University of South Carolina Libraries
PERSONAL MENTION. People Visiting in This City and at Other Points. ?Mrs. J. C. Lewis is spending: a j few weeks at Glenn Springs. ^ ?Miss Edith White is visiting friends in Johnston this week. ?Mrs. R. M. Kitt spent the weekend with friends at Harleyville. i ?Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Free have returned home from the mountains. ?Mr. A. Rice has returned home / from a business trip to St. Louis, .Mo. ?Prof. S. A. Merchant, of Spartanburg, is visiting relatives in the city. ?Mr. B. C. McDuffie, of Augusta, spent a few days in the city this week. ?Master Oliver Fowler is spending - TT'itJ-i rolativpe: in Au tt lew weeno n mi ? gusta. ?Miss Janie Bellinger spent a few days last week in Orangeburg with relatives. ?Mr. H. H. Stokes returned Sunday from the mountains of North Carolina. . ?Miss Sallie Tyler, of Branchville, is visiting Misses Carrie and Bernice Simmons. ?Mr. Clyde Cox, of Rowesville, spent Sunday in the city with Mr. L. t B. Fowler. ?Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hartzog, of Atlanta, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. V. J. Hartzog. ?Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Klauber returned last week from Hendersonville, N. C. ' ?Miss Mildred Jones has returned \ . from the mountains, after a stay of several weess. ?Mr. and Mrs. I. B. Felder returned to the city last week from their honeymoon. ?Mrs. A. W. Knight is spending some time with friends and relatives at Newberry. ?Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Ayer have returned home from the mountains > of North arolina. ?Mrs. M. R. Brickie left yesterday for Greenville to spend some time with relatives. ?Mr. Black, of Mississippi, has returned home after visiting relatives and friends in the city. * ?Rev. and Mrs. Geo. P. White are -r spending some time with relatives ? and friends in Georgia. ?Mr.' and Mrs. C. J. Field re* turned last Thursday from the mountains of North Carolina. ' ?Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Rhoad and little Miss Lena returned last week from a trip to the North. ?Mr. J. J. Smoak spent several .days last and this week in the mountains of North Carolina. ?Mr. H. M. Graham, is spending today in Bamberg on business.?. Greenwood Index-Journal. f ?Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Jones and . littie Miss Elizabeth have returned home from the mountains. ?-Mr. J. Frank Folk, who has been quite ill, is rapidly recovering, his friends will be glad to know. ?Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Carter returned Monday evening from the mountains of North Carolina. * ?Messrs. Arnold and Bernard Sanders, of Cordova, spent Sunday at the home of Mr. J. A. Griffith. ?Mr. A. J. Knight, postoffice inspector spent Monday night here with his brother, Mr. A. W. Knight. ?Mrs. G. A. Rice left Friday for Raymond to spend some time with her daughter, Mrs. T. R. Smith. ?-Mrs. Kice steeaiy iert mis weeK , for Steedly sanitarium, Spartanburg, where she'^will undergo treatment. ?Mrs. Mary Marks and granddaughter, Theresa Blume, are visiting relatives and friends at Lexington. V ?Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Black, of * Beaufort, are spending this week in the city with Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Price. i?Misses Sadye and Ruby Byrd, of Branchville, were the guests of Miss Gertrude Smoak Monday and Tuesday. ?Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Rentz, Jr., returned this week from McCormick county, where they have.been visiting relatives. ?Mrs. S. C. Hollifield and little son returned last week from Sharon, after a stay of several weeks with m relatives. } ?Mrs. W. A. Moore and little Miss Bettie Moore have returned to Charleston after a visit to Mrs. J. B. W Plor>lr T t ^ JUiUVXl. y V*. ?Misses Thelma and Gladys Milev, of Williams, S. C., spent several days in the city last week with Miss Eunice Hunter. ?Mr. W. H. Varn and children, of Leesville, are spending a few days visiting friends and relatives in the town ^nd vicinity. ?Mr. Govan Dunn returned home Monday from Glenn Springs and the mountains, where he has been en? % joying a vacation. "4 ?Mr. H. H. Hill, of Savannah. | came up to attend the funeral and ! interment of his mother, Mrs. H. H. Hill, Sr., th's week. ?Miss Roberta Johnson ler't yes-'i terdav for Glenn S: rings, where she' will spend a week and then go on to! . the mountains of Xorth Carolina. I ? Mr. Clifford Kinard, U. S. X., is I ' spending a furlough in the city with ; I relatives. Mr. Kinard recemly re-; enlisted in the navy for two years. ; ?Dr. X. S. Oeiger and mother and ' Misses Hattie E. Seav, Vinn'e Har-j( moil and Essie Rawl, of Lexington, j ( spent Sunday with Mrs. W. D. Blume. i ?Mrs. H. M. Crum, of Denmark, ; arrived yesterday to spend some time with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Calhoun.?Greenwood Index-Journal. ?Mrs. M. J. Black, Miss Myrtle Black and Mrs. J. Frank Folk left ' yesterday to attend the wedding of Miss Bessye Johnson and Mr. Willis K. Herndon. ?Miss Nell George left Monday for a week's stay in Lenoir, N. C., after which she will enter Baker Sani- ' tarium, Charleston, to go into training as a nurse. ?Miss Montine Griffith has returned home after a visit to the home of her uncle, Mr. R. T. Griffith, in Orangeburg. She was accompanied home by her cousin, Miss Esther Griffith. ?Miss Alice Smoak left Friday for 1 Charleston, whjere she will join a par- ! ty on a trip via the Clyde line for New York, Atlantic City, Washington and other points. On returning, she will stop over for a stay in Richmond with friends. ?Mr. A. B. Utsey left Wednesday for New York, where he will be a crnoct nf tho fTniiita hlo T.ifo Tncnr Q V/A bliU MAAV J 4* | ance company for a week or so, having won this trip by the volume of business he has written for the company during the past year. LICENSE "ORDINANCE CITV OF BAMBERG, 1919. State of South Carolina?City of Bamberg. For the purpose of meeting in part the current expenses of the city of Bamberg for the fiscal year and to meet in part such other indebtedness of the city of Bamberg as may become due; therefore be it ordained by the mayor and aldermen of the city of of Bamberg, and by authority of the same: Section 1. That no person, firm or corporation shall engage in, prq^ecute or carry on, any trade, business, occupation or profession hereinafter mentioned, in whole or in part, within the limits of the city of Bamberg, without having first paid a special license tax thereafter, as follows, towit: Agents for enlarging pictures per day $2.00, per year $10.00 Agents for automobiles, per yr. 25.00 For each additional make, per year 10.00 Agents for retailing goods, per day 10.00 Agents for dealers, non resident, in pianos or organs, per year 25.00 Agents for dealers, non resident, sewing machines, per year 25.00 Agents, purchasing cotton seed and cotton seed meal, per vr. 25.00 Agents for insurance companies, fire, life, accident, non ! resident, per day $5.00, per year 25.00 Agents for fire insurace, resident, per year 10.00 Agents for life insurance, resident, per year 10.00 Agents for accident insurance, resident, per year 10.00 Auto, bicycle and gun repair shop, per year 25.00 Agents and brokers, dealing in fertilizer, non resident, selling direct to consumer, per year 25.00 Agents for lightning rods, non resident, per day $5.00, per year 25.00 Architect, civil engineer or surveyor, per year 10.00 Apple wagon, fruit or vegetables, wholesale or retail, per day 1.00 Auctioneers, per day $10.00, per year 25.00 Automobile, livery, each machine, per year 10.00 Ball when admission fee is charged, per year 5.00 Baker, per year 10.00 Banks, minimum, per year 25.00 For each additional $5,000 or fractional part capital stock above $25,000, per yr. 1.00 Barber shops, per year 10.00 ?? i s nn ?5111 posiers, per veai x./.w Bicycles, each, per year 1.00 Broker and dealer in futures, per year 25.00 Broker and dealer in building supplies, per year 15.00 Bicycle dealer and repairing, ; per year 5.00 Blacksmith, per year 10.00 Boarding houses, per year .... 10.OO i Book agents, non resident, per | day $2.00, per year 10.00 Bowling alleys, per month .... 10.00 ! Boot blacks, per year 2.00 Building and loan association, local per year 10.00 Building and loan association, other than local, per vr. 25.00 Butcher and dealer in meats, resident and non resident, per year 1 0.00 Circus, per day $25 to 300.00 Contractors and builders, year 25.00 Cotton manufacturers, per vr...l 00.00 Cotton seed oil mill, per year.. 50.00 Cotton gin. per year 25.00 Dealer in cattle, horses, etc., non resident, per day 50.00 Dealer in fruits, peanuts and confectionery, per day $1.00, per year 10.00 Dealer in gasoline, K. oil, etc., wholesale, per year 25.00 | ; Dealers (local) wagons, buggies, horses, mules, cattle, : 1 etc., per year 25.00 . < Dentist, per year 25.00 \ Drug stores, per year 25.00 , j Dray wagon, one horse, year.. 10.0 1 Dray wagon, two horse, per yr. 2'.>.?>s J Dray, trucks, per year lO.OOM Dogs, each, per year 2.00 ; Express company, for business j : done within the State, not including that done without < the State and not govern nient business, per year ".o.OO i Fortune teller, per day $1.00, i per week 5.00 , 1 Fruit tree agent, per year .... 10.00 Gas fitters and plumbers, year 10.00 i Grits mill, per year -. 5.ho . i Gun and lock smith, per year.. 5.00 j Hair dresser, per year 5.00 ; ! Horses and mules sold at auction, per day 50.00 Hotels charging under S2.00 per day, per year 10.00 1 Hotels charging over $2 per i day, per year 25.00 : Ice dealer, per year 10.00 Lawyers, general practice, yr. 25.00 Lawyers, lending money, etc., 1 1 per year 10.00 , r non onU trno( r>r\r>1 no T1V lonH L<uaix aiivi v* vtoc I ing money on real estate or otherwise, per year 25.00 Lumber yard, per year 20.00 . Laundry, per year 10.00 Livery and feed stable, per vr. 25.00 Machinist, per day $1.00, wear 10.00 j Manufacture of soda water, etc., per year 25.00 Marble dealer or agent, per yr. 10.00 ; Medicine vender selling direct to consumer, per day 25.00 , Merchants for stock of $5,000 or less, per year 25.00 For each additional $1,000 stock above $5,000, or fractional part thereof, per year 1.00 NTewspaper printing office, vr.... 25.00 Optician, per day $2.50, per vr 20.00 Physician, faith cure, per year 20.00 Physician 25.00 1 Piano and organ tuner, per day $2.50, per year 20.00 Photographers, per day $1.00, per year 10.00 ' Pressing club, per year 10.00 Railroad, for business done within the State and not in- , eluding that done without the State or inter-state commerce. and not including that done for the government, per year 50.00 Real estate agents, per year.... 25.00 Repair shop for furniture and other wood work, per year.. 10.on j Repair shop for stoves, non resident, per day $1, year.. 10.00 Repa^ shop for sewing machines. phonographs, clocks, etc.. per year 5.00 I Rstaurant, per year 10.00 ; S*alt water fish dealer, per year 1 0.00 j (And it is hereby ordained that j, the selling of salt water fish is pro- i ho+Tvoon tlio Hntps r>f AlflV 1 loth and September 15th, and anyj. person, firm or corporation making! such sale shall be guilty of a mis- N demeanor and shall be subject to fine ' as provided by ordinance governing j the sale of salt water fish.) Shoe shop, making and repairing, per year lfr.00 Soda founts and ice cream dealers, per year 10.00 Skating rink, per year 5.00 Street peddler dealing in produce for profit (other than local merchants) per day $5 per year 25.00 Tailor (not merchant), engaged in making and repairing, per year 10.00 i Telephone exchange, per year.. 50.00 Telegraph company, per year.. 25.00 Theatres and moving picture shows, per year 15.00 Undertaker, embalmer, etc, per day $1.00, per year 25.00 i Veterinary surgeon, per year.. 15.00 | Warehouse (public) for profit, j] per year 25.00 i < Watchmaker, jeweler and re- 1 pairing, per year 25.00 j. Sec. 2. That any person or per-' sons, firms or corporations (or their agents or employees), carrying on,: engaging in, or prosecuting any business, trade, occupation or profession,1 or running any establishment named ; in this ordinance, or upon which a license shall hereinafter be imposed, j without first having taken out a license thereof, shall be fined (except: in cases where special penalties are j imposed), not less than two dollars1 no more than one hundred dollars.! or be imprisoned not less than two' days nor more than thirty days (or serve sentence upon chain gang), I for each and every day such busi- j ness, trade, calling, occupation or: profession is carried on, engaged in, | or prosecuted without such license. I And it shall be the duty of the clerk j of council or the marshals of the I nf RqmWcr nnrt nf thp aldpr- i men to report any and all cases of | refusal or failure to obtain licenses I and to see that licenses and fees are J A AiftLALALAAAA AA T^T T^T T^T T^T T^T T^T T^T | State Teacher-' X at orangi f > A State Teacher-!1 y teachers for the Public y Carolina. Every energy y ration for the rural sch( y or any other charge. J i T-1 I -| j V State. I'irst graae ceri complete thirty-two wee] X X fall term beg: j Y > For further ini | Mrs. W. Y ORANGEI V paid. Sec. 3. That for any business, trade, occupation or profession not enumerated in the foregoing saerons, the li-ense shall be regulated and imposed by the town council at any meeting of same. Sec. 4. The town council hereby reserves the n'ght to refuse or revoke any license for any cause which may seem to it just. Sec. 5. That anv cerson. firm or corporation mank'ng any false or fraudulent returns where a return is accessary or required under this ordinance. shall, upon conviction, be fined not ex eed'ng one hundred dollars nor less than five dollars, or be imprisoned not exceeding thirty days nor less than five days. Sec. R. All liceness granted and issued under this ordinance shall continue in force until the first clay of August, 1020. except such as are herein provided for shorter periods, until renewals shall become necessa*y: and licenses for less than one vear shall be nro rated according to the time to he used, except as otherwise provided herein, and shall he dated from the first of the month in which the same is issued. Sec. 7. That all applications shall be made to the clerk of council, who shall issue under his official name all licenses, and he shall keep a strict account of all moneys received therefor. and of all licenses issued. Sec. 8. That this ordinance shall go into effect on the first day of August. 1919. and all persons, firms or corporations not conforming to its requirements shall be liable to the penalties herein imposed, from and after the last Mentioned date. Sec. 9. That all ordinances or parts of ordinances inconsistent or in conflict herewith, are hereby repealed. Done in town council meeting this 17th day of July, 1919, and ratified under the corporate seal of the city of Bamberg, S. C. fSEAL) J. J. SMOAK. L. P. McMILLAN, Mayor. Clerk of Council. p ATS DIE so do mice, once they eat RATSNAP. And they leave no odor behind. Don't take our word for it? try a package. Cats and dogs won't i.~i*. "Dr. + ? t-iooc? nn oil frinrl tn L U U UII 1 L. XVCILO paoo Uf/ uaa ?.vwvk ?v get RAT-SNAP. Three sizes. 25c. size (1 cake) enough for Pantry, Kitchen or Cellar. 50c. size (2 cakes) for Chicken House, coops, or small buildings. Sl.OO size (5 cakes) enough for farm and outbuildings, storage buildings, or factory buildings. Sold and guaranteed by Smoak & Move, Bamberg, S. C. 666 quickly relieves Constipation, Biliousness, Loss of Appetite and Headaches, due to Torpid Liver.? Adv. NOTICE. " Of Meeting of Stockholders of Ehrhardt Manufacturing Company to Pass Upon Resolution to Increase Capital Stock. Pursuant to a resolution of the Board of Directors of Ehrhardt Manufacturing Company to increase the capital stock of said company to the sum of forty thousand ($40,000) dollars, a meeting of the stockholders of said company is called, at the office of the president, Ehrhardt, S. C., 10 o'clock, a. m., Monday, August 18th, 1919, to pass upon said resolution. EHRHARDT MANUFACTURING CO. By J. M. Kirkland, President. Ehrhardt, S. C., July 21st, 1919. 8-13 Colds Cause Grip and Influent LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets remove die cause. There is only one "Bromo Quinine." E. W. GROVE'S signature on box. 30c. r i ag=a BUYWAR I SAVINGS STAMPS CONSTANTLY in mm a 8 mi' n n? a S This Space Patriotically Donated By Chero=Cola BottliogCo. Bamberg, S. C. framing School | IBURG, S. C. X V Y raining School to train Schools of Lower South & is directed to the prepa>ols. There is no tuition School supported by the :ificate given to all who ? ks' work. V I ENS SEPT. 15, 1919. I J T 'ormation write D. Rice | SURG, S. C. X ! Cabbage Plants Now Ready! ; Charleston Wakefield, Succession, Drum Head . and Flat Dutch Varieties. ?ALSO COLLARD PLANTS? -nn By Express II By Parcel Post >00 for $l.o0 J ? 1,000 to 5,000, per 1,000 .... 2.25 !j 100 lor " -j?? 5,000 to 10,000, per 1,000.... 2.00 I 500 for ^.2o j 10,000 or over, per 1,000.... 1.7o :j 1,000 for 4.00 | Cash With Order. Supply of Plants is Limited. I Nothing Shipped C. O. D. !M II DUTru ID cr m?:_ c? i N f n. n. DLiiui, ji\., dj main oueei, iicuuciauii?inc, n. v. "Cabbage Plants all the Year Round" Green Peppers r\ ] / PEACHES > J lamorma Ki , '"-Ac We will have a. complete line of fruits , in a few days PHONE 15 | -M TOM DUCKER I BAMBERG, S. C. j 1 ^ 7^11 1 Storage Battery | W lllara SERVICE STATION What a Willard Service Station Does CHARGING?Done as it should be done, this often means the revival of an apparently "dead" battery. Done by an untrained ? /, man, it may have disastrous results on an otherwise healthy battery. * REPAIRS?Willard skill and Willard responsibility assure you? m THAT REPAIRS are necessary and that it will pay you better to have them made than to buy a new battery. THAT THE WORK is done by a man trained for that particular job, with adequate tools and equipment to do it right in the shortest time. -'J RENTAL BATTERIES?If your battery must be removed from your car for repairs or recharging, the Willard Service Station carries a stock of rental batteries, among which will be one to fit your car. The convenience of keeping your car in commission far outweighs the small charge for this service. "THRO' SERVICE WE GROW" Faulkner Electric Service Company ' I r\ I^CK WALLS i? fl . and 11^Strong locks I ?iJN,sTHE ^AFE , rn ^;.!ijhfcpLACETO HIDE I ! U) IP' 1 YOUR MONEY I i |i -PUT YOUR MONEY I Mi flN our Bank 'I . M bI .ri' II Mi If \ then you have , mm ' !|^^~,tsafe I Hi |!| I mi fi| Riii" I If you bury your money some one 9 may SEjg you or may find it. You I might die without anybody knowing S 9 of its whereabouts. If you hide it be- I hind a picture, under the carpet, in I a sugar bowl or the the coal bin, a i 1 - - ?? iiiot r>nmt> and sret it. B iu Ul"5i<ai <_axi juou That's the burglar's business. Study this picture and you will hide yours I in our bank. 9 BANK WITH US. I We pay four per cent, interest, com- , I pounded quarterly on savings deposits | I Farmers & Merchants Bank I 9 BHRHARDT, S. C. I V