University of South Carolina Libraries
Personal Mention. ?Mr. J. A. Spann has returned from a trip to New York. ?Rev. J. B. Holly, of Augusta, was in , the city yesterday. ? ?Miss Irene Cochran, of Charleston, is visiting Miss Ethel Bamberg. ?Mr. A. A. Forman, of Sumter, spent Sunday and Monday in the city. ?Mr. H. N. Bellinger, who has been sick for several days, is out again. ?Miss Allie Gooding, of Allendale, is in the city visiting Miss Ruth Riley. ?Rev. Peter Stokes and family left last Friday for a visit to relatives at Williamston. ?Mr. J. E. Sallev. of Orangeburg, spent | a short while in the city yesteday morning. ?Miss Carrie Gerard, of Charleston, is visiting Miss Annie Laurie Rice in the city. ?Mr. D. H. Counts, Jr., of Laurens, is spending some time in the city with rel. atives. ?Mr. D. A. Kinard, of McLaurin, is on a visit to his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. I. Kinard. ?Col Jno. F. Folk has gone to Chickamauga as a member of Governor Heyward's staff. , ?Miss Marie Brown, of Beaufort, is spending some time with Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Garland. ?Mrs. Harry Antley and Miss Burnice Horger, of Jamison, are visiting Mrs. Jesse C. Folk, Jr. ?Misses Pearl and Alma Black are at home from "Walterboro, where they have 1 been visiting relatives. 1 ?Auditor R. W. D. Rowell attended the i 4 meeting of the State board of equalization } in Columbia last week. , ?Mr. W. A. Klauber returned Monday from a trip to Baltimore and New York, where he went to buy fall goods. ?Mrs. Herbert Zeigler, of the Cope ' section, is in the city on a visit to the : family of her father, Mr. D. F. Hooton. , ?Messrs. C. R. Clayton, G. L. Kinard, 1 Isaac W. Carter, and Geo. J. Hiers,oftbe Ehrhardt section, were in the city Monday. ?Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Felder, of Mullins, visited relatives here this week. They left Tuesday for the mountains of North Carolina. ? ?Mr. and Mrs. Jones A. Williams returned Tuesday from a visit to Tybee. Mr. Williams is sick, being confined to his bed. ?Misses Bessie Lee and Nell Black are at home from Buffalo, where they have been visiting their sister, Mrs. L. E. Wiggins. . ?Miss Pauline Folk and Master Jimmie Folk, of Ehrhardt, spent last week in the city with their brother, Mr. Jesse C. &- Folk, Jr. ?Misses Nettie and Evie Free returned Monday from a trip to Barnwell and Hampton, where they visited relatives and friends. ?E. T. La Fitte, Esq., has gone to Glenn Springs to recuperate. He will not be able to appear at many of the campaign meetings. ?Mr. W. L. Mitchum, of the firm of Mitchum Bros., prominent merchants at Ehrhardt, was in the city yesterday, on his way to Charleston. ?Mrs. John Cooner returned Monday nitrht from a stav of three weeks at White Sulphur Springs'Mt. Airy, N. C., and the mountains of Virginia. ?Mr. W. D. Rhoad attended the Knights of Pythias district meeting at Aiken Tuesday as a representative from f Bamberg lodge. He reports a nice time. ?Messrs. T. D. Beard, of Colston, and Frank Hiers, of Ehrhardt, were in the city Tuesday. Mr. Beard was on his way to the Knights of Pythias district meet^ ing at Aiken. N ?Mr. F. D. Knight, of Sumter, manager of the Herald Publishing Co., with his little sou, Jenkins, spent Sunday in the city on a visit to the family of his brother, A. W. Knight. ?Mrs, Morris Mirmow and little son. Master Eddie, returned home last night from Bamberg, where they spent the day with Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Pearlstin.?Orangeburg Evening News. ?Mrs. Hebron Berry and little son, who have been on a visit to the family of her father, Mr. A. H. Bruce, returned to Branchville Monday. Mrs. Berry's health is very much improved. For the first time since the reconstruction days a negro has announced himself a "candidate for lieutenant governor of Alabama. He is a Greensboro negro politician who addressed himself to the chairman of the republican party of Alabama stating he is in the race. The republican party recently decided to put a full state ticket in the field for the first i time in years. Former State dispensary director H. H. Evans is a candidate for the legislature from Newberry. Of course he favors the dispensary and says there is no corruption in its affairs although it's no Sundav^ school. Crop Condition is 82.9 per Cent. Washington, Aug. 3.?The crop reporting board of the bureau of statistics of the department of agriculture, in a bulletin issued at noon today, finds from the reports of the correspondents and agents of the bureau that the average condition of cotton on July 25 was 82.9, as compared with 83.3 on June 25,1906; 74.9 on July 25,1905; 91.6 at the corresponding date in 1904, and a ten year average of 82.4. The following table shows condition t on July 25 of this year with the respective ten year averages: July 25, Ten-Year State. 1906. Average. Virginia ".S3 86 North Carolina 75 85 South Carolina 72 83 , Georgia 74 84 Florida 72 85 Alabama 83 83 Mississippi 88 81 Louisiana 88 82 Texas . 80 80 Arkansas 89 82 Tennessee 88 85 Missouri 95 86 f Oklahoma .92 86 Indian Territory 85 88 Scrub yourself daily, you are not clean inside. Clean insides means clean stomach, bowels, blood, liver, clean, healthy tissue in every organ. Moral: Take Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. 35 cents, Tea or Tablets. H. F. Hoover. t v- * The Drainage of Bamberg. Editor The Bamberg Herald:?If you will give me space I would like to say something in regard to the all important subject of draining thoroughly the town of Bamberg. As we can all sec now. the city made a great mistake when they tried to carry the water through the canal at new bridge. If you will think of it, the new bridge is considerably up the country from Bamberg, it being west of north, and is just at the beginning of the red clay ridge which crosses the State from north-east to south-west; this ditch runs up the river from Bamberg, when it should have gone down. Had this ditch gone into G. Frank Bamberg's field and, instead of turning to the left through the Price field, gone to the right and through the Jones Bros, and Thos. Black ponds, both of which are already ditched, entered and enlarged the ditch from the nursery down through the Hunter Branch tc the crossing of Cannon bridge and Charleston and Augusta roads, the town would have been perfectly dried with much less cost. Being very much interested and having had considerable experience in this line of work, I have gone over both routes and carefully noted the fall. The difference in the two routes is so great that you do not need the use of instruments to note it. If the town will call for taids to drain it and pay no money until it is done, I feel sure that it will be done foi much less than was paid for the work that is no good. You cannot make water run up hill, so when you ditch see to it that the mouth of it is lower than the head. The Edisto is said to have about ten feet fall to the mile, and the distance between the mouth of these ditches, would be H or 2 miles. J. M. J. GALVESTON'S SEA WALL makes life now as safe in that city as on the higher uplands. W. E. Goodloe, who resides on Dutton Street, in Waco, Tex., needs no-sea wall for safety. He writes: "I have used Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumptipn the past five years and it keeps me well and safe. Before that time I had a cough which for years had been growing worse. Now it's gone." Cures chronic coughs, la grippe, croup, whooping cough and prevents pneumonia. Pleasant to take. Every bottle guaranteed at Hoover's drug store, and J. B, Black's. Price 50c and $1.00. Trial bottle free. * The WiTof Fox. Charles James Fox, the famous English Advocate of a century ago and his secretary, Mr. Hare, who lived with him, were both noted for their impecuniosity, and their creditors spent much time in dunning them. One morning before daylight there was a violent ringing at the door, and Mr. Fox, going to the window found a group of creditors below. "Are you fox hunting or hare hunting this morning, gentlemen?" he asked. "Come, now, Mr. Fox," one of them called up, "tell us when you are going tc pay that bill. Just set a date and we will laorfl mil in npflpp " iva v v j vu "All right," was the reply. "How will the day of judgment suit you?" "Not at all," said the creditor. "We'l] all be too busy on that day." "Well," said Mr. Fox, "rather than pul you to any inconvenience, we'll make il the day after." The Situation. "Why don't you get married, John?" "I only earn $100 per month." "One can live very comfortably on $10( per month. "That's just it. Two can't." ft! M 0*Y E DICK i N S 0 n'j t INSURANCE | FIRE, ? t LIFE, i 1 TORNADO, 2 ACCIDENT, 4 LIABILITY, ? 2 CASUALTY, 2 J Office at The Cotton Oil Co, J UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA Session 1906 1907 Begins Wednesday, September 26th. Five courses leading to B. A. degree four to B. S. degree, one Co L. I. degree and one to L. L. B. degree. Certificates given for work completed in any one ol the departments. Expenses: Tuition fee $40.00; Term fee $18.00; Room fee $8.00; one-half of each ** ' - - * - e i. must he paid at trie Deginmng 01 eaci term. Tuition fee may be remitted upor presentation of certificate of inability tc pay the same. BENJAMIN SLOAN, President. WOFFORD COLLEGE HENRY N. SNYDER, LL. D., Pres. Two degrees, A. B. and A. M. Foui courses leading to the A. B. Degree Nine Professors. Library and Librarian. The \V. E Burnett gymnasium under a competeni director. J. B. Cleveland Science Hall Athletic grounds. Course of lectures by the ablest men on the platform. Nexl session begins September 19. Board from $12 to $16 a month. Foi catalogue or other information, addres: J. A. GAMEWELL, Secretary, Spartanburg, S. C. Wofford College Fitting School Three new brick buildings. Steair heat and electric lights. Head Master, three teachers and matror live in the buildings. Individual attention to each student Situated on the Wofford campus. Students take a regular course in the College Gymnasium, and have access tc the College Library. $125.00 pays for board, tuition, and all fees. Next session begins Septembei 19th. For Catalogue, etc., address A. MASON DuPRE, Head Master, Spartanburg, S. C. SLIPS OF NOVELISTS LEGAL MISTAKES THAT HAVE BEEN MADE BY GREAT AUTHORS. Dlckena and the Famous Cane of Bardell Versus Pickwick?The Trial Scene In Reade's "Hard Cn*h." Trollope's Dip Into the Law. "Legal fictions," says one of Gilbert's i gondoliers, "are solemn things." Yet i it is curious how seldom a novelist ventures into a law court without driving his quill through acts of parliament and rules of law alike. ^ ' 1 I ?.1 1 O TTT 'mat JJICKfcfllS KUUW icugc ui iavt, na.\. , Mr. Weller's of Loudon, was "exten , sive and peculiar" is amply demonstrated by the famous case of Bardell . versus Pickwick. Students of that re, port may have been struck by the fact , that neither plaintiff nor defendant appeared in the witness box. The explanation is that at that time parties "upon the record" were not competent 1 witnesses, their interest in the case being regarded as too strong a tempta>" tion to, shall we say, iuaccuracy. But i had Dickens been a lawyer Mr. Winkle i and his friends might also have been , spared the ordeal of cross examination and their friends and admirers deprived of many merry moments. In his anxiety to satirize the abuses 1 of cross examination Dickens over1 looked the legal rule that the counsel ' who calls a witness is not permitted to ; cross examine him at all, but, on the contrary, is bound by his answers; ; therefore had Serjeant Buzfuz permitted the Pickwickians to be called as n-i+noBfios for the nlaintiff (which he | would have known better than to do) their version of the words heard 1 through the door "on the jar" must have been accepted, and at the first attempt to badger either of them it would have been the learned counsel for the i plaintiff who received his lordship's in> junction "to be careful." >' But all lovers of Dickens will rejoice 1 at his ignorance of the rule which forces counsel never to call a hostile witness. Who could bear to be depriyI ed of the evidence of Mr. Samuel Wel? ler? Exactly the same mistake is made by Anthony Trollope in his well known novel, "The Three Clerks." There the > hero, Alaric Tudor, is placed upon his ' trial for misappropriating trust money and defended by that famous leader, Mr. Chaffanbrass of the Old Bailey, Tudor's Mephistopheles, the Hon. Un ' decimus Scott, is called, much against his will, as a witness for the defense i cross examined by the celebrated Chaf[ fanbrass, forced to confess his mis. deeds and dismissed covered with Ignominy, to be subsequently expelled i from his club?poetic justice which would have been defeated even by a chairman of quarter sessions. The great theoretical and practical > knowledge of law possessed by Charles Reade saved him from this error, as t from many others. Yet the famous > trial scene in "Hard,Cash" would have I been ruthlessly deprived of its most dramatic moment by any judge of the * TTn A high court. ? nen uie uu^icoo AU1VU I Hardy, who has been wrongfully imprisoned in an asylum by his wicked I father, comes at last to establish his sanity before a jury, his case is closed I by the reading of a letter from his dead sister. Writing at the point of death, she solemnly denies his insanity and begs him to show her words to his accusers when she is no more. Read aloud by the judge himself, her letter reduces a crowded court to tears and goes far to secure her brother a triumphant verdict, with heavy damages. : "Hard Cash" is termed "a matter of . fact romance;" but, as a matter of fact I and law, no such letter could have been received in evidence. Knowing that, * under ordinary circumstances, such testimony would be inadmissible, [ Reade is careful to establish that the writer knew herself to be dying; but J he was unaware that a "dying deelara tion" is only admissible in evidence upon a charge of murder or man slaughter of the person who has made y it, and cannot be laid before the jury - in any other case whatever. Numerous and entertaining are the trial scenes which adorn the works of , I Mrs. Henry Wood, but they hardly pro fess to be strictly accurate. Let me point rather, to an interesting slip on ' the part of that most careful of nov| elists, David Christie Murray, who [ shares to some extent the popular confusion on the subject of the law of > libel and slander. His powerful story, l "A Capful o' Nails," has for its hero i a working nailer, who becomes an 1 agitator on behalf of his much op} pressed class. In consequence of a speech denouncing an unscrupulous - employer he is prosecuted on a charge of criminal libel; but, thanks to a faithful friend and a smart lawyer, he emerges triumphantly. No fault can be found in this case with the way in which the villain is . cross examined to pieces. The ditfii culty is that no such prosecution could have been instituted at all. You may slander a man by defamatory speech, ^ but to libel him you must "write, print . or otherwise permanently record" your . defamation of him, and, though slander and libel alike may expose you to an action ror damages, it is noei aioue that can bring you within the grasp of the criminal law. It is difficult to uphold this distinction. A libel is regarded as a public 1 crime as well as a private wrong beL cause it tends to pre < a breach of the peace, but one would think as , much might be said of slander. Still the distinction exists, and the agJ gressor who confines his attack to 1 words may suffer in purse, but not in I person. Such are a few of the slips to which the novelist is liable who unwarily trespasses upon legal preserves.?Pearson's Weekly. ' * v ; " - I,.; ..t-J:'} THE SUNDIAL. It Shovld Be Marked For the Latitude In Which It StandM. In an old shoi> in lower New York a man keeps up his trade of dial making. The dials, square, octagonal or circular, are hand chased. They do not receive a high polish, and any accidental effect of weather stain or other "tone of time" is carefully preserved if not skillfully added. These dials, fitted with the gnomon, or stylus, are then artfully slipped into the show windows of uptown curiosity shops among a selected debris of Sheffield plate, prism candlesticks, inlaid tea caddies and old blue plates. A visitor to one of these shops asked: "How old is that brass dial over there? It's all hand work, isn't it?" "It's all hand work," said the proprie tor, whom we will call Truthful James. "I can testify to that, for I know the man whose hands made it. It's about a month old, if you want to know. You're like lots of other people?you want an old Scotch or English dial. Don't you know it would be useless, if you found it, for practical purposes? Excise me, but haven't you ever studied geography and heard of latitude? A dial ought to be marked out scientifically for the exact latitude in which it is to be set up. So sinless you strike the same parallel In the states that the dial left in England it will tell lies from morning till night. You'd be surprised how many people pick up a dial that strikes tbeir fancy which perhaps stood in the garden of an old Virginia estate, intending to hurry it off to the big grounds of some place in Minnesota; or they'll snatch at some quaint dial from New England, with the idea of rigging it up in Texas. "More people would make the same blunder, except that many haven't caught on to dials. Too bad. Nothing is prettier than a simple dial at the crossways of gulden paths, or by a fountain or on a terrace or at the en trance of a pergola or near a rustic seat or arbor. You don't have to hire a head gardener and two assistants to keep a sundial. Marble platforms and pedestals are very grand, but unless you're running a big Italian garden with clipped hedges and yews and statues something simple is what you want The dial will keep just as good time, once it's engraved right, if it's mounted on a tree stump, with ivy planted round it, or on a bowlder, or on the coping of an old disused well, or on a column of cobbles mortared together, or on top of the old hitching post that the family doesn't use in these automobile days, but doesn't want to root up and throw away. "You'd be surprised at the ingenuity of some people," said Truthful James, who himself seemed of ingenious bent. "I mean people who haven't much money to spend and are fond of their own old stuff for association's sake. They're the ones who get effects with a piece of junk, a lump of sentiment and a pocket of small change that can't be bought with a blank check. I've known people who used an old millstone to set the dial on, or who laid a slab over an old stone garden urn, or who saved the capitals from pillars on a house being torn down, or who even rigged up a standard from the bricks of a chimney on an old homestead that had meant a lot to them. One family made a sort of cairn out of a geology collection some ancestor had formed. Another took a flag pole for the gnomon and laid out a dial with pebbles in the grass around the pole. . "No, it doesn't require any skill to set up the dial. Get the noon mark for the ?~ (.Aoniin I A air a nl/ilr if nn fho gllUUlUU UU KVUUI ? ? slab and then set the dial in a bed of cement. There you are."?New York Post The Laundry Auction. "Ever go to a laundryman's auction?" asked the man who was sorting bundles. "You can get bargains there sometimes. Here are forty-eight packages that will be sent to the auctioneer tomorrow. One bundle is labeled 'W. Joblotz. No address. Will call.' Now, I wonder what has become of W. Joblotz, who had no address and promised to call? What has become of the owners of these forty-seven packages? Some of the things thrown on our hands are very fine and as good as new. Just look at that pile of handkerchiefs and those shirt waists and collars and cuffs. It has been more than a year since they were left here. All unclaimed packages are kept a rwr r?r mnrp tlipn thpi7 flrp SPIlt around to a general receiving station to be disposed of at auction."?New York Sun. Arohbltihop of Canterbury. The arqhbishop of Canterbury is referred to as "his grace," and he writes himself archbishop, etc., "divina providentia," whereas other prelates use the phrase "divina permissione." He is the first peer in the realm. At coronations he places the crown on tko head of the sovereign, and the king and queen are his domestic parishioners. The bishop of London is his provincial dean, the bishop of Winchester his subdean, the bishop of Lincoln his chancellor and the bishop of Rochester his chaplain. Xo Cue For Them. Canvasser?Madame, I would like to show you the beautiful silver forks thnf wo nrc crii-inor nwnr with PVPrv ? ****" ?v -"~v ?* half dozen bars of Skinfiynt soap. Lady of the House?"We don't never eat with forks in this house. They leak.?Woman's Home Companion. Enongh. "I'll never ask another woman to marry me so long as I live." "Refused?" "No; accepted."?London Tit-Bits. The angels may have wider spheres of action, may have nobler forms of duty, but right with them and with us is one and the same thing.?Chapin. ' ... , ' ' -J > jf, .. . t. % PJW *Ti T^Tf T^Tr tltT ?K ?T yP flj ^ AT 1AT TAT T AT TAT *471AT1A^ XA7 ^Aa ^AT I With The | I Cow's Compliments j fi ? 4> < i* ?8? ? ? H? "Rvptv housewife knows that a meal mav 3? tf; / ' It: be perfect in every particular and appoint- 2!: 3: ment until it comes to the butter?and then, 2 J 3: if that's just the least bit "off color," the 3: whole meal is a hopdless failure. :: 3: Cheese, too, is no small factor in the mak- : J 3: ing or marring of a meal. Xot only a :: ?*** tasty "smack," but a lot of genuine 2 J nourishment in a piece of pure cheese. : 5 We have the finest butter and the clearest, :: 3: choicest brands of cheese a careful market : J 3? affords. Won't you order some and see ? :: F * j* | MOVE S GROCERY STORE 1 j A* * [ ? 'Phone 41 Bamberg, S. C. On the Coner * J ? V?A*?A*?A*?A?*4*?A?*A**A**A? 4*?4* *4* ?4? ?4* *4* *4* f- VxS\eFitting Sc.?] | Of Wofford College ^^0 / Bamberg, S. C. Situated on large campus in progressive city. Prepares boys and girls for college. Separate boarding departments. Four teachers and matrons live in dormitory buildings. Individual attention. Buildings improved Electric lights. Excellent health. Two flowing wells on M campus. Splendid course in music and elocution. Literary societies. Library. Y. M. C. A. Gymnasium. Athletics. Session begins Sep. 12. FOR CATALOGUE, ETC., WRITE TO W. S. Hogan, Jr., Head Master ^ Sp | WELSH NECK HIGH SCHOOL I f Hortcvillp Smith farntinn 1 I1WI T 1M?WJ WM?a W%M VMM** CO-EDUCATIONAL and MILITARY I | Buildings large and commodious, heated by furnaces or steam, provided I with shower baths and situated on a campus of twelve acres. Pure artesian I . $ water. Instructors graduates of leading colleges of the country. Terms for I board, tuition and medical attendance for session $120.00. Uniforms for 8 cadet $30.00, for young lady about $18.00 for session. Write for catalog. I ROBT. W. DURRETT, A. M., Principal. 8 I?? ???I I SPECIflLJOTICES. I KiNe" helrose | 1 Advertisements Under this Head 25c Y \ < J For 25 Words or Less. $3000 Roan Stalllotl WANTED AT ONCE?Your order for X 16 Hands Foaled Oct. 4, 1900 it dry wood. J. H. MURPHF. - ^ = X Sire, Hargrave 17046 J [ Valuable Real Estate < Trotter. Registered. Trial, Quar I t ter in 35 Seconds $ FOR SALE | For Service at Smnak's Stable t | i One lot, 21 acres, with two tenant o X houses, barn, five stalls, shed, and a good five-room dwelling. Cheap at $1,575. * ? Twenty-four acres in Bamberg, under high state of cultivation, with growing I TTVT^ITTTJ \ "\T/^T? pecan orchard. Fine residence site. AJL.1 O U Xixlll " J Price $1,800. I HEl An excellent dwelling, good location, prpr rvcrrrj? 4 v/?p at West Denmark. Write for particulars. iJy&LJiA.XL,E , . ... ? LIFE INSURANCE. M One acre lot with 6 room cottage on ' . Railroad Avenue. Delightful location. SURETY BONDS v o Price $1,600. * T a . r* In good, strong Companies. 400 acre farm a few miles distant from Bamberg. Good investment. Price$3,000 TTTjlJpV T QI) i TITTi If Tw 11 acre lot with cottage, situate on llllAJjllAM, Jl.j Midway street near Carlisle Fitting Office at Bank. Phone Connection. . School. This is an excellent bargain. . A Price $2,250. X ?+ 117 acre farm one mile from Bamberg. (TV T (TV T]\ X T7 Well improved with barb wire fencing II I | y | , IVr all around. The timber is worth the price. JL/ f3 % AJ JLJ AJ 1 V Price $4,000. Has in stock a nice line of Various building lots in all sections of Qpgg ^ Top Bfl?neS and HaiUeSS ! futnwn anH other farm property for sale. r SS u ? - - >* '-a Iiliv w vw M ?? ? # _ If you wish to buy anything, or if you for sale cheap. He is agent for pr0perty f0r 9ale' let me 6e" U Bkkford & Hoffman's Celebrated Grain toryou Drill, the Woodruff Hay Press, and H. M. GRAHAM, A lrt/v _ "ci: A. _ Real Estate Aeent Als0 Conducts a F'ret-class , aam REPAIR SHOP MONbY TQ LOAIN and builds anything on wheels V to order. Now is the time to have On farming lands. Long time. your buggy repaired and painted No commission charged. Bor- to look and last as good as new. TOPi4snactFaorCf"U?erPior: Horseshoeing a Specialty formation address _ . ?.,i RUNS A"TT~J , John B. Palmer & Son. GrlSt Ml" 0n Saturdays ; Box 282, Columbia, s. c. I have also added a yvn p u A Tp FIRST-CLASS RICE MILL JLyXXa vX? -T Xlillllf and will grind on Wednesdays DENTAL SURGEON, '"'have also'just pat in a Bamberg,s. c. ^ Year Tire Setting Machine | In office every day ir' the weei; Graru- an(J now . ate of Baltimore College of Dental Sur- , , Rj , ,? gery, class 1898. Member of S. C. Dental Factorr Stvle SS^ I Association. Office next to bank. c Y 7 -1 T iTVTVT T7 : W. P. RILEY I. . ! I fire, life Dr. O. D. Faust I it accident o DENTIST v| Jt INSURANCE 1 bambero, s. c. I !! bambero, s. c. j; office in folk building ii+MMMOMMMMMMMM L___? "st '/ '