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THE BRITISH FLEET BUSY LIES BEHIND NO IMPREGNABLE SHORE DEFENSES. Hoping to Meet Germans, Ceaselessly Scouring North Sea in Search of the Huns' Grand Fleet. ; The* head of the British admiralty, speaking the other day in the House of Commons, flung out a challenge to the German navy. He said, "I disclose no secret, or if it is a secret, ) I disclose a fact which I should be glad to tell the enemy?when I say that the British grand fleet in its northern base lies behind no shore defenses, but relies on its own strength alone." There are people in the United States who do not appreciate the activities of the British navy in its home waters, who think that it lies in idleness, like the German high seas fleet, behind impenetrable landlocked bases. For the purpose of removing this impression, the Asssociated Press representatives was asked to visit the grand fleet, live on board the firstline battleships, and observe just what sort of a day's work it puts in day after day and week after week. Ceaseless Activity. Ceaseless activity is the motto of the grand fleet. Neither men or ships are permitted to gather rust or barnacles. From its base at the north^ A r f Vl A D y* fin Tnl AA 1 ^ At TTT /N A r* ? CIii up ui mc liiuisu isica, n, swccys day and night the 140,000 square miles of the North sea on ceaseless vigil, in unflagging hope that one day its watching will be rewarded by a meeting with the enemy under circumstances wherein he cannot avoid battle. Moreover,/this sweep. _ ing of the North sea is no mere aimless patrol. In the most casual moves of ships and men there is always a directing mind and a directing plan. The North sea is as well swept in relation- to its size as the drawing room of a well ordered house. The enemy's coastline is still the British navy's frontier. The harbor which has been the home of the grand fleet for three years is probably the finest of its hind in the world. The whole area comprised in this British northern base is about equal to the hundred odd square miles which the Germans evacuated in France last spring. The battleship squadrons, for example, ; within their own particular section i of this great base, have room for every kind of practice manoeuvers, including target practice. At Target Practice, i On a sunny afternoon the correspondent saw eight battleships at turret or target practice, a detachment of cruisers in manoeuvers, a seaplane-balloon ship at work under conditions simulating those of actual warfare, and off around the edges, various operations by innumerable small era-*.. and auxiliaries. Night target practice, which .also is conducted* within the harbor, is always an interesting sight. The battleships steam down the nine-mile course. Suddenly a searchlight picks up a target. Instantly every turrent is trained, every gun directed. Then a button is pressed somewhere, and the7 guns speak as with one voice in a gigantic broadside that awakens th/e echoes from the hills. / Playing the Game. / There is an infinite, variety to the turret practice on a big battleship. The officers in charge of the turret speaks: "An enemy shell has come ; in through the turret killing men Nos. 1, 3. 4 and 6. Right gun disabled. Connection with rest of ship lost. Carry on!" The "dead men" f \ file off to one side and watch their comrades work as they would in actual battle. There is the zest of a game to it. The officer speaks again: "Shell has hit turret, killing all men except Nos. 1 and 3. No. 3 is seriously wounded. Ammunition hoisting machinery disabled. Fire started in pile of waste behind gun. Carry on!" The single unwounded man left in the turei must now endeavor to keep the guns in action single-handed, besides dealing with a fire and a seriously wounded man. The "dead j men" stand along the edge of tne turret and watch their comradesf efforts # to "cajrrv on" with interest and amusement. It is play, but play with a deadly efficiency behind it, for it is intended that in actual battle, there shall not be a single possibility with which these men will not be ready to deal. The sugar used for making candy in the United States, according to the Food Administration, is sufficient to meet all the sugar requirements of England under the rationing system adopted there. Since the war insurance plan became operative in October more than 45,000 soldiers have applied for insurance, amounting in all to nearly h#lf a billion dollars and averaging about $8,000 a man. I | WHAT IS LOVE? Definitions By Southern Evperts in Newspaper Contest. ,That there is a very wide range of opinion among American men and women on the subject of love is indicated at the result of a contest which has just been closed by the New Orleans Times-Picayune. That newspaper offered cash prizes for the best answers to the question: "What is love?" In all 23,761 answers were received. Most of them were from women and dealt seriously with the subject. In the main the responses from male correspondents, were satirical, scarcastic or facetious. Three of the four principal prizes were won by women and six of the ten minor prizes offered also fell to women. All of those selections dealt seriously with the subject of love, i The first prize was to Molly Anderson Haley, of Mobile, Ala., for the following: "Love is the doorwaj through i which the human soul passes from : selfishness into service, and from ] solitude into kinship with all humanity." 1 In selecting that from nearly ' twenty-four thousand offerings the jury announced that it was worthy of distinction because "it has in eminent degree dignity and beauty*of form, and is a clear, direct response to the question asked." The second prize fell to Mrs. W. P. O'Toole, of New Orleans, for this offering: "Love is a chisel that carves into soft outlines the granite block of stern reality." The third prize winner, Mrs. Albert . Godchaux, of New Orleans, dealt more lightly with the subject in the following: "Love is what makes red hair 'golden,' white hair 'silver' and no hair 'a noble brow.' " The fourth prize went to H. C. Delcourt, of Houma, La., for this sentiment: "Love is the gentle art of being very miserable in a perfectly happy fashion." Among the other prize winners was Ella Bentley Arthur, of New Orelans, for this verse: "Love's like a well and a deep one. A fact you have noticed, no doubt; It's easy enough to fall into, But hard as the deuce to get out." George Gowland, of Arabi, La.,* submitted the following: "Love: A song; music by father, words by mother," Here is love as desc?ibed by Mrs. V. I. Crawford, of Meridian, Miss.: "The thing that throw's a halo around duty, makes poverty endurable, lightens burdens that would . otherwise crush and makes any four walls a home?that is love." " Mildred Blincoe, of Vicksburg, says "Love is a perfume you cannot pour on others without getting a few drops on yourself," while Jennie N, Whe less, of Yazoo City, says: "Love is a bank wherein every deposit bears interest, and notwithstanding frequent panics among its patrons, the old reliable establishment has never been forced to close its doors." The Times-Picayune states that it started the contest to relieve somewhat the gloom of war news, and feels that it has been minently successful. To Salute, or Not to Salute. That the Russian army suffered a defeat through lack of military subordination seems clear enough. Of this we had a disagreeable premonition when we read a fortnight or so ago that the matter of a soldier's saluting his officer was to be left to his individual choice. Touching the visor of one's cap or not at the sight of a shoulder strap may seem a trivial matter, but is not. Of course, we do not wish to make ourselves absurd by treating a symptom as an origin or cause. We know that no battle was lost because the soldiers did not touch their caps, but rather because they had abandoned that respect and obedience of which touching their caps was an outward sign. 5 Tf order is the first law of Heaven, obedience is that of an army. Respect for authority, absolute and instantaneous submission to the command of one's superiors are the fundamental obligations of military life. It not sjo in Indian warfare. Among aur American aboriginals the individual was the fighting unit and a law unto himself. It was not so in our continental army, when the liberty-loving plow boy intolerant of discipline would leave the ranks if he found it too severe. But the modern army is a fighting machine. It is organized upon principles as scientific, as exact, as im+hnco nf an automobile, an pgi iUUl3 U O C4IVUV V *. %-r? , . airship or a dreadnaught. The man who enters it surrenders his personal will. He becomes an instrument, a thinking instrument to be sure, but an instrument all the same, and must respond to a command from an officer as the key of a typewriter does to the touch of a finger. Of this docility, this duty, this discipline the touch of 'the cap is the soldier's sign and reminder. He is under authority and may not forget it. He is a subordinate, and it is necessary to realize and acknowledge the momentous fact. When the Russian revolution was accomplished its most dazzling gift to the individual soldier was self-respect, a sense of personal value, an emancipation from inferiority. But liberty became license. Authority was despised. Obedience was held in contempt. Soldiers debated their duty with their officers. They refused to march, to shoot, to charge at the word of command, and the victorious army was routed. Nothing in all the war is sadder than this result of the abuse of a new-found liberty. Our hearts go out in sympathy to those poor moujicks, whose heads were turned by, its too beady wine. But they must learn to obey. They must bend their necks to the yoke of authority. Submission which was once involuntary must, finally, if their government is to endure, be the voluntary tribute of their liberated souls. MAN OF 64 TELLS OF HIS REMARKABLE EXPERIENCE Had Not Known Good Night's Sleep for Years.?Now Sleeps Like a Boy. "I call it a wonderful experience," said Mr. Wm. Walker, the well known Brick Mason of 1207 First avenue Birmingham, Ala., "to go for years nritbrmf- lr n mri n f a (rnnri nifht'c clppn and then find a wonderful natural medicine that let's you sleep like a boy. It seems most too good to be true." "I suffered for a good many years with asthma so badly that I could neither work nor sleep. I was always afraid I would suffocate in my sleep and so I lived for years in this torture trying one remedy after another but never getting the relief." "Then one day I determined to try Sulferro-Sol just as a drowning man grasps at a straw. To my deep wonderment I could lie down angl sleep. I never got such wonderful results from any other medicine before. I feel that Sulferro-Sol is surely the greatest remedy that has ever been given to help man go through his sufferings here below." (Note?Sulferro-Sol has been in numberless cases of asthma and catarrh and rarely ever fails to give quick and pemanent relief.) ' Sulferro-Sol is sold and recommended by all druggists in Bamberg and vicinity. Murray Drug Co., wholesale distributers.?adv. FOR SALE. One two-story dwelling* at Ehrhardt. Well located. Two stores situated on Broadway " street, Ehrhardt, cheap. . Four brick stores in the heart of Denmark. Terms to suit the purchasers. v One six-room residence in Bamberg, with outbuildings and 1 1-2 acres of land, for $1,000; $400 ca^h, balance to suit the purchaser. Three brick stores on Main street, Bamberg. Prices and terms right. One nice residence lot of- one acre of land, $500. Several lots on Elmore Heights, $100 each. Sixteen acres on Main street, near Mr. E. C. Bruce's, $200 per acre. Well suited for peanut factory, or oil mill. 400 acres of land four miles from Bamberg for $11 per acre. Nice dwelling and all necessary outbuildings. X REASONABLE TERMS CAN BE HAD ON ALL THE ABOVE PROPERTY. H. M. GRAHAM, Real Estate, BAMBERG. S. C. I R. P. BELLINGER ATTORNEY AT LAW MONEY TO LOAN. Office Over Bamberg Banking Co. General Practice r The Quinine That Does Not Affect the Head Because of its tonic and laxative effect, LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE is better than ordinary Quinine and does not cause nervousness nor ringing in head. Remember the full name and look for the signature of E. W. GROVE. 30c. J. P. Carter B. D. Carter CARTER & CARTER ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW BAMBERG. S. C. SDecial attention given to settle ment of Estates and investigation of Land Titles. I RILEY & COPELAND Successors to W. P. Riley. Fire, Life Accident INSURANCE Office in J. D. Copeland's Store BAMBERG, S. C. I I N I N Horsesa r \' Fresh Shipme % WE WISH TO ANNOU ] THIS SECTION THAT W [ A FRESH SHIPMENT 0. *irn a nn \tattt nDPT) A If ai>l? iiAXi iiuvy x-jvcuta H ' THE NICEST ANIMALS ll CINITY. THEY ARE A U AND WE ARE IN POSITI n More TWO CAR LOADS OF I BE BOUGHT DURING T! j| WILL ARRIVE AND BI U SPECTION RIGHT AFT] [ SON. WE WILL BE AI f _ . ANY KIND OF MULE 0] I IT WILL BE A PLEASU] L WHETHER YOU WISH ' | Buggies, V M\ WE HAVE A LARGE ? IU| ONS, HARNESS, LAP RO N WE WILL BE GLAD TO N LY THE MOST RELIAB] LI SURE WE CAN NOT OS 0 SAVE YOU MONEY. Ift J jj General II N WE ALSO CARRY A U U MERCHANDISE, AND 1 H SERVE YOU. COME IN M WAYS GLAD FOR OUR t| AND MAKE OUR STORI n N J. M. Dani EHRHj V. ' ; - - 'A., ind Mules nfltok H I N ' ' V ! nt Just Arrived ? %'l -?., x ' ' ?. NCE TO THE PEOPLE OF E HAVE JUST RECEIVED \ F MULES AND HORSES, RED TO SHOW SOME OF |fft EVER SEEN IN THIS VI- |0| < J lLL IN TSOOD CONDITION, HI ON TO SAVE YOU MONEY. D| Coming 9 lUjLES AND HORSES WHi . IB HE HOLIDAYS, AND THEY ]{] i ! READY FOR YOUR IN- |Q ER THE CHRISTMAS SEA- U 3LE TO FIX YOU UP ON H ft HORSE YOU MAY NEED. * M EtE FOR US TO SHOW YOU, M J ro BUY OR NOT. H Ifagons, Etc. | ITOCK OF BUGGIES, WAG M J . ) BES, WHIPS, ETC., WHICH U f SHOW. WE HANDLE 0N> h K liE MAKES, AND WE FEEL M rLY PLEASE YOU, BUT Merchandise IRGE STOCK OF GENERAL ] ? iYILL BE PLEASED TO ' TO SEE US. WE ARE ALFRIENDS TO CALL ON US 3 THEIR HEADQUARTERS. M ?? r.i y.jf*. nelly & Co. ILRDT, S. C. ' . ? * 1 ... * -' -. .. . . ^ . !'->