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Visitors in the Town And the Community ?Albin Kirsch, Sr., is spending this week in Charleston. ?Col. W. C. Duncan left Monday for Manning, S. C., to spend a few days. . ?.Miss Mary; Ann Bronson is spending some time in the city with friends. ?Miss Ruth Owens, a B. Y. P. U. worker, of Aiken, was in the city Saturday. ?Miss Ethel McMillan left Tuesday morning for Anderson to spend some time. ?Miss Marianna Vaugban, of Augusta, is spending this week with ' Miss Nell Beard. ?Russell Floyd, of Spartanburg, spent a few days in the city last week with James Rhoad. ?Miss Mary Williams has returned to the city after a visit to friends at Lexington, S. C. ?Rev. M. B. Buckley, of Williston, spent Monday night in the city \ with C. W. Rentz, Jr. ?Mrs. M. A. Moye, Jr., and children, of Charleston, are visiting Mrs. S. A. Rowell and family. ?Mrs. Josephine Beach and Miss ArJa Tvmtsp have atone to Glenn Springs to spend a few weeks. ?Mrs. Mamie Murdaugh and Mrs. R. C. Jones leave this week for Westminster, to spend a few weeks. ?Mrs. W. A. Klauber and Mrs. S. C. Morris are spending some time in the mountains of North Carolina. ?Rev. S. O. Cantey and family left yesterday hv automobile for Asheville, N. C., to spend a few weeks. ?Mrs. A. M. Brabham and children have returned to the city after spending a few weeks on Sullivan's Island. ?Dr. and Mrs. J. C. Guilds and daughter, Mildred, spent the weekf end in the city with Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Folk. A" *" ?(Rev. T. C. O'Dell and family, of Columbia, were recent visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Brabham, Sr. ?Misses Willie Mae Allen and Esther Dagnall have returned home after a visit to relatives in Washington, D. C. ?Mrs. E. H. Henderson returned to the city Tuesday morning from Cedar Mountain, N. C., where she spent several weeks. . ?M. J. Black, C. E. Black and P. W. Free attended the funeral and r interment of Mrs. Jane Black, in Walterboro Saturday. ?Misses Nell Bla^t and Harriet Wiggins, after a visit to relatives at Clinton, are now visiting Mrs. Florence E. Hunter in Columbia. ?Little Misses Mildred Lewis, of Kline, and Dorothy Pace, of Savannah, visited at the home of Mr. and > Mrs. J. F. Carter this week. ?Mr. and Mrs. Ben. F. Barton, of Summerville, spent the week-end in the city with relatives. Mr. Barr ton lived here many years ago. ?Mr. and Mrs. C. J. S. Brooker returned Saturday after spending a month at Hot Springs, Ark., Colorado City, and other western points. y ?Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Wilkowski, of Augusta, have returned home after I anon/Hri^ a wAAk with Mrs. Wilkows ki's parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Beard. ?Mrs. G. Frank Bamberg has gone to Birmingham, Ala., to visit her son, ^ McGee Bamberg, -who has been quite ill, but who is now very much improved. ?V. J. Hartzog left Tuesday for the mountains of North Carolina, where he joins his son, Robert B. Hartzog, and Mrs. Hartzog, to spend a few weeks. ?Walter Curry, of Elizabeth, N. J., sfcent Monday night in the city. 4 Mr. Curry was employed here several years ago and has many friends in the* city. Since his last visit here he has been married to a New Jersey drl o? - w ?Hallie Huttc, one of the genial clerks of the Bamberg postoffice, is enjoying his vacation?at Camp Jackson?with the medical detachment of the 118th infantry, which is ' # doing twb weeks of training with the national guard. ?Miss Katherine C. Riley left Saturday for Asheville to attend the meeting of the Southern Underwriters association, after which she will go to Hendersonville, to be joined by Mrs. Helen Copeland, of Augusta, for a stay of some time. ? ?Col. W. C. Duncan, Rev. S. O. Cantey, C. R. Brabham, Jr., and A. W. Knight spent several days last wee*. un <x triy 10 -Auama uy auiurnubile. They report the crop prospects very poor from Augusta to Atlanta, although the land is ordinarily very productive. They were much impressed with the peach producing country through which they passed, however. Something About Milk. .Milk is our best all-round food. It S; is the most perfect tuod we have. It is also one of the cheapest foods, ev- <r en at the present prices. Milk is the most difficult of all our foodstuffs to collect, handle and transport. It requires the greatest care from pasture to pail, and pail to palate. Milk spoils quicker than any ofher food. 0 It spoils even quicker than fresh fruit and berries. It must be kept F clean, cold and covered. Milk tastes good; it is easily di- 0 gested, and is very nourishing. It makes bone, brawn and blood. In fact, the vigor and success of a na- If tion depend largely.upon the amount of milk it uses. In'the United States A we use something like forty billion quarts of milk a year. This would make a lake large enough to float all V. the navies of the world. Yet this is only about one-half a pint of milk a day for each person. Only one- "< quarter of this actually is used as milk, the other three-quarters being made into butter, cheese, and other I': milk products. Like all good things, milk has a few drawback^ but these are far out- W weighed by its advantages. \Tiiv ic thp ereat factor of safety S( in our diet. It makes ration complete and keeps the body strong. Drink more milk and use it freely T! in cooking. Milk is the best food we have. There is no substitute. Save on I other things if you must, but not on milk. Yoir'cannot afford to do with- B out it?growing children especially need plenty. Buy at least half a pint S< of milk a day for each person in the household. No other food can take Oi its place. Use it all; do not waste a drop. Milk looks like a simple fluid, but really it is very complex. A glass of milk contains a mixture of all the important things that make up a mixed diet. One can get the same nourishment from milk as from a meal made up of meat and eggs, sugar and cereals, oils and fats, with salt and water. Milk is a good fuel, because it contains fat and sugar. The body needs fuel to keep it warm and to make it move and work and play, just the same as the steam engine needs coal or the automobile needs gasoline. One quart of milk is about equal in fuel value to any of the follow- A< ing: 2 pounds salt codfish, 3 pounds fresh codfish, 4 pounds beets, 5 pounds turnips, 1-6 pound butter, 1-2 pound wheat flour, 1-3 pound cheese, 3-4 pound lean round beef, 2 pounds potatoes, 6 pounds spinach, 7 pounds lettuce, 4 pounds cabbage, 8 eggs. One ordinary glass of milk is about equal in fuel value to: 2 large eggs, 1 large serving of lean meat, 2 moderate sized potatoes, 5 tablespoonfuls of cooked cereal, 3 tablespoonfuls of boiled rice, or 2 slices of bread. Evolution of Transportation. A Elbert Hubbard wrote, before the Riser sent the Lusitania to the bottom of the sea, that? "The avolution in transportation jf has been rapid. From the time when man walked and carried a load on his back, to the time when man used a horse, is a long, long period. ^ "From the horse to the horse and wagon, from the horse and wagon to the horse car, was also a long, long time. If "From the horse car to the cable car was not long. From the cable car to the electric car was a short period. ' Y "Rapid transit began with the cable car. "The speed was increased by the electric car. re "These different means of trans- g portation were all born of man's ne- I cessities, kept pace with and were I concommitant with human progress, r "From a single electric car to a long train, such as is used on the elevated and subways, is an easy evolution. "The 'electric car annilhilated disj tance and lengthened man's day, one, i two, three, four hours, and some| times doubled his capacity for work. "Then came the automobile, which made electric street car and electric ; railroad transportation slow. And j the automobile has this advantage: it is not limited in its progress by steel and roadbeds. ^ "Anywhere that wheels can go, _ there goes the benzine buggy. The question is now being tried out, Can electricity compete with gasoline? i "In San Francisco there are a thousand jitney cars. Los Angeles , t has fifteen hundred. Seattle has five \| hundred jitney cars. "It is figured that in any of these r cities, with the natural growth of ^ the jitney service, the street car re- j ceipts would be depleted about eight million dollars a year." Mr. Hubbard was a keen student < of progress, and the world lost a 1 great man when the Kaiser sent him < to the bottom. He had his foibles. J 1 and what man has not? but his heart was in the right place?filled with loving kindness for 'his fellow men. Dan McCann Declares Himself. aid Dan McCann to a foreign man, who worked at the self-same bench. Let me tell you this," and for emphasis, he flourished a Stilson wrench, Dort't talk to me of the bourjeoissee, don't open your mouth to speak f your socialists or anarchists, don't mention your Bolsheveek or I've had Plough of this foreign stuff, I'm sick as a man can be P ^ nr\AAnV* S\G V. Ai A O /I T * rA tAlll'n T I L L IIOpCCLiI Ui uaic, ailU 1 III I you straight that this is the land for me! you wish to brag, just take that flag, and boast of its field of blue, nd praise the dead an' the blood they shed for the peace of the like of you. 11 hear no more," and he waved once more, his wrench in a forceful way, * y the cunning creed of some Russian breed. I stand for the U. S. A. m done with your fads and wildeyed lads, don't flourish your flag o' red 'here I can see, or- at night there'll be, tall candles around your bed. ) tip your hat to a flag like that! T&ank God tor its stripes ana stars! hank God you are here where the roads are clear, away from your kings and czars. can't just say what I feel like today, for I'm not a talkin' man, ut first an' last, I am standing fast for all that's American. ) don't you speak of the Bols'heveek, it's sick of that stuff I am. le God, one flag, is the creed I brag; I'm boosting for Uncle Sam." ?Edgar A. Guest. The Other Side of "If." you can keep your job while all about you Are losing theirs 'because their work's been slack; you can shut your mouth wheijL times arje changing ? Forget about your grievances to clack; you can show your boss when business slackens, You have no Bolshevism in your head, nd no belief that workmen own the nation? Were patriots when they earned their raisin-bread r you have saved a tithe of swollen wages, Extracted in the nations' stress or war, 'hen you at home were battling for your union, And, striking, held our Union up for more; you've put by, into your family savings, The huge excess employers had to pay, ^ nd did not blow your coin for cheap victrolas, .Or go in silken shirts or glad array; you have learned that when you quit your labor, The job you left was no longer your own, nd t'hat, no matter what your friends may say, It's murder when you club and * beat and stone; ' you nave learned to glory in your manhood, Not hide behind some banner of Unrest, ou may not "win the earth or all that's in it ? You'll be a decent citizen?that's ?"Rpn .Tnhnsnn * m w - '*rr* * WHITE WYCKOFF'S\ f . Stationery of course? fo //lose u?/io know & ? White & WyckofPs Distinctive c,^. Social Stationery v?aS 10 further description of these >opular correspondence papers s required. To those who are not acquainted with them?we shall ffl o trt ?finw JC CAV^CUlll^tJ 51UW IV W..W )ur line and to help them in heir selection. , _ THE HERALl) HOOK STORE Bamberg, S. C. WANTS HIM TO SHOW HAND. ' | New York Times Challenges Senator Watson (Intl.), to Waive Immunity, i We do not know nor do we care ! whether Senator Jim Watson believes j what he said yesterday in the senate j that the New York Times does not ; tell the truth about t'he tariff because I retail merchants will not let it. Sena- i tor Watson.,..*....* seems to regard j the immunity of legislative halls as a [ license to utter any libel. If he will j be obliging enough to repeat this j statement outside the senate cham ber, sheltered by no special privileges but those of the citizen held respon-j sible for his words, we shall make a j reply to which he will be compelled ! to pay attention?New York Times j editorial, June 23, 1922. To this indictment for libel and j the challenge to waive immunity, j Senator Watson has made no reply j either in the senate or in the public! press, so far as we can learn. He has not waived immunity so that he can be held legally responsible for his charge that importers control the policy of that great newspaper, the New York Times. He has not even filed a demurrer to the indictment. To those who know the ethics of t.hA metrnnnlitan nress. Senator Wat son's charge against the Times falls ofits own weight. Newspapers like the Times spend -every year many times the amount of Senator Watson's annual salary to keep their columns accurate, clean and fair Their main policy is to print the news and | to comment thereon uninfluenced by any consideration except to tell the truth,- which is the only reason for publishing a newspaper. Their ethical code is as high and inflexible as that of a virtuous woman. Advertisers do not place their advertisements in such paipers as a matter of favor, but in order to get nnanciai results from the quantity and character of the circulation of such papers. The same is true of the leading Republican newspapers of the United States as well as the great independent press. The charges that the metropolitan press is influenced or controlled by importers and retail merchants made by Senators McCumber and Watson (Ind.), are just as applicable to the smaller papers, for the so-called "country press" is governed by the same code of morals as the " metropolitan dailies, and the few exceptions in both cases only prove the rule. An incorruptible press is the chief safeguard of a nation, and when it is j assailed by the sleight-of-hand tarin tinkers in the framing of an extortionate tariff bill in the interest of one class against every other class, the honest press of the country, regardless of party, should be a unit in resenting and rebuking the assault. Dramatic Criticism. P (Heard at "Abraham Lincoln") ? Young Woman?"That's a fine play. Really, I never knew much about Abraham Lincoln before?except that he never told a lie." An Elderly Woman?"I agree, my dear, it's a very impressive play. But you must admit that the ending is highly improbable."?New York Tribune. Miss Ploreida Batson, of New York, selected as captain of the American Women's Olympic team, is the holder of the American records in low and high hurdles. I YOUR The campaign of th< MONDAY, JULY 31st. Now is your last ch; tecting this year's crop. If you "Wait, and Se Cards have been sen delivery points among t Warehouses run by the 1 If you are a membe stamped post card back 1 If you are not a me Farmers have organized This Organization is have no other interest t] themselves. All the men working growers. The interest oj The Board of Direct orously prosecute any vie While officials of th< necessary, the Associatioi any member to break his who breaks his contract > the penalty as provided i ITH^OBACCCMoR ai ran LIFE I I Why all this toil for triumphs of an hour? ?Young. 3| Life's a short summer?man is but a flower. ?Dr. Johnson. By turns we catc'h the fatal breath and die. ?Pope. The cradle and the tomb.'alas! how nigh! ?Prior. 9? To be is better far than not to be. 4?Sewell. Though all man's life may seem a tragedy. ?Spencer. H But light cares speak when mighty griefs are dumb. ?Daniel. S| The bottom is but shallow whence they come.?Sir Walter Raleigh ?8 Thy fate is the common fate of all. ?Longfellow. 9 Unmingled joys here no man befall. Southwell. 9 Nature to each allots his proper sphere. ?Congreve. m Fortune makes folly her pecualiar care. ?Churchill. ng Custom does often reason overrule. ?Rochester. S And throw a cruel sunshine on a fool. ?Armstrong. 9 Live well; hiw long or short permits to Heaven. ?Milton. jra They who forgive most shall be forgiven. ?Bailey. Sj }?mH Sin may be clasped so close we cannot see its face. ?French. U Vile intercourse where virtue has no place. ?Somerville. 1 Then keep its passion down, however, dear. ?Thompson. f jra Thou pendulum betwixt a smile and tear. ?Byron. Q Her senseless snares let faithless pleasure lay. ?Smollett. 9 With craft and skill to ruin and betray; ?Crabbe. ^ ? Soar not too high to fall, but stoop to rise. ?Massinger. "We masters grow of all that we despise. ?Crowley. gj Oh, then, renounce that impious sel::-esteem. ?Beattie. ?3 Riches nave wings ana granaeur is a ciream. ?\jowper. ? Think not ambition wise because 'tis brave.?Sir Wm. Davenport. I The path of glory leads but to the grave. ?Gray. '' I What is ambition? 'Tis a glorious cheat. ?Willi?. II Only destructive to tbe brave and great. ?Addison. 9 What's all the gaudy glitter of a crown? ?Dryden. ' The way to bliss lies not on beds of down. ?Francis Quarles. Sj How long we live, not years but actions tell. ?Watkins. - JM That man lives twice who lives the first life well. ?Herrick. I Make then, while yet you may, our God your friend.?Wm. Mason. 9 Whom Christians worship, yet not comprehend. ?Hill. I The trust that's given guard, and to yourself be just. ?Dana. | For live we how we may, yet die we must. ?Shakespeare. I ?SYRACUSE HERALD. 1 I if'Have Your Auto Repainted^ ] WHILE ON YOUR SUMMER TRIP AND g Your Top Recovered III H WHILE THE SUN IS SHINING. ||| 1 You will need it when it rains. Ill j You will be much surprised in your old car. ijjj | You will wonder how it's done. ||| I Estimates furnished cheerfully. ||| I Prices are the smallest items we have. ||j GET BUSY AND GET THE ||| . |j QPFriAI PPTPFS III 1 Ill ^ U1 A A OF THE NEXT FIFTEEN DAYS. ==============^^=^^===; ' ^ K. J. GILLAM II HIGH GRADE AUTO PAINTING AND TRIMMING. .? 11 "Null Sed." . ^ ^PHONE 158. ORANGEBURG, LAST CHANcfTl j e Tobacco Growers Cooperative Association CLOSES ON m Mice to join with 75,000 organized Tobacco Growers in pro- 8 1| e" now, we prophesy that you will WAIT AND LOSE. ? t to member growers, giving them opportunity to choose their |1 he markets of South Carolina, which all have Cooperative 1 Tobacco Growers Cooperative Association. . * ^ ir, do not fail to name your choice of market, and mail the ? :o headquarters, with the information requested. 1 imber, Join Today in the Association which 75,000 Tobacco '4 for their own good. . 1 formed by Tobacco Growrers who have elected directors that ian the orderly marketing of the crop for the growers and M ; for the Association are the direct employees of the member |j f these employees are the interests of the growers. || :ors owes it to the 75,000 growers of the Association to vig- j| )lation of contract. jj| 3 Association hope that no suits against any member will be ,1 a will vigorously prosecute any person or persons who induce M \ Marketing Contract with the Association; and any member j? ,vith the Association by selling his tobacco elsewhere will pay $ij n his contract. f! LOWERS COOPERATIVE ASSOCIATION I