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ACCEPTED OXFORD AS MODEL Architecture of New Pari* University la t? Be That of Famoue Erigliah College. Architects' plans and illustration* ?re now published In flu* French, press of t Ik* new I'url# university bulldln;,'* tin the site of the : dhuiuin tied fortification* and away from th? crowded I.atlu quarter. It Is Inter* cstlnu to learn that the architect' for the first block linn abandoned i lift conventional rrcndi style and t'ono to Oxford for Ids models, remarks ,th? Manchester fjuardlan. A writer In I/lllustratlon curiously describes the architecture a* "Anglo Hollandals," hat as a matter of fact the delate') hear* a great resomhbrme to the new Itrasenose buildinus. The ground pJmi reveals ample spare that is to he devoted to garden1*, -though we are not told whether an attempt la to be made to rival Oxford's careful ly tended lawn* -and placing Aelds. In the latter spaces have been care fully marked off for "football," "Hug by" and "baseball." Students at Kngllsh unl vers! ties ? ? and especially at the older universi ties may feel a little envious when they leurn the' cost of living In this neve Purls settlement. The price of a \\ ell equipped room, one of whose luxuries' will be that "hot and cold running water," which the French now ap|>ear to think s? Indispensable in every well-regulated establishment, will be IK) francs a month, . and the maximum price for dinner or lunch will be .'I franca. Moth men and wom en are to find homes In the hotels. M. Emlle Deutsche de la Meurthet the jp'uerouH donor Of the tlr.st block, Jias stipulated that out of the ,'lfiO for whom rooms are to be found In the first instance, 100 must be women. Among foreign countries which lmve >wl ready consented to establish hotels for their students on the new site are <?anada and Argentina. Some of the French papers say that the Univer sity of Oxford has been asked to tako u hand In the scheme. Exterminating the Prairie Ant. The Kansas State Agricultural coU lego, after experimenting with <lifT ??r ent substances, has adopted carbon bisulphide mm the most efficient means for destroying the prairie ant. The work should, If possible, he done when the ants are at work and their gang ways open. Otherwise, It would he advisable to take a sharpened broom stick or an Iron rod and run down to the bottom of the nest In several places. A galvanized tub or similar vessel |h turned over the nest and earth Is thrown nround the tub wheve It rents on t tie ground and parked down to make It as nearly airtight as possible. A shallow dish Is placed on the nest and Into It Is poured fronj one-half to one and one-half ounces of carbon bisulphide/ according to the sl/.e of the nest. The tuh Is quickly lowered and the earth Is placed all around It. The deadly fumes of the drug, are heavier than air and sink Into the underground galleries of tha nest, destroying every ant with which they come in contact. The drug must be carefully handled, lis the fumes are even more Intlammuhle than gaAollne, if possible, and not a ttpeck of tire, not even a ]>ijx? or cigar, must be permitted anywhere near it or an explosion will likely re sult. The tub is left in place live hours and then removed. # "So Shines a Good Deed." A Kentucky mountain girl, crlpple<J with infantile paralysis, crawled on her hands and knees to school over a mouutaln more than a utile and a half away. The sharp rocks, despite pads, cut her knees so she could not make the trip more than a few times. A Louisville physician heard of thp case and, taking, her to (he city, he operate on her. By breaking and resetting the bones In her legs he tivflde It possible for her to walk In a year's time. She learned to read and write In the hos pital and whs taken to Beers college to finish her education. A man whose name is withheld deposited $1,000 to her credit In a Louisville bank. Getting His Bearing*. One day three of iuy girl friends and I were out talking. After we had gone a short distance we decided to go to one of the neighbors to visit. We hnd to go one mile north to get there. We had Just started In that direction when along came a Mg cur with only the driver In. He stopped nn<l said : "Are you going north?' "Yes." I re piled, as I fmt my foot, on the running board. "Thanks," he said. "I thought I was going the wrong way," arid with that the car dashed ofT, leaving me standing there embarrassed and my friends were laughing. ? Chicago Trib une. Exchanging Student*. A prominent American woman 1? making it possible for six British stu ? ?ents to enter universities in the l.'nlt ed States every year. She has found ed scholarships at Princeton, Harvard and Yale for students at Oxford and Cambridge. It Is to be hoped that the time toon will come when it will be |M?Kfilhle to arrange exehnnxe of stu dents with nil enlightened nations of the world. ? I>enrborn Independent. f?r ve Woodland*. Organization of lo< al chapters of the Motorist League for Countryside Pres ervation throughout the I'nlted Stfes la progressing rapidly, ? automobile owners and civic clubs generally hav ing indorsed |h? iuugutt * (hat motorists. o-ve to themselves, their fel low men and the nation the care and preservation of woods, hills and cotut try side. UANTHE weaker? I ? Woman Calls Him "Bedraggled Soareorow in Trousers." Female of th? Species a "Stalking Tlgiest," Made Up to Look Love ly, Frail, and Hclplts*. "There never was a woman horn who was satisfied with the man she u.turrlod. She always makes him over, j or, rather, she mistakes hia gradual I disintegration for something construc live In her own handiwork. "The universal husband! I'athetlc, bedraggled acarecrow in trousera. No wonder men alwuya answer their country's call to arina. It la far easier to face quirk death on the battlefield than hjpw, death beside the domestic hearth. "At home they are helpless, numb. Things overtake them, fasten on them while they are asleep. Whichever way . they go. It la not the way of thelf choice. They are pushed along froiu behind, never doing any of the thing* they desire, never wanting any of the things they get. "I'oor universal husband V So Jane Burr writes, with scorching pen. She .begtna; "As the blare of trumpets and the swirl of smoke gradually die down on tin- feminist battle front, an unbiased eye sees, jrtfll breathing but spiritual ly dead, a pathetic, bedraggled sort of scarecrow In trousers ? the universal husband! The universal husband, made out of all the promising little boys In the world, Is warped and cheated by women from the hioment ho expands his lungs at birth until he contracts them (often willfully) at the moment of death. "I>urlng Infancy his mother eats him alive, smothers him with emotion In order to get a personal outlet, makes of him, If she ean, her bowing, scraping courtier, ties him to her by a thousand invisible but unbreakable threads. He tries to escape her Is boyhood, but In the reflex caused by an In^ilt from some pink sunhonnet and pinafore he rushes back to moth er for consolation. Mother consoles and gloats. She has him back. All her life she watches like, a bird of prey for a recurrence of this chance to console and to gloat. "loiter on, in hfr; effort to esccvpe mother, he fallH in love ? which means, In most cases, exchanging a cruel power for a crueller one. "lit* sees a frail, lovely, helpless girl, and his heart goes out to her; l:e wants to build his nest with her, for her; hcJiongH to buy her trinkets, to guard and protect her from the vicious outside world. "As a mutter of honest fact, he does n<?< want to do any of these things. He only thinks lie wants to do them. Old primitive nature is undermining his reason; old primitive nature hah got to g^t rough work done. "After marriage the promising youth with his fantastic ideas becomes a universal hushaud. The frail, lovely, helpless girl proves to be neither frail nor helpless. She was made up to look frail, lovely and helpless in order to Htlr his manly qualities. With the noose secure about hia neck, he sees her remove her paint, her eyelash black, her face powder, her false tresses. He suffers as he watches the exposure of her outward 'dishonesty. ''Physically, at least, a woman pets what she marries, but men never know until the artificialities are removed* "As men are little boys, they rofght even forget the exposure of their wives' physical disabilities If it were not for the thlnfts they later discover In women's souls. "Women have very little honesty, no modesty and no sense of shame. They cannot afford such fairy -took luxuries. Raal honesty, modesty rtnd a sense of shame are not things with which to catch a husband. Maiden women Invariably possess some of these* abnormal qualities. That is why they remain maiden women. "A woman cannot be frail. She la not frail. She Is a tlgreas. She is not helpless. She can move moun tains, and does If she Is not always given her own way. If she were heir less the universal husband would know how to provide for her, how to place her In hi* relation to a struggle for existence. Hut he does not know where fo place her. She turns up at unexpected moments, in "unexpected places, and acts ns a positive menace to his psychology and to his business career." ? I'a 1 1 Mnll (Jnzette. Raising Queen Bees for Profit. Halslng queen bees brings a Calallen (Tex ) man nn annual revenue of more than M*). most of which is clear profit. Breeding ijfceen bees is done part 1\ by artilhlal means. He figures nn obtaining ybmit HX) queens from everj hhe of to 8, (MM) workP c bees, instead of only one queen Queen bees la'lng from $1 to S'J.TS each. Enfllish "Housewives' Union." A "housewives' union'* has I ,>,-n formed at IH?*1 Knghind. and u SI] el *???,<*. ftjl mntpuign Is being carried <ti against high prices of food. Wor i?*n of all classes, from ladles of title to wortclngmen's ?lves, are member*. G*ts Third Set of T?eth. An eighty-three year-old woman ol j BrttrMoo-.- Ktrs'-nd. Is enrrfr:^ !:rr ? ? Tr?T * cpt nf t^rth. Her ???ber teeth tptt ,.vtrn<>*d snni* years ago and replaced *>> an ? rtlfleial wt. Now, 12 new ones ?unV made their appearance. NEVI1B ROSE ABOVE SAVAGE North American Aborigine Knew Only Civilization That. Mad B^cn , Forced Upon Him. The American Imlluii la of Mougo* Han st?K'k. He 1^ a oouiin of tin* yel low Mongolian and the browu Malay. Hut lu all his era as the owihv of the a int-i if.i> he never waa more than ? lavage, according to floda which are now lu-lug made from Mexico to lVru. It wax a Mother Mongolian race, <'hine#t?llfce people, who carriwl civili zation t?i th.s continent, It neems. ? The !?*?;? k of ancient civilization In the Americas lay In the tropical strip between Arizona and I'eru, reaching its peak lit central Mexico and Peru. The ruins ' of civilization in these plan-* are mighty and awe-ln.spir lug and utlr>t a nuv of pi-ople who In their day were the most highly cul tured In the world. In every direct lot* away from the tropical Venters the Indians sink In culm*'. In North America the level of t In* aborigines decreases as we go north and cast. In South America the native* . lU^AQWjet-.Ptni, the Amazon and PntHgontn Indiana being aaid to be little lletter than unliuuls. A most remarkable fact) appears when the ethnology of the Americas Is [ viewed as a whole. * The Indians were everywhere declin ing when the white man came. The mound builders were no more. These men had evolved the turning lathe, among other Inventions ; but, useful Invention as it was, the knowledge of |t was forgotten by the red men whose corn Anthony Wayne Cut down. The Indians of historic fanes all have the characteristic marks of a people whose civilization had been forced on them. It was beyond their capacity to carry, and they were getting rid of it and Into the comfortable degradation that they preferred. The Indian Is a sav ago at heart, and nil the trappings of civilization wHl not take it out <>C him. Have Rival to Phonographs. For years Smith lived In a Manhat tan apartment and was tortured by phonographs. When he fled from the front of his flat he was greeted with music from the houses In the rear. Finally he decided to leave the pho nographs behind and rented a bunga low out In the "open spaces" of Brook lyn. He had to walk a. mile to the subway station, but he figured living In Jthe great silence made It worth it, the New York Sun says. When spring came Smith tidied up the lawn, set out rose bushes and shrubbery and trimmed the shade \rees along the street. Then came disturb ance In a new. form, brought on by the xety Isolation of his neighbor ? hood. As Smith's street Is well paved. It has become the meccn of new automo bile owners learning to drive. They back Into his yard, bark his shade tiroes, tear up the turf and ruin the shrubbery. All day and as far as Into the night the amateur drivers zigzag down the street, awakening him with their horn blowing and racing en gines and Imperiling his life as they come plunging across the^ lawn and banging into the porch. Smith Is thinking of moving back ^omong the clllf dwellers, as phono graphs, after all, cannot knock him down and run over; him. Whore He Stood on M6ney Question. Judge Edwin Lamar Davis, congress man from the Fifth district of Ten nessee, is one of the best story tellers in congress. At a recent Jackson day dinner in (ililo he told this stoi^ of former Gov. Bob Taylor of his o\vn statu* t?t Illustrate the promises made by the Republicans In the campaign of 1020, saying that all conflicting ele ments were brought together by prom ising them everything they desired: "Back In ttfe days when the money question was the paramount issue and every candidate was required to an nounce whether he was for the gold standard or the free coinage of silver, Governor Taylor was a candidate for office. On one oc<*islon he was mak ing a speech and was about to con chide without any reference tft the money question, when a man in the audience called out : "'Bob, tell us where you stand on the money question.' " 'I am glad you reminded ine of that,' Governor Taylor replied, 'and I wyi he glad to tell you. 1 am for a little more gold, a little more silver, a little more greenbacks and a little sprinkle of counterfeit." ? Chicago Journal. Job for Horsehair. "Brother, have you a horsehair in the lapel of your coat? If so, please let me pull it out," suld a well-dressed man to several men respectively, as he met them on Lafayette boulevard near the Fort Shelby hotel, one after noon. <>n?* by one the men halted, whlb? the petitioner patted the lapel? of their coats, only to meet with dis appoint rnent. Finally a coat yielded a horsehair. The man pnlled it out and hurried to a companion who stood with one hand shielding his right eye. The horsehair was curled into a loop, and used fifl an instrument to remove h cinder from the eye of the compan ion, that had cnt Into it and left it much Inflamed. ? Detroit News. His Far Off Only Job. Settlement Worker ? What makes your hoshand look so worried, Mrs. Mixer? Mrs. Mixer ? He's drendln" the time, ? ma'am, when he'll have to jjo hack to wort. "Whom doe* he work for and what doe* he do, Mr*. Mixer?" "He works for the Solvation Arrojr, ma'am. He Ssata CUiwtu"- Judg% MINISTER KILLS MAN. Hattle to Death With Kenegade Who Had Stolen Church Money. St. Matthews. Au*. 17. -Gus JBuyck. is dead. Thin announcement may not startle the world. But gruesome as it may sound, hundreds of Calhoun cit izens will faeaftei* sleep with a better s. unity. Foymore than twenty years h?* has been engaged in serving sen tences on the gang and making as fre quent escapes. The absence of a leg seemed but to sharpen his wits and increase his daring, In fait, the 'peg leg has at times proved a helpful as* sistant in his effort at offense, A fugitive from sentence, he was in hiding about Cameron. The mem bers of a negro church held a meet Wednesday evening to make money for church purposes. Fifty dollars realized. Tho money was entrusted to the pastor who guardedly put it under the bed in the back room of the par sonage. When alll was asleep, Gus, loading the situation as by intuition, stripped himself of all clothing, took his crutch which wore on its toe *? shoe for a successful delusion and entered the window. The minister was aiousetl by a noise. lie went im mediately to the church treasury. He struck a match and a bare arm swung at from under the bed. He grappled the robber and a hard fight ensued. The children and wife of the pastor arose and went to the rescue of the pastor who was being subdued. One child brought in a brick, and a few blows were administered oft the head of Gus with small effect. The wife thought well of the axe, the weapon of successful ministerial de fense in such attacks. She made one swing and Gus got the axe. The fight over possession of the axe went on over the several rooms of the house. However, with the assistance of his wife and child, the minister succeeded in planting several blows on the head of the enraged antagonist and the loss of blood and exhaustion made him weaken He made his way to the back steps and collapsed. The sheriff was sent for and found Gus still alive and had the $50. A doctor was called but saw the case hopeless and devoted his attention to the minister who was none the better off for the fight. Gus was laid in the car of the sheriff and ?died on the way to jail. The minister is greatly disturbed over having been forced to take human life. While his friends, black and white, join with him in regret that he was forced to play his part to the fatal end, yet, orgy that it is, he is commeiYded on all sides, for fighting his assailant as he did, even to death. C lough Chappel seven year old ne gro boy, was kicked in the head by .a mule near Greenwood Saturday after noon and probably fatally injured. The child had gone to the pasture to drive up the stock for his father, Willis Chappell, when he got too close to one of the mules and was struck on his head, his ' skull having been smashed. A portion of his brains oozed out before an operation could be performed and physicians said his chances for recovery were slight. - Julian* R. Corley has received from the postmaster general the appoint ment as acting postmaster for Lex ington and assumed the duties of the office Tuesday. o bathing caps New Rubber, many shapes, attractive colow, 50c each. J ftotti SWaJs.'^or the tub shower ) ,tUt ?... $1.50 Moaquitone.Vplievea the sting from mosquitoes im- . .mediately >, . ~,>c' Swcot Dreams, keeps mosquitoes away, per bottle 35c. W. ROBIN ZEMP'S DRUG STORE PHONE 30 111 staYk owned stallion. ? . Has Been Placed in Seventh District at North for Stock Breeders Thy first thoroughbred stallion to bo placed in South Carolina by the United Stutes government for breed ing purposes is now in the hands (of H. M. Hydrick of North, according to II. P. Fulmer, fongrepsman from thy Seventh District. Twenty-five dollars is furnished by the ? government for the care of the stallion for four months of n season-, after which time the horse is to be maintained by the county in which it is placed for the remainder of the. year. Certain regulations and limi tations are set by the government regarding breeding and fees. According to government reports, the stallion is placed in the counties by the remount service of the quar termaster corps, United States army, to encourage the breeding of a better typo of horse. The government is at tempting to give those counties which prove themselves capable of providing for thoroughbreds an opportunity to improve the breed. When the army wants horses, colts sired by such stal lions will be inspected and given first choice, according to bulletins, though the government does not have any option on the foal. iMr. Fulmer says he knows Mr. Hy drick personally and can vouch for his knowledge of good horses. The Con gressman believes that conditions in his district are suited for the govern- j ment requirements of breeding and caring for the thoroughbred stallions, j "Sand Bed", the horse now under | the care of Mr. Hydrick, is a chestnut j colored, three year old stallion, bred by August Belmont, Lexington Ky. Ht is of average height and weight, and has been recently inspected by * v?. erinarian from the remount office. The stallion is reported to be in first class condition, being free fro? transmissible unsoundness and guar, anteed to be of suubstantial aid in im. proving the stock of the community!? Friday's State. Mrs. A. M. Stern, 00, an^l he daughter 35 years old , committed sui cide irt New York, last Friday by jumping from the sixth floor of an apartment house on West Seventy, eighth street. It was a suicide pact, according to the. police. He Had Suffered For Seven Years Kibley Declare* Dr. Thacher'i Liver and Blood Syrup , Simply Did Wonders % For Him. "Since taking Dr. Thacher's Liver and Blood Syrup my relief has been wonderful,' said S* E. Kibley, of r Uooney, Ky, "About seven years ago I first no ticed a dull aching pain in my back 7 just under my left shoulder blade. At first I thought it might be rheumatism and doctored myself for that but got" no better. "I read so much about Dr. Thach- , er's Liver and Blood Syrup I decided to try it. I soon noticed the pain gradually leaving me and now it is i entirely gone and never bothers me at all." Dr. Thacher's Liv^r and Blood Sy. . rup is sold by all good druggists and if the first bottle does not benefit you the purchase price will be refunded. Look for the Smiling Red Devil You always know a can of genuine Red Devil Lye by the smiling red devil on the label. It stand9 for a lye that you can depend upon to do the hard, rough work. For twenty years it has been the standard for good lye. Ask your grocer for the can with the red devil label. Write for Free Booklet. Wm. Schield Mfg. Co., St. Louis- Mo. USE Carolina Bond on that next order of Printed Stationery ENVELOPES TO MATCH We also carry in stock: ? Hammermill Bond Tokio Bond Triumph Bond Signet Bond Basic Bond WITH Worthmore Bond ENVELOPES P^intcraft Bond ' ' TO Southland Bond MATCH Richmond Bond , Uncle Sam Bond / THE CAMDEN CHROPWGfcE Telephone 29