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I ^ ^IHH Hootoi I BemgWell t ja| I Therefore let ou " I summer wearing H section. While ? I the most phenon I I Separate Skirts H I We believe that 01 ' n , I I is more complete th n 1 past. We have had 3 1 SEPARATE SKIR' v is S i , HI therefore prepared 1 I I in and let us show yo B | I I Piece I t I I At this particular t: > . v B I for these WARM SIT] . I FANCY, IN VOILE fl I ETTES and FLAXO] l H I ty you usually find W I preciate,your busines v * , Visitors in the Town And the Community 1 < ?Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Hill expect to move this week to Springfield. ?Mrs. W. H. Zeigler, of Cope, is visiting Mrs. E. A. Hooton this week. *" ?Mrs. L.^C. Smoak has gone to /? cnan^ cnmo tfmo with rpla 1UV/W11 bU O^/CUU OVUiV ?? * - ^ tives. -" ^ S ?Miss Theresa Ffwler spent a lew days in Columbia last week with V friends. ?Dr. M. H. Vara, of Atlanta, spent last week in Bamberg with relatives and friends, v \ ?D. Graham Copeiand. of NeW Orleans, was in the city for a few days last week. r 1 ?Miss Rowley Williams is spending some time in Estill, S. C., and Savannah, Ga. ; ?Miss Minnie Lee Ayer is spending some time in the mountains of > North Carolina. ?Miss Mary Ellen Eaves, after spending a week or two here; lias ) ' gone to Beaufort. , ?Mrs. E. V. Camp, of Atlanta, Ga., fs visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Hooton. * ?Mrs. J. Brice left last week for Charleston, where she is under treatment at a hospital. > ?Mrs. George P. Hair has returned to the city after spending a few i * weeks at Glenn Springs. * ?Mrs. Janie Sojourner, of Denmark, spent a few days in the city last week with relatives. 1 ?\V. H. Chandler left this week for Aiken, where he has a position ^ for the summer months. ?After spending some time with friends in the city Miss Dixie Faust has returned to Macon, Ga. * T> -I- J nf ?.urs. r raiiK l-suiie a,iiu uauj, wi. I Charleston, are visiting Mrs. H. J. Stuckey on Xew Bridge street. ?Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Hartzog, l of Atlanta, are spending this week in . the city at the home of V. J. Hartzog. ?Mrs. L. B. Fow.ler attended the meeting of the grand lodge of the Eastern Star in Columbia last week. 4 ?A. W. Knight, of Bamberg, was ^ in the city Tuesday evening on a short visit to his brother, F. B. Knight. He left Wednesday morning | for the meeting of the S. C. Press ^ association, which met at Myrtle Beach this week.?Sumter Herald. i's Ladies Dressed is an r years of experience f apparel, from the 1< we are showing a m ninal values ever off for Summer Wear I iir showing of SKIRTS I an at any time in the 1 an unusual business on I rs this season and are I for your wan^s. Come | Hoods of All Kinds and ime we are showing the PIEC MMER days, among them you S, ORGANDIES, SWISSE NR. The Prices, we think, ari at HOOTON'S. Come in an ;s, it matters not how small. lH( ?Miss Harriet Smith, of Williston, returned home Monday after a visit to Misses Vista' and Evelyn Brabham. ?Mrs. J. D. Copeland and children have gone to Como, Miss., to spend some time at Mrs. Copeland's old home. , v ?Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Bruce left last week for Atlanta, where they carried their little son, Arthur, for treatment. ?Mr. and Mrs. William R. Hutto, of Tampa, Fla., are spending some time in the city with Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Herndon. ?J. H. Cope returned to the city this week from Asheville, N. C., after spending a few days there. Mrs. Cope, who accompanied him, ^ill spend the summer in the mountains. ?W. H. Morris, a former resident of Bamberg county now living in Georgia was in town Tuesday. He is. visiting friends and relatives in this community after attending the Confederate reunion in Richmond. He is 79 years of age, but is hale and hearty, and he enjoyed his visit: to the former Confederate capital to the fullest extent. * ?Dr. Robert Black returned to the city Sunday night after a three j weeks tour of ' western points, in- j eluding a visit to San Francisco. His j friends will regret to learn that he was ill for several days during the j trip, and is still confined to his home ! here. Miss'Thelma Bailey, another member of the party, returned with him and is spending a few days here, j* Both Hit It. The Chinaman could speak but lit- i tie English and the Englishman could ! speak no Chinese; nevertheless the! dinner went off agreeably. There was one dish that pleased the Englishman. It was a rich stew of onions, pork, mushrooms and a dark, tender, well-flavored meat that tasted like duck. The Englishman ate heartily of this stew. Then he closed his eyes, lifted hi^ hands, shook his head with 1 an air of ecstaoy. After his compliment to the dish, ' he said interrogatively: "Quack, Quack?" "Xo, no," said the Chinaman. "Bow 1 wow." *1 ! ? ? Mr. and Mrs. Cary A. Sutter, of! : Boston, will spend six weeks in the j! Maine woods, living as Adam and ; Eve did. I' i Store an natter of Tast ; in Ladies' Ready-tc irgest and most com tore complete line o sred in Bamberg Co | Real Summer In our showing of ? will find many of th STYLES. We can fit y is complete in SIZES price to suit your Po WAIST, see us. . I Qualities * JE GOODS most wanted . will find the PLAIN and S, CREPES, GEORG3 reasonable for the qualid let us show you, we ap)OT( \ NOW ROLLS IN WEALTH. Author of 44A Perfect Day" Had Hard " Sailing For Many Years. .-Washington.?"We can be what we want to be, despite everything, if we set our minds and hearts on it. "Adversity is an opportunity. "I'm glad I've been poor; it makes one more human. But?I don't want to be starving poor any more!" Such is the creed of a woman who, left widowed and practically penniless at 30, has made fame and fortune in two lines of endeavor; first as a composer of songs, second as publisher of the output of her brain. This woman is Mrs. Carrie JacobsBond, best known as the author-composer of "A Perfect Day." When you meet the Mrs. Bond of today, prosperous, exquisitely gowned, gracious, cultured, it is difficult to picture her as battling poverty 20 years ago. "When I was only four," Mrs. Bond" said, "I could pick out on the piano any melody I heard. But in the little isconsin town where I spent my girlhood, no special attention was given to this gift. "When in my early twenties I married Dr. Frank Bond. We lived at Iron River, Mich. Most of my husband's patients were among the poor miners. For two years, follow.1 _ r lono hnchonr] ing 1116 paillC Oi lovo9 my jiiuojuau virtually doctored the poor gratis. Then, in 1895, Dr. Bond died. I went to Chicago to fight my own ight for existence. I knew something of china painting, and it was by painting china I managed to earn enough to buy food and clothes. Then I began to'try out s^me of the lerses and tunes .that came to me as I worked. "I painted my own title pages and offered these first songs to the pub- lighers. They were accepted, but they brought me mighty little in t?e way of royalties." An opportunity came for Mrs. Bond to sing at the executive mansion in Springfield. She needed the publicity and prestige such an opportunty would give her. But she 'had no gown fit for the occasion. "An old lace curtain was sacrificed and the gown was made," she says. About this time she decided the royalties she was getting weren't enough. So she determined to be her own publisher. The first publishing plant was installed in a hall bedroom in her Chi0 , id Readyp and Inform: ?V MAAUAAA1VA AAAI >-wear and Piece Gc pletely assorted stoc f higher class mere! unty are to be fou Shirt Waists SHIRT WAISTS you e NEWER kind and ou, for the assortment and STYLES, and a cket Book. If its a Gloves, Co ( These articles we havi many things other plac? very, often they are ovei ing to get what you wani and SAVE STEPS and I }N, B ! cago boarding house. The supplies j were kept in a closet. To advertise 'her songs, she accepted "concert" engagements at $10 per concert. The tide turned for the better, however, in 191 (f, with the publication of "A Perfect Day." Since that time more than 5,000,000 copies of this one song have been sold. "There 'have been many incorrect stories of how and where 'A Perfect Day' was written," says Mrs. Bond. "The words were written for a dinner card. Later I hummed the words one evening and a friend-exclaimed: I 'Oh, you've got another song!' " 'Maybe you're right,' I said. "The success of the song proved she was.". At the white house the other night, when Mrs. Bond^-*stopping on her way to Europe?was a guest, "A Perfect Day" was the closing number of the musical programme. It is President and Mrs. Harding's favorite melody. The president, in au- j tographing a photograph for his iguest, wrote: "With the gratitude of one who ever delights in an undying composition." J Mrs. Band's publishing house has grown from the hall bedroom in Chicago to a completely equipped mi hliaViin cr nlont at Hnllvwnnd Calif., and Mrs. Bond no longer has to wonder where the next meal is coming from or how her gown for a concert is to be improvised. "I think t?he present trend in music," says Mrs. Bond, "is decidedly toward more melodious music of the really human sort. "Manv music houses have failed \ recently. There has, however, been a steadily growing demand for the r\ n V, 1J c V, o t mi- nlont nil f in BUi-lgO ?C y U Uiioil a, v. HI v? (/luuv " Hollywood. "I do not know that the publishing of 'Jazz music' or a slump in the demand for that sort of compositions had anything to do with the failure, but I do notice a growing demand for the melodies that carry a real human note. The old fashioned waltzes'4 are coming back." Weary Willie's Wish. "You will never get anywhere unless you have higher ideals than this" preached the woman at whose door the tramp had applied for assistance. "Are you really content to spend your life walking around the country begging?" "No, lady," answered Weary Willie. "Many's the time I've wsihed I had an auto." to-Wear ition rather tl tods help you in your k of Ladies' Goods t landise than you fine nd here. Gome and Dresses for Mid * You know the kind a if its a DRESS of any and look ours over. V for HOUSE, STREET A look will convince yoi you wish, HOOTON'S Prices in accordance v select. J rsets, Hosiery, and Sma e always made a specialty of, :s, when it comes to the mos looked, and cause you to go fi t", but for these we invite you t HONEY. TELEPHONI amueig, TAX EXECUTION SALE. In accordance with the executions to me directed by B. F. Folk, Jr., city clerk and treasurer of the city of Bamberg, state of South Carolina, I have levied upon and will sell for cash in front of the court house door, Bamberg, S. C., on Thursday, July 20, 1922, during t'he legal hours of public sales, the following described lots in the city of Bamberg, said lots to be sold for taxes due and owing the said city of Bamberg: One and one-half acres, bounded' as follows: North by lands of Joe Dowling and lands of J. P. Ott; east ;by lands of J. P. Ott; south by lands /.of Mamie Flynn, and west by New 'Bridge street; said lot to be sold as the property of Hammond Hartzog. One lot containing one-fourth of. an acre, bounded as follows: West by lands of T. J. Jenerette and Henderson; east by a lane; north by T. J. Jenerette; south by Tecy Rice; said lot to be sold as the property of J. T. Minigahn. One lot 75x220 feet, bounded as follows: West by lot of J. Cooner; east by lot of William Carroll; north by Flynn street; south by a lane; said lot to be sold as the property of Oscar Rivers. J. W. McCORMACK, Chief of Police of Bamberg, S. C. June 28, 1922. To Control Fleas. Clemson College, June 17,?The following suggestions are made by Prof. A. F. Conradi, entomologist, in answer to inquiries on how to get rid of fleas." # 1. These pests originating on dogs1 and cats kepts as pets on premI ises, it is necessary to treat these ani rnals first. 2. After these animals have been properly treated, as well as their bedding, the places where fleas abound must also be treated. Such places are open spaces under the house, pig pens and places around the barns which dogs and cats frequent. The material suggested for treating is any one of the coal tar products, examples of which are, chloro naptholeum, creso, zenolium, and creolin. Bathe the dogs and cats thoroughly in a three per cent, solution of one of these coal tar products. After washing them, treat the bedding. Then make up a ten per cent, solution, and with a little foot pump or other kind of sprayer or sprinkling pot?if the place can be reached? apply this material thoroughly. Tim hasp nav nf a nrivatp snlriipr I during the World War was: United States, $1; Great Britain, 35 cents; France, 5 cents; Italy, 2 to 4 cents; and Germany, 10 cents. * * ? innln/tAmA E laiiiiiumiG | selection of your | 0 be seen in this B 1 at most places, ? let us show you. || Summer Wear I - j nd style we carry, so |1 kind you need, come * M Te are showing them m and CHURCH wear. i II that if its a TYR/ESS H ki U1AU/U XX X U\J %Ai X/AVXIVM ffgpfl is the place to look, f fl rith the garment you | II Wares I | for when you can find j m it essential garments M om place to place try- || o come to HOOTONJS ^ S. C. I IN MEMORIAM Mrs. Hibernia Hays and Miss Addys G. Hays. As the years go by and one by one the Chapter members pass beyond, it seems- most fitting that we should pause for a while and dbntemplate the mysteries of death and gatner J the riches from the lives of the departed members and record their deeds of service for the enhancement . J of the future goodness and greatness. No greater loss 'has ever come to the Chapter than was feft when, with- . vin the course of a few weeks, occur- _ . vi red the deaths of Mrs. Hibernia .. -i ? 1 J ways, ana or ner uaugmer, .maa Addys G. Hays. Both, loyal, devoted members, always ready to help carry forward the great work of the organization, we deeply feel the loss in their going and realize that their > places can never be filled. It was an especial treat to the members of the Chapter, when Mrs. Hays? was able to attend a meeting and igive in her ! humorous, vivacious manner, remi- / i niscence?.of the war and of the hardships endured during those trying days of the Sixties. , \ In those two deaths, we realize the fact that there-is something majestic in the exactims of death, it burnishes its sickle to garner the old who are ripe in experience and rich in good deeds and the young, who" are in love with life and with high-hopes and longings for the future.^ Death is at all times awe-inspiring -3 - -? rr i-fliroronpo tn tVlP<?P t/hft ami in uunig ~ beloved members and to the others of the band who have gone on before, we are reminded that we too shall pass this way but once and whatever of love or sympathy or hel^ for our fellow man we may plan to do must be done quickly ere our day too is ended. And to the sorrowing ones left behind we can give the assurance through our risen Lord thnr death is not the end of mortal existence, t^iat there is a life beyond the grave. MRS. W. P. JONES MRS. A. M. BRABHAM. v The* Problem. A man who had obtained work in a railway yard was told to mark some trucks. ? "Here's a bit of chalk," said the ji foreman. "Mark each of 'em elev-en." A little later the foreman came round again . There was a largo "T" on the first truck. Nothing else had T J ^ ueen uuue. "What does this mean?" asked the foreman. "Only one truck done and I said eleven not one." "I know," said the man, "but I couldn't think which side of the "I" the other "I" goes." ? Mrs. John J. Rigers, of Massachusetts, has begun an investigation of conditions in soldiers' hosrifcals as a personal agent of President Harding. * .33