The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, February 25, 1909, Image 6

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lAmia /MWOI | H /flfflrl fell I Thousands of millions [3 UUblcCtllu w5a/Jl of cans of Roval Baking El RJ Powder have been usee! 19 U hi making bread, biscuit H DJ and cake in this country, M ttj W and every housekeeper El D] cn SB using it has rested in perfect conli- M In " dence that her food would be light, EI d| sweet, and perfectly wholesome. Royal is a safe- In U guard against the cheap alum powders which are M DJ the greatest menacers to health of the present day. ftfl |N royal is the only baking powder H K1 MADE FROM ROYAL GRAPE CREAM OF TARTAR III ^ Tfej-S uJL Jack of All Trades! ? aASOLINE ENGINE J f . NEW HOLLAND FEED MILL | I lK^tvY\jlfe*T^r" Ya Thin I. the only outfit thnt wlH M>F "ntt /it m Rrintl 'Far Corn ftiitiafftutorlly I 'Wil jr~T l? n I _..'a wltli oiniill pow?r. Tim engine con i III ? vm nlao ho uaetl for pumping, hi\w- H ALL arr hp >r.n. ? ln? wood. .helling orn. cutting ,it ur okadt to run. fothlrr, ruuiitug < roam M.-ptxrutor, h churn or waHhtng machine. Elzos I Please send me Illustrated Catalog No. L962 from 2 II. 1*. up to 200 II. P., vor- E 0 ileal, horizontal or portublo. ^^FAIRBANKS^ORSE^CO^ BANK OF CONWAY OON WAY,S.C CAPITAL STOCK 9 M.OOO.M TOTAL ASSETS . .fiiM.eM.M. DIMOTOU D. T. McNeill, S. A. McDemmott, Jao. OL Bylvey, B. #3. OnUlBii, 6. P. QiMtUebMun, M. W. OotlhM, D. A. Splvey, A "Savingc Bank has recently been organised In connection with our Institution. Inquire for terms and rates In this department. Ufy. wlok thanlr iVio vmiKKo Knlr IIKorol noirixnofra 9w nnai n ?3 "ion w mniin iuc jjuuiiv twi w iiuwi ai ^?i.i\'uago >u uiv and cordially solicit their future business. B. A. SPIVEY, V.P. & Cashier > * BANK OF HORRY, Conway. S, C. CAPITAL STOCK $ 50000 SURPLUS lOOOfj LIABILITY OF STOCKHOLDERS 50 000 SECURITY TO DEPOSITORS 110 000 DIRECTORS Robert B. Scarborough, \V. R. Lewie, H. L. Buck, W. A. Johnson,71 George J. Holiday, Will A. Freeman. We continue to pay 5 per cent intereet^on yearly deposits, andve tolicit youraccount EOBE-RT 1. SCARBOROUGH, H L. BUCK, WILL A. FREEMAN President. Vice President. .Cashier HATKE&CO fl I * I -?,"lj>Ll5ft-g? t867|ff I Jy. H AT KE ^ I FiNl WHISKEYS rbiSTiLi.JlH^ B h*>Kt .nTPS.'fe 5{? .our. 8hiPP.,"?' house where we have been doing bus M best and quickest shipping facilities, All orders aro sent out same daj I PRIVAT? ST<?rTr^U^JA,N RYE~A ^Hi.k.v w have I B HON awn r.w B ?N" Tl1 m,,d *nd " ?ow( try it one H APPLE BnJNNnvDeAtIGin 8?,d at <h,? ,ow Pr,c? LE BRANDY This w?am n?r\n ku? 14 I a PIIRP RQANO K PEACH BRAN DY ? Mad* especially for us In Maryland. M "ABO lO CENTS EXTRA PER BALLON FOR Hi 24 Pints sr AS B?H-Ptntm of An I We prepay express Charges at thoee prices and guarantee safe del Send Money Order or A. IIATKE < 800-802-801-800 E. CARY ST? BO PROFESSIONAL CARDS. H. H. WOODWARD I Attorn?j and Councilor At La%. CONWAY, s. a ] f O. K. ST. AM AND, < i Attorney at Law * ( Conway, S. C. | 1 ( R. B. SCAItBROl'GH 1 ( rnwvAY. h. c. Attorney at Law. W. 10. McCOIlD, SURGEON DENTIST. CONWAY, S. O. Over Hank of Horry il. H. BURROUGHS Physician and Surgeon. CONWAY, s. a r B. WOFFORD WAIT. Attorney M LAW. CONWAY, 8. 0. Ofllc* In Splvey BilldJng, The Hartwell Sun thinks that the woman who gets up and builds the tires in the mornings should he allowed to vote. And the man who allows her to make the fires all the time should he disfranchised. Most cough cures are constipating because they contain opiates, and you should he careful to take something that does not tend to constipate. You should take Kennedy's laxative Cough Syrup. It not only allays inflammation and irritation of throat and lungs, hut it drives out the cold from the system by a free yet gentle action of the bowels. Children like the pleasant taste that is so nearly like maple sugar. Sold by all druggists. There are pillows wet by sobs; there are gentle sensitive nature seared and warped; thero are old time friends separated and walking their lonely ways with hope dead and memory but a pang; there are cruel I a it t% /I /k n ti /I I m i I U n f ?v> r> lr 1 { f/? uuouuuui oittiiuiii^a iuai uirtivu 1111: bare these are but few of the sorrows that come from the crimes of the tongue. r r-"- _ \ r- ?. " If . you need a pill take DeWitt's Little Early Itisers. Insist on them; gentle, easy, pleasant, little liver pills. Sold by all druggists. The man who owns his home is in a position that the renter can never reach. The renter usually finds that his rent is too high, or he is dissatisfied for some reason, and i is restless, and discontentment stalks before him. He wants to move. He j. does not take the same interest in , municipal affaris as In his own affairs I nor is he as solicitous of his neighbors, as the man who owns his homo. Indigestion or dyspepsia is inability of the stomach?weak digestive juices?to digest what you eat. Kodol is a combination of all the natural digestive juices found in an or- i (Unary healthful stomach, and fct will | digest your food in a natural way. j ' Pleasant to take. Sold by all drug- i gists. LOCATED IN' RICHr BHfl'h. ?JST 1BBB BBWgjHf: B MJp | jrnumH mess for moro than forty years. Being next r received. Wo mako losses and breakage g 1 Gt seen selling for forty years - $2 6 jo, then always .... 2.5 - 2.5 Y - 2.5 * 2.5 SIVY OP THE. ABOVE BRANBB IN FULL Ql ty Above Brand In Piatn Camoe $7.50. ivory ' Write for complete price list, as 1 Registered Letter with order. & COMPANY, x on, * NARROW ESCAPE. tullet Whizzed by a Spartanburg Teacher's Head. Spartanburg, Feb. 13.?Miss Lucy Riser, of Newberry, terifeticr in thi graded schools, this city, narrowl} escaped being shot to death thh afternoon by a small boy, who wai (hooting at a target with a pisto )r rifle. Miss Riser was siting by i window in her room on GlendaU street correcting examination papers when a bullet from a rifle or pisto'. crashed through the pane, barely missing her head. The accident oc jurred not far from the place where Miss Myrtle Plumer, of Converse College, was shot several months ago. IlltAVK PlltKMKX Itesrucd Fighteeit Women From i Horning I in i Id i ii l;. Toledo, Ohio., Feb. 14.?With th< wind blowing a gale and driving sleet in their faces, firemen early to clay carried eighteen women down ladders to safety when a blaze rout ed out the tenants in a four-stor; apartment home at the corner of Adams and Seventeenth streets. N< one was Injured. The property los was about $5,000. This is just the time of year when you are most likely to have kidney or bladder trouble, with rheumatism and rheumatic pains caused by weak kidneys. Delays are dangerous, (let HeWitt's Kidney and Bladder Pills, and he sure you get what you ask for. They are the best pills made for back ache, weak back, urinary disorders, etc. They are antiseptic and act promptly. We sell and recommend them. For sale by all druggists. INMUR1CI) IIY MONKKY. A Child's Fae? Made a Mass of Torn Flesh. Savannah, Ga., Feb. 14.?Attacked by "Nellie," the largest of the monkey colony at Thunderbolt, four year old Frank Beasley was very seriously injured this afternoon, the boy being rushed to a hospital after he was freed from the animal, with his face a mass of torn flesh where the monkey's teeth had been. The monkey fought for its prey after the rescue and a half dozen men were hardly able to repel its attacks. There is no suggestion that the monkey was rabid, but the wounds it left were carefully treated. There is not any better Salve than DeWitt's Carbolized Witch Haael Salve. We hereby warn the public that we are not responsible for any injurious effects caused from worthless or poisonous imitations of our DeWitt's Carbolized Witch Hazel Salve, the original. It is good for anything when a salve is needed, but it is especially good for piles. Sold by .all druggists. Drop Dead on Train. Chicago, Feb. 15.?An unidentiled man, 45 years old, believed by tho police io be F. L. Woodruff, of Atlanta, Ga., dropped dead, supposedly from heart disease, on a Michigan Central passenger train bound for Detroit last night. Kodol for Dyspepsia and Indigestion is a combination of the natural digestive juices with necessary acids, and it actually digests the food you eat?no matter what kind of food it may be. It does the ordinary work of the stomach, so that by taking a little Kodol every now and then you cannot possibly have indigestion or any form of stomach trouble. Sold by all druggists. " iDSi THE.HEART OF-/ 10ND, VA,J ( Fggfflf I l I T SHIPMENTS . I ; to ino express office gives as the I 2 Gals. 3 Gals. A% Gals. 0 $4.60 $6.60 $9.00 0 460 6.60 9.00 0 4.60 6.50 9.00 0 4.60 6.60 9.00 0 4.60 6.60 . 9.00 Llieao are only a few brands. Richmond^ Va! QUAKE SHOCKS Play Havoc In Turkey, Killing a Great Many People. PROPERTY RUINED. Thirty Are Known to be Dead at Sivas and Others May 1m? Dead in Kuins?Many of Inhabitants Arc Now Without Shelter?Houses uud Government Ituildings Collapse. Constantinople, Feb. 16.?A number of houses and government buildings at Sivas, the capital of the Vilayet of the same name in Asiatic Turkey, collapsed today as a result ivjl (in cm iiuinanc. The los of life has not been ascertained, but reports say that thirty people have been killed and others injured. Many of the inhabitants are without shelter. Sivas has a population of about G.000 families. What damage was done in the surrounding country is not yet known, as communication is poor. A dispatch from ltudopest says an earthquake shock lasting for ten seconds was felt today in the district of Keeshemst, Nagy, Koros, Czegid and Feligyhaz. The inhabitants fled in terror to the country. The walls of a number of houses were cracked, but otherwise no damage was wrought. \\ IIjIj MKKT I.\ MEMPHIS. Tlie Old Confederate Veterans to Hold lleunioii in June. New Orleans, I>a., Feb. 15.?AdjuI tant General and Chief of Staff William E. Mikell has issued from the headquarters the following general order by command of Gen. Clement A. Evans, commander-in-chief: "The general commanding announces that, according to the custom heretofore in force, which leaves to the general commanding and the department commanders the fixing of the date of the reunion, the 19th annual reunion of the United Confederate veterans will be held in the city of Memphis, Tenn., on June 8, 9 and 10, 1909, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, respectively, those days having been named by our hosts as satisfactory. "Paw *l ' ? ' * vi cue nun uiuu iii inc oriei life of this order, the people of Tennessee throw open their doors and invite the survivors of the glorious armies of the Confederacy to partake of their hospitality, while the noble and patriotic citizens of Memphis a second time beg the wearers of the gray to be their guests. "The general commanding with much pleasure announces at the request of its most energetic president, Mrs. W. J. Behan, that the Confederate Southern Memorial Association will hold its meeting at the same time. "The general commanding sincerely hopes that the press of the entire country will endeavor to sitr up interest in the mmintr mooHn? I and to this end he requests that this | order he published and editorial comment made thereon." MARITAL TANGLE. The Strange Relations That Kxist in a Missouri Family. St. Joseph, Mo., Feb. 15.?The probable fatal shooting of \V. Smith, a carpenter, over a comic valentine, there came to light a strange domestic entanglement. "Mrs. Cora | Smith," who fired the shot at Smith, told the police that she was married to Smith knowing that her mother was already his wife. The three lived together for years, the man posing as the husband of both mother and daughter. The daughter, who is 2 2 years old, sent Smith a roniir vainnti,,??? . ...vi.nnv ^ csiunuiy. Smith became angry when he received it, picking up his clothes and started to leave. Thinking he was going to desert her, the daughter, wife shot him. The mother says she was married to Smith secretly in 1 002 and took her 15 year old daughter by a former husbind to live with her and Smith. A year after the marriage, she says, her daughter and Smith fell In love with each other, and the mother made her husband marry her daughter without getting a divorce, thinking that no one knew of the former marriage. "Mrs. CoI ra Smith" was arrested. She will j he held pending the result of Smith's I wound. Mining Disaster.. Newcastle, Eng., Feb. 19.?A telrible disaster has occurred at West Stanley, a small mining town 12 miles distant, in which, it is feared, 180 lives have been lost. Killed by Tight Shoes. Lake Charles, La., Feb. 19.?May Ruller, aged 10, died at Hacker, La., a few days ago from blood poisoning, which originated from a blister caused by a tight shoe. FAKER LIKE TEDDY % SHOULD NOT HE IMMUNE FROM ^ ) j CRITICS, Says Senator Tillman, Hut He May Not Expose Him in a Set Public ? Speech. ^ Washington, D. C., Feb. 13.?The only thing that will cause Senator Tillman to prod President Itosevelt with his pitchfork will bo any effort on the part of Senator Lodgo to pass the gag rule which he recently proposed and which Is now pending in the rule committee. i if the rules remain dormant in the committee, it is likely that | Tillman will excoriate the president, as ho has threatened to do several times since Mr. Roosevelt attempted to implicate the South Carolinian in Oregon land scandals. "Many of my warmest friends have urged me not to jump on Rosevelt," said Mr. Tillman this afternoon, "and T am undecided whether I will expose him as ho so richly dei serves. I realize that the office of president of the United States is, and should be, above criticism, but 110 faker 1^ Theodore Roosevelt should he ininiune. The office and the occupant are different. "It is a question in my mind whether I should humiliate the people of this country by showing the man In his true light. I have information about him that would shock the people of the country, but my friends tell me, and I believe that way myself, that the senate subcommittee rebuked him severely for his attitude about'the secret service." It was suggested to the senator that perhaps he might be deprived of the right to criticise Mr. Roosevelt, if the rule proposed by Senator Lodge was adopted. "Just let 'em try it," snapped tho pitcfhorker. "That rule will never be adopted, I tell you, and if they try to put it through I wil make my speech about Roosevelt sure. I think I could add materially to the Interest i of a filibuster against the rule, and > I'll do it, too, if any effort is made to pass it." Senator Tillman did not Indicate 1 the nature of his information about i Theodore Roosevelt. ri A 1KT1 n a vuii i v BAfft U1AIWNK* Bays Charley Silas Was Name of v Ijaurens Yeggmaii. Jacksonville, Fla., Feb.- 1-41* "X ~ i professional safe blower, giving his 1 nams as John Simpson, of Curtain Bay, Baltimore, was arrested Monday , morning at 3 o'clock, while in the act of blowing the safe in the store of Charles H. Burnett, in the heart of the business district. Policeman Ammons, in walking his beat, heard a noise in the store and, finding the door unlocked, crept in and was directly over the safe blower before he was aware of his presence. Scattered about him on the floor were nitro-glycerine, saws, chisels, fuses, revolver and all shipments carried by professional burglars. The man /offered no resistance. Simpson made a confession at police headquarters, saying that he has nen operating for some time in Jacksonville and was a pal of Charley Silas, the yeggman who was killed by the policeman at Laurens, S. C. Simpson said he would have killed the policeman this morning but ho thought there was more than one.t/f them. FIKWfJ INTO TKAIX. Two Passengers oil Atlantic Coast Line in Danger. Fayetteville, N. C., Feb. 16.? Hon. J. G. Shaw, ex-Congressman of this district, and Col. Sol VV. Cooper, manager of the National Hank of this city, returned from a business trip to South Carolina last night, and report a thrilling expedience, the reUlllf f an niitmi""""" 1 "" uu uimoguuuH uci. i/iiey were on the train bound for Columbia and at 11 o'clock, short distance from Florence, a bullet tcrashed through a window, which Mr. Shaw was sitting next to, and not six inches from his head, and only a little further from Mr. Cooper, who was sitting next to Mr. Shaw. A second before that a ball had crashed through a window of the second class ooach just ahead, but fortunately no one was hurt in either case. Only a short time ago a promi- < nent citizen of South Carolina was kiled in this samo manner. This sort of thing makes one feel unsafe to travel through South Carolina. The train was not stopped and tho person who committed this fiendish act was not seen. lleports 4vvagcrate<l. Constantinople, Feb. 17.?The rumor in tho United States that ten thousand people lost their lives in tho earthquake in Asiatic Turkey is clearly a gross exageration. The' actual loss of life as far as the present information goes is thirty persons.