University of South Carolina Libraries
Patrolman Who Killed His Wife is Acquitted. # % News and Courier. Columbia, Sept. 19.?A vefdict of "not guilty" was returned shortly after midnight by the jury in the i case of Eugene m. Lancaster, motorcycle policeman of the Columbia police, force, on trial for the murder of his wife, Mrs. Allie B. Lancaster. The killing occurred on May 28th of this year, at which time Lancaster also shot to death Newton S. Lorick, his wife's companion in an automo bile. Lancaster is still to lace trial i for the killing of Lorick, but this case will not come up at the present term of ?ourt. Though locked up for the night .about 10:30 o'clock, the jury let it be known about 11:30 that a verdict had been reached, and officials of the court returned to receive it. It was read shortly after 12 o'clock. Lancaster himself was the principal witness of the closing day of the fviol TTp tpstifiprl that his mind was a. perfect blank after he fired the first shot at the couple when they approached in an automobile from the Congaree river bridge. The motorcycle policeman, facing a courtroom which was jammed to > suffocation, made his statement as to the circumstances leading up to and surrounding the double tragedy. At n the trial with him were members of his family, including two of his * * 1 'All - J LJ young sons ana-ms ntue aaugiiLet , > the latter being taken out when anything bearing on the alleged infidelity of her mother was brought out. Lancaster said when he got out of the automobile, his wife threw up both hands and said to Lorick, "My God, Newt, there is Eugene." ' DR. Z. T. CODY SAILS FOR WAR TORN EUROPE - " _ _ J r Greenville, Sept. 19.?Dr. Z. T. Cody, one of the editors of the Baptist Courier, has left for New York from which city he sails within a few days as a member of the commission from the Southern Baptist convention appointed to make an investigation of the religious needs of the war-torn countries of Europe. The commission is to report to the con " ? ? i* J vention next May its nnamgs, aim this report will be the basis of the convention's plans for work to be done in foreign fields with part of the $75,000,000 to be raised November 30 to December 7. Upon his departure from Greenville, Dr. Cody wired a parting message to Dr. L. R. Scarborough, director general.of the drive, in Nashville, Tenn., in which he said in part: "Tgo in the confidence that our peo?anion mnro fVlQTl 9AT^ntV ?J1C SJUOil lauc iuviv vu?u ? w five millions ere the journey is over, and that Southern Baptists will enter these appealing and inviting fields, promptly and adequately." The other members of this commission who are accompanying Dr. Cody are: Dr. John F. Love, corresponding secretary of the foreign mission board, of Richmond, Va.,; Dr. J. T. Henderson, secretary of the Southern Baptist Laymen's movement; and Dr. Everett Gill, missionary to Italy. During Dr. Codv's absence from ; >? Greenville, Dr. H. W. Provence, of Furraan university, will be acting editor of the Courier. Farmers Should Win. The State, 19th. \ Senator Alan Johnstone of Newberry was in Columbia yesterday. Senator Johnstone is greatly interested in the fight being made for better prices for cotton and thinks -- " '1 - 1 ? if the tarmers ian/io namue uic situation this year, they alone, are blamable. All the producers have to do, he believes, is to sit steady and not be stampeded by the present fluctuations of the market. Senator Johnstone has a distinguished public service record. He was a member of the city council of Newberry four years; trustee of the city schools of Newberry 16 years; turtee j of Clemson college 28 years, now being president of the board; two years in the lower house of the general assembly and is now serving his third term in the senate, which brings his. legislative career up to 14 years. ^ Mrs. Gildersleeve (looking at a portrait)?But that beautiful thing isn't a picture of Miss Gumlings, the ^homely nurse? "Rli+Viomsm?Yps. it is! it was IU10* JL/AiV4*VAAAM** .. J painted by an artist she pulled through a critical illness.?Judge. ' | Ask Your Soldier Boy How "Cooties" , Got Such a Held. He'll tell you that the battlefronts j of Europe were swarming with rats, i which earned the dangerous vermin' and caused our men misery. Don't1 iet rats bring disease mco yvui jiwu;. W-ien you see the first one get KAT3NAP. That will finish them quick. Three sizes, 25c, 50c. $1.00. Sold guaranteed bv Gilder and Weeks Cc. * . Not, However, the Seat of the Kaiser's Authority, as One Mig^t Rest sonably Suppose. In order to understand where the throne of Satan came from and how it came to .Berlin, it is necessary iu open the pages of ancient history and renew our acquaintance with Pergamura. Pergamum (Pergamos orPergamon) was the ancient capital of Mysia, in Asia Minor. It wak about three miles north of the Caicus river and fifteen or twenty miles from the Aegean sea. Under the Greek rule of Attains I (241-197 B. C.) it became not only a powerful city but also the center of the artistic and literary life of Asia. Attalus built many wonderful temples, altars and monuments t^at attracted the attention of the entire world. His son Euinenes II (197-159 B. C.)'carried on the policy of his father. He founded the famous Pergamum library, which cont\ined 200,000 volumes. This library was later removed to Egypt by Antony and presented by him to Cleopatra. Attalus III bequeathed his treasures and the kingdom of which Pergamum was the capital to Rome, and so, at his death, in 133 B. C., it became a Roman province. This was the first Roman province on Asiatic soil. Carl Humann, a civil engineer, who had traveled in Asia Minor, induced the Berlin museum to fit out an expedition to excavate for the hidden" fKflociiPoc QT?r?ionf- Porfflmnm. In U ^aouxvo Vi. U1BV4VMV A ? 1886, at the close of the third campaign, Humann and a friend named Conze unearthed the great altar and the site of the library. Subsequent expeditions uncovered many treasures. The great altar was shipped, piece by piece, to Berlin ?nd re-erected in the Kaiser Friedricli museum. A few parts of It are in Constantinople. However, the central and main por* * fhnnnA !c in RftHl'll LIUU Ui oauiu O UIIVUI^ ia 111 With the throne of Satan in Berlin ft is not difficult to understand the military ambitions and actions of the German government. France's Big Families. Notwithstanding all that* is said about the depopulation of France, large families are by no means scarce in certain rural parts of the country. A society for the encouragement of large families publishes a report giving tha munoc nf families in the department of the Loire-Inferieure, each of which has had more than six sons or sons-in-law with the colors. At the head of the list is the Marlot family, of which twenty-two members? nine sons, three sons-in-law and ten grandsons?have joined the army. .Four of them were killed, four wounded, one died in'captivity, and one is missing. Four won the crolx de guerre. Numerous other famines in tne at. Nazalre district have had from six to twelve sons and grandsons at the front. The 587 families named furnished 4,015 soldiers to' the army.? Lexington Herald. Treat 'Em Rough. This applies to all garden Insects, for none of them are there with an honest purpose, says the National War Garden commission in a bulletin. If you discover that one or more hills of your canteloupes are infested with plant lice, the only thing to do is to null thft nlnnts ud and carry them off and burn them. But in doing so you should put them in a-tight receptacle of some kind so that none of the lice drop off and get on other plants for they will multiply rapidly and you will have part of your fight over again. " As for squash bugs if they begin to suck sap until their skins burst, spray ^the canteloupe vines with nicotine sulphate, soap and water. Old squash bugs can be trapped under pieces of board placed near the plants. They will hide at night under these boards and may be killed in the morning. Soldiers'* Swear Words. Despite the chaplains, the men developed the habit of swearing; soldiers always have. War requires emphatic expression. It destroys flexibility of expression?and "<Jamn" and "hell" do seem the fullest description of a soldier's occupation. "It's an innocent kind of swearing, though," said a chaplain. "It does not really blaspheme, and the men will fall out of the habit when they return 1 ?> ^ a*. /I/\ if ir\ n r? ?\1 ? * in'c IlUIli^. 1I1CJ UUU I UU It 111 i I V. i Klj'idiii o presence?unless they are under fire, when chaplains are too busy to attend to such details." They did not swear when they were in the presence of women?and least of all in the hospitals where they were ministered to by those hard working, practical, noble fcrmy nurses who submitted to discipline as sharp as that of the men, and where they learned to appreciate womanhood at Its best. Walks Upside Down. Because he walks upside down as well as right side up, the black-andwhite warbler is also frequently called the black-and-white creeper, says the American Forestry association of Washington, which is conducting the national birdhouse building contest. This bird lias been called a symphony in block and white because of the beautiful manner in which these two colors ore used over his body. His j head Is bnrred black and white with ; n white stripe over each eye; he has wing bars on each wihjj: and th^ inner I tfrtl.ci s\-f hio i intiJi' to ! | foot OTP I ? MI II JO VUiV! Ifiii AvuiAkv* w via X. ! white patched. 'ibis bird gets most i of his torCi l?y Catherine insects ami ! j'u the crevices iti the bark of ; ;i\ es. thus aesrroyiii^ pests which might work injury to line trees. j BEGINS THIS WEEK i Newberry Jews will celebrate the j new wear. Rosh Hoshanah, begin jning Wednesday night at dark anc j ending two days later, September 20 i at sunset. The year going out is 5,, 679 for the Jews and the new yeai iwill be 5,680, corresponding to the jyear 1919 to Christians. j While the day is really the new jmoon of the seventh month, Tishri the calendar beginning with the spring month, Nison, the religious importance of the month so emphaj sized this particular new moon ob ! servance 'that it gradually assumec jthe importance of the new year. II lis the beginning of the cycle knowr *' y -Jf i. 1 j as tne ten aays 01 repentance, enu jing with the holiest day of the year the day of atonement, October 4th this year. In contrast with the rest of the pe riod, which are days of sadness anc penitence, the new year has always i been observed among the Jews as j j day of solemn joy and happiness. 11 I is called in the Bible the "Day oi | Memorial" and to the Jews it marks j the recording of -the deeds of the pas1 'year for judgment?judgment whici I -- 1- nnonnn/1a/l tintil o-ffop till IS) I1UWCVCI) isuopciiucu u 11 via uivvi ?... day of atonement when through tru( repentance and sincere contrition th< sins of the past may be blotted oui and new opportunity afforded to live a life of purity and usefulness. It is also called the "Day of th( Blowing of the Trumpet" and aroun< this ceremony?the blowing of th< Shofar or ram's horn?the service oJ the day revolves. The ram's horn ii supposed to refer to the salvation Oj ? * ii * i*j_ j.' j Isaac ana rne suDiituuon 01 a ram u j his place when Abraham was about t< slay him in his wrong understanding of God's demand for a sacrifice (Genesis XXII.) i As is the case with all Jewish hob days, the observance begins at th< preceding sundown and in the ortho dox synagogs lasts until sundown tw< days later, two days being observe( in nlace of one as is the custom in th< reform synagog. ?r From Pastor Furcron. Baptist Courier. Dear Courier: I am asking for $ little space to tell some of the goot things that have come my way this ytear. I am serving as loyal am liberal people this year as can b< found anywhere on the earth. Thei are ever ready to help in any goot cause. ) Wp Viflvp had our nrotracted meet , ~ ^ ing at Oakland, and were fortunate indeed in having Dr. J. B. Turner student pastor of Wake Forest col lege, to preach for us. Brother Tur ner was a chaplain 4n the 30th djvi sion and had already won the heart of some of my people by service ren dered on the battle field. He it wa: that found and buried Ernest Digby ? 1 AnfnAVMA/1 on 3U11 Ui vui v cx y iiiginy csiccuicu ou perintendent, Mr. T. J. Digby. And while here he met and renew * ed friendships with several of th< boys who saw service overseas. Bu that is not all, he is a fine fellcv and a preacher of the gospel. The visible results of his worl here were twenty additions to th< church on profession of faith, the en tire community helped forward, an< a warm spot found in every hear for him. My churches, Oakland and East side, went awav over the top finan ' - cially, and will report at the Asso ciation over $1,000.00 all told, anc they are enthusiastic over the 7; million campaign and are going t< ask for a full share in it. ' At Oakland last Wednesday nigh they voted themselves a vacatioi and handed me a purse to leave on to be sure I would be out of the waj while they rest; and I am away fron i home while writing: this and I an sincerely hoping that they are en joying this vacation as much as I am This is the third trip they hav< given me this year, having sent m< | to Atlanta in May, to Greenville ir ! July and now J am at Crawford, Ga. (with my family visiting our rela tives, resting and having a good time I. could go on and on recounting the pleasures of my work this year i Lut time and space both forbid s< I will close by wishing that you maj get a copy of the Courier in even Baptist home in the State, and tha they will read it. Yours very truly, W. E. Furcron. nni_ _ 1 ;?. j.1 u j ine nermii, uirusu 1? uctwicu n be the most talented and brillian singer in the world, not even ex cepting the nightingale. NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMEN1 I will make a final settlement o: , the estate of Horace Gruber in th< ! Probate Court for Newberry County |S. C., on Monday, the 29th day o: September, 1919, at 10 o'clock in th< on/1 irrmpil'ntci . ; AUiCJiUUIl, CiJUJ rn.1 ^ j thereafter ask for my discharge a: ! guardian of said estate. 3VI. L. GrMbtr. Guardian. Ne\\berry, Aug. 26, 1919. WHEN YOU SUFFER |l FROM RHEUMATISM j Almost any man will tell you I * m m m that* bloans Liniment i\ means relief i j _ r. For practically every man has used j It who has suffered from rheumatic '|. aches, soreness of muscles, stiffness of - j /bints, the results of weather exposure. ; | Women, too, by the hundreds of . | thousands, use it for relieving neuritis, lame backs, neuralgia, sick headache. , | Clearl, refreshing, soothing, economil! cal, quickly effective. Say "Sloan's t j Liniment" to .your druggist <}et it ,; today. 35c, 70c, $1.40 I i htr^ ja m mnuirrrrn-m-tmm il FrooseveltI J I Wo- u? a*~.:j a - | mas nc nuaiu ui Being Assassinated ? ' lie wr<ite to Sir that be couldn't uixierklnad why ^nldlr uo got mertout aboul it. I Heading Roo?evelt'? Own Letter*. wfcleh jrtno* a|>|*arlag nrlukiirl; In M KIKM-II'S k like vli.il Inr hl? pri?ate afllee at the White llou;* ai-J luvVi. g o?er hit eorrekpondeace. I The** tn BwMcvplt'k Own Letter* row I ' tt[ip?urt?ip la r I Scribner's Magazine I 5 If Toor dmlw fi??l Mipjilr roar repr. nrnd I p fl your order now 10 SCR.'li.VKK'J* HUJViilNK, n ^ .New \ork hty, for a full year'* iHbxription. 1 I PrW I , (J V After you eat?alwa>j take ; FATONIC ME ( FOR YOUR AOD-STOMACTt) Instantly relieves Heartburn, Bloated Gassy Feeling. Stops food souring, repeating, and all stomach miseries. Aids digestion and appetite. Keeps stomach *-?J U/nxMwaVifalitVfllMlPeD. 1 eweetuuu suvu#? ? v*? * 3 EATONICisthebestremedy.Tensof thousands wonderfully benefited. Only costs a cent 5 tJT two a day to use it. Positively guaranteed to please or we will refund money. Getabif 1 box today. YoawOlaee. * 3 Gilder & Weeks Co., Newberry, S. C. 7 i ; Stomach : Out of Fix? j 'Phone your grocer or druggist for a dozen bottles of this delicious digestant,?a glass 8 with meals gives delightful relief, br , no charge for the first dozen used. Stiivar Ale 2 PURE DIGESTIVE AROMATICS WITH t SKIVAR MINERAL WATER AND GINGER Nothing like it for renova:ing old worn-out stomachs. converting food c into rich blood and sound flesh. 2 Bottled and guaranteed by the celebrated Sliivar Mineral Spring. Shel.j ton, S. C. If your regular dealer cannot suoply you telephone t J. KIBLER CO., Distributors for Newberry. . jLUUtv r un Ir JI UfilJ THE FED BAIL I TRADE MARK /|5 ilplr m M Firearms $ Ammunition m Jshootu^B^rp 1 , NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT I will make a final settlement of . the estate of Jacob A. Shealy in the * Probate Court for Newberry county, , S. C., on Wednesday, the 8th day of ) October, 1919, at 10 o'clock in the j forenoon and will immediately there? < after ask for my discharge as admin 11 istratrix of said estate. Martha E. Shealy, Admx. Newberry, S. C., Sept. 8, 1919. j AUCTION SALE OF LIBERTY t BONDS. I will sell to the highest bidder, . J for cash., before the court house door i" at Newberry, S. C., on October 6th, f! 1919, within the ]e.2al hours of sale, J' one Liberty Bond of the United , States of the third loan, par value f of $50.00, i;rd one Liberty Bond of J the Ur.'ttd States of the fourth ioan, r.or- Vi^TP rf S.v'j.fcG. r jyui ~ - t "-r :1 . Thomas P Adams, Kxo- 'i.r- L: t \V i:l and Testament ' 01 John Thomas Adsmes, deceased. 9-12-26-10-3 n I tires \ ^ | returr vmM By coi j PWI of a ; ! jin ' J^3U Plv T iGilder & \ I . . I. Newberr i \ I Newberry 1 : 1 I I ^ j | ^ 1 has been called to * || fuel saving secur el Original Hot B isl Coal prices* are high? | an extravagant heating | is a demon for fuel. Join now in the j | satisfied users wi j ? relief from hig ! | with the great 1 **?%* pre i I ^Vkb ^ i I Hot Blast M Burns cheapest coal clean an | I Everybody is searching j || and food. Here's yc j pga cut your coal bills s< i % gain a perfectly 1 v'- well. Investigate r ?* ? rt y. % is ruci pavers i i x, j ^yo.:i2 ricuic c.vci y a lar Buy lOO V J 'ents Worth ~IY not make every dollar you spend for jive you the maximum i in mileage guaran) '! * upcuillg U1C lUSL pel UiUC Y2 n x 4V2 B so-called " stantire with a Hood Extra ire of the same size you'll that the Hood is at least cheaper, because? The "standard" tire guarantees 3500 miles for while the Hood ' gives you 6000 guaranteed miles for a first cost ' . of only more. tow Drop in and let us prove ? money on your tire bills. I a RosJ | it for a j ft 11 4k _ / / . J \. > Veeks Co., i 1 4 v. s. c. ? 7 ? " 0 Idw. Co. I \ 'k ^8 j[ .? ..1^ a ^ tne remarKauic j ed with Cole's \ last Heaters. -why be a slave to e ; plant or stove that I ' * jreat army of js ho havs found ' ?---1 *.- //? I 71 FUCi Ullia inr fuel saving a Original ( : Heater f .J l?*?M ileae ami fiiol p Ill UHgllt* V?w vuj ??* |*3 for a way to save fuel | iur opportunity to I juarein half and &Ji> leated home as low. Our Store M. ieadquarttrs^f t