Keowee courier. (Pickens Court House, S.C.) 1849-current, April 11, 1917, Image 6
KEOWBB COURIER
(Established 1810.)
Published Every Wednesday Morning
Subscription 91 Per Annum.
Advertising Hates Reasonable.
-Hy
STECK, RIIEIiOII ? SCHRODER.
Communications of a personal
character charged for as advertise
ments.
Obituary notices ann tributes of
respect, of not over 100 words, will
bo printed free of charge. All over
that number must bo paid for at the
rate of ono cent a word. Cash to
accompany manuscript, j
WALHALLA, H. C.:
WEDNESDAY, APRIL ll, l?17.
DIRKCTOR LOM.' WHITES LETTER
To All Men and Women Demonstra*
lion Agents In tho State.
Tlio conditions, as being reported,
ni thu foot! crops of the world If not
alarming aro serious, 'rbis is espe
cially true when we realize that the
reserves will bo exhausted at the end
of this crop year,
li is reported that the English
wiieal crop is exceedingly backward.
Thc Dutch crop ls small. The Kron cit
crop is very much less than usual,
and what is most alarming, Argen
tina will have no wheal or corn to ex
port. The Australian wheat crop is
reported 50,000,000 bushels le.-s
Dian last year's. The statement is
linnie thal the Kngllsli government
ha.-, contracted for the entire surplus
of this -.ear's wheat crop of Canada.
Wheat in Hie winter growing States
in our country has suffered much for
want ol' moisture.
Karly vegetables in the Southern
Stales have been destroyed by re
cent freo/.es. Coming nearer home,
tho prospects for wheal and oat crops
in South Carolina are Hie most dis
couraging in years Thc season is
very backward and. therefore, little
gardening was done in March.
The country i> virtually in a state
of war and wo have every reason to
expect that in a short time thousands
ol' young men tuny be called from
the Heids lo arms. Therefore, it is
necessary to impress upon all classes
of our people, tho urgent need of
growing all vegetables for table use
and for canning purposes.
You should lake this matter up
not only with the farmers, but willi
the officials of cities and villages and
bring about organizations for the
cultivation ol' vacant lots in food
crops. Chambers of commerce, wo
men's clubs and every agency should
be appealed lo to assist in this most
Important work. The production of
forage crops on large areas, particu
larly tho velvet boan, sorghum, Su
dan grass, cow pea 8 and soy beans, ls
urgent. The acreage in corn should
be greatly Increased.
The greatest care should bo taken
with spring pig?. Hogs are now sell
ing in the Northern markets at 15 %
cents II pound on foot; beef cattle
from IO to 12 cents a pound Oil foot,
with every prospect of increasing.
The acreage of sweet potatoes should
be increased many fold. Kvery lar
mer should plant a crop of fall pota
toes tho Lookout .Mountain variety
If obtainable.
Willi tho food supply ol' the world
in Its present condition we limy bc
assured of a profitable demand for
all food crops. We owe it to our
selves and our country In produce
the necessary supplies for the family,
and in tho even I thai war is declar
ed, for the men who are performing
their patriotic duty. The indications
are thal for the first time since the
Cl\i| War wo will he nuable lo pur
chase supplies from oilier countries.
Therefore it is i m pe ra ll ve that we
produce them at home. This possi
bility of shortage may bring some of
our people lo urinal suffering.
If >.>;; 'hink wise, have this article
published in your local paper. Call
your bankers, m..rehaut s and fann
ers in conference so (hat tho most,
powerful I ti ll II cit ros may lie pul in
motion for the growing of necessarj
food ( tops for man and beast
Respe, ifulh,
\v. W. Lon-. Director,
ciei-.-on College, I i V.
Hulls Ijt?iO ?i Ton.
i A ndcrson Tribune. ?
Collo., seed are bringing .yt'7..">n
poi' lon and hulls $-<>. Cotton seed
oil Is DOc. nor gallon, four years
ago hulls sold as low as $1 per ton.
while oil brought 20c. per gallon.
'.Mils ts (tuite a contras! lo what these
products brought many yeats <'i??o.
Wo remember thal 111 our boyhood
days farmers dumped seed in gul
lies and washed places in their lands.
About twonty years ago Mr. Town
send fired lils oil nilli bollern with
hulls and gave them away to any
one who cared fo haul them off.
.I* .!* *%* *?" *h *?* *?* 4* *l* *%* *l* *l* 4*
??? SlMtlXGTIMlO, ^
.J. XA Tl'KU'S SYMItOL (>r .J.
.J. TH IO KKSLKRKCTIOX.
?J? ?|? ?J? ?J? ?J? ?J? ?J? ?J? ?J* ?|? ?J? ?J? ?J? ?J?
( Hy J. Bussell Wright. )
The cold, Icy hand of winter is
passed; lin.? rain is over and gone;
tho bluebirds aro building their nests,
the swallow a house for herself. Hie
dovo is cooing to its mate, the mock
ing birds aro pilling their sweet car
1 obs to the air and the clouds from
the grapovine by day and by night;
: the whippoorwill is sending its keen,
j shrill notes from tho pine log In the
forest; tho little frogs arc praising
their pond; tho quadrupeds are
j coining forth from their winter beds.
i The south wind is blowing softly;
the warm sunshine is beginning to
'strike the earth vertically, causing
thc little nuts, acorns and seeds to
j burst their bard shells, from which
you may see tho little buds peeping
1 out from tin- dead leaves--their
'winter blanket - seeking more light;
j and the Howers are blooming in Held
and forest, and all tho soft, whisper
[ lng winds aro chanting a requiem.
j Any one can read in the great Hook
of N'a tu re this morning that all
I thins are praising their Creator. So
i springtime is the resurrection Ben
son. And If "Tho Hook" was silent
ion tins point (which it is not not)
j .\atur<' would convince any sane per
son that when a man dies he shall
; liv?? again.
j Tbis is t!it> ll rsl day of April, and
j very little bas been done towards
I fa rpi lng; hut Just look at tho trees
jin the forest-they are backward,
and thal will tell you that there is
time enough to make a crop. Have
patience, and wben the land gets
right be ready to lay off your coat,
pitch your shoes in the fence corner,
spit on your bands and draw thc
line over the mule's back-and "just
keep going, not caring which way
the river runs, just so it don t run
over you.''
In the ">tb cha pier of Genesis wo
have a very brie! biography of tl
wonderful man. "Knoch," win
walked with Cod three hundred
years. Ile must have been one ol
:tho best and noblest men that evei
lived, or Iiis biography would hov?
been longer. Hut there is nothing ti
say. because his life is unique; it i:
perfectly smooth; there are no mis
takes in lt, no sharp corners, lu
dllllculties; it moves right on witl
j the meat (.'rea ti vc Spirit of God
! So smoothly, so calmly does it glid
! that it makes no disturbance; it dis
pels nothing that i. true, disturb
nothing that is right; it goes on ti
its eternal goal without hesitation
or stop because "he walked witl
Hod."
Knoch walked with (?od in anothe
sense -be was a lover of nature
and any ono who walks with Ho<
cannot fall to be interested in na
turc. Stand by the sea; do liv
waves si.y nothing to you? Do the;
not tell you of the time when tin
voice of Hod was heard-so sweet
and yet so piercing . soundinj
through the darkness of the earl
fog. saying, "Hot there be light!1
Hook at the great mountain range
its peaks that lift their heads Int?
thc cloudland. Does it not tell yoi
of tile time when this world was al
j a molten mass, mu! when the Al
I tn i gil Hy Clod moulded the mass o
I matter ns tho potter tosses the clay
Knoch saw glory in the sunshim
at tho vory first glance; he l:av
beauty In tho waters thnl WP nove
see: in Held, in plain, in mountain
and in woods he recognized lovel;
? forms which we never see. So. I
the leaf-so beautifully colored, si
! wonderfully shaded thal tho ards
I is dismayed al the thought of copy
I ing it If the smallest autumn leal
jas it lies upon the ?round, tells yoi
I no story of the tailing of human life
and repeats not to you tho old, ob
story of lil" and death, growth an
decay, ami our dependence on (?od
If. as it falls lo the ground to dh
I il docs not teach you ol' the rosurrof
Hon, when all tho nutriments ol'tba
leaf will re-ascend into other leave
lal tho summer's return- if oven th
i little falling leaf has nothing to sa
; to you, it is because you live m
willi the (?<>d of Knoch.
Knoch understood tin* teachings (
I Nature. For bim Hod was in ever;
j thing the mountains, the cloud
tho waves, the trees. valleys an
hills; all bad their voices for bin
and the winds played a magnified
organ, bulli hy the Supreme Mus
clan. Vor bini Hie sounds of N?
lure had voices like those thc aug?
heard when the morning stars sar
?together. Our Saviour loved tl
great Hook of Nature. In nearly a
lof His teachings lie would draw lo
son..; from overy-day Ufo from N
tm e.
' li fl tuan die, shall he live again'
Seneca. S. C., April 1. 1 ii 1 7.
A motorman in Worcester, Mas:
who had been OU one ran so\<
years, took a car out on alioth
route one day recently and we
several blocks on his old run befo
the passengers woke him up to I1
fact that he was going In Hie wrot
" . 1
HHOUIil) INTEREST TRUSTEES.
Superintendent Swenrlngen l'oints
Out Pitfalls fur Trustee*.
(The Stute, 5th.)
\t tin- request ot John E. Swear
ingen, Stat? Sui?erintendent of Edu
cation. Thoa. ll. 1'eeplcB, Attorney
General, has ron deed a ruling,
which the supertax tdei.t regards as
important and hoi pf ul. concerning
school district overdrafts'and school
district indebtedness.
"Ai this season of the year, when
many of the short-term schools are
closing, it is necessary for school
trustees and County Superintendents
to give careful attention to school
accounts." Mr. Swearingen said yes
terday. "The taxes collected during
the winter of 1916-17 should bo
used to pay current oxponsos during
the scholastic year of 1910-17. A
small balance could he carried for- i
ward If possible, in order to meet in- .
cidental expenses during the sum- j
nun- as well a.s to pay running ex
penses during next September and ;
October.
What Deficit Means.
"A school district deficit simply
means that the trustees anticipate
tax collections by illegally expending
in advance the probable revenues of
the ensuing year. This abuso has
been gradually diminishing, al
though it is still too common. The
Attorney General's opinion will bc
most valuable to trustees and Coun
ty Superintendents by helping them
to avoid the shipwreck that has over
taken many communities in the con
I sequence of careless and reckless ex
penditures."
j The ruling of the Attorney Gene
I ral's office follows:
"Answering your inquiry of March
30th. I beg to advise that by Section
ISOG of the Civil Codo of 1912, the
County Treasurer and County Super
visor are allowed, on application of
tho County Hoard of Education, to
borrow moneys during any fiscal
year to pay school claims of such
year not exceeding 75 per cent of
the assessed tax which has been lev
ied, as shown hy the report of the
Auditor, but 1 know of no authority
authorizing the trustees of a school
district, organized under the general
law. to borrow money In anticipation
of the collection of taxes, and they
certainly could not bind the district
by contracts which would divert the
taxes of subsequent years to payment
of claims arising out. of contracts by
the trustees in prior years. !
In Special Districts.
"In a number of special districts
the Legislature has from time to
time passed a special act authorizing
the trustees to borrow money and is
sue bonds for the purpose of raising
funds for a particular purpose, but
lu such cases the act authorizing the
issuance of the bonds makes provis
ion for their retiremnet from the fu- ,
turo taxes to be collected In the '
years named.
"Section 584 of I .ie Criminal Code
prohibits any county officer from Is
suing any certificate of Indebtedness
other than tickets to jurors and -vit- .
nessos for their attendance upon the
Circuit Courts.
"lt is the duty of the County Su
perintendent of Education to see
that the funds to pay the claims pre
sented to him are in the county trea
sury and available for the payment ?
of such claims before ho approves
the same. The approval of the war
rant by the County Superintendent
of Education ls equivalent to the
drawing of a draft upon the funds In
tho treasury, and such draft can only
be drawn when the funds are there
i to meet it."
10 CENT "CASCA RETS"
REST LAXATIVE FOR
LIVER AND ROWELS.
Don't Stay Constipated, Headachy,
Bilious, With Rion th Rad or
Stomach Sour.
No odds how bad your liver, sto
mach or bowels; how much your
head aches, how miserable and un
comfortable you are from a cold,
constii)ation, indigestion, biliousness
and sluggish bowels-you always get
re?e? with Cascareis.
Don't let your stomach, liver and
bowels make you miserable. Take
I Cascareis to-night; put an end to the
headache, biliousness, dizziness,
nervousness, sick, sour, gassy sto
mach, bad cold, offensive breath and
all other < Istross; cleanse your in
side organs of all the bile, gases and
constipated matter which ls produc
ing the mi.cry.
A 10-cent^iox moans health, hap
piness and a (dear head for months.
All druggists sell Cascareis. Don't
forget Ibo children -their little in
sides need a gentle cleansing t,oo. ad.
James Was Immune.
! .lames was not an apt scholar. Ali
'the teacher's efforts to drive into his
.brain oven tho simplest forms of al
gebra failed miserably, and tho in
: t. actor was absolutely disgusted'.
At a school reception James's father,
on hoing Introduced, remarked:
"Oh, you're the teacher .lames
lakes algebra from, aren't you?"
"I wouldn't say just, that," the
teacher responded politely, ".lames
has been exposed to algebra, but ho
has not taken lt."
.Jo fy fy fy fy fy fy fy fy fy fy fy fy fy
fy APRIL ON THU PARU fy
fy fy fy fy fy fy fy *l* *I* *P *?* 4* *l* ^*
( Progressive Farmer.)
April is planting month-a season
when seeds o? our most Important
Held crops arc being put in the
ground. And Just as "well begun is
half done." so it is that getting the
seed planted in the best possible
way. is a good long step toward tho
goal ol' over) business fanner-a pay
ing crop at harvest time.
While < irly planting may be im
portant, lot us not forget that there
aro other factors still more import
ant. One of these is a well-prepared
seed bcd. We must not let the war nj
April sunshine rush us to planting
before our land ls ready. This means
that all clods must, be pulverized, the
soil settled by ono or two good rains,
and then gone over with a harrow
just ahead of the planter. This lat
ter is important and quite necessary
to remove any trash in the way,
crush any remaining clods, and flue
t he surface soil.
On the sandy or loam soils that
are well drained wo prefer as a rule
to niant corn somewhat below a
level. Water-furrow planting makes
cultivation easier, enables Us better
to hold grass and weeds in check,
liol ps in time of drouth, and makes
it possible to lay-by the corn practi
cally on a lovel. The experienced,
observing farmer knows that when
any crop is planted on a ridge, tho
tendency ol each cultivation is to
malu? this ridge a little higher, so
that in the end we have tho crop on
a bcd that is entirely too high.
In the lower half of the South
April-?dat:;ed corn, particularly on
stiff, heavy soils, ls liable to damage
from budworms, or "spikers." March
and .May plantings are much less sub
ject to the depredations of this pest,
and on lands where damage may or
dinarily be expected April planting
should be avoided. In the northern
half of the cotton belt, plantings dur
ing the early part of April are ordi
narily safe, while plantings from
about thc middle of April through
the first week In May should be
avoided . In so far as possible, corn
should not be planted on lands
known to be infested with worms.
Generally, we would aim to plant
the cotton on a slight ridge or bed.
Mods warm up quicker in the spring
and thus germination is quickened
and eraly growth hastened-both
highly important in boll weevil ter
ritory. But don't make the beds too
high; a good plan will be to run over
them with a harrow ahead of the
planter, so as to drag them down, at
the samo time pulling Into the mid
dles any trash and clods.
In making profitable cotton crops,
a good stand ls highly important, and
to get this plenty of seed must be
used. Nothing less than a bushel per
acre can be depended upon.
Let us not forget that according to
most experiment stat..ni evidence the
average farmer leaves too little cot
ton on the ground. On ordinary up
land capable of making a stalk two
to three feet high and one-half to
two-thirds of a bale per acre, the
best evidence we have indicates that
rows three and one-half feet apart
and cotton eight to ten inches apart
in the drill will give tho biggest
yields. This looks close, but we are
only stating tho facts as proved by
our experiment stations, from Geor
gia to Texas, lt seems, too, that this
spacing is best in or out of boll wee
vil territory.
On rich lands, callable of making
a stalk four or five feet high and a
halo per acre, somewhat wider spac
ing, say rows four feet wide and the
plants fifteen to eighteen inches in
the drill, will probably he best. Es
pecially will this he true with the
ranker growing varieties, such as
Triumph. 'Pruitt and Russell Rig
Boll.
In getting stands of cotton and
corn, the harrow must be used af Im
planting as well tis before, particu
larly if heavy rains fall immediately
after planting. Not to uso tho har
low freely under such circumstances
is to risk getting bad stands, if not
having lo replant altogether. Fur
thermore, a liberal harrowing serves
as n first-class cultivation.
In fertilizing tho corn crop, we
would withhold at least part of the
nitrogenous fertilizers until later In
! the season, particularly if the nllro
j gen is in a quickly available form
like nitrate of soda. Where an or
dinary factory-mixed 10-2 fertilizer
is used at planting time. i:> to 100
pounds per acre of nitrate of soda
when Hui corn ls waist-high will
generally pay. The samo fertlliza
? Hon for cotton, using the nitrate
about tho time thc first squares ap
I pear, will also be well. Of course
these recommcndatlonns aro intesd
Says Deep Plowing
Now Means Another
Thing to Farmers
Old Ideas Must Give Way Just Like They Did In
Fulton's Time-"John B." Says Something
About Plowing Up Stubble For Seeond Crops.
THAT a good many of the old ideas about plowing are sim
ply bound to give down before the common sense way, is
a principle that John B. Jobson, the inventor of the Jobson
plow, stoutly maintains, and that, too, with a great deal of force.
"When the steamboat was invented by Robert Fulton," said
Mr. Jobson, "it swept away hundreds of old ideas and old methods
of traveling on the water, of fighting at sea and the like, and it's
the same way about plowing. People's ideas are changing and
the sooner a good many folks forget about how it used to be
done and get down to common sense methods, the better it is
going to be for all concerned."
"As it used to be," bo continued,
when you said subsoil you meant
four mules, two men and an outfit of
machinery of one kind or another that
cost never less than fifteen or twenty
dollars-sometimes twice or three
limes that amount. You could do this
only in thc tall or early spring, and
it look a long time for tho land to
get over it, even if it did pay in the
u ng run.
* Hut all that has been changed now,
I'm mighty glad lo say, and 1 certainly
tim proud of the fact that I had some
thing to do, with the change. Deep
plowing is not the costly thing it used
t: be and it can bo done any time
of the year ground must be golton
ready for seed. People want to gol
il out of their heads that the plowing
siason is in this or that month, lt
? has now become a year round propo
? sit ton and I'll tell you the reas nw hy.
I li's just this: our new double wing
1 plows don't turn thc wet clay out on
: top. When plows did that you couldn't
; th uk of going deep in tho late sining
or summer because the suiv would
bnko ibo land as hard as a brick.
'Our common sense plow acts so
I that tho bottom layer is turned and
left on tho bottom and the top layer
l urned and left on top. This makes
! deep plowing as safe and as beneficial
! in midsummer na in the fall."
.ile. '.- whore that big advantage
: cottles in: suppose you want to turn
i under oat or wheat stubble along in
' .May . r June and put in a second crop
i of soy beans or pea?, or corn, or tur
j nips, or even clover. It being hot sun
shiny w eal her,'you couldn't plow deep
; and lix ibo land like it ought to bo
, fixed to bring a bumper crop; hut
with our common sense plow you can
go just as deep as you ll Ito and make
a seed bed that will be soft and mel
low and deep and just ready lo pay
you back tenfold what you put in ll.
Now, any practical farmer known
this famous Georgian was right, that's
why so many of .them soe the need
of "one of these Jobson Plows every
month tn the year. The fact is you can't
afford not to have one laying around,
for there's hardly a week in tho sum
mer that some little plot of land--if it
is nothing more than an early poa o?
an onion patch-doesn't need to be
plowed deep and planted in something
else so that it can be paying its way.
After the harvest the Jobson is the
(liing every farmer needs, be that ear
ly or late, hot or cold. This remarka
ble plow has simply sol the farmer
free to do his deep plowing any time
of the year he wants to. Send for
booklet giving full and complete in
formation about tho Jobson System.
Get it at your local dealers or from
the Jobson Plow Company, Atlanta, Ga.
For further information about the Jobson Syteni apply to Jobson
j Agents in this county. These finns are glad to clo everything in their
power to advance the agricultural interests of this section, and they are
Jin position to supply iron foot stocks (to go with the Jobson Plow) as
i well as a* great many other farm implements.
Agents for Oconee County are: C. W. Pitchford, Walhalla, and
j Matheson Hardware Co., Westminster, S. C. Agents for other points
are being appointed rapidly.-Adv.
?ed for the ordinary thin uplands of
tile South.
Don't forget a big melon patch,
planting it -?n a mellow, rich, sandy
I loam, with a liberal application of
? stable manure and acid phosphate at
planting time, followed by a tea
spoonful of nitrate of soda to each
hill about the time the vines begin
to run.
There is more catarrh In this sec
tion of the. country than all other dis
eases put together, and for years it
was supposed to be incurable. Doc
tors prescribed local remedies, and
by constantly failing to cure with
local treatment, pronounced it in
curable. Catarrh is a local disease,
greatly Influenced by constitutional
conditions, and therefore requires
Constitutional treatment. Hall's
Catarrh Medicine, manufactured by
I V. .1. Cheney & Co.. Toledo, Ohio, is
in constitutional remedy, is taken In
! tornnlly and acts through the blood
on the mucous surfaces of the sys
tem. Ono Hundred Dollars reward
is offered for any case that Hall's
Catarrh Medicine fails to cure. Send
for circulars and testimonials.
K. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio.
Sold by druggists, 7."?c.
Hall's Family Pills for constipa
tion-Adv.
A, II. Coker Dead.
(Tilgaloo Tribuno, 3d.)
i Asa ll. Coker. Con fedora te vete
ran, died at his home two miles from
Westminster, on the Rogue's Ford
rond. Inst Saturday afternoon, about
:> o'clock. Mr. Coker was in his s 2d
year, and had been in declining
health about a year. He was a na
tive ol' Goorgla, but bad been living
in Oconee 2 2 years. Mr. Coker
laves his widow, I ?5 children and up
wards of l in grand and great-grand
children,
Last September Mr. Coker joined
Km..tunnel Baptist church and was
baptized by Hov. .1. A. Martin.
There are many who will be sorry
io loam of the death of Mr. Coker
and who extend sympa Hiv lo thc bo
' rea veil. He was a brave soldier, and
ja kind-hearted friend. Interment
, was made in the First Baptist eomc
I tory Sunday afternoon, funeral ser
I vices being conducted by bis pastor,
Kev. J. A. Martin. A large con
course of sympathizing friends fol
lowed the body to its last resting
place.
To Cure a Cold In One Day
Taite I,AX ATIVIt IJROMO Quinine. It stops the
Cough and Headache and works off the Cohl.
1 DruKKiat" refund money ii it falls to cure.
U> W. OROVK a signature ou eacu box, 25c,
.Vow Preacher for \V rat minster.
A recent dispatch from Bamberg
says:
"Rev. W. R. McMillan preached
his farewell sermon at the Baptist
church here last night and spoke
feelingly of the pleasant relations
that have existed between the people
of Bamberg and his family. Mr. Mc
Millan has been thc Baptist pastor
here for live years, and his leaving
causes regret not only among the
members of his congregation, but
among the entire citizenship of tho
community. During this week ho
will move to Westminster to begin
service in his new field."
(?iiis Burned in the lillee.
Jersey City, N. J., April ?..Twen
ty girls engaged In filling caps for
?{-inch shells were burned, four of
them probably fatally, by a "Hare
up" of smokeless powder in the plant,
of Detwiller Ai Street late to-day.
There was no explosion and how tho
powder became ignited has not been
determined.
Spring Colds
Are the Worst
They lead to catarrh and
pneumonia. They weaken the
entire system an<i leave it un
able to resist the sudden
changes. They interfere with
your digestion and lessen your act
ivity. Neglected they soon become
that dread diseaso known as sys
temic catarrh. Don't neglect them.
It's costly as weil as dangerous.
PERUNA
Will Safeguard You
Ihive a box of Pernrro Tab
lets with you for the sudden
cold or exposure. Tone your sys
tem up with a regular course of tho
liquid Peruna, fortify it against
colds, get your digestion up to nor
mal, take care of yourself, and avoid
danger. If you are suffering now be
gin thc treatment at once. Give
Nature the help fihe needs to throw
off the cntarrhal Inflammation, and
again become well.
Peruna has been helping people
for 44 years. Thousands of homes
rely on it for coughs, cold nhd indi
gestion. It's a good tonic for the
weak, as well.
I The Peruu* Company,
Columbu?, Ohio