University of South Carolina Libraries
Tk UNS i\ii 5 N i J. governor Says Failure of Palmetto National Hank Would Probably Leave State I'nprotected Columbia. Jan. 13.?Governor j Blease having refused to approve the ireties on the bond of $90,000, which i /Mr. S. T. Carter ha<l secured preli-1 ntinary to takinc charg? as Stare! ; Treasurer, the law requiring that th-3; governor must approve the bond, he j v?-as asked this morning why he rtfus-j <ed to approve the sureties of Mr.: barter's bond, and he issued the fol? | lowing statement in explanation "I have been reliably informed thai; ' ?he Gulf and Atlantic Insurance Com-! pany is on the bonds of a very large number of the county officials ol this >tate, and I have declined to approve those bonds brought to me, signed by that company, and I shall not appoint; any man to office, as treasurer, or au-j nr nthpr nrmmntive Dosition, who i have to be bonded, who furnished bund I in tnis company, for the reason that I! Jo not think that it is right for all | State and co inty officials to be bond-! ed in one company; and, when on^! company receives its proportionate of the business, thereby assuming what I conceive, as governor, to be the full extent of their liability in case of defalcations, T shall, in so far as my power iirs, protect the interests of the peo- j pie by declining to approve the bonds ' "Tn show that this is not a political1 fight, I turned down the bond of Soli-! citor Gunter, who is my appointee, and i also that of Solicitor Albert E. Hill! v.hom, I presume p.v.n his oppo-' r?it will say, is friend Bui ir is, a questio 1 as u v> hat T be-' I'r'.e ic f'>~ I'.'.* lest i:it.? iv; of the' people of my State. "As to the bond of T.wi&nrer Carter; ! I have nothing to do with VIr Carter's! ideas or movements; he presented aj bend signed by Gen. Wilie Jones, J. [ Pope Matthews, Francis K. Weston: and others prominently connected with j the iJaimetto Aanonai JtsanK. i ao rioi| think it is right for a State Treasurer to be placed^in the hands of or under the direct control of one bank by its president, cashier, attorney and other j officials being his bondsmen. Mr. Car-j ter may view it differently. Besides, these gentlemen, to a- very large ex- ( tnt, have all they have got wrapped} up in this concern, and in case of | failure of this bank all would go to-, aether, and the probabilities are thatj Carter would be here without a bond, j "It is not a political matter, as Mr. | Carter told several of my friends! throughout the State last summer that; was my friend and, therefore, I! have no reason to do him an injustice j or injury; but the duty devolves upon! me to approve a $90,000 "bond, and when I do approve it I propose to see j ihat the bond is good, so far as the j securities go, to stand between the | State treasurer and the people of the j State of South Carolina. This is alii there is to it. ao bugaboo to be made; out of it and no reflection cast upon; any of those who propose to become | securities for this bond. "If you will notice. Governor Wilson is receiving much praise for being against a banker holding the office of State treasurer of New .Tersev. Tf he is,to be given praise for that then why j .? In J ...I. 1-^.. J . s-iiuuiu man wiiote uuna to o? grven < ."bv one bank be treasurer of South j Carolina? What is the difference one being a banker himself, and the other .being absolutely in the hands of a "crank? I cannot see any. ""I do business with the Palmetto i National Bank: got a small amount of j money in it, and some of those gentle- j men there, particularly the president,! are my close personal and political' friends, but when it comes to my duty in approving the State Treasurer's bond I know only my responsibility." RTIT TA PPrtrVT VTCUTIVf' i M.9M.XJJLJ 1\7 A. JIIXJ V 1. 1 t\>ll 1 A.< VI I ( Senator Would Stop Boxing /for Any! Compensation in California. j Sacramento, Cal. January 13.?If the j proposed bill which Senator W. F.j Brown, of I^>s Angeles, will introduce n the California legislature is adopted, j prize fighting for compensation will j ?e eliminated in this Stater "I want to divorce the financial e;id 1 rom the game a'logether," said Sena"or Brown to-day. "When we will j ' -have clean boxing without the slug-j ging that now attends it. Los Angeles j was disgraced by the reports of the j t>^??V,t " . .VtUVili ~X ttiZiCi ugui. I SOUTH CAROLINA POSTMASTERS, j Officials Nominated for Fonntain Inn,! Seneca, In man and Kingstree. Washington, January 13.?President Taft today sent to the senate the nominations of the following pstmasters in. South Carolina: .Tames E. McKelvey, Fountain Inn; David Hunt, Seneca: James P. Metcalf, Inman; and T>ouis Jacobs. Kins?tree. r a A .iii Or'Hi Ki * Mrs .John Cart oi Orangeburg' Hank ing Ofticer in South Carolina lor Woman's Auxiliary. Orangeburg, Jan. 13??An an nouncement which will be read wit * * a * 1- - ? tl4* r aii crV* An mieresi 111 mis <mu mivu^nvu South Carolina has just been mad through the monthly bulletin of th Southern Commercial congress. Thi body, which is devoting its attention t "a greater nation through a greate South," has solicited the assistance c the women of the South in this gres work. The Woman's Auxiliary of th Southern Commercial congress ha Vw.av. fnr fnr this nnrnOSft. an ii*VU 4V? ? ? j--? ~ w Mrs. Woodrow Wilson has been name as honary president. The organiza tion has not yet been throughly con pleied, but a number of the nations officers have been named. Anion these officers is found the name of Mr: John Cart, Orangeburg, who is th national officer for South Carolina. The State officers of the woman auxiliary in South Carolina* are; Mr John Cart, president; Mrs. L. S. Wolf< Orangeburg, vice president; Mrs. J. J Merritt, St. Matthews, secretary; Mr. B. F. Muckenfuss, Orangeburg, treat urer. Cabinet officers, Mrs. J. L. Mc Lees, Mrs. A. H. Moss, Mrs. B. B Owen, Mrs. J. M. Albergotti, Mrs. W. Bowman, Mrs. A. D. Webst : Mrs. W. F Bairey, all of Orangeburs The county presidents was'be nan ed shortly by the State president. ELECT WILSON AM) MARSHALL t AH States Cast Ballots for Presidei and Yice President Last Monday. Washington, January 13.?Elector in forty-eight States met today am formally elected Wood row Wilson t the presidency and Thomas R. Mai shall to _the vice presidency of th United States. Returns prepared by the elector chosen at the polls last November ar nw n their way by mail t Washing ton, to the president pro tem of th Senate. Another set of these return will be brought in person by an elec tor chosen from each State to be can vassed Febuary 12, in jint session c the senate and the house, when Go\ ernor Wilson formally will be pre claimed president. In two of the States^ Utah and Ver mont, four votes each were cast fo President Taft for president, an Nicholas Murray Butler, for vice pres ident, the latter having been name by the republican national committe -' ? i a - - n nu ~ ?. to succeed tne laie jamts a. anemia, on the republican ticket. DEVIL TAVERN STILL EXISTS. Was Favorite Resort of Beii .Tonso and Shad well. At the present time it would be dif ficult to discover a London tavern eve called by the name of "The Devil." Bi in the eighteenth century 1 Fleet stree still is in existence, was so called. "The Devil's Tavern," was so calle owing to the proximity of St. Dunstan church and the fond recollection of a interlude between the saint ana th Exil One. This was Ben Jonson's favorite r< sort and here he presided over a clu of which he was the founder. H wrote once: "The first speech in my "Catiline spoken to Scylla's ghost, was writ af ter T had parted with my friends a the Devil Tavern; I had drank we that night and had brave notions." It was also the resort of Shadwel pillorized as Og by Dryden in his "At salom" and "Architophel." Hera th poets laureate used to rehearse thei birthday odes, so carefully writte with the minimum of emotion in th Augustan style, and here Kelligre^ laid one of the. scenes in his "Parson' Wedding." / Swift, in his "Journal to Stella," th human document of a passionate be ing. mentions dining here with Ac dison and Garth. Pope has embalme it in the amber of his classic vers* Here Goldsmith, in his prosperou hours, played at cards, and in 1751 D .Tonson assembled his merry and al most famous party to celebrate th publication of the delightful Mrs. Chai l-AA- T >_ a A _ T : ? ? , uiunox s nrsi nuvci, i ut- i-int; t Kariet Stuart.'' Firct Small Girl?Your papa an mama are. not real parents, yo know. They just adopted you. Second Small Girl?Well, that make it all the better. My parents picked m out and yours had to take you jus as you came. Giv a man advice and tel- him t take it for what it is worth, and will probably <40 unheeded. ( ii LAD KII,j\S HIS 310) - Boy Was Anfrcred When Parent Hefused Him Five Cents Willi Which to Purchase Candy. -\ Pittsburgh, Jan. 13.?Leroy Hig-: h gins, aged 11, shot ana killed his j i i itj mother in the bed room of their home j - ! - j. * t i ,1 T* 1-, ^ InH n-oc ontror. ! C ; ai .Vioiliuca IUU<1 > . 1111- mu ?> j e; ed because he was refused ."> cents to j s! purchase candy. o | After the shooting young Higgins j r j reloaded the shotgun and going into i f i the yard fired a charge through the j it | wall of the house, leading the police I e; to believe, until the boy confessed, that s some other person was guilty, d WOUNDED IN LOBBY OF HOTEL. W. T. Ritter is Said to Have Attempt-1 ed to Shoot Clerk and Suffers S Wound Himself. 'I ~ i e |_ Charleston, Jan. 13.?Some excite-; j ment was caused in the lobby of the; 's j St. John hotel this afternoon by \V. T. j s. j Ritter attempting to shoot Clerk GrifI l e>1 fin. Ritter entered the hotel and ask-1 j ^ j ed for a 50 conts room. He was told : 5- j that there was no room to be had at! >-' this cost and he placed a roll of bills j on the counter. Stepping off a few j feet he returned to the counter .'and j I. examining the roll he declared that: r, j some of his money had boen stolen.; : I- Griffin attempted to assure him to the ! i- contrary, when he blamed a bellboy1 standing nearby. A dispute followed! with the clerk and wnen ne drew nis j pistol the negro seized Ms arm and in; the tnssle which ensued the pistol was; ! i discharged, the ball entering the arm of the stranger. Ritter was placedi . under arrest and later sent to a hos-j pital for treatment. 's ?: ?? d ; Still Het l"{). ?i Apropos of the re~v.it resolution of J *- the Bible Studx;:v?s Convention in e Washington repudiitn.g th.e doctrine of a literal "ho'l five.'' relates '"..e s St. 5ouis Globe-L/t:uocid', Dr. Phi'.;) e Hale Curtin of V/h-V.i.iT, Sc;id to a ?- leporter: e "Hell fire is r,ir )ly mentioned any s more except in jest, -eic^pt, for example, as in the body-snatching story, j i- "A doctor, according to this srory, j >f saw late one night, a ::ne automobile ! liolftxr? nntci/lfl a (?otnotArv T-Tp hiri I ' iiUi VVU V/U WiUV M. J A.A V AA*V* i-1 behind a tree, for iie cxpected that i body snatchers were at work, and ' siire enough, in a few minie? h<; saw r two body snatchers stagger frcni the d cemetery carrying a body. Thy i- placed it upright in the aui.vjioNle, d: as though it were alive, propping it e | securely in the back seat, and then n they hurried back to the cemetery to | till the violated grave again. ; "The doctor in. their absense 1 if - ed ! the body out of the automobile, hit! i' j , under a hedge, and took its place j | himself. J "Soon the scoundrels returned. One ; seated himself in the back seat, j ! beside the body, so as to support it.! I - Then, in the darkness, they glided off. ;r "After a while the man in the rear it seat said in a rather awed tone: t, | "This body seems mighty warm for | ; a corpse. d "The chaffeur reached back his j >s hand and touched it. n j "Don't it, though, he muttered, j ...! between Dernlexitv and fear. .c . " ? "Then the corpse, in deep sepulch| al tones, exclaimed: Ijj "Warm, of course I'm warm; And j e i if you had been where I've been for j the last two days, you'd be warm ,,;too!" | ,_j "With loud yells of horror the body; t snatches leaped from the automobile J jj i and fled. The doctor seized the wheel j and drove it home. He has the car,! , : still." J I . The Hard Part. e : | New York Tribune: n I Senator Penrose, at a luncheon at : the Auditorium in Chicago, told the ,! following storv about an office seeker: \ v l , j "I hear you've got a government I ; job, now," one man said to another. The other answered gayly: e j "That's what." l ne nrst man gave an envious sign \ and asked: ^ I "Is it hard work?" 5-; "Xot after you get it," was the re-1 s; ply. r.! - Sounds Bostonish. ej The other day a visitor surprised! *"' a distinguished professor, who was j )f i : i~ v.:_ I ~ Saving iu nig uctuv . "On-nv, no-nv, 'e musev tick his! | footsy tootsies?" d j Just then he caught sight of the u j visitor, blushed and muttered? "Xo no: you must not expose your >s pedal extremities by extending them e beyond the protective covering of the j ;t blankets or you will lay your svstem! i open to attacks of catarrhal affec- j j tion."? Cincinnati Enquirer. o " ~ " it; In the school of experience each man considers himself a teacher. ( / I I The Newberry Savings Capital Stock, - $50, EVERY DOLL/ m H Y0U put I I ^%?THE BA] I iTf STRENGTH ?I1THE WA iPSBETWEEir IfSD ADYEKSIX iitfilMni iTi , Copyright 1909, by C E Zimmeman Co.?No. 65 il P VERY dollar you I w 4 the bank means 1 er step toward success. No si I man has ever been without a 1 I count. A bank account m< creased prestige and a sense c bility and security, well wo greatest effort in order to acqi "The Bank That Always Has The I I Foot Per Cent Interest Paid on Savings I I JAS. MclNTOSH, President J.JE. NOR I HOUTEN s 11 i"j IMPORTED DUTCH I \l rT^\ Hans thought it o'er and more and more 1 fi j i:: seemed to him but fair 1 13 That little folks in other lands I 1 Van Houten's joys should share. 1 - > So taking leave of Holland's shore B j He crossed the ocean blue 8 ; And brought "Sweet Rona" to your door. So you might share it, too! 1 1 For Sale By E. M. Lane & Co. t The Herald and News, $1.50 yr I I > . ^ Bank J I A^A AA | | uuu.uu IN i A NK | "Frivrc ' . ' LiW LL YOU 3L* i y put in | anoth- 1 iccessfu! I J Dank ac- |~* eans in- I *' >f relia- I irth the I J 1 mre one. ) Money" Deposits I WOOD, Cashier | Ji ETITION FOR PROBATE OF WILL IN DUE FORM OF LAW. (Summons Published). 'o the Defendants Above Named: You are hereby summoned and reuired to answer the petition in thia ction, of which a copy is herewith erved upon you, and to serve a copy / ?f your answer to the said petition on i he subscriber at his office at New- 4 terry, South Carolina, within twenty [ays after the service hereof, excluive of the day of such service; and \tr ou -fail to answer the petition within he time aforesaid, the petitioner in his action will apply to the court for he relief demanded in the petition. Lambert W. Jones, dominated Executor of Last Will and H Testament of Samuel Tribble. C. C. Schumpert, udge of Probate Newberry County. NOTICE. I To the non-resident defendant, Red nond Tribble, if he be alive, and if lead, to his heirs at law, next kin, egatees and devisees: You are hereby notified that the pe- ? ition in the above stated matter was >n the 30th day of December, 1912, iled in the office of the Judge of Pro- V ate for Newberry County, South Caroina. Lambert W. Jones, dominated as Executor of the Last' Will and Testament of Samuel Tribb!e, deceaised, Petitioner.. C. C. Schumpert, |||| udge of Probate for Newberry County, South Carolina. I 2-31-6t-ltaw. Asthma! Asthma >OPHAM'S ASTHMA REMEDY ives instant relief and an absolute care p. all cases of Asthma. Bi inchitis, and Ic* Fever. Sold bv druggivts: mail oa ecoipt ct pricc; $1.00. ''"r'ni Tri' Vae- by ttvi!! Irt cents. ^FCl. CO.. Pr03*- CJevciyncU '.'*u? ?