University of South Carolina Libraries
LUCKYSTRIKE cigarette. Flavor is sealed in by toasting COUNTY AGENT ORGANIZES COMMUNITY AGRICULTURAL CLUBS With th vassistance of Mr. B. 0. Williams, Assistant State uiud Agent, I have organized several Community Boys' Agricultural Clubs an the County. The object of these clubs will be primarily to pro-, mote farm Hfe. It is planned to hold monthly meetings with the clubs, at which a definite program dealing with different phases of farming, will be recited by the boys. There is nothing truer than "Knowledge is Power" and as soon as the farmer acquires the proper knowledge of scientific farming and an apprecia tion of farm life, we will 'be living amist a New South. It is also plan ned to give the boys belonging to these clubs entertainments of vari ous kinds. Farmers are too isolated, that is, they don't have their social gatherings and amusements that we see in the towns and cities. The boys will be urged to play baseball and f/wthnll basketball and other games, fishing trips and picnics will be given. The fojkxwng clubs have been or ganized : Donalds Boys' Community Agri cultural Club: Preident, Herbert Williamson; , Vice-President, Haynie McDonalds; i Secretary, Truman May. The mem-! bers are, Alex Brown, Kinard Rasor, Wilford Martin, Hayward Poore, Clifton Dodson, Mark Pruitt, and Eugene DeVore. Midway Boys' Community Agri- ( cultural Club. Officers are: Carl Wright, Presi dent; Hubert Grant, Vice President; , Wyatt Ferguson, Secretary. The members are, James Hall, Henry Wright, Eugene Lewis, Luther Hall, < Olin Hall, Frank Hill, Fred Miner, j Curry Via], Carlton Hall and David ] Lewis. ] % Antreville Boys' Community Ag ricultural Club. ( Officers are: Thomas Williams f President; Albert Bell, Vice Presi- ( dent; James re^guson, secretary Members are: Fred Car.n, Harold i Vandiver, Paul Vandiveir, James Stokes, Leland (Gable, Lee Simpson, J Hoyt Blanohett, James Vandiver, Curtis Williams, Wilburn Gable, Von Gable and J, B. Meeks. The future of the world depends i primarily upon the proper training j of the boys and girls. They will be 1 the future ministers, doctors, farm- - ers, lawyers and mothers of the 'i world. The world will hang in their, ? hands. May we put forth every ener- < gy of ours, every dollar we can and an unselfish service to train the ris Motor T Station Trucks and passer service at We Haul | a' Call 414?we' iiSEggggSgSSSSa HONOR ROLL First Grade?Highly distinguished: Sarah Neuffer, Albert- Gilliam, Roy Gilleland, Elizabeth Stephens, Re becca Smith. Distinguished: William Hill, Roy Mundy, Emma Whaley, Charles White, Effie Lee Bauknight, i Claude Harrison, Frances Welsh, I Francis McLane, Louise Levi, Mar garet Richey. Second Grade?H'ghly distinguish ed: Eugenia Swetenburg, Sarah Hall, Mary L. Benton. Distinguished: Wil liam Cheatham, Marnie Reese, La vinia Bosdell, Mary Maxwell, Walter Hagen, Edward Roche, Edwin Mc Cuen. Third Grade?Highly distinguish ed: Margaret Culbreth, Helen Gam brell, Viola Thomas, Claude Neuffer, James Culbertson, Martha Aiken, Jane Harrison, Frances Wosmansky, Florence Sprouse. Distinguished: Cassel Ferguson, Mabry Miller, Lad son Perrin, James Reynolds, Ruth Eakin, Ollie Belle Frith, Ovelle Gil liam, Frances Johnson, Frances Mc Comb, Annie Rogers, Elizabeth Fer guson, Sarah DuPre, Lounelle Suth erland, Margaret Telford, Sadie White, Norma Flynn, Virginia Tate, James Owen, William Martin, Myer Poliakoff. Fourth Grade?Highly distinguish ed: Sam Shiver, Henry Power, Sarah Smith, Sarah Evans, Lennie Reynolds Distinguished: Lillian Coleman, Mary Chalmers, Margaret Maxwell, Jack Sutherland. Norman Seitz, Anne Smith, Eleanor DuPre, Bill Dawson, Harold Bell, James Blessing, Eddie Thomas. Fifth Grade?Highly distinguished Minnie Ella Swetenburg, James Fulp, Jr., Martha Calvert. Distinguished: Adair Aiken, Josephine Barnwell, Eliabeth Fant, Estelle Lyon, Jean Milford, Mary N. Perrin, Nona Tutt, Jesse Hall, John McMurray, Fraser Perrin, Mabei Bradley, Charles Fin ley, Susan Minshall. Sixth grade?Distinguished: Alma Wilson, Louise Uldrick, George Tel ford, Pat Howie, Margaret Flynn, Grace Roche, Gr^ce Smith, Anna Jones, Elizabeth Beeks, Margaret Able, Lucy Thomson. Seventh Grade?Highly distin guished: Annie Jackson, Rachel Min shall, Margaret Harrison. Distinguish ed: Ellen Nabers, Bill Greene, Ada Perrin. MILL SCHOOL First Grade?Curtis Scott, Jennie R. Whitten, Annie M. Johnson, Mil dred Frith, Ethel Cann. Second Grade?J. C. Able, Wyatt Smith, Fred Ayers, Eula Dennard, Tack Able, Iditha Cannon. HIGH SCHOOL Eighth Grade?Highly distinguish ed: Judith Hill, Lillie Milford, Jen lie White. Distinguished: Donald Elarris, Ellis Poliakoff, Sara Evans, Lucy Highsmith, Virginia Wilson. Ninth Grade?Distinguished: Deby Dwen, Grace Milford, Elizabeth Lyon Sarah Leslie, Mary Jones, Mary Shaw William. Tenth Grade?Distinguished: Ma *ia Neuffer. Eleventh Grade?Distinguished: tfary White. J. D. Fulp, Supt. An instrument making it possible :or the blind to hear the printed ;age was recently invented in Eng and. Tig generations as it should be jpiritually, mentally, physically and socially. W. A. Rowel, County Agent. ransfer 22 E. Pickens St. Telephone 414 lger cars for your ail liiiic:o NYTHING NYWHERE NY TIME II do the rest A. ELLIS, Mga. mauve tribe little known Tehuclehes of Patagonia Have Many of the Characteristic* of North American Indians. Many are the strange and interest ing native tribes that are found in the Americas. Among the most Interest ing are the people of the ostrich, who inhabit au almost as yet unknown country, and in language, and char acter, and race, are altogether difi tinct from other Indians, says an ar ticle on "People of the Ostrich" in Boys' life. They live in the remote and almost legendary regions of the "land of large-feeted men"?a land, that like Chill, Peru, Mexico, and northwest South America, has its. story of the existence of a hidden city among the unexplored wilds of their Cordilleras. The Tehuelches of Patagonia, that vast peninsular end of South America, are scattered across It, from the Straits of Magellan and the Rio Ne gro?a territory of over 1,000 mlleii in length and 300 at Its narrowest A brave, active, athletic people, won derful horsemen, singularly expert with their weapons and Implements, who lead a wandering life, and hunt the wild cattle, the guanacos?and ostriches. For Patagonia is a borne of that splendid bird, which was there ages before men crossed its path in the faraway wilds of the in terior. To the Tehuelches, this fine bird is as Important in their existence as the guanaco, for they are a race of Hunters, and grow but little rood ror themselves. PREACHES FROM AN AIRPLANE ?i? Minister With Many Parithe* to Cover Put* Modern Mode of Travel to Good Uu. No (oiling church bells announce to the little communities scattered, through one section of America's great Northwest the periodic Sunday morn ing arrival of the region's most en terprising itinerant evangelist. In stead. they hear the coughing exhaust of an engine, as his airplane spirals down upon the village. Drawn irre sistibly by the novelty of the visit, they flock to the airplane, now at rest in a nearby field or meadow. They And the preacher on his feet in the pilot's cockpit of the plane "Sky Pilot," ready to begin his discourse. Explanation of this strangest of all the airplane's uses is found in the evangelist's decision, some months ago, that the time and energy required for | constant travel among distant parishes was seriously curtailing his effective ness. He decided to defy all precedent by allying aeronautics and religion. He first subjected himself to a rigorous course of training, and became an ac complished airman. He then pur chased hig plane, selecting a three seater of sporting type. The rear cock pit seats the pilot, and serves as his pulpit when the meetings are held in the open ; the forward cockpit" accom modating his two assistants, one ol' them a song leader.?Omaha Bee. Women Crave Excitement ^ The wife of a very wealthy man was arrested with a group of bandits after a pistol battle with the police, in which the woman was shot, in the arm. She is a woman who has trav eled, is educated and bears every evi- J dence of refinement. The police saj j that there are many women of this . kind who work with thieves unbe- I known to their families. The call of adventure Is the prime motive. In a 1 raid on an East side wine cellar re- ' cently ten men and one woman were taken to headquarters in a patrol. All the men had criminal records. The woman is happily married to all ap pearances, and is a patron of the opera. She said the men and women In her set were dull and that she liked on/I mint?la wlfh the meL IV 5^1 V?fc UUW who lived by their wits and were not afraid of dangerous paths.?New York Times. The Chef'* Daily Manicure. One of the daily events i* the life of a chef in any of the large New York hotels is his morning manicure. Before he touches food, his hands are carefully washed and his nails are cleaned, cut and polished. The Job is not given to a sweet girl manicurist, but to one of the hotel physicians. He is always on hand during the day; should the chef acci- i dentally cut himself, the doctor will bandage the wound, as he Is there for I that purpose. Chefs are precious these days; many ij of the French ones?unable to get jj their daily bottles of wine?have gone II back to France, where the thought of !| prohibition can still be treated as a I joke, though even in France there are J heard ominous rumbles between the J Jokes passed at our expense.?Popa.ai | Science Monthly. To Jail by Airplane. Aerial policemen in San Franclnco are thus far the flrsfc to make use of the airplane to conduct a prisoner to jail, via the automobile patrol. The sky route offers the most direct passage between two places, and In this Instance the prisoner was trans ferred from the Alexandra county jail across the bay of San Francisco to the locality where an automobile patrol was waiting t<^ continue the Journey through the city. Where it Is neces sary to save time, the airplane can be of service, as in this case. When the air becomes crowded with machines, the arrest of violators of j the air-tififflc laws will undoubtedly become common and aerial patrols will no longer excite comment.?Pop ular Science Monthly. TREAT YOUR SWEET POTATO SEED WITH FORMALDEHYDE It is now time to bed sweet pota toes for plants the coming season. Due to the fact that there is a con siderable loss of sweet potatoes that can be attributed to the diseases carried from storage to the beds, and fields, sweet potatoes should by all means be treated before bedding. It is a fact that from 50 per cent to 75 per cent of the entire 9,000,000 bu shels }f sweet potatoes grown in South Carolina each year is lost through poorly disease selected seed disease plants infected plants and from inrnroner storage. Think of 4. 500,000 bushels of sweet potatoes thrown away each year, merely by neglecting the above mentioned facts. South Carolina produces enough potatoes to supply her needs, 'but because of the fact we lose over 50 per cent of our entire crop each year through rot we have to import potaoes. Every potato that is bedded this year in Abbeville County should be treated with a solution of formalde hyde and water. Go to your druggist and purchase a small quantity of formaldehyde, which Is a 4o per cent solution of formalin, and treat your potatoes before bedding. Use one pint of formaldehyde to 30 gal lons of water and soak the potatoes in this solution for five minutes. The formaldehyde solution will kill! all disease germs on the potatoes. Remember the strength is one pint of formaldehyde to 30 gallons of water, and soak the potatoes for five minutes. W. A. Itowell, County Agent. In Spain, women have had the right to study at the universities snce the thirteenth century, but it is only of late years that they have availed themselves of that right to any appreciable extent. Copyright 1921, Tbc Hloi Sunday's I HERE'S where ; npnf mlrp-Uvpl ft AXWXW ft* dicker about but i AndJhere'sJ wher dard as high as e\ to bring a reducti* for you in the Ion; n i? l _ ?j oeaei seicci yuui Easter hats quality and GEORGIA FEELS FORCE OF AIL Macon, Ga., March In.?Violent hail storms appear to have struck the western part of Georgia this ?f ternoon, causing damage all the way from Box Springs, eight miles west of here into Alabama. Trees and ; wires are down. . \ A passenger train arriving here at 5:25 o'clock this afternoo* from Montgomery, Ala., had two windows ' broken by the hail. It was also hail ing at Worth, Ga., south of here at ? ~ V p. 111. The hailstorm that struck Cusseta and Box Springs in Western Geor gia appears to have moved east ward. A heavy fdll of hail was reported at Americus tonight. At Abbeville, in Wilcox County, hailstones measuring five and a half inches were picked up some time af ter the storm. The ground was com pletely covered with hailstones. No serious damage was reported. On the Columbus division of the Cen tral of Georgia trees were blown Hold You FOR:: HIGH! Conservative on Cotton Coi M. B. WAT! Cotton Factor: Greenville, laster Youll neec you'll find prices dow r the season?we die anticipated.. e you'll find the fame /er. We'd never sacrif 3ii in prices?it would g run. Faster clothes today. cravats, shirts and he an investment in good a Parker 2f5I5ISI5ISf5JEISIBf5JBTSiJ5I5J5JB/EIBJ5JSIBI5IBJ5JB?c FRENCH WINES LAST YEAR EXCEEDED PREVIOUS YEAR Washington, March 16.?IVeneh wines last year exceeded by more than 177,000,000 gallons that coun try's supply in 1919, according to a report to the Department of Com merce today from Commercial At-, tache D. G. Singer, at Paris. Pro duction of "wines in France in 1920, he said, amounted to about 1,400, 853,000 gallons as against 1,286, 547,000 gallons the previous year. While the stock of wines in tie country last year totalled approxi mately 88,600,000 gallons, as com pared with 25,800,000 gallons in 1919. Philadelphia has established a sep arate court for dealing with bandits. down in some places and one pas coTKyoF train 1 rtm/vfito run into 3 fallen tree but was not derailed. The railroad lost all wires from Smith ville, Ga., to Montgomery, Ala. ir Cotton IR :: PRICES Loans Made t isigned to us. SON & CO. s and Brokers S. Carolina I rpj m l new clothes n to the perma In't hesitate and jus quality stan ice on that score be extravagance isiery?all ppearance & Reese 3f2J2J3J3ISJ5I3J5f3fSISI2EfSf3SEJSI3J3/SI3f3iSjC^