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f WEEK'S NEWS STORIES RETOLD - > V gagas? ' * K- Events That Made a Stir Condensed to a Paragraph. : A } WHAT WASHINGTON IS DOING . i ci News of Interest That Trickles From * the White House and the Various Departments?Catalogue of * Crime* and Casualties. niwuininuiiuuiiiuiiiiiuiiuiiinHiiiHiiiiumnuiiimiHiHinutg Washington f illUiUllllllUIUiUlimilllliHUUUUtUlllillllIinilUlilillllillillll,^ Though voting against the La Foll tte amendment imposing a tax of 10 per cent on all inoomee over $100,000, insurgent Democratic Senators forced party leadens to consent to confer increasing the tax above the t*te provided in the Tariff bilL President Wilson reads stirring message to Congress outlining the administration policy toward Mexico. He trges Americans to leave the country end declares a strict neutrality. it was reported that President Wilion and Governor General Harrison would work for the eventual independence of the Philippines. The House Democratic caucus adopted an agricultural currency amendment to the Administration Currency bill, which puts paper based on agricultural products on the same bas!f as commercial paper for banking purpose*. | Personal 1 ld0imiUMRMHniWIUHIUflJIIMU?UUWUiJU]iUUtiUllli!iHIMlUliilUHUl? Harry Thaw probably will stay in jail at Sherbrooke, Jue., until October at least before hi* status is decided Pi the courts. Charles M. Caughy, ex-United States (kmnsul at Messina and Milan, Italy, died in. Rochmond. He was first appointed by President Cleveland and wan a newspaper man in Baltimore for many years. Alice Miller Weeks, author of children's and stories published in Sunday school papers, died in her home iz\ Philadelphia, In private life she was Mrs, Alfred M. Kroger. Andrea Rlela, proteeaional dancer from New York who has been giving dancing lessons to the members of the fashionable villa eoleny here, was arrested in Newport lor a bill contracted at the Casino here. Mrs. StuyYfcant Fish has been among his pupils. Sporting | Umpire McGreevy, of the American League, Chicago, resigned because of the illness of hi wife. The vacancy will not be filled, President Ban Johneon depending upon the remaining eight arbiters for the mat of the season. It was announced that the Laurel race course would be included in the Jockey Club circuit of tracks. By a new rule of the American Powerboat Association, an amateur helmsman can race for cash prizes, taking plate if he wins. James Butler, the New York millionaire, has purchased the Laurel Race Track from H. D. "Curley" Brown for a sum supposed to be $250,000. A check for $10,000 was given to bind the bargain. General UUHtUHII!IU)llllllllll!IIIIII1llll!lllilHIIMini!IMIIUillUilllllKII!IIIIIIUI1IIIHIl7K The Palace of Peace erected by Andrew Carnegie at The Hague was dedicated. Capt. Alfred Brown, on his fifth attempt, swam from the Battery, New ' York, to Sandy Hook. A note from President Huerta of Mexico called Mr. John Lind from yera Cruz back to the capital. Charles M. Schwab ?ave $14,000 needed to complete the $50,000 endowfumd of Leonard Hall, an Episcopal missionary school. Colonel Roosevelt etopped in Chicago long enough to declare himself against compromise with the Republican party. He had nothing to say on the Mexican situation. Appeal* to District Attorney Whitman t? help save the fusion situation were nwuie by the Nw York committee as thp result of Hearst's attack on McAheny and Prendergast ExKJovexnor Stone, of Pennsylvania predicted that Harry K. Thaw would In Canada when &j*ow falls, and planned a test of the Canadian immigration law to avert the expulsion of the fugitive. District Attorney Whitman accepted the Tammany designation for his present office and E. E. McCall, Tammany candidate for Mayor, gave a pledge to support him "from the ground up." Miss Blanche Bas* gave up her place in St. Louis society to take charge of a eugenics training school for orphan girls at Shreveport, La. The bodies of Miss Angie Spear, 19 years old, and Car! W. Perry. L'O years old. of Rockland. Ale. were found in a motcrboat. at sea by a fisherman. Both died from wound** from a pistoi which was found in Perry's hand. Tr was announcr-d thru the Frawlev Conimiiiee would renew investigations of Governor Sulzer's campaign fun*! and that an effort would be mad? to discredit Mrs. "confession" ?Jf h*r thare in ;he sloe*. transactions. j i The trial of F. Drew Gamine j charged with white slavery ,is on t; i in California. Delegates representing 30,000 E i attended the opening of the State j union in Milton, Pa, The annual convention of the Pe I sylvania Catholic Total Abstine: ! Union opened in Mount Cannel. ; John Lind, President Wilson's pe j envoy to Mexico, leaves for Vera C on his return to the United States Governor Fielder welcomed the F esters of America to New Jersey their annual meeting at Atlantic C: W. E. Sweeting, of Penneylvai won the national individual r match at Camp Perry, with a score j 238. j Suffragist leaders from the natio: j headquarters are preparing to en I actively into the coming campaign Maryland. J. E. Rowan, his wife, two clrldi and his sister-in-law were killed wt a Pennsylvania train hit their mo car near Freeport, PaPostmaster John S. Wilson, of C nmbia, Pa., and his assistant, Fra G. Payne were arrested on the chai of embezzling office fundsu Special Sunday dinners, "with so: delicacies in addition to the routi fare," will be enjoyed by all occupaj of New York State prisons. The Pennsylvania State Camp, P riotic Order Sons of America, in s sion at Altoona, elected Samuel Wells, of Philadelphia, president. James Mitchell, seven, was left die in a sand bank when workmen d out two playmates at Patfrson, N. because it was not known he w there. As the result of the recent droug 38,000 cattle were received in t j Kansas City stock yards, the great( single days' receipts in the history the yards. Bumper crops in the Northw( i were predicted in Minneapolis. A r< ! ord corn crop is assured, while wh I and small grains are expected to bri higher prices. Congressman Lenroot announc his candidacy to succeed Senat Stephenson, of Wisconsin, there emphasizing his break with Senat La Follette. Six men were chosen to sit on t jury that will try F. Drew Caminet in San Franc! SCO, on the charge having violated the Federal wh' slave act. One thousand longshoremen e ployed on the piers of the Hambui American Steamship Company stru in protest against the abandoning the check system of hiring. American Locomotive and Americ Can shares led the stock market \ ward, owing to dividend rumors c< cerning both companies. Wall stn does not fear the Mexican situatioi Precious stones valued at $1,500,6 A* X- 1 ~ were, mrougn errur, imt uuuci sua of one man in a Chicago hotel for hour, by members of the National I tall Jewelers' Association, whose fc days' convention will begin today. A terrible self-inflictetd gash in t heel and a swim of a mile with t blood pouring from the wound prob; ly saved the life of John Swanson Atlantic City, a giaxet Swedish fish man, when stung by a stingray. Ferdinand Pinney Earle denied The World's Paris correspondent tt he had deceived his present wife regard to his former marriages. 1 ? said "religious" persons are trying break up his home. Dr. William M. Willey, a refug from Vera Cruz, detailed the outrae to which Americans resident in M< ico were subjected and the alleg remissness of United States Consu The fourth International Congre of School Hygiene was forma j opened at Buffalo. Dr. Charles j Eliot, president of the Congress, < I I'JvcKT-Qrl liic cmrmpl nrirlrpss in t J HT^.iV.U A* * 'J fc*** ?* v?v%? i evening. j William. Travers Jerome arrived \ Sherbrooke, Que., after an automob journey of more than 600 miles, take charge of New York State's fig to have Harry K. Thaw returned Matteawan. Ex-Gov. Stone of Per sylvania, in charge of thaw's si( plans to fight deportation by the i migration officials by testing the cc stitutionality of the section of the I migration law which applies in 1 case. MimftitttKuiimMHmmHiiuiuiiiiiimmintmiiHitiirtiiHifwtHkiiHmirtif! 1 Foreign KitHHHHWitwmNmjiHtmtiiuuuiiwMHiiiwHMtuiniwHmmtiiiiiiiiiiii] English militanv suffragettes buj ed a residence in Pinchley, one of he don's suburbs. Government forces have captur Nankin, and de-prived the labels their last stronghold. Harry A. Hawker, the English av tor who is flying around the coasts Q?*/1 c or?rlt???rl EJAA%LCL1A\A m.U.KA l^WWKUiU, AAWI VU Oban, Scotland. - No. 6 Grosvenor Square has be leased for three years by U. S. Amb< sador Page, who expects to occupy t house in the middle of Septemb* when he will return to London aft a motor trip. It is announced that in the lumb room of the Calais Museum in Par there wa* discovered a magnifice painting 01 the head of an old m; ! signed "Rembrandt, 1653." | Walter Hines Page, the new Ame ! can Ambassador In London, leased house in Grosvenor Square. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Carnegie \v j be the guests of the Belgian Govei ! ment. The King will give a banqu I in th*-r honor on the day of their i ! rival, and other oflicial functions a i being arranged. I "The f'Iclure of Dorian Dray,' j dramatization ot" Oscar Wikk's fame J novel.. was produced at the Vaudevi j Theatre in London, with Lou Tellege the Fleet! sh actor, who ie a freque I oooperator with Sarah B-inhardt, ! l>oriun itti, ! rial j :'s! ALFALFA nn- ^ Qce j Alfalfa should be grown on every farm. Make ace | a beginning-start now. ruz ! 1 1 'or- j for ! ALFALFA ENRICHES THE LAND Ity. j iia j Besides Producing More Abundant iflQ j Harvests Alfalfa Adds Plant Food I to thp Soil for the Use of , OI ? ? Other Crops. nal ter Alfalfa enriches the soil. The roots of the alfalfa plant penetrate 12 to j 35 feet into the soil?far beyond the reach of corn, wheat, oats and l n | other shallow rooting plants. In tor j this way potash, phosphorus and othj er elements of plant food are drawn 01- j up from below through the roots of ,nk I the alfalfa plant and stored in the 'ge I upper soil for the use of other crops. The experiment set forth in the acme I companying chart was made in Canine | ada, where it was found that alfalfa its J at- Alfalfa Enriches the Land ao. C Wheat Bu.Per Acre Alfalfa Sod [iuwictctw 61.0 to Timothy Sod padHS 42. ug J., Barley as i Alfalfa Sod ISgffBWB 30. Timothy Sod HM1BW 20. bt? r? he ; Corn JSt | Alfalfa Sod 24. Timothy Sod jSWBPIM 18. jSt j I????__?I ec- j sod yielded 61.5 bushels of wheat per -at j acre, as compared with 42 bushels oa nS j timothy sod. Barley yielded 30 bushels per acre | on alfalfa sod, and only 20 bushel3 on :or i timothy sod. Canada is not a corn by j country, yet the experiments show or similar results. Alfalfa sod yielded 24 bushels per acre of corn, as cornhe pared with 18 bushels on timothy sod. This is only one of many such expert-, ments which give the same results, Ite proving alfalfa t. be a soil enriching crop. m- , r!" ALFALFA MOST VALUABLE CROP. ck ?* Per Acre Value Five Times More .Than Clover?Some Wisconsin an Census Figures Which Talk 1P" for Themselves. >n )et According to the 1910 census of the 2- hay crop, the state of Wisconsin grew 00 18,000 acres of alfalfa, which averaged -rd 2.8 tons per acre for the entire state, an and the average acre value of the te- crop was $31.00. During the same ?ur year the combined acreage of timothy and clover averaged 1.6 tons per acre, he valued at $14.00. It costs no more to he grow an acre of alfalfa than it does ib- to grow an acre of timothy or clover, of The average cost of growing an acre er- of clover or timothy is approximately $10.00. Thus the farmer would clear to $4.00 per acre in growing these crops, iat whereas if he grew alfalfa he would jn i make a profit of $21.00 per acre, or Fie ! 101 Alfalfa Moft Valuable ;?? | Forage Crop 5X- ! ' e(j j Wisconsin Hay Crop, 1910 Is. Value Acreage Av. Yield Per A. j^s Alfalfa 18,000 2.8 Tons S31 !v Timothy 767,000 1.4 " 14 ie; | Clover 119,500 1.7 - 14 lie ; Timothy ) and [ 1,600,000 1.6 14 I Clover ) at I ? i I over five times the income received ? from any one of the other hay crops. ' w The lates^ reports from Wisconsin L? show nearly 40,000 acres seeded to alin" falfa with an average of about four e' tons to the acre, m>n " m- ALFALFA RICH IN PROTEIN lis ' With 12.3 Per Cent, of Digestible Protein, Alfalfa Surpasses Even | Wheat Bran In Feeding Value. a a Alfalfa has high feeding value* aa :n- shown by the chart below, taken >n- from California Bui. No. 132. This is due to its digestibility and its composted tion. Alfalfa is rich in digestible proof tein which is the bone 'and muscle buildinz element. It is also rich in ni la. of I ALFALFA RICH IN DIGESTIBLE PROTEIN ^ ^ ALFALFA w. wwrira*M?i i2Ji WHEAT BRAN ksmui* mil aii|,h yffl 11.2 it, OATS UiiWiiiMiiw^|j|?| 9.5 Gr CORN ^u^-grwgai 7.8 er CLOVER 7& is> TOOTHY IessS 28 nt CORN FODDER [e3BI 2.5 au CORN SILAGE kg 18 ri- OAT STRAW L2 a WHEAT .4 ill u* trogen, the component of protein, | but protein is the costlv food element. ; irIt is absolutely neeessarv for the pro- , rc duetion oi mill: and for young grow- j in.n aauiiais. i'Jg? win starve ua iui'i alone. All animals must have frame ! us buii-iiiii; rood as well as fat producing ; food, sue'i as corn. j Alfaifa with corn makes a perfectly ! balp.rcefl ration, supplying the unimal I wit;, an abumiance ol Done, fieaii ailU fat ; material. ! i just ; ONE ! word that wo"' . ! tuws, it refers to Dr. Tutt's Liver Pills and ! ivsea&ss health. Are you constipated? Troubled with indigestion? Sick headache? Virtigo? Bilious? liiouiiiiuai | ANY of these symptoms and many others indicate inaction of the LIVER. You. INToec! Take No Substitute. i ? -gi | Picnic at Little Mountain. | The annual fraternal picnic will be j held at the school house at Little ' Mountain Friday, September 5th. I Three orders are represented, namely: j The Woodmen of the World, the Im| proved Older of Redmen and the i Masons. The public is cordially in| vited. j All neighboring orders are invited j to attend this picnic with baskets, as we hope to make this the largest gath! ering of the kind ever held here, and ; we hope to make it profitable to all | who attend. The Peak striDg band, | which has a good reputation for its ! efficiency, will furnish music. The ! following program has_been arranged, i and the committee congratulate.them! selves on being able to ^secure such , emcient and noted speakers: Meeting called to order by Chairman | J. B. Addy. Prayer by the Rev. J. J. LoDg. | Music. i Address of Welcome by Mr. J. B. i Lathan, in behalf of the town and ! community. j Address of Welcome by Mr. H. L. j Harmon, in behalf of the orders. | Music. | Address by Hon. J. H. Wharton, in i behalf of the Woodmen of the World. I I Music. Address by the Hon. R. A. Cooper, in behalf of Free Masonry. Music. Recess for dinner. Meeting called to order at 1:30 by Chairman J. B. Addy. Music. Address by Cole L. Blease, in behalf nf the Tmnrnved Order nf Red Men. w- -?r-' ' ? ? Music. Ool. E. H. Anil, Great Sachem of the Improved Order of Red Men of J South Carolina, has been invited, and will as usual, have something good to say. Mother of Eighteen Children. "I am the mother of eighteen chil dren and have the praise of doing more work than any young woman in my town," writes Mrs C. J. Martin, Boone Mill, Vt. "I suffered for five years ' with stomach trouble and could not eat as much as a biscuit without suf- j , fering. I have taken three bottles of | Chamberlain's Tablets and am now a well woman and weigh 168 pounds. 1 j j can eat anything I want to and as much j j as I want and feel better than I have j at any time in ten years. I refer to j anyone in Boone Mill or vicinity and i they will vouch for what I say." Cliami berlain's Tablets are for sale by All i Dealers. aciv. I j Tri-County Fair. i Big preparations are being made by | the officers of the Tri-County Fair to be held at Batesburg this fall. The people of Lexington, Saluda, j Edgefield and Aiken are more enj thusiastic over the fair than they have ever been and are working with might and main for its success. A Man's Bargain. If I cry out for fellowship, A comrade's voice, a comrade's grip, An ear to heed my groan, Renew that hour's dark ecstasy When all thy waves went over me And thou and I, with none to see, Were joined in fight alone. If I demand a sheltered space Set for me in the battle place, Where I at times could turn my face A screened and welcome guest, Decree my soul should henceforth cease From its wild hankering after peace And rest in that which gives release From the desire of rest. j If 1 for filial goal should ask, Some ript ncd field that yet may ' bask S; cure from hurricane, ! Point to tf 13" locust eaten sheaves. ! The burnt out stars, the still born leaves, J And by the toil no hope retrieves Nerve me to tAl again. 1 ?O. M. Ilort in London Acauemv. ? j j Despondency i Is oft. n caused by indigestion and j constipation, and quickly disappears j when Chamberlain's Tablets are taken. 1 For sale hr AH Dealers. adv. ! 1 t? ? ??? ^ ni_n* ft * i Mailings & Armstrong New Brookland, S. C. More Goods for Same Money, Same Goods for Less Money. ^ ?? Vi Columbia, S. C. Phone 498 LORICK BROTHERS Jobbers and Dealers in Stove9 Mantles Ranges Tiles and Grates Furnaces Heaters Stove Pipe Steam, Gas, Water Pipe Hollow-ware and Fittings ? ? Valves Enamel Ware Water Closets and Tin and Galvanized Ware Trimmings "Wear Ever" Euameled Iron Aluminum Ware Bath Tubs and Lavatories Bath Room Acc s-orh.-s -m Terra Cotta Soil Pipe and Finings Sewer Pipe Compression Cocks Flue Pipe Stops and Bibb9 Farm Drain Tile Fire Brick and Fire Clay Sporting Goods Tin Plate Pig Lead Solder J?M Asbestos and Regal Copper Roofing Metal Shingles Slaters Felt Ventilators Tar Paper Galvanized and Black Red Rosin Sized Sheeting SL et- Iron Koof Coating Metal Ceiling Roof Paint Gutter and Conductor j Pipe Tinners' T00I9 Corrugated and V. Crimp ed Roofing < Pumps and Well Goods Ridge Roll , Rubber Hose t Valley, Etc. Our Stock is Complete; Prices Low; Deliveries Prompt. Let us quote < you before you buy. < I Manufacturing Oo.' 1 I MANUFACTURERS OF 1 I Sash, Doors and Siind, Inferior Finish, I II Pine, Cypress and Oak. I jg flooring, uemny, neainerDoaruing, muuiumg, m g Door and Window Frames. S ^ Columbia, South Carolina. a C. 0. BROWN & BRO. ~i | 1730 MAIN STREET, COLUMBIA, S. C. j ji Is where you can find one of the best stocks of | ^PAINTS^ 1 jj| OF ALL KINDS | DOORS, SASH, BLINDS Sc GLASS I LIME AND CEMENT. I I CABINET MANTLES, 1 si Call or write for Prices. is I j