The herald and news. (Newberry S.C.) 1903-1937, February 15, 1921, Page FIVE, Image 5
PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS
PROSPEROUS PROSPERITY
Literary Sorosis Discusses Big Questions?Mrs.
J. D. Griffin Entertains
the Tots?Miss Hawkins
Hostess for Bridge
Prosperity, Feb. 14.?The Literary
Sorosis met Friday afternoon with
Mrs. G. W. Harmon. The program
was an exceptionally interesting one,
the subject being State Government.
Legislature.?a. .Election and apportionment
of legislators; b. Time
and frequency of meeting; c. Process
of law making, was ably discuss
cd by Mir C. T. Wyche.
The State Administration?a. Elec-J
ted officials; b. Appointed officials;]
c. Salarie's and duties of state officers, j
was the subject handled by Mrs. J. F. j
Brown. |
The hostess served a tempting
salad course and hot cHccolate.
Wednesday afternoon Rev. and
Mrs. J. D. Griffin entertained about
twenty little tots at their home in
honor of thefr son, Leslie, who celeVi
KirtVirlnir Aftpr
UL Ci ICU Ilid
numerous games were played by the
children, they formed a line and
marphed into the dining room where
hot chocolate and cake were served.
Master Leslie was the recipient of
many useful and pretty gifts.
Miss Effie Hawkins on Wednesday
( evening added a delightful bridge
affair to the numerous social entertainments
being ' given this week.
Narcissi, japonicas, and hearts
adorned the attractive rooms where
the tables were set for the game, i
Tempting refreshments of tomato j
salad, celery, black coffee, fruit
cake and mints were served. '
'Twin Oaks," the ideal country
home of the .late Rev. Z. W. Bedenbaugh,
will be solid at public auction
on the Prosperity ' public square
Wednesday, February* 16 at ll|
- o'clock. j
Mrs. Corrie McWafers of Colum- i
bia visited her new little grandson,'
Horace E. Counts, Jr., on Sunday.
- Mrs. Oliri Evans of Urange&urg ar-i
rives' today to visit at the home of
Mr. S. L. Fellers.
Mi$s Lyona Gulledge of Sumter
spent the week-end with Mrs. J. A. I
Price.
Miss Moss Fellers of Andrews is!
spending the week-end at home.
* Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Aull of New!'
Mexico and Mrs. Jecsie Ray of Spar- j
, tai>b^j^e jgu^s^of ^iss Edna Fel-:
lers.. - .v:y;r. - r
Mrs. W. G. Blake, is visiting in j
Ninety-Six. 1- ? j:
Messrs. .Hunter and. Ercel Fellers^
of Wilson/^.- C^vare. visiting their!
mother, Mrs. .Eilie Fellers.
l^ fe?ivian Meces is j
on a short visit" "to her parents, Mr.'
s . and Mrs. J. ;D* Quattlefyaunu"
....Mrs. H. Drucker of McConnick j
spent the past week with Ker brother,j
I. Kaplan.,
? ?!! 1 * 4* T TT :
Mrs. H. jr. wiCKer anq-ivirs. o. n.
Seitz have returned from Columbia.
Mrs. J. B. T. Bcott is visiting in
Greenville.
Miss Lucy Lake spent the weekend
with her brother, Professor j
Camp-bell Lake of Kershaw.
R. P. Luther has returned to At-!
lanta after visiting his parents,. Dr. i
and Mrs. R.. L. Luther.
S. S. BBirge has returned from a<
visit to his nephew, Ernest Sam Kohn, j
1 - ? owrl M VC? !
wno IS Willi xiis pctxciit-a, iTAt. anu
A. H. Kohn at Columbia.
D. M. Bedenbaugh is under treatment
at the Columbia hospital.
I. Kaplan has returned^from Ashe
ville, N. C.
E. L. Wheeler of Cheraw is visiting
relatives here.
Mrs. W. B. Boinest, Jr., of Pomaria
and Miss Lera Livingston of St.
Philips spent the week-end with Mr.
I and Mrs. B. M. P.. Livingston.
Mrs. J. D. Quattlebaum spent Saturday
in Columbia
Uimt Mowhprrv is i
iwrs. ixcinc uuiiK vx v>.uv..,,
visiting Mrs. J. D. Hunt. /
i Misses, Goode Burton and Josie
Griffin spent the week-end in Newberry.
Representative E. N. Kibler was*
home for the week-end.
Summerland and Newberry will;
join in a six welts' summer school to j
be held at Newberry college begin- {
ning about July 16th. The purpose of j
this is to give an opportunity to the !
1 ' nrVirk WfJv!
siuuenis- 01 tacii l uncgc ??uw ;
wish to work off conditions, and to j
help prospective candidates for the j
Freshman class to prepare for en-j
trance examinations. In addition,'
courses will be offered to public!
school teachers to equip themselves!
beter for their profession.
Col. E. H. Aull, superintendent of
education for Newberry county, has
already expressed h;> intention to '
PALMAFESTA
Palmetto State Festival
Columbia March 29 to April 2
*
\
urge the teachers of his county to at- 5
tend this school. It is believed the g
school will meet a resrl need, and it is
hoped that it will attract many students.
f
I *
The ladies in attendance v;i!l be
domiciled in xhe new dormitory, the
men in the old. Complete details
will be announced later. ( R
The standing committee of the J I
board of trustees has selected F. D.j
MacLean of Youngstown, Ohio, director
of physical education to session
I921-'22, to succeed Mr. L. C. j"
Sullivan, who gave notice last Dec- o
ember that he would resign at the e,
close of this session. Mr. MacLean S
has accepted.
F. D. MacLean was graduated ^
from Newberrv college with high hon- f1
% II
ors, June, 1915. He was elected to,
an assistant professorship at once, J j.
and did good work in the department j,
of English. In June 1916. he left
Newberry and secretly crossed into ii
Canada where he enlisted in the Prin-j **
cess Pat regiment and wen over with'
his regiment to Flanders. After ourj a
country entered the Great War hej ^
transferred to "our military organi-j 0
zation and made a notable record in
the service of our country. He was r<
discharged a few months ago and is! vs
now at the home of his father in j
x i o
Youngstown, Ohio. |
"Dutch" MacLean put Newberry; ^
college on the gridiron map of South ! c;
Carolina. His exoerience in coaching. r<
has not been a very long one but has' d
been brilliantly successful. The stu-' o
dent body, hundreds of old boys, and j "
the people of the town will give: *
"Dutch" the glad hand when he - R
comes. |
' G
Cald well-Thompson
A Wedding that came as quite a' '
surprise to their many irienas was, "
that of Miss Oro Caldwell to Mr. John!
| rr(
P. Thompson on Wednesday, Febru-; ?
ary ninth. The ceremony' was per- y
formed in the presence of the fami-i
ly of Miss Caldwell and a few friends,' c<
Rev. James E. Merry officiating. Mrs. a
Thompson is the daughter of Mrs. J.
F. Caldwell who resides on Drayton' ^
street She is an attractive young girl, *
and numbers her friends by the score.' ^
Mr. Thompson is a young man of ^
sterling qualities. And all who know ii
this young couple predict for them a o
success future. ! ?
After spending their honeymoon in: ^
Atlanta, Ga., and other points Mr.' j,
and Mrs. Thompson will "be at home to ^
their friends in Newberry on Drayton it
street. j h
? ! f
< . ! "
Patching the Czar's Trousers. ; ^
In lifs recently published memoirs ?
Count Witte, a member of the old Rus
sian, regime, relates that Alexander tl
IIT's prudence In government expendi- tl
ture "was matched by his personal a
thrift: "Alexander III was extremely o
economical with his wearing apparel, b
I had a curious proof of this when I b
accompanied the emperor on one of E
his railway trips. Since I found It ,
impossible, on account of my responsi- j
bility, to sleep of nights, I would often
catch glimpses of his majesty's valet tl
mending the emperor's trousers. On cl
one occasion I asked him why he b
didn't give his master a new pair in- ! b
stead of mending the old so often. r<
'Well, I would rather have it that I
? 1 ?i?i. i.!,. i ti
way, lie answereu, out. jus majesty won't
let me. He insists on wearing j t:
his garments until they fire thread-, h
bare. It is the samte with his boots.'n j I
i
j Si
Huge Stone in Roosevelt's Honor, j 1(
* The greatest chunk of stone ever! 11
quarried or transported in the United
States or anywhere else on earth is j *1
going to he hewn and brought to J P
Washington for the monumental Theo- j I
dore Roosevelt national memorial. The : n
memorial is to ta>.e the form of a j
mme 3R hv 4ft In flimpnsions. \ f<
ar;d it is to be carved by Carl Ethan c
Akeley out of a solid block of rock. li
Where the Vone is to come from appears
not yet to be determined. One
authority suggests it may be necessary
to build a special railroad and ft
equipment to bring it to Washington, j a
The memorial will be the biggest job I g
in stone, it is said, since the sphinxes ii
were set up on the plains of Egypt.? ii
Philadelphia Public Ledger. r
: a
i
Floats for Boats. s
S. E. Van Horn of Manhasset, N. ti
JL lO 11IC lin V UlVl \'K. il OV.IlCIJI^ AVI j X'
making boats unsinkable. The safety | n
boat is provided with a couple of urn- j li
brellas of rubberized fabric, one on ti
the port and the other on the star- i1
board side, attached to the gunwale
by a sort of outrigger*.
When not in use the umbrellas are
collapsed and take up little room, the a
outriggers b'.'ing swung alongside of e
the craft, out of the way. But in case y
of danger the outriggers are hastily e
swung outward into position, the urn- h
brellas spreading automatically. p
_ t
Harrowing Experience. ii
"What's the trouble?" asked the sec- y
ond assistant sporting editor. p
"I've just had a call from a woman
who had written some 'free verse,'"
said the Sunday editor, who was
shaking all over. j.
"That ought not to upset yttt." b
"Ah!" groaned the Sunday editor, t
"But she read It to me and tfrew In q
a lot of gestures."?Birmingham Age- c
Jieraia. ... J Ii
FAMOUS OLD GiTY|
Geneva Figures Prominently in!
r> .r i i:.i
rages 01 msiuiy.
!
lecords Show Brave Fight for Independence
Long Maintained Against
Powerful, Unscrupulous Neighbors, j
Geneva, the seat of the League of j
Nations, witnessed some fierce fight- j
1 z in the days when the duke of
avoy sought to destroy its independ- j
tice with the aid of a contingent of
panish troops.
These mercenaries tried to rush
le defenses at dead of night, but
lough some of them managed to get
lto Geneva, not one of them managed
) get out again. Those who were not
illed in action were a'fterward beeaded.
They still preserve at Geneva seal
ig ladders captured from the Spanirds
on that memorable night, toether
with the caldron out of which
Genevan housewife, who had risen
arly to prepare her husband's breakist,
poured a deluge of scalding soup
a to the heads of the enemy troops.
Another relic preserved at Geneva
?calls the little band of exiles who
'Orked together there at the tracslaon
of the Scriptures, known as ihe
eneva Bible.
^ * - " ' * -? -n x.?
un me eve or xr.eir ueyanurt? j"i
Ingland they went in a body to the'
ity fathers, who gave them, as the
?cords show, "honorable license to
epart, together with a testimonial
f the satisfaction we have had in
iem, and an exhortation to act in
ie*r turn toward foreigners as we
ave acted toward them." Then they
11 wrote their*signatures in the "Livre
es Anglais," or Book of the English,
'hich is carefully treasured in the
eneva archives.
Though Geneva for some hundreds
" years has been a sovereign republic,
mcli of the architectural beauty of
le modern town is directly due to the
enerosity of a one-tin^ reigning
rince, Charles II, duke of Brunswickfolfenbuttel.
The duke, who was born in 1S07, suc?eded
at an early age to the throne,
nd governed so arbitrarily and cruel7
that his subjects appealed to the
lerman diet, which, after some negoation
deposed him and placed his
ounger brother on the throne. After
lis Duke Charles, who was very
-ealthy, wandered abbut Europe, makig
Paris his headquarters. On the
ntbreak of the Franco-Prussian, war,
1 1S70, he finally settled at Geneva,
'here he died in 1^73.
He had been an exile from his own
;nd for more than .thirty years, and if
e ever had had any affection for. it,
: had perished during that time; so
e constituted the city of Geneva his
eir. His will was disputed by his
rother and successor, Duke William,
'ho demanded the family jewels and
ther treasure.
Before the case came into the courts
fie duke agreed to compromise, and
fie city came in for a legacy worth
bout four million dollars. This stmv
r a considerable portion of it, has
een spent in beautifying the town,
uilding the quays and the elaborate
irunswick monument. T V
*
Mark Twain as a Typist
Mark Twain appears.to have been
tie first distinguished author to purbase
a typewriter, and'a letter typed
y him to W. D. HoWells on Decerner
9, 1874?the very day the machine
cached him?is still extant.
"I don't know," he tells him,
whether I am going to make this
rpewriting machine go or not; that
isf- word was intended for n-not: but
guess I shall make some sort of a
uecess of it before I run it very
>ng. I am so thick-fingered that I
liss tiie keys. You needn't answer
lis. I am only practicing to get
iree ? another slip-up there; only
raeticing to get the hang of the thing,
notice I miss lire?eret in a irood
lany unnecessary letters and punctuaon
marks. I am simply using you
>r a target to bang at. Blame my
ats, but this thing requires a genius
1 order to work it just right."
Profiteers ferced to Build.
Switzerland has found a new use
or war profits. The Swiss who reaped
n excess profit during the war can
et an abatement of taxes if lie will
lvest his surplus in residential liouslg
under official regulation. The
egulation guards against unsightly
nd insanitary building. It also retricts
rentals to yield only a fair ream
on the investment. If the war
rnfifppr docs not rare to nut his easv
joney into this useful channel of pubc
service at a fair return, the state
ake? a large part of it from him and
:self subsidizes the building of homes.
Selling Human Bones.
The keeper of a public cemetery of
small Bohemian town near Prague
xcavated the older parts of the graveard,
and sold all the old bones he
ould find for industrial purposes, as
e found that certain manufacturers
aid more for human honrs than for
hose of animals. He had been earn
ng money in this way for several
cars before lie was detected and susended
from the pest.
Crowded Highways.
The highways of the country are beng
used to a greater extent than ever
efore. The latest figures show the
otal number of cars registered in this
ountry last year to be 7,503,446, inludlng
niotorcycles and trucks. This
s a 23 per cent increase over tlie preious
year.
' FARMER OWES MUCH TO il/SULE !
j Animal Is Hard and Rugged Worker :
and Aimcst Indispensable in
Many Localities.
Tiic mule, like everybody else, lias ;
his place. He is considered a bad i
actor. Fathers caution their sons '
about going near any animal with long !
ears and ropy tail. Tlie sons Know ;
what the animal will do becau.se they j
have been looking over the "funny t
| paper" each Sunday and were de- j
lighted in seeing the mule fold up and j
! let loose with a kick that sent a man
through the side of a barn or over
r
1 the fence. But in spite of this unj
desirable advertising the mule is with j
! us today 011 more farms than ever j
i before. He is a hard and rugged j
! worker and Is especially adapted to 1
1 the more hilly farms of our agricul- ;
~ ?
i tural sections. Even through the i
! Middle West there are some counties }
j that have more mules than horses. In
j 1867, the yiules of the United States
| numbered 822,000, with an average
| value of $6G.94. In 1S00 the number
j was 2,321,000, valued at $7S.25. By
j 1914 the number had increased to I
| 4,123,000, with a value of $119.84 per
j head. On January 1, 1920, the cum!
her was 4,99"),000 and the value per
! head was $147.
The mule has gained rapidly in
popularity, in many localities taking
the place of the horse, and has also
^1* a {An /-?f f li a trr. rt- 1
j trmeu uic jniiuuu*,i.ivu ui me n.iv.- j
j tor in many places. There are not a i
j few mule ranches over the United j
1 States, the owners finding it a pay- j
1 ipg kind of stock to raise. 'The de;
mand is increasing and jthose having
j them for sale cannot supply the mar|
ket.?Thrift Magazine.
j CONDEMN TERM "FAIR SEX" j
| English Women Go on Record as Op- !
posed to Phrase "Belonging to
a Bygone Age."
; It has been officially declared in Eng- j
land tbat women, en bloc, are neither
' "week" nor "fair." At least the Worn:
en's Freedom league, under the leadi
ership of Councilor Margaret Hodge, j
| has put a ban on the terms "fair sex" ;
j and "weaker sex." "Spinster" and
j "mother-in-law" have also been put
: on the feminine index. Further, it is
| averred, once and for all time that:
| Woman's judgment is as good as
j man's. ' '
Women talk less -than men.
J Women can keep a secret.
I "One irritating custom," said Miss
! Hodge, "comes from an age when to be
j fair was woman's .first and foremost
i duty, xne only yromen wno coimieu i
j were for ornament rather than for use. j
i Women may be the2 weaker sex physically,
but certainly not morally. The
; name mother-in-law is still the stand;
by of farces and comic literature. It
: is an idea from some bygone age."?
London Chronicle.
Chinese Art.
The applicability of Chinese art for
' interior decorailiofc'1 of any period is j
bcins strikingly illustrated in a recent
gallery opening ijr New York. The
i idea that anything Chinese is gaudy
is being gradually displaced. In the
carving of gems, the working of metal
I and in tapestry Resigns the Chinese
are without rivals.0 The owner of the
new gallery has fitted up half af score
of rooms in period designs?there Is
the old French./ and English, the
j American colonial, the early Italian
! and the Holland rooms. Fitting snug- j
! ly into the general tone of the room |
I are marvels of Chinese craftsmanship j
I in the form of hangings, carved wood- j
| work, tapestry and lam^s. It is a rev- j
: elation to many and has a new con- j
; eeption of Chinese craftsmanship.?St.1
I Paul Pioneer Press.
-r: - "
Big Task.
i One of the big-causes of delay ln<
1 the movement of freight is the heati
Jng of the journal boxes of car axles,
I commonly called "hot boxes." When
! one journal box In a train gets seriI
ously hot it is necessary to stop the
| whole movement of traffic until the
; condition can be remedied. This '
j makes very timely a series of tests |
1 *?* *? ?^ "On nn nnL i
j now uemg uarueu vn ut i uiuuc u?nj
versity, to determine accurately tlie j
j benefit to be derived by using venti- j
! lated lids instead of the solid lids j
j now almost universally used on the
axle journals. Tlie tests consist of
j eight-hour runs with heavy loads at
, high speed, during which accurate j
I records are kept of the temperature I
attained in each class of apparatus, j
Perfume Hunters.
i There seems to be no good reason
I <rr.V><<T 5,-k tliic! /-niintrv flip fntllPrinf? of
All UilO \.vum,?v? v-.v, 0
sweet-smelling herbs and flowers for
the perfumery trade might not he
found profitable. It has recently become
a considerable industry in rural
parts of England, a great many women
and children having taken it up.
In April the picking of cowslips begins,
those flowers being in demand as
a cure f<jr sleeplessness, and also for
"potpourri" /and sachets. Broom and
older flowers follow. Mullein and mallow,
ber^amot, peony petals, rose
petals and red poppy petals bring good
prices; likewise raspberry leaves,
i sajro^ mint, balm and thyme.?Phila
delphia Ledger.
Telephone Statistics.
Telephone wires in the United
I States have reached the enormous to'
tal length of 22,827,1 SS miles, the new
! government census reveals. There are
| 31,71G,;">20 x telephones, connected
j through 53,234 organized systems or
j lines. Tlie total number of messages
. -? fit Ot'TIMOOS <>11 nnM
j in was ? ,oou, ui ?-j.a yci
| capita.
HZ T? S _ o
1 N & lis w^i
I IMlil vf" &i
imm*ir?-V-^ - Jnwuim
ft 7
how ts i
V,
i <
To &zzv seem
*s
irn,
I; Our buyers f<
searching the ir.
at a price m kc<
prices the bayirs
As a result o
ready revised p
| dollars worth <
ta S? (4t* $.ikf -v
r <? n 3
| i he tallowm
^ * ""a S '
i easy >x wisi be s
| goods you need
S to pay s
3 Apron Gingham ....
;; o2-ineh Dross Gingr
-l2-inch Dress Gingl
? 82-inch Dress Ghnd
$ 27-inch Dress Gingl
^ 97_irtr>^ TV/r^e <7-ir!0*l
11 22-inch Romper CIc
I j * 1S-inch Bleaching ..
Lonsdale Nainsook
o 0-Inch ?sainsook .
26-inch Nainsook ..
? Colored Nainsook ..
? Long Cloth
| 33-inch Indian -I-Ieae
% 36-inch Indian Head
44-inch Indian Hea<
- 9-4 Pepperai^Sheeti
I: 2>-inch Kod btar JJi
- . 72-inch Mercerized
; 56-inch Mercerized
36-ideh Curtain Ma
? 8-inch; Curtain Mai
. 30-inch iMiddy TwH;
86-inch Middy Twill
27-iInch Dimity ......
4C-inch' Veil and Or
40-inch Batiste
' 27-inch Dotted Swi:
i S6-:"nch Dotted Swi:
I Cheviots
in earner j cxmg' ....
Stra*v Ticking
Blue Denim
' Blue Denim
/ While and Colored <
I - . 36-incli Percale
a 27-inch Chambray ..
a ?; -inch Silk Taireta
C 3-in eh Silk Taffeta
i Crepe de Chine
Pon'-ee
1 36-inch French Serf
U i 7 a 2-inch French Sfcrj
I_ 30-men Kimona i r
SB-inch Kimona Crc
Toweling
Toweling
| Towels
Towels .
Towels, h emistitche
Lath Towels
Eath Towels
Iiviei cerizso. i\ apKiiit
Mereerized Napkim
72x90 Sheers
; 81x90 Sheets
90x90 Sheets
42x36 Hemstitched
45:;&6 Pillow Cases
New Laces (3,000 ;
Radmore Silk Hcse
Ror.nd Ticket Silk J
Round Ticket Silk 1
Round Ticket (regu
Lad-Isa' Lisle Thresh
I Todies' Ltele Threat
Ladies' Cotton Hose
Boys' Heavy Ribbec
Boys' Heavy Ribbed
577 77
We sen r*c
I the Easit
We are recei
CI.,' ."--r 3r o.e
"THE fJRO
jj ?&&*Ui&i 1 &*>?
|
p ^???*????www ?a?
0m k lane'
*SeJ &
im r ?!' m mm n iiian?pin Ti invmnwHM
the Time to j
our Spring ,
b w*
Dmicaily this store i
make your purchasi
or the past several weel
larkets for quality merch
;pir*g with conditions hota
ig public can afford to pa
? eisr efforts we have a tit
Heed sleek mere than Ml
of new, crisp, desirable
and Millinery.
g comparative prices v/i
:or ye'is to'buy from jis
now at prices that you cs
Prevail'!
, Aug
(
iam <
ram
lam '
lam /..
iairf ; '
>th i
j
i
1
>
rig - aper
Cloth v 3.
Table Damask 2.
Table.} Damask 1.
rouisette 4 ,
.-anisette and Veil
l /
L ...J.
/ ,
gandy
5S
}3
Oil Cioth
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Pillow Cases
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2
lose 2
lose . 4
iar and out sizes) Kose 3
1 Hose
I Hose 1
I Hcse
Hose
me Patterns, Stylish and
23fc of All Patterns to Us a
Iving daily new Dresses,
*1 7^ /? oV "* e
s** > ?* J v t* 0 v -Mi r
cilUVi 7 ?
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'WING STORE OF KEV
Jf-w i ?ws?.2
l^iTp i<af a ^
8S|aVli w*? .? *
km tm mmmmm i urn mmm laawMn ?n tm n ?fc?tmcm? afrarmcmx
nfewr , I
&IIV& 9 ^C.
Do . I
Q ^ I
W I W
:s the place | .
"s 1
is have been ^
:andise to sell
7 existing, at ?
aeti w uiET c4i- I y
teen thousand |
Dry Goods, 11
il show how
si thd kmd. of k
in well afford
tig Pries Our Price S? ' \
1920 Now ; jj
>5 .10 yd \ K
15 .19 yd
30 .25 yd |
75N -3o .yu JS w\
15 - .10 yd . ' I
SO . .25 yd . I
55 .15 yd j a
30 , .25 yd | j
35 .15 yd / B 50
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