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pr- ; . s * . The Bamberg Herald. ESTABLISHED MAY 1st, 1891. A. V. KXEditor. 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 for three, six, or twelve months. Want Notices one cent a word each insertion. Local Notices Sc. 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 Those of a personal nature will not be published unless paid for.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, January 23, 1902. We hope our representatives in the general assembly will put a special tax of one mill on the Bamberg school district for highways exclusively. We need and want good roads, and we can't get them without paying for them. A bill has been introduced in the legislature for the establishment of a Soldier's Home for Confederate Veterans. We are opposed to the idea. Instead of building such a home, the legislature should increase the pension for old soldiers. &- * 5. ? - . In an editorial referring to the child labor question in the cotton mills of the State, now before the legislature, Editor Ayer, of the Florence Times, makes the - very remarkable statement that cotton mills make one hundred per cent profit. We presume that Mr. Ayer knows what he is talking about, and we would like for him to name a cotton mill in this State which has made one hundred per " cent profit. ? ^ One of the most unfair things we have ever noticed in the newspaper world was the action of the Spartanburg Journal and Free Lance in publishing Senator Tillman's letter to Editor Appelt, of the Manning Times, and not printing one line of Mr. Appelt's reply. The letter and reply both appeared in the same issue of the Times, and common courtesy would demand that the most important points of the reply be republished along with the letter. While we heartily commend the scheme to erect a monument to Bamberg's honored dead who gave up their lives in defence of their liberties, we think th^Association has made a mistake in not calling the ladies to their assistance. All benevolent and patirotic enterprises are more successful when the good women take up the work, and we are afraid this Association will come to grief unless our ? women share the labor of raising the necessary funds to erect the monument. If you want to make your work eminently successful, gentlemen, call on the ladies ^ to assist you. It is amusing to find our esteemed contemporary kicking itself over our shoulders Sinoe nnr cond Sheriff did not in sert tlie advertisement under consideration and had nothing to do with its insertion, it is patent that he therefore did not "see fit to insert his advertisements \ only in another paper." The Sheriff requested us to so state the matter, and as he had the right to do that, it was clearly "our business" to comply. Not having had anything to do with the insertion of the advertisement, the Sheriff had no communications or explanations to make to our offended brother, however often or much he may have seen him "during the past two weeks." Sheriff Hunter could have applied to the Herald for an explanation, if he had been so minded, surely, but not so wishing, he had still another , "prerogative" of going to mill wherever he thought he would get the best grist. So the matter has been our business from the beginningand will continue so to the end. And just why the Herald rushes forth with its boomerang advice passes our understanding except on the ground that "it is more blessed to give than receive." The attitude of the Herald in this matter reminds us of that little tale about the fox and the grapes, which seems to fit into the creed of the Herald as nicely as " it does into the lpre of the fairies. We believe the more our estimable brother grinds this affair through the gray matter of his cranium, the more he will "see a resemblance between the Herald and the "mole hill that laboured and brought forth a pismire."?Bamberg Times. Granting that the statement of our officious contemporary, the Times, is true, that "the Sheriff requested us to so state the matter," it does not alter the case in the slightest. It is strange that there should be an explanation that the advertisements were inserted by one of the attorneys in this case, and yet immediately following such explanation the statement that "it is his prerogative to f* ' . ' put them in any paper he sees fit." If it is the Sheriffs "prerogative to put them in any paper he sees fit," why explain that they were inserted in the Times "by one of the attorneys in the case." If it was the idea to have the explanation reach the people who had read our original remurks, this paper was the one to have published it, and it was clearly a viola tion of journalistic ethics for the Times ; to have made the remarks it did, even if . requested to do so. If its editor had wanted to do the right thing, he should have referred the Sheriff to this paper for any explanation he desired to make. But the animus of the Times is quite plain As we remarked last week, it is an attempt on the part of that paper to make capital out of the incident, and was done with malicious intent. It is perfectly welcome to all it can make out of it. We have no regrets over anything we have written. We characterize the action of the Times as impertinent and contemptible, and we have noticed it far more than we intended doing in the outset. We have no desire to enter into a discussion of journalistic ethics with either the advertised editor of the Times or the writer of its last article, for reasons which must be obvious to most people in this community. The insinuation that the fable of the fox and the grapes applies to us in this matter is maliciously false, and is in keeping with the efforts of the Times to distort this incident to its own advantage. But the matter is not worth discussing, and we I don't care to pursue it further. New Advertisements. burton feeder. See the advertisement of Burton Felder in this issue. He has opened up a stock of groceries near the Herald office, and will appreciate your trade. He is a deserving young man, so give him some patronage and help him along. jones bros. Jones Brothers received another carload of mules yesterday morning. Be sure and see them before you buy. C. B. Free, Administrator?Sale personal property. R. W. D. Rowell?'Teachers' examinak tion. Legislative Elections. The general assembly held elections Tuesday for Supreme court and circuit judges and dispensary directors. The , following were elected: Ira B. Jones was re-elected as associate justice of the supreme court, he having no opposition. j Geo. \V. Gage, of Chester, was re-elected Judge of the Sixth Circuit, no one opposing him. James Aldrich, of Aiken, was re-elected Judge of the Second Circuit without opposition. R. C. Watts, of Chesterfield, was reelected Judge of the Fourth Circuit, no one opposing him. J. C. Khigh, of Abbeville, was re-elected to the Judgeship of the Eighth Circuit, he having no opponent. Judge W. C. Benet, of Charleston, declined to stand for re-election as Judge of the First Circuit. Chas. G. Dantzler, Esq., of Orangeburg, was elected fo this place without opposition, J. E. Burke, Esq., of Charleston, having withdrawn from the race. For Judge of the Third Circuit there were three candidates: R. O. Purdv aud T. B. Fraser, of Sumter, and Geo. Galletly, of Florence. R. O. Purdy was elected. the vote as nnany announceu sianuing as follows: Purdy, 84; Galletly. 40; Fraser, 31. Leon J. Williams, of Edgefield, was reelected chairman of the board of dispensary directors without opposition. There were six candidates for the other two places on the board, but the old mem bers, H. H. Evans, of Newberry, and A. F. H. Dukes, of Orangeburg, were reelected on the first ballot. Hon. H. H. Crum, of this county, was unanimously re-elected State commissioner. He has made a most excellent official, and no one had the temerity to oppose him. W. B. Love, of York, and W. D. Mann, of Abbeville, were re-elected as directors of the penitentiary. Wilie Jones, of Columbia, and .T. E. Breazeale, of Anderson, were elected trustees of Winthrop College. Jno. T. Sloan, of Columbia, and Robert McFarlane, of Darlington, were re-elected as trustees of the South Carolina College. W. D. Evans, of Marlboro; A. T. Smythe, of Charleston; L. A. Sease, of Lexington; and Jno. S. Garris, of Spartanburg, were elected as trustees of Clemson College. A. L. Dukes, of Oraugeburg, and Cole L. Blease, of Newberry, were elected as trustees of the State Colored College at Orangeburg. Miss L. H. LaBorde, of Columbia, was unanimously elected State librarian. The Southern in the Geography. "The great rivers don't carry passengers any more," said Chauucey Depew, "the great railroads have taken their places." Mr. Depew is right. Grass grows on the wharves at Omaha and Kansas City, and only a few freight boats are now accasionally seen at Cincinnati and Louis vine. The Harpers have gotten a new geography from which the children describe the great railroads, and what a knowledge of the whole country it gives to the youngsters. The school children used to describe the rivers, but now they describe the great railroads. To illustrate how they describe them, the teacher in the Washington public school said: "Now, Mary, can vou describe the Southern Railway? You know it is 9,000 miles long." "Yes, sir, that is very easy," said Marv. "The Southern really commences in New York. It runs its cars over the Pennsylvania railroad through Philadelphia and Baltimore to Washington. Then it leaves the Capitol and runs right by Washington Monument and the White House, Manassas and Bull Run battlefields to Lynchburg near Appomattox, where General Lee surrendered to General Grant, then to New Orleans and Florida." "Where else does it go to, Mary?" "Whv. it runs all over creation. It spreads out like a great fan all over the South to New Orleans, Florida, St. Louis and Atlanta." "Give me some of the cities the Southern goes through, Mary." "Why, from Virginia it goes through North Carolina with its 19<? cottou factories, and through the cotton and tobacco fields to Greensboro, Charlotte, Summerville and Charleston, where the great Exhibition is, and then to Savannah, with its grand old Buena Ventura. From , Savannah it runs to Brunswick, Ga., within sight of Jekel Island, and then to j St. Augustine, with its palmetto and palm ! trees, and then down into the orange groves of Florida, where, after shooting a few alligators, you can ferry across to ' Havana and see Morro Castle and the sunken Maine. Here you can pick bananas while you watch the pretty Spanish girls as they play their guitars and flirt ; with love-sick cavaliers through the iron gates." I "Where else does it run, Mary?" 1 "Why, to Memphis and the West. Then it goes to Birmingham and Chattanooga, with its Lookout Mountain, where Hooker fought among the clouds. From j Chattanooga," continued Mary, pointing j on the map, "you see the 'Southern' runs , southeast to Atlanta and North to Cincinnati, St. Louis, Chicago, Cleveland, . .uetroit ana nttsDurg.' "But the 'Southern' don't have its own j track north of Cincinnati, does it, Mary?" , "No, but they send out their wonderful , 'Florida Special' from Chicago, over the 'Big 4,''C., H. & D.,' aud 'Monon,' and [ they run through cars to Florida, from | Cleveland and Pittsburg to Jacksonville. . "But that 'Southern's Palm Limited' that flies from New York to St. Augustine, Augusta, Bon Air and Aiken," said Mary enthusiastically, "and the Southern's flier that flies to 'the land of the sky' like a cannon-ball from New York to Asheville, Atlanta, Mobile and New Orleans, where , you can see the lavishing Creole girls ' with their goo-goo eyes and " ( "But your geography don't say that, Mary!" ( "No, but my brother George said that when he got back from the Mardi Gras. ( George said, he got his ticket at the 1 Southern Ry. Office, 1185 Broadway, and 1 left New York in a snow bank at twentyfive miuutes past four o'clock in the afternoon, and was in warm Atlanta in 24 ' hours, and in New Orleans in J9 hours." Mary might have added that Samuel Spencer, the President of the "Southern" : has taken in the "Queen and Crescent," which runs from Cincinnati and Louisville to New Orleans and Shreveport, La., ; and he is President of both roads?about ] 9,000 miles long.?Eli Perkins' Railroad Letter. This signature is on every box of the genuine 1 Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablets J the remedy that cares a cold in one day ( Mardi Grasat Peusacola, Mobile and New Orleans. i On account of the above occassion tlie , Seaboard Air Line Railway will sell ( tickets from all points to Pensacola, Mo- j bile and New Orleans, at rate of one fare j for round trip. Tickets on sale February 4 to 10, inclusive, limited until February j 15; by depositing ticket with joint agent t and upon payment of fifty cents fees same . will be extended until February 28. Seaboard Air Line offers best service from , all points having double-daily service, , carrying parlor cars on day trains and , Pullman sleepers on night trains. Full information upon application to your j nearest ticket agent, or write J.J. Puller, { T. P. & C. T. A., Columbia, S. C\, or W. t P. Scruggs, D. P. A., Savannah, Ga. , Blown to Atoms. I The old idea that the body sometimes i needs a powerful, drastic, purgative pill ? has been exploded ; for Dr. King's New < Life Pills, which are perfectly harmless, ( gently stimulate liver and bowels to expel < poisonous matter, cleanse the system and absolutely cure constipation "and sick i headache. Only 25c at Thos. Black and J, B. Black. i Anything She Wanted. Mrs. Mabel Loomis Todd, wife of the Amherst astronomer, was telling the Appalachian Mountain club the other evening about her experiences in the Philippine islands last summer, one incident of which contained a warning against too great lingual facility. The party with which Mrs. Todd was sojourning, included a relative of one of the civil commission, a young lady who had lived several years in Samoa. The party had reached one of the southern islands of the Philippine archipelago and were "meeting" a group of the natives that had come to greet them. These natives appeared to be somewhat different from the run of Filipinos and were particularly distinguished by the handsome beadwork on their garments. Men and women wore it in elaborate and exquisitely designed figures. All the ladies of the touring party coveted specimens, but all attempts to buy some were fruitless. The natives would not sell on any consideration. The young lady who had lived so long in Samoa overheard their conversation and remarked that she understood them, their dialect was so nearly like the Samo1 o _ r _i j i ? an language, noine 01 me oiuer lauies, the chaperones of the younger fry, urged her to go ahead and see what she could do with Samoan, which she accordingl)r did. The chief, whom she addressed, threw up his hands in surprise. "What," said he, "does the white maiden talk our language?" fie was evidently overjoyed and promptly asked her the Samoan equivalent for "what he could do for her?" She told him in her sweetest Samoan how much she admired the bead work on their garments and how much she would like to buy a piece of it to take back to her own country and show her countrymen how skilful and artistic these particular Filipinos were. "No," said the chief, with a lordly wave of the hand, "you shall not buy. You shall take as a gift." Whereupon he quickly removed his trousers and handed them over with the unblushing grace of a child of nature. The young lady hastily resumed her English tongue and the other ladies of the party confined their further importunities to women of the tribe.?Boston Herald. Jnstice for the Editor. "No man in the community does more for the public and receives less for it than the country editor," said Senator Clay Heather, of Palmyra, Marion county, in the Missouri State senate when the bill reducing the price of publishing the Australian ballot was under consideration. "If all the space he employs in booming the town, in helping individuals, in making statesmen?sometimes out of pretty raw material?were paid for even at half the legal rate, he would be the richest man in the county. "Few country editors are rich, but they are of more service to the communities where they live than the wealthiest man. They are in the forefront of every movement for progress. They do the work and leave the emoluments to others. A good, clean, houest newspaper?and most county newspapers are good and clean and honest?helps on every worthy cause and deserves every encour agement. It lights the party battles, holds up the hands of the reformer and makes the scoundrel afraid. I am opposed to this bill. No paper in my county would print the ballot at the pitiful price named. The}' are not paupers. But for the amount of the splendid public service they render they ought to be millionaires."?State Tribune, Jefferson City, Mo. Cabinets ami Cabinet-Making. The gradual reconstruction of Mr. Roosevelt's Cabinet lends a direct and timely interest to an article which the Hon. Charles Emory Smith has just written for The Saturday Evening Post, of Philadelphia. Cabinets and Cabinet-Making tells how Presidents choose their official advisers; how nice political considerations influence their choice and reduce to lowest terms the number of available candidates. One of the most important conclusions reached by Mr. Smith is that most Presidents have followed one of two methods in forming their official families: that of Mr. Lincoln and his predecessors, who surrounded themselves with party leaders and former Presidential candidates, and that of Mr. McKinley, who appointed strong, broad-gauged men, regardless of previous political preeminence. This article will appear in an early issue of The Saturday Evening Post. Stops the Cough and Works off the Cold. Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablets cure a cold in one day. No cure; no pay. Price 25 cents. Plenty Like It. "Can I get this note shaved?" he timidIv asked the monev lender. "Gracious!" exclaimed the broker, as be glanced at the date, "it's old enough to need it!" A Good Recommendation. "I have noticed that the sale on Chamberlain's Stomach & Liver Tablets i9 almost invariably to those who have once used them," says Mr.J.H. Weber, a prominent druggist of Cascade, Iowa. What better recommendation could any medicine have than for people to call for it when again in need of such a remedy? Try them when vou feel dull after eating, when you have a bad taste in your mouth, feel bilious, have no appetite or when troubled with constipation, and you are certain to be delighted with the prompt relief which they afford. For sale by Bamberg Pharmacy. State Convention. The Annual State Convention of the Voung Men's Christian Associations of South Carolina will convene this year in Columbia, February 8-11. The gathering already bids fair to be me of considerable strength. It will differ in many respects front other conventions held. The opening session will be held on Saturday evening, and the dosing session on Tuesday night. Sunlay will be a red letter day in Columbia. Nearly all of the pulpits of the city will be occupied by prominent delegates and speakers. In the afternoon a mammoth meeting for men will be held in the Opera House. A chorus of male voices will lead the singing. Mr. L. A. Coulter, of Richmond, Va., a speaker of rare power and ability, will address the meeting. The Columbia Association confidently expects to see a thousand of the men of the city at this great gospel meeting. On Sunday evening there will be three Dr four mass meetings in the principal churches, addressed by prominent Asso elation men. Among wuom are Messrs. C. L. Gates of Atlanta, T. S. McPheeters >f St. Louis, and F. S. Goodman of New York City. Monday and Tuesday will be devoted to the discussion of problems which affect men and boys. A well known Association worker is to open a discussion >11 work among the men aud boys in factory districts and it is expected that .his will be a topic of absorbing interest. Students from fifteen different Institutions of learning are coming; delegaions of active, wide-awake young men ire coining from the towns and cities. Altogether it will be a strong army of letermiued young Christian warriors hat will take possession of the Capital early in February. The State Executive Committee, ,hrough the columns of this paper, exends an especial invitation to the Chris,ian men of the State to attend this Conrention. Any man who is interested in he welfare of the men and boys of South Carolina is invited. It will be necessary 'or him however, to secure delegate's credentials. and this can be done by writing \. G. Knebel, State Secretary Y. M. C. A., Charleston, S. C. Parties desiring further information should address him. There will be reduced rates on all the ail roads. The people of Columbia will entertain ill delegates. Smith Arrested. Chattanooga, Texn., January 18.?Mr. Williams, the postoftice inspector in charge, has been notified by Inspector Peer that Joel E. Smith, editor of a weekly publication at Monticello, Fla., has been taken into custody, charged with using the mails for fraudulent purposes. Smith, it is charged, has been advertising "for ladies to do writing at home," and offering them $20 a month for their services. He has been held in a bond o $1,000. REMARKABLE CURE OF CROUP. A Little Boy's Life Saved. I have a few words to say regarding Chamberlain's Cough Remedy, it saved my little boy's life and I feel that I cannot praise it enough. I bought a bottle of it from A. E. Steere of Goodwin, S. D., and when I got home with it the poor baby could hardlv breathe. I crave the medi cine as directed every ten minutes until he "threw up" and then I thought sure he was going to choke to death. We had to pull the phlegm out of his mouth in great long strings. I am positive that if I had not got that bottle of cough medicine, my boy would not be on earth today. ?Joel Demoxt, Inwood, Iowa. For sale by Bamberg Pharmacy. TB( Presidents that Ohio has given to the Nation have been pursued b}r a curious and most lamentable fatality. Of the four," only President Hayes tailed to die in office. Garfield and McKinley were assassinated, and William Henry Harrison served but one month of his term. Ohio men have been elected to five terms in office, but succeeded in serving only nine years and one mouth of the twenty years?Harrison one month, Garfield six months, Hayes four years, and McKinley four years and six months. A Deep Mystery. It is a mystery why women endure back, ache, headache,nervousness,sleeplessnessmelancholy, fainting and dizzy spells when thousands have proved that Electric Bitters will quickly cure such troubles "I suffered for years with kidney trouble," writes Mrs. Phebe Cherley, of Peterson, la., "and a lame back pained me so I could not dress myself, but Electric Bitters wholly cured me, and, although 73 years old,Inow am able to do all my housework." It overcomes constipation, improves appetite, gives perfect health. Only 50c at Thos. Black and J. B. Black's drug store. Could not Resist an Officer. Mrs. Housekeep: "You needn't deny it, Delia; I saw you permit that policeman to kiss you last night." Delia: uAv course, ma'am. Shure ye wouldn't have me resist an officer, would ye?" "Some time ago my daughter caught a severe cold. She complained of pains in her chest and had a bad cough. I gave her Chamberlain's Cough Remedy according to directions and in two days she was well and able to go to school. I have used this remedy in my family for the past seven years and have never known it to fail," says James Prendergast, merchant, Annato Bay, Jamaica, West India Islands. The pains in the chest indicated an approaching attack of pneumonia, which in this instance was undoubtedly warded off by Chambedain's Cough Remedy. It counteracts any tendency of a cold toward pneumonia. Sold by Bamberg Pharmacy. The Far Journey. Among the original New Year obituary notices we find the following: "The last word that he told us Was, 'Meet me by-an'-by;' An' I reckon we will meet him ; But?heaven is mighty high!" It Girdles the Globe. The fame of Bucklen's Arnica Salve, as the best in the world, extends round the earth. It's the one perfect bealerof cuts, corns, burns, bruises, sores, scalds, boils, ulcers, felons, aches, pains and all skin eruptions- Only infallible pile cure. 25c a box at Thos. Black and J. B. Black. Modest Fees. Lawyers do not usually get the small end of a bargain with their clients, but the Green Bag recalls two incidents where the clients had rather the best of it. Sir Walter Scott's firsi; client was a burglar. He got the fellow off, but the man declared that he hadn't a penny to give him for his services. Two bits of useiui lmormauon ne onereu, uowever, and with these the young lawyer had to be content. The first was that a yelping terrier inside the house was a better protection against thieves than a big dog outside; and the second, that no sort of lock bothered his craft so much as an old, rusty one. Small compensation as this was, the first brief of the noted French lawyer, Monsieur Rouher, yield ed still less. The peasant for whom Monsieur Rouher won the case asked, how much he owed him. "Oh say two francs," said the modest young advocate. "Two francs!" exclaimed the peasant. "That is very high. Won't you let me off with a franc and a half?" "No," said the counsel; "two francs or nothing." "Well, then," said the client, "I'd rather pay nothing." And with a bow he left. The Best Prescription for Malaria Chills and fever is a bottle of Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic. It is simply iron and quinine in a tasteless form. No cure, do pay, Price 50c. "What is the reason,' asked a Prospect avenue woman, "that you never see a woman's head on a postage stamp or a man's head on a dollar?" "Give it up," said her husband. "Well, it's true, just the same and I can't see why we can't have our heads on the stamps as well as the coins." "Never thought of that before," said the husband, "but that is, no doubt, the reason why. we lick the stamps and squeeze the coins."?Milwaukee Sentinel. You Know What You Are Taking When you take Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic because the lormula is plainly printed on every bottle showing that it is simply iron anil quinine in a tasteless form. No cure, no pay. Price 50c. "Where is the editor?" "Froze." "Where is the foreman?" "Freezin." "Well, where's the office boy?" "Mortgaging the paper to buy a snow shovel." A Cure for Lumbago. W. C. Williamson, of Amherst, Va., says: "For more than a year I suffered from lumbago. I finally tried Chamberlain's Pain Balm and it gave me entire relief, which all other remedies had failed to do." Sold by Bamberg Pharmacy. Solicitor Black got off a good one in the city criminal court the other day. Here it is: Solicitor Black to prosecutor on the witness stand?"Y'ou say this is yonr watch and that the prisoner took it lrom you?" "Y'es, sir." "How do you know it is your watch?" l l n : ^ .4 i ? >.. "necause it ims iuv swuciucaii s picture ill it." "Ah, I see. A woman in the case."? Atlanta Journal. To Cure a Cold in One Day j Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund money if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's signature is on each box. 25c. According to Scale. I Mrs. Winder?It seems to me that that < music teacher is always asking for money. Mr. Winder?That's perfectly natural. ( His scale, you know, begins and ends with "dough."?Baltimore American. ; LITTLE LEAKS. What They May Lead to and ITott They May Be Stopped. It. is possible to lose much by littles. A classic case is that of the royal granary which was depleted of its stores by a succession of "one rat came and took one grain away, and another rat came and took another grain away." So fortunes are dissipated, and reputations are destroyed, and health is ruined and character itself lost?by little extravagances, little indiscretions, little negligences, little obliquities. Benjamin Franklin was a great economist not alone of money, but of time. He said, "To teach a young man to shave himself is as good as to give him a purse of gold." He had reference to the minutes as well as the dimes it costs to patronize the barber. Elihu Burritt stopped the leak in his time and taught himself a dozen languages. Gladstone was equally wise, for he read Plato in his carriage be tween Carleton terrace and the parliament buildings. A prosperous man ascribed his success In business to his habit of permitting no particle of material to bo unproductive. He experimented and elaborated until he found a method of disposing profitably of every atom left over. There is a man in New York who ha9 in bank a goodly sum of money which he calls his " 'tis but fund." When tempted to needless expenditure by the specious plea, " 'Tis but a nicl^l or a quarter or a dollar," he denies himself and drops the amount he would have spent into a portable bank, which is filled with amazing rapidity. That is one way to stop a leak. More serious than any prudential matter are the little leaks in life by which vital energy is squandered and moral force is diminished, imperceptibly St may be, through what we sometimes regard as inconsequential acts. Lack of order in our methods of labor, indifference to the "minor morals" of hygiene and the "major morals" of honesty and truth, the practical repudiation of personal responsibility, the neglect of duties which arise from our ethical and religious nature?these are the leaks which we must stop or be bankrupt in the world's eyes and in God's.?Saturday Evening Post A LESSON IN CHESS. Why Willie's Papa Ended It Almost 1 Before It Was Began. Paterfamilias, with a laudable desire to keep Willie at home at night offered to teach him to play chess. The boy was delighted, and the game began. 'Tut the little ones, pawns, all along the front and the big ones behind, as I show you." "I think that is cowardly. The big ones ought to be In front. Ma says"? "Oh, but that is the rule. Now, seeno; put that rook in the corner." "Rook! What's a rook?" "It Is a kind of bird." "Well, that ain't a bird. It looks like a castle." "Call it a castle, then?and put the kniglit next"? "Why is that called a knight? It looks like a horse's head." "And then the bishop," went on paterfamilias, ignoring the question; "so, and then"? "Why is the bishop's head split In two, pop?" "Oh, that Is his hat?a cardinal's hat" "But I thought he was a bishop!" "A cardinal is also a bishop. Now don't talk so much, Willie. Then you put the king and queen"? "The queen is bigger than the king, pop!" "Well, so she is. Who said she j wasn'tt" said puieriuLumius, wuu a trace of Impatience in his tone. "And then another bishop; so." "Why are there two bishops, pop?" "Because the rules say so. Now, I shall move first" "What, after all that trouble, are you going to move them again?" "Say, Willie, I believe my head is aching. I shall show you the rest some other time," said paterfamilias as he swept the men into the box.?New York Times. How to Teach a Pet to Rtde a Ball. Many readers have doubtless seen bears standing on a rolling ball and maintaining their balance perfectly while rolling It about the arena. 1 have a bear who delights to do the trick. He can scarcely wait for his time to come to perform. He was j taught, as they are all taught by joggling his pedestal while he tried to keep from being jostled off. Gradually the pedestal was substituted for a ball with many flat places on it and this was followed by a perfect sphere. He has been performing two years nr?T*r n nrt T hovA nPVPr known him tO slip and fall off?Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly. Both Sides. Johnnie?What does It mean by "seeing the humorous and the serious side of things?" Father?Well, my son, take a bit of orange peel, for example. How many sides has It? Johnnie?Why, two, of course. Father?Exactly. And when some other man steps on that orange peel he sees the serious side of it and you 6ee the humorous side.?London TitBits. The cheerful man Is one who practices the art of having things as be would have them.?National Magazine. ' Men sometimes become wiser as they grow older, but they seldom become less foolish.?Chicago News. Said an Irishman, "What a melancholy sight It would be if all the people in the world were blind!" Thousands Sent into Exile. Every year a large number of poor sufferers whose lungs are sere and racked with coughs are urged to go to another _! ?... t.?? ClllllUIC. r>lll iiiis in i iimij unit inn. Illways sure. Don't be an exile when Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption will cure you at home. It's the most infallible medicine for coughs, colds, and all throat and lungdiseases on earth. The first dose brings relief. Astounding cures result from persistent use. Trial bottles at Thos Black and J. B. Black. Price50c and $1.00 Every bottle guaranteed. Weary Walker?No, ma'am I ain't dirty from choice. I'm bound to honor. I wrote a testimonial fur a soap maker onct, an' promised to use no udder. Mrs. Housekeep?Well, why not use that? Weary Walker?Because, ma'am that firm failed just after the Civil war.? Catholic Standard. Don't Live Together. Constipation and health never go together. De Witt's Little Early Risers promote easy action of the bowels without distress. "I have been troubled with costiveness nine years," says J. 0. Greene Depauw, Ind." "I have tried mauy remedies but Little Earty Risers give lust results"' P.ambcrg Pharmacy, and A. C. Reynolds, Ehrhardt. ! Those Boston Girls. Mauile: "What do you think? Harry asked me to kiss him last evening." Bertha: ">Iy' And what did you say?" Maude: "I was so shocked that I couldn't say a word." Bertha: "And what did Harry say?" Maude: "Oh, he was in no position to say anything."?Boston Transcript. Children Especially Liable. Burns, bruises and cuts are extremely painful and it neglected often result in blood poisoning. Children are especially liable to such mishaps because not so careful. As a remedy DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve is unequalled. Draws out the tire, stops the pains, soon heals the wound. Beware of counterfeits. Sure cure for piles. "DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve cured my baby of eczema after two physicans gave her up," writes James Mock, N. Webster, Ind. "The sores were so bad she soiled two to live dresses a day." Bam nerg rnarmacy anil A. C. Keynolds Ehrhanlt. Suspiciously Happy. ''That young widow is always so pleasant. There's nothing like having a happy disposition." "No, but there's sucli a thing as carrying a happy disposition too far." "Think so?" "Yes; for instance, when one laughs at one's husband's funeral."?Philadelphia Press. A Profitable Investment. "I was troubled for about seven years with my stomach and in bed half my time," says E. Demick, Somerville, Inch "I spent about $1,000 and never could get anything to help me until I tried Kodol Dyspepsia Cure. I have taken a few bottles and am entirely well." You don't lire by what you eat, but by what you digest and assimilate. If your stomach doesn't digest your food you are really starving. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure does the stomach's work by digesting the food. You don't have to diet. Eat all you want, Kodol Dyspepsia Cure cures all stomach troubles. Bamberg Pharmacy and A. C, Reynolds, Ehrhardt. His Earthly Effects. "Have you made your will?" asked the lawyer of the old colored citizen. "No, suh; I ain't got nothin' to leave cept one wife en dc rheumatism!" Child Worth Millions. ''My child is worth millions to me," says Mrs. Mar}' Bird, of Harrisburg, Pa., "yel I would have lost her by croup had I no1 purchased a bottle of One Minute Cough Cure." Oue Minute Cough Cure is sure cure for coughs, croup and throat and lung troubles. An absolutely safe cough cure which acts immediately. The young est child can take it with entire safety The little ones like the taste and remember how often it helped t hem.Every familj should have a bottle of One Minute Cougl Cure bandy. At this season especially il may be needed suddenly. Bamberg Pharmacy and A. C. Reynolds, Ehrhardt. When you hear a man say "There's the devil to pay," don't get worried; th< devil is the last man he ever pays, and is perfectly willing to wait on his customers WANTED. Reliable man for Manager of a Branch Office we wish to open in this vicinity Here is a good opening for the right man Kindly give good reference when writing, Tiie A. T. Mourns Wholesale House Cincinnati, Ohio. Illustrated catalogue 4cts. in stamps. TEACHERS' EXAMINATION. Applicants for teachers' certificates tc teach in the public schools, will be ex amined in the court house, Bamberg, S C., Friday, February 21st, 1902. Examination will begin promptly at 9.30 a. m Applicants will please be prompt in at tendance. R. "VV. D. ROWELL, Superintendant of Education. SALE PERSONAL PROPERTY, By virtue of the power conferred on m< by the Probate Court of Bamberg county as Administrator of the estate of "VV. E Beard, deceased, I will sell at the late residence of W. E. Beard, all the persona] property formerly belonging to said W E. Beard, deceased, including corn, fodder, farm implements, cotton seed, mules cows, hogs, etc., at ten o'clock a. m. on Tuesday, February 4tb, 1902, to the high est bidder. Term cash. Articles sole will be delivered on day of sale. C. B. FREE, Administrator. Bamberg, S. C., January 20, 1902. S. G. MAYFIELD, 0 ATTORNEY AT LAW, DENMARK, S. C. Don't tie the top of your ^ip?? Jelly^and preserve Jars^n J f them by the new, quick, ys. rS'/ VVn absolutely sure way?by a thln coating of Pure ReflnedParafllne. Has /? W|.|ijrE* ngf air tight and acid proof. Easily applied. )) Useful in adozen other bTe/ ways about the house. FuJ1 directions with Bold everywhere. Made by STANDARD^OIL (rt. ^ kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. This preparation contains all of the digestants and digests all kinds of food. It gives instant relief and never fails to cure. It allows you to eat all the food you want. The mostsensitive stomachs can take it. By its use many thousands of dyspeptics have been cured after everything else failed. It prevents formation of gas on the stomach, relieving all distress after eating. Dieting unnecessary. Pleasant to take. It can't kip but do you good Prepared only by E.G. PeWitt & Co., Chicago The $1. bouie contains '~yt times the 50c. size. Bamberg Pharmacy and A. (J. Reynolds S. Moye Dickinson, INSURANCE. FIRE, IjIFE, TORNADO, . A AC ID EXT, LIABILITY. CASVALTY. Office at The Cotton Oil Co. 3. U. AND BELL TELEPHONES.' Buggies^Wagons We Lave received one carload of ANCHOR BUGGIES. One carload of ENGER BUGGIES. and one carload of the famous IIAYDOCK BUGGIES. We can surely suit you in a vehicle of any description. Full line of HARNESS, LAP ROBES, WHIPS, Etc. Don't fail to see us before buying a Buggy or W agon. We can and will save you money. JONES BROS., BAMBERG, S. . : THE SHEAVES from early morn to dewy eve , Having accepted the agency for the celebrated toiim WwmWm UUU1111& llUllUUUUfe Hatiw I am now prepared to sell you on - easy terms self-binding Wheat Harvesters, Mowers, and Rakes. You have always heard that Deering Implements were the best; now let me prove it to you or give up your money. I won't have it unless you rather have the machine, As to our CillAGE BUSINESS 5 Would say I do not deem it necJ essary to say more than remind 5 you that I am doing business at same old stand, opposite Bamberg Cotton Mills. I am here to stay, so don't forget me when you need , the services of the carriage man. Gratefully yours, I). J. DELK. . L. C. Ikglis. A. McIyer Bostick. INGLIS & BOSTiGK, LAWYERS. Bamberjsf, S. C. , Will practice in the U. S. Courts and ' all the Courts of the State. Money to Loan. ? APPLY TO I Izlar Bros. Sf Bice, Attorneys and Counselors at Law, i BAMBERG C. H., S. C. Nobility 1 Recommends Nervine. The above portrait is that of Countess Mogelstud, of Chicago, 111., whose gratitude for the benefit received from the use of Dr. Miles' Nervine prompted her to make this statement: "It affords me great pleasure to add my testimony to the very excellent merits of Dr. Miles' Nervine. Although I am past 80 years of a^e I find it soothes the tired brain, quiets the irri? ?/! Jn?i?AC TACfflll clpAfl IttlCU UCI VCO OIIU UMUIVW IVW?4M? W.VVW, I never feel contented without a bottle of it in the house." Gratefully yours, Christiana Maria, Countess Mogelstud. Miles' Nervine is a nerve tonic and strengthbuilder that starts right in restoring health immediately. Sold by all DrussUta-, Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, tnd. Largest and Most Complete 'Establishment South. GEO. S. BACKER It 80S. manufacturers of Doors, Sash, Blinds, Moulding and Building Material, Sash Weights And rnriL Window and Fancy T? t'y" Pamv _ #Iaw a Specialty. CHARLESTONt S. C. Purchase our make, which we guaran tee superior to an}* sold South, and thereby save money. " K ENGINES, BOILERS j J GINS and PRESSES. Complete Cotton, Saw, Grist, Oil and Fertilizer Mill Outfits: also Gin Press. v Cane, Mill and Shingle Outfits. Building, Bridge, Factory, Furnace and Railroad Castings; Railroad, Mill, Factory, and Machinists'Supplies. Belting, Pack ing, Injectors, Pipe Fittings, Saws, Files Oilers, Etc., cast every day. Work 150 hands. LoiMUiW'tsMrGll I AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. Foundry, Machine, Boiler and Gin Works. Renairine Promptly Done. ?? SOUTHERN RAILWAY. mfSL- i w w Condensed Schedule in Effect July 1,1801. SSlySily MSw ? * 520p| 7 00a Lv... Charleston ... Ar 1115a 730p ' 60Sp 7 41a 44 .. Summerville.. " 10 82a 042p 7 25p! 8 55a ".. Branch ville." 900a 515p -y 2 8l0p 92sa "...Orangeburg..." 881a 442p 6Q3p 1024a 44 Kingville ? " 7 45a 84flp 11 4on Ar Sumter Lv ... ... 380? 11 25a " Camden Lv 200p 950p 1100a Ar....Columbia.....Lv 7 00a 4Q0p 520p 7 00a Lv... Charleston ...ArH 15a 780p 7 25p 915a 44 ...Branchville... 8 50a Slfip" 4 805p 940a "....Bamberg-... 44 827a 460p 817p 9 52a "....Denmark...." 813a 488p 885p 10 10a " ....BlackviUe 44 800a 418p 988p 11 10a 44 Aiken " 7 03a 816p 108op 11 59a Ar. Augusta and Lv44 I 8 20a 280p NOTE: In addition to the above service trains Nos. 15 and 18 run daily between Charles* > ? ton and Columbia, carrying elegant Pullman Bleeping cars. No. 15 leave Charleston 11:00 p. m.; arrive Asheville 2:00 p. m. No. 18 leave Columbia 1:85 a. m.; arrive Charleston 7:08 a. * .. m. Sleeping cars ready for occupancy at 9 58 p. m. both at Charleston and Columbia. Tness , A trains make close connections at Columbia 2? with through trains between Florida points and Washington and the east. Trains Nos. 1) and 14 carry Elegant Pullman Parlor Cars be* tween Charleston, Summerville and Asheville. Ex~ Sun. Ex. ' .-'fi Sun. only Sun. /? Lv. Augusta 7 00a 9 80a 5 20p Ar. Sanders ville I OOp 1250p 84Op 44 Tennille... 130p lOOp 8fi0p ' " > 1 Lv. Tennille 530a 340p 810p 44 Sandersville 5 40a 850pj 828p . . Ar. Augusta 9 OOaj 7 lQp 8 80p Daily Daily Lv. Savannah. 12 SOB 1225$ 44 Allendale 3 40a ,826p UlCp ... 6 44 Barnwell 413a 8fi8pl2i)5p - 44 BlackviUe 4 25a 412p 4 26p Ar. Batesburg . 8 OOp , Ar. Columbia. 815a 550p ....!> , -| Ly. Columbia 11 4lla 110a Lv. Batesburg 880a ^ At. Blackvllle - 12Dp 262a 1080a J8 44 Barnwell 188p 8 07a 1140a ; | 44 Allendale...- 200{> 840a 1200ns ? 44 Savannah 806p 46Qaf .. -J Atlanta and Beyond. Lv. Charleston- 7 00a 620pj m At. Augusta U 60a 1080p ...... 9 44 Atlanta 880p 500a Lv. Atlanta. HOOp 5 80a 5Up At. Chattanooga 5 46a 9 46a lOOGp ^ Lv. Atlanta. 800a 415p Ax. Blrminghm 12n'a lOOOp ? jB 44 Memphis, (via Bir'mgam) 805p 7 15a At. Lexington 606p 500a 44 Cincinnati.* 780p 746a 44 Chicago , 716a 580p Ax. Louisville 750p 840a <1 44 St. Louis 7 82a 69ftp At. Memphis, (via Chatt) 7 lOp 810a To Asheville-Cinolnnati-LioniaTilla. ,,-TUT. Nol84Nolsi eastern time. Daily Daily "5j! Lv. Augusta. 260p 9 80p 'i 44 Batesburg 488p 1207a Lv. Charleston 7 00a 11 06p . Lv. Columbia (Union Depot) 1180a 120a At. Spartanburg 810pl025a 1 44 Asheville 715p 200p - t 44 Knoiville. 415a 7 tuu 7 L'^S " ?> n ort_ o t? ' !vS ~ ^moinnlinn. i uwi j ?w . 'm * Louisville (via Jellico). ( | v To Wasldngton and the East* , Lv. Augusta. 250p 930p Js " Batesburg 488p 1207a . .? " Columbia. 555p 216* At. Charlotte 900p 946* . .-"3 At. Danville. 1261a 13^p Ar. Richmond. 600a 625p At. Washington. *1 Sua dOOp < M Baltimore Pa. B. B 912all26p M Philadelphia. 1135a 268a *3*99 " New York ..... 20Bp 613* ' Sleeping Oar Line between Charleston and Z,r<$ Atlanta, via Augusta, making oonnections at ' ^Jpag Atlanta for all points North and West. Connections at Columbia with through trains for Washington and the East; also for Jacksos* vine and all Florida Points. FBANKS. GANNON, J.M.CULP* '^J?SHI Third V-P. & ?en. Mgr. T. M-, Washington. : EOBT, W. HUNT, Div. Pass. Agt, Charleston, 8.0. 1 ' ^*8 B. H. HABDWICK, W. H. TAYLOB, ' ft. P. A. W&anlngton,_Aril. P. A.. Atlanta. .T:>jp?| SeaM lirJJiB Biflwar. "Capital City Route." Shortest line between all principal cities North, East, South, and West. Unequaled schedules to Pan American Exposition - J at Buffalo, Schedules in effect May 26tht NORTHWARD. .. / j Daily Daily '."iNo. 66 No. 84 Lv Savannah c t.. .11 45 p m 210pm Lv Fairfax 134am 3 58pm ?? Lv Denmark 215am 4 39 p m L v Columbia e t... 4 40am 712 pm -v: Lv Camden 5 37am 806pm- ^ Lv Cheraw 7 12 am 9 43pm Ar Harriet 7 40 a m 10 15 p m Lv Calhoun Falls.. 100am 411pm Lv Abbeville 1 33 a m 4 38 p m . ..-J* Lv Greenwood 2 01 a m 5 01 p m Lv Clinton 2 55 a m 5 47 p m Lv Carlisle 3 43 a m 6 33 p m Lv Chester 4 10 a ra 7 03 p m . . Lv Catawba Jet 445am 7 35pm Ar Hamlet 710am 1010 pm Lv Hamlet 8 00am 10 85pm * Ar Raleigh 10 37 am 124am Ar Petersburg 2 45pm 5 48am Ar Richmond 3 28 pm 6 29am Ar Washington 7 05 p m 10 10 am A . Pol.Imn.o 1 1 OC n m 11 OK . m xx i uaiiiuiuic ... xx p ux xx vu a xl? Ar Philadelphia 2 56 am 186pm Ar New York .. .6 30 am 4 25pm SOUTHWARD. , Daily Daily No. 31 No. 27 Lv Cheraw, e t 7 48 a m 1118 p m Lv Camden 9 25 a m 12 53 a m Lv Columbia, ct... 9 40am 105am Lv Denmark 1109 am 2 27am Lv Fairfax 1154 am 3 05am Ar Savannah 147 pm 4 52am Ar Jacksonville 610pm 9 15 a m * ^ g Ar Tampa 6 15am 5 40 p m Lv Catawba, et 9 45am 106am Lv Chester 10 20 a m 1 42 a m Lv Carlisle 10 47 am 2 05am Lv Clinton 1137 am 2 55am Lv Greenwood 12 22 pm 3 46am Lv Abbeville 12 48 p m 4 15 a m Lv Calhoun Falte.. 115 p m 4 48 a m Ar Athens 2 40pm 6 28am Ar Atlanta. 455pm 9 00am No. 66 connects at Washington with the Pennsylvania Railway Buffalo Ex- ? ? ? I press, arriving Buffalo 7.35 a m. I Cplpnjbia, dewberry & I^aufpns IJy, train No. 53, "leaving Columbia, PniQ& Station, at 11.28 a. m. daily, connects at Clinton with S. A. L. Ry., No. 53, afford ing shortest and quickest route by several hours to Atlanta, Chattanooga, Nashville, St. Louis, Chicago, and all points west. Close connection at Petersburg, Richmond, Washington, Portsmouth-Norfolk, ^ Columbia, Savannah, Jacksonville, and Atlanta with diverging lines. Magnificent vestibule trains carrying through Pullman sleeping cars between all principal points. For reduced rates, Pullman reservations, etc., apply to Wm. Butler Jr., D. P. A., Savannah. 6a. J. M. Bare, R. E. L. BUKC$, IstV.P.&Q. M., " T. P. 4., Portsmouth, ya? ti