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Shr Bamfarrg fcalb; ESTABLISHED APRIL, 1891. j 1 ^___________' A. W. KNIGHT, Editor. Published every Thursday in The ] Herald building, on Main street, in the live and growing City of Bamberg, being issued from a printing ( office which is equipped with Mergenthaler linotype machine, Babcock cylinder press, folder, one jobber, a ' fine Miehle cylinder press, all run by < electric power with other material and machinery in keeping, the whole equipment representing an invest- 1 ??in nnn and nnwards. i LU^XIC UA ^JLV?vvv v? ? Subscriptions?By the year $150; , six months, 75 cents; three months, 50 cents. All subscriptions payable strictly in advance. Advertisements?$1.00 per inch for first insertion, subsequent insertions 50 cents per inch. Legal advertisements at the rates allowed by law. Local reading notices 10 cents a line each insertion. Wants and other advertisements under special head, 1 cent a word each insertion. Liberal contracts made for three, six, and twelve months. Write for rates. r Obituaries, tributes of respect, reso lutions, cards of thanks, and all notices of a personal or political character are charged for as regular advertising. Contracts for advertising not subject to cancellation after first 1 insertion. I Communications?We are always r glad to publish news letters or those . pertaining to matters of public interest. We require the name and ad- * dress of the writer in every case, s No article which is defamatory or j offensively personal can find place in our columns at any price, and we are not responsible for the opinions ex- ? pressed in any communication. \ ? J Thursday, Oct. 3,1912. c j : ? c Now let's do some work for Bam- 8 fcerg. There's no money in politics. J Wonder who thinks there will be t 140,000 or more votes polled in the * next primary held in South Carolina? ^ We don't, that's certain. The decision of the State executive f committee did not create any interest a in Bamberg, as everybody expected s the result to be just what it was. p J. Fraser Lyqn ought to be reelected attorney general. His record 8 in the office entitles him to another c term. Let Bamberg county roll upa 1 f good majority for him. o ? t The amount of money that goes t out of Bamberg county for whiskey c is amazing, and the amount spent t right in the town of Bamberg for whiskey is still more amazing. The deaths growing out of the j strike in Augusta are to be greatly t deplored, but we do not see where a the employees of the company had j any right to strike. The deaths of j. innocent people were indirectly caus- r ed by the union laborers, and they j. are to be censured, if the facts are. v as stated, that they Had a contract E wit I? the company which did not ex- jpire until December 31st. This being the case they have broken a con- ? tract and the company is exactly Tight in refusing to arbitrate. d ^ The State executive committee has decided and we fell sure .all good- F citizens will accept the vresult. As an earnest opponent of the present f governor, we accepted the result and ! hope ?is next administration will be an improvement on the past two ^ years. When he does right we shall v commend him, and we hope not to be under the necessity of condemning his official acts or public utterances. 3 The money sent out of Bamberg 1 county to the mail order houses for T goods which could and should be r bought at home would sustain an- 1 other store. People ought to spend * their money at home. The mail or- s der merchant does not pay taxes, 1 help build churches, schools, or as- * sist the poor of the community. Your * home merchant does. It is to your * interest to sepnd your money with * the home merchant. t ^ C The question over in Augusta t seems to be who shall control the y street railway company, the men who 1 own it or the conductors and motormen. Granting that the employees I did have a right to quit, what right i did they have to commit acts of vio- t lence and attempt to keep other peo- i pie from working for the railway ' company? The fact of the matter i is that union labor is being manipu- j lated these days by the wily poli- ] tician and demagogue in the shape of the labor agitator and the sooner < they are eliminated the better it will be for the laboring people. Now ] they are being used to further the i selfish ends of designing men, and ' the public will not stand for it al- i ways. Sooner or later we look for i : national laws to be enacted prevent-j ' ing strikes and the attendants acts ' of violence. To our mind the unions ! forfeit all right to consideration' when they commit acts of violence | < and attempt to prevent other people1 from working when they strike, j True, the unions say they do not en- j dorse violence, but we notice violence , usually follows a strike. It is bad j business all round, and labor and; capital better get together and cut out the go-between and troublemaker. We are of the opinion that those newspapers who are carrying adver- \ tising for W. E. Craigmiles, a real ^ estate agent of Thomasville, Ga., | will not get pay for their work. He j owes us for advertising done last j Kear and pays no attention to state- ^ ments, letters or drafts. c This is written before we Know the 7 decision of the State executive com- 0 mittee, but we have no idea they ^ will do anything but declare the re- ^ suit of the primary according to the e votes polled, and, it seems to us that was the only thing could be ^ done. We never expected the in- e vestigation to amount to anything, ^ not that those in charge of it were r aot sincere and competent, but the <] task was too big and the time too t short for the whole matter to be 0 gone into. The only thing to do is 0 :o take steps to prevent another such primary as that of 1912. ^ BEES STUNG MULES TO DEATH. t; tl rwo Animals in Lexington Overturn d Hives with Fatal Result. Lexington, October 1.?Two mu- a es, belonging to Andrew Long, a h >rosperous fafmer, residing about 2 * niles north of Gilbert, were stung so s< >adly by bees one day last week that )oth died from the effects of the t< itings. It seems that Mr. Long had fi oaded his wagon with cotton and lad left the mules standing. They s< grazed around and ran upon the hi- b res, turning two of the gums over, ir rhe bees immediately swarmed and n ompletely covered the animals. One ir >f the mules died a short while Y fterwards; the other the following w lay. The loss falls heavily on Mr. J; ,ong, who is a hard-working, indus- lc rious citizen. d< ? S Vives of Drinkers Sue Saloon Men. H 1/1 Chicago, Sept. 25.?Eight damage ;uits for a total of $85,000 were VJ tied in the circuit court here to-day jj, gainst 30 owners and managers of ^ alocns and persons owning the propTty in which they are situated. The ^ uits were brought by forty wives .na children who declare their in- ^ omes have become impaired through w he shortcomings of husbands and athers, which in all cases are traced o the saloon. The suits were filed ? n >y counsel for the Citizen's League ^ ?f Chicago, which has for its purpose * he State dramshop act. p Carried Too Far. Sl He had an invariable way of ask- n ng the wrong question or making m he wrong comment. So it was, when .t a dinner party his neighbor, a s( ady, said to him: "I am a thorough P( >eliever, you know, Mr. Smith, that nen's clothes should match their tc lair; a black-haired man should P( rear black clothes, a brown-haired r( nan should wear brown clothes. w )on't you think so?" ti "That may be," bungled Jones, but suppose a man is bald!" u; r( Leopard and Umbrella. The audacity of the leopard in w mrsnit nf his favorite food is re- ei narkable. In "Sport on the Nil- u; ;iris," Mr F. W. F. Fletcher gives an si ustance in his own experience while w iving in India. He adds that he lost robably twenty dog^ at various times tl 11 carried away by leopards. Some ai rere taken under his very nose. vi One April afternoon I had been; ai ver to see a friend about four miles b; way, writes Mr. Fletcher, and short- ti y after I left his bungalow on my p: eturn home, it began to rain. As n; iding was uncomfortable in the wet 01 got off my nag, and gave him^o the le lorsekeeper. After a mile the rain k topped, and the sun came out; but o: shut my umbrella and determined o walk the rest of the way home. c< Before me trotted five little terriers, w )ehind me came the syce, leading my o lorse. We reached a sharp bend in t( he road, and the doggies had dis- v tppeared round it, when I saw the v vhole pack rushing back full tilt, ci vith a leopard at the heels of the lindmostdog. S Just as they reached me, the leo- it )ard seized Flirt, and at the same c: noment I "landed" him a blow on K :he head with all my force with the o imbrella, which flew into splinters, tl The leopard dropped the dog, but his s mpetus was so great that he could h aot stop, and rushing past me, he , knocked my syce clean off his legs, o Then he jumped into the grass boriering the road. b The change that came over our n peaceful procession in that one in- h ytant was astonishing. There stood t I in the road, flabberghasted, with h a. broken umbrella-handle in my hand; t my syce was roaring blue murder on e his back; my horse was bolting fc-r home like a runaway-engine, and l my five little dogs were shivering at I my feet. I picked Flirt up and carri- e ed her home. She was badly bitten a in the neck, but frequent applications I of phenyl soon made the wounds s heal, and in a fortnight or so she t was well again. But she was a t changed dog. She would come out \ with me, but she always stuck to g my heels, and nothing would induce her to enter the scrub or join I the other dogs in a hunt of any kind. \ f OUTLAW A CANDIDATE. fember of Dalton Gang Now a Pop- i I)< ular Candidate. Not many robbers running for ofice in New York make campaign in apitai of their reminiscences of time n( rhen they stole from the public. A al western candidate these days is not a nly recalling in his stump speeches be Js experience as a train robber, but ai ie is being well received by his audi- Di nces. A. L. Jennings, formerly a mem- di er of the Dalton gang, now nominat- Gi d for the office of county attorney, tb as for his campaign slogan " a train in obber is better than a public yegg." ai ^he public there seem to believe Li hat he ought to know. He won ut over six men who ran for the tv ffice in the primaries. th Jennings's speeches declared that or tie crimes of the Dalton gang were th ame affairs compared to the work of CI tie present court house gang in that tv istrict, who, he vowed, were embez- be lers to the amount of $50,000. "I .have stolen more than that ti< mount from trains in this territory," ex e declares, "and I have ridden away T] uth it tied behind my saddle in a w] aamless sack, but I was caught at of Lst, and now my greatest desire is m 1 prove that I can be an honest of- ar cer." Jennings was serving a ten-year mtence in thfe penitentiary for robing the inails when he was pardoned th 1 1907 by President Roosevelt. Jen- te ings's old Dalton gang was started ha i 1890 by four nephews of Cole w] ounger, the notorious holdup man sa rho was a member of the Jesse ames gang. They were reckless fel- M: >ws and up till the time of. their first p0 epredations held positions as United jU tates deputy marshals. In 1890 f0 ley ran off a bunch of cattle and s0 orses from the Osage Indian reser- tl( ation and when the country got too W( ot for them transferred their activ- bo y to California. in Their first attempt at train rob- do ing was made at Atila, Cal., in 1891, til ad nearly proved their undoing. T1 rant Dalton was arrested, charged vo ith complicity in the affair, and the yo ther members of the gang were fa )rced to fly from California. They jturned to Indian Territory and in Ay of the same year held up a Sant Fe train and broke into the Wells argo Express car. This hold-up was m lccessfully done by the gang, whose pr umber had been increased, and they W tade a clean escape. an A year later, July 14, 1892, a Mis)uri, Kansas & Texas "limited," ex- Qn ecting an attack, whistled in answer ey ) stop signal at Adair, Indian Terri>ry, and came to a stop at the unim- . artant landmark to find itself being ' )bbed. The train carried eight men ^ ho were supposed to be an effective ain robber antidote, but Jennings ad company notwithstanding, shot j p the express car, rifled the safe, >bbed the station cash drawer, shot ^ vo men, and rode off into the night ^ ithout a scratch. One of the wound1 men died the next day. The hold- . bo p antidote dropped off the opposite de of the train and failed to connect ith the robbers. Emboldened b/ their success in lis venture the Dalton gang went on ad met their Waterloo at Coffeyille, Kan., Oct. 6, 1892, when an to ttempt was made to rob the town th ank in broad daylight. Quick ac- th on on the part of the townspeople Pe revested this and when the rem- ar ants of the gang fought their way at of Coffeyville they were minus iff saders. Four of the robbers were H< illed in a running fight and the last sii f the Dalton boys was captured. ab Jennings; the recently nominated an aunty attorney, has drawn crowds ha herever he spoke by relating some ck f his experiences. He does not try I ) hide the fact that he is an ex-con- ri< ict, and apaprently the Oklahoma wJ oters consider him reformed suffi- at iently to hold office. he In 1908 Jennings, with United hi " -* T -I- A V T tsites Marsnai ja.UK Auciuaiuji, via- ;ed President Roosevelt and gave a at inematograph lecture in the White th [ouse. Western pictures were thrown ad n the screen and press accounts of se hat entertainment said that in a reel lil howing a train holdup Jennings se imself acted quite naturally. si: How Jennings got his start as an se utlaw m an interesting tale. 01 In 1889 he migrated from his th irthplace in Virginia to Pottawato- lil lie county, Indian Territory, with be lis father and brothers. He was tu rained for the law by his father, who th ield the office of probate judge in ca hat county. Jennings himself was hi lected county attorney. b? In a shooting scrape with Col. si: ^empleton Houston, son of Sam louston of Mexican war fame, Jen- = lings was wounded in the shoulder b( .nd saw his brother shot to death, th le went out to kill his brother's sa layer. This incident was the thing th hat influenced him to turn train rob- in >er, and it was not long before he vas leading the wild "Jennings gi ;ang." tt His downfall came when a Rock d< sland train bound for the west with pi J100,000 was held up by the rob- ti MAKES GOOD HIS THREAT. esperate Lumberman Refuses to b* Taken Alive and is Shot. Lake Charles, La., Sept. 25.?Makg good his threat that he woulc >t be taken alive, Charles Smith ias "Leather Breeches," accredited desperate character about the lumir camps in this section, was shol id killed to-day near Merryville b) eputy Sheriff D. J. Charlan. Smith was one of 57 men under idctment here in connetcion with ths rabow labor riot of July 7, wher iree men were killed and 37 injured a pitched battle between unior id non-union men at the Gallowaj jmber Company's plant. Smith was armed with a rifle and jo pistols when he fell a victim tc e aim of Officer Charlan. Wher dered to halt, Smith turned and rew his rifle to his shoulder, bul iarlan was the quicker, and pul jo loads of buckshot into Smith's >dy. Smith came here from Texas All of the men indicted in connecm with the Grabow riot, with tht ception of Smith, are in jail here ie charges against the prisoners bo are members of the Brotherhood Timber Workers, embrace rioting, urder and conspiracy. The cases e set for trial October 5. Had Gone His Limit. The boys had made good use oi e steep hill in their search for winr sport, and their sleds and bobs id worn a track down the hill, lere the snow had turned to ice, ys the New York American. A gentleman, whom we will call r. Chesterfield (he was really very lite,) colided with a fat woman st at the brow of the hill, lost his oting, and fell; the woman fell al, landing on top of the polite geniman. And down the hill they jnt, Mr. Chesterfield forming a to ggan on which the fat lady rode safety. Faster, faster they went wn the icy incline, not stopping unthe foot of the hill was reached, len the fat lady heard a very weak ice saying: "Pardon me, madam; u have to get off now?this is as r as I go." British Locomotive Names. Scott has been largely drawn upon the omaenclature of British exess engines. The original "Lord the Isles," which ran on the Great estern during the broad guage era d had 789,300 miles to its credit fore rebuilding was necessary, was e of the most famous locomotives er constructed, and the London and )rthwestern's "Lady of the Lake" 50 holds an honored place in railly history, having the distinction being the handsomest locomotive er designed. Classical names have figured largein the annals of British locomores, notably on the London and )rthwestern, and they are certainly 3re appropriate than the title ol Jrawley," which is, or used to be, rne by one of the Brighton Comny's engines.?London Globe. A Kansas Cyclone Story. "I have seen some hard winds out western Kansas," Abe Peters says Tom McNeal. "There are some ings that on old resident learns out ere from observation and exrience. One is that when you e facing a hard wind keep youi Duth shut. One day I was travellg with a tenderfoot from the east. 5 was a long, slender man about ? .-.-n,! inoViOC thipk' RTld v ICCl auu liii v>/V^ iuviivw lout six inches wide. He had nc ore meat on his bone& than a fork .ndle and was- about the most emaited looking person I ever saw. As was saying, one day we started tc Ie across the prairie when the nd came up in our faces, blowing the rate of a hundred miles ar lur or so. That tenderfoot opened s mouth to say something to me heard him make a curious noise Ld looked around to see what was e matter and saw that he had inlve?tently swallowed about six or ven barrels of wind. He looked ee an inflated air cushion and emed to be about four times the ie he was naturally. It seemed tc t him sort of crazy and he jumped it of the buggy. When he lit or e ground he bounded into the aii ie a rubber ball and then went mnding across the prairie like a mble weed before the wind. A1 .e end of three miles he fell into a inyon where the wind couldn't hil m and stopped, but it was a week ifore he was back to his norma! ze."?Kansas City Star. Rub-My Tism will cure you. jrs not far from Chickasaw. Ir Leir eagerness to get the money the ife was only partly wrecked anc ie gang had to be satisfied with go ~ *1-. rioecOTlirora' nookets 5 IU1 UU511 lac w r Posses immediately trailed th< ing to a hut near O-aremore, bui ie fugitives slipped through the cor 5n which was drawn about th< ace. They were surprised and cap ired several days later.?N. Y. Sun / '?-& MILL 1 i COME TO ( ; 4 ?! If only to see the B !"* Hats which we are si EXCLUSIYBNESS THE FRENI MILLINER1 J 69 HASELL ST. ' 55555555 I A Safe C< In the Banking business i ods, shrewd judgment a the fact that our deposits ficient proof that our cus that this combination is < We shall be pleased to customers. We pay 4 per PEOPLES BANK BANKRUPT'S PETITION FOR DIS CHARGE. In the District Court of the Unite< > States, for the District of S. C. , In the- matter of Rubin & Peskec bankrupts. To the Honorable H. A. M. Smith Judge of the District Court of th t United States for the District o South Carolina: Rubin & Fesken, of Bamberg, i] , the county of Bamberg and State o ' South Carolipa in said District, re spectfully represent that on the 18tl day of January last past they wer - duly adjudged bankrupts under th acts of Congress relating to Bank ruptcy; that they have duly surrec 1 aered all their property and right ; of property, and have fully complies . with all the requirements of said act and of the orders of the Court touch ing their Bankruptcy. Wherefore they pray that they ma he decreed by the Court to have j full discharge from all debts prov able against their estate under sai Bankrupt Acts, except such debt as are excepted by law from such dis charge. Dated this 18th day of Septembei l A. D., 1912. RUBIN & PESKEN, Bankrupts L J. RUBIN, - C. PESKEN. 1 ORDER OF NOTICE THEREON. ; District of S. C. 1 On this 24th day of Septembei i A. D., 1912, on reading the foregc [ ing, petition, it is? Ordered by the Court, that a heai ing be had upon the same on th 26th day of October, A. D., 1912 before said Court at Charleston, ? C., in said District, at 11 o'clock i: the forenoon, and" that notice there of be published in The Bamberg Hei aid, a newspaper printed in said Dis trict, and that all known creditor and other persons in interest may ap pear at the said time and place an show cause, if any they have, wh the prayer of the said petitioner , should not be granted. And it is Further Ordered by th Court, that the Clerk shall send b mail to all known creditors copie of said petition and this order, ad dressed to them, at their places o residence as stated. Witness the Honorable H. A. M i Smith, Judge of the said Court, an< i the Seal thereof at Charleston, S. C . in said District on the 24th of Sep tember, A. D., 1912. RICHARD W. HUTSON, Clerk U. S. D. C. S. C. COPY SUMMONS FOR RELIEF. The State of South Carolina?Coun ; ty of Bamberg?Court of Commoi Pleas. Willie Jones and Isaac Jones, plain 1 tiffs, against . Edmond Jones, Jack Jones, Jim Sim . mons, Eliza Ford, Robert Sim mons, Josey Jones, Wash Cooper ' George Simmons, Eugene Sim s mons, Elbertha Romey, Lemue ; Simmons, Johnny Simmons, Mar Hammond, and Ruberack Sim mons, defendants. 1 To the defendants above named You are hereby summoned and re > quired to answer the amended com . plaint in this action, of which a cop herewith served upon you, and t serve a copy of your answer to sai< ' complaint on the subscriber, at hi I office, in Bamberg S. C., withi: I twenty days after the service hereof exclusive of the day of such service ! and if you fail to answer the com plaint within the time aforesaid, th [ plaintiff in this action will apply t , the court for the relief demanded i 1 ~ ? 4. tne comyiaiuL. FRANCIS F. CARROLL, - Plaintiffs' Attorney L To the defendants Jim Simmons an : Ruberack Simmons above name L Please take notice that the orig , inal amended summons and con: plaint in this action, of which sum : mons the above is an exact copy, ar [ on file in the office of the Clerk o the Court of Common Pleas for Bam berg county, S. C. FRANCIS F. CARROLL, - Plaintiffs' Attornej i Attest: C. B. FREE, [L. S.] Clerk of Court. 1 Bamberg, S. C., Sept. 25, 1912. READ THIS. 3 BANELLA cures dyspepsia, indi t gestion, nervousness. First dos - helps. Indorsed by physicians. Ai ? ter using ten days n uvt sauouvu ? v turn medicine and get your monej 45 days treatment $1.00. For sal by Peoples Drug Co., and elsewhere iSEST CHARLESTON t leautiful and Exclusive I* a lowing at moderate cost T INDIVIDUALITY J 1 HAT SHOP I ' ST IMPORTEES ? CHARLESTON, S. C. J Dimbination jjjj is ample capital, careful meth- |S I iid unfailing courtesy. Thus / i are increasing rapidly is suf- |g J itomers realize and appreciate ^ our method of doing business. |g number you among our new ^ 1 cent, on Savings Deposits. ^ - - - - Bamberg, S. C. II TAX NOTICE. The treasurer's office will be open for the collection of State, county, J - ~ J ^11 A * ^1- - a I suiiuui auu an utuer taxes irom ine 15th day of October, 1912 until the l, 15th day of March, 1913, inclusive. From the first day of January, l, 1913, until the 31st day of January, e 1913, a penalty of one per cent, will f be added to all unpaid taxes. From i the 1st day of February, 1913, until q the 28th day of February, 1913, a f penalty of 2 per cent, will be added i- to all unpaid taxes. From the 1st h day of March, 1913, until the 15th e day of March, 1913, a penalty of 7 e per cent, will be added to all unpaid taxes. i- THE LEVY. s For State purposes 5% mills d For County purposes 5 % mills s Constitutional school tax ....3 mills Total 14% Mills , y SPECIAL SCHOOL LEVIES. a Bamberg, No. 14 9 mills r- Binnakers, No. 12 3 mills d Buford's Bridge, No. 7 2 mills s Clear Pond, No. 19 2 mills s- Colston, No. 18 ?2 mills Cuffie Creek, No. 17 2 mills Denmark, No. 21 6% mills Ehrhardt, No. 22 9 mills /-* \r. 1 i a :iu liovan, i\o. 11 * 1X1X1X3 5 Hutto, No. 6 2 miils / Hampton, No. 3 2 mills Heyward, No. 24 2 mills Hopewell, No. 1 3 mills Hunter's Chapel, No.' 16 1 mill Lees, No. 23 4 mills "? Midway, No. 2 2 mills , ' Oak Grove, No. 20 2 mills Olar, No. 8 4 mills St. John's, No. 10 2 mills ,e Salem, No. 9 3 mills ;? Three Mile, No. 4 2 mills All persons between the ages of 11 twenty-one and 'sixty years of age, except Confederate soldiers and sailors, who are exempt at'50 >y'ears of age, are liable to a poll tax of one s dollar. '* Capitation dog tax 50 cents. All persons who were 21 years of t * age on or before the 1st day of Jans uary, 1912, are liable to a poll tax * of one dollar, and all who have not ? made returns to the Auditor, are re*v quested to do so on or before the t s 1st of January, 1913. * I will receive the commutation road tax of two (?2.00) dollars from r the 15th day of October, 1912, until : the 1st day of March, 1913. ? G. A. JENNINGS, " Treasurer Bamberg County. TEACHERS' EXAMINATION. Dn.ononf +/-? on rtHor r?f thp Stntp * 1 U1 Ouauc IV UU VA UV4 VA VAAV VVWW - board of education notice is hereby given that the regular Fall teachers', examination will be held at the court house in Bamberg on Friday, October a 4, 1912, beginning at 9:30 a. m., and closing at 4 p. m. The examination will be based upon the following subjects: Agriculture, History, English, Algebra, - Arithmetic, Physiology and Hygiene, ' - Civics and Current Events, Pedagogy ' ', and Geography. Pedagogy will be based upon the elementary and high d school manuals furnished by the y State superintendent of education, t- Columbia, S. C. The county board of education is : authorized to renew certificates of all s- persons holding first or second grade .- certificates who attended a summer y school, do satisfactory work and pass o the final examination, d . R. W. D. ROWELL, s County Supt. Education. Q ???????????????? NOTICE. * w ; I desire to announce to the public i- generally, and especially to the e friends and patrons of my late brotho er, Mr. W. Paul Riley, that his inn surance business will be continued by the undersigned^for Mrs. W. P. Riley and myself, iuvery interest, large r. or small, will be safe-guarded in d ever particular, as in the past, and all d business will receive my most creful r_ and personal attention. [_ With thanks for past patronage ^ [m and asking a continuance of the e same, I am, Respectfully, ,f H. JACK RILEY. " NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR DISCHARGE IN BANKRUPTCY. r. Pursuant to an order of the Honorable H. A. M. Smith, Judge of the District Court of the U. S. for the District of S. C., in the matter of ' Rubin and Pesken, Bankrupts, the - said bankrupts will, on the 26th day of October, 1912, at eleven o'clock in the forenoon, appear before said i- court at Charleston, S. C., and apply e for a full discharge from all debts ?- provable against tbeir estate unaer J- the said Bankrupt Acts. r. CARTER & CARTER, e Attorneys for Bankrupts. i September 25th, 1912. ^