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PERSONAL MENTION. People Visiting in This City and at Other Points. ?MeGee Bamberg spent Tuesday j in Columbia. ; ?G. C. Yarn, of Savannah, was in j the city this week. ?Mr. and Mrs. John Cooner spent j Tuesday in Charleston. [ ?Paul Whitaker, of Orangeburg, was in the city Tuesday. ?J. A. Mitchell has returned home after a visit to Savannah. ?Mrs. J. J. Beach has returned to the city from Charleston. ?George Bamberg spent several days in Bamberg last week. ?J. C. Kearse; Esq., returned Sunday from a week's stay on the Island. ?Mr anrl Mrs ,T. W. Barr have been spending a few days in Charleston. ?Mrs. L. C. Smoak has returned home after a visit to relatives at McColl. ?Miss Hattie Xewsom, of Williston, spent several days in town last week. ?Mrs. Lanier, of Waynesboro, Ga., has been visiting Mrs^ A. McB. Speaks. ?Mr. and Mrs. N. P. Smoak are spending a few weeks at Glenn Springs. ?Miss Genevieve Kirsch is spending some time at Asheville and Glenn Springs. ?Mrs. Albin Kirsch has gone to Ninety-Six to spend some time with - relatives. ?Mrs. J. Gary Black, of Beaufort, is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Price. ?J. A. Spann has gone to Baltimore for treatment at Johns Hopkins hospital. ?Misses Ochie Mae and Margaret Jennings are visiting Mrs. A. B. Jordan in Dillon. t- ?C. D. C. Adams, of Walterboro, spent Friday and Saturday in the city j Willi ICldUVCS. ?Miss Augusta Gilchrist, of Columbia, has been visiting her aunt, I^rs. C. F. GilchrislT ?V. J. Hartzog has been spending j a few weeks with relatives in Charleston and St. George. \ ?Mrs. J. J. Beach left last ^week for Charleston, where she is spending some time with relatives. ?Mrs. Malcolm Move and children, of Charleston, are visiting at the home of Mrs. S. A. Rowell. II WE I | FRI] I ON " "1 \ WIL :py.;i: V / Hgrjg jr t 3 insi I 3 HEE I 8 RON f This Applies EgS&iK IBraj} c B C. W. RENTZ, SE wmM W. S. BAMBERG ?Mrs. Minnie Copeland and Mrs. Natherine Riley are spending several weeks in Hendersonville. ? Little Misses Elizabeth and Jane Gilchrist visited their aunt, Mrs. D. K. McDuflie, in Columbia, last week. ?Miss Naomi Sandifer left this week for the mountains of North Carolina to spend a few weeks vacation. ?Mrs. Frances Folk, after visiting the family of E. F. McMillan, at Hahira, Ga., returned home Sunday. ?Miss Sara Herrington, who has been visiting relatives in Georgia for several weeks, has returned to Bamberg. # ?Miss Helen Milhous, of Columbia, after spending a few weeks in the* city with Miss Martha Ray, has returned home. ?R. P. Bellinger, after spending several weeks at Glenn Springs and on a trip to northern cities, returned home Sunday. ?R. M. Bruce and little son James are spending some time at Glenn Springs, where James is recuperating from a recent illness. ?Mrs. Frank McMillan, who has been under treatment at a hospital, has returned home much improved in health, her friends will be glad to know. \ YOU CAN BECOME j Biggest Antomobili AND SHARE II 250,000 SHARES OP PREFER in ' AMERICAN SOUTHERN : of Greensl Par Value $ 8 Per Gent. Participa I\ivTirlATielc PQITOKI l/l? luciiuo i ?-j a>/i The earning possibilities of any res today are well known, but in addition of this kind, from an investment st which make the preferred stock of t ive investment. The Charter of this corporation pr( paid to the Preferred Stock and 6 per dividends are divided equally betweei 51 per cent, of the total dividends, ar 'Your stock has both the guaranteed the speculative features of a Common The American Southern Motors Coi of assembling and distributing to. the tinctive Light Car?the American Ba Ivon H. Blackman, of Charleston, F in BAMBERG next week?Tuesday? osition with all those who are intere stock of the American Southern Mote For an interview, address IVON H. B1 BAMBEI BEG TO ANNOUNCE TO I 3NDS AND CUSTOMERS T] iND AFTER JULY 1, 1920, L PAY * PER CENT. ( ) Savings Depos PEAD OF FOUR PER CENT :ETOFORE, AND YOUR I AGE IS RESPECTFULLY TED. T All A II io uia i/eposns as vi % L A. M. DENBOW, President C. W. Vice Presidents BAMBERG-, S. C. ?J. I). Brandon, county farm demonstration agent, returned from Ciemson college last wee a, after attending the short course there. ?Mrs. Sherwood Price, Miss Colette Padgett and Richard Black spent Sunday in Bamberg with relatives.? Walterboro Press and Standard. ?T. J. Rentz and family, who for the past few years have been living in Augusta and Warrenville, have moved back to Bamberg to reside. ?Miss Ruth Hodges, who has been visiting Miss Nell Black, returned home last week. Miss Black accompanied her home to spend some time. ?Miss Thelma Bailey, who has been visiting relatives in the city, left last week for the University of Virginia, where she is taking a special course. ?F. C. Ayer, a former resident of Bamberg, now in business at Seneca, was' in the city yesterday. He mo tored through the-country with J. X. Hopkins. ?J. H. Pearson spent Sunday in Charleston with Mrs. Pearson, who was recently operated on at a hospital there. Her friends will be glad to learn that the operation wTas successful, and that she is rapidly regaining her health. \ PARTNER IN THE ; Industry in Dixie T ITS PROFITS RED PARTICIPATING STOCK rhe MOTORS CORPORATION, >01*0, N. C. 5 Per Share. iting Preferred Stock, e Semi-Annually. ponsible and well organized company to the usual advantages of securities andpoint, there are several features Vii~ imiionoll ir o + froI ins v.ujl pifi anuu au uuuouanj utti uvc )vides that after 8 per cent, has been cent, to the Common Stock, then the a the two, which gives the Preferred id the Common gets 49 per cent. I features of a Preferred stock and all stock. -poration was formed for the purpose Southern Trade America's Most Distanced Six. iepresentative for this sectipn, will be and will be glad to go over the propped in getting some of the original rs. jACKMAN, {?, s. c. OUR I EIAT 1 WE I )N I its I PAS I ?AT- 1 SO- 1 Ml L M?..t P feu t\s new g RENTZ, JR.,^ I I:;!: First Natic BAMBER< YV TV TV YV 5 PER CENT. PAID ON i TT YV 6 PER CENT. PAID < vV nA ttt.sj np np.pns if vv ft *tX SAFE ? SOUND ? i tt ft First Natic YV B AMBER! ? I " MM ?? m The Who! A Bet i Simply a Matter oi j * x This you will realize?once you try a Brunswick?--that a super-tire is possible only when the name certifies that the maker is following the highest standards. For tire making is chiefly a matter of standards and policies?cost plus care. Any maker can build a good tire if he cares to pay perfection's price. All men know Brunswick stand ards, for Brunswick products have been famous for 74 years. - Formulas, fabrics and standards vary vastly in cost. Reinforcements, plies and thickness are a matter of expense. And these variations affect endurance. It rests with the maker how far he wishes to go?how much he can afford to give. For there are no secrets nor patents to hold one back. THE BRUNSWICK-B; Atlanta Headqu? Sold On An V Gucrar, Cord Tires with "Driving" an Fabric Tires in "Plain," "Ribbe The Ma^ * LEES, S0U!1 j?*y ^ ?nal Bank H }'s-?- II :| <%>& SAVINGS DEPOSITS. V<?? YY DN TIME CERTIFI- YY IT' || J UUJNCjJGiitYii ll VJEj i i XX >nal Bank ff &, S.c. YY .;:p i A A A A A A A A A 4^1 A A A Ai A A AA A t^T fy Ty Ty T^f le Secret of ter tire I * the Maker's Policies | To, ascertain what each maker v 41 offers one must analyze and test some 200 tires?as our laboratories have done. Then it is a matter of combining __ | the best features and building according, to the highest standards. f Once you try a Brunswick you will understand how we have built model tires, regardless of factory expense. Yet Brunswick Tires cost you the same as other like-type tires. _ Our saving is on selling cost, through our nation-wide organization. ' - )/- .v.'.We realize that you expect more from Brunswicks, and we assure you that you get it. ONE Brunswick will tell you the st<?ry. And then voull want ALL Bnmswicks. No other tire, youll agree, gives so much for your money. *LXE-COLLENBER CO. . fjg rters: 3S Luckie St. hlimiied Mileage | itee Basis ' H d "Swastika" Skid-Not Treads id" and "BBC" Skid-Not Treads afield Co. m CAROLINA ' . " 1