The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, June 01, 1922, Page 3, Image 3
jjno Hi m |
opinion
Richmond, Va., May 29.?(Special)?
Richmond is completing preparations
to entertain the 32d annual convention '
of the United Confederate Veterans, :
on June 19, 20, 21 and 22. Fully 5.000 ;
of the surviving 45,000 Confederates \
are expected to be within the city's
hospitable gates. Most of them will
be accompanied by one or more members
of their families, and, in addition,
there will be present members of the
Sons of Confederate Veterans, Daughters
of the Confederacy, the Confederated
Southern Memorial Association,
sponsors and maids and matrons of
honor.
Comfortable Quarters.
Because of their age, the veterans
this year will sleep in comfortable
quarters. Thousands of them will
stop at hotels and with relatives and
friends, while others will be accommodated
at reasonable cost, from $1.25
to $2 per day for lodging and breakfast,
in private homes. Applications
for quarters and inquiries concerning
them should be addressed to Major
B. B. Morgan, chairman of the Committee
on Information and Quarters,
Postofflce Box No. 685, Richmond.
Dinner and supper, with the compli mATtfc
n.t itiKo Pitv nf Piohmoniri and
' the Commonwealth of Virginia, will
be supplied Confederate veterans* who
desire them on June 20, 21 and 22.
Reduced Railroad Fares.
The Southern Railway, the Chesapeake
and Ohio Railway and, in fact,
practically all the transportation systems
in the South have agreed to give
the veterans, accompanying members
of their families, and members of
auxiliary organizations the benefit of
reduced fares to this city and return.
These rates have bee en fixed as follows:
. Veterans - and accompanying members
of their families, 1 cent a mile
for each mile traveled.
Members of the Sons of Confederate
Veterans, Daughters of the Confederacy,
the Confederated Southern
Memorial Association, other auxiliary
organizations, sponsors and maids and
matrons of honor, one-way fare for
the round trip.
Identification Certificates.
Tickets will be placed on sale
through the South in ample time for
visitors to reach Richmond on or before
June 19. As customary and in
order to eliminate trouble In procuring
tickets at the reduced rates of
fare, identification certificates have
v ?? .iwioi.aj an/4 oro hain? rtiafri- !
UOCii yi cyai cu ?uu ma w
buted to all veterans and members of
Confederate and affiliated bodies. Individuals
who are unable to procure
them through usual channels should
apply at once to Adjutant-in-Chief
Carl Hinton, Sons of Confederate Yet
erans, Hotel Richmond, Richmond.
RICHMOND ISNOT
t 11 AnrrTiirTrmiin
II) bKttMftltHAIID
Richmond* Va., June 5.?-fSpecial)?
Richmond has called dor the remnants
of that army which defended her for
four years and by the thousands will
the survivors answer the summons to
be here on June 19, 20, 21 and 22.
The last three days are those fixed
for the welcoming and entertainment
of the United Confederate Veterans
at their 32d annual reunion. June 19
baa been set as the date for beginning
the ceremonies which will engage the
attention of the Confederated Southern
Memorial Association and of Sons of
Confederate Veterans.
Preparations are now complete for
taking care of the enormous number
f visitors who are expected to attend
the reunion. The veterans will be
made comfortable at the hotels, with
friends or relatives and in private
homes.
Provide Comfortable Quarters.
Upon their arrival at the railroad
etations in this city, each veteran will
be met by a member of the Reunion
Committee, given an identification
card and assigned to quarters, if
^previous arrangements for accotnmo-.
dations have not been made. However,
Brigadier-General Jo Lane Stern,
chairman of the Reunion Committee,
'Wa* all vidfnra mtlrA TAR
tuai WAl VAi7AWA<9 W? ww
ervatiofis before coming to Richmond,
applying to the hotels or to the Information
and Quarters Committee,
Postofflce Box No. 685, Richmond for
quarters in private homes and boarding
houses.
Reasonable cost, from $1.25 to $2
per day for logging and breakfast, will
prevail in private homes.> Dinner and
supper, with the compliments of the
City of Richmond and the Commonwealtlj
of Virginia, will be supplied
Confederate veterans who desire them
on June 20, 21 and 22.
Elaborate Program.
The program of exercises and entertainments
piobably will make this the
greatest reunion in the history of the
United Confederate Veterans. One of
the most impressive exercises in
which the veterans will take part will
be the laying of the corner stone for
the Matthew Fontaine Maury monument.
Addresses will be delivered by some
of the South's greatest orators, there
will be a great parade and reviev.
band concerts, a Confederate ball and
-dozens of other features designed particularly
to entertain and please the
Old South's heroes.
B. HARRIS SAYS i
TEXAS CROP SHORT;
Editor The Herald:?On May 6th
I left my office and started on my way
to attend a pure food and feed and
drug convention to be held in Galveston,
Texas, on the 8th, 9th. 10th
and 12th. In order that I might see
as much of the present condition of
the crops as possible, from Xew Orleans
I went over the Sun Set route
to Houston, Texas, ana in cumins .
back I came ove.r the Southern Pasific
railroad to Dallas and Fort
Worth. From Fort Worth I came
over the Texas Pacific by way of Little
Rock, Arkansas, Memphis, Tennessee.
through northern Alabama by
way of Birmingham and North Georgia
to Atlanta. These two routes
carried me over some of the best
cotton lands in the following states:
the Piedmont belt of South Carolina
and Georgia; on by Montgomery and
Mobile, Ala. ,From New Orleans I
went through Louisiono into Texas.
On my return trip I came through
Arkansas and Tennessee. I saw men
from every section of the cotton belt,
so I got direct positive facts in regard
to each section of the great state
of Texas.
In south Texas where the cotton is
nbw fruiting, the boll weevil is re^
in aroator number than ever
before at this season of the year and
doing greater damage, as the winter
was so warm great numbers came
through the winter. In west Texas
we hear a great deal of dope put out
by the bear speculators stating what
a fine prospect they had there. On
the loth of this month they had one
of the worst storms that had ever
been known in that section?all the
lowland was over flooded and the
rr?*v?.of Vio-il eirtrw tliat over visitpd
Hf VI Ol Uall OWA JLU VMMV W w* .
that section. It was reported that at
least 30,000 acres of coton was damaged.
From Houston to Fort Worth, a
distance of 300 ipiles, I traveled in
the daylight?that was on the 18th.
I crossed four rivers on that trip and
everyone of them was out of its banks
and covered many thousand acres of
the very best cotton land. A great
portion of this land will not be planted
this year; if they have any more
rain it cannot be planted before June
181.
On my arrival in Dallas I called at
the federal farm bureau office, which
is located there handling the Cooperative
Marketing' association of
farm products. I saw the president,
Mr. Orr. I found him to be a very
pleasant gentleman and well informed
as to crop conditions. I asked him
what proportion of the Texas crop
was there to be planted and to be
planted over. He said at least fifty
per cent, of the crop up to the 18 th
of this month, taking the flooded districts,
was yet to plant, and from
what I could see I think he was about
right. .
I saw a great many good farmers,
also business men, and some bankers,
who have lived in Texas for
forty years and they have kept in
close touch with agricultural conditions;
they all said Texas had the
poorest prospect for a crop up to
this date they had seen in forty years
and they vcouId not make anything
like an average crop this year, owing
to the lateness of the planting and
excessive floods and cold rainy weather.
I saw some good cotton dealers
who don't hesitate to say that with
ideal seasons from now on we cannot
make over 8 % or 9 million bales this
year.
Now, as to the acreage, if it had not
been for the floods and heavy rains
Texas would have increased nrteen
per cent., but on account of the floods
she will not more than duplicate her
1921 acreage, and I doubt if she
does that. Arkansas cannot increase
on account of the same conditions
existing in that state. The only
states increasing in acreage this year
are Oklahoma and North Carolina.
Taking the cotton belt as a whole,
there will be no increase in acreage
this year. I rather believe there will
be a decrease in acreage.
I have said all the time that you
were going to see cotton very much
higher, and in 1923 you would see
cotton higher than it sold for in
1919; I am still of the same opinion.
We now have a real world famine in
cotton?the world is nearly naked.
No one has had anything like as many
cotton goods as they need?the world
is now beginning to get uneasy as to
where the cotton fabric is to come
from to clothe it with. Every yard
of cotton goods you buy now, you pay
ion a basis of 35c a pound for cotton
| and from th^s date on- you will see a
j material rise in price. Don't sell a
bale unless you have to. I receive
many letters every day now stating
that the boll weevil is sucking the bud ,
of the cotton.
I want to urge the farmers to p4ant
a row of corn every eight feet across
the cotton rows. And remember to
let this year be one year that you
raise everything you need on your
farm for home consumption and be
sure to keep out of debt. Let the i
bale of cotton you make this year be <
yours and sell it when you get ready.
My prediction is high cotton for 1922
crop. I want to say that the farmers
now have the situation in their own
hands?there will be no surplus on
September 1st. Xo use now for a bale
of cotton to ever sell without a profit
to the former. B. HARRIS.
S Best material and workman- n
3 ship, light running requires 3
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5a hanrtlp Aro mado in qpvPral I
I sizes and are good, substantial I
money-making machines down If
to the smallest size. Write for I
catalog showing Engines, Boil
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. LOMBARD IRON WORKS & |
I SUPPLY CO. 1
I Augusta, Georgia I ,
DR.G. M.TRULUCK ;
SPECIALIST, j
Eye, Ear, Nose, and
Throat <
i
Barton Bldg. Phone 274 |
Orangeburg, S. C. '
MANY LIKE THIS IN BAMBEB6 !
]
:
Cl?;u. Dainn Dnklleh*d In
WUIIDai vaowo wwuiy WW* IWMWW
Each Issue. i
The following case is but one of i
many occurring daily in Bamberg. It is
an easy matter to verify it You
cannot ask for better proof.
J. H. Murphy, farmer, Elm St.,
Bamberg, says: "I had a lameness
in my back and my kidneys were ,
disordered, causing annoyance. I i
used Doan's Kidney Pills and they i
completely cured me of this trouble 1
and put my kidneys in good shape 5
again, so I $m glad to endorse this
remedy. Anyone having trouble
with their kidneys should try ]
T\na ri'c "
Jk'VUU w* ,
60c, at all dealers. Foster-Milburn 1
Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.
1
1
Colds Cause Grip and Influenza <
LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets remove ,
the cause. There is only one ' Bromo Quinine."
E. W. GROVE'S signature on box. 30c.
DR. THOMAS BLACK j
DENTAL SURGEON !
Graduate Dental Department University
of Maryland. Member S. C.
State Dental Association.
Office opposite postoffice.
Office hours, 9:00 a. m. to 5:30 p. m.
No Worms in a Healthy Child
All children troubled with Worms have an unhealthy
color, which indicates poor blood, and as a
rale, there is more or less stomach disturbance.
GROVE S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC given regularly
for two or three weeks will enrich the blood,
improve the digestion, and act as a general Strengthening
Tonic to the whole system. Nature will then
throw off or dispel the worms, and the Child will be
in perfect health. Pleasant to take. 60c per bottle.
Funeral Directors and
Embalemrs
MOTOR HEARSE
J. COONER & SONS
BAMBERG, S. C.
WEAK, NERVOUS,
ALL RUN-DOWN
Missouri Lady Suffered Until She
Tried CarduL?Sajs " Result
w * h r* . 11
Was Surprising.?uot Aioag
Fine, Became Normal
and Healthy.
Springfield Mq.?"My back. was so
weak I could hardly stand up, and I
would have bearing-down pains and
was not well at any time," says Mrs.
B. V. Williams, wife of a well-known
fanner on Route 6, this place.' "I
kept getting headaches and having to
go to bed," continues Mrs. .Williams
describing the troubles frdm which
she obtained relief through the use of
Cardui. "My husband, having heard
of Cardulf proposed getting It for me.
"I saw after taking some Casdul
.,. that I was improving. The resnlt
was surprising. I felt like a different
person.
"Later I suffered from weakness
and weak back, and felt all run-down.
I did not rest ^well at night, I was so
nerrous and cross. My husband said
he would get me some Cardui, which
he did. It.strengthened me'. . My
doctor said I got along fln& I was in
good healthy conditidn. I cannot
say too much for it>"
Thousands of women hare suffered
as Mrs. Williams describes, until they
found relief from the use of Cardui.
Since it has helped so many, yon
should not hesitate to try Cardui if
troubled with wo&anly ailments.
For sale everywhere. BLW
I
To Cure a Cold in One Day
rake LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE (Tablets.") It ;
itops the Cough and Headache and works off the
}old. E.W. GROVE'S signature on each box. 30c. i
I carroll S.S.CA' ROIL !
teaches
watches Watchmaker
to and
tell Jeweler j
the i
truth Bamberg, S. C. |
r PORTABLE AND STATIONARY
imm
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Saw, Lath and Shingle Mills, Injectors,
Pumps and Fittings, Wood |
Saws, Splitters, Shafts, Pulleys, |
Belting, Gasoline Engines
-A ROE STOCK LOMBARD^
Foundry, Machine, Boiler Worke,
Supply Store.
AUGUSTA, GA.
Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days
Druggists refund money if PAZO OINTMENT fails
:o cdre Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles.
Instantly relieves Itching Piles, and you can get
-estnu sleep alter tne nrst application, race tsuc.
| TONIC
drove's Tasteless chill Tonic restores
Energy and Vitality by Purifying and
Enriching the Blood. When you feel its
jtrengthening, invigorating effect, see how
it brings color to the cheeks and how
it improves the appetite, you will then
appreciate its true tonic value.
Qrove's Tasteless chill Tonic is simply
Iron and Quinine suspended in syrup. So
pleasant even children like it The blood
needs QUININE to Purify it and IRON to
Enrich it Destroys Malarial germs and
Grip germs by its Strengthening, Invigorating
Effect 60c.
Wrinthrop College
SCHOLARSHIP AND ENTRANCE
EXAMINATION.
The examination for the award of
vacant Scholarships in Winthrop
College and for almission of new
students will be held at the County
Court House on Friday, July 7, at
J a rn AnnliVantc must tint he less
:han sixteen years of age. When
Scholarships are vacant after July
1 they will be awarded to those
making -the highest average at this
examination, provided they meet
:he conditions governing the award.
Applicants for Scholarships should
vrite to President Johnson before
;he examination for scholarship
examination blanks.
Scholarships are worth $100 and
free, tuition. The next session will
>pen September 20, 1922. For
further information and catalogue,
iddress Pres. D. B. Johnson, Rock
am, S. C.
) "
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| ACCOMODATING CONSERVATIVE
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SOUTHERN AGRICULTURIST
Nashville, Tenn.
THE GIANT OF THE SOUTH.
Its immense popularity is due not only to the
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farm families by men and women who know and
appreciate Southern conditions, but to the practin
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