The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, July 30, 1914, Image 3
- OR. J. H. MCINTOSH
ATTACKED BY BLEASiTE
** I
NO DOUBT ON ACCOUNT OF
WHAT HE HAD TO SAY ON
^ R1CHEY CASE.
RiCHEY WIS PAROLED
BECAUSE A PARALYTIC
Doctor Mcintosh Said in Statement
That Was Published That His Paralysis
Was Only Put On For Get^
ting Pardon.
j
Dr. James H. Mcintosh was shot
1 on ...
?mi jjainiuuy wounded by an unknown j
* man in Columbia, who attacked him ;
shortly before 2 o'clock Thursday
morning; as the physician was return- 1
ing home along Marion street after a ,
visit to the Knowlton hospital. Ac- |
cording to statements made by Dr.
Mcintosh the assailant, after a struggle,
fled over the wall of the Presbyterian
churchyard, shouting as he
* scaled the wall: "Now, you won't
bother Colic tomorrow," or " Now,
Colic won't be bothered by you tomorrow."
Dr. Mcintosh recently was brought
forward into the senatorial race, Gov.
Please having said that lie expected
1 to invite the doctor to be on the stage
v kt the Columbia meeting when he j
would answer the question asked at
Greenville, as to his statement re- ;
garding the condition of R. A_ Richcy,,
who was paroled by the governor.
There is no clew to the identity of
Dr. Mcintosh's assailant. The wound^
ed man described him as being small
* about 120 pounds in weight, dressed
in dark clothing and wearing ? ninth
? - (
cap.
Bloodhounds, summoned from the
penitentiary, arrived some lame after :
the shooting. Bystanders had been
kept away from the part the wall
which the assailant had scaled in his
escape. The trail, therefore., was relatively
easy.
The dogs followed the trail through
the graveyard to Bull Street and
thence down that street to the cor- 1
ner of Bull and Pendleton streets.
i
There the trail was lost, about half
way across Pendleton street.
f The affair caused tremendous excitement
as it was the night before
rthe day for the Columbia meeting
during which Gov Blease was to have
called upon Dr. Mcintosh in regard i
k to that gentleman's statement con^
cerning R. A. Richcy, a criminal pardoned
by the Governor. Dr. Mcintosh's
statement contradicted that of
Governor Blease.
Dr. Mcintosh drew the revolver
which he had been carrying for the
past few days and fired at the would^
be assassin. Help arrived shortly
^ and he was taken to the K nowl ton
Hospital, where probing resulted in
the recovery of the bullet. The
wound extended into the abdominal
sac, but penetrated none of the intes
tines. The wounded man's chance j
v for recovery was pronounced excelJP
lent.
At three P. M. Thursday the man
who shot Dr. Mr'lntnch ti+ 9 a ?>-. +S-.* i
^ vvk/?l %A> 1/ M C4 111* tilUl
morning on Marion street ha<l not
been apprehended. No arrest had
been made.
The trail ended at the automobile
that apparently awaited the assailent.
On last Friday two or three days
after the shooting the condition of
Or. Mcintosh was described as "fine"
by the superintendent of the hospital.
The expectation was that he would
be sufficiently recovered to leave the
, hospital in a week.
*** Efforts of the Columbia police had
failed to discover a clue leading to
identification or apprehension of the
assailant.
Belief of the police department that
the assailant boarded an automobile
at th^ corner of Pendleton and Bull
Ik streets, after fleeing four blocks from
*" the scene of the crime was strengthened
when Mrs. C. Y. Reamer, who
resides at 1507 Pendleton street, near
the corner of Bull and Pendleton
streets, told officials of suspicious actions
of a man in an automobile at
the corner exactly at 2 o'clock on
^ Thursday morning.
Mrs. Reamer is sayl to have told
the police that shortly before she
heard the first shot fired that morning,
an automobile stopped at the cor- :
ner and the laugh of a man was heard
above the noise of the engine, which 1
contiued to run. The laugh of this
> unknown man was the ' y human
f sound she heard, it was related, and i
within a few minutes the first shot ]
was heard. After a lapse of a few i
minutes the machine was driven away 1
and the city clock struck the hour of 1
< x
V. D. Johnson was in Socastee one ]
day last week. j
K
s
S JSt 53JM JEJ R3 SE? S3 S3 55 p,
| ITEMS OF GENERAL NEWS ?j
i ALL OVER THE WORLD g
>ai
THURSDAY JULY 23, 1914.
President Wilson late last Thursday
ended the bitterest fight of the
administration by withdrawing the
nomination of Thos. D. Jones, of Chicago,
to 'be member of the Federal
Reserve Board. Mr. Jones had written
urging this action.
Chairman William F. Barnes, of
the Republican States committee, Shnc
unced last Thursday that he had informed
his counsel to bring suit
against Theodore Roosevelt, based
upon Col. Roosevelt's statement of
Wednesday night attacking Mr. Barnes
and endorsing the candidacy of
Harvey D. Hinman for the nomination
for Governor at the Republican
primaries.
Theodore Roosevelt't request to he
heard by the Senate foreign relations
committee in opposition to the Colombian
treaty by which the United
States would pay $25,000,000 for the
Panama Canal strip and express that
anything should have oceured to "mar
the friendly relations* between the
two countries" remained unanswered
by the committe last Thursday. No
decision will be reached for another
week.
A reward of $5,000 for the arrest
and conviction of the man who early
last Thursday shot Dr. James 17. Mcintosh,
well knew physician of Columbia,
was offered late last Friday
night by J. W.. 'Norwood, a Greenville
banker. Citizens of Columbia
launched a campaign to raise $1,000
for the arrest of the assailant,
who is supposed l-o have escaped in an
automobile.
Governor 13lease ordered closed the
Columbia, Metropolitan and Ridgewood
clubs during his speech at the
(campaign meeting Friday at Columba
for candidates for the United States
senate. The chief executive explained
his action by saying some of those
persons in the audience interrupting
him wore members of of those organizations.
When the Governor began
his speech combined cheers and howls
of derision extending over a period of
15 minutes prevented him making
himself heard.
FRIDAY JULY 24, 1914
Official advices last Friday revalod
that the Washington Administration
was meeting with success in
bringing Provisional "President Carbajal,
Grn. Carrvinxa, Gen. Villa and
Gen. Zapata into harmony for the
restoration of peace in Mexico.
"I am going to tell you about that
dirty, filthy record Governor Blease
has made," said L. D. Jennings last
Friday in a scathing denunciation of
the Governor, adding. "His diabolical,
filthy record is the dirtiest ever
made in South Carolina," and "that
Please has debauched the Governor's
office worse than Moses, Scott, Chamberlain
and all the Republican Governors
combined of the reconstruction
period.*"
It will he with regret, Governor
Glynn of New York says, that he will
accept the resignation of Attorney
General Thomas F. Carmody and the \
first deputy Attorney General J. A.
Kellog. The resignations will be handed
in, Carmody says, on September 1.
The Attorney General and his first
doputy will practice law in New York.
_______ I
Fire practically wiped out the bus- 1
iness section of De Graff, a village in
Ohio last Friday, causing a loss estimated
at over $100,000 ? 1
<
Gen. Huerta and the fugitives from 1
Mexico accompanying him arrived at
Jamaica about noon last Friday on
board the German cruiser Dresden *
from Puerto, Mexico.
Count Alexander Roma, leader of
the Garibaldi Legion during the last
Balkan war, in which he was wounded,
died at Athens, Greece last Friday.
He was a member of the Chamber
of Deputies, and at one time was
its speaker.
Austrian reservists residing in Ber- fl
lin have been instructed to hold them- i
selves in readiness to return to Aus- j
tria and join their regiments at the
shortest notice.
Theodore Roosevelt, after renew- d
ing his attack on Wm. Barnes, Republican
State chairman began last |
K'riday the work of preparing his I i
legal defense in the $50,000 libel suit r
begun against him by Mr. Barnes. *
Read the articles that will ap- 1
aear in this paper from time to time c
in behalf of home trade. ?
r
| To the Tobacco Growers o
| Wil! say that the Ay rv
I and by this time hope
| am icivin? n?v time and m
| Ay nor one of the best tow
I I have secured a irood
% dee, AHie ^est and McLai
Y
We have the promise <
A *
leliow man and that is en t
attention, and you shalt ha\
<g be misled by anyone, but ct
& feacco with BoyIe3, the farn
& and ?o to boosting instead <
^ then watch her grovr.
I
4 ><? x*x$xSx$><$ <? <?x$><t> <Sxt><$x?<S>
POLLOCK WILL BURY
HECKLERS FACE DOWNWARD
Some of the Loading Feartures of the
Senatorial Meeting at Lexington.
Following arc some of the features
of the campaign mcetng for Senatorial
^candidates held at Lexington,
S. C., last Friday:
W. P. Pollock, of Cheraw, was the
first speaker and to one of the hecklers
he said:
"May God have mercy on you until
the devil gets you. On August 25 we
are going to bury your kind face
downward so that when you scratch
out it will be in hell."
In referring to the attempted assasination
of l)r. .M>Tr?*noVi. , member of
the audience cried that Dr. Mclnto.
shot himself.
"You dirty coward, you know you
lie when you charge Dr. Mcintosh
with shooting himself."
Senator E. D. Smith, the second i
speaker, commenced by launching in- j
to Ins regular cotton speech, which '
was well received.
"Hurrah for Collie," cried a voice, j
"He will go back to Newberry after
August 25 and Smith will be sent
back to the United States senate," replied
Senator Smith.
After explaining his record in the
senate particularly the amendment to
the banking and currency bill, Senator
Smith concluded amid an ovation.
Senator Smith was presented with
several bouquets and a stalk of corn
decorated with a minature "stars and
stripes."
When the time came for Governor
Blease to take the stand he was driven
up in a wagon seated in a chair
surrounded by a bevy of beautiful
fuJ girls.
The vehicle was decorated in red
bunting, Confederate flags, cotton and
corn Stalks. Following the wagon
were about 500 of the chief executives
followers. When Governor Blease
commenced his speech there was an
effort made to howl him down. The
chief executive paid his respects to
the hecklers in characteristic language.
He told his disturbers that he
intended to make his speech even if it
;ook al day. He called his hecklers
"hounds."
Lest the latest population figures
should make the country appear
crowded we call attention to the fact
that in the National forests alone
there are two acres for every man,
woman and child.?Charlotte Observer.
To Prevent Blood Poisoning
ipply 91 one* the wonderful old reliable DR.
'OUTER'S ANTISEPTIC HEALING OIL, a surrical
dressing that relieves pain and heals at
he same time. Not a liniment. 25c. 50c. f 1.00.
No. Six-Sixty-Six
This is a prescription oreoared eaneciallv
or MALARIA or CHILLS & FEVER.
flve or six dotes will break any case, and
f taken then as a tonic the Fever will not
eturn. It acts on the liver better than
Calomel and does not gripe or sicken. 25c
nvlgorating to the Pale and Sickly
The Old Standard general strengthening tonic,
iROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC, drivee out
dalaria .enriches the blood .and builds up the sys?
ess. A true tonic. For adults and children. 50c
u nnvi r
n. duiLl
>f Horry and adjoining Cou
r*r Tobacco Market wiU opei
to have everything in read
one/ to make the Farmers
rn*. in Horry County,
efficient force of Horry ho:
dShiin, aiso Mr. Reid Moll
>f plenty of buyers to handle
he square and every pile of \
rc the highest me.rket price t!
)me home and make your he
ners friend and a will help yo
of knocking and hollow Hun
PI | ffl?
SiniiTcr mim
umiuiuniLO milium
:ards in this column ari
$r>.(k) in advance. no extra
charge for running
the card
th ro ug h secon d
primary,
For Congress.
I hereby announce myself a candi
date for Congress from the Gth Cor
gTess'ional District of South Carol im
subject to the rules of the Demoerati
party. J. E. Ellerbe.
\
For Congress
I hereby announce myself a car
idate to represent the sixth Cor
ressional District in the next Cor
ress,subject to the action of th
emoeratic primary.
a. l. Hamer.
For Magistrate.
T hereby announce myself a candi
date for Magistrate of District No ]
Conway township, subject to th
rules of the Democratic primary. I
elected I will discharge the duties t
the best of my ability.
H. Norman Sessions.
For Magistrate.
I announce myself a candidate fo
Magistrate in district No. 2, Conwa
Township, and promise if elected t
attend to duties of the office.
N. O. Sessions.
For Probate Judge.
Not by the solicitation of man;
friends but because I want the office
I hereby announce myself a candidal
for Probate Judge of Horry Count;
subject to the action of the Demo
era tic Primary.
S. M. Allen.
Gurley, S. C.
For Auditor.
I hereb" announce myself a candi
date for re-election to the office o
Auditor of Horry County, subject t
the rules of the Democratic primary
N. C. Adams.
For Auditor.
I hereby announce myself a candi
date for the office of Auditor of Hor
ry county, subject to the rules of th
Democratic primary Aug. 25, 1914.
W. H. Howell.
For County Treasurer.
I hereby announce my candidac
for re-election to the office of Treas
urer for Horry County subject to th
rules of the Democratic Primary.
John Holt.
Selling Cheap
1?4 /"X r? r? t-?
ft U1 V^CiDil.
At
WOODWARD BROS., STORE.
Butt Meat 10
Merry Widow Flour, 241bsSacks_. 75
100 Bags Corn, going cheap,
50 Bags Feed Oats,
50 Bags Good Rice.
50 Bags Molasses Feed.
50 Bags Bran,
1000 Pounds Butt Meat.
And Car Loads of Plate Ice will b
coining soon. Phone us your wanti
Phone No. 35.
, s c.
nties:
i for the sale of leaf tobacco \
. i .
to give you ti\e best of se
Warehouse one of the best w*
irs to assist m \ ; icUidm,?
ey ot Chatham, Va., tor Aueti
the weed and I have only one \
tobacco you place 011 my floor v
eat cart be obtained. So when ;
acl quarters at the I'armers Waiv
vi along the road to success. Sc
ah for Ay nor, the promising yoi
Yours for Service,
(Deafnes Cannot Be Cured.
by local applications, as they cannot
reach the diseased portion of the cr.r.
There is only one way to cure dcafncs,
and that is by constitutional roG
medics. Deafnes is caused by an inflamed
condition of the mucous lining
of the Eustachian Tube. When this
tube is inflamed you have a rumbling
sound or imnerfeet Vinnvinnr nn/l
when it is entirely closed, Deafnes is
the result, and unless the inflamation
can be taken out and this tube restor
ed to its normal condition, hearing
will be destroyed forever; nine cases
l~ out of ton are caused by Catarrh,
i- which is nothing but an inflamed conlt
dition of the mucous surfaces.
' We will give One Hundred Dollars
L for any case of Deafnes (caused by
catarrh) that cannot be cured by
Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circularg
F. j. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio.
t_ Sold by Druggists,75c.
t_ Take Hall's Family Pills for constie
pation.?adv.
Stops Neuralgia?Kills Pain.
iL,
Sloan's Liniment gives instant rec
lief from Neuralgia or Sciatica. It
f goes straight to the painful part?
o Soothes the Nerves and Stops the
Pain. It is also good for Rheumatism,
Sore Throat, Chest Pains and
Sprains. You don't need to rub?it
penetrates. Mr. J. It. Swinger, Louisville,
Ky. writes: "1 suffered with
r quite a severe Neuralgia Headache
y for four months without any relief.
0 I used Sloan's Liniment for two or
three nights and 1 haven't suffered
with my head since." Get a bottle
to-day. Keep in the house all the
"* time for pains and all hurts. 25c.,
50c., and $1.00 at your Druggist.
y Bucklen's Arnica Salve for all So- i
. res.?adv. I
? i
e
1 .1-*- Jht^W
GROCER
Only High Grade Family and Mlanta
* itonf* Supplies handled. Your natrcuagf
is respectfully ^elicited and will he appreciated.
Satisfaction guaranteed or |
" your money back. Mo trouble tc shou
' good?. ?o if you don't sec what you wan I
0 ask for it. I
| FOR SALE !
My house and lot on corner Meaty
Street and Gth Avenue. Good sixroom
house and out buildings. Write
or call on me for prices at once.
e 2t. J. H. Oliver.
"
'New Store.
We have bought out the stock of
S. F Gasque Co, on the corner opposite
the Horry Tobacco Warebouse
We carry up-to-date ^Staple
and Fancv Groceries, Beef, Pork.
Sausage, Etc. Give us a call and
be convinced that our goods are
fresh.
Yours for business i
c J. T. Proctor Jr.
& Co.
For Weakness and Loss of Appetite
The Old Standard general strengthening took.,
? GROVE'S ~4STEI*ESS chill TONIC, drives out
g Malaria and builds up the system. A true tonic
and sure Appetizer. For adults and children. SCc
i
11
rer. |
Wednesday July 22nd, I
rvice in everyway, &s I I
irehouses in the State, I
?rs. Furmau W. Har- 1
oneer. |
vay of dealing with my |!
yili receive my personal %
you start to market clonk \
chouse and sell your to- ^
> lets all pull together %
Ling town of Horry ^and
< >
1
< >
< >
V
A
? A A a a a/> AA/>aaaaa >v
. . . v ~ ^ V ^WWW*?
W. E. McCORD,
v
Dental Surgeon,
I CONWAY, S. C.
i
H. H. WOODWARD,
Attorney and Counsellor at Law,
CONWAY, S. C.
I ^
K. B. SCARBOROUGH,
Attorney at Law, *
1 CONWAY, S. C,
I
< ?? - .
i
| HAL L. BUCK
1 Fire Insurance,
Ofliee Conway National Bank,
CONWAY, S. C,
J. M. JOHNSON,
01VI'-. ENGINEER
Marion, S .
Railroad, City and Land Surveying;
and Drainage. Road-building an
Sewers Draughting and Blue Printing
11. C. cain ?nON
General Land Surveying.
Oflice?Buck Building
CONWaY, S. C.
. "TV V 1 1 "1
W CSIN Jli'i) C ) $
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Conway, S. C.
j Office up Stnirs Buck Building:
(
! ENOCH S. C. BAKER
I Attorney at Law,
Spivey Building.
CONWAY, S. C.
D A Spivey & Company
On "THE CORNER"
In
PEOPLES NATIONAL BANK BL'DG
| Bonds
J Fire
Life
And
Other
INSURANCE.
I). A. SPIVEY. W. a KING
GEO. LUM LAUNDRY,
CONWAY, S. C,
Beginning July 1st. 1913
All persons must take ticketsfor
work left here. Possitively no
work delivered until ticket is prasented.
Laundry not called for in
30 days will be sold for charges.
GEORGE LUM
CHICHESTER S PILLS
THE DIAMOND BRAND. A
/7M>X I.ad'rut Ask your DnuwM for A\
?K ( hfdca-ter1! IMumom Rr?iii/A\
IMIU In Red ?nd 4J?I4 ineuUk^^
>y ^wll boscn, tnl?l with Ulna klbboo.
\f? B yanrs known as B?st, Safest, Al ways Rsllnbt*
I SOU) BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWNEMj