The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, June 06, 1907, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

&V i % % -* t . IMOTHERHOOD g The first requisite of a good < ' I mother is good health, and the exj Kj perience of maternity should not be ! G approached without careful physical I preparation, as a woman who is in good physical condition transmits to her children the blessings of a good constitution. Preparation for healthy maternity is accomplished by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, which is made from native roots and herbs, more successfully than by any other medicine because it gives tone ; and strength to the entire feminine organism, curing displacements, ulceration and inflammation, and the result is less suffering and more cl than thirty years ? ? *? ? - - ? v Lydia t. Finkham sv has been the standby of Amei'ican 1 Note what Mrs. JamesChester.of42 letter:?Dear Mrs. Pinkham:-';I wisl: Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Comp of its great value at this trying peril it and I did so, and I cannot say enc I recovered quickly and am in the b Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable 1 remedy for the peculiar weaknesses It has cured almost every form of tions, Weak Back, Falling and Dis tions and Organic Diseases of Wome Childbirth and during the Change ol Mrs. Pinkham's Standi] Women suffering from any form write Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mas T^IImill 111 II 11 II i i iiiinIIi mi i ITT Write for Catalogue p. Let us pay the postage on our large; illustrated free catalog: it contains j the most convincing argument in behalf of a commercial education, our practical methods of teaching and the : success of our graduates ever compiled. ^ The lady whose picture we present ^finished our course, writing 150 words j of new matter per minute in five | r weeks, accepted a position with a 1 large law firm, where four stenogra- i phers were employed, and in less than >a month she was made head stenographer. She is soon to take a trip to Europe on the money she has earned in this office. ^ We have had a thriving school in :the city of Atlanta for the past three :years, and its graduates are now holdilng many of the very best positions -of our southern cities. We have sold more than 100 scholarships in Athens, Ga., and will open a school there on the 24th of June, to be known as the U '"Athens Business College. This school Is assured a large patronage from its '"opening. We have the exclusive con! trol of the famous Byrne Simplified j ?? i " f' Shorthand and Practical Bookkeeping,! ; .which have made the Byrne Business Colleges so popular. One of them enjoyed the largest enrollment during 'the month of January of any American, ! Business College. With these systems, we can turn out and place in a gocd . position a better bookkeeper or stenographer in three months than can j any other school teaching any other j Bystem in six months. Fill in and mail to the school you would prefer \ to attend jName ^ Address ? Atlanta Commercial College, 24 1-2 j Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga.; Athens' Business College, 184 1-2 Clayton St.,! Athens, Ga. ?j MISPLAYIXG IT. Mrs. Browne: "Mrs Whyte says, she thinks that it is wrong to play; \ bridge." Mrs. Black: "It is the way she plays | It."?Somerville Journal. I Lfbfey's Vcsl Loaf With Bed end Pork Do you like Veal Loaf? You will surely be delighted with Libby's kind, made from choice fresh meats, ia Libby's spotless kitchens. It is pure, wholesome and delicious in flavor. Ready for Servir.ff At Once.-Simply garnished with siuce it is an appetizing entree for luncheon or dinner Atk yMr rrwer f*r LlbVv'* ead Insist j up .n setting LlbbyV Libby, McNeill & Libby Chicago 3r . v ' . . rS+z* V ' - i MRS* JAMES CHESTER | T 1 iV? +V T7"/-M- THAKl Ifl "lilUi CU UvdlUl^ CL Kj Ull VU> 4' V* V ^ Vegetable Compound J r.others in preparing for childbirth, n :7 W. 35th St., New York says in this H i every expectant mother knew about ft ound. A neighbor who had learned ft od of a woman's life urged me to try ft >ugh in regard to the good it did me. E est of health now." S Compound is certainly a successful 1 5 and ailments of women. E Female Complaints, Dragging Sensa- B placements. Inflammation. Ulcera- a n and is invaluable in preparing for y f Life. * rag Invitation to Women | of female weakness are invited to 9 s. Her advice is free. Jj ^ w/ A OFFERED WORTHY yOunG PEOPLE \Z^Sr t/i// (/ IVjO matter how limited / J\ your means or education, if ^you^wislr a training and good position, write today for ' Our Great Half-Rate Offer. Success, independence and probable FORTUNE guaranteed. Don't delay?write today. GA.-ALA. BUS. COLLEGE. MACON, OA. f Don't Use "Practically I * TTT1 *i _ T J ft l"ure" wnue i-?caa There is no other pigment that is "practically" \Vhite Lead?no other paint that has the properties of Pure White Lead Paint. Pure White Lead, good paint that it is, cannot carry adulterants without having its efficiency impaired. To get Pure White Lead durability, see to it that every keg bears the Dutch Boy trade mark?a guarantee that the conv tents are absolutely Pure White Lead made by the Old Dutch Process. SEND FOR BOOK "A Talk on Paint." gives valuable information on the paint subject. Sent free upon request NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY. in whichever of tha follow irig cities to nearest you : New York. Boston, BoffnJo. Clerelanrf. Cincinnati, Chicago. St. Philadelfhia [John T. Lewi*? Bro*. Co.J; Pittsburgh National Lead k 011 Co.] #5 Dropsy II V- Removes all swelling in 8 to 20 days; effects a permanent cure A\ in 30 to 60 days. Trial treatment yV' wWX^Kfl^given free. Nothingcan be fairer C oitiflsBi Write Or. H. H. Green's Sons. V:\wvvlS; Specialists. Box b Atlanta, 6r HIS CULINARY LOVE. Cook: "Now we've 'ad ?ords, you'll be lookin' for another cook to keep company with?" Policeman: "Not me. I'll starve first!"?Punch If you have" not received the Argo Red Salmon Cook Book, ask your grocer or send a postal to the Alaska Packers Association, Atlanta, Ga., Advertising Department. If the ladies will keep on courting the chained lightning at the white house, warns the Atlanta Constitution, they will force the organization of a "Sapphira uiud.' HOME WEEK IX BOSTON. Sons and Daughters of New England Capital to Visit Scenes of Youth. The greatest event for Boston and for all New England this season will be the home-coming week in Boston. This will occur at the end of July, and will attract thousands of persons ; from every part of the country to the I i i city and the section of the country i where their ancestors lived and where their affections are centered. The citizens of Boston have made liberal preparations for a grand cele- j J bration of the history and achieve- j i ments of Boston and the Common- } wealth of Massachusetts. There will be a week of midsummer reunions of i families and of public festivities. The { Lime selected is from July 2S to Au- | gust ??. j j The home-coming week in Ken- ' i tucky attracted ha if a million visit- j ! ors to Louisville and the home-coin- j j injr for Georgia was likewise grate- j l'ully accepted. There is no doubt of | the attraction to Boston of a far great- ; er number of sons and daughters who j cherish the traditions and the sue- j | cesses of the people and who venerate i the history of the famous city which I is the leader in the literature, art and j the civilization of America. ( ' v- :i< - * '* 1 -' - ' At . :. ^- .*1 '-j.*.. . *' SP.NNEF.S AND GROWERS Stand Together in Opposition to Speculation in Fleecy Staple?Vienna Congress Closes. The International Cotton Congress, held in Vienna Austria, came to an end May 29. The attitude of the congress was, on the whole, favorable, the most important thing the congress did was to reach an understanding as to how cotton could be ginned, baled and delivered. An interesting feature was the fact that both growers and spinners were united in opposition to j speculation in cotton futures and in i this connection a resolution was pass- J cd in favor of the compression of the cotton at the ginneries or at the point of production. In the matter of the question of tare the congress adopted a resolution establishing a maximum allowance of tare at 22 pounds per bale, instead of the 6 per cent of the gross weight of the cotton as is now the custom. This arrangement works in favor of the American growers. The spinners expressed a desire for closer and more direct relations with the growers of cotton, and this attitude on their part may be taken as a recognition of the views on this subject presented by the American delegates to the congress, who, in their addresses, labored to disabuse the minds of the spinners of the idea that the American growers had any intention of unduly advancing the price of cotton. Another resolution passed by the congress expressed the satisfaction of that body with the statement made by the American representatives that the Americans intend to adopt every possible measure to improve the existing methods of transporting cotton from the plantations to the spinners. The question of insurance was referred to the next congress. In the matter of the extension of cotton culture the congress expressed the opinion that all countries where efforts are being made to extend the area of cultivation are deserving of liberal support. The congress was prompted pass this resolution by the recognition of the fact that the world's supply of cotton should not depend upon the climatic conditions of any one country. Speaking on this subject, the American delegates declared that according to their experience those European ountries who are trying to introduce the culture of cotton into their various colonies are laboring with slight prospects of success. Harvie Jordan reminded his hearers that during the civil war in the United Stat4s efforts then adopted to this end were more persistent than today and that they were in vain. Daniel G. Roper concluded his address with an appeal to the delegates to the congress to participate indirectly in the growing of cotton on American soil. He declared it would be a good thing if the European growers of cotton would send their surplus of able agriculturalists to the United States in order to help extend the cultivated area in that country, saying this method would dispose definitely with the question, where the world in the future would get its necessary supply of cotton. The EnsrHsh deleaates snoke in fa vor of the greatest possible decentralization of cotton growing, declaring that today Europe was as much dependent as ever on one part of the world the bulk of its cotton supply. This view was seconded by the German delegates and as an outcome of this difference of opinion the congress passed the resolution to the effect that all cotton growing countries should receive general support. LYNCHED FOR USUAL CRIME. Mob Takes Negro from Jail and Launches Him Into Eternity. Henry Johnson, a middle-aged negro, was lynched at Echo, La., Saturday night by about 150 men, who took him from jail. He was charged with attempted criminal assault upon the wife of his employer. Johnson had worked about a year for Ephraim Pearce, a prominent planter. Mr. Pearce was absent from home and during this time the negro made his attack. CHANGE OF VENUE GRANTED. Former Judge Loving Will Be Tried at Houston, Va., June 24. The trial of former Judge Loving, charged with the murder of Theodore Estes, at .Lexington, va., win taae place at a special term of court to be held at Houston, Halifax county, beginning June 24. Judge Barksdale's decision granting a change of venue was announced closely following Loving's indictment. WHITE MAN AND NEGRO Found Guilty by Jury of Murder of Reese Jones. The .jury at Buchanan. Ga.. in the case of Ben Adams, white, and Hilliard Lee, colored, charged with the j murder of Reese Jones, a white man, j after being out all night came in at j 9 o'clock Thursday morning with a verdict of guilty and recommending life sentences. J pHSTwis Next Reunion of the Grizzled j Heroes of Confederacy. RE-ELECT OLD OFFICERS General Stephen D. Lee Remains Commander-in-Chief ? Committee Reports Important Resolutions, Which Are Adopted. The grand camp., cnned conteaerate Veterans, at Saturday's session in Richmond, re-elected its general officer as follows: Commander-in-Chief, General Stephen D. Lee. Lieutenant General Department Army of Northern Virginia, General Irvine Walker. Lieutenant General Department of Tennessee, General Clement A. Evans. Lieutenant General Trans-Mississip'pi Department, General W. L. Cabell. All of the officers were chosen by acclamation. Birmingham was the city chosen for the next (eighteenth) annual reunion of the veterans. Other cities in competition were San Antonio and Nashville. The vote stood about 1,600 to 800 in favor of the Alabama town. The report of the committee on resolutions was adopted without debate. It recommends that the speeches of General S. D. Lee, Senator Jno. M. Daniel and Colonel Robert E. Lee, Jr., be printed in pamphlet form for distrioution, and endorses the objects and aims of the Arlington Confederate monument in Arlington National Cemetery. On the correct representation of the Confederate battle flag, the resolutions submit as a substitute, "That the action of this association at its convention held in Nashville, Tenn., in 1904, be endorsed and reaffirmed." The report favors the preservation of all papers, manuscripts and historical sketches of the" Confederate States, and recommends the endowment of a Confederate hospital in the home formerly owned by "Stonewall" Jackson at Lexington, Va. The report recommends the tabling of the request of the Daughters for a change of the rules governing the bestowal of the crosses of honor, so that they may be worn by the aescendauts of the recipients. Ti J i. t _r it tua.uh.tj uuugre&s diiu tue president for returning the captured battle flags and for appropriating $200,000 'to mark the graves of Confederate soldiers buried on northern soil. It likewise thanks the Twenty-third New Jersey Infantry fo rerecting a tablet at Salem church to the Alabama soldiers with whom it was engaged. PUGH SIX The report urges that the southern states give each Confederate soldier a testimonial of his record, and when the end comes an appropriate burial; also that the division commanders shall constitute the executive committee of the association. It declares that the title of general shall be borne only by those who had that title during the war. It also recommends the tabling of the resolution passed by the Daughters and providing that no state sponsors and maids of honor be appointed. It likewise recommends the tabling of the resolution regarding a monument to the women of the south, and extends sympathy to the family of Mrs. McKinley. The report is signed by Joseph F. Johnston of Alabama, chairman; John P. Hickman of Tennessee, secretary; B. W. Green of Arkansas; S. E. Lewis of District of Columbia; Albert A. Estopianial of Louisiana; Thomas Spight of Mississippi; W. H. S. Burwin of North Carolina; L. S. Gore of Northwest Division; E. K. Goree of Texas; Samuel Pasco of Florida; O. L. Schumpert of South Carolina. SNOW FALLS IN NEW YORK. Flurries Add Midwinter Aspect to Advent of Summer Month. Snow fell in New York Sunday. The flakes did not fall to the pavements, but coming from a colder strata they swirled about the tops of the skyscrapers and before dissolving added a midwinter touch to the most remarkable June that New Yorkers have known. In the Catskills, where many New Yorkers have already taken up summer quarters, there were two heavy snow squalls during the day. MERCHANT GROOVER ACQUITTED Jury Frees Man Charged With Murder of Woman by Poison. | After being out twenty-four hours the jury at Summerville, Ga., in the I case of the state against G. L. Groover, charged with poisoning Mrs. K. E. Hooks, at Cheisea, on October 2, 1906, returned a verdiot of not guilty Saturday afternoon. On account of the prominence of the parties the case attracted wide attention. j r - * -V'*" ' :* r - y- ' ! FRED BUSH ACQUITTED. Atlanta Man on Trial for Sending Infernal Machine to Young Woman Exonerated. At Atlanta Friday af:ernoon, after being out one hour and ten minutes, the jury brought in a verdict of not guilty in the case of Fred Bush, charged with sending an infernal bomb to the McCarthy home on the night of May 8. The case went to the jury at exactly 2:30 o'clock, and at 3:40 the verdict had been made. The state introduced comparatively i little new evidence and nonp of it of a direct nature. The defense, on the | otjier hand, produced no witnesses" I whatever, although it had summoned several. Its efforts were directed, for the most part, in an attack against the prosecution's testimony. It was largely a battle of lawyers, both sides making able and, at time, heated arguments. ; The vstaie introduced three witnesses. They were Patrolman McGill, John Ballinger, a negro messenger boy; and Ed McGill, a white messenger boy. Patrolman McGill testified to having | seen Bush twice on the night of the explosion, and at a time an hour or more after Bush had said he was in his room asleep. The negro boy said that Bush looked like the man who gave him a package in front of 1 North Forsyth street, on the night of the explosion. He could not identify him positively, however, and his testimony was ruled out. The McGill boy simply testified as to having taken the package from Bal; linger and delivered it at the McCarthy residence. Bush's statement was in the nature ! of a general denial of what the state i charged against him. He protested ! that his wish to interfere with the | proposed marriage between Doolittle { and Miss Katie McCarthy, for whom I the machine was intended, was a business one, as Doolittle spent too much time at the phone talking to her. Bush was unperturbed throughout j the trial. Not even when Mr. Hill pointed him out to the spectators and the jury as the guilty man did he wince. He talked on the stand without nervousness, and deliberately. He I detailed all his movements on the i i night of the explosion, j Mr. Hill had characterized the relai tions between Bush and Doolittle as strange ones, and said that the affection shown tiy Bush to Doolittle- sur| passed that of a man for a woman. { He made an able speech. Mr. GoodI win, associate counsel for Bush, declared that the newspapers had black> ened the characters of both Bush and Doolittle, but he was interrupted by the court and told to confine his argument strictly to the evidence in the I case. Mr. Rosser, chief counsel for ' Bush, also took a fling at the "arguseyed" reporter. On the announcement of the jury's verdict applause broke out in the court room. The judge cautioned the spectators about making any display. The deputy sheriff rapped loudly for order, and the judge demanded to know who had applauded, but nobody could tell mm. "I do not mean to say that I ap-1 prove or disapprove of the verdict," said Judge Roan. "There has been a fair and full trial, and twelve good men have made a verdict. I simply wish you to understand that the court room is not a place for any such display, no matter what the verdict may be." IMPALED ON. PICKET FENCE. Telephone Employee Meets Tragic Death at Cartersville. While talking with some friends, B. C. Peters, an employee of the Southern Bell Telephone company, fell over the baluster of the second-story porch at the Bell hotel at Cartersville, Ga., and as he dropped toward the ground his bodv was impaled on a picket fence. Two of the pickets passed through his body, causing death an hour later. AWAITING REPORT OF CHEMIST Dr. Rowland and New Wife Are Held in North Carolina. Safely secured behind prison bars, charged with the crime of poisoning his 11-year-old son, and accused of causing the sudden death of Engineer Strange, Dr. David Rowland, a prominent physician of Raleign, N. C., eagerly awaits the results of the anal ?-- .1 ysis of the stomacn 01 ms son anu i Strange. With him at the jail at Hen- I derson is his young wife, erstwhile widow of Strange, whom he married one week after the mysterious death of her husband. gray veteran the orator Ex-Confederate Soldier Delivers Federal Memorial Address. An unusual honor was bestowed upon Dr. James H. Reed of Battle Creek, Mich., who delivered the memorial day address at Climax, Mich., Thursday. The doctor, an ex-Confederate, has been an honorary member of the very union regiment he fought against the hardest. I . """" J_.il1 ?A ' BEP3ND3NT IXDEPEXDEXCE. The fathers had just signed the Declaration of Independence. And yet, we mused, not one of them . dares take his winter flannels off till ' \ his wife gives him permission. /\ This goes to show what an abject A coward lordly man really is.?New York Sun. ; Every German soldier's equipment 4 includes a Bible and a half-pound vj* cake of chocolate. I Don't Push^ff l\ The horse can draw the ftfaB ' ; load without help, if you IWB 'vl\ reduce friction to almost / j|JJJ ^^^othing and eaves so much //Jflr ^ \0. horsepower. Next time / JfjP ' $$ try Mica Axle Grease. r@*eskflfe ^ Standard 031 Co. The London Globe declares the ^ critic is the product of birth rathe? '.M than of training. . } > jgfjs FITS, St. Vitns'Danc? rNervoosDiaeaaes permanently cored by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve v 3| Restorer. 13 trial bottle and treatise free. " ?? Dr. H. R. Kline. Ld.,931 Arch St., Phfla., P|k // r ii ROOSEVELT'S $40,000 PHOTO. "fIt Sfcows Him Taking a Fence on a ? * Ml. Hunter and has Been Copied Widely. v' v^i The most widely published and best ' -JE known photograph in existence is said to be that of President Roosfc- ;-r velt taking a fence on his favorite hunter. This has been printed in ad-,' nioslt every paper and magazine in the world which uses half-tcnes, and the ' sales from it have already amounted ; to more than $40,000, making it most profitable photograph ever taken. Nearly 3,000 copies have been sign- 0^ ed by the President to be used special gifts, and the demand for .ft"; wherever it has been placed on sale < has been steady during the three ' and a half years since it was made. "f .',|2g|| It was made with a shutter that *'."J opened and closed in one fifteen- ||S| hundredth port of a second. The . President, accompanied by an oc^ei^x$*:-3 -ly, left the Cabinet meeting one morn- y ing and joined the photographer at Chevy Chase in the suburbs of Washington. It was necessary for the :j?President to force his horse over the ^ ^ fence a dozen times betfore a success- y ful picture was taken. President Roosevelt is probably the -; . most photographed man In the world, with the possible exception of Emperor William-, and photographers sert unreservedly that he is most dif- .-^^^' ficult to pose. He is nervous, and is. ;^|gj often snapped in what might seem hit or miss style, but every picture . <?'.* ever taken of him i3 thoroughly charactteristic.?New York Sun. * Worth the Price. v An English jur^r has awarded $1,250 ' r ijSS damages to a woman who before an accident could reach high C when sang, but after it, could get no./iwr-j ther than B flat. From this it wouid / seem as if they thought the poer girt' ^||| had been damaged. But this is doubt- * ful. As a general thing reaching hieh C is much like what Br. son said about a dog's waiting on his hind legs: "It is not done but you are surprised to find it don# v'V;* at all."?fBoston Herald. r CLERICAL GOLF. . ~ She (watching clergyman on the ,^-g golf links): "There's one thing I mire about the Rev. Holdforth. Ho always says .what he means." ,^||f t- He; "Oh, no, he doesn't. Whop he 'liisses the ball he generally just grit? his teeth."?Judge. f-; - ^ CHILDREN SHOWED IT. 'Q Effect of Their Warm Drink in the t j k-MS Morning. - * ^ "A year ago I was a wreck from coffee drinkiig and was on the point v^' of giving up my position in the school room because of nervousness. "I was telling a friend about it and 1^". she said, 'We drink nothing at meal time but Postum Food Coffee, and it is such a comfort to have something we can enjoy drinking with the chiK k&jE dren.' * "I was astonished that she would ; 5 allow the children to drink any kind' . ^ ^ OI COIiee, DUI sue sam x"uaium w<u> ' the most healthful drink In the world for children as well as for older ones, ' and that the condition of both the children and adults showed that to be y-' Ja fact. i "My first trial was a failure. The cook boiled it four or five minutes and it tasted so fiat that I was in de- - ' V spair, but determined to give it one '. ^'.6 more trial. This time we followed Xh the directions and boiled it fifteen / j| minutes after the boiling began. It ^ was a decided success, and I was completely won by its rich, delicious^ J- * flavour. In a short ;time 1 noticed a decided improvement in my condition v.: and kept growing better and better month after month, until now I am y T>prfp<?tlv TipaJfhv ami rlo mv work in ? the school room with ease and pleasure. I would not return to the nervedestroying regular coffee tor any money." "There's a Reason." Read the fa- { moua little "Health Classic," "Tha Itoad to Wellvilie, ' in pkgs.