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FORD AUTOMOBILES!" hi: re FORI) MODEL T TORPEDO RUNABOUT L V\ c ?" * ' i go Don't foot it?Ford it! It's almost as economical ot ?and you'll get there quicker, safer, easier. The ta Ford has made the horse and buggy a lavish ex> travagance. It's the people's car?and seventy- in five thousand new Fords will go into service this year. And mark you this? ofa There is 110 other car like the Ford Model T. It's lightest, tightest?most economical. The two passenger car costs but $590, f. o. b. Detroit, complete with all equipment?the five ho passenger but $690. To-day get catalogue' 101?from Tlie Ford N. i Motor Company, Madison and Eleventh or from our Detroit. u: * factory. bo FORD SALES CO. : Bamberg, South Carolina J t!h ap . Ask your 1 ? Dru&dis i Fop S ' jilrM ROBERTS' : TASTEI/ESS el. ^SfCHILL-TOMCl !t W^gi y Don't be satisfied with anything else. Nothing ever made will accomplish such results. It drives j - all malarial conditions completely out of nB^F | the system; succeeds where other reme* ^es ^ is truly a marvelous remedy; " > Bi'lPjlM j quickly restores old time health and ^ \ strength. It is the greatest blood remedy \v | | ever compounded. *= Get it today, and be made happy and j ^ : j well as thousands of other have been. se Wmfk Two sizes, 25c. and 50c. fe t u J C ! w | Suffolk Drug Corporation, Virginia. I us CORTRIGHTSh r nauu-w 1 Roofs Put On pt jP||g? 26 Years Ago HBBgg flwuninqnnn.1 ngfPTTTrl are as good as new, and have fi( never needed repairs ? never 'Ml STill n( ^ T^^FlPffS need attention of any kind, ex- 8 SB gr ?cpt an occasional coat of paint 9 Storm-proof Fire-proof Lightning-proof 9 jj( 2 Don't boy that roof for the new building, or re-roof the old until you hare B 1 We hare local representatives almost everywhere, but if none in your immediate I la fl locality, write us direct for samples, prices and full particulars. 5 I w I CORTRIGHT METAL ROOFING COMPANY I sy 9 50 North 23d Street Philadelphia, Pa. I ' ar ^ | Just About Over 11 I r in 4 * * tThe hunting for tliis season is about over and you *B* l} should have your guns cleaned and put in first-class "J* *n - *? shape before storing thent away. If you want the ?? 4#, best work at lowest prices bring; tliem to me. i also have bicycles and supplies, also automobile t X* supplies at lowest prices. Come and see. s t tW f J. B. BRICKLE* F L ^ The Repair 3, C. I ? J FORI) MODEL T FORE-DOOR TOURING CAR ^ ^ II t0 > > If ha ih ^ || N( ALLEN CAUGHT IN GAFFNEY? m Said to Resemble Virginia Out- C law Held by Police. Gaffney, April IS.?A man, giving 5 name as J. J. Maloney, was ar- b sted on the outskirts of Gaffney v is evening about 6 o'clock, suspect- t of being Sidna Allen, the fugitive p rginia outlaw. He was coming to a e city and stopped to talk with a t ill employee. After discussing sev- C al questions with him. he asked if h ere had been any talk of the Al- b as in this neighborhood. The man b e stranger had accosted had al- v ady detected a likeness to Allen, fi d he at once turned in a call for i e police. The stranger made no o sistance when arrested. t When seen in a cell in the city jail v -night, the man claimed that he c .d been living in Atlanta, but that i jw York was originally his home. 1 i claimed that he had been a travel- C ig salesman and was down on his a ck. In appearance he tallied with u e description sent out of Allen, c is hands and feet are small, and he F >es not show evidence of work. His f Dthes are torn and he seems to * ve had little to eat. He denied any knowledege of the e lens, but his actions aroused sus- c cion. Notwithstanding the fact t at he claimed to be headed north, 1 was near the outskirts of the nor- b ern part of the city that the arrest t is made, and thus he seemed to be d ing south. Very little information F a satisfactory nature has been ot> t ined by the police. * When questioned as to his address f Atlanta, Maloney gave a number t different places. He claimed to ( ve been associated with some sort t business in Atlanta, with an at- I rney named H. J. Boswell, whose e me, he said, was in Greensboro, C. Maloney next stated that he r mself had never been in Greens- ? ro. He said that his idea for get- t lg to Charlotte was that there 1 ight possibly be some mail there c r him. ' t \ Before Klectrieity Came. ^ Few, indeed, are left to recall f ose distant days preceding the t plication of steam engines to railad and steamboat work. But there ( e plenty who well remember when ^ sctricity was considered but a natu- z 1 phenomena and a plaything of f iture during terrestrial storms. t It seems almost incredible, yet it true, that but thrity years ago \ gctricitv was unheard of outside of j ientific laboratories. j We had no telephones. ? Xo electric railways. c c * Xo electric fans. ' c Xo electric elevators. r Xo vacuum cleaners. s Xo ele^ric lights. t Xo trctiey cars. j Xo electric ranges. t Few electric motors. ( We had to walk the city streets or i de a horse car. The suburban resi- ] >nt sections of to-day were un- ] earned of and everyone tried to < >'e as close to the business section < ; possible. Hacks did a thriving 1 isiness. We could not call any one up on e telephone. The mails and mesnger boys did the work. The tele- i aph was in use but the lines were \ w. All housework was done by hand, i ithout the handy electric stoves. ] ie motor driven appliances now in i r In hot days we sweltered for the f ectric fan was undreamed of. j We read by flickering candles or { .1 lamps and there were no arc mps to illuminate the streets after < trk. { There were no motor cars because te gas engine would be impossible < ithout electricity for ignition pur- j >ses. 1 There were no electric door bells, ) buzzer communicStion from of- j ;e to office, no electric flatirons, ) electric chafing dishes, toasters, 1 ills, etc. i Factories ran by steam or water ] )wer. Cities were covered with a til of black smoak. Railroads could )t run through tunnels without e gravest dangers. Electric venti- t ting- systems for large buildings S ere unheard of. Electric signal ? ' stems for railroads were not used < id the trains ran a good deal on t / ck. Such were the good old days we < ?ar so much about. The folk who 1 fed and worked then did not miss t ese things inasmuch as they had t iver enjoyed them, but one of the < eatest hardships which might be i flicted upon us to-day would be to jprive us of electricity. Without t we would be put to the greatest * convenience. 1 [ Mob Lynches Prisoner. t Forsyth, Montana, April 18.? t enry Hoffner, alleged slayer of Mrs. t illiam Morrill, of Joppa, near the 1 wn of Rosebud, Mont., was taken r om the county jail early to-day by mob of sixty masked and armed c en and, despite the efforts of the i leriff and his deputies, was hanged c a tret. f THE LAST OF A RACE. j 'razy Snake, the Aged Creek Indian Chief and Fighter. Because it compels a comparison etween the conditions which he witnessed in his closing years and hose which he saw in his early rime, the death of Crazy Snake, the ged Creek chief, will be of interest o the country, says the St. Louis llobe Democrat. If he himself knew ds exact age he never told it to anyiody, but he was active as a fighter ong before the opening of the Civil trar. His own tribe belongs to the ive civilized clans who were located n the Indian territory, now the State >f Oklahoma, three-fourths of a cen. ... i ury ago, but civilization, or tne tnin eneer of decorum superimposed 1 iver savagery which masqueraded mrier that name in the old Indian , 'erritory, had no attractions for Irazy Snake. Rather was he, so far s circumstances permitted, a spiritial descendant of Weatherford, Os- 1 eola and the rest of the fighters ' iroduced by the great Mukogee con- , ederation of Georgia, Florida and ( Alabama of a century ago and later. When, in 1908, Crazy Snake raisd his little rebellion against the ac- = eptance by his tribe of the condiions drawn up by the white man for and allotment and government unler white man's law, he found that he situation had changed since the lays when he could go on the war?ath with a powerful band behind lim whenever the whim seized him. lis rising attracted comparatively ew of his tribe. For a few weeks ip kpnt thp fipld. with some of the )klahoma militia on his track, and hen his band gradually dispersed, lis tribe had lost its old "fighting idge," because there was no longer xcuse or incentive to fight. Railoads were running through their rejion. The small band of implacables o which he belonged were only a ittle oasis of savagery in a vast sea )f civilization. His tribe had lost he nomadic habit. The frontier had anished, the buffalo was quite exinct., and great commonwealths conronted them whichever way they urned. In Crazy Snake's own State of )klahoma, which was making its adrent just as the old Creek reactioniry was starting on his last war oray, are 1,700,000 people. Among hem there are 117,000 Indians, all ixcept 15,000 or 16,000 of which jelonged to the five clans?Cherocees. Choctaws, Chickasaws, Creeks uid Seminoles?which he tried to irray against: the new order. Indians ire engaged in all the pursuits i >f the white man. Among them are j nerchants, farmers, bankers, miners, ;tock raisers and lawyers. Three of hem?Senator Curtis, of Kansas, md Senator Owen and Representa- ! :ive Carter, of Oklahoma?are in = Congress, and assist in making laws or white men and red. The day of xing Philip, Pontiac, Tecumseh and h Black Hawk had passed when Crazy Snake started on his last raid, and iven Red Cloud and Sitting Bull had )een knocked obsolete. ^ t n He Got His Half. Jjj "Can I get any work around li lere?" said Rastus Johnson, safe in s :he ktiowledeg that there wasn't any. "Yes, I want you to collect a bill b :'or me from Mr. Sawyer, the lawyer, e He has owed me this bill of $20 for E :wenty years. If you can get the ^ noney I will give you half." n Old Rastus went to the business v place of Mr. Sawyer and found him s: imong a group of clients. j "Mr. Sawyer," said he, "Mr. Jones r lone tole me you owed him $20 for o ibout a hundred years." t( "You idiot," said Sawyer, coming ^ jver to him, "don't you see you are uining my business? Here's a $10 J jill, now go on." h Rastus went back to the merchant md was asked he got anything. v "Well, suh, I got mah half, suh, n jut you better watch when you go d ifter yo's, he's right hot over it."? Vlack's National Monthly. N g. Blease Paroles Young. Columfbia, April 18.?Gov. Blease a: ;o-day paroled until October 1, Jas. ~ Stobo Young, who was convicted in I lanuary, 1910, of breach of trust in ;onnection with the Seminole Securi:ies Company. The parole was issued > >n the recommendation of the parion board and bears the condition , chat Young report to the superin;endent of the penitentiary on Oc- "" ;ober 1, or else be arrested and recommitted. No parole was recomnended for Garlington. Young was formerly secretary of ;he Seminole Securities Company, tnd was convicted along with John if. Garlington, formerly president of ? he same company. Young was sen- I" " "* x - ? ^ GIICGQ 10 ODG jeai auu uauiugiuu :o three years. They both began heir sentences on December 4, 1911. foung leaves for his home in Lau ens this afternoon. q Blease also commuted the sentence >f Lewis Bartley, who was convicted M n Bamberg in March, 1912, of lar- ^ :eny and given three months to pay ine of $50 or serve three months. H branch riJDUADnT store at tnnnAnU 11 ? ? ? I beg to announce that I will open a ?j !? branch store at Ehrhardt about May ?J f: 1st. Paul Arndt, Jr., will be in . * k charge of the business, with a full line :: A? A T*T I 1 * 1 J_ _ / jg oi w aicnes, jeweiry, eic. ij Watch, Jewelry and Clock repairs tif promptly attended to. t ? i: Should there be anything you want that he has not in stock, kindly give ?: him the order and it can be obtained A U? H * k MA ASAA 4? irom tile mam uusmeas at -oamueig. | PAUL ARNDT8 ? Watchmaker and Jeweler Bamberg, S. C. Jt ^ / Bridges Time and Space IT WAS A QUESTION of life or death and :;|j the victim's life hung by a slender thread. A difficult operation was necessary. To be sucr 1 .1 . ^ 1 L 1 _i. ^ cessiui me operation inusi ue penurmeu ai unue. The services of a specialist were required, but he ? was in a distant city. .] The specialist was reached over the Long Distance Bell Telephone, the case described and the operation arranged for. The sufferer's life was saved through the ability of the Universal Bell Telephone Service to bridge time and space. By the way, have you a Bell Telephone? JjATl SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY ? BROUGHT TO LIGHT. . There have been many cases like y, f le following in Bamberg. Everyone jlates the experience of people we .< "LOMBARD I now. These plain, straightforward L Caur Millet! :atements will do much toward re- |llHPPQVCll JflW if 1111 IS* eving the suffering of thousands. ?L|_ PDifTlAJU FFFH strong. Accurate uc-h testimony will be read with in- iVAKIAdLl rnlullUni illll. and Reliable. J ?rest by many people. Best material and workmanship, light! Mrs. J. Q. Adams, Main St., Bam- running, requires little power; simple,, erg, S. C., says: "Nothing has easy to handle. Are made in severaj ver given me as much relief as sizes and are good, substantial money oan's Kidney Pills which I procur- making machines down to the smallest i d several years ago at the Peoples size. Write for catalog showing En-. ?rug Co. Kidney trouble made me gines, Boilers and all Saw Mill supplies, liserable for several years and there Lombard Iron Works & Supply Co.4j as a steady, dull ache across the >' aucusta, cfc mall of my back. ine kianey se retions bothered me and sometimes ???????? felt dizzy and unsteady on my feet. 'he contents of two or three boxes f Doan's Kidney Pills restored me i good health." (Statement given flH A Second Endorsement. jfl gfl Vj| Mrs. Adams was interviewed on T yB H B fl B anuary 26, 1911 and she said: "I I I I I I I ave taken Doan's Kidney Pills oc- B jS B Jl asionally since I endorsed them and ley have always helped me. I still alue this remedy highly and you lay continue to use my former enorsement of it." Is the price of HUXT'S CURE. ^ ' nm.?_ ??: '^'11 Ka nnnmntlv ro. For sale by ail dealers, rrice ou I xiii$ price Mm i/u jpij iv- | 3nts. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, funded if it does not cure any ew York, sole agents for the United case of tates. Remember the name?Doan's? PIT TIT I\IPF 1 PI1 nd take no other. ^IVill UlbtAjfc CHICHESTER S PILLS PEOPf^fcco Wygv THE DIAMOND BRANS. a PEOPLES DRUG CO., Bamberg, 8. c. y I'lIU in Red tad Gold mrtalMc\^#X boxes, sealed with Blue Ribbon. V/ A- B- RICHARDS MEDICINE CO. l> /,SSS,KS Sherman, Texas. i ?r SOLO BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE ~?' s. g. bxa y i ntjd. w. e. free. FRANCIS F. CARROLL MAYFIELD & FREE . ,, , T ATTORNEYS AT LAW Attorney-at-Law bamberg, s. c. ~ .... _ Practice in all the Courts, both Office in Hoffman Building. state and Federai. Corporation GENERAL PRACTICE. practice and the winding up of estates a specialty. Business entrust ^ ^ ^ ^ ___ trusted to us will be promptly at)R. J. G. BOOZER -* ? ?m i n M'AVTi! TumcTOSON 1 DiLiJNTi?>T, w. mvxu .... DENMARK. INSURANCE AGENT WILL WRITE ANYTHING raduate Baltimore College of Dental Surgery, Class 1907. F'^- T? ido. Accident, Ida[ember Sontb Carolina Dental Asso- bility, Casualty, in the ciation. strongest ana most refflce Rooms 1-2 Citizens Exchange liable companies. Bank Building. 'Phone No. 10-B. Bamberg, 8. 0. ours: 9-12 and 2-5 every day. - - - . - - -a,