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TWO CROP SYSTEMS ADVISED FOR 1915 New Bulletin Offers Tenant Farner and Two-Horse Farmer of State a "Way Out" Clemson College, March 15.-Prac tical advice, for the small tenant farm er and for the farmer who works from two to five horses is contained in Bul letin F, the latest bulletin in the Farm ers' Reading Course of the extension division of Clemson College. In addi tion to the two papers discussing these crops systems for 1915 Is a paier on the South Carloina live stock problem by one of the most successful prac tical breeders of live stock in the state. - Tihe bulletin is entitled "Demon stration Papers" and contains three papers that were read at the semi annual meeting of Demonstration Agents recentfly held at Clemson col lege. The first of the three is entitled "The Bebf Cattle Problem in South Carolina" and is by L. I. Gulon, of Dugoff, Kershaw County. Mr. Gulon is known throughout the state as one of the most successful beef cat Ile breeders in South Carolina. He has treated his subject briefly and simply and what he has to say will be we'll worth the attention of any farm er who is thinking of trying his hand at feeding cattle for -beef -produc-tion. "A 1915 Crop System for Small Tenant Farmers" is the title of th( second paper in the bulletin. It is by J. Frank Williams, demonstratior Agent for Sunter County, and its con tents are explained by its name. "The Two to Fifty-Horse Farmer Ir 1915" is the third contribution and ih by T. M. Mills, demonstration agen for Newiberry County. Mr. Mills goe thorough into eight separate ifarn practices which Clemson College anl the demonstration work are urginj South Carolina farmers to carry ou this year. All these papers are brief and ver; simply written. The bulletin also con tains a complete directory of the en tention and demonstration specialist at Olenson Obllege and of the count and district agents. Bulletin F is fre and niay he obtained from any count agent in the statc or by writing to Shl n ey S. Rittenberg, Clemson College. New line wall paper just in, new an prtty patterns, prices f-onm oc Ic S. M. & E. IT. WI LKES & CO. Why Is It? , "Of the G7,000 varieties of thing about women's ways that it it imtpo! ibl for a mni to uderst]ind," sal a quiet observer, "I will mention o1 one. Why is it that women butto on their coats the other way fr.i the way in which a ma n buttons o lis coat? A man's coat Is so mnad that the buttons com'. on the left si: or half of the garment, when it buttoned. In a woman's coat, the bu tons come on the right side. Whe ai woman puts en a man's overca the first thing she says is always thim 'Why. it buttons on the wrong way Of course, the man thinks thmat ti: woman's way is wrong, and the on1 thing that is certain about it. is tb: the man's coat buttons on one si< iindl the woman's on the other." Newv York Courier b'ittsbu gh Dl patch. See outr Ride Walk 'Sulkeys. s(eer styles to select from, pic'ies fr'om $1. S. .\. & E. I1. WIIE ES & CO. IHas Had Many Rulers. The name Roumnania comies .do Trom the (lays of Roman rule, ti country previous to thtat being ovc run by semitnmdc Grotae and D~ olans, Its vicissitudes, transform tions, malformations and reformatioi have been innumerable, being rul< by this and that exploiting nation, at it only reached its present indepen: -once after the Russo-Tatrk war 1877, and with the .settlement f that time of the "Eastern question" l the congress of Berlin in 1878, Rc -mania became in area and impuls the little kingdomn of today, Greatest of AII s Humanm Blessinj 'The moaht wonderful thing in the we is love expresed In the helplesa infa And among thi * expectant mothers the , well kamo "Mother's Friend.' SThis Is an exter; application to ens the abdominal mi eh to becomo m turally with ' hdue pain from :straIn upon cord 01and ligaments. Applied as direce 1:pon those muts< *Involved it sotes to i'no network inerves wlit whic .:t the muscles supplIed. ;Xhus a g at share of the pa so much areaded miay bo av'oldod and perlodl of expectancy passed in domfor There ts 11o question but what si relief has -a snarked infhuence upon general health of the mother. Ina a little book sent by mall much t ful InformatIon is given to inexperlen methers. It tells how to use "Moth Friend" and how to ovoid catting brea It has been prepared in our haborat for' over forty'years and is known fat ably to most druggists everywhere. 2.-lyottle to-day and write for b'ook Bradnleid flegulator Ce., 309 1.amar il Atlanta, (la. Do sure to askc for ignoran0* of the Bible. One thingis tundentable-knowledge of the. Bible Is far less general now than it was in the days ofiny child. hood. That amuzihg familiarity with the' sacred' book withi, which Joh.n Richard Green credits the people of England in the ,days of the common wealth had persisted until my boy hood among the sons of the Puritans and the Scotch irish m New tijgland and In New York state. It was not universal, but it was general. The kind of tests by which college stu dents and students in secondary schools are frequently In these daya made to display an ignorance of the Bible which is astounding could hauve been passed with creditsby the majority of country boys and girls sixty or seventy years ago. But this thorough acquaintance of earlier generations with the Bible was not due to. any considerable ex tent to the public school. All that we learned. about the Bible in school would have added very little to our store spf religious knowledge. It was in our churches and our Sunday schools, but chiefly in our homes. that most of us learned what we knew about the Bible.-Washington Gladden In Atlantic. "Literary Style." A high abhool student writes this of. fiee inquiring what constitutes a "liter ary style." Without trying to answer this interesting and difficult question. two remarks may be cited hat throw light on it. When Charlps James Fox was told that his speech read well he retorted, "Then it was a bad speech." "When one of my congregation would tell me at the end of a service that the ser mon was One," Dr. Lyman Abbott has said. "I knew I had made a failure." In general the style is good when it fits the thought so well that the style itself does not attract attention. As soon as you begin to be copsclous of the style-unless of course you are reading with that end In view-you may be pretty sure It's bad style Style is something like clothes or fur niture. The well dressed man is the I man whose clothes do not attract at tentlon. The well furnished room is the one you go out of satisfied. but unable to describe the furniture.-Kan sas City Star. Short and dharp Justlee. It was short and sharp justice that was meted out to the emmunistq in the Parls of the seventies. Sir Willin m n Butler in "An Autobiography" tells of v a visit to the prison of La Roquetto: "We were shown into a small court yard by a young naval lioutenant. who coolly explained to us the processes of the trhil and execution of the cominun ists. 'We st rip their right shoulders.' lie said. 'If the skin of the neck atnd shoulders shows the dark mark pro duced by the kick of the ehn-sepot rifle the court pronounces the single word "classe:" if there Is no mark of s discoloration on the shonkler tle presi dent 'says "pasmse" and the man is re n leased. Those to whoml) "('htsse" is said Y are shot. One hundred and Iifty were a shot .at daybreak this norning in this n courtyard.'" e Folks' Good Opinion. Few persons (10 not value the good opinion or others. I'uliniag (own the t- character or some otie else 14 not the n way to bu1 III) your own; the ruin t of another does not inean yoitr build ing upi. Theriie tire somei who i apeair to tinik anlother'as piossessionis somte 0 thing takent fromi themselves. This is Y a mnista ke. To ipoiut out ani error in Lt another's (barnecter It is not to pirove' 1e a corresponding virtuae in one's ownu. -Let your chief aimi tie to mrnke vour s- self wor'thy ot the goodi op~inionl o others. ilelittling them is a plIn acknowledgment of .a conscious fautfi al of your own. The way to win the good 10 o'pinion of others is to be' worthy of It. if you arp you will not need to call at tention to It.-MIlwaukee Journal. Racket or Raquette. 'n When you use the racket in playing to tennis yotu do not stop to tinik what r- It mena and how difficult it hais been a- to trace the word. Some thotught that a- it was so called because of theo noise is made by the bali striking it, but this ad is impossible. The real origin is from ad the French raquette, the palm of the d.- hand, which was originally used in rf the game before the racket was in >r vented. It's all very simple when you )y know.--Ixchange. 05 Cured by Buggestlon. "And you say that Jorikins was cured - of an extremely bad case of insomnia by suggestIon?" "Yes, purely by suggestion. Hisa Swife suggested that since he could not sleep he might as well sit up and amuse the baby. it worked like a ldcharm." se fo * All Through. 1s "Your friend appears to think that( R life has nothing more to teach him." taa "Yes; he seems to imnagine he is the ble only living alumnus of the school of ex % perience."--Seatthe Post-intelligencer,. and - >Ut As He Osw it. the Wife-Please hurry up. Hlaven't you ~ les ever buttoned a dress behInd before'? C of Huabby-No; you never had a dress rethat buttoned before behind.-Life. v tho C . * ChIna's Jean of Are ach Chins bad 'her Joan of Are. Tradi t~tion tells' of a maiden, Mou Len, who. so..' In the garb of a man, led the armies cod of the empire to victory. 3r's sts, ory Anoient Earrings. 'or- The great Jtivenal is authority for the statement ,tbai earrings wore wvorn g~., by all the males resIdIng in the iaai 'You I Gran FRIE We i spection nery an4 and qua of distin charm t< OUR ( your inspect here and on EVER) ing with new inspection o Ribbons, Dr SW GB! CALOM[llS UI SHOCl(S Y aomel Sickens? Don't Los Liver and Bowels with Ug)il C'alomel makes you sick. It'i rrblel Take a dose of the danger. us drug tonight and tomorrow ye' hSy lose a day's work.. Calomel ls mercury or quicksllvet bch causes necrosis of the 'bones alomel, when it comes into contac dth sour bile crashes ii.to it, break ig it up. This is when you feed tha ful nausea and cramnping.,, If yo1 e luaggish and "all knocked out", 1 or liver is torpid and bowels con tipated or you have headache, dizzi B, coated tongue,s i betth is be harmless D~odsotn's Iver* Tone tc here.'s my garentee-Go to an kre Cor to Atte IS!p : Spri lAY, MAI will have i a beautifi I Headgea Lity and wi ction that ) every HE :OAT SUIT E ion. All that if Friday we ask DEPARTME? v Spring Good f our Ladies' ar ess Goods and' 'ITZER LAURE IRIBlt! iT ie a Day's Work! Clean you "Dodson's Liver Tonic." 13odson'a Liver Ione.5 Tce a bo1)0 fu- an i i adoaesn't str iten 1 vigorous I want you to o back to LI store and get your m icy. Dodson calinel becauise it is al liver 1me cine; e-*Ircly vegela le, therefore fti tI avet01 omake yo Hik.u I dson's Liver 'Tone will put yol Ssluggish liver to ivo>d cai o teot an i in g y.ou fel yisrabl :veguaran ee it' ttl o f o ao 1 r n wil kci ortie d ai Sgione nnel they like lits Pleasant tas -dially I1 nd Our Rg Op RCH 19, eady for 1l display, .r of corre th a decid lends a w ixto Oepartment is al: ; new and nobbj that you inspeci 4T of our store i and we. ask Ld Misses' Slippe: Tfrimmings. COMP] .NS, S. C. NB. DIAL A. C. Toor DIA.L & TODD Attorneys at Law e nterprise Bank Bdtiding, Laurce% S.C J PRACTICE IN ALL COURITS toe to loan on Real Estate-Lonj Tim. B. R. TODD Engineering and Contracting Land S4urveys a Specialty of inerte Work Sklllfnfly done or la spected. id Srawings and estima of all Kin4 Telephone No. 346 It SUMMONS FOR lRELIEF. iiState of So till aroInSeved ir County of Laur in es. s- .\adora Fleming, Plaintiff, I ' against I's Larry Fleming, litty llarklsdale li n. F'lemlng, William Fleming, Alfr< lo FlemIng, Bennle Lee Fleming, I) l' racena Fleming, D~ouglass Flemnin t. atito Bell Fleming, Mamln 1icr rivited mgin 1915 your in of Milli ct styles ed tone onderful o ready for r awaits you them. is overflow your careful rs, Neckwear ~NY lng, LuIcile Fleming, Sallie Fleming, Nannie Fleming, Susie Fleming, Stoho F'leminig andl( C. H1. Duckett, D~efendants. To the Defendants above named: Yuae hereby summoned and re action which wvas fied in the ofilee of the 'Clerk or the Court of Common Pleas for the County of Laurens ini said state, on the 25th day or Febru ary, 1915, and to serve a copty of your answer to the said complaint on the subscribers, at their omile at Laurens, 5. C., within twenty days after the ser vice hereof, exclusive of the (lay ot such service; and if youdall to answer the complaint within ,the time afore.. said, the aPlaintiff in/this action -will apliy to the Cottrt 6r reliof demand ed in the compla'ny Dated Feb. 25th, 1915. Ferguson, Featherstone & Knight, Plalntiff's Attorneys. *. To the Non-Rlesident Defendntsi, Lar ry F'lemuing, WVilliamn Fleming, Al 'fred Flintg and~l tenie Lee Flemting: You will lease take not ice that the original Summ Ions antd Conmp lint t.in tis action was tiled with the Clerk of the (curt for Laurents Coutnty, State of SoutIh Carolina, on thle 25th day of Febrauiry, 1915, and lai on file now in e sid( otlce. (1 Lauiren's, S. C., Feb. 25, 191 5. )- F'ergu son, F'eathiierston e & Kniiigh t, Attorneys 'for Plain tiff.