The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, February 07, 1918, Page EIGHT, Image 8
"I
AVE YC
Q WASH C
I THEM A
FOR COTTON A
ABLY. WILL N<
ANY REASONAI
THE GOVERNI
OTHER MATTEI
Buy War S
investment payi
any time upon t<
125 cents and $5
25 cents ar
| tnai a sinyie su;
of these strands
I A Country wor
Bum
STRIKE SITUATION
IS UNCHANGED
No Extension of Disturbances
in Germany, Copenhagen
Says
AUTHORITIES TAKING |
STERN MEASURES?'
Frobable Meaning of Extension
of Martial Law?Movement
Receding.
ulon.?The latest telegrams rein
Copenhagen from Berlin re'
situation as unchanged, says
hango Telgeraph dispatch
Danish capital. The strike
;n extended.
liner Tageblatt reports
ps seized the trade union
rlin and arrested Deptnd
other leaders.
Law Extended
ial law has been cxi
and Hemelingen, a
vdinrr n nnrt s re
. VX.
of Uerlin, in an
mossion for three
p was taken be
? > a mass strike
out in two more
.?<! strikers at Nuiiavaria,
have resumed worl
?jYiA.? vwo <my CH'muusvriiuun Mi ni Mav'J'i1'
l-aw Proclaimed
I)eclarati6.n ?f martial law in tl?
great ports of Hamburg and Breme<
sipd a lack of detune news eonctjrn
itog the progress of the strike move
ment in Germany indicate the possi
Mlity that the authorities have take
stern measures to deal with the di.*
contented workmen. Belated reports
however, show thai the movement ha
spread widely since Monday. Soin
correspondents in Holland believe t'.'
situation has grown worse, owing i
;he effort of the German govenme
co minimize the importance of tl
strike an 1 the scarcity of new
)UR FERTILIZER AND POTA
IUT YOUR FERTILIZER SACKS
iWAY CAREFULLY; YOU WILL
ND COTTON SEED NEXT FALL
DT BE ABLE TC BUY COTTON
RLE PRICE. THEN, CO-OPE
WENT IN FOOD REGULATION,'
RS.
avings Stamps. A profitable, si
ng 4 per cent, compounded, n
en days' notice, issued in two d
.00.
id $5.00 seem s nail amounts b
and in a cable das no strength b
bound together uphold the Broo
00 YoliP Sit
th fighting for is wc
ighs & Collin
While a report from Copenhagen
says that all the socialist leaders have i
been summoned to Berlin to discuss
political questions, advices received >n '
Amsterdam are to the effect that
Chancellor von Hertling, following
the example of Minister of the Interior
Walraff, had refused to see a 1
strikers' delegation. i
In Berlin, there has been a fatal
clash between the strikers and the'
police, and minor disturbances arc re-j
parted to have occurred in other sec- j
lions as well as in the suburbs of the i
capital. The Berlin press says the
movement in Berlin has reached a cli-I
max and that it is losing its effective
ifss. Reports received at Amsterdam
f'om other industrial sections say
that the ike is not getting fufl support.
More than 700,000 workers
have been reported on strike in Bei '.in.
There are reports of new strikes
hi the Dortmond mining district and i
I in Danzig and Munich, while it is said
; the strikers in Nuremburg, Bavaria,
have returned to their tasks.
Military Operations
Military operations on the western
front aim still of a minor character,
On the front l>etween Asiago and the
Brcnta, the Italians persist in their
attacks, although not in such a large
| scale as earlier in the week. Now I
' Italian positions west of the Frenzola
; valley have been extended. Berlin says
J that the new Italian attacks near
; Asiago have been repulsed.
! A severe blow to the ambitions of
; the Ukranian republic appears to have
'been dealt in the capture of Kiev, tho
temporary capital, by the Boshevitcl.
The city is said to have surrendered
i after four shots had been fired.
The peace negotiations between
Russia and the Central Powers havt
reopened at Brest-Litov.sk. A repoit
from Petrograd says that the first
question taken up concerned the oc
*' j cupied territories, which has been t\
'i stumbling block since the pourparler.i.
began.
l- Reports Very Vague
n j London.?Little fresh 'informatio*
4 A1
Ion the strike movement in iierman;
-I had come through early today and vir
- j tually all the news in the morninj
n | papers here had been delayed '1
transmission. None of the Berlii
newspapers of Wednesday's date ha
iS arrived in Amsterdam, and several o
them are not printing owing to strik
i' | e among their employees.
Delegates representing the striker?
v Icording to Amsterdam reports, at
uv t-nnptcd to interview Chanellor vo
-?. j Hertling, hut he refused to see then
I
mumaai
rnmamgmmmmmmm?a
m?amaamammmmmmm?mm?mmmmmwmmmMmmmammmm?mmm?mmmm
I
1
TO SACKS:
; AND PUT
NEED THEM ' |
AND. PROBSHEETS
AT ;
RATE WITH I
5 AND ALL
impie, secure g
edeemable at I
enominations, I
ut remember |!
ut thousands I
klyn Bridge. |
yrth saving for
is Co.
'I
us had Hon* Walraff, minister of the
interior.
The actual situation Thursday is ex
trcmely vague. The scarcity of news
induces some correspondents in Holland
to assume that the situation has
grown worse, but they warn against
attaching importance to the strike
movement as far as the army is concerned.
The Berne correspondent of The
Daily Mail depreciates a loo ready
assumption that the strike will have
serious effects in Germany. He says
no strike or revolt in Prussia can be
taken seriously until it has won its
st urs.
Views of London Press.
Newspaper opinion in London regarding
the strike is divergent. Some
papers incline to the belief that the
strike really denotes the growing
strength of a democratic spirit ;n
Germany while others favor the view
that the whole thing to a great extent
has been engineered by the government
for its purposes. The Daily
News, while accepting with reserve
the more extravagant accounts,
thinks it is obvious that there has
I I ? ? /1 . . 1 A ..
peon spread mio uermany aim Austria
some measure of the spirit which
dethroned the Russian Emperor. It
adds:
"The tide for which President Wilson
has so long and so patiently cut
the channel is beginning- to flow at
last. A cleavage between the German
people and their rulers stands re
vealcd but as yet the cleavage is no
more than an incipient one."
I LAND WR TOWN"
OFFERED FOR SALE
We offer for sale at a very lo\>
1 figure the fifteen acre tract of lan'
; near the corporate limits, the propel'
ty of Mrs. Katherine G. Rollinson
This tract lies of the north side o
1 the road leading from Conway
' iir:n ci : : l
wiiiow opnng, imiiiixuuit: uppusii'
- the old Melson residence, and !
* hounded by lands of Col. I). A. Spive;
1 (Sanders Place) and others. Call o
1 write us for our lowest price to-da\
* - Horry Land Agency,--adv
f '
As the situation is now we ar
fighting to maintain our homes, an
<, ;f we did not do this, it would h(? onl
-1 a short time before we would h
nj fighting to repel invaders of ou
t,| homes.
ALD, OOVWAT. 9. o. I
FERTILIZE NOW III
MANURE
The Cheapest Fertilizer ||
THE world shortage of farm products means continued high prices for I
everything your land can produce. Plant more acreage this year ^ I
and make each acre produce more. fl
Now is the time to use Manure?the cheapest fertilizer. I
The following comparison of the plant food value in commercial fcrtil- J
izer and manure bears evidence that it is to your interest from a cost fl
standpoint to use Manure on your land. I
? ,
I A COMPARISON OF THE COSTS OF PLANT FOOD IN COMMER- \ I
I CIAL FERTILIZERS AND MANURE I I
II BASIC PRICE PER UNIT |U
Ammonia # $7.00 JII
Acid $1.2 5 81
I Potash $0.00 ill
COMMERCIAL s MANURE FROM CAMP I
FERTILIZER " JACKSON
Analysis? " ^ Analysis? I
I S-3-0 cost i^er ton $37.00 Acid, 0.45 at $1.2 5 $.56 I
8-3-3 cost per ton $54.00 Ammonia, 0.68 at $7.00 4.70 I
10-2-0 cost per ton $30.00 Potash, 0.58 at $6.00 3.48 I
$8.80 9
ACTUAL WORTH OF MANURE BASED ON COMMERCIAL FER- I
TILIZER $8.80 9
I Furthermore the decaying* organic matter in the Manure is 9
| constantly adding available plant food to the soil, is valuable 9
I both from a humus standpoint as well as a land builder. Manure 9
I will snow results lor three years, and its cost divided through III
this period will show a much lower cost per unit of plant food I II
than any other fertilizer on the market. I II
Car Lots a Specialty II
Cars Average 33 Tons II
WE ARE daily making shipments of this product into all sections of III
the country, and it is being received with entire satisfaction on ac- III
count of its excellent quality and condition on arrival at III
destination. III
It contains no objectionable matter such as trash, dirt, obnoxious III
grass seeds, etc.; oat straw is the only bedding used, and the Manure III
naturally contains a small quantity, but not sufficient to make it objec- I II
tionable. As a matter of fact it is worth more than its weight, on ar- III
count of its high value of potash, which makes it more valuable as a fer- III
THE RAILROAD COMMISSION OF I
SOUTH CAROLINA
September 5, 1917.
r ,kv. ';;a!{ vr 2f , this schedule of i
Freight Rate Adjustment
Special Rate on Stable Manure. Applicable freight rates i
between points in South Carolina. I
Carload minimum 80,000 pounds; per ton, Will enable you to determine II
2,000 pounds H
Not subject to percentage reduction on joint Wfcttei toyour shipping' poiltt. ^ II
trafl,c- Shipment can be made from H
Kate .
5 miles and under $ ?itbO |l
10 miles and over 5 miles 00 H
15 miles and over 10 miles 05 camp jackson
20 miles and over 15 miles 70 H
25 miles and over 20 miles 75 Columbia, S. C. Bl
80 miles and over 25 miles 80 II
35 miles and over 80 miles 85 ft I
40 miles and over 85 miles 90 camp wadsw0rth ii
50 miles and over 40 miles 9o v. o r% H
60 miles an,I over 60 miles 1.00 Spa.-tanburg, S. C.
70 miles.and over 60 miles 1.05 write us today h
80 miles and over 70 miles 1.10 . U
1 > t i r. Tf vmi arn in torocf Arl in nt*nm nt , "m WA
00 miles and over tfu mnes ~v???w? ... W.ut/V , Y Ml
100 mile.i and over 90 miles 1.20deliyery We already have nu. Ij
120 miles and over 100 miles 1.2o
140 miles and over 120 miles 1.30 merous orders booked for B
160 miles and over 140 miles 1.3.) * u * ? fl
ISO miles ami over 160 miles 1.40 prompt shipment, but Will USO H
200 miles and over 180 miles 1.45 our best efforts to make deliv- fl
220 miles and over 200 miles 1.60 fl
240 miles and over 220 miles 1.55 ery accordance with your in
260 miles and over 240 miles 1.00 structions fl
' 280 miles and over 240 miles 160 H
; ::::::: is agents wanted in unoc- i
Effective September 17, 1017. cupied territory. |
] Superseding all rates in conflict. H
By order of the Commission. H
J. P. DAUBY, Secretary. |
' 1
ADDRESS ALL COMMUNICATIONS TO
Powell Fuel Co.
?l
Columbia, S. C.