University of South Carolina Libraries
1 1 ' PALMETTO HAPPENINGS;! 1 n ; !| " i News Notes of General Interest F ! From All Parts of the State. !| 2 1 i r = DR. J. H. CARLISLE DEAD. oI i w President Emeritus of Wofford Col- ^ ' lege Passes Away at Age of 84 ?( Years. A Spartanburg. Special.?l)r. James Dl H. Carlisle, aged 84 years, president 01 emeritus of Wnfforit Colliur,. mill rain at of the most prominent educators in the South, died at his home here Thursday morning at 7:30 o'clock. I The funeral was held Friday at 4 p. P' m., in the College chapel and was attended by hundreds of prominent eitixens f.iim all sections of the State. All schools and colleges in the city ri were closed and during hours of fu- 811 neral all places of business were a closed. Pc The last time that Dr. Carlisle appeared in public was during the sum- J!1 mer school for teachers at Wofford ' College, when it was the pleasure of ju the teachers to hear an interesting . address on school life of long ago, 1 and on Washington's visit to South 111 Carolina after lie had been elected President of the United States. Prior " to this time he had not made an address in public for many months. The commencement at Wofford last ; 1 June was tlie first commencement j}( missed by I)r. Carlisle for moi^e than two score of venrs Wlien 1i? ????? d* a member of the faculty he always P occupied a seat on tlie rostrum <luring the commencement season, and ?" after he retired from the active pros- 111 idency of the college, he never miss?d an exercise. Last June, however, lie was indisposed and it was impos- ?,! sible for him to attend any of the ' exercises at the college. Dr. Carlisle was president of Wof- u' ford College from 1875 to 1!)02. when n" lie resigned and became president. J emeritus. Following liis resignation *' Dr. H. N. Snyder was elected. He was born Slay 4. 1825. Corn Prizes Awarded. cli Bishopville, Special?Tlie Lee eoun- ^ ty Boys' Corn Contest association. sa organized under tlie bureau of plant 0; industry of the United State depart- di inent of agriculture, held a meeting ^ here October 10. to award the different prizes offered, which wen as ful- 1,1 lows: 1,1 Best 10 ears of corn, prize of $10, P ?uii uy ii. v\ . iNortlicutt; second best j 1,1 10 ears of corn, prize of $5. won by '? E. Fulton Peebles; third best 10 ears 6f corn, prize of ijv2.n0, won by Eldridge II. Mixon. Best live ears of corn, prize of $7.50. won by Ehlridge McCoy: seeoiul best live ears of corn, prize of $5, won by Tlios. A. DuBose; Ui third best live ears of corn, prize of Ji $2.50, won by Ethan Baker. Best ear be of corn, first prize of $5. won by te Marant Truluek; second best ear of Ot corn, prize of $3, won by Lawton bi Beasley: third best ear of corn, prize or of $2. won by Walter Richlmrg. C< There was also a prize of $3 offer- lit cd to any boy of the county regard- CI less of being: a member of the contest association for the best ear of corn, C< which was won by llarvey Ford. W Two other prizes were also offered wl for the best and second best ear of th the prolific variety with stalk, first lit prize, $3 and second $2. won bv Ti Henry CJreen and Ralph Green. In The association is composed of 27 te boys, of which number 14 entered the re contest. of Thirty-four boys entered the indc- er pendent one ear contest. in The judges were: Ira W. Williams, nr Columbia; W. S. Wheeler. St. Charles fo and L. L. Baker, Bishopville. fa Much interest was taken in the ex- in hibition as was shown by the attend- vc ranee of about 300 people. After the an awarding of prizes, Mr. Williams lee- Tl tured on the selection of seed. wi Jury Gives Verdict Against Lancaster Lancaster, Special.?The jury in er Athe ease of. Mrs. Roma Stogner p11 against the town of Lancaster, suit jj, for damages for personal injury sus- lit tained by being thrown from a buggy an on the streets, returned a verdict " Tuesday night for the plaintiff for Pr $212.50. The amount sued for was $4,000. ed York Farmers Prosperous. Pj Yorkville, Special.?It is generally conceded that fewer farmers in this fj section are holding cotton this fall ^ than at any time since the war. Those who owe accounts ar selling their cot- 1 ton an<l paying up, and those who m have no accounts are selling and at .in iii ii-_ J- it- - t?i-- lr. cuuerfpiaiin^ im* money in ine name* or kcojjjf^r it nt home, but compara- Tj tively speaking the large majority arc 8(1 depositing it, most of them on eerti- ** flcate. It is estimated that the depos- of its in the eight banks of York county >n at this time amounts to close around 8* 3?2,000,000, the largest in the history hi of the county, : th To Establish Creamery at Marion. Marion, Special.?The question of er establishing a creamery here is being pi ^.agitated by Messrs. Gibs and Simmons of the Elgin Creamery Company of Elgin, 111. They propose to Sl put in a plant here to cost $6,000. ei Several local business men have already become interested in the pro- ec jeet and subscribed stock. It is I ei thought that the reqaired amount of W money will be raised. a*ji Hi Iti-i i ri i* ORKTOWN CELEBRATION Cornwallis Is Taken," Rings Out Again?Memories Rekindled By 5,000 People Finding Their Way to the Secluded Spot. Yorktown, Ya., Special.?Quaint id Yorktown, for tlie second time ithin the period of its national fame uesday commemorated with titling iremonies that glorious event in meriean history with which its line is identified. Here was laid le hundred and twenty-eight years jo to a day the cornerstone of liher' upon whitfli a great nation lias been lilt. x "Cornwallis is taken!" Those sime words sent broadcast from here lis date three years tuore than a intury and a quarter ago meant lat the burdensome yoke of ltritish lie had been cast olT by the long iffering American colonists and that new republic, destined to become l 1 I i /?viiiii, iiuti iii-en norn. Yorktown today is a village of loss * an one hundred people. It is as louijh the sta<;e settinjr for that lal drama of the Hevolutionary war ul been reserved as the aetors left , a relic of antiquity as well as a I onunient to American patriotism. ' The descendants of the signers of e Declaration of Independence and i offspring of that organization, the orktown Historical Society of the uited States recently deiided to >ld an annual celebration here this tober 19 and henceforth on this ite. and probably five thousand peoe responded to their appeal. When e fact that Yorktown is still with- j it railroad communication is taken s to consideration, the attendance J is remarkable. To most people present the exer?es were the least part of the eeleation, although there was a parade mounted horsemen and horsetmien, led by the Fort Monroe band id the soldiers and sailors, than a irade of the school children and afPNvards public sneakinsr from a andstand erected in front of tlie storic old Nelson mansion. The parade began at 1 o'clock and is full of inspiration. The school ildren of York county, who were ouped before the grandstand, then ng "America," after which Col. twnld Tilgham of Kaston. Md., a root descendant of Lieut. Col. Tench lgham. aide-de-camp to General ashington, who carried the famous assage "Cornwallis is taken" to e Continental Congress in Philadellia, made an address. He also read e correspondence between Washingn and Lord Cornwallis and the rms of capitulation. reparing to Sell Whitney Power Property. Ashevillc, N. C., Special.?Tn the uited States circuit court Tuesday tdge Pritchard considered a numr of phases of the receivership matr of the Whitney Company, the $10, 10.000 power company near Salisiry, which on February .1, 190S, upt the complaint of A. O. Brown & of New York, was placed in the inds of John S. Henderson and iarles W. Smith as receivers. In the suit of the Bankers Trust >mpanv of New York against the hitney and its subsidiary companies hieh was filed Monday to foreclose e $.">.000,000 bond issue, which it dds as trustee, Judge Pritchard lesday named A. II. Price of Salisiry as special master to take the cf itll/tnt' irr? /wov t lw> hooaiiaC ? ceivers, and inventory the property t the company, preparatory to a de- 0 eo of sale. He set the first Monday 1 December as the date for the Whit- [ iy Company to answer the suit he- j re him. The bill alleges that dealt has been made in payment of . terest on bonds due May 1, and No- ' imber 1, 1008, and May 1, 1000. nouutiug to approximately $450,000. 1 le property will probably be sold ithin three months. Rebel Movement Serious. Bluefield, Nicaragua, Special?Gen- c al Estrada, the rebel leader, who ? is proclaimed himself Provisional q resident of Nicaragua, returned to a is city Tuesday after having estab- p died outposts to the north of Rama id sent a detachment of 500 of his * 'st men to meet the expected ap- t oach of the government forces. a President Zclay's army is report- p I to be impeded by heavy rain. d a resident Like a Boy Out of School. Gregory, Tex., Special.?President [ lft began his three days of doing as j pleased on his brother's ranch I lesday by playing 18 holes of golf tlin llinnninfr tw l\r* o mm1/1ir l??" lll?? Wf * i u IUIIUU Y Wilis; I ill by ".just loafing" through tlio ? ng afternoon and evening. Mr. j; ift'ivwi as happv as a hoy out of v hool. ''ilie idea of eating a dinner y it bout having to speak for it. and J ' going the livelong day without hav- v g to make a speech appealed ir> him c rongly anjl he declared he wished 4 s vacation could last a week and ^ ree dnvs. c Seven Killed in Boiler Explosion. 1 El Dorado, Ark., Special?Seven nploye8 were killed and three other irsons were severely injured when t boiler of the plant of the Griffin iw Mill Company near El Dorado ^ iploded late Monday. 1 The steam register, it is said, failI to indicate the overpressure, the 1 [plosion, which could be heard for 1 iveral miles, following, wrecking a * rge section of the plant. j \ THE HUNTING SE ... j < - \ > I | / \l HATE TO DO YWfS | <v\VA I | / /KrrrrMro*T , Tlie Fanner's An ?Cartoon by WHO OWNS \ Pressing Problem That Must Be Si Aviator Has the Right oi Way 0' Ownership oi Which in Every i Old Roman Law, Extends U Ncvr Yorl: City.?How high most at tt in aviator !ty to be safe from the eon- fined equences of illegal trespass? and Tt l great many other questions, not tate mining now hut considered as soon law 1 o be hot ones, were treated by Lyt- terns leton Fox, a lawyer, in an address to raise nembers of the Aero Club of Amer- ship? ca. The answer was that *he aviator In c< vould have to be out of sight. He fleet nnct HnH oo t ho imlion riniin The old Roman law which Rives to the he owner of land absolute ownership I' th ilso of the air above it is responsible to cs or this. The law must 1>~ changed, an ei le added, or the courts wiii be ruin- perm uisly congested. As raav^ers stand. Th here having been no chances in tho with aw for several hundred years, a man travt n a flying machine has no rights that essar i man with a plow is bound to re- in it ipect. The question is how best to visio ring the attention of the judicial its r< ystem to this unfair discrimination In igainst the living portion of the race, test <>? man can fly as things now stand that vithout technically breaking the law. an a inless he gets special privileges from clear he landowners. modi It is a problem that bristles with noun lovclty, says Mr. Fox. In the event tion >f pedestrians being hit by ginger unfoi >op bottles dropped by the passing ately iviator or by other objects, includ- once ng 'he aviator himself, the man be- and ] ow would have redress at. law. Mr. atlan 'ox believes the Aero Club should those lrge the Wright brothers, for in- suffe itanco, to consent to be sued by the otliei nvner of land .over which they have level lown (and thereby trespassed), so howe is to bring the whole subject before or ar he courts for settlement. The juit hottc thould bo a friendly one, he saiu. the ashei (bject being to modify, if possible, wit'nc he law of aerial trespass. Another thin? vay might be to condemn the air by there egal procedure, and thus knock over dang he historical fossil. by tl A discussion that followed tho ad- of th Iress of the evening resulted in the tion nembers arriving at the firm belief Et hat the air should be considered a says: Hghway, and there was preliminary "X all: concerning an attemnt at lecris- nerm ativo enactment. trcsp To avert suits for aerial trespass "V >Ir. Fox suggests that the S.ate con- fuJ h lemn and buy a stratum of air as a waylighwa.v for flying machines. The in tin acf that Count T.ambert in his flight he nr icross Paris violated a police regula- air li ion forbidding aeroplaning over the sion :ity shows that the French have al- shou eady applied the law t&) cover one this iliaso of the question. By leaving Sv.it: be aerodrome for his Paris flight utes .amberi incurred a penalty of $1; road. DOFFINS TOO CHEAP, IV The Burial Casket Men Say Cost of With Increased Cos Cincinnati. Ohio.?The burial cas- faucet manufacturers and jobbers, in too n onvention here, are dissatisfied be- ting ause the cost of dying has not kept ness. lace with the increased cost, of living thev "hey deprecate cut-rate funerals, and thing ire proposi' g to establish uniform than irices for the retail trade in coffins. 'em s "We coffin makers want the under- "II akers to help us out more than they ough lo," said one delegate. "We want price he undertakers to make stiffer bills, a ste ind then we can get more for our Coffii roods. Why should we have to pay and louble what we used to pay to I've ough .nd let people die cheaply? It isn't hand -OREGOES CLOISTER TO Miss Swanson Discovers Him in Jai Seek to Procure I* St. Louis.?Miss Elsie Swanson. of room It. Louis, renounced her aspiration to each lecome a nun because she believed to ot ler duty was to search for her father, was chom she had not seen for eleven missi ears. She found him in the County for c rall at Joplin. a few minutes after he Mi ras convicted of burglary and lar- vea.-< eny and sentenced to two years in C. St he penitentiary. custc Swanson did not recognize his ten : laughter, but she picked him from a decle :rowd of prisoners in the main cell was Kentucky Stnte Troops Guarding Berg the Tiurley Tobacco Region. Lexington, ICy.?Night riders have Hi igain become active in the Burley to- has lacro region. fees Governor Wtllson has ordered out the Jtate troops and they nre scattered in of I he counties where night rider warn- conti ngs have been given. work In Mason County warnings were eled eft at the homes of Fred Adams and T1 *arry Allen, both of whom were giv- cent in five days fn which to pool their syati irons or suffer the consequences of and ihelr refusal. trtct ciu* i ASON OPENS. iC To-pJI mini Job. Godwin, in the Pittsburg Dispatch. l THE AIR? sttled at Once is Whether an irer Private Property, the Case, According to the pv/ard Indefinitely. ip Rlieims moot an aviator was for reckless driving, le military airship will necessinew provisions in international to meet the new problems of initional relations which it will France has now seven airi, Germany eleven and Italy five surse of construction. Given a of Zeppelins arriving unaniced above a British port, will act constitute a cause of war? le aeroplane develops the power irrv explosives for dropping on oemy's licet, will the practice be litted under the rules of war? le interesting fact in connection the suggested regulation of air ?1 is that it is already made necy by an invention only yesterday s infancy which threatens a re n of the statute books aloi>g with evolution of traffic, advocating arrangements for a suit, Mr. Fox seems to believe af/er the existing legal status of .erial trespasser has once been ly outlined the law may be so fieri that the air will be proced a public highway. Legislaof that kind, however, would he rtunate if it were not very aceurlimited. There is a wide differbetween navigation of the sea navigation of the air. If a transitic steamship is badly handled ) who are on hoard her may r, and she may injure an* craft which is on the same . There is practically no chance, ver. that she will harm anybody tything directly under her, at the ?m of the ocean. She can discard 3, ballast or any other material int fearof doing mischief. If such rs are dropped from an airship, s will always be h possibility of er?a danger which is enhanced m temperamental characteristics ose who engage in aerial navigator sport. iitorially the New York Times fill the invasion of the air hy ">!?.nes he repelled hy suits for a<=s? fe think not. The first sumessuman flight made the air a high? a possibility not contemplated 1 s Roman law. Besides, there can ? oiToctivo possession of the upper i y a land owner. Where possosneithor is nor has been, there Id he no ownership. At any rate. is assumed in Germany and terland, which have passed stntestablishing rules of the aerial TAKERS COMPLAIN i ' Dying: Has Not Kent Pace t of Living. and it isn't logical. There are ! uany undertakers. They are cuteach other's throats to get busi- 1 and, what is more to the point, are cutting prices. Another the supply of coffins is greater the demand: that's what makes 10 cheap. i f a man wants a decent burial he t to he made to pay a decent for It. It isn't as though it was >ady drain on the family purse, ns are bought only occasionally, when the occasion arises they t to be willing to do the thing somely." FIND LOST FATHER 11 as Burglar and Will Now lis Parole. i. Father and daughter wept In others' arms. She will now try itain a parole for him. and as he convicted solely on his own adion of guilt it is possible her plea leniency will he granted, ss Swanson, who is twenty-one ; old, is the ward of the Rev. C. ahlmann, who took her from the >dy of her father when she was rears old. Swanson having been ired unfit tn earn for liar oi.? educated in a convent here. en County, N. .J., hrgins Work on $000,000 Improvement, ickcnsaok. N. J.?Bergen County received $37,920 from the auto paid Into the State fund, and to Brewster Construction Company, ikcltensack, was awarded four racts amounting to that sum for c to he done on roads much travby New York autoists. le Board of Freeholders at a remeetlng voted to establish a road tm that will cost about $600,000 i insure eicellent roads in tl"? dla- I close to ^ew York. , ' I 1 . ^ Southern Agri Modern Method* Farmer, Fruit Gr< flonewal of Old Strawberry Beds. Many of the leading growers of tin strawberry recommend taking but t single crop from a plantation. This means getting only one crop front th< land during two years. Thus, aftei the picking season is over the plant: are plowed under and the land is pre pared and planted to some late toragt or other crop. This method also requires setting a new plantation oacli spring and keeping a double area ol land in strawberries for at least a part of the time. In this State, however, two, three and sometimes more crops are taken front a plantation in successive years. Some growers state that the seeond year's crop is often greater than that of the first year after setting the plants, while the third is apt to be in ferior to the first two. The number of crops that can bo harvested with profit appears to depend to a considerable extent upon the method of renewal, the care and freedom from weeds, and the use of fertilizing materials. In some eases six and seven crops of berries have been taken from the same plantation before putting the land into other crops, but this is not regarded as profitable. Two methods of renewal, with some variations, were noted. In on? method the old rows are narrowed down to about one foot by light plow, ing or deep cultivating between tht rows. During the remainder of tht season cultivation and irrrigation art given the same as in new plantations the runners being allowed to rool along the sides of the rows until the spaces are only about one foot wide. Additional thinning of the plant! In the rows is frequently secured bj "blocking" the old rows. This h done by hand with a hoe or by mean: of a cultivator run crosswise of tin rows. In the second method of renewa 1~?. 1 ..1 -!-? V..V I wno UK U 4llt?IIK <f||<* Mdl about one-third only of the width o each row being left. The corresjiond ing side of each row its plowed undo and the next year the reverse side i tints treated. In this way all of tin oldest and weakest plants are re moved, and the next year the rows d< not stand on the same land as tin year before. This method possesses two dis tinct advantages over the former First, it allows of the breaking u] and cultivation of the soil in the cen tre of the old row. which has beeonu packed and hard. Second, the plant left to send out runners are vounge and possess more vitality than thosi in the centre of the old row. and are therefore, capable of producing bettci plants. This method seems bettei adapted to longer duration of 11k plantation than the former, and is tin one practiced hv many of the mosi successful growers. Cause of Gapes in Cliicks. Gapes in little chickens are caused by the eating of earth-worms. There are parasites in the earth-worms which find their way into the windpipe of the chickens and lodge there where tlicy take the form of little r< <1 worms. The best preventive is to keep the chickens from flic surfacr nf the ground; or use salt or strong salt waier 011 the soil, so as to kill the earth-worms: or strew strong lime nr something of th-> kind on the crroillKl sri thf>t Inn fliir-L-sj will nr.t got hold of tho worms to eat them. After the chicks have been attacked with gapes, however, yon can dislodge the worms by making a very small loop in a twisted horsehair, draw out the tongue of the chick slightly, insert the horsehair loop in the windpipe opening, which will be seen between the forks at the base ol the tongue, and, twisting the hail around, withdraw it. The worms are likely to he found within the loop, or some of them will have been thus removed, and the operation can be repeated. Another remedy is to dip the tip oi a soft feather into kerosene and insert it in the windpipe opening to dislodge and kill the worms. Such treatment, although severe, is better than letting the worms remain undisturbed, to severely annoy the fowls and even kill them. Mixing turpentine or other substances in the food of the young poultry has not proven satisfactory as a remedy for gapes.?H. A. S. Itest Slimmer Pasture. Tn reply to a Mississippi subscriber who asked about a pasture grass for rather poor upland, making about half a bale of cotton to the acre, 1 refiliorl n? fnilnwc* "Bermuda is certainly the best summer pasture grass you can have on such soil an* in your climate, and 1 t'.iink that there is very little dangei of its spreading unless cut and fed for hay. Close!* pastured it will seldom seed. "But if you do not want Bermudr Little Room For Improvement. "Well," asked I lie agent, "how d< you like lliis flat T * * "1 must say,' replied the lady who was examininj it, "that there's little room for ini provement.''? Chicago Kecord-Her aid. "Seeing "things at Night." Mrs. Upper Tenne: "Yes, doctoi black and red spots appear before m eyes every night. What would yoi advise me to do for it?" Doctor "Stop playing bridge, madam." , I t cultural Topics. That Are Helpful to 3wer and Stockman. I would use a mixture of ten pounds j of orchard grass, five pounds of redl top and ten pounds of tall meadow .j oat grass per acre. You must uso } liberal seeding to get a good turf. Then on that land apply 300 pounds ; of cottonseed meal and 100 pounds . of add phosphate per acre harrowed > in before sowing the grass. Sow in late October or early November. Here , 1 would add to the fertilizer about [ fifty pounds of muriate of potash L per acre, but they say that potash is not needed in your State. After get. ting a stand of grass, keep it good by an annual top-dressing of some fertilizer and keep the weeds mown off and the droppings scattered with a harrow, and the pasture will improve . annually. Then to prevent brooms. edge from getting started, spread some lime on it and harrow it line i with a slant-tooth smoothing harrow about once in four or five years, and . if the Bermuda creeps in do not worry about it, for you can have nothing . better in * summer.?Progressiva , Farmer. i ; Pellagra, i Very much has been written 011 this subject during the last few months. 1 since the fact that a number of cases ! have been reported in the Southern I States. Pellagra is an old disease, and oe curs extensively in the northern parts ' of Italy, where it has been called Al> pine scurvy, or Italian leprosy. The , trouble begins with indefinite digest tive disturbances with insomnia, but : as it progresses there appears an eruption of the skin, followed by su? peration and the formation of dark ' crusts. The mental depression is 3 profound. It is claimed to bo caused s from ratine: bread made of moldy or ? smutty mm Reports are made that this disease has been known in the 1 South for the past thirty years, but a the physicians have diagnosed tho f disease under various names. With - the numerous reports sent out by tho r press of tho gravity of this dreaded s disease, a complaint followed from e the operators of grist mills of tho - falling off of their trade for corn > meal. While it is a much dreaded a disease, there are no reasons for becoming unduly alarmed, for if users - of corn meal exercise care in purclias. ing meal from reliable mills there is [> no danger whatever of contracting - this disease.?Southern Fruit Grower. s Hay For S:1 a Ton. r With beef cattle or. the farm tho B millions of tons of corn stalks that rot in our fields, and that represent r from thirty-five to forty per cent, of '* the feeding value of the corn crop, J would be converted into beef and * manure. The thousands of tons of oats and wheat straw, the large quantities of slightly damaged hay, tho many tons of sorghum, peavine and soy bean hay too coarse for the mar| ket. would all be entoti by i ho cattlo > and help to enrich the farm and the j farmer. The question of producing feed to grow beef cattle is not a serious one I in the South, as I will endeavor to , prove. Last fall we planted one field . in oats: ihe oats were cut for hay in ; tho dough stat<-: the land was then . planted in sorghum: the sorghum . yielded two cuttings: the total yield > of hay per acre from this field was six and a fourth tons. Including $3 per acre rent for the land, the hay eost S2.C0 per ton in the rick. An . adjoining field was planted in wheat to l>e cut for liay: the wheat was followed with eowpeas, the total yield of hay per acre was ".ST. tons; includi ing So i?er acre rent, the hay cost $3 . per ton in the rick.?Professor E. It. - Lloyd. ! Cut the Grass Early and Often. I have heard men who should have known better, say that it is hest to let newly sown lawns grow without , cutting, and let the grass 1 an to seed, the notion being that the seed will help thicken the sward. But try this and you will find that you have a brown hay stubble when the ripe grass is cut, and the formation of " seed has weakened the grass so that more harm than good is done by the seeding. Start the mower on the newly sown lawn at. soon as the grass is tall enough for it to catch, and then, while rain is abundant, run the mower every week. Tn making a new lawn where the soil is sandy on the surface, get the plow down to clay if practicable, for clay is essential to grass in the South, t and if deep sand, then haul clay on . it, and grow peas for a time to get organic decay in the soil before seed j ing to grass. I A fine green sward is well worth I j working for. and when you have got I ten a fine sod around your house use I I trees and shrubbery for the framing. - j and do not frame it with a fence and ' then make a pasture of it.?W. F. t ! Massey. I There's a Difference. j Cureh: "Dors your wife spent ' much of her time shopping" (iolh? am: "She says not. She says she - spends most of Iter time waiting for - her change."?Yonkers Statesman. Seasoned Well, of Oonrre. , Ostend: " Pa, this magazine states y that there are so many seasoned duelit ists over in Germany. What is a : J!seasoned duelist 1" Pa: "One that [ has been well peppered, my son." #