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Husbands Fought Against British The Columbia State. Long ago though the war of 1812 and the Mexican war seem nowadays ?almost lost "in the dark backward ani abyss of time"?ne/erlheless even now no less than three widows are live of South Carolinians who enrvorJ in thp war nf 1X12 and OTi6 survivor is left of that gallant command which stormed ChapuUepee castle, the Palmetto reg'mont. The State has obtained from the bureau of pensions in Washington, through the good offices oi Senator N. B. Dial, the data on file, in respect of these venerable pensioners Only one resides now in Sou'h Carolina: Tvlvs. Mary McGra v jives near Columl ia on R. F. D. ;oute .\o. 1, from luge ft. The buroiu repo-.s on he four as follows: Three "1812" Widows. "Armenia I. Anderson, Cedar Grove, Ga., widow of Robert Anderson, fifer Carolina Naber's company, South Carolina militia, war of 1812. Soldier enlisted November /6, 1814, and was discharged March 16, 1815. He married Eliza W. Sullivan at Augusta, Ga., February 13, 1825, who died in 18S0 or 1881. He married Armenia l. uatiett, reoruary 2?, 1883, in Walker county, Georgia. The soldier died January 12, 18S7, at Cedar Grove, Ga. "Mary Ann Grice, R. F. D. No. h, Columbia, Miss.; widow of Britton Grice, alias Emanuel Moake, p/ivate in Captain William Taylor's company South Carolina militia,, war of 1812. Soldier enlisted October 7, 1814, and was discharged March 7, 1815. He married Rebecca B. Cox, December4 f 1854,. in Marion county, March 18, 1873. He married Mary Ann Moore, August 4, 1S76, in Marion county, Mississippi. Soldier died July 21, 1890, in Marion county, Mississippi. "Mary McGraw, R. F. D. 1, Lugoff, S. C.; widow of Marshall McGraw.. private in Capt. James Kinkaid's company, South Carolina militia, war of 1812. Soldier enlisted Octo1 ber 45, 1814, and was discharged March 6, 1815. No d^ata as to his | first marriage is . on file except that ; his wife, Jemima, died October 6,! >- 1880.x He married Mary Hardy on; March 1, 1886, in Kershaw county. South Carolina. "nrt^cra. XT A Kr??nr R T? D 1 XX . nuu^;, i?. X . X.. X, Clay, Miss.; corporal in company L,j ' Palmetto regiment, South Carolina; volunteers, war with Mexico. He en-; listed January 20, 1847, and was dis-J charged July 1848. He was in; Quitman's brigade and was with: General Shields an the battle of Con\ treras and Churubusco and was severely wounded at Churubusco, Mex-! Ico, on x\ugust 20, 1847." Mrs. McGraw residing now near] Lugoff, in Kershaw county, is the. "baby" of all the '*1812 widows" now on the rolls, of whom there are 49.1 i She is only 62. Mrs. Anderson, the next youngest, is older by 11 years.] The average age is a little more than] 85. ^The oldest is 104. Three are] centenarians, and the remainder ' with the single exception of Mr3. McGraw, are past 70. The^ husbands] came from 13 states. The widows1 now live in 21 states, ten of which] "had not been established when their lius'bands fought for the flag. Mr. x\bney is 94. The average] age of the 73 Mexican war veterans' Is 93 1-2 years. The oldest is 102. Here's The Trouble. I Dillon Herald. < Saturday's papers carried a press dispatch from an Alabama city telling a sordid storv of moral degeneracy the sequel o* which was the' tnu.cei of a man 06 ye its c-d and; blasting forever of the character of a 1 year old girT. dhe reading worti peruses such stories in a carele-TO ma unci. wandering he such things can happ-n passes ~ to something else nre interesting and soon forgets. Very few people take the time or have the inclination to study out thei underlying causes. They know thatj so n thi! j i wrong?that there has been a weakening of the moral fi. bre?but so long as it does not reach the ir.rer circles of their homes they are satisfied to dismiss such ghastly affairs with a shrug of the shoulders and the reflection that those who sin must pay the price. But the illustrated sections of the Sunday papers tell another story. Here all -lie filth and slime and immorality c: the week are raked up and presented to the gaze of the American you-;li in the shape of nude women of scmi-respectablilitv. On one r*r*e yoc. will find the almost nude fi p re o-" some notoriety-seek-j ing c ire who poses as the world'sj chu. * . t-weight "prize fighter." : challenges all comers. On anoth . eee you will find the almost nude r'^r>f some so-called cham pion '-.. r'-r. and perhaps on another the almost nude forms of "society 'ris" 'bathing on the beach." Sw.:.. * ago the government GIRL DIES FROM SXAKE BITE. Little Doris Cranshaw Passes ai Home of Parents. CoClumbia, Sept. 8.?Little Dorh Cranshaw, seven year old daughtei of .Mr. and Mrs. B. D. Cranshaw. 1103 Woodrow street, died at hei home early yesterday morning frorr the effects of the bite of a snake which she suffered last Tuesday after! when she was in a corn field witt other children about seven miles from Blaney. The little girl, who was barefooted, was in a corn field on the Kirkland place and was trying to climt in the back of a wagon, which was drawn by a mule. While passing through the field the mule gave a sudden start and a moment later the little girl felt something strike her on the right leg. She was taken seriously ill in a short time and was carried to Blanev, where first aid was administered, and later was brought to Columbia, and despite efforts that were made to save her life passed away yesterday. ; She was conscious at times after reaching her home. While no one saw the snake, all symptoms were those of snake bite. The mule, which was struck on a hind leg, was also at once affected by the venom injected where the fangs of the reptile broke the skin. The attending physician said last night that the probability was that a rattlesnake had struck the little girl. Doris is survived by her father and mothH and by two brothers, Donald and Marvin, and two sisters, Misses Margaret and Lena Cranshaw. She was a bright and attractive cnna and her tragic reath has brought sorrow to her friends and little playmates. The funeral services will be held at the residence, 1103 Woodrow street, at 4 o'clock this afternoon and will be conducted by the Rev. W. S. Hardin. Interment will be in Elmwood. excluded from the mails a certaic magazine which one always found iE barber shops because it carried the pictures of half-naked women in various poses. That magazine was .a Sunday school pamphlet as compare ed to some of the illustrated Sunday supplements that are allowed to circulate through the mails as secondclass matter. Some of the women who pose for the camera are said to be women of respectability. This may be true. But the women who allow a permanent record to be made of her nude flgifre has no sense of decency. What must be the feelings of a daughter or son, a grand daughter or grand son who a generation or so from now gazes upon such a picture and says this was my mother or my grand mother held up to the world in all lier nakedness? But let us go a little further. Paris, as most of us know, is the Babylon of the universe. Even before the war its morals were at a low ebb. Since the war. if we are to believe the newspapers, it has been the scene ofi revelries that would have made Nero, the most depraved of all moral lepers in history, blush for shame. Here is a Paris dispatch taken from Monday's papers that eclipses anything we have ever seen in the public prints: ''Paris, July 3.?As the result of the wildest week-end party ever given, forty French beauties are back in Paris minus their tempers and the reputations as being the most extravagant dressers in Europe. It took a bevy of American and English musical comedy stars to outclass the French in the matter of sensational gowns. "The party was given by Wolf Joel, son of Sully Joel, famous Johannesburg diamond king, at Pourville, the new gambling resort near Dieppe in which he is a large shareholder. "Four hundred of the most famous beauties in Europe received return tickets from London and Paris to attend the opening of the Casino. "Joel announced that he wanted to 'out deauville Deauville' in eccentri - - -- -c a n rl s? c MlP TPSUlt l_"l ly u i. laouiuua uuu %.?? Parisian beauties came prepared. "Nina Mval, and two other actresses traveled 150 miles from Paris attired in bathing suits. Ninette Juree came chiefly atired in a wig and a georgette kimona, like a harem queen. "On their arival, however, the French found that American and British women had gone them one better. Betty Trelswmey, former Follies chorus girl, and more recently a dancer In Paris, promenaded swathed more or less in narrow ribbons. Frances Baker, of Chicago, revived the 'half p^ece' bathing suit, which was only fourteen inches long from top to bottom. "Lady Diana Cooper. England's reigning beauty, created a sensation in a lovely one-piece light blue bathing suit over which she wore an organdie kimona. "Phillys Dare wore a London creation of 'beauty ventilators' designed TO FLY AT XIGHT. t Postoffiee Department Making Plans For Xew Mail Service. 3 Establishment in the near future * by the postoffic-e department of night flying in the air mail service between * Chicago and Cheyenne, Wyo., which i will make a flight across the conti' nent in less than thirty-six hours pos sible, was assured when J. A. McGee l of the Washington headquarters > made a recent inspection trip over the proposed route. Moinr n \ Tnmilson. in charee of the Reno air field, said the plans of ? the department are to create landing > fields every twenty^five miles with ,r beacon lights which would enable the < pilots to follow the course and would > furnish suitable spots on which to ' make forced landings. McGee, in his inspection trip, made the flight across the country with air > mail pilots to make a survey of the region and to find desirable landing plrces. I With the adoption of these plans, > planes may leave San Francisco in the morning, reach Cheyenne by t nightfall, Chicago by daybreak and New York before the end of the sec ond day. i LEE'S FAMOUS HORSE. - Beautiful White Steed is Subject of Moral Painting. The two historical horses, the ' mounts of General Gfrant and Gen eral Lee, which appear in Stanley . Arthur's mural painting, ''The First " + rvn_ uay oi reauc, iui mc a t i^v i ver, Del., have been arousing discus sion among veterans who remember the heroes' favorite steeds. The white horse upon which General Lee is mounted in the picture, has been identified as Traveler, the . silver beauty that went through four I years of war with the Confederate. commander and escaped without a scratch. General Lee was his only rider. No one else might put a sad1 die on Traveler, and after his mas1 ter's death he had to be turned out 5 to pasture, for he would permit nobody to mount him. General Lee took Traveler with ' him when he accepted the presidency of Washington and Lee university and moved to Lexington, Va. He rode the war charger along the highways about the college, often so lost ' in thought that he passed people without seeing them. To, every mood Traveler would -ac' commodate his gait, and he had al!j most all the gaits known to the train'} ed saddle horses of fhe Virginia gen'j tlemen of that day. When he died, * rj Richmond and Lexington mourned | an equine'idol.?Detroit News. i *?*"**?^?P | to provide maximum coolness. Mrs. "* r ~ ? ? J ? J ^ /Inn rtArl J1116 i ilOIQpSOLl Uilieil <Aiiu uautcu xxx the Casiho wearing her famous backless gown, revealing the most magnificent shoulders in the world. "Gladys Cooper, gaiety star, wore the most fragile bathing suit ever , seen, constructed of expensive lace ! which would be ruined on the slightI est contact with salt water. I "Almost everybody in European society attended the opening, including Lord Holmesdale, Earl of Pontarlington, Lord and Lady Tichborne, Lady Joan Mulholland, Andre De | Foqueres, Princess De Chimay. Mari quis De Mun, Princess De Radziwell, | Princess Faucigy, Lucinge, nee Fos| ter; Princess Michael Murat, nee I Stallo; Countess De Gramado, nee | Brown; Countess Kergoclay, nee Carj roll; Countess Lepic, nee Whitcomb; | Major General Branker, George Gres smitIV Fanny Ward and Ivor Novello." The foregoing is enough to make angels weep and devils laugh. NoI tice the names of "prominent sociei ty leaders" who atended the mad debauch as spectators. The first question one asks after reading of this disgraceful affair is, "Where were the police? Why did not the strong arm of the law reach out and throw these moral transgresi sors into prison? Why are such people allowed to pollute the atmosphere in which respectable people live and move?" But the answer is fofind in the same spirit of indifference with which we look upon the immoral Sunday supplements which parade the nakedness of women before the American public. Nowadays the man on the other side of the earth is almost a next door neighbor. Wireless transmission of sound, the cables and fiveday mail ships have made the world mighty small. A scandal in Paris or Hong Kong is almost a community affair. Tt reflects itself in America through the medium of the immoral Sunday supplement. Who knows but it is just such as that has blighted forever the life of the 15-' year old Alamaba girl and crushed fond parents with sorrow? We know of the fate of Babylon and Sodom and Rome. If we follow in their beaten paths is there any reason why we should escape a similar fate??Dfion Herald. /%/%/% Cures Malaria, Chills, Fever, Bilious Fever, Colds, and LaGrippe. V ? s J. F. Carter B. D. Carter q J. Carl Kearse Carter, Carter & Kearse ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW ,? I Special attention given to set- 1 tlement of Estates and Investiga- * tion of Land Titles. Loans ne- i iotiated on Real Estate. S. G. MAYFIELD ATTORNEY-AT-LAW g carroll s s CARROLL I h teaches IRaP 3 watches Watchmaker 11 to and n| tell Jeweler I I the pl truth Bamberg, S. C. RENEWED TESTIMONY No one in Bamberg wno suffers backache, headaches or distressing urinary ills can afford to ignore this Bamberg man's twice-told story. It is confirmed testimony that no Bamberg resident can doubt. James A. Mitchell, R. F. D. mail carrier, Calhoun St., says: "The jarring of driving caused the weakness and pains I suffered with my back. Doan's Kidney Pills brought m? relief in a short while and I never lost a chance to say a good word for them." FOUR YEARS LATER Mr. Mitchell said: "Doan's Kidney Pills | cured me of disordered kidneys and my cure is permanent." 60c, at all dealers. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo. N. Y. PORTABLE AND STATIONARY AND BOILERS Saw, Lath and Shingle Mills, Injectors, Pumps and Fitting!, Wood Saws, Splitters, Shafts, Pulleys, ' Belting, Gasoline Engines LAHOBSTOCK LOMBARD Foundry, Machine, Boiler Worke, Supply Store. AUGUSTA, GA. I Funeral Directors and Embalmers MOTOR HEARSE J. COONER & SONS BAMBERG, S. C. I TIRES &TUBES I As good onyour I automobile as they I were onyourbicycle I I J. COONER SONS I I jjllpij JM TEE PR] 1 MinL?MS, AS ^^g^pTHESE AR ! ^^p?|advice, I I ?vI^?^Imay BE Q] I It is the purpose of t many people Whether your problem be n i I be of service, we want WELCOME Yl RESOURCES 0?E1 - ' 'k-' * * -r '' .. Practice in all courts, State and Federal. Office Opposite Southern Depot. BAMBERG, S. C. 1 Queer 1 j I Feelings g' ^ "Some time ago, I was very i/p m Irregular," writes Mrs. Cora yf) im r> _ ?**_ _e n-i ,?_ T/ (If Iml ?i Kooie, 01 riKcvme, ivy. -1 % suffered a great deal, and knew ggj m I must do something for this gg] Sgj condition. I suffered mostly Kgj. % with my back and a weakness in ggj ggj my limbs. I would have dread- ggl ful headaches. I had hot flashes Kgj % and very queer feelings, and oh, eg how my head hurtl 1 read of ^ 1CARDUII 1 The Woman's Tonic 1 ? ^ and of others, who seemed to [ fa have the same troubles I had, \fa * fa being benefited, so I began to jZj s fa use it. I found it most bene- jjgn 0 fa ficiaL I took several bottles m fa .... and was made so much ffa (s fa better I didn't have anymore \fa t I fa trouble of this kind. It reg- \fa fa ulated me." fig! o fa Cardui has been found very y/i helpful in the correction of many Kgj * cases of painful female dis- ^ " orders, such as Mrs. Robie Kgj mentions above. If vou suffer Kg) as she did, take Cardui?a wn purely vegetable, medicinal Kgj tonic, in use for more than 40 xg] years. It should help you. igf Sold Everywhere. gg NOTICE. If you need money and wish it on I long terms in amounts less than ten I thousand ($10,000.00) Dollars, Iycan I make your application to the Federal I Land B/nk for suoh loans. For the ? white people, the 'Denmark National Farm Loan Association; the colored people the Edisto-Savannah River National Farm Loan Association. ' Come at once and sign your appli- J cation. S. G. MAYFIELD. J" R. P. BELLINGER , ' ATTORXEY-AT-LAW {j General Practice in All Courts Office Work and Civil Business a Specialty. Dffices in rear over Hoffman's Store BAMBERG, S. C. b u To Cure a Cold in One Day e rake LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE (Tablet*.) It v stops the Cough and Headache aad works off the b Cold. E.W. GROVE'S signature on each bex. 30c. B T ESENT DAY PROB- I \ THEY COME UP, E TIMES WHEN OUR \ SERVICE OR HELP f F BENEFIT. -his Bank to help as \ as possible. * large or small, if we can I \ you to know that we g | OU GLADLY. \ I I R $1,000,000.00 1 0~ wujjiiiyi SI E ! > -r '- ; * :- -- "a ' . '*tvaS" ? DR. THOMAS BLACK DENTAL SURGEON Graduate Dental Department Uniersity of Maryland. Member S. C. tate Dental Association. Office opposite postofflce. )ffice hours, 9:00 a. m. to 5:30 p. m. Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days >ruggists refund money if PAZO OINTMENT falls o cure Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Files, nstantly relieves Itching Piles, and yoo can get estful sleep after the first application. Price 60c. [lie Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance Co. Of Philadelphia ,Vill pay you an "Income" if yon live < ?your family if you die?yon should know about this plan w. REXTZ, JR., District Manager, Bamberg, S. C. Habitual Constipation Cured in 14 to 21 Days LAX-FOS WITH PEPSIN" is a speciallyirepared Syrup Tonic-Laxative for Habitual Jonstipation. It relieves promptly but hould be taken regularly for 14 to 21 days o induce regular action. It Stimulates and Verv Pleasant to Take. 60c >er bottle. Colds Cause Grip and Influenza LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets remove the cause. There is only one ' Bromo Quinine." E. W. GROVE'S signature on box. 80c RILEY & COPELAND Successors to W. P. Riley. Fire, Life Accident INSURANCE Office in J. D. Copeland's Store BAMBERG, S. C. To Stop a Cough Quick ake HAYES' HEALING HONEY* a tough medicine which stops the cough by lealing the inflamed and irritated tissues. A box of GROVE'S O-PEN-TRATE IALVE for Chest Colds, Head Colds mid Jroup is enclosed with every bottle of LA YES' HEALING HONEY. The salve hould be rubbed on the chest and throat 4 children suffering from a Cold or Croup. The healing effect of Hayes' Healing Honey inide the throat combined with the healing effect oI irove's O-Pen-Trate Salve through the pore* of be skin soon stops a cough. Both remedies are packed in (me carton and the < ost of the combined treatment is 35c. Just ask your druggist for HAYES' lEALLNG HONEY. \ DR.G.M.TRULUCK -SPECIALIST1 > Eye, Ear, vNose, and I Throat I, \ SK Barton Bldg. Phone 274 I Orangeburg, S. C. I No Worms In a Healthy Child Ail children troubled with Worms have an tm* ealthy color, which indicates poor blood, and as a ale, there is mare or less stomach disturbance. ROVE'S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC given regalrly far two or three weeks will enrich the Mood, mprave the digestion, and act as ageneralStreogfening Tonic to the whole system. Nature will then brow off or dispel the worms, and theChOdwttfba i perfect health. Pleasant to take. flOcperteOla. NOTICE OF SALE. , ??? Pursuant to an order of the Proate Judge for Bamberg County, the ndersigned, as Administrator of the state of B. M. Roberts, deceased* rill sell at public auction, to the ighest bidder, for cash, at the late esidence of B. M. Roberts, deceased, t Ehrhardt, S. C., on the 22nd day : ? September, 1922, beginning at 10 'clock, A. M., and continuing until old, certain personal property beanging to said estate, consisting of wo (2) second hand automobiles, ousehold goods and furniture, etc., n inventory of the same being on file a the office of the Probate Judge of lamberg County. ^ R. C. ROBERTS, . . i __ -J it.. D V sinistra tor 01 tuu cbwi-c ui u. .u. Roberts. . ^ Bamberg, S. C., September 2, 1922. . \" 66 quickly relieves Colds, Const!- ' ation, Biliusness, and Headache. . Fine Tonic. lie Quinine That Does Not Affect the Heed ecause of its tonic and laxative effect, LAX AIVE BROMO QUININE is better than ordinary uinine and does not cause nervousness nor aging in head. Remexnber-the full name and >ok for the signature of E. W. GROVE. 30c. Best material and workman- I ship, light running requires I little power; simple, easy to S handle. Are made in several g sizes and are good, substantial g money-making machines down g to the smallest size. Write for g catalog showing Engines, Boil- E ers and all Saw Mill supplies. B LOMBARD IRON WORKS' A eg I SUPPLY CO. I ^^^^^Augusta, Georg^^^^^^^ A TOIVIC irove's Tasteless chill Tonic restoeit nergy and Vitality by Purifying and nriching the Blood When you fed its lengthening, invigorating effect, see how brings color to the cheeks and how improves the appetite, you will then ppreciate its true tonic value, rove's Tasteless chill Tonic is simply on and Quinine suspended in syrup. So leasant even children like it The blood eeds QUININE to Purify it and IRON to j Inrich it Destroys Malarial germs and rip germs by its Strengthening, In vigorting Effect 60c. J > ^ i 1* ^ I*