University of South Carolina Libraries
PERSONAL MENTION. People Visiting in This City and at Other Points. ?Mks Evelyn Free is visiting relatives in Barnwell. * ?Mr. E. P. Copeland, of Ehrhardt, was in the city Tuesday. x ?Mr. E. P. Copeland, of Ehrhardt, was in the city Thursday. ?Mr. J. W. Pearlstine, of Olar, spent Tuesday in the city. ?Mrs. J. S. Saunders, of Florence, > is visiting relatives in the city. ?Mr. J. Frank Chassereau, of Ehrhardt, was in the city Tuesday. ?Misses Pearle and Alma Black are home from Winthrop College. ?Mr. C. H. Milhous, of Denmark, ^ was in the city Tuesday morning. ?Mr. Frank Free, of Barnwell, is ' visiting relatives in the city this week. . ?Mr. Isaac W. Carter, of the Ehrhardt section, was in the city Monday. ?Mrs. Alma Hays has gone to Asheville on a visit to Mr and Mrs. J. Norman Walker. ?Col. T. J. Counts in away on a visit to the family of his son, Mr. D. H. Counts, in Laurens. ?Mr. N. P. Smoak went to Branchville Monday to attend the funeral of Mr. J. M. Tucker. ?Mrs. J. A. and Bass Jenkins, of Kline, are on a visit to the family cf Clerk of Court C. B. Free. ?Mrs. L. E. Livingston, and daughter, Miss Mary, left last week for a visit to relatives in Virginia. ?Misses Kate Felder and Evelyn * Free, of Bamberg, were here for the dance on Friday evening.?Barnwell Sentinel. ?Hon. C. W. Garris, candidate for congress, was in town on Monday shaking hands with the "dear people."?Barnwell Sentinel. l ?Miss Mozelle Copeland, of Bamberg, was the guest of Miss Annie Lee Simms for several days last 3 week.?Barnwell Sentinel. ?Mr. and Mrs. A. McB. Speaks - and Mr. J. H. McGowan left here Tuesday to attend the marriage on Wednesday of the latter's sister, Miss Annie Belle McGowan to Mr. Chas. A. Jones, of Berkeley county. ?Mr. J. R. Owens, of Denmark, was in the city Tuesday morning. His many friends are insisting that he make the race for the legislature from this county, but he has not decided as yet to become a candidate. Mr. Owens is very popular and would have a strong following were he to enter the race. House Flies. Seldom is a second thought given * to the common house fly. It has always been considered a nuisance, but recent studies have shown it to be very much more than a mere nuip sance. The germs of intestinal and filth diseases are readily carried in large numbers from the excreta of ^ patients suffering from typhoid, dysentery and cholera direct to food intended for human consumption and even to the fingers and face and lips of a babe or sleeping person. Flies breed in filth and offal of any kind, perferring above all else the fresh droppings of horses and mules. Large numbers will develop in human excrement and in garbage barrels, at places where dish water is thrown out and wherever decaying animal or vegetable matter occurs. The adult flies are constantly passing back and forth from such materials, where they deposit their ? eggs, to other materials upon which they themselves feed. They prefer sweets, but are attracted by almost any kind of human food. k Flies do not ordinarily travel to any great distance and if a little care is taken, their numbers may be rprinopri T7!sneeinllv flops the farmer have the chance of abating the pest so far as his own premises are concerned. The eggs laid by flies hatch in about a day into the familiar white i maggots. After about five days spent feeding, if the food supply is unlimited, and a couple of days in a resting stage, the adult flies appear. It takes them slightly more than a week from fly to fly. If manure can be disposed of, hauled to either the field or a compost heap some distance from the house every five to seven days, no flies will be able to develop. If it is not possi Die to tnus aispose 01 tne manure, it may be possible to provide a room dark and thoroughly screened, into which the manure may be put until it can be disposed of. Of all the substances used to kill or repel flies the one which has proven most satisfactory is ordinary airf slacked lime. Lime is a first-class deodorant. A free use of it around all stables, privies and garbage cans will cause those places to lose half of their disagreeable features, and they will cease to be attractions and breeding places for that menace to ' health?the common house fly. PROF. GEO. G. AINSLIE, Associate Prof, of Entomology and Zoology. i KILLED BY ACCIDENT. j E. A. Fuller Dies from Accidental ^ Wound. McCormick, June 18.?E. A. Ful- 'c ler, of McCormick, a traveling sales- j ' man, was accidently shot in the leg t by James F. Edmunds on Stevens I . creek this afternoon. The bullet, which was from a Winchester rifle, struck Mr. Fuller's leg between the knee and the ankle, shattering both the bones. It will be necessary to amputate Mr. Fuller's leg at the knee. Mr. Fuller's condition is not considered critical. Both Mr. Fuller and Mr. Edmunds were members of a fishing party which went to Stevens creek this morning They took the rifle with them and this afternoon were shooti ing at a mark. Mr. Edmunds was reloading the rifle when the accident occurred. Mr. Fuller was taken to a hospital in Augusta on the afternoon train. , McCormick, June 19.?E. A. Fuller, who was accidentally shot in the leg cn Stevens creek with a fishing party, by James F. Edmunds, died from hemorrhage at 6:30 o'clock this morning in the hospital in Augusta, where he was taken immediately af> ter the accident. Mr. Fuller, until recently, had been engaged in the mercantile business t here, when the fire destroyed his * Rtnrp with the largest business por- c tion of the town, which necessitated ^ his going out of business for the lack a of store room. Since then he has ^ been traveling. a Mr. Fuller was 29 years of age. c He was reared at Longmires, in Edge- * field, ten miles from here. Life of a Steel Frame Building. The tearing down of a 19-story T building in New York while still new, \ to make room for a 39-story building, s as related in yesterday's Star, has revived the question: "What is the natural life of a steel-frame build- ^ ing?" The question is really of more J interest than importance, because ob- i. servat'ion leads to the conclusion that t a steel-frame building has about as r much chance of living out its natural * life as an Alberta steer. To answer f the question may take many cen- c turies, or it may come with bewil- <3 dering suddenness. In the former s case, it will be a freak structure of some kind that will supply the an- c swer to the riddle. Steel-frame build- t ings, like pie crusts, are made to be * broken, and it is astounding how r soon the crusts get stale. This is not y because they are made of steel; it is t because they are the last word in f the way of big building construction a ?with or without reinforced con- i crete And the latest word on r building construction is apt to be ? spoken on the main thoroughfares of c city life?and in these streets there p is no finility. The good Methodist o fathers who built old St. James t Q Street Methodist church probably r thought that they were building for i many generations, if not for all time, s The gentlemen who built the temple r building on the site of the old church, ^ doubtless, never dreamed that they i would live to see another and a s grander building on the same site, j; On this continent, nothing lasts for t long. In London, Christopher Wren's \ churches are still landmarks and still c sacred. In Montreal we see gothic * windows in office buildings, spires on e printing offices, and traces of eccle- t siastical origin in cigar factroies and ? department stores. "Wise men die," J saith the Psalmist, "likewise the fool s and the brutish person perish and p leave their wealth to others. Their t inward thought is that their houses c shall continue forever and their * A H r? or nl o ono fA oil crAnDrQ tinnfl t U TTV^iilU^ P^UV/VO vv Qvmv* MwavMw * v they call their lands after their own ^ names." Not even steel frames and reinforced concrete can do it. In the main streets of city life where steel frames and reinforced concrete do mostly congregate, there is a tire of private circumstances and public interest, which day after day arises and beats upon those houses, and eventually great is the fall thereof. The phenomenon is common in New York, it is becoming familiar here. Many a machine is thrown on to the scrap heap while still as good as the day it left the factory?because something better has been invented. In the same way, many a building is pulled down while as strong as it was upon the day that the boom was hoisted upon its place is wanted for ; something bigger. The life of a steel-frame building depends almost entirely upon the winds and the waves of commercial life.?Montreal Star. Let your prayer be, "Deliver me from the temptation of going into debt." Strive to be strong enough to resist having what you cannot pay for; then you will never be Vanted for embezzlement, which means steal? ing. Never be ashamed to live within your means; by doing good, honest work you may have your business or I your salary increased, but pay always for what you have. GARRIS'S PLATFORM. Bis Address to the Voters of the Second Congressional District. So far as issues are concerned, we ire all Democrats. Our National Party two years ago, and recently our , jarty in the State have delivered us : ;o doctrine. If the party were in , jower it would do those things it jrociaims best for the Government, ; ;hrough its platforms. I feel that a ' Minority Congressman, while keepng in view the doctrines of his party, [ should not refuse the benefits of the ' system he may oppose, because he J :annot excape its burdens. The rock upon which our people , livide is the matter of taxation, as t is levied on imports, commonly sailed the tariff. Our party stands j or the collection of tariffs in this vay, but in no greater amounts than . ire necessary to conduct the govern- ( nent, admitting that the incidental jenefits of the system to certain in- j lustries. Our opponents, the Repub- ( ican Party, believe in the collection >f tariffs for the protection of our 1 ndustries first, and secondly as a . neasure of gathering revenue. Cerainly, there can be no question of loubt as to the soundness of the , )emocratic theory of leaving all but ' he necessary money to run our gov'rnment, with the people. For fifty years, almost, without nterruption, the conduct of this gov- , >rnment has been in the keeping of he Republican Party, the Party of j >rotection, and that party has pur- . ued its policy of extending privilege , o enterprise, and guaranteeing profts to aggregated investment until . >ur necessities of life are controlled , >y trusts, some now grown so strong hat they defy the government itself. ,Ve of the South have not been re- 1 ponsible for this. After the war . ^as over, when our fields lay fallow, . ? J --A" ? ? 1? i ? n vt f V* LQQ OUT Cities lcty 1U <15UCS, auu iucic I vas no substance left to sustain us, , re began life over again, not under i system of our own making, but unler one proviued for us. Very early re exercised our returning strength o eliminate the negro and alien from he control of our State, but we have lever been able to eliminate objecionable tariff taxation from the naional government. We could not tand still in our poverty, and we nade progress under the system prodded for us in spite of the system itelf. Under the system of protection the nanufacturer of cotton has flourished in the United States. Protection ras thrown about this industry for he special benefit of New England, >ut the law-maker built broader than le knew?the benefits of the law exended to the. South. And this is lot strange, because the field is the iroper seat of manufacture. Provilence in decreeing that the Southern >ortion of the United States should ilothe the world provided an abun[ance of cheap water power on the pot with which to manufacture coton into cloth and to sew it into garnents. Since the South is the provilentially designed producer of coton, the South is dependent on coton. It is true, we can raise all the arieties of food crops, and we should aise them, as a matter of economy, et cotton is the money crop, and on he price of this product hangs the ate of the South. The cotton farmer who owns fifty tfjres and runs one plow may stand j n the midst of his field and make a ( nental inventory of its possibilities omething like this: "On the price hat I receive for this cotton grown in this field depends the future hap- < >iness of my home, and the destiny j f my children, if my children amount , o anything socially, intellectually j ir religiously, they must have prepa- . ation ard training, and these cost j noney; and this field is the only * ource of money to me." What this 3 an says of his field, the South may , veil say of its chief resource; for i vhat we make of cotton, cotton will j nake of me South. So that a senilble policy for the South can he j lone other than one that is willing to , oster the industry from the fields , o the most remote consumer. I ] vould not, therefore, consent to re- \ luce the tariff on cotton manufac- ? urers as long as the cotton producer j tnd the cotton manufacturer is fore- j d to buy every necessity of the home, he field and the factory in a protect- j id market. Cotton manufacturing in , he United States, now consuming ? learly one-third of our crops is a trong factor in maintaining fair 1 >rices for what we call the raw ma- .. erial, for the reason that the Ameri:an manufacturer, with a forty-five >er cent, tariff backing offers a com- ; >etition to the European buyer ihat j :an never be harmonised, especially vhen the supply is normal or below. The effect of taking the import iuzy OH OI CUttOU lllduuidl'iuicio, uuler present conditions would neces;arily bring ruin to the American ndustry. It would throw hundreds >f thousands of the mill help into the :otton fields to swell our production, j vhile every home agency of con- ; mmption would be destroyed, and >rices at the mercy of the European ipinner would sink down to the starvation basis in a few years to come. , believe there is enough contempla;ed in the Democratic idea of inci- . lental protection to protect the cot- , on industry to the point that it must , :ontinue to flourish, and under the ;ame idea there is enough protection :ontemplated to protect the labor in :his industry against the standards )f the European pauper. Labor is the , luman flesh and blood invested in en- j ;erprises, and all governments are ustified in fostering conditions that vill warrant fair wages, as such ( vages are measured against substan;ial and necessary wants of mankind, ind the government that does not ook to an arrangement of the conlitions under which its trade and , )roductive energy, faithfully and indigently exercised, may bring such \ eturns as a derelict. When the gov- , eminent has done its duty along this ine, it should be remembered tnai Capital and Labor are inter-dependent and they ought in clean equity to itrike a fair division of the profits. Income Tax. Our party has declared its disposi- ' ;ion to favor a tax on incomes, but ;he platform is provided with several ! ire escapes. Personally, I am not in 1 'avor of the national governments ( collecting a tax on incomes. I am not in favor of it for the reason that it is not necessary, and it is an uncalled for extension of the taxing power. I warn the people that the greatest necessary enemy in any government is the taxing power. It is sneaking, insiduous, grasping and despotic. Only the incomes of the rich are proposed to be taxed now, and it is partially justified on the ground that large owners of American securities live abroad and draw immense profits from their investments, and make qo contribution to the expense of our government. This is true, and it is sad that it is true, but do not let us allow the taxing power to build a trojan horse of our prejudices to the rich that will land us, bound hand and foot, into the hands of the tax collector and tax-consumer. The Republicans have just reduced the tariff and raised the average in order to get sufficient revenue to run the eovernment. Everv well-inform 3d Democrat, who is not afraid of nis political existence, will tell you that the average tariff could not be reduced unless some other source of revenue be found. Now, is it well for the people to say to the Congress: "You must reform your expense account," or is it well through prejudice to the rich to give them this added and most dangerous power for the collection of more money from the people? But, it is argued that incomes of less than $10,000.CO will not be taxed. The answer to that is: 'If you tax any income at all, you may tax every income." There can be no doubt but this tax will take the course of the tariff. In 1879 the first tariff was levied for the support of the government, and it amounted to about a five per cent, average ad relorera. A few luxuries carried ten per cent. A few years later it was increased to ten and fifteen, then to twenty. Then to twenty-five and fifty. South Carolina protested bitterly In 1832, and secured a compact by Congress to have the tax reduced, which was never carried out. So, by leaps and bounds the tariff has ?one up to an average ad velorem of about sixty per cent.^ These tariffs were at first justified on the ground that they were laid on the luxuries of life and not on the necessities. But to-day from every platform it is charged with proof that the tariff is levied ruthlessly upon the necessities of the poor. So, it will be with the income tax. At first it will be levied Dn incomes of $10,000.00. Then as the taxing power hungers for more money it will be levied on incomes of $5,000.00, and for the same reason it will be levied on incomes of $1,000.00 and on to $500.00, until it coils its loathsome form about the tiniest savings of sacrifice and hunger. An officer badged, uniformed md arogant would be bound to command you to keep books of your small affairs to the taste of the federal government in order that they might easily detect whether you are attempting to evade the great taxing power of the federal government. Under this despotism men would become liars, and hide such of the sources of their income as could be bidden, and the burden would be left en visible property; largely on lands, so that owners would have little better claim than that of tenants at will. [ am not willing, therefore, to place this additional power in hands that bave heretofore abused every power intrusted. They have used the tariff tax to impoverish us. Who can say they will not use the income tax to destroy us. Internal Improvements. I believe that tne government should, wherever it is necessary, erect its own public'buildings of eommodidus proportions, out of good material, and after dignified designs of architecture. But I do not believe it is satisfactory to our people who pay *60.00, about, to each family, to the national government, to have an occasional appropriation for a public building, or an appropriation to dynamise some creek impossible to navigate thrown to them as a sop to keep them satisfied. I believe in extended and preserving the mileage nf our navigable streams; but I know if we consume the little allowance made to Southern congressional districts in the erecting of buildings, that we will get' no beneScial improvements. Some of our people favor public buildings because it may beautify the lucky town, and bring some money to the locality. The town may be beautified somewhat, but usually there is very little money spent where the buildings are put up, for bids are all opened in Washington, and some iNortnern contractor who is on to the game usually gets the contract to build the structure, and he brings his skilled labor down with him, and together they get most of the money and take it back North, leaving us a public building manned by two or three negro porters dressed in blue livery witn brass-buttons to sow seeds of prejudice and race-riot. I know that if it is constitutional to build a postoffice for the benefit of the public, it' is constitutional to build a post road for the same purpose, and where is the town keenly alive to its own welfare that would not greatly prefer one hundred miles of decent highway leading into the limits than to have a public building such as I have described? In building the road th^ ~?? *n1r/? tVlfl flftflf' nf Vmilft. L'UIltl ilttui in a j taivc iuv vwv vi mu?*v4 ing the road away with him, but certainly he could not remove its benefits. The perfecting of an efficient rural school system, and the building of decent highways are the two paramount problems before our people to-day. The solution of the former depends largely upon the latter, and upon the solution of both depends the arrest of the increasing human tide that flows from the country to the towns and cities. For a century and a quarter of the existence of our government the cquntry boy has been our defense in times of war and our s3,I6Sl counsellor 1U liuico vj. We must preserve his tribe. I believe, furtner, that as a matter of proper and timely internal improvement the federal government do what the individual cannot hope to accomplish, and what the State is at present unable to do, and that is to drain and reclaim the low-lands of the South. It is true the national government will not engage in this undertaking as a gratuity, but it should undertake to remove the water from our waste-lands upon as favorable j terms as it now furnishes irrigation | to the arid lands of the Western States. Partisanship. In years gone by, Senators and Representatives in Congress devoted themselves with a most commendable degree of patriotism to the consideration of the merits and demerits of propositions presented by its members. but to-day practically all questions are considered from the standpoint of party advantage or disadvantage. Our people would have reason to take fresh hold if Congress would yield just one hour occasionally to a non-partisan consideration of + on/1 n Af /I AtrA+A if o An tuuxi cot, auu uvb uv/f via; ivo tu~ tire time to partizan consideration. I believe that Southern Representatives could lately have engaged themselves in an effort of diplomacy that would have been of untold value to the South Atlantic States at least, and that is in the matter of recent heavy export tax levied by the German upon the potash or kainit salt mined and exported for the use of our farmers from that country. The Germans are large customers of ours in cotton, the cotton seed oil from the South, and surely representations could have been made in a united way that would have saved the farmer some things from the added burden of this tax. It one single dollar per ton could have been saved, it would haye amounted to more solid benefit to the people than all the partizan debate indulged in during the present session. Much that we have for sale in foreign countries encounter impediments that are costly to our people. The national government itself places handicaps on some of our products in our own market, and the removal of these imbargos and handicaps might occupy the attention of the Southern Congressmen in a way that would be profitable to our people. The foregoing gives, in a crude and incomplete way some of my views on the course to be pursued by a national representative. I hope to meet tne uemocratic voters in tne district from time to time, and discuss these matters more completely. In the meantime I would be thankful for a word of criticism from any of our citizens. C. W. GARRIS. Couldn't. "He says he has never deceived his wife," "He never has." "He is one truthful man.'" "Not particularly; he's just got that kind of a wife, that's all." We do not want the earth. A small part of it will satisfy us. Try us for a "square deal." C. H. MILHOUS, Manager Denmark Realty Co. Home Industry Did you ever stop and think what kind of business judgment you exercised when you let those globe trotting, so-called opticians and eye specialists pull a veil over your face and stuff wool in your eyes ahd sell you a pair of glasses with a guarantee strong enough to see Halley's comet at noon and tell the time of day And you had just as well believe that as anything else they tell you, for he has collected your money and gone. Suppose the glasses don't fit, where can you find him? or suppose they give you perfect satisfaction and you recommend him to your friends, where is he? You doifct know. He is gone, and your friend has missed the great man 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 of fakirs; that they are the best on earth. But I find many people that are swearing off from such venders and are patronizing home industry, enabling an honest man to stay at home and do the work as it should be and add a profession to our community greatly needed. Don't be 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 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 come through and carry thousands of dollars away, leaving in most cases nothing in return, I feel duty bound to rise up against them in behalf of my people and myself. You may think and say I have a selfish motive in view by taking this s+and. I don't care if you do. 1 am in a position to substantiate every word of it, and if you don't believe it look on your manteis ana manteis 01 your neighbors, and if you don't find enough 'ilk in the way oI old spectacles convince you, I will stop writing ar v. we will go fishing. I am making s living and I want you to live, and to do so you must patronize home industry. Buy from whom you may, but try and get value received for your money. Written for the benefit of the public. I will be at Ehrhardt Thursday. June 30th and Friday July 1st; 1 will render service to anyone suffering with eye trouble in the way of refractive errors. Can fit the most difficult cases with proper lenses, relieving the eye strain and producing comfort. Special attention given to chronic cases. All work guaranteed. vn mm n n i unnrv T 1JK. IN. K. lADOLLL Eye Specialist NOTICE TO ROAD OVERSEERS. All road overseers in Bamberg county are requested to have the roads in their respective sections worked at once, and to report anyone ploughing in the right of wry to the nearest magistrate, and see that the road law is enforced. J. B. KEARSE, H. D. FREE, Supervisor. Clerk. Bamberg, S. C., June 13, 1910. * - U V- - * * . . . . i ' . iiv* ; * ! . HIDDEN DANGERS Nature Gives Timely Warnings That 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. Sick kidneys send 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, Bam- , S berg, 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 frequency in passage. Having Doan's Kidney Pills brought to my attention, I procured a supply at the Peoples Drug Co. and began using them. They gave prompt relief. In a fewt weeks the pains in my back were entirely disposed of and my kidneys \ '0 were again performing their work properly." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo. New York, sole agents for the .> United States. Remember the name?Dean's? ' and take no other. Hunt's Cure Is the guaranteed cure for skin diseases. If you suffer from any such trouble, get a box from your druggist V' and be cured. Don't suffer the annoyance of scaly, itching, burning or pimply diseases of the skin when -a 50 cent box of HUNT'S CURE will . ; 3|gg 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 a salve and is easily applied. Remember one box is guaranteed to cure any one case of Skin Disease | under our pledge that $ou get your money back if it fails. Ask your druggist. The price is 50 cents a . >???! box. Prepared by A. B. RICHARDS MEDICINE CO., ~^?j Sherman, Texas. Sold by Peoples Drug Co., Bamberg. Winthrop Collegej SCHOLARSHIP and ENTRANCE. EXAMINATION. The examination for the award of vacant scholarship in Winthrop Col- '"v?| lege and for .the admission of new -^31 students will be held at the County Court House on Friday, July 1, at 9 a. m. Applicants must not be less - .'mS 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- W tion, provided they meet the condir x tions governing the award. Applicants for scholarships should write to President Johnson before the examination for Scholarship examination blanks. Scholarships are worth $100 and , free tuition. The next session will . ^ Ol 1fl1A Cm. #??._ upcu OUpiCUIUUl 61f lt7iV. X* VI 1UI" ther informatfon and catalogue, address Pres. D. B. Johnson, Rock Hill, \'r.%M FRANCIS F. CAEROLL Attorney-at-Law Offices Over Bamberg Banking Co. ' GENERAL PRACTICE. T J. F. Carter B. D. Carter ][ 1 CARTER & CARTER <j 2 Attorneys-at-Law '0 J Bamberg, S. C. J | Special attention given to set- < t tlement of estates and invest!- J [ { gation of land titles. <, f Loans negotiated on farm lands X Office over Bamberg Banking Co. < > fGh MO YE dioilunsue * -m J[ INSURANCE AGENT \ \ o WILL WRITE ANYTHING \\ '.Hi o Fire, Tornado, Accident, Lia- <>' \ \ bility, Casualty, in the J J < > strongest and most re* o < liable companies. < > | \ J^^e^No. fO^B. Bamberg,^ I W. E. FBEE ;|H Attorney-at-Law <, J(| All business entrusted to me will receive prompt attention. Investigation of land titles a specialty Office for present at court house. fDR. 0. D. FAUST n ti \r r,. t a m U ?l 11 X X 0 1 ^ BAMBERG, S. C. Office in Herald Building. , ^ i d e g e o f. h a i e i i J J Dental Surgeon...Bamberg, S. C. < [ < In office every day in the week. < - ? Graduate of Baltimore College o 5 of Dental Surgery, class 1892. ][ o Member S. C. Dental Associa- o ? tion. Office in old bank build- <[