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PERSONAL MENTION. People Visiting in This City and at Other Points. I ?Miss Osteen, of Florence, is | visiting Miss Ida Brabham. ?Mr. D. M. Eaves, of Union, was j in the city a few days last week. ?Mr. H. B. Grimes, of Lees, was in the city Monday on business. ?Mr. L. B. Fowler spent Saturday j and Sunday in Augusta with rela- j tives. ?Dr. and Mrs. C. A. Sanders spent Sunday in Aiken with friends and relatives. ?Mr. and Mrs. H. N. Folk spent a; few days last week with relatives at i Barnwell. . ?Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Stokes spent a few days in the city last week from Edgefield. * ?Mr. M. A. Moye, of Fairfax, spent several days in the city recently with Mr. J. T. O'Neal. ?Mr. W. D. Rhoad, Jr., U. S. N., of Charleston, spent the week end in j the city at home. - ?'Rev. and Mrs. R. H. Jones and , children are spending two weeks in Anderson with relatives. ?Mr. Henry L.,Kearse> U. S. N., of Mount Pleasant, spent several days in the city last week. ?Miss Ola Faulkner, of Gainesville, Ga., is visiting her uncle, Mr. J. K. Faulkner, in this city. ?Private Albert McMillan, of Camp Wadsworth, Spartanburg, is spending a few days at home. ?Mrs. J. C. Folk and daughters, Misses Lucille and Ruth, spent several days last week in Charleston. ?Mrs. A. M. Brabham and children left recently for Hendersonville, N. C., to spend the summer months. ?Mr. A. M. Brabham attended the < meeting of the county food administrators in Columbia Thursday last. ?Mrs. M. A. Moye, Jr., and children, of Charleston, are visiting at the home of Mrs. R. W. D. Rowell. ?Mr. Clifton S. Rhoad, of Camp Jackson, is spending a ten days furlough at his home in the Hunter's Chapel section. ?Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Stokes and, Mrs. M. W. Brabham are spending a few weeks in the mountains of North Carolina. ?Dr. and Mrs. L. A. Hartzog, of Bamberg county, were in town yesterday en route to Glenn Springs.? Greenwood Index. ?Mr. Richbarg Rowell, who is taking a special army training course at Clemson college, spent a few days at home last week. ?Mr. J. D. Copeland, Jr., has returned to the city after spending two weeks with his family in the mountains of North Carolina. ?Mrs. J. J. Kearse, of the Keafse section, and Mrs. W. 1$. Harter, of Fairfax, were the guests of Mr. and r+ * Mrs. W. P. Jones last Sunday. ?Miss Bessie Watson left last week for Alexandria, Va., her new home, after spending a few weeks in the city with Miss Virginia Folk. ?Mr. J. D. Copeland, Jr., of Bamberg, returned to his home yesterday after a short visit to his cousin, Mr. H. Gerard Hartzog.?Greenwood Index. ?Mrs. j. C.. Guilds and little daughter, Jlildred, and Mrs. C. E. Black and little son, H. N., Jr., are spending this week with Mrs. R. B. Still in Blackville. ?Mrs. E. Hv Henderson and Mrs. Paul J. Zeigler left last week for Waco, Texas, to join their husbands, Leut. Henderson and Lieut. Zeigler, who are stationed at that place. ^ ?Miss Ottie Harrison, who was some time ago transferred by the American Telephone and Telegraph company from Denmark to Jacksonville, has been transferred from that place to Memphis, Tenn. ?Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Bruce and little son left Saturday night for Atlanta, Where they will visit Mr. Bruce's mother. They will also visit their son, Lieut. Edwin C. Bruce, at Camp Sevier, before returning home. ?Mr. J. K. Faulkner, Miss Ola Faulkner, Mrs. W. L. Lovinggood, and Misses Ochie Maie and Margaret Jennings motored to Columbia on the fourth, and were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. S. S. Steinberg on Green street. ?Quite a party of college girls and boys dined with Miss Mildred Jones last Sunday: Miss Sadie Harter, of Columbia; Mr. Holbrooke Williams, a recent graduate of Newberry college; Mr. Faber Kearse and Mr. William Harter, of the jCitadel, and Miss Ruby McMillan, who has been her house guest for some time, and who is a student of Anderson college. < hi ? In answer to queries regarding the protection afforded against mustard gas by American masks, word has come from the expeditionary forces that no information has been received that any box respirator of American or English manufacture I has been penetrated in the field. | BANK STATEMENT. j Statement of the condition of The Farmers & Merchants Bank, located at Ehrhardt, S. C., at the close of business June 29th, 1918. RESOURCES. Loans and discounts ....$284,746.36 Overdrafts 820.00 Bonds and stocks owned by the bank 5,000.00 : Furniture and fixtures .... 1,515.00 j Banking house 1,435.75 j Due from banks and bankers 8,108.16 j Curencv 3,500.00 | Gold So.00 ; Silver and other minor coin 457.25 . Checks and cash items .. 1,200.00 j Other resources, viz: Liberty bonds 11,000.00 j i Total $317,$67.52 j LIABILITIES. j Capital stock paid in ....$ 20,000.00 j Surplus fund 10,000.00 | Undivided profits, less j current expenses and taxes paid 12,764.8$ ; ; Indivi dual j I depos its j i subject to check .. ..$42,694.65 Savings dei posits .. .. 82,911.83 Time certificates of deposit .. .. 24,605.40 t' Q ell i p ' Q checks.... 390.76 150,602.64 j Bills payable, including certificates for money borrowed 124,500.00 j Total $317,867.52 I State of South Carolina?County of i Bamberg. Before me came W. Max Walker, j cashier of the above named bank,; j who, being duly sworn, says that j the above and foregoing statement! is a true condition of said bank, as i shown by the books of said bank. i J W. MAX WALKER, Cashier, j] Sworn to and subscribed before me i this 9th day of July, 1918. W. B. MOORE, Correct-Attest: Notary Public. S. W. COPELAND, J. H. ROBERTS. M. D., j | W. MAX WALKER, Directors, i! ??mi ^yThrtftan jLJi J Economists sa *f\w would grow i J a America wast J l German stren iff J on efficiency a , is thrift Vvt Every other pe III has an accour || banh. %f Jl England, the \fl " nations, produ Jj est amount ^7/ through savir J J On thrift dep? t' tion's progres your own. A growing account i insurance of indeper One Dollar Stat 4 Per Cent. Interest Pai CAPITAL AND SURPLUS Bamberg B PERHAPS E You have named as yoi is familiar with your affai pose, however, he should before your Estate is settl your affairs into confusio point an Administrator de annexo?and he wouldn't 1 affairs and how your Estal the average layman kno\ > these words. Name us a eliminate this "perhaps." . poration and do not die. BAMBERG BAN] T?- 1 fwssT iWiMMttW Buy Them And Help Win The War 70S SAL* SYXBTWHXRE A national labor congress will be held shortly at Milan, Italy. ^ <>? Of 150,000 Australian trade unionists enlisted, 45,000 have been killed. /: Suffer? k / Mrs. J. A. Cox, ofAl/ derson, W. Va., writes: /\ / "My daughter . . /suf- /\ / fered terribly. She could /a /\ not turn in bed ... the ** /. doctors gave her up, and we brought her home to r dip She had suffered so > WyM much at. .. time. Hav- K4 WyM ing heard cf Cardui, we WyM ya got it for her." ya CARDUI ya The Woman's Tonic yA ya v ri "In a few days, she be- r. 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