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w7 A A A j&+. A^a A^i. A. A A^AAA 8|MMMMM m ATT Iff Vyy Tff ill ? m I Kit ATM ? % * A> | IN EVE m , * VxT f m l< lif 8f8 m Inform y ift ft? V, fff | The Chairmi || 1 ttf XXX BAMI i "HI TYY ttt - A A^A A A A A $ G* Tyl^T T^T y^T T^T T^T T^T T^jl A. A^A Jv A, A^L A^t. A^A A^A Wf f^f "^T T^T y T^f ^L A aIA A A *^A A A A A Ai (PERSONAL MENTION. People Visiting in This City and at / Other Points. ?Mr. 0. J. C. Lain, magistrate for Olar, was in the city Saturday. ?Miss Bessie Armstrong is spending some time in Bamberg with rel? stives. r i < | . ?Mr. S. S. Williams, of the Govan /v section of the county, spent last FriI ? day in Bamberg. ^ ?Miss Claire Weimer, of Florida, t is on a visit to Mrs. Paul J. Zeigler fat her home here. ?Mr. and Mrs. J. F'/ank Folk, of Denmark, are visiting friends and relatives in the city. ?Messrs. H. C. and J. W. Crum, of ; Denmark, were visitors to the city Thursday of last week. ?*-Mr P. Belton Hair, a senior at Furman university, is at home for - the Christmas holidays. ?Miss Vista Brabham, of Converse college, Spartanburg, is at home for the Christmas holidays. ?Mr. John Frank Lancaster, postmaster at Govan, was in the city for a short while last Friday. ?Mr. N. Pinckney Smoak, Jr., a Wofford college student, fs at home here for the Christmas holidays. \ ?Miss Arrie Free arrived home Tuesday night from Converse college, Spartanburg, for the- holidays. ?Miss Virginia Folk, .who is attending Lander college, Greenwood, is at home for the Christmas holidays. \Tipr ?Miss Edith White, a student of the Spartan Academy, Wellford, S. > C., is at home for the Christmas holidays. ?Dr. E. O. ' Watson, who has j already entered upon his work at 1 Camp Jackson, spent several days S in Bamberg this week, i ! ?Mr. and Mrs. Henry Zeigler have , returned from their wedding trip and I will occupy the home of Mr. and Mrs. j E. H. Henderson on Railroad avenue s I here. ?Mrs W F Free returned last '> ? 1 week from the hospital in Charleston, | where she had been for some time, j and is now greatly improved in health to the delight of her many friends here. I ?Rev and Mrs. M. W. Hitt, who have been spending some time in the city, left Tuesday morning for Dun, edin, Fla., where they will spend I the winter months with their son, I Mr. J. E. Hitt. I* , ATA ATA ATA AT^ ATA ATA ATi A^A ATA ATA ATA ATI A "^y iy k ATA AVA ATA ATA A^k ATI ^^y^y^y ^ ^ T^t T^T T^T ^ FOR RIFT SIT&MI 1111 1 MlillUI RY STOCKE Foi ation Gladly Fui \ i m of the War Savin SERG BANKING CO. RENT & FEK I A^A A^A A^A A^A jjfek jj y VVV , A, A. A A ^ ^ ^ ^ A JK y( V ?Judge and Mrs. Hayne F. Rice, of Aiken, were in Bamberg for a short while Saturday morning. Mrs. Rice is much improved in health from her condition several months past. ?Mr. H. J. Brabham has returned home after being with his wife who recently underwent an operation at Johns Hopkins hospital, Baltimore. Mrs. Brabham stood the operation fine, and her many friends here will be delighted to know that she is rapidly recovering. Cultures and Vaccines. The laboratory of the army and medical school has shipped since April 1 sufficient typhoid and paratyphoid vaccines to inoculate every man in the army. Throughout the process of making the vaccine is guarded against any contamination. It is then stored in sealed vessels in lok^ked refrigerators, to which only the "two officers in charge have keys, and none of these vessels is ever moved, except in company of one of the officers. In more than six months of largescale production not a trace of contamination has been found. One of the tests of the vaccines includes the inoculation of a mouse, a guinea pig, and a rabbit. If too much tricresol (a coal tar product used as a preservative and to kill the bacilli had been added, the mouse would be killed. Should tetanus germs be present both the mouse and guinea pig would be kill- j ed. Wit hthe emulsion correct, as it must be used, no animal is killed, T??ar on/? nohhit oro auu hid 5uixica ^15 axxu * a wuiv wiv not visibly affected by the inoculation. Stick to It. Plan for more than you can do, Then do it. Bite off more than you can chew, Then chew it. Hitch your wagon to a star> Keep your seat and there you are. ?Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Slates and slate pencils at The Herald Book Store. Save paper by using a slate. XI /\1 rvP/1 ivmv 1 Charles Petit, assistant quartermaster general of the Continental army in the Revolutionary war, died in Philadelphia September 4, 1806. The weakest department in the administration of the American Revolutionary war was that of the quarter a^A A, A A A A A A A A y 4t^w w ^k J^L. A^fc. A^A A^A A^k A^A A^. .A A^l A^k iftk I^^^TAT AV A^ ^ A^- TAT A^ CH! r i % r Sale at Y rnished by Youi m gs Committee for Ba of this space b] SMOAK & MOTE, "If it's DER, Gents' Furnishings. J. J. SMOAK,: K A A A A A T^T T^T T^T T^T T^jf^T T^T T^T Tjr^r^r master general of the dificiencies of which Gen. Washington most bitterly expressed himself. In a letter addressed to the President of Congress, just before Christmas, 1777, the commander-in-chief declared: "Since the month of July we have had no assistance from the quartermaster general. *** The soap, vinegar and other articles allowed by Congress, we seen none of, nor have we seen them, I believe* since the battle of Brandywine. The first, indeed, we have now little occasion for; few members having more than one shirt, many one the moiety-of one, and some none at all. * * * "We have by a field return this day made, no less than 2,898 men now in camp unfit for duty because they are barefooted and otherwise naked." Baron Steuben, who came to Valley Forge that winter to organize the wholly undisciplined army, said: "Accounts were never furnished or required. * * * The men were literally naked, some of them in the fullest extent of the word." G. W. Greene, in. the "Life of Nathaniel Greene," records; show "While Congress was deliberating upon the best way of procuring meat, the army jvas often brought to the verge of starvation for want of it. WThile Congress was discussing by the warm fire the most eligible methods of providing the army with tents and blankets, half of the army was sleeping on the snow without either blanket or tent. * * * "The first campaign demonstrated the necessity of providing by regularly organized departments for food, clothing and transportation of the army, but it was not until late in the second year that a board of war was organized and not until later still that the quartermaster general and the commissary general were allow| ed to devote themselves to their duty | in camp, instead of waiting idly for i orders at'the doors of congress." I It was Gen. Nathaniel Greene who ** 1 1 x ~ ? -3 ~ ? /mi4- ap ao in I nrsi Drougiu uiuci uui ui vnuuo m I the quartermaster general's depart| ment. His self-sacrificing assumption of the most burdensome responsibilities led Washington to urge him to take the office of quartermaster general as the one man who could be relied upon to establish and maintain an effective system. Gen. Greene, without relinquishing his right to command in the field, yielded to Washington's advice, and in his hands the quartermaster's de\ / A A^A A^A A. a4W |]ij| a4a A ^ 4HKhHKhHhHhJhH4 4 RISTI 1 ?M SHI IN Hi Ill U T our Postoff * V Postmaster, Ri] imberg County grate j the following: A 3 Hardware, we have it." C A. BICE, General ] Horses and Mules. *~x~X~X**X~X"H A A A A A A^k A^A A^k <~X"?yXK~X"X"XH partment became a revelation of effic-1 ienucy. He had to rely, of course, upon capable assistants, and chief among these was Charles Petit, who became \ assistant quartermaster general, and in this capacity served throughout the war although upon the resigna- j tion of Gen. Greene, Petit was urged unsuccessfully to succeed the general. I /Petit had advantageous social con- j nections, and came from an old Hu- ! guenot family, that had settled in Southern New York. Joseplr Reed, whose sister Petit married, was ap-! . . 1 A_ ^e KT^.^rr ! pointed provincial sunugaie ui new Jersey some years before the war by Governor William Frankland/ who, although a son of Dr. Benjamin Frankland, became a Tory. Under Reed, Petit was commissioned surrogate, and afterward was secretary to Governor Frankland, but did not follow the governor away j from the patriot cause. \ After the war Petit was a d/legate j to congress and advocated the adop- | tion of the constitution. He was a J native of Am well, N. J., and died | in his 70th year. THREE FOUND MURDERED. Father, Mother and Child Killed and ! ' Bodies Burned in House. Barnwell, Dec. 7.?What is appar- j ently one of the foulest murders ever committed in Barnwell county was j discovered this morning when the j - - ~ ? J nr 1 charred bodies or .\ir. ana ivju s. rcaipn j Nolf and their little two-year-old daughter were found in the smoking embers of their home at Donora, a small lumber mill village about ten miles from Barnwell. A post morten examination dis- j closed the fact that he skulls of all three members of the family had been ! crushed by blows from a blunt instrument. The residents of the village were aroused about 5 o'clock by the fire whistle at the mill and immediately rushed to the scene of the fire. The first to arrive was A. L. Lowman, superintendent for the Kendall Lumber company, and a brother-in-law of J Mrs. Nolf. At the time the fire was i confined to the rear of the house and Mr. Lowman burst into the front calling Mr. Nolf's name at the top of his voice. Getting no reply he j ^ent into a front room but saw no j one. . 1 Other neighbors began to arrive | and one man went into the bedroom and pulled the clothes from the bed fff fff fff fff MAS i , fff fff YTT Tit INGS CERTIFICATE ? TRY HOME 1 yff ZXX ' | ice | 1 iral Carrier or Teacher I|x fully acknowledges, the donation !. R. BRABHAM'S SONS, Merchants. Merchant. fix III yyt U. A^A A y y t^T T^T T^yiy T^T T^T y T^T T^T V^V y T^T iy "y "y <y ^ i^A i^A A A i^A A^A A A A A jMiWk ^T T^T T|T T^T T^T T^Tl^T T^T T^T T^T T^T Ty Ty T^TCTy T^T T^T y Ty T^T Ty TW tt A^A A^A i^A ^A A^t A^A A^A A^A A^A A^j| A A A A A A J^k ift y^ y "y y ^ "y^y T^T ~*y ^T T^T yy Ty ^r . V The man with money JK&k \ fi^ared.He fi^uredjg||| \ on Banking some,.,%>3j^ All of the rich men you see so comfortable today, figured when they were younger that they MUST \ HAVE MONEY in the bank to start into any kind of \ business. So they started a bank account. ' \ You know the rest. That bank account grew into \ a FORTUNE. * It can be just the same with you. There's no luck about it. Put YOUR money in OUR bank We pay 4 per cent interest on savings accounts. n l n 1_ reopies DanK i BAMBERG, S. C. I to make sure that the family was not | that Mrs. Nolf went into the kitchen still asleep. The seachers were then j to get some medicine for the baby driven from the house by the smoke i and surprised a would-be robber; and it was not until the house had that she screamed and ,was kicked burned to the ground that the bodies j down; that hearing hei^cry of alarm were found. Mr. Nolf rushed to her assistance Mrs. iNoIf's body was found in the and was killed. The verdict of the kitchen with the baby girl tightly coroner's jury was that they came clasped in her arms, the body of her to their death at the hands of an unhusband being found in the dining known person or persons. ** ' room. The skulls of all three had Mr. Nolf was a sawyer ai me jven-been crushed. dall Lumber company's plant, was The assassin left no clue to his originally from Pennsylvania, having identity. One theory advanced is moved to Donora in February. / ; /