University of South Carolina Libraries
^ Tuesday, septemDer v0> iyil. IMIMNAUGH "Bk T 1 rNew j I Thousands and ? mm 4- AvrAwn r>f iarmicm, cvcij mors successful i satisfactio i. Suits Neu (Wonderful assorting handsome sit 3 an. Bi select from in all the ] IP Hundreds or ns for business wear , Tailored skirts wi . styles. All pricet $3.49, Never in all the W 1 | variety of stylish I $9-75 > $ I 200 sport suits, I " New plaids and n I \cgarment for scho I " r in the lot for $5.( > IVJL M i ? f?-?cBOSS -Wric*~ ,kf *,j?a ?wsm? a The alen and wtXnen o? No. S Town earaestlly --^quested t3 miset^at Smyrna. sd&oolhouse, on Fri ?*.' . .^js > *;-. N. p - ..*' . -j t - **F afternoon, September 28th., a? t o'clock, for the purpose of organlz| iias a<n auxiliary to the Newberry Red V jf ^ Cross Chapter. The cooperate and f extension committee will be present 6 to assist vin the organization of this ? auxiliary. Everybody is urged tc V cozne. P -Bon^anpa^dns A*anoO 7 UOSIUMl R "0 fd SuiuuiSaq 9 po 'jCep-in^g 0SI1OH ^noo 3^3 Pl^ moftBiijniBxg; .sjaqasax /*nnoO aqx soixYKiKYxar tSaaHjyax \ $ !^if^@8feii?BKilB\ *iljjK233BL1 V eVERE^CDY (FLASHLIGHT , with its guaranteed Tungsten long service battery and Mazda lamp, assures you an instantaneous light J wherever and whenever you may I ^^^^^omein. Let us show yo^^ fEUigaaw M\\W I H MfciWBJIIiiiWMi P 5* FOR sale by r P. X. TfAT, DRUGGIST, I KEWBERRT, g. C. 'S 1"^ _ 11 ? Fhousanas of dollars >uhter, ev?ry rack, e\ n Knvinor thatl eV5F. " ~ '"O Dresses V ; Sateen and Serge j int of handsome new dresse v variety of styles for misses O * popular colors. Regular $20. $15.00 and $16.50 each. The New Skirts w skirts for every occasio Fancy styles to wear 1th pockets, shirred; and i special ao ?? en to nn n JO| ?pw UV| v V| W Sylish Coats for F i history of this store hat coats for ladies and mist '12.50, $15.00, $19.75, 7all Styles in Sport ~ ^ w wonderful array of style, ilade with large collars ai ol. $6.50, to $8.50, coat >0. - ^ - hC A i ' 1 .!*? ' r- Wi - * *..?* /ji BCT9ST W W0SX"" ?? THE BEB CROSS "-.Misr'F. D. Mower, the cfcafriaaa of-, the torn mitt ee on supplies, ha^aadI ed in the following report: W'A I 3*-here.,are 377 hospital bed shirts I % i j_. 9-1 fra^tur? nil-J lUl SUl^/Ut?Vw~-w , ^ : Vows ' and 40 operating caps iiave ; have been made. Township* No. 2 has' i made 36 shirts; Kinards, 14 shirts; | i Prosperity, 31 Shirts; D. A. R's, j shirts; Drayton Rutherford U. ?). C.t! 42 shirts; Bachelor Maids, 14 shirts. 'This committee has done excellent i work; and it was with regret that; J * 9t ! J tne executive cummuicc its last meeting the resignation 011 Mrs. Mower chairman. Mrs. Mower has given unreservedly of her time and energy to this work, and will be ( greatly missed. Mrs. Wright, the chairman of thej extension committee, reports one new j auxiliary central girls of the Central. Church, and one new branch?Whit-' / mire. I The knitting supplies have bean! ordered and as soon as they arrive, J ths women of the county are expected to begin work. These woolen articles' must be finished before cold weather.) Bess Barton, .1 Chairaan Publishing Committee. I . COTTON MARKET r*- ? Newberry O A Cotton -* Seed 1-00 Prosperity Cotton -4 Seed 1-00 Little Me?stala Cotton ?i- ! Seed 1-00 Tfkttmfre f9. 1-4 i uotton w j Seed 91 { ghftppells Cotton s 24 Seed 102 lir.ards | Cotton ' 24 Seed^ 100 j SiHer street i Cotton 24: i 1 An i Seed i.w , Powaria Cotton ?4 seed 1.00 THE HERALD A.Nt> NEWS ONF i ! TEAR FOR ONLY $1.50. j MiMNAUG 1 ? ?- stsx?m} ^za worth of new goods rery shelf, is crowde* Greater /a'uss wars Coats Dresses 8, Few quality serge ^ d , ! and ladies. Hundreds to 00 dresses special this week ' n. Smart plain styles ' with. dainty waists, a variety of pleated nd $10,00. , all ve we shown siich a tes, priced at if 9Ji. 00. WI*M y v . ? * . 5uifs I , material, and color. id wide belt, the ideal . Choice of any coat M X tf if' * >.,-r* a-? o, t- . - , ^ ; . ' - ? ^ Mr. S. & Griffift-, ha-resigned: "is cashier af ihe Savings fa&xtft an& ei ?- - .-v^t XvTTs^vj? w-- v. , -i_ r?t; 4?rX' pect*:to-iaite i*?a? tlitea ^eflJC6.c> | r; Architect J. E, Summer returned ia Greenwood Monday after coming w> Jtewberry for a day just to '"'look * the bask." ~ :i jv; : Mr. IWfclter S. Melton, late rural policeman, is now employed at Camp -Jackson. ; Coast Artilleryman Silas J. Klettner, who has lost about fifteen pounds of his surplus flesh, was seen going across from Charleston to Fort Moultrie one day last week with a has containing $19,000.- Silas is "0 K" there as he was here. Mrs. Otto Klettner is in Charleston visiting her brothers in that city, where she has -the opportunity of seeing her son. Silas, now at Fort Moultrie with the other members of the Coast Artillery companies. Presiding Elder W. I. Herbert of Greenwood spent Sunday night at Whitmire and was in the c\ty Mondav on hi3 way home. * i We reprint the* excellent statement of the Peoples National Bank of Prosperity. The government changes th* form with every statement, and awhile we had ihe figures correct there *'as some little mistake in the other pari and we reprint it. This is a vary conservative bank but one of the best and strongest jn, the county. The aLdies Aid srviotv t * ui me l^uineran church of the Redeemer will meet with Mrs. Arthur Klbler Tuesday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock. The night Cannon Ball comes do-*n \ an hour earlier now, reaching Newberry at 7:54. ' It was only x burning chimney that caused the fire alarm to be sounded Sunday evening. Fire burned the roof off the house of Willie Ruff, color^r? in rtunter street last Friday afternoon at 1 o'clock. lie lo~t. his kitchen utensils. but saved the household effects. The common pleas court adjournen after a week's trial of one case that had already occupied three sessions of the court. The last trial was 51 mistrioi ?' ?... maKing the third mistrial, Four times for one case is a losing game to the county. The jury in this last trial took .from 2 o'cIock -jp riday afternoon to 7:30. Saturday 'morning to render the Terdict. * zJh *v 1 H'S . i. We are ready in d with carefully se ! .S3cur\idi and great* Skirts St * Made from fine qua and broadcloth. Elegat for woman and misses, and above all every suit yrttyao If ILL* - A ? I M ?> S/lO< Ample capital and ou to buy and sell for less i and see with your own t stock in the up-country. We have more goods, mosf of the store in Nev Matchles ? F ?? b.very express onngs i that is right up to the We want you to come i headgear. TF ? 5 j " n.'." :* s-~ W.'.x-' r. ^ [SPECTER QF GfiEAT tAi(E| l ' :'. + ' -fyy- jC . -r^V " ? ^ Misy t Sailor FmaaJne# H* See* tfe* .... Barmockburn Which Disappeared . In Mysterious Fashion. " ' ' ; *.'* i One superstition that Is firmly rooted" in tlhe'miiHls of all Great Xakes j navigators concerns the mysterious wreck of the Bannockburn. "She was a big, powerful freighter, carrying a crew of 22 men. She cleared Duluth on a day In the late fall. What happened to her will never be known. I sue went out iu iiie uiuruiu&, auu nao j last sighted the next evening. That was the end. For more than a year , the chill water of Lake Superior guarded well their secret. Then one day an oar was found floating along the i driftwood of the bleak north shore. I A piece of tarpaulin was wrapped se! curely around it, and when this was I removed It was found that the word : Bannockburn was scraped into the i wood. The oar is all that remains today to tell the story of the missing freighter. j "According ro ine queer iwisl gircu the story by the sailors of the inland seas, the Bannockburn is supposed to be the Flying Dutchman of the Great Lakes. Sometimes at night, when the chili north wind sweeps across the swollen bosom of Lake Superior and the stinging 'ice devils' fill the air, the lookeut on some lonely point calls loudly to his companions and points j to where he imagines the Bannock| burn, an \&ite with ice and ghastly ! in the darkness, is slipping through : the black mystery of the lake." I j 'NO GOOD OF THE OPENWORK' I ? J Thft Wat Why Queenie, Dark-Skinned, Put ?n Pairtf Pink Stockings ' * Under the BJack Ones. Queenie, seveote&i, comely, a pleasant dark-brown in complexion, appeared in openwork stockings at the apartment of I*er employer and prepared to scrub the floor. ; Tfte laoor entaneu a couaiuerauic ' ?howin# of stocking. The mistress of the house, glancing at this display, observed the openwork and was roys| titled by an extraordinary color effect. Queenle Is a very pretty ritgress, but she is obviously of pure African strain. ; Yet through the interstices of the openI work there undoubtedly were to be had glimpses of a delicate pale flesh color, j Could it be a str^age example of racial admixture? Was Queenie afflicted with flesh-colored supporters for her brown body? | "What in the world, child," d?mandi ed her mistress; "you aren't pink un i derneath, are you," ! "Got a pair of pink stockings on underneath the black ones," grinned Queenie. 4'When I fust put 'em on by ; jtheirselves I ?0$ Jflf the MT every sense of the v leered merchandise, values are offered m V v -W - anJ ylish Fail Suits lity French sergz, pc; itly tailored, pleated cn They come in all the r or dress we sell we gua $15.00, $18.50, $: 30,00, and $35.00. r - - ~F. 1 17. es TOT LsUK.1 yuuu.y r connection in the big i. han any merchant in th\ iyes. We carry the mdt All the new fall styles _V ; Second Floor piled upstairs on the se ~ W oberry carry in stock. s Showing of Millii as something new in the minute.' We know we < \ere and see the wond* > ' ' -tojsi> i - Horv* e - '; >*. i' i - - - > - - v - nH^mng ? raria. ?.>'. p (direct from France m&e?ore*Ue8 under no posftlbfi wnptetoa" tit b&ng oJ pacifist mann . factor#-, oar Oenaan^iuspirallorL" Ai enormons enfwtl was gathered Intfc Place de la Concorde waiting for Gen eral Pgrshlng and his staff, whose ap proach along./the. neighboring street! was fcarbiagered by cheers like thos< . which accompanied Marshal Joffre'i progress up Broadway and Fifth ave nne. . In the very first rank of the ex ? --*? <* tvnHlfni^a *t?qq a vt*rv IrtTOIl! yCClDUl UJ UHUUUC nuu u . vj v-tf Individual Indeed. At the first gliraps< of the Americans he tossed his cai into the air and yelled "Hurrah! Here'! the Salvation Army!" In spite of th< solemnity of the occasion everybody within hearing laughed as well ai cheered. ****** ? ^ - Rsise Ichneumon Flies. A . >! The most destructive enemy or tm cabbage and related crops is the cab bage butterfly. This lays its egg: Uf>on a cabbage leaf; the eggs hatcl into green caterpillars and these ea the leaves. In 1883, says the Journa of Heredity, an ichneumon fly was im ported from Europe to keep the cab bage butterfly in check. The fly layi its eggs in the body of the caterpillar the larvae which hatch from these eggj ' - ? : v.ol. eat tne caierpnmr? iuaiuw, ?_ui iu^k way out through the empty skin anc spin cocoons from which the flies emerge. "It is interesting to note," adds the Journal of Heredity, "that the para site is in turn preyed upon by a su ! perparasite, a little cnavis ny, anc ; so on down ad infinitum,' no doubt" ** Bald-Headed Eagle. . The bald-headed eagle is a sea-eagle selected as the national emblem of the ; United States, Its markings are familiar, though the term "bald" is td be referred, not to the absence of feathers, but to the effect produced by thf white feathers on the head. In size, it raorlr fho c*f?l Pn ?>3 2] P . t'UI I UtKHJ fcvr C" 1,-i whose length is about three feet and extent of wing seven feet. The baldheaded eagle lives mainly upon the fish which it seizes along the seashore and around lakes and rivers. The nest is built on a high treetop or upon a rocky cliff. The eagle is used as an j emblem on coins of the value of a quar; ter and above. The gold coin of the United States valued at $10 is called ii js I an eagle. 'mere are aiso nun. eagics ! and double eagles. Hatching War Eagles. France hatches her war eagles at the flying school at Avord started a year before the war. Here 5,000 men i work night and day, and 300 pilots ' are tnrne-d out a month. A war pilot costs the state $4,000, not counting demolished machines. * MNAUGH'3 | _ JL t'ord, every dep- I; We have been I j !. We guarantee 1/ Shirtwaists J -.'in, gabardine I a bcuec. Sizes ft ich tall shades, i iraniee a perfect W. GO, $25.00 ft i ijfc narket enable us is section. Come I it complete shoe are here. - 8 cond floor than ' K 9 '*' ; ;; nery way of millinery can please you. . zrful showing of 1 I 9 QM K? .. #1' ' % m^mmammmmrn ?n i n ? . i n >jm+~rn*m+*mkia*mmm~**> % ' " " * -Three colored gamblers jrieacfecfe' f WRHp to the charge before Magistrate Dojrgias:-Monday and each paid hfe * 5ne of |o,v and tki^e colored w4>ma?? 5 were before Recorder Earhardt., tha same day charged with assauU; aaot _ jaltery. One was dismissed and lb* > others paid $3 each for being guilts|J -] George Eichelberger paid $5 on t??? order of the recorder Friday. ^George? was guilty of riding his bycicle on tte? s sidewalk and running against youiae j Jacobs. i ' 5 Hank >'o. 256. - f7 STAT?ME>T 3 Of the condition of the Farmers Bunk located at Chappells, S. C., at tb* close of business, Sept. 11, 1917i . RESOURCES. - Loans and discounts $43,978.63 3 Overdrafts 142.63 -i 1 Bonds and Stocks owned by ^ J' the bank -i 500.08 N Furniture and fixtures 1,500^1. ' _ i ranking house 2,GG&ft.'-* J i Due from Banks and Bankers 6,945-4;" '. ^ | Currency I(067j&fc ; ! Gold 260 Off / I i< Silver and other minor coin; 22235 I j Checks and Cash Items .... 384.7&J } ? 1 Total $56,981.38 [ | - LIABILITIES. . ! Capital stock paid in $10,150.0? t ' Surplus fund l,000.Q$i, ' TT.^-Nr;JXJ 1-? |v;i.iui?iucu jjxuiios, current expenses and taxes I paid . 2,326.4*; | Individual deposits subject I to check ! Time . certificates of deposit 2T.49&7X | Cashier's checks I02.S7 i * ________ : j ^tal' $56,981.23 !: STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Newberry?ss i Before me came E. L. Cook, cashierof the above named bank, who, bein&z ! duly sworn, says that the above andi I foregoing statement is a true condition ' of said bank, as shown by the boofere j of said bank. E. L. COOK-,. Cashier:. Sworn to and subscribed before me this 22d day of Sept., 1917. W. P. ALLEX, Magistrate Xewberrry County, S. CL Correct Attest: / J. L. HOLLOW AY, W. 0. Hollowav. H. C. Strother. Directors. The Herald and News One Year fc*r Only $1.50. t .