University of South Carolina Libraries
- aWienu*an 4 Many new ideas appeatr in this fornml tailored frock for the coming fall and winter In which the vogue for embroidery and that for fringes have been so artfully an18 beautifully iuted. It takes the place of a foratl~ tailored Suit atnd is perhais even 4 more tiiiptalde to m)anIy occaslons than its fIorerUn!! r. The picture tells Its story ; but note the shape of the neck and sleeves, the nhrrow latce vestee an1d strap helit, the ingenious hcintlr.'. of embroidery--they are till important. WELL CLAD FOR PLAY 3 1 ~ , There are coats and coats for little ladles, but the best of themr all for play or school in cool autumn days are those knitted ones that fit her snugly and allow her so much freedom. Here s one in which she may romp as she viwll. AMONG BEADED BLOUSES Here is a headeod bloule avhich will complel tmny an admiring glance wherever it Is wo'rn. F'or tihe theater, dinner patrty or arty other plaice where splendor-iloving WomenQ~ uindertak Ie to look their beust, it is sure to triumpilh. Those two rivanls in beat tiful fabrics *--crepe de4 chine atnd georgettes--liave joinedl forces in this biouise. .imagine it in sapphire bhie crepe de chine wvitht bead~s in rapphire bhe andl~ steel andl~ fallingr Sanes onr the sleeves mae of black georgette similarly beaded. STYLES FOR YOUTH Dlesigners huaveu tkn much(I.ii wt hiought -for the school or col lege girl tis iall, and have- providedl fora hter such enuvi *able things as the (ne-piece frock plc. tured htere. It is madn~e of a dark-col ored suitinag, and simnply timmtaned wi th rules of moire r-ibbion to match. $tL.as of the aterial at the sidles suppor-t the ribbont belt. If one wish~'s to remioudel a last year's f.'ock,. rib. bcu utsed it thtis way wvili give It un entirely new aspect. I. uNUK TN 'a 6LiDPTIME QII to% Reget Affair of Honor in Paris Actu. ally Appears to Have Been Car. fully "Chaperoned." Not long ago a quarrel broke out between a subprefect and the secretary general of the prefecture in i deprt went of the west. Feelitg ran so high that blows were exchanged. I' changed? No, ,not quite. The word Isn't quite exact. If they had really been exchanged, both the enemies might have thrown up the sponge. But there was bestowai of slaps by qne of the functionaries and simple reception without return by the other. That was serious ! Only blood could adequately wash the oll'nded cheek I They secured their witnesses, named the day and bought tht'inlv.s swords. But the prefect uifund out about it. At first he tried to elecit a reconaciliation between tie two foes. Vain effort I Then he tried to use his authority to forbid their light in, :. tJsel'ss threat! They offered hht two heroie resigna tionis to win the right to get them selves kiljed. "Weji, then, hlre your confouindtl thronts cut, if you wtant to!" he cried. "But you salail tssis it the comibat anti l'l hold *yiI respon1silble for the lives of hoifh of tl'm," lie sahl t) tie clhlief clerk of i- pIr'ef'ctuare. "If ty hotly gels hurt I shll dislia rge you!" The chief ch-rkc obeyed withoult at mlurtuutr. Ih. e'intpenronept! the enc'.oun ter wlit a lug swoIrd in his had. andi wla'evt'r it blow seellel Iaiigoer o01s, lie wCurdIeil o'1 the inu'tlderois I weapon. In the end they itnade it ipl, alid the il'i'i'i'e't was1 content.-Fromnn Le Ceie, I'aris. MEN SET IN "HIGH PLACES." Those Only Admirable Who Remain Affable and Generous to Those of Lower Levels. Speaking of the Mount Everest ex pedition, Sir Franeis Younghusband says: "At great heights men get very nervous and irritable. At 16,000 feet they begin to lose patience with one another, and the higher they climb the deeper they hate." There is a moral in that for men saceking high altitudes in our coninuon. human life. May it never he said, of them with truth: "The higher they climb the deeper they hate." It is a line thing to find a man who goes upward to great heights without losing his head, his nervoua equipoise, his self-control. It is an inspiration to us who plod and drudge along at the lower levels to find him gbnerous, amiable, affable, ready to meet all comers and faithful to his friends. On the other hand, It is deplorable to come upon a man who wins his way to eminence of any sort, and in that lofty station,.. Lnstead. of looking to the sky and 'a super'or Power, looks down upon "the common herd' and thinks-and tells-how great he is in comparison with them.-Philadelphia Public Ledger. The Kromargraphe. There ial been invented in Europe a music typewriter called the kromar graphle. With the aid of this instru ment, It is salid, the comp)oser may pro duce a typewritten scroll without the trouble of mnaking the characters by hand. All that he has to do Is to place himselt'f at the pIano and1( give free play to Is creative fancies. Every stroke upon t he keys is registered it regular musical chuaacter upon01 a paper scroll woutmd upon a drumn. The machine op erates through a system of electric coin tacts with the piano keys. 'Te regIs terinig aippairatus, whlieh resemles~0 ana erdliary typ~ewrliter In size, may, in or (der to reniove (discordant soundls, be placed ait a3 dlistancet fr(31n the 1)11no,0 evein in an aidjol inlag room.-4hiristin Science Monitor. Unwritten R). Any soda1 clerk will tell you with disgust of the hiesitiation withI which many113 customters ordetr their dirintks wvhile lhe wvaits itpattiently. That is whiy an1 tiptowni store has little rout lette wheels at each table. Intstead~ of numbers the htand turns to the va rIous ilavors andi speciatlties. "It seemIs to attiract thte young boys anti girls, especially," saidl the manl alger. "They like to spin the whteel to see what to drink. It's 3an uiwrlt ten rule alwatys to carry' out tile order to whtieh the hand1( point1s. Luck is goodh to me whvlen expens1ive speci'al ties are drawn and( bad1(, I suippose, for the fellow (hat pays the hili."-New York Sun. Jazz Raises Rent. Thle agent who wats singing the praisees of' the silmme)~r cottage on the' Michigan shore dwelt with partiemtar emtphatss on1 one0 near a more elaborate wats $5 a3 mlonh mbuor'e than the rest." "iTat's be'cautse y'ou get muiei," he '~3'Mul('?" iasked thet puIzzled client. "\\'ll,"' was514. th aswver, "thet people0 who, 'ownt itilt hot1Ae give weekl''y dantces 'luring the sutil ter. T1hey'3 hitve allm otrih'ira oi3 the1 lawn. You 'iign hte'tar it und 311give'(11 dallee yotirsel f wvith Without Light for a Week. for a week recently owin~g to a strike iiatong I te oztployees of the electric light and jaovec plant. One excep tiont was imadte and thatt wias the iios pittal, which was .'upplie'd with current sufitcer't for thle oper'ation of an~ eec trlc iiactubator in whicey a feeble infant 'vas being raised in artificial heat. :i 7KN "EL. NDERS FIELDS" Poppies Bloom In Kearney, N. 1., in Soil That Was Transported From Beautiful. France. "In Flanders fields the poppies grow," but not only in Flanders fields. Over in the Federal Shipbuihltlig coin pany's yards lb Kearney, N. J., Frenech and Belgian poppies bloom with the same brave colors they showed on the battlefields overseas. Ilow did they get there? Well, that's a long story. Itemember wien our troop ships were speeding over the wters guarded by swift destroyers? And when other vessels were making the trip carrying food and other supplies to the brave armies oversens? Well, no troops were homeward bound in those days, but the vessels did not come back with empty holds. Instead as ballast they used soil from Belgium and. 'rattee. What to (i) with this ballast when the ships touched New Tork was it problenm until oflil(itls of the shipiuild ing concer't in Kearney tasked for the soil for fi.lItag in I tirinses. As at result [not'e tIan 100 burg. liaIs were Iranls fe'tecI fromn traInsports <eckt'i in 110 bokeil atl carrit'u to tIe yards, wht'e the soil was tiset to till It Sort of trench c:ltsed by 1 it' rt'aioval of i pipe line. And there the { ophies have been itlIotlllil' for it(>'e tI tall a yeit'r 11i)to t-lc&s, except now a1ad theti by a ai''ss lug ship w orkt'r. '1'Ley have t'ourislieu In thei' f ra:iiilslanted 10110e perhttips be (Ztit lis ev t t tre usedi to treli'ah lifte. nternixtt i witi tc blool-rotl popphys ar 1-'re l" la izises, their petals bitinter than the Aine'i(')in Valriety, and11( with neveral blossotuis growing from each stein. Probahly these newcomers would still be tnnotieed if the other day Some one hadin't stopped the young aon of the shipyard's chief of police to ask where he picked his scarlet nosegn.. "These?" remarked the boy, holding the flowers out for observation. "Oh, these - are Belgian poppies that grow wild down in my father's yards. Want to get some? I'll show you." STATEMNT OF Till ')N;T)1'1'!ON 0 The Pickens Bank twaItted at Plickens. S. ('.. at the c:ose of bust ne-S Sept (i01I.a loans ind diiscon uts. . .... . .... .... :...4 1 Overdraft' .. .L(~.v o ill t e ks o w n e I y b a l l:... . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ittnking hmouse g:~iH Other real estate owe~i ..................'t Due ftot hanks an bankers ..... .. . -2_.t6t8 Currency .... .... ......... ..... .00. Gold . ..... ..................... Sit':er and other minor co1in . . ..0u) Ch. k anti i ;sh items . . .... .. it) Ecxenangeai for the t:tearing lou0e . 1. n Other Resoureek, Itlatuit ...... .. !4 0) TIotatl .... .. -- - .---- ... .. .. CN >~3 . l Capital stock nttui in. .. .... ... $ 10..- .00 Surpiass ttnid..... .................. Univide d prolits, less ,uirreut ex penses id taxes paid ...... ....... .0one i)ue to banks atI1 itinkers . .. . 1/10.02 Dlvidends unpatid.................... Ind iviiual teposits 1u bject to Cheek ........ .... .... 5,( ":7-1 ( 9avinags deposits...... .. .... t~{. i)emnt Ci(erltijlentes or D~eposuit.... ..........ile of Deposi'..j'........tI1. Slti O tolliIdl eits.t State of southi ct'a oi 141 te itIi :k i~~tit Coun lt. y~,6z or i1 aeust. ileorenieenie F tnkMc~ll, vic Y eit ent ttittof the above-nmed ban wof hen d mLoa:t ti a trueI cot': ion '.a te rtt of s i t sw (awr to am . u..r....h.. re....ti....t day'rat~ fete 931 \\~ Coa. ..\...ilti 'iY t~xtilitlgs fr te otaIry 14hh fr s 0 -ap til ltok Rii. it i rec......trs.'N t StuiatementI of. t Codtonoh 1.'n .s;.tr. i 19- r1 Overdiffte s .. h-: o,;. tFurn iture4 a i'ix'u . G.... ... . .*s. Slilve and ioVCuterI IiO toin tti... :tin 10 4t1x. tnles f1Io tet Clering ~ '4, tiu ert' I Cait al Seock a i- -. .--. . . t'1> I0 00T Umtavde P oIt' . '.RE", nren Seasonable I Our Store is chock ful county people want at thi; they are all new goods frE use. Look through our s1 then you will have no regi We are showing the lat< will take pleasure in show We handle the following of goods for men: Arrow Shoes, Stetson and Schot E-Z, Ivory and Paris Gart Make our store your hea T. L. Bens PICKENS otve IStruci whenyou Your taste have the flavor perfectly blern mild. And there' TASTE. We put the i Camels are as g and lifelong kr ~ j cigarette. That's why CIGARETT: .II Verchaudise I of goods that Pickens season of the year, and sh and crisp for autum 'ock before you buy and ets. Est millinery creations and ing the ladies this line. nationallly known brands Brand Shirts, Florsheim )le Hats, Arrow Collars, ors, Knit Ties. dquarters court week. on & Co. A'tS. C . it Right Light a CAM El will tell you that! For Camels gnd fragrance of choicest tob'accos, Led. They're smooth and mellow s NO CIGARETTY AFTER itmost quality into this one brand'. :ood as it's possible for skill, money towledge of fine tobaccos to make a Camels are THE QUALITY