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A UVJUU.^' 9 *>/ , C rp >OTE AM> COMMENT <J> <S> By Local Reporter. $> ^ r\l r> nt\ "o <5 Vi o i-rl rincifinn -?i. I11&YU1 O 10 C4 uuxu ? to hold. Xo matter how good a man ^ is elected some people will find fault with him. It matters not how hard ^Khe tries to do his duty, and please the ^ community, he will find that he dis pleases many; or at any rate they will criticise him whether or not. He can | not please evreybody. If an angel from heaven came down to act as , mayor of Xewberry he would find it ; the hardest job he ever undertook. Xo j fiL doubt it would be just as hard in any other town. I-PCI? ;~" Jr. Vintv rlnoc Frank i ilie quesuun ia, nu>. uw ^FDevore like Henry Kinard's ducks? Aii island is a body of land, surrounded by water. Devore's residence is a m house surrounded by Kinard's ducks. H Quack, quack, quack, Frank. Maybe k it -just suits the twins. Speaking of faith, hope and charity, H and that the greatest of the three is j m charity, leads the reporter to suggest j that the greatest of them all is [ hope. Mankind could manage to eke * ? i. - v.1 a OYlctPTlOP with || UUL CL iuioci auib out charity, in either mean- ! I ing of the word, and the B world would be dark without J faith, but it would roll along somehow, r Take hope away and man could not live. Although "hope deferred maketh I the, heart sick," yet "hope springs ' eternal in the human breast." What would we do without hope! What could we do without hope? Even though many times we "hope against1 ~hr\r\a " it id thp nnlv thins: that keeps , j, v AV w w H us alive. ^Sometimes you think you are fool-1 M^ing a fellow when you "ain't." Very seldom outside of fiction does one see instances of the helping hand. It is all very nice to read about some JP able person taking a liking to a j V worthy young man and helping him | along, but it doesn't come your way. ! W There are worthy men in Xewberry j 8 who could be helped out of a hard I place occasionally if some kindheart- I 'j ~i 0-r.^J ! W ed man of means wouiu step up ?uU ( I say: "Don't you need to borrow some j I money today? I can let you have it." ! JW You read of such in books?you don't i see it. There are men here who have ' 8 struggled all of their lives. If any S man has ever voluntarily offered to I I lend any of them any money, we I 1 would like to hear of it. ft Saw girl cranking automobile other day. Saw one hitch horse to post J I another day. Both "got there." I Isn't it strange how one becomes i f fascinated with" the moving pictures?,1 L It is interesting to watch the fami^^kliar faces of actors and actresses as they reappear in the different plays. Wr They are becoming well known by j their faces and are watched for eager- j I ly by the public. It seems that newspaper men are j ( just alike everywhere, Harry Thaw ' ~ i & tried to borrow some money iroxu | g one up in New Hampshire yesterday ^ and found that he was broke.?Green^ ville Piedmont, 11th. H. Thaw couldn't l > borrow any from some of them in A Newberry. Maharaja Kumar Jitendra Hirayan, | WF of Cooch Bahar -weds Gaekwar's i p Daughter.?Headline in dailies. Tnat'sl M all we want to know aDout u, umcss we could see it in the moving picf ture shows. i Mary had a little skirt, She slit it most in half, And everywhere that Mary went L They saw her little calf. B ?Seattle Post-Intelligencer. ' J 4-/\ mQlra i The man mat aoesn l hac iu waav ft children happy is no man at all. Jerome and Thaw and the lawyers and doctors on both sides are playing H a great game of hide and seek, like little children, for the money that is He cometh forth these cool morn* * * A *- ? ? ^ ings in a iignt coai auu 1 R much guying. At the noon hour he V showeth the unwise populace the V wisdom of his ways. It were better to W shake an hour in the morning breeze like a reed in the wind and be comtvio rocf- nf the dav than to IUA Lauxv waav *. VK/V - . g start out comfortable in the early p hours only to fret and fume later. DELATED ITEMS. Paragraphs Intended for Last TlmrsL day's Issue, Pushed Aside by Ads. P Mesdames H. F. Addy and L. I. B Epting and Miss Tda Epting visited Dr. and Mrs. T. H. Wedaman at Po raaria this week. The civic association will hold its I regular meeting at the residence of f Mrs. F. R. Hunter next Monday afternoon at 5 o'clock. Mr. S. M. Duncan, of Newberry, vis; . Bited Mr. J. W. Duckett yesterday. f Green wood Journal, 10th. W Mr. B. M. Scurry has changed from | Newberry to Chappells. ^* j* xt n* x "U Capt. Geo. 31. Jtnsnop, 01 me oum.:ern railway, was in the city Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Jacobs left Wc l-j nesday for Columbus, Ohio. This is his ast year as a student of veterinary surgery. Miss Cleone Hayes returned Wednesday to Lauder college. Mr. Victor B. Cneshire, of Anderson, is in Newberry in the interest of his candidacy for congress. He counts on his first name in this race. Mr. Cheshire is a pleasant gentleman and is bound to win friends. Mrs. \Y. S. Melton and little daugh- ; ters Ernestine, Travis and Hilda went Wednesday to Hodges to visit relatives. Miss Elizabeth Dominick is visiting friends irt Columbia and Barnwell. She will return home Friday. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Wicker, of Newberry, are visiting her sister, Mrs. .Taenh E^rharrH fnr n fpw rinvc ? Ehrhardt cor. Bamberg Herald, 11th. Capt. Metts, of Newberry county, is visiting his son, W. P. Metts, in Meeting street.?Columbia Record, 10th. Mrs. E. J. Sox, of Little Mountain, spent Sunday night with the family of P. I. Sox.?Columbia Record, l^th. H IT: T ~ 1 A _ k i * iviiss j-.itura oetzier nas gone iu ahniston, Ala., to teach school. Miss | Nettie Setzler will on Friday leave j for Iva, Anderson county, to teach. Mr. J. Thos. Hutchinson, of Charlotte. and Mr. Stanmore G. Langford, of Union, both reliable and proficient men with the Southern Power company (the company will have no other j sort) are in Newberry, their former ; nome city, on a nttie vacation irom their strenuous work. Tne only difference is Stanmore has his own fami- i ly to spend vacation with while Tom j is out in the cold like all other un- j fortunate bachelors. MAYOR OF NEW YORK PASSES AWAY AT SEA ! i i William J. Gaynor Dies En Route to , Europe Aboard the Baltic. New York, Sept. 11.?William J. j Gaynor, mayor of New York city, ! voyaging over the sea on the steamer ! Baltic in the hope of regaining his strength to enter the three- j cornered municipal campaign as a candidate for reelection, died suddenly on tne Baltic as the steamer was ; within- a few hundred miles of the Irish coast yesterday afternoon. The first news of his death, flashed ; v?tt tim ncf. onr! ralnvpri "hv pahlp from I Europe, reached his secretary, Robert Adamson this morning. The mayor had .succumbed to heart failure, the message said. Later dispatches from his son, Rufus W. Gaynor, who was his father's only traveling companion, gave details j which showed that the end had come with shocking suddenness. "Father died at 1.07 p. m., Wednesday, the 10th," said a message from his son, received oy secretary \ Adamson today. "His deatli was due to heart failure. He was seated in his ! deck chair at the time. I and the j nurse and the ship's doctor were with ! him. I discovered him unconscious in ! his chair. Though still laive, he died | about three minutes later withoutj recognizing any of us. ^Everything j possible was done, but he seemed to go as a candle flickers out. Am all right and am trying to arrange to jDring the body back on the Lusitania, sailnig from Liverpool on Saturday, the 13th." Heart Wask. That the mayor's heart had been in o TroQt-oTiorl r>nr> rlifrirm fnr vp.flrs was ; the statement tonight of physicians who treated him at the time he was j shot in the neck and almost done to death by an insane discharged employe of the city in August, 1910. They would not declare their belief that the wound inflicted by the bullet had led j directly to the end today but did af- j firm that his general resistance had j been lessened thereby to a very great j extent. i Plans for a public funeral to be . probably on Monday, September 22, i will be made tomorrow by the board of estimates. Late advices from j abroad say the body may be trans- | forrort from the "Raltin to the steamer i "~ " I Cedric, sailing from Queenstown to- 1 morrow, or if that arrangement can not be affected, to the Lusitania sailing from Liverpool on Saturday. The body will arrive in New York Friday or Saturday of next week. "With the death of Mayor Gaynor i Xew York automatically transferred the office of mayor to Ardolph L. Kline, re republican. President Kline took the oath of office today and his first official act was to call the board of estimates together to lay plans for the public funeral services j of his predecessor. Mayor Kline then declared that during this short term of office, which will terminate January 1, 1914,, he i would carry out the policies of Mayor Gaynor so far as he knew them. , SMALL FORTUNE DISAPPEARED. I Safe Arrives at Savannah Short $71,- i 000.?Detectives at Work. Savannah. Ga., Sept. 11.?'Tonight a small army of detectives, special ^ agents and express company officials are working in an endeavor to ferret out the mysterious disappearance of ?71 900 from a nnrtahlp =;afp pti rrmtp from New York to Savannah. Of this amount, $.">0,000 was consigned to the Savannah bank and Trust company, $5,000 to the Real Estate Bank and Trust company and tne remainder was destined for banks in smaller cities in South Georgia and was to have been reshipped from Savannah. A dozen clues have been discovered, it was stated tonight, but nothing tanrnhlp ha<; r1pvplnr>prt Thp pvnrp?? company declined to discuss the na ture of the clues obtained and is extremely reticent in discussing the affair. T. B. Hockadav. of Atlanta, general j manager of the Southern Express company, and other officials are here directing tne search for the missing money. Suspicion that the money had been stolen was first aroused when the Savannah Bank and Trust company failed to receive $50,000 in currency shipped from the Chase National bank. New York. The bank wired the New York institution asking if the money had been shipped and received a reply, saying it had been sent by the Adams Express company and was turned over to Southern Express company by the former at Jersey City. In the meantime a portable iron saie naa oeen received ai iue local officies of the Southern Express company. The waybill was missing. When the safe was opened only a few packages of currency were found. The seals on the safe were intact and the key to the safe had been mailed to the Savannah agent of the company. The Jersey City office was communicated with and it was learned that the safe, containing the currency, left that citv Monday nigh': over the At- | lantic Coast Line railroad. Express messengers who had charge of the safe between New York and Savannah were given a severe grilling by the officials, and rumors were current here this afternoon that an arrest was about to made, but this was denied by the officials. Claim Agent Weaver was hurriedly dispatched from the city tonight at 8 o'clock, i Jtiis aesnnanon is uiikuuwu. i It is stated that in the event the money is not recovered the banks will not be the losers, but the loss will fall upon the express companies. The money was in two packages. Local police have not been called into the case. Arrivals for the Smith-Cely Wedding, j ?frowded Out Last Issue. I Greenville Piedmont, 10th. Mr. P. C. Smith, Jr., of Birmingham, Ala., will arrive in the city today to be present at his sister's wedding. Mrs. W. P. Smith, Misses Ger-[ trude and Marie Smith, of Newberry,; - - j I will come to Greenville toaay, ana ; Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Smith, and Mr. i and Mrs. J. W. Smith will arrive tomorrow from Newberry to be present at the Smith-Cely wedding tomorrow evening. A very large crowd will arrive from Anderson tomorrow evening and a special train will run tomor- j row night after the wedding recep- j tion, leaving here at 11.jo 10 aucu.ii-! modate the wedding guests who wish I to return home the same evening. A full rehearsal of this brilliant wedding will he held at the First Baptist church tonight after which the 'bridal p^rty will be entertained at the home of Mr. and Mrs. P. C. Smith on North Main s:reet. A Card of Thanks. I desire thus publicly to thank my doctors, neighbors and friends in the community generally for their great kindness to me and my wife in her last illness and at her death and buri- i al; not only for their kindness at that' time, but for their sympathy, encouragement and thoughtfulness con stantly extended during the long 3'ears of her illness. I shall ever be grateful to them. The memory of s.uch deeds can never fade away. "Kind words can never die." May our j heavenly Father bless them, abun,d?nt-ly and always. Very truly, F. M. Lindsay. ! Candidates of Varsity Squad of dewberry College. Active practice has been indulged in during the past week by candidates j of the team. Capt. Floyd has had : the men indulge lightly in some road j <n*sw?1 ~ rvnrjfinnr O T-i r? r?0 CC1T1 C nf Til A ' I "W U1 A., JJ 1111 LiII3 auu puoom53 v/a. ball. Wessinger, Troutman, Efird, the Baker brothers and Crotwell are some of the recent arrivals in camp. From | now on practice will be in order both morning and night until the ; opening of the college, September 18th. flM\- PriMvn n-l-in V> ci c hfkort ill for I \A UL KJ 11 n itv iiuu - sometime expects to be able to join the squad in a few days. This is the time of year that a certain set of periodicals begin to print articles on the number of injuries in j football. Any one who knew nothing i of t!:e game and read these articles j 1 ? 15s ftLrvBttrrsiiinO >X 5 lravuua; Mrs. Walter Vincent, /g\i of Pleasant Hill, N. C., writes: 'Tor three sum- .*. J mers, I suffered from F?! ?j nervousness, d r e a d f u 1 IS^ pains in my back and /S\t sides, and weak sinking j(g) _?^li . n_ ti i iit _r ^ speiis. mree oomes 01 Cardui, the woman's fiS ?] tonic, relieved me entireyr ly. I feel like another M person, now." [(g) p TAKE ^ ?l w The Woman's Tonic f4 ?J For over 50 years, y)*, Cardui has been helping pV @1 to relieve women's un- |? necessary pains and |(q{ i building weak women up |/?J* to health and strength. jr'* It will do the same for f~5j5 (?) j you, if given a fair trial. 1^ So, don't wait, but begin 4^ /g\i taking Cardui today, for [(g) wy its use cannot harm you, 9'\ and should surely do you JJ good. E-72 1% ^ Safest Laxative for Women. Nearly every women needs a good laxative. Dr. King's New Life Pills are good because they are prompt, safe, and do not cause pain. Mrs. M. C. Dunlap of Leadill, Tenn., says: "Dr. King's New Life Pills helped her troubles greatly." Get a box to day. Price, 25c. Recomended by all druggists. Do You Fear Consumption? No matter how chronic your cough or how severe your throat or lung ailment is, Dr. King's New Discovery win sureiy neip you; it may save your life. Stillman Green, of Malichite, Col. writes: "Two doctors said I had consumption, and could not live two years. I used Dr. King's New Discovery and am alive and well." Your monev refunded if it fails to benefit you. The best home remedy for coughs, colds, throat and lung "roubles. Price 50c, and $1.00. Guaranteed by all druggists. Strengthen Weak Kidneys. Don't suffer longer wka weak kidneys. You can get prompt relief by taking Electric Bitters, that worderful remedy praised by women everywhere. Start with a bottle today, you will soon, feel like a new woman with ambition to work, without fear of pain, Mr. John Dowling of San Francisco, writes:?"Gratitude for th? wonderful effect of Electric Bitters prompts me to write. It .cured my wife when all else failed." Good for the liver as well. Nothing better for indigestion pr biliousness. Price 50c and $1.00, at all drug stores. No. 666 This i& a prescription prepared especially for MALARIA or CHILLS &. FEVER. Five or six doses will break any case, anc if taken then as a tonic the Fever will noi return. It acts on the liver better thar Calomel and does not gripe or sicken. 2C Malaria or Gils & Fever Prescription No. 666 is prepared especially RJAB ADIA nr r.UMI I Q A FPX/PP ?v/i innk.ru in wi Five or six dotes will break any case, and if taken then as a tonic the Fever will not return. * It acts on the liver better than Calomel and does not gripe or sicken. 25c I Pay Cash For Hens 12c lb i Roosters 7c lb Frying Chickens 14c lb Eggs 25c doz Jas. D. Quattlebaum, Prosperity, S. C. would gather that playing football was equivalent to going to war. The cartoonists picture mangled heaps of men scattered around the gridiron with ears and noses missing and the general number of broken arms, legs and necks. Before the season is over there is no doubt this widespread opinion in certain circles will be disproved. People will discnvor that rick in football is no 2Teat c: than in any other outside sport. At home.?College of Charleston, Clinton, B. M. I. Abroad.?Citadel, Furman at Union, _ ri _ l T> AT T riovvl. i. iinto:l .'l v,uiui:i'Jia, u. ->i. i., j. > -uson college. H|^ Newberry, Tuesd ROBIN FAMOUS NOW COMB SANC GRfATER'CIJ European M COMBINEC A Mighty 500 PEOPLE\ AND . 1 BEAUTIFUL1 // HORSES! sT / richest ih^y /l i costumes v//] ' i magnificent t^ff : 1 equipment uzr* '^t lfamedasthe \n| ' world's / show JTsST \\?^ /beautiful / \? finest^ </vv jx\ r _.;Tl?tlNSl >0^ opec// w0f / \ Palace cars^SJ MUSEU|V|.|U middo" " 1 - ^ SANGER'S QRl PERFORMING | WHITE CLOUD !ua v^n v rr PIAJUK UI IbU SMALLEST MITES OP ADUL ... FAMOUS 0R1 WORLD'S CHAMPION TSS iTTFCMmHRi BIND 1 BILLY LIGHTFOOT I \ Acd 20 ^thor Funny Clowns. Twa Performances Da Doors open oni SEE THE aPLENDIt J. C. 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Much of your heavy work i t i : can oe aonc oy an engine mniui n-aiva to be a Manager instead of/a worn out laborer. Will take some of the burdens off your man, allowing him to put his time on more profitable '.vork, hence he becomes better satisfied with his position. Removes much of the drudjery from the wife's shoulders and permits more time for recreation. We cap furnish 5, 7 and 10 H. P. single cylinder type, also 12 and 20 H. P. two cylinder opposed types. Any size mounted on road truck. ficinG trucK or s&icis* nuiatuvc ^u^o* Further particulars supplied by our local agent. Western Implement Co. INDIANAPOLIS. IND. ?]' If interested in an Ensilage Cutter incestigate / ? The Papec W