University of South Carolina Libraries
('OUNTY FAIR PREMIUM LIST (Continued from Page Three.) 171 Brahma, Uight, pair. .175 Cochin. Uiff, pair. Class 3-Mediteranean. .171; leghorn, White, pen1. ltocker, $3.00, S. Ni. & 1t. I. Wilkes & Co. J-7 Leghorn, lBrown, pen. Center table, $2.00, S. M. & 1N. 11. Wilkes & Co., and 18 lbs Pc tersotis Host Holour, $1.65, Todd, Simlpson CIo. Si 'lver Camilpine, pen. Ladiie.-' hat, $2.00, J. C. iBurns & t Co.. ad I enn While lltte cof- g l'ee. Todd, Sipsonl Co. p \I i nO 4or a, 3air. iii I( ul'Ubadise, lowe Di ('). \nonas, pen. 1.4)0 Ill lute cliailise, .1. C. Shell & Co.v \nalhi.sians. pen. .C 150 in merehiind ise, Nachi.eni Gro- r veirv Co. t ('lass -f -Eniglish. C lkow! and ilitcher, $1.00, S. M. & 1.;. !1. Wilkes & Co. Class 5 -(Games.t 1 Gaei, llack, llreasted t(d, pair. I R1e'ter, $1.00, S. M. & I. It. Wilkies & Co. 4 (;ale, lied Pyle. paIr. r ir. IlIl,:; pou )ltry powder. .1. A. *L Franlks. ('ns ( -it (himnes. m,11114'. Ili, [teds, pair. (dse. $2.00, Eur'eka Ikrug Co. Game, Pit, White(s. pair. I b ake, $1.25, 1,airetis Bakery. Ia'.l'i, 11lack1s, pair.t 1d 1 1$.00, .1. I . Shell & Co. v G;arn'e, l . Crays. pai'. 6 ye"1a. subsc'rip on ) to SwithernI C L'111tivator. C m1 0Se, Il lues, Ifair. t yeIlhuscriptionl to) So-11thern t uliVta01r t l il, Oliminitpies, pair. 8 Ib <,,k . $1.25, Iaurents Hakery. ( C-Nss "7 Orientail (l-tine14s. in i In (*;aml, Cornis-h1t, pair. i.l In merchandisie, . C (. Sheill Co. t n11 o l( nw -han ils " , 171r1.. ir a *tille, .l n . . . l ('. :4!o. 11 1 . '.5 .i r n a e y II. l n'. $1.77" ;11d ' 'ah 'rlo e4;v C'o. ru \'le(, iir.. .I Ii ii ) I i 4 t d - au:ers, I . wa }r.t - , 1 iI. I A .,. Ilarel 5 and 100 m 11 and i m(h. n (offt'. . !.: n K-m eewe be:st pai;r. I IhIt ( i ous:e e'4tfe01. Casih r ery 00i. Hhinllaes bwsi pmir. Y. . il), .Ie, llayes 5 and 10c Whi 4'ahilei, 4pair. oy'. 0ov1:;, 1!5c, llave.' .5 aml 10c 1 24. les- S ; ir' While41 .\loinon ies.t'' Ow"lt': s. t\l ( ' s ar h \allte s. 2 Lt'sr pair White King. 24' lIes.: cir P in Tiails. \\a*l [.75, .1. ('. Iurns &r C.. 0uineas. 21 les indiividIual poul1try di.'play3 of liiiurens County. I :gob i'0rooch, $5,.00, 1lelming IIrios. I 4i1as IIiI waig powdter, $5.00, Swyner't, Nichols & Co. fiGNCHI SilW. .3 im D'Shi el ds, Guy Ta. -Watson. Superin14tenden'fts. 212 11'st Setter dlog. ('ornlhination01 kn1ife and40 bttle OP ener,' $1 .00, Cher1o-CoIla Iltt.3 ing . Works. 21; Iest *~ fier hitch., hottling Works. 3444r4e '44nbrelcla, $3.5, ('her'o Cola Ilt''3 ln Works. I hat1, $1 .4)1, A\ Ib IDiamnond. 2!!b I"la II llou d do4g. I su:i t under'wear1, $1.00, Aho D iamrond. 21 I . est pair' II un pups(1341 , one of ('ach1 s'x, undlcer 2 years old,. 250, by A. M. iiill. 21'' I est 1agle dlog. I collar. 220 liest I Iagle 3bitch. I 00ollar. 2231 lest (CollIig' dlog.4 222 I est C ollie iltchl. 223 llet plair O)'possums, I can coffee, J1. M. Phlil pot. 221 Ilest collection O'possums. Ilunch hannanas, lI Ondr1os Bros. 225 [lest pair 14qulirr'els. I shirt, I fayes 5 and 100 Store. Usual Plan Reversed. It was thle firt (day of school, and 'the teacheor was mnakinig upi her' rec ords. "HI-ow many of you phupils are tuii Ion pupils?"' Silo asked-meanIng, of cou(1rse, those( whol( lived out1 of the -eity dIstrict and1 muost pay43 tuition. A hadLt lit tie boy wh'lo dloes not1 like school aind upon whom his plarenits are obl3igedi t~o use( all ijorts of ind(uce mets~)1 to got 1him 3to go, coul n ot get 31ta word "'1Inition."' "I don't know whlat you meanI," said h)e. "1 mean those thait hmave t~o 3ay3 tilloni," saidi te tea4ch)er. "'D o you)l pay to come here?" "Naw; they pay me to come here." POINTS OUT NATURE'S ERROR Mr. Gwimpleton Turns Aside From Daily Duties to Discourse on Matters of Consclence. "Wealth, as we know,'' said Mr. :wimpleton, "is very unevenly dis tributed, but conscience is more so. "Some men are overburdened with conscience; some have none at all. Some people worry themselves sick )ver this or that real or imagined thansgression of the civil or the moral aw. "There are others who worry only 'hat they cannot safely transgress the more. "Between these two extremes we lave the man commonly described as averconscientious, meaning one wor-. thy but timid, who lets a conscience too keen and active keep him from betterments of his fortune that he might otherwise compass. Then we liave those people who are not trou bled in such ways, who are all but ,onscienceless and whose conscience really lies dormant. "It is true, too, that a thing that may stir one man's conscience may uot touch another's; we are differ 3ntly constituted. There appears to be no absolutely definite standard of .onscience applicable to and actuat. ug all men alike. This enormously 3omplicates the conscience situation. "But still the great primary dim .ulty lies in the uneven distribution )f conscience. If we could only have something like an even distribution )f such conscience as now exists it 6vould, for one thing, in sonic ineas tire reduce piracy in its nanifolld .oris as now practiced under civilized .onditions by men without conscience, ind for another thing, it would by reducing the stock of the man of ab orial conscience, spare him the wor nienits that now beset iiiii and let dim take without qualms whatever beneilts rightfully belong to him. In ,act, a more even distribution of Con icieice would (tone up the world gen 'rally and make it in inany ways a vastly itore comfortable world to live ill. '"Penading (hat happy day it be Ihooves us, i supposw-at anly rate. lily frienld Alaellinik, a weltil micaniing and :i(eerfll but not always overtr1.1u st fulI man, says it does-to be still more or l-s w ary il our dealinlgs with our follow I1a:1 inl url(r to avoid "sublj(t ing our '\ il aaning but wektaiir brotlhier toP 1undue4 tltinjutation , and to avoid beli;; cir-cuivenuted by 'io1i1v body who wsPi haP jt overloolitd vn tirely in tie conscience distribution." Aeroplane Carris Oi; Prisoncr. The -Zory o 11 aviatlor who Came back to the Russian lines with an Austrian prisoner strapped to the tail frame of his aeroplane is told in a Petrograd dispatch from the front in Poland: "The airman, Terentic Pasehaloff, ascended from the aviation headquar ters in the rear of General Ivanoff's army in his 150-horsepower machine, a-cCollipaniied by his meclianlic. The machine carried a small gun and a number of bombs. "Owing to iotor trouble, lasclialoff had to descend two miles behind the Austrian lines. While the mechanic was repairing the motor six Austri ains approached. Paschaloff turned his one-pounder on them and fired one shrapnel shell, which exploded ac curately andl felled flye men The sixth surrendered. "Thlen came the problem-what would lie do with his prisoner? Pas chaloff decided to abandon his stock of bombs and tie his prisoner to the tall frame of hIs macline. Thus bur dented, the aeroplane rose and flewv over the Austrian lines amid a storm of bullets, regaining the Russian lines without damage." Man Who Was Always Late. Private *---- was known to all his chums as "the early bird," probably because it was an exact description of the very opposite to what lie really was, for "the early bird" was always late, the last man to get out of bed at reveille and the last man on pa radle, and when .his regiment sailed for F'rance Ils chums declared that lhe wvas the last into the transport ship aiid the last out of It. When lis regiment was doing its spell in the trenches "the early bird" wvas senit for by lis officer, and as lie was creeping along the trench towardls the dug-out a stray bullet caught himi In the shoulder, just as lie was outside the officer's shelter. After seeing that lhe wasn't seriously14 wvounded, the offiedr exclaimed, with a twinkle in lis eye. "If you had just been a second earlier y'ou would have missed that." of "I would, sir," returned Private-, of "or if I had been a second later it would have missed me."-London Tit- g Dits. Photographic Marvels,.k In making photographs of the splash i formed by a falling liquid Professor eni Worthington of the Royal society, in thi London, has succeeded in giving an se exposure of less than three one-mil- it lionths of a second. This is effected c with an electric spiark, wihich can be c so accurately timed that the operator' can select any desired stage in the C progress of a splash within limits of thi error not exceeding two one-thou. ta sandths of a secondl. lpc A photographic printing machine In exhibited at a recent meeting of the er society had( a roil of preplared bro mide paper fed In at one end and, turnedl out finished photographic of prints at the other end~ at the rate of ac 2,000 to 8.000 per hour. These photo gr'aphs may be used for illustrations S( In newanoers and magazinon. : GET READ1 Count MINTE Is the Place. N Our store is ful third story, with the we could buy in the I This is Dre Throughout the United S your outfit. With cotton prosperity is here, and th show'that happy feeling old suit and Dress-Up in outfits. Ladies Department. New shilneui l ('oat Suits inst ai'riverl. 1h14e spieeial nIIImbrs at $20.00. a. . .... .... .... .... .... .. $25.00 .Se, nur siik at $10.00, $1d 50 aid $15.00 :S rt.s. a ren: % niws $3.50, $d.00 and $7.50 Sport Coats .... $5.00, $7.50. and $10.00 n .IIs . . ..... $7.50. $10.00. $12.50, $15.00 SPECI .\L SIIt(1)\\'I O ' EV ENIN( 1) IlkSSES -.111'T AR IVED. riees..... .... $10.00, $12.50 an d $15.00 NEW TIIN('s IN JA)ES' 81101S'I 1. C(lth tops in gray. latIn and hlik spevial at .... .... .... .... .. $3.50 Extra speviall valuies inl Ladies' Viei, ("unl A1011al ad Patent levather. at .... .... .... ...... $1.50 to $3.00 \Ilisses aund (Childruen 's Shoes aut al pice~s upI to (.......... .... .......... $3.00 'ro(st y mournings.' wvilI sooni he hiere anid the days whenh U goo a rm U '~i.~ sweater wvill teel gooad. We hauve themit for theii wh~ole fm nily andi& at prices toa suit the piurse. Here's for Better Clot Minter ( Laurer M~ANNING llTlES' SHlltIlF. lotQie alf minds Himt of Law Rlegiulatlng lbro ifrn Vorking (onditionus In Textile PlIants WiI oehrwt Sherliff John D). Owings Is in receipt alneggdi the following letter from the ofleeo ouetesn Governor Manning, at Coliubia: anleiathea desire to call to your attention the ai cuytes lowing Act of 1915, approved by me(lwot(orsf. February l6th, 195 do not aie nllbrr ow whether or not this Act i~s being atheam >lated in your county, but merely Il same to your attention in order at you may lbe on the lookout and (rnigwtrb a that same is enforced. I feel that (l~~i5o lse is of vast importance that our wite comoain l izens shall not lbe forced to work ft'isw oalp Ie by side with negroes, and that ev-saderofr y precaution should be taken that gg~ ntebsn e two r'aces (10 not come into con-mnfcuiga at with eh other any more than (itnto orc aslble. I shall co-operate with~ ontin the enforcement of this and all oth- Scin2 ea laws on the Statute Hooks. AtAyfrie Section 1. Separation of employeesenad Bctn different races provided for-equaligvoltn tle comodlations. He It enacted by the At la elal meral Assembily oif the State ofoetonhude tuthi Carolina, Thit 'it shall be tin-eahndvryof fufoanpeon imorcril-nuto a ny peit 'ELLS OF ARMY LIFE RELIABLE" DISPATCHES FROM BARON MUNCHAUSEN. ,ccording to His Reports Soldiers Are Having an Enjoyable Time, but of Course One Need Not Believe Him. The hardships of warfare in the 'enches have been so grossly exag erated that it is time, I think, to ut forth the real facts of this fea ire of the war. Rocking-chair corre pondents, who spend their time far rom the scene of action, draw so Lrgely upon their imaginations that cry little, if, in fact, any truth per olates through to the ultimate 3ader. I had read with interest, iough with skepticism, their reports f the intense suffering of the troops ompelled to fight in the trenches, so !hile I was with the German army in 'oland I determined to investigate Li matter fully. Needless to say, I >und the soldiers enjoying comforts i their subterranean shelters that ivaled those of the most luxurious omes. I had the pleasure of visiting the lerman position in Poland as the per onal friend and guest of General von lindenburg. The first thing that truck my notice was that the reaches were about half filled with 'ater, in which the soldiers were tanding up to their waists. So ac ustonied had they become to it, how ver, that they found it uncomfortable o stand on dry ground, and when, uihappily, as sometimes happened, he water drained away, they made pecial provisions for refilling the itches, drawinig their supply from ear-by streams. The water served a double purpose, hat of keeping them warm and of af ording a hiding place when the Rus lans advanced in too great nuibers. 'he soldiers would in such a case ierely duck coipletely under the atvr, until the attacking force had gain retired. The G erumans also outid the streamis that constantly lowel through the trenihes of ines ilable valhe iil t ransport of ra ioniS and(] aramuition from)14 tne point 4) anoti-, and by the ski! fuli use of peelially constructed rowboatls they (vre enabled to rush re-( tnfori e tnentt't o tlreaten1ed spots. One dilliculty hy imd clptd with I'lmuc esflly was (lie fIr 'zinilg Of th, v-atter inl extremlely cold wea"thelr.Th lisadvu'late of this was lhiat it ren lered lie entiVo i :-iy immobile in he event of attacks, and General von lindenibuirg was elten at a loss wheti kt fouid troops ne(ded at. a ' particut ar point held fast by the ire in their mositions, ont lixed post, as it were. sugges Itod that if he soldietrs ere )rderied't all to Jumpi111 u pward at the ane time the'- would bring tile Ice vith thIemi, at .ould, itoreover, pre eitt a tilluitet -.tmt to the fo. This clene w%-as tried onl th next cold light with unparalleled success. 'T'le Serian lines, linked together by ice valls, advanced literally by leaps ind )ounds, and so star'ltad the Russians liat they fled 1:recipitately. Two companies in returning had a atmhable exper-inc", for inadver'tent y each attempiitetd to enter the trench f the other. The tmregular ice, of ouirse, did(1 not fit ini either case, andi lie soldIers' efforts to force their wvay nto the wronig shelters was so ludi ~routs that I was faiirly convulsed with aughter. After the dlifliculty had been olitedl out the two c'ommiands ex ~hanged places, anti without further rouble got into their proper shelters. -Brooklyn Eagle. Small Fish Ponds. The AmerIcan FIsheries society fa hers a project that has already re teived serious consideration in many )arts of the countr-y, anti shotuld, If mt Into practice, help to reduce the :ost of living. ThIs pi-oject Is the areation of small ponds, tin acre or wo In extent, on every farm large nough to contein them. The ponds diould be six or seven feet In depth indl furnished wIth vegetatIon su ied o the needs of the fish wIth whIch Lhey are stocketd. As no othier food vould be required the cost or provid ng ia cont inuial suipply of fish would be very small Trout have been for' rnny years hatched and i-eared in the waters of sporting cltibs, and im rnense niimbhers of them- have bteen raised fotr commercial purpioses. In i small pond fetd by cold springs they man be bred in great quantities so as to furnish sport as well as food. Carp, pickerel, eels andI perch can also be reared without great expense. Dr. Charles II. Townsend, the director of the Newv York aquarium, has shown his interest in the ptroject for estab lishing these small ponds by prepar Ing a booklet giving detailed informa tion in regard to their stocking and maintenance. Old Men Lead. The proverb "old men for counsel, young men, foi war" has generally been understood by the wise to mean that old men imay be useful occasion aily for proffering advice based on ex perience, but that strength and energy and enthutsiasm of young men are es sential for any real activity on a large scale, such ats war. The proverb still holds good, bitt wIth a qlualification. Young men ar'e stIll the backboneeof wsar-in the treonches. The 01(1 meii are the counselorsq, but they arec inore than' co':nselors. They are the active execuuive heads--the commanders. Pitsuh Pr.. (FOR THBE y Fair R CO. ow is- the Time I from basement to best stock of goods eading markets. is-Up Week tates. Come to us for selling above 12 cents ere is no better way to than to put aside that one of Minter Company's Men's Department. (II- .lln1's Clthing Deam ient is Ie4Iin lt w~' '~ ith ai: goodt sh i ng I or ) . l h ig r le ( 'loth iI . \Vou will look iol bst i (114 )1* ( $18.00, $20.00 and $25.00 Suits. 'nusual v l n .\ens mad youilng le's Siits at . .$10.00. $12.50, $15.00 liy'sSuits .... $2.00, $3.00, $5.00 and up ShIltTS. SOCKS ANI) N ICK WEAlH. e ouri showil, ol Alien's 111S at $1.50 $2.00 u1n d .... .... .... .... ....$3.00 ShOES iO MEN ANI) BOYS. Edwin Clapp Shoes .... .... .... $6.00 Ition V. Ileynolds .............. $5.00 lIen an1)1u i dher goo makes forlC5iti $3.00, $3.50, and l.... .... ...........$4.00 E~xtraP goold Shoes ifor boys atI $2.00. $2.50 and( .................. ...$3.00 liiggrest I lne of Alenii's and1( 3o(y 's WVork *hoe wel hve? (ever sh1own-the kind( olo ng w41L(~ ear,11 and 11 c omfr. You will be1 leaseI~d if you1 buty your1 P shoesC lhes and Better Times omp any. s, S. C. turing in this statef ic te fes isom tedad o >perat ives, helpl anid ePldt th scolf dofte i races to llO abor I tand i wihofndn etiemau in the same room, fcuigettlih~li Oael ie business of cot- Scto 3.Atntoapl tocr doors of entranceta mlye-TiAcsalno rne time, or to usealll toe lomn of ieen s ne pay ticket win- sbriae nbie omtuk paying off its oper- mn rt lo cubr n hs at the same time, Pisn mlydi epn npo stairways and win--prcniinlvtoisad tios ime, or to use atan1cretr, ec nis ndoh s lavatories, toilets, eggdi h earo rcino ckets, lpails, Clibu ildng, ,; Provided, Equal Scin4 m eitl fetv. all be supplied and Ti c hl aeefc m eitl rsons emloyed by uo t prvlb h oenr or corporation en- Apoe h itet a fFb ass of cotton textile ry A.D115 aforesaid, without ?salb ldt erfo o color or previous fo iet ieavstn st h ty for violating this freetofm nyu ony 'son or corporation eytuyors textile manufactur- Iihr .Mnig provisions of this Coenr to a penalty of not $100.00) dlollars for (e~ ev uig ot ~,ae use, to be recoveredcila 8Osayrd eno tecony i ch thMifnsiscm tte Cmandy: