{EijePamberg^eralb
ESTABLISHED APRIL, 1891.
Published Weekly at Bamberg, S. C.
Entered as second-class matter April
1891, under Act of March 3, 1879.
$2.00 PER YEAR.
Volume 28. No. 19.
Thursday, May 8, 1919.
FOCH REBUKED IMPUDENCE.
"Would Xot Stand for Conduct of German
Who Lacked Courtesy.
" ?.ii
The tactlessness, or pernays raiuer
the utter mental obtuseness, of the
average Prussian is well illustrated
by a breach of the proprieties committed
last fall when Germany made
her appeal for an armistice, the offender
being no less a; personage
than Gen. Hans von Winterfeldt,
chief military plenipotentiary of the
mission sent by Germany to call on
Marshal Foch to arrange for terms.
It appears that General von Winterfeldt,
who should have been well
informed on points of military courtesy
since he was reared at the court
of Berlin and later spent many years
in Paris as military attache, some
""""months before the outbreak of the
* 1? !- i ? on
war ana was senuusi>- mjmcu m ?*"
automobile accident while attending
maney^ers of the French arm}* in the
south of France. He was tended with
the utmost solicitude by the most
eminent French surgeons. During his
illness President Poincare called on
him and decorated him with the cross
of officer of the legion of honor.
When the war broke out Winterfeldt
took charge of the espionage
service of the German government
at San Sebastian in Spain, doing no
end of harm to the people who had
treated him with such consideration.
How the Prussian general roused
the ire of the French marshal during
the armistice negotiations is thus related
by a writer in the New York
Evening Sun:
Marshal Foch received the German
delegates in the railroad car which
he made , his home and which was
then switched on a siding in the
forest of Compiegne. When the German
emissaries were ushered into his
presence .and von Winterfeldt saluted,
the ordinary impassive marshal's
' eyebrows, for once in the war, went
up. No wonder. For the German
general had had the incredible impudence
to don for the occasion the
cross of officer of the legion of honor,
bestowed upon him by President
Poincare before the war, in total dis?
-X XV_X - n T71_ ?-L
regard 01 tne iaci mat an r ieucu uiatinctions
bestowed upon Germans
had been canceled by the war, in the
same way that French naval and military
men and citizens had
"scrapped" every German decoration
that they had received.
Before returning the salute Marshal
Foch, fixing his eye on the
legion's cross and red ribbon on the
general's breast, exclaimed,' in the
most sharp and cutting tones: "Monsieur!
I authorize you to remove that
cross at once from your breast!"
General von Winterfeldt, thoroughly
disconcerted, removed it, and,
instead of laying it down on the table,
placed it rather sheepishly and
awkwardly in his pocket. It was
then that Marshal Foch acknowledged
the salute and consented to
- - proceed to business.
The presence of General von Winterfeldt,
of all others, on the German
delegation seems to have had
an exasperating effect on the French
officers anDointed to deal with ihm.
and it is not suprrising under the
circumstances that he soon insisted
upon withdrawing from the mission.
KILLS CHILD BY ACCIDENT.
Negro Woman Meant to Shoot Her
Husband.
Gaffney, May 4.?Endeavoring to
shoot her husband, Jim Peek, with
* ? -1 4. T? 1- I
a siiuig u.u, i>urau reeK, a negress 01
Cherokee county, yesterday afternoon
shot and instantly killed Annie, her
2-year-old daughter. The homicide
took place at Cherokee, about eight
miles from Gaffney, on a plantation
owned by A. C. Price. Immediately
after the tragedy Sheriff W. W,
Thomas was notified and he took the
woman into custody.
Her story, after she was arrested,
was to the effect that her husband
was advancing upon her and when he
. was about 50 yards away she fired
in self-defense and that she had nc
intention of shooting the little girl,
She is being held in the Cherokee
county jail without bail.
Awkward Position.
"Yes," said the shopkeeper, "1
^ want a good, bright boy to be partly
indoors and partly outdoors."
"That's all right," said the applicant,
"but what becomes of me whei
the door is shut?"?Pearson's Weekly.
' t
lira of torn
iomiih
MR. J. S. WANNAMAKER GIVES
SURPRISING FACTS.
STATEMENTS OF FARMERS
South Realizes Its Future is at
Stake and Must Act
Accordingly.
Mr. J. Skottowe Wannamaker,
chairman of the South Carolina Cotton
Association, upon the request of
a well known magazine that he furnish
them with a statement "showing
A a A- At 99
the cost 01 eouon to me ouucu, icui
them the following article:
Cost of Cotton to the South.
First, as to the cost of cotton to
the South, I have estimated the cost
of cotton to the South includes the
following:
1. The production of cotton ooet the
South slavery.
2. It caused the War Between the
States. 1
3. The production of cotton has
brought slave labor. Regardless of the
fact that cotton is a hand-made product,
a price has been established on
cotton on the basis of slave-labor,
.from which price it has never been
removed.
' 4. It caused the South to become
cotton slaves.
5. It caused the South to merely exist;
denying to the producers the necessities
and comforts of life.
6. To produce cotton and exist at
the price paid for it by the manipulator
necessitated the establishment
.of starvation wages in the South,
which exist even unto today.
7. It has caused the illiteracy ol
'the South, through the manipulations
'of the cotton bears.
8. It has caused the impoverishment
and pauperism of the South.
9. The production of cotton has
caused the bad roads of the South,
through the impoverishment of the
producer by the manipulator.
-10. It has driven from the rural
communities the white man, who la
no longer contented to eke out an ex
istence; to deny to himself and his
family the comforts and necessities ol
life; to work without a fair remuneration.
11. It is even driving the negrc
away; he has received a new vision;
he is no longer satisfied with his un
comfortable surroundings; he is insuf
i .ficiently clothed.
Hat Made Other Sections Prosperous
IS. It has made other sections o
the eountry prosperous; it has fat
tened the bears and manipulators o(
the North; it has blessed mankind in
every spot of the globe where the
son shines except in the South, where
it has proved a curse.
13. The production of cotton In the
South today has caused the descend
ants of the people who fought tc
break the chains of physical slaver?
from the black man to fight for the
purpose of forging the chains ol
, slavery, of poverty, of illiteracy os
the women and children working in
the cotton fields, both white and
Mack, still tighter.
- 14. It hae filled the grave-yards ol
: the South with men, women and lit
tie children who existed and passed
away without necessities, eemforti
and education.
15. It has created one of the great
est gambling hells on this globe, th?
New York Cotton Exchange, extend
ing its damnable and blighting ma
nipulations and schemes throughoul
our nation; fattening and prospering
the gamblers and manipulators on th
life-blood of the toiler.
"M in thf
10. ISO JMUUUbUva w
South has caused the producer to be
come a commercial cannibal, this be
tag absolutely necessary be enafoh
him to exist He has destroyed hii
forestry, fleeced his soil of its fer
tility; existed on his natural assets;
denying to himself and his family
reasonable hours of work and propel
working conditions; a decent home;
the opportunity to play and to learn
17. It has caused child labor in the
South. It has caused the women and
children of the South, both white and
black, to perform not only labor, re
gardless of hours, but even to pet
form the manual labor of tilling the
soil with the plow. (White women
and colored women can be seen plow
ing the cotton fields of the South
with little barefooted children plod
ding along behind them, scattering
compost, and performing their wort
| from tho break of day to the twiiigm
?underfed, impoverished, half-cloth
ed, wore and weary.)
18. ft ha* caused the producer o 1
cotton to go without the necessary
( cotton clothing?the white man sal
[ dom having enough to meet the re
| quirements of health and hygiene; thf
negro being seldom blessed with more
than four cotton uadersuits?one foi
* life use. one when he Joins the church
one when he marries the first time
> and one when he is buried. (This be
:ing in excess of the average.)
At to the Coat of Production of Cottof
In the South.
I requested the Hon. D. H. Houston
Secretary of Agriculture, to furnisl
me with a detailed statement showing
the eost of production of cotton li
the South for the year 1318. He ha!
i Just telegraphed me as follows;
"Itemised estimate of total eost
production of oottoc tor 1918 not
? ?
completed. Work now being done will
i provide basis for estimate in few
i weeks. Would be glad for your association
to select committee of three,
! to be in Washington April 21, for
j special conference on factors to be
I considered in estimating cost of proi
ducing cotton."
For the purpose of estimating the
cost of production by the producer.
, by the experienced business man and
j by the experienced banker, I have
' selected various men from our State.
| The result is aptly furnished by the
1 following statements, which are in
i line with the various statements re
ceived. These statements are from
three men of unquestioned veracity,
fine business judgment, long business
experience and men who hare been
actively engaged in farming for ovei
a quarter of a century; men who
would not purposely make a misleading
statement, even though they felt
satisfied it would result in assisting
us to win this campaign, regardless of
iViAw in +V* cno.
LLlt; Utjcp iliuci t
cess of this movement for the commercial
freedom of the South
Cost of Production Illustrated on a
One-Horse Farm of Fifteen Acres,
Planted by J. M. Holman.
The production of this firm is based
on a ten-year average production of
Calhoun county.
I have been farming for thirty-five
years, and have also been actively engaged
in cotton for the past ten years.
All past years must be left out of any
calculation in finding the cost of the
1919 crop, for the reason that all values
have advanced out of all reason.
Labor and fertilizers cost three rimes
as much as they did at the beginning
of the war.
The calculations herein are made
* _ 1 i. - J iT,
with the actual conon piuiueu uu una
one-horse farm, and the expenses are
figured only for the actual working
period, my only object being to find
out what it will actually cost to produce
a pound of cotton. The owner of
this farm gets nothing for himself out
of this farm except his profit of $96.50
' and he will not get this profit if his
' cotton is damaged by storm or other,
wise and is reduced in grade, also pro'
rided he gets thirty cents for his cotton
and $60 for his seed. I have not
charged this farm with'any expense
for hoeing. I expect the plowman to
have time to do this work.
Expenses.
15 bushels planting seed $ 15.00
1 . 3 tons high grade fertilisers 180.00
750 pounds rent paid, at 30c.. 225.00
Ginning, bagging and ties, 7
hales cotton 85.00
Wages one man, eight months
| at $40 320.00
Feed of mule eight months... 120.00
Rent of mule 30.00
Picking 9,000 pounds of cot>
ton at $1 90.00
Hauling to gin and market... #21.6C
' Expense handling seed 15.0<
" Wear and tear tools and fixtures
15.0C
1 $1,066.00
Income.
1 3,375 pounds cotton at 30c.. ,$1.012.5C
' 5,000 pounds seed at $60 150.0C
t
Gross income $1.1 2.5C
' Expense 1.066.0C
* Profit $ 96.5<
r
J . Cost per pound, 31.58.
I certify that the above statemenl
Is correct and true. J. M. Holman.
. Coat of cotton production itfustrat
edon one-horse farm of thirty acrei
, (twenty acrea cotton and ten acrei
1 food) by J. A. Banks.
" Fertiliser.
8 tons 8-4-0 at $50 $ 400.0C
1 1 ton soda 83.5C
Labor.
1 plowman at $40 per month.. 480.(K
' Hoe labor 40.0<
Extra labor 40.0(
Picking 12 B-C at 75c per
hundred M.0<
20 bu. planting seed at $1 bu. 20.0(
10 per cent depreciation on
$500 equipment 60.0(
1 Current coat farm equipment 30.0(
' Ginning and bagging and ties,
" 1AM
13 B-C il W wv.vr
J
1 $1,302.51
Income. /
r 276 bu. cotton seed at $1 bu..$ 276.OC
. 3,600 lbs. cotton at 28ftc lb.. 1,026.<X
fl,302.(K
[ This farm should produce undei
I average conditions in this county o<
I Calhoun, 8. C., food sufficient to feed
the horse that plows it and twelrc
400-pound bales of cotton (three bales
, of which shall be taken for rent oi
L land) and 276 bushels of cotton seed
This makes a balance and leaves
the farmer nothing for his time and
! attention.
r I have been farming for the pas1
! forty years and J am thoroughly
[ familiar with cotton production, hav?
also had many years' experience ir
general merchandise business, supply
p ing fertilisers and supplies to farm
r ers, also have had twenty-five tc
tMrtr vears' experience as a banker
bsing engaged during tfyis period it
} (arming, merchandising, operating
, sales stables and furnishing lire
r stock.
The abore hi a correct statemenl
illustrating the cost of production o
. cotton. J. A. Banks.
Coat of Cotton Production lllustratee
, on a One-Horse Farm of Twentyseven
Acres (18 Acres Cotton
and 9 Acres Corn and
[ Hay). By T. A. Amaker.
, Fertilizer.
[ 6% tons fertiliser 8-J-f at
, $58 1 ?1.W
1 ton nitrate soda 90.0<
Labor.
1 plow band IS months, at $40 4t0.0(
Hoe labor, 18 acres at $2.16 40.60
Extra labor, gathering corn,
hay, etc l 50.OP
Picking 10 bales cotton at $1
per hundred weight 120.00
18 bushels planting seed at $2
a bushel 36.00
10 per cent depreciation on
$600 equipment 60.00
Incidental expenses 30.00
Ginning and bag and ties 10
b. c. 50.00-_i
$1,348.00
Income.
7 b. c. 400 lbs. each at 30c..$ 840.00
249 bushels cotton seed at $1 240.00
$1,080.00
The above farm should produce* 10
b. c. and tenant must pay three bales
rent After paying entire proceeds of
sale of cotton and seed on his year's
pxnpnsps hp owes a balance of $268.
Land planted in corn and hay will
produce enough to feed horse.
I have been engaged in farming
for the past thirty years and am
thoroughly familiar with the cost of
production being now extensively engaged
in fanning, and also thoroughly
familiar with same as a merchant
selling fertilizers and supplies, having
been extensively engaged in the
mercantile business for the past thirty
years.
The above is a correct statement
illustrating the cost of production of
cotton. T. A. Amaker.
Referring Back to the Cost of Cotton
to the South.
Cotton production has cost the
South all that I have said and a vast
amount more. The cost is so great
I that it would require the judgment of
i God Almighty to render a decision
: a to what cotton has actually cost
! the South. No mortal man can make
I the estimate.
Henry Grady more than thirty-one
: years ago delivered a speech in New
I England, which made a more lasting
j impression possibly on the country
I than any one speech ever delivered
. I
by any human being. The production
of cotton in the South has prevented
i his prediction from coming true. He
j said in part:
,! "When every farmer in the South
shall eat bread from his own fields
and meat from his own pastures and
, disturbed by no creditor, and enslaved
, by no debt shall sit amid his teeming
, gardens, and orchards and vineyards,
and dairies and barnyards, pitching
i his crop in his wisdom and growing
them in independence, making cotton
, his clean surplus, and selling it In his
i own time, and in his chosen market
I > and not at a master's bidding?getting
his pay in cash and not in a rei
ceipted mortgage that discharges his
, debt, but does not restore his freeI
dom?then shall be breaking the fullness
of our day."
I The cost of production of cotton hi
the South has made the loyad Aiueri
I can citizen realize that it is abeo
- lutely nec eseunr tor him in carrying
out his pledge to help make the world
I safe for democracy, to help in every
> way possible, using every ounce o<
energy at his command to help im
I prove conditions in the South, *o thai
) tt will be a fit place for people tc
- live in. He has made this decision be
) cause he realizes, first, that it is hit
- duty as a loyal American citizen and
because ft is his duty in Justice tc
t God and man. He realizes:
'Once to every man and nation
Gomes the moment to decide;
i In the strife of truth with falsehood
i For the good or evil side.
"Then to siderwith truth it noble.
When we shore our wretched cruet;
Ere her came bring feme and profit
And tie prosperous to be just.
"Then It is the brave man chooses,
While the coward standi aside,
Doubting in hie abject spirit,.
Till his Lord Is crucified."
South'* Future at Stake.
The Sooth realizes that its futurt
existence is at stake, and that it U
absolutely necessary to market, ban1
and finance its cotton crop sad thai
If this is not done, the cotton produo
tion of the South will follow the in
digo production, and that the co-doc
production wfll be referred to only as
something that once existed in thi
South.
For this reason the farmer, mer
chant and banker have abeloutaly de
termined .to arrange to market cotton.
They are forming a $200,000,004
corporation for this purpose known as
the Marketing, Exporting and Financing
Corporation. The manipulators
and gamblers who have fed on the
life blood of the South will, of course,
We realize that
I commercial freedom of the South h
abflolately necessary to the futun
1 progress and prosperity of the South.
' The banking Intereels of the South
! wtti increase their capital and eur
' plus by at least 50 per cent, and will
' accept liberty loan bonds in payment
' for additional stock issued. Oppor1
tanity only knocks once. The South
* realizes that it is knocking today and
1 the door irill be opened.
r
Are You Helping.
Are you helping in the fight foe
h commercial freedom of the South? If
j not, you are not a loyal son of either
America or the South. Not only thii
I ?you do not realise that America, of
which the South is a part, is year own,
your satire land; you do not realise
that God Almighty made all men free
and equal; you do not believe en
"Peace on Earth good will to men."
Ho loyal American rwtH so far forget
; his duty as an Ainorican citizen; no
) loyal American will so far forget his
pled go to make the world safe tar
) democracy.
\
Fertilizing Gi
DOES I
J. N. H;
Soil Improvement Comm
Side applications of fertilizers to
the growing crops as a supplement to
a first application made at seeding
time is quite widely practiced in the
soutn.
The writer recently obtained from
county agents the names of leading
farmers of North and South Carolina
who make a bale or more of cotton
per acre. These farmers were addressed
a letter and asked, among
other things, to tell how they fertilized
their cotton. In these answers
a large proportion report that they
make side applications of fertilizer.
A few of these reports that are typical
of the rest are given herewith:
Mr. Jno. C. Fletcher, McColl, S. C.
Kind of soil: "Light loam with clay
Bubsoil."
Fertilizer used and method of applying:
"Use about 1,400 lbs. per
acre; half applied just before planting,
and the other half about June 15th."
Mr. B. D. Mann, Enfield, N. C.
Kind of soil: "Sandy loam and
heavy loam to gray stiff soil."
Fertilizer used and method of applying.
"From 500 to 1,000 l^s. per acre
of an 8-3-3. At time of planting use
from 400 to 600 lbs., about June 1st
when cotton is chopped out make another
application of 400 lbs."
Mr. Fred H. Young, Timmonsville, S. C.
Kind of soil: "Sandy loam with
clay subsoil."
Fertilizer used and method of applying:
"900 to 1,000 lbs. of fertilizer
used. April 1st apply 500 lbs. of fertilizer,
ridging on same and planting
about ten days later. Fertilizer applied
in three applications; 500 lbs,
before planting; about May 1st, another
application of 500 lbs.; and still
another application of 200 to 250 lbs,
i June 1st." 7
Mr. B. F. Shelton, Speed, N. C.
Kind of soil: "Norfolk loam, or
dark gray soil."
Fertilizer used and method of ap
plying: "800 lbs. of a 9-5-2 used pei
acre (during normal times an 8-4-4)
: Half of fertilizer applied in drill al
, time of planting; the other half wher
. cotton is 5 to 6 inches high."
1 . Mr. A. G. Clarkson, Wateree, s/C.
Kind of soil: "Ruston loam."
Fertilizer used and method of ap
' plying: "1,500 lbs. of a fertilizer an
alyzing 10% phosphoric acid, 39?
" nitrogen, and no potash. Apply two
thirds of fertilizer at time vof prepar
i ing the land and one-third in May 0]
- June."
Mr. S. P. winburne, Como, N. C.
Kind of soil: "Light loam."
Fertilizer used and method of ap
1 nlvine: "600 lbs. per acre of a 10-5-<
! French Papers Not Enthusiastic.
I
j The covenant of the league of nations
arouses little enthusiasm in the
t press of Paris. Indeed many of the
i principal newspapers aostam irom
. comment altogether. L'Oeuvre, which
\ has always been a champion of the
I league and of President Wilson, says:
* "Speaking generally, we are bound
to say the pact of the league of nations
causes a certain amount of disappointment.
Its 26 articles consti'
tute really the statutes of the league
of governments to safeguard their
territorial sovereignty and are not
; a new chapter of the law of nations
, which had been hoped for."
The newspaper thinks that the resignation
shown by Belgium, Japan
and France must be due to promises
or special guarantees which will be
known, perhaps, when diplomacy is
no longer secret.
Writing in the "Echo de Paris"
"Pertinax," spokesman of the nationists,
declares outright:
"The league of nations is dead before
birth." He also refers to rumors
of treaties being made between the
allied powers, remarking "to reassure
us, Premier Clemenceau and
Foreign Minister Pichon, allege they
hold favorable alliances in their portfolios.
These parchments must be
beautiful, complete and eloquent to
justify such docility on the part of
the French ministers."
All the nwspapers point out tnat
the great concessions were made by
France. Some of the journals go so
; far a's to declare that these concesi
sions amount to a surrender. As a
i whole, however, the press expresses
the hope that later amendmei^s will
1 result in satisfying what are regarded
>kas legitimate claii^ of France and
' the other countries which, as the
| Havas agenqj summary of the comment
words it, "showed their moderation
by abstaining from insisting
yesterday upon an immediate vote"
on the charges in the covenant which
. they were advocating.
Origin of the Word Camouflage.
It would be interesting to know
how many people who have taken,
I with a kindliness which has become
somewhat monotonous, to the word
"camouflage," in their daily conversation,
are aware of its origin. Cam,
ouflage was a word coined and used
i by the Paris Apaches, those ingenious
inventors of language, to ex'
press their method of making a quick
disguise or an alteration of a disJ
guise. Of recent years "camouflage"
>
_ _ _ ___ I ?
rowing Crops j
T PAY?
arper,
littee, Atlanta, Georgia.
(during normal times 700 lbs. of an
8-4-4). Apply fertilizer and jstable
manure in drill before planting?" Apply
one-third of fertilizer as a side
application when plants are about , J*
knee high." :j
Mr. H. A. Monroe, Cameron, N. C.
Kind of soil: "Gravelly sandy loam
with clay subsoil."
Fertilizer used and method of applying:
"600 to 800 lbs. of fertilizer
per acre used. Part applied at time
of preparing the land, and 200 to "300
lbs. applied as side dressing before
Diooms appear.
Mr. F. H. Waller, Kingston, N. C.
Kind of soil: "Gray sandy soil."
Fertilizer used and method of applying:
"800 lbs. per acre of a 10-4-8.
Apply fertilizer in drill about ten days
prior to planting. Side dress one or
two times about June 20 and July 10.*
Mr. W. F. Peterson, Clinton, S. C. .. ?
Kind of soil: "Dark gray."
Fertilizer used and method of ap- ;
plying: "400 lbs. when rows are
laid off; 250 lbs. as side application
at second plowing after chopping, and
250 lbs. as another side application
when plants are knee high."
Side Applications to Cotton.
At the time the cotton plant is in
> ?full
bloom ample plant food must be
available or else a large percentage
of the squares will shed. While there
are other factors that cause shedding*
for example, a lack of a proper amount
.' ".1^3
of moisture; still, it has been proven
that even with the most favorable
moisture Conditions, a lack of plant
. food is the potent cause of this
1 trouble.
-v. ' .
Under boll weevil conditions, the
fertilizer used in side applications
should contain a high percentage of i
phosphoric acid and a rather low per*
centage of nitrogen. This fertilizer ^
' has the effect of forcing the young
bolls to quick growth and early ma*
turity.
Side Applications to Corn.
- While it usually pays to make *
1 larger side application of fertilizer for
cotton than for corn, still, many of
the best farmers in the Southeast
advocate liberal side applications for
corn. - . if
" The period of the growth of corn is
much shorter than that of cotton; con*
r sequently, there must be present in
the soil large supplies of available
plant food at the critical period of its
growth, which is from the time it is ^
) waist high to tasselling time.
has, of course been used in the European
war to effect, as far as possi
ble, concealment by-disguise. In
i time "camouflage" came to be super ,
seded by "dazzle-painting," which ap;
j plied mainly to the work done at
l | sea for deceiving the enemy. 5 The i
..term "dazzle-painting" originated
with Admiral Greatorex, through
[ whom it was adopted by the British
. admiralty. It achieved the most ex.
traordinary results, wrell known \
. ships being so completely disguised ,
. by its operations that they were' un
recognized by sailors who knew them ?
intimately.
1 MEETING OF TAXPAYERS]
f
A meeting of the taxpayers, voters
. of Bamberg School District, No. 14,
; is hereby called to be held in the
, City Hall in the town of Bamberg, S. * '
C., on Monday, May 26, 1919, at 4
! o'clock p. m., for the purpose of %
electing one member of the Board of
1 Trustees, and for the transaction of
any other business that may legally
come before the meeting.
W. M. BRABHAM,
Chairman Board of Trustees.
Bamberg, S. C., May 7, 1919,?2tn
We are proud of the confidence
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LET THE
i Aiken Gift Shop
> * Aiken, S. C., do your
KODAK WORK v
Best Materials and Workmanship.
MAIL US YOUR ORDERS.
Rub-My-Tism is a great pain killer
It relieves pain and soreness caused
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CITATION NOTICE.
The State of South Carolina.?
County of Bamberg. By J. J. Brabham,
Jr., probate judge.
Whereas, E. D. Dannelly hath
made suit to me to grant him letters
of administration of the estate and ^
effects of Ham Brabham, deceased,
These are therefore to cite and admonish
all and singular the kindred
and creditors of the said Ham Brab
ham, deceased, that they be and
appear before me, in the court of
probate, to be held at Bamberg on r
the 14th day of May, next, after
publication hereof, at 11 o'clock in
the forenoon, to show cause, if any
they have, why the said administration
should not be granted.
Given under my hand this
29th day of April, Anno Domini,
1919.
J. J. BRABHAM, JR.,
Judge of Probate.
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Biliousness, Loss of Appetite and
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Adv.