The herald and news. (Newberry S.C.) 1903-1937, July 28, 1922, Page FIVE, Image 5

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SL ?? ^ THERE IS A LITTLE H0U88 little house! It is so small - ?; { 2 hava not found it yet at all, Asd as year follows patient year, Strange towii6 of countries far and nM( Return the answer: "Nay, not hero!" And yet 1 know the lamplight falls Caressingly upon its walls. And I would touch them if I could. To know if they are stone or wood. There is a clialr for vou. and ther# > The light falls golden on your hair. But?with your graying lips unklswd The spiral shadows coil and twist About you as you turn to mist. Our little house! Its window panes Stung by a thousand passionate raia^ Are blind with ivy, and the moss Creeps on the sill that we must crc?% It would not be so hard to wait. If I were sure about the gate. A bToken latch were trivial now, To dazzled eyes, that marveled how The sunrise rested on your brow. But dawn is terrible unless Love soothes its awful loveliness. Ah, love, what fierce dawns storm and dare The little house that waits somewhere! ~Mary Brent Whiteside, in Leslie'i Weekly. SHRINE LOOTED OF TREASURE Russia's Soviet Government Has Appropriated Riches of Famous Church of Saint Sergius. Sit Saitohs' treasure of S300.000.00C has disappeared. Red soldiers now use as a barricade the buildings ol what was once regarded as the richest and most famous convent of all the Russians save, possibly, that at Kiev. There are but five monks left Id the monastery. Fifteen others have removed a mile and a half distant t the Church of Gethsemane, at Cherfligovskaya where they have founded a humble community and till the soil, The other monks who lived at this vast religious mecca, to which yearly went 100.000 pilgrims, have been scattered. There are but few pilgrims now to Dray before the ik<?n of St. Sergius, the miraculous powers of which was supposed by Russians to have saved the monastery from destruction by the French army of invasion in 1S12. The very jewels of the open silver sarcophagus of St. Sergius have been removed or replaced with false ones, it is claimed. Many of the vast treasure of church vessels, mitres and croziers, made of solid gold and inlaid with precious stones o? immense value are missing. It is claimed that the loot from the monastery equaled in value the treasure of gold and silver and precious stones of St. Peter's, Rome. The monastery Is now classed as a national soviet museum and no services fire held within the church. Ipp' A CREDIT RATING Mr. Everbroke: I want a good diamond ring on credit I've just become engaged to the rich Miss Goidenbonds." The Jeweler: I am sorry to have to refuse you. Our credit man reports that it's difficult to get Miss Goidenbonds to return her engagement rings. Call and see us when you need wedding rings. K Thirty days time?five per cent, off for cash. Piano Box Shoe Store. Have you ever been in an oil boom town? The hope ol' striking oil is a* great an excitement as the finding of gold in '49. From the preliminary leasing of the land, the promotion ol stock, to the setting up of a drill it has all the glamor and glory of speculation. Once oil is hit. the gusher opens up not only wealth for the prospector, but some measure of opportunity .(01 the alert merchant. In the Arkankis C-U (1 lino (if lltrius UIUIKJI Uiniiipiii M ...... --- V- - ^ appeared. They were nothing more than shanties at the best, but the shoe store took the prize of the entire main street. It consisted of four piarn boxes containing the'best grade boots and the best calfskin/shoes at a pric* reminiscent of the war period.?Bool and Shoe Recorder. New York Woman's Fool Idea. Because she dyed lior cat a beautiful blue to harmonize with the furniture of her apartment, a young woman In I*?ew York, who says she is a singer, was arrested on a cruelty charge by fhe Humane sociery. a pronation oificer who was sent to investigate the case told the magistrate that the singer had a three-room apartment all done in Alice blue and had an Alice blue ward robe. She wanted Otto to be of the 6ame shade and so dipped him. Two other cats that she had dyed had been poisoned by licking off the dye* The magistrate gave her a suspended sentence and ordered the Humane society 4 .???*!? I f.. c?Aft fn?* Ic to Keep me eui uiuu us cwh *?= once more clean and there is no further danger to its health. Easy to Start. *1 notice that some young womec have started a movement to teach tlit young men of their town how to tali when paying a call." **A waste of time." 1 "Eh?" "All that Is necessary when the younj chap gets his hat parked and himselJ oaoror? nn rhp ed<r?' of a chair is to say OCttlvu v- 'Oh, Augustus,' Montmorency, PercivaJ or wfcate*er his name happens to be Mo tell me about yourseif t' BlnaiOf lUuzi A^e-Hersai !j 8,000 W CLUBS | ] IN GREATER NEW YORK i i i i | They Swing Along Highways and Through Woods in Groups of Varying Size. j Now York.?One must walk nnwa- ' das to be in the swim. S{:;'isti?-s gleaned from the out-door departments j j of the newspapers, from tEc Boy Scout j and Canipfire Girls' organizations, i j from the Y. M. C. A. branches and i kindred bodies, from scores of amateur f athletic clubs and from the leading i ^ : dealers in sporting goods, indicate that i 1 'i 'I f :: I : 1 "Best Walkers Make Best Citizens," ! Says Mayor of New York. :! ! i I today there are no less than 8,000 hiking clubs in Greater New York, | with a total membership of more than a quarter of a million men and worn ; en, who are keeping themselves in the .! pink of condition and experiencing the i real joy of living by getting regularly ; ! out into the open country with no oth- j | ;er means of locomotion than their Godgiven legs. | ! | The city of New York has taken offi- ' ; clal notice of the movement. On three j occasions recently Mayor Hylan has : ; congratulated the boys and girls of the public schools upon their enthusiasm in taking ud the new sport of hiking. In his dedication of the great new public playground in trife Bronx the other day Mayor Hylan extolled the athletic 1 tendencies of the boys and girls and j Impressed upon them that there was no better or more profitable way in which they could pass their vacations t and utilize their holidays than by the excursions into field and forest of their ! walking clubs. He gave the same , message t<> the Amateur Athletic Un- j ion of Brooklyn a few days later, and 1 when a club of East Side boys and zirls him nt /Mtv hnJl nr^naratorv to 1 a hike to the tomb of Roosevelt at ! Oyster Bay he assured them that the ' best walkers among them would make ; I the best citizens. Walk and Be Well ! No less enthusiastic a champion of j the walking game is Dr. Royal S. i Copeland. city health commissioner. i "The benefit to health and the safe- j : guard to morals to be found in long : walks," said Dr. Copeland in an ini terview, "are too apparent to speak : of thein. If one takes long walks alone [ It is well, for he walks the road of ; health, but if he takes long walks in j | company it is better for he adds the j l /,# r\.i n t/\noh 1 T"4 tr> PVPr^lQP 1 I I Vine VI ...~ , J Walking is the one form of exercise In j j which there is the minimum risk of ; | overdoing it. In short, I consider . J walking the most beneficfal of all exer- j l J eises and it is never out of season." ( j "Never in my life-time," said Ed- J > | ward R. Wilbur, manager of a nation- i j ally known sporting goods store, "have | , i I known su-ch a demand as now for out- J ! i door garments and shoes and stock- | ' | ings and appliances for the tourist's 1 | luncheon box. The rapid spread and , tremendous popularity of the walking; j club idea has no parallel in our e*- . perience. 1 j "The hiker can make his requisite ! 1 : - ... ?1; T>An} ' j JllSt WJI3T HG ICeiS 1IKC spflium^. .?ac<??- | ! i ly, there'aro only two or three articles j indispensuble to hiking?thick walJting ' shoes that allow lots of room, thick ) \ woolen soeks and clothing that will 5 give freedom of limb. He should have i , a canvas or leather musette bag, such ' ; as the soldiers used In France. The Cow in the Knapsack I "To get the real benefit and joy out 1 ' of hiking luncheon should be carried J and prepared and eaten in the open. ! Bread and cheese, a few slices of 1 bacivi, some coffee, a can of condensed milk, and a cake of chocolajt? fur ' nish high-powered fuel for the hiker and are readily and happily assinii- j 1 lated even by those who in their pre- ? ' , hiking days were afflicted with di- j i gestive apparatus so feeble as to balk ; 1 at crackers and milk. Fortunately for I > the hiker, he can replenish his simple : ? larder at any cross-roads store and ! i provide himself with the most nutri> tious and appetizing food in a form that can be conveniently carried. ! "No single development in the probi lem of fo<?d transportation for the . hunter, fisherman, hiker and all lovers of the out-of-doors can compare with ' the gift bestowed by the man who ! found the wa.v to make con ! densed milk, thereby putting a dairy ' In every man's knapsack. Before Ions: ' there will be a national association of : hikers, and Cail Rorden will be its patron siiInt. Such an association could do | much to encourage the spread of the 1 most beneficial and universal of all 5 outdoor pastimes, map out interesting routes, secure the establishment of shelters, rest-stations, and camp sites at suitable locations, acd insure the I rights of pedestrians on country i f?ads.M ^, II Whole stock carefully 8 thing must go. Wed WHY PAY MORE ! Friday and Saturday i almncf i I AF I I Ginghams | $1.50 Dr. I J A large assortment of | Good percaJ( gp fcpretty tringnams is oiij made in man II special table B terns, 8c and 10c | g< Gingham House Dresses I Pretty Gingham House a h dvqpoqp pnwrpol a?r be Ig auu >? H I Aprons, all sizes, K Never b 98c gains. ] Hundreds of others at I I equally low prices. B > ^ ^ 5 Exquisil I 15c 37-incK Sea Island H j q , | Extra wide, fine quality g ana Dat 9c yard IS Extra good quality worth Middy ? 12 l-2c . I Ladies' Ii $1.25 and $2.00 window I Gabardii S <^3 dcs ^ 0. R AH colors. Complete I dy ollltS, 98c |-fully 1 IE Summer Caps, Extra Spe- I b]ems> & I 1 lot of men's and boys' 8 x* i i p I summer caps in plaids, I J-Ul VctlUc I 29c I $2.95 & ^ | $5.00 Skh*ts AM IK Skirts of every descrip- B X & J??J | tion in this lot. Every I | color, style and size. Va- p ^ II lues up to $6.00 gj 98c | NEW A A A A A A nn. 4 ^ ^ vy ^ ^ V N7 V V v v v c v "v v , t'l v iii^ l ^ ^ Vl ''o-' A<?> NEWBERRY'S CLUB WOMEN <s> ^neS" * ' ^ ^ course ar $> <s> <S> <$>'s) <?><$> <$ ?><???<?<?><$>$> Winthrop She compl (By Mrs. A. A. Woodson) York Scho special sun Miss Elizabeth Dominick | ^nn'<jrsity Miss Elizabeth Dominick is the ia niver daughter of the late Jacob L. Dom-' e 1S ' . . , ... .. , , e and capafc inick and his wife who was before marriage Georgianna E. Minick. a e a r Her family is one of long standing " a f i , i . TT C dl/lOil and prominence in the county. Her j Revolutionary ancestor was Henry. ^he Dominick I, who came to Newberry'sc^00* 1 prior to the Revolution and took a S5Cn since prominent part with the Americans 11 veai<3 ? in that struggle. Members of her1 men^ family have served in every war of s>stant insi our country since that time. She is throp sun a sister of Hon. Fred Dominick fors'ons* the third time elected to congress' Miss Do from this d:?3trict. | est in clul -?? ^vn,U?v. 4-Vvq nrcranized -\11SS is it iiiciJiuci ui we , o Lutheran Church of the Redeemer. Winthrop She completed the course in the was presic Columbia city schools with honor, three term immuMmmummmmuwMW BMBBB w I IVHll --SUCCE ? A ATTI U*\LVU HA VE BIG REl l 1 . . passed on and thousan lo not throw out bait, e WHEN WE SELL I :or there are hundred c f daily. Our wonderful 7ew Bargains , ess Shirts! Men's $2.25 I Work Pants i shirts, well Khaki, pin check, Pain ' :e H Beach colors and other: I in good substantial mate H rials, )c I $1.35 Canc/Trfi/v: UCffOUllVI efore in the History of Newberry Each and everyone cut to the heai :e Girlish Crepe de Chine, in Dresses, worth up to $2E $5.95 to $8,95 r $ 1 9 Ort 1 SHOE | Thousands of them. ' Suits I spec^y' Pr^ces 1 cv 11 Cl g Hundreds of pairs c TTTl *j 01 wnite | le Mid- I Many Ladies' Shoes beauti- " bvimmciH 9 Every conceivable s LI inlineu | t0 look ,em over at lk emwonder I ??? I $5.00 and $6.00 Cui ?j thers, best makes?a el l $3.95 IERICAN Si ash Paid for Any Private Stock BERRY - I he Peabody medal for the Maids; served j erage in the high school chapter, D. A. id she graduated from; vin Crozier ch? r\ -p loffnr* . . I UC1 KJ i. college with distinction. j service of her eted the coarse in New; member of ^ ol of Applied Arts, taking ;ber of the Wo amer school courses at the: League> and of Virginia and Cotam- ^ she sity. New York. ! Red Cross auxi a very talented, travelled hjgh schooL ile young woman, having i ip to Europe in 1910, and FORD RETAII ttended the National Edu- IV >ciation in New York city. is taught in the public Company Repo :he state without intermis-; Reached graduating. For the past it head of English depart'berry high school, and as-' Retail sales :ructor in fine arts at Win-;anfi tractors e; imer school for two ses-!reC0rd during . ! to a statement miniek takes a zreat inter-, factory at Det) i work in the town. She 709 machines the Newberry chapter of Ford sales ] Daughters of which she j constant incre lent several terms; served year; June bei is as president of Bachelor history of the n pcnnc tt\ jouao i yj-~ MARKING ! ds of reductions i kvpyvthincr in thi * T V? ******^ aaa r0/? LESS? N< >f new things her buying ability is v Selected ai I $1.00 Figured Foulards Beautiful selection of attractively designed Foulards, extra special, 39c ! rial Sale in Ladi or in the State of South < rt. The final cut on all s vicinity at less than cost o Georgette > to go at $12.50 young la c cuncc iJliVUk/ A vast array of every desci will move them anywhere. HIHHKBBMB UDMHKOBai CHILDREN'S SHOES >f Children's Slippers on table, 45c included. LADIES' LOW SHOES. tyle, one special lot of several . 95c BOYS' EXTRA SPECIAL atom Made Oxfords in all the r ose out. > $2.65 BMWBHnnnBi tire pf\ 1LCJ LU South '$ Foremost. SOUT! / as secretary of Jasper of 148,5 R.; historian of Cal- Of this tpter, U. D. C. (mem- the Fore organization through 9,435 bj father who was a companii Boy company); mem- branches man's club, the Civic practical American Red Cross the worl is director of Junior With y of the Newberry june, Fc that tot; 1 " months < c a i trc - half-mill 1AKE NEW RECORD bejng 6high rec Tolal Sal? Have advance 5,709 Machines , peHod aPay July I of Ford cars, trucks ^ual' a stablished a new high ? eS 1 and trac June, when, according , xl T~\ i; 70 /, altj issued from the Ford. . ? I tioned m :oit. an average of o,-| were sold daily. J Ford lave been showing la i tempt hi. ase each month this dealers i ng the highest in the their or< company, with a totel three mt BaeaBnmauHH BHBDnHHHHHH I WEEK made. Nothing resc s enormous stock -> one can afford to e for you. New si the reason why. \ Random i ^ - - , i ($1.00 Colored I ; Petticoats Large assortment of pret- gfl 3 ty Petticoats, a wonder- I ( ful value, < 49c / I ?" > A es uresses Zarolina have there been sui ummer Frocks, the Jarges. a ?f material. WHITE ORGANDY D - - ? ^ -a r\ . _ _ to $15 00 Organdy ures idy at a clean up price SHOES .-iption, far too numerous to odds and ends at hundred pairs. Don't fail lewest toes of the finest lea i fflgj MPANY I lTii mi i Bargain Givers H CAROLINA 39 cars, trucks and tractors, been number, 6,054 were sold by types. 1 company of Canada and closet r the various European Ford to m< 2S and South American popul , reaching * purchasers in dan f ly every civilized country in A i d. seen the closing of business for sales, .v<1 vo/>r?rr?<5 rlisMnsed tho fact I eight] U sales for the first six I Merc? of 1922 were well over the come ion mark, the exact figure motor i2,2Gl. This is also a new costs ord as it is considerably in the it of any previous 'half-year twice clearl, rord sales are expected to dition nd probably eclipse June. At mated output of cars, trucks j ployir tors has been placed at 151,-j nough dealers have requisi- j ore than 200,000. j When officials state that every at- Asked is been made to supply their She p ,vith snfficient cars to fill Gave iers, but that for the past And < mths prompt deliveries have I dor ^ A 1 ;rved, every- ? is a leader. 1 stay away i tocks arrive I $1.50 and $2.00 I Silks ' I rlessaline, Taffetas and Georgettes in large assortment of colors, 89c I ch wonderful bar.220jiane-it in this PRESSES 11 ses for the stylish | p $4.95 Ladies' Waists $5.00 and $7.50 | Georgette and Crepe de Chine 1 Waists, beauti- ? fully trimmed If with beads, hand j | embroidered, a f& beautiful assort- 1 ment of hand || tailored waists $2.98 pi I u O IMI/UUlio * j 10,000 yards of prettiest I ribbons in the city. Every I conceivable kind, solid I jgi colors, checks, striped, I flowered, plaid, and many IB other kinds. No matter ? ?f what kind you want we i have it. Lees than half i price. 3c yard and up ^ impossible with some of the t>I. ? J -Tjii. en. JL I1C UCIIi<ailU ivi i uiu vu i cars has been especially hard eet, due to the ever-incrasing arity of the coupe and the seor all year around use. eflection of general business is in the record of Ford truck i _i ... wnicn snow aa uj. f-four per ccnt over last year. lants and farmers alike have y to recognize the utility of the truck in cutting transportation and speeding up deliveries, and ict that they are buying nearly as many now as a year agb J. y points to better business cons. the present time Ford is em ig 75,000 men in Detroit. Blissful or Profane Adam in bliss Eve for a kiss, uckered her lips with a coo, look so ecstatic, mswered emphatic, 'i care A-dam if I do.