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SON KILLED, FATHER WOUNDED Pickens County Men, Charged with Murder, Resist Officers. Charlotte, N. C., Nov. 16.?In a pitched battle on the outskirts of Brevard late this afternoon, Deputy Sheriff Branch Paxton, of Transyl* vania county, shot and instantly kill's ed Leroy Elrod and badly wounded his father, Thomas Elrod, both of whom were wanted in Pickens county, S. C.\ for alleged murder of a man > there yesterday. Paxton. was also painfully hurt and bruised by the attacks of the men he was trying to arrest. * Early this morning local officers were wired to lookout for the two j ElTods. They were located this af' ternoon and Sheriff Shuford and Deputy Paxton went after them. In % Closing in on the Elrods, Paxton (reached them first and ordered them to throw their hands up. While covered with the officer's gun and being ^ searched for weapons, the elder Elrod knocked the pistol from Paxton's hand and a hand to hand conflict enf. sued, lasting several minutes. There was a general exchange of shots between the three, but only one bullet took effect, Leroy Elrod, the son, being shot through the breast. The old man was quickly overpowered and brought to jail, at Brevard. Sheriff Shuford reached the scene too v laite to render any assistance to his deputy, having gone further way to head off the escape of the men. Thomas Elrod is about 62 years old. His son was only 19. The old man admits having shot the man in Pickens county yesterday, a9 charged. Sheriff Roark. from Pickens county, arived just after the shooting, having driven through the country. The coroner held an inquest to-night and acquitted the Brevard officer of all ^ blame in the matter. It is considered f rather a miracle that Mr. Paxton was not more seriously wounded in the f . melee. SHIP CENTURY OLD. Vessel Buried Years Beneath Bustle and Rush of the City. San Francisco, Nov. 14.?Unearthed from its sleep of sixty years or more beneath the bustle and rush of the commission district of this city, t the skeleton of a deep-water ship built more than a century ago was disclosed to-day by workmen excavating for a building. The massive > timbers of the old sea rover, held together with hard-wrought copper spikes, lie within a stone's throw of the site of Fort Gunny Bags, where the vigilantes exacted swift justice in pioneer days, and nearly half a , mile from the present water front. !It was believed at first that the / skeleton was that of a Spanish ship of war, thrown ashore in some forgotten hurricane before the water line was driven out into the bay by the city's need of room. . It was determined that the old vessel was between eighty and a hundred feet in length, too short for a ship of war, and from the heavy timbers at the bow it was argued that she was a New England whaler. Many such were pressed into service . w in the gold rush of '49, and brought ardent Argonauts around the Horn. Arrived within the Golden Gate, their usefulness ended, and they lay abandoned in the stream until they were pulled jashore to serve as lodging places for the gold seekers. LITTLE GIRL FATALLY BURNED. Mother Makes Vain Efforts to Save f ? Child, at Scranton. Florence, Nov. 14.?News was received in the city of a horrible accij dent, which occurred at Scranton, a small town 21 miles south of this i city, in Florence, county, Monday afternoon, in which Ethel, the fiveyear-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Cook, of that place, was burned to death. From what can be learned, Ethel > and two other small children were playing in a room at the Cook home; when suddenly Mrs. Cook heard her little daughter scream. She rushed ' to her as quickly as she could go, only to find her clothing in a blaze of fire. Before she could do anything for her the flames had burned all the clothing from the little girl's body and it was only a short time be'i fore the life of the little girl had gone out, although everything possifh ble was done for her. Society Leader Held for Theft. Minneapolis, Minn., Nov. 16.? Wilfred Stuart Sheldon Dickason, said to be a member of an old English family, and arrested yesterday on the charge of stealing jewels valued at $2,950 from Mrs. Olga von Wedelstadt Haskell, of this city, was arraigned to-day in police court and ? * asked for a preliminary examina? > tion. The case will be heard to-mor* row. Bond was placed at $5,000. which has not been furnished. t George Haskell, son of Mrs. Has^ kell, who also was arrested yesterfiav nn romDlaint of his mother and I held at police station last night, was given a 45-day workhouse sentence, I but was released on probation for one year. According to the complaint made by Mrs. Haskell, the jewels disapfr peared shortly after Dickason had seen her hiding them. Dickason who has been a guest in the Haskell home for about five weeks, and wTho has been a leader in Minneapolis society since coming here sev, I eral months ago, declares that he knows nothing of the jewels. ? * A Fisher of Men. ,1 A Methodist bishop was a guest, j at the home of a friend who had two charming daughters. One morning f. the bishop, accompanied by the two young ladies, went out in hope of catching some trout. An old fisherman, out for the same purpose, wish1 ing to appear friendly, calld out: "Ketchin, any, pard?" The bishop, drawing himself to his . full height, replied: "Brother, I am a fisher of men." I "You've got the right kind of bait, all right," was the fisherman's remainder. I r R . I MUST SERVE SENTENCE. Supreme Court Upholds Lower Court in Seminole Judgment. Columbia, Nov. 13.?Rejecting the allegations of error in the trial in the lower court, the South Carolina Supreme Court this afternoon, in an opinion by Chief Justice Jones, affirms the judgment of the Richland county circuit court in November, 1910, when John Y. Garlington and James Stobo Young were convicted on a charge of breach of trust as officers of the Seminole Securities Company, and sentenced to serve three years, and one year, respectively, on the public works or in the State penitentiary. Garlington was president and Young secretary and treasurer of the comDanv. and were brought to trial in the Richland court on an indictment embracing five counts, including charges of conspiracy, breach of trust with fraudulent intention, and grand larceny. They were found guilty by the jury on the fourth count only, which charges "a breach of trust by the said defendants by the conversion to their own use of the sum of $55,596 in money of the property of the Seminole Securities Company, entrusted to the de- J fendants and converted to their own j use with fraudulent intention." Garlington and Young are both from Laurens, and are under a $5,000 bond each for their appearance. It Is stated here to-night that the men are now in Chicago, but they will be communicated with at once, and are expected to arrive in the immediate future to commence serving their sentences. The exceptions, imputing error during the trial, embrace admission of testimony alleged to be immate? - ~ 1 ? rvrQeifli'nor "ill H P"?> rictl, 1 Ullilgs UJL lliu {/l voiuiuq JUV.QV on motions for a directed verdict, and for quashing of indictments, and refusals by presiding judge to charge as requested by the defense. The opinion at every point finds the trial to have been conducted without error prejudicial to the defense and affirms the judgment. Associates Justices Gary, Woods, and Hydrick concur in the decision, of Chief Justice Jones. Teacher Shot by Father. Lumber City, Ga., Nov. 18.?Prof. R. L. Moon, principal of the public school at this place, was shot and painfully wounded yesterday while on his way from school by D. Z. Willis, a patron of the school. The trouble grew out of a whipping given by the school teacher to Willis's little boy. Willis stopped Prof. Moon on the J Street, wnere soiue wuius ?*cic paooed. The former pulled his revolver and shot at the professor three times, two shots taking effect One penetrated the left hand and the other I made a scalp wound. The wounded man was given medical attention and his injuries are not thought to be of a serious nature. Prof. Moon is held in the highest esteem here and the shooting affair is generally deplored. Willis recently moved here from Cochran, Ga. Woman Doctor Commits Suicide. _______ Pittsburg, Pa., Nov. 16.?M. Ethel Kirk, aged 35 years, a well known woman physician, was found dead in her apartments in the Geyer building, located up town, late to-day - <? -1.1 r rrU/x I from itne enects 01 cmoruiumi. x uc doctor had * committed suicide by placing cotton, saturated with the drug, in her mouth and nostrils. Financial troubles were the cause. Several days ago Dr. Kirk visited a trust company and made her will. Wednesday, in conversation with the woman janitor of her apartment, she said: "I am tired of this. I can collect little from my patients. I wish I would die. I would like to lie down and never wake up." Mrs. Dippold, the janitress, was called to the telephone of another physician in the building to-day. * An officer of the trust company where Dr. Kirk made her will informed the janitress that he had received two citroncp letters from the Dhvsician. He said he was unable to get a response to telephone calls and advised an immediate investigation. Summoning Dr. H. E. Krumpe, Mrs. Dip; pold unlocked Dr. Kirk's office. They found the woman lying on a lounge dead. They Looked On. Johnny, who lives on the South Side, hasn't been to school long, but he already holds some peculiar views regarding the administration of his particular room. The other day he came home with a singularly morose look on his usually smiling face. "Why, Johnny," said his mother, "what's' the matter?" Johnny snorted. "I ain't going to that old school no more," he fiercely announced. "Why, Jcjhnny," said his mother, reproachfully, "you mustn't talk like ! that. What's wrong with the school?" "I ain't goin' there no more," Johnny replied; "an' it's because all the boys in my room is blamed old cowards!" "Why, Johnny, Johnny!" "Yes, they are. There was a boy whisperin' this mornin', and' teacher saw him an' bumped his head on th' desk ever an' ever so many times. An' those big cowards sat there an' didn't say quit nor nothin'. They let ! that old teacher bang th' head off th' poor little bov, an' they just sat there an' seen her do it!" "And what did you do. Johnny?" "I didn't do nothin'?I was the boy!"?Cleveland Plain Dealer. When a man points a gun at you knock him down. Don't stop to see if it is loaded, but knock him down, and don't be at all particular what you do it with. If there is going to be a coroner's inquest let it be the other fellow. He won't be missed. "Judge," said the guilty man, "I inherit this felonious habit. I can't resist it. My father was a grafter and my mother a photographer. I can't help taking things." "Then take seven years at hard Labor," said the judge, kindly.? Cleveland Plain Dealer. LAST HOPE VANISHES. Governor Declines Even to Grant Brief. Respite. Richmond, Va., Nov. 15.?With the frank and emphatic statement that he believed in the prisoner's guilt, Gov. Mann to-day declined to grant a respite to Hehry Clay Beattie, Jr., convicted in Chesterfield county, CDntomhai* fi r?f mifn milrdoi' Tho ro. kJV yj b^ill uv-x KJ J VX " XXV XXX ux uvx X HVo X V fusal of the governor to interfere wiith the sentence, which the supreme court declared on Monday to be plainly right, means that Beattie will die in the electric chair at the State penitentiary on Friday, November 24. Being aware that a final decision would be reached in his case to-day, Beattie, in the death cell, waited expectantly for some word from the governor's office. His grav-haircd father, utterly broken in spirit and strength, who notified him on Monday that an appeal had been denied, was spared the ordeal of conveying a second message that all hope was lost. Hears Fate in Silence. The Rev. Benjamin Dennis, an Episcopal minister, wlio had interceded in the young man's behalf, went quickly and quietly to the prison to inform him that every possible effort to save him had failed. Beattie heard the announcement in silence, though he was visibly affected. Later in the afternoon his father, brother and young sister called to see him. Unlike the supreme court, which filed no written opinion in refusing a writ of error, Gov. Mann gave out a statement, in which he said that Beattie's appeal was made with "the purpose, if possible, of avoiding the consequences of a crime of which he knows he is guilty." Not Worth Considering. The governor also stated that the so-called affidavit of Paul Beattie was not worthy of consideration as evidence. In a signed statement to Beattie's lawyers and the public, Gov. Mann said: "While I sympathize very profoundly with the father of H. C. Beattie, Jr., and would be glad to help him if I could do so with proper regard for the public interests, I cannot with any consideration for those interests interfere with the due execution of the sentence of the court in the Beattie case. Followed Trial Closely. "I followed that case during the trial, and as its horrible facts developed, .regretted that a crime so cruel and malicious should have occurred within the confines of this State. In the decision of every question which was presented to the able and impartial judge who presided at the trial, he was careful to give the benefit of every reasonable doubt to the prisoner; his instructions were as favorable as counsel for the prisoner could have expected; that he did not err in the admission of exclusion of evidence or in his instructions given to the jury, is shown in the refusal of ine supreme court 01 appeals to grant a writ of error. Defendant's Rights Protected. "There is no question of the honesty and fairness of the jurors trying the case, nor is there any question that the defence made by lawyers of character and ability obtained for H. C. Beattie, Jr., every advantage guaranteed by law to persons charged with crime, "That Beattie is guilty of the wilful, deliberate and cruel murder of his young wife I have not the slight esx qouoi, nor is ix insisted max ineie shall be any greater relief offered than the commutation of his sentence to imprisonment for life. "I do not think the affidavits of Paul Beattie, printed in the papers, oir any other evidence of consideration brought to my attention, sufficient for that purpose, nor do I question the wdsdom, I might add, the necessity of capital punishment in cases where human life has been quickly and deliberately taken. "Life for Life." "On the contrary I believe that this punishment is necessary for the protection of society, and if on a jury I would not hesitate, in a proper case, to agree to a verdict requiring life for life. "To grant a respite in so plain a case would be to set a precedent; would be to temporize with the law and to encourage appeals to the supreme court, with the sole purpose of gaining time. I believe the best way to prevent such crimes as this is to punish them adequately, certainly, speedily. - Therefore, the judgment of the circuit court of Chesterfield will be carried into effect with out interference from me." LEGAL PHRASE SCARES WOMAN. A ttomntc Qnifiido Whpn TnlH Hftl* Case Was Nol Pressed. Atlanta, Ga., Nov. 13.?"Nolle pro&sed," coming from the lips of her attorney, who was telling her of the outcome of a case against her, so terrified Mrs. Therese Bates, a young Hungarian woman, that she tried to commit suicide here yesterday afternoon. Unfamiliar with court terms, the woman thought that some terrible calamity was about to descend upon her. When she heard the result of her case she dashed for an open winJ '* 4-V? n44/\?i?> /M-i +Vl A UUW 1X1 LUC CLLLU1 11CJ o VJ111V?C WU (,ii.c. fourth floor of an office building, and but for prompt action on the part of several men would have fallen to the pavement below. As soon as possible a clear explanation of the term was given, and the woman felt that life again was worth the living. Advertising Brings the Business. ' The business man who does not advertise might almost as well put his goods in a basement as on the shelves of his store. He does not realize the truth of the statement made by Lord Macauley years ago when steam was the great motive power, that, "Advertising is to business what steam is to machinery." He would soon know the truth of it to his great financial gain if he would but test it. This is what the progressive business man does with consequent prosperity to himself and of gain to the public. Come & Ne ARRIVE T1 Hats, Feathers, tors, Embroid and Draw Floss, Full Line of A1 Lot of other smaller quantiti The Millin (Formerly K. I. BAMBER FARMS F BAMBERG COUNTY. No. 1. 675 acres; 250 cleared, with tenant houses, barn and stables, 4 miles east of Midway. No. 2. 250 acres; 60 acres cleared, with barn and ^tables; 1% miles north of Midway. . No. 3. 650 acres; about 450 acres well timbered with cypress and other hardwoods. A fine pole and tie proposition. Xo. 4. 500 acres; 300 acres cleared, stumps removed, balance in long leaf pine and hardwood; 7-room dwelling, good tenant houses, barn and stables; 4 miles west of Ehrhardt. Xo. 5. 312 acres; 150 acres cleared, balance in pine and hardwoods; 7-room 2-story dwelling, 4-room tenant house; 1 mile north of Midway. Xo. 6. 278 acres; 80 acres cleared, balance in pine and hardwood; 6-room 2-story dwelling, barn and stables; IVz miles north of Bamberg. Xo. 7. 400 acres; 225 acres cleared, balance in margins and timbers; 5 tenant houses, barn and stables; 6 miles south-east of Bamberg. Xo. 8. 136 acres; 75 acres cleared, balance in pine and hardwood timbers; 4-room itenant house; 2 miles south of Bamberg. Xo. 9. 668 acres; 350 acres clear-! ed, balance well timbered; 6-room dwelling, 4-room tenant house, barn and stables; well drained; 10 miles south of Bamberg. Xo. 10. 388 acres; 200 acres cleared, balance finely timbered; 7room dwelling; 5 tenant houses, barn and stables; 8 miles south of Bam-J berg. Xo. 11. 206 acres; 125 acres cleared, balance in long leaf pine and hardwood timbers; 2 miles east of Govan, S. C. ' Xo. 12. 230 acres; 150 acres cleared, balance in margins and timbers; 4 tenant houses, barn and stables; 1 mile south of Bamberg. Xo. 13. 258 acres; 80 acres cleared, balance in margins and timbers; 4-room dwelling, barn, stables and other outbuildings; 40 acres under wire fence; 4 miles east of Midway. Xo. 16. 62 acres 30'acres cleared; 4-room tenant house, barn and' stables; 2% miles south of Bamberg. Xo. 17. 50 acres; 40 acre cleared; good tenant house, barn and stables; 3 miles soutn or ?amoerg. 353 acres, 200 open; balance In long leaf pine and hardwoods; 4 good tenant houses, 4 rooms each; lies within 2 miles of Bamberg & Ehrhardt Railroad. 903 acres, 350 open, in good state of cultivation, balance in pine and hardwoods; only ^ mile north of Midway, S. C. DORCHESTER COUNTY. No. 15. 165 acres, a good Umber proposition; 7 miles south of Ridgeville, S. C. ' ORANGEBURG COUNTY. | No. 19. 913 acres, 600 acres cleared, balance in timbers; 4-room dwelling; 7 tenant houses; large j barn and stables and other outbuild ings; 5 miles east of Cope, S. C. BARNWELL COUNTY. No. 20. 260 acres; 150 acres cleared, balance in timbers; 3 tenant houses, barn and stables; 3 miles from Dunbarton, S. C. HAMPTON COUNTY. No. 18. 750 acres; 450 acres cleared; 9 good tenant houses, barn j. t. o Real Estate Agent I il WiTrCr 4 I have just received a shj (ft, cycles of the latest make easy terms. A small am wheel and the balance in i have a large supply of b impair you old wheel at a fft* mobiles, Bicycles, Guns i (ft, short notice. J J. B. B l I The Repair Man w Beauties HIS WEEK Jabots, Aviaery, Stamped m Work, Girdles I These Just In. new items in es^at......... .... lery Store SHUCK & CO.) G, S. C. OR SALE and stables; only 1 mile south of Fairfax. Xo. 21. 1,000 acres; 600 acres cleared; 13 tenant houses with 4 ruums, urajjuage guuu, umy 74 iiiixc north of town limits of Brunson, S. C. Xo. 22. 110 acres; 60 acres cleared; 2 tenant houses with 4 rooms, barn and stables; only mile north of Brunson, S. C. Xo. 23. 363 acres; 175 acres cleared; 5 tenant houses; 3^ miles northeast of Fairfax, S. C. Xo. 24. 545 acres; 300 acres [cleared, 10-room 2-&tory dwelling, 1 store house, 4-room 2-story dwelling; one large barn, 2 small ones; engine and boiler; sawmill and gin outfit; well 600 feet deep; hydiraulic pump; four miles from Scotia, S. C. Xo. 25. 2,500 acres; 500 acres cleared, balance in hardwood timbers; 2 settlements; well fenced with wire. Xo. 26. 500 acres; 150 acres cleared, balance well timbered; 10room dwelling, barn and stables; % mile from Gillisonville, S. C. Xo. 27. 2,100 acres; cut over timbered lands 25 years ago; no buildings; 0 a fine stock raising proposition; lying near Gillisonville, S. C. Xo. 28. 156 acres; 100 acres cleared; C. & W. C. Railroad running over its southern portion; 2 miles east of Fairfax. Xo. 29. 70 acres, cleared; 6-room dwelling, barn and stables; 2% miles north of Hampton Court T-Tmi co GREENWOOD COUNTY. No. 30. 1,403 acres; 700 acres cleared; balance well timbered; 8room 2-story dwelling; 18 tenant houses, 4 and 5 -rooms each; 1 store house; 1 large and 8 small barns with stable, stock, and implements included if desired. COLLETON COUNTY. 1,260 acres, 400 open; balance well timbered in long leaf pine; iroom dwelling; 5 good tenant houses, and barn and stables; near Smoaks X Roads. TOWN PROPERTIES FOR SALE AND RENT. One 5-room residence on Orange street, large rooms and reception hall; barn and stables; lot contains 1 2-5 acres; good water, shade trees, an unaer wire ieuue. One 8-room, 2-story dwelling, lot, barn, stables, and other outbuildings ings on Railroad Avenue. One 5-room dwelling, barn, stables, servant house and other outbuildings, on Second street. One 5-room dwelling and lot, barn, stables and other buildings, on Second street. One 6-room dwelling, large lot, servant house, barn, stables and auto house, oh Church street. One 5-room house and lot, on New Road street. One 7-room dwelling, large lot barn and stables, on New Road street. One 4-room dwelling, new, large lot, all fenced, on Green street. One 4-room tenant house and large lot, on New Road street. One 2-room tenant house and lot, oh New Road street. Four large open lots on New Road street. One large open lot, on New Bridge street. Full descriptions with prices and terms, on application. ?'NEAL * * o . i i* Sam berg, aoutn Carolina frAAAAAAAAAAAf* edit You | ipment of brand new bi- * which I will sell you on Mm lount when you get the weekly payments. I also >icycle supplies and will y reasonable price. Autoind Pistols repaired on ?? t RICfCLEf Bamberg, S. C. ? NOTICE OP SALE. State of South Carolina?County of Bamberg?In Court of Common Pleas. Carrie E. Simmons, plaintiff, againts Sallie E. Whetstone, et al., defendants. By virtue of a decretal order of his Honor, S. W. G. Shipp, Circuit Judge, I will sell to the highest bidder for . cash on Monday, the 4th day of December, next, at the court house in the Town of Bamberg, between the legal hours of sale, the following described property: All that certain piece, parcel or lot of land situate, lying and being in the Town of Bamberg, County and State aforesaid, containing and meas- x uring five acres, more or less, and bounded as follows: North by lot of Jack Rowe; East by New Bridge St.; South by lot of R. L. Risher and F. W. Free; and West by C. R. Brabham, Sr. . .''%M ALSO Those certain lots of land situate, lying and being in the Town of Bamberg, County and State aforesaid, described as follows: Lots 7, 8, 9, and 10, in block 1, in Brabham Court; also, lots 15 and 16 in block 4, and lots 34 and 35 in block 1 of the said Brabham Court. Purchaser to comply with bid within one hour after sale or the said property will be resold at the purchaser's risk, and so on from time to time until a purchaser is found who will comply. Purchaser to pay for papers. H. C. FOLK, M Master Bamberg County. , MAYFIELD & FREE, Plaintiff's Attorneys. Bamberg, S. C., November 6, 1911. MASTER'S SALE. By virtue of a decree of the Courts ^ ^ S of Common Pleas for Bamberg Coun-T ty made in the case of F. M. Roach, administratrix of the estate of S. C. Roach, vs. O. J. Bond et al., I will sell at the Court House door, Bam berg, S. C., during the legal hours of / '. j sale, on Monday, December 5, 1911, to the highest bidder for cash: All that piece, parcel or lot of land, situate and being in the county of Bamberg, formerly Barnwell, in the State of South Carolina; bounded on the North by lands of - V: ^ the estate of W. F. Roach; East by lands formerly of Free; South by lands of F. M. Roach, formerly M. G. Roach; and West by run of Little ,v. Saltkeahatchie; the said tract originally containing two hundred and thirty-four (234) acres according to said plat but since reduced by sale to one hundred and eighty (1$0) acres. --^ph H. C. FOLK, Master for Bamberg County. B. C. BELLINGER, ^ Plaintiff's Attorney. , A , NOTICE OF SALE. V State of South Carolina?County * of Bamberg. By virtue of a power of attorney' to me directed by the heirs-at-law of C. j : Boozer Copeland and Theacia Copeland, I will offer for sale to the highest bidder Jor cash at the Court House in the Town of Bamberg on Monday, the 4 th day of Deccmbor next, being salesday in December, all that certain piece, parcel or tract of land, situate in the County of Bam- ' / berg, State aforesaid, containing 164 acres, more or less, and bounded as : ^ 1 follows: North by. lands of J. L. ; Copeland and Little Saltkeahatchie; East by Mrs. Martin Smith; South by / Isaac W. Rentz; and West by J. Laz Copeland. A title to the said purchaser at said sale will be executed and delivered ! unto the purchaser on the delivery > sj of the purchase money. J. C. COPELAND, , Attorney in fact for the heirs-at- Y%^ law of C. Boozer Copeland and Theacia Copeland. Bamberg, S. C., November 6, 1911, FARMERS' UNION MEETINGS. The local Bamberg Farmers' Union > ;/* -g meets at the court house in Bamberg on the first and third Friday mornings in every month. Meeting at V ; 11 o'clock. Applications for membership received at every meeting. Let all members he present. J. W. STEWART, J. P. O'QUINN, President. / - ^ Secretary. - ? . 1 *ll 2 D. DELK t | CARRIAGE WORKS ' - V-% When in need of anything in my line, don't forget the place, No. 24 Main street, .Bamberg, ; :*y.g S. C., in front of the cotton mill. | We run a first-class repair and wheel wright shop, build one and two-horse wagons, sewing machine and delivery wagons, log carts, and any special wagon; paint buggies and au- ' > tomobiles in factory style. 'p I We are agent for the Deering harvesting machinery, disc r harrows, compost spreaders, gasoline engines, etc. P We carry a stock of the best grain drills on the market, rail and see us before you buy. " " I Anything! sent us will have the same attention as if you were to bring it yourself. .v" . D. J. DELK BAMBERG S. C. BRICK WORK I am an experienced brickmason and do all kinds of brick and concrete work, plastering, kalsomining, etc. Satisfaction guaranteed. JOHN DATS BAMBERG, S. C. An ad. in The Herald will bring recults. Try one and see. *.Z t ' . { .. H /