The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, February 22, 1917, Page SEVEN, Image 7
' THE SHIELDING SHADOW
/
' "Leontlne! The mantle !"
"Our Uvea, ltavengnr," she respond[
ed.
t And, seizing him by the arm, she
helped hhn into the trees, iuto the underbrush.
They crouched there while
L 1'iunca and Sebastian, unsuspecting
7 (heir presence, passed by them toward
^ the hotel.
"I suppose that fellow Ravengar
1' won't come back to life,'* suggested
Sebastian.
Blunca realized for the first time
that he had gone. But she did not cure
' to let Sebastian know that she hud
r saved him. "I guess we've seen the !
I last of him," she answered.
Blanca and Sebastian, arm in arm,
t started down the path through the
woods together.
1 <ENI> OB' TENTH EPISODE.)
?
Too Late. j
The Congressional Record is a
1 mighty good paper, and a very interesting
one at time.s, but as a daily
news paper it is a failure, because it
has to hold back for its advertisers'
to read "thoir own nrnnf nnd whon I
\vn get the issue we want the public
has forgotten what the matter was.
if we have not ourselves, forgotten
to look for it.?Florence Times.
?-< ?>
f /
Another Palmetto State Creamery
will be established at Orangeburg in'
April. This will mak^ four such
creameries in the state.
There are. now seven bull assooia-.
tions in South Carolina. The state
having the most associations-of this
character is Michgan, with fourteen.
| o
^ j
Dr. Lycurgus A. Woodruff,
D. 0. P. T.
Eyesight Specialist
Office Days: Every Saturday
at Horry Drug Store.
o
Lingering Coughs Are Dangerous
Get rid of that tickling cough that
keeps you awake at night and drain?
your vitality and oner ?y. Dr. King'.New
Discovery is a pleasant balsan
remedy, antiseptic, laxative am
promptly effective. It soothes tlv
i ritated membrane and kills the
cold germs; your cough is soon ro
lieved. Delay is dangerous?get Dr.
King's New Discovery at once. Fo*
nearly fifty years it has been the
favorite remedy for grippe, croup
toughs and colds. Get a bottle to
day at your Druggist, 50c?adv.
cottoTseed
?EXCHANGE FOR MEAL?
See our Mr. W. Percy Hard*t?i
a /\ f tirn vr C! ^ V>
wiuau, ui wun vy (xj f kj . \y.t ucfcrre
selling, we want your
business.
ELBA MANUFACTURING CO.
Bating $500,000.OX)
CHARLOTTE, N. CT.
Office over Horry Drug Co.
o ?
MAKE PORT SAFELY.
New York.?Another Entente
steamship, the French liner Chicago,
-which passed safely through Germany's
zone of unrestricted submarine
warfare, arrived here today
with 181 passengers. J To U-boats
were observed, the officers said, nor
any friendly war vessels, although
the wireless spoke of the presence of
French patrol boats off the French
coast.
The French line steamer Rochambeau,
which left here on February 4
with 100 passengers, 21 of them Americans,
has arrived at Bordeaux.
She got there at 11 p. m. Tuesday,
according to advices received bv the
" %>
French line today.
o
THOROUGH WORK
How a Cor.way Citizen Found Freedom
From Kidney Troubles.
If you suffer from backache?
From urinary disorders?
Any curable disease of the kidneys,
Use a tested remedy.
Doan's Kidney Pills have been tested
by thousands.
Conway people testify.
Can you ask more convining proof
of merit?
M. F. Outlaw, Murrells Inlet P. O.,
Conway, says: "I had an awful lot of
trouble with my back and kidneys,
brought on by exposure. I could hardly
keep going. I was so sore and
lame that I could scarcely bend and
it was just as difficult to straighten.
I used Doan's Kidney Pills as directed
and they cured me of all signs of kidney
trouble."
Price bOc, at all dealers. Don't
simply ask for a kidney remedy?get
Doan's Kidney Pills?the same that
cured Mr. Outlaw. Foster-Sl.<burn
Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y.?adv
0
DASHEEN VEGETABLE
FINDING MUCH FAVOR'
#
i:
Root Crop Introduced Into;.
This Country From Trinidad
Not Long Since.
<
______ i
l
The dasheen, a root crop introduced
into this country from Trinidad
within recent years by the United
States Department of Agriculture, is
now grown by a considerable number
of farmers and truckers in the South.'
and promises to become a valuable
member of the group of domestic
vegetables, such as the potato, which
furnish starchy foods. The new ve- j
1-.L1 - _ _1 1_. 1 A - .1 A Al A
Kcittuie is cioseiy reiatea 10 me taro, i
which is an important factor in the
food supply in portions of the Tropics.
The dasheen is itself primarily
a tropical plant. It can bo grown
successfully, however, not only in the
warmer portions of Florida but in
other sections of the South as far
north as South Carolina. The edible
portion of the plant includes a large,
central corm and a number of ti'.boea*,
of: much smaller size, attached to <ajBii ,
around the corm.
The- value of the dasheen,, it is bs*
believed, will be as a crop, supplement
tal to rather than a substitute for, thai
potato. The fact th'at*. the dashfcec*
matures in the fall when potatoes
must be obtained from northern pro-i
during sections should make the new
plant especially valuable in the economics
of the southern farmer.
In food value the dasheen is comparable
to the potato though it contains
a smaller proportion of water
jand a greater proportion of protein,;
I starch, and sugar than the latter.
i nt- iifw vugt-'uiuic muy DO prepureii
for the table as potatoes usually are
or may be made into flour and user'
in baking. The tender shoots forced
from the large corms may be prepared
like asparagus, and make a
pleasing dish in that form.
The dasheen is grown from whole
'.ubera weighing a few ounces. They
rcqure a frostlesg season of at least
seven months, with plenty of moisture.
A moist but well-drained, rich,
sandy loam has been found to be ?
satisfactory soil f*>r dasheen culture
k large portion of either clay or
nuck in the soil produces strong
flavored, tough corms, which
often unfit for table use. Large cropire
produced wider such conditions
however, and make excellent stock
'oed.
The crop is planted in February in
.outhern Floridfi and as lats as tlm
early pail of April in South Caro
lina. The plants are spaced aboul
3 1-2 by 3 1-2 feet. Drsheens 4 may I
be dug for home use by the middle j
of September and the main crop can j
he harvested at any time after the I
last of October. The clumps of tu
bers are left on the surface of thf
ground for several days to dry. Tiv
tox>s and small roots are then broker
off and the dashecns placed in stor
age.
The dasheen is a good shipper amis
handled by the carriers at the
same freight rates as potatoes. The
vegetable has already found its way
into a number of northern markets.
o
Subscribe to the Herald?$1.00.
MUSTANG
For Sprains, Lameness,
Sores, Cuts, Rheumatism
Penetrates and Heals.
Stops Rain At Once
For Man and Beast
25c. 50c. $1. At All Dealers.
LINIMENT
O
OBITUARY.
On Feb. 9th, 1917, death visited
the home of Mr. Hugh L. Gerrald
and claimed his brother-in-law for
its victim, Mr. Allen Rogers. Mr. I
? -
ivogers was 71 yoars of age. Afto?
serving in the fight Between the
States he returned home and joined
the army of the Lord and fought th
good fight of faith until his dope.'
ture. "Be thou faithful until deal
and 1 will give thee a crown of life *
Formerly he was a member of Bue!
Swamp church in Dillon county. A
his departure was a member of M'
Pisga Baptist church. His remanwere
laid to rest the following day i
the Gerrald cemetery to await the
resurrection morn. Funeral servicer
were conducted at the old home by
Rev. M. A. McCracken.
?A FRIEND. ,
THE HORRY' HERA
DONT GO TO WAR, SAYS HE 1
_______
Beware of European Conflict, Say*
Republican Leader.
Washington?Applause from both
sides of the House greeted a declarition
by Republican Leader Mann ^
that the first duty of the United *
S;a.cs was to look after affairs or.
Lhe American continent and that he
oped this country would not be
drawn into the European war. Do
b:.to of the army appropriation bi:.
was in progress when he spoke.
"I am determined," Mr. Mann said y
"to do over 'tiling in my power t(
keep our country out of the Euro- .
pean war. If it becomes necessary
at any time for the Unitted States to
enter into it. I will willingly join, but
I am trusting with hope and faith !
;hat the President will do everything
he thinks possibly can be done to
keep out. ]
"God only knows where he will
land if this country enters the war.
So far as we can it is to our interest
to remain the dominant force on the
American continent and not think
that we should regulate the whole
world. When we have taken care of
i?i < ?
VJIV, 1 vpuunva 111 VyUIlirUl U1K1 ijOUtn I
America to the credit of ourselves
and civilization it would b* time
bnough to regulate the older nations
new engaged in conflict. I regret it;;
but I hope we can keep outi of it."
jVIfj Mann argued that if the Unit*
ed States were drav n into the pre?e.ufc
war it could no longer claim/ the*
ritrht to regulate American affairs
ulo.ie. He urced th+it the- whole,
country stand together regardless of
what step was taken in the crisis.
?
i i rs-\i i rr-r cicv
nun n uu uua oiviv
Sometimes you overload your
stomach with rich foods. Your
life may be an active one, and thus
you may care l'or all you eat. But <
a few days of inactivity show your
Bystem does not call for so much.
You awake in the morning tired.
Your body feels heavy; you know
you are not, up to the mark. Your
digestion has not cared for the
overload. Part of It remains. It
generates gas that inflames tho
delicate linings. They fall to pour
out the digestive fluids and neglect
to absorb the life-urivlnur elements.
You know something la wrong. \
Your body gets weak, and soon
opportunity Is offered for some so- <
vere illnes. j
Taken in time, the lndlgostio** 1
would not become serious. First re- I
move the overload; then soothe the
sore membranes; then build up the <
weakened body. It's slmplo to say,
but not too easy to do. Youneedhelp. ]
A tonic that will quicken dlges- (
tlon. help remove waste, soothe the
soreness and arouse the system?~
that's Jest what you need. 4
Peruna has an enviable record In <
this respect. It has aided many
thousands In the last century to <
overcome just these conditions, and
thereby prevent serious sickness.
The tablet form Is convenient ]
CATTLE DIPPING WILL
BEGIN AT EARLY DATE
(Continued from Page Two.)
discussed at a conference to be held
at the end of January in Dallas, Texr
as. Louisiana like Mississippi, has,
made eradication a State matter. In |
the other States tho work will be
carried on by counties.
These facts indicate that throughout
the entire South there is a determination
to be rid of the tick and
that quickly. It is many years since
there was any question of the feasibility
of total eradication; the chief
difficulty has been to convince the
people that it was really worth their
while to take up the work. Today so i
much territory has been freed that <
the benefits are plainly apparent,
and this difficulty has, therefore, to
a great extent been removed. In the
last three years more than 10,000'
square miles have been released from
quarantine, leaving 419 000 in tli3 en - j
tire country still infested. Much ol M
this area, how ever, is in Texas, whree
the problem is somewhat different
ihnn in the States east of the
issippi. In the Uxttcr section it ;s
reasonable to suppose thrt in a few
years the tick will be a thing of the
pant.
Give Y our Liv
Take a time tried and proven rem
iveness, Biliousness, Jaundice, li
Blood. Pimples, Indigestion.* I! s
Dr. Thacher's Liver
lour Liver end Kidneys are yoer best fries*
when neglected they become your most dent
stipated yoa should immediately take this |
UD.OOKWAY, SO
rHERE IS DANGER
EATING RAW PORK
1
Serious and Often Fatal Dis- i
eases Due to Uncooked
Meats. '
|
I
Eeat no pork or pork products uncss
they are cooked if you would bo
;ertain of avoiding trichinosis. This
s a warning issued by the Bureau of
Animal Industry of the United Stat
es Department of Agriculture, especially
to those who are in the habit
of eating raw ham or special
forms of sausage cnotaining raw
pork and made to be eaten uncooked.
The records show that the number of
case of trichinosis?a serious, painful,
and often fatal disease resulting
from trichinae?increases during the
holidays, partly because of hog-killing
time and partly because farmer.4
frequently make up special forms of
sausage which are eaten without
cooking.
To avoid trichinosis no form of
pork in the raw state, including
dried or smoked sausages and hams,
should be eaten.* All pork- used as*
f<jod should be cooked thoroughly, as
trichinae, the< minute organisms,
which cause this deadly disease, die*ami
therefhjre become harmless whea
subjected to a temperature of 14(V
degrees F. or higher. The fact' that:
these organisms may remain alive
and active in uncooked pork makes
the latter, say department meat
specialists, a meance to life and
health wherever it is eaten.
Everyone should remember this
simple rule of food hygiene; Cook
pork well. A practical rule is to
cook pork until it has lost its red
color throughout all portions, or, if a
trace of this color is still present, at
least until the fluids of the meat
have become more or less ji Hied.
The Federal meat inspectors do
not inspect pork or pork products t<
determine the presence or absence of
the organisms causing trichinosis, a?
2Ven careful microsconic examina
tion is unreliable. In inspected es
Lablishments the inspectors do, how
ever, require that pork which is to b<
made into products to be eaten raw
shall be heated sufficiently or sub
jected for considerable periods t?
extreme cold to destroy the harmfu'
Dvganisms. This requirement doe:
not reach all pork products made to
be eaten raw, since the Federal Government
inspects only establishments
preparing products to be ship
ped in interstate commrece.
It should be noted that the 'special
treatment required by the Bureau of
Animal Industry to be given to pork
products meant to be eaten raw
must not be interpreted as van inInrsemcnt
of such dietetic practices.
The measures are taken 'primarily to
reduce the risks taken by persons
v\ho ignorantly, carelessly, or wil
fujly eat such products. It remains
that the safest plan is to eat no pork
products of any kind raw.
7 -<>.
Impossible.
How can Tennessee hope to secure
"bone-dry" prohibition when it has
Rye for governor??Daily Record.
c
rkii r? a - ^ - - - ' ?
rues v/urcu in o 10 if I Jays
Your druggist will refund money if PAZO
OINTMENT fails to cure any case of Itching,
Blind, Weeding or Protruding Piles in 6 to 14 days.
The first application given Ease and Kest. 50c.
H)
ANOTHER FORD TALE.
Atlanta, Ga?Some folks say Henry
Ford pays a humorist to hatch out
all these jokes about his car, by way
of shrewdly advertising the same,
but here's a Ford story that nobody
not any pay for, and it's a true story.
A Ford was standing in front of a
fashionable hotel on Peach tret
.-trout. It caught fire and s'x companies
came and put it out and win*
back to their re pe.-tivo station
nouses. The Ford caught fire again,
ml the "ire companies came a second
time and put it out and returned to
their stations.
Then the owner of the Ford came
Dut of the hotel and cranked up and j
pvo^ in and rode away.
'era Chance
edy (or Liver Complaints^Cost^
Sidney Troubles, Impure or Bad
uttering from these take f }
and BloodiSynip
l? il yon keep tkem in good condition, but
erons enemies, ell you are bilious or cofy
rest preparation?50c and $1?all dealcf ,
????a??
HATCHING AND i
REARING CHICKS
Clemson College, S. C.?During
the next two months farmers and
farmers' wives will place thousands
of eggs under setting hens in an effort
to hatch early chicks. It is particularly
nceessary that the best
eggs be selected in order that the
percentage of chicks may be increased.
Care of Eggs for Hatching.
Eggs intended for hatching should
perferably be kept in a cool room
with temperatures between 40 and
60 degrees Fahrenheit. They will
not hatch well when stored in a room
with a temperature over 80 degrees
at any time, since the germ develops
at this temperature and the albumen
loses density. Place the eggs in a
basket, cover them with a muslin
cloth, and do not disturb or turn
them. Do not keep eggs desired for
hatching (or for table use) on cotton
reed hulls. It is not advisable to use
eggs more than two weeks old for
hatching, while for best results the
eggs shuold not be more than five
days old.
.Big Eggs Produce Big Chicks..
Experiments couducted by the
p*M4try. expert at Clemson College
determine the weight of chiaksv
haiciwd from eggs of dif forest:
Ueitjl(Vt8 prove conclusively thfl&T s
urjfdrm lot of chicks, cannot tie obtained
from a mixed lot, of eggs.
Thje result of these experiments went
to show, with little variation for
t mall or large eggs, that 71.5 per
cent of the weight of an egg at the
commencement of incubation is the
weight of the live chick hatched from
that egg. The chick was weighed as
soon as dry. In other words, a large
...... i? *-?u ? i..? ..?.j ......it
tldlLIIVA it lit! (JC Vliivtv dim it Bllldtl
egg hatches a small chick.
Since large chicks in a mixed lot
retain their increased size throughcut
the growing period and generally
lay or crow earlier than the smaller
chicks, it is evident that only large
eggs with good shape and smooth
shell should be incubated. Do not set
any egg smaller than standard size
(1 5-8 inches in diameter crosswise.)
Reject extra long, sharp-pointed or
rough-shelled eggs, and all doubleyolk
eggs, in addition to those under
standard size.
Gathering the Eggs.
Collect the eggs twice daily. Do
not allow them to be chilled. Keep
sittings hens away from the nests
used by the layers. If a hen sits on
an egg for a day, and such an egg is
removed the next day and stored in
the cool room. if i?
, ... 11^ IJ
doubtful if the egg will hatch.
GALOMELDYNAMITES
A SLUGGISH LIVER
Crashes into sour bile, making]
you sick and you lose
a day's work.
Calomel salivates! It's mercury.
Calomel acts like dynamite on a
sluggish liver. When calomel comes
into contact with sour bile it crashes
into it, causing cramping and nausea.
If you feel bilious, headachy, constipated
and all knocked out, just go
to your druggist and get a 50 cent
bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone, which
is a harmless vegetable substitute
or dangerous calomel. Take a spoor,
iiiand if it doesn't start your liver
and straighten you up better and
quicker than nasty calomel and with
out making you sick, you just go
back and get your money.
If you take calomel today you'll be
sick and nauseated tomorrow; besides,
it may salivate you, while if you
take Hudson's Liver Tone you will
r ake up feeling great, full of ambition
and ready for work or play, j
It's harmless, pleasant and safe to
give to children; they like it.?adv. j
o
No farm is complete without a
Bermuda pasture. No other part of J
Li.i: farm will pay more dividends
' w>n a good Bermuda pasture.
Winter Brings Colds to Children.
A child rarely goes through the
.vhole winter without a cold, and evry
mother should have a reliable
omedy handy. Fever, sore throat,
tight chest and croupy coughs are
sure symptoms. A dose of Dr. Bell's
Fine Tar Honey will loosen the
phlegm, relieve the congested lungs
ind stop the cough. Its antispetic
pine balsams heal and soothe. For
roup, whooping cough and chronic
ronchial troubles try Dr. Bell's Pine
, >r Iloney. At all Druggists, 25c.?
adv. i
ssvEtr
BRITISH ANNOUNCE
NEW DANGER ZONE
Waters Around Germany and
Parts of Holland and Denmark
to be Mined
TO BOTTLE UP SUBMARINES
BY USE OF MINES
Neutral Shipping Warned to
Avoid Prescribed Zone in
the North Sea.
Washington.?Notice of a dangerous
area in the North Sea because of
operations against Germauy has
been given by the British admiralty.
A copy of the notice, dated February
13, has been received at the State
Department. It warns shipping that
after February 7 a prescribed*. area,
including all waters around. Germany
and parts of Holland andi Dttwmwrk.
will be dangerous and should fcw?
avoided. The new notice says;
"In view of the unrestricted) weu>
fare carried on by Germany at\ sea
by mines ainl submarines, n? ' ordV'
against the Allied Powers, but also
against neutral shipping, and the
fact that mercnant ships are constant
?
ly sunk without regard to the ultimate
safety of their crews, his Majesty's
government gives notice that
on and after the 7th of February,
11)17, the mentioned area in the
North Sea will be rendered dangerous
to all shipping by operations
against the enemy, and shuiid, there
fore, he avoided."
The notice, which replaces one issued
January 25, bounds the area as
follows:
"Dangerous Area?The area comprising
all the water except Netherlands
and Danish territorial waters
lying to the southward and eastward
of a line commencing four miles frotn
the coast of Jutland, in latitude 56
degrees north, longitude 8 degrees
east, and passing through the following
positions: Latitude 5(> degrees
north, longitude (? dgerees east and
latitude 54 degrees, 45 minutes north,
longitude 4 degrees, 80 minutes east,
thence to a position in latitude 53 degrees,
27 minutes north, longitude 5
degrees east, seven miles from the
coast of The Netherlands."
<>
THE VEGETABLE GARDEN
If a penny saved is a penny earned,
then keeping a garden means
adding a considerable sum to your in
come, says Lewis Edwin Theiss, in
Pictorial Review.
But altogether aside from the cash
value of keeping a garden, there are
other returns the value of which cannot
be estimated. To begin with,
there is the matter of freshness in
your vegetables. If you have always
bought your green goods at a grocery,
you havq yet to learn how
fresh vegetables taste. There is as
much difference between vegetables
fresh from the garden and vegetables
that have been harvested three days
or a week as there is between daylight
and dark. Then, too, there is
an exercise value in gardening. To
busy people, exercise for erercise's
sake is a bore. The same ampunt of
time that my wife spent grudgingly
in exercise, as a city dweller, she now
spends joyfully in the garden. And
those golden hours of sunshine and
gentle exercise among the plants and
flowers have a value that cannot be
estimated. But 1 can see the difference
in increased vigor and strength.
S-> far as we are concerned we have
settled the question. It does pay to
make n imrilfn
o
Nor I>o We.
It may bo very exciting, but personally
we have no desire to jump
I.'>9 feet on skis.?The State.
British casualties for January
show a considerable decrease over
those of the preceding month.
o
For First Class Shoe Repairing
Call on
M.B.KUBOSKE
(Next to the Postoffice.)
Why throw away old Shoes wlie* I
make them like new for a small
SUm. Ask fnr
- A v* O uuuun^
but the beat of leather used.
Give me a trial. Satisfaction
Guaranteed ?
M.B. KUBOSKE
"Here to Save Your Soles."*