University of South Carolina Libraries
~ ? PERSONAL MENTION. People Visiting in This City and at Other Points. ?Miss Harriedellev Free is visiting friends in Augusta. ?Mrs. S. R. Wilson has been visiting relatives in Orangeburg. ?Prof. J. C. Guilds spent a few davs last week in Berkeley county. ?Mr. A. H. Bruce, of Branchville, is spending some time in the city with R. M. Bruce. ?Mrs. Hebron Berry and son, of Branchville. spent Sunday in the city , with relatives. ?Dr. George F. Hair attended the annual meeting of the State Dental association last week, t ?Mrs. James E. Salley and children, of Orangeburg, visited friends in the city last week. ?Miss Rebecca Lahcaster, of Go/ van, is spending some time in the city with Miss Daisy Free. ?Mr. Xorman Kirsch has returned to Jacksonville, Fla., after spending a few weeks in the city. ?Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Simmons and children spent Sunday and Monday in Greenwood with friends. ?Mrs. J. C. Lewis has returned > to the city from Augusta and other points, where she spent several weeks. ?Rev. Geo. P. White left Monday morning for Greenville to attend the annual Baptist assembly now in session. ?Cadtet J. Wilbur Simmons, of the West Point Military # academy, has returned/home for the summer vacation. ?Mrs. C. B. Gohagan and Mrs. George Price, of Walterboro, are spending some time in the city with h Mrs. M. J. Black. * "r"rT?- ?^ ^ ^n y*n_ Mr. f. Li. WngUL lias 1CIU!Ued to Winston-Salem, N. C., after spending a few weeks in the city with Rev. Geo. P. White. i ?Mr. Jefferson Riley has returned home from Massachusetts for the summer vacation, after attending school_there for the past term. ?Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Davis, of Calhoun county, spent Sunday in the city with Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Bellingger. Mrs. Davis was formerly Miss Fishburne, of this city. ?Dr. F. B. McCrackin returned Saturday from Baltimore, Md., where he had been under treatment for several weeks. His friends will be glad to know that he is rapidly improving. ?Mr. Francis M. Bamberg, who recently enlisted in the aviation corps, failed to pass the physical examipation. He is spending some time in the city, but says he will soon try for some other branch of army service. ?Messrs. B. H. Willis, C. D. C. Adams, W. W. Smoak and Dr. B. G. Willis and County Agent F. W. Risher passed through Bamberg yesterday en route from Walterboro to the weevil infested areas of Georgia to secure first-hand informatibn concerning the boll weevil. Sr ?Mr. and Mrs. P. J.' Talbert and children, Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Helms and little daughter, and Mrs. Marion Harvis, of Atlanta, spent a few days in the city last week with Mr. and Mrs. L. P. McMillan. They are mntorine from Atlanta to New York. Where Danger Lies. President George Kister, of Campion college, said the other day in Prairie due Chien: Learning, profound learning, is the > light of the world, but we continually get new proof of the harm a little learning does. A woman em/ ployed a schoolgirl of twelve to scrub her front steps. The school girl worked well, but suddenly she stopped coming. The woman met her on the street and said: "What's the matter, Minnie? Why have you stopped working for me?" The urchin tossed her head. "I'm takin' Latin now," she sniffed, "and I don't scrub steps no more." ?Youth's Companion. r TRANSATLANTIC AIR ROUTE. (Continued from page 1, column 6.) ing 100,000 planes or any such number. He also warned American man> ufacturers that they must expect constant changes in design both of en.? gines and planes and be ready to absorb new types of either on short notice. Gen. Brancker deplored the advertisement of official statements and otherwise of flying "aces." The practice, he said, does a grave injus tice to the men of tne pioaaing reconnaissance machines, who risk their lives for hours to make the work oi the guns below efficient. Advertisement of the "aces," the general said, would not be countenanced in Great Britain although he was certain that British pilots, on the average, held the highest records for performance. "You Americans," he said, "are onr dangerous rivals in that field." i ?* m "Not a Morphine War." Floyd Gibbons, war correspondent of the Chicago Tribune, in a letter to Federal Judge Landis, of Chicago, written after .Mr. Gibbons had received a letter from Reed Landis, the jurist's son, writes: "Unless Germany is beaten, unless America beats her, our national fate will be as ignominous as Belgium's. Nothing? absolutely nothing?politics, cost, rank, life, present welfare, nothing should be permitted to interfere with j I mir ofPnrt trv cavp r?nr national OX-I istence. A Swiss statesman had been quoted as saying that 'Germany has been fighting the war with liquid fire and the Allies with hot air.' If there ever was any truth to such a charge then it is time for America to make | it spell a lie. We know we will never j win the war by jabbing ourselves with a morphine needle and then raving about what an awful wallop we are going to land on the Boche. This simply isn't a morphine war?not the way Germany is fighting it? and that is the only way that can be considered if we have within our hearts the will to win." Japanese railways are largely operated by women. *m Bookbinders at Rochester, N. Y., secured $3 a week increase. CANDIDATES' CARDS^ Cards inserted in this column chaFged for as follows: All county offices, excepting magistrate, cotton weigher, and county commissioner, $5.00: magistrate, cotton weigher and county commissioner, each $3.00; congress and U. S. senate, $10.00; all State offices $10.00. Cash with card. Please don't ask us to insert card unless check accompanies same. FOR CONGRESS. I hereby announce my candidacy for reelection to Congress, pledging myself to abide by the rules and regulations of the Democratic party and to support the nominees thereof. JAMES F. BYRNES. I am a candidate for Congress from the second congressional district composing the counties of Saluda, Edgefield, Aiken, Barnwell, Bamberg, Hampton, Jasper and Beaufort, subject to the present and future rules and laws of the Democratic party. Platform?one hundred per cent. American. G. L. TOOLE. Aiken, S. C. I hereby announce my candidacy for election to Congress from the second congressional district, 'pledging myself to abide by the rules and regulations of the Democratic party, and to support the nominees thereof. T. G. CROFT. AUDITOR AND SUPT. EDUCATION. I hereby announce myself a candidate for Auditor and Superintendent of Education, subject to the rules of the Democratic primary, and pledge myself to support the nominees thereof. F. O. BRABHAM. COTTON WEIGHER BAMBERG. I hereby announce mysen a candidate for the office of Cotton Weigher at Bamberg in the primary; subject to the rules and regulations of the Democratic party. A. P. BEARD. I hereby announce myself a candi' date for Cotton Weigher at Bamberg, pledging myself to abide by the result of the Democratic primary and to support the nominees thereof. W. M. SANDIFER. I hereby announce myself a candidate for Cotton Weigher at Bamberg, subject to the rules and regulations of the Democratic primary, pledging mvself to support the nominees thereof. CLARENCE B. FREE. COTTON WEIGHER EHRHARDT. ' I hereby announce myself a can- j didate for reelection as Cotton Weigher at Ehrhardt, S. C., pledging myself to abide by the rules and regulations of the Democratic party and ! to support the nominees thereof. BOYCE W. BISHOP. MAGISTRATE AT EHRHARDT. I hereby announce myself a candidate for reelection to the office of Magistrate at Ehrhardt, subject to the rules and regulations of the Democratic party. J. H. KINARD. Having been induced by a large number of my friends, I hereby announce myself a candidate for the officei of Magistrate at Ehrhardt. I pledging myself to abide by the rules and regulations of the Democratic party and to support the nominees | thereof. E. D. GRANT. MAGISTRATE BAMBERG. I hereby announce myself a candidate for reelection to the office of magistrate at Bamberg, pledging my. self to abide by the rules of the Democratic party, and to support the nom1 inees thereof. E. DICKINSON. , COUNTY COMMISSIONER. Lower District. ' I hereby announce myself a candi. date for reelection to the office of county commissioner for the lower district of Bamberg county, subject to the rules and regulations of the Demoratic primary. O. L. COPELAND. 1 J. F. Carter 15. D. Carter CARTER & CARTER ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW - Special attention given to settlement of Estates and investigation of Land Titles. BAMBERG. S. C. BUY WAR SAVINGS STAMPS. WINTHROP COLLEGE. Scholarship and Entrance Examination. The examination for the award of vacant scholarships in Winthrop college and for the admission of newstudents will be held at the county court house on Friday, July 5, at 9 a. 111., and also on Saturday, July 6, at 9 a. in., for those who wish to make up by examinations additional units required for full admission to the Freshman class of this institution. The examination on Saturday, July 6, will be used only for making admission units. The scholarships will be awarded upon the examination held on Friday, July 5. Applicants must not be less than sixteen years of age. When scholarships are vacant after July 5, they will be awarded to those making the highest average at this examination, provided they meet the conditions governing the award. Applicants for scholarships should write to President Johnson for scholarKlonbo TllPQP snip eAaiujiiaiiuii blanks, properly filled out by the applicant, should be filed with President Johnson by July 1st. Scholarships are worth $100 and free tuition. The next session will open September 18, 1918. For further information and catalogue, address PRESIDENT 1>. B. JOHNSON, Rock Hill, S. C. UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA Entrance Examinations. Entrance examinations to the University of South Carolina will be held by the county superintendent of education at the county court house Friday, July 12, 1918, at 9 a. m. The University offers varied courses of study in science, literature, history,. law and business. The expenses are moderate and many opportunities for self-support are afforded. A large number of scholarships are available. War courses, such as wireless telegraphy, bookkeeping, typewriting, and kindred subjects will be offered. Military training will be compulsory for freshmen and sophomores. Reserve officers' training corps. For full particulars write to THE PRESIDENT, UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA Columbia, S. C. 7-4 (Wc c" HJUL SAVINGS fUMPf lit USD Wf TBS UNITED STAfBS .GOVERNMENT Buy Them And Help Win The W ar FOB SALE EVERYWHERE This Space Patriotically Donated By \ A. RICE BAMBERG, S. C. LOOK m FOB IT Many a Bamberg Reader Will be Interested. When people read about the cures made by a medicine endorsed from far away, is it surprising that they wonder if the statements are true? But when they read of cases right here at home, positive proof is within their reach, for close investigation is an easy matter. Read Bamberg endorsement of Doan's Kidney Fills. J. H. Murphy, farmer, Elm St, says: "In my estimation, Doan's Kidney Pills are the best kidney remedy on the market and * I can honestly recommend them. I haven't had occasion to use any Doan's Kidney Pills for several years, but 1 clearly remember the good I derived from them when last I used them, i had a lameness in my back and my kidneys were disordered, causing me much annoyance. I used Doan's Kidney Pills and they completely cured me of this trouble and put my kidneys in good shape again, so I am glad to endorse this remedy. Anyone having trouble with their kidneys should try Doan's Kidney Pills." Price 60c, at all . dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy?get Doan's Kidney Pills ? the same that Mr. Murphy had. Foster-Milburn Co.. Mfgrs.. Buffalo. N. Y. mm PORTABLE AND STATIONARY Engines AND BOILERS Saw, Lath and Shingle Mills, Injectors. Pumps and Fittings, Wood Saws. Splitters, Shafts, Pulleys, Belting. Gasoline Engines LARGE STOCK LOMBARD Foundry, Macliine, Boiler Works, Supply Store. AUGUSTA, GA. 1785 1918 COLLEGE OF CHARLESTON South Carolina's Oldest College 134th Year Begins September 27. Entrance examinations at all the county seats Friday, July 12, at 9 a. m. Four year courses lead to the B. A. i and B. S. degrees. A two year premedical course is given. Military training in all courses. A free tuition scholarship is assigned to each county of the State. Spacious buildings and athletic grounds, well equipped laboratories, unexcelled library facilities. Expenses moderate. For terms and catalogue address HARRISON RANDOLPH, President. CI Best material and workman- I ship, light running, requires K little power; simple, easy to E handle. Are made in several R sizes and are good, substantial money-making machines down B to the smallest size. Write for f catolog showing Engines, Boil- I ers and all Saw Mill supplies, i lil) 1 BOX WORKS & 5 SUPPLY CO. I Augusta, Ga. K jCOULD HARDLY | PTiim it Alir! JIANU ALUNC! Terrible Suffering From Headache, Sideache,, Backache, and Weak- j ness, Relieved by Cardni, Says This Texas Lady. ______ Gon2aI?s, Tex.? Mrs. Minnie Philpot, of this place, writes: "Five years j ago I was taken with a pain in my j left side. It was right under my j left rib. It would commence with an j | aching and extend up into my left ' ! shoulder and on down into my back. I | By that time the pain would be bo j ! severe I would^ have to take to bed, ! j and suffered usually about three days I ... I suffered this way for three years, i | and got to be a mere skeleton and was | j so weak I could hardly stand alone i Was not able to go anywhere and had i I to let my house work go... I suffered j awful with a pain in my back and I j had the headache all the time. I just i was unable to do a thing. My life | was a misery* niy 6tomach got in an awful condition, caused from taking bo much medicine. I suffered so much pain. I had just about given up all hopes of our getting anything to help me. "One day a Birthday Almanac was thrown in my yard. After reading its testimonials I decided to try Car- [ dui, and am so thankful that I did, for I began to improve when on the second bottle...I am now a well woman and feeling fine and the cure ! has been permanent for it has been two years since my awful bad health. 1 will always praise and recommend Cardui." Try Cardui today. E 78 CITATION NOTICE. The State of South Carolina, Coun- j ty of Bamberg?By J. J. Brabham, | Jr., Probate Judge. Whereas, Mrs. Susan M. Kennedy made suit to me to grant her letters of administration on the estate and effects of W.fB. Kennedy. I These are;, therefore, to cite and I admonish all and Angular th? kindred and creditors of the said W. B. ? Kennedy that they be and appear j before me in the court of probate j to be held at Bamberg on July 13th next, after publication hereof, at 11 , o'clock in the forenoon, to show i cause, if any they have, why the said ; Administration should not be grant- i ed. Given under my hand this 25th day | of June, Anno Domini 1918. J. J. BRABHAM, JR., Judge of Probate. J At the t of a m? Just like a gas stove you get instant hea U1 LUU&Ulg Tfiui ? The gas stove effici 3,000,000 into Ame A New Perfection ligl soot It lightens fuel ] work in. It saves coa] Made in 1-2-3-4 bun: oven. STANDARDO Washington. D. C. Norfolk, Va. NEWP JMLC ^ 1 w _ \] We Set Tire ? Standards Tread Why is it that United States Tires 'are setting new records for mileage | and serviceability ? Why is it that the sales of these tires are constantly mounting by leaps and bounds ? The answer is found in the factories where United States Tires are made. Standards of construction i$T (HI m these tires are higher than ever be? f?re known in the tire industry. j Makers of tire fabrics tell us that the standards we have given them for United States Tire fabrics ara higher than any previously known. , Likewise through every process of construction from crude rubber to finished tires?we have set new and higher standards everywhere. These standards work out on your car in the practical economy demanded by war-times. United States Tires will raise any car to higher efficiency. There is a type to suit every condition of service. The nearest United States Sales and Service Depot dealer will cheer' $7 fully aid in selecting right tires for ?1F ' your requirements. ' United States Tires We know that United States Tires are good tires. That's why we sell them. SMOAK & MO YE. I). X. COX. C. J. CONE'S GARAGE. Bamberg, S. C. Denmark, S. C. Lodge, S. C. ?\ U-JLJ touch itch?it lights o i?touch a match?turn a lever?and t and accurate regulation for any kind New Perfection Oil Cook Stove. > ency of the New Perfection has put ^boJTSel^ew rican homes. Perfection Kerosene water itens housework?no coal, wood, ashes or Heater. L:i1- A vrtn ? mnl. clean kitchen to n?? Al*AAim Se UUIO CUIU 51T vw ?. I for the nation. curity OH ? Alier sizes, with or without cabinet top and ' ILCOMPANY(NEW JERSEY) Baltimore, Md. hh^h^h Richmond, Va. Charleston, W. Va. Charlotte, N. C, Charleston, S. C. ERFECTIONIS' oirwi TT? O ? ~J <uvm aiuviij