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"BURY HATCHET'* AT GREER Greenville, July 5.?On the battle ground of the famous "Greer Annexation Are-a" fight of a year or so ago, Greenville and Spartanburg buried the hatchet today at a barbell cue and Fourth of July celebration held at Greer, at which large crowds from Greenville, Greer and Spartaaburg took part. The event was held at the Wesleyan Tabernacle just outside of Greer. A special :^ain was operated from Greenville and Spartanburg this morning for the base/ball game, the train and croyd returning to Greenville for Lt. _ --i-i A: ? i iiae ceieurawvu uvvu. A motion that the Fourth of July celebration be made an annual event at Greer for Spartanburg, Greenville and Greer people was unanimously carried by a rising vote. A feature of the event was an address by Dr. A. G. Wardlaw, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of Greer. Dr. Wardlaw preached the "Funeral Sermori" for the hatchet and then performed the marriage ceremony of Ufa Greenville to Mr. Spartanburg. A patriotic address was delivered by Lieutenant Governor Wilson G. i Harvey. Other talks were made by Major William F. Robertson, of Greenville, and farmer Congressman Sam J. Nicholls of Spartanburg. The Fourth was very geierally celebrated throuhgout this section, virtually every mill village having a special program of its own. CORNER STONE PLACED FOR MASONIC TEMPLE ] C" < Columbia, July 5.?Featuring a < quiet Independence Day, the i corner-stone of the new Masonic ] temple to be erected here was laid this afternoon with imposing ceremonies which were presided over by Samuel T. Lanham, of Spartanburg, grand master for South Carolina, in the presence of the Grand Lodge and a large gathering of Masons, repre. senting every section of the State. Tie oration was delivered by W. W. Wannamaker, of Orange/burg. The structural steel already has bebn plac3d in the six-?tory building beiqg erected on Sumter street, which is expected to be completed by May 1, 1922. It will be fire-proof 4.*U/v *. auu vuo vi buc uauuovuicsv aviuv* i tures in the city. It will cost $250,- c 000 when completed. I \ > ? John ; ' Wanan i .? . says: "If ther v \ ness on earth I should leave s 1 ' it is advertising - - -. V Advertising _J which creates s business. Thi - to increase adv ing what are times. In this way v ? / * 1? by using ach ?keep their sa to normal \ A 1 Adverii The Press t Sells the V DEMPSEY'S AUTO SEIZED BY SHERIFF New York, July 7.?Jack Dempsey had to walk home today. His $18,000 automobile in which he usually transports himself from place to place was seized and whisked away to parts unknown by an officer representing Sheriff Knott of New ,York county. The seizure was made on an order issued by the sheriff's court ordering Knott to take possession of any property belonging to Jack Dempsey. The order was issued in connection with the litigation over the photo play,"vDare Devil Jack," in which the champion ap peared, in the courts of Batavia, N. Y. The> first piece of property the sheriff's officers beheld was the big automobile standing in front of the Biltmore hotel. The chauffeur was told to get out and the car was driven off. SCRAP OF .PAPER MEANS WEALTH TO CAFE MAN New York, July 7.?A scrap of paper Ibhat for five generations has reposed between the covers of a fad^d copy of Spencer's Faerie Queene may mean wealth and luxury to Alfred Watkins Seymour, keeper of a small restaurant in Seattle, Wash. The paper is a certificate of sixtyseven shares of stock in the Mechanics Bank, left by Thomas Williams, who died in New York in 1822. Its actual value, ^together with accrued interest, was declared to amount to half a million dollars. The certificate had dropped out of sight but was discovered by a genealogist who was joing through a library in the household of a family in Troy, N. Y. where Seymour had had a sister and an aunt. Seymour has established, it Eras asserted that Williams was his ?reat grandfather and that he is now she sole heir to his property. His :laim has been substantiated in several courts7 but a legal battle is still in progress. The bank now known by virtue of various merges aa the Mechanics ind Metals National Bank, maintains ;hat it has no record of the issue of stock and pleaded the statute of limfcations. Supreme Court Justice Wagner recently ruled against this >lea, but attorneys for the bank de:lared they would carry the case to ligher courts. I f laker iia^Zt 9 J e is one busithat a'quitter' everely alone, t is the power ales and builds e natural time ertising is durtermed "dull" / rise merchants rertising space Jes volume/up 'sing in ind Banner Goo ds i i l THINKS LABOR UNIONS REVOLUTIONARY IN FACT New York, July 7.?Frank Tan- i nen'baum, 26, former dishwasher, I. \ W. W. mob leader, jailbird, loyal 1 soldier of the TT. S. A. honor gradu- ( ate of Columbia University, member i of Beta Kappa, has now blossomed ^ out as the author of a book. It is called 'The Lafbor Movement' I and is thoroughly temperate in dis- j ' cussions akmg economic and soci-1: ological lines. It has been reviewed j j ' and on the whole highly praised by i ' conservative newspapers. t I Tannenbaum is a labor unionist f 1 now rather than a socialist The sen- . [ eral point ..of view of the book is that ? I "the labor mvement represents the ] most vital contribution now being made to social change and reconstruction." He thinks that the move- 1 ment has resulted from the insecurii ty of employment and the fact that ^ machinery has become the center of r gravity in modern civilization. 1 He thinks the* labor unions are, | "revolutionary" in fact rather than jj i primary intention He thinks they are J= I revolutionary because they are ac- 0 tually changing f.he world rather E than because a few individuals ts among them preach revolutionary | doctrines. | He is not as kind bo the newspaper | as they have been to him. He says: jj "The labor movement and the jj workers in general, because of thei* jj experence with the capitalistic press, jj lose confidence in it and cease to be- p i lieve it. This is a very striking fact | in the current world. The capitalistic G press has overdone its service to the ;| present sysytem and has lost its hold | upon the workers." f , 1 SHRINE TEMPLES TO " HOLD JOINT MEETING G . I n Columbia, July 7.?An invitation | has been forwarded by the secretary 1 of A1 Araf Shrine Club, of Columbia, f to the officers of the two Shrine Tern- s pies of the state, Omar, with head- I quarters in Charleston, and Hejaz, | with headquarters in Greenville, for | a joint meeting of the two temples in i Columbia in the Fall. T{ie exact date E for the joint celebration will be de- I cided by the officers of the two Tem- ? pies, but it is stated that the meeting will probably be in November. 5 Both Temples will have their meet- % ings in the Fall, and the idea of the | Columbia Shriners is to have a joint E meeting here. At a recent meeting g of the A1 Araf Club, on motion of | C. C. Campbell, the secretary, Walter | F. Going, was instructed to send the | invitation to the two Temples. j . It is stated that if the invitation is p o accepted the Columbia Shriners will bend every energy to make the November meeting one of the best of the kind ever held in the state. It will be the largest assembly of Shriners ever h^ld in the state, and elaborate J-1 !!1 .1 J- 1> X fi preparations win ue maue ior enwsrtaining the visitors. It is stated that such a meeting will bring between three and four thousand Shrlners to Columbia, every part of the state being represented. Columbia Shriners belong to one or the other of the two Temples, some to Omar and some to Hejaz. Omar has the largest percentage of Columbia Shriners. RIOT CALL SENT OUT Miami, Fla., July 2.?The kidnaping tonight of the Rev. R, H. Higgs, a negro preacher, who has been conducting revival services in Cocoan? i i. j nut uruve, oecauae 01 ms auegvu j doctrines of racial equality, resulted i in a riot call being set to Miami, the dispatch of several automobile loads, of policemen with machine guns and! the shooting of two men here. Higgs was taken away by four| j men in -an automobile. The sheriff and hia deputies say they have been unable to find him. When the commotion began all former service men here were called out and armed and were thrown about the roacU to prevent a gathering of negroes. One negro who failed to halt when commanded to do so j was fired upon by a.guard and was. 11 seriously wounded. A white man C passing was sugntiy wounaea. W. A. HARRIS funeral supplies embalming and Auto Hearse Service phones j Day 395 Night 134 I / NOTICE OF LAND SALE V By virtue of the authority vested n me by a certain deed of Trust, I vill sell at public auction, on the Lst day of August 1921 at Abbeville Court House, S. C., at 11 A. M., or soon thereafter as practicable, the 'oilowing described real estate: All that lot or parcel of land sitlate, lying and being in the City of \hbeville. in the Conuty of Abbevilie, n the State of South Carolina, facng on short street leading from Vlagazine Street to Jail Street, and )emg bounded by lot of Jim Buchanlan, by lot of Harriet Vance, by lot )f Thomas Culbreth, and by Street ieparating this lot from lot of G. A. Harrison. Terms of Sale: Cdsh, purchaser to )ay for paper** and stamps. D. H. HILL, Trustee. Fune 20th, 1921. 6-22- 3t. r???? l BAILEY M I ....GRE jj Faculty of 28 Offi< i 14 States and ; |. Bailey Military Insti jj equipped ftighgrade A large outdoor gymnasiui 3 dormitories and hospital. The 11 j] campus. Three Expert Coaches. | boj?. ~ At Bailer each Cadet is u J w j the lime he reaches the school < ' Every effort is made to sur [ ing and living. The moral infli Bailey it recognized by the I full Military equipment. Militar; Last Summer over 200 appl I Applications and letters of inqui I advise you to send in your appli< ] catalog. j COL j MAJOR JOHN W. MOORE, HE j For 14 years a professor at The . .XI Jz Southet Summ< Fror ' TO Asheville, N. G Black Mountain, N. C. . . Beaufort,^. G : Canton, N. C | Flat Rock, N. C | Gastonia, N. C H Hnf 9?nninnre K Pi nuv AAllfetU* ilt V-* . g x \J I | Lake Junaluska, N. C. a Murphy, N. G. ... ... . i Saluda, N. C I . . ; a | Swannanoa, N. G. ...... | Tuxedo, N. G. ... . :; . . Wrightsville Beach, N. C. I (8 a a Tickets at above rate i with final limit returning | all points on both the goii ^ In addition to the abo | other resorts throughout | Pacific Coast. ^ ____ | Spenc Mounta a 9 a a a a a a ?? | GOLF, TENNIS, HORSEB a i ? : Convenient sched I ed information cons QTrpfnrvi AV moa kjtv oicin, auuitoc. 3 H a | a a a a i Plumbii and Heati REASONABLE I PRICES Ralph IILITARY INSTITU' ENWOOD, S. C eers and Instructors. 31 3 Foreign Countries Re firta ic nrm rvP fhc* lororoc VV4W MKJ VAAV VJ. V* A V preparatory schools in n affords pleasure and physical dev irgest swimmfr ? pool of any male insl A faculty of experienced and promi nder the close personal control and ? until he leave* for his home. round the cadets with an atmosphere lences thrown around them are not e: I United States Government and suppl y discipline develops loyalty, neatness, lications came in after all available sf iry are coming in each day; If you co :ation at a verv earlv date. Write i F. N. K. BAILEY, SUPERINTEND 1ADMASTER. ? > i Citadel. The last three years as cor ....ANNOUNCES.... ;r Excursio n ARREVII.I.F.. R-T. FARE TO .... $ 9.80 Biltmore, N. .. . . 10.88 Brevard, N. .... . 26.79 Bryson, N. C . . .. 11.02 Clyde. N. C. .... 8.21 Fletchers, N -. . . . 8.79 Hendersonvi .. . . 12.32 Isle of Palm . ... 11.45 Lake Toxawi 17.43 Morehead Ci 7.64 Skyland, N. .... 10.52 . Tryon, N. C. . . . 8.00 Virginia Bea .... 19.86 VVaynesville, per cent war tax to be added) s are now on sale and will con October 31. 1921. Stopovers lg and return trip. >ve points, summer excursion fa the United States, and specia 1 Your Vacation In^the ( ins Of Western North LIVE OUTDOORS ...IN... unri t _i Af *.1 CI. l ne L<ana ur me ok ACK RIDING, MOTORING, F! MOUNTAIN CLIMBING. ules and through train s ult nearest ticket agent. R. C. COTNER, District Passenger Agent, SPARTANBURG. S. C. 3JSM2fSJS?3J5I3JE[SJ3JSl3J3J3J3J3SI3JSM3I3MS i V If 1 PHONE v; | 265 I 1 . Calvert Building^ I \ t o. : 1 Vienna street r T ' I 1 urner i i ' ; . i< gg p 32 Cadets. I presented. I | I t and best * v f the South. ^2^ . * i elopment. Modernly equipped , :itution in the state. Twenty acre nent educators who understand j ' v ... Mil ratcHful care of instructors from ; s . /; that will encourage noble think- [S? ccelled by any school in the land. s I V . ied by the War Department with b , obedience and devotion to duty. i ?ace bad been taken. ^ ntemplate patronizing Bailey we a or our handsomely illustrated ff*, >ENT- it nmandant of cadeta. * [SJ3J3IS13J3I31SI3IS13f3J3J3J3J3ISJ3f3J3?3I3f3I3?a System I r? . ..... I n r ares ? s.c. | ? 1:' . R-T. FARE I' C $ 9.72 I C 9.80 I". 14.04 1 V 11.24 I'':* . C 8.93 1 , lie, N. G 8.43 ? / s, S. C 16.22 I ay, N. G 11.09 ? *\ ity, N. C 26.57 I ? a r\f\ ta (J y.zz: s * 7.06 J oh, Va . . 30.70 I , N. G 11.67 1 tinue until September 30. 1 are permitted at any and i ires are authorized to many | I attractive fares to the^ a Glorious f!arnlina. | ? I 1SHING, CAMPING, AND | ervice, and for detail- I Southern Railway, | iS/5i3?3?S?313?3fi^3IS?SJffl9?SJSI3i3/3/S/a ?