The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, October 17, 1907, Image 6

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I ?lf? Bambrrg ^ralb 1 ESTABLISHED IN APRIL, 1891 | A W. KNIGHT, Editor. Rates?$1.00 per year; 50 cents for I six months. Payable in advance. Advertisements?$1.00 per inch for I \ first insertion, 50c. for each subsequent [ insertion Liberal contracts made for F three, six, or twelve months. Want Nof tices one cent a word each insertion. Local r Notices 8c. per line first week, 5c. after. wards. Tributes of Respect, etc., must I ? be paid for as regular advertising. Communications?News letters or on ' subjects of general interest will be gladly welcomed. Those of a personal nature - ? ? * * . 1 :j r will not puonsnea uniess pam tur. i . ======^= Thursday, Oct. 17, 1907. Our New York Letter. Now that the seven tunnels are nearing completion in this city, everything appertaining to them in any way makes interesting reading. Ferries, relics of the past, will soon pass into oblivion, and the millions of human beings will pass under ino+rtrtr? /vP <-viTQ-r rivprc nnd in two Ol/CCH.1 Ui vr\.i wiv ah Mm. ... ... . minutes time, compared with 25 f minutes to-day. The Hudson Tunnel Company's .terminal building covers two blocks along Church street and north of Vy Cortland street. This structure is A being finished and the various offices on the twenty-two floors occupied. It will house 10,000 people. The occupants will equal the entire population of many cities. There will be thirty-nine elevators in it, and 182,000,000 persons will pass through the building in entering the i course of a year. The comparison as to accommodations with the greatest yet built, viz., the new grand central depot is designed to handle 100,000,000 a year, the new Pennsylvania station 146,000,000; South sta tion in Boston only takes care of 30,000,000, and Broad street, Philadel| phia 20,000,000. From this terminal building one will be able to go to most any corner of the country; trains running into it will connect with all subways and all big railroads. Trains will enter and depart thirty feet below the sea level. The steel frame of the building weighs 24,000 tons, rests on foundations extending to bed rock 80 feet below the street. \ There will be 22.acres for business -purposes, offices, etc., every one rented already. The effort to boom Knox, Cortelyou, Root and others for stemming the Charles E. Hughes landslide have all proven failures and been abandoned. The writer is a Democrat, right or wrong, always Democratic i to the: core, but is fair enough to accord justice where 'tis due, especial1 lv if a piece of news is recognized in the subject. / Governor Hughes, your correspondent voted against, but he has proven in office, as he did in probing the insurance affairs, that he is a man of the people, one who not only - can rise above party, but perches and remains there all the time. He is a man who never exploits his methods. A thing he is going to do is never advertised until the result is reached and then the result over shadows it. His deeds stand out complete m a white light so fully in justification that people wonder no other man had , done so before. Hughes is going to be the Republican nominee for president, and is going to be hard to beat. H. W. Finlayson. 450 Broadway, New York. Important Decision. The State supreme court has held that the driver of an automobile must use great care and diligence in using the public roads. In the case of a man who sued for $475 damages from Greenville county because of injuries to his mule, the court upheld the circuit court and the man got the money. In his case the automobile stopped, but the engine kept on running, making a hideous noise. The general public is as generous as can be to the automobilist and the average owner of an automobile is as careful as one could wish in dealing with frightened horses and mules. It is the man who wants to race over the country at break neck sneer! who causes all the trouble. When a few of these maniacs are taken up and made to pay $500 fines like the man in Greenville there will be an abatement of the nuisance.? Greenwood Index. The One Thing Attachable. A Kansas City man recently wrote to a lawyer in another town of the state asking for information touching the standing of a person there who had owed the Kansas City individual a considerable sum of money for a long time. "What property has he that I could attach?" was one of the questions asked. The lawyer's reply was to the point, "The person to whom you refer," he wrote, "dted a year ago. He has left nothing subject to attachment oY^pnt a widow." John Temple Graves is determined that no guilty man shall escape. He now puts in nomination "for the great office of President of the United States that accomplished editor, that most versatile of Democrats, that 'South Carolina gentleman,' Col. J. C. Hemphill." We refuse to surrender to the ferocious vengeance of Col. Graves, our own particular victim, until we have worked out our Senatorial design upon him. "Into parliament he must go."?Charleston Evening Post. ^ WOMAN AND FASHION Gown Fop Fall Travtle. The natty little belted in Jacket of the suit here illustrated is a pleasing style. It is of military simplicity and smartness, with a square yoke vest of OF mZXD CHEVIOT. gray and white to brighten np the dull blue or toe wnoie. fipmgs 01 biu are used also as a trimming on the plaits or bauds of the jacket, and the only adornment on the plain gored skirt is a narrow fold of silk. To Adjust the Veil. Before an attempt is made to fasten a veil to the hat it should be held up before the face to see that the spots are well placed. When two of them are allowed to outline the corners of the mouth they give that feature a distorted, bad tempered look which may be quite out of harmony with the rest of the face. When, on the contrary, the dots rest just above the corners of the mouth they are apt to produce, from a distance, a silly, simpering expression. Neither should a dot be allowed to cover the end of the nose, for it then appears to lengthen that feature. Dots by the side of the nose have a tendency to make it look broader than natural and to coarsen the whole face. The spotted veils are undoubtedly becoming. They givf fairness to the skin and the same piquancy of expression that is associated with little pieces of black court plaster. But among all sorts and conditions of veils there are none so unmercifully abused in the i tying on as those with polka dots. ?? mm _ a _ _ now material*. While many somewhat heavy and wintry? looking materials will un doubtedly be shown later in the season, the fashion potentates predict a breaking down of season lines and a decided leaning toward soft, clinging materials, quite as suitable for one , season of the year as another. The charming silk and wool voiles and the host of thin wool fabrics have no notion of taking a back seat with the entrance of another season, and those who know say that we shall have another season of diaphanous woolens, quite regardless of any changes in thecalendar. There is no use denying the becomlngness of such fabrics, and anything that successfully meets this demand is bound to be popular all the year round. v What to Wear. In the early models of fall millinery mere are some especially attractive hats in light gray and white soft French felts. They have medium wide brims and round crowns and are simply trimmed with ribbon, silk or velvet and wings or plumes, such as coq or gouras. The feature of these hats, w\ SMART FELT HAT FOR EARLY FALL. which are at their best when worn with natty tailored subs of dark colored plain or novelty Scotch serges in plaited skirts and semifitting coat style, is the side roll. If the brim is straight it is bent abruptly upward against the crown, and if rolling the left side is rolled more and the edge tacked to the crown. The trimming is all grouped at this point and so arranged as to droop over the brim and hair. I t 9 BRICK FOR SALE ; We are manufacturing a High Grade Brick and 3 can furnish Run of Kiln at $6.00 f. o. b. cars Badham, Sonth Carolina jj Dorchester Lumber Co. Badham South Carolina Light SAWMILLS LATH AND SHINGLE MACHINES SAWS AND SUPPLIES, STEAM AND GASOLINE ENGINES. Try LOMBARD, A02XfTA ... ,- /* VALUABLE Plantation For Sale My plantation'^ nown as the Unnp.vford or Hutto nlace. con taining two hundred and ninety four acres, well timbered, with both swamp and upland. Price thirty-fivehundred dollars, onethird cash, balance on one, two and three years' time, one-third each year, with interest at the rate of eight per cent, payable annually on the whole balance. Five-horse farm now open. Mrs. S. H. Counts Bamberg, S. C. PHOTOGRAPH GALLE RY Open in Telephone Building by Expert Artists.- Come and avamlna nnr nlrhlfM. Prices from 60c to $6.00 per dozen. Special attention to enlarging and copying old pictures. * T. J. POOSER & BRO. BAMBERG, - - - S. Q. BAMBERG GUARDS > REGULAR MEETING EVERY THURSDAY 8.30 P M NOTICE FINAL DISCHARGE. On Saturday, November 2nd, 1907, I will file my final account as administrator of the estate of Plenty Stephens, deceased, with Geo. P. Harmon, Judge of Probate for Bamberg County, and will thereupon ask for my final discharge as such administrator. H. C. FOLK, Qualified Administrator. Bamberg, S. C., Oct. 1st, 1907. AGE NO BAR Cmifh f arnlina ic L? V CTI Jf 111 UVIIUl vui vimm a*^ i Eligible. Old people stooped with suffering, Middle age, courageously fighting, Youth protesting impatiently; Children, unable to explain; All in misery from their kidneys. Only a little backache first. Comes when you catch a cold. Or when you strain the back. Many complications follow. Urinary disorders, diabetes, Bright's disease. Doan's Kidney Pills cure backache. Cure every form of kidney ills. J. W. Powell, proprietor of a general store and coal, wood, and ice dealer, of Waverly, living at 2010 Blanding St., Columbia, S. C., says : "My son has been afflicted with kidney and urinary trouble from childhood, being unable to control the secretions especially when asleep. Since using Doan's Kidney Pills he has entirely recovered!" For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn#Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name?Doan's?and take no other. Trcarter! Attorney-at=Law 2 BAMBBRQ, S. C. I Special Attention Given to Settlement ? of Estates and Investigation of Titles X Offices over Bamberg Banking Co. HOLLISTER'S ? - mm ma BH _ Rocky Mountain i ea nuggets A Busy Medicine for Busy People. Brines Golden Health and Renewed Vigor. A specific for Constipation. Indigestion, Liver and Kidney troubles. Pimples. Eczema. Impure Blood. Bad Breath. Sluggish Bowels. Headache i and BacKsche. Its Rocky Mountain Tea in tab- ! let form. 35 cents a box. Genuine made by j Hollisteb Drug Com pant. Madison, Wis. tOLDEN NUGGETS FOR SALLOW PEOPLE HUMOR OF THE HOUR The Meanest Man In the World. A true story is told of a southerner who went into the store of one of his neighbors and asked him if he didn't want to trade.' "Whatchergot?" said the storekeeper. The man ran his hand down Into his coat pocket and pulled out an egg. "This," said he. "One aig," said the storekeeper. "And what you want for that?" "Waal," drawled the man, "you can gimme a couple knittin' needles for it, can't ye?" "Ef that's all," said the storekeeper, "I reckon I kin." The man received the knitting needles, and, looking up at the store keeper, he said, "Aren't you goin' to treat?" (The custom south demands a treat whenever a swap of any kind is made.) "Well," said the storekeeper, "what you want?" "Oh, I'm not perticilar," said the man. "Gl' me a drink o' sherry." So the storekeeper handed out a bottle of sherry and a glass. "Help yourself." v The man thought a moment and then said solemnly, "I nevah drink sherry without breakin' an aig in it." "Well, upon mah soul," thought the storekeeper. But he handed him the egg he had just received and said: "Here's yoh aig. You kin have it" The man broke the egg into the glass nt ohorrr an/1 In riolnflT BO diftOOVered that the egg had two yolks. He drained the glass, smacked his lips, pronounced It a fine drink and then said to the storekeeper, "You know you ought to gi' me two more knittln' needles, don't you?' "Why?" asked the storekeeper, perplexed. "Because," said the man, "that aig o' mine had two yolks!" ? Harper's Weekly. Something Worth While. "We've got to do something to attract attention," said the editor of the moribund paper. "Do you think It would make a hit if we were to start a puzzle of some sort and offer each solver a year's subscription?' "Well, yes," replied his friend, "if you make It a year's subscription to some other paper."?Catholic Standard and Times. Must Be. "He Is always talking about the light of her countenance." "Is she lantern jawed?"?Philadelphia Press. Her Collection. They had met for the first time at the seashore thirty minutes previously. "Pardon my presumption," he began, "but I?er"? "Well?" interrogated the summer girl as he hesitated. "Will you?er?permit me to add another engagement ring to your collection?" he concluded.?Chicago News. Viewpoints. Mrs. Crawford?I don't see how you can say that woman on the first floor has a lovely voice. I think it is Just awful. Mrs. Crabshaw?But, my dear, you can hear everything she says np the a'rshaft.?Puck. Both 8idcs of It. She?Don't those lonely dinners at the club drive many a bachelor to matrimony ? He?Yes, I believe so. And the strenuous dinners at home drive many a married man to the club.?St. Louis Republic. Trouble Either Way. "I expect to have a bad morning of it." "What's the trouble?" "Well, I'm either going to ask old Gruffieigh for his daughter or get a tooth filled?"?Cleveland Plain Dealer. Didn't Hurt Him. "Mr. Nervey," said the girl's ratner, *it seems to me you sit up entirely too late with my daughter." "Don't worry about that, sir," re- : plied Nervey. "I never require much sleep."?Des Moines Register. A Perfect Achievement. Mr. Goodart?Miss Koy has such a perfect air of innocent young womanhood. Miss Chellus?Yes. Practice makes perfect, you know. ? Philadelphia Rress. The Cast of a Die. "%r 1" ? ** ???V?A Af A^anr>o Qffpf "Marriage is a guiuc m i_uuuw ?^?v. all. Laura Lusher's husband has left her and Is boozing harder than ever." "I see your point. He shook her for the drinks."?Puck. The Vernacular. "Understand, we don't want a man In this business who falls down on assignments." "That's all right. I tumble."?Hous-? ton Post. '1 * a ~ ^ WE HANDLE A ?Q Fine Line of Buggies Consisting of Rubber tire, Open and Top Buggies, Harness and Whips, also a selected line of both ONE AND TWO-HORSE WAGONS Call and see us and get our cheap r?riVpc V>pfnr?> Kmrinor wxvx v my vij uig BLACK & BLACK BAMBERG, SOUTH CAROLINA ( \ F. W. Wagener & Co., i COTTON DEPARTMENT CHARLESTON. S. C. . We have arranged to handle Cotton to best advantage, and solicit consignments. We give special attention to handling Staple Cotton, viz: "Allen Seed," "Florodora," and others of this grade. Try as with a shipment. . * I -J -I-1? -I--I? :i--I-'::--:- -II Great Bargains! & u ? T " " ? I! 1 ? 1 :: is V $ ;; > i | '? sz\ Dry Goods, Clothing, Shoes \\ \ I and all kinds of flerchandise \! ; ' ll' ;; & $ i liinsun o s ( > mm. < m mm % ' ? & i i* * ? Buy now while you can save ![ || so much money ::::::: || j j? mm . 4? a ? v " " IE. O. KIRSCH'SH jh Bamberg, South Carolina *4* A* *A* ?4* ?4? *4* ?4* *4+ *6? *4* *4* *4* *4* ?4? *4* *4* *4* *?+ ?4? *4* *4* ?4# +A+ *i > 1 VERY LOW RATES! H ^ ? ? TO NORFOLK, VA., & RETURN i j ? a ? ? * V ACCOUNT JAMESTOWN TER;; CENTENNIAL EXPOSITION... j; 1 VIA SOUTHERN RAILWAY \\ ?< * * ? ? i. . *4* . / Season, sixty day and fifteen day tickets on sale daily commencing i ! J April 19th, to and including November 30th, 1907. (7 * ? ; Very low rates will also be made for Military and Brass Bands m ? ? ? uniform attending the Exposition ' 2 : r Stop Overs will be allowed on season, sixty day and yfifteen day . t ? tickets, same as on Summer tourist tickets. 2 Z For full and complete information call on Ticket Agents Southern ; ; t ? Railway, or write : t f I R. W. HUNT ]| jjf Division Passenger Agent Charleston, 5. C. jfj :l? fl-:I; ;! il-:! :! :I; :I; :I; :! -I; -Ir::; -I-:I-:I :I' :I; ;1; |Stoves and Ranges! !|j Do You Need a New Stove in Your Kitchen? g Save money by buying the best. We carry 88 the best to be had in the store line, and our ^ prices are reasonable. Our stock of Hardware, Building Supplies, Housefurnishing Goods, ^ 88 Crockery, etc., is full and complete, and a 88 @ visit will be appreciated. Come to see us. w i C. J. S. BROOKER | X THE HARDWARE HAN - - - BAMBERG, S.- C. || ( v ' - .. V ^