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TWO STATES WARN ON NEGRO ISSUE APPEAL GOES OUT FROM DEMnrpatq in r.FORGlA. Chief Executive of Arkansas Says White Supremacy in Jeopardy. P. H. McGowan in Columbia State. . ' . Washington, Oct. 16.?At the same time that a strong appeal from the Georgia headquarters of the national Democratic committee appeared here today also came an even stronger deimand from Governor Brough of Arkansas to Governor Cox, warning the people of the South to look out for negro rule and Lodge killft oltAlllr] TToivtina? Ko olppfpH IWItC DU19 OUVU1U liui Uiitg wv - president. , - In part the Georgia statement is as follows: "Migration into the North Central states has made the negro vote a potent factor. In some districts it is the balance of power. Senator Harding and his party in bidding for this vote have made dangerous pledges of recognition. As earnest of these pledges Henry Lincoln Johnson, negro, was placed as the Georgia member-of the national Republican committee. Republican success in November means Georgia postoffices, and other federal places filled by negroes. ? . "This menace coupled with the *v magnificent record of Democracy appeals to Georgia Democrats for sup fport." r. .. , . Following is Governor Brough's statement: . "On my arrival in Columbus, Ohio, in connection with the speaking tour through Ohio and.the Middle West, I was astonished to learn from my friend, W. W. Durbin of Columbus, chairman of the Ohio Democratic state executive committee, that a negro journal, the Toledo Pioneer, is urging race equality arid urging the negroes to unite at the ' PollsKgr. "This, of course, strikes at the i ' very heart of white supremacy and v it is current knowledge here in the -f Middle West that if Senator Harding .and the Republicans triumph, an effort will be made to pass a force ^ bill, which will mean federal bayonets to supervise Southern elections. ' "Senator Harding's recent speech to the neeroes at Marion, has great ly encouraged them in this, so much / so that William M. Trotter, negro, l editor of the Boston Guardian, in his recent ad' 'ess on 'A Christian Government,' before the negro Baptist convention at Memorial hall, said: It is an abuse to teach the black Br * v > ; American, he is too low down to dare have trouble with a white man and '/ get court trial; too inferior to have authority over or with white men in . government; too inferior to have a hotel room, to have a shave, to have a theatre seat or a meal in a restaurs* rant where other people get these ac eommodations.' "Thi3 presidential election. means gp i everything to the South and I urge you as a high minded and splendid representative of your great commonwealth to become active in explaining to your people just whal &V- . Senator Harding's triumph woulc mean in robbing the South of hei most cherished birthright, AngloSaxon supremacy. "You will remember that Senatoi Henry Cabot Lodge introduced th? / force bill in the house of representatives in 1889, and secured its passage in that body, but it was defeated in the senate by the filibuster oi great Southern and some fair minded Western senators. r "Please urge the Democrats 01 your state to be thoroughly alive as to the seriousness of the situation and also get immediately in touch with the state chairman and urge raising of funds to be sent to the national treasurer, Wilbur Marsh Grand Central Palace, New Yori . city." PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS OF LITTLE MOUNTAIN Halloween Frolic at School House Wednesday for Benefit of the School. Little Mountain, Oct. 20.?There v- will be given a Halloween party: in the Little Mountain high school auditorium on Wednesday evening, October 27, for the benefit of the school, There will be lots of good things tc eat and everything will be done tc make the evening an enjoyable one for all. Everybody come. Mrs. Quilla Derrick has returned to her home in Chapin after spending several days with her daughter, Mrs. A. M. Stoudemire. Mis sEdna Shealy of near Chapin spent the week-end with Mr. and M,rs. A. H. Shealy. Mrs. B. F. Stockman of Columbia visited relatives here this week. Dr. Claude Sease, accompanied by his mother, Mrs. J. M. Sease, and Mrs. W\ B. Shealy spent Monday in ] the capitol city. : Mr. Julian Boland of Columbia ; spent Saturday night and Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. i Boland. 1 Miss Hallie Haltiwanger has ac- : cepted the position as day operator < of the telephone exchange here. Mrs. Martha Shealy had as her i guests for the week-end her children, < Mr. and Mrs. Horace J. Shealy of i Laurens, and Mr. and Mrs. L. E. < j Shealy of Chapin. j Mr. Roy Huffman of Clinton spent : the week-end with his father, R. P. ; Huffman. Rev. J. J. Long left Tuesday for , Washington to attend the convention of the United Lutheran Church in , America. 1 Misses Willie Mae Shealy and Edna Shealy of Summerland college . spent the week-end with their par-| ents. Mr. and Mrs. John M. Doster of < Columbia visited the latter's parents, ' j Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Shealy, last ; week-end. B. V. Chapman of Newberry visit- ; ' ed relatives here this week. Mr. and Mrs. Burr Connelly have . returned to their home in Newberry . after spending a week with their . daughter, Mrs. John Chapman. Mr. and Mrs. Leland Shealy of , Newberry spent Sunday with the ! latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Epting. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Boland and ! , children, Mr. and Mrs. Jeffe Boland , and children of Clinton, Mr. and Mrs. Moody Boland and children of ; Columbia, spent Sunday with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. David Boland. Mr. J. B. Connelly of Newberry is visiting relatives here. Mr. and Mrs. John A. Huffman spent last Thursday in Newberry. . MJaa Mae Belle Fulmer spent Sat urday afternoon in Chapin. Mrs. Jim Cumalanaer spent Saturday in Newberry. Mr. Willie Hack Derrick left Sunday for the Fairview section, where he is principal of the school this session.. Misses Eula and Chtoe Eptmg left Saturday to take up their work in the St. Lukes school another session. Mr. Bert Taft of Camp Jackson was a week-end visitor with friends here. Mr. Sjdney Summer of Lexington T- - ? spent the weeK-ena wim ms siotc*, Mrs. J. H. Stockman, and friends. Mr. E. W. Derrick of Chapin spent Sunday evening with friends here. Mr. W. H. ,Huiett of Greenwood visited friends here last week-end. Mr.*and Mrs. A. N. Boland left last Saturday for an extended visit to their daughters, Mrs. David Farr of Pruce Pines and Mrs. John L. Page of Gastonia, N. C. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Q. A. Epting and son, Frank, were business visitors to Newberry last Saturday. Mrs?. J.' H. Summer of Newberry | was the guest of Miss Elberta Sease; Wednesday. Mrs. Martha D.. Summer of New-; berry spent Wednesday with her sis- i ' ter, Mrs. David Boland. 1 POSITION OF LODGE SCORED IN HIS STAE j (Continued From Page 1.) ously repeated experience, I should . be disposed to suggest, even to a Boston audience that it would have been more accurate to have said i that the senator is 'notorious' every. where, rather than that he is 'famous . j everywhere.' xt-Vixr hnvA thp neonle of this nation risen en masse in condemna[ tion of Senator Lodge? The reason . is clear. Our people are quick to * recognize insincerity." 5 Reiterating that President Wilson i before returning to Paris in March, t 1918, had conferred with senate andj > house foreign affairs committees, and ! . approved league covenant changes,! Governor Cox said that Senator! : Lodge formed "the base conspiracy to stab the treaty in the back." "But even before the president , had a chance to return to Paris," the I governor continued, "the base con- j spiracy and the infamous round rob- j t in was under way and the nefarious j pledge had been made to strangle the I to Heath. From that dark day |, until now, no means have been too i vile to employ, to traduce American ( i opinion and betray the confidence of ( the electorate. And Lodge's leader ship was made possible only by the , vote of Truman H. Newberry, now ; > I under conviction in the state of ? Michigan, for having purchased his i seat in the senate. Falsehood Like Leaves. ] I "Malicious falsehoods have been scattered like autumn leaves, and ] , the hypocricy of Lodge, himself, is one of the outstanding black events < i in American history. In the light of [jhis earlier recorded pronouncements, he has been forced to stultify him- j , self over and over again. He has ; libeled and slandered no man more 1 than himself. He is supporting a can- 1 didate who voted for the Knox reso- i lution for a separate peace with Germany, and who has since publicly advocated the same unworthy ,ict." j Citing Senator Lodge's statements j in 1918 against a separate peace and j the senator's Union college address; for world peace Governor Cox add-| sd: | "in view or tne present attuuue of Senator Lodge, as the acknowl-' edged leader of treaty wreckers, it is certain that he has neither honesty of purpose nor sincerity of mind. It is up to the state of Masachusetts right now to repudiate his leadership and at the earliest possible moment retire him forever to private life." Ovation for Eliot. Governor Cox was delayed in his arrival at Harvard union, and the meeting was opened with an address by the presiding officer, Dr. Charles W. Eliot, who for 40 years was president of the university. Dr. Eliot, who received an ovation from the undergraduates, defended the league with a vigor that belied his nearly 87 years. He declared that the statement recently signed by 31 distinguished Republicans and friends of the league misrepresents both the Democratic platform and its candidates. How the 31 gentlemen could have signed the statement was a mystery to him, he said. President Lowell of Harvard was one of the 31 signers of the statement attacked by Dr. Eliot and the speaker's reference to the motive for the statement as something mysterious to him evoked both cheers and hisses. When finally Governor Cox appeared a din was raised that continued several minutes. He was briefly introduced by Dr. Eliot and immediately launched into an appeal for the league of nations. One of the largest crowds of Governor Cox's campaign gathered on the Common and waited several hours, as the candidate's schedule delayed his arrival until 10:15 o'clock. All about the Parkman bandstand, the Common's rostrum, a great circle of humanity, containing many thousands, roared its greetings. Mayor Peters introduced the governor, who was joined here by JSenator Harrison, chairman of the Democratic speakers' committee. The great crowd stood, almost a solid mass, for yards about the rostrum, where the governor stood. Tragedy of Ireland. Governor Gox got his first cheers by his reference to the Irish question. The situation in Ireland, he said, had become a tragedy and conditions there were such as to concern the science of the world. If elected presiednt, he said, he would bring the case "to the bar of public opinion of the world" through the league of nations. Article 10, he added, would be appreciated by Ireland when she obtains her independence "because of its territorial guarantee." Governor' Cox's criticism of Senator Lodge received prolonged applause and cries of "Right yoii are." Holding what he calls a "town tnootinor" with rmestions and answers from his audience, Governor Cox was asked: "How about entangling alliances?" "They say George Washington proclaimed that/' the governor answered. "It is doubted Whether he did, but if not Jefferson did. They say the league runs in contravention with that pronouncement. Well; George Washington did a lot of things we are not doing nowadays in America. George Washington owned slaves. George Washington owned a distillery." Applause and some cheers followed this statement. "What do you think about prohibition?" was another question. "My friends," rejoined the governor, "I know you have a wholehearted in+orocf in +hp snhient. When I take the oath of office as president I shall do as I have three times done as governor of Ohio?swear that I will perform all the duties of that office and uphold the law of the nation." "What - about the bonus?" a discharged soldier asked. "I stand," was the governor's reply, "with the action of the Cleveland convention of the American Legion on that." "Good for you," the heckler responded. This ended the questioning and Governor Cox went on with his discussion of the league of nations. Expert Testimony. Morris Year Book. ^ "Say, Dad, what's a monologue?" "A monologue? A monologue, j my son, is a conversation between husband and wife." j "But I thought that was a dialogue." "No, a dialogue is when two persons are speaking." A Fayettevilie man boasts of hav-i ing an umbrella he has had for 20 ( years, but the Greensboro Record; ;hinks he has kept it long enough and | chat he should return it now.?Morris Year Book. I [p. ! TO OUR TRADE |3 j We will have sev- lei eral cars of DANISH CABBAGE > jC( to arrive about No- ^ vember 1. Get our m prices before buying * I aiocvvncic. itr MILLER BROS. j! Prosperity, S. C. lo bi ? a1 NOTICE TO CREDITORS. C C All persons holding claims against z. the estate of J. Reuben Thomas, deceased, will present sanie duly at- ^ tested to the undersigned, at Blairs, g S. C., or to my attorneys, Hunt, Hunt & Hunter, Newberry, S. C., on rp or before the 14th day of October, 1920. J, Lewis S. Henderson, As Executor of the last will and test- G ament of J. Reuben Thomas, deceased. . F September 17, 1920. v Subscribe to The Herald and News $2.00 a year. D NOTICE OF SPECIAL SCHOOL F ELECTION IN REEDERVILLE SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 42. tc The State of South Carolina, r County of Newberry. ^ Whereas, a written petition or re- T quest made and signed by at least p one-third of the resident electors and a like proportion of the resident freeholders of the age of 21 years of C school district No. 42 of Newberry county, the State of South Carolina, having been duly presented to us re- S questing us to order an election submitting to the qualified voters" or C electors of said school district the question of issuing and selling cou- G pon bonds of said school district, payable to bearer, aggregating the C sum .of four thousand ($4,000) dollars, in such denominations as we B may deem necessary, not> to exceed 8 per cent, of the assessed valuation S of the property of s?id school district for taxation, b^iijing a rate of inter- P est not exceeding 6 per cent, per annum payable annually, at such.times !< as we may deem best, to determine whether said bppds shall be issued B or not as provjicted in Section 1743 of Volume I oj?';the 1912 Code of L T.?ws nf said state: and whereas, we,! the trustees of 'said school district I V I have had a survey of said school dis-! I trict made by '^Jeely J. Cromer, a 0 competent surveyor, and a plat there- j i of made and filefl in the office of the E clerk of the cosrt for Newberry county, in said state; V Now, be it rdfeolved, That for the purpose of determining the issue of C jsaid bonds as authorized in Section j 1743 of Volume I of the 1912 Code I of Laws for said' state, an election is (hereby ordered t6 be held at or near C the site for the new school house, f" in. said school d?strict, on Saturday, the 23rd day of October, 1920, the 0 polls to be opened at 7 o'clock in the si forenoon, and closed at 4 o'clock in b 'the afternoon, on the question of h jwhether such bonds shall be issued j or not, in which election only quali fioH vnters or electors residing: in said ? ! school district shall be allowed to " vote.P. C. Workman, A. C. Mills, J. F. Bedenbaugh are hereby appointed managers of such election. The ballot cast must have written on printed on it the words "For Bonds" or "Against Bonds." I. M. Smith, J. A. Davis, J. B. Speake, ry-P QnVinnl nictrii'f Vo 42 XiUdCCCiS Ui UV1IV/V/1 i/iuvi iv v w. . of Newberry County, the State of South Carolina. October 12, 1920. NOTICE OF ELECTION State of South Carolina, County of Newberry. Notice is hereby given that the General Election for Presidential and Vice Presidential Electors, United States -Senator and Representatives in Congress will be held at the voting precincts fixed by law in the County of Newberry on Tuesday, November 2, 1920, said day being Tuesday following the first Monday, as prescribed by the State Constitution. The qualifications for suffrage are as follows: Residence in State for two years, in the County one year, in the polling precinct in which the elector offers to vote, four months, and the payment six months before any election of any poll tax then due and payable: Provided, That ministers in charge of an organized church and teachers of public schools snail be entitled to vote after six months' residence in the State, otherwise qualified. Registration.?Payment of all taxes, including poll tax, assessed and collectible during the previous year. The production of a certificate or the receipt of the officer authorized to collect such taxes shall be conclusive proof of the payment thereof. Before the hour fixed for opening the polls Managers and Clerks must take and subscribe to the Constitutional oath. The Chairman of the Board of Managers can administer the oath to the other Managers and to the Clerk; a Notary Public must 1 administer the oath to Chairman.. The Managers elect their Chairman and Clerk. Polls at each voting plaee must be opened at 7 o'clock a. m. and closed at 4 o'clock p. m., except in the City of Charleston, where they shall be opened at 7 a. m. and closed at tij m. The Managers have the power to [1 a vacancy; and if none of the anagers attend, the citizens can apDint from among the qualified vot*s, the Managers, who, after being vorn, can conduct the election. At the close of the election the | anagers and Clerk must proceed j jblicly to open the ballot box and J >unt the ballots therein, and con-j nue without adjournment until.the | ime is completed, and make a state- j Iclll U1 tlic ICiUlb XKJl cavil umvw, | id sign the same. Within three j lys thereafter the Chairman of the; oard, or some one designated by! le Board, must deliver to the Com- j issioners of Election the poll list, j le box containing the ballots and! ritten statements of the result of le election. , Managers of Election.?The foliwing Managers of Election have sen appointed to hold the election i the various precincts in the said ounty: Newberry Court House?R. T. aldwell, A. J. S. Langford, Miss j [ary L. Burton. Newberry Cotton Mills?George J. Robinson, R. S. Turner, Thos. . Adams. Mollohon Mill?Wilbur Gantt, I. j . Timmerman, G. H. Perkins. Oakland Mill?S. R. Timmerman,! sff T. Cromer, J. C. Suber. Glymphville?J. H. Cromer, E. L. i lympn, j. w. uaiaweii. Helena?J. G. Miller, J. R. Lake, . G. Spearman, Sr. Maybinton?J. Berry Richards, W.| . Lyles, W. B. Whitney. Whitmire?F. W. Fant, W. G. uckett,. Mrs. W. R. Miller. Betheden?R. C. Carlisle, E. C. oik, B. H. Caldwell. Jalapa?A. Miller, B. L. Albrit>n, L. B. Hutson. Longshore?Mrs. Hennie B. Senn, . H. Martin, J. R. Spearman, Jr. Williams Store?Henry Fellers, r., Mrs. Kate Holloway Coleman, W. ,. Lea veil. Chappells?Mrs. Kate Holloway loleman, J. J.- Boazman, W. B. Alm. Utopia?J. H. Attaway, W. R. chumpert, W. W. Herbert. Prosperity?W. C. Dominick, G. . Fellers, Mrs. Maggie Barre Werts. Hendricks Mill?P. B. Warner, reorge H. Hunter, C. E. Lester. Slighs?E. R. Shealy, A. H. ounts, John Dow. ? " 1 m a ttill lir "d joiiy street?i. a. ruiesur, vr. jj. oinest, Jr., W. 0. Richardson. Central Srhool House?E. S. healy, David Koon, Sligh Wicker. Pomaria?J. W. Alevvine, Mrs. J. '. Setzler, ty. W. Berley. Walton?J. M. Felker, J. S. Fow;r, J. J. Hentz. Mt. Bethel?George S. Ruff, John laker, H. O. Graham. St. Phillips?A. E. Lominick, J.' ... Ruff, G. W. Shealy. Little Mountain?W. B. Shealy, S. 7. Young, Miss Elberta Sease, ? Union Academy?M. L. Strauss, P. >. Parrott, H. J. Kinard. Einards?J. A. Dominick, L. J. irooks, A. D. Johnson. Garmany Academy?E. S. Boozer, 7. C. Brown, Jr., W. G. Ulmer. Peak?M. W. Wilson, J. 0. lounts, W. 0. Oliver. Lambert W. Jones, t -n m ci 4-x 0. ?>. X. own, B. H. Herron, lommissioners of Federal Election or Newberry County, S. C. Get the Boxes at Court House? >ne Manager from each precinct hould be certain to get the boxes, allots and instructions at the court ouse Saturday, October 30. Lambert W., Jortes, Chairman. TURKISH & DOMESTIC 1 | Is He^ Listen | in that many towns of yoi The low STATION T< it more profitable. | SOUTHERN BELL T1 AND TELEGRAPH "Didn't R Prominent Georgia Lady I and Sleeplessness? PEOPLE who get to feeling weak every now and then, and who do not seem to get the proper refreshment from rest, sleep and recreation, need a tonic to help their blood revitalize and build up their system. For this, you will find Ziron Iron Tonic very valuable, as the tesimony of ! thousands alreadv has Droved. Mrs. J. W. Dysart, lady of a prominent Georgia family residing near Cartersville, says: MI didn't feel like.myself. i i . i? 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