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A Few Good Reasons Why You Should Deposit With The Ehrhardt Banking Company 1st. Because we are absolutely safe. 2nd. Because we are conservative. 3rd. Because we are constantly helping the farmer, and in helping the farmer we are building up the country in which we are located. 4th. Because a bank account with a strong bank stimulates credit, and helps you to help yourself. 5th. Because we are strong in the desire to make our bank of practical value to every man, woman or child that favors it with their account. We pay 4 per cent, interest on deposits in our savings department. Now that the cotton season is on, bring us your checks and drafts, and we will handle to your satisfaction. Clirliorib R<ininnrr f Atnnonv LlUlUUlUl IWIIillUg Wlll|f(UlJ Coital and surplus $24,550.00. EmtHART)Tt S. G. FRANCIS F. CARROLL Attorney-at-Law Office in Hoffman Building. GENERAL PRACTICE. J. Aldrich *Wyman E. H. Henderson Wyman & Henderson Attorneys-at-Law BAMBERG, S. C. General Practice. Loans Negotiated S. G. MAYFEELD. TIT. E. FREE. MAYFIELD & FREE ATTORNEYS AT LAW BAMBERG, S. C. Practice in all the Courts, both State and Federal. Corporation practice and the winding up of estates a specialty. Business entrusttrusted to us will be promptly attended to. H. M. GRAHAM H. G. ASKINS GRAHAM & ASKINS Attorneys at Law. We practice in the United States and State Courts in any County in the State. BAMBERG. S. C. J. F. Carter B. D. Carter CARTER & CARTER Attorneys-at-Law > : Bamberg, S. C. Special attention given to settlement of estates and investigation of land titles. jj w. p. riley I; o a ;> Fire, Life ;| J! Accident j; < - o i: insurance :: * BAMBERG, S. O. o t -I DR. J. G. BOOZER K DENTIST, L DENMARK. Graduate Baltimore College of Dental Surgery, Class 1907. Member South Carolina Dental Association. Office Rooms 1-2 Citizens Exchange Bank Building. Hours: 9-12 and 2-5 every day. J. D. COPELAND, JR. I ...agent for... Penn Mutual life Ins. Co. Money to Loan On Real Estate BAMBERG, - - SOUTH CAROLINA CHICHESTER S PILLS Vyrv THE DIAMOND BRAND. A Ladle*! AikfonrDrurittfor AA ftu QStt Okt<cL M-tei'i DlaaMiid BrAnd/A\ Pills In Red t-d Hold metalilc\^/x boxes, sealed with Bine Ribbon. 4m HI Take no other. Boy of your . r/ - fir Dnuxliit. Ask fot C1I1-CIIE8.TEE ? I 4? J? DIAMOND BRAND PILLS, for 86 If B years known as Best, Safest, Always Reliable r SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWKE:' COMES QUICKLY. I Don't Have to Wait Fop Weeks. A Bamberg Illustration. Waiting is discouraging. Prompt action pleases everybody. A burden on the back is a heavy weight. Hard to hear day after day. Lifting weight, removing the burden, Brings appreciating responses. Bamberg people tell of it. Tell of relief that's quick and sure. Here is a case of it: Mrs. Julia B. Sandifer, Bamberg, S. C., says: "I feel justified in recommending Doan's Kidney Pills and I am pleased to do so. I got them from the Peoples Drug Co. for dull, nagging backaches and other symp* J ? onH tliov toms OI KlUIiey uumpiaiuu UUU tuvj I gave me splendid relief, also correcting other trouble with my kidneys. You may use my endorsement for the benefit of other kidney sufferers." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the , name?Doan's? and take no other. , : . 0 WHEN; Fall, we'i about; clothes that ai much about them af I Halt Schaffner < perfectly tailored; th time. Any man who v We'd in gra tweed / We'd like to have yoi sack, made with soft rol adjustable collar ulsterett CORLEY'S TORSION OF TROUBLE. < Claims That Cooper was Threatening .1 Him When He Shot, Aiken, Oct. 28.?Howell Cooper, a young merchant of Salley, was shot i last night, and is thought to be fa- ? tally wounded. The pistol was in 1 the hands of Henry H. Corley, also t a young merchant of that town. ( Cooper was hurried to a hospital in a Columbia and very little hope is c entertained for his recovery. He s was shot twice. 1 Carley* states that last night 1 Cooper came into his, Corley's, store t in a drunken condition. He says 1 that Cooper began to curse him in a i vile manner and drew his pistol I from his pocket and threw it on the floor. Corley picked up the gun, t whereupon, he claims, Cooper heap- t ed abuse on him for taking advan- c tage of him. Corley states he then 1 gave the pistol back to Cooper, and t that a party of men carried Cooper ^ away from Corley's store. Corley says he then locked up and went 1 away with several friends, and that ( Cooper, who, he says, was behind him. Corley claims Cooper was c - * - * - ? -a 1,1^^4. 1 snapping ms pistoi at mm au.u mai i later his attention was called to 1 Cooper said he was going to follow ^ him and kill him. Corley states that it was then that he pulled his pistol from his pocket and fired. j Tho unfortunate affair is deeply deplored, as both young men are from the best families in Salley. Cooper# is about 22 and Corley is * about 20 years of age. ; An Oconee county man announces ? that he intends to run in the Demo- i cratic primary next summer for con- 1 gress from the Third district on the * platform of a "high tariff on cotton." 1 Arthur Penland, a 14-year-old boy of Woodruff, was found guilty in the United State? court in Greenville * on Saturday of robbing the mails and was sentenced to a fine of $100 or 30 days in the reformatory. 5 I : H| a you're reac re ready to sho^ re so good that if yo ter that. & Marx clothes are ey fit so well, and a years these clothes ne like to show you the i y, browns, blue-grays; th s, cheviots, worsteds, tl i see the new models in si I lapels*; the coat withoi e. Look at them now; h Suits $18.00 t. K. DK Home of Good Clothing" SOES CRAZY, CUTS PASSENGERS. STew York Man Loses Mind on Illi- ' nois Central Train. New Orleans, Oct. 29.?Becoming) violently insane while a passenger ; iboard an incoming train on the II- ! inois Central near Magnolia, Miss., 1 ;his morning, Harry Creiger, a ma- < ihinist of New York city, suddenly 1 jprag from his seat in a crowded < ;ar and wielding a large pocket knife < ilashed six other. passengers before i le was overpowered by train men. 1 iVith the exception of A. B. Middle- j on, of Brookhaven, Miss., who was jrought to this city for attention, i lone of the wounds of the others is : )elieved to be serious. i T. R. Freed, stock- claim agent of he Southern Pacific with headquar- ] ers at Lafayette, La., besides being :ut about the face, was struck on the lead with a cuspidor, causing a severe scalp wound. Crieger's other J rictims were W. W. Wolf and T. P. ^ iVolf, of Brookhaven, Miss., and Will 1 Reynolds and H. I. Preston, of New 1 "Irlpans. Crieger, who is 35 years old, was 1 >n his way to New Orleans to visit * lis wife. He was lodged in the ' louse of detention here on the arri- 1 ral of the train. * < POSSE SEARCHES FOR NEGRO. \ Maltreated Two White Women in Bibb County, Ga. Tuscaloosa, La., Oct. 25.?Sheriff , Dakley, of Bibb county, and a big j orce of citizens of Bibb and Tusca- , oosa counties, with bloodhounds, j f-railincr an unknown n A- 1 1113 c u* j ?ro who seriously mistreated two , yomen near Erline this afternoon, j The negro went to the home of Mrs. ^ r. T. Filgo and demanded money. . iVhen told there was none in the . louse he knocked Mrs. Filgo uncon- 1 scious and then attacked her daugh- j *>r. r The Herald gives all the news for ( pi.50 the year.- J [OyvrTIt ly to think; v you the kind < u think about them so well made, of al re in such perfect ? edn't give much thou new weaves this season; ie dressy blue serges in ] he best thin ps from th< aits; the Shape-maker esp< it padding. The new ov uy when you're ready. and up. Overcoats $1( 1 ABHAM': WRECKS HUSBAND'S CAFE. Wife of Umpire Frary Does Carrie Nation Act. Seattle, Wash., Oct. 26.?Mrs. Ralph Frary, wife of the National League umpire, to whom attention was attracted during the season just closed, by his cool defiance of a * Brooklyn mob of fans, is a second Carrie Nation. She appeared in front of :the Mecca uaie, an eiaooraieiy.. atted up resort owned by her hus-| band and demolished all the plate; glass windows and mirrors in the1 place. Then she made charges against the resort, its license was! revoked and it was closed down yes-; terday. I Frary is now in Spokane and has \ aot been heard from. Football Player Dies. Helena, Mont., Oct. 28.?Charles , Lange died to-day from the spinal , Injuries he received from a kick on the neck three weeks ago during a % practice game of football. While he was dying the woman's club, of which Lang's mother is president, was adopting resolutions declaring football to be "on a plane ; with pugilism and. bull fighting and is dangerous as war," and asking the , co-operation of the woman's clubs of the State to abolish the sport. Moves to Anderson. Mr. William Banks will become ! editor of the Daily Mail on Novem-., Per first, succeeding Mr. A. M. Car- j ( penter, who will return to Washing- j ( ton to resume his duties as assistant librarian of the house. Mr. Banks is already well known in Anderson and ; Is a fine newspaper man and will keep ! the Daily Mail up to its high stand- , ard. He has already moved his ' family to the city, and will spend j the next few days getting his house-j hold matters in shape. Mr. Banks 1 will occupy the J. M. Sullivan resi- i ience on East Hampton street.? ! Daily Mail. " i about new of clothes you before you buy, you \ 1-wool fabrics; so c style, they keep goo ght as to whether or ] ; new patterns and coloi plain and self-stripe wea s best markets in the w ecially for young men; the 1 ?j-i v i:.u i erguai muucis?ijii^uou i $ 0 3.50 and up. S SONS Bamberg, Sooth Caro LYNCHED OR ESCSAPED? Fate of Alleged Georgia Assassin Seems in Doubt. Augusta, Ga., Oct. 29.?Dave Walker, the negro farm hand charged with assassination of C. S. Hollenshead, at Washihgton, Ga., last night, it* is reported, was taken from Sheriff Bobo, on the public square, and lynched. A mob has gone after another negro said to be implicated in the crime. At 1:30 o'clock this morning there is division of opinion as to whether the-negro was lynched or not. He was captured ten miles from Washington and turned over to Sheriff Bobo, at Hollenshead'^ store, and was brought to Washington, where a mob had followed and which overpowered the sheriff and his deputies and took the negro. The negro was carried to the woods, about a mile distant, and it is said he escaped, though some who were present affirm he was lynched. Search will continue for the other negro implicated in the killing. Mr. Hollenshead was one of the best known and most prominent men in Wilks county and the people were much enraged over his assassination. Lyncher Gets Life Sentence. Newark, Ohio, Oct 25.?The jury in the case of Walter Diehl, charged with bein? a principal in the lynching of Carl Etherington, anti-saloon detective, found the defendant guilty of second degree murder. The verdict carries a sentence of life imprisonment. Etherington, who was a. native of Washington county, Kentucky, was lynched in July of last ? Via Viod Kaon drofrcod from yCcir <Xl Utri uc uau uwvxx the county jail. The State department of agriculture estimates that, on account of the spring drouth, the oat crop in South Carolina is 50,000 bushels short. * -'><p f.^H| '. rtWjl ?#fi rcw^g ^ , *! I - ; /? . ... VVzl^H^I * . * r vfH i ' clothes for I ^^3 * . ^"- 3f ought to think | don't need to thin^H arefully shrunk; s^H d looking for a lon^B not he'swell dressecfiHj Varsity, the new Engfid|||?| x>x coat, Raglan imd mam * NOTE FORETELLS SUICTOBL " ;>|m River Will be Dragged in SeardkWoman's Body. Thomas ville, Ga., Oct. 28.? to-day searched this city for ItSSfc'jra Zettrue Gaddy, who disappeared-dhf^ -' m ing last night. A note was found ii?| ' her room, at the home where fl|g?jQ|9 was visiting reading: ' "When you find me I will be in death, in the river." S The Ocholock nee river will ^ dragged, near here, to-morrow., missing woman is 32 years old. TYLER'S WOUND FATAL. 3 Springfield Prisoner Dies in Omng|^ burg Jail?Inquest Held. Orangeburg, Oct. 28.?Wade Tyv ler, the negro who was shot ii?*|gi^ Springfield Thursday night while ^ the custody of the sheriff, and was brought here and lodged in Jail^V^ B died last night as a result of wound, after an operation. An quest was held and the jury return-; ed a verdict of death "caused fciy | wound inflicted hy parties unknowuiT^ x;|| The body was turned over family of the deceased and will; taken to the country and interred. Nothing of interest was devel&jBJ at the inquest bearing upen e BODY FOUND ON ROADSIDE. SIM Foreman of Florida Farm Killed by :|||? St. Augustine, Fla., Oct. 28.? L. Hall, a plantation foreman, was ;'il| killed by a negro workman near-bsw^^ ^ this morning. The negro was baid^^ ^ ly cut, presumably by Hall. Details of the duel are not. known. If After being stabbed, Hall got a buggy and started for a nearb^ffljgffi settlement. The mule he was driving ran away and overturned the vehide. Hall'e body was found J