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RET. KOON TO SILVERSTREET. Will Move In a Few aDys.?Pastor And Teacher.?Miss Nichols Assistant. Rev. S. P. Koon, for the past year president of Summerland college and prior to that pastor of St. Luk-e's Lutheran church, has accepted the ca!' to become pastor of the Lutheran church at Silverstreet ajid also principal of the school there. In a letter from Mr. Koon under date of June 27 to Mr. D. L. Ham, of j Silverstreet, Mr. Koon states that hej is now ready to move and wants to gel in his new quarters as early as possible. The Lutherans of Silverstreet will assist Mr. Koon in moving and will have him installed as pastor cf the Lutheran church within the next ten days. The trustees of the school have elected Miss Anna Nichols as assistant. Miss Nichols is from Leesville. In speaking of the election of Miss Nichols, Mr. Koon writes, "I am cer tainly pleased with the election of the ! assistant, Miss Anna Nichols. She is 0 a good young lady." Th-ere are great possibilities at Sil-5 verstreet for Mr. Koon to make Silverstreet one of the best schools in the county, and at the same time do a great deal for the uplift of the entire community and growth of the Lutheran church. Wedding Cards Received. Spartanburg Herald. Cards reading as follows have been issued. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Gallman invite you to be present at the marriage of their daughter, Alice Blanche to Dwight C. Stuckey on Wednesday evening, July 9, at 7.30 o'clock, 1913. At home, Newberry, S. C. Miss Delia Cudd, of this city, will be an att-:ndent at the wedding. FINES FOR MILL MEN. Two Are Convicted of Working Em,< ployees too Long. "Spartanburg, June 28.?Mack >3mith, assistant superintendent, and * W. L. Hames, weave room boss, of Glendale mills, were convicted today ; of .working their employes longer ( each day than the law permits and were sentenced to pay a fine of $50 ; <eacii of serve 20 days. GREATER COLUMBIA CLUB FORXED 'Newberry Alumni Chapter Officers Chosen. The State, 2Sth. A "Greater Columbia" Newberry college club was organized at the Jefferson hotel last night. There are ! ! more than 80 alumni and ex-students of the Lutheran institution residing in Columbia, and the purpose of t'he association is to tie these together j Into a permanent club so as to serve i the Newberry school in any way possible. After the adoption of a constitution and treport of the committee in | ch&i?e of the preparations of a banquet for next Tuesday evening, the following officers were elected: The Rev. H. A. McCullough, president; the Rev. W. H. Hiller, vice president, and F. W. Capplemann,' secretarytreasurer. A banquet is to be held at the Jefferson hotel next Tuesday evening, July 1. President J. H. Harms of Newberry college, George B. Cromer, L.L. D; A. F. Lever and other prominent alumni will be invited to attend. Was Shocked by Lightning Bolt. Pickens, June 27.?During an - * rt j | electric storm nere last aunuay aiternoon the residence of Judge Newberry was struck and the weather-1 boarding ripped off one corner of the house. His daughter, Miss Stella, was! on a bed within a few inches of the bolt and was severely shocked. Mr. Newberry was in another room and only received a slight shock. The terrific noise of the repose from the bolt affected Mrs. Newberry's hearing and it is feared that she may not hear again. Two trees were also struck fga Poplar hill, in the rear of the jail, near one of which was a hog p-:n and ?.he hog was killed. Church Destroyed. Epitaph for a Groncli. V)ne there was a man who was Xofc "Thankful. When good things came his way he raked them in and never coiH a Tt-rkT-rl W^ novpr caw thp hP3H- ) tv in the fields or the woods, and no sunset ever phased him. He never ^5ieard a bird sing, never gave a child a piece of candy. His morning and evening sa'.utation was a grunt. He dragg d a'ong through the years unI on?tn winjmpumjm. njurii.Tii .iiimtm A Positr I Read these few articles belo^ what the CASH plan is going 24 lbs the very best I lour, was Best Canned Tomatoes, was i< Standard Canned Tomatoes, w Best Canned Corn, was 15c, 0 Best Canned Desert Peaches, ^ Asparagus Tips, was 25 and 3< "D o Oil A Arv! TTTrt O T P o tirl -DctivCl 3 V^U^vUiaiC) ? <10 auu Rumford Baking Powders, \va As good Coffee as you ever drs A good Tea for all purposes.. Lemons, dozen Lots of other things we can'i show you. We are going to sell you an} Friday at 20c per pound. An] Our fresh meats are reduced Don't forget that everything i Yours t E M. LAI Phones IK til the thing was over?but he didn't J die. He just sort of shriveled up and blew away. And the happy onlookers who gathered near, saw a green vapor hover for a few minutes over his old clothes and then pass with a weird and mournful sound into an abandon- I ed well. And they filled the old well' with tin cans and erected a monument over it in the shape of a cucumber. And this was the epitah: "Here Lies a Grouch. Blessed are the grateful." ?Marion, (Kan.) Kecora. Judge Sease on Compulsory Education. Cheraw Chronicle, 26th. Judge Sease complimented the grand jury very strongly last Monday on its stand for compulsory education and assured them that it was not going to be long before compulsory education, in some form, would be a law. If every grand jury in South Carolina would come out fiat footed in favor of compulsory education as Chesterfield's has done, and every Judge on the bench would endorse the propositon as Judge Thos. S. S-ease did at Chesterfield, it would not be long before -every white child in South Carolina of school age would be attending school. All honor to Chesterfield's grand jury and Judge Thos. S. Sease. ORANGEBURG TO VOTE. Election is Ordered on Question of Dispensary For County. Orangeburg, June 28.?The supervisors of Orangeburg county today ordered an election to decide whether or not alcoholic beverages will be sold in this county by dispensaries. The meeting today was r. special one for the purpose of completing the matter of going over the petitions filed asking for an election and for the purpose of finally deciding the matter. Representatives of both the prohibitionists and dispensaries were present and lively speeches were made. It was 5 o'clock in the afternoon when the supervisors decided that there was a large majority over onethird of the qualified electors of Orangeburg county signed upon the petitions and they, according to the special statute, ordered the election. ? PARCEL POST PACKAGES C. 0. D. Send Them >*ow for Ten Cents.?Additional Cost Include Charsre for Insuring Package to $50. I Beginning July 1, patrons of the J parcels post may send packages C. [0. D., for a charge of ten cents, ac cording to information and instructions received at the local postoffice. The additional cost of ten cents, to be paid in parcel post stamps will also include the charge of insuring the package, to an amount not exceeding $50. The collection for packages through the postoffice system, is a decidedly new feature of postal work, and naturally its adoption in connection with. the parcels post is somewhat of an experiment, the result of which will j be watched with considerable inter- j est. Packages thus sent C. 0. D., may be sent only from a money order office, and only to a money order office. The amouir: to be collected j cannot exceed $100 on any one j packag ?. j ire Proof. v and you can get an idea of to save you at ot r store. : ,Qrrtmxr t ' WJV-, 5c, now ioc as ioc, now 8c iow i 2c ;as 25c, now 22c )c, now 20 and 25c 25c, now 10 and 20c s 30c, now 25c ink 22c 50c 30c t mention, but come arid let us r kind of Ham you want next 7 other day 23c. in proportion. is strictly CASH from today on. 0 serve. m & to. 3 and 212. The remittance to the sender of the package will be by money order. When the address-ee receives the npAlfftnrA V? rv Piflrnc n roftoinf nrV?ir?V? ^ativagc, 11c 015110 a. ictcipi, >> uau is considered as his application for a money order for the amount called for upon the package. With this reciept-appiication, the postmaster makes out a money order for the account and returns it to the sender of the package. While the instructions so far received do not give specific information upon this pcint. it is believed that the remitting party will have to pay the regular money order fees upon the amount so remitted. one reature aoout <j. u. u. dusiness which should be carefully noted, is that the addressee will not be permitted to examine the package before paying for i:. He will not be given an opportunity to examine it until he has paid his money and been given a receipt. This precludes thi possibility of sending a package subject to examinatior through the C. C. D. 'Method. If tire receiving narty finds, after he has gotten -the package that he does not want to accept it, he cannot then refuse payment. If he declines to accept the package at all, it must be before the payment is made. MAINTENANCE OF GOOD KOADS. People in Many States Filled With Enthusiasm for Improvement of Public Highways. The present year promises to be the greatest in the history of the movement for the improvement of the public roads of the United States, according to th-e report:? received from all parts of the country by the United States department of agriculture. A joint committee of congress is engaged in an investigation of the feasi bility of federal aid in the construction, improvement and maintenance of public highways, and a number of tho State legislatures are considering good road legislation. In connection with the general impetus that the good road movement has recently had in all parts of the country, the director of the office of public highways says: "Too much stress cannot be laid uDon the imDortance of maintenance in cojLection with the work of improving the roads. The people in nearly all the States are filled with enthusiasm for road improvement and are spending enormous sums of money in the construction of superb roads, and yet almost without exception they are making little provision to care for the roads after they are built. This is true not only in the various counties, but under many of our State highway departments. "To maintain the roads in good condition year after year requires a considerable annual outlay, but this out lay is infinitely less than the loss which must fall upon the people eventually if they allow their roads to go to utter ruin. The thing for all advocates of good roads to do is to urge continuous, systematic maintenance, ana me s-eiung asiue every yeai- 01 a.u amount per mile estimated by the engineer in charge to be sufficient for the proper maintenance of the road?a course which must make for economy and efficiency." STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF NEWBERRY, Court of Common Pleas. The National Bank of Newberry, Plaintiff, against D. Essie Blackwelder, the George D. i .viayo .uacmne company ana ueorge S Mower, Defendants. By an order of the court herein I will sell at public outcry before the court house at Newberry, S. C., to the highest bidder, within the legal hours of sale, on Monday, sale day, the 7th day of July, 1913, all that tract or parcel of land lying and being situate in the Town of Newberry, county and State aforesaid, containing one-half acre, more or less, fronting on Main cr Prati street of said town, and otherwise bounded by lands of the estate of the late J. W. Chappell, by lands of Mrs. Clara M. McCrarv and by Randall or Catherine street of said itown. Terms of sale: One-third ofthepurrTiQQP tn in r>c?c>i and ! the balance on a credit of one year | from day of sale, with interest on the | credit portion from the day of sale at the rate of eight per cent, per annum, with leave to the purchaser to anticipate the credit portion in whole or in part, the credit portion to be secured by bond or note of the purchaser and a mortgage of the prem lses soia, said Dond and mortgage to contain ithe usual stipulation of ten per cent, attorney's fee in the event the d-ebt will have to be collected by foreclosure or has to be put in the hands of an attorney for collection. And the mortgage to be given by the purchaser to the Master to contain an insurance clause requiring the puri chaser to insure the buildings on the | said premises against loss or damage j by fire in a sum not less than the credit portion of such sale and assign j such insurance policy to the Master. jThe purchaser shall be required at sucli sale to pay to tne Master tne sum of two hundred dollars iri cash or by certified check when the purchaser's bid is accepted, and in default of such payment the Master shall immediately without delay resell the said premises so bid off, on the same terms. In case the purchaser fails to fully comply with the term of sale within five days after the day of sale the Master shall forthwith readvertise and resell the said mortgaged premises at the risk of the former purchaser. Purchaser | to pay for papers and recording the I 59mo H. H. Rikard, Master. Newberry, S. C., June 12, 1913. i ' Red Band 6 . There is bu candy, and th kind, at a po 10c and 20c. a Try a pound oi you will always \ large assortment. Chocolate Cream Chocolate Figolel Covered Dates 1( Maple Blocks 10< And many oth in and try a pou vinced. "Better Goods a MAYES' Book & Th? HOOSE? I |L_ . SOUTHEBN RAILWAY. Schedules Effectiie December S, 1111. Arrirtlg and Departnreg Jiewberry> S. C. (N. B.?These schedule figures ai* shown as Information only and are not guar^pteed.) 8:51 a. m.?No. 15, dally from Columbia to Greenville. Pullman Bleeping car between Charles toe 11:50 a. m.?No. 13, dally, from Greenville to Columbia. Arrives Columbia 1:35 p. m., Augusta 8:85 p. m Charleston 8:15 p. m. 2:45 p. m.?No. 17, daily, from Coluir bia to Greenville. 9:05 p. ul?No. 16, daily, from Green vill? to Columbia. Pullman sleep Ing car Greenville to Charleston Arrives Charleston 8:15 a. m Ar rive Savannah 4:15 a. m. Jack I sonville 8:30 a. m. Four further information call o? ticket agents, or E. H. Coapman, V. P ft 6. M., Washington, D. C.; J. L Meek, A. G. P. A., Atlanta, Ga., or F L. Jenkins, T. P. A., Angnita, Nl STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF NEWBERRY, Court of Common Pleas. James N. McCaughrin, Plaintiff, against James -M. Ward, Henry S. Chapman, Adeline Silvery and W. A. Speer, as executors of the last will and i testament of John Silvey, deceased; W. A. Speer, A. C. McHan, R. K. Rambo and W. T. McCuIIough, as partners doing business under the firm name and style of John Silvey & Company, Defendants. i By order of the court herein I will sell to ithe highest bidder before the court house of Newberry, S. C., on Monday, July 7, 1913, the same being salesday, within pie legal hours of sale, the following described lots of land, as a whole, to wit: All those ten lots, pieces or parcels of land being situate in the Town of Newberry, county and State aforesaid, being lots Nos. 72, 73, 74, 75 and 76, fronting on Kinard street, and lots Nos. 87, 88, 89, 90 and 91, fronting on Hunt street, in Block C, as shown by plat made by F. W. Higgins, surveyor, and recorded in the clerk's office for Newberry county, in Plat Book D, at * 1- - M J Jl * _ pages ziu ana 211, eaca 01 saiu iota having a frontage of fifty feet and running back same width two hundred and fifty feet. Terms of sale: cash. H. H. Rikard, Master. i Newberry, S. C., June 12, 1913. InnJ P onJiac 1 lull! VIUIUIVO it one kind of at is the pure pular price of F my candy and vant it. I have a > , i Almonds 20c lb. ttes 20c pound. )c pound. : Dound. a. er flavors. Come ind and be cont Same Money." S Variety TORE f >.000 THINGS I 4 ^ ^ $> 3> <$ ^ ^ ^ <i> <$ ? J| <S> ?, " ?> LODGE DIKECTOBY. *" <? Newbery Camp, No. 542, W. 0. W., meets every second and fourth Wednesday night in Klettner's TXall, at 8 \ o'clock. Amity lodge, No. 87, A. F. X. iiauiy jLKjage, ;>o. a<, A. J?. J4., mee^i evfery first Monday night at 7.30 o'clock in Masonic Hall. Visiting brethren cordially invited. T. P. Johnson, i, W. iSarhardt, W. M. Secretary. _ ^ Wodmen of the World. 1 MaDle Came. No. 437. W. O. W meets ever7 first and third Vvedneeday evening at 7.45 o'clock. Visiting brethren are coriallv welcome. D. D. Darby, J. A. Derrick, Clerk. C. C. Bergell Tribe, No. 24, L 0. B. K. Bergell Tribe, No. 24, Improved Order Red Men, meets every Thursday night at 8 o'clock in Klettner's HalL J. 0. Havird, 0. Klettr/r, Sachem. ?hief o? Records. ? Omaha Tribe, L 0. B, 1L Omaha Tribe, No. 75, I. 0. R. M., Prosperilty, S. C., meeta every first and third Friday night at 8o'clock in Masonic hall. Visiting brethren are welcome. G. H. Dominick, Prof. J. S. Wheeler, Sachem. Chief of Records. Caoteechee Council, >u. D. of P. L 0. B.M. Cateechee Council, No. 4, D. of P., i meets every other Tuesday night at i o'clock p. m., in Klettner's Hall. Signet Chapter, Xc. 28, B. A. IL Signet Chapter, No. 18, R. A. BL, meets every second Monday night at 8 o'clock in Masonic NalL Van Smith, T. P. Johnson, E. H. P. Lacota Tribe, I. 0. B. 3L Lacota tribe, No. 79, I. 0. R, M., Ja- * lapa, S. C., meeting every other Wednesday nieht at 8 o'clock in Summer hall. Visiting brethren are welcome. T. C. Dobbins, J. Wm. Folk, Sachem. Chief of Records. Newberry Commandery, ffo. 6, K. T. j Newberry Commandery, No. 6, K. Tn meets eyery third Monday night at 8 o'clock in Masonic Hall. Fred. H. Dominick, T. P. Johnson, E. C. Recorder. Willow Camp, So. 694, W. 0.W. Willow Camp, No. 694, W. 0. W? meets every second p,nd fourth Tues- 1 day nights in each month at West End school house. f * | T. B. Kihler, I Council Commander. A. C. Ward, 4 . Clerk. Palmetto Camp, No. 694, Boys of Woodcraft, meets at Odd Fellow's hall, West End, every second and fourth W ednesday night, ?t 8 o'clock. G. W. Harrison, Commander. j CHICHESTER S PILLS THE DIAMOND BRAND. A Pills ia Red tad Gold nmllicYw/ Vy boxes, sealed with Blue Ribboa. \/ Hi f^wl Take ho other. Bar of T*mr * {'/ - nr AskforCHMUKS-TEKa I w 2g DIAMOND It RAND PILL*, foe U \V JQ jrean known as B<st, Safest. Always RelUY* ^ SO! 0 *Y n tmv.wny Winthrop College ^ 4 SCHOLARSHIP AND ENTRANCE EXAMINATION The examination for the award of { vacant scholarships In WInthrop Col1 3 ^ /V# MAVf* 04l1 lege ana iur cue <tuiuisoiuii ua ucw awdents will be held at the County Court House on Friday, July 4, at 9 a. m. Applicants must be not less than sixteen years of age. When Scholarships are vacant after July 4 they will be awarded to those making the highest average at this examination, provided they meet the conditions governing the award. ADDlicants for Scholarships should write to President Johnson before the examination for Scholarship examination blanks. Scholarships are worth $100 and free tuition. The next session will open September 17, 1913. For further information and catalogue, address Pres. D. B. Johnson, Rock Hill, S. C.? TJflct Tcr#Hrfi ?AI< fliA ttraH livot JUVAUfUT V JL iuv <fX??'U? Old men and women feel the need iJ of a laxative more than young folks, 1 but it must be safe and harmless and one which will not cause pain. Dr. King's New Life Pills are especially good for the aged, for they act promptly noonr- a P^rnm ly aim taonj. a * -w -- - mended by all druggists. * *" ' ** ---