Barnwell sentinel. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 185?-1925, June 21, 1917, Image 2
HE FORECASTS THE WEATHER
MMNNillli|N<
■S - m y «*•
Whole Campaign Against ttie
Teutons Hinges’on Ac
tion of America.
• BRITAIN IN STRAITS
: , FOR MORE SURGEONS
J ' Manchester, Rhg.T^Tie drain •
• which the war has made Upon •
Ji*the British medleiil ptyfessloft is j
•-4 shown by the fact -that more '#
^ *■
•—tjinn ~ 25fi- physicians and ’tmr-
• geons from the Manchester dis- •
• , triet are serving in the army. 2
J The 1 insistent demands for •
• more army surgeons will pet .J
• slight response from this district •
• A because it -has already tyepn «
J ‘combed out, says the Munches- •
• ter. Guardian. -7 :. ' ~ S
Look to This Country for Men, Money
and 8upplies—Renewed Activity
Ih East Hope of General# in
• West.
[Swfwwi
JSSCSLf
By ARTHUR S. DRAPER.
* - the'New ...York TribixicJ’-
London.—Amertm jiow Impls the pi
votnl posilion in tlie war.- 'This 1 ac 1
will become more^lrlklugiy appitreii 1
if) tlO' mjk t- Jje u ffUtiULha. , : .11...
America today is like a foot bull play
■er-called info the game late in the sec
CROW MEAT IS
i'iiV
Two German Pood Speculators in=-J*H4-
for Trying to Corner-the^ Crow -
Martyr
Two German food specula-
« extended their activities
even to crows, which htr(»ln preiit do-
d on account of th<
goal For America to moot me. nan over
the crossbar. '*
America does not yet appreciate how
much dependence the allies are plac
ing on her. nor the dilliculties ahead.
Hencelurth the whole campaign-of the
grand allies will revolve a round Amer
ica—and Russia. * Rut the Russian
lenders today are frank to admit that
for the present at least Russia will fol-
low the.sympathetic lend of republican
America, * •
What Allies. Expect. .
France is looking to America,to give
her assistance4n tin* line of battle and
to support her financially. Italy looks
for money. Serbia hopes to get Slavs
from America to re-enforce her buttered
army. Belgium asks little, hut will he
devoutly grateful for anything. Eng-
land, strong and confident, is.overjoyed
with what her new partner already.has
1 __ 'I***'I''W •' I >1 •»-*- *i*
done. * _
America can and will poon .become
,tfie dominating factor of the war. She
Is fresh ; her resources are unlimited';
she has a definite policy. Whether or
not America Wants*the limelight, it will
be thrust upon her.
She can become the lender of the
world or the scapegoat of the grand
alliance. It Is for her to choose, hut
upon what she does In the next few
months will depend her position In the
world for generations.
Some weeks ago Premier Lloyd.
George appealed to America for "ships,
ships, ships.” Now his appeal, if he
dared speak frankly, would be for
speed. It Is nTl very well to talk of
beating Germany lb 101K or. IMP, but
It leaves people cold. The European
statesmen know that the. .people will
no longer be satisfied with anything
hut hard facts.—Within the. central
powers unrest has been bottled up for
so long- that it- is becoming more dar
ing,- and even the Prussian government
fears revolution. The -vLloyd George
government has no smooth path ahead
of It, In every belligerent the same
feeling exists7~T
That Is why It is essential for Amer
ica to make speed.
Still Determined to Win.
I must make It-perfectly clear that"
blockade-runner. 4—Japanese cruiser Atoisa arriving at s
Use Schools as Canneries;'
Fond du Lac, Wis.—Every ^'school
im 11 ding In the qlty this wiiiiifner wlJJ
he converted into ff canning factory.
Pressure cookers for canning fruits
and vegetables will he installed and
may be used gratuitously by house
wives and schoolgirls c for the preser
vation of foodstuffs during the canning
season. Competent instructors jfrani
the State university will be on hand to
give aid.
ambassador to “Japan.
GENERAL WOOD IS WELCOMED BY ATLANTA
Phntirojf California’s weather prophet
taken in front’of his laundry Jn Simla
4 11 .. 9 . * •- ■ V 1r : . -v -
Clara. Sing Kee hits been very suc
cess fill this season in' naming the
weathefr’Ve are to have, but, like ail
Chines**/ doCs/imt .approve uf his ptc-
lore being printed. Lie says “him sure
no lain if you print bint-picture,-and
if UeHookee sky then himJsuredaih." —
His the Job to Clear Mysteries
of Graveyards of •
further,
lie told me of one of. the most
cent of his diving exploits.
Seven Seas
t he blade **f a
ship’s propelk
r trying to., release- a
cable which imart foaled ns~she went
down. ' As I finally got the cable free
the propeller -began to move- and
pitched me oflf. It revolved several
times; I thought my number was up,
as I belle v«l the blades Would cut 111/
Must Survey Ships Sunk by Subma
rines, Mines and 'Shells in the
Last Three Years —150
Feet Is the Limit.
air cbmmnntcatlons
only trouble was in regainthg ray feet
again. It is extremely^dlffictflt to get
a footing once you have lost it. Some
times you corpti tiplegs first. It w-u-s a
narrow ™sqycak/y
One of tlnynnvy diyers'.recently lost
two flngeps when nipped by^a mib
which. ho said, measured fully two'feet
across lts^ back. There . are many
stories about divers which they them
selves cast suspioionmn, but this was
not one of thenIA!,, The fingers were
gone when the man came to the sur
face in an exhyusted condition.
•With the Grand Fleet.—Submarines.
1uities and gunfire In the last three
years have added more Victims to the
graveyards-ttf. t,he 'seven seas-than in
any other period of tlie world’s his
tory. It wfH*-«M*Mrin for The* diver to
clear*. ui*r4be'Triyseries that surround
1 lanyiof them. Even now the duties
of these men, so little brought to pub
lic attention, ls—tme of the most ex-
woooq?
1 r.Qf
SQADIER
Gen. Leonard Wood, arriving in Atlanta to take command of the departriient of the Southeast, was accorded »
rousing welcome. The lllustrntiQn _shows the parade of the students of the GCorgtn School of /Technology; which
I have hud un opportunity of tulk
lug with a diver who has had wide ex
Lint .working, in the rnhl sans where fiontml Wtuid. nnntte:m.t ino.rttwi
353S55 iEam before comoleiefi
naces
survey of a wreck. It was a .difficult
piece of, work, and one illustrative of
the hardships of the profession. lie
GUARDING THE STORM-WREAKED TOWNS
WOOD'S SON A CAPTAIN
is the octopus of tropical -waters.
While many craft now lying'in "com- |
shnHow water ’ may be
dependenec on Amcrica to assist in ob
taining a pence which, In the words
of General Smuts, woGhl establish "se
curity in the future” for all peoples,
large' or small.
But that pence cannot be secured
without the full and speedy co-opera
tion of America, 1 state this, not fill
my own authority, but on that of-then
who know every detail of the situa
tion ns It exists today. ''Labor, Ireland,
liquor and fond are only a few of the
paratlvely
pntchedvUp and raised when the war is
over. It Is certain that divers will prln- ‘
elnally be-engUged In -ascertaining the
ymereaboutB of tyrecks, the causeti—
vn^iiel| lerLtmheir destruction, anti th«
repairs:necessary to attempt any re
covery of tl,ie vessels. The profession
lias been largely'augmented during'the
\Vyr. T-here are great (TIfITculties 'ln
surveying ships,, particularly, if v ttfe>'
tie in northern seas, where the water
had found the wreck, but fully a mile
ami a half from where' the vessel had
foumtered. —A ^strong Current had
swept it that distance.
"Will it be possible to go down to
the Lusifanin?", I asked liim, recall
ing the discussion in American marine
quarters us. to the posxjbilltyybf ‘sav-
questions’whieh Ibis government must
settle wliile at the same time It con
tinues its pressure on the enemy.
Around the British premier is a
where sho-went dtiwh.-for any diver
{o reach iier,” wa^/Iils answer. . "Of
course filiero have -been many notable
diving feats pfi^fecenr years - and new^ iriTProor nepxn'.Tire pfyssure is so great
apnlie.aiH’es are always being experi- that bofttre divers Tire- brought to the
lueiited with, though thojv.sccuis noth- : surface rhey-musL-linger. in a soft-of
ing ti^/present which woijkT warrant "twilight zonV^at a deT*th .of 120 feet,
the belief that-A-divei’-cotild go down !.or slightly 4f>ss, so their Rings can get
tfi the great liner. ,H Is possible tfi : in proppf' shape before they can be
group ot men
compromising -
—but'they hi
juncture, and
government by
next-few week:
NAVAL RESERVES ON BOSTON PIER
tCkaMivXiXv.,
ith Lead Pencil'.
• Capt.—Ossborho Wood, sop of MnJ*
Gen. Leotinrd -Wood, commander the
Southeastern department. Inspecting
-flrms-ot ^.fiotnpany ,of Haryiard’a *?&•
I»B(lott,r-TbeTkim?e of
which ov»‘rthrew cx^zhLN
Russia and the most Aiitm
To i»revenf looting and other crimes In the Illinois towns struck by the
tornadoes, membtus of the National Guard were put on duty. - One of them Is
" ‘ " " “came hac^”
goyr'i shqwu Jiere qiicatloning a, strainter. Above is a .family cat that
1.11 it t * 11T ilit It »» , f ^
Adme-tt knptv.
tb'tlurfuins *of
ment,
with the stub of a bird iwuiclL’
The act of abdication itself was
typewritten—the-.one tnAih-rn note in
the. whole story<—but v^lien Yt came
’ Eagle Attacks Deer. .1 t ~ Home Economic*. • ' ' Fishing for Sharks.-
AlherT Bilker, forest ran-ger.jit the- Prof. Harry F, Itausoh -In a lecture ^jfo. section of the Atlantic ifenboard
Bingham Springs station in Oregon, at the OnLyersity b#-vW-g*hingtoj|!gave wiil offer n better field for exploitation
repormT’an‘atTnck --n bald eagle some hlDts/ahouthome>cpQomics, one than the deep sea fishing .gx-otinds dL
upon a iMiihd of seven deer near bm of which was thbt Loodk^hivshallow* reetjy off the .Delaware eSpcs, If At.
Rtjitlon'. The ea^le would swoop dowm/^ans oopkt.mafe rapidly 'than ln -d^ep ; lantlc fisheg^ep decide To take advan.
to signing no pep was,b* be-4i;»d.
Finally, ,M.* Shulgih. who accooi-
panted War' Minister Gucbkoff tc
; Hskto’. fi-lc-d a bit 4 l"iii| pencil from
jikns, tKui Tavmg/tFWfe- Another wiftt
that not a scrap of > HT of anjr sort
nee3 be thrown awa.t, but all should
go into • doable broiler and be tried
out to use in frying «r as shortening
fur paafry. v
on the deer and strike one of thCitnE.
mala with such force as to prostrate
lt Tbe/anfer war tmable'To sseTBe
finish, as the deer escaped over the
jgdge. It la believed the animal* escaped
hlis poeket, • The czar took, it and
scribbled his nnmg with a shaky hand
r *7The*e details of thereat Russian
federal bureau of dsheries to the
ic -coast fishing fleets that they
More than J.OOO members orthC Naval Reserve, hailinCv frOHtall portions
of the United States, ^tre now quartered on the Commonwealth phriC.South
on a wholesale
f revolution have just bben received
whlfh has been taken over by the United States government
h m Tm 1 ninw ntatlnn " -V 1 ^
fartud Into 1 training station.
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