HARl.DiNG WAN''S COM3MUNITY I[ELP FOR IDLE FOLK ]Requests Governor and Mayors Througrhout Country to Organize ('omnunity .linchinery in Behalf of I'nlemployedi. Washington, Oct. 3.-Governors and mayors throughout the country were asked by President lHarding in a pub lie statement today to organize In each community machinery for the corree tion of economic conditions along lines worked out by the unemuployment conference here. The conference, the president dccfared. had demonstrated that conditions couild no' be met pro perly without such local co-operation. lie announced that a central agency woI e mtain cd h1re undc: the alispices of the conference to give na ion al coo rd ination to the reha bilita oin effori t. The *'resident's statmcaint fo!ow4s: "Th: (Ionferece 'vhich I re'cently summtnioncd to W ,ash ton o advise as d:t'l::stx.-rt that vn annual voumie t'1em" !oyent exst and 'wo cid aI'-) cv.- e me.i :e n : r i hout a uch mtore then usual or r~an: at.'n . "hot -Po-e stater 'l n-n t .w i wh o S u:: m: Iv a~ I-a -14-,ri ce: ra l pro- I .tI0tons, -In of n)i Cth :Pro fs na an, 1:0)renatve c'sh 1 t. 1 ch orcai.za the va u a,] a-'ec cties of -- [-III tov 'I 1Y) a e - -no%- -, . pnn I-e with 'I - - cdf Ifr. --,- te-%. I t is or r.-o 0,. :r'--t tha t P%,rvr vonml 1S1101 ''"' " *"o' ' anJne 'tt0 (ne ik such -, n-ri" that th e n t'on ''I'''' "'"'-*' as a whot o. Moro tl- oroit ih oeinmitinent to a tazk i" sure to start a thous rnd i which will Idd to our co' on". wlf-tre. "' t n''', npaenl to the gov Sne"-l nd mlo'-or l-c t he nation that ilho- ehou ld t a 1 the steps recoin mnndeod by the conference. "Fom Iorsemen" Coming W. M. Switzer, manager of the Princess Theatre and Laurens Opera lIous-;e, announced yesterday that he had succeeded in signing a contract for a two-day showing here of "The Four llor11-semen of the A pocaly pse, :id hby many critics to he the world's gr:atest moving pictire to date. By a fortunate arrangement, he said, he had sectu red the great feattire for Fri day and Saturday. October 1-1 and 15, ahead of cities of much larger size. On acouilit of the ma situide of the product.ion and the large attendance c-:aectedl from the city and Cnunty, the p icture wil1l he s:hown at t ho Operma I louse, which has a larger seating ea t'''ity th'an Th t Princess Thleatt', th.e Pr'inc(es5s shtowing its regular p rogrami. The Iiture will be accomtpaniled by an orelhestra. Hupmobile Thc Car Everlasting Ellis Motor Co. . DISTRIBUTORS Clinton, S. C. THE BRIDGE The doctor's pre scription is the bridge that carrics the pa tient from sickness to good health. The ma terials that go into the prescription are the cables of the bridge. This is why we use only the best quality of products in filling prescriptions. PUTNAM' DRUG STORE "A NIGHT. IN HONOLULU" A PLEASING SURPRISE l'eer Uomedy Breaks Away From the General Order of Things. The Richniond Times-Disipatch says >f "A Night in lionolulu." which will Ippear at t.e Laurens opera house he night of Friday, the 7th: The crowd which filled the Acade my last night to see the first per 'orniance in Richmond of "A Night in [Ionolulit" was treate(d to it big sur ,rise. Many were ex)ecting somec hlng on the order of a poor "Bird of Paradise." or even the ever-remuen >ered and terrible "Hawaiian Butter- 4 ly'-and instead, a most entertain- I ng play unfolded. "A Night in lionollulu'' is nine .enths comedy-and clever stuff, too nd the rest good, rough inelodra na. with a villianess instead of the iackneyed male of the species. It tarts off with a laugh, and few a: he momenits from then to lhe finalI urtain that one isn't either highly m seIlit somiiethinl t or entetortn:.IId y the exceptional sin:ng and an ic z0-1. Fooz this. don'.*1 iniag:!'.coo he itece is a mu sicali conoedy for 1:1< wo dances and tlhe native mie:' a.r:e )>l1y incihtIntal. IIow.ever. there is ust the right anount which means h w th:nis h. rn tO 4ther :I a hit or speed u.. to a climax. a he case may he. w hear ome me:1 Of otiLs'' the,. 3iot r evolves abt a~ : Quyedancer. supposedly a nativo. A "I) is :.arin; wilth her b.:oie :~ish and native speechets. I':r. 'arpenter. as "Kalama," the dan:1 i ,irl. is qtuite adoral e to look at, to el to and to watch when he lances, which is surely a con ina lon. Sihe has a nic sclnst. of (mn) *y, too, anId lir winsome way of saying som picked-up phrase always brings a laugh. Sharing honors as central figure in -Q play is: one Elmer lIsworth, a youthful comedian, who will proh ably do a lot move in the theatricall fi-h! if he 1 s o:n at the 1:are ho i.i I :oing now. Of all difficult part.s to rand:e, naturally t:at of a callow :.ourth w' ho is hubbling over wiIt life and getting in everyhody's way ii one of the worst. And young 1lsworth manrages to Simiply be that callow uth. to the letter, and makes a laugh whenever he sets foot upon the sta.. e. The other members of the cornpa ny fill their respective roles acceptably, though none equal the work of .\lis. C(arpenter and .r. A Elrsworth. A troup of native .1iawaiian had their ti-rn at entertaining, as weli as beng heard off the stage, and by t.he erirb - saatic reception, it woul scern that the'y ii ere tie 1-t hard hrei in .is e timel. 'A -Night in lionolulu", your see. rs a hiably satisfactory production. t'n hrtalled it toulasses rnany of our muchtalked of plays and musicAl comiedis, which we AookW forward to .itih such11 anticipation and Wrt.