SOLVING WAR PROBLEMS
TAUGHT PEOPLE THRIFT
Country Urged to Keep Benefits !
Gained ?{Through Lesson of Sav
ing Learned Last Year.
Fellowship in the faaiest growing
riety in the United States is open
everybody. In every state in the
union it is gaining members- daily,
since it is. a society in which the good
of the country is served as . well as"
that of the Individual.
from all walks of life its millions of
ever increasing members come. No j
one can be a member and keep the
jkdge he takes without receiving
lasting benefits anrt aiding the United
States of America to maintain the. j
proud pL?ce k has already attained ? [
the peer of any nation that has ever
existed. _ .
When the UeMiij department of
the Uafctd State* began the attempt
, .msi thet he. |
,
It ie the ereaje^ creditor nation in
the world today can on* realize what
an achievement ha* been won. With
out a direct tax on the people money
has been raised to pay for the suc
cessful termination ot the war. and '
this cost more than $20,000,000,000.
Beside this enormous amount of
money there is now more money in
&e banks than before.
This, of course, was done through
the Liberty Loans, principally. But
.these leans have ceased, and those at
Che heed of the nation's finances are
seeking to clinch the lesson already
learned, and are urging- the perma
nent establishment of War Savings
Societies. ?
\ The Treasury Deoartment
^service for the small investor in ac- j
'*? ?mr
flve^eents and giving the same securi
ty tim the holder of erjUMMO liberty )
3oed enjoy the entire resources of
the JOntted Stat** of America. Could 1
anything be more safe?
i T % v .
SAID EVERY SOLDIER
Engineer After Viewing Battlefield
Make* Interesting Commentary
? Could Find Everything *?
But One Trophy He
?V Wanted.
\
An em in ant engineer recently re
turned to Washington after traver&ing
on government business much of the
western front. Be went over the bat
tie area before the army salvage corps
had removed the signs of conflict.
"I saw pretty nearly everything
there," he said. "Lots of rifles, bayo
nets, maehine guns, helmots, soldiers'
packs, water bottle* and even hand
kerchiefs and socks all over the I
ground!
"t didn't want any of them. Be
cause I'm an? engineer, I'd set my
Jpart on a drench. shoveL I'd seen
thousands of Jthem back of the lines,
j&titifrttleaeld.
a
dislodged front a position, might loose
his peck, hisvextra clothing, even his
rifle, in his escape, but he never let
go his shovel^
"He knew h e had to have it, to dig
himself In aga^n."
War Savings ' Stamps are trench
shovels for digging in against adver
sity.
CARRY ON!
Uncle Sam is releasing frem his
service the men who went "over
f there" to free the world from au
tocracy. ThewMnds of soldiers are
daily receiving -their hoaorable dis
charges ; they pocket their pay, bid
farewell to their comrades anil sal
ly forth? civilian#.
There is one army, however,
whieh must ; not be demobilised.
That it the army of War Savings
' 'jhayA.' Mare recruits are
? u... to cawy on the rsmpatgs oC
readjustment whieh fellows the
tif&ing of 'the armistice.
The amy fighters ha* achieved
?
The armf o< savers moat remain
in "action." ?
"Carry at" to a lasting peace un
der the basset of W. 3. S.
and failure. v.
I am Uttle is aiae.
I am little to coat
w m
. ''Say, Mollie, I was just looking at the way this stove
is made! / g
"I know something about the way most stoves are
made ? - but. - do you knoW, this has got them ali beat
a mile! * '
"Simple as A. B. C ? but the method of construction
is what gets' jne.
"After you have examined tnis
' stove and are talking about wood
| stoves? you can think of th is kind
only? THE,
? ->-i> ? ? I . > v ? v-v'-: '? ^ V: -
Cole's Original
Air-Tight
Wood Stove
? . -r ? f. c C
"This is the kind for me.
- "See that double-seamed bottom? And
that lock-seam in the bo*? 7?t . <
" ; > "No door frame to leak air and spoil your
^ 0rihejaShJd00r ^ Iets up just like a pump valve?
Rpwwhed sides are protected from actual contact with the
I'Thcrpis nothing that will, t
"We got our money's worth,
"And have you ifoticed how
"Gee, it makes me feet quite
to, own ft.
If you want thai" chesty" feeling also, Mr. Stove Buyer,
% ' ? ? tame in? we Hhve more stoves of the same kind*
"Cole'a, " the Original Patented Air 'Tight
Heater, u sold only by u*.
t
?? ? ! ' ? . I ? - "S
i
*5 ?
???
Take a look at or~
l.'fi-.hfr.y T-\'j v/J4'- So ?'*
Ik, ? . ' 'Mm?* .?? \
? *>T *? ?<V! r, -
Entered in the Post Office at Farm
ville, N. C., as secpnd clans mail
matter.
FRIDAY OCTOBER 24, 1919 I
, ? ?? ;===
PMStncss ^i!
Seed Rye $2.00 bushel.? J. H.
Harris.
Get your Hemstitching done
in Farmvillfe at Mrsr f. WeMs
Smith.
__ 2
Seed -Rye, Oats, Clover, Al
falfa, Vetch, Grass Seed? B, A.
JOyner & Co.
I . ?; ? . , . r . '
?? 1 ? . " 1 . ? "
I For Sale? Ten barrels of Com
at $10.00 per bbl ? W. H. Moore,
Sr., of Greene County.
a '
Seed Rye $2.0ft bushel.? J. H.
Harris.
v > , , \ ' 1 ; I
Improved Hickory Prior To
bacco Seed; the popular kind,
from carefully selected , stalks.?
See L. M. Cox at Tbwhserid's
Warehouse, Farmviller-N, C.
FOR SALE? Lands suitable
for growing Tobacco. This has ?
been demonstrate^ Good market
and transportation ? facilities.
Prices $60.00 to $100.00 per acre.
J. G. STEVENS,
Valdosta, Ga.
WANTED? The government
wants thousands of Postoffice
Clerks and .Carriers. We abso
rete^fellilibt^tqr^repare you
to pass the examination. Age
18 to 45. Salary $1500. Write
today for information.
Southern Civil Service School,
Petersburg, Va.
" i .i
No Worms In a Healthy Child \
All children troubled with worms have an un
healthy color, which indicate poor blood, and asa
role, there Is more or less stcraach disturbance.
GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC given regularly
for tiro or three weeks will enrich .the blood, Im
prove the digestion, and act as a General Strength
ening Took to the whole system. Nature will then
throwoffor dispel the worms, aa4tb6Chi'd wi^.ba ,
la perfect health, neasaattotake. 60c act bottle. ^
???". ,'0.;Vy y. n
Office 1
Millinery' Store
Farmville. N. C
V<w !>a ? Mar ? W9rk,
You are more ai
ttobkwib^l
and how
will then