionary. Wiliam Smith. '
Introduction to Homer. Richard C.
Jebb.
Hawaiian Islands.
In the Hawaiian group there are
twelve main islands, all classed as
United States territory. The total
trea is 6.449 square miles. The inhab
ted Islands number eight—Hawaii.
Mani. Kahoolawe. Lanai, Molokai.
Jahn, Maul and Nihua. In addition
here are numerous small Mantis In
he chain which are valuable for their
;uano deposits and shark' fishing
(rounds, but which are not inhabited.
Tennis an Old Game.
Tennla was played as early as thi
twelfth century.
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SHE’S SPONSOR OF
NEW GOOD SHOP
’AMERICAN PRESS’
< ® I|l| '
* ‘Litt 1
1
j Miss Elizabeth E. Stone of New
. i York, daughter of Melville E. Stone,
* Gen’l. Mgr. of the Associated Press,
• was sponsor for the new Hog Island
I ship, “The American Press,” named
■ as a tribute to the loyalty of the ,
American press during the war.
Great Men Superstitious.
Charles Dickens. I.mil Macaulay nnd
'fax Muller are numbered among the
' treat ur n avowedly ■ .porstltlous.
i Dickens refused to lie down on a bed
! inless it was placed due north and
i louth, ami he gave ample notice of his
ule before arriving at a friend’s
muse or a hotel. It Is said he car
led a com) ass in his baggage to make’
ure. and the s . <<st error had to
>e corrcetcJ be' mild turn in
Tact.
Tact consists in saying things that
pie like to listen to and of list'"
_■ to things that people like to
ninth’s Companion.
IP O Bom 116 B. C. HOGUE Phon * "
CONTRACTING, BUILDING, ARCHITECTURAL |
DRAFTING. EXCLUSIVE AGENT FOR SUMTER
' COIJNTY FOR TIFT WHITE SILICA BRICK. ; j
■. I )
nrwwwwvrwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwWui
TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 1920.
NASHVILLE WOMAN
MAKES STATEMENT
CONCERNING CASE
Mrs. Brinkley’s Eighteen Years of
Suffering Ended By Tanlac—Say*
She Gained 22 Pounds Since Tak
ing It.
“I only weighed ninety pounds
when 1 started taking Tanlac and now
I weigh a hundred and twelve,” said
Mrs. J. W. Binkley, of 5104 Illinos
Ave., West Nashville, Tenn.
“I suffered terribly fcr the past
eighteen years,” she continued, ‘‘and
my stomach was in such an awful
condition that I had to live on the
lighte.lt kind of djiet. Even milk
would sour on my stomach and form
gas that would keep me in misery for
hours. I had little strength left, and
although I tried the best medicine#
and treatments I could find, I just
kept going down hill and suffered
agonies until finally I was told that
my only hope lay in operation.
“A friend of my husband’s per
suaded him to get me some Tanlac,
and it not only saved me from the
operating table, but I have gained
twenty-two pounds and am a well
woman today. I can eat anything I
want without suffering any inconven
ience afterwards and am feeling just
fine. I shall always praise Tanlac
for restoring my health and wish ev
erybody knew about this wonderful
i medicine.”
All druggists sell Tanlac. adv
Could See Improvement.
Having had a severe illness I wae
ooking thin and tired, but during my
summer outing grew fat and rosy. Oa
tny return home I met a small girt
i friend of mine who looked at me In an
admiring manner and then said: "My,
mt your face must have had a nice
> a at ion.” —Exchange.
None But Japs Admitted.
Amid restaurants of all nationall
ti"s in Loudon open to all nationali
ties, Is just one for one race alone.
!On its entrance is “For Japanese
Oniv ”