University of South Carolina Libraries
PURELY PERSONAL F * ffke Movements of Many People, Sewberrians, and Th<?s^ Who Visit Jewberry0 Dr. and Mrs. J. K. Gilder, Jr., have moved from Atlanta to New York. Mrs. O. Wells is in Darlington visiting her daughter, Mrs. J. L. Welling. " Mr. Will Buford of Newberry spent Sunday in Clinton.?Clinton Gazette. Mrs. i.Mattie Quattlebaum of Columbia is visiting relatives in the country. Miss Gertrude Smith of Orangeburg is visiting Miss Mary Frances Pool. Mr George Bobb of Columbia spent Sunday with relatives in the Bactiman chapel section. Mrs. J. J. Vandiver of Ayersville, Ga., is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Chesley Dominick. ' Miss Eloise Brown, after visiting Mrs. H. L. Parr, has returned to her frome at Cross Hill. Mr. James (jamara ana ms sister, Miss Abbie Gaillard, will leave on Tuesday to visit relatives in Pendleton. iMiss Susie Davenport will return on Tuesday to Belfast, after -visiting Miss Abbie Gaillard. / Mr. Bob Leavelle of Newberry is one of the guests at C. More" cottage on Sullivan's Island.?Charleston Post. / Master William Brown of Columbia is visiting Master Wr. B. Oxner in Newberry. Mr. Barton Copeland has returned fro mthe Columbia hospital and is at work again! Miss Bessie Taylor of Prosperity is visiting her bro'tner, Dr. E. P. Taylor. ?Batesburg Herald. Mr. J. W. Courtney of Newberry spent last week with friends in Batesburg.?Batestburg Herald. XT?.T 1 ? A An rr> r? ,VTiiTrK^rrTT lVli^S Cily vri CJ auamo ui ?? j is the guest of Miss Rachel Counts.? Union Times. Mrs. Davenport of Newberry is /is~ _iting i:er sister, Mrs. P. B. Waters, Sr. ?Johnston cor. .Edgefield Advertiser. Miss Juanita L.angrord returned on Friday to Georgetown, after a visit to relatives in Newberry. Miss Pearle Lake of Newberry is "visiting Mr. T. H. Boozer and family.? Clinton Chronicle. Miss Marian Jones ot Newberry is visiting Miss Ame Copeland.?Clinton Gazette. Miss Alice Devore has returned from a visit to friends in Newberry.?Ninety Six cor. Greenwood Tribune. , Mr. Bb Copeland of Laurens was the accompanist of Solicitor Cooper to Newberry last week. Mr. Robert E. Leavell returned last 1 Week from a three days' fishing trip on Sullivan's Island. Miss Estelle Caldwell returned from ivisiting relatives in Saluda county last week. Tk- /"? T? ir. nniV Vi * r. f n m Ul~. v. x>. iXld.v CI rr uu, witu mo iouiily, is spending some time in Laurens, was in Newberry on Saturday. Mrs. J. E. Muldrow of Bishopville * arrived on Monday to visit her parents, iVlir. and Mrs. F. W. Higgins. Misses Lela and Sudie Dennis of Newberry are guests of Mrs. R. J. Hollingsworth.?Cross Hill cor. The State. Miss Margaret Mcintosh returned last week from visiting relatives in Augusta. Welch Wilbur of Newberry is among this week's arrivals.?Murrell's Inlet cor. The State. Mr. Ellesor Adams, who holds tfae WHitmire end or tne southern urower line,with a firm hand, is spending his vacation in Newberry. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Wicker of Newberry are the guests of M!r. and Mrs. L. B. Cromer.?Ninety Six cor. Greenwood Tribune. Pat /Mitchell of Prosperity spent several days here with his cousin, E. K. Mitchell, this week.?Batesburg cor. fffce State. Mr. and Mrs. It. G. Smith of Newberry were guests this week of Mr. and Mrs. T. L. 'Cely and Mrs. J. L. Tribble.?Anderson cor. The State. Wilbur Sale returned on Sunday to Union, accompanied as far as Columbia hv his hrnther Frederick, who is visiting relatives in that city. iMirs. J. S. Smith and family of Newberry spent tee week-end with Mrs. Smith's mother, Mrs. E. C. Cornelous. on Second street.?Columbia Record. Mrs. Smith and daughter, Miss Lucile Smitl:, of Newberry are guests of Mrs. J. 1m Walker.?Johnston cor. The State. Mr. J. Lurey will leave on Tuesday or Wednesday for New York and Boston to lay in a new supply of fine shoes for the fall and winter. Judge and Mrs. T. S. Sease and chilHi - dren are home from an extended visit in Newberry county.?Spartanburg Journal. i\lr. S. R. Taylor, auditor of the Gulf and Atlantic Insurance company, is in Newberry this week with t):e local agent, Mr. Allen Counts. Mr. Ferd Scurry, who was carried to the Columbia hospital last week by TTk L T ? ^ D O ny c trvnrl tV?0 nnOfU. j U, I. JUU. U. kJCLtlll , 01.UI/U tion and is doing well. Mr. Alfred C. Matthews came from | Columbia with Commissioner Watson 1 last week for a brief visit to New-: . berry. j Mr. Henry B. Wells left on Monday ' for Cincinnati, to be gone a week, atj tending t?_e International Association of Fire Engineers. Miss Minnie B. Merchant and son (Ernest of Blackville are visiting Mrs. P. C. Gaillard and other relatives in the city and county. Mrs. B. W. Hand of Graniteville and Mrs. jtiasen w. ^tuucii ui bnancsiuu j are visiting tLeir brother, Col. L. P. I Miller, at Enoree plantation. Miss Lmily^i^wkley, of Atlanta is j visiting her father, l.M.r. Irby D. Shock- j ! ley, who is ill at the home of his! j daughter, Mrs. Ossie T. Stewart. { Miss Maude_ Weinheimer, who has. I been visiting Mr. W. E. Long and Mr. i C. B. Spinks, returned to her home in Charleston on Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Parr have re-; turned from attending the missionary! .1; i 4ii TT ! | meeting at ah xieanug 0^111155, \jr<a?j tonia, X. C. Mr. James McCullough returned on Monday to Columbia, leaving Mrs. McCullough visiting relatives in the Col! only section. Miss Agnes Adams, a pleasant young lady from the Mt. Pleasant community, returned to her home on Monday after a pleasant visit to relatives and friends in Newberry. Among the home-comers may be ^mentioned Mr. Lambert W. Jones and -| Miss Annie T? Jones, who"*ave just re turned from a visit to 'Atlanticville on Sullivan's Island. Mr. Nick P. Mitchell has returned I from Blue Ridge and Asheville. We j (*.on't know whether he went to the | blue ridge mountains of (Virginia and ; saw that lonesome pine or knpt. j Walter H. Hunt, president of the ; Oakland mills, Newberry, S. C., and ; John M. Kinard, vice-president, were I in New .York on business last week.? i Mill News. iMSsses Rachel and Iva Counts -'ill . give a moonlight picnic Friday eveni ing, in compliment to their house ' guests, Misses Nellie Adams and Ethel Russell of Newberry.?Union Times. i Mr. R. C. Shands and family left this week for Whitmire, where they will make their future home. T-ey have | many friends here who regret to see I them leaves.?Union Times. Mr. Fred H. Dominick of iNewberry in a nifr loot niarVif nn rAiilo | aiiiTvu iu iuc v/itj iaov, ux^ui i ! to Snow Hill, wfcere he will make an address before a gathering of Woodmen at a picnic tomorrow.?Anderson Int3lligencer. Agent ;T. S. Lefler says the Southdaughter, Harriette, of McCormick, are visiting relatives here. They will also visit in Newberry before returning to their home.?Greenwood Journal. Mrs. George Wright and daughter, Elizabeth, of Newberry were recent; visitors of Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Austin j of the; Trinity Ridge section.?Laurensville Heradl. Mrs. Austin was formerly Miss Lillian Glenn, when Mrs. Wright was Miss Beta Leavell. Miss Sadie Goggans, having finished at the "Peabody institute, returned on Sunday from Nashville, Tenn. No resignation fzas caused more general regret than has the resignation of Miss Goggans as supervising teacher of VoivViorrr nnnnt-v QVio will ontpp linnn V/ ?' k/VA 1 J VVU1A WJ " *** V**vv* j the discharge of her duties in a sim- i ilar position in Richland county this week, and the people of tftat county will find that there was never a better one. VARIOUS AJiTI ALL ABOUTIs a Tomato a Fruit or Vegetable.? Headline. It is a good thing. Miss Mazie Dominick will begin her class in. music September 20. The Barnwell People says good roads lead not only to town, but to money. The Calendar society will meet Thursday afternoon at 5 o'clock at the home of Mrs. uan wicKer. Don't forget the park benefit performance at the opera house on Wednesday. ' The latest buyers of Fords are Messrs. G. W. Summer, J. W. Stegall and B. H. (McGraw. Miss Maud Epting was given the^ Newberry college scholarship awarded by the Calvin Crozier chapter. It is rumored that Mr. E. T. Carlson, the merchant tailor, will return to Newberry to reopen his shop here. The stockholders of the old Farmers' bank of Silverstreet will meet at Silverstreet on Tuesday afternoon to wind up the affairs of the bank. .The Amos-Fox wedding was celebrated the other day. T e AmosQuito celebration is on in Newberry now. iA fellow is walking on dangerous ground when he talks a whole lot to one girl about another girl being so sweet. A low stable that bursts risht out on a corner close to a handsome public building is not an elevating sight in any city. Mary Atwood, colored, for the leading of a disorderly life, was sentenced by Recorder Earhardt on Saturday $15 or 30 ays. C. J. Dunston is the winner of the beneficiary scholarship at the Citadel academy in Charleston. Good for Jack. I believe that the country which God made is more beautiful than the city which man made.?First article of a little boy's creed in an exchange. Dominick automobile repair shop will be removed on Wednesday to the rooms under the Savoy, occupied by the Harley-Davidson men. iMany people have seen tf:at it is good to see Dr. F. C. Martin living in Newberry to look after their eye sight. Ana while the Ford owner gets his rebate tee Ford jokester swallows and looks wistful.?Greenville Piedmont. Yes. $50 is better than a joke in Newberry. Beatriz Michelena is the queenly star of all this strenuous, dramatic, epochal turmoil.?Speaking of "The Lily of Poverty Flat," for Tuesday at the opera house. The cooking for a big barbecue at Monck's -Corner on September 6 will be done by Mr. Albert C. Sligh of Dyson. The 'cue fame of this former Xewberrian is spreading in tl-e land. (Emeline Counts, widow of ?im Counts, colored, died in Atlanta and the body was brought to Newberry for burial. The funeral service was held at Bethlehem Baptist churcfc in this city on last Thursday. The sore of- "news" we like to hear is this: Mr. John Peterson, who carries the news, etc., on R. F. D. No. 2, says that Mr. John iNorris has enougii of last year's corn in his crib to last until Christmas. Recorder Earhardt stuck it to Abraham Green on Monday for transporting liquor. (Abraham pleaded guilty, hut it wflc hie offense the WUV Ab " - v? ? recorder made it $100 or 30 days. Wfcen we got "the news Abraham hadn't paid. A little girl \cked up a copy of iTfo Heralds and News recently and ran to her mother, saying, "Oh! Mamma; Roosevelt t':ad a fight with Wilson." She had/ read the headline, "Roosevplt "Hits Wilson." Auditor J. B. Halfacre has received his commission and taken charge of the office. >ir. D. H. Wyse of dee comptroller general's office, former auditor of STiten county, will "coach" Auditor Halfacre for the present. Betwee/i tfce beginning and the end, "Th? Lily of Poverty Flat" is richly studded with most varied, picturesque and exciting thrills. /The story is full of dramatic force. See it on Tuesday at the opera house. The mayors of South Carolina are iifvited to assemble with ti-eir wives at the Jefferson hotel i-n Columbia to attend a complimentary breakfast on the opening day of the State fair and harvest jubilee, October 29.?Newberry won't have a front seat in the picture. Agent T. S. Leftler says tl':e Southern excursion to Columbia on Thursday will not be a repetition of the former excursion. He will personally conduct it and accompany the train to Columbia, seeing that there are enough coaches to accommodate the people all along the line, comfortably. Beatriz Michelena, one of the most beautiful girls in the world, grand opera star and exquisite actress, a "native daughter," appearing in a motion picture made in California, based on a story by Bret Harte, tfce man who, in the literary sense, put California on thp man with thp feature distributed by the World Film corporation. Opera house on Tuesday, in "The Lily of Poverty Flat." Death of a Boy. Lee Gray Adams, 6 years old, son of m - Am o c Q A o ty-? c Af \\TOct .VII . dllU ITli O. ii-umuo kj> rxuamo vi t? vwo End, died early on Saturday morning of mumps and tonsilitis, and was buried at West End cemetery on Sunday afternoon at 5 o'clock, service by the Rev. Gobe Smith. BETTER SERVICE Manager H. B. Wells Announces Tiiat iie Will Improve Service at the Opera House. Manager H. B. Wells on Saturdayreturned from Atlanta, where he spent several days in the interest of his mo.iiig picture service, w men \mu ue i . improved. Notwithstanding he has j . been told by outside parties that they I wouldn't go to ti.e expense of im-, proving the service unless there was an opposition theatre, Mr. Wells shows ' that he wants to give the best just as! though he had opposition, and some] pictures are shown ki Atlanta and oti.er large cities that he would not : allow in Xewberr.t His desire is to give a fine, clean show. To that end : he has arranged for the following: Mondays?Three reel features diJ - - < i? -? -? m ,3: ?^ VT ^rv, ! j VlUeil U<21 \\ fcJtfll ?.uisuu aiiu xvatcui j films. (Tuesdays?World feature films in five reels, as usual. Wednesdays?"The Hazards of1 : Helen." Admirers of Helen Holmes \ will take notice of the change to j Wednesdays. Other pictures also will; be shown Wednesdays. Thursdays?Vitagrapi.: and Essanay, j : alternating. (j Fridays?V. L. S. E., alternating, ,/ which means Vitagraph, Lubin, Selig and Essanay. This is the greatest I and richest combination of moving' I tiintura v>r?iicoc in thp ulrld. and as! I JJ1WI Uig liVWWVlJ VAAV J ? __ i the Alms are high Mr. Wells will l:ave { to make a small advance in the price | 1 for Friday nights, which will hereaf- j iter be 10 and 15 cents. Prices for. , the afternoon shows will remain the j | same, 5 and 10 cents. This latter ar ! rangement is made for tJ:e accommo' dation cf grown people who prefer paying the 10 cents. Saturdays?Beginning the latter part of next month, alternating pictures will be between Knickerbocker i and Lubin. There will be the usual I I 1 iHam and Bud features as usual. As J ,' j the booking houses are closed tempo-; , rarily there is 110 'vaudeville available at present. On account of feature pictures not appealing to children Mr. Wells will run his regular program on Fridays from 3 to 4 for children under 12, wl:o will be admitted free as usual. What 3Iakes the Clock Go? < Wq Viqvo monrinrtPfl thp mvsterious dlock at Mayes' drug store. It is said j that one of these clocks has been running 39 months. The mystery is, what makes it go? It is a case of perpetual motion. Seemingly all the mechanism of the clock Js a glass dial with the hour marked thereon, and , two hands marking off t):e minutes and j the hours. A magnetic compass is at ' t/-k rvno nf hands and the I clock itself finds the correct time and keeps it. The man who gave us the above information, also has given us the following explanation as to what makes the clock go: "There are no pendulous oscillations cognizable, but the elongated indicators of aluminum construction perambulates a circumscribed radius i i with a circumferential activity, tnereby registering accurately the subdivisions of its circumference. The energizing impulse necessary to accomplish the resultant activity is not suf^ L1? ~ J 4-r\ A r\ent TTiTT fKn ; ncienxiy auceiciciLcu iu ucouu; I molecular cohesion of its atomic constituents. Its syncronization is promulgated by the dissemination of actinic rays, and tf:e nocturnal and diurnal deflections are equalized by contraction and expansion." Special Services at Lebanon. A series of special services at Lebanon church ended last Thursday night. On Sunday toward ti'.e middle of the meetings, the annual celebration of Children's day took place The marked interest that the children took in these exercises^^^gether with the Christian activity of adult members of both the Sunday school and the church who are now piloting the church along, and the increased at tendance to the special servic.es throughout the community and also of surrounding communities strengthens the evidence that Lebanon church has Hvort 5<3. livinc and ?.halT h#* The chief feature of these special services was the preaching of tlbe pastor, Rev. W. R. Bouknight, who handed out the gospel to the people in simple and plain language. The arguments of the pastor upholding the nearer perfect lives people should live were convincing and t erefore, were effective in thp minds, of manv of the Deople. Dur | ing the meetings there were twenty conversions and four added to the membership of the church. iThe pastor has done much work dur- ] ing tf:e last two months. At three of ] his other churches on the circuit he < I has held special services, doing a good 5 deal of ti':.e preaching, wnen ne start- j ed at Lebanon church he seemed not < j to be "fagged out" yet, for the much ] good accomplished was in evidence. < H. L. S. 1 REV. J. E. JOHNSTON DIES 1 M DDENLY AT PHOENIX j o * Beloved Minister Passes Away?Fu- oi neral at Damascus Saturday in Afternoon. o' i :i, Greenwood Journal. j hi His friends in Greenwood were great-! o: ly shocked this morning to learn of' d the sudden death of Rev. J. E. John-; n ston at 12 o'clock last nigi'.'.t at his1 i; heme near Phoenix. Mr. Johnston, c( with a number of his neighbors, had si gone to the assistance of Mr. Jeff Witt ti in the attempt to extinguish a fire in in the latter's residence and died while j on i is way to the well on his own piaz-1 w TO fr\T- o + /-vf wotor Ho fpll as ! 1/1 LtlA. L\J X U. WUVUVl, \JL -.% ** ? .V lie climbed the steps and expired almost instantly. Dr. Pratt Henderson,: ti who was only a few feet distant, I e rushed to his assistance, but found i m him dead. ir iThe funeral services were conducted ti at the residence Saturday afternoon at D 2 o'clock by Dr. E. J. Smith and inter- j r* mont m a rl n in t Vi ^ Vinotxr Qiv na mutArv I 01 ^ iiL *14 tUV/ ? i WAiiv bv? v> j m at 4 o'clock. j hi \V;T. Johnston was one of d':e best-j g] known Baptist ministers of this sec- j el ::on of the State. He had served six ei years as pastor of Bold Spring, Damascus and Mount Moriah churches and vi during that time had made friends of p all his acquaintances of all denomina-| rj tions throughout tl':e country. He was | M a good preacher and a universally be- c< loved man. His death has cast a gloom j a: over the section of the country where, he was held in the highest esteem. a: Mr. Johnston was a native of New- b berry county, having been born near s Bush River church 46 years ago last c October. He married Miss Ellen Su- x ber of Newberry, and is survived by tl her and one son, J. E., Jr., who is 14 years of age. Mr. Johnston received (Ms collegiate education at Furman university and j a was later graduated irom tne capusi " Theological seminary at Louisville,:a Ky. |tc I s< Sudden Death of Rev. J. E. Johnson, g ! r< Greenwood Journal. i a; The sudden deati': of Rev. J. E. John-! t]son, on last Thursday night, at his jg home near Phoenix, in this county,;-^ came as a shock to his many friends i , -X , I ana aamirers in me cuy ana county. p He was a man of good* parts, and bad fl a strong ^ld upon the churches that ^ he served, and upon the people in the w communities where these churches are located, without respect to their denominational affiliations. He was do- n ing what many preachers wfco serve e] country churches do not do these days. He lived in the country among his peo- ^ pie, and in this way became thoroughly T identified with t)':em. j He had good opportunities for spe- ?t cial training, having been a student of 3.1 both Furman university at /Greenville a and the Southern Baptist Theological c< seminery at Louisville, Kv. it He was a god man, filling a very important pastorate. Hiss losses, not only to the churches that fce served, ^ but to the county and to the State, is great. It will be no easy matter to fill his place. His people will greatly] _ miss hrm, as he was the one to whom 31 trey looked for comfort in times of sorrow and bereavement, and who was ready at all times to shart with them the pleasant things of life. ^ It is a rather remarkable coincidence that his predecessor, Rev. J. S. Jordan, who served the cT:urches to J'l which he was preaching, and who lived in the same community, died suddenly. He, too, was stricken while in. apparently goo health and pa~ssed away in a Very s^ort while. Funeral of Rev. J. E. Johnson. A large number of sorrowing friends attended the funeral of Rev. J. E. _ Johnson at the Ninety Six cemetery this afternoon at 2 o'clock. Dr. E. J. Smith conducted the services. The floral tributes were many and beautiful. ?tGreenwood Journal. An account of the deati'a of the Rev. Mr. Johnson, as _ well as a tribute from the Greenwood M Journal, are to be found in this issue of The Herald and News. The rela1 - ? ~ -a A ? ? t? MnnrKarrr tVlo frtf lives auu U1CUUS m Iicnuwjj, mer home county of the deceased, are deeply grieved at the sudden death of this good man and minister. Death of a Little Boy. Homer Y. Shealy, aged five and a . half years, son of Mr. and iM!rs. J. W. Shealy of near Mollohon, died-of ty- ^ phoid fever on Saturday mightnigfct and was buried at Rosemount on Sun day afternoon at d o'cioc-. service uy the Rev. Dr. A. J. Bowers. Hotel Cl&nges Hands. iThe Newberry hotel is to pass under J" lew management on September 1. C. P. Pelham, who has had charge for several years," will go on tfce Toad for i tobacco house, and W. W. Bullock, _ i well known traveling man, will sue- Bi :eed him at the Netvberry. Mr. Bulock will give the house a complete - - " ?-11 ~ 1-- :* Dvernaunng ana \wu n auiot:ive to the traveling public. 1 in Atlanta of Newberry Lady. Mrs. Elizabeth Epting Dickert, widv of W. H. Dickert, died at the i:ome ' her daughter. Mrs. .lames F. Edens, . Atlanta, on Saturday morning at 9 _ clock, at the age of 75 years, after a / tigering illness since the death of her ( isband. who was buried in Newberry i the Sth of last Februarv. Mrs. ickert's body was brought to N'ewber' on Monday and carried from tfce 1:15 Southern train to Rosemont mietery, where it was buried by the de of iM'r. Dickert's grave, service by ie Rev. Edw. Fulenwider, the follow-* ig acting as pallbearers: J. D. 'heeler, G. B. Summer, R. IT. Caldell, L. I. Epting, [. B. O'Xeall Hol>way and T. J. Hayes. Mrs. Dickert was the daughter of le late Capt. George and Elizabeth pting and was born and reared three tiles below Little Mountain, in Lexigton county. She lived for years in is city with her family, when Mr.^| ickert was in business here, before > ' amoving to Atlanta. Mrs. Dickert i /I f a f o m i 1 ?r?-i ^ ,1U tiic laiuii; axauc mail/ ixiuuuo sre. She leaves nine children, thirty randchildren and four great-grand- 1 lildren, besides a large circle of oth* relatives. Her suviving sons and lughters are as follows: Messrs. Da- i id M. and Jeff Dickert, Mesdames Mar Boinest, Sarah Spense, Lottie dge and James Eden, all of Atlanta; Messrs George and Lee Dickert of Ma :>n, Ga., Mr. D. C. Dickert of Alexndria, Va. She is survived also by four sisters nd one brother, namely, Mrs. David oland of Little Mountain, Mrs. Xoab. ease of Chapin, Mrs. Adam Hipp of olumbia, Mrs. Martha Summer of \ ewberry and Mr. John Epting of Lit- j e Mountain. * t Still Inventing. * Mr. J. J. Eargle, expert machinist j nd Newberry's inventive specialist, ill retire from the active busMess or machine shop and devote his time ) his inventions. Ever since people iw that fine miniature locomotive en-^^ ine constructed by Mr. Eargle They ?alizea that f:e had inventive genius s well as mechanical ingenuity, which me has proved. The Herald and News itely spoke of his improved cultivator, 'e has also invented a lamp chimney J'hich will prove to be as great an imrovement on that necessary and useii article of household utensils (aside om the electric light) as the lamp as over the tallow candle. The vir le which carries importance and Denit with the use of Mr. Eargle's chimey is in the groove that fits tl':e burn: to perfection. The chimney is held ) securely to the lamp that it will not ^ ill off even when held upside down, here will be no toppling over of' iimneys, as is the case with the in nCO In ,1 ai^Ill UI1CO UV" *11 UCV. J.LX vy* lone the new ]amp chimney will be great saving, to say nothing of tf:e ^mfort and convenience of its securv. ' i fiPPATAT. TVrtTTfilS he Bluest Cut Sale Price ever known in Curtain Goods at Caldwell & Haltiwanger^s this W??k. It iss Mazie Dorainick will begin her class in music September 20. 8-31-tf. J otice?Doctor Stuck will be out of town until October 1st, account sick ness. 8-27-2t or Sale?Burr clover seed, well screened, at $1.00 per bushel. R. McC. Holmes. 8-27-lt or Skle?RecJeaned and graded Fulghum oats $1.00 per bushel. Recleaned and graded Appier oats 75c per bushel. Apply to H. O. Long, Silverstreet, S. C. 8-27-tf iss Paaline Gilder will accept a lim- i ited number of voice pupils; class M beginning September 1. For terms apply resident; phone 49. 8-24-tf r. Farmer?It will pay you to keep taJta your harness in repair. We have A TXTArlr mil xix tixat iiuc. vi a uvu^ at war prices. Newberry Hardware Company. 8-3-tf ere Mr. Automobile 3?an?Does your top or your upholtering need repair? , We have t?ce man who can do it for 1 /^? - ^ you. AewDerry nam ware to. ? 8-3-tf anted?Tlie pubic to know that we are paying a very fancy price for | green hides; also best market price for good beef cattle. Hutchinson & Sneligrove, 1000 Main St., Newberry. Phone 38. 7-30-2m will be glad to have scholars who -nna.A /wjaMti.s' the summer months. Mrs. J. ?. Norwood, 1311 Glenn St. 6-4-tt ring Your Anto (if out of repair) to A Sam Dominick's repair stoop. AH M work guaranteed. Sharp's old stand, fl south side Friend street, opposite Baxters. 5-18-tf fl 1