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SPY Oil TRAITOR UKVEALS SECRETS Hufitrug for "Writer oi' Letters to Senator Telline: Forbidden Details. Washington, June ^ lnvestiga iion by the senate nav. , committee of accidents caused by aefective am munition on armed merchantmen was interrupted today to await the outcome of a search by government agents for the writer of letters mail ed from Detroit, Mich., to Senator Frelinghuysen revealing naval ord ance secrets. Secretary Daniels, placing the let ters before the committee, declared that either a spy or a traitor had been at work because the informa tion disclosed could have been ob tained nowhere except from the confidential files of the navy's ord nance bureau. He insisted that the writer should be found and required to explain. The committee adjourned until Werinesdav bv which time it is hoDed to locate the author of the letters. ' Senator Frelinghuysen told the committee that he had no desire to shield any one and had sought un successful to discover the identty ?f his correspondent. Tonight he gave out a statement defending the letter writer, saying his object was the welfare of the country and to prevent ^further accidents and de claring that Mr. Daniels' use of the words, "spy" and "traitor," was re markable. He made public his let ter to Serretarv Daniels transmitting the letters, explaining that while he did not know his correspondent, he felt in all fairness the secretary should be informed of the charges made and that the documents men tioned snould oe produced. During the hearing today Rear Ad miral Earle,. chief of the ordnance bureau, and Capt. Twining and Capt. Strauss gave the committee detailed and. technical information con cerning the accident on the Mongolia end other vessels, the chief facts concerning which have been publish-; ed previously in official reports. BEFEJiSE COUNCIL tfUAKVS SJiLfiUliU Body Makes Ready to iCoordinate I South Carolina^ Resources fc>r War Purposes. The State. Important committees to carry on the work of the State council of de fense have been appointed by David R. Coker of Hartsville/ chairman of the council. Headquarters for the council will be opened at an early date in Columbia. Plans for making the work of the council effective dur ang the war period are now under consideration. The following committees have been named: Executive and finance committee: B. R. Coker. chairman; William El liott, vice chairman; John G. Rich ards, Christie Benet, J. Ross Hana tan, W. W. Long, Ira B. Dunlap. Publicity: Robert Lathan, chair man; William Banks, C. 0. Hearon. Military matters: E. M. Blythe, chairman: Dr. F. H. McLeod. rroaurnoil ana conservation 01 foodstur *: Bright Williamson, chairma: W. W. Long, A. C. Phelps. Industrie-; :u\d exemptions: A. F. McKisol.-v, chairman; Robert .Mc Dougall, John T. Stevens. Transportation: J. W. Wassum, chairman; Otto Klettner, Robert G. Hall. Alleviation of distress caused by en listment: Horace L. Tilgliman. chair man; E. J. Watson, John S. Reynolds. Coordination of activities of patriat ic organizations: Dr. John. E. White, chairman; Miss E. E. McClintock, E. R. Buckingham. Research and education: W. M. Rjggs, chairman; J. E. Sirrine, J. "Prkco TTanahnn * Cooperation of negro organizations: John F. Maybank, chairman; Bright Williamson, W. I. Johns. MEN ASD BEASTS v CAN EAT PEASUTS The State. Clemson College, June 11 ?The peanut will furnish more costly food elements for man or oeast than any other crop that can be planted dur ing June and early July. It is rich in protein, which is a substitute for meats; rich in carbohydrates, a sub stitute for white bread: rich in oil which is a substitute for butter or other fats required by the human or animal system. Any vigorous family would be well fed with practically a balanced ration, if it had only Irish potatoes and peanuts three times a day. Both crops can be planted on grain lands up to July 15, July 15 being probably the ideal time for planting potatoes for fail crop. The White Spanish peanut is the most prolific' variety, and can be grown in rows 21 to 30 inches wide, and six to eight inches in the drill. After turning the stubble, thoroughly har row with smoothing harrow, and plant nuts. on a level, using 300 to 600 pounds of a mixture of two-thirds or 16 3-'cr cent, acid phosphate and one-third cf cottonseed meal. If it rains before the nuts are up. by all means n-n the smoothing harrow or weeder over the field to kill all ger minating grass and weed seeds and to conserve moisture. Shallowly cul tivate after each rain, and when nuts are mature, run a one-norse. pjow (with mould board or "wing" remov ed), under each row. Allow to wilt and then stark around polls about five to six feet high (after nailing two strips crosswise of poll, about eight inches from ground) with nuts toward the poll. Cap well with grass or other similar material and let stand about four wee^s or until dry. Haul to barn, remove nuts for family use or feed tops and nuts to live stock. THE HERALD ANI) NEWS. ONE YEAR r"OR ONLY SI.50 BRITISH DYNAMO ARRIVES Lord North dine in America to Take ' ? ' -v* ' * 1 IIiao irlm**A L?oI_ I j> I tl II >f t'l ;l II II^I C four Left Off. | New York, June 11.?Great Britain's human dynamo, Alfred Charles Harms worth. Lord Xorthcliffe. arrived in America today to carry forward the work of war co-operation with the ! I'nited States inaugurated by the Bal fcur mission. I The man who upset two cabinets and woke up the English people issued a brief statement and buckled down to his job, characteristically. He is not here for diplomacy. He is here for business and finance. Taking up where Mr. Bairour lert ou ue win 1 seek to co-ordinate the work of the: I various subsidiary British missions 1 engaged here in arranging with the ; government for supplies to be shipped to the allies, ships to be furnished and the general detail of joint co-opera l tion between France, Italy. Great Brit-' aia and the United States. , Established j Aside from the formal statement he I i&sued, Lord Northcliffe ceclined to ! say anything. Leaving LonCon on 36 i hours notice he was accompanied only 1 by a valet. Reaching New York he : exchanged* flying salutes with old ' friends, distributed his statement on the way, leaped into an automobile and was whisked uptown to the Hotel ; Gotham where he will maKe nis head-' j quarters. In a day or two he will I go to Washington to *ee President Wilson. j; Arriving at the hotel Lord North- 1 cliffe consented to pose for his pic-;' - ! 1 tux c, j "One picture, only one." he said, i 'K)h there Burton?just a minute, i Fix up your camera boys. Bullock, a ) word with you?let me know when l you are ready, and remember only j one." | With a pair of horn spectacles in his ! hands he darted from one room to an { other, conferring with three differ ent groups of callers, the while the ' picture men posed a dummy and level j ed their cameras upon him. With i eeyvrroomc(assx,sush ... anew'ptvbgk ! everything in readiness Lord North | cliffe was notified. He darted in and ' dropped into the designated seat. Slow i "Nr>w then bovs. Tiurrv ud." he ur ged. "Just one, understand. My word i ?get a move on you?snap It. snap it. -1 | You are not half as fast as the menj | who take pictures for my papers." I j Noticing for the first time the re- . porters, he demanded: ' "Where are your cameras?*' "We are only reporters," was the reply. 1 ! "Nothing to report here,'; cried his! lordship. "Not a thing. Good hea-j vens, aren't you through yet? But I ! can't look both ways at once. Oh, but' you're slow." j All the while Roosevelt-fashion his1 mouth was moving, he was darting j glances out of the windows and look-, - ing about the room. At length lie rose abruptly. "That's all," he cried. "One is - plenty." I < rn1 1 COW n T*_ I , 1116 UIllv xaiict a i>vi vuvitu\y i ir.g the day were Stephen Lausanne, j' editor of the Paris Matin, and Briga-j dier General White, in charge of Brit-: ish recruiting in New Yorft. Follow- j ing his invaraible rule he retired at 9 < o'clock tonight. And following his "Via mill Ho tin civiH nn thp ifth at. 5 I U i O li^ Mill V V..v J o'clock in the morning. I D. A. R. CHAPTER HOLDS AX IMPORTANT MEETING Mrs. 0. B. Mayer was hostess for! ! the June meeting of Jasper chapter,! j D. A. R. Monday afternoon, June 11.., ! The meeting was opened by singing ! "America." After roll call and read ing of minutes, the business of the i afternoon was taken up. Miss Gladys ChappeTi was chosen: i secretary for the year. " I The chapter had already decided to | join some branch of service for war ! relief but had not decided which one . j to join. Blanks, sent out by the War j Relief Service committee. D. A. R.,| i were distributed to the members and i 1 thpv are ursred to fill these out im-' mediately and return them to Mrs. | i J. L. Keitt, regent. These blanks are similar to those of the Red Cross ser-j vice and Woman's National Service' League. j j The chapter resolved to dispense, | with the printed ye=r hooks and use j the $5.00 for war relief. ; The chapter also agreed to buy af | Liberty bond. The purchase of this j ; bond was left to Miss Fannie Mc-1 * ? * ? Al? ? i Caughrm, treasurer, as me um^Lci had already pledged $25.00 to the Girl's Industrial school founded by the Georgetown school, the fund in the treasury was fbund to be insuf ficient, so it was decided to give a se ries of entertainments to raise funds, arrangements for these entertain ments was left in the hands of a cen tral committee?Mrs. Mayes, Mrs. Jones and Mrs. Carwile. Mr. Wells has promised the picture j show for the first of this series and j a committee are arranging for a ?Sw J interesting tableaux in connection, j It is hoped that the amount raisedj will be sufficient to buy the Liberty; bond and leave enough for the sup- \ 1 -02"t 01 Gl u:ie r'ieuiu vi puuu, j which requires $36.50 per year. Mrs. Gary of the Abbeville chapter . was a guest at the meeting and she i told of the wonderful amount of work ; that had been done by the 17 members ] of hqr chapter. We hope that we shall be spurred to greater efforts by her j , i The meeting then closed with ' singing of "The Star Spangled Ban-, ner. i a? A PRETTY PICTURE. The Richmond Virginian of June 7 ^ I rnnfm'ner] a slowins account of the! I recent reunion. It is so interesting; wa wpnt our readers to enjoy the; bettor part of it, as follows: Washington, Ji.na 4.?More than ; 4.000 Confederate veterans are en camped in the shadow of the Capito] i come tonight. In jlace of flickering camp lire?, the steady glow c: numer our arc lights made the tented city almost bright as day; instead of the single blanket thrown upon the ground, the veterans rested on com fortable army cots and immense caul drons supplied steaming coffee in place of the battered tins used over a half century ago. Over in one corner the brilliant yellow of the old cavalry uniforms made a bright spot in the picture. 'I hey were Pickett's men and some of them had ridden with Forrest and Mosbv. The men of Pickett's brigade were not so numerous as the others. lor as captain v. a. lapscou. cap tain of the company in the Fifty-sixth Virginia regiment, put it: "Of the thousands of men who went into the charge at Gettysburg, I have seen probably less than a dozen since the surrender." Sixty survivors of the lamous "Or phan brigade'' called by Joseph E. Johnson, "the best brigade in the Con federacy," arrived during the da). Kach proudly wears a picture of Gen eral J. 0. Breckinridge, wtio command ed the brigade. One of the callers at General George B. Harrison's headquarters tonight was .Major William Campbell Saun ders, of Wytheville, IVa., who had on the same coat lie w*ore during the war. He exhibited a bullet hole in the left shoulder where a "minnie ball" drilled through just fifty-three years ago tomorrow. Captain G. W. Smith of Springfield, Mo., notified General Harrison that although a Union veteran he had come to the reunion to march in the parade with his brother who served in the Confederate army. After all plans for the reunion of the brothers were made, the one who wore, the gray died in his home in North Caro lina. "But I am here to march with you Johnnies' anyhow/' explained Cap tain Smith. "My brother wanted me to." He Didn't a A boy fell into a pond, and when a man who was passing pulled him out tie said to the boy: "Well, son, how did you come to fall in the lake?" "I didn't come to fall in at all," replied the boy with some heat. "I same to fish."?Washington Post. HOPED MORN WOULD FIND >0 STOVE IN THE HOME MRS. BURGIN THOUGHT CHANCES WERE HEAYILY AGAINST HER CHANGE ?A MIRArfLE" Greer Woman Talks Interestingly of Her Remarkable Experience. "I was in an awful condition when I began taking Tanlac and had been for two years, but Tanlac got me back in good healtX'' was the em phatic statement of Mrs. D. J. Burgln, of Greer, S. C., in a satement she gave May 10th in endorsement of Tan lac. "I was suffering from the after effect of malaria. My system was out of order, I was weak and run down and my face was as yellow as a pump kin. My feet and legs felt like they were dead or 'asleep' and tingled all the time. Really I had begun to won der if T ever would regain my health and I didn't think I Had a cnance. ror so much medicine had failed to help me. In fact, I felt so badly that I often told my family at night T hoped there would be no stove in the house in the morning so I would not have to cook breakfast. I had stomach trou ble very badly, too. "Tanlac is the grandest thing in the world for a condition like I was In, and it soon got my stomach in good shape, my face cleared up and regain ed the right color and my appetite soon came back. No matter how bad a headache I had, one dose of Tanlac relieved it. Soon the Tanlac had me feeling fine and strong, and after I had taken two bottles I was well and strong. I took some of the Tanlac Tablets and they helped Tanlac ever so much to get me well. Those tab lets are the best T ever took." "I am f'ad to recommend Tanlac, for it is the first and, or course, tne only medicine that ever helped me." Tanlac, the master medicine is sold by: Gilder & Weeks. Newberry, S. C., Dr. W. 0. Holloway, Chappells, S. C., Little Moimtain Drug Co.. Little Mountain. S. C.? The Setzler Company, Pomaria, S. C.. Prosperity Drug Co., Prosperity, S. C., Whitmire Pharm acy. Whitmire. S. C.?Adv. CHEVROLET "FOUR NINETY" Electrically Equipped $550 F. O. B. Flint, Michigan. The actual worth of a motor car is in proportion to its preformance tinder the most trying conditions. And this means in climbing ability and negotiating the roughest road. Chevrolet cars have sufficient power for any emergency. vSee the Chevrolet and pass judgment on it. This is tbe fairest way of presen ting a product to you in these days when competition is keen and at a time when so mauv automobiles are made to fit a price J. D. QUATTLEBAUM Distributor Prosperity, South Carolina ( an YOn Do It A smart military officer once bet an athlete that he could not hop up a r-prtsiin Inno- flicht nf ctpna tv;/i n t a time. The athlete accepted the wager and made the trial, to find that there were forty-one steps to the flight, and that, after making twenty hops, he had lost. He paid up. but accused the other of sharp practice. "Sharp practice?" was the retort indignant. "Well, I'll make the same bet with you that I can do it." The other expecting to win his mr>npv hnolr ascpntpH TV?p nfficpr then hopped up forty steps ini twenty hops, and, hopping back one, 'finished in the prescribed manner, and won the wager.?New York Herald. \0tice OE election IN WHIT mike school district >o. 52. Whereas, one-third of the resident electors and a like proportion of the resident freeholder:} of the age of | twenty-one years, in Whitmore School District No. o2, of the County of Xew berry, State of South Carolina, have filed a petition with the County Board of Education of Newbtrry County, State of South Carolina, petitioning and requesting that an election be held in said school district on the qustion of levying an additional spe j cial tax of two (2) mills on the dol lar to be collected on all the taxable 1 property within the said school dis- j trict. Now, therefore, we the undersigned,! composing the County Board of Edu cation for Newberry County, State of South Carolina, do hereby order the Board of School Trustees of the Whit mire school district No. 52, to hold an election on the said question of levy ing an additional special tax of two (2) mills on the dollar to be collect I ed on the property located in said ! School District, which said election shall be held at the Whitmore school 1 house, in said School District, No. 52, on Saturday, the 30th day of June, 1917, at which said election the polls shall be opened at 7 a. m. and closed at 4 p. m. The members of the Board of Trus tees of said school district shall act ?yui BLACK SAFE Goodrich 1 sivelv fas managers of said election. Only j such electors as resiae in said school j District and return real or personal { property for taxation, and who ex- j hibit their tax receipts and registra tion certificates, as required in tlie general elections, shall be allowed to vote. Electors favoring the levy of j such tax shall cast a ballot containine the word "yes" written or printed; ; thereon, and each elector opposed to , such levy shall cast a ballot contain ing the word "no*' written or printed thereon. , Given under our hands and seals | this the 14th day of June A. D., 1917. CHAS. .P. BARRE (L. S.) 0. B. CANNON (L. S.) JAMES P. KINARD (L. S.) County Board of Education for Newberry County. Bargain Prices < fftv ll/vnv* onil till uuui aim corn. See me H. 0. Long SHEBUF'S SALE. By virtue of an execution issued to me in the case of Crumley-Sharp Hardware company against W. S. Cook Mercantile company, I have lev s Fa TfUtOC MAM (RA sted-Roa( TY TREAD TIRES r |-| UNDREDS of thousands LJ [ pioneer days of the MII Goodrich Tires the T . America on the TEST of ut the Road Test is the G ,Ls Tires. lv JW-i-q of rWvlrirh Test Cars i actions of our country, are dailj EST to Goodrich Tires to brii res for you. The Dixie Fleet;?The Pacific Flee Fleet;?The Prairie Fleet;?The Atlantic Fleet. ALL belabor Goodrich Tires aga if cad and every kind of climatic , lillions of miles?the average of' 30,000 11:1:03 a week?thus settle ? silience of the Goodrich pni 10LD, unoroken cure, Goodri lined was BEST for fabric tires. iuy this TESTED certainty of a 1 y Goodrich Fair Treatment, afety Treads. THE B. F. GOODRIC] Akron, Ohio Oon^rirh also makes the famous Silvertc txio ..-o v.aichwon the 1916 Racing Chu Also V.c Best Tubes?Broun and 1 Best in the Lor are s in INewber rdy IV ied upon the following proper'.-, of the debtor and I will sell it at public auction in front of the court hous? at Newberry, S. C., on salesday ia 1Q17 within The lesal llOUTS Of. sale, for cash: Five oak bedsteaus. three oak cap boards, six oak bureaus, one iron ted jrtead, 11 second hand washstacds,. one bureau, and one wagon. Cannon G. Blease. Sheriff Newberry County June 9. 1917. NOTICE TO DELINQUENT TAX PAYERS. The treasurer has turned over io me for collection all taxes due for the year 1916. All pel sons interested' will have .an opportunity to pay th* same at my office until July 1. After ?mill ho n*?a^o tr? , which uuic ic? rw i isfy the executions. CANNON G. BLEASE. SheriST. 5-22-tf. University of Sooth Carolina Entrance Examinations Entrance examinations to the University of South Caroliua will 52 held by the County Superiii ;endent of Education at the Conn ;y Court House, Friday, July 13,. '9*7 The University offers varied, courses of study in science, literae :ure, history, law aud business fhe expenses are moderate and nany opportunities for self-sop ?ort are afforded. A large nusi >ar of scholarships are available, Graduates of colleges in this state-, 'eceive free tuition in all courses ixcept in the school of law. For nil particulars write to THE PRESIDENT, University of South Carolina Columbia, S. C. ir Treatment iUSSII iTested ' ! ! ; ' r } . * of tire users from the automobile, acclaim ESTED TIRES of TIME. oodrich Test for n six widely different r putting the ROAD lg out the BEST in t;?The Mountain Lake Fleet;?The UldL C*Ci J handicap the combined fleets is e the durability and iciple of the UNIT ch has always main asting tire, backed up in Goodrich Black H GO. r.vn Cords, njpionshjp Cruy Where You See Tki* Sign Goodrich Tire* arc Stocked old exclu rv bv