University of South Carolina Libraries
I I - ? ?? r*~' 1 | THERE IS A LiTTI.E H0US8 | little howse: It is sc small X have not found it yet ai all, Ahd an year follows patient year, Strange town* of countries tar and neftSt gturn the answer: "Nay, not here!" And yet I know the lamplight fall* Caressingly up^n its wails. And I would tou>.k them ii I could, to know if they a:e atone or wood. ?r Ther? is a chair for you. and ther? Jhe lifht falls yoldt-ii on your hair. JPUt?with yc>:r graying lips unkissed The ipiral shadows coil and twist About you as >ou turn to mist. < little house! Its window panea gtung by a thousand passionate rain^ Art blind with ivy, and the moss Oftept on the sill that we must crOM, It would not be so hard to wait, If I Were sur* about the gate. M K?nir^n for h Trivial now. To dazzled eyes, that marveied how The sunrise rested on your brow iut dawn is terrible unless Love soothes it.s awful loveliness. Ah, love, what fierce dawns storm and dare The little house that wait3 somewhere! ?Mary Brent Whiteside, in Leslie's "Weekly. j SHRINE LOOTED OF TREASURE i Russia's Soviet Government Has Ap; propriated Riches of Famous I Church of Saint Sergius. 8t. Sergius' treasure of $300,000,000 has disappeared. Ited soldiers now toj* as a barricade the buildings c? what wni once regarded as the richest and most famous convent of all Russians save, possibly, that at There are but five monks left, in the monastery. Fifteen others liave itaoved a mile and a half distant to tfce Church of Gethsemane, at Cherfcigovskdya where they have founded a Gamble community and till the soil. The other monks who lived at this vast religious meeca, to which yearly went IQQ.OBO pilgrims, have, been scattered. ii* re j*re but few pilgrims now to priy before the ikon of St. Sergius. the miraculous powers of which was supposed by Russians to have saved tfci monastery from destruction by the French army of invasion in 1S12. The jewels of the open silver sarcophagus of St. Sergius have been removes or replaced with false ones, it if claimed. Many of the vast treasure cjf cimrcli vessels, mitres and croziers, made of solid gold and inlaid with precious StODes of immense value are Missing. It is claimed that the loot Zrym tliuitlx&ta * cqunicu ui tht treasure of gold and silver and predoeA stones of St. Peter's. Rome. "!fbe monastery is uo\v clessed as a national soviet museum and no services are held within tlie ohnrcb. V . c . . > / A CREDIT RATING Mr. gverbroke: I want a good diamond ring on credit. I've just become engaged to the rich Miss Goldenbonds." The Jeweler: ! am sorry to have to refuse you. Our credit man reports that It's difficult to get Miss Goldenbonds to return her engage- . ment rings. Call and see us when you need wedding rings, i Thirty days time?five per cent, off for j ?ash. I Piano Box Shoe Store. j.- Have you ever been in an oil boom tcwn? The tope of striking oil is as jreat an excitement as the finding of ' ^old in '49. From the preliminary i KSBlUg 1)1 UlC liUJU, luc wuiunvu ui Btock, to the setting uj) of a drill it has all the glamor and glory of speculatlon. Once oil is hir. the gusher opens up not only wealth for the prospector ( but some measure of opportunity (or the alert merchant. In the Arkanlias fields almost overnight a line of stores appeared. They weie nothing more than shanties at the best, but the shoe : store took the prize uf the entire main street. It consisted of four piano boxes containing the best grade boots ; and the best calfskin shoes at a price Reminiscent of the war period.?Boot and Shoe Recorder. , New York Woman's Fool Idea. Because she dyed her cat a beautiful blue to harmonize with the furniture of her apartment, a young woman Id j XTa.^ XT I r? q 4 rror 1 Vi ik, ?nv ?il?> 3 one 10 a ouig&i, was arrested on a cruelty charge by the Humane society, a probation officer who was sent to investigate the cf.se told the magistrate that ihe singer Jiad a three-room apartment all done in Alice blue and had an Alice blue wnrd- i robe. She wanted Otto to be of the same shade and dipped him. Two other cats that she had dyed had been poisoned by licking off the dye. The > magistrate gave her a suspended sen tence and ordered the Humane society j to keep the cat until its soft fur is j once more clean and there is no farther daiiger to its health. Easy to Start. "1 notice that some young women have started a movement to teach the i young men of their town how to talk i when paying a call." "A waste of time." "Eh r "All that is necessary when the young ] chap gets his hat parked and himself I seated on the edg*' of a chair is to say, i Oh, Augustus/ Montmorency, Percival, or whatever his name happens to be, ' Mo tell me about yourself I'Birzcia^ GREAT W CUPID: ; Few Lscape Shafts of Small 1 God of Love. Affection Has Been Weil Described at a Specific Ailment; Also a Form of Madness. ; ? !' "Love is like measles.'' said a well| known novelist, "for neaily every one I must go through it." I Slit- might with equal truth have I added: "Ami like measlei, it is ? dis ! ease, with its marked and distillcvm7\ ? t ,mc with vimntr naH- j . ods of incubation and often with seri- | | ous consequences.*' However sentimentalists may scoff, i love is beyond doubt a specific dis- j t ease?"a fever, a ferment in the blood" , ?a fact which has been recognized by j writers of all ages. from Terence, who wrote, "In love, in delirium," to Mrs. j' E. B. Browning, who said. "We catch j1 love and fevers in the vulgar way." j. Its attack is sometimes instantaneous. remarks a London Tit-Bit writer. A truant curl, a sudden glance ( from a pair of merry eyes, the pout j of pretty lips, a dimple that comes and j. goes, the sudden music of a voice? and for many a man the deed is done, jJohn Leech succumbed hopelessly (< at the sight of a pretty face in a Lon- i ] don street; a dainty figure seen ; j through his telescooe was Garibaldi's i < Immediate undoing, a sudden shower 1 i nnd a shared umbrella cost Walter : ficott his heart. Over most men the disease creeps j insidiously, marked by varying but J recognizable symptoms?"a foolish sequence of disordered sentimentalities." They have fits of moodiness and abstraction and a "brooding, fiangdog look." They become unsociable and irritable?now almost hysterical in their hilarity, now plunged in an abyss of gloom. Their appetite fails; they lose . flesh. ! In proximity to the loved one they often act in a manner distressing to themselves and idiotic to others. At a word they will Same scarlet and utter in coherencies or imbecilities. They will sit on their hats or put the sugar tongs in the milk jug. flTK^vV* .?Kav? nt 1?i or f-lirk JL IlCiJ, UCU aw tUOL tilt LVikUiW V*. incubation are over and the disease is in full swing, the whole world is ; metamorphosed for them. This is the stage of delirium, in which they see glorious visions and move among phantoms. For them there is only one woman in all the world. She is a queen, a goddess. Her faults are virtues, her virtues divine. Her voice, though it be raucous as thai of raven, is sweetest music; her face, her form, are the crown of fe- ? male perfection. If they may not live for her, all the boon they crave of the ; gods is to be allowed to die for her. This period of ecstasy may be iong or short. Happy the man who soon j emerges from it Into sanity, for tho oth'ir way disaster and tragedy lie. i It was in this mood that Hazlitt j glorified the "kitchen slavey'- into a 1 divinity and worshipped prostrate at j her shrine, and it was iu this mood that hundreds of men have closed ; great careers in tragedy, from Marc An tan v ui TConlnneer. who shot him- : self on his ado/ed one's grave. But whatever tne symptoms, love is, beyond all question, a disease fiiid full of perils to its victim. It blinds ; his eyes, paralyzes his judgment. It ; is like auger, a madness, though, unfortunately, not always trief. No Wonder Folks Laughed. ! The sun was hiding somewhere. J Anyway, it was nowhere to be seen, j Little drops of rain splashed on the 1 window panes. Taking an umbrella from the rack In the hall, Saxton Daggles made his way , downtown to the office. "Is it my imagination or are peo- ! pie really turning round to look at me?" lie muttered, as he crossed over one street and walked down another. : ? - ~ lu?U ! The ram was coming uovui u aiuc g faster now. People scutried away, ,1 seeking sl>elter In neighboring door- ' ways. , * ; "Well, it isn't my imagination," Dag- i gles ejaculated to himseif. "And peo- i pie are looking at me!" "Darn it!" exclaimed Saxton Dag- j gles crossly, for lie was stocking mak- j er by his profession. "I'll Hud out i why they're ail looking at me." And he asked, a laughing letter car- j rier. j "Is there anything about me that | would make people turn and stare?" j he asked. "Well, there's something above you , that might," returned the letter car- i ner. Looking up quickly, Saxton Dagglee ! saw that he had been carrying a cane ; raised in the air instead of his umbrella, the wf>ole time and in ail the pouring rain. Looking dnwi, again he found it was quite wet.?Detroit News, Canada's Mineral Production. The value of Canada's mineral production fur 1921 is officially estimated at $169,552,000. This is a considerable , reduction from that of 1920. when the figures were $227,859,000. While iu certain departments there was a fall- j Ing off in production, due partially to i business depression, stili there is rea- j son for the statement that the lower j figures are due largely to the marked j reduction in the price of minerals. To : ward the end of the year the demand | became more active: prices manifest- j ed a tendency to rise. ar*d with the ! gradual aosorption of surplus stocks a genera! Improvement in business wm MM. I FIVE YOUNG MENTAKEN TO JAIL' i Officers Recover Goods Stolen in ; Chapin Sheriff Blease and deputies came in Friday from a hunt for thieves who broke into the Chaffin Hiller itore in Chapin iast Thursday night. The officers brought with them five young ^ien, who are charged with the j crime. They are Willie Wicker, Otis' Wicker, Otis Smith, Broadus Cor-j ley and Melvin Davis. The goods sto-! len amounted in value to $200, con- j listing of 15 pairs of shoes and a < number of pairs of overalls, socks, shirts, knives, razors, etc. Most of the goods have been found,! some of them in the loft of a barn, j; When Mr. Hiller found Friday morn ing that his store had been broken open he tracked an automobile to Prosperity and told Deputy Quattle- ! baum about the affair. The officer! tracked the car to where it turned j off, but could not follow it further. With Deputies Player and Taylor and Magistrate Douglas and Constable | Havird, their search resulted in the j arrest of the five men. Sheriff Bleuse i has notified Sheriff Ruff of Lexington! I in which county the crime occurred ( to come for the men. They were tak-;. sin to Lexington Saturday by officials ' from that county. Another Shipn Good Hi Positively we have i -* i ji values m i siraps ana We aim to make th time to come. In ord you real bargains. \ Black Patent Lea heel, $4.00 value at... Black Kid one-stra rubber heel, at Old Ladies' plain t< ber heel, at Men's tan Englisl heel, at Men's tan, English heel, at ' And many other gc Come to Sanders' I 10 pounds best Sug Southern Silk Chev Blue Bell Cheviots 1 bale Osenberg fo: yard T. M. Sand BRUNER MANAGES BOTTLING COMPANY Orangeburg Man Accepts Position in Columbia The State. R. R. Bruner of Orangeburg. formerly manager of the Coca-Cola Bottling company there, has accepted the position of secretary, treasurer and manager of the Columbia Coca-Cola Bottling company. Mr. Bruner has been manager of the Orangeburg plant for some years and under his management a flourishing and successful business has been built up. He is a young man of ability and comes with the highest recommendations of his former business associates. He is married and has two children. Mr. Bruner will move his family to Columbia early in June. Eccentricities of Genius The Interviewer?"And please, sir, what have you to say on the subject of anonymous letters?" The Great Man?r"Stupid missives! I admit I invariably read anonymous letters?but I never answer them." ?Paris L'llluetration. According to a Kansas paper the candidate, while still a candidate, tells what he will do; if defeated, what he would have done; if elected, what he can't do. And the piiblic pays most attention to the promise. >er and 1 lent Just Recei' oge Montgomerj r never been able to off< [ slippers as we are offei is shoe sale one that wil 7 ler to do this we know \ V i!7 - ft %( I Think An all Leather lac< foot rubbed heel at . ? A good medium he ? at .t.?; Dark brown one-sti \ to go in this sale at.... Dark brown Oxforc foot rubber heel, at.. ther, one-strap low $2.98 p neat toe, Wingfoot $2.98 oe, flexible sole, rub $2.25 i Shoe, rubber heel, $3.50 / toe, Wingfoot rubber ^ $3.50 Mens' tan English at Black Gunmetal, s Men at Plow Black Scout Shoe. $3.00 values at ! Tan Scout Plow Sh at >od values too numerous Big Shoe Sale Saturday. ar for iots at at r making wheat sacks, mmamammb* rs i wmmmBmmmafmmmm?mmmmmmrn jmer-. ere Dry G( Newberry, S. C. FUNERAL AT HODGES j Remains of W. A. McDonald Laid t Rest i Greenwood, May 22.?The funer: of William Arthur McDonald, rai road section foreman, who ^vas ii Istantly killed near Belton y ester da when a motor driven hand car jumj . ed the track with him, was held th j afternoon at Hodges with Knigh; [Templar honors. A large number c Knights Templars from Greenwoc commandery officiated. I Mr. McDonald was 34 years of and was a graduate of Newberry co lege. He is survived by his wife ar two small children. ! Three other men who were wit him on the hand car are said to hav ibeen only slightly injured. Did It? ! Two women who hated each oth< |SO heartily that they always kisse j when t.hey met, were talking in th; ; sweetly affectionate way in which w< j" men on such terms converse. One said, with a sigh, "My, how hate to think of my thirtieth birtl day!" j "Heaven!" said the other, inn< jcently. "What a memory you've go' j Did -something unpleasant happen o tb3t day?" i ~ I ir ?? ! I 11?IWfn W% m m better red of Those /Shoes sr such remarkable *ing now. 1 be remembered for ve will have to offer of It! 3 SliDper with Wing $1.98 >el and toe one-strap ^ $1.75 ap Kid, worth $5.00 $2.98 1, medium toe, Wing i $2.98 t Shoe, rubber heel $3.50 ill Leather Shoe for $2.98 r Shoes , blue leather sole, A a * > id $z.zt> oe, blue leather sole, $1.98 ; to mention. 50c 15c yd 15c yd oat sacks, etc. at 12 l-2c nhIs Store a?H?g--"^?ifin?iin'" i wi?i?rn-rwa l-i id v. ;r" i m??-? J rdict for QUALITY I I I ' vJIVERSAL CAR " I I re A year ago? ;,ri almost unknoi :d| it, 31 Today ? a leac I Ij A sweeping ve t! ? n " ; 1 ii i *m i ii mmii ni ii mini ! THE UI 1 ' ? I Fori Ford parts, like aim I are counterfeited. Imi to SELL at the highest grades of steel used quality, specially heatFord formulas for th< FORD PARTS. Don't be misled? PARTS made by the F( . ing you will get from from them, and you wil the same everywhere. I 50 PER CENT OF RETAIL FOR I Ask for When your Ford ea tention, call on us. F equipped, employ comj uine Ford ana j?'orason Fridy I I Nev j J ..ii laiiin mm rmrrrgiTin^T-n-miri aMS? mmmim Cows oi ME?u i ii -i<???. According of the towi Cows will n< j the Sidewa | at any time I S i i i \ ; i ??. f JSJBBBaanaaMBaoaBMMBaB Owners! m ost everything else worth while, itation parts are manufactured passible rate of profit and the are consequently not the same . treated alloy steels specified in e manufacture of GENUINE fljj| Insist upon GENUINE FORD A >rd Motor Company. By so do-% f 35 to 100 per cent more wear ^ 1 pay the lowest possible cost? "" % . i GENUINE FORD PARTS \ 1 .ESS THAN 10c EACH Parts Price List r r, or Fordson tractor needs at or remember we are properly ^ >etent mechanics, and use Genparts in all repair work: Motor Co, J 'berry, S. C. IfHBf i Sidewalks j to an ordinance J i of Newberry, j st be allowed on ; Iks of the town } i. C. McCarley Chief of Police 1 ?^ i i