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_ I > V / \ / ' : - - i ^ - . i ? VOLUME LV., NU.MBER 79. NEWBERRY, S. C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1919. TWICE A WEEK, $1.50 A YEA* ?-? ii . * ii i i. j MANY IMPROVEMENTS BEING [ MADE IN WHITMIRE' i1 Needmore New Settlement for the Negroes?New Y. M. C. A. Secretary?Addition to Build y ? trig. ' \ Whitmire, Sept. 30.?For some time the Glenn-Lowry Co., who have , "v 1 - ,jV - ? J Uaati Uiisn parr. ! ( maae mis iuwu, u<tvc uccu uuo^ ov^regating the colored people. They have put up nice new houses for them j s in Needmore, streets will be laid off,; c lights and water put into these houses j and a moving picture show planned . * for . the negroes. This company pur-j c chased the negro church near the ball ground and will help build a new t ~ 1 ? 1- \t/\A/^?V?AVO 0 cnurcu in nccumvtv. , A large boarding house for mill j operatives, of 15 roomsj has justjt been completed and fitted up with * -every modern convenience. This : ^ ^ house stands on the eminance just j beyond the fill at the mill. Mr. and ? ?" T A rv" ?'U-- ml>n oro woll L'nnwn i S / ivirs: j. a. uajuv, wuvs uit >iv<4 here will have charge of this board- i ing house. ! The boarding house near the school s kept during the summer by Mr. C. "v B. Hagna, is now presided over by c Mr. and Mrs. Fortune. Here the ( > teachers find a home where they are pleasantly located near their work. ? An upper story has been added to j ^ the Y. M. C. A. building just oppo-1 c .1 Ml mi.;- ? 11 -Site tne mili. 1 rns is nun a uuiguuicent building of which all our citizens feel proud. ' Mr. Brockman of Greenville, the new Y. M. C. A. secretary, has taken F charge of his work and is winning ^ * his way into the hearts of the people. We are soon to have a lady as j a community worker. j.' Mr. Sam Whitmire of Greenville ^ 1 L+ViD wopir With ) nas uccu opcuumj, vuv ...? friends and relatives ^^e. Mr. " Carlisle Liv , after ^ spending the summer in Charlotte, ^ Pacolet and other places, has returned and resumed his work in the P. B. Qdell garage. Mrs. Jno. L. Miller has been in Columbia for the past two weeks undergoing treatment for her throat. Mr. T. H. Watson has sold his home ?ore'to Mr. George Abrams. The lumber is laid on the ground \ c and being sawed into the proper j ^ shape for the new cottage of Mr. , and Mrs. T. W. Abrams. This^ot tage will be on the lot between Mr. j M. E. Abrams and Mr. Jno. L. Miller's residences. When this house is completed Mr. and Mrs. Abrams will ^ move to town. j i Mr. and Mrs. Jame& Abrams moved j I 3 Saturday into the rooms over -vthe j ' " * "I ri 1? 1 | ? bank and Mr. j. i^. urooKs aau xaiunv , i p will occupy Miss Ida Brannon's j .house, which they vacated. j ^ Mrs. J. M. Major and daughter, j Helen, went home with Mr. W. H. ^ IRasor and spent a few days in Union with her sister. \ Mr. and Mrs. Jno. W. Hipp have s> shftrt: trin to New 1 CUU1 11VU A1VU4 M ^ _ . berry. Miss Mary Mayer and Master John Robert Suber are boarding with Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Miller and attending the Whitmire high school. - ^ Mr. Jas. M. Henderson and daughter, Mrs. Browning, visited at Dr. R. R. Jeter's last week. ^ Miss Elizabeth Coleman spent sev- N eral days in town recently. She will ^ enter Converse college this week. ^ Mrs W_ H. Rasor and children are f v visiting relatives here. ' j Jj Mr. and Mrs. Will Duncan spent j j yesterday at Mr. Dwrtd Duncan's. * Rev. Kilgo, the presiding elder,; will hold the quarterly conference j ^ here Wednesday and will preach for ^ us that evening. ^ Mr. John Shannon is staying with his sister, Mrs. Orville Suber, and S Si Tnmac QVx o n nnn witii Mr. ,T. -LU^pt/CX fj ainco MAMMAUV** .? * ?. ..... C. Abrams and attending the Whitmire high school. ^ Mrs. A. H. Best is spending a few days at Pacolet. - j01 Mrs. .^.nnie Finney of Laurens is ^ visiting her friend, Mrs. R. L. Coop- i er. ^ Mr. Bl^ckman Metts of Laurens and Miss Mary Metts of Newberry spent a day or two with their mother, Mrs. Fannie Metts. I w Mr. Ailard Douglass has accepted _ a position with the wnitmire pnarmacy. . w Dr. Ellesor, Dr. Neal and Di7 .nd c< Mrs. Blake motored from Newberry s( yesterday evening. The men lectured tc to an audience of men in the communty building and Mrs. Blake spoke d? to the ladies at the school house. PURELY PERSONAL. lie Movements of Many People, Newberrians, and Those Who Visit Newberry. Mr. Wilbur Schneider of Columbia risited in Newberry on Sunday. St^nmore Langford of Newberry vas a visitor in the city yesterday.? Columbia Record, 1st. Mrs. B. Hope of Prosperity was hopping in the Capital City yesterlay.?Columbia Record, 1st. Miss Alma Brooks of Newberry, ,is risiting relatives and friends in this ity.?Charleston American, 1st. Mr. E. T. Mayer has moved into ne nouse in mgn romt wnicn ne reently purchased. Mrs. P. F. Baxter and her daugher, Miss Lucile Baxter, attended the eunion in Greenville the first of the veek. Rev. Dr. J. W. Carson has return>/-! -rvrnYi TonVioccoo arH will fill Kic ippointments at the A. R. P. church text Sabbath. Mrs. John M. Kinard is spending opie time at a sanitarium at Ashe'ille, N. C. She went over on Monlay and was accompanied by Dr. W.. i. Houseal and Miss Hortense. Long, j Mr. B. C. Matthews and Mr. C. E. j Summer have been appointed dele-1 * * i * fates to the world's cotton coniertnce to be held at New Orleans Ocober 15, 16,' 17. VARIOUS AND ALL ABOUT. Read the advertisements in this aper. They are very interesting. "Smashing Barriers No. 5, SaturLay 5th, at the opera house. Cincinanti won the game on Wedlesday with Chicago at Cincinnati >y a score of 9 to 1. Most of the Jpr-Kottw fnnn staked rm fhiVflPft. ' The Rev. G. Croft Williams will ireach at St. Luke's Episcopal hurch, this city, Sunday morning at 1:3(ko'clock, in the interest of the tation-wide campaign. The^Drayton Rutherford chapter nil meet with Mrs. R. T. Caldwell >n Tuesday, October 7th, at - 4:?0 'clock. Mrs. Caldwell will be asisted as hostess by Mrs. Jos. L. Keitt i tnd Mrs. Mary Fant. The storv of an Oriental Pearl ! >f Paradise who was bought by an Snglish lord, and then offered to sell j lerself to save him from financial xiin. See Bessie Barriscale in "Her 'urchase Price" Friday, October 3. Since Painter Myers has put! he stripes on the brick walls of the . H. Summer and comany store it ooks well and is greatly improved, ind the work of putting in the hand-; ome and modern front is about com-1 leted.* Rev. C. E. Peele, the pastor of Central Methodist church, has reurned from the hospital and will lold services at Central next Sun ay morning and evening. His many riends are glad to see him back and ble to resume his labors. Only about $30,000 of the stock of he cotton holding association has een subscribed. It should all be aken at once. Subscription blanks nay be found at all of the banks. Ivery farmer and grower of cotton hould take some of -this stock. Wonder if any of the city fathers ave ever walked the sidewalk on Jance street from Boundary to Yiend. Wish some of them would ry it some dark night, or even by the gnt of the moon, or even in the blazlg light of the sun. It is.a beauty. f nrVf q irtv fArovav JL i*VW V* JVJ iVX V ? K/* ? Mrs. Dora Watts, who has been rith one of the leading department tores in Columbia for the past year, = as accepted work with Mr. J. A. Iimnaugh, of this town, and will bein work today. She will be glad to se and serve her friends at "Mimaugh's." > Eugene Long, colored, was before j [agistrate Douglas on Wednesday; n the charge of criminal assault on negro girl about 12 years old. ong lives on Mr. D. G. Livingston's lace and the girl on Mr. Fred chumpert's in No. 8. Long was [>mr? 1 to jail without bond to | wait i e sessions court. The government cotton report j hich came out Thursday put the j Thp Inner lonlceH for chautaucma i ill be here October 3, 4, 6. We wel- j )me its coming for we always get >me thoughts that are new and up > date. Rev. D. W. Garvin spent a few ays at Kinards lasf; week. "Neta.' ' condition 54.4. And the ginners report is two million bales behind what it was a year ago. The Southern cotton association put the condition 52.7. This estimate came out on September 29. As usual when the report comes out the market went off. This time no doubt to get a good "holt" when it starts up as it must. Death of Mr. W. F. Wright. Mr. William Franklin Wright, a native of Laurens county but who once lived in Newberry county and had many friends here, died suddenly at his home in the old Tylersville section of Laurens on Monday afternoon at four o'clock. Mr. Wright was sixty-two years old. Just two . weeks before his death he spent a I day with relatives in this city, and ! wasj-ooking so well, apparently in the | best of health. His sudden death 1 was an awful shock to all, as no one I suspected anything to be the matter with him. He was feeling well and in his usual happy frame of mind to i his last hour. The end, so unexpectedly to those with him at the time, came so peacefully to him. He had just sat down to rest for the moment, and rn that brief period quietly passed away into the great silence of the valley of the shadow. He had iheard of a new hymn at the church the day before which he wanted to hear in his home, and was having his wife at the organ singing it, with his youngest daughter in the room. During the singing of the hymn he sat down. Nothing unusual was thought of that. After awhile it was noticed that he still kept his seat, without saying a wora or attempting to resume his singing. He vmade no outcry as he took his seat and gave no warning of the great calamity that was about to ,fall so suddenly upon his loved ones. No serener or more peaceful death could come to any one. Singing the hymn he so well loved to sing, with the song in his heart and the words upon his lips he sat down to accept the summons that had come to take his spirit to the land of eternal song. His soul within hirn in that sublime moment must have sung "Swing low, sweet chariot," for if angels descend to bear a soul to its immortal home, then surely the soul of this good man was borne on ansrelic wines, even from the little choir at home to the choir everlasting. No one could wish for a better death. TTIII V/right was a great church man, a devoted and loyal member of Sandy Springs Methodist church, and j a great Sunday school worker, superintendent and leader. He delighted j in all such work, and particularly in ! leading the singing. He was also a leader in his community, taking r~rt in all good work forjthe welfare of the county.. Such a man is missed when deatJf removes him. Mr. Wright is survived by his widow, formerly Miss Annie Greneker, daughter of the late R. H. and Jrene H. Greneker of Newberry, and by two sons, Frank G. Wright of Greenville and Will F. Wright, now of Schenectady, N. Y., and six daughters: Miss Irene Wright, teacher at Neeses, who was at home at the time; Miss Annie Wright, assisting her brother in the express office at Greenville; Miss Hallie Wright, teacher of the Deadfall school; Misses Haskell and Byrd Wright, students at Newberry college, and Miss Beulah Wright, living at the home. He is survived also by one sister, Mrs. Margaret Little of Laurens county, and by four brothers: Z. B. Wright, of Whitmire. Robert D. and Haskell Wright of Newberry and JulianWright of, Shreveport, La. He was * ' rrn 3 T the son ol tne late Zj. r. ana jaue Byrd Wright of Laurens county, and he leaves a large circle of relatives and friends to mourn his death. The funeral service was held at | Sandy Springs church on Wednesday afternoon at three o'clock, conduct ed by the pastor, Rev. Mr. Miller, assisted by Rev. Mr. Kennedy of Ora and Rev. Mr. Holmes of Laurens. The church could not hold all who had gathered to pay tribute to their departed friend, large numbers of persons having come from the surrounding country. The feeling words of the ministers at the affecting! scene brought tears to many eyes, I which, with the great profusion of j beautiful flowers in wreaths and! crosses and other emblems made it' a most solemn and impressive occa-' sion. The children of the Sunday .L:-r.i . . ' ] STUDENT HAJIME INADOMI j TO PREACH AT GRACE CHURCH I Prosperity, Oct. 2.?Student Haij'me Inadomi of the Lutheran theI ( logical seminary in Columbia will preach at Grace Lutheran church 1 next Sunday morning and at the evening services. The communion ( service will be postponed until the i second Sunday in October. j The William Lester chapter U. D. C. will meet Friday afteronon at 4:3U o'clock with Mrs. "J. L. May. All members are urged to be present. Prosperity, Sept. 29.?J. L. Griffin of Pinewood en route to the reunion of the Thirtieth at Greenville spent the week-end with his brother, Rev. J. D. Griffin. Miss Swittenburg spent Sunday in I Newberry with Mrs. Geo. Hipp. Misses Elizabeth and Latrell Morgan of Springfield have been visiting their uncle, Mr. G. M. Able. Mrs. L. A. Sease returned Sunday to Clemson college after a visit to her father, Mr. John Hunter. H. P. Wicker is spending a few days with Mrs. Wicker at the Bapfict Vincnitol * V1CU liVU^ X Miss May Witherspoon of Birmingham, en route to Winnsboro where she will teach is spending a few days with her mother, Mrs. Alice Witherspoon. Miss Annie Fellers of Batesburg* was home for the week-end. Miss Sadie Padgett of Leesville has been visiting Miss Lucile Moffett. Mrs. Olin Bobb has returned from Columbia. Her sisters, Misses Ger J ' T>1 T_ ? ?Ava truae anu Dimiciic lvam vrcic nvi v for the week-end. Miss * Ruth Mayer of Newberry spept Saturday here with friends. Mr. ancl Mrs. J. L. Quattlebaum and. Mr. Julian Quattlebaum of Flor-1 ^ce spent Tuesday and Wednesday with their brother, J. D. Quattlebaum. Misses Susan Langford and May Joyner of Columbia were week-end guests of Mrs. P. L. Langford. F. N. Calmes of Camden motored over for Sunday, en route to Newberry where he1 will be with Anderson Motor Sales Co. Miss Susan Quattlebaum leaves Friday for Neeces where she will teach this ssssion. Mrs. J. B. Bedenbaugh and child| ren have returned to Pomaria after a visit to Mrs. J. M. Werts. Mrs. Alma Nance left Sunday for a visit to her daughter, Mrs. Wm. Tallavast of Florence. Messrs. G. R. Nichols, C. B. Black, Frank Thrailkill and E. 0. Counts, Jr., members of the Thirtieth have gone to Greenville to attend the reunion. , Mrs. M. R. Singley has returned i-- " T T T rxf I xrom a visit iu u* u* 1^0 vx Newberry. Rev. James McKeow nis visiting his mother in Chester county. The little showers on Tuesday evening and Wednesday helped some, but the red dust from Friend street where Captain Joe Werts was working is still very bad and has almost ruined our place of business. The city authorities say that water is scarce and they give us no water for sprinkling. The dust and dirt with ; us is almost as bad as fire. | Captain Jim Wheeler and the i Standard Warehouse have built a real j cotton shed and are now prepared to j receive cotton and keep it in the dry. j It is a great shed and makes 'the j weighing and handling of cotton a | pleasure and a delight. No better shed anywhere for the purpose for ) which it is intended. i i i j school whom he loved and who loved j him helped to place the flowers upon the grave of the one who had been the superintendent of the school for ! twenty-five yeras; and the choir sang the hymn their friend had sung when the angels came as his head was being held by his loving wife, who had caught him in her arms just as his siriptc wasa MsouvpOkM?. as his sDirit was calmly passing away to the "land of the unsetting sun". The sympathies of the people of +hp mmmunitv and of other local ities go out in love to the bereaved wife and fatherless children in this hour of their great sorrow. The Newberry relatives attending the funeral were: Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Wright, Mr. and Mrs. Haskell Wright, Miss Carrie Greneker and R. H. Greneker. LITTLE MOUNTAIN HIGH SCHOOL HAS FINE OPENING Little Mountain, Oct. 1.?Little Mountain high school opened Monday morning with large attendance. The enrollment this year is very fine and especially in the high school. The teachers for this session are as follows: Miss Lizzie Neel, principal; Miss Narvis Rae Setezler, assistant high school teacher; Miss Minnie Lee Shealy, 6th &nd 7th grades; Miss Pauline Boozer, 3rd, 4th and 5th grades; Miss Vanie Lake 1st and 2nd grades; Miss Stella Wessinger as Tiusic teacher. ' Miss Kaubaugh, advance agent for the Radcliffe chautauqua was in town last week making arrangements for the chautauqua to be held here in October. The exact dates are 8-9 ll). The Ycung People's society of j Holy Trinity church will hold a public meeting Sunday evening at 8:00 o'clock. The Rev. Enoch Hite will be speaker for the occasion. The following young peole have been elected as delegates to attend tRe convention which meets at Leesville October 10, 11, 12: Misses Kathleen Counts, jZula Stockman and Mr. Robert Lee Kiser. Miss Elberta Sease returned home Monday after spending some time with her brother in N. J. She spent last week-end at Winthrop college en route home. Mr. Harold Wise returned home Wednesday from Columbia, after having a slight operation of the nose. Mr. B. M. Wise spent several days in Columbia this week. Mrs. Francis Eoggus otrsew iorK and Miss .Virginia Lee Kinard of Irwin, Tenn., made a short visit in town last Thursday. Mrs. A. G. Wise of Prosperity made a short visit here last Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Wise and son, Carlton, and Winfred Miller spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. C. B. I Dreher of Irmo. Messrs Carroll Derrick and Blair Stoudenmire of Newberry college spent the week-end at'home. Mr. W. B: Wise spent Sunday at home. Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Young, Mrs. I. A. Epting and Mrs. P. B. Fulmer motored to Columbia Friday. | Mr. 0. W. Bundrick spent the j week-end at home. Mrs. P. E. Eargle of Peak and Miss ! Eare^le of Newberry visited j Mrs. J. H. Wise last week. j Mr. and Mrs. P. B. Yarboro of Greenwood are visiting Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Shealy. j Mr. and Mrs. Job Wessinger of Chapin spent Sunday with their daughter, Mrs. J. K. Derrick. Messrs George Shealy, Maloy and E. A. Wheeler, I. Q. Epting and Ward Fulmer motored to Columbia Sunday. Mrs. James Amick is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Henry Farr. Sidney Dominick Dead. Sidney Dominick of Newberry county, who was strhck by a train on the Blue Ridge about two miles this side of Belton Sunday night, died at the Anderson hospital at 4:20 yesterday afternoon. It is understood that the body will be taken to New berry today for interment. About two and a half miles out of Belton, Engineer Hutchinson saw a I man sitting slouched on th? track. He | blew his whistle and started to stop his train, but the man on the tracks did not move. The train had just rounded a curve, and was carrying extra coaches and being all-steel was especially heavy. The engineer brought his train almost to a stop before striking the man, but when the train did hit him, it was going at suf ficient speed to knock Dominick clear j of the track.?Anderson Tribune, Sept. 30. Mr. Dominick was a son of the late J. Preston Dominick of Newberry. The Southern railway will operate a special coach on the morning train from Columbia on Monday, No. 15, to accommodate the veterans who , will attend the reunion in Atlanta. This schedule will put you in Atlanta about 4 o'clock. The rate from < Newberry for the round trip is $3.84 Adjutant Buford thinks there will be : some 35 or 40 going1 from New- ; berry. If you have not received your certificate to secure the rate ] better see M. M. Buford or William T /\V?-n cs\Y> . / 1 U V/UAA0VM* ' | ' fte jtniO ao0 Jem Katered at the Postoffice it New# *rrj, 8, C., as dad class matter. ?i nr ? irf f TiTvrrtinn E, H. AtLL, tUlXUtW Friday, October 3, 1916. RATE INCREASE. The management of The Herald and News is endeavoring to run the paper as a business enterprise. As good business men they realize that in order to do so the income must exceed the outgo, or at least be not less. If not the machine can not continue to run. Not only is there high cost of living, but there is high cost of paper | and ink and labor, and in order to meet these there must be an increase of advertising rates to meet the expense account. S The successful merchant does not sell his goods below the cost of the purchase price and the expense of handling. No one blames him for making a legitimate profit. That is what he is in business for, and if he is not it will be only a matter of time ' witn mm. The same here. So the managementJias decided that on the 15th of October the rate for advertising will be increased to 20 cents the inch. That is below the price charged by some of the other papers of the same class as The Herald and News. We have a flat rate for all commercial business except of course the special notice column which remains the same, one cent the word per insertion. It is purely a business proposition. The only merchandise the newspaper has t<$ sell, besides the price charged for the paper, is the space it sells, and the income from the two must pay expenses and a living and legitimate profit or there is no use to be laboring. That is all there is to it. We are going to try, to make a little profit on what job work we do, and if not we do not care to do the *\ . work. We love to work, but 'the Af ! pleasure is ?one if there is not a rea-. ^ sona'ole return for the labor. We i trust that those who have to have * publicity appreciate the position. m*mmmmmmm???^ WILL BUILD THREE STORE ROOMS ON LOT AT ONCE Messrs Langford and Fridy who purchased the lot from Mrs. A. Coke Smith in Main street next to the Fridy Motor company will build at once two rooms fronting Main street, j one for the use of Mr. W. E. Craver who will open a sales department for the Overland cars and operate in connection with it a hospital mainly for the upkeep of the cars which he sells. The other lot or building will be used by Mr. Leo Hamilton for the garage and sales department for the several cars handled by his agency. These two rooms will go about half the depth of the lot. On the Friend f street side there will be built a room for the use of the sanitary pressing club, and one half of the lot left vacant for the use of the occupants of the three buildings, at least until there is demand for another building, which in all probability will net | be long. There is great demand for room of every kind in Newberry just now. People who desire to come here to go in business find it difficult to secure house room for themselves and families, and as for store room there is not a,vacant place in the town. We need a real building and loan especially for the home makers and home builders who are coming to town and who desire to come as well as for those who are already here. PEOPLE, WAKE UP. "Almost two million bales of cotton short" says ginner's report. Who is the man to find a guinea nest to reai?ce this real shortage of cotton? Fall in line by immediately subscribing for stock in the Newberry - ~ - \ n.ii TT_ 1J: r\ (Uountyj l^oiton xiumiug pupation, capital stock $150,000.00? share $10.00 each. Look the matter square in the face. Won't you help us to help you yourselves? A subscription list is with every bank in Newberry county. We must organize right awayr See Tuesday's issue of this paper; i. ' * -is P ,-jj