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j personal Mention. People Visiting in This City and at Other Points. ?Mr. S. W. Copeland, of Ehrhardt, was in Bamberg Thursday. * ?Mr. I. B. F. Middleton, of Midway, was in the city Saturday. ?Rev. Walter Black, of Ruffin, was in the city Saturday afternoon. ?Mr. J. G. Rhoad, of Hunter's Chapel, was in the city Tuesday. ?Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Rentz, Jr., of Blackville, spent the week-end in the city. ^ ?Mr. and Mrs. Hebron Berry, of f Branchville, visited relatives in the city Sunday. # ?J. Ham Kirkland, Esq., of Olar, ^ ?m/\wor Trini f rvvr in tVlO Altv I (ULlUUfe LUC Vioxil/io xu wuv viv; Friday afternoon. ?Mrs. J. F. Kilgus left yesterday for Anderson, where she will visit relatives for some time. ?Rev. and Mrs. P. K. Rhoad, of Providence, were visitors in the city to relatives last week. ?Mrs. Frances Folk has returned home from a visit of several weeks to relatives at Providence. ?Mr. Francis T. Rice, of the Uni^ versity of South Carolina, spent a while at home last week. x ?Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Berry, of Branchville, visited relatives in the ?city Saturday and Sunday. ?Miss Elvie Kearse is in Atlanta getting new ideas about spring millinery for LaVerne Thomas & Co. ?Mr. Carl 0. Kilgus, of Savah . nah, Ga., was in the city Tuesday for | the funeral and burial of his brother, Mr. J. F. Kilgus. ?\W. E. Derrick, Esq., of Orangeburg, grand chancellor of the South . i Carolina Knights of Pythias, was a a business visitor in the city last Thurs[ / : day. . v . t ?rMrs. S. R. Wilson, of Connief Maxwell orphanage, Greenwood, has returned to the city. She will be away from the orphanage for several weeks. ?Mr. and Mrs. Glenn W. Cope, of Norfolk, Va., where Mr. Cope is in the paval service, have been at home for several days on account of the^ illness of Mr. Cope's fajjher. WAR TO BE WON IN AIR, United States Should Have a Fleet \ By Spring. % ' ; r1 j? "The big need in France is for air? ? ~ ? oimlonoc nnirV Flv v praues aua ? eiybody over there asks when they are coming and how many. This country ought to have a fleet of fighting planes in the air by spring." This is the opinion of Major Robert W. yWood, the eminent physicist who was sent abroad in September by the United States government at the invitation ofx the French government to study scientific problems connected With the conduct of the war. Major Wood returned last week and for the present will devote his tjime to work ill this country. * v "It is not possible to emphasize this fact too strongly," continued f Major Wqpd. "I believe the war will be won in the air and that in the * future offensive tactics will play as great a part as the work of observation, but I am not at liberty to speak . ' of these matters. "One thing about which much popular misapprehension exists, hojvever, , is fighting in the air. People immagine that airplane duels are everyday occurrences. As a matter of fact, they are comparatively rare. Planes J are more apt to avoid each other than to fight. Most of the shelling is done by anti-aircraft guns and when air r\looa ora Menollv cn u^uto laxvu ux v uguwiij uv ' high up as to be invisible to observers on the ground. "Officers' Experience. "I saw an artillery officer who had been on the front for many months and had never seen a fight in the air. When I was outside Nancy one afternoon, just at sunset, I saw a Boche plane come over. It was up in the region where there was still sunlight, and the puffs of smoke from the shells fired by the anti-aircraft guns L were turned to rose color by the glow, f I counted 120 of them, but the Boehe made his get-away. | "The effects of the torpedoes dropi ped from the Gothas are extraordif nary. They go straight down through a seven-story building to the basement, where they explode with a L xl r i T xi x 1 T i uxiiw luse. Any uuuse uia.t uas uetju I liit in this manner acts as an exI plosive- At Nancy I saw a house that had heen struck, and the fragmr mfents of it had wrecked every house in^tfce square on which it stood. I "The anti-aircraft guns are marvelous in their range and comparative accuracy. At St. Clement I saw a Zeppelin that had been brought down from 16,000 feet by an antiaircraft shell. Of course the Zeppelins move more slowly and make much better targets than airplanes. This particular Zeppelin had just 4 * V* - V V'.r,; ' i j r v m been brought do#n and it was still burning. Most of the crew had been carried away, but I saw a hand sticking out from one end. It was a gruesome sight." ' When asked to tell what were just most unforgettable experiences, Major Wood said that two stood out in his memory?a night bombardment by airplanes at Xanc^ and a day at the British front. He continue^ "On our trip to the front we drove in a luxurious limousine down a corduroy road with nine-incn howitzers on both sides firing over our heads. After we had" gone as far as we could we put on steel helmets and gas* masks and walked the rest of the I way. We did not strike any gas, but | the new gases are pretty bad. They are not gases properly speaking, but liquids, that evaporate slowly and give off fumes." Major Wood refused to define the exa.ct nature of the scientific problems that physicists are called upon to solve. Carrier Pigeon's A'alue. "In a general way I may say that some of them consist in devising means of locating batteries and methods of signalling," he said. "It is curious, though; that with all our scientific devices carrier pigeons have been found most effective after all i?n carrying messages to and from the front lines. "I heard a remarkable story about one of these pigeons. It had been struck by a shell splinter and its leg driven up into its body in such a way mk j First Bank of NewYorklj^ N-, ^ From the hand dred thousand atf the tim& of 1 our governmenl practically the of the world is t of New Yorh Ci <[No one of the { national zpetrc careful attenti principles of ba ... 41A savings acc means an eari your money?n< the amount?ai surance of its 4L Get the saving v relief from man va Start a banK acc \ , 4 Per Cent. Interest Pa CAPITAL AND SUEPLU5 Bamberg B I BRIEFLY j We can legally do a an individual Executo those things for the 1 which NO individual ' can more largely IX( your Estate?we can a TY and protection? MONEY?than can b vidual Executor. T\ A ?TNTir\ /M T> A %T ICAlVii3?i?tljr I3AJN Bambe] % Owen Bro V de m via pi u'm ER V Jg j|f| Dealers in ^ The largest and Creenw V *' .. "; h: Wm.': > ? 1 .;*. that the dispatch was carried with it. In spite of being desperately wounded j \he bird flew all the way home and j dropped dead inside the home cote." j According to .Major Wood, America ! is not the only nation that is bur. dened with red tape. "When I was in France I wanted a certain chemi; cal for an important test, and I had j to have it immediately. A request , through official channel brought the ! information that Prof. had ! some of what I wanted, but that it i would take a month to get it as the request had to be referred to several I authorities. j " 'I'll ask him myself," I said. I : was assured that it was not in regie ! and couldn't be done, but I didn't , : see it that way. I called on the proj fessor myself and left the laboratory j with all he had in my pocket. So it j is sometimes possible to cut red i tape." "Another thing struck me in ! France, he continued. "The war has not speeded up certain things in France.*. They still take two hours for lunch. All the laboratories are locked up between 12 and 2 and if the custodian lets you in between thpse hnnrc it is nndftr nrnfpst Thev I have borrowed our poster, "There are six men killed every minute. Don't waste that many.' I always wanted to write underneath it, 'How about those two hours at lunch?' "?Ex. % He who throws away the fragments of his life has no just appreciation of the bulk. / j j 18j|||lp \ ^ ling of a few huncfollars each, year he inauguration of |{ t to the position of j money metropolis ' he financial history \ty. i i great banhs of our >polis gives more | on to the correct nKing than we do. ount at this banK ling capacity for 3 matter how small \ri an absolute as safety. habit. It means a i | iy of life's worries. ;ount with us today. ^ ^ id on Savings Deposits. i .... . $100,000.00 J anking Co.! zrni 11 of those things which I 1 r can do. We can do W ] >p-np-fit of v?mr "Estate It1 Executor can do. We UREASE the value of fford it greater SAFEwe can save it more e secured by an indiKING COMPANY rg, S. C. EM??Mg" A " ' iff Matlila Pr (]iranitn PA io. liicu uu; u ui aiiut v?u. y } SIGNERS 1 \ NUFACTURERS V ECTORS ^ ! Everything for the Cemetery \ \ best equipped monumental mills in the Carolinas X 1 T i ood, S. C. . Raleigh, N. C V i )elk, Bamberg, S.C.,A?gctal X > pOL?3 E=30E=30C ....Al : Klaubers,"TheS / We are now showing a nur and invite voxi to come in and ] o v Coats in poplin, serge, etc.. Suits at $20.00 to S27. Dresses at $10. to $25. I will leave this week for Ne plete line of Ready to Wear f days. OUR STYLES ARE B OUR PRICES REASC j ' We buy from the biggest ar country and we feel that we ( * vice in our line. V\ AM | Electric Sign lUirtUJ J "The Store of Quality" mi?ir^ I ? LIE DOG, NAMED l PRINCE. REWARD H FOR RETRUN TO Qfi H. N. FOLK I Bamberg, S. C. H IX MEMORIAM. 9 | Our beloved brother, J. Hansford J 9 I Pender, departed to be with Christ | B I i 3n the morning of Jan. 23, 1918. B I ] Interment was in the Hunter's \ B I Dhapel cemetery on the following j 5S I lay. The esteem of a host of friends j ^ I s vas indicated by an unusual array of j B I i loral tributes. B I t He joined the church at Hunter's , B I ZJhapel early in life, and later was Sffl 1 elected deacon which office he held B I 8 until his home going. B I i His life, both private and public, B I t vas a model worthy of imitation. B I Ml who knew him, respected, ad- B 3 nired and loved him. And he was j B 8 vorthv. Indeed, he was one t?f the B I lm ruly great men in the Baptist ranks j fig 9 H n South Carolina and one of this j B I B state's best citizens. B I U| I He loved the Lord and was devot-! 8 * id to His cause; serving in love and B mmility, and like his Master, will- B ng not to be known. It was hard Bmbbmbw ndeed, to give him up. The separaion brought pain and deep sorrow ;o a multitude of hearts. f IHBBBBHB Now that he has gone from us we | J ^ ;an best commemorate his mem- j n )ry by resolving to carry on the H ? * 1 vork that he so much loved, with I f I 1 ir/l -enewed zeal. Therefore, be it H It a J Resolved, first; That we recognize' H _____ :he sovereign right of God to call j I into Himself one of His children,! I nrirrMTTT 1 ind that by His grace we bow in j S Nhy|*j?|H / tumble submission to His will. That in him the Hunter's Chapel j PARfll ffiurch loses one of her most useful, j v/lliUI influential and efficient members; the! Jenomination one of its most loyal j , And Ai ind faithful supporters; the com-1 nunity and State one of their purestj md best citizens; the family an ideal j JL ind loving husband and father. ! That we feel deeply our loss, and j -ealize how greatly this man of God,j w vho was so unselfishly devoted to; have lis family, friends and Christ's cause, auction 55 hea ho miscori i | pile nf tho Tint That expressions of sympathy and I supply of meat A-arm Christian love be extended to i , ? :he bereaved family. i boss\ The bes That a copy of these resolutions j at this meeting 3e sent to the family, the Baptist | economically. Courier, and the county papers for 1 jublication. D. 0. HUNTER, I For furth< A. W. HUNTER, i L- I. GUION, Pi G. W. HUNTER, i Lugoff, S. C. J. L. HERNDON, D. H. OWINGS, 2^??Committee. \ / )E3QI? 11 l0^| its, Coats I ii resses y $ I . tore of Quality": - nberof New Spring Models II ook them over. Jg n . at $15.00 to $25.00 ,50 each, each., w York and will have a oomroods to show von within 10 I IGHT? I INABLE. y A id best manufacturers in the ;an give you the best orser- , ^ Look for the <n k v | jlm ft J Electric Sign Bamberg, Sauth Carolina 2 n " ?? isf Arrived I will receive this (Thursday) |9 norning another load of Fine Young g| Jules direct from th,e West. If you ;H9 ire going to buy a mule you should H ;ee this lot, as there are some extra g ?8 lice ones in the drove. As it is get- 8 ||l ing late in the season, I aid offering Kg hese mules at a very close price, 8 G| md am sure I can satisfy you, both I nfl n quality and price. Also some ex- 8 g|| ra nice buggies and harness on hand 8 0 it the right pricesj. fl H J. SMOflK) I E TO COLUMBIA TO THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE SOUTH JNA LIVE STOCK ASSOCIATION uction Sale of Pure Bred Hogs I ARCH 13th AND 14th g ? I induced W. P. Smith, of Kinards, S. C., to seU at d of pure bred Jersey breeding hogs. The counion are calling on South Carolina to produce our and the only way it can be done is to raise more t breeders and feeders of hogs in America will be ; to tell us how to produce pork successfully and ;r information address: es., T. O. LAWTON, Sec., W. P. SMITH, Garnett, S. C. Kinards, S. C. N 1 \ 1 , . X . >"'?