University of South Carolina Libraries
jpjtONOR ROLL OF SCHOOLS *WwIh Who Have Boon proHcivnt In Stvdiev and Attendance Grade 8a?Elizabeth Zerop. Willie Halle, Emily Pitta, C*olyn McKain, lienor a It ha me. a Grade 9a?Duncan Lang, Kochelk< Bheorn. Grade 9b?Martha Benaon, Catharine Boykin, Betty Cureton, Nell Good ale, Caroline Itichardaon. Grade 10a?Mary Boykin, Elmer Watte. Grade 10b?Evelyn Bruce, Virginia Haite, Ellen Stewart, Molly Blackwell, Virginia D?Lo*ehe, Dotty Zemp. Grade 11a?Robert Da via, Team <Jettyh, Francis Bissell, Carolyn Heyraan, Louise Jennings, Louis Lang, Willie Porter. Grade lib?John Itichardaon. Scholarship Honor Roll. Grade la?-Lesta Davis, Edna Moore, Betty Holland, Paulette West, Henry Garrison, Wylie Hogue, Carlisle Jackson. H. T. Lovette, Dan McCaekill, Jack Richards. Jack Villepigue, Billy Allred, Boboy Allred. Grade lb?Marie Bullock, Annie Childers, Masie Christmas, Billie J>< lioache, Talmage Dabney, Margaret Oaborne, James Williams, Douglas Woo ten. Grade 2a?Archie Brown, Francis Chapman, Guy Love, Jac4c Mogulescu, Harvey McKcnzic, Minnie Sue Bruce, Virginia Davis, Rebecca Rush. Grade 2b?-Willis* Sheorn, Edwin Miller, Clinton Thigpen. - r Grade 3a?Sarah Bissell, Leila Christmas, Sadie Frietag, Elizabeth Goodale, Emily Shannon, Emily Sheorn, Lillie Mae Smith, Lena Stevenson, Thelma Stokes, Edna Strak, Helen Tindal, Gladys Hames, Lucile Robinson, Belton Beard, Jack Brown, Murray Graham, Jack Halsall, L. S. Mayer, Rymond Moore, McKain Richards, Robert Shaw, Marion Smith. Grade 3b?Ethel Evans, Evelyn Horton, Fledabel Horton, Martha Moseley, Louise Reed, Zelda Snyder, Emerson Branham, Nettles Myer , Redding OgleHhy, Billie Pursley. Grado . 4a?Catherine Brayshaw, Ruth DeLoache, Charlotte DuBose, Estelle Myers, Frances McLeod, Dorothy vanLandingham, George Brunson, James Chapman, Dorris Houser. Grade 4b?-Marie Trapp, May Ne'.l Trapp. Grude 5a?William Thompson, Jas. Shirley, Fletcher Moore, Mary Lee Blakency, Golda Shirley, Elizabeth Moore. Grade Ga?Samuel MeCaskill, Mela Mogulescu, Katherine Kennedy, Nancy Brown, Joseph Lang, Charlie Sheffield, Virginia Drawdy, Grace Love. Grade 7a?Grayson Shaw, Alice DePass, Emily Goodale, Margaret Goodale, Margaret McCoy, Grace Robinson. Grade 7c?Willie Belle Davis, Attendance Honor Roll. Grade la?-Sophia Creed, Betty Holland, Neta Kirkland, Mary L. Laney, Dorothy Moore, Lenora Sinclair, Bessie Willingham, Lucile Willingham, Lcroy Branham, Henry ('nrrison, Wylie Hogue, Carlisle Jackson, H. T. Lovette, Graham Marshall, Jack Richards, Jack Villepigue, Fred Sheheen, John Whltaker. Grade lb?Rebecca Beard, Marie Bullock, Ivey Connell, Dorothy Durphec, Leonard Goff, James Graham, Elmer Hicks, Randolph Kirklan-I, Carolyn Nicholson, Frank Love, Margaret Osborne, Leslie Player, Herbert Richey, Albert us Rush, Cora Scarborough, Talmadge Dabney, Claud Williams, James Williams, Douglas Wooten. Grade lc?Malcolm Christmas, W illiam Christmas, Harry Corbett, Carl Drakelferd, Guv Maver, Joe Moselev, I. J. MfK enzie, Clarence Owens, Gilbert Shirley, Daniel Snyder, Banks Tucker, William Waters, Goldie Cor bett, Eulah Evans, Velmer Morris, Jessie Sharp, Velma Truesdale, Vir.i Truesdale, Ruby Vercen, Margaret West. Grade 2a ? Minnie Sue Bruce, Lena Corbett, Lou Clyburn, Lillian Davis. Virginia Davis, Catherine Denrpsti . Charla Dunn. Lois Hames, Ellen Little, Rebecca Rush, Albertus Shaylm. Hazel Shirley, Eula Smyrl^Jean VanLandinghiwn, Nancy Watts, Woodrow Benson, Willie Cameron, Francis Chapman, Sidney Kirkland, Guy Love, Jack Mogulescu, Billy Nettles, Isaac Pitts, Allen Colder, Walter Harris, Harvey McKenzie, Andrew Whitaker. Grade 2b?dyburn Huggins, Joylynn Hall, Julian Hough, Edward Moore, Margaret Mayer, James McKenzie, Bobby Outlaw, Michell Sheheen, Willis Sheorn, Harold Smith. Dorris Truesdale, Gladys Threat t. Jack Williams, Julia Hough, Leo Snyder. Grade 3a?Sarah Bissell, Leila Christmas, Sadie Frietag, Elizabeth Goodale, Alma Hunter, Ruby Melton, Emily Sheorn, Lillie Mae Smith, Willie Mae Smith, Lena Stevenson, Thelma Stokes, Helen Tindal, Gladys Hames, Mary Ellen McDowell, Lucile Robinson, Ned Beard, Jack Brow i, Jack Halsall, McKain Richards, Robert Shaw, H. B. Shirley, Ralph Trapp, Claude Marshall, Ellis Snyder. Grade 3b?Ethel Evans, Fledabel Horton, Thelma Kinney, Martha Moseley, Louise Reed, Louine Tolbct, Beatrice Truesdale, Louise Vercen, Dorothy Watts, Emerson Branham, Lacy Brayshaw, Arthur Christmas Norman Cornell, Willie Dial, Lcroy Dorrity, W. L. Jackson. Grade -la?Catherine Brayshaw. Caroline Britton, Charlotte Brown. Ruth DeLoache, Annie Blake Kelloy. Mary Florence Little, Mary Moore, JEstellc Myers, Frances McLeod, Dorothy VaoLandingham, Eleanor Watts, George Brunson, James Chapman, Otis Creed, Joseph Gaskins, Jerome Hoffer, Dorris Houser, Steven Team. Grade 4b?Ina DeLoache, Willie Mae Dodger, Mary Huckaboe, Elvm McLean, ? Ora Mae Price, Dennic Smith, Mary Nell Trapp, Nancy Watts, Frank Hinson, Roscol Johnson, Wilbum Moseley, Robert Rhame. Francis Sheheen, Boyd Trapp, Leroy Lava, Grade Hht?rMamle Baker. Agnes Hatfield, me CuL pigue, Frank Clyburn, Rufoa Corbett, Edward Hasty, C. W. Rhoden, Idoyd Rush, Albertua Trueadale. Grade 5a ?Margaret Baldwin, Alnuito Baxley, Mary I ah Blakeney, Kdophel Dial, Belay Dickens, Ruby Gardner, Elizabeth Hayneeworth, Mary Nell Javena, Willie Kennington, Mary Ellen Kirkland, Zaidn Lung, Mury Filer) McCaakill, Margaret I>itt?, Nealio Raby, Golda Shirley, Mary Elizabeth Wootun, Louise Williams, .J a men Clyburn, Harvey Davis, Marion Evans, | Douglas Kennedy, Cecil MoCaskill, 1 Fletchep Moore, William Moore, Ham- j tltbrf Osborne, Joe Phillips, Luther Shaw, James Shirley, William Thompson. Grade fib-Fay Baker, Catherine Hall, Rosalie Moore, Henrietta Myers, Mildred Williams, Antonette Williams, Mary Zeigler, Natallne Zeigler, W. R. Barnes, Alvin (Christmas, James Colder, Norman Cameron, James DeLoaehe, John Flowers, Virgil Hardner, Colie Gardner, William Johnson, Richard Jenkins, Cleo Johnson, Johnnie J'ettigrew, Albert Reed, John Hilton, Whaley Michaw, Karl Hammer. Grade Be?Henry Beard, Sidney Brown, Frank Campbell, Roddey Cornell, Wilbert Henson, Herman Jackson, Edmund Langley, Beaufort Nelson, Edward Sheheen, Jack Shirley, Harold Shirley, Dwelder Dial, Lillian MeCaskill, Alice Melton, Purvis Shirley, Francis Snyder, Oradell Stevenson, Jenny Tolbert, Alberta Watts. Grade Ha?Margaret Barnes, Harriet Beard, Sarah Benson, Olivia Buddin, Betty Carrison, Frances Creed, Virginia Drawdy, Elizabeth Gardner, Jean Harris, Sarah KitkUmd, Grace Love, Mary J. Mackey, Meta Mogulescu, Homer Baldwin, Jack Boyd, Thomas Bruce, Austin Jones, Joseph Lang, Samuel MeCaskill, Meljcue McCoy, James Moore, Reuben Pitts, Charlie Sheffield, Leonard Story, Katherine Little. Grade Ob?Eleanor Brown, Sara Moseley, Lila Ross, Macy William, Clarence Christmas, Clemmie Dabney, L. O. Funderburk, Woodrow Huckahee, Dan Lang, George Sheheen, John Smith, Ellie Trapp. Grade He-?Bessie Hinson, Luci'e Kirkland, Ethel Sparrow, Gallic S. Williams, Furman Case, Frances McLeod, Alvo Stokes. Grade 7a?Alice DePass, Margaret Goodale, Emily Goodale, Marie Haile, Mary Love, Margaret McCoy, Mary Purdy, Sara Lynn Richey, Eloise Rhoden, Lois Turner, Edith Webster, Grace Robinson, Bill Clyburn, Troy Denton, Joe Uenkins, Laurence Munn, Grayson Shaw, George Rhahie Grade 7b?Lillian Hasty, Clara Holland, Genevieve Moseley, Ruth Stevenson; Dan Mackey, Alvin Riley, Wilburn Robinson, Ernest Shaw, Andrew Trapp. Grade 7c? Julian Burns, Wilburn Denton, Harry Lee Gregory, Claude Jackson, J. H. McLeod, Elliott Sheorn, Woodrow Trapp, David Snyder, Willie Belle Davis, Minnie DeBruhl, Jessie Horton, Blanche McCaskil1, Emma Stevenson, Gladys Tolbert. Must Go To Church For Two Year* Charlotte, N. Nov. 22.? L. L. Herein, North Charlotte youth, must go to chinch every Sunday for Iho next two years. Herein received this sentence in superior court here today in addition to paying a fine of $100 and costs for driving an automobile while intoxicated. "You can't help getting a little religion in that time." Judge R. Lee Wright told him. "If you don't want to go to church and bring this court a written attendance report from your minister, you tijny take the other alto native any time you see fit. It is a sentence of six months on the roads." NO FOLK YEAR TERMS -Pctrp+t--Seemi Contented to Elect Representatives Evry Two Years. By Staff Correspondent Columbia, Nov. 2D.-?Less than 1H,000 votes were cast in South Carolina in the general election on November 2. and when the state board of canvassers met on Saturday finally to declare the result, Spartanburg county had not sent in any official vote at all. The constitutional amendment of greatest interest, to make the terms of the members of the house of representatives four years instead of two, was killed by a vote of 5,574 to 3,772. All the twenty-seven other amendments. including that by which South Carolina would surrender her concurrent jurisdiction over the Ttrgaloa i iver to a Georgia power company, were carried, by votes of approximately 2,h00 to 2,000. Exactly what will he the status of Spartanburg county in the general assembly;, appears undetermined. In all probability some way will be found to give her a senator and representati\os in the house, but the incident serves very strongly to emphasize the danger of the lack of ihterest taken in general elections in this state. And subject only to ratification by the genera! assembly and approval by the governor, the fundamental law of the state has been amended in twentyseven particulars by less than 10,000 vote;*. ?J no. K. Aull. The death toll as the result of the hurricane that swept over six Southern states from Texas to Virginia, last Thursday and Friday, is placed at 84. The Red Cross forces are actively at work in Arkansas, Louisiana and Mississippi. ' ??a?a RIVER HERMIT KILLED A * ,. ,y .... Head of Murdered Man Foqnd in Black River Kingatree, Nov. 26.?/The head of "Frenchy," mUsing hermit of Black river, waa found thia morning by a party dragging the river for trace* of the missing man when foul play | waa suspected in the diaappearance, owing to the discovery of bloody ! clothing and poola of blood in the vicinity of hia aback on the bank* of ! the river. The searching parties are now , dragging the river for the body from j which the head waa severed. The akull waa crushed in until the unr fortunate hermit's features were almost unrecognizable. This community was first informed yesterday of the disappearance of the picturesque character known locally an "Frenchy," 'who made hia home at a camp on Black river about one mile from the railroad station where he supported himself by his prowess as a fisherman and as an umbrella mender. W. F. MoCan.ts not having seen Frenchy since Tuesday went to the haunt of the hermit yesterday to inquire as to^his welfare and invite him to Thunksgiving dinner. He found the shack locked; the vicious dog, always kept chained, just out of reach I of the cabin, gone and a pool of blood just outside ^ie shanty, another beside a log at a little distance and another pool by Frenphy's boat moor| ed at the river sidg/ After a short./fnVestigation of the place Mr. Mc Cants forced the door of the house open to find everything in apparent drder inside. Looking further he found Frenchy's pipe in the bout, his trousers bloody, lying beside the boat, his bloody shirt at a little distance in the woods and his undershirt floating In the river. Mr. McCants immediately returned ' to town and reported conditions to police authorities. In the afternoon a party repaired to the camp and with hooks attempted to discover Frenchy's body in the water but with no results, j This morning the river was being i dynamited in search of the body of ! the man who is believed to have been j killed. THIRTEEN PLACED IN JAIL i | Section Foreman and Helpers Suspected of Heinous Crime. i 1 Kingstree, Nov. 29.?Garfield Math1 cws and his twelve negro helpers were | arrested here today in connection with i the murder of O. V. Gilbert (Frenchy) : here sometime last week. Mathews is charged with murder. The negroes are held only as material witnesses. Gilbert was decapitated. Only his head has been found. The railroad gang of which Mathews was foreman kept camp about one-quarter of a mile from the lonely abode of the hermit and officers claim that "Frenchy" sold | them fish. It nppears, according to a statement of a friend of the slain man, I that some trouble had arisen over the } payment * of a string of fish and "Frenchy" had been threatened because he wouldn't sell another string until the first had been paid for. Just what other evidence officers contend they have against Mathews v-ould not he learned. The county jail here is filled to capacity, the town guard house being requisitioned to hold some of the prisoners. Harold Wheeler, who is charged with shooting Sheriff Gamble is-being held in Savannah pending arrangements for extradition papers. He refused to come back with Deputy Haselden Sunday because there were no extradition papers shown. Plays Trick on Store Chester, Nov. 25.?The HardinBrice company is out one hot water bottle and eight dollars and fifty cents in cash as the fruits of a trick pulled off on them this week. .When the Hardin-Brice Drug company'] telephone rang and they were asked to send a hot water bottle and change for ten dollars to 117 Church street, no crookedness was suspected, and the boy was sent with the goods. When the boy knocked at the door of 117 Church street, which is the home of H. B. Murphy, a man came to the door, took the package and the change, handed the boy a check and went back into the house. By the time the check, whicfl was on the National Exchange bank, could be investigated and found no good, the stranger was gone. Who he was, Mr. Murphy had no idea. He found the door standing open, and saw his chance to pull his trick. He telephoned from somewhere else, as Mr. Murphy hAs no telephone. American coal is being sold at retail in England at $20 per ton. Over half of the English coal strikers have returned to the mines. JU--.g - L t-rx..1:- -j-'gi-LiuLU-^rrBRQWM WKITK8 ON LYNCHING Uoeu Not Like Attempt of Papers To Hold Up BUU to Ridicule. ?3 _ Kdgar A. Brown, well known Barnwell attorney, and late candidate for the United Ktutea Senate, writes in the lust issue of the South Carolina Gazette as follows: <4I have read with a ureal deal of ! interest your reply to the New York World 011 the lynching situation in South Carolina, and I want to commend you for the position which you take. When the gangsters and thugs of New York and Chieago are daily murdering people by the dozens to gain the privilege of rum running or to get hold of a pay roll, the New York papers pass it up as daily incidents and hardly put these sort of items on the front page; but when a South Carolina woman has been ravaged or some peace officer is willfully murdered by some black fiend, and an outraged people wreak thejr vengeance upon the perpetrator and satisfy an unwritten law, we are scorned, ridiculed, villified, and held lip to the world as half-breeds and outlaws. "I reckon the New York World would like to see a negro governor of South Carolina, and a mulatto presiding over the governor's mansion, but thank God, the people of South Carolina ore still white, with red blood in their veins, chivalry and manhood in their hearts, and expect to keep our country, clean and pure, notwithstanding tne ravings and routings of a negro-loving northern press, when an occasional black brute is summarily dealt with. ? "All this investigation and hullabaloo about who did the lynching and the whys and wherefores is pure, unadulterated bunk. The New York World, the governor, the so-called "law and order" citizens, and many others, know, or could easily know, at least some of those who participated in the killing of the Lowmans, and know, as well as the balance of the world knows, that nobody is going to be punished and nobody wants anybody punished. "I don't condone the Aiken lynching but these unfortunate things will happen and are going to happen as long as we have social conditions mixed as they are in the South. "The people of Soutli Carolina, whether they condone or deplore the Aiken tragedy, I am sure, are tired and disgusted with the attitude of the New York World, and with at least one of our South Carolina papers, the editor of which sheet, in an attempt to ape the New York World, is putting himself in an entirely unenviable position with the decent people of South Carolina." carsr Five students of Oberlin college, Oberlin, Ohio, have been expelled for liquor drinking. ?., re.. .i.i.a ,..^.,.?>i..... GOVKKNOK KILLS DKKK Lieutenant Governor Butler Duea Not HaYO Much Dwell \ t Special to News and Courier: Moncks Corner, Nov. 30,-?Senator R. J. Dennis entertanied delight-fully with a two-day hunt at his club on Stoney Landing noar Moncka Corner and at Dean Hall. The following were guests of the aenator: Governor-elect John G. Richards, Lieutenant Governor-elect T. Hothwell Hutler, CoL T. I*. Kaveno, of Savannah, Ga.; Senator Claud Martin, of Orangeburg; j Senator 11. 11. Groan of Dorchester; P. E. Meyers, Jr., clerk of court of Berkeley county; Sheriff C. P. Ballentine, Deputy Sheriff C. L. Woodard, Judge Hutchinson, Pete and Brawley Miles of SummerviUe and a , number of others. On Friday the party, headed by I Senator Dennis, proceeded to Dean Hall, the beautiful hunting preserve i of Mr. Kiltredge on the Cooper river, by special invitation of Mr. Kiltredge, ! where a most delightful hunt was had. Governor-elect Richards was among the first to shoot a buck. Two ( ran out to the governor-elect and both were shot. 'While the governorelect was shooting a second time at the first deer downed, the other got up and ran by Lieutenant Governoi Butler and escaped the shot from both barrels of Mr. Butler's gun. Mr. Butler stated that the shot from the governor's gun seemed to have enlivened the deer and that it was traveling -it such a rapid rate of speed that hL- shot could not connect. The lieutenant governor, however, brought down a magnificent gobler. Several cither members of the party shot and five deer were killed. The party spent Thursday and Friday with Senator Dennis and everybody seemed to enjoy every minute of the time. I Weekly Traffic Toll. A decrease in deaths and an increase in the number of persons injured in traffic accidents in the South last week, as compared with the pre( vious week are showed in reports to the Associated Press from 11 states. The most notable reduction in fatalities was in Mississippi, where no deaths were reported last week, while 11 occurred the previous week. Georgia was the only state reporting no deaths last week. Forty-four deaths were recorded last week as compared with 57 the previous week, but the toll in injured persons increased from 249 to 265. Grade crossing accidents took a toll of nine dead last week in the territory embraced in the survey. South Carolina reported 7 dead and 13 injured. 1 The Vanderbilt family of New York has recently given an additional $650,000 to the University at Nashville, Tenn., which bears their name. ? ' ' . J- I Lfl >1 Hf l^ll , -v. . . - Y UNITED DAUUHTKKH I . (Continued from Ffrut Page) I o'clock wh?n members of the .division I were guests of the Camden and Ki i 1 shaw County Chamber'of Commerce, being carried for a ride through tho I city and to places of especial interen. I At 5:80 o'clock a tea was given the I visitors by the Daughters of tin- I American Revolution at their ehepUr I quarters in the old court house,. Guests of Honor I Mis. St. J^hn Allison Lawton, I ident general U, D. C. Mrs. A. T. Smythe, ex-preside ru I general U. D. C. I I Miss Mary Foppenheim, ex-pre*ident general U. D. C. I Mrs. R. D. Wright, ex-recording I | secretary general U. D. C. Mrs. Albert ft. Hill, president Col- I onial Dames. 1 | Mrs. LeRoy Habenicht, state pr?P- I ident U. 8. D? 1812. 1 Mrs. Clark Waring, president Girls I of the tiO's. Mrs. John S. Reynolds, president I A. L. A. Mrs. R. R. Furman, state president I Federation Women's Clubs. I Miss Martha Washington, honorary president Charleston chapter. I l)r. Frank P. Gaines, Furman Uni- I versity. Partial Roll of Delegates | Mrs. St. John Alison Law tor, I j Charleston; Mrs. T. J. Mauldin, Pickens; Miss Poppenheim, Charleston; I Mrs. J. W. Doar, Georgetown; Miss I Margaret Ronquie, Georgetown; Mrs. j George S. Timmons, Hartsville; Mrs. I J. W. Ivey, Florence; Mrs. Joseph B. I Workman, Ware Shoals; Mrs. T. M. j Wells, Manning; 'Miss Lillian M. fl Baker, Greenville; Miss Bertie Smith, I Greer; Miss Marion Sfilley, Orange- j burg; Mrs. W. A. Dukes, Bfftnchvilk, I Mrs. J. Frost Walker, Union; Mrs. I Fred E. Culvern, Kershaw; Mrs. J. R. I Tarra.nt, Greenwood; Mrs. Drayton T. I Nance, Newberry; Miss Grace Sum- I ner, Newberry; .Mrs. J. R. Shealy, I Newberry; Mrs. ft. D. Wright, New- I berry; Mrs. John W. Kinard, New- 1 berry; Mrs. W. S. Lipscomb, Pacolet; I MfB. C. J. Milling, DarRhgton; Mrs. I H. L. Culbertson, Greenville; Mrs- I James E. Daniel,, Greenville; Mrs. I R. B. Furman, Sumter; Mrs. A. C. I Phelps, Sumter; Mrs. E. R. Bucking- 1 ham, Ellenton; Mrs5 Mike - Gleaton, '? Springfield; Mrs. Wyatt Boylston-J Springfield; Miss' Marie "Bolancl, "I Springfield; Mrs. John London, Rock Hill; Miss Julig Plexico, Rock Hill; I Miss Ruth Williams," ROck Hill; Mrs. I W. B. Burney, Columbia; Mrs. W. F. I Marshall, York; Mrs. W. B. Meredith, 1 Rock Hill; Mrs. C. *H.' Richardson, I Hartsville; Mrs. J. P. Jensen, Harts- M ville; Mrs. R. Dr Lee, StHHTer; Mrs. J W. H. Carwile, Newberry; Mrs. Jaiye* Flowers, Bishopville; Mrs. Lila AnSn,-3* Bishopville; Mrs. L. G. Jordan, Biih* I opville; Mrs. Beesie Oswald, All$*i*m dale; Mrs. Jones, Allendftle; Mrs. Rhame, Charleston. . ' . " - . . HI ?. ' , _ f[ tough hill PROVES ( y , this oil gives greater POWER. gg THE TEST A seven -year-old Ford truck. Many tries up a Jersey hillside. ^ Stop-watches. Speedometers. V- * Four different drivers. Three of the heat-known motor oils found on the market. * THE RESULT "^ne uj^ the ' Other Oil* 50% seconds 14.6 mtteilptr hour "STANDARD" 46 aecond* 18.0 mik? per hour ' ^ +? ? ? ? ?fr *?u c .get Sip & Give the new Standard' (yi Quarter Motor Oil a trial. You cuffipp a Quart j "STANDARD" MOTOR OIL STANDARD OIL COMPANY (N. J M i "*