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??? I inwini i ihimb ?I mmm \m a HAZING AT ULtMSON St Matthews Paper He iterates Ctiarflfis and Claims t;i fce Abie to Prove Same St M ;*:ia>. * ? -f ?.? :* 1?': i !i-Oilhoiii: riil.nt: i ii< ?? - < V- -k. S'.uncwliaf i?vt*r f;?ur c*'i 111111 I its litori-i! are i:t :i:js.vi-r I'- us uiitirs ??*i the ; ? -li Vi article "M the .-'it.j I*:, which :i?>Ill til-* W'.V .'111 (''II. el' few, davs ? >.'.-d :>i full with additi m;> i - : . \ r : - <? i knuck'-'S of ii:?' * ':!< journal. T:ic ? i ' r. ("it fi>.- ; seniors i- ai?'> given a <o:;sj place in lIk* picture. The. Advinedisclaims aj.v unkind feelings ? wards Cleuisoii. On the other hand, it avers a strong friendship for the college, and that it took no part or hand in the criticisms heaped upon the management recently by the. daily and some other papers, as: % such things are liable to occur iu i any institution, but it loathed and despised the brutal habit of ha/.ing, aud would hit it whenever opportunity presented itself. It charges, * -- -on!, fhof among omer uuuga, tuio men vu?? ?"rats"?slept in the open rather than be subjected to the indignities practiced in barracks. That the "rats" were made to gamble and got no "stakes" when lack came their way, bat their money was freely and forcibly appropriated when they lost. The Advance finally winds ap with this challenge: "To settle the matter we will lay down this proposition to the 'senior class.' Let the president of the college select an impartial committee, let them come to St Matthews and we will prove to their satisfaction that what has been published can be substantiated by students, 'rats' and graduates. If not we will defray all expenses of 1 said committee and acknowledge through the pre63 of tne State that we publish 'malicious statements.' If we do prove it, then let the 1 ?* Avnnnon f ! senior ciuss uenuv cue c.vj/tuov v*., the committee and publish through ; the press of the State that they are unworthy of the respect and belief that is due the members of a senior class of any reputable institution. "Now, put up, or shut up." Money Comes in Bunches to A A Chisholm, of Tread well, X Y., now. His reason is well worth reading: "For a long time I suffered from indigestion, torpid liver, constipation, nervousness, and general debility," he writes. 4'I couldn't' sleep, had no appetite, nor ambition, j grew weak every day in spite of all medical treatment. Then used Electric Bitters, Twelve bottles restored all my old-time health and ! vigor. Now I can attend to business I everyday. It's a wonderful niedi-j ciue." Infallible for Stomach, Liver, Kidney, Blood and Nerves. : 50c. at J> C Scott's. THE TOWN THAT! PUSH BUILT | V.?The Wily Furniture Man , ; HERE is the furniture dealer who I read A clothier's ad. and by it was led To spend for clothing the selfsame bill That he got from the dry gocds merchant's till. Where it had been placed when the butcher bought And paid with the bill that he had got When the grocer with him had settlement made With the money the honest workman paid. P. $.? The local dealer who's up to snuff i If ill always advertise his stuff. } \ OUR TREES. Some Varieties Wave a Dif.'crcnt Nama In Every Ctate. What i- ca!!??i Mar a in lVmisvivania i- ii: Massachusetts, white l?n-i:<t in New York, red locust in one part "i' Ten1^1?. I- ! jjri'OIl ill ;<Jloi Iht. !n Maine it i- >iiiu?!v iti 1 . ?s; -iii:::* acai ia. in .\i innesota 1? >uey locust and in Man land ! > ust. The v.- nt;:?tv nanu - ov?'r:.jj> a:i<! are not si i i- tly separated by state linos. hi 'i ; 1 .. i;?-v ! -ii>t 'which i'olo;; - jo nr. ali-a lueU. 11 !.: ov. n : U?> .. - : ;! '\ locust, sweet usi, thorn locust, locust, three thornetl acacia, thorn Hi . il'?2:c?v -hacks. ;iinoiiretu . confederate pin tree and a few otin ; name-.. White pine is a tree of so distinguished flppenranee that it. is entitled To one name anion*: liunbermen as wel! as among botanists. But it does not have it. In both Massachusetts and South Carolina it is sometimes known as Weymouth pine, which is its uni- j vcrsal name in Europe. Pennsvlva- ; nians occasionally speak of it as J soft pine, Tennesseeans as spruce, and in other parts of the south it is I nolloit nnrtliprn ninp The loblolly pine is a southern J tree, and the people of the south have been liberal with names, sometimes applying several in a restricted locality. In North Carolina it is loblolly oldfieid, torch, rosemary, slash, shortleaf, sap, Indian, yellow, swamp and longs traw, each being followed by the word "pine." In Maryland it is longsbucks, in Delaware longschat, in Virginia cornstalk, foxtail; spruce, swamp and others. It is called meadow pine in Florida. From New England to the Carolinas the tulip poplar i9 frequently called whitewood or tulip tree. Yellow poplar is its usual name in Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Kentucky and on the market in the form of lumber. It is tulip poplar in Illinois, poplar in Ohio, white poplar in Indiana, blue poplar in Delaware, hickory poplar in Virginia, popple in Rhode Island, cucumber tree in New York and canoe wood in Tennessee. The birches are equally rich in nomno artel snrrif* nf the names cling after the lumber reaches market. "Cherrv" and "mahogany" furniture may be made from what in Maine is known as sweet birch, j but which changes its name at the crossing of almost every state line as the tree's habitat is traced south- 1 ward. Scarcely half a dozen of the almost r>00 species of forest trees i found in the United States are pop- , ularly known by their botanical names. A few, however, arc so j known, among them being catalpa 1 and sassafras. Hut even these suf- i for through mispronunciation by those who try to speak them.?Forestry and Irrigation. Preferred the Pavement to Luxury. Thackeray's crossing sweeper who kept his carriage was not entirely a creation of his imagina- ; lion. "I knew a man," says Dagonet in the London Referee, "who ! took his stand daily outside a pub- . lie house, fetched cabs and did odd jobs, llis relations were very well off indeed, and a year or two ago they persuaded him to go to live; with them. After leading a life of luxury for a couple of months lie reappeared one day outside the puh! /? Iiaiicc I LnnttiniT his rircum stances, asked him why he had left i comfort for the cold pavement. 'I i had to/ lie said. .1 stood it as long as I could, but when they wanted me to dress for dinner every time they had company I chucked it/ " And That Ended It. Two officers once appeared before one of the crowned heads of Europe to ask permission to fight a duel, as one had grievously insulted the other. "Certainly, my friends," 6aid the ! king. "I will he present myself at the encounter/' On the day appointed the king appeared on the scene accompanied by a sinister looking person, who proved to he the public executioner. Pointing to the two combatants, the king said: "You see those two men? Imme-diately after their duel you will hehead the survivor." i Economy! Maidie, nearly four, brought to her mother two little branches which she had broken from a bush and stripped of their leaves. "Here, mother," she said?"here are some switches to switch the boys when they are naughty." "But," objected mother, "you do not want your dear little brothers to be switched, do you?" "Well, when they're naughty," Maidie emphasized. "They're such nice little switches"?lovingly?"it would be a pity to waste them."? Philadelphia Ledger. A SifiAixGii DaiMCE. Curious Religious Rites ?.t Whitesus- ; tiJo lr- Luxorrtburj. i A ; . \ pia ?' . at \VI . i ilK> 1 * , ton >1 '?j' J!. I:!.-rii:: : . it. " -i^:a proct ?<;? : ;'e ' ' ? : !>; '.1. ' ' " '"1 1 !<" ' >'"t ' -'i- ' the T . !' \ !i. V.. tic-, r - au?i ] : ? ; c ; :c pro, < ! >' . ' . : . ::,.i r A . ; In this oU kom<r of rofic tin idea ?! .'i to <i< . < .< Mi!'. !!< ?: . - : :i ' . <1 h: ;'<Tv and v.t.- i?P( i ,: **) i;i ( i < i: .r?.i. i he ?prin?pr< . .on of j*('!. t'.Tllilt ii lVi'l'?->':r> I ;:i? phihts- ( r< >!?< ? 'avan-e it * . itr!:t u?* fv'sn old i; ?::?-s and certifies him that nothing I-1 .jI?- .r.i v. hich i~ done ^:i- 1 ccrely. A man i!?::v -miV ;it ? xh i things: no gentleman can langli at i it. It is Whitsun Tuesday at S in the morning, a late day in spring. The 1 town is gav with wreaths, flags and ' streamers, the windows aflame with t flowers. Twenty thousand people i J fill the streets and stretch in a dou- j hie row across the bridge. A sense j of serious waiting fills the air. The procession starts, with its 1 banners, tapers and 300 singers and ] its clergy. All chant the litany of St. Willibrod. t Suddenly an electric tremor i thrills along the whole cortege of inolmmanta all sinner J {fllgl lllIWj iUOUUillVUIV CM* tHVMg wmm-m* ine take up the tone, and 40,000 c feet, not all light, but all fantastic, \ are vibrant in the dance. ^ It is a sort of sobered polka, three steps forward and two back. ~ Youth and the old mam rejoice together, the sick and tne hale, the bent dotard side by side with the t saucy schoolboy. They dance for j health, for the state of their par- f ents and friends and for the ills of their beasts. * Some very old and infirm dance ' by deputy, and many an urchin t dances lustily for several invalids. x Here a young mother dances with g her young child in her arms; here . an old man, whistling like a saw, 1 forces to the measure his rheumatic bones. The pageant takes five c hours to travel three-quarters of a j mile. j When all is done the tired thiong . goes home. Home of the Navel Orange. i ^ "Bahia, Brazil, the home of the I navel orange, from which place the j lot* William (r. Saurtders imported !1 the first navel orange tree to the ; i United States, raises large quanti- ' j ties of this luscious fruit, but does pot export a single orange/' said a ! man formerly in the diplomatic 1 service in Brazil. "Nearly every j t family has an orange and a banana i tree in the back yard, and some have a number of frees. These are i merely for home consumption. "Mr. Saunders, when he began \ the reproduction and distribution ; of the navel orange tree, the original of which, 1 believe, is still in | the groards of the department of: j agriculture. thought lie could reproduce the same quality of orange,* but 1 do not think he sneceedcd, although the* American navel orange , is a tine fruit. It would be inrpossi- J'j bie to produce in Babia any great quantity of oranges for export be-!' cause there are no facilities for!? keopiugtlio fruit after it is picked." ! ] ?Washington Tost. jc I c Mason and Dixon's Line. ! t The "Mason and Dixon's line," j J the name given to the boundary line : t between Pennsylvania and Ma:ry- J t land, was run, with the exception * of some twenty-two miles, by j j Charles Mason ami Jeremiah Dix- i on, two English mathematicians ! and surveyors, between November, 1763, and December, 17G7. During | the excited debate in congress in j 3820 on the exclusion of slavery! from Missouri John Randolph! made great use of the phrase, wh:.ch j was caught up by all the newspa-! pers of the country and thus gain- ' ed the celebrity it still holds. : j The Persians. Every traveler from Morier on- ^ ward has descanted on the physical cowardice of the Persians. Rut there are mysteries about the valor of Asiatics which no European historian has yet set himself to 6olve. ^ It was currently said in the early eighties among Englishmen that the Egyptians were cowards, yet under Mehemet Ali they defeated Turkish armies and Wahabi fanatics and would have overthrown the Turk- q ish empire if Europe had not inter- a veiled. There are similar passages * in Persian history.?London Nation, t I ??????? # j I, Made All the Difference. s "Henrv asked me to be his wife ? last night/' she told her chum. s "Oh, I'm so delighted. Gertrude, a And how did it happen ?" 1 "Well, he just asked me, and I said, 'Yes/ and then he just stood up and folded his arms." i "What! He was no more inter- t ested than that?" J "Oh, but, you see, I was in them when he folded them." The October American Magazine. The October number is tliv first -sue of the hi rye r and amplified j M>i u' !n<. t-outtiini:i^ aii ! litional juetur? new department- j 111< 1 forty }>a_r<< of reading j matter. A remark aide tii-w tel e - of j irt iote- ' " -ins i:i : hi- is-iu\, hv i oh it Kenneth Turner, entitled j 'Ilarbarous V*\:o>." i-'- v. people i n the world ivaliz< that net ia. I-1 Very is at j?ii s-'iit n ? oniv I i111 arried nr. in .Me\i <?, bn: i- tacit !\ . II,* aroncted ami i in aia^vu by tile' foverntii' ill. \ir i'itrner *. : article- 5 ire hound to make .i profnuu 1 ini- j res.-ion. a> he ha- item an ?-\?-\vtt-jj lev- of t lie tilings :t!>ei:t whieh !;e j ivrites. ; j h'nnr iniMortaiit and leinai knhle 1 j irtirlcs make this magazine touch ^ he high-water mark uf literary j 'xcelleiice: '"The Confidences of a "j Psychical Researcher," by ^^iam j lames?Professor of Philosophy at H [larvard College and beyond question j :he greatest living authority on H psychical phenomena; "Stories of H FootbaW Strategy," by "Bill" Reid 5 ;he famous Harvard football coach; H 'The SouJ of John Brown," by j Eleanor Atkinson?a remarkable j iocnment of immense historical j ralue; and "The Disintegiation of j he Jews," by Ray Stannard Baker j ?aa article full of startling reve- j ations to Jews and Gentiles alike. s Other particularly attractive fea;ures are "Mr Dooley" on "The Magazines" and two new depart nents in the magazine, one devoted o pictures and short accounts of 'Interesting People," the other to he news of the dramatic season, lew plays, and photographs of ictors and actresses who will appear n them. Fictiou of a distinctily high grade jharacter is contributed by Robert iarr, Susan Ulaspell. Zona Gale, [nez Haynes Gillmore, and Samuel iopkins Adams, who writes a powerful allegorical story ot three nen who lived in "Stellopolis." "The Interpreter's House" and 'The Pilgrim's Scrip" contain an in usual amount of interesting readng matter. Fall colds aru, quickly cured by Foley's Honey./ ami Tar, the great hroat and lur ^remedy. The gen tine contains nv harmful drugs. D 0 Scott. Summons for Relief. STATE OFSOITH CAROLINA, COUNTY Or \v ILI-I 'MSBUKO. Court of Couim>>u Pleas, i M Cooper, T M Cooper and J F Cooper, CO-pa I ners rrnunii; anu uumg business ?inti?-r the firm name and style ot Cooper Brothers, Plaintiffs, against L A Gibbs. Defendant. I'o the Defendant, J- A Gibbs:? Von are hereby summoned and reluired to answer the complaint in this icti"ii which was filed in -the office of lie Clerk of the Court of Common 'leas for said county on the second day ?f September, A D 1909, and to serve a :op> of your answer to the said com>laint on the subscribers at their office | n Kingstree, S C. within twenty days ifter the service hereof, exclusive <>f he day of >ucn service, and if you fail 1 o answer the said complaint within the i ime aforesaid the plaintiffs in this ac- 4 ion will apply to the court for the re- 1 ief demanded in the said complaint. GlLLAXD & GlM-AND. jI'laintiffs' Attorneys. 2 Kingstree, S C, September 9. 1909. 9-9-0t Summons for Relief. (COMPLAINT SERVED.) STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA. COUNTY OF WILLIAMSBURG, Court of Common Pleas, lelle G Blakeley as Administratrix of the Estate of T A Blakeley. Plaintiff, ^ against ^ Wrttr/t .1 n Rmrri. F.mma Mar- ?l UdlWl" a-rvrjv ^ 4 ?j ? shall, Elizabeth Cooper, WT Evans, n Lorena McElveen, Charley Bryan, (] Minnie Bryan, Bloomer Loryea, Ha- ?| sel Loryea", Sidney Loryea and 11 or- j ace Loryea, Defendant*. ; ro the Defendants, Martin Boyd, J D ?j Boyd, Emma Marshal!, Elizabeth j Cooper. \V T Evans, Lotena McEl- (j veen. Charley Bryan, Minnie Bryan, % Bloomer Loryea,Hasel Loryea, Sidney j Loryea and Horace Loryea, ^ You are hereby summoned and re|uired to answer the complaint in this ^ iction, of which a cc py is herewith (] erved upon you, 'and to serye a copy of ft"' on?wor to said eomnlaint on he subscribers at their oflice, King*- 51 ree, S C, within twenty days after the { ervice hereof; exclusive of the day of j uch service; and if you fail to answer 51 he complaint within the time alore- y aid, the plaintiff in this action will ^ ;pply to the court for the relief de- 51 nanded in^he complaint. { Kelley & Hinds. y Plaintiff's Attorneys. 51 Take Notice?That the complaint { n the above entitled action was filed in y he office of the Clerk of Court for VVil- 51 iamsburg county the 14th day of Sep- ( ember, 1909. * y Kelley & Hinds, ^ 9-16-6t Plaintiff's Attorneys. ^ \ . I , IP* O S3 Bi ii Ii ii u a Males Mamte Cares U M Poison. leaatiss ai5 Selufa".). ^ P. P. purifies the blood, builds r.p Pie weak aril oebilitated. ^ - :* iiu'li to weakened l.erves, expels bise;:.-c, "iviiur tin- patient health i i where ulooiuy leeii;:?:s end I.os;f ado ::: j.i\ \ :iP. ??. in I oil MO'SOJI, it ::i 1 poison. 1: . i ;i ' :. ilyv vpsl.i. :?. '! ; :i ' rv. skin diseases, like blotches, pitnph ?. < ;*. cliroiiic uleers, ie?t. i wi: spy without l-.tr of rnutirlie {:< ? !*' ? the best I)' purifier m the world ..ulies whose sy cms pnisi.v* ] r.r. 'it impure " dr'i.n lire to ru?r.>;v:i:?; c.:t! . it : ' '< oh i . derfui tonic and Mood clwiisirj properties i P . Viikiy Asb, lV.J.? 1 !' -i .iiul i'clii -'- ii*::. if - . n .v u' ? ?vi*. ' . a ?., .? J-* # _ - ^ <*y?w?VYmvyvyvwtYTV>>???yyyTvywf?,rw?fww?x : \ve Are Prepared to Give You J First Class Service in INSURANCE: ^ ; Life, Fire, Plate Glass, Health, Accident, 5 : Burglary, Live Stock. S ? We represent only the best anil most reliable companies. ^ We will Rent your Houses and collect Rents. 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