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The Bamberg Herald. ESTABLISHED MAY 1st, 1891. A. W. KXIGHT, Editor. Rates?$i.oo per year; 50 cents for six months. Payable in advance. Advertisements?$1.00 per inch for first insertion; 50c. for each subsequent insertion. Liberal contracts made foi three, six, or twelve months. Want Notices one cent a word each insertion. Local Notices Sc. per line first week, 5c. afterwards. Tributes of Respect, etc., must be paid for as regular advertising. Communications?News letters or on a subjects of general interest will be gladly welcomed. Those of a personal nature will not oe puonsnea unless paiu ior. Thursday, February 13,1902. F. M. Player, the defaulting dispenser at Kingstree, has been pardoned by Governor McSweeney. A strong petition was presented, asking for the pardon, but we cannot commend the governor in this instance. As this is campaign year, there is a lot of playing for political position in the legislature these days. Biennial sessions of this body would be a good thing for the State and the people, and if the question ever comes before the people of the State, they will decide for biennial sessions. And they will be wise in so doing. The annual sessions now cost a lot of money for which the people of the State do not feceive a particle of benefit. There is much dissatisfaction expressed at the redisricting bill recently passed by the house of representatives, and if the measure ever becomes a law it is likely to be much amended. For our part, if we were going to suggest the formation or change of the Second Congressional district, we should say it should be composed of the counties of Bamberg, Orangeburg, Colleton, Barnwell and Hampton. This would give us a compact district. kV It is said that the county of Bamberg is about eleven thousand dollars in debt. This is a pointer for those who live in the territory embraced in the proposed county of Allendale. The only way to get Bamberg out of the hole is to double-tax her citizens.?Barnwell Sentinel. Our contemporary has the figures wrong. We are not eleven thousand dollars in debt. We are behind about six ? thousand dollars, but it is bad enough, Peven at that. Verily, smaller counties do not reduce expenses. Senator McLaurin writes that he will do all that he can for our public building. This is good news. We believe that he can do much and we had expected him to *-v.- da what he could, but are nevertheless most highly gratified to know that he will not disappoint us. This public building was really his conception. His pride in his own work will prompt him to make an effort to see it crowned with success. Senator McLaurin is a valuable friend at court. He will find that his efforts in Florence's behalf will be appreciated here and throughout this section of the state. ?Florence Times. The Florence Times has in the past said some of the hardest things about Senator McLaurin of any newspaper in the State. Now that it needs his services its tune is changed. Verily, there is nothing like an appropriation for reaching the minds of men?and newspapers. Sensational Story Abont Warren. Bartow Warren, a fugitive from justice on two charges of train robbery and one of murder, and for whom there is a reward of $1,000 offered by the State of South Carolina, if he is taken alive, has been found. Since the express robbery near Bran chville some time a<ro, people have been on the lookout for W arren, but no definite trace could be gotten of him. A railroad conductor coming into V Augusta this afternoon stated to a Herald reporter that the people of Yemassee are considerably excited and all the talk of the little settlement is of a visit the outlaw paid that place this morning. Early this morning, shortly after the two or three stores of the place had been opened the people collected around them noticed a man coming up the railroad track rather shabbily dressed and with a brace of pistols buckled on the outside of his coat. When the man got near enough to be recognized and his back was seen it was noticed that he had a piece of paper pinned on his back on which was written: "I am Bartow Warren. If you want me take me." Warren is well known to many people around Yemassee, and it is said that he knows the woods and swamps in that part of the country as well as he does the home in which he was raised. Very unconcernedly he walked directly to the sore of Mr. Pinkney, on the right side of the railroad going down, went in and stood against the counter for a short time with a hand on each of the pistols while standing in the store, talked with the proprietor for a few minutes and then went away. The reward offered for the criminal states that he must be taken and turned over to the state alive and knowing the desperate character of the man no one seemed to care to run the risk of being killed for the sake of the reward, and it is further known that Warren will never be ? taken alive unless taken while asleep. * The people of Yemassee believe that Warren has some friend in that section who knows his hiding place and has been supply^pg him with food.?Augusta Herald. Burglary in Lees We are informed that on Saturday night, about 2 p. ra., the store of R. B. Gilliam, general merchant, at Lees, S. C., was burglarized and the safe blown open. Just before the burglar finished his work, however, a late home-comer discovered that something was amiss in the Gilliam store. He ran over to the residence of Mr. Gilliam, which was nearby, awakened him, and one or two other neighbors, and returned to the store. When the store was surrounded the burglar was called upon to surrender. He answered this demand with a volley of shots. None of them took effect, though some of the besieging party had narrow escapes. After several exchanges of shots the burglar made a dash to the rear door of the store, where Mr. Gilliam was stationed. As soon as he put his head out for a survey of the field, Mr. Gilliam fired. The agonizing cry that followed the shot showed it had taken effect. The burglar yelled that he was dying and was willing to surrender. Not knowing how many intruders were in the store or'if the burglar's cry of pain was real, Mr. Gilliam shouted to him to throw his weapons outside the door and ? .? come out. This the burglar quickly did. He was soon taken in custody, when it was found that his left eye was shot out and the left side of his face was terribly lacerated. A physician was summoned and the man's wounds dressed. Later he was sent to Bamberg, S. C., and confined in the jail at that place. The burglar proved to be a young man of good appearance, being well dressed and possessing an air of refinement. Upon being questioned he stated that his name was Wilson and that he was from Knoxville, Tenn. While his wounds are severe and painful, there is no probability of the young man dying.?Augusta Chronicle. There is only a few days more in which to make your tax returns. . J"- . - 'OLD FAMILIES OF VENICE. Their Fortune* Are Dianipated and Their Palaces Sold. Very few of the fine old palaces of Venice belong to the descendants of the families who built and originally occupied them. Very little of the enormous wealth for which Venice was celebrated In the fifteenth century remains. The most of It has been dissipated by the descendants of the men who made it, the same as in England, France ami other countries. The rich men of Venice today are an entirely new class of people, whose names do not appear in the Golden Book, which contained a list of the patrician families in Venice who were invited to festivities at the palace. This book was instituted in 1315 and thenceforth until the Austrian occupation was the index and standard of nobility by which all claims to precedence were decided. Occasionally the grand council, by a vote, rewarded the gallantry or public services of some citizen of humble birth by directing that his name be inscribed upon its pages. None but those whose names were in the Golden Book could use the golden stairs when they entered a doge's palace, and when this right was conferred it was equivalent to an order of nobility in another country. There is one notable exception to the decay of the ancient families, and he Is Count Grimani, who traces his lineage back to one of the most famous of the doges, whose portrait, painted by Titian, hangs in the council chamber of the doge's palace. The Grimani palace is 011 the Grand canal, near the Rialto bridge, and Is celebrated for its finely sculptured capitals. Many of the rich men in Venice today are Jews. They practically control the banking business and manufacturing. They own the fine houses of historical interest and the best paying estates on the mainland In the neighborhood. The present wealth of Venice is invested not so much in real estate as in banking, manufacturing, flour mills, elevators, gas companies, cotton mills, the manufacture of glass and in steamships upon the Adriatic.?Chicago Herald. MARRIAGE IN ARABIA. Tke Wedding: Procession an Elaborate and Noisy Affair. A marriage procession among the Arabs is a very elaborate affair. The camel "which bears the bride is decorated with bright henna dye on his neck and shoulders, while there are verses from the Koran inscribed on the hangings. His uncouth legs are often swathed with bright cloths, his head bedecked with plumes and small mirrors, while his back is resplendent with bright colored bits of tinsel, which glisten against a patchwork of many hued cloths. A hood or cage conceals the bride, and no doubt adds to the discomfort of the cramped ride on the beast. There are attendants, and last of all the musicians, chiefly drummers, who attract the crowds by their incessant pounding on small but high keyed instruments. If the Journey to the groom's home is a short one, it is lengthened by stops at frequent intervals, and all the while the lover must not show any eagerness * ? nn motfor TT-llO + Vlfm IU YY CIW11JC uu, uu ujubvw. Tiuuv feelings may be. The Arab may be affectionate, but he cannot with dignity betray emotion. Among the lower classes buffoons accompany the procession with performing bears or other wild animals, and when the bride is wealthy largess is distributed along the route in the form of clothes or coin. When the groom's tent or fixed home has been reached, the bride is expected to show great reluctance about entering it, and In some cases she has to be lifted by the husband over the blood of a sheep he has Just slain.?Woman's Home Companion. A Magniflcent Vessel. In 268 B. C., Archimedes devised a marvelous ship for Hiero of Syracuse. Her three lofty masts had been brought from Britain, whereas "our ships' masts are of iron or obtained from New Zealand or from Vancouver island. Luxuriously fitted sleeping apartments abounded, and one of her banqueting halls was paved with agate and costly Sicilian stone. Other floors were cunningly inlaid with scenes from the "Iliad." Stables for many horses, ponds stocked with live fish, gardens watered by artificial rivulets and hot Ko+Vio ttoi-o fnr iis#> or amuse k/u nviv V ? ^- ? ? ment.?Chambers' Journal. Longevity* The span of life is gradually expanding. We live longer and get more out of it than our grandfathers did. Whether the cause of this is a better knowledge of natural law or more skillful surgery we will not undertake to say. At any rate, people think this a pretty good world to live in aud want to stay here as long as they can comfortably. The man with 100 birth anniversaries behind him is not such a remarkable fellow after all.?New York Herald. Came Fop Grievance. "When you refused me, you promised always to be my friend, and now you are as cold as an iceberg." "But I didn't think you were going to stop proposing."?Life. His Cigar Lighter. Wigg-I saw Skinnum light a cigar with a twenty dollar bill. Wagg?I'll bet it wasn't receipted.? Philadelphia Record. When you get tired of work, you will realize that you have reached the time of life when you have no place tc play.?Atchison Globe. Don't think for a moment that you " ? ***-x_ XI ~ ~ ln 4 L. nave met an tne ltliois mere ure IU im world.?Chicago News. To Core a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets All druggists refund money if it fails tc cure. E. W. Grove's signature is 01 each box. 2oc. "Yes, sub," said the old colored broth er, "de col' weather is sho' bad enough but dey's dis consolation: De gooi Lawd'll soon sen' Springtime en de year thquake chills, en de broke-bone fever!" "Yes," said the rural matron, "I'm sun now that Spring ain't fur oil", fer yandei comes yer daddy an' two mortgages* on tin old blind mule!" The Best Prescription for Malaria Chills and fever is a bottle of Grove': Tasteless Chili i onic. 11 is simpiy hoi ami quipine in a tasteless form, iso cure no pay, Price 50c. A south Florida editor writes: "Ilere in the month of February, the weather i: so warm we could cook eggs in the sunif we only had 'em!" Working Overtime. Eight hour laws are ignored by thos< tireless, little workers?Dr. King's Nev Life Pills. Millions are always at work night and day, curing indigestion, bilious ness, constipation, sick headache and al stomach, liver and bowel troubles. Easy pleasant, safe, sure. Only 20c at Thos Black aud J. B. Black. The Love Story of George Eliot. The world has always judged pretty harshly the union of George Eliot and George Ilenry Lewes; not for itself, but for its intluence upon others. The early life of George Eliot and the nature of her intimacy with Mr. Lewes and the strong personality of each are feelingly discussed in the March Delineator bv Clara E. Laugh 1 in in her series oil Authors' Loves. Certainly George Eliot's four and twenty years of life with Lewes were idyllic, full of earnest purpose and unremitting labor and crowned with a perfection of mutual understanding and helpfulness. Mr. Lewes first encouraged her to write fiction and her success proved his wisdom; her novels bear ample testimony to this. The article is accompanied by some rare illustrations. Refused Bribe of 8100,000. Washington, Jan. 24.?James Alman, who once refused a bribe of $100,000 to put poison in cream, which he served to Abraham Lincoln, is dead in this city. He was a well-known and respected citizen. For manv vears he guarded care l'?ll}r the fact that he was in any way mixed up with any plot or attempt on the life of President Lincoln, aud only a few friends knew of the affair. Some months, ago however, he made the following statement: "I knew and loved Mr. Lincoln, and thought at first that the offer of $100,000 to poison him was a joke. At that time I was running a dairy where the bureau of engraving and printing now is, and my family occupied a house which was torn down when the property was bought for its present purposes. Among my regular customers were President Lincoln, Secretary Stanton and many other gentleman in official life. It was his habit in the early spring to walk over in the morning to Secretary Stanton's and take a cup of coffee with him, while they discussed public matters. He generally went to the Secretary's about 5 or 6 o'clock, and sometimes earlier than that. I had received instructions from the Secretary's family to be sure to get around early in the morning and leave cream for the President's coffee. "One morning in the early part of April ?not two weeks before the President was assassinated?I was driving along in my wagon, when two men stopped me, and one of them asked if I didn't want to make AiAAAAA ?ni1 Aniolr T rnol tt ^ur f 1W,VW CrtJJ U11U VJUl^a. x CIV/uivvi^ ouv it what to say, but I told them that I guessed that I did, if it could be done on the level. Well, he then asked me if I could keep a secret, and I told him that I thought that I could. Then he got right close up to me, leaning over the side of the wagon, and said: "Well, my man, here's $100,000 in good money. Every cent of it is yours if you will take this little box of powder and put j it in the cream you serve to President Lincoln this morning. Pour out the cream in the measure and put this powder in it. Nobody will ever suspect anything and the money is yours." "He showed me a tremendous big roll of money, and it looked mighty nice, but I didn't want any of that kind. If it had been as large as the treasury building it would not have tempted me."?Philadelphia Ledger. Yon Know What You Are Taking When you take Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic because the formula is plainly printed on every bottle showing that it is simply iron and quinine in a tasteless form. No cure, no pay. Price 50c. There are many great exhibits at the South Carolina Inter-state and West Indian Exposition, there are many marvelous things. There are sights, sounds and sensations to suit every shade of human taste; profound things for the profound, artistic things for the artistic and morals a-plenty for the moralists. But if one is looking simply for a good time, for pure unadulterated fun, it can be had in the Beautiful Orient on the Midway and in big bunches. Here indeed is the home of hilarity and the street of folly. Mirth and merriment reign supreme. At a step one finds one's self in the midst of a mass of narrow, winding streets flanked with quaint, looking market stalls, stately mosques, solemn temples and graceful minarets, all clothed in the gorgeous colors so dear to the Eastern heart. On ever}' hand arises a babel of strange sounds; the din of drums, the falsette squeak of queer reed instruments, the droning chant of moslein prayers, the hoarse shouts of camel drivers, the shrill cries of hawkers vending their wares, the grunting of camels, the braying of diminutive donkeys, the trumpeting of elephants; a medley of wild, weird music and the jargon of many tongues. For here is a motley and polyglot throng of many peoples and of myriad languages. The turbaned Turk strides abreast the skirted Greek; the white shrouded Algeri an rubs elbows with the swarthy sneiK from the plains of Araby; the natty and bejeweled Persian doffs his fez to the ebony skinned belle of Ethiopia, while the stranger is jostled by a motley crew of Armenians, Albanians, Soudanese, Abyssinians and a host of others all dressed in their national costumes and pursuing their accustomed occupations with all the noise and confusion of the land of Allah, Mahomet and Buddah. A hustling, bustling, jostling throng arrayed in all the picturesque splendor of the Far East. Muleteers and musicians, camel drivers and contortionists, swordsmen and singing girls, dancers and dervishes, tumblers and tradesmen, jugglers and janizaries, houris and hawkers, acrobats and artisans, a shouting, singing, rollicking and good-natured crowd as one may wish to see. And how the sight-seeing and fun loving American crowds enjoy it! Yonder go a blushing bride and dashing groom spending a brief moment of their honeymoon on the swaying, lurching back of a camel; there a staid and steady old banker is being jolted along the Streets of Cairo on an equally sagacious donkey; here a motherly looking matron is seen clambering to the broad back of a kneeling elephant; old and young of both sexes and all stations catch the inflection of the moment and join in the jollity of the occasion. Busy politicians forget their plots and plans of party and faction to jounce up and down on the vertebrae of an Algerian ass; overworked business men torget tneircares m a camei riueanu laugh themselves red and reckless as they roll and pitch on the hurricane dock of this ambling "ship of the desert"; thoughtless students forsake their books and revel I in the delights of the Oriental theatre and i grizzled veterans share with roystering , youths their admiration of the grace and beauty of the dancing girls or the gruesome thrills evoked by the grotesque torture dance. i i i "And I Don't See Why He Lived." From Fairfax, \V. Va., says the New York Post, there comes to the American Casualty Insurance Company the following very self-explanatory epistle: | "Gentlemen : I found Charles A. Wil( lis on the hands of the Phoenix Bridge Company who was working on the Pigeon Bridge 011 the 20th day of November, 189*3, Friday at 12 o'clock a. m., fell un. conscious from the top of said Bridge I which is ;;*) feet from where he started to where he lit. And his injuries was caus ed by stopping too suuent. lie nau nem, horrhage of the stomach and injury to the p whole vertebra which produced nervous j disorder of his whole system. I treated him ten days and I don't sec why he lived, he is alive and in a good way of recovery from his injuries. Time will bring him < as good as he was before the accident, j "Yours respect full}', 4 i ______ "Surgeon Phoenix Bridge Co." Had To Conquer Or Die. i "I was just about gone," writes Mrs. - Rosa Richardson, of Laurel Springs, N. C., "J had consumption so bad that the doctors said I could not live more than a month, but I began to use Dr. King's New ? Discovery and was wholly cured by sr, en j bottles and am now stout and well." It's , an unrivaled life-saver in consumption, - pneumonia, lagrippe and bronchitis; in1 fallible for coughs, colds, asthma, hay fe, ver, croup or whooping cough. Guaran. teed bottles 50c and $1.00. Trial bottles free at Thos. Black and J. B. Black. HINTS NATURE GIVES SYMPTOMS THAT SHOULD WARN MEN OF COMING SICKNESS. The Significance of Sneering, Yawning and Recurring "Winter Cold*. The Meaning of Dine Hands?Apoplexy's Warning Signals. Nature scarce ever strikes without .Warning. In so far as disease is concerned it gives clear signs of what is Impending days, weeks, months and even years before the attack. If people looked for these signs and took warn lng rrom uiern, tney wouiu escape much serious Illness and live many years longer than they do. It is indeed remarkable how careless we are in this respect. A man who will anxiously scan the sky for signs of coming rain lest his top hat may get spoiled will never dream of examining his eyes, nose or finger nails for signs of coming illness. The sneeze, for instance, is very significant It is always a sign that something is injuring the air passages anywhere from the nose down to the lungs. Should it be only a case of snuff or pepper, of course the sneeze is of no consequence. But often it is an indication of congestion. There is inflammation somewhere, with too much blood, and the object of the sneeze is to give relief by getting rid of some of the fluid. This sneeze is a warning that every prudent person should attend to. It is at least the forerunner of a cold. But it may indicate an approaching attack of bronchitis or pneumonia. When there is much sneezing, accompanied by something like a small shower of rain, the victim will do well to take a warm footbath, go to bed and adopt the other usual remedies to cure a cold. The winter cold itself is a grave warning. When it recurs two or three times every winter, it is sure to be followed in the end by chronic bronchitis. Once this comes on it is practically Incurable. Men are started on their lives much as a shell from a cannon?with a certain fixed quantity of energy. If disease or accident does not carry them off, they will die some time of what we call old age?in other words, when the energy with which they started is spent Some have energy enough to carry them over tne run century; oiuers have only sufficient to keep them going for ninety, eighty, seventy, sixty or fewer years. Now, early baldness Is a sure sign, with some exceptions, that the energy Is likely to fail sooner than In the average man. But all kinds of baldness have not this significance. Sometimes the loss of hair arises from scalp disease caused probably by microbes. The warning baldness Is that kind which commences about the temples and on the crovrn of the head and gradually eats its way over the scalp until only a circular fringe of hair Is left. Blue nails, or blue hands, betoken weak or obstructed circulation. They are a warning against overexertion of any kind. The obstruction may occur from disorder of several organs In the body. But most commonly the blueness Indicates that the heart Is not up to the mark. Yawning is a somewhat similar warning. It is a sign that the steam has run down and that it is time to go to bed or perhaps to go Into the open air. When you sit in a close room, the lungs do not receive sufficient of the vital gas, oxygen. The yawn Is then a desperate effort of the lungs to properly aerate the blood, and it warns you to open the -windows or to leave the room. When you are out of bed too long or when you have done an unusually hard day's work, the waste products of your body are present in excessive quantity. Then the yawn is a warning to you to lie down and rest Most people have a great horror of getting a "stroke" or fit of apoplexy. It is not by any means as unpleasant as the toothache, but the suddenness of it is what appalls. There is really no suddenness about it, however. No disease gives such early warning. A "stroke" is a very simple occurrence and not at all horrible. It results from two or three causes, but the most common one is this: A little artery in the brain wears out and lets some blood escape, which clots, presses on the brain and paralyzes whatever part of the body is governed by the piece of brain pressed upon. Now this artery wears out only in common with other arteries of the body. In some people they all become what is called atheromatous, or hard and brittle. At the same time they become tortuous or twisted. We can see these hard and tortuous arteries ou the temples, and then we know it is not safe to do anything which will congest the brain, lest the one little artery there, which is especially liable to give way, shall let the blood escape. Likewise warning is often given by the tiny arteries of the eye. They break and let out little traces of blood, which can easily be seen, but a cold or sleepless night may do the same. When these signs occur?and they occur months and years before the stroke?do not get excited or angry, no matter how great the provocation, do not rush to catch an omnibus or- in any way overexert yourself, and do not dine too heartily. By taking the warnings given by nature you will insure yourself against this pleasantest way of leaving the world and be sure or dying or cuoieia or smallpox or some other respectable disease.?London Mail. Opportunities He Had Neglected. "Were you surprised when I proposed?" he asked. "Well," she replied thoughtfully, "I was not so surprised that you proposed when you did as I was that you did not propose on some previous occa8ions."--Chicago Post The Last Heard Of It. "My little boy took the croup one night and soon grew so bad you could hear him breathe all over the house," says F. I). Reynolds, Mansfield, O. "We feared he would die, but a few doses of One Minute Cough Cure quickly relieved him and he went to sleep. That is the last we heard of the croup. Now isn't a cough cure like that valuable?" One Minute Cough Cure is absolutely safe and acts immediately. For coughs, colds, croup, grip, bronchitis and all other throat and lung troubles it is a certain cure. Very pleasant to take. The little ones like it. Bamberg Pharmacy and A. C. Reynolds, Ehrhardt. The Surgeon's Valentine. He?You know about the doctors operating 011 Tom Archer for appendicitis, mil iliortirprimr th:if. t.hf?ir diagnosis was ...... & 0 wrong? She?Oli, yes; well? He?Well, they sent him home on Valentine's day with a note reading, "Opened by mistake."?Judge. For Stomach Troubles. "I have taken a great many different medicines for stomach trouble and constipation," says Mrs. S. Geiger, of Dunkr erton, Iowa, "but never had as good results from any as from Chamberlain's Stomach & Liver Tablets." For sale by Bamberg Pbarmac)'. "Hot Time" as Funeral Hymn. The solemn exercises at the funeral of Mr. Black, a wealthy Brooklynite, were 1 marred by a most untoward occurrence, i He was a man of fads, but the one con- ; suming fad of his existence was for 1 musical Instruments?not the ordinary 1 piano and organ, but mechanical devices whereby harmonies were sounded by un- ( seen forces. For instance, as one enter- j ed the house some secret connection with t the door started the flattering strains of t "Hail to the Chief," to the accompaui- 1 ment of which the astonished guest was ushered into the reception room. Clocks 1 of every sort sounded fitting music to the 1 passing hours; in short, every piece of i furniture seemed in some way to be con- r neeted with a hidden orchestra. i Mr. Black's death was untimely; a hand 1 organ, with a new and wonderful com- i bination of every orchestral instrument t that blares, suddenly began a concert in i front of his house. In his eagerness to ^ examine this new musical marvel Mr. s Dl.i />1? f ?in/1 fnll /?/M?*r\ fliA 1 ah rr / DlU.l tv ti ij'i'di ami itii uu>* ii tug u;u^ \ staircase and liis life paid penalty of this final pursuit of his idol. 1 Before the funeral extreme care was t taken to silence all the harmonies of the 1 house. For two days the servants labor- t ed diligently disconnecting wires and re- 1 moving offending furniture. Atlastthey rested from their labors and the last sad hour arrived. The exercises were conducted in the house, and as the minister was concluding his panegyric on the departed a belated mourner entered and was shown to the one empty seat, a chair in an obscure corner. Silently the late , comer tiptoed to the chair and quietly sank into its depths. Instantly there pealed forth a loud chord and then without interruption came the loud, strident notes "There'll be a hot time in the old town to-night." All ef- i forts to silence the music were futile. In j notes that drowned the minister's voice i and were plainly audible for blocks the music continued and not until the last strain had died away was the minister able to conclude his remarks.?New York Tribune. ' Something That Will l>o You Nona. ' We know of no way in which we can be ] of more service to our readers than to tell ' them of something that will be of real 1 good tothem.For this reason we want toac- < quaint them with what we consider one of < ihe very best remedies on the market for j coughs, colds, and that alarming com- i plaint, croup. We refer to Chamberlain's ? Cough Remedy. We have used it with such good results in our family so long that it has become a household necessity. By its prompt use we haven't any doubt hut that it has time and again prevented croup. The testimony is given upon our own experience, and we suggest that our readers, especially those who have small children, always keep it in their homes as ] a safeguard against croup.?Camden (8. ' C.I Messenger. For sale by Bamberg Pharmacy. Representative Sibley of Pennsylvania ' has a beautiful bald pate. It shines with , glistening smoothness. A few days ago a little girl was visiting at Mr. Sibley's handsome home on K 1 street. As she sat near the congressman J in the library enjoying the open fire on ' the big hearth a fnnny thought seemed to strike her, for she laughed out loud. "Mr. Sibley," she said presently, ' "wouldn't you like a rabbit painted on 1 your head?" "Like v.'hat?" queried Mr. Sibley, as he 1 smiled upon his little visitor. "A rabbit painted on your head," re- 1 peated th e youngster. < "Why?" asked the incautious Sibley. "Because," said the little one triumph- ! antly, "it would look like a hare."? ] Washington Post. 1 Clerk's Wise Suggestion. 1 "I have lately been much troubled with ' dyspepsia, belching and sour stomach," writes M. S. Mead, leading pharmacist of , Attleboro, Mass., "I could eat hardly anything without sutTering several hours. My ' clerk suggested I try Kodol Dyspepsia Cure which I did with most happy results. I have had no more trouble and when one can go to eating mince pie, cheese, candy and nuts after such a time, their digestion must be pretty good. I endorse Kodol Dyspepsia Curo heartily." You don't have to diet. Eat all the good food you want but don't overload the stomach. Kodol DyspepsiaCure digestsyour food.Bamberg Pharmacy and A. C. Reynolds, Ehrhardt. An incorrigible backslider was nicknamed by the brethren of a Georgia church "Falldown" Jenkins, and he says , the nickname "kept him out of the legislature." Well, the best of our blessings are sometimes disguised. When you lack energy, do not relish your food, feel dull and stupid, after eating, all you need is a dose of Chamberlain's Stomach & Liver Tablets. They will make you feel like a new man and give you an appetite, like a bear. For sale by Bamberg Pharmacy. "Daddy, thar's a kingsnakc quoiled up on the foot o' yer bed I" " "No barm in him. Never do you wake me up ler nutiun less n a rauiesuaKe: I have used Chamberlain's Cough Reme<ly for a number of years and have no hesitancy in saying that it is the best remedy for coughs, colds and croup I have ever used in my family. I have not words to express my confidence in this remedy. ?Mrs. J. A. Moore, North Star, Mich. For sale by Bamberg Pharmacy. "It seems the Queen will wear more than a peck of diamonds at the coronation." "Goodness! I should think she would be afraid of being mistaken for one of the American guests !"?Life. Saved Him From Tortnre. There is no more agonizing trouble than piles. The constant itching and burning make life intolerable. No position is comfortable. The torture is unceasing. DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve cures piles at once.For skin diseases,cuts,burns.bruises, all kinds of wounds it is unequalled. J. S. Gerall, St. Paul, Ark., says: "From 1SG0 I suffered with the protruding, bleeding piles and could find nothing to help me until I used DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve. A few boxes completely cured me." Beware of counterfeits. Bamberg Pharmacy and A. C. Reynolds, Ehrhardt. How Could They Be. A lady on boarding a Columbus avenue car recently was attracted by two bright children sitting beside their nurse. Turning to the nurse she said : "What beautiful children! Are they twins?" The nurse answered, a little indignantly : "Twins, indade! I keeps on tellin' the Madame not to driss thim aloike, but she will. Twins, indade! Whovwanof thim is a bhoy and the ither a ghurl."? New York Times. Wheeler Got Rid oHiis Rheumatism. During the winter of 18081 was so lame i in my joints, in fact all over my body, that 1 could hardly hobble around, when I ! bought a bottle of Chamberlain's Pain Balm. From the first application I began to get well, and was cured and have worked steadily all the year.?R. Wheeler, 1 North wood, N. Y. For sale by Bamberg 1 Pharmacy. ; \ Learn to slop croaking. The world is too busy to care for your ills and sorrows. If you cannot see good in this world keep the bad to yourself. The Cowthrope oak is the largest in England. It is reported to be over 1000 years old, and its branches cover half an acre. At the close of the seventeenth 1 no/ini-iliiKr to TCvplvn's "Svlva." I i UClllUIJ, n ~-j -J , | it was seventy-eight feet in circumference | at the base of the trunk. Since then a quantity of earth has been placed around it as a support. It is estimated to contain ( at the present time seventy-tree tons of timber. , Favorite Nearly Everywhere. Constipation means dullness, depression, headache,generally disordered health De Witt's Little Early Risers stimulate thp liver,open the bowels and relieve this con? dition. Safe, speedy and thorough. They never gripe. Favorite pills. Bamberg Pharmacy and A. C. Reynolds, Ehrhardt. J A Result of "Mixed" Schools. SrniNOFiELi), Ohio, Feb. 10.?A negro joy forcibly hugging and kissing a white jirl was the sight witnessed at the Pleasint street scliool a few days ago. The >oy was not satisfied with the above, but ie*kept calling her his sweetheart. Fortunately the girl had presence ;nough of mind to free herself from his jrasp and returning to her room told her eacher, who in return reported the case ;o Principal Ogan and the lad wasseverey dealt with for his conduct. * Although every effort has been made to ieep the matter quiet, it is learned that joth of the pupils, although in different ooms. were kept in by their teachers. They were dismissed at the same time md as the girl left the cloak room the x>y rushed across the hall and just as she reached the door he grabbed her around lie waist and commenced kissing her. she fought him off the best she could and *hile she was endeavoring to free herself from his grasp the young rascal kept jailing her his sweetheart. ner screams nnaiiy irighteneu him ana ic ran rapidly clown the steps. She re;urned to her teacher, Miss Mamie Canield, and reported the case to her. She ;old Principal Ogan and the next day the ail was taken in charge. <S This signature is on every box of the genuine Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tabieta the remedy that eaves a cold In one day A Flourishing Town. "How's the new town comin' on?" "Fust-class. We've got the chills, the measles, five doctors an' the brokebone iever. All wre need now is a railroad, and incorporation!" A Fireman's Close Call. "I stuck to my engine, although every joint ached and every nerve was racked with pain," writes C. W. Bellamy, a locomotive fireman, of Burlington, Iowa., 'I was weak and pale, without any appetite and all run down. As I was about to give up, I got a bottle of Electric Bitters and, after taking it, I felt as well as I ever did in my life." Weak, sickly, run lown people always gain newlife,strength mil vigor from their use Try them. Satisfaction guaranteed by Thos. Black and J. B. Black. A Born Promoter. "What sort of man should you say he was?" "Well, candidly, if I heard he had gone to the infernal regions I should expect to bear of him booming the place as a famous and hishlv aristocratic winter re sort." Bocklen's Arnica Salve Has world-wide fame for marvelous mires. It surpasses any other salve, lotion, ointment or balm for cuts, corns, burns, boils, sores, felons ulcers, tetter, salt rheum, fever sores, chapped bands, 3kin eruptions; infallible for piles. Cure guaranteed. Only 23c at Thos. Black and J. B. Black. Mr. Martin was talking at the dinner table, in his usual clever manner, about the inconsistency of women. "These young ladies who protest that they are never going to marry!" he broke out. "Everybody knows] they will belie their own words at the very first opportunity." He paused, and evidently hoped that Mrs. Martin would come to the rescue of her sex; but that discreet woman held ber tongue. "Why, Mary," he continued, "you remember how it was with yourself. I have heard you say more than once that you wouldn't marry the best man alive." "Well, I didn't," said Mrs. Martin.? Tit-Bits. W. F. RILEY, FIRE, LIFE, ACCIDENT INSURANCE. BAMBERG, S. C. WANTED. Reliable man for Manager of a Branch Office we wish to open in this vicinity. Here is a good opening for the right man. Kindly give good reference when writing. The A. T. Morris Wholesale House. Cincinnati, Ohio. Illustrated catalogue 4cts. in stamps. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. All persons having claims against the estate of W. E. Beard, deceased, will present same, duly attested, and all owing said estate will make immediate payment to C. B. FREE, Qualified Administrator. Bamberg, S. C., February 10, 1902. S, G. MAYFIELD, ATTORNEY AT LAW, s DENMARK, S. C. ([Harness!, M Yoq can make your bar- /h|1R En nesa as soft as a glove /jKVWjflEf Hi and as tough as wire by /W vflW It using EUREKA Har- W /??X 1 nesa Oil. You can IV /fnMR\ VI lengthen Its life?make It tW /flWl M last twice as long as It j| ordinarily would. EUREKAf Harness Oil I If makes a poor looking har- H I nesa like new. Made of I pure, heavy bodied oil, es> peclally prepared to withstand the weather. mSu Sold everywhere y^K in cans?till sizes. w Mads bj STANDARD OIL C0.\M ITnrinl nv?i?fi Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. This preparation contains all of the digestants and digests all kinds of food. It gives instant relief and never fails to cure. It allows you to eat all the food you want. The most sensitive stomachs can take it. By its use many thousands of dyspeptics have been cured after everything else failed. It prevents formation of gas on the stomach, relieving all distress after eating. Dietingunnecessary. Pleasant to take. It can't help but do you good Prepared only by E.G. PeWitt&Co., Chicago The $1. bottle contains 2% times the 50c. size* Bamberg Pharmacy aud A. C. Reynolds fm Buggies^Wagons We have received one carload of ANCHOR BUGGIES. One carload of ENGER BUGGIES. and one carload of the famous IIAYDOCK BUGGIES. We can surely suit you in a vehicle of any description. Full line of HARNESS, LAP ROBES, WHIPS, Etc. uon't lan to see us oeiore Duying a Buggy or "Wagon. We can and will save you money. JONES BROS., BAMBERG, 8. . MKGDIGffl | THE SHEAVES from early morn to dewy eve Haying accepted the agency for the celebrated Deerae Bar? tsli Main I am now prepared to sell you on easy terms self-binding Wheat Harvesters, Mowers, and Rakes. You have always heard that Deering Implements were the best; now let me prove it to you or give up your money. I won't have it unless you rather have the machine. As to our CARRIAGE BOSKS Would say I do not deem it necessary to say more than remind > ou that I am doing business at same old stand, opposite Bamberg Cotton Mills. I am here to stay, so don't forget me when you need the services of the carriage man. Gratefully yours, I). J. DELK. ^ L. C. Ikglis. A. McIvkr Bosttck. INGLIS & BOSTICK, LAWYERS. Bamberg, S. C. Will practice in the U. S. Courts and all the Courts of the State. Money to Loan. APPLY TO Izlar Bros. ? Bice, Attorneys and Counselors at Law, BAMBERG C. H., S. C. A Medicine for Old People. Rev. Geo. Gay, Greenwich, Kas, is past 83 years of age, yet he says: "I am enjoying excellent health for a man of my age, due entirely to the rejuvenating influences of Dr. Miles' Nervine. It brines sleep and rest when nothing else will, and gives strength and vitality even to one of my old age." "I am an old soldier," writes Mr. Geo. Watson, of Newton, la., "and I have been a great sufferer from nervousness, vertigo and spinal trouble. Have spent considerable money for medicine and doctors, but with little benefit I was so bad my mind showed signs of weakness. I began taking Dr. Miles' Nervine, and I know it saved mr life." MneV Nervine Saved me from the insane asylum," Mrs. A. M. Heifner, of Jerico Springs, Wo., writes. ~i was so nervous that I could scarcely control myself, could not sleep nor rest, would even forget the names of my own children at times. I commenced using Dr. Miles' Nervine and it helped me from the first, and now I am perfectly well." 8old by all Druggists on Quarantaa. Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind. Largest and Most Complete Establishment South. GEO. S. HACKER & RON. MANUFACTURERS OF Doors, Sash, Blinds, Moulding and Building: Material, Sash Weights and Ford, Window and Fancy Glass a Specialty* CHARLESTON, S. C Purchase our make, which we guaran tee superior to an}' sold Souih, and there' by save money. > i i ? " . r1 ENGINES, BOILERS GINS aud PKESSES. ' - '} Complete Cotton, Saw, Grist, Oil and Fertilizer Mill Outfits: also Gin Press, Cane, Mill and Shingle Outfits. Building., Bridge, Factory, Furnace and Railroad Castings; Railroad, Mill, Factory and Machinists' Supplies. Belting, Pack ing, Injectors, Pipe Fittings, Saws, Files Oilers, Etc., cast every day. Work 150 hands. -. LoiMlrtn W'ts Supply Go AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. Foundry, Machine, Boiler and Gin Works. Renairing Promptly Done. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. JS^ Condensed Schedule in Effect July L, 1001. tei"M "?riaN uuti - , ; . * ?? V A 6 20p 7 00a Lv... Charleston ...Aril lfia 780p 6Q8p 7 41a " .. 8ummerville.. " 10 82a 642p 7&p 856a " ...Branchviile... 44 900a 515p ^ 810p 9 28a "...Orangeburg..." 881a 442p 9Q3p 102ia " .... Kingyille.... " 7 4fia 346p 11 46a At -Sumter Lv 880J , , -^3 1125a " Camden Lv 200p . t 950p 1100a Ar ...Columbia.....Ly 7 00* 400p 520p 7 00a Ly... Charleston ...Ar 1115a 780p 7 86p 915a " ... Branch ville... " 8 50a 515p 805p 940a "....Bamberg...." 8 27a 450p 817p 9 52a " ....Denmark.... " 813al486p 885p 1010a " ....Blackville " 800a 419p 988p 1110a " Aiken " 7 08a 8 Mp 108Op 1159a At. Augusta andLv " 680a 280p NOTE: In addition to the above service, r' &? trains Noe. 15 and 10 run daily between Charles- -j ton and Columbia, carrying elenant Pullman sleeping oars. No. 15 leave Charleston 11:00 p. m.: arrive Aahevllle 2:00 p. m. >No. 16 leave Columbia 1:86 a. m.;arrive Charleston 7IX)a. -^-3 m. Sleeping cars ready for occupancy at 9:36 p. m. both at Charleston and Columbia. These trains make close connections at Columbia. with through trains between Florida points -i and Washington and the east. Trains Nos. u ' ?< Sjm . T4?11 v..in. n?M. t<A. na x* c&rryjMegami rumiuu imui vsw. tween Oharleeton, Summerrllle and Asheville. EZ Sun. Ex. 7-i Wi Sun. only Sun. /! Lv. Augusta 7 00a 080a 58Bn r*r - 2?f Ar. Sandersviile lOOp 1250p 8 40p 44 Tennille ISOp lOOp 8S0p ^ Lv. Tennille 5 80a 840p 810p 44 Sandersrille 5 40a 850p 828p Ar. Apguata. 900a 7 lQpl 8 8Qp D^lyIW]7^ Lv. Savannah. 1290a 1225p ....? 44 Allendale 3 40a 8 20p 11 10?. SB 44 Barnwell 4 18a 858pl20ip M Blackviffe 4 25a 412? 4 25? I At. Batesburg 8C0p At.Columbia. 515a 550? ...... VflDaily Daily Lr. Oolumbla 1140a 110a - ^jjsjg?9 Lv.Batesburg 680a Ax. Blackville 120p 2 52a 1030a 44 Barnwell 133p 8 07a 1140a 44 Allendale 200$ 840al200? ; ^ 44 SftTannah 80gg^jQgj^... Atlanta and Beyond. LT. Charleston.... 7 00a| 580pj - v?| Ax. Augusta 11 50a 1080p " Atlanta 880p ?00a ...... Lr. Atlanta. 1100? 580a 515? :.?*? At. Obattanooga 8 46a 845a]lQ(g> Lv. Atlanta. 6 00a 415? Ar. Birmlnghm 12n*n 10(w 41 Memphis, (via Bir'mgam) 80ft) 715a :i& Ar. Lexington 506p 500a -l&iM 44 Cincinnati.* 780p 7 45a s-'S^Se 44 Chicago 715a 580? Ar. Louisville 750p 840a ' 44 St. Louis 782a 686? ^ * - " H- /_r- ft 1SW.I fl AT. jnqaipaia, y via | a w v To Aehevllle-Cinelnnatl-Lonlsvllle* NoI84 Kolrf --A8TSRN TOO!. Dally Dafly *3 Lv. Augusta. SWaTttp " Batesburg 488p UWI ^ Lv. Charleston : TOQa ilOtfp Lv. Columbia (Union Depot) 1180a 7 80* At. Spartanburg 3l0pl0 28a ^ " Asheville 715i> 2 QOp " Knoxville. 415a flOp " Oincinnnati. 780p 810a '- *%??& " Louisville (via Jelllco) 850a To Washington and the East* Lt. Augusta 250p 980p , " Batesburg 488p 1207a i:-j " Columbia. 66op 215a 'r * As. Charlotte 900p 0 45a Ar. Danville 12 51a Ts%) At. Richmond 8 00a 62Sp Ar. Washington. 7 85a OOOp " Baltimore Pa E. E 912aJ126p "Philadelphia 1185^, 256a <&39| " New York 20<p 618* ^ Sleeping Chr Line between Charier m and Atlanta, via Augusta, making colweoAons at Atlanta for all points north and West. Connections at Columbia with through trains -J?3n9H for Washington and the East; also for Jacksonville and all Florida Point*' , FRANKS. GANNON, J.1LCULP, Third V-P. & Gen. Mgr. T. 21* Washington. ; m EOET.HTHT^^ ? Charleston, 8.0. ^ -^S3aM m ? TTttmwrng xxr xt ipivt/va Q.P. A.WMhlngton- a. ft. P. ,- -^ StaM lit lias Railway. "Capital City Rout*." ' Shortest line between all principal cities v/| North, East, South, and West Unequal- ^ ed schedules to Pan American Exposition .; ~ ; at Buffalo. Schedules in effect May 28th, 1901. NORTHWARD. " Daily Daily No. 66 No. 84 Lv Savannah c t.. .11 45 p m 2 10 p m " .*<Lv Fairfax 134am 8 58pm Lv Denmark 2 15 am 439pnT | Lv Columbia et... 4 40am 712 p m : Lv Camden 537am 8 06 p m ; r^^Hj Lv Cheraw ,712 am 9 43pm Ar Hamlet 7 40 a m 10 15 p m Lv Calhoun Falls. .100am 411pm ' Lv Abbeville 1 33 a m 4 38 p mv, Lv Greenwood 2 01 a m 5 01 p m Lv Clinton 2 55 a m 5 47 p m '.J Vti&ia Lv Carlisle 3 43. am 6 33pm Lv Chester 4 10 a m 7 03 p m T o- PotQTi;h? Jpt d AH ? m V n m Ar Hamlet 7 10 a m 1010 pm . ? Lv Hamlet 8 00am 10 35pm Ar Raleigh 10 37 a m 1 24 a m Ar Petersburg 245pm 5 48am Ar Richmond 3 28 pm 6 29am Ar Washington 7 05pm 1010am Ar Baltimore 1126 pm 1125 am Ar Philadelphia 2 56 a m 1 36 p m Ar New York... .6 30am 425pm SOUTHWARD. Daily Daily.' No. 31 No. 27 ' ~ Lv Cheraw, et 7 48am 1118pm --'i Lv Camden 9 25 a m 12 53 a m . Lv Columbia, c t ... 9 40 a m 1 05 a m Lv Denmark 1109 am 2 27am Lv Fairfax t...1154am 3 05 am Ar Savannah 1 47 p m 4 52 a m Ar Jacksonville 610pm 9 15 a m Ar Tampa 6 15 a m 5 40 p m Lv Catawba, e t 9 45am 105am , Lv Chester 10 20 a m 1 42 a m - :?j>. Lv Carlisle 10 47 am 2 05am : Lv Clinton 1137 am 2 55am Lv Greenwood 12 22 p m 3 46 a m ; Lv Abbeville 12 48 pm 4 15am Lv Calhoun Falls.. 115pm 448am ' :i"? A r Athens 240pm 6 28am Ar Atlanta 4 55 p in 9 00 a m No. 66 connects at Washington with the Pennsylvania Railway Buffalo Express, arriving Buffalo 7.35 a m. Columbia, Newberry & Laurens Ry. ~ . _ _ rr_.'^L tram No. 03, leaving ^uiuuilu?, uuiuu Station, at 11.23 a. m. daily, connects at Clinton with S. A. L. Rjf., No. 53, affording shortest and quickest route by several hours to Atlanta, Chattanooga, tfashviile, St. Louis, Chicago, and all points west. Close connection at Petersburg, Richmond, Washington, Portsmouth-Norfolk, \$ ' Columbia, Savannah, Jacksonville, and Atlanta with diverging lines. I Magnificent vestibule trains carrying through Pullman sleeping cars between all principal pqjpts. For redueed .Tales, Pullman reserva- i tions, etc., apply to . Wm. Butler Jr., D. P. A., Savannah, 6a. J. M. Barr, R. E. L. Bunch, ist v. p. & g. m., t. p. ; w?. Portsmouth, Ya*