University of South Carolina Libraries
Ifo" |mli m& piws ! l E. H. AULL, EDITOR. t Entered at the Postofilce at New- ' berry, S. C\, as 2nd class matter. Friday, July 17, J 008. 1 Wlial about thai wagon yard? It , should he arranged before (he fall ] season begins. The public square should not be used for such a purpose and besides it is not a fit place for a wagon yard. It is cruel to the animals to make them stand in the hot sun in summer or cold rain and wind iu winter. The open square in rear of (lie old court house should la; made a park ] planted in trees and grass and some fountains arranged, ft is stranue how little, apparently, our people care for the beautiful. A few small parks would add so much to the beauty of I lie city and t ? the comfort of the cit i/eu a^ well. j .Ma.j. Caldwell mad" some good suggestions as l>> the old court house. I )id the ollicers and members of the library association see what he said ? If not it is time lo act. City council should cooperate with ilie associati u. ( Why wail ! \Yh\ not get busy today and do somelhing ? Cole lllease won't get as many ( voles for governor as he did when lie i ran for lieutenant governor some years ago. In that race he didn't carry Newberry county, and we understand lie will not carry il lliis < veer. 11 campaign is looked on as | a joke in the up count rv?I'amberg . Herald. We trust, as we believe, that the forecast made as lo Mr. Hlease's vole will prove as incorrect as Hie stateinent made as |o hi- vote in Newberry. | Mr. lilcase carried this county by nicc majorities in both the races lie made for lieutenant governor. His opponents should not resort to misleading statements in order to injure his can- , didacv. \\ < believe our contemporary is simply ignorant of the mailer, and lliat it will correct iis statement. , Newberry is looking upward. The lliim.! lo do is to keep her looking . that way. You may think your in- i flneiice small, and your wealth may be little, bill you can do your pari, i Kveil if you can't In In, you certainly can kep from knocking. TJut your little hammer away, and sing songs o! Newberry's greatness. Now Laws For New Crimea. "I am fined for failure to provide good drinking water on my passenger trains," a Ithode Islander might say; to which a fellow-railroader iu South Carolina would add : :ilu this Stale a jail sentence follows a neglect to provide spittoons for every two seats in our cars." A man in V irginia says: "I killed a partridge on the second day of February. for which 1 must serve time in jail." In Tennessee a man must pay a fine or serve three years' imprison- , incut for killing fish with dynamite. f Tn Wisconsin a baker must serve I three weeks in jail for sleeping in his < bakery. In California nurses are punished " bv fine or imprisonment should they fail, in proper instances, to notify the physician of certain phases of illness in their patients. To water a bicycle path in the State of Ohio is an offense punishable by heavy fine and sometimes imprisonment.?Harper's Weekly. Home is What Wo Make It. A man may ow na handsome and i well furnished residence and yet may not possess a home?that is, a home in its best and purest sense, where domestic felicity reigns supreme; for only amid such surroundings can \ we find the happy home. So understood, there is not sweeter word in the language than "home" ' and one has well said: "Few words ile nearer the heart than the word i "home.' " To those of us who are ] trained in good homes, how deep, how heartfelt is the pity we feel for those who were deprived of that moral and social stimulus that is the eonmitant of the happy home! "Where is you htme?" a little hoy was asked by an acquaitannee. "Where mother is," the it tie fellow replied, as he looke dlovingly i across at her. The little boy's philosophy would be endorsed by many of maturer age. Vndouhtedly the mother of a family, the mistress of the house, has much to do with the 'tone" or quality of home life. The author of "The Chron- i ides of the Schoenberg-Cotta Family" says: "Of our mother I cannot* Iiink oL' anything to say. She is just lit: mother?our own dear, patient, oving Utile tnotlier; unlike everyone ilse in the world, and yet it seems as f there was nothing to say about her )y which one could mako anyone unlorstand what she is." In other avoids, the "dear, patient, loving little mothers" are sweetly indesribuble, their l'ragrant lives being often compressed into that single yet sigitilit sentence, "She makes home happy." Just how she docs it would puzzle her to tell in detail, and perhaps die wouldn't if she could; but aside from "personality'' or the individual expression of loving devotion which prompts in a tlmosand ways, we may safely give a Tew recipes for lidding to I he good eliccr of the home. Here arc several which we cordially recommend: 1. b'ecipo for securing love: Love. 2. Receipe for educating your chilIren : Educate your^eit. Recipe for having friends: 1 ?( me. !. Recipe for perpetual ignorance: lie satisfied wit!i your opinions and i-Miteutcd with your attainments. o. Recipe for having a beautiful 11 > : i? : I'.e I'caut i I Hi yoursel!'. Recipe for good temper: Keep SWlM't. ?. Re-ipe for lessen inn annoying wporicnccs: Don't serve I hem up at I I . ' cipe for curing the "gadding " labit: Make home the most attractive place on earth.?I'Yank J. Mallei t, in "Mothers." Absolute Obesity. There is a member of the faculty of !c(?rge Washington university who, 0 use the words of a colleague, "is is rotund physically as lie is profound met a physically.'1 One day the 'professor chanced to come upoh liis children. of whom he lias a number, all of whom were to liis astonishment engaged in an caricst discussion of the meaning of the iVor?I '' absolut e.'' "Dad," queried one of the youni'-lers, "can a man be absolutely foj II I ? " "No." replied the father. "Dad." put in another youngster, 'can a man lie ahsohitelv bad?" " Xo." "I'apa." ventured the third child, 1 liirl. "can a man he absolutely fat?" Whereupon father fled incontinently.?1 'hi la del phi a Ledger. BARBECUE NOTICE. We will furnish a lirst class barbecue at Mount Pleasant, Campaign Day, Wednesday, July 22. IT. S. Graham. M. J. Smith. An Anticipative Burial. The ship doctor of an English liner notified the death watch steward, an Irishman, that a man had died in stateroom !">. The usual instructions to bury the body were given. Some hours later the doctor peeked into I lie room and found that the body was -till there, lie called the Trishnan's attention to the matter and the lat I or replied : "I thought you said room 10 I kvint to that room and noticed wan of him in a hunk. 'Are ye dead?' says [. 'Xo,' says he, 'but I'm pretty near lead.' "So I buried him."?Wasp. as ~ a s o ? ? f ^ S 3L_Jo r, ^ t/i tTE CO . c/1 ^ ^ ^ .? P r ctq BARBECUE NOTICE. I will furnish a first class barbecue ?t St. Pauls church on August 1. Candidates are invited. Dinner ilf> and 40 cents. J. W. Richardson. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLIN, COUNTY OF N13WBERRY. By Frank M. Schumpert, Esquire, Probate Judge. WHEREAS, J. L. Wessingor, J. C. Wessinger and Geo. W. Summer made suit to me, to grant Geo. W. Summer letters of administration of (lie estate of and effects of Nannie M. Wessinger. THESE ARE THEREFORE to cito and admonish all and singular the kindred and creditors of the said Nannie M. Wessinger, deceased, that I hey be and appear before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Newherrv, S. C., on Saturday, July 18th next after publication thereof, at 11 o '(dock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the said administration should not be granted. GIVEN under my hand, this 2nd day of July Anno Domini, 1008. Frank M. Schumpert, J. P. N. C. 11^^ EASTMAN is the one to put your money in. The 1908 Catalogue fully describes and illustrates the various styles. NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT TWT . AND DISCHARGE. i^lOllCC. Notice i? Ik* re by a i veil (hat the undersigned ;i< I lie* administrator of (lie ts_ . personal. potato of Susanna Frances >A/6 ClGSlf? tO Call the Se'zlcr, deceased, will, at 11 o'clock . . , .. of I lie forenoon on the 18th day of attention Ot XmG public Auyust next, make a filial accounting , . r . .i . H,<- com-i Nowhorry to the fact that we are county for said estate, and that lie .... r* . . , will iiniuedialely thereafter apply to Still Selling TITSX pstfint said court for a final discharge. All _ , persons having demands against said TlOUT at 10C? 2~r IDS* estate will render an account thereof n , to the undersigned, or to Messrs. beCOnd patent at OOC. Schunipert and II olio way, attorneys, ^ duly attested, on or before said time IDS- LGflflOnS 1 OC. of settlement. r doZ. We will also ' ueo. A. bctzlcr, r Administrator, &c. have fresh fish on SatJuly 16, 1008. urdays. We will have teacer wanted. fjne potted Mexican Applications ^Tbc rccolvc.1 for femS a"d fil" PIa"tS f?r a teacher for Smyrna school up to sale at 75C. each, and including July 30. Term eight months. Address, sy?r* w**n & PLAYER 11. T. Longshore, Trustees. i i wmwiw mi . Headache Helps. Wl'"" 1 ? ?' * l>?aa?oho coming on, and application for dis- .. . ,, , . CHARGE says A writer in the April Designer. Tho undersigned will make his final ^ &rouml for -tilic cause. Usually return and settlement of tho estate of I loosen my hair. It is not generally Mrs. Martha Caroline Caldwell, de- known th-at hair done up tightly and ceased, before Hon. F. M. Schumpert, pinned closo to the head will cause probate judge for Newberry county, headache. Try letting the hair fall S. C., on Friday, the twenty-fourth loose, or braid or pin it loosely in a day of July, 1008, at 11 o'clock in tho a different style. Sometimes it is forenoon, and immediately thereafter my collar which is too tight, and will apply to the said probate judge when I take it off my headache disfor his discharge as executor of the appears. Again it is caused by tight will of tho said deceased. or uncomfortable shoes, or by higiiJ. F. J. Caldwell, heeled shoes, which may feel comfortltaw-5t-T Executor. ablo but which will eauso tho troublo. i Save Money II on your C 0 A L 1 BY SEEING US I | I We handle nothing but I ,j the best Jellico. 9 ;J Summer Bios. Co. J j ?? I r wtttct ?gaasonmragxa6ny^.?i^i?M*jaMra*q?caa^^ | BELTS AND BUCKLES 1 I AT J Mower Go's. t Leather Belts in Black, Tan and Colors, straight | j| and girdle shapes. j j ! Get a Merry Widow Belt. | j Have you seen the new adjustable Belt? Can be 1 changed from one size to another. Just 50c. j Buckles and Pins. i Pearl Buckles and Pins in round and square shapes, j j I imitation Silver Belt Pins, Belt Pins in Brooch effect, i ) Egyptian Cameo and Gold Filled Sash Pins. I -M Everything for the Ladies. 1 W G. I fi. S-lower Co-j | THE "LUCKY"ONE " > ! SEVENTH ANNUAL Mid-Suipier Excursion ?TO? -ATLANTA, OAThe New York of the South ?via? c. n. & l. and s. a. l. r ys Tuesday, July 28, 1908. f <?q ca round TRIP. Longer Return Limit HnnH Miss It Than Ever IBefore UUII I Forget It. Special Train, Low Rates, Fast Schedule. | Leave Columbia 7.30 a. 111 $3.50 Round Trip 31 Leave Irmo 7.54 a. m " " <? ||S Leave Cliapin 8.13 a. 111 " " ? iji Leave Little Mountain 8.30 a.m./ " " ?? 3| Leave Prosperity 8.45 a. m , " " << ||J Leave Newberry 9.00 a. m " " " Wm Leave Kinarcls 9.20 a. m $3.00 " " Wra Leave Goldville 9.30 a. 111 " " ?? Ml Leave Clinton 10.00 a. 111 " " " H Leave Laurens 9 7.00 a. m $3.00 " " Arrive Atlanta at 4.00 p. m. " ffl Tickets good to return on regular trains up f| to and including Seaboard train No. 32 leav- 9 ing Atlanta 1.20 p. m. Friday, July 31 st. | For information and tickets, call on any C. N. & L., Agent J or write J. F. LIVINGSTON, Sol. Agt. C. N. & L., Columbia, S. C. M J. S. ETCHBERGER, T. P. A., S. A. L., Columbia, S. C. * G. L. ROBINSON, Agent, Newberry, S. C. *