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% . 4 t ' fCarload Horses and Mules Just Arrived! J i| ALSO THE BIGGEST EOT OE || 1 BUGGIES, WAGONS, HARNESS, ETC., j vjl Ever seen in this part of the country. G. FRANK BAMBERG. J | ' Personal Mention. ?Mr. D. B. Reid, of Denmark, was in j town Monday. ?Capt. D. H. Rice, of the Olar section, was here Monday. ?Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Barnes were in the city last Saturday. ?Judge Jas. F. Izlar, of Orangeburg, is in the city attending court. ?Mises Lillian Bellinger and Ethel Folk spent Monday in Charleston. ?Mr. J. Laz. Copeland, of the Ehrhardt section, was here last Eridav. ?Mr. M. N. Rice, of the Buford's Bridge section, was here Tuesdaj*. ?Dr. J. L. and Mr. I. D. Copeland, of Ehrhardt, were in the city last Thursday. * ?Mr. D. P. Smith and sister, of the Ehrhardt neighborhood, were here last Thursday. ?Rev. M. W. Hook left Tuesday to attend the session of the annual conference in Greenville. ?Messrs. W. H. Chittv and J. F. Kearse, \ Jr., of the Buford's Bridge section, were in town last Friday. ?Mr. J. Stokes Salley, of Orangeburg, spent Sunday here on a visit to his brother, Mr. N. M. Salley. ?Mr. John H. Cope, president of the cotton mill, attended the meeting of mill men in Charlotte, N". C., this week. ?Rev. C. I). Walker and his son, Mr. IC. A. Walker, of the Hunter's Chapel section, were in to see us last Thursday. ?Mr. W. P. Jones returned last Friday from the West, where he went to purchase a car load of horses and mules for Jones Brothers. ?Mr. C. F. Rizer, of Olar, attended court this week as foreman of the grand jury, which position he has ably filled for the"past two years. ?John R. Bellinger, Esq., went to Charleston Tuesday night to attend the Masonic grand lodge. He is deputy grand n. /vf *Vio KAHP A COSTLY MISTAKE. Blunders are sometimes expensive. Occasionally life itself is the price of a mistake, but you'll never be wrong if you take Dr. King s New Life Pills for dyspepsia, dizziness, headache, liver or bowel troubles. Thev are gentle yet thorough. 25c. at Dr. Black, Bamberg; H. C. Rice, Denmark. Dr. Kllgo Protests. Raleigh, N. C.,Dec. 2.?President Kilgo, of Trinity college, Durham, which institution Is under the auspices of the North Carolina Methodist conference created a sensation at the conference by rising to a question of personal privilege and telling Bishop Candler, of Georgia, who was presiding, that he was tired of being hounded in the pulpit, in the college, and in his home, by some North Carolina newspapers. There is a split in the church in regard to President Kilgo, this having existed several years. Some of the newspapers attacked the college because its endowment is the gift of members of the American Tobacco company. Feeling runs pretty high about the matter, each side having strong supporters. Police Commissoner Greene estimates that during lastyear there were 365 people killed in New York city in traffic accidents?one death a day. The commis- , sioner says that of'this number 172 were killed by street railway lines; 146 by trucks and wagons; contrary to general ; belief, only a comparatively small number, 9, by automobiles; 2 by bicycles and 7 by runaway horses. THE LONE STAR STATE. Down in Texas at Yoakum, is a big dry goods firm of which J. M. Haller is the head. Mr. Haller on one of his trips East to buy goods said to a friend in the palace car, "Here, take one of these Little Early Risers upon retiring and will be up * -? >> eariy m me iuuruiug iccuux 5wu. * ui the "dark brown" taste, headache and that logy feeling DeWitt's Little Early Risers are best pills to use. Sold by Dr. Hoover. Needed No Text. A story in the Scottish-American runs that some Paisley weavers were speaking about their ministers when one said that it was wonderful how much his minister ! could bring out of scripture. He had ] known him to preach several sermons from one text. Another said his minister surpassed J that for he had preached six sermons from J the shortest text in the Bible. . "But that's naethin' to my wife," said the third. "She's been preachin' to me j for sixteen years frae nae text at a'." " GOOD FOR CHILDREN. 1 Pleasant to take and harmless One Minute Cough Cure gives immediate relief In 1 cases of cough, croup and lagrippe be- J cause it does not pass immediately into j the stomach, but takes effect right at the ( seat of the trouble. It draws out the inflammation, heals, soothes and cures permanently by enabling the lungs to con- ( tribute pure life-giving and life-sustaining < oxygen to the blood and tissues. Dr. Arm- 1 strong, of Delia, Tex., prescribes it daily j and says there is no better cough remedv, < Sold by Dr. H. F. Hoover, Bamberg, 5. C. < j Burglar Bill?Got any children ? Slippery Sam (moodily)?I had a son once. I trained him up to snatch pocket- ( books from ladies out shopping. s "Wot became of 'im?" ( "He starved ter death." t BILIOUS COLIC PREVENTED. ! Take a double dose of Chamberlain's < Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy as 7 soon as first indication of disease appears t and a threatened attack may be warded ] off. Hundreds of people use the remedy t in this way with perfect success. Sold by ? Ramberg Pharmacy; H. C. Rice, Denmark, i STRIPPED HIM OF CLOTHES. Nature's Electricity Played a Queer Prank with a Colorado Victim. A blinding flash, a loud and sudden crack of thunder, a sensation as of some one striking you in the face and then darkness and unconsciousness! That is how it feels to be struck by lightning. It is the way Art Bruer, a conductor for the Mauitou and Pikes Peak road, who had his clothing torn from his body by lightning last week, describes the sensation. Although Bruer's clothing was torn to shreds, his conductor's cap removed from his head, the fleece lining of his underwear set on fire and a blue streak burned across his chest from shoulder to shoulder, he recovered consciousness a few minutes later and was able to bring his train from | the summit of Pike's Peak to the cog road j station at Manitou. There are no tailor shops or hand-medown stores on the peak and Bruer borrowed a Navajo Indian blanket from the curio shop there and performed his duties as conductor while arrayed like an Indian. The incident was one of the most peculiar freaks of lightning on record. It has been known to perform strange antics, but never before has it stripped a man so completely of his outer clothing, tossed his hat into the air, left an indelible stamp on his body, rendered him unconscious for a few minutes and then left him almost unhurt, with no burns except a long thin line of blue on his chest and set fire to the fleece lining of the underwear without burning or scorching any other nf R xepftrinc annftrel. > V* ?? " o ~ri Bruer believes he was born lucky. In the present instance this was better than to have been rich. The chances of a man's life being spared in such a case are so small as to be almost infinitesimal. At the time he was struck by the lightning he was standing on the steps of the coach, holding the brass railing with both hands, preparing to start on its journey down the peak. The passengers were all aboard and everything was in readiness for the downward start. Suddenly there was a blinding flash and a deafening crash of thunder. A blue streak of forked lightning shot across the peak on its way from one cloud to another. En route it encountered the form of Bruer and his body formed the circuit which shot the bolt into the top of Pike's Peak. After the passengers had recovered from their momentary fright they saw the insensible form of Bruer lying on the ground. They hastened to him to pick him up, as they supposed, dead, when, to their utter astonishment, he sat upright and looked bewildering about him. To in quiries he replied that he was not hurt, "only stunned," but one man discovered that the fleece underwear was burning. The fire was extinguished and the Navajo blanket borrowed. The clothing which had been torn by the electricity was picked up and brought to Manitou.?Colorado Springs Gazette. REVOLUTION IMMINENT. A sure sign of approaching revolt and serious trouble in your system is nervousness, sleeplessness, stomach upsets. Electric Bitters quickly dismembers the troublesome causes. It never fails to tone the stomach, regulate kidneys and bowels, stimulate the liver, and clarify the blood. Run down systems benefit particularly and the usual attendingaches vanish under its searching and thorough effectiveness. Electric Bitters is 50c. and that is returned if it don't give satisfaction. Guaranteed by Dr. Black,Bamberg; H. C. Rice, Denmark. Rabbit Discharged Gun. Philadelphia, November 19.?Martin Price, living near the golf links at North- j field, took his gun yesterday and went out after rabbits. A big one appeared and Price chased it until it disappeared in a bole. The hunter laid his gun down, got a ?olf stick and'pushed it into the burrow, rhe gun was cocked already for Price to pick up and shoot. The cottontail came out with a rush and its first bound landed it on the gun. [ts fore feet struck the trigger and the ^un was discharged, both barrels going )ff at once. Price was in a stooping position, his log near him. He was just far enough jut of the line of the gun to escape the :ull force of the charge in it, but two finders were torn off, his leg was badly lacerated, and his left cheek filled with shot. One of the dog's legs was shot off. The rabbit is 6till at large.?New York Sun. KODOL DYSPEPSIA CURE ligests all classes of food, tones and strengthens stomach and digestive organs. Dures dyspepsia, indigestion, stomach roubles, and makes rich red blood, health md strength. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure rebuilds wornout tissues, purifies, strengthens and sweetness the stomach. Gov. G. 5V. Atkinson, of W. Va., says: <4I have ised a number of bottles of Kodol Dyspepsia Cure and found it to be a very effecive, indeed a powerful remedy for stomich ailments.. I recommend it to my riends." Sold by Dr. H. F. Hooyer. 1 i harness] B flaking- I; . = and = Repairing: - ^O^R^OAMMBfi^TABLK^ WE ARE ALWAYS I to do something for the welfare prosper, we can too. If they ai ness. We know a man that get with the times and prices. Foi THIS BIC I 1 One year's subscription to THE B4 customer who trades to the amount of ! January, 1904, in anything-except Flou sell practically at cost. We offer anytl I Dry (roods, Clothing, flats Women and Children. Hardware, consisting < Saws. Lynchburg Steel Horse Plows, Leering Double-barrel Guns, time a large stock of eve zs^HOLIDA\ Everything at fair and square prices, thing we have in stock. All we ask is find the best articles for right prices. Branchville BRANCHVI VaBRnHMMMMMiaMWHHai if another 1HORSES II HAS A1 AT. OUR l I If you need an Anim || we can suit you. . | BUGGIES, WAGI m in inn a i a n m Is wnirs, Lflf hi Jj See us for anything in you easy terms at closes I JONES II fHOW ABOUT A PR We have a full line of goodi holiday presents. For your Stationery, a bottle of fine ext candies. Give your gentlemai We handle only the best brant DRUGS and TOI1 You can get any article usual! store from us. Come to see us you buy or not. | Dr. n. k no CURED PARALYSIS. : W. S. Bailey, P. 0. True, Tex., writes: . "My wife had been suffering five years with paralysis in her arm, when I was persuaded to use Ballard's Snow Liniment which cured her. I have used it for sores, i frostbites and skin eruptions. It does the j work." 25c, 50c, $1.00. Dr. H. F. Hoover. . I To Cu I Take Laxative Bron I Seven Million boxes sold In past 12 n The Formula tells 1 Grove's < Not a patent metfia Fluhl Extract PERUV Fluid Extract BLACK I Fluid Extract DOG V It Cures the Chills ; ANXIOUS of our customers. "We know if they re bankrupt, we must go out of busis a weekly paper can keep up better this reason wc make to all i OFFER 3IBERG HERALD FREE to every $10.00 with us before the first day of r and Bacon, as these two articles we ling in and Caps, Shoes for Men, A first-class line of of such as H. Diston -beam One and TwoMowers , Single and We trill have in due ry thing in the way of ' GOODS It is useless to try to mention everyfor you to give us a call and you "will Yours truly, Supply Co., LLE, S. C. wmJ CAR LOAD jfj I MULfcSI IJtlVED N || STABLESI lal for Any Purpose, m A full stock of . . . |i DNS, HARNESS, | ORES, Etc., Etc. p our line. We will give p)| i jjrct;c0? wmc cc #ei?/ i BOTHERS I1 lESENT-^ 3 suitable for Christmas and best girl: A box of fine ract, or a box of Wiley's fine 1 friend a box of nice cigars. Is. Full line of LET ARTICLES ly found in a fir9t-class drug . Glad to show you whether nwr PHONE45UVCr, BAMBERG, S. C. J DR. G. F. HAIR, DENTAL SURGEON, Bamberg, 8. C, In office every day in the week. Graduate of Baltimore College of Dental Surgery, class 1892. Member of S. C. Dental Association. Office next to bank. _? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?? re a Cold in One Day no Quinine Tablets. ^ (Vi jt ?n ?v?y I tonths. Tills signature, ? box. 25c. I :he story: 1 ?|| Chronic Chill Cure I J ne: a thin spirituous liquid, of a pleasant bitter taste, made of I IAN RARK ltlniri F*tract POPLAR BARK I [ ROOT " Fluid Extract PRICKLY ASH BARK I WOD BARK Fluid Extract SARSAPARJLLA | i that other Chill Tonics Don't Core. I uc. No Cure, No Pay. Price, 50c. J J.M.Dannelly&Son, EHRHARDT, S. C. ; 1 Harness and Harness Sundries. "-1 We have just opened one thousand dollars' worth of Harness and Harness Sundries. Can supply any broken part of a set of Harness. i . -| Buggies and Wagons. | Our stock of Buggies, Wagons, Surries, Saddles, Lap Robes, Whips, Har ness, etc., was never larger and more complete. Be sure to get our prices before buying anything in this line, for we can surely suit you, no matter what your demands may be. Furniture! Furniture! We have gone into the Furniture business, and have just received two car loads of every kind and style. As we buy in car load lots, we can sell cheaper than others. _ MrfVirmirkr Marhinprv. *i*wv? jKiavtm JL T ^ w We are agents for McCormick harvesting machinery, and can fix you if you want a Mower, Reaper and Binder, Rake, or anything in this line/ Lumber! Lumber! Don't forget that our saw mill is running every day, and we are cutting lumber for sale. Give us your orders, which will have prompt attention. New Ginning Plant. Our ginning plant is now completed, and we are ready to gin your cotton ^ promptly and give you a first-class staple and a good turnout. Our gin system is the latest and best to be had, and we guarantee satisfaction. /I 11 1 . ?nl jj I Millinerv. Dress Goods. I ^ 7 _ , Trimmings, Silks, | and Notions. Prices the Lowest, ' 4 Styles the Latest. ? ; J? Goods the Prettiest. "M \ COME TO SEE US, 1 C;M Mrs.K.I.Sfiuck&Co | 1 | IT'S UP TO YOU J to decide what you will give for a holiday or Christmas present. Why not malse it one of the 3 ** i n t A i many handsome and useitu articles we are now showing in our FANCY GOODS DEPARTMENT 1 Jsothing would he more appreciated than one of our large pictures or mirrors in elegant frames. Or you might want to give Sterling Silver. We have scores of articles for the silver chest, as well as many novelties. Let us show you through our stock and assist you to make a selection. Don't put it off too long. Buy now, before the assortment is broken. CI C DDnni/I7D thehabd jf oi dnvuivcnj ware man. ifl . % i* ' &