The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, December 11, 1913, Page 3, Image 3

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'go Beginnin; Sale. Busine we determine Don't think tV still getting in k | V. . 'V * 1 1 V - % ' ft SHOES-aH Shoe.well selected HATS?New Hats the famous ? TRUNKS AND MEN'S SHIRTSBLANKETS AN ic- R -1 CATTLE RAISERS QUIT BUSINESS, ft Condition Will Be_ Felt in U. S. as I1 Regards Higher Prices El Paso, Texas, December 6.?The cattle industry in northern Mexico, which was the source of a large por- ?t } tion of the meat supply of the United * States, has been practically wiped e< out by the Mexican revolution and Jl many of the largest cattle raisers 03 $ * have been forced out of business. ~ di Yearling steers are now selling for $30 and $35 here and two-year-olds for $40 to $47 and the supply is U ? . a: small. Before the revolution $20 was a \ good price for a yearling and $30 0 for a two-year-old. The higher price and scarcity of Mexican beef, coupled with the poor condition of the ranges % % \ Q\ through Texas and the epidemics of . black leg, are going to have an important effect on the American market and cattlemen here are prophe- 11 eying that beef will be higher than ^ ever before. Gen. Luis Terrazas, the largest cat' tfe raiser in Mexico and the owner of thousands of acres in the State of n Chihuahua, is now reported, to be 0 cl fleeing toward the American border accompanied by several other large o * 1 ??i T) r/NM.*v wA^rnlii tmn C&I116 raisers. DCIUIC me iciuiunuu i the annual export from the Terrazas 'i ranches was between 50,000 and 75,000 head. Since Jan. 1, last, Terrazas 1 has shipped less than 1,000 head to the United States. For the last 15 M i, years Terrazas has branded between 75,000 and 100,000 calves. This year the "iron" has been put on but 500. tl The adverse conditions which have t made themselves felt through the cat- a: tie country in Texas and New Mexico b; caused the American raisers to rely tc upon the Mexican cattlemen to fur- h nish the supply from the southwest y, i for the Denver, Kansas City and Chi- e] cago markets. Hundreds of buyers s< are traveling through the country, but l tl all are wondering where the cattle are d coming from. 0] ^ L. W. Parker, owner of the famous m Heart Diamond ranch, George Bledano nf Finite N. M.. and C. J. Gra "* ? I v * ham, of Cutler, N. M., have said that! sl they as well as all cattle raisers in j ir the southwest will be forced to begin j Z{ feeding during the next ten days. It j a is an axiom among cattlemen that j a! "feeding before Christmas makes a ! high spring market." j el George Johnson, one of the largest j dealers in "cow" horses in Texas, to- j Q] -a ~J iinoKln o-^f Qll f? j , ^ CiaV SctlU lie **ao uuauic iu ficient horses for the roundups owing to the thousands of horses bought up by the Mexican rebels. . b r\ 1 /* ! g uecemoer otn, an( ss has been unusual d to give the people tat you will get odds new goods, but we a Men's Suits at $25.00, now..... Men's Suits at 22.50, now. .. Men's Suits at 20.00, now.... Men's Suits at 18.00, now.:.. Men's Suits at 17.00, now.... Men's Suits at 15.00, now ... Men's Suits at 12.50, now. .. - Men's Suits at 10.00, now. .. Men's Suits at 8.50, now.... Overcoats and extra Pants cui >, Mens' Ladies, Boys, Girl* line of Shoes and the sto ?in the Latest Styles and 1 Lnapp Felt and C. & K., a SUIT CASES?A complete >$1.00 Shirts at 95 cents, 50c SI D COMFORTS-AU w??'1 BRABHA1 ANCESTORS COLLEGE BOYS. . STIR arents of 143 Princeton Freshmen Lieut. Govei Took Degrees. oused Fifty-five per cent, of the parents .Jackson, f the freshman class of Princeton expected ar: niversitv have never had a college Theodore Bi iucation, according to the statistics ville, and t ist made known here. Of 143 par- of State Si ats who have had a college educa- burg, on eh on there are 14 mothers who took were the se egrees. sippi politi Eighty-four colleges or universi- were indict* es are represented by these parents late yesteri nd 4 5 of the parents attended burg. Hob rinceton. Both parents of sixteen son last nig C nnllaora crro/liiatoc I TTnllkP f Vl L lilt? uu >C> w c* C t ^lauuat^c. -- ~ he average age of the freshman of 1910 whe ass is slightly more than 18 years. resentative Among the parents almost every by confessir ccupation is represented ranging leged bribe "om policeman to the Secretary of records are le United States treasury. The Cab- factor in th let officer's son is William G. Mc- exonerated doo, Jr. Business interests claim maintaining 56 of the fathers and the professions money to e 48 of them. ersThe Presbyterian denomination is During t ^presented by the greatest number legislature f supporters. 155 favoring this pave tne w? lurch, while the Episcopalians have Detectives 31, Roman Catholics 30, Methodists Phonic dev 8 and the Congregationalists 17.? freely used rinceton, N. J., dispatch to the New After Bill ork Herald. he aligned m known as tl TWO SHOT TO DEATH IX BED. was elected ' . _ ? he is now Emers Killed While Sleeping in , Governc Calumet Boarding House., pj^ Calumet, Mich., December 7.?Ar- Lieut. Gc lur and Harry James were killed, tor Hobbs 1 homas Dally was fatally wounded here tc nd Mary Nicholson seriously injured ^ictments y rifle bullets fired before daylight yesterday cl )-day into the house in which they to receive $ ved. The James brothers came here 0f yeizoni, gsterday from Toronto and obtained votes in the oiployment in the copper range Con- use |nfiuenc )lidated mine, whose men are among t0 pass a ce lose on strike. They stopped with __ ally, a miner. Miss Nicholson lived w<wi q the other side of the Dally apartlent house. Canton, 1 All the victims were in bed when of 50 year: lot. Six men are under arrest on night when ispicion. The murders aroused great years old, b idignation throughout the strike Snyder, 73 )ne and mass meetings were held in years ago .M liferent places to-day. The strikers married. L Iso held meetings and speakers ex- Recent dea orted the men to stick to the Fed- I widow and ration of Miners and to be prepared corresponde ) defend their home from raids from riage of th ffirprs vonthflll SW Thomas Dallv died to-night. n m i The nices All kinds of ledgers and blank shown in Bi ooks at Herald Book Store, cheap. Herald Bool SOL d ending on 24th, ly good, but we b< of this communil i and ends, for oui re anxious to do tl CLOTHIN $19.50 Boys' 19.00 Boys' 16.00 . Boys' 15.00 Boys' 14.50 Boys' 12.50 Boys' 10.00 Boys' 8.50 Boys' 7.00 t in proportion Boys > and Children's sold a1 ck is complete, we c M. ? Best Quality. We hav< ilso cheaper hats, that < line of Trunks and Suit Ca arts at 45 cents. We have Blankets and Cotton Mixti be1 VI'S SOh ? ft , % I IN MISSISSIPPI. HELD FOR S nor and State Senator Ac- Men Arrested ; of Seeking; Rribes. j on Way i .Miss., December 3.?The! . Spartanburg, rest to-day of Lieut. Gov. 'jam Hamilton Ibo at his home at Poplar- white men, con he expected arraignment jaij f0r thirty gnator Hobbs, at Vicks- Magistrate R- J arges of soliciting bribes charged with rc nsations to-day in Missis- Saluda, N. C., 1 teal circles. Both men sworn out to-da id by a special grand jury Commission J. day afternoon at Vicks- money was fou: bs was arrested at Jack- when they wen ht. ,burg Junction, e legislative investigation way conductor in Bilbo, then a State rep- badits he had i sprang into the limelight the Saluda stai ig that he received an al- the robbery. 1 of $640, telephonic device are. race track expected to prove a great jng their way t is indictment. Bilbo was small' sum was of the charges in 1910, robberry. r, that he accepted the ntrap the supposed brib- Umbrella he 1912 session of the Brussels lead an effort was made to industry which fv for passage ?of the bill, man's inconven were employed and tele- A company 1 ices, it is known, were with a capital < purpose of le 30 was exonerated in 1910 those who neec himself with what is scheme: A ma he Vardaman faction and $1 a year and lieutenant governor, and aluminum disc. an avowed candidate for denly comes u] >rshop in 1914. way to the offic ed Under Arrest. for the nearest >v. Bilbo and State Sena- the first shop were placed under arrest cafe, a restaura >-day as the result of in- He presents hi brought against them receives in retu larking that they "agreed the shewer is o 2,000 from' S. Castleman, to return the i for the promise of their where he got i i legislature * * * and to step into any sh e wilfully and feloniously of the umbrei rtain bill." turn in his "pe ? in which he receiv Afted Fifty Years. The scheme 1 and it remains 1 December G.?A romance prosperous. s was consummated last ^ i Mrs. Helen Ream, 70 Shroud Vnd ? e To^nK , ecame me unue ui years old. Twenty-two *s,ew York, Irs. Ream went West and cheerfulness *s ater Snyder also married. ^rs* Hannah F itlis left .Mrs. Ream a a*taine(* *he agl Snyder a widower. A s*xteen J ears s nee resulted in the mar- burial shroud fc e aged couple who were made it h eethearts ag0' when she . die had come. t line of Xmas books ever imberg now on display at Holland's pre k Store. has increased t D CH we will have our anil 3ught heavier than in: ty the best goods at a r stock is fresh and nei le business so offer spe< G Suits at $3. SO, now $2.50 Suits at 4.50, now 3.50 Suits at 5.00, now 4.00 Suits at 6.00, now , 5.00 Suits at 7.00, now 6.00 Suits at 8.00, now 7.00 Suits at 9.00, now 7.50 Suits at 10.00, now 8.75 pvfra Pants rut in nronortion. t rock bottom prices. We hai :an fit anyone and please s the very hat that you go tc ire the best of their kind. ses at a bargain $ a very large stock. See them fa ures at reduced prices. Comfort ds at a great sacrifice. IS, Bamber ALUDA ROBBERY. BOY DIES OF HYDROPHOl at Spartanburg Were Son of Mr. and Mrs H. M. 1 to Charleston. Dies at Ware Shoals. December 5.?Will- Death from hydrophobia w and Hai*rv Rogers, of its terribleness came yester imitted to the county the seven-year-old son of M days as vagrants, by Mrs. H. M. Rhodes at their . Gantt yesterday, are in Ware Shoals. The liUle b< 'bbing the postoffice at bitten by a mad dog nine wee Tuesday, in a warrant an(j was given medical attenti y before United States mediately, having been taken ;B. Atkinson. No lubia for Pasteur treatment a nd in their possession as it was discovered that tl 5 arrested at Spartan- ba(i rabies. For several wee but a Southern Rail- condition showed improvemen identified the men as until yesterday morning at 6 c seen loitering around it was thought that he had tion the night before the danger point. But at thi The suspects say they be developed signs of the h men who were mak- disease, and all that medica o Charleston. Only a could do proved of no avail. taken in the Saluda it is stated that a young si the Rhodes boy was bitten als she, too, had improved rapidl; Problem Solved. within the past few days. He it is hoped that medical atl ls?he world in a new wm prevenf fatal results in he promises to alleviate Njne weeks ag0 the Rhode lences on a raiuy uajr. dren were attacked by a dog a has just been formed home w Ware shoalg Tbe of $1,000,000 for the sbowe^ sorae signs of rabies jnding umbrellas to wag immediately killed and it 1 them. Here is the gen{; Columbia., where an ex; in pays a premium of tion glowed a thoroughly dev in return receives an cage Qf hvdrophobia. Mr. an, A rain storm sud- Rbodes iost no time in making 0 while he is on his catjon for the Pasteur treatme e. Instead of making tbig wag administered with g shelter he drops into success until yesterday m< he comes to, be it a wben tbe little boy was take tnt or a tobacco shop. Iently dying fiye hourg la s aluminum disc and ^ o'clock.?Greenwood Jourm rn an umbrella. When ver it is not necessary W 11 I JUDGE APPLIES THE BRA imbrella to the place t. All he does is to Jos Connolly Says He is Go op displaying the sign Stnn Grantine Divorces, lla organization and r tpin in exchange for Portland, Me., December t es another disc. marriage is to mean anything a Has great possibilities mugt be put on the granting to be seen if it will be vorces>.. said Judge Joseph E nolly in the Superior Court 1 , - when he insisted that all the !er Bed 55 Y ears. a case on trial should be presei jcember 8.?Although "I m not soing to grant div< the receipe by which he continued, "to accommodat Losokoff says she has or because they want to t< e of one hundred and v'*ith some other man or woman ;he constantly has a Judge Connolly quoted stz >lded beneath "her bed. showing the ratio of divorce in ? - nno tn pvprv six marriaees. erself fifty-five years 10 ? - ? thought her time to Kansas it is one to twelve riages; in Massachusetts one 1 enteen; in Minnesota one to t iduction of beet sugar four, and in Maryland one tc enfold in 20 years. one. eap| 'M -J& I , ? lual Cleaning up former years, so sacrifice price. N) in fact, we are * * cial inducements | I . . i .< ' ^Itl V^-l V - . '4 ire an extra large and j you with the style. > larger towns to get, I I ? , s for double and single I g, s. c. I bia. executors' sale. ihodes By virtue of the power contained in the will of L. N. Bellinger, deceased, we will offer for sale at pub- , ^ lie auction, at the court house in v ith all Bamberg, S. C., on Monday, January . . 5th, 1914, the same being sales day, y at 11 o'clock a. m., the following r. and real estate: home One lot in the town of Bamberg, known as lands of estate of l. n. * Bellinger, deceased, containing three ks ago acres, more or less, with the residence on im- and other buildings thereon, bounded to Co- North by lands of James H. Zeigler, East by street, South 'by G. Moye Dickinson and the county jail lot, ' i 'M dog an(j on west by Jno. H. Cope, fks his Terms cash. Purchaser to pay for t, and, papers. y'clock R F? BELLINGER, >ci0ck> c. e. fishburne, passed c b free, s hour Executors. orrible Bamberg, S. C., December 5, 1913. 1 skil} NOTICE TO DISTILLERS AND LIQUOR DEALERS. ster of K) and Bids and samPles are hereby re' quested in accordance with the disy until pensary jaw now in force, for the iwever, following goocte to be furnished the tention State of South Carolina for the use r case the county dispensary board of ' Bamberg county, S. C. Liquors to be s chil- gripped in car load lots, except beer, t their freight prepaid to Bamberg, S. C., toanimal wit: and it kinds corn, rye, gin, wines, brandies, both in bulk and bottled in s head one-half pints, pints, and quarts. I amina- Beers in pints and quarts to be ' _ 0 eloped delivered at Bamberg, Denmark, d Mrs Khrbardt ant* Olar, S. C. Also bids on empty bottles, oneappli naif pints, pints, and quarts, in dis nt and pensary cases, corks ana tin 1011. tratify- All goods shall be furnished in >rning compliance with and subject to the . terms and conditions of the dispen,n V1?" eary law of 1907, and bidders must ter, at observe the following rules: . il. 1st. All bids must be sealed, and there shall be no signature or mark upon the envelope indicating the KJES. name of the bidder. 2nd. All bids must be sent by ing to express or registered letter to Geo. A. Jennings, treasurer, Bamberg, S. C., on or before January 5th, 1914. 3rd. The contract will be award> ?"If ed to the lowest responsible bidder. . brake the board reserving the right to reof di- any or all bids, or parts of bids. P The board requires that on all bids submitted the age and proof of all to-day, goods shall be stated, and all bids acts in shall be in gallons, one-half gallons, ited. quarts, pints, and one-half pints. _ ? Bids will be opened at the office of the county board, Bamberg. S. C., on e peo- January 5th, 1914. ike up J. M. GRIMES, " unairmau. - J. B. ICE ARSE, LUSUCS \V. H. FAUST, Maine Board of Control County Dispensarwhile ies, Bamberg County, South Caroi mar- lina. ' , :o sev- A conference lias taken place in wenty- Vera Cruz for the purpose of calling > fifty- together a committee for a Mexican >11 trade union congress. ' J T JMg