The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, August 03, 1911, Page 8, Image 8
Styr Hmnbrrg ijrralb
Thursday, August 3,1911.
SHORT LOCALS.
, Brief Items of Interest Throughout
the Town and County.
The hot dry weather continues.
Attention is directed to the ad. of
Carlisle Fitting School in this issue.
A good number of Bamberg people
attended the Crocketville picnic yesterday.
The residence of Capt. J. D. Fel
der is being repainted and otnerwise
^ improved.
If you want to 6ell your farm,
timber property, or other real estate,
write the Ligon Land Co., Sumter,
S. C.
Mr. I. B. Felder has gone back to
housekeeping in his home on New
Bridge street, vacated by Mr. J. W.
McCue's family.
A postal card from C. J. S. Brooker,
dated at Seattle, Washington,
- July 24th, says that he is still having
a great time.
The dry weather of the past two
weeks has damaged the crops in this
section. The drought has caused the
cotton to throw off a lot of its fruit.
iThe first boll or open cotton ror
this season was brought to our office
last Saturday by Mr. W. E. Metz, of
the Cope section of Orangeburg
U ' county.
The Denmark baseball team defeated
the Columbia Mechanics two
games in Denmark Monday and
Tuesday. The scores were 5 to 1
and 8 to 7.
Head Master J. C. Guilds is busy
these days canvassing and making
addresses in the interest of the Carr
lisle Fitting School. A fine opening
this fall is expected.
The handsome residence of Mr. J.
H. Hutto on New Bridge street has
tieen mmnieted and his family mov
ied into it last week. We are glad to
, welcome them as residents.
This newspaper does not ask for
patronage on the ground of friendship
or because we need it. We ask
for it because our newspaper deserves
It and our work for the town and
community merit it.
Mr. J. E. McMillan, of the Ehrhardt
section of this county, has been appointed
as delegate by the governor
to the International Dry Farming
Congress which meets at Colorado
Springs, Colorado, October 16-20.
Our merchants are taking notice
of the fine prospects for a good cotton
crop this year, and evidently expect
to do a rushing business the
cpming season, as numbers of them
Ere leaving ior me ivuruiera uiain.et?
g v to purchase large fall stocks.
Wk . The concert given by the band
k.;1 - last Friday evening was heartily enjoyed
by those present, and a fine
program was rendered. It is to be
regretted, however, that such a small
crowd was present. This does not
IBk . show much interest in the band.
The residence of Capt. J. D. Felj|..'
. on New Bridge street, is being enlarged
and improved. We understand
that Mr. Felder, who is now
[living at Young's Island, will soon
reutrn to the city, with his family,
and will keep hooks for Mr. A. Rice.
A card from Mr. C. J. S. Brooker
says that their party has just returned
from a trolly ride through San
Francisco, in a private car, a courtesy
of Mr. Patrick Qalhoun, president
of the company, to the people of
his native State, Mr. Calhoun being
from Charleston.
We have heard the remark several
times that the Press and Standard
force were fined,, say ten or fifteen
dollars worth for fighting and
thirty-five or forty dollars for writing
about it. That is one way to account
for the amount of these fines.
?Walterboro Press and Standard.
Miss Llewellyn Cleckley, ' treasurer
of the Confederate monument
8pS fund, will be away for a month or
m ~ six weeks, and during her absence I
W. Brabham, at Bamberg
Banking Company, will have her
books and will be glad to receive
contributions to the monument fund
or to collect from those who have
subscribed.
A
.The committee having in charge
the work of claying the streets of
tfie city by the co-operative plan, consisting
of Dr. Geo. F. Hair, J. D.
Copeland, Jr., and J. J. Smoak, have
gone promptly to work, and as a re
? li A /v# TTtn #VA?ft V* rtTTA V\AAn
buib a uuluud ui nagvxuo uatc
- furnished by public-spirited gentlemen,
and the work of claying the
heaviest streets in the city is going
forward rapidly.
^ v . Big Line of Vehicles.
>
C. F. ftizer, of Olar, has just received
one hundred buggies and one
hundred wagons. He paid spot cash
for them, and will give his customers
the benefit of the great saving. He
has any style buggy you want, top
or open, automobile back, half automobile
back, or two in one, also rubber
tires and ball bearings. He has
a lot of mighty handsome vehicles,
and wants you to see them before
you buy.
' \ _ x ?
'?-? -* ' ' I-'' ? : - -
New Advertisements.
/ W. H. Yarn?Monuments.
V Andrew J. Hydrick, Jr., Referee in
Bankruptcy?Bankrupt Notice of
Still Bros.
/"J? C. Guilds, Head Master?Carlisle
Fitting School.
/ Atlantic Coast Line?Cheap Excursion
Rates.
Hoover's Drug Store?Nectar for
the Gods.
Business League Meeting.
A most interesting meeting of the
Bamberg business men's league was
held in the city hall last Friday afternoon.
Officers for the ensuing
year were elected as follows: J. F.
Carter, president; J. A. Hunter, vice
president; B. D. Carter, secretary and
A mi Til?-1r nr n DhnnH
treasurer; iuu?. x>ia^n.t <t. v. ?uVm,
J. D. Copeland, Jr., and W.,A. Klauber
were elected as members of the
executive committee.
Reports were heard from a number
of committees, and several movements
of importance were started,
among them being the matter of better
mail and express seryice, the
claying of the streets under the cooperative
plan, and the adoption of
a resolution looking to the introduction
in the legislature of a bill for
a constitutional amendment allowing
the 'town to vote additional bonds
for the establishing of a sewerage
system. The committees having these
matters in charge will atteid to all
the details, and results will follow in
a short time it is believed. The
members of the league were heartily
I in favor of sewerage, and our representatives
will have the proper bill
presented to the legislature at its
session in January. This matter will
be handled by-the committee on legislation
of the league, of which Mr.
tr ft fnlt io Ahairmnn
ll? r via im * - * ? -?
Xegro Wrote Obscene Letter.
According to a report received in
this city last night from Bamberg,
the citizens of that town were very
much enraged by the action of a
negro in the vicinity of that place,
-and there was some apprehension of
danger to the negro. He was? taken
in custody and placed in the county
jail, and a call was made to this city
for a United States Deputy Marshal.
The matter was brought to the attention
of the United States commissioner
at this point this morning, and
the necessary papers were taken out
to give the negro a hearing before
this official. The negro will probably
be brought to Orangeburg sometime
during the day.
A 'phone message about 9:30
o'clock last night to the chief of police
informed him that a negro had
been arrested in Bamberg on the
charge of attempted assault upon a
prominent white woman of that county.
The arrest was brought about
through a letter of ah obscene nature
purported to have been written
by the negro to a prominent white
woman. The letter was placed in
the hands of the authorities at once
and the negro was placed behind the
bars. Some anxiety was felt by the
authorities for the safety of the negro,
and it was reported that the
community was greatly enraged. The
negro was arrested on a charge of
attempted assault, but it was afterwards
decided that the matter should
be turned over to the United States
authorities, and this morning warrants
were issued charging the negro
with the use of the mail for obscene
purposes.
He will probably be given a preliminary
within a few days.?Orangeburg
Evening News.
Reunion of Company G.
The annual reunion of Company
G was held at Bethesda church
Thursday of last week, and as usual
was attended by a large crowd. True
there are only a few of the gallant
old company left, but their friends
and relatives gathered to spend the
day with the old soldiers. Addresses
were made by J. F. Carter, Esq., of
this'city; Head Master J. C. Guilds,
of the Carlisle Fitting School, and
R?v. E. A. McDowell, of Ehrhardt.
Everything passed off pleasantly, and
the old soldiers have cause for congratulation.
McKay Brabham to Wed.
Invitations have been received
here to the marriage of Angus McKay
Brabham, of Bamberg, to Miss
Edith Clarice Rice, of Denmark, S.
C. The ceremony will take place on
Tuesday evening, August 1, at 7
o'clock in the Baptist church at Denmark.
Mr. Brabham is a former Wofford
boy and has many friends here. He
is connected with the firm of C. R.
" - ? i - /* -r? v
uraDnam, 01 camuerg. iuc uiauiagc
is of State wide interest.?Spartanburg
Journal.
The house of Oscar Faust, a negro,
situated in the South-western part
of town, was destroyed by' fire early
Monday morning of this week. He
lost most of his household goods,
and his insurance amounted to about
$1,000.
Baptist Church News and Notices.
DIRECTORY.
Preaching service every Sunday
morning at 11 o'clock and at night,
by the pastor, Rev. O. J. Frier.
Sunday-school every Sunday morning
at 10 o'clock, J. A. Hunter, superintendent.
B. Y. P. U. every Sunday after- j
noon at 3:30 o'clock.
Prayer meeting every Thursday I
night.
Woman's Missionary Society meets
Wednesday afternoons after the sec-;
ond Sunday in each month.
Sunbeam Band meets every two
weeks on Friday afternoons.
Monthly conference each fourth |
Sunday.
Observance of Lord's Supper the
first Sunday in each quarter.
NEWS AND NOTICES.
There was no preaching at our
church Sunday, as the pastor was in
attendance on the fifth Sunday meeting
at Hunter's Chapel. There were
four received for baptism as the result
of the few days' evangelistic services
preceeding the union meeting,
in which Pastor Frier aided Rev. E.
A. McDowell, the pastor of that
church.
The union meeting at Hunter's
chapel was well attended, and the
hospitality all that could be expected.
Hunter's Chapel neighborhood is
composed of some of our best people,
and it is a pleasure to visit
among them. The introductory sermon
was preached by Rev. O. J.
Frier. The program was a missionary
program, and was thoroughly discussed.
Rev. B. F. Allen, of Denmark,
preached the missionary sermon
Sunday morning. It was a carefully
thought out discourse and well
rendered. It made a fine impression
on the large congregation.
The prayer meeting talk by the
pastor Thursday evening will be the
second on the Apostle's purposes in
writing the first epistle of John.
Pastor Frier will leave Saturday
for Plum Branch, not far from Edgefield,
to assist the pastor, Rev. J. E.
Freeman, in a meeting of days, beI
ginning on Sunday. Rev. W. G. BritI
tnn nf Rflrnwell. will SUDDlv the DUl
pit here next Sunday morning. Pas-j
tor Frier will be back in time, to fill
the pulpit here the second Sunday.
Announcement will then be made in
regard to his regular vacation.
Contributions to Monument.
jv
Following are some additional contributions
to the Confederate monument
fund, made since the last list
,was published. The contribution of
Mr. W. H. Morris, of Davisboro, Ga.,
was made some months ago but published
under wrong initials, hence it
is republished. Mr. Morris is an old
Confederate soldier, a member of Co.
G, 6nd (returns to the county each
year to attend-tne reunion of his.old
company and to visit relatives:
H. J. Zorn $ 5.00
Mrs. Tindal 50
L. A. Brabham 5.00
L. W. Pearlstine, Florida. 50
W. H. Morris 5.00
Mrs. J. W. Barnes, Orangeburg 1.00
Mrs. Stella Bronson 1.00
W. P. Blume * 5.00
Oxford Buggy Co., Oxford,
N. C 10.od
Jerome Carter, Florence, Ala. J.00
IJM nrl>Aa Tftmno T?lo Q ftrt
iJau 1 iiuguto, xoiuya, i u.uv
M. 0. Kinard 4.00
D. P. Rentz, Sanford, Fla 5.00
Cash 50
Capt. J. J. Copeland 3.00
J. A. Peters 2.00
H. W. Herndon 2.00
J. R. Morris 1.00
J. J. Brabham, (Olar) 1.00
Capt. J. R. Hamilton, BranchVille
5.00
Negro Arrested.
Friday o^ last week a negro named
Tony Lawton was arrested and lodged
in jail on the charge of attempted
assault, his crime being that of writ
mg ail msuiuug <tuu uus^cuc lcbbci
to a widow lady of the Clear Pond
section. It was decided, however,
to change the charge to that of using
the mails to transmit obscene matter,
and accordingly Deputy Marshal
Kennerly, of Orangeburg, came over
Saturday morning and took the negro
to that city and lodged him in jail
pending a preliminary hearing before
U. S. Commissioner Brantley.
Last week the lady found a letter
in her rural mail box with the name
of Lawton signed to it, the letter being
most insulting in terms. The negro
denies the charge, and says that
he cannot write his name, hut it is
said that he has signed papers over
his crop and stock at stores here in
town. There is some doubt as to his
guilt, and had there not been he
would have been summarily dealt
with. Had the citizens of that community
been satisfied that Lawton
was the guilty party he would not
have been arrested. The negro has
borne a good reputation heretofore.
The preliminary hearing win oe neia
in Orangeburg in a few days.
Telephone Meeting.
<
All parties who are interested in
the establishment of rural telephone
lines running out of Ehrhardt in
different directions"', will please attend
a meeting at Ehrhardt, S. C., Tuesday,
August 8th, at 8 o'clock.
G. J. HERNDON.
SLOW ABOUT LIGHTS.
Southern Railway Not in a Hurry to
Light Passenger Station.
The Southern Railway Company is
indeed making slow progress in the
matter of furnishing electric lights
for the passenger station here, and
in this respect is holding up its
record of ignoring Bamberg and the
patrons of the road along this division.
The Southern road has for some
time had the reputation of being the
most unaccomodating and indifferent
road in this section, but this is purely
a business proposition, and the dilatory
tactics of the road in regard to
so small a matter are simply abominable.
This matter has been pending
with th*k railroad for over a year, as
formal complaint of the poor lights
in the depot was made by the people
of Bamberg to the authorities ever
since February, 1910. And yet
nothing whatever has been done here
towards wiring the building. In fact,
as far aB is definitely known no action
at all has been taken by the road
with regard to installing the lights
in the station here, although the
superintendent of the road stated to
the railroad commission in a letter
dated June 8 th that the depot would
be lighted with electricity, and that
work would be commenced on the
job within a very short time from
that date. The road is certainly in
no position that it cannot have this
work done and there appears to
be absolutely no excuse for the matter
being delayed in this manner.
The railroad commission seems to
be doing its duty in the case, as is
evident from the urgent letters written
by that body to the authorities of
+Vn-w mo A in KoViolf nf fho mnvomont
Iriic ivau 1U MVUUfAi. VI. vuv UAV ? vm?vmv*
Therefore the fault all lies with the
railroad, and we venture to say that
if Bamberg had another railroad to
compete with the Southern this matter
would have been attended to long
ago, and we would not nqw be inconvenienced
by the miserable oil
lamps in the depot. But this is customary
with the Southern Railway
under such circumstances, and it appears
that the people of Bamberg
will .remain at the mercy of this road
until another is operate4 here or some
severe measures are taken against it.
On July 24th Mr. B. D. Carter,
secretary of the Bamberg business
men's league, wrote the railroad commission
to the effect that no action
had been taken by the road to provide
lights in the depot here, and
also requested the commission to
urge the road to install the lights, as
it has promised to do. On the following
day, July 25th, the commission
wrote the superintendent of the
road a stiff letter in quiring why the
road has not complied with its prom
? t A 11 11-- 11-1-1- J 11. ?
I8e to install tne ligiits, auu lunuer
asking when the road expected to
remedy the trouble complained of
by the people of Bamberg. As yet
no reply has been received from this
letter, and the answer of the road
and their action in the matter will
be awaited with much interest.
Mr* Carter's letter and that of the
commission follow:
"-1 1-j_ rt r\ x__i? or 1 m 1
uoiumpia,, o. v^., juiy asaa.
. Mr. J. W. Wassum, supt. Southern
Railway, Charleston, S. C.
Dear Sir: Under date of July
24th, Mr. D. Carter, Secretary,
Bamberg Business League, writes as
follows:
"Referring to your correspondence
with Mr. A. W. Knight, Bamberg, relative
to the above matter, we beg
to inform you that no action has
been taken to provide the town of
Bamberg with better lights at the
passenger depot. The depot is now
lighted with very poor oil lamps and
is often in total darkness. The railroad
company could furnish up-todate
electric lights at a very small
cost, as the town of Bamberg has an
efficient electric plant. Therefore,
there is no excuse why the railroad
officials should not comply with the
demands of the public. We will apvmir
fnrthor iircine* tViPm in
give this matter attention without
further delay."
On June 8th, your file 209, you
wrote the commission as follows:
"Your letter June 6th, file 1531,
regarding lighting passenger station
at Bamberg. It has been decided to
light this depot with electricity. Papers
and recommendation have been
submitted to the management and I
am reasonably sure authority will be
issued for work to commence in the
very near future."
The commission desires to know
why you have not installed these
lights as promised. It further requests
that you inform it when you
expect to remedy the troubles complained
of by the people of Bamberg.
This matter has now been under consirterntin'n
qitipp "Fphrnarv 2R 1910.
and was handled by Supt. Hungerford
on March 4, 1910, and has been
handled by you since May 2, 1911.
It seems that very slow progress has
been made in getting this small matter
arranged and the commission desires
that you give this personal attention
and carry out your plans as
stated in yours of June 8th.
Yours very truly,
T. B. LUMPKIN,
Secretary.
EXCITEMENT IN BAMAKO.
Negro Arrested Charged with Writing
Obscene Letter.
Orangeburg, July 29.?Excitement
was created in Bamberg yesterday
when it was reported that a negro of
that place had written an obscene letter
to a young woman. The negro
was quickly arrested upon a warrant
charging him with attempted assault.
The letter was purported to have
been written by the negro, whom the
Bamberg authorities have apprehended.
The negro will have a hearing before
United States Commissioner A.
Brantley, of this city, for using the
United States mail for obscene purposes
next week.
Farmers' Union Meeting.
Editor The Bamberg Herald:?
Will you kindly convey a little message
to the members of the Farmers'
Union of Bamberg county, through
your most excellent paper, from a
visitor to the State Union convention
which met in Columbia last week.
When we left home we felt like we
were going to attend the funeral of
the Farmers' Union, but when we
got to Columbia we found it a very
lively corpse indeed. We met intelligent
men from every county in the
State, progressive thinkers, men who
have the good of the order at heart
and are working for its success.
One peculiarity about the assembly
was the number of bald heads in the
hall. By actual count there were
twenty-two out of a total of a hundred
and twenty-five, and it wasn't a
very close count, either. I know it
was not less, but very 'likely more
than that numher. ,
The membership of the order has
increased thirty-three per cent, in
this State in the last year. Instead
of being in debt, as it was a year or
two ago, there is a cash balance of
over seven hundred dollars in the
treasury, and that after having an
organizer in the field all the year,
and three parts of the time.
After what I saw and heard at the
convention, let me make this prediction:
That in less than five years
from to-day the farmers of this country
will be selling their cotton from
their own warehouses to the spinners
of this and other countries, and, they
will ask you what you will take for
your cotton instead of dictating the
price to you.
Farmers of Bamberg county, yea of
the wbele State/ come up to the help
of your brethren, to the help of your
hr At hern aerainst the devils of Wall
street, who have b^en robbing you
of your rights even since you were
born. Cotton has gone off fifteen
dollars a bale in the last three weeks.
If you are going to make ten bales of
cotton you have already1 lost one hundred
and fifty dollars. If you are
going to make one hundred bales
you have lost fifteen hundred dollars.
Now, then, let's figure just a little.
If we make a million bales of cotton
in South Carolina, and the makers
of every bale would turn in the pittance
of two dollars per bale to the
Farmers' Union, as members or otherwise,
with this fund at hand we
could protect ourselves. What is two
dollars a bale when we have already
lost fifteen. With this fund we could
keep enough cotton off the market
and carry the price up more than it
has gone off. Some sap head may
say what is two million dollars to
fight the cotton market with? Well,
that will he little South Carolina's
share. The other cotton States are
at work and will do their part.
Mississippi has had an agent in
Europe all summer making arrangements
to' sell their cotton direct to
the mills, and when all the States
catch up with Mississippi the cotton
mills will ask you what you will take
for your cotton instead of dictating
a price that would bankrupt any business
on earth.
Farmers of Bamberg county, won't
you come out and help us? We need
your help and you need our help.
We have helped you in the past and
can help you in the future. You
never would have gotten the price
for cotton that you got last year
and the year before had it not been
for the cotton the Farmers' Union
kept off the market. Perhaps you
didn't know that they kept three million
bales off the market until the
price was assured. Some men say
the Grange and the Alliance failed
and the Farmers' Union willfail also.
Not so, my friend. The Grange and
the Alliance both did a wonderful
work, but they got mixed up in politics
and that was their ruin. We
will profit by experience and keep
politics out of the Union, and as
long as we have such men as E. W.
Dabbs, B. F. Kener, j. w minerReed,
J. B. O'Neal Holloway, and
numbers of other that I could mention
at the head of the Farmers'
Union, we are safe.
D. R. MATHENY.
Bamberg, S. C., July 31, 1911.
Mr. J. T. ,O'Neal exhibited on the
streets a few days ago a cotton stalk
which had 254 bolls and forms. This
shows what the lands of Bamberg
county will do.
JAILED BY WHOLESALE.
Sixty-seven Held Growing Out of
Mansfield Riot. yf'
__
Pittsburg, Pa., July 31.?Seventyeight
persons, three of them women,
charged with having participated in
a riot at the Mansfield mine of the
Pittsburg Coal company at Heidelburg
last Monday, were given hearings
late to-day. Seventy of the defendants
are held for court, five were '
discharged. Three, under bonds of
$5,200 each, failed to appear. Of the
number tried to-day 67 were committed
to jail in default of $2,500
bonds, and three women furnished
$1,000 bond. yi\
SPECIAL NOTICES |
Advertisements Under This Heed 85c*
For 25 Words or Less. > >. fR
Buy your fruit jars at Hunter's "
Hardware Store. The only sanitary J
iruu jars on tne mar&ei.
If Yon Wish to Sell That farm, - .
timber land, store or residence, /|
write us at once and send full J
description as we have an attractive
proposition to oiler yon.
LIGON LAND OPM Snmtcr, 8. C.
Piping for Salew?Two thousand
feet of % inch iron piping, also one
Gould ram. Will sell cheap. 8. S.
WILLIAMS, Govan, S. C.
BANKRUPT NOTICE.
In the District Court of the United
States, for the district of South Carolina?in
bankruptcy.
In the matter of 0. E. Still & W.
H. Still, copartees as Still Bros., and
individually, bankrupts.
To the creditors of 0. E. Still & '
W. H. Still, copartees as Still Bros., v\ ;
ana individually, of Denmark, in the
county of Bamberg and district aforesaid,
bankrupts.
Notice is hereby given, that oh the .
5th day of July, A. D., 1911, the -.fc
Said copartnership was ,duly adjudi- |
cated bankrupt, and that the first
meeting of the creditors will be held
at Denmark, S. C., on the 10th day >:
of August, A. D., 1911, ^t eleven
o'clock a. m., at which time the said
creditors may attend, prove their
claims, appoint a trustee, examine - .
the bankrupts, and transact such other
business as may properly come |
before said meeting. Notice is further
given that at this meeting ap- *
plication will be made for an order
for sale of both real and personal
property.
ANDREW J. HYDRICK, JR>, < -O
Referee in Bankruptcy.
Dated July 25,1911.
.
tYFamou. UuB E9cm .
X|m
Bff Call and rramlne our
C||K fine of the Famous ?r
BP KUM tttflft , *
iX, Tools and Cutlery to- M
more rnan ux wwaatj > b
Cb All our claims are JajRbacked
with a "money, ^la| *\?
tsl refunded if you're not HI
:P satisfied" guarantee. . IgU
0^ J. A. HUISTER
?
J. F. Carter B. D. Carter ^
CARTER & CARTER I
m
AECorneyBn?i?jj?w ,?
Bamberg, S. C.
\ $ '
Special attention given to set- .
tlement of estates and invest!- - ^ ^
gation of land titles.
NOTICE OP SALE. ~ ||
State of South Carolina?County of /rJB
Bamberg?Court of Common Pleas/ %
Mrs. Lizzie Hill, plaintiff, against 1 |
Wilhelmina Wilkinson and Laura - ;-|
Wilkinson, defendants. ,
T>.._0,.on+ an nrdftr of this COUrt -?#S
X Uiouauv uu
in the above entitled action, dated
tho 6th day of July, 1911, I will sell |j
at public auction, to the highest bidder,
for cash, on the first Monday in
August, 1911 (being the 7th day of "&
the month) before the court house /J
door in Bamberg, 8. C., during the - 0
legal hours of sale, the following described
real estate, to wit:
Ail and singular that certain tract,
piece or parcel of real estate containing
and measuring one acre, more
or less, with four room cottage there- /
upon, heretofore used by the plain- i||j
tiffs and defendants-as a home, and
bounded as follows: by lands of J.
M. Grimes, Neal Rush and S. A.
Kinard, situate, lying and being near
the incorporate limits of the town of
Bamberg, in said county and State.
Purchaser to pay for papers. ' H.
C. POLK, A
Master Bamberg County. 1
GRAHAM & ASKINS, , f.?
piaitififffl' Attorneys.
July 6th, 1911.
Piano Contest.
Following is the standing of the
contestants in the contest for the / r?j
piano now being given away by The V#
Bamberg Herald and Hoover's drug
store. No names of contestants are '{0*
published, each contestant having a
number. Get in the game early and &?v
make the contest interesting:
1 .. .. 36,995. 75 .. 35,220
2 .. 36,525 79 .. .. 63,090 jj$
o 6,625 89 ^ ^ 2,225
21 " " 81,270 90 .. .. 48,350
03 6,140 112 .. ? ~ 2,335
35 ? ~ 3,025 119 .. ^ 2.005 VJ
41 ? ~ 23,780 140 .. .. 65,840
42 " *" 2,035 141 .. - 2,040 P
43 ** 2,715 146 .. .. 42,285 j ?
49 !. .. 2,030 147 .. .. 42,000