The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, August 02, 1917, Page 3, Image 3
GIBBES NOMINATED.
Is Recommended by Audubon Society
for Chief Game Warden.
Columbia. July is.?Wade Hampton
Gibbes. formerly mayor of Columbia,
was this afternoon nominated by
the Audubon society of South Carolina
to serve as chief game warden
of the State. Mr. Gibbes's name
will be reported to Governor Manning
as the recommendation of the
society. The faction of the society
which has steadfastly voted for Al *
3 * woe nnt rpnrp
lrtJU A. X. uumiucwu ~ -
sented at the mefeting, its members
evidently taking the position of Dr.
E. C. L. Adams, president, that no
properly authorized call for the meeting
had been issued.
During Dr. Adams's absence from
Columbia Governor Manning requested
Dr. C. H. Barron, vice president,
to issue the call for the meeting in
order that a nomination might be
made. The call was made by Dr. Bar
ron, but the roll o: members was locked
in Dr. Adams's safe, it was stated,
and the president of the society took
the position that no meeting would
be legal unless all of the members
were properly notified as it was.claimed"
the by-laws provided.
At today's meeting there were present
in person fiffteen members of the
society and proxies of 321 others
were presented. This combined vote
of 336 was cast for Mr. Gibbes. no
Other nomination being made.
W. A. Clark presided in the absence
of Dr. Barron and Edmund Heyward
acted as secretary of the meet
ing. Albert R. Heyward, of Columbia,
was nominated by the society to
Governor Mannfag for reappointment
as treasurer and was also elected secretary.
Mr. Heyward was instructed
to call on Dr. Adams for funds of
the society now in his keeping.
The name of Mr. Gibbes will likelv
be transmitted to Governor Mar
ning as soon as he returns from a
trip to the North.
Back to the Courts Again.
Columbia, July 19.?The recommendation
fcw the Audubon society
Wednesday of Wade Hampton Gibbes
for appointment as chief game warden
of the State has not by any means
disposed of the present unsettled conditions
which surround that office. If
Governor Manning should appoint
Mr. Gibbes, as it is generally believed
he will do, the validity of the apx
pointment will again be tested in the
courts, according to statements made
by Dr. E. C. L. Adams, president of
the society, and Alfred A. Richardpon,
former game warden and at
V present custodian of the property of
the office.
v Both Mr. Richardson and.Dr. Ad.
ams refused to recognize the legality
of Wednesday's proceedings, taking
the position that the meeting had not
been called in the manner prescribed
by the by-laws^ef the society. Dr. Adams
today notified the governor's of\fice
that the appointment, if made,
would be contested.
Mr. Richardson stated after Wed
nesday's meeting that he would not
surrender the property of the game
warden's office to Mr. Gibbes, if he
were appointed, until directed to do
to do so by the courts. He, too, took
the position that the meeting had not
been legally called and that any action
taken by such a gathering would
be invalid.
That the matter will be again taken
into the courts and that South
Carolina game and fish laws will not
\ " "
l)e enforced for many weeks seems
apparent.
Governor Manning is out of the
city. His office has not yet been of/
ficially advised as to the recommendation
of Mr. Gibbes.
Dir. Adams's /letter to Governor
Manning follows:
"At a meeting of a small group
of persons, who styled themselves
the Audubon society of South Carolina,
held at the Jefferson hotel, Columbia,
S. C., on the 18th inst., I am
informed that the name of Wade
Hampton Gibbes was recommended
for the position of chief game warden
of South Carolina, and that it
was ordered that his name be trans\
mitted to you for appointment as
such.
"TViio ic nrrfifv von that .Wade
Hampton Gibbes is not the nominee
of the Audubon society of South Carolina
for the position of chief game
warden and that the group who met
at the Jefferson hotel on the 18th
inst. are not the representatives nor
do they constitute the Audubon society
of South Carolina.
"I appeared at this meeting as
president of the Audubon society ol
South Carolina for the purpose of protesting,
and did protest, against the
legality of its proceedings. The bylaws
of the society reotiire ten days
notice, by mail, to be given each member
of the society by the secretary
before a speeial meeting can be called,
and U19 by-laws further designate
that a special meeting- may be
called only by the president or three
members of the executive committee
"When you returned my name on
the ground that the method of recommendation,
to wit: The recommendaS
DOING ONE'S DUTY.
/
Inspiring Extract From a French Sol/
dier's Diary.
Young Antoine Boisson, born of a
family of soldier^, at Lure, in one of
those little towns of eastern France
so rich in military virtues, left his
lycee to enlist, at the outbreak of
war, writes Maurice Barries, in the
July Atlantic. While an aspirant in
the forty-seventh regiment of artil-j
lery, he died for France at eighteen.
In his diary?the date is January 1,!
1916?he wrote:
"Today begins the new year. It
will be the year or victory, w nat
will it mean for me? The greatest
year of my life surely, if God grants
that I survive. I am going to fight; i
I am going to take part in war?in
real war, in a holy war which, for
seventeen months, has numbered so
| many victims?friends, comrades, fellow-countrymen.
Whatever destiny
may be awaiting me, I shall waste no
time thinking about the future. I
confess I said to myself this morning,
I'What will be left of me when still
! another year has taken the place of:
j this one?' But my conscience quickly
replied, 'Do your duty, your whole
duty. That is the only thought worthy
of a volunteer soldier like your- j
self.' Let soul and heart obliterate
the animal instinct and the revolt
of one's baser nature. A man must
hold up to himself some great dream
to follow, some goal to reach. And
what is this war for, if not to train
character? It has developed within
me feelings I am proud of, though
I am at a loss to say why.
"I am proud of being a soldier, of
I being young, of knowing that I am
I brave and high spirited; I am proud
of, serving France, the land of my
birth. Loyalty to the flag, love 0?**
country, respect for the given word,
the sense, of honor?these, for me,
are no hollow, meaningless phrases;
they ring like a bugle call in my
young heart, and for them, when the
moment comes, I shall be able to
make the supreme sacrifice."
Slow to Start, Then Swift.
The War Department reports that
clothing and camp equipment are
j ready for the million men to be draft
IJUeSl, in uruer lilcll llic mcmugi o v/i.
! the society might express their choice
; as to tb_, proper person for the posii
tion of chief game warden, and I am
writing you this letter to put yo* on
notice, that a legal meeting has not
been called in a regular way, as sug;
gested in yo?r letter to me, and any
f action taken by the socalled meeting
. of the Audubon society'on the 18th
inst. was the action of individuals
. and lot of tire Audubon society of
' South Carolina and Uiie society will
. not be bound thereby. As a matter
of fact only a small number of those
. present at the meeting of the 1 Stk
inst. either in person or by proxy
s are members of the Audubon society,
> it appearing that- the vast majority
. of the proxies had beeai secured from
i p.ersons who-are not members of the
- society, they never having even ap
plied for memberAip."
: ed to the national army by the first
| of September, when they are to go
into the cantonment life of prepara!
tion for war. Also that full supplies
| will be ready for the National Guard
i when it is called out in full force.
; The department has already equipped
1 300,000 soldiers, the regulars and National
Guardsmen, and the advance
army in France has with it supplies
for six months. That.is quick work,
even for the United States. None of
the European countries got their men
ready for war with complete supplies
! in any such time as that, not even
! the mighty, systematic Germany.?
Worcester Telegram.
tion of each member by mail, by
I which method I was recommended to
i you, was irregular and requested me
; to call a regular meeting of the so|
ciety in order, as you stated, that
some person could be regularly and
legally recommended for this position,
I immediately instructed the secretary,
Mr. Funderburk, to inform
you by letter that I had been called
away from the city to New York and
would attend to this matter immediately
upon my return. This the secretary
did. However, upon my re'
turn from Npw York. I found that
Dr. Barron, the vice president, had
t authorized the secretary to call a
meeting. The secretary, as you know,
notified Dr. Barron that he did not
have access to the roll of member
ship of the society at that time and
it would, therefore, be impossible for
i him to give the notice required by the
i by-laws to the members of the society.
Immediately upon my return, having
been advised of the above stated facts,
I gave notice that there would be no
! meeting of the society held at the
Jefferson hotel on the 18th inst., for
the reason that the members of the
, society had not been advised of said
meeting in accordance with the coni
stitution and by-laws of the society.
"It was my intention, -upon my rei
turn to call a regular meeting of the
( society in accordance with your re?
*? ? ?-3 i.u A 4 iV?A mAmkAvc A f
ARMY TRAINING. | ?
j | i
Is Said to Invariably Improve the, I
Health and Weight of Young Men. j
I
Military training invariably im-|
[proves the health and weight of young:
men. It takes off fat and puts 0111
muscle, and the proof of this is that j
the average weight of the national j
guardsmen who served on the Mexi-j
can frontier showed an increase of j
about ten pounds, though they drilled
and marched in a hot climate, to
which most of them were not accustomed.
The war department will put
more than 600,000 men in training
as soon as possible and another half
million will be added before the beginning
of the year. Two or three years
of service in any army puts its '
stamp upon a man. Throughout the
rest of his life his back remains
straighter, his mind brighter, he is
neater in his dress and more resourceful
and able to take care of himself
than those who have not gone
through the experience.
No matter what their present at
titude may ue, young men who serve
their country in this war and come
back to it will not regret it in after
life, aid will appreciate what has
been done for them as they grow older.
Many city dwellers look weedy
and unfit for, military service, but the J
records of our civil war prove that 1
the clerks and indoor workers drawn
from the larger cities and towns became
strong and active under military
training and outmarched men
who worked at h?avy trades, and ev- '
en the farmers, who spend so much
time out of doors.
A prominent Cleveland physician
says that 90 per cent, of the army of
the unfit can be reclaimed by a
course of training and supervision
carried on by the government. Nature
does wonders when she gets a
chance, and the recuperative power
of a human body up to the age of
30 or 35 is marvelous. Theodore
Roosevelt was a weakling as a boy, 1
and we know what he made of him- !
self. Sandow, the well known pro- '
fessionally strong man, was another (
weakling, whose muscular development'
was the wonder of his day.
Proper food, exercise, fresh air
and regular habits will put four out
of five young men on their feet and
make them strong for the rest of
their days. If we can feed our soldiers
properly the well being of the
nf the rountrv will be improv
ed rather than deteriorated by this |
war. Those who stay at home must
devote themselves to the production
of food for ourselves and our allies
and to supplying troops in the field
and in military camps of instruction
with proper clothing, shelter and medical
attendance.?New Yo?k Commercial.
%
One Seldom Called.
"What sort of place do you. intend'
to visit this summer?"
"I want altitude. I'm going to a
hotel that is built on a bluff."
"My ffiend, the average summer 1
hotel is not only built on a bluff, but
is run that way."?Birmingham Age- I
Herald. I
HAD STOMACH TROUBLE
FOR SIX YEARS.
Tells How Acid Iron Mineral Brought
Relief After Specialists Failed.
Grateful for A-I-M.
* '
Suppose you had been a sufferer
from stomach trouble for six years
and specialists had operated on* you
without success. Read what this man
says about his trouble.
"For six years I endured the most j,
intense suffering from gastritis and .
intestinal' inflammation. I had received
treatment from the best specialists
and had two operations performed,
one for appendicitis and the
other for an exploring operation, but
neither did m? any good. Indeed I I
was permanently injured during the
first operation, making me liable to
hernia at any time if I ever over-lift
or strain myself. My. physician told
me that my case was hopeless and I
was on the point of despair." i
"I learned of what Acid Iron Mineral
was doing for others and as a
last r?3ort I determined to give it a
trial. The results were wonderful.
I have been completely cured of stomach
and intestinal trouble by this
wonderful remedy. Had I kn?wn of
it sooner these operations could have
been avoided. That was three years. i
asm and T have enioved perfect health
and been able to work continuously '
ever since. Words are inadequate J
to expreis tfhe gratitude I feel for '
what rour Acid Iron M.ineral has j
done for me," sayg Mr. F. A. Kirl^-, ;
|C?10i Cberhart Ave:, Chicago, 111.
Tktt above remarkable testimonial !
is but ene of the many received prais- '
ing thig?truly wonderful product of '
nature'*. Ufenr tell of taking A-I-M '
after being given up by doctors and j
reoeiring relief from its us?. In
fact nany doctor* are now prescrib- .
ing it. A trial will convince you of 1
its worth.
At all reliabre druggists in 50c and 1
$1 sizes.?advertisement.
f ' ..
Best material and workmanship,
light running, requires
little power; simple, easy to
handle. Are made in several
sizes and are good, substantial
money-making machines down
to the smallest size. Write for
catolog showing Engines, Boilers
and all Saw Mill supplies.
CRD IRON WORKS &
SUPPLY CO.
Augusta, Ga.
-TTmrmni?rn rmrn
The Beauty Secret
Ladies desire that irresi^tible
charm?a good
wP : .1 complexion. Of course
J they do not wish others
/c5) to know a beautifier
has been used so they
i ? buy a bottle of
Magnolia Balm
UQUID FACE POWDER
and use according to simple diretfions. Improvement
is noticed at once. Soothing, cooling and
refreshing. Heals Sunburn, stops Tan.
Pink, While, Rose-Red.
75c, at 'Druggists or by mail direct
Sample (either color) for 2c. Stamp.
Lyon Mfg. Co., 40 South Fifth ft. Brooklyn, N.Y.
aaa portable amd stationary
ENGINES
AND BOILERS
Saw, Lath and Shingle Mills, Injectors,
Pumps and Fittings,- Wood
Saws, Splitters, Shafts, Pulleys,
Belting. Gasoline Engines
LAWiESTOCK LOMBARD
Foundry, Machine, Boiler Works,
Supply Store.
AUGUSTA, GA.
Mgro.
fxiarke Special" I
I THIS "CLARKE SPECIAL" HAT MADE TO I
YOUR ORDER FOR $1.99 S
(It Yob Katun TWo Ad With Your Orfiar) B
B AMY SIZE OK COLOR RESULT $4.00 VALUE I
B Crawn 4 ta 5^ Inches, Brims 2 to.3 inches SC
B Sand for Mostrated Catalogue OS
B THE H. W. CLARKE HAT COMPANY E
B JACKSONVILLE FLORIDA B
Saves Doctor's Bills
Instead of calomel and other violent purgatives.
which are dangerous as well as nauseating,
it is better to use a reliable medicine like
Granger Liver Regulator
k 0UnM! w*
OSffSBl Liver Regulator in
ft?? 53 ?Z~ w my family for years
?? ** S| <| Jai|X?y 9 and find it to be a
5?*a ML n f'ae 'amily remedy
S$2 b^6^35ffil ^which has saved
:;2T_ M numerous doctor's
CS?? Ha TrtttCS I * always keep
ffiy bouse and
?j5?> ra wou^ J}0^ be withIB
Sold by drug:8wt?t25c#^x.
Crancor Medicine Co^ Chattanooga Tana
DOUBT DISAPPEARS
No One IrT Bamberg Who Has a Bad
Back Should Ignore This D.ouble
Proof.
Does your baek ever ache?
D&ve ^ou suspected your kidneys?
Backache is sometimes kidney
icfce.
With it may come dizzy sp^ls,
Sieepless nights, tired, d-ull days,
Distressing urinary disorders.
Doan's Kidney Pills has been enioased
by thousands.
Are r.ecommend-ed here at home.
Yon have read Bamberg proof.
Bead now the Bamberg sequel.
Renewed testimony; tested by
lime
Mrs. Julia B. Sandifer, Calhoun St.,
?
Baafbesg, says "l nave usea uvau*
Kidney Pills for dull, nagging back3?+
or. keadaohes and ot&er kidney
riteaeate and have found them very
beneficial." (Statement given Jan.
>6, ISil. .
0n Mary 27, 1?1>4, Mrs. Sancfifer
said: "I still tuink well ef Dean's
Kidney Pills and yon ean continue
.o use my :-ai?e recOmmending^ rh'em.
[ always praise Dean's Kidoey Pitts
what I hear anyone- complaining of
fcitoey trouble."
Rftee 50c, at all dealers. Dob'*
ask Sor a kidney remedy1?get
Deaths Kidney PHls?frhe same that
Mrs. Stendifer has twite publicly
reew&mejided. JTostef^Mtfiburn Go.,
Preis. Buffalo, N. Y. .
I
- * ?
. 1/ '. rit
Girls Nee*
Liver Me*
stead of
"My experience in work as a train-!
ed nurse." said a young woman, j
"teaches me that young girls are especially
subject to constipation simply
because they omit or neglect the
all-important duty to Nature that
should be performed without fail
every day."
And then, after they get bilious and
headachy, so many of them take that
nasty, poisonous calomel that sickens
their^stomachs and makes them have
to stay at heme while it acts on them.
They would be very much better off if
they took a dose or so of Martin's
Liver Medicine, a guaranteed vegetable
medicine which acts gently on the
bowels, without griping or causing
loss cf time or affecting the appetite.
Martin's Liver Medicine is sweet
and pleasant to take?a spoonful is
usually sufficient in treating a headache,
constipation, indigestion, sour
For Sale By MACK'S DR1
ATTENTI
I ST
I Enlist For Colle
lH|
I81 H rionrol WnnH eavs1 "TTd
In uciiiiw
THEIR EDUCATION."
S Secretary Baker says:
fl tions; second, food; third
NEWBERR1
I offers a large number of
large and able Faculty,
succeeded in keeping the
cation within the reach of
NEWBERRY
maintains the four college
entrance requirements, ai
NEWBERR1
offers courses leading to
OLOGY, TEACHING, BU!
NEWBERRY
offers a course in MILI'
hours a week, with credil
i vpvt crceinv api
IBS ilTjiVl OljkJUlv^i \/x ji
3 Write for catalogue and
111 PRESIDENT J.I
I I XEWBEI
S$1
A^k A^A A^A A^A A^l
wir yr
$ "The
f Hartford Fire I
f
I-. V Came Back
t ??
V
X I Am PrenareH to HI
I r"
D? you believe
NESS and RECI
jr I can protect yo
Y you want my p?
% SWAP"
| G.M0YEI
WYVVWViv VVVV
E. H. HEMDE-RS0M"
Attorney-at-Law
General Practice. I?oans Negotiated.
: . ' ... ,
-As./ V , .-* -
i Martin's
jicine InCalomel
? /
stomach or bowels. It is guaranteed
to give satisfaction. If it doesn't^
take the empty bottle to your druggist
and get your 50c back.
"I have used calomel and its
pounds for liver trouble for years. I
have always dreaded taking it because
of its violent action, the sickness it , <
invariably causes and the fact that it
is a poison. Martin's Liver Medicine
is a boon to mankind in that it takes >
the place of calomel, acts so effec- . ^
tively but so pleasantly, that it is >v
Nature itself. I cannot too highly
recommend Martin's Liver Medicine."
?W. T. McDonald, 1109 Oglethorpe
Ave., Macon, Ga.
Get a bottle of Martin's Liver
Medicine from your druggist. If he
hasn't it in stock, he can easily get it
for you. Insist upon having it and
refuse to accept any substitute. There ' r
is no other medicine that is just as
good. . / ' .1,
JG STORE, Bamberg, S. C. *
ION ||
UDENTS! I
* Bh
ge in September I ^!
V'
./I
?V V-/: . 'j
.
m?m
- - -JuJag
f- * 'Vr
' ' ''n
B|9
\ \\
/'%0
r' V
- ' vl
{ COLLEGE If
rARY TRAINING, three 9
9^^'v-':" v&
9 <
Hv
ENS SEPTEMBER 20 9
m
I descriptive literature to 9
9
HENRY HARMS I if
' i
IRY, S. C. 9 >. *
HB v ^
iihm rural IB '
nnBDBHH^nininB
w?pi???
! Old |
T
I fl' Ml
Insurance to. |
to Me Again
ZZL.I
In PREPARED- X
PROCITY, if s?
u from fire, and V
itrsnage, "LET'S Y
Y
)ICKINS0N |
J .
Vv V %!;V^wv V Vw
j *
the Maine tt?t Does Not Affect The Heee
Because of its tonic and laaoUve effect, L|KAvy
1TBROUO QBf*dfcE is hater than odaty
Quidtfce and A>es not oaase aepoasn?|^&or
rinsrinsr in head. ReneoAar Ore ftiM at(M%ppd
look/ for ihe'fignMure W. ROTB.^5c,
; ? ;
Read Tbe HeraM, $1.50 a year.
' . /. - ?i-.v - : : *
" r.'V rxX.-gfitC'l !5^K