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I / Lwiftg a North Pole_ l Costs Very Little If you will only go and live near the North pole you will find the climate warmer than northern Montana. You will have no housing problem because you can build a comfortable house in about fifty minutes without spending anything for materials or * labor. You will not be troubled by the high cost of living, since all the food you can eat is all about you for the shooting. 0 * You need not worry about the coal V strike, since the same shot that gives you your dinner gives you the fuel with which to cook it. Costless Clothing. You will find, without money and * without price, clothing more comfortable to wear and, to adjust than the garments of so-called civilization. 3 You will be spared even the Shour day, since you can live comfortably by performing less than two hours of interesting work every day. You will have a vacation every winter, when you need do nothing except enjoy yourself with your friends. All those "promises" are given by Vilhjalmar Stefansson, who iholds the U v world's record for five and a half j years of continuous Polar service. wiho took away the adjetive "unknown" from approximately one hun* dred thousand square miles of Arctic - land and sea. ."The process of settling the Arctic* reigion has begun," Mr. Stefansson said in New York the other day. "I admit there has been a temporary recession of population due to the fact that the first settlers wanted \ % graphophones, their wives wanted high (heel slippers, and there 'seemed r no way to make a living which / would pay for their luxuries. "There an%r just two big things? ^ and only two?which stand in the way of the colonization of the far north. One of these things is a Chinese wall of ignorance; people have ' 4 been brought up with many wronjg impressions of the country. The oth ? er oostacie is man s mnerrent couscivatism. He cannot go to the north and live like a southerner. He cannot live life just as he always lived I it. ' "Let me give you an instance of what I mean. The first settlers of southern Illinois came from Louisiana, and they tried -to plant southern Illinois with cotton. Naturaily, it was a failure. And undoubtedly those ^ men, many of whom left the country, would have told you that southern \ Illinois was a land 'not fit to live in.' Yet now it probably is regarded as one of the most fertile sections of } our country. "If you will go north and live as a northerner you will be able to make a good living. If I were not ail exv plorer, but just a man witih my living Jr? to make, I could go to the north and maintain a most comfortable existence on less than two hours a day of work. Also, it would be work much j. more interesting than factory labor or many other jobs; in fact, it would be work which many Americans choose for play?the task of hunt' ing."' In "The Friendly Arctic," his re,? cently published book, Mr. Stefansson has described how he and his party "lived on the country" by killing caribou, bear and Polar oxen as they needed food, fuel and clothes. The blubber in the seal he used for w fuel to cook the seal flesh. The meat of caribou, he says, is as \ / good as any food in the world, and he thinks no one could tell the difference between Polar oxen steak and the sort we buy in New York. The skins of these animals, he declares, make better clothing than can be bought here; clothing waterproof, nrnnf. comfortable to wear and I easy to put on. s And you may doubt bis figures, butv he has temperature records which prove that the climate is colder in northern Montana?10 degrees Jk colder?than at the North Pole. f Few Frostbites. "Neither I nor any member of my immediate party ever had a frostbitten finger or toe," he said, "all the t time we were in the north. Our faces often were slightly frostbitten, but that's no worse than sunburn. "The country will be developed, I think, either by a great corporation with a man of brains in it, or by individually intelligent persons. Intelligence is essential. It is a country which will, be needed by the world's population within a measurably short period if the present population in0 crease continues." *>> 5/ "Ana 11 aoes seem iu ue cie uuc land left where you can live without money/' I observed. '"You can live in the far north \ without money, without work and without cheating anybody," Mr. Stefansson summed up, simply.?Marguerite Moorers Marshall in the New ^ York Evening World. Renew your subscription today. J Loan Insures the Financing of Crop Kentuckians, Virginians and Xorth Carolinians working with the officials of the South Carolina Tobacco Grow ers cooperative Association are i ( breaking all records in their cam-1 paign of fifty-two meetings this week, | and are covering the entire South j Carolina belt and overflowing into the border markets of North Carolina. Leading the campaign is George A. Norwood, native South Carolinian who, as president of the largest Cooperative Marketing Association in America, 'headed the officials of seventy-five thousand tobacco growers last week when they secured a loan of $30,000,000 from the War Finance Corporation in Washington. Thousands of South Carolina farmers have I now heard how those thirty million dollars will be applied to the pay? ? A- J - AW? Viavo s\f f hn Tn_ ments maue iu iucuuuci o <>ub j. ^ bacco Growers Association upon delivery of their tobacco. Thousands more have heard from C. E. Marvin, John Blanks, Reuben Offutt and John Bull, members of the famous Burley Pool why five thousand farmers have rushed into the association since the organized growers of Kentucky received their second payments on deliveries of tobacco. J. H. Quisenberry, leader of the successful Sun Cured Tobacco Pool of Virginia, has told at other crowded mass meetings why the organized growers of the sun cured tobacco, in his state gained a very large addi? - tional profit over tnose wno ianeu to join the pool. Still other growers have heard from Southall Farrar, district agent of extension in Virginia, why 80 % of the Virginia growers have now* joined the Tobacco Growers Cooperative Association. It is freely predicted that contracts from South Carolina which reached headquarters of the association by hundreds last week will arrive by thousands the few days that remain before the markets open. Official announcement that no contracts will be signed for this year after July 10, gives the tobacco farmers of South Carolina who are still outside of the association only a few more days to join. Wierd Happenings. A Newark, N. J., woman has found a new reason for getting a divorce. She got it, too, which should make all devotees-of the royal game more careful. Her testimony was to the effect that [hubby played so much golf, so often, that he hadn't time to be a husband or provider. It's" an old saying of golfers, "If business interefres with golf, give up business." This particular golfer found his wife interfered with his game, and so She got rid of him! But this was nothing to the sad case of a Des Moines lady who had a "husband" who proved to be a woman, yet one so overbearing and strong that she held her "wife" in terror for a year and a half before the poor deluded lady caused her "husband" to be arrested. The wife should have gone to Vassar. Statistics from the great women's college show that Vassarites, during the last ten years are an inch and a half taller, two inches larger around, and with bigger hands and feet, all due to 'physical culture. Paris says skirts must be long. America says they are short and going to get shorter. Comes a Parisian dress-engineer with a gown which has an adjustable skirt. When on fashion parade, milady unties a ribbon and behold a long skirt. When she goes shopping or wishes to catch a street car, she pulls the ribbon and up goes the gown to knee length. A Charleston (W. Va.) boy, out riding in an automobile, was fired upon by an unknown assailant. Rushed to a hospital, he was X-rayed and his heart found to be upon the right (which is the wrong) side of his MnH his heart been where hearts are supposed to be, in the right place on the left side, he would have been instantly killed. COLUMBIAN A SUICIDE. Wife Hears Shot and Finds Husband Fatally Wounded. Columbia, June 24.?Failing health and worry over financial matters were said to have been the cause | of the suicide of E. K. McQuatters. well-known Columbian, at his home, 1307 Calhoun * street, at about 6 o'clock this morning. Mrs. McQuatters told Coroner Scott that she was under the impression that Mr. McQuatters left their room for the purpose of paying the ice man on his morning trip. Soon afterwards she heard a shot and rushed to the hack porch, where she found her husband lying on is back, with his head on the back steps. A man who has no sense of humor is naturally short of sense. Admits Statue of Lee to Hall of Fame Since Virginia refused to permit the senate to put the statue of George Washington in the Hall of Fame unless it would also accept the statue of Robert E. Lee. the senate now accepts the statute of any individual, up to two, which the state mteht designate. Souhern states as a rule have not taken advantage of the opportunity. North Carolina 'has Senator Vance and South Carolina John C. Calhoun. Florida has Dr. Corrie, who invented the refrigerator (and, incidentally, he was born in South Carolina) and Gen. Kirby Smith, Confederate soldier. Texas has Austin, the Indian fighter. Tennessee has neglected both Andrew Jackson and David Crockett. Some time, Mississippi will send the statue of Jefferson Davis. Georgia, if its constitution will ever permit, will send the statue of Alexander Stephens, vice president of the Confederacy, and Dr. Crawford Jofles, who first applied ether as an anesthetic in operations. Something is the matter with the constitution of Georgia. That which hinders it in appropriating for its sons is also responsible, it is said, for the fact that the jeweler who engraved and furnished the silver service for the battleship Georgia has never been renumerated. There 1 is delight in Washington that Alabama has undertaken a movement to put a statue to Gen> William 0. Gorgas in statuary hall. He was born in Mobile and educated in Tuscaloosa, where his father, who had served as chief ordnance officer of the Confederate army, was president of the University of Alabama. General Gorgas was internationally famous as a sanitation expert. His work made the Panama canal zone habitable. Alabama is now represented by J. L. M. Curry, who was born in Virginia and was moTe closely identiTTr?+v> Tannoesop Thp. legislature ll^U *? Itu JL Vliuvwwvx/. _ of Alabama suffered relatives of Curry to put his statue in the capitol with the understanding that they would defray all expenses. To that extent Alabama sold its birthright. It is the hope of Alabamans in Washington that Alabama will remove the Curry statue and put in its place one in honor of Admiral Semmes, who commanded the famous Alabama during the Confederate war and was the soutb's greatest naval hero; or William Rufus King, once vice president of the United States; real father of the Panama canal legislation. / There was a sensation, of course, when Virginia sent the Lee statue to Washington. The senate bickered. But Virginia said that Lee must be accepted or Washington would be ?A Woll r?f TTamp without Wliuuiavyii, XJL until V* - ...?_ Washington would be a joke, the senate recognized, and, without fornjal action, permitted the statue to be placed. While the senate struggled ! over the Lee controversy, echoes reached the house. Carter Glass, then t a representative, declared in a speech' that Virginia did not care very much as the government had already erected in Washington a statue to Lee most descriptive of his military genius. Ctio nf the "red shirt" wavers was amazed. He made inquiries of the Virginia member. "It is nothing more or less than the pension office,"' returned Glass without the semblance of a smile. Do You Know That The Census Bureau says that 39.4 of the population of the U. S. is engaged in gainful occupation. Former Governor Ferguson, of Texas, is running for the United States senate and that he is being opposed by his wife. Sounds like a recent Williston election. When the Dodge company wanted 1 - ~"1 Ko o tVi cktr con f tn tO yUL Oil I Cell Utti uci/iiv wvuv Augusta to get Clem Castleberry to supervise the job, thanks to the good report of the Detrcfit team. The largest electric sign in the world is in London and is a quarter of a mile wide. It is used to guide aviators in landing. In the average nine inning game in the major leagues three dozen base balls are used. James Bland, a negro poet, wrote "Carry Me Back to Old Virginny." There is .scarcely a chorus girl in the United States over 65 years of age. To date, the editor has not received an invitation to the McCormick-Oser wedding. Mathilde must have forgotten us. 100 years ago gooseberries sold in Philadelphia at 1 cent per qt., strawx s* * or 11 C berries at -o cems pci qi., at 12 cents per bunch.?Williston Way. Half the nation's unemployed World War veterans have found jobs in three days of the American Legion's employment drive. 18-YEAR-OLD BOY DROWNS. \ Body Entangled Under Water at Sunday School Picnic. ; Aiken, June 22.?Henry Bernice Snipes, the eighteen-year-old son of Lee Snipes, was drowned at Plunkett's Pond this morning. The Baptist Sunday school was holding its annual picnic at this pond and young Snipes was one of those who first went in bathing. The young man was diving and it is supposed struck his face and head on a snag, was knocked insensible and was drowned. In some way his body became entangled, and more than an hour elanserl hpfnrp it was recovered. After the body was recovered it was rush- . ed to the Aiken jhospital and every effort made to restore life, but it was too late. The funeral will take place at Clearwater church tomor- , row, cakroll S.S. CARROLL teaches watches Watchmaker to and tell Jeweler the truth Bamberg, S.C. NOTICE OF FINAL DISCHARGE. , 1 Notice is hereby given to all persons interested that the undersigned, as administrator of the estate of < iMiss Addys Hays, deceased, will on the 7th day of July, 1922, file with the Judge of Probate for Bamberg County, final report as such admin- , istrator, and at such time will ask ( for letters of discharge as such administrator. N. R. HAYS, Administrator of the Estate of Miss Addys Hays, deceased. May 12, 1922. 7-6n ' R. P. BELLINGER ATTORNEY-AT-LAW i General Practice in All Courts Office Work and Civil Business a ; Specialty 1 Offices in rear over Hoffman's Store ( BAMBERG, S. C. i i iTOf 1Q99 1 ?COLLEGE OF CHARLESTON.^ i Examinations- at the county seat i for the Bamberg county scholarship, Friday, July 7, at 9 a. m. Subjects: English grammar and composition, 1 American histor^, algebra, and plane geometry. { Four-year courses lead to the A.B. ] and B.S. degrees. Special two-year pre-medical course. A course in Commerce and Business Administration is featured. Expenses moderate. For terms, catalogue, and illustrated folder, address HARRISON RANDOLPH, President RILEY & COPELAND Successors to W. P. Riley. i?"ire, uie Accident INSURANCE Office in J. D. Copelan^'s Store BAMBERG, S. C. S. G. MAYFIELD ATTORXEY-AT-LAW , Practice in all courts, State and . Federal. Office Opposite Southern Depot. BAMBERG, S. C. 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 1 in perfect health. Pleasant to take. 60c per bottle. . j To Cure a Cold In Oae Day Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE (Tablets.) It stops the Cough and Headache and works off the Cold. E. W. GROVE'S signature on each box. 30c. 1 I D.W. GRIFFITH I ffkrsonaily Presents cA PUQPLE ROMANCE OF o4NOTNER> DAY. direct from Sensational Run at QokatvS/Iieatre, ufewj/ork, 50,000 PLAYEPS TAKE PACT HUNDREDS OF WILD BEASTS AO00 QANCIK0 OIR4.S. Cast Includes. Co3\sianceTa2irvad<fe' Hilly Marshall. I George Fawceti 'SeenaOwfcn ( Mildred. H-strris Elmer Clifton George biegmap* Alma Rubens Elmo Lincoln Alfred Paget RELIANCE THEATRE Orangeburg, S. C. For Two Days, Monday and Tuesday, July 10-11. Admission 25c and 50c. WMMM Best material and workman- | ship, light running requires g little power; simple, easy to g handle. Are made in several p sizes and are good, substantial g money-making machines down K to the smallest size. Write for P catalog showing Engines, Boil- || ers and all Saw Mill supplies. jf? w rv\rr? * ?tv tlTATlirc CL ^ inUA wurviuj at rg SUPPLY CX). 1 ugusta, Georgia 1 RENEWED TESTIMONYNo one in Bamberg who suffers backache, headaches or distressing urinary ills can afford to ignore this Bamberg man's twice-told story. It is confirmed testimony that no Bamberg resident can doubt. James A. Mitchell, R. F. D. mail carrier, Calhoun St., says: "The jarring of driving caused the l^akness and pains I suffered with my Koolr Flno r? 'o Pillo Krrvii orh uaviv. JL/vau a ixiuuu; jl jlixo ui vuguv me relief in a short while and I never lost a chance to say a good word for them." FOUR YEARS LATER Mr. Mitchell said: "Doan's Kidney Pills cured me of disordered kidneys and my cure is permanent." 60c, at all dealers. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA. Scholarship and Entrance Examinations. The examination for the award of vacant scholarships in the University of South Carolina and for admission of new students will be held at the County Court House July' 14, 1922, at 9 a. m. Applicants must hot be less than sixteen years of age. When scholarships are vacant after July 14 they will be awarded to those making the highest average at examination, provided they meet the conditions governing the ward. Applicants for scholarships should write to President Currell for scholarship blanks. These blanks properly filled out by the applicant should be filed with President Currell by July 10. Scholarships are worth $100, free tuition and fees. Next session will opsn September 20, 1922. For further information, write PRESIDENT W. S. CURRELL, University of S. C. 6-25 Columbia^ S. C. 866 quickly relieves Colds, Constipation, Biliusness, and Headache. \. Fine Tonic. NOTICE CONCERNING PLOWING IN PUBLIC ROOADS. Pursuant to recommendation of the Bamberg County Grand Jury, the landowners of the county cultivating lands adjacent and adjoining public roads are hereby urgently requested not to plow into or allow their hands to plow into the roads. Landowners are requested to plant two or three rows of crops adjacent to roads parallel with the road, so that there may be proper turning space without the necessity of turning plows in the roads. It is against the law to allow plows to damage the roads, and/ it is an unnecessary practice. The county spends large sums of money in road building, and the roads belong to the people. I have no desire to prosecute anybody, but I must insist that this practice be stopped immediately. The farmers and tenants can cooperate in this respect, and there should be no necessity to bring action against anybody. Full notice is. being given before I take such action. W. B. SMOAK, - Supervisor. January 31, 1922. tf Habitual Constipation Cured in 14 to 21 Days -LAX-FOS WITH PEPSIN" is a speciallyprepared Syrup Tonic-Laxative for Habitual Constipation. It relieves promptly but should be taken regularly for 14 to 21 days to induce regular action It Stimulates and Regulates. Very Pleasant to Take. 60c per bottle. N * HHHHHBHHHSMHI S0METH1 I . KIT? I jbl | TOOTHSOME TOASTED ]M[ . tid-bits lfl i ;// Ittokta T?4 t>?n m4 T?4 \Jm? 1 VITAMIN % ,TI r makes ptp 'yfi ALL . Tk Brtlie Crack FoW C*. /# 151 ^ iattvi din. aiCMtCA* |Xr Ai TAm F fx Vlll JU ABOI DR.G.M.TRULUCK SPECIALIST ' *r Eye, Ear, Nose, and Throat v I Barton Bldg. Phone 274 I i I Orangeburg, S. C. | The Quinine That Does Not Affect the Heed Because of its tonic and laxative effect, LAXA? TIVE BROMO QUININE is better than ordinary Quinine and does not cause nervousness nor ringing in head. Remember the full name and look for the signature of E. W. GROVE. 30c. NOTICE OF FINAL DISCHARGE. - 'VI Notice is hereby given to all persons interested that^he undersigned, as administrator of the estate of J Mrs. Hibernia Hays, deceased, will on the 7th day of July, 1922, file with the 'Judge of Probate for Bamberg ^County, final report as such administrator, and at such time will ask for ! lpttprs nf disr.harerp as such adminis trator. E. C. HAYS, Administrator of the Estate of Mrs. Hibernia J. Hays, deceased, i May 12, 1922. 7-6n J. WESLEY CRUM, JR. ATTORXEY-AT-LAW Bamberg, S. C. Offices in Herald Building Practice in State and Federal Courts. Loans negotiated. J. F. ?arter B. D. Carter J. Carl Kearse ^ Carter, Carter & Kearse ATTORXEYS-AT-LAW Special attention given to set tlement of Estates and Investiga-1 tion of Land Titles. Loans ne- I 1 gotiated on Real Estate. | FARM LOANS AT 6% INTEREST The First Carolinas Joint Land Bank Long Time. No Red Tape. We have strong, financial connections r that enable us to act upon your application at once. If you need money on your farm property'see us. All business promptly attended to. Gyles & Hard wick ATTORNEYS Denmark :::::: South Carolina To Stop a Cough Quick take HAYES' HEALING HONEY,** a cough medicine which stops the cough by healing the inflamed and irritated tissues. A box of GROVE'S O-PEN-TRATE SALVE for Chest Colds, Head Colds and Croup is enclosed with every bottle of HAYES' HEALING HONEY. The salve should be rubbed on the chest and throat of children suffering from a Cold or Group. The healing effect of Hayes* Healing Honey inside the ihroat combined with the healing effect of Grove's O-Pen-Trate Salve through the pores of the skin soon stops a cough. Both remedies are packed in one carton and the cost of the combined treatment is 35c. Just ask your druggist for HAYES* HEALING HONEY. f | Funeral Directors and Embalemrs MOTOR HEARSE V < J. COONER & SONS BAMBERG, S. C. ' I PORTABLE AND STATIONARY Enginfs andboilerT w Saw, Lath and Shingle Mills, Injectors, Pumps and Fittings, Wood Saws, Splitters, Shafts, Pulleys, Belting, Gasoline Engines LARGESTOCK LOMBARD Foundry, Machine, Boiler Worke, Supply Store. . AUGUSTA, GA. NG NEW I VITAMINE FOOD IRON I FOOD LIME I \KES PEP I THREE BLOOD AND TISSUE & TLDERS IN A DELICIOLS ? BREAKFAST FOOD. | S* SK J )iir.ker ! UT IT J I 1