University of South Carolina Libraries
[garden SEED We have a fresh tupply of all kinds of Garden Seed on hand. Zemp & DePass Call of Ph?oe Nil W University of South Carolina entrance examinations Kntrance examinations to the Unl rersity of South Oaroliua will be held >1* the Surerinteudent of Kdu rtlion at the County Court House, Fri to, July 11. W at 0 a. m. Entrance eliminations will also be held at the University, September 17 and 18, 1910. The University offers varied cotitves of study in science, literature, history, jiw and business. The expenses are moderate and many opportunities for ttU support are offered. A large num* [kr of scholarships are available. Mill (iry training eouywlsory for freshmen tad sophomores. Reserve Officers' Training Corps. For full particulars write to PRESIDENT w. s. currell, University ef South Carolina, Columbia, S. C. COLUMBIA LUMBER & MANUFACTURING CO. MILL WORK SASH, DOORS, BLINDS AND LUMBER ? ? ? ? i * PLAIN & HUGER STS. Phone 71 COLUMBIA, S. C. "The Reason Why." B. A. Thomas Stock Remedies are (he best, tbey are scientifically made tnd all nfedirinc. They keep the health ap. and the food bill down. There Is a i I'ause for every effect, remove the ciuse and i lie effeet removes itself. The Poultry Remedies are especially made to relieve all the diseases in the Fowl family such as Cholera and Roupe urt makes the Hens lay. The 11 or Remedy will positively keep off the Cholera, and if given in (be first stages, will cure 00 pef cent . Don! forget to keep en hand a bot tle of Farris' Colic Remedy for Horses. It Is so simple with dropper, that a child can give it. Also a bottle of Fer ris' Healing Remedy for Outs and Bruises on man or beast. Tbey. never fm. ! These remedies are all guaranteed to you by your dealer, to give satisfac 'Hon, or'your money back. t Made by old Kentucky Manufactur to? Co.. Pndneah, Kentucky. For sale by Springs & Shannon. Cam to). S. C.-adv. .Tune 8. Collins Brothers! Undertakers for 'People Telephone 4 I 714 W. tMUIb St. ,1 ? .J . i **?? | Ash ^otg* Dealer Rzoyfetoi Grand Prize firearms 8 Ammunition Vfite fnr Ca^aIo^uC ?E remington anmsumc.co.inc. THE CITADEL The Military College of South Carolina Ovweil by the War Department as a Distinguished Military College f'ull courses iu engineering, sciences *D<I languages. I ; ? beneficiary scholarship which P*r* nearly nW expenaee, is vacant in ^ ?Wi#ha*- county and will be filled by 1 w^j^titive examination to bo beW JJ ' Aumist ftth *t the Cotmty Btw t. JM* **amination will be given on the Wowing subjects: Algebra througn Wa'Iratii-*. plane geometry, English ff*mmftr. "reposition and rhetoric, j^rttaire. American hifttory, ancient ii ml physical geography. A limitM number of pay cadets *>U he rof-nivrd. T*>tal expenee* ***1 n<%{ i>xref>d fMX). Karly appli f*tK>n is nis*e%sary. For catalog rTlr* full infnimation, addresa rf,I- O j. UOND, Superintendent Th<k Citadel, Charleston, S. G. FOUND OLD INDIAN VILLAGE Interesting Relics, Believed to BeCe* turiee Old, Recently Unearthed In New York 8t?te. IteliCS Of HI) IlldlAU Tillage. said have Its origin as early as 157 8. have Im ? n discovered iii Uiison 1 *o| lit, the Bronx, according ??? un MHWpptm^ made by the Museum of the American imiitiii. foundation. Tin discov ery wns made bjf Alan H. Skinner. ar choolnglst of .the foundation. The dls cowry I* regarded a* u very impor plan! oho by the member* of thy fonn itdtlon. Research establishes that the village was probably Inhabited by na tive* of the Slwanoy tribe, known to very early settler* as "Snakesklns." The research, made through the kindness of a trustee of the fouuda tlon. has established to the satisfac tion of the hoard that the tract re mained Id possession of Its Indian In habitants until 102ft, .when It was pur chased by Uobert Cornell, an Knglisb* n in n. Cornell's family was later inut* sacred by the barbarian tribe. During the attack he managed to make his escape on a Dutch ship, Mr. 8k!nner was making a pleasure trip through Clason Point, w^ileh la somewhat of a summer resort, last July. He noticed very large oyster shells on a mound of sand and recog nised them as Indian boundary line parkings. He obtained permission fyom tlu) owner of the land to moke a search of the ground. To the sup prise of the searchers, relics of Indian ^Ife were unearthed. Costumes, beads, cooking utensils and a complete hair dress of the Slwanoy tribe were dis covered. Seventy lodge sites, contain ing hundreds of Indian Implements and tools, 'were also dug up. The collection contained crude har poons. fishhooks, carved tortoise-shell cups, bodkins and decorated pottery. Hundreds of pipes and a beauti/ul mold Jar were discovered intact, and all are being preserved for public ex hibition when the museum opens. This history speaks of the Slwanoy practice of digging sand holes and pluclng large quantities of food and other of ? ferlngs to the "Great Snake." It w^s announced at the museum that the relics will be placed on exhibition at the opeulng of tlje exhibit. Opportunity Missed. For several years It had been my custom to make a visit on Thanks-, giving afternoon at the home of my most particular friend. This last Thanksgiving I missed, as the family was to attend the. community singing at 4 p. in. A frw dWys after little Catherine dropped In to see me^jnd asked "Why didn't you come to see us on Thanksgiving?" "Well," I replied, "you were not vat home In the afternoon." " 8he then asked: "Why didn't yon come' earlier? ^Why not come for din ner?" ? ( "But," I Jokingly replied, "you didn't ask mel" . "Well," she replied thoughtfully, "I think if you had come early and hung abound they'd have asked you 1" ? Chi cago Tribune. , Awaiting Instructions. 1 In a letter received from a cousin of mine, who Is a lieutenant In the aviation service, he tells of the follow ing incident that happened co a cadet flyer at Kelly field: The ondct was making- his flrsfsolo flight and had j been flying around the towers where the instructors sit andN observe the movements of the solo flyers, when he I was seen throwing something out of j his plane. He had thrown his shoe out with a note tied to It saying that his "gnn'^or gas throttle was jammed, and he didn't know what to do. He flew around the towers ten times be fore he realized that he had a mag neto switch on his plane that would shut off the ignition and thus stop the engine. He finally landed with a dandy "thump." ? Chicago Tribun^. Conscience. It Was plain to be seen that Arthur, eight years old. had something on his. mind. It was something that con cerned Christmns and his neighbor, Jimmy. Finally he said to his mother: "I guess I'll give Jimmy-, his knife for Christmas." "Have you Jimmy's knife?" the mother Inquired. "Yes. I found It a long time ago. He thinks It's lost. Rut flndln's keep In's, you know." The mother made no comment, for she knew something else was coming., And then her son said: "I might as well give It to him. X can't use It fcause he's with me all the time." Wheat Production. Mean wheat production per acre In the 15 years, 1890-1913, was 42.5 bush els In Denmark. 35.4 bushels In Ire land, 35.1 bushels In Belgium, 31.5 bushels In Great Britain, 29.7 bushels In Germany, 20.2 bushels In France, 19.1 bushels In Austria, 18.1 bushels In Hungary, 10.7 bushels in Roumiinla, and 14.1 bushels in the United Statea. Bushels of measure are taken for Den mark, France, Great Britain, Ireland and Roumanla ; of 00 pounds for tha other countries. Family Prayer*. Nursle ? James, did you know tha angels have sent yoti another ITttlo brother? James? Oh. bother; Just *1fT I don'l have enough folks to pray for every night as It is. His Species. "Jims Is a conceited man. fie hoa estly b Sieves he is the flower of his family." "Well, b? la their poppy, Iso t bar' j BETTER THAN ANY MEDIUMS Mine* Pit That Brought VWoA of Horn* Caused Wounded Soldier to Long for Life. Pie Is not among the article treated of In works on materia iimmIIoh. imt a recent Incident show* that It may have therapeutic value. In a hospital lay nn American Mallor, for whom ev erything had litvn done by surgeons, doctors and nurses. and yet something was Incklng. He was homesick ; his mind was ever sway In a little At lantic coast town. One day, lf? the midst of his hodUy pain and aoul-suf ferlng, there flashed upon him the ob ject of his quest, and he murmured excitedly: "Oh, If I could only have a piece of mince pie." It was not that he wanted to eat a piece of pie. for he was too 111 for that. His hunger was for what the pie represented. An American nurse who heard the wish managed, with some difficulty, to find all the Ingredients for a real New Kngland pie. When she took It to him she put with It s bit of cheese, also hard to procure In these times, eo that nothing would he lacking, and In the cheese ale planted a miniature 8 tars and Btrtpes. The poor boy could eat nelthet* the pie nor the cheese, ?hut they contributed Just the home touch needed to 'Improve his condition. When the wife of the American consul general vlstted him later she remarked upon the Improve ment In Ills condition, and he said: "Two days ago I was In such misery that I could have welcomed death. Now I feel that America Is not so far sway as I thought and that I have got to hnng on." GENERAL BELIEF IN HONESTY Something Very Like the Mllennium ' Seems to Bo Near In Qreat British Metropolis. How Is the sudden trust Londoner* have come to exhibit for each other to be accounted for? There Is nn ex t rein e shortage of copper* colnsfor small change In London, and one man says 9 f his experiences: "On several occasions lately news vendors who have been unable to change silver have said to me, 'Never mind, pay me the next time you are thin way.' Only one of them knew me as a regular cus tomer. Kven more unexpected credit than;thls was offered me at a railway booking office where I tendered a shill ing for a two-p(?nn.v fare. 'I'm short of coppprs.' said the girl hooking clerk, ?pay me tomorrow.' 'Hut I shall not be here tomorrow,' I replied. 'Then pay me the next time you are here, when ever It Is.' she said. 'But supposing I forget.' I expostulated. "Oh, 1 know that you will conic* and pay me soVne day, slit* answered. 'I've never known people fall.' " Similar testimony Is of fered by others, who tell of copper credit thrust upon them by Grangers, and often very poor and, humble stran gers.-^-Lnndon Mall. Clearing Up After War. On the banks of the Thfunes, less than twenty miles from London, there in an American town of the mush room kind such as you might find In a new California oil field. ~~fts popu lation consists of morq^than. 20^ white men and about 150 negroes. It covers twenty-five acres which nine months ago were fallow grass land. The business of the town Is^ to re ceive, sort and store wnr material. There Is a street of wooden huta, an other of corrugated Iron huts, huge Iron store sheds a quarter of a mile long, office buildings, water supply and electric lights, the whole sur rounded by a hedge, a few armed sen tries and much mud. All day long the khaki-clad negroes push and haul railway trucks full or war material. War Material coming back from Russia Is being stored at this camp, also the fittings of the dismantled hos pitals which the American army es tablished in England. Warmth Increases Oil Flow. . An electrical method of ' carrying warmth to the bottom of oil wells has been found In many cases greatly to In crease the flow of oil. The heating process, says Popular Mechanics Maga zine, decreases the viscidity of the oil, Usually occasioned by the admission of air to the well and the cooling of the rock bed. Minute crevices and capil lary channels which afford easy pass age to warm, thin oil become quite Im passable If the oil gums. The electric heating method not .only thins the oil but often generates g&s whose pressure helps the oil to the surface. The sys tem found military *se In the aban doned oil fields of Roumanla and Gallcla. j What's In a Name? .1 ? . ? Most readers are familiar with the story of the German bank in a United States city which, finding Its name un popular, changed It to the ".Sherman bank." Here Is another example on the same lines: A popular New York city German restaurant was called the Kloster Glocke (Cloister Bell), and Its front was decorated with a large bell as sign. The name has been changed to the "Liberty Bell," and the bell of the olf! monastery now does duty as a replica of the one which rang out Independence to the colonies. Doubts Mechanical Skill. A "prominent business man" has offered $50,000 for the privilege of being carried as mechanic on the first transatlantic flight made In an alr plane. If this offer is accepted. It Is tc be hoped /that his mechanical ability equals his enthusiasm. ? SprlQg fleld Republican. TRONA POTASH CAU8KH TKOfBl^N (ivuutaii Colh^ Report* on InvnUlft ttoit of Cvoq 1)miih? < Kinvou College, Jul* 10. ? C?eun?on Oolite authorities have investigated the potash situation which has given ?trtiuble in the P?fc? D*** *ud have tried t ho matter to JfSaour<v in the wo Of trona potash, which coutalna imiMuitU'H lujurloua fc> crop*. BrUfht Williamson, a promiueut bank er and (annor of Darlington, mid John If, N?piap? (Bounty agent of Darllugtou County found trouble with potash in that county recently and rejwrted .the matter to Cleiution College. Prof. 0. P. ItlackwcM, ag nonomlst, and J. L. Seal, prtaut pathologist, went immediately to Darlington and Florence Countleo where thoy n>et Mr. W. W. Garner, chief ot tho office of tobacco and -plant nutrition investigation*. The throe studied the sit uation in tho fields of Darlington, Flor ence and Dillon (Vuutieo. >. , They agreed that the vwf orrotic mum havo caused poor crop conditions in purts of Florence County which some ( ha vo erroneously attributed to potash. In I)arllu?tou County, however, where trona potash from Searl I>ako, ('alitor nia, purchased through ,a OharlentoU broker, was used, very serious iu juries wore observed on a number of farm*. ' Tho Clemson and fovernroent capons wore convinced from field examWiatio'n* that this trona potash 'a hie' ' fot ? the trouble. Thousamjs of acres ot in Darlington have been dea.'-.'iyod.. Other sources of Aimerlcau potash have .t?veu good reaufts so fa.* as Inves tigations show. Since nearly ait t no soils- of the t*?astal plains section of , the Mtote are iu need> of potash, it would be unfortunate to have all potusU indiKtcrjniinately condemned alona with this one tiovtnk). Director Harre announces that experi ments will bo " begun at once at tho Poo Dee Nation to obtain all possible information on t.he effort of this ma terial on plant giv?wth. Further ? study will bo made In Darlington liields to assist farmer* in securing data uoon w#li i < ? h to base claims for damages. Those investigations will be reported lis soo.n as the data is available. Tho legal appoots of the case will,, be considered by tho board of fertilizer control. There ha* probably , boon injury to crops from this1 same source in otner sectious of tho State, and1' if tanners think they havo this trouble they should consult. theft county agents, all of wttopi havo been posted about the matter. Late In June. Director H. W. Harre of the South Carolina experiment sta ?tion attended" a potato conference otU J>ong Island to examine tests of all sources of domestic jiotash. Trona, potash showed marked injury to potato plants. and tho conference developed the fact that similar "trouble was being es peeientecd Ui North Carolina with- cot ton. tobacCp and co'rn. Similar troublo sooins to have boon experienced in sev eral localities along the Atlant'e coast. For the guidance of farmers, Prof. Black well gives the field symptom* toa follows. In .the case of cotton and corn germ in at iota ia retarded or Dri ven ted. Soon after plarits which do germinate are above ground, the^. turn white or. yell<rw and die. "^Tobacco whdn transplanted turns light and soon ?lies. The .roots are found to be nn % O developed and many dead. The trouble intents 15 Fluid tooM "lg<5kX-? similatin^tbeKHKi tyBegJ* tiriitheSto^sWKi^^? Thereby Promoting neither WWn.Mw^'JJ Mn^-KoTNARgo^J il?S '% cjiaataga naurtUnit iMSlmite Si4t^2.?f Exact Copy of Wrapper. CASTORIA For Infants and Children* Mothers Know Tta Genuine Castoria M Always Beam the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years CASTOMf TH? tlNTAUM COMPANY, NCW CI?'. litn in- \mmi ?s worse whore tobacco bed* have been knocked down. as this brings the root* in closer oo'ivtatit wibh .the poisonon* substances. With all croixx the Is woiw on light dandy soils Jthau on heavier soil*. Tfo Pn/lfe CVttfcvt IVIce. V .Vnderj^nri^ .July 11. ? B. B. Cios-sett.t piWidcirt of 'fhe -Oh amber of Commerce *<>f Ahidernan, appointed the following committee 'to investigate the lo?al cottoiV market: G.- I*, ...Bfowme, ohairman ; A. S. Farmer, W. A. WaHfeon, J. Fiihyer Wfttatm , H, It. barker, I?3l^? MoGee, and 10. 1'. Vamllver. 'phewe inwft are appoint ed "to Investigate the cotton market in AiKtamoai, 'and if \n?*?ible detormiue w'hether the price her<^ d? or i* not a? good a.s (tliat of f+urroiu)ding markets, and ff m'ot, why nirt?" Wentjence Is Commuted, ( 'oluinbta, July 12. ? -J huh* AJlen, a ?negro, cmivlcteid from Tjancateter County, in March t-lria year, of nvurder of Wrown tfimpsun, n wihlte 'man, and iftDt^OCtU to .death, hud 'tolu won'tovce commit toil to Ktfe imprlBomnrnt this afternoon by (lov ertnor Cooper. AH on quarreled with tMiinptfon t?i August 4, 1918? and whot him to death. Jodice (Jiaj^, Hf/bo tried Allow, told the juhy, following the yer>d#bt, that ho had looped the verdict would be more lenient, and later he earnestly urfpd the coiumu fhtlou of tJ>e ?en twice uponi the Gov ernor. PraeticnTLv every lawyer of the Lancaster liar 'reooirtm ended clemency and two different pardon boards pasted favorably upo*ii the commutation. t Julst received carload of -pipe. Just received carload of shafting:. v *Just received carload of iron. Enroute to us carload of galvanized roofing. We have large stock of Pump Jacks, Pump Cylinders and Well Points. V Large stock of Rubber, Leather and Gandy Belt. Let us have your enquiries if not your orders. ? COLUMBIA SUPPLY COMPANY pas WEST GERVAI S ST. COLUMBIA, S. C. to. b. 0 id ! ? n M 1 z <* hi H (O Ul * Ul X H I THE NORTHERN STATES HAVE OFFICIALLY ADOPTED THE 56' AUTO TRACK WAGON Neither too Wide nor too Narrow K ? r. < but Standard 56-lnch Auto-track WEBER J W :x Bought by Farmers Because of Its Known Qualities ^^VEGARDLESS of all other considerations -*-the 60-inch wagon does not fit the road. Any advantages it^ might possess are offset by the tact that it is a stranger on its own roads. It rides the ridges, which causes broken axles, wheels and other parts, and the tongue whips about which is hard on the team. ? o The justly famous Weber wagon is built only ih 56" auto-track because thi6 ia the standard approved tread of automobiles ? and the Automobile . makes the ruts in muflror soft roads. If the farm wagon is not made to follow die same path it is out of date for road service. Automobiles are increasing among farmers because they are a time-saving necessity, and every farmer who hasn't an automobile intends to procure one at the earliest opportunity* The Weber 56" auto-track wagon will do everything that the old 60" wagon would do. It will haul cotton bales as easily as the wide track wagon and the team can draw the load without having to pull every inch of the yijr. ^ It lends teelf just as readily to all kinds of farm work and in addition it fits ' the prevailing road tracks. Besides the auto-track feature the new Weber has the patented Fifth Wheel and the " Safety First" Swivel Reach Coupling ? two advantages that are worth $20 apiece to the user during the life of the wagon. Bv all means see our Weber wagons before you buy. We can offer you something that will aave you money and give you service. ? Rhame Brothers, Camden, S. C THE SOUTHERN STATES HAVE OFFICIALLY AIXHTEP THE M' AUTO TRACK WAGON