The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, June 13, 1921, Page PAGE SEVEN, Image 7
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f The Wayne P. Sewe
j? ....PRES1
^/Pf/rroA
! A MUSICA.
f.?: .
ARRANGED BY
\ DIRECTED BY . - -
ACCOMPANIST
' 1
1 OPERA.
( Mondau Everti
f 830 0'
GIVE!
I MARKER COMMIT
I CAST OF C
I Madam Cupid
8 Prise ilia Prunes ? __
1, , V Lovie Long
8 nr t. u..
TTUUUt Jnaii
'
|v Ima Fraud ?
> tfopnie Sweet gum ? ?
: Samantha Loving ?
Arabella Antique ? ? ?< Lillie
Lonesome -_1;
L^ft Overs ? ? Mrs. J.
. '? Mrs. Henpeck
Mr. HenpecK
Billy Bachelor
U. B. Careful
Simon Shy
Can't Catch
v, Never Wed
) Bobby Bashful ?'' ?
, Very Bold --
iV
^ Hardly Necessary ?
CHORUS
V *
J _ ... - W ?
Billy Bradley, banaiora jaowie, j
? 7*
. Julian Roche, William Hughes, A;
> ' DANCING
Saeab Barnes, Mary Bruce, Eles
v *" * ' /
Ada Faulkner, Ruth Beeks, Mar;
Milford, Elizabeth Jones.
ROSE CI
Nona Tutt - ... ... .?
^ Virginia Wilson, Mary White, E
Emmie Haigler, Maria Neuffer, ]
Wilson, Ruby Edmunds, Eliaabet
JAPANES]
> Howard Hill, Willie Harrison, Ji
Vance Bowie, Sarah Thomson, ]
Florence Neuffer, Grace Hilford.
M CUP
Edith Reese, Mildred Hughes, Ch
Martha Edmunds, Lillie Hilton.
' SPEC
^ Heart of a Rose .....
Poor Butterfly ... Hot
i- ACT I.?MUSK
.Opening
Lonely Bachelor Maids
V.
Teeny Meeny Microbe
Old Fashioned Wife ?Victoria 1
?
LEFT OVER CLUBC
J.'
Three Old Maids of Lee ? ...
|f You Want A Man ..
The Wimmen Won't Let Me A1
^ v ACT II.?BAC1
Fishing ? ? ? Lore
Nest ? ?- ...
Here Comes The Harried Han Catch
'Em Young ??
Microbe of Love ......
They Always Follow Me
ACT in.?GA]
I Can't Do Without The Men ..r.
Looking . "or a Sweetheart - , .
Ouija Mine ... ... ... ... ..
Pretty Little Sun&bade ? ...
Girl In the Ginfbam ... ......
In Our Bungalow ? 3
Kin ale ... ... ... ... ... ..
Reserved Seat*
Balcony?No Reien
BENEFIT OF CI VI
i* *
*
11 Lyceum Company
ENTS....
e of i^ove'
L COMEDY
_ HETTIE JANE DUNAWAY
. _ . RUTH STRICKLAND
. WINONA BARKSDALE
~HOUSE
ng, June 13th,
CLUCK
S BY
'TEE, CIVIC CLUB
HARACTERS , 1
Miss Victoria Howie
-l' J Miss Sophie Reames
V ' '
Miss Elizabeth Edmunds
Miss Howard Hill
Miss Ethelinde Pope
? Miss Gwen Bristow
Miss Eva Reames
Miss Sara Gibert
Miss Louise Brown
M. Wilkinson, Mrs. Fred Cason
Miss Lydia Owen
J. L. Anderson
W. E. Hill
!_ Percy Leach
. ? Jack Bradley
_ Arthur Thomas '
. ? Alvin EllLs
- \ / ' . . . - *
Bruce Galloway
/ . \*
Clyde Hagen
Truman Reames
BOYS..
j V . (5?
Marshall Leach, William Hill.
rthur Manning Klugh.
CHORUS*
'*'?? Tlnrnfliv Svfui.
f Greene, Maude Wood, Mary
\
J
iORUS
..r ... . Soloist
lizabeth Thomson, Lewie Kay,
* /
[da Kay, Celia Chalmers, Annie
h McLane, Marion Cason.
EDANCE
idith Hill, Jeansie White, Janit
Debbie Owen, Marion Cason,
< '
IDS ?
ristine Stevens, Lorena Johnson,
:ials
...+ .. Nona Tutfc and Chorus
rard Hill and Japanese Maidens
DAL NUMBERS
. ... Ensemble
. Chorus
" 0
... Madam Cupid '
BEowie, Margie Bradley?-Chorus.
?BETWEEN ACTS
Left Overs
Mrs. Henpeck
one Lord Tiaa Pity
3EL0RS CLUB
Roth Beeks and Chorus
Chorus and Bachelors
. ? ... .?....... Bachelors
Mr. Henpeck and Bachelors
.. Madam Cupid and Bachelors
... ..... Madam Cupid
RDEN PARTY.
.. .. Bachelor Girls and Chorus
. Lorie Long and U. B. Careful
- ... ... ....... .... Chorus
Henpecks and Chorus
Simon Shy and Chorus
Madam Cupid and Billy Bachelor
..... ... ... .... Entire Cast
$1.00; 75eU.
ed Seat* 50c U.
EC CLUB MARKER
HARRIS URGES CHEAPER
RATE TO AID GROWEF
Senator Move* For Reconsideration
Of Recent Refusal of Roads
To Reduce Charges
Washington, June 9.?Reconsideration
of the recent refusal of the
Southern carriers to reduce freighl
rates from Georgia to Eastern and
Western markets * on perishable
fruits and vegetables was requested
Wedensday by Senator Harris and
J Chairman dark of the Interstate
j Commerce and Vice President Linjcoln
Green of the Southern Railroad,
' ^/v?? flia
Senator Harris said he made his
request in view of dispatches from
Chicago that ' the transcontinental
railways announced a reduction o1
rates on carload shipments of vegetables,
melons and apples and a
new rate of $1.75 per 100 pounds on
vegetables and melons, including
x-1 -p /-i L 4
cantaloupes irum raeiiic uuasi uciminals
and intermediate points for
destinations east of Chicago and the
Misssisppi River and will be made
effective at the . earliest possible
date." , ^ ..
Senator Harris said that "recognition
of the necessity for a reduction
in rates by railroads of one section
should be followed by 3kmilai
action for the Southeast on the
fruits and vegetables."
After the Southern railroads declined
to make a voluntary reduction,
the Interstate Commerce Commission
informed Senator Harris
that sufficient time could not elapse
for a hearing and an answer by the
railroads in time to help the movement
of the present crop. Senator
Harris said that af the railroads
would take immediate action in the
Southeast along the lines indicated
in the Chicago dispatch that such
relief would be of great assistance
to fche Southern growers.
o *
The popilation of the earth is estimated
at about 2,000,000,000. If
they were all as bully as the people
of this town this old world would
sure be a hummer.
KIIA.D THE -ADVERTISEMENTS
an out toneg nggm cut
American ships, flying
the Stars and Stripes I
I - will carry you and I
I f your goods anywhere I
i Two and three generttkxu |
1 ' ^ 1 I
J|\ ago, the Start ana stripe*
were all over the world.
Then they almost vanished
from the seven seat. But
today they are back again.
Big splendid stejtmm, Ameri
can owned and operated, car?;ku;
passengers and goods, are crowding
their war Into all foreign
harbor? with the Stan and
Stripe* proudly fluttering from
their mutt *
American exporters, importers,
travelers?all can help by shipping
and sailing under the Sen
and Stripes.
Operators of Passenger
Services
Admiral Line. 17 Sum Street. New
York. N. Y.
Mataon Navigation Comptnr, M
Sc. Gay Street, Baltimore, Md.
Munaoa Steam Ship Line. 62 Beaver
Street, New Yorlt, N. Y.*
New Yoric and Porto Meo & S. Co.,
11 Broadway. New York, N, Y.
PidAc Mail 6. S, Co.. 4} Draadeay,
New York, N. Y. [
U. S. Mali S. S. Co., ? IWUW},
New York. N. Y?
Word Um.<NrvY?k ml C*? Mali
S. S. Co.) Foot JvtiTlumL
New York, N. Y.
Free uoc at
. ... Shipping Bowd films
Um of SNppfig Board jmatitn ftMM
Mm, torn rack, tree on MQJM W mm
mm, p?lor, ?l% or mgrnmratjcu.
A (rot cducMkMl pfaituM
' : r
jjftiij M Viufcto ?a US, m4
Foftailingso/??ss#*f#r
fnigkt ships f aU
parti *ftk* world aadaU
tkcrinftrmati**, writs
amy of the above Uaet or
' fer ~ jl
I . ! 4
YEAR'S WHEAT CROP
t LARGER THAN BEFORE
?, Washington, June 9.?The country's
combined winter and spring
wheat crop promises to be 43,000,
000 bushels larger than last year's,
1 based on forecasts- of production
' announced today by the department
' of agriculture. There will be small!
er crops of oats, barley and hay than
' were harvested last year, while the
' apple crop will not be half so laTge
! as that of 1920 and the peach crop
will be much smaller than last year.
? Winter wheat, which 3 month ago
promised a crop of 629,000,000
bushels, came through May in bad
1 shape in some of the important pro1
ducing states and as a result the
forecast of production showed a re
duction of 51,000,000 bushels
i bringing the total to the same
i quantity as produced last year. Ran:
sa's, premier wheat state, reported a
decline in the condition of the crop
' from 84 per cent of a normal on
! May 1 to 60 on June I, which res
suited in a reduction dn that state's
i forecast by 33,000,000 bushels. In
Nebraska the condition dropped
. from 92 to 75 and in Oklahoma from
84 to 70.
TheVspring wheat crop forecast
' ir.dicatek 43,000,000 bushels more
than last year's crop. The condition
of the cro\ ds better than a year
. ago, while acreage is somewhat
smaller than test year's.
An acre yield of 13.9 bushels is
forecast compared with 10.8 bushels
last year..
Stained glass was first made in
' North Europe in the Twelfth cen- j
tury.
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! .
I
DEP
i
OF THE UNITE
OFTH1
for t
PR
? is the word in
We have a Is
prepared to lot
you desire to
! costs are chea
you should pr<
GIVI
i
'! and let us fiffur
! || will then be oi
i begins.
R
t
That we are
not on the pri(
BUILDER!
A. H. Jackson, N
I T TMDr
LiUlVlDE.
HAS NARROW ESCAPE
Spartanburg, June 7.?W. M.
Wright, who resides at 130 Dickson
street, while crossing the railroad
track leading from the station to the
Inman Cotton mills about noon today,
was1 run into (by an engine which
was shifting cars,, his horse killed,
his wagon demolished and he was
badly injured. He suffered injury of
one hip, his right arm and -breast.
He was taken to his home where he
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life hi l
IUUIIVI II1VIIMIV V
GREEN VI
Manufacturers of I
Monuments, also
and all other ceme
ble and granite,
fencing, etc.
3
| Plant Equipped
| Mach
?I
THE
W A R
til t. ' A ! II I3V 0
ARTM1
/
D STATES AT TF
E WAR WAS CRIT
>eing unprepared for
F.PARDNF
I
building as well
irge supply of li
)k after your buil
build the present
per than will be
K '}
epare,
: ire a r
-j UJ V.
e with you. The
11 hand when the
EMEMBE
selling on today
;es af war times.
5 SUPPLY (
Igr.
R YARD AT ILL
?
was thoroughly examined to fiai flw
extent of the injuries. 3!lte Bomb
was mutilated Mr. Wright had tarn
to his farm in the mountains to ftAe
his horses to the pasture and mm
returning home. An automtffe
passed Just an front of him and Tamed
a dust which obscured his rw
and he did not see the eneaanqff
train until it was right on him.
Watch the label on yanr popmL t
I
LLE, S. C. I
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmgmmmm?> -'fi?
4igh Class Artistic |
Markers, Coping i
TirrkvL- in rm of- 5
WVIR, **1 A11UJL" g
Dealers in iron i
Br
m
I With Modern I.
inerjr. I
.. , .. 1|M^
m i j
IE BEGINNING 1
JCISED 1 ? :,
war " ' J.;-,'
nn *1.
L.dd - it;
as m war. I
imber and are I
Iding needs. If J
summer, and ?
tne case agam, g
ALL I
i things needed I
; time for work I
R I
's market and I
COMPANY
'Phone 68l 1
PLANT I
I
seas ebb?p