The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, February 20, 1919, Page SEVEN, Image 7
I
?
I 1 KEEP IT SWEET
4 I Keep your stomach sweet
8 1 today and ward off the indiI
gestion of tomorrow?try
I KmiehQS
I N the new aid to digestion.
[ I As pleasant and as safe to
f I take as candy.
i I MADE BY SCOTT * DOWNS
I MAKERr. OP CCOTT'S EMULSION
o
SLOW IN COMING.
- >
Although the war was ended last
i November and although it was
j! thought that the boys needed badly
< at home would all be back again to
| plant their crops for 1919; yet in
somn cases some of the boys who are
nfuch needed at this period are still
{ in the army. In some cases efforts
made by their relatives to get the
Y boys out of the service to aid depend
r cnt relatives have apparently proved
without results. In some cases of
this kind there is a slowness about
obtaining dicharges in some way.
^ D. A. SPIVEY & CO.
{ X W. B. King, Sccty.
BONDS AND INSURANCE
?Office in?
1'EOPLES NATIONAL BANK
j?- BUILDING
^
H. H. WOODWARD,
Attorney and Counsellor at La*
CONWAY, S ~
B. B. SCARBOROUGH
^ Attorney at Law,
CONWAY. 8. C.
S. P. HAWES
Auto Supplies, Fancy Groceries
Ajax Tires, guaranteed 500( ;
^ ' miles.
PHONfi 57.
QUICK DELIVERY.
T. B. LEWIS,
Atty. and Oouncellor at Law
_ CONWAY, - - - S. C
J. M. JOHNSON,
l CIVIL ENGINEER
MARION, S. C.
My Engineering and Surveying
office will be open during my ab
ence, and prepared to take care
. - 1 I A J
or any worn as usuai. nuuico? I
all communications as hereto
fore.
WILLIAM EUGENE KING, M I
Physician and Surgeon
Office in Piatt Drug (Jo.
AYNOR,. S.C.
t -
OR. J. D. THOMAS
; Physician and Surgeon
LO&I8, s. o.
LUM JUNG LAUNDRY,
CONWAY, 8. C,
Beginning Jaly 1st. 1919
All persons must take tickets |foi
, work left here. Possitively nc
work delivered until ticket is pre
'* sen ted. Laundry not called for lr
30 days will be sold for charges
LUM JUNG
DR.G.!, LEWIS
DENTAL SURGEON
Office Over Norton Drue Cow nee*
CONWAY, s. c.
V ^ . >
BnDnuna?(aaBD
g HORRY COUNTY S
g TRUST COMPANY S
0 L. D. Magrath B
El Manager. B
B Real Estate B
B Real Estate Loans B
O Bonds B
B Insurance B
ODennngBss
PROGRESS MADE
IN LEAGUE PUN
?
Commission Now wearing End
of task of World
Agreement.
Paris?.?The following official comI
niunication was issued today.
! "At 1:30 o'clock this afternoon .at
Hotel do Crillon the commission on
the league of nations held a mooting
which was marked by the name accord
of view that has characterized
its previous sessions.
"At the Ollfl of this mootiinr iho
commission finch itself nearing the
end of its task. Only a few articles
of the draft remain to be; presented
formally to the members of the commission.
A few matters, referred to
the drafting committee for clarification,
still require reference back to
the commission and certain points
provisionally accepted may be reopened
for discussion before the
commission makes its report to the
conference.
"M. Ricci Busatti was named t>
represent the Italian delegation on
the secretarial. The committee will
meet again .at 10:30 Monday morning.
"On Sunday afternoon the drafting
Nobody wants anything
when he buys from a merchrv;
buy what he needs at fair pri?
At the Sam
The year of 1919 finds i
a full line of staple good:
that are fair to our customer:
Give Us
If you have not been trai
us a trial this year.
DUSENBU!
Toddville,
HARRELSON & HARRELSON
Attorneys-at-Law
Practice both in the State an!
Federal Courts.
MULLINS, ? ? SO.
HANDS. ARMS,
LIMBS ASLEEP
And Wat Rnn-Down, Weak and
Nervous, Says Florida Lady.
Five Bottles of Cardui
Made Her WelL
Kathleen, Pla.?Mrs. Dallas Prine,
of this place, says: "After the birth
of my last child... I got very much
run-down and weakened, so much
that I could hardly do anything at
all. I was so awfully nervous that
I could scarcely endure the least
noise. My condition was getting
worse all the time...
I knew I must have some relief or
I would soon l>e in the bed and in a
serious condition for 1 felt so badly
and was so nervous and weak I could
hardly Hvo. My husband asked Dr.
about my taking Cardul. lie
said, 'It's a good medicine, and good
for that trouble', so he crof k
W w V MVW"
ties... After about the flecond bottle T
felt greatly Improved.. .before taking
It my limbe and hands and arms
would go to sleep. After taking it,
however, this poor circulation disappeared.
My strength came back to
me and I was soon on the road to
health. After the use of about 5 bottles,
I could do all my house-work
and attend to my six children besides."
-V
You can feel safe in giving Cardul
a thorough trial for your troubles. It
contains no harmful or habit-forming
drugs, but Is composed of mild, vegetable,
medicinal Ingredients with no
bad after-effects. Thousands of women
have voluntarily written, telling of
the good Cardui has done them. It
should help you, too. Try It. E 74
THE BORKY HER
committee above referred to, consisting
of Paul Ilymr.ns (Belgian); Leon
P.ourgeois (Prance); Lord Robert
Cecil (Great "Britain); and M. Venizclos
(Greece), will meet at the Hotel
Majectic in order to prepare a report
for the next meeting of the committee."
The official statement issued to- j
day on the meeting last night of the
peace conference commission on a society
of nations says:
"The commission on the society of
nations met on the evening of February
7 and continued its discussion
or articles of the draft. Substantial
agreement was reached by the commission
on the chief points discussed.
The commission decided however,
hat certain clauses of the draft
should be referred to a subcommittee
of four for clarification. In order
the greatest possible progress might
be made with the draft it was decided
to resume the discussion on the
morning of February 8 at 10:30
t 'clock.
?o
WAS t ALLKI) OFF.
Influenza is still causing much
trouble in Dillon county it appears.
On account of this disease the members
of the bar of Dillon last week
asked iho judge to call off the term
>f the court which was to have con
j vcncd there this week. It was feared
that the gathering at court woul l
cause an increase in the prevalence
of this disease.
less than a fairly good article
nt; and a customer wants to
CCS.
41
e Old Stand
t's at the same eld stand with
l> which we offer at prices
s as well as to us.
; a Trial
thng at Toddvillo before, givif
RY & CO.
<&? s. c.
[food not enough
i tn revive germany
IViris.- -The rehabilitation of Gee-'
n.any can not be effected alone by
supplying her with an adequate
amount of food, in the opinion of an
American trained observer who has
just completed ,a tour of Prussia for |
the supreme council of food and re- |
lief of the peace conference. A letter
from him received by the coun-'
oil today says.
"It may be that a food supply :\s
the .first and indispensable need, but
I am not sure of that. The disorganization
and lack of control is so |
extreme that I can without difficulty
see food importation leading directly
to new disturbances.
"There is no doubt of the need of
food. The people are affected physically
and spiritually by the poor
food which is given in small quantities,
but there is much more at the
bottom of the almost hopeless situation.
"The people will not work. They
arc paid a too high pension for idleness.
They have no real leaders t)
.organize and carry them. They are j
going down further and with few |
, I
| exceptions they do not blame them- j
selves; they n-piuaeh the entente.
They are blindly insolent."
o
Colds Cause Grip and Influenza
LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets remove the
cause. Thero is only one "Bromo Quinine.' ;
E. W. GROVE'S signature on tax. 30c.
?
On last Tuesday afternoon the poo .
pie of the Eulonia community were!
deeply shocked to receive the sa l j
news of the untimely death of Mr.
E. Lido Wall, who was stricken with
a very pernicious type of pneumonia
only a few days previously says the
Mullins Entei-pri.se.
AL.D. COirWAV t? 1
I . I
HOW TO USE STRAW
IND SHOCK CORN FEED
I
Beef Cattle May Be Kept Over
Winter By Feeding Rough
and Rich Foods Mixed
I
Clcmson College.?Beef cattle may
be kept over the winter in fair shape
, by fue<ling rough foods mixed with
rich foods; and. in the spring they
will be in condition to put on good
grains from pasture. Straw and shock
corn can be used in South Carolina in
this way, so don't allow the straw to
become damaged, and plan to use the
j shocked corn,,
The following rations are suggested
for wintering breeding cows:
Rat'on 1: Lbs. !
Straw 10
Silage 20
Cottonseed meal or linseed
meal 1 *4
Ration 2: Lbs.
Straw 20
Cottonseed cake or oil cake 2
Ration 3: Lbs.
Straw 10
Shock corn 30
Cottonseed meal 1
Cattle bought in the fall and kept
over winter in this way might cost
loss than would have to be paid for
i them in the spring, and the fanner
would have more manure to put oil ilia
crops.
SOUTH CAROLINA MOVES UP
Food Cr'ODS in Thin l?.
crensed in Value $27,000,000 During
the Pant Five Years.
!
In the census year, more than twoi
thirds oi' the total crop values in South
i Carolina were produced by cotton
1 alone, and her bill for imported food
I supplies was $05,000,000. The same
I year her cotton and cotton seed were
1 worth $00.380,000?or just a little more
than her pantry and farm supply bill.
For 1 >ng years the state has been
i Duylng staple food supplies with coti
ton mo lev; but in 1010 the per capita
i (arm wealth of her country population
I wan only $337. agulntd $095 in the UniI
ted States, $829 in Oklahoma and
3,539 in I<nva..both of which are food
producing states, with surpluses to
market abroad.
A Twenty-Seven Million Increase.
But last year was epoch-making in
^outh Carolina. Recent reports of the
Federal Agricultural Department show
that rhe state has gained $5,574,000 in
litres toe'* and $21,848 000 in food crops
since the census year?a total gain of
$27,000,000 in five years.
On January 1, 191G, the farmers owned
14,000 more ntilcli cows and other
cattle titan in 1910, nearly 20,000 more
horses and mules, and 252.000 more
swine. |
The six-year increases in food crops
were as follows: hay and forage 99,000
tons or 54 per cent; potatoes, 2.GOO,000
bushels or 51 per cent; oats, 4,229.000
bushels or 74 per cent; corn, 14.G86.000
j bushels or 70 per cent; wheat. 2,119,-j
| 000 bushels or 082 per cent.
I It. Is a great record. South Carolina
i has gone a long way towards establishmi
a cclf-feeding farm system.
! Of course .there were other agencies !
| :tt wo.*. hut Clem son College feels
: 'hat she has a right to claim a pari
i In bringing about these changes.
TREES LOOK AS IF SHOT
Effect of Shot Hole Borer on Fruit
Trees and What to Do to Control
This Insect Peat.
Whenever your fruit trees die hack
! and you tlnd lHtle holes in the hark
! that make you think somebody had
! shot into the trees with a shotgun
1 loaded with No. 8 shot, those trees are
infested with shot hole borers. If with
your knife blade you peel off the hark
you will find not sap wood, but a mass
of sawdust instead. Shot hole borers
usually attack a tree that his been
weakened. The principal causes of
weakening in trees are scale and
borers. A badly infested tree should
be cut out and burned during winter.
Badly Infested branches should be cut
from a tree and the tree stimulated.
Insects stay over winter in bark as
little white grubs and pupae. By carefully
watching the tree one may determine
the time when the last brood of
\ oetles has come out, which is about
the middle of September. At that
time the following wash should be applied
to the tree:
Quick lime 20 lbs.
Soap(not coal tar or ni.. litlia) 3 lbs
Sulfur G lbs.
Salt 5 lbs.
Water 25 gals.
Dissolve the soap in 2 gallons of
hot water. With water batter the sulphur
into a paste. While the lime is
slaking in a barrel, add the soap and
the sulfur and slowly dilute until
the whole mass makes 25 gallons. The
salt has no advantage except to make
in*- within hiit'K lusier to iuc trees.
Thifl wash can be applied with a
small point or whitewash brush. The
trunk and larger branches should be
thoroughly covered.
A. I<\ CONRAI>
Professor of En tome ogy,
riemaoJ: Agricultural * dlegct
| I
%
Gen
gaKl2R?p!S~-y
Every Cake
????- i?j
1 H?
NEW PUBLICATIONS.
"l"hf* following publications wrr
is.wti by the United States Depuii
n.ent of Agriculture during the week
ended January IP, 1919:
Practical Hints On Running G:i
Kngine. Farmers' Bulletin 1013.
Producing Family and Farm Sun
plies on the Cotton Farm. Farmers'
Bulletin 1015.
A Study of Some of the Chemic;
Changes Which Occur in Oyster
I Hiring Their Preparation for the
Market. Department Bulletin 700.
Production of American Egyptian
Cotton. Department Bulletin 742.
The Economical Use of Fuel in
Milk Plants and Creameries. Department
Bulletin 747.
Need of Strong Departments of Ag i
r culture in the Stater.. Remarks o ;
I >. i*'. Houston. Secretary of Agricul |
tu.e, l?ot'ore the Natioivil Assoc;.u |
tiou of Commissioners of Agricul- j
lure, at Baitimore, Md., January
1919.
To-day and To-morrow in Ameri.
an Agriculture. Remarks of D. K
lieu ten. Secretary of Agriculture,
1 ? tore the Association of American
\ gricuitural Colleges and Kxperi- i
n-nt Sh'itions. at Baltimore, Md., i
January K, 1919. j
Cepie; o! these puhlicutinns ma.v
o obtained on application to llv j
1>iV? ion of Publications, I nite*; I
S'.atc.; Department of Agriculture,
Washington, l>. C.
o
LEMONS MAKE SKIM
WHITE. SOFT. CLEAR
Make this beauty lotion lor a
few cents and see for
yourself.
What girl or woman hasn't hoard
of lemon juice to remove complexion
".flemishes; to whiten the skin and to
bring- out the roses, the freshness and
the hidden beauty? Hut lemon juice
j alone is acid, therefore irritating', an.l
should be mixed with orchard white
this way. Strain through a fine cloth
the juice of two fresh lemons into a
bo4tie containing about three ounces
of orchard white, then shake well and
> ou have a whole quarter pint of skin
i and complexion lotion at about the |
cost one usually pays for a small jar
cf ordinary cold cream. He sure to
strain the lemon juice so no pulp ger.s
j into the bottle, then this lotion will
I it main pure unci fresh for months.
When applied claily to the face, neck,
arms and hands it should help to
bleach, clear, smoothon and beautify
the skin.
j Any druggist will supply three
ounces of orchard white at very little
cost and the grocer has the lemons.?
?adv?(5)
TOBACCO GROWERS
ARE NOW CAUTIONED
Washington.?"Plunging" in Tobacco
growing to the neglect of other
crop.; is not justifiedNby the present
tobacco situation, which the Department
of Agriculture, in ,*i statement
issued today describes as difficult.
In territory, where tobacco is
a new crop, recently introduced to
i (place cotton under boll weevil
condition:;, as in portions of South
Care Una and Georgia, the best interests
of farmers, the statement says,
,appear to lie in the development of a
safe and well-diversified system of
farming rather than to plunge from
the uncertainty of cotton production
into the possibly still greater uncertainty
of tobacco production under
existing conditions. While it Js
impossible, the statement declares,
t(. arrive at the quantity of tobacco
Europe will be prepared to purchase
during- the next year or two, it seems
likely that any considerable increase
over the 1918 crop in the flue-cured
section would be followed by a decline
in the market prices.
The largest crop of tobacco the
country ever produced is being marketed,
and while prevailing prices
are very high for some of the lea 1ing
types, such abnormal prices are
j aid to be due primarily to war conditions.
The denartmeni ik/mil* out
1 lv.\t the country has grown three
'urge crops of tobacco in succession,
with no decided shortage in production
of any of tho leading types.
PRESIDENT ELECTED.
Easel.?The German national assembly
today elected Friederich
Ebert president of the German state
by a vote of 277 out of 1179 votes.
Torr Ebert accepted the election,
"ount von Posadowsky?Wehner received
49 votes.
m
8EVm
INTERVENTION IN
RUSSIA IS BARRED
Military Operations On a Great
Scale Out of the
Question
PEACE MAKING IS
PROGRESSING WELL
British Statesman Says That
There Win Be No
Dilatoriiiess.
Paris.?Military intervention in.
Russia on a large scale is not to be
thought of declared Arthur ,J. Ralfour,
the Brtish foreign secretary, in
closing an interview which he granted
the newspaper correspondents
here. The great powers were doing
everything they considered could be
done, however, he said, in dealing
with what he characterized as "a
most disquieting situation."
As to the general work of the
peace conference, the foreign secretary
declared the peace-making body
was making all possible baste to
settle upon the peace terms. He was
led to this statement by a question
f'om one of the interviewers, who
said:
"There is much talk in t.io peace
conference about various problems,
such as the : oeiety of nations. Do
you not t!iink your real task is, before
everything else, to impose peace
conditions upon Germany?"
Alter a moment's inflection, Secrc
taiy Balfour replied:
"One can evidently criticise without
limit the methods of work we
have .adopted, but rather than answer
criticisms, 1 would rather tell
you that the fact that the problem
of the society of nations has been taken
up before that of peace, properly
so-called, in no way signifies that
the settlement of our accounts with
the enemy will only come afterward.
The mechanism of the commissions
we have instituted permits the con
current study of several questions.
"Let public oponion be assured.
The delegates to the peace conference
have no intention of employing
dilatory methods. They are using all
their energy and skill to attain as
soon .as possible the iust neaco to
which the whole world aspires. That
is their one aim, their sole ambition."
As the interview was closing, one
of the correspondents asked regarding
the Russian question.
"It is a most disquieting situation,"
replied Mr. Balfour. "We are
doing all that can be done. As to
military intervention on a large
scale, it is not to be thought of."
Alliances among the various nations
will not be affected by the existence
of the society of nations now
in process of formation, said Mr.
Balfour. The foreign secretary was
asked the direct question as to
whether the formation of the world
society would involve the abrogation
of alliances.
"The constitution of the league cf
nations," responded the foreign secretary,
"will involve no modification
of the treaty of alliance previously
concluded.
"As to the question whether
special coalitions of two or several
peoples could be formed aside from
the league, the conference alone can
decide."
TO FYPFNn MONEY
IV k-m LI1U ITSVIII. I
IN ROAD BUILDING
South Carolina will receive aoproxiniately
$4,000,000 during tha
r.ext three years, 1919, 1920 And
1921, from the federal government
for the construction of permanent
roads, if pending good roads legislation
in the general assembly is passed.
The exact amount to be received
bv the State is jK.T94fi.lftt> KK nt
this amount $1,147,784.05 will bo received
during, the year 1919. During
the yonr 1920 a total of $1,362.864.40
will be received and during
the year 1921 ,n total of $1,434,594.10.
Over $500,000,000 will be spent by
the federal government in highway
improvement during the next three
years. Almost every State in the
Union is expected to take advantage
of the opportunity thus offered. If
South Carolina does not, its peoplewill
be helping to construct permanent
roads in other States and will be
getting nothing themselves in return.