University of South Carolina Libraries
The Herald and News Entered at the PostofTiCi * .?! <rry, S. C., as 2-xl class matter. E. H. AULL, EDITOR Tuesday, October 7, 1913. The purpose of putting up a sign , should be for it to be read. We have wondered if the authorities who put up the signs to slow clown to four . miles the hour Wanted the sig.:s read. We mean the automobile signs. You 1 * - ?f n to Am onfl <.iave lO JJIt'UV CIU5C IU I.UC111 cmvi have'good eyes io*see what they are. ' If signs are to be put up for the drivers to be governed by why not make them so that they could be read at least at a distance of twenty feet. We are satisfied that the great majority j of the drivers have not yet even seen the signs because no one?at least j ? nnr O t f Cm _ i not one in twenty u?,?o au(r :"on to them. Maybe they were meant j not to be seen. If so we apologize for J calling attention to them. Talking about signs and stopping ordinances, we would like to suggest an amendment to the notice at the j corner of Caldwell and Main street so as to make the sign read: "Stop befnrp rrnssin?." There is very little good in stopping after you have cross- | ed the street, as a great many driv- | ers do. It is getting time to be thinking about a city council. The election, , _ , ! nas Deen oraerea. i ne city neeas a : live progressive administration. And remember that when we elect this time it is for a term of two years. The city needs an administration that will do things. 'And there is lots to be done. c agicc wiiii ujc .\cnucu ? Herald and News that every town' needs a booster's club, but if every 'own could organize a booster's club as easily as it organizes a boozer's elub progress would be wrii in large, letters all over toe State.?Dillon : Herald. It could be done just as easy. What is needed in each community is one or two real live me.i- who are interested in the commercial life of the 'own and who are willing to give jus: i little of their time to the general welfare. We must believe those two nr three live men live in Newberry - nd that they will come forward and | lead. They are in other towns. Why ->r?t Vpwhprrv? It is iufit as eood as 1 - - - - - w 'he best and so are the people. Come forward. The call is to you. The legislature of Tennessee was called in extra session to pass some more drastic liquor laws. It failed to ! nass any law and almost adjourned in a row. Since then the criminal judges of someV of the larger cities have gone j to work to see th^t the present laws are enforced' and the liquor dealers are going out of business rapidly. We ? + '? >ic- ci'miilr tn romarV that if . :i c:ii liUil LUiO CXI U|yivT IV 2 is not more law that we need but the enforcement of the law that is already on the books. And not"only toe liquor laws but some others. i .11 m ~ Abe Martin says: "I reckon ther'll j ^llus be a few girls that prefer a nar- j "ow buggy an' hoss that knows the ! road." ! ? ? ! The News and Courier says tftat it :s now possible to' see through woman's clothes, but mose of us are still nable to see through woman. j i A New Hampshire woman has been "ound who flagged a train with her etticoat. And this has led an exchange to remark: "So, then, there is j one left." i I All three of the above paragraphs occurred in one issue of the Greenj vood Journal. "What do you know about that? We beg the privilege once more to ' all attention to the condition Qf "tosemont cemetery and to ask the ;ood women of Xewberry if they will lot take tho narter in 'hand and-see f something cannot be done to get somebody interested in doing something to make it look like there was ? :nmphndv in Ypwhprrv whn mrpr? fnr he loved ones gone before. From the ondition of the driveways it looks as f the county's big scrape had been over them and left all the grass s.nd rubba^o I'rom the ditches piled in ! tnnm ill thi> Pi.ntrP nt t h fll'lV*' ways. The w.iiole thi::g is a reflection ! upon and a disgrace to a Christian j and a civilized community. We don't know who is supposed to be in charge, but we do know that somebody ought to be in charge. Tne thing is beyond adequate description. We ihought ~ rrs-A fli a crr\i-\A w r\ >> > mi iiia.v ue ? e tuiuu jci .. of the community interested and that they might do something with the men. You may be too busy just now making money to stop and look after places like this, but let us tell you, some time in the not distant future you will have to put aside this thing of making money and you will be hauled over and laid away in this same spot. You would like to feel that those you leave behind will think of you occasionally after you are gone. Why net you take some thought of c-hose who have preceded you just a little while. "Editing a newspaper is a man's game?you keep out," quotes The Rock Hill Record, which we hope has no reference to us. We are already 011 the job and would hate to be excluded by our brothers so early in our career. ?Lancaster News. Don't you worry, little girl, you are I ~~ i.V? ^ -Jyv'U ^ A ttaii o mol/in crnnrl i VJLi U1C JUU dliU JUU CA1 ^ | and your bretlrren are not going to exclude you. DIVERS SEEK TREASURE. Chest of Gold That Sank in 1820 , 3Iay be Recovered. I Paris Cablegram to the St. Louis Republic. Untold lost treasures, lost a: sea I in 1820, are now being sought Sy the, latest development of physiological science and the enterprise is siirring up France from centre to circumference. T ? rtl Vi yiA^tr>iivnn + -vr* K An 1 A I iu uaic, tiuu, lcsiauiaiu, un uumtvard. Champs Elysees and Avenue Des ! Accacias, nothing is being talked of bu* j the lost treasures of the Bay of Bis- j cay. j It has a special interest for Amer- , icans. The lost treasure came from | America; the ship which bore it sailed j from America. The basis of the treas- j lire story is briefly 'this: - During the French revolution t! e Count de Saint Paul, instead of fly- ' ing to England like most of the emigres. went to America. There he grew enormously wealthy, and with his waalth he decided to return tQ his native land. For, though he liked the country which ->ad given him oppor- 1 tunity and hospitality, a proud beauty of Brittany held his heart captive. i So he resolved to return ?nu place his heart and fortune at the feet of her whose dark eyes haunted him in all his wanderings. FYPI 1 Hand - tailor* ma IS S2SS&. TL. a tp I M. M wo more &fm No Less X Our Um Mo JVf r>r*<R No extra charges double breasteds to yout individua workshops. 1109 Caldwell St. Opposite Ne 9 His wealth consisted of precious stcncs, mostly diamonds. and gold bars. All w>re carefully packed away in an enormous coffer especially con structed for the treasure. Tlie conn* j chartered a three-masted schooner, Lo ; I I Jeune Henri, to carry homo his dia- . monds and gold. Their vali ? is said to have been at i least ?30.000.000. The good ship j weathered all storms until it reached ! the Bay of Biscay, in rhe vicinity of the Island of Oleron. off the -hor-- of j Brittany. H^-e, within sight of tho Port of St. < . Denis, the good ship Le Jenne Henri j was wrecked, and with it the fortune i of Count de Salm Paul. Within sight of land a mutiny broke out. Some of ! the rough sailormen, maddened wito.j vigil, work and rum, wanted to con- j fiscate the mysterious treasure in the j UI? uu.\. ( The captain was a fierce man, who 1 knew no parley but the pistol. The na- j tives say he armed himself with all the jj I pistols in his armory, and he and his ! mate and his first officer shot and;; killed murderous mutineers until there ' I | wer hardly any left to be drowned I I d j I And the inhabitants base their s^ate- j ment upon -the tradition that the jj bodies of the sailors washed ashore 1 were riddled with bullets. Happily for himself, the Count de j Saint Paul was delayed in the New; World to purchase some presents for Ji his lady love in Brittany. This saved Jh-is life. He took passage by another I steamer, oniv to learn when he reached Brest of the wreck of all his fortune and hopes. -tT ! The woman wno, more uian au^uuu^ i, else, is pressing this search for the! lost treasure, is Mile Guillard de Saint1 i Paul a collateral descendant of the emigrant nobleman. I Brains in Football. | October Outing. There is no combating the states- j men that the "good big man" is bet- j ter than the "good little man," but in i | every case wherein the good big man ( I has made one of those tremendous I reputaripns that belong to a Heffelfinger, a Coy, a Glass, a Hare, a Shealin, a Bomeister, a Cutts, a Blagden or to any of the men who have boasted J of tremendous physique, that physi- > que ihas been topped with both brains i and courage. Indeed, in football, j j brains are inseparable from courage,! ' ii for the mere playing 01 me ga.uc ni | an aimless, blind fury has never pro- r I duced high class football. jj j i mi Miller School. Sharon, October 2.?The Miller j school will be taught this year by Miss I Felicia Spearman, of Newberry. A once. 9 The annual meeting of the stock- : ? holders of the Columbia, Xewbarrv I and Laurens Railroad company will :: be held at the company's office, Xo. j 1124 Taylor street,- Columbia, S. C., at 12 o'clock, m., October 21st, 1913. | C. A. Seabrook, Corirotflrv I J . , " I USIVE I mmmmmmHHMMMMBM sd Garments H V ^ B8B3 V . Na Mnrp ^tt"j~17 xiv iiiviv g/ No Less i > _?? i i nea ndi .00 i I No Less i for extra sizes, TfiiT if i? 1 or iNorroiKs maae 1 measure in oar I i i L. I. Blalock, Mgr. wberry Hotel 1 I Una Mm IViiV 171111 We want you words, but will I come and purch ever, and the pr you can buy the er than elsewhei -1 Uur Clothing quality, down 01 Sizes 34 to 42 pc Boys' suits , Guaranteed rubb Ladies' rain coat; P1MJ >_ Iv^nuaren s ram ci Ladies' long dres Ladies' suits Children's coats, If you want a and have one m to a citv and bu Come in and Black's | Pre 18 bars Laun< 3 boxes Sear 13 boxes Golc 20 Nutmegs 3 sticks Blue A 1 A. j* I /\ny i uc aru We wish to < Cloths, Doilies, .1 _ ? (cutlery or every The best for t We now have ish?no rubbing rlnoe fKp rpst. IVIWtf kAAW Www Don't fon They are go< V ? MMMBIMM?W iiaiitiiiyyiiug . . lil* to reaa mis 11111 mean money to ase. We have a ices are the same, same quality as c . w is up to the mir i the bottom in pi ;r suit er rain coats, 54 in. long . 5, full length >ats s coats, latent styles -ii -i.~i j an siyics aiiu pntcs. real nice suit, we ade to fit cheapei ly a hand-me-dow il L 1ATA VATIlll AhAVl VYC Will ZIWY Dry Gc isn^rifv. J JE"" 7 ' KcmSBBB^BKSSSSHBBBHH Iry Soap chlight Matcl 1 m m i i nn .1 l lvieaai lootr ing cle this week :all your attentii Knives and Foi kind. he least money. 4 : a-plenty of our i or brushing?ji get to ask od for a set of ? 43 son's 11 Stores 10J E ioc; i e ad, not many I \ you if you will 1 fuller stock than I that means that I :heap and cheap- i 1 lute in style and I nee, viz: I $2.98 to $20.00 I $1.00 to $7.00 $5.00 I 1_ $4.50 1 -.. $1.35 to $2.50 I ^ $2.50 to $15 00 I $2.50 up I will measure you I r than you can go I J n. 1 | i you the rest tods Co. =i r ' \ Jl ' ig E ^ 1 25c les - 10c j J i PI/*lre \ ftr I I jl ii/iio x vv m 5c \ 5c A 3 for - 25c | | / jp an to our Table I ks, and Kitchen i amous Shoe Pol- I ast put it on?it y for Receipts. I ] Silver Spoons. I 4 0 Cent U HNBHBBHHHESHMHHMnJl I