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DIED TO SAVE CHILDREN Superintendent of Street Cleaning Stops Runaway Horse. New York, Sept. 2t>.?Edward Scully, a superintendent in the street ? cleaning department, sacrificed his life to-day to save a crowd of school children from a runaway horse. Scully seized the animal's bridle and turned it into the curb. Although he had checked the runaway he was carried under the horse's hoofs and instantly killed. CHARGED WITH ROBBING MAILS. Negro Driver of Parcel Post wagon Under Arrest. Atlanta. Ga., Sept. 26.?Hewlett Worthem, a driver of a mail wagen. is in jail here, charged with robbing the mails of parcel post packages valued in the aggregate at more than $1,000. Postoffice inspectors arrested Worthem late yesterday in the act, they say, of extracting a parcel from a mail bag in his wagon. After an alleged confession by Worthem he took the inspectors to his home, webere they saw they found a large store of many valuable varieties of, parcel post matters. Go Seven Thousand Miles to Wed. A journey of 7,000 miles to Hong Kong to marry girls they will see for the first time on their wedding day has been begun by Moy Bock Quong and Moy Bock Tom, sons of Charlie Toy, proprietor of a Shanghai chop suey restaurant on Second street. The brides, who are daughters of wealthy Hong Kong merchants, were arranged for by Mr. Toy. dealing entirely with the girls' parents, says the - -- - - - 1 -- j? ?a Norfolk Ledger, me unues auu unucgrooms had nothing to say about the matter until they were informed that preparations for the nuptials l$d been made. Mr. Toy in searching for desirable girls for his sons remembered two girls whose parents he had known in Hong Kong. A "go between" was chosen to carry messages between Mr. Toy and the girls' parents. A diviner was consulted who discovered by means of astrology, the flight of bird6 and other signs that the unions would be happy and the wedding day was set. The betrothal of a Chinese couple is not considered made until the wedding day is set. After the day is chosen the bride has her face shaved, calls in her friends and mourns until the wedding day. The two young men sailed from Vancouver this week on the ship Empress of China. As soon as they arrive in Hong Kong the ceremonies for the wedding of Moy Bock Tom, the older of the two boys, will start. The wedding gifts of tablets, bearing suitable inscriptions, and geese are sent to the bride's parents. Wild 1 3 ? " a?^K1 geese are loogeu uyuu <*s cmuicmaucal of conjugal harmony. Domestic geese are symbolic of fidelity. On the first day of the ceremonies the bride will be put in a sedan chair adorned with festoons and artificial flowers. The baggage of clothes and ornaments will be carried by servents. They will also carry lighted flambeaux. Relatives and friends follow, the nearest relative carrying the key to the bride's chair. When the procession reaches Moy Bock Tom's house he will be given the key to the chair. When he unlocks the door it will be the first glimpse the bride and bridegroom will have of each other. He will lead her to a table set for two. The company will be led to other tables, the men sitting on one side and the women on the other. The bride spends the rest of the day with her women friends and the bridegroom will treat his friends in a separate apartment. The next day they will return to bend knee to the family gods and pay respects to their relations. On the third day the bride will visit her parents in a chair made by the bridegroom especially for the occasion. The visiting will continue for about ten days when the ceremonies will be concluded by a feast given by the parents of the bride. As soon as Moy Bock Tom's wedding is over, that of his younger brother will be started. A few weeks later they will return to the United States with their brides. Moy Bock Quong, who has been in engineering in the Armour Institute in Chicago, has one more year before he completes his course. He expects to finish in 1914. Moy Bock Tom, who has been in Xey Tory will take charge of his father's business in Milwaukee. He will probably be joined by his brother after he finishes his work at school. Fatherly Clergyman (meeting young parishioner in curl papers)? < Why don't you leave your hair as it was meant to be my child? If nature < had wanted your hair to curl she ' would have curled it for you. < Offended Young Lady?When I was a little girl, she did, sir; but I ; suppose she now thinks I am old i enough to do it for myself. FIVE VESSELS ARE ICE B()U\I>. I Fleet of Canadian Explorers Imprisoned Among Icebergs. Nome, Alaska. Sept. 26.?The t'our-masted schooner Transit is a total wreck on the shore off Point Barrow. where she was driven by the ice and five other vessels are imprisoned in the ice in the same neighborhood. Capt. J. B. Backland, owner and navigator of the Transit, and his crew of seven, are on their way to Nome in a launch. The old whaler Kartuk, bearing Vilhjalmar Stefannson, is the only vessel of the Canadian explorer's fleet or? A 01.* Tl'intcV IU L'lCrtl tllC IV- c auu munv quarters. The power schooners Mary Sachs and Alaska and the steam whaler Belvedere, bearing part of the explorer's outfit, are fast in the ice. The other icebound vessels are the power schooners North Star and Polar Bear. While the five imprisoned vessels are in danger of meeting the same fate as the Transit, no fear is felt for the safety of those on board, as it would be easy to leave at any time over the ice. WAS PIRATE FIGHTER. Standard Oil Man Tells of Six Years in Chinese Service. A man arrived at the Waldorf yesterday who spent six years looking for pirates and smugglers in the Far East. He is J. J. Rule, an American, who is assistant manager for the Standard Oil company at Canton, China, and under the imperial government he held the rank of mandarin of the sixth class. This was awarded him as a result of a fight on the West river some years ago, when he helped fight and capture a lot of pirates who were about to seize a river steamer. Mr. Rule has lived in southern ~ i ? yo n n A o trnn/1 nort <~kf X i > cai o, auu c*. 5wu v v*. that time he spent in the Chinese customs service. He speaks Chinese fluently. He says he would feel as safe in the interior of China, even, during a revolution, as anywhere else in the world, because a foreigner who speaks the language and knows Chinese customs is secure when traveling in the country away from the seaboard. "I left Canton the latter part of May," said Mr. Rule yesterday. "That was, of course, before the latest troubles came up. Business at that time was about normal, considering the state of affairs that then existed. "Pirates on the Pearl river? Well, they call them pirates, but they are hardly pirates of the old school, such as used to prowl about the coast of China. You see, a gang of them get some inside information that a certain steamer is carrying treasure, and they get on the boat as passengers at some port; and then, after overpowering the crew and beaching the craft the pirates take to the shore and scatter all over the province. It is next to impossible to run them down collectively. "I had to come into contact with some of those fellows when I was in the Chinese customs service. I was on duty up the West river for five years, and then for a year and a half I was on the frontier back of Macao. That is where most of the smuggling is done, and we had to keep a sharp lookout for opium coming in and also for junks going out loaded with contraband grain. We" had a mixed guard of Indians and Chinamen at first, and they used to say that one nationality was employed to keep the other awake. But since the dispute with Portugal over the boundary of Macao I understand they have come to employ only Chinese. "Things happened in those days, but the hottest time we had with the pirates was at Samshui, when I was on duty up the West river. A lot of cut-throats had gone on board a steamer at Wuchowostensibly as passengers bound for Hongkong. We had word that they intended to take possession of her, so the Chinese harbor master and I with a small force of men, went on board to arrest them. As we reached the steamer, the pirates opened fire and there was quite a little shooting within a few minutes. We killed two of them and wounded one, but the harbor master was wounded. However, we captured 14 men. The harbor master receiver the decoration of mandarin of the fifth class, and at the same time I was made a mandarin of the sixth class. This would have been of a lot of use to me had I remained in the service. The fight lasted only about 10 minutes, for we were soon surrounded by gunboats, and there was no way for the pirates to escape. "I like Canton better as a place of residence than Hong kong, because from it, it is easy to get into the ri/Mi r> t Vi*-**-/-* /\ri 1 i? ni Orll t A r nin A iirumi*. ^ ua v c uui%> cifeiit kji inxx^ Americans in Shameen, the foreign concession. I was in Canton through the other revolution. In fact I was senior lieutenant of the Shameen defense corps, but things soon got be>*ond us and British and Indian troops were sent to protest the settlement."?New York Times ! SEGREGATION FOR BALTIMORJ Oidinance for Separate Blocks f( Whites and Blacks. Baltimore, Md., Sept. 25.?A ra( segregation ordinance was passed t the city council here late to-day an signed by Mayor James H. Prestoi Tim moaciirp hps the f nil n wine titles "An ordinance to prevent confli and ill-feeling between the whi and colored races in Baltimore cit and to preserve the public peace au promote general welfare by makir reasonable provisions requiring tl use of separate blocks for residence by white and colored people respe tively." A house on Mosher street occupi< by negroes who moved in yesterda was bombarded with stones and bri< for three hours to-night by white m< and boys from roofs, windows ai stoops of houses opposite, occupi< by whites. Then a crowd of negro< assembled and began a similar woi of destruction on the houses of tl white people. Several persons we injured by flying missiles. SOUTH'S CORN CROP. Will Probably Aggregate Seven Hu dred and Fifty Million Bushels. Of the 2,300 million bushels corn which it is believed will 1 husked from the growth of 1913 the United States, not less than 75( 000,000 will be the Southern cro The latter will constitute near $600,000,000 out of the $1,600,00( OUU total value 01 American cum m year. These results are indicated 1 the preliminary report in the Atlan publications, Orange Judd Southe: Farming. It says the prospective b crop is due to greatly increased acr age and higher average yield p acre. The season in the Southeast was i favorable to corn that the yield w average 22 bushels per acre, or som what more than in previous years, the Southwest, the yield of 14 bus els per acre is slightly more than tx years ago, compared with 20 la year. The total crop of the Southwest : therefore, expected to be very clo to 600,000,000 of bushels, or abo 100,000,000 more than last year two years ago. The drought in tl Southwest was so serious as to mal this year's crop of 166,000,000 on about the same size as two years ag compared to 239,000,000 last yes The South, as a whole, will mal fully 750,000,000 of bushels tl year. This is slightly in excess last year's bonanza total, but ov 100,000,000 more than two yea ago. South Carolina's crop of 2,300,0< acres is slightly more than last yea according to Soutnern r arming s pr liminary report. The yield now loo like an average of 20 bushels p acre, compared to 18 two years a; and the same last year. The tot amount of corn produced in Sou Carolina this season will be abo 4 5.000,000 bushels, which is 12,00( 000 more than two years ago, coi pared with 34.000,000 last year. B corn may be worth an average of ! cents a bushel this year, compan to 85 and 91 the past two years, this case. South Carolina corn w make a crop worth $4 3,000,000 coi pared with $29,000,000 and S3 0,00( 000 annually for two previous year TOTAL LOSS OF OHIO FLOODS. Weather Bureau Estimates Cost $16:5,000,000. Washington, Sept. 24.?A tot money loss of $163,000,000 was cau ed by the Ohio floods last March. T1 iv cat lie hnvooii octimafoe tliof cnr M VUtllVl UU1 VUU VVk) liiUV kJUl which includes loss tc railroad, tel graph and telephone lines and farm property, including prospectr crops. Xo other Ohio Valley flood, excep ing the midwinter flood of 1SS4, e: ceeded the 1913 flood, the report d clares. In the lower Mississippi tl crest stages attained exceeded a previous records between Cairo ar Helena. NEGRESS BURNS TO DEATH. Half-witted Camden Girl Loses H< Life in Fire. Locked in a house, while h< mother was picking cotton in a fiel nearby, an eighteen-year-old negi girl was burned to death Tuesds morning at her home, on lower Ma ket street, near Vaughan's ginnei at Camden. The girl was half-witte and at one time was an inmate of tli insane asylum. The supposition that she set fire to some cotton, whic was piled up in a corner of the roon Mr. Garner, who operates a ginnei nearby, together with several hand saw smoke emitting from the cracli of the house. They knocked dow the doors and when George DuBose, negro, attempted to rescue the gi: she rushed into another room, an in a few minutes was calling for hel] but no one could enter on account c the flames and smoke. S. C. G. ANDERSON, JR., Pres. J. N. YOUMANS, Yice-Pres. Savannah, Ga. Lexsy, Ga. )r Anderson Cotton Compan -e COTTON FACTORS AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS )V 308 BAY STREET, EAST SAVANNAH, GEOR id a. CONSIGNMENTS OF i: Upland, Sea Island and Florodora Cott ct GIVEN OUR PROMPT AND CAREFUL ATTENTION te y. We Respectfully Solicit a Share of Your Patrona ld Guaranteeing Entire Satisfaction ig ??.. ? Wanted^t2>Every person who lias a desire to save money to open ' an account with us. Mlien you deposit your money in ^ the bank, you will not spend it as foolishly as you will if it is in your pocket. Therefore, you have saved it; id -? ?Hi lvn?.yv ? Ayvoi.io 4 V. r* ? lntirVA il ami 11urn juu win u??c a ucanc iu natc a. i<u^c We pay 4 per cent, interest on savings deposits. 8S * PEOPLES BANK Bamberg, S.C. 1G ? _ re H prepared farSrcknessi \\ave Some money in the j | ? '1 : f y'' i V f" J ** who gets the money is. You Earn 9 y When SICKXESS, calamity and all sorts c unlooked-for things over-take us, we must b or prepared for thc'm. If you were taken sue tie denly ill, and it might be several weeks befoi <.e your recovery, would it not be a comfortabl ^ . feeling to know that you had no worries aboi money ? P overt v is a'disease, when you are oh o, that is as painful as physical disease, PREPAR ir. now for the DECE^IRER of you life; start bank account. lis Do YOUR banking with US. ot er We pay 4 per cent, interest compoundrs ed quarterly on savings deposits )0 er; Farmers & Merchants Banl ks EHRHARDT, S. C. al irrc PIPE i ivpcmrif LODGE meeting. th LirLniVL LlVEjlULlY Bamberg, Lodge, No. 38, Kni ut 7 of Pythias meets first and fo >. UPAITH on J AffinFNT [Monday nights at 7:30 p. m. n_ 1IL./IHI1I turn nvvii/uni ing oretnren coraiaLiv mvnea. * f*rnT irk * GEO. F. HAI INSURANCE A ? ^?XT?S??ncelIor Commai Jo ??___ A. M. DENBOW, 2d * ^ ^ o ,r . ~ Keeper of Records and Se; Agent for Superior Monument Co. n Can Save you Money on Tombstones. 1 J. F. Carter B. D. Cart W. MAX WALKER carter & carter s EHRHARDT, S. C. 1 _ Attorneys-at-Law at V^tmBSpecial attention given to se tlement of estates and invest "i francis" f. carroi le "LOMBARD M?n 1 Attorney-at-Law n' Improved Sow Mills* Gfflce in Hota Building te" VARIABLE FRICTION FEED. ind'keliable- ^ J GENERAL PRACTICE. Best material and workmanship, lighi} BAMBERG, S. O. :e running, requires little power; simpleJ __________ easy to handle. Are made in several portable iwn qtannmi t- sizes and are good, substantial moneyj J? ^?^table an^sta-^w* [making machines down to inesmancai< m m m vm m mm m? size. Write for catalog showing En4 K- B| fl I fl MB B e~ pines, Boilers and all Saw Mill supplies, r flu ! fl flu ? ie Lombard Iron Works & Supply Co.* fl IB Bfl fl IB fl :11 > *UCU,TA- "* Mm IV II I II k d CHICHESTER S PILLS AND tori; W, tteSffiW Saws- Splitters, Shafts, Pulle er A tjL. Belting, Gasoline Engines . W Jjt DIAMOND BRAND PILLS, for 25 . ^/s0lDBrDiG0isf lRE LAR0^T0CK LOMBAR ^ I* ~~~~~TTniinHitv \faohino R/iiloi> \W 1 UUltUAJf iUMVUJUVf ft \ Supply Store. o MO YE DICKINSON august*. g* iy INSURANCE AGENT y win Write Anythins GRAHAM & BLACI d Fire, Tornado, Accident, Liaie bility, Casualty, in the Att0ril6yS-<it-Ii3>W is strongest and most re- yyyj practice jn United States h liable companies. State Courts in any County 3- My Motto: "Buy What I Need m the State* in Bamberg, and From Those BAMBERG, S. C. s? Who Patronize Me. " " ~ ~ n 'Phone 10-L, or at Oil Mill FIRE 1NSURANC a | BAMBERG, S. C. I , ? . ? ri "" Old Line Conipsiniej d To Prevent Blood Poisoning 3, apply at once the wonderful old reliable DR. J. F F^)L1C? Apt, f PORTER'S ANTISEPTIC HEALING OIL. a sur- 9 & gical dressing: that relieves pain and heals at niiupppr c r the same time. Not a liniment. 25c. 50c. $1.00. ISAMUUiKU, ?. I ^ ( ^ ^ ^ ^ * More Time At Home dj TO and from work?four trips a day?a wheel will save ten ? minutes each trip or nearly an hour extra?three hundred hours a year J more at home. You'll feel better ? and act better. Gets the cobwebs out of your brain and honest hunger A Into your stomach. The M fIVER JOHNSON ] has more strong features, is better built and finished and runs smoother than , any wheel you ever A mounted. You needn't buy till you try. Trust JBH Bicycles, Guns, and Automobile Supplies, Key Fittings, and General Repair Shop. First-Class Workmen. J. BUIST BRICKIE Bamberg, S. C. | RILEY & COPELAND* * Successors to W. P. Riley. a | Fire, Life | Accident J INSURANCE f, ' Office in J. D. Copeland's Store ? | BAMBERG, S. | FOR SALE. )f BARGAINS IN REAL ESTATE. 38 fine building lots in town of Ehrhardt. r"e 16 choice building lots in town of Bamberg. ? / 1 store house and lot next to post jl office on Main street, Ehrhardt. a Apply to JOHN F. FOLK, Bamberg, S. C. S. G. MAYFIELD. W. E. FREE. MAYFIELD & FREE Attorneys-at-Law BAMBERG, S. 0. J* Practice in all the Courts, both ^ State and Federal. Corporation practice and the winding up of estates a specialty. Business entrustted to us will be promptly attended ~~ ? j ights Ma AAA >urth X1U? t Thit it a prescription prepared especially m Ri for MALARIA or CHILLS & FEVER. icier ^*ve or *** doses will break any case, and if taken then as a tonic the Fever will not aj return. It acts on the liver better than Calomel and does not gripe or sicken. 25c H RUB-MY-TISM ; Will cure your Rheumatism Neuralgia, Headaches, Cramps, Colic, Sprains, Bruises, Cuts and Burns, Old Sores, Stings of Insects u Etc. Antiseptic Anodyne, used in- i i. ternally and externally. Price 25c, 1o wis**- ? wuiu ii*. u'fic Day Take EAXATiVF: RROMO Quinine. It stops thi ' T Cousrh aud Headache and works off the Cold. * Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 2. W. GROVE'S signature on each box. 25c. ^ ? E. H. HENDERSON Attorney-at-Law BAMBERG, S. C. LHY General Practice. Loans Negotiated. m For Weakness and Loss of Appetite , The Old Standard general strengthening tonic m J ROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC, drives on A Malaria and builds up the system. A true toni> WM md sure Appetizer. For adults and children. 50c BH CITATION NOTICE. * iec- The State of South Carolina? >od County of Bamberg?By Geo. P. Har>ys, mon, Esq., Judge of Probate. Whereas, W. D. Kinard hath made suit to me to grant him letters >r\ of administration of the estate of and effects of J. M. Kinard, deceased: irks, These are therefore to cite and admonish all and singular the kin- } dred and creditors of the said J. M. Kinard, deceased, that they be * 3 _ and appear before me in the Court of r Probate, to be held at Bamberg, on k. Monday, October 13th next, after publication thereof, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the said administraand tion should not be granted. Given under my hand and seal this 23rd day of September, A. D., 1913. GEO. P. HARMON, ^ Judge of Probate. 1 J. P. OTT, JR. CIVIL ENGINEER S FARM SURVEYING A SPECIALTY Address: 1341 Main Street, COLUMBIA, S. C. ... i '