University of South Carolina Libraries
/ SUI TS Made By Isaac Hamburger & Sons & Michaels, Stern represent the best values ob tainable in CLOTHING. These two well known lines are handled exclusively in Sumter by us. and we can fit you regardless of whether you take a stoat, slim or regular. 'PH ONE Ei The C CALL i ETTER OES It is human nature to try and get the biggest value a dollar will buy -we are human-and take just as much pride in buying goods to offer you as you take in satisfying your own needs. E HAVE answered the call for better shoes by putting in a complete line of LONGWEAR SHOES-the more you wear them, the better built to fit and give foot comfort from the first time you wear them, and will give' longer wear than any other shoes for the same money. We are show ing some exclusive patterns in Men's, -Women's and Children's shoes this season that are the latest word in style-nobby lasts for the young people and conservative lasts fo h oesdt. ecnftyou upin Mdetal, Vici, White Buck or White Canvas-give us ~ . * the chance to prove the superior worth of LONG- .. R. R. JENKINSON, Planning, S. C. 859 BRIGHTEN UI? To Columbia. S. C.. and return Including~ Admis- O R F R IU E sion into State Agricul tural and Mechanical Fair and Automobile Races. Oct. 27-31.JstahtecnforNWVANh * On account of State An gri-il u GldLo" nyu cultural anid Mechanical Fair' iigTbeadCar.TeeSan r and Automobile Races. the aefo ietpget n h etw Atlantic Coast Line offers the above attractive rate-children '(18Wth'Imaenykilofritr over.5 years of age and un-j loknw der 12, half fare. For all THYPI.SANADVRIH trains Oct. 27 to 31, (teept InoeeetinEstoap.Ayby for train No. 55 due to arrive Columbia 11.10 p, mn.. Oct. iodoi.Iic oll;itanStisfo 31 ) Limited to rto-hl o.rigi- B 4 5.cn ual starting point not later thtan midnight of Nov. 2, 1913, T e itJw tr W, J. Craig, Paa. Traffic Mngr. ________ C..3 . IJ~LADSUYOUR DERN T IST, * Dxvis W1D~:M CIVIL EaGINEER. can ofiou N vEr BaV o R aNing TAOIN willAputAa,"GANook" on C.u MAN~iNG. . c. ade ov r om ine st imeo Pande bes we7 ANI $15 It is a Recogni that in this age appe for much. The man dressed, prosperous al many advantages ove who has no regard for kind. We make a study ing business, and can I book as well as your f umter LUCKY BASEBALL FLUKE. Think of a Plsyer Making a Home Run on an Infield Flyl -In all the years I have been attend ing baseball games-and they are more than I would care to number-there Is one play which stands out in my mind as the greatest I have ever seen," says a eontributor to the American Maga zine. "There was no wonderful skill em bodied In the play. It was, I suppose, pure luck. But the fact remains that I have never seen it duplicated nor ap proached, and it is, so far as I know. unique in the annals of baseball. "The game was one between Wash ington and Cincinnati back in thedays when Washington was In the National league. - The score was 1 to 0 in Cin cinnati's favor in the last half of the ninth. Two men were out, and Wash ington had a runner on second, with Wilmot at the bat. On the ftrst ball pitched Wilmot swunghard and knock ed an ineld fly, the highest I have ever seen. The ball went up and up until It was risible only as a tiny speck. "With the crack of the bat the run ner on second had started for home. and he crossed the plate before the ball began to fall. Buck Ewing, Cin cinnati's first baseman; McPiee, who played second. and 'Germany' Smith. the shortstop, all gathered between first and second awaiting for the ball to drop. Wilmot sped around the bases at top speed and passed thIird as the ball tell just inside the triangle of waiting Infielders.. "The ball struck the hard earth of the line and bounded high In the - M g having to wait rur it to de-' Sa second time before he could throw home. Wilmot slid a .e plate and was safe, having we agame with a home run on an infield fly, a feat which has never been duplicated in professional baseball." Will G. Richmond, a residen of Iu. glewood, Cal.. will answer any in qulaes about Foley's Honey and Tar compaund. He says further "Foley's Honey and Tar Compound has greatly' benefted me for bronchial trouble and cough, aster I used other remedies that failed. It's more like a food that a medicine." Do not accept a substi tute-for sale by all dealers every where. Advt. Japanese uMovies!I Even the remotest towns in Japan have their moving picture shows, and in large cities they seem to be nearly as plentiful as on this side of the Pa cinec. - In Yckohamna there Is a whole street of them, and, as the program of each Is endless and each picture is an nounced in huge symbol's en a separate varegated banner flying from a tall bamboo pole, the aspect of Theater street is startlingly unique. The pic tures Illustrating the sensational points of the programs above the entrances and at their sides have a certain quaintness about them, which is ac-, centuated by the fact that they are all orIginals, not mere stereotyped adver tisemnents printed in raw colors- The "getas" or wooden sandals of the spec tators are deposited on a rack before the entrance to a moving picture show, for where other people take off their hats the Japanes~e leave their shoes Ponular Mechanijes The Family Coagh Medicine. In every home there should be a bot te of Dr. King's New Discovery, ready for immediate use when any member of the family contracts a cold or a cough. Prompt use will stop the spread of sick ness. S. A. Stid, of Mason, Mich., writes: "My whole family depends upon Dr. King's New Discovery as the best cough and cold medicine in the world. Two 50c. bottles cured me of pneu monia." Thousands of other families have been equally benefited and depend entirely upon Dr. King's Ne w Discovery to cure their coughs, eolds, throat and lung troubles. Every dose helps. Price 50c. and 81.00. All druggists. H. E Bucklen & Co. Philadelphia or St. Louis. Advt. A Duty Well Done. Tlhe- teachetr bad been giving a long ,tu tre to, the juvenile class on the sub leet~ of mo"rals "'Now. Haurry." she said, "what is our duty toward our neighbors?' "To keep' an eye on 'em," was the reply Ezebange. Marital Dialogue. She- The tried and lovIng husban8 is one who when his wife has the neu ralgia suffers more than she does. He -And she generally sees to it that he does.-Cucinnat1 Enquirer. Sign of Wealth. "Is be rlchy' ''ay he's sqo rich that his neighbois ave all begun to tell what they'd de for charity if they' bad his maone."-w Detroit Free P'ress. D 0 to zed Fact arances count to inv with a well ppearance has or Ov r his neighbor things of this at $1( of the Cloth- W it your pocket Clothi igure. Cloth Famous Flags. There are only a few Old Glories in the Annapolis collection of 173 his toric flags, but each is connected with some incident that gives it the honor of its present position. There is the thirty-one starred Dag that flew be side the sunrise flag of .lapan when the close shut doors of that island kingdom were pried open for American commeree. The old flag. that Lieuten ant Charles Haywood defended so ga lantly in 1847 at San Jose, Lower Cali fornia. is there to recall the story of how he and his tiny garrison held an old mission house for over three months against an overwhelming Mex ican force. Here, too, are a few re minders of our history's saddest war. Side by side in the one case are draped the ensign of the UnioA man-of-war Kearsage and the stars and bars of the ensign of the Confederate cruiser Albemarle. Another treasure"s the ensign of the battleship Maine, which was recovered fourteen years after the catastrophe in Havana harbor. Christian Herald. Diamonds and Wealth. A famous French scleneist estimates that all the diamonds recovered in the I hiatory of the world could be packed in a box three feet wide, six feet high and eight feet long and would weigh less than thirty tons. It seems almost beyond the power of mind to grasp the fact that a treasure worth more than a billion dollars in gold could be contained In so small a space. The'high value of the gems Is sil more strikingly Illustrated by the fact that gold to the value of a billion dollars would weigh more than 4,000, (100 pounds. Diamonds as a measure et money occupy a large place in civiii aton. But when one takes into con sieration how far diamonds are from constituting the real wealth of natIons or a measure of brains, of true socIal standing or worth while success in life the enormous expenditure of hu man energy .represented by the pile of gems valued at ai billion dollars is an appa~ lling waste.--ChIcago Herald. Henry A. Johnson, a business man of L'An se, Mich.' writes: "For years, Foley's Honey and Tar Compound for couges and eaids has been our family medicine. We give it to our children, who like it on account of its pleasant caset. It is a safe cure for coughs and wlds." It contains no opiates. For sale by all dealers every where. Adv. MEPHISTOPH ELES. I Nd Satisfactory Proof as to the Originl -of the Name Exists. There has been much discussion con 'cerning the origin of the word Meph istopheles .in the past, which has, oreover, as yet ended in no very sat isfactory conclusion. Some very bi :zarre explanations had been propound ed before the time of Goethe, who was himself forced to own to the music~n Zelter in a letter of Nov. 20, 1829, "I ~nnot give any definite answer to the quiestion, 'Whence comes the name ephistopheles?" According to one theory it was a hy brid Greco-Hebraic formation of me phis and tophel (the liar); according to another its ety'mology was entirely Greek-very dubious Greek-mephos tohilos, "he who does not love the light" Though -this derivation is hard jly acceptable, it appears that this'was the original form of the name, the sec fond vowel being replaced by I at firsta in England. whence it was taken Into the popular Gernian mysteries. In the "Goethe Jahrbuch" Herr Oehke gives an enitimIY novel deriva tion which, if farfetched, has at least the merit of originality. It is based on two naines round tu chapters 4 and 15 of the second book of' Samuel. Pephiboshetu and Architophel. He :e~inds us that it was customary mn the middle ages when giving names to 'evil spirits to refer to the Old Testa :ment; hence the combinationl "Meph 'stopheles." The explanation is not perceptibly :more absurd than others. Goethe him viated form Mephisto when It suited the exigencies of hIs meter. it may be Sremembered that this particularly ir d :tated Schopenhauer, who wrote In his ~pamphet "On the Murder Verhun zung) of the German Language. "The foolish desire for brevity goes so far as to cut off even the devil's tail by writing Mephisto for Mephistopheles." ~Watmnster Gazette. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. T. Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Sigatre o Cass md Sores, Other RemedIes Won't Cure. The orst cases, no matter of howlong standing, re nrod by the wonderful, old reliable Dr. Peiter's Antiseptic Healing Oil. It relieves Pain and Reals at the same time. 25c, 50s, $1.00 .a.-eth annah ad healaland~s VER COATS $30! f You Do Not Care Our Boys' Department est as much as $15 in a Suit is stronger than ever this season. Suits and Overcoats at popular arcoat, we have other makes prices. IN OUR HAT DEPARTMENT 1, $12.50 and $13.50. :1$250ad$1.0 will be found No Name and Stetson e are prepared to supply your Hats. and in our SHOE DEPART MENT, Walk-Over Shoes insall leath ers. 'PONE wil b fo N170 Has an in our SHEDEAT Sis proving an important factor todeer many customers. *The first idea in the buying of SHAW & McCQLLUM'S Shoes is to offer a a line tflat .,ets away from the mere pirice-cutting element of retailing. ers.. DvHNAP *" Tdthis wpringas itorer qualy imery il from the * buigoeThe rstoai the labuch of SHA'WorkMcCLU'SSosn.oofe ee SHAW & McCOLLUM's Ser vice includes muore than quality . ft of construction. We believe our styles are tho foremost in the - shoe trade in Sumter today. SHAW & McCOLLUM'S Ser vice offers you an efficiency in the size of our stock that means - a full line of sizes in popular styles always ready to be found in our store. You will find our Shoes the substantial kind of merchandise * ~that you will want to buy again.3 * Shawe& Mcoluecall C.~ay ' Speeds of the Stars. Y':rs of 20-diuous resea.':rc~h have re veaedtht te tas nary llmove thirty miles per second, our star. the sun moving about thirteen miles perTH second. Bat the rapid stars, those eight or nine seconds of arc per year are flying at such terrific velocites'~ that they form a class by themselves. TreieSC. Their speeds are between 100 and 500 ofe ther second. the latter being thatih cmie aiacnfdne ossec n oftehuge sun Arcturus. The attrac- r.ey.Tebgmnitthbgroladhelte tion of the quantity of miles in all mnwt h iterl r lk ecmd u or suns-that is, bodies that are visible aeoe tobr wrs nd ep ior ale. Orp - is totally unable to cause these im- oei omk u aka uul eei otecr mense velocities. This shows that the ' uiyi eea n t arn npraua.W n quantity of invisible matter is far vieyutstrach kng contw hu, greater than that in the 100.000.000 visible bodies. The quantIty of matter able to Impart a speed of 100 to 500 miles per second is far beyond all im aginaton. - Eagar Lucien Larkin in' isl.EuaeteLf ad New York American. tssidhtaterinsaosi Dr anl.awlkon(rmf Saktacwsth neto f o tlnnentefsigi o ey hsca.wiig i h abr ma-n a opee brsatefshre ataacdissnincgcle.reomnd h eua sitn.I 81 ntecus f a re eslceonzdb-hercsue ino h lf ada ehdo tue at th-on e' hita as- olnJre n ruesbae mna eeomn ybign h tuassp keof themnal prcese o teamis n fteews rgh oeo h i noatvt inv entban a ue agaetion ofonts ed is am bytegnlmnt Hessthtntiwy ecnad l matn and ncessieties, at an sinlel hmhus-aryn n h el 5 e ett u pwradta tebe at the ougla s hrdtout bas-cameBees'btm 'mie'nm amoedlaetuhtan herg. soitln ina slameni ght Mas. than c ide on'"Teloins n tepait xc h sted spoe neto ayf the et ree romaesric rm bthhns nvnptin a tie a with ait AnAtRtofmn te raetatss uha the itembons aof thegymsitis s ium "Fromm tm sas usin ht Lenrod ic. obi ad th ertsr tof otheras wbrance otbs the prfso intecus ofhslc nse re au tin colto sebh Yonetba s t hat sa nh ascain idald r.nnaaie ad asD iek susqetytLthei lb n "t e n hteil swys ayo teratnsig mna etrt seTthe nertsb a ini thas letreinro i s a pupriingl robustceappearance.i of siHhelpatstdn.H oe. tacal oti ln. thek members offer ayeasi tro ee it spea thog othe branchs of the Srn laig ohfr a ekes ounr e n Cherisan asocpationgend. Jmo- osrn laiga l h aeHniR eotwsago I odo itBtwasare isccwnenaer.Rchfr Rank_____ didoneoftherb estpilleat on The arlsad ivali hasordiarclhOportbites cait ,cod ene, c apisencyro ann asrprsiglyrobstapparace He Hwtcou r ity he obist manc with tohi b iero ha d ee stleu loksston. cofes ayheha t eer man' dwith th e tt nd it a e d fork lele.a no mens a be o iv thouh herigrsofth oe is to ake ough ansetkrn aymungal. beeft te tmthe sam cure Thee isan pocrphalmunitth be i ge nealanfis oarons r thre par ilear. Wea in-ete of n eitph n Calsbd hurh- i teyut tr hcigacuwith r s, m fte olwn yard: No~~~~ting sai troubesom ce tat ea o im l h n culysa i was wen. j 'Scolandl.whena the fsn . pigst notx verylae h f ih briskeriousishelmen defensecoddhis son hoped to beoolen jrse andtroser b ace d wsbdy~ one Agn t Her Iazn -arups toUth armits. One o thesewa