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BOYS' CORN CLUB. Meeting in Newberry at 10 o'clock Mftv ift. Prf*?ediner Memorial Day Exercises at 31.30 O'clock. County Superintendent of Education E. H. Aull has addressed the following letter to the members of the Boys' j Com club: "I notice from the program, which is arranged by the ladies of Newberry j for observance of Memorial day, that they have changed the hour for the j public address from the afternoon, as! heretofore, to 11 o'clock in the fore- j noon. I did not know ttns untu it was | published in the county papers on May 3. I liad published a call for the meeting of the Boys' Corn club for May 10, at 11 o'clock, and all ,of the speakers have been invited, and have accepted j to be present at that hour. Hereto-1 fore, the Memoriai exercises nav e always been in the afternoon. I can not: change the day for the meeting of the Boys' Corn club, because the gentlemen who have kindly consented to meet with us, have other engagements. I regret the conflict in the hour, but do not feel that it is my fault. However, I have consulted with some of the committee in charge of Memorial day, and we have agreed that the Boys' Corn club shall meet in the court house at 10 o'clock promptly, and that the public address at the opera house for HTrvr?io 1 cihall hft at 11.30 o'clock. iUViUV* J.CW1 WW This "will give the boys one hour and j a half, and after the meeting is over, | they can go in a body to the opera j house to attend the exercises there. "I desire every boy, who has joined the club, to be present at the court house promptly at 10 o'clock, and I do not want any boy to be absent. It] will be an indication that you are not j interested if you fail to attend this first j meeting. I beg your earnest co-opera- j tion in making the Aewoerry uouniy Boys' Corn club the banner club in South Carolina, and I want as one evidence of your interest and enthusiasm your presence at this meeting promptly at 10 o'clock. "Several gentlemen, who are interested in this work, have consented to come here to talk to you for a short while, and to help us in the organiza tion of the club, and I want you to 6liow your interest by being on hand promptly. "Yours truly, "E. H. Aull, "Chairman Boys' Corn Club for Newberry County." \ The following is the list of the boys who have joined the club, with their postoffice addresses: ,Byrd Gibson, Prosperity. Thomas Hayes, dewberry, No. 7. J. G. Lowman, Prosperity, No. 1. J. P. Lowman, Prosperity, No. 1. J. S. Harmon, Jr., Prosperity, No. 1. Arthur E. Derrick, Prosperity, So. 1. wnll "Vf illo "Prrkcnftri f v \Tn 1 V(U 1 Vll ?Uii AOy X A *w? ? J. P. Watts, Slighs, No. 1.' . Cecil Dominick, Slighs, No. 2. Vaiice Miller, Newberry, No. 3. J. Earle Schroeder, Silverstreet, No. 2. W. E. Schroeder, Silverstreet, No. 2. Hugh Epting, Pomaria, No. 2. Leon C. Dennis, Newberry, No. 4. Abram Warren, Prosperity, No. 1. \V. n. jorowii, jri*u?i>tri..it,y. Jno. E. Herbert, Newberry, R. F. D. No. 4. W. M. Lester, Jr., Prosperity, No. 1. Esmond Dominick, Prosperity, No. 2. J. W. Glenn, Newberry, No. 2. Drury Lovelace, Prosperity, No. 2. J. A. Eargle, Pomaria, No. 3. W. H. Wendt, Jr., Newberry, No. 2. Hermis Kibler, Pomaria. , Luther Kibler, Pomaria. Carl Epting, Pomaria. Charley Wise, Prosperity, No. 1. Jacob Wise, Prosperity, No. 1. J. C. Neel, Jr., Newberry, No. 5. Walter H. Craps, Newberry, No. 6. J. S. Wheeler, Jr., Prosperity, No. 3. Clyde WTieeler, Prosperity, No. 3. riande TT. Miller. Newberry, No. 3. Dickson Alewine, Newberry, No. 2. Wilbur Counts, Slighs, No. 1. J. E. Seibert, Prosperity, No. 1. James P. Halfacre, Newberry, No. 5. Olan Lee Cousin, Newberry, No. 7. George Andrew Johnson, Newberry, No. 1. Roy Longshore, Newberry, No. 1. Marvin. Wilson, Newberry, No. 2. ? - ~ * T> ?rA? \T- i Severn stoCKiiian, -rruspemj, inu. i. Wilbur Buzhardt, Newberry, No. 1. Otto Klettner Nichols, Newberry, No. 4. Raymond Blair, Silveretreet. Daniel Berry, Silverstreet. Junius Long, Newberry, No. 4. Frank Boozer, Newberry, No. 1. Guy Boozer, Newberry, No. 1. Jas. Clyde Ward, Newberry. A. E. Nichols, Prosperity, No. 4. J. W. Smith, Blairs, No. 1. 1 as\ra-A tu PoifiTLvin V&trhpr'iT. No. 2. VJW1 -1?' VUIU H * w -vv - %i 7 Coleman Gary, Whitmire. s Clarence Richie, Whitmire. Jno. F. Wheeler, Jr., Slighs, No. 1. 1 ? - . . . V LETTER TO It F. D. CARRIERS. Members I'rered to Attend Meeting at' Chester in July?Thomas E. Wicker for President. The State is in receipt of a letter j from D. C. Hayden, of Orangeburg, * jt J. - ii /^Alitrarxr addressed 10 tut? iui<u ucuycij mail carriers of the State. Mr. Hayden's letter is as follows: To the Rural Carriers of South Carolina. Brethren: Greetings. What are you doing in your county toward increasing your membership? Do you know that we want the largest and hpRf mpptinor at. Chester in Julv that v>"wv ?- o we have ever had? We can not accomplish this end unless you lend us a helping hand in the matter of fully organizing your county and increasing your present county membership. These State meetings are always very interesting and instructive; in fact, proving a veritable love feast to all prc-.seht. Once you attend a State meeting you will never desire to miss any meeting in the future. Let me tell you why the approaching State meeting to be held at Chester must be largely attended and why we want to send a larger delegation to the meeting of the national convention, which is to be held at Nashville, Tenn., I than any delegation ever sent to a national convention?Thomas E. Wicker, j of Newberry, a member of our organ- i - - ? i * i* -11 I ization, who lias served so iaitniuuy, i energetically and ably for several j years as our State president, and who is now chairman of the national association executive committee, will be in the race for president of the nationalassociation, and I truly believe he will j be elected to this high and honored | office. That Mr. Wicker is thoroughly J qualified for the office can not be questioned, and his popularity in the national association was clearly dem. i onstrated at the last national conven- j tion held at Milwaukee, Wis. Who of! us in our good old State of South Carolina would not feel proud to have one of her sons preside over the national body of rural carriers of the United States. That there is much benefit in or- J ganization'can not be questioned, not j even toy the sceptic. That wTe have I fun cari^tmn nf th* deoartment! tli C xun WJU w* - ? Jg. that we are under has been fully dem- ; onstrated by their sending those at! the head of the department to everyI meeting of the naional associaion, and j nearly always sending a representative to the .State meetings. So get busy, every one of the "boys ; of the wagon," and pull for a bigger, I larger membership in your county or- j ganizations and send a full delegation to the State meeting at Chester in i July. Hoping to see our State forge to the front. I remain, Fraternally yours, D. C. Havden. Orangeburg. A VETERANS' TRAIN JUMPS THE TRACK! Eleven Killed and Forty Injured in Mississippi?On Way to Macon ' Reunion. Hattiesburg, Miss., May 6.?Nine persons, including three women and j two children, were killed and 55 per- 1 sons injured when the first section of j ? - - -A O. i ? T ! tJie (Jonteaeraie veterans ?peciai ui ( 11 cars, en route from Texas to the an- i nual reunion at Macon, Ga., was wrecked this morning on a trestle a mile south of Eastabutchie, Miss., on the New Orleans & Northeastern railroad. The locomotive, baggage car, one day coach and three tourist sleepers were derailed and tumbled down a high emb^pkment, making a conglomerate mass of wood and iron debris. I Though several hundred Confeder- j ate veterans were aboard the train, j not one was numbered among the! dead. Several of the veterans were j injured, though none fatally. CLARK GETS MARYLAND. i Thongrli Preferential Vote is for Roose- j Yelt, Taft Men May Control Convention. Baltimore, May 7.?The closeness of the struggle between President Taft and Theodore Roosevelt for control of Maryland's 16 votes in the national convention was emphasized today when complete returns from yesterday's primaries showed that the result depended upon one county, which, on the fa.ce of the returns, gave Roosevelt a majority of but 80 votes. Put * ?^ ? : - xl. ^ ting tnis county, nowara, in iue Roosevelt column, gave him 66 delegates to the State convention, just one | more than the majority necessary for control. The three Howard county delegates counted for Taft would have given him the primary victory by the same margin. Complete unofficial returns received today by the State Roosevelt qommit i tee and all the Baltimore newspapers, j incuding the two which have supported Taft, agreed in giving Col. Roosevelt a majority in Howard county of SO odd votes; but this slight margin left the Taft leaders tonight unwilling to concede that their opponents had I wAn the ^lp>r>Hnn i The other feature of the day was : the development of the possibility | that the individual delegates elected j to the Stae convention include a mai jority of Taft men even though their instructions by the county preference vote might bind them to vote for a J Roosevelt delegation to the national i convention. It was pointed out that President j Taft's friends might control the ori ganization of the convention, force the j adoption of a conservative platform i and send a delegation to Chicago i which would be ready to abandon j Roosevelt as soon as they considered I thpv had fulfilled their lesal duties bv : voting for him on the first ballot. None i of the leaders, however, made any such ! prophecies. The day's developments brought no ^ change in the Democratic situation | except to insure for Speaker Clark several delegates already counted for him on the strength of the indicated \ county majorities. County preference I vote bound 81 delegates to Clark, 44 to "Wilson and 4 to Harmon. EXPLAINS THE PLANS FOR LUTHERAN SCHOOL Rev. S.. C. Ballentine, Secretary of Conference, Tells of Movement for Woman's College. * ~ ! To the Editor of The State: In as much as impressions have heretofore gone out that are not in harmony with the actions of the joint conference which started the movement, it might be in order for me, as j secretary of that body, to give a somewhat semi-official account of the matter. The project was started April, 1Q11 of Qf Afiphaol'c /^hiirrh. T.PYiriP' ton county. A committee of four, consisting of Dr. E. J. Etheredge, Rev. C. P. Boozer, C. M. Efird and Rev. J. A. Cromer, was appointed by conference "to indorse a movement to estab- j lish a female college in South Carolina." The two synods were asked to appoint a committee of one each "to act in conjunction with the committee of four appointed by conference." This committee was "empowered to act as long as it assumed no indebted- | ness." In response to this resolution Rev. 3. P. Koon was appointed by the South Carolina synod and Rev. B. D. Wessinger by the Tennessee synod. This committee made its report at Bethlehem church, near Irmo, last week. The report recites the history of the committee's work, stating finally that after having visited personally each of the five places offered, taking everything into consideration, the committee unanimously decided that the Summerland hotel property?the Leesville-Batesburg offer?was the best place offered. Under the consideration of the historical part of the report, the regularity and legality of tne committees worK was iuny sudstantiated. The principal part of the discussion was upon the recommendations of the committee. Some changes were made. As it finally came before the body, they read: "Your committee respectfully rect ommends: "That your body commend the action of the committee in accepting the offer of the Summerland hotel proporfv nAmnlafnlTr fnrr>ioV?^^ on/1 AC\ vx uj luimou^u) auu * v acres of land, as the location of the Lutheran college for girls. "2. That this body suggest that the president of the South Carolina synod call meeting of that body as early as possible, to consider the acceptance of this proposition, and that j:his body appoint a committee of three, whose duty it shall be, in case the called | meeting of the South Carolina synod j is not had, to accept in trust the titlej to the property, conditioned upon thej acceptance thereof by one or more of the synods, to be by them conveyed to such board of trustees as may be selected to accept the title to the property in trust, and to complete the buildings for the institution. "3. That the South Carolina synod be requested to accept this offer, and to provide for the election and succession of members of board of trus tees, whose duty it shall designate, and that it invite the Tennessee synod and the -Georgia synod to elect and provide for the succession of such members of the hoard of trustees as the South Carolina synod may suggest." After a thorough, spirited, but withal a harmonious discussion, a roll call was asked. By a vote of 34 to 4, the above recommendations were passed. Four members of conference did not vote, under recommendation two, tne following committee was appointed: C. M. Efird, J.. E. R. Kyzer and Dr. 1 whether in * - cori~l life di Would you '1 of walk S"Do you no; ..uid serve t and sweet, la . ,!ia body anc an atmosphere c i: c-sire and comma imDressed w:th vour Dersonalitv?" ! ? How to Have Eyes, E Clean an BRIEF STATEMENTS FR Milam has Riven me a great appetite and cleared and softened my skin. H. W. LayIdon, Spray, N. C. Milam has restored my sight almost entirely. I was nearly blind when I started its use. W.E.Griggs. Secy, and Treas. We.itbrooks Elevator Co., Danville, Va. Milan curcd me of eczema after I had suffered with it 26 years and despaired of relief. C. H. Williams, salesman for Cluett, Peabody & Co., Troy, N. Y. WHY NOT LOOK, FEEL Ask your druggist for six bottles of money back if COURT CALLED OFF. " Notice is hereby given jurors who were drawn to attend court May 13, 1912, that there will be no court at that time and that they need not come Respectfully, Jno. C. Goggans, 5-7-2t. C. C. C. P. & G. S. E. J. Etheredge. Almost the whole time of conference was spent in discussing this important matter, and all seemed a unit in sentiment and effort to build up a college for women which shall be ? nrr?^+Viir nartnor nf thp r.hnrfth's in CL n Vi V/JULJ VUVJ. V* ? stitution at Newberry. It may be of public interest to add that the South Carolina synod has already been called to meet in extra session in the Summerland Inn, May 28, 1912, in pursuance of the above action of conference. S. C. Ballentine, Secretary of Joint Conference. n Leesville. TEXAS DEMOCRATIC CHOICE. Wilson Lacks Three, Thus Far, of Controlling Convention?>*o Further Republican Returns. Dallas, Tex., May 5.?Returns received by the Galveston-Dallas News up to 11 o'clock tonight from the Democratic precinct convention held in Texas yesterday indicate the selection of instructed delegates to the State convention to be held May 28 as follows: Woodrow Wilson, 309; Judson Harmon, 86; Champ Clark, 26. Necessary to control State convention, 312. A j ' ? - T I large nuniDer Oi precuiULS iio,ve uui- i been beard from. Others held no conventions or failed to instruct, as well as can -be ascertained and it is probable that complete results of the primaries will not be known until after the county conventions next Tueslay. No additonal returns from the Hepublican precinct conventions were received today. Last night returns gave Taft 38 and Roosevelt 37, with only a few points heard from. Republicans in many counties will hold county mass conventions Tuesday in place of the precinct conventions * * * 1 " - ? x- i?i 3 wnicn tney ianea 10 noia oaiaiua^. COUNCIL REJECTS SUFFRAGAN PLAN Xo Xegro Bishop of Sonth Carolina at This Time?Archdeacon for This Work. i Beaufort, May 8.?By a vote of near? ? . it- n ? ly iour to one, uie duulu v^aiunua diocesan council of the Episcopal church in this State. The resolution . th? position of suffragan bishop, to be held by a negro, at this time. As a substitute for the negro suffragan, the council appropriated money for the maintenance of a negro archdeacon for work among the negro members of the church in 'this State. Tht resolution against the suffragan bishop proposal was adopted without debate, the council considering the winter's open discussion of the matter sufficient to enlighten all the delegates. The resolution was adopted after the presentation of the majority report of the committee, favoring the plan, the minority report opposing it f icrrioiaj epends almost entirely upon health. jj | :ing in the ruck? As Whitman says ? 0 have eyes, blood, complexion clean 1 soul that when ycu enter a crowd, md enters with you and every cnc is Hood and Complexion d Sweet :OM RELIABLE PEOPLE; I have suffered ail my life v.-ith rr.v eyes. Since taking Milam l ean read very line print and do embroidery work r.t n:g*t I without glasses. Miss Kate Iviebane, R. F. D. No. 2, Blanche, N. C. l I suffered with a dreadful skin disease from which I could g?t no relief until I tried Milam. This is the first spring and summer I have- enjoyed in three years. Miss Winnifred Poston, 731 Patterson Ave., Roanoke, Va. . and BE at Your Best? Milam on our liberal guarantee? 1 not benefited, ( IDLUDP % yx^H/ nSenil I If weak, you need Cardui, I I the woman's tonic. Cardui | I is made from'gentle herbs, [ acts in a natural manner, I and has no bad results, as a some of the strong drugs I sometimes used. Asamed- I icine?aT tonic?for weak, I tired, worn-out women, I Cardui has been a popular I success for over 50 years. | ICARDUI The Woman's Tonic I Mrs. Lula Walden, of I Gramlin, S. C, followed | this advice. Read her let- j I ter: "I was so weak, I | when I first began to take I I Cardui, that it tired me to I I walk just a little. Now, I I can do all the general I housework, for a family of I I 9." Try Cardui for your I I troubles. It may be the I I very remedy you need. Lw? HPMWI ?SB NOTICE. Cnn Q5 r?rdinanro? Town Of N^W UCb* VUy V A berry: Any person who obstructs, in any way, the drains or ditches of this town or wTho throws papers, rags,, trash, garbage, or any animal or vege- f table matter in the streets, or on any public square or vacant ground, or who throws the same or allows the same to remain on his or her premises or the premises on which he or she resides or controls, shall, on conviction, b? punished by a fine of not less than five ($5) dollars nor more than twenty ($20) dollars, or by imprisonment of not less than five (5) days nor more j than twenty (20) days: Provided, how-j ever, That persons occupying stores,! offices and business houses shall be | allowed, and it shall be their duty, to place any such paper, rags, trash, garbage, etc., in receptacles, on the side of the streets in the town adja cent to their premises for removal by the scavenger cart each day before 9 o'clock in the forenoon; and that other persons shall be allowed and it sliall be their duty, to place any such paper, rags, trash, garbage, etc., in receiptacles on their respective lots near the ' streets of the town, so as to be easily | accessible to the scavenger carts on the following days: In Ward 1, by 12 o'clock on each and ?very Monday; in j Ward 2, by 12 o'clock on each on every | Tuesday; in Ward 3, by 12 o'clock on each and every Wednesday; in Ward 4, by 12 o'clock on each and every Thursday; in Ward 5, by 12 o'clock on each and every Friday. i All premises must be cleaned up by ir>th nf this month. Immediately after this date inspectors will be j around and any unsanitary conditions found wil be reported and the penalty enforced. D. B. Chandler, H. 0. May 6, 1912. !|wr M. w# Because of its guaranteed higv> fi grade construction, its embodim*- K of every practical improvement a. 9 feature found in any other machine, ^ combined with low price, the New ^ Royal No. 5 is truly the machine ? the American business man has been g Here it is, tne king among type- B writers, challenging the world to B show a machine that can do better ] work, easier work, or more work, no matter what its price! B New Model 5 I Has Two-Color Ribbon, Back Spacer, Tabulator, Tilting Paper Table, Hinged Paper Fingers and many other valuable new features. Let us show the Royal in your B g own office,on your own work?either alone or alongside any other ma- W 9 chine. The Royal shines by comparison* I 1 Model 5, $75 I | Same as for Model 1 with Tabulator. 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