The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, May 29, 1919, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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PAGE TWO SOME CONCESSIONS MADE TO GERMANY Slight Modifications Promised in Relation to the i. Sarre Valley CHiNA WILL SIGN THE PEACE TREATY Question of Future Administration of Turkey Engages Council. Concessions on sonic parts in the peace treaty have been made to the Germans by the Paris Peace Conference. Slight mollifications have been made in the terms of the Sarre valley award and the terms regardin 12; reparations, as they stood in the original text of the peace treaty, also have been modified in some degree. The fact that the council of four had decided to make these modifications was reported in a dispatch from Paris last night. The message, however, did not. indicate, just what were the alterations decided upon. These are expected to be developed in part with the handing to the Germans of the council's renlv to the German note on reparations. There were no indications, however, when the exact nature of the concessions made regarding the Sarre valley would be revealed. China's delegation at the Peace , conference has decided it will sign ^ the peace treaty in spite of its declaration that, it would not do so because , of the recision of the council of three j relative to the turning over to Japan of Germany's interests in Shantung ( and Kiao-Chow. It is said however, that reservations will be made in at- ' taching the signatures of the Chi- . noses, it being pointed out the United States has taken similar action in the past. The question of the future administration of Turkey is occupying much of the time of the peace conference and it appears to be a desire on the part of the powers that the ( United States shall assume the position of mandatory for Turkey. Pres ick nl Wilson has been advised bv ', 11 Henry Morgenthau, former Amcri- j ^ can ambassador to Turkey, tlint the j at!mnimiration of Constantinople, i ^ Aanatolia and Armenia should he com ' hired in the hands of one of the now- ; er.->. It is indicated that if there is ; any acceptance of the responsibility of administering' Turkish affairs by the United States delegation, it will be conditioned upon ratification by the Senate. It is not expected that the negotiations with the Germans at Versailles will he interfered by the absence of Count von 13 rock i lo rf f - Ran tzau and other members o* the delegation, who have gone to. Spa for conveiva- ! t.iens. The return of the head of the j mission and his colleagues is expected not later than Sunday. Allied forces in northern Russia liavo carried out a turning movement against the Bolsheviki and have forced the enemy to retreat southward. Several towns arc said to have b< en occupied by the Allies. The procis | sof hemming in Petrograd by P.,- j Iberian, l'd.nish and other forces | appeal., to be making favorable progross. ??** ? i nwrniirmn^T; nwmmm- . | Happy Mters i I m M?2ilG6 A Wondnrfui Influence For Er.poctnnt Mothers. 1 :X :J*ii Mothers for over half a century havo used with tho utmost regularity tho timo- I ttonorcd preparation, Mother's Knead, before tho arrival of baby. Hero is n truly wonderful penetrating application for tho abdomen { nnd breasts. 7t softens and make; clastic j the muscles, rendering them pliant to readily yield to nature's demand for expansion. By its use the anxious months of pregnancy I aire mado comfortable. The usual wrenching strain, bearing-down nnd stretching pains i are counteracted. 'Iho system is prepared I for tho coming event, nnd tho use of Mother's ' Friend brings restful nights and happy antici- ! pat ion. for tno nerves aro not drawn upon jvith tho usual strain. Dy its regular application tho muscles exGnd easily when bnbv arrives; the time is is at tho crisis and naturally the pain and i danger is loss. I Mother's Friend is on sale at every f drug store. It is for external use only, U ; absolutely safe and wonderfully effective. Write tho Brad field Regulator Company, | Dept. C, Lamar Building, Atlanta, Georgia, for their interesting Motherhood Book, rrco ' to users of Mother's Friend, and obtain a bottle of Mother's Friend from the drug store ?jucl begin this grateful treat incut. ' & i Tho con to. nary movement of the ' Mothodiftt Church is mcetinpr with , success in the Rock Hill district. ' COUNTIES APPOINT TRUANT OFFICERS Eleven Women Work Under Compulsory Act?List Wot Complete. John S. Swearingen, Sato superintendent of education, has boon notified of the appointment of 42 counties of the attendance officers under the compulsory education law. The State board of education directed the appointmtnt of r>5 of these officers, 37 counties receiving one each and nine counties two each. All appointments were to he made and reported to the State superintendent's office l>.\ May If), and the appointees were to begin service June 1. So far no reports have been filed by Superintendent J. A. Knight of Chesterfield County or Superintendent S. Li. Owens of Jasper County. In Florence County the illness of Superint* ndent A. H. Casque has delayed the action of the county board of ed- j ucation. In Charleston County the ' appointee selected by the county beard declined to servo and in York County one of the appointees refused to accept. Vacancies, therefore, still ; exist in Chesterfield, Jasper, Florence-, Charleston and York. The State superintendent hopes that these vacancies will he filled at the earliest practicable date. It is also possible that declination may be reported later from other counties, but action can not be delayed much longer without impairing the service to the schools. Among the JO attendance officers already selected, it is interesting to note that 11 women have been appointed in 11 different counties. . During the month of June each attendance officer should be busy learning the boundaries of the school listriets of the county, the location ;>f school houses, the enrollment of pupils in the various schools, and especially in securing from teachers the annual enrollment list of all children attending school. The records and lata in county superintendent's office will be of great assistance to attendance officers in their work. During the month of July and August a census by school districts | must bo taken of all children beLv eon the ages of C> and 14 years. i'kins tor this census must ho ar- i ranged. The cooperation of trustees, patrons^ teachers and pupils i 11 be needed, ami nil preliminaries should be thoroughly discussed with :h< county superintendent and with .he county hoard of education. The ;cmpulsory attendance low prescribes j Pfl pi 'III H|! :l! li' I ' i? I: . I'J'i ' :i'i1 ;;i - ,1 : ! M'iljl. c'?' i i : ii!: Ijjj ijii Stfe:: lii'i IMP ii %;i iililfetdi!? li i! I! Copyright ''111 |j '! ! 19,9 ?>v 'I in I R. .1. KcynoUls | jl; Tobacco Co. 'I| j y;!' it THE HOUR? HERALD, COM ** 5LTTm3r nnnrn x ^ Your Made \ ^11 One sure i make your ste] I replace your ! Walking in be wornout floor c< the daily hou harder. J We carry of carpets. ^ money's worth, like iron. Se you are refurr + just starting in |^=^SUTHERLAN[ Household and Kitchen Furnis definitely the duties of the attendance officers and the State board of education has instructed the State, su norm tend on h t<-? ln-nnn . i;.._ i , V vv? |y V |/u I (II n I U I ^" I tribute census cards. These materials ] will be forwarded to the several counties before July 1. RESOLUTIONS Passed by the lx>ris Cair.p No. 303 Woodmen of the World. Resolved, First, that this Camp extend its deepest sympathy to Soverign Herbert Anderson at Gurley, S. C., in the untimely death of his wife by a stroke of lightning on Saturday, May 17th, V Second: Whereas his home was destroyed by fire, leaving him and hi. little motherless children without ei her shelter or clothes to wear. In oi\T r that we may in a way relieve him of some of his troubles, j may we ask that the Clerk of his Camp issue a call to each Camp for h? !p arid as loyal Woodmen let us rcvpond liberally. i ;iat tus call be extended | i | m *m n r Eg i%g epMg \ 1 |,J || & || 1 \ I |i| \ I Mtsf < : '{ y ' " ' vs if ';:r,**?J ill, I nil i in! ! I 1 Hill, te:i;.;^:. t < ^j# ,;i ',oLt:iiiL .'i: ?* ; ; :; >?.W !?',I'Hii |? 'ii i i 14, HktMA '" . ' il'ii! f %%:';i,? 'IB-' i i I l<|| jillillll LjjJ* ' ' :-.:V Sj&J Vs-?hfvV .ff "'l'. " .: .V'/O s }!': "i"1 11,, "ii'lllll; VW"-: 1 riftb# '!!:' ;jii Slliiiir ,'!!'iii!!i II ilite'ir I mM me ill IhiM' -ill' il'7 !, 'I i'll, I I."' ''I .!'i liiljl lijljji ijili jj j |1j| | j Jjll1' 111 Si Hi |l ii |F V?u can1 mW 1 1 remarks !j||||l|l amokespot v ' 'ilDII1 .Vpu so fair and square. nmn , | . UlgartilU! miJiVil }g as it io delightful every hour It's never too late to hop into tl asture! For, P. A. is trigger )bacco fun than you ever ha rhat's because it has the qua Quick as you know Prince A1 lat P. A. did not bite your ton ind, it never will! For, our e uts out bite and parch. Try it fc Toppy red bags, tidy red tins, hondsor, humidors?and?Chat clc. ' jr, pn.ctUwl po sponge moistener top thai keeps the tab* . J. Reynolds Tobacco Cornpar WAY. S. O., MAY 29, 1919. Sflli \ i! lliif iipp^ Steps 1 | Easy way you can I ps easier is to old carnots. I ?aten paths on mUUw overings makes sehold routine Wlw several makes (ou get your A They wear IhV e our line if lishing or are ) FURIi C&<?==^ hings ? Bicycles and Supplies through the County papers to every citizen. Church, and Sunday school in Horry County. All checks and m< ney will be forwarded to Mr. E. W. Prince, Gurlcy, S. C., who will keep a record of same and report ] later through the papers. May God open the hearts of the j people to this call, because He lovetb ! a cheerful tfiver. "The foxes have holes and the onus nave nests; out Herbert and his | children hath not where to lay their heads." Respectf ally, W. A. Prince, For Loris Camp. o All rules and regulations governing the production, manufacture, <Ii: tribution and transportation of oil in its various forms, inciis'.'ng gasoline and of natural gas ver r rn ved by an order of Fuel Administrator Garfield last week. Germany's blockade troubles were piimariiy brought upon her by herself, writes Maximillian Harden, the German free lance, in the latest num her of his periodical, Die Zukunft. | i Sgi i, 'M|i'?-i^|l||IK ff i> llttl I I - \0Rt j 3:' twm : % f# il I 111 I >>*$& UUil j ?ii# % , %!\ v/?i, iiiiit iii. Illl I U/\ln > t ?. uumng loose joy'us every time you flush your vith Prince Albert?it hits It's a scuttle full of jimmy rs sunshine and as satisfyof the twenty four I Prince Albert pleasure-ready to give you more d in your smokecareer. tity. bert ybu'lf write it down gue or parch* your throat. ;xclusive patented process ?r v/hat ails y6i/r tongue 1 ne pound and half pound tin \tr.d crystal glass humidor with :tcco in such perfect condition. iy, Winston-Salem, Nv C. ECONOM IC HOG ! PRODUCTION I Plant Grazing Crops and Feed Heavily at All Times. Clomson College.?"The market beg that sees his llrst birthday usually loses money for tho owner." This | statement is made by 1). W. Williams, : livestock specialist of the Extension | Service, in discussing profitable hog | production in South Carolina. This ! means that the hog must go to the slaughter at eight to ten motnhs of age, weighing two hundred pounds. This is not an unusual weight for hogs at eight months. Recently one feeder averaged over two hundred on ! twelve head at five months. To make profits from hogs it is necessary to feed heavy at all times. A starving process is a losing one in growing hogs. | The hog raiser's problem, therefore, is "How can 1 make the most hog, in the least time at the lowest cost?" < Plenty of feed provided ahead of time is the solution. Pigs farrowed in Jan i uary and February should be ready for the October and November mar| kets. j Start now and provide the feeds that will be needed this fall. We cani not compete with the corn belt farmer raising hogs in a dry lot on corn and purchased supplementary feeds such as shorts and tankage. While these are always necessary to make the best gains, we must use forage crops just as much as possible. With the wide use of forage crops cheaper pork can he produced in South Carolina than In the corn belt. I Re sure to plant some supplementary feed crop with your corn. Cow peas, soy beans, and velvet beans all furnish good grazing for hogs. In the fall let the hogs do the harvesting and you will find but very little wasted. Let the hogs you are going to market gather most of the feed; then when it gets so scarce that they , must cover a great deal of ground in ' getting enough to eat. remove them and lot sows and smaller pigs finish cleaning up the field. A small patch of sweet potatoes will furnish much succulent feed, which with a grain ration will make very satisfactory gains. Every farmer, whether or not he raise hogs, should have some alfalfa. It pays handsomely where it is grown. As a forage crop for hogs It is unexcelled. It is questionable whether it is advisable to plant very many peanuts for hogs this fall, says Mr. Williams. While hogs make very cheap and rapid gains on this crop, the carcasses are g-eatly discriminated against on the market. Soft drippy pork is not desirable South Carolina is now i nrodueing hogs that sell to better ad-, van' ge than those from other Southern St ites. because thos^ hogs kill hard as a rule. It is to our advantage to continue marketing a superior prod net which sells well toward the top of the market rather than to get a reputation for soft hogs and take a cut in price which is often three or four cents per pound. | TTogs will be marketed this fall in carload lots from practically every county. Aim to provide a few surplus hogs for these shipments to help es-1 tablish a hog market in this state. Be sure to kill enough to assure your home supply of meat; then market the surplus. In the future of diversified farming in South Carolina the hog is one of the most promising factors. GREEDY HENS ARE GOOD1 MOTHERS. Clemson College.?Tt is not grner- ' ally known that the greedy mother who eats almost all the food thrown to the baby chicks is doing her best to prevent the loss of her brood. Just nerore a chick in hatched it absorbs the greater part of the yolk of the egg. This yolk will not be digested for a week or ton days, and if tno cliick is overfed its system becomes clogged,' the yolk decays, arid the chick dies. Many persons raising chickens in brooders make the fatal mistake of feeding the biddies too much. The brooder is not a greedy hen and it cannot eft the food and thereby pre-j vent the chicks obtaining more than they should have to eat. Place the brooder on sharp sand, have the temperature one hundred degrees when the chicks are removed , from the incubator, and do not feed the chicks the first, day. Oivn therrl' buttermilk or sour milk; otherwise1 fresh water. A tomato can with a ] hole punched near the open end Should be filled with liquid and in verted (Tver a saucer to prevent the chicks from becoming wet. On the second and third days scatter a little rolled oats on the sand' floor four or five times daily. On tho fourth day begin alternating rolled oats with some coarse hominy or com* mercial chick feed. The latter Is : preferable because it contains alsfl!? t millet seed and cracked wheat. Scat-1 f tcr these on the fine litter to makelf the chicks exercise. I On the fifth day provide a dry masfr' / of equal parts hominy, wheat short*, | b rolled oats, (or ground oats with the i ^ hulls removed), wheat bran, sifted ?' heef scraps, and bright yellow cottonseed meal. Keep this dry mash bo ^ fore the chicks constantly. p If these suggestions are followed, the babv chicks are likely to pass through the critical period without any miahap. c: ? TRY IT! SUBSTITUTE FOR NASTY GALOMBL Starts your liver withoJ^nak- I ing you sick and can not 3 salivate. j I Every druggist in town?your drug j gist and everybody's druggist hag : noticed a great falling off in hte sale i if calomel. They all give the same j oason. Dodson's Liver Tone is tak- I ing its place. fJ "Calomel is dangerous and people y know it, while Dodson's Liver Tonepe perfectly safe and gives better recults," said a prominent drug- I Dodson's Liver Tone^is per/mM scnally guaranteed by every druggicjB| who sells it. A large bottle costs but v a few cents, and if it fails to give a easy relief in every case of liver slug y eishnoss and constipation, von have ffl only to ask for your money back, v Dodson's Liver Ton0 is a plcasajf^* jj tasting, purely vegetable remedy, n harmless to both children and adults. Tako a spoonful at night and wake up I'eclfng fine; no biliousness, sick head y ache, acid stomach or constipated bowels, it doesn't gripe ?r cause in- f] convenience all the next d.-BLke violent calomel. Take a dose calomel today and tomorrow you will feel weak, sick and nauseated. Don't lose a day's work! Take Dodson's Liver Tone instead and feel fine, full of v:"cr and ambition.?adv. . FORK ION ITEMS GATHERED AND CONDENSED FOR EASY READING It stands to reason that the beaten Germans will fight for the best conditions possible. The German peace delegation has lx on grunted an oxtonsion of seven days or until May 29, in which to reply to the pe ace terms. A slight decrease i i unemployment is indicated in weekly summary l>? the federal eemplovment service. Five French track and field rocoids were broken by American army athletes at the invitation meet here yesterday of the University Sporting Club. ? Max Kaasch, a former captain in the German army, who was arrested several days ago by American intelligence officers on a charge of having in his possession property from France, committed suicide by stabbing. . '* v, The machinery for making and ratifying peace treaties and international agreements is of greater interest to the American public now than at any time since the administration of President Monroe. l It was highly important to (lern.iny that British warships should not enter the Baltic, where they could have joined the Russian fleof. . The Anv rican army rowing crew left Pari, this morning for Henley, Kngland, to train for the Henley regatta on July 4 and f>. -> Ruh-My-Tism is a great pain killer. It relievos pain and soreness caused b\ Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sprains, etc.?adv. 4-24-19 20t. "BAYER CROSS" ON ASPIRIN'' Always Ask for Genuinef ''Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" / A \ V M J , . w Only Aspirin Tablets with the ;afoty "Bayer Crosa" on them am genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" >wned and made by Americans and iroved safe by n?iUions of people. Jnknown quantities of fraudulent Vspirin Tablets were sqld tewomtly y a Brooklyn dealer \thich ^P.oved o be composed mostly M- Talcum owder. "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin should hvays be asked for. Then look for lie safety "Bayer Cross" on the ackage and on each tablet. Accept othing else! Proper directions and (sage in each Bayer package. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayr Manufacture of Monoaceticacidster of Salicylic acid.-?a<to