The herald and news. (Newberry S.C.) 1903-1937, January 17, 1919, Page SEVEN, Image 7
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How in God's na:
dealt to humanity?S
' America will save the
{ your part? You cou
' American! Every pen
| ing, helpless people ot
| THE
/ YOU
GAM
AM
TORRE
A
i
THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA,
Tow* o$ Newberry.
Be it ordained by the Mayor and Aldermen
of the Town of Newberry in
Council Assembled:
j 1st. That all Pool or Billiard rooms
^ conducted for gain or profit or rooms
in which any other game or games are
m conducted for gain or profit in the
Town of Newberry, shall be located on
I the ground floor and shall be open to
i public view from- the street and shall
* not be in any-way screened so as to obstruct
full view from the street, and
shall not be operated later than twelve
o'clock at night.
2nd. Any person, firm, corporation
or a partnership operating or conduct"
"t_ ? 1 o _
mg ady such piac? ior sanies m vxuiation
of this ordinance shall upon conviction
thereof before the recorder be
fined not more than one hundred dollars
or imprisoned :n Town Guard
House or upon public works of the
town for a period of not more than 30
days.
Done and raitfied this December 30,
191$.
Z. F. Wright.
Attest: Mayor. I
J. W. Chapman,
C. & T. T. N. j
1-10 2t.
OPI
L : ^
Endorsed b
All the
Leading
Dramatic
critics
This same shcr
nanv rnmps Hir
1 berry from fhe a
atre, Atlanta, G<
' . """"
'SHAIX^OT
me can you let millions di
tarvation? You cannot dc
orphans and babes from th
Id not do otherwise and
ny you give goes for food i
f the near East.
NFATTOM'S OTTOTA S3f
A V A ? A A A K/ W W ?i 5|rw %
R QUOTA t??
PAIGN JANUARY 12-19
ERICAN COMM
UEF IN THE N)
LRME.VIA- C REECE " 3TRIA.-PJ
\
{inin i
?HAII
Brelesto Medicine Otx,
Gentlemen: Before I n*ed
yoor Exetosto Caiaine
Pomad* my hair wai
short, coarse and nappy,
bat xnr it has grown to 82
inches Ion;, and is so soft
and silky that I can do it
op any way 1 want to. 1
am tending yoo my pielure
to show you how
pretty Exelento has wad*
it SALLIIKKED.
1 - Don't let some fake Kink Remover fool
, you. You really can't straighten your hair
until it is nice and long* That's ~wh.it
|; EXELENTO pgmadI
does, removes Dandruff, feeds the Roots of
; the hair, and xnal:es it crow Ion?, soft and
; silky. After usinsr a few times you <can tell
I the difference, and after a little while it
; wll! be so ptetty and Ion* that yon can fix
it up to suit yen. xi m?icuw ?
we claim, we vrifl give your money back.
j Price 25c by mail on receipt of stamps
; or coin.
AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE.
i Write for particulars.
V EXELCMTO MEDICINE CO., Attarta, Ga.
HVOHHBMHm
M 1? Y17 t
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y
AD]
ii
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w and connect
to New\tlanta
Theeorgia.
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PERISH^*!
e the most hideous death
) it! You will not do it!
leir hunger. Will you do
be a man, much less an
and clothing for the starv
1,000,000
1919
ITTEE
iAREAST
ZRS2A
- Mi i
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A Just Received, best Cedar shingles in
? town. Langford & Buzhardt.
[ 12-20 6t.
_ i REMOVAL NOTICE.
1 j Blease & Blease, Atoerneys at Law,
^ ! have removed their offices to the
H ! fourth floor of the 'new Exchange
! Back" Building?rooms Numbers 403.
| 404, 405, 406, right in' front of the
! elevator. 12-20 lm
: i
CABBAGE PLANTS,
Millions Harcly Cabbage Plants from
'elected seed. Any variety, mow. iraMay.
$2.50 per 1.000. 10,000, S2
j nter 1-000. Prompt delivery. Enter
| orise Truck Farm, Georgetown, S. C.
ATTENTION PENSIONERS.
T Ml 1 - A. A. ^ /II
1 win oe at uie oierK. ui Liuurt s o:- i
l fice each Saturday in- January to prepare
pension applications No old
pensioners need apply.
W. G. Peterson,
? Pension Commissioner.
5 E R R Y
1'tie tvent of
.... SPECIAL MAIN
America's For<
ELAIDE
-? fho RIrt M OTAr V^flr I
: JL 1.1 JL^lg JL 1 JK. \/A U A
'HER owr
By MARK
Pric
SOc, 75c, $1
PLUS W/
f
I
i
For headache, |
neuralgia, colds and
grippe prudent physicians
now advise
The improved tablet in
which the heart-depressing
tendency is counteracted
by heart-toning elements.
To avoid confusion Aspitone j
1 1 I 5? 1 1 I
is sola omy m unproKen
packages. Price 35c. At
P. E. WAY <1/ GGIST.
GILDER k V/EEKS CO.
M Mter'f W j
E/* Airs. J. A. Cox, of AI- K/j
t/ derson, \V. Va., writes: !
y/\ "My daughter . . . suf- \
?/] fcred terribly. She could sr/$ j
K/] . net turn in bed .. . the
jk/\ doctors ?ave her up, 2nd w\JA j
f'yk v/e brought her home to jpy^ |
die. S'.ie l:~d suffered so &v|
PyM much at. .. lime. Hay- Yy*% !
A ing hcaid cf Cardui, we |?/|j ;
r got it lor her."' lfs*i j
Y* Be Vita's Tonic ya
1 In\afewdays, snebe- m^jE
L/J gan to improve," Airs. yl\
K/j Cox continues, "and fced J/a
Y/ty r.o trouble at... Cardui f/J f
{T/Jj cured her, and we sing ?/% I
Br Jk i4'; nmispc: evrrvwhrrp." Wr AL I
Y/k receive many thou- ^JL
|/J cands cf sirn;!ar letters Z&
K/J every year, telling of the /1&
t/ji good Cardui has done for /J
TV -j women who suffer from /j
;r/*1 complaints so common to yl ;
their sex. It should do
W fflr* t0?- $F /J
ItiL............ ^ ;
y, ^ ^ ^ v ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ V .
POPULAR MECHANICS MAGAZINE
IS FOR SALE BY ALL NEWSDEALERS
Asfe them to show yon a copy or send 20c for
the latest issne. postpaid. Yearly subscription
$2.00 to all parts of the raited States,
its possessions, Canada, and Mcxico. .
POPULAR MECHANICS MAGAZINE jA
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the Season
IAGEMENT OF . . .
amocf Aofrpsfi
A WW
THURS1
-yric Theatre Succc
4 MONEY
SWAN
es:
OO, $1.50
R TAX
"Deep Stuff" .
Doughboys R
Paris.?(By Mail.)?Not "best
ary refreshment demanded by the
that the war is over, and our boys
soldier is a serious-minded person,
reports to the contrary. He want
The American Y. M. C. A. in Fra
group of 300 doughboys, when aske
ing matter, spoke up with one voice
emati-cs. They were so much in ea
decided to start its first class in pr
?nn fnrm?>rlv an insstnTfinr in thp S
Colorado, was sent for to take cha
The fust real impediment to inte
vates presented itself when it was <
any could find out, an American b
France There were the French o:
pected to study French and Mather
well to mix drinks from the fort
son, however, was undaunted by tl
teered to teach without them until
mediately could arrive from the gi
^OST SCULPTURE OF REIMS
Works of Art of Unfortunate City Thai
Rivaled Those of the
Greek School.
Four years ago the sculp rare ol
Reims was one of the three great, original
groups in }France, the others being
Chartres and Amiens. How they
escaped, heaven knows, but they did
Saint Denis, Senlis and Laon, equal in
beauty and in quality, fell easy prey
to one set of sodden savages or another
until only a few precious fragments
are left, mutilated almost beyond
recognition. Paris has been
further degraded by barbarous restoration,
and therefore Chartres remains
as the exemplar of the high hieratic
echool of the twelfth century, Amiens
of the supreme fulfillment of the thirteenth;
for the great gray cliffs of
Reims, with their matchless flowering
of inconceivablc, incredible statues,
have been blasted by shell and calcined
by fire, and the exquisite sculpture of
all the craftsmen of France has
crackled, crumbled and fallen iijto indistinguishable
dust
I think it was the greatest sculpture
of the middle ages; greater than Char
tres, tor this was merely a triumphant
detail of architecture; greater than
Amiens, since it was less cleverly naturalistic,
more Greek in its proportion
end line, and more vital and varied in
its vivid characterization, writes Ralph
Adams Cram in the Yale Review. Medieval
sculpture is often dealt with as
Inferiority, patronizingly commended
88 all very well, considering the time.
I regard it as a school of sculpture
that stands on the same level with
that of Greece. Here at Reims were
many schools, many masters and each
following had its own personal qualities.
In all, however, we find a truly
ureeK quaniy or line ana composition,
a sense of dignity and power that to
unique, vivid and convincing characterization,
and an indwelling devotion
and religions passion that find their
match neither before nor since.
Why Prices Rise.
- This is an actual occurrence in Columbus.
A woman who had occasion
to use a common drug in making a
home preparation, bought a pound of
it at a drug store. She had often
bought It for seven %ents a pound, but
this time was charged 22 cents.
"How Is that?" she asked the proprietor.
"I never paid more than seven
cents a pound for that anywhere before."
'
"But." expostulated the druggist,
' prices have gone way up. Why, I have
to pay seven cents a pound for that
myself!"?Columbus Dispatch.
The Pest
American soldiers spenk of tht
louse as a "cootie." The French fight
er calls It a "toto." and the British ft
"coddler." Among all the armies the
pests are known as "trench rabbits"
or "seam squirrels." The significant
thing is that never are they called
lice. The soldier has the same horror
of verro!n that he had in civilian life,
and the very name "louse" carries th#
suggestion of degradation.
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7
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5SS
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s,
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ocai ac
JANUAl
Make Resei
??oMBBsssam
Is What
ead Over There
filers" but .serious works is Ine merAmerican
soldiers in France, now .
are waiting to get back home. The
with decided intellectual views, all
s to make his way In the world,
nee came to this conclusion when a ;
d what they would like as light read- >
, ana demanded books on applied Math- |
rnest about it that the Y. M. C. A.
aclical arts in France. B. H. Morri- ,
tates Teachers' College of Greeley, ^
rge of the class. I
llectual research among the buck pridiscovered
that there wasn't so far as :
ook on applied mathematics in all
nps nf ennrsp but none should be exr
natfcs simultaneously. It really isn't
of learning in that way. Mr. Morrihe
absence of textbooks and volunthe
ones which were wired for imood
old U. S. A. i
, . i??
; MOT AN UNMIXED BLESSING
t Washington Man Rejoiced Over "Alttoiess
Sunday" Until Awful Thought
Came to His Mind.
"Something is always happening to*
take the joy out of life,'' he saicL
mournfully.
"Something always happens, ox~
somebody always says something, and&
If they don't I have to think of something
myself," he continued.
,' "When I saw that news about thesupply
of gasoline being short, witts
probably not a month's supply left, E
rejoiced. You see, I don't own an au.
tomobile, and, what is more, my
.nerves must be sensitive, because they
, j worry me.
, j "They awake me at midnight with
. J a terrific banging and snorting, and
': disturb my slumbers at six o'clock irk
me morning wiui imu^ieu ruius uuu
explosions like unto antediluvian
monsters.
"If I had my way I'd restrict theuse
of automobiles from nine o'clock
in the morning to six o'clock at night.
But?well, when I thought the gasoline
was giving out, I must confess
I rejoiced. Selfish? Maybe. But I
had no sooner rejoiced than I thought
tt
The mournful man smiled sorrowfully.
"I thought," he said, "that with alt
the automobiles out of business, therewould
be just that many more people
j to ride on the street cars."?Washington
Star.
ALL HAVE THEIR FAVORITES
Most Novelists Admit Decided Preference
for Certain Children of
Their Brain.
It is no secret that Mowgii, the wolf
boy of the "Jungle Books," is Mr. Kip!
ling's prime favorite, or that Rodneyj
Stone, that fine fighter and gallant Englishman,
takes precedence even of
Sherlock Holmes in the affections of
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.
Thomas Hardy much prefers to consider
himself a poet rather than at
Btory writer, but among the many
characters he has created he love?
Tess best of all; and it is rumored
that H. 6. Wells has a sneaking af?
[ /ection for his Tono Bungay.
I It is often difficult to account forprejudices,
for likes and dislikes. The?
mother often loves her least worthy
! lad best. Mark Twain doted on Huckle?
i berry Finn, Dickens had a soft placeIn
his heart for the Artful Dodger^
and it is said that W. W. Jacobs Ioves|
best his sly, diplomatic, cool poacher!
and general scapegrace, Bob Pretty,
j Jerome K. Jerome has never lost hisr
first love for 'Three Men in a Boat**
It made his name known in two hemispheres,
and he feels he owes it a debt
of gratitude.
! Allan Quartermain is an easy first
In the heart of Sir EL Rider Haggard;
I Marie Corelli's favorite among her
own works is "Thelma," and Sir HaH
Caine's "The Manxmanwhile nobody
else can ever take the place of Bab"bie,
the gipsy lass of 'The Little Minister,"
in the love of Sir James Barrie.
i 1 [
he Play That
very Wife
hoiild Take
Ier Husband
) See. Not a
ex Play.?
ile Opens |
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