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? . I SDK M I l"1 " RED GUARD FORCED TO LAY DOWN ARMS Tear Insignia From Their Sleeves and Rebuke Man Who Addressed Them OPPOSE ARMED WORKERS AND PLAN CONSTITUTION Former Crown Prince Located at Maastricht, Holland Where He is Held. * + / Copenhagen.?All reports reaching here from Germany are of a more hopeful tone. A good impression has been made by the Socialist Government's pronouncement concerning the Constituent Assembly. Vorwacrts declares that the pronouncement "makes the Constituent Assembly a certainty." The Berlin correspondent of the Hamburg Fremdenblatt is encouraged by the events of the last few days. He reports that a large part of the members of the Soldiers' Coun cils have removed the red bands from their sleeves. Soldiers Repress Socialists. Not all clanger for democracy has passed, the correspondent adds, hue he says the Government can rely on the soldiers, who are the "real holders of power." At a meeting of soldiers the withdrawal of the order for the? formation of a civilian Red Guard was demanded. One Socialist speaker who said, "But comrades, you are Socialists," was answered with the ^hout "We are soldiers!" The same Socialist speaker's declaration that it was a duty to spread i the revolution to England an 1 France was loudly disapproved. . A ??. 1--A! - t ,1 . .? jx resoiuuun was passed mat UK: Berlin soldiers would view the arming of laborers with distrust as long as the government failed t3 declare expressly for the summoning of a Constitutional Assembly as the so) 3 basis for the adoption of a Constitution. Factories Resume in Berlin. A good impression has been created by the Government's order to the soldiers to obey their officers an_l maintain discipline. The Prussian Government has announced that Prussia's future will be determined by a Constituent Assembly and the Wurttemburg Government has mad? a similar announcement. All the factories in Berlin have resumed operations. The whereabouts of Ludwig III, former King of Bavaria, is unknown, according to a dispatch from Munic.i to Amsterdam. Dernburg to Enter Cabinet. A despatch received here quotes a message from Berlin saying that th ree civilian politicians will enter the German Cabinet?Herr Waldstein and Dr. Bcrnhard Dernburg, to represent the Progressive Popular Party, and Matthias Erzbcrger, who will represent the Centrists. Otto Bauer, editor of the Viennu Arbeiter Zeitung, has been appointed Austrian Foreign Minister, according to a Vienna despatch recevied here. Mule THE SPARK THAT Copenhagen. ? Friday afternoon': edition of the Vorwaerts of Berlir declared that the report was true that the German fleet was orderci out on October 20 for a final battle which was to be fought until the las! ship was sunk. The pan- German: believed that such a battle would re animate the German people with th< spirit of 1914. It is said that the order to th< fleet spoke merely of a "manoeuvn cruise" but the report that a sacrifi cial battle was intended spread liki wildfire. A general mutiny follow ed. "This," says the Vorwaerts, "wa the real spark that kindled the revo lution." rm ? - - - i rie number of persons killed ii Beriin since the revolution broke ou is said to be about 100. o? OFF FOR EUROPE Washington. ? Food administrate Hoover and Chairman Hurley of th shipping board will sail Saturday o the White Star liner Olympic fo Europe to study problems connecte with the interallied program for fee ing the people of Northern France Belgium Central Europe and th Near East. o The Austro-German frontier now i closed to travelers and traffic of a Mndfc . . ... IMBb.' mi > DEATH RIDES WITH OUR AIR PATROLS Chasers and Bombers Alike Go Ceaselessly Over Foe's Lines. Close to our front line in the neigh borhood of Grandpre I watched a German airplane circling over the narrow foxholes in which crouched our muddy and weary but undaunted infantry. Suddenly the plane skimmed low and the sinister clack-clackclack of its machine gun fusillading our helpless doughboys faintly reach ed my cars, says Lincoln Eyre. A moment later something that looked like a falling star dropped out of the skies right on the ta'il of the low-flying Boche. Abruptly righting itself, the star became an American pursuit plane spitting bullets at the marauder, and the Fokker shot upward and climbed higher, with his pursuer right behind him, and vanished from view far beyond his own lines. Just as the curtain fell upon this little melodrama 1 glimpsed far above even the highest wisps o! cloud a group of our battle planes riding in stately array toward Germany. A sweating runner stopped on his way back from the firing line, glanced upward and exclaimed jubilantly, "Gee, them birds look good to me!" Task at All Times Hazardous. What 1 had seen was simply a bit o'" tho everyday business our airmen are performing on this front. After ward, back at aviation headquarters, I found no report of the occurrence; it was too much a matter of routine to mention in the report. Yet when that American youth drove back his adversary he probably saved a hundred men from wounds or death. In the public mind the aviator 's a dashing Sir Galahad, constantly engaged in spectacular duels in which he shoots his adversary down in flames or is himself destroyed. As a matter of fact, these Olympian combats form only a small part ol our chasse pilots' duties. Most of the time they are carrying out task-, of far less sensational, though equally hazardous, character. Scores of pilots seek vainly for somebody to fight.. They never have the luck to encounter a belligerent foeman, and are perforce obliged to content themselves with the routine oi patrolling the sky lanes. Yet they arc every whit as necessary to our ai my as the luckier and celebrated aces, just as the destroyer which never sights a submarine is quite as valuable in war at sea as her sister ship which has sunk dozens. Even the leaders of our corps, like Capt. Eddie Uiekenbacher, do not always find the Boche willing to give battle. Capt. Rickenbacher's latest exploit, in fact, consisted in a sort of game of hare and hounds, in which he was the hound and a Fokker with a crippled engine was the hare. The German sought vainly to volplanback to his own territory, firing scarcely a single shot, but Rickenbather managed to manoeuvre hi a so cleverly he was obliged to com' down a half a mile behind our owr I trenches. How Meissnor "Got" a Balloon. The same morning Capt. J.me Meissner oi Brooklyn, sent after i ' > certain German plane, found it \va i not yet aloft, and he promptly darto * down to within seventy-five feet o 1 the ground, from which height he so , a balloon ablaze with incendiary ma t chine gun bullets as it lay in its nes ; three miles behind the German front - The defenders of the gas bag riddle: 3 Meissner's wings with machine gu; fire, but he got home safe and sound 3 The first pursuit group to wide I 1 11 I'll 1 I* ? incse acos Dciong, sun noma tno \va - record for the number of encnr t> planes desrtoyed within a give - period. Since the First Army bega to operate in the St. Mihiel salient s four squadrons of which the group i - composed, and which total a littl more than a hundred fliers, have ha ? r> 127 officially listed victories, ir . eiuuiHK tliG destruction of fort', three Boche balloons. In the same period their own casv alties have been less than 15 pc r cent, of their adversaries' total. The e have fought 373 combats, fifty r n which took place in one day, Oct. 1 r in two months there have been onl d five days when the group has bee d unable to send planes aloft, i, Lieut. Frank Luke, now officiall e registered as missing, was the stf of the group, with eighteen vietoric Capt. Rickenbacher now heads tl s list with sixteen, though unofficial! II his total runs higher. There are a together sixteen aces in the group. THB HOBJtY HEK1 TOMORRC What is done in chi blood and build up rag or breaks the man of 1 youth, with nervous em constant care and scorn i to help maintain strength and the dual strain of growth and 1 The reputation of Scott's is nourishing qualities and its al Scott a Bownc, filooii MflRF HftRSF RFANQ ITIVIIk IIVIIUU ULflllU SHOULDBE GROWN Horse beans, because of their quality and high feeding value, should be grown much more extensively in this country, according to Farmers' Bulletin 909, recently published by the United States Department of Agriculture. Their value, according to the bulletin, has long been known in the Old World where | from ancient times they have been grown as a vegetable, a forage, and a green-manure crop. VA\ some sections of this country. ; particularly the Pacific Coast Spates, the large flat-reeded varieties ar pioduccd in home gardens and ar"* used either green, dried, or canned as a vegetable much the same as any of the more common beans. Although their seed as stock feed ha been limited in the United States, they arc considered in some cases to he superior to field peas and other leguminous crops. All varie.ies nl lmivn lirr.n,: *i i*? v ..x/? ? V U1 u u 111 VCl -(i; I V* ^ 1 1' annuals and should bo plaited in the fall in Southern States and in early spring in northern latitudes. Horse beans are not very exacting Uf to soil requirements, but do best on well-drained, heavy loam or clay loam soil. A good supply of moisture, however, is essential. The crop requires practically the same climatic conditions as common vetch. The hardier varieties stand a winter temperature of 15 degree:*, above zero without serious injury, I but the tenderer varieties are frequently killed by light frosts. Ben j development is made in cool weather {and in localities having mild winter [conditions such as prevail in the i South and Pacific Coast State1-. Seeding can be done in September, October, or November, the exact time depending largely upon the soil moisture available in these months In northern localities or at high elevations. farther south where severe I winter conditions prevail, pla iting I should bb done as early in the spring as tlie ground can be worked. Seeding of small-seeded varieties can be done with a common com planter, and planters used for lima brans are suitable for the larger varieties. Except when grown on a commercial scale for drying and for stock feed or as a green-manure crop, seeding is usually done by 'hand. Horse beans planted on lan 1 I for the first time require inocula' j lien, which is true with most, if not 1 j all, legumes. The crop should bI cut for seed as soon as the lowei ; parts are mature and the upp i ones fully developed. They must be handled as rapidly as possible aftri cutting, as the seed shatters easily 1 Under favorable conditions the see "> _ . ! 1 1 1- j l , yn-Kiri are ncavy, inc average pro 'Uluction being about ! 1-2 tons )V: 1 acre. Seed retains its vitality f* u long period; germination test "ivifh jeed 4 years old has rhowi * ! only slight, if any, determination. km mwm TO THEIR mm. y "I n| So constant has been the improve t, j mem in the influenza situation ove s i the- State that Dr. C. V. Akin, Unite o States public health service, i d charge of influenza control worl i- has felt warranted in releasing fro; . j-'orvico in the State p. numbo** ?f pu I lie health service physicians \vh i-{have rendered most valiant sei >r service to many communities. Ur y der authority from Surgeon Genert >f Rupert Rluc of the health pervic< r,. these men have been returned t y their homes though their names ai n still kept on list in Washington c physicians subject to call for servic y in epidemics whenever and wher* ir ever needed. s. o . ic i The independent Social Democrat y in the new government have deman< 1- ed the arrest of Admiral von Tirpit former minister of the German navy V ILD, OOHWAY, 8. 0. )W'S MAN ildhood days to enrich the ;ged health often makes tomorrow. The growing ergy overwrought, needs MUISION vitality equal to withstanding vear and tear of the body. a. based upon its abundant >ility to build up strength. Yfit ificM.N.J. ' 1** ? ?a APP VrkIT I>I A VTivr< iiuu i V/LI 1 & 111 VI MORE OF WHEAT? Clcmson College, S. C , Nov. 13th. j ?To aid in the promotion of the fall food campaign the Agronomy Division of the Extension Service makes some good suggestions on planting wheat in South Carolina. Soils for Wheat.?Wheat requires a fertile soil, preferably a clay or a j clay loam. It will grow successfully , on the lighter sandy soils only when heavily fertilized. The soil should | be well drained and should not be . low and marshy. I Preparing (lie Land.?If the land is to be plowed in preparation for 'wheat it should be plowed as early j a.- possible and medium deep. Land I j should not. be plowed deep just bc| fore planting, as wheat needs a firm ,-soil with a loose mulch on the surface. Much of the wheat will, of neccs- j , sity, be planted or corn and cotton J land. This can be done by using* at I 1 _ _ l - i l T i ? * ? imu-iior.se orni. ii can also do done by seeding: broadcast and p'owing in , with a cultivator or sprirg-tcothcd , harrow. I Fertilizers for Wlv. at.?The bed , fertilizer for wheat which is avail- J ' able to the farmer at the present j time is a mixture cf equal parts of j acid phosphate and cotton seed meal , applied to the time of seeding and ( at the rate of 400 to 500 pounds per acre. It is advisable to top dress [wheat in March with 100 pcurms o! ; I nitrate of soda per acre if it is avail ( 'able. If the nitrate of soda is not l available it will be profitable to top] , dress with barn-yard manure early in the spring, j Time to Plant.?Anytime from the middle of October to the flr.t of Do-' j comber will be satisfactory, but the soonei wheat is up after the first killing frost the better i', will bo. Amount of Seed to Plan'.?The best rate of si odintr is. ! to 0 nn-k ; per acre. Host Varieties to Plant.?Sonic of the best variiies oi' whor.t for South \ Carolina arc Red May. Kelt:'., Fulcaster, Blue Stem (purple straw), and Leap's prolific. SERVICE THAT WINS THE SOLDIER HEART . i i Fred Lockley, Y. M. C. A.. Tells o. Jie Gratitude of the Boys at the Front. .1 "One of the discoveries men are making over here," Fred LoeUlcy^vf the Y. AI. C. A. and of Portland, Oregon, writes from London, "is that more pleasure can he had out of giving (ban getting Many a man who has spent money freely in the old days i' ; to buy pleasure is finding that lie gets V > W k ! /-? IvIikllUIIII/k /tt'iiit It / .ll/k lv?f Aim ?\i\*k/l - I ii ms i i; I; n? I < 11 ? inn iiuri: 11$ IIU." ??#v:in?" ing of one's self in (lit; service of others. I MA few months ago 1 went out with a fellow V. M. C. A. secretary to hunt j up out-of-tho-wn.v detachments ol troops. A stable guard here, a rnnchine gun company there, ti platoon ) Somewhere else. We carried our I goods in an automobile. We had plenty of writing paper and envelopes , for free distribution, and chocolate, 1 cookies, chewing tobacco and smoking i tobacco, cigarettes, razor blades j. j tooth paste and things of that kind foi .! sale. American war service workers ( I were busy everywhere. We found Sal" | vation Army lassies making doughnuts j for the hoys and K. of G. secretaries n i giving help. Hooks furnished by tin b I American Library Association were ti ,, | be seen on all sides. "Hearing firing at a distance, wc drove down the road and found n " score or so of men at tnnchino gut 11 practice. The officer gave the met half an hour recess to buy goods, o "At another place we came in sight c of a lieutenant drilling a platoon. ] ,f said to the lieutenant: 'How soon bo ,c fore you dismiss the company? W? % have Y. M. C. A. goods for saleu' "j "lie snld: 'Hight now. Sergeant dismiss the company I* | "And ten Reconds late.r the companj t?; was in line waiting to buy goods fron 1-1 our traveling 'Y.' Grateful Is no nam< J for It. The men can't do enough t< I ttl.n... ill-J- M j miuw uivir giuiuuu<&* # / ? MOTOR TRUCKS SHOWN IN FARMING REPORTS Longer Hauls at Less Cose Disclosed in Reports to Department 4. Motor-truck hauls in 1918 from farm to shipping point averaged 11.?. miles, while wagon hauls averaged 9 miles; and a motor truck made 3.1 I round trips per day over its longer I route of 11.8 miles, while wagons made 1.2 round trips per day over. the 9-mile distance. Toe,estimated coot for hauling in | wagons from farm to shipping point averaged in 1918 about 30 cents a ton a mile for wheat, 33 cents for corn, j and 48 cents for cotton; for hauling ir. | motor trucks or by tractors the aver-; ages arc 15 cents for wheat or corn 1 and 18 cents a ton-mile for cotton. ( These figures are based on reports j made by correspondents of the Bureau , of Crop Estimates of the United Stat-! es Department of Agriculture. Motor Cost Declines. A similar inquiry in 19015 showed an : averagd for wagons of 19 counts per) j ;i . i i ' ' 1 ii-nuic ivr nauiing corn or wneai, ..nd 27 cents for cotton. In 19< 8 wagon costs wore naturally higher, since prices and wages have incrcat- i od, but motor truck costs were much lower in 191S than even the wagon costs of 1900, due to greater efficiency of the motor truck. The cost of wagon hauling a ton- | mile for wheat among the geographic divisions in 1918 was lowest in Urn Pacific States, 22 cents. Above this, in order, are the North Central States east of the Mississippi River, with 20 . cents; the West North Central States 29 cents; the West'South Central, ?2 cents; the East South Cencrtat, !io cents; New England and tho Middle Atlantic States, MS cents, the South Atlantic States, M9 cents; and, highest | of all, the Rocky Mountain States, with 42 cents a ton-mile. In motoivtruck hauling the order of the different divisions of the country begins with 9 cents a ton-mile for wheat in 1918 in the East North Central, 10 cents in the East South Central. 14 rents in Now Km land the Middle Atlantic, and the West North Ccncrtal, 15 cents in the West South Central, 17 cents in the Pacific, 18 ; cents in the South Atlantic, and 2!) j cents in the Rocky Mountain States. ? Trailed^ Often Used. The motor trucks generally in u*-e | by farmers are not large trucks, but small ones whose nominal caput ity is UMtally 1 to 2 tons. In suite a numi bcr of countries throughout the country the trucks used for hauling are made-over passenger cars. In some j cases light wagons are attached us j trailers to ordinary passenger cars and produce is taken to market in that way. In North Dakota and CaliI ifornia, as well as other States, trac; tors, each drawing several wagons, are used for hauling grain. Trailer, aie also used, especially in the We a';, with horse-drawn wagons. Cor the United States as a whole 'the average wagon load of wheat was 55 bushels in 1 DOG and f>(> bushels in j lints, and mo motcr-trucK ioa<i in tn-1 lattei voar was 84 bushels. For com. i the wagon loads of 1900 and 1918 j wore 89 bushels and, the motor-truck load of 1918 was 58 bushels. The cotton load for 190G and 1918 for wag! ons was 8.4 and 8.6 bales, respectiveS ly, and for motor trucks G.G bales in 1918. i o 14ring us your order for letter i heads. o CRYING FOR HELP i ???? i Lots of It in Conway But Daily Growing Less. The kidneys often cry for help. \; Not another organ in the whole ' i body more delicately constructed1, Not one more important to health. The kidneys arc the filters of the 1 j blood. ' | When they fail the blood becomes > foul and poisonous. * j There can be no health where ? there is poisoned blood. Backache is one of the frequent j indications of kidney trouble. , It is often the kidneys' cry for f help. Heed it. Read what Doan's Kidney Pills > 1 l i? _ i ? ? ? * !' ?r%?i rr?i? /Mfnviifnvirn/I irt/-?w ai ?o I itiil VlWit'w -A V A I */4 VV?fA?%OVt iViitMlyJ l)| j Road what Doan's have*done for * , Conway people. i Mrs. D. W. Harrison, Conway, i says: "About a year ago I had a i terrible backache and didn't know what was the matter. I was awfully I nervous and I couldn't do my house[ v/ork. Dizzy spells bothered me and . I would have to hold on to something ? for fear of falling. My kidneys acted irregulary and bothered me a , great deal. Finally I got Doan's Kid ney Pills and after I had taken one r box I was cured of all the misery." , Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't 9 simply ask for a kidney remedy?get Doan's Kidney Pills?the same that Mrs. Harrison had. Foster-Milbum Co., Mfgrs., Buffalo, N. Y.?adv ' 1 f? ?^?mm* IN LOVING MEMORY. w . / On October 19, 1918, the 'death; cupel visited the home of Mrs. Ida M. Singictary and took away her loving husband, James. All was done for him that doctors and all earthly hands could do, But our dear L*>rd and Master that doeth all things sfcll thought it best to take him home, He was kind and loving. He loved his ; church and tried to servo the Lord as best he could. He looked as happy as . if he had been looking in the face of ' Jesus as he fell asleep. It is so hard to part with our dear brother, but his work on earth is done, and he is gone : to be with Jesus and his dear little son. Sleep on dear brother, and take thy rest; the Savior hath called 1 thee, He knew it best. His body was laid to rest at the Bakers Chapel cem- . etery where in grief we left hie* with his dear little baby to await thb Res- . urrection Mom. He left a wife, on?little son, his parents, four sistersjK five brothers, and a host of friends and relatives to mourn our loss, bftt we hope our loss is his Heavenly gain. Oh, how we miss his smiltovft : face, and lone to hear the voice ko c -still. There is his chair, a vacantplace, this cruel world can never filtl. He is gone from us but not foraottejfl^, Never will his memory fade7 Our sweetest thoughts will ever ling-.. er Around the grave where he is laid. We only trust in (?o<l to lead us on to that bl ight happy home where we can live with him for ever whenwork on earth is done. His Loving Sister, ?AD DIE. o ? A Womas's Story Subject cf Discus I Women of Experience. Women everywhere tell tlietr friends how, through tlio us? of Mothcr'r. Friend, tho wonderful penetrating external application, they avoided puffcrinf? ni:d dls'.rcra before the advent cf naturc'o rr.o?.t wonderful evo iUIIOU. . Mother's Friend is r. rcracdy whlTO*" npronds Its influence upon the cord.*, r.crves ni.d ligament* involved, rendcrir.;; them pliant to readily yield to nature's demand for cxpn-rdon. The nerves, cord.-, t< r.don* and ligaments expand without tl t peculiar wrenching (train, and nervousma3, nausea and unrcstful sensation* nro naturally r.Tolded when tho nerves ond muv-'lci are relieved and thus arc not tort and dr \n. Dy regular use, the lower nbdordriul region expends with ease when baby H the hours arc less at the cih:3? ancj ^ola and danger Is naturally lest. You can obtain Mother'.*) Friend from any drug store, it has been used by worneif for over half a century, and is just aa standard as anything you can think of. Write the * Brad Held Hcgukitor Company? Dept. IF, l.atniir Building, Atlnntn, Georgia? for tiicir Mothcrhixa! Book, ami get u bottlo of Mother's Krlcnd today, anil thus fortify) yourself against pain and discomfort. o SUBSTITUTES NOT REQUIRED. The Food Administrator last week removed the regulation which had required, householders and bakers to intrcha.se 20 per cent, of substitutcK with each purchase of wheat flour. The regulations put into effect by the Administration were not followon any closer in the whole country than they weir in Horry County. The people aie now relieved from this i equirer.u nt. The Food Administrator still advocates the conservation of flour. NOTICE O.F SALE. Under and by virtue of the deeV%5 ~ ' and judgment of the court made by his Honor S. VV. G. Shipp, Judge of the Twelfth Circuit, at Chambers, in Florence, S. C., in the case of Tri-szie Todd, Plaintiff vs. E. S. Booth, Eli/.a Gasque, W. M. MisEoc and Ellen Todd, Defendants, and dated the 21st day of October A. I). V-wtfs, 1 I, W. Ii. Bryan, Clerk of the Canrt of Common Pleas, and Special Roferee for Horry County, will sell at ( public auction to the highest bidder before the Court House door at Conway, in Horry County, and State of South Carolina, during legal hours of sale, on salosday in December, 1918, it being the second day of month, all and singular those certain lands situate in Horry County, and described as follows, wit: "All and singular that certain parcel, or tract of land lying and being situate in Bayboro Township, County and State aforesaid, containing forty (40) acres, more or less, and 1 lying on the north side of Maple \ Swamp, the same being the wtofiti- I tal tract conveyed unto C. Jackson Todd by J. T. Booth, by his deed 1 dated October 13th, A. D., 1894, and bounded at present by lands of Enoch Booth, Allen Booth, Joe Baker, James Allen, and Burroughs & Colllins Company?the ulentical tract on which C. Jackson T<ftd lived at the time of his death." I Terms of Sale Cash. Purchase! , to pay for papers. W. L. BRYAN, Clerk of the C. of C. C. P. and Special Referee. J L. B. SINGLETON, Plaintiff's Attorney, i \ (