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MAY HAVK BEEN* MURDERED. Team Wandering on Road witl Karinei's Body in Wagon. Pensacola. Fla.. Oct. 2.?The bod; of George Hamilton, planter of nea Grand Ridge. Jackson county, to-day was found in his wagon, the tean wandering near his home. Yesterda; Hamilton had been to the cotton gii some miles away ana did not ge away until after night fall. It is sup posed that he was murdered for th< mrmov ti-hinh hp TPOeived fOT his COt ton. Will Oppose Negro Appointment. Washington. Ocft. 2.?"I linten* to oppose vigorously the conlirma tion of every colored man nominate* for a Federal office except Ministe to Liberia." said Senator Vardamai of Mississippi today. s - uuu 4-KA4> ^ i Ills auuuue, wmi'ii lb nidi VJ other Southern Senators, may influ ence the President's policy in th selection of colored men to office. Th pressure at the White House for re cognition of the colorel race is grow ing ar.d the President is soundin; sentiment in the Senate as to what h may expect in future nominations. . "I am not an enemy to the coloret man," continued Senator Vardaman "but I unhesitatingly assert that po litical equality for the colored rao leads to social equality. "I expect to favor and urge tin enactment of laws for this countr; that will make perfect the social am political segregation of the whiti and colored races. We cannot nov follow the idea of Lincoln and sent the colored man away to a country o his own. The next best thing, there fore, is to bring about complete seg regation." OIL-BRIYKX WARSHIPS. Grimy and Perspiring Stoker Ma; Become Relic of the Past. During th~ recent naval manoeuv res several 01' the British dread noughts were drivep by liquid fuel oil taking the place of coal. In man: "quarters it is prophesied that we art on the eve of a new naval era, anc that the authorities are shortly tc equip our battleships with oil-burning plant, coal being dispensed with for propelling purposes. This forecase supported by the fact that tht first sea lord is at present working on a plan to place great oil tanks along the British coast for the use ol the navy. The manner in which oil is used for propelling purposes on battle ships is very simple. The oil is sprayed with a current of air through burners so placed that the jets 01 flame impinge upon fire bricks in the furnace of the boilers. The heai obtained in this manner is enormous steam can be got up in a few minutes by turning on a tap. Two men wil be able to attend to a nest of watertube boilers heated by oil, which would require a dozen stokers and rimmorc t<-? kppn sroine with coal. Among the many advantages oi oil as a fuel is the ease with which it can be transported. Oil can be pumped from one ship to another and thus can easily be transferred ai sea even in rough weather. At pres ent coaling at sea in anything but a perfect calm is an extremely dangerous operation. So convinced are the authorities that oil will prove the future driving force for British battleships that during recent years they have erected huge oil fuel storage tanks at Turnchapel. near Plymouth, on the .Medv ay and at various naval bases ai home and abroad. The grimy and perspiring stokei will be a relic of the past if oil fuel comes into general use in the navy One of the greatest advantages o; this form of power is the elimination of the ash and clinker which is lef 1 behind by coai. It is this grit anc coal dust which render the atmos phere of the average stokehold so un bearable. Oil fuel produces no sucl waste material as this, it does noi throw off great heat from the fur naces and all the stoker will have t( do will be to look after a numbei of taps, instead of shoveling masse: of coal into the fiery furnaces. Although oil is slightly more ex pensive than coal, w.hich latter i: every year increasing in price, in tin long run it will make for economy About sixteen tons of oil generate: as much steam as 25 tons of coal. An instance of the economy of oi fuel occurred recently when a steam er burning oil fuel was taken froii Hull to London with only one Chi nese in the stokehold. One important reason why the na val authorities are in favor of oi fuel is that it would greatly increas< the accommodation on board our bat tleships. In dreadnoughts propell ed by coal an enormous amount o space is taken up by bunkers, and tin accommodation necessary for a larg< number of stokers. With oil fue much of this space would be availabh for storing ammunition and an extn number of seamen and gunners coul( be carried.?Pearson's Weekly. I I GOVERNMENT VAULTS ROBBER. ! ! I i i I . S. Treasurer at 'Irisco Made Good ; < i j >Iissin<* Funds. y San Francisco, Oct. 2.?An inven- i r ! tory filed to-day of the estate of the ; 1 , j late Lester .Jacobs, former United; 1 ii j States treasurer here, shows that the ! s y \aults were robbed of SiLOOO about. i; i April 18, 1^06. the day of the great i c t earthquake and fire. .Jacobs made: - good the loss privately and the claim | \ e of his heirs against the Government ' 1 t'/if ruhnhnrsoniPiit mnsidered of I no value. I During the confusion the subtreasury vaults were guarded by i j I'nited States soldiers. A week later j it was discovered that $2,000 had I s ^ disappeared. The loss, although ru-! t r mored. was never publiciy known J before to-day. C ? * i l Kvan Grew So Fat He Had to (Jive I n 1 c f | e ??? c Too much flesh rendered Patrick | i e ? I Ryan, once a prosperous restaurant j j e keeper in Bristol. Tennessee physi- e callv helpless, retiring him from | r the business world and in fifteen j v z years reducing him to poverty. r 0 I This may not often happen to an j individual in this strenuous Ameri- j j * can life, and especially to a man of | j. * energy and pi?sh. but in spite of all a that he could do Ryan, who had made money, saw his business gradually ^ get away from him on account of his ^ ever-increasing burden of flesh, and v , v, ,. ... ' after he was ooliged to retire ne sat g on the streets for years trading P " watches as a means of preventing a j_ ~ onnA/1,. 1 --.c- ? r\f hie oflniinffi , ^ I LUU IWO-J VI 11.^ ^ s ~ . Q I Twenty years ago, at the age of j i forty, he weighed 2 ?0 pounds and 0 ! was a fine specimen of physical man- v " j hood. Gradually, in spite of dieting, e his weight climbed until he weighed Q 250. He was then still able to attend 0 to business, but his avoirdupois conr tinned to increase until it reached g 300 pounds. Then he gave up the j restaurant business and went on the ^ - i streets and began trading watches. ^ - His flesh continued to increase un- g , til he became physically . helpless ^ : 1 under a weight of 370 pounds. v J "I have tried my utmost to keep t. I ! up the struggle for a livelihood" he ); said, "but 1 am too fat and too short i of breath. Somebody has got to take i care for me if I am to go on." Through the Rev. Father Meyer, a ^ of St. Ann's Catholic church, Ryan r, has been admitted to a Catholic in> stitution in Richmond. His generad b f health is as good as that of the aver- b age man of his age. ^ CATHOLIC DOMINATION. * 1( 5 ~~~" l North Carolina Pai>er Makes Charge S t Against Associated Press. ^ I h t Our daily newspapers are afraid of j . the Catholics. This fear comes from > the fact that the Catholics control . e I the Associated Press, which is the life-blood of the daily paper. The i editors of these journals are not in ^ 1 sympathy with Catholicism, but they dare not speak their honest senti- . 1< f ments in their columns. There is no Si i excuse for the weekly papers to be | > silent for they are in no way, shape ^ , or form dependent on the associated : press, but many of these papers echo - the sentiments of the dailies, and i desire to appear broad minded, how ever narrow and hidebound they may I really be. It is a pity the principle t > purveyors of the life and thought of e ; our time are thus muzzled by any i - particular sect or organization. This n I is no Catholic country. The vast circulation of the Menace, an ex- t - tremely bitter sheet, shows how p i strong an anti-Catholic sentiment is : c among the rank and file of our peo- i v pie. The furor that was raised over a 1 the action of the Charlotte school . board, recently, because it saw fit j t : not to employ two Catholic young | t i ladies to teach, and the profound t silence of the press, except those I papers that censured the board, - shows how well the Catholics man- y - age to manipulate public sentiment i in their favor in a state almost solid- I I ly anti-Catholic. This thing of re- a - fusing to elect teachers because they o ) are Methodists, Baptists. Presbvteri- '3 r ans and Episcopalians, is done every 1 s 5 year. Some school boards, being all j t members of one church, sometimes ! r - elect only those teachers that belong j s to their own denominations, and no ! ? lawyers ever appear in anybody's be. half and no screaming headlines tell I . 5 the story to the waiting world. But i 1 I 8 r 1 of persecution is immediately raised j - and the dailies an dtheir sycophants j 1 read solemn letters to the men who I c - dare discriminate against a great de-; nomination. Perhaps the Catholic - church is not strengthened by such 1 tactics, but it is tiresome to see news- j 1 ! I ? papers appoint themselves the de-; - fenders of the faith, and deliver their j - preachment in favor of liberty of f speech and action, the eternal sepa? ration of church and state, and other j s ancient axioms The Catholics have j 1 our newspapers, that is our daily pa-' u * pers. nailed down hard and fast, but \ v a they are not winning any recruits \ i among the people.?Charity and > Children. i s 1 DIVERS SEEK TREASURE. j [ best of Gold that Sank in 1820 j May f>e Recovered. Untold lost treasures, lost at sea in ; $20. are now being sought by the ; atest development of physiological cience and the enterprise is stirring j ip France from centre to circumfernce. In cafe. club, restaurant; on boule-1 -ard. Champs Elysees and Avenue j J>es Accacias. nothing is being talk- j >d of but the lost treasures of the Bay of Biscay. It has a special interest for Amercans. The lost treasure came from \merica; the ship which bore it .ailed from America. The basis of he treasure story is briefly this: During the French revolution the _"ount de Saint Paul, instead of flyng to England like most of the emigres. went to America. There he rrew enormously wealthy, and with lis wealth he decided to return to ?is native land. For, though he lik d the country which had given him ipportunity and hospitality, a proud >eauty of Brittany held his heart aptive. So he resolved to return and place lis heart and fortune at the feet of ler whose dark eyes haunted him in 11 his wanderings. His wealth consisted of precioustones, mostly diamonds, and gold iars. All were carefully packed away n an enormous cotter specially conducted for the treasure. The count bartered a three-masted schooner, .e .Teune Henri, to carry home his s iamonds and gold i Their value is said to have been t least $20,000,000. The good ship weathered all storms until it reachd the Bay of Biscay, in the vicinity f the Island of Oleron. off the shore f Brittany. Here within sight of the Port of it. Dennis, the good ship Le Jeune lenri was wrecked, and with it the ortune of Count de Saint Paul. Withn sight of land a mutiny broke out. ome of the rough sailormen, madlened with vigil, work and rum, ranted to confiscate the mysterious reasure in the big box. The captain was a fierce man, who new no par'ey but the pistol. The atives say he armed himself with 11 the pistols in his armory, and he nd his mate and his first officers hot and killed murderous mutineers ntil there were hardly any left to e drowned. And the inhabitants ase their statement upon the tradiion that the bodies of the sailors ashed ashore were middled with buljts. ? Happily for himself, the Count de _ aint Paul was delayed in the New 1 ^'orld to puchase some presents for i is lady love in Brittany. This saved ' is life. He took passage by another teamer, only to learn when !ie reach- 1 d Brest of the wreck of all his forLine and hopes. The woman who, more than any- ^ ody else, is pressing this search or the lost treasure, is Mile Guil- i ird de Saint Paul, a collateral de- I cendant of the emigrant nobleman. -Paris Cablegram to the St. Loius * Republic. Then the Ghost Left. J' The rector of Asfordsby says he ? ias "laid" a troublesome ghost by L he pomp and ceremony of solemn " xorcism. Archbishop Thomson once |j rt/-.rnv>r>HcVioH >thp samp feat in a mich simpler manner. a Staying at a country house with ^ raditions of a family ghost, he was ut up for the night in the "haunted hamber." In the morning his hosts ? rere anxious to know if he had seen I ny thing. * "Oh, yes," he replied, "about # welve o'clock I heard a knock at ?< he door. I said. 'Come in, come in.' J "And did he come?" '"Yes, an old sallow looking man." V "Yes, that is our ghost! What did | ou do?" * "I got out of bed and asked if he >elonged to the house. He nodded ssent. I asked if he were a parishner. He nodded again. Then I said, 1 am anxious to build some new chools; will you give me a subscrip- | ion?' He disappeared and I saw no I nore of him!" He is Some Rat Catcher. ^ Mr. L. O. Henderson was a visitor ^ n town Tuesday. While here he told * m Index representative of his sue- ^ e6S in catching rats with a trap nade by himself. He said from Mon!ay at dinner to Tuesday morning he i aught forty big rats. If this is not I he record outside of a regular old- * ime rat killing it must be pretty tear it. Mr. Henderson says the rap be uses is one made by his fatht and grand rather?Greenwood In- ^ o* lex. I m _ S Hare Coins Stolen. Baltimore. Oct. 2.?Rare coins valed at between $25,000 and $30,000 rere stolen from the residence of 1 Valdo Newcomer, president of the | National Exchange Bank, during the ummer, it was learned to-day. ii ai vui For the Town We have receive HORSES A! an extra nice load as usual, we are was the first loae county thisseaso to see them, evei needing an anim; ^ Tl. . can suit you. int up to the Jones h quality and style an extra nice lot Buggies, Carri; Harness, Lap R? We have a number of Harness, and feel sure 1 requirements, 110 matter We have the styles ar Come to see us. You JONES BI L BAMBERG, .... ??? _ [IT* , 1 [Kaiser & winter and 1 J Modern and Sani Im j Private Water Sy | Sanitary Septic 1 jonn are rs f _ AIKEN coming 'sjj ohn and Winter have been; one for some time and they oth are anxious to come! j "Lombard" ack, and every breath it'sj improved i ! VARIABlf FRICTION I ^1 ^^1 |1 # ' Best material and w >hoes, Clothing, gggrg ? m making machines & Jnderwear, Out1 | f AUGUST ngs, Blankets, Of^mj )ress Goods, jHEAlTH 8011 They both take a breath j INSUR __ J -i?l !_ ..J I Agent for Superio ana sran agaui aiiu saj Can SaTe you Mone handkerchiefs, wMars, Ties, 11 ? 1 Will Write Ms and T? fd? ] bility, Casua] - strongest an i/HTPlTQ liable COJ Jill Ivl O My Motto; ?Bu JOHX SAYS?Get the girls some *n Baniberg, an ice Shoes, nicest to be found, some Mho Patronize rettv dresses. Get the boys some 'Phone 10-L, o ood Shoes, Stockings. Collars, Ties, BAMBER hirts, a Norfolk Suit each. WINTER SAYS?Get them quick. IAUM n JOHX SAYS?Go to JUHIN U. WATCHMAKER I 0 1 1 Fine Railroad and (entz & relder BAMBERG, S. C. DEXMAR I * the Season i and County 4 ? 4 4 A jm id a car load or ND MULES , by the way, and, * ] ahead, for this . J received in this ' i n. We want you i if you are not al just now. We isefully measure igh standard for . We also have of ages, Wagons, ibes, Whips, Etc nnrrlac onH )U| OLJ 1V3 111 UU^IVO CIi ivi that we can meet your how exacting they are. id the prices are right, are always welcome. MOTHERS - - SOUTH CAROLINA ? , j TIT 11 LODGE MEETING. - 1 ?lKvI Bamberg, Lodge, No. 38, Knights Hti<r DnnfW of Pythias meets first and fourth nog, KOuling Monday nights at 7:30 p. m. Visitit ing brethren cordially invited. Iff7 GEO. F. HAIR. raSk! Installed' Chancellor Commander. LanKs installed. A M DENBOW, ties Inquire Keeper of Records and Sea1' raid Office. mm*?? > q J. F. Carter B. D. Carter ' CARTER & CARTER Attomeys-at-Law k BAMBERG, S. C. Special attention given to setI tlement of estates and investiM^ggSf gation of land titles. PI ??????? , , Mjii_ FRANCIS F. CARROLL >aw Mills. Att? MaUaw prrn Strong. Accurate} AttOTO6y-cit-Ij<lW orkmanshipTlighti ?ffice in Hoffman Building ?le power; simplei GENERAL PRACTICE. 3 made in several BAMBERG, S. O. substantial money4 ________________________ own to the smallest alog showing En3 ?332 PORTABLE AND STATIONARY 11 Saw Mill supplies, fl || A | II ?% ^supp,ycj-1 fy 01M t V LIVESTOCK LWiI Ill Cu AND BOILERS ACCIDENT Saw, Lath and Shingle Mills, Injectors, Pumps and Fittings, Wood * i Saws. SDlitters. Shafts, Pulleys, AINUE I Belting, Gasoline Engines r Monument Co. LARGE STOCK f fQlV1RA j on Tombstones. poun(jry< Macliine, Boiler Works, Supply Store. TALKER AUGUSTA, GA. >T, S. C. ^zzuzz: graham & black ICKINSON Attorneys-at-Law E AGENT Will practice in the United States and Anything State Courts in any County . ., . T. in the State. = Accident, Lia [ty, in tlie BAMBERG, S. C. d most renpanies. j FIRE INSURANCE y What I Xeed a From Those Old Line Companies \f? II i'AV? | ?r at Oil Mill j J. F. FOLK, Agt. G* S- C' i BAMBERG, S. C. ^ HADWIN CHICHESTER S PILLS j WTHE DIAMOND BRAND. A AXD JEWELER Ladl^I A?k your Drnp^At for/\ I ? fi Chl-ehe8-ter s Diamond Brand//V\ fYkirmliratWl T?<*. Mils In Red and Gold metallk\\^/ compiicacea l\e- , boxes, sealed with Blue Ribbon.^/ 1 ' Take no other. Bay of yonr specialty. \ 'J ~ m Droralnt. AskforCIIl.Cl/E8-TEH8 'vnpripncp ! t rf DIAMOND BRAND PILL8,for?5 < experience V "P? m years known as Best. Safest, Always Reliable r \ k, s. c. I ^?r SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE