The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, December 17, 1914, Image 7
A"Starirmi?statemeirt,bitatr?<?v>r
One ieaspoouul of roeiitcme and-rfu
youraiwn Rcound feed {tootf abottt.3
?rin-.M^tiat tii?3 do for your animalsrnu
I ;pounds of an$ ready-made stock ?r
(price 25 cents). There you are!
toe lievr. it,, tfyikt out! ifcry., today ,1a
J BeeDee510^
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.
| Why we Can
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| a Qvnneticut dock. Butt<
I Detroit overalls- Washes
I soap, ;jn a Pencylvaii ja pa
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| Rapids Able, eats Chicago
. ? tried nuKansas lard, cx*ok<
"| range. J?uts a New Y<?$*
f fed on low.a.corn. Plows,
I mortgage, with a Chatano
|> .comes he i>et<cds a chapter
|> Boston, says a vprayer wril
| under a blanket &nade in
1 I
| awake by a South Caroline
X minal usf
^ dlrf, WU't the place, #.nd the
.'Icfjl
$ m?% money raising .cotto
| Farmers & J\
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SOUTHERN SAW ,
Write for Catalogue E. Tell us what i
LA GRIPPED
ANO BAD ^Mnii
x
TO NAME STACKHOUSE
First Selection to Win in Mullins.
Special to The State.
Washington, Dec. 12.?Citizens of
Mullins reached Washington today to
see what could be done about the
ppstofTice matter at that place. SevavoI
Art xro n r#/\ Pn/*o/lolo
ci at \ic\yo unoiiiaii iva^o\iau;
decided to leave the question of appointing
an official to Senator Tillman
and the latter named G. G.
Stackhouse. It is understood that one
or two others thought they might
have been considered in connection
with the matter, hence the trip to
Washington. Those who were here
today called to see Senator Smith but
he was busy with other affairs and
they were referred to Senator Tillman.
It is understood that the name
of Mr. Stackhouse will remain before
the postoflice department and that he
will shortly be named.
Whenever You Need a General Tonic
Take Grove's
The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless
chill Tonic is equt-lly valuable as a
General Tonic because it contains the
well known tonic propertiesof QUININE
and IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives
out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and
Builds up the Whole System. 50 c^nts.
1
mHHHHnmBMBHBMBl
als ? 25
le In this case. ! ??
fO pounds Of j Writtffora trial package
cents * eaual, 5 of Bee Dee stock a
i fowls ?two : mVLTHY MEDICINE.
5 alsoour;^2 page, illustrapoultry
tonic tell book, fully explaining
if you dflilfi ! >ts uses. .Address-:
can of? jBecDeevfctuck Medicine
. Company,
: POULTRY | 'tChaitttutcga, Tcnn.
ICINE 1? J
.Eftr, BQc and $*. per can.
iirnilaiM. ?' ?
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't Grow Cot- f
' Profit !. I
a
iier $trfcstup at the alarum of i
A
>ns Chicago suspenders lo t
his fcce - with Cincinatt&i |
X
, m
n. Sits (down to a Grand S
meat and Iradianna hominy %
id on an Atlanta Barrett <ibridle
on a Kentucky mule, f
a farm covered by an ,Ohio J>
i/ga plow. When bed time %
a
. / )
?rom the Bib!# printed in |
%
tten in Jerusalem, crawls |
%
New .Jersey, to :be kept *
|
i dog, the- only home pro- <|
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n wonders why he cannot &
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Merchants Bank
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up
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IGINi! 1hnl can be Absolutely Depended Upon
'anted tiie only attention needed is oiling?starting
I >?-t us prove to you wiry the P.AWLE.IGH has be,
(or Big Surplus Power, Simplicity, Reliability, EnVrfect
Balance. The smoothest unning engine built,
ir, no Vibration. The Rawleigh saves time, expense,
. Nlrv.ii or!* ,:rerl. t'wr.vt read':. R^on Lavs for itself.
our word for It. Cio to tiro plant whore thi"* pa
<i ami M-e a I h p operating the entire plant
I ewia's mill and eee a larger engine.
& MACHINERY WORKS, Atlanta Ga.
Kon need an engine for.
HH JOHNSON'S
. Tablets gfio, TONSC
USES OK TUNGSTEN.
i 19? -V *
1 i '
Tungsten is used principally as an
alloy of high-speed steel?that is,
steel used in making tools used in metal-turning
lathes, running at high
speed?to which it imparts the property
holding temper at higher
temperature than carbon stdels will,
according to the Unlteff States Geolnononl
.Qnweir TVin ma?i> n./ill lr?
i T vj , X 11^ 11UTV VYVU AIIUV* II
ductile tungsten is used for incandescent
lamps, which are fast displacing
carbon lamps. Recently greatly improved
lamps, in which the wire is
wound in helices and in which the
globes are filled with nitrogen, have
produced a close approach to white
light. These lamps are furnished in
candle powers up- to 2,000. Ductile
tungsten is practicallly insoluble in
all the common acids; its melting
point is higher than that of any other
metal, its tensile strength exceeds
that of iron and nickel, it is paramagnetic,
it can be drawn to smaller sizes
than in any other metal (0.0002) inch
in diameter), and its specific gravity
is 70 per cent higher than that of lead
Invigorating to the Pale and Sickly
t The Old Standard general strengthening tonic,
OROVK'S TASTK.I.KRS chill TONIC,drives out
Malar la.enriches the blood,and builds up the system.
A true Umic. For rdults and children. 5Cc
GERMANS DRIVEN BACK i
BV ENGLISH FORCES
and are beixu hammered on
their town 'ground at
last.
ncnpui tttcn nc imm
iii I WML w*uri ui miiu
Fightfog in TV?ent Has Become so Adi
vanoerd tfhnft -Storm .Center .No
Lon-g<er Hesttv ' in France,?English
Take ft he Enettiyvs Position.
Paris, T)ee. 5.-^-Gen. Sir. John French
and hts British'forces made doubly
memorable the official visit of King
George to the trenches of his fighting
forces today by a brilliant and dashing
oITensrve in Which the Germans
were driven back all along the British
front from Dixmude to Lys.
North of the Lys they sprang from
their trenches at daybreak and fell
pell mell upon the German first line
earthworks, swarming , up and iinto it
in the face of a terrific fire. 'They
went down among the "Germans with
cold steel and thrust, jabbed and beat
down the helmetted occupants until
they had cut them down <or dug them
out.
When the first ditch was chockablock
with gouging, tearing khaki and >
grey lighting, dying and dead, the oncoming
rear rank swept over the top
of the mass ami did not stop until the
second line of entrenchments had
j been taken.
It was 500 metres from the British
j position to the second line of trenches
i and the British fought every inch of
the way. They fought like demons.
The Germans wore so stunned by the
audacity of the attack aad the brilliance
of its execution, that there was J
no effort to rot rive their losses at this
point. Unofficial accounts of the
charge place the German losses at
one-half of those engaged. The Brit!
ish losses were heavy, but did not appreach
the casualties of the enemy.
The British also settle a dispute of
a months standing by winning the
"Battle of the Ferry House," which
has been bitterlv contested, lirst by
i
the Belgians, then by the French.
The position is to the cast of Poselc,
on the right bank of the Yser.
about half-way between TMxmude and
Ypres on a mound which commands
the house of the ferry keeper, or what
is left of it for the structure has long
since been shattered by shrapnel.
The Austro-German union is being
hammered both from the east and
from the west and on its own soil.
While the Russians are assailing
East Prussia's borders and successfully
penetrating Austrian territory,
! the French are carrying the fighting
in greot force up to the outer works
of Metz ^'hile menacing the country
south of Strassburg with cannon and
aerial bombardment.
So advanced has become the fighting
on the western front that the
storm center of the battle no longer
rests in France. The crucial engagements
are being waged at the extreme
limits of the line stretching from
Switzerland's border to the Belgian
coast.
It is in Alasce and in Belgium that
France is fighting her big fight.
While the French war office is silent
on its operations around Metz,
Berlin admits that the Germans have
been forced to defend their fortifications
there against French attacks,
which the German army headquarters
state were repulsed.
WAIT FOR HER, BOYS !
The girl who is unkind to her mother
isn't worth a tinker's dog-gone.
This isn't written in any part of the
Bible, but it's written in the history j
_ r A i - -
oi mousancts and thousands of misfit
homes. If one of you boys ever run
across a girl with her face full of roses;
with eyes that would dim the lustre,
of a Colorado sky and with a voice
that would make the song of of an
angel seem discordant, and she says,
as she comes to the door:
"I can't go for a few minutes. I've
got to help my mother with the dishes."
Don't give her up. Stick to her
like a burr to a mule's tail. Just sit
down on the door-step and wait. If
she loins vnil in twr. nv fKvon
? ? J ^ V. ? ? V ?? V/ %'? l/Ili VV/ 1 I 11 I ( U
tes, so much the better; but if you
have to stay there on the door-step
for half an hour, or an hour, you just
wait for her. If YOU don't somebody
else WILL and in time you'll be sorry.
For you'll realize what you have
lost.
Wait for her, boy. She's worth it.
Woman Dies from Wounds.
Mrs. Mary II. Flavelle, who was
shot and robbed while traveling last
May from Florence to Perguia, Italy,
died at Chicago last Friday from injuries
she sufTered in the attack. For
many years she was prominent in
Philanthropic work there. She was
70 years old.
GERMANS ARE LIVING
ON CROPS OF FRANCE
?
Nerves of the Soldiers are Good and
Spirits High.-?Supply Themselves
From the Fields.
A correspondent of the Associated
Press in the field of operations has
been the guest of Gen. Von. Heringcn
formerly war minister and now com-1
manding the Seventh army; Gen. Yon
Zwehl, who captured Klaubeuge, and
Gen. Von Emmich, conqueror of Liege
and Namur.
Several hours were spent in the
trenches in the picturesque old town
where German riflemen and French
legionaires play grim practical jokes
of war upon each other from positions
a scant 20 yards apart. INlen, horses,
SUDDlies and hosrntals nrn hnnsp/l in
caverns, formerly stone quarries absolutely
protected from even the most
powerful shell fire.
The morning; wns passed in an artillery
observation stand opposite
Rheims where a powerful telescope,
through which the fire of the altillerv
is directed, brought the observer with
in a hundred yards of the city and the
cathedral and its towers were standing
fairly intact although blackened
by fire.
Inspection was made of a labyrinth
of field fortification, approaches along
the Aisne at its nearest point to Paris
where the lines are normally two or
three hundred yards apart. The soldiers,
even in the foremost trenches,
are living in comparative comfort.
They are well supplied with blankets,
food, water and clothing and are in
good spoils. Desultory infantry tire
always is in progress here and oca
siontd'ly the rattle of machine guns
breaks out. The artillery on botl
sides has thrown tons of iron dail?
but there have been no great fighb
of late hereabouts.
Harvesting Crops.
Of all of the impressions of the trip
is one of unthreshed wheat stack;
stretching througout Northern France
More than 100 German threshing machines
are working in the region oc
cupied by the army. The army not
ntO w iu liin'mi- nn cininlmo n
X/III y Jk) a T VII V/l liWU 4 4 114
meat derived from this section of the
country but actually is sending' whea*
and flour back to Germany.
The German soldier at the front if
smiling and well fed. The lean greyhounds
seen .after the dash of Park
are again rounding out into portly
Germans.
The normal soldier at the front doe:
not sing as much as formerly, partly
perhaps because he has sung himself
out and partly because singing in the
immediate vicinity of the enemy is apt
to draw tire, but he is neither discouraged
nor exhausted. There is no in
dication whatever that his nerves are
breaking under the strain.
Health conditions are remarkabh
good, the surgeons state. There ha:
been much typhoid but this is nov
well in hand. The medical department
is cleaning out three villager
in the immediate vieinitv of headquar
ters which were found to be typhoid
centers. The surgeons are isolating
or vaccinating the inhabitants of suspected
villages.
Prepare for Long Stay.
The Germans evidenly are prepar
: r i * i
mg ior an exienaea occupation.rrencn
peasants under the supervisions and
to a great extent, the mild compulsion
of the Germans, have planted winic
crops and are working in the field?
Important bridges destroyed are everywhere
being permanently rebuilt
with steel from Germany. The roads
are being- maintained as usual b\
French labor and insome cases factories
are being reopened.
PERT PARAGRAPHS.
This is one queer world. A threering
circus evangelist can gain fame
and wealth by bragging about what
an ornery pup he used to he. But if
another man tried it he would he boycotted.
Ireland hasn't anything on a married
man in wanting Home Rule and
not getting it.
Nature intended that man should
have larger feet than woman. But
that was before white shoes were invented.
The only times some men will admit
that the world is treating them
right is when someone says: "What'll
von lmvp
Here's something to worry about.
A woman isn't wearing half as much
clothes as she did ten years ago, and
vet it costs more to dress her now
than it did then.
We are all liars. When a man owes
us a dollar we think of it and cuss him
every time we see him. And later on,
when he does hand the money over,
we smile and say: "Oh, there's no hurry.
I had forgotten all about that."
A woman can look as dainty as a
lingerie advertisement. But no man
ever looked as handsome afc a picture
in a union suit advertisement.
The best woman isn't the woman
that nobody talks about. She is the
woman who talks about nobody.
To Cure a Cold in One Day
Take I.AXAT1VK HKOMO Quinine. It stops the
Cough end Headache and works oil the Cold.
DriiRKists refund money if it fails to cu>e.
K. %w OWOVK'S signature on uch box. 2*c.
A
QARBANZA KQVH SHOWS
HIS UNRULY SPIRIT
BY ANSWERING THE NOTE OF
THE UMTED STATES WITH
VEILED THREAT.
TAKES NO BLAME
For 1he Recent Firing Across th**
Border at Naco,?Expresses Hope
That Good Friendship Will Prevent
Employment of Force.
Vera Cruz, Dec. 12.?"If the United
States employes force to stop the firing
by Mexicans across the international
boundry line at Naco, it will be
considered an unfriendly act, notwithstanding
the friendly motives cloaking
the act."
In this manner Carranza made answer
in a statement to the Associated
Press to the formal notice served by
the United States on both Provisional
President Gutierrez and Gen. Carranza
that unless such firing ceased
force would be employed to protect
American territory.
Carranza's reply to the American
note, which is expected to reach
Washington tomorrow, will repudiate
responsibility for shots that have
crossed the line and clearly set forth
that he and his government will regard
intervention at Naco as a hostile
net. At no time since the receipt cf
Secretary Bryan's note calling attention
to the repeated wounding and
killing of residents of the American
town has Gen. Carranra appeared perturbed.
but he has had long conferences
with those close to him, and, in
iv * * ...
iranung ills reply i4 is said lie has
been careful not to let himself stand
in any uncertain light.
Blames the Others.
"Gen. Hill, constitutionalist commander
of the forces at Naco, is on
tl;e defensive," continued Gen. Carranza,
"and since his back was to
the line, it is difficult to see how he
could be responsible for the firing.
The fact is that Maytoren's men have
been attacking and therefore it appears
reasonably clear that they, and
only they, could have been to blame.
"As a matter of fact 1 do not know
that the rights of American citizens
have been violated. It seems to me
that it would he well for the state
department to investigate this oik stion
in order to lix the responsibility.
"I remember similar instances at
El Paso, when the Madero forces were
attacking there. In that case those
shots were for the most part the imprudent
and curious individuals who
flocked to witness the fighting as if
it had been a spectacular show staged
for their benefit.
Ca r ra n za ('o m pi a i as.
"As to the use of force, of which
Mr. Bryan talks, that is something
the gravity of which I fear he docs
not fullv annreciate. Ho It u-nnlJ
not moan an invasion of our territory
or a violation of our national sovereignity.
It would. And moreover it
would certainly be an act directly
against the constitutionalists who now
hold the town, and if in favor of the
Villiasts, who would he left free to
continue their operations. It would
he simply tying Gen. HilL's hands and
leaving Maytoren free.
"I sincerely hope that the good
friendship of the American people toward
the Mexican people will prevent
the consummation of Secretary Bryan's
threat."
GOVERNOR I EASES I \W OFFICE
Governor' n.. ,r,o announced recent
lv * hat he had leased oflices 011 the
s< .and floor of the Clark Law Building,
on Washington Street in Columbia,
which he will occupy as a lawyer
after his term of office ns governor
expires January 29. The governor
also obtained early in the day a registration
certificate and qualified himself
as a voter in Ward 2, he stated.
It was stated at the executive oflices
that he would practice alone, and not
form a partnership, as has been currently
reported.
Stationery that he will use when he
retires to private life was received,
and he wrote on a sheet of his paper,
bearing the heading "Cole L. Blease,
Lawyer, Columbia, S. C.." a letter to
his namesake, Miss Colie Blease, of
Newberrv.
LITER A U Y LUNKH E A DS.
Ho is a dub. I hope he chokes,
His field has a wide range.
This lad who cops out my best jokes.
And signs himself "Exchange."
?Cincinnati Enquirer.
Another Gink who stoops to crime?
By no one he's respected?
Is he who used our best rhyme,
And signs himself: "Selected."?
Youngstown Telegram.
I lo"n to writ" the joyous wheeze
Which my brain has risen;
B'-t gridirons hot await the geoze
Who palms it olf as his'n.
SEABOARD ROBBERS (JET I
SENTENCE OF A YE.Mtl
Charlie Crosby and Evans Radcliftfl
Were Tried in United States Court!
:?t Charleston La?t Week on Charge!
Thif Charlie Crosby and Evans'
Crlclift. young white men of Columbia.
pleaded guilty Tuesday afternoon
in the United States district court at
i Charleston of robbing an express car
and a mail car of a Seaboard train
leaving Columbia last July was report
ed in a communication received Wednesday.
The charges alleged that
these young men robbed the two cars
of express packages in interstate shift
ment and of registered mail. They
were each given sentences of imprison
nt for a yea1* and a day in the
j federal prison in Atlanta, according
to the dispatch.
Chief of Police Richardson, of Co
lumbia, and ex-Chief of Police Cath!
cart, Charles Horn, traveling special
agent of the Seaboard railway, and a
number of express company officials
it Columbia and in this division attondo
1 court and were present when
the men admitted their guilt..
They will be carried to Atlanta
' within a few days and begin serving:
their sentences a4 once, it was expected.
according to the dispatches.
The robbery, to which these men
pleaded guilty, was one of the. most
daring ever committed in Columbia,
according to local police officials. The
: police believed the robbers boarded
the train at the Scabord station.
While the train was slowly moving1
through a deep cut near the edge of
the city they obtained a number of
registered mail packages and some
valuable records from the express car.
The monetary v; lue of the express
packages was said to be only about
I $100.
! ^
No eT'.e to the identity of the robI
hers was obtained by the police until
several weeks after the holdup.
Young Rude!ift wa.s arrested and was
said to have told of his part in the
crime, implicating his arcomplice. The
arrest of Radclift was not made pub-;
lie to newspaper representatives until
the police, it was said, had located his
accomplice.
Several months after the arrests
were made, some dogs excavated from
a shallow hole in Newman's woods,
i near Columbia, the express company's
records and some other articles which
had been taken by the robbers of the
express and snail ca .
PERKINS REMAINS INGLOOMY
QUIET.
Federal Prisoner, at Roper Hospital
Kept in Partial Seclusion.
I George Bachelor Perkins, indicted
and arraigned for murder, one count
for assault and 1 attery with intent to
kill, who is to he tried at the Columbia
'term of United Statea district cou'-t,
, I which convenes in Columbia during
January, spends his time in his quarters
at the Roper Hospital in Charles{ton
very quietly.
The cultured man, who finds himself
j in the presence of such a startlingcrime,
apparently committed by hi iself
while in a state ef temporary dementia,
remains gloomily quiet, according
to report, and evinces gr? it
grief from time t > time. He is Sc'd
to have earnestly rei larked that e
would give his own life gladly to r
store that of Mr. F. W. R. Hinnif ,
who was killed on board the Mohn\ 1c
when tho unfortunate fusilarie of N 1vombcr
11 occurred.
Grief over the situation in vvhi h
the Boston architect finds himself 1
alleged author, and an apparently u witting
author, is evidently affectii x
directly the very nervous state 1
which the prisoner remains from 01 ?
cause and another.
Atendcd by two doctors, Or Willia ?
Henry Johnson, county physician, a
Dr. Robert Wilson, Jr. Ids private p
sician, the condition of Perkins
closely watched and every effort *
made to prevent the intrusion up
his consciousness of any unneeessa
nervous stimuli.
The handling of the sensitively b:
lanced, high strung artist is a delicr
matter, and every effort is being ma
i to build up his wasted nervous enerj
i sulliciently to allow him to stand t
strain of the ordeal which he nu
perforce face during the Columl
term of court. No one is allowed
visit Perkins. In his quarters at f
Roper hospital the prisoner is so
only by his physicians, his counsel a*
j his immediate relatives when they a
here, and such yisits are made on
in accordance with the advice of ti
attendant doctors.
Perkins will in all probability r
man at the Roper hospital until tl
date of his appearance in Columb
He is watched ni^ht and day by de
uty United States marchals.
CANT SHOOT OVER BORI)E
If the contending Mexican forces
p$>#it<? Naco, Arizona, do not cease f
in# into Ameri^jr territory the thr
batteries of ttel<T artillery sent to t
international line will be ordered
return the fire.
This is the United States Covet
' meat's determination it became kno'
after a^fpll discussion of the situatr
j hy Present Wilson and his Cable