The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, July 05, 1917, Page 4, Image 4
OLI) BABYLON FALLS AGAIN. (
This Time the Ancient City Is Taken \
by the British Armies.
The dispatches failed to mention
it, when reporting the capture of Bag- e
dad, but not the least interesting lj
item in the recent remarkable news g
from Bible lands is the fact that
Babylon has fallen once more, and e
this time to the troops of Great Brit- s
ain. Despite all the attention that i
~ ^cnrr.p r
is being given iu Da^uau? .
of the recent articles ate amazingly r
inaccurate?that city of the caliphs p
does not have anything like the hold
upon the public attention that old
Babylon possesses. In history, pro- v
phecy, imagery, song and story, Baby- v
Ion occupies a unique position, and t
its passing into the control of the 1'
British is noteworthy. t
Literally, the British have taken C
Babylcn. There are really two Baby- t
Ions. One is the Babylon of today, t
and the other is the Babylon of the s
time of Nebuchadnezzar. The former b
is the town of Hillah, situated with- fi
in the confines of old Babylon, and f
famous for its dates. I have eaten t
dates in many parts of Mesopotamia, d
but those of Hillan are me ue?i ui
all. The town is small, with only a I1
few hundred inhabitants, and its t
buildings are all of mud bricks, like fl
the Babylon of old. i
Hard by are the ruins of Nebu- F
chadnezzar's palace, and the houses a
of the German archaeoligists, who v
have been at work excavating the s
ruins for many years. Before the c
war there were a dozen German
scholars living regularly at Babylon, s
together with the Arab workmen en- q
camped outside the walls of their t
compound. The head of the com- c
munity was the famous Dr. Kalde- C
way, whose hospitality has been ex- t
tended to the few Americans who 2
have penetrated into that remote cor- 1
ner of the world. Judging from the C
guest book which Dr. Kaldeway kept, e
I should say that there are probably i
not a score of persons in all America e
who have pressed foot on the very =
bricks of the floor of Nebuchadnez- f
' oc tha ftermans!
Zar S Uli uut: iyum, wo w ?w
have laid it bare.
Kaiser's Stake in liabylon.
Germany had more than a scholar- c
ly interest in Babylon. The expenses t
' of the work, amounting, Dr. Kaideway
told me, to $20,000 a year, were
met by the German government. The
kaiser's personal interest in the BabyIon
project is famous. Not only was j
it a research work that appealed to
the imagination, but it was also a
"stake" in this wonderful region to ?
s
which the imperial German ambitions
.
were directed. The members of Dr. ;
f- Kaldeway's staff were all German of('
ficers, and that their activities were
' . not exclusively archaeological has
been demonstrated by the early sue- ^
cess of the Turco-Teutonic expedition. g
They accomplished what the British, ^
long dominant in this region, had be-! j
Iievea lmpossiuie.
Now Babylon is practically a suburb
of Bagdad. It automatically ^
follows the fortunes of that metropolis
of Mesopotamia. When the city
of the caliphs fell to Gen. Maude's ?
i
forces, and the Turks were chased Q
from all the outlying positions, Baby- J
Ion was one of the first points to be
cleared. Your unsentimental British
officer was not unmindful of the ro- ^
> mance of capturing the city, which
had fallen to Cyrus the Great and to .
Alexander the Great, and which has j
had a peculiar position in all the histories
of antiquity. As a German centre,
it was important that it should t
not be left in the enemy's hands. ,
In the Footsteps of Abraham.
Bible students best understand the j {
dispatches from Mesopotamia, for j
other persons, for the most part, have, c
only the haziest notions as to the lo-j t
cation of Mesopotamia itself, not to
speak of its detailed points. Inter- ?
est in the present retreat of the Turk- ?
C
ish-German forces is enhanced by the fact
that they are operating within ,
strictly Bible lands, and their course
is almost identical with that followed; .
by Abraham, when he followed thejc
voice that called him out of Ur of the (
Caldeee. Kut cl Amara is on the edge ,
of ancient l'r. The Chaldeans are j
still living there. Among the Chris- j
tian leaders hung by the Turks when! >
they took Bagdad were eminent nmn h
of the Chaldean Christian church, onej i
of the historic * Kastein churches!,
which was borne to witness its faith. (
despite all persecutions, in this fa?n- U
ouh religion. | t
When Abraham went to Haran, he ;
followed the Tigris river, just as thei'
Turks are doing. They have the ad- *
vantage or' a hundred miles of the j
Bagdad railway, which has been built ;
northward from the city the name of j
which it bears, to old Samarra, the t
place lamous religiously as the tomb ]
of the tenth Imam, the niahdi whose .
return is expected by Moslems. It \ \
was because of the pilgrimage thatji
this section of the railroad was com-! Dieted
without waiting for the rest.'.
The mosque which covered the tomb i
of the tenth Imam is one of the most 1
** beautiful in the world, external!v.
J
Xo Christian has ever been permitted to
enter its sacred precincts, and few
.Westerners have ever seen its walls.
JKEECE BREAKS WITH TEUTONS.
'enizelos i* at the Helm.?War Will
be the Next Step.
Athens. June 29.?The Greek govrnment
has broken diplomatic reations
with Germany, Austria-Hungry,
Bulgaria and Turkey.
Though war has not been declard
yet, the Greek government colliders
that a state of war exists since
ts advent to power yesterday. The
ecall of the Greek diplomatic repesentatives
accredited to the Central
owers and their allies is imminent.
Greece's new course with regard to
*- - -t A 1 >
IUV DegUIl to ue siictpeu un u uuc ?.
nth the abdication of King Constanine
and the accesion of Alexander,
iis second son, as king. The abdicaion
was in effect a dethronement of
"onstantine, whose pro-German atitude
had given the Entente endless
rouble and threatened not only the
uccess of the Saloniki expedition,
ut its safety through danger of backire
from a hostile Green military
orce. Decisive action by the Enente
was long in coming, but was
irastic when finally taken.
Eliptherios Venizelos, Greece's
eading statesman and fast friend of
he Entente, soon appeared as the
nan to take the leadership in guidng
Greece back to her traditional
lace by the side of England, France
.id Serbia, the last her close ally
I'hom she had abandoned under Contantine's
coercion in Serbia's hour
if greatest need.
Summoned back to the premierhip
by King Alexander, Venizelos
[uickly formed a cabinet. The reacionarv
elements have been ousted
>r quieted, the- reestablishment of
ireek constitutional government virually
abolished by Constantine be;an.
That the parliament of May,
.915, which had been dissolved by
lonstantine, will be again summoned
to meet was later indicated, givng
an executive backing to the new
xecutive power.
The route of Abraham, and of the
leding army, passes old Ninevah,
.cross the river from which is the
ity of Mosul, where the army is likey
to make a stand. This is a walled
ity, the capital of a vilayet. A batle
beneath the ruined walls of Xineah
would be in consonance with the
haracter of this war, which has so
wonderfully linked the old and the
iew, the past and the present, the
last and the West. All that is alive
n Xinevah today is a little village
?ver the reputed tomb of Jonah, and
till bearing that prophet's name.
If defeated at Mosul, the Turks and
lermans will make tneir next stand
it another point of scriptural interest,
Ras el Ain, which is the old Ha an,
where Abraham dwelt before gong
to Canaan; and where he sent his
iteward to get a wife for Isaac. Here
Rebecca's well may still be seen.
Does it not seem like a journey into
he realms of the remote lands of
noclern troops where Rebecca watered
the sheep?
Fighting by Kebecca'rf Well.
Here at Ras el Ain great stores of
nilitary supplies are accumulated,
iince Ras el Ain is the terminus of
he construction of the Bagdad railcay.
Preparations nave long been
nade for a defense here, should it
>ecame necessary. -This is the point
vhere the Russian army will strike,
f it gets down from Bitlis, through
Diarbekir.
Of even greater interest, from the
eligious standpoint, than the milliary
operations in the regions of
Abraham's early home, and of the
:xile and captivity of the Children of
srael. is the progress of the British
expedition up from Suez and the
>iani peninsular. Very little about
his has got int^o print. A recent dis)atch
reported the troops as being
>.t Hebron, where Abraham and Isaac
ind Jacob are buried, in the cave o!
Uacphlah. This spot is a sacred
Woslem' shrine.
Evidently the British have not onl>
Iriven the Turks from the entire
>inai penisular, but they have alsc
- l T} 1, ^ i, ,
;&I<lUrCCl lilt Deist <11 Dccuiicju
vhich was the railhead of the new
ine built down through the Hoi}
.and by the Germans, after the
var began. Arish. the border to.v.r
letv.een Egypt and Syria, tell to the
British some time ago. Now, if the}
ire at Hebion. it will be but a matte!
)f days until Jerusalem falls intc
heir hands?indeed, the capture o!
he city of David may have been reported
this article van be printed
Fhe old Jebusite fortress, which ha;
tood so many and so romantic sieges
s scarcely in position to hold cm
ottnok nlthnne'h ii
Incline I Ci iilVV4V,? W wuuvii, v ?0.. ..
is doul'tlul if the British would at
:ack'it with artillery, because of th<
joly places.
Should the British Suez army pusi
iorthwardf to effect a junction witl
lie forces from 'Bagdad, nothing
would be likelier than a landing o:
reinforcements at Haifa, and a bat
tie with the Turks 011 Israel's historh
battleground, the Plain of Esdraelon
perhaps in the neighborhood of tii<
town of .Mogiddo?the real battle 0
Armageddon.?Tim Religious Rambler
( William T. Ellis. >
I
BANK STATEMENT.
Statement of the condition of the
Bamberg Banking Co., located at
Bamberg. S. C., at the close of business
.June 20th, 1017:
RESOURCES.
Loans and discounts ....$3S$.749,20
Overdrafts 1,357.65
Bonds and stocks owned
by the bank l,000.0o
Furniture and fixtures .. 2,305.34
Banking house 4,976.69
Due from banks and *
bankers S2,4 22.25
Currency 3,194.00
Gold 70.00
Silver and other minor
coin 1 ,olo.yu
Checks and cash items.... 559.33
Total .... S4S6.14S.42
LIABILITIES.
Capital stock paid in ....$ 55.000.00
Surplus fund 45,000.00
Undivided profits, less
current expenses and
taxes paid 24.695.64
Due to banks and bankers
1,593.66
Individual deposits subject
to check 11S.5OS.S6
Savings deposits 111.271.S5
Time certificates of deposit
2,605.91
Certified checks 14.3S
Cashier's checks 2,458.12
Bills payable, inclu-ding
certificates for money
borrowed 125,000.00
Total $486,148.42
Before me came D. F. Hootop,
?nf tho above named
lasuici wi. v?.w _
bank, who, being duly sworn,
says that the above and foregoing
statement is a true condition of said
bank, as shown by the books of said
bank.
D. F. HOOTON, Cashier.
Sworn to and subscribed before me
this 2Sth day of June, 1917.
H. H. STOKES,
Correct-Attest: Notary Public S. C.
JNO. H. COPE,
G. FRANK BAMBERG,
J. B. BLACK, Directors.
BANK STATEMENT.
Statement of the condition of The
Farmers & Merchants Bank, located
at Ehrhardt, S. C., at the close of
business June 20th, 1917:
RESOURCES.
Loans and discounts ....$189,030.47
Overdrafts 796.29
Furniture and fixtures.... 2,515.00
Banking house 1,435.75
Other real estate owned.. 545.23
Due from banks and
, bankers; 13,164.75
Currency 3,100.00
Gold ; 110.00
Silver and other minor
coin 363.55
. Checks and cash items .. 1,653.96
Total $212,715.00
LIABILITIES.
'Capital stock paid in ....$ 20,000.00
, Surplus fund $ 7,000.00
Undivided profits, less
current expenses and
1 taxes paid, . 7,993.65
Individual deposits
subject
to Ck. $45,110.01
1 Savings dei
posits 41,992.97
| Time certificates
of deposit
20,478.01
Cashier's
i checks .. .. 140.36 107,721.35
i Bills payable, including
certificates' for money
borrowed 70,000.00
Total $212,715.00
State of South Carolina, County of
Bamberg.
Before me came W. Max Walker,
* " -Li- - -1 knnl>
| casnier 01 tee auuvu uamcu uau&,
who, being duly sworn, says that
, the above and foregoing statement
>1 is a true condition of said bank, as
! shown bv the books of said bank.
W. MAX WALKER, Cashier.
| Sworn to arid subscribed before
; me this 27th dav of June, 1917.
W. B. MOORE,
Notary Public for ST. C.
' Correct-Attest:
S. W. COPELAXD,
J. H. ROBERTS, M. D..
W. MAX WALKER, Directors.
BANK STATEMENT.
, Statement of the condition of the
, Ehrhardt Banking Co., located at
Ehrhardt, S. C., at the close of busi1
j ness June 20, 1917:
?j RESOURCES.
; I Loans and discounts $83,191.98
J Overdrafts 51.24
J Furniture and fixtures, .. 841.50
'j Banking house 2,000.oii
: j Due from banks and bank
| ers 19,001.85
i i Currency .... 1,065.00
| Gold *321.00
I Silver and other minor
*| coin 854.84
}| Checks and cash items .... 36.22
Gold certificates 14
| Accepted draft .... 327.tin
'! Total $107,841.03
LIABILITIES.
I r~t ? -? - i - "i- ? J 'I ? ) i: ii ii i\ OA
,j VUp'lcti biui'h l>tuu m v
Surplus fund .... . j?,200P0
1 j Undivided profits, less
;i current expenses and
taxes paid 4.S:t??.
. j Individual deposits
subject
to cheek $21
I Savings deposits
.. .... l .08
Time certificates
of de;
posit 8.00
, Cashier's
checks 8.00 72,1 1 8.1;;
r Partial payments ... 1.602.82
Total siii7.N4l.it::
11 State of South Carolina?County of
| Bamberg.
j Before me came A. F. Henderson.
1' Cashier of the above named bank,
1 who, being duly sworn, says that the
i above and foregoing statement is a
f true condition of said bank, as showD
bv the books of said bank.
A F. HENDERSON. Cashier.
Sworn to and subscribed before me
, this 27th day of June. 1017.
? W. B. MOORE.
1 Correct-Attest: Notary Public.
1 J. L. COPELAND, M. I)..
J. C. KINARD,
F. H. COPELAND, Directors.
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The New Perfection oven bakes evenly wit!
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The New Perfection does everything a coal
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STANDARD O
(New J<
WajHin^aC BAL
Richmond, Va.
NEW PER
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FOR SALE! 88 sg
V
The
I have a line buggy freQlieilt
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Weight about one HiVC
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that telej
making
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W.P.Herndon
'Phone 24 Bamberg, S.C. A.VC
?? ? ! ! cerned b
No. 666 in thedi
This is a prescription prepared especially
for MALARIA or CHILLS & FEVER.
Five or six doses will break any case, and
if taken then as a tonic the Fever will not
return. It acts on the liver better than
Calomel and does not gripe or sicken. 25c SOUTHE)
The Beauty Secret. AND1 TE)
- I .ad ies desire that irre- ! M
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they do not wish others I If I
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Magnolia Balm j I ?f|||
LIQUID FACE POWDER | | jp^sS^
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75c. at 'Druggists or b]> mail dirtd. jra d
Sample (either color) for 2c. Stamp. 1 ; Jg.
Lyon Mfg. Co., 40 South Fifth St. Brooklyn, N.Y. B jjf
Opinions from I
I Folks Who Know I Ent
For malarial headache, Granger | 5 Per Cent. In
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LilYfe!!" JTwtJi Uici tux ciini >~av? i. v^v
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Had heavy headache. Vomited ??
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Mother had sick headache. Granger Fire
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I never expect to be without it in I N S U ?
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All druggists sell Granger Live* supply of
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IL COMPANY
;rsey) , i-.-'
Charlotte, N. C. . ,?< C
Charleston, W. Va.
Charleston, S. C.
re of the Number li
efore Calling ff|
: telephone directory is issued at .
intervals for the information and ;v ^
if the telephone-using public. ' >?
ry effort is made to keep this list ' +
and up-to-date. It is expected ,
Dhone-users will consult it before
i.> ":-mam
calls. A call for an incorrect ; Sil
causes delay and possible arinoyi
third party.
)id inconvenience to all cony
looking up telephone numbers ; *
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0
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?????
)n't Carry a Safe.
*? Vf-rs
_
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terest Paid 011 Savings Deposits. Bamberg, S. C.
i \ * i
??? ! NOTICE T<> CREDITORS.
;OPELAND ,
W. P. Riley. , \0tice is hereby given to all and
t i-Pp singular the creditors of the estate
JjJ,A of James H. Morris, deceased, to file
dent i their claims, duly itemized and verified,
\yith the undersigned on or beiANCE
fore the 14th day of July, A. D. 1917,
?opeland's Store and failing to file their claims within
^ said time shall be forever barred. . ..
* s- c* J. E. COOK.
?? Administrator of the estate of James
? ; H. Morris deceased, with Will anWaterman
s Four.- nexed.
Id Book Store. 1 Olar, S. C., June 22nd, 1917.-3t.
m
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