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ALLENDALE IS SELECTED. Headquatters of Six Counties of Warehouse Commission. i ': > _______ jg. ' Allendale, Sept. 10.?Allendale has been selected by the State Warehouse Commission as headquarters for the six counties in this section in -which a representative of the commission will operate. This includes Bamberg, Hampton, Barnwell, Jasper, Colleton and Allendale. H. A. Miller, who, will have charge of the business of the warehouse commis sioa in this section, arrived in Allendale on last Monday and will establish his offices here. He will leave shortly to make a survey of all of the warehouses in his territory, and for the purpose of outlining the policy of of the department to all managers of the warehouses operating under the state system. ^ At present there is no cotton waret V . house in Allendale but it is underigl: stood that the Allendale Cotton Oil and Fertilizer company, of which J. H. Hewlett is manager, will begin soon the construction of a large warehouse that will accommodate o11 farmers of bhis section. This an vnv &v?* - ? company formerly operated a warehouse here but this was destroyed by fire in the spring, incurring a loss of more than $100,000. J. H. Augley has recently constructed and is now operating under the state warehouse system a warehouse that 'has been pronounced by Mr. Miller to be a K.; . very up-to-date and satisfactory building. Mr. Augley plans to enlarge his plant in the near future and will rnr in position to accommodate all the farmers of his immediate section. : w" The belief in this section is that this is a good year to take advantage of the storage proposition as it is generally believed that cotton prices will |;vj.' 1 be higher later on. The cotton crop in this section is generally estimated to be not over 15 or 20 per cent, and some, experienced men are putting the estimate as low as 10 per cent. One large ginnery in Allendale had ginned only thirty bales up to yesterday and cotton is coming into the local market very slowly. The recent rise in the cotton market caused rv'v quite a flurry here but very little cotj?5. . ton was sold. DISTILL WHISKEY IN CITY. Outfit Built Underneath One Room House in Greenville. Greenville, Sept. 10.?When a little negro shack near the heart of the business district and just off Main street was demolished this morning to make way for business improvements, a nearly complete whiskey distilling plant was unearthed. The plant was carefully built under 4 ground with brick walls and top and was so arranged that the smoke camej out through the chimney of the little one room house. County officers, u-.V; who investigated the find, said appearances indicated that the still had I" '* not been operated for several years. Lumpkin is Xew Head of Legion. Columbia, Sept. 10.?Special interest attaches here to the telection of Morris C. Lumpkin, of Columbia, ? - ?? ry. ? A mnrinon dS Slum (.'Uiuuiauuci ui luc aui^hvuu Legion at the convention at Newberry. Mr. Lumpkin is very popular |v . in Columbia, his native city, and throughout the state as well. He was until last year assistant attorney general of the state. During the war he served* overseas as a captain in the Eighty-first division. He is now & a prominent member of the Columbia bar. He is a young man, but of ' \ excellent executive ability. His many friends in Columbia are glad of the Legion's selection. Confidential. "Once a very charming young woman presented a small check at my win/irtw " the sneaker at a re cent banker's convention. "She was transparently honest, but had no acquaintance in the bank nor any let, v ters or other papers with her. I askr. ed her if she had a handkerchief or ; some article of jewelry marked with < her name or initials. After a moment's deep thought her face brightened and she asked: "Would an initialed garter buckle do?" "Did she get the money?" asked a Toice in a tone of detached scientific inquiry from the back of the room. "I must remind you," said the speaker, judicially, "that a bank's relations with its clients often are highly confidential." A Good Joke, However. - .... . . An argument as to tne origin or bagpipes had waxed loud and long between a Scotchman and an Irishman, each of whom claimed that his own country had produced the instrument. Finally the Irishman clinched matters by remarking: "Well, the truth is, the Irish invented the pipes and made a prisent av them to the Scots. And the Scots haven't seen the joke yet!"?Houston Post. / f REDUCED RATE IS APPEALED. And Railroad Commission Retaliates For Such Action. Columbia, Sept. 10.?The recent order of the railroad commission, for a reduced freight rate on short hauls of cotton, will be appealed to the Interstate Commerce Commission by the Atlantic Coast Line, according to a statement filed with the commission by R. A. Brand, of Wilmington, traffic manager of the Atlantic Coast T ino thp Southern and Seaboard. 'have agreed to the rate. The Coast Line has put into effect, but under protest and with notice of appeal to the I. C. C. In retaliation, the railroad commission has refused the petition of the Atlantic Coast Line for discontinuance of trains 68 and 69 between Columbia and Sumter. Chairman Shealy of the commission, told Mr. Brand that if his road would not abide by the ruling of the commission as to the cotton rates, and would appeal the matter, which is >.entirely an intra-state proposition, to the interstate commission, then he should have to take to the interstate commission the petition for discontinuance of the two trains, both being intra-state matters. Unless the I. C. C. orders discontinuance of the trains, they will remain in service. FOUR OF A KIND. Folks Who Made Good After a Hard Struggle. Nothing ventured, nothing gained. That is Winchell Smith's message, writes Whit Hadley. He began as a stage clearer at 50 cents a day. He did so well they gave him small parts in the play at $10 a week. William Gillette said "this boy das courage but 110 initiative" so he drilled him and started him on "Secret Service." Charles Frohman took him up in 1894 and made him study every angle of the theatre. Then Smith produced "Brewister's Millions" and wrote "The Boomerang." j His real name is William Brown Smith and he is worth half a million dollars. Margaret Deland, now brilliant writer was poor in 1880. She tried several occupations without success. Then she married Lorin F. Deland of Boston. rinnnrtiinlHec wpta fpw in Kfinne bunkport, Me., where they moved, so she -began writing. She has amassed a fortune from "Old Shester Tales," "Dr. Lavendar's People," "The Awakening of Helen Richie," and "The Iron Woman." Publishers say her "human sympathy made her successful." She is 64 years old. Harry L. Doherty, at 51 controls over two hundred big utility companies, and is the largest producer of refinable oil in the world, started as an office boy in the Columbus (0.) Gas Co. He tried 14 different kinds of work and eave them all up. Then he tack lecf banking. A New York banker says of Doherty, "he must have a telescope in his head. All his business life he has gone like a shot for the thing that was hard, important and vital." Harry Emerson Fosdick, brilliant preacher and writer, had to fight his way through school and support the family while doing so. But he graduated from Colgate University ana Theological school with honors. Then he wrote "The Challenge of the Present Crisis" and sold 200,000 copies. In 1918 the British government took him to England to help encourage soldiers. He is now 43 and wealthy. Fancy and Fact. She was pretty and ambitious and had studied the matrimonial problem to a nicety. j "Yes, I suppose I shall wed even-i tually," she said, "but the only kind of masculine nuisance that will suit me must be tall and dark, with classical features. He must be brave and yet gentle, withal,, he must be strong ?a lion among men but a knight among women." That evening a bowlegged, lathframed youth wearing checked trousers and smoking a cigarette rattled the door knob and the girl knocked four tumblers and a cut glass fruit dish fell off the sideboard in her haste to get to him.?Houston Post. Sure Enough! "I observe," remarked Professor Pate, "that a patent has been granted for an alarm clock which, instead of ringing, discharges a stream of cold water through a tube to bit a sleeper wherever he desires." "Quite nice," commented J. Fuller Gloom. "But where do you suppose a sleener could desire to have a stream of cold water hit him on a chilly I morning?" 4 And nothing'will Ten-I der the body more , liable to ] dangerous diseases than this ! same poisonous condition. Don't be constipated! It isn't safe! It | isn't sensible! * It isn't necessary! Be well?but don't rely on ordinary laxatives j . to help you. Try instead the newest : scientific treatment for constipation? { T> TPU T A V This preparation not only overcomes constipation, but it does away with all the nausea, cramping and deranged digestion caused by ordinary laxatives. Guaranteed at Our Store. We are so sure that Rich-Lax will please you that we want you to come to our store and get a bottle and try it en? tirely at our risk. If it doesn't suit you, if it isn't the best laxative medicine you ever used, simply tell us so and we will promptly refund, the full 1 purchase price* i Buy tablets by the dozen, only 45c, at Herald Book Store. 11 I i is SEn iiitu |j, | "I was weak and run-down," H j I relates Mrs. Enla Burnett, of ? . Dal ton, Ga. "I was thin and Just felt tired, all the time. Sjp J I didn't rest well. I wasn't U Kg ever hungry. I knew, by gj this, I needed a tonic, and TO jj3 as there is none better than? Kj IninniiiS Dy A W WM |bf WnM An n gag n B Tbe Woman's Tonie I ji g . . , I began using Cardui," , gSBg continues Mrs. ' Burnett 6 s "After my first bottle, I slept M ( better and ate better. I took M m four bottles. Now I'm well, A | feel just fine, eat and sleep, K | my skin Is clear and I have M gained and sure feel that 0 Cardul is the best tonic ever Bg made." IS Thousands of other women E! have found Cardul just aa A SS Mrs. Burnett "did. It should K H help you. A* *11 SmnrfKta. 0 MiBgwKawai '^TWrrips": The telephone carries yo saving the delays and dis arise when you travel in p Wliv nnf tnr ih? T f 11J A1V W W& ^ *v SOUTHERN BELL TI AND TELEGRAPH /CHEVT^ KmSSSSSSSS^SSSSSSmSS^SSESSS^^^^SSSEi NEW MODELS CHEVROLET $725.00 Delivered. Full Stock Tires, T Oils, Gre: Expert Repair Work. J. B. BF BAMBEE flHnHBHHHBH CREDITOR'S NOTICE. All persons or creditors having claims and accounts against M. A Kinard, Ehrhardt, S. C., will presenl :he same to the undersigned dulj temized and verified on or before :he 3rd day of October, 1921. *-29 W. E. FREE, Receiver of M. A. Kinard. School supplies of all kinds at Herald Book Store. Colds Cause Grij* and Influenza LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets remove the cause. There is only-one "Bromo Quinine." E. W. GROVE'S signature on box. 30c. S. G. MAYFIELD ATTORNEY AT LAW Practice in all courts, State and Federal. Office Opposite Southern Depot. BAMBERG. S. C. No Worms In a Healthy Child All children troubled with Worms have an un healthy color, which indicates poor blood, and aa < role, there is more or 1 ess stomach disturbance GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC given regu larly for two or three weeks will enrich the blood improve the digestion, and act as a general Strength ppmg Tonic to the whole system. Nature will tha throw off or dispel the worms, and the Child will b la perfect health. Pleasant to take. 60c per bowk DR. THOMAS EJjAUJX DENTAL SURGEON. Graduate Dental department Uni rersity of Maryland. Member S. C State Dental Association. Office opposite postoffice. Office hours, 9:00 a. m. to 5:30 p. m. A. B. UTSEY INSURANCE Bamberg, S. C. Habitual Constipation Cured in 14 to 21 Davs 'LAX-FOS WITH PEPSIN" is a speciallyprepared Syrup Tonic-Laxative for Habitua Constipation. It relieves promptly bul should be taken regularly for 14 to 21 days :o induce regular action. It Stimulates and Regulates. Very Pleasant to Take. 60< yer bottle. To Cure a Cold in One Day rake LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE (TableoO It stops the Coogh and Headache and works off thi Told. E. W. GROVE'S signature on each box. 30c Just Arrived New line of WINDOW iSASH AND DOORS Bamberg Lumber Co. Bamberg, S. C. Save Money "Talk trips" by long distance telephone offer you the most up-to-date ( way to attend to your business and social ^affairs in nearby or distant cities. a there and back quickly, [appointments that often erson. f.T.F.PHONE (OO) l \ A* COMPANY NEW PRICES OVTKLJlXD $775.00 ? Delivered. I ubes, Auto Parts, ises, Etc. Your Easiness Solicited UCKLE tG, s. c. tjr : We Will Have a C r FRl Ianc VEGET, in a fev phon: I Tom D - BAMBEBi The House of Qual RECEIVER ? Pursuant to a decree of I Circuit Judge, signed at Cliamb day of September, 1921, now on Court for Bamberg County, I w: \ est bidder the entire stock of F | the entire stock of Coffins t . the store formerly operated t said stock ,and fixtures wi i first in blocks and then a same brings more selling h , will be knocked down in that mi sale will be bad at the said stor S. C., on the 3rd day of Octol o'clock a. m. and continue until fixtures are finally sold and di cash. At the same time and p] the highest bidder, for cash, tin all notes, and bills receivable t Kinard. Eec I IMPROVED SI 1 Qau fliarn P Oil IUUUUIUU 1UU1 The through trains from to Washington and New ^ of Charlotte over the peri lanta-Washington trunk lii way System. Effective Sunday,, Leave Augusta '6 Aiken " Trenton " Batesburg u TiPYinp-fon I" Columbia '' Winnsboro " Chester " Rock Hill " Charlotte A'ri'e Washington " New York Early morning connectio for Buffalo, Pittsburgh, an< and Pennsylvania points. The Augusta Special is f; High clasg coaches to <" Drawing room sleeping ca ing cars for all meals. CONSULTI I Southern Kail j The Double Tracked Trunl H G-a., and Washi 1 " Complete Line of JIT ABLES j days 4 E 15 ucker a, s. c. ity and Service. 'C Q4IV U UIXEJMJ i lis Honor, Hayne F. Eice, ers, Aiken, S. C., on tlie 2nd l file in the office of Clerk of ill offer for sale to the highumiture and Fixtures, also 5 and Caskets, now in by M. A..Kinard; the ill be offered for sale, s a whole, and if the a blocks then the same inner, or vice a versa. Said e in the Town of Ehrhardt, )er, 1921, beginning at 11 the said stock of goods and sposed of. Terms of sale, lace, I will offer for sale to I 3 books, book accounts, and >elonging to the said M. A. W. E. FREE, I :eiver of M. A. Kinard. 1 jRVICE VIA l ^ way system Augusta and Columbia B rork are operated north B A :ected double track At- B 1 tie of the Southern Rail- B ? August 14, 1921. |i No. 32 m Augusta Spl. No. 36. B 12:15 P. M. , .12:20 P. M. m . 1:20 P. M. \ . 2:07 P. M. B j 2:44 P. M. fl i 3:20 P." M.' 5:10A.M. B 4:40 P. M. 6:30A.M. I 5:39 P. M. 7:20A.M. i 6:22 P. M. 8:05A.M. J 7:25 P. M. 10:15A.M. B 7:30 A. M. 11:00P.M. 1 1:30 P. M. 6:45A.M. J ns made at Washington B ffl iall Western New York B I amous for regularity. || J Washington. Pullman I rs to New York. Din- |9 | LGENTS. I A way System I V i Line Between Atlanta, Bj " ngton, D. C. j | -