The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, September 07, 1922, Page 3, Image 3
1
ll 1814 STAR SPANGL.1
X ^ (Francis Sc<
X (If you are a good Ameri<
A you were born in Alancliesl
X Dublin, Stockholm, Kiselir
X kuk, why not celebrate the
X Spangled Banner by lea mi
X that you will never forget
& them.)
X 0 say can you see by the d
X What so proudly we hail
gleaming,
X Whose broad stripes and
Y JJtJJLHUUO UgAlt
O'er the ramparts we we
I streaming?
And the rocket 's red glare
air,
Gave proof thro' the nigh
there,
0 say does that star-spang
0 ';er the land of the free an<
0 thus be it ever where fre
Between their lov'd hon
tion!
Blest with vict'ry and pes
cued land
Praise the power that h;
us a nation!
Then conquer we must, wh
And this be our motto?"I
And the star-spangled be
wave
O'er the land of the free an
A AVA A^A ^
SUMMIT OF PIKE S PEAK.
Highest American Point Reached By 3
Automobile Highway.
/
What is the highest point in Ameri-1
ca that an automobile may travel? i
More than 75.00U motorists answeieu 11
the question this year. There are i
many highways of dizzy altitude tra? 1
versing the White Mountains of New i 1
Hampshire, the Appalachian range of f
the Middle Atlantic states, the Blue j i
Ridge mountains, and the Canadian s
Rockies, but the "roadway stop" is in <
the Pacific Coastal Range. s
Winding its serpentine way for 1
eighteen miles up the mountainside is I
the Pike's Peak Automobile Highway;
not only the loftiest roadway in j
America, but representing one of the ]
greatest engineering feats of the age. i
To build an automobile highway ;
more than twenty feet wide at its 1
narrowest point, smooth as a paved ]
boulevard and graded to the safety of j
a railway right of way, is a marvel ]
of engineering construction. And that j
is what government engineers did I
when they constructed the Pike Peak ' <
Automobile Highway, built at a cost
of $400,000, subscribed by public j <
spirited citizens of Colorado Springs, j 1
the tropics to the Arctic reaions. it
is no uncommon experience for visi- t
tors on the Peak to stand in sunshine, j t
far above the clouds and watch a j \
rainstorm playing on the canyons and i 1
country below. This is a phenomenon | <
of nature seen elsewhere;. but without J >
Spencer Penrose, who conceived the j i
? plan in 1914, and who headed the | ]
movement saw the completed result | <
of his efforts two years later.
Opened in July 1916, in the face of i 1
criticism from engineers, who de- j <
clared. in all sincerity, that it could!1
not be done and characterized the ;
entire plan as impractical, the high- j
way became famous almost over
night. Today it is probably better ]
known to western automobilists than 1
any other Rocky Mountain scenic 1
route. For thousands of people each j ]
year who make the trip leave im-! 1
pressed at the variety of scenery and
the natural beauty revealed by neverending
panoramas, too eloquent for ]
portrayal by the artist's brush. 1
From Colorado Springs the high- 1
way leads up the famous Ute Pass, :
where hundreds of years ago a con- 1
stant beat of Indian moccasins wore
a trail along the sheer red walls of
the canon, in their journeys from the ;
western slope to the magic springs of 1
the Manitou.
On and upward the highway winds, ]
past Cascade and Divide, with the | ]
mountain streams and protected glens 11
where spruce forests flourish. After j
you have passed Glen Cove and swept j 1
into the heights above the timberline, 13
l
the eye switches away from the < 1
things at hand and your vision soars j
off into lofty spaces that seem to fade ;
into nothingness. !
Running from the sunlit climate of t
Colorado Springs to thp snow covered
mountain crest is like a change from (
!
% f
I I
T
ED BANNER 1922 X
X
)tt Key.) X
?an, no matter whether A
;er, Hamburg, Palermo,
left', Vera Cruz or Keo- *t*
anniversary of tiie Star &
mg it word for word, so
your own national an
I
T
-
.awn's early light >
I'd at the twilight's last ?*
Y
bright stars thro' the
Y
Ltch'd, were so gallantly
Y
the bombs bursting in V
Y
t that our flag was still V
x
led banner yet wave X
1 the home of the brave ? V
Y
emen shall stand f
le and the war's desola- V
T
ice may the heav'n res- ^
ath made and preserv'd x
f
Len our cause it is just. ^
n God is Our Trust,7 7 ?
inner in triumph shall i
J
d the home of the brave. J
i.^1. J&A.
CAT RAISES FOXES.
itaine Rancher Makes a Unique Experiment.
Fox pups have been reared by
nother dogs, it is said, but it has renamed
for a Maine silver fox ranchnan,
Frank A. Harvey, to bring up a
itter of fox pups with a cat fosternother.
Pussy still wanders interestedly
ibout the big fox pens where her last
season's pups have grown to her own
size, and would still fondle them if
she could. ' But Mr. Harvey believes
:hat they would make a meal of her
to-day if they could reach her.
"I wanted to see how far I could
?o in semi-domesticating these foxes,
tie said. "Every one knows how wary
the fox is. Frightened by dogs, or
?uns, or strangers, and unable to
lurv or hide the newly born pups, the
mother n^ay kill them by just carrying
them around in her fear. So I
tiave been trying to overcome the
fox's fear of men and animals.
"I felt that if I could raise a litter
pf the fox pups on a mother cat they
rould become accustomed to our handling
them, fondling them, talking to
:hem, accustomed to strangers and
the barking of dogs, and learn their
protection from all harm while in our
pare.
"We had our difficulties. We had
to give over the whole lower floor of
pur home to the experiment,, but it
was worth while for once, although I
am afraid ,the trouble would deter us
again.
"The pups responded to the treatment
and show confidence and playfulness
with me and no fear of visi:ors,
passing dogs, or the occasional
tiunter and his gun in the woo^s near
by."
<?i m
The graceful lines of the kimono
have prevailed almost unchanged
throughout the history of Japanese
dress.
the vivid aspect of storms seen from
Pike's Peak.
Xor is it unusual for those who
journey to the summit in midsummer
to engage in a snowball battle royal,
while the sun shines brightly overhead
and the plains below are wrapped
in the warmth of a midsummer
day.
While in its completed state Pike's
Peak Highway represents a large outlay
of capital, it is in no sense a
noney-making proposition. Whatever
Interests the citizens of Colorado
Springs have manifested in its construction
had its inspiration purely
hrough the nation-wide campaign for
. .ter roads. The small fee now
harged motorists making the trip is.
ipplied toward liquidation of its aeual
cost. By 1940, it is expected
hat the highway, now under supervision
of the state of Colorado, will
lave paid for itself, and be thrown
>pen to the public, free in every respect.
?
FLIERS FLY BACKWARD.
Australian Air Current Prevents
Gliding Down.
From Australia comes the report
of a remarkable air phenomenon,
which has been confirmed by investigation
and simply explained by meteorologists.
The facts and their explanation
are briefly as follows:
Airplane pilots while flying over
the Xew South Wales coast, facing
the vastness of the South Pacific,
have reported the amazing experience
that when the time came for
them to descend near the earth, preparatory
to alighting;, they found
that, instead of sliding down, their
machine showed an obstinate and extraordinary
tendency to keep on rising
upward. One airman, in fact,
piloting a medium powered "taxiplane"
type of machine, put the bow
of his craft earthward in order to
make a graceful glide down, and
when- he looked at his altimeter a
momeht later to see how far he had
descended he saw with amazement
that the dial registered him as actually
going up in the air backwards!
He dipped the bow of his machine
still deeper, only to find that he was
still going up instead of down. It
was not, indeed, till he switched his
engine on and flew hard for the
ground that he overcome the mysterious
force at work and began to
reduce his altitude.
And now for the explanation of this
astonishing affair. Along the coast of
New South Wales there is a long
mountain chain. Great upper wind
trends, raising in from thousands of
miles seaward, impinge upon these
mountains, and being defleted. sent
vast eddies upward almost to unknown
heights. And it is in these
huge invisible and abnormal currents
have been caught to their own invertically
upwards, that air pilots
blowing not horizontally but almost
tense bewilderment.
The waters in the river Jordan in
Palestine are to be developed into
power to turn the wneeis or new industry.
The British government has
granted a concession for the utilization
of the river for 70 years. The
energy obtained will be used for
house and street lighting, pumping,
water supply, railways and many other
purposes.
I Shall Si
I
(* * 011 generations Demo
i if ^ Carolina. Born in
baptized in the fires
ful years of sufferin
rule, it is a faith thi
' soil should be as jealous of
breathed into us in the won:
the milk that fed our infanc;
Butler, Gary, Tillman and tl
them in their struggles. Sh?
pottage?
I Cole L. Blease is again i
of the State. It is the high
that should not be given ligl
light set on a high hill, on \
spirit of the people who put
This spirit is necessary 1
: white race. To uphold and
I for the honor and the safety
should be betrayed? Can w
offices should have stained i
our very political freedom at
i Has Cole. L. Blease kept
which no man is held wort:
stained it by dealings with o
en the firmness of the white
Do we not recall his All<
he told the assembled audie
mand their rights, which he
all men remember his bitter
1918? Did he not attempt
Independent?an individual
worse than a Republican? I
the primary."
I'rnere are iew ueuiuwai;
of Joseph W. Tolbert. He i
lican patronage, on whom tl
been laid in approval and bl
the ruler of "The Black and
crat who has at heart the got
any relations with this man
Cole L. Blease wrote Tol
Con
To Cure a Cold in One Day
! Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE (Tablets.) It
: stops the Cough and Headache and works off the
. Cold. E. W. GROVE'S signature cm each box. 30c.
NOTICE.
Notice is hereby given that stock :
I certificate number 217 of Bamberg
! Banking Company, Bamberg, S. C.,
I has been lost or destroyed, and api
plication will be made to said corporation
-on the 8th day of Sept.,
1922, for a new certificate.
J. W. STEWABT,
Administrator of the Estate of Mrs.
Dora S. Williams.
Dated July 27th, 1922. . 9-7n.
?? ? ?' I
J JI
I carroll S.S. CARROLL
ii teaches
h watches Watchmaker
|?i to and
8 tell Jeweler
II THE i
B truth Bamberg, S. C.
WUMENJiVE OUT
Housework is hard enough when
healthy. Every Bamberg woman who
is having backache, blue and nervous
spells, dizzy headaches and kidney
or bladder troubles, should be glad
to heed this Bamberg woman's experience.
Mrs, Nora Sanders, E. Main St.,
says: "I was in a terrible state
from my kidneys. The muscles of
my back were lame and I was so
stiff I couldn't bend. Frequently,
flnlnrftd anonlra HortaH Vipfnrp mir
vv/ivi wu cy wuu vtu* vv\* mv&w* v - -1 j
eyes and I got terribly dizzy. I felt
tired out and weak all tbe time.
Doan's Kidpey Pills cured me and
my cure has lasted."
60c, at all dealers. Foster-Milburn
Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.
NOTICE.
i
If you need money and wish it on
long terms In amounts less than ten
thousand ($10,000.00) Dollars, I can
make your application to the Federal
Land Bank for suoh loans. For the
white people, the Denmark National
Farm Loan Association; the colored
people the Edisto-Savannah River
National Farm Loan Association.
Come at once and sign your application.
S. G. MAYFIELD.
outh Carol
L .'iL A iL,
aim oi uit
cracy has been the faith of South
days that tested the hearts of men
of war, and purified through shameg
under the heel of Republican negro
it every true son and daughter of our
as honor itself. It is our birthright,
ibs of our mothers and mingled with
y. It was the birthright of Hampton,
le hosts of lesser men who supported
ill this generation sell it for a mess of
i candidate for the office of governor
iest honor in our gift; it is an honor
itly. The governor of a State is as a
rhom all men look, seeing in him the
him there.
:o our very being as a selfrgoverning
keep it pure is a trust that we hold
of our women. Can we bear that it
~ vvwi ft tVint f~.-r.1T mon xi-lin qdoItc nnr
c SUJJU11C Liiai anj muu Iiuu wvwtf
Dr trifled with this faith that carries
its core?
this faith of pure Democracy without
fly of our public offices? Or has he
ur political enemies who would weakman's
government of this State?
I
en University negro speech, in which
nee of negro men and women to deexplained
in detail to them? Do not
abuse of Mr. Wilson during 1917 and
to run for Congress, in 1919, as an
denounced by Wade Hampton as
le said: "Let my friends stay out of
> in South Carolina who do not know
s the "boss." the overlord of Republe
hands of Warren G. Hardin? have
essing. He is the giver of all power,
Tan." Is it thinkable that a Demoid
of his party and people would have
in politics?
bert, on May 21, 1921, a letter of aptributed
By E
Funeral Directors and
Embalmers
MOTOR HEARSE
J. COONER & SONS
BAMBERG, S. C.
R. P. BELLINGER
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
General Practice, in All Courts
Office Work and Civil Business a
Specialty
Offices in rear over Hoffman's Store
BAMBERG, S. C.
No Worms la a Healthy Child
All children troubled with Worms have an a*
healthy color, which indicates poor blood, and as a
rule, there is more or 1 ess 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 StrengthTnn!(<to
thp whnlp svstpm. Nature will then
throw off or dispel the worms, and tbeChildwUlba
la perfect health. Pleasant to take. 60c per bottk.
^ PORTABLE AND STATIONARY
AND BOILERS
Saw, Lath and Shingle Mills, Injectors,
Pumps and Fitting!, Wood
Saws, Splitters, Shafts, Pulleys,
Belting, Gasoline Engines
LAHOeSTOCK LOMBARD
Foundry, Machine, Boiler Worke,
Supply Store.
AUGUSTA, GA.
Notice of Second Primary
Primary Election
September 12
A second Primary will be held September
the 12th for the purpose of
nominating a Magistrate for Fish
^ " rn -1- S ? ? 3 ~ /*1 ri/vTv>
fOQCl TOWDSIIip <111(1 a uiitj' wunimissioner
for the Lower District of
the County of Bamberg, and-the following
named persons have been directed
by the County Committee to
run%)ver at said election:
For .Magistrate, Fish Pond Township?A.
G. W. Hill and R. H. Jolly.
For County Commissioner for the
Lower District?J. B. McCormack
and G. W. Hunter.
At said election, voters will also
'vote for Governor and State Superintendent
of Education. The candidates
for Governor are Cole L. Blease
and Thomas G. McLeod; the candidates
for State Superintendent of
Education are J. E. Swearingen and
J. H. Hope. ?
linians Be
'ir Father;
/AM M MU1VA *
proval of Tolbert's leadership of
Carolina; a letter strongly comme
and devotion to his party; a letter
position as Republican leader, whi
There was nothing secret, nothing
lowing his indorsement of Tolber
"You are at liberty to read th
publish it if you wish, as I presuir
what I think, regardless of conseqi
ly as you requested me to do. I
so-called Democrat, but a Jeffersc
Harding's election and the down!
terest of Cole L. Blease in Joe 1
other Democrat showing the sam
No word of that letter has eve:
He cannot deny it; he meant it.
that I speak what I think." Wha
man thinketh in his heart, so is
L. Blease when he wrote that leti
true Democrat? It stands in cold
ment ever written of the Democr
wrote it himself!
Are the white people of South
Hampton and Tillman, prepared
a man who is the confessed appi
Joe Tolbert, the" political heir of
gers?
Shall a man sit in the Governo
the direct, simple question whethe:
r\f fho "npmnpratir; DartT
JLlUiiliUCCO Ul IUV _
Shall we lift to our highest o
heart to rejoice with Joe Tolbert,
the "Black and Tan" politicians o
Warren G. Harding and the down
The Governor of South Carolin
of the State's Democratic forces,
want to set up a Democracy that i
These are questions that ever;
for his State should answer hones
before he votes in the coming prir
Proof is held of every stateme
democrats o
The following named managers
have been appointed by the County
Executive Committee to conduct the
election at the several Democratic
clubs, to wit:
Bamberg?E. L. Price, Sr., H. D.
i Free, and L. C. Price, Managers. J.
1 W. Folk, Clerk. Election to be held
at the Court House.
Colston?G. W. Kearse, G. W.
Beard and Perry Lee McMillan, Managers.
C. M. Varn, Clerk. Election .
to he held at the Colston School
Building.
! Denmark?T. P. McCrae, R. A.
Goolsby, and W. H. Cain, Managers.
James Wiggins, Clerk. Election to
be held at the Sandifer Store Building.
Edisto?Hubert Herndon, B. C.
! Kinsey, and Jeanny Dempsey, ManI
agrs. Clayton Jolly, Clerk. Election
! to be held at Farrell's Store Buildj
ing.
Embree?L. E. Cooner, J. J. Eng|
land, and Clarence Irvin Hughes,
Managers. James M. Watterson,
Clerk. Election to be held at the
Embree School Building.
Ehrhardt?H. W. Chitty, I. D. .
Copeland, and J. E. McMillan, Managers.
W. R. Copeland, Clerk. Election
to be held at Copeland Hall.
Go van?R. L. Lancaster, Joseph
Gunnells, Jr., and Clifton Eubanks,
Managers. Stoney Kennedy, Clerk. '
election will be held at the Town r
Hall in Gcyan.
Kearse?G. E. Kearse, J. S. Breland,
and L. M. Ayer, Managers. J.
O. Ritter, Clerk. Election to be held
at the Kearse Store Building.
. Lees?J. C. Kemp, H. A. Cave, and
F. L. Cox,* Managers. J. W. Grimes, /
Clerk. Election to be held at the
store building of J. W. Grimes.
Little Swamp?J. Z. Harrison, _ ?
Jr., R. M. Goodwin, and Q. H. Miley,
Managers. J. C. Goodwin, Clerk.
Election to he held at the Little
Swamp School House.
Midway?Q. H. Sandifer, B. D.
Donalds, and J. P. O'Quinn, Managers.
Gilmore Simms, Clerk. Election
to be held at the store building
of Q. H. Sandifer.
Hightower's Mill?E. H. Hartzotg,
J. W. Hightower, and W. B. Gillam,
Managers. L. W. Abstance, Clerk. * ^
Election to be held at Hightower's
Mill Building.
Hunter's Chapel?N. H. Fender,
Arnold Walker, and David M. Smoak,
Managers. Horace Rentz, Clerk.
Election to be held at Hunter's Chapel
School House.
Olar?G. M. Neeley, H. F. Starr,
and G. 0. Barker, Managers. E. O.
Barker, Clerk. Election to be held
at store building of H. H. Kearse.
Springtown?G. Marion McMillan,
G. W. Warren, and M. J. Free, Managers.
R. L. Kearse, Clerk. Election
to be held at Duncanville School
Building.
, ? The polls will be opened at eight
(8) o'clock and closed at four (4).
o'clock p. m.
J. F, CARTER,
County Chairman.
hbhhhhh
tray the I
y - '%
the Republican party in South H
:nding Tolbert's years of service S3
intended to strengthen Tolbert's IB
ich then seemed to be in danger. |g|
I private about the letter. Fol- H
n
t, Cole L. Blease wrote:
is letter to whom you please, or H
le everybody knows that I speak 11
lences. I have written you free- Q . ,
am a Democrat; not a Wilson ; ||1
mian Democrat, who rejoiced at |g
iall of idealism." Why this in'olbert?
Can you point to any |B|
e interest? . ^
r been denied by Cole. L. Blease. H
'I presume everybody knows i%|
t do the Scriptures say? "As a : |S|
he." Was the thinking of Cole H
ter the thinking of a sound and ||l
type, the most complete indict- K
acy of Cole. L. Blease?and he H
. Carolina, the political heirs of |||
to entrust their government to irai
over, adviser and comforter of w
the Scalawags and Carpet-bag- *||
* mm
r's seat who dares not to answer 5
r or not he voted in 1920 for the tegf
ffice a man who found it in his ||i
leader and political comrade of Sj
f the State, over the election of IS
fall of Democracy? 18
a is presumed to be the leader Jjg
Do the people of South Carolina ?||
s corrupted at its source? H
y loyal Democrat whose love is
tly at the bar of his conscience Egg
nary. |g3
nt herein made. j 8
f "76 11