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h - -/ s u~ate b TieH E_ W sAND HERAL ublished Semi-Weekly. Winnsboro. S. C., SAurday. May 6, ioit. Establishd! 4.Vl LVI.N.3 20.00 'ByAccc By the Winnsl Three! An For this C M. CHAND that the contestants lzSwill simply -"re and more n Th ,oro Bank, the: field cou K. has come for* : thne Prizes to b e awarded tfl to make their county papei tal of 8100,000 and its sur-, handling a larger and iner .ive their prize to the lady oaav until May 27th. So hte $20.00 and the bammoc Tonight goes the nice sul o-date furniture store. I re of the day and can plE MMr. C. M. Chandler who cellent jewelry and othei er to the contestc.nts. 'I l have her choice of eithi ,s Beulah Wooten, Blyt] s Marie Stevenson, Wir Mary Belle Lemmon, Mary Foutz, Elacksto< Gertrude Pickett, Lon Leila Bolin, Shelton, Marie Smith, Rockton Maggie Hogan, Blythi Minnie Elkins, Rion.. buth Ratteree, Black Lily Mobley,TiiI JaieCrowder, Strotl i Elsie Hood, Blythewo s Iva Robinson, Winnsl MisIrene Curlee, Winnsb< Miss Louise Douglass, Avoi Miss Sallie Aiken, Albion,. Miss Ruth Hollis. Ridgewa: Miss Irene Douglass, Albio -Miss Etta Lee Scruggs, W Miss Annie Raines, Ridgew Miss Pearl Gladden. Blacks Miss Mary Gibson, Winnsb fTh HOW V( Te first nomination cou1 her or him to LO90 votes fi there will be a Free Voting Smany ballots will be accept< 4But the easiest and most getting subseriber~s to The :for three months or longer of votes indicated in the se -By getting out and seet votes for yourself and t piano, or one of the other : new subscriptions,~ renewva have a big opporttunity to It costs nothing to enter SC 1 year. SL.50.....--.--. 2 years, $:3.00..-.-. 3 years; $4.50..-.-.-. 5 years. .$7.50..-.-.-. 10 years, $15.00..-.-. 15 years, $22.50. ---- 20 years, 8.30.00. Card of Thanks. WXe wish to extend our s Sthanks to our dear neighbo friends who tendered tn sistance and heartfelt synl during the illness and de our loved one. Our nearts a prayi God to reward you oir loing~ kindniess and ~ords~ of~ cnofor anid cc d arkest hours~; o ursore be ment. Mrs. McGarity, Mrs. ad arid family. Mr. WV. R. Doty, Jr. fhursday in Columbia. Savings iunt Offered oro Bank. One, Two, on the Home Run Week's Special. LER GIVES $5 PRIZE ave to do now is .is to hust!e a little our in. Ea-h week the business firms :erested. and make still better offetrs. ;trongest nnanclui ::ititto in Fair ard w 820.00 is cash as their share of e contestants. who are striving so hard a larger and better one. With its capi lus of S90,000, this bank is capable of ?asing volume of business. They will handing in the most subscriptions from ll money handed in today will count on k also. )stantial gift from Ernest Gladden's up r. Gladden carries only the elite furni ase the eye of any purchaser. is known all over the country for his -goods has kindly made an exceptional he one polling the most votes next week r a $5.00 gold locket or a $5.00 bracelet. iewood ....................43,640 votes sboro, ..................39,560 votes Winnsboro ...............38,270 votes :k,.................. 31.560 votes gtown,.....................32,890 votes] R. I..................'.26.220 votesil R. 1......... .......21,850 votes wood, R. 2, ........~23,080 votes ...... ........... 13..880 votes tock, R. 1, ................10,900 votes 1,....................... - - 8.9 t te er. R. 1....... .......3,560 votes od,.......... ....... 2,000 votes ?r6.............. ..... .. . 000 votes ro,. .................1.030 votes .................... ..1,010 votes ........... ..... ..........1,000 votes , R. :3, ............. ..... 1,000 votes n............. .............1,000 votes nnsboro,...................1,000 votes ay, R. 2...... . ..1,000 votes toek, R. 4........ ......1,000 votes oro, . ... . .--.-- .. 1,090 votes )TES ARE OBTAINED. >on sent in for each contestant entitles ee. Besides these.complimentary votes Ballot in each issue of this paper. As id as can be collected for any contestant. important way to get votes is through News and Herald. Every subsciption will entile the contestant to the number ale of votes. ring subscriptions you will get these hus be pulling you-rself in reach of the rizes. Votes will be given for getin~g ls, and collecting back debts. So you secure votes. so send in your name:at once. ALE OF VOTES. Back Debt or Renewal. New. ........ 1,000 1,500 votes ........ 3000 4,000 votes ........5.500 7,000 votes ........1,000 - 12.000 votes . ...... 25.000 :30,000 votes . .......50000 60,000 votes' .. .8. ..0,000 85,000 votes AMERICAN MUSIC COMPANY. Contest Managers. J. T. PETERKIN. Resident Manager It Startled The World. incere When the astounding claims rs and were first made for Buckien's air as- A rnica Salve, but for forty years pathy of wyonder'ful cures have proved, ath of them true, and everywhere it is e full not known as the best salve on >u and earth for Burns. Boils. Scalds. al fo~r Sores. Cuts. Bruises. Sprains. ente Swveilings. Eczema. Cihapped nsola- hands. Fever Sores and Piles. th the Only 25e at Jone. H. 2icMaster & reave- Co. Bnk- --Still they come, and that offer of a Twenty Dollars Sav *ingrs account 'in the strongest spent fin~ancial institution in Fairfield count is sure to protect them. FAVORS DIVIDING THE DIOCESE Episcopal Council Favors Idea When $40.000 is Raised. Yorkville, May 2.' That this council considers the division of the diocese desirable when $40, 000 is added to the present bish op's permanent fund," is the wording of a resolution adopted,i by the Episcopal diocesan coun-; cil here today. This with the 1 adoption of a resolution provid ing for a special committee tol, look into the advisability of elect ing a negro suffragan bishop of .he (Iiocese were the chief mat Lers of interest disposed of by the council today. Bishop Guerrv suibmitted hisi, annual report this morning. and 1 in it he explaiite.' posi!,on on ihe diio o' the diocese. He s ha: he did no(.t mean bv: hi ~e leer1' m: last June 1o SICo 'hCial1! committee n -. work to raise an endowment( for te oscopte.Xhtat he Saiw hat ence tZ the noti:e ser v ed on he diocese that the mat ter oT division would come u) again at the Yorkville meeting. In the letter he expressed him self as believing that the contin ued agitation of a division of the t diocese was setting back the work,1 of the church and preventing co-' operation on matters of great im-, portance which concerned the. welfare of the diocese as a whole. He opposed a discussion of the division in advance of ah increase t of endowment with which to pro vide money to finance the addi tion of diocese. When a division is made feasible by increased en-; dowment, and when it is clearly i the wish of a majority of the lay-'i men of the diocese to divide,; Bishop Guerry says he will not oppose the divisions. The special committee which was empowered to raise the en dowment of about $40.000 for the division reported this morning t that they considered it useless to attempt to raise funds after Bishop Guerry had issued kis open letter in June, therefore the con.mittee had._.not acted.-,+ The -colWhnitteei -nowever,meanalq formulated a report which was submitted to the council to-day, t in which it was stated thac it was their belief that the endo,v ment could be raised and rec ommended that the council ap point a committee of three with full power to carry into execu tion the issuing of coupon bona in several denominations, matur ing in ten years. This recom mendation was adopted and then; this council werrt .on record as, thinking a division of the diocese; desirable when the endowment of $40,000 is raised. Sad Death of Little Child. Mr. John Varmadore, wvho lives at the old Newton Gaston lace: twelve miles from Chester, lost his youngest ehild, a boy be- Q tween six and seven months old, under p)articularly sad and dis tressing circurestances I a s t Thursday afternoon. The child had been taken out into the yard in its carriage by the- other chil-I dren for a ride- and had been I left there by its brothers and sisters, who had bocome absorb ed in their games and gone back to the house. W1hen Mr. Varna dore came in and inquired about the baby they were playing in the house, and it w'as only after. a moment or two that one of the little girls remembered that the child had been left:in the yard. When the father drew near the, carriage he was horrinfed to find: the child's head over the strap that held it in the seat and life extinct. It had eindeavored to change its position i-n the car-' riage, and in some way its head had caught over the strap and it: had been strangled. Mr. Varnadore lost his wife only a few days ago, and this second bereavement under such deplorable cir'umstances i s doubly sad.--Chester Reporter. A Burglar's Awful Deed. May not p)aralyze a home so completeiy as a mother's long illness. But Dr. King's New Life Pills are a splendid remedy fo women.*f "They gave me. wonderf ul benenit in constipation and femal e trouble,"' wrote Mrs. M. C. Dunlap. of Leadill, Tenn.. If ailing, try them. 25e at Jno. H. McMaster Co. -I -Mrs. Sam Steve ason returned~ to Blackstock Friday morning. COMPROMISE IN RICE WILL CASE. Half Milion Dollar Estate Settled by Agreement. The famous Rice will case was ::alled Tuesday morning by his I Honor R. C. Watts. presiding ,udge, at this term of court. and was settled by an agreement be-t Lween a.l of the parties interest d, that afternoon at 4 o'clock, when Col. R. W. Shand an- c iounced to the court that an'a igreement had been perfectei ,e requesting the court to leave : :he case ope-n until the order P :ould b- drawn up and signed bX L he heirs. The estate is one of 1 he largest ever owned by an f me in this county. being wort -tweeni fve an six ur hnousai;d dloill.S The tlement wa-\,s based,pol c)nagremen" by Mrs. Evelynla " . eifeof, M t M. ke E .. of s city, and rs. Agnes olen Jeter, wife of Dr. R. R ' e .of W.hite-mire. to receive a ) ixetd pr.opotion, ?c otner lega ees agreeing to the settlement. F he at:)rneys of both sides ot a he casei w e r e in consultation C vith their clients all of Tuesday norning and it was noised around ' hat an agreement was beingf nade. and when court convened S uesday lafternoon there was a uite a crowd of spectators to a iear the decision in the case. The order was signed Thurs lay morning. : It is understood n hat Mesdames Evelyna Rice and b znesColeman Jeter will receive x 75. 000 each,; while other cousins p md heirs 1 ill receive $12,000b .ach with t e exception of Mrs. v 7. S. Cole an, of Wnitmire, the nly living next to kin in thc state, who ill receive an.amount v qual toth of Mrs. Rice andt drs. Jeter. - The co romise thus agreed in ipon by al parties concerned isjs le that, ill be gratifying tot her f ri n d s throughout the tat ,nder the compromise it s de 'tood that Mrs. Rice, -leman and Mrs. Jeter l ea receive one-seventh of. estate: ul th .wii and codicil thef would" a1a e received one-fifth .of h esta. The estate is Valued f Lt alf million, and consists P h fly bout 15,000 acres of a in n Laures, Neivber- a ah and (hester coun ies and ck in tie Glenn Low-; ry Man eturig conbat, t; Vhitmlre- Un;, Times. s A &ig- t '0d Passes Away. On Frida ight April 28th, as :he dlock wa triking ten Ethel: HGarity fell on sleep. She ad been sick for about three seeks. From the beginning of er Milness she was critically ill md death was not altogether meected. Her body was ini ei-red on Saturday afternoon at C ve .* clock in the Presbyterian temetery. Ethel was the second daughter >f Mrs. L. J. McGarity. She was .a bright attractive girl of 12. he was in the 4th grade at, chool :and always stood at or lear the head of her class. Her lovable disposition endeared hier to a her friends, school metes1 ad teachers, the kindness to) the, girls younger than herself won f,er her the love and esteem* >f the .,irls in the lower grades. As a s.upil she was obedient to all the rules of the school. She was z regular attendant upon the Presbyterian Sunday School and aiays took a great interest1 in the school. She is survived by her mother and three sisters, Marie. Jessie May. a'n. Agnes. The loving sympathw of the whole com munity goes out to these in their bereavement. In spealdng of Ethel one of her teachers said: "She was a good girl and young as she was she had an influence for good. We shall miss her." Col. Crittenden Suicides. The city of Greenville was hocked on Wednesday to learn, hat Col. Stanley S. Crittenden bad shot himself thr ough the1 head at eight o'clock that morn-] ing. dying instantly. C l. Crit-1 tenden was a naulve ot (Tireen ville and was a highly esteemed z:-tzen, a sur.'ivor of the Cor. federate army. Despondency, following the recent death of h's wife, is thought to have been ) FIELD NOTES. lant. Successive Planting Continuous Crops. in "orn, especially*in the garden, is we would again call attention to in the great value of such corns as e- Country Gentleman and Sto%vell's m E-:ergreen, which for table are 3t;par excellence. They are for ie this purpose so far superior to yan of the ordinary field corns as is not to be in the same class at all. What about trying some Man -i u Wurzel beets and carrotsfor your s tock. If otheas have uind them so advantageous, --hyT not give them a trial? Cer e ainy the propoosition of produe ng lilk and butter at less cost and the red Lcing the cost of your )wn raised meat to you are urob ens :hat are worth J:hile. That vhat these crops make uossi e. So get ousy anu try t hem. d a It is to be taken for granted, d of course. that you have plantrd -y a liberal quantity of sorghum. al If not this is a splendid time for it getting at it. In fact, this is the -k most favorable season of the whole year for the planting of this, the greatest of all the for n age crops. There is no danger h of you planting too much of it. . At least, that is what those who n have given it the fullest trial 5e say. Of course, there are a few who still stay shy of this valuable crop because it kills their stock, as they think, but then their ie number is growing much less. re Several farmers have spoken 3o to us lately about their planting te out potatoes and pindars for their re hogs. This is a splendid way to t- raise meat at the very lowest d. cost and to keep the corn ip tbe ry1a ib for the horses. This see &-tion will never do very much in the matter of raising their own meat till they learn the value of Kt beets, carrots, pindars, potatoes. Df comes mighty hig, even w en, re -he corn can be raised here at ,s nome. The one thought-for everyone .to keep in mind, so far as the - garden is concerned, is that it is mi4~ciiyt it and 1W: kee. it Lll qU6 t ion of vegetables ihan to Jet any er part of. it go to weeds and grass. 'The getting rid of these is the In nost.expensive -work ever to+ be e- .dne in the ~garden, expensive -e- noct niyain actual cost, but also in the further'dost 4f taking of of the ground so mueh of-' plant of food. delighted to do him honor as EL they followed his progress with sympathetic admiration., bidding le him to one high place' after an other until at the last as leader of his church's hosts in South en Carolina, they crowned his ea at reer of honorable service with emore exalted testimonial of trust he and have in their powers to of ~or fer." i. Do Ghosts Hunt SwamPps? ns No. Never. Its foolish to a fear a fancied evil, when there mn- are real and deadly Perils to mn- guard against in swamps and marshes, bayous, and lowlands. 1 d These are the malaria germs ho: that cause ague. ehills a n d ;h- fever, weakness, aches in the m.bones and muscles and may in a d u c e deadly typhoid. But ice . Electric Bitters destroys and of casts out these vicious germs ng ifrom the blood. 'Three bottles Iir ' drove all the malaria from my so system," wrote Wmn. Pretwell, no of Lucama. N. C., "and I've had e- fine health ever since." .Use he this safe. sure remedy only. 50e are at .Jno. H. McMaster & Co. icd Mules and Negroes, 7Tribune Farmer. .The mule is the farm work ani mnal of the South. and no wite as. man can get along with t b ul asi te ner an.Te go to Sthe Southern farms. er- LOST- One Hartford bicycle. Dr. When last seen? was before The he Win nsboro Bank. Any in ed formation will be appreciate ho. by .J. Bratton Davis. A GARDEN ANI Xhat and When to P Necessary for At least three Darties with he past few weeks have told i hat they plant their terraces unfiowers. which prove a d ided ornament and make bundant yield of the very fine oultry feed. Tfie value of t unflower 's very much more a reciated out west than here, bere it is a crop of importanc 'he example of the farmers r erred to above might be folio; d by all a considerable profit. The uest of what to do -aard to relaitin, whec or as failed to get a stani. is oi ,at in a lare ma.ioi f * tances c*an oe answvered b sa iz t%hat, w.hee theris onl ar iai stan-,.,--. about the'C e aing to -v, :s to pia, zrve specially is this true of cor nd practicaliv all other flie LOps except cotton. which is on derfully resourceful croP ar hich frequently mades a ve. ne yield with only a Darti tand. Replanting corn is aboi s unsatisfactory piece of woi s one ever gets at. This is about the season. wh< ost farmers plant their bran< ottoms and other bottom cor rhich usually does better wh( lanted not too early. The: ottom lands are very valuabli rhen they hit all right. The soja bean is a crop ti alue of which the .farmers i iis section need to learn mo: bt. There is not near auchr.the rabbit scare as sor eem to think. The little damal be rabbits will do will be of li le consequence in a large fiel Vhenever tried this bearnis ve npular and all should get a Lainted with it. I it sboild rain in the. te. ew &as vitd W R ope is probable, .here, sny, ollow.a co.n0deral man, lantkik:f the garder-i Wie he second planting of beai nd of corn has not been mad bMs will be a flne time for i 'here should also be anoth ianinL.ftomnatQaxd cabba eed for the late. su lanting of these should be n( s soon as the ground is in a s, 3factory condition. Anoth ilanting of watermelons and ca aloupes is also- desirable. act, the only way to have-a sir ession of any crop is by fi uent plantings. Speaking of the planting ORNERSTONE OF CAPERS CHAP] 'he Memorial Services at Yorkvil Were Well Attended. Yorkville, May 2.-Fully sev Lundred persons were present he Church Home Orphana his afternioqn to witnesst aying of the corner stone :he Ellison Capers Memorial he ['his hall will cost about 810O.( aised by public subscriptic mnd will be in the nature of louble cottage which will acco nodate 32 children of the orphs age. The stone was placed a >lessed by Bishop Guerry, w -eviewed briefly the life of Bi: > Capers as a soldier and citiz< is a priest and bishop and as ervant of God. J. Steele Br nade a short talk in behalf :he people of York county, stati :hat they deemed it a high hor :o have a memorial hall of reat a man. He knows of nan, living or dead. more1 oved than Ellison Capers. aid. In the soldier-bishop w< stemplified the highest ideals nan' said Mr. Brice. He pledg te support of the York cou' eople to the orphanage. Following Mr. Brice came R< rohn Kershaw. D. D.. who v :he speake. of the occassion.! iershaw's address was a co lete review of Bishop Cape ife from the time of his birth ,he day of his death. "As a citizen." said Dr K ;haw, -as soldier. as educat s public oflicial, as bishop. net the expectaton~s and justiti he confidence of his people, vw