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PURELY PERSONAL. The Movements of Many People, Newberrians and Those Who Visit Newberry. The Rev. J.' C. Smith, pastor of the Pentecostal Holiness church in Newberry, is conducting a meeting at the church this week, beginnng Thursday night to end Sunday night. Assisting Rev. Mr. Smith are Rev. and Mrs. Paul F. Beacham of Greenville. The Rev. Mr. Beacham is head of the Holmes Bible and Missionary institute in that city. Mss Dove Elam has returned to Greenville after a visit here to Mrs. Mattie Crooks. Mrs. J. G. Marshall of Montgomery, Ala., formerly Miss Mamie Payne of Newberry, and Mr. and Mrs. Pope Payne of Washington, D. C., are visiting Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Walton and others in Newberry. Mrs. T. P. Johnson has gone to ?"* ' ? < j _ ? Waxhaw, IN. U., 10 spena a Willie at her former home. Mr. H. P. Powell and family are visiting relatives in Shelby,. N. C. Rev. E. D. Kerr left on Wednesday to. visit in North Carolina, out from Charlotte. Mr. Duane Livingston aid his little sister Margaret, after spending a week with their mother in Henderson\ .. ville, returned home last week, accompanied by their cousin, Miss Lucile Cureton, for a visit here. Miss Marjorite Hallman and hei> brother, Harold, are visiting Mrs. George Miller of Hunt street. Misses Frances and Marion Caldwell returned last week after visiting relatives in Ward and Saluda. Mayor Eugene S. Blease is announced as a candidate for the vacancy in the legislature. Prof. McTyeire Daniel "blew in" from Newberry Friday and put in a strenuous course of love-making until Saturday afternoon.?Abbeville Press and Banner, 8th. Mrs. P. F. Baxter and son Marion left Sunday for Cherryville, N. C., 4-Viq fnwior Vmmp nf fhp l?tp Mr. BaX ter, on a visit to his brothers and sisters in and ^around that place. Miss Ossie Lee Jones of Savannah, Ga., is the attractive guest of Misses Grace and Sadie Jones. Misses Ethel Sharpe and Aileen Shane and little Dick Sharpe, brother of Miss Sharpe, motored to Newberry Saturday afternoon for a visit to friends. They returned yesterday morning.?The State, 9th. Mr. Til Harmon and family left this week to visit in Spartanburg. Misses Irene Hunt and Lillian Latimer and Rohert and James Latimer * of Pageland are visiting their grandfather, Mr. D. B. Werts, their aunt, Mrs.Xlarence Summer, and other relatives in Newberry. Mr. Will Turner has been called to Tennessee on account of the critical illness of his daughter. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Spearman and four children of Cherokee county, near Gaffney, have returned home after visiting his father, Mr. Prank G. Spearman, at Helena. Mr. Eddie Dickert, traveling representative of the DaCosta Wholesale, Columbia, is ending his vacation m Newberry from Monday to Friday, x preparatory to taking up his new duties, after visiting his brother, Mr. Yancfey Dickert and other relatives. Mr. Mack Zarifis, one of the pleasant men at the Candy Kitchen, will leave on Sunday for Atlanta to spend three months in that hustling city. Mr. Gurney Summer will spend the week-end in Greenwood. Dr. Tom H. Pope, Dr. C. D. Weeks, Mr. "Red" Johnson and Mr. E. C. m 1 A. T J 1 "? f layior moiorea to uoiumoia ruesday. Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Fuller, Mrs. J. R. Smith and Carroll Smith, of Laurens, spent Tuesday at the home of Dr. J. L. Daniel. They didn't know that, Mrs. Daniel had gone to the mountains. Mrs. Smith is the mother and Mrs. Fuller the sister of Mrs. \ Daniel. i Miss Mary Hutchinson has returned from a visit to her sister, Mrs. Ed Hitchinson near Augusta. Mrs. L. C. Pitts underwent an operation at the Columbia hospital Saturday and is doing well. Mr. J. W. Richardson of Prosperity has been drawn as grand juror for the federal court at Greenville September 13. Messrs. J. E. Senn and S. J. Shannon of Newberry, L. C. Livingston of Pomaria and H. M. Boozer of Leesville are drawn as petit jurors. Misses Lila and Julia Summer and Leila Dennis are SDendimr two weeks in Hendersonville. William and James Kennedy are visiting relatives in Newberry.?, Yorkvlle Enquirer, 9th. Mrs. M. J. Epting and son Wallace and Mrs. Grover C. Paulsen of Savannah will return home today, Friday, after visiting Miss Mamie; Cline and Mrs. J. D. Wicker. Messrs. J. H. Mayes and M. E. Brown of Newberry were in Westminster Saturday and Sunday. Henry and Moody are doing quite a lot of building at Newberry this sum-| mer.-?Tugaloo Tribune. Yes, and "Henry and Moody" are not the only {evangelistic contractors doing quite a lot of building here. There is a good deal of building and street work and other work going on in Newberry, making the city lively. Mrs. 0. L. Schumpert received the sad news on Monday that Mr. Jack i T V. o A A!n/"1 rwn tViof ilt, Vlis j IjC V> 15 uau UitU Vi? CUUV V4V.J I 'home in Atlanta. He is survived by his widow, formerly Miss Lula Chase of Newberry. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Spence, Mrs.j G. V. Boozer and Mrs. H. F. Addy of ! Columbia visited Mr. George Addy j | and other relatives Sunday afternoon, j [ One of the pleasant features of the I | visit was the bringing of a churn of j ! ice cream?and the cream was as firm ! 'when it reached Newberry as when j it left Columbia?good and cold. Messrs. Robert Tarrant, Hugh Summer, Elbert Dickert and Oscar Summer motored to Greenville Tuesday. I Irwin Leavell has returned from an av n n/1 is nt.! ' CAtCilUCU VIOIV tu ? 'home preparatory to going off to col-j j lege. j Mrs. Hal Kohn and little Hal, Jr., are in Columbia visiting the parents of "Mr. Hal." Rev. J. L. Bragg will preach at the : First Baptist church Sunday morning Sat 11:30. | Messrs. W. H. Zeigler, H. W. Domjinick, Walter Ramseur and John Swittenberg motored to Columbia Tuesday. When in Newberry recently it was a pleasure to meet Editor Wallace of the Observer. He is dean among the weekly editors of#South Carolina and his opinion carries weight with his 'brethren of the press. We were glad i to find brother Wallace much im-1 l | proved in health. Editor Aull was not in his office but Mr. Greneker, his! 1 assistant, was in. Mr. Greneker is j ' j one of the livest reporters and local men that we know of. It is rare that an item in The Presbyterian concerning a Newberry citizen that escapes his eagle eye. He is always on the job.?A. R. Presbyterian. | Addresses were made by Rev. E.1 E. Strong and Dr. J. W. Carson.^?The 1 Associate Reformed Presbyterian in reporting the Y. P. C. U. meeting in' connection with the recent conference! at Linwood. The subject of the two, addresses was "The Three Great Rela-1 Itionships of Life." The names of Dr. E. N. Orr and nf Pv/vf n t* r nnnan uroro aiiyia_ . vx JU A VJLI JLmf vuiuivii ?* vi v aiixivunv I ed withdrawn by the chairman of the 'executive commttee.?A. R. Presby| teran's report of the meetng of Ersj kine board nominating Rev. R. C. | Grier of Columbia as president of1 jErskine college. ! JVIiss Cleora Ezell of Whitmire has been spending a month with her aunt,; jMrs. T. J. Cooper. Her father and mnt.her camp for thp wpplr-pnH nnH carried her'home.?Ekom cor. Laurens Advertiser. Mr. H. H. Evans is announced as a' (candidate for the vacancy in the leg-! islature. Mrs. J. Y. Cooley of Leesville is ! spending a few days with relatives 'and friends here.?Lanford cor. Lau-' ;rens Advertiser. ! Miss Minnie Havird of Newberry, ' is visiting friends in the city.?Mrs. 1 ; w. it. tsrown ana ivirs. jonn league ; have returned home after visiting I jfriends in Newberry.?Mrs. J. L. jGoggans and children of Dallas, Tex- j as, who have been visiting Mr. and | Mrs. L. G. Balle in this city, have | gone to Newberry to visit relatives. ;?Laurens Advertiser, 10th. Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Wright and ba- ', 'I i by of Anderson, motoring to Johnston J | on a visit to relatives, passed through I |Newberry Wednesday afternoon. On; their return trip home they will stop' over in this city. j Mrs. Edw. R. Hipp and Mrs. J. 0. j Willson and little daughter, Mary; Hipp, spent a couple days in Newberry and returned through the cotfn;try to Spartanburg:, where Mrs. Hipp lis spending the summer. Mr. R. Y. Leavell is spending a1 | few days at Harris Springs, after which he will go to Glenns. He was | motored to Harris by Mr. James Lea' veil. Mrs. Charles Cheatham and -daugh- j ter of Greenville visited Mr. and Mrs. I John Thomas Hayes a day this week: ' at the residence of Mrs. W. E. Pel-! i ham, Jr. They were accompanied by ] ! Mr. Haves' mother. Mrs. E. Lee i | Hayes, and her daughter, Miss Ida | May. . Mr. Will S. Lominick "and family have moved to Mr. H. H. Kinard's [ house in Friend street, next door to j J the residence of Mr. and Mrs. H. H. j Kinard. Will says he is now living | in the old C., N. & L. passenger de- j j pot building. We all remember how I j Henry had a time of it pulling it 'from the station, but after he had it' overhauled and fixed up it showed a wonderful improvement. Solicitor Homer S. Blackwell of ( Laurens was here yesterday, visiting. ;a number of friends at the StateI House. Solicitor Blackwell is preparing for a special term of court to be held at Greenwood next Monday to I |try Pink Griffin, slayer of Dr. Law-' ton C. Lipscomb.?The State, 11th. j ( Rev. I. S. Long: of Charleston has, arrived to spend a couple of weeks with relatives in Newberrv. Mrs. Mattie C. Kneece left last Wednesday for Newberry, where she wll spend several days.?Batesburg cor. Lexington Dispatch-News. 10th. Miss Norma Stribble of Newberry j is visiting Miss Myrtle Bundrick.? Broad River cor. Lexington Dispaich-: News, 10th. Miss Marjorie Jacobs of Newberry is spending some time with Mr. R. W. M. Eleazer's family.?Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Shealy and little daughter Sadie, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Derrick, Mrs. J. M. Sease and Miss Althea Sease of Little Mountain,! are oif on an extended trip to Washington, D. C., and New York, where they will visit relatives before they return.?Chapin cor. Lexington D:spatch-News, 10th. Mr. John Latimer and family are spending a while in Shelby, N. C. Mr. W. D. Stroud has gone to visit relatives at Whitmire, Union and Blacksburg. Mrs. Eugene F. Summer left on Wednesday for Tampa, Fla., to visit her mother, Mrs. Dennis Crandall, and will be gone about a month. Mr. John Gruber and family are visiting at Greer. ? ? " >n ? /--? Mrs. J. u. iviaunews 01 uaines! ville, Ga., and Mrs. Claude Werts and san of Newberry are visiting their |sster, Mrs. Herman Warnecke.?Ai'ken Journal and Review. Mrs. 0. 0. Copeland is spending the week at her former home in Clinton. Miss Troxelle Wright 'of Newberry is visiting at the home of Dr. and Mrs. J. W. Bell.?Keowee, Walhalla, Courier, 10th. Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Wooten have , returned from a ten day motor trip to Asheville, Hendersonville and oth er points in the mountains of North 1 Carolina.?Greenwood Index-Journal. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. L. Brissey and Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Wright have returned from Wrightsville Beach. They made the tip by automobile.?Mrs. 1 Dorsey Smith of Kinards is visiting Mrs. T. Lloyd Cely.?Anderson Mail, 110th. Messrs. L. M. Matthews of Greenwood and L. C: Pitts, Jr., of Old Town motored to. Newberry Wednesday, the former spending the night at the home of Mr. B. B. Hiller and family and the latter with Mr. and Mrs: Thompson Pitts. They were 1 accompanied on the homeward trip by Caldwell Derrick, visiting Clarence Pitts. ! Misses Mary and Byrdie Kelley of Greenville are visiting Miss Aughtry Templeton of Nance street. Mr. John C. B. DeHart has been vsiting his brother, Mr. Noah DeHart, at Pelion. Mr. and Mrs. Noah DeHart and daughter accompanied him home to remain about a week visiting relatives. Mrs. Charlton Rauch and handsome little son Ted returned. Friday to their home at Ballentine after a week's visit to the former's parents, 3 TIT A T T ? 1 ~ -f V IUI. U.IIU 1*115. S\. i>. UUIUlSUIi U1 ZV111ards. Miss Daisy Johnson returned with them to spend a while. | Col. and Mrs. Hunt of Newberry were in attendance. The colonel, though a Baptist, loves to attend the A. R. P. Summer conference. He is one of the prominent laymen in the Baptist church and withal a very genial man.?From the A. R. Presbyterian's "Linwood Echoes." Dr. P. E. Way and little son George have gone to the mountains. Mrs. Jas. R. Davidson, Mrs. T. Q. Boozer, Miss Blanche Davidson and Mr. and Mrs. Jas. L. Aul! and children motored to Columbia Tuesday. Mrs. R. C. Perry, who has been in Greenville for some time undergoing treatment, is improving, but Mr. Perry is suffering with eye trouble, and has been in Greenville' for treatment under Dr. Jervey. Thomas Earle Hipp, now in Shanghai, China, with his battleship, has been promoted from assistant pay-i master, with the rank of lieutsjiant, J dating back to July 1, 1920, having been appointed to his present position by President Harding on the j v>nth of .Tulv and nromotlv confirmed; by the senate on the 29th. Mr. Hipp 1 received his first appointment at the beginning of the war, but was turned down on account of alleged color! blindness. Congressman Dominickj took the matter up with the navy department and after persistent work1 through Admiral Samuel McGowan of; Laurens county, paymaster of the na-j vy, was finally successful in getting j alleged defects waived, and Mr. Hipp) *"** kit. nnnnm+munt If id JinW g\J W IIH aj;pu;iiiun.in. .. tenant Hipp and his many friends will be proud of his promotion and j distinction that has come to him in his fine career. The many friends of Mr. Henry Holley, who has been ill for the past two weeks at the home of his fatherin law. Dr. J. M. Kibler in Newberry,! will be greatly pleased to learn that J he is now recovering: from his illness, j Mr. Holley was taken with typhoid' j fever Thursday two weeks ago.? j Aiken Journal and Review, 10th. Miss Lois Clayton is on an extended visit to Newberry, Inman and Spartanburg.?Easley Progress. Rudolph Busch returned home for the last week-end from Newberry college, where he is attending the summer school.?Aiken Journal and Review. Mrs. Thomas K. Pope and Mrs. T1 -*T TT! 1 XT U ? -..wit T I | J onn ivi. jvinaru ui i>iewucn j m n ? - j ed in the city Tuesday for a visit to j Chief Justice and Mrs. Eugene B. Gary.?Abbeville Press and Banner, .1 Oth. Dr. Bowers is a strong thinker and speaker and is always heard here! with genuine pleasure.?Clinton Chronicle in reporting a sermon of Dr. A. J. Bowers at the Clinton Presbyterian church Sunday morning which the Chronicle says was "an inspiring sermon." Miss Cora Dominick left Thursday for a visit to relatives in Baltimore and Washington. Dr. O'Neall Jacobs of Laurens is in the city. Mr. Roy Cannon of Sumter is in Newberry with his relatives spending! 1 his vacation from the Sumter Insurance company. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Lawson of New' York are visiting the mother of the latter, Mrs. M. A. Huiett and her sisP A Onln AT->< T owarm is LCI, .U1S. VJ. VJ. uait. .iixi . ua ??ovrn a member of the editorial staff of the New York Times. Mr. Wilbur M.' Sale of Columbia is visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. G. Sale. VARIOUS AND ALL ABOUT. Alice Joyce in "Her Lord and Master" at the opera house tonight, Thursday, and Otis Skinner in "Kismet" Friday. "Kismet" is one of the most spectacular productions that has come to the.screen. Thousands of neonle and hundreds of horses, don-l keys, goats and camels crowd the scenes which are resplendent with magnificence of Bagdad a thousand years ago. The, sheriff of Richland county had in his office the other day a negro's wooden leg containing about ten gai-j Ions of booze. No wonder Columbia | is seeing bad times. j A colored man, mentioned as James Wise, who was in the city court at Columbia on Monday, told the officers he had $700 on deposit in a Newberry 'bank,*&s reported in Tuesday's State. < It may or may not be so, but you can ! not find out which bank holds the I money unless you have a check from j Wise cashed, and then you wouldn't i know how much the balance was. </ml /-l J.M Xl i ? ?.. ~ "ine uoncen is tut; stuiy uj. a temperamental musician, a sensible wife, a romantic young matron and a gallan.t physician. All-star production at- the opera house Monday. A large crowd from Mollohon mill went ta Little Mountain Thursday for a picnic. One lady teacher was asking her iittle pupils the month each was born | in. After several had said March, J April, May, etc., one said she was born in Columbia. The/work of paving the lower end; of Boyce street to the opera house j corner and on Nance street between Friend and Harrington street is now ? " > i i under iun neauway., ixus wun mc j jwork going on for the whife way j helps to make busy times in Newber-j ry. And the drains along the already j paved streets are being opened; and all minor troubles caused by the work, will soon be rectified. A large piece of paper was taken j up by a whirlwind the other day and carried off high up across the western j side of the city. The scene was wit-1 nessed by several prominent members1 of the country club, who thought: persons in the localities over which1 it passed were imagining it to be a i zeppelin or something on that order.! Watermelons were plentiful and I cheap last Saturday in this city. A : colored man had a wagon load and as he hadn't sold out b'efore having ; to go home, made a quick sale to I Messrs. Will Hornsby and Ray Fel-! i lers, which was the cheapest melon j i sale on record. These two opened eyed citizens bought 14 melons for 19 cents. And the melons were not as small as you might suspect from 1 the price. There will be peraching at Clayton iMemorial church Sunday morning | at 11:30, also Sunday night at 8:30.' All are invited to attend these sev-[ i vices. The morning service will be J a memorial service. In another column will be found an account of the automobile accit dent on the Laurens road beyond | Clinton. The dead man was Mr. t iArthur Emory, who with his family' lived in the Oakland mill village, i He was buried at Whitmire Tuesday. Mr. Emory was about 35 years old. j Besides his wife he is survived by! four children. Verily we are living! in a fast, rushing age of fatal acci^ dents and sudden death. These short skirts teach us that' women, too, are sometimes fearfully .and wonderfully made. j VITAL STATISTICS FOR [pi CITY FOR JULY vc sa Deaths C2 White males 1 th White females 2 ru Total white 3 if Black males 1 d< Black females 1 yc Total blacks 2 d< y< Total deaths 5 C Births S( White males i \ cc White females 10 jm Total whites 17 fi Black males 3 v< Black females 2 of Total blacks 5 : m 1 tu Total births 22 } te m js Clyde Sease SHeeley Pomaria, Aug. 10.?Clyde Sease je Sheeley, the second oldest son of L. q A. Sheeley, died at a hospital Friday er August 5, where he was tab&a for ^ treatment a few days before he died, jyj He was 1G years, G months, and 29 n( days old, having been born February G, 1905. eH leaves a father, stepmother, two sisters and five brothers. ^ His body was interred in St. Paul's burying ground amid one of the larg- J ^ est congregations ever assembled ir there. The funeral services were j a conducted by his pastor, the Rev. 1I H. A. Kistler, assisted by the Rev. jl S. P. Koon. Magstrate Douglas held the prelim- B inary hearing Thursday morning in 1^ the case of Adam anil Jake Douglas, r two of the negroes involved in the Jshooting scrape last Saturday night I in front of Mr. George Hipp's store a when a bullet whizzed close between g the heads of Mr. Will Swittenberg H and Mr. Otis Lominack. The magis- trate sent Adam and Jake to jail in r\f hnil +Vlp hrmd "for .Tnke having been put at $500 and Adam's ~ bond at $300. The other negro to ** the affair, Will Baxter, Jr., waived the preliminary Monday and is out on ? $300 bond.' ? , l lMf ^ The Vogue of the Peanut Greenwood Index-Journal. The American peanut crop is already valued at about 100 million dollars a year and its cultivation is spreading and its value rising. We are' eating peanuts and peanut oil and ^ peanut butter in many forms and ? feeding hogs and cattle with peanut j ^ hay or peanut vines, and turning tne meal or "cake" which remains after the oil is expressed, into pork chops, spare ribs and country sausage and into milk, cheese and butter. _ R. B. Handy of the office of experi- I ment station, department of agriculture, wrote twenty-five years ago that _ "While the peanut has been cultivated j " in the United States to a limited ex-i c< tent for a number of years it is only _ since 1866 that the crop has become D of primary importance in the eastern section of this country, which seems peculiarly adapted to its production." ? He said that between 1865 and }870 the rapid spread of the culture of the peanut was probably due to the know-;F Jedge of it acquired by the armies which operated in the eastern part of Virginia and North Carolna. Before T the Civil war we imported peanuts from West Africa, but today, notwithstanding the remarkable increase in.the production of American peanuts, we are importing peanuts from (Spain and Africa, and importing the! nuts and their oil from China and Ja- : A t pan. m i _ x ? _ ' i. _ _ _ I i ne peanut, is not a nut, 11 is a pea. It is a trailing, straggling plant, growing from one to two feet high, with G thick, .angular, pale-green, hairy ~ stems and spreading branches, and itj ripens its fruit or its peas or nuts,! under ground. It is a strange habit. I Small yellow flowers are borne at the; _ joints where the leaves are attached j \\ to the stems and as soon as pollina-j tion takes place the flower fades and j 1 the "peg," as it is commonly called,! buries itself in the ground, where the i pod develops. . L, Mr. Handy wrote that the peanut,1^ like many other extensively cultivate ed plants, has not been found in a I truly wild state and hence it is diffi-j^ cult to fix upon its habitat or the 1 b< place which it would call home. Soj*1 widely has it been cultivated in eastern countries that some botanists; ? have attempted to trace its spread t gj from China to Japan, thence through j? fViii TTocf Tnclio Trie} 1*1 HJIfl i I LaIV Jl~A aoi mv.ua AOiUllVtO WV iwvitu U1I\I n then to Africa, where in the seven-'? teenth century it was so extensively; cultivated and had become such an|K important article of native food that g the slave dealers loaded their vessels! with it using it as food for their car-;? goes of captives. FOR THE LEGISLATURE To the Voters of Newberry County: As a candidate for the unexpired g term for the legislature, I have been B asked for my platform, if elected. I;H candidly give it here, to wit: I am against any and all high sal- g aries of state and county officers;, ji against all high appropriations. If you want the now fearful ex- {? m :nses of the sheriff's office, don't1 *" )te for me; if you want the hi^h lary of the superintendent of eduLtion, don't vote for me; if you want e useless and high salaried office of iral policeman, don't vote for me; you want the useless office of farm jmonstrator, don't vote for me; if' )u want the useless office of canning ?monstrator, don't vote for me; if )u want high appropriations for lemson college, Winthrop college, :mth Carolina college, Charleston >llege, Negro college, don't vote for j e; if you want the useless and fearll salaried office of health unit, don't . Die for me; if you want the useless fice of health clinic, don't vote for e; if you want the coming: legisla-1 ire to vote referendum for the eonmplated fifty million dollars bond. " sue, don't vote for me. ? I have an idea that Clemson col- j ^ ge, Winthrop college and South; arolina college should either be giv-j 1 or sold to those grand old Chris- j ? ans, the Baptists, Presbyterian and ^ iethodists, and let them be made de-: Dminational institutions. Your Obedient Servant, HERBERT HENRY EVANS. ! ? dvt. It Is Easy to Reach Us ?j When you want your clothes I V cleaned, pressed or repaired. Just Phone We'll Call I L. I. BLALOCK I " Phone 12 If SPECIAL NOTICE g rirnrose plants. Now is the best y time to start a pot or two. Hal Kohn. I o the Public?Having bought out Harvey 0. Reese's barbering business I offer my services as a barber to all his friends, and to the public generally, guaranteeing as good work and polite attention as > given by any one.- Will* Baker, successor to Harvey 0. Reese. 8-12-tf. V lower pots in many sizes. Good life ever lasting pots. Hal Kohn. / anted?Two teachers, principal and assistant, for a two-teacher school near Dyson, in Greenwood county. ? Applications will be received up to B August 15. Address J. L. Aull, chairman board of trustees, Dyson, S. C. 8-12-td C1 have just received a shipment of 9 Mayes' Linen Pound Paper. Mayes Book and Variety Store. 8-12-2t - O Main Street" is the book you will read. Perhaps you would like a - 3pv now. Hal Kohn. on't throw away your old pot.3 and pans, use Mendit. It mends all leaks. Mayes Book & Variety Store. S-3 2t ldclible outfits save laundry loss. Ask me. Hal Kohn. or Rent?Suite of three rooms,with modern conveniences, bath, etc., at my residence. W. E. Pelham. 8-9-2tp. he annual meeting of the Newberry Building and Loan association will be held on Tuesday, Aug. 23, at " 6:30 p. m. at the chamber of commerce. All stockholders are urged j to attend. T. E. Keitt, Sec.-Treas. J 8r5-3t. t my new place of business, 940 Friend street, corner McKibben, I am prepared to carry on the work ^ of making and repairing shoes. M. i*. O r 4- r .J Turner. o-u-n ood flower pots, all sizes. Hal Kohn. eep well drilling?When in need of wells consult White and Frick, 'Little Mountain, S. C., as to prices.* Satisfaction guur^ntee-l. p 8-2-1 Ot-ltawp * Wanted?To buy 50 houses and mules at my stables. Any ages, fat and sound. B. A. Havird. 8-2-tf. FOR THE LEGISLATURE ~ I hereby announce myself as a ^ indidate for the vacancy in the ouse of Representatives from Nevsrry county caused by the death : Honorable George S. Mower, and edge myself to abide the result of ie Democratic primary election to i held tui Tuesday, August 30th, )21. ' n \ T Cleaning ai -Si BET ippfl Steam Pressing, Work Called For and Del Ladies' Work a Specialty. We Dry Clean Ladies' BL AL The Cleaner a: Phone 12 OPERA HOUSE PROGRAM Friday, August 12 KISMET Otis Skinner 4 (Special) Fox News Saturday, August 13 "BRIDE 13," Episode 13 2 Reel Western 2 Reel Comedy 1 Monday, August 13 i "THE CONCERT" Myrtle Stedman Fox News or Sale?Some BufT Orpington, /I March and April hatched cockerels j 1 and pullets (fine birds). Anne 0. Ruff. 8-2-tf. ne hundred and twenty-five bufhels' double-screened Burr Clover seed for sale at one dollar per bushel, F. 0. B. Newberry, S. C. Nat Gist. 8-2--4t r. E. H. Kibler will be out of the city until August 13. 7-29-5:. eacher wanted for Deadfall School. 1 Term eight months. Must have experience and hold first grade state license. Apply to A. P. Werts, Silverstreet, S. C. 7-26-4t /hen in need of fire or life insurance call phone 14. T. N. Parks, 5th floor Exchange Bank. 7-14, * To prevent a cold take 666.?Adv. TAKE NOTICE We think the coal is as cheap as it ill be for this season. Parties that ant the Farmers Oil mill to furnish leir coal will please send in their rders. We have the coal and would ke to deliver now. Get while the etting is good. J. H. Wicker, Mgr. 7-29-41. /anted Teacher for Ridge Springs school (Old Town District). Term seven or eight months. Apply to the undersigned stating salary de- / sired. J. W. SANDERS, J. C. BUTLER, S. E. SENN, Trnstpps Silverstreet, S. C., Rt. 2. will furnish a first class barbecue at Pomaria Grove Thursday, August 11. Everybody is invited to come out and enjoy a good dinner. Speaking by Cole L. Blease at 11:30. Eddie and M. H. Graham. 7-26-4t}>. ARBECUE AT PEAK SATURDAY, AUGUST 20 I will iurnish a first class barbeue at. Peak on Saturday. August 20. ome and get a good dinner and en)y a pleasant day. R. J. Stoudemire, -2-td. BAKE:RITE BAKERY ? Cottage Pound Cake * Almond and Cocoanut Macaroons * Caramel, Cocoanut ?.nd Chocolate layer cake. / lyes Examined Glasses Fitted iatisfaction Guaranteed Dr. G. Elbert Cromer Optometrist ooms 510-511 Exchange Bk. Bldg. H.M.BIGBY Optometrist rd Floor Exchange Bank Bldg EYES EXAMINED GLASSES FITTED BROKEN LENSES DUPLICATED nd Pressing of the| TER KIND | Dry Cleaning, Repairing I ivered in Record Time! All Work Guaranteed! White Kid Gloves. I OCK I nd Presser Opp?sk^Newberr^^^^^