The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, February 14, 1918, Page 2, Image 2
W&t Pamberg per alb
ESTABLISHED APRIL, 1891.
Thursday, Feb. 14, 1918.
WOMEN IX THE ARMY
Both French and English Are Using
Them as Cooks and Waitresses.
The use of women in the British
army both in France and at home to
release men for the trenches is growing
steadily. The exact numbers
have not been published, but arrangements
have now been made for over
four thousand women in France;
over six thousand cooks and waitresses
have been provided for two
hundred camps at home, for one item
and about four hundred women have
replaced men as motor transport
drivers in the army service corps and
the royal flying corps, for another.
"The London Morning Post" gives
some interesting figures of economies
resulting from the introduction of
women as army cooks. Chiefly they
have been assigned to officers' and
sergeants' messes and hospitals. At
one mess the daily charge to officers
was reduced in a few weeks from
2s, 6d. to Is. 3d. a head, and in addition
100 pounds was saved for the
benefit of the, mess generally. The
charge at the same mess has now
been cut to 9d. a day. The army
council recognized the good work by
an increase in wages. "Instructresses
In cookery" have also been furnished
to army cooking schools.
At the bases in France and on the
lines of communication women are
employed in the following posts:
Clerks, typists, cooks and domestic
servants, motor drivers, storekeepers,
tailors, bakers, shoemakers, messengers,
telephone and postal serv
ice. "The enlistment is for the duration
of the war. A uniform has been
adopted for all women serving in this
women's army auxiliary corps, as it
is officially known. Its women are
placed directly under the control of
the commanding officer of the formation
or the officer in charge of the
P office to which they are assigned for
f duty.?New York Tribune.
.
Urges Construction of Roads.
lill
Secretary Houston, of the Department
of Agriculture, has set forth
the policy which he thinks should be
followed in highway construction
during the war:
"So far as it is practicable to do
so, this department will urge the
) maintenance of the highways already
fe constructed; the construction and
completion of those highways which
are vitally important because of their
bearing upon the war situation or for
the movement of commodities; the
?;V postponement of all highway con'
struction relatively less essential or
not based upon important military
or economic needs. The department
is preparing to suggest to the State
v highway departments the preparation
of a schedule of work for the Federal
aid projects for 1918 in line with
this policy."
Road construction and maintenance
in the United States involve
an annual expenditure of about
$300,000,000.
' V Australian Estates Given to Soldiers.
A recent report made by the United
States consul in Tasmania, an island
'(s . State of Australia, includes the fol,
lowing:
?y - - "The general scheme for the repatriation
of returned soldiers contemplates
placing them upon the
land. At a recent conference between
the Commonwealth and the
State authorities, it was decided
that each State would have to find
the land, while the Commonwealth
i Government would advance up to
- ' $3,433 to improve the holding of
each returned soldier and to procure
the necessary stock and implements.
,/ . In this State it was deemed that the
Crown lands would prove difficult to
improve to attract returned soldiers,
and it was decided to purchase large
estates and divide them up into
small farms and to use the money advqupoH
hv th? flnmmnnwpalth
Government for buildings, fences,
and tools. The money expended by
the State in purchasing the land, as
well as the money advanced by the
Commonwealth for improvements, is
a lien upon the property and must
be repaid in small annual payments.
It was also decided by the Commonwealth
to advance money to returned
soldiers who may desire to rent land.
Bills will be introduced into the >
various Parliaments at once so that
this scheme can be put into operation
throughout Australia."
^ i?i m
One Hundred Per Cent Gratification.
"It must be gratifying to see your
jokes copied elsewhere."
"What gratifies me most," said the
professional humorist, "is that somebody
is willing to buy 'em in the
first place."?Louisville CourierJournal.
TROOP SHIP IS SUNK
BRITISH SHIP TUSCANIA TORPKDOEI)
BY HUXS.
Of the 2,179 American Soldiers On
Board, All But 345 Accounted
For.?Others Probably Safe.
Washington, Feb. 6.?The British
steamship Tuscania, with 2,179 United
States soldiers on board, has been
torpedoed and sunk in the war zone.
Nineteen hundred and twelve of
of the 2,179 American officers and
men on board the liner Tuscania were
reported accounted tor in a cnspatcn
to the State department tonight from
the American embassy at London.
The war department announced
that its records showed the following
were on board the Tuscania:
Headquarters detachment and
companies D. E, and F, of the twentieth
engineers, 107th engineer train,
107th military police, 107th supply
train, 100th aero squadron, 158th
aero squadron; replacement detachments
Nos. 1 and 2 of the thirty-second
division; fifty-one casual officers.
The thirty-second division is composed
of national guard troops from
Michigan and Wisconsin. The division
trained at Camp McArthur, Tex.
The 107th engineers was composed
of the first battalions of Michigan engineers;
the 107th military police
was made up from the fourth
and sixth Wisconsin, and the 107th
supply train from the fourth, fifth
and sixth Wisconsin infantrv.
T
The war department isued this
statement:
4
"The war department has been offi
any auvisea tnai tne sieamsnip tuscania
was torpedoed and sunk and
that survivors numbering 1,100, as
far as could be ascertained, were
landed at Buncranna and Larne, in
Ireland. There was a total of 2,179
United States troops on this vessel.
No names of persons lost have been
reported to the war department and
no names of survivors were reported.
Additional particulars are promised
as soon as received."
,
1,832 Troops Saved.
Washington, Feb. 10.?Eighteen
hundred and thirty-two names of
American soldiers rescued from the
torpedoed liner Tuscania had been
reported tonight to the war department,
leaving 345 of the soldiers on
board unaccounted for. No official
report has reached the department to
change the estimate that all except
113 of the men were were saved, but
the names have been coming in very
slowly over the cables and there is no
assurance as to when the list will be
complete.
From the names so far received
and the passenger list of the lost
steamer the Associated Press has
compiled the record of those still not
reported. Probably more than 200
of the men whose names appear on
this record are safe in Ireland and
will be so reported soon.
! > ?
GERMANS ESTIMATE ARMY.
Conclude Am?rica Has Only 40,000
Men Now in France.
Amsterdam, Feb. 10.?In their
comment on the sinking of the Tuscania
the Berlin newspaper Germania
and Deutsche Tages Zeitung effect
surprise that the big transport
only carried approximately 2,400
men. Thus, as "according to re- '
ports," sixteen trasports have arriven
in France, they calculate that only
about 40,000 American troops now
are there. This, they assert, agrees
with independent information at
hand on this subject.
Germania adds to this the assertion
that the sinking of the Tuscania
gave the United States a hard blow,
which for a moment "threatened to
unbalance" Secretary of War Baker.
"Even so," it concludes, "we do
not underestimate the importance of
America's assistance, but we shall,
nevertheless, look for further u-boat
successes."
^ < > ?
There is nothing in the fuel order
of January 17 to prevent the operation
of automobiles, motor vehicles
of all classes being considered as
coming under the head of public
utilities. In keeping with this
ruling garages have been exempted.
NOTICE TO DEBTORS AND CREI)^
ITORS.
Notice is hereby given that all parties
holding claims against the estate
of Mrs. M. A. Inabinett, deceas-:
ed, should render the same, properly;
itemized, to the undersigned, and all!
parties indebted to the said estate I
must make payment to the undersign-!
ed. G. W. KEARSE,
Administrator Estate of Mrs. M.
A. Inabinett, Deceased.
February 11, 1918.?4t.
1
For Indigestion, Constipation or
Biliousness
Just try one 50-cent bottle of LAX-FOS
WITH PEPSIN. A Liquid Digestive j
Laxative pleasant to take. Made and j
recommended to the public by Paris Medicine
Co., manufacturers of Laxative Bromo
Quinine and Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic.
RUPTURE 'EXPERT HERE
Seeley, World Famous in This Specialty,
Called to Bamberg.
F. H. Seeley, of Chicago and Philadelphia,
the noted truss expert, will
be at the .Mayflower Inn and will remain
in Bamberg Friday, Feb. 22,
only. Mr. Seeley says: "The Spermatic
Shield will not only retain
any case of rupture perfectly, but
contracts the opening in 10 days on
the average case. This instrument
received the only award in England
and in Spain, producing results without
surgery, injections, medical treatments
or prescriptions. Mr. Seeley
has documents from the United States
i~? a n n
uuveriujieiii, \> u. \j.. iui i
inspection. All charity cases without |
charge, or if any interested call, he
will be glad to show same without
charge or fit them if desired. Business
demands prevent stopping at
any other place in this section.
P. S.?Every statement in this notice
has been verified before thfc Federal
and State Courts.?F. H. Seeley.
?adv.
MASTER'S SALE.
State of South Carolina.?County
of Bamberg.?In the Court of Common
Pleas.
Pursuant to an oraer of the Court
of Common Pleas for Bamberg county
in the case of Jr.mes Stanley,
plaintiff, against unknown and absent
Hiers and all other persons having
or claiming to have any interest
whatsoever in the estate of the late
John Carroll, deceased, defendants,
the undersigned will sell to the highest
bidder for cash, at public auction,
before the court house door, at Bamberg,
S. C., between the legal hours
of sale, on the 4th day of March,
1918, the same being salesday in said
month, the following described property,
to wit:
"All that certain lot of land in that
part of Denmark known as Grahams,
in the county of Bamberg and State
aforesaid, known as the Monroe Cox
lot, and bounded on the north by lot
belonging to the Colored church;
east by Sawdust street, two hundred
and fifty (250) feet; west by lot of
S. G. Mayfield, one hundred and ninety-five
(195) feet; south by lot of
L. K. Mayfield."
Purchaser to pay for papers.
J. J. BRABHAM, JR.,
Judge of Probate for Bamberg
county, acting as Master for Bamberg
rnnntv
February 11, 1918.
^ IX MEMORIAM.
Again has death come into our
midst and has robbed our. chapter
of one of its most beloved members,
Mrs. Mary E. Felder. "God's finger
touched her and she slept." Just
so sweetly and calmly did her spirit
pass bevond the shadows that it but
seem'- 1 though she slept. Confined
to r bed for only a few days,
she was spared the suffering of a
long illness. It was thus kind and
merciful to her. Quiet and unassuming
in manner, only her intimate
friends knew the depth of her character,
but all who came in contact
with her were strengthened and made
better through her influence.
We, the members of our chapter,
grieve with her bereaved ones, therefore,
be it,
Resolved, 1. That in the death of
Mrs. Mary E. Felder the Francis Marion
Bamberg chapter has lost a faithful
and loyal member, and that her
memory shall be held sacred in our
hearts.
Resolved, 2. That we humbly bow
to the will of our God, who is allwise
and merciful and pray that it
may be given he^ loved ones to see
that God's plans are right and He
doeth all things well.
Resolved, 3. That a copy of these
resolutions be spread upon the minutes
of the chapter, published in The
Bamberg Herald and County Times,
and that the secretary furnish the
family with a copy of these resolutions.
MP <3 W P TnVTTiS
MRS. B. W. SIMMONS,
MRS. A. M. BRABHAM,
t Committee.
Royal
Theatre
Ehrhardt's First-Class
Play House.
Motion Pictures Every
Monday, Wednesday
Thursday and
Friday
5 Big Reels Featuring
the Best Plays, Comedies,'Etc.
Be sure to see the serial
every Wednesday
evening
"PEARL WHITE IN
THE FATAL
RING."
Amusement For All
B Admission 10c and 20c
B War Tax Included
The Theatre Will Be
jLfgy
Whenever You Need a General Tonic
Take Grove's.
The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless
chill Tonic is equally valuable as a
General Tonic because it contains the
well known tonic properties of QUININE
and IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives
out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and
Builds up the Whole System. 60 cents.
\
Solve the Fertilizer
Problem With
r*i . i *11 *.9
cost and efficiency cansiaerea, it s
THE CHEAPEST FERTDJZER
I ^
A COMPARISON OF THE COSTS OF PLANT FOOD IN
COMMERCIAL FERTILIZERS AND MANURE.
/
/
BASIC PRICE PER UNIT
Acid $1.25 ;
Ammonia $7.00
Potash $6.00
f
COMMERCIAL MANURE FROM CAMP
FERTILIZER JACKSON
Analysis? Analysis?
8-3-0 cost per ton $37.00 Acid, 0.45 at $1.25 $ .56 ; v ^
8-3-3 cost per ton $54.00 Ammonia, 0.68 at $7.00..,. 4.76 '
10-2-0 cost per ton $30.00 Potash, 0.58 at $6.00 3.48
$8.80 |
ACTUAL WORTH OF MANURE BASED ON COMMERCIAL FERTILIZER $8.80
ATTTI TlTITnn T TSCfO TOTTA'AT TT A T 13 TIT A T
uun rxviv/ii uijoo iimii iuiuj; ximi
Furthermore the decaying o rganic matter in the Manure is t
constantly adding available plant food to the soil, is valuable both
from a humus standpoint as well as a land builder. Manure will
show results for three years, and its cost divided through this period
will show a much lower cost per unit of plant food than any , ^
other fertilizer on the market.
MTiWE ARE daily making ship- ^TT Right now is the time to use
^J| ments of this product into all ^11 manure. Write us today if
JJ Sections of the country, and JJ you are interested in prompt
it is being received with entire delivery. We already have numsatisfaction
on account of its ex- erous orders booked for prompt
cellent quality and condition on shipment, but will use?our best
arrival at destination. efforts to make delivery in accordance
with vour instructions.
%/
^7T We will be glad to 'make
j credit arrangements with re- |TTTWe specialize on car lot shipJl
sponsible parties, or we will ^J| ments. Cars average 33
accept wood in exchange for rna- ^Zll tons. Buy a car in conjuncnure.
Wood to be delivered dur- tion with your neighbor and save
ing the summer months. freight.
Shipment Made from. Either Point
CAMP JACKSON ' CAMP WADS WORTH
COLUMBIA, S. C. SPARTANBURG, S. C. I
AGENTS WANTED IN UNOCCUPIED TERRITORY.
Powell Fuel Co.
Columbia, South Carolina
! kkhhhhmmbi } rADiwr. rno Tur
| v/uvinu i vji\ xujli
HUMAN MACHINERY 1
1' |\| 11T11 F The human system is the most inII
V/ 1 1 vL tricate piece of machinery, and your
Best material and workman- j " health your very life, in fact?de- ,
ship, Hght running, requires \
little power, simple, easy to | 1 ^*11 he at Rizer s improper food, lack of sufficient <
handle. Are made in several I Stables Olar S. C. on exercise or some indiscretion, you besizes
and are good, substantial ! come bilious, the human machine gets ,
money-making machines down J the second and fourth , . I
to the smallest size. Write for i Tuesdays of each body in good condition, particularly
catolog showing Engines, Boil- your liver. This can be easily done
ers and all Saw Mill supplies. ! month. ky taking a dose or so occasionally of
that standard proprietary medicine,
, .__ _ i -v mm t attti Granger Liver Kegulator, which acts
LOMBARD IRON WORKS & I\ I 1W I AU1J directly on the sluggish liver and bowSUPPLY
CO. 11 1/1 ?! Ill* Lu v L c!s and quickly cleanses the system of
I' the fecal elements which clogged the
immsta Ga I ___________________ machinery. Granger Liver Regulator
? M ?MMnfifrM 'Mi contains no calomel nor alcohol and is
^Mi^MMMMIIMMM HMHi^ i ? used in thousands of homes daily, with
D|| pv rOPFf AND most satisfactory results. Try a box
. Succe^ors to W R Ritey!
I A R ITT^FY i Fire, .Life ^ ^ ^ ^ -
n* VIUU1 Accident ? ? ? ~~~
Because of its tonic and laxative effect, LAXA.
tuns i^tsxjirance INSURANCE I Quinine and does not cause nervousness nor
nffim in T n P^land'c etrvr^ ringing in head. Remember the full name and
Bamberg, South Carolina Copland s Store look for the signature of E. W. GROVE. 30c.
BAMBERG, S. C.
????? Read The Herald $1.50 the year.