The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, June 25, 1914, Image 2

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, . I 1 1 [ to I MUST SIGN PERSONALLY Each Person Desiring to Vote in the Primaries Must Personally Sign Rolls. Following is an official notification to all Democratic voters which if they will heed in time and personally sign the Democratic Club Rolls by the last Tuesday in July, which is July 28th, they will be in position to vote in the Democratic Primary when it comes off, under the new rules of the Democratic Party. Those who neglect to get their names on the roll in this manner will be barred from voting and therefore it is important to heed this warning: "All white men are urged to give attention to this matter. In order to vote in the Democratic primary on August 25 it is necessary to sign personally the roll before the Mast Tups clay in July,' which is July 28. To he entitled to enroll one must be a white man 21 years of age before the November general election, and must have resided in the State two years and in the county six months prior to the November general election, and in ward GO days prior to the primary August 25, and must be a Democrat. "In offering to enroll let every one bear in mind that the rules require him to sign personally his name in full?not merely the customary initials, and to write on the book his age, occupation and residence street and number. If he cannot write, the secretary will do the writing for him and witness his mark which he must personally make in the book. "There is no requirement of registration certificates or tax receipt. This is different from the city primary. Here all that is required is personal enrollment as above indicated." Conway and Loris. Conway went to Loris last week to play the Loris boys a game of ball. Two and one half innings were played when the rain came up and put a stop to the game. In the course of the two and a half innings played, the score stood seven for Conway to Loris nothing. " is ivinv anu r 1*411 i' ry. There will be a basket picnic and fish fry at "Punch Bowl" on Saturday July 4th, 1914. The public is cordially invited to attend. Read the big ad. appearing in this issue for the Norton Drug Company. I no wi wi in Ith bu VO] cie he wl rmm-mrmam?mm ?mm i wwcawtMwwismi ina | MEXICAN DELEGATES CONTEND i Thai Thev Must Have an Adherent . < of Huerta, and Hope ol Success is Almost Lost. Washington, June, 18.?While administration ollicials said today they j still had hopes for a successful out- ^ come of the mediation at Niagara Falls they apparently were more ( doubtful than they have been at any time since the conference began. . . li Ollicials close to the president feel c< that Senor Itabasa's published note of yesterday disclosed anew that the cl Mexican delegates are consistently holding out for a Huerta adherent for ^ the provisional presidency,, despite despite the fact that many such men \\ have been mentioned as "neutrals." g President Wilson is equally deter- ^ mined in his view that unless a man approved by the Constitutionalists is << chosen the new provisional government will be introuble from the out- (j set. b White House officials said that y when the reply of the American dele- |> gates to Senor Ilabasa's note was published, it would be a suflicient explanation of the attitude of the United p, States. ! y I n HOW TO CI \li: TOUACCO ! it " i s W. 1'. Lawrence, a Tobacco Man of ; v Experience Lives Recipe. j A receipt for curing tobacco that a , looks like a crazy quilt but if you will ,r follow it and not listen to Tom, Dick j j" j and Harry you will get a good price , for it, if you will sell with Lawrence P at Ay nor, S. C. v\ First night lire to 100 by 9 o'clock, j.j I go to bed; at 4 o'clock in morning j fire to 100 by 8 o'clock; go to work I let wife fire around 100 all day; at 8 j h o'clock night open door and be at 100 o by midnight; go to sleep and at 4 v o'clock in morning commence with .. door open and by !) o'clock be at 130; stay 2 hours, go to 140 in 2 hours; 11 stay 2 hours; come hack to 120, stay li 2 hours with door open. Clo to 150 q in six hours, stay 2 hours; close the . door and go to 130 and fire until cured. This is for first and second crop- a pings. Will publish receipt for third s and fourth croppings later; it requir- \ es three different receipts to cure tobacco in order to get good prices. Tips should be cured all together dif- a ferent. Will publish it later. IJ W. P. Lawrence, Manager, a Peoples Tobacco Warehouse, Aynor, o S. C.?adv. , 1c Mr. J. L. Mishoe, the operator at a the Coast Line depot, was called to p his home in Bayboro, Horry county, c< Sunday by the news of the death of v his aged mother. Mrs. Mishoe was b buried Monday.?Mullens Enterprise, u \ JO ANNOVN We take pleasure in annoui ,nr tVl A mnnnMAH tt iuana|;ci UJL illc il hereafter be in active 11 be glad to meet and serve : every way possible. We cannot make definite ai e exact date we will be back siness, but hope to do so rable we hoj,e to be th( pernio on the weather a re we wish to thank very mil 10 have stood by us, in th< lich we are thrnkful are no NORTON Ml Hjll llllll I III Hill I? IIHitllllM?III11 I! I TLT BETWEEN BLEASE AM) SMITi-I OPENS CAMPAIGN ihort Account of Wordy Passage Between the Leading Candidates at St Matthews. There was a large attendance upon lie opening Senatorial campaign looting at S . Matthews last wecic. here was a sharp tilt between Gov rnor Klease and Senator Smith, the ,vo candidates for the State Senate, 1 which general interest seems to enter. The governor was the first speaker, nd was reading from his 19,000 word manuscript certain attacks on Senamr Smith concerning federal apointments. The first break came 'hen Blease made a charge that enator Smith had secured the apointment of Capt. W. E. Gonzales 3se in his chair and replied: Governor, now let us keep the recDrd straight. I want it distinctly unerstood that I was no more responsile for the appointment of Mr. Gonales to Cuba than was Cole L. lease." The governor made no reponse. Two minutes later the speaker re rred to the appointment of James L. ims of Orangeburg as United States marshal?"a man who had once edod a negro newspaper." Senator rnith again leaped to his feet, and ; till th- t Mr. Sims was Senator B. R. | Tinman's appointment, and that he nd ho alone was responsible. The overnor then searched through his ulk of "documentary evidence," and roduccd a letter, said to have been ritten to W. J. Shelton of Colonial [eights, Columbia, in which Senator 'illnman said: "Senator Smith and I ave agreed upon the appointment f Sinms." Senator Smith then ad anced to the front of the stage, and acing the governor, replied, "No man i the image of God can call me a ar. I have told you that Sims was 'illman's appointment, that we greed that he should appoint Sims nd W. G. Thurmond, and that I hould have Francis Weston and B. V. Crouch." At this point Dr. Dreher ounty chairman, stepped between, nd Senator Smith took his seat. Gov. lease's only reply was, that if it was lie Ben Tillman told it. Senator mith then told the audience that the *ttcr meant only that the two had greed not to fight each other's apointments when these came up for onfirmation in the senate, but there 'as little chance to hear what was eing said and Senator Smith was rged to take his seat. ?? ?wm mmmm?mmmmammmma?m?ammm?mm?mm?mmm?mammmmmmmTS* El CEMENT ncing that Dr. V F Piatt Norton Drug Co. I charge of this concern ai its customers at ail times ai nnouncement this week as at our old quarters ready f soon. If evtrythipg is f ere next week, but mui nd other conditions. Ju ich indeed those of our friem e trials and inconvenience iw nearly over. DRUG CO JENNINGS iiEAiU) AT OltANGEliURG Declares That the Price of Cotton is Governed by the Law of Supply and Demand. The second meeting of the State Senatorial Campaign took place at Orangeburg on June 18th. L. D. Jennings of Sumter was the first speaker and he immediately launched into the cotton record of Senator Smith and defied the junior senator to show any single thing he had done to raise the price of cotton "but sit in the senate." "I will show you the raise in the price of cotton is due to the law of supply and demand and not to Senator Smith," exclaimed the speaker. When Mr. Jennings attacked Senator Smith's record on the non-passage of the bill for standardizing cotton, which was passed over because the cotton exchange promised to put the provisions of the law into effect on April 15, 1915 the audience repeatedly called the name of Smith. Mr. Jennings said Senator Smith magnifies his services in helping to raise the price of colon in the effort to be re-elected. "If I were not in this race and Mr. Pollock were not in this race, and it were between Senator Smith and Governor Please, 1 would not only vote for Senator Smith, hut I would work for him," said the speaker. Mr. Jennings deprecated factionalism in South Carolina politics, and urged the election of a man who is not a partisan. He voted and worked for Judge Jones for governor in 1912 because he believed the election of Judge Jones was for the best interests of the State. Mr. Jennings in vehement language approved the new rules governing the primary elections. He claimed that the old club roles contained 50 per cent more names than thara \m. ters. He said that the rules will prevent fraud. Mr. Jenings concluded with a strenuous attack on Blease's pardon record, saying that 14,000 jurors were better judges than one man. He criticised the governor's action in turning "loose over 1,200 criminals, the majority of them negroes, to go into the rural districts" where your good women arc unprotected." Pollock on the Aggressive. W. P. Pollock, of Chcraw, the next speaker, speaking of the action of the Orangeburg delegation in endorsing Senator Smith, said: "I have never is I le ? id I id I to 1 or | ch | st 1 ds I voted for Governor Blease and I nov< r expect to, thank God." The speaker said that many people in all see- a tions of South Carolina arc of the op- 'J inion that neither Blease nor Smith t 4are qualified to fittingly represent the j state in the federal senate. "That is p why I came out." ^ j MC 1 nrto n 1 11 Vi J.V/1JOI. j >1 TREASURY .DEPARTMENT .. ! c Oflice of Comptroller of the Currency I Washington, D. C., May G, 1914. 1 WHEREAS, by satisfactory evi- i dence presented to the undersigned, r it has been made to appear that 1 'THE PEOPLES NATIONAL BANK < OF CONWAY" in the Town of Conway in the County of Horry and < State of South Carolina has com- 1 plied with all the provisions of the c Statutes of theUnited States, required to be complied with before an as- ? soeiation shall be authorized to com- t mence the business of Banking; 1 NOW THEREFORE I, John i Skelton Williams, Comptroller of the Currency, do hereby certify that < 'THE PEOPLES NATIONAL BANK ? OF CONWAY" in the Town of Con- t way in the County of Horry and < State of South Carolina is authorized 1 to comemnce the business of Banking * as provided in Section Fifty one hund red and sixty nine of the revised 1 Statutes of the United States. IN TESTIMONY WHERE- < OF witness my hand and Seal of of| fice this sixth day of May, 1914. 1 (L. S.) J no. Skelton Williams. ( Comptroller of the Currency. LetriE Ro Your Compost II I am the champion rotter of the world. I'll rot leaves, straw, stalks, manure, sawdust or any other vegetable matter, even dirt, into a rich, high-grade fertilizer, in less than two months. Just keep me on the Job and I will save you a big lot of that fertilizer "money. If you want to know all about this compost rotting, as well as spraying and preventing hog oholera, write " Red Devil," 619 N. Second Street, St. Louis, Mo., and I'll send you a little book, free, that tells how. I am Red Devil Lye hhm ci * 9 ? i~u ror D1U CAINS Almost as big as those oosting lOo. ^ SATE MT LABELS. ^? * m i ? u L was^ . m "JL NOTICE OF SALE. Under and by virtue of the decree ,nd judgement of the court made by lis Honor S. W. G. Shipp Presiding udge, in the .case of A. C. Thompfc#u 'laintilf vs. John it. Edge, J. H. B. Cdge, Jt. E. Edge, Bank of Conway j.d Conway Savings Bank, Defendmts and dated the 27th day of May V. D., 1014, I, the undersigned J. A. jewis, Sheriff of Horry County, will ell at public auction to the highest udder before the Court House door it Conway, in Horry County at}|jk State of South Carolina, during 1"?n7 lours of sale, on salesday in July text, it being the 6th day of said nonth, all and singular those certain ands situate in Horry County, and lescribe*I ns folic, we All and singular that certain tract >f land situated in Dogwood Neck Township, containing 39 acres, mom >r less, and bounded as follows: Beginning at the run of Big swamp, E. T. Ricks, corner and runs hence with said Ricks' line North 27 L-2 degrees East, 37 chains to a stake n edge of pond to said Ricks' corner. Thence South 68 degrees East 10 chains and forty-five links to a;i igreed corner line, thence South wenty-scven and one-half (27 legrees West 40 chains to the run he said big swamp, thence down said iwamp to the beginning, containing 39 acres, nTore or less being my home ;ract of land where I now reside. (This sale is made subject to a life ?state in J. H. B. and ft. E. Edge.) TERMS of Sale Cash. Purchaser to pay for papers. Conway, S.C., May 30th, A. D., 191,4* <\ H. H. Woodward, J. A. Lewis, Plaintiff's Att'y. SherifF of H. C NOTICE OF SALE. | Under and by virtue of the decree and judgement of the court made by his Honor S. W. G. Shipp, Judge of the 12th Circuit nt riiMrviU.-B A IV/JL- p ence, S. C., in the caKS&J of Conway Live Stock Com- y{ pany, Plaintiff vs. F. S. Powell, J. H. <j Dawsey and H. C. Dawsey, Defendants, and dated the 6th day of June A. D. 1914, I, the undersigned J. A. Lewis Sheriff of Horry County, will sell at public auction to the highest bidder before the Court House door at Conway, in Horry County, ami j State of South Carolina, during legad P hours of sale, on salesday in July* next, it being the 6th day of said month, all and singular those certain 1 lands situate in Horry County, and described as follows, to-wit: All and singular that certain piece, parcel or lot of land, situate, lying and being in the town of Conway, County and State aforesaid, and fronting fifty feet on 3rd Avenue, having a depth of one VnmHwwi oi? __ ???%?? VM ninety-eight feet and designated on a plat of the W. R. Lewis property made by J. M. Johnson, Jr., Surveyor, as lot No. 29, to which deed and plat of said property above referred to, reference is craved as forming a part of this description. v u TERMS of Sale Cash. Purchase*^ to pay for papers. " Conway, S. C., June 10th, 1914. H. H. Woodward, J. A. Lewis Plaintiff's Att'y. Sheriff of H. C J I