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IXX; STEALS STEAK?MAX DEAD, j <Jeorgia Fanner Shoots City Mar-1 Ev shal who Asks Settlement. j Ik Lily, Ga., Nov. 1.?Wright Spradley, prominent farmer of Dolly county. shot and killed A. D. Goodwin, nii city marshal, here to-day because vie Godwin said that Spradley's bulldog wa stole a steak from the city market, coi The market is owned by Godwin's na brother, J. L. Godwin. ret According to persons who witness- ii ed the tragedy Spradley's bulldog <. < followed the owner into the market, tio and while Mr. Spradley was buying 3 meat and some fresh steaks, the dog of helped himself to a fresh, juicy steak, vie The proprietor of the meat market we wanted a settlement for the steak, do hut was refused. Then the meat man w r called his brother, the city marshal, he and demanded that Spradlev be fore- trs ed to settle. th< ? Spradlev and Godwin both drew ro guns when the proposition of set- iai tlement was made, and the shooting a i began. Five shots were fired in all. he Marshal Godwin fell mortally wound- wc ed and died within an hour. Mr. Pr ; Spradlev was not wounded. ph The doctors found that Mr. Godwin had been wounded twice in the f chest and once in the arm. Sheriff H. L. Davis, of Vienna, was t^( ? informed of the shooting and imme- j01 diately started to the scene in his an automobile. He found that Spradlev and his dog had disappeared, and is still scouring the countryside for Spradley. wj. Trouble in Store. Ch ???^ Miss Christie MacDonald believes gr( strongly in the value of a sense of 611 humor and tells a storv to illustrate , aa its power to lighten even the worst > . . . nil adversity, says \oungs Magazine. CO! "Thev were two newly arrived emier.i grants, and, having wandered far from the paths of civilization, had coi y fallen into the hands of a dusky sav- . bri age chief. The day after their capture their captor ordered them to go and gather fruit. gr< * "In due time the first returned, _ oGJ bearing a plentiful supply of grapes. ^ " 'What bringest thou?" asked the *, f Pai chief. " "Grapes, guv-nor.' mc " 'Then swallow them whole.' res "A peal of discordant laughter greeted this order, and the chief ? ^ cir frowned. " 'Why do you laugh?' he growled. ^ " 'Sorry, guv-nor.' apologized the prisoner, wiping his streaming eyes, , and striving to smother his convulsive chuckles: 'I was just thinking of pr< my poor old pal, Tommy. He's bring- ^ ^ ing cocoanuts!'" CHILD BURNED TO DEATH. Mother Faints While Running to jet Rescue Her Son. lor Clinton, S. C., Nov. 1.?Thomas us< Chapman, the 3-year-old son of Mr. th( and Mrs. Walter A. Davis, who live pe; about three miles east of Clinton, cr( was fatally burned yesterday afternoon while playing about the home. we Mrs. Davis had gone out in the frc yard about 12.30 o'clock to attend to no some domestic duties, and had left ar( the children in the back yard playing. Soon afterward she heard is screams and upon looking in the di- Iet rection of the house saw the child 011 Iai the back porch enveloped in flames. pe; She had a fence to cross before she ar( could go to the house, and in her fec efforts to reach the child she was so to overcome that she fainted. As soon f01 as she recovered sufficiently she f0I again ran in the direction of the house, but upon seeing the suffering p()1 child a second time she again fainted. When the child was reached it was all so badly burned that there seemed tj0 to be no hopes for its recovery. Phy- f sicians were immediately summoned. re, but despite their efforts to give re- t0 lief, death came about 5 o'clock. ? pe; DECLARES SEX CONTROL SURE. l0\ we Chicago Man Confident, After Years pei of Experimentation With Chickens, on mg Dr. Oscar Riddle's experiments in sex control have reached such a stage wi that he now asserts that he has secured such control over pigeons and m? doves. His experiments are contin- tQ ued daily in a large aviary, where he ^ has more than 500 pigeons and a barn yard full of chickens under be daily, almost hourly observation. t "Progress," he says, "seems to be m( rapid, but it will be years before we ad shall approach the human problem, ^ although from the results so far tQ achieved we are confident that that wj, will be possible." r ! The research work for sex con- of trol was begun by Prof. Whitman, of j the University of Chicago, in 1 903. r Dr. Riddle \yas his assistant. "1 know now." he says, "the difr-c hotiroon the mjilp and the on 1C1 cave UK C ? VV.U vuv ???-? -- female producing egg. But the facts eft" gained show that sex in the human m< being is not once for all determined, tin but will one day be capable of con- pn "trol. That I am convinced of thor- de oughlv."?Chicago Dispatch to New wi York World. en JAPS BAR SNAPSHOTS. angelist Describes Dangers that ?set Foreigners who Use Cameras. Travellers and missionaries who ike the mistake of photographing litary works in Japan and are con:ted oF it are required ever afterLrd to sign the description "exnvict" whenever they place their u:es on .a hotel register, check, Tipt, or any other paper, accord; to the Rev. Joseph H. Smith, the angelist of the Holiness Associan's Convention. Jr. Smith told of a number of cases missionaries who had been conited for this trivial offence and ;re compelled to set themselves wn as ex-convicts whereever they ote their names in Japan. Then told of his own and his wife's ivels together in Japan preaching 3 Gospel, and how near they came | being convicted because his wife \ locently turned her camera upon i structure which was discovered to ' part of the Japanese military j ?rks. He ascribed their escape to j ovidential protection.? Philadel-; ia Inquirer. At the Marriage Altar. The marriage of Mr James Mat3w Birds and Miss Amelia Mar-ie Armstrong was solemnized at early hour last Wednesday mornl at St. Peter's Episcopal church, v. W. A. Wye officiating. The church was prettily decorated j th palms and ferns and bespoke it something more than the usual urch services was to take place, the time announced the bride and ~ x - ? - j A f rv-\ n a ->om emereu lug unuiuu uuiu a omc trance, near the altar, -unattended, | d taking their place before the < nister were united in marriage acrding to the pretty and solemn cerlony of that church. After the ceremony the happy I :iple repaired to the home of the j ide's mother, where they will re-!. Le temporarily. The wedding trip s postponed on account of the Dom's connection with the Florida a Food Company, the business of lich required his attention at this :ticular time. The groom came to Fernandina >re than a year ago and since his >idence here has made many ends and stands well in business cles. The bride is a daughter of Mrs. C. . Weeks, and is one among the rest of our city's daughters. The many friends of tlie bride and )om wish them a long, happy and Dsperous life.?Fernandina, Fla., ws-Record. Pea Crop on Rented Land A reader asks: "Does it pay to a renter sow oats or wheat for e-third of the crop put in the landd's barn and allow the renter fre'fe 5 of the land to sow peas, or should j landlord also have a share of the as as rent on the land for that )p? If not, would it be better for 5 land to grow up in grass and eds to be turned under before >st than to have the land bare and thing to turn under after the peas i CUt?" If the pea crop is cut and sold, or cut and fed and the manure not ;urned to the land, we believe the ldlord should have a share of the a crop for rent. If the cowpeas i grazed off. or if the cowpea hay is i 1, the manure saved and returned the land, the landlord can well af-d to waive the rent of the land growing the pea crop, especially the renter will use 200 or 300 unds acid phosphate per acre on j j cowpeas. Practically the same swer applies to the second quesn. If the cowpeas are removed im the land and no stable manure urned, nor acid phosphate applied the pea crop, i,t will make little Terence to the landlord whether a a crop is grown or the land is alved to grow a crop of grass and eds to be plowed under. If the a crop is removed and nothing put the land, the amount of nitrogen ly be slightly increased, but the pply of phosphoric acid and potash 11 be reduced; while the growth of ass and weeds will add humusiking material but will neither add nor take from the supply of plant )ds in the soil. One-third the wheat crop should fair annual rent for the land and he landlord can make any arrangemt regarding the pea crop that will d to the fertility of the soil, he ould be willing to allow the renter grow a crop of peas after the teat is off. But if the land is to be bbed of nlant foods, by growing the pea crop, the landlord should I ve a share of the pea crop forj it.?Progressive Farmer. The new United States law. which otects all migratory birds, went into ect November 1st. and the new ?asure will be a great thing for s agricultural sections, as it will r\\*r\r^+ * /-? mlono-htar r\ f Vn rrl c* TvVtlpVl c v uill ui Mil uo ?? stroy insects. Federal authorities 11 co-operate with State officials in forcing the law. ? ORIGINAL JOSEPH'S WELL. It is Situated Near Cairo and is ol Large Circumference. Louis Parker's play, "Joseph anc His Brethren," with its scenic splendors, including a representation ol Joseph's well, reminds one that the remnants of the original well are tc be found at a spot situated directly on the canal route from Schechen: to Memphis about two miles southeast of Cairo. The well itself is ir the Court yard of some barracks belonging to the army of occupation. Near by is "the citadel," the second largest mosque in Egypt. The well bears signs of having been brick ed up. Yet it is easy to see uiai Joseph's discomfiture could not have been so great as one might imagine For this well, like all the wells ol Egypt, is one of a circumference much larger than those of to-da) and Joseph would have been able to exercise his limbs with ease b> walking around it. Moreover when the Nile is low these wells are quite dry.?London Correspondence tc New York Sun. Roads Win Mileage Book Fight. Washington, Oct.. 31.?The sale ol interchangeable mileage books with the requirement that the coupons be exchanged for tickets before a journey is begun was held by the commerce commission to-day to be neither discriminatory nor in violation ol law. The decision was reached in a proceeding prompted by a complaint ol the railroad commission of South Carolina directed against the practice of the Southern Railway and other roads operating in the South, which require that mileage shall be exchanged for tickets instead of being used directly for the checking of baggage or transportation upon trains The legislature of South Carolina passed an act requiring railroad companies operating in that State to receive coupons from mileage books on trains for transportation and for the checking of baggage. A similar Act passed by the Georgia legislature was vetoed by the Governor. The rairoads thereupon adopted a regulation 'that coupons from mileage books would not be accepted in exchange for a ticket for a journe> wholly within the State of Soutt Carolina. A new form of mileage book was issued for intrastate travel in that State. The State authorities complained tc the commission that South Carolina was being discriminated against. In its decision, however, the commission holds that the complaint "was based upon a desire to secure discriminatory advantages." In the belief of the commission and of Com. Marble, who prepared the opinion, such inconveniences as are caused to travellers by the use of the exchange mileage books can be removed easily by increased effici ncy in station operation. Various Opinions Expressed. Columbia, October 31.?That a 2cent passenger rate bill will be introduced at the next session of the General Assembly, that Senator Tillmar will introduce a bill requiring thai railroads honor South Carolina mileage books outside the State and thai the case will not be carried to the Supreme Court of the United States was the opinion given to-night bj several interested in the case, as the possible result of the interstate commerce commission's order turninf down the appeal of the South Carolina railroad commission to force the roads to accept interchangeable mileage. John G. Richards, Jr. chairman of the State railroad coin mission, could not be located in Columbia to-night. Other members ol the commission are in Washington attending the annual meeting of the railroad commissioners. J. Frasei Lyon, former Attorney General, represented the interests of the T. P. A in the fight before the railroad commission. He said to-night that in view of lack of funds that it was impossible to properly present the case to the interstate commerce commission. H said there was a number ol interruptions in the case, over which the attorneys had no control. Mr. Lyon made argument in Washington upon request of the T. P. A. and the railroad commission. KILLED IN PLANING MILL. Remains of M. T. Brogdon Interred Near Manning. Manning, Nov. 1.?Mr. Mark T Brogdon, formerly of this . county was killed in a planing nun in savannah about noon yesterday. The bod\ was brought here this morning and interred in the Tisdale family burying ground, about four miles west oi Manning. Mr. Brogdon was engaged as a machinist, and had just adjusted a planing machine that had got out of working order, and when he started in a board to see how the machine worked, a knot was struck, and a piece flew out, striking him in the chest killing him instantly. \ rM??j?rearer i FOR SALE 1 k beautiful home, situated on Spann street, I I. ana containing iy2 acre lot, with 2-story, 7-room v dwelling, with large closets and hallway; well of fine water; smoke house lbxl8; large barn and | ; -Pvti<ci4- + vooc r?n/^ oV?Y?nli'hpvT7 oil "fpriPPfl anH 9 i ^ 3 >5 Let U1CK> J 11 Ullf 11 CCi3 CtllVl kJAiX W. KJ UV/l J j uxi ivuvvu wuu u r ft in fine condition. Will go at a bargain to a buyer. | t I See me at once, as the time is limited. | I I TP O^IV P A I REAL ESTATE AGENT B L E 1 1 ^ ^ ^ 9 BAMBERG, S. C. Jt I SECOND HAND I 1 ; AUTOMOBILES For Sale, $125 up. Let me know your require- . .. > ments in used Autos and I can get a machine to suit you. i Prompt Attention to Repair Work ' Patrick's Garage, Bamberg, S.C. : itiBfek "Worth More ' V^Iljjr Than it Costs" ; Lots of farmers declare their telephone service ! is worth more than it costs. J. W. Harris, a well known farmer living near Choccolocco, Ala., writes: ? "I had occasion to call our doctor not two hours after my telephone was connected with I your exchange. My mother, who is very old, fell down the door steps and broke her arm, and I called the doctor. He was at my house before i I could have gone to his residence, as he has an automobile. "We would not be without our telephone for more than it costs and appreciate the assistance you rendered us." l ; Our free booklet tells how you may have telephone service on your farm at small cost. Write 1 lor it today. A postal will do. 1 FARMERS' LINE DEPARTMENT i SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY 1 8. PRYOR STREET ATLANTA, GA. # * . I _ ? [ J. C. LEE, President F. E. GIBSON, Sect'y & Treas. ) Farmers-Merchants-Builders If you are going to Build, Remodel or Repair, we invite your inquiries. i COMPLETE HOUSE BILLS A SPECIALTY t We manufacture and deal in Doors, Sash, Blinds, Stairs, interior trim, store fronts and fixtures, pews, pulpits, etc., rough and dressed lumber, lath, pine and cypress shingles, flooring, ceiling, siding. . Distributing Agents for Flintkote Roofing Estimates Cheerfully and Carefully made. Woodward Lumber Company AUGUSTA, GA. Corner Roberts & Dugas Streets OUR MOTTO: QUALITY SERVICE : WUENEVES III IEEI " IIIIM1MS Mi HUE'S The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic is Equally Valuable as a General Tonic because it Acts on the Liver, 1 Drives Out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builds up the Whole System, For Grown People and Children. & ? * You know what you are taking when you take Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic / 1. chnwincr that it contains the well known as tne iormuia ib pnmcu ? ?? 0 _ tonic properties of QUININE and IRON. It is as strong as the strongest bitter tonic and is in Tasteless Form. It has no equal for Malaria, Chills and Fever, ! Weakness, general debility and loss of appetite. Gives life and vigor to Nursing Mothers and Pale, Sickly Children. Removes Biliousness without purging. Relieves nervous depression and low spirits. Arouses the liver to action and I purifies the blood. A True Tonic and Sure Appetizer. A Complete Strengthener. t No family should be without it. Guaranteed by your Druggist. We mean it. 50c. If you write you should own a WaterI man's Fountain Pen. New line at the jlici aiu uuun, uiui^/. COLORED COUNTY FAIR A colored county fair at Denmark November 12th, 13th, 14th and 15th, 1913. This will be the sixth annual fair of the Bamberg County Fair Association. The object of the Association is to stimulate our people to a greater interest in agricultural, mechanical and other vocational pursuits and thereby in a tangible way lead them to labor for the things pertaining to the higher side of life. The Association has purchased ten acres of land out from Denmark for Fair pur? "es and are erecting thereon an e libit building thirty by seventy-m e reel. mis 01 course brings upon us a pretty fair expense. # This we are hopeful of meeting by the strong aid of our white friends, who have always aided us in this great industrial uplift. E. D. JENKINS, President. I. S. NIMMONS, Vice President. R. W. WROTON, Secretary. WALLACE W. CARTER, Treasurer. TAX NOTICE. The treasurer's office will be open for the collection of State, county, school and all other taxes from the 15 th day of October, 1913 until the 15th day of March, 1914, inclusive. From the first day of January, 1914, until the 31st day of January, 1914, a penalty of one per cent, will be added to all unpaid taxes. From the 1st day of February, 1914, until the 28th day of February, 1914, a penalty of 2 per cent, will be added to all unpaid taxes. From the 1st day of March, 1914, until the l$th day of March, 1914, a penalty of 7 per cent, will be addea to all unpaid taxes. TIJE LEVY. . For State Purposes 5% mills For county purposes 5% mills Constitutional school tax....3 mills For public schools 1 mill For roads Vz mill Total 15 ^4 mills SPECIAL SCHOOL LEVIES. Do rv-> Kovff \'n 14. Q mills uainw^itj) a^V. jl. i v ?? Binnakers, No. 12 3 mills Buford's Bridge, No. 7 2 mills Clear Pond, No. 19 2 mills Colston, No. 18 2 mills Cuffie Creek, No. 17 2 mills Denmark, No. 21 6*4 mills Ehrhardt, No. 22 9 mills Fishpond, No. 5 . 2 mills Govan, No. 11 4 mills Hutto, No. 8 2 mills Hampton, No. 3 2 mills Hey ward, No. 24 .*. 2 mills Hopewell, No. 1 3 mills Hunter's Chapel, No. 16 4 mills Lees, No. 23 4 mills Midway, No. 2 2 mills Oak Grove, No. 20 2 mills Olar No 8 9 mills St.John's, No. 10 2 mills Salem, No. 9 3 mills Three Mile, No. 4 2 mills All persons between the ages of twenty-one and sixty years of age, except Confederate soldiers and sailors, who are exempt at 50 years of age, are liable to a poll tax of one dollar. Capitation dog tax 50 cents. All persons who were 21 .years of age on or before the 1st day of January, 1913 are liable to a poll tax of one dollar, and all who have not made returns to the Auditor, are requested to do so on or before the 1st of January, 1914. I will receive the commutation road tax of two ($2.00) dollars from the loth day of October, 1913, until the 1st day of March, 191*4. G. A. JENNINGS, Treasurer Bamberg County. For Weakness and Loss of Appetite The Old Standard general strengthening tonic 3ROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC, drives ou Malaria and builds np the system. A true toni< nd sure Appetizer. For adults and children. 50c To Prevent Blood Poisoning apply at once the wonderful old reliable DR. PORTER'S ANTISEPTIC HEALING OIL. a surgical dressing that relieves pain and heals at the same time. Not a liniment. 25c. 50c. $1.00. To euro a eolU in One Day LA Jx AY rYE EROMO Quinine. It stops thi :ough and Head ache and works off the Cold. 'rusrgists re/und monfy if it fails to cure, v. V7. GJtOVFV --icnaturc on each box. 25c. E. H. HENDERSON j Attorney-at-Law BAMBERG, S. C. General Practice. Loans Negotiated. * . 3 J. F. Carter B. D. Carter GARTER & CARTER Attorneys-at-Law BAMBERG, S. C. Special attention given to settlement of estates and investigation of land titles. GRAHAM & BLACK | Attorneys-at-Law Will practice in the United States and State Courts in any County in the State. BAMBERG, S. C. FIRE INSURANCE j - ? Old Line Companies J. F. FOLK, Agt. BAMBERG, S. C. Kaiser & Walker | Plumbing, Heating, Roofing Modern and Sanitary Plumbing. Private Water Systems Installed. Sanitary Septic Tanks Installed. Bamberg Parties Inquire at The Herald Office. * ifirw c r . u* v. -