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- > Mr IE. N. Austin. N Auzs n has ioe to D Austin a good officer, fearless and pairtal in the (lischarge of his dut: He was formerly connected with police force of Newberry where proved himself to be a man who wo do his duty. If that is what Bish ville wan:s. It has such in the per Sof Chief .Austin. ( * * * * * * * * * * * * * GLANDERS. * - * Clemson Extension Work-Ard. * cle 17. * * * * * * * * * * * * If your horse or mule has gland( or if any of your animals are sick dying with what appears to be a c, tagious disease, it is your privili and duty to notify the veterinar: - at Clemson college,. who will visit y< place without expense to you. Glanders is caused by a spec germ (bacillus mallei) and affe horses, asses and mules. The g cat and dog sometimes contract disease from living in stables v glandered animals. Pigs may c tract the disease by inoculation. C tle and chickens are immune. ' disease attacks the mucous membre of the nose and extends to the w pipe and lungs. When the lymphs glands of the surface of the body affected, the disease is known farcy. The disease is transmitted other animals, including man, by i: culation through wounds or muc< membranes. There are other ways which animals may be affected si as common drinking troughs, fi boxes. mangers, hitch racks, harn and any equipment used around an fected stable.. Symptoms: Glanders may occur the acute or chronic form, or may tack the surface of the body in form of farcy. The acute form glamlers begins with it chill; h fever, the mucous membrane of nose is at first hot and dry, and s< there is a watery discharge, wh later becomes bloody. -Nodi les ulcers form on the mucous membr of the nose and discharge pus. Th - changes in the nose may take p1l in to wor three days The patients come very weak and rapidly lose fie The first symptoms of chro glanders are not easily recognizedC ing to the absence of distinct syr toms in the first stages of the disea First you will notice a watery c charge from one or both nostr which later on becomes sticky and a yellowish green colored pus mi: with blood coming from ulcers on inside -.of the nose. When glanders affect the skin, ii called farcy. One of the main syr toms may be the swelling of the ic with engorgement of the limb nodules may form along the line the sympatics. These nodules vary size from a pea to a hen's egg have a tendency to soften and charge pus, after which they b rapidly. Other nodules may fc following the same course as the r vious ones. Prevention: All glandered anim should be immediately destroyed, not allowed to come in contact u' healthy animals through stables, cc mon drinking troughs, harness or other stable equipmtent. All suspicii animals should be isolated until amined by a competent vaterinari Infected buildings should be th oughly disinfected with a 5 per ci carbolic acid solution or a one to:1 hundred corrosive sublimate soluti Then all wood work should be wI washed. In doubtful cases of glanders, mallein test is given. This t should only be given by a quali: veterinarian and until it is determi: whether a suspicious case is or is glanders, the animal should be k apart from all other animals. member that the disease is occasior ly transmitted to the human and incurable in man or beast. R. 0. Feeley. Nothuin- in Natir- Inspires S( Raptural;s Melody. London Tim. The singing of birds is a ver ular thing: it stands alone am tural phe%oinena, for birds i only crp,aturps that sing, besidE Uld their son, T-ouches som seated chord in human nature. singers themselvos and the m Sie o1 :: h.aV0f in all ages 4,! rmid responde Nojh rure has inspil meditativr r7l01 ,! ots io har the bird he'~ad h espn)ornb .heir es h pi t s are h -rees. r) o0,s \vhhch they seommitteby the Silence of t the esz 1)nhe antn y heir voices ho the b At feTheir conpan crays welcomed. They are the of nan. rlo-- rhan any othei ;O,N r&~ Tho-.-I the friendl often ll renired. That was ncommitted by the ancient n *when he wantonly slew the all ,the beautiful, friendly, compan creature. The same sin is cor *by all who wantonly destroy anCi Thle sanie curse is On theni not only the taking of life, I taking of friendly life. Ther speCial affinity between ma birds, which shows itself in or ways. They do more for us free exercise of their natural E e a domesticated functions than ai An er living things. Even the b )ur I ill omen the carrion eaters E . night-fliers-perform services, .fic . I . is at least an open question v ::ts those which prey on our crops at, do more good than harm by d the: h Ing far worse enemies; but foi ith ,3 insects would probably extei us. They share with man th( at 1 liarity of an upright carriage 'heI legs. which brings them into mresemblance than the four nd. .ti gait of monkeys. The excha wings for arms may be regard ~.point of superiority. Their fiu peas sto. the eye as their sn to passn ear. It is the most beautiful in life and a perennial object< in der and aspiration to us. The Lcpicturing transfigured man as edgel can only give him wings. other creature do we pay the1 in:of borrowing its form to exj higher state. And -there are .links-the gregariousness of their practice of building el; hehabitations, and the power of o.ing our speech possessed by species. heThis line of thought leads to onciful region; but the points of ch are real and worth noting. 'J nd of song is the most striking o Le.and perhaps the effect upon us ~se singing of birds has it.s rool ~ce deep in our being. Why do e- sing? It is not the sense ofI sh. Many other creatures have th ic1 respond to the rhythm of musi though they have voices, of they do not sing. And rhythm se. iously subordinate in the song s-at any rate the rhythm that we ls, stand. There often seems to b of Many birds sing in distinct p ed but without accent; the notes a he fectly even. There is no sugge tne dance, which is the primal is sion of rhythm; nobody could pto a bird's song. Nor has it a: it of the character of a chant nd Itechnical sense. There is no ofor tune, though birds are not in fable of tune; the piping b nd learns to repeat correctly a tu: iing both rhythm'and melody al ears, but it is quite unlike the rm al song of any bird, and the e re- marks the difference between music and ours. Theirs is nmor als Itaneous, wild, and free. Yet nfd order and regularity, and is ith haphazard sequence of notel in- same species of song-bird alway ny in the same strain, though ' >u dividual modifications, and it ex- always dstinguished with eas n. others. The same bird will rep r- same pharses again and agail ~nt. out variation, day after day ax ie year after year. But there is n. cess of education or developme Lite early efforts of a young bird a different from the mature-acco: he ment of older ones; which he g est. ly acquires perhaps by imitatio led phrases, short, broken. and uni ed at firs:. beome longer. fulle ot mor.- sustained : the inflection pt er aud t-: mafrkI. In e- which is the dlifference of p)i al- Vween one nlote and~ another, a is tained utterance are the chief zers of bird-song; they disting from cries and calls, though t p. is sometimes hard to drav gales and thrushers dispaly both char Much acters in a high degree. They con bine on extensive compass and a wide ranIg o 0onM s with long-drawn phrases and sustainod sing>. no'es. y sing-- The thrush excels in the former re spect the nightingale in the latter, an 1ST)P(ci:)1y in the f-xocuTion of a nd trill on a single note, that long, s man, low, delicate shako which always en do - (hants the r. Tc,e La,:, which must P!ers, he classed with iheso as a supreme St sell- artist. pours our a watchless flood of and in sustained soimn in i,some magical way :* :o it. without p.tising fo.r 1.reath. 1 -Now m1rf marC infie-tion an( ni T V'OC Ss t. z'-'*u I8 si)oech S Sig - ii nar. an naily in these two I?rk of reS'c-r- ' -h h ther S a hird birds; -,argement oI : um-ra,nce rep resented by song .increases the power he for- of ex6ressing feeling. The utTerance' is oP- is simple, more emotional. more elp F is al- mental than speech. And the inarti friends culate song of birds presents that, wild character in t pur2st forim. It is ess eis: pure feeling. the spontaneous utter the sin ance of the living creature, conscious iariner, of the joy of life. The chorus of sing )atross, ers waxes with the rising tide of life: ionable annually renewed; it swells with the 2mitted forward march of light, warmth, and birds, growth; it rises to a climay with the It is renewal of life among the birds them-, >ut the selves in nesting time; it begins to e is a, wane when the cries of spring is over, Li and and it dies- away with the fadng leaf many and dryng sap of summer. In these in the latitudes the most vocal time is the md un- end of May; June already'sees a great ,y oth- falling off., and August is the most, irds of silent month in the year. It is as and the though the beginning of decay took and it the heart out of them. What they hether sing is just the joy of life, and that do not is what appeals to us. They sing it estroy- in many moods-the ecstatic apture, them, of the soaring lark the triumphant -minate paean of the thrush in his topmost pecu- pinacle, the sentimental pleading of on two the nightingale unseen, the mellow se closer renity of the jolly blackbird, the: handed' cheery geniality of the linnet, with nge of many another, each in his own way, ed as a merry, gay, imputent, or shy. But all ~ht ap- alike pour out their hearts in praise to the of life. Mating has, of course, a large motion share in it, and the poets have made >f won- a great point of that; the birds in the Sartist high hail garden are usually calling an an- Maud or some such name. But it is To no only a part of life, and Darwin's theo aomage ry of the evoh tion' of bird-song' iress a th rongh the exigencies of courting other will not do. They sing their best over birds, the nest ful of eggs and , the sitting aborate mate when courting is over; it is the: imnitat- song of the new life. Nor is the sun several their stimulus, though they hail the dawn, in which proceeding, by the a fan- way, neither the blackbird, as some affinity assert, nor the thrush, as others say,; 'he gift is the first, but our good old friend a them, Chanticleer, who was accounted a of the singer by our forefathers' and is the ,s very only bird that sings all the year birds round. But the thrush may be seen: hythm. singing in a thick mist on a dark No-' at and vember afternoon, the bold and jolly c; but,: cock robin sings all the winter; and: a, sort, then there is the nightingale, which is'cur- comingly chooses a dar hour at night >f birds just to get the audience to himself.: under- Warmth has more influence than e none. light; it all depends on the tempera hrases, ture whether the lark begins in Janu2 re per- ary or February or puts it off till lat tion of er, and a spell of severe cold will shut expres- them all up even in May. Cold is dance more hostile to life than darkness. 2ything and it is life that they sing. in the~ melody- A Iissourian in Doubt. llfinch jWhen in doubt as to the proper form ie hay- of a word to use, employ all three as in our Brady Harris does. He got niixed up natur- in writing of his trip to Cape Girar ontrast deau, but got out gracefully, as wit their ness this: "This year, however, we e spn took the bit in our teeth. promised the it has old lady a newv calico dress, and hay not a ing securedl our ticket, borrowed three .The .dollars and six-bits from our friend s sings Iand on Tuesday, the 1 -th, we sit, set, ith in-' sat out for St. Louis."-Kansas City. can be. Star. e from- -~ " --- ~ ~ eat the Won the Prize. i with- An Englishman was asked to speak* dvnat the Al Fesco dining club. He arose,: a pro- stuck his monocle in his eye and told nt; the' this story: evey "I was in Chicago at a dinnah, you cnls-know," said he, "wheah they were to radual E.Tegive a prize for the best story. One ..ishe fellah got up and told a story and sat down, another told another story r, and. ,te and sat dlown. Uon't you know, he sbl-they asked me to tell a story. I arose leto,and began: :ch be- aanngsh n d sus- "' ma nlsmnwith a sense charac-: of humor!" ;uish it "And to my amazement they ga.ve he line me the prize before I could say an 7The other word. You see what i mea?" N0TICE PIZINAiY ELECTION. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA. COUNTY OF NEWBERRY. In accordance with the rules of the Democra.ic party. a primary election is hereby called *o be held in New berry county on Tuesday, August 30, 1910. for the following offices: Governor. Lieutenant Governor. Secretary of State. Comptroller General. StaTe Treasurer. Adjntant and Inspoetor General. State Superinendent of Education. Arrano f'en"ral. Railrowl Commissioner. Conarrss Th'rrd Distrit. C, L to n Tr easuI er.Tou Manristrt sp in R isTeti Town -~ -* gyshn,"! opr the po!lS at 9 a. m. and shall close: them at 4 p. m. The fo!lmwi-.- managers have been appointed to conduct the said elec tion: .Aanazers-. Township Number 1. Ward J-.Jos. H. Hunter. M. M. Sat terwhite, L. I. Epting. Ward 2-A. C. Welch B. B. Hiller, Harry W. Dominick. Ward 3, No. 1-Alex Singleton, War ren H. Jones, S. S. Langford. Ward 3, No. 2-L. S. Darby, J. J., Porter, J. R. Rivers. Ward 4-J. R. Davidson, J. M. Bow ers, W. W. Hornsby. Ward 5-Isaac Wesson, Fayette: Odell, Arthur Ward. Helena-B. F. Goggans, B. E. Ju lien, W. S. Melton. Hartford-P. M. Hawkins, J. J. Schumpert, George D. Lathrop. Johnstone-M. R. Brooks, W. P. Fellers, J. H. Willingham. Township Number 2. Garmany-John T. Oxner, John A. Suber, Jr., C. S. Ruff. Mt. Bethel-Joe M. Brown, Eugene Brown, W. H. Wendt. Mulberry-John M. McCullough, J. P. Wicker, J. A. Sease. Township Number $ Mt. -Pleasant-G. Fred Smith, Geo. H. Cromer, K. L. Glymph. Maybinton-W. B. Whitney, B. .H.' Maybin, J. L. Thomas. Township Number 4. Whitmire-Jas. 'D. Tidmarsh, P. B.; O'Dell, John Morse. Long Lane-T. E. Chandler, J. S. Glean, E. C. Folk. Township Number 5. Jalapa-J. W. Johnson, A. A. Sligh, S. B. McCarley. Kinards-J. A. Dominick, 'T. H. Pope, W. P. Smith. Township Number 6. Young Mens-J. A. Schroder,'F. W. Pitts, J. C. Longshore. Trinity-J. S. Long, J. A. Hendrix,; Robert Hendrix. Reederville-M. M. Livingston, J.I H. Dorroh, D. S. Satterwhite. . Township Number 7. Saluda-E. A. Fellers, J. S. Werts, H. B. Lindsay. Jhappels-J. L. Watkins, A. P. Coleman, W. R. Smith, Jr. Vaughnville-J. Pink Davenport, E.! C. Johnson, W. R. Leavell. Township Nuinber 8. Utopia-J. M. Nichols, G. T. Blair, J. A. Foy. Dead Fall-J. F. Stephens, A. P. Werts, W T. Blair. East Riverside-W. L. Buzhardt,j Robert Paysinger, Willis Schumpert. Township Number 9. Prosperity-M. C. Dominick, M. H. Boozer, J. A. Baker. St. Lukes-N. A. Nichols, R. F. Haw ins, N. E. Taylor. Saluda-J. C. C-ook, H. L. Fellers, E. M. Mayer. O'Neall-T. M. Mills,- J. A. Wise, W. H. Long. Swilton-Jacob W. Long, Rufus E. Shealy, Robert E. Dowd. Liberty-P. T Tonkle, W. F. Daw ins, Clarence Dominick. Monticello-T. B. Warner, W. C. Barnes. D. A. Counts. Little Mountain-J. K. Derrick, A.' C. Wheeler. B. H. Miller. Township Number 10. .Union-M. L. Strauss, R. N. Taylor, J. W. Sligh. Jolly Street-T. A. Ellesor, B. H. Werts, C. T. Werts. St. Pauls-T. A. Epting, J. B. Bed enbaugh' J. J. Kibler. Central-D. C. Bundrick, B. S. Wick er, David Koon. Township Number 11. Zion-J. W. Kinard, W. L. Graham, W. C. Cromer. St. Philips-M. H. Wicker, James~ Ruff, Benj. Halfacre. WAalton-JT. D. Crooks. W. B. Gra ham. G. T. Drown. Pomaria-H. F. Counts. .T. G. Long. Geo. J1. Wilson. The cqualifications for voting to be as follows: The voter shall be twenty-one years Men's and Women's Subs pair - - Another Jelly Glasses, half pint size, Just F 500 pound shipment Delicio All of our Candies are n sanitary conditions, in cle Same Por Headley's Delicious ChoIcola Assorted Cocoanut Bon Bon Gum Drops, etc., pound Andersn Always Busy, 2 -D EXCU COLUMI DESD SBASEBALL- --Col ROUND LEAVE TRIP RA71 Laurens 7:20 a. m. $1.2 Clinton 7:50 a. m." Goldville 8:05 a. m. 1.0 Kinards 8:13 a. m." Gary 8:18 a. m. " Jalapa 8:24 a. m." Newberry 8:47 a. m." Prsperity 9:07 a. m. 75, RETURNING, Tickets good and including Train 14, due lumbia, Thursday, August 2 Ask Agents, W. J. CRAIG, P. T. M. Wilmington, N. C. succeeding general election, and be white Democrat, or a negro who vol ed for General Hampton in 1876, an has voted the Democratic ticket coi tinuously since; provided, That n white man shall be excluded froi participation in the Democratic pr: mary.*who shall take the pledge requi ed by the rules of the Democrti party. No person shall be permitted to vol unless his name has been enrolled o a Democratic club list at least fis days before the said primary electio: After tabulating the result of sai election, the managers shall certif the same and forward the ballot bo: poll lists and all other papers rela ing to such election to the Count Chairman within 48 hours after tt] close of the polls. Managers will call for the ballC boxes on and after August 25, at th office of the secretary, in the ol court house, where they will receiv boxes, ballots and full instructions. Fred H. Dominick, County Chairman. Frank R. Hunter, Secretary. SALE OF STOCK OF MEECHANDIS1 By authority given us in the will C Edw. R. Hipp, deceased, we will sel as a whole, at public auction, to th highest bidder, for cash, on Monda; September 5. 1930, at 11 o'clock a.. m at the store house of said deceased, i he own -of Newherry. S. C., the stoc r. goods, wares and merchandise the in stok belonging to the estate of sai deceased, a complete inventory c which may be seen at said store hous on the day of sale. The purchaser c .t-he st nnef god will be given th , HEELS. tantial Rubber Heels, all sizes, . - - 10c. Shipment dozen - - 25c. Leceived us Candy-Pure, Fresh, Clean. ianufactured under the most an, well ventilated factories. ular Prices. te, pound - - 20c. s, Cream Wafers, Mints, - - - 10c. 1Oc. Store. .here's a Reason." AY R SIO*N IIA Sim C: rIA_____ & . Y, AU 24 umbia vs. Augusta. ROUND E LEAVE TRIP FARE 5 Slighs 9:25 a. m. 75c. Lt. Mountain 9:33 a. m." 0 Chapin 9:45 a. m. 50c. Hilton 9:54 a. m." White Rock 9:58 a. in 'Ballentine 10:06 a. m." Irmo 10:18 a. m. " ::. Ar. Columbia 10:50 a. m. on any Regular Train up to to leave Gervais Street, Co 5th, 5.20 p. mn.. Phone or Write J. F. LIVINGSTON, S. A. Columbia, S. C. a privilege of leasing either one or both' :of the store buildings from the day of d sale to January 1, 1912, at the month L- ly rental of $50 for each building, the o lessee to pay for water and lights. n The undersigned reserve to themsel i- es, however, and to their agents, a -suitable space in one of the store c rooms as a place for the collection of store accounts. e e Mrs. Mary E. Hipp, Jno. C. Hipp, e Geo. B. Cromer, 1. Executors,. d August 16, 23, 30. rTEACHER WANTED. t- Wanted, a teacher for Central y school with first grade certificate.. .e Term five or six months. Salary, $40 per month. Aplcat address either >t of the undersigned on or before Aug. e 25, 1910. d P. 0. Setzier, J. A. Counts, L. A. Sheely,. Trustees: Barbecue. The undersigned will give a first class barbecue at Slighs station, onh the C., N. & L road Friday, Septem - ber 3. Everybody is invited to- at Stend and enjoy a good dinner. 3. D. H. Kibier. e Robt. Moore. E. H. Werts. kWe will furnish a first-class barbe aceaFo'sschool house Friday, d August 26. Every body invited, and f the candidates are urged to attend as e this is one of the most popular cam fpaign places in the county. ej H.Hand C.L.Rut