University of South Carolina Libraries
I intimate Picture o * President's 1 Two years ago Tuesday a week ago Woodrow Wilson fell a sick man. On the anniversary, the Associated Press gave the following pen picture of the former presidents simple home life: Mr. Wilson, besides following the ways of a retired gentleman with a lively interest in the world's affairs, lives, by the eight hour day which he once told congress was "adjudged by the thought and' experience of recent years a thing upon which society is justified in existing, as in the interest of health, efficiency and! I contentment." He aims to have eight j 'hours for sleep, eight hours for work j i and eight hours for relaxation andj "keeps to the schedule pretty fairly. j Seven o'clock in the morning is; about his rising time. He once again i shaves and bathes alone and then! takes some calisthenic exercises pre-! scribed by his physicians as beneficial j in restoring the use of nerves and j muscles which were impaired during j I his breakdown. He has breakfast in i Mrs. Wilson s boudoir and finds that I two years of illness and slow convaI lesence have not affected his ^npetite. I The morning papers never are neglected whatever else may demand at-i tention. Half a dozen of them are delivered early and Mr. Wilson reads them thoroughly. Work of Morning. Then comes the morning s work. About that time the mail carrier, six days a week, delivers quite a packet of letters. They come from a variety of correspondents. Old friends of the administration days write informal friendly notes or discourse on the politics of the day. Schools and colleges ask for donations; individf uals who feel the pinch of the times -ask for some personal financial assistance. Others discourse on the shortcomings as they see them of the Republican party. Autograph hunters are represented in large number. Various gentlemen who think their ailment is the same as Mr. Wilson's want to know the names of his physicians. Mrs. Wil son invariably goes over me inomin&'s mail with her husband, some : letters are turned over to a secretary for reply, most of them the r former president answers personally, dictating to a stenographer who comes from his law office every morning for the purpose. All of them he signs himself. The morning's work is done in the library. The old desk and chair and table Mr. Wilson used in his study at Princeton are there. Thousands of volumes which were packed away while he was in the White House are there. Through the windows may be seen the indigo blue strip of Virginia hills where he used to go golfing, and not far away hangs a bag of golf sticks, a reminder of a better day. Princeton Colors Used. The former president and his inr separable companion always have their lunches served in the dining Them rnmps a naD of an hour and then, unless the weather is most inclement, a motor drive. Mr. Wilson while in the White House became attached to a certain automobile. It went back, as is the custom, each year to the manufacturer, from whom Mr. Wilson bought it as a' i "used car." He had it painted black, i with orange trimmings?Princeton colors?and in his car which he regards as an old friend,' he goes driv-i ing into the countryside. He dislikes! exploring new routes but rather en-' joys driving over the same ground j at about the same time. Many folks j in the country look for him; one; quaint old lady recently held up the j car and presented a sweater which she had knitted; a little girl gave Ihim a knitted lap robe. Frequently the car stops at a farm and takes on a load of fresh vegetables, eggs # \ and fowls. The party is always home before dark. Dinner is an informal affair; some, times there are guests, always old friends or associates. Mrs. Wilson J nrt lftiuor rirpsses for the occasion! H JLXW *V**ov. as she always did while Mr. Wilson was president; it is en famille. But no meal in the BBS Wilson household ever proceeds un|H til grace is said. Mr. Wilson has al|H ways said it himself, and months ago when he was so weak he could hardly stand without aid, and his voice was almost inaudible he steadied himself on his chair and whispered BB|m the plea for divine blessing. Friends remember him ever at Frequently a Potomac river ^^^^HAsherman sends a rare specimen ^HHB^Hrcm his catch. Once, another friend HHflBBent him ducks out of season and j I^MBHMpaid the game warden a handsome e n Heading or Amusement. HHSB % After dinner he goes in for reading i ^^^^V.or amusement. Once a week Mr. Wilson has a motion picture show of his SK^F own and frequently sees the feature S? At' - f Former j Simple Home Life: film at the same time it is being shown at the theaters down town. Occasionally he goes to a vaudeville show, -his party taking seats in the last row, and entering and leaving with every effort to avoid ostentation. It rarely happens, however, that somebody fails to discover the visitors and a demonstrations of handclapping always ensues. Evenings at home, however, are spent in the family circles. The former president and Mrs. Wilson read a book together, or perhaps Mrs. w An /I n >vnauu icaua aiuuu. Sometimes it is one of the detective stories of which Mr. Wilson was said to be so fond. They do not now form as large a part of his reading as may have been the case years ago. He takes to bed early, not to sleep, however, but to relax, to read and write. Like Mark Twain he does much reading and writing in bed. Propped up by pillows, and with a little writing board across his knees he reads and makes notes, some of them voluminous and in shorthand. Nobody knows what they are about. He puts them carefully away. They are not notes for a book, which many expect. Not to Write Book. Unless Mr. Wilson changes his mind decidedly he will write no reply to Robert Lansing or any one also who has criticised his policies. A writer who has been given access to Mr. Wilson's papers of which there is most a ton, is writing a book, but " * 1 *- - ^ HIT'f It Wlli De HIS U w U, LLUL .?ii. H uouu o. "I'll give you any material I have for your book," Mr. Wilson told him. "I 11 answer any questions you ask; but its your book, I don t even want to see what you wcite." However the evening may be spent, however tired he may be, there is one thing the former president never neglects. It is the reading of a rew verses of the Bible. When he says good-night he invariably reads aloud some short passage from the book which always rests on the reading table at his bedside. Friends and admirers ask, what is Woodrow Wilson's real condition now? He will be 65 years of age next n.AAn.Vv/M. ?> n A Vioc Vioan tVirftnsrVl a n UCi AiiU iltto tui v iaq u MM ordeal which few men survive. The measure of his progress toward health must be measured with these facts in mind. His normal weight in health while he was president was 180 pounds. He showed little depar-. ture from that figure now. His eyesight is as good although he has discarded his favorite noseglasses for spectacles. His hair has turned snow white, but it has not thinned. His appetite is too robust to please his physicians. Last March when he left the White House with president-elect Harding, an attendant had to place his feet on each succeeding step from the portico. The other day he sent his attendant away and climbed alone, not without some effort, into his automobile, just to see if he could do it, and seemed pleased to | find that he could. Walks With Cane. 4 Motor nerves and muscles of his | left side have given more response to j treatment than was hoped for. Of j course they are not fully active now. He still walks with a cane most of j the time but frequently hangs the! crook over his arm and "goes it alone j without my third leg," as he puts it. j .Mr. Wilson is far from a well man j today; he was far from a well man when he entered the White House over eight years ago. But during the last two years there have been times when his voice was inaudible and when he could not support'himself alone. His condition today shows more improvement than his family and friends dared hope for. There are many angles to Mr. Wilson's present day psychology. Living in Washington and easy of access to party friends at the capitol he might give consultation on party politics, but he does not. Whatever a visitor may say in criticism of the Republican administration Mr. Wilson never makes a reply. -He never permits any one in his presence to speak what he regards as "disrespectfully of the president of the United States." Somebody once raised the question "How do your ex-presidents live?" Colonel Roosevelt had a comfortable fortune of his own augmented by income from writings. Mr. Taft until he became chief justice, had from j time to time profitable sources of: income. I Mr. Wilson brought with him to j the White Mouse the small savings! i of a lifetime, which he preserved. I During his terms in the presidency! his royalties from books previously " v'tfnn in mm t rut ir?tr? rather hand some sums. Singularly enough they! have shown a marked slump since he! left the White House. While he wasl president circumstances helped him save money. The war and the suspension of social functions and entertainment were quite an item. It has been estimated that the former president's pocketbook was at least $25,000 richer because he was not called upon to wine and dine numerous dignitaries and official persons. Upon his modest fortune now he lives simply, with an establishment of only tbree servants and a "used car" SUMMONS FOR RELIEF. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Bamberg. In the Court of Common Pleas. Bamberg Banking Company, Plaintiff, against J. Sam Morton, C. W. Rentz, Sr., Geo. F. Hair, Jno. H. Cope, S. C. Hollifield, Bamberg Potato Curing Company, and National Park Bank, of X. Y., Defendants. To the defendant, J. Sam Morton. You are hereby summoned and required to answer the complaint in this action, the original complaint and a copy of which was on the 30th day of August, 1921, filed in the office of the Clerk of Court of Common Pleas for Bamberg County, at Bamberg, S. C., and is on file in said office now, and to serve a copy of your answer upon the subscribers, at their office, Bamberg, S. C., within twenty days after service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service, and if you tan to answer tne complaint aioresaid within the time aforesaid the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for 'the relief demanded in the complaint. CARTER, CARTER & KEARSE, Attorneys for the plaintiff. To J. Sam Morton, defendant in the above entitled action. Take notice: That the publication of summons in this cause is made pursuant to an order of the Clerk Court of Common Pleas for Bamberg County, issued in said cause; further, take notice, that there is on file in said office of the Clerk of Court -tne original Complaint and a copy of the same for you, which was filed in said office on the 30th day of August, 1921. CARTER, CARTER & KEARSE, 10-6 Attorneys for the plaintiff. COPY SUMMONS AND COMPLAINT. COMPLAINT SERVED. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA. County of Bamberg. Court of Common Pleas. Denison Interlocking Tile Corporation, Inc., Plaintiff, vs. T-l /-I TT T"> U ? _ ~ P.iwinff Hd. L. navs, Damuei 5 xruiaiu vjuniicj Company, and J. Sam Morton, Defendants. To the Defendant, J. Sam Morton,' you are hereby summoned and required to answer the complaint in this action of which a copy is herewith served upon you and serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscribers at their office in Barnwell, S. C., within 20 day3 after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service and if you fail to answer the complaint wifchdn the time aforesaid, plaintiff in this action will apply to the court | for the relief as demanded in the I complaint. HARLEY & BLATT, Plaintiff's Attorneys. Barnwell, S. C., Sept. 14, 1921. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Bamberg. Court of Common Pleas. Denison Interlocking Tile Corporation, Inc., Plaintiff, vs. E. C. Hays, 3amberg Potato Curing to. ana j. dam iuui iuuj l/cul^uu i ants. To the Defendant, J. Sam Morton, Yon will please take notice, that the complaint in the above entitled r.ction was filed in the office of the Clerk of Court for Barnwell County on the 15tn day of Sept.. A. D. 1921. HARLEY & BLATT, 1 0-6 Plaintiffs Attorneys. R. P. BELLINGER ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Oeneral Practice in All Courts. Office Work and Civil Business a Specialty. Money to Lend. Offices in rear over Hoffman's Store. t? * ??? >nun c n DAlUDCiAU, O. \J, To Stop a Cough Quick take HAYES' HEALING HONEY, a cough medicine which stops the cough by healing the inflamed and irritated tissues. A box of GROVE'S O-PEN-TRATE SALVE for Chest Colds, Head Colds and Croup is enclosed with every bottle of HAYES' HEALING HONEY.. The salve should be rubbed on the chest and throat of children suffering from a Cold or Croup. The healing effect of Hayes* Healing Honey inside the throat combined with the healing effect of Grove's O-Pen-Trate Salve through the pores of the skin soon stops a cough. Both remedies are packed in one carton and the cost of the combined treatment is 35c. Just ask your druggist few HAYES' HEALING HONEY. r PORTABLE AND STATIONARY uniurfc ^IItb^qilees Saw,"Lath and Shingle Mills. Injoc- i tors, Pumps and Fittings, Wood i Saws, Splitters. Shafts, Pulleys, Pelting, Gasoline Engines I o.Vi B A R D I Foundry, v ; ino, Uoiler Worke, j ' apply St*, i . AIGISTA, GA. c Grip and influenza LAXATIVE; .CUOMO QUININE Tablets remove j the cause. There is only one "Bromo Quinine." i E. W. GROVE'S signature on box. 30a j f STOCKHOLDERS' MEETING. A meeting of the stockholders of the Bamberg Bottling Company will be held in the office of the Company, Broad street, Bamberg, S. C., on Friday, October 7th, 1921, at 10 o'clock, a. m., at which meeting a resolution will be introduced to liquidate the affairs of the said Company and have its Charter cancelled by tihe Secretary of State. THOMAS DUCKER, President. B. F. i REE, Secretary. 1016 A TONIC Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic restores Energy and Vitality by Purifying and Enriching the Blood. When you feel its strengthening, invigorating effect, see how it brings color to the cheeks and how it improves the appetite, you will then appreciate its true tonic value. Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic is simply Iron and Quinine suspended in syrup. So pleasant even children like it The blood needs QUININE to Purify it and IRON to Enrich it. Destroys Malarial germs and Grip germs by its Strengthening, Invigorating Effect 60c. DR. THOMAS BLACK DENTAL SURGEON. Graduate Dental department University of Maryland. Member S. C. State Dental Association. Office opposite postoffice. Office hours, 9:00 a. m. to 5:30 p. m. Read The Herald, $2.00 per year. NOTICE OF DISCHARGE. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINACOUNTY OF BAMBERG.?COURT OF PROBATE. ExParte John K. Snelling, Petitioner. In Re Estate of Elvira Brennon. Whereas John K. Snelling as guardian for Elvira Brennon has filed his petiton with me for 'his final discharge as guardian of the said Elvira Brennon. Now, therefore, all persons having claims or interest in the said estate will show cause before me on the 14th day of October, 1921, at 10 o'clock a. m., at my office in Bamberg, O C* t-T ? "U 4-V,r\ ^ o i rl T n XT Qnn11in(r 1 o. , V> lij luc saiu u vjiiu. xv. uubiiiua should not be discharged as such guardian for the said Elvira Brennon. J. J. BRABHAM, JR., Probate Judge, Bamberg, S. C. Sept. 14, 1921. 10-7 No Wormj In a Healthy Child All children troubled with Worms have an unhealthy color, which indicates poor blood, and as a ; role, there is more or 1 ess stomach disturbance.' GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC given regn- j larly for two or three weeks will enrich the blood, ] improve the digestion, and act as a general Strength- j ening Tonic to the whole system. Nature will thaij throw off or dispel the worms, and the Child will be in perfect health. Pleasant to take. 60c per bottle. ? cv* I Best material and workman- Q ship, light running requires p little power; simple, easy to g handle. Are made in several |g sizes and are good, substantial S money-making machines down j| to the smallest size. Write for m catalog showing Engines, Boil- S ers and all Saw Mill supplies. ^ LOMBARD IROX WORKS & | SUPPLY CO. I S Augusta, Georgia 3 The Quinine That Does Not Affect the Head Because of its tonic and laxative effect, LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE is better than ordinary Quinine and doe9 not cause nervousness nor r'uging in head. Remember the full name and look for the signature of E. W. GROVE. 30c. J. F. Carter B. D. Carter J. Carl Kearse Carter, Carter & Kearse ATTORXE YS-AT-1 A VV Special attention given to settlement of Estates and Investigation of Land Titles. Loans negotiated on Real Estates. 1 Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days Druggists refund money if PAZO OINTMENT fails to cure Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles. Instantly relieves Itching Piles, and you can get restful sleep after the first application. Price 60c. RILEY & COPELAND Successors to W. P. Riley. Fire, Life Accident INSURANCE j Office in J. IX Copeland's Store BAMBERG, 8. C. BUY WAR SAVING STAMPS fnstipation is the forerunner of 85% of all human ills. It brings on more suffering; nore sleeplessness, lore ill-temper /than ly other single cause. \\J J/ | But YOU. CAN GET U RID of constipation. i Nor do you have to take V Ft any nauseating, griping ! tea medicines to do it. Take | RICH-LAX i RICH-LAX is a new treatment It cleans the system, removes the poisons from the body, and puts you in shape to accomplish things. And RICH-LAX does this without leaving you weak and half-sick, as you always feel after taking ordinary laxatives. Guaranteed at Our Store. We are so sure that Rich-Lax will please you that we want you to come to our store and get a bottle and try it entirely at our risk. If it doesn't suit you, if it isn't the best laxative medicine you ever used, simply tell us so and we will promptly refund the. full purchase price. MACK'S DRUG STORE. ?w.j- . ??ji ._j ' , . __ I G. Lloyd Pre I Architects ai OFFI Atlanta, Ga. Augusta, Ga. ______ 8" In j | The New She Ifron1 r-TTYif MS // 1/ 1 "makesafej REAR FAULKNER & BELL State I>istributers BAMBERG, S. C. WV I / CAN Na" Good business means which in turn means sup for permanent prosperit; There is not a single le (tivitv that we do not fa^ triotic. / Any man who has in i pansion is heartily urge* with us, if we can he of s RESOURCES OVE ? ' . -. -i.C; ;. / r ?-L .? _ - ' S-.-fta x \ acher & Co. id Engineers OES: Spartanburg, S. C. | Raleigh, X. C. ... ' M H \ : ; < g nrannnHnn I???????jMg. YEN BROS. MARBLE - f AND GRANITE CO. 'W SIGNERS | NUFACTURERS ECTORS ! v A IJtsgt rhe largest and best equipped numestal mills in tbe Carolines. GREENWOOD, 8. O. ickAbsorber f j II r VIEW VIEW ^ J I JAS. T. BURCH & CO. I I Dealers * BAM BE KG, S. C. I agBMBsaaggm increased production? port of the national plans ?. . . gitimate expansion or acror, and our reason is pa nind such activity or ex- I i to come in and consult | ervice. | 8 11,000,000.00 I M