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( Light We When the dizzilv clin dred mark will bring y We have a in Pennine j o Worsteds, dines -in lig men of all s Let us shov new heat-pi lar two and J. H, St m v INe * ' tin win" m !?>? innflWRei Big Barbec tain Sfii iWlil MV1I Jl Speeches by For this one c mer Fabrics, M greatly reduced "R^ Qir.'p to on tending this bi? The Little FOI ^ T tt T a iT-nl r+\r Knci J.Y1V tlCV^ClXj. wuci opportunity for some Reason for selling ha Long lease, low rent. G. C. Calciut Big lot ex morning, prices on i Snmm< WILL MAKE MOTION FOR MISSAL OF EDMUND E Columbia, June 29.?Sol M. Gasque of Florence is < to make a motion before the court for a dismissal of the a Edmund D. Bigham, now in t house at the pen, on the gj'oi the court has already re.rie question of fact involved in 1 and the solicitor predicts court will grant his motion ar cut the appeal. Recently the supreme cour ed a new rule, whereby it ri! review a question of fact, a guished from a question of judiciary discretion, once th court has passed on the fact premises. Under this rule ti: tor may move, alter ten nay to the attorney on the other the case, to dismiss the moti< new trial and get an answer 10 Vmliir in 3 ;UUiVI ill U sight Summer Suit old thermometer is ibing around the hun-a light summer Suit ou relief and comfort. complete assortment Palm Beach, Tropical Mohairs and Gabarht and dark colors for izes and builds. / you some of these -oof suits in the popu [ three button models. inimer and Co. wberry, S. C. Wimfcll) lll'Hl'lMMliMBBMMBWMMWHMiatllii ue At Little Mounoo! On Tuesday uly 4th. prominent speakers. lay we will offer our sum[illinery and Oxfords at prices. me in to see us while atsehool rally. Wise Co. Mountain, S. C. % SALE ness in Newberry. A wonderful i one to get into a going business. ven't time to look after two stores. - cooper Sumter, S. C. n Arsenate ;pected Saturday Also get our molasses. ?r Bros. Co. ii i I'm ! mi ' ffrriirt? niiiio* On n i>iln rM?(1fCini? DIS- ; waiting for the tedious processes ilGHAM the court. | 4*I intend to avoid the Gtate of ti icitor L. rule," the solicitor says, "ii the s expected' preme court follows the rule it h supreme laid down, as there is no reason ppeai of think it would not do so, the Bigh; he dea'n" case will ,-uot hang in the suprei and that court a year longer."' wed the A. L. King, attorney for Bigha .he case, iVeil formal notice of intention to z that the peal last week. Ke has forty days id throw which to perfect the appeal. Af1 thr.t Mr. Casque will have ten days 4- . tirUutlt 4 r\ nurffir-i- V> i a untir'n Ta r^icm I .UUjn- WUiVil tu jSVA.i*W iiviivv WW u.w**. fuses to the appeal. If Bigham thus loses i s distin- appeal, he will have to be resenten< law and f ie lower One good thing about taking advi s in the is that you have somebody to blai ie iiolici- when tilings turn out badly. side of Xi-w that we have prohibition, t :>n for a presumption is that when they without fishing they do nothing but fish. 1 * <? $$> ^ <?><$><?> 3> <$> t : V & t . s? AMERICAN LEGION NOTES. <?> c v . <*> <s> 4 ? ^ <i$> ' > v? 'V '.%> <#v '+} < > ^ <?> < > < > <^> '/ j The American legion membership; drive has been launched throughout t, the country and will continue through ? August .'>lst. The local post hopes to j , : sign up every eligible man in the t 1 community. Ex-service man, do you r | ask why you should join the legion? r Buv or borrow the American Legion > i " Weeklv of June 30th and read the 1 ! , articles, ''Ten .Months of the Veter ? ?? U ^ 4 U/i r\ -C f r\ T n.viAn'c? ail> UUlCrtU, LIIC KJ L uie uv^ivu c Victorious Fight to Save the New fj Hospital Program from the Influenees Which Brought Failure to the Old i One," and "France Remembers 'Le ^ Trente Mae'?A Whole Nation to As sist the Legion in Caring for the s , Graves of America's Soldier and Sai-! u ! I lor Dead Overseas," and you will v find two very good reasons why you t ! should join. j ! What part have you naci in tne le- 0 lion's fight for the proper care of i the disabled, for it has been a fight f ; in the truest sense of the term? Oh, s I yes, the government promised to see s; | to it that the disabled were properly jj ; cared for, but it is a fact, neverthe- p , less, that the history of the governi ment's care of these boys before the t] * | legion took up the fight is not such e |ias any of us can feel proud of. The n i legion is still on the job for the bat- p j tie is not yet/over. "There is strength sj in numbers" is as true in the legion's ^ ! fight for the disabled as in any other ^ { struggle. We need you in the legion.! ! Then, too, do we not, as ex-service q | men especially, have to bear some <s> ; obligations to those of our comrades who sleep in foreign soil? For the . $> third successive year since the organ-1 | ization of the legion, on May the , | 30th, the day that the graves of our | heroes who rest in our homeland are c j remembered with wreaths and flow-, tl i ers, the graves of our comrades in d ! foreign lands have been decorated i J with wreaths and the United States f ! flag. The expense for this service s< ' has been borne by posts of the legion fi ! at home, and the task itself perform- b i ed by overseas post. In this service p : the foreign nations gladly take part. : s< : At the permanent A. E. F. cemetery n| of Suresne, near Paris, Marshal JoiFre I w . flAlilTAVn/) tV>Q WOCC9CTO r\f t P Wfl T 1P- T j urn vciuu vi&v ?nvoouhv v..w .. ? gions of France to the group that asi sembled on Memorial day, May 30th,' b 1922, in these words, "On the tombs c - of our dead comrades here in the far Cl " off cemeteries in the land in which b' they died, America and France on C1 I this memorial day of 1922 renew ^ j 'their pledge of friendship?renew it S j on the white crosses of faith, and 0 ! sacrifice, and love." These services j helj every year will tend to bind h : more closely the ties of friendship S( It . x-i ^ 11 I Deiween tnese nations wmca was tc- 1 mented by the blood shed on the common field of battle. Again I ask, a what part have you who are outside A of the legion had in these, services? ( a We need you in the legion and I be- a lieve it is equally true that you need ; ^ _ the legion. i ^ Our post meets tonight (Monday) ; ^ at 8 o'clock. Business of importance ; x will come up for discussion. Come v | out and bring a new member with 1 you. Remember the state convention c meets in Florence August 23 and 24. c Begin now to make your plans to! c attend this convention. 0 John B. Setzler, Publicity Officer. The Strike at a Glance ^ Chicago, July 1.?Four hundred, j thousand railroad shop employes q were called out on strike at 10 a. m. ! i today by Bert M. Jewell, president of + | the railroad department of the Am' erican Federation of Labor. { ! The causes of the strike were: .slash from two to nine cents an hour '^ ; in pay by the United States Railroad (Labor board; elimination of time and j a half for over time; and evasion by e | carriers of jurisdiction of railroad c 1 board by "farming" out shop work to r j outside contractors. : < | According to figures gathered by c ? the United Press, 300,000 men are , ! _ t jout in the larger railroad centers: It j is estimated that an additional 50,-', i , i 000 struck in smaller shops, i . i I11S The government, through Benja- ] sU-j min Hooper, chairman of the railroad ( ias board, promises protection to all! workers who stay on the job or to ' im jiew men who take the places of ] strikers. .1 j The start of the strike was not i nV marked with trouble of any kind. f( LP- j Railroad executives say that trains i in i will run as usual and that the strike c -er will make no difference to the general ? in public. : 1 iss J Jewell issued a statement that the c [lis strikers would not go back to work x d- i until the carriers accepted his terms. I ce UNPRECEDENTED DEMAND FOR ;t lie, MAXWELL AND CHALMERS CARS r t With a total volume of May busihe ness amounting to $5,738,000, the go Maxwell-Chalmers organizations ran ? i true to the predictions of those 4<on J he inside*' and exceeded its exceptionally favorable April volume by lose to a million dollars, according o figures just released by Wm. Robt. A*ii>on. the president. TU.. con/ivf nlxn <lin#s n \T?v in rease of $2,000,000 in current asett3 over the figure at the close of Vpril with less| than $700,000 inreyse in liabilities for the same peiod. Liabiblities increase consisted nainlv, it is explained, of additional naterals and equipment necessitated >y the expansion of production schedules. Likewise, it is stated, the May proits, when complete reports are availble. will be considerably in excess of he healthy showing; of better than a taif a million dollars in April. Cash and cash securities are also aid to have reached a new high figre for the year on Saturday last ,hen they mounted to the impressive -a...i ..c on -nn nnn Dial U1 One of the most notable features f the company's current business, it > pointed out by Mr. Wilson, is the act that outstanding drafts repreent only seven and one half days of hipment which is less than the minnum time required for placing the resent output in dealers' hands. "It shows two very important tiings,'' he says. "First, it reveals mphaticalllly an unprecedented d"land for our products. Next, it roves the increasing financial Lrength of our dealers which makes ; possible for them to take care of rieir obligations so promptly. <S> BRAILLE <? <S> A call has come to the Red Cross hapter of Newberry county for work lat it has never done before?proucing Braille. No more heroic figure emerges rom the great war than the blinded sldier. His courage on the battleeld is as nothing compared with his rave spirit in facing life handicaped by blindness. If you were that )ldier what would you wish for io?l? From every intelligent person ill come the same answer?books. he blinded soldier must learn to ?ad by touch, and for him special ooks must be made. The system of haracter writing for the blind is illed Braille. It consists of dots emassed on paper. It is not at all diffialt?only tedious. In many places has been taken up by high school iris as an altruistic work. Women's rganizations are doing it in a sys?matic way through the Red Cross, idividuals are finding joy in this ?rvice that will give so much pleasre to these darkened lives. Perhaps here are those wno pnysicaiiy are not ble to sew for the naked children of ^rmenia and Poland, or who are not ble to get out from home to do more ctive work, but who could give an our or two every day to writing Sraille. If so, call Miss Fannie Mc"aughrin, phone number 8, and she will be only too glad to furnish you rith materials for the work and with nstructions. Let us show our appreiation for the blessing of sight by loing our bit to bring light into the 1 1 - V? nvnnc Txrll H larKeneu jivt-s ui muoc uciuto ???.? >flfered their all. Mrs. R. D. Wright, For Supplies Committee. The Passion Play fouth's Companion. The Passion Play, which was relumed this year, after having been >mitt.ed since 1910, goes back at least o the sixteenth century and is rather t devel?Pnient than a creation. As wocantfl/l nViprnmrripro-an. it. is in effect an open air play, for although he auditorium is covered, the stage s open, with a background of sky and 'orest-covered hills. The out door settings, the songs of birds, the trees ;waying in the wind give the scene in air of reality that is most affesting }n one occasion a thunder-storm ame up during the crucifixion scene, md to many of the spectators the - 1 _ ~ 1 _ /J? AM /J +1^ A nrfirc JIHC'K UIUUU3 aim one iigni.iiin g, ?? v 1 v nore realistic than was pleasant. SX-SOLDIER AND HIS GIRL ELUDE DAD IN AEROPLANE Fort Myrs, Fla., June 29.?John P. Harris, World war veteran and member of a prominent Georgia family, md Miss Fern Armeda, daughter of Japtain iNick Armeaa 01 mis cny. ,vith the aid of an airplane have succeeded in eluding Captain Armeda md county judges through south Florida, an(j have been married, according to a telegram received by \rmeda fhom his daughter. Peggy Joyce says she returned to Vn'? pnnntrv on business. Another nillionaire will be married for a short ime. You may say what you like, but the 'iris are going to wear short skirts ust as long as they please. ! IBM I ' g* ?- '?? I I % 1 You u car of t Maxu ! remarJ i Cor able cau< Prk ing< Caroli] $88 491 Tjufrxr liww u mi rtm ntrTirnrTrr*^* I Stuc | Don't I The Special-Six chassis frame is 1" deep. It tapers from a width of 29* in the front to 41 * in the rear, so that the sides of the body fit perfectly without overhang. Five crossmembers prevent the distortion that eventually causes bodies to squeak. THIS IS I V /ill be astonished to find t :he size and weight of tlie /ell can be so roomy ar kably comfortable to rid d tires, non-skid front and rear; disc steel wheels, demount at run and at huh; drum type lamps; Alemite lubri 3n, motor driven electric horn; unusually long springs T- T1 T~v . 1 X es t D. l_/eiroi{, revenue tax ve duucu. xwui Car, $535; Roadster, $385; Coupe, $1335; Sedan, $148; tia Auto Com . ^-ajjaggigSS^SS Hhe Good ft k .... lebaker Bod Rattle or Sq Studebaker bodies rest squarely frame?not on the body sills. Th frame form a rigid unit that succ the rack of the road. Studebaker bodies are built i shops by men, many of whom he ing vehicle bodies for Studebak Troorc _ on A mr pr< Ui -/ V/ J V^UJ. O WA1VA4 x M V Studebaker has been building seventy years. Studebaker Special-Six bodies, I quality and soundness, weigh m of other cars around the Specialcannot skimp in material and bu will not rattle. * Freedom from rattle or squeak of the fine-car refinements that extra value of the Studebak( MODELS AND PRICES-/, o. LIGHT-SIX JPECIAL-SIX 5-Pasj.. /12' W. B. 5-Ptiis.. fir W. B. 40 H. P. 50 H. P. Chassis $875 Chassis $1200 Tourinjf 1045 Touring 1475 Roadster. 3-Pas3. 1045 Roadster. 2-Paas. 1425 Coupe-Roadster Roadster. 4-Pasa. 1475 2-Pass. 1375 Coupe. 4-Pass.... 2150 Sedan 1750 Sedan 2350 ^ ? m. CM j i c LOr<1 1 ^ ^la^uru McHARDY MOWFJR Distributor Phone 300 Newberry, S. C. A STUDEBAKE hat a good id so ie iii. > pany \ :ll J '1 * J V _ . . , % lies [ueak on the chassis te body and the :essfully resists O. 1 _1_ _ I in oaiaeDaxer ive been build- I er for upwards I > before them. fine bodies for >ecause of their ore than those Six price. You , lild a body that' * ' is just another emphasize the ir Special-Six. b. factories BIG-SIX 7-fW. 126' W. B. 60 H. P. Chassis $1500 Touring 1785 Speedster. 4-Pass. 1985 Coupe. 4-Paas. ... 2500 Sedan 2700 tent