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I 5lOOHOWFWOgj*l AVclcW)l?ftep?WSri..l sinulati: gtyiciood by : tin^theS tomadisaftdDg^^ IHinrir^ Msasg e;BS?? Jfaptu. WdDcSAMMftH***' fiun *Jun 5*4 V I lb! <?*?*. t-Lm 5 I (jviMSmr ) ) fit b ?yr.V'"/^ W - ' I Consli|iaUonai?lDiarrl? <md Ft^crlshness m? LossoFStKEi j rcsuitintij^rf.^? rac-SimilC Si^natareof i aiciToHNTAunCoH^- | NEW VOR^'-^J Exact Copy of Wrapper. Use For Over Thirty Years CA8T0RIA THC CENTAUH COM) IK CITY. CASTORIA For Ipf^nts and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Always DID IT FOR NOTORIETY Fscanaba Fever (iirl Confesses Her Friiud on Physicians. Kscanaba, Mich., March Kk ? Miss Evelyn Lyons, Escanaha "fever tfirl" whose ingenious methods raised the temperature of clinical thermometers to the limit of twenty days, sat up today and related to the Associated Press why she had "fooled" the hum dreds who came to test her remarka ble "temperature." Evelyn was herself today although still "very sick" and registered a fe ver of I 01 decrees ? this time correct. "I hardly know what to say" she be^an "only that I have found out that the world nftei1 all is full ? of thousands of tender hearted and gen erous people who love one another can not hear suffering. I know 1 did wroiiK in fooling the doctors', and ! am sorry. I knew from the start that I would fool them. I waived mv arms .about my head and thus at tracted attention. I thought it a vfood joke on then), but never thought of keeping it up. Then came the news paper stories, the telentam^, bun dreds of letter's from sovalled 'natuie healers' from all parts of the nation. "i was beseixjed with requests from these 'fakers' who persisted in asking 1 1> let them heal me for :i nionetarv consideration which would make me independent for life. I otu-e was .? nurse ami i recalled the folly of it all, but 1 was determined not to let them reap a harvest over a "hoax.' So 1 decided to wait until specialists from Chicago would come or else let it gradually go down. ''1 know too, that a sudden reduc ing in temperature would cause many l 'quacks' who were advertising them selves as working on my case, to claim credit for themselves and by j this medium swindle spine other poor invalid. "Saturday night I knew that the i < d 1 a | > s e of the trick was near. I knew the doctors were only goading me -on when they said I was going to die. I knew Dr. Defnet was on to nic and so I tried to get out. "Only 1 way so clumsy ?1nd they caught rne. All l can say is that no one can hoodwink the public and suc ceed. I am Kind its over with ami I pray that l may get well? and I will." According to a statement issued last evening by Dr. Harry .J. Defnet the girl has not wholly recovered from an aut<>mol>il* accident last fall which severely bruised her head. "The girl is quite sick," declared the statement, "although she is suffer ing from a mental strain, wnich, cou pled with a desire for publicity ex- i plains h? i tacjl it s." \V. S. Carter, former head of the Urol kci hood of Locomotive Kngineers died in I'.alt inuue. .Mil.. Thursda> | nicht. T H E Woodstock Represents the latest achievement in Typewriter Const ruet ion : ir i v e s the greatest measure of satisfactory service i and a quality of work that is unsur passed. Woodstock Typewriter Company (lateral Sales Office A. Deahorn Street Chicago, Illinois /?'. 1). GOOD ALE, A pent, Camden, S. ( . GIVKS FIRST PARDON. North Carolinian Grunted Freedom liy McLeod. Columbia, March 19. --The State pardon board appointed by Governor Cooper hold its Inst meeting tod^y and resigned as is customary. It in not known what the action of Gov ernor McLeod will ' take. Hut his drat pardop wuh issued to day on the recommendation of the pardon hoard. The members aro VV. P. Conyers, of Greenville; Alva M. Lumpkin, of Columbia; B. P, Fe^ucfl, of Cheraw. The man who was par doned whs Lawrence Tyndall, of North Carolina, who was convicted in 1U1J1 in Florence on the charge of stealing an automobile. The board came to the conclusion that Tyndall was the victim of mistaken identity. He had a good alibi but did .not use it. In sueh a case the query naturally arises, should his lawyer be made to pay him for two yearfc loss of time or- should the Statu of South Caroli na reimburse him in some way. Harding to Seek Itenomination. Miami, Flu., Mar. 17.? Prediction that President Harding will be a can didate for re-nomination will be se lected as the republican standard bearer, and will be re-elected, was made here today by Attorney General Daugherty, pro-convention manager for Mr. Harding in 11*20 and since then his chief political adviser. "President Harding will be a can didate for re-nomination," said the. attorney, general. There will be no other Candid a to against him except one and that one is always a candi date. He will be renominated and re elected. The country and the party will demand it. Hotly Found After Mnnp Months. The body ofc Alex Richardson, i young man of Columbia has been found in Calhoun county, where it had been deposited by receding high wa ter. The young man had been charg ed with breach of trust in a matter involving seven dollars, and a magis trate's constable was after him with a warrant. The young man to escape the Constable, waded into the Con-1 garee at the Gervais street bridge, as if to cross over to the Lexington side. It was in midwinter, the 2Sth of !><? comber. lie was seen to disappear hehjnd one of the bi^' piers; hut it was never knowh whether he got safely over until hi:' body was found in Cal houn county Lit > miles below Columbia, a few days ago. Numeral Lines. How ninny ?>f our readers have heard the following curious nonsmst' rhymj's? The linos wore very well known somo fifty years ago: ()ni> oh: ox opening oysters. Two toads totally tired trying to trot to 'led bury. Three tigers taking tea. Four fat friars fanning fainting fleas. Five Frenchmen frieitsseelng frogs. Six sportsmen shooting snipe. Seven Severn Salmon swallowing shrimps. Eight educated Englishmen examin ing Etirope. Nine nice neat nimble noblemeu nibbling nonpareil*. 1'en tailors twisting twine. Eleven Egyptian elephants bating English eels. Twelve twittering tomtits twining twisting, twirling twixt the fonder twigs. "I Have Other Fish to Fry." "I ha\e other tish to fry." Is a novel phrasing of the thought that "fie has other things to do ta'sides the nrie pro posed by the questioner, ii was ut fered by the Mad Knight 1 ?on Quixote - 'mmortal hem ?d' the no\e| by that name, which had for its purpose the ridiculing of knight errantry . mid the j glorious days of chivalry. Orvnntes makes his hero read ro mance and mheriture into everything he sees during his Journeys through the prosaic countryside, and as a re sult some painful e\-perlern e* befall the knight. Don Quixote'* memorable tilt with windmills is a *-las?..(_? story of literature, and the naive way he ex- I plains after the unfortunate fit. that i they were knights when # he attacked them, but that an i I 1 1 . r! ne 1 1 < e eon- ) verted them Into windmills t ? ? avert de- I feat arnJ htjinllinte him. is mirhable to the la?t degree. "Charles Egbert Craddcck." M i ss M i \ m <?- Mur t!?-e. who , died at ma fn i \ ?; w o. xs.-ts tietter known I to the reading public by her pen name I nt ( 'harles Egbert < 'raddock, A crlj* ple front childhood, .vhe sought to re- I pair the family fortunes. Impaired by i the < % ? I ^ar through writing tales of her own regent ?? f the ? 'umr.rrlands ; and for more th.tn n generation ?he was eminently >uc<essf ul. 'i'he col lection of her short Tories I uhllshed in 1 SM. under the title "Tn the Ten nessee .Mountains, whs ??i>ugh to make her fame lasting. She con tinned to write publishing novels un til" 1104 All were ?< e I in thw .scenes with which "he u,h familiar, the land in with h he- greaf -grandfather. Mtirf ree. settle l ? .1 . 1 !n the Nine teen? h t ? 1 "" y Mi?? M irfr?,e w ;i * one <?f 1 he real v [.ip?>r' ;i *i r regional M<"'Vell*'? of A 1 ej i< a - York Herald. BEARD IN HISTORY At times Fashionable and Again j Severely Frowned On. ? V I4- i Public Opinion at to the Desirability j of the Facial Appendago Changes Without Soorning Region. The propheta of fashion in England announce that beards ure to b? worn once mom Upon wln.it signs and tokens the predict ion la founded does not appi-ur. It la hardly to be con tended that the beard 1?hb become a U)Qre common object, or that In social Intercourse a now Interest In beards 1h to be observed, but one must not discredit prophets. What the Impulse Is which Inspire^ one century with a desire for beards la as much a mystery as that craving for the razor which mark^ another. No mau knows why tjeardM grew again In Victorian Eng land after two hundred years of shav ing. It Is easy to say that King Ed ward VII set the fashion, but: that only puts the dlftlculty In another manner. We cannot tell why the prince of Wales of Qu^en \ Ictorla a reign should havo chosen to wear what ?>" M'tu hail worn since diaries I. Hut the changes of fashion have been many," even In England, observes llenrl IMckard In the Cincinnati En quirer. According .to the liayoaux tapestry, Edward the Confessor had a beard, but pot Harold. The Normans Who came to England with the Con (jueror were clean-shaven, but It was a new fashion In Normandy. Though a vehement prelate, called bearded men ? "filthy goats ?nd bristly Saracens." there was for four hundred years no dominant fashion in England. Mus taches, beards, and shaven faces were all to be found. Henry V made shav ing the rule until beards came In again with Henry VIII. Hut, left any man la ahymed by that precedent. It must be said that the first defender of the faith was only following ? European fashion sanctioned by I'ope Julius JI and the Emperor Charles V. The Elizabethans wore bearded, and very elaborately, for they cut their beards to all manner of shapes, per fumed them, dyed them, starched them, powdered them. Under the llrsf Stuarts the beard became a chin tuft, Hy the beginning of the Eighteenth century every man was clean shaved. At the end' Of It mustaches and whisk ers were coming in again. ?At first these decorations were military. Every Englishman remembers how dive New cop i bo, who was only a painter, amused t" ? marquis of i<ar!n tosh by wearing mustaches. in the middle ?>f the century lMcUens went ; abroad eleaniy-shavcn and grew him- j self a pair. "They :?re beautiful, beau- j liful he wrote. '?"Without them-, life j Would be a blanl " "'.rge IV shaved . ch?a n. I* ' he ; . ? ?? George Fred eriek M'litf/.. w:-.-? ? *ure, was a I desper:.'" radical, brought a "huge black l ?. :? I" into the house of com mons, where such a thing had not been seen for two centuries,, and timid : folk expected the immediate end of all things. The prince consort let hair grow oh his face, and whiskers became longer and longer; hut even in lSoT people thought It desperately hold of Livingstone to "brave the prejudices ?f ids countrymen" wearing a .mus tache. ami within the last 1<> years a bishop was blamed for wearing a , beard. Who knows what the next j turn <>f fashion may he? I'ntll the . war it seemed that the clean-shaven j nice was likely to l.ecome the rule . <ince more. The war's crop of mus- | viehes *ttll flourishes ami anything | in > happen next -even a new Dun- | i ;v? ? : t r> I Warship Sails Up Amazon. Tho British warship IVIorus, a twin screw, protected. third class cruiser, l drawing *17 f ? ? t of water, recently made >i \o\ai;o of U.I500 miles up flu; Amazon ri\er from I'ara, P.mzll to Iquitos. Peru In f rav?Ts;i?^ the upper reaches, \v 1 1 1 ? ? ! i lire uni halted, if \Ciis thought best to jindior tit night : but tho ship nu't with no accident. got buck to I'ara in good tinio. and literally astonished tho natives ail tho way. It Is s; i ill that an American :in<l an Italian worship, small rlvor bouts, wont up the Amazon yars before that: but no vessel as la rge :is tho I'olorus. >..? far as oan be ascertained, ever before penetrated so far ? to with )?n .**?( h t miles of the I'aclMe roust. and the achievement gave new Impetus to tho hope that It will ho easier to open to commerce and civilization tho rich but IHtle-known Interior <>f ?? vas't con Unont Oapanese Honor Christians, Jnpan in recent jours has triven more and more public recognition to <"*hrist in nity. At the coronation of th?* pr<-'P' emperor several < 'hrisihms v. ? ??I'idod In i lie list of Japanese nl'i oisod honors, soiue of tliein. fll.< I >r Mutoda. hoiwljuast ?t of St i ti s college, ' I* 1 1 K \ o , and Miss T * i n . ? i - ! ? I i | Tine. pal ><f a s< hn..| for girls be;n..'V. prominent as < lw istian Workers ii.ii' ? r xrlcc'ion implied ii n npprov a! <>' i >. ar w>rk N?-\er >n'forr had < hr--- .t:.- .???a so honored 1 \ the throne A Cor genial Role, What I I.ke ; 1 1 ?? ?? . : ; ' ? ! - it>f?>r :s Ms >i ! ! 1 1 \ " ? . iik I * . !< iw 1 1 > I .a ' ! o part 'Ho'si ( i a tire a iiOT'l Irmker" Ti n f ; net the point lie ? ' ? " 1 ?< .??'?1 ? i far ? lia t rt \\ J b s ' ?? . i rsl n l' it ?or ? >.? i I'.innin^hMm A^e I le raid. Turn on the Gas ami fill up your tank with the Ik'sI product of the ivl'im iy. ()ur gasoline haa#biH*n thoroughly tost ed ami has never y* t Um n ruunc| wanting in purity, power and purse-saving. Our oils and gFeajjiji too are the best. Beard's Filling Station v West DeKalb Street Death Sentence Act Signed. Columbia, March 17. ? Persons sen tt moil to death in South Carolina hereafter will not be taken back to the circuit court for resentencing, af ter the suprertie court acts in their case<?, . ?, (iovernor Mctaod today signed an act passed by the legislature provid ing that in capital cases the sentenco shall automatically be carried out on the Fourth Friday after an adverse ^pinion of the supreme court is ren dered. In a riot of movie extras at Los Angeles, Cal., Thursday, started when a pay reduction of $5 to $3 per day was announced, five rioters were sent to hospitals, all suffering from gunshot wounds. Matthew Riddulph, indicted by a New York grand jury on a charge of stealing $500,000 worth of jewelry from a Buffalo society woman in New York several weeks ago has confess ed the crime. ? ^ JIM LUNGARDIA FOB COUGHS AM) COLDS U\ The quicker you can remove J Cough of Cold, 'tip. better. iw seated ones are a menace to the Lungs. If LUNGARDIA is not bet ter and does not act quicker in Coughs and Colds of all kinds, sort throat, difficult breathing, spasmodic Croup, and for the relief of Whoop, ing Cough ? your money back. U*e it to ward off Influenza. Thousands praise LUNGARDIA. For Sale by ZEMP & DePASS 46-1 pd Mrs. Henry W. Eaton, .New York society woman, operates ? silver f ox ^ farm at a handsome profit. fir Burns and hruisesTl lMENTHQLATUMJ Spools and heakJ CAST IRON COLUMNS and DOOR SILLS We have for sale a store front consisting of the fol lowing Cast Iron Columns and Door Sills: Cast Iron Box Columns ? 3 ? 10' 10" long-, Face 12", Depth 12", Thickness 1" 1 ? 10' 10" long, Face Depth 12", Thickness 1" I ? 10' 6" long, Face 12", Depth 12'*, Thickness 1" Door Sills ? 1 ? 7' 5"xl4%" Wide Overall 1?4' 8 1/2 "x 14 %" Wide Overall Can save you from $100.00 to $150.00 on Front. Columbia Supply Go. 823 W. Gervais St. Columbia , S. C. Checking Account is Business Recommendation The best way to learn a person's standing and re liability is to inquire of those with whom they do busi ness. Should someone inquire about the character and reputation of another with whom you transact bus iness, the first question you ask yourself ? and it may be subconsciously ? is, "Does he pay by check 1*' The man who pays by cash may be as prompt and all that, but, somehow, You Think First of the Man Who Pays By Check. The check shows a certain substantial connection and association. Which man would you hire first: The man with a bank account or one without that forethought and care ? Loan & Savings Bank Capital $100,000 STRONCi SAFE CONSERVATIVE FOR SALE Pedigreed Cleveland Big Roll Col ton Seed in any quantities ? F. M. WOOTEN WE ARE SAVING MONEY for thousands of others in cleaning and dyeing Win ter Garments, Carpets, Rugs, Blankets, Comfort?* Curtains, etc. We will be glad to serve you. FOOTER'S DYE WORKS Cleaners-Dyers. Cumberland, Maryland.