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k I r gl * From the very beginni V Xestled among tli room service is not f ) is famous the worlc restoring spout of < teopath, of Chariest the Carlsbad, VTisch; % don't hesitate, Glen The South Caroli: year; also the Sout "fountain of youth, marvelous and aim Come to Glenn S] The proprietor hi the best in the Sou Gov. Jennings an '? The Hon. J. Pres vice. Your friends "T avopg' T jflTIP." A. Schil PERSONAL MENTION. People Visiting in This City and at Other Points. ?Mr. J. H. McGowan is spending ^ a while at Glenn Springs. V ?Mr. E. P. Sojourner, of DenH mark, was in the city Monday. ?Mrs. J. A. Murdaugh spent sevV eral days in Orangeburg last week. ?Miss Myra Hooton left Monday for a visit to friends in Walterboro. ?Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Stubbs, of Augusta, visited relatives here this week. ?Mrs. J. D. O'Hern left this morning for a stay in the mountains of North Carolina. ?Mrs. C. R. Brabham and children have returned from a visit to relatives at Mullins. ?Mrs. G. L. Kinard spent several Hav? last week in Ehrhardt with friends and relatives. ? ?E. H. Henderson, Esq., has gone to Cedar Mountain, N. C., for a month's stay, to recuperate. ?Mrs. W. H.- Battley and children left Sunday for an extended stay with relatives at Carthage, N. C. ?Misses Alice and Marie Sease spent several days in Ehrhardt with friends and relatives last week. ?Miss Carrie Jaudon and Miss Claudia O'Neal, of Ocala, Fla., are visiting Mr. and Mrs. J. T. O'Neal. ?Mr. Isaac W. Carter, of the Ehrhardt section, was in the city yesterday. ?Miss Flora Pearlstin, of Charleston, has been in the city on a visit to her father's family, Mr. S. W. Pearlstin. ?Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Brabham and daughter, Mrs. LeRoy Wilson, Jr., left Tuesday for a month's stay at 4 ?- ?xt n Asnevmc, a-m. v^. ?Mr. J. J. Jones, who has been sick for nearly two weeks, is well enough to be out, and left yesterday for Glenn Springs to recuperate. ?Dr. and Mrs. H. H. Wyman and Miss Lalla Wyman, of Aiken, are expected here to-day on a visit to the family of Mayor J. Aldrich Wyman. ?Mr. J. R. Morris, of this community, has just returned from a visit to his brother at Danforth, Ga. He says crops over in Georgia are fine. ?Mr. John H. Cope spent a few days at Glenn Springs this week, where Mrs. Cope is spending the summer. His son, Glenn, came home with him. ?Mrs. A. W. Knight and children, > Mrs. J. A. Murdaugh, and Mrs. John Cooner will leave this (Thursday) morning for a stay in the mountains of North Carolina. ?Miss Bessie Black, an extremely pretty, vivacious and agreeable young girl of Bamberg, is in Edgefield on a visit to Miss Lizzie Lou Jones.?Edgefield Chronicle. ?Mr. E. P. Copeland, of Ehrhardt, was in the city last Friday. He was ' on his way to Charleston to bring back his family, who had been spending some time at the sea shore. ?Mr. Glenn, of Anderson, spent a few days in the city last week. Mr. Glenn is connected with the Anderson Daily Mail, and he paid The Herald office a pleasant call while here. ?Mr. S. D. Guess, of Denmark, was in the city last Saturday and called to see us and to inspect our printing plant. He was of the opin4 Vior-r, o micrhtv n i no hnnt 1UU luai "C ua> V U ui.Bvv; store and printing office. ?Messrs. C. R. Brabham, Jr., W. D. Rhoad, Dr. V. W. Brabham, C. R. Brabham, W. M. Brabham, C. H. > Brabham, J. W. Stokes, J. F. Brabham, Henry F. Bamberg, and A. M. Brabham left Monday night for Charleston on a fishing trip. ?Mr. H. Z. McMillan, of the Colston section, was in the city Tuesday and paid The Herald a pleasant call. In speaking of our contest and congratulating us on its success, Mr. McMillan stated that The Herald was second to no county paper in the State, and his family could not do without it. 4 . ENN Moi ing crowds have been arriving ie foot hills of the Blue Ridge, nights coo surpassed at any resort in the South. Ai 1 over. Have you indigestion, dyspepsia, jilenn Springs. Thousands have been cui on, S. C., is operating two modern bath p y, Sulphur, Sea Salt and YTiolet, in modifi in Springs is the best place on earth, aa Dental Association, with its cultured m h Carolina Press Association will meet a " the asylum for the seekers of pleasure, ost miraculous. prings hotel and mingle with our happy c is been in the hotel business all his life, a th. Dancing, billiards, pool, bowling, bo d family, of Florida, Gov. Sheppard and ton Gibson, of Bennettsville, S. C., is witl will be here, more than one hundred an WRI leter, Prop f I TAMPA SALOON OWNER SLAIN. S ? * * !? ? u.v x (jn&nown .ISSaSSIIl Lt?>rs ins uuu *1 Behind Him. Tampa, Fla., July 18.?Alfredo Alverez, proprietor of a West Tampa g ! saloon, was assassinated at an early J hour this morning, just as he was entering the gate of his home, by an d unknown person who made his es- s< cape. Near the scene of the crime j was found a single barrel shotgun, marked H. V. K. 0 One peculiar feature of the murder b is that Alverez is the man from K whom it is said a check for $100 was ? obtained, which figured in the alleged b offer to pay State's witness Burmudez K in the Castegne-Ficcarratta murder b case, to leave the city. ' 0 b Personal Mention. ?Mrs. H. A. Wright, of Orange- tl jburg, is visiting her parents, Mr. and _ Airs, rnos uiacK._ ?Mr. and Mrs. Robert Black, of Valdosta, Ga., spent a few days in the city this week on a visit to the family of his cousin, Senator J. B. Black. They were on their way to the mountains of North Carolina to spend some time. Mr. Black was a relative of Senator Black's which he had never seen. OUTLOOK BAD, SAY GIXNERS. President Taylor Reports Crop Average Lowest on Record. Memphis, Tenn., July 19.?J. A. Taylor, president of the National Ginners' Association, to-day issued the following special report on the cotton crop: I "Reports from about half of our correspondents under average date of the 16th, indicate a condition of 72 and under. This is the lowest condition ever known at this date. Some parts of Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and Arkansas show slight improvement, but others show deterioration. Texas shows heavy deterioration on account of severe droughts and hot winds. Scattered rains have rallen since these reports, but in most cases have come too late. "It is the consensus of opinion that rains now will only make the plant shed more rapidly and there is little chance to make a crop from the new growth on account of the weevil. Heavy rains in Georgia and the Car lolinas have caused a small loss in condition in that region. Oklahoma shows considerable loss in about half the State, due to hot, dry weather; the other half about holds its own. "Reports from the weevil district are that the damage being done now is much less than in June, but with rains the damage will increase. The crop will likely show further loss between now and the 25th, unless there are general rains of two to three days in Texas." ^ Our Biggest Soldier Killed. Newport News, Va., July 19.?Private George E. Hedgepath, a member of the Forty-fourth company, = coast artillery, stationed at Fort Washington, Md., was killed at Fort Monroe to-day by falling beneath the wheels of a dummy train. Hedgepath, who weighed 318 pounds, and was said to be the largest man in the army, is survived by a widow and six children, who live at Fort Washington. Georgia Sheriff Arrested. Albany. Ga.. July 20.?Sheriff L. H. Glenn, of Wilcox county, Marshal G. B. McDuffie, of Leary. Ga.. and four other men were arrested to-day as a result of a bloody fight in a room in a local hotel during the hours just after midnight. It is charged that a poker game was in progress and that one of the players, a heavy loser, started a "rough house." The sheriff is charged with assault to murder, gambling, carrying concealed weapons, and assault and battery, on four warrants. The room in which the alleged game was in progress was spattered with blood. One pistol bullet was fired. SPRI Popula g. This season will regisfc 1, scenery picturesque and everything a experienced waiter at each table. II bladder or kidney troubles, or brok< red by drinking this water. All of th< arlors, one for males, while Miss Mos ed form. These baths in connection 1 embers and the Cotton Manufacturer t Glenn Springs hotel in 1910. This recreation or restoration of health. 1 exhilarating company. Get a new lea nd all praise the hotel service. Com x ball, horse-back riding, automobile Attorney General Bellinger, of South i us this season, and he will be deligh d fifty of them are already here. Co] / ITE FOR RATES I. HOOTS NEXT-DOOR NEIGHBOR. few Orleans Man is Said to Have Avenged Abuse of His Wife. New Orleans, La., July 18.?Louis,1 !. Breaux to-day shot and seriously j rounded Henry Meyers, residing next oor, in a difficulty participated in by averal members of the two families, 'he trouble is said to have arisen ver abusive words alleged to have een spoken to Mrs. Breaux by Frank Iroeper, son-in-law of Meyers, ireaux, who was accompanied by his; rother, is said to have attacked froeper as the latter was sitting on is doorstep. Kroeper's sister rushed ut of the house and dragged her rother inside. Meyers then walked ut and became engaged in an alteration with Breaux, which resulted in tie former being shot twice. ^?m HON. 5EAB0RN WR Vho Will Deliver an Ac Bamberg on Thursd Eleven O'c Established in 1894. The aim of the school v MATTrt. "Thorough instruction undei MOTTO: possible cost" The school was established by the Methodis place where girls can be given thorough trai cost The object has been .? o fully carried out pret Tf X? ^ b>-day. with its facultj IvLjvL A building and grounds, wort! S THE LEADING TRAINING SCH< (he ^ A pays all charges for the year, b !S I >11 beat laundry, medical attentkn T except music and elocution. A] REV. JAMES CAN* NGS r than & er one thousand more visit romantic. The hotel with its 150 room f you don't see what you want, ask for jn down, languid? Then come to Gle i modern baths known to advanced sci< s will smierintend the ladies departmei svith Glenn Springs water will make th s, of this State, held their annnal sess is the Mecca of the pictnresqne Piedm< [he wonderful cures which have result* se, and receive loftier ideals of life, stock's Orchestra, which furnishes mu s?any kind of recreation. Carolina, and many other prominent ted to see his friends from Bamberg &r me and rest and roll on the grassy lav AMD INFORM AT R. Adgt Killed His Brother. Charlotte, N. C., July 19.?At Patatown, Way^ne county, Sunday night, James Bivens instantly killed his brother, David, with a hoe. The slayer surrendered to the authorities at Goldsboro this morning and following a preliminary examination was released on $200 bond for his appearance at the August term of court. The tragedy is enshrouded in mvstery. Bivens stated that he had heard his wife screaming in his cotton field and running up was startled to see that she was being choked to death by his brother. After felling his brother James Bivens carried his wife home and by vigorous effort saved her life. The dead man's wife, a sister of Mrs. James Bivens, the only witness to the fratricide, testified at the hearing that the killing was justifiable. The motive for the dead man's attack on his sister-in-law is unknown. n"": K8&X;?" v|^ Bg?.: ; Bs&Bj|| W0& ^F jH IHrpgft nn Prohibition in ay, August 5th, at lock a. m. i clearly set forth by its * positively Christian influences at the lowest rt; Church, not to make money, but to furnish ning in body, mind, and heart at a moderate that as a r of 82, its boarding patronage of 300, and its i $140,000 ? OOL FOR GIRLS IN VIRGINIA. idading the table board, room. lights, steam i. physical culture, and tuition In all subjects ?pty for catalogue and application blank to ON. JIUM. Am Principal. Black*?, Vs. , 1 HOTEL 1 ver M - wi y*g ars to the hotel than during any previous year. __========== ^ '% ? [ is is as neat and inviting as a French sanitarium. The dining it; we have everything in abundance. Glenn Springs water nn Springs hotel, and drink from the invigorating, health siice are administered here. Dr. J. D. Moss, a noted Os? it. He gives Massage, Osteopathy, Hydrophathy?same as e lame walk, the despondent happy and cheerfol. Come on, ions at Glenn Springs hotel this season and will be here next mt, and the Queen of all Southern summer resorts?the ?d from the drinking of Glenn Springs water are absolutely sic for the grand opera in Greenville, S. C., is here, one of people of the United States are here now. id lower Carolina, and he will extend every courtesy and serms; live life over and plan for the future while strolling JOIN ;r Reid, Bus. Mgr. | I "Plug" || X There are plenty of "plugs" in the world. X || X "Plug" people, "plug" horses and mules, but we X ? don't deal in "plugs" of either description. The A ? horse or mule you buy from us has the Jones Bros, ffi ^ ? reputation behind him. That alone eliminates all ? ? "plug" possibilities. Our line of X ||H 1 Buggies, Wagons, Harness, ? ? 1 Lap Robes $ ? etc, are of the kind that must give you satisfaction @ ^ * and value for your dollar. X JgS jg Our reputation is behind them, too. ^ Iamaa nHA^ItAVii I J I JUIIlft DIMS if x Bamberg, South Carolina x Southern States Supply Co. m H. L. HARVEY, President. Plumbing Supplies 1 OF ALL KINDS fgj 810 to 818 Gervais St. Columbia, South Carolina v|<p 1 I A BANK THAT IS STRONG j j Jf 2 I in money, In men, in courtesy and in the desire to make its ser- 2 2 2 j vices of practical value to every man or woman who favors it %C 2 1 If you are not already one of our customers, try a checking 2 f y? account with us, deposit your checks or cash. No matter what I j . X 9 bank your checks are on, we will cash them and &i e you a neat I I fi I pass book and a check book. In this way you wiT" u ways have nil y ? receipt for the money you pay out. y * S j J. L.COPELAND, M. D., J. C. KINARD, A. F. HENDERSON, { [ . ;-M 09 President. Vice President. Cashier. . {EHRHARDT BANKING COMPANY jl CAPITAL STOCK $20,000.00 5$ SURPLUS AND UNDIVIDED PROFITS $4,708.06 J 5 CASH RESERVE $19,500.00 ? g P. PP. ~ i Males Marvelous Cures to Blood Poison, BheiatisiD and Scrofula, j P. P. P. purifies the blood, builds up the weak and debilitated, gives strength to weakened nerves, expels disease, giving the patient health and c ^ happiness, where sickness, gloomy feelings and lassitude first prevailed. In blood poison, mercurial poison, malaria, dyspepsia, and in all blood and skin diseases, like blotches, pimples, old chronic ulcers, tetter, scald head, we say without fear of contradiction that P? P. P? Is the best blood purifier in the world. ; Ladies whose systems are poisoned and whose blood is in an impure condition due to menstrual irregularities, are peculiarly benefitted by the wonderful tonic and blood cleansing properties of P. P. P., Prickly Ash, Poke Boot and Potassium. F. V. LIPPMAN, SAVANNAH, GA.