University of South Carolina Libraries
The Delegation ftpm Turbeville Meets With Chamber of Commerceto Consid er Annexation ?I i ' ^Che meeting held yesterday at the ?fc?mber of Commerce between the Mirect^rs of .the- Sumier County Chamber of Commerce, with other -|^?^e^nfetlve:;Sumfer' and Sumter county tmsiness men,' to confer with a- representative delegation of citizens ef .1>ouglas Township and Turbeville sections of Clarendon county regard \ ihg trie probable annexation of about; ? 60 to 70 square miies, of Clarendon county to Sumfer"county was appar , ently satisfactory to -ail parties con cerned, and it how looks as though tpes- Turbe\'ille citizens will join^Sum tfir-county at no distant date. . -Dr. E. S. Booth, president of the Chamber of Comnierce presided. - 3??essrs.-. D. E. Turbeville, C. E. Gam ble, D. 1?. Green, 'Henrys Johnson. A. O. Johnson and R. A. McFadden rep resented the Clarendon county sections '.: proposed to be annexed- to Sumter county. The^ keynote of the proposition hlng : ed'-on whether or not Sumter county ~Y w^?ld -agree to construct a short cut .- roajfi irom Turbeville, which will be shorter and more convenient for the people- of Turbeville . and adjacent ter tory'to haul their tobacco, ?eottori and oth~3r farm products to the Sumter markets, and for antoniobile trans portation. There were some differences of opinion between * the - J?cBride or Safem section of Sumter county cki . zens, namely ; Messrs. - E. W. Dabbs, Jr., and I*. C. Tisd?le; Messrs. Henry Jonson, A. O. Pohnson, ?f Clarendon oouh^. concurrfng: with these two? and. Messrs, Gamble, Green and Turbeville i dissenting" somewhat ras to the best jroute^ to be taken to build the pro posed abort cut road, v The meeting, however, adopted res?luti?hs, which are published below and-left the ioca . tion of the hew road to the citizens ^i^ih^ two" counties most' ma teriaHy affected?after seridmg a delegation from, the Chamber of Commerce with! ' the-"delegations from- Turbeville and ' Salemtb interview the Board of-Coun t><Commissieners; Messrs/C- G: Row iarrd,: Ii. \T>. Jennings,- G. Ay Leipmon '. antd^ J. :-Frahk:/- Wfllia:ms-'-representing ^8te*>Ch?mber of Commerce before the . C?ohty Commissioners with the joint delegation. - The s following resolution covering v the* matter Nvas unanimously, adopted after Messrs. JE/- Di Jennings: and I. C. gti^'?Si-. m?ve4,^ahd'":ca?fed/ that the ^eeahg nnanimousiy^f?vored the con ; section of a short cut roaof to be- de- ? ferrminedi later as to location. - ^?^ROlvec!, r^^-^^^yi?Stmlc^^. of Commerce of Sumter county looks with favor upon the proposed annexar of Turbeville and adjacent terri to^? to Sumter ? county; land * exteiids ? a ^earty^ welcome tothe* pet>i>le pfopos ?ti&to'Soiis themselves with us. ? Resolved;-T^?t.we recommend to the Boartf ;.of County Commisioners that a^" soon as practicable,-- thatgood roads be emended into1 this territory. < and in a5^ys;_t}^tMrttj^S^. 'served, and ?:-?%ale? .%s-.'.is.'^i:"ther"r^-of Sumter cotm^:'r: -~ ' ~ ' .'[?' /;;'-'?;' ?^^t^8fv^f,^That , a joint^'committee fromTurbevilTe5 and ftMs['Cb^b^f.'.6f ^ntsaetce j^es*ent^ these t^es^utions to i^^oferd ip'f* f/ou'nt^'Cb^m^ion^ The^othtT ^eg?^?n" then went to the; meeting of the ^Bokrd \f /County Ctemissioners ^erhich? was. held w?it-. for the visitors.- Cliairman H. J. j $cTs of the Roard of. County | Commissioners. immediately; gave the ?^^iation. the right of way, suspend-!? ,'Jnj5*ail other business^ and in less thanf twehtyTn*ye ..'minutes," without discus sion, after S^retary. Reardoh read the resolutions -^ove mentioned, the Com missioners unaaiimously decided that . the wishes of the Turbeville and Salem1 section and.the. Chamber of Commerce ^buld be complied with, but Chairman M^^urfn suggested that the repre sWtetives of the Tbfbevilie and Sal en?^ sections get together and harmon ize:- tnefr differences of .opinion as to the* .best location of "the new road. ' :"Tbo commissioners, V: is understood, base^ their decision upon the annex^" ?tf?nrof Ttirbeville and adjacent terri-' tory to Sumter:"county. Tps* Sumter County Chamber of Cgiaffierce agreed that the sanie finan cial arrangement agreed upon regards ing the proposed annexation of Pine wood School district to Sumter cbun ^?h?old prevail in regard to the Turbeville annexation proposition? that is that the Chamber of Com merce will bear one-half of the cost Of the surveys, elections, etc.. should ' the^; election go against the ,proposi tion to join Sumter county. -If the election goes in favor of annexation the Taw provides for the payment of th^e expenses by the counties interest After the conference, between the Turbeville and the Salem delegations -it'was stated that an agreement had ? been reached by a compromise route for the new road which will be satis factory to all parties concerned. " The courtfyi commissiners will have a committee with the county engineer to look over the proposed route for the short cut. NORWAY REFUSED THE MANDATE Offered Post by Snpreme Coun cil and Turned It Down Copenhagen, June 3?The National Tidende says that it has learned that Norway refused to accept the man date- over Danzig when it was offered by the supreme council and that the mand?te was accepted by Poland. NORTH CAROLINA CONTEST SETTLED Chicago, June 3?The Morehead ^laotion delegates from North Carolina were seared by the committee today* TRAVELED BY DEVIOUS WAYS I Correspondent Experienced Acute Dis ( Cdrrrfari While on a Journey Through^the Holy Land. It Is eight or nine miles, as I esti Euphrates to Constah ^nople, tf one follows^ the course of j the Bagdad railroad, whose track is ! laid a part of the way where the feet of th> "ten. thousand** had marched, where St Paul had trainped in his first and jsecond missionary journeys, and where. Godfrey of - BouiUonT Tan ered, BaUSwin, Raymond and Bohe mond- had passed, and Frederick the Etrst had perished. In^my anabasis: (if I may give my lonely expedition a name so ambitious and yet ?? coi?emned t>y many a youth) from the Euphrates toward Constantinople x had to make a cir-j cuitbus journey, as did St Paul from -Damascus, writes John H. Fihley in July Scribner's. I went first from ! iSeppc* to Damascus, then to Jeru- ! salem;' then to Haifa (near old Caesarea where St. Panl took ship), and then by sea tp Beirut andHeriua, on coast of Asia* Minor, a few n^ea^cpa- st' .Baul'e" ^me. town*' Tarsus, which was also the same town as that toward which Jonah sailed from Jaffa, Wb j evading the call to Jfjneyeh. But the reader would, I 5fw? find this an' uncomfortable and ^haps a tiresome trip, even to read ^?^iS'^r%^^'j^^^^'- way in freightearsi (of tte'type known to our soldiers in France, ae^nimodating ''forty^-five hommes or- eight cheyaux") on a trawler , (which wajs absolutely j the . most uncomfortable meaW of I trans^riatmn: that I had ever en dured) and on- a British "destroyer** wKcIL ni^^ very-fitly; h^ve borne Str ^Paul's name befpre he changed it, in j the days when he was "breathing out} threatening* a^d ^ There is\ shorter- and less indirect J way, for, sneaking generally, there ,1s j no 'direct^ way ^fxpnr one place to an- j other ih iM the world. "This is probably the reason why the street in Damascus called "Straight" "got its distinguishing name. * SUFFERED FOR THEIR FAITH French Huguenots Driven Into Exile ^Dy^thV^evc^?oni of the Edict of Nantes. The^H^enots were .the^ Pnrjtans oif Franee in -.the sixteenth and seven teenth centnriejL'^The name .was first ^ff/about 1^60; its origin is un Iggwn.;: ? The Huguenots sufl!ered se vgigjy in the Teighs of Francis X and his Immediate successors, and after 1^2^ were-tnequentiy: -involved in war, wilder the' leadership of: such men as ?^finfra^C?ilgny and King Henry of | Navarre, ^?^erwards Henry IV* of Erance. Coli^y-aud ^bm 20,000 to 30,000 others"fell In th^ massacre of St 'Bartholomew,' August ^/157^ I^ ter di9Era$e<rj*^^^ this wW^daehry "caused^ hy the; discov ery: "of "Hn^aendt^plots, or had. been pre&e^?ipL ~> In ^te ^air tl>is, they continued numerous and' power ^jfew^^^P^g^my^j^^ ih 1598 byHenry * IV'gave'-4hem fuH .io B|rc^; and' civil rl^t|. 'O^heir power was . token * jaf ter5 'me:. snrreiad^'J ot La^c^eHe and tn^r^ocatiojx-of; the edfctMantes by lionls XTfla'2Q8?y and hundreds of thousands of Hugue nots went jito exile, giling to Prus sia, Holland; Switzerland; England, Scotland and America. f . > Chinese Curb Tcfcacce Users.. '.^CnlnaVlnWstry' of the Inferior has telegraphed t?e^?Uojwing circular ii s^ctions to the Shehchangs and T^r iia^^^f ^yit the country, according to Me Peking'Daliy. Sews: >lf has been noticed? that almost everybody in the country has indulged in the hse' of * cigars or ^cigarettes, TJ^hich will' become a worse cursV-fo ISie nation than opium in former days unless some restrictions are imposed. It te ^ere^r^cMed that before taking up any measure* for the total prohibi tfon of its ^nse, the fellowmg restric tions shall be imposed: First, no boy or girl under eighteen years of age shall ybe allowed ,to smoke cigars, or cigarettes; second, any military or na val* man ^sfng it shall be punished; third, the use of cigars and cigarettes to" all ^vernnaent schools and ^colleges shall be strictly proWbited'*?Far Kastern Bureau Bulletin. o Legislators Must Work. j A novel method of forcing attend ance In the chamber of deputies of the Republic,of Argentina has been sug gested by a member who is out of pa tience with those who draw their saia ries from the public purse but fan 9 I fulfill their constitutional obligation of | regular attendance. The suggestion Is in the form of a I bill providing for payment per day . to j deputies Instead of a lump sum every ; month. Failure to answer the roll call is equivalent to absence, and the measure provides that no deputy shall receive his pay for days when he is absent from the regular sessions. Land for National Forests. The national forest reservation com mission has just approved for pur chase 48,581 acres of land for national forests in the White mountains, South ern Appalachians and Arkansas. The largest tracts are In the White mountains, .where 31,022 acres In Car r?ir and Grafton counties, New Hamp shire, and. 1.220 acres In Oxford coun ty, JfaiBe, were approved for purchase at an average price of $7.15 per acre. These lands include the. scenic peaks of Mount Chocorua and Mount Paa gus, ni8?h visited by tourists and made accessible by trails maintained hk thft CStoaarnt oinb* til_ ! V HAVE SIMILAR FINGER MARKS Important Discovery Made by Call? fornia Professor as to Peculiarities of Family Graupa. Prof. J.. A. Larson, instructor of physiology in'the University of Cali fornia; announced a new discovery in connection with H?ger prints which is likely to have a remarkable influence on many important oases that con cern the law courts of"California. Briefly, Professor Larson's discovery Indicates that ' a ^simitarity, of finger prints among members of a family is sufficiently marked to enable scientists to trace ffmily groups and determine positively whether a, given individual is really a~ member of the family to which he claims relationship. * "The iihpoftance of the discovery In probate cases such as the Slingsby ease I is ObvfousV Should Dr. Larson's hew discovery tef&c&fpt&f? ffifrl 'and- science, the Slingsby\]S^^6ri'm&7.^e reyer^ed, as well" '^^ta$l^^^u?^^i cases. . Dr. Larson's h?vestig?ti?hsi began in I 1913 *t_the_Bdston ^ * ? v j / uSlncf ^?p^^B l h^e rexammed Sprints of members of approximately 100 famfllW^he "said, **and I am satls: fled in my own mmd that such a means:*g Identlfieatlon; im possible. 1 anr'prepaj^jjj d e tai l e.d reports of my work^nd^fo'^ tfi?t science may be benefited by: my discovery. Before. I completi "this, however, I expect to Investigate the prints of fifteen or twentyadditional, families" so as to re move air doubt as ta the accuracy of my As<?very;'t--San Frandseo Chron icle. ? jv' ' . " ' ' .: AMBER FORMED BENEATH SEA Natural Resin of Pines Turned Into Precious Material by the Action of .the Elements. . The world's;' supply of amber, that rare and. therefore precious, substance, the 4<gold of the^Dorth>" as it has been called, comes from the coast of. Sam land *1n-- the "eastern Prussian, penin sula, between the town*, of Burstrdrt siid Palmhieken, and here the shafts of ? famous mine run out under the Baltic and the miners are actually working Tinder, water. Ages ago the country was a . land of pine forests which file i)ceaij oTjerwhelmed; the pine. trees' vanished beneath the sur face, of the sea, and then, century by century, the wood became fossilized | and the natural resin of the pines was j turne4-into amber. Millions of years were, needed*.' to.; transform the resin ! into amber; and the search for-amber has developed romantic and picturesque | epfeiodes like^those that have become part and parcel of the story of gold and diamonds. An amber mine, how ever, is- not necessarily under water, and there Is an open-air mine at P?lm nicken where amber is dug for. in much the same way. as diamonds are sought in the mines of Kimberfey." In' nor mal times' this one mine provides oc cupation; for about 3,000 amber | seekers, i ??????i ^. ?; Our Own Masters. | "We have been told tfcat America is to save the world ami rescue, civilization from,, dis^lntion, but we must do ,it in our .w?y ; in the way that has made | us, in it tittle mo^e-thau.'-.a century, j the most unified, the most virile, and the most . potent Single: power in the . world. And when we: ask oaraelyea S what it is that has given us thia unity, this virility, and this? poteiicyy the an swer isi that .we -nave; founded this nation .upon principles of law, and upo*: vue guarantees'; of individual rights under, the law.: That Is. our great contribution to civilization; and if we are to be of use to other nations, old or new, our first thought must be to remain our own masters, to pre serve our -independence, to control our j own "forces as a nation by our own ; laws, andr to protect our heritage of organized liberty from any form of detraction or perversion. ?David , J?yne Hill In the South American Re view. Giant Warrior of Middle Ages. The pride and magnificence that played "their part in the daya of chiv alry ? can hardly have a better illus tration than the suit' of equestrian armor which has recently been placed on exhioitfbn fh the Metropolitan Mu seum of Art. m New York city.^Sleur Jacques Gourdon de Genoullhac wore the suit m tfie st^teenth century, a'hd. Sfeur Jacques was an uncommonly large and powerful warrior, r.bo serv ed ? under '.Louis.' -XXL and Francis T. of France. As may be deduced from their armor, the kniglits of the period were not noticeably large men, and Sieur Jacques must have seemed a veritable giant, for'a "six-foot attendant at the museum has tried on his armor and Is said to have "merely rattled a'rotmd in It" Sea Mose. Owing to the war the supply of "sea moss," of which several hundred thousand pounds, valued at almost $50,000, have been imported annually, for the most part from France and Germany, has virtually come to an end. Se? moss (hot seaweed) is the popular name of several kinds of small marine animals that grow in colonies of a branching, plahUlke form. Their commercial value arises from their having a horny skeleton which preserves the general plantlike shape of the growth. ^ Difference of Custom. "In old ICnglarfd people showed the!? excitement by saying 47oundsr" "And In NeV Jersey the cummutan say 'Stones."* '._z f TIMES '-SURE HAD CHANGED" Doughboys tn France Hailed as Friend Man Whom They Had, When "Kid*," Feared Greatly., The story of how two doughboys found their old enemy in France Ii told by Mike 1 Dlan, former police lieu tenant of New Xork. j?ty, who served as a K. of C. secretary assigned to the Sixteenth infantry, First divisio?. Nolan is fifty-two years old and put in 23 years on the New York police force. When he changed the bine uni form for khaki, he w'?snn charge of the twenty-third precinct, the old Ten derloin. On his breast Is a victory ribbon with two bronze major offensive stars and three silver citation stars. He has been recommended for the D. S. C. by the commanding officer of the Six teenth infantry. He had wandered up to a "little bunch" of doughboys who were "shoot ing craps," and gave each .of the boys a p?ck of K. of C. cigarettes. 'The game was an exciting one, and a sal dier who was about "to roll the ivor ies" looked up at him and asked hint to "kiss 'em for a five." Noian? did so, and the dice turned up a two and | a three. ? One of th? unlucky boys who had lost on the toss of the dice looked up 3 at Nolan and recognized him as an old ?? enemy. "Holy cat I Look, it's Tenderloin | Bull Nbl?n!" he said to his pal. "IKm't j you remember, he's de cop who used I to chase us from doorway? for shoot: ihg craps when we was kids?" '"Shure," said the lucky soldier, "and he pulled us once for smoking hutts. And here he is shelling out packs of real cigar", . ics and kissin' de bones for us. Damn'd if it* ain't right" dat de war changes de whole woild V INSIGNIA OF ANCIENT ORDER That Now Worn ..United States Army Medical Officers Goes Back Four Thousand Years. j The caduceus, which was introduced ! in. 1002 by Col John Van R. Hoff, M. C., U. S. A., editor- of the >mitar? Sur geon,, as part of the''medical officers* . insignia, dates back 4,000 years, ac cording, to F. H. Garrison, M. DM TJ. S. A., writing in the Journal of the Amer ican Medical Association. For a num- j ber of reasons the serpent was always the symbol of medicine In antiquity. The Babylonians' caduceus, which ;as the Insignia shows today?two snakes entwined with wings at the top of the staff?occurs in Hittite remains. It stands for an actual serpent god, Nin gishzida, who as the special messenger of Ishtar, was the awakener of life Jn the sprfngttme, and the M?esopotamIah prototype of the Greek Hermes. The Romans had a special functionary, the caduceator, who was a sort of peace commissioner, The caduceus was used oh the title pages of books published bV the1 famohis medical printer, Fro benius, in 1460 to 1527. The "wand of Mercury," as it is sometimes railed, I was also carried by merchant tr?deis I In. ancient times, on excursions where peaceful negotiations were desired and they wanted to be known as neutrals. Labor; Troubles in China. " . The $4P a month which the. Chinese coolie with' hW f?mlly drew from tfie ; Chinese, government during his peri?jii. of enlistment in the army Is the basis ; for the labor disturbance which is j rocking China at the present time, says C. e. Thompson of Shanghai - in the Seattle Post-Ihtelligencer. Mi*. Thompson explains that prior to the war the average coolie made a month ly wage of $12 to $15, while having become accustomed to the new. stand ards of living made possible by the $40 allotment he declines now to re turn to the old basis. Even household domestics have become, affected by the new unrest and are demanding more money, he says. Recently be- ; canse of the.unsettJed conditions there was a strike of dockworkers in: Chi nese ports which held up all trans Pacific traffic for a considerable time; Mr. Thompson states; . ' ?' Owes Atf to Uncle Sam. Building upon his past experience, as an employee in a .shoe factory, the federal board for vocational education : placed a young chap of 24, who was disabled at Soissons, in a shoe manu facturing plant for training. His left hand and arm were severely Injured by ? high-explosive shell, but he finds he can carry on, in spite of the handi cap, and Is fast becoming ah expert shoe cutter. The management, finding his service valuable, are paying hihi $1 a day?this, of course, in addition to his training pay, which comes from the board. He is enthusiastic and writes: "This,training is great stuff. Everything is going fine. * * ? I wouldn't have been able to dos any thing if the government hadn't given me this chance.** Movies Set Distance Record. Two -moving picture records were broken recently, according to the Pop ular Mechanics Magazine, at the cen j tenary celebration of the Methodist church in Columhus, O. An ordinary projecting machine, equipped with a special lens, a rapid shutter, and a 150-ampere light, was used to throw pictures 100 by 75 feet, on a screen 850 feet away from the machine. The light employed was three times the strength of those commonly used.* It generated so much heat that It was necessary to operate the cinemato graph at great speed to prevent burn ing the 2T?. "Jhe screen.on which the pictures were thrown was 113 feet SQuare. Letter From a Boy Scout. ? ' ' ' '? . Suppose that Scout boy in your family was to sign the letter printed below and ask you to reaoV it during j "Boy Scout Week"?this week-^May 30th to June 6th, could you "turn him down and ever look yourself in the -face again? Just make believe-he- has done. so,, read every word of tJiiSrletctr that we know he would like to write you,' and* ihen face the chance of your ?ife to make good with that boy as bi? best friend on earth. Besides, your ac tion will make you a good Scout, too. "Dear Dad:? ' - ' ? "I don't know why they call this" a dare to you? : ;If they krttew you as well as I do, they'd know that this is just the thing I've been wanting to say t? you. Or, :na$be I ought to say that I see now it is just the thing to say. You have done a lot for me, but I haven't let} you in for the very thing I guess you would enjoy most doing if you should take, a whack at'it I don't believe you have had ariy too easy a time getting right ideas to rn y head. (Of course, it isn't up to me to say where I. got a head so hard you can't knock things into it. But one thing is sure. Scouting does the trick. We fellows are learning a iot of things that sound good, and we are finding out ? lot of things about our selves. I don't think it is fair that you shouldn't be in the*game with n?e. ' Just the same, there is something lacking in Scouting, and I am going to \ell you what it is in, a minute. But I am not knocking Scouting, you un derstand. It's. greatV and will be ab solutely all right with thig one thing more in it. Our Scuot Master is doing all he can to help us fellows. He's a good sport; honestly, he must give up a lot of things he'd like to do, just for us. (Still, of course, he gets a lot out of it, too.). If I could live up to the Scout oVth and Law, I think I'd be a very satis factory, young citizen. And if I could do everything and learn, everything there is in Scouting well maybe you'd ;be proud of me,, "that's all. But sup pose I don't live up t?rthe Scout Law .and don't get ail the way in Scouting. I Suppose you would feel like- saying that I was a quitter, or else that Scouting isn't what it's cracked up to be. Wouldn't you?,, .... v Some, fellows can make good hi Scouting in spite of everything. < But ?most of us think that there is some thing lucking, and until that is in Scouting, the chance .that, we will go the limit isn't as good as it might be. "And the thing that is lacking is-^ H?MEI If you were strong for Scout ing,' our home would be, too. I mean strong like, you are for school and ev erything of thai sort. . Perhaps what I really mean is, if y?u. wo?ld come into , the Scouting game with me, it would hej.p you iron the kinks out off me. . And-'I vbeiieVe.;you'd^1tove the time of your-life- T. know I would if you were my side-partner in Scout ing. . ? . ' . ''.The men at the.head, of our. move^ ment have found:out that the reason 'that some Scouts and sorne troops do . not get all the good; they might-out of Scouting.is that their homes'aren't in .it with them.: -If all the .homes'of. all the fellows in my Tr?op' were Scout homes, something would happen In this town. "Now,:.of course, I didn't write this myself,' but'I MEAN"' EVERY WORD OF IT. . I mean every word of it, ; right stratight from me to you., I'm telling you1 thatr if you want, me to Jfhake-' the most Of.- my opportunities^ and" to get all the. good there is in Scouting, you will come in, too. Will 'you? ' ?ir ?: ? ; i ^ yfj "Your Scout Son." Any parents of boys or any person who wants to';.' nelp.;. boys should apply for membership on the Nation al Boy Scouts of America, An asso ciate membership Costs $1 to '$2 \a year, a contributing membership $5 to $25 a year; a sustaining member-' ship $25 a year and up. This mem bership carries with it a subscription to "Boys' Life," the best magazin ein the country for boys. Get in the game for a' Better Boyhood in- Sumter. For further'' information see Wendell M. Levi, Scout Master, or W. I. White head and J. Y. To?d, troop; commit ?teemeri. I SUMMER IS HERE And With It Comes Sunday Ex ? cursion Fares to Charles ? ton, S. C. The above.^ announcement will be gratifying to many who annually take advantage many times during ' the summer of the ^convenient schedules arid low excursion fares offered by the Atlantic Coast Line to visit the seashore on Sundays. This season - these excursions begin on Sunday, June S> and continue ev ery Sunday until September 5, in clusive. The excursion fare from.Sum ter will be $2.20 to Charleston and return, and corresponding excursion fares will be made from a large nurn her of other points. The train will leave here at "3:55 A. M. and reach Charleston at 10:35 A. M. Returning, it will' leave Char-' lestoh at 8:20 P. M. and reach here at 11:50 P. M. Comprehensive sched ules will appear in the advertising column of the Item in due course. In the meantime Mr. Player, the ticket agent, will give any further in formation desired regarding these Sunday Schedules and fares; also full particulars regarding long limit sum mer excursion fares to the seashore, Lake and Mountain resorts through out the cour try. Mrs. John D. Lee entertains tonight in honor of Mr. Maurice Matterson, of Columbia, who will give a song re cital before the Women's Afternoon Music Club. STA$E HOME DE*MONSTB?tex v SH0KT COURSaE '?, ?'- ? Winthrop College, Rock Hill, S. C.r Jane 4tb-12th, 1920 The annual State home demonstra- / I tion short course will be held this [year at Winthrop College, June 4th through June 1-lth. There will- he about pftOvwomen, ?r.d girls in attend- i ance, coming from every section-of the State froni the largest,cities to theC ? smallest rural districts. .These "wonx-- i en and girls come oh scholarships won ? because of the quality of work ?cc?m- j plished during this year ' in various * home demonstration clubs, which in- 1 elude coofting, sewing, poultry and to mato^.clubs^.for the girls, bread and hbme denYonstration clubs for the wo-' men. One of these scholarships is an honor to the winner^ and something that is.very much desired by the.w^m en and girls of the home demonstra-j tion clubs. They are awarded to the" leaders of the different clubs so that the knowledge, gained at the short . ; course may be spread over the com-, an unity and that not only the woman! or girl attending the short course/may^ I profit but all? who come under her ] influence in the community' in whiChl she lives. Some of the. best teachers a'nd de-] monstrators in .the-country have beenj secured to lecture at this short course..] Dr. Johnson, President of the College,] 1 has very generously thrown wide the] doors of the institution to these -5tfo' women and girls who will attend thq-' short covr&e a'n'd every facility tnatj the college''has to goffer: Wfll Ve'-a$ tfte-j pleasure of the^^ The program planned for this year's* short course is especially worth white and. intensely interesting just at thi? 'time, the theme of the entire course, I being the means Of cutting the high cost of living.' Some phase of this-stu pendous task is taken' up for' 'each! jday's work. ~ The first day's program is a study? of organization as an aid' in cutting? the high eost of" living. . Under this' head comes the Organization of the community and its' relation to co-op-' er?tfve, buying and selling, ^ahdajrdfc^ | ation'of'poultry^ standardization Of canned .goods and ' standardization 'of j?airy products. The . second day's' ^program takes up a study of how; 1 home production can cut the high cost* [jof living. Under this general he$4T comes its application in gardening,! conserving of surplus, making newj garmenik 'from old,"garments, keepT i frig, the iiome^cow ni?kSrit -and ' the I study of poultry. . 3%?nhiatih|r waste iroYo the home is ihesu^ect of study I for thd third, day. . Under *this comes the systematMng' of ;hoUSe work; say ing' fuel in" cooking, saving fobd^'hy the proper care 'bf ^it and ^dyeing old clothes. Cntting down the cost of Hy frig by saving time and money in fo?^d preparation. is. the phase planned for ! the fourth' o*?y.; Un^r'^his c?mes^a demonstration oT^ ho^^o^nl?^e tov? jlcinds of' bread" from-one dough, a de monstration of the;use'of-cheaper euti of meat and a "ieeture;'Thrift in:;It2 Relation to the High; Cost of Living,* I The Wihe;bf;n%aTth- hi: the high cost of : living is also taken" up;" this being the, j sfndy for .the fifth day I of?the ? si 'course. -Under, this .head comes th< |earev of teeth' and their rekitibn the .diet,'school lunches, milk diet in |the growth, of children and the* ta? ?on tuberc^tosis. - - The cost .of Tabor i* coiother factor hehig taken. up for the sixth./dajv .ip^mon^ti^t?hs ' ^in laho* saying- equipment willSbe'. given; thi planning of^ kitehens.to save sbteps am? exhibitions of different . Water at lighting, systems _wiil be made. Tjl^j lajt ;d"?yrs' program wilt be taken i~ .with a, study of ^ow--to cut;the higrl cost of clothing and hoine-~iurnishing1 [The refinishing of 'furniture and floomj cleaning rugs, economical buying* -ca of . clothes. renoV?ting\ hats and denv onstrations on h?use furnishing wll j be gone into. . M*n and women, from the Uniti States Department "of Agriculture win have - been thoroughly trained aiohj their special lines of. work will be at Winthrop during, this short "course- toj ; lecture arid ,&ive demonstration Oth-j I ers will attend from different parts 6a the United States. In addition to thiehstudy part of *th?l [short course pro-am there will . .1 amiisemeiits each ^evening. . movil pictures,' parties and entertainment of various kinds. The eollege swi'm-j ming pool will be^thrbwn open to the women. and girls and thbse who not know how to swim will be giver-j dn opportunity .to learn. The entire] week will be filled with good thii and the outlook promises the mot successful short c?urse ever had - byl the home demonstration department' New Calf Weighs 14*> \ Clemson' -College, May 29?Efele Queen Bervardo"2nd, a Holestein coy in the Clemson CpHege I^iry Divisipi herd, recently gave birth to a caltj which ..is .a record-breaker in the mat; teri of weight. /This calf, which is: heifer, weigher ?il45ypounds at the ag< cf on'e hoiirr-. ,So .fjjtr^ as1 is-known thi is the second greatest weight at birthj of a Holestein calf.-.One was reportee in.1919 through Hoard's Dairyman, a^j weighing 157 pounds. That calf^ I however, was a^buli and bull calves us | .ually weigh about ten pounds more] (than heifers at birth, j The average ? weight of Holstein] calves in the Clemson College herd jhas been about 95 pounds*' at birthj For the past year or two the weight^ of calves in the herd has been notice ably greater than previously, and il is thought that the methods of feeding] have much to do with the result The mother- of the 145-pound ,eal3[ weighs 1,400* pounds, Which is some-, what above the average for the breed. Her record on official test: for; the past year was 13,000 pounds of milk. Marriage Licenses White:. Mr. John J. Stoudenmirt and Miss Ethel D. Fiud, Sumter. Colored: Richard Deas and Emma] Green Wedgefieid. j ? . Oscar Yates and Susanna Johnson?! Sumter. - , Caesar Richbourg Horatiq, and Sar ah DuR?nt, Stateburg. Isham David and Caroline Pughi Sumter.