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tidir Hambrrg Irralb ESTABLISHED APRIL, 1891. 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 Mer' Rdhonplc gentnaier uuut}pc uia^umg, cylinder press, folder, two jobbery, a fine Miehle cylinder press, all run by electric power with other material and machinery in keeping, the whole equipment representing an investment of $10,000 and upwards. Subscriptions?By the year $1.50; six months, 75 cents; three months, 50 cents. All subscriptions payable strictly in advance. Advertisements?$1.00 per inch r for first insertion, subsequent inserv tions% 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. Obituaries, tributes of respect, resolutions, 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 insertion. p Communications?We are always glad to publish news letters or those pertaining to matters 01 puunc merest. We require the name and address of the writer in every case. No article which is defamatory or offensively personal can find place in I' our columns at any price, and we are v not responsible for the opinions expressed in any communication. Thursday, Sept. 30, 1915. |Weekly Weather Forecast. Issued by the United States weather. bureau at Washington, for the . week beginning Wednesday, Septem?*ber 29, 191a; For South Atlantic and East Gulf Ip^v States: . VRains and high winds are probable in the East Gulf States and local ty. rains irr the South Atlantic States the first half oUthe week; the latter jsV, ' half will be fair and cooler. We notice in yesterday's papers I ' that Hieroslap Sjczynski has surj|j; , rendered to the New York authori. ties. We certainly don't blame the t . '' - v fellow for surrendering. sKP* ^ fe: * The students and faculty of Car ..v . school are heartily welcomed on P^V ^ their return to the city. To the new ???-. "s?udents, Bamberg extends an espec; ial welcome. They will find Bam . > . - % berg a fine town, and a fiire place in which to pursue their studies. BampT ; berg feels quite a pride in Carlisle, fe:>- and has a keen interest in the wel^are of *he scbool. is Quite a satisfaction for our people to know that - Carlisle has the largest enrollment > this year that she has ever had. Charlotte, Greenville and . other * towns have been having "Dollar d^ys;" The idea is for each merchant of the town to offer one or t more -especially attractive bargains v ' v for a dollar. In some cases the dol>> lar offers consist of articles that are usually worth $2, and in other cases there are combinations of several arTrr?*?+V? ol^Aorafhar mil nil TTI OTP P UU1C& WU1VU uiuwu ; \ than the dollar asked. The result Of many attractions of this kind is iqtlite a large crowd of buyers and increased volume of business.? .v Yorkville fcnquirer. * We wonder* with Bamberg's pro2 ' . -gitessitfe stores, ''Dollar Day" has rtfot bgbn^adopted here. Dollar day, K'V> without doubt, attracts trade, and is the best sort of "advertising for a j*'*? store?to say. pothing of the profits /derived from the sales. F "It is an ill wind that blows no . one any good," and, although the ' > /great war is too terrible to contemplate in its fullness, if it has driven an economic fact home to the South, i > <. - it has jeriven us some benefit in return for the loss it has caused in our cot. ton crop. The Manufacturers Rect ord, in its last week's issue, says Bel' \ , ? that the percentage in number of hogs in SouthvCarolina is 120, compared with 100 in 1914, at the same J.-r ** date, September first. This is not ' only, interesting, but is cause for jubilance. South Carolina has been in >;-I.f:". >; the habit for years and years o? sending to the West for the bulk of l^er meat. Better meat and cheaper meat |fc can be raised right here at home, and v itThas remained for a great world p. * r r war to impress this on the State with enough force to cause the people to - realize its truth. We wonder how many 'hunters know the amount of game the laws allow for a day's sport. The following is the number allowed in this State: Five deer in a season; 25 nnail fnartridees). two wild turkeys, "1. ? \ JC w ' ^ ^ 25 doves, 12 woodcock a day. The fellow who boasts of killing a hundred doves in a single day's shooting perhaps does not know that he has violated the State's game laws ?that is if he really bagged that ' v ? number. Which reminds one of the joke about the fellow who boasted to a stranger, that he had killed 150 quail that day. Said the stranger "Guess you don't know who you are talking to. I am the State game warden, and it is against the law to bag more than 25 quail in one day." ? "Yes, sir, and you are talking to the biggest fabricator in the State," re plied the sportsman. Glendale Springs water on sale by Mack's Drug Store and W. P. Herndon, 50c for 5-gallon jug.?adv. * X DOMESTICATION FOR DUPOXT. j Give Rise to Question if South Caro-, lina is to Make War Munitions. j i Columbia, September 22.?Papers; of domestication filed with Secretary | of State R. M. McCown this morning; by the E. I. DuPont de Nemours & j Co., of Wilmington, Delaware, give j rise to the question if this big powder company intended establishing a branch factory in South Carolina. The papers filed in the case state that the principal office of the corporation in South Carolina to be "its office at its plant near the Atlantic Coast Lumber Corporation's mills, nt Gpnraretown. S. C." The domestl cation papers are signed by Irnee DuPont, vice president, and were mailed direct from the main office of the company in Wilmington, Delaware, and approved by C. S. Mudge, attorney. The DuPont company has large contracts for the manufacture of war munitions for the allies and the filing I of the papers in this State today attracted a good deal of interest. The statement that their main office would be at their plant at Georgetown apparently confirmed the idea that South Carolina is about to share in some of the tremendous profits which are being made out of the manufacture of munitions of war for the allied nations of Europe. Georgetown is admirably located for such a plant, on deep water and with ample railroad facilities. Confirmation of the purposes of this company in domesticating would be of great interest to the State. The company is capitalized at $240,000,000. COTTON WAREHOUSE LAW. Manning and McLaurin Working Together to Strengthen Law. CnlnmHifl. S. C.. SeDt. 25.?Gover nor Manning and Warehouse Commissioner McLaurin held a lengthy conference in the governor's office a few days ago, discussing the advantages of the State warehouse system and the legislation necessary to perfect the law governing it. * No statement was given out after the conference, but it was learned that both Governor Manning and Commissioner McLaurin are agreed that certain defects in the law should be remedied and that there was a prac- . tically complete agreement between the governor and the warehouse commissioner as to what is best to be done in perfecting this law that means so much to the cotton producing interests of South Carolina. It is likely that Governor Manning and Commissioner v^IcLaurin will hold frequent conferences on this matter before the legislature meets I in January and the results of these conferences will probably be embraced in a message1 from the governor to the legislature' during the early part of the next session. The following editorial from the Yorkville Enquirer of September 21 refers to this subject: "As a result of a conference between Governor Manning and Warehouse Commissioner John L_McLaurin, it develops that Governor Manning is not secretly hostile to the State warehouse system, as was-legitimately deduced from published remarks. recently attributed to him. It is quite clear that if there should be a regulation providing that managers of State warehouses should be absolutely disinterested parties, neither owners of the warehouses nor of the cotton stored therein, there could easily develop a situation very different from that under which all present progress has been ; made. But from the reports of the , conference referred to it appears that the governor is most sincerely so- 1 licitous of developing the warehouse c system along lines that will work to ^ the interest of the producer of the "cotton first, and ?he public general-, * ly second. The conference referred to, we understand, developed that there was practically complete agree- * ment between Mr. McLaurin and Mr. Manning as to what shall be done ^ and the outjook is that such recorp- ^ mendations as the governor shall see s proper to make to the general as- c sembly with regard to improving and r strengthening the warehouse system; * will be made only after complete * agreement between the governor and * the warehouse commissioner." 1 HANNA INQUEST. | Men, Women and Children Hear Pro- ^ i ceedings at Home of Slain Farmer. <-? -l?i n?a. o rr>a, ? ???? 1 spartan uurg, sept. ^o.?me uuiuner's jury today held Cliff Godfrey, 1 a young white man, responsible for 1 the death of Robert Hanna, who was shot down in Godfrey's home Friday morning, near Enoree. To place the ( responsibility for th& death of Hanna was a mere formality, but the in- 1 vestigation brought two hundred J men, women and children to the i Hanna home where, under the ' spreading white oak in the front yard, they crowded about the coro- 1 ner's jury and with breathless si- ] lence listened to the testimony of 1 witnesses. < The witnesses told how Hanna was 1 | shot three times, the first shot fired 11 ' Our Oneninc ~ z # * ? Z DESIRABLE DRESS GOODS. Fifty-inch all wool French serge in black and navy blue, handsome quality, $1.25 the yard. Thirty-six-inch all wool storm serge and French serge; undoubtedly the best serve w^ve ever had for the money; black, navy blue and colors. The yard, 50c. $ / { < Thirty-six-inch garbadine in black and . navy. It is cotton,- but looks like wool. Fine for skirts and . dresses. The yard, only 25c. (This is the best cloth we've ever had for the money.) r Thirty-six-inch chiffon taffetas ii} black, navy bltfe, dark brown, Copenhagan, dark green, light blue, light 4pink, dark red, white, several patterns in black and white and changeable combinations, in fact, everything you could wish for in taffetas, at $1.50 and $1.00 the yard. t Thirty-six-inch silk and cotton poplin. A very popular cloth; all shades; exceptionally chea?p; only 75c the yard. Forty-inch silk and wool poplin (not silk and cotton) in green, new blue, white, battleship gray and other wanted shades. This cloth is worth $1.50 the yard; our price is only $1.00 the yard. Tatting threads, all colors. ' Crochet threads, all colors. Emhroidery threads, all colors. Silk floss, all colors. Tatting Shuttles Crochet Needles : laving taken off his lower jaw, yet n that condition, and with Godfrey ollowing him and firing two other gt ihots into his body as he crossed the gc ield, h? walked a quarter of a mile o his own home before he gave way rom loss of blood. The witnesses today were Godrey's wife, Dr. Hanna, who attend- ^ >d the dead man, and Capt. C. A. g. Jpencer, an employee of the C. and da \7 P ro i 1 rl Tt'Vin r>Q n>Q linrtTl tVlO t.l( it. \j , i am vau, itiiu vuiuu u^u.. v..v icene of the shooting in his lever in W! :ar just in tin\e to see all that occur-. ed outside the house. He testified co hat Mrs. Godfrey ran between her or lusband and Hanna at one time and J* Godfrey said to her: "Get out of the g. ,vay, damn you, or I will kiW you!" es Mrs. Godfrey testified thai she had ^ Droken a gun belonging to her hus)and to pieces a few weeks ago to veep him from killing himself with t. She says she has no idea why "" ler husband should have wanted to \ill Hanna, unless it was because he vas in debt to him. gl w Godfrey is in jail here, having giv- b* in himself up Saturday morning, at Witnesses appearir efore the coro- ^ P< xer's jury today were summoned tojes ippear before the court of generali di iessions here on the fourth Monday td n November. Mrs. Godfrey was Miss Maggie a Wood, of Cashville, prior to her mar- uage and was at one time connected sc vith the Spartanburg Telephone ex- pi hange. She has two children. The t0 ?an ily bod live i on the H-jnna place U m ess than a y??ar. ^ t t I ?? shelves, are fmi tions of "Madan New Fall Goods EYE; the prices that the STY gc the world's mar [ Far Surpassed Pr ' . . ?> I mi i II . n New Millinery Arrives Almost ij FIRST PRICE THE HATS ELSEWHERE, THEN COJ TO THE LARGEST MILLINERY DEPARTMENT IN B COUNTY AND SEE THE DIFFERENCE, ALSO NC WONDERFUL VARIETY OF GOOD HATS AT LITTLE IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR SOMETHING DIF COME TO OUR STORE. Cost Our swell line of tailored suits, priced from $15.50 cannot be duplicated here or in neighboring towns, showing only one of a kind. Some are trimmed witl some with black silk braid and buttons, some curve i the figure, straight box backhand coat buttoned high collar (military effect) is the most favored at this tin poplins and garbadines are the favored materials. The suits don't stay with us long. Don't put it off er. Come to us today for your suit. ? " '> I oNama Thnmac Xt LU V VI11V ft 1IVU1UU Vt s Telephone 41-J "The Store of Courtesy" Ba NOTICE TO CREDITORS. 1 In the District Court of the United / ates?For the Eastern District of >uth Carolina. ' In.the matter of M. Leinwand, ankrupt?In Bankruptcy. To the creditors of the aforesaid f ankrupt. -y ( Take notice, that M. Leinwand, of arhardt, in the county of Bamberg, yfiffry IrZH said district, who was adjudged a t. ankrupt in this court, on the 7th * //. iv of July, 1915, has filed his peti- MrM /, m therein, praying for a discharge JjjU) Ifllr, \ Bankruptcy; and that a hearing /fjjlIjlMffjil/ as thereupon ordered, andv will be Ajjumlwj/ id upon said petition, before .said > 'lirt, ctt biijincbtuxi) 111 &aiu uioinvt, HIVHEt/itVI i the 2nd day of October, A. D.t u/^uSM "" )15, at 10 o'clock, a. m., at which yylntK me and place all creditors of said AyytJWk ankrupt and other persons in inter- nv/jllSff t, may appear and show-cause, if '// llfrSiy ly they have, why said discharge ' lltHllJr /y VSR muld not be granted. ]a\w / RICHARD W. HUTSON, /// X 0 August 24th, 1915. 9-20. J NOTICE. 7 f mrZ A\ I will file my final accounting as lardian erf J. T. Copeland, a minor, - nTT..Tnr AT, 1. ith G. P. Harmon, Judge of Pro- HL CHANCJSj Oj A ite, on Saturday, 23rd of October, a little cash. ; 11 a. m., and will ask for letters h ^ t smissory as such guardian. All * arsons having claims against said Of* A T>T state file same with me before said O I AK I ite, or be forever barred. L J. d. copeland. If you already have ai "The Wirining of Barbara Worth," Opportunities that are dramatization of Harold Bell ? 1.1 u.. _ 'right's great story, interpreted uvjfApTfAT A1MT) strong company, aided b'v novel vArAliilj iilNJJ :enic and electrical effects, is to be 4 Per Cent. ayed at The Academy, Friday, Oc-! ber 8, Orangeburg. It is tjaought! g J 1 lat with this ample notice, a good ! any will arrange to attend from JUL\ ?re.?adv. ? % I I ng cases and plenteous d with the newest crea- ' le Style." Come, see our . They will please your . will please your PURSE. ' i you come to our store . LE will be right, the < t, the PRICE right. We dness with the best goods kets furnish. A i PvimiQ llnpninffc V T IvUv VIIW1UU.U ' . ' \ " * \ >aily DAINTY CREPE DE CHINE HAND- I IE OVER KERCHIEFS AND WINDSOR AMBERG TIFS )TE THE PRICES. Beautiful line of dainty little " i FERENT, v , " crepe de chine handkerchiefs in solid \ < colors with fancy borders, and with dainty baby Irish borders. Also a pretty line of crepe de chine Windsor 1 ties. These we have in plaids, . * : i i V; V stripes and flowered designs. Ties and handkerchiefs at only 25c each. .. r LACES. We are' noted for our beautiful i \ trimmings. The dainty little baby I IvJ!M Irish edges which are being used so * I |v IU\ much right now can be found right i 1\ IIU here; narrow edges from 10c to 25c; wide edges from 35c ,to $1.00 the '// IJ yard. Just received large assort- V ment of d^ipty vals match sets from 5c to 15c the yard. . ^ i 1 to $25.50 k: J -v We are Every department is just brimi fur and mjng over Wjth handsome offerings, i little to ' ' /N ft/NrnrA TT/\11 I 'ATVIA up in the vv^ are xcauj iu ocivc ^uiuc le. Wool in today. ' We are always glad to f \ have you inspect \ our merchandise ' r any long- whether you wish to buy or not. . : . ; ' & . _ \ ft November Pictorial Review I A Patterns and Publications ! now on sale. . r V. ^ mbern, S. C. / . J KmiMMMED ? IS ADOLLAR SAVE) UNTIL YOU NEED IT ^ ' \ * } LIFETIME presents itself. All that is needed ii It is the man who has BANKED HIS SAVINGS he immediate advantage. \ AN ACCOUNT TODAY. i account add to it and be prepared for the business often offered you. V '' *'v -'v ? ?? AAA AA SURPLUS . Interest Paid on Savings Dep^iT "" irg Banking Co. i 0 . N - < ?* * / . . \ . * . ' * "* *' - -** . 1, _ : >