The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, November 13, 1919, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3
INTIMATION AS TO
CAPTURE JENKINS
t
Refuted by Mexican Newspaper\Jhat
Investigates the
* Rumor.
Mexico City.?Published intimations
thut the abduction of William
O. Jenkins, American consular a^ent
at Puebla. presented phases indicative
I of connivance by Jenkins and certain
of his associates with the bandits, are
refuted in a story published by the
Excelsior. The newspaper's story is
the result of an investigation by its
special representative in Puebla.
i The Excelsior says the consular
J^gent was really kidnapped, and that
' Cordova, loader of the bandits, signed
a receipt for 200,000 pesos, althou&hjfft
is said it is not known how
much of this amount has been paid
or who paid it.
Tfce arrest of Jenkins' attorney,
who has been released on bail, is believed
to have been brought about bv
the local courts wanting to assure
*j|?stimony to aid in clearing up charges
in connection with what persons
paid over the ransom money.
Mr. Jenkins is still in the hospital
suffering from the effects of a week s .
privations.
1- j
Y^>u Do More Work,
You are more ambitious and you get more !
enjoyment out of everything wh.cn youj '
blood is in good condition. Impurities ir '
the blood have a very depressing efleet on j
the system, causing weakness, laziness 1
nervousness and sickness.
ROVE'S TASTELESS Chill TONIC i
icQiurus jMier.py ana Vitality by Purifying
and Enriching the Blood. When you feel
its strengthening, invigorating effect, see
how it brings color to the cheeks and how
it improves the appetite, you will then
appreciate its true tonic value.
GROVE'S TASTELESS Chill TONIC
is not a patent medicine, it is simply
IRON and QUININE suspended in Syrup.
So pleasant even children like it. The
blood needs Quinine to Purify it and IRON
to Enrich it. These reliable tonic properties
never fail to drive out impurities in
the blood.
The Strength-Creating Power of GROVE'S
TASTELESS Chill TONIC has made it
the favorite tonic in thousands of homes.
More than thirty-five years ago, folks
would ride a long distance to get GROVE'S
TASTELESS Chill TONIC when a
member of their family had Malaria or
needed a body-building, strength-giving
tonic.* The formula is just the 3ume toi.day,
and you can get it from any drug
\ store. 60c per bottle. +
o
) WILLIAM EUGENE KING, Ml
Physician and Surgeon
Office in Piatt Drug Oo.
AYNOR,. ... S. t
OR. J. 0. THOMAS
Physician and Surgeon
loris, s. o.
0R.G. 1. LEWIS
DENTAL SURGEON
Office Ov?r Norton Drug Coapattv
CONWAY. 8. C.
LUM JUNG LAUNDRY
CONWAY, 8. C,
J3??(finning July 1st. 1913
All jpersons must take ticketslfe.
work left hero. Positively nwork
delivered until ticket is prt
sented. laundry not called for 1
30 days wiil be sold for charges
LUM JUNG
D. A. SPIVEY & CO.
W. B. King, Secty.
BONDS AND INSURANCE
?Office in?
PEOPLES NATIONAL BANK
BUILDING
H^RRELSON & HARRELSON
f Attorneys-at-Law
Practice both in the State and
Federal Courts.
MULLINS, ? ? S. C
'
I
H. H. WOODWARD,
Attorney and Coonaellor at Lav
CONWAY, S ~
B. B. SCARBOROUGH
Attorney at Law,
CONWAY. S. C.
T. B. LEWIS,
Alty. arid CouuceUor ai Lav
CONWAY. - - - S . t.
4
^AsDead as
Every druggist in town?your <
gist has noticed a great falling off
all give the same reason. Dod:
place.
"Calomel is dangerous and pe
Liver Tone is perfectly safe anc
prominent local druggist
T ? 4 4 r*v i i
iaKe uoason s liv
Dodson's Liver Tone is personally
guaranteed by every druggist who '
sells it. A large bottle costs but a *
few cents, and if it fails to give easy '
relief in every case of liver sluggish- *
ness and constipation, you have only (
to ask for your money bnck. ,
Dodson's Liver Tone is a pleasant- ,
tasting, purely vegetable remedy, '
harmless to both children and adults. |
MUST PKOVIDK ['CMW, <
Columbia ?Directors ol tDc Uor.th;
Carolina Automotive Trad* :
I'on meeting in Columbia Thorsday i
passed re.v.lulions st). ugly U'gine \
the passage at the next session of
the g< ncal : isciiibly of a mea lira
p ro v i< ing for the const ructk 11 of pCi- (
rnrnont highways iii tin- tate. Td
resolutions declared that So* h
Carolina is to keep pace with her sister
states that funds must no pr \ i ICriticis
(Jitize
It is the plain, p
citizen to criticize
ment measures beli
Swift 8c Compan
it ion perhaps, than
stand the meat pac
Iits relations to publi
ests, even though tl
been giving the sut
j sincere attention.
Swift 8c Compan
? interference with its
function by gove
however well inten
injury to every r
child who wants rr
as to the men who
I to those who dres!
Maximum ser
monopolize becaus
tion and lack of c<
of supply is furnis
of profit?a fractic
pound from all soui
Therefore Swif
taking every legitin
ship to prevent sue)
These advertise
to help you, and
decide what is besl
takes are costly anc
in these trying time
Let us send you
Address Swif
Union Stock Yard
Cttt<ff
UW11L u V/Ulll
//L?
L?// ^busheb ifJ mm 0U
aBMlf/a%o9?! O J
\ V Exusr.34% jp 7 f\ I n
XVE#
THE HORRY HERALD. CON
x r i
gtjho Dodo
iruggist and everybody's drugin
the sale of calomel. They i
ion's Liver Tone is taking its ]
i i
:ople know it, while Dodson's
I gives better results," said a
i'
I.
rer Tone" Instead 1 j1
rake a spoonful at night and wake
ip feeling fine; no biliousness, sick i,
lendache, acid stomach or constipated i
>owela. It doesn't gripe or cause inconvenience
all the next day like vio- 11
lent calomel. Take a doso of calomel
today and tomorrow you will feel
weak, sick and nauseated. Don't lose
s day's work! Take Dodson's Liver
Tone instead and feel tine, full of
vigor and ambition.
mI by the next legislature at its n xt
;cssion for highway work. (
Tammany hall nppa:? nlly went
I own to defeat in the municipal election
recently.
o
liecommendcvlions that all nations
legislation prohibiting indusI
' ial labor by children holow the age
' 1 10 were mad ? by the International
Vv'oiking Women's congress in a reso
lution adopted unanimously.
IT
m and I
nship I
ublic duty of every I
proposed govern- I
eved to be harmful. I
ly is in a better pos- I
i others, to under- I
king business in all I
ic and private inter- I
ie others may have I
>ject a great deal of 9
iy is convinced that 1
> legitimate business K
rnmental agencies, 9
tioned, would be an I
nan, woman and I
leat to eat, as well \ |
raise the meat and j B
5 and distribute it. I I
vice that cannot | |
e of keen competi- j 9
sntrol over sources j 11
hed at a minimum I j 0
;>n of a cent per 111
*ces. I g
*t & Company is I |
nate step of citizen- I H !
h interference. | 0
ments are intended I g
to help Congress I 9
t to be done. Mis- I i
1 apt to be harmful I I
a Swift "Dollar." I I
t & Company, I I
Is, Chicago, 111. I I
pany,U.S.A. I I
8 9
WHAT ULCOMES OF \ 'i ti
THE AVERAGE DOLLAR \ ?5
// fiECEIVCD DV \\ I ^ ig
| SWIFT & COMPANY J1H :
If FROM THE SALE OF MEAT V 1 fig I
AS'OIJY PRODUCTS L._,_, ,Jfl I
\ 8S CENTS IS I-'AIO F Jtt THE J
\V UVE ANIM/L 1
\\ 12.00 CENTS >0R I.AAOR i/
\\ EXOt NSES AND FRriCHT //
\ 2.04 CENTS REMAINS ]/
V WITH jy'
V SWIFT & COMPANY J?
\vAS rR0Mf,.^'
WAY, S. C., NOV. 13, 1919.
SCIENGEADDIN6
TO SPAN OF LIFE
Dr. Mayo Predicts Increase
of Ten Years in
Longevity.
Before an assemblage of the most ,
brilliant surgical talent of America,
Dr. William J. Mayo, elder of the .
kvell known Mayo brothers of ,
Rochester, Minn., addressing the 1
Clinical congress ot) the Ameiican (
College of Surgeons, says the New
Vork Tribune, predicted that ten
ypars will be added to the life of man
tnrough the achievement of medical ,
science in the next twenty years.
Dr. Mayo, whose speech in the
g;ra?nci ball room of the Waldorf marked
the occasion of his taking office
Els president of the college, called attention
of the professional men and
women who heard him to the fact
that this added life would come at
the period when cancer is the most
dread human foe, spoke rather
p( ssimistically of the present ability
of medical scion e to cope with tha*
foe, reviewed favorably the contribution
of radio active substances to
cancer therapy, and urged a- deep n
research into the abstract s.-kv. e
that they may be ma le t.< yiol the!
fell contribution to the warfnv on
:vi:> iigv.ant disease.
fv'iUch of Or. Mavo's add res/, technical
discussion of metastasis in caner
was not intended for the layman
In part ho said:
"America is confronted with tlw
problem of reconstruction fellowir.
war. How may she best meet the i t<
rnational eompetit-ion along with
failing immigration and an exodus o
t< mporary residents who are now returning
to their European homes,
with their savings, earned in
America ? No one among us can be so
mean in spirit as to desire the
American laborer to return to prewar
conditions, but rather do we all
' i
4-1...4 _ i-i ii* ? ?
miii 111c lauorrr iin<i ms lamnv j
shall be well housed, and fed, well 1
clothed and that his children, the j
future American citizens, shall he I
veil educated and equal to grappling
with the problems of their time.
"By laborers I mean all those high I
01 low who are engaged in productive
employment; not only men hut women,
who under changing conditions
in tiiis country have become an important
part of the labor supply.
"America must compete in international
tnule with countries which, devested
by war, containing peoples
willing to work long hours for small
pay. under labor conditions which w v
hope never again to see in this country.
Successful competition demands
C : II"
If IIP
v.
Lay a bet 011
rollang 'em with
ALBER
the national joy smc
Rolling your own ci
^ about as joy'us a sidi
your grip! For, take it at a
flavor, fragrance and cool
life as every "P. A. home-r
Prince Albert puts new si
delightful rolled intb a cigaretteto
it like you been doing it since
and a cinch to handle ! It stays
start to hug the paper around
You'll like Prince Albert in a
4 nn f ar\/i
AWIIV^U IUU i 4-J11 v-, auu
process. Ycu know P. A. is th<
pipes where one vv^s smoked
way. And, me-o-m; , what a
?*very time you fill up I
\
ft
efficient production. There must be a
reduction in this country of the 200
per cent unproductive man to a minimum.
"Every person who is fulfilling an
unnecessary function between production
and consumption is a double liability,
inasmuch as the labor of another
is required to maintain him,
and what he might produce were he
profitably employed is lost. This
parasitic class is a cause of great
social unrest in America.
To Add Ten Years to Life.
"In the work of the medical profes
sion lies the best hope for the. future.
Since the close of the civil war fifteen
years have been added to the
average* lenjrth of human life. With
present knowledge and present conditions,
fifteen years more might he
added to the life of man in this country
within the next twenty years. It
is certain that the years will he mid- i
ode, at the mtst productive ajr.\
from a standpoint of industry, and
will greatly aid in maintaining our
position as the most productive!
nation. When I was a boy it was!
difficult for men of forty to find a
new job and for a man of fifty it was |
practically impossible. Today the oldder
men aie> great assets to the counti
y.
''In the prolongation of their lives,
their skill and their experience particular
work, counts for much. Th y
are less inflammable. they haw
family ties an<l responsibilities?th >
have something to lose?so that t! ey
are less under the in finer ce of th
violent agitato.
"If as a nation, we ad\ai ce the time ,
of promt-lion of each p '"sen t? u
\ears, we can well nf'ord to 'ore
tite hours or work and unproc. liv
conditions, and we sha!' be aH >>
compete with those' countries in which
lean' hours and poor living con lition
shorten human life, and eventua i c
decrease production and i.ter< <
social unrest.
NOTICE.
Under and by virtue of authority f
the Probate Court for the C unity of
Horry, notice is herebv riven tlvi? I
I will soli at public auction to the
highest bidder for cash at the home
of the late J. M. Sarvis, near Ads
brook, S. C., on Saturday November
15th, 1919,?sale beginning at 10
o'clock A. M., and continuing unt.il
all the property has been sold, all an 1
| singular all of the personal prope t *
of which the late J. M. Sarvis died
seized and possessed, the same consisting
of household and kitchen furniture,
live stock, cattle farming implements
and crops on hand.
G. M. SARVIS,
Qualified Administrator.
Allsbrook, S. C.,
October 29, 1919.?2t 10 30
The Mississippi Democratic tick I
| v ?'?s elected in general election with ai
vote approximately of 50,000.
/
ike
garettes with Prince Albert i
eline as you ever carried arov
ny angle, you never got such q\
ness in a makin's cigarette in
nade" will present you!
mokenotions under your bonnet!
?and, so easy to row t And, you ju
> away back ! You see, P. A. is crir
i put?and you don't lose a lot wht
the tobacco !
i jimmy pipe as much as you do in a
>arch arc cut cut by cur exclusive p,
tobacco that has led three men to
before. Yes sir, Prince Albert bla;
wad of smokesport will ripple yoi:
NOTICE OF SALE.
Under and by virtue of the decree
and judgment of the court made by
his Honor. T. J. Mauldin, Presiding
Judge, in the case of Charles A. Livingston,
Plaintiff vs. Claude B. Livingston.
et al., Defendants, and
dated the 20th day of October, A. D.
1919, I, the undersigned J. A. Lewis,
Sheriff of 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 salesday in December next,
it b<ring the first day of said month,
all and singular those certain lands
situate in Horry County, and describ
e<i its rouows, U) wit:
Tiact No. 1: All that certain
tiact or parcel of land in Horry
County described as follows, to-wit:
Situated in Little ' River neck, in
Little River Township, Horry County,
South Carolina, containing One
Hundred and Twenty-Three and OneFourth
(123 1-4) acres, more or less,
and bounded on the South by Dunn
Sound or Salt Marsh, on the East by
land of J. T. Lewis, on the North by
land of J. F. Lewis, or the Main
Rend, and on the West by Bob Lewis,
being the same tract of land conveyed
to Robert Livingston, Jr., deceased,
by C. B. Livingston, C. B. Livingstone,
attorney ir fact for Charles A.
Livingston. b> deed dated March
14th. I'J'C). and recorded in Book
< -4, r:vrc 2b. r< or.i of Hei ry County:
: r.d tb same is known as the estate
lar.d >?f Rob it Livingston. J-.
Tract No. 2: An undivided cnoha!f
inU ' in ami to that certain
, t' a. 2 " ituat d 'a 1 'tie R'vev Neck
T wpship. ir. tb." C'oun'v of Horry
1 S nth Car Ihia, containing
l-Viir lla.ndv 1 a. si fcrty-fivo
(4A"?? acres. cvj-c or le - a id c wpom.!
nuvh.'.y ei* salt .aa.vsh or beach
land. oi !'i Vr vv lan bounded on
tl e Norlb by th - A. V. Bessent land.
: lam! ( r T. Lewis. n<! Trad No. 1.,
known as the estate of Robert Liv;
ingston, Jr., on the Fast by the
estate of Von on. on the South by
Atlanti' Ocean, ant! on the West by
land of N. F. Nixon: being lands forj
morly owned by Robert Livingston,
Sr.. as to an undivided one-half in'
tcrest.
; TKRM.S of Sale Cash. Purchaser
: to pay for papers.
' Conway, S. C., Nov. 7th, 1019.
.1 A. LEWIS,
Sheriff of Horry County.
!H. H. WOODWARD,
Plaint! ff's Attorney.
N;micd.
All persons arc he ? by forbidden to
hunt, lish, trap, cut r or trespass in
iriywav on mv land in Dogwood
Noel: Town, hip, containing 050 acres,
more or lor and bounded by the Atlantic
ocean beach, lands of Coney
jVerecn and others.
I 11(> 19 ?lt - Alelvin Causey.
rljrM 1019
. Reynolds
accu Co.
Awaiting yout Bay-so, you 'U
Ant/ toppy if t1 bags, Hay rod
tins, handsome pound and
half pound tin humidors?
and ? that classy, practical
pound crystal glass humidor
with npongo moistener top
S JllSt that kecpo Prince Albert in
t such perfect oornhtmn /
ind in ^ J( Reynolds Tobacco
lality, Company
Win?ton*Salum, N. Cs
Il'8 so
st take