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1 1 1 " I ADTOMNLE V Funeral Directoi $ A COM J My automobile 1 J any part of Dillon C< X able. X Phones: X Resider X Office Y BEN N El ???? XSGX5Xs)???<iXiX?Xi)?<5XE??( ? I8 SUPERIOR B GUARANTEE! BUS1N1 U Piedmant?Live, location, Ideal clima plete equipment, colle tative enrollment, S< Practical Courses, M ] | ard, Strict requireme j ; cient product, Highj | service, Permanent < J |' ary, Rapid promotion I? CIVIL SERV1C1 COMMAND HA VII 117 I 111 11 | Uncle Sam is in n | raphers. He is holdir | day in 450 big cities ? i men to Civil Sendee ? starting salaries of $1 1 of his employers earn | sands of commercial 1 | young ladies to fill va I pleted office forces. IJ I it is your patriotic dut i the tremendous and I of/l ie help. We have f< f cial and Teaching poj I schools. About a do a "! -iding desirable posi | are now in training t< I UNDUPUCATED j IMMEDIATE 1 AND I 1r Famous Gregg Sh< Twentieth Century I scholarship or month ^ or $10 monthly aftei f fare paid from your ? tions guaranteed on i $900 to $1200 a year. | ladies in private hor | Established employn | facilities for locating i for placing students, i ers free. Thirty yes p favorably known. T p Preferred. Beautifu | alog, showing photog | students in positions 4 free on reouest. Wr ?l * * | Blank and Attractr I School Students. PIEDMONT BE 1 LYNCI I W. P. Musick. Pres. 'i BEARSE SERVICE ? _ ?? V WHITNER, > r and Expert Embalmer v v i iPLETE STOCK ? Y T t v learse can be sent on call to '? X ounty. Rates very reason- ice 209. 1 83. | TSVILLE, S. C. Y * S)?????? ????????????????^)?????t*. DS1NESS TRAINING 1 : FYTRAARMNARY / ui&nuivitvuiniii ? ESS SUCCESS I Progressive School, Central | te, Beautiful building, com- | 'ge trained faculty, represen- ? elect class, Choice material, j| odern methods, High stand- $ nts, Thorough training, Effi- | class positions, Satisfactory | employment, Handsome sal- ? E STENOGRAPHERS i HDSOHE SALARIES 1 ASHINGTON I eed of thousands of stenog- | ig examinations every Tues- | uiu appointing men ana wo- g positions in Washington at | ,000 to $1,200 a year. Many | from $2000 to $5000. Thou- I louses are calling loudly for ? cancies in their recently de- | f you cannot go >to the front, | y to qualify yourself to meet | unprecedented demand for | ound Civil Service, Commer- | sitions for students from 45 | zen Piedmont students are | tions in Washington. Others f o that end. | PROPOSITION MERITS f INVESTIGATION 1 ACCEPTANCE | r?linnrl Tnn/iU T 5** u> uiaiiU) i uucn i jfjJCWI '5 bookkeeping, Tuition sold on ? ily plan, payable in advance | leaving college. Railroad (|; home to Lynchburg. Posi- | day of enrollment, paying & Spare time work for young f nes to pay board and room. | lent department. Superior | positions. Effective methods | Live-wire service to employ- | irs established. Widely and | he Piedmont Prepared are | lly illustrated 200-page cat- f raphs, letters and records of % from many schools, mailed I ite us today for Application | /e Proposition to Summer g | IHISS COLLEGE, 4 BUR 6, U I Sam Jack Musick, Mgr. | IGLIU SCHOLARSHIPS VACANT A* WINTHROP. | Here's an KdySional Chance for Home Dewrrinf Cirls?Condition* <?overaing Applications. One federation scholarship will be | vacant at Wlnthrop for next fall, as jMIss Kate LaBoon of Anderson, our | senior scholarship girl, was graduatjed lost week. Examination for this vacancy muBt be taken at the county court house on July 5, with regular Winthrop scholarship examinations. The scholarship gives tuition end $100 additional for board. Applicants must be at least 16 years of age. unable to pay for college course end not have previously attended college. Application should . be made in writing to me at once, accompanied by letter from applicant oikiiiK* -I ?-A a ouinut uviauo ut cuvuiuguwcm HUU previous schooling. Application must be accompanied by Indorsement from i president of local club and one mln-; ister. District vice presidents and club presidents are asked to give this notice wide publicity. Have it copied In your county papers that it may be brought to notice of deserving girls. / Also please explain to applicants! that this scholarship may possibly be' ! for one year only. At the next con- 1 ! vention plans will be unfolded lookiing toward the creation of a students' j loan fund, which may take the place of the present method of giving I scholarships outright; or it may be I that at that time it will seem wise to ! retain the four scholarships at Win,throp and establish the loan fund in j ! addition. That is all up to the next ! convention. However, we do not wish I any girl to take this scholarship un""'der a misunderstanding concerning its continuance. Very soon I hope to present a statement of the educational department at the present time, giving coling colleges at which there are now i federation scholarships, names and | classes of girls holding the same. I shall do this In the holiof that tho club women of the State wish to keep in touch with their education-; ;il work, of which I am merely tem-i' porary steward. Mabel Montgomery, Marion Chair- ! man of Education. How the Navy Flays. j Washington, D. C., June 10.?So. much has been written and said about keeping the fighting man . amused the impression is apt to get, abroad that he is incapable of amus- 1 , ing himself. Of the navy especially ;1 this would be untrue. For while the ' cars are keenly appreciative of all th eshows and lectures and magazines and concerts and movies which ' have been provided for them by a generous government, and a still j more generous public, they are by |' habit to a great extent independent j of these things. This reat and com-!1 mendable movement for keeping the * recruit amused is comparatively new, . but the navy has long since solved 1 the problem of how to have a eood j time, no matter where it is. ]1 For while the sailor's day of leis-j( ure may be spent in London orj< Paris or Hongkong, they as often ,1 occur when the nship is at anchor off'1 some coaling station among a popu-1 lation of natives, or in a port that is quarantined. Hence the navy has formed the habit of depending upon it sown resources for diversion. And ithe new recruits have quickly caught the idea. An old tar, looking over a roomful of naval resrves, remarked: i j "Throw a bucketful of salt water into! that room, and the whole blooming: lot will be seasick in a jiffyy." And he may have been right at; the time. Iiut these men not only got: used to the ways of the sad sea j 1 waves, but also to those of the jolly! men that sail them. For the navy has1 a tradition or cheerfulness. The happy firin is its insigne. The nay has been decorated with a smile for learning how to have fun under trying conditions. 1 The fundamental principle of the navy's method of amusing itself is that a shipload of men will include, by the law averages, many differ ?-m kiiiuh oi xaieni. mis talent is sought out with systematic care, de-' ,veloped, and used far all it is worth.' i A belligerent Irish recruit, when' asked what he could contribute to jward a general joy fund, replied: "I jcan't dance and I can't sing, but I can lick any d d man in the crowd.", i lie soon had a number of chances: to prove his assertion for boxing is; one jf the navy's standard sports, I and it has developed some men who! ! would show to good advantage in1 the professional ring if they chose to' enter it. Uaseball is another game that stands high in the estimation of the ( j sailor man. At a training station1 near Washington, there are a dozen; baseball diamonds laid out side by , iside, and all of them are kept busy: | most of the time. Here the naval reicruit with an aptitude for the national game gets into trim to uphold the j honor of his ship against the teams, I front other vessels. His athletic in-' jstruction is as systematic and tbor-1 jough as that in his profession, for | the navy is abundantly supplied with; juthletic directors. The Jack always j ; knows what is going on at home in i I the world of sport, too; for the wire-, less summary of news that goes out j from Washington every day to ships j and naval stations in all parts of the world includes the baseball scores. Rowing is a naval sport which is more in line w.:*h the professional duties of tb> tHipants but which' ti DwrartlMiw Mt?k?d npon la a sporting spirit. When raeea between the riul crews of the bis warships are pulled off, there is wild enthusiasm and strong betting. Among less strenuous amusements inging holds first place in the nary. Upon every man of war there are a number of men who can sing, some who can play instruments, and few who do not attempt one or the other. And music is an aid to work as well as a means of passing spare time. When a ship is being coaled the band usually plays, and the fuel goes overside in a Jiffy to the rhythem and swiwng of some tune that every man can sing. Quartettes are as common in the navy as cornet players in a country town. Not long ago a group of naval officers or high rank wene being entertained, and a quartette from one of the vessels formed a part of the program. The skill of these singers was surprising. After they had finished a gentleman went to the ledded, explained that he had been in the show business, nad wanted to know where these men had acquired such unusual attainments. "We were in vaudeville for three years." the sailor admitted. "We enlisted in a body." "Isn't that fine?' exclaimed the old showman. "Maybe so," said the mistrel sailor, "but we never worked so hard before in our lives. Once the crew round out what our business was, they started us singing, and we've been singing ever since." John Phillip Sousa has been especially successful in finding and developing musical talent among the sailors. At the Great Lakes training station he organized a band of three hundred pieces that is praised by the knowing, and he now has over a thousand naval recruits on the lakes organized into bands. The Great Lakes recruits further distinguished themselves by staging a sailor written and sailor played musical comedy, which achieved a genuine success in the Chicago theatre, and even won words of praise from the professional critics. A similar show was put on at the Century thee're in New York by the men Trom the Pelhain Bay station. It went over with a biff bang?which was the name of the play. The navy seems to be rich in Jazz band talent, and, strangely enough, Boston, the highbrow city, is especially prolific of jazzers, for it recently sent out as a recruiting station siunt a naval jazz band that literally made the whole country yell with delight. It played four weeks in vaudeville during the last Liberty loan, and whereever it appeared the money simply poured over the tootlights. Its last appearance was at Keith's, in Washington, D. C., during the final week of the drive, and it caused such excitement and enthusiasm that this house was able to jet the world high water mark for Liberty loan subscriptions received in a theater. The value of music in the navy is fully appreciated by its officers. One captain when asked recently if he rould use any more men on his ship, replied: "You might send me a couple of ukelele players, second class." 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