The news and herald. (Winnsboro, S.C.) 1901-1982, May 23, 1906, Image 8
i. IF our rate
enougl
2. IF our rat
enoug]
3. IF the acco
factor3
4. IF our busii
think
5. IF you are i
invite
['
'Zbe
Pays 4 per cent on
2 per cent on
3
3
Ney
IN FURNITUI
riages and Go
all at right pr
aud Rocking I
MIL'LINER1
woman shoul,
DRY GOOD
ried and full.
here.
Special atte
and Curtains.
in Rugs and E
ting. Big sto
J. (
Do
You
Know
GINES, Steam Er
Ginning Machin<
know whether yo1
you bargains.
Don't put off y<
to go to ginning.
More
WE-START THE
AND BETTE
PARTME
Men's Su
worth much mor<
Men's Pa
regular bargain p
Laces a
in large quan
ordina:
.Shoes for M
and Low Cuts, Vi
certainly please y
That's what I
garden. Theyv
den. Saves lot:
Screen Doors
styles. Buy no
same for the wi
The White M
Always gives sa
A full line of
ware here.
J.N
PA L
C . Color., Best Co'
Stais Oind
PA LMETTO
IF i
of interest on deposits is high
of interest on loans is low :
nnodations we afford are satis- :
ness is safely managed (and we :
it is),
iot already a customer, then we
you to become one.
iinnsboro IBank.
deposits in the Savirc Department.
deposits in the Commercial Department.
V Arrivals
ZE, IRON BEDS, BABY CAR
-Carts. A full assortment and
icer. Extra good lot of Lounges
hairs.
( DEPARTMENT full. Every
i see these offerings.
S AND NOTIONS=-Stock va
Easy to find what you want
ntion called to Window Shades
Some tempting offerings too
loor Mats. Come here for Mat
ck to select from.
). B O A G.
That it is a good plan to make
your wants known to the old re
liable W. 0. McKEOWN & SONS
when thinking of buying uew or
second-hand GASOLiNE EN
gnes, Boilers, Saw Mills, Cotton
ry, Water Tanks, etc.? Let us
1 wish to buy or sell. We can give
ur gin repair work until you need
IcKEOWN & SONS,
Cornwell, S. C.
Ddr gains.
SPRING SEASON WITH MORE
R BARGAINS IN EVERY DE
NT THAN EVER BEFORE.
tsat from $6.00 to $12.oo well
than we ask for them.
fS=A big lot of these and at
rices. Be sure to call here.
nd Embroideries
tity and endless designs. Extri
y bargains in this line.
n, Ladies and Children. H igh Cu
is, Kids and Patent Leathers. Can
ou in shoes.
.0 LANDEiCKER.
5 IT BROWN........
3rown's Garden Plow does for the
~ry thing for cultivating the gar
of hoeing. Try one.
and Windows in all sizes and
w and get the good benefits of the
ole season.
untain Freezer is the best out.
tisfaction.
-ardware, Crockery and Glass
V. SEIGLEiR._
METTO PAINT
ly for Southern climate. Unrivalled .
onest in Measure, Permanent ini
ering Quality. The Best and Most
rnishu Stains. Sendfor olor CardPAsN
PAINT MFG. CO., Columbia, s. C.
THE SCILLY ISLANDS.
They Have but Three Seamons-Spring.
Summer and Autumn.
The climate of the Scilly islands is
the most equable in Great Britain. It
ranges on an average from 4( degrees
to GO degrees. On the coldest day it is
warm and on the hottest it Is cool.
There are only three seasons in Scilly
of four months each-spring, summer
and autunir. When the autumn ends
spring commences. There Is no great
height in the islands. The highest land
In Bryher Is only 133 feet abve sea
level. although the telegraph tower
built on St. Mary's reaches a height of
15S feet. but the rock scenery of the en
tire group of these islands is remark
able. There are rocks fantastic. jagged.
peaked, toothed, serrated; rocks resem
bling living creatures and others sug
gestive of primeval vastness and un
couthnc.; some grandly castleated.
others
Like a great lion's cheek teeth.
Those on the peninsula of Penninis.
especially If they are seen in mist,
Menawar (pronounced man-of-war), the
Maiden Bower, Mincarlo, Shipman's
Head, the Haycocks at Annet and
many others are strikingly grand. The
curious resemblance to primeval ani
mal forms has given rise to many of
the names of these rocks and certainly
many are
Like a great sea beast, crawled forth to
sun itself,
while there are "elephants' tusks,"
"monks' cowls," "pipers' holes,"
"giants' castles," "pulpit rocks," etc.
London Spectator.
HAIR AND COLOR.
Red Is Much Nearer Allied to Black
Than to Blond.
The color of the hair, says the Grand
Magazine, is usually transmitted from
parents to child. This is especially true
when both parents have the same com
plexion. Instances, however, are not
uncommon where children have hair
black as ebony, while the hair of both
parens Is a burning red. Instead of
disproving the theory that a child takes
after its parents, so far as the color of
the hair is concerned, this fact, it has
now been ascertained, is all in favor of
the doctrine. red hair, in fact, is by
Its structure and composition much
nearer to black hair than to blond.
Very often if the hair of a very dark
complexioned person be examined at
tentively a few quite red hairs will be
detected in the mass. On the other
hand, it would be time wasted to seek
for black hairs in the locks of a fair
person. Similarly it is not infrequent
to notice children whose hair, red at
birth, becomes as they grow older quite
dark. When, too, after some serious
illness, the production of the coloring
pigment of the hair falls off, black hair
becomes not blond, but red. Fair hair,
which to a casual eye appears to have
much more affinity to red hair than to
black, Is, on the contrary, quite dis
tinct.
Valued Religious Relics.
The collection of religious relics to
be seen in the church of the Corsicant
village of Sisco is utdoubtedly unique.
The inhabitants of this pretty little
place are exceedingly devout and very
simple, which probably accounts for
the possession of such a remarkable
collection. A writer in L'Independence
Beige gives the following list of the
principal items: The horn used by Mo
ses to call together the children of Is
rael while in the desert, a tuft of that
red hair which was the pride of Esau
and the despair of Jacob, a piece of
the nail of the little toe of the left foot
-the statement is very precise-of
Enoch, the patriarch; the bib worn by
the infant Jesus, the curb and crupper
of the ass that tak the holy family in
to Egypt and several relics of various
saints.
Two Laymen Have Been Popes.
The canon law does not prescribe
that the pope must be a cardinal or
even a cleric. Nevertheless since the
election of Urban VI. in 1378 the suc
cessful candidates have belonged to
the members of the sacred college, al
though as late as 1758 a noncarlnal
was voted for several times. At least
two laymen-John XIX. (1024) and Ad
rian V. (1276)--have occupied the papal
throne, an~d there Is today nothing to
prevent laymen from being created
cardinals, although they are not enti
tied to vote in the conclave unless they
can produce a special permit from the
late pope.________
Beef and Brawn.
It is said of Kean, the actor, that he
ate mutton before playing the part of
lover, beef before playing that of mur
derer and pork before assuming the
character of a tyrant. That may be
merely a story or a fact, but It Is a
well known truth that beef will enable
more exhausting muscular work to be
done than will mutton, so there may be
something in the "roast beef of old
England." In the eighteenth century
this was one of the English "gods."
His Motive.
Critic-I have seen many s med cow
on green grass, but this is the first
time I ever saw a green cow on red
grass. Is It nn implressionistic depar
ture? Irish Painter-Not at all; it's a
patriotic impulse-I wanted to keep the
green above the red.-Exchange.
Quite the Contrary.
"I understand that drinking is one of
your husband's failings."
"You have been misinformed," said
the wife severely; "It is his most pro
nounced success."
The Cost of It.
Dolly-Nell says that her engagement
ring cost $100. Polly-Perhaps she
meant that she spent as much as that
entertaining the young man before she
got it.
Not if as Rich as Rockefeller.
If vou had all the wealth of Rocke
'eller, the Stand~ard Oil magnate, you
~ouldl not buy a better medicine for
Owei complaints than ('hamberlamn's
~olic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy.
he most eminent physician can not
>rescribe a better preparation for colic
,d diarrhoea, both for children and
dults. The uniform success of this
emedy has shown it to he superior to
11 others. It never fails, and when
educed with water and sweetened, is
leasant to tak e. Every family should
e supplied with it. Sold by Obear
A SABBATARIAN.
Result of a Doctor's Compact With
an Insane Patient.
Dr. A. did not believe in forcible re
straint for the insane. Therefore, as
head of an Insane asylum where per
sonal influence was made to take the
place of bolts and bars and shackles.
he was kept a.busy man. One patient
in particular was a young boy continu
ally complained of at headquarters be
cause he refused to wear his elothing.
preferring to tear it into rags.
Dr. A. remonstrated -in vain, then
thought out a plan of diplomacy, with
which he approached his patient.
"John," said he, "I find I am in need
of a boy and thought you might like to
take. the position. I want to engage a
boy not to tear clothes. Do you think
you could do that work?"
"Yes. I could," said John.
"Very well. What wages will you
ask?"
"Twopence a day."
The bargain was closed on the spot,
Johi's destroyed clothing having cost
the asylum pounds where his wages
were pennies. From Monday to Satur
day John was a model laborer, receiv
ing at the end of each day his wage
with the other workmen about the asy
lum. Sunday came, and with It John's
mania. He had not a whole rag on his
back when Dr. A. was called upon to
speak to him.
"How did this happen, John?" he
asked. "Weren't you engaged to work
for me? You have broken your con
tract."
"I have not, sir," asserted John, with
warmth. "Didn't I work for you all
the week? Today's Sunday, and I'll be
hanged if I work for any man on Sun
day."-Pearson's Magazine.
CAVE OF THE WINDS.
The Vision Carved In Stone Under
the Hills of Dakota.
The great wind cave has the form of
an eight story house, each story, or
stratum, containing a. distinct forma
tion of Its own and each containing
chambers of a size and magnificence
of decoration such as have never been
found in any subterranean cavern of
the world.
It Is a dream, a nightmare, a vision,
carved in solid stone under the green
hills of Dakota, stone as white as the
milk the hired man used to give us to
drink in the dawn of'a happy June
morning, stone as red as the heart of
the first bloodroot that you dug in the
spring when the world was all spring
to you, and stone that is blue with a
blue that all the painters who have
ever painted Venice have tried to get
for generations and have failed.
Frozen fouptains are there, white
with the leaping foam of untold ages;
sculptured cats and horses and great
o.onsters to be dreamed about o' nights
and feared In dark corners-in the day
time, organs built by the hands of
giant gnomes for a Titan to play wild
hymns of praise upon, a kitchen for
the cooking of weird- dishes never
thought of up here in the sunshine, all
manner and all kinds of rooms, ninety
miles of them, down there under the
hoofs of the gallant little range horses
who pound the grass into hay the year
round, up there In South Dakota.-Ex
change.
Napoleon's Inic Wiper.
Napoleon was a- hero to his valet,
Constant, though he sadly marred the
servant's effort to dress him neatly.
Said the valet:
His breeches were always of white
cashmere. But two hours after leaving
hisq chamber It often happened that
they were all spotted with ink, thanks
to his habit of wiping his pen on them
and shaking ink all around him by
striking his pen against the table. How
ever, as he dressed in the morning for
the whole day, he did not change his
toilet on that account. but remained in
this state until night. The whole inside
of his boots was lined with white fus
tian. Whenever one of his legs itched,
he rubbed It with the heel of the boot
or shoe with which the other leg~was
shod, thus heightening the effect of the
spilled ink.
An Aggravated Case.
Lord Justice Clerk Eskgrove, In sen
tencing certain housebreakers, began
by explaining the various crimes of
which they had been convicted-as
sault, robbery and hamesucken, of
which last he gave them the etymology.
Hte then reminded them that they had
attacked the house and robbed It, and
so worked gradually up to the'climax,
"All this you did, and, God preserve
us, joost when they were settin' down
to their dlnner!"--Law Notes.
A Long Life.
To prolong life one should take plen
ty of sleep and remember to sleep lying
on the right side, indulge In a morning
bath in tepid water, take daily exercise
in the open air, keep the window of the
Isleeping room open all night, take fre
quent and short holidays, not be over
ambitious and hold one's temper.
Considerate Discretion,
Stranger-How long since you made
an arrest, constable? Constable Hi
Medder-Quite a considdyrable speli.
I'm goin' a leetle slow 'bout haulin'
'em In jest now. We hain't got bo
place to put 'em 'ceptin' Cy Tedder's
chicken coop, an' Cy's got a settin'
hen on.-Cleveland Plain Dealer.
The Fact of It,
"It's love that makes the world go
'round," Said the old fashioned senti
mentalist.
"No," answered Miss Cayenne; "It
merely makes some people so dizzy
that they think the world is going
'round."-Washington Star.
The dawn of the future is announced
to such as can read its signs, and wt6
owe ourselves wholly to it.-Mazzinl.
It is possible to abtain relief from
chronic indigestion and dyspers'ia by
the use of KODOL FOR DYSPEPS IA.
Some of the most hopeless cases of
long standing have yielded to it. It
enables you to digest the food you eat
and exercises a corrective influence.
building up the efficiency of the diges
tive organs. The stomach is the boiler,
wherein the steam is made that keeps
up your vitality, health and strength,
Kodol digests what you eat. Makes
the stomach sweet-put the boiler in
(ondition to do the work nature de
nands of ite-gives you relief from s
igestive disorders, and puts you in ']
sape to do your best, and feel your
Read This.
If you want to In=
sure
Your Cottou,
YourDwelling and Furni=
niture,
Your Barn and Stock,
Your Store Building,
Your Merchandise,
CALL ON
W, H, FLENNIKEN,
Prompt attention as well as prompt
-ettlement.
Monuments
from
RION GRANITE.
We have opened up
Granite Works at Rion
and can fill all orders for
monumental and ceme
tery work.
Best material, high grade
work, prices reasonable.
Your orders solicited.
Works at Rion, S. C,
Powell Bros. & Co.
Rion, S. C.
2-28-3m
J. Wilson Gibbes
TYPEWRITER HEADQUARTERS
1412 Main St., Columbia, S. C.
South Carolina Agent
DENSMORE TYPEWRITER-Th<
best writing machine at any price.
CHICAGO TYPEWRITFR-T h e
best for the price-$35 and $50.
A LL MAKES-Rented, Exchanged,
Bought. Repairing on the premises by
an expert.
RUBBER STAMP FACTORY
Stamps made every day on the premi
ises. Stencil Plates, Daters, Number
ing Machines, Check Punches of all
kinds.
OF'FICE SUPPLIES AND FUR
NITURE-Everything from a Pen
Point to a Roll Top Desk. Sectional
Filing Cases, Bookcases and Card In
deres a specialty, 10-18.
EVERYTHING IN
Flower s
Plants
Bulbs
Seeds.
Choicest up-to-date varieties grown
by us.
Carnations, 7.5c. to $1.00 per dozen.
Roses, $2.00 to $3.50 per dozen.
Lilies, $2.00 to $0.00 per dezen.
Chrysanthemums, $1.00 to $6.00 per
dozen.
Wreaths, Crosses, Anchors, &c., $3.00
up.
Bouquets, Boxes or Basltets of pretty
Mixed Flowers, $1.00 to $10.00.
Fine Wedding WorK a Specialty.
Only give us an idea what you want
and price and we will please you.
ROSE RIIJ GRE ROUSE,
COLUMBIA, S. C.
ggirWe ship flowers every where.
Cures Cold
La GrippQ
& Pieurisy
I '
IhteGritAntiseptic
Price 2550& .00
DrEarl S.SloanBosoniMass\JSA
Horse Notice.
BULOW'S COMET will make the
ason, beginning March 1, at Ced:
~ree plantation oni private terms.
TV. L. BULOWV
Carolina Rail I
Capital Stock $2
HOME OFFICE: MA
Office in Farmers and Merch
- Directors
W. J. MONTGOMERY...........
P. S. COOPER ......................
H. C. GRAHAM .....................
CHAS. A. SMITH..............
W . H. CROSS.......................
RICHARD I. MANNING............
J. C. M ACE .........................
R. B. SCARBOROUGH.............
W. STACKHOUSE... ..............
INSURE YOUR CROPS AGAIP
W e insure your Tobacco for........... ........ .........
T ruck for. ..............................
Strawberries for............ ......
Cotton for...........
Sm all grain for......................
The cost of this insurance is small in coijp
you have at risk.
The premium to be charged on all crops,
cent. of the aniount of insurance. On tobae
more risk, the premium is only three (3) per
The losses will not be pro rated but paid i
proof of loss has been filed at the home offiee,
the loss is adjusted in a shorter time.
Local Agents WE
J. M. JENNINGS
FOR FAIRFIELD
WINNSBOR
Garolina Hal In uac
FOR PRICE ANI
IT WILL PAY YOUT
SEE US WHEN IN
Mules Hores Buggj
A LARGE STOCK OF
BEST KINDS NOW
GREGORY=CONDE
m17 Plain Street.
~*<,Cure I]
Almost instantly, ar
I'hey also relieve ev
gia, Rheumatic Pa
SStomach ache, Agu<
jury, Bearing-down
-ziness, Nervousness
By taking one or two
Pills when you feel a
You not only avoid suw
ening influence of pain
nervous, irritable and
tablet on retiring or
This soothing influen
brings refreshing sleep
25 doses, 25 cents.
~~KEEP C(
I can showv you the
of FIGURED OR(GA
LAWNS in town. A ic
vince you that they are
cheapest you can get i
the monev.
GlEO. R. LAUD
COTTON GINNERS AND) MA
Write for prices on th
rills (Gauge (o- o '*ip..up
ack Saws Oil C:as i!: .~ 1.lc~he
ittings In1jector:, ie
aee Leather Packing all kin,!s. Shan in.g; (2l:
Columbiainupply Coery -ui
[Surailceco
5,000.00.
RION, S. C.
ants Bank Building.
........ ....Marion, S. C.
.............Mulins, S. C.
......... ....Marion, S. C.
......rT S. C.
.............Marion, S. C.
.............Sumter, S. C.
.............Marion, S. C.
.............Conway, S. C.
.............M arion, S. C.
4ST DESTRUCTION,
...........................$100 Per A cre
........... ....... .. ........... 100 " 1
............. 100 "
.............................. ... 3 "
arison with the investment that
'xcept tobacco, is two (2) per
.o, where there is considerably
n full within sixty days, after
or may be paid sooner, in case
inted by
:P, G en. Agt,
COUNTY.
0, S. C.
GO:, Marion, S.. 0
) QUALITY
0 COMEjTO
NEED OF
es or Wa1ouD
~THE VERY
D3N HANDS.
R MULE CO.,
COLUMBIA, S. C.
Dr. Miles'
iti-Pain Pills
[eadache
.d leave no bad effects.
ery other pain, Neural
n, Sciatica, Backache,
Pains, Pains from in
pains, Indigestion, Diz
and Sleeplessness. -
Prevent
all=Aches
Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain
n attack coming on.
Tering, but the weak
upon the system. If
cannot sleep, take a
when you awaken.
ce upon the nerves.
Never sold in bulk.
>rettiest line
NDIES and
'ok wvill con -
the best and
mywhiere for
ERIDALE.
CHINERY OWNERS
e followin~g
Lu. ntr lt, Gundy
- Columbia, S. C..
I