University of South Carolina Libraries
r ? ? PERSONAL MENTION. I People Visiting in This City and at k Other Points. ?G. B. Kinard, of Ehrhardt, was i^L in the city on business Monday. IjB ?G. J. Herndon, of Ehrhardt, was a visitor in the city Thursday. Spl ?Frank Simmons, of Orangeburg. |||8k was in the city Friday. |jj|V ?Mrs. H. F. Bamberg is spending some time in Asheville, N. C. BUte:; ?Miss Sue Smoak has been spend^^Kng some time in Charleston. ?Mrs. E. O. Watson, of Washing||jH ton, D. C., is spending some time here Bp with her sons. ? ?O. P. Folk, Jr., is at home for L the summer vacation from Clemson HL _ _ ! conege. ?Mrs. J. B. Black, Jr., left Tuesday for Charleston to spend* some time with relatives. ?Mrs. M. A. Squier, of Savannah, spent several days in the city last week visiting relatives and friends. ?Miss Edith White has returned to the city ^fter a -visit to friends and relatives in Johnston. ?John Cooner spent last week in Charleston, where he was a juror in the federal court. ?Mr. and Mrs. V. J. Hartzog returned Friday from a two-weeks visit to relatives in Orangeburg and North. ?Mrs. B. L. Mitchell and children, of Westminister, are visiting the I former's sister, Mrs. Robert C. Jones. r ?A. M. Denbow left last week for New York to spend some time on a vacation. ^ ?Mrs. Alice Zeigler, of Tampa, l Fla., is expected in the city today to I spend some time with relatives. ?Miss Virginia Hill, who taught B music near Spartanburg the past se? " sion, is at home for the summer. "Alti TViolmo TJoilov on ^ T AT AUIOO JL ucnua -i?'uiiv.i uuu J. . -x. 1^. Bailey, Jr., are in the city visiting relatives. ?J. Carl Kearse, Esq., attended p the federal court sessions in CharlesW ton last week. F ?Mr. and Mrs. L. B. "Fowler and children spent several days in Auv gusta this wreek. i ?N. R. Hays, of Appalachicola, Fla., is spending some time in the city with relatives. ?Miss Corine Fowler is attending the summer school for Sunday school teachers at Myrtle Beach. ?'Game Warden O. J. C. Lain and - *" Magistrate Jeff Gunnels, of Olar, ) were visitors in Td*wn Thursday. ^ ?Mrs. J. R. Poliakoff, of Aiken, spent several days in the city last Week with Mrs. Milton Shapiro. ?Mrs. Alice Solomons, of Savannah, is visiting her sister, Mrs. J. A. Klein. ?Mr. and Mrs. L. C. A. Roessler, of Orangeburg, were in the city Thursday. ?Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Hitt left Tuesday for Rock Hill to attend the meeting of the South Carolina Pres? association. ?Mrs. J. A. Murdaugh left Tuesryinrninff f r\y JJ vi r?r? 'V *{"! whfiFft I uaj mui mug iui vtui tuu, . .. ?., .. ? ? _ she will spend a week, and then go to Morganton, N. C., for the summer. ?Mr. and Mrs. Willie Wiggins, of Savannah, spent several days in Barnberk last week with ^rs. H. M. Wiggins. -?Col. J. C. Guilds, left last Saturi day for Myrtle Beach, S. C., where he is one of the instructors in the training school for Sunday school wrorkers. ?Frank Heard, of Detroit, Mich., arrived in the city Sunday to spend j the summer with his brother, J. J. [ Heard. . ^ ?Mr. and Mrs. Cashwell, of Newberry, returned home Monday morning after a visit to the latter's par? ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Hewitt. ?S. W. Copeland and Miss Eddie Kearse, of Ehrhardt, were pleasantly entertained at the home of Mr. and (Mrs. L. F. Shuler at Elloree last Sun-' day.?Times and Democrat. 1 - ?A. M. Denbow, a prominent busiJ * ness man of Bamberg, accompanied by Mrs. Denbow, was in the city yesterday on business.?Times and Democrat. - ?Miss Mercedes de la Barra, of Santiago, Chile, a student of English at Winthrop college and teacher of oi-ionioVi iti Winthron summer tj^aiixou iu WMV ? ~ school, is spending some time in the city with Miss Ethel Strom. ?Dr. J. B. Black attended the annual commencement of the South Carolina Medical college in Charleston and a meeting of the trustees of the college last week. Dr. Black is vice president of the board of trustees. ?Miss Eunice Hunter left Saturday morning for Xew Hampshire, where she will spend the summer. She was accompanied by her friend. Miss Dora Minus, of Georgetown, who spent Friday night in the city with her. / Get your "Pizen" for your tobacco f worms from Rentz & Felder. f I . I 1HKS SFDIKKXLY AT i'l \KHAL. Mrs. T. J. (Yid<T Succumbs to Heart Failure Thursday. The many friends and acquaintances of Mrs. Thomas J. Crider were shocked to learn of her sudden death last Thursday at the late home of G. AV. Folk. Mrs. Crider, a muchly beloved woman, went to the home to attend the funeral services of Mr. Folk, who died the day before in Charleston. During the funeral it was noticed that she had fainted. She was given attention by those about her, and seemed to rally. A short time later, however, she was found dead in the bed where she had been placed. Heart failure'" is said to have been the cause of her death. Mrs. Crider's funeral services were conducted Friday afternoon and interment took place in the family cemetery near her home. Her husband and several children survive Mrs. Crider. She is also survived by one sister, Mrs. Miller, of Bamberg, and one brother, Monroe Sandifer, of Denmark. "The deceased came from a prominent Bamberg county family. She was prominent in the affairs of her community, and highly esteemed by all who knew her. Bamberg 9, Denmark 2. In a dull, slow, lifeless, listless, uninteresting, and anything else you wish to say about it, ball game between the Bamberg and Denmark teams of the Tri-county league at Rhoad park Monday afternoon played solely for exhibition purposes and not to figure in the official standing or the league, the home boys came out on the long end of a 9 to 2 count. The one redeeming feature was that the home team won. At times there were a few plays which closely resembled baseball. Indeed, no less than three double plays were completed. However, neither team had its full strength on the field, neither team was at its best, and neither seemed to care much which way the game broke. It was by no means a fair test of the relative strength of the contesting clubs, but the game afforded both teams some good batting and fielding practice, and also the unusual stunt of a pitcher being taken out, then sent back to finish the game, and then being yanked again before the agony was over. Denmark scored first in the second inning and held the lead until the fifth when the locals tallied twice; again in the sixth Bamberg counted four scores and the visitors made their final run in the seventh. The winners scored one in the seventh and two in the eighth. "Gyp" Rentz and Otto Large both hit well fnr th<* lnna.1*. Goldsmith, a would be twirler, started out to pitch for Denmark and held the locals scoreless* until the last half of the fifth. But after two runs had been driven over by consecutive batting in this inning Capt. Stewart, catching for Denmark, waved Goldie to right field and called in Bruner, the ex-Sallie league southpaw, who retired the side without further scoring. In the next inning, however, Bruner-ivas as wild as if he had just got out of the army, and after passing as many as he could was taken out and Goldsmith returned to the box only to be driven out again and replaced by Phillip Cox, a Denmark boy, who was punished for the balance of the game. Zach Weeks, who twirled such a magnificent game for the league leaders in Allendale several weeks ago, decided to try his arm again, but in the very first inning he easily realized, as did his mates, that he was not right, and although only one hit was plucked from his delivery the only thing that saved him was a lightning double play on a line drive. Zach is a great pitcher when he is in shape, but his arm has gone bad on him and it is feared he will not be in condition to pitch much ball this summer. Yesterday was his first start since the Allendale game. Frank Bamberg toed the slab after Weeks retired and for eight long innings surprised himself, his comrades and the fans, and shocked the whole Denmark team by holding its heavy hitters at bay. Wonders will never cease in baseball and Frank actually fanned a number oi them, and while they did acquire eight bingles off him he. kept the j hits well scattered and was never ir i danger. Not more than two came ir J any inning and this only happened once or twice. Charlie Rentz playec hie firct ?amp at spconri base foi ii lO OV _ Bamberg, and if he expects to re main there will have to learn to take a throw from the catcher. Score b? innings: Bamberg 000 024 12*?9 12 : Denmark ....01 0 000 1 00?2 9 J: Batteries: Weeks, Bamberg anc Cooner; Goldsmith, Bruner, Gold smith. Cox and Stewart. After June 1st all coal orders un delivered will be charged for at $1! per ton. The Cotton Oil Co. CARD OF THANKS. Being unable to see each of our many friends we take this means of expressing our sincere appreciation of the many courtesies shown us in our recent bereavement. .MRS. G. W. FOLK and Children. i LINKS LOVINGLY HKDICATKI) TO THK MEMORY OF MRS. Al'Gl'STA ADAMS. > Time and again during the past week have 1 tried to write a lew iines to the memory of our dear good cousin, but each time blinding tears would fill my eyes and the pen would have to be laid aside. It is natural . for us to magnify the virtues of our loved ones, but after all we know them better than anyone else. Then ' why should we not with propriety 1 i* x "I- ^ ^ rrr. 9 A r? r\ \\7 Vl /A SPG3.K 01 Liiest; (.1111150. auu ??uu more fully than I is capable of sounding her praise; I who have spent so many happy hours in the bosom of her home, around her hearth stone as one of them; I who loved her with a love akin to filial affection, and who in her departure am sorely bereaved? I was not there to lay as a token of my love a spray of flowers on her grave or to shed one tear above her flower-strewn mound, but if it were in my power I would wreathe a garland of words, so fair and fragrant and place them to her memory, that strangers, as well as friends, would read and understand the real beauty of her great and noble nature. She was a member of the Mehodist church; it was the church of her parents, the church where she had been trained from .early childhood and where was laid that solid, symmetrical character for which she was so noted. And to her church and all its institutions, her purse strings were always untied. Domestic happiness has never been better illustrated than in her life, a life that closed so quietly, so peacefully that we scarcely knew when she breathed her last. Oh, what a sundering of strong, warm friendship, what rending of sweet -i 1 ~ household ties. A son whose wnoie life lay in hers, three daughters for 1 whom her devotion forms one of the , loveliest and purest pictures of the past. -low they will miss her * sweet presence, her wise and loving , council. "But we will cling to the links of a broken chain, With the tenderness of love; And patiently vrait as the bright days wane, That at last we can gather them up again, In the fields that bloom above. ' COUSIN JACKIE. LET ME FIGURE With you on that next life insurance contract H. D. STEEDLY Agent Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., of New York. We have the "pizen" kind of "Pi- ' zen". Simply kills the tobacco worms. Rentz & Felder. MONEY TO LEND ON REAL ESTATE HOME BUILDING & LOAN ASSN. J. P. Carter, J. W. Barr, lies Vice. Pres. J. C. Kear.se, Sec. and Treas. We are proud of the confidence doctors, druggists and. the public have in 666 Chill and Fever Tonic. SCHOLARSHIP AND ENTRANCE EXAMINATIONS. ! i UN1VEJKS1TI. OF SUITH UiittOiji- t NA. The examination for the award of, vacant scholarships in the University of South Carolina and for admission . of new students will be held at the county court house on Friday, July 9, at 9 a. m. Applicants' must not be less than sixteen years of age. When scholarships are vacant after j July 9, they will be awarded to those making the highest average at examination, provided they meet the conditions governing the award. Applicants for scholarships should write to President Currell for scholarship blanks. These blanks, properly filled out by the applicant should be filed writh President Currell by July 2. Scholarships are worth $100, free tuition and fees, total $158. The next session will open Sept. 15, 1920. For further information and catalogue, address President W. S. CURRELL, Columbia, S. C. . 6-3&10; 7-1 Rub-My-Tism is a great pain killer. It relieves pain and soreness caused by Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sprains, Etc. ANNOUNCEMENTS. I Under this head The Herald will . publish announcements of candidates , at the following rates: Congressman, solicitor and all state offices, $10; ' county offices, $5, except coroner, 1 magistrate and county commissioner, i for which $3 will be charged. These . fees will pay for insertion of name only in black type, and not exceeding 1 one line in light faced small type'for ' such notation as "For Reelection," : etc. Additional lines will be charg> ed for at $2 per line. Seven words is reckoned as one line. Cash must ' accompany the card. 1 ? i MAGISTRATE AT EHRHARDT. i J. H. Kinard (For Reelection.) L. G. Yarley His friends announce him a candi7 date for Magistrate at Ehrhardt. > MAGISTRATE AT PISH POND. J. M. Carter i ? FOR SHERIFF. I hereby announce myself a candidate for the office of sheriff of - Bamberg county, subject to the rules j of the democratic primary and pledge myself to support the nominees thereof. D. J. DELK. ? Y ! 1 I ! Interest on Sav t I T I A~A = *:* i T t I i f I T I f I T 1 Y I , = TTI 171 ow nf flip rpppnf rsnsps *(iC = JL J_l f AV ?? V/ JL. liiiv X WVJ-l *J i llikJVk 4^ I A 1 Federal Reserve svstem, ti 4Zj> | |> | lines, and the increased rat J by several of the leading ba: A J be in line with its usual pro; ^ | ing Company, of Bamberg, k A | ginning July 1st, 1920, five j > J - paid quarterly on its savinj V I > | posits until further notice. T I V I T T I i % = I I Ramner? B $ I i BAMI I ' f I VA = % .llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll!llllllllllllllllllll!llllllllll!llllllll!lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli;illlllllllllllllllllllllil'lll t T WE BEG TO ANNi FRIENDS AND CUi ON AND AFTER J WILL PAY I r per i I J Savins INSTEAD OF FOU HERETOFORE, A] RONAGE IS RESI LICITED. * ** djsp jflr yvk rf?l ?v rak p?S; s?& gj M BIMBBB IK jjP% M |g| BB I A. M. DENBO" C. W. RENTZ, SR., W. S. BAMBERG, Vice Presided BAMBEI ? f . i;i!iiiii!!i;i:i!ifii!i!!iiniiiiiiiiiiiii;::;'(!i!!!iiiiii!iiiii!iiiir,'r',i' iiiiiHiiHiinii-'i'iiiiii'iiiiJiiiiiiiniHiiii'iiiiir.Hiiiiiiii'iiiiiiinnSfe: + I | ings Deposits | | i f 1 I ? ^ !:! uent. | 11 3 of interest rates by the | & he advances in all other | X es of interest on Savings j ? y nks over the state, and to | . ? I 1 1 "T* i = Y gress tne .Bamoerg rsanK- I a 3. C., gives notice that heper cent, interest will be | gs to all old and new de5 E ? anking Co. 11 I JT , ?i\d ?ERG, S. C. | , X " A| IIIUIIIIIIllllUIHIUIIUIIIIIIIIllltllllUlllllllliillllinilUllilllilillllllliillllllillllllllUlllijlllHtlllillllllliUlllllllllllllllllflUIIIHIItltlUI^ I T Ty ^ ^ "y * BHnHBHnnHnBBHnHHnHni ' 1111 BB SB ?h| v ^BB B?& <$j ygmfj * mm ^ |BnH i ;' H HB- ^';j?|? OUNCE TO OUR 1 | 8T0MERS THAT ULY 1, 1920, WE B J IB * iiii ' * ?'t* mm -;.j CENT. ON I I fs Dpnnsifs I |u m* vj#vvi?v ^ R PER CENT AS I '>% CTD YOUR PAT- J >ECTFULLY SO- |1 t s W, President RmT?^ JR ^ ts Cashier. jf e__e__eweM_weeeiiM__BM^^_^eeeee__weieH_|e_ie!^eieeH|eeKeee_^'2? . ^ ^