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Hie Watchman and Sovthron Entered at the Postoffice at Sum ter, S. C? as Second Class Matter. PERSONAL. ^Mrs. A. L. Lesesne has returned from Lynehburg, Va., where she at tended the commencement exer cises at Rahdolph-Maeon CoHege. Mr. Harry Price returned Thurs day from Davidson, where he has been attending c?llese. Miss Catherine Rowland of Ashe ville arrived in the city Thursday to pay a visit to Mrs. W. W. Row Sand. Mr. Jack Wright returned from Columbia Thursday, where he had : beeh attending the commencement exercises at Carolina. Mr. Cv M, -Douglas returned to Winnsboro Friday after paying a visit to friends in the city. Mr., J. R..Flowers of Andrews passed through the city Thursday on his way home from Tulane Uni versity. Coach H. M. Gray of Davidson was in the city Friday on business. ? Mr. Charles H. Green returned from Columbia Thursday afternoon. Mrs. C. L. Stubbs left Thursday to make a tour through Europe. She is to leave New York Saturday morning. Mr. -G. C. Propst Vent to Char leston Friday on business. -Mrs. H. D. Walsh- and children spent Thursday in the city with relatives. - Miss Elizabeth Lesesne is at home from Virginia, where she re ceived- her A. B. degree at Ran dolph-Macon. Woman's College in Lynehburg. Misses Elma and Rosalie Dixon left Thursday night for Den mark where they- will visit rela tives-for some time! . I Miss Ruth Dixon left Thursday night for Orangeburg on business. * A party consisting of Mrs. L. Strauss, Miss Lilla Rheimhennee, and Mr. Herbert Morris motored to Batesburg on Tuesday where they ?isited Mrs. Paul Garber. Mr. Geo. F. Epperson, Jr., left Friday for Tampa, Fla., where he expects to make* his future home. His family will follow later. Mr. M. A. DuRant of Alcolu, was in the city Friday visiting relatives. Mrs. E. L. -Byok of Savannah, who has been the guest of Mrs. Geo, D. Levy returend to her home Friday. -Mr. I. C. Strauss returned Friday fi-bm.- Charleston where he has been on business. .Mr. Richard Baker returned from , Charlottesville Thursday, where he graduated from the University of .Virginia with a B. S. degree. - Mrs. S. C. Baker returned Thursday from Charlottesville, - where she attended the graduating ?xercises at the University of Vir ginia. Miss Marion Satterwhite, who has been a visitor in the city, went to Darlington Friday, where she will "be the guest of Miss Na pier. Mr. W. J. Crowson, Jr.. return ed Friday from Asheville, where he has been attending the State Bank ers' convention. Mr. Geo. H. Hurst returned Sat urday from Asheville, where he has been for several days. Mrs. Solomon Blatt and son, Sol, Jr., of Bamwell, will arrive in the city Sunday to visit her fath er; Mr. M. Green. Hr. Aaron Green returned from Columbia Friday, having graduat ed at the University with an A. B. degree. .?" Mr. Frederick Kenzie left for Atlanta Saturday, where" he has ?secured a position. Mr.< Earle Rowland returned T*hursday from Asheville, having attended the State Bankers' con tention. Miss Carrie Delle. Wilson of St. Charles and Miss McLaurin of Mullins, who is ,the :guest of Miss Wilson, were in the city Satudray. Mrs, B. C. Wallace, Jr., of Greenwood, having spent some time in the city, returned to her home Saturday. Mr. J. K. Wilson of St. Charles was in the city Saturday. Messrs. W. M. DeLorrne, Bert .DeLorme, Rowland McCallum, Henry C. Rauton, Frank Clarke, and Wisdom, a colored mechanic, brought six Fords from Charlotte Friday for H. C. Bland Motor Co. Mr. Raymond R. Stan3ill of New York City is visiting relatives in-the city. Mrs. W. L. Gregg, of Norfolk, Vs., is visiting her sister, Mrs. J. D.. Chandler. Mr. W. D. Carson of Summerton, spent the day in town. jjtfrs. W. B. Upshur has return ed to her home, after spending several weeks in Baltimore. Mrs. James Simmons of State Iwarg was in the city Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Haynsworth and children and Miss Antonio Gibson left Saturday, morning by automobile for Pawley's Island. Misses Lois Shirer and Theresa McMillan leave this afternoon for Orangeburg where they will spend a jceek with relatives. Mr. D. S. Middleton, of Golds boro, N. C, is spending a few days in the city. Mr. S. K. Rowland has gone to Racine, Wis., on business. Miss Annie McMillan* is visiting in Prosperity. Mi?ses Mamie Tucker. Man Olivia Till, Nell Ard. Sarah Julia Cummings, Elizabeth Hudnall, and Messrs. Reece Joy. Felpham F. James left Monday morning for Columbia to attend the Epworth League convention, which is be ing held at the State College. Mrs. J. H. Grady who is visiting in North Carolina wiil return the middle of this week. Mr. Archie Crumpton. who has many friends in the city has left for Gaffney, N. C, where he will op*n a bakery in partnership wirh another man. Miss Rowena Floyd, who has been spending a few days with Mrs. T. R. Floyd on W. Hampton avenue left Monday morning for Winthrop College to attend summer school. ^fiss Liltie Folsom and Miss Nell Folsom motored through the coun try to spend the day in Columbia. Mrs. J. H. Guthrie and daughter, Thomosia, left Friday night for Richmond. Va.. where they will visit relatives. Mr. Leland Edmunds left Satur day night for New York on a busi ness trip. Mr. Charlton Walsh leaves to night for Atlanta, Ga., where he has secured a position in the office of Milton Dargan, Southern Mana ger of the Royal Fire Insurance Company. Miss Frances Smith left Sunday aftrenoon for Richmond, Va., where she will visit Iriends. Mr. T. S. Watts left Saturday morning for Richmond, Va., where he will represent his camp as a delegate of the old soldiers* con vention. On his way back he will stop in Petersburg. Va., for several weeks with his son, C. H. Watts. Mr. Lawrence Nunnamaker left j for Orangeburg Monday to join the i Orangeburg baseball club. Romance of a New-World Girdling Route i "The route holds the true ro mance of the proposed globe-gird ling flight of Major Blake and his British associates," remarks a bul letin from the Washington, D. C, headquarters of the National Geo1 graphic Society. "Personal adventure and service tests are present here, but they are not paramount as they were when Lieut. Commander Read flew across the Atlantic Ocean. The voyages of Magellan and Columbus are remembered because they cut new paths for civilization. If you will trace out oh a globe or a world map the route of Major Blake's party you will realize very quickly why generations to come may rank j their course as epochal. ! . Follows Land Route "It follows the land wherever land is to be found. Hitherto in tercontinental travel has been conr cerned with finding the shortest water routes. But these flyers are blazing a trail which skirts the edges of two great oceans to fol low the chain of the desolate Ale utians and to touch the southern tips of Greenland and Iceland. *Tf your mind goes along with those scientists who foresee a day when airplane travel will supplant the ocean liner, and if you will recall what being along the trav eled way has meant to Portugal Chicago, Bagdad and Terra Haute you will find yourself in an O. Hen-" ry frame of mind?wondering what soon may be doing in Ko diak, Reykjavik, or Cape Farewell. ' "The shortest' way around the ! world by airplane, it would seem,-j is some 30,000 miles. As you view j the route on your glol>e it looks : like two festoons, suspended from Iceland ard southern Alaska. w.:th one strand dipping to Karachi and Calcutta a:nd the other to Netv York j and Chicago. j. Segments Already Traversed "The flyers will not cover the j whole distance in uncharted air. j That part of the route which lies j from London, through Rome, Cairo, and Bagdad to India, is substantial ity the course taken by the late Sir! j Ross Smith on nis air cruise to j Australia. ! "The Atlantic has been crossed' \ by Lieut. Commander Read, of! j the American navy, and in a non jStop flight by Capt. Alcock of the British army, but the course of] Major Blake, via Newfoundland.! Greenland and Iceland is new. It j may well be that the trans-Atlan- < tic air travel which seems a cer- j [ <ainty of the not distant future may find the more circuitous route less hazardous. From Newfoundland to the Azores is approximately 1, 400 miles while it is about 800 to Greenland, with even shorter! 'jumps' from Greenland to Iceland| I and Iceland to Scotland. 2,000 Miles Nearer Japan. "The British flyers also have as j j a precedent on the western hemis- j j phere the carefully planned round- j trip flight of Capt. Streett, U. S. A. j I between New York and Alaska. | j Perhaps no portion of the flight is of more interest to Americans than that from Kamchatka to Alaska. Such a passage makes the old world seem infinitely closer. Geo ; graphies have been briefly dis I posing of the Aleutian chain of ! rocks, flower patches and volcanoes as a barrier between the Bering ! Sea and the Pacific, but these is I lands now loom as stepping stones j between two areas of great eco I nomic potentiality. Japan is some I 5,000 miles from continental Amec j ican soil by steamer out of San I Francisco;- but is only 3.000 miles i removed by airship out of the ! Alaska Peninsula, j "Even more fascinating conjec l ture arises about the crossing of the Alaskan Gulf from Kodiak to Sit ! ka, for off Kodiak is situated that j ! eight world wonder, 'The Valley of | Ten Thousand Smokes.' discovered by National Qeographic Society ex peditions sent to study Katmai, the world's greatest active volcano. This region has been made a nat ional monument.- and when it is! accessible its fifty square miles of ? steaming fissures and rainbows of hissing gasses will form one of the I mot fascinating national parks." -? ? ? BUY UNTIL IT HURTS j At the Schwartz Clearance! Sale which starts tomorrow and lasts for 6 days. Prices that sound like 1914 and in: the face of a steady rising! market, and you know what a real sale at Sumter's real; store means. Schwartz Bros.! Advertisement. When a woman sees a shop win- ; dow she says "There is something that needs looking into." - Our Legitimate! Clearance Sale of the correct styles in wo-j man's wear begins! Wednesday. The Ladies' Shop. Adver tisement. . , WORLD m London, June 16?Mrs. Molla Bjurstedt Mallory, the American Lawn Tennis champion, was de feated in the semi-finals in the wo men's singles in the Kent Tennis Championship by Miss McKane, the British star. Washington. June 16.?The House Merchant Marine Commit tee rejected the amendment by Representative Bankhead providing that no government aid should be allowed ships on which liquor was sold. Cincinnati, June 16.?Organized labor and organized veterans of the World War have "as oommon ene mies those who seek to tear down the integrity of America." Nation al Commander MacNider, of the Amercian Legion, told the Ameri can Federation of Labor at their convention today. Belfast, June 16.?The eastside was again the scene of incendiary fires this morning when flames were started in a sdap factory, a motion picture theatre and a butcher shop. Scenes of great disorder followed. Cincinnati, June IG.?President Jewell, president of the railroad employes department of the Amer ican Federation of Labor, was au thorized today by the chiefs of railroad shop crafts uipns to re quest the officers of the United Mine Workers for a' joint confer ence. -: Talladega, Ala., June 16.:?Tea gue Cunningham, negro, w*as hang ed here today for the murder of Policeman Hobbs. Cincinnati, June 16?Railway union chiefs are considerinig today the serving of formal notice on the railroad labor board tha: an overwhelming majority of the mil lion two hundred and twenty-ave thousand shop crafts, and mainte nance of way employes are voting in favor of a strike on July ist., and that the officers of the union will abide by the decision of the workers. Richmond. June 16.?Search was continued here today for two ne groes, who, late . yesterday, at tempted to attack a ten year-old white girl and her six-year-old* boy companion in the woods on the out skirts of. the city. The police say they know the identity of the men. Later two young negroes were rarested and jailed charged with having attempted the attack. Palatka. Fla.. June 16?S. R. Fields, of Bunnell, a member of the boaard of commissioners of FHgler county, has left the county as the result of his third flogging at the hands of unindentified persons in the last few months, according to Flagier county officers who are here to run down a clue. Irwinton. Ga., June 16?Jim Denson the negro who made a sen sational escape from a mob a few weeks ago, was hanged this morn ing for criminal assault on an aged white woman. Richmond, June 16?Delegates from every tobacco producing sec tion of the United States will meet here June 29th. for the annual con 'vention of the Tobacco Associa tion of the United States. P o di'ction and marketing problems will be the main topics fo discus sion. ?* Paris. June 16.?Germany today paid the regular monthly instal ment of 50,000,000 gold marks for reparation. Deposits aggregating that amount were made in the des ignated banks in Paris, London and Brussels. Chicago, June 17?Harold F. Mc Cormick. the former head of the International Harvester Company is reported to be getitng along "very nicely" in a hospital today, after a minor operation Thursday. Stockholm, June 17.?The Inter national Cotton Conference ended its sittings here yesterday after passing resolutions declaring against the forty-eight hour week as economically unsound and det rimental to the best interests of both employers and workers . Washington. June 17.?A bill de- ! nying entrance to American porst, of any ship, foreign or domestic, on which liquor is sold, was intro- j duced by Representaive Edmonds, ranking Republican of the Mer chant marine committee. Washington. June 17.?Senator j Underwood urged determination of fixed policy for the development by j the government of Muscle "Shoals! before congress adjourned. Cincinnati, June 17.?Strike bal lots to stationary firemen, oilers, and instructions to general com mittees of signal men to decide whether to take :i strike vote will be in the mails by night, following! the decision of the railroad labor; board last night cutting the wages! of members of these unions. Indianapolis. June 17. ? Rev. j Frederick E. Taylor. of Indian- ; apolis, modernist leader. was J elected president of the Northern] Baptist convention at today's ses sion. Salt Lake City. June 17.?Pilot] Leviste. of the western division of the United States air mail service, hopped off from Woodward Field at 5:15 o'clock today in a new at tempt to break the Salt Lake to San Francisco flying record. Washington. June 17.?With the shipping board liquor issue inject ed into the prohibitive fight on the Republican house leaders today fS IN BRIEF 1 prepared to confer again with Pres ident Harding on the question of taking up the ship subsidy bill be fore adjournment. Representa tive Bankhead said he would offer his amendment on the floor, deny ing government aid to ships on which liquor is sold and demand a vote. Belfast, June 17?Cardinal Logue the primate of Ireland, and his co adjuetor, Archbishop O'Connell, were" again held up last night by a squad of Ulster constabulary forc ed to alight and their cars search ed, after which they were allowed to proceed. Berlin, June 19.?A hundred and twenty persons were injured, some seriously, in a fight between mem bers of a patriotic society and a party of communists at Chemitz, Saturday, according to newspaper reports. SHOULD RESTRICT RIGHT OF APPEAL ludge Shipp Says Regarding His Charge?Thinks It Is Open to Loopholes and Sub terfuges to Delay Justice Florence, June 17.?"The right ; of appeaj. should be restricted to j good and sufficient grounds?not I open to every loophole and subter j fuge that is resorted to today to I delay justice." Judge S. W. G. Shipp, of the Twelfth judicial cir cuit, said today when asked by a Times reporter what remedies he had in mind recently when he charged a grand jury in the court of general sessions here that the public is to blame for the long de layed justice in criminal cases in South Carolina and has the remedy in its hands. "I would not limit the right of a man's appeal but i that right should be restricted to j prima facie evidence that t?te ap i peal is being taken on good and' j proper grounds and is not merely a resort to delay justice. ? "Right of appeal is purely statu tory and therefore can be changed at will by the people or their leg islators. In my judgment, such changes should be made as will ex- ? pedite the administration of justice in South Carolina.. These changes should enable the courts to reject, summarily, any - appeal "which is evidently a move to delay the sen tence of justice. * "South Carolina formerly had a rule which required that an attor - ney had to get permission of the supreme court to carry his case before that body. This rule was nullified under a decision of that court in a' famous case. Virginia J has restricted the right of appeal I to bona fide evidence of sufficient ] grounds. j "In the federal courts, if an at ; torney would appeal, he must get J the permission of the circuit judge j ?the court official before whom ! the case was tried. If he refuses, j that ends the matter. I am not in l favor of this responsibility being I placed on the trial judge in the ! state courts, but I do favor a plan j which would operate to the same i end in the state courts, j "Another law which the general j assembly, in my judgment should j change is that requiring a prisoner j must be brought back from the state penitentiary for sentencing in j the court for trial. Once a man ! has been sentenced to execution, land has been taken from that I county to the state penitentiary, ! the supreme court should be dele j gated the authority to name a date I for execution. He should not be j brought back to the county for re j sentencing. Or let any circuit I judge then sitting in session, fix a j date without having the prisoner brought again from the peniten tiary into the court." The charge of Judge Shipp to the Florence county grand jury has aroused probably more attention than any charge which has been given in South Carolina in many months. It has been eopied widely from The Florence Times and most j of the papers have commented j very favorably upon his charge, j Judge Shipp ranks among the fore I most of the circuit judges of South i Carolina and stands very high in j the legal profession of the state. [Such words coming from him, mean a great deal in the judgment of the I press and the public. j Feminism advances rapidly, but j we shall he spared the sight of wo l man pulling on a cigarette while darning the children's stockings. With all those whiskers the Rus sians are naturally in the soup. If work alone make a long life most of us would have died years ago. A man doesn't have to be absent minded to forget himself. DOINGS OF THE DUFFS LIMIT EXPIRES FOR CANDIDATES V Many Aspirants For Office in the Coming Campaign Which Closed Monday Columbia. June 13.?The ring for political hats closed at noon Mon day. The political campaign starts Tuesday, the first campaign meet ing being held in Columbia, at 10 o'clock. The following had filed their campaign pledges up to the present week: For governor: Thos. G. McLeod: George K. Laney; Cole L. Blease, and John T. Duncan. For Lieutenant Governor: J. K. Owens, Bennettsville. For State Treasurer: S. T. Car ter. Columbia. For Adjutant General: Robert E. Craig. ?Columbia. For Attorney General: Sam M. Wolfe. For Commissioner of Agriculture B. Harris, and Senator George W. Wightman of Saluda. Mr. Harris is the encumbent. For-Congress: F. H. Domir.ick, Newberry: Sam H. S h e r a r d, Greenwood, and Senator E. P. Me Crnvey, of Pickens, in the third dis trict; P. H. Stoll, Kingstree. Je rome F. Pate, Darlington; W. R. Barringer, of Florence; A. H. Casque, of Florence, in the sixth district: W. Turner Logan and J. B. Morrison, of McClellanvtMe. In the first ^district; James F. Byrnes, in the second district; J. J. Ale Swain in the fourth district; W. F. Stevenson, in the fifth; H. P. Fnl mer. Orangeburg; J. J. McMahan of Columbia and A. J. Bethea, of Columbia, in the. seventh district. For State Superintendent of Ed ucation: John E. Swearingen, for re-election: O. D. Seay, Columbia; Paul H. Moore, Columbia; ^J. H. Hope, Union; Cecil H. Seigler, of Aiken, and two women, Mrs. E. B.' Wallace, of Columbia, and Mrs. Bessie Rogers Drake, of Bennetts ville. Three solicitors' offices are to be filled again, and for all three the encumbents have announced for re election: Frank A. McLeod, of Sumter; A. F. Spigener, of Co lumbia, and L. M. Gasque, of Flor ence. For Comptroller General: Walter E. Duncan, of Aiken, has filed his pledge as a candidate for re-elec tion. For Secretary of State two can didates are in the race, W. Banks j Dove, the enciimbent, and James' C. Dozier, of Rock Hill. : The most interesting announce ment in connection with the po litical situation in recent days ^ras that of" Saturdayy.. that State Su perintendent of Education -John E. Swearingen would not con* tinue in the race for governor. Mr. Swearingen withdrew from the governor's race and filed his pledge for re-election to the office of su perintendent of education^' f^^^^ ? COPTBrCHT ?t M?CALtt Fashionable three-piece suits are being shown for girls. of six and eight as well as for their mothers... This costume is of ratine. Other materials used range from tweeds and jersey to linen and pongee. Senator Hale Seeks Re-election Portland, Maine, June 19.?Unit ed States Senator Hale, sought re nomination by the Republicans at the Maine state primary today. He is opposed by Former Congressman Guernsey, and former State Sena tor Edward Davies. The stone age man had his wife at his feet. The modern man has his wife at his heels. Rotary club will recognize public servants as business men. Some are; but you can't recognize others. ? ? ? ? A girl is often as pretty as a picture because she is one. I SEE THE WEATH1 SAYS IT'S JM FOR AN ALL DAV RAIW RA1NJM' GOt KT OPAV VETERANS GATHER IN RICHMOND Annual Reunion of Confed erate Survivors Opens To day Richmond, June 19.?Reliving in memory the days of sixty-one to sixty-five, Richmond opened wide her gates to the surviving band of gray coated .men who, by va lor made immortal the armies of Lee and Jackson. Late today the program of reunion week opens with the annual convention of the confederate southern memorial as sociation, followed tonight by the opening session of the sons of veterans. The reunion proper opens at ten" o'clock'. tomorrow morning. "J - . ; MARKET NEWS (Furnished by MacDowell & Co., 18 South Main St.. Corresoondents of H. & B. Beer, Member* New York and New Orleana Cotton Exchanges.) Morning Cotton Letter. New Orleans, June 19.?Liver pool was due 25 up by New Orleans 23 to 36 up by New York. Southern spots Saturday were unchanged to 50 up; Dallas 25 higher; middling there 22 cents. Sales at Dallas 933; all told 6,589 bales. Advices from New England are to effect that the tendency of tex tile mill workers is slowly but sure ly to return to work under the 54 hour week and 20 per cent reduc tion wage scale. Stockholm, Sweden, June 17.? The j international conference end ed its sittings here yesterday after pa s s i n g resolutions declaring against the 48-hour week as eco nomically unsound and,detrimental to the best interests both" of em ployees and workers. > The return to the 54, instead of 48 hour week in America and Eu rope means larger, consumption by six* hours per . week in the United States and Europe, thereby in creasing the consumption* of cot ton next season. Exports from United States last Saturday were 39,000 bales vs. 14,000 last year, leaving stock at all .United States ports at. 758,000 vs. 1,626,000 one year ago. . - .Columbia, S.. C, . June 19.? Friends .lust back from trip over state selling boll weevil traps, states plant all over state simply alive? with-pest now. Cables,-, weather Conditions and general news will, dominate, market today.- . Favor realizing, especial ly on bulges, unless rains, indicated, as Wednesday's weekly likely to be best, so far. this season. Sentiment remains divided; Stanley on the Weather. Memphis. June 19-.?Tempera tures/, slightly cooler over the belt, rainfall Saturday over southern and western. Texas, Oklahoma.and por tions of Louisiana, moderate rain fan reported Sunday over eastern belt; Memphis district hard rain and hail yesterday southern Lou isiana; moderate rainfall; light rainfall western Texas. Monday entire belt part cloudy; showers, except west Texas gener ally fair. COTTON MARKET new york cotton. Yestdya Open High Low Close Oos? Jan -- _ _.2f.?3 22.45 21.83 22.3? 21.60 March - ..2r.75 22.30 21.75 22,21 21.46 May v- ..21.55 22.00 21.55 22,00 2S.23 July . . 21.30 22.90 22.26 2?7fi . 22.04 Oct.. - - 22.20 22.87 22.20 22.7C?. 2J.93 Dec..: - .22.05 .22.63 22:05 22.4? 21.76 Spots 70 up, 23.25. new orleans cotton. Yestdya Opes High Low Clone Clou Jan. - ...21.45 21.98 21.45 21.81 21.03 March - .. 20.95 21.69 20.95 21.63 20.78 May _ .. _ 21.35 20.53 Jury .22.45 23.08 22.45 22.93 22.16 Oct.._21.75 22.55 21.74 22.3 } 21.37 Dec..21.45 22.20 21.45 22.07 21.26 ? Spots '87 up, 22.75. Liverpool Cotton. January .... .? . 12.44 March. . _ ._ 12.27 May. _. 12.17* July . _ ...... . 13.01 October.;..?? 12.75 December . _ . . 12.53 Receipts. 7,000; .Sales, 15,000; Middimfj, 13.09; Good Middling. 13.54. Cheer up. A hot summer goeth before a fall. People who look on the dark side of things never shine. BE ON HAND TOMORROW As the great Schwartz Clearance Sale starts and with values that will surprise the most pessimistic. ; Sale throughout the-entire store. Shop early and often and at Sumter's largest and best store. Schwartz Bros. Ad vertisement. FIRES FATAL SHOT Road Construction Foreman Kills Negro Orangeburg, June 17. ? Walter Williams, negro, was fatally shot last night by Mack Daniel, con struction foreman, at the road camp on the Xeeses-Springfield highway. It, is alleged that Wil-1 liams was shooting around the cdmp and was under the influence of whiskey and that Mack Dan- j iel went to him to take his gun from him and when Williams turned the gun toward the white man and fired, Mr. Daniel. fired, the pistof*ball passing through the negro's lungs. The negro died at the Orangeburg hospital at an early hour this afternoon. Mr. Daniel has arranged bond. RAISES BILLS, IS CHARGE Ten Dollar Ones Out of Ones, It Is Alleged Manning. June IS.?Marvin Strickland, a white man from Gable, was arrested and lodged in jail on a charge of passing ten d?llar bills alleged to have been raised from one-dollar bills. Only two of the alleged bills were pass- i ed before the fake was detected. ; GOV. SMALL WILL OFFER NO EVIDENCE Waukeg?n, 111.,^ June 19.?Gov. Len Small will offer no evidence ^in his behalf in his trial for conspir acyr the counsel for the defense announced today, but he will rest on the evidence of the prosecution, which closed today. Bonus Laid Aside Until After Final Tariff Vote Washington, June 19.?The sen ate Republicans in a conference today voted against the laying aside of the tariff to consider the soldier bonus. The bonus is to be made unfinished business until after the final tariff vote. . About all that makes, a train late these days is running over autos. Corsets., for men! Ugh!. Sup ? pose a fellow should get . one "on and forget the combination. The business revival could stand a litle more shouting. A magazine prints a list of "characteristic American furni ture," but forgets to mention The World's Best Liiterature *-'in Ten Volumes. E VERETT TRUE L?M,P1P PANtfY >r? he istfr . ._I DAWKl HSR?* OCCUPY CAN ii; _ Unity^?n Chiiaa May ^ From Action Poking",'June 16.?A telegram re ceived 7 .by foreign legations here today says the forces of General Chen Chiung' Min have occupied Can ton, the sea:: of Dr. Sun "STat " Sen's Southern China government. It. is understood Chen Chiung MJp is sympathetic with the plans **/ General; Wu Pei-Fu for reunifiej tion oifjChina, but he has not yet publicly^ndoreed Wu. - Masons Denounce 4 Ku^KIux Xew "Fork, Junfc 19.?Supr< Court ...Justice Tompkins, grand Master of the Masons of New Y4l$c state, in a. statement, made publ$$ today, denounced the^ Ku Kl?x Klan and warned the mernbersyOf the Masonic-. fraternity that tj?^T" cannot be mejnbers of both masons and klan. Connecticut and Maa.# chusetts<1'-Grand Masters,- rece.^y issued similar announcements. People who toil not spin al< in autos: These June nights are eve*n wi? ter than the famous Arabian nights;--' Ford won't run for president,Utrtf he may "ride for it. p ?:?; ?. ? ? v-r Lots, of people own their homeir '. if you Count those who live in t"a?fe? - automobiles. ' --\ " ? ? ? ' '? ? . Work neve^r hurts a man unless he keeps away from. it. '' -.:',/ ? ? ? THE BJS GUNS I OP S Wili start firing tomorrcgr : and will rapid fire ^ for s$i days. X)f course we mean # Schwartz Bros., where tiheir Annual Clearance Sale is on throughout vthe entire -:spS?'' You know what a Sch*^ra^ ' : >ale means. Schwartz5 Bros. $ Advertisement. : Vogue Hats, Be V^ales Dresses inel ed ih our. l^grtim^ Clearance Sale of t correct styles in0\^ man?s>- wear. 'S The ^adieVsSh??.. ? FfyCeii mm BY ALLMAJ?