The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, August 12, 1915, Supplement, Page NINE, Image 9
BLAMES GERMANY '
AS HER REASON 1
C
o
/ n
For Refusing to Accede to De- ?
mands of The United I
States s
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AMERICAN REPLY |
BEING PREPARED
threat Britain Will Continue to
Apply the Orders in
C
A \ Council. x
t
, t
State department officials last week 1
were preparing the answer which the
I United States will make to Great (
jfcr Britain's replies to the latest Ameri- ^
r can representations against interfcrL.
*nce with neutral commerce.
r Great Britain, in her notes, refuses
I to accept the American contention
I that the orders in council are illegal
and justifies the British course as be- <
i ing wholly within international law.
Great Britain, it is declared, will r
continue to apply the orders in council,
but with every effort to avoid em- 1
barrassment to neutrals.
j It is denied that international law
is violated by the blockading1 of neutral
ports to cut of fan enemy's commerce
with foreign countries and ;
Great Britain declines to allow the
free passage of goods originating in
Germany and territory under German '
control.
Great Britain's reply is embodied
i^t two notes, one supplemental, and
together with the correspondence
over the American steamer Nechez,
seized by the British while bound
from Rotterdam to the United States
with goods of German orie-in. also .
I published today, totals seven thousI
and words.
I The supplemental rote is a reply
I ti> the American caveat giving notice j
I that the United States would not
I recognize the orders in council in lieu
I of international law and defends i|
I prize court proceedings. The United |
I Goi
WI
11 MO
11 AN
I II tvj
11 wt
11 MS
TREXl
/
Supp
itates is invited, however, to submit
(j arbitration any prize court deciion
it holds unjust.
In the case of the steamer Nechez,
etained under the orders in counil
the note justifies British stoppage
f commerce from Germany and German
controlled territory on the
rround that Germany has violated inernational
law in her war on British ,
,nd neutral commerce.
An answer to the British notes
hortly will be forth coming.
[YPHOON LASKES
CITY OF NEW YORK
New York.?Streets in New York
ity and its suburbs were turned into
rellow rivers, surface and elevated
raffic was badly crippled, wires were
down into a tangled network, trees
iprooted and hundreds of cellars flood
id in a torrential downpour that broke
>ver the metropolitan section last
veek accompanied by a GO-mile gale?"
o
IN OLDEN TIMES.
In olden times? how rare the
phrase?
When George the third was king,
Docked hat and wigs in those gay
days
Were thought the latest thing;
The ladies went in for the patch;
The bucks they wore the queue,
wonder?in a hundred years
If we will seem quaint, too. .
They traveled in a coach and four,
Went to the play in chairs;
ru~ c ii.: i ? .1 ? ' ?
iu?- i.u i iwriKiues tne oenes men wore
Imparted dainty airs;
Swashbucklers with their trusty
blades
Ran one another through.
[ wonder?in a hundred years
If we will seem quaint, too.
rhey danced the stately minuet
The fox trot was too naughty,
\nd in the famous pump room met
Gay beau and grande dame haughty;
Three-bottle men filled brimming
cups
Or played all night at loo
[ wonder?in a hundred years
If we will seem quaint, toc\
Today in this distressing age,
Reform is all the cry;
Freak legislation is the rage,
A state is "wet" or "dry."
'Abolish this!" "Abolish that!"
Each day sees something new.
[ wonder?in a hundred years
If we will seem quaint, too.
ING I
3AT HAS
\
HAS FORCE
ST ATTRACT
D SHIRTS,
:r offeree
BETWEEN
WILL urn
;E AT WHO
.ER LUW
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lenient to: THE HORRY HERAL1
OUR PUBL
V.?E. P
p-???- On Relations o
Hk The industrial
the public face to J
The time was whe
Ik to the people they
a lawyer or emplo
P>' lature, but the mc
now talking over
When the lea
"hack to th? soil"
when asfted to give his views in refer
railroad and the public said in purt:
"Frequently we hear statements
improving, that the era of railroad ba!
ment now favors treating the railroad
sentiment, if any such theye be. is not <
It is true t{iat in the legislatures
past winter there were fewer unreas
than usual but a consideration of th
there is still reason for much tfisquie
luorQ or less of a majority/ *#?*****?
Moreover, the idea that the railr
not seem to prevail in the oflWa of t
seem to cherish a notion that their b
between the railroads t-.nd tlie people,
the railroads are able to take care of
act as attorney for the people even i
to^the railroads. It requires no argun
are entitled to justice equally with ot
have not received it and are not re
proof. Th^U they have practically no
determined.
The situation therefore is tki.fc the
must elect whether the services of the
sated or not; and it requires no fortu
in the lofig run the service will take tl
The natural competition between
to perform first-class service has hoi
much more than it was wilting to p
impossible and 110 laws, however drasti
AMERICAN NA1
OF WILr
' Capita! and Surplus
Total resources
/
DOES BOTH COMMERCIAL
4 per cent, compounded c
depart
0 F F 11
Thos. E. Cooper
Geo. O. Gaylord
Chas. E. Bethea
>
Wm. C. Denny
v
E. Fred Banck
1 "
r
Out
> THE W
:d us to f
overalls
) the pel
I AUG. 16
:R OUR ENl
ILESALE PRI
*
' *
%
D. CONWAY, S. C., August 12,
ic forum]!
'. Ripley
f Railroads and People
Headers of this nation are talking to
race through the columns of this paper,
in if a corporation had anything to say
sent a hired hand, whispered it through
yed a lobbyist to explain it to the legisn
who know and the men who do are
the fence to the man who plows.
ding business men of this nation get
with their problems, strife and dissenr,
fpr when men look into each other's |
ero is a better (lav comine
cy, president of the Santa Fe Railroad,
ence to relations existing between the
to the effect that these relations are
[ting has passed and that public sentis
fairly. As yet this change in public
effective in results". ' ? - ?
of the southwestern states during the
johable ami unreasoning laws passed
e hostile bills introduced shows that
t even though they wero defeated by
oads Jthve boon harshly treated does
he State Railroad Commissions which
usiness is not to act as an arbitrator
but which proceed on the theory that
' themselves and that their duty is to
though in so doing 4hev deny justice
lent to demonstrate that the railroads
her citizens and taxpayers., That they
reiving it is perfectly susceptible of
recourse in the courts has also been
i people, through their representatives,
i railroads shall be adequately compenne
teller or soothsayer to predict that
lie class that is paid for and no better.
the railroads and the natural desire
etofore resulted in giving the public
av for. Continuation of this will lie
1c, can long accomplish the impossible."
[TONAL BANK
VilNGTON, N. C.
ssnn.nnn.nn
$2,506,666.66
AND SAVINGS BUSINESS
luarterly paid in savings
ment.
CERS
President
Vice-President
Cashier
Asst. Cashier
Asst. Cashier ^
? ??? r i
VI K
HR DONE
' ?
9
AND OTHEI
ini r nr in
itll ur m
1*1 AND S
IRE STOCK
ICES?TERP
t \ ' # % ' ? *
1915.
A Receipt For Curing Tips.
Fi^st night firs to 110 or 115 by 9
o'clock. Go to bed. At 3 o'clock commence,
and by 8 o'clock be at 100.
Fire aroundv100 all day. At 8 o'clock
open door and at 10 be at 120. Go to
bed. At 3 o'clock commence and at 10
o'clock be at 1.30. Fire for 4 hours;
go to 140 by 10 o'clock. Go to bed.
At 3 o'clock commence and by 10
o'clock be at 130. Stay 2 hours; go
to 140; stay 2 hours; go to 150; stay
2 hours. Come back to 120; stay 4
hours; go to 150 in 8 hours; stay 4
Hours. Close door and go to 180 and
finish.
MANNING VISITS
. STATE HOSPITAL
- ^
Governor Manning, accompanied by
a party of newspaper men, went over
the State -hospital for the insane in
company with Dr. Sandy, the medical
director, ami viewed the improvements
making; there. The chief executive
was very much impressed with
what he saw, and commented freely
on what he saw.
o
The Hall Player Prayer.
Lord, help me to play the game.
It matters not to you whether 1
am talented or poor in natural gifts;
wealthy or starving; a leader among
men or a simple follower, so that I
play the game as you would have ii
played. Help me to keep my eye on
the ball, that the curves of temptation
not deceive me. Keep my feet in
the path of righteousness, that I may
, touch second and third on my way
I 'round the bases. Help me to beat out
ii my bunts, and hold me that 1 stray
'not too far from base when the catch
er is ready to peg me, 0 Lord, for the
j batting eye sometimes goes wrong
'though the intentinon is right. Help
me in the pinches, Lord, because r
j bingle might bring my brother home
Let not the music from the fans keep
I my eye from the ball, nor the enticements
of the slabman draw me a\va>
from the need of a clean single witl
a man on second. Help me, O Lord
to bat over MOO, because my eyes arc
on the big league for eternity ever
: while I sojourn here among the bust
| leaguers.
o
It is time now to begin work on the
fall and winter garden.
"
lUSINI
r FOR YO
SOME OF 1
, MEN'S PM
t DRY GOC
)RRY COUP
STDT 1
EN. ISt
ftP llPftftll!
U? MtKblU
(IS ARE C/
m A
NINE
KILLS HIS WIFE
ALSO RELATIVES
Chicago Tragedy Creates Excitement
and Authorities
Hold Witness in Case
.. \
STARTED DIVORCE IN >
ILLINOIS COURT
? |
Attentions Paid by Husband to
Another Woman Caused
The Suit. >
^ %. f.
i * , ' W' k
Chicago.?Leaving a young woman ?
over whom he has had trouble with
his wife, in his automobile in front of
the house, George 11. Jones, 4S, a garage
owner, entered the home of his
brother-in-law one day last week and
shot to death his wife, her sister,
Catherine Cosgrove, and her brother,
John, and tried to slay his own son.
He returned to the automobile, drove
to the young woman's home and tried
to commit suicide.
Jones had quarreled with his wife
about the attentions he is said to have
paid Miss Margaret Bittner, 21 years
old. Mrs. Jones had gone to live with
her brother and had brought juit for
divorce.
When served with notice . of the
suit Jones went to the home of his
brother-?n-^uw and called for his wife.
Before she could speak he shot her.
' He then shot Cosgrove and his sister,
> His son Harrv, 1 8 years of age. es?
? caped by fleeing down an alley. A
i crowd tried to capture Jones, but fail.
1
eci.
1 Miss Bittner was taken into custody
as a witness.
o
1 An Easy Pleasant Laxative.
, One or two Dr. King's New Life
Pills with a tumbler of water at night.
{ No bad, nauseating taste; no belching
gas. Go right to bed. Wake up in the
1 morning, enjoy a free, easy bowel
movement, and feel fine all day. Dr.
King's New Life Pills are sold bv all
, Druggists, 30 in an original package,
for 25c. Get a bottle to-day?enjoy
this easy, pleasant laxative.?adv.
ESS
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ITY 11
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