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r ? : GAPERS' NURSE SUES. A.sks Damages Because She Was Not Admitted to Washington Theatre. ? A dispatch from Washington tc the News and Courier says that con sielcrable interest is being shows there in the suit filed a day or twi ago in 'the supreme court of the DisF trict of Columbia, by the nurse oJ ! John (.}. Capers, because slie was denied admission to Crash's Theatre, one of the leading- play-houses in thv national capital. A few days ago Mr. Capers purchased tickets for his two little girls to attend a performance at the theatre above named and sent, the chil? dren along with their nurse. That was I as far as they could go. At the dooi * tho woman was denied admittance, beJ ing told that colored people, under n< circumstances, were admitted t<? thai L house. *i The nexI step in the matter wn> when tho nurse filed suit in the courts of that city, claiming dainaires in tlu sum ol' JfvUNlO. It i.s recognized thai when the case comes to trial perhaps a new ruling may be established governing the admittance of whitc and colored persons in the theatre generally. If the court should decide that the woman is entitled to r.v cover it would mean that thereaftci | negroes would be alio we :1 to bu,> s tickets and secure entrance into an\ P of the leading theatres of Washing(ton?-which they are not allowed t< do now. Negroes could sit side by side with White men or white women, and there would apparently be no restriction whatever upon the amusement places they might attend, providee; tliey could pay the price. It would bv manifestly impracticable to exclude , t'hem, because al this time, while none of the respectable hotels in Washing, i ton lake negro guests?because it may always be said that there is n< room?the same thing would not g< with the theatre. As soon as a big attraction is booked?which is often elone weeks ahead?any one desiring to secure, seats could" no to the bo.\ ollice and arrange for them, as it now done, and there would be no way tc kevA> from selling tickets to negroes Not only the Washington hotels but amusement places generally, have protested that they do not want negroes and I heir trade, and 'that the\ ! get along considerably better without it. SHOOTING NEAR GREENWOOD Negro Seriously Wounds Mr. J. Belton Hargrove?Talk of Lynching Discredited. The S>tale. iMiliege Colt, a negro, was" lodged , in jail in (SreenwoodT, being sent u| by Magistrate London Brooks, charged with shooting Mr. .). Helton Hargrove, a white farmer livimr on th; f Green \vood-\Salmia line. From reports, it seems that Mr . Hargrove was loking for some negroes ? who had'been in a fuss with some ol his tenants. In the search he came upon the Colt negro, whom he toolto be one of those who had been ir the i'uss. Coll had a single barre shotgun at the time and Hargrove K was carrying a Winchester rifle. Coll says Mr. Hargrove shot at him witl <the rifle, giving him a f'lesh wound ir the side and was ready to shoot again wiren he, Colt, used the shotgun, hitting Mr. Hargrove full in the fac< with a charge of number six she>t al a short distance away. Hargrove was \ slill living Sunday, but was in a ver\ ^ serious condition. INDIAN BOW AND ARROW. i Materials From Which They Were f Made?The Quiver. $1 The ibows of Ihe North American )' Indians were made of wood, 'bone ot horn, Sernie times the bow was made of a single piece of wood, sometimes of several pieces: perhaps it was ol ! ? "wood alone, or it might, be backed b\ sinew or by the skin of some animal The material for the weapon wa.; gathered, says Forest and Stream | whenever it was possible, and a man might have in his lodge a number ol sticks each of which he intended ulti Innately to fashion into a bow, or il he dieT not live long enough for this the bow wood would descend to his he?irs. As the most important imple ment of hunter or -warrior the bov was highly valued. Bows of bone were made sometime: of sections of the rib of large ani i nials, spliced and glued logether am were usually backed by sinew. Thos< y-' of Ihe antler of Ihe elk were some times in a single piece, and at olhei limes in sections, bevelled a I Ihe end and neatly glued and spliced. Bow, of horn were often made of severa .pieces similarly glued and spliml. but :TII , tlii' horns of I lie mountain sheep wore 1 ?J sometimes cut into long, and slender , BY roils which were laid together, glued PR amr backed by sinew. ! -y Another type of sheep horn bow <$ui 1 was in a s-ingle piece, the horn being Ad cut in a spiral Ironv base of horn to fee 1 point, this spiral being steamed or '| ' boiled and then straightened and aU( } caused to dry straight. Rows such as j^jn these were unusual, but they were al- "WJ so very powerful, and never wore out. be ! On the other band, it is said that C*oi 5 bows maide of bone or of antler were ber more for show than for use. They n<>> - were good to look at and for a time o'c , were effective, but after a few years can became dry and brittle. Ad Next to the hew, and* in fact so od. > much a part of i; that it cannot be ( separated from it. is (he arrow, a dai - complex implement tire development of which we may imagine to have been very slow, and which no doub!. was well advance-:! toward its present ! . , jorm before the bow was thought of. | ; j e may farcy t!:e arrow to be the ' . ouiirrow!!i of simple stabbing in- j, st rument, which developed into a ' ^ ; dart to I),, thrown, similar to certain!^.1 toys still in use among (lie children . ol our plains Indians. '( > I he arr</v consisted ol" three essen- ? . lial parts, the head, the shaft and the ? feathers. Konvet-imes the shaft was ?X, campound, consisting of more than ' one piece of wood. The primitive -I head was very various. The feather- j - iny is comparatively a mode in inven> tion, so much so that today traditions exist as (u its development and the I various stops toward the improved leathering of modern limes are given. n.n Kven within the last forty or fifty ' ( 1 years the children among our wi'Ider ! i 'i ihes have employed* very primitive j'(, i forms of arrows, using in their huntintr of little birds arrows without sat' heads and having merely a sharpened, tire hardened point, arrows without bei ' featners and again arrows feathered (|.p ' after an earlier method, of which, as pi act iced by adults, we know only , 1 hy tradition. r The bowring was usually made of |' - twisted" sinew, sometimes put on the )-,( bow green and allowed to dry there. ' In the southwest, however, the string Ou was sometimes made of vegetable fi- 1 . bre. In other sections it might be ( made of strips of rawhide or in!es- :hv tines of animals. I he bow and its arrows were almost always carried r.u the back in caves made ol the skins of animals. I he bow case was a long and nar row bag. just wide enough to admit the unstrung bow. Immediately beneath that and parallel !o it. both cases usually being attached to a stifi rod of wood nearly as long as the quiver, was the shorter, wider bag for the arrows. It wjis slightly lom-er than the arrow, and when arrows p> were to be drawn from it they were grasped about the feathers, so as to ^ t prevent this important part of the C( dart from being ruffled. Among ihe plains tribes in old ' times the best quivers and bow cases ^ were made from the skin of the otter, } but the liide of the panther was also "ighly valued for this punpose, and I ^ ihow cases and quivers were frequentI l.v made from the hide of the buffalo , calf. In later times (he skins of cat- ? tie were used for the same purpose, and I have an old bow ease an 1 ( one of the pack train of the seventh , cavalry killed at the time of the Custer fight. II Garden Seeds \\ FOR SUPERIOR VEGETABLES & FLOWERS. Our businoss, both in Garden and Farm Seeds, is ono of the 1 largest in this country, a result due to the fact that 8 Quality is always our JJ first consideration, q We are headquarters for Grass and Clover Seeds, Seed Jy i Oats, Seed Potatoes, Cow Peas, Soja Beans and other Farm Seeds. c! , Wood's Descriptive Catalogue lfl tlio best and moat practical of seed catalogues. An up-to dato and re- I \ cognized authority on all Gardon II L, \ and Fnrm crops. Cataloguo mailed it " II freo on request. Write for It. /I S \ T. W. WOOD & SONS, /, C " SEEDSMEN^- Richmond, Ya - REPAIR SHOP?I*'urniiuiv. lounges, *t 1 and parlor suits, "each upholstered* recaining chairs, repaired; making 8^ and laying carpets and mattings, i' cleaning old I urnitur'?. hi Sunlight i tfj s J J Tall, near old colored\ Baptist i si church. M Wesley Means. ?. i i i i:avrvL^u sxlvxj i>i J .KSTATU OFSOL'Tll CAROLINA C.unty of Newberry. Frank M. Sehunipert. F,S(^rilvFj, OBATI'j .1UIK! K. VilMRKAS, John P. Tyree made t to me, to grant him lA'tters of ministration of the Estate and efts of William C. Tyree riTKSH A1M0 TMKR.El'OKF, to cit > 1 admonish all and singular the dred and Creditors of the said lliain C. Tyree deceased, that they and appear 'before me, in th? urt of Probate, to be held at. Newrv, S. C.. on the Oth day of April ;t. after pnblieation thereof, at 11 lock in the forenoon, to show isc. if any they have, why lire said ministration should not be grantliven under my Hand, this 19th of March, Anno Domini. 1908. F. M. Sell inn pert. .1. P. X. C. NOTSOE. iids will be received by the Court nse Commission for certain fnrnie for the New Court Mouse at Newtv. S. ('.. at eleven o'clock in tli" enoon of Friday. April 15, 1908. Is will be for this furniture installand put up in the building. Bid s will stale time of their delivery the furniture and are requested hi libit samples of work. Lie right, is reserved to reject any 1 all bids. .Sealed bids may be id with chairman at any time. For further information apply to. Geo. S. Mower. Chairman. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. ATK OF SOUTH CAROLINA. OU'NTY OF NFWIRKRKY. \ 11 persons holding claims against estate of -Sallie Tidwell. .leceasare herelby requested to present ne, duly attested, to Hon. Frank M. nunpert. probate .judge for Newry county. on or bofore the said r of April. 1908. \in! all persons indebted to said ate are hereby required to pay ne to the probate .judge f??r N.'W ry count, on or before the saiil 1) day of April. 1908. J. .Brooks Wingard. alitied Executor of the last will ind testaonent of Sn 11 i Tidwell, leceased. nBHMiBOJWWWBBBBBMBBHlBSMHWWHWISWB Newbei In looking for a Bant 3u want to find a Sa ank, an Accommoda ) consider this Bank ; Dme in and open an ? We Pay Interest , D. Davenport. President, dw. R. Hipp, V. President. G. B. Cr< We Len i Buy V We provide easy ter We enable borrower i Monthly Installmeni llowed to meet obli&a It is cheaper than pa; :> save money to buy * :ontract. If you want to save r ike a Security Contra Call on A. J. Gibson, reasurer, at office, cc treets, next door to G jsmzr \ Z0 vv o. I THE PASTIME THEATRE, Next door to the Poatoffice Is oucn for tho season. Doors open from 2 30 a. in. to 10 p. m. Continuous performance All children, school children and college students admitted for five cents. All other persons ten cents. Come one and all and make this a place of pleasure and pastime. In connection with the pictures I intend to have vaudeville ]>erformances as often as I can get them, as I have stage and scenery fixed up for that purpose. Remember the location?next door to the Postoffice. FRED J. RUSSELL, Manager. Why buy an Organ from a Peddler? When von can buy n superior organ from your I factory representative for less money, nno on easier terms, and have absolute protection in tho guarantee given by the makers. We make low prices ami grunt from one to two years?without interest?for settlement, ami only bitnl the organ nssecuiity. We save you money ami supply Organs that will prove n life long pleasure. Write ut once for catalogues ami special prices ami terms l<> the oUl establish).tl MALONE'S MUSIC HOUSE, COI.UMIUA, S. C. PIANOS AND ORGANS. SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY. 1'nder any by authority of an order of tho probate court for Newberry county, J will sell ihc personal properly of which 'SlielUm fJallman ! died svvizod and possessed, oat 'Tuesday, March 31st, 1908, at 11 o'clock , a. in., in the town of Prosperity, S. C ?Said |>orsouall property consists of: 1 wagoiv, 1 mule, 1 buggy, 1 shot gun, 2 lap robes, harness, agricultural implements, household furniture, old clothing, etc. Torms of sale casJi. Allen IT. Hawkins, Kxeeulor of oslate of Slvelton Cla.llman, deceased.. NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT AND DISCHARGE. Notice is hereby given that 1 will make a final settlement on the 'estate < f Annie Leit/.sev, a minor, in tlie office of the Judge of Probate for Newberry county, on the twenty tliinl day of April, 1!)0S, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon and will immediately thereafter apply for letters of discharge as such guardian. John Davis, fluardian. Newberry, S. C., March 1!). li)0S. mm m w rry, S. C. c to receive your money, fe Bank, a Convenient ting Banko we want you and satisfy yourself and account with us. on Time Deposits. M. L. Spearman, Cashier. W. B. Wallace, Ass't Cashier, jmer, Atty. d Money ro -Homes! ms of payment, s to accumulate a f*md fcs, on which interest is itions at maturity. ying rent? If you want x home take a Security noney for any purpose! ct. It pays. Asstant Secretary arid >rner Boyce and Adams opeland Brothers. sii INVESTGIEN1 fsfL vv^ekbxeuek.'*!::, ?s.o. # Tin? EE NATIONAL BANK OF NEWBERRY S. C* "lll'I HO^OSETBILL, IT'S BlIRi.LdR PROOF." A repository in which you have your money deposited, and maybe your valuables stored, should be strong enough to resist the attacks of the burglar. Entrust them to us. They will be absolutely safe. With an account opened with us you can pay by check, thereby insuring accuracy and system in your methods of keeping accounts. There is no greater convenience and safeguard for handling money than DIRECTORS: M. A. Carlisle. H. C. Moscley. T. li. Carlisle. J. A. Blackwelder. Robt. Norris. Geo. Johnstone. B. C. Matthews. S. B* Aull. Jos. H. Hunter. three I Excellent Reasons why YOU Should open an account with a Bank. [ Firsl: Because your money is safer in a Hank | than anywhere else. I Second: Because paying bills by eheek is the i jsimplest, most convenient ami best method. jg jYour check is always tin*best recept in the world. Third: Because it ^ives you belter standing I ji 11 the conununity, especially anions business jmen, to pay by check rather than cash. Think j jit over. \\V will appreciate your opening a (j savings account. j, We pay 4 pr. ct. 011 Savings Deposits. 1 The Bank of Prosperity, I I Pk asperity, S. C. I J DR. OKO. V. ] 1UXTMK, DR. J. S. WllKKI,I\R, j President. \'. President. I J. 1<\ BROWN H, J. A. COD NTS, I Cashier. Assistant Cashier. YOUR BANKING! THE NEWGESSr SAVIKES DAM. Capital $50,000 ... Surplus $30,000 No Matter How Small, Ho Matter How Large, The Newberry Savings Bank will give it careful attention. This message ipplies to the men and the women alike. JAS. McINTOSH. J. E. NORWOOD, President. Cashier. ITo. 699^ The People's National Bonk Prosperity, S. C. Paid Up Gapitai - $25,000 OO Surplus and Individual Profits $6,000 00 Stockholders' Liabilities . . $25,000 OO For protection of depositors. H. C. Moseley, President. M. A. Carlisle, Vice-President W. W. Wheeler, Cashier. Geo. Johmstonb, Attorney. Better a conservative interest oi your deposit with its safe return when wanted, than a high rate and a ieeling of doubt about the principal. A National Bank is a safe Deposit. Government supervision makes it so. Likewise our Board of Directors Is a guarantee of prudent conservative management. DIRECTORS: G. W. Bowers. W. P. Pugh. ^ J. A. C. Klbler. Jno. B. f ellers. R. L. Luther. W. A. Moseley. M. A. Carlisle. Geo. * Johnstone. J. H. Hunter. H. C. Moseley. J. P, Boweis. We allow 4* per cent, per annum in our S&vin&s Department, interest payable semi-annually" *