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PERSONAL MENTION. I -People Visiting in This City and at M Other Points. V ?M. S. Connor, of St. George, was r in the city last Monday. ?J. W. Barr returned to the city Monday from Baltimore, Md. ?Miss Mary Frances Walker is 1 spending some time in Florence. ?Mrs. Sallie Owens is visiting relatives and friends in Johnston. ?W. D. and Robt.. Bennett, of Ehrhardt. were in the city Monday. ?Miss Gene Price is attending the summer school at Winthrop college. ?Mrs. Albin Kirsch and children spent several days last week in Greenwood. ?Harry Snyder, of Savannah, spent a few days in the city last t week. ?Mrs. L. L. Tobin, of Barnwell, was in Bamberg a few days last week. ?Mrs. W. D. Roberts, of Columbia, visited Mrs. W. P. Jones last week. ?Miss Ida Brabham has gone to Florence to .spend a month with relatives. ?Mr. Allie McCue spent Sunday [ in Charleston with his brother, Johnnie McCue. I ?Mrs. J. A. Murdaugh has re> turned to the city from a visit to Charleston. ?Mrs. R. M. Bruce and children : spent last week with relatives in Branchville. ?Randolph Smoak, Hallie Hutto and Marion Rhoad spent Sunday at Tybee Island. ?O. D. Faust has been visiting relatives in Macon, Ga., for the past week or two. \ ?J. Carl Kearse. Esq.. is spending some time in Georgia with friends and relatives. ?Mrs. A. W. Knight left Friday for Newberry to spend some time with relatives. ?Mrs. J. M. Hitt, of 'Montmorenci, was a visitor in the city the past week-end. ?W. Rothrock, of Aiken, spent a few days in the city this week with Col. W. C. Duncan. ?Mrs. J. J. Cudd and children, of Spartanburg, are visiting Dr. and Mrs. George F. Hair. ?J. M. Kirkland and J. S. Bre, land have gone to Hot Springs, Ark., to spend a few weeks. ?Mrs. H. P.-Bamberg left Tuesday morning for Asheville, N. C., to spend a few weeks. ?Mrs. A. M. Brabham and children are spending some time with relatives in Columbia. > ?Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Jordan and children, ofJMllon, visited relatives in Bamberg last week. ?Miss Gertrude Smoak left Tuesday morning for Winthrop college to attend the summer school. ?Miss Loulie Moore, of Barnwell, is spending some time in Denmark with friends and relatives. ?Mrs. C. R. Brabham, Jr., and children left Morudav morning for " T_1 J i. J ? /~vT. sumvan 5 isiaiiu iu syciiu a wcca ui two. ?Rev. Peter Stokes, of Orangeburg, presiding elder of the Orangeburg district, was in the city Monday. ?^Sheriff and Mrs. Thomas S. Burch, of Florence, are visiting at the home of their son, James T. Burch. ?Mrs. W. J. Snyder spent a few days in Barnwell last week in attendance upon a missionary society meeting. ?Mrs. George S. Smith and little daughter, Margaret, are spending the >. summer in the mountains of North Carolina. ?Mrs. LaVerne Thomas and children left Wednesday morning for Florence to spend a few weeks with relatives. ?Mrs. J. D. Copeland and children left Monday night for Como, Miss., to spend several weeks with relatives. ?Mrs. T. R. Miller has returned to her home in Summerton, S. C., after a visit to her sister, Mrs. F. 0. Brabham. ?Mrs. J. V. Williamson and little son, John, Jr., of Lumberton, N. U., are visiting the former's sister, Mrs. J. R. Black. ?Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Jones are spending some time in Baltimore, where Mr. Jones has gone for medical treatment. ?J. R. Black is attending the Southern Furniture Exposition, which is being held in High Point. X. C., this week. ?Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Chitty, of Ehrhardt, were in the city Tuesday en route to Sumter to visit Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Bagnal. ?Rev. and Mrs. P. K. Rhoad and children, of the Providence section of Orangeburg county, were visitors to relatives in the cit^ last week. I BASK BALL. J (Continued from page 4. column 4.) | sending the nightmare into extra inn-1 inns when he called Baxter safe at j first on a play in which a blind man j at midnight could nave seen he was I i out a city block. Polite English is j not emphatic enough to describe the; game in full, and therefore some of j the plays in detail must be omitted j because The Herald is read by too' j many ladies to publish such stuff, j The official scorer gave Bamberg! | j five errors, but "Doc" Black always j has been noted for his big heart. j The game was concluded in the J j following manner: In the last half; ^ ^ a 1 O V> t t ll A CnAVA + t 1 ! VJL lilC IOII1, VWIXI i IXC CX.UX CT sun UCUI Whitesides, first up. fanned: Radeliff got his fifth hit, a single to right, | | while Large and Cooner walked fill- J i ing the bases with one down. Char- j I lie Renrz wanted to plav some more. i i so popped out. but Warren, along j i with everybody else, was tired of it. j so continued his happy habit of hit- J j ting in the pinches, and slammed one' j to right center for three hags if it . had been necessary. Denmark had already batted, of course, and so that | hit won the so-called game, as Bamberg didn't have another chance to ride the clouds. Score by innings: | Bamberg ....0022021100001?9 1 7 5 Denmark.. ..0002000600000?8 13 3 Batteries: Radcliff, Whitesides and Cooner; Bethune, Gibson and Able; umpires. Black and Christie. LOCALS PLAY ORANGEBURG. Bamberg 3, Orangeburg 1; Game Called in Third Inning. Orangeburg is not in the Tricounty league, but a series of two | games was arranged between the lo- J cais and the team representing tile! City on the Edisto, and last Wednes-1 i day rain not only saved thousandsj of dollars on the crops in that county, j but also a good ball game. For at! the beginning of the third inning the j downpour came and thus prevented the Orangeburg lads taking a good sound walloping from the Bamberg team. So old Jupiter Pluvius was a friend to Orangeburg in two re-1 spects. The locals had on their batting rags and had started sweet revenge on Bill Wolfe for his two defeats administered to them last year. On the very first ball pitched in the game Otto Large cracked a terrific line drive over the left fielder's head and dashed all the way home for a run when the third baseman errored the throw- in. It was a clean three-bagger. The next three batters fanned, Orangeburg rendering due thanks to the speed of Wolfe j and the bold and nervy umpiring of one Mr. Webster, who played the best game for the tpo innings of any man on the Orangeburg club. He certainly must love his home town, but even at that they all realized that they were due for a good licking when the rain interfered. Turnipseed started the second inning with a single over second and came all the way home on "Gyp" Rentz's smashing drive to right center good for three bases even with "Gyp" doing the running. He crossed the plate on Price's single to center. Hitting in tho ninnhpa is what snells b-a-s-e b-a-1-1, and the hoys surely acquitted themselves beautifully in this inning, if anybody can find anything beautiful about that bunch of ours. Bill Whitesides had Orangeburg swingers swinging lively but in vain, and they should not have reached first. With two down, however, Charlie Rentz dropped Pike Berry's fly for an error and he scored when Cooner errored on the throw in home to catch him. Exactly two full innings were played, "and Berry was the only home player to reach first. So the score when play was stopped was 3 to 1, and the rain disappointed the Bamberg folks considerably more than it did the Orangeburg people. Orangeburg will come here for the return game to be played at Rhoad park today. ?Mrs. H. X. Folk and children are visiting relatives in Orangeburg. ?Col. F. N. K. Bailey, of Greenwood, was a visitor in the city Sunday. ?J. T. Herndon, who has been under treatment for appendicitis in Charleston *for several weeks past, has returned home. ?Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Ayer returned last week from a visit to relatives and friends at Camden, Leesville and Columbia. ?Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Moffatt, of Washington, D. C., spent several days in the city last week with Dr. and Mrs. George F. Hair. ?Major and Mrs. Frank R. Lang | and little daughter left several days ago for Asheville. where they are spending the summer. ?Misses Evelyn and Vista Brabham left last week for Charlottesville, Va., to attend the University of Virginia summer school. ?Garland Smoak, George Bamberg and Walter Row*ell left last week for Charleston for a cruise with the naval reserve force. 4 <T* 0 0 ** Hundreds of Eager Shoppers ** During the First Days ===== ?==-: ??= ? n /\ . II ^ Hut 0, xx %% Dire necessity forces us to sel regardless of profit, cost or va XX of merchandise, consisting of XX Ladies' Dresses, Men's and Boys' Suits of fine merchandise is priced below y< A A ?r 1 l II XX You have seen bargains ana bargain dreamed of anything like this. You XX as far as it will during this sale. Evei this most terrific slaughter of prices < XX Come early and you will go away rich H ? YY 1.1, aaa aa nmA/ivf r | $5U,UUU.UU MIM ci< %% Shoes, Hats, Yard Goods, f.% tions, Etc., Must Be Sold AH %% Regardless " * ff YY if Special Bargains in I YY Ladies' Shoes, Oxfords and Shirts. A A Pumps. Manhattan, $7.00 va A A In Black, Brown, White and Madras, woven strii T I /N A j T~! J "n J ^ > way. a size to n it any r oot. vaiue $7.00 and $7.50 quality >. $5.50 Madras, woven stri] <? ? 5.00 quality $3.50 value <? 4.00 quality $3.00 , H * Lot Broken sizes in Oxfords \ and Pumps?sold up to All felt Hats?St |n|> $1250, now going at.... $3 to $5 ble, Connett, goingx; VV Oxfords and Pumps. Underwear?Uni r $11-00 quality, black, tan $3.00 value and white, pair $7.90 $2.00 value $10.00 quality, black, tan $1.00 value ff *nd T?it?' pa7,"" v J- P 00 Red Star Vapor < 2o pair black and tan Ladies -*?* ? Pumps, 11 1-2 to 2, $6.00 At half price. . f<i> value, at $1.50 slightly damaged (i One lot of Ladies' White Kid oven combined.) "V V<& Pumps, all sizes, values up them to give satisfai to $15.00, at $5.00 $30, and $35. ? <? Lot of black and tan Pumps, _ . ! fonnerlv sold from $7.50 ^ JLA i-io oh nnon l <9 +a Kfl d>on no +/% dMA no 'VV IU ojpcv>?OJL cxl wv yv.w tpc>c.w iu tpTcv/.vv/ vaiu YY One lot Men's Shoes, Edwin Best Serge, $55.00 v; YY make, sold last fall at Worsted, $30.00 tc Yy $11.75, all sizes, in tan on- value ... YV ly, special at $5.00 Palm Beach, $21.00 ff 300 pair Men's Oxfords, Palm Beach, $17.00 YY black and tan, sizes 2 to ni ... Yx 8 years, at half price $1 to $3 2 YY on. Boys' Suits, all wool YY Palm Beach, $11.001 YY $2-50 Crepe de Chine $1.75 YY $1.75 Crepe de Chine $1.25 YY $4.00 Charmouse $2.90 100 .pairs of Ladii $3.DU unarmouse $z.ou onues, iuw duu Yj $2.25 and $2.50 Taffeta $1.50 worth $5.00 to $7 yj $2.25 Wash Satin $1.60 tra special, pair ... Yx t j* > tt j One lot 50 pairs ff Ladies'Underwear. shoeSj YT $2.00 Teddies $1.50 $12.00 to $16.00. Yx $1.50 Teddies .... $1.10 pair || ?=^=^===? || ^ DEPARTMEN %% The Progressive Merchants YV V-'V.V WVi *? * Have Crowded Our Store ?* of This Great Sale ill *:* ?1 H ^ ^ > %% 11, and sell quick and fast, due, over $50,000 worth Shoes, Hats, Furnishings, XX , Millinery, Notions, etc. This lot *?% Dur most sanguine expectations. sales this season, but you never ?? have never seen a dollar stretch XX rything for everybody, All go in ever witnessed in Orangeburg, XX er and happier. TT ? = n XX New Dry, Goods, Men's >thing, Ready-to-Wear, M Millinery, Dresses, No- xi, r LESS THAN COST || H i?_ n . . II Lvery uepanmeni g .Overalls. VV lue $3.50 Headlight, $2.25 value $1.50 && 3,e, $2.00 Hopp Bros., $1.65 value $1.25 Pajamas. |f $1.00 $4.50 value $3.00 $3.00 value $2.25 , 0 , 50 pair Children's Pumps, 1 t ft half price" $3,0? values> in black and XX ' it nair price. tan, sizes 5 1-2 to 11, at.... 75c ion Suits. Gingham Dresses. XX Ii'ka $6.00 Gingham Dresses for $4.25 YY ygc $5.50 Gingham Dresses for $4.00 ? ? 3il Stoves. Ladies Hose. <|>X Have eiffht Kayser Silk, $5.00 value .... $3.25 ?Y p 6 buraer Ka-vser Silk> $4-00 yalue - ?2 90 XX n- Kayser Silk, $3.50 value .... $2.60 tl ^.guarantee p, * . 4950 d S3 ft 'at? " "valuesjb.OO 11 Phoenix Silk, $1.50 value ....$1.00 AA *s* - Gingham. AA ' e. aS 32-inch Dress Gingham, 35c Vlf , ?35 00 value' yard 15(5 AA ?oo e/\ 75c French Gingham, yard.... 50c ll One lot of French Gingham, 11 Va Ue!tiS sold for $1.00 per yard %% value $11.00 while they last, per yard ....35c AA Blue Bell Cheviots, worth AA 1-2 Price 35c toda& yard , A* ' * "i^ cft 15c Plaid Homespun, yard .... 7c AA ralue ....$6,50 25c plaid Homespun, yard.... 10c AA Best Quality Apron Ging- AA , ^, ham, yard...: 10c AA BP . , 9-4 extra good qualitv Brown A A S' sheeting, 75e value, yard 37V2C A A ' ~?q nn 9-4 Bleach Sheeting, yard .... 40c A A Yndifts ' 10~4 Brown Sheeting, yard 42V2C AX ?.lr1 -x 10-4 Bleach Sheeting, yard.... 45c AX fecial Bxmgalow Aprons, only 10 AA $5 00 (I02611? special at 75c ?|+A =====^^= TT it rothers | T STORE || Orangeburg, S. C. A 2 a4A A4A A^A A^A A^A X X "A" "y "y T^T "y "A" ?a? "A? fA? "y L,A-i^A-A-Aj^A^k^LA^ftLj^k.A.A A A a^A A^.Ai .?a Jk yi>TF ^ ^ 4%g) 0