University of South Carolina Libraries
PERSONAL MENTION. People Visiting in This City and at Other Points. ?Mr- J. W. Hill spent Sunday in Johnston. t :* ?Mr. Joe Kinsey, of Olar, was in 1 the city Tuesday. y ?Mr. Frank Cope, of Cope, was ^ in the city yesterday. . ?H. F. Rice, Esq., of Aiken, was j in the city last Saturday j ?Mr. A. A. Zeigler, of Ehrhardt, \ was in the city Sunday. 3 ?Miss Buchanan, of Virginia, is S visiting Miss Franke Folk. c ?Mr. Hollis Frier is visiting t friends and relatives in Allendale. * ?Misses Ethel and Ulma Black are j at home from Greenville Female Col- r ? v locrA r V. > ?Miss Irene Andrews, of Charles- s ton, is visiting her aunt, Mrs. J. W. i Stokes. * ?Mr. M. N. Rice, of the Buford's ' Bridge section, was in -the city last Saturday. ?Mr. William Rice, of Davisboro, Ga., is in the city visiting friends and s relatives. ?Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Ehrhardt, i of Ehrhardt, were in the city last j&p:';'" Saturday. ?Mr. Frank Johnson is at home from Clemson College for the summer vacation. " V ?Mrs. A. H. Bruce, of Branchville, visited relatives and friends in the > ; , j--. .. M city this week. ?Mrs G. F. Hair returned Tuesday afternoon from a visit to reia' tives in Blackville. ? ?Mr. J. J. Smoak left for WinstonSalem, N. C., Tuesday evening, where v . lie went on bussiness. ?Miss Myra Hooton is visiting her ^ sister, Mrs. Ziegler, in the Cope sec- ^ tion of Orangeburg county. ?Miss Cressida Breland, who has ? been assistant milliner at Mrs. A. McB. Speaks during the past season, f lUv ; left for her home Tuesday, the sea- i v^: : son being over. c ?Mrs. Lewis Kinard ana little 1 daughter, Ruby, are visiting friends E * and relatives in the Ehrhardt sec- a ? tion. " ^ ?Mr. D. M. Eaves spent several days in Rock Hill this week attend- . tag Winthrop College commence- ^ ment. , ?Miss Belle Cooner came home a Friday from Greenville, where she ^ has been attending Greenville Fe- j male College. 0 ?Mr. Thos. Black and daughter, p Miss Nelle Black, attended the Win- c throp College commencement in Rock fc Hill this week. I % ?Mr. E. Paul Allen, superintend- F ent of the graded school, spent Sat- ? urday and Sunday in the city en e . iroute to Aiken. o ?Mrs. L. E. Hill, has returned to ,5 this city after an extended visit to v Johnston with her .daughter, Mrs. F M. C. Sandifer. 1 V ll ^ A ?Mrs. M. A. Bamberg, Mrs. Alma * Hays and Mrs. J. A. Wyman left this week for Gleen Springs, where they will spend some time. ?Dr. G. W. Garland, who has been E on an extended visit to his sons in New York, returned Home yesterday s (Wednesday) morning. s ( ?Messrs. Norman and Simms v . ' V l Fender came home last week from t Furman University, at Greenville, \ for the summer vacation. <3 ?Little Miss Lucile Hunter re t -V" w turned homo yesterday after a pleas- t ant visit to her father, Mr. O. F. * Hunter, in Washington, D. C. s ?Miss Lanier, milliner for Mrs. A. McB. Speaks during the past sea- . . son, left for her home Tuesday morn- 1 ing, the season having closed. ?Mrs. Rosa Hooton and family, of , Denmark, are moving to Bamberg ^ this week, and will occupy her resi- t dence on the corner of Midway street, opposite Mr. J. A. Murdaugh's. t ?Mr. E. E. Hughes, of Holly i Spring, Miss., was in the city Satur- t k day. Mr. Hughes was on his way to Ehrhardt, where he will spend some ? * time with relatives and friends. ^ ?Rev. Chas. B. Smith, presiding s elder of Orangeburg district, will f preach in Trinity Methodist church i next Sunday evening at 8:30 o'clock, s f and will hold the third quarterly con^ ference Monday morning. ?Hon. S. G. Mayfield spent several days in Manning last week, attending court, where he went to repi resent' Mr. W. J. Ray,, a son of Mr. S. G. Ray, of Denmark, who was charged with assault and battery with , intent to kill. Mr. Ray shot and wounded an inpudent negro at Pinewood sqme months ago. The case re suited in a miss trial. Farmers' Union Meeting. The next meeting of the Bamberg County Farmers' Union will be held / with the Colston local, at Colston ^ school house, on Thursday, July 14th. nnhlix oronorallv i T1 vitpfi t.fl ^ JL 11^ |/UUUV Uiij *?? W ? k come and bring well filled baskets. < j. e. McMillan . s Ehrbardt, S. C., June 13, 1910. ] > CHARGED WITH MURDER. Tohn M. Wise and M. C. Tidwell Ai rested in Laurens. Laurens, June 11.?The arres ;his afternoon of two young whit nen, John M. Wise and M. C. Tic veil, both of Watts mills, on a wai vant charging them with the mui ler, five months ago, of Clarence I rVhite, caused quite a sensatioi Both men are held without bail an lave been committed to jail. Th varrant was sworn out to-day, befor Magistrate John M. Hudgens, by Vii fil A. White, father of C. L. Whitt leceased, and the arrests were mad >y Sheriff Owings and Deputy Cul jerston. The apprehension of the accuse s the result of some clever detectiv rork, which may be the means c .tearing up. the mysterious circuit tances, which at the time surround id the manner in which -Clarenc IVhite sustained injuries that cause lis death nine days later. It wi] >e recalled that young White, a rail oad employee, with headquarters a ..aurens, was found in an uncot cious condition on Monday morning anuary 31, in a ditch beside th ailroad near Watts mills. His skul ias fractured and there were mark f other injuries on his body. Nin lays later he died at his home, nea )wings, this county. While foul play was first considei id, the general belief was that he wa he victim of an accident. Now i Lppears that he told his father ew days before his death that tw oung unknown white men attacke lim as he was walking along th ailroad track towards the city Sue lay night, January 30, and, afte mocking him in the head with teavy stick or blunt instrument, the obbed him and threw him down th ieep embankment into the ditct vhere he remained all night. Children's Day at Trinity. Interesting visitors, fond parents aithful pupils and beaming count lances throughout, made children' lay at Trinity Sunday school a de ightful occasion last Sunday after toon. The auditorium was well fillei Lnd the friends of the school wer veil pleased with the splendid mar ter in which the children carried ou heir parts of the program. Noti ng seemed to worry the children a hey took their places following th eautiful processional, and they eac irose to their part in the prograr rith a zeal and earnestness so pleas ng to see. From the time when th irganist started the march for th rocessional until the end .when th ongregatlon all joined in that ol iymn, "Around the Throne of God ii leaven," the exercises were mos (leasing. The teachers of the schoc t'ho trained the participants deserv auch credit and were congratulate^ m every side by the visitors. Such occasions as this children' lay are events in the life of the pu iils and in the history of the school "hey may have various purposes an ead to various ends, but the chie ,im is to impress the beautiful les ons on the children themselves, an n the others attending. The oc asion marks a time when the sprin oonths have passed and the summe s just about to open. In mos chools there is always the "summe lump"; Trinity is endeavoring t card off this and special plans ar >eing laid looking to this end. Thi vas one of the purposes of the chil Iren's day exercises. The hope wa xpressed last Sunday that many c hose attending as visitors woul >ecome permanent members of th chool. The announcement was made fror he platform that the school is be ng reorganized, the classes being re snrolled. A complete reclassificatio vill be undertaken in July. Th 3ible Class is growing rapidly an vill continue to do so for some tim here being a great many of the chui ;h members of Trinity who are not i he school at present but who wil ikely join. All residents of th own oithor normanont nr tpmnnran vho are not connected with som school are urged to come out an rerv likely join. All residents of th school. The Herbert Bible Class i or all persons sixteen years or over 'or those under this age there ar special classes. Mr. Featherstone Here. Hon. C. C. Featherstone, of Lai: ens, candidate for governor, sper ast Saturday in the city, shakin lands with his friends, of whom h las a number in Bamberg, he havin risked here before and made an ac iress at the Methodi6t Church. H :ame down from Blackville, where b lad come from his home on accour >f the illness of his son. He has >on ill at Blackville. The boy cam lown on a visit to his grand-pareni ind was taken sick with typhoid feve :he day after his arrival, so his fi :her came down because of his il less. Mr. Featherstone was a calk it The Herald office, but he did nc liscuss politics, in fact, he did nc seem disposed to discuss politic* matters. FIVE AWAITED DEATH. ._ Speeding Locomotive Crashed into < Funeral Coach. it Haverstraw, N. Y., June 9.? e Three mourners their pastor and ] I- their driver, sat in a funeral coach 1 - here this afternoon and watched cer- ] > t^in death come rushing on them at 1 j. 50 miles an hour. With a screech < i. of grinding brakes, a heavy West s d Shore freight engine, hurrying south i e to pick up a train at Weehawken, j o crushed into the coach, scattering 1 - its occupants along the right of way. ] i, and came to a stop 150 yards beyond i e the crossing.' All the occupants were 1 [- either killed outright or fatally in- / jured. The dead: i d Romath, the Rev. A., pastor of 1 e the New City Methodist Episcopal if church; Seifred, E. V., New City, N. [ Y.; Seifred, Mrs. E. V., New City, N. , I- Y.; Beebe, William, Haverstraw; ' e Kesslers, Mrs. Parry, William, Ha- j d verstraw; Kesslers, Mrs. Parry, Ha- j 11 verstraw. Mrs. Kesslers died several [- hours after the accident. t Dramatic and Horrifying. < i- The accident was not only un- j >, usual but dramatic and horrifying to j e a degree. It happened at the foot < 11 of Graveyard Hill, in full sight of the j s returning funeral procession, of. , e which the wrecked coach was the ] r first, and of the terrified and helpless j watchman. j The watchman was eating a bite ' s of luncheon, in his little cabin, when j it the tinkle of an electric bell warned d mm oi ail uypxuauuiiig uaiu. mco chanically he pulled the lever that d set the heavy, balanced gates in mo- j e tion. Then glancing from the cfcen ; t- door, he saw a sight that will not ] r be out of his dreams for many a ] a night. ] y Just what happened will probably ] e never be known, but some eye-wit- j l, nesses say that the arrangements of ( the crossing gates, late in descend- i ing, blocked the coach after it had crossed the first of two tracks and \ 5? held it a prisoner on the rails, while ] y the terrified occupants sat paralyzed, j 8 gazing at the on-rushing locomotive, j Km Hopeless Effort to Escape. J The driver lashed his horses in a < ^ futile attempt to force the vehicle e from the track, until, with a sharp < L~ crack, the picture dissipated and it 1 * seemed as if the coach literally blew up. Fragments of splintered wood s and mutilated shreds of humanity were flung far and wide. The enh gine stopped. There was absolute 1 Q silence, save for the'hiss of escaping steam. e A search for the dead followed. e The bodies of Mr. and Mrs. Seiferd ? were found, side-by-side, fifty yards ' down the track. The wife was just ' a returning from the burial of her {a- ' ' ther, by whose death she had come 1 ' into a tidy fortune. ? Young Beebe, the driver, was the ' son of a wealthy livery owner. He " lay twenty yards nearer', stone dead. 8 The Rev. Mr. Romath was the cler- ] gyman who had officiated at the fu' neral. An inquest has been deferred, ( pending fuller' investigation of the { j facts. d _ . i !- Cremated in Jail, g ! r Garfield, Ga., June 12.?Two j ,t negroes ended their lives here last r night in an extraordinary manner, o They were arrested by the town mare shal for being drunk and creating a s disturbance and locked up in the ' i_ calaboose. In the first part of the ! s night the officer discovered a fire in if their cells just in time to save the : d little structure. The negroes un- ' e daunted, however, were determined on self-destruction and in the latter n part of the night started ^another fire ] which ended in the calaboose being j. consumed and they being cremated. n HOTEL ROW IX SPARTANBURG. 1 e d Alleged Attempt to Throw Young Woman from Second Story. 1 n Spartanburg, June 13.?With her 11 hair hanging down and her person e bloody from an encounter with two r, men in the hotel, Evelyn Jones, a e young woman of about 20, was res- ' d cued from a second story window of j fhe Orpp-on Hotel this mornine. where 1 C W* s she had luckily caught a hold, after ; being thrown from the building, as i e she claimed, by L. D. Crews, one of the proprietors of the house. Men i across the street, who saw the woman clinging for her life, secured a < i- ladder and, running it up, took her it down in safety. g The young woman was a guest at i e the hotel. Cases of disorderly con- : g duct were made out against Harry I- Cutter and L. D. Crews, proprietors e of the hotel, and, upon investigation ; e before Mayor Lee, they were each ' it fined $50. Evelyn Jones, who claima ed she was on her way to Jacksone ville, Fla., and had only stopped over , :s in Spartanburg on business, was de:r tained at the police station till the i- arrival of her train to-night and 1- placed upon it by Chief of Police Hill. , ?r It was alleged in the trial that >t Evelyn Jones was conducting herself )t improperly at the Oregon and that il Crews and Cutter were trying to put her out. I HEROIC DEED SAVES CHILD. [Thrilling Occurrences on Railroa Near Salters. Kingstree, June 10.?informatio has just been received here that th two-year-old child of Mr. Albert I Moseley, of Salters, while playing o the railroad track, directly in fror 3f its home, at that place, had bee struck by an extra freight train 3outh, knocking it from the trac md some distance away. Drs. Gan hie and Jacobs, of this place, wer hurriedly to render medical assisi -? r? ?/-> Vm* V> /NnArt o t?A fvrt f Ol IUV/C, UUl VCl J 1U11C uupuo aiu tained for the child's recovery. B< Bides internal injuries, which ar jerious, the back of the child appear 10 be broken. Injuries Not so Serious. Later developments at Salter show the child was not seriously ir iured as first reported. The act c :he engineer reads like fiction, in tha ie saw the child on the track ahead putting on emergency brakes, h rushed out of his cab, reached for th ;hild, and threw it off the track, se< ;ng he could not stop the train. Th injuries, therefore, that the child re reived were slight, resulting from th call after having been thrown by th engineer. Had it not been for th heroic act on the part of the enginee: tie child would doubtless have bee mangled to death under the trail rhe first report was that obtaine from a person coming for the doctoi Account from Salters. Salters, June 10.?Innocent of a ilmost certain death, James, the i pear-old son of Mr. Albert R. Mos< ley, of this place, toddled out in th middle of the main track of the Ai lantic Coast Line, only a few yard Frnm Viio ViAma /Urontlr In frnnt r 11 V&U U10 UV'OIV) UllVVVi^ A U wuv v a fast' running freight train, at 3'clock to-day, and was knocked o by the monster freight engine. The engineer saw the child too lat to bring his train to a dead stop fc< fore hitting the child, although he ai plied the emergency brakes as soo as possible, coming to a stop aboi three cars' length past where tfc ihild was struck. i A physician was called in imm< iiately, and is i sported to have sai that the child will recover. Cotton Crop Report, New Orleans, June 12.?In sun marizing its initial reports of the co ton crop of 1910, the Times-Dem< :rat will say to-morrow: "The reports indicate a favorabb though somewhat late start througl Dut the major portion of the bel Much ^planting was - found nece: sary. Weather extremes form the bi sis of most of the complaints, "An appreciable increase in acr< age is reported from the States wei Dt the Mississippi river. "As a rule the fields are clea and well worked. "Boll weevils have appeared in tk laMinna in footed loot VPflr whPI crop diversification has been rosor sd to more than ever before. Thus U the plant seems to be free of oth< Insect pests. "The labor supply is ample in moi sections, but complaint of scarcit In this respect com^from others." Moonshine Destroyed. Spartanburg, June 11.?Revenr officers accompanied by special coi stables left Spartanburg early th morning to make a raid on a mooi 3hine distillery 20 miles above tt city on the line of the Carolir Clinchfleld & Ohio. They found a S5-gallon still in operation. "T1 pot was boiling" but the moonshine] had gone off to a cabin to get mej to make mash. While the officers were busy cu ting to pieces the still the ownei appeared on the brow of the hil but when they saw what was goin on they fled. Over 2,000 gallofls < UCCl UUU liiUOU ?T VI uvyti vj v\n ? r-v i j Shooting in Yorkville. Yorkville, June 11.?George Webl while sitting on the driver's seat ( a mowing machine, on a farm aboi four miles east of Yorkville, th morning, was shot in the back, it stated by Abe Seigel. The weapo used was a shot gun, loaded wit slugs. Webb is said to be seriousl wounded, but the attending phys cian expresses the opinion that t will recover. Seigel surrendered to the sheri and is in jail. He was standio about ten feet from his victim whe the shot was fired, and assigns < his reason the alienation of his wife affections by Webb. lniveksity ofIsouth carolin VarioH prmrspa nf stnriv in Sc ence, Liberal Arts, Education, Civ and Electrical Engineering and La\ College fees, room, lights, etc.$26; Board?$12 per month. Fc those paying tuition, $40 additiona The health and morals of the sti dents are the first consideration < the faculty. 43 Teachers' Scholarships, wort $158. For catalogue write to S. C. MITCHELL, President. Columbia, S. C. ? ' " r&i WEST KNIGHT MAY DIE. d Perhaps Fatally Wounded by Tolly Babb, Prominent Farmer. n Greenville, June 12.?Tully Babb e to-day shot and perhaps fatally I. wounded West Knight on Laurens n road, near here. Both men are tt prominent white farmers of that secn tion. The shooting grew out of con, tinued illfeeling between the two. k Babb with his wife was driving i- in a buggy on the Laurens road. As it they were passing Knight's home, t- Knight came out in the road and r- stopped them. He then, it is said, attempted to pick a fight with Babb. e Babb got out of his buggy ana s Knight advanced on him with a knife. Babb drew his pistol and fired four times. The buhets took effect in Ttnicht's abdomen nerforatine' the in S testines. j Knight was brought to a hospital t here, where he is now. Physicians say that his recovery is doubtful. ' Babb was lodged in jail. He claims self-defense. e Babb is a well-known character in this section. At one time he was a e , ^ distiller in this county before the en" actment of the dispensary law. ? The salaries of postmasters in a e number of South Carolina towns will r, be raised the 1st of July. The salary of n the Bamberg post office will be raised i. from $1,500 to $1,600 a year. The d salary of the Blackville office will r. be increased from $1,400 to $1,500. I Home Industry e Did you ever stop and think what kind of business judgment you exercised when you let those globe t'rot18 ting, so-called opticians and eye >f specialists pull a veil over your face 1 and stuff wool in your eyes and sell m you a pair of glasses with a guaran tee strong enough to see Halley's comet at noon and tell the time of :e day And you had just as well believe that as anything else they tell you, for he has collected your moL.ey and gone. 11 Suppose the glasses don't fit, it where can you find him? or suppose Le they give you perfect satisfaction and you recommend him to your friends, where is he? You don't know. He is gone, and your friend d has missed the great map that sells medicated glasses that restores sight and cures all diseases from a sprained ankle to a deranged mind. Now you wear the glasses, if satisfactory, and swear by that bunch 1_ of fakirs; that they are the best on t- earth. But I find many people that )_ are swearing off irom such venders and afe patronizing home industory, enabling an honest man to stay at e? home and do the work as it should l- be and add a profession to our comt. munity greatly needed. Don't he a drawback -to our homes and county, keep as many people and as much money here as you possibly can, then we will be proud of ourselves and a. others. " If these people come here and live as one of us I for one extend to them a hand of welcome, but for them to ,n come through and carry thousands of dollars away, leaving in most a cases nothing in return, I feel duty bound to rise up against them in be"e half of my people and myself. You t- may thin* and say I. have a selfish ir motive in view by taking this stand. I aon't care if you do. I am in a iT position to substantiate every word of it, and if you don't believe it look 3t on your maitfels and mantles of y your neighbors, and if you don't find enough junk in the way of old spectacles to convince you, I will stop writing ana we will go flsning. l am making a living and I want you to live, and to do so you must patie ronize home industry. ' Buy from i- whom you may, but try and get iS value received for your money. Written for the benefit of the public. ie I will be at Ehrhardt Thursday. ia June 30th and Friday July 1st; I n will render service to anyone suffering with eye trouble in the way of refractive errors. Can fit the most *s difficult cases with proper lenses, reil lieving the eye strain and producing comfort. Special attention given 10 t chronic cases. All work guaranteed. ; DR. M. R. CAMPBELL ft Eye Specialist > CITATION NOTICE. The State of South Carolina? County of Bamberg?By Geo. P. HarL mon, Esq., Judge of Probate. D> Whereas Mrs. A. R. Lancaster hath >f made suit to me to grant her letters it of administration of the estate of [S and effects of L. L. Lancaster, de. ceased: s These are therefore to cite and n admonish all and singular the kinh dred and creditors of the said L. L. y Lancaster, deceased, that they be and appear before me in the Court 1_ of Probate, to be held at Bamberg, on Friday, June 17th, next, after publication thereof, at 11 A o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the said s administration should not be granted, n Given under my hand and seal this ls 3rd day of June, A. D., 1910. -s GEO. P. HARMON, Judge of Probate. - 1785 1910 COLLEGE OF CHARLESTON il 126th Year Begins Sept. 30. 'vwt/nir*?f 1 /-??p Ttrill V?Oi Virl V. JZiUl.1 U.IHSC CAauiluanuuo nm uv uvivi ? in the County Court House on Fri>r day, July 1, at 9 a. m. All candidates ,1. for admission can compete in Septeml ber for vacant Boyce scholarships, )f which pay $100 a year. One free tuition scholarship to each county in h South Carolina. Board and furnished room in dormitory, $12. Tuition $40. For catalougue address f HARRISON RANDOLPH, President. HIDDEN DANGERS | Nature Gives Timely Warnings That r*-^r No Bamberg Citizen Can Afford to Ignore. DANGER SIGNAL NO. 1 comes from the kidney secretions. They will warn you when the kidneys are sick. Well kidneys excrete a clear, amber fluid Sirk kidnpva s#?nd out a thin. ?. pale and foamy, or a thick, red, illsmelling urine, full of sediment and irregular of passage. DANGER SIGNAL NO 2 comes from the back. Back pains, dull and heavy, or sharp and acute, tell you of sick kidneys and warn you of the approach of dropsy, diabetes and Bright's disease. Doan's Kidney Pills cure sick kidneys, and cure tnem permanently. Here's Bamberg proof: N. B. Adams, Main street, Bamberg, S. C., says: "I most heartily recommend Doan's Kidney Pills, as I used them and obtained great benefit. I suffered for more than a. year from attacks of backache and pains in the small of my back. The kidney secretions were unnatural and gave me no end / ^ of trouble on account of their fre- > * quency in passage. Having Doan's Kidney Pills brought to my atten- tion, I procured a supply at the Peopies Drug Co. and began using them. They gave prompt' relief. In a few weeks the pains in my back were en- 4? tirely disposed of and my kidneys were again performing their work ' properly." V For safe by all dealers. Price 60 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo. New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name?Doan's? TdfiSMR and take no other. Hunt's Cure Jj Is the guaranteed cure for skin dfas eases. If you suffer from any such M trouble, get a box from your druggist . ;^j and be cur^d. Don't suffer the annoyance of caly, itching, burning or J pimply diseases of the skin when a 50 cent box of HUNTS CURE will ; relieve you. We guarantee one box to cure any one case. If it doesn't* you get your money back without question. But one box WILL cure . Just try it. You can get it at your druggist. It comes in the form of salve and is easily applied. Remem-' y ber one box is guaranteed to cure any y>ya|8 one case of Skin Disease || under our pledge that you get your: money back if it fails. Ask your druggist. The price is 50 cents a box. Prepared by A. B. RICHARDS MEDICINE CO., Sherman, Texas. Sold by Peoples Drug Co., Bamberg. Winthrop College. SCHOLARSHIP and ENTRANCE. EXAMINATION. , The examination for the award of' vacant scholarship in Winthrop College and for the admission Of. students will be held at the County v Court House on Friday, July 1, at a. m. Applicants must not be lesa than fifteen years of age. When' Scholarships are vacant after July 1 . they will be awarded to those making the highest average at this examina- { tion, provided they meet the conditions governing the award. Appli- . .;{|S cants for scholarships should, writeS to President Johnson before the ex- Vltsi amination for Scholarship examina- 3 tion blanks. Scholarships are worth $100 and . . -.X,3 free tuition. The ndxt session will open September 21, 1910. For fur-* XlSgS ther information and catalogue, ad- 1$| dress Pres. D. B. Johnson, Rock Hill, FRANCIS F. CARROLL Xlll| Attorney-at-Law Offices Over Bamberg Banking Co. GENERAL PRACTICE. > j I CARTER & CARTER X Attorneys-at-Law '. < T Bamberg, S. C. g Special attention given to set- < ' \^*S9j T tlement of estates and invest!- J | :S| J gation of land titles. o J Loons negotiated on farm lands J f t[ ^ jOffice^over tomtey^ Banking Oo.^< 1 ? G.' MOYE' DICKENSON | INSURANCE AGENT 1? ' o WILL WRITE ANYTHING H I o Fire, Tornado, Accident, Ida- <> | J J bility, Casualty, in tbe J [ 4 strongest and most re- ? jJ liable companies. . 3 Mm1' ' W. E. FREE Am Attorney :at-Law ;^SJg All business ^entrusted to me will receive prompt attention. Investigation of land titles a specialty ' ' 'M Office for present at court nouse. DR. 0.' D. FAUST DENTIST > BAMBERG, S. C. Office in B[erald Building. ^ | DR. GEO. F. HAIB | X Dental Surgeon...Bamberg, S. C. < In office every day in the week. < * Graduate of Baltimore College < | X of Dental Surgery, class 1892. 0 X Member S. C. Dental ^ssocia- * ^ tion. Office in old bank build- j [ I?,M,