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PERSONAL MENTION. People Visiting in This City and at Other Points. ?D. M. Eaves, of Union, spent a I few days in the city this week. ?Thomas Ducker spent the past several days in Asheville, X. C. ?Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Brabham, of j Columbia, are visiting relatives in j the city. ?C. H. Brabham, of Olar, spent Sunday in the city with J. J. Brabham, Jr. ?Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Hooton. of Denmark, spent Sunday in the city -rr-it-Vi rolorivOS ? 1 L 11 1 Viw.v,4f w. ?J. M. L. Kirkland, of Beaufort, is spending a few days in the city with his brother, A. L. Kirkland. ?Mrs. J. D. Salley, of Orangeburg, is spending a month with her sister, Mrs. J. Frank Jennings. ?Mrs. E. L. Price and Miss Julia Price are spending some time with Mrs. J. G. Black in Beaufort. ?Mrs. Frances Folk left Tuesday morning for Lakeland, Fla., to spend several weeks with her brother, D. P. Rentz. ?Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Black left Monday for Atlanta to spend a few days, Mrs. Black going to consult a specialist. ?Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Xewsom and Miss Mary Harvey Xewsom, of Williston, spent Sunday in the city with Dr. and Mrs. Robert Black. n -n A Mrc> T T Hoard Air ?hi emu o u u xxvuj. *>A and Mrs. Laurie Burch, and Miss Pearl Counts left Sunday for Atlanta, Ga., by automobile, to spend a few days. ?Mrs. L. P. McMillan has gone to Atlanta, Ga., to attend the millinery openings as a representative from La Verne Thomas & Co.'s establishment. ?Miss Minnie Lee Aver, who re cently graduated from Lander col'lege, and who is now teaching at t Shandon near Columbia, spent the week-end in the city. ?Auditor J. G. Black, of Beaufort, was in the city the past weekend. He was accompanied home by Mrs. Black and baby who spent the past month in the city. ?Mrs. M. R. Brickie and Mrs. L. B. Fowler left Saturday morning for Greenville, where they attended the golden wedding of Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Leach on Monday, the 7th. ?Rev. S. O. Cantey spent the past Sunday at his old home in Summer+nn Tuhprp hp nrpached at the Metho dist church. The pulpit of Trinity church was occupied Sunday by the Rev. Mr. Ingram. "KID'S" S>TH WIFE TALKS. Gives Intimate Story of Muchly Married Pugilist. Dagmal Dahlgren, ninth wife of I "Kid" McCoy, heard too much of the I first second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, ? seventh and eighth wives of the form1 er champion during the three days she lived with the prizefighter. That is why, she said, she is suing for divorce. At least, she heard too much of the five women who were his eight wives [ before she became the ninth. She said yestefdav, says the Atlanta Georgian: \ "He used to talk to me all the time about his other wives. Why, during the three days following our marriage that was all I heard. "Always telling me ^bout them, he was, and showing me their pictures. He had a regular rogues gallery of them. He would get them out, and disfffay Lottie's picture, and Julie's, and Lillian's, and Edna's. He would talk about these women by the hour, and compare their merits and their faults. ; "The very day we were married he got a letter from his eighth wife, so ? he had to get out her picture and talk to me about her, and then about [ all the others. Realized Awful Mistake. "It's an awful thing for a young girl who thinks she is doing a sensible thing by getting married to rea< lize inside the first twenty-four hours that she had made a terrible mistake. ' "Some people have said that I married Kid McCoy for his money, after knowing him only three days. Why he had only twenty dollars when we were married?that is answer erough to that gossip. I had known him for nearly a year, as I lived with his sisfp-r "here in Los Angeles." "McCoy married one of his wives three times. Do you think that he and you may become reconciled?" the reported asked. "Not me?I am done for good," she replied. "Jle tried to call me up by long distance phone from Oakland Sunday, but I would not talk to him. ' I gave it a fair trial, those three days, and now I am plunging into my moving picture work with all my might and I am trying to forget that I was ever the ninth wife of Kid McCoy." That is to say, she is trying to for> get that "if and until," as the lawyers ! say, she gets a divorce she is in fact Mrs. Norman Selby, legal wife of the man of that name who is known as "Kid" McCoy. She is by the same token trying hard to remember only that she is Dagmar Dalgren of the pictures, and in private life Carmen Browder. She says she was born nineteen years ago in Oaxaca, Mexico, of American parents. Says "Kid" is Getting; Fat. "The 'Kid' says he is only 41," declared the unhappy wife No. 9, "but he is 47, and he is getting fat, too." According to a dispatch from Oak1 a ti A AToCnv ooi-e Vi a will Tint lailU) .UV/VJUJ cuv' O uv ? itv/v the action for divorce provided his wife does not ask for alimony. To this his wife said during the interview: "I do not want any of his money. I am quite well able to make my own living." Mrs. Selby?that is to say, Dagmar Dalgren?who resides at the Cordoba Hotel, says she has an engagement with the Rolin Film Company, at the Hal Reach studios at Culver City. She studied with Isadore Duncan in Europe, after having begun dancing at the age of 11 years. " 'Kid' McCoy said when he married Dagmar Dalgren April 19 that he was hitched up for good. He was quite sure that his ninth marriage was going to stick; no more trouble and quarreling, getting divorces, making up, marrying again, and encore on the divorce. "Well, he 'stayed married' just three days, and now in the divorce complaint it is charged that the 'Kid' began to get 'rough' almost before the jazzy tinkling of the ninth set of wedding bells had faded into silence. The wife says he slapped her face and beat her, and that their attempt to be happy in a pretty apartment at 1235 1-2 North Maricopia street, Hollywood, was a dismal fail urtr. Here is "Kid" McCoy's marriage and divorce record, which in its way is quite as interesting as his long ring record: First Wife?Lottie Piehler; year and a half; divorce. Second Wife?Charlotte Smith; a few months; divorce. Third Wife?Julie Woodruff; two years; divorce. Fourth Wife?Julie Woodruff; one year; divorce. Fifth Wife?Julie Woodruff; veryshort time; divorce. Sixth Wife?Indianola Arnold; a few months; divorce. Seventh Wife ? Estelle Lillian Hem; five years: divorce. Eighth Wife ? Edna Valentine Earle; five years; divorce. Ninth Wife?Carmen Browder (Dagmar Dalgren); three days; divorce suit pending. N. B.?There may be some slight inaccuracies in the above list, as these records have not been kept with the same care as the records of the prize ring. Returning the Compliments. Professor's Wife?I suppose you have forgotten that this is the anniversary of your wedding day? Absent-minded Husband (abstractive. from r>nmir> <?Pf>tionsl 111*2 llllllO^XJL x i vy ux , Eh! What? Dear me! Is it really? And when is yours.my dear??Baltimore American. i m i ? Socrates paid but little heed to the scolding of his wife Xantippe. To Stop a Cough Quick take HAYES' HEALING HONEY, a cough medicine which stops the cough by healing the inflamed and irritated tissues. A box of GROVE'S O-PEN-TRATE SALVE for Chest Colds, Head Colds and Croup is enclosed with every bottle oi HAYES' HEALING HONEY. The salve should be rubbed on the chest and throat of children suffering from a Cold or Croup. The healing effect of Hayes* Healing Honey inside the throat combined with the healing effect ol Grove's O-Pen-Trate Salve through the pores ol the skin soon stops a cough. Both remedies are packed in one carton and the cost of the combined treatment is 35c. Just ask your druggist for HAYES' HEALING HONEY. Hastings Seeds 1921 Catalog Free t+?o r?T7 r?r>w 11 fi handsomely il JLU O ? vuuj aav ft ? hjstrated pages of worth-while see( and garden news. 'This new catalog we believe, is the most valuable see< book ever published. It contain; twenty full pages of the most popula: vegetables and flowers in their natu ral colors, the finest work of its kirn ever attempted. With our photographic illustrations and color pictures also from photc graphs, we show you just what yoi grow with Hastings' Seeds even be fore you order the seeds. This cata log makes garden and flower be< planning easy and it should be in ev ery single Southern home. Write u a post-card for it, giving your nam< and address. It will come to yoi by return mail and you will be might; glad you've got it Hastings' Seeds are the Standar* of the South and they have the larg eat mail order seed house in the worl* back of them. They've got to be th best Write now for the 1921 cata log. It is absolutely free. H. G. HASTINGS CO., SEEDSMEN, ATLANTA, GA. > NOTICE OF DISCHARGE. Notice is hereby given that the un- ; i -dersigned will file his final return; as administrator of the estate of P. I ' H. Foley, deceased, with the probate; : judge for Bamberg county, on the! 5th day of March, 1921, and will, on j , said day, apply for letters dismissory as such administrator. . B. D. CARTER, ! Administrator of the Estate of P.! H. Foley. February 2nd, 1 921. 2-24 j NOTICE OF FINAL DISCHARGE, j Notice is hereby given'that the un-j dersigned will file her final return j as administratrix, d. b. n., of the es-j tate of Aaron Hartzog, deceased, with the probate judge for Bamberg coun- | tv on the 5th day of March, 1921, and j , at said time will apply for letters dis-j missorv as such administratrix. DELL A HARTZOG, j Admnistratrix, d: b. n., estate of! Aaron Hartzog. February 2nd, 1921. 2-24 j NOTICE OF DISCHARGE. Notice is hereby given that the un- j ' dersigned will file her final return j as administratrix of the estate of j Ransom P'olk, deceased, with the pro-1 bate judge for Bamberg county on! the 5th day of March, 1921, and! at said time, will apply for letters I dismissory as such administratrix. I MARY FOLK, | Administratrix of the estate of Ransom Folk. February 2nd, 19411. 2-24 3! Kn 1 HELEN LOUL( H MPERSOXATOR, C( S TENOR, COMPO Management, I I Ehrhardt Sch( !| EHRHAI FEBRUARY ft XX YT ff ft YT ft i P( YY ' it || 36 BRED ?1! : TT . < ft Thi ; ff : ft Y J "GOOD EX< V V 'MOUW'S O! : |f ^ YY YY f ; lj i! YY j i || ORANGE ! 1 WEDNEi J t ' yy i YY , yy j l^^j] > !* a YV , Yy vV J. WESLEY CRUM, JR., ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Bamberg, S. C. Offices in Herald Building Practice in State ancl Federal Courts, j Loans negotiated. . ! RILEY & COPELAND Successors to W. P. Riley. "Pirp T.ifp Accident INSURANCE Office in J. O. CopelancTs Store BAMBERG, S. C. ' BUY WAR SAVING STAMPS r?fw^mmiFamKsam I Dry Split Pine Wood 1 Stove or Fire Place. The largest load you ?? have had in a long ^ time for $3.00. ^ PHONE 11G ||* J. H. DIXON 1 BAMBERG, S. C. g| IING! j T Diur I I "11111U I 3E WOLCOTT I INTRALTO, PIANIST c *ING I SER, VIOLINIST ledpath Bureau S >ol Auditorium I 10th, 8 p. M. I ^f T^T T^T T^T T^T T^T T^T ? ? ?"? JOINT SALE IV )land CI LTS 8 TRIED SOWS is Offering Includes Tried Sow Some of the Best Blood Line: OUGH" "DORRS BIG RANGE" "WONDER M BRED TO SHULER'S BIG OR^ WILL BE BURG FAIR GR JDAY, FEBRUAB FREE LUNC i,R BROS, i VANCE, SOU! is idle and useless. | Money deposited in the Bank becomes the basis for Credits of several times its own amount These Credits help the Government to carry on i I Reconstruction plans, the Farmer to grow Food, B the Manufacturer and Merchant to carry on Es- 1 Isential Business. I ? - ? ^ __ i _ ii iii 1 .Besides being always reaay to your can, your funds are safer and patriotically employed if deposited with us. ' I RESOURCES OVER $1,000,000.00 ^WaUWHMfilMgggM?J :?-j,: OWEN BROS. MARBLE I WW mn r.RiNiTE en. Ip^j nil 1/ VHliil A m mm WW. II ?|| DESIGNERS EjiLnyfm MANUFACTURERS IpY " ) ERECTORS , The largest and best equipped ^ monumental mills in the Carcrfinas. >i^p-? ' ^ GREENWOOD, S. O. -$j ff :;j ||. | 10DERN TYPE |1 j liina Hogs jj ft 1 6 YOUNG BOARS READY FOR SERVICE f? fx s and Big Growthy Gilts Carrying f s of the Boeed: Daughters of BOB" "K'S BIG PRICE 2ND" Y * UN" "LAND WONDERS KING" fY INGE AND OAKDALE CHIEF V V YY "i ft UJCTIO HELD AT OUNDS, Orangeburg, S. C || Y 16th, AT 1 O'CLOCK ? H AT NOON & f, S. SHULER I "H CAROLINA 5*1 fx / . -