University of South Carolina Libraries
p r Hooto EVERYTF I Something new for y THE PRICE YOU upon the quality ol Ask your friends, tl ' Minery Past experience has ts department, as well as il when you come here. Th and expect, we are preps wants of each individual stocks to run low as the s late customers to be pies Therefore, we can please to come. i Since you were here 1; things, which we invite y MILANS?There is n have them in medium an< jj HEMPS?Come and s< will just suit you, and at | PANAMAS?These w and see them. The price FLOWERS?These ha / II season has advanced. S( ^ _ || hat come and let us show Mfc || RIBBONS?Of these Hb shipment, and we have t; I I any purpose you wish. 11 GIRDLES?These we || them to your order. Let : \e. a. I ||i Telephone 83-J ! \ ~ ?? PERSONAL. MENTION. : People Visiting in This City and i 4 v Other Points. ?Mr. Glenn W. Cope is in Spa] tanburg attending the music festiva ?Mrs. H. F. Bamberg has gone t Johns Hopkins hospital, Baltimor< for treatment. ?Mr. Thomas Gill, of Savannal visited his mother, Mrs. G. W. Gai land, last week. ?Messrs. G. Frank Bamberg an ^ \ Francis Bamberg have returned t the city from Baltimore. ^ ?Dr. F. F. Johnson has gone t Baker hospital, Charleston, where h will undergo an operation. ?Mr. J. C. Kearse, of Ehrhard was in Orangeburg Friday.?Orange hurg Times and Democrat. ?Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Berry, c L Branchville, spent several days lai week in the city with relatives. . ?Mrs. James Byrd, of Charlestoi is spending some time in the cit with her sister, Mrs. H. G. Delk. ?Rev. L. E. Wiggins, of Pickem i? spending some time in the cit with Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Black. N ?Mrs. M. A. Moye has been visit ing her parents in Bamberg.?Fail fax Correspondent Hampton Herald -?Mr. and Mrs. F. F. Carroll ar at home again after a visit of sever* weeks to Charleston and Savannah. ?Miss Louise Wilson has returne to the city from f Blackville, ^ he school having closed for the session. ?Prof. J. C. Guilds attended th meeting of the Columbia district cor ference at Ridge Spring last Frida * and Saturday. ?Mr. E. D. Bessinger and family of Olar, were the week-end guests c Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Mobley.?Barr well Sentinel. fVt ?Mr. Charles Chitty and Mr. Moi |v ris, of Olar, were in town Monda and Tuesday.?Fairfax Correspond ent Hampton Herald. ?Mrs. Lizzie Wright, of Bambers is visiting at the home of her sor Mr. H. A. Wrignt. on Loven street.Orangeburg Times and Democrat. ?Dr. Hartzog and .Mr. Bessingei of Olar, were among those who a1 tended the memorial services her t Sunday afternoon.?Barnwell Peoph ?Dr. and Mrs. Robert Black an Miss Urma Black left Tuesday nigh for Asheville, N. C., to attend th sessions of the Southern Baptist cor venticn. i t ' \ 5--: : " * J n's Ladi IING FOR TI ou almost every day in eac PAY has little to do with i F goods you get. At Hooto !ll J..1I u ley win ten yuu u w Department LUght us what you expect in this t has taught you what to expect erefore, knowing what you want, j ired to fill those many various customer. We never allow our eason advances, for we want our ised as well as the early ones, you at any time it suits you best ast we have received many new ou to come and inspect, othing better at this time. We i large. ee these. We have a shape that a price you will be glad to pay. e have in the new shapes. Come s are correct. * - ? l _ ve grown more prominent as tne ) if you prefer a flower trimmed you. we have received another large hem in any quality or width, for have ready to wear, or can make us have the order. COME TO SEE US, YOU AR HOOl tmmmmmammmam* BMRanaMMMMMMMHWaaBMM ?Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Chitty 9pen1 the week-end with relatives in Olar it ?Fairfax Correspondent Hamptor Herald. , ?Mrs. Barr, of Bamberg, spenl several'days last week with her sis1 ter, Mrs. E. J. Wannamaker, on El.0 liott street!?Orangeburg Times anc Democrat. ?Mrs. R. L. Gaffney has returnee i. to her home at Shreveport, La., aftei r- spending several weeks in the citj with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. S ^ Easterling. o ?Mr. and Mrs. G. J. Wescoat anc Mrs. Robt. Kearse, of Olar, spent 0 Sunday in town as the guests of Mr e and Mrs. G. C. Brown.?Walterborc Press and Standard. t ?Misses Addys Hays and Moselle Copeland, Mrs. C. J. S. Brooker, Col 1 J. R. Owens, Messrs. Calvin Rents and D. F. Hooton, Mrs. J. W. Price Miss Pearl Counts, and Mr. and Mrs A. McB. Speaks have gone to Birmingham, Ala., to attend the reun1? ion of the Confederate veterans. ?Mr. and Mrs. Jake Rentz, of the Hunter's Chapel section, reti^rned tc 3? their home Monday after spending a y week or two with relatives in the city. Mr. and Mrs. Rentz are neart ing ninety years of age, and have r- been married more than. 65 years . They are both in moderately good e health. Conforming to Profession. d A man went to order a wedding 'r cake the other day. "I'm getting married," he said, e "and I want a cake." i- "Well, it's the latest thing," said y the shopgirl, "to have wedding cakes in harmony with the bridegroom's j calling or profession. Thus, a journalist has a spice cake, a musician {_ an oat cake, an athelete e cup cake, a man who loafs on his friends a sponge cake, and so forth and so on. ; What is your calling please?" j | "I am a pianist." "Then, of course," said the girl, "you'll want a pound cake." r _____ > , 11 i. Reason for Cyclones. "Of course I want my daughter to have some kind of artistic education. r' I think I'll let her study singing," said .Mrs. Neighbor. e ^ "Why not art or literature?" sug5* gested .Mrs. Highbrow, d "Art spoils everything and literait ture wastes reams of papers. Singe ing merely produces a temporary disi turbance of the atmosphere," was the reply. es Store 3E GIRLS AIN :h department, that's why Ho it, its what you get for your >n's you get the best values i shop here, for we give you II ' I I ^ . think it 4iCv\\h let us s] gNi^.^];PPIVV.^fe^B^ Places 1 / t0 Sh?W MTVmfmW^' LAC im Fflmmi'k .$ -be disc( ffl f^ilii"ed^? are goo jf (i ))A terial f ^ Come a TAF hard to you can get the one you want 1 SUITS?Of these we have 1 in a suit. If you are going a^ the line. rriT AT?T?n nPTTiQQ nODDS. wjjv/xlui^ iy xvxjui^ vx \/ \/x^ what we have, as the assortme fore you buy. E ALWAYS WELCOMED. DON' roN, "THE HOME OF T : CLIMATE'S EFFECT ON GROWTH. I * i Scientist Concludes Maturity of Child I Not Reached Earlier in Tropics. t Children do not reach maturity in j . tropical climate any quicker than in ; [ temperate climates. This remark-j able conclusion, which runs contrary! ^ to a widely held belief, has been! , reached by Prof. Franz Boas, profes-1 , sor of anthropology at Columbia Uni- j versity, says the New York Evening1 Post. Prof. Boas, fresh from parti-j cipation in a scientific survey of Por-1 ^ to Rico, made his report to the New i 11 ' | York Academy of Sciences, which un-j '' dertook the investigation. > "The first of our anthropological inquiries had for its object the study * of conditions of growth of the body in a tropical environment," says' ' ?TOI. 150as. II IS generally aosum- i ' ed that heat has the efiect of acceler- j ating the physiological development j ' so that in warm climates children j " reach maturity earlier than in tem-1 perate zones. Our inquiries do not j i substantiate this view. The material! ) has not yet been collated, but from | i the general character of the data I j i venture to say that they will be of j the very greatest importance for i practical measures relating to the , hygiene of childhood and for the I management of schools. "The data thus obtained give also , valuable information on the type ot! Porto Ricans, and necessitated; studies among the adults. Material j ' for these has been obtained particu- j larly among the soldiers of the Porto | ' Rican regiment, and the success of j this work is entirely due to the lib- j eral assistance of Major Basil H. j ' Dutchem. It is not possible yet to j speak of the results of this work j with certainty, but it would seem that a remarkably strong environ-! ' mental influence upon the racial type] of man may be observed. If this] should prove to be the case, we j should have succeeded in establish-! ing a fact of great scientific import-] ance." Prof. Boas's report also covers an | inquiry into the folk-lore of the Porto Ricans, and researches into the ? anHnnitfpc nf thft island. Of this ; work he says: "The collection of folk-lore in Porto Rico was entrusted to Dr. J. Alden Mason, who solved his task with great skill and success. He has ac cumulated many hundreds of folk tales, riddles, rhymes, ballads, and songs which will give us a clear in; sight into the traditional literature of the island. I think the material, i and M ID LADIES I oton's is the Most Popular mjp > wrmmmmmamammaam m mm money that counts, and h :or the least money. Tha values according to the iry Goods, Dresse 3 see what we have to show you ii : will be interesting as wrell as pie how you all of the newT things we I :he stocks are badly broken, but Y r you that you cannot find elsewhe ES?If you have had trouble aboi )uraged, for we have even a large LACES?These wre are showing nd insertings to match at 5c. TER VALS?These we have in a nd insertings that we are selling ; 3NTAL LACES?These we have d, as well as the All Overs, and t\ RGETTE CREPE?Do you need or dresses or trimmings-? We hz ,nd let us showT you. FETAS AND MESSALINES?\ n-rtf Knf i-p itaii Tirorcf ai 4-V> av /^an1 ' get, wut li juu wain ciLiici, uun iere. -eceived several shipments, and a 'ay, now is the time to get one. ( ?In these lines it would be imp ;nt is so complete, therefore we 2 T KNOCK WHEN YOU COME Bai HE NEW THINGS" when worked out and published, will have not only great value for the study of romance philology and comparative literature, but will also furnish reading matter for the rural schools, attractive and interesting to the children, because based on their own historic environment. It should have an influence similar to that Nof the European fairy tales collected a century ago, which have been a source of pleasure and instruction for millions. "The archaeological work has been carried on by Dr. H. K. Haeberlin, Robert T. Aitken, and Dr. J. Alden Mason. Dr. Haeberlin investigated | with great care one stone enclosure j (juego di bolas) in the Jobo district and a cave near by. The latter contained some ceremonial objects ^nd a small number of buria. In the cave were found large numbers of bones of an extinct rodent that may have been used for food. Messrs. Mason and Aitken excavated a large cave in Caguana, Utuado, which proved to, be the burial ground of a ancient j community. Here also a large num-j ber of bones of extinct rodents were j found. At the foot of the hill in! which the cave is situated were j found terraces and enclosures, evidence of the existence of an ancient j village, to which undoubtedly the; cave belonged. "After the cave had been cleared out completely, Messrs. Aitken and Mason took up a preliminary investigation of a village site at Capa, lo- j cated by the writer, that seemed of: particular interest. For the pres-j ent half-year the committee has con-' tributed considerable funds for re-' search at this site, which proves to j be by far the most important of all j archaeological localities so far inves-: tigated in Porto Rico. Dr. Mason; has been carrying on work there throughout this half-year, with tne exception of a period of about four weeks. He closed his field work on j the 15th of December, although not more than about one-third of the j whole site has been excavated. An | accurate survey of the site is being j made. "The locality seems to be so im-j portant that it ought to be preserved, j and I trust that the government of I Porto Rico may find it passible to; protect it temporarily by detailing a( I policeman to watch it, and perma-1 nentlv by acquiring the site as a1 national monument." A scientific survey of Porto Rico I was inaugurated by the council of j the academy at its regular meeting j in November, 1913. The undertak-j / " illinery ROM HOSE Exclusive Ladies Store in t iow much or how little y< t is why you always find tl price you pay. Everythin s and Suits ft these departments. We asing to you, to come and lave at this time. At most / lere we have many things / / re. ' / at these this season, don't 1^ r assortment than usual, f in a varied assortment large assortment of both at the same old price, 10c. in all of the widths that ley are not expensive. any of this popular matve it in all that is good. ?e know these have been 't take a substitute, when t this time can please you Come and let us show you V\l/> iin 4*/\ /av? 4--C uaoiuic IUI UO tu 1I1CI1CHJ11 isk that you see these beIN OR WHEN YOU GO OUT. nberg, Mail Oi ing was made possible by an offer of Emerson McMillan, at that time president of the academy, to contribute $1,000 a year for a period of five years, and an appropriation of $500 a year by the council from the academy's funds for a similar period. The endeavor received the cooperation of the American . Museum of Natural History, the New York Botanical Garden, and the scientific departments of Columbia University, New York University, and other institutions. The Insular government of Porto Rico included an item of $5,000 for the survey in its budget for 1914-15 and again in the budget ! for 1915-16, and it has been requester? te nrmHrmo this snhsiriv fnr three j VU V V/ VVAAVAA&UV v A* A KS v. v W years longer. ! The committee of the council I charged with the direction of the sur' vey consisted of Profs. Britton, Crampton, Kemp, Boas, and Poor. The , preliminary reconnaissances were made by Profs.. Britton and Crampton during the winter and early spring of 1914, and the work has since progressed continuously, in the field and in the laboratory. Collections of geological palaeontalogical, botanical, zoological and archaeological specimens, aggregating many thousands, have already been brought together, and, after being studied, are being divided among the cooperating institutions and sets of duplicates are being returned to Porto Rico to form a natural history museum there. lie ,0-Jl Ioonsuioaiau ri A Masterly Drama B Based on a Man's I Dual Personality I Directed by George 6 L. Tucker who pro- H duced "Traffic in a Souls. B FRIDAY, MAY 19th I I Thielen Theatre I Parlor1 TO HATS his section of the State - V-l A >u pay, it all depends iiecrowdat Hooton's. ig just as represented j^lff . !, Elastine-< i Kpauso s. C.IJ ders Filled Promptly JjJJ .r : Moseley's Weekly If Bulletin //ja These warm weather specials will be of real interest to every eco' nomical buyer. ^.-.j 27-inch Rice Cloth . Voile, beautiful quality, special at 10c. I . I Blazer Stripe Poplin 36 inches wide. Very popular for sport suits, 2 5c: * i New 40-inch Voiles, in Floral and Stripes, all colors, 25c. 1000 yards of very fine 40-inch white .'-i Voile?a big job?at 10c. 136-inch Gabardine and Waffle Check White Skirtings, unusual value, 25c. 36-inch Silk Poplin, specially suited for Suits arif] Tod Coats. || All shades. 75c. Wide Lace Bands, in white and ccru. Quite a novelty. 2 5c and up. 9 White Xi . 2or graduation cosljmes. A very popular article just now. 5<V\ 50 new p.'eces of Curtain Goo \ in Scenics, Marqn^setts, Voiles and Swiss, in white, cream and eru, . plain and hemstitched I sides, at 10c 12 1 -2c, 15c to 25c yard. I We fill mail orders promptly. MOSELEY'S PHONE 500 Orange urg, S. C.