The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, August 31, 1922, Page 5, Image 5
Visitors in the Town
And the Community
?Ben K. Summersette, of Columbia,
was in the city last week.
?Mrs. Bissell Beach, of McColl,
^ is visiting Mrs. Josephine Beach.
?Col. W. C. Duncan spent a few
days last week in the mountains.
?Mrs. R. L. Risher, of Columbia,
is spending a vacation in the city.
?Mrs. J. C. Moye was a recent
visitor to relatives in Walterboro.
?Miss Vista Brabham has heen
visiting friends in Myrtle Beach and
Marion.
?Mrs. M. A. Bamberg has return-!
ed to the city after a trip to Glenn
Springs. j
' ?Miss Thelma Ellzey, of Georgia,
f ^ has been visiting her grandmother,
f Mrs. Miller.
?Mi?s Flora Brown, of Waycross,
Ga., was the guest last week of Miss
Lena Rhoad.
?Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Henderson
have gone to Cedar Mountain, N. C.,
to spend a while.
?Miss Emma Heriot, of Bishop
ville, is visiting Miss Nell Black on
Railroad avenue.
! ?Miss Marie Chisolm, of Garnett,
I has been visiting Miss Elizabeth
Kirkland the past week.
?C. L. Dyches and family, of
WinnSboro, have been visiting the
family of W. H. Blume.
\rro Txtrtn Tnhin and Mt.tlft I
daughter, Mary Lucia, are visiting
relatives in Greer, S. C.
?Miss Lurene Smoak, of Branch*
ville, spent the past week-end in the
' city with Miss Urma Utsey.
?J. J. Cudd, of Spartanburg, spent
the week-end here at the home of
* Dr. and Mrs. George F. Hair.
?Mrs. G. Frank Bamberg left
Saturday for the mountains of North
* Carolina to spend a few weeks.
- ??? v%?j. ?
' ?'MISS jcmuiy ^urwr, ua caiuwell,
was the attractive guest last
week of Miss Evelyn Brabham.
?Major Lewis B. Stabler, of the
faculty of Carlisle school, is in the
k city after his summer vacation.
?Mrs. W. B. Tarkington and Mrs.
[ Ellis, of Laurinburg, N. C., are visiting
relatives and friends in the city.
_ v i
?Mrs. Josephine Beach has re*
turned to the city after spending
some time at Glenn Springs and McColl.
?W. D. Rhoad, Aaron Rice and
Misses Mildred and Jane Rice have
returned from their recent northern
trip.
?L. A. Brabham and family and
Ewart Brabham and family, of Olar,
spent Sunday in the city with reia>
tives.
?Dr. P. B. Hair spent a few days
I in Greenville last week. He expects
to open a dental office in that city in
December.
?Miss Bessie Sanders, of Walterboro,
is spending some time with
relatives and friends in Denmark and
Orangeburg,
v ?Major William R. Watson has
returned to the city after spending
most of his vacation with relatives
in Johnston.
J " m 1_ /~t y-1 ?,, 1 f
?Major ana .airs. :viarviu vx. uauu
have returned to the city from their
I honeymoon trip to the mountains of
| North Carolina.
J ?Miss Marie Doscher, of Charleston,
returned home Saturday after
spending some time in the city with
^ Mrs. B. D. Carter.
?Mr. and Mrs. I. B. Felder returnI
de to the city last week after spending
several weeks in the mountains
of North Carolina.
?Mrs. D. H. Owings, of Mount
pleasant, has been visiting her moth^
er, Mrs. J. R. Sandifer, and Mr. Ow
r ings spent the weeh-ena here.
?Miss Thelma Carroll left Sunday
lor Columbia to spend a week. Miss
Julia Quattlebaum, who has been her
guest, returned to Columbia at the
same time.
?Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Black, Mr.
t and Mrs. H. C. Folk and Mrs. H. N.
Folk and children spent several days
rlast week in Columbia with Dr. and
Mrs. J. C. Guilds.
;?Rev. O. B. Falls, after conducting
revival meetings in Texas and
Georgia, returned home Friday, and
filled his regular appointment at the
Baptist church Sunday morning.
?W. E. Stokes, of Gainesville,
A Fla., spent the pa*st week-end here.
Mrs. Stokes and children have been
here several weeks with the former's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Cooner.
?J. C. Kinard returned to Ehr,
hardt Tuesday from the mountains
> of North Carolina, where he spent
a few weeks. He hurried home to
exercise his Democratic right of ballot
in the primary.
* ?Rev. and Mrs. T. A. Inabinett
left Monday for Holly Hill, where
they will visit relatives for a week
before going to Spartanburg, where
Mr. Inabinett will pursue his studies
^ ofr the ministry at Wofford college.
*
r*
?Buck Herndon, of Blackville,
spent Tuesday in the city.
?Mrs. J. Frank Folk is undei
treatment at a Charleston hospital.
?Marion Moore, of Charleston,
spent the week-end here en route
home from the R. /t>. T. C. camp.
?Mrs. W. A. Moore and Misses
Betty and Gerfrude Moore, of Charleston,
are visiting Mrs. J. B. Black.
Jr.
mi
REVOKES PAROLE OP CONVICT.
Governor Harvey Acts After He Re
ceives Information on Adams.
'Governor Harvey yesterday revoked
the parole of Andrew Adams, of
York county, and directed the county
officials to recommit Adams to the
county chain gang to complete his
sentence.
Adams was paroled during good
behavior on Nov. 1, 19pl, by Governor
Cooper. He was convicted in
l York county in July of 1920 of grand
larceny and sentenced to serve two
years.
Governor Harvey recently began to
check up the paroles. An investigation
revealed that Adams had violated
his parole, and yesterday the chief
executive revoked it. The governor
was advised that Adams has been
convicted of another crime since he
was paroled.?The State.
DEMANDS SUM OF $2,000.
__ I
Widow of Lynched Negro Serves No- J
tice on County.
McCormick, Aug. 23.?Through ]
her attorney, F. A. Wise, Esq., of the
local bar, Janie Bell Quarles, the 1
widow and administrator of Herbert
Onarles. has formally made demand ^
upon the county of McCormick for '
the penalty of $2,000, for the alleged {
lynching of Herbert Quarles in this 1
county in June, of last year. Her- ;
bert Quarels was the negro who, it is 1
alleged criminally assaulted a white 1
woman as she went to the mail box 1
near her home in the Plum Branch 1
section. The negro was hunted for 5
two days, and one night when found, '
admitted having committed the 1
crime, and was put to death. The 1
widow now makes demand upon the '
county for a penalty of $2,000.
Barnwell Elects New Council. i
- I
In the municipal primary election s
held last week A. J. Bennett was' ?
elected mayor of Barnwell over his
opponent, Charlie Brown, by a ma- (
jority of 113 votes out of the 350 !
cast. Mr. Diamond, for alderman, t
got a very flattering vote of 302, t
losing only 48 votes of theytotal num- J
ber cast. There were eleven candi- ?
dates in the race six of them voted
for and seven of them got a majority i
of the votes cast. The following j
were elected on first ballot: M. C. e
Diamond, L. J. Davis* T. J. Attaway,
T. S. Cave, W. D. Harley, and F. S. 1
Brown. L. M. Calhoun got a majpri- ]
ty of the votes cast, but six other c
candidates beat him. i
m t T a A MnAliofor 1
X* J UdUglC/ aiiU XX* xx* j
will make a second race for com- 1
missioner of public works. Langley t
lacked only 5 votes of getting p ma- t
jority over his two opponents. 1
A large number of the ladies of the i
town voted in this election for the <
first time. Much interest was mani- i
fested in the election and only the .
best of feeling between the candi- <
dates" and their friends prevailed. ?
Wftnoo P**fv In Fnfrfft*. 4
]
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Preacher, of ]
Fairfax, delightfully entertained a 1
number of the young folk of their ]
community in honor of their two ]
daughters, Misses Blanche and Lilly j
Preacher with a house party*for the i
past two weeks. Entertaining con- j
sisting of dances, swimming, picnics, ]
cards, peanut boiling, etc., were enjoyed
by those present. Among those ,
enjoying Mr. and Mrs. Preacher's hos- '
pitality were f Misses Annie Laura 1
Creech, of Kline, Eva Creech, of
Kline, Margaret McDaniel, of Andrews,
Lucy Ellis, of Hampton, Hazel
Youmans, Hazel Knopf, and others of
Fairfax. Messrs. Milldred Morris, of
Olar, Monroe Morris, of Olar, Ellis
Barker, of Olar, William Harter, William
Youmans, Albert Youmans,
Hugh F. Folk, Ernest Burkhalter,
Frampton Mixson from Fairfax and a
number of young men from Kline.?
Allendaly Co. Citizen. <
Quick Thinking. ]
<
Young Jenkins asked his employer '
if he might have the afternoon off to 1
attend his grandmother's funeral, ]
and old as the gag was, it worked.
An hour later he was about to pur
chase an admission to the base ball ]
grounds when who did he see stand- <
ing beside him but the boss himself. :
Young'Jenkins did not lose his wits, ;
hovewer. Instead of putting his mon- ;
ey down, he turned to the ticket sell- ;
er and said in a tone loud enough for
his employer to hear. "Would you
kindly direct me to the cemetery?"
Exchange.
New Texas Senator
From Carolina Stock
Dallas, Aug. 26.?Incomplete returns
from 180 out of 245 counties
voting in today's Democratic primary
indicated the nomination of
Earle B. Mayfield for United States
senator over James E. Ferguson. The
figures compiled by the Texas election
bureau were:
Mayfield 218,223; Ferguson 157,780.
The reports were from all over
the state and showed Mayfield to be
leading consistently.
Mr. Mayfield comes directly from
Carolina stock on both paternal and j
Ar? Uin f a f V? aw T /"\ V\
inaiui uai oiucs. ixid iaiuci , UUULJJL
Blythe Mayfield, who died recently
upon the platform at Tyler, Texas,
a moment after he had concluded an
address welcoming the Shriners to
the city of Tyler, was the only son of
Thomas Mayfield, who was born in
Greenville county, S. C., and Melissa
Blythe Mayfield, the daughter of
Rev. David Blythe, a Baptist minister
residing at Blythe Bridge on the
South Saluda, Greenville county,
was a sister of Judge Absolom Blythe
and Lillian Blythe, the wife of William
Mayfield, of Greenville county,
d r%
D. U.
Thomas Mayfield was a soldier of
the Mexican war and settled at Tyler,
Texas. His father, Jesse MayBeld
married Nancy, the youngest
daughter of Samuel McJunkins. Samuel
was the son of Maj. Jos. McJunkins,
who took part in the battle of
Kings Mountain, and to whom Gen.
McCrady in his history of South
Carolina gives more credit for the
Winning of the battle of Kings Mountain
than to any other officer. Major
Joseph McJunkins was*the son of
Captain Samuel McJunkins, who had
taken part in the French and Indian
wars and with John Mayfield ran the
blockade of the French and Indians
ind bore messages to the settlements
which sent relief to the Fort Schuyler,
which was then besieged and
iriroin nrcoooH On return nf aid sent
>V1 V1J VCWVV*. W** * ~ ~
)y the settlements to Captain Stanwix,
the commander of the fort
tfhich is now named Fort Stanwix,
Home, N. Y., Samuel McJunkins and
Tohn Mayfield, in the night time, reentered
the Fort and an attack, as
igreed, was made by the rescuing
)arty and the besieged, which relulted
in the defeat of the French
md Indians.
Samuel McJunkins and his wife
?ame to South Carolina with John
dayfield, who had married Mary,
ho riniipTitpr of flantain Stanwix. and
>oth John Mayffeld and Samuel McTunkins
took part in the Revolutiontry
war.
John Mayfield's grandson, Jesse,
narried Captain Samuel McJunkins's
grandson's daughter, Nancy, the othr
daughter, Polly, married Jos. Cobb.
On the maternal side David
31ythe was a soldier of the war of
L 812; with Benjamine Hagood and
)thers defended Georgetown while
t was besieged by Admiral Joseph
31ythe, of the British navy, who was
ater killed off the coast of Maine in
;he battle between the Boxer and
;lie Wasp, uavia jBiyme s iaiuer i
iad taken part in the Revolutionary
var as had Dr. McClure,. whose
laughter Rev. David Blythe married.
. There are many kindred in South
Carolina of Earl Blythe Mayfield,
imong them, Judge Absolom Blythe,
)f Greenville, is a great-uncle; the
children of William Mayfield, to wit:
Ex-superintendent or education w.
D. Mayfield; Ex-seifator S. G. May3eld,
of Bamberg, S. C.; Mrs. .Kate
Ponder, of Dacusville, and George R.
Mayfleld, of Marietta, S. C., are cousins
on both mother's and father's
jide, their fathers, Thomas and Willam,
being brothers, and Melissa and
Lillian being sisters.
It will be seen that Earl Mayfield's
ancestors have taken part in the
wars in the defense of their coun
try.
Earl Blythe Mayfield is under fifty
rears of age. He was elected to the
legislature from Rusk county, Texas,
and became the champion of the prohibition
bill, introduced the bill and
fought it to a successful conclusion.
He served three terms in the legislature
and was then elected to the
railroad commission to which place
he has been three times elected.
Allison Blythe Mayfield has been
- - - ' * J! J
chairman or me rauiudu wiuajisoiun
for more than twenty years. For the
past ten years the two Mayfields have
3erved on the railroad commission of
Texas. Allison was re-nominated in
the first run off of the recent primary
in Texas.
Earl Blythe Mayfield, the nominee,
is a man of fine address, eloquent,
[earned and adaptable. He has pitched
his campaign on a high plain. He
made the fight for the U. S. senate
advocating lower rates of freight
and that the several states should
have the control of rate making on
intrastate business as against the interstate
commerce rates being fixed
in Washington ror all lines 01 transportation.
SENATOR CAPPER SAYS:
Los? the First Battle for Muscle 1
Shoals.
c
The first battle for the Henry Ford f
Development of Muscle Shoals has s
been lost. The senate committee on i
agriculture declined by a vote of 7 to i
9 to report the Ford plan favorably. 1
The final battle will have to be fought t
out on the floor of the senate. Sena- c
tor Ladd and myself and five Demo- a
cratic members of the committee were I
the seven who stood by the Ford r
Proposition. A hard fight is ahead t
of the senators who wish to see Ford ^
win, the one man who c&n transform c
this stupendous wreck on which the t
government,has spent nearly 100 mil- c
lions, into great national benefit and u
at the same time free the farmers of ^
the United States from the grip of the
fertilizer trust. But they are in this p
fight to a finish. It may take 'an- d
other session of congress but victory 1:
will come in the end. , a
As I see it, it is Ford and the peo- t
pie on one side, and the fertilizer G
trusts and the private waterpower a
interests on the other. In the end a
Ford and the people will win. Either c
this great project will be developed f:
by Henry Ford or by the government i<
under direction of Secretary Week9 h
of the war department. I think the a
farmers believe Henry Ford, an in- h
tensely practical industrial genius,
will come nearer to smashing the
< 1.M2 x x XI ill TTT 1. ?
ieruuzer irusi. man win vveexw?,
whose close affiliation with big business
is a matter of common knowl- tl
edge. The farmers haven't forgotten c
that Secretary Weeks has on a num- A
erous occasions publicly expressed his
opposition to the farm bloc and has
shown no sympathy or interest in the Iproblems
of tfhe farmer. * Ford wishes
to give the farmers a chance. Under y
his contract all he could make at best
would be 8 per cent.
Why Not Plain Speaking?
The State. B
Once or twice a week lately a homicide
has been reported in South CaroTr*
m AO + /\f +Viooq trQcroHioa I
Ulla. XXI LUUOl U1 I.UOSV V1UQVU1VW
white men have been parties and in q
some cases they have been men of ^
more than ordinary intelligence. That
is a wretched condition of affairs.
Nevertheless it is certain tha: were ^
men who have it in their hearts to
carry pistols and, upon provocation
or without provocation, to slay their
fellowmen reasonably assured that in
the case of conviction and sentence g
to death and imprisonment they
would be pardoned after a few
months by a governor, the number of
homicides would be trebled or quadruDled.
The shortest and surest- way to T
make South Carolina uninhabitable
by law-abiding citizens, especially defenseless
women, would be to lodge
the pardoning power in the hands of y
a citizen who might pardon 425 criminals
every year and possibly more.
So much no man or woman will deny.
It is all well enough to talk about ^
''enforcement of law." Why not
specify? Why not be definite?
Why not say, "I shall not pardon
convicts except in extraordinary circumstances,
when the rigidity of the
law requires to <be corrected lest injustice
be done, and I can not conceive
of circumstances in this state
that would allow me-to issue in any
one year more than 40 or 50 pardons
and commutations?"
A declaration of that kind would
mean something. It would be candid
dealing with the people. It would be
the abandonment of all quibbles, double
meaning and nonsense. ^
Why do not the voters require the
candidates to come down to facts
and honest talk? Do the voters know
that candidates who refuse to use
plain language that a child can understand
are laughing at them and
in their heart* calling the voters
fools?
Why is any candidate afraid to
speak in words that will commit him- ?
self to something? ^
Every candidate knows the difference
between pardoning 200 men and
2,000 men in four years.
m t9f S]
Uncle Sam Saloon-Keeper at Sea. ^
v
It is a scandalous and deplorable
situation, it sems to me, to have this v
government in the saloon business on IV
its merchant ships at sea, as it is now v
with the consent of the chairman of a
the U. S. Shipping Board. With Uncle
Sam a prohibitionist at home and a
saloon-keeper on the seas, our European
brethren can again wink the
other eye when discussing American C
ideals and tne world's greatest nyyu- ~
crite?because that is what we are C(
if we permit this to continue. A gov- 7
ernment that breaks its own laws 0
need expect no one else to respect ri
them or it. If it is lawful to run a tl
saloon under the American flag on e
ship board, it is lawful to run a sa- ci
loon anywhere. As it is unlawful, P
this disgraceful thing must be stop- r:
ped.?Exchange. d
Tt is said that tha nnlv Chinese au-; e
"*w ? - _ _ ? _ I tomobile
race driver is Jim Chv, a I v
resident of Canton, China. j t]
Ford's Thoughts by the Way.
S'ew York Times.
Mr. Henry Ford, en route, has discovered
that not a single union is
ormed primarily by the men themselves,
or run for their benefit. To his
)enetrating eye it is clear that "all
mions are engineered by capitalists."
rhus they hire Mr. Gompers to defy
he courts, Mr. Lewis to bring on the
:oal strike, and Mr. Jewell to nationilize
the railway workers. It must
. 1 XT x ? T xi~ ? ^
uapuai iiiai aiso inspires me jluxiutess
of the unions for breaking conracts.
"The moneyed interests of
Vail Street are behind these walk>uts,
as they are behind every disurbance
in the ranks of labor or
apital," says Mr. Ford, who hates
mions almost as much as he does
Vail Street.
It is well known that he is indeA
+ r\ f vvai v* 'pvl A KAnnAvt +v? a+ V r\
'^u.u.ciiA kjl uuiu. JL nc i caouu i LA a t uc
ioes not class himself with capitaists
is that he pays a "living wage"
nd gives his men "working condiions
conducive to 'self-expression."
Ireat wits are sure to madness near
llied. Yet it takes a certain courge
to invite laughtJer in the manner
f Mr. Ford's self-expression. His
riends are pushing him for the presiency.
But even he cannot delude
imself into thinking that there are
ny union votes?or other votes?ih
is views on unions.
"The Cloud/'
A Vino ii + ifii 1 nnom innrnnTf!ito +n
A U^UUbilUl ^/VWUA upyi Vf/A iVDbV l/V
[lis midsummer season is "The
iloud" by an unknown author:
. cloud came over a land of leaves
(Oh, hushfi little leaves, lest it ]
pass you by!)?
[ow they had waited and watched
for the rain,
lounUain and valley, and vineyard
and plain,
With never a sign from the sky!
lay after day had the pitiless sun
Looked down with a lidless eye.
>nt now! On a sudden a wnisper
went
Through the topmost twigs of the
poplar spire;
ut of the east a light wind blew;
.11 the leaves trembled, and murmured,
and drew ' '
Hope to the help of desire. '
: stirred the faint pulse of the forest
tree,
And breathed through the brake
and the brier.
lowly the cloud came and the wind
died,
Dumb lay the land in its hot sus-.
pense;
he thrush on the elm bough suddenly
stopped,
he weather-warned swallow in mid
flying dropped,
The linnet song ceased in the
fence;
[lite the cloud moved, till it hung
overhead,
Heavy, big bosomed, and dense.
.h, the cool rush through the drytongued
trees,
The patter and plash on the thirsty
earth,
he eager bubbling of runnel and rill,
'he lisping of leaves that have drunk
their fill,
The freshness that follows the
dearth!
Tew life for the woodland, the vineyard,
the vale,
New life in the worW's new birth!
?Anonymous.
MARRIED IN SEAPLANE.
froom Flies Machine at 60 Miles an
Honr.
New York, Aug. 23.?Shouting
ver his shoulder '*1 will" as he drove
is seaplane 60 miles an hour 1,000
eet above the Hudson river today,
-loyd Wilson Bertaude of San Fran
* ' TT.1 TTi?
Isco, tooK nis Dnae, .miss neieu virinia
Lent. The knot was tied by
\>rmer Lieut, Belvin W. Maynardr
he "flying parson."
Twenty minutes after they were
ronounced man and wife, the plane
plashed down and taxied to its moorigs,
where Mr. and Mrs. Bertaude
rere greeted by a group of friends.
With Eddie Stafiton, Mr. Bertaude
ron the world's endurance record at
rineola, N. Y., a freezing day last
winter, remaining in the air 26 hours
nd 32 minutes.
A River of Mystery.
From its source to its mouth the
olorado river drops almost two
liles. At some points along its
>urse, particularly in the Grand Canon,
it has cut its channel more than
ne mile below the level of the surounding
plateaus. The Colorado is
tie least-known stream in the westrn
hemisphere. It is the tomb of
[vilizatoons that flourished in ages
ast. The stark cliffs, chiseled by the
(ver. are furrowed with the deserted
wellings of peoples of mystery. Ceniries
ago these early races constructd
irrigation systems which are still J
isible in part and which command I
tie respect of engineers even today, j <
*
Increase Advances
on Ass'n Tobacco
Raleigh, N. C., Aug. 26.?Eight important
sales of tobacco, running into
the millions of pounds and orders
'
iwi miure aenvenes receivea dv tne
Tobacco Growers' Cooperative association,
were announced today by the
leaf department of the big cooperative
association.
So successful has the association
been in its first sales that South Carolina
growers will receive cash advances
on a revised valuation and the
members who have already delivered
their tobacco in South Carolina will
receive the benefit of this revision
and their share of increasing profits
at the final settlement. The sales to
leaf dealers and manufacturers have
been so large that the second distribution
of cash payments for deliveries
will be made to the South Carolina
members of the association just v
as soon as a sufficient amount is collected
to make another substantial
cash advance in the near future.
More than 3\000,000 pounds of tobacco
were delivered again this week
to the cooperative warehouses of the
South Carolina belt. The growers' association
is now urging a?1 its mem- *
bers to make deliveries in view of the
demand for their tobacco. Enthusiasm
for the new method of marketing
Is on the increase and many farmers
who failed to join the association this
year have expressed their wish to
sign up next year's crop. Steady de- ,
liveries continue throughout eastern
North Carolina, where general satisfaction
with the new marketing method
and the cash advances is being
voiced by members of the cooperative
association. Hundreds of hew members
from western North Carolina
signed the marketing contract this
week following the opening of the association
warehouses in the east and
enthusiastic meetings were held at
many points throughout the old belt.
Vote in 1918.
. "*a
The following are the official returns
for United States senator in
the first primary in 1918 as declared 4 ^
by the state Democratic executive
committee:
*
Counties Blease Dial Rice
Abbeville 692 898 ~ 47
Aiken r.,932 1,594 141
Anderson .2,735 2,848 137
Bamberg 1 277 784 112
Barnwell 516 1,350 120
Beaufort 118 354 74
Berkeley 275 591 80
Calhoun 158 574 38
Charleston .. ..1.678 2,895 122
Cherokee 1,419 1,255 ' 116
Chester 494 1,246 63
Chesterfield .. .. 652 1,420 201
Clarendon 865 syv 5/
Colleton 446 1,548 127
Darlington 1,003 1,522 89
Dillon 423 950 85
Dorchester 403 659 63
Edgefield 306 984 40 ...M
Fairfield 366 727 43
Florence 1,192 1,997 165 f
Georgetown .... 247 752 26
Greenville 2,443 4,320 334 l\
Greenwood .. .. 985 1,508 96
Hampton 220 1,192 123
Horry 576 1,357 180
Jasper 59 312 74
Kershaw 826 1,363 115
Lancaster 742 1,428 85
Laurens 1,274 1,908 119
T^p ? 720 800 57
Lexington 1,759 1,952 152
McCormick 396 990 100
MarioA 446 1,202 72
Marlboro 218 534 57
Newberry 1,346 1,387 71
Oconee 1,146 1,281 ? 272
Orangeburg .. .. 721 2,428 180
Pickens 1,313 1,293 169
Richland 1,879 3,104 213
Saluda 1,028 925 71
Spartanburg .. ..2,980 4,340 386
o. a 11 1419 ?3
sumier.. .. .. nx x,ixu v?
Union 1,077 1,394 156
Williamsburg .. 468 1,222 91
York 1,229 1,593 135
Totals .. ..40,45-6 65,064 5,317
NOTICE OF APPEAL.
Evans Piles Paper With the Supreme
Court for Ira Harrison.
B. B. Evans, attorney for Ira Harrison,
convicted murderer, yesterday
filed notice of intention to appeal the
Harrison case/ with the supreme
court. Notice of intention to appeal
was filed some weeks ago with Solicitor
Spigner, but not with the supreme
court until yesterday.?The
Stato.
Epitaph.
(Placed on the tomb of his wife
by Mark Twain.)
"Warm summer sun shine kindly
t
here;
Warm southern wind, blow softly
here.
Green sod above, lie light, He light,
Good night, dear heart, good night,
good night."
France has sixteen wonren for
every ten men of marriageable age.
"t
.