University of South Carolina Libraries
URGE WIDER USE OF CABBAGE Expert' of Cornel! College of Agriculture Extol Humb!* Vegetable's VsJue as Foccl. Lovers of cabbage will welcome the pronouncement of the experts at Cornell's College of Agriculture, acclaiming the merits of this succulent vegetable. Cabbage is a subject the discussion of which is not considered good social usage. For some inscrutable reason to acknowledge a fondness for it does not one in the estimation of professing epicures, wives H. Young in the Providence Journal. PoKhc. crc% !w in 1 vrvn orwl VU AO A >Vii * AA 41. VM UUVi \/\?* . mineral salts, it contains h moderate amount of growth-promoting substance and the American people should eat more of it than is their habit, according to the Cornell propagandists. Have we not heard, too, that it contains these precious, if as yet unidentified elements called vitamines? This cabbage report suggests that Americans do not cook it properly, as a rule, and that may explain why appreciation of it is not more general. It should be "plunged into boiling saltei water and left there for 20 minutes, no longer, uncovered"?instead of being confined to a tightly-covered receptacle for an indefinite period. The practice of covering the di-h has grown up because of a convenHonal disinclination to having the house filled with the perfume of boiling cubage. But to a hungry cabbage lover this fragrance is one of the vegetable's charms. It exercises, as one may say, an agreeable psychological influence. There are, of course, divjrs ways of serving cabbage, all of them good. And since our tastes are often ruled by the judgment of authority, it may be believed that a widening circle of confessing cabbage eaters will be the conscience of Cornell's approving verdict. SHORTAGE iN PANTS SUPPLY Evidently Pioneers' Wardrobes Were, at Least to a Certain Extent, Unpleasantly Limited. In the early days of central Illinois, t period when the settlers drove their hogi to market at Chicago, breaking a path in winter by means of a yoke i of oxen and a heavy log, a certain young man was in the habit of walk- | Ing eight miles to see his best girl. ! On the occasion of one visit a heavy j snowstorm swept the prairie, and the | ? ? ? t A 1*^. J young mull iuuiiu 11 ucvc<3caij ?.v i main until morning. He slept in an "outside" room, the space between the logs being unfilled. The old-fashioned feather bed with wool blankets protected him from the zero weather. It so happened that the yonns: man wore the style at that dntr, buckskin pants. Thoughtlessly on retiring he j laid his pants on top of the bed- I clothes. A coyote or wolf crawled I through the cracks between the logs | in the night and carried his pants ! away. The theft was revealed when ! the young man wps called for break- i fast, and to cap the climax, not an j *xtra pair of pants was to be had. j The young man was forced to stay in j bed a:d s^nd a boy eight miles to his i | home ior pants. There was only one J pair m his family, those worn by his j J father. Thus the father had to go to j bed una send the boy these pants in : i order that the latter could get back ! home.?Indianapolis Xews. : Altogether Too Suggestive. Journeying along the border a few weeks ago, Tom Mix, a motion-picture actor, drove his automobile across the ; rifer into Juarez for a glass of beer, ! innocently parked in a space where parking was prohibited and w8''<e<I off. He had made about two blocks ! when he was clapped on the back by . a breathless Mexican policeman. "You air under arrest for putting ze i automobile where he do not belong, j Come with me. Why you not stop when I call you?" panted the gen- | darme. "Sir, senor, I call you twenty times, j hees?like dees: Ssssssssss Zat is ze j way we call ze attention of a hombre ' In Mexico." "Well," said Mix, "all I've got tc i say is that's a rotten way to call an actor." Seasoned Autoist. Virginia is three and one-half years old. She calls herself "Buddy." Her \ father owns an automobile. T';e <-trer day while the fam'ly was enjoying a ride, traveling at a rapid spee k lie auto struck a large bump. So \v>ient was the jolt that It seemed as if i every spring would break. - As the car , rolled on Buddy, seated beside her | father, looked up at him witli large, j round blue eyes and said: "Daddy, j why don't you say damitoheil?"?In- f dianapolis News. ?. Handy Bibie for Blind. The .American Bible society has an-1 ncunced it is to bring out a ".small I liandy volume" of Scripture selections for the blind. Tile pages are 7 by 13 inches, and ; the volume will weigh about a pound, j A complete Bible prepared in the em- j bossed system used for the blind j weighs about 150 pounds and comes in ! from 11 to 58 volumes. i Adept Umteu States System. The American idea of public health ; nursing has been formally adopted In the city eounucii of Warsaw. Poland A corps of nurses has been organized j to work with the school doctors ex amining children and investigating! health conditions in homes. Fifty thousaciU children of local grammar j schools make the first g: -up to com< j tinder this new system. j ! CREDIT TO MINES j Without Them, Modern Civilization Would Perish. j | Frcm the Cradle to the Grave, Man's Life Is Bound Up With Mint I eral Substances. ! While this is being written the United States navy dirigiV-'' C-7 is circumnavigating Washington monument, r.'roueiting over tlx "A'Lire House and :.irtiii? with the tv-Lus over the eapjto], says the Mining Congress Journal. i It is filled with helium gas. an element It.-. ? /vn ? n o mn i n 11 f t' Uf I'll UM" WJ. IIS liuiiiiiiiiiuimnvoii,' 1 is expected make possible the saving : of many lives during war and in the ! peace-time pursuit of commercial aeri| al transportation. It is one of civiliza tion's latest developments, anil apparently one of the best, and it is a 100 ' per cent product of the mineral in: dustry. Savages cultivate the fields. The lower animals have their highly de! veloped transportation systems and ) maintain storage plants for the pres| ervation or foods. Apes use wooden implements, ants run dairies and the birds are still the greatest architects and builders. Many other il.ings may he done by instinct alone, bin ,-t takes brains to operate a ivi:?i . Mankind j ceased to be bruiish ai <J ' "srim to be ' civilized when some ere;:: 'ri more inj telligent than the others fashioned the ! first implement out of stone. It was j probably a woman, actuated by mothi er love and stem necessity to make a i vessel to boil some bitter brew to cure i vrnmc Tr-hfhvrnnimn Hinnonulitibo'S i tnmmyache. From that time on clv| ilization and mining developed con| temporaneously hand In hand, each I dependent upon the other, and today | humanity from the cradle to the grave places its -chief reliance upon the j products of the mines. The first substances appropriated to the use of the new-born babe are mineral substances?boracic acid, dropped in weak solution in the eyes to prevent blindness, and vaseline, applied to every other part of the body to sootlip thp tender skin and hasten its development. Everything modern man rats, wears, plays with and buys or sells is composed of or manufactured by the aid "of the products of the mines, including the instrument with which he writes his last wiJl and testament. He gives up the ghost oy an r iron hod, is placed in a casket held together by steel and laid in his last | resting place, which his frieod^ smooth over with a metal shovel Or. if he is cremated, the antimony out : of whicli the "silver" handles on the ! casket are made becomes 'volatilized ! and wends its gaseous way along with j his souk to that ultimate destination J of all miners, whose streets are pa\ ed ' with goftl. Neither This world nor the ! next could be run in orthodox fashion without the mines. Trapper De Luxe. Hardships and vicissitudes seem n necessary part of tbo life of a i:.?rrt woods trapper. Sleeping night aTr>r night in deep snow, "mushing" a dim powdery trail, going the rounds of his traps when the thermometer Is forty degrees below zero?those are some of the things we think of when we think of the fur hanfer. But in "Trailmakers of the Northwest." Mr. Paul L. Haworth shows that one trapper at least leads a life of luxury. A certain Dr. Greene lives on Peace river and runs a line of traps on bare hillsides in sijjht of his cabiif. Whenover he thinks it is thn^ to make the round of his line he takes a pair of powerful field glass- > -Mid looks to see whether any of thf* traps have been sprung. If there is an animal in one of them, he has onJy to walk out and bring it in: if not, he remains comfortably beside his cheerful fire. The method, though not ambitious, seems -? -C--1 . 7 SUl'CtfSMUl ; wutr ?1UH-1 ivi. caught a silver fox that lie sold for several hundred Cottars. ? Youth's Companion. Knew the Place. A business firm recently adapted KHson's plan for testing the iftelligeuce of men applying for positions. A man applying for a position us superintendent would be expected to answer all the questions on the list submitted. One wishing become a clerl; faced only half the ii*t: as the Job applied for dwindi<-<l !i- important. the amount of kiiowl*-<i:n ?iecessm'v to secure it grew r A colored man who !;.; ! . jplied for 0 j(>l> as porter received .1 card heur 1 -1. - l.v ii.vnxta^ II1? lilt* ?* ixv uiv;iu^u the cotton sin?" "Wcl?," said the clerk, to who,n he returned The card, "what's the answer?" "Say. boss,v answered the daiky. "Ah duuno who .'twus fust made dat ! stuff, but Ah knows whar you kin git some."?Harper's Magazine. Getting Acquainted. The bus was starting in the midst of | a torrent of rain, when the conductor ; put his head inside and inquired: "Will any gentleman get outside to oblige a lady?" j "She can come inside and sit on mv knee if she likes," said a passenger Jocularly. | To his great st:-. prise a buxom worn nn bounced in and ofcej/ted his oflVr. After a time the man got into conversation wii. ,'iis fair burden and asked where sli-.r ;ts going. On hearing her destination he exclaimed : "HIkss r.iy soul, that is my hou^e!'4'Y"cu/"* saiii the fair one. t>!n ' :ng; "I'm the niw cook!"?Lundjn Answers. ! CLOSE ~Q HORRIBLE DEATH , " " Missionary Telis of Harrowing Experience Wilh Leopard Which Ter.w nor^-ily Shared His Berth. I A J quite so wild as it used to . s;ud ilie gray-haired missionary, mailing. The liurrowest escape I I ever had was vn board ship :? thouI sand aiilfS from Capetown. I lay in my aenh with my clothes on, trying to g ' n;. strength h. after a spell : of - .;< ! i.ess, when I saw a hig leopard .-' lading in my doorway. At lirst j I thought it was someone's pet and ' spoke to it. Growling and flattening 1 its short shan> ears, it crouched as if J to spring. Even then 1 thought that | it was playing, but I was in no condition to play with it. "Lie down!" I ! said sharply. I: sprung and vanished. The flight i of it was so swift and silent that | for a moment I thought it had gone j through the porthole above the upper | berth. Then I saw tin* sag of the : springs and knew that it had landed ; in the berth. A moment later its long ; tail switched back and forth over the l edge; then, turning, it put its great , ugly head within two feet of my face. \ Its mouth was open, and 1 could see i a cavernous red gullet and teeth as i sharp as sabre points. I tell you that I was as close as I ever want to come I to a live leopard. I yelled and buri rowed under the bedclothes. j A calm heavy voice with a slight ' n<mn\m ncci'iit sounded at the door. j "Be not afraid. Keep on talking with ! if. hut don't move.*' The man was one j of the keei>ers. I learned later that i there were other animals on board. ; It was easy enough to lie still, hut : it was not so easy to talk to the , boast.. The muscles of my throat ; seemed paralyzed, but at last I man| aged to repeat hoarsely, "Lie down! j Lie down, I say!" The cage the leopard had escaped | from was brought and set in the door; way; but before the beast could be i induced to leave its perch two men had to go over the side of the ship and j prod it with long iron bars thrust ! through the porthole. Before it finall.ly entered the cage it turned on me I again, and I never veiled so loud in | my life. The men with the bars were ' doing the best they could. but they I could hot quite reach The* leopacd a9 it crouched on the floor. I think my ! preacher's voice saved me. Snarling, ! but frightened at the strange uproar, the beast backed away inro the cage, and the keepers slammed the door in its face.?Youth's Companion, i ' I ' f Peter Pan Remains Popular. f Whether one believes in fairies or not doesn't matter. It is impossible to live in London through a Christmas season without coming to believe at least in Peter Pan. Tije fact that j T'.arrie's fairy tale s playecl each December holiday time as regularly as i Santa comes down ihe chimney does ! not wholly account for the important ! Christmas institution-that Peter Pan ; has come to be. although-it has done 1 ? orpnr dpfil toward it. Year after ** I?* I year, the boy who would not grow up has spirited Wendy from her bed on : the stage of the St. James theater, far away to the never, hevqr nev?r land, where warwhooping red Indians ! and the lost little boys of England : fight iho hold, bad Captain Hook and ; his crew <>f piratejs. Since the very ; first performance at the I)uke .<>?. York's theater, in 1004, produced by , Charles Frohman, with Nina Bouci; caul*" in the title role, London has ! never let a year go by without call: ing Peter back.?Eleanor Carroll, in : New York Evening Post. j The Finish. A mischievous student of Butler 1 college who added a "c" to a label on ; a bottle of hair tonic, making it read . "gives the chair a permanent gloss and finish," caused a commotion on | ; th?> campus recently. i Being a pledge to tl;e Lambda *-hi j Alpha fraternity, and being made to j undergo certain embarrassing situa- I rions to qualify for Joyal membership, j fellow-students were not astonished I to find him engaged in tlie extraordi- ! nary activity of giving a coat. of j i varnish to a chair in tlie Butler col- j ' lege building. | True to its promise, the substance j j gave the chair a permanent gloss, but j j the finish was given to the trousers of j ! a fellow classman who sat upon It. j i An upper classman of tlie fraternity j | discovered the absence of his hair reI Juvenaior, and evidence pointed unJ favorably toward the pledge.?Indian* ! apolis News. I | Discovered "Witch Hazel." J * ? * ? 4', TT10 n ! II I1US Dffll Sttiu Lllil l Lll^ I1AOC 1UUM . to distill witch hazel was the Rev. I ; Thomas Dickinson, of Essex. Conn., j and lie was also first to d'.stLll oil of 1 | black birch. That was aboUf. 75 years i j a~o. Mr. Dickinson distilled witch huzel for use in his own family and for the j comfort of his neighbors, but about j T/0 or (50 years ago it was put on the j j market in bottles, and labeled "H awes' ; i Extract," "Golden Treasure," and "Ex- j tract of Hamamelis" at different times, j The bottle of "Golden Treasure" car- j ! ried a la bid with a picture of a miner ! digging gold. Taking the temperature. This strictly her er. is: ? He makes his ow . : in his own ! cellar. He is scientist. ih^ut it. Uses t ;i hydrometer to test its kick or some- J tiling. The other evening he was working in the cellar. His little granddaughter followed him down stairs. She saw him wipe off the hydrometer and | gently slip it into the beer. "Wbst*:* the matter, gran'pa?" granddaughter inquired. "Has your ( aeer got fever today?" . FATNESS NO SIGHT OF HEALTH j i Increased Weight, After the Age of Forty, Rather a Danger Signal, Say Experts. i i ! When a person becomes sto.it after | 1 About forty years of age it does not j worry him, or her, unless the stoutness he so great as to cause discomfort or disfigurement. Nevertheless, the .statistics of lite insurance companies prove j that increase of weigh: with age is not favorable to length of days, ac' I ; cording to Drs. Irving Fisher and K. L. Fisk, the greatest authorities on I insurance statistics. "What are the burdens of obesity and why does it shorten life?" asks the Journal of the American Medical : Association. "Various answers, mostly 'r indelinite in character, may be fortli! coming in reply to this question. Tis| sue fat must be carried about like any ' t ther incubus. We are reminded that ; overweight puts a 'strain on the heart and on the joints,' and that it 'pushes up the diaphragm and cramps the I iungs.' A gaining adult who is already overweight may find his physical ncj tivities restrained and bodily exertion made labored. Accordingly, with an i unchanged food intake the surplus of j unused energy accumulates and a viI cious cycle is presently established, j The obese person inevitably limits bis I exercise; he grows heavier l'rom the J unused reserves, and his activity therej upon becomes even more restrained | and limited. Overfeeding, obesity and I lack of exercise interplay until 'big' ! becomes 'bigger.'" I And Dr. E. V. Joslin indicates fatj ness as responsible 'for diabetes. ; PROVIDES FARMS FOR POOR i j Self-Help Project Fathered by Nebraska Philanthropist Seems Move in Right Direction. ? H. D. Watson, millionaire farmer and philanthropist of Kearney, N?b., who Is perhaps doing more than any other one man in the United States to make the "back-to-the-land" movement a reality, is in Alamosa investigating the advantages of the San Luis valley as a place to locate one of his community farm projects, 0. E. Meyer writes in the Rocky Mountain News. Mr. Watson already has acquired a j tract of 300 acres at Carbondale, Colo., and is now making arrangements for | starting one of his farm communities j there. However, the Carbondale disj trict is ^irnited-'in extent and land is I higher priced, lie found it iuex! pedient to acq&tre as large a tract as lie wanted. He will settle a family j on each 22 acres of the Carbondale ! tract, and the only condition which Mr. Watson places upon an applicant j for one of hisjifrommunity tracts is ! that the applicant he absolutely withi out money or otiier property. i The tenant is located on the tract ; with all necessary tools, stock and seed furnished. ->In addition lie Is i furnished with a?um of money duriojfi i tn*f first year. After that the land is | expected to produce enough to make i a living for the family and provide a I sinking fund for*paying for the land, j In six or eight Jl-ears the farmer, if . he is the right sort, owns his land. i Mourning Chevrons on "Beer" Suits. I When the Princeton seniors ap: j peared in their |heer" suits last year, 1 with a black mourning brassard on I flirt Irtff flrtAi.A IllilO IT'OL* nf\t ? w* I I 11. I 'I ^ I t ; UUC ICll MCC> T7, ?? <*o v.';Moiutivvi | I very, nifty. But they've beaten it ibis | i spring. The beer suits were broken out J j out early this week, and tliey have i three small black chevrons oh the left i cuff, each indicating six months of ! prohibition. The beer suit custom is ! indigenous to Princeton. Before the j days of Volsteadisin the suits?plain | white "jumpers" and pantaloons?apI peared, simultaneously with the bock | beer signs, and gave unique distinction to the seniors, passing their last spring in scholastic trammels. Also, there were some jolly parties in certain cozy corners in the classic shades of the collegiate town. And maybe there are now?hut in corners that are surreptitious as well as cozy.?Cincinnati Times-Star. LL . . Facing Buildings With Pottery. In a recent lecture before an English gathering Prof. Bercsford PIte disc ussed the possibilities of ceramic products in the clothing of reinforced concrete skeleton buildings. Unlike many architects who regard traditional practice as something quite sacred, Professor rite would throw the conventions of the past to the winds tn order to meet modern developments. While admitting the structural advan tages of reinforced concrete, he is not an admirer of concrete as a material for exterior surfaces, and advocates the clothing of the structural skeleton with "a garment of permanent, elective, beautiful, ceramic color, unlimited in its variety '.nd worth."? Scientific American. Thoce C!d-Time Workers. "When I was a hoy," said Mr. Cumrox. "I worked 14 hours a day." "No. you didn't," replied Mr. Cas.- iux Chex. "My father was keeping the store you worked in. You just hung around 34 hours a day because It was a warm, comfortable place to Ioa&M But the Elephant Must Be Fed. if present conditions continue in certain lines of business there are going to he some people who will simply have to go hungry in order t:> buy their gasoline.?Boston Transcript. Australia's Heart in War. Although conscription did not apply fn Australia, of her total population : of less than 5.000,0(10, 410,000 men and women volunteered for service. JEWELS SUR1ED SEVEN YliARS French Countess Rcccvc/s Treasure Wh'ch She Had Long Since Given Up as Lost. Treasure trove to the value of 030,Dtiu francs has he en unearthed by gardeners who were making a new path outside the Uauphine gate of the Bois de Boulogne. one of them, engaged in removing an overgrown lilac bush* suddenly sh.r.:te?i that he had found a handful of pearls. and when tiis companions joined him and more soil was turned up, a small heap of Jewels was revealed, lying hardly more than a foot below the surface. Altogether 11 pearls were recovered, in addition to a very large one set in diamonds and a sapphire diamond bracelet from which two sapphires are missing. The police found the owner within a few hours, according to the Montreal Herald. She is the Countess de Heauregara. *mu u is iimn- uwm m-m-h years since she l<?st them. Slio says that on August 2, when war was declared. slip went to the safe containing Iter jewels to prepare it for removal to the bank, but found several cases open and empty, though a diamond tiara and other valuable articles still remained. The police suspected her German chambermaid and several times visited her in the segregation cam]) to which she was removed, in order to obtain admissions. After peace w:is signed this woman, however, was sent to Germany, and the countess lost all hope of recovering her jewels. The pearls belonged to a necklace of 150. and the view is thnt the thieves visited the hiding place from time to time as they wanted money. MODERN LIFE IN OLD CITY Changes in Bagdad Might Well Cause Caliphs to Turn Over in Their Gorgeous Tombs. Bagdad, the city of caliphs, the scene of the deeds of the good Harunal-Rashid of "Arabian Nights'' fame,, is now enjoying the strangest sights In its 1,300 years of history. The British have brought the Strand to ifs hflznnrs the motorboat to the Ti gris and the automobile to its timeeaten gates. Bagdad enjoys an English weekly magazine, published in English and Arabic, including some of the latest brand of British humor and excellent portraits of the leading muezzins and sheiks. There are a number of British banks doing business in "the city, branches of great institutions famous the world over. British hotels are there offering roast beef and Yorkshire pudding with ale and stout to wash them down. They have Turkish baths, billiard rooms, palm gardens and are furnished with English furniture throughout. British stores sell perfumery, novels, clothing for male .and female of the latest styles of London and Paris. One leading department store in the eld city advertises: "What you may not get in other' stores fn Bagdad you can get in ours," says the Wall Street Journal. One may soon see some lordly son of the desert driving in his flivver to the local hotel to partake of the roast beef and ale of old England. Selah! .a* . , .-7y * ?????????? . Circus Tent Stakes Driven by Power. The automobile truck has largely superseded the horse as a means of transportation for the Itinerant circus. It has also relegated the uselessness of the former sledge-swinging skill of the canvasmau. Now the stakes for the tents are not driven by hand, but by a truck built especially for that purpose. It carries The stakes and the lent poles and is equipped with a miniature piledriver of the modern automatic type, operated by a belt from the truck's engine. All the canvasnien have to do is to hold the stakes under the hammer of the driver until they are started into the ground.? Exchange. School Laws in Various States. Colorado, Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Ohio, Oklahoma. North Dakota, West Virginia, Louisiana and Florida do not accept certificates granted by other states. Many of these, however, issue othei certificates 011 the basis of recogn'zed credentials, provided the requirements are met. Connecticut is the only state which issues certificates wholly on the basis of examination. and does not accept credits rrom institutions either within or without the state. Queer Taste Accounted For. Coming home from a party late one bright moonlight night. 1 did not light | a lamp on entering the house. Feel j ing hungry, I went to the pantry for j a lunch. Taking a slice of bread. 1 j spread it with what I supposed to he i plum marmalade. Proceeding to the i kitchen, I took a bite of my sandwich ( to find it did not taste like those my, mother puts up in my school lunch. Lighting a lamp I discovered I hadj used soft soap instead of marmalade. I ?Chicago Journal. t Antarctic Discoveries. J. L. Cope, the explorer, returned! to Plymouth, England, a year ahead ol j schedule; lie had discovered extensive workable mineral deposits and gained valuable knowledge relating to tish- j eries, including the secret migrating place of whales. After exploiting tliest finds he plans to go back, taking hii wife with him, in which case rhe wil be Srst woman to set foot on th< antarctic continent.?Scientific Amw j I Try This S ! "Waiter, here's a naif-crown for f you. j "Thank you, sir. Die! you w:?h to a j reserve a table?" d In a few minutes I .-.hall *" 8 I come in with two iadies, and I want j jvuu to tell us that, cvry tabic is en- ( i gaged."?London Passing Show. iF ! t CITATION OF LETTERS OF AD- t MINISTRATION !t The State of South Carolina, County1 of Newberry, by W. F. Ewart, c Probate Judge. i Whereas, Jno. H. Wicker, E. B.! Setzler and C. S. Suber hath made ' suit to me to grant them Letters of j ! Administration of the estate and ef- c fects of John 0. Koon, deceased, i There are, therefore, to cite and j i admonish all and singular the KinI dred and Creditors of the said John j ! O. Koon, deceased, that they be and i ^ appear before me, in the Court of j Probate, to be held at Newberry, S.i j ! C., on Monday, June 5th next, after | publication hereof, at 11 o'clock in! a j the forenoon, to show cause, if any \ a j they have, why the said Administra- j a j tion should not be granted. U I Given under my hand this 17th day U ! of Mav, Anno Domini 1922. s W. F. EWART, L r .1. N. Co. ;a I ~ (CITATION OF LETTERS OF ADMINISTRATION jf The State of South Carolina, County c of Newberry, by W. F. Ewart, t Probate Judge. c Whereas, J. A. Darby hath made 5 WEEK-ENI FROM ALL PRINCIPAL ST MOUNTAIN AND SE ANNOUNi | SOUTHERN RAII Effective Hay 20th to Septemt be scld for all trains Saturdays a i:\y Tuesdays following date of sa' I Following low fares will apply Aclicvllle, N. C $6.90 Brevard, N. C $6.90 Charleston, S. C $7.50 j Fill: Rock, N. C $5.85 v r sr nn .i.t, Lakn Toxaway, N. C "ST.80 He nr. tain Home, N. G $C.15 S-.yhnd, X. C 56.55 T'yon, N. C ?5.05 F-ynesyilla, X. 0 $3.15 For farther information and i Trckit Agents. ! * , i i-1 i 11.i.~ i - - - ? i {,<'($& I-'Si j' . |.. A Tiny Spark Causes Fires . \l-1- 1 j i ii maicn caruitbsiy un uv i \ i ^ t;u:t with an explosive and i Causes of explosion are oftDanger may be minimized w j First, see in c reliable lire have it. Then give some sei vontion. This agency will c Ox' phone. i fsaimjac A Q/U&AAVU JL Jk Insurance?R 1 1 0*? Caldwell St. Member Newberry Cha - ?r r- it i mm ?? n ^ n t I F UIV i | I About 82 ? Newberry coui Kohn touching man, Daisy Ha J | A bargain. Pitts Drug <kSaluda, uit to me to grant him Letters of Administration of rhe estate and efectcs of W. J. Aughtrv, deceased. There are, therefore, to cite and dmonish ail and singular the KinIred and Creditors of the said W. J. Aughtrv, deceased, that they be and ippear before me, in the Court of 'robate, to be held at Newberry, S. '., on Saturday, June 3rd next, after fublication hereof, at 11 o'clock in he forenoon, to show cause, if any hey have, why the said Administraion should not be granted. / Given under my hand this 16th day ?f May, Anno Domini 1922. / W. F. EWART, P. J. N. Co. Wintlirop College SCHOLARSHIP AND ENTRANCE EXAMINATION The examination for the award of acant scholarships in Winthrop colege and for admission of new stulents will be held at the county court louse on Friday, July 7, at 9 a. m. Applicants must not be less than sixeon years of age. When scholarships ^ ire vacant after July 1 they will be iwarded to those making the highest Lverage at this examination, provided hey meet the conditions governing ^ he award. Applicants for scholarhips should write to President Johnon before the examination for scholirship examination blanks. |||| Scholarships are worth $100 and 'ree tuition. The next session will >pen September 20th, 19*22. For furher information and catalogue, adIress Pres. D. B. Johnson, Rack Hill, 5. C. 4-28-tf ) FARES x 'ATIONS TO PRINCIPAL ASHORE RESORTS OED BY ,WAY SYSTEM )er 30th, round trip tickets will nd Sundays limited for return[e. from Newberry: Arden, N. C.- $6.45 j Black Mountain $7.60 J Campobello, S. C $1.70 J Fletcher, N. C $6.35 I Hot Springs, N. C $8.55 M Lake Junaluska, N. C $8.05 J| Saluda, N. C $5.45 M Tvbee, Ga $8.95 Tuxedo, N. C $5.70 ' ? Walhaila, S. C $5.00 ^ Pullman reservations apply to j ^ -i J ^Ht! ' / ' -Vv \ f /n aside may come in coni cause tremendous loss. en matters of negligence. , J ith care. ( insurance if you do not I; :ious thought to Fire Pre:ooperate with you. Call ? \ r % ' l'{ . Burton eal Estate. Newberry, S. C. .mber of Commerce ? . iin..o - I ' ii? SALE i teres land in ity near S.J. / ; G. F. Stock wkins. Easy terms. T I Co. Inc. s.c, J