The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, May 16, 1912, Page 8, Image 8
?Ij? Hambrrg l|rralb
?
Thursday, May 16, 1912.
SHORT LOCALS.
Brief Items of Interest Throughout
the Town and County.
Mr. Jeff Gunnels annnounces his
"v. *
candidacy in this issue for magistrate
at Olar.
Mr. O. J. C. Lain is announced as
a candidate for re-election as magistrate
at Olar.
Miss Belle Cooner is teaching in
the graded school during the illness
of Miss Stella Hair.
Mr. S. A. Hand moved last week
into his handsome new residence on
lower Main street, which has just
been completed.
The Orangeburg county convention
decided that cotton weighers for the
various towns should be voted for by
the Antir#* oountv.
Miss Stella Hair, one of the teachers
in the graded school for the past
few years, has declined re-election
for next year, on account of her
health.
The faculty of the graded school
for next year is about complete, and
ithe full list of teachers will be given
out soon. There are few changes in
teachers.
Carey Brabham, a negro, who has
been porter at the Johnston Hotel in
this city for a number of years, died
last Thursday night. He had been
ill for some time with tuberculosis.
The young men of the Bamberg
band have again begun practicing,
and we trust they will keep it up until
the town has a first-class musical
organization. Nothing adds so much
to the life of a town as a good band.
The Orangeburg district conference
will meet at Holly next year.
Bamberg extended an invitation to
tVia annfaronao frt moot in til is f?itv_
i but Holly Hill won out by one vote.
A tie was the result on the first baljpU
lot.
The Carlisle Fitting School baseball
team went to Charleston Monday
and played a game the same afternoon
against the Porter Military
Academy team. The Carlisle boys
were defeated by a score of eleven
to three.
The weekly prayer meeting at the
Methodist church, which has been
held heretofore at eight o'clock in
IS- the evening, will hereafter be held at
4:30 o'clock in the afternoon, beginning
this week. The change of hour
will be observed until further notice.
Farming operations in this county
; have been much retarded on account
of the bad weather, but the fine
weather of the past week has been
of much benefit to growing crops.)
Our farmers are not disheartened,
and will make a crop with any sort
of showing.
A meeting of the tax payers of
Bamberg school district will be held
in the town hall in this city on Monday
afternoon, June 3rd, at four
o'clock, for the purpose of electing
one trustee and fixing the tax levy
for the support of the school the
Z?E,^'.;v
& coming year.
We understand that Dr. E. Kirkland
and family will move into the
Grayson house, opposite the graded
school, just vacated by Mr. S. A.
Hand. Mr. J. F. Carter will move
into the Cope residence, which Dr.
Kirkland will vacate, he having purchased
this place some months ago.
Brother W. R. McMillan writes:
"Please send this week's Courier to
Bamberg, S. C., instead of Amherst,
Va. I feel that I am leaving one of
the best pastorates in the land, but
hope to find the same at Bamberg.
You may count on me as a belated
member of Brown's famous Courier
Band."?Baptist Courier.
The Woman's Home Misison Socity
will hold its regular monthly
meeting next Tuesday afternoon at
4:30 o'clock in the ladies' parlor of
the Methodist church. Mrs. Bourne,
f-.V ..
the State corresponding secretary,
will be with us and a rare treat is in
store for all who will attend. Visitors
are cordially invited.
"Congratulate you on the nice,
clean, readable print of your paper
and the good style and get up of the
? - -w- paper. It is one of the best that
comes to our office." Thus write^
Mr. Geo. R. Lombard, president of
Lombard Iron Works, of Augusta,
in reference to The Bamberg Herald, j
Need we say that we appreciate it,
coming from such a man as Mr. Lombard.
We had the pleasure of seeing an
interesting private letter from Mr. P.
B. Murphy this week, who is now on
eXieUUetl VV CSIC111 H if in auiuiuvunvt
He is now at El Paso, Texas. He
says it is a great country. At present
there are in the city a number
of Americans who have left Mexico
cn account of the war down there.
Mr. Murphy says the climate is delightful;
it gets hot in the the daytime
but at night one has to sleep
under blankets. He says there are
no negroes there. !
r*
New Advertisements.
J. B. Hunter, Sheriff?Notice. C
0. J. C. Lain?Candidate's Card.
G. Frank Bamberg?Don't Try to
Race.
p
Harrison Randolph, President?
College of Charleston. d
J. G. Brabham, Bankrupt?Bank- a
rupt's Petition for Discharge. j
L. C. Price?Special Notice. t
Jeff Gunnels?Candidate's Card. i]
? o
Tile Millinery store?i\ew Arrivals.
1
Rentz & Felder?John Goes to
E
Town.
E. A. Hooton's Ladies' Store? j
Read Every Line. It Will Pay You. a
f
District Meeting. q
The district meeting of the Wo- *
man's Home Mission Society of the c
Orangeburg district will be held at
the Methodist church in Blackville
Friday, May 17th, to Sunday, May
19th. Miss Llewellyn Cleckley, the
district secretary, will be in charge *
of the meeting, and she has prepared 3
the following program: c
FRIDAY EVENING. P
Devotional services?Rev. Dr. n
Pitts. *
Address of welcome? *
Response?Mrs. E. O. Kirsch. f
Talk?Work of the Deaconess and *
Missionary in the Home Land?Mrs. &
Stewart, Wesley House, Augusta, Ga. e
. SATURDAY. a
9:30 a. m.?Devotions?Mrs. D.
N. Bourne.
9:45 a. m.?Organization; appointment
of committees; report of
district secretary; reports of auxiliaries.
f(
11:45 a. m.?Report of council f(
meetine?Mrs. D. N. Bourne. 7
12:15 p. m.?The Stranger Within n
Our Gates?Mrs. W. H. Hodges. <3
12:30 p. m.?Devotions?Rev. T. ?
E. 'Morris. n
AFTERNOON SESSION. 13
4:00 p. m.?Devotions?Mrs. a
Stewart. a
4:15 p. m.?Preventive and Rescue
Work?Miss Finstrom.
4:30 p. m.?Home Mission District
School?Conducted by Mrs. E. b
O. Kirsch. u
SUNDAY. \
11:00 a. m.?Annual Sermon? u
Rev. C. E. Peele. \ t
SUNDAY AFTERNOON. tl
4:30 p. m.?Talks to the Young I
People and Children?Mrs. Stewart I
and Miss Finstrom. s<
SUNDAY EVENING. n
8:30 p. m.?Devotions?Rev. C.
E. Peele, g
Talk of General Work of the Woman's
Home Society?Mrs. D. N.
Bourne.
In Honor of MJss Saunders. g
Among the very enjoyable social
affairs of the past week was the linen
shower given her guest, Miss Janie
Sue Saunders, by her cousin, Miss
Pearl" Counts, at her home on Rail- ^
road avenue, last Wednesday after- ^
noon. Flowers, ferns and spring toi- k
lettes, together with the very many j
beautiful and dainty gifts appropriate
to such occasions, and so dear to b
the feminine heart, combined to make
of the reception rooms an attractive r<
sight. Miss Saunders, who is a gifted
Ktr Mloo A 71 Tl 1*Q
viuixuist, uj mwa auu^w ^
Lou Byrd, delighted her hearers with
several solos. ti
At the entrance the guests were re.
l a
ceived by Mrs. S. H. Counts and Mrs. g
W. Z. Bryan, of Allendale, and were ^
conducted to the parlors by Misses ^
Counts and Saunters. Roses, carna- ^
tions and ferns were everywhere to ^
carry out the color scheme of pink
and white. Little Mary Ann Brun|
^
son, dressed as a little laundress, received
the gifts and arranged them
upon the clothes line stretched across ^
1 the dining room. Mrs. G. Moye Dickinsqn
invited each guest to write an
appropriate sentiment in the dainty
little bride's book, hand-painted by ^
an aunt of the bride, Mrs. S. H.
| Counts, and later read the many good
j wishes to the guests. Miss Saunders
responded very wittily and feel- .c
ingly in a toast to her hostess, her ^
guests, and "Her Old Home Town."
Whist was the game played, and
the first prize, a handsome pair of
hand-embroidered towels, was won
1 K
by Mrs. Furman B. McCrackin; the
guest prize, an exquisite ivory fan, ^
going to Miss Saunders. At the 1.
si
conclusion of the game, refresh
ments were served in courses. .BamcL1
berg having been the home of Miss
Saunders before removing to Florence
she was cordially greeted upon a
this occasion, and her many friends
were delighted to have her with them ^
even- for so short a visit, as was
evinced by the beautiful, dainty and 0
attractive gifts showered upon the
SI
dainty bride to be. J
Among those present were: Mes- i"
dames G. Frank Bamberg, H. J. Brabham,
J. W. Price, F. B. McCrackin,
L. C. Price, J. A. Williams, J. A. Wyman,
Janie C. Lewis, W. P. Riley, H. n
H. Copeland, G. M. Dickinson, W. E.
n
Spann, Decania Dowling, W. A. Klau- ~
ber, W. Z. Bryan, of Allendale, and 01
J. D. O'Hearn, of Florida; Misses Ad- 11
dys Hays, Bernie Counts, Annie Lou
Byrd, Ottowa Easterling, Kate Felder,
Berta Johnson and Nina Riley. lc
*
BARNWELL DOWNS C. F. S.
'arlisle Fitting School Lose to Tone T!
of 6 to 5 at Barnwell.
Barnwell, May 10.?In a very
retty exhibition of the national at
ame the Barnwell High School team C
efeated the Carlisle Fitting School C
ggregation, of Bamberg, 6 to 5.
larnwell was unable to score until at
he sixth inning, when, by bunch- ai
ag hits and a combination of errors J<
n the part of the visitors, they net- cc
ed three tallies, tieing the score,
'he next inDing gave them three h;
aore and a safe lead. The features ct
t the game were a triple play by 2,
lamberg in the fourth inning and
- AnVvlo hv PotforeATi 4*?
.11 uuassisicu uuuuiv *->j * tc
or the locals. The score was: w
J. F. S 10200002 0?5 7 8
H. S 00000330 x?6 9 9 ai
Struck out by McConnell for C. F. g<
!., 6; by Pate, for B. H. S., 9. w
School Closing,
The Pine Grove school in Hutto s*
listrict, will close on Wednesday, p
lay 29th. Exercises by pupils in the
aorning, beginning at 10 o'clock J
romptly. An address in the after- V]
toon by Rural School Supervisor W. *
l. Tate. Everybody is invited to at- h<
end. We specially entreat all Conederate
soldiers to be present. A. ?
reat is in store for all those who ?1iave
never heard Mr. Tate, and we
arnestly wish all to be present who ai
re interested in education and school
approvement. Be sure to come. w
GEORGIE EMMA JORDAN. w
i ai
Death of Mr. Dickinson. M
Mr. H. C. Dickinson, an aged Con- h.
ederate veteran, died at the Con- C(
ederate home in Columbia last q
'hursday morning, after a short ill- ^
ess. The body was taken to Allen- ir
lale last Friday fdr burial. Mr. m
)ickinson. was well known and had S(
aany friends and relatives in Bamerg.
He was an interesting writer,
nd had written a number of valued c(
rticles for this newspaper. g
School Meeting a>t Govan. tc
An important school meeting will
e held in the church at Govan Sat- B
irday, June 1st, 1912. Mr.- E. J.
Vatson, commissioner of agricultre,
Mr. E. W. Dabbs, president of
he Farmers Union, Mr. Haddon, of
IE
he U. S. department of agriculture, j
)r. W. K. Tate, of the South Carolina ^
rniversity, supervisor of elementary
chools, and Rev. Paul Bolen, will
lake important addresses. ,
Dinner will be served on the
rounds. All are invited to attend.
Mc. P. EUBANKS, W
S. S. WILLIAMS,
J. B. BROWNING, ^
Trustees of the Govan Graded ^
chool. ^
IH
Govan, S. C.t May 10, 1912.
Denmark Doings. ^
M
Denmark, May 15.?The ladies of d<
ie Baptist church gave an ice cream oi
sstival at the home of Mr. T. B. Wil- te
inson on last Friday evening,' for
ae benefit of the church. <
The inception hall was simply,
ut tastily decorated in ferns and p<
owers. In the dining hall were armged
numbers of tables at which
ae guests were served with delicious
ream and cake. ec
Some of the most enjoyable fea- ?*
ires of the evening were the music
nd recitations furnished by: Mrs. UI
. G. Mayfield, Mrs. Wilkinson, ?*
[isses Edna Steadman, Katherine a
of
filkinson, Julia Goolsby, Virginia aL
aust, Lillian Gentry, and Mr. Thos. sa
/ilkinson, Jr. a*
Quite a large crowd attended and J0
very neat sum was raised.
On Friday afternoon Mrs. L. C.
,ice gave a very informal affair for w
ie young ladies at her lovely home, a*
ocksley Hall. sh
Tl
Several musical selections were
mdered by the ladies, those present
eing: Misses Rosa B. Strait, Emma
. Thompson, Lillian Gentry, Esther
olier, Bertriand Perret, Josie Pratt, f*
uth Stokes, Margaret Thorpe, Lou- s
:e Zeigler, Julia Goolsby, Josephine 30
aust, Rutn Guess, and Virginia
aust. he
pfi
Delicious fruit punch with cake
cr
as served, and every one spent a
lost enjoyable afternoon.
Miss Lula Bess Wroton, of Hamlet,
go
. C., spent the week-end with her
ster here, Mrs. M. R. Willis. ea
The W. C. T. U. held its meeting es
t the M. E. church on Wednes- m
al
ay afternoon. Quite a nice crowd
ttended. cl<
CO
A great many of the town folks atmded
the picnics at Binniker's
ridge and Hightower's mill pond, tn
q Saturday.
Mrs. A. M. Brabham, of Bamberg,
. , i - j ?:iv. 1 th
pern me u<?y wuu nci uiuliici utic,
[rs. W. F. Rice, on Tuesday.
We hope to have quite a large ^
rowd at the school building on Fri- ta
ay night week, May 24th. The
ledal which the W. C. T. U. offered ar
SO
> the school for the best essay will
N(
e awarded, the essays read, and a
sries of musical selections are belg
prepared. . se
ui
Boys' suits and pants, also chil- $1
ren's wash suits, a full line, prices pa
>w. F. G. MERTINS, Augusta, Ga. th
t
THIS IS TWISTIFIED.
hree Men Accuse Governor Blease
of Misstatement.
Spartanburg, May 13.?A few days
the following appeared in the
olumbia correspondence of the
harleston News and Courier:
"A gentleman here yesterday whc
:tended the' Spartanburg convention
id who is a strong friend of Judge
mes, said of the results of theii
invention: 'We had everything oui
tvn way and we made the Bleasites
ang their heads. Judge Jones will
irry Spartanburg county by at leasl
,000 majority.' "
When the governor came to Sparmburg
he gave out a statement ir
hich he said:
"I asked Mr. Caldwell, the News
ad Courier's corespondent, who the
antleman from Spartanburg countj
as and he answered that it was
ihn Gary Evans, as I had supposed.'
Mr. Caldwell made the following
;atement over the long distance
hone to the Spartanburg Herald:
"The governor asked me if John
?I
ary avails uau giveu uic mc miciiew,
but I did not reply to him.'
; is a denial of the statement mads
ere Thursday by Gov. Blease to the
feet that Mr. Caldwell told him exov.
John Gary Evans was the authoi
f an interview published in the Coimbia
correspondence to the News
ad Courier.
Mr. Rose, of the Atlanta Journal
horn Gov. Blease said was presenl
hen the conversation between him
ad Mr. Caldwell took place, confirms
:r. Caldwell's statement.
Ex-Gov. John Gary Evans said: "1
ave not been in Columbia since the
>unty convention, I have not seeE
aiHu-oli r?f thp Npwr and Gouriei
ureau, and there is no more truth
l the statement Blease makes thai
light be expected, coming from thai
>urce."
Gov. Evans has been out of the
ty for the last two days engaged ir
)urt in Union and had not seen Gov
lease's interview until he arrived ir
>wn last night. He says he knows
[r. Caldwell most pleasantly anc
lat he does not believe he told Gov
lease any such thing as the goveror
attributes to him.
"While I agree with the prophecj
lade in the interview I have noi
lade any statement and I am noi
le person quoted in the News anc
ourier,"
"Did you see what Mr. Caldwel
lid?" asked a reporter for the Jour
al of Gov. Blease this morning.
"Yes," replied Blease. "Mr. Caldell
is mistaken and .I'll tell you jusl
hat happened. When Mr. Caldwel]
Lid that he had heard that Spartanirg
county would give Jones a inanity
of 2,000 I asked him where
a got his information. At first he
id not tell. I told him I knew and
tat it was from John Gary Evans,
r. Caldwell at first did not admit 01
my that Mr. Evans was the source
! his information. He later admitid
that Evans was the man."
SATOR EATS JEWELLED DOG.
oodle Adorned with Diamonds and
Rabies Swallowed by Saorian.
To see a French poodle dog, adornl
with eight hundred dollars' worth
! jewelry, swallowed by an eight>ot.
alligator, was the extreme pleas*e
of Capt. J. H. Devereux, inspector
! government buildings, while on
recent visit to the alligator farm
St. Augustine, Fla. Capt Devereux
,ys that he was out looking at the
ligators and was beginning to eny
their methods of holding hands
id making love when a richly dress[
young lady, evidently from somehere
north of the Potomac, came
ong with a handsome poodle, wmcn
ie was leading by a golden chain,
ae pup wore a collar studded with
amonds and a belt around the mide
balzing with rubies, and he was
sry proud. Anxious for her "doge"
to witness the "spooning" of the
ators, the young lady held "Fido"
i that he could look over the wall
id bark at thie monsters to his
jart's delight. His barking attract[
a large alligator, which came
eeping slowly to a position near
here the young lady was standing.
3 "Fido" looked vengeance into his
urian majesty's eyes he seemed
ger to charge, and giving a lunge
caDed from the hands of his fair
istress. He leaped toward the big
ligator, and the monster's jaws
Dsed upon him. Capt. Devereux
ys that the last of "Fido" and the
welry was a smothered growl as
e molars of the saurian snapped.
le young lady flew at the keeper
the farm and threatened to sue
e institution for the small sum of
round million if he did not immeately
operate on the alligator and
ke from his leathery maw her beved
"Fido." The keeper smiled
id showed the lady the nearest exit,
says Capt. Devereux.?Charleston
jws and Courier.
NOTICE?Summer clothing, blue
rge $12.50, all wool, mohair $12.50
>; wash suits $4.00; linen dusters
..25 up. All kind of summer wash
ints $1.00 up. F. G. MERTINS,
e tailor and clothier, Augusta, Ga.
"J - 6
'' ,
. * v. * "% "vi * ' ' '
' i 'i
Meeting at Ehrhardt Baptist Church.
i Beginning Sunday morning, May C
19th, there will be a series of religious
meetings held at the Ehrhardt
i Baptist church. There will be two
i services daily. The first at 11 a. m., ei
} and the second at 8:30 p. m. You m
are hereby cordially invited to attend al
? these meetings. The pastor, Rev. c<
l E. A. McDowell, will be assisted by tl
! Evangelist Laurence A. Cooper, now tl
pastor of the First Baptist church w
of Clinton, S. C. Mr. Cooper has just ai
> closed a union interdenominational rc
1 meeting with the churches of Au- r<
: gusta. In a letter to the Baptist L
pastor at Ehrhardt, dated May 4th, w
1912, Rev. Geo. E. Guille, pastor a]
i of the Green Street Presbyterian U
church, Augusta, says: "I congratu- N
i late you on securing Bro. Cooper for
i your meetings. He has few equals tl
r and no superiors. All of the minis- ti
5 ters here are delighted with him and a;
' his work." a
; The. following is a clipping from h
5 the local paper, which gives an ac- T
count of a meeting held by Mr. Coop- T
l er in Ashland, Ky.: l
"Evangelist L. A. Cooper, who has h
' recently come to our State from n
) Georgia, assisted us in the greatest pi
i religious revival perhaps ever expe- ti
rienced in this place.
"The holy Spirit was with us in
- great power from the very begin5
ning; men, old and hardened in sin,
broke down and wept aloud before ^
, the great audience?this they did ^
: night after nijjht. Many who had ^
l been long members of the Baptist
} church and churches of other denom- _
s<
inations, gave their hearts, for the ^
[ first time, to Christ. Not only have ^
5 there been scores of additions to our
c<
l church and to the various other ,
a
churches in the city as the result of
i the meeting, but our own church
l members are greatly revived and are
: now full of holy ambition. The
? "W
crowds that attended our services ^
* T
\ Rev. Laurence A. Cooper.
> were immense. After Bro. Cooper e<
I preached one time, ever afterwards H
. it was impossible to seat or stand la
' the people in our church. We open- e
> ed the Sunday-school room and filled A
the aisles and corners with chairs
and then many had to be turned jj:
away. ^ S1
"Bro. Cooper is one of the greatest
preachers I have ever heard. He r(
1 is not only a deep and logical ^
speaker, but his presentation of the _
Gospel is most pleasing and attractive
to the hearer.
"Children, as well as grown peo- A
pie, will sit and listen for hours at
the time and when he ends his ser- =
mon they are'just as eager for him
7 to continue as they were for him to p.
begin. fi
"There is no undue excitement in m
his preaching or in his methods,
Those who unite with the church un- _
der his preaching we can safely put
down as regenerate members. ^
"It is impossible to calculate the et
god he has done for Christianity "ft
throughout Ashland and the neigh- si
boring country and towns."
Merchant Injured by Explosion. ^
?? 01
Lake City, May 14.?About 2 m
o'clock this afternoon L. H. Howie, of
a prominent merchant of this place,
while assisting his friend, R. A. q
Brown, to remove an unusually large ?
stump by means of dynamite was j
blown several feet in the air by a
premature explosion and probably h<
fatally injured. Since the explosion P<
Mr. Howie has not regaine<j con- ^
sciousness and the physicians in attendance
hold out very little en- Ci
couragement to the family. Qt
BODY FOUND IN WOODS. B;
IT
Mystery of Oconee Man's Death Baffles
Coroner's VTury.
va
Seneca, May 13.?John Moore, }e
white, was found dead in the woods st
near Seneca on Thursday, having Cc
been shot in the mouth. The badly ^
decomposed body indicated that gc
death had occurred about ten days 5
before vultures led to the gruesome *n
discovery. *
The coroner's jury was unable to pj
determine whether Moore's death to
was due to suicide or murder. Moore ac
formerly lived at Walhalla, where
he was married, later separating from fTl
his wife and moving to Oakway, in op
this county. th
? dr
Wait for O'Riley. Hi
?
NEGRO ESCAPED.
onway Citizens Failed to Catch
Fugitive. i
Conway, May 14.?The negro who
atered the home of a prominent wolan
in town yesterday morning and
bandoned his foul purpose on acaunt
of there being two women in
le room has made good his escape
aus far. The bloodhounds which '*
ere put on his trail late yesterday
fternoon followed his path some six
liles from town then by a circuitous
aute returned to the Atlantic Coast
ine Railroad station, into the negro
aiting room, to the ticket window ^
nd to train yards where he evidently ^
>ok the early morning train for
orth Carolina.
Word was received here last night v a
lat a negro answering the descripon
of the one in question had been /
rrested at Tabor, N. C., a station j
bout 25 miles from here, and\that1 /.
e was being held for identification. /
he authorities sent immediately^to/ % '*
abor, but upon arrival there they
sarned that the negro arrested was
eld on charge of killing another
egro in North Carolina. He vas not : *
ermitted to return with the authories
but will be brought here later.
^
Myrtle Hawkins's Alleged Slayers.
Hendersonvile, May 13.?The trial
f A. B. McCall, Beatrice McCall, his
ife, George Bradley, "Boney" Brad- ,
jy and Dan McCall, all charged with <
eing connected with the death of v:
[yrtle Hawkins, whose dead body is
lid to have been found in Lake Os- sola
last September, will be called s
1 the Henderson county superior
Durt here to-morrow or Wednes- :V f
ay.
All cases of minor importance on v ;
1e docket will be disposed of before \ al;v
atering upon the Hawkins case,
hich, it is expected, will consume
le greater part of the three-week
?rm. Judge Howard A. Foushee, of
urham, is presiding.
W. O. Shellnut, of Atlanta, who ||||||||
lys that Myrtle Hawkins Is living,
) here as a witness. He says he met
er in Hendersonville in 1910 and I
911 and talked with her in Jackjnville,
since her supposed death. |3
he prosecution places little credence
l the theory that she is still- living.'
he is reported to be in Seattle, at
resent.
Suits from $10.00 up, all wool;
ants $2.00 up;5 rubber coats, for ?vM '
lin or duet, $5.00 and up.
'. G. MERTINS, the clothier, Auusta,
Ga.
1 TRIBUTE OF RESPECT.
Ever near us though unseen,
he dear immortal tread;
or all the boundless universe is life,
here are no dead."
Wherpflfl ft 1 r?vin c Wath or hft? rail- v -->3Sra
i unto Himself, to abide forever in
[is presence, the spirit of our late T|f?
eljoved leader, Miss Urbana McMiltn
Westbury, who entered Into Life ... Q&r
ternal on Easter Sunday morning,
pril 7th, 1912; therefore be it;
Resolved, 1st, That our heartfelt
rmpathy be extended to her family ^
ud that a page in our minutes be
litably inscribed to her memory. 'rpfe
Resolved, 2nd, That a copy of these 'Ijap
jsolutions be sent to the family and
ublished in the Southern Baptist I
ourier and The Bamberg Herald.
SPECIAL NOTICES. '
dvertisements Under This Head 25c.
For 25 Words or Less.
Furniture Repaired.?I have open- r
* iiW o firof_rtloco ponoir chnn fnr re- kj&'h
A VlJfcS C* UlOb VAWIJO A V^/MAA wuv^r ^ .
airing, painting and up-holstering
irniture of all kinds. Old furniture r ;
ade to look like new at W. H. Patek's
Automobile Garage. C. C. '
OWELL, Prop.
GOING WEST June 18tik?Denir,
Yellowstone Park, Los Angeles, ?
an Francisco, Salt Lake City, etc.,
c. Already have several to go.
''rite me at once. Special train, :
>ecial price. DR. GEO. F. HAIR,
amberg, S. C.
Special Notice.?After Monday,
ay 20th, ice will be sold from wagis
only on tickets. This rule is
ade necessary oh account of errors
' drivers. Tickets can be procured
lly from me at my old stand until :'
irther notice. ICE IS CASH. L.
PRICE.
^*******mmmmFor
Sale: The H. J. Brabham
)me place. The lot contains about
Lree acres. Has a good eight-room
>use on it, artesian well, swimming ^
>ol, fish pond and all kinds of out- mt
lildings. Also one lot on Main
reet next to H. J. Brabham, Jr.'s J
ore. Also three residence lots on
arlisle street. All at a bargain to - x
lick buyers. Apply to MRS. UM
DELLB J. BRABHAM or H. J.
RABHAM, JR., Bamberg, S. C.
inthrop
Collie Scholarship and
Entrance Examination.
The examination for the award of
icant scholarships in Winthrop Colge
and for the admission of new AI
udents will be held at the County
>urt House on Friday, July 5, at ^
a. m. Applicants must be not less . 1
an fifteen years of age. When \
:holarships are vacant after July
they will be awarded to those makg
the highest average at this exnination,
provided they meet the
nditions governing the award. Apicants
for scholarships should write *
President Johnson before the exoination
for Scholarship examina- f
>n blanks.
Scholarships are worth $100 and
ee tuition. The next session will ?
en September 18, 1912. For furer
information and catalogue, adess
PRES. D. B. JOHNSON, Rock
ill, S. C.