The herald and news. (Newberry S.C.) 1903-1937, September 02, 1910, Page TWO, Image 2

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THE M.(;ITTE . Tote on the Tarious Townships-E. A. Hentz and J. J. Rinard Run Re Again in 'No. 11. In the first primary on Tuesday J. C. Sample defeated J. H. Chappell for magistrate in Nos. 1 and 8. The de- Sol tailed vote is given in the county re- yo turns. de J. C. S. Brown was elected in No. 2 ha without opposition; John Henderson mi in No. 3 without opposition; R. M. ne Aughtry in No. 4 without opposition; c03 W. C. Sligh defeated J. F. Riser in No. 5; W. M. Dorroh defeated both op ponents in No. 6; W. R. Reid was co chosen over A. L. Dominick in No. 7; of B. B. Hair defeats E. B. Kibler in No. 2 9; P. B. Ellesor wins on first ballot re, in No. 10; and E. A. Hentz and J. J. 19( Kinard run over in No. 11. as Following is the detailed vote: ga Township 'No. 2. po J. C. S. Brown. reE Garmany... ............... 18 inW Mt. Bethel ... ... ... ... ... ... 31 ne: Mulberry... ... ... ... ... ... 14 mc St. Phillips... ................2 cot Total... ... ... ... ... ..... 65 Township -No. 3. 15, John Henderson. ad, Mt. Pleasant... ... . ......... 34 of Maybinton... ... ... ... ... ... 13 th] ~ frc Total... ... ... ... ... ...... 47 lea Township No. 4. the R. M. Aughtry. Whitmire... ... ... ... ... .. 151 thE Long Lane... ... ... ... ... .. 37 ta Total... ... ... ... ... ... ... 188 the Township No. 5. J. F. W. C. ua Riser. Sligh. fa( Jalapa... ... ... ... ... 33 36to Kinards... ............7 24 fev vai Total... ... ... ... .. 40 60 tol Township No. 6. W. M. T. J. J. W At Dorroh. Harmon. Hendrix.f 19. Young Men's.. 9 ..131 Longshore .. .51 4 20 we Reederville . .29 2 Total. ....89 6 51 we Township No. 7. Sol A. L. W. R. sue Dominick. Reid. cor Saluda No. 7.. .... .....10 11 ing Chappells.. .. .......11 42 siv Vaughnville.. .... .....17 4 1 - .-figi Total .... .... .. ....38 57 lea Township No. 9. an< B. B. E. B. un< Hair. Kibler. spi Prosperity .... .......120 83 nec St. Lukes.. .... .... ...15 12 Pat. Saluda.. .... .......24 29in O'Neall ....... ..35 12 ed Swilton.. .. .... .....5 . 8 wa: Liberty.. .... .......19 33 to1 Monticello.. .. .......15 14 Little Mountain.. .... ...27 21! T spc Total... .........260 212 bal Township No@. 10. 000 P. B. T. L. B. T. E.Ishi Ellesor. Epps. Stone. of Union.. .... .....8 41 .' mu Jolly Street.. .. ..23 2 12sg St. Pauls.. .. ....14 .. 3tai: Central.. .......17 8 . a Little Mountain. .. 32 .. .. i Swilton.. .. .....6 4 act Pomaria.. .. .....6 .. . d no Total.. .. ....106 55 15 Township No. 11.be E. A. W. L. J. J. W. F.ch Hentz. Kibler. Kinard. Suber. ba Garmany ... .. . .. 2 Zion. .. ...8 3 31 4! ter St. Phillips 7 30 19 10th Walton . . 9 3 8 16jA Pomaria. .38 2 - 6 13: wh Total.. .62 40 64 45nei _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _gus SPARED HIS AGED MOTHER. ne Remarkable Display of Courage by Mortally Wounded Man. thE _____th< New York, August 29.--To spare his th~ aged mother the shock of seeing him an totter mortally wounded inito the ba house, Patrick Rahll, a Brooklyn but-*c cher, today put the last vestige of p strength left him into the refrain of!di( a popular song, which he bravely fur whistled as he passed through the an room she occupied. As he reached an of ad.ioining room he fell unconscious. 'ti Rahll and two companions were ter seen a few moments earlier fighting an in front of his home. An examination pr showed that he had received four do knife wounds. He died without re- in vealing the identity of his assailants. plh -Identified. pr Jack London has an affection for rini children, and he once made the ac- ioj (quaintance of twin sisters of 6. w "Good morning, my dear," he said of one morning. mneCting one of them on1 ha The street, "and which of the twins vo are you ?" co The little lassie looked up into his re: face and said very gravely: 'wi "I'm the one what's out walkin'."- ovi HIGHEST SINCE W:i aches 20 Cents a Pound of $100 Pc Bale in New York Market-De mands From Shorts. Kew York, Aug. 29.-August cotto .d at 20 cents a pound in the Ne rk cotton market today on urger nand from speculative shorts, wh i postponed covering until the la nute in the hope that the increasin ;v crop movement might break th itrol of the bull leaders. [his price, the highest reached fc ton for any delivery since the Wa Secession and exceeding by nearl 1-2 cents above the highest figure Lched in the famous bull year c 3-'04, which until now had stoo a standard of comparison, was rE 'ded by many as the culminatin nt of the bull movement in prog s here for the last six months dui ) a season, which, when it end ct Thursday, will go down as th st spectacular in the annals of th ton trade since the war. Sales Rather Small. Cot a great many bales, perhap 000, actually changed hands on th -ance from 16.82, the closing pric last week, to 20 cents for AuguE s morning. At 20 cents an offe m W. P. Brown, one of the bu] ders, to sell 100,000 bales checke upward movement, and it was th ieral impression around the rin it this was a level fixed In the ope ,rket as a basis for settlement c entire August interest remaininj 'ater, however, this view of the sil ion was somewhat shaken by th t that after reacting from 20 cent 18.20 under scattered selling of r hundred bales, August again ad iced on renewed buying by short tching 19.90 in the afternoon hin 10 points of the high recort the close, August was quoted a 75 bid, while new crop month ich had been very quiet all da re only 4 to 9 points net higher. Spots Unresponsive. n the local spot markets the price re marked up to 19.75, but th ithern spot markets showed n bh gain, the greatest advance r ded being 3-8, at Savannah, show~ the local character of the exten e advance. To one has attempted any accurat iring of the profits of the big bul ders, W. P. Brown, Eugene Scale I Frank B. Hayne, all of whom arl ler indictment charged with con ring in restraint of trade in con tion with the bull pool. James A ten, of Chicago, is included in the ictment, but in view of his repeat announcement of retirement he Snot generally considered a part :oday's transactions. Handled Much Cotton. rn all the bull leaders have handlet 't cotton to the amount of 800,004 es, valued approximately at $65. ,000. But the bulk of this has beet pped abroad and .iust how muel it has been actually sold and hov ch of it may now be held on con ciment at foreign points is uncer 1. Inasmuch, however, as the bulli re handled contracts for many thou id bales in excess of what the: ually received, they have undoubt y taken large speculative profits matter how their deal may turn ou en their last bale of spot cotton ha n sold. In the New York stock ex mnge they still own about 100,00 es. tumors circulated in the trade af the close of business today wer tt there was still a considerab] gust short interest outstanding ich must be covered by noon Wed ~day. At that hour trading In Au ;t is over and with it ends all busj ;s in the old crop season of 1909-'1( More High Prices Likely. ror the last three or four month bull campaign in the old crop, al ~ugh based chiefly on the fact tha crop grown during the summe I autumn of 1910 was 3,000,00 es under normal, has had the er iragement of very unfavorable re rts from the coming crop and prm tions that the world was facing ure inadequate supply. Naturall other short supply following a yea general curtailment and procras ation in purchase of both raw me -ial and finished goods might mea other season of extremely hig ices and this expectation has ur ubtedly encouraged the bull trader their policy of carrying spot suj es forward into the new season. Latterly reports concerning tl ospect have been confusing. Ov Sto drought in the Southwest dete> -ation has been reported there bl ather conditions over other par' the belt since the first of Augul ye bon~ conlsidered much more f; rable and some reports have showx nsiderable improvement. The ne: port of the government on~ conditio 11 be issued at noon next Friday an 'ing to the conflicting nature of ri 1 To )ii New Croip. , It is understood in the trade, how r ever, that the operators who have gained such prestige on the bull side of the market will now turn their at tention to bulling new crop months. n They have issued a circular, outlining their reasons for expecting higher prices but that this action on their o part was not unbiased was naturally t suggested as any statement tending to enhance the value of the new crop would make a better market for wind ing up the odds and ends of the old! and for disposing of the large supply r ot spot cotton still supposed to remair, r in their hands. y As a preliminary to the deal which s culminated in such a sensational ad vance today, the bull leaders began d taking up cotton on contract in March. By the end of March the price g had advanced to the 15-cent level. There was a period of irregularity during April and many traders be-: s lieved that so much cotton would be e delivered to the bulls on May contracts e that it would break their hold on the situation. Government Helped Bears. s At this time proceedings instituted e by the department of justice encour- I e aged speculators on the short side but it notwithstanding the fact that more than 300,000 bales were brought here for delivery in May, the bulls took ev d erything offered and by the end of May e contracts were still holding around the 15-cent level, after having sold at g nearly 16 cents for May in the middle of the month. During June not much cotton was delivered but in July the bulls re ceived over 200,000 bales. Thus far e this month it is estimated they have received between 75,000 and 80,000 a bales. This cotton has been shipped out cf New York almost as fast as It has been brought here and according -;to official figures today there remains available in the New York stock only t 111,990 bales. ' Opinions as to whether the bulls will ' extend their operations into the new crop months are conflicting. Some think that the old crop campaign will s be carried throughout September at e any rate, but as the new crop season opens on next Thursday and the new crop cotton is now moving rapidly from the Southwest, the weight of the - new maturing crop must be figured upon. 1 A MOST UNHAPPY CAT. ] E Iveryting and Everybody in Conspir acy to Xake Him Miserable. Nebuchadnezzar was the unhappiest cat in Christendom. and there was] some reason for it. He felt very much as if he were imprisoned in a wire cage, just like the fool canary bird And that bird was part of it. Hay ing an acute sense of hearing, the song of this feathered nuisance dis turbed Nebuchadnezzar to the bottom - of his being. In plain, unvarnished, 1 up-to-date English, it made him sore. 1 Time after time he'd tried to get r that bird, but they'd made the cage - strong enough to keep a tiger out, - and the last time some one caught him s climbing up, and welted him with a - barrel stave. Y Then grandma was so blamed deaf - that it was an outrage. Nibuchadnez ,zar raged about it. She had slammed t the pantry door on his tail, and when S he remarked bitterly about it, she: - thought someone was calling her and I left him there. Then underneath the refrigerator -was the nicest place to sleep. IThey e had a dishpan put under the refrigera e tor to catch the dripping ice water, and in summer time all a cat had to do was to curl right up against it and sleep in peace. Then they got careless about the -pan, and one night it overflowed and deluged him, giving him a bad cold, s and making him so hoarse he couldn't attend the annual concert of the. Noc t turnal Felines' Back-fence Joy Club. *and he had been counting on going. 0 Nebuchadnezar had other griefs, too. How was he to know that milk in a crock on the table was different from milk in a saucer on the floor? a It wasn't right to hit him with a pan ywhen he made such a mistake. XAltogether, Nebuchadnezzar was unhappy. He sulked. He loafed about and got stepped upon, and was gener ally so disagreeable that they decided he needed a tablespoonful of castor oil. And he got it. Butt they paid for it, confound them! Nebuchadnezzar bit and scratched, eand the man who had the spoon said Sthings he ought never to have said in Sthe presence of children, and wiped ithe blood off his hand on his best :trou3ers. stBut even this didn't make Nebuchad _ nezzar happy. IHe went back in thv nyard and lay down under the goose eberry bush and wished he were dead. n But shucks! What's the use of a cat d wishing that? If he got his wish, he'd have to get eight more.--Galveston liE11EandPLACE rhe Time to ACT is just NOW Thething to DO is BUY one pound of Barring ton Hall Coffee. WILSON sells it under a posi ive guarantee. Don't be led to believe there is another ust as good. PLACE s at Wilson's. No where else n Newberry can you get the offee that's Steel-cut. The Coffee without a regret. If you want what you want when you want it 'Phone 202. W. 0. WILSON, CASE AFTER CASE. Plenty More Like This In Newberry. Scores of Newberry people can tell you about Doan's Kidney Pills. .Uany a happy citizen makes a public ;tatement of his experience. Here is i case of it. What better proof of nerit can be had than such endorse nent7 Al. M. Graham, Newberry, S. C., ays: "I used Doan's Kidney Pills ind they did me so much good that [ do not hesitate to recommend them. fy back ached, particularly at night Lnd I was often unable to sleep rell. The pain seated itself across ;he small of my back and made it mpossible for me to assume any yosition that was comfortable. The kidney seeretions contained sedi nent an& garea so frequent in pass ige that l' had to arise several times t night. -The various remedies I ried, proved of nio avail and I had tout givanc up hope af ever being mred when I heard of- Doan 's Kid ey Pills. I procured a box at W. E. Pelham & Son's Drug Store and lecided to try them, although I did ot think they would help me. I as agreeably surprised, however, as :hey went directly to the cause of n 'trouble and effeeted a cure. I ave had no return of kidney comn >aiot 'and believe that the credit is le to Doan 's Kidney Pills." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 ents. Fosteir-Milburn Co., Buffalo, sew York, sole agents for the United states. IRemember the name--Doan's mud take no other.. :An Unheroic Rescue. "Twenty of us helped save a girl rom drowning." "By forming a living chain?'' "No; by rushing cnt of the lake. It mmediately sank eighteen inches." ~xchange. Mlaybe giving advice is so popular ,ecause taking it is so unpopular R The Newi - NE At the Close of Condensed F RESOURCES. Loans and discounts $ Furniture and Fixtures Overdrafts secured and unse cured Bonds and Stocks Cash and due from"Banks *4 O Paid JAMES MCINTOSH, President. - A NOrrf 8lETW YOU and SAV EXCEP Supply Yoi FRO 0. KLEr The Fair and Sq 934 Main Street. University of South Carolina. Varied courses of study in Sci- t ence, Liberal Arts, Education, Civil K and Electrical Engineering and Law. ct College fees, rooms, lights,- etc., si $26; Board $12 per month. For P those paying tuition, $4o additional. i The health and morals of the students are the first consideration of the faculty. 43 Teachers' scbola;ships, worth A $158. For catalogue, write to S. C. MITCHELL, Pres., Columbia, S. C. N I. B. WELLS' TRANSFER N Eauls Anytbing on Short Notice. N areful and Accommodating Drivers. N oving Household Furniture a Spec ialty. * OUR BUSINB~SS SOLICITED. N 0O.ce Phone No. 61 N - Residence Phone No. '. When the digestion Is all right, the ction of the bowels regular, there is W~ anatural craving and relish for food. p~ hen this is lacking you may knowp hat you need a dose of Chamber ain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. hey strengthen the digestive organs, 0 prove the appetite and regulate the owels. Sold by W. E. Pelham & Son. SUMMER RATE SALEh Teeare ew an d in beautiful ahogany t these bargains. Ee ORGAN BARGAINS Ma cSome second hand organs taken in ex- af fe eimited number of slightl used for- 0] be made on ay of teabov. inetrme.~s Pianos and Organs FULLY WARRANTED. al Malone's Music House, Columbia, S.C. de EPORT OF >erry Savi IWBERRY, S. he Business Novei om Report to State Ban 69,495.25 Capital 2,275.00 UndividedPr Deposits 1,758.60 ~ Notes and Bi 680.00 ed 59,437.65 33,646.50 On Savings ID uING EEN! ING MONEY T TO fr Wants M UTNER uare Dealer. Phone No. 262 Took All His Money. Often all a man earns goes to doo rs or for medicines, to cure a stom :h, Liver or Kidney trouble that Dr. ing's New Life Pills would quickly ire at slight cost. Best for Dyspep a, Indigestion, Billiousness, Consti ition, Jaundice, Malaria and Debil y. 25c at W. E. Pelham & Son's. NEWBERRY UNION. STATION. rrival and Departure of Passengen Trains-Effective 12.01 A. . Sunday, July 17, 1910. Southern Railway. o. 15 for Greenville.. .. 8.51 a. m. o. 18 for Columbia.. .11.57 a. m. o. 17 for Greenville.. .. 2.48 p. n 0. 16 for Columbia .. ....8.55 p. in. C., J. & L. Railway. To. 22 for Columbia.. .. 8.47 a. mn. o. 52 for Greenville.. .. 12.56 p..mi. o. 53 for Columbia.. .. 3.20 p. m. Co. 21 for Laurens.. .. 7.25 p._im. * Does not run on Sunday. This time table shows the times at hieh trains may be expected to de art from this station, but their de arture is not guaranteed and the me shown is subject to change with it notice. G. L. Robinson, Station Master. President Helps Orphans. Hundreds of orphans have been alped by the President of the Indus ial and Orphan's Home at Macon, a., who writes: "We have used Elec ic Bitters in this Institution for ine years. It has proved a most ex ellent medicine for Stomach, Liver id Kidney troubles. We regard it one of the best family medicines i earth." It invigorates all vital or-. AnUs, purifies the blood, aids diges on, creates appetite. To strengthen id build up pale, thin, weak chil ren or rundown people it has no' iual. Best for female complaints. " aly 50c. at W. E. Pelham & Son's. rigs Bank e C. nber 16, 1909. k Examiner LIABILITIES. $ 50,000.00 ofits 27,013.63 250,632.87 IlsRediscount .6,000.00 $333,646.50 eposits J E. NORWOOD, Cashier.