The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, August 15, 1901, Image 2
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The Bamberg Herald.
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ESTABLISHED MAY 1st, 1891.
===============
A. Jr. KXIGirr. Editor.
Rates?$1.00 per year; 50 ceuts for
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insertion. Liberal contracts made foi
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one cent a word each insertion. Local
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Tributes of Respect, etc., must
be paid for as regular advertising.
Communications?News letters or on
subjects of general interest will be gladly
welcomed. Those of a personal nature
will not be published unless paid for.
Thursday, August 15, 1901.
??
We print Senator McLaurin's reply to
the executive committee. It will be seen
h/\ Ahftn/rno TillmoYA T\* it It TP
liiill iiU y. Jill! 5V.0 11I11UU11 ?1>U -
sponsible for the committee's action, and
compares records with the senior Senator
* t
as to their votes in congress, proving by
the records that Tillman voted with the
Republicans at least as often as he did.
Altogether it is a strong reply.
From Honey Ford.
The Midway and Clear Pond base ball
teams met for practice on last Saturday J
afternoon. The score stood 14 to 4 in
favor of Midway.
Misses Nora Lee and Lanier Folk,
charming young ladies of Weimer, visited
r , Miss Wilhelmina Cleaver last week.
Messrs. Eugene and HughHutto are on
the sick list.
A picnic is scheduled for next Saturday
at the Getsinger place by the Clear
Pond base ball team. Two games will be
gg played. There will be music and we hope
plenty of pretty girls on hand.
fni?< _: ir, n?l TTT? TTVOL- oro
PX11C 1HCUUJ Ui VUI. UUV. J. . J. win U.v
gratified at liis appointment as treasurer?
an honor worthily bestowed. H. E. G.
To Cnre a Cold in One Day
Take Laxative Brorao Quinine Tablets.
KV" > All druggists refund money if it tails to
cure. E. W. Grove's signature is on
each box. 25c.
?
&.> . Six Candidates for Senate.
Columbia, Aug. 11.?The past week has
been largely devoted to politics.
McLaurin attacked Latimer at Greenville,
aud Latimer retaliated at Union,
and so it went. The attacks on McLaurin's
record were savage, and so severe
that it may not be speculative to sav that
McLaurin would have had a hard time
with the Union audience. It ha9 been
my observation that McLaurin is an unusually
agile and quick stump speaker
and a hard fighter, and pretty well able to
take care of himself, and he could as well
do so in the coning fight, if he enters it,
although Tillman says he will never toe
the scratch. McLaurin had the crowds
with him or pretty much divided in the
days of yore, but how it will be now,
with intense opposition from many sides,
will be another matter.
From the situation as now observed the
ftrrav of senatorial candidates who will
want to succeed McLaurin will include:
John Gary Evans, John J. Hemphill,
Daniel S. Henderson, Wilie Jones, George
Johnstone, Asbury C. Latimer.
There may and probably will be others
who^ will want Mr. McLaurin's place,
whether he runs or not, and each candidate
seems to have his own style of campaigning.?News
& Courier.
if
This signature is on every box of the genninf
Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablets
the remedy that ?urea a eoM in one day
Denmark Doings.
"The colour of the king doth come and go
Between his purpose and his conscience
T :).? LnoMs tirn rlrooilfnl hflttlps
jUI&C uciauto ui iAb in v ui vui?iua
* set.
His passion is so ripe, it needs must break"
The above lines are taken from the
works of a famous dramatist, which fitly
portray in blank verse a struggling conscience.
And such must have been the
musings of the poor mortal that fired the
Baptist church of this place Monday
night. This is expressing the sentiment
of the entire community,"His passion is
so ripe, it needs must break." If the
calamity is the work of an incendiary,
these sentiments are true. It would be
inhuman for your correspondent to say
that it was human, for it would be forcing
the broadness of the term into narrowest
confines. But possibly the poor church
mouse, is the cause of the disaster and not
man.
The iron tongue of night had already
spoken twelve, and gentle sleep engrossed
the town. See that sudden glare! It is
the Baptist church! You say this is the
work of man! Oh God, change the
mental picture, surely it is but the mischievous,
poor church mouse!
The fire was hard to locate, few thought
that the sacred spire of half a century,
was at the mercy of flames. As each man
rushed up to the scene, he quietly stood
and gazed. No one entered the church.
The fire seemed to have enveloped the
building in short order.
The officials of the church held an insurance
policy of $2,000 which will materially
aid them in the erection of a new
? church. The location was sjp^t&l early
in the year, midway b$" the two
towns. Money and nihave also
been subscribed for a jjjrfWnage. Work
^ will sooir begin and what the Baptist
~ " "people now call a calamity will in the
end be a good blessing. It takes a
sweeping fire sometimes to move off the
car of progress.
The citizens of this school district are
anxiously awaiting the final disposal of
the entangled county affair. The business
reputation of the new Treasurer
Sromises much and possibly the overraw
n accounts will soon be reimbursed.
Mr. Folk is well known throughout the
county as a man of extraordinary capacity.
His success in past undertakings have
V , , 1 .. ;
oeen pncnomeuuj aim uiv imjji c>? ui ui?
intelligence on the work of the Treasurer's
office will soon smooth out the crooks and
kinks.
Mr. Dickinson deserves the sympathy
of the entire people. His peaceful resignation
to the inevitable situation shines
with the integrity of honored manhood.
Taking the whole trouble into careful
consideration, lie has done remarkably
well. The ex-Auditor must wear his share
of public censure for the poor book-i
keeping exhibited in his office. If our
hustling Supervisor issued checks, which
he knew would overdraw funds to his
credit, he too must walk up and take his
li'tle pill. Each department should be a
check 011 the other. [We do not see how
the Supervisor is at fault.?Ed.]
The Allendale base ball team tussled
wifli tl>t> FWinnrL- Sfitnrilnv
noon and won with hands down. It was
a game of errors. Several hoys from Bamberg
played on the Denmark team.
Youmans pitched for the Allendale
nine, which seemed willing to dul> him
with the household name, "Tillman." The
son seems to like the name better than his
papa likes the man.
Hutto and Peterson have opened up a
general merchandise store under the Ellzey
House. All stores are occupied and
others could be rented if they were available.
Cottages are in demand. The transient
dwellers cannot find homes. Every
week brings the inquiry for a house.
Miss Bessie Recti, of this place, and
Miss Mamie Rowell, of Bamberg, have
won the Winthrop scholarships. They
were formerly pupils in the Denmark
... ^ High Schoohwheretheir work was exceptionally
editable. J.
Denmark, S. C., August 13,1901.
You Know What You Are Taking
"When you take Grove's Tasteless Chill
Tonic because the formula is plainly
printed on every hottle showing that it is
simply iron and quinine in a tasteless
form. No cure, no pay. Price 50c.
McLAlRINS WARM REPLY.
His Letter to the Slate Executive
Com mi t tee?Sco res Till in a n.
Paris Mountain, S. C., Aug. f>, 1901.
To the Democratic Executive Committee,
State of South Carolina?
Gentlemen: The official notice of the
action of a majority of your committee of
July 25tli was received by me on August
1st, live days after it had been announced
in the newspapers. The published announcement
was the lirst notice I had
that any action affecting me was to be
taken by your committee. 1 am now officially
informed that the majority of your
committee condemns my course in the
senate, demands my resignation, and undertakes
to expel me from the democratic
[Villi >. Jl WVUIJ *VUl 111*. 11 141% ? V. UIVVU*|'1VVI
to usurp the powers of the 90,000 democratic
voters of South Carolina, and as an
incident, in a meeting called for another
purpose, have hastily endeavored to do
what can be done only by solemn proceedings
of impeachment,"expressly provided
for in the constitution of the United
States.
RESPONSIBLE ONLY TO THE PEOPLE.
I hold mv commission from the democratic
voters of South Carolina. I recognize
no authority but theirs, take 110 orders
from any source but them, and shall
in due course appeal to theift for judgment
on my course as a senator and my character
as a man and a democrat.
Personally, I am indifferent to your action
because nobody has made you my
master or censor, and I regard what you
have done as merely expressing the malice
and the fears of one individual, Senator
B. R. Tillman. But for this always
evil and indecent influence, ordinary respect
for the proprieties would probably
have prevented the four of you who are
my declared competitors for the seat 1
now have the honor to occupy, from attempting
to use the power entrusted to
you by your party to remove a rival from
yuurpuui.
UNFAIR AND UNDEMOCRATIC.
As a citizen and democrat of South Carolina
I am mortified by your action, because
it has brought upon the State the
condemnation and the ridicule of the
press and the public throughout the
country. Unhappily, those who are not
intimately acquainted with our conditions
accept the action of 3-our majority as representing
the intelligence and democracy
of our State and both arc made objects of
derision. I wish to enter my solemn protest.
I shall demonstrate how unfair,
absurd and undemocratic your action is.
and I shall trust to the democrats of South
Carolina to repudiate it when the opportunity
is given them. Your purpose is to
deny that opportunity.
STAR CHAMBER PROCEEDINGS.
It is in strong contrast with the blatant
boast of Senator Tillman at Gaffuey to
put me on trial liefore the party on' the
hustings with himself as prosecutor. As
you know, I sought that test by accepting
;i proposal of appeal to the people, but
the governor saw fit to forbid it. Now
Senator Tillman appears as prosecutor
against me in my absence, and by proceedings
like those of the star chamber, which
was the most infamous tribunal of English
history and the most abhorrent to AngloSaxon
instincts, seeks to exclude me from
the party and its debates and public assemblages.
It is your duty, as custodians
of the party interests, to seek recruits to
strengthen the party.
To save Senator Tillman from staking
his record, strength and fortunes against
mine, you undertake to exclude me and
my friends from the party. Whatever
your individual motives may have been,
the purport of your action is to facilitate
the Senator in dodging me and to deny
the people the opportunity of passing on
my positions and conduct. It seems to me
the democratic masses of South Carolina
are competent to say at the polls whether
or not I have been a faithful Senator and
a consistent Democrat. Why should you
attempt to prevent them ?
POLITICAL ASSASSINS.
It is no cause for wonder that Senator
Tillman should seek to make political assassins
of you to avoid open and fair fight.
He has climbed to power by venomous
abuse of many of the purest men in the
State who opposed him, for which he has
always carefully shirked personal responsibility,
and on the political lives and
fortunes of those who befriended him
while he needed friends. Norris, Tindal
and Donaldson, men representing earnest
purpose and the interests of the farmers
of the State and therefore strong, were
used by him to promote his own interests
and then thrust aside. Irby, Shell and
Farley died despising him because of his
treachery to them and to the people. I
am now in his way and because he has
failed to strike me* down he incites you to
attempt to strangle me, and at the same
time to destroy a white primary, to his
advocacy of which he owed much of the
best of liis early following. Party principles
are fixed and to the principles of
the democratic party I have been uniformly
faithful. Party policies are determined
from time to time by party elections
and conventions, and no man, nor body
of men, has the power to say between
those elections what policies shall be the
tests of party loyalty.
Senator Tillman is assuming the prerogative
of supreme boss and dictator to
say who shall or shall not be regarded as
a democrat next year. I do not concede
any such power to him nor to you. He,
nor all your committee together, has not
the power to exclude from candidacy nor
the polls at the democratic primary the
humblest citizen of South Carolina who
declares himself to be a democrat and
pledges himself to support the party
nominees. Suppose in 1890, the execu
tive committee of the State hail ruled out
of the party all who engaged in the
''Fanners' Movement?" Suppose two
years later it had excluded all who favored
the Sub-Treasury idea? Such action
Would have been unjust, tyrannical and
insulting to thousands of good citizens
and democrats, but not more so than this
proceeding of yours.
WHETiE DID TILLMAN* GET T1IE MONEY.
In his double character as prosecuting
witness and attorney against me, Senator
Tillman is reported as saying before
your committee that I have voted with
the republicans "in important matters"
and that he has seen me conferring with
republican senators. As I will show by
the records he himself frequently voted
with the republicans "in important matters,"
as all other democratic senators
have done from time to time. It is frequently
necessary, proper and courteous
to confer with members of the opposite
party, as he knows and as every man of
practical sense knows. These* expressions
of his are attempts to take advantage
of credulity and ignorance. I do not
think there is a man in South Carolina
so ignorant as to be really deceived by
them. He can not put me under suspicion
as he has put himself by his own
I acts. I have not in public otfice retrogra
ed from a, perhaps, honorable bankruptcy
to dishonorable and unexplainable
wealth. He and I have drawn the same
salaries but I have found it impossible to
save a dollar from mine. I have never,
however, truckled to corporations, with
; the fawing of a tamed spaniel, made
1 speeches against them, then voted for
them, and accepted favors as he has done.
I have never been the sole boss and buying
agent of a newly created whiskey
trust with its rebates of $00,000 to $70,0(K)
a year, none of which ever reached the
State treasury. I have never had the
handling of a State bond refunding
scheme with $28,000 of commissions never
yet accounted for or explained.
A year ago Senator Tillman went into
North Dakota and made speeches advocating
the re-election of a republican Senator?Mr.
Pettigrew. Senator Tillman and
llli> >cn;in'i n vi t" |?i iMiiiiRiu tii |uv?viiiing
by filibustering tacticts a vote on the
subsidy bill. The newspapers said that
Mr. Hill, head of the Northern Pacific
lobby against the subsidy bill, gave SenaTillman's
friend and associate a "tip"
which paid him *4.">0,000 in the stock
market. Birds of a feather, gentlemen of
the committee, always llock together.
TILLMAN NOT A DEMOCRAT.
Has Senator Tillman, prosecuting attorney
against my democracy, ever failed
to abuse democrats aud democracy ? Do
you know that in the last two democratic
national conventions lie lias supported
the nomination of Republicans ? In lbUti
lie favored Senator Teller for President,
an old line republican and one of the bitterest
foes of the South in reconstruction
days. He had himself appeared before
the convention as a competitor of W. J.
Bryan and been ignominiouly snowed
under. In 19(H) lie was for Towne, also a
republican, for vice president. Is he the
man to be supreme arbiter and judge of
what is democracy in South Carolina?
GIVE THE YOUNG MEN A CHANCE.
Iii the Senate I have labored, as the records
will show, to broaden the prosperity
of the country, to promote the interests
of my own people, to spread civilization.
to enlarge and increase opportunity
for our young men and to stimulate
enterprise. llis whole political course and
method have been to tear down, to abuse
and oppose, to blight and restrain, to bite
\\ here lie dared and to fawn where he feared
or sought favor. 1 shall ask the people to
??A.?4 1? A o J! e 1?n 11 />loiio TT
Willi.V*!. HIV ICVV1US .Will .-M1UU 1 it I L11 lllj
right as a free man, a born and reared
demrtcrat and Senator from South Carolina,
to do it regardless of the orders of
twenty-one members of the executive
committee. I shall ask the people to decide
between the man who has tried to
help cotton factories, open highways of
commerce and to so command the democratic
party as to command for it the confidence
and respect of the business and
laboring elements north and south; and
that of the man whose conduct and record
has been to sink the party to disrepute
and impotence. I shall ask them to say
whether they prefer the Senator who has
tried to retain for South Carolina the
honor and dignity won by a long line of
illustrous sons and glorious deeds, or the
Senator who has postured as buffoon and
bully and who proclaimed on the floor of
the Senate that he represented a constituency
of ballot box stuffcrs and murderers
who wanted their share of the stealage.
He is now in a Notheru State holding
up our people as negro murderers and
ballot box thieves.
WOULD CONDEMN AND DEPOSE WITHOUT
A HEARING.
You have undertaken to condemn and
expel and depose m<J, not only without a
hearing, but without evidence. Upon
what ground are my good faith as a Senator
and my fidelity as a democrat assail
ed ? Is it on tlic tariff? None of you of
the committee can prove to the people
that the democratic party is a free trade
party. It has opposed a tariff for protection
only, hut as early as 1797 we had a
protective tariff and we have never in
the one hundred kand four vears since
known free trade. * General Hancock, the
party nominee for president in 1880, regarded
the tariff as a local question.
Samuel J. Randall, for years the party
leader and speaker of the house, was a
protectionist. In every congress where
the question has been presented numbers
of democrats have voted against and
helped to kill free trade. I have contended
that Southern products should be put
on equality with others, and in 1897 I
fought to have rice, pine lumber, and cotton
protected. The cry of "Republican"
was raised against me then, but the people,
before whom the issue was squarely,
put, endorsed me by an overwhelming
vote. Are you now undertaking to reverse
that verdict ?
TARIFF SUBSIDIES AND EXPANSION.
I have favored ship subsidies. It is a
great question and one, I submit, on
which the people of this State are competent
to pass after hearing full argument.
The subject has never been discussed before
them, although it is of vast importance
to the prosperity of this State. The
nurnose of the subsidv is to develop the
building and operation of great fleets of
American ships. It touches the interests
of our sea ports, of our lumber industries,
of all our manufacturing enterprises and
our great agricultural products. It is a
question on which some of the ablest
democrats of the house and senate are
divided. I most humbly submit that it is
not in order for twenty-one members of
your committee to rule that the democratic
masses of South Carolina shall not
at their campaign meetings hear this matter
of vital interest to them discussed,
and that the people of the sea'coast cities,
who would like to see new tides of commerce
brought to their harbors and the
lumbermen and owners of forest lands
who would be glad to sell material for
more ships, are to be thrown neck and
heels out of the party because they favor
ship subsidies. Senators Carlisle, Pugh,
and Morgan voted for a subsidy bill which
has been in force ten years and which
has helped our Brazilian trade, in a
measure at least. Are they not democrats,
according to the decision of Senator
Tillman and your committee?
I believe that is our duty to develop
the new territory which has come into
our possession along commercial and industrial
lines, to civilize them, and make
them the equal of our own States in
material prosperity. Senator Tillman
would leave them, after we have deprived
them of the protection of Spain to a hopeless
struggle as an independent nation
without resources or self protection.!
Fortunately for us the records show that
in building them up, we are going to
benefit our own country. I want to give
that territory the best form of government
in tlio world, he does not want to
give it any form of government at all.
lie says "free silver or bust." I say the
American people have settled that question
at the ballot box.
I am for a sound currency and constant
employment for all who desire to work
at remunerative wages. This we can not
have without an outlet for our surplus*
products on equal terms with all of our
competitors in the markets of the world.
Do you think the energetic, live, progressive
young business man of the South,
will long permit the cabals of a few
scheming politicians to stand between
him and the attainment of these glorious
ends? If this is not democracy, then
gentlemen, I invite you to join hands
with me in making it so.
These are the leading questions on
which I understand my democracy and
loyalty have been assaulted. The records
give me little light as to'what further
ground there may be for your action.
Allow me to summarize them briefly.
COMPARING RECORDS.
In the first session of the 55th congress
Senator Tillman and myself voted together
in 148 of 150 yea and nay votes.
I voted against him for protection to
the farmers on an amendment to the
tariir bill, proposed by Senator Jones, of
Arkansas, present chairman of the executive
committee. Possibly you may reconvene
your committee and read him
out of the party. I voted with Jones,
Vest, Bacon, Bate, Berry, Daniel, Mills,
Morgan and all the other democrats, except
Senators Tillman and McEnery who
voted with the republicans. It was a
.4 ? Mn innfliop nnwnil.
MHllglll JM1L? iwvi,. v?? uuv>?v. ?....?
in en t to the same bill I voted with the
democrats. Senator Tillman was the one
democrat voting with the republicans.
See Congressional Record, vol. 39, page
1577.
In the second session of the same congress
Senator Tillman and myself voted
together on 82 of 95 roll calls. One vote
on which we differed was on a motion to
adjourn intended to defeat a resolution
calling upon the President to intervene
in Cuba. Senator Tillman voted with the
Republicans to adjourn and the motion
prevailed b^ one vote. I voted with the
Democrats. The other votes on which
we differed were unimportant and not
pa rty questions,the parties dividing on all.
I favored the acceptance of theHawaiaan
Islands along with such Democrats as
Gorman, Kyle, Money, Morgan, Pettus,
and Sullivan, and he, with the other
democrats and some republicans were
opposed to it.
On page 4858, vol. 31 of the Record it
is shown that I voted with all the democrats
but three and all the republicans,
for a bill to provide for arbitration of disputes
between railway companies and
their employes. Senator Tillman was one
of the three against it. We also differed
on a bill prohibiting intoxicating liquors
to be sold in the territory of Alaska. I
favored and he opposed the prohibition.
Possibly he had views on a dispensary
and rebates there.
On a vote to recommit the conference
report on the River and Harbor bill I
voted for the recommitment with such
Democrats as Chilton, Hcitfeldt. Kenney,
Mills, Rawlins and Turner. lie voted
against with such republicans as Allison,
Burrows, Cullom, Davis, Elkins, Foraker,
Hale, Hawley, Lodge, Perkins, Piatt and
Quay. In the first session of the 5(>th
Congress Senator Tillman and I voted together
on G7out of 71 roll calls. In each
of the four cases which we differed the
parties were divided. The most notable
of these was on the admission of Senator
Quay. I voted for it with Senators
Daniel, Kenney, McEnerv, Morgan and
Taliaferro, democrats. He opposed with
most of the democrats and eleven republicans,
including Hanna, Piatt, Foraker,
Gallinger,*and Hale.
In the last session of the same congress
Senator Tillman and myself voted together
in most of the 57 votes taken. On a
resolution requiring the President to issue
in ten days a proclamation disclaiming
any purpose to exercise sovereignty over
the Phillippiues I voted "nay" with Foster,
Kyle, Lindsay, Morgan and Sullivan,
democrats. Senator Tillman was one of
22 favoring it. On an amendment deelar
ing that it was not the purpose of the
United States to exercise permanent control
over the Pliillippines Senator Tillman
with most of the democrats and Senator
Hoar, republican, voted "aye." I, with
Senators Foster and Lindsay, democrats,
voted "nay."
On the tiual passage of the army bill \vc
differed. I voted for it, and had \vith me
Senators Foster, Lindsay, Morgan, and
Sullivan. We voted together for amendments
extending the constitution of the
United States over the Pliillippines on
strict party lines.
TOGETHER OX IMPERIALISM.
On the question of governing our outlying
possessions he and I voted together,
and it is that determined the matter of
j imperialism, not the possession of the
| territory. I voted to take possession and
rule justly. He voted not to take possession
but to rule.
He and I voted together on all party
questions except those concerning the
Philippines, which my judgment, exercised
as a Senator and a representative! of
the people, tohl me was a question of foreign
relations, involving entirely new
problems and therefore not properly a
party question, and on which my political
judgment told me the country was practical!}'
united. The democratic party was
wrecked by being forced in this matter
into a policy opposed to its own traditions
and the overwhelming sentiment of the
country, against my protest and that of
other loyal democrats. Developments have
proved that those who maintained that
the pacification of these islands was impossible,
that the people would never accept
our control and that their retention
would be unprofitable and disastrous,
were wrong. I am ready to go before the
people of South Carolina and show them
the facts. Do you undertake to say that
I must resign and put myself out of my
party because I favored upholding the
dignity of the American flag after its
troops had been fired, and opposed a cowardly
abandonment of the people of these
islands to chaos ? Is the proposition to
punish ine because I did not believe
Aguinaldo to be the equal of George
Washington or concede that the Filipinos
A. A. Power, of Emporia, Kan" "My
neighlvor across the street was sick lor
over a week, had two or three bottles of
medicine from the doctor. lie used them
for three or four days without relief, then
called in another doctor who treated him
for some days and gave him no relief, so
discharged him. I went over to see him
the next morning. lie said his bowels
were in a terrible fix, that they had been
running off so long that it was almost
bloody flux. I asked him if lie had tried
Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea
Remedy and he said, 'No.' I went
home and brought him my bottle and gave
him one dose;told him totake anotherdose
in fifteen or twenty minutes if he did not
find relief, but he took no more and was
entirely cured." For sale by Bamberg
Pharmacy.
One Cause and Exceptions.
An Irish judge of the old school in a
recent summing up at the Four Courts,
Dublin, created a great effect. The plaintiff
was even more beautiful than her
beautiful daughter, who was a witness.
"Gentlemen of the jury," his lordship began,
"everything in this case seems plain
?except Mrs. O'Toole and her charming
daughter."?London Daily News.
Astounded The Editor.
Editor S. A. Brown, of Bcnnettsvillc,
S. C., was once immensely surprised.
1T1 _l. 1 "
1 lllUUi^n 9UUC1 nig uuiu \>J ?^iaf
he writes, "ray wife was great 1}' run down.
She had no strength or vigor and suffered
great distress from her stomach, hut
she tried Electric Bitters which helped
her at once, and, after using fourbottles,
she is entirely well, can eat anything. It's
a grand tonic, and its gentle laxative
qualities are splendid for torpid liver "
For indigestion, loss of appetite, stomach
and liver troubles it's a positive, guaranteed
cure. Only 50c. at Dr. and T. Black.
When a woman is dead sure that she
has a man she is never dead sure that she
wants him.
"Through the months of .Tune and July
our baby was teething and took a running
off of the bowels and sickness of the
stomach," says O. P. M. Ilolliday, of
Deming, Iiul. "Ilis bowels would move
from live to eight times a day. I had a
bottle of Ohaml>erlain's Colic. Cholera
and Diarrhoea Remedy in the house and
gave him four drops in a teasepoonful of
water and he got better at once." Sold by
Bamberg Pharmacy.
A WORTHY SUCCESSOR.
"Something New Under the Sun."
All doctors have tried to cure catarrh
by the use of powders, acid gases, inhalers
and drugs in paste form. Their
powders dry up the mucuous membranes
causing them to crack open and bleed.
The powerful acids used in the inhalers
have entirely eaten away the same membranes
that their makers have aimed to
cure, while pastes and ointments cannot .
reach the disease. An old and experienced
practitioner who has for many
years made a close study and specialty of
the treatment of catarrh, has at last perfected
a treatment which when faithfully
used, not only relieves at once, but perrnttiipntlv
I'lirps pjitnrrli hv rpmnvinc the
cause, stopping the discharges, and curing
all inflammation. It is the only remedy
known to science that actually
reaches the afflicted parts. Tins wonderful
remedy is known as "Snuffles the
Guaranteed Catarrh Cure" and is sold at
jthe extremely low price of one dollar,
each package containing internal and external
medicine sufficient for a full
month's treatment and everything necessary
to its perfect use.
"Snuffles" is the only perfect catarrh
aire ever made and is now recognized as
the only safe and positive cure for that
annoying and disgusting disease. It cures
all intlammation quickly and permanently,
and is also wonderfully quick to relieve
hay fever or cold in the head.
Catarrh when neglected often leads to
consumption?"Snuffles" will save you if
you use it at once. It is no ordinary
remedy, but a complete treatment which
is positively guaranteed to cure catarrh
in any form or stage if used according to
the directions which accompany each
package Don't delay but send for it at
once, and write full particulars as to your
condition, and you will receive special
advice from'the discoverer of this wonderful
remedy regarding your case with
out cost to you beyond the regular price
of "Snuffles" the "Guaranteed Catarrh
Cure."
Sent prepaid to any address in the
United Slates or Canada on receipt of
one dollar. Address Dept. C. 432, EDWIN
P>. GILES & CO., 2330 and 2332
Market Street, Philadclpliia.
Suicide of a Sumter Farmer.
Sumter, August 10.?W. H. Smith,
white, a farmer of the Oswego section of
this county, committed suicide this morning.
lie lived on Mr. li. P. Stackhouse's
place, and his body was lying across a path
leading through a corn field from his
house to that of Mr. Stackhouse, and
found by a negro farm hand. P?y the side
of the body was a doublebarrel shotgun,
which Mr. Smith had borrowed from Mr.
Stackhouse a few days ago. Both barrels
were empty, and there was a depression
by the side* of the path where the butt of
the gun rested when it was tired. The
right side of Mr. Smith's face and the entire
top of his head were blown off, and
his brain and pieces of the skull were
scattered around over a space twenty feet
in diameter. Just after day-light, a short
time before the body was found, the report
of the gun was heard by several persons
living on the place. The negro who
found the body ran immediately to Mr.
Stackhouse and informed him, and he
telegraphed Coroner Flowers. An inquest
was held this morning and a verdict
was rendered in accordance with the
facts. Mr. Smith has been melancholy
and despondent for some time on account
of the poor crop conditions and financial
troubles. He leaves a wife and three children.
THE HOME GOLD CURE.
An Ingenious Treatment by Which
Drnnkards are Keing Cured Daily in
Spite of Themselves. No Noxious
Doses. No Weakening of the Nerves.
A Pleasant and Positive Cure for the
Liquor Habit.
It is now generally known and understood
that drunkenness is a disease and
not weakness. A body filled with poison,
and nerves completely shattered by periodical
or constant use of intoxicating
liquors, requires an antidote capable of
neutralizing and eradicating this poison,
and destroying the craving for intoxicants.
Sufferers may now cure themselves
at home without publicity or loss
of time from business by this wonderful
"Home Gold Cure" which has been perfected
after manv years of close study
and inebriates. The faithful use according
to directions of this wonderful discovery
is positively guaranteed to cure
the most obstinate case, no matter bow
bard a drinker. Our records show the
marvelous transformation of thousands
of drunkards into sober, industrious and
upright men.
Wives cure your husbands!! Children
cure your fathers!! This remedy is in
no sense a nostrum but is a specific for
this disease only, and is so skillfully devised
and prepared that it is thoroughly
soluble and pleasant to the taste, so that
it can be given in a cup of tea or coffee
without the knowledge of the person
taking it. Thousands of drunkards have
cured themselves with this priceless remedy,
and as many more have l>een cured
and made temperate men by having the
"Cure" administered by loving friends
and relatives without their knowledge in
coffee or tea, and believe today that they
discontinued drinking of their own free
will. Do not wait. Do not be deluded
by apparent and misleading "improvement."
Drive out the disease at once
and for all time. The "Home Gold Cure"
is sold at the extremely low price of one
uoiKti, urns placing \> iinixi icauii ui
everybody a treatment more effectual
than others costing $2.") to $.">0. Full directions
accompany each package. Special
advice by skilled physicians when
requested without extra charge. Sent
prepaid to any part of the world on receipt
of one dollar. Address Dept. C 432,
EDWIN II. GILES A CO., 2330 and 2332
Market Street, Philadelphia.
All correspondence strictly confidential
Reflections of a Bachelor.
A girl who has never been kissed by a
man has never had any temptation to do
right.
Why is it that the time that women talk
the most baby talk is just the minute they
wake up?
For some reason when their stockings
and their garters don't match girls act as
j uncomfortable as if everybody knew it.
It's funny, but when a lot of wives get
to talking about clothes all the married
men look more scared than the unmarried
[ girls.?N. Y. Press.
"Blind Tom," the negro pianist, who
has so completely dropped out of hearing
that many have supposed him dead, has
now reappeared in concert. Tom is now
52 years old, and is still mentally the child
he was when his extraordinary imitative
faculty was first manifested. Since 1SS2
he has been under the most punctilious
care, in asylums and sanitariums, and
his custody has been a shuttlecock between
one and another attorney. The
present guardian is Albert Lerche.
The laws of health require that the
bowels move once each day and one of the
penalties for violating this law is piles.
Keep your bowels regular by taking a
dose of Chamberlain' Stomach and Liver
Tablets when necessary and you will
never have that severe punishment inflicted
upon you. Price, 25 cents. For sale
by Bamberg Pharmacy.
The ideal husband is the man who
hasn't got married yet.
Marrying a drunkard to reform him is
like frying fish to make beefsteak out of it.
Their Secret is Out.
* * Ml Ir ? 4. - 1
All JNiuieviue, ivy., was curious iu icarn i
the cause of I lie vast improvement in the
health of Mrs. S. 1*. Whittaker, who had '
for a long time, endured untold suffering
from a chronic bronchial trouble. ' It's all
due to I)r. King's New Discovery," writes
her husband. "It completely cured lier
and also cured our little grand-daughter of
a severe attack of whooping cough." It I
positively cures coughs, colds, la grippe,
bronchitis, all t hroat and lung troubles.
Guaranteed bottles 50c and $1.00. Trial
bottles free at Thos. audDr. J. 13. Black's.
could instantly and unguidcd organize
for themselves a stable government and a
high civilization ?
LET HIM DENY TniS RECORD.
I have been at some pains to show from
the records, by volume and page, that
where Senator Tillman and I differed in
congress it was not on party questions,
and that he voted with the republicans at
least as often as I did, and that in every
case where we divided I had with me
democrats who possess the confidence of
the party throughout the country and
whose democracy not even his reckless
and slanderous insolence dares to assail.
I could further and show other instances
in which he has voted against the
great majority of his party and even
against his own declarations?notably in
the Piatt amendment to the Cuban bill.
He had declared his purpose to oppose
and fight this to the last ditch, but he
voted for it. Some of his present newspaper
friends said at the time that he did
it to curry favor with the Charleston vote,
hoping to trade the exposition bill through
If that was the case, he was the shallow
victim of a political green goods game and
sold himself for sawdust. But I have said
enough, I think, to prove to you and to
the public that you?like many who have
risen and gone "before you?have permitted
yourselves to be made tools of by
Senator Tillmar., to promote his own base
and brutal ends and to protect him from a
struggle he fears to face, because he knows
th.it the tacts and arguments are an
against him. His hope is to keep those
facts and arguments from the people of
South Carolina.
Accept my condolence on the unhappy
and absurd situation into which this
would-be dictator has led you. You may
be assured that he will find- a crevice
through which to crawl, leaving you to
stand the fire when it becomes hot, and
that having used you he will cast you
aside like many he has formerly used.
I desire to proclaim to the world that
you do not represent the intelligence, the
tlemocracy or the people of South Carolina,
and to j'ou and Senator Tillman that
he has never been my master and shall
never be; that he shall not escape the
vengeance that must surely fall upon him
when the people have been piade to understand
his motives, his methods, his debased
haracter, and his shameful record.
To that grand conservator of free government,
the reserved patriotism and common
sense of the people, I make appeal,
against partisan intolerance and tyranny.
Yerj' respectfully,
Jxo. Lowndes McLauktn.
A Minister's Good Work.
"I had a very severe attack of bilious
colic, got a bottle of Chamberlain's Colic,
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, took two
doses and was entirely cured." savs Rev.
" " " ": '- :'f"* '^Xrv5^' ''^Sv.'
CARLISLE FITTING SCHOOL
Of Wofford College at Bamberg.
Offers a thorough course in preparatory work for College to young men and young
women.
A Boys' Boarding Home under control of Head Master.
A Girls' Boarding Home under control of Lady Assistant Teacher.
A well selected Library, two Literary Societies, a Gymnasium, etc.
A Department of Instrumental Music.
$109 pays all expenses for entire year.
SESSIONS BEGINS SEPTEMBER 24, 1901.
Write for a Catalogue.
H. G. SHERIDAN, Head Master,
BAMBERG, S. C.
J. P. ALLEN, President. C. B. ADDISON, Vice-President. D. B. KENDRICK. Cashier.
The Bank of Brunson,
BRUXSOy South Carolina.
Board of Directors?D. F. MOORE, JR., DR. J. L. FOLK, M. F. BRA.BIIAM,
G. W. CONE, W. D. BARNES.
Transacts a general banking and exchange business. Equipped with latest improved
lire and burglar proof vaults, with time locks, insuring everv protection that
modern ingenuity and science can devise. Accounts of firms, individuals and corporations
solicited. All business entrusted to us will receive prompt and careful
attention, and every facility and accommodation consistent with sound banking principles
will be extended to patrons.
A SAVINGS DEPARTMENT
will be operated in connection with the Bank, and interest will be allowed on time
deposits. Especial attention will be given those not accnslomed to transacting a
banking business. A cordial invitation is extended the public to visit us whether
bent on business or not. We shall be glad to greet you.
t nni iniinn
muin Drtuonco
going at a special low price this week. A large
invoice bought below the regular market price
will be sold accordingly.
Pure Drugs & Medicines.
There comes a satisfaction from using the best,
The general public is being educated through experience
to recognize the importance of dealing
with competent pharmacists and not grocerymen
when medicine is needed in their families.
A. C. REYNOLDS,
EHRIIARDT DRUGGIST.
getthebestT^
You want the best flour and the largest of A ArK-4
yield for your wheat. This is precisely W
Fifty Barrels Capacity a Day
new crop, and I guarantee satisfaction or
return you pound lor pound the wheat DDTUflTUfl TM
you brought MMM ifl
WHAT I WILL DO.
A mmj ODGAIJCG
If you prefer to ship your grain to Cope, llln j\[l R A I Rll
mark your sacks plainly, prepay freight,
and I will haul your grain from the depot from early morn to dewy eve
and return it when ground into flour, ....
without any other cost than the regular agency for
toll at the mill?provided the shipment is llie celebrated
not less than thirty bushels. Two or more ..
Dniu'enii" iTTnnur
KUUM run MAN ANU DtAol. ..
In case any distant customer should UQP|l|j|fjPy
have to remain over night, I have quarters illuUllllIUl J ( unian
for the man and stables for his team.
I am now prepared to sell vou on
cad CYPHAMfiF easy terms self-binding Wheat
run HAUnMMUt Harvesters, Mowers, and Rakes.
I will exchange flour for good beef cat- You have always heard that Deertic.
Bring your wheat and have it made ing Implements were the best;
into first-class patent flour. now let me prove it to you or give
up your money. I won't have it
JO TT#*<ixrv*rirrLr unless you rather have the ma
t>. 1 ray WICK, chine. As to our
:r.i: caiiige mm
Would say I do not deem it necPBflMiJ
U nnvTll'V essary to say more than remind
JtiLi WLLli. UrLLJuLU. W tiUuilvtia you that I am doing business at
" "" 7 " * 7 same old stand, opposite Bamberg
, _ . Cotton Mills. I am here to stay,
Attorneys and Counselors don't forget rae when y0a need
' the services of the carriage man.
BAMBERG C. H? S. C. Gmteful.y yours, |
General practice; special attention l>e- D.J.DELK. I
ing given to corporation law and the examination
of titles. _________________________________
FOR SALE. I??-????
One ten horse power engine; one fifty ff?n- ffaJ 11* fAlAai
saw gin; condenser and press. All in flayE yflU Xly^rQ Luc ilulEttL
good shape. Will sell cheap for cash or m *?? ?
011 reasonable terms. J. A. SPANN, H7IIAT TO TT
Bamberg S. C. W11AI ID 11.
q D t jn \/ Terrible Hot Wave Comiag our Way.
* ? ** * * 9 WELL, LET 'ER COMEFIRE,
THE BON-TON FOUNT
HiIF?] Keep Things Cool.
ACCIDENT Ail the latest and most popular
a mT/NTI <lrinks at the B?NTON, and
5 I 1 S ^ \ \ ( II served in a way that will tickle
A -L Y ^ AiiA-1" V7 M-J the palate of the most fastidious.
BAMBERG, S. C. ( AT OUR PHARMACY
can be found at all times the
Newberry College. articles, fancy Stationery, choice I
cigars, and a well selected stock
Commodious buildings; pure water. Pure> fresh drugs, paints, oils.
^ Three courses for degrees, with elec- 0ar Pre8Cpiptioi| Department
Good library; working laboratory. is in the hands of a thoroughly
Efficient preparatory department. competent and reliable FharmaBoard,
tuition, anil all fees per year I cjst.
need not exceed $100in collegiate department;
$00 in preparatory department. PURITY AND ACCURACY
Next session begins October 2d. For OUR MOTTO
catalogue address
GEO. B. CROMER, We hare a nice line of spectacles
President, Newberry, S. C. and eye glasses, spectacle frames
and lenses. ^ Dr. B. D. Bronson,
MB FJi&M,
CAN SEE
because I bought Zifatitipnd/ GUARANTEED I
'1 _? UXDKl A
my I $5,000 DEPOSIT
J ? a '/^nhnfw ? " fme paid .
Spectacles ftfja
L ?ILiLJIH Write quick to
U.-ALA. BuatME?8COH.EQt.Haoon.C?
^ Dr- H- w- BLACK,
T C jROIJIS
V* Will be at EHRHART from TUESDAY
- _ _ _ d*u a n to SATURDAY after the second HonR.
R? Ave?, Bamberg, S. 0? J day in each month.
. .
- - ' .. . : -;; y ?i:: -Vs.
"r : " %
staH iirjJit Mvar.
Capital City Route."
Shortest line between all principal cities
North, East, Sonth, and West. Unequaled
schedules to Pan American Exposition
at Buffalo. Schedules in effect May 26th,
1901.
NORTHWARD.
Daily Daily
No. 06 No. 34
Lv Savannah c t .. 11 45 p m 2 10pm
Lv Fairfax 134am 3 58pm
Lv Denmark ..*... 215am 4 39pm
Lv Columbia et... 4 40am 7 12 pm
Lv Camden 5 37 a m 8 06 p m
Lv Cheraw 7 12 a m 9 43 p m
Ar Harriet 7 40 a m 10 15 p m
Lv Calhoun Falls .100am 4 11pm
Lv Abbeville 133am 4 38pm
Lv Greenwood 2 01 a m 5 01 p m
Lv Clinton 2 55am 5 47 pm
Lv Carlisle 3 43 am 6 33pm
Lv Chester 4 10 am 703pm
Lv Catawba Jet.... 445am 735pm
Ar Hamlet 710am 10 10 p m
Lv Hamlet 8 00am 10 85 p xa.
Ar Raleigh 10 37am 124am
Ar Petersburg 2 45pm 5 48am
Ar Richmond 3 28pm 6 29am
Ar Washington 7 05 p m 10 10 a m
Ar Baltimore ......11 26 p m 11 25 a m
Ar Philadelphia 2 56am 136pm
Ar New York .... 6 30 a m 4 25 p m
SOUTHWARD.
Daily Daily
No. 31 No. 27
Lv Cheraw, et 7 48am 1118 pm
Lv Camden 9 25am 12 53am ,
Lv Columbia, ct .... 9 40am 105am *
Lv Denmark 1109am 2 27am
Lv Fairfax 1154 am 8 05am
Ar Savannah 147 pm 458am
Ar Jacksonville... 6 10 p m 9 15 a m .';
Ar Tampa 615 am 5 40pm
Lv Catawba, e t 9 45 a m 1 05 a m
Lv Chester 10 30 am 143am
LvCarlisle 10 47am 305am
Lv Clinton 1137am 3 55am
Lv Greenwood 13 33pm 346am ,
Lv Abbeville 13 48 p m 4 15 a m '/.?
Lv Calhoun Falls.. 1 15 p m 4 48am
Ar Athens 3 40 pm 6 38 am \
Ar Atlanta '? 4 55pm 9 00am
No. 66 connects at Washington with . / j?
the Pennsylvania Railway Buffalo. Ex*
press, arriving Buffalo 7.35 a m.
Columbia, Newberry & Laurens Ry.
train No. 53, leaving Columbia, Union
Station, at 11.33 a. m. daily, connects at # A
Clinton with S. A. L. Ry., No. 53, afford*
ing shortest and quickest route by several
hours to Atlanta, Chattanooga, Nashville, .
St. Louis, Chicago, and all points west. y: Close
connection at Petersburg, Rich- z)r.:
' mond, Washington, Portsmouth-Norfolk,
l Columbia, Savannah, Jacksonville, ana ~
Atlanta with diverging lines. ,
Magnificent vestibule trains carrying
through Pullman sleeping cars between
all principal points.
For reduced rates, Pullman reserva- ^ y ^
tions, etc., apply to ~
Wjc. Butleb Jb., D. P. A.,
Savannah, Ga.
1 J. M. Babe, R. ?. L. Bunch,
IstY.P.&G. M., T.P.A.,
Portsmouth, Va.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY. |S|
Ah .'yjsm
<HV
Condensed Sohednle in Effect July 1,190L /.'
N55TNO.W I No. 'MM
Daily Daily Daily Dafly^ -MM
620p 7 00a Lr... Charleston.. .Ar 1115a 780p Jj^ji
?Q6p 741a ."..Summerville.. " lO&la 542p ^
7?p 8fiSa ? ...Branchvtlle... 44 900a 51$ 810p{
928a 44 ...Orangeburg... 44 881* 45$ .^r
908p 1084a 44 ....Kingvffle....44 745* 846p
1145a Ar .Sumter Lv 880f .
1125a 44 Camden Lv .| 554F
9 SOp 1100a Ar... Columbia.....Lv 70Qai 400p .\
*520p TOOajLv...Charleston ...Aril 18aj 780p I
f 25p 915a 44 .. .Branchville... - 8?2 515p " ?Sg|
805p 940aj 44.... Bamberg .... 44 827a| 4fi0p P
81Tp 958a 44 ? Denmark? 44 8 lSaj 488p ^ ;
??5p lOloJ 44 ....Blackville.....44 800af 418p *
988p 11 tOal 44 . ... ...Aiken.44 7 06a| 8Up ; S
lfl80p liaOajAr. Augusta and Lr44 520a' 380p
" NOTE: 'in addition to the above service :trainsNos.
15 and 16 ran daily between diarieston
and Columbia, carrying elegant Pullman -iM
sleeping oars. No. 15 leave Charleston 1140 p. ^ '
m.:arrive Aaheville 240 p. m. Na 15 leave . ?.$*
Columbia 148 a. m.; arrive Charleston 740 a. 4
m. Sleeping ears ready for occupancy at 945 ; >
p. m. both at Charleston and Columbia. These
trains make close connections at Oolombia ^ ^
with through trains between Florida points .
and Washington and the east. Trains Nos. If - Vi
and 14 oarryElegant Pullman-Parlor Cars be- ; >
tween Charleston, Snmmervillfl and Ashevilln. .. $
" EjT. Sun. Ex.
Sun. only Son.
Lv. Augusta 700a 980a 62ta
Ar. banderaville 100pl250p 848p --WM44
Tennllle lag lOOp 8lti?jsapM
frrTwnnlllo..... 580S 85D|? 8Up;;5S
44 Sanderaville 5W850p, itt.pH
Ar. Augusta., 9oSj T10p| 85% |j
Daily Daily
Lv. Savannah. 1280s 1225p .....i.
44 Allendale 840a fffpllttp
u?mw?n 418a 8Mp1885p: ^^S
- . |4 2sa|#t?pj
Ar. Bateeborg 800p .
Ar. Columbia. fl 15a 06Op ......
Daily Daily jg*," -;.'
Lr. Columbia ....1140a 110a
Lv.Batesburg 680a , r
Ar.Blackvllle - I?p 252aH)8ua ^
? Barnwell 1& 807a 1140a '
M Allendale 200& 840a 1200m
? Savannah.... 805p 4fi0al..... x;^|j
Atlantn and Beyond.
Lt.Charleston. ?00al 620p}...'.~
Ar. Augusta U50aM80p
M Atlinta 880p ?003
Lv. Atlanta. 1100p 5 53 5lie 'M
Ar. Chattanooga 5 4&a| 0 45a{lOOt^>
Lt. Atlanta. 000a 416p .
Ar. Birminghm lSn'n lOOOp
*' Memphis,(viaBir'mgam) .v... 806p TUa . ; ? ^
Ar. Lexington '.... 606p 800a .
" Cincinnati.* 7o0p 7 48a
" Chicago... 7 L5a 680p
- MiMMW ' ' ' -f ^ ' ' M
Ar. Louisville 760p 840a .
" St. Louis.. 782a ?Wp
: ZZ t,
Ar. Memphis. (viaChatt)? 7 jOp 810a. '* :
To AshevUle-Clnoinnati-LonlaTlTISi
^ASTEMi TIM*.
*Tf.
Lv.Augusta. BWp 9?p
" Batesburg 486pl?ff? ,
Lv. Charleston ! 70Qa il5p
Lv.'whinbia (Union Depot) 1180a |20a ^
Ar. Spartanburg 8l0pl026a
" Asheville ... 7lS> 200p
M KnoxvHle. 418a 7 Up
M QnolnnnatL 780p 8 Ma ' - '>>
- Louisville (via Jellipo) 860a.
- ST . V?. i.%
To Waahiugtos and tha East.
" Colombia. SfiSo 81|a
Ar. Charlotte. POOp 04m
Ar. Danville ;. JJTHa Igjp
At. Bichmond ouuaj szop
As.Washington. t35a firip
u Baltimore Pa. R. R 0 lih 11 Sp
" Philadelphia. 1188a ffife ?
" Now York. 8Q8p)8iaa
81eeplng Oar Line between Charleetoa and
Atlanta, via Augusta, making connections at
Atlanta for all points Worth and West.
Connections at Columbia with through trains ^
for Washington and the East; also for Jacksonville
and all Florida Points.
FRANK 8. GANNON; J.M.CULP, " .S.;U
ThhrdV-P.A?en.Mgr. T.M..Washington.
BOBT, W. HUNT, *
w*S&!&fa.a A
B.H.HABDWICK, W.H. TAYLOR,
fiLP A-. W*?hington A. G. P. A.,Amgj%
STILL AT IT. ||
WHAT? SELLING
TOMBSTONES, MONUMENTS,
and anything needed for a cemetery
for the old reliable house .
Son lb tarouna iriaroie iar?,
COLUMBIA, 9. C. -i- ' ' -"4?^
F. H. HYATT, Proprietor.
. >
W. 91. CADTHE9T. Agent. ;
BAMBERG, S. C.
Will visit your homes with full lines of
designs. Prices right < :
. ' , ?>>U ''