The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, March 18, 1915, Image 3
UMV UMBVtVnBMMnMWMMMMHMUinM'Mi MMRHB
MAN RUNS MAD I
MSEOBRAHTY1
| l
Hospitals aro Riled With His!
Victims or i'ow iVIUiutcs
r MONEY LEWDER !3 CRAZY
IPolics Finally Succeed in Killing
Murderer.-Monroe Phillips
Shot Lawyer First
..Brunswick, Ga., Itiarci (i.?Six men
are dead, several of them prominent
in business circles here, as a result
x* ii nu:n: ..
Iui nit; lii&v in muuiu i ni'iijih, ii inuiiey
lender, who, becoming crazed because
of alledged financial reverses,
ran amuck with a double barrelled
shot gun in a law office on Newcastle
street, a principal thoroughfare of
Brunswick.
The dead: Monroe Phillips, Rox
Denver, policeman; L. C. Padgett, former
policeman; George W. Asbell,
motorman; Wm. A. Hackett, undertaker;
TIarry F. Dunwoody, prominent
lawyer.
The injured: W. H. Berry, m< rchant;
Isaac Cohen, retired merchant;
Sam Martin, clerk; Jerry Wolchar,
clerk; J. E. Crumplrr, gardener; Ivntus
C. Butts, lawyer; Carl Brown,
clerk; L. J. Heavy, constable; A. .V-.
Way, real estate man; W. J. Way, insurance
agent. Clyde Wilkes, banker;
Gunner Tolnas, bank clerk, and dv.wij
others slightly.
! Phillips wont to Dunwoody's office
hortly after 10 o'clock this afternc on
nd accused Dunwoody of wronging
iim in a financial deal. After a heatd
quarrel, Phillips raised a d mble
arreted shotgun and fired, blowing
)unwoody's head off. Albert Way, a
eal estate dealer, who was in 13unt'oody's
oflice, attempted to soke
*hillips and received a charge of
aickshot in the head. If is thought
iG will recover. Newton \\ alker and
.. C. Padgett, standing at Die bottom
f the stairs, heard the shots and
tarted upstairs. Phillips met them
t the head of the steps and opened
re, killing Padgett instantly. Walker
arrowly escaped. Phillips proccedd
down the stairs and into Ncwcaslo
?frnnt tnlfinw ;t Ktviml in front of
I (ranch pharmacy and repeatedly
Hiding his gun, bombarded everyone
1 sight. George Asbell, a motorman
ras shot in the head and killed as ho
topped ofF his car. Wm. A. Hackett,
n undertaker, started to run from
'hillips, but received a charge in the
eck, dying half an hour later.
Several citizens and four policemen
hen began closing in on Phillips with
fusillade, whose figure seemed to
y a difficult target. Phillips contined
to fire, wounding several other
itizens, when a bullet finally lodged
i his chest, mortally wounding him.
ifter he had fallen, Phillips raised up
n one elbow, fired again at Policelan
Dcavers, tearing a great hole in
ie officer's left chest. Dcavers died
lmost instantly and Phillips shortly
xpired.
Phillips , who is said to have
cen the largest man in Glynn
aunty, was fond of hunting and was
crack shot. He was formerly a deal
r in timber lands.
Phillips leaves a wife and seven
hildren. He was about 50 years old.
The wounded were taken to the lox\
hospital, every ward being filled.
Ivery physician in the city was call[1
out to dross the wounds of Phillips'
ictims.
Phillips had been a resident of
^^ ^runswicK anout iz years and nad
^^K>cen involved in considerable litiga^H^ion
in local courts. It was stated he
^M^ecently had lost considerable money
^H|n real estate transactions and had
^^Had dealings with Dunwoody. He
^^ftwned several large tracts of land
HHear Macon.
H ft Dunwoody was at one time mayor
{.ere and also had served in the GeorHAia
legislature as a representative
HHjnd a State senator. He was a neph|^Bw
of Justice S. C. Atkinson of the
^^^Eeorgia Supreme court.
In Need of Repairs.
Rudulph Schulz, representative of a
^^Korfolk ship chandler ,went alongside
^mje Hltel Freidrich at Old Point early
urnn Tn A PAmmon/loi* %Y*#W!/n r? I
In vvi\. * nu V\/|I1IIIC4IIVIVI UKUir C5UII1U
jiries of Mr. Schulz and indicated
t he meant to go to the Newport
vs shipyard and that there had
11 trouble with some of the machinHe
declined to say whether he
dd intern the vessel.
lr. Schultz said that he counted 12
s, about 5-inch calibre, aboard the
imer; that there were many passers
aboard, includng women and
drcn.
Duke is Sick,
lie Evening1 News published a <lis?h
from Copenhagen declaring Ert
August, Duke of Brunswick and
-in-law of Emperor William is sufng
from a nervous breakdown
ch probably is incurable. The
c became ill fighting in France.
\
BRITISH BELIEVE
ALLIES (GAINING
Situation Gro^s More Favorable bv
Lend and Sea.
As England sees it, not since the
war began has the situation both on
land and sea been mere favorable to
the allies than it is today C -nfident
opr.ions of this nature are finding constant
expression in London.
Slowly but sure1:/ it is argued, the
'.Hied fleet is creeping toward Constan
. in epic and thus opening another road
to Berlin; the retirement of Field Mar
shall Von Hindcrberg's army from
North Poland is said to be imminent
by many British observers of affairs;
in the West the allies claim the ascendency
all along the lino although
no decisive engagements are being
fought, while in the Balkans and in
Italy, according: to British interpretaion
of the political news, the majority
is clamoring for intervention on
the side of the allies.
The crisis in Greece seems temporarily
bridged by formation of a new
cabinet but whether the new premier
| can control the chamber of deputies
1 is causing much speculation here.
Though officially denied, reports insist
that a ministerial crisis also has arisin
in Buiguir.
Paris ofticialy confirmed today that
Liu; super-drcadnaught Queee Elizabeth
slipped into the Dardanelles
proper Monday and bombarded the
Turkish forts, another of which on
the European side has been partly demolished.
Petrograd dispatches sify the German
failure to reduce the Russian
fortress of Osswetz, together with
the reported German defeat at Grodno
and Prasnysz means definite aban-1
donment of tlie German offensive in
North Poland.
In Central Poland both the Russian
and the German are attacking alternately
with no appreciable change,
j The same is true in the Carpathians
and generality along tiio western front
jPBackaclsepi
Miss Myrtle Cothrum, | S 11 !
g || of Russcllville, Ala., says: 1?J g
Ok "For nearly a year, I suf- jLJ^J
gStS fered with terrible back- i&Jk
y t; 1 ache, pains in my limbs, i 11 S
Sgl and my head ached nearly ||||
1*1 all the time. Our family g jj g |
iauuiur ireaieu me, oui a
only gave me temporary g
relief. 1 was certainly in B
; bad health. My school I
teacher advised me to 8
take j
Cardoi
1 The Woman's Tonic ]
j B II took two bottles, in all, I ^
]! | and was cured. I shall | Q
J 1 always praise Cardui to 111 ,
) \ sick and suffering wo- 3 & " j
J j men." If you suffer from ftp!'
B I I pains peculiar to weak I$ :j S
Sa ^w women, such as head- JgjjiJ
ijfl aclie? ^ckaclie? or other Hjf j
Sill symptoms of womanly |O I
1111 trouble, or if you merely 18 H j
IW I need a tonic for that tired, I |J S
yy nervous, worn-out feelfl
ll try Cardui' E-65 || ||
APPEAL FOR FOOD
PDAM IITJT/1 A VTO
r hv/.M
Mexican Red Cross Asks Americans
To Relieve.
Washington March 10.?The Mexican
Red Cross today appealed to the
American Red Cross through Secretary
Bryan for food for the starving
populace in Mexico City. The appeal
said the famine in the Mexican capital
was rapidly growing worse. Secretary
Bryan said that the State Department
would cooperate with the
Rdd Cross as far as possible.
General Carranza's reply to the
American note demanding an improve
ment in the "intolerable" conditions
for foreigners in the territory under
his control was being awaited momentarilly
tocjay by President Wilson
and his advisers. They had been advised
unofficially that the draft of the
I'nnKr Una '
.vK.,v n"o un 11 cuni[juitai aim was i
ready to be forwarded to Washington <
It was expected to be favorable.
Tn the meantime, precautionary
steps had been taken by the Washing
ton authorities looking to the safe- 1
guarding of American interests in j
Mexico. United States warships were
hovering close to the shores of Mcxi- ]
co to enforce, if necessary, compliance i
with American demands and Americans
in Mexico City have been warned
to leave because of the critical sit- :
nation there. <
Sixty Years Ago.
The well worn saying "history repeats
itself'" was never better illus- J
tinted than when reading a copy of a
newspaper called ''Graham's Daily
Mail"' which fell ii:to our hands the
other day. The paper was dated at
Philadelphia, Pa.. April 21, 1S85. One
myvht think a periodical of this date
would be a "back number" in every
sense; and it may be surprising to
learn that many of its news paragraphs
would not appear out of place in
a paper of today, while the subjects
of its leading articles are just as
much in the public mind now as then.
For instance the progress of the Eu
ronnnn wnr. in which w.? road of the
"Allies," intrenchments, the propoets
of peace, about "'ruling the waves."
Other subjects discussed art
the situation in Mexico, Prohibitioi
laws, "The Horrovvs of War," the
need of more enlistments in the United
States Navy, and "Submarine Exporation;"
these last were by means
of an improved diving bell
In the article on prohibition the cd
tor is confident that such a law wil
be passed in Pennsylvania within a
year. lie believes it the best possible
means of controlling liquor traffic
and consider it only a matter of
time when it will prevail for the en
tiro country. Doubtless, however, h<
did not forsec how much time.
The war, of course, was the Crim
can, in which the Allies, England
and France, were combined against
tthheir present ally Russia. We sec
by the market reports that it ha?
the same effect as the present war 01
the price of grain, only more so
Wheat is quoted at $2.50 to $2,75
flour $11.50 a barrel, rye $1.50, corr
$1.10, oats .79. Cotton was selling
from six to ten cents a pound; sugai
at about present prices. But colfec
is quoted at ten and eleven cents, and
bacon oigth to ten, hams ten to twcl
ve and a half a pound. Another vor,\
modern touch appears in the market
report, where against certain items ir
''Nothing' Doing!"
Helen Keller is Much Improved
Austin, Tex., March 10.?Miss Helen
Keller rested quietly at a local in- i
firmary last night and was much improved
today. It was thought she
would be able to leave the infirmary
within a few days as she was suffer
only a severe cold.
Persons Hurl in Broad Riot.
The increased cost of bread was responsible
for violent clashes between
the police and workmen in the naval
arsenal at Lisbon last week. The police
used their weapons freely and
many persons were injured.
TEN WEEKS IN BED-EMINENT
I PHYSICIANS FAILED--WONDERFOLRECO
'ERV
T I -
j wisn to intorm you of the great
benefits I have derived from the use
of Swamp-Root. I had been a sufferer
for more than twenty years from
kidney and liver trouble and was almost
constantly treated by the most
eminent physicians who could only
give me temporary relief. I had been
in bed ten weeks when I began the
use of Swamp-Root. Inside of twenty
four hours 1 could see that I had
been greatly benefitted. 1 continued
to use Swamp-Root until I had used
several bottles when 1 really felt that
my old trouble was completely cured
and I am positive that any person suffering
with kidney or liver trouble
can be cured by the use of this preparation.
I am now in the best of health, better
than 1 have been for ten years or
more. I do not know how to express
myself as strongly as I desire, in favor
of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, as
I am sure that it saved my life and
that my good health is due entirely to
this great remedy. I heartily recommend
it to every suffered and am confident
they can be benefitted as I have
been. It is a pleasure for me, gentle
men, to hand you this recommendation.
MRS. H. J. PRICE,
1406 Center St. Portsmouth, Ohio.
Personally appeared before me this
13th day of September 1909, Mrs. H.
J. Price, who subscribed the above
statement and made oath that the
same is true in substance and in fact.
R. A. CALVERT,
Notary Public.
| Letter to I
j I)r. Kilmer & Co., [
i Binghampton, N. Y. |
Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do for
You.
Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co.,
Bingham ton, N. Y., for a sample size
bottle. It will convince anyone. You
will also receive a booklet of valuable
information, telling about the kidneys
and bladder. When writing, be sure
and mention the Conway Weekly Horry
Herald. Regular fifty-cent and one
dollar size bottles for sale at all drug
stores.?adv.
Minister Resigns.
Roao Chadas, Portuguese minister ,
Lo France, resigned last week. He
Issued a statement which said in part: ,
"The present cabinet is an extraparliamentary
one and I will not serve
tinder a dictatorship. I can not forget
I was the first constitutional premier
Portugal had. The present regime
may not last long but I thought it my
[luty to resign my diplomatic post.
GERMAN SUBMARINES |
ACTIVE IN WAR;
Sinks Three More Ships by Latter
l*art el' Last Week.
German submarines apparently
have become active again in their
quest for ships of enemy powers.
Three steamers have been sunk at
widely separate spots in the waters off
the western, southern and eastern
coasts of England, while another
ytnnmoi' r.Oi "in't/1 > ? i i.i! I ^ > 1..I
OVVMdiv * v ovvi[/v*l il tMMlllcll VJ I i 4 V
through the use of speed superior to
that of a submarine and steering a
zigzag course.
The, North sea, the English channel
and the Irish sea were the scene of
the three disasters, in one of which
37 of a crew of 38 perished. The raid
of the underwater boats egan in the
North Sea oil" Scarborough with the
sinking of the Tangistan. A few
hours, some 200 miles away, the
steamer Blackwood was blown up in
the English channel and three hours
dftcen minutes afterward the steamer
Princess Victoria was sent to the
bottom in the Irish sea oif Liverpool,
>00 miles from where the Tangistan
went to her doom.
Tiie crews of all the vessels except
.hat of the Tangistan were saved.
A submarine chased the steamer
Clan Macrae for 25 minutes off the
Mers.v bar in the Irish sea but speed
and zigzag steering saved her.
Desperate fighting is going on between
the Germans and the Russians
in Northern Poland between the
Nicmcn and Vistula rivers and near
the town of Augustowo, almost on the
East Prussian frontier, with the advantage,
according to Petrograd, in
favor of the Muscovites. Farther
south on the left bank of the Vistula,
and in the Carpathians, engagements
continue.
In the West the French official report
declares the allies have met with
successes in the capture of trenches
and the repulse of attacks in the
Champ [ignc and Ar^onne regions
The bombardment of the Dardanelles
fortification by the allies
warships is going on.
A newspaper dispatch from Paris,
says the German Imperial chancellor
intends to outline before the reichstag
the terms under which Germany is
willing to make peace.
King Constantino has accepted the
new Greek cabinet formed bv i\l.
Gounaris, which Gounaris will head
as premier and minister of war. It
has been stated that Gounaris' policy
will calll for Greek neutrality.
The British house of commons has
given the government the power to
commandeer factories in which munitions
of war can be manufactured.
A news agency dispatch from Amsterdam
asserts that an explosion in
a German arsenal at Antwerp killed
14 men and injured TO.
The moratorium in France is expected
to be extended for another
three months.
Emperor Nicholas has left Petrograd
for Helingsfors, Finland.
Severe Head Pains
Caused By Catarrh
Cured By Per una
..tMftlWrw.
My Cure.
Mr. W. H. Chancy, R. F. D. 2,
Sutlierlin, Pittsylvania Co., Va.t
writes: "For the past twelve months i
I have been a sufferer from catarrh
of the head. Since taking four bottles
of your Peruna I feel like a
different person altogether. The severe
pains in my head have disappeared,
and my entire system has
been greatly strengthened.
"This is my first testimonial to the
curative qualities of any patent i
medicine. I feel it a duty to mankind
to let them know of Peruna.
Tn my estimation it is the greatest '
medicine on earth for catarrh." i
We have thousands of testimonials
like Mr. Chaney's. Some of them
YI'At*A All A A W A P
)l i;i c V u I UU iHlVI .V CUI ^ Ul nllll fillip
and disappointment in finding a 1
remedy.
Send for free copy of "Ills of Ifife."
The Peruna Oo., Columbus, Ohio.
Those who object to liquid medicines
can now procure Peruna Tablets.
11 Men of Sealing Ship Come Ashore
St. Johns, N. F., March 10.?Eleven
men of the scaling steamer Erik,
caught in the ice, oil' Bay Bulls, 15
miles south of here, came ashore over
the iec today. They left their ship
last night.
No later word has been received
from tthc Erik, which has about 120
men on board.
Earlier reports were that the Erik
and three other imprisoned sealers
had escaped.
No Such Thin# as "Sex War."
New York, March 10.?George W.I
Kirehwey, dean of the Columbia Law
school, told the Women Lawyers' assoeiation
that "there is no suvh thing
as a "sex war."
His statement v."as made in debate ,
In reply to the assertion by the Rev. i
Percy W. Grant that a male and fcmale
class consciousness existed and
that essentially the two sexes are at
war. Mr. Grant advocated the extension
of suffcrage to women and the
placing women judges on the benches
of the inferior criminal courts.
mi i K>ro B avu
Mr. Stock Owner!
We carry in stock all the
following
Boyd's Remedies
which are guaranteed to do the
work claimed for them or purchase
price will be refunded.
Boyd's Sure Pop Colic Cure, larfro . $1.00
Boyd's Sure Pop Colic Cure, small , .50
Boyd's Sure Pop Fever & Cough Cure .50
Boyd's Sure Pop Purgative ' 50
Boyd's Sure Pop Eye Remedy . . . .50
Boyd's Sure Pop llocf Liquid . . . .25
Boyd's Sure Pop Magnetic Ointment . .25
Boyd's Liniment, small 25
Boyd's Liniment, medium 50
Boyd'3 Liniment, largo ..... 1.00
Boyd's Worm und Condition Po. sml. . .25
Boyd's Worm and Condition Po. mod . .50
Boyd's Worm and Condition Po. lge. 1.00 j
For Sale by j
Conway Drug Co.,
Conway, S. 0.
...... nr..~ n ?
1 got a card from Steve, doggone
his travclin' skin.
He's up around Niag'ry Falls wriiin'
home again
Seems like that boy's one glory is to
wander fur an' free,
An' furder otV he gets, I vum, th' more
he writes to me
lie sends these picture postal cards,
with photos showing that
Th' world is alius beaut if'est where
you ain't living at
His messages read all th' same; in
letters large and clear
He writes from Main and Fnnkuke
and says?
"Wish you was here!"
Nobody ever seems to know ;(us when
he'll go or where
We git his destination from the card
that says he's there.
An' he ain't more than settled down
to loaf a day or two ,
Till lie gits thinkin' up the names of
every one he knew
And then with ever' doggone cent he
possiblly can spaaic
He buvs the bJnit.w church, the Do
1 ~ - bot
and ;li'i Square.
Then he mails the whole blame businbss
home and says?
"Wish you was here!"
I guess he's at Niagry now; he was
last time he wrote
Hut that don't prove conclusively that
he ain't in Torrre Mote
He may be down in Panama or snoop
in' 'round in Nome,
Nobody knows just where he's at?except
he ain't at home!
1 guess we'd never hear from him for
months or maybbe years
If some kind soul had not devised
these picture souviner
Yes, I expect if Steve would die he'd
rise up from his brier
To pen a card to all his friends an'
say
"Wish you was here."
Skinny's Finish. x j
Being a little short of material this
week we asked the devil to write us a .
article against the use of slang. He
did. Here it is:
If there is any thing that gets *
our Nanny it is the use of slang. *
Some guys spill so much of that kind
of dope that it is hard to get wise to ;
their speill. Kids should be put next
by their parents that slang is on the *
Fritz and should ought to be cut out.
If I had a kid that couldn't put over ^
<
straight stuff I would whallop the k
lining out of the lobster. Skirts are
shines, proper, when it comes to
slang They think that mercy, and 1
should say not are real tought. The '
Boss is a dish of prunes when it
comes to slang. He bawls me out to
a fare ye well and I am in Dutch
from the time I come on the job till |
Maying time in 1 ho evening. This is
the first thing that I have ever wrote
and if it don't show up in the rag I J
will know it is a flivver proper.
?Skinny. [
:? ? 1
Zeppelin Given Trial. J
Ilerne, via Paris, March 10, 12:15 1
a. m.?A new Zeppelin which is now '
being given trials over Lake Constan- ]
ce will be the ninth to leave Freidcrichshafen
since the war began.
The Best Hot Weather Tonic
" ROVI?;,,i TASTKI.HSSchill TONIC enriches the
alood, builds v-- the whole system and will won
ierfullv strengO-en and fortif> you to withstand ,
.h* ?c pressing rfteet of the hot suinuit' SOc. '
*?
ipiiFvE*
f r?at rnow>''&Sp|
a# L 'i L '\a*i m U fi 1* ~ i*n i
TVs: rat nrt<T ni ^ *r.\a. mtnntoTrnada,
Kills quickly and absolutely wiia out odor.
M'.iii;rallies?thus prcventin?? d^compost!
lion. Jif.tor t''iu all i!i tr.?;?s In the
i \\ .-hi. It si->t on ?U'nnim' HAT CORN,
li -V, oOc, ut dealers or by mall, posfr>
.1 paid.
V BOTANICAL MFG. CO.
4i/i Ji Face Sts., Philadelphia* Ptb
W. E. McCORD,
Dental Surgeon,
CONWAY. S. C.
_____ i *H.
H. WOODWARD,
Attorney and Counsellor at Law,
CONWAY, S ~
" * I *. *
HAL L. BUCK, '* {
* Fire Insurance *
Office Conway National Bank
Conway, - - - S. C.
R. 15. SCARBOROUGH
Attorney at Law,
CONWAY. S. C.
LUMJUNG LAUNDRY,
CONWAY. S. C.
Beginning July 1st. 1913
All persons must take tickets'for
work left here. Possitively no
vo^k delivered until ticket is pr9sentod.
Laundry not called for In
!-50 (lavs will he sold for ehururoQ
LUM JUNG
WILLIAM EUGENE KING, WI D
Physician and Surgeon
Office in Piatt Drug Co.
AYNOR.. - - - S. C.
CHICHESTER SPILLS
fcv .THK IKAMONW ?IiANl>. A '
j* T.hO?oh! A?l?y?>ir DrtiuglKt for XlV
?f. 4( < li' "kvH.lrr's IMunmiH'. Tirand//V\
an ' ?uM 111-taUic^Vy
boxes. seated viilj I.lue Ribbon.
TOi ijisj, V<A| n<? Iluy of your
'/ ~ /Jf IfrujfirNf. /.sk <*orcm.oin<:8.TEsal
C Ztf MAAM?NI> ItUANlV FILLS, far tt&
y*S* U yeais Xnown as liest. Safest, Always Reliable
A?r SOLD 3Y DflllJiQISTS fVERYWHERI.
J. M. JOHNSON,
CIVIL ENGINEER
Marion, S C.
Railroad. City and Land Surveying;
and Drainage. Road-building Mi
Sewers Draughting and Blue Printing
W C SINGLETON
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Conway, S. C.
Office up Stairs Buck Building
D A Spivey & Company
[On "THE CORNER"
In
PEOPLES NATIONAL BANK BL*DG
Bonds
Fire
Life
And
Other
INSURANCE.
J. A. SPIVEY. W. B. KING
CHAS. R. SCARBOROUGH,
Conway, -S. G*
Complete Waterworks, Steam, Hotwfe
ter and Hot Air Heating Plants
INSTALLED ANYWHERE s-i
)nly Plumbing and Heating gooda and
material of highest quality used*
Cull line of Tub, Toilet, Lavatory
Sink and other Bathroom A
aiul repairs on hand at aU ??
Plumbing and HeatLv
HIT WATER AND HEAT
IN YOUR HOUSE
\re You Just at Odds With Yourself?
Do You Regulate Living?
Are you sometimes at odds with
,'oursolf? Do you wonder what ails
,'ou ? True you may bo eating reguarly
and sleeping well. Yet somehing
is the matter! Constipation,
leadachc, Nervousness and Billioua
Spells indicate a Sluggish Liver. The
;ried remedy is Dr. King's New Life
?ills. Only 25c at your druggist.
Bucklen's Arnica Salve for Skin
Eruptions.?adv.
T. B. LEWIS,
Atty. and Counccllor at Law
DONWAY, - - - S.C.