The herald and news. (Newberry S.C.) 1903-1937, November 13, 1906, Page SEVEN, Image 7

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FREAL E. Watch th for advert of additiot able Real I next IsSU very anx form a I connectio you. . . JA BBJ "The Man Between" 'Phone No. 57, N WHERE ENGLAND LOST. f British Review Summarizes List of s American Diplomatic Triumphs. Contemporary Review, England. For, so far as anyone can see, the only danger to the political connee tion lies in British diplomacy. Long t ago, it was predicted that England would pay more for Canada than she 1 had spent in the Seven Years' War she "would have to shed, rivers of blood," one distinguished English man said, over the disputes that would inevitably arise with the Unit ed States. Thus far, the prophecy has not come true, because England has chosen the wiser part of conciliating f the United States, frequently, it must be. allowed, at our expense. The dan ger is that this policy may be carried too far. It is the popular belief in Canada that in all the negotiation5 v and adjustments with the United States since 1783 we have suffered from the incapacity of British diplo- c Inats, from their want of local knowl edge, and from 'their disposition to placate the Americans "in the inter est of the empire.'' Nine Canadians out of ten believe that, owing to these causes, we were deprived of vast areas now forming part of Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, Minnesota, Dakotat,1 Washington, and Oregon; of a por tion of the state of Maine cointainingt an invaluable winter seaboard, of'" San Juan Island and of Ihe Lyn Ca nal in Alaska, another seaboard; while our claims agains,t the United .States on account of the Fenian raids ( were ab)andoned by Epgland in lher haste to settle the Alabama ease; in fact, the only international court which has not muleted us was the I Fisher Arbitration, at Halifax, 1877, I and for that we had t.o thank the Ii Canadian member. Charles Summer s said of Mr. Seward 's purchase of Al- t aska that it had '''dismissed anothor c ' monarch' from this, continent,'' and when British diplomats gather at WVashington to debate Canadian ques- t tions, the Canadian imperialist trem,. e ble for. British connection. THE "BASTILLE or TPHE 400" Is What the rormer Husband -of I Amelia Rives Calls Asylum. c Richmond Dispatch to Newv York' Times. "Four Years Behind the Bars of r Bloomingdale; or, the Bankruptcy of d Law in Now York,'' is the title of a e remarkable book by John Armstrong J . Chanler, first husband of Amelia I Rives, the author of "The Quick or Dead,'' who after being divorcea- r from him, married Prince Troubets- f koy. .r Mr. Chanlor became a citizen of Virginia about the time of his, mar- r riage in 1888. His home, the Merry r Mills, is in Albemarle .county, and:it I is here that he -wrote his book, an 1: advance copy of which has reached 5 he,re, r A quarrel with his family growing d out of the marriage became acute in d 1897. Clhanler had quit the prac. d *tice of laiv in New York, and retired to huis country home, in Virginia, d *where ho took up the study of psy.. r *etology., While thus engaged,~ Stsn.. hlit do STA change "jacl en scoot: iron m( made, e is place hot. Here isement interrup tsem nt I"Yer laughs. iaL valu-p speaker, Estate in J"ack devil.' )a ampuss Jai sezee. ious to en""*,"p manl er )usiness him tu come in The I n w ith lond li tagious I M Mrs. B1aker,< 1906. Eden Li ed iat B3 URTONedShe h ruary t Buyer and Seller. misplac( sufferin ewberry, S. 0. come w be at rc ''But Illu She p ord White, as records seem to show, g ame down from New York and per- An< nuded Chanler to returfi with him. ''Ora Mr. Chanler narrates in detail how known e was then railroaded into Blooming- mother ale Asylum on the testimony of two boys ai octors, who visited him in a hotel in death. Tew York city, pretending that they are ma ,ere students in psychology. He told the girl lie callers of studies and announced being i ome startling results. One statement dren. e made was that his eyes in the per- Grai: id of ten years had changed in color parents rom brown to gray. as a n He also declared that lie could at again, rill go into a state of trance and as- pleasur< ume for the time the mental and poor en hysicalN aspect of Napoleon. Mr. content, ,hanler's book includes an affidavit she did rom his former wife thit when they She lost rere married his eyes were brown, est chil< liereas they are now unquestionably her's w ray. Mr. Chanler hints that the family , hange may be associated with the As m egetarian di6t which lie adopted the tim< Dme years ago. Coincident with the her lius liange in diet Mr. Chanler eschewed years al leoholic beverages and tobacco. In Grant is earlier years he drank freely and failing -as a high liver. thinlgs t Upon the testimony of the two doe- and on 4 >rs who lie referred to as ''obscure'' times gi Ir. Chaniler, after being lured to ly blind( few York, was taken in charge by on boil w'o police officers, lie says, and secret- aboutt yv removed to Bloomingdale Asylum, about n nily two miles from the heart of the Sur'el tetropolis of the United States, butt wh' friend, DEVIL AND BLACKSMITH, fore ha' we kinov lid Nick Trid to Show Off; But Was and tha Caught Napping. Wyatt In the last number of Bob Taylor's News al 4agazine, Mr. RI. T1. Wyche, ''the The I rorth Carolina story teller,'' gives a ville, R< randl newv ''Uncle Remuis' '-like 'the Thi tory told him by an old negro on yester'di lie farm of Dr. Speighit in Edge- ing wit] ombe county. It runs as follows: of a ni ''De devil in ole times,'' he said, mutchi t< 'coumld change inter de image er the arri hings. He could change itter a dog, It wn: r cat, er' hog, enything cepen a dove Aiken t r lam. He couldn 't change inter' ton to y em, and his ''In dem days dar live er man by no0 mfor' e name cer Jack which werca black- himt. I1 mith. He glood de devil dowvn one has yoi< ay dat he could name sutpner de tion mo evil couldn 't turn inter. Do devil first br lowed lie couldnm't. test the '' 'Jack)' sezee, 'you jes come tet. with thi iy shop en we'll se 'bout dat.' De himself, evil says, 'all right.' When de pint- could t d (lay come de devil turned ump in The d ack shop en say, sezee, 'Well, Jack sents ini 'm here.' progresi ''Jack say, 'All right, I 'm busy nowv, at ighit now (lhe was wvorking on a niated b ieee 'of Iron at the forge). P'll be are, thri: 6ady for you in a mii, sozee. 'howY to ''Den aitei' while 'Jack 'he turn and the sun, en.look at d6 ddWil'en say: 'All for the Ight, le'mne pee.youm ttirn intei' or cat.' thiey.ha etdevil l'e whifl roun en uhange in.Cong it er image ny' di' cat. Den $Jaek ed by hi ky: 'Le 'me see you turn inter er Charlesl konkey.' De devil he whirl ronn, lie we havt id, en change 'intoroet nonkey. Den recognit ack say: 'I tell you what you can't ordiniar o.' De devil say, 'What'?' Jack say', State.. T'ou'ean 't turn inter two dollars en the fact rap down lhere on de ground. en their fa ittle.' ''pe devil.say, 'Yes, I ken. Jack Patier fnore ofi l'mei see yer.' Wid dat he mip up, he did, en whenr he ground lie rattle. He done M uter two dollars. be stool) down, quick as dat, urM up an' slap um inter ot ha ney-puss what he had dun th n welded de iron while she in - he had him."- an the story was for a moment so ted by ejaculations, such ab ed right" and loud" liar har-r' n 'ha n Jack died," continued the .i 'he went to hell en knock 'ye ." De devil say, 'Who dat? Al sezee. 'What Jack?' ax do Wi Jack,' sefe. 'Who, Money- 0C &kI ax do devil ergin. 'Yes,' er do devil call one of he angels be 'Here, you,take en kyar dat su chunk or fire en hand it ter to do crack. Don't you let him po here,' sezee. ag ast point was applauded by go, ghter that seemed both con- bii Ind spoitanleoui,S. isl B. 3mory of Our Grandmother. M 4arali Baker, wife of Joseph an leparted this life October 23, by "he was a member of Beth fe itheran chur1ci and was buri- jn oth Eden graveyard. be is been an invalid since Feb- nu bis year, having fallen and at, d her left hip on February co itiently bearing her intense fr , she longed for the time to th lien she could go home and fo st. -u when the sun in all his state sa mined the eastern skies, ca issed through glory's morning ate, I walked in Paradise.'' idma Baker,'' for she was to to all by that name, was the te of eleven children, leaving six ri d two girls to mourn het N All of the surviving children cl [ried, and all except one of s have large. families, there n all thirty-nine grandehil Ima was not born of wealthy and her mother died when she N lore child; her father married 3o her life was not oirb of 13 and enjoyment, only as the bi joy life. But she was always D No matter what her task, J. it cheerfully and with a wili 13 her husband when her young- I I was about two years old, and c( as the task of raising a large a m small means. s4 ost of the older people know, s were harder then than now, band having died about forty Ima was noted for her never memory. She could tell of fi hat hapepned in her childhood i4 lown to the present, and some- rc ve exact date. She wqas total- o when she died,,hiad cataracts I eyes. One eye was blind I welve years and the other no months before her death. F y she wvill be greatly missed, ile we have lost an earthly those whmo have gone oin he re gained a heavenly one, and r ''God doeth all things well,'' h< t our loss is her gain. N ______________-ti Aiken Knows What's What. R~ [on. D. Wyatt Aikeii, of Abbe- m presentative in Congress from ci r'd Dist.rit, was ini Charilestoni Ly for the purpose5 of witness his own eyes the first fruits ovemneint which lie has (lone N~ promote, to see for himself val of the Wittekind-.u a very graceful thing for Mr. tl o (10, this coming to Charles- dl relcome in person Col. Watson T European recruits, but it wvas oh than was to be expected of season and ouit of season lie ~ed his belief in the imnmigra vement. Whenm the matter was == ought up lie did not wait to popularity of the movement ( e peOople, but, believing in it he set about to do wvhat he popularize it. istriict which Mr. Aiken repre- fl Congress is one of the most dive in South Carolina. It isY d it has always been, domi- ti y the white man. Its people ~ty and intelligent. They know improve the passing moments y. know also how to prepare morriow. For the man whomY ye. chosen to repr'esent' themA ross, in the seat so long grac s lamented father, to come to 1 on on this occasion was, a6 t said,. a fine thing, a fitting ion of a movement of extra importance to the whole [t is only another evidence of that Mr'. Aiken is at all times ithfuh Representative. s. ce isn 't necessarily a virtue i nen it's a necessity.. The Nationalisi South. Peter Pechin in Southern Farr agazine of Baltimore for Novell r: For instance, the national feeling s always been strongest, perhaps, in e South, the natural feeling look x to the good of the whole country ,d stgrnly setting its face against ainlism and sensationalism, disguis though they might be in the gar nts of ephemeral "patriotism" or ving never so respectable a follow g as to. numbers. Seventy-odd ar8 agg, under the name of feder sm, that nationalism in the South iich differed from nationalism In her parts of the country, in that it mld not use the power of the Gen al Government for the exclusiva nefit 'oZ a particular section, was bmerged for a time in opposition 'a nationalism that would use the wer of the General Government ainst a particular section. The Dialisin of the moment was a com lation of agrarianism and abolition n. In its beginning it. found Roger Taney as strong a Nationalist as Rrshall; at its climax it found him upiholder of governmental action the several States as the surest de ase of a really Federal Covernment. the intervening period there had en a rearrangement around the elei of sectionalism of political Jno. M. ius having no real affinity, and the untry has not even yet recovered om the instability I of equilibrium us induced, birth to other pretexts r further aggrandizement of exe tive power, and that, therefore, the fe course is to prevent further oc sions, if not to remove existing ones. TRESPASS NOTICE. All persons are hereby warned not Mer trespass uponl the place inl the pos ssion of the undersigned on Bush ver eight and one-half miles from pris ewberry on the road to 3ush river mureh, containing 104 1-4 acres on Peo Lis side of the river and adjoining thot .r. Jim Epting's place. Olie Waites. Cull you OTIOE or FINAL SETTLEMENT. Notice is hereby given that I will W e ake a final settlement in the pro te court for Newberry county on ecember 8, 1906, upon the estate of W b H. Motes, deceased, and immediate thereafter apply for letters dis issory, as administrator of said de ased. All persons holding claims ainst said estate will present the ime by that (late duly attested. F. D. Motes, Administrator. qOTICE TO ROAD OVERPEERS. All Road Overseers are hereby noti- R. C. ed and required to put their roads condition and perfrom the labor quired by law, before the first day December, 1906. Hlercin fail not, under penalty of TR J. Monroe Wicker, red. H. Dominick, Supervisor.. Clerk and Attorney. REGISTRATION NOTICE. Ca p Notice is hereby given that the ioks of registration for the Town of Sur ewberry, S. 'C., are now open, and Ie undersignedl as Supervisor of Dep cgistration for said town will keep id books open every day from 9 a. W to 5 p. in., (Sundays excepted), in.. uding the 1st day of December, 1906. W Eug. S. Worts, Supervisor of Registration. W iti OTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT. Fou Notice is hereby given that we, thle i(dersigned, will make a final set emenCIt onl the estate of L. L. Boozer, eceased, at Prosperity, S. C., on nesday, December 4th, 1906. All JS aims5 to b)e handed in lby that (late. Pierce F. Booz,er, Jr. Joseph E. Boozer, se.. Heirs A t Lav w. E oal! Coal!! Coal!!! I am making arrange- Sg ients to establish a coal ard and will be in posi on to supply your wants >r both hard and soft coal. hxould you wish to buy Get our winter supply for ugust;or September do very I would be pleased i quote you prices. , It will See,me before buying. oan deliver any time af SE( irAugust 15. S. B. JONES Offce Cor. I "WE WATOH IT." Depositors who have daily turned into our bank their cunrrency, checks, drafts, with notes for collection, don't need to worry about their safekeep ing. With us YOUR MONEY IS SAFE and secure. "We watch it'' and dou ble safeguard it so that it's yours when called for. Your check for what is banked with us will be promptly honored whenever presentod. [E COMMERCIAL BANK 4 Per Cent. Interest Paid in Savings Department. The Bank for Your Savings. Kinard, Pres. 0. B. Mayor, Vice-Pres. J. Y. McFall, Cashier. Save! Save! It's Easy! ely a matter of spending less than you i, keeps growing easier too, becomes sur ing after you have practiced it for a while. pie fall into the habit of spending money ightlessly, and imagine they cannot save. ivate thoughtfulness and carefulness and are bound to succeed. pay 4 per cent interest on Savings. ty not open an Account Today? The Exchonoe Book( Of Newberry, S. C. DAVENPORT, Pres. M. L. SPEARMAN, Cashier CARLISLE, V-Pres. G. B. CROMER, Atty. Newberry, S. C. ital stock paid in . . $ 50,000.00 osits . . . . . . 235,000.00 e do business on business principles. e extend every consideration consistent safe and sound banking. r per cent. paid on deposits in Savings Department. Fire Proof Vault. Burglar Proof Safe. McINTOSH, J. E. NORWOOD, President. Cashier. JURITY LOAN AND INVESTMENT CO. plies the best Facilities For Saving Money at a Profitable Rate of Interest: For Building by lustallment: For Buying Land: For Borrowing Money on Real Estate. one of Our SECURITY CONTRACT And Be Convinced of its Value be the means.of your Saving Motley and accumulating a Fund that will buy Land or Build a House. . UORITY L.OAN AND IN VESTMENT CO, JAMES N. McCAUGHRIN, Secretary-Treasurer. 3oyce & Adarns Sts.. Newberrv, . C.(