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'«FOR * Candidate ttPRESENTATIVES > >»< t »»♦»»♦♦ He favors the taxation of stocks, bonds and other securities oo which no taxes are now collected. If elected he will seek the advice of the best minds in the county tad State in an effort to solve the difficult and oppressive problems oi today. He will use the same business methods in county affairs that have proven so successful in his private business. He believes that with good laws justly and wisely executed, ath industry and economic living, South Carolina and Barnwell County will come into their own.. >44 » VOTE FOR PROGRESS AND ^ERNMENT 26th Will Be Appreciated n» «f tin uo<—< nutM rWfNirUMt of AarinUnirt hoi rmlt- ed In tnuMfonolmi n 111 loon of tana of naata farm product* Into cold caah for growera. Only recently, a now nan for cotton need meal, commonly nned for cattle feed, wa* dlacorered. UesultH of nutrition ftudles on cot tonseed meal revealed the product was rich In vitamins Q and B and excellent for use in treating pellagra, a serious nutritional disease especially prevalent in thfe South. In this re spect, cottonseed meal was revealed ns a rival of yeast, which is the rich est known natural source of these two vitamins. Researches into uses of by-product* of corn and cotton have been specially fruitful of results. It has long been acientiticnlly practicable to make high quality paper from com stalks, and at least one plant has been formed for commercial manufacture of such paper. The surpttis of timl*er for paper, how ever, has retarded growth of this new Industry. Development of the rayon Industry is a monument to the chemical labora tory's research Is this field. Rayoo Is made from the cellulose of cotton |In ters, com stalks, etc., and com stalks are also being widely used to stake wsllbosrd and Insulating material. An recent years baaed on the of Inonlattnc boned from the of the sugar ran aa waste palp af tha | fast Dr W. W Wkkmm. _ af the tecbaiml aorttaa af tbs smnt. battmaa that Mpsl^ from Urn own pAsaf. may aams day jrtetd aa staay aapaetaat pru< “* aaetb as sanA tv. Haetf a by already base baai and wady af its at a af taw sat mnad «a a tad* ■ ir Fiat Early PaWtia. TriU Wonkieal Daga aaa tbaa SjOQO yaara bafora Joabaa (abaat MOO B. C) tbana ilvad a trtba In tbs soatb af Pa I sal Ins who worshiped dogs, stated Prof. Mr William niadera Petrie, la the coaraa of a lecture at Ualveralty college, Lon don. u describing the relic* of tha earl lost human community known Id historians, Professor Petrie said: ‘These are the earliest people af which we know, and a very curiona tiling la the remarkable number of lit tle model dogs which have been found in their tombs. The presence of that tribe helped us to understand the movements of Joshua after the Exo dus.” A great deal of jewelry bad been found. Prehistoric babies evidently needed rattles, be said, for several had been found this year. Water bot tles bad also been discovered in tombs. Woman Angler Lands 11 Full, All at Same Ham Newton, N. J —Throwing her Una in Caw’s pond bars, Mrs. William Kinney of Washington. V. A, fait n •light tag. She wound Is Urn Una aafl tosad the pall Wo faand ft is has