The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, January 27, 1916, Page EIGHT, Image 8
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goat
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REAL ESTATE LOANS
j REAL ESTATE
Horry
L.
\
i
!The
will in no "
lution of
Bank. W<
the same p
I
tw.Russ,
1 PRESIDENT
SO DECEPTIVE I
Many Conway People Fail to Realize
the Seriousness.
Backache is so deceptive.
It conies and goes?keeps you
cuessine*.
Learn the cause?then cure it.
Possibly it's weak kidneys.
That's why Doan's Kidney Pills are
' so effective.
They're especially for weak or dis-!
ordered kidneys.
Here's a Conway case.
M. Johnson, policeman, Fifth Ave.,
Conway, says: "My kidneys were out;
of order and I was in a bat! way. The,
kidney secretions were very scanty,
highly colored and contained sediment
like brick-dust. I tried lots of medicines
with no results. I finally got
Doan's Kidney Pills at the Norton
Drug Co., and they soon relieved all
signs of kidney trouble and regulated
the passages of the kidney secretions."
I
Price 50c. at all dealers. Don't
simply ask for a kidney remedy?get
Donn's Kidney Pills?the same that
Mr. Johnson had. Foster-M ilburn
Co., Props., Buffalo, N. V.?adv.
"" v t " 1
Mr. Allen Booth of Horry Industrial
School was in Conway on last
Wednesday.
/Cream cf ' f.u"
' I ^^gJ^Kentucky 4 Fttii
i ! 1 Full OA, Full ?M OC 4
tk Quart OVj Quarts <J>1 .ZO C
J Airave Prices EXPRESS COLLI
\ 6< J ALWAYS TA ? %?'
6 I WHAT I SAY / 1 jf J V -]
>. j Jt i WILL KJ v\oH?<
| RANDOLPH ROSE, President * *
| R. M,, Rose Company ^ for whic
DISTILLERS X
CHATTANOOGA, TENN. /
useful and beau- poet 0ffi"
fIFUL PREMIUMS: ExpressOffice
FREE WITH ROSE umc*"'
GOODR. Write for Book r. p. d. ?rSt?
JL??
' . ? ' - *- - '
' "
County Tr
D. Magrath, Mana<
CONWAY, S. C.
Horry County Trus
way be affected b]
the Farmers and
s will continue in
lace for the presen
NOTICE.
WHEREAS at a meeting of the
board of directors of the Farmers &
Merchants Bank, held at Conway, S.
C., the 11th day of January, inst.
After a thorough examination of
the affairs of the bank it was foundi
that the business of the corporation
had not been profitable during the
past year. The board after mature
deliberation determined to recommend
to the stockholders that the corporation
go into liquidation, pursuant
to section 2813, code of laws South
Carolina, Vol. 1, 1912 Et Segum and]
with that end in view have practical- j
ly perfected arrangements, subject
to the approval of the stockholders,!
with Conway National Bank to assist!
in the liquidation of its affairs, so
that the depositors and other creditors
of the corporation may be paid,
and the balance of the assets divided
among the stockholders.
NOW THEREFORE the undersigned
hereby calls a special meeting of
the stockholders of the Farmers &
Merchants Bank, to be held at the of!
fices of the bank, at Conway, S. C., at
10 o'clock A. M., on Monday the 14th
day of February proximo,, for the
purpose of considering the rccommen-'
I '1 lf;UI
ir^FOJ?^L?S^ ^ II jl^
Quarts!. 1.50 iijj '
Quarts . . 2.90 *81' l^fi?Mililr>ll?> Lj
! Fu" <C9 CA . OI.I?
>uarts^.DU UrAAn?IlUC
| VFWl/Ifcl/I v
riiifl offer expire* M hi*. 1. HM (>. In order to II
ure these prices, either fill out coupon or ixin
our order. K-42
E, Chattanooga : Please ship me the following,
h enclosed find money order for $
State
/
THE HORRY HE
T
INSURANCE
BONDS
UST CO.
ger |
.t Company |
f the dissc- 1
Merchants |
i I s
business at il
L. D. MAGRflTH.
SECY & TREAS. I
elation of the directors, the liquidation
of tlie corporation, the adjustment of;
the claims against it, the division of
the remainder of its assets among its
stockholders, and the surrender of its'
charter, and for the transaction of
such other business as may come be-,
fore the meeting.
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD,
JANY. 11, 1916.
W. R. LEWIS,
^resident.
o
Whenever You Need n General Tonic
Take Grove's
The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless
chill Tonic is equally valuable a3 a J
General Tonic because it contains the ,
well known tonic propertiesof QUININE |
end JRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives
out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and
Tuilds up the Whole System. 50 cents
?
Changed His Name.
Vallejo, Calif., Jan. 19.?A man
with a name closely resembling the'
kaiser's affliction, and pronounced
softly as you'd breathe the name of a^
Serbian mountain resort to a dear
friend, has been enlisted in the'
United States Marine Corps, as Liberal
Scott, by special authority from
Washington, D. C.
And so, Eleftherios Sykeotis is of-;
fieially listed in the records of the
United States Marine Corps as "Lib-1;
oral Scott."
Sykeotis, who is a naturalized Am-j
erican citizen, adopted the name of
Liberal Scott because of his great ad-j
miration for Harry Lauder, he says,1
and for the further reason that few;
persons have ever correctly pronounc-'
ed tlie name he abandond.
CHICHESTER S PILLS
v T1IK l>!AMONU IIRA.Vl. /
J +$ I-ndif?l A?l< your l>rnmjl?t for/A
/. C?jvl <"' * rlieiMcr'a )>larmtnc ltrnn<l/a*\\
Av^*'I'tilM in HeOi ftn'I iiio'.aSilcV^U',/ |
-x with lilno W'ibon. \/ j
1**1 trVj 'CftliA ?i > otli-r. !ii v <\{' y^ur ^
I / ~ fl\ .?? >< I'-ircn; MS''>.TKi| i
! w. .y r.U,\Nlk 1'1 M.*, m
\K* M V?\fs n >.vt, us lirst. Safest, Alwtjs |<,?i ? I
<;?)> p <Y n:?!!rdilc.TSfVTPWf ' I
1 _____ _____m*,.
Further reports regarding the resumption
of hostilities between Monte
negro and Austria after a rejection of
peace terms by the former, are lacking,
and there is small disposition In
Teutonic quarters oven to admit that
there has been any break in the negotiations.
A Berlin dispatch early to
day, however, quoted a Cologne newspaper
as conceding that obstacles had
arised during the negotiations and
that there had been a refusal of a
part of the Montenegrin army to lay
down its arms.
i
SALT, COTTWAY, S O.
GIVES APPROVAL
TO GARRISON PUN
Former Secretary of War
Stimson for Continental
Army
MUST GET AWAY FROM
THE MILITIA SYSTEM
Regular Army Inadequate Even
to Meet Serious Trouble
in Mexico.
Washington, Jan. 22.?Unqualified
endorsement of the administration's
continental army plan was given to|
day by Henry U. Stimson, secretary of
war in the Taft administration, in an
'address before the National Security
League.
Declaring himself in favor of compulsory
universal military service as
the true solution of the defense problem,
Mr. Stimson said he regarded the
program now advanced by Secretary
Garrison as the sound initial step.
"If Congress is not ready yet to
sanction universal training," he said,
"the measures which are enacted
should be those which, so far as they
go, are in accord with this great fundamental
duty and which, as time
passes and experience ripens will lead
most naturally to the establishment of
such a system.
"Under the federal constitution tnei
national guard is primarily a state
force instead of a national reserve and!
I do not believe that any effective national
citizens arm can be created out
of a force dominated by 48 separate
sovereignties. For nearly fifteen'
years strenuous efforts have been:
made to increase the number of the,
guard, yet it has remained nearly stationary.
"It seems to me that these defects'
can be traced directly to the fact that
the national guard is in fact a State
military force which we are also requiring
to do duty for the national
government. So long as such forces
exist the States are tempted to slur
their police duties and to rely wholly
upon citizen soldiery for that purpose.
Prejudice Against Militia.
"What is even worse, there has!
gradually grown up among our labor-'
intr classes the feel in rr thnt thr? nnlv
soldiers with whom they are practically
acquainted represent a different
class of the community and are maintained
for the purpose of being used
against them. Instead of regarding
the militiamen as a citizen training to
perform his duty of defending the
country in case of real war, the labor
man has come to regard him as a
privilege of capital being trained as a
police against labor.
"As the national guard is, other
than the regular army, our only pros-'
ent force of even partially trained
soldiers. Nothing should be done to
discourage its work but, on the contrary,
everything to stimulate and encourage
it. But such encouragement
should be in the direction of transfer-;
ring wholly into the service of the fed-,
eral government and not of perpetuating
it in its present status. Particularly,
to grant federal pay to the individual
militiaman for his weekly
service rendered to the State, seems i
to blur the great lesson which is emerging
from the European war. It is1
to yield again to the theory that we
can induce men to serve their country,
not as a duty of patriotism, but for
pay.
Mr. Stimson endorsed as "sound
and intelligent" Secretary Garrison's
plan to bring the regular army up to
its proper basis, but added that personally
he thought the regular army
now should be made larger still.
"What is proposed in Congress and
what is likely to hhopen," he continued,
"is that Mr. Garrison will be refus
cd even the regiments for which he
has asked and that instead a sop will
Y\f\ iUt'rwv'M ( A i lin !m/mt *\C Oin
?v v 1/i i i \y ?t I I tv V lIVy t)\/II VI lllt.il ^ \/L l/I I\country
by merely authorizing the
j department to enlist enough more
men to bring our existing regiments
up to full strength."
Mexican Army Stronger.
Referring to recent Mexican border
troubles and the demands of many for
a punitive expedition Mr. Stimson
said "it is conceivable that at almost
any time the hands of our government
may be forced by some such emergency,
yet at the present day, with the
great hulk of our army massed along
the Mexican border, we have only
20,000 troops there available for such
an expedition and, under sober calcuj
1 lation, the Mexicans have far more
A Hint to Mc
of Grov
A Mild Laxative at Regular
Intervals Will Prevent
Constipation.
A vital point upon which all schools
of medicine seem to agree is that normal
rPCIlllll'ifv r*f fllft in
. V* IV U1MIVIS 19 U11 t*9"
sential to good health. The importance
of this is impressed particularly on
mothers of growing children.
A very valuable remedy that should
be kept in every home for use as occasion
arises is Dr. Caldwell's Syrup
Pepsin, a compound of simple laxative
herbs that has been prescribed by Dr.
W. 13. Caldwell, of Monticcllo, III., for
more than twenty-five years, and
which can now bo obtained in any
I stocked drug store for fifty cents a
. bottle.
In a recent letter to Dr. Caldwell,
[ Mrs. H. C. Turner, <S44 Main St., Buffalo.
N. V., says. "I bought a bottle of
Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin for my
babv, Poland Leo Turner, and find it
, works just like you said it would. It
armed men and trained troops available
for a punitive expedition into oil"
territory than we into theirs."
Root tin National Guard.
A letter from former Secretary of
War Root endorsed Secretary Garrison's
contention that the national
guard could not be depended on for
I the army increase.
i "It is idle," wrote Mr. Root, "to talk
of developing the national guard itself
into an adequate army for nation!
al defense, and any such attempt
would inevitably result in the failure
of the whole movement and the waste
of all the energy and effort devoted
I *4- t "? 1 ??,1 r\ ?v\ n ?
n/ it. l iiicttiuucii ^uai \i ai c j#i nuui ily
State troops for State purposes
and they must continue to be so.
"There are good things in Secretary
Harrison's plan. The doing of them
would he progress in the right direction.
Don't lose these good things
even though you may find that you
can't at this time get something more
in the same direction. But, In the
meantime, let us take the first step on
any sort of a program that is directed
towards the goal we ought to attain?a
rained and always available
national citizens soldiery under the in
struction and administration and formative
leadership of an adequate
though small regular army."
o
NOTICE. |
Under and by virtue of a Decretal
Order made by his Honor, S. W. G.
Shipp, Judge of the Twelfth Circuit,
at Chambers, in the case of A. 13.
Buffkin vs. Zebedee Williams, dated
January 7th, 191G, I will offer for
sale before the Court House Door at
Conway, S. G\, within legal sale hours
on Monday, the 7th day of February,
1910:
Tract No. 1:
"All that certain nlantal.ion or mot
of land, lying and being in Green Sea
Township, on Grassy Bay, at the head
of Tarkiln Branch, locally known as
the Pickett Place, containing 25 acres,
more or less. Beginning at a pine
corner on the South side of Grassy
Bay at the old Enzor, Hodges & Harrelson
corner, running nearly East
course with J. L. Lewis' line to a light
wood knot coorner, near the old ford
of Tarkiln Branch; thence an agreed
line nearly in a Northerly course to a
lightwood stake corner near the edge
of the old Cart road leading from Alva
Enzor's to Williamson's Short Cut
Road; then with the old Cart Path to
a pine corner on Zehedee Williamson's
line; thence Williamson's line and J.
L. Lewis' line to the beginning cor|
ncr."
Tract No. 2:
"All that certain plantation or tract
i
of land and containing forty (40)
i acres, more or less, and lying and being
in the State and County before
mentioned, and in Floyd's Township,
and on the Aimer Road. Commencing
on Bryan Mincy's line on Cart
Road; thence running the various
I courses of Cart Road to Hosea Hardee's
line; thence said Hardee's line
i to Aller Gerald's line; thence said Alter
Geralds line to Bryan Mincy's line;
I thence said Bryan Mincy's line back
to the beginning corner; the same
' Iniirl h'inrr r>n 1 lui XTahIU owIa aC I
li.ini 111^ Vil n.i/ ilWl HI DHIi; U1 JHll\U
Swamp Waters of Little Pee Dee
River."
Terms of Sale: CASH: Purchaser
to pay for papers.
ROBT. B. SCARBOROUGH,
Plaintiffs Attorney.
J. A. LEWIS,
Sheriff.
o
There appears to be developing
a very vigorous and persistent opposition
to the present plan of administering
free tuition and scholarship in
the State institutions.
? ' ' 11111 ' ' * * nhmm*
others
zing Childre
KOI,AM) LICK TURNER.
, is fine for the stomach and bowels." I
I A bottle of Dr. Cnldwlel's Syrup
Pepsin should be in every home. A I
trial bottle, free of charge, can be oh- I I
tninod by writing to !)? . W .15. CaLlwell,
4~>4 Washington St., Monticello,
4|
w vyni^ va naraii e?. jcwtumo
POVERTY IS CAUSE I
OF IMMORALITY^
, Wlore Girls Misled, Too, in^Mj
Domestic Service, Vice
Commission Finds. R
J
????
w
Springfield, 111.?Poverty is the
Drinciiml rnnso immAHniu.. .. ?
? v/ > HHIllVI Ulll^ ) U I I 1 1 r 1 I
imum wage for girls and women
j should be .$8 a week and unregulated! IH
(Conditions of domestic employment j^H
render the home, in many cases, a ^H|
breeding place for commercialized
vice, according to the Illinois Senate I
white slave investigation committee's
j Thousands of girls, it says are dl'iv- I
en into prostitution "because of the
sheer inability to keep body and soiU I
together on the low wages they receive."
The system of domestic en-.ployment
in America is condemned in
positive terms. "Unregulated conditions
of domestic employment, uncertain
hours, absence of definite social
status and lack of creative opportunities
render the home in many cases
for the women servants a breeding I
place of immorality," says the repoiTInvestigations
disclosed that more
women on the underworld fell into dis I
honor from domestic employment
than from any other work. Of 181
girls sent to the State training school
at Geneva, III., who had worked for a
wage previous to commitment, the
fOm fr?nn.! 4- 1 IK ? nr r
w....invwvu i vuuvi mat -i iU) ur n?),i) [)rr?
cent, had been engaged in domestic* I
service.
The report says wages were found
to be discouragingly short of the $8
wage considered necessary. Attention
is called to testimony taken by the
committee "of wages running as low
as $2 a week; of foremen who profane
ly abuse girls in short dresses; cf a
manager who found his factory bo-fl
sieged with the agents of professional
white slavery."
I The report says there can be no disagreement
as to the effects on the 'fl|
young women of the alternate drinking
and dancing as practiced in many
fashionable restaurants.
The committee found that the hign?
! est standard of morals exist among I
| the girls in the high schools, colleges
and universities of the State.
The committee makes the following
recommendations:
"Enactment of a minimum wage JH
law.
"Repeal of social laws fallen into H
I disuse and strict enforcement of all l H
others. I
"Encouragement of uniform State H
j social legislation.
I "Improvement of conditions for H
I girls in domestic service. H
j "Establishment of homes for moral I
j and industrial schooling of reformed H
women
"Extension of vocational education. H
"Abolition of the 'fining' system in
I the treatment of immoral women. T I
"Registration of minor boys and I
girls in employment.
"Prohibition of printing in newspa- I
pers of details of court cases involv
| ing moral lapses. I
"Creation of a State athletic com- I
mission fhr the encouragement of H
healthful nastimes." v
The committee's report concludes I
an investigation that began in Aug
ust, 1913, and covered extensive in- I
quiries into conditions existing in I
Chicago, Springfield, Peoria, Alton, I
East St. Louis and several other Illi- I
nois cities. Lieutenant X36Vternor Bar- I
ratt O'Hara was chairman of the com- v I
mittee. * I