The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, July 27, 1922, Page 7, Image 7
Denmark Items
r
Denmark, July 22.?Rev. W. E.
Wiggins, pastor of the Bethel Park
Methodist church, has been assisting
in the revival meeting' at Holly Hill
the past week.
Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Fanning are
visiting relatives at Springfield.
Misses Gladys Sanders and Xell
Thomas, of Barnwell, are visiting
Miss Louise Brooker.
After a visit of several days here,
Miss Thelma Walker returned to
her home in Columbia.
Mrs. Felix Goudelock, of Union, is
visiting her mother, Mrs. Robert L.
Zeigler.
St. Clair Guess spent several days
in Florence this week where his baby
has been receiving treatment at a
hospital.
Misses Annie Margaret and Lina
Zeigler are visiting relatives in Leesville.
/
Miss Anna Goolsby is visiting her
sister in Beaufort.
Chaperoned by Mrs. Andre R. Wal>
lack, the Campfire girls spent a delightful
day on the Edisto river this
week.
The B. Y. P. U. held a picnic at
Holman's bridge on the Edisto river
Tuesday evening.
Mrs. G. C. High is visiting home
folks at Gaffney.
Miss Lula Bess Wroton is attending
summer school in Raleigh, N. C.
The Young People's Cooking club
met at the high school building Wednesday
morning with Miss Vara as
instructor.
Mrs. W. E. Wiggins and daughter,
VIvia, visited relatives in St. George
this week.
Aft QTir? Mro T S Wnltpr and fam
ily spent the day in Walterboro last
Sunday.
. Mrs. Williams, of Allendale, is
visiting her daughter, Mrs. O. J.
Frier, at the Baptist parsonage.
Miss Genevieve Wroton is the
guest of relatives in Columbia.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Richards,
after a pleasant visit to Miss Delia
Folk, have returned home to Columbia.
Dr. Welbourne, of Union, was a visitor
to Denmark this week.
Mrs. J. Z. Brooker and son are visiting
relatives in Savannah.
Miss Dorothy Crum is visiting relt
atives in Fairfax.
Miss Parker, of Thomasville, Ga.,
was the guest of her aunt, Mrs. W. E.
Wiggins, last week.
Mr. and Mrs. T. P. McCrae and
family motored to Laurens Wednesday
to visit Mrs. McCrae's sister, Mrs.
J. W. Todd, Jr., and returned Thursday
via Newberry and brought back
the out of town guests who had atr
tended the Kinard-Steadman wed.
ding on Thursday.
Miss Genie Fogle entertained a
few friends on last Wednesday evening
with rook. After a series of
gmes a salad course was served to
aDout zv guests present.
Judge Holman, of Barnwell, was
the guest of J. Arthur Wiggins last
r Wednesday.
Mrs. Lucius Willis, who has been
visiting relatives at Lancaster for a
month, has returned home with her
baby.
PARTRIDGES WELL.
>
Hatched and Mothered by Bantam
Hen in York.
York, July 22.?Ten of the eleven
partridges hatched by a bantam hen
> belonging to Dr. M. W. White, we'll
known dentist of York, some six
weeks ago, still live and are growing
fast. The baby partridges follow
their foster mother around the White
t premises just like little chicks would
do and so far they give no indication
of going to the wilds. Since the
hatching of the partridges was announced
Dr. White has been the recipient
of letters from peo'ple all over
South Carolina, wh6 were eager to
buy a pair of the young partridges or
else the whole lot. However, he has
declined to sell them. His idea is to
raise them to maturity in his own
back yard if they are willing to remain;
or if their wild instinct predominates
and they are inclined to
take to the wilds he is willing. Their
principal diet so far has been grasshoppers
and Dr. White has been hard
" put to catch enough grasshoppers to
satisfy their appe tites. However,
they are now large enough to help
find their own food. There *ere
eleven eggs in the partridge :.es. that
Dr. WThite found on his farm near
Vioy*q ond m-M. ?V> rf.mfU'S'l fn hlS
iivt U1IU t? U I C.i lAVy ? V % - w -
home in order to set under the ban?
tam. One of the partridges died soon
after it was hatched; but aH the
others are sturdy and strong.
Mrs. Louis R. Wardner. of Hal t
lister, Cal., who acted as a nurse during
the civil war, is the oldest Red
Cross nurse on the Pacific coast. She
is now past 90 years of age, but still
; retains her interest in relief work
among the sick and needy.
From Norman Mack '5
Buffalo Timet
"Vender."
: "It's better hoein' yender?
? Fer they ain't no stones t' hender,"
The words that Silas Higginbotham
alius says t' me;
! "Th* patch that we're a-hoein'
Is the worst they is a-goin?
It's better over yender, boy," Silas
says, says he.
"Th' clouds is breakin' yender?
I was 'feared th' shower 'd hender
Our wnrk t'dav " sp? Silas kind of
happy-like, t' me;
"I thort th' rain had found us,
But I guess it's goin' round us?
A-goin' way off yender, boy," Silas
says, says 'he.
Lord bless sich men as Silas,
Teachin' trouble not V rile us?
Lord fill 'em full o' blessin's jist as
full as they kin be;
Them folks, so good an' tender,
That see better things off yender,
Th' same as Silas Higginbotham alius'
shows t' me!
x ?John D. Wells.
A Xew York woman was arrested
because she had a persistent 'hallucination
that she was a great singer,
flood! KeeD it up!
A Gambler's Deductions.
We're nary a bit of a student
Of humanity's wares and its traces;
But, gobble this hunch,
There's folks?yes, a bunch?
Who are bluffing their way through
on deuces!
Throwing a Wrench Into Hop's Birthday
Party.
While Uncle Hop Bowen was celebrating
his 76th birthday last week
his wife presented him with twins, a
boy and a girl.?Monroe Co., Mo.,
Appeal.
Still they come, those Sundays
? t 1? ?_ r il *.?
wneil lilt! can 01 uie gia.it: la iuuuci
than the call of outdoors.
\
Don'ts.
4 (By Joe Crimson.)
Don't continually chew the rag?
swallow it!
Don't say you cannot set your table
on four dollars per week?let
me introduce you at MY boarding
house.
Don't laugh at these things?pray
for me.
It cost a Chicago man $35,000 to
hug another man's wife and sit on
the sofa with her. Gee, that was a
costly souvenir "spoon"!!!
Why do we always say "she has a
jretty foot?" Sam Hill, is she onelegged?
What's become of the old-fashioned
girl with a lap?
"Where Will Women Shop?"
shouts a Virginia paper. Well, in
front of a white goods sale window
for one place. And. right in the elevator
door for another.
What Mary Really Had.
r Alary naa a *mie iamu
With mashed potatoes fine,
Then she hail a do/en smells
And topped 'em of: with wine.
Maty had :.n *asy nvult?
I think his name was: Jones?
Anyway what Mary had i
Cost Jones-v twenty bones.
An Indiana hen has laid 240 eggs
in 247 davs. We hope the other hens
*
see this!
The truly up-to-date person, instead
of decorating (?) his house
with adhesive or poison fly-paper,
will install a neat little electrical
device, hook it to a plug, and let the
current do its part in reducing the
~ - - - ? ? T. 1 "U ^ ^
fly population or nis neignuuiiiuuu.
A citizen of Bremerton, Washington,
has invented this device?a simple
machine which is is baited, con.
nected with an ordinary electric
light plug, hung on the wall and left
to electrocute all the flies which
otherwise would pester the baby and
interrupt father's Sunday afternoon
nap.
Darwin said?Clothing was first
used as a matter of decoration. First
people painted their bodies?then
clothing formed the decoration;
while feathers, horses' tails and beads
made up the head gear. Fashions
have evoluted. We have been told
that in women's dresses, the fashion
makers have actually "overstripped"
one another.
Miss Pauline M. Floyd is the
youngest woman lawyer practicing
before the United States supreme
court.
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