The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, October 02, 1913, Page 2, Image 2

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4J BANDITS HOT BIG KAl'L. SEVERAL A II BESTS IX ALABAMA TKAIX BOBBED Y. Men Held at Eutaw and Tuscaloosa l>e3iy All Connection with Daring Hold un. Tuscaloose, Ala., Sept. 26.?Deputies from Birmingham and Montgomery and armed farmers of Tuscaloosa county have abandoned the search for the three men who held up and robbed the express car of the Alabama Great Southern train near Bibbville, Ala., last night, and the case is now entirely in the hands of the railroad special officers. Five men have been arrested at Eutaw, Ala., below Tuscaloosa, none of whom is over 30 years old. and five others have been landed in the Tuscaloosa county jail by Special Agent Hall. All of these men deny connection with the hold-up. Mail Clerk Leander Poole to-night said: "The robbery was committed by three masked men, only one of whom appeared to me to be at all experienced. The other two were young and nervous. One of them did considerable promiscuous shooting and cursing in the mail car. Bullets passing through the mail car narrowly missed four men. I am confident the robbers doing the shooting were drunk, while crouched under the counter I had the presence of mind to save a few registered letters. Dynamited Safe. "The last charge of dynamite that blew the express safe was very heavy. It jarred us. one hundred yards away. They had modern appliances equipped with lights that threw rays so that they could see us but we could not see them. As they were marching us back to the passenger coaches I fell into a cattle guard and sprained my ankle. One robber warned us of the cattle guard just as I fell. "The fireman stated the' robbers got off with mail sacks full of booty. My impression is they left the car before we reached Vance, letting the engine run wild to throw the posses off the trail. I believe I can identify the robber who did the shooting and cursing. I got a good look at him. The smaller robber, who guarded the rear end of the express car, seemed experienced. The express messenger * had no chance to defend himself." Covered with Revolvers. According to statements of the train crew, Engineer Daniels and his fireman were covered with revolvers when the train was stopped on the block danger signal at Bibbville. Fireman was forced to uncouple the express, mail and baggage cars, and they were run down the track some distance from the passenger coaches. There the mail clerks and express messenger were driven from trie ears and the safes blown open with nitro-glycerine. After the robbery the three men jumped upon the engine, forcing +he fireman to open the throttle. They forced the fireman i to jump from the engine a short dis* tance from Bibbville. C. C. Jinks, who was a passenger, says the conductor notified all the passengers of the hold-up and advised them to hide their valuables. The coaches were not entered. A negro porter engaged in a hand to hand tussle with a robber, but was struck on the head by another of the gang. Late to-night conferences were held by Sheriff Palmer, his deputies engaged in the chase, railroad detectives, express company officials private detectives and detectives from national agencies. It is estimated that fifty thousand dollars were stolen, incfuding a heavy shipment cf currency from the East to New Orleans. Car Badly Damaged. Montgomery, Ala., Sept. 26.?The entire train that was held up at Bibbville last night was taken to-day to Meridian, Miss., the southern terminus of the division. The baggage car had a large hole torn through the roof by the explosions, which blew the safes and the mail car showed bullet holes. The negro porter, who last night was removing a velocipede usually used to flag trains, when ordered to halt by one of the robbers, pushed the pistol away from his face and grappled with the highwayman, throwing him and holding him securely until another masked man stepped up and hit him over the head. The negro then ran under the baggage car. MOTH EH ANI) BABE BURNED. Found J)ea<l in Celiac of Home De stroyed in Forest Fires. Napa, Cal., Sept. 24.?Mrs. M. Hutchinson and her infant son, of Foss Valley, were found dead today in the cellar of the Hutchinson home, which was destroyed by a forest fire. The forest fire broke out again today in Connecticut Valley, near St. Helene, and is still burning. The property loss in this vicinity exceeds $100,000. TO CONSIDER FREIGHT RATES. _____ Xoith Carolina Legislatu. ? Convene in Extraordinary Session. | Raieigh. X. C.. Sept. 24.?Th j Xorth Carolina Legislature convenei in extraordinary session to-day t consider proposals made by severa railroads tor readjustment of freigh rates to and from Western. Xorthen and Eastern cities. After effectin organization, both houses adjournei until to-morrow, when Governo Graig's message on the propose rare ohanees will be received. At a mass meeting of shippers thi afternoon Governor Craig declare himself in favor of accepting th roads' proposals. He said such recommendation will be incorporate in his special message to-morrow. Reductions amounting, it is esti mated, to approximately two millio dollars annually in freight rates fror Northern, Eastern and Western citie have been proposed by the carrier* Commodity rates on west-boun freight have also been offered. Ac ceptance of the proposals has bee recommended by the State corpors tion commission. A lively contest i expected in the Legislature. At its opening session to-day th House of Representatives electe Walter Murphy, Speaker. Hurt in Fight With Constables. Anderson. Sept. 25.?A telephon message from Pelzer at 9 o'clock tc night states that John Sargent, white man, suffered a crushed skul at the hands of Constable Allie Step of the sheriff's office and Constabl Smith of Pelzer this afternoon whe: he resisted a search of his premise by the officers. It is understood tha Stepp and Smith appeared at Sat gent's home to malie a search fo w contraband whiskey and Sargent se cured a gun and offered resistance j The gun was taken by the officer and in the melee that followed a bio* v. as dealt Sargent. His condition i critical, so it is stated. It is said that the officers found 6' j pints of whiskey on the premises. Constable Stepp reported the mat i ter to Sheriff Ashley and Ashley an< Stepp went back to Pelzer tonight. Schoolboy Drowned in Reservoir. Union. Sept. 25.?Little Amo, Singleton, the seven-year-old son o Mrs. Pearl Singleton, met a tragi' death late Tuesday afternoon b: drowning in the reservoir of the gin nery at Santuck. It appears that the boy was re turning from school with some com j panions when he left them and wen I alone by the ginnery reservoir, when j he apparently looked over into th< j water and losing his balance fell ii | and drowned in the water which was j four or five feet deep. For several hours Mrs. Singletoi i thought that her little son was ou j playing with his schoolmates, bu j when night approached and he die | not return she became so alarmec j that a search was instituted, anc when the boy's cap was found neai the reservoir it was not long before his body was seen and recovered. Mrs. Singleton's sorrow has excit ed for her much sympathy, as thii tragic affair adds another to the lis' that marks her life, her father beinj Sims Gilmore, who was shot and in stantly killed at Jonesville about si? *ears ago. and her husband, Roy Sin gleton, having been killed by beins struck by a derrick engine when he was working on the dam at Grea Falls about three years ago. Little Amos was a bright lad ant I besides his mother he leaves a^ little brother and sister. (Greenville .Man Under Heavy Bond Greenville, Sept. 24?Benjamin F Chapman, charged with violating th< Mann white slave act, having trans ported a Greenville woman from this place to Augusta, Ga., for immora purposes, was given a preliminar; hearing in Augusta and placed undei $1,500 bond for his appearance a the next term of the United State coart when he will be tried on th< Federal charge. The preliminar; hearing was given before Unite< States Commissioner C. J. Skinner Jr., Mr. Sidney Smith, white slav< officer for Augusta, arguing the cas< for the United States. Deila Dixon, the white womai from this city, whom Chapman i charged with transporting to Augus ta, was present at the hearing. Judgi Picquet finished reading tlie affec tionate letters which passed betweei Chapman and Delia Dixon, pnd tliei made an eloquent plea for the dis misal of the charges against Chap man. The Dixon woman is said to havi lived at Xo. 11 First street, thi city, and she claims to have beei born in Pickens county. A full stor; of the case was carried in yesterday' issue of The News and caused con siderabie comment, ine outcome o the case is awaited with interest. Full line of blank books at Th< Herald Book Store. KITTEN BY MAI) DOG. if s Lady and Physician Attacked by j Animal in Spartanburg. e Spartanburg', Sept. '! >.?Miss Bar-; 3 ' bara Brown was attacked and bitten j o! by a dog on .Magnolia street yesterday \ 11 evening. Dr. M. \V. Chambers, of j t1 Jonesville, tried to drive the dog j a I away and was bitten also. There ^ * li o ctront ortH ! gi were 111<111 \ ycuyitr wjll w c?.~^ . d I the incident caused excitement. The r! dog's actions led to the report that it d was suffering from hydrophobia and there was a rush^o places of safety, s Somebody called a policeman, who d killed the dog. e Miss Brown and Dr. Chambers a were taken to Dr. B. B. Steedly's d hospital, where their wounds were dressed. If the dog did not have hyi drophobia the lacerations which it n inflicted will soon heal. The dog's n bead was sent to Columbia for exams ination. If it develops that the animal was rabid Miss Brown and Dr. d Chambers will take the Pasteur treat- i ment. n ^ Lazy Husbands Go to Kockpile. 3 Philadelphia, Pa., Sept. 24.?Nursing hands decorated with large water e blisters and backs that ached after a d long day under a blazing sun on the county rock pile, six recalcitrant husbands, who, according to their wives, are possessed of a chronic objection to work, sat in their cells in the county ^ prison Friday night muttering curses on Judge Bregy. From the bench of ^ the Desertion court Judge Bregy sent them to the rock pile for ninety days, with orders that the 65 cents a dav e that the county pays for their labor be given to their wives. The men had s t been ordered on previous occasions to , pay various sums to their wives each week, but had failed to obev the orr - * .i * ueis 01 me uwun. All six of the men had hands white and soft as women when they went to s t lie workhouse. On the way they seemed to regard the whole performance in the light of a joke They laughed and chatted about it. But their mirth did not last long. Bright and early in the morning they were , roused out of bed to a breakfast of 3 coffee, butterless bread and molasses. Then a big guard led them to a piie of brand new sledge hammers especially bought for the occasion. It seems ed to the guard that a couple of the f husbands were a little slow in picking c up their hammers. He gave them a i heart to heart talk and illustrated his - remarks with forcible gestures. After that the hesitancy disappeared. j| Out through the jail the men were [j - marched to a pile of big rocks. There t they halted. 1 "Gwan!" said the gu&rd. "This is 2 for you. Get busy and make these / i big ones into little ones. And remem5 ber this: The county is paying 6a cents a day for what you're going to i do? and I'm here to see that we get t all of 65 cents' worth of work done? t and then some. Go to it, now?and 1 the first man I catch loafing will wish 1 he hadn't. Get me?" I The husbands evidently underr stood. Each picked out a particular 5 spot and began to wield his sledge hammer. While they didn't display - any undue enthusiasm about it, they s kept at it steadily. t The sending of these six husbands y to the rock pile was the first practi cal application of a new law designed c especially to meet the cases of hus bands who won't give any money to y their wives. Under the old law men ? were sometimes sent to jail, but they t did not mind much. Besides, the mere fact of having them in jail did 1 not help the wives from a financial > standpoint. Judge Bregy threatened to enforce the new law about a week ago. Can Trove Her Charges. Atlanta, Sept. 25.?Do Atlanta so5 ciety girls get drunk? Shorn of eu phonious qualifying phrases that's 5 the bold question that has been raised 1 by a recent Christian Citizenship y meeting. Has aroused a storm of r indignation and denial? You bet it t has. s Mrs. G. B. Lindsey of College Park 2 secretary of the Civic League of y America, who said in a speech here i that "many society girls are carried , drunk from fashionable cafes and a elnhs." has todav reiterated the truth b of her statement. The ladies who first said that Mrs. i Lindsey was mistaken, now declare s she is a slanderer. They say Mrs. - Lindsey has never been in any of b the fashionable clubs whose morals - she denounces, and that she has simi ply repeated slanderous stories that .1 have no foundation in fact. I But Mrs. Lindsey declares that she - based her statement on absolute and inoontestible evidence and that if she s | is pushed to it she will produce proof s! to back up her assertions. .1! Mrs. Lindsey wants it to be undery | stood however, that she it not trys' ing to indict Atlanta society as a - j whole or Atlanta society girls as a f I class. She insists, however, that j some of them drink straight whiskey j and get drunk on it. She says they ^ e I also swear, gamble and smoke cigarettes. Pap Tnwr JL \J M. til V A V/ TV 1 We have receiv HORSES A an extra nice load as usual, we an was the first loa county this seas( to see them, eve needing an anim can suit you. Th up to the Jones \ quality and styl< an extra nice lot Buggies, Carri Harness, Lap Ri We have a number of Harness, and feel sure requirements, 110 matte We have the styles a Come to see us. Yot I JONES B1 I BAMBERG, .... * 1 11 " ~~ WrZ ^ n I invite the attention customers and the pu Saturday, the 4th and contir Tnno/I 117 (UlU lUGOuajr, i/tiuuu .1 will offer my entire cept Groceries) at have a large stock of GENERAL MERCHANT Which 1 intend to sel ? 1?- ?t M/l iiveiy nu guuud uiai g all, you will be met a my store headquarter I have to make roor arrive later. This is do your early fall s] forget the date. ^ n nv j. v. un EHRHARDT, SO i ~~~ " ? B { Ae Season i and County |* ed a car load of J ND MULES I, by the way, and, 31 s ahead, for this d received in this )n. We want you n if you are not al just now. We esefully measure ligh standard for We also have of iages, Wagons, ^ obes, Whips, Etc styles in Buggies and J that we can meet your | r how exacting they are. I j nd the prices are right. 11 {MM i are always welcome. j ROTHERS 1 - - SOUTH CAROLINA || L JL 1VIIVV of all my friends and blic generally that on of October, 1913 * 0 luing until the 14th, 1913 s stock of goods (ex J L_1 i. i i ana oeiuw cum. a USE m FDRMIDRE ji 11 off for cash. Posi- J ed. Come one, come || nd waited on. Make s during these 10 days, n for goods that will ; a chance for you to hopping. Now don't Jery truly, j NNeLLYI ! UTH CAR0]?l^^^^^Jjj) ' &- .. . I