The herald and news. (Newberry S.C.) 1903-1937, April 27, 1920, Page SIX, Image 6
SUMMER SCHOOl aT
WINTH*?^ COLLEGE
The bulletin of the summer school
? V. iiiii;rc*2' col!e;re. to be issued in a
: ' v?, <? iacuity ot over
.
f) : * *
<.? * . y *i*i \\ ' m ; ? ;; <';.; v
I * u ; - " i . * ! .. v' v*. .. 0 ! \ til 1
v* laiiw'v* Iv' ii\ 1.1 y i\j>'
. y I e. uients alkl
lie have already sijriviied their
..' ntion of arrend:n;r this conferc.
Two educational workers of
? ional reputation have agreed to
meet with those attending1 the conf-.
ence. Superintendent C. \V. Rish-ards,
of Ardmore. Oklahoma, and
Calvin X. Kendall, Commissioner of
Education of New Jersey.
Another new feature will be
courses in social science and community
work by Miss Marjorie A.
Totwine, Director of Community
"i t- ..r Siivnn Mills. Snartanburg, S.
V*X/iiV UV. T _
<\ These courses will be helpful especially
to all community workers in
ru.al communities and mill villages.
The work of Mr. Homer Rode$rt.:ver
in music will be a special feature.
Training: in leadership in
music will be jriven, especially leadership
in community and group sin?r5n
H?RE ARE SOME REASONS
WHY THE SALVATION ARMY
IS ASKING YOUR SUPPORT
The Salvation Army has been on
r< : job the past year. Here's part of
the record: 4o,590 jobs found for
mer. and 16,74 7 found for women;
5.000 mothers and 25,000 tenement
Jk!Js taken for a vacation in the
~ - . ^;nnarc
country ;zuu,vuv tuniuiia? ut.uivio
jriven to the poor in the United
States last December 25; 70.000 poor
youngsters given Christmas toys at
the same time.
One million homeless men and
wo men were lodged and fed last
ve; r by the Salvation Army. Counties
others were aided with clothing,
i
feed, medicine. legal or spiritual
advice and financial assistance. The
ir.;nd work will crc on with the funds
raided in the second home service
?;r-:.eal May 1-0-20.
flaking- the best of the worst?
that's the Salvation Army's specialty.
That's why They insist: "A man may
be down, but he's never out. '
ri he Salvation Army encircles the
gl: be. It is established in countr's
and colonies. Salvationists
preach the jrospel in 40 languages.
One hundred thousand little children
are wards of the -Salvation
.Anny in this country. In Salvation
? ",'~c- rViPV
~e\ Z~ ilIN
find almost the* only brightness in
their lives.
More than 2.500 erring girls are
yearly cared for in the 2o maternity
hospitals ar.u rescue homes maintained
in this country by the Salvation
x Army. The records show a vast
majority of these girls are permanently
rescued.
The Salvation Army men and wo.:men
answered the call to arms in
iyl7. They now ask the public to
}ieed their call to alms in 1920.
What of the unchurched? In
117,599- open air meetings held last
Tear the Salvation Army preached
to 18,000,000 persons. The Salvation
Army takes the church to the
Deoule.
''I am for the Salvation Army because
it helps the under dog," says
James H. Maurer, president of the
Pennsylvania Federation of Labor.
SENATOR SWANSON
SUFFERS ATTACK
Virginian Collapses Into Chair in
w?j:a?.e Cha.niber Following Ro- ;
marks on Amendment.
i
Washington, April 22.?Senator
$vnnson of Virginia collapsed into a
chair iti the senate chamber late to-'iay
and was carried out by colleagues
-and attendants while the senate ad
journed. He recovered almost immediately.
The attack was said to
be due to a heart weakness of long
.standingA
passage of remarks in senate de"bate
on the rivers and harbors appropriation
bills involving an amendment
which he had introduced, preceded
the collapse. Senator Pomerene,
Democrat, Ohio, presented a statement
from a constituent, asserting
that the amendment, which provided
for a'government survey of the
Northwest river, between Virginia
and North Carolina, with a view t(f
determining the works necessary to
make it ziavigable, would not benefit
commerce but would benefit private
land owners materially. Senator
Poiv.erene said he absolved the Virginia
member from having r.nv such
purpose- in mnvJ, and Senator Swanso:
"' 'c ! pern-issioii to insert in the
record al: hiz correspondence on the
' ma tier. As ho turned to :e.;ve. h j
iroppe i i: :r> a chair.
233 AD, INJURED
$2,COO,COO LOSS, TOLL
OF LATE DIXIE TORNADO
i m.. \ ?"> ? t-I_
1 lrmin^nam, m., nm n ?x.*?"rorrr-ation
received here direct from
the stricken areas, together with reports
at the offices of the governors
of Mississippi and Alabama today,
gave the following toll of the torna
Jo, which swept through this section
last Tuesday:
Mississippi?150 dead; 100 in-'
iured.
Alabama?78 dead; 500 injured.
Tennessee?5 dead; 30 injured.
Families made homeless ,in tho
three states total close to 500 and
looses in livestock and property will
approximate $2,000,000.
Winston, Marion, Madison and
Fr;.nk!in cooties bore the brant ct
the terrific storm in Alabama. Many
victims were killed outright by flying
timbers from their wrecked
homes, others were maimed by the
blast which swept away buildings and (.
trec?. Crops were ruined and far- s
mers with their only source of livelihood
destroyed have been forced to t
?' p: 1 up'.;-! charily m?.* food and v
IT IS "MILK" NOT "MILCH." 0
t J"** ~;c 1' u"C" Settles
i i wr I: w.;: bo W tow"
:M not "milch cow "?:;i least so far
: > i"-jji Slalos d parunent of ;
::;,i :c ullir/e is concerned. i
This decision marks the lermina- i
lion of a controversy in which etymologies
in the department have had I
not a little interest. Those defend- j
vi" "milch" h:iY(> nointed to script- I
ural use and certain of the classics 1
as establishing precedents, while the ?
opposition has contended that dairy-. t
men. rnnchmen, and farmers in gen- I
eral uce "milk" instead of "milch". ^
almost universally. The advocates 1"
of "milk" also favored thar word be- 1
cause, they contended, it was more a
strictly an English wovd, while t
"milch" was akin to German. Since ?
\ At lonmiQfrn oe w^kll
.."Villi? I jl'Ull JiUtlun VI lansuu. v. i. o ?. v ..
as ideals is an article in every t
patriot's creed, it is thought that this ?
last sally of the "milk" defenders c
helped as much as any to decide t-te ^
question in their favor. ' .
A NEW VEGETABLE. j I
The town garden and the city far- d
mer have been for time past the butt ?
of many jokes and the former fre- v
quently a happy reality for the a
neighbors, chickens and pigeons. But y
ihe city farmer was a very great P
help, not only to himself, but to the :
country, during war-garden activities 0
then, has since helped in the fight P
to win against the high cost ot living. _
The Albany (Ga.) Herald says:
"It's great to have a garden, even a
though it produces few vegetables. s
It's great to have a place for out-!V>
door exercise?a place in which to P
turn up the iragvam earin witn a
spading fork level it with a rake and
lay it off with a trench hce. Some ''
folks say it's better exercise than n
golf or tennis, though on that ques-' '3
tion we do not presume to sit in *
judgment. A man can work in his v
garden before sunrise, when golf
links are too wet with the dew to be 0
used, and his garden is a whole lot
nearer home than the golf club.
"And there is no reason why Mr.' r;
Town-dweller cannot have a garden ^
with real vegetables in it if he will
/rive a little practical thought and
diligent ippli:;ition to its . prepara-,
tion and-care."
And now it is time to get the gardening
habit,?if It ever stofts rain- 1
?when the undoubted spring;^
_ ?Jxl. ? ,1 U ^ ^ <-> i->-\ a _ '
S3?S0n 'S Willi us eiiiu mci.\ uc c-vint- .
body will take the same interest in | :
your exploits, hor'ii; ulturally, as a r
Tampa. Fla.. concc-*n did when this ;
week the following letter was received
by a prominent lady of the ]
city, who had announced her inten- :
f;on of becoming: a female Burbank: :
"Dear madam: i '
Since beig informed that you are "
contemplating: on going into exten-i'
sive gardening:, I am taking advan-j 1
tage of the first opportunity to write!
you a personal letter recommending: i \
to you our latest model wheel!
barrow seed, which we are posting *
you toaav u^der separate cover. The i *
product of these seeds are a wonder.?
1 - - ...ii
and gives satisfactory wherever tried, j <
and we recommend them to ride the I
easiest and th-? best of any other
make in the world. Soas a reputable j
firm of many years standing heartily i
recommend them to you. Here's I.
hoping that you will have success and ^
a great many young wheel barrows
by next fall, we are, 1
Yours respectfully, '(
Bureau Dept.''
COLLEGE ENDOWMENTS
IN oOUi'H CAROLINA
In a recent article in South Caro-jS
lina Education, Professor Wilson Gee i
brings some significant facts to light, i
Excelpts from his article follow: !
A wealthy Massachusetts or Con-1
neeticut citizen, or an alumnus,wherever
he may reside, very fre-i
quently includes in his will or makes' c
as a special bequest during his life-' ^
time a liberal contribution to the | "p
support cf Harvard or Yale. This!'
has been done so often that it has;n
become habitual in those parts. | a
The balance sheet of the Treasurer J j;
of Harvard college for the year end-1 a
ing June 30, 1919, shows an item of | e
$35,683,378.09 from funds and gifts, j
Similarly the report of the treasurer;
of Yale University records, under en-jc
dowment funds $22,192,413.13. The "a
same report from'Harvard shows, un-jp
der gifts for capital during that year,: ^
$1,322,553.44 for establishing new ,
iunds oi- increasing old ones. In add
it ion to that amount. ^ ?2S0,9G1.34 *!
i" indicated as donated for immediate '
?. e. For the same period, the Yale':
treasurer reports gifts and bequests p
; nounting to $2.271!.07 4.68.
A statement from l.le t;i jar 01 me
" "'vciSiiy ' f Yirch.ia, ci.itecl January '
1. ?20. ;hov-s 1 i 10 endowment '
(.f that institution to be $2,;il)G,4."4.- . '
The total endowment of all the t
white colleges in South. Carolina is e
> 1,628,85;"?. 1This is a million dollars
ler-s than the endowment of the.
l~niverity of Virginia. According to
the latest estimates of per capita s
wealth (Bureau of Census 1912), 0
Virginia ranks as forty-second anion?
the States, with $1,080 per individual;
while South Carolina stands
j-?a.. ~^+ u TT-itli -i nor- fanif.a <2
1 oi l v ~ac v ^rinu, * * i hi l' ^ ^
wealth of S8fi9. Also, it must be 1,
remembered that the University of f
Virginia is a State institution, and }]
these are most slowly contributed to
in the way of endowment. c
Tjie most heavily endowed insti4
ition in South Carolina at this time 5
i Charleston College. This institu- }
:;on hns a productive endowment of v
:! 2,500. Seven of the repor'ir- '
I "^titutions have no endowment at ;
11. Four cf ihese are State colThe
only Scate-^unported
havinir an en.v--.!--mc-u is
Temson college. There the Clemon
bequest amounts to S">8."? ">! . i
There are three endowed chairs in j
i.e colleges of South Carolina. Two ;
t the^e are a I !v c:?; 1 ej tiir*
v c ( ii;jir of . a; -! .'.laral
;. ' . , . . .
r
i he { niversily 01 v n*i^inj?i reports j
n i ) t. . .. v- i;>: : ;
i .. V',':l t! 'w'i .'.i''" v'. v'd ClKliiS |
Treating; $597,000. {
There is :;Teat hoj.e in -lie future, i
)Ciinite plans have b?en projected s
'or an increase of $3.08^.01)0 in the J
>roductive endowment of the col- I
_ x' i.i. Ti.; , 1
S CI tiiC ouui'. i ilia i crfjiccMTiic^
ilmost 200 per cent, increase over
he present endowment. Furman
)Ians an increase of $750,000. Conrerse
college is to add $500,000 to
icr endowment, half of which has aleady
been raised. WofFord college
nd the Presbyterian college of
South Carolina each plans to raise
;500,000 additional for endowment.
In answer to this same question,
he Bursar of the -University of Yir- !
" - - * i ? : * I
fi?v.a reporis inai "ine .-\iumni .-\*soiation
is working on a scheme for a
!3.000,000 endowment."
This study reveals a situation that
> not a very satisfying one to face,
t is true that we were left almost
estitule after the War Between the,
States. But it is equally t'ue thai
i'ith the good prices for agricultural
nd textile-goodi during the past few
ears we have recovered from this
rcstration, and are beginning to >
eaiize thai we are just upon the eve
f entering into a great economic ex- T
a vision.
The recent very successful drives
or "millions of dollars in war work, (
nd the still more recent ones of th?' >
everal denominations show that
hen a worthy cause is properly r
laced before the people, thoy re- J
pond in a liberal way. (
The principal conclusion to be I
rawn from the data under considertion
is that our citizens of wealth
ave not become accustomed to conribute
Lo any appreciable extent, "
:ith certain marked exceptions, to J
he support of our educational inter- t
sts. Such help will enable the col- i
?ire to wo*'k out more courageously j
nd effectively the hi.sh duty of prearing
the sons and daughters of the N
for nspf:il pit Izenshin. <
The Contest Dance. j
nd?x-Jouvn2l. t
From reports which have come to [
his newspaper from absolutely re- :
tabic and unprejudiced sourc-es it s
spears that the dance last Friday \
>U"ht here was an affair of which ^
his trvr. cannot be proud. And furher
it appears certain that no such
vent can or will be tolerated acrain. .
A dance which is "open to. the '
corld:* naturally is open to all sorts
ir<! kinds of people, people who do I
iot know hew to b2have and people ,
ho may know how to behave but in
he c 'owd throw away all restraint
ir.d become just as indecorous as :
hpiv t\osf.ps innv dirprt ;
If the young men and young women ;
)f this town who wish to hold a "Conest
Dance'' cr any other kind of
lance will accept, in the best of ;
pirit, a suggestion, it is that in the 1
?uture such events be controlled by *
nvitation and that invitation and
general control be in ?he hands of
r.en and women of discretion. A
,-oung man who feels no compulsion
0 act and behave as a gentleman
hould under all circumstances and
1 young woman who has no regard ,
?or 'her reputation are* certainly un- '
lesirables not only at a dance but
it any public function or gathering
)f any kind.
R IS ONE AS LEAD
SCYNCOPATED LIFE
leait'Ie Sheriff Provides Two Fiddles,
Banjo and Possibly Mandolin for ,
Men Under His Care.
1
lealtie Post-Intelligencer. j
In a community of growing appreiation
of the fine arts, and showing ,
pecial leanings toward the higher
orms of musical utterance, there
lust naturally be much sympathy in
ny effort to give the prisoners in
ails and stockades every cultural ^
dvantage and opportunity for self
xpression. ;
In Seattle, to speak frankly of the (
ommunity we have in, mind, there
'ill be found many who cordially ap- '
rove the determination of Sheriff !
tringer to provide two fiddles, a <
anjo, and possibly a mandolin, for;1
\\a use and mutual entertainment of
!v>se temporavMy detained in his cus- 1
In declining to spend the f
lorrey of the tf xpayers ::: purchasing' '
l:es< :-:s''T.r-errt'iO county com- i
ic-sioners lay themselves open to 3
ion of falling behind in the <
teat or. ward march of civilization
. <; I.-otray an amazing ignorance of i
he soothing a no reformative inllu- j
nee of jazz.
But the music loving sheriff is not j
0 he denied, praise be; and he him- (
elf it is who will meet the first cost
f filing the stockade with concourse t
f sweet sounds. If the county can't j
>uy them?the two fiddles, the banjo j
,nd possibly the mandolin?he will,
ie says, making a strong point of the ,
act that he has under restraint,, just '
it this time, "a long, thin negro that (
art put over a real show."
.And who shall say that Sheriff
^irhv^.'v may not be more wise than
le looks or talks? Perhaps Lorenzo
?ad the right idea when he said:
'or do but note a wild and wanton *
herd.
Yt'.-hini; mad bounds, bellowing and <
a n
- a- y- ? *- - / >. -o ?3 Vs.. ,
v > s* - . - . ;:. r \> r
r,}\ /' ' |
C *f*. p''S" i -r?~ "r;
Vw* 1 "., v X v ? ^ i ^ ? %J
r> *
rrimarj
No Matriculation
i
For B.-iiletin, add
n o
11 H
neighinp; loud,
iVhich is the hot condition of their
blood;
f they but he?.r pei\Iunca> a trumpet
sound,
)r any air of music tou"h their ears,
ifou shall perceive them rau'ie a mutual
stana,
rhcir savage eyas turn' to a modest
gaze
>y the sweet power of music.
The sheriff has had all kinds ef
uck trying to keep his prisoners in
ail, stockade and oilier places of dec^tion
by the old fashioned means of
-.1-1?o Viivc nnci o-umvli Mflrv of tnfWl
lave gone forth on their own account
vhcn they got ready. Those of us on
lie outside can easily imagine that
jail without jazz is sure to become
nonotonous and trying:. It may be
hat there is as. much of the practical
?.s of the idyllic in the mind of the
herifT. Anyway, we trust that he and
ts proteges will enjoy the programs
>oon to be arranged.
,<r
A Bonus Tax on Everything.
\"ew York World.
The proposed scheme to raise $2,300,000,000
for soldier bonuses by
;"oI:ectin? a sales tax of 1 per cent
;m goods sold under $500 and of 5
r.ar- f o-noilfi 5a]i1 ftVPr that
amount finds favor in congress. If it
?oes through, the person who eats,
;{rinks, wears clothes and allows himself
reasonable comforts may expect
to be kept busy counting the pennies
that go to make up his daily contribution.
When Smith starts downtown in
the morning for his office and stops
to buy a paper at the newstand he,
will pay a tax. If he has his shoes
shined he will pay another tax. His
wife told him before leaving not to
forget that" tomorrow will be the
boy's birthday, and on the cheapest
>y he will pay a tax. At noon he
may lunch on a cup of coffee, a sandvich
and a piece of pie, each article
subjecting: him to a tax. A cigar
vill mean another tax. Rushing for
he subway in the evening, for every
hance nickel he may pay out he will
leave behind a fixed sum for taxes
>n sales.
In the mean time Mrs. Smith will
hnno-hf. a few nrovisions at the
* v O ? A.
rorner grocery, a new saucepan, possibly
half a dozen cheap handker hiefs
and a pair of stockings, and at
?ach step in her rounds will have
)een summoned to pay tax.
Every day it will he the same for
?verybody?Smith, Brown, Jones,
Robinson and their neighbors,
vhether they live in an eastside tenement,
in the Bronx, on Long Island
>r ir. Weschester. And the tradesnan
and dealer who acts as tax colector
will want something extra, for
ii- pains and charge aeeor ling to his
>npc.rfun!ties. From ising in the
r.ru to goi:'.to ' . .1 at nit ht,
;" .0 ' pc <?!e t:. " 'U'-iiout the
will be pay-mj: bcr.us taxes
'-'rUt Vir is bcv. fit and sold?
*oo(l. wearing a;' are], luxuries and
n- : e*sarle.;.
This isJ92<\ It was in 1820 that
"y:iney fniit'i wrote in commenting
? ? ... 1 -v ^-v ^ -f f o ^ I /\ ?^ f l"? A "T/\y*f Li
Ml iI SV'IiCiJlC Ul KlAatlUil ICCIl III J.V/JVV.
'"'The schoolboy whips his taxed
:op; the beardless youth manages his
axed hoi ~e with ;; taxed bridle on a
;axed road, and the dying Englishnan,
pouring his medicine which has
said 7 per cent into a spoon that has
>aid 15 per cent flings himself back
3ii his chintz bed which has paid 23
per cent and expires in the arms of
an apothecary who has paid a license
t>f a hundred pounds for the privilege
-*f ntfirnr Jiim fn rlonfh "
L W w ? > -
hat was child's play compared
ivi '> the bonus tax that * congress
; : ? to rush through in the hope of
r -uiiiLT the soldier vote.
V. I Iff? g|
<rs. .'T's * Zf
H '-' iivi !: *" i % f? y H " 8 t;
> '.; * - '.' i ; - < f; J*; ^ ; ^5 1}
- 7. ? *"5
; -71*5 a v, ^ f -t *v . / .>
, t. w .. . v.. .?. J. J L- -'
0
" * 1
r* ^ ' n * t
; v? ~ ,rz ^ ' r? V -* r* p n n!
? <L V * ?* W .? W ^ J* w> - A JL zw/ V' i. .A -/ ?
r wnrlr FVIanv Co Hp
V f W A ? O 9 * 1 4ft V% A m J W W ? ? -W
i or Tuition Charg
from South Carolina,
ress
Rock Hill, S, C.
iBmmammttnwumamm : mam mm m i bmmwmmmmmi
AS "CON" MEN WORK
Get Rich Quick Promoters Sell Oil
Stock to Farmers.
World's Work.
This story cf the operations of get
i i_ * ...l., ??n:
riCil quiC'K promoter:.- wnu are senuig
oil stocks to the farmers of the Mid.
die West comes from n job printer of
that section:
! These promoters come to him to
pet their circulars printed. "We
have no money now," they say, "but
we are going to sell 190,000 shares
cf this stock at $1 a sha'~. and your
printing bill will be but a small item
for us to pay in a week or two." Frequently
they offer him stock in payment
for his work. If he is sure
they are going to make a market for
the stock in order to entice prospactive
buyers with advancing -quotations,
he take.? the stock, and then
sells if back to them through the market
as soon as they start their manipulations.
One cf these promoters told him
how they got the farmers' money:
? "We ask him if he owns any Liberty
bonds. 'How much did you pay
for them? Do you know what they
are selling for now? What rate of
interest do they pay you? Only 4 i-2
*r r - 11 II?- _ 4...
per cent. now wouia you iitve cu
exchange them for a stock that pays
more than .twice as much and will
advance in price? Those prices you
see quoted in the papers for Liberty
bonda are for outsiders like you; we
can do much better than that, and
j we are willing to take y^ur bonds
l and give you the Same price you paid
for them.' "
' The crop of Liberty bonds that
these pirates of promotion have har
. vested has been an enormous one,
, and now that many farmers have
j sold their farms at fancy prices,
j there is still more juicy fruit on the
trees that these stock fakiers ore
going after. A banker from Louisiana
writes:
"This section is a rural one and
we are visited all the time by slick
talking salesmen who drive way back
in the woods to sell the poor farmer
; that they have come way out there
; i-ust to give him a chance to get some
'nf rhe wealth cf the world rather than
! to let Rockefeller have it all. All
j they have to do is to buy a few shares
of the particular stock this benevo|
lent salesman is offering and the
j farmer suddenly becomes one of the
| idle rich."
Prices Must Fall.
Charlotte Observer.
Assistant Attorney General Figg
j has made testimony that prices must
i inevitably fall in the near future, and
i cites a reduction of from 25 to 50 per
i cent on food stutis and clothing, in
! nonv<rin Moreover, he declares that
j "immense quantities" of women's
<-clothing have been thrown back on
i .he manufacturers by retailers who
1 have found out that the women will
I *ofc pay just any .price demanded.
abor having received its maximum
i * Tease in wajres, should now. acI
cordirij? to the surest ion by Mr.
j Fiji's:, turn to and help along1 the
j movement to cut the cost of livinj??
and the developing situation he
I _ ?.. ,,.U loKrwv mnvht" JlR
; pain is i> urn.* >% in*. 11 Ull'V/i .4? 4. V ?
I well be preparing to face, for it has
started and is bound to gain momentum.
Subscribe to The Herald and News
J. P. STRONG.
Prominent Real Estate Broker of I
Massachusetts.
j j
i Boston, Aug. 25th.?Says, "I have j
| been in the real estate brokerage
j business for many years. I have sufj
'ered with loss of sleep, indigestion I
i nd nervousness, but sirce taking
! \rsro-Pkosphate, I sleep better and;
j at without fear of distress, and can j
.'?e 1 a great change in my system." i
I _ I
n p
>Mi i niipcfp
V - : f ' ^ *; /? Cj
w f , s^y <-7?? -^v
. u # ]
3
i
3
I
rs. !
, Elementary and
ge courses.
es for Teachjers
:ident,
. 'v
! There is nothing in medical science r
\ that equals Argo-Phosphate in the
treatment of indigestion, rheuma(tism,
nervousness, kidney and liver
; ills. Sold by Gildsr & Weeks Co.,
; and all reliable druggists. *
No. A-3 '
1 T'li'iTriTirmiaMif-tf'Mtiimwiiiiiimrr
Sflare subject to bowel fi '
tptfj trouble: mothers must I1?9.
B j^?=?be . careful about this. \
3 For half a century mothers I
j Shave been using ;
Dr. Thacher's ?|
Diarr; Mixture I ,
| S3 to sot"'3 i ne neaun or 53
: 0 their tet .11 bies. A sim-lja
j $( pie and in- remedy; foril
j If children -. alts. All drug J a
| | stores, * MONEY BACK II
I? THACHER MEDICINE CO. 11
*
I Stoinach ills ?
1 >ern:anen'ly uisappr^r after drinking tl;
j :e!cb:u;eti .Sii;\ar J?.:ueral Water. Positively
;ur.run:c??il by money-back oiler. Tastes
fr-'.-s .? fri^v a^v^-'ierc ly
Mir Dewberry Agents, J. W. Kibler Co
'Notice of Application for New Cer^
tificate of Stock.
Notice is hereby given that stock
certificate No. 118 dated January 2, .
1913, issued to William Coleman for
74 shares of preferred stock, of ^
Glenn-Lowrv Manufacturing comj
pany, has been lost or destroyed, and
j that the undersigned, as the owner of
the said certificate, will make application
to said corporation, at its place
of business at Whitmire, S. C., on the " ?
I 14th day of May, 1920, for the issuance
of a new certificate in the
place thereof.
William Coleman. '
j April 13, 1920. 4-12-4t1tnw
j CALL FOR DEMOCRATIC CLUBS
j TO ORGANIZE.
' X ^ ' " *"* T*\A ArtVflf'/?
unoer tne iaw ux ujic yciuuvianv
party all clubs are to reorganize on
Saturday the 24th inst., this being f
the last Saturday in the present
month. The presidents of clubs are
i hereby urged to give proper notice
j of the time and place of meeting.
j At the meting on the 24th inst.,
i the clubs are to elect delegates to
j the county convention. The repreI
sentation in the convention is one
! for each twenty-five voters or the
j majority fraction thereof of those
who voted in the first primary in
1918.
The county convention will meet
on the first Monday in May, which
will be May 3. 1920.
HARRY H. BLEASE,
Chairman of the Qounty Executive
Committee.
i B. B. Leitzsey,
Secretary. *
1 NOTICE TO DELINQUENT TAX
PAYERS.
The Treasurer of Newberry county j
has turned over to me for collection A
executions against all persons who V
failed to pay their taxes for the year
1919. 1
All persbns affected can save some ^
expense by paying the same at my ^
office on or before May 10th, 1920. 1
After that date levies will be made
to satisfy said executions according
to law.
CAXXON G. BLEASE.
4-20-6t Sheriff.
- I
LOIAII. 11UUV.L.
Notice is hereby given that I will
j make a final settlement of the estate
of Sallie C. Metts, deceased, in the
I Probate Court for Newberry County,
S. C., on Wednesday, May 26th,
1920, at 11 o'clock A. M., and immediately
thereafter apply for a discharge
as Executor of said estate.
All persons holding claims against
j said estate are hereby notified to
I present* same, duly attested, to me,*
I or my attorneys, Hunt, Hunt &
I TT x 1 - ^ XV _ + Ai.1. 3
tinnier, on or oeiore ine iytn aay
[- of May, 1020.
i ' .JOHN B. LATHAN,
| \s Fxecutor of the Last Will and
Testament of Sa!!:e C. Metts,
defeased.
\pril 23, 1020. %
i
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