University of South Carolina Libraries
i|Victor I Records! ? : I FOR NOVEMBER i t * T t * 4*4 RED SK A I. UK( 'ORDS 4 X Noctuino in K Mai (Chopin I'opjx-r) Viol(in t '.\>> Mablo ( a&uls ] V Prelude (< Jiopin-Sievek mg) \ :'?!ii/V'llu I'ahlo Casals ^ <A> Ai Dawning (Madman-Ritjaland ) Violin Fritz Kreislei 4 JT Arxlanlino-?( Lemare-Suengei ) Violin Frit'/. Kreislei' J No Night Then* --{Clements I). tr.U- > Marion Taliey < ?2* In the Garden ((I. Austin Mi'?-) Marion Taliey < & STANDARD, VOCAL ANl) lNS'TRLMKN TAL RECORDS '4 J Neat it My God to Thee ?( Adam.--Mhsmij ) Grand Organ ' Mark Andrews ?; 4*4 Abide With Me (Lyte-Monk) (irand Organ Mark Andrews 4 X Cavaileria Rustnana?Intermezzo (Mam-ngni) J Victor Coneerl Orchestra ^ Tales of Hoffman Barcarolle (Offenbach) 4 ^4 Victor Coneerl Orchestra < X Hawaiian Walt Medley Hawaiian Guitars * Frank Feraia .John K. I'aaluhi < 4*4 Kilima Waltz Hawaiian Guitar- . 4 J Frank Ferara John K. I'aaluhi * For My Sweetheart . . Gene Austin < ?? Me T 00 . . . . . Gene Austin 4 J'retty Little Dear Frank Crumit < Get Away Old Man, Get Away Frank Crumit ^ The Mirth of the lJluesr?Fox Trot with vocal chorus ? 4*4 Maul Whiteman and His Orchestra 4 4 Countess Maritza -Fox Trot < Maul Whiteman and His Orchestra < J* Mreeious Fox Trot- with vocal chorus 4 J4 Maul Whitman and His Orchestra \ Moonlight on the Ganges Fox Trot?with vocal chorus Maul Whitman and His Orchestra V 4*4 Ting-a-Ling Waltz (Waltz of the Hells)?with vocal chorus.. 4 J Waring's f'ennsylvanians < .Sleepy Head ?Waltz?with voca! chorus , 4*4 Waring's Pennsylvanians 4 X I'm Walking Around in Circles Fox Trot J Art Landry and His Orchestra ?? For My Sweetheart Fox Trot with vocal refrain 4 J*4 Art Landry and His Orchestra < Dorothy ?Fox. Trot with vocal refrain f*. a*-* Jim Garber and His Orchestra 4*4 There's a li'iii* Kidge in My Heart, Virginia Fox Trot 4 X Jim Garber and 11 is Orchestra ' The Hells of St. Mary's Furbcr-Adams Frances Ald.i 4*4 Fiver of Thee I'm Fondly Dreaming?( Linles-Hall) 4 4 Frances A Ida Silver Thread- Among the (1 >ld ( Hex ford-1 tanks) ^ John McConnack 4 ^ 4 When \ < >11 .1 1 I \\ ef' N oUllg Maggie ( J oh lis oil -1 III 11 e I" fie hi ) . . . . f John McCormack Valencia?i-FFrym- (Hrrrriex MadiFfm ( Arr; Bourdon) In Spanish . . < 4*4 Tito Schipa 4 X A ma p.?la --(Poppy) (l.acallc) In Spanish .. . Tito Schipa In the Da\- Gene My (From "('-aintcss XJantza") (Kalman).... * 4^4 \'ictor Salon Orchestra 4 I .on e Fycrlas: :tig ( Cu-hing-F r i ml) f Victor Salon Orchestra * 4* F\a t.ir.g ( hime> (linns,- ()p. "J(J1 > \'io!in. Flute and Harp with 4 ?? V ibraphone Neapolitan Trio v 4 W oodland F hms?( W'unan) Violin, F lute, and Harp Neapolitan Tn ? 4*4 Minuet in G ( Maderewski-Wright i Victor Concert Orchestr 1 4 X Amaiyllis (Air Louis XIII) ((! hy s-Sere)ly) \ ictor Concert Orchestra * *?4* Id! tin or - (Deppeti) N'ictor Salon Orchestra 4 Out of the Dusk to You- (Lee) Victor Salon Orchestra X There's a tNevv Star 111 Heaven To-N igh ? ( Rudolph Valentino) ? a* With violin and guitar . . v Vernon Dalhart- < 4% An Old Fashioned Micture-with \ iolin and guitar?Vernon Dalhart ^ X 1 Can't Get Over a Girl Like You with piano Aileon Stanley ?Billv Murray K % Who Would n't with piano < Aileen Stanley?Hilly Murray f There's Nd> <>t Lik Mother ; > Me w.tli plan 1 . Tietge Sisters Mv Wild In.-a K..?e with piano Tietge Sisters 4 4,^4 DANCE RECOUDS ? X Trudy F'ox Trot with vocal refrain Maul Whiteman and His Orchestra < When the Red, Mod Rohm ('rtnies Hob, Hob, Bobbin' Along? 4 4 F'ox Trot with vocal refrain. Maul Whiteman and His Orchestra * Wh> Do Ya Roil Those ldyes?Medley F'ox Trot ? with vocal ref. 4 ^4 ' Maul Whiteman and His Orchestra ^ ^ Me Too?F'ox Trot with vocal chorus . Maul Whiteman and His Orchestra < 4^4 Mary Lou Fox Trot?with vocal refrain j X H. F\ Goodfich Silvertown Cord Orchestra Metrushka -Fox Trot-?with vocal refrain ^ 4?? B. F. Goodfich Silvertown Cord Orchestra 4 Moonlight and Roses?Fox Trot ?with vocal refrain Waring's Pennsylvanians * Let Me Call Y ou Sweetheart?Waltz?^with vocal refrain 4 Nat Shilkret and the Victor Orchestra 4 ("hick, Chick, Chick, Chick, Chicken!?Fox Trot with vocal refrain *8* Ted Weems and His Orchestra < ^4 Ain't We Carry in' On?Fox Troj with vocal refrain < Jan Garber and His Orchestra % Turkish Towel?Fox Trot with vocal chorus i Johnny Hamp's Kentucky Serenaders 4 . J4 Monte Carlo Joys?Fox Trot Gus C. Eld wards and His Orches. ^ That's My Girl?Fox Trot with vocal chorus Ted Weems and His Orchestra < 4% Somebody N Losin' Susan?F'ox Trot i ^ Mhilip Spitalny and His Orchestra Her Beau- Are Only Rainbows?-Fox Trot with vocal refrain.... * a ring's Pennsylvanian-. 4 ^4 Bol-hevik F'ox Trot with vocal chorus X Waring's Pennsylvanians I Wish You Were Jealous of Me ?Waltz?with vocal refrain.... 4 ^4 Nat Shilkret and the Victor Orchestra 4 X Stars Are the Windows of Heaven?Waltz with vocal refrain.... Nat Shilkret and the Victor Orchestra < While tho Years Go Drifting By F'ox Trot?with vocal refrain. . < <? Art. Landry and. His Orchestar X That'- An "a belie -F'i^x Trot * 4* Art Landry and His Orchestar < J4 I'll F"'y t > Haw.iii 1 ov Trot with vocal chorus J Gu- Fid wards and Hi- Oichestri * ^4^ Cryin' to: M > >:, F'ox Trot with vocal chorus < .4*4 Gus ( . Ed wards and His Orchestra X I-a Pnloma F'ox i r .t _ Nat Shilkret and the Victor Orchestra V () Sole M io ai;/ v ,ih >?><a' retain * <%+ Nat Shilkret and the Victor Or?h,? X " ] I Camden Furniture Co. 8, t ? SOUTHERN ENG'M S IN CO!.OK SET NEW STYLE GREEN 1 f I--... ..J STRIPING LETTERS 6NUMBERS _ GOL.D LEAF [ GREEhf | X n I I. owm. ttf:iiofornc New f-'aubcr Locomotive oi Southern Hailway System, Painted 0 recti and Gold. I Atlanta. (Jr. Much attention haw ? ' < < n attracted by the brightly painted if h corpot I v tj which Llio Southern liailv. ay System putting In service to null its fast through passenger trains. Mspladng the sombre black which has been the unlvei * garb for 1<>-I omotlves on American railways in j ocent yeura. the Southern has adopt ^ v <1 a color scheme of Virginia green 4 ind gold for its passenger engines and T wonty - three of the heavy Pacific ? \pe are now coining from the Kichr if mond plant of the American Locomo*4 ivo Company, dressed in the ne\v k olors. They are a part of an order -if 11.'5 locomotives which was gWon if j v the Southern in March. ? The new engines have tenders, k dis and other projections above the ? -dler Jackets; drivers and truck heels painted a rich Virginia ^reen . ith gold leaf striping yhlTboUer' ? jackets. driving rous and other running parts are highly polished. adding greatly to the attractive appeal ance of the locornot i vch The photography showB No 1 9tj. the first of the new engines to reach Atlanta, ready to pull No. 38. the "Crescent Limited." fro hi Allanlu to Spencer, N. C. Four of the engines which will handle Nob. 37 and 38 between Atlanta and WaHhiiiRton have their tenders lettered "Crescent Limited" and three to run between Chattanooga, Birmingham and Meridian have their tenders lettered "Queen and Crescent Limited." A distinctive feature of these new locomotives is the size of the tenders which have capacity for 11.000 gallons of water and 16 tons ot coal 1 ''The tenders have twelve wheels, being mounted on two six-wheel trucks, and were designed to eliminate stops for water 'i'lioy run through between At!utitit itn d Greenville wltliotif jtopping for oPhrs coal or water. I.Ikewise iro .goal or water is taken b?* ' twoeii Greenville and Spencer. N. ('. j where engines are changed. The en .nine pr.t on at Spencer runs to {j-Jon I roe. \'a.. without taking on cot 1 oi I water, and then r :na to Washington : I>. C Two t iiallies thus make the run of t>37 miles let ween Atlanta ant: W a.1 hinKton, each of them stoppln" j only once .or eon! and water i I.Ike other heav., Pacific type en , Kini'8 now in servit o on the Southern, jthe new engines lpive 73-inch driving | wheels, cylinders of 2t-lm h (JiametcT and 2k-inch strop. and such modern [ improvi no :rs as 'Mechanical stokers i pott ei re voi" e nee is feed water hoy' |ors. su|jcrhcato,*H and hriek arches Tlte engines alone weigh 3 >0.000 pounds a v..I tin ciders when loaded j 25fi 3oi? pounds WORK OF SCHOLAR OF THIRD CENTURY? Michigan University Prizes Bible Fragment. An ancient scholar, prohahly the leader of a church, was writer or copyist of the earliest fragments of the text of the Bible known to exist, says I)r. Henry A. Sanders of the classical language department of the ! I tilversitw of Michigan, i I?octor Sanders litis spent two years | working over the )>it of browned | papyrus, the most cherished item of j the large collection of papyri in the j I "Diversity ?.f Michigan. "It is written in the Creek of the common people," says Doctor Sanders, "thus dist inguishing it from the 'de luxe city c<liiions' of th* complete Bibles of Antioch, Alexandria and i aeserea, in which the fine penumuship of the clerk or copyist was the observed characteristic." It has at the end of each phrase a little mark I i above the line. This Doctor Sanders ; <*onstnies to have been for the direc- i tion of tlie readers fn tlie church to! show the phrasing. It is tlie only | punct uat ion observed. I be date of writing of the fragment is placed in the Third century or tlie century preceding that in which tli<# city editions were copied. 1 he text is a pari of Matthew, telling of the Last Supper and the betrayal of Jesus Christ. It came into tlie possession of the university two years ago through Hie activities of Its Near Last research organization. The first writing of the Bible was In the Greek of the common people, Doctor Sanders declares, ns It was among the common people speaking , and writing Greek that the faith had Its first followers. It was written from 50 to 90 A. D., nnd he places the time of collection at before 158 A. D. 1 Later the faith appealed to the educated Greeks and the copying of the men of eduoatlop/lSln a better handwriting and vrfth corrections In the language. The late Third or Fourth I ^?fUry the copying of the Bible and establishes correctness of what Doctor Sanders calls tlie "de | luxe city editions." It In from these copies that the King James and other of the Bible have been made up^ he says. "ih general," says Doctor Sanders, the earliest known fragment of tfflb Bible establishes the correctness of the earliest translations Into the old Lat. in and the old Syrian languages as ! this earliest hit of scholastic Greelt j differs less in meaning with them than with tlie Fourth fentury copyings into Greek." His Toe Slumbers On A strange tiling happened on my vacation." a North end niun remarked US he Stamped on his right foot. "You see I drove my cur l.SO.l miles altotether. During that time I had to keep my foot on the accelerator I noticed after tlie first day. that the Croat toe of m\ right foot developed the sensations of being asleep." Weil, that kept up from day to day. nnd vvhri: I h,id T| rest for a Couple of days before starling buck It made no .dif fere ore. thai Toe remained asleep. ? ommg hack the snnic conditions pre vailed .mil when 1 walked about anv pin* e I had little or no feeling liv that Joe. Since my return the condition has boon Virtually unchanged. Only V *Tf days has tlie toe , Ww ",CB" W"k'"K - "-'roll ~ ~ ' I'M ?' I AWARD OF THE SOUTHERN j:I RAILWAY'S CORN CUP IN 1925: ? j Selecting tne Prize Winning Corn in the 1926 Contest for the Corn Cup offered J by the Southern Railway System. ^ i, Atlanta, Ga.?The handsome sliver * cup offered by the Southern Rall: waj' System to iho grower of the best ! ten oars of corn, produced In eight ^ states of the South and exhibited at ^ I ertaln state and district fairs, was f!Yst competed for In 1925. It was y* shown at i.iost of the fairs within A+ the territory and did much to stim^ ulate competition among the corn growers of the South, y The ten oar exhibit adjudged to be A> the best shown at each fair was put fa up In a sealed package by the officials of the fair and forwarded to y the General Agricultural Agent, l? Southern Railway* System. Atlanta with a letter certifying the name ? and postofflce address of the grower and exhibitor of the corn and the ^ county In which It was grown. TwenA> ty-seven lots of corn which had won X first prizes a*, the fairs were forwardT ed to Atlanta. / y At thq invitation of Southern RailAs way System. Mr. John R. Hutcheson; ^ Director of Agricultural Extension. ^ Blacksburg, Va.; NVr. E. B. Ferris, Dly rector of the South Mississippi Rranch A> Experiment Station. Poplarvllle. Miss., fa i and Mr C. A. Cobb. Editor of the ! Southern Ituraltst, Atlanta. Ga . met V ! In Atlanta on December 7 to select! y* the best one of the twenty-seven lots js of corn and award the cup. Each ten+ ear exhibit was given nr number and ^ the Judges had no mea^is of knowing y where It w-as grown or by whom It had been exhibited. fa It Is doubtful whether so many unlJ formly good exhibits of corn had ever j y before been rotten together in the South All > f them were good, hut,! ^ after carefuH|( coin** over each exX hibit end scoring t: or. the schedule y of poiHiw--4Uivornl!-.g iho award the y judges unanimously agtvod as to one ^ ' to which the cup 'hould he awarded i X '! R was then found thai the* xhiW* I hn 1 been grown by William Patton y M !? <' a 16-ver.r-old Corn Club boy. At f 1 ortarln. Newberry County. South X '*?! ? Una. art. had '^aen awa-ded the n* f.i we> h r ? -cl'na Sfic V , \ l- u* gi; -.warded th> c :p for 1325. In * f ?. - J< j..L .: r.? awarding the prize the judges suld "The committee of Judges feel that the exhibits assembled in the Southern Railway Corn Contest were very creditable throughout and that tht Southern Railway Uself, especially ti Development Service, is to bo heartily commended for this forward step 11 has taken toward the development ol Southern agriculture. "Wb feel that offering the trophy is distinctly in the interest of the farmers generally throughout the entire southeastern section of the country and are of the opinion that the contest la worthy of the continued support of the farmer* and agricultural leaders'In the houth. We ^Bre please j to find- bo large a number-of exhibits representing so wide a territory, Indicating the wide-spread interest In the contest." Th^ cup was formally presented to William Prtton Roland J in the Gov 4 ernor's office at Columbia on December 23, by Governor Thomas O. McLeod of South Carolina. In conformity with a concurrent resolution adopted by the legislature of South Carolina, the cup was put on exhibition in the lobby of the State House. It was shown at Charleston. S. C.. during the meeting of the National Foreign Trade Convention in that city. April 2 h .1"> and was taken to Washingtt n. D. C . and shown J during the nieetir of the i'nlted I States Chamber <>: Commerce. Ma ! 11-1T. 19?' vl; ro p attracted nv oh I attention My invitation, young MoI land ook the cap to 'he V.'hita ITo.tao. 'where he was congratula td by Pvt s | ident Coolidge and where photograph" of the president, tcup winner 'ud the cup were made on the uh!t" House lawn It is interesting to not. :1m: " k,corn whU;h wm tht? pr(?.> in l:i2" Tint n vartRFv origins' d n C.^oreli and improved h\ Mr T .M Villi* Cnun y Agent Newberry ( o.nr South Carolina, a coal e\p*-rt in Seed s?lec loo and jjrodr.rtjon. The varipf is a sin?-.red wh.te dent typ^ # f fair tnifmmity and good quality. Tt la a hr vy pr?d":ecr. | Mi? America\ Beauties from all sections c* the United States participated in the annual Atlantic City Pageant. Here we have Miss Norma Smallwood, representing Tulsa, Okla,, upon whom the judges bestowed the coveted title of "Miss America ft)2G." Wild Geeae Going South. Workmen on the new highway bridge over Catawba, river near the city report numerous droves of wild geese passing over on their way to Southern climes for the winter. A drove of the wanderers was also seen passing over Lancaster one day this? week. The migration of the geese to the South, it is claimed, is a forerunner of a cold winter, and as a consequence and in conjunction with the arrival of a little cooler weather, wood and coal dealers are enjoying ' a brisk trade in their lines.?Lancaster News. Women Leap to Deaths, New York, Oct. 27.?Mrs. Berthi Washauer, 52, and her 32 year old daughter, Dorothy, are dead today a* _ result of leaping from the 11th story of the Martha Washington Hotel for women. The 2 women registered under assumed names a half hour before carrying out their suicide pact. They were identified through ' a doctor's card on which was -written, "brother knows all about the money.' Beacon lights to guide airplanes on mail routes are proving a boon to stockmen who have been worrietr by the depredations . of coyotes and wolves. The animals keep a long distance off . - (^oritBomw your NeighWs paper < ' Own jour Own! I : " i . Friend of Forest , ' ? ' ' - . ^ : A. W. Laird of P?tlatdL is president of Wsrtsrn FOtJiwJ , Conservation Assn., and btadj committee that called on P*?*?*?} " Coolidg* to diecqse the proMam dm saving our treat naUonal^woo^