University of South Carolina Libraries
WAYS'OF CARRYING MONEY j 1 Englishman and American Usually ! Scorns Pocketbook, Which Is Used in Franco and Germany. "It is interesting to note," says an observant New Yorker, "the various methods in which men of different nationalities carry their worldly wealth. "The Englishman carries gold, silver and copper all lcos:e in his trous- G ers pocket, pulls out a handful of the mixture in an opulent way and selects the coin he needs. "The American carries his 'wad' or 'roll' in pretty much the same way. the average man here looking with contempt upon the pocketbook as indicative of a 'tight' disposition. ^ "The Frenchman makes use of a v leather purse wiih no distinguishing 5 characteristics. The German uses one gayly embroidered in silks by the i fair hands of some Lottchen. "The half-civilized capitalist from some torrid South American city carries his dollars in a belt with cunningly devised pockets to baffle the gentle- . men wiih light fingers. Seme of these belts are quite expensive. "The Italian of the poorer classes . ties up his little fortune in a gayly- . colored handkerchief secured with many knots, which he secretes in some . mysterious manner about his clothes. "A similar course has charms for the Spaniard, while the lower class Russian exhibits a preference for his boots or the lining of his clothes as a hiding place for his savings." A Deadly Weapon. o Artist (to friend.?Yes, I use the palette-knife a good deal. Knocked a v child's head oil in the morning and s Bold it in the afternoon. (Nervous old ' gentleman gees cut hurriedly at next ' stop.)?M. A. P. 0 h c Completely Pauperized. 1, Albert W. Hebberd, New YorKs i s charity expert, said at a recent din- t v ?er: t "The great danger of charity is ita ! t pauperizing effect. This effect must i; be avoided, or the recipients will all n become Jack Hanches. "Jack Hanch, on the score of bad health, never worked, and the pastor of the Methodist church, a man whose heart sometimes outran his head, sent the idler and his family weekly gifts of food and clothing?supported the whole crew, in fact I "A church visitor, after listening to Jack's complaints one day, said: " 'Yes, of course, you have had bad health, we know that; but one thing at least you ought to be thankful for, and that is our pastor's kindness in sending you all this bread and meat and jelly and blankets, and so on. Don't you think it is good of him to look after you so well?' " 'Cjood of him?' said Jack, lmpsr tieiitl.v. "Why, what's he for?'" Wrong Guess. It was exhibition day at No. 3, and as the parents of Jack Grady, the dullest pupil, were listening hopefully, the teacher tried her best to help the boy. "How did Charles I. of Eugland . die?" she asked, assigning the easiest question on her list to Jack. As he looked at her, with no indication of a ; coming answer, the teacher put her hand up to h?r neck. Jack saw the movement and understood its meaning, as he thought. "Charles I. of England died of cholera," he announced briskly.?Youth's Companion. Deadlock. "Who is that man who has been sit- , tii:% behind the bar day after day?" ? inquired the stranger in Crimson e Gulch. r "That's Stage Coach Charley. He's c In a peculiar predicament. He went to 11 town last week and got his teeth fixed. Then he came-hcre, and, bein' 1 broke, ran up a bill on the strength of ^ his sevpn dollars' worth of gold flllin". r Charley won't submit to havin' the -1 nuggets pried out an' the proprietor won't let him git away with the col c lateral, and there you are! a ' ti A Perennial Mystery. Average Man?These Sunday papers n just make me sick! Nothing in them f but commonplace personal items 'j about a lot of nobodies no one ever s neara 01. i Friend-^ saw a little mentlofi of h you in the Sunday Gammon. h Average Man (half an hour later, to i messenger boy)?Here, rush around to a the Gammon oflrce and get me forty -y copies of the Sunday edition. t Her Tribute. 0 Randall? How did you Mke the mill- a tary parade, Ida? ? Miss Rogers?Glorious! I never saw t enougu men in all my life before.? Harper's Bazar. g WISE WORDS. u A Physician on Foo-d. A physician, of Portland, Oregon, c has views about food. He says: r "I have always believed that the c duty of the physician does not cease n with treating tho sick, but that we * owe it to humanity to teach them how c to protect their health, especially by * hygienic and dietetic laws. "With such a feeling as to my duty ^ I take great pleasure in saying to the r public t'aat in my own experience and * also from personal observation I have ^ found no food equal to Grape-Nuts, * and that I find there is almost no limit ? to the great benefits this food will 1 bring when used in all cases of sick- c ness and convalescence. ,-It is my experience that no physi- 1 cal condition forbids tho use of Grape- s Nuts. To persons in health there is ? nothing so nourishing and acceptable e to the stomach, especially at break- 1 fast, to start tl>e r.:achinery of the hu- j 1 nan system on the day's work. I ? "In cases of indigestion I know thai j complete breakfast can ba made 01 Urape-Nuts and cream and I think it is jot advisable to overload the stomach *t the morning meal. 1 also know the Treat value of Grape-Xuts when the jtomach is too weak to digest other [ food. w "This is written after an experience s of more than 20 years, treating all w manner of chronic and acute diseases, h and the letter is written voluntarily S on my part without any request for it." tl Read the little book. "The Road to is Wellville," in pkgs. "There's a Reason." fi J W' ^ 5 b__ . AX'S host friend is his ' ~f%C? moiher?the earth. All /jgte'sSTj she ashs is the opnortunity and she will yleid him the wealth of ? an account that has 'deen ?ro;vin& f?r ages. And he has treated her ?3 he usually treats his beat friends. He has tak2n a;' sbc had to ^L/cV. give, bought an auto^(2^ mobile and a house in town and then hid his idilress from his relatives of the soil or fear they would bring their earthy imell into his new residsnce. Wit h ni?lcf rl '-C? oron n1 H AfntViPP " Vjms-V IUU.HV4 V^*-i wN v.v* .UVW.V. Earth endures this ingratitude, but he time corses when she has nothing or his greed. What happens then? ..ook to India for one answer. Ten r.llllon of our own Aryan blood starve here in a single famine year?starve ipon a soil t!:at once was, and still :ould be, almost inconceivably fertile. Russia offers another reply, where dtb stomachs empty men enter a vorld that never fills them. Yet an* ither answer, centuries old, may be ound in the Tigris-Euphrates valley, rhich, once marvelously fertile, now corches uselessly in the tropic sun. "he necessity of man forged a weapon hat brought him plenty; but the greed f man forged a weapon that brought lm penury. For do you think there an be prosperity when the earth no snger yields? Do not forget that the hame of Rome was coincident with he time when one bushel of seed reurned but four in the harvest. When he soil exploited, that is when it 3 so fanned that the essential elenents are taken out in crops and noth ;ig returned to Duna it up, me result /v& 2Z&&S1&A2.~?^V^r 5 exactly the same as when men are xpioited in workshops and nothing etumed to build up their bodies. You aunot haul phosphorus and nitrogen i oats and wheat and corn from your arms year after year anu maintain he fertility of the soil, if you give ack no phosphorus aud nitrogen in eturn. Twelve thousand abandoned arms in the state of New York alone estify to this. After sixty years of ultivation the lands of the corn bslt re beginning to hint at the same bing. We all feel the results; and it is ot the man with the hayseed in his 1 eels it first but the man with the uei ils ear. Month by month the price eparate commodity puts a little larj ure in his salary, until by the end of is savings, which began hopefully, a :nown quantity, have ended as "X = i Ie it is who knows the cold dread o ,ge; for unless tbe land can bo int ield abundantly prices will not srttle he point where the man on a moderai an live free from fear. Farmer ai .like, we are all vitally concerned iroblem of maintaining and increasing illty of the soil that is fertile, and o ng soils that have been cruelly explo Fortunately they can be restored. ;ence is more potent than avarice indo the evil it has wrought. Even th hat have been exploited to tlie point ? :nt ruin can be nursed back to hea 'yril Hopkins, head of the agronomj nent of the University of Illinois, a iallst of .national reputation and the s tumorous pamphlets and a book entit fertility and Permanent Agriculture,' if the most enthusiastic workers aJ ine. He is a man of hard facts ai >retty theories even as the devil lo vater. Every fact that he gives c irove itself over and over again in te lis own farms, or these belonging to "ersity or upon oue of the various ex nl ?> 1 /-\ t- Thnfft orA nHr.nt f liirtv nf fh mattered through the state of Illinoi he soils are carefully examined a . ropped according to their needs. I c ou tales of what Mother Earth has he way of coin, wheat, oats, or clo\ ;he has received proper treatment th >et you to building car-ties in the air ;arthy foundation. The corn yield upc lie university farms in 1909 was 87 .0 the acre, due to treatments with 1 ind phosphorous. Dut before we gc On helt-ber I had been to Hell-fer-Sartain, and had heard preaching there. If I rent back now the way I had coine I hould save six long weary miles. I /as tired, as was Old Faithful, but I ad not been to the mouth of Hell-ferartain and I had not seen the church here, and while my curiosity was sat;fied, my conscience wasn't, and so rom sheer stubbornness I saddled Old 'aithful and rode on down Hell-fer wammmammmmnmammmmmmmmmmn JetimuAvmvztrt afjyjuM ??n.Ml.W. IFTOWm?m r u2l>r<Z?G,CSZCS2i<rt lair who let us consider a fsw fundi a behind growing. nf onr-h First there are six nosit ?e punc- scntial factors. They are the year (2) the plant home, (3) the s an un- plant Is made, (4) moisture, i lothing." Now, except in the case of t f middle feed these factors are largely luced to er's control. Dame Nature down to trusted to attend to them sai te salary then, has the farmer made us :id clerk control the two factors? B; in this msnt. and care in the selectii ; the fer- ignoring the matter of plant if restor- result? When the land was ited. no plant food to give the gooi Intelli- turlst arose irately in farm and can told what he thought of the ose soils trouble all the time was not Df appar- with the soil, which hod ha> 1th. Dr. plant food removed in previ ' depart- a consequence could riot resr soil spe- the seed. luthor of What are these elements led "Soil in the list, but eight are pre " is one Three?oxygen, hydrogen a ong this directly from the air and ' na loves mai sous cuuiam euuugu i ves holy slum, iron, calcium and sulph iut must times the first must be suppi sts upon of plant food, therefore, narr< the uni- /bases, to maintaining and in perimen- phorus and nitrogen. ese plots Now nitrogen is as easj s, where measles if one knows how. nd then it in inconceivable amounts, ould tell estimated that the air above done in contains about 310.000.000 v er when the counter at ordinary com at would order to induce this nitroi upon an earth, where it may reappt.-s. >n one of all that is necessary is to pi bushels i eas or any legume. By me* imestone upon the roots <:hese legum< i farther nren into the ko5'. How noc tartan Creek Sartian through an avenue of cucumber trees. Never had I seen so many cucumber trees In mv life as were on that one rocky r' and had they only been starred i h their great creamy blosson-s they would have been com pen 'on ior the whole toilsome trip. L. appointment awaited me at the mouth of the creek. The church there was closod. and above its doors was not the picturesque title j L m CL w"Jir. n-| n ???? ! ! II ?MM ?1??? imentals of crop of nitrogen is ma: a 100-bushel crop ive, absolutely es- almost 100 pounds : (1) the seed, about 48 pounds i food of which the anced land in th (5)'heat, (C) light. 8,000 pounds of i he seed and plant process of subtra beyond the farm- year after year w can, however, b3 be seen clearly th tisfactorily. How, not multiply. Rol ;e of his ability to ers always should y exercising judg- Wheat, corn, oats an of seed and by rotation; also whe food entirely. The cotton, corn and o worn out ana nau ui uiese ruiauuus i seed the agricul- of clover seeded t. ers' institute and der for corn as la seed seller. The year. The other with the seed but crops of legumes > i the elements of when plowed und< ous crops, and as besides supplying >ond to the call of they decay they s soil which helps c i? There are ten to free themselves >vided abundantly. farmer's bank act ,nd carbon?come Now that the q water. Most nor- outlined, suppose )Otassium, magne- phosphorus, the 01 ur, although some- ever shall have tc ied. The problem of the use of phi dws itself, in most soils of the Unite creating the pho3- this to say: "Phosphorus is ' to catch as the riculture on these The air contains crease the amoun Dr. Hopkins has makes possible th on omo nf <rmiirifl lfrnmes and the < rorth, if sold over gen from the i.iCJ mercial rates. In and with the addit ?cn to enter the tor in the residue r as food for man, and in manure, me ant clover, alfalfa, hay and pasture, i ins of the bacteria corn and other g ?s draw the nitro- produce comes t! ssary the element from the immense di the stream, but some fernlike name i that was easily traceable to some shockcd feminine taste from the outer | world. Half a mile on I got a dinner of cold beans and cold cornbrcad, and joined by a 20-year-old school teacher on a big black mule, turned my face toward Jackson. This young school teacher was making money in his native mountains in order to study law ootside; he had gone to school in the Bluegrass and he knew my books, 'ust then he was electioneering for his brother, who was running for a = 0 b si e P r be seen from the fact that thai only' of corn takes from the soil cry, Jrrig of nitrogen in the corn and means foi n the stalks. Rich, well-bal- ness that e corn belt contains about food elera litrogen. Therefore, if the methods ction of nitrogen goes on their way, ith never an addition, it can of return: at the farmer's finances can- if us?d :ation plans for grain farm- hastening include a crop of legumes. To rr-ti and clover is a satisfactory ton to th< ^at, corn and cow peas; also acid cond ats and cow peas. The first in the en should include a catch crop and to rj he first year and plowed un- tons to th te as practicable the second of the ex two should include catch and the c ,vhenever possible. Legumes than upon 2r perform valuable services A quet the soil with nitrogen?as * tenticn Is upply organic matter to the tion. Un ither elements of plant food for succe; from the earth and into the the univei :ount. lieve. Fi luestion of nitrogen has been have decl; we turn to the problem of that crop -l.. r\t nlant fnnrl wa fPCt COndi lll%V CICUICUC W1 I.?ww. ^ i buy. As to the importance injure the Dsphorus upon the common elements (1 States, Dr. Hopkins has excreta as worn-out i the key to p<rrraanaent ag- with this i lands. To maintain or in- neutralize t of phosphorus in the soil soilsoil w e growth of clover or other Mother E consequent addition of nitro- ever. Thi ;haustible supply in the air; has, ho'.vf ion of decaying organic mat- Hopkins c s of clover and other crops the same i?id in inrsre nart from clover, the rotat: ind from the larger crops of members rains which clover helps to in the ba it; possibility of liberating used up supplies In the soil sufficient in iiurov. i county oilica and ho shouted hi.-; . gan to some native playing baseball ; ci up the creek, to the porches of the jli I f, I houses as we passed, and when we j 11 met a voter in the road he stopped, while I rode discreetly on, and he never failed to overtake me with a wink J of success. I'd like to wager that the ! brother won. Hcll-fer-Sartain Creek had once deserved its name, he said, n for there had been a "heap of devilment" done up there. There had been n several fights In tho schoolhouse where where I had heard preaching, r ' //"//iatosjs ^&r<D7*y-r&a'T' 2eC?tZXZ. S/V -&/1T0 j*&LMxe&DtaSsftraf, magnesium and other essutial abundant elements supplemented by the 'amounts returned in manure and crop residues for the projection of large crops at least for j^usands of years; whereas if the ap^ly of phosphorus in the sell is IfaSily decreased in the future in acord^nce with the past and preset icjf* common farm practise, then j^rty .is the only future for the People who till the common agricultual lands of the United Statss." Phosphorus may be applied in libral amounts?as much a3 l.COO pounds 3 the acre every three or four years? nd it costs about $7 a ton. After the problem of returning the lements to the soil has been solved le farmer may find another condition f the soil which , must be corrected efore his farm will produce as it hould. This is the tendency of cerlin soils to acidity. Clover, alfalfa nd other valuable legumes- cannot irive upon soil that is sour. Somemes on acid soils when applications f farm manure are made, the legumes rill seem to grow well, but examlnaIon reveals the fact that the nitrogen atherlng bacteria fail to develop roperly. Hence the most valuable ontribution the legumes have to make 3 the soil is largely lost. Upon cerlin fields belonging to one of the lost famous agricultural stations in tie world, that of Rothamstead, Engind, applications of natural limestone rere made a century ago. They are 1 *? ?- o 1 rVi nn cr'i till moderately pr'juutufc, ther fields near by, which have never eceived the application, aro e::tremer unproductive. Care should be taken that limetone is used for the one and only purose of correcting soil acidity. And while we ara upon this ubject of soil stimulation, have you ver thought that most of our lmrovements have that in view and ? Improved seed, improved machination, even crop rotation, all are r extracting from the soil the rich--* ' -v nnv of the is In it, nci iur i cnum-0 ?...? ents of grain building. All of'tiese of soil stimulation are excellent In , if used in connection with methods ng the elements of plant feed; but without them they are means of the impoverishment of the soil, irn to the question of limestone, one ? acre finely ground will correct the ition of most soils. It is, however, d cheaper and easier to apply more jply it less often. As much as ten e acre was applied to the soil of one periment fields in southern Illinois rop yields there hav9 been greater any other fields in that district ition that has been given much atitely is the question of crop rotadoubtedly it is absolutely essential ssful grain farming , but it is cot sal panacea some would have us be)r instance, a group of theorists ir.ed that fertilization is unnecessary, rotation will keen the soils in pertion. The idea is that plants do not soii because they use its plant food but because they throw off poisonous ; animals do. Therefore a so-called soil simply has bscome saturated excreta. Plant a crop which will I the poison of the last crop and the j 111 Birnataneri and (|,e leasts of I arth kept dripping with plenty foris is very attractive?as a thecry. It ;ver, no foundation in fact. As Dr. las said, the rotation of crops has Just cSect upon wealth in the socil as ion of the check bock among the of ths farr.ily has upon the wealth nl:. Plant feed elements cannot bo and r.ct returned without resulting rL'hrv.cr.t of tVc soil. 1 - . - i - ,1 .1/MtPTl i't c vefyiillEg U.*.i ijui'jieu uunu here, us it was quieting down all hrough the mountains, except ov9r award Jackson. Yes, ths gcod old liney were gone!?John Fox, Jr., in cribner. First and Foremost. "My wife has a great deal to say to ip about her first husband." "Nonsense; you're wife was never carried before." "1 know ii. That's what makes her eflectlons so painful."?Puck. NOTHING CETTER Cook?Please, ma'am, I want to give a week's notice. Mistress?Why, Jane, this is Indeed a surprise. Are you not satisGed with the treatment you receive here? > Cook?Oh! yes, ma'am. iviistress?i iicu i support; juu ihiyo something better in view? Cook?Oh! no. ma'aci; I'm only going to get married*, She Probably Could. Senator La Follette, apropos of certain scandals, said at a dinner in Madison: "These things recall the legisla- \ tor who remarked to his wife, with a look of disgust: 'One of those land lobbyists approached me today with another insulting proposition." "Tho wife, a young and pretty woman, clapped her hands. 'Oh, good!* she cried. 'Then I can have that sable stole after all, can't I, dear?'" . ')y Anything left to be dor > at your leisure seldom gets done.?S. Martin. mm ana^ ^' "I fell and sprained my arm and was in terrible pain. I could not use my hand or arm without intense suffering until . a neighbor told me to use Sloan's Liniment The first crnhvP' me {nstnnt b relief and I can now use my arm as well as ever."?Mrs. H. B. Springer, 921 Flora St, Elizabeth, N. J. SLOAN'S LINIMENT is an excellent antiseptic and ^erta killer ? heals cuts, burns, wounds, and contusions, and will ; $ draw the poison from sting of poisonous insects. 25c., 60c. and $1.00 1 fij Sloan's book on 6 horses, cattle, sheep e I'JJI?8jui B and poultry sent free. ^ I'll^VHfjlLJ H Dr. Earl S. Sloan, ^ M Boston, Mass., U.S.A. ?aMaBBMMB ** ? f?? ip DB Send postal for | Bn ? W FreeI>a<'kage I I I ? Esfl sk* of Paxtinc. | Better and more economical I : than liquid antiseptics I < FOR ALL TOILET USES. | t Gives one a aweet breath; clean, whiter I fi cerm-free teeth?antiscpticalJy clean | f mouth and throat?purifies the breath I after smoking? disp els all disagreeable I perspiration and body odors?much ap-1 predated by dainty women. A quick I remedy for sore eyes and catarrh. ?A little Paxtine powder dissolved in e glass of hot water makes a delightful antiseptic solution, possessing extraordVary cleansing, germicidal and healing power, and absolutely harmless. Try a Sample. 50c. a large box at druggists or by TH^PA^tqn Toilet Co., Socton, Biliousness [ "I have used your valuable Cascaret* { and I find them psrfcct. Couldnt do without them: I have used them for some time for indigestion and biliousness and am now completely cured. Recom! mend them to everyone. Once tried, you will never be without them in tho j family."?Ed ward A. Man, Albany, N.Y. Pleasant, Palatable, Pctent. Taste GoodDo Good. Never Sickcn.Wcaken or Gripe. lCc,25c. 50c. Never sold in bulk. The cert uine tablet stamped C C C. Guaranteed to cure or your money back. S29 j Restores Cray Hair to Natural Color/ REMOVES DANDRUFF AKO SCURF i - t f-ll:? ?? | Invigorates and prevents tnc nair iruiu iumu* VM, Tor 8alo by Druggists, or 8ont Oir?ct by XANTHINE CO., Richmond, Virgin!* ^rlc# II Bottle; Sample Bottle 35c. Send for Circulate j ? | R~E IS/! E M B E R fgc.coughs s cold,,; A -? - a