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I Olhr lambrrg iirrali H Xe ESTABLISHED APRIL, 1891. A. W. KNIGHT, Editor. tra Published every Thursday in The D. Herald building, on Main street, in pej the live and growing City of Bam- an berg, being issued from a printing office which is equipped with Mer- t)0' genthaler linotype machine, Babcock wo cylinder press, folder, one jobber, a da] fine Miehle cylinder press, all run by electric power with other material and machinery in keeping, the whole gal equipment representing an invest- an< ment of $10,000 and upwards. 0f Subscriptions?By the year $150; six months, 75 cents; three months, an< 50 cents. All subscriptions payable ue< strictly in advance. aln Advertisements?$1.00 per inch ^ for first insertion, subsequent insertions 50 cents per inch. Legal ad- J vertisements at the rates a1 lowed by to-v law. Local reading notices 10 cents ter a line each insertion. Wants and , other advertisements under special p head, 1 cent a word each insertion. str Liberal contracts made for three, six, toe and twelve months Write for rates. 0f Obituaries, tributes of respect, reso- .. lutions, cards of thanks, and all notices of a personal or political char- ter acter are charged for as regular ad- cat vertising. Contracts for advertising j not subject to cancellation after first insertion. rel .Communications?We are always to glad to publish news letters or those Cai ^pertaining to matters of public interest. We require the name and ad- ^ dress of the writer in every case, tra No article which is defamatory or con offensively personal can find place in wa? our columns at any price, and we are not responsible for the opinions expressed in any communication. der the Thursday, Oct. 31, 1912. A ] We certainly wouldn't want a man . wh< like Pope Havird turned loose in a community where we lived. ^ ^? The New York Sun's estimate of a gentleman has been going the rounds of the State press recently. Frankly, does any one know of such j a man?* ter] Keep your eye on the coming ses-- ^ a< t" 1"* P sion of the general assembly. It will Li*c be interesting to note what kind of ma a record will be made along the line eia of economy. ^ar res: Be sure to vote against the asylum fou bond issue next Tuesday. If the tax ma payers votfe a million dollar bond is- wai sue for the asylum next thing they ed will be called on to vote about the ed ' same amount for a new State house, so ^ * har We believe the parcels post, to be inaugurated the first of the coming ^v year, will be a great thing for the ^ country newspapers, for it is going to force the home merchants to advertise if they want to compete . ing With the mail order houses. . ?? flici It looks to us mightily like there Mr. was something back of the arrest Pisi of the three parties in Greenville mei charged with assisting in the escape ^or of Vaughn. He was of course as-1 to Kistpri in makine his escape, but it i &t will take more than his unsupported word to make us believe anything tha against anybody. wei ? unc One of the smallest things we not have heard of recently was the action of the commissioners of elec- js tion in Marlboro and Orangeburg W01 ' counties refusing to publish the no- thi< tices of election in the Pee Dee Ad- jn vocate and the Times and Democrat. Those papers supported Judge Jones, HA .and the action of the commissioners was in the way of revenge we guess. ^'ltl We have not noticed similar action in other comities. Roosevelt's new party claims to be cle* strictly a white man's party in the Mc< South, yet in the North negroes are noc admitted. There were several, ne- har gro delegates in the New York State en, convention, and they forced the con- on vention to adopt a plank in the plat- ed form protesting against discrimina- litt tion against negroes in hotels and Pre cafes. How many South Carolina ma men who are supporting Roosevelt to t would like to stop at a hotel with -wit their wives and daughters where ne- fat: groes were premitted? aga We must say tnat it iooks nae . . ach prohibition has been and still is a era failure in Bamberg county. Con- ^ ditions seem to be growing worse so ^ far as lawlessness and crime is con- ^ cerned, but whether prohibition is gr the real reason we are not prepared j to say. However, it is certain that there are more murder cases to be ^ tried at the coming term of court ver thanvever before, and several of these _ ma killings are directly traceable to ^ whiskey. There is a reason for such nei a heavy criminal docket at this court, ^ and no doubt different people will have different solutions of the prob- g lem. ? It will hardly be claimed, how- ^ ever, that prohibition has been productive of good results in Bamberg j, county, no matter how much oppos- - ' ed to whiskey one may be. Is it . ^ noi time for the good people to become aroused to conditions? , lad Cotton Market. mo wh Cotton is selling in Bamberg to- wit clay (Wednesday) at 11 cents the ing pound. The receipts for the week the ending Tuesday night were 683 goc bales, and for the season 6,524. 30. \ ORRIBLE DOUBLE TRAGEDY. B< gro Kills Another and Then Sends H Load Through His Heart. Bowman, Oct. 25.?A double gedy occurred yesterday on Mr. Y C. Pendarvis's plantation in up- fa * Dorchester county, near the Or- st geburg county line, the victims C< :h being negro men with families, J. rking 6hare crops with Mr. Pen- st wis. From information that could be ai :hered the parties were at work ^ I it is said that Jule Bowman, one m the victims, tok up a shotgun, I walked up to Jule Jones who was o< ir by and shot him at close range, lost blowing the entire head from ca i body, causing instant death. Bowman then, it is stated, started vc rards his house not far off, and af- v going a short distance sat down, * [led off one shoe and taking the 1 0C ing from it, tied it to one of his 3.1 s and the other end to the trigger - - * i - -9 j. J. _ ~ i ^fi. ills gun ana piacmg it to uis icn. e fired the weapon, the load en- se ing the body near his heart and dc ising death instantly. s? [t is said that there was no quaring or any words passed previous bl or the shooting. Mr. Olin. P. Evans, Tier R. F. D. No. 3 from Bowman, ;sed the place at the time of the gedy. The coroner of Dorchester hi mty was notified and an inquest m< 5 held that afternoon, but nothing of ther was obtainable as to the evi- ni ice, or finding of the jury as to hi cause of tragedy. It is indeed T1 emarkable case and unparalleled to this entire section of the country. H< aegro suicide is indeed rare any- he ere. Gi er GKO FIRES UPON CONSTABLE. el] et: t is Himself Shot by Edgefield Officer?Caught at Johnston. hi ' f e: Sdgefield, Oct. 29.?Yesterday afnoon Constable Moultrie, of this ? ia ce, armed with a warrant, went to W' home of Herlder Jones, a negro u, to arrest him. Jones lives sev- . f e: 1 miles in the country, and it was ni k when the officer reached his .. it idence. On reaching the house he nd the door fastened. He dended that the negro come for- * ' "d and surrender. This he refus- ' D( to do, whereupon the officer startlo enter the house, and as he did a the negro made his exit, gun in ^ id. Again he was ordered to surw i der, the command being answered ^ a shot fired upon Mr. Moultrie, be 1 although the men were in close ^ ximity the one to the other, the an 3 went "wild of its mark. The firnc was returned by the officer, inco ting two wounds upon the negro. Moultrie, who had emptied his tol, and was practically at the rcy of Jones, telephoned to town assistance, which was responded by several citizens. On arriving ga the scene the negro could not be av nd, ana this morning it develops ry t, after being shot, he hurriedly it to Johnston where he now is ed ler the care of a physician. It is nu thought that his wounds are te Lgerous. But for the darkness it na very probable that Mr. Moultrie Bi iiri htiva inst his life. Matters of I > kind are of very rare ocurrence this county. Kl er XS, JR., & HANS, SR., DEPART. fo tie Stowaway and His Father Be- 0 JtV< gin Voyage Across Seas. co "I ^.s the British steamer Moorlands , ired the wharves of the Rogers- ,, th Cabe Company yesterday after- , m and sailed out of Charleston bor, loaded with cotton for Brempc a little blue-eyed boy stood out on the stern of the big ship and wavhis handkerchief in farewell. The 1^ fellow was no other than Hans ledicker, the eight-year-old Gern boy who came as a stowaway Fi ;his country to hunt rabbits. Along h Hans on his return trip is his her, and both go back much linst their own wishes. Bi Jans, Jr., has experienced many fo ventures, and has achieved sev- o'f ,1 columns of newspaper notoriety re ce coming to this country. Al- ot ugh he has spent most of his time w *e in the county jail as a trans- m s^tor against the immigration ha ,'s, he made lots of friends, some to whom offered to adopt him. This, cl< vever, the immigration laws pre- ti< ited. He has to return to Gerny and wait until his father can bj ng him back in a legitimate man- Lk Little Hans showed his manners w] en he shook hands with Jailer K< nnett and Assistant Levy, and or .nked them for the kindness that m y showed him while he was in the As son. Neither did he forget Mrs. yo the kind wife of the assitant G( [er, or the other members of the I force. A number of German lit ies called at the jail yesterday at rning to bid Hans good-bye, and Bi en the little fellow 4eft he carried h him several packages contain- br delicious eatables given him by St se friends that called to ten mm tn >d-bye.?News and Courier, Oct. th OY CHOIR SINGER A BURGLAR. as Sweet Smile and a Long Record T1 of Crime. f A well-dressed boy, says a New ork special, with a bright, honest M .ce, sauntered through Woodbine ? reet, Brooklyn, last evening and at th sntral avenue Detective Thomas tb Cavanaugh, of the Ralph avenue ation, hurried up to him and said: w ? ?-? 3 n?i, t al " well, ttaymuuu JDtsun., a Bee yyu ? e back at your old tricks again. e3 ow many burglaries have you com- ^ ited since you escaped from the ?* lvenile Protectory at Dobbs Ferry, Dtober 12?" sW The boy laughed and remarked, . ,lmly: "So you've got me again, have ^ >u, Cavanaugh? I'll tell you one ^ ling. It's well for you that you m dn't come on me when I was heel- ja I. You'd never have lived to make n< lother arrest." Cavanaugh caught the boy and UI arched him. It has been known for rQ tys that the Brooklyn choir singer, n of a respectable family, living at tc 3. 7 Cypress avenue, who turned .-u 1 -1 A ^ irgiar a year ago, wnen ?*, was j P med. in Boy's Amazing Boldness. ar The boldness this boy displays in af s burglaries was such that for onths during the summer and fall se 1911 he puzzled the police. At pi ght he would play checkers with sp s father or mother until bedtime, ac len he would go to his room only 'Y sneak out later and rob a house. I 2 was captured after robbing the or ime of Mrs. Mary Sterns at No. 972 ev *eene avenue, where he took sev- 'y? al hundred dollars worth of jewry and cash, and two theater tick- th s. hi He used these theater tickets and hi s arrest resulted. He then con- oi ssed to twenty or more robberies, in That Raymond Beck, "the sweet- le ced boy singer." as he was called, b? is the burglar who so puzzled the ri, >lice was not believed until he con- P< ssed. First he was sent to the juvele asylum at Chauncey, N. Y., but M could not hold him, so cunning be is he, and he escaped from there pc arch 16. 'He was captured and pi nt to the Juvenile Protectory at U: )bbs Ferry. Ri As soon as he escaped from there fr series of puzzling robberies began, bj anday afternoon Mrs. Stern's home m is robbed again, the thief usin? gi '1 -a n ? e exact metnoas usea 111 uie ruu- ui ry a year ago. She went to Capt. at lhne at the Ralph avenue, station a id said: "If that Beck boy wer^ th >t in the protectory I would say *fr mmitted this second robbery." J ey "But he isn't in the protectory, in ^ has escaped." th Robs More Houses. ) The next day Mrs. Gertrude Bel- sp rd's home, at No. 899 Jefferson t0 enue, was robbed of money, jewel- ex 's jn and a revolver. . ; A series of robberies were report- se P( by the residents of Woodb-'ne aveLe. Two or three houses^ were en- ^ red almost every day. and Cava- w< hr ,ugh kept watch on that section of c V] ooklyn in the hopes of catching lymond. The boy was taken into Capt. uhne's office and searched and jew- ^ P( ly belonging to Mrs. Belgard was und in his pockets. ,fE "Sure, I did all those robberies, '. 111 f V lymond said to Capt. Kuhne, acrding to Kuhne's statement later" w "Hr 'd have done a lot more, too, if it .dn't been for this cop. He turned al e same trick on me a year ago and in 1 get him yet. See if I don't." The boy was asked why it was im- * ssible Tor him to reform. He burst it laughing and cursed Kuhne and SL ivanaugh for preaching to him. nc NOTE LEFT BY SUICIDE. - tu ri< irther Details of Death of F. Mi a? Brown, of Brunson. ec dc Brunson, Oct. 29.?Mr. F. M. ar -own, a citizen of Brunson, was ve und dead in his back yard at 9 Vi clock yesterday morning, his body tt clining against the outer wall of an C< it house, his clothing drenched to ith blood from a wound in hie ar outh and head where a pistol ball ui Ld passed through from the mouth back of the skull. His pistol was la 3se by his side with a freshly emp- C< id chamber. 01 A note written by Brown was close tl< r his side, sealed and directed to la )cal Magistrate Dowling as follows: m "Get my shop book and collect as bat is on it and give it to my wife, m eep enough for your trouble. No le will refuse to pay you, it is for a y wife and children, not for me. re 5 this is the last thing I can ask th >u to do please do that for my wife. N< )od-bye." of The deceased left a wife and three I sh ? . . j tie children. His parents, Drotners rr id sisters live in the vicinity of qu 'unson. in A . few months ago a younger an other met a violent death in the wi ate of New York as a soldier in st e U. S. army. jo His aged father is a veteran of fir e Confederate war. en i 1 WOMEN SAW SHIP DUEL. housands Witnessed the Fight Be :ween the Monitor and Merrimac. A great deal is being said abou rs. Pickett?as Miss Sally Corbel -being the only woman who sa^ ie fight between the Merrimac an ie Monitor. As a matter of fact, thousands o omen saw it, and thousands ar ive to-day, who, asyoung girls, wer re-witnesses to this memorabl ?ht, to say nothing of those on th jposite snore within the raaius o ewport News and Old Point, write T. Campo, of Norfolk, Va., to th rashington Post. Said an admiral of the navy: "I well recall the fight between th errimac and the Monitor. I was itle fellow 10 years of age, visitin y uncle in Norfolk, who lived in rge brick house with a flat roo jar the water. As a child I playe< sailoring. I remember how m icle dragged me up-stairs to th of, on which there was a platform here, with his field glasses, he lovei look out over Hampton Roads. H mped me up on this platform am irang up after me, and taking im his arms adjusted the spy glasse id told me to look at the ship ire. I looked long and earnestly. "Presently he said: 'What do yoi e?' Breathless and eager, I re ied, 'I see specks, uncle?littl ecks.' 'Specks!' he roared. The: [justing the glass, he demanded /hat do you see now?' 'Oh! uncle see millions and millions of peopl l the houses, on the shore am erywhere!' 'H?1!' he exclaimed ou'll make a devil of a sailor.' "I see him now, tall and slim, lik e mast of a ship, standing 6 feet 4 s figure outlined against the skj s field glass in his hand, lookinj it over Hampton Roads. On com g down from the roof my unci arned that my aunt and cousin Ld harnessed the horses to the car age and driven away to Sewall )int." The initiative was between th errimac, a sister ship of the Cum irland, which lay close up to New >rt News, guarding the camp at tha ace, and the wooden ships of th flited States navy lying in th oads. The Turtle, formerly th igate Merrimac, now reconstructe r the Confederates at the Ports /MifVi noT7v varH anH namprt thp VlT V/UbU UU? J J UA u MMV* V? V w . nia, steamed silently and secretl it of the navy yard at Portsmoutt id as she crept along, with scarcel ripple on the water, the people o: e wharves and along the rive ont of the two cities stood wide ed in astonishment, none suspect g her mission, many ignorant o e kind qf craft she represented. Like a rongue of flame the new read and in less time than it take tell it the cities were wild wit! citement. Every livery stable wa vaded, every horse and vehicle wa ized, and the road to Sewall Dint, off which the battle too! ace, swarmed with people, men am Dmen, boys and girls, hurrying wit! eathless interest, wrondering "wha e would do." The Norfolk Light Artillery Blues e oldest military organization i: e State, was camped at Sewall Dint, the men and officers resplend it in their new uniforms glistenin the sun, doing duty as hosts t Le handsome girls from Norfolk ho had\ come in their carriage; inging suspicious looking hamper; 1 unmindful of the tragedy await g the first shot. We all know the history of tha ;ht. The Virginia, having broke: >r prow ramming the Cumberland king that vessel; the Congres irned to the water's edge; the Mir ssota, in flames, backed off and re rned to her dock, where her inju es were repaired, steaming ou ;ain in the morning to be confront I by the Monitor, which had com >wn in the night and lay nosin; ound Old Point awaiting her ad >rsary. A few shots were fired, th irginia retired to her dock and o: te evacuation of Norfolk by th mfederates, Commodore Tatnal ok her down the Elizabeth rive Ld when off Crany Island blew he ). To have witnessed the fight, as re ted by Mrs. Pickett, when as Sail Drbell she "rode across the countr 1 horseback" from her father's lit 3 farm near Chuckatuck, wher ter Gen. Pickett was camped am et his bride, the lady shows hersel : remarkable a girl as later a wo an. Tn spp that fieht she had to cros river four miles wide in order t ach Newport News, which, wit] e outlying country from Newpor 2ws to Old Point, was in the hand the Federals camped along th< ores. Her daring in swimming ; ver four miles wide, the staying lalities of the horse, her clevernes: being able to penetrate the line: id be permitted to come and go a ill, her splendid physique in with anding the hardship of the Ion? urney, alone and unprotected, t< id that Sewalls Point, where tin .gagement took place, was eigh f Whcrfw/dyots/ t o/dage he ?/ | & Every old man is 1 e younger days, A man s night. A.ge creeps upon s is stealing away our moi j our capacity for work a desolate old age. If yoi J you must begin putting e then when old age come 41 ? X? A V7Z77I ft liiC JLA1.KJ1M.K?y y KJIA [' I Do YOUR bai fl e 9 We pay 4 per cent, 3 I ed quarterly on si e I Farmers & M / ? EHRHAE e IX CELL WITH HER DAUGHTER. s Lucile Cameron's Mother Does so Bes cause of the Moral Effect. Chicago, Oct. 25.?Three United States deputy marshals to-day served many new subpoenas on persons who are to'appear before the federal t grpnd jury investigating the Jack Johnson-Lucile Cameron case when e ? it resumes its sessions on Monday e d morning. Federal officials said that more than 100 witnesses will have been heard before the inquiry has been completed^ It developed Nthat Mrs. Camerony Falconnet, mother of Lucile Cam? eron, the white girl mentioned in r connection with the case, occupies the cetl with her daughter at Rockford, 111., in order to keep the girl - under her influence. The girl is held by the federal officers, she having been unable to furnish $25,000 3 ba?k A subpoena has been issued for a -West Side manufacturer, who is said by the federal officers to have introduced the Cameron girl to the negro j, champion pugilist in the latter's cafe ^ in West 31st street, k A subpoena also has< been issued t for Sig Hart, a widely known sporting man who is to be one of the important witnesses. Government aun' thorities say there will be supoenas issued for other persons believed to have knowledge of conditions in the _ negro's cafe. 5 0 Jacksonville's Street Car Men Quit. 3, Jacksonville, Oct. 28.?The street 5, railway employees of this city succeeded in perfecting an organization at 3 o'clock this morning and 150 of t the 175 employed on the lines in this n city have left their positions. I, , All the street cars in the city with s the exception of three or four were i- at a standstill this morning and s- thousands of business men and emi ployees were late in reaching their t offices and business houses as a resuit of the strike, e The trouble has been brewing for g several days and the strike has 1- threatened since the middle of last e week. The failure of the men to n perfect their organization, however, e delayed the break between the com11 pany and its employees, r The carmen are demanding that r the company reinstate 25 men who are said to have been discharged last i- week for taking the first steps to A ^^#antinor tVlO r fan 1za.ti o n of V Wdl U yet icvwub tuv y the employees, and a recognition of the new street carmen's union. e ^ Kills Himself by Accident. f Tampa, Fla., Oct. 28.?Climbing into an automobile dragging a loaded shotgun behind him caused the s death of Plink Reasoner, the 15-year0 old son of E. C. Reasoner, a promi^ nent nurseryman of Onoeco. The hammer of the gun caught on s the step of the automobile and the 8 gun went off, the charge entering 1 the lad's breast, going through his ? heart. Death was almost instantane5 ous. s ? t miles away, was an undertaking - worthy of a Roman maiden, but to ia ?mnnpr thft 5 S2?y L 1Y1 1 ?> iT Vl> %M ??? w?g ?r?<<r ) few who saw the duel" is not borne 2 out by the history of that eventful t time. 7ji^| ' | faxo/eJ pz? thewe A b/ e/eAt or xfra verier nee -BcrjzA ur/no&eyrf the ripened fruit of his does not grow old oyerizs, and if extravagance ney, age is stealing away and preparing us for a 1 wish to be comfortable, < away your money now, ?s you can fall bach upon D when you were younger ihing with US, interest compoundivings deposits erchants Bank *DT, S. C. I M IMPROVED EARLY TOOLE. Come to the Home Place and see the way Hite's Improved Early ? Toole fruits. After you've seen that, go over the books with me and let me show you the lint out turn for the season. Twelve hundred and fifty pounds seed cotton gives five hundred weight bale. . ' Then if you want fine seed, bring me two bushels of seed for one of mine. A Bamberg or Denmark oil mill seed receipt will be all right. KENNERLY MAYFIELD, Denmark, S. C. J. Aldrich Wyman E. H. Henderson , Wyman & Henderson Attorneys-at-Law BAMBERG, S. C. General Practice. Loans Negotiated. WE'RE NOT ASHAMED TO SHOW how our carriages are made. In fact the more you examine them the better we will be pleased and you will too. For our carriages are not built merely to sell. They are built . to wear so well that you will come back when you need another and tell 5 your friends to come here too. HORSES AND MULES. G. FRANK BAMBERG, Bamberg, S. C. H. M. GRAHAM Attorney-at-Law Will practice in the United States and State Courts in any County in the State. BAMBERG, S. C. J. F. Carter B. D. Carter CARTER & CARTER { Attorneys-at-Law BAMBERG, S. C. Special attention given to settlement of estates and investigation of land titles. CHICHESTER S PILLS TIIE DIAMOND BRAND. A Pills in Red and Gold m?aliIc\^Xy boxes, sealed xrith Blue Ribbon. \f W Take no other. Bar ofrpar " . rj - nr m* fo? cm-citch-tee s! I U JjP DIAMOND BRAND PILLS, for Ul B years known as Best, Safest Always Reliable 4 SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE n PORTABLE AND STATIONARY Engines AND BOILERS Saw, Lath and Shingle Mills, Injectors, Pumps and Fittings, Wood Saws, Splitters, Shafts, Pulleys, Belting, Gasoline Engines _____ \ LARUESTOCK LOMBARD Foundry, Machine, Boiler Works, Supply Store. AUGUSTA, GA. , "Is - \ .