University of South Carolina Libraries
Harris Spring Water Im/o'i 4 out your**)! witb 4ru&* ? -X*t .. im? tiiOltUtu! vumt > J* ' ' ' ' " " ; . V iv ?? ?' load* lr* Nature'* laboratory ac.d known for M* proi*r tU* iti ib? relief at'i car* of fb* following dltfMlM'. HOl'T tlHKl M A11?M MUSKY AXD BlAUDttft tkoibu;s <;kav*:i? uiHFf:p?iA ini>iokhtio.n < f J \ HTI PA TI O .N' w?d AJ \AAYA> WtOMAVB Tltfil/BI-KS. On* of. tbe of all na* tural mineral water*, Kor aaio by drug#**** generally. Sblpj>ed <3 very where. Harris Springs Water Co. Harris Springs, - S. C. The Busy Corner Where Everybody Stops You'd, be surprised to know how many people do practically all their trading in the Dru g Line at our itorr. If it'* in the Drug Line we have it, and you may re?t as tured that the quality and price is right. Take advantage of our phone service. We fill and deliver phone orders promptly and satisfactorily. No extra charge. F'rescriptions accurately com pounded. Leave your prescrip tions to us and they will he filled promptly and accurately. A complete line of sick room supplies, such ixM rubber goods, hot water bottle*, ice bags, syringes. Zemp & DePass "THr Bu*y Corner Drug Store" TO OUR CUSTOMERS AND OTHERS: Why we do not charge"* Some nik why wo do hot deliver- and rail later for pay? Our rctioni i?, the ruilomcr know* just what we charge when good* are sent C. O. I)., and it saves extra expense for u*. We hope you will look at it from a '.ommon sense standpoint and do not think we are afraid to charge good citizens. Your* to serve, CAMDEN Harness & Shoe Repair A. R. BOBB1TT, Mgr. COLUMBIA LUMBER & MANUFACTURING CO. MILL WORK SASH, DOORS, BLINDS AND LUMBER PLAIN & HUGER STS. Phonr 71 COLUMBIA, S. C. ' WHILV or *|? HI KM-li. Mfutrr, MomMr i(Mr , la ? H t' , J??* i^Ttt <l*A(Jk for Jot* II. Jacobs. bu Wlf foar , e*IWr??>, dii*rl<*+4 ?*?* |?*S dU*V**f?r4 Ifi fU?M* Mil/ ?*t ?r4*f U a ui)?ur> (Ut will ?#t?r Ur k?U^ .i 4a> of ?*!? JftV?*<(ga<tOfi folioaiftf ifc* 4i* epv*r) of tbf awful fra**4> ha* thorn n QU Jjr that human hand* SAd no* * lightning boll or * chance i'VMj** of flame resulted in t|t? fcu44?*> death of si* persot >? ** ths-y ' *l#p? In tb<rtr home to the rich ; Datrh Fork **ct'.on of Islington r county. five en ties- front p*ak r ' Okly ???4o>4? < hlasaaje. <>4 -4. ftii* <4 and 4*brfs rtprtMfut today what w*sv>Kjriday oening thts 4ub fcfOMie Of if pro?jWoUt plai?t tor. Tb? s charred remain* of a fain ? iljr Of *U w?T?r cbi* afternoon buried ?Jij a single grave &t the family bu ' r>U?g ground oh the Jac obs plant*- | ? '?"? The bod it**, horribly turned, show that the ukulia of th rK4t ?<-ro ; crushed This u regarded, in the i'ght of other development*. as ion elusive proof that they were mur dered and did not u*eet death from the flame* thai burned the house destroyed any evidence of the ruar der. ; A theory at first entertained by t niHfi) that the fajnii> might have | been burned to death when the res i idence they occupied was destroyed I U dismissed by the statements of ? nurnerou* residents of the communi ty. irhp declare that the storm th*t passed over this section between Is and 10 o'clock was over at 10 o'clock rfevere liKhtning accompa nied ' hia storm .but no lightning [ * a? seen by neighbors after 10 0 cl oc-.k The fire *an . discovered | between 3:30 and I o'clock Other suppositions are hardly less j bafljng. John it, Jacobs wan a ! highly respected and prosperous T&rmer: nw~acaitir?g *irh ail mm had been honorable and none of his closest friends can furnish evert a remote motive for this horrible crime Neither he nor any members of h ih family were known to have 'a j enemy. Robbery would not have at t traded vandals, for there could nol ; have been more than, an Inconsider I able sum of money in the house, i The jewelry known to have been I there has been found jn the ruins } ? and Identified in whole. J The body of Miss fallen Jacobs j was found i ii the ruin 1ft of what had ; be? \it.r room. I*. r?r-te,' on the. 1 ? 'h;irre<t r'T'itj ui'h of h?*r bed. Mrs... ; J; r o:j>- body was found in a si Miliar IKwc.i'ion in her room The botlu-9 of johu'h Jacob* ahd Orln Jn^obs, the ! younnes* o1 i h rw? koi:k, were to<?eth i er on The t:p rings or rhelr b??i The | b',;/li<*ft <.if lX'slle Jacobs, IK, .asid : II uuh Ja^ol'ii. 10. coti !d not be <1 i k | UnKijinhed. T iieye w^re aliuo~' <on jvutr.ed and who viewed the bodies have no? Ix-en able to .?ay j which w.-j* sejjerate() fr f;if; the t bodies of faiher ar;?] broih'-rs. ()ne | van !out*d i r> t }??? dining room ad | >oi ii ; n * h e room tn wTilf h tJio fathr | and ? u i / Imji ?. ft ere found Mr Ja j'vObs a!j'J >ij^ t hre<- occupier] I the room connected with the dining ? roon. b> .i window <>r d?>or. Part.s j of t.o \;r pun's and an axe. all bellev ?? ed 'o ha\e be?n the proper*}' of Hi"] ! hers of the Jacobs household, wore I found in -'he ruins-.- The wood v.orl: "i.a!! had !???.? h burned, only the iron j and -ieel remaiipug intact. The ? ;t\e iv;is a new one ;ind had not, it . said, been ground. In the guti j wfss fouud tv^o sh'dls. One, .it ip i believed, had been fired While the orher w;^ discharged by tlie heat Jlhis belief jv, has?*d t>fi the discov j ,-r-; 'hat an indentation ij. found j on ,,||4. shell where it had been ;s?r?i<-k by the !iani!!i'*r. ?.vhile the | other bore no suet, impn:;? ? Th-- funeral >?-rvi<?- for r f,mf. ly \s !-. ( on d i)i t ed ? h ;?? j.t-on '. ! e lortnt-r home of \\\.]'.'-r Jacobs, ?a i. w h und red yards from ;!... home his i a ? e hrofher. Wai'- r Jarobs -evej-M years ago mo\ed to New ; berry and since h' vaca*c-'. ;* hou.?c has not been occupied Thn jiu.ner;il and interment attracted a j J-'reat erowd from f,a*vera! counties. I t'robably no funeral in this section ' 1 as been so largely attended and 1 >?} person > frcjni suih a ili.stani't'. j The family of m\ (*%?> Coffji,?. was laid , , a grave in the famii> bur>ing ground on the Ja I cobs plantation w here already thrco children of ; he family had been bu I ried - * FAVORITE FICTICM. o.ii i. iii .n rt:rp yorr var.iT! <:i have nK'? ? ?' ? ' h Nou'rc iv ok:;.,, line. ' I ?This the *;iMf I'vp :.S:. iny !.a:.'!s ;or j I >%? ? ! !????! so sorry fnr thrsv* ?? : -? ?. . k. "P Jo's i:i ihi* Mi ?? ? fu <: ? - v ?< r:r..? ' i rv i- j- rrtfnH hr* * hat'h * yrrj ]! ' . like i: ?' j ' ' J l y C-.rUr. ;? p. y.-h l\f. It J broke the ! i <v_> k and fcvt a rrzv." i ' 1 SHE WAS INTERESTED fx ^otie rtovse. ri*<st*y f*jcs?d??w ?Jm girt wttfc tfc* btgjL collar, u 1 tfe&. gi?tJK*4 at ifce tafc4r ol ^u?u | .'or the raf?mkm<hLi of <b? < "Wlu< Irfbr (4??? k/R<: j {.?? oo kn! ) *?^i4ii'i **m+ my I in it* o*er nutml*' Ten a a&* rntkc ! Ufc-c k ib aft vu> chair. "~No, lhabk |<? i don't |U i try to&ig&L *he rc^lutid 1(4 U/ bo*- . (t*i, ?bo a?k*d her u> ctoou** a put ; tie "I lb? lor (Um thiLg* Ub )t*r? **o " With ifcjl ib? smiled so superciliously that tbt ho* (m. iMhed* 1^1 fiut4 cm to Uu next guest ?Ui >out comment vH?rt' "? r?mcc>iniif4 ihe youag man with k white tar&Mioa lo hi* coat. "1 |tt choice! TbU one it a mistake U never vu to leaded to come apart. *J*d. so it i?ai fair! GJre roe that he-art tbing-HU look* easy!" " You foolis h Ui) ! " exclaimed the jgirl with the high collar. Getting ex- ? cited about a puixle! Why, 1 could work them ail when I ma* twelve year* old"" "May be so," replied the man with the carnation "It'll take some dem onstration to prove it, however. Here 1 take this jigger and see if you can get the inside out, without untying the string"* He handed her a puxxle. ''Thank you!'.' laughed the girl with the high collar, laying down the pux xle "I think ril gain more by Just thinking than by doing anything ao perfectly useless!" "Well, then, here's something to sit and think about," exclaimed the girl with the violets. "Just mediate on the fact thst they say it's gospel truth that you can get this dingus off this other dingus without breaking the wire ? that it Just slips off like a ring! I'd deny it, but Sally turned her back on me just a tenth of a second and then "Just Attend to Ycur Own Knitting." showed it to me all apart. Another tenth of n second put it ail together again! I'm swamped!" She sat dov, n in grim earnest to pore over h<T individual problem "Oh, I vt got. mine!" cried the girl v. ho had been silently Working. ' I've got it, and it's just as easy! Watch!'* She look s?part her puzzle and put it together before the others with the ' air of a magician. 'Huh! You chose the eaaiest ihiiig in the lot!" retorted the young man' v.hii the camatioy. "Here. I'll <-? ? hange, and then see who's the smart er! " "i^ouk here," said the meditative man, corning up from his cornor and speaking slowly. "If any of you cy,:i give me an inkling how to do this, 1 11 give- a prize myself! They say" ? ho placed skeptical emphasis on tho square. I'll give five cents to the person v. ho can ?" "Oh, do your own sums!" advised the young man with tho carnation. "We've got our own reputation to live up to, and if I get this one thing solved before morning I fhall be ever lastingly proud of myself!" " I >- 1 t> Rfp it," eaid the girl with the hiKh collar, laughingly. The medita tive- mar; handed his puzzle to her an<} then stood watching. ' I think you must turn this thing around the end," murmured the girl ! with thu high collar, a? t?he worked I cor.eentratedly at the puzzle. P.ut j nothing canie apart. "Turn it the other way." suggested some on, pauning to watch. "Now, you just attend to your own knitting!" flashed the girl with the high collar. "I'm going to earn that nickel !" She worked silently some minutes. "Oh, I can't do this one," she ex claimed. "The idea of asking me to solve a puzzle that a grown man had to give up'" She picked out another from the box "This one looks eas ier." "Ask your baby brother how," sar castically advised tho girl with th? ! violets. "They're so easy, he'll show J you ! " Hut the girl with the high collar | i wnii too absorbed to notice the re I mark. "Mv dear," she whisperrd to her hostess upon les-rlng, "may I Laki:J this one home? I think Fvp got an | idea and 1 want to try to work It out 1 How did you ever think up ?nch a clever plan .is to have pnz7les? I've had the most exciting -'irae. I hate to leave without trying them u" 1 '' The hrptess opened her lips the?, closed them (If^crertl v, without spp-'?:r.r ? ("Vu-a-'T !-o"'' X?w* R?C* r?l?ri VM pn>>t& fntlti Hp Um filtry nac. T?t M?mu>f In ft helpful factor Mr* are ofmucb talia Tt? a r?? nr. 4 grf?(M( Uv of brM tag ?* like beg?u like "* A ?b?p that U In good condition to the fall I* kill wintered e TtekA<c U os* of the very bett como.*rcUJ fe<d? in Ut(?D>ng koga tillage and alfalfa combined make tb* found* (too of the b*et dairy r* ttoo I>urka are Tin tend of dandelion* chopped and nixed with ground (ntn ? v * ? battle ahould hare acceea to water ?t all time* when prairie paature I* get Uag dry. Too little pbo*porouaM t* tb* cause of many of the low yield* on corn belt soil* Have the rope* and atrapa good and fttout when yon begin to baiter break the colt. ' Tfc**re seems to be a good deal of prejudice against millet, becauae It exhauata the aolL Skimp ycrar sheep on good pasture and they will skimp you on mutton. Works both way*. > The valne of corn silage to the beef producer is not limited to its use In winter feeding alone. Keep the laying hens working. To do this feed them at daytoreak and Just before sundown. Waif until cool weather has abso lutely put the last fly out of business before dehorning the cattle. # ? Instead of using an old wooden watering tank make one of cement that will never decay or leak ? ? ? The longer the calf Is allowed to suck the cow the harder It will be to make it drink from a bucket. After a day's work clean the work horses thoroughly, wash their legs from the knees down and rub dry. Ralae horses for big money, cattle for sure money and hogs for quick money, is an old saying, and a good one. A year ago there was more stock j than there was feed. Now there is i 'eed for more stock than can be 1 found i In building a. wire fence for hogs ; put one barbed wire at the bottom, and the worst rooter In the pasture ?won't root out. v Don't be afraid to apply air-slaked \ lime to the cabbages with a blow gun. s It will destroy the worms on the head of the cabbage. Young fruit trees that were planted ; In the autumn of last year, or in the j spring of this year, should be ex amined carefully. The garden acre should be the best on the farm. Best prepared, best fer tilized and best cared for. Then it will give the best return*. ' While the orchard is coming into i bearing try vegetable growing as a side line. This makes one of the sur- i est and best souses of income. Chopped roots, fed along with the ! grain, will make a valuable addition j to the ration, especially if winter ! grazing or silage Is not at hand. Keeping any machine well oiled , and In proper repair not only in- : creases efficiency, but decreases the ! amount of power required to run the machine. Do hot allow the cows to dry up i during the latter part of the summer, i as this necessitates keeping them through the winter, giving a smaller ! flow of milk than they should. Laml plaster has a very small pr?r- ? centag? of lime; lump lime has the i largest percentage,- and hydrated. lime ' next. Marl is usually a little richer j in lime than ground lime stone I For the last six months the hog feeder has but little more than brok en even. If we aie to Judge the fu ture by the past there is a time com ing soon when the hog feeder will make good money. The peanut is becoming more Im portant as a feed for stock, especial ly In the southern Mates. The vines with the nuts attached are often cured, and they make a palatable hay for all kinds of farm stock. The fruit farmer can always find something lo do. either In the orchard or around the buildings. This busi ness. like any other, 1s ruined by too much lonf:nfc Keep the loose ends vreTl Tn hand for the b?et results. The gr^at bulk of the pat crop of the world is produced within the north temperate zone including the oounine> of hu?-!a <fTmjrny, Norway and Sweden. Canada, and the north ern part of the Vnited States. Russia produces more oala than any other country C^u,\^ikV^QHhyi6VAWr?^^W(Dtn^ AoT lTT^oim at f 1 nit; UKST1\<. TIMK OF MFK. Hie wiae man Is the on? who ha* "saved regularly" dur ing the productive year* of his life, put it away in safety nod t hen can sit down and enjoy his latter years. \? Worry About IncooM" or ftopJopnest. Ibictu ? Ok) Ag** & tVmi i?K The Loan & Savings Bank The Clemson Agricultural College EnrollmentjOver 800 ? Value of Property Over a Mil* lion and a Third-Over 90 Teachers and Officers DEGREE COURSES: Agriculture (seven courses.) Chemistry; Me ohanioal Eleetrieal Engineering? Civil "Rn gtn&Se f iti ; TexlUe Kdui^ try; Architectural Engineering. SHORT COURSES: One year Courses in Agriculture; Two-Year Court* in Textile Industry; Four Weeks Winter Course in Cotton Grading; Four ? Wooko ? Winter ? Course ? for ? Fanners: T COST: Cost per session of nine months. Including all fees, heat, light, water, board, laundry and two complete uniforms, $133.45. Tuition, if able to pay, $4 0 extra. Total cost per session for the one year Agricultural Course, $117.55; Four-Weeks Course, all expenses, $10. SCHOLARSHIP AND ENTRANCE EXAMINATIONS: The College main tains 167 four year Agricultural and Textile Scholarships and 51 one year Agricultural Scholarships. Value of Scholarship $100 per ses sion and Frree tuition. (Students who have attendeed Clemson Col lege, or any other College or University, are not eligible for the scholr arhsips unless there are no othtlrellgible applicants.) Scholarship and Entrance Examinations v ill t>* * * Id by thr County Siiperintendent of Education on July 11th, at 9 a. m. NEXT SESSION OPENS SEPTEMBER iOTH, 1013. ^Write at once to W. M. RIGGS, President Clemson College, S. C. for Catalog. Scholarship Blanks, etc. 'If you de lay, you may be crowded out. .^7 . i The First National Bank OF CAMDEN, S. C \ ? ? ? . \ . ? ? . ?'?. Haven t you been expectinig to start a bank account ? been, trying to save an amount sufficient to "make a good start?" Any start is a good start. A dollar is sufficient. If yOfff wait for a large sum before making your start you'll never do i'. ^ ou doubtless know from your own experilence that the money which you can lay yonr hands on at any moment lasts long. So don't wait for a start but begiin now. * We earnest- ? )v solicit your Bankiing busiiness. The First National. Bank ..... .... ^ ...... -1> - . ' ? - 1 - OF CAMDEN, S. C REDUCED PRICES S u n b e a m Ma z d a1 ? L a m ps 40 Watt, each 35c, 60 Watt, cach 45c, 100 Watt, each 80c Be sure to get Sunbeam Mazda Lamp9 ? the new, rugged kind. Give three times as much light for the same money ? ? ? f , ? W. Robin Zemp's Drug Store PHONE 30. ? WE DELIVER ONE LAMP OR A DOZEN ? PHONE 30