The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, May 08, 1913, Image 6
CARRY OUT PLEDGE
PRESIDENT WILSON URGES NEW
JtRSEY DEMOCRATS TO
CARRY OUT JURY REFORM
Incidentally He Promises to Give Ills
Opinion I'pon Local Questions if
Asked?Democrats Must Carry Out
Their Campaign Promisees or lose
Out llcforo the I'wutlo.
President Wilson Thursday nigiht
In two speches at Newark and at Elizabeth,
Now Jersey, made good his
promise to return to New Jersey to
tight for tho reforms which were
pledged to tho peoplo while he was
governor, but which failed of accomplishment
since his departure for
Washington. The president was
greeted with cheers and enthusiasm
as he faced the big crowds.
"It made my pulse beat," said the
president in his speech at Newark,
"to think that 1 was to come to this
great county of Essex that wants to
govern itself but does not. I have
come therefore to speak not to you
but for you. I have exercised a
great self denial about New Jersey.
My great temptation in choosing a
summer home was to pitch my tent
where 1 used to. Hut there is going
to bo a contest for governor in- NewJersey
next summer and 1 did not
want anybody to think I wanted to
boss the job. I have no candidate for
ir<~>vr?rmir hilt I nni minrmnrl tn whr?
ever ia desired by certain gentlemen.
I don't want to see any governor privately
owned. 1 am going to New
Hampshire next summer but New
llempsbiro ia in telegraph comunication
with New Jersey. Any 0110 who
wants to know what 1 think can learn
by asking.
"But 1 want to say a few words
about the Democratic party. I want
even body to realize that' I have not
been taken in by the results of the
last national election. The country
did not go Democratic in November.
It was impossible for it to go Republican
be>cauae it could not tell which
kind of Republican to go. The only
hopeful and united instrument
through which it could accomplish its
purpose was the Democratic party.
There were certain things which we
want, the country said, not certain
persons elevated. There wore certain
things wo want demonstrated, such
as that the government of the United
States can not be controlled by private
interest. Now tho Democratic
party is going to have a try at making
these things sucessful and if not
we're not going to have another try."
The president applied his reference
to the national election to State situation
deducing that if the Democratic
party in the stato did not redeem its
pledges, including jury reform, the
people might try another political
party in the next election.
Mr. Wilson declared that when the
Democratic party in New Jersey threo
years ago came into power, everybody
wondered "if the old gang
would run it, but it did not."
ThV) speaker said that when he was
preparing to go to Washington from
the governorship he was told that
"the old gang would come back."
"I did not believe it," ho continued,
"until I saw it.Once more that
bulky form of the gentleman who used
to personally lead the New Jerseey
legislature into disgrace reappeared
on the very floor of the legislature;
that great system with a big
snake-liko 'S,' that great, sneaking,
whispering system had established
itself in Trenton."
The president used a quantity of
adjectives to describe the "gang" and
charged that the system had been so
corrupt as to permit grand juries to
indict at strategic moments and "they
can withhold grand juries from indict
ing when all is quiet and you know
that the mastery of certain gentlemen
in this state would bo impossible if
the things they did were subject to
the dispasslnate judgmen of grand
juries.
The president was unsparing in his
attack upon tiie eleven assemblymen
from Essex county who were opposing
jury reform.
"It is a disgrace," he said amid applause,
"to the judicial system of the
State and the Union and I come here
to -protest as a representative American
citizen that these things should
not be allowed to exist."
Moved Where .fail Was Handy.
A new reason for living in a big
city was given by Violet Piotrowski,
of Detroit, Mich., who appeared
against her father, who was charged
with drunkenness. Until recently tho
family lived in a small town in Ohio
but moved to Detroit in order that
v. ^ n ? .1 r t. i..
uwr lttiniT 1111 j4,iu uu jain'u ior ins
sprees, the police facilities of minor
municipalities not being sufficient to
accomplish his correction. The court
issued a warrant for non-support. *
Murdered Two Two Negroes.
Two negroes were murdered in
their house at night some days ago on
W. S. Middleton's farm in the lower
part of Edgefield county and as a
result of the efforts of Sheriff Swearingen
five negroes wero committed to
jail to answer the charge of murder<
at the August term of court
m}k . , t
WILL DO MUCH GOOD ;
+ (
THE IiEVKIt AGRICULTURAL EX- j\
TENSION RILL. 1
I
? i
Congressman I/ever Explains His Hill
mid Toll the Public What He Hopes
It Will Accomplish.
In an article in "Husiness Amor- ^
ica," a magazine, Congressman Lever !
Hots forth what "The Lover Bill" is J
intended to accomplish and why ho
believes it will. After reviewing
conditions as they actually exist, Mr. J
Lever proceeds in his artielo as follows:
Outline of Lever Bill.
Machinery, adequate for this purpose,
in the opinion of all masters of
tho subject, is provided in the bill .
(II. K. 22874 ) to establish agrieul-I
tural colleges in tho several states, '
and known as the "Lever Extension
Hill", which without a dissenting I
vote passed tho House of Representatives
on the 23rd day of August of
this year and is now pending in the
Senate. This bill, simple, direct in
itH terms, makes it possible to reach
the farmer in the most positive way
with tho lessons which science and
practical experience have taught, it
takes into consideration tho farmers
well known version to tho acceptance
of new theories and practices with respect
to tho methods of conducting
his own business. The fact that "my 1
father did it this way and it is good
enough for me" is not overlooked,
and the bill makes special provision
to meet his innate predisposition to
ceaso to cavil only when he is made
to know, to stop doubting only when
he sees. The central thought of the I
bill is to dispel skepticisms by ocu- !
lar demonstration. Tho farmer's
farm, with its special natural and
economic environment, is to be tho
field for this work.
The Lover bill, In brief, appropriated
to each state the sum of $10,000
annually, and beginning in 1914
proposes a lump sum appropriation
of $300,000, this sum increasing at
tne rate or $3uu,uuu a year over tne
preceding year until 1 923, when the
total amount appropriated will be
$3,000,000 plus $10,000, the initial
appropriation additional. The initial
appropriation to any state is conditioned
upon the fact that such state
provides in its agricultural college '
for the establishment of an extension
department to ho devoted to giving
demonstrations in agriculture and
home economics, through the medium
of field demonstrations, publications
and otherwise. The additional
lump sum appropriations are condi-1
tioned upon the fact that the states!
receiving them shall provide for the
support of their extension departments
a sum equivalent to the
amount received from the federal
government annually. Assuming,
and there can be little doubt of it,
that the states will meet the conditions
of iho federal appropriations
fully, the total amount available for
this work by 1923 and annually
thereafter will be the sum of $ >,480,000.
Under this plan, it will be possible
to put into every agricultural
county of the country at least one
agent or adviser who must combine
scientific knowledge with practical
experience relating to agriculture
and homo economics in the broadest
rn niitiiw, .-V f 4 .
iiicnuuig ui 11H-OC7 IC1 Ilia, 1 HIM (Infill
or adviser will become the agricultural
physician resident in tho county
to whom the farmers may go with
confidence with their sick soils, their
anaemic crops, their post outbreaks,
and other ills to which the profession
is heir. Such a man must not
only have expert knowledge and
practical experience, but in addition
must possess tact, common senso,
and be enthused with optimism for
his work and for the future of agriculture.
He is to be tho middle man,
tli rough whom the demonstrated
theories and best approved practices
of the profession, emanating from
the colleges and stations, are to bo
carried directly to the farmer and
put to the living test under his own
eye. To break down any prejudice
which the conservation of the farmer
may set out against this method
of adult teaching, it will bo necessary
for him to not only como into
personal contact with the farmer receiving
the instruction and to make
tho farmer himself a participant in
the actual demonstrations of the
practicability of the lesson sought
to be taught, but it will bo necessary
also that the method advocated shall
be successful. Tho farmer is at this
time, in a reooivtivo mnoil for follo?/lr?cr
I- ^ ..-WWW .W?IV/ff lllh
methods which promise a betterment
of his condition, and this bill recognizes
all of these peculiar conditions
and in its very simple terms, in section
two, it is clearly set out that
the duty of these extension departments
shall be "to give instruction
and practical demonstrations in agriculture
and home economies, . . .
on said subjects through field demonstrations,
publications and otherwise."
To more significantly emphasize
the field demonstration ideas as
contrasted with the old method of
teaching by bulletin and lecture, it
is made obligatory that "there shall
be extended each year for field instruction
and demonstration not less
than seventy-five per centum of all
r*oneys available under the provisions
of this act." The demonstration
method, out in the field in direct
contact with the farmer, is again em/
(
plinsized and made plain In the explanation
of the provisions of the bill
jn the floor of the House of Repre- I
jentatlves by It sauthor. Repeatedly
In answer to Interrogations, he assured
the membership of the House that
the purpose of the bill was to reach
tho farmer on the farm and refused
to be led away from his central
thought.
Now tho practical question:
Experience Is tho best guide. It
has worked in European countries
successfully and in a more or less
limited way in this country. Without
going into details, it is sufllcient
for the purposes of this article to call
attention to the fact that extension
teaching is carried on and approved
by the British Empire, Australia,
Denmark, France, Italy, Holland,
Germany, Russia, Belgium and other
lesser nations.
The success of the system in Belgium
is notably striking. Twentyfive
years ajio her agriculture was in
a most deplorable and discouraging ]
condition, so much so that the government
was forced to take notice of (
It. The remedy was found in this
system of extension work by field
demonstration, and ocular instruction.
Under it tho average yield of
wheat in twenty-live years was increased
57 per cent.; rye 5 3.4 per
cent.; barley, 5 0.5 per cent., and (
oats, 63.8 per cent., and her farmers
in the last twelve years have trebled
their savings bank accounts.
The same methods in Germany (
made for wheat a gain of 31.6 per 1
cent.; oats, 36 per cent.; barley, 3 0
per cent.; rye, 4 1 per cent, in a quarter
of a century.
It would be criminal to shut our '
eyes to the meaning, the immense '
significance of theso data. Assume '
that twenty-five years hence the av- '
erage yield per acre for wheat, oats, 1
rye, barley, potatoes and cotton, under
the system outlined in this bill, '
shall have increased fifty per cent. <
The result will startle the mathema- 1
tician and confound the dreamer. '
Are our conditions such as will '
warrant the belief that tho system i
will wo-k as well with us as it has '
under t1 conditions of these foroitrn
count .! Emphatically yes. Al- i
rend More than thirty of the land '
gr-nr colleges are using this method
fo- i*lnit teaching in limited ways. i
Si\.y years ago practically nothing i
was being done by any of them along l
these lines. The enthusiasm with 1
which it has been received, and its ;
eillcacy in reaching the difficulties, <
are the forces which have created i
the unanimous sentiment of the <
country for the passage of the meas- i
ure embodying the details worked i
out in this bill. The results have 1
been so encouraging that the princi- ]
pal railroads of the country, the larg- <
est farm implement companies, such 1
as the International Harvester Co.,
the National Association of Rankers, j
with whom the first question is: ,
"Will it pay?" have joined with tho
farmers and the agricultural colleges ,
in support of it. It is possible, to
multiply illustrations from reports of j
this work showing it to bo beyond
question tho practical solution of the ,
problems with which our agriculture ]
must deal. (]
One illustration, however, where the
demonstration system has cov- (
ered a number of states and has been ,
in operation for a sufficient time to (
make sure that it is no flash in the .
pan is sufficient. This work has (
been carried on in tho Southern ,
States since 1901 when it was organ- ,
ized by the late Dr. Seaman A. ,
Knapp. Its success was immediate
and remarkable, nor has it lost any
of its force by lapse of time. On
the contrary it continues to grow
in influence and good. From a small
beginning, with only a few trained
men in the field, it has developed in
less than adecado into a great movement.
with a thousand agents or ad- 1
visers, one hundred thousand farm
prs, seventy-live thousand hoys In
Uio corn clubs, and twenty-five
thousand girls in the canning
clubs who are receiving instruc- '
tlon and becoming centers frpm
which radiate the better methods of 1
agriculture and homo ecomnoics to
their neighbors. The results of this
work in the South have made a pro- '
found impression not only upon her
own people,,but upon the people of
the entire country and tho world.
Representatives of Russia, Brazil,
England, South Africa and Argentina
have studied it. Sir Horace
Plukent, a member of the committee
some years ngo to visit contiental
countries to investigate their sys- !
terns of extension teaching, after a
visit to this country and a study of '
this work- expresses himself as profoundly
impressed with tho good sense
which underlies it. Of it Dr. i
Walter 11. Page, said: "It is the
greatest single piece of constructive
educational work in this or any age." 1
Since it was put upon a firm basis it
has doubled the yield per acre both
of corn and cotton as against the
average in every state in which it has
been practiced. The results in South
Carolina aro tynlcal. Tho averatre
yield of seed cotton per acre for this
state for 1011 was seven hundred
and ninety-five pounds, while the
average yield reported on seven thousand
three hundred and seventy-one
acres and by one thousand and seventy-four
demonstrators is one thousand
five hundred and sixty-nine
and two-tenths pounds of seed cotton
per acre, or an increase over ordinary
methods of ninety-four and fourtenths
per cent, or about twenty- <
three dollars per acre. The average
yield of corn for South Carolina for
1911 was 18.2 bushels, while the
average yield reported! on 5,99 8
KILLKD A 8QIKALKK.
Vew York (hangmen Shoot Member I
Who Wan Telling.
Suspected of "squealing" to the
iistrict attorney, Jerry Maida, known c
is "Jerry, the Lunchman," mot his i
ippointed death on Firty-First street 1
near Broadway, New York, early t
Tuesday. He was shot down by >
gangsters who sent bullets into his t
body. |
Tho shooting occurred only a cou j
|)le of blocks away from the scene of i
:he murder of Herman Rosenthal last f
July, but the gunmen had loss luck t
than tho Rosenthal murder crew, i
Five policemen who were in tho ini- t
mediate vicinity heard tho shots and
bounced upon five men whom they i
. ,.,.11 ,.f I# 11111. ? '
iv-v-vio* ? vi i i uu rv i i i i 11 f~y , I
Tho police allege mat the men 1
aught are members of lie l aul K\l- i
ly band of gangsievs. of which Jerry c
a as an adherent. They say that Jer- t
ry had recently fallen uinfer suspi- (
don, however, and that he was l
thought to be revealing the gang's t
jecrets to the district attorney.
None of the men caught were armid,
but witnesses said they had seen
thein throw revolvers away and three (
>f the guns were found in a garbage f
can nearby. The police say that j
'(Juinea Sam", one of the prisoners, )
was under arrest two years ago in (
connection with the murder of an- (
Dther member of the gang under sim- j
lar circumstances. j
(
'Floods of (iodless Men." >
In speaking of the recent floods t
Louis F. I'ost contributes a most in- t
cresting article to The Chicago Pub- \
lie. lie says "precisely this is what
he catastrophes of the past week in 1
reality are?"Hoods of godless men", t
Not of particular men who are god
ess, but of the godless men in each t
if us. Trace those floods back to 1
heir physical causes. Scrutinize '
uhoso moral causes, and you find 1
hem to consist of that deadly love i
[or unearned dollars from which 1
none of us is entirely free, and a 1
wicked indifference to common f
rights, of which all of us are in some f
measure guilty. j *
"They are the "floods of godless 1
men"?of the unrighteousness that
Is in all men. It is well, therefore, 1
hat all contribute somewhat to the (
elief of the misery all have caused , A
md are causing. Iairge aggregate (
contributions from many persons in 1
imtill hwHvi/liinl o??Annta h-amI/I Kno* 1
iiiut t ivi uui uuiv/uiitoi n v/ m vi urr>i
?xpress the general consciousness of
^uilt. Hut that is enough to wash
xway the stain. The "godless men"
within us can not he evicted or suppressed
by gifts to relief funds. The
only effective penance is a new communal
life., j
"So long as we get something for
nothing?nay, even so long we indifferently
allow others to get something
for nothing?so long shall
there be "floods of godless men" with
all their calamitous consequences;
for none can get something for nothing
unless others get nothing for;
something. To relieve calamities we ;
must give when calamities come, no j
matter why they come. But to pre-1
vent calamity, we must arouse our-1
3elves to the beneficent commands of !
the moral law. Its punitive sanctions
can not he averted by relief funds.
To stay the "floods of godless men"
our "godless men" must he reduced
Lo order. To make physical laws
3erve us well wo must hitch them to
the moral law."
PKNSION FOR MOTHKR8.
?
Fourteen State legislatures Are Considering
Beneficial Haw.
Fourteen legislatures are now consideraing
Mothers' Pensions hills,
while nine states have already enacted
laws bearing either directly or
indirectly upon the endowment of
motherhood. Wherever pension leg- ?
Islation has been enacted it has been 1
based on the theory that children (
should not be separated from their >
mother for reasons of poverty alone, i
The Tuesday club, of St. Louis, an <
organization composed entirely of 1
women, has found that broken homes t
and institutional children produce
the Juvenile court offenders, and that
they in turn till the penitentiaries. *
4^4 *
Gave Ilimscl ffor $."><>. i
Declaring he was unable to refund t
$f?0 he had stolen from Mrs. Raehael <
Sparks, aged 50 years, of Corbin, Ky., 1
Prank G. Girard ottered himself and 1
was accepted. They were niarriel t
within a few hours.
acres by 1,672 demonstrators in 29.2
bushels, an increase under demonstration
methods of 115.4 per cent,
or about $20 per acre.
These are cold facts, and if every
farmer in the South had followed the
demonstration methods on h'.s farm
for 1911 millions of dollars would
have been added to the wealth of
that section. What is true of the
South is equally true of the entire
country. Will the system work?
rri./, Unnl ' ? II * * *
1 iiu uool tiiinwcr 1H, 1L IUIH worKea RO
successfully in the South that the
people who are feoling its benefits
are to-day making voluntary contributions
for the great memorial to
the author of the plan. The Lever
bill proposes to nationalize the work
already in existence in the South and
a majority of the land grant colleges
of the country, and to co-ordinate it.
with the other agencies at work solving
the problems of agriculture and
rural life, by making agriculture
profitable and rural life happy. 1
Via i
WILL AII> ADMINISTRATION.
>omocrats In California Support WilNon
anil Ilryan.
An indication of the form Democratic
opposition will take to the proK>sed
Webb draft of the anti-alien
and bill was given in the California
state senate at Sacramento Thursday
vhen the measure came up for final
iction.
It was the original plan of the progressive
Republican majority In its
insurance of a successful issue to
oree the bill to a vote at once but at
he request of the Democrats a postponement
of one day was granted at
he last minuate.
In return for the delay the adminstration
leaders received a pletlgo
rom the minority that it would abide
)v the results as shown in the final
oil oil 11 and not demand a reconsidjratlon.
Thus the Progressives felt
hat although apparently they lost a
lay, in reality they saved several 1
>v cheeking further efforts to impede
heir plans.
What ltooze Did for llim.
The other day Thomas Seahrooke
lied in Chicago in the most miserable
nirroundings. The Cedar Ilapids Republican
says a dozen years or so ago
le was easily the foremost comedian
m the stage. He was a born cornelian.
There was no horseplay effect
n his acting. At that time ho was
ible to make $7.r>,000 a year, for ho
ou Id draw audiences that would
varrant a manager in paying him
?uch a salary. The announcement
hat Seahrooke was in the cast alvays
filled a theater in those days.
Put, says The Republican, Seairooke
made one mistake. He
bought he could get away with John
tarleycorn and put him under the
able. He knew that other men had
ailed, and failed miserably, in the
inequal contest, but the thought that
io was to be the one exception, the
nan who could win the victory. Rut
le didn't win. They never do win
Alio start out on such a trial of
itrength. The end is always the
same, dishonor, humiliation, shame
ind suffering of every kind. Seaprooke
died in delirium tremens.
He had one supreme agony of
nind, when all the devils and snakes
>f hell tormented him, and then he
,vmk dr?;id d??nd n.t n tim?> whnn ho I
)Ught to he in the beginnings of a
nellow maturity, the kind of maturty
in which Joe Jefferson was at his
pest and during which he gave his
riends and admirers their greatest
pleasure out of art. This is a temperance
sermon that should bo heard
ind heeded by all men, but most especially
the young men. Every man,
roung or old, who takes one drink
'aces the awful fate that overtook the
alented Seabrooke.
Why They Are Not Wanted,
The reason why California wishes
o exclude the Japanese is because of
heir effect upon the labor conditions
pf the white people of the State. A
Sacraento paper suggest "that Mr.
Jryan take an auto and ride to Pertins
and on to Florin and Elk Grove
ind see the Japanese women laboring
n the fields. Let him view the huts
hey live in and contrast them with
he white men's homes next door. If
his continues, how long will it be
peforo the white women will be compelled
to labor in the fields to help
heir husbands obtain even the "lecessaries
of life? How long will it be
intil the white families will be degraded
to the same miserable huts?
x'ow these three towns mentioned are
ill in this county, a few miles oast
pf the capital city of the State, under
he very nose of the Legislature, and
A'ore formerly prosperous American
'ommunitios. And there are others
south of the city, towns where the
lewspapers scarcely find it worth
vhile trying to maintain a circulation
hat formerly was large." It will bo
seen that the Japanese settlers are a
pindrance rather than a benefit to
California. Under the circumstances
, , ,1 ? ^ 4 I. 1 ? ... 4 1. ? 1 - ?1? At
ivw uu inn uiuuit' uio people 01 uie
State for not wanting them as residents.
Wo would not want them
lere. There is no comparison heween
negroes and the Japs.
Jealous IiOver Slays Fiancee.
With their wedding but a day off
Nathaniel Burton, formerly employed
n the United States quartermaster's
lepartment at Honolulu, ended a
liiarrel with Miss Elma Snyder, his
lancee, by shooting her to death and
tilling himself. Jealousy caused the
ragedy. *
BANK OF
Con wa'
HAS LARGEST CAPITAL AND SITR
COUNTY. MORE THAN THE COMB
ALL OTHER BANKS IN THE COU
CAPITAL STOCK.. ..
SURPLUS
LIABILITIES OF STOO]
SECURITY OF DEPOSE
DIREC
ROBERT II. SCARBOROUGH.
t\f. L. ZUCK,
GEORGE J. HOLIDAY.
WE OFFER OUR CUSTOMERS AOC
COUNTS WILL JUSTIFY, AND WE
Robert R. Scarborough, D.
President.
WE CONTINUE TO PAY 5 PER CEIS
THE HORRY HERALD
CONWAY, S. C.
thursday, may 7, 1013.
fKOKKSHIONAIi <AKI>?
H. H. WOODlVAJtI>
Attorney and Councilor At
CONWAY, S. O.
?. b. etc a it into i ti le
CON WAV, Is. t
attorney at Um?
#4. H. BIJKROIXJH?
^biairUn and Hurgooa
CON WAX, 8. <J.
W. Li. McCORD,
Dental Surgeon
CONWAY, S. C.
%
IIKSK HAVEN EL
l^ind Surveying
and
nrninuge
Kpivey Building Conway, 8. O.
Ht WURLDS BRtAllSi SEWIN6 MACHIRt
k LIGHT RUNNING ^
nfwhhmc
Oryoo wnntelthera VibrntlngRhuUla ttouuf
nbattleor aHingloThreiid [CViatn dvt/cAl
Bowing Machine write to
flB ?W HOME 8EWINQ MACHINE CQMPMK
Orange, Muss.
Mtt>9?ewtTiff machines arc made to set! re?aivftea**A
*o*my. but the New Home it made to wea*
Ota guaranty neve* rtina out ?
|Mt SI Authorized dealer* MNAJ
*0* *AL* ?
WIDOW A(XT'SKI) or MUUDKll
+
Mis. I.aura T. lleuter Will bo Tried
at Rartlesville, Ok la.
Charged with knowing the plans
of the slayers of her husband, Charles
Renter, one of the most promising
young attorneys of Tulsa, Okla., his
widow Mrs. Laura T. Reuter, will be
placed on trial this month in Ilartlesville,
Okla. She declares she is innocent
of the charge and will establish
her innocnec by the same confession
through which the prosecution plans
io condemn her.
Guy I). (Mackenzie and Joe Baker
are now serving life sentences charged
with the killing of Renter. Against
them the confession of Bud Bellew,
a chauffeur, was used. It is assertod
in his confession ho did not mention
Mrs. Rueter directly.
Head Hacked With Hatchet.
Cleorge I. Sease, a farmer near Lorcross,
(la., Thursday was found fatally
injured on the farm of J. K. Knox
near Duluth. Sense's head had been
badly hacked with a hatchet and he
died before medical attention couli
bo summoned. A neg;*) employee on
the farm, on who id clothing bloc 1
stains are sai 1 to have been found,
has been arrested.
"It has been suggested that some
men are born good; some men ac
nunc suuuuess, ana omers leave It to
the kindly monument makers to find
their virtues," says The Greenwood
Journal.
HORRY,
f- s, c.
PLUS OF ANY HANK IN HORRY
I NED CAPITAL AND SURPLUS OF
NTY.
$r>o,ooo
12,500
KHOLDKILS. . .. 50,000
DORS 112,500
;tors
W. A. JOHNSON,
WILL A. FREEMAN,
D. V. RICHARDSON.
OMMODATION WHICH THEIR ACSOLICIT
YOUR BUSINESS.
V. Richardson, Will A. Freeman,
Vice-President Cashier.
IT. ON YEARLY DEPOSITS.
?
I *