University of South Carolina Libraries
e Business Man id a New Suit ' *" " 11 Taken as a whole, business men are openly particular about th<l appearance, fit and quality of clothes, and quietly, but just as sincerely, about the dollar and cents value. Stem-Dlochl|mdy|fclothes You probably feel this way. Then let us show you how we can solve your clothes -problem with Stein-Bloch Smart Clothes. Every feature that you could ex pect from the high priced "Fifth Avenue T ailor" brought together and expertly tailored as Stein Bloch and "59 Y ears of Knowing How" would indicate. Price $1 Best Overall y o & evjer bo ught op your money b a c jk after 30 (days wear Guaranteed ? j m?t?ra Lut.'i Ctvfjr & Co. J)t;froi?, Mich. L. Schenk & Co. ' *> ' I" J . . _ LIGHT THAT PRODUCES SOUND Statement Sound* Incredible, but Ex periment Will Speedily Demon strate It to Be ? Fact. It geettlf incredible that a beam ot light would be made to produce wound, but Much a thing can be done. A ray of sunlight is throwp through a lens on a glass vessel containing lampblack, colored silk or worsted, or auy Ilka KubHtance. A dink having elite or open ings cut in It le made to revolve awift ly in this beam of light, so aa to "out I It up," thua causing alternate flaahea ' of light and shadow. When one places ; his ear to the glass vessel he hears Strang* aounds so long as the flaahing beam falls upon the vessel. A still more extraordinary effect is produced when the beam of sunlight la made to pass through a prism, so as to produce what is called the solar spec trum. The disk is turned and the ool ored light of the rainbow is made to break through it. Now, if the ear be placed to <he vessel containing the silk or other material, as the colored lights of the spectrum fall upon It, aounds will be given by the different parts of the spectrum and there will be silence in other part*. For example, if the vessel contains red worsted and the green light flashes upon It, loud sounds will be heard when the red and the blue parts of the rainbow fall upon the vessel. Other colors produce no Hounds at all. Oreen silk gives out sound best In a red light. Every kind of material gives more or less sound in different colors and no sound at all in others. ? Har per's Weekly. ) WORLD'S DEBT TO VEGETABLE Poeeibly 8un Worship Had Ita Origin In Knowledge\.of the Fact of the Dependence. Vegetable life may worry j^long without animals, but animal life can't continue without vegetables. There fore, says an English chemist, man owes a great debt of gratitude to the vegetable. He should do his best to foster it. It is not intimated whether this is an argument in favor of the theories advanced by the vegetarian, but it is considered ample proof man would not be here only for the hum ble vegetable kingdom. But vegetables, like animate life, are dependent upon sunlight for their existence. The v vegetable, however, is both the direct and the indirect sustenance of animal being. Animal life of certain species exists solely, or almost so, on the flesh of other ani mals. But that latter food eventually is dependent ? upon the vegetable. Time would eradicate animate life should inanimate cense to exist. The relations between plant and animal form a beautiful dispensation. Man owes to the vegetable more than he does to lower animal life. "Thus," concludes this chemist, "Isn't it possible tho sun worshipers perhaps had a greater realization of the value of Old Sol than we of the present century?" Livingstone's Resourcefulness. David Livingstone, explorer and mis sionary, was a man of varied accom plishments. Besides getting himself taught on board ship, and later by Sir Thomas Maclear, to take with great accuracy astronomical observa tions for fixing latitude and longitude, besides .acquainting himself with bot any and geology, with patristic litera ture and Egyptology, Livingstone was an excellent mechanic, a steersman and a mariner. His resourcefulness was at all times remarkable. When he was hard up for fuel on his first steamer journey up the River Shire he landed in the elephant marsh- Here no trees existed and no fuel was ob tainablex but his men found many bones of slaughtered elephants, Liv ingstone at once took tho bones on board, burned them in the furnaces of the Ma-robert, and so continued his Journey. Picture Statesmen at Work. A moving picture concern recently obtained permission to take so ojries of moving pictures illustrating ench parliamentary life. Legislators soon got to hear of the matter, says Les Nouvelles, some of t them showing : themselves particularly anxious to fig j ure on the film. The taking of the | film lasted several days, and the oper ' ator took pictures of thcflehamber at all times. Photographs will show tho : deserted benches of the morning, with a dozen or sp deputies discussing laws affecting the whole of France, the sol emn arrival of the president, life in tho lobbies, a stormy afternoon ses sion and the thronged refreshment bar. Very Rapid Descent. At tho exhibition of post-impression- ' 1st paintings in New York two Boston men ' were standing in front of the much-talked-of canvas alleged to rep resent a figure descending the stairs. "This is the worst yet," crTed one. ; "Look at it! It is simply a tangled ' mass of streaks and splotches." "I think," said the other, after gaz- ? Ing at it a moment, "that tho fault I lies in the title, which is not sufficient- ' ly explanatory. It should tell us that ?' it is a figure descending the stairs aft er the carelesB scrub woman had left . a cake of soap on the top step." r ? ^|iM ir~* i No Immediate Use for Them. She (after the quarrel)-? I shall j send back your ring and other pres- J ents tomorrow. lie ? Oh, there's no hurry. I don't ? expect to be ~ engaged again for a ? week or two. ??* : ... . 1 STATE CHAMPION NOT IN IT Rtal Hero of ths Links In This Com* munlty W?? the Man Who Re fused to Play tha Qama. VN'? had a chance to deinonstratt our theory laet fall, says a writer In I the Topeka (Capital. It worked like a potato in a rheumatic's pocket. Through the influence of the missus, who haa friends, we obtained a card j to a very select country ciub in an eastern statu, where we stayed ten days. The club had golfltls In its most acute form. , The men and wom en who frequented the club played j golf, talked golf, ate golf and slept 1 It. It wan the home of the state , champion and the game was the one important topic of conversation. For a day or two we were lost In j the atmosphere of golf which befog- , ged the place, Then we began jto at tract av little attention by indicating in a delicate and poUte way that the Whole thing bored us to extinction. When we respect/ully declined to en gage in the game or borrow any of the implements connected with the sport there was great surprise. Our assertion tliut we did not play the game and did not wish to w^as receiv ed with amazement. Up to the time of our advent the state champion had been the colossal figure Of the club. At the end of three days we had the state champion hanging on to the ropes. At the end of a week bis ex igence had been ? forgotten. As a curiosity he had been crowded out of place by the "eccentric" Kansan who sat around reading the reports of the world's^champlonshlp games, deaf to golf and all of its manifestations. It isn't always the hand that is dealt you. It Ib the way you play it. ACCORDED A HIGH POSITION Women of 8ervla, Well Educated and Able, Are Companions of Their Husbands and Brothers. There is no country in the world where women occupy a more dignified position in the home than Servia. The Servian idea is quite different from that of the Turk, who keeps his wom en behind shut doors or the Qerman, whose ideal womaix is a hausfrau. In Servia the woman is the companion of the man. A man is responsible for bis un married Bisters, and throughout the Balkan states it is considered rather a breach of etiquette for him to mar ry before his older sister. No Servian girl would feel she could hold up her head in society Unless she could speak four languages. There is hardly a Servian woman who can- ? not play some musical Instrument. ' Embroidery, painting, drawing, and sculpture are all studied. Politics is a popular feature among women. Servian women arp very domesticat ed and the highest ladles pay personal attention to trivial matters of house keeping. There are two women doctors prac ticing in Belgrade, and several wom en teachers. But public opinion, on .the whole, is rather against women entering the labor arena. Jekyll and Hyde Both Out. One day Mr. JenkinB, senior part her in the firm, came out of his pri vate office and handed Jimmy, the of iice boy, a slip -of paper and said: "Here, Jimmy, go over to the pub lio library and get me 'Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.' I have written it on a piece of paper for you so that you will not forget." Jimmy lost the slip of paper on the way. When ho discovered his loss he returned to the office without go ing to the library and was seated at his little desk innocently shooting file# with a rubber band when Mr. Jenkins said to him: "Well, Jimmy, where's 'Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde?' " "Please, Mr. Jenkins," responded Jimmy with well feigned candor, "the lady at the library said they both just went to the ball game and to call for them in the morning." ? V Old Town Again In Limelight. Stockwell, England, where d hidden church over 600 years old has just been discovered, has hitherto been chiefly famous for its ghost, which sot all London in an uproar In 1772. Mak ing the furniture dance and the crock ery fall was the ghost's specialty, though by way of variety an egg once flew across the room and hit the cat. Having excited London and frightened Stockwell. tl^e ghost retired/ leaving behind a firm belief In his supernatural origin, until many years later a serv ant admitted that long horso hairs at tached to the, crockery and wires to the furniture had enabled her to play the ghost so successfully that frighten ed beholders never even detected such open feats as throwing the qgg at the cat. * La Grande Passion. "Une grarrdo passion est une grande folie. Mediocrity In all things Is wisdom; mediocrity in sensations is superlative wisdom. ... No young lady should fall in love till the offer has boen made, accepted, the marriage ceremony performed, and the first ltalf ycar of married life ha? passed away. A woman may then begin to love, but wllh very great precaution ? very c ^oi ly, very moderately, very rationally, if ever she loves so mv^ch that - harsh*' word or a cool look elitfi her* to the heart, she is a fool. If she over loves so much that her liUBbandVwill is her law, and that she has got into the habit of watching his look in or she may anticipate his Hjjhw, will soon be a neglected ! " -<:??avlotte Bronte. . AT SAWYER'S IT IS GOOD %r. y r*- - f means simply "TAKE THOU*' It does riot mean to put in the nearest thing that happens to be in stock. The cabalistic sign is An Imperative Command and admits of no deviation from the writ ten word laid down. When you bring your prescriptions to me you can rest con fident that no precaution will be neglected, and your sick one will have all the advan tage that expert knowledge, experienced skill, the purest materials and honest methods can produce. Bring your prescriptions to us. And ypu will know you are getting the very best. Sawyer Drug Company REAL ESTATE .SELL. Do You Want to > loan ? BORROW I May Help You. LAURENS T. MILLS, CAMDEN, B.C. Foreign and ? Domestic. Try a bunch of our CELERY. CAMDEN CANDY KITCHEN We now have on display a most comprehen sive,^ new, modish showing of exclusive AUTUMN MILLINERY The latest imported and smart domestic crea tions in exquisite fashionably, millinery will from ' . that day be here awaitng your inspection which i? mo&t cordially ?im;arely invitxui O MISS MATTIE GERALDS