The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, September 19, 1912, Page 7, Image 7
ALL IX GOLD.
Wonderful Resources Exhibited by
Bank of England.
"All in gold, please."
These are words heard many times
A a day by the cashier of a bank, on
presentation of a check. And in this
instance they were spoken by an ordinary-sized,
quiet-looking gentleman
to one of the cashiers of the Bank of
England.
Nonchantly the latter picked up
the check, and, at the same time as
v ovominpH it made hv force of hab
it for the till.
Then he drew up suddenly and
cafefully scrutinized the customer.
For the check was made out for 1,000,000
pounds! Possibly he thought
the possessor of the check was one
of those amiable lunatics obsessed
with the idea that he is worth endless
money?not an uncommon experience
of a bank cashier.
But, in fact, the gentleman was
f one of the directors of the English
V v ' Sewing Cotton company, which had
arranged to buy out for cash the
leading American concern, the Williamantic
Thread company, of the
same business, and the money was
j 4.nki'n +a A in rvrrlor
I t? 14 Uil CU IU SUip IU ica iu wtuv*
to save the rate of exchange, which
would amount to many thousands of
pounds. The money was to be shipped
by the Lucania in a week's time,
this being the last available date of
doing so before the option expired.
Such are the traditions and discipline
of the Old Lady of Threadneedle
street, however, that the
jS, cashier gave no outward signs of his
x doubts upon the sanity of the customer,
but quietly remarked, "I sup-pose
this is all right, sir?"
"You can easily find out that it is
all right," was the reply, "and I'll
have the money in gold coins, no bul^
' lion. Kindly let me know if you cannot
let me have it."
> The cashier excused himself for a
moment, and the customer was soon
joined by the secretary.
The necessity and urgency of the
m case were explained to the latter,
who undertook to find the money
within seven days.
Thereupon the Bank of England
scoured the banks of the principal
c'ties of the United Kingdom for
their surplus supply of sovereigns,
but on- the sixth day they were still
j, - about 50,000 pounds short of the
required amount. This was fiirally
made up of ten yen pieces, obtained
from the Yokohama Specie bank.
Then the whole amount was pack<
ed in iron-bound heavy wooden cases,
sent by special train to Liverpool,
and reached the seaport well in time
* * to be safely deposited in the strong
rooms of the Lucania.
Thus the Bank of England had
faithfully discharged its trust at considerable
expense to itself. It is
doubtful whether there is any institution
in the world, except the Bank
of Paris, that could have found the
m coin at so short notice.?Pearson's
Weekly.
Planned Suicide?Pined by Recorder.
> * . u
Macon, Ga., Sept. 12.?Following
his futile attempt yesterday morning
to take his life by firing three shots
at his head with a revolver, Charles
L. Spikes was arraigned before the
recorder for shooting inside the city
and carrying a pistol without a liy
cense. His attorney waived commitment
in the pistol charge and he
was fined $25 by the recorder for
shooting in the city.
Tx i? V\tt fViA TVaIi /\rv fVlQf
XL 15 auvauLcu uj> LUC
Spikes did not try'to kill himself, although
a bullet passed through his
hat, missing his head only by a marX
gin. He declared in his statement to
if the court that he did. "When I quit
my job in the Atlanta railroad shops
' and came here for the purpose of
getting my wife to unite with me
again and she flatly refused, the
thought of living separately from her
and my darling baby boy was more
than I could stand and I took death
* as my only consolation," he stated.
k Stolen Pie May Cost Wilson Votes.
f _ Montgomery, Ala., Sept. 12.?A
' stolen pie may cause the loss of two
votes to Woodrow Wilson, Governor
O'Neal holds the balance. If it tips
one way Wilson will lose. If it tips
the other the former Princeton president
will receive two extra votes In
Alabama and two young South Alabama
men will have their civil rights
restored.
Jl ^ The pie was stolen from the buggy
f of a farmer at an all-day picnic. The
young men were arrested, convicted,
fined and their civil rights taken
a wnv Thev are free now and have
appealed to Governor O'Neal to order
'their names restored to the registra.
tion book. The trial judge and other
f ? prominent men have requested Gov'
ernor O'Neal to grant the request.
Fun prompted the men to take the
pie, according to their statements,
and they meant no harm when they
slipped up to the buggy and appropriated
the one chicken pie. Governor
O'Neal has the matter before
him and will act in time for the
V young men to register if he decides
to restore their civil rights.
J
MADE CAREFUL PREPARATIONS.
Details of the Killing of Boyce by $
Sneed.
Amarillo, Texas., Sept. 15.?Jno.
Beall Sneed, who yesterday shot and .1
killed A1 G. Boyce, Jr., to-day reaf- i
firmed his determination to give out t
no statement concerning the shoot- c
ing. Sneed's attorney's were closet- I
ed with him for several hours to-day, ?
but on statement was given out by ?
4. "U ~ i*e rnnnrtoH f A VI Q va }
CiitSUl. OUCCU AO A. wv UUIW
spent a sleepless night and was ner- t
vous to-day. - i
Mrs. Sneed is expected to arrive J
here this week. It was the elopement
of A1 G. Boyce, Jr., with Mrs. 2
Sneed to Winnipeg, Canada, last De- r
cember, that led to the killing by t
Sneed of A1 G. Boyce, Sr., at Fort c
Worth, last March, and the killing t
of A1 Boyce, Jr., yesterday.
Henry Boyce, banker, of Dalhart,
Texas, brother of A1 G. Boyce, Jr., 2
arrived here to-day and consulted s
with his other brothers, Will and
Len Boyce. 1
Friends of both the prisoner and t
the dead man arrived here to-day 1
from different parts of the Pan- i
handle, and others are expected to- s
morrow. t
The police theory is that Sneed had s
made careful preparations to kill i
young Boyce. This belief is based on s
the fact that only two days before g
the tragedy a inan giving the name
of W. A. Walker, and answering the t
description of Sneed, rented a small l
cottage from which it is thought the d
first shot at Boyce was fired. One \
window of this cottage commanded t
a view of the Boyce home, three s
blocks away, as well as a wide range s
of the sidewalk.
Families living on either side of i
the cottage leased by the mysterious c
party complained to the owner of the 1
property that the new occupants be- t
b.aved suspiciously and asked that v
an investigation be made. The in- \
vestigation was delayed and the cot- t
tage now is vacant. v
It was stated by eye witnesses v
that Boyce's slayer removed a r
gun from a box when the shooting
took place. At the cottage immedi- }
ately after the tragedy yesterday a j.
box was found conforming to the s
size of the weapon. X
T+ J,. nnnr 1- M /"VTI*? + V> Q t fl 11 T*i 71 V f Vl P 1,
It lO U\SW *VUV??U tiiuc uwi*-D ?w 1(
days the cottage is believed to have c
been occupied by Sneed that Boyce c
passed several times on the opposite t
side of the street, but so far as is
known he was in company with one a
or more parties. Yesterday, it is be- 0
lieved, was the first time he walked v
down the street alone. So far as Is c
known, Boyce had no intimation that u
Sneed had been in Amarillo since he ^
himself returned. P
The grand jury is expected to con- s
vene at 8 o'clock to-morrow for an 0
investigation of the case. t
The body of Boyce probably will v
be buried here to-morrow. ^
? a
WIFE OF JOHNSON KILLS SELF. c
t
Shunned and Unhappy Because She
Married a Negro. A
A dispatch from Chicago says be- J
ing shunned and unhappy because she
had married a negro, the wife of
Jack Johnson, world's champion
heavyweight pugilist, shot herself a
nicrVit a n rl HioH ThlircHflV a
?? Ui^UV UUU U*VU i MMA wv?v.j ^
morning. She was 31 years of age a
and the daughter of Mrs. David Ter- c
ry, of Brooklyn. When she married ^
Johnson, she was the divorced wife v
of Clarence Duryear, a well known E
New York turfman. [
During the trip to. Las Vegas, N. ^
M., where Johnson fought Jim Flynn, 2
the black's wife told friends she was
very unhappy, as her former friends ^
avoided her because she was wedded ^
to a negro. c
Soon after Johnson left his home j.
Wednesday night she called her two ^
maids and placing an arm around p
each asked that they kneel in prayer. v
After she had prayed for some ?
time, she sent the maids into differ- ^
ent rooms. Hardly had they closed p
the doors behind them when they r
heard a shot and rushing in found a
the woman on the floor.
She had been in such a condition ^
for several months that, on the ad- ^
vice of a doctor, Johnson had employed
two women attendants to
watch her. He was to have taken
her to Las Vegas. N. M., for her 1
health, and was away getting tickets
when she shot herself.
v
Woman Asks $25,000 Damages.
Columbus, Ga., Sept 9.?Essie n
Carter, the young white woman who ^
f
was horsewhipped by W. S. Dozier _
and others in Dawson on July 20, on 11
account of attentions being paid her s
by Mr. Dozier's son. Voight, has en- t
tered suit for $25,000 damages a
againts W. S. Dozier and those who 1
participated in the whipping.
The suit was filed here in the *
United States court for the northern v
district of Georgia, the Carter girl d
being a resident of South Carolina. ^
W. S. Dozier, his two sons, Clyde and ^
J. C., Pope McClung, Jim Geise,
Duke Marshall and Erwin McRare are p
made defendants in the suit. A
FEAT OF INDIAN HERO.
swam the Icy Columbia With Child (
on His Back.
To swim the Columbia river at
Jmatill, where it is half a mile in i
vidth, is a test of human strength i
iven under the most favorable con- r
litions, but to accomplish that feat 1
mrdened with the weight of a child s
md in the dead of winter with the c
(wollen river made more formidable I
)y the presence of hundreds of jagjed
ice floes is an achievement al- i
nost unbelievable, says the Oregon t
rournal. i
Yet this was just what was done a
ibout eight years ago by a Columbia t
iver Indian who had almost reached J
he age of 50. He is slill living to-day *
>n the Umatilia reservation to testify
o his performances, though no man J
sver heard him boast of it. t
The Indian's name is Sees-Yuse t
teady. , w
Several times he was struck by an ^
ce floe and the jagged end of one s
ut a deep wound in his neck. Final- E
y, after what seemed an almost in- c
erminable time, he reached the shore 1
vith his burden, his strength spent ^
>y his heroic efforts and loss of
ilood, and almost frozen by the chill e
yater. Before the flow from his *
round could be checked he had al- e
aost bled to death. a
Not long after the incident Sees- t
fuse was awarded some heirship
ands on the Umatilla reservation and a
ince that time has lived among the E
Jmatillas, Cayuses and Walla Wal- E
as, but through the death of the ^
f
hieftains of his own tribe he has
ome to be regarded by his people as 0
heir head man. a
f
The old Indian, whose facial charcteristics
are so different from those ^
>f the prairie Indians, is a frequent ^
isitor in Pendleton, Ore., and alaost
regularly once a week calls c
ipon his friend,* Major Lee Moor- v
louse, not, however, so much for the g
lurpose of talking with the major
,s to gaze at a full length painting
'f himself,, which adorns the walls of F
he Moorhouse office. The painting
t*as made from a photograph of Sees- c
fuse, taken by the major, and the 1
t
ged redman often sits by the hour, "
hildlike, admiring the likeness on r
he wall.
i
LLLENS SENTENCED TO DEATH. r
C
udge Staples Fixes November 22 as t
Date of Execution.
s
Wytheville, Va., Sept. 11.?When h
djournment was taken for dinner a
o-day in the trial of Victor Allen for d
lleged participation in the Hillsville E
ourt house murders, Judge Staples 11
iad Floyd and Claude Allen, who
vere found guilty of first degree
aurder on the same charge brought
nto court and passed sentence of ^
[eath upon them, fixing November t
2 as the date of execution. c
The feature of the evidence of the \
rial of Victor Allen to-day was the
estimony of the defendant. He ac- ^
ounts for the fact that he was in t
lillsville at the time of the tragedy p
iy saying that he had been tele- f
honed to and asked to bring a sick v
witness. He admitted being armed n
he day preceding the tragedy, said p
lis brother, Claude, had taken his 1;
istol, and claimed that he had a v
ight as a rural mail carrier to be
rmed. j
A few other- witnesses testified as j
o the prisoner's character. The evi- e
ence will be concluded to-morrow. n
WHITE MAN FOUND DEAD.
??- ?
Jody Discovered Near Cartersville. G
Attempts to Identify a Failure.
r
Timmonsville, Sept. 11.?There s
^as a white man found dead by the t
ailroad track this morning one-half t
aile from Cartersville. The men of t
lartersville have put forth every efort
to identify him. He had nothag
about his person to give the
lightest clue to his identity except t
he clothes that he wore were bought ^
t Coker & Company's at Hartsvile. e
t is supposed he fell from train 55 v
n nf lv T-T n ic. oiv fnaf"
iiu U1CU llisiaiiti%v . lib ia OIA xv/wu ^
all, sandy hair, sharp features and \
weighs about 150 pounds. Has on p
lark gray suit. He will be buried a
iere at 11 o'clock Thursday unless r
te is identified. js
We cover all kind of umbrellas and
arasols, Write F. G. MERTINS, p
lugusta, Ga. g
md he is now the head man of the c
mattered Columbias. It was in the t
sarly years of the new century that ?
le attempted to make the passage of c
he Columbia in a frail canoe, accom- ?
>anied by a boy of 9 years. When
n mid-stream his little craft was c
rtruck with such force by an ice cake s
hat it was overturned. Sees-Yuse a
eized his boy companion, and plac- 1
ng him on his back, breasted the
tream and commenced his battle to r
;ain the shore. c
If men who witnessed the feat are c
o be believed, no white man could t
lave accomplished what this old In- r
lian did. Foot by foot he made his ^
vay toward the southern bank, and J
hough swept down stream by the 1
wift current, his progress was
a
arth the sand and dust settled into
he depression. The drift of ages siftd
over the edges of the huge bowl
nd assisted in the work of covering
he meteorite.
But the most remarkable thing
bout this meteorite, apart from its
irodigious size, is the fact that in all
irobability it consists of one huge
:iamond! This is inferred from the
act that numerous large fragments
if the meteorite found in the crater,
nd which are unusually heavy, were
ound, upon investigation, to contain,
iesides meteoric iron, large, hard
ilack diamonds of great value.
Even if the meteor itself consists
inly of black diamonds its value
^ould be quite inconceivable, for a
;cod black diamond, though worthess
as a gem, is worth even more
han a white one for mechanical purioses.
It is quite probable, however,
hat the bulk of the meteor consists
>f white diamond, in wlr'ch event
here would not be enough wealth in
he world to pay for it at the current
irice of the precious stone.
The largest diamonds in the world
ncluding the Koh-i-noor, the CulliLan,
the Great Mogul of Russia, the
)rioff, the Great Premier diamond,
he Tiffany diamond, the Etolie Pol,ire,
and a dozen others of the same
tandard, worth in the aggregate
lundreds of millions of dollars, might
.11 be placed together in an ordinary
lerby hat and not reach the top. This
neteoric diamond, scientists believe,
aust be at least half a mile thick!
Fraudulent Votes in Greenwood.
The Greenwood Journal of September
12, has the following to say of
he meeting of the county executive
ommittee in Greenwood last
Vednesdav:
The countv executive committee
0-day finished its report to submit to
he State committee, the most imortant
features of which are: 103
raudulent votes were found; 60 men
oted more than one time, and four
ainors were found to have cast balots.
If any of the men who thus vioated
the law can be located warrants
all be issued for them.
W. H. Yeldell, for clerk of court;
. B. McCombs, for supervisor; and
. F. Wideman, for superintendent of
ducation, were officially declared
ominated in the second primary.
The committee decided that there
rill be no more county primaries in
1-reenwood this year, and Messrs. Joe
,ake and J. W. Canfield will have to
lin Air/ir f Ar on/^if at* qi +TirVl^n tho
tate committee calls a primary for
he office of attorney general or if
his is not done their contests will be
hrown into the general election..
Wrestler Found Dead Under Sofa.
Newburgh, N. Y., Sept. 12.?With
he skull fractured and circumstances
ndicating that he had b-een dead sevral
days, the body of John Grace, a
- restler, was found under a sofa in
he rooms of the Century club at
Valden last night. The police suspect
that Grace was murdered -.and
re making an investigation. Grace
ecently came here from Hoboken,
I J.
All children's wash suits at half
rice. Write F. G. MERTINS, Auusta,
Ga.
DIGGING FOR A METEOR.
)ne Worth Billions of Dollars Believed
to Be in Arizona,
Several years ago a syndicate of
nining men began sinking a shaft in
Arizona to reach the largest dianond
in the world, believed to be no
ess than half a mile thick. This
ihaft is now 1,600 feet deep. Three
>r four hundred feet more, it is exacted,
will reveal the great prize.
The scene of this most wonderful
nining operation is Meteor Mounain,
Ariz. The mountain is such in
iame, only, as it is little more than
i butte, rising 200 or 300 feet above
he desert, about 10 miles from Canron
Diabolo Station, on the Sante
re Railroad.
Viewed from a distance Meteor
rlountain looks little different from
he countless other buttes that rear
heir heads above the southwestern
lesert. But as soon as one begins
0 climb its sides, strewn with meteoric
fragments, he realizes that he is
>n the threshold of one of the world's
greatest scientific mysteries.
From the top of the "mountain"
ne gazes into a bowl-like depresion
in the earth 600 feet deep and
1 mile across. It is in appearance
ike a volcanic crater.
Scientists agree that this crater
arks the place where a giant meteirite,
as large as the circumference
if the bowl would indicate, struck
he earth in ages past, perhaps a
nillinn nf venra and hnried itself
leep in the bowels of the earth?
list how deep it is the purpose of the
aining syndicate to find out.
When this giant mass struck the
arth there was no butte there; the
lutte was created when the meteorite
truck, its tremendous weight disilacing
strata of rock, sending huge
louds of dust into the air and formng
the "mountain" as it exists tolay.
After the meterite sank into the
LOOK! LOOK! LOOK!
'-rj
Ladies Must Have Attention As Men |
Uncle Sam's Pressing, Laundry & fiat Cleaning Parlor
provides for all. We represent the largest laundry in
the State and will satisfy all. We also clean, press and
mend all Ladies' and Men's garments at a cheap rate.
No tearing, scorching or burning, all work is guaranteed
when once in the hands of Uncle Sam's Pressing, Laundry
and Hat Cleaning Parlor.
F. K. GRAHAM, Proprietor* j
UP-TO-DATE WORKMEN WORK GUARANTEED. n
- f - - J J
MMHBnHHnmHnHBnHr
| A Safe Combination ||
ww Trt tha RnnHnrr hneinMe is flmnlo rnnitftl na refill moth. UV
iods, shrewd judgment and unfailing courtesy. Thus
the fact that our deposits are increasing rapidly is sufficient
proof that our customers realize and appreciate pfe
that this combination is our method of doing business. [ S
We shall be pleased to number you among our new
^ oustomers. We pay 4 per cent, on Savings Deposits.
j| PEOPLES BANK Bamberg, S.C. jj|
'
The South Carolina Co-Educational Institute ]
LOCATED AT EDGEFIELD ; 1
will begin its twenty-second session on September
26th. Colonel Bailey has been President of the
Institution all these years and has associated with :
him a large expe- everything that is '
rienced faculty of | , I necessary for car14
instructors. lying., on a. high
Last session E grade institustudents
attend- tion. .
ed this school . J|||?flJS? Graduates of .
from all over the S. C. C. I. can
Si C?V? r<nwrtlivio oil r\xrar*
j OUUtll \JOlX VJXXXXCil WW XVUUU Uli, VTV1
and five other |J .1^^% , South Carolina,
States. The dor- (jlgfe^ji filling positions
mitories are al- tymtSmm of honor and
I ways filled to the pj||^jjfj trust.
.utmost capacity If you contem- <
and each year the BHHKatsmi plate patronizing
school grows in HH, ?k| this institution it
favor with the is important that
people. g ' you communicate
The buildings ||gSH|8?H with the presiare
of brick and BBSmmident as early as
furnished with possible, it is always
necessary to engage rooms before the ses-. *
sion begins.
COL. F. N. K. BAILEY |
PRESIDENT \m
EDGEFIELD, SOUTH CAROLINA M
^
| WHICH* BANK *D0 * YOU *USE\
(ft, Is your money hid away in an old trunk, closet or bureau, ?
~J5 where the burglar is likely to find it any night, or is it t
locked up tight in our vault, protected not only by a mr
(ft. massive steel safe, but by ample burglar insurance as *ft(
JS well? You do not perhaps realize what great danger t
your money is in when kept around the house. Every
(ft. day the newspapers tell of losses sustained because of mm
Jb this habit. If you would sleep soundly, with the knowl- t j,
*W edge that your money is perfectly secure, bring it in at y
(ft. once and open an account with us. You are then taking fti
I EHRHARDT BANKING COMPANY *
When you have use for a gun or pistol you want "J?
one that will not fail to fire when you want it to do v
so, one that you can feel satisfied that it is working Ap
J, "just right," Bring your gun or pistol to me to be* JL
3 repaired and you can then have that "satisfied feel- "T
ing" when you have use for them. I also repair
Bicycles, Automobiles, Locks,- etc., at reasonable "J?
4 prices. All work guaranteed. *Si
}j. B. BRICKLE*
0- The Repair Man Bamberg, S. 0. >
p p p p ^p p p p p ^p ^p ^p ^p p p ^p p ^p ^p ^p ^p^ p^ p^
build:ne^"repairs ?never'^^^"a^'attenrioa,I
occasional coat of paint. Just the thuig for all Irinrk of country buildings. FiTt-proof? I
? Handsome?Inexpensioe. Can be laid right over wood shingles without dirt or bother. I
We Rave local reprcscniaovc* wmoH cyaywucc, uui u uuu? w ;??. ... _
locality, write us direct for samples, prices and full particulars. 4 I
CORTRIGHT METAL ROOFING COMPANY I
50 North 23d Street t Philadelphia, Pa. |
I
^ ?