University of South Carolina Libraries
llllllllllllMllllllHtt'f His Chlltll JOIN WITH YOUR NEIGH- + Ualel?h State J( + BORS FOR CO-OPERATIVE Not so long i + MARKETING. beautiful ttdew state, a ghastly IMIIIlllOKiir.. man was stabbei Progressive Farmer. and again?near There is just one big fundamental 8<} that he fell ' fj'.ct about marketing, good friends, dled where he f that we wish to emphasize on this trled the us .page. That fact is that successful ne88eB testifled, 1? marketing means co-operative mar- eg the judge chi keting. In other words, if you are verdict followed going to market your products profit- wa3 sentenced to nhlv vmi mnat w/\rlr nrOVi v>"? , ...v.. u?'6?- Qf years. There k?r8, unusual about th And working with your neighbors read about it all means some trouble, of course. Some goon forgot it. ] of them are Indifferent; some lgnor- hearse it here. S ant; some just naturally "hard to means it had bet get along with," as you say. So it's administer Just! going to be a little trouble to get the But there was an needed co-operation, no doubt. But with the last mc remember this, that the only thing man, which It ma in the world worth doing is some- relate, thing that it takes some trouble to when the strl do. That is the only thing that de- the ground wlth velops character and ability. Babies ,nR from h,8 man can do easy things, but God made that gomp one pr men to grapple with hard tasks, and h th_. th, .hay Ret be rea, men until B?t thone ?h?t they do. him stood dum! Let us appeal to you then. Brother when silence was Subscriber, to try to Interest"your his request, he neighbors in getting together for himself. Whethi better marketing of their crops this burly of a busy 1 year. Co-operation is necessary for no other prayer, . numerous reasons: his mind ran sw 1. In order to secure adequate years he had spe information. If you have only five mtmi o to twenty bales of cotton or twenty paw in the Rathe to fifty bushels of potatoes, or six or ion of a Rood wi eiRht hams, you cannot afford the ex- the bowed head c pense of keepinR informed about knelt in evening prices and fluctuations in half a less now to inquil dozen different markets, about what he said as best h< dealers you should ship to, by what aRony: routes, etc. Nor would dealers give "Now I lay i you much attention if you should j pr.pray the ffsk. But if you have an orRanlza- to keep- If I tion with five hundred bales of cot- he-before I wal ton, or a thousand bushels of pota- Lord' my soi toes, or five hundred hams, your ? . .. "The crimson representative can afford the ex- , ? _ . . . . ceased to flow, am pense of correspondence, telegraph- , A , . . ,, strong man died ing, telephoning, or even personally , . , , . ... .x. ... . . ? j childhood on his 1 visiting the markets in order to find ..... .. , , , . . out to the sea; out just how the very highest top- , , , down from on h notch price may be obtained?in- . , . , , ., , sands of homes 1 stead of sacrificing the product when , l4. . ..... , . , ? kneeling with boi the first buyer makes his offer. , . . , , ? ? .. . . ing their 'Now I li 2. C o-oi?eration is necessary in . . it happened that order to secure the profits of proper grading. , When several grades of ? ,r?y " , . , . . ., 'Now I lay me s ( the same products are sold together. .. , them as a garla the price is fixed by the lower or low- . , . _ . '' . blossoms through est grades. Or if only one uniform ,.A , , , , r . ,j .u # . . v Celestial, lo good grade is sold, the farmer is not , .... . . .. ?A , . was found in the likely to get the benefit unless he knows grades. And so co-operation MOl'NT is necessary (1) because the Individ ual farmer frequently hasn't time to Saving Historic become an expert grader, and (2) if stru he were the most expert grader to be T^e high bluff * found, he could not get recognition Mount Vernon, th merely as an individual nmnii err/... ?,w" president, has fi er. An organization of small grow- danger of graclua ers, on the other hand, can (1) se- Potomac, says cure expert graders and (2) by hon- Magazine. This est dealing in large enough quantl- ttCute a few yeari ties can secure recogntion of r its discovered that a grading with materially increased beginning that i profits. stroy the broad Is 3. Ixnver freight rates may be mansion, if not th secured. And frequently the differ- mansion itself, ence between high and low freight work, recently < rates may mean the difference be- gun at that time I tween profit and loss for the pro- site from furth ducer. ground slopes frc There are other advantages, of the edge of the t course, that might be mentioned, P?lnt drops steei such as the ability of an organization feot or more to th to hold and constantly supply a mac- The river group of customers, whereas an in- w'de tidal estuarj dividual could not; the advantage of the waves has ca naving all members of the marketing sion at the foot ol organization grow the some variety '-v'nK the bluff ai of the product or the same breed of cl?y and soft sai poultry or livestock and thereby get Investigation, wer better prices, the advantage of being urated with wat able to compel fair settlements from bined with the en dishonest men who might harass or has resulted in la rob individuals with impunity; the doubtless been i advantage of uniting upon one tently for ages, brand, advertising it and making It hie a small draina a money-making asset for all, etc. driven to the bo Successful marketing means eo- Rtone stratum and operative marketing. Will your l'ie r'ver front a neighbor co-operate and get the -00 feet. From t profits or refuse to co-eperate and flow ot water ii lose them? and this flow con Crops are "laid hy" now and g?n- "lon,'ls- At (he e eral farm work is not pressing. Why V diminished not see your neighbors and organize ,,r! v,,!t an(1 has i to market together your cotton, cot- ? <ons,1,nt evt>r ton seed, tobacco, peanuts, live- ' '1r ''rns'"n a stock, etc.? Somebodv must make " "" "'rough the* a start. Why not yon? a h<>avy ">??>?' along the edge of Truck Farming. Fine F The Bartow Courier-Informant fs ' '# At a ax.a , . .... There are man a perfectly truthful and reliable Vnri, ?...i paper. It is edited and managed by county and . South Carolinians. We state these one ?' them. Las facts as a necessary Introduction to od his millet fro the report of the work of a trucker onc-flfth acres II in Bartow. , ... ,, , . from this piece c The C-I, that s the way it refers to Itself, savs this trucker deposited eigntn. $19,31'/.71 In real money from the York county land sale of his truck in June and on the Is well drained t first day of July he deposited $1,500 This crop was sow more. He is now getting about . exnprt_ to' , $1,000 a week from a field of nine expects to get acres of egg plant. He has forty from the same st acres in sweet potatoes from which nectlon, Mr. Fried 'te hopes to get $12,000. He recelv- fin#* vegetables, as ed $8,000 from the sale of potato testify, and ho n Kiips alone. Some truck farming the frequent gifts J suro.?Greenwood Index. Rock Hill Record. t 0 -iii# x ? couhi in nis dying lPn- WG suspect, becaus etliey were ]{]< clue to be written. They were things for ne?down to sleep that boi,ed over- And >'et- a,onR W T.ord my aou| with the jungle books, they const!- roi sh-should die tute tbe KreatGRt boys' literature that te j pr.pray the bns been produced since the now to ta ta " out-of-date "Treasure Island." Roys . .... . , Gat them up. and are better for the agi stream of life had . . . ... ._ * . ...... mental exercise, for this reason, that me [1 so it was that this .. . ... . ' ... .. they were not written for boys. wo with the prayer or ips The tide went In a" Uterature we do not think to the stars looked there is a greater crime than that of igh; and in thou-' "wr,tlnK down" to children. Children thf ittle children wcc don't want to be written down to. ing ,ve<l heads and say- They need to be written up to. The ay me's.' And thus! two or three books we have cited Sts when Sandalphon., were not written remotely for chil- ma er. gathered up the dren. and yet they are the prize tee .hat night and bore|ch,,d'8 books on tbe 8ta,ls toda>- enj nd of pure white KiPling ?n h,R Jungle stories wrote vai the portals of the lnto ,be ways of hi8 animals a plillo- nb] . a blood-red rose sophy that any a*e m,Rht d?KGRt str ir midst " i w'th benefit. In the story of the nf __ ' rich boy picked up by a fishing (j0 VERNON. smack, he pictured the birth of a ma soul. Stevenson, In "Treasure Is- yes Site From TH?- land" and other books. Rave boys all ()Uj rtion. they were looking for, but he was j on which stands not writing for boys. He was writ- mj) e home of our tirst for the great public; more im- bu( or years been in portant than that, he was writing, j lly sliding into the w,th a oare tl,at wa8 almost mater- prc Popular Mechanics nal for every word, for Stevenson. Jntl danger became | When we think of what happens ehi b ago when it was to the neglected boy of a decent fam- the new landslide was ily In his reading, we begin to see red. j threatened to de-i There is so little time to read, ana am iwn in front of theisuch a road to follow. Dickens has tjef e foundation of the boys' stories by the dozen. Thackeray are and engineering has not a few of them. Stevenson bai iompleted, was be- has them by the score, and Kipling of to save the history by the hundred. "Kim" is worth all bp ier damage. The 'he libraries of Boy Scouts, aviators, ^ >m the mansion to hunters, and whatnot ever written. CRU duff and from this The trouble is that we go along in mo ply for a hundred a sort of dreamy idea of perpetual e edge of the Poto-' youth until some day we look a ft he at this point is a little baby that we were wont to I ' and the action of chuck under the chin and And out ren used a steady ero-|that, overnight as It were, he has ' the bluff. Und-ir-j become a man! perj e strata of sand. if we have to dope him with learn- Idn idstone, which, on fnfc of some sort, why not see that e found to be sat- he is not entirely brought up in the er, and this, com- moving picture spirit of popular edu- tho ssion of the waves, cation? bet mdslhies that hu\e pro going on intermit- ' To cure the tron-1 t ! ge tunnel was first jjj . ttom of the sand- j W V carried back from 7 BsshI I distance of about I ^ his tunnel a heavy y . nmediately started . *Tn itinued for several jL AisLf nd of that time tho ? _ . to a moderate j B^fc ft R remained practi al- J since. To prevent JL Bel t the foot of the ?; iction of the waves.j] I K Prnff>rfp wall was then built , ; C. 1 * wLGt^lC the river. ' } :: Your health is protected by the arming. ' \ Your pocketbook is protected 1 y fine farmers In *? _ ? fulius Friedhelm is 1? \OUR SATISFY ; L t week hftrvflot- ^ ? niZ~ Ll'i % our aim an<l we spare no eflfor m a plot one and t ... e got 8,240 pounds * We want y?ur trade, and we wai >f land?four tons * make good if you give us the opp Thla shows what ^ can do, jfrw<|ded It <f> A rH^C1 O md In good shape. 4. W ? vAJ j\ S 8 \ Kj n on April 18, and ? JUL/ I X 11111/J UC : another cutting + _ and. in this con- 7. Se" the Best Things to Cook helm raises mighty T Cook Witl we can personally COAL SHINGLE ns our thanks for ? of various sorts.? + J J )? ) ;}? i+j ? v Li . I # THE LANCASTER NE\$ hood Prayer. "***tt>>IIIIIIIIItlt||||||| y >uiral. t i>? WRITING IT TO THE CHILI) ago. In one of the * ater towns of the **l,i,Aa*1Tflll||||||||||| ,ls, deed was done. A Tho Columbia State. p d, again and again > We sometimes wonder whether wi a score of times? real writcrs who have the gift of lh< where he was and tu,e tellinK know what they are do- ize >11. The slayer was hoys. A generation ago a boy ual formalities, wit-1 wou'c' tftke a worn copy of what he an twyers made speech-! v'as as aP* as n?t to call "chase* un urged the jury, the1 I,ickens, lay It on the floor, spread tj1( and the prisoner himself over it and every now and j. ? prison for a term then tJo a somersault of mirth at the pn was nothing so very, w,t of Sam Weller, the genial idio- sta e trial. The people !c'es ?' Pickwick, or the absurdi In the papers anrfi tles of the sleepy fat boy at the " It is needless to re- ruce8- Never was clenner fiction ociety used the best! ,vr?tten for the growing citizen, but >n able to devise to; 11 ,s out of 'late. So, we fear, are Ice, so let it pass. books like "Treasure Island," and in i incident connected, their place are "series." such as "The " >ments of the dead ; R?y Aviators." "Hunters," "Ex- J*3 y be worth while to P10^"." almost everything interminable drivel starting from nowhere cken man sank to ""(1 endi"K a* the place they started {)f', his life blood gush- rom' jef5 y wounds, he asked Yet u is easy to pick reading stu ay for him, because for a b?y- The other night a Co- cis 8 end was at hand. { ,umhln father who is keeping bache- by ad gathered around 'or hall with a thirteen-year-old am b In their horror. found his hopeful in a bath-tub read- th? i the only answer ro ,nK "Stalky and Co." Afterwards thf began to pray for sai<1 hopeful came out and remarked to er in the hurly- cai?"ally, "That fellow Kipling is a ife, he had learned Pre,ty Rood writer, isn't he?" or whether, when, When he gets off of politics and cm bark OTer the | comes down to writing stories, we ne< nt. as they say the should rather say he was. If we had treme moments, he our way "Captains Courageous," for vvh ring gloom the vis-! instance, should be made a part or u.! oman bending over the course of every high school. This in ?f a little boy as he book was not written for bovs nor ,r prayer, it is need- were the delicious stories of "fitalkv" \ re; but this is what j written for them. They were writ- th> S JULY 30, 1915. Vinthrop'H New Extension Work. The Hlrh and Royi iek Hill Record. I am grown expensive With the object of extending the ticated. 1 can no long* efulness ot the college to the teach- out elegance, but a c< ? of the state, Winthrop College shall be master of my 11 this fall undertuke, along with who knows the most, he i other extension work, to organ- what sweets and virtue i a department of correspondence ground, the water, the idy. The University of Chicago heavens, and how to cc d others of the great Western enchantments?is the ri iversities have long ago proved man. Only as far as th } practicability of giving effective the world have called I 'ruction by correspondence. And their aid can they read jg.essive normal schools in other in magnificence. This i ites are offering this opportunity ing or their hanging ga: non-resident students and find- garden houses, islands, ; that there is a demand for it on preserves.? Ralph Wald > part of teachers. . Teachers who have completeo Only to trust, and do lege courses may wish to con- rvear as smiling a face ai ue their studies in special lines, others and ourselves 1 r in English, mathematics, hts- j Stevenson. y, or language, with the \ie\v of! . sparing to teach one of these spe_ . oame i ninc, 1 subjects in the high school. Doctor?"You must go tiers who have never been to col- iong rest." Overworked ;e may wish to do systematic: "Hut, doctor I'm too I idv under the guidance and eriti- away." Doctor?"Well, th m of the college instructors, and stop advertising." this means, as well as by attend- ~7~ . , ,. Ah! the Invigorating V re upon summer schools, relieve ( Pitie Forest! mselves from any handicap that How it clears the i ?ir lack of preparation may seem head of its mucous ail ?jve i this spirit of Newness i from the health-giving I A bulletin of the college giving brought back by Dr. Bel rticulars as to the correspondence' Honey. Antiseptic and h irses will be sent out within the a bottle today. All Drug! a few months. Meanwhile, if there are teachers HMMnm o are here in the summer school ?/ 0 think tlioy woul<l be interested "N*. ' this correspondence study, they I j A .? asked to file with the Registrar j?*: ^ statement giving their names and | f ,?,x !;*?| 1 subjects in which they should " e to have instructions. This In maiioii may be useful to the col-; ;e in arranging its programs of , ?????? respondence courses. i THREE-Ql ARTF.RS IN THE TRAINING What Children Might Do. . ,A time-seasoned We all sympathize with the laws. ru'"'?8 0'-'ne ,n,c"ecl . 1 Christian influences. , tinst child labor, but every far-. religious in life and r knows that the right sort of Health conditions unex rk is as beneficial to the child as, . Buildings equippe >n college work and ad trip man nr wnmon ( young men. The Wyli There is something inspiring to I provides every modern > child in the consciousness of be-' acre campus, out- oor Literary and scieni ; useful. , degrees. Library of Doctor Claxton of the United School. ' , .. . , ' Government based ites bureau of education lias estl- tui|ion lo young iadie. ted that if one third of our thir-, , n million school children were to - -T~ v^~T sage in the cultivation of back ; ds, vacant lots, and other avail-' A ? e ground, under competent in- j uctors, they would add the sum ? i ?200,000,000 annually to the nanal wealth, and be enabled to reL f; irs longer on the average before tting to become breadwinners. ^?L_? doctor Claxton seems to have in ul city rather than rural schools, i : his conclusions are most valid ~/yiTi/^/%r\ A the country. It is easier to find f l\/\_ ^ ductlve work, at the same time .? ? eresting and truly educational, for [ ?\ g^anfcnri (Collcgi ldren in the rural schools than in 1 n the canning clubs, the pig clubs,! ? 4 1 the various other school activi-1 .4 1 in which the country childrer. j finding so nnieh edn.-ati.?n and : j * ipiness, we have only the daw ring j,^ ? an era in which such work shall ' a source of real wealth to their j and neighbors and tho 1 } i ise of true education will be enor X M..H . he,. f..r *W. n this chest you have an excellent ?????????? ledy for tooothaehe, bruises, - ains. stiff neck, backache', neural, rheumatism and tor most emericies. One 25c bottle of Sloan's intent does it all?this because , on . A se ailments are symptoms, not dis- : 's 1 J es. and are caused hy congestion r?^fTTMp'? I inflammation. If you doubt, ask lt?Ti se who use Sloan's Linimen', er ter still, buy a 25c bott'e and ve it. Ml Iruggirts. :i ?- I he Leading lr f-:4i 1 ^ 1 ^ 1 tVHrrr cnn imrcntw flml ^ mnnwtcr m<-n t, wt wiifh run Mmm mb ^ ?ddiv?? OEU. 1*. ADAMS, S | jj A $6 Bai 8 1 1 1 We don't sell flour, DOOK Luziai i jj j; Use HALF AS MUCK !Q Here. !! \ [ make a better cup o '|| the grocer for it. j quality of our groceries. !! by the prices we charge, ^ I! liziannk 11 <? Save your 1,1 \ction # ;; i ' t to accomplish this end. j[ J HPIII7 nr it to hold it. and wp will * X I ! - * ortunity. ? Horton'S jj ; and (he Best Things to O Y TPI 1 wood | Send The I rH?-r4-r+-:-4>-r+: ! ? I ? ; I ;! ?f 1 J 3_ ] si Man. me at these I p .. g ch and royal I (jrCCIlVlllC 2 r?r,r I Womans College J b the height H Greenville, S. C. I rdens villas H Affords complete advantage# for II parka and B a broad, liberal education. Trains I o Emerson. | !t" student. for lives of fullest I efficiency and responsibility. 19 Equipment, faculty, courses of our best and study, and cultural influences ate ft R may be tot entirely in harmony with present- ft Administration, instruction and dor- ft I ir.itory nuildiii-s equipped nloi.i: ttie I most modern lines, for convenient. K away for a jgj Entrance requirement* upon 14-unit txiit, V Merchant *1 H's'h stHndurd^ourses i> adin?.r to It. A.. H busy to eet 111 l.uiuoi.ores. Selene.i''""""-' on vnn rnunt 6l IBB In Domesticecitnce. Buunt.tCourt*. I en. >ou inusi h ading to diploma. J | Thorough courses lnndinc to diplo- I ? |P I u Coiur rvitory of Mtiit. depurltm ills H r?,lff of tbe < I Art, Eiprtiuon, Plijticol Cchurt, K.iod?r??r H ten. Normal Traioins Court*. ' j throat and j? This institution ;iims to alTord the V) montu If to fl I'fM educational :i(l van tapes c-iiuinublt' jn . ... K at a luluixnuai cost. For Catalogue tdd-rtt f ind Vigor R 'inev Forest ( DAVID M. RAMSAY, D. D.. Pres. d Is Pine-Tar- | Grecnvirie, S. C. i lealing. Buy g| gists, 2 fie. | ~ " . i OF A CENTURY OF CONSISTENT IDEALS OF YOUNG MEN AND YOUNG WOMEN. institution offering superior advantages for the and the development of character under sound Situated in a quiet college town, educational and t atmosphere; influences highly favorable to study. i celled. td and arranged to afford the maximum of efficiency ministration. College Home accommodates seventy e Home, a handsome new building for young women, j dormitory equipment ar.d convenience. Twentv. ports and exercises. :e courses of collegiate standard; B. A. and M. A. 10,000 volumes; Laboratories, Observatory, Fitting upon an appeal to honor and self-respect. Free in Wylie Home. Expenses for year about $200. For Catalogue ad- ^ OLLEGE FOR WOMENr of tKrftttrntcttf, Oiotiurtioti it it it CChararicr 3 Christian Influences. . . 3 Home-like Surroundings. I 3 Schools of Art, Expression and \n Ideal College for Women ^ /HE 3 For Catalogue and Information RFV. S. C. BYRD. n n jfe. Columbia, - S.C. ^ HSSBBEIEBHEIEBBEIjBEB M Acuity of 33; 427 Student*, from 20 z 1'^ Slatw. Ac(T?litO(l l?y Virginia Ntato l<RtWiitW>i Hoard of Kdncntion. IIiini!r?-<ls of gradnates now teaching. $l?o pn>s cImii-jtch g^SaJljeJSBS n Acndeinic Department; $200 in IX?I?^l5gg|jggg It-gv Department. aining School for Girls in Virginia n rolli-itf with no fine n rfroril. wllh wnrh e\|?<-rlrpcr?t iltrnln ? ?>*< f Kor culnluKUC uu?l a|iplk'?tluo blank ierretary, llliu knloiic, Va. ? rrel of Flour for $3 ji but we authorize you to buy one pound of ' nne Coffee at 25c I as of ordinary coffee and then it it does not < > f coffee, get your money back. We will pa> < ? is absolutely healthful and sanitary. ? ? 'Zl.tNXE coupons for valuable gifts. <> ILY-TAYLOR CO. !| NEW Oltl.EANH. ;; HM-+++++4++++++++++++++++++++++++++ > a a Sews Your Job Work Lancaster S. C.