The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, October 11, 1917, Page FOUR, Image 4
TOTO
Che ftorrn 30 wild
CONWAY, 8. C
lalMtd at the Post Office at Conwij
I. C., as aecond claaa mail matter.
H H WOODWARD
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THURSDAY, OCT. 11, 1917 |
Ho who marries in haste to avoid
the draft h w may soon discover thn'
he made a bad trade.
o _
Seme husband created by the dra.f:
law may soon wish they were at the
front fa.irg German bullets. We have
good authority for this statement
and it has been made in public speech
e- i some places.
Any oh! thing seems to have beer
go* d enough for some of ti e young
s'c rs who suddenly wanted wive
just before o- just after June 5th, j
1017, aco-d! i" to the rep; rts in some
c ! the daily o pers.
The m"?f' dangerous period in any
cuucs'up in vlif'i t o girl has reach. |
rU that stae-'e when anv o'.l sort of I
iran will do.
It :s hard i present day society for
even the most trutl ful to rcfrai
from telling a lie of some kind.
?
All the larger tracts of timber r*
this section of the State arc bei. g
rapidly cut and hauled to the mil.-.
Now even the small tracts of timb r,
v. here there is any at all, are regarded
as valuable.
This paper sta- d for the farmers
of Horry County more than any other.
o
As now cops are planted and bring
profits to the farmers, the price of
lands in Horry County will go upward
and upward, and they will never come
down again, iluy land now if you :
reed it.
o
The san lv lands rf many sections
of Horrv ore t! " best pea. h and grap.
lands of the country.
o
It is good business for the farmer
to o.vn a t'li k rather than a Curing
car: proviso;i of t-f>\ 1 r. he is not able
to own both.
Concerted r 'i -n am on r th? bu iness
me' of C< nway would soon brinp |
flour mills, cotton factor? s. nn('
wood-working plants to this recti" n
of the State.
o
Yankee brains will have as much
do with the ending of the war as bi.r
Runs and ammunition.
rn i t ^ j 1 mi j *
i ik* uniu'ii ruaics nas noi vof arrived
as a controlling factor in tlv
war; hut she is making the finest progress
in the world.
o
German money is almost without
value in neutral countries. You know
the reason why.
o
It is strnage how the idea has reach
ed some farmers that the dipping of
cattle is a forerunner of the stock law
in this county; that it is only a step
in order to enforce the abolition of
fencing the crops and the beginning
?f a plan to leave the crops in the
open nad fence off pastures for th<
cattle. Nothing is further from tin
truth, for the dipping would ho enforced
just the same even if this section
had the "no fence law."
EAT COTTAG E CH EKSE?SAV-B*
MEAT.
There is skim m'lk on every farm
where cows are kept.
Skim milk is easily made into cottage
cheese. A gallon makes 1 1-pounds.
Cottage cheese is one of the best
substitutes for meat, not only because
of its food value but also because
from it dishes can be made which fit
into pur meals as meat does.
There are more than 5,000,000
farms which keep dairy cows. A
pound of cottage cheese each week
made on each of these farms and used
in place of meat Would mean a quartet
of a billion pounds more meat
available each year for emergency
uses.
If there is only a little skim milk,
make cottage cheese from it and use
it at home. Many farmers have skim
milk enough to make cottage cheese
for home use and to supply families in
near-by towns. The United States
Department of Agriculture urges that
the cottage-cheese maker and the
cc ttage-cheese user get together.
Cottage cheese can be used alone in
salads, as cottage cheese loaf, and in
many oilier attractive dishes.
Turn waste skim milk into a valubale
meat substitute.
I am pleased to announce that we
are not only equipped to give you
Krf /iv l\iif nTf n ii/l nin/iU.ii*
uv UVI inu IIIVI v. V.I 1 IV IV m (II i \ I VJUIV IW I
service in the way of fitting, repairing
and subscribing Eye Glasses awl
would advise that if you are in need
>/ Glasses that you have it done as
Lens are steadily advancing and some
numbers are extremely hard to obtain
on account of the present war.
Come and p,?t them while we have
them, a trial will convince you that
wc can please you by restoring your
vision.
Wo shall he glad to have you call
and look over our line of Jewelry.
Remember that we are agents for the
Jv'ison Re Creation Talking Mac hine,
the one with a soul, the one that actually
r< produces the Human voice.
Respectfully,
adv. ?J. Id. DAWSKY.
PEE DFE~FAIRWI11
BE GREAT SUCCESS
Preparations For Event Arc
Going Forward Satisfactorily.
Preparations for holding the Pee
1 >ee Pair in Florence arc going 'orward
satisfactorily, .and there i
cm ry imm anon mai n o rail' will ue
an un(|uaiii''led su'cess.
People aP over this groat section
are fooling s0 much hotter than they
have for the pa.>t throe years, on account
of hotter crops and better
prices; that they are taking more interests
in outside affairs, and even
though the Poo Deo Fair is more
than a month off, there is already a
lot of talk about it. As the fair
covers the entire Pee Dee, this interest
is general. The attendance will
be a record breaker, and the exhibits
will surpass any heretofore shown.
Great advancement has been made
i n inrrifiilt urn nnrt in t h r> livn ufrwb
industry, and progress in these lines
will be demonstrated by the exhibits.
Then the women have accomplished
wonders, and the womens department
is certainly going to shine.
The grounds will be put in the
very best shape. There will be plenty
of water, the lack of which has
been something of a handicap before
the city mains having been extended
to the grounds. The amusement feature
will be all that fun lovers can
lesire. The premium list is now in
he hands of the printer and will be
nailed out as soon as printed. It carover
throe thousand dollars in
awards. adv It
THPB HORRY HRRi
COLOREOBCQHTINGENT !
LEFT LAST SUNDAY |
Local Board Arranged for Jas.
Lynch to Lodge Colored
Draftees.
The list of colored men called for
military duty to appear here last Saturday
evening at 4 o'clock, were on
hand in obedienec to the notices. They
were given food and lodging by James
Lynch, colored, the board having
made arrangements to that end as
provided by the rules and regulations
oi the war department. They left hreo
for the training camp at Columbia on
the early train last Sunday morning
The list follows:
James Johnson,
Tyler Small,
Tom Ladson,
Lewis Ford,
Jesse Frank Faulk,
Jas. Flag Dixon,
Joseph Cephas Cochran,
James Edy,
Edward Cause,
Wm. Henry Thomas,
Charlie Stevens,
Luther Walden Bellamy,
Wm. Alfred Friend,
Irvin Bellamy,
Wheeler Carter,
Alex M. Stackhouse,
Geo. McRay,
Ben Wright, Jr.,
~ I ? 1 T5 n ..
I I UVI1L' V_/clIYill UVIltllliy,
James Hemingway,
Peter Skipper,
Cain Wilson,
Luther Randall,
Boisy Parmlee,
Henry Doshier De?vitt,
Frank Dudley Shipman,
Pcarlie Holland,
Dock Freeman,
John Henry Carter,
Leon Crate,
Dozier Beaty,
George Benjamin,
Charlie Livingston,
Babe Johnson,
Robert Vaught,
James Gore,
Henry Campbell,
Johnie Gore,
Henry Bellamy,
He-die Brcwn Smith,
Samuel Phillips,
Joseph Gore,
Zcp.o Reaves,
Abram Sump'cer Gore,
R^bert Then\pson,
Richard Bolianiv.
Al. Reaves,
Dock Only Dewitt,
Evvie Jordan,
J< soph Cephas Grissett,
Edwa: <1 Dewitt,
Makuhi Gause,
Joseph Butler,
Joe Wilson,
Henry Clayton Bellamy,
Ben Frazier,
Paul Smith,
Archie Hemingway,
Sam Galloway,
Allen Rut ledge,
Wheeler Johnson,
Isaac Alston,
Franklin White,
Eugene Gran'.-!lie Beaty,
Norman llufus Hewitt,
Troy Davis,
Frank Bellamy,
Bert May,
Caesar Blanshaw Wilson,
James Langston,
Nolly Johnson,
Ben Bellamy,
Wm. Fnmklin Elliott,
Van G uise,
l>, \Kr l .. c
iv1.1> i l ?v t-Mcy ojjtiin,
Sam'l. Alston,
Eliza .Johnson,
Richard Holmes Rriee,
101 mo Sherman,
Joseph Alston,
Wesley Stevens,
r.oX Campbell.
o
WHEAT INCREASE WARRANTED.
One farmer in Harnette County, N.
C., who has just threshed his wheal
eiop, pot 14 bushels to the acre without
the use of commercial fertilize)
K\' t lll'ninci' r\nn tfinnc.' nn.lm. 1....4 .
vv.. I'V (i inn.n UMUVI 11? ; > I J Cil ;
Another used soda and grew 2(5 busn
els to the acre, while a third, with
especially good land and extra prepa
ration, made 86 bushels to the acre
Such a yield at this time, when the
cry is for wheat, means 8 barrels of
flour from each acre besides the other
wheat products from the ?ame ma-1
tcrial. For this reason' -^George A.
Cole, the county agent, is urging an
increase in the wheat acreage.
o .
0
Lost Hit Sweetheart.
Harold, aged five, wns visiting his j
aunt In the city, and the little girl
next door wns his sweetheart till one
day when she enine over with her
little pink tampers on. Mortified, Harold
said: "Why don't you go home
nnd get a dress on; I don't want you
to be a boy."
>> *
fcLD. CONW# Y. 8 kC
-
ii I ! III i J J JII 'I'M 1 l.ili >i i |
.1 ."<> Oilcpp;
D. mn
s flj?
The purchase of a Doi t accords
with the present National spirit
it is the purchase cf motor car
E F F I C I E N C Y WITHOUT
WASTE.
Come in today and look over this
car of fine lines and built-in service
factors.
Touring Car
AND
Roadster
^ W MW
CONWAY SALES COMPANY 5
^ ^KBOIB^'
Its our season-end sr.'c on
and 'till 15th inst we will!
cocks and Talcolette ialc I
I
can or two cans for 25c. c;
; window display.
The Store cf i
Tnr r.r r
| \h H> ulf||
ilOil iHi. Ill
UMUI
=? FLORENCE,
| mmm
" Tho Biggest and
A!! nf YriMi' Prionrk
Write For Prcr
I ciatii
"%//?illlllllllllllllllllll
President Wilson and Secretary! T
Baker are expected to visit Camp the
Wadsworth while the Twenty-sev- ferr
enth Dmsfon is there. Tt is said the ado]
president will make a tour of the resc
Southern training camps during the vigr
fall or early winter before the general had
movement to France begins, but the the
time of his coming has not been an- arc
nounced. assc
The wholesale district in Columbia D
is a busy place these days. The rail- aimroads
and wholesalers have their a lo
hands full and the indications point *'ve
to continued increase in business a>
the
tivities. 'f>00
,r. :
u
llty Goes CI.
|lllllllllllllli!llllllll!ll,
| OFFICIAL R!
| 09RT TEN-DAY E
~ Under Superv
ZZ American Automo
The official results of
ZZ oray Run of the DOR1]
ZZ made on a continuoi
Angeles and San F
ZZ supervision and <
ZZ American Automobile
ZZ follows:
ZZ Mileage
ZZ Gas used 195.37 ?
ZZ 23.03 miles per gc
Gil used 21 pints
ZZ miles per gallon.
ZZ Water used 31
ZZ GOT OH miles per ?
No mechanical repairs. ]
~These figure:-? have been ca
ZZ authentic.
(Signe
J, Woodill Driver W. .1.
W. Fitzgf raid Driver .1. S.
"* * W. D. Felix Driver L. H.
(Ail Signed) (All
Los Angclos, September 1(
li!Hi!S!l!l!Sliilll!ii!!:ii!
i
ftp"
or iip !
U1 fi,yy
i Talcum Powders
soli Co'rjates, Bab3ow(iers
13c per
isli only. Sec our
Quality.
1111! Illl
Hit fiiii] s
! 6-9 |
Best Yet ~ i
will be There ~
mmmm
nium List EEj
fiB* ==i
1? HiMJ- |
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IIUIIIIIIIII llP^
he American Bar Association, at
opening of its annual session deed
all other business until it had
pted by a unanimous rising vote
>lution expressing pnnrovnl
>rous Drosccution of the war ami
set in motion plans to marshal for
aid of the country all lawyers who
members of federal, State or local
>ciations.
eterioration during September of
ost the entire cotton belt caused
ss of 425,000 bales in the prospccproduction
of cotton, and leaves
1917 crop at 12,047,000 equivalent
pound bales.
,
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......I i " .
1 1 1 1 11
:
ear* Through
\
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EPORT OF I
ECONOMY RUN 1
ision of the - M
bile Association ZEZ C
the Ten-Day Econ- ZZZ j
C stock touring Car, ^
is run between Los ZZZ
rancisco, under the
observance of the
Association are as ggZ
4653.4
Radons average ZZZ
iilon. ZZZ
average 1774.64 . ZtE' ,
on arts average L
alien. ~ ?
Mo cost for repairs.
trefully compiled and are - " .7.
il) (1. K. Stephenron ??
Technical Representative ??
Contest Board, A. A. A. IZZZ
Stipe Observer, AAA Lm?m
"Whyte Observer, AAA """ j
Harms Observer, A A A
Signed) TZZZZ
Hh, 1917. ?iil(!lllillSil!!lH!liU!iP:
I
ONE DAY EACH WEEK
WITHOUT MEAT OR WHEAT
David R. Coker, United States Rood
Administrator for South Carolina, h s
issued an appeal to the peep e of the
Slate advocating a meatless an !
whcntlcrs day for each week.
ffAV " * *
i nc following is tl.c appeal to tn '
people of South Cr.Wlina:
"The time has cwme for our prop0
to prove thoi?* patriotism hy li'tlo self
denial. W hile the so'dit r.* nf . us allies
are bravely fighting and eio own *
rp'endid boys are getting ready f r
the big push we mu I do rur p: i t : i
home to support and encourage there.
"The United Stater. Food Adm.ir isolation
itas asked every family of the
notion to abst: in from using wiir .t n
any form during one day of each v.r- k
and also to absh ie frt m the use ? f
rnca' for ore day. It ir. ostkuat d
that SO OOP,000 to 90 0'-0,000 1 ushels
ol wlvat end 2,200 000,0 )0 uouiv's < f
i.i at W' u'd l;e .:rved if the rn
ti'm adopted (his pre.-,!;?
Most of our p'->p o thcre-ugli'y anptociato
our pre; t fovea!, < m p, ard t
would 1>. t\o km <! drip of thorn t u *?
t ox'.'iusivoiy not only one day. hut o.(
-< veral days of the wick. With
beiled hominy for breakfast,
bread for dinner and corn muffin <fr
spoon bread for supper, none of js
will feci the absence of biscuit or light
bread.
"The need of saving wheat an 1
meat is very great, and I, therefor',. ,
call upon the people of South Carolii a
to respond to t'no call of the National
Kcod Administration anl abstain from
wheat and meat on one day of each
week."
o
Not a Coward.
A Philadelphia man who had nft
qualifications for a soldier went
P.evident Wilson's * secretary and
said:
"My Health is fine. Honest Mr.
Tumulty, there ain't a thing the matter
with me except I am afraid. 1
tell you I can't fight. I woke up in
the middle of the night and sec myself
under a pile of dead men, with
tlv, cannon blatting all around and
every bullet coming my way. It isn't
that I don't want to be a soldier, but
I just haven't got the goods, that's
all."
Any man who can talk this way 4
about himself is not a coward. In
private life he is the man who at any
moment might risk his life to save
life and be heroic. C
He might be more useful to his^
country than he would be in the
trenches, and he might do twice the
labor of a soldier for his country with
out shrinking.
In our rage for blaming ar.tf branding
we <lo injustice to many useful
and willing men.
The man who can't lie, or who
won't lie, can never be a coward.
The unfit though healthy should
used right.?The Norwich Bulletin.