The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, April 19, 1917, Page 4, Image 4

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I QZije pamtierg ?|eralb ESTABLISHED APRIL. 1891. Thursday, April 19, 1917.1 In the conflict now upon us, there is no place for the idler. Every one must do his or her part. The idler consumes food and gives the nation j nnthinw in rofnrn April is our war month. Nearly ?very war in which we have ever been engaged was begun during this month. Six wars began in April, as follows: Revolutionary war began 1 in April, 1775; Black Hawk war began in April. 1 S31 ; .Mexican war be- j gan in April, 1S46; civil war began in April, 1S61; war with Spain began in April, 1S9S: war with Germany began in April, 1917. The only other important war America has ever been engaged in was that of 1S12 with England, which began in June of that year. "Grow food or go hungry," is the way one exchange puts it. And it amounts to just about that. No matter how attractive the price of cot ton may be, you can't eat cotton. Bamberg county must be self-supporting. It should be self-supporting not only during this crisis, but all of the time. We believe this to be the best i farming section in the world?right here in Bamberg county?because practically anything and everything can be grown here profitably, and there is no real reason why we should look to the West to raise food for us. We recall reading in some muckraking magazine some months ago t that it would require two or three years to manufacture rifles and equipment for an army of 500,000. We shall soon see whether there is truth in such assertions. If we were in authority, persons publishing such statements would be called on to prove their assertions. But even if the United States is not fully prepared to enter this war, America has never failed in any emergency, and she will not fail now. We hope that I it will not be necessary to put Ameri- j can troops in this war; but if they i are put there, the other side will know it. Everybody has wondered how Senator B. R. Tillma^ regained his health. And well may they wonder, as the senator was expected to die in office long ago?oy several wouia-oe senators from South Carolina. But the senator is not dead yet. In fact he is far from it. In a recent issue of Physical Culture, a health magazine, Senator Tillman tells how he regained his health. An exchange briefly sums it up as fodbws: Hot water drinking; a simple diet; deep breathing; and careful and regular practice of physical culture exercises. He drinks three quarts of hot water regularly every day, and sometimes five or six. He drinks his water before and after meals and the first thing in the morning. He affirms that drinking immediately after meals does good and not harm. His diet consists chiefly of vegetables: onions, spinach and Irish potatoes being his favorites. Fruit and milk are also important items, and cheese and eggs take the place of meat. His deep-breathing exercises are performed systematically and often. In taking exercise, he uses dumbbells and an iron bed. In addition to these exercises, he makes it a rule to walk several miles each day. Senator Tillman points out that these methods can accomplish the seemingly impossible for anyone with a run-down body, and heartily recommends it to all people leading an inactive physical life?especially other senators and public men. L'l 'ITV IV I "C I,1 rililiV A 1IIV 1 1 1 * - ^ V OIJ* Extension in Treatment of Wounds Hesult. of War. / Treatment of the hordes of sick and wounded soldiers in Europe has brought to trial every promising novelty of medical and surgical science, and seems especially to have given a considerable impetus to electrotherapy. Various applications of the electric current at Radcliffe infirmary, Oxford, have been described by Dr. W. J. Turrell. Unclean wounds are ionized, either by applying salt solutions acted on by the electric current or by means of ultra-violet rays, and the usual benefits of effective sterilization are shown. Forms of rheumatism yield to electric treatment. Mild electric shocks stimulate activity in nerves and muscles that have lost their power, and induce movements that break down internal adhesions and prevent binding from tJooio Thoro ovq piirimie rn<spc C IICOI' v. 1 W U1 V VV4 ? *VV?W VV*VV4/ of shell shock, however, in which the patient is averse-to all electrict treatment. It is concluded that, on the whole, application of electric currents may restore function to many crippled limbs and make fit for service many persons who would otherwise be permanently unfit, may completely arrest or greatly relieve many cases of severe pain, and in many less serious cases may greatly hasten cure. Read The Herald, $1.50 a year. I TALKING' KKFORMS IX GKRMAXY. I America's Kntry Into War Has Added Impetus to the Movement. Copenhagen. April G.?America's ; entry into the war evidently has had ! an immediate and strong effect on the reform movement in Germany. The conviction that the instant modernization of the Prussian constitution and the proclamation of a more democratic basis of government and diplomacy in the empire without waiting for the end of the war, is necessary as a military and political measure to counteract the "tempest of the world's public opinion," as the t Vorwaertz puts it, is evidently gain ing ground in all except reactionary circles. Austria's Example. The demand that Germany follow I the example of Austria-Hungary and declare itself in favor of peace withI out annexation is heard from moderate Liberal as well as from Socialist quarters. This demand no longei represents alone the belief of many thinking persons that annexation except for slight frontier alterations would be against the real interests of Germany, but also the realization that after the United States joined the ranks of the enemy the time had passed when Germany .could hope to dictate terms of peace or even moderate terms. Xo Hope of Victory. The Associated Press correspondent heard this view in even gloomier terms from variouo sides in Germany at the time of the rupture of relations T'nitoH Sfntps and Gei UCt CtU III V V 1*4 WV? ^ VV? many, namely, that if the United States decided to take an active part in the war, Germany could no longer hope to gain a victory, but after holding out for a year and a ha jr two years must inevitably submit to the economic pressure of the blockade. America's Strength. The Vorwaertz speaks of the great strength of America as a peace making power and points out that with| out its cooperation at the peace conference it would be impossible to secure the possibilities for economic development which Germany will so sorely need after the war. It concludes by saying that the most urgent need of the hour is the organization of the national defense under the auspices of sweeping reforms and the clearest and most definite announcement of the nation's intention to conduct the war not for conquest but only to foil the hostile designs of annexation and to end it immediately when the enemy denounces such designs. Our Coal Supply. I It is not generally known, but it is none the less true that coal is our most abundant natural resource, declares George H. Cushing in the American Review of Reviews. Our supply will outlive even the natural fertility of the soil. (I distinguish here between natural fertility and fertilized soil.) Our forests even now are vanishing. Our iron ore is! approaching the exhaustion point. We have gone through the rich lenses and are beginning on the complex 01 es in the precious metal njines. But in coal we have, since 1 840, worked out only one-fourth of 1 per cent. That part of coal which is j gone is nothing when compared with that which remains. That is, this is true if you assume that all our coal reserve, regardless of where it lies,; can be made available by some scheme of transportation to all the people, no matter where they live. ' ? - 1 I me united states ueoiu^itai ?ui-i vey has measured our reserve at I something like 4,1 S8 billion tons in; the United States and Alaska. This figure, of course, conveys no impression to anyone except of his inability i to conceive it. To speak of even a | thousand million of anything is to get beyond human comprehension. To speak of four thousand thousand million is merely to multiply an inconceivable numeral by 4,0<10. Perhaps it is more nearly understandable to say that more than 4 5 per cent, of all the coal upon which the world must depend forever?so far as is known now?is piled up in the United States and Alaska. The Alamo. The Alamo is a mission church at San Antonio, in what is now Bexar county, Texas. In 1S36 it was occupied by about 150 of the revolutionists in the Mexican war. Though attacked by 4,000 Mexicans under San| to Anna, the Texans held it from I February 23 to March 6, when Santa Anna took it by storm. All but seven or the garrison perished, six of these being murdered after their surrender, and one man escaping to report the affair. In this garrison were the celebrated David Crockett and Col. James Bowie, inventor of the Bowie knife. The memory of this massacre became an incitement to the Texans in subsequent encounters, and "Remember the Alamo!" became a war cry in their struggle for freedom.? Kansas City Times. 31A RTIA LSI* LEX DOR. Open Fighting of Last Ten Days Different From Trench Warfare. With the British Armies in France, Saturday, March 24.?The open fight-1 ing oi' the last ten days during the j German retreat has presented war j pictures fascinatingly spectacular and j closely approximating the older i I ideals of modern martial splendor, j The roads, or more exactly, the rem- j nants of roads, in some of the strick-1 en districts of France have been fair-; ly choked with troops on the move. I From an eminence on a recently evac- j uated German stronghold could be; seen today a seemingly endless col- j unin of cavalry coming over a distant hill, dipping down into a beautiful valley and rising again by a winding road to a broad, open field where camp was pitched for the night. At times the brown-hued horses and brown-clad men were almost invisible against the brown winter landscape. At points further forward, infantry detachments could be seen disappearing in the distance, skirmishing, dodging, one unit covering another, until it seemed almost as if the days of Indian fighting had returned. Striking Change. This open movement is a striking change from the deadly staleness, the depression of fixed trench fighting. On the other hand, it is wonderlul how the men long inured to trench life have come to love holes in the ground. During the. rest period on long marches many of them can be j seen sitting in deep sneu craiers m preference to the paved roadside. There is warmth below the surface and a protection from the wind which "Tommy" has learned to appreciate. Following the German wake it is! difficult to understand why the re-' tiring army gives up without a fight some of the enormously strong positions that now are in British or j French hands. Almost Miraculous. The changes that have occurred j within a few days in the territory recently occupied by the Germans are almost miraculous. Ruined villages which two days ago seemed isolated within the zone of deadly desolation liad military traffic policemen on duty on their main streets today. Advanced hospitals have been established and divisional and brigade headquarters taken up, while in the corners of the shattered village blacksmith shops were ringing with the sound of hammer upon anvil and j soup kitchens were sending out their , savory odors. Everywhere were visible the* activities of a great army moving forward. .Major generals and brigade generals who a few days ago were occupying comfortable houses behind the old fixed positions are directing operations today from huts and dugouts and thoroughly enjoying the change. .Motoring over pontoon bridges hastily thrown across streams to replace the peimanent structures blown up by the Germans was one of the many novelties offered by the present situation. Another has been to see Indian troops, khaki-clad and with immense khaki turbans on their heads, moving forward as patrols. SOURCES OF EFFORT. Europe Xor America Can Ever Re tlie Same Again. Americans are most interested in I the situation after the war. Every- j * ^ ! one agrees that neitner mrupe nut America can be the same again, observes Elmer Roberts, in the January Scribner. Any political, social or economic. changes in Europe must alTecti us, and Europe, feeling our youthful. I untouched vitality, will wish to draw upon it. Europe, rather run down at the heel, will need our accumulated strength, energy and ideas. I will venture to speak upon two or three broad aspects of our relation to Europe after the war. The! righting European countries are not likely to be as nearly ruined economically as Americans seem to think. Any financier or economist before the war would have said?and those who had occasion to discuss the subject did say?that no modern State could j support a national war for even a year; that the industrial dislocations! and disorders would be unendurable! ( for longer than six or nine months; i | that national organizations would fall j to pieces. It was demonstrated as imj possible that any country could take I three or tour minions ui men nvm productive life and keep them fighting for more than a few months. The war has shown the solidity of the modern State, its power to resist J shock, its mobile adaptation to abrupt changes. Elements of peaceful production and exchange, such as railways, factories, technical skill and organizing genius, are quickly coordinated into instruments of destruction. Effort in the social organism is diverted from constructive purposes to destructive ones. The sources of effort, as we now see, can remain active in war for an indefinitely long period, with only slowly diminishing power. Making Cheese. The development of cheese making in the mountain section of North Carolina marks the greatest industrial stride of the year 1910 in this State. This industry had its beginning in 1914 and there are now nine cheese factories in successful operation, according to a bulletin issued by the extension service bureau of the State. We are told in this bulletin that before this development was undertaken the entire State of North Carolina was producing only about 30,000 pounds - <- -1 .1.:- 1. _ ? ?1.. ,1 ? 01 cueese, mis ueuig <x puiciv uumestic product, made in private homes. The extension service evidently sees an even greater expansion of cheese making in the mountain section and is planning to give encouragement in that direction. The animal industry department of the Agricultural and Mechanical college has organized a course of special instruction in cheese making, the object of which is to assist those who wish to prepare themselves for positions in cheese factories. The work will consist principally of instruction in cheese making and cheese factory management. Twelve factories have been built in the last eighteen months and more are now under construction, so a good opportunity is open for young men in these cheese factory sections. The course this season will open on Jan uary 16 and close on March 3. It is iptended to give instruction to any one wishing to study >the making of cheese and cheese factory management, and is limited to students 16 years of age and older. It is expected that the course will be valuable to those who are thinking of building a cheese factory whether they are to have active charge of it or not. Some of the details of the development of this industry may prove interesting to the Observer's readers. The bulletin states that the little factory at Grassy Creek made 12,365 pounds of cheese from July 13, 1915, to January 14, 1916. The Cove Creek factory made almost 15,000 pounds up to the same date. When it is realized that these little factories cost from $400 to $800, a good idea is obtained relative to the amount of business which can be built up around a small equipment of this kind. The farmers in these cheese communities are also build j8aj3s -qo apopiBqo?'sauopej jo Aiddns aqi spaaoxa iuaq; una o; uaiu jo Aid -dns am Uiun Aid a pjuaxjoj o2 JOUIIBD }! pUB >(JOAV 3lO JO 0?JBip UI sisiimoads aio jo aiuo aio jo ipmu saqBj A[{BjnjBu siqj, *qjOA\ aio ni upiq uibjj pun pooqjoqqSiau 010 m ubiu aiuos a^Bj oj AJBssaoau ueeq SBq ;i sasBD jsora uj 'paqsiiqBjsa uaaq aABq A0qj jajjB saijojDBj aio ubiu oj [ pauiBJi X{juaiDiyns uaiu Suipug ui si qjo.vv 010 qjiAv pajoenuoo saoinog -jip jsajBaaS aio jo auo jnq aiqissod si sb aonBjsissB qama sb iuaio SutAiS 9JB aoiAjas noisuajxa 010 jo uaia aqj, *sasnoq Suuds puB sojis 2ui BOASTERS SHOULD BEWARE. I Self-Exaltation lietrays a Lack of Self-Confidence, j | It is an old, familiar saying that he who excuses himself accuses himself. So is it with the man who would exalt himself by boasting. He, too. accuses himself. To boast is to feel the need of boasting. The strong, energetic, really successful man is too busy ? 1 ' .-.rt,,- oe.lifflvoniontc tn <itr!T1 P 1(1 111! 1 11 UGV? awiicxilibiiw \.\s ^ io plume himself on past ones. Besides. he is not worrying about the opinion others hold of him. I Fie knows that he is doing well an;! that he can continue to do well. That is enough for him. He is quite I content to let his work speak for itself. The boaster, on the contrary, by the very fact of his boasting betrays a curious lack of self-confidence. His | boasting amounts to a confession that he is surprised at himself for ever having done anything worth boasting about. The discerning recognize this and appraise the boaster accordingly. Also they know that even those whom his boasting might delude would be repelled by the egotism which the boasting indicates all too plainly. This means that he would find it hard to get along with others, and would be that much the more handicapped for any genuine achievement. If, then, you notice in yourself any tendencies to boastfulness con sider their signincance. Aiwavs iemember that the more you boast the less likely you are to accomplish things that are really worth while.? Irish World. No Chance. .Misstress?Sarah. I saw the bakerman kiss you today. I really shall have to take the bread in myself in the future. Sarah?Twouldn't be no use, ma'am. He wouldn't kiss you, 'cos he promised he'd never kiss anybody else but me!?Pearson's Weekly. worst tnrng m me -mhhP$ world. He has HIS %BS8y n\oi\ev safe in the Barvk. \ The black hand is certainly over the poor devil who is jn DEBT. * ^ I DON'T get into debt. There are lots of little things you can go without NOM that they can enjoy later if you'll just put a little money in the Bank. That little money will grow just as the acorn does into a GREAT OAK. Yau will be encouraged to work harder and EARN more when you have money in the bank. Put YOUR money in OUR bank U/a n/ru A nAr !pl( oroc^ nn cnwinnc nrroimhc ^ V V ^ P U y ~T I I V> II I CVI V?^ V V1 1 ?^V4 via 1 ^ M WW M I I %W* n I Peoples Bank I ' I BAMBERG, S. C. Ijl Horses and Mules I We have a full stock on hand of H Horses and Mules. Our stock is se- 99 2|| lected personally by a member of our M " 1- i i 1 J 1 iU ? MM I? nriTi, ana eacn animai suia u<ts uie |? " Jones Bros.' guarantee?and you . H S know what that means. When you 9 B need a horse or mule, don't fail to 9 jl come to our stable. We will take 9 3 pleasure in showing you. Our stock H H 4 I is always in good condition?they are |9 g bought sound and sold sound. 9 BUGGIES, WAGONS, HARNESS I ] ! We have a splendid line of Buggies, 9 > Wagons, Harness, Lap Robes, Whips, 9 I Etc. We have a number of styles in 9 + Buggies and Harness, and we can J suit you. We handle only the best vehicles to be had, and our . prices ' 9 are always right. Come to see us; M you are always welcome. 9 I Jones Bros. I I I Bamberg, S. C. I SCHOOL ELEOTJOX NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that upon igg j Bp the written petition of more than |fg| j * one-third of the resident ejectors, s?| I ^ 9 and a like proportion of the resident ^ I VJvy 1 KS jfl free holders of Lemon Swamp School JS I flj District, No. 13, of Bamberg county, ||p VWff B 3 S. C., at the age of 21 years, an elec- ggj K j 3 A I 1 H tion will be held at the Lemon Swamp Kg BISf fB IJ9 39 school house Qn Tuesday, May 1, BS HV J^B l\ Q 1917, for the purpose of levying a V B f"B II Bj special tax of 4 mills on all real and ?&! V V X JL Am H I?ersonal property in Lemon Swamp Ha 9H School District, No. 13. Only such ? BE electors as return real or personal i|j |H property for taxation, are residents BB wJ of Lemon Swamp School District, No. nij B 13, and exhibit their tax receipts and bS j ~^toe oc rpnnirpd ill BB , i egitai auuu tcinin.?iv? ? ... general elections, shall be allowed to j BR gut y0ur B Electors favoring the levy of 4 SB Watches and Jewmills special tax will cast a ballot elry with Reid. ^B ) j containing the word "YES" printed B He will put them B or written thereon, and electors op- H| in good shape and posed to the levying of the 4 nulls S5J special tax will cast a ballot contain- B wi" you B / ing the word "NO" printed or writ- B right. AH work SB ten thereon. B guaranteed. H The polls will be opened at 7 a. m., HR B and closed at 4 p. m. H SB S. E. Zorn, M. W. Tant and G. W. H B Croft are appointed managers to con- !B| B duct said election, B B R. \Y. D. ROWELL. B ======= B County Board of Education. 9 Rdd S J6WClrV StOFC I Bamberg, S. C.. April 9, 1 917. gg Bamberg, S. C. 9 NOTICE OF TOWN ELECTION. gg B Notice is hereby given that nn 1 ITi Tuesday. May 1st. 1917, an election j | will be held in the Town of Bamberg j I for mayor, six aldermen, and a com- j ANNOUNCEMENTS. missioner of public works. All elec- j tors for said election will have to j register again, and books of regis-j *or Mayor, tration will remain open, in the office | Mr. C. W. Rentz is hereby anof E. H. Henderson, supervisor of j nounced as a candidate for mayor of registration, until April 23rd, 3 917. j Bamberg in the approaching town 4-5. CITY OF BAMBERG, j election. CITIZENS. 0