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v\ . The Bamberg Herald. ESTABLISHED MAY 1st, 1891. A7w. KNIGHT. Editor. Rates?$1.00 per year; 50 cents for six months. Payable in advance. Advertisements?$1.00 per inch for first insertion; 50c. for each subsequent insertion. Liberal contracts made foi three, six, or twelve months. Want Notices one cent a word each insertion. Local Notices 8c. per line first week, 5c. afterwards. Tributes of Respect, etc., must be paid for as regular advertising. Communications?News letters or on subjects of general interest will be gladly welcomed. Those of a personal nature will not be published unless paid for. THURSDAY, June 11,1993. City council should require the Southern Railway to establish and maintain some respectable crossings on Railroad Ave nue. Sidewalks should be put down to the track in several places. *"* Cotton is said to have reached the high est point this week that it has in thirty years. The future market has been especially strong, July futures going as high as 12.27. We trust the spot market will be something like these figures this fall. g V > * * In the selection of a site for the new school building, the committee has no doubt done the best it could, and while from a personal standpoint, the site is not satisfactory to us, we have no criticism to offer. The building should have been more centrally located, but this possibly could not be accomplished. While the financial loss is something enormous, the greatest calamity is to the poor operatives who are thrown out of fs* work by the destruction or damage to many cotton mills iu the upper portion of this State. Charitably disposed persons in all sections should remember in a substantial way the pitiable plight of these people. * * * The bonds for the erection of the new graded school building will soon be put on the market, and we trust the highest possible price will be obtained for them. The bonds should certainly sell enough above par to bring the interest down to frvnr rwr ii. norr>pnt Snhnnl hrtnrlsin nthpr parts of the State have sold this well, and there is no earthly reason why oars should not sell fally as high or higher. Ehrhardt Etchings. Ehrhardt, June 8.?Mr. W. R. Copeland is painting his house on Madison ? street. Capt. J. M. Dannelly has purchased the Reynolds property in Robertsville. Dr. Reeves, of Orangeburg, was in town two days last week, administering toothache to a good many patieuts by filling their teeth. Come again, Doctor. Mrs. F. E. Copeland has a curiosity in the shape of a winter pink that is bloomj&h ing now. It bloomed last winter, and is in full bloom again. Don't know of what i variety it is. i Mr. C. F. Wertz and family are visiting Mrs. Wertz's father, Rev. S. P. Chisolm. i Mr. T. D. Jones, of Bishopville, is visiting at the home of Capt. W. E. Sease. Mr. W. A. Durant, traveling salesman r?;:. for McCormick Harvester Co., was here i l-y- last week putting up two reapers and < ? binders lor t-'apt. J. in. uanneny ana air. , C.Ehrhardt. The machines do nice work : when properly managed. Quite a large crowd went out to Mr. Ehrhardt's field j ^ near town to see the machine cut and tie ; *** grain. , , The oats crop has turned out much . better than was expected a few weeks ago. ; Mr. H. A. Hughes says that he has the best ; oats crop that he has had in years. Very much rain has been falling in this : section for the last few days. In some j places it is reported that the rain has been so heavy as to hinder farm work a great Y' deal. Mr. A. C. Reynolds, our popular drug^ gist, surprised us last week by closing his 1 store and leaving for a better field. He ' was accompanied by Mr. L. L. Wilson, * who has been clerking for him for the ' last month. We wish them well. 1 gf-- - Messrs. Joe and Bert Dan nelly, have re- < ; turned from the Fitting School, where \ they attended school the past year. Misses Virgie and Fannie Enrhardt are < also at home for the summer. { Ehrhardt high school will close next < * Tuesday with an entertainment for the Y' benefit of the public library. There will ' spf' also be a picnic on Wednesday following. Prof. Folk and his assistant have done some very good work here, and it is hoped i they will both be elected for another year, i A gloom has been cast over our com! . munitv by the death of Mrs. C. Hartz last i ???. Saturday morning and the death of Miss Janie Copeland Sunday morning follow- I . iug. Both were members of Mt. Pleasant j&sv Lutheran Church, and were interred there g.' : ia the cemetery. The church has lost two Y of its best members; the community has suffered a severe loss, but the worst blow falls oh the families of the loved ones., because their respective places can never i ^ * be filled. Our svmpathy goes out to the sorrowing members in each family, and ] we pray G6d to give them strength to } p* bear up under their affliction. , Mr. E. E. Hughes and wife, of Ala- ] - bama, are visiting his brother, Mr. H. A. Hughes, and friends in this section. Amicus. Landlord Cleveland. " 1 Ex-President Cleveland, who is living at Princeton, owns a bouse in the neighborhood which be leases to a university & " ' professor, a friend of his, for a very ( ' moderate rental. The spring rains have .. ' s been unusually heavy of late, and the pro- ( ^feasor's cellar is frequently inundated, gi^atly to his annoyance. Having found, upon investigation, that a defect" in the : - construction of the wall was responsible ? ? .i_ _ VI.. v_ v : i lor ine irwuuie, uc caueu upon uis eim| nent landlord to register a protest. "Mr. Cleveland," he complained, "my ] cellar is full of water." } "Well," rejoined the ex-president, j "what do you expect for the rent you pay , ?champagne?" N { X The Delineator for'July. s The July Delineator shows considerable t change in make-up from preceding^issues; \ the literary matter has been brought to the front of the book, then follow tbe^ s fashions, and lastly departmental matter. C The number is in many respects superior j1 to any previous one. The display of the fashions is charming aud up to date, and J the literary contents are of striking interest. Christine Terhune Herrick writes 1 entertainingly of Marion Harland's a souvenir garden at Sunny bank, hercoun- s try place in New Jersey, and N. Hudson Moore contributes to the number a finely illustrated paper on roses. Bird Babies 1 and their cradles, by Landou Knight, is a ? very attractive article, illustrated with J photographs. In the seventh "Miladi" ' , . paper Miss Clara E. Laughlin discusses * woman's duties towards her neighbors. r Tn fiction, there is a short story called c Paper Dolls and Paper Dollars, written ^ oy Joseph Blethen and illustrated by A. c I. Keller; 'fcaud the third installment of The Bois-Brutes,Mrs.Cather\vooct's serial. A page of exclusive photographs of Viola r Allen is a feature. Iu the series on historic and modern homes, Van Cortlandt | manor house is described and illustrated, * "with views of both interior and exterior. s For the children, Liua Beard begins a ^ series describing the construction in * minature of the "Seven Wonders of the World." The number also includes the introduction to a series of tales for children called Firelight Stories by Livings- 1 ton B. Morse. The sixth lesson in plain p sewing is given, and the departments are s as helpful and varied in interest as usual. I ?? I Hartzog Happening*. IIaktzoo, June i>.?Tiie Hunters Chapel school ended last Thursday. Three prizes were given, one for the one who improved most in writing: Miss Essie Folk received this prize. One for the one who stood head of spelling class the most weeks: Master St. Clare Rhoad received this prize. Master Beu Zeigler received the other for the most head marks in his class. Friday a very large crowd went to Edisto, where we stayed all day enjoying the hospitality of the river, lemonade, and last but not "least, pleasant boat rides, which the young folks enjoy as well as anything else. The ones from other points who attended the picnic were Messrs. W. D. Rhoad, C. W. Rentz and children, and Miss Seward, of Bamberg: Rev. S. P. Hair, of BlackvilJe, and Mr. Harry Hunter, of Summerville. Mr. R. W. D. Rowell and son, Clyde, were with us also. The fishermeu who spent Thursday night at Edisto were Messrs. J. H. Fender, Albert and Harrv Hunter, Tom Dixon, Wyatt Rhode, Frank Smoak, and Tom, Abe and Hammond Steedly. Though it rained we caught the kitties. Mr. Harry Hunter, of Summerville, is spending time wuu irienas nere. Rev. ?>. P. Hair preached at Hunter's Chapel Sunday morning. Rev. E. M. McKissick at Zion in the afternoon. Miss Mattie Steedly, who has been attending our school, returned to her home near Spring Branch Sunday afternoon. Mr Joe Copelaud, from uear Bamberg, was with us Sunday. J. W. R. Startling Evidence. Fresh testimony in great quantity is constantly coming in,declaring Dr. King's new discovery for consumption, coughs and colds to be unequaled. A recent expression from T. J. McFarland, Bentorville, Va., serves as example. He writes: "I had bronchitis three yeais and doctored all the time without being helped. Then I began taking Dr. King's new discovery, and a few bottles wholly cured me. "Equal ly effective in curing all lung and throat troubles, consumption, pneumonia and grip. Guaranteed by J. B. Black, Bamberg; H. C. Rice, Denmark. Trial bottles j free, regular sizes 50c. and $1.00. A Strong Resemblance. There was in Washington a few years ago an old negro who was noted for his recollections of all the famous statesmen of ante-bellum days. To him one day came a rather pompous member of a comparatively recent Congress, who resem-i bled some of the famous forensic giants only in his capacity for ardent spirits. He had his customary cargo aboard and was inclined to be colloquial, so he adddressed the old negro patronizingly: "Uncle Daniel, I understand that you used to know Webster, Clay and all the celebrated statesmen of before the war times ? " "Oh, yes, sir; I 'members dem all," responded the old negro. "Well, Daniel, I have been told that 1j look like Daniel Webster. Can you notice any resemblance ? " "Well, yes, suh; you does mind me pow'ful of Mars Webstah in some 'specks." I * i - % ? -1 _ T I "incieea! in wnat particular ao 1 remind you of Daniel Webster?" inquired the now thoroughly flattered statesman. "Mos'ly in ae bref, sub," responded Daniel; "mos'ly in de bref! " His Last Hope Realized. [From the Sentinel, Gebo, Mont ] In the first opening of Oklahoma to settlers in 1889, the editor of this paper was among the seekers after fortune who made the big race one fine day in April. During bis traveling and afterwards his camping upon his claim, he encountered much bad weather, which, together with the heat, gave him severe diarrhoea which seemed almost impossible to check, and in June the case became so bad he expected to die. One day one of his neighbors brought him one bottle of Chamberlain's colic, cholera and diarrhoea remedy as a last hope. A big dose was given him while he was rolling on the ground in agony, and in a few minutes the dose was repeated. The good effect of the medicine was soon noticed and within an hour the patient was taking his first sound sleep for a fortnight. That little bottle worked a complete cure, and he cannot help but feel grateful. The 3eason for bowel disorders being at hand suggests tins, sold Dy rsamoerg rnarmacy. Wants Change of Veune. Counsel for James H. Tillman have been in consultation here for a day or two and to-night Col. Croft announced that an application for a change of venue would be made. The grounds will be that Tillman cannot get a fair trial in this county and affidavits will be served on the solicitor next Friday. The Court decides in what county the case shall be tried in ;ase a motion to change is granted. The Court convenes the fourth Monday in June and Judge Townsend will preside. ?Columbia correspondence News and Courier, Wednesday, June 10. Chamberlain's stomach and liver tablets are just what you need when you have no ippetite.feeldull after eating and wake up with a bad taste in your mouth. They will improve your appetite,cleanse and invigorate your stomach and give you a relish for your food. Sold by Bamberg Pharmacy The progress of this age is grand, No more he "takes his pen in hand"? The business mau, smit by her charms, Takes the typewriter in his arms. Cots, Braises, Barns Quickly Healed. Chamberlain's pain balm is an antiseptic liniinpnt and wlipn annlipd trwufs hruispa And burns, causes them to heal without maturation and much more quickly than by the usual treatment. For sale by Bamberg Pharmacy. The Fall of Man. Here are the seveu ambitions of a lifetime: 1. To be a street railway conductor. 2. To be a professional ball player. 3. To be able to lick the school principal. 4. To marry the smartest girl in the class. 5. To be president of the United States. 6. To make an honest living. 7. To keep out of the poor house. Chamberlain's t'olie, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy [s everywhere recognized as the only remedy that can always be depended upon ind is pleasant to take. It is especially valuable for summer diarrhcea in children md is the means of saving the lives of i great many children each year. For *ale by Bamberg Pharmacy. A paper with a settled and lixed policy )n vital issues is always sought after, especially if it gives the other side a fair showing. An Arkansas hotel keeper was K^ked by a tourist, one ot tbese lntormaiote. seekers and givers, what was the >olicV\ of his town paper. He replied: Well. agin the revenue collectors, tiggers, utides and the Republican part >> ,nd for lync&ers, free whiskey aud free ^ver " x ^ Kodol Gii^es Strength >y enabling the digestive organs to digest, assimilate and transform all of the vholesomefood that may be-^aten into the ;ind of blood that nourishes ^he nerves, eeds the tissues, hardens the muscles and ecuperates the organs of the body. Kodol lyspepsia cure cures indigestion, dyspepia, catarrh of the stomach and stomach lisorders. Sold by l)r. H. F. Hoover. Major Di.x?Do you think it's going to aiu tomorrow, Uncle Isham? Uncle Ishain-I duuno, honey. It's migty lahd ter prognosticate. When de Lawd lad charge ob de weathah 1 could tell umin' erbout it, but since dis yere reathah bureau dun bin runnin' it Uncle sham's had ter gib it up. Yon Know What Yon Are Taking When you take Grove's Tasteless Chill \>nic because the tormula is plainly rinted on every bottle showing that it is imply iron and quinine in a tasteless arm. No cure, no pay. Price 50c. BEET SUGAR. I I It Wit* Born of Prance's Isolation Dtiriuu tbe Napoleonic Wars. Sugur as au article of food was not known to the ancients. Mankind has always exhibited the greatest fondness for sweets, and from the earliest times the demand was supplied by honey. The royal psalmist sets up honey and the honeycomb as the highest standard of material sweetness. A land flowing with milk and honey was the picture drawn by the most ancient poets to dej scribe an earthly paradise. Romans of the last days of the republic, and sub| sequently of the time of the empire, who were at the same time the most luxurious epicures and the - grossest feeders the world ever knew and spared neither money nor exertion to secure every delicacy possible for their I tables, had no knowledge of sugar, but robbed the bees to obtain sweets for their famous honey cakes and other confectionery. Sugar was made in India and Arabia in the earliest times, but it was not brought into Europe until the invasions of the Mohammedans into the countries around the Mediterranean sea, in the seventeenth century. The Moors cultivated the cane in the countries of north Africa, and they intro duced it into Spain, xne spaniaras, about 1510, planted sugar canes in their West Indian possessions, whence it spread through Spanish America and into the French province of Louisiana. The cane was the original source of gugar, and so remained up to the time of the Napoleonic wars in Europe. The ports of France were so closely blockaded by the British fleets that it was impossible to secure sugar from any tropical countries, and Napoleon assembled the chemists in France and commissioned them to discover some means of making sugar out of material found in the country, at the same time offering a large reward. This proceeding resulted in the production of sugar from the beet?New Orleans Picayune. DAVID GARRICK. The Great Actor'* Art and Hi* Wife'* Raffled Feeling:*. Mrs. Garrick's admiration of her husband's dramatic talents was intense, and on his great nights she would hang over her box, next the stage, in rapturous delight The one flaw in her idol, she claimed, was a taste for low life, for which she blamed him greatly, insisting that he loved better to play Scrub to a low lived audience than one of his superior characters before an audience of taste. On one particular occasion she was in her box in the theater when Garrick's impersonation of Richard III. was applauded to the echo. In that day a farce followed the tragedy of the evening, and as Mrs. Garrick rose to leave before it her husband came to the box to say he had some business in the greenroom which would detain him, so most unwillingly the lady was obliged to acquiesce and remain through the closing entertainment This Droved to be a comical series of blundering adventures which had befallen a countryman who had left his farm to see London and on his return gave his neighbors an account of the wonders he had met. This characterization was received , with such peals of applause that Mrs. 1 Garrick, ever zealous of her husband's i fame, began to think it rivaled those lately lavished on Richard III. Her j feelings were nearly worked up to fe! ver heat when she was attracted by I the frantic efforts of her little spaniel dog to overleap the balcony that separated him from the stage, when she Immediately became aware of the truth that the actor was Garrick and exclaimed, "Strange that a dog should know his master when the woman who loved him best in the world could not pierce his disguise." Wealth In Lapland. What the buffalo was to the Indian the reindeer is to the Lapps. At the present day the wealth of a Lapp is calculated in reindeer. Thus, when the people speak of a man's estate they say, "He is worth so many deer." Those who have only flfty^ or sixty head are poor servants, and*fheir deer are put with those of their "betters." To have any kind of social standing in Lapland one should possess at least 500 of these animals. A Lapp is considered well off when he is the happy owner of not less than 1,000 reindeer. Might Cat More. Fashionable Mother (languidly)?Well, Sarah, how is baby today? Nurse?He cut two teeth this morning, ma'am. Fashionable Mother (still more languidly)?That was careless of you, Sarah. You oughtn't to let baby play with knives. Driven to Desperation. r ^ Living at an out of the way place, remote from civilization, a family is often driven to desperation in case of accident, resulting in burns, cuts, wounds, ulcers, etc. Lay in a supply of Bucklen's Arnica Salve. It's the best on earth. 25c. at J. B. Black's, Bamberg; H. C. Rice's, Denmark. "It's hard to lose'one's relatives," said the poor man. "Hard!" growled the millionaire. "Why, it's almost impossible." That Throbbing Headache Would quickly leave you, if you used Dr. King's new life pills. Thousands of sufferers have proved their matchless merit for sick and nervous headaches. The}' rrake pure blood and build up your health. Only 25 cents, money back if not cured. Sold by J. B. Black, Bamberg; H. C. Rice, Denmark. Most people expatiate upon the cowardice of suicide because they have neither the nerve nor brains to commit it themselves. A year from this date the candidates will be moving around with their smiles and hand-shaking and decided iuterest in the people who do the voting. We have often wondered if the woman who wears her heel in the middle of her shoes really imagines that it makes her feet look smaller. A Berlin girl is demanding $2,500 damages from an uu welcome suitor as the price of a single hug. She declares that the pressure of the embrace has affected her heart, whether literally or metaphorically is not stated. * l Some Men are Lucky. J Enpeck?Meeker is certainly a lucky individual. Slowun?What's the explanation ? Enpeck?Last fall he tumbled into an . open sewer and recovered $5,000 damages from the city, and yesterday he fell out of ^ a third story window and lit on his a mother-in-law. j "I have been troubled for some time with indigestion and sour stomach," says Mrs. Sarah W. Curtis, of Lee, Mass., "and have been taking Chamberlain's stomach and liver tablets which have helped me very much so that I can eat many things that before 1 could not." If you have any trouble with your stomach why uot take ([ these tablets and get well. For sale by Bamberg Pharmacy. u Worst of all Experiences. Can anything be worse than to feel that every minute will be your last V Such was the experience of Mrs. S. ll.Newsom, Dt catur(Ala. "For three years," she writes, "1 endured insufferable pain from indigestion, stomach and bowel trouble. Death seemed inevitable when doctors and alt remedies failed. At length 1 was induced to try Electric Bitters and the result was miraculous. I improved at once and now I'm completely recovered." For liver, kidney, stomach and bowel troubles Electric Bitters is the only medicine. Only 50c. It's guaranteed by j". B. Black, Bamberg; H. C. Rice, Denmark. A clergyman having occasion to go to Loudon before Christmas, his wife asked him to buy a text for the gallery of the church for the Christmas decorations, according to The King. He was very busy and forgot all about it till just before leaving, so wired for instructions to his wife as to the words and dimensions. She wired back the following message: "Unto us a son is born, nine feet long, by three feet high." A Serious Mistake. E. C. DeWitt & Co. is the name of the firm who make the genuine witch hazel salre. DeWitt's is the witch hazel salve that heals without leaving a scar. It is a serious mistake to use any other. DeWitt's witch hazel salve cures blind, bleeding, itching & protruding piles, burns, bruises, eczema, skin diseases. Sold by H F Hoover A negro preacher down South has dis covered the real cause of the recent volcanic disasters. He says: "De enrf, my friends, resolves 011 axels, as we all know. Sometin' is needed to keep the axles greased; so when de earf was made, petrolvum was put inside for dat purpose. De Standard Oil comp'ny conies along an' strax dat petrolyum by borin' holes in de earf. De earf stix 011 its axels an' won't go round 110 more; den dere is a hot box, just as ef deearfwuza big railway train? and deu my, frien', dere is trouble." Do You Enjoy What You Eat? If you don't your food does not do you much good. Kodol dyspepsia cure is the remedy every one should take when any thing is wrong with the stomach. There is no way to maintain the health and steugth of mind and body except by nourishment. There is no way to nourish except through the stomach. The stomach must be kept healthy, pure, and sweet or the strength will let down and disease set up. No appetite, los9 of strength, nervousuess, headache, constipatiou, bad breath, sour risings, rifting, indigestion, dyspepsia and all stomach troubles are quickly cured by the use of Kodol dyspepsia cure. Sold by Dr. H. F. Hoover. The bar of justice is some times made of a very dingy and ill smelling quality of brass. All is not gold that jingles. If it were we'd pay our wives' bills with tobacco tags. TEN CENTS BUYS A Three Heaths' Subscription to Cbe Industrial times AND MINING RECORD with which is given free as a premium Two Splendid Maps of Thunder Mountain Mining District and of Southern Idaho, showing all the mines and all the important claims, also routes, railroads and wagon roads. The Industrial Times is a monthly of 16 big pages which give accurate information regarding the movement of industrial and mining enterprises. Its regular subscription price isone dollar per year; but a trial subscription is sent for three months for ten cents, including the maps. These are the only accurate maps of Thunder Mountain and are alone worth several times the price charged. Address THE INDUSTRIAL TIMES ' 253 BROADWAY. NEW YORK Miss Ida. M. Snyder, Treasurer of (be Brooklyn East End Art Club. " If women would pay more attention to their health we woulo have more happy" wives, mothers and daughters, and if they would observe results they would find that the doctors' prescriptions do not perform the many cures they are given credit for. " In consulting with my druggist he advised McElree's Wine of Cardui and Tiledford's Black-Draught, and so I took it and have every reason to thank him for a new life opened up to me with restored health, and it only took three months to cure me." Wine erf Cardui is a regulator of the menstrual functions and is a most astonishing tonic for women. It cures scanty, suppressed, too frequent, irregular and painful menstruation, falling of the womb, whites and flooding. It is helpful when approaching womanhood, during Dregnancv, after childbirth and in cnange or life. It frequently brings a dear baby to homes tnat have been barren for years. All druggists have $1.00 bottles of Wine of Cardui. WlNE"CARDUi V????# ^ ....FOR..FIRE INSURANCE ....CALL ON.... HENRY J. BRABHAM, Jr., N. B. I also am agent here for the strongest surety company in the world. GO TO D. J. DELK -FORHiiiers, Bate, Binders, and BINDER'S TWINE. ie sells the Deering, the best 011 earth. Uso extra parts of Deering Machinery, lso Wheelwright. Black Smithing aud Repairing of all kinds. InWas a Spoilt;. Yours for Satisfaction, D. J. OBI/K. 0 T vjpj. 3 nE^v if Jim Dumps' young wife while yet 1 Some biscuits made with greatest pride, 'l Jim looked with fear upon the food, ^Bf]Cs-fc==r^A ) \ But to a bride one can't be rude. J HL> E Ifyf 44 Let's eat 4 Force ' first, dear, 'tis my J It saved the life of44 Sunny Jim." "Force" The Keady-to-Serve Cereal when in doubt, 6 "In our household 'Force'is as fa- JM* i fj I miliar aud welcome as'Sunny Jim,'and \ j J I that's saying a good deal, for we are all j W?6 [ TO THE PUBLIC If you want any machinery made and sold by the Lombard Iron Works, or the best Gin and Press 011 the market, made by the Liimmus Gin Co., of Columbus, Ga., write or call on F. M. POOSER, Salesman, i BAMBERG, S. C. / SUMMEjjJjOODS! This is the season when yon need the dainty, light summer fabrics, arrayed in which the fair ladies delight the eye and charm the heart of man. In I WHITE GOODS and SUHMERI I 4- DRE55 GOODS <- | We can certainly please you, for our stock was never more complete. In fact we have too many, and they must go while the season is on. To this end we are ottering special prices in every department. Come before the stock is broken, for at the prices we are now offering goods they surely can't stay with us long. Yours to Please, i A iri t L.A.RiauDer BAMBERG, S. C. . The water that cares GLENN SPRINGS MINERAL WATER Still and Carbonated Cures Diseases of the Liver, Kidneys, Stomach and Skin. ENDORSED BY PHYSICIANS ?A?vr>? WELCOMED BY PATIENTS. |JT1DR.G.F.HAIR, 1 A T> /Y A D 1 A I ' ! m w wt I 3 1>V /\ 1A JL? I A T D -1 I Bamberg, S. C. AlP Line Kaiiway. I In office every day in the week. Graduate of Baltimore College of Dental SurI i, jic jir? j nr j B Kery, class 1882. Member of S. C. Dental B lNOrtll=bOUth=taSt=WeSt B Association. Office next to t>ank. rrwcTDail^PuIlmai^^ (1 Rnfll/O ufPlflHCfln | ted Trains Between South and N.Y .| HIUJO UlUfVIIIO UIIJ B fl TJVSHlTf A NCT? I FIRST-CLASS DINING CAR SERVICE | o ^Mmam-mmmm| The Best llates and Route to all fl, MPE? Eastern Cities Via Richmond and fl TORYADO, I Washington, or via Norfolk and fl ACCIDENT, I Steamers. To Atlanta, Nashville, fl IiIABIlITl, Memphis, Louisville, St Louis, B C/ASUALTY. fl Chicago, New Orleans, and all B Office at The Cotton Oil Co. points South and Southwest?To fl S. C. AND BELL TELEPHONES. Savannah and Jacksonville and I fTT. c . . JT 7T 8 all points in Finri.ia and Cuba. I w,ntl?r?P Scholarship and En fl trance Examinations. fl Positively the shortest liue between fl The examinations for the award of va Xdtvf li ond ^r>iitli B cant scholarships in Winthrop C'olletre I fl and for the admission of new studenls II will be held at the county court house on B For detailed information, rates, II Friday, July 10th, at 8 a. m. Applicants I schedules, Pullman reservations, I niust not he less than fifteen years of age. I apply to an)T agent of The I When scholarships are vacated after July I Seaboard Air Line Railway or to loth, they will l>e awarded to those makI J. J. Puller, Travelling Passenger I jua the highest average at this exaniinaI Agent, Columbia, S. 0. fl tion. The next session will open about wMMMmoMWMMMaMB September 10, 1803. For further informaBvMl'lN P. Stewart BI tion and a catalogue address President D. fl - * - "* I B. Johnson, Rock Hill, S. C. Assistant General Passenger Agt., I' TRESPASS NOTICE. I SA I I.W.4H, - - - Grt. ... . . .... i All persons are hereby prohibited from 1 - - -i j trespassing on uie lamia ui mc uuuci"Do you consider it :i moral wrong to signed, either by fishing, hunting or othercheat a lawyer?" asked the person who wise, and any one committing a trespass is always looking for a chance to start will be prosecuted under section 18(j of I something. "No," replied the man whose the Criminal Code of South Carolina, specialty is worldly wisdom, "but I con- ALLEN KINSEY. sider it a physical impossibility." Dated May 30th, 1903. Horses and Mules) 1 always on hand at Jones Bros'. Stables. Remember we make a specialty of . . . . Fancy Driving Horses 1 I and can always supply your wants in this line. Give us a call when in need of stock for any purpose whatsoever. JONES BROS, jfl % ?? I - :# When You Want ill 111AIP IK \t Woodw?rkin? r-i,,.. MAI UIMnkV ? iviHuniiicn I sg WRITE W. H. GIBBES & CO., Columbia, S. C. ^JS We ilive special service to our Bam berg County patrons through our salesman MR, D, B, REED, headquarters Denmark, who is prepared to call and see you promptly, Gasoline and Kerosene Engines, SUtionary and Portable, Vertical and Horizontal ^j ; jV s ftwfhiftdn^ "'/' >?g*fcrc? am DR. MOFFETrs jicbh CMtn-hfnft* ? *, BB jpypjBFBWw 1 Diarrhoea,Dysentery,tad J Aldf^Dlgestl ?^n{( 7^%$d Costs 0?lj 25 cats at Ikaggists, *i?SsS$S?' "1 0r mAn 25 ce>ta to c. J. MOFFETT, M. D? 5T. LOUIS, MO. ^?H Columbus, <*a., Aug. 84,1872, DR. C. J. MOFFETT?Dear Doctort We gave your TEETH ISA (Teething " ?3 towders) to our little grand 'child with the happiest results. The effects were almost magical, and certainly mare satisfactory than from anything we ever used. Yours very truly, JOSEPH 8, MET, /^sagaS (Sow Bishop Southern Methodist Church.) Pastor of St. Paul Church* - || Wire Screen Doors AND WINDOWS Nice line of these goods just received. It Aitnn mifli tlfnm lrnfln Allt JLljUiu jfuur liuuac miu iuoiu) Acop vuv the flies and mosquitoes, and be happy. ICE CREAM FREEZERS and WATER COOLERS, ;|J| Fishing Tackle and, other seasonable goods at BROOKER'S HARDWARE STORE, BAMBERG, S. C. STATE MUTUAL Life Assurance Co., of Massachusetts. | : ASSETS. ----- $21,678,560.35INSURANCE IN FORCE, - $94,966,674.00. V ?--j Guaranteed Dividend and Gold Bond Policies, Endowments Term and Limited Payments. Guaranteed Cash, Paid Up Insurance, Extended Insurance. Before Placing Your Insurance Call on JNO. F. FOLK, Re dent Agent, T DICK, Sp cial Agent, BAMBERG, SOUTH CAROLINA. Sanborn Chase, General Agent, Florence, S. C. THE LEADING STORE OF THE TOWN. We try to keep what the people want. We have just opened up one of the largest and finest lots of Spring and Summer Dress Goods ,i.? an*4 lwMinriit lvefnpp thp risp Onrnriees are the same as before evex see Li iu iuc t.<.?nu, auu uuugU. w.v.v r cotton went up to ten cents. Call and see them and compare our prices. CLOTHING. Perhaps you have not provided yourself or your sons with a suit of clothes for the summer. Now is your chance to obtain them at prices to suit yourself. Your measure taken for a tailor made suit, tit guaranteed. SHOES AND OXFORDS. | Our line of Ladies', Gents' and Childrens' Oxfords are all up-to-date in style tfbd quality. Call and inspect them before buying elsewhere for we will save you money and give you beter goods. GROCERIES. | -"- -i We have as usual a full line of Groceries at prices that would pa)' you to buy of us. COOKING STOVES. Nice line of cooking stoves, all prices and styles. With and witLout ware. Copeland & Dannelly, EHRHARDT, S. C. ^ i