The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, November 02, 1916, Page THREE, Image 3
Worth Carei
Do you read the lat
your baking powder is
of tartar or, on the oth
or phosphate ?
Royal Baking Pov
cream of tartar, derive
adds to the food only i
Other baking powd
phosphate, both . of r
used as substitutes fc
because of their cheap
Never sacrifice qui
ncoo iui L\J W |JA1UC?
ROYAL BAKING
New Y
Gloria's
i
Romance
of rhododendrons.
Gloria begun to laugh and encourage
Stas. At length Itoyce made a
frantic rush for the hoy, and Stas,
growing breathless, made for Gloria's
arms and tlung himself Into them, panting:
"Take it! take it! take it!
quick !"
He placed the envelope in Gloria's
hands. She was about to return it to
Itoyce without a glance. But the heavy
weals on the back caught her eye and
she looked down.
Instantly she recognized the envelope.
It was the one that had fallen
from Freneau's pocket the night
he came to bid her good-by. It was
the one that she had seen the crouching
figure take from Freneau's pocket
ufter Trask had murdered him and
run away!
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
FIRE INSURANCE j
GOOD FOR FARMER',
i
i.
Suggestions For Meeting the"
Evident Needs of Farmers
Insurancce.
Four kinds of property insurance
are written in which the farmer is j
particularly interested . These are,
insurance of buildings and perse nail
property against loss by fire or light'
ning, insurancce of the same objects |
against loss by wind storm, insur- I
ance of growing crops against hail, i
and insurance of live stock against1
death by disease or accident.
- To the average farmer the first j
two kinds of insurance usually makr (
the strongest appeal. One reason for1
this is doubtless the feeling that fire j
and windstorm are the destructive I
agencies that most frequently, at a
single stroke, deprive their victims
of the accumulated earnings of many
years. Perhaps a second reason why
farmers usually first provide themselves
with fire and windstorm insurance
is the fact that these are,
as a rule, relatively less expensive
than the other two kinds of insurance
here considered. By this is
meant that a larger percentage of
the money collected from the insured
can be used to compensate the
sufferers of less than is the case
with hail or live-stock insurance. A
simpler organization is possible, and
fraudulent claims are more easily
guarded against.
The fact that hail and live-stock
insurance are less generally carried
by the farmers of the United States
does not signify that these forms of
protection are not important. Under
certain circumstances and conditions
they may even outrank in im
A. . 1.1 .1.1 i 1 - il- *
purvance me outer two. as me American
farmer learns to make of
agriculture more strictly a science,
and to eliminate, as far as possible,
the element of chance, he will doubtless
insist on the further development
of all the kinds of insurance
here enumerated, and perhaps of still
others.
Few farmers are so rich that they
can wisely go without insurance.
Happily few are so poor that they
are compelled to go without a safeguard
that to the average farmer
may be classed as a necessity. The
very farmer who has but few buildings
and little personal property, and
is perhaps least able to pay for in
40?
ill Thought
>el to know whether
? made from cream
er hand, from alum
irder is made from
>d from grapes, and
wholesome qualities.
ers contain alum or
nineral origin, and
>r cream of tartar
ness.
aiity ana tiealthlulPOWDER
CO.
ork
i
1
E=sr.rT-icr
--HySfg
/ (lllii
j
C\
R M
H
I
THE HORRY HERAL
surancc, protection, is really the one
who can least afford to go without
it. Hence the importance of making
insurant re as cheap as it is possible
to make it and yet have it efficient
and dependable.
About two-fifth of the farmers in
the United States have found a meth
od of providing themselves with fire
insurance at greatly reduced cost
through mutual operative insurance
associations, embracing a single
county or some such limited terriory.
Dependable and cheap winddorm
insurance has sinvinrly been
orovided by means of la i cv mutual
ompanies, often operating in close
relationship with the local fire-insur
ance mutuals. Local windstorm
suranee companies have, however, in
several instances, been taught by experience,
and to their own sorrow,
that while each group of farm build :
ings and to a considerable extern
each building within the group con
stit.utes a seperate and distinct risk
so far as the fire hazard is oonrem- !
ed, the same is not true with refer-!
ence to the windstorm hazard. Snfe-|
ty and stability in windstorm insur-1
ance be large and the risks widely
L JL JU
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..'a f.y-.* ^v.\... : w? ; . : <
ft' ?$m.: m:.v:
i
. ROSE
RANDOLPH RC
JACKSONVILL
t
D, CONWAY, 8. O.
scattered. The same is true of hail
insurance.
A smaller number of farmers have
also provided themselves with had
and live stock insurance by means of
mutual associations. While a number
of these assocciations have a successful
record covering many years,
companies representing these kinds
of insurance have been less generally
successful than have farmers' mutual
fire-insurance and windstorminsurance
companies. Some of the
reasons for this difference in success
have already been Suggested.
Not frequently letters come to the
department relating stories of hardships
due to losses of property not
covered by insurance, and asking: if
some provision does not exist by
which the department can aid deserving
farmers who have met with
' oeial disaster to their property.
The answer to such inquiries must,
of course, be in the negative.
'p'v> Office of Markets and Rural
Ore- nization of the department has
undo taken a careful study of various
kinds of property insurance of
interest te 'im farmer. The informa-;
1 ion in ? ' -'ssion is at the dis-1
(**V'Vv t . -;K" ' " 1.
" if you
-*- trouble
to get Liquor
get something
A? * c 7 .o. C* e"*i 1 C< 4r i TJT. uV
y \*S& ti ?<LV>0
^ 'vT-' '' ' '-'ri V-> A'-vMiiM
v>
H & | m ft
'''^'.'.^^^ 1 I'*,
It costs only
* REAL QUAL3
Remember this: .
will be new label*
favor} some good,,
have no c f t**
Select
r *V
The safest thing is
one reliable, justly
brand ? a brand wit
that must be lived
Vo 0. S. RlacI
/ \x/;<u 11.
i rr s. i x L-iX *
Order sue! a. a brand rej
mg it will always be
quality whiskey, the
key, that you as a ?
drink or serve to anotl
Vo O. i
BLACK A
1 Full Quart
Express Collect
4 Full Quarts
Express Prepaid
C 0 M Pi!
)SE, President
E. FLORIDA
posal of groups of farmers who desire
to organize with the view of providing
themselves under favorable
conditions with insurance best adapted
to their needs.
ADVERTISING BEATS
CIRCULAR LETTERS
John Lee Mahin, a Chicago advertising
expert, says that if merchants
would use the same copy contained
in o circular letter nnd place it in
thci?* local paper, they would sc.ure
greater circulation at less expense.
Tne cost of postage, paper, and labor
in n fiiV'iilVtv K.... '
v.. vuiui ivvvvi n ill UU > tunaiu*
erable newspaper space. If some
mi rchants would put the same careful
thought into their newspaper
ads that they employ in writing a
circular letter, they would get still
more for their money.?Geo. A. Starring.
o
J. T. Booth who was away for a
short time recently has returned to
his former home near Adrian, S. C., j
and is still engaged in sign painting, i
must go '
5 of sending
shipped u\ by ex pre
that is ire ally Itigl
cj vt p , , f crxi {i zfr\N~jt'
( \.J **./X /iJO'w ? *- Tk-<i. >* ?..
mf$ ||| |fc?
: :<- v - wJplrw
?*i
y2 * 4$P:> i| & 1 %
Si #$*1^1 k i
'V'.i ^ ?Hp4?> ? p | ^ k Jj
4 % WP m V: a& b%
' ^ >, ;\* <. W:C;h Jwff
as mac.ru as it fx
:TY in I iqoor /iff
/cj?3ft< fTi* printing pr
and ?i*w brand*,, bb
scsns fair, soma M.\r:-r
ffrj, ' 'HC i'ood /vera f/.e 5
..*? w>
aa Old B
to center on
famous cid
h a reputation
up to, like
s Armor
' -Oh.' Whiskey df&d
dmi
gularly,kiio\vthe
same high
kind of vvhic- f|&
;entle.tna.n can w
icr gentleman. W
s. IM1
RMOR i.||
$12 * ||f|
$42 By
lNY ti
THKXB
AMERICA TO ESCAPEHORRORS
OF RATTLE
Long Branch, N. J.?in a speech
devoted primarily to a discussion of
the need for economic preparedness
in the United States, President Wil3on
told a delegation of farmers, architects
and engineers here today
that he did not expect the United
States to get into war.
"I know that the way in which we
have nrcs6n'sd peace i" objsctsd to/
said the president, "and that certain
gentlemen say they would have taken
some other way that would inevitably
have resulted in war, but I
i;n not expecting this country to get
into war, partly because 1 am not
expecting these gentlemen to have a
chance to make a mess of it."
Taking the wovk done bv the administration
for the farmeJ * as his
text Mr. Wilson declared: "We 'want
the privilege of represent'rg the
whole force of the nation."
o
W. Y. Graham was in the city one
day last week.
> I H
II
i
to the I
? away I
;3s, why not 11
1 class and j I
such as II
ikes to get II
-No more. II
uises ran, there |
tiding for your 11
?ght bad. You 11
ad. Therefore: I I
' '?< ' X. '' B H
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