The Dillon herald. (Dillon, S.C.) 1894-????, April 03, 1919, Page Page Seven, Image 7

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I VI I I Rev f? WHAT IT WILL DO?IT'S SELLING 4>4 FIELD. We want you to picture in your Y mind a small town of ibout 500 peoy pie. In this little settlein&it there is a general merchandise store catering X to the. needs of the local population. One of the dady duties of the mana ger of this store Is to order a supply of ice for his customers. A This ice costs 45c. a. hundred X pounds in the nearest city, added to' that ia the expressage. If the town be Y 25 to 30 miles from the nearest ice factory, there will be probably 75 pounds left in each 100 pound block by the time the ice reaches its .iestination. But the corptry store nianaY ger has paid for 100 pounds of ice, A a and so he must charge his customers proportionately. Ice in this little town I kY is expensive luxury. B ?? Now we want you Uv multiply this little town by 700 to 800?there are that many and more in South Caro?T Y ;llna where the above condition exists Y ?and then add the hundreds of large consumers of ice, like hospitals, hotels, cotton mills, restaurants, meat EX markets, green grocers, fish dealers, . I ice cream manufacturers, n^Ilk deal4? ers. etc. ++* Now you have before you the logical market for the most revolutionary tP. T - piece of time and money saving ma.* Y chinery that has been announced in 4* many a year?the Quick Ice Making 1 v : A Machine. 4& A machine costing around $700.00 Jr complete; un by any small gasoline Y engine, at a cost of not over $1.00 a 4? day, operated by cheap inexperienced ^ help, and most remarkable of all i turning out 600 pounds of good ice ^ every four hours?1,800 pounds a day. Of course we will manufacture ?? larger machines on which the operat^ ing cost will be less in proportion. The large machines will have a cajr pacity of as high as 6 tons of Ice a day. A The Quick Ice Making Machine is a | The Qv ? OFFICE V X. T. DAW8EY, Pre A J. C. TOWXSEND, \ A E. K. DELOACH, ? A : | urer and Genew v- " A SAFE TEST. For those who are in need of a The S remedy for kidney troubles and head- ty of D ache, it is a good plan to try Doan's Probate Kidney Pills. They are strongly rec- Wher ommended by people in thi3 viciinty. 0On has Mrs. S. M. Watson, Latta, S. C, t0 her 1? aays: "I have had my share of kid- estate a oey trouble and must say that I dont These !**"' want any more of it. My health had admonie always been good until kidney trouble an, ^ began to bother me, back in 1912. My Qethea, back began to ache and every day it appear 1 Iained me more and more. Finally I! bate, to *t so bad I could hardly go. My[dav Ap, Idneys acted irregularly and I suf- hereof, i ered with rheumatic pains. My ank- show swelled and sacs hung under my (he said This is the way I was suffering granted Be i I read of Doans* Kiduey Pills, Given decided to use them. I bought Qf Marc Be Doan's Kidney Pills and was relieved of my trouble. ContinjSBuse, put my kidneys in fine con- 4.;>.2i_ ?Bn and entirely rid me of all my Hey trouble." Cold Oc. at all dealers. Foster-Milburn 1. Mfgrs., Buffalo. N. Y. lCUU8e 1 fct?250. v 'E.W.GRG Quick Ice si m olutionizes I< demonstrated success and is now be- ] ing manufactured and sold in several states where large companies have been fprmed to put it on the market. This company is now organised in South Carolina to manufacture and sell the machine and we seek your co-operation in helping us to bring it before the people, offering you at the same time,an opportunity to share in the profits. We. are offering at par a limited number of shares of stock in the Quick Ice Machine Company, Incorporated, of Columbia, S. C. The capital stock of this organization is $100,000 divided into 10,000 shares of |10 par value each. It is intended that this stock is to be owned by numerous . investors in place of having the entire issue in the hands of a few, so we do not offer over 100 shares to any one individual. We will require about $25,000 for immediate use tQ cover the cost of manufactqring machines under con-' tract. It is impossible for us at this, time to build and equip our own plant to care for the orders for this season. We are offering a high class investment proposition backed by a ma chine that is now necessary wherever ice is known imd used. We have not even advertised the machine for sale at this time?our only advertisement being the invitation to tho public to come and see the machine in operation at the Gibbes Machinery Co. in' this city. It has met the instant approval of every man who has seen it and we have taken a number of orders for machines which we must build and deliver at once. Our selling proposition is simple and fair, we install 'the machine for the purchaser, make the first run for him, and, if satisfactory, he pays. We do this with knowledge of the fact that the machine does make ice quicker, cheaper and can be handled by one man without previous knowledge of ice manufacturing. ick Ice Ma< COLUMBIA,: RS: ?ldent Ice-President iecretory Treastl Manager. CITATION. tate of South Carolina,' Counillon, by%Joe Cabell Davis The Re Judge: R. will m< eas, Mrs. Janie Bethea Brun- 4 o'clock made suit t0 me to grant un- ^ memb ;tters of administration of the nd effects of Louise Bethea. Taber, > are, therefore, to cite and h all and singular the kin-! Cirov d creditors of the said Louise' restores vltai deceased, that they be and ; rkhinithe 1 >efore me in the Court of Pro- *mn*be held at Dillon, on Fri- "" 1 1 *K novt laffor nuhlirof inn The Stro .1 xx?. j Cold at 10 o'clock in the forenoon, i v .. , . You must cause, if any they have, why J durance Administration should not be, \yhen y ! condition a under my hand this 26 day yourpystei h. Anno Domini 1919. Winter COl( JOE CABELL DAVIS, GROVE'l Judge of Probate, Fortifies tl 135 Dillon County. andlntluei the Blood. ~~ 7~ It contai s Cause Grip and Influenza erties of i E BROMO QUININE Tablet* remove the acceptable rhere is only odj "Bromo Quinine.' and is plea IVE'S signature oo box. 30c. its Strengtl ? : Machine | wl ze Making $ Are You Going to Share in the Prof- X its to be Made by the Manufac- X ture and Sale of the f QUICK ICE MACHINE % 4mI The Ford Car of the Ice Making Industry ^ The limited amount of stock *we have to V offer at, par is rapidly being taken up. You V will never again have the opportunity to buy Y stock in this company at $10.00 a share, par value. fy W,e have had number of offers from busi- X ness men anxious to buy stock in large X blocks, but we do not wish to sell that way. X Our idea is to have the stock widely distri- X buted, for every stock holder is a booster? X a walking advertisement for the company, v There is no doubt as to the merits and ^ possibilities in this revolutionary invention. ? Tho onfhnciocm nr?H infrArfflt. shown hv me- V JLUb UAAV4 AAAVW . ? -- ~ ^ chanical experts who have seen it in opera- V tion is but the foreshadow of its success. Y Now is the time to act. There is but. a V Yi small amount of stock for sale. It is going ^ rapidly every day. i j Fill in this Coupon ? Mail Today j ? r?~?~?" ~ i t The Quick Ice Machine Co., Inc., j Y | . Columbia, S. C. * i V | Gentlemen: ' ? Please mail me at once full particu- j lars regarding stock in your company I X 1 | Name v i ' ! f Address ! V i 1 | * \ chine Co., inc. $ S. C. * DIRECTORS:. V W. C. GRANT A N. T. DAWSEY ? ,J. C. TOWNSEND T E. K. DELCiACH Y D. A. R. Meeting A SPOONFUL GIVES RESULTS. _? | When your young chicks do not becca Pickens Chapter D. A. grow and thrdive they need a tonic, eet on Tuesday afternoon at B. A. Thomas' Poultry Remedy is with Mrs. Albert Parker, not only a tonic but a specific for ers are urged to be present. Bowel Trouble, GapB, and otber j. T. W. Bethea, Regent. chick troubles. Get it today. We Secretary. sel it on the money back plan. ! Save 91.50 e'g Tasteless chill Tonic ! Make >'our Healing Remedy at lity and rnergy by purifying end ?- home" Get a 50c bottIe of Fa"'8* ilood. You can soon feel its Strength* Healing Oil, add it to a pint of linirating Effect. Price ?>c. aeed oil and you have a full pint of . the heSt healing remedy that money ng Withstand the Winter can buy. It cures old sores, wounds, Better Than the Weak jcuts and scratches. We sell it. have Health, Strength and En- 4-3-4t?236. fight Colds, Grip and Influenza. our blood 13 not in a healthy ~ ind does not circulate properly, HOUR KODAK FINISHING? n is unable to withstand the All rolls developed 10c; packs 20c. i. up; prints 2 l-2e, 4c. 5c; enlarg3 TASTELESS Chili TONIC ing 35c. up. Specialitsts?we do le System Against Colds, Grip, nothing but kodak finishing. All iza by Purifying and Enriching work guaranteed to please. East. ? . . . man Kodaks, Films, Supplies. Cons the well-known tonic prop- . . ' .,,, Quinine unci Iron in a form l"ml,la """? Flnlshln!: Co- 1111 to the moot deiicate stomach, Taylor St., Columbia, S. C.?43tf. isant to take. You can soon feel! lening, Invigorating Effect, 60c. | Subscribe to The Herald. HUGGIN8 IN TROUBLE AGAIN. Mullins Enterprise:? Most of our older citizens remember Kenlaw Huggins. It will be remembered that at the summer term of court of general sessions for Marion county, June 7, 1906 he was tried for murder. The Jury - finally agreeing to a verdict of manslaughter, and Judge Watts sentenced him to bard labor bn the public works of Marion County or the state penitentiary for four years. This victim was Joe Bynj of Kirbys township. After serving his sentence, he hired to the county and stayed with the gang for several years. Later > he left here and went to Florida, where he secured employment on a turpentine farm guarding convicts, where he was making good until ' recently when got to drinking. The following dispatch which tells the story, ig taken from a Florida papor of March 12. "Capt. Gary W. Mims, of this place who has been for two or three years past in the employ of the D. G. McCormick Naval Stores Co., and a highly respected citizen, was shot by Kenlaw Huggins, a convict guard of , the same company, according t0 a verdict of a coroner's Jury summoned at 9 o'clock Sunday morning, the ' 9th of March, by Justice of the ? peace W. C. Richards.' , There seems to have bee" no pre vious ill reeling neiween uio iwu men but Huggins who some time in the ' afternoon oJt Saturday had secured a > supply of moonshine, went on a ( crazy drunk, shot and killed the horse he rode, a valuable animal belonging to the N. S. Company took off ' his hat and coat and proceeded to r terriorlze the whole camp. , Capt. Mirams, who had always before been able to t manage Huggins 1 when drunk, went over from his residence near the camp, and after a few minutes' talk with the drunken , man, di ring which he at one moment promised to be good and professed unbounded love for everybody i^nd ' the next swore that he would kill 1 everybody In sight and especially the , [ Captain, went into the store room of the commissary and as Mr. Mims ' walked away shot through the screen window, hitting Mims. in the back, > just above the right hip, the bullel passing diagonally through the body and coming out a little to the left of 1 the stomach. > The wounded man was carried to his residence and Dr. Bipe of Alva was called at once by 'phone. No hope was held out for the captain's recovery and he died a few minutes after four o'clock on Sunday morning. Huggins escaped on foot without hat or coat, going in an easterly direction. Sheriff Hand and several posses of citizens scoured the country in all directions. Monday afternoon word was received that he had been captured at Bartow. | Huggins is an expert shot- with pistol or rifle and has had the reputation of being a bad man. -His treatment of the convicts under his care has been the cause of much indignation on the part of the ciizens around Denaud for two years or more. o . TRIBUTE TO THE COW. Little docs man realize the debt | he owes the cow. During the dark [ages of savagery and barbarism, we find her early anceaters, natives or the old world. As the bright rays ot civilization penetrated the daraness of that early period, and man called upon the cow, she came forth from her selusion to share in the streets that gave us a greater nation and a more enlightened people. For two thousand years she has been the co-partner of man, sharing alike his prosperity and adversity, responding nobly tg all that was done for her, until through her development she has bdfcome an idle of the people. In 1403, when Columbus made his second voyage to America, the cow came with him, and %from that time to today she has been a most potent factor in making this, our own country, one of the greatest na. tions. Her sons helped till the soil of our ancesters, and slowly moved the ' products of . the farm to market. They went with man into the dense forests of the new world, helped to clear them for homes, and made cul tivation possible for the coming generations. I When the tide of immigration 'turned westward, it wus the ox that hauled the belongings of the pionjeer acro6 the planes and over the great mountain ranges beyond. ! The Cow is man's greatest benefactor. Hail, wind, drought and floods may come, destroy our crops nnd banish our hopes, but, from what is left,, the cow manufactures the most nourishing and life sustaining foods. i The Cow is life itself to thousands of little ones stranded upon the hollow hearfs and barren bosoms of modern womanhood. We love her for her gentleness, ??wl hor u cot'ii 1 nf.c? T-Jpr loyalty has never weakened?and if misfortune overtake us when we become bowed down with the weight of years, we know that in the cow we have a friend that was never known to falter. She pays the debt. I She saves the home. 1 . '? V't; \ ' COTTON BANKS NECESSARY. -,Y , . ' Business Men Giving Thought An System of Finance for Cotton Crop.' Columbia, March 19?Governor W. < [i P. G. Harding of the Federal Ro? ' sehre Board, Hon. Robert F.? Maddox, of Atlanta, president of tfco Amerioan Bankers' Association an# other speakers of national repatntion will probably deliver addreeoOT 1 at the big State-wide cotton rally to 'ho in f!rav*n Hall ihi* eitT_ an I April 3 beginning at noon. It h?* I been planned to hold this meeting in . . the hall of the house of repvesdnto? tives but the indications point to 'such a large attendance thvt it haa been decided to hold it in a larger hall. I Governor Harding is expected to -speak on the exporting and marketing of cotton. Mr. Maddox's addreeo will be on banking, financing and | stabilising the prico of cotton. It was stated at the office of the ^ South Carolina Cotton Association in this city today that definite steps are now being taken in every section off the. cotton belt looking to the formation of plans that will result in a banking system for properly finaneing and stabilising the price of cotton* a corporation for the exporting an* marketing of cotton along the lineo suggested by Governor Harding. Definite plans are-also being formed, ft was said, for the organisation br a Southern Cotton Association, tue membership to be composed of farmers, bankers, merchants and bnf i&ess men. The idea is to h^ve this association represent practically all of the business interests of the Sontb, .'je absolutely controlled by the cotton interests. This would, in no wise, conflict with the banker's association, the Farmers'- Union and other organizations, but will have their cooperation. Special charters will be secured fbr the association. The following statement was given yaM out today by the South Carolina Cotton Association: "As an Illustration of the propagahda now being sent out by the cotton bears, the following is cited; "The movement for reduction ie acreage in this section of the country may have some effect but there is ne such movement ,on hand in the West where they have had good seasons and expect to plant a full crop. This propaganda in the Southern States reads that there will be no reduction in the West and in the Westers States it reads that tnere will be m> reduction in the South. "Another big cotton firm sends oot the following: "We are glad to note thai, you have been successful in vni ? oRmoaien to brine about a gen eral reduction in acreage, but tut written before, we are sorry to see it because we do not think It will ba necessary and if we are right in our views of the market, we believe that the prices prevailing around plant- 1 mg time will induce farmers to pot a_ nnich larger acreage in cotton than originally contemplated. "As an illustration of information sent by the New, Yqfrk firms the following wa3 sent a leading business man and planter in South'Carolina:' " 'An opinion has been given by the attorneys for the Bureau of Market* of the United States government that t all transactions in 'old style' contracts (those trades made prior to March 4) must be liquidated before May 1, 1919. All trades on hand after that date must be in 'new style' contracts. We are ordered to report to the cotton .future attorney all 'old style' contractg liquidated by our customers. We must therefore request thai you close out your 'old -style' contracts in accordance with the above ruling.' "This is absolutely and positively contrary to the rulings of Mr. Braa of the department of markets. Ae a result of such incorrect information being sent out a vast amount of cotton was closed out. If such had not been the case, the market would have ahown u remarkable high level before it would have been possible fol the bears to have stopped the edI1 vance. / It appears that some people ia the State are making a fight on the 'cotton association. The following let- x . 'ter has been received from one mac: |"i have asked several men to pledge themselves to cut the acreage and. showd the letter, they say they won't pay anything for some big man to live without work and smoko hie 'cigars on." The South Carolina Cotton Association has l,f>00 men who are giving untiringly and unselfishly of their work and seryices without remunera-^y. tion. Their only compensation i* *. > I their earnest desire to gam commercial freedom for the South and benejfit our State and its citiaenship. The : central committee members have been overtaxed and overworked. They are paying their own expenses and ) gladly rendering every effort possij ble to push the work to a successful termination. In addition they have 'contributed of their own means t? j assist in the financial support, which j is, of course, absolutely necessary. j FOR SALE?Cleveland Big Boll cot-: ton seed direct rrom vvanainaKer last year. Carefully selected. $1.50 per bushel. B. H. Atkinson, Latta, S. C.?3-27-2t.p. Files Cured in 6 to 14 Days Druggists refund money if PAZO OINTMENT faila to cure Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles. Instantly relieves Itching Piles, and you can ttf restful sleep after the first application. Price 50c. i 1< ' ' _ - H'\ -7, a