University of South Carolina Libraries
I Haltiwange \ / Oil \ " ? 1 pirn 36 inchJS^vy Storm Se 44 inch All Wool Stor yard * ;.r '? s mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm?mmmm?mrn* Heaviest quality Outi ? colors, yard Extra heavy Cheviot, 35c Bed Ticking, vai 32 inch Kiddie Cloth, | 56 #LCii ^road Cloth, all i m "Are You a Shriner?" "Are Yoa a.Shriner?" a pleasin comedy will be ^pfeyed at the cit opera house on Monday night, Nc vemBer 22. This play will ae give under the auspices of the Newberr ^ U,f' H^La <w3 n ova onruiv ClUlfc 1UC yiajCiD ate iivi Al Araf Shrine dub t>f Columbia, as sisted by the best talent of the capi i tol city and directed by Daniel Reec director cf the Columbia Stage sc ciety. ,;V\ The fun of "Are You a Shriner? is contained in every guise known t farce; surprise situations, forcei confessions, mistaken identity, an ?-j?x_i tv, a /?o cf nril act:meiILUl CUUVICUUU. mc vaob ??iJ array the clean cut story of the pla; with all the finesse and accuracy o well trained players throughout thre* acts, with one purpose?that o charming and amusing the audience Keep the above date in your min< and get your tickets early, as ther will be a large crowd out that night Fiesh Like Salmon. The flesh of the. emperor fish, ; gaudy, deep blue and golden yello\ coral fish of the South seas, resem bles that of salmon. HARDING RESTS AFTER CAMPAIG! ( Continued Frqsi Page 1.) w?iii i i r i"i Now that the political complexioi of the next administration is know definitely gossip about cabinet selec tions is reviving and enough name to fill a dozen cabinets are beinj mentioned in current rumors. In this undercurrent of specula . tion, which apparently is withou V . sanction of authority, the name """heard oftenest as possible cabinet of ficials include those of Elihu Root Philander C. Knox, Henry Cabo Lodge, Charles Evans Hughes, Hei bert Hoover, Maj. Gen. Leonar Wood, Gov. Frank 0. Lowden, For mer Senator John W. Weeks, Harr M. Daugherty, and many others. Besides cabinet officials Mr. Hard ing will have an army of other fed I eral appointees to select?a fac I which was brought to his realizatio ft with new force today as the petition K of office seekers beg^in to pile int A his office in full swing. His friend A declare it is partially to avoid sue annoyances during a period of res that he will leave Saturday for hi month's trip to Point Isabel, Texas and the Panama canal zone. ^ :r & Carpenter "The G Calling Yc // V V 1 fl :r Help] 11 7E are extendir ^ww nierchi wIllllfMlfa that high price XyjumUM down by cutting off the X\ T$mml waited until the se&son 1 vk WRJll you need the goods an( f( Hundreds of items for ] home, are here ready f( have heard of in many n opportunity of saving g: urge you to come and store will prove the trut this sale is limited, the s pers are buying heavily more than liberal .value r-Mllffi DRESSES , Serge and Tricotine Dress $19.50, $22.50 and $24.50. Charmeuse and Tricotine E merly priced at $47.50 for I Extra special beaded, braid broidered Tricotine Dressy MIDDY SUITS - GOODS $12.50 value for Srge, $1.25 value price, yd 90c |1|;5Q value for m Serge, S3.00 value price, $25.00 value for $2,39 $3o.00 value for : ... VV t * r.v ing, light and dark | | g 35c e d 25c |]2) H| yard 39c "The G. $ i Miiwi.iT 'H'wii in iMii?faBag\agrmTWM?ga?1i^mb??a?? I - CHARACTER. g j j* y| '*? :%A mans character is not what he seems to be, but >-! what he really is. Often character is thought of as n j that reputation which we possess in the minds of oth- s yJ ers. But, when we study this wore}, we find that the J former and not the latter is really character, i-j (Character is not 'measured by a man's wealth, nor l,i by his brilliant talents, but bj? his true virtues. These *-\ virtues are the sure qualities by which character is ? | known. Nothing in physical power, wordly accumula0| tiori, or wonderful power of intellect can separately i! form character, though they may be subordinate to d character. If we speak of a man who has just died, we can not fj mean his genius, his wisdom or his social standing, e! These qualities may enter into his character, but they fj are not the qualities which make up his character. The character of a people is not to be learned from those who dress in purple and fine linen, or from the apparently refined ladies and gentlemen; but it is to be learned from the noble deeds which are productions of the virtuous and the good. ai True character is a principle that is always right v I and commendable. It is a power in man that keeps . his entire nature in direct opposition to the devices of evil. Character is formed slowly; it is a gradual process and can not die. For we live not in our outward * ' appearance, nor in the houses which we build with our I * * hands, but in deeds and by memory. Therefore, we J see how necessary it is to possess and retain a good 1 character. * K. W. K., '22. s ? ? B FROWNING FORTS OF FOLLY. " Our country has just passed through a momentous * crisis. America has experienced many hardships and s trials but now she faces a new day of hope and peace. . Our cities and towns are prospering. Our fields are t fruitful?our forest and mountains are beautiful -; with the feet of those who bring good tidings of peace. d But with all this wealth and natural resources, this great power of national aggrandizement, we are feary i l'ul lest some impending danger imperil our glory. I-1 Coming into this beautiful land from abroad, a strangl"| er sees in his ambitious imagination, huge air castles, 11 the semblance of which is dazzling and beautiful. But s behind these castles there is not always that which is o expected by others. Let the floods come, the rains de sj scend and beat upon the walls, and then we learn if h! these magnificent buildings are founded upon solid rock or merely upon shifting sand. The majority of . them are built upon the sands for behind the walls are our frowning forts of folly. t : Z ; - \ wsmmmmmmBmmBsmmmmammmaaammmMmmmmaammmmm rowing Store of Newberry" M 11* A ffnnfm ing Hani ig a "Helping Hand" to those in need of Fall and andise, but who have put off buying in the hope ;s would come down. We have brought the prices best part of our legitimate profit, and we have n.oe . was half over, but have done it right now when 1 can use them to the best advantage. personal wear, and scores of things needed in the >r your choosing today at lower prices than you lonths. To put off buying now means to pass an reatly on everything you need. That is why we choose before it is too late. Just one visit to the ;h of every statement we make here. The time of ;tock of merchandise is limited, too. Wise shopand rapidly. Come in and get your share of these s. SUITS *7 CO GilTTrtTrf-yvwtk Olid 1/"?1 1 ! .Qlll + C & 7 AO Co, l?UV/| Oil VC1 IU11U anu T V/1VU1 K-'UAVUJ value for $60.00 Presses, for- Tricotine and French Serge Suits, strict $38,00 ly tailored, also fancy models, $47.50 ed and em- value for $36.00 is, $40.00 Gabadine and Storm Serge Suits, $32.00 $32.50 value . $18.50 COATS $ 9.95 * $27.50 value for : $18.00 $13.20 $37.50 value for $25.00 $18.00 , $47.50 value for ; $38.00 $19.50 , $55.00 value for $44.00 ; $28.00 . j $75.00 value for $60,00 A /I V r & tarpenter, 1 'owing Stotf of Newberry" HraanBBHHBHHnnBHMBBHaHHBHBHI The fort of materialism, under the name of pros perity; the fork, of national selfishness, under the name of "America for Americans;" the fortress of illiteracy, under the name of "Americanism;" and the fortress of intel^tual inertia or rather the^ fortress of mental sluggishness of our people, which masquerades under the pseudonym of "American deliberateness." How many-of our sincere and peace-loving people have wandered from the righteous path merely on account of that almighty dollar. This powerful, seduc tive dollar has caused us to neglect our educational duties and, worst of all, to neglect Alimighty God. Selfish individualism has held the grasping power on us in the past, at the present, and will so continue for years to come if the people of this nation do not awake and look forward to the higher ideals that will attain for this nation the standard of perfection. Have any of us ever once thought how many illiterates were among us? Statistics have shown us that iv? 1 01 n ixrovfi five cmH u Vialf million nprmlp in t.hfi ill JL %J JL \* tllWX ?? Vi. V *4. ? V W? AAW^JL ^ V w ^ . vr ? United States over ten years of age who could neither read nor write. Now is it not time that we should get down to work and eradicate this menacing evil? It is natural that in all the States where illiteracy is common the decrease each decade should be large. Decrease in illiteracy must .come through the public schools, although an increasingly large number must devolve upon other agencies, such as immigrant associations; the Christian and Hebrew Young Men's and Young Women's Association; workers among the mountain whites, and such institutions as Hampton and Tuskegee among the negroes. On account of a more literate type of immigration before 1900, statistics show us that changes in illiteracy were less striking than in the period from 1900 to 1910. Do we realize what a great per cent, of our male voters are illiterates? The great world war has shown us how many of our men of this age are illiterate. Now friends, how can we, the people of the greatest nation on earth, stand for such an alarming percentage of ignorance among us? How can we persist in such an evil as this? We see strong, robust men going to the polls to vote and yet these men can not even write their own names. Such a sight moves us with compassion. Shall we sit idly and let this black spot remain rvv Qffl wo rrnincr tn orpf hnsv ? This fnrt of illiteracy VI l*i V " V 5 vw t5vv " V V- ^ must be dismantled by the education of the masses. The time has come when we, the people of this nation, should get down to genuine judgment and put aside that mental sluggishness which has had the hold of us for so long a time. The American statesmen would do well to reconsider the Treaty of Peace, that this confused and upset nation may be brought back to normal conditions. But there are so many of our i * f y t l jr. t / ^ 1_| Haltiwanger & Carpenter j n to d" Sale ? COTTON PIECE GOODS 'x 36 inch Madras, White and Colored Stripes, 65c value, yard v ...49c /' 36 inch Madras and Percale, yard 25c 36 inch Indian Head, yard : 35c Festival Bleaching, yard 25c 30 inch Middy Twill, good quality t yard 35c j 50c Long Cloth, yard 35c i 32 inch Ginghams, yard 35c Best Apron Ginghams, yard 19c 40-inch Heavy Unbleached Homespun, yard 19c Sweaters and Woolen Scarfs 10 per cent off. One lot of Organdie and Voile Waists 1-2 price. < Blankets $4.95 to $15.00 g 36 inch Solid Color Plaid and Stripe Messalines, i yard $1.50 and $1.69 | 36 inch Taffeta, Navy, Black and Brown, yd v$1.95 I $2.50 Corsets $1.88 I ma $3.00 Corsets .,.".......$2.2$; 1 111 $4.50 Corsets ...... ..$3.50 Ilw# $6.00 Corsets $4i50 ^ $8.50 Corsets .$6.00 140 inch Charmeuse, yard .$3.00 .*. - ,?<; i mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmsmmtmmm ' " ' '?-' ?<i "': people among us who object to the proposed League . of Nations. As McAdoo says, "This treaty must ben, ; . enforced for never in all history has it been so necessary that an effective instrumentality for the'interpreX_A? _ jy _ j_ j j r "ji _ / A _ P j _ x' " tation 01 a treaty ana ior tne eniorcement 01 its terms , \ be provided as in the present instance, because *never in the history of the world has peace been reestablished - after a great war upon suoh'a revolutionary basis." The time has arrived when we should do away with . that fortress of intellectual inertia and should get earnestly employed that order might be brought intt this confused land and the promise of peace to a suffering, despairing world. in the words of Mr. Hoover, "Neither the gospel of hate nor the gospel of unpreparedness is the road to peace but the true road lies in every effort to remove * the causes of war not in tearing down such structure of peace as we have, nor in blindness to present dangers." 'Tis a frowning fort of folly, this stronghold of mental inertia, for its further fortification will spell inevitably our destruction?our ruin. i / America, the leading nation of the world, has bee* the center and inspiration of democracy for a hundred ovc WTn liovn rritroM oil ii'o nnococsaH m'OVV *cnir_ \ cai O. T I C I iCV V ^ 51) C1I UU It v< ^/uouvuuvu KW v ? VI j wuj/i* ation for self-government during this time. And we believe this government which we have was instituted for the betterment of the world. We have enjoyed, the prosperity gained from it. Then we sent our noble lads?our best blood?to the battle-fields of Europe. They fought that we might blot out autocracy in the world. We won. Now shall we sit idly and become once again me victim 01 unscrupulous assassins, ur aic we going to have a determining voice in shaping the future destinies of worlds and use every strenuous ex-* ertion we have in order that peace may reign once more in this world of turmoil and strife? / a' r We can not doubt it. These frowning forts of folly are in our path. We have become too prosperous and have put aside our duties to the teaching of our illiterates. We have neglected our God. This generation is not able to uplift the walls but we can lay the foundation for the victorious generation that will come. And in our blindness and national egoism we have erected these menacing forts that will bring to us only shame and disaster. We may not be able to clear away the debris after destroying these forts. But clothed in the majesty of American patriotism the great army of heroic citizens will lay the foundation for a magnificent structure of national leadership that shall tower victoriously above the racing tempests and thundering storms of ages to come, the proud triumph of all the generations yet unborn. D. 0. H., '21. - ~ .r -s / T % , ?