The herald and news. (Newberry S.C.) 1903-1937, September 01, 1914, Page SIX, Image 6
WIN Y AH Ll'MBEK VO***" ' *
FLAM DESTROYED
Fire at (ieoraretown Consumes Property
Worth $100,000?Covered
by Insurance.
Xpws and Courier.
~ ~ ~ I
Georgetown, Ai'g. 27.?Fire, begin-,
ning a: 11:45 o'clock last night, de- j
stroyed the big lumber mill and yards
of the Winyah Lumber company, situated
at the eastern end of the city.
i
The loss will be $100,000 ormore. It
is rnvprpH hv insurance. The orisin :
of the fire is not known. It started :
i
in a lumber shed adjoining the main j
building and spread quickly to the
whole plant. Four million feet of |
lumber was burned and 50,000 feet j<
saved. Two lighters laden with lum-:
ber were partly burned. 'The fire ,
was the largest and most spectacular
since the burning of the Atlantic j
Coast Lumber company's plant in j
April of last year. T.e loss is covered j
by insurance. President Doyle, of <
the company, says it is the purpose! ]
to rebuild and that a mill modern in J
every detail will arise 011 the ruins. [ ]
HE HAD TOO MANY WIVES
i !
Young Mil at Greenville Gets Lonari
Sentence.
Xftws anri Courier
Greenville, Aug. 27.?Luther Haw-!
kins, 30 years old, charged with hav-,
ing five wives in three Slates, was sen-j tenced
to serve four years and six j
months on tfce cham gang and pay a;
fine of $5,000 in criminal court here i
today. The scene was a touching one ,
as the man stood to receive bis senI
tence. The wives and their relations
stood near by and gazed upon the
broken man more with sadness than
reproach. His last wife, a mill girl
of this place, is not more than 17
years old. She has stood by him
-throughout.
^ 1
i\
A FAMOUS POEM
Author Tells How Site Came to Write!
the Celebrated Verse.
Los Angeles Dispatch to the New j
York World. |;
'When I was 16 and wrote "Cur- !
few shall not right tonight!" I little;
) imagined that it was destined to make ;1
famous the little church in England:
v/here its scene was laid, enrich nu- j
xnerous publishers and make a fortune !.
tor the men who bought the timbers i
'jpon which the old bell hung, and sold ! J
souvenirs made from them," said Mrs. |
'Rose Hardwich Thrope, who wrote the '
iamous peom.
"Directly, I have never received, a 1
cent from the peom, but, o?f course, it
gave me a name and enabled me to
.find a market for other poems I have 1
written. It also got me recognition
from Queen Victoria. In cact, the
people of England have shown much 1
more appreciation for my work than
Jtiie people of my own country."
Incident Was True. 1
""Was the incident true which is related
in the poem?"' ^
"Indeed it was and has since been
proved, though I did not know it at j the
time. I will be 64 \imorrow and '
I wrote 'Curfew' in my 1 GtIi year, i
April 3, 1S67, when 1 was living at i
Litchfield, Mich. The incident was j1
taken from a story in Petersen's Mag- j
azine of September, 1S65. Tee story t:
nas eiiuuea juove ana L?oyaii;y.
"I sent the poem to the Commercial , Tribune,
in Detroit, and the editor j
published it. It gained recognition al- ^
most immediately, and the editor
wrote me that he felt ashamed to j
have accepted the poem as under the
rules of the paper he was not allowed
to pay for verse. He said the
poem had been copied all over the
world and suggested that if I wrote J
n T> TT TYl/iT?a T pVlrtliM ?* -? ? ? !
cAiij liivic J. ouuuiu ocuu fuuui iv iiitag*
azines.
"Curfew attracted so much attention (
in England that Queen Victoria appointed
a commission to verify the incident.
The commission located the
church in Chertsey and found the old
bell, which had been cast in 1310. An j enterprising
Englishman took the tim- j
" bers and made clappers for miniature j bells
which 'he sold as souvenirs o.' the :
bell about which 'Curfew' was written. :
.He reaped a fortune.
T f~ave had my reward in the :
knowledge that, the world appreciated
.'he-story T told, and innumerable testimonials
that I have received show
Hsr Terse Called "Nonsense." *
Mrs 'TArope is now living in San
Diego, chough, she goes East every
summer to visit her native place in
irenuniscences of her early literary
career. As a little girl, she says, she
wrote her verses on the wrapping paper
that came to the ihouse from the
3tores where her parents dealt. She |
was an twcasiuudi wuiuuuwr 01 verse
to the Detroit papers when she was
very young and took her payment in
glory.
Her parents did not take kiudxy to |
)
her "scribblings."
"When I was about half way
through with 'Curfew' she narrates,
"my mother came into my room to
te1.! me that a girl friend had cailoi
anu i mrst go down to entertain 1 -r.
"'Oh, mother!' I erclaimed, 'Can't
she wait a few minutes?"
".My mcthe' was persuaded with df-1
i
ucuUy, ao':e.?ting at iast my expl&ns- j
tion that I had a 'sum' to do. 'Very J
well.' she argeed. 'I suppose I can
entertain her for a "while. Bu* come
down as soon as you can and don't
waste any more of your time on that
nonsense.'"
The Famous Foem in Full. j
The vogue of "Curfew Shall Not
Ring Tonigut" has never died out, and ^
it is worth reproduction as follows:
* ! i
Slowly England's sun was setting 0 erj (
the hilltops far away.
Filling all the land with beauty at the
close of one sad day;
i
\nd the last rays kissed the forehead {
L
of a man and maiden fair?
He with footsteps slow and weary, she
with sunny floating hair;
Fie with bowed head, sad and thoughtful.
she with lips all cool and
I
white,
Struggling to keep back thf- murmur,
"Cur.ew must not ring tonight."
'
'Sexton,'* Bessie's white lips faltered,
pointing to that prison old,
With its turrets tall and gloomy, with
its walls dark, damp rnd cold,
'I've a lover in that prison doomed
thi<; vprv rn?hr fr> dip
At the ringing of the curfew, and no!
earthly 'help is nigh!
Cromwell will not come till sunset,"
and her face grew strangely white
As s?e breathed the husky whisper:
"Curfew must not ring tonight!"
"Bessie," calmly spoke the sexton?
and his accents pierced her heart
Like the piercing of an arrow, like a
deadly poisoned dart?
"Long, long years I've rung the curW-N
4- V\ r*? 4- ^vl XV <-? w /n Vi n /I ??? /s J
ten livui iiiciL giuum^ buauuweu j
tower:
Every evening just at sunset it has l
told the twilight hour;
I have done my duty ever, tried to do
it just and right;Xow
I'm old I still must do it: Curfew,
girl, must ring tonight!"
Wild her eyes and pale ier features,
stern and white her thoughtful
brow,
A.nd within her secret bosom Bessie
made a solemn vow;
She had listened while the Judges
read, without a tear or sigh,
'At the ringing of the curfew Basil
Underwood must die!"
^nd her breath came fast and faster
and icer eyes grew large and ; j
bright?
^s in undertone she mumured: "Curi.ew
must not ring tonight!"
With quick steps she bounded forward,
sprang within the old j
church door,
-.eft the old man treading slowly paths
ne'd trod so o-.t before;
\'ot one moment paused the maiden,
but with eye and cheek aglow
Mounted up the gloomy tower, where
the bell swung to and fro;
\s she climbed the dusty ladder, on '
which fell no ray of light,
l"p and up her white lips- saying:
"Curfew must not ring tonight!''
She had reached the topmost ladder,
o'er her hangs the great dark bell,
^wful is the gloom beneath her, like
the pathawv down to hell;
Lo. t'.e ponderous tongue is swinging,
'tic tllo hnilr- rvf Pnrfoir ?% /vti"
CAO UVUi VfX LH-T >> y
A.nd the sight has chilled her bosom,
stopped her breath and paled her 1
brow, <
Shall she let it ring? Xo, never! Flash 1
her eyes with sudden light.
ks she springs and grasps it firmly? 1
'Curfew shall not ring tonight."
Dut she swung, far out, tfhe city seemed
a tiny speck below;
rhere, 'twixt heaven and earth suspended,
as the bell swung to and
fro;
kvA the half deaif Skxton ringing
(years he had not heard the bell,) (
A.nd hp fho-i^hf f*hp f"tvi 1 i<rhf Hnrt'ptv
rang young Basil's i:'unera! knell;
Still thfe maiden clinging firmly, cheek .
and brow so pale and white,
Stilled cer frightened heart's wild .
beating?"Curfew shall not ring
tonight." (
[t was o'er?the bell ceased swaying,
and the maiden stepped once more
Firmly on the damp old ladder, where
(for hundred, years before
Human foot had not planted; and .
nrV? n r r- V* s\ 111 Jri ? C4- V. ? J J ? ? ?
r> iio.i. sue tuio ui^ui UdU QUELS
Should be told in long years after?as
the rays of setting sun
Light the sky with mellow beauty,
aged sires with (heads of white
Tell their children why the Curfew
did not ring that one sad night.
O'er the distant hills came Cromwell;
Bessie saw him, and 'her brow,
Lately white with sickening terror,
glows with sudden beauty now;
At his feet she told her story, showe(
her ?ands all bruised and torn;
And her sweet young face so haggard
with a look so sad and worn,
Touched his heart with sudden pitylit.
his eyes with misty light;
"Go. your lover lives," cried Cromwell
"Curfew shall not ring tonight."
Diseases of Plants.
More than 125 diseases of plant,
have been traced to bacterial para
sites, according to Proif. X. F. Barrus
of the Xew York State college o
A crrir'iilfiiro TVipqp Hicphspc arp char.
acterized as blights, rots and galls oi
tubercles, and familiar examples an
2rowd gall of fruit trees, black rot ol
?aggage and fire blight of apple, peai
and quince. Even more numerous ar?
:he diseases due to l'ungi, a low or3er
of plants, somewhat higher in the
scale of life than bacteria. The parasitic
fungi include apple, scab, grain
*ust and smut, and potato blight. A
ew diseases?such as the club root oi
cabbage?are caused by slime moulds,
i third low form of plant life.
CHICHESTER S PILLS
THE DIAMOND BRAND. A
Ladles! Ask your Druirjjist for
^S\ t'hl-ehcs-ter s Diamond Krand/jA\
I' llls in Rod and Gold metallic VMv
ty/'r3 ^oxes? sealed with Blue Ribbon. \/
JW Take no other. Buy of your ?
fj ~ iff Drncctst. AskforCIH-CIiES-TER S
L. Jjf DIAMOND BRAND PILLS, for fcj
\ "C* jr4 yearsknownasBest.Safest.AlwaysReliaKe
^?r SOLD BY nRUOQiSTS
Kidney Trouble?if you suff, write today
for sample bottle of Whittle's
Epsom-Lithia water. The most effective
water for curing Rheumatism,
Diabetes, Brights disease. A
wonderful Uric Crystal solvent an(
Anirt Eliminator. Heals the weal
Kidneys Readily. Write at onc(
Whittle Springs Co., Whittl<
Springs, E. Tenn.
Summerland College
For Young Women!
Courses: Literary, Music,
(Piano, Voice, Violin.)
Preparatory course for those
not sufficiently advanced
to enter College,
Next Session Begins Sept. 16
For catalogue address
P. E. MONROE,
T *11 _ O O
jjeesvme, o. kj.
HAPPY WOMEN.
Plenty of Tlieni in dewberry, and Goot
Reason for It.
Wouldn't any woman be happy,
After years of backache suffering,
Days of misery, night al unrest,
The distress of urinary troubles,
When she finds freedom.
Many readers will profit by the following:
Mrs. J. L. McNeill, Musgrove St.
Clinton, S. C., says: "I was subject t<
attacks of kidney compiaint and m3
back pained me intensely. Often j
felt dizzy and nervous and I noticec
that the secretions from my kidney*
were unnatural. Seeing Doar.'s Kid
ney Pills advertised, I got a supply a
Young's Pharmacy and it was not lon?
before they made me well."
Price 50c., at all dealers. Don't sim
ply ask for a kidney remedy?ge'
n^on'-c? t<Ti r? n qtt Pil 1 O camo tbfl'
L/VUil O Ak-JUUVJ A- M ? vMV?
Mrs. McNeill had. Foster-Milbun
Co., Props. Buffalo. N. Y.
NOTICE FINAL SETTLEMENT.
Notice is hereby given that I wil
make final settlement, as guardian
on the estates of Lottie, Ollie and Le
roy Shealy, minors, in the probata
?ourt for Newberry county at 11
:>'clock in the forenoon, Septembei
16th, 1914, and immediately tbereaftei
apply for leters dismissory as suci
guardian.
Ail persons baring claims agains
said estates will present them duly at
tested on or before that date.
P. D. Metzs,
Guardian.
CHICHESTER S PILLS
TIIE DLAMOND BRAND. /.
LadlesI Ask your DrngsUt for A\
Chl-ches-ter8 Diamond Brand//%\
Fulls in Red and t' old niftaiiic^^/
% _boxes. sealed with Eiue RiM-on. \T/
' ? n.it- Tnni. V
p/ ? ftf ??ruir<rl?t- A.kforClII.Vlft;s.TER?
I ^ I;f DiAjif'O : ?. f..r oc
y?5rikn"V.T.a?;: W. >s?. > . !
>*~a* ' j ^ _ , _ t
11 ^ p
The IV
? I
ce
?i
f
c Are the mer
SAVE THEIR
and foolish exp
the Bank, wher
| and where you <
rack in fimp nf 1
VIA011 AAA bllliV \/A 4
to accumulate
account.
The New
; I
ii
:
unamMammmmmmmmmwmmamammmmmammmmmmm?mmmmmwmmmummmmmmmmm
J
!
J/JWV) l
OFALLIUNDS (fa A
TOILET ARTICLES.^?!
JP
I> \0 OTHER
I
line is such strict attention demanded
as in the compounding of drugs. In
order to avoid the disastrous result
entailed by carelessness, we employ
, none but he most reliable clerks.
' If we compound your medicines for
you, you can rely upon their accuracy.
Mayes' Drug Store
i
Phone 133 Newberry, S. C.
[[ JAI 'i
H Worn Out? [I
No doubt you are, if I
you suffer from any of the S I i
numerous ailments to 11
rajp which ail women are subjprj
ject. Headache, back- Ow
- ache, sideache, nervousness,
weak, tired feeling, Jp*
I are some 01 we symp- rA
toms, and you must rid m
yourself of them in order
to feel well. Thousands
of women, who have
been benefited by this I
remedy, urge you to
TAKE 1 j
a Cardui ?
M 11 n. nr. T?.U
Sinews i urns
Mrs. Sylvania Woods, 9 8
of Clifton Mills, Ky., says: i I
"Before taking Car dui,
I was, at times, so weak I B B ;
could hardly walk, and '
- J ^9 the pain in my back and jg&? [
;; head nearly killed me. Ww j
L After taking three bottles
?* ^ardui?the pains <^s" n
: 111 appeared. Now I feel as |
ill! wel* ^ * ever did. Every
H suffering woman snouia
try Cardui." Get a bottle
today. E-68 11
How To Give Quinine To Children. |
TT TW ic tVio nomo frirron fo an I
improved Quinine. It is a Tasteless Syrup, pleasant
to take and does not disturb the stomach.
Children take it and never know it is Quinine.
Also especially adapted to adults who cannot
take ordinary Quinine. Does not nauseate nor
cause nervousness nor ringing in the head. Try
it the next time you need Quinine for any p'\r- i
j pose. A^k for 2-ounce original package. j
j name FKBRILINU is blown itjboul'*. 25 c <
len Wh<
ed in Lii
i who HAVE THE
* M ? T W-l ? T ^
MUlNJbI. Ult out
>enditures and put 1
e it will draw compc
:an get it when you w
need is a great relief,
some money. $1.
Lavvit Qmnni
ucujf oaviiii
dewberry, S. C.
The telephone goes h:
roads.
The telephone overcoi
cles of bad roads and ma
farmer and other rural resii
ness in the city and
roads are impassable.
Progressive farmers ar
roads and telephones. 1
modern civilization are doi
toward eliminating the iso
You can have a telephone
small cost. Send a posta
giving complete informati<
FARMERS' LINE E
J
SOUTHERN BELL TE1
AND TELEGRAPH C<
OBaaBSBBMBHnHBnHHHBMBHHBHBi
Sell Us Your
I -_1 17 M..
L-eaKy rounu
We will allow you ci
worn out) in exchs
Jewel, 2 quart fountain
Credit for old syringe__.
Costs you only
Queen, 2 quart fountain
Credit for old syringe...
Costs you only......
Magnolia, 3 quart fount
Credit for old syringe....
Costs you only
Think of getting
e
it* o xr v i n rr o c
Ill O jf I 1 11 g v w
EVERY ONE WAI
GILDER &
3 SllC- J
LO
NERVE TO %
your usseless M
that money in fl
mnd interest}
ant it. Ready H
Start to-day H
.00 opens an fl
is Dank,
Telephone
j
jood Roads '
ind in hand with good i
[lies many u 1 uic uusuikes
it possible for the1
dents to transact busii,
neighbors when th& '
e insisting upon good 1
?hese two agencies of
ng more than all others i
lation of country life.
in o t" T7ATV
XIX JUU1 XXVU1V Ob T V1J M|
1 for our free booklets
on.
)EPARTMENT \
LEPHONE ^JlV
OMPANY &AJS
i
Old Worn, ^
lin Syringe
'edit for it (even if 3fl
tnge as follows: 8
syringe $1.00 H
syringe 1.25 H
.... .50 |
.75
;ain syringe.. ZOO
J 1.25
i
.75
?
I such values L
for 75 cents r
GRANTED BY i I
WEEKS I
t