The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, November 04, 1920, Page 5, Image 5
f It's Your La
T ______
f
X . STORE
I Closec
This store will be clos
nesday afternoon, Nov<
retagging and markin
A I everything for the finis
I open THURSDAY MOR
Jw I o'clock sharp.
I
| Oniv Three
| More
t Days
Y . DON'T MISS
f ONE OF THEM.
SOMETHING DOING
T EVERY HOUR. X
OX FRIDAY, NOV. 5
You can buy a boy's suit fo
one-half Sale Price. Example
' f $10.00 Suit going at $4.45, Fri
t day for
X $2.24
I This is the
| The Biggest;
t
T ~~
y remembe:
T
We pay your railroat
purchases of $25 or m<
miles. It will pay you 1
I a day off. Your earnings
I uz
INTIMATE PICTURE OF WILSON.
Sti^ngely Misunderstood and Violently
Misrepresented, Says Secretary.
Washington, Oct. 28.?An intimate
picture of the "manner of man
this Woodrow Wilson really is" based
on ten years as his private secretary
and touched here and there with
hitherto unpublished incidents in the
president's official life, was drawn
today by Joseph P. Tumult}*, speaking
at a Democratic mass meeting
just over the line in Maryland.
Mr. Tumulty described the president
"as a man as strangely misunderstood
by some and as violently
misrepresented by others as any man
in the whole history of of American
politics." He had long desired, he '
said, to tell the country what he
knew of Mr. Wilson's character, hut
had refrained in the knowledge that
the president shrinks from selfexploitation
and would resent exploitation
by his friends.
With the approach of Mr. Wilson's j
retirement to private life, however, I
Secretary Tumulty continued, "It!
seems to me not improper that just
before the curtain rises on the last
act, I modestly step out from behind
my obscurity and tell the public a
few things about the leading actcr
in this great drama of the past eight |
years."
. On Fateful Day.
Among incidents on which he drew
to illustrate his subject, Mr. Tumulty
recalled the reaction of the president
to the applause which greeted deliverey
of his war message to congress
on April 6, 1917.
"On that fateful day," Secretary
Tumulty said, "I rode from the capitol
to the white house, the echo of
the applause still ringing in my ears.
For a while he sat silent and pale
in the cabinet room. At last he said,
"Think what it wras they were applauding.
It means death for our
young men. How strange it seems to
applaud that."
"That simple remark," Secretary
Tumulty continued, "is one key to
an understanding of Woodrow Wilsr.ii,"
who, he said, hated and dread
ed war with "all of the fibres of his
human soul."
Secretary Tumulty recalled Mr. j
Wilson's determination to ride in the;
funeral procession of the marines
and sailors killed at Vera Cruz when
their bodies were brought to New
York. Disquieting rumors that an
attack was planned on his life had j
reached secret service men, Mr. Tu
st Chaiice
jmber 3, .
g down - Lome to
h. Doors Cm 1
ning, 9 Saturday,
?, ,?.P f
1 r i r. i
uei iieaay, cveryi
This entire stock is rea<
Cut Prices again CUT for t
NO LOSS TOO GREAT. IV
. are, sell everything. This
will bring people for miles
thing remarked, retagged,
down. You can wait upon
Stock is arranged so you
r upon yourself to make sellin;
Follow your thrifty neighbor
rv awav the bargains. SAT
" 1/ v' o
NOV. 6 is your LAST CHAN
THE END. BE HERE.
Biggest, Most S
Surprises are Y
Thre
R
I fare on all
ore up to 50 - B II B
to come, take BlB IB V
will surprise V i
THIS SAj
j multy said, and "one undertook to
| argue with .him saying 'You will
! show all proper respect by appearing
1 in the reviewing stand. The country
cannot afford to lose its president.'
"His reply was: 'The country can
not afford to have a coward for president.'
This was his brief and final
answer. He rode in the procession."!
The sternness of Woodrow Wilson,
his secretary declared, was "just the
reverse side of his human nature" and
"nothing more natural" than that he
should have become the champion
of small nations. The president's
insistence upon Article 10 of the
league covenant was explained as a
wish to forestall the necessity of the
United States goin'g to war !by making
it a participant "in a plau to present
the beginning of such a war."
In contrast to Mr. Wilson's selfproclaimed
"passion for peace," Secretary
Tumulty declared that "when
the challenge came from Germany
when American mind was ready for
war ... this same Woodrow Wilson
became the most uncompromising
advocate of the most stringent measures
for conducting the war, thereby
hastening: the end of the war."
"It was he," Secretary Tumulty
continued, "who insisted On mining
the North sea, to cut off the German
hornets. . . . Experts said that it
could not be done. The civilian Wilson
said it* could be done, must be
done, and it was. It was the civilian
Wilson who broached the plan for
combining the allied powers in the
west under the supreme command of
General Foch in order that all the
allied powers could be concentrated
on the German forces to crush them.
In his mind the supreme object of
this war was to end war."
The "grave fault" which Secretary
Tumulty asserted he found with the
president was his ignorance of "how
to play to the gallery."
The secretary told of a journalist
who wished to have the president
"do one of the stunts that the public
dearly loves to read about" and the
comment of ^he president.
"He said to me: 'Tumulty, you
must realize that I am not built for
these things. I do not want to be
displayed before the public. If I tried
to do it I would do it badly. I want
people to love me but they never
will"
Two final pictures, Mr. Tumulty
said he desired to draw, the first, that
of the president in 1917, " a straight,
vigorous, slender man, active and
alert."
"The other picture is only three
T^T Ty "y "y "y "y "y "y
The Ei
fR LA
Denmark November
6th
IERE WILL BE A WILD RU
iody! I SENS^
iy. The 125c Gral
he finish. STARTING THI
[y orders WE WILL SELI
final cut Containing Merc
5. Every- partments, each 1
' marked 7alu,ed from f c
. _ - mg less m value
yourself. tQ ?g 0Q Two h
can wait n a> m > 2 till 3
g speedy. evening 8 till 9.
and car- HEREIS WHER
URDAY, PAID AND
CE. IT'S OF YOUR LIFE
ensational Sale
*,0
et to Come. -
e More Days!
Hyla
LE AND THESE PRICES POS
ftk ATA ATA ATA ATA ATA ATA ATA
y 4
HBMIsS^XDays^
yytttp^ OnichtsO
IrBiG CIRCl
rxw ACTS FREE DAY AND h
Wll STARS OF THE CIRCUS
U. HARNESS RU
\ EXTRA ADDED PEA'
\ AUT<
and a half years later. There is a
parade of veterans of the great war.
They are to be reviewed by the president
on the east terrace of the white
house. In a chair sits a man, your
president, broken in health but1 still
alert in mind. His hair is white, his
shoulders bowed, his figure bent. He
is 63 years old, but he looks older.
It is Woodrow Wilson.
"Presently in the procession there
appears an ambulance laden with
wounded soldiers, the maimed and
the halt and blind. As they pass,
they salute, slowly, reverently.
"The president's right hand goes
up in answering salute. I glanced at
him. There were tears in his eyes.
The wounded is greeting the wound_
_i _ it _ ? t_ ^ T t _ t I
ea; tnose m tne amuuiance, ne in
the chair, are alike, casualties of the
great war.
"I don't believe in his heart President
Wilson regrets his wound. I
fancy he realizes no man could die
in a greater cause, but I do sometimes
wonder if it ever seems to him
strange that when a man has been
seriously wounded in his country's
service that he should be met with
sneers and calumnies from his countrymen."
nd is Near
ST C/
- Only Three I
l, Positively the
SH TO GRAB THE BARGAINS
ational Hei
L n 0 1 SHOE!
I) box bale
JRSDAY, NOV. 4th, .
i 500 GRAB BOXES Cj01,ng (
handise from all De- C?S '
r> x j eluding
Box containing goods ~ ,
ents to $5.00. Noth- E.ngllsl
than 25 cents and up
ours each day 10 till
p. m., and Saturday
$15?
,e you are well *ty
lving the time wackk
grade,
f.
Ever Witnessed
Don't Miss
Three More
)J| Denmarl
1ITIVELY END SATURDAY, N<
fffWPH51
MAMMOTH SHO
js^a live stoci
MCNT SOOTHE LEADING SHOW
WORLD \MI 5555 DISPLAY# J
r- ? POULTRY
LSI PET STOCK
?"? /
^S^WDVEI
RESIDENT n|| W kal
kta-9-io-i
?I I???WN??
SUMMONS FOR RELIEF.
State of South Carolina.?County of
Bamberg.?Court of Common
Pleas.
W. Ham Kinard, plaintiff, vs. Raymond
W. Mingo, defendant.
To the defendant above named:
You are hereby summoned and required
to answer the complaint in
this action, the original of which is
now on file in the office of Clerk of
Court for Bamberg county, and to
serve a copy of your answer to said
complaint on the subscriber at his
office, Bamberg, S. C., within twenty
days after the service hereof upon
you, exclusive of the day of such
I service, and if you fail to answer the
I complaint within the time aforesaid,
I the plaintiff in this action will apply ;
to the court for the relief demanded
in the complaint.
W. E. FREE,
Plaintiff's Attorney.
October 25th, 1920. 1
To the Defendant, Raymond W.
Mingo:
Take notice that the complaint in
the above stated case is now on file
in the office of Clerk .of Court for the
County of Bamberg, S. C. i
W. E. FREE, 2
Plaintiff's Attorney.
1
Gravar'a Taotetes* sttfl Ttaic
restores vitality uU energy by porifriaf mad ea- [
riciiag tkc Umi. Y?a mm mob fiesi kt 9ticagtk- e
enimg, IarigtriiBj Effect. Fnee < c. g
Come, i
lLL| *
H time c
gMjjgj^lljM Goolst
I that t!
Wore Days ?"*,!
f ? r\ again.
Last Day ^
J less
i Wrigh
'e are Two Stunners
3 FOR MEN AND WOMEN
Our Best Lines
at less than manufacturers'
$15.00 Men's Dress Shoes, inl
the Famous Bostonian brand,
i. last, dark chocolates. Your
this lot, last three days
$6.79
md $16.50 Ladies' Queen QualDes,
high top, all style heels,
id and chocolate color, our best
last three days
$6.79
I * iL*
i in mis rari
; One of the La:
Days I
WE FU1
j O M* You can
Lr ^ I days of tl:
[\ft iji Vf wagon, he
_____ for your g
or more.
JVEMBER 6.
STUPEN9C
1 p v% 1 Fl F
y^lirs Y1^
^^MNrV.OISMAVS \ fclC
rWOMAW&WORtC ^jToh
IUTO SHOW Sifti
liPICCMT DISPLAYS
ICULJUREj^p
RFP JJW.FLEMING
v I hb#BiiiiIA SECV e? managi
I_ I _ I ^ SAYANNi
Ifi W CEOBS
vii ii i n pi a ni/
I HA I BAD BAUA
Do you hare & dull, steady ache In
tfa? small of the back?sharp, stabbing
twinges when stooping or teft
ing?distressing urinary disorders?
For bad back and weakened kidneys
Bamberg residents recommendDoan's
Kidney Pills. Read this Bamberg
woman's statement.
Mxs. Nora Sanders, E. Main St..
Bamberg, says: "The muscles in my
back were lame and I was go stiff,
I couldn't bend orer. I often got terribly
dizzy. I used Doan's Kidney
Pills and before I had finished one
box I was cured and the cure has j
tasted."
60c, at all dealers. Foster-Milburn
Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. T.
~~bn. thomas nnacr
DENTAL SUIM2S0K.
Graduate Deetal Bepartaaeat Uairersity
ef MiljlnA. MwHr f. C.
State Deatal Asseei&tiem.
Office opposite poetoflce. Office
lourse, 9:00 a. m. to 5:30 p. m.
jommt mam gammiMm mm?*?
tue, Then is eeljr om 1mm matea."
? W. (StOVE'S ai^eatareoobc*. 38C.
A A^A A^A A A^A A A
VVVVV V VV V V v V ?1
Help Yourself f
mnmiii miihi iiim hiiiiiiih ?|] x
itical Times ^
ie to every merchant at some ?
ind this time it happens to be X
>y & Son. This crisis means ?
heir high grade stock of merise
is going out to the people
ces that will never be offered ;
We are forced to trade our
for your cash at one-half and Jt
than actual value.?P. E.
t, Merchandise Adjuster. &>
It's the End jr
The Finish ?
Saturday, t
1L1 1 Y
novemoer j
6th f
POSITIVELY THE J
LAST DAY. T
ONE LOT X
Men's Dress Shoes, values up
to $12.50, Box Toe, Tan or ^
Black, last three days
t*
$2.95 ?
of the State |
st Three Days ?
?H T 'M
I T
RNISH THE GAS FREE Y
't afford to miss the last 3
lis sale. Get in your gas
ad her this way. We pay &
as on all purchases of $25 &
X
fm
T
?^????B?
iwTifiTi
HHMYJJO^ESvf
] SHOWS ^31
IUS. STARTLING.SUPERft. ill - !
REWORKS I
S A NIGHTLY FPEE FEMMl//
IUR5I0N RATES A !
I ALL LINES OF
^m |
. _
NMIT BACK *
Hunt'sSctw
\ [A tuit?ti fated w>s?
hM r?5rred kaadftft *f tvek
flHD tun. Y?o cas't Ivm ? mt
OHIn _ M+mmy Bmtk CMWI(N. XO
jnew rirtTQCNAYt Mw?9?
MACK'S DRUG STORE.
NOTICE TO DEBTORS AND CREDITORS.
All persons indebted to the estate
of Lydia Daniels, deceased, will make
payment to the undersigned administrator,
and all persons having claims
against the estate will file same, duly
! itemized and verified, with the undersigned.
WESLEY DICKINSON,
11-11 Administrator.
No Worms ii a HmHfcf CMW
Ail children Immkhi. with wbpi k*ve aa unhealthy
eofer, wfefcfc Mfeotot poor Mood, aod m a
rata, there li Mast ?r teas mmA ifcioihoM..
GROVE'S TASOtiUS cfcia IWlftl
for tore or three weefcs wfll eerieh Ao Wood, improve
the dStfeotia*. aad Mtut SawnUStseagthtam&7mie
to the wheto nitwi Jfau Haoa
tfarar off or dfepei the weme.ond the Cfcddwil be
to perfect keokfc. PJeo?e?t to toko. Wc per bottle.
No student should be without a
Waterman's Fountain pen. We have
\them from $2.89 up to $8.67, tax included.
Herald Book Store.?adv.
iM
. . , \;A|j