University of South Carolina Libraries
MKMOK.VULK KVKNTN. * ? - - ? ? April 6 a <.!?-.it l>a> in ('uitttt Hintnt llikiory. Wu?hiliK(<?ii. April ?. T?*la.v iV|iM Mh> amnvcrsai'.y of urtut rvrnts in hi* lol.V. i > m- liuuilrod ami t|)irty<Jnt? year* a?o HfitrKv WiishttfTqn was OlorUKj flrist I't'iuriUcnt of th?* I'nJtoU Htut<Art }?j th?? MrM H4>ssl(iii of Con.vrf'sx, wtyfoh ron wimhI In. Now Y<u.k Fiftyyoara <tv<r thv lriil?n? ami ('onfiHlciat<< aruiUvi khipiiUhI hi . (ho tftvut buttle of HMIoh. Klevon your** nifo. the late Hem' A<1 Lullnl tV4rjf "nall??d tin* Stars ami stH|N*s (.? fix- North roic" Tlmv ,v?*ais a?ro tin* I 'ni t?*d States dtviaivd war on ? 'pj.i ' m -n- j.,' i Study Th**e JKIgurtfw. fkltW^A 1800 and 11)11) tlu* total i? Miur^'M <'f tiu- national banW In Houth < '411 <>liii i lmvw from $10,;i7r?,lKM to $1 Tld* wii-. all Iiu'ivav for tb? Iwi'iity ymir jm.?i'4o<] of or 1,'i-l.'J iH?r CMlt, < ?<*t tli?'M? tlRnn^ livi-d In your mind. Tlioy arc a fair r?'fUx tion of ttu* aina/in? ad* vainv wl>i?-It South Carolina In mak ing. f\Vws and (.'ourlor, "More Home to the House" MAKE YOUR PORCH [YOUR SUMMER HOME ' ;-v . ? From the.-hot, dust> streets or f/0111 aii ovrrfawtMl kitchen to turn aside to some dim, rool veranda and sink Into a hospitable chair?who wouldn't respond Jo such an invitation! Murb ingenuity. has l>een expended 011 the problem of (be outdoor living and these AKROLt'X Ventilating Shades represent the highest attainments in shading equipment. The summer's beat and sun 'cannot penetrate them, yet all the wan dcrinK breezes filter thru?for they are made from splints of heat-retard ing Liftdenwood and scientifically woven so as to Rive maximum protec tion and ventilation. Special adjustable "No Whip" cords add to their usefulness by in Miring araiiM flapping in the wind?so they may be effectively used in all kinds of weather ou living, dining or sleeping porch, ? OF It I.1NK OF I'OKCH AM) SIMAIKK FIKNBSHINOS IS COMPLKTK Camden Furniture Company I'llONK i:>ti CAMDKN, S. C. WMGLEYS For rosy cheeks, happy smiles, white teeth, good appetites and digestions. Its benefits are as GREAT as its cost is SMALL! It satisfies the desire for sweets, and is beneficial, too. Sealed Tight Kept Right "After Every Wear Tbe Flavor Lasts A12 OLD SHAKESPhARE IS FOUND Fragment pf "Pass'onate Pilgrim" Be lieved Curlier Than Any Other leeue. London.?Knlh<hy's Will Hfll ft! ?U< lion 11 volume Which rivals In rarity iii?* tin^ hook which <; i>. Smith ?? New Vork bought for fr*?n th?* !lrltW0|l Ootirt library l??'?< jul?rr That >*ohl from tlx* Hrluvell library comprised fchakespearc'a "VtiiU* and A<i<?niv," fourth ?*<jiti<>i?, t?"?'??. <>f wtofch only Oltf copy Is kifltwti; Shakespeare's ??passionate Pllgrlin' und "Smmets," first edition, 1500, of w11?<? I? oni.v -lie Ollltr fopy was then known ,md "Kpl u'ranunoK and Kit#*,'1 by Hir .Johii Uavls and Christopher Marlowe. The contents of the newly dlscov eml volume are KhakoMpearc'a "Pas sionate Pilgrim" and "Nonnota," first edition, 1000} Shakespeare's "Lu rivie;' third edition, 1000. of which oiUy one other ropy Is known; Thomas Middlcton's "r.host of TvUereceT* 1000, a unique and hitherto unknown work; "Kinntledulfe," by K. O*, an author uever identified, lftOft, and Shake spreare's "Venn* and Adonis," fifth edition, Issued In 1W0, the Ntine year as the fourth edition. The "Passionate Pilgrim" and "Son nets"- Is a fragment containing a large portion of the work; Ita twenty-seven leaves out of thirty-four are, moreover, made up of two iasuea, one of which ?MR ? ^ ? ?? ia th^ Issue offered at the Brit well Court sale, hut the other Issue from which the piece Is made up lit one hitherto unknown. It contains, mis prints which In the Britwell Court ex ample are corrected. Consequently the*clalm of the latter to he the first edition Is, in the words of the cata logue of the new find, rendered doubt ful. The new volume was discovered by ltlchard Francis Burton at his home, I.ongner Hall, near Shrewsbury. - Device Shoots Words as Gun Shoots Shells London.?Tn a small room at tin; Imperial College of Tech nology, South Kensington, Prof. A. <). Itankiiip is perfecting tin instrument which shoots mes sages us n gun shoots shells. A person talking Into a trum pet attached to a minute mirror reflecting a strong lipht can send a message to any distance' reachfcd by ttyi light without fear of the words being inter eepted, It Is said. The words spoken ca? be heard distinctly half a mile away and are transmitted through projectors to an electric battery attached to a piece of selenium fitted to an ordinary telephone receiver. The larger the receiving battery the great er distance can the message be sent. ALLIGATOR IN NEVADA RIVER Trapped After It Had Killed a Num ber of Calve* on Frey*s Ranch. Winnomucca, Nev.?James Bryant nnd William Brennan, veteran Nevada trappers and hunters, arrived here re cently with a tale of having trapped an alligator on the Humboldt river, near Frank Frey's ranch, west of Win-i nemnccu. ? 1 -- ? Bryant and Brennan trapped the al ligator after 4t had killed a number of calves on the Frey ranch and put the entire district In fear of going near the river. The trappers say it was an alli gator that escaped from a circus train at Imlay a few years ago and has been living in the Humboldt river ever since. The alligator skin will be made up into a traveling bag by Frey. In addition to the alligator the trappers secured a largo number of muskrats, beaver, otter, <*oyotes and wildcats. BERLIN POPULATION 3,801,235 Effect of War Is Shown in Big De crease in Males According to Census. Washington. D. C.?The city of Berlin with adjacent districts now in cludes 3,801,235 inhabitants, according to recent issues of the Berlin press which published results of the census started October 8. 1019. The moKt re markable feature of the census was the considerable decrease In the city proper, census reports showing a loss of more than eight per cent since lftlft. The effect of the war was seen in the fact that the number of innles in tin* suburb* of Berlin Increased only 033, while females increased l!U>.T7. In (Jrea-ter Herlln males decross?M| ."V4.000 no-! fnnales increased 124,*iv>. DRIFT 15 DAYS ON ICE CAKE Three Eskimo Hunters Arrive in Nome After Braving Perils In the Bering Sea. Nome, A l:??kn.?Three Kskiino hunt ers r>tme into Nome over the sen let "tit of .sight uf land. They said they had sufT?'re?| from eoM :m<l tmim. r :md Hint while hunt Intr they ?a.itpcd on the leo oft the mouth of ;t river IV) miles south #if Nome One mnrttln^ thvy awoke t< flnii'W rnt?- hii<l torn their ?ee cuke fre. nn<l htt'l <*:irriei| ir to ie:i. They dio not <-lrft? la ml nimhi until Mareh 2. The tae.i re: rli | Nome ?>y working their cano?- fhe ice until U?ey reached solid abort ice. LANCA8TKK COUNTY NKW8 Am Told By The Semi-Weekly Nnvt of - of Neighbor Town. The MoMii that \l-itcd J.ine;otei and (he count \ earl.\ UNO iimmlng l^twt Week wrought' Iihvix> in the eautefn se< tion of Uk? miinty. Major W. (J. A. r<?i tn of 1 fc\v II?t. lost heavily, the wind demolishing his corn or 11), one stable, wagon xbed. well h<*use, moved tln> Kin ka house front its foundation, and did other minor damage The More room of Mr. Towne . C'arnes of the same community, was blown from lis pillars * and g?*?dH wore ne utered and Wroken galore. A tenant house on Mr. Mm House's place, near Pwjght Was literally torn Into kindling wood. Flro in Tlmmonsvillc Tuesday night destroyed about $125,000 worth of property, among the \icttuis being two former l^inraster boys. Or. t\ A. and Dr. It. K. Foater, whoso otllces were completely destroyed. ?'They have made tlu'lr home in that city for *evei'al years, where both are very popular and have built up an extensive prao* the. The stimrn shovel, which the county road authorities have Ikhmi booking for a long time, lias finally arrived and Is belug unloaded. Four .separate shov els W?T?? shlp|H><l. tlllQO of tlllMIl ItOllHf wrecked or otherwise failing to reach their destination. Knel\ time a new one was shipped out from the factory and the fi/urth one came through without mishap 11. (?. CUrrlson, Jr., and A. M. Mc l/cod, of Camden, were visitors In the Ity Wednesday. < Mr. \V. 11. Hums left this week for Tucson.' Arizona, where he avUI spend day or two with Ills sou, .Mr. Hallett l'?uru>. From there they will go to the Faelllc coast for a short time before they return holnc. Mr. I la 1 lot t Huriis >i. i \|M*rted to accnm)?nuy hLs father to Sumter. Sumter Herald. . ? . ~ FLOUR IS FUEL Flour contains the elements that the body turns into heat ami energy. Bread to the fuel that our bodies need to keep them warm and healthy. ,The amount of energy and heat that any food will produce is measured in 'calorics' 10 cents worth of "PIEDMONT" "PURITAN" or "ARGUS SELF-RISING" FLOUR contains more calorics than 90 cents worth of beef or mutton; (>0 cents worth' of milk or $1.25 wodth of eggs. Bread is the cheapest of foods, and it is the healthiest, the most wholesome and greatest of energy-prpducers as well. You should use more, bread and biscuits on your table. Let them take the place of Some or the more ex. l>oj?sfvo ili-lit-. It jwaiK bettor heuHli mn! tfrv;U>r etfoiMtmy, -Nothing (KMtfd tx* more dfell<4ons that bre.iil. lu?eu:t* nnd (vik?? mfttlo fbe*c fwnou* i?rO<lwvH of the X*lo<|. ' moat Mill*. They hitve ?toori thf te.*t f*ir more thin r?o years. Make their u<M*?'iiutHiwe r?xluy. The Piedmont Mill* Inc., Lynchburg, Va. ?marmot/a*"* Products of the PIEDMONT HILLS The fuurml ship with IwxlieH of Aitu-rkuu sutlilit'Di wliu died in France uni Vod in Now York hftrbor last 'hHtr day., lLl)rotn;1it S? IxxUek -?I Drive this New CHALMER to Estimate Its. Worth WHEN you have driven this new Chalmers you will, appreciate its marvellous ease of action, its soothing absence of vibration, its great energy?results directly traceable to the Hot Spot and RamVhorn. Hot Spot is an ingenious device that occupies about six square inches. It receives from the carburetor gasoline still in a raw, heavy state and breaks it up into infinitesimal particles. Then the gasoline, now a "cloud" of dry gas, is rushed into the cylinders via Ram Vhorn (which has no sharp corners to impede the progress). Thus the cylinders get the kind of "food" they should have, and you get a snap, a "kick" from "gas" that you haven't seen in many a day. Some things you don't get, too, and they are burned bear* ings, scored cylinders, frequently fouled spark plugs?all traceable to inferior "gas" which most engines cannot "digest." Ride in this new Chalmers and you, too, will say : "Chalmers is one of the few great cars of the world." Qtmnjrm GEO. T. LITTLE Camden, S. C.