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BLEASE SPEAKS DESPITE PROTESTS Bishop Introduces Ex-Governor as Strongest White Man in State Cole L. Blease was the chief speaker at the opening exercises of Allen university, a large negro school in Columbia, despite the protest of Tuesday morning by alumni and former students, who petitioned President Mance and the faculty that the invitation be withdrawn, "as it will greatly embarrass our wives and daughters to have ex-Gov. Blease speak to them, since he has spoken so harshly in the courts and on the stump against the vritues of the negro women and the respect and decency of negroes in general." Mr. mease made no direct reference in his speech to this petition, but the Rev. W. D. Chappelle, D. D., bishop of the African Methodist Epis copal church in this State, who introduced the ex-governor, as "the strongest white man in the State of South Carolina" and one whose pardoning record had removed all sting in things "said on the stump" was somewhat scathing in his denunciation of those who presumed "to dictate the policies of a great church." "Who are they, anyway?" Chappelle asked. Then in answer to his own query he remarked. "They aren't known outside of their own back- i >> tu. JfUllli A. lit? ItCUOll tlllll^O DC* Ml Ull III* stump, the bishop observed, were only to tickle the ears of the voters and thereby gain their support. < Bleaso Greatest, Chappelle Says. < Ten minutes were consumed by < Bishop Chappelle in his speech of introduction. generously seasoned 1 with superlatives. In asking the ex-governor, he had sougnt, ne said, to get the strongest man in the State. He had gone carefully over the records, careers and deeds of all of the governors of South Carolina, and Mr. Blease, he said easily held first rank. Several pardon cases, where the former governor "by a single stroke of the pen set that negro free," were cited. One of these was that of a 14 year old negro boy sent up for life. The congressional controversy between the negro, George Washington Murray, of Sumter, and a white man, Col. Moise, of the same district, was also reviewed by the bishop in all its ramifications. Later in his speech Mr. Blease reminded the bishop that it was he (Mr. Blease) who had made; Murray the congressman from this | State instead of the white man. Mr. Blease was then a member of the ' canvassing board and cast the dccid-1 inn- vnin "If 1 Un<J ?.U .. ? l t wv'i it * nan ^ wc JUOtlt'C llliet* 1 weeks ago and if the board had been a* honest," he said yesterday, "I would be the next governor of South Carolina." He had always sought, ho said, to do justice to the negro, regardless of his color. Much speculation had been engaged in by the negroes themselves as 1 to the character of the speech Mr. Blease would deliver, but the speaker throughout his discourse spoke guardedly and with moderation. He said he had been misunderstood by the negroes, whom he greeted as "my friends." In politics he had always urged that taxes negroes paid should go to the support of negro schools. School boards, he said, chiseled the negroes out of their just proportion when making apportionment for the schools of the two races Christian citizenship was earnestly commended to the students of the school. "I don't make much profession myself. I have been so hounded, villified and abused that I often go by my own church, refusing to enter, because I know that there are o r> <-1 o/irtim/lralo of JU'WV* * U1MI OVVUMlll V/lO C41/ tltu \ \/IlI I Tnunlon table, who are a disgrace to' 'God Almighty." The students were! -told to "aim high, tell the truth and; to attain the ends of a worthy ambi-: for honesty," and not by slipping books under the desks in the exami-1 nation room or copying information from their cuffs. > "Never Insulted Women." j Referring to the sentiment in the petition, by inference, Mr. Bleasesr.id he had never insulted "a colored girl." "I have never wronged any woman, white or black. Neither have I spoken a word of slander against any woman." A slanderer was denounced as "a most contemptible cur." The ex-governor's attitude toward convicts was somewhat enlarged upon. He sometimes thought, he said, that all penitentiaries, jails and court houses might be abolished. ) What was the'use of these and the church too, ho asked his audience, that applauded his worus with increasing volume, and punctured the unfinished sentences often with con firmation comment. An overruling Providence was held up as the mighty avenger of all wrongs, both political and spiritual, and certain political controversies were enumerated to sustain this assertion, the names of those waonged being tactifully withheld. In urging that the negro students hitch their wagon on a star, the race, just up from slavery, was cordially commended for its entrance into professions and the varied phases of commcrccial life. "You are coming into higher things," they wore told. "They can't hold you back despite what I or any other man may ssay," he said, while the auditorium roared with cheers of approval. B. W. Mance, president of the university, was reared in Newberry county, and the Newberry negro was the choice of Mr. Blease to head the State negro college at Orangeburg, when an attempt was made to oust Miller, the president of that institution, during the Blease administration. Mance himself took occasion at the conclusion of Mr. Bloase's speech to deliver another laudatory speech ' in which he recalled the early efforts of Mr. Blease at the Newberry bar, "when Cromer and Johnstone and Schumpert and Welch and the late lamented Pope were the giants in the legal profession there." These had dwindled into the proportions I of "mere pygmies" in commiHson! with Mr. Blease, before Mr. Blease, was elevated to the governor's chair, I Mance argued. The president of the' school commended the examples of. AT- X> 1 .1 IJI -.1. /-il ill i ~ 1 mi. Dic??oc ciiiu xtioiiu|j v^nujxjjeiit; ?.?.? j the students as worthy of emulation. Both, he said, were known throughout the United States and it was only through their zeal and adherence to worthy purposes that they had been able to carve their way through untoward circumstances. i NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of the decree and judgment of the court made by his Honor S. W. G. Shipp, Presiding Judge in the case of The Kaminski Hardware Co., a Corporation, Plaintiff vs. T. W. Livingstone, et. al., Defendants, and dated the 25th day of May A. D. 1916, I, the undersigned J. A. Lewis, Sheriff of Horry Pn II ntv Ufl'll Qoll n f ni.l.li'/. " wj , i>ni ovu ob (JUUIIV; autbifll iu the highest bidder before the Court House door at Conway, in Horry County, and State of South Carolina, during legal hours of sale, on salesday in November next, it beirtg the 6th day of said month, all and singular those certain lands situate in Horry County, and described as folR "?. to-wit: .1 and singular that certain tract or parcel of land, situate in Simpson Creek Township in the County and State aforesaid, containing thirty (30) acres more or less and bounded North by lands of J. J. Rhuark, East and South by lands of Burroughs & Collins Co., and on the West by lands of Thomas W. Livingstone bought of Ellen Bellamy, and other lands; being the same thirty acre parcel purchased by me from J. M. Dorman, by deed dated March 9th, A. D., 1911. TERMS of Sale Cash. Purchaser to pay for papers. Conway, S. C., October 11th 1916. J. A. LEWIS, Sheriff of Horry County. n. n. VY KJKJU W AJVU, Plaintiffs Attorney. o NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of the decree and judgment of the court made by his Honor Mendel L. Smith, Presiding Judge, in the ease of Colemar. Worley Plaintiff vs. D. N. Holt, Defendant, and dated the 27th day of September A. D., 1916., I, the undersigned J. A. Lewis, Sheriff of Horry County, will sell at public auction to the Highest bidder before the Court House door at Conway, in Horry County, and State of South Carolina, during legal hours of sale on salesday in November next, it being the 6th day of said month, all and singular those certain lands situate in Horry County, and described as follows, to wit: , ) The undivided interest of D. N. Holt in and to that certain lot of land in the town of Loris, bounded on the West by land of H. L. Singleton, on the East by D. D. Harrelson, South by Main Street, and North by Street measuring 50x150 feet, and being the same conveyed to W. K. Holt by W. W. Wright. TERMS of Sale Cash. Purchaser to pay for papers. Conway, S. C., October 6th, 1916. J. A. LEWIS, Sheriff of Horry County. H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. THE HOBBY HEBi Buiid Up ( Clear out the conges breathing and weak* ly/jRA invigorate all the boc k Ml A phare in cold weathe; Ji I tV to perfect health. V J PERUNA IS Jn It la a tonic that restores the ba!?r .fg cway the waste matter in your syat f e<i effort :?n<l better health. For n< have found it n valuable aid in all < i.jft experience points the way tor you 2&Cteat that provoa its value. Table' k*3b;??v5l quick adniinistration. Pleasant to Y"hh you. \ Manalin Tablets are tho Ideal la 1// I thu hshlt of constipation, arouse th wO V I kidneys. Your druggist has them. NEW METHODS FOR I NEW CONDITIONS1 Clemson College, S. C.?Many and many a farmer in South Carolina is practicing the same methods that his father and grand-father before him used. But why use old time methods when old time fertility is gone. There was a time when about all a farmer had to do in this State, was to tickle the earth with a hoe and it woulu burst into a smile of golden grain and fruit or fleecy staple, but that was when every field was virgin soil. Now our soils are exhausted, they have been robbed of their plant food, so when we go forth to sow we must| do more than merely tickle the earth; we must plow deep; we must rotate i crops; we must apply modern methods suitable to modern conditions and not depend too much on fertilizers to make up for deficient plant food. If cood methods are nraet.icod con-: ? * i sistently, we can soon bring our depleted soils back to their old time ( productiveness; and having by that' time learned the lesson taught by "robber crops" and "robber systems," we can, by a continunace of those' good farm practices, keep the land productive. Don't be behind the times in your system of farming. Look around1 you and see what the men in your' neighboring communities and coun-| ties are doing. If they are prosperous and you are not, study their methods and put them into practice on your farm, for you may rest assured that in most cases it will b^ the methods they use that make their land better and their farms pay more. o NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of the decree and judgment of the court made by his Honor Mendel L. Smith, Presid T t ' - * ? ing jucige, in tne case or Kobert C. Scarborough, Assignee, and H. H. Woodward, Agent of Creditors Plaintiffs vs. J. W. Cannon, Ly J. Cannon and I. D. Cannon, George C. Cannon, A. L. Cannon, Burroughs & Collins Co. and George J. Holliday, Defendants and dated the 27th day o? September A. D. 1916, I, the under signed J. A. Lewis, Sheriff fo Horry I County, will sell at public auction to the highest bidder before the Court' House door at Conway, in Horry County, and State of South Carolina, j during legal hours of sale on sales- i day in November next, it being the ( 6th day of said month, all and singu-1 iai those certain lands situate in Horry County, and described as follows, to wit: All and singular that certain piece,: parcel or tract of land lying and be- i ing situate in Conway Township, County and State aforesaid, contain-; ing Forty-five (45) acres and bounded and described as follows, to-wit: on the North by lands of S. T. Sessions; on the East by lands of Emily Beaty; South by lands of Bob Davis; on West by lands of W. E. Causey. This being the identical lands convey ed to us by George Cannon. TERMS of Sale Cashs. Purchaser to pay for papers. Conway, S. C., October 6th, 1916. J. A. LEWIS, Sheriff of Horry County, j I F. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiffs Attorney. o The fair season is on. This is the| time of the year when we hold corn! shows, canning club exhibits and gen cral agricultural fairs. *11fEi; ' Reme ?' > STELLA VITAE a< ^ in the functions pocul ar l oua auppreeaion, an ' < yVxfQfJ by week, nervous, r TPSHIhB^ fercrs and is guarai flrat bottle if you ai THACHEW IS* ILD, CONWAY, 8. 0. or Winter tion that has disturbed your ?ned your digestion, and relily processes to do their full r, and thus build yourself up INVIGORATION tee to your bodily (unctions, clear* em, and Keys you up to increasparly half a century thousands ^ catarrhal conditions. Their /J f jW PKuUNA has stood the t form ia convenient for Ar* ry/Xry take and easy to carry jAWv & //, xative. They correct X>y ^ e liver and help thei ".y ,lumbu?, Ohio IMPROVED BUTTER j MADE ON FARMS \ (Continued from page 3.) er. The hands should never touch the butter, both on account of sanitary reasons and because the body warmth may melt the fat. The work ing should be done carefully to avoid making the butter greasy. Before the butter is worked, tine salt should be added at the rate of about an ounce per pound of fat. The butter should be prepared for market in a rectangular mold, since, when in this shape, the product is more easily wrapped and handled and is more pleasing to customerRegular parchment butter wrapping paper should be used around the prints, as ordinary waxed paper tears easily and sticks to the butter. The placincr of the wrannp.H nrinlc in w n?%* r* -* vtJ "" pasteborad boxes is a desirable final step, as it protects the package, gives it a better appearance, and per mits the use of the maker's name or trademark as an advertisement. A ff 4-U ^ Kiif f a>? mnlfmA1 AIL viic uu tvv. i IIIUIMII^ open* tions are completed the churn should be rinsed carefully with warm water. It should then be scrubbed with hot water, cleansing powder, and a fiber brush, and finally should be scalded and set in a clean, sunny place to drain and dry. MULE?Warship has great speed .. Rome, via Paris?Italy now posesses a type of warship whose speed is three times as great as that of the greatest trans-Atlantic liner, according to The ?iornale Italia. The sea trial of the first of these ships to b< completed was witnessed by a correspondent of the paper. Three oth ers are building. All of the new vessels will use oi fuel. o NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of the decre< and judgment of the court made b: his Honor Mendel L. Smith, Presid ing Judge, in the case of Palmett' Grocery Company, a Corporation Plaintiffs vs. J. G. Allen, Defendant and dated the 27th day of September A. D., 1916, I, the undersigned J. A. Lewis, Sheriff of Horry County, will sell at public auction to the highest bidder before the Court House door at Conway, in Horry County, and State of South Carolina, during legal hours of sale on salesday in Novembei next, it being the 6th day of said month, all and singular those certain lands situate in Horry County, and described as follows, to wit: All and singular that certain tract or parcel of land, situate in the County and State aforesaid, in Bayboro Township, containing one hundred and thirty (130) acres, more or less, and described as follows: Beginning at pine knot at the head of Briar String, thence running a west course on the southern side of Lozon Swamp to a corner on short leaf pine, thence due South to a line on land of George J. Holliday and also land of Burroughs & Collins Com puny, thence a Northern course U the beginning corner; and being the same tract of land conveyed to me b.\ my father B. S. Allen, by his deed dated the 19th day of December A D., 1914, running the line between lands of J. G. Allen and B. S. Allen from the Holiiday and Cun,oughs S Collins Company corner to the saic beginning point above mentioned. TERMS of Sale Cash. Purchasei to pay for papers. Conway, S. C., October 6th, 1916. J. A. LEV/IS, Sheriff of Horry County. H. IT. WOODWARD. Plaintiff's Attorney. GUARANTEED dyForWomen it* directly on the female organs and regulates iar to women. It stops wasting, relieves dangerd bawiahea the terrors of those periods so dreaded undown women. It has helped thousands of sufnteed to help you. Your money buck on the very e not benefited.?$1 at your dealer's. IDICINE CO., Chattanooga, Ttm* NOTICE OF ELECTION. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County pf Horry. Notice hereby given that the General Election for Presidential ami Vice-Presidential Electors and Representatives in Congress will be held at the voting precincts fixed b># law in the County of Horry 0:1 Tuosduy, | November 7, 191(5, said day beii g [Tuesday following the first M -n.lry as prescribed by the State Cc n .titution. The qualifications for suf' rage are as follows: Residence in State for two years, in the County one year, in toe p^ll.n., precinct in which the elector offers to. vote, four months, and the payment six months before any electcn n of any poll tax then due arid payable. Provided, That ministers in charge of i an organized church and teachers of public schools shall be entitled to vote after six months' residence in State, otherwise qualified. Registration.?Payment of all taxes including poll tax, assessed and | collectable during the previous year. The production of a certificate or the receipt of the officer authorized to collect such taxes shall be conclusive proof of the payment thereof. Before the hour fixed for opening the polls Managers and clerks must take and subscribe to the Constitutional oath. The Chairman of the Board of Managers can administer ; the oath to the other Managers and to the Clerk; a Notary Public must administer the oath to Chairman. The Managers elect their Chairman and Clerk. Polls at each voting place must be opened at 7 o'clock a. m. and closed at 4 o'clock p. m., except in the City of Charleston, where they shall be opened at 7 a* iti*, and c *?w u m. , The Managers have the power to fill a vacancy; and if none of the Managers attend, the citizens can appoint from among qualified voters, the Managers, who, after being sworn, can conduct the election. At the close of the election, thej Managers and Clerk must proceed publicly to open the ballot box and count the ballots therein, and con-. tinue without adjournment until! same is completed, and make a state ment of the result for each office,! and sign the same. Within three j days thereafter, the Chairman of the j Board, or some one designated by the, Board, must deliver to the Commissi sioners of Election the poll list, tho box containing the ballots and written statements of the result of the election. Managers of. Election.?The fol-i lewing Managers of Election have been appointed to hold the election at the various precincts in the said County: Adrian?Alex Hardee. M. C.! Holmes, S. S. Anderson. Aynor?J. W. Cook, Waterman Graham, Kelly W. Jones. Bayboro?Arnold Bell, W. E. Tyler, J. A. Hamilton. Blanche?B. F rank Graham, U. A. Johnson, W. F. Mishoe. Cedar Grovo?Tillman Jordan, J. H. Hendricks, J. Ben Hucks. Conway?J. Pink Graham, J. A. Eason, C. Ben Dusenbury. Cool Spring?George W. Rabon, H. H. Gasque, I). M. Mishoe. Daisy?W. M. Carter, J G. Gore, A. R. Williamson. Dog Bluff?R. B. Nichols, W. B. "'ar?-oll, W. A. Spivey. Dogwood?B. Haskell Todd, B. R. 'arker, W. A. Adams. Ebenezer?J. Hiram Long, William <\ Ilardee, J. C. Sarvis. Farmer?Ben Butler, J. Berry Todd, J. H. Richardson. Floyds?G. M. Ford, A. T. Martin, I. G. Powell. Ga'ivcnt3 Ferry?Press Coleman, lert R. Gaskin, Chess Best. Grahamville?J. D. Watson, B. H. /aughi, T. L. Thomas. fl-folinin'o V I> V_. I Uiiu.il O UUUC.B IVUSSCll L . Graham, S. P. Hughes, E. Hamp Hardwick. Green Sea?VV. W. Roberts, S. H. Harrleson, Corney Loupo. Greenwood?Cornelius Cannon, W. Chap Martin, J. A. Tindale. Gurley?J. W. Sasser, Frank Ellis,I John W. Harris. Hammond?W. D. Cox Chess L. I Williamson, George West. Homewood?N. T. Collins, M. A. Gause, W. J. Waller. Horrv?E. C. Smith I v "...vU., ,, W . V. ?<l UUglll'O/ J. Elbert Allen. Jordanville?George W. Singleton I S C. Davis, T. Monroe Eundy. Knotty Branch?A. J. Richardson M. C. Johnson, Jas. T. H icks. Little River?P. K. Bessant, Jon; Vcrecn, John I. Ward. Lot is*?George Butier, B. H. Hinson, Chas. B'aekburn. Marlow?I. P. Patrick, Rufus McDowell, John J. Vereen. Pott Harrelscn?J. P. Wilh'ams J. Rufus Thompson, C. M. S.irvis. Sanford?L. D. Suggs, W. H. Holt, _ Bim ! FRENCH SWINDLER CAUGHT AGAIN . Harry Hochotto Duped Leading Frenchmen in Bucket Shop Operations HIGH OFFICIALS INVOLVED IN CASE Has Served as Motorcyclist Since First Month of the War. Paris.?The disappearance of the noted Harry Rochette, who was sentenced to three years imprisonment i.1 1912 in connection with vast bucket shop swindles, has been cleared up by his arrest at Granville today. Under the name of Georges Bienaimee, Rochette enlisted in Paris as a motorcvclist in th?> fitvaf mnntL H*** r k/v invaivii \J ft tUC war and was stationed at Amicus. The Rochette case was one of the most sensational in the history of the French courts. Rochette was arrested in 1908 charged with swindling on an enormous s.-a!e. His operations involved a sum of more than $20,000,000 and at his subsequent trial it was stated that some of the most prominent men in French public life had been either his dupes or accomplices. A parliamentary inquiry was made into charges that Antonnie Monis, former premier, and Joseph Caillaux, former minister of finance, were exerting their influence to protect the promoter. Went to Mexico. Rochette disappeared while out on bail and succeeded in reaching Mexico, where, it was said, he was welcomed by Francisco Madero, the Pres ident, to whom he was reported to have rendered valuable services. The French government demanded his extradition, but Rochette was warned in time and made a sensational escape from the police. Since that time his whereabouts have been unknown. rri n?L.ii. ... a lie rwcnetce case was revived in 1914 when Gaston Chalmete, editor of The Figaro, was shot to death by the wife of M. Caillaux. The shooting was the result of violent attacks, made on Caillaux in The Figaro and among the charges brought by Salmete was the old scandal of the former minister's alleged connection with Rochette. 1 4) Not True Blue. The man who becomes sad-faced and apparently deeply sorrowful when anything sad is brought to his notice, is not true blue. His sorrowleaves as quickly as it came.?Daily Record. It is Time. If the price of paper goes much higher the reading world will begin to appreciate the value of a news* paper.?Dillon Herald. Manning spoke last week at Chester. , ; o Clear Bad Skin From Within Pimpy, muddy complexions are due to impurities in the blood. Clear up the skin by taking Dr. King's New Life Pills. Their mild larative qualities remove the poisons from th#? svs. ?|T " torn and brighten the eye. A full, free, r.on-griping bowel movement in the morning is the reward" of a dose of Dr. King's New Life Pills the night before. At your Druggist, 25c.. ?adv. H. M. Sarvis. Shell?S. W. Vereen, W. C. Todd, Sam Chestnut. Spring Branch?Joe J. Enzor, Agrippa Williamson, Arch T. Jernigan. So east re?W. B. Clardy, W. K. West, Joe B. Rabon. Tnylorsvnlle?S. l>. Gerrald, B. F. Harrelson, W W. Wiliamson. Vardelle?C. H. Shelley, Jack Grain.;or, J. K. Harrelson. Warn pee?Joe Bell, J. C. Livingstor. R. V. Ward. Withers?George W. King, G. C. Graham, G. C. Stalvcy. TVT ? ...v euca precincu named above are requested to dclepat3 one of their number to secure the box and blanks for the election fro n J. M. Dorman, Clerk, at Courtbouse on and after Oct. 30th, 1916. A. E. GOLDFINCH, E. C. HARRIS, MAY BURY FLOYD, Commissioners of Federal Election for Horry County, S. C., October 17, 1916.