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FRIDAY, NOVEMRBp n PAGE NO. TWO. .11 n. . "U'0W PALATKA KEWS. PALATKA, FLA, - - -t , m mmm ioue webs Thursday, Friday, Sa 8th, THE PLAN- Pay us the regular price for any item here ad vertised and we will sell you another of same kind for ONE CENT. PURPOSE- This sale was developed by the United Drug Company as an advertising plan. The company sacrifices its profits and something besides, in order to get a larger distribution of its meritorious pro ducts, and you get the benefit. POSITIVE RULES OF THE SALE No telephone order will he received for any goods offered on this saie. Nothing will be delivered by messenger, Nothing will be charged, Not more than two articles of the same kind will be sold to any customer. The reasons for these POSITIVE rules are obvious. It is the Rexall method of Twentieth Century advertising and the object is to get you into the Rexall Store to see the Rexall products and to give you the opportunity of testing them at reduced prices for CASH, and to have you carry your purchases with you as an additional advertising "STUNT," and to gain a wide distribution. You cannot afford to miss THIS SALE as it is the only sale we will put on this year, but we do want you to enjoy the full benefits of it. M LET'S MAKE THESE DAYS REAL RED LETTER DAYS IN PALATKA'S MERCHANDISING HISTORY. cicermao - Die war Drug Co. ore SENATOR FLETCHER PIONEER OF RURAL CREfiip U. S. Splendid Tribute Paid Sena tor Fletcher by David Lubin. Honorable David Lubin, Delegate of the United States to the International Institute of Agriculture, Rome, Italy, in a message and address to the Southern Commercial Congress at its :.r,!. uai euivenlian in New York, Oc tober 1.7.h-17th, among other things said: "The mobili-.tioii of agriculture would render the farmers of the iu t'oi: :.i expel in buying and soiling ti.eir products as are the master- mer- hr. nts of the cities. ".Such mobilization would be in line -vith the conditions brought forth by t.-: tvc tieth century. We have no re i to be told that mobilization is the p-r.eral rule now-a-dnys. Capital is r!,'ii!'"'; energy is mobilized; labor is mobilized; all industries are mobil ized with the exception of agrculture. And here is the weak spot which the Treasure before us is intended to rem edy. ...i - cl-ampionship of this n 1-1. 1- 1 net-sure lor mouiimnuon nas own tan on up by the Southern Commercial Congress. It has persevered in the struggle: it now remains to see wheth er it. will continue on until victory is here. "It is mv belief that it will, for it his at its head one of those peculiar men who manage to win out in the end. This mnn. with bull-dog te nacity, is yet unobtrusive and self-rff-'em". It is through him that this neasure for the mobilization of agri culture has been presented in Con- gress, and yet the measure is not in his :i.ame. He has been instrumental in bringing forward rural credits in the United States, and yet others took up the threads of his work and re ceived the credit due to pioneers. This is a mistake. The pioneer of rural credits for the United States is the President of the Southern Commercial Congress Duncan U. Fletcher. He i! was who pioneered the way for the materialization of the American Com mission and for the United States Commission on Rural Credits, and the labors of these commissions, as em bodied in their reports of Olfi pages, paved the way for Rural Credit Leg islation. "If I were nresont at your meeting I would call upon Mr. Fletcher to step forward on the platform, and i ft:ni.r.!r to him 1 would say: I his is I the in -m who his done a great work ! f'-r the American farmers. He is the P'oneer of Rural Credits in the Unit j cd States, and do you know what that j means? Do you realize the present .difference between the ordinary rates j of interest on farm loans and the m i ral credit rites? "Xor is that all; take the present leverage nte of interest and compare it with what it was before Senator Fletcher tool; tin the Rural Credit j question: then strike a balance and j tpp wh"'t the difference amounts to. ! You will no doubt be sin-wised to find jthat the difference in solid gob' would j make a bulk many times his size. And all this has been saved to the Farmers of America. If you hnve 'any doubts in the matter, then please co over the testimony given bv Comn troller of the Currency. Williams, in his heirmg before the Joint Commit tee on Banking and Currency. See what testimony he gave on interest ratei charged on farm loans before the rural credit legislation was enact ed. Then see wht the rates are to dav, with the rural credit system as a competitor in the field. "The South should not forget this great accomplishment of one of her sons. It cannot afford to do so. It would be unjust if it did. And the time will come when the United States will remember his work; when it will be inscribed on the imperishable pages of history." The Way You Do It. One reads that Darwin never under stood an equal ion. and the chances arc that Isaac New ion could not have pass ed any examination in literary nr lies thetie subjects with Ids idea that poet ry was ingenious nonsense and statu ary only stone dolls. Faraday had m gift for mathematics, ed question if Xai could have passed a ct examination i:i Fiv:n-li. their ability to do s. me d th world in its i'i r !,:: to do l,a that has tin at var ious lie- not the;.- iz:.1 1 j the u i . ! It ma'z's liti;;. The liii'a IV i it. The l.z.-z,. with V- r , ! sitions, wliia- ; and it is a moot uleon l'onaparie i:lc entrance IV.t it was one till':-; we:' i 'a d v 1 rail'-!. v'.at al der..t,-' v, ci; v.-!:ai : ou -.ca e in Ce oil c v. o, ill :s i v rsoc!;e;l loo':. in;.- for gi ml pn .1 positions are wail i big for good people to till them. That pound of wheat flour YOU save every week will weigh very heav ily on the Kaiser's mind. If you want Germany to win this war, waste food use up the food needed by those who are fighting her. Mrs. I (). Stuchell Tells How She Cured Her Son of a Cold. "When my son Ellis was i with a cold last winter I gave him Chamber lain's Cough Remedy. It helped him at once and quickly broke up his cold," writes Mrs. P. O. Stuchell, Homer City, Pa, This remedy has been in use for many years. Its good quali ties have been fully proven by many thousands of. people. It is pleasant irnd safe to take. Ackerman-Stcwiirt Drug; Co. a ccr7:Ti:;T witness. In This Case Action Was Much More Eloquent Than Words. Judge Poilard of St. Louis, originator of a widely known probation system, is the subject of a story illustrating his novel method of dealing with trouble some cases. A driver had been brought before Judge 1'ollard charged with cru elty to animals. He had been driving a galled mule, but he had an expert witness in a veterinarian, who testified that the sore on the mule's back did not pain the animal in the least. The judge listened attentively to the long technical opinion and then de manded to u,i.,w the mule's where abouts He was informed ,iiat it was harnessed to a wagon that stood in the street in front of the 'minimus,,. The judge then ordered that court be adjourned for live mi,,,,,.,.. ti.. . . ,. . . '"" i c looh j his cane and proceeded t the street I went v.p to the mule and with the e,.,i of his cane gently tombed the sore spot on the animal's back. The mule Promptly tried to Mek the dashboard oft the wagon. Ome again tlle ,,,, , touched ,l,e s. ,,, wi(U h.s (,a and the mule responded as before Judge Pollard returned , ,he bench The . 1-ris.-.,.,. was .,i,, before him! W ith ml due reS - t to ,l,e expert testimony ; ha,,. ,,., ,.,, your behalf , shoyy ,,0 muW back does ,M ,.ah, l,i,,i. I ,viil ,ine -0u '".""."'"'', J't'lw. "I asked the mule ,f the sore hurt him, and he said it did." -Exchange. The women andchiid7e7 0f 0U1. the women and children f a should be hungry tv," Al,ler'ea abundantly-' wiseh L .m3-.,eat waste-aid still . aml wlthout children o our -fl WT tremes of hunger ThJ whthe " woman is ,j 1. . na.ts w"y everv of the Food A m" :asaer Jacksonville, October 31 The United States government tomorrow answers one of the few arguments of some housewives against home food conservation by makihg- food' conservation compulsory on manufac turers, wholesalers, jobbers and marny retailers of the country's basic food products. i The plan becomes effective to-mor-iow under Presidential order. Coming at the height of the Food Pledge campaign, it is considered by the Food Administration a conclusive answer to the housewives who have said: 'Why should I sign the food pledge to conserve food in my home when the manufacturers are wasting it, speculators are boosting its prices and anti-Americans are hoarding it m enormous quantties?" There will be no more cf that. Ail the great ma-nufaeturers and wholesalers who have been accused ol controlling the market are today forbidden to do business except un d r government license. This includes those engaged in ' the import, manufacture, storage and lis- i tri'mtion" of the fundamenfal food ! stuffs named. It embraces meat packers, cold storage warehousemen, n.ii'ers, earners, elevators, grain deal ers, ant retailers- doing a business of more tiun $100,000 a year. These dealers have been warned th.vt anv one of them who is found manipulating or speculating in these foods, who hoards them, who extorts unreasonable profits, or who indulges in discriminatory practices in hand liir thent, will hs mhict to i fio of s."),0(lli or two ye-ifs n prison or both. Hoarded food will be seized by the government. Conspira-v on the p-i yt de"V- . L a.. iU. 1 to oeieat me purposes oi cue ioou law is pomsname ny himiuii nne or two years' imprisonment, or both. The government will w.tcb these dealers 3WI consider them as patri otically living up to the provisions of the license until by their own acts they prove that the confidence is mis placed. Such cases will be dealt with summarily. o firm in the list ran do business without a government license after todr.y. And under the license, each firm or person licensed must report wh'.t has bo"n "-oing on in his busi ness since the last report. A spe cial legal department has been organ ized in the Food Adminirtration to en-fiv-cp these regulntons. Dealers effected are those packing o-.- h"ndlinr in large wav whet, wheat floury rye or rye flour, barley or barley flour; oits, oatmeal or roll ed eats; com. corn grits, oornmenl, hnminv. corn flour, starch from com, oil, covn syrun or glucose; rice or "ice flour; dried be-ins, pea seed or dried peas, cottonseed, cottonseed oil. cottonseed cake or cottonseed meal; neanut oil or meal; sov bean oil or meal, pahn or copr oil, oleomarg-i-'i-e. b'rd. lai-d substitutes, oleo oils 0- cooking '-its: milk, butter or cheese, condensed, powdered or evap orated milk; fresh, canned or cured beef, pork or mutton; poultry or eggs; fre-h m- frozen fih: fresh fruits nr vegetables, canned peas, tomatoes, corn, snlmoe or sardines; dried prunes, annles, pcehes or raisins, su t'ar. syruns or molasses. This, the p-,)r,,i pied -re Week cam-pnio-ners pointed out. nuts the house wife, the packer -. nil the dealer in food en a par in the saving camti-iign. With this .ilstinctim: the housewives are being asked to conserve voluntari 'v the needed fnry, meit. wheat fats and sugar. The packers and dealers have accepted restrictions aimed to -uljust exorbitant prices at tb" source. Replying to the further criticism ,""f '""Vl'ltr '-et:';lors doing less th"n poo.000 worth of business a vear un- 1- censed does--', tl, r0 to-ice situation much, n Food Adminis-tr-ition Official tnd-iv said: "We were not aulho'-zed lv Con-'-Trcss to license retailers doing less M an SlOfi.fiiio a vcr business. How ever, the cn-trol of retail nrices real v is in the hands of the housewives. We vow control the bash- products pp to the small ret ulor's door. We will tell the public what price the re tailer pays for those products. Then i. will he up to the huving house wives to see that no retailor sells to them for more than a fair margin of profit. "Put." -dded the official, "we feel "'ire that no housewife will use ;v-v eteder's unpatriotic attempt it nro tee,.,:K ., v(,.,con fn nnf (loiti? !"v .vt towards wiv fund conse'-va-tion. Compound, turday j t, 1 0th I a K3 Cleveland, Ohia-'TorJ fered so sometime ;t - y.el 11 My J as all inl 'gat.s. J could hanl lorn in. littlaatnd I almost : "-or came. home I would f rir.t jv had the same ppim A friend who is at-" f T :: r ri:.. ' pound. I ter-n t;.: Khfr', for T V'!e :iil.'nMK . " ".' already done me m-ro t-ri' hospital. T- ::rv-'-!- v us, ui, iiij, autlL'f IS 108U3 j nirr.cti oi,.l L,,.t . mm aa i ti3 my BUVlCe IS t08U drug-store and get a bottle you go home."-Mrs. .C 2844V.12thSL,C!eve!ati,(j I Americ;, will deserve to lose this I ar if. through unwillingness to prac ! j"1' j'"1-'!! e-ononiies. it. fails . to ave ! the food nccess,M-v to keep our allies ! !n ",0 f,ht until victory is won. COURSE OF A RIFLE Just What Happens From th the Gun Is Fired. Two sportsmen were disJ claimed t::i,i if a r:.1e is s;.: dead level the l,ji WMm the Instant it leans tlir k second man imcd timt lb, rises above the level nf the then falls. They didn't setti. tion, !a:l h-re is the aiiswg: Gravity a-'ls tipmi a i;:ov,: suiported b' d,- instantly, i large or small. In a rille i Bight tthat is, the line uf s thing; the line of t'.ie tore J Iu order thai uravity will nJ bullet to di-oii tun sunn arifii' uiiule m that the line of tlie 1 slightly up .it'll a ii'iniiiiifti! line of siiit. The re.-itt i the bullet he-iio tn ilruii the dirirt line of the kivtW it leaves ih" pie e, it thJ above the .!( (.f sir!it ainll drops beli w it. Ititles are n-'..-i''y nuide k Will s, i ike lii I ;riiJ.. tain d:sta-. i s.;j -'"';wi.-hiuiter. ! v, t "point b.ani;" ;.; '.'"i yank jei-t is tartl-er ": ' must I'e ui i :j. i'i;r nay t cuuistaii' e-. l-"wci-r, ti W away from t !.-. Ii:.e nf the 1 to the gra- i;y. ilr is...wot llred.-N'ew York Tiihuue. AGED SOAP BUBB1 Dewar Walu Monster Ones Keeps Them For Monti The tr.in-u M eiteire ol bubble is j.i. M-i!ji;il. but 1' I )..! i- in a r:u i utx m ered at the !:;. al iut;tati- don, cxpla.: ! Iww soap could be n a. a- io lii-t for Ui'. ovlitliiieil ,M-:ai siieiimt'lis. requisite is ;h.a theuii'" the bubble shail In' free from In l'rofe r 1 vw:if s mi is filtered ,iir.-!il "mV' liolil.li.s me :-i-.ii I')' i cock In the air "!lM.v soai) Sol!lli he lffW oleic acid : ben and an sillin or i :. To make a liquid muM I tOIll b.V Slieii. from outside. bles that had that were ta diameter, blov tainlng pare : sure. A little wan of the vessel, of about .".o d. longevity. 1 smaller Inibblc -riiiladclhia m, ., ,o-n,aiie-i-V 1 lie llie.-i - ' , : . t)j out of a tight p.: ' .led I'V '!'e H ....ainni soup ,;! ;. durable 1 .. lenieved tti ,,, ihrnudi tub Tin. lecturerf. eialureJ for a- ;,. liani ball a a ia air at atiaesh- ... i keal V ia.ii'" :ves K. i i I'ai:'' s .ere m'a''1' 1'ic. TIRED, NflM lOfflft TOOK ! Millions of Kuronean farmers hive I r!- .,,lpi'- f;'h's to fight for the afetv ot -mencn and the world. Those! . , . Ch.rt-ff aill j therefore haven't been n-odncing NOW She IS Strong 1 i. '?. r.uropes tooa j mis got to come from somewhere. j onei-K-i ,s the place. Ifs little I eropo-ll in ncl- U i - " " mi- individual : American ! to conserve what our fields produce. o j--,, r.iiiopean hrethren can have plen ! ,v nd keen on tt.o r,vt c.. ...... I -e 'e ni;in, ail.c JUUI For a Weak Stomach. ) As a general rule all vou need to eo is to adont a diet suited to vour ace and occupstien and to keep vour howeln regular. When vou feel that vou have eaten too much and when "mstipated, take one of Chamberlain's 'ablets. Arl-orm. Ct i- n, Berkeley, taLr40Bids ' irritable, no PPt'tV ;r I 1 nld,9VS Ills"' , J ana wa .(Tnrt ' work was a great eBort other medicines haM, built me up and made sl have a g"" - k ,w Sl07 Dwight Way, JBf,, We ask every ner down, ailing woman , wi try this cod uvc. - - , our guarantee to H Jf it fails to neif j j ACKEBMAX-STEWAtl "nauon. - " imiil-u tc K1 b L-1 lUt I I o.