University of South Carolina Libraries
Rules For School. There are a few persons living wh< heard their teachers read the "rules for the guidance and discipline of th< scholars. They were read the firs day or the first Friday of the ses sion and frequently thereafter. Wad H. Griffin, of Mississippi, secured set -found in Hernando, Miss., and dat ed 1823. They were published in th< Meridian Star. The Rules. ist. Any scholar who comes ti school without washing their face an hands and combing their hair, sha1 'have two cuts well laid on. 2nd. Anyone coming to or goin from school mee:cing a person or per sons, and do not make their obei sance and speak politely to then shall have two ditto. 3rd. Anyof the scholars when talk ing to a person, if to a man, do no answer him yes, sir, or if to a womar yes, madam, no, madam, as the cas may require, shall have 'Three cuts we laid on. 4th. If any of the boys are know: by me to wear their hats in the hous at home, school or abroad, shall hav two lashes well laid on. 5th. -If the boys are known by m to play with the girls, or trouble thei playgrounds, or if the girls go to: pla, wich the boys, or trouble their play grounds, for e-.ch offense they shal have two lashes. 6th. When a person or person come into the school house, those wh, do not rise and make their obeisanc (when spoke) then take their seat and be attentive to business durin the time the person or persons sta3 shali have two cuts well laid on. 7.th. Those who tell tales out c school, and do not give a true a< count of whiat they tell, or .if the raise -a falsity to make an interriptio in school, shall have four cuts. 8th. If any of the' scholars ar known by me to curse, swear, quarre fight, call each other by nickname! or use any profane or bad languag shall have seven cuts. 9th. If any are known by me t climb trees, wrestle or scuffle, to tea or dirty clothes, shall hiave three. roth. If any scholar is known b; me to play or loiter on the roa when coming to or going from schoo shiall have two cuts -well laid on. 11th. If one should enter to thi school who are young men or wome: and do not feel disposed to compi: with the rules of the school, if the: violate them, they shall leave th ~schiool to their own shame and di.s grace. 12th. If any should be knowin: to- the violation of any of the abov mentioned rules, and do not irmme diately or as soon as convenient, giv *me information, shall bhe subject t hialf the penalty of the rule violate( 13th. If any scholar is known b; me to tag another in the evenin; -after school, he or she shall be pun is-hed according to the crime. Als, -laughing out and telling -in schoc strictly forbidden under the penait; of a !fcgging. What's In McClure's ~The November McClure's begins new vo'lums with the opening chap ters of two great new serials and a bi; -Kipling story, which promise th anagazine's continuance as a torch~ bearer in public affairs and the leade of excellence in present 'day literature - n this number Carl Schurz begin his "Reminiscences," the life story c a patriot-soldier-statesman-author, fighting idealist who never comprc mised with this conscience. Ray Stannard Baker, with "Th 'Railroad Rate," opens his series c articles on the greatest national per plexity, the outcome of more than year's digging into the mo-st 'difficul subject American voters have eve had to,master. Last of the "articles" in Novembe is the second ha-lf of Charles F. Lumn mis' breezy story "Pioneer Transpor tation in America," the epic of the he roic. age of travel which waited til now for a writer. Kipling's most re .markable story is "With the Nigb 'Mail," in which he projects 'his won derful imagination into the twenty first century and takes a thrilling air ship flight from London to Quebe< He has invented a new world of me chanics and found strange highway in the sky, which are pictured in col or 'by Reuterdahl. In -~passing h glimpses a transformed earth so viv idly real that it is hard to wake up t< the fact that Utopia does not exist. Another story in this number -tha sad .c+rngly nout is the "Last Love Feast," a tale of the French Commune > which focuses in a terrible. brief, dra matic moment every human passion. It is splendidly illustrated by Cas t 'taigne. Fitly following this piece of fiction e is "The Lottery of Death," a true sto i ry of the Civil War's most appalling -episode. In sharp contrast to all this stress of emotion is "An eye for an Eye," a dainty little tale of hot blood and a young hearts told in the sweet patois I of the Louisiana 'Cajan. Mhere are be 1 sides stories by Samuel Hopkins Ad ams, Mrs. Wilson Woodrow, Jean g Webster and others. - Kipling's Look Into the Future. L, Rudyard Kipling, in the November McClure's, projects himself into the twenty-first century, and flies across t the skies from London to Quebec in I an airship postal packet. "With the e Night Mail" gives Kipling's wonder i ful constructive imagination free play With the same art by which he can a tell of a liner's engine-room so that e you smell the bilge and feel the stuffy, e oily 'heat, he makes the -strange high ways of the sky, 'the marvelous ma e chinery and th.e jolly fellows of the r airship service so vividly our own that y they grow as familiar as travel ex - periences of today. I Inside the steel-skin of the packet Kipling has created a new world of s statics and mechanics by which she : hurls herself along 'the five-mile lanes e at sixteen miles a second, and outside - there are strange traffic and new perils g above a strangely ordered earth. Hu r, man iature only is familiar. The captains of the packet stamped with of the clean free air of their service might be a new breed of salty Atlan y tic skippers, perfected but unchasten a ed. New and undreamed-of perils be e set the navigators of the air, and in [ the brief twelve-hour run Kipling's ;, reporter sees a tramp crew rescued e as their storm-ibattered hulk hurtles down through space, and feels his own : ship tossed .in mile-long yaws as it r shoots through the vortices and blow outs and electric tensions of a tempest y of the upper air. When the sun 'has d topped the curved Atlantic's eastern , rim, there is time for a look down on the earth's changed face and for a lit s tle gossip of mundane affairs which L shows the old world a happy enough y place in A. D. 2025. e -Wanted-Men. - God give us men! A time like this de mands g Strong minds, great hearts, true faith eand ready th,ands; -Men whom the lust of office does no't e 'kill; o Men whom the spoils of office cannot L. abuy; y Men wiho possess opinions anid a will; g Men who have 'honor, men who will .. not lie; p Men who can stand before a dema >1gogue And damn his treacherous flat'teries without winking, Tal' men, sun-crowned, who live above the fog a In pu'blic duty and private thinking. - For -when the rabble, wit;h their thum'bworn creeds, e Their large professions and their lit' - tle deeds, r Mingle in selfish strife-lo! Freedom .weeps, s Wrong rules the land, and waiting fJustice sleeps. a 3. G. Holland. Some Halloween Suggestions. e Among the appropriate decorations for this day are 'strings of apple par aings made gay with ribbon bows. Lit tie imps for name card's. the satanic' messenrs holding tiny .ards in their r 'and. itte bac cas.whieb coma s candy boxes. may be -given a hn rFing of asbestos paper. makingi a smal Ihole in the top, of each head. Then pick out the eyes. or out in tiny h!s of yellow or green glass. Little can1 dies placed within will "do tLhe rest." 'These placed a'bout the t'able with a tcenter-piece of a 'branching twig hung with jac-o'-lanterns, and small toy ows perched in the branches, will make another odd table deco'ration. Another charming device far name cards are little mushrooms made from crepe paper which rest in a rot,nd of cardboard covered with rose petals or eother flower petals. A brownie stands by each mushroom, and the guetst's name is pasted across the top of each "fairy um'brella."-Woman's Home NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLE-I MENT AND DISCHARGE. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned will make a final settle ment as Administratrix on the estate of A. Y. W. Glymph, deceased, in the Probate Court for Newberry county on the io:h day of November, 1905,. at ii o'clock a. m. and will immediate ly thereafter apply for final discharge as administratrix of the said estate. All persons holding claims against the said estate will present the same duly attested by said date and all per sons owing the said estate will make payment. Mattie K. Glymph, Administratrix. REGISTRATION NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that the books of registration for The Town of Newberry, S. C., are now op'en, and the undersigned as Supervisor of Regristration for said town will keep said books open every day from 9 a. m., until 5 p. M., (Sundays ex cepted), including the 1st day of De cember, 1905. Eugene S. Werts, Supervisor of Registration. Letters of Administration. State of South Carolina, County of Newberry. By John C. Wilson, Esquire, Probate Judge. Whereas F. D. Motes hath made suit to me, to grant 'him Letters of Administration of the Estate of and effects of J. H. Motes. These are therefore to cite and ad monish all and singular the kindred and creditors of t.he said J. H. Motes, deceased, that they be and appeari be fore me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Newberry on Tuesday, Oc tober 31, next after publication there of, at ii o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they 'have, why the said Administration should not be granted. Given under my .and, this 13 day of October Anno Domini, 1905. 3. C. Wilson, J. P. N. C. NAVE YOUR WATCH W.B. Rikar4 Jeweler Iewberry,S.C. W.U. riKARD is now in The Herald and1 News Office vwhere he will do your work promptly and under GU ARA NTE E. Give him a trial. Price.e Fight WORK' BY A Newberry Steam Laundry Co. 12th Car, Makin Choice Tene JUST ARP Although Flour advanced tomers the same Best Patent, Cotton, Best Half Patent, Cotton jWhile we are doing the are also leading in Dry-Gc ing, Millinery, &c., &c. I goods, carefully selected Baltimore, and want ever see for themselves and be are headquarters and the all kinds goods at very b pay $40.00 for Sewing Ma drop head $17.93, guarar high tone, 12 stop Organ $ Choice Western Seed 0C Thousands of bargains i Almost impossible to men MOSEL] 0 Special Offer on Our Cou 4' Cut out this adv. and hand it in 0 you a package each of our 25c. sizI } for the price of one until' the first this special offer that will not be made solely that you may test the i One or both are apt to be needed a * make a saving, and be ready to tre * as one appears. When bought at r are guaranteed. MAYES' DRU FOR BARGAI IN FURNIE AND HOUSEHOLI .. COME' Kible&,Der N EWBERE When Wanting Somel CALL C Qeo..D. Da Cod Fish Balls,[Deviled pered Herring, French Boneless Herring, Roast Beef, Lunch Tongue, S Chicken and Potted Turke Pineapple, Mushroons, Salad, Pickles-Sweet an< lets, Cheese, Coffee from Cream of Wheat, Quake Force, Peanut Butter, Bi Ferris' Breakfast Bacon, Spices for Pickling, Vineg Apple, Fresh lot of Chocol pound. Phone 1 10. 1.200 Bbis. ssee Flour IVED. we hold for our cus old price. - - - $5.25 4.45 Flour business, we ods, Notions, Cloth Ne are brim full of in New York and ybody to come and . convinced that we proper place to buy ttom prices. Why chine? We sell good iteed; good Walnut 50.00. its, sacked 55 cents. n our immense line. tion them all. EY BROS. OMT3M! gh and Cold Cure. with 25c. and we will give ! Cough and 25c- Cold Cure of November. We make 0 repeated this year, and is * nerits partly at our expense. t any time. Buy at once, at a cough or cold as soon egular prices these remedies G STORE. FURE I GOODS , S hing Good to Eat venport. rabs, Shrimps, Kip Sardines, Lobsters. Mutton and Roast liced Ham, Potted y, Grated and Sliced Asparagus, Celery i Sour, Junket Tab Ic. to 35c. per lb., r Oats, Grape Nuts, tter Beans, Olives, Tetley's Tea, Mixed ar-White Wine and ste Candies 40c. per