A BIT OF FRANCE
IN NEW ORLEANS
V3Ufa of Vieux Carre Being Made
Into Picturesque Abode For
Works of Art.
Vieux Carre is the name for the
?U French village in ' New Orleans,
writes Chloe. Everything is set to
sake the village an abode of art. It
will be, if New Orleans succeeds in
their designs of the Old Square.
Down in Louisiana they are scrub
- ' iV- .1J
Hng and reinrDisning we oia neuvu
*0lage and making it so attractive
to artists that within the year, they
ltope, great painters, poets and au-(
tkors will swarm there from all over
ffce world. The Little theater, the
I
Qnatre club and a tea room called (
I'Ombre de la Cathedral," are all
wry attractive and alluring. The
shadow is supposed to be cast by the
Id St Cathedral. It is a good cathedral,
all right, but it couldn't possi-j
Uj cast a shadow that far. |
The purpose of the Quatre club is
.to entertain' visiting celebrities and
far general social meetings of the
vtists and writers of the quarter and
t the society leader sponsors from up|
i town. Among the distinguished guests
kas already been Gen. Robert Georges
Nivelle when he visited New Or
Mens. It was one of those chill days
vbidt reminds one . of Paris when the
antral blows. But the Quatre club
was above all' considerations of,
weather and had the tables out on the
walk, in real Paris style. By all ac?tints
the affair was a decided sue,
Of the romance of old days,1 the
? - _ iiL. *T
feast possible survives in me new
Orleans French quarter now but sure
if bo place in the world has a ^oup
- ?f buildings more charming and suitvV
4pble for the abode of artists. When
|v: v > jso first walk about the streets you
if, are Bkely to be disappointed ; for in
aider to know the real spirit of the
-.v. quarter you have to be at leisure and
lure around, under escort, stopping j
tp visit here and there with a friendly,
|v- shopkeeper, ad to sit at your ease,
i m the shade of a banana tree in some
I';/t' dusky court yard.
I know of one court yard where
19iree fig trees, with their funny stubfry
twiggs, grow, and upon the gal..
fcry above are rows of brilliant gera-1
inure. The people are just poorj
Kaffans who have not been in the.
tpuitry long; but they show off their,
fewery Spanish court yard as if it j
r : Wire an ancestral habitation. It is
? aid that there are o nly some half
*' . j dbjpen Creole families living down in
fife French quarter^ now. Most of I
, ftyrn have moved uptown. But'there [
V u ene charming pface on Royal street |
with great tall wooden doors. You!
! X i
re admitted through a little door cut
|
lathe big one- and taken through the
finest court yard in the quarter,1
- Basegrreaf palms planted 100 years'
' * I
n, spread. There are, twenty rooms
|b this house and it is tenanted by
Anree persons, the last of the family.11
? Hot far away is a little pink house |
qrith a low balcony upon it, about one
from the street. There Patti
?sed to sit on an evening to watch!
. * the fashionable^world go by when she
ms in New Orleaans singing at tne
French opera house. This opera house
tamed down in December, 1919, and
s very generally lamented. It was
aot only the headquarters for the
cay's music, 'out the meeting place
wf fashionable society, when the
iwilrpd balls were held at carnival
t&pe. The low, slate and tiled roof
1 lasses are built of brick, stuccoed
f\ t -"?v I
mad limed and turned to all sorts of
IT- . -Jtf
jitturesque colors by time and the
weather.
There have been many unknown
Ciest men in New Orleans, and one I
gnat man was expected and didn't i
gtt there. That is the most touch-1
hag story of hero-worship in all the;
sqaals of the people's hearts. The
Ckfeoles of New Orleans loved NapoImq
even more after his downfall
Shan in his triumphs. And a man
smed Nicholas Girod thought of how
&e emperor could be rescued and
Bnught here to stay awhile until his
?ejastatem6nt. The Creoles regarded
othing too good for Napoleon,
ether the throne of France nor the
test house in their own town.
Co they built a fast yacht and commissioned
Dominique You and a crew
picked and desperate men to make
Iks rescue. Napoleon died before the
expedition could get under way; but
tte house, the finest in town then,
mrmm rooil*i fnr liis rRo.fmtion. Thev
ariB tell you that every citizen who J
a choice piece of furniture, or
fBtticularly elegant linen, costly sil%
9er and rich Oriental rugs, gave toj
... '
I NEWBERRY PLANNING
TO ENTERTAIN LEGION
Dr. John F. Setzler, Pott Command*
er, Issues Tentative Program
For State Convention.
Newberry, July 30.?Dr. John B.
Setzler, commander of Newberry
1 County Post of th6 American Legion
Ifcnd one of the most active legion
'men in the State has issued the following
tentative program for the
State convention to ibe held here Sep'tember
7 and 8:
I "The locaU committees ?,re getting
'affairs in shape for the entertain1
ment of the delegates to the third an
|nual convention of the American
Legion of the South Carolina De1
partment, which' meets in Newberry
September 7 and 8. The Woman's
Auxiliary to the post is cooperating
with the legion. This fact alone is an
assurance to the delegates that they
?Ml IL- J?(I _? M?nr_
win oe itmeii vtuc vi wuuic ah nvnberry.
"The legion hall will he used as
convention headquarters and general
information bureau, immediately upon
arrival the delegates will register
at headquarters, and then will be assigned
to quarters.
"The delegates to the convention
will be housed in the hotels, private
homes, and college dormitory. The
two hotels can accommodate 100
delegates. The rates wftl be $3 and
$3.50. Delegates assigned to private
homes will be entertained free..
Those assigned to the college dormitory
(may obtain meals at The Commons,
on the campus, at 1;0 cents per
meal. In so far as may be possible
the wishes of delegates ^will be complied
with in assienlmr homes.
"The new court house will ibe used
as convention hall. The 'business sessions
and committee meetings will
be hedd there. .
"The convention will open at 10
a. in., Wednesday, September 7. The
tentative program calls for a concert
at 10 o'clock by The Serenadere
of Lancaster, Pa. Then will follow
several short addresses oi welcome,
with response by members of the
convention, naming of committees,
and an address by some prominent
legionaire. i
"At 1:30 a barbecue will be served
to the delegates at Willowbrook
Pairk. This will be followed by a
I
meeting of the convention. in the
T>a villi on at the -park.
"A baseball game is scheduled
with the local post and some other
post of the department for 4:30
that afternoon at college park.
"Dance dn the Legion Hall (for
delegates only), 9:30* to 12:30.
Music by "The Serenaders."
"The convention will open on the
8th with a concert Iby 'The Serenades,'
at the convention hall. This
will be followed by a business session,'election
of officers, reports of
committees, etc.
"At 4:30 there will 'be a baseball
game at College Park between a
picked team from among the delegates
and a team from the local
post. After the ball game there will
be. an automobile ride followed by
watermelon cutting at East View
Park.
"The picture show at the opera
house will be open to the delegates ]
at all times."%
'Dance at the Legion Hall 10 to i
2. Open to all Delegates free. Music
by " The Serenaders."
"Each post has 'been asked to send i
a sponsor and a maid to the conven- i
tion. The sponsors and maids will 1
be chosen from the auxiliaries where ;
possible. The posts having no auxiliary
may select them from among ,
those eligible to became members of
the auxiliary. A conference of the i
members of the auxilary present at
the convention and of those interested
in organizing auxiliaries, will
he held in convention hall at 3 o'
clock the afternoon of the 8th."
ward furnishing the house for- the
hoped-for guest.
Now the dark courtyard is full /of
old lumber, and plump Italiaan babies
with big black eyes and bouncing
ringlets are at play. For the rest,
it's merely a tenement, with shops
and the like, but for all that the
house will never be as other houses.
Dominique You was a pirate held
in such esteem in the memory of the
people as to make one reflect upon
the folly of being good. Jean Lafitte
is the leading pirate of the neigh
borhood, but if you walk in the old
St Louis cemetery even after all these
years you'll occasionally find a
wreath upon Dominque's tomb, showing
that he, too, is not forgotten.
I
SAYS CAPTAIN KIDD If
WAS OF GOOD REPUTE
-?V? I
Boston, July 27.-VSong and story I
are wrong. Captain Kidd was not a |
pirate and his fabled treasure does [
not exist. Privateersman he was, but J
of good repute. His hanging as a pir- [
ate and murderer on Execution Dock [
at London in 1701 was to satisfy P
,the political exigencies of the r
time. |
These are the findings of John H. f
Edmunds, state archivist for Massa
chusetts, as announced in a lecture *
at the old South Meeting house.
Archivist Edmonds was discussing 5
"Lord Belloanont and the Pirates." *
Bellomont, he said, was appointed
governor of New England in 1695 I
with a special mission to suppress t
piracy. 1
"Before leaving England,'* Mr. J
Edmonds contended, "he agreed !
with Captain William Kidd, a priva- J
teersman of good repute from New
York, to proceed against pirates in I
a ship called the Adventure Galley I
in a <No-capture-no_pay> basis. The Z
adventurers included Captain Kidd |
Robert Livingston, Lord Chancellor [
Somers, the Earl of Oxford (First |
Lord of the Admiralty) the Earl of [
Romney and the Duke of Shrews- j
bury (Secretaries of Sta^e), Bello- |
mont and the straw men, to whom
the king's grant of tresure was later |
made, did not contribute a cent." |
"On September 6, 1096, with a [
crazy* vessel and a crazier crew J
Can tain Kidd proceeded in his mis* r
sion," the archivist said. He picked g
*up several pirates including 'a Moor- *
ish" ship of 200 tons and a Bengal
merchant man of 500 tons, (both ?
havinp French passes and being law
ful prizes."
He came to New York and then to
Boston "through the trickery of Bel
lomont, who promised him safe con- I
duct. With the remnant of his crew I
he was arrested, sent to England, I
tried for murder ?,nd piracy, con- E
victed and hung on Execution Dock, [
Fiday, May 23, 1201, to satisfy the J
political exigencies of the times. It jj
was either Lord Chancellor, the First J
Lord of the Admiralty the Secre- taries
of State or Captain Kidd, and finder
this circumstances he had no >
chance. Collusion and perjury are
' ? L!- J .i. i.u~ L
pituiiiy cviueui/ in ais trial, uie m
French passes which would have
cleared him of the piracy charge,
though produced in Parliament, I
were suppressed in the Admiralty E
Court. The least said about Bello- E
mont's action in the matter the bet- ?
ter. He fooled Kidd,/he fooled his jj
council, and worst of it is, he allow- |
ed it in his letters to the Lords of !
Trade. g
"The Captain Kidd of "today as a J
composite pirate made up of all who ?
frequented our shores from 1637 to >
1837. Propaganda recognized French I!
authority says: 'It may be well
doubted whether any man in equally
trying circumstances has ever been *
truer to his trust.' I
"And yet the great American pub- E
lie persists in calling Captain Kidd, E
a pirate and in searching for his E
treasure, which does not exist." |
Rub-My-Ti?m kills infection. [
PIGEON BRINGS HARDING NOTE ?
1
President Takes Part in Celebration ?
of Landing of the Pilgrims.' F
Washington, July 30.?Coromuni- w
cation with Washington by naval car- p
rier pigeon was maintained today by
the Presidential Yacht Mayflower as I
she steamed up the Atlantic coast S
with President and Mrs. Harding f
aboard, en route to Plymouth, Mass., f
where on Monday the President will
speak at the ceremonies corifmemor
ting the tercentenary of the landing J
of the Pilgrims.
Before the Mayflower left Washing- ?
( am o^r T ioiif 1Wr* A f
jr coniji vaojt , aji^uv* 9 via*?*v?? h
tor of the Navy Pigeon Service placed J
five carrier pigeons aboard, at 4.55 &
p. m.- today one of the birds returped I
bearing a message from the Presi- E
dent to the executive office. The |
pigeon had left the Mayflower at ?
11.30 a. m. today when the yacht was j[
about 23 miles northeast of Cape f
Henry light, a distance of about 250 j
miles from Washington. g
The President's message, obviously g
hastily scribbled, said. 4 j
"Fine voyage, all well, Mrs. Hard- j
ing greatly refreshed. Making our J
?f?Viorhi1n ami'Hsl-. pvrpllpnf. condition, p
Inspection this morning revealed fine
crew aboard the Mayflower. Greet- {
ings to all the office force." jj
666 cures Chill* and Fever. fil
LIEJHIiilErillBIErElilimnJiLfHJBfZliilHfEn
Alfalfa A:
fv
| VI
fi a |
It will pay every farmer
m C A T T~1 A T 'n A (* .1.
I 01 Aiur Ai^r a ior eacn
3 farm. It is one of the b
j and it is also one of the
] grow. If it is properly
( ., four to five tons to the a
j at $40.00 per ton. The
I a handsome profit on tt
will last from eight to t<
or three years you are
and after that it is profi
400 tons of 16 per cent
year. It is one of the
grown and with the Boll
tion of the country, fan
9 geous to have as many s
money crops as possible
best of each. The few;
... x-..
falfa is one of the best
you will have in Alfalfi
better than twice that r
It should.be sown i:
strong, red, well-drain<
and well limed. The 1:
/
i should be arranged for
You can get the fertili2
* * v '
we can give you a ferti
and specially adapted t
Clemson College wi
ing you how to prepare
; limo it anH anw vmir sp<
P ililiv XV., ??? ?T J
has sown some can give
by all means, sow a few
And then you sell your Alfa]
need money most. Some Farme
Alfalfa money.
j ;
11 r
Anderson \
Oil Coj
AINDfcKSL
! i'
| But whatever you do, don't ua
S that contains grass seed and thai
! Alfalfa and that is just what you
j to re-sow as long as you keep the
1 Andersor
gjgfiuiLrai^
' ffl
> a Money|]
op j
'frthaxm ofloacf AnDQ/?t?fl I
UV iiw V \SJ UV AVUUVj VliV uvx V vu
head of live stock on .his |l
est forage1 crops grown }|
best money crops you can IJ
sown it will make from 11
.ere and it is nowj*etailed I}
! first years crop will pay I {
te outlay, and one sowing 11
sn years. For the first two . {I
v/-v n/lrli'liAHn 1 Avnanaa I >
at nw auuinviiai
table to broadcast 300 or j j
i >i'J j
acid . to the acre every [ J
Ij
most profitable crops . ;;II
! Weevil invading this sec- : 11
mers will find it advanta- v!
11
jupply crops and as many j] .
i and Alfalfa is one of the J j
acres you will have in Al- j i
of each. The few acres - j J
a, will pay you very much ' '11 j
nany acres in cotton. j 3 j
n September, on good, |i .
3d land, well fertilized j I
ime and the Alfalfa seed | j
in advance of your needs. Bj
;er from us at any time; ij
lizer of splendid analysis ' j J
;o the crop. ^ i *
n rinn ttaii n Trill + ol 1 _ M5 .1
li ociiu. juu a uuiiv/iin uv/iiyour
land, fertilize it, v [ j
3d; or your neighbor, who . lj;
yon this information, but J J
r acres. * [ 1
If a in the summer; just when you [ j
irs finish their crops with their j j
'hosphate &|!
mnanv 1
L111/IM1J ?
>N, S. C. 13
ij
e lot manure or stable manure; I j
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A. f(j
i Phosphate & Uii company. gj
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