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PAQK TWO MOST GERMANS ARE ! MENTALLY TWISTED,: I, |> Swiss Observer Finds Ninety Per Cent Unbalanced by The War t EFFICIENCY GONE; CONFUSION REIGNS 1 1 . | M Everything Said to Be ?n Dis- , order and No Straight Thinking. : I A Bemo Special U) the New York ; i Times says: A number of Swiss in or- j chants, who for years past have rogu- , larly attended the famous Loipsig , Fair, have boon unable to express i ( their ama/omont at what they ; j saw thoro. It was not that , there was nothing to interest!, them at the fair, but that while they ; were in Gormany they could hardly ! believe that they were not in some \ other country, they did not quite ] know which. The merchants, manu- i facturers and. others at the fair, with < whom they had to deal, seemed to be ] mentally unbalanced. j "Ninety per cent of the people with ! \ whom I had to deal," said one mer-L chant "really did not know what they \ were about. In visiting the various , exhibits in Leipsic 1 would give an j order for .something1. 1 would tell the j j man in charge that I would take say \ oOO gross of a certain number down < myself, and then of course, I expect- J ed him to write it down too. Then I would order something else, and by 1 the time I had finished giving my 1 orders I would ask to compare my 1 notes with his. Then, to icy great > astonishment, I would find he had either not written clown the orders at j1 all, or had written them down a!l|( wrong. | ^ "At first I thought I had merely j( to do with a careless individual, but j2 afterwards I found that nine out of i5 ten persons were in just the same ' state of mental confusion. I then < talked to some of the other Swiss who were visiting the fair and found 1 that they had had similar experienc- J es. Once I lost patience and spoKc 1 very sharply to one man, whereupon < he simply broke down, and said he IJ was sorry, but he had been four j years in the1, trenches, and that he < was no longer capable of doing his! I work as he did it before the war." !' Judging by all that these Swiss!1 merchants observed in Germany, this ! mental weakness and incapacity is 1 affecting not only men who have 1 been a long time in the trenches, but also civilians?women who were at heme and men who. for i>nc rr?;ivir?n 1 oi another, were never at the front. 1 Some Germans known to these merchants before the war as shrewd, energetic, capable business men, now, they say, talk like children .as if they knew nothing whatever of the outside world, or what has been taking j pluce during the last four or five years. rrhus not even now do some of them seem to realize that the value or Gorman paper money abroad has fallen. When told that the German mark is only worth 35 cents in Switzerland today, instead of 1 franc 25 centimes, they asked, "Why?" As if they hail never heard of such things as international exchange or a country's credit being good or bad. The exhibits at tho Lcipsic Fair were fairly numerous, but there was nothing new. The large firms insisted either upon payment being made in francs or unon 170 to 200 nor rent being added to the prices for Germany, owing to the German exchange in Switzerand being so low. So confused were the minds of the , representatives of the smaller firms, however, that they asked 'the same prices from a Swiss merchant as from their German customers. Even in the case of the large firms, how- < ever, the Swiss merchant simply toid , his agent to buy up such and such < <iufantities, pay for them, and export them. < ' These leading German firms have i a combine, and arc supposed to con-'] t'ol prices for export, but as a mat- h tor of fact, so I am assured, they do ' ( nothing of the kind. In short, the \ ( orman merchants seem completely i dazed, bewildered and confused at < present, and do not know what thcyi< arc doing. 11 What particularly struck all these c Swiss merchants, who have known ' Germany for many years past, was < the lack of orderliness everywhere, not merely at the Eeipsic Fair, hut o in the streets?a change for the verse which is commented upon now i by all visitors to Germany. In the halls of the great fair, which before the war used to be neat as the provcubial new pin, disorder, and even dirt, are everywhere. It is scarcely possible to realize the day when at a I former fair an Englishman who threw down some scrap of paper was seriously admonished by the policeman on duty to pick it up, and on his refusal to do so was arrested and fined. This incident the Swiss merchant with whom 1 have been talking particularly remembers, because he ssas one of the witnesses in the case. Now. he says, an airplane flies over the fair throwing down advertisements and handbills everywhere, and no one thinks that this is a disorderly proceeding, still less of doing any thing in the way of tidying up afterward. At the fair any one who look y[ weli dressed, tidy, and healthy was either a Dane, a Dutchman, or a Swiss. The streets leading to the Leipsig hair were this vear lined with wound >d, crippled and blinded soldiers, selling postcards, bootlaces, and all man nor of other trifles, or playing" barre' organs, with their military caps :>n the ground before them for people to throw in anything they could afford. And this in a country where mendicants never used to be toloritcd. Every Swiss merchant who went to Line Leipsig Fair this year was alowed by his government to take with mm twenty-two pounds of provisions. One with whom 1 talked took with lim five pounds of chocolate, knowing what a precious gift it would bo ?o some of his old acquaintances. In visiting one of tlie leading manufacturers he presented three daughters .vith half a pound each. The girls grasped him by the hand, with tears 11 their eyes. "We haven't seen anything like it for years," they said. It will make us well. Apparently the Germans attach u ancy value to chocolate, and this is ii-obably all connecte<l with their ack of mental balance. They expect t to work wonders. One evening this Swiss merchant, A'ith two others, was sitting in one )f tlie best lestaurants in Leipsig, .vhen a lad walked around the tables offering postcards and matches for *ale. He was very sickly looking, ind the Swiss merchant put his hand n his coat pocket, took out a block of diocolate (about half a pound), and handed * it to him. Immediately all the guests in the restaurant got up and surrounded the lad, gazing with amazement at the chocolate. Some jf them asked the Swiss how he man 1 igcd to get it. Even in the restaurant, he said, he people who collected around the j >oy with the chocolate behaved like children. All this points to what is now being more and more clearly recognized?that the war and its con ditions have caused a more or lc s abnormal mental state in the case of many persons. This was particularly noticed by tbo Swiss doctors and others who had to do with interned sol ' [lit-rs in Swtizerland. For instance. Major Edooard Favre, of the Swiss army medical corps, who made a spo- i rial study of the condition of interned men, refers to the lack of power or concentration afflicting many of them, to such an extent that they i often could not sit out a "movie." ' i. . I Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cure.!1 by local applications as they cannot reach | the diseased portion of the ear. There la ' only one way to cure Catarrhal Deafness, and that Is by a constitutional remedy. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. Catarrhal Deafness Is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining: or the Eustachian Tube. When this tube Is Inflamed you have a rumbling sound or Imperfect hearing, and when It is entirely closed. Deafness Is the result. Unless the Inflammation can be reduced and this tube restored to its normal oonditlon, hearing may be destroyed forever. Many cases of Deafness are caused by Catarrh, which Is an Inflamed condition of the Mucous Surfaces. ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for any case cf Catarrhal Deafness that cannot be cured by HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE. All Druggists 75c. Circulars free. F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio. o Citation Notice. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Horry. By J. S. VAUGHT, ESQUIRE, PROBATH JUDGE. WHEREAS, Sal lie Hardee made *uit to me, to grant her letters of ."vummi.sirauon 01 tne Estate ol" and ! ? fleets of Ernestine Hardee. THESE ARE THEREFORE to . itc and admonish all and singular Lho kindred and creditors of the said Ernestine Hardee, deceased, that Lhey he and appear, before me, in the 2ourt of Probate, to be held at Conv;;y, S. C., on Kith day of Jvdy 1919 iext, after publication hereof, at 11 /clock in the forenoon, to shew ause, if any they have, why the said \dministrution should not be grant??:. 1 . , CilVKN under my Hand, this 1st lay of July Anno Domini, 1919. Published on the 3rd and 10th days f July, 1919, in the Horry Herald. 1 J. S. VAUGHT, Probate Judge. j THE HORRY HERALD, CON1 | Yourh Ybur < ^ Furniture c( love in making I UUUUU pyand livable. I I > ~ ,. \ 1 v? mm ir| im ana 11 s nor wc l|W ins through it , MS J ml old, creaky cha squeaky burea Ww dated looking b ft ^ m ^ Make your L? enjoyable sur Vs w PaYs- When \v) nf niture buy gc That's why yoi [ ^ here. i^^SUTHERLANI Household and Kitchen Furnisl f CARE OF EGGS j! BEGINS ON FARM : 1 Good fresh eggs put in a basket) and stored in the hot kitchen for a . day or two may reach town in such 1 condition that they must be used at once to be available for food. A basket of perfectly fresh eggs left on J the back of the wagon and exposed to the sun during a 10-milc drive to town may reach the country mer- 1 chant in such shape that not even im- ! mediate chilling will make them * available for long shipment to the 1 cities. This is the story co :ct ntly 1 revealed by the candle he ; car. Eggs of which the farraoi'x wife is very proud will show that x the> have been allowed to remain >A cs jn hours in the nest or at some point in their history "nave been ex s posed to heat which lowers their ? value. It is evident, therefore, that if the < gg is to be palatable to the v c!i> consmner care in its handling 1 iru.'-t begin on the farm. The farm-J1 ( ; must gather his eggs twice a day j* a: 1 must keep them cool afterwards, * in .1 a. he would cream or milk, un- lithey are delivered in town. There * the merchant must at once put them J ir-lo a dry, cold place, or, if he wishes t<? be strictly up to date, must chill them in his own little refrigerating \ plant or in the larger refrigerating . plant of the town, to a temperature t well below 40 degrees F. j Heat is the great enemy, for once ] a good egg has stood for any time at j a temperature of over G8 degrees F. * it begins to incubate, if it is an infertile egg. , j THE PIONEER TESTING { ASSOCIATION MAY REPORT . ^ c v^iemson Uollego?Twenty-two cows made more than 40 pounds of butter- . fat in May in the Pioneer South Car- I olina Cow Testing Association, according to the report of J. W. Herring, official tester. This continues the good record of April, which was I the first month of the Association's 1 official records. jj Cows making the official record (t requirement were 4 Guernseys own- t o.l by R. M. Cooper, Wisacky; 2 Guern i soys owned by E. B. McCutchen, Bish t opville; 3 Guernseys owned by R. A. t Smith, Lynchburg; 1 Holstein and 1 1 Jeisey owned by Archie China, Sum- * ter; 11 Jerseys owned by J. A. Shan-'t kin, Camden. jc The highest producer among these , 22 cows in May was one of J. A. ' i Shanklin's Jerseys, which produced t 52.5 pounds of butterfat. Two oth- i or Jerseys of the same herd pro- , duced 51.5 pounds each. Among the .s v.v.^.,v.-> mi; production i was 48.5 pounds. The only Holstein c in the list produced 40.1 pounds. t A number of other cows in South p Carolina are known to be making r over 40 pounds of butterfat on offi- v cial test, but they are not in the y Pioneer Association, the only one so i fa) organized in this state. o n Crawford?"I always thought 'the h younj? bard's sprinp poem was a a harmless little thintf." tl Crabshaw?"So it is, until lie be- a 2[ins to spriny it."?Life. , rr WAY, S. P., JULY 10, 1919. p) lomels 11] Castle I I I Dmes next to ihe home hapLife is short, JUbUUlll >rth while go- fl\\f|/f| surrounded by ||l; 'jiff irs; scratched, ?1 If us or dilapieds. home a castle hu foundings. It \l\ Q J you buy fur- Yjj^ ^VJ >od furniture. \\j w 1 should come JrjzjL j ) FURIi CG^= lings ? Bicycles and Supplies; HAVE WE A FALL HONEY CROP? Clemson College.?"In our own :>cc-yards," says Prof. A. F. Conradi, )f the Entomology Division, "we nade a small honey crop last fall d though the bee-yard had been negected owing to the necessity of meet ng war requirements. Our fall honey :hat comes from asters, golden rods, ind other fall flowers is fancied by nany people. The flavor of this loney is stronger than the spring loney and the color is somewhat larker, but it makes an excellent loney for eating. Furthermore, ,hci"c appears to be a market denand for a fall honey for winter ise. We urge that close attenioa be given to this subject because | . , whole our bees have been too j veal: /or us to determine how niu-h . >f a fall crop we really have. "Straighten out your hives. B - , fin thinking about requeening, J it lengthen your colonics for a possible fall flow and have successful vintering. Now is the time to got cady for next spring. We rccomnend packing for this fall and in'o.-mation will be sent out in due ,ime. If we wait till next spring to | stimulate we will again be too late j 'or the honey flow as we have been j ,rcar after year for many years." o The Russian soviet government vas warned by the United States in \ message sent through the American legation at Stockholm that reprisals against American citizens in Etussia would arouse intense sentincnt in the United States against the soviet heads. ? o Congress adjourned until Tuesday, ftdy After enacting all appropria- J :ion Dills needed by government igencies for the new fiscal year. GERMANS SCHEMED TREACHEROUS BLOW Berlin.?The German Government leaded by Philipp Sheidemann, had ilanned to refuse to sign the peace ;reaty and to pennit the Allied roops to march into Germany as far is the Elbe, where it would be atacked by strong German forces, he Danzig correspondent of the rageblatt declares in a despatch deicribing the details of a secret plan o create a separate state in Northiastem Germany. The plan failed because of joalouses and differences of opinion beween the Government and the army eaders, the correspondent says. The last proposal made by the conpi rators planning to oppose the Al ios, it is said, was to ask Poland to ombino with Eastern Germany in he formation of an independent remblic. The offer, it is declared, was ebuffed by the Poles, who asked /by it had not been offered ten ears ago. o The taxicab driver is the best bated um in I/Ondon. All through the war e ruled the taxi riding public with n iron hand and his sway, owing to i ic continued shortage of cabs, probbly will have to be endured for any more months. j COPY SI MMONS FOR RELIEF. (Complaint Not Served.) Court of Common Pleats. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Horry. The J. C. Bryant Copmany, a Corporation, Plaintiff, vs. Wm. J. Hickman, May M. Shelly, Jcttie Blanton, Herbert Hickman, Acidic G. Shelly, S. Ross Hickman, Lee Hickman, Bell Wanton, Inez Hickman, W. J. Hughes, J. Alton Hughes and W. Milton Hughes, Heirs at Law and Distributees of S. P. Hickman, Dec'd; Jessie Poe Hickman, Alston Hickman, Sam Hickman, and Mrs. W. D. Hickman, widow of W. D. Hickman, Heirs at Law and Distributees of \V. D. Hickman, Dec'd; F. A. Prince, Jr., N. E. Harchvick, Dan "W. Hardwick; Dan VV. Harchvick, iS. D. Bryant and I). F. McGougan, as Executors of the last Will and Testament of J. C. Bryant, Dec'd; also all other persons unknown, claiming any right, title, estate, interest in, or lien upon, the real estate described in the Complaint herein, Defendants. TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE NAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the complaint in this action, which has been filed in the office of the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas, for the said County, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscriber at his office at Conway, S. C., within twenty days after the sci vice hereof; exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the compaint. May 6th, A. D. 1919. H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. Tc D. F. McGougan, F. A. Prince, Jr., Jessie Poe Hickman, Absent Defendants: Take Notice that the Complaint in the foregoing stated action and the Summons, of which the foregoing is a copy, were filed in the office of the Clerk of Court of Common Pleas at Conway, South Carolina, on the 8th day of May, 1919. w t. hrvam n y \ C. C. C. P. H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. To all of the defendants in the above stated action, especially the absent defendants. Notice of Pendency of Action. Notice is hereby given that the plrr.tiff has commenced an action which is now pending in this Couit for determining adverse claims and correcting errors in the chain of title and for other relief in relation to the following described lots of land in the Town of I.oris, title to which is claimed by the plaintiff, and of which the plaintiff is in possession, tr wit: All ami singular that certain lot or parcel of land measuring one hundred and fifty (150) feet by fifty (50) feet front on Patterson Street, on the Westward side of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company's right of way, in the Town of Loris, in the County and State aforesaid, on the Northward side of said Patterson Street and beginning at a point which is located ofto hundred seven 'v-i'vc wo) rrom the center of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company's right of way and twenty- j five (25) feet from the center of Todd's Ferry Road and running thence Northward one hundred fifty 1 (150) feet to J. C. Bryant's land,1 thence J. C. Bryant's land fifty (50 feet Westward to land said to belong to W. D. and C. A. Hickman at corner, thence Southward one hundred fifty (150) feet to Patterson Street, and thence Patterson Street to the beginning point; being the Eastward one-third (1-3) part of a certain lot of land conveyed from B. J. Sessions to J. R. Allsbrook, November 3rd, 1902, and from J. R. Allsbrook to G. F. Stanley, W. J. Hickman and E. I). Lawson May 4th, 1903; bounded on the Northward by lands now or formerly of J. C. Bryant Company, on the Southward by Patterson Street, and on the Westward .by lands said tn hnlftnir W O ' * T" * ... w ??. is. t*im v_y. f\. MlCkman. H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. Dated May 6th, 1919. o TRESPASS NOTICE. All persons are hereby forbidden i to hunt, fish, or encev or trespass in I any manner upon uiy land in Gali- i i vants Ferry township, bounded by I lands of P. A. Gerrald and M. T. Floyd, containing 90 acres, more or less. All violators of this notice will be prosecuted especially for hunting or fishing. ?Dan'l T. Lewis. 6|12!19 1 mo. pd. o Get your supplies of legal blanks ar the Herald office. 1 I W jjjjjjmij??^rnrn^mmm?? i ITS UNWISE to pot ?If to-day'i duty until tomorrow. If your etomach ia acid-disturbed take K1-M0ID5 the new aid to digestion comfort todaym A pleasant relief from the discomfort of acid-dyspepsia. MADE BY SCOTT & BOWNE MAKERS OP SCOTTS EMULSION 19-6A NOTICE OF SALE. Under and by virtue of the decree and judgment of the court made by hi? ii ?inni' S. W. fj. Shino. Judtre of 112th Circuit, in the case of I(Ui A. | Watts, et al., Plaintiffs vs. Ida May Thompson, et al., Defendants, and ? [dated the 20th day of June A. D. 11911), I, the undersigned W. L. Bry|an, C. C. C. P. as Special Master of Horry County, will sell at public auction to the highest bidder before 1 the Court House door at Conway, in ' Horry County, and State of South i Carolina, during legal hours of sale, ^ on salesday in August next, it being [the 4th day of said month, all amJL' singular those certain lands situafr\ in Horry County, and described as follows, to wit: ^ Tract N'o. 1. All that certain lot of land in the T wn of Conway on what is known as Baggett's Heights, being lot No. 1 on Block 1> on map Amj. H. C. Cannon, dated March 2;>th,jl A. I). 1910; conveyed to L. J. Watts by Burroughs <SL* Collins Company by deed recorded in Book (1(1, page 209. Tiact No. d. All t'.iat certain lot of land in tin* Town of Conway on what is known as Baggett's Heights, being lot No. 5 on Block B on map by II. C. Cannon, dated March 25th, A. I). 1910; conveyed to L. J. Watts by Rurroughs & Collins Company by deed recorded in Hook CiG, page 309. Tract No. 0. Al! that, certain lot of j land in the Town of Conway lying on the west side of L:\vis Street, measuring fifty (50) feet front on said Street and running back to a depth of one hundred fifty (150) feet conveyed to L. J. Watts by W. R. Lewis, by deed dated September 30th, 1911, and rocorded in Hook QQQ, page 73, records of Horry County; and being i lot No. 13G of W. R. Lewis land. J Tract No. 7. All that certain lot of land in the Town of Conway, lying on the West side of Lewis Street, measuring fifty (50) feet front on said Street and i\inning back to a i depth of one hundred fifty feet convoyed to L. J. Watts by W. R. Lewis, by deed dated September 1 30th, 1911, and recorded in BooV^? I QQQ, page 73, records of Horry County; and being lot No. 136A of W. R. Lewis land. I TERMS of Sale Cash. Purchaser to pay for papers. Conway, S. C., June 30th, 1010. W. L. BRYAN, 'Clerk of Court of Common Pleas as | Special Master. H H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. ? ' \ ; Habitual Constipation Cured in 14 to 21 Days ! "LAX-70S WITH PEPSIN" is a speclally prepared SyrupTonic-J.axative for Habitual Constipation. It relieves promptly but 1 should be taken regularly for 14 to 21 days to induce regular action. It Stimulates and ' Regulates. Very Pleasant to Take. (JOc ' per bottle. j I The question of a pcrm&ti^(t miliitary policy probably will be forced before the present session of congress. I : Kub-My-Tism is a great pain killer. It relieves pain and soreness caused by Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sprains, etc.?adv. 4-24-19 20t. 1 ^BAYER CROSS" ON ASPIRIN 'Always 'Ask for Genuine | ."Bayer Tablets of Aspirin'T i \JL/ I Only Aspirin Tablets with 9 safety "Bayer Cross" on w. vaivill OIW tl Kenuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" n owned and made by Americans and I proved safe by millions of people. Unknown quantities of fraudulent I Aspirin Tablets were sold recently ul by a Brooklyn dealer which proved jfl to be composed mostly of Talcum dl Powder. 1] "Bayer Tablets of Aspirinj should I always be asked for. Then look for I the safety "Bayer Cross" on the || package and on each tablet. Accept |l nothing else! Proper directions and |l dc sage in each Bayer package* jl Aspirin is the trade mark of Bay- 11 er Manufacture of M< noaceticacid- ?1J ester of Salicylicacid.?adv SI