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HELD FOR SUPERIOR COURT. Proprietor of Rock Springs HoU Jailed on Suspicion of Murder. Wilmington, X. C., August 12.J. C. Holly, proprietor of the Roc Springs hotel, which was burned se eral nights ago, the dead body ( Edward Cromwell being found in tl ruins, several hours after the fir was committed to jail to-day wit] out bond, the verdict of the coroner jury being, "The facts and circur stances introduced before this jui warrant the holding without bond < J. C. Holly for the superior court." Holly had the boy's life insure for $2,500 and furniture in the buil< ing insured also. Cromwell is sa: to have been from Charleston. Profits from South Carolina Farm Columbia, August 13.?Thi trucking pays in South Carolina shown by the following item take from the Manufacturers' Record < the last issue, under the caption < "The Lettuce King:" On a recent visit to Savanna! where he gave orders for pipes ar other appurtenances of $6,000 irr gation plant, Mr. C. U. V. Bento who is making a specialty of raisir lettuce near Beaufort, S. C., ga^ some facts as to the productivene: of the soil in trucking. He cultivati between 30 and 35 acres of land, ar raises between $40,000 and $50,0( worth of lettuce, besides cucumber potatoes, etc. During the season 1 ships North three carloads of lettu* a day and 150 carloads of truck day have been shipped from his se tion. He was asked by the Savanna News whether he would take $100 a acre for his land, and in reply sai that some Northerners inquirir whether he would take $1000 a acre for the land on which his la crop was growing were told that eac ? c J +1.MT corr- inOfl mm iiCXtr Ui lauu LUC.i oan wuw<?vv> than $2000 worth of lettuce. M Benton let a man plant an acre c shares, and the net profit from th acre on one crop of lettuce that wi made in 70 days was $1456. BURGLAR SHOOTS SWEETHEAR1 Girl is Seriously Wounded and Ma Shot Twice in Neck. New York, August 13.?Miss Et Grossman was so seriously wound( this evening that she will probab die and her sweetheart, Meyer Bat nowitz, was shot twice in an encoun er which aroused the neighborhoo After a number of shots were fire policemen entered the apartment ar found the young lady shot throug the chest and her admirer with bullet in his neck. The girl was hurried to Gouve neur hospital, but Babinowitz wj able to talk and said that while 1 was visiting Miss Grossman to who he was engaged, a stranger enterc the apartment and was robbing when Babinowitz found him. T1 shooting followed, the robber empt ing his revolver and then disappea ing with some of the loot. New Post Office for Branchville. Branchville, August 11.?T1 new United States Post Offi< will soon be ready for the postmast* to occupy, and Branchville shou congratulate herself for being favo ed with such a nice place. All ai ready to admit that this is one it provement that Mr. J. Marion Byr our efficient postmaster is largely, not wholly responsible in getting f< out town and this should be appr ciated by every patron. Mr. Byi * ~ flTld t.OOlv R 5>Ct? 111C yyj(uivi?uivj _ vantage of it. The post office buil ing is centrally located, being < Main street and near the corner 1 Edward street, the building is ow ed by Mr. H. D. Steedly. The furr ture in the post office is of the la est style, being of quartered oa The office will be occupied on tl 15th.?Branchville correspondent Times and Democrat. TORN FROM* HIS BRIDE. Young Soldier Arrested at Columb for Desertion. Columbia, August 13.?Arrest* on the charge of desertion from tl United States army, Wilbur R. Bai said to be a private, was taken fro his home, 1408 Lumber street, ai in charge of a detective placed aboa n train for Charleston. If he is returned to the compai to which he belongs it will be nece sary for him to cross the countr as his regiment is now stationed the State of Washington. He will ! court-martialed and if convicted w be disciplined by confinement at ha 'r labor. There is a story of pathos in t" arrest of Barr, as he was compell to leave behind him a young ai pretty wife. Mr. and Mrs. Ba liave been residents of Columbia sin he left the army and the leave ta ing was one that touched the heai of all who witnessed the scene. Wh the woman realized that her husbai must leave her for months and suff punishment, she broke down a: y tears of anguish flowed uncontrolle A SPECIAL CAR FOR A DOG. >1 The Drews, Too, Are Traveling in It to San Francisco. ? New York, August 11.?F. F. jk Drew, a lumberman, who lives in v- San Francisco, got here from Paris of recently with his wife and decided ie yesterday to start for the Pacific e, coast. The Drews had with them a h- dog named Radium. Mrs. Drew 's didn't want Radium to travel across a- the continent in a baggage car and :y it was against the rules of the comof pany to have the dog go in the sleeper. >d Mr. Drew settled all this very i- handily by hiring the special car, id Plymouth Rock, which was attached to the Chicago special on the NewYork Central which lett at 12:40 yesterday afternoon for Chicago. The private car w-ill be tacked on to a * Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul 1S train, then to San Francisco. All it >n will cost Mr. Drew is $2,000. Df ^ ^ Murdered His Five Children. Vienna, August 11.?A terrible LC* family tragedy is reported from Bud>i_ apest, where Joseph Molnar, a posta? office employee and the father of five young children sent his wife under *e some pretext to town and when she 5S left killed all of the five children with ac * " - ? ? infliftfinor HmHIv ms razor, uudn.t v. l(* injuries on himself. Before expiring, he said that he s' preferred his children should die ie rather than suffer from such terri:e ble poverty, his monthly salary bea ing only 55s. Frau Molnar at the c* sight of the six bodies became inlh sane. in i id THE COURT AXD A CRAP GAME. tg tn Kernochan, Who Knows Hardest Point, Decides 'Twas Real. :h :e New York, August 11.?Adolph r* Lock, of 179 Middleton street, Brook,n lyn, was charged in Essex Market po1S lice court yesterday with being a 15 common gambler. Policeman Joseph H. Miller, of the Delancey street stapg tion, said that in plain clothes he entered the house at 26 Avenue C. and n there found Lock running a crap game. "Describe the game," said Magistrate Kernochan. "I know how to la play the game, for I've played it my[v self, but give me detils. (j*_ Miller explained how the game was t_ played. On the first roll he lost, but d he won the second." jj "What was your point?" asked the l(j magistrate. "Four, ' said Miller. a Magistrate Kernochan nodded his head appreciatively "Good shooting," r_ he said; "that's the hardest point on as the dice." ie He then held Lock in $1,000 bail m for trial. * BIRTH OF TWIN CALVES. it ie ~ A Phenomenon Took Place at Cayce r. Farm in Lexington. Columbia, August 12.?This one sounds big, but it is vouched for by ie the weather prophet, Wm. P. Houseal, A. M., of Newberry college, one " of the editors of the Lutheran Church sr ld Visitor and manager of the big publishing house of the Lutheran denomination in Columbia; so it must re be all right: d A periodical event of reguiar recurrence on the Cayce farm, at Cayce just beyond the Congaree in Lexington county from Columbia, has again ,*d occurred, after the lapse of 2 1-2 years?the oirth of twin calves in the a- * d Cayce pasture. The last previous occurrence of the >n phenomenon was in 1908, but both Q_ the calves perished in the August freshet last year. ^ l win caives nave apprmcu vu we Cayce farm during the past 15 years ae at regular intervals of 2 1-2 years. - The breed is from the farm of Mr. Alex. C. Guinard. WHITES AND BLACKS RIOT. ,ja Three Whites Shot, Two Probably Fatally, in Hand-to-Hand Fight. 5d New York, August 12.?Three tie white men were shot and two of them r, probably fatally wounded in a shootin ing affair and hand-to-hand fight late id to-night in Douglas club, a negro rerd sort in West Twenty-eight street. Sixty men, whites and blacks, ly mixed, participated in the struggle, is- The wounded are: John McCarthy, y, 20 years old, shot in the left side and in said to be dying; Joseph Crvions, 20 be years old, shot in the right side, and ill right arm, condition critical; Will rd Deherens, 22 years old, shot in right shoulder. be A fourth man was said to have ed been shot and hustled away by tid friends. Twenty others were injured. ti,0 nonco nf g-nn fieht and i i X uc vauov vjl v**v o ?w ce general struggle was precipitated by k- an insult offered a negress singer by *ts a white man. More than 30 shots en were fired. nd The white men were mostly East er Siders, who had gone to the resort ad In search of the negro assailant of an id. East Eider recently shot. KILLS AND MANGLES SON. Father Cuts Young Man Then Stamp on Him. Winston-Salem, X. C., August 11 ?Thomas Jarvis, a young farmer, o Davie county, was killed by his fa ther. William Jarvis, near Advance to-day. According to reports re ceived here the father and son go into a dispute which ended by th elder Jarvis drawing his knife am cutting his son across the abdomei from hip to hip. He then stampei upon the young man as he lay wound ed and bleeding on the ground unfi the victim was fearfully manerlecl The father has thus far escaped ar rest. The Rise of the Boy Scouts. American visitors who have beei making motor tours through Englam during the last two summers hav seen at surprisingly frequent inter vals groups of sturdy boys dressed ii an adaptation of frontier costum marching along the hedge-borderei highlands or camped under the shad of some wayside grove. On a schoc holiday in London. Manchester, Liver pool and other large centres thes same groups, under the commandv o an elder lad, could be seen makin; their way on foot or by tram towari the suburbs or parks with an ai that seemed to say that they ha serious and interesting work befor them?work and play combinedfor they were the already famous Bo Scouts organized two and a half year ago by General Sir R. S. Baden Powell. Baden-Powell, it will be re membered, is that same doughty sol dier who held Mafeking against over whelming odds in the South Africa War, and who distinguished himsel in other ways, until in the last de cade he has become one of Grea Britain's popular heroes, classed wit Earl Roberts and Lord Kitchener. Intensely patriotic and believin firmly that the future of his countr depends on the type of young men i produces, he founded the Boy Scout as a practical school of manliness i which love of God and countrj courtesy, courage and a sense of tru honor should be inculcated. The ide took at once with the public, an there are now enrolled in Grea Britain over 400,000 Boy Scouts, wh have taken the Scout's pledge, an who are manfully trying to live u to the high ideals taught in th Scout law. Some time ago twent thousand Scouts assembled in Lor don and under command of their sr perior officer marched through th streets while the cheering crowd gave ample evidence of the stron hold the new movement has on th public mind. Now Canada has bee swept with a similar wave of er thusiasm and the Boy Scouts ar there numbered by the thousands Here in the United States patrols hav been formed from Massechusetts t Kansas, and every week come in rs ports from Young Men's Christian As sociations, Sunday-schools, boys' club and other organizations interested i " ?1? * i.i? i?... 4-Vi tne wenare ui iiie uuj, wmug uy iu idea and forming patrols. Seven o more boys may form a patrol. Thre patrols form a troop. * Some people have conceived th erroneous idea that the Boy Scout are being trained exclusively for mil: tary purposes, whereas the truth c the matter is that they are bein trained for good citizenship. C course, the military virtues?such a obedience to properly constitute authority, respect for the command of the officers, truth and courageare in the rules and regulations t which they subscribe, and rightly s< Out of the thirty-six badges which Boy Scout may obtain by performin certain services only one is given c a military character. In fact, Bader Powell refers to the Scout mov< ment as "peace scouting." It is character-forming movement for boy who are just at the age ,when the are reaching the two roads, one leac ing to an upright, honorable caree where high ideals are found, th other which leads downward, eve bending away from true attainmer and honorable success. Recently a mass meeting was hel in New York and plans laid for forn ing a permanent central committe< A temporary committee was selecte( which will later report on the bes plan for a permanent organizatioi Among those taking an active pai were General Wingate, Ernes Thompson Seton, the naturalist an author, Dan Beard, known to ever boy in America, and leaders in soci< w-nrt- spttlements. nlavground assc ciations, Sunday-schools, and tb Young Men's Christian Associatioi Among the latter was- Mr. John I Alexander, who for several years ha been active in work for boys, an who for the present has devoted hin self to this new work of organizin the Boy Scouts of America. He just the man for the place. Full ( enthusiasm over the subject, he he made others as sanguine as himsel and is enlisting the aid of prominer men all over the country. The heat quarters are at 124 East Twent: eight street, New York. Erne; Thompson Seton has just complete the Scout's Manual, similar to Badei EVAN'S CHECK TURNED DOWN. s Warrant Issued?Creek Given Magistrate Fowles Saturday. Columbia, August 10.?Barnard B. f Evans, candidate for attorney general of South Carolina, is again in trou>, ble on account of the non-cashing of i- one of his checks by a local bank. A t warrant has been sworn out for the e arrest of Mr. Evans by Magistrate I James Fowles. The check for $17.75 a was on the bank of Columbia, and i was the money put up with the magis trate pending the settlement of the .1 board bill matter with Wright's hoi. tel. A fon- i^ova nam Mr vvqnc ti*3Q 9r. rested, charged with not paying his board bill. He paid $19 in a check, and claimed this was all that was q due; also turned over the difference 4 between this amount and the $36.75 e to the magistrate in a check pend - ing the hearing of the case. It was a the check for $17.75 which was turne ed down at the bank for lack of d funds. e Under the act of the general asil sembly, passed last year, it is against - the law to give a worthless check, e The drawer has thirty days in which f to make the check good. If he does g not do so he is subject to a fine. 4 ? r RATS ATTACK POLICEMAN. d e Bite Him, Tear His Clothes and Hold _ on Till Help Comes. y That rats will turn and fight vigor's ously when attacked was shown last i- night at Allen and Front streets when }- ninrp than a sr>r?rp aave battle to a 1- policeman and were putting him to rout when assistance arrived, says a n Philadelphia dispatch to the Baltif more American, The policeman was - bitten on the leg and his clothing was -t torn in the encounter, h The Cohocksink sewer is noted in that section of the city for the numS ber of rats it houses. The downpour y of last evening made the sewer a t raging torrent and the rats deserted s it in hundreds as they would a doom11 ed ship. Policeman Thomas Benz, of r? the Front and Master streets station e was standing at the corner when a a drove of the rodents scrambled past d him. Benz took a club and started to drive them off the pavement. They 0 turned and, snapping at him, drove d him back toward a wall. Quite a P crowd was attracted by the unusual e battle and it might have ended seriy ously for Benz had not Policeman l~ Coulton come to his assistance. The l" reinforcement was sufficient to turn e the tide and the rats were driven s back into the sewer, g - ? e Powell's book, but adapted to Amerin can conditions. L. The Scouts take the following e pledge: "On my honor I promise that 3. I will do my best to do my duty to e God and my country, to help other o people at all times, to obey the Scout mi ^ C 4."U^ + j- 1-jcIW. 1 lit tfSStJLI LiClliS \JL lliC OUVUl Law are that a Scout's honor is to ig be trusted. A Scout is loyal to his n country, his officers, his employers e and his parents. He must be useful r and help others. A Scout is a friend e to all, and a brother to every other Scout, no matter to what social class e the other belongs. A Scout is courte;s ous, he is a friend to animals, he i- obeys.orders of his parents and ofif ticers. A Scout smiles and whistles g under all circumstances. A Scout is if thrifty." -s There are three classes of Scouts d and the tests are not child's play s by any means. At first a boy is - classed as a Tenderfoot, but even for o this classification he has to be able ). to tie four different kinds of knots a the proper way, to fly the flag, to g know something of its story and the >f Scout laws. The second-class men i- must be able to pass in first aid to the ?- injured and in signaling, to build a a fire with only two matches, to cut s a camp dinner with only the regulay tion billy, to track half a mile in 25 I- minutes, or in town to describe r the contents of one shop window out e of four observed for one minute. >r The test for a first-class Scout emit braces a good knowledge of camping and woodcraft. He must swim fifty d yards, go on foot or row a boat seven l- miles and return, and write a report on the trip. Supposed to take two 1, days, but can in less. In signaling st he must send and receive sixteen l. words per minute, describe the way t of saving life in ordinary accidents, 5t such as drowning, runaway and ice d breaking. This is only a part of the y list, and the boys are on their mettle i! to pass and become first-class Scouts. )- Religion is brought in as a natural ie and not unnatural thing. The boys i. are pledged to do at least one act j. for some one else once a day. Some - -< ii?T.niv hove whn have Lb Ul Clltr LLlUdt UUi ux; W d joined have come under the chivalric l- influence of the rest of the Scouts g and have been completely transformis ed in character. >f Mr. Alexander believes that the is work should be done through bodies f, already organized, and independent it Scouts are not enrolled. The Scout 1- movement is designed to help organizations in the work for boys; not to st create a rival interest.?Robert S. d Blair, in The Christian Herald, July l- 27, 1910. DO YOU NEED MONEY? 1 J Right now, perhaps, yon are wishing that you had enough money I to invest in some good business proposition, or, maybe to pay off an old debt, or possibly, to enlarge your business. I And it's just this way every month of the year. If one would I save many of the nickels and dimes that are wasted when the I time comes for profitable investment, or when bills come due, I there would always be something with which to meet the emerg- I Take care of the nickels and dimes by having a savings ac- I count here. We pay 4 per cent, interest, compounded quarterly. I Ehrhardt, S. C. CAPITAL STOCK $20,000.00. We do a general banking business, and solicit your account. We are backed by a strong board of directors, insuring you every safety. We allow you 4 per cent, on deposits in our sav- .; ings department. We extend to our customers every courtesy consistent with good banking. We receive accounts of individuals, firms, and corporations on favorable terms, and shall be pleased to meet or correspond with those who contemplate mak- I ing changes or opening new accounts. J. L. COPELAND, J. C. KIXARD, A. F. HENDERSON, President. Vice-President. Cashier. l TV A H 1 ' ill Horses & Mules il | Buggies & Wagons |: | I Full Stock in Our Line j WM on hand at all times. | See us before you buy. j |JM A few Fancy Driving j bgH Horses on Hand.*.*,'.*.'.*. j |?? j J JONIS BROS., j j I WE HAVE MOVEDJl | ^ We moved this week to the a handsome new store on Main m ? street, next to the post office. ^ ? Here we are better prepared than ^ 5^11? ^ ever to serve our customers with 52 w the best goods at the lowest ?3 * prices. We carry a full line of ^ Dry Goods, Dress Goods, i Clothing, Extra Trousers. fllM !r - We want yjpu to know us and ^ S our prices, which are lower than ? a ?2 others. We have pleased others * a S and can please you. Suppose 2 i ^ you give us a trial. We have ? A i|i|J u the goods and prices are right. 2 X g Polite attention to all. w A :|f|H RUBIN & PESKIU W. E. FREE tCr. MOYE DICKINSON t V * insurance agent Attorney-at-Law X Z All business entrusted to me ?$S Z WILL WRITE ANYTHING Z win receive prompt attention. f Fire, Tornado, Accident, Lia- Investigation of land titles a specialty $ bility, Casualty, in the | Office for present at court house. ^ siroiigesi auu must iv- v ^ liable companies. >' X 'Phone No. 10-B. Bamberg, S. C. J ? FAUST DENTIST BAMBERG, S. C. T J. F. Carter B. D. Carter f CARTER & CARTER X 0fflce 111 Herald Building. X Attorneys-at-Law %???? ??i *? , , BT1?*' S; c- , .1 H. M. GRAHAM Special attention given to set- . _ tloment of estates and invest!- T Att0m8y-at-LaW o gation of land titles. ' BAMBERG, S. C. r Loans negotiated on farm lands J n __ . ? _ . . ... 4 *3 Office ove? Bamberg Banking Co. i Practic ?" <*>"*? <* ?>to State. . ; | Offices in The Herald Building.