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ARTHUR GRUBBS SHOT. Barnwell Man Fatally Wounded by Augusta Policeman. Augusta, Ga., July 27.?Arthur Grubbs, of Rosemary township, Barnwell county, South Carolina, was fatally shot in a pistol duel on the North Augusta bridge this afternoon by Policeman Caudle. Grubbs died to-night. Caudle was slightly wounded. Grubbs, attended by a friend, Dickson Green, also of Barnwell county, arrived in Augusta Tuesday night and started drinking. Their disorderly conduct and cursing on the bridge attracted the attention of the officer who ordered them to move on. When the officer approached again Grubbs attapfcpd him onenine fire at once. The first shot struck the officer's club, the second struck him in the stomach just below the heart and left the body at the waist on the left, the third missed. After the third shot the officer drew his revolver and shot Grubb through the head, the shot entering through the left eye. Green, seeing that his companion was shot, drew his revolver on the officer, but was "covered" from behind by Officer Aiken who had come up during the shooting. Grubbs will probably die during the night. Caudle's wound was dressed at the city hospital, and he is now at his home. sv The Legal Question. Aiken, July 27.?There is considerable discussion here of the shooting of Arthur Grubbs on the North / ' Augusta bridge this afternoon . It appears that it is not entirely clear as to whether the shooting oc. curred on the Georgia or the South Carolina side. If the shooting was on the Carolina side it would offer considerable complications, as a Georgia officer would have no authority to come into Carolina to make an arrest. Grubbs is said to have been in Ai.t-en this mornine. then in an intox icated condition. While Georgia has usually claimed her boundary as extending to the . Carolina edge of the river, the South Carolina statutes define the boundary as being the middle of the stream. As high and low water make several feet difference in the centre of the stream, it is likely that some quesl"'. tion may arise as to the boundary. It is contended that the affair occurred a few feet on the Georgia side. Walterboro to Have National Bank ' Walterboro, July 28.?At a meeting held Tuesday at the office of Peurifoy Bros, a national bank for Walterboro was organized, officers elected and plans made for the building. While the organization is only a tentative one, pending the formal permission from the secretary of the treasury, this will be forthcoming in ||| ' ' a day or two, when the tentative or?, ganization will be made permanent. |v The capital stock of the new bank is $25,000, and it will be styled the K ' First National Bank of Walterboro. The officers and directors are all well-known business men, who will give their best efforts to make the new bank successful. The building will be up to date in every particular. It will be of brick and adjoin the offices of Peurifoy Bros., on Main street, fronting on the court house square. The following are the directors for the new bank: Jesse Drew, Abe S. Karesh, John H. Peurifoy, O. Gadsden Padgett, Jas. E. Peurifoy, E. E. Jones, J. M. McKenzie, J. M. Witsell, . S. N. Haws. The officers elected by the directors are: Jas. E. Peurifoy president; E. E. Jones, vice president; S. Gadsden Padgett, cashier. The building committee in charge of the erection and furnishing the bank building is composed of the following: Jas. E. Peurifoy, Abe S. Karesh, E. E. Jones and C. Gadsden Padgett. The bank will open its doors for business September 15. Exonerates Slayer of Grubbs. Augusta, July 28.?Officer Caudle, who killed Arther Grubbs, of Barnwell county, in a pistol duel on the North Augusta bridge yesterday, while trying to arrest Grubbs and his companion, Dickson Green, was ex- i onerated by the coroner's jury at the inquest here to-day. I Grubbs and Green were drinking and Grubbs drew a pistol and fired upon officer Caudle as the officer approached, according to the testimony of the main witnesses who appeared. Green, also from Barnwell, admitted that he and Grubbs were drinking and he also stated that Caudle shot Grubbs after the latter had fired upon him. Grubbs's father, T. J. Grubbs, came to Augusta and took bis son's body home this afternoon. Ho said his son's death was the result of liquor and keeping bad company. Watch the date on label of your paper and renew promptly. Clemson Extension Work?Celery. Celery is ordinarily grown for it large fresh left stalks, which ar< eaten raw with salt and also fo extensively used for seasoning pur poses. Celeriac or turnip-rooted eel ery is grown for its large roots which are used for seasoning salads It is a gross feeder, and though th> soil selected be reasonably fertile, ! or 10 tons of barnyard manure shouli be applied per acre and thoroughl; incorporated with the soil befor planting. On land that will produc forty bushels of corn per acre, no less than 1,000 pounds of fertilize containing 7 per cent, available phos phoric acid, 6 per cent, nitrogen an< 8 per cent, potash should be appliei per acre. Celery seed are planted in frame * ? ^ T ^ ? ~"L T<V?.rv T?/NT1*CI O morbp/l 1X1 .UclIUil. J. lie I \J n o en ^ six inches apart and about one hal inch deep. Ten to fifteen seed ar sown to every inch of row and cover ed with sifted soil. After the seei are planted the bed should b sprinkled lightly and then shadei with bags or burlap until the youni plants begin to appear. Then th' bags or burlap should be removei and a lath screen used in its place. After the seed have been sown th surface' of the soil in the plan bed should be allowed to be come dry until the plants hav* become well established. The us< of the 1th screen may graduall; be discontinued after the plants haw formed the fourth of fifth leaf. When the plants are about thre inches high they should be thinnei to one inch apart in the row. Th' plants removed may be transplante* to other beds and will produce a good, if not better, plants than thos not transplanted. Celery is trans planted to the field during the sum mer months, when it is very hot an* the soil unusually dry. It is, there fore, necessary to water the plant as they are set out. The tops o the plants should be clipped back t half their length about two weeks be fore transplanting to the field an* watered sparingly the last week be fore transplanting. An hour befor the plants are removed from the bed they should be watered freely. If the celery is to be blanched b earth, the rows should be marked ol five feet wide and the plants set fiv inches apart in the row. If th double row system is used, each se of double rows should be six fee wide and the plants set six inche apart each way. It is very important to have stock plants to transplant to the field, a [ it is very difficult to get the smai ones to live, and they never grow o ! as rapidly as plants of larger siz< Plants that have been given ampl distance in the seed bed will be froi six to eight inches tall and ver stocky at transplanting time. The amateur grower frequentl makes the mistake of setting th plants too deep in the soil. The plant should not be set deeper in the fiel than they stood in the plant bed. 1 the plants are set in the bottom c a furrow, as is sometimes practicec the bud will be covered by soil wast ing from the sides of the trench an many of them will die. When th plants are set in a slight furrow mad by the marker and the soil draw about them, the bud of the plac should be on a level with the sui face of the soil. The plants should be taken froi the bed with a small block of so attached to the roots if possible. T do this a heavy knife with a blad about six inches long is passed alon each side of the rows one and on half inch from the plants, cuttin about three or four inches deep. 1 is then passed between the plants i the rows cutting the same deptl The plants are then removed wit ! the block of soil and roots attachec pressed lightly in the hand to prevec the soil from being shaken off i handling. The plants are then covei ed with wet' bags or burlap and whe thus protected will remain perfectl fresh for several hours. The ides wav for setting: the plants is to plac the plant in the hole immediatel after the water has been poured in fill the hole with soil and press lighl ly, leaving a mulch of loose dry so: around each plant. It is very important that the so mulch be maintained at all time during the growing season in orde to prevent the loss of moisture froi the soil by evaporation. Cultivat shallow after every rain in order t prevent the formation of crust on th soil and to re-establish the so Late celery for winter use i blanched by soil. The plants are se in the field during July and earl August, and the blanching is begu about the last of September. Celer is usually ready for use by the 20t of November, but will continue t grow rapidly during December an will need no protection until th last of that month, when it may t covered entirely with soil or strav or it may be stored in a suitabl frame or trenched. The first process in blanchin celery with soil is called "handling. This consists of gathering all th r leaves in one hand and holding them in an erect position while the soil s is banked and slightly packed around < 5 them to about one-half their length, r When this is done the soil is heaped - around the plants with either the - plow or "celery hiller." , i, Instead of "handling" the plants as 1 described above, they are sometimes c e wrapped with paper string to hold j ? them erect until the soil can be < 3 banked about them. The string is j v' fastened to the first plant in the row , e and is then tied once around each j e succeeding plant ana at last fasten- ] t ed securely at the end of the row. , r As the string is covered with soil it soon decays and does not injure the j I plants. The soil is then banked about < 3 the plants with the "hiller" or plow. < As the plants grow the soil is heaped ' s higher, and after a few weeks the ( T b^nks will be so high that the hoe j f and shovel will have to be used in < e addition to the hiller. ( The following varieties are espe- < 3 cially recommended: Fin de Siecle, . e Giant Paseal, Winter Queen and 3 Golden Self-Blanching. % For further information concerning e celery culture see Bulletin No. 144 3 of the South Carolina experiment j station. C. C. NEWMAN, ! e Horticulturist South Carolina Ext periment Station. COTTON MILL MERGER. 1 e g i ^ Corporation Organized with Twenty . e Million Capital. e New York, July 28.?New Eng- ( q land, New York and Baltimore mill 1 a e owners, bankers and capitalists in- i 3 corporated to-day the International , s Cotton Mills Corporation, under the e laws of New York with an authorized capital of $10,000,000, 7 per cumulative preferred stock, and $10,j 000,000 common stock. A statement, issued this afternoon , s by Myron C. Taylor, president of the f new corporation, says that textile 0 mills, sales and distributing agencies, l_ in this country and Canada, which 3 manufacture and sell 3,000 varieties of cotton fabrics, are included in the e merger. The properties consolidated s represent 22 mills and 25 principal ? brands, owning 10,000 acres of land, v part of which is under cotton cultivation, and employing 10,000 hands, with an aggregate annual output of e approximately $18,000,000. Some Mills Included, (t Among them are the Stark Mills, of s Manchester, N. H.; the Mount Vernon Woodbury Cotton Duck Company, the y Consolidated Cotton Duck Company, s the Boston Yarn Company, the Bay 11 State Cotton Corporation, the Eastern ff Mills and the Maryland Mills. President Taylor is president of the e American Commercial Corporation n and a director of the Bay State Coty ton Corporation, the Boston Yarn Company, the Lowell Weaving Comy pany, the Merchantile Corporation e and other interests in the trade. Other s officers are: Charles M. Warner, New d York; Thomas M. Turner, New York, [f and P. T.Jackson, Boston; Augustus ,f P.Loring, Boston, treasurer; DavidH. Carroll, Baltimore, secretary, and S. Davis Warfield, Baltimore, chairman d of the board of directors. All the e officers are named as directors, in ade dition to a number of prominent men n in New England, New York city and tt Baltimore. The Sun of Ireland. After centuries of misrule Ireland , has passed the dawn and seen the 0 brilliant and glorious sunrise of a new e day. Thomas Carlyle held that there i would not have been a cordial union between England and Scotland if g Robert Bruce had not gained the t great victory at Bannockburn. But the Irish lost at the Boyne, and that j made her long subjection the more b galling. In addition, there was re- < 1 ligious prejudice that is the most t' cruel and insensate of all fanaticn isms. Benjamin Disraeli said that the n way to treat Ireland was to grant her y all, save absolute independence, she ( rroin Kir O C: 1, woe C f 111 rpvnl lit ion : J WU1U gaiu fc/J u. V*- . ? . , e and it is a pity that he did not put his J philosophy into practice when he was . in power, though it is pretty certain ^ his party would not have allowed it. U Ireland is considerably smaller in geographical area than Kentucky or 12 Indiana, only 32,000 square miles in ,s extent; but last year her flocks were increased to the number of above 4,000,000 sheep. She exported cattle to the value of $45,734,577, butter to . 0 the value of $17,883,000 and the eggs she sent abroad made a return of ^ $13,637,050. To this must be added jS the enormous quantities of linens and tweeds from her looms and the products of the shipyards.?Washington J Post. n __ y There are in South Carolina over , h 3,000 boys, the oldest not twelve o years of age, who have planted one d acre of corn during the present year, e This work is being done as the re ie suit of the United States farm demons', stration work. The sum of $S,000 Ie will given as prizes to the boys. This means that 3,000 young people of g the rural districts are training them" selves to be intelligent farmers of ie the future. . , , 2d'~ REBATE CHARGE UNPROVEN. < Commissioner McMaster Investigates Alleged Insurance Law Violation. Spartanburg, July 28.?State Insurance Commissioner F. H. McMas:er was here to-day to investigate :barges against Wade H. Smith, agent For the Union Central Life Insurance Company. The case was one of supposed violation of the anti-discrimination laws in regard to rebating. The investigation proved that Mr. Smith had committed no violation of the insurance laws. Mr. Smith was supposed to have offered a rebate to Mr. T. H. Reed, of Campobello, who took out a policy for $5,000 in the Union uentrai u.ne. < This supposition, it was proven, grew { 3ut of a misunderstanding of a state- _ aient made by Mr. Reed, in a conversation with Messrs. M. M. Mattison, < Df Anderson, and T. T. Goldsmith, of < Greenville, agents for another insur- ( ance company. Believe Robbery the Motive. * i Spartanburg, July 28.?It was re- < ported here to-night, at' a late hour, { that D. W. Miller, a stove repairer, who lives near Spartanburg junction, was found this evening lying on the i new cut road, near Pisgah church, < with a hole knocked in his head and < in an unconscious condition. Rob- ( bery is supposed to have been the ( motive of the deed. It is said that Mr. Miller travels * ever this country a great deal, re- < pairing and selling stoves, and that < he has at times about his person con- ( siderably money. If. | i If all who hate would love us, And all our lovers were true, The stars that swing above us : C-TT 1 J wouia unguieju 111 ulic uiuc, If cruel words were kisses, And every scowl a smile, A better world than this is Would hardly be worth while; If purses would enlighten To meet a brother's need, The load we bear would lighten Above the grave of greed. If those who whine would whistle, And those who languish laugh, The rose would route the thistle, The grain outrun the chaff; If hearts were only jolly, If grieving were forgot, And tears and melancholy = Were things that now are not? Then Love would kneel to Duty, And all the world would seem A bridal bower of beauty. A dream within a dream. If men would cease to worry, And women cease to sigh, And all be glad to bury Whatever has to die? If neighbor spake to neighbor As love demands of all, x The rust would eat the saber, The spear stay on the wall; Then every day would glisten, Ana every eye wouiu same, And God would pause to listen, And life would be divine. ?Anon. Watch the date on label of your paper and renew promptly. Now is the time to buy real estate. It is going at a price that will not grow less. We have some attractive bargains. C. H. MILHOUS, Manager = Denmark Realty Co. FRANCIS F. CARROLL Attorney-at-Law Offices Over Bamberg Banking Co. GENERAL PRACTICE. J. Aldrich Wyman E. H. Henderson Wyman & Henderson Attorneys-at-Law BAMBERG, S. C. General Practice. Loans Negotiated Shoe & Harness Repairing I have moved my shop to my new building in rear of Johnson's Hotel, by the passenger depot, where I am read to serve you with all kinds of harness and repairing, as well as new work in the harness line. Give me a trial. HEYWOOD JOHNSON BAMBERG. S. C. t DR. GEO. F. HAIR I J Dental Surgeon...Bamberg, S. C. + + In office every day in the week. * ? Graduate of Baltimore College J of Dental Surgery, class 1892. J ? Member S* C. Dental Associa- ^ tion. Office in old bank build- t iPg- i f W. P. RILE Y | Fire, Life f | Accident t 1 INSURANCE I" BAMBERG, S. C. |* * ^Carlide ^Fittir l| BAMBERG, SOUTH ( Eighteenth year begins Septembei |ft, ment. Strong faculty. All building j|' refurnished. HOT and COLD ARTE J* mitory. Unsurpassed health. Pure {poses. Separate dormitories and boa and girls. Such advantages as ath cieties, music, expression, etc. One hundred and fifty dollars pay 2 \othing can take the place of Our school is owned and controlled t ? prepare your son or daughter for a 3 the South. We have accommodation ber. Write at once for catalogue or ? J. CALDWELL GUILDS I No More with that automobile, bicycle, $ A have me to put it in first-class r< "r prepared to do your work as an] B1 cities, and my prices are about t gft, also have in stock a well selects ? AUTOMOBILE & BIC J which I will sell to you at closes if* what you need I will get it for 3 ^ the next one. When in need of "j don't forget me. VI work guai SJ. B. BR 4. The Repair Man TTTTTTTTTTTTTTI ii KEEP COOL! K DRINK TETLEY'S TEAS. DEI "PERFECTION" Lunch Tongue, Chipped B Fine for Auto Li I "GET THE HABIT." R JNO. W. 1' The Quality Store.1' Thoi BBBBHBBBWBHBW las since 1894 given "Thorough instruct! influences at the lowest possible cost." RESULT: It is to-day with its faculty of * * * * * # -AA 1 1 . _j_ 11 i its student Doay 01 mu, ana its piant wonn ; THE LEADING TRAINING SCHOOL $150 pays all charges for the year, including heat, laundry, medical attention, physical cu except music and elocution. For catalogue BLACKSTONE FEMALE INSTITl JAS. CANNON, Jr., M. A. \ THOS. R. REEVES, B. A.J 1 Telephone ani itTiijr^rO Whatwas 1 jS What is tl The telephone ans tions for thousands of F It will do this and mo cost of a telephone c small; the saving is gr< Our free booklet t< it. Write for it today. Farmers Line Depart SOUTHERN BELL TEI & TELEGRAPH CO 108 South Pryor SU Alia Subscribe for The Herald ai ind State news, only $1.00 p + ig School ? 1 :arolixa. x? r 21st. 1910. \>w Tnanacre- "B? ;s thoroughly repaired and jp 0 letics, library, literary sos all regular expenses. PROPER PREPARATION. 7 >y Wofford Colleges and we y ny school or university in Mm is for only a limited num- t * , M. A., Head Master. t Trouble | jun or pistol if you will epair. I am just as well Ap rone outside the larger X. ;wice as reasonable. I V a line of ?p YCLE SUPPLIES f t prices. If I haven't 7 ~ou just as prompt as ? anything in my line ^ # anteed. J ICK'LEf Bamberg, S. C. ? J g? :eepcool!|| JCIOUS WHEN ICED. 11 eef, Fresh Crackers |s. INQ 'PHONE 32 | | ^ ^ on under positively Christian 32, a boarding patronage of 328, > 8140,000 FOR GIRLS IN VIRGINIA I table board, room,lights, steam ilture, and tuition in all subjects and application blank address, JTE, Blackstone, Va. 4 Associate Principals. 1 Find Out! - .;4i he weather repor^^^ le market price ^ of cotton m team left town m * .any freight for me | want to buy 1 rt- ? i A J uie meeting ^ .-.j wers these ques> armers every day. re for you. The >n your Farm is iat. * dls you all about , Address ' men* J2PH0NE MpANY mta, Ga. t nd get all the County >er year.