The herald and news. (Newberry S.C.) 1903-1937, July 17, 1914, Page THREE, Image 3
DAY iN ABBEVIIAEI !
ONE OF FEATURES
(;OVKK>OH EXPLAINS KKi-K \ >K
(IF i?I< ili;YS;ujiter
Man >]>*';>!> Ven SJsarjih 01
i Jin Cli-irifii <??' t'ri?
went.
The Slate.
A'ibevilie, .July 14.?The cat ipaign ;
i:.e.-ti;:-4 r. re tO'J.i.v w;is o font in j
o:;> c. .1 iii oi unoxpeci'd features. The
governor himself iinorde i the lirsi. ;
when iu gave practically hi* entire j
time to a discussion f the parole of !
1-* 4 ...1 , .... . /vll .1 AI* I
I\. -A. fllv . . V\ !1U U u5 tuunv-ttu .\Ji ;
assault upon his l<>-yiar-o!d adopted
daughter. Thong: the governor con-:
sinned 30 o. his allotted o-"? minutes i
in reading letters and other manu- J
scripts on which the parole was
based, he said tins was neither an
explanation nor an ap-logy. Xor was
it, he said, to be considered as a reply
to anything that had been said on
the stump by opponents, though this
.iv v ? i ? n r*i
case was me nign ngm in me ureeu- j
wood meeting last Saturday. He did
this, he said, in answer to certain reports
that had been circulated in Abbeville
county, and if it had not been
for this, he would not have come to
Abbeville today.
The governor said that Richey,
f^/\n orl> + art V* i n r\ 11 no ti* o o All t
L.1UU5II pai UlCU, ?> ao v^*w
on a $5,000 bond, and that be could (
be reincarcerated at any time, and
would be when ins health so improved
that it would not impose a burden on
the State to keep him in the peni- ^
tentiary. .
Answers Charge. ,
Mr. Jennings added another feature ]
when he read editorial comment from
the Yorkville Enquirer to the effect \
that Messrs. Jennings and Pollock had t
entered the campaign according to a ]
carefully prearranged plan to help i
Senator Smith and that the selfish ]
motive behind it was "probably j
money?expenses paid fr<.m some ]
other source, and a good bonus in 1
addition." The speaker said that if <
+ Vi r\ rt-rjo r\ rrantlAmon Vl ^ n'AlllH i
luc ctucuvi v? cio a. 5cru.i4vjuiciii i-it, nuuiu j
furnish the proof as to the prearrangement
or retract it with the same
publicity.
Mr. Jennings declared tbat otherwise
the writer would show himself
a liar. The charge about money he
den:unced bitterly.
The mayor cff Sumter offered to
withdraw from the race, and in ?d
dition to subscribe $5,000 to the deaf ]
and dumb institute at Cedar Springs 2
if the editor will furnish proof of
his assertion. .
Mr. Pollock, in raking through the ,
"records"' again today, mentioned an- ;
ether member of the governor's staff. |
This latest discovery, according to the (
Cheraw candidate, is the son of the
man who owned the Kingstree paper t
on which James L. Sims of Orangeburg,
as a young man, set type. It
was for this work that the governor (
so strenuously objected to Mr. Sims'
appointment as United States mar- | (
shal, and over which he has gnashed | (
his teeth on many stumps in the | ^
present campaign. j .
The speaker today called for the j i
first hand primary. After subjecting .
the governor's record to a severe
grilling, he asked that all those who
<
indorsed that record to show their
hands. The speaker said about 15
shot up. When asked that all t'r.ose
W t
W who did n:t approve to raise their
hands, there was a general flutterW
ing of hats and waving o;' arms while
c
V the grove behind the court house
Wf echoed with applause.
? Appause for Smith.
. Senator Smith was the first speaker, 1
and was well received and generously (
applauded. He made today his usual c
speech in defense of his record, with- 1
out any apology for working five and ;
cne-'half years in the interests of the 1
farmers. There were many bursts of 1
spontaneous applause in response to (
his appropriate jokes. When he had ^
concluded he was presented with the 1
unique gift of the campaign, which 1
was a last year's cotton stalk of rank \
growth, with all bolls open, and n:>ne 1
i
picked, and with the long staple locks '
' hanging low from the burrs.
There was much applause when this '
was passed up to the stage.
Senator Smith began by saying that
there had been some comment that I
"Cotton" Smith, "Boll Weevil" Smith <
and "Cyclone" Smith had done noth- <
ing. If he hadn't he said, he was <
thankful that 'he was there when the
doing was done. He then read the <
letter from Senator Smith of Geor- ;
1 gia to the Greenville Piedmont, dis- <
^ claiming any credit .f-cr the Smith,cot- 1
ton bill, whom tie governor had said i
was the author. "Senator Smith in- :
troduced the original bill," the letter
ran, "and if any one has given me
xhe lion's share of the credit (for
amending and supporting the bill on i
the floor of the senate), T regret It. j <
To:> much credit can not he given i'
your own Senator F 1 \ Smith."
mm i
Ho tnpn dis'-a.ssed a measure now in :
li. committee eonlVivnce. w ic-Ii v?lun
L i-eecmes law wirhin the x; : w
days, will compel coit-m d-.i'crs u
>;? iv>?r t!ii' sa.ne uraiu of <;>:! ?n a
e ni raet> < :? V for. ' Wi. n vo
i.\! ! ling, > d( liver or i;<
i:valem or you iio to jail i;i con- !
St i-'-Mir-e" he - aiu. in ianatio!. o: ,
iii curbing ;> >\v r o :he coti;?ii
brokers to con! 1 act for H!in : o?
r *;r is and t!u i deliver '"d u
?. .1 or ar.y available "j-nk "
TiiiiiS <?: Ljsjjh.
" e gov. rnor s;x>k< ;:r< . I'y a r
: ior Smith. :!? by <a;. ii
ir 'hat arrangement- had be<-:! maae :
j< - *i.ay ior .Juii v/i iu rt- |
i:Is!i th?> depleted Stale treasury.
T.. rate of interest to be paid is !
o . -1 per cent., the lowest, lie said, j
at w::ich the State had ever been !
i
able to borr w funds. By this decreased
rate his vetoes of the appropriation
bills, he said, had become an
economic advantage.
^.s soon as the governor had fin- j
ished speaking he left the stage, but I
only a scattering few trailed after, j
As the chief executive stepped down
- "? urii. j
mere were repealed cans: oiay aiiu
take your medicine, governor." This
was answered by: "He can't afford
it," which drew much applause. Wl:en
k was remarked that few were retiring
with the governor to the hotel
some one called out: "I bet all those
came over from Anderson."
Mr. Jennings said t'liat Senator
Smith had brought about what he
had done for the price of c:tton so
miic'i and had talked about it so
much that he actually believed that
tie had*done these things. "But you
ire entitled to 'have some one in the
senate who has more than one idea,"
tie added.
In discussing the governor's atti;ude
towards the Charleston situation "
;ie mayor of Sumter said that he did J
not expect to change one blind tiger ^
ir race track gambler's v:te, but that ^
le did expect to open the eyes o. the people
to the fact that t'.iis class of (
people are trying to deceive them into 3
relieving that tnev represent the (
2ause of the people. 'Mr. Jennings '
made sport of the governor's claims '
<
:hat he would turn out the negro mail '
:-lerks when he got to Washington.
"He can not do this," the speaker
?xplained, "until he has repealed the
jivil service laws, and all the sena- 1
::rs in the South can't do that." The
mly way, he said, these negroes could
je deprived of these jobs would be
:o repeal the 14th and 15th amendments,
thus depriving negroes of citisffnshin
rishts.
'"Which is the most harmful,'' he
asked, "a few mail clerks passing
:hrough the State on trains and earn- ]
ng an honest living or 900 convicts
.urned loose in your community, (
criminals of every conceivable type?" '
Mr. Jennings drew a laugh from 5
;he audience when he reminded them 1
hat the governor has repeatediy said *
;hat he 'had nothing to explain yet
:*ame to Abbeville and consumed his '
entire time explaining one case. In
iiscrediting the idea of Ricney's brok- '
?n health, the speaker said: "Charles .
r. Morse, in the federal prison in At:n
rendering a patriotic service to the
ivas nearly dead. Now he is in the
\*orth still robbing tne people."
Mr. Pollock, henceforth, will hold
ilmost a uniaue n'aoe in South lCaro- i
lina politics. The candidate from
2heraw today came to the defense of'
:he newspapers of the State and delounced
as cheap demagoguery the
ittempt to create prejudice thriugh
ittacks on the newsappers.
The speaker said: "I am tired of
:he cheap political demagoguery that
las sought to array class against
.iass. I am disgusted with the abuse
>: the newspapers and the newspaper
nen. A free press is essential to j
'ree government, and my experience J
s that the newspaper mon?the editors
and the -reporters?are as fine a
^lass of our citizenship as any we
aave in the State. It is through the >
lewspapers that the people are In- '
?ormed of what is going on. They j
:urn on the white light of truth, and j
t nnlv thp Hpnia?n?ri]p that wishes I
lis real self kept "rom the view of j
:he people. It is cnly he who abuses
ind villifies the newspapers. But such
*buse will not deter the newspaers
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 6).
IT| fn
$> <&!
s> SENATORIAL CAMPAIGN. <S>
<s>
< ><?><$><$><?> ^ < ><$><$><?>
Pickens?Friday, July 17.
Greenville?Saturday, July 18.
Laurens?Wednesday, July 22.
Columbia?Thursday, July 23.
Lexington?Friday, July 24.
Saluda?Saturday, July 25.
Edgefield?Wednesday, July 29.
Aiken?Thursday, July 30.
Camden?Tuesday, August 4.
Chesterfield?Wednesday, August 5.
BennettsvilLe?Friday, August 7.
Darlington?Saturday, Ar.'rust S.
COULD NOT |y
' I |
Mrs. Baker So Weak?Could 1
Not. Do Her Work?Found j ; j
Relief In Nove! Way,
I *
A. vlrin u.,h. ? ' I s:;.::' red terribly \ j
witii i?. weakner:: ar.' backache and j
F;..- ? ? got so v?vai: that I I
I > ' could hard!;; do my S
\ ' r J V v. i work. Y/hen. I j
I 0 y' : wash- d my dishes I! :
jVx-Tv ! hr.d to sit down and ;
x.~\? y I wl en I would sweep !
v;1 ? ?. j the floor I would get j
j so weak that I would j
IllRv^^Plti:!! have to get a drink i .
ff'. every few minutes, |
' i: I VI / and before i cua my | ^
N / i ' dusting I would have I ,|a?
?? to lie down. I got j
so poorly that my folks thought I was 3tr
going into consumption. One day I fj|
found a piece of paper blowing around
the yard and I picked it up and read it. 'i
It said 'Saved from the Grave,' and W
told what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta- tavble
Compound has done for women. I j i
showed it to my husband and he said, j
' Why don't you try it ?' So I did, and '
after I had taken two bottles I felt
better and I said to my husband, 'I don't yl
need any more,' and he said 'You had
better take it a little longer anyway.'
So I took it for three months and got
well and strong." ? Mrs. Alonzo E.
Baker, 9 Tecumseh St., Adrian, Mich. ,v
Not Well Enough to Work.
In these words is hidden the tragedy
of many a woman, housekeeper or wage A
earner who supports herself and is often | gest
helping to support a family, on meagre corn
wages. Whether in house, office, fac- tive
tory, shop, store or kitchen, woman
should remember that there is one tried
and true remedy for the ills to which all
women are prone, and that is Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It >
promotes that vigor which makes work A
easy. The Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine M
Co., Lynn, Mass. M
Bisliopville?Monday, August 10.
Florence?luesaay, August 11. H
Dillon?Wednesday, August 12. V
Marion?Thursday, August 13. ^
"onway?Friday, August 14. I
Kingstree?Saturday, Augst 15. T]
Georgetown?Monday, August 17. lu
Vlonck's Corner?^Tuesday, August 18. ever
Manning?Wednesday, August 19. good
Sumter?Thursday, August 20. IT"
plas
HAPPY WOXES. ^
kniv
Plenty of Them in dewberry, and Good that
Keason .For It. may
cutt:
IT"
Wouldn't any woman be happy, righ
After years of backache suffering, It's ,
Days of misery, night of unrest, Pam
The distress of urinary troubles,
vvnen sne nnas ireecom. j
Many readers will profic by the fol- all
[owing: wisl1
go.
Mrs. J. L. McNeill, Musgrove St., U(^
Clinton, S. C., says: "I was subject to (
ittacks of kidney complaint and my
)ack pained me intensely. Often I befo
?plt rii77.v and nprvniic and T notirpri Pr
;hat the secretions from my kidneys ply
;vere unnatural. Seeing Doan's Kid- Doa;
iey Pills advertised, I got a supply at Mrs.
Young's Pharmacy and it was not long Co.,
THIRTE
Annual E?
to
Atlanta
via
C. N. & L and Seal
m ? vi
1 uesday, July
Columbia 7:30 a. m. $3.50 Pi
Irmo 7:54 a.m. 3.50 N
Ballentine .. .S:04 a. m. 3.30 Ja
White Rock..8:11 a. m. 3.50 G;
Hilton 8:15 a. m. 3.50 K
Chapin 8:24 a. m. 3.50 G<
Lt. Mountain.8:36 a. m. 3.50 Ls
Slighs S43 a. m. 3.50 CI
ARRIVE ATI, A NT
Tickets good on special trair
station 7:30 a. m. Returning
except No. 6 leaving Atlanta
original starting point befor
July 25.
TP /-v-M nft-f/wiwinfirtn n
JL1 ui UCLCUICU. mxvunaiavn ^
agent or write
E. A. Tarrer, C. A. J. S.
C. N. & L.
Theme 1040
I
I
r
\\\r
w. t v;
:A\ >v-.~-f 1 /
SV > / /%%;\i,V>! i '
V ^-L / - J ?.-_J">
~-n vT"^ : . "* % ^ ;
--," . . 4 !;" \ M.#* /) i
Ji:t) bE\?l ^' ^ /' : yi 'r'r';
- ^thecrr, !
r.Vv . V i^rms fr* v\ v <| \ \Sj
~~~ \J I ' y j
3 j
-1". I t! ; t < f ?. :.i ., th -a I
tied '/> tbe ?;<" > or s > : ft ed for ten B
i' ti t-. l: u -1 an t morning j} j
< - ;: " t.-. \v: 1 PREVENT %
'- ? < weri?. I !
*r : be?.o:..o v. jr;:is, and worms g
'ise hogs siri;. (i.vc n;e :i cnance I
L i-ic .se gerra-i and worms and I'll I
r/fjcirt SAVE YOL'K HOGS
DO?S!"\
1 am
Red Devil Lye.
IN BIG CANS f- r t
cost you only xl,
('mlllirabi ^sua' *>ri'e ^ ?My
iTS-IF For Corns On j
Your Figgy-Wiggies! I
Puttering With Corns. Use This I
Sure, Sew-Plan Corn Cure. 1
few drops of "GETS-IT." the big- ]
stller in the world today of any
remedy, is enough to spell posidoom
to the fiercest corn that
hese little toes These little toes
id "GETS-IT" had none. i
cemented itself to a toe. It's ?
l-bye Johnnie. You apply "GETS- I
in two seconds?no fussing with k
ters that don't stay put, with 1
es that make corns "pull" and
e the toe beefy and raw, with
es, scrissors, razors and diggers
make corns grow faster and that
cause blood poison from corning
and corn-bleeding. "GETSshrivels
up corns, they come j*(
t off.( That's the new-principle.
just common sense. No more corns.
"GETS-IT" is safe, and never
s the flesh. Get rid of corns and q
lses. f
rETS-IT" is old at 25c a bottle by
druggists, or sent direct if you
^ ?~ TT* T a n r\ J?, P a P'nioo
i, II Uill XL/. Uct *y J ClivT oc vuiva
n
rETS-IT'' is old in Newberry by
r. Mayes and P. E. Way.
re they made me well."
ice 50c., at all dealers. Don't sim- H
ask for a kidney remedy?get ^
a's Kidney Pills?4.he same that! x
McNeill had. Foster-Milburn
Props. Buffalo, N. Y. SJ
rr
I &
ENTH !.
! ^
ccursion L
:
ij G3.9
I
j
loard Air line
I
21,1914 j
rosperity.. .8:54 a. m. $3 50
ewberry 9:13 a.m. 350
lapa 9:30 a.m. 3.50
ify 9:37 a. 111. 3.50
inard 9:44 a. m. 3.00
olclville 9:54 a. in. 3 00
mrens S.20 a. m. 3.00
inton.... 10:15 a.m. 3.00
A 4:30 p. m.
1 leaving Gervais street
good on regular trains,
12:10 p. m., to reach
e midnight Saturday,
all on any C. N. & L.
. Etchberger, T. P. A.,
Seaboard Air Line.
Phone 574
JJ ac "r*pmtm-i. .i.: iwuwili?CBPL?B1 J
KMT
llPans'Onnl~
/1"Oomans Drink(
venjhodt/s Uriah [,
IiZ t&XZStt I / V.-V..-..-V ... ..
W \ Tigorously good ~
^ delicious. Thir
and refreshing.
The national b<
i ?and you
Demand the genuine by f
Nicknames encourage sul
TTJi? mr a mi a C(
Geneva AtIan^ Ga.
ou see an
\.rrow think
f Coca-Cola. ^ __
The telephone goes ban
J
oaus.
The telephone overcom
les of bad roads and maki
irmer and other rural reside
ess in the city and
oads are impassable. ?.
Progressive farmers are
oads and telephones. Tli
loaern civilization are doinj
Dward eliminating the isola
rou can have a telephone ir
mall cost. Send a postal
iving complete informatior
FARMERS' LINE DE
SOUTHERN BELL TEL1
IND TELEGRAPH CO
A DELIGl
16-Day
August 4 to
Niagara Falls, Toronto, Lak
Islands, Hudson Rivei
and one wee
Atlantic
"The Playgrounds oi
-VIA THJ
Seaboard Air L
AND CONNEC
ALL EXPENSES
A high class tour: Dining <
ship and Hotel Service, coveri
J
country by daylight. Persons
C. H. Gattis and chaperoned t
Gattis Touri*
RALEIGH,
A 4-v?/-\vi4-n C/^OKaovt)
XUUilbL ngcuto ucouuaiu
Write for Be
i i?! ! ! in i ii i 11 i >ii111 umiifn?TmiHtnm
iA ' ':^ M0
. itfi-J'. .. , : ?',??
. a. /<:
-A*
' * V >## \
. ' / ' V
- and keenly I
st-auenchins
average
I IB? ? ?
mmammaaBmaassmmmm >
?!
' % *"^sK
relephone
t T> 1
ooa Koaas
id in hand with good
X .1 L-?
es many 01 me uusia.es
it possible for the
:nts to transact busineighbors
when the
insisting upon good
lese two agencies of
y more than all others
tion of country life.
1 your home at very
for our free booklet1
1.
t
PARTMENT
SPHONE
MP ANY
HTFUL
Tour
19,1914
e Ontario, Thousand
r, New York
k at
City,
: the World"
A
3ine
Railway
JTIONS
INCLUDED
Oar, Pullman, Steamng
the beautiful scenic
illy conducted by Mr.
>y Mrs. Gattis.
st Agency
n n
. . . I
A iv* T ina P
nail vv aj .
)oklet. |