University of South Carolina Libraries
6 88 88 88 88 88 88 8 8 8 L Local and Personal Mention. 8 S 8 88 88 88 8 888 8 8 Mr. J .F. Davis, of Clinton, was a visitor in the city Saturday. Mr. Edwin Lucas, of Spartanburg, spent the week-end in the city. . Mis. J. D. Jones of Clinton was among the visitors here .\Monday. Mrs. . Boyd was among' those visit ing in the city on Monday. Mr. J. W. Wells 6f Gray Court, was here for a short while yesterday. Miss Nell s1Eichelberger will leave Saturilay for Columbia to citer a hospital for training as a nurse. Mr. 11. E. Vincent, of Charlotte, N. C., was in the city yesterday visiting his brother, Dr. C. P. Vincent. lisas Charlotte McGowan spent the Week-end in the city with her par ents, Judge and Mi's. F. 11. McGowan. Mir. ilerk L. llirdy spent Sunday in Greinville with his father, .ir. .aies S. Clardy. Mrs. J. Moore Mars of Abbeville is hiere oii a visit-to her parents, Mi. and Mr's. E. 11. Wilkes. Mrs. A. 13. Weathersby of Belton has been, spqnding several days here with fient(s. Mi. J. W. Tinsley, who resides on Laureis Rote live was among the visito's here for the day Saturday. Quite .'a number of the Clemson and Woff'ord boys spent tle week-end with their parents here. lfss Frances Oavis, who is attend in Converac, spent the week-end in the city with .\Mrs. Davis. Miss iu1 Little, of (Grcenville, spenilt the week-end here with her- mother, Mrs. .1. It. Little, on Laurel trecet. Mr. Jaeics C. lemphill, of Greeji wood, was a business visitor here yes terday, Mr. Mlarshall Trammell, assistant nationtal bank-examiner, spent yester day here on business. Miss Francis Thames spent several days in Greenville last week as the guest of friends. }liss Helen Tolbert, of Greenwood, I spent the weck-end in the city as the gust of Miss Kathleen Wilkcs. Mrs. J. R. Workman and little son, Eugene, spent the week-end in New berry with 'Mrs. Workman's parents, 'r. and .irs. Eugene Blease. Miss ilargaret )ial, who is now a studiient at Lander, visited her parents, Dr. and .rs. W. Ii. Dial, Saturday and Sunday. Mr. T. L. Monroc went to Columbia A Saturday and Sunday with Mrs. Mon roe who has been undergoing treat ment at a Columbia hospital. Mir. Grover Itichey, who is attend ing 'the law school of the University of South Carolina, was a visitor in the city Sunday. Mrs. E. H. Wilkes has returned home after spending several weeks in Baltimore, where she went to attend the funeral of a nephew. MI. John Law Anderson, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. Ray Anderson, has gone to Columbia to enter a business col lege there. Mr's. D. A. DuPre, of Spartanbui'g, is visiting Mr. and Mrs. C. RI. Mose icy on Noi'th Harpeis sti'eet, having come dlown on account of the sickness of Cai'los R., Jr'., who pias been sick of measles. Mr. L. C. flalle, of Lauirens, spent the week rend in Newbei'iy, i'etui'ning to h-ishoAle with Mrs. Ilalle and the two childi'en, who have been visiting Mi's. Hallte's parents, Mir. and Mrs. Jlohn C. G4oggans.--Newberry lier'ald & Newvs. Mr. P. A. Siimpson has returned to the city after staying several weeks 'in Columbia with the Lockner Phone i:'aphl Company. Is friends wvill be W:lad .to know that lie has decided to give'up his wvork in Columbia and re S.plain in TLaui'ens. Mrs, Lizzie Hall, who resides with Mr. an'd Mi's. R. W. Willis, received the sad intelligence Sunday of the death of her sister, Mirs. James Reagan, wifo died at her home near Newberi'y Sat ui'day. Thb~ deceased is survived by her hushind and five .daughters, be sides oth il' more dis'tant relatives. Dr. Is ore Schayer, of Columbia, was a vi itor' in the city this week. Dr. Schaf~er wvent to the bor'der with the eond regiment anid wvas imustei' ed out ' of the service several weeks ago. ills, camp life seems to have agreed wvith him, though thei'e is lit tIe change in his persoiial appiear'ance. ils friends are always glad to see hinm in rfaurens. We are showliig the best line of Poreh Goods5 'n be found anywvhere. S. M. & E. H. WVILKE1S & CO. .7'IATIO AL APRILJ18LH + SOCIETY. + + .3+ F '+ *!-+ . -' -! . 1. -3.+ . -. -3. .1. Monday evening at the Baptist par sonage Miss Lenora 'I'hompson became the bride of ir. Wi. l-erian Kessler of Asheville, N. C., the ceremony be ing performed by the itev. S. 1H. Tem Pleman, pastor of the First lBaptist church. The only witnesse were the bride's oldest sister, Miss Nellie Thompson and Mlr. W. C. Brown, Jr., of Asheville, a friend of the groom. The bride is the second daughter of Auditor and Mrs. .1. W. Thompson of this city, and is admired by a wide cir c'e of friends for her beauly and chamIling personality. Mr. and Mrs. Kessler will make their home in Asheville where the groomi is sutecessfully engaged in the Jewelry business. 0 o 0 iIshop-iItickman. A marriage which camte as a sur prise to their friends here was sol emnized at Greenville Wednesday when liss Katherine hickman becnme the wife of Mr. L. 1. Bishop, manager of the Eu reka iDrug Company at Watts Mills. The bride formerly lived here and is greatly admired by those who know her, while the groom is a rising young business man. Several of his I friends from here were present at the ceremony. 000 The following .item takeni from the Rock Hll correspondence of The State will be read with interest here where the bride has lived during most of her life and whee she is greatly admired fQr her atractive personality and admirable traits of character: Rock 11111, March 25.---Though coi ing at a surprise to all but the Ii mediate members of the family the announcement of the marriage of Miss Nell Miller of Laurens and 'DeWitt W. King of Charleston will be received with interest by tie friends of tle young coupei throughou4 the State. The ceremony was performed at 1M o'clock Saturday morning at the homei of the bride's sister, Mrs. L. D. Pitts of College avenue, whom she was vis iting at the time. The officiating mini iater was the 1Rev. F. V. Gregg of the First Presbyterian church and only the family and several friends were present. .\Mrs. King Is the daughter of the late .\l,. and Mrs. C. NI. Miller of Laul rens, where she has continued to make her home. Her frequent visits to Rock 11111, however, have won for her a number of warm friends who have admied her attractive pesonality and winsome manner. Mr. and Mrs. K'ing left at noon for a trip North, after which they will be at home in Chaleston, where the bridegioom, as traveling man, has headquarter.. ''lie bride was attired in a becom ing coat suit of the new green tones with modish hat to match. .1 ust in, anuothler' shipment of tine Glass in new and beautiful patter'ns. S. M. & E. Hi. WILKES & CO. "Uncmle ,lnck" ('omes Back. "Uncle .Jack" Glenn, the genial Irmishman who has been "'foreman'' of the jail during several recent admin istrations, has returned to the city from Clinton and is at the same 01(1 stand again. It is said that the piris oners (10 not feel at home without "Uncle Jack" around to feed them and give them otheir attention. An Export 'Witil be at Minter eom-. pany's All Next Week. Miss Watson, as representative of. the Madame Grace Corset will be at Minter Company's store all next week for' the purpose of demonstrating and fitting this special make of coirset. Miss Watson is a corsetiere of long experience. "THlE LITTLE GIRL NEST DOOR" Famous Picture to b~e Shown ait Opera House. Manager' Switzer is making prepara lions for' a record cr'owdi at the Opera I louse tomnori'ow, when lhe will show the famous imoi'al ipicturie. "'The Jit tle Giirl Next I~oor". Tils pictur'e has been seen aind endorsed 1by manny of thle leading pi'eachers, teachers and bumsinei men of this country and is considered one of thme most entei'tain ing lilctures evei' shown ini Laur'ens. One of the most valuable testimon ials received by this photoplay is the following. T'ihe woi'st evil which dhestr'oys character andi life is vice. T'very boy and gir'l should und~er'stand the dani gers, and be pirepared to meet them. Study' this pictui'o, 'The Little Glirl N~ext Dooi". it represents the ti'uth. It shows methods employed to tral) young girls into a vicious life and em phasizes the necessity of young pee pie) being told of the dangers ahead. it's a great moral sermon."-Arthur' Blurrage Farwell, hend of Chicago aw Ma~c Ounr Loea. ~tgri ARTERING V T ANSI' OtTATION for the Tl gris corps was arranged and we wire told to embark on a pad dIe steaier. We were advised o draw rations, as we wvoild have to '.eed ourselves Iluring the Utrip, writes t correspondent of the Chicago Daily 1;ews in describing a till) u the an ,lent Tigris river with the British orces. The captain of our steamer was a 'ersian). lie was mentioned in dis mitches for galaint conduct precedin g he investiture of Nut. Ills ship was he last to escape before the Turks sur ounded General Townshend. Because )f many years' experience in navigat ng the Tigris between Basra and Bag lad, he Is one of the most valued cap ains on the river. ie navigates his f1p1) from a bridge incased with steel krmor which is bullet-spattered in sev ral places. In the old days sandbags vere plied four deep along the rails )f the ships to protect crafts against kral) snilpers. It has been some 1 months since there was serious snip ng along the river. The Arabs found hat it paid better to sell eggs and resh chickens. Six officers and myself shared thel orward bridge deck. The after delck vas packed -with stores, malls and ............. ATlTINO white troops returning from hlospitals to their units at the front, The bags of rice and flour comprising the car goes of the barges fastened on either side of our steamer fornmed couches for several hundred nat!?c troops. We spread our camp beds, camp tables and collapsible chairs, hung porous wa ter jugs on thle ship's rali, so that the hot wind would cool the water in the jug by evaporating tile moisture which seeped through, and settled (Iowa for our term of agony. Sleeping Amid Money Chests. Trho senior combatant oflcer-passen ger is always chlosenl as oflicer comll mlalinlg troops. Theo "0. 0." in our case was a malljor who had1( been in America. When I first saw him1 he0 was sweatring ro)tmdly ait a nlative ser geanit and six lmenI who had1( just tdepos ited at Is feet somlethlin g like $50,000t in Indian mlonety and( i alured Im ant h~e, as "0. 0.," was responl~ble for its safe arrival at Amara. lIeI counit ed th~e boxes, examlinled thle seals and1( signed a receipt for thle treaIsure. WVe moved the boxes of mlonety he-) ween our betds s) that they formled a talie for meals and1( a dlressing standt for shamving ini tihe morninlg. ie thenl orderedi ail tile Indians~ of fIghting st renigth to fail in on thle after deck anad "'told off"' moen for the guardNA. The first reaches of the T1igris were beautifull. Thle river was broad andf swept along In graceful curves. Its banks were deeply linled with luxuriant (late palms, each with a necklace of glistening, golden fruit. But barren wastes lie 800 yards behlind them. Tigris sunnein aro w'ndnarfu:1. Olld campiigners say that they are second only to those of E'gypt. An admirer of a Tigris landscape and sunset would think of' splee winds and banly breezes. The native Arab says, "(od nide hell and foinid it was ,not bad enough, so he mae(10 Mesopotainla-and added flies." Ily 10 a. In. we cordially hated the Tigris and its patli-treed bank. A blis tering hot wind blew out of the north. If one touched bare metal--the skin of one's fingers stayed on the metal. I had a dozen candles. Whvei I looked for them at night I found only twelve 1ilp) striigs-every particle of tallow had melted aund dribbled away. Arabs Fish on Banks. The Arabs who live along the Tigris In sumnmer are called "fish enters." They migrate to the hills in winter to escape the floods, but return to their bits of river lands In the spring. We saw scores of fami Ies standing walst deep in the river hauling out bony, wiggly fish as fast as they could bait their hooks with hits of dough. The children seem to live in a perpetual state of bathing. They have a strong aversion to clothes of any description aind ire less dirty 11an their parents beeause they have not lived as long. It is now date-picking time, and those R A4 -.4, ... ... natives who are not fishing may be found at the top of date trees suspend ed by rope slings slmilar to those used by coconut pickers. Late in the-afternoon we p)assed the new mouth of the Euphrates. A few years ago this river got tired of Its niouthi at Kurna and cut a new one a few msilles north of Basra. It is saId that In a fewv years the mouth at Kur na will become hardly more thani a canal. Thle Euphrates water- is a sul phurle white, whIle the Tigris water Is Inow complaratively clear. F'or miles Iafter joining the waters of the two riv ers keep to theIr own sides of the stream i. Each oflcer's servant prepared his miaster's dinner towar mi diark. Our dles sell, established b~y rii med Iical reg uilationi, was teni grins ofi <liiin--ten gr'ainms every night mses En( grains every mionth. Good Sleepers. Learning to sleep wiellI is learning to live well. Blut it (does not follow~ thaumt tile goodi sleepiers are necessa rily Igoodl peoplO or thlat t hey knfow hsow toI live. Glood slee(~tpr are to bei found amn'T'f these who break~ the laws o moralIs andl of hmensIth. Th'Iey hav e the gift. Whether' they will lbe ablde to keep it thIroughs thlir lives Is a qutes tion. The eff'ects of their lawbreakIng masy '4uddenly overthske them and the ravages may weaken- their sleeping ca pacity. In the dlepths of conseiousness there Is often a rebellion of the minad that is none the less persistent I.e. cause it is silent and that may sud Idenly break out into a revolutIon. USE A QUICK MEAL OIL STOVE And You Will Have No Smoke No Dirt No Odor Simple and Easy to Operate More Heat--Less Fuel Up-to-Date , R'iii '. We are prepared to fur;ish you with eithcr a. 2, 3 or 4 burner size Nvith or without high shelf. We Will Gladly Show You the many advan tages of the "Quick Meal," and they are advan tages that you can see and appreciate. You should use the best, and at our prices the k Meal" will cost no more to buy and less to operate than many of the inferior makes. Buy a "Quick Meal" and be satisfied. S. M. & E. H. WILKES & CO. When You Become a "Conscious" Reader of Advertising By J. R. IIA3ILXON Former Advertising Manager of Wanamaker's, Philadelphia When you learn to read your advertising as you read yout news, the cost of everything you wear or use is going to be lowered for you. If you knew how much money it takes to soak an idea~ into your minid subconsciously you woul be ashamed of your mind. It actually takes as long as two years somietimes to get you to think and say a certain word. It.'s like tearhiing a baby to talk. Every known trick of psychology is brought to bear on you. Advertisers hav'e even b~eenl knowni to print their adlvert isemient uplside down, hop)ing, 1prhlaps, that if you had to stand on your head to r'eadl it you might rememtber what they say. And what you so often refuse to receive with your will the camera of your eye recordls in sp)ite of you. So that 96% of what you buy you buy through advert ising whether you know it or not. And yet, in the face of all this, the advertising method of selling things is twenty times cheaper than any other method known. Think how much cheaper still it would be if you would only, read your advertising consciously instead of buying through ib in spite of yourself. The merchant who doesn't advertise hasn't even a chance with the one who does. Your eye is taking photographs every time you turn these' pages. You couldln't get away from these advertisements if you tried. Even the man who claims not to see them at all is record-! ing them all the time. Every merchant who appears here is tellIing you is story every day whet her you know it or niot. All we are trying to (10 is to make you conscious readers of adlvertisinlg insteadI of sub1corl5ciouls reaiders. TIhis is beinig (done equally for' your benef'it anid for ours. Everv i ime v'oi look for thle ad (vert iin ini this paperinta of muakintg iit look tor' you y ou bring dlowli your' cost of living, you increase the buying power of your money and you get a better qullity for the price. This is t rue hiecause the men who ad ver'tise are al1ways the best merchant s. Thley are the ones wh'lo last. The others flicker up for a little while and then go out. That's the proof. On the other hanmd, every time we get a hiund redi morte of our readlers to turn each (lay with a conscious minid to the adver tising news as well as to the general news, we make this a better medium for our advertisers. We give them more for t heir money because we give them your will. And before we are through every subscriber we have will be reading his advertising consciously day by day-never fear. For this Is another psychological law.. (Copyrighted.)