University of South Carolina Libraries
Copjmvot A J 1 l 1 R. J. Reynold* Tobacco Co. I -SPECIAL ELECTION IN HARTFORD SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 11. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Newberry. Whereas, one-third of the resident -^lectors and a like proportion of the Tesideut freeholders of the age of tnrAn(v^n? in thp Hartford School restrict, No. 11, of the County of Newberry, State of South Carolina, h:r/e tiled a petition with the County Bo*rii of Education of Newberry Courty, South Carolina, petitioning and requesting that an election ko hekl in said School District on tfc j Question of levying an additional -spocial tax of two (2) mills on the U M property within the said school - district. \ Now. therefore, we, the undersign ed, composing the County Board o! it\n ?"r?r- Van-h?\rrv Pminfv Smith AJUU\'MM1'U IV* .IV v/vv...v^ y Carolina, do hereby order the Board of Trustees of the Hartford School District No. II to hold an election 01 the said question of levying an add; tionai special tax of two (2) mills t< be collected on the property located within the said School District, which said election shall be held at the Hart, ford School House in the said School District No. 11, on Monday, the 24th day of February, 1919, at which said election the polls shall be opened ai 7 a. ru. and closed at 4 p. 111. Thy members of ihe Board of Trustees of said School District shall act -as managers of said election. Only ..such electors as reside in said School District and return real or personal property lor taxation, and who ex hibit iheir tax receipts and registra tion certificates as required in gencr al elections, shall be allowed to vote Electors favoring the levy of such tax shall cast a ballot containing the word * "Yes" written or printed thereon, and each elector opposed to such levy shall cast a ballot containing the word "No" ' ^written or printed thereon. Given under our hands and seals this, the 3rd day of February, 1919. C. M. WILSON, (L. S.) <>. B. CANNON, (L. S.) \ J. M. BEDENBAUGH, (L. S.) County Board of Education for New berry County, s. C. NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT. Notice is hereby give that I will '-stake a final settlement of the personral estate of Ernest Wise, deceased, at 10 o'clock a. m., on Friday, the 21st day of February, 1919, at the office of - the Judge of Probate for Newberry "Otnmty, S. C., and will immediately thereafter, apply for a discharge as administrator of said estate. Henry Wise, As Administrator of the Estate of Ernest Wise, Deceased. CABBAGE PLANTS. Millions Hardy Cabbage Plants from selected seed. Any variety, now, until May. $2 per 1,000; 10,000, $1.50 per 1.000. Prompt delivery. Enter prise Tiuck Farm, Georgetown, S. C. ii i I si ^sfef d Ml l! |l!i I! 1 ? If I !?i i! ii Hdm | j " ^ Tis geared t? P that just lavis every man eame enough t tidy red tin and a jimmy pi Get it straight that wha pipe or cigarette makin's sr in P. A. That's because You can't any more make F :ongue or parch your throat than irink when he's off the water! )ut by our exclusive patented pro You just lay back like a regula ^ ^tttKTT 11^ O * lit; UciIU?> ?UiU wuuuci wny in o< ;ection in the P. A. smokepastur ;o remember back! Bay Prince Albert everywhere tobacco tidy red tins, handsome pound and half ?that clever, practical pound crystal I moistener top that keeps the tobacco I. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., i i < i ! I Stomach i Out cS Fix? f 'Phone your grocer or IJ j druggist for a dozen boltles l\ ' of this delicious digestant,?a glass lg | with trials give? delightful relief, or i no char-re for th" first dozen used* 'c .. ^ ji -a t> Jl TS _ , T I smvar me ji fipe o,rn:vE aroma~i:s with if SriiVAn MliZfa l wa1es A wd ginger j t ! ; Nothing like ? i -r ren;>v<:jlcl !9 wura-oUt : .vk verting IcM'J j iiiio rich aiK <ounu flesh. I i Bottled ami pn*?ran'epd by the cele- j S'livar Vin#?ral Spring. Shel- ( ton. S. C. If your regular dealer cannot supply you telephone I A 1 a , ,V. IIXEL^fc CO., J 5 Distributors for Newberry. C NOTICE. |? A charge of $2.50 will be made here-jr after for er.ch and every carcase of' t mule, horse or cow burned at the in ja trineraler cf the town. M !> < nvfior fit thp fftmrr.ittee I? J 0. 2. Lindler, ]a Mealth Officer, j2 ThlsCornWiTn Peel Right Off! j! "Gets-It" Makes Coins Gome Oft j" The "Banana-Peel" Way! ! Why have to flop on the floor, squeeze yourself up like the letter ( "Z", and with bulging eyes draw vour face up into a wrinkly knoi. while you gouge and pull at trie I ?<juick" of a tender corn? That s i 2 or 3 Drop* Applied in a Few Seconds-" There's No Fussing or Cutting. "Gets4t" Always Works! ! the old, savage way. "Gets-It" is the modern, painless, simple way. i Lean over and put two drops of I "Gets-It" on the corn, put your ; stocking and shoe right on again, and forget the corn. Pain is eased. "Gets-It" has revolutionized the ' j treatment of corns. It never irri- ^ j tates the true flesh. You'll stop i limping on the side of your shoe, ? j and do away with greasy salves, ; bundling bandages, thick plasters and painful methods. Use "Gets-It", I it's common sense. "Gets-It," the guaranteed, moneybackcorn-remover, the only sure way, costs but a trifle at any drug store. MTd by E. Lawrence &Co., Chicago, 111. ..Sold in Newberry, and recommended as the world's best corn remedy by W. G. Mayes, P. E. Way, Newberiy Drug Co., Gilder & "Weeks Co. t W j i i < it smokes, Prince Albert o a joyhandout standard hes smokehappiness on o make a bee line for a ipe?old or new! t youVe hankered for in nokes you'll find aplenty P. A. has the quality! 'rince Albert bite your t you can make a horse Bite and parch are cut cess! j r follnwr otrn? iff tn tnoof jl iV/iiw vv cuiu pun iu uvui I amhill you didn't nail a e longer than you care j .1 is sold. Toppy r*d bags, i pound tin humidors?and {lass humidor with sponge in sach perfect condition. Winston-Salem, N. C j i COLLEGE XEWS. I Rev. Frederick H. Knubel, D. D.J \rocHAnt nf tha T7n itnH TiiithoPfli Church in America, will preach the baccalaureate sermon to the graduiting class of dewberry college, San. lay morning, June 15. Dr. Knubel' s known all over the country as .1 >reacher and a leader, and doubtless he Lutherans of this State and the riends of the college generally will >e gratified to know that he .will be it our commencement, and they will ake advantage of the opportunity to; tear him. Rev. M. L. Stircwn't of ConcoTd, X * 1., one of the most eloquent young' >utneran ministers c r :ne aouiu wii; iddress the Y. M. C A. and the public Sunday night, June 15th. The speakers for the literary so-| ieties celebration and for the alumri t nefttimr Tuesdav morning will bs ail-! louuced a little later. In spite of many interruptions tfco. iffairs of the college have been ax j ast brought to order and college j ictivities are running smoothly. The mnual debate between the Excelsierj md Phrenakosmian literv societies,! widely kiyown as the "March Debate'; rill not be held this year, but it nj rotable that a joint debate with a I ister institution will be held t'ii3 I prmg. The enrollment is considerably: :bove that of last sessior but is 13' >er cent less than the total enroll-' tient during the period of the S. A. T. 1 "olored Soldiers of Newberry County Are Asked to Register ! ? ! All colored soldiers of Xewberrv' :ounty who have been discharged! rem the U. S. army are asked to go; o Singleton's drug store and register! lis name as there will be a register; here for that purpose. In going there! )Iease carry your discharge papers j hat you received when you left the j irmy in order that your rank, com-j >any, regiment and length of service j nay be properly registered. We arej loing this to secure a permanent re- j :ord. We are preparing to have aj >an<iuet for you in the near future j vhen most of the overseas soldiers I iave returned. All ministers and nembers of the council of defence ire asked to urge the coys of the various sections to come and register, i it once. Respectfully, U. S. Gallman, For Committee. j 606 cures by removing the cause. It ! THE H.EI jVJLD ANT NEWS ONE VEAR FOR ONT,Y $1.50. ! TRENCH FIB EE ; AT Et'il OF THE MS ! j Memory cf Littia Sheets That ' Enlivened Army Life Will Live Forever. The trewh newspaper died with the i end of tlie worM war. Inn in Knghind j ;irs?! Krance today ihere are not a few j soldiers who, ;iirlioii.irli naturally joy- j ous ;it the thought of peace, betray j a degree of sadness because of the j disappearance ot these famous little publications. i Editors and reporters were sought out to serve the occasion from all ranks and conditions. Typewriters. papers and penrils were spirited fr<??a ij somewhere, and the trench papers j were produced, in most cases, on the ;j t?rw? Tlmv ImH nvormnp in- !l Ill lilj^ ? j M a IU14 IV v J| numerable difficulties. Laughing at'i death and destruction, it was their Jj mission to lighten the task of the;! fighting men. j1 But now the little papers have been I scrapped. Editorial offices in the shape j of dugouts, beli tents and broken-j down huts were stripped with the si^n-; ing of the armistice, and the Squib, ij Rocket or Patrol remain only as mem- j ories. It is said of one of these lit!le pub- j nations on the British front that not one of the original editorial staff lived to read the last words of the paper they brought into heinj:. Men came end went, hut the paper was preserved until the last. TOWN WELLS GUSH TWater Fills the Storage Tank, but fs of Little Use to Pumps. The town of Wyoming, three miles south of Dover, Del., has a phenomenon which officials and residents have been nnable to explain. The water system, pumping station and tower are a quarter mile from the town proper, with a tank which is nearly 100 feet hiffh and has a capacity of several thousand gallons. Usually it has required an hour or longer to fill the tank by pumping from the driven wells and refill it as water is drawn by consumers. llTUktn ??> > nnct wool' liniTSllfll Wllillll %*?v. pu.^i Itvvn ...X thing has happened. The keeper of the pumping station was surprise to see the tank filled In about 20 minutes of pumping and In some instances not that long. It !s also noticed that even after the pnmps have been shut down the water gushes up the pipe for a eon siderable height', causing the tank to' overflow. With this peculiar situation several town wells hnve gone dry. the presumption being that the pumping station has struck the same vein of water. Residents with such useless wells have been compelled to tap the town water supply. MUSTARD GAS COOKS FLESH Soldier Tells of Experience in Engagement Near Verdun. "Mustard jras shells which the Hun? nsed in many instances cooked thf flesh," said William Arnold. Penn. 111.. Company D. Forty-seventh infantry while recounting an entrapment with the Germans near Verdun. "When the enemy made an attack. , we adjusted our masks, hut the eras was so deadly poisonous that It scorched our hands and necks. If s man failed to pet his mask on fn time, nine times our of ten his fncf would be badly burned. The pffccr resembled a bad case of smallpox." he said. Private Arnold is in the base hosnitnl at Camn Sherman re^ovmng from shrapnel wounds In both legs. FREAK WINS HIS BET -- *> Found Dead in Police Station as He Had Predicted. Fifteen years ago "Tattooed Jack." a well-known steeple jack and circuf sideshow character of former years bet "the best drink in town that FN be found dead some niirht with niv S i clothes on in this police station," with Sergeant Hutchinson of the. North sid, | Jail at Pittsburgh. The other night an aged man was found dead in a cell of the station. No one knew his identity until Hutchinson was called. It was "Tattooed .Tack." and he had his clothes on. H? had won the bet. Rich Indian Takes Wife. Old Dog. chief of the Oros Ventres.*]" one of the four tribes which lives inj pence and harmonv on Rerthold lleser- j ration, has brought Mrs. Old Do;: to j a hospital :it Rismarck. N". D.. fo? treatment. Old Dog is a full b I no.led Oros Ventre, nnd is one of the wealth lest and most progressive Indian-! on the reservation. He has thousand* of acres of good land, several thousand head of registered cattle and hundreds of fine horses. Last summer he built a nine-room home in which he installed a modern heating and plumbing system. Optimism Nets $500. Mrs. J. FI. Steiner's optimism nnrl: faith In General Pershing and his J Yanks has won for her $."00. \Vhil? I the Germans seemed on the verge of: winning the war she went anions her j neighbors in Pittsburgh cheering then , up. saying that the enemy would I?,; ; beaten before the snow began to fa)! ! When her statements were question* I; she prc.nptly offered to wager $r?0r. i whieh was as promptly taken up. She collected. warn wsnMim mmmmmmmP? ? 1 SPECIAL | &3 i i a^'e been f<riun :j to purchase fi I tllifer Visile jj| This is your opportunity to t< I?3 goad. It has all of the attac ulator, ruling devise, rachei paper, standard keyboard; a ?r/ce $37 II have only five of these mac to buy a typewriter, don't mi Mayes' Book ? LThe House of a ' nsasrassBaH FEW V/O'J Lj P.ESCUE JOHN BARLEYCORN! The has killed the Evans bill '<> allow tii? shinment of one gallon of liquor a month to individuals in South Carolina instead of the proverbial quart. The motion to strike out !he enacting words was made by Representative Mims of Edgefield and the vote was 65 to 21. Those who voted against striking out the enacting words, which vote was in favor of the measure, were: Buckingham, Burguson, Carey, M. R. Cooper, J. H. Davis, T. P. Dickson, Evans, Folk, Gaston. Gerald, Hall, Hanahan, Keenan, Kelly. Lancaster, Long, Miley, Morrison. Peurifoy, Wise and Woods. Uj uitiskrafs on his farm nrj'? 4*i* in*- I>H.. Hurry B (Jo.i. I? t> liu.ilf enough To pay for his jarit. uiii ?v;l. have some money left f<? h??lp u >: u-oJ.-i cultivation Hp jrets? fLV f . f?lH' ! hides. 88 c*?nf> for rpc. >m ? :ir*<: l;? <vnts 'ai*b ?ai uieut H*- !;,{> *!?' *< - iio?" than *1 V*l. EMliNfiS FROM SHOES T. D. Cv/iii.-j cf Ookah, Hawaii, * ' ' -i- ?u: -U makes a remartiacie statement wmcn demonstrates tin money-saving durability c f I icolh Sc!cn. II2 \;ri;.e% *'Aftrr wearing a pair of iTjClin-soh:! shoes c 7 arid cn for th::ty-t!irce norths, I r/cre them on a tif> the vc'.cano cf ICihuea and v.T.I.:claro::r.:l the cratcr over hot lava ch: limes an; I clill the roles showed c::!v eirr." cf wear." ihb "ci^ericnco is not accidental. It. results JVcr.i the scientiiic process by v/hicli Neciia Seles are made to be c::ect!y what csl:s chould be?comfortable, waterproof and exceedingly economical because cf the long wear they ?ive. Get them ca new shoes for all mem* r linim ftiom t-lfif" t^en ct trie tiiiu navt muu c~\ rom shoe 3. They arc made by The Gociynr Tire &. Rubber Comjnny, A':r^n, Ohio, who also make Y/inV^- jruaranteed to outwear any ether heels. He?li.fi Soles Tnuio Msrs ?cz? ...... I'at. Off. K^^^^HHHBBjl ?n*'S (;nw an-.I Artistic Dancer W'ltl Opera House Next H , OFFER! nte in being ab'e -j ve Number 5 I : Typewriters * ike advantage of something hments. Back spacer, tabt release f&r writing on ruled. complete typewriter in itself .50 CASH | rhines. If you ever expect ice fkia kafnain ^ 1 VlilC k/UI ^UUi? ? H t Variety Store ' Fhousand Things % ' y ? te-Ms & wmmmmmmmammt TO ALL COXCERXED. I I | Fair and final noticc is hereby given j tliat 011 the 1st of March, 1019, execu! tions will be issi.ed for all taxes due 1 town of Newberry and unpaid on that ! date. i By order of the Town Council. J. W. Chapman, td Clerk and Treas. i COMMUTATION TAX The general assembly has extended IB ; the time for the payment of commu- if ' tation or road tax until March loth, 11919. All persons having not paid ! can pay same until March 15th, 1919. ^H| C. C. Schumpert, Treas. Newberry County. ? j Feb. 13, 1919 2-14 3t 1 TAX RETURNS. I, or an authorized agent, will be iXl iue J.UJ1U YViiig pxckces uajucu UVWW for the purpose of taking tax return* of personal property for the fiscal year. 1919: Jolly Street, Thursday, Jan. 23rd. Poinaria, Friday, Jan. 24th. I Glymphville, Tuesday, Jan. 28th \ J. L. Crooks, Wednesday, Jan. 29th Maybinton. Thursday, Jan. 30th. ^ 1 j And in the Auditor's office in the v 1 j court house until February 20, after 1 1 which date 50 per cent penalty will be added. i iLe law requires a tax on all notes and mortgages and mouey; also in: come tax on incomes of over $2,500. ! There is a capitation tax on all dogs of fifty cents. * ^ I til m n?AJ i .'Ul maxt; pciBuno uciwccu iuc ages j of 21 and 60 are liable to pay a poll H ! tax of *1.00 unless otherwise exempt 1 All persons owning property in M more than one school district will be ^9 required to make returns in each dis- j| irict, as the tax books will be made jj> H ; by school districts instead of town- M ships in 1919. . J j i_'C ciii't'iu i to stale whether yoa | have bought or sold real estate durj ing the year 7918. J. B. HALFACRE. J | County Auditor mwwiiiij mmmmmmtmrmym?vi???? W ? niw> I'% % v < > -v; \ IVALBKUw 1 "My Sol<!i*'r OirP at tlie Newberry Thursday Night, Feb. 20.