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TSss Watchman and Soathron Entered at the Postoffice at Sum : ter, S. C.s as Second Class Matter. PERSONAL. v Mr. W. R. Wells and daughter G-ladys have returned after a trip to Clemson College. Cadet W. R. Wells, Jr., is at home satter finishing his senior year at Clemson College. Miss Janie Mikell has returned to the city after spending some time with friends in Chester. Mrs. A. J. Lide, who has been attending the annual missionary meeting in Manning, has returned home. . vMiss Katie McKiever of this city leaves Chicago tonight for Yellow Stone National Park, where she has accepted a position with a transportation -company. /-The Misses Louise and Mary Brown of Florence are visitors in town. Insurance Commissioner Mc M&han of Columbia was in the city Friday on business. Mr. Sheldon Reynolds has re turned home for the summer from Georgia Teach. -Mr. Milton McManaway, of Greenville is in the city for a short titoe in the interests of a boys* summer camp to be held in North Carolina. Mr. Hermon London of Pitts burgh is in the city as the visitor of Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Levi. Mr. and Mrs.*F. F. Converse of Florence are spending the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Thos. S. Sumter. . Mrs. Louise Earle, who has been visiting her sister. Miss Daisy Yeadoh, returned to her* home in Greenville "Saturday morning. Dr. R. S. Truesdale of Columbia returned to his home Saturday af ter a visit to Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Ml Chandler. ? Mr. W. F. Jones of Abbeville was a visitor in the city Friday. /Mr. J. K. Wilson of St. Charles was. in the city Friday on business. Mr. Hazel Witherspoon has* re turned home from Bailey Institute, Greenwood. ' Dr. and Mrs. Marion will enter tain at their - home this evening at 8:30, all members of the Pres byterian Church, who graduated from High School this year and tnese who have been to th6 va rious colleges. ; Misses Anna Fishburne, Mary JSshburne. and. Messrs. John Fish burne, John Fishburne, Jr., John Bianding, motored from Bishop vijle Sunday to spend the day in the* city with relatives. * Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Fishburne, of Columbia, spent Sunday in the city, with' relatiy.es, having motored from their home. ' r Mrs. C. S. McKagen, Mrs. O. H. McKagen, Misses Leonora and Ber tha McKagen a^^ Master O. H. are visiting relatives in Kershaw. Mr. Lyde Hill spent the' week end in Kershaw. ^ Mrs. Pauline Haynsworth Mc C?wn has returned to her home in Florence. She was accompanied by* her- granddaughter, Mrs. Evans Bruner and great' granddaughter,) Jean. Sjf. H; C. Folsom left Sunday Bight for Atlanta where he has a : j?osition with the Mohawk Rubber Co. Mrs. J. B. Folsom and little son. J. B^ Jr., are visiting relatives at GVeenville, S. C. Mr. Henry McKagen, of Augusta, . spent the week-end in the city with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry G. McKagen. J- Mr. Hughson Green has arrived from Peabody Institute, Baltimore, where he has been attending school for the past nine months. - Mrs. L. M. Allen, Jr., left for Richmond Sunday night where she will spend about six weeks. Mrs. LV M. Allen, Sr., left for Richmond Sunday night where she will speni a few days. i Mr.- Jack Wright, having spent the week-end in the city, return ed to Columbia Monday to attend commencement at the University of South Carolina. Messrs. T. C. Cuttino. Gifford .Shaw, Don Bianding and Richard -Wri^hi motored to Greenville Thursday morning for the pur pose of seeing the camping grounds at Stone's Lake, which are located about four miles from the city. Messrs. Cuttino and Shaw returned Monday. Messrs. Bianding and Wright will remain in Greenville throughout the-encampment, which begins next Friday. Miss Harriet Lucius of Elliotts, *rho has been the guest of Miss "Blanche Spann, returned to her home Saturday. - . Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Branson, Misses Armida and Nell Branson and their visitor, Miss Elizabeth Branson of Wilmington, left Sun gay for Edisto river, Colleton coun ty, on a fishing trip. Miss Sara Lucius, who has been visiting Miss Edna Boney, has re turned to her home at Elliotts. ? ? ? "Where do liars go?" is puzzling Doyle. Perhaps they go where they are often told to go. One paper prints a chapter from the Bible every day. It is news, and good news, to some people. ; If the coal strike keeps up there wiil be a slate shortage. 'Fact that there are bootleggers is- proof they don't drink the kind of stuff they sell. In Paris they have a dog bath bouse. Bathing gone to the bow *wpws. ' This fight lo save the U. S. oil reserve shows that where there's a well there's a way. ?* Once they married in haste and repented at leisure: now they marry in haste and repent at work. ? All good men are not dead. From the suits filed, motorists are run ning across some teood ones. ? ? ? ?' Job was patient: but Job never waited on a street csij _ LUNATIC KILLED BY OFFICERS Dargan Beaco, of Greenville County Wounds Deputy Sheriff Who Had Lunacy Warrant >? Greenville, June 10. ? After! shooting Deputy Sheriff Parris when an attempt was made to ar rest him on a lunacy warrant. Dargan Beaco, 50 year old farmer of near Greer, was almost instant ly killed near his home at noon to day. Deputy Parris-was rushed to the city hospital here and is reported as painfully, though not seriously, injured. More than 100 shots of about No. 6 size took effect in his legs, left side and left hand. Deputy Parris and Deputy G. L. Jones attempted to arrest the man Friday night, but on account of leaving the warrant behind and be cause Beaco drew his knife sugges tively when mention of his going to Greenville was made, the officers withdrew in the hope of returning today and persuading him to ? ac company them without difficulty. When Deputy Parris returned this morning with Deputy Cothran to get the man, who it is said, had terrified the neighborhood with his threats and cruelty to '.his family, they sighted him in a field nearby. When they stepped from the car and approached in a friendly man ner in an effort to spirit him away, the man retreated several steps and, picking up. a single barreled shotgun, ordered the officers to leave his premises, firing at Deputy Parris as he uttered the com mand. When this officer was shot, Deputy Cothran leaped. behind a - L terrace and with the wounded of ficer emptied his pistol. Apparent ly noting that Deputy Parris did not fall the deluded man loaded his gun a second time and, throw ing it to his shoulder, fired a sec ond time at the officer, then load ing a third time, discharged it in the direction of Deputy Cothran, the bullets clipping the top of the terrace. As the man attempted to push a third shell into the barrel, the j gun refused to breach and the fatal pistol bullet took effect in the > man's body. Falling backward, he died before he could be carried to the car. The body was rushed on ito Greenville by Deputy Cothran, together with the wounded officer. Beaco, it is said, was held at one time in the state asylum. MAJOR HAMMOND . PASSED AWAY Served! as. Staff Officer in Confederate War, Also as Legislator Blackville, June 11.?Maj. Ed ward Spann Hammond, aged 88, Confederate veteran and former ed itor of the Richmond Dispatch, died at his home here this morn ing. Major Hammond was a son of I J. H. Hammod, who in 1842-44 was 'governor of the state and in 1857 j 60 was a United States senator, re I signing when the Confederate war j broke out. Edward Spann Ham j mond was third in a family of eight children and was born in Barn well county June 20, 1834. He w^s reared near Silver Bluff on the Sa vannah river until he was 16. He was graduated from the University of Georgia in 1853 and in 1855 was graduated in medicine from the University of Pennsylvania. Lqter he was admitted to the bar in j South Carolina, but he never prac ticed either medicine or law, his I energies having been devoted al most entirely to planting. During the Confederate war he served as a staff officer and was ac tive from beginning to end. He had previously, in 1858, been elected a member of the lower house of the general assembly. j SUMTER BOYS TO ! CAMP OUT FROM GREENVILLE Forty Boys Leave For Two Weeks Carrtp Friday Cuttino McKnight and Gifford I Shaw returned from Greenville j this morning where they have been 'spending several days working and planning for the camp-out at Stone's Lake a beautiful lake three miles out from Greenville where about forty boys from Sumter will ? spend two weeks beginning this ! Frida3\ When the boys return j some twenty-five or more girls wilJ j go to the same site for two weeks, j Mr. Shaw and Mr. McKnight j speak of the place in the highest j of terms and both are looking for ! ward to a great time on this out ! ing. The roads from here to j Greenville are almost perfect. The jOnly bad road is between here and jCamden: some six or eight men j have offered their cars to take the j boys. If any one has a car and ; could go and let the camp fund jpay for the gasoline htey would ap preciate it. It is possible for a few more boys to go if they will see T. C. Mc ! Kngihf at the Y. M. C. A. imme diately. Thix is to be an outing for Jthe training: for next year's work. I especially on the religious side. It isn"t difficult to save daylight. The hold-up men don't care for it. ? ? ? Rising coal prices gives every body the chance to say "I told you so." ? ? ? Motorists should be grateful to th ebarefoot country boy for gath ering all the tacks in the road. Indiana minister wants boys to stop playing marbles and we'll bet boys want him to stop preaching. Germany says nothing good will come out of the Genoa conference so things look a little better. WORLD NE? Chicago, June 9?James C. Dunn, president and chief owner of the Cleveland baseball team, died here at 8:10 this morning, after a long illness. London. June 9?The London Times announces that some mem bers of he Mount Everest party have reached the highest altitude ever attained by man, twenty-six thousand eight hundred feet. The previous record was twenty-four thousand five hundred and eighty three feet. Tokio, June 9?Admiral Baron Kato was today offered the premier ship of Japan. He asked for time to consider whether he would un dertake and form a cabinet to succeed that of Premier Takahashi, which resigned Tuesday. Admiral Kato headed the Japanese delega tion to the Washington Arms con ference. Washington, June 9.?Senator Simmons and Gooding engaged in a sharp row in the senate today over the tariff duties on farm pro ducts. Cincinnati, June 9;?The execu tive committees of six railway shop crafts unions in each of the coun try's three divisions will * convene in Chicago June 24th, preparatory to the canvas of the shopmen's strike vote, which is returnable on June 25th,. it was announced here today by B. M. Jewell, head of the federated shop crafts. New York, June 9?The death in London early today of Guy Bar ham, publisher of the L03 Angeles Herald, following an operation on his throat several days ago. Is announced by the Dow Jones tick et service. Washington, June 8.?The senate tonight rejected the ^nomination of Benjamin J. Mixson as postmas ter at Orangeburg, who had been nominated by the president in De cember to succeed A. C. Ligon, whose commission expired in Jan uary. No explanation was given as to the reason for the rejection. j Washington, June 10.?The first j cabinet wedding of the Harding ad j ministration to be held late today j is that of Miss Catherine Hughes, {'daughter of the Secretary of State, to Chauneey Lockhart Waddell, of New York. The president and Mrs. j Harding, members of the cabinet, j and the diplomatic corps, will be among the guests. Terre Haute, Ind., June 10.? Serious disorders broke out at sev eral coal mines here early' today, according to reports received here. \Three hundred men, some armed, 'are reported, forming to march on the Riley mine while a party of a hundred are reported to have at tacked the Kern Company mine, and injured one employee there. ' Detroit, June 10.?A decision to I not make a formal request of i Henry Ford to become a candidate j for president of the United States, j for several weeks at least, has j been made by the executive com i mittee of the Dearborn "Ford-For President-Club," it was announced today. "We desire to crystallize the sentiment in favor of Ford, and i show him that such sentiment real ly exists before we take the matter up," said Rev. William Dawe, the president of the club. Minneapolis, June 10.?One boy I was killed, basements were flooded and wires blown down in a severe j storm which struck this city and i surrounding country last night and [early today. Wire communication j with the south and east is badly I demoralized. Sofia, June 10.?Bulgaria has re fused to accept the establishment of allied control over her finances, as proposed by the reparations commission, and will attempt to re open the question at the Hague, it is declared by Premier Stam boulisky. j Augusta.. Ga., June 10.?The first woman, in the country to become the "boss," of the policy.-of the fire department of a city the size of Augusta is Mrs. L. S. Arrington, a prominent club woman, who was j elected late yesterday to the chair j manship of the civil service com i mission. Paris. June 12.?Bills ratifying the accord have reached the Washington arms conference1 now in committee chamber of deputies and will probably be reported soon. j Washington, June 12.?After a j conference today with the presi dent. Representative Rondell, Re j publican leader, hastily called the Republican steering committee of the house to discusx the probable action on the ship subsidy bill and Muscle Shoals, but the meeting, it is said, "got nowhere. Belfast. June 12.?Edward De i vine, managing director of a bak | ery concern in Belfast, was shot j dead today in his office, by three ! men, who forced an entrance to the place, shouted "hands up" and i then fired. Richmond. June 12?Prospects for all Virginia field crops are ex cellent according to the June re port of the Virginia crop reporting j service made public today. The i fruit crop the report says, was di 1 minished greatly by the freeze last ! April. Cincinnati. June 12 ? "Open shop." unemployment, wage re ductions, recognition of soviet Rus sia, one big union, court decisions, and injunctions affecting l.tbor formed the main issues that con fronted the American Federation of Labor, which opened its two week's convention here today. Thsre fS IN BRIEF was no debate on program durin: the opening session. Richmond, June 10.?Announc ing the completion of plans for the Confederate reunion here,. June 19 to 22. officials of the general com mittee today estimated that five thousand survivors of the Confed erate army will attend and attract fifty thousand visitors to the city. Washington, Junel 2.?A fav orable report on the Capper-Tin cher bill to amend the future trad ing act to meet the recent decis ion of the supreme court was orr dered today by the house agricul tural committee. The measure is expected to be taken up by the house Thursday. Washington, June 12.?A heavy earthquake shock was recorded at Georgetown University observatory last night and a less severe tremor, probably more distant, was re corded about six o'clock this morn ing. TROUBLED TIMES FOR IRELAND Country Not So Well Provided With Funds as Was Case f Year Ago ! N - ?Dublin, June 9 (By the Associat-. j ed Press).?A meeting was h Id at 1 Mansion House this evening in sup port of the panel candidates for parliament chosen by the Free Staters and the Republicans, Ea mon de Valera presided. Michael Collins in a speech said he could foresee for the new par liament great possible difficulties. Ireland had passed from the stage of violent revolution, to a stage of lesser revolution, but was not yet ! out of the revolutionary stage. The country now was a good deal poor er than it was a year ago. "We are faced by a situation," Mr. Collins continued, "in which inertia is coming into the national life and productivity is reduced. I j received today a report from the ! inspector of taxes stating htat the collection of revenues. was ex tremely unsatisfactory, the main cause being a lack of any effective means for enforcing payment. 'This is no time," Mr. Collins added, "to take on war with North-r east Ireland and with the British empire, too. We have seen the ar tificial situation created on the Formanagh-Donegal border in the last days and the British troops called to aid the Northern govern. :nent. British troops entered the Donegal area for a certain distance,; and it' only needs that sort of an (advance to bring war into all the J rest of Ireland. ? "Such a situation can be avert ! ed. The difficulty in the northeast is not on the border but in Belfast., We must meet the trouble at its' j seat and not give others the ad vantage of meeting trouble where there should be none. Otherwise ! the whole of Ireland wiil be over run and an artificial trench made around the six counties. The Northern leaders are planning for I this, and if we do not act wisely the trench will make partition permanent." PRESIDENT SAYS CRITICISM UNDESERVED Acceptance of Money From Campaign Fund by Nat. Goldstein is Subject of Let ter St. Louis, June 12.?President Harding has written Nat Goldstein" that the criticism produced by the nomination of Goldstein for inter j national revenue collector here, j caused by Goldstein's acceptance of ! twenty-five hundred dollars of the j Lowden campaign fun was an 4,un j deserving character." Gov. Harvey Appoints Staff Columbia, June 12.?Gov. Har vey ha sappointed seven members of his staff to date. Others are to be named later.' The seven already appointed are: Daniel L. Sinkler, of Charleston; Frank J. Tripp, of Pelzer; F. H. McMaster, of Columbia; C. D. Brown, of Abbeville; H. I. EUerbe, of Manning; James H. Craig, form er state bank examiner, of Ander son; and Major J. C. Hemphill, of Spartanburg. Each member of the governor's staff will have the rank of lieuten ant colonel. The most popular summer, re-, sort is "It's too hot to work." DOINGS OF THE DUFFS you've lost every time now let me pick this one 1t5 the last race - 5uy a ticket OH V_ "Helen lck;ise*-ThA^a|^^ pretty NAME " SHE'S M?h ^ \ fdlNE" have Voo? w MARKET NEWS (Furnished by MacDowell & Co., 18 South Main St.. Correspondents of H. & B. Beer, Members New Jork and New Orleans Cotton Exchanges.) Morning Cotton Letter. New Orleans, June 12.?Liver pool was due 47 to 73 up by New Orleans, 48 to 61 up by New York, most on nears, due to strength of spots. Southern spots Saturday were 25 to 50 up Dallas 45 higher, middling there 21.95; sales at Dallas 1,929; all told 8,729 bales vs. 7,000 cor responding date last year. As yet the elements and the weevil hold the center of the stage and unless the weather clears, pos sible reactions are likely be only temporary, affording favorable op portunities to buy on depressions. Numerous influential market de velopments set for this week aside of the weather and weevil. Semi monthly crop report of National Ginners"' Association due, perhaps their usual forecast regarding May consumption in the United States on which census bureau will make report on 14th, while private ca bles probably furnish information as concerns British board of trade report for May to be followed by weekly weather and crop govern ment report, no definite reply from Washington a-f? yet as to when the weekly will be issued, Tuesday af ter market hours or Wednesday at 10 a. m. A good reaction is due, but if cables better than expected, or if the weather remains unfavorable temper of market Is such as to influence values to a higher level still. However, unless the weather otulook remains badr it is time to stop, look and listen, since it is bet ter to be sure than sorry. Sentiment remains bullish but rather cautious. Stanley on the Weather. Memphis, June 12.?Tempera tures slightly warmer over the belt; light rainfall scattered Saturday and Sunday over portions of east ern and central belts. Arkansas and eastern and southern Texas. Monday eastern and central belts generally fair with western belt cloudy to part' cloudy; un settled showers, except western Texas generally fair. COTTON MARKET NEW YORK COTTGN. Testdyi Open.High Low Close Close Jan i:. _ . 21.4? .21.70 21.00 21.00 21.85 Maren*.. .. 2t.45 21.50 20.90 20.92 21.73 July .. - ..22.15 22.16 21.61 21.68 22.31 Oct .. . 21.90 22.00 21.43 21.48 22.22 Dftt . ? _ . 21.68 21.80 21.17 21.24 22.01 Spots 70 off, 22.15. NEW ORLEANS COTTON. . Yestdya Open High Low Clone Clone Jan.. _ . .21.03 24.05 20.49 20.49 21.32 March . .. 20.76 22.85 20.25 20.25 21.08 July .. _ ..22.12 22.18 21.51 21.60 2248 Oct. .. - .21.55 21.63 21.00 21.04 21 88 Oee_ - ?,.21.20 21.30 20.65 20.69 21.52 .Spots 25 off, 22c. - Liverpool Cotton. January . _.. ?_- _ 11.81 March .._ . u.68 May ._-. 11.56 July .... ...... ...... ..,.?._ 12.33 Ootober _ _ .... _.. _;_ 12.11 December ._2_ j|.89 Receipts 27,000: sales 8,000; Middling, 12.76; Good Middling. 13.31. ADMIRAL KATO BECOMES PREMIER Acceptance of Premiership Regarded as Triumph For| Ndn Militarists Tokyo, June 11 (By the Asso ciated Kress). ?: Admiral Bar?n Kato today accepted the premier ship. His non-party cabinet comes iato power with the avowed inten tion of carrying out the agreements of the Washington conference ? to the letter. ? : '." The one condition on which Kato I accepted the premiersliip was agreement of army leaders to re duce the estimated army budget "by! 40.000,000 yen and to adopt a; general policy of retrenchment. Kato will have the support of the Seyukai majority party in the diet and the Kenkyukai, the largest group of peers in the house of lords. It is understood that Shiedehara has the refusal of the foreign of fice portfolio in Kato's cabinet. With malaria seting in, this is the time for all good lemons to come to the ade of their country. Some think all picture shows .are immoral because that is the only kind they will go to see. Voliva says he knows exactly where heaven is; but he still sticks around 2ion City. When an optimist loses his pocketbook he always thinks Boy Scout will find it. After all. about the only menace to eivili2ation is mankind. WHERE !3 NL>Mj3?|2 joins ? iDOrV 6?e H $60,000 State Aid For 124 Schools Sumter County Receives $1, 295.00 Columbia, June ?.?The state de partment of education has paid $60,000 state aid for 124 school houses in thirty-five counties. These districts qualified for $81, 054. The appropriation was, there fore prorated on the basis of 74 per cent. Warrants have been forwarded to the several county treasurers and duplicate copies to the respec tive county auditors and county superintendents. Inquiries concerning new' school house construction are daily reach ing the office of> the state super intendent of education. All such inquiries are being advised to prac tice the strictest economy. The list of counties follows: No. of Amt. of County Buildings. State Aid. Abbeville _ 2 .$1,147.00. Aiken._ 1 592.00 j Anderson ._ 1 444.00 Barnwell. 2 1,036.00 Charleston.1 740.00 Cherokee..1 740.00 Chester 1 117.00 Chesterfield 1 444.00 Colleton._ 2 888.00 Darlington __ __ 3 1,924.00 Dillon.-4 2,664.00 Dorchester _. __ 2 44<.00 Edgefield ... ._ 3 ' 352.00 j Fairfield_ 3 ? 1,665.00 Florence. 1 740.00 Greenville. 7' 5,180.00 Greenwood 4 1,443.00 Horry. 1 222.40 Kershwa. 2 962.00 Lancaster. 1 740.00 Laurens _._ 7 3,552.00 Lee. 1 56.00 Lexington __ 6 1,721.00 Marion .. __ 5 2,849.00 Newberry _ *6 2,646.0fr' Oconee ..' . 10 4,958.00 Orangeburg .. . 3 3,497.00 Pickens ._ 8 3,497.00 Richland. 7- 2,812.00 Saluda ._. 1 518.00 Spartanburg ... 11 6,047.00 Sumter 4 ,1,295.00 Union._ 1 592.00 Williamsburg ..4 1,184.00 York. 7 3,865.00 Total, 35 coun ties.124 $60,000.00 South Carolina Crops Condition oh June 1 Given Out by B. B. Hare Saluda, June 11.?-B. B. Hare, agricultural statistician in' South Carolina for the bureau of mar kets and crop estimates. United States department of agriculture, has prepared estimates which show the condition of crops>eport ed below on June 1 as follows: Wheat 75 per cent of normal, oats 88 per cent, rye 85, hay 88, alfalfa 90, cowpeas 85, cabbages 87, onions 87, apples 66, peaches 77, pears ^65, watermelons 80, and cantaloupes 78. The indicated production of wheat in the state is reported at 1,218,000 bushels, production for the entire United States being re7 ported at 855,000,000 bushels as against 795,000,000 bushels in 1921. Total production of oats in -the state is estimated at 9,327,000 bushels, or 1,137,000 bushels more than last year. The total produc tion in the entire United States is reported at 1,305,000,000 bushels, against 1,061,000,000 bushels in 1921. the five-year average being 1.413,000*000 bushels. Peaches in the western, central, and eastern counties will show a marked increase in production over last year. Condition of pears and apples fair to good. Weather conditions for the past 60 days have been highly favorable for clover and alfalfa, 4nd excel lent yields ? have - been reported. .. Condition, of - watermelons and cantaloupes fairly good, though there has been too much rain for both. The same is true of cab bages, onions and other truck crops* Commercial crop of cucumbers larger than usual and prices have been very unsatisfactory. Black ville is the-principal shipping: point. Rainfall during the month of May was far above normal in many sections and farm work has been much delayed, especially in harvesting wheat and oats, for this reason farmers have been unable to get into fields with reapers and binders. All growing crops have progressed slowly on account of moisture, lack of sunshine and proper cultivation. It is seven years bad luck for breaking a mirror and often more than that for breaking a law. Why not let Russia have the money she wants on condition we use her country for trying the Still man case? M It is said there are 750.000 varie ties of insects. This does not in clude those who read movie sub titles aloud. ER! m tf>HE ISnVi THERE.1 WHAT DO YOU SUPPOSE HAf TO M?M?E? J ROTARIANS ELECT NEW PRESIDENT Raymond Havens, of Kansas City, Chosen Head of In ternational Organization Los Angeles. June i>*c-Raymond Havens of Kansas City, .Mo., was chosen president of the Internat ional Association of Rotary Clubs at the final business session of the 13th annual convention of the or ganization this afternoon. Directors elected to the Inter national Rotary board were Harry Bert Craddick of Minneapolis, Minn.: Ralph Bristol of Ogden, Utah; Herbert Wilson of Worcester, Mass.; John Turner of Tampa, Fla.; Robert Patterson of Dayton, Ohio; Alexander Wilkie of Edin burgh, and R. Jeffrey Lydiatt of Calgary, Alberta. i The principal address of the day was delivered by James Layton Ralston, barrister, of Halifax, X. Mr. Ralston declared that the world war crisis "found the people of the nations wholly ignorant of the means at hand for adjustment and preparing for war. It is our duty, as plain ordinary citizens, to know what machinery is available DIRECTORS OF COTTON MARKET ING ASSOCIATION Executive, Committee Met jn Columbia Friday and Tab ulated Ballots y Columbia, June 10.?Members .'of the executive committee of . the South Carolina Cotton Growers' Cooperative association met yester day and counted the ballots for^?i rectors of the organization. The committee declared the follow] elected;. E. Wallace Evans of Bennet ville fojr disjrict No. 1, compri ?f Marlboro and Ch? e Drake of Anderson^M? b. .2, comprising coun* ties of?Greenville, Pickens, Oc?nee. and Anderson. * 3* i, J. S. Craig of Laurens for jnep trict No. 3, comprising counties . oL: Spartan burg. Laurens, Union, 1)erry and Cherokee. ' - -T J. P. McNair. of Aiken for dis rtict No. 4 comprising countieis^afc Abbeville, Greenwood, McCormXekj Edgefield, Saluda, Aiken, Baring and A lien dale. B. F.- Williamson of. Darl for district No. 5, comp counties of , Darlington and LeeJ"" A. Victor Bethea of Dillon. t? should a crisis come?further it is our duty to see that our neighbor j district No. 6, comprising co has this information." \?* DiHon> Marion, Florence, He said that he did not admit and Georgetown. that the United States is not aj. R member of the league of nations, ? d*st?* but said this nation was a party to The Hague conference and that, taken in itself, is security from war if the people know of its ex istence and understand its purpose. | The board of directors will name vice presidents and the sec retary general of J the association and also seject the place for the next convention. The closing session was marked by two enthusiastic ovations giv en to retiring president, Crawford C. McCuliough. The resolutions committee presented him with a check for $2,500, brought in on a silver patter designed as a symbol pf affectoin and apprecia tion of Rotarians. Internationalism as the keynote of \ Rotary activities for the com ing year was emphasized by the new president, Raymond M. Ha vens. Parting addresses by delegates from France, Canada, the British Isles, Hawaii, South America andikT'T**^! ~~r?'~? ???-rrrrTt-.LMJl. Australia accentuated the world-p1?0 Evaas*..are men of wide >TS?!3 Hamer of Easto verlor Kp. 7, comprising counties of Richtend, Lexington and S?p h?Un. ; * Dr. ?A-. R. ilohnston of St. G&&%f for district No. .8, comprising c<jh?i-' ties of Orangeb?rg, Dorchester, Col-. leton, Bamberg and Hampton, y - : L. Df Jennings of Sumter for dis* trict 2?o. comprising counties^?f Sumter, Clarendon and Williams^, burg.-: Dr. -J.-B. Johnson of Roek.bj? for district No. 10, comprising counties of York, Chester, Lancas ter, Fail-field and Kershaw. ^ Harry G. Kaminer of Gadsde?; has been appointed a member^of the board by Governor Harvejp* Alll?f the members of the are well' known men and aU1. regarded as men of good busf ability and of integrity.. Dr. Johnston, , Dr. J. B. Johnstoh^^L. D. Jennings and J. P. McNafcjt addition to their'Targe it terests, are also presidents; of banks. Messrs. Kaminer, HaJ?fcrV Drake, Bethea, Williamson;/Cj wide significance of Rotary. Farm bureau says lambs are short. But there are plenty in town. - ; Wouldn't it be fun to watch . a cynic and a grouch shoot each other? ?- swell, neighborhood is .where you have to wear your shoes to sit on the front porch. ne'ss experience, who ', have very successful. Complete satisfaction was pressed by members o? the. ai tion last night with the" select* directerss.-; Always : ?jct, ?? surprised *w man says he-is. married andve' woman says- she isn't. Marriages. ."may be""made.in'v ven; but ja comfortable.porchswing of ten ?detiv?rs; the goods. EVERETT TRUE fcjHrrr is. Trte. 1l THAT v v^4Nf^<S Tec C - You ? f TH6R3 it's * easv' t? oer 4at/ ^an4t>v ovci?|? BROIL?^ HOv^eiJttoy hav<5 -y-. 'pRvc^, SAY 5o ^N?T^^w 0^ TH12> PSYCH0L0^\CAC SfeVJS3N*N8H\r^ON ME ill' . BY ALL MAN SHE ElTrIRR | PEf^70ROPP6O PEAP iwerroRTHev / TOOK H?fc J ooT-r' If I Come un its