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Cash P Every subscriber to will be credited with one n cash subscriber sent in in offer on page I. Consider which THE NEWS ANL proposition, this should subscriber to send in as m; in order to induce every or proposition is the more inN THREE CA to those who are the most subscriptions by May io: PREMIUM I. Five Doll scriber to THE NE NS May io the largest numbe NEWSAND HERALD on page i, provided that t is not less than ten. PREMIUM 2. Three D subscriber to 'THE NEW! May io the second larges to THE NEWS AND H tion offer on page I, provi scription is not less than PREMIUM 3. Two Dol subscriber to THE NEW May io the third largest as per special subscription number of such subscripti ~ CONDITIONS.-A the following conditions: I. All subscriptions r therefor and must be sent which they are taken. Ot 2. All subscriptions i 9 o'clock P. M., May 9, an1 P. M., May io. Winnsboro NEWS AND HERAL PUBLISHED WEEKLY, -BY -WINNBORO P121NTING C( J. FR UNK FoM E, - - - En TERMS, IN ADVANCE : One Year,..................... - siz:xfonths................... . WINNSBORO, S. C. Wednesday, April 30, - - 1 There were no wild onion that meadow in which Long low's kine grazed. The following clipping w< indicate that they are gettin things right over in Alabama: "The Alabama agricultural partment has ascertained i numerous reports that the< average of the State will be creased 6 per cent., and the ton decreased 8." Congressman Johnson has troduced a bill in congress wi provides for furnishing to ti along the free rural routes i boxes at about actual cost. TI is need for a similar work in half of the patrons of"-ity of6 in the reduction of box r which is unquestionably too h Such 'a reduction would gre; increase mail facilities in small towns. Rev. Sam Jones is said t, an advocate of trusts and mot~ olies. Trhe Revereu 1 Mr. J' has had a mnoipoly so c n' certain style of st renai 'fu re ing that we are nut surpruise his advocaev of all tra,ts combines.-Ex. Judging from t; e gre;t ber of little one hi rs~e era that have tried to imiitat' strenuous preaebIin;: of Mi r. Jo it would not seem thatt his mot oly has been very effective. Judging from a remark c subscriber who said he coull give up his county paper on count of the good advice it< tained, we infer that at least duty of a country editor is to advice. As it is such an e job to give advice, we want be in the ring in this respec least. So we want agatin to vise the farmers of this cou not to neglect the planting such forage crops as will em; them to tide over the sum without having to buy so m corn and hay. Then we we -FO R 1 1 ['HE NEWS AND HERAL[ )onth's subscription for each nei accordance with our subscriptioi ing the greatly reduced prices a ) HERALD is offered under thi be inducement enough for ever: mny subscriptions as possible. Bu ie to go to work at once while th riting, we have decided to offer SH. PR EMIUMS successful in getting new casl ars in cash will be given to the suI AND HERALD sending in b: of new cash subscribers to TH i as per special subscription offe [e number of such subscription >llars in cash will be given to th 3 AND. HERALD sending in b t number of new cash subscriber ERALD as per special subscrii ded that the number of such suk ars in cash will be' given to th S AND HERALD sending in b number cf new cash subscriber offer on page i, provided that th on> is not less than four. I the above offers are subject t nust be accompanied by the cas to us at the close of the week i herwise they will not be countec i this contest must be taken b i must reach our office by 9 o'cloc Printing Company. D. advise them not to increase the cotton acreage on account of tl recent advance in prices, and n< to neglect their corn for the -. cotton. If they will only, tal =this much good advice this tim ITwe would be willing to hold up -= little while. 1. At least one thing will r< i sult from the Manning meeting the retirement of 5"My Def __Appelt" to private life. Wh: -the senior senator did for th: ~*l'ght weight was a plenty. On] old charges were rehashed whil s in no new testimony was offere< 'fel- hence the promised sensationt (id not develop. A good po: tion of Tillman's speech was d< >uld voted to a discussion of tw Sat changes in connection with til State campaign. One of theE de- suggested changes was a strictE com pledge for the candidates, i ~orn connection with which the sus in- gestion was made that McLauri ot- be e'xemptedt from the p ledge re quired of other can did ates. C course, such a suggestion is nc in- to be taken seriously, for th ich 'same pledge would have to b Lose 'required of all. Then, too, ther aail . is no use of making rules to ? Lere |McLaurin; he is too changeabi be- to fit any rule, and he surel; ies h:asn't the gall now to offer fo ent, re-election at ra Democratic pri ighI. mary. The other suggestion i tly that the candidates for the Stat, the otfices and the candidates for th senate go in tw sections in th State campaign. The effect c >b th,is woul be to give two cam op tpign1 meetings at each place fIr bis would be an advantage t< i a the e.undid8tes, but a disadvan h- - en to the pe ople, who can no 1l alt i so much of their time fo aten li g these meetings. NI - Cre nbr!er Dots. thl Gweenbiier was well repre l ei ted last we. at the Charles 0i' ton exposition. The fo!lowin1 pei sons saw ti.e grand sights ii thbe "Is ory City": Mrs. Tfhos f zlBlair, Mrs. J. R. Curlee, Mrs ln't T. W. Ruff, Mrs. M. WV. Peurifoy ac- Misses Nora and Libell Curlee on- Miss Sallie Bertha Bhrv, Messrs one Tr. C. Leitner, Lonnie Melton ive Harry Powell, and Ernest Blait asy There are others who will g< to later. t at Miss Mabel Curlee has returnet ad- to Columbia after several day: nty stay at home. of Miss Etta Germany has beet eb!e quite sick, but is not~ improving er Several coats of paint hav< uch added much to the appearance o nuld Mr. S. F. Castle' home. Mrs John Delleney, after. a pleasant visit to relatives, has returned to her homA im Nrzh Carolina. Rev. J. B. Campbell preached an impressive sermon to a large congregation last Sunday. The attendance is improving. Miss Sudie Aycock is visiting at Prof. Peurifov's. Our school was pleased to have the editor of The News and Herald visit us last week. Come again. Hon. Jno. J. McMahan, State ) superintendent of education, will v deliver an address before the I Greenbrier school on the 30th of t May. As Fairfield is his native county, and as she is justly proud s of him, he will no doubt be wel ' comed by his many friends and t associates of former day. e Another interesting feature of our school closing will be a play given by the pupils. April 29, 1902. Stops the Cough and works off the Cold. 1 Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablets cure a cold in one day. No Cure, No Pay. Price 25 cents. Flint Hill News. r At this time all farm work is - well advanced and cotton is s nearly all planted. Upland corn and sugar caue is already up and e the planting of it is still con y tinned. Several of our people s are, at this writing, in Charles a ton visiting the exposition. Their names are Mrs. B. V. Bray, Misses Cynthia, Berta and Lutie Durham, Mrs. W. C. Peay of e Bucklick and Messrs. W. A. Neil y and Alexus Durham. s Mr. J. H. Neil of White Oak e is with us for a few days. Mr. R. H. Boulware on his re turn from Charleston came down o antl gave us an interesting ac count of his trip to the Ivory b City. n Mrs. B. F. Boulware was quite 1. ill lately but is now much better. There has been something like k smallpox among certain of the colored people in this neighbor hood. I do not think that it is though, for it has stopped none from work except one or two about two days. It has appeared - in only one or two negro families, ir none elsewhere. e It was with sorrow that. we >t read of the death of Gen'eral ir Hampton. He was one of great. :e est of Confederate veterans, u~n 3as such we will always reme et a him. Our veterans are pafng over the river one by one, a i i - a~score of years very few of hemr -indeed will be left to tell the -story of the famous fight. As a r son of a veteran who fought 0o ~t the bloodiest fields and felt the s force of both bullet and shell lel y me, in behalf of the sons and e daughters of the Confederacy, ; ask these kindly gentlemen for a 1l few more accounts of the great -contest. We want as many as -. we can get. These accounts, even o the shortest, are eagerly read by e us and are preserved by us ae e history. Was not a most bean r tiful piece written for memorial o day by the kindly gentleman from .White Oak? We honor the n veterans and we seek to build -monuments to them every day, if but none of the monuments that t we build to their memory can e ever equal the one we have built e .to them in our hearts. Can we e not have more and more accounts t from them to keep ini our memo a ries? B. 3. B. For Over Sixty Years. .Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup has -beeu' used for over sixty years by mi a llions of mothers for their children 3 while teething, with ect success. 3 It soothes the child, softns the gums, al ays all pain, cures wind eoi,and Sis the best remedy for diarrhcaa. It f will relieve the poor little sufferer .. immediately. Soldby all druggists in every part of the world. Twenty-five -cents a bottle. Be sure and ask for "'Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup," - and take no other kind. 1-1-17 rCrosbyville Items. Planting is the order of the day this beautiful weather. Corn crops are very nearly all planted aund coming up; stands good. I - don't think there will be as much - cotton planted around here as i usual. There is a good deal more Scorn planted than usual. Small -grain is not very promising at -this time. Gardens are looking ,well. The State and county superin -tendents of education visited the schools of this section a few days ' Mr. Clarence Wishart and Wil lie Stevenson returned to-day from the Charleston expos'ition. A pril 26, 1902. C. You Know tizat You Are Taking When -ou take Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic ecuse the formula is plainly 'printed on every bottle showing that it is simpliy Iron and Q:uinine in a taste N.tes f,n A-:a. The ladies are louking after the gardens and raising rhickens; the men are spee.ling the p'ow. It is important to have plenty chickens, for soon the campaign picnics and that bust of good fellows, the candidate, will be claiming attention. By the way, our corn munity boasts two can didates, Mr' John G. Mobley for railroad commissioner and Mr. C. S. Ford for the legislature. Dr. Pixley passed here some days ago on his way to Catawba River for a few days' fishing. He said he was tired of hog and hominy and wai,ted a feast of fish. Thomas Higgins, son of Mr. J. M. Higgins, has been snTerin for some weeks with whAt the doctors fear is appendicitis. Hi condition remains un,satisfactory as yet, but we hope there wil soon be a change for the better A mare belonging to Mr. Dan Hall gave birth to twin mul< colts this week. Unfortunatelj they did not live. They wer( just alike and each had a blaz< face. Mr. A. M. Jackson, who move( here from Mitford, has opened : generel merchandise store at the old James A. McCrorey place He has a nice stock, especially pretty line of spring dress goods Mr. J. H. Hall has plantei Irish potatoes and onions fo: market-an example to be imi tated. Few farmers grow enougl of these for their own use. The writer has purchased tw< sittings of fine Silver Lacei Wyandotte eggs, and, Mr. Editor look to your laurels at the count, fair. But may be we are sayinl too much, for eggs are not alway chickens. J. T. Carter. A Doctor's Bad Plight. "Two years ago, as a result o a severe cold, 1 lost my voice, writes Dr. M. L. Scarbrough, o Hebron, Ohio, "then began a: obstinate cough. Every remed; known to me as a practicing phy sician for 35 years, failed, and daily grew worse. Being urge to try Dr. King's New Discover: for Consumption, Coughs an< Colds, I found quick relief, an< for last ten days hava left bette than for two years." Positivel: guaranteed for Throat and Lun .troubles by McMaster Co. 50, and $1.90. Trial bottles free. Smaliwood Dots. As I never see anything fror our town, I will write a line c two. Farming is all the towns men are doing. Wood-haulingi; about over. Planting cottoni the order of the day. All ar about through planting uplamnd corn; some corn is up to a goo stand. Gardens are very g>)od Grain, where it was not kille, out, is looking fine, wheat espe cially. There is a great deal o amber cane planted around her for stock; also more sorghum cant planted this year than la4t. ~Another Narehxouse has juxs been completed in our tow.n. Mr. R. A. Meares hrs a fine lot of wheat. Mr. E. F. Pagan, of Walhalla spent several days at Smallwool recently. J. P. K. April 23, 1902. COL. LArlAR PASSES AWAY. ( The State, April e8.) Colonel Robert Gresham Lamai is dead. Another Confederate veteran worthy wearer of the Southerr Cross, has been summoned t<n join his comrades at divine head quarters, there to receive an uim mortal crown from the General issimo of the Universe. For some months his healti has been failing, particularl' since the death of his wife, ius two months ago, and during the last two weeks it had been evi dent that the end was near. O Saturday he lost consciousness Death had wrapped its sleep instilling wings around him, and at a quarter past 8 o'clock yes terday morning his w.ts a wake less slumber. C>lonel Lamar was in hi' seventy-third year. Hie wasa gentleman of th>~ old school patriotic, upright and of inflaible integrity. Of him it could truth fully be said, he trod the pati that "is as the shiining light, that rAhineth more and more unto thme perfect day." He bore the in. tense suffering of recent mionths with Christian resig;nation anid fortitude, and now he has found the balm in Gilead, "for of the Most High cometh healing!" Colonel Lamar, the yonngest child of Thomas G. and Martha Leland Carry Lamar, waw born in Edgefield district, S. C., now the county of Rarnw e1l Februarv DR. M O F (TEETHING Cures Ohol-ra.hrnantum. Diarrhoea. Dysent Adoyy Age. Aids Digestion, Regulates theoBo TEETHING EASY. Cures Eruptions and Sc and prevents Worm,. TEETH iNA Counteri Summer's hest upon Tethin gc1iidren. an mal 25 cents to C. J. MOPFE T. M. D.. 22, 1829. He was a brother of Col. Thomas G. Lamar of Seces siouville f me, and his thre sisters ma:rried, resp ct.vely, Chancellor F. 11. Wardlaw of Edg-field, Major 'Th o Stark of , Columbia and C. N. A Pe:y of Faiirfield . In e: r'y life he married Miss Mary Caroline Jones of Lo.g tow%n, S. C. They had thirteen chiliri-n, nine of whom survive : Mrs. 11. 11. E.buund-, Mrs. C. G. McCrcerv, and Mrs. J. Wilson Gibbes of Colunibia, Mrs. Wm. M. Mo-re of Spart;nburg, Mcssrs. A. J. and Robert Lee of Mont gomery, Ala., and Miss Ella and Messrs. T. J. D. and Wm. F. Lamar of Florida. Col. Lamar settled in Edge field near the Savannah river and was a large and successful planter. He was a devoted hus t band and an indulgent father. He was noted for his kindness of heart and ready band to bestow r aid and charity upon his less prosperous and needy fellow man. He was a high-toned, honorable, Christian gentleman. He was an ardent States' rights man, and at the call of his State to arms he joiued Capt. Hammond's cavalry company and served as lieutenant, but, owing to some spinal trouble which incapacita ted him from active field service, he resigned his commission. He was afterwards appo&uted quar termaster of the Ninteenth South Carolina Volunteer Infantry, then under command of its first colo nel, Wm. C. Moragne of Edge Y field, and served with his regi ment in the west under Generals Albert Sidney Johnston, Bragg, Joseph E. Johnston, and others.' During the war Col. Lamar was planting on the Mis4issippi river, but had to abandon his r crops, and remove his negroes back to South Carolina, where he again farmed near Augusta, SGa. After the war he planted in Kershaw, Fairfield and Richland counties, but for a number of years, owing to loss of hearing and general poor health result - ing from an accident nearly 20 years ago, in which both his legs swere broken, he gave up active; life and lived quietly with his family iu Columbia, but lhe never ceased to take the greatest inter est in the welfare of his State. Colonel Lamar was a great ad L mirer of General Hampton, and a loyal supporter of him. He, fwas a member of Camp Hampton, eU. C. V., and took the greatest Sinte rest in these affili:ations. His wife died in February last Safter a peaceful and happy mar ried life of fifty-two years. It Scan be truthfully saiJ, "Heroe ties an honorable mapn-peace to his~ ashes" lThbe funeral services will be held in the First Presbyterian ohurch at 11 o'clock this morn-!I dng, the interment being in the churchyard. The members,.of Camp Hamp~ ton will attend in a body and are Scalled to assemble at the resi dence at 10.45 o'clock to escort the body to the church. 1The patlbearers will be as fol Slows: Active-Andrew Crawford, -B. L. Abney, 0. Y. Owings,.D. L. -Bryan, A. E. Gouzal .s, Wade H. -Manning.T.JLi comb, Angus P. Brown, Col. William Wallace, Jno. S. Verner, L. F. Youmans and D. R. Flen niken. To Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets All druggists refund the money if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's siguature is onceach box. 25e H.>n. D tvid Bennet Hill of New York, has accepted the invitation e-xteuded him to be present at the Due WVest co.nmencement and deliver the annual addre ss. The Best Prescription for Malarla Chills and F'eer is a bottle of GROVE'Sy TrAsTELEsS CHILL TONIC. It is simply iron and quinine in a tasteless form. No Cure, No Pay. Price 50k. Registration Notice. The old Board of Supervisors of Reg istrationi, consisting of T. WV. Sligh, 4 J. H. Neil, and WV. W. Crosby has beeni reappointed. The Board iiolds its regular monthly meetings the first Mondlay in every month in their offie in the Court House. T. W. SLIGiW. 'FETT'S t POWDERS) try and the Bowel Troubles of -h-ldref we.s, Strengthens the Child and MA res. Colic Hives and Thrush. Removes tots and overcomes the Effects of the it costs only 25 cents at Druggists, or St. Louis. Mo. W!'stcr fieasurezrent. 6iste.1s. Capneity. Ft. Ins. -ourt House. ...17 0 13 10 Depot ........167 14 1 Ei,tt's ........11 3 9 7 ..ii's ....... ..177 1511 ii!e.'s.... .... 80 ~ Phillips .... .. 115 6 0 'unmiugs...... 17 8 TolIege .......153 15 3 :)nart's ........16 6 16 6 h.irreus trettldEI55 E V Ft.LIns ncs. (;i. It rc si:"s thec(an:p, cr .uit :andp1 11i Lc 'S ite do nut rck \I onye YCI) lookiZ like{ new. tut. Hanssd (A everywhere ma s. . . . . \ \ Mfade by \ I Stand swed t Agents Wantedre. LIFE OF T. DEWITT TAIAIAOE, by his son, REV. FRANK DEWITT TALMAGE and associate editors of Christian Herald. Only book endorsed by Talmage family. Enormous profit for agents who act quickly. Outfit ten cents. Write immediately CL ARK dt& CO., 222 S. 4th St., Phila., Pa. Men tion this paper. 4 ELECTION NOTICE. An election for one Trustee for School ~ District No. 14, will be*eld on MON DAY, THE 5TH DAY OF MAY NEXT. Blooks of Registration will be opened onThursday, Fd8and Saturday preceding the (lay of e U All persons residing in the sch t41s trict who hold State registratioei rer tifie3tes tire entitled to r ion. dte regi\tatio\ R.Ndster \r \poi \\mna gents eantiod Pls will REV.eeda A FA K EWIT TLMdAGE 4 n asocateitrso By Tarmae ofamily noroTuste poft Soor agentrwict quic1y. Otie cents Writ C.mmediaelL,N CO.,sb2r2 S. 'S., Pila., P9. Mn 42-tintipae.42 HAMPTONNOIE Aneeto for on TrseefScho fET ork poaf bgsrton. l S avypecd TOhr1 edal nice Aloprso esign thate secha rc wioll Stae themistrti cer tineaes re yontied reg se Ro to Mse me andpo illeto on u thae gstone.htwilgv ger stfaelction. olls that be il opened or 8..ad hem forSdryrcattle Ainboo W .iC.,fril 2 ,19. A FE COPESJO