The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, February 26, 1920, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2
MOE'l.VO
HEISINGFORS IS
, CITY OF MYSTERY |
Many Aliens are There Who
Await Throwing Open
' Doors to Russia.
Helsingfors is the waiting* room for
Pctrograd. Antl it is now one of the
queerest towns in the world, says the
London .Daily Chronicle.
! ;<- friirinir c:V>oltn?* to 1 11 nd VPl 1 O^
-W I ^ ft! ' >? & -
Russians who havo escaped from the
Ked Terror, triad to find a refuge in
Finland. But among its ad en population
are men of very many nationalities
who are waiting to gel into Rus
sia at the earliest possible m< mont,
with Petrograd as their first destination.
On a ship which put into port here \
some little while ago were 23 Gormans,
3 Americans and 2 Englishmen
?all commercial travellers anxious
tc perfect their organization in Finland
as a jumping off ground for
Russia. And in little remote villages,
now white with snow, you may find
a German traveller talking business
witli an American over the thin an 1
sour beer which is only drink permitted
in this dry, dry land.
In neutral harbors there arc now
locked some thousands of tons of
food, which the northwestern government
would bring into Petrograd if
the way could be opened.
A City of Mystery.
These pushing German and American
travellers will follow closely on
the track of the food ships, ready to
set up their agencies long before
Petrograd has settled down to a normal
life.
Of actual conditions, in the most
Unhappy city in the world, little is
known. Helsingfors is full of rumors.
But Petrograd is also completely
shut off from the outer world
that to discover the truth about it is
almost impossible. Today a Finnish
*- * ? .1 1 I
nuFinor.s man asKeu tne uriiisn con- |
su) if it was possible to got a letter
through to some English people in
Petrogvad.
"It is quite impossible/' he replied.
"They wPl not admit even the Red
Cross nurses. There must be quite
hO English people left in Pctrograd,
but there is no means at all of communicating
with them."
It is still possible, I believe, to get
into Itu.*i>ia from Finland. But it ;s j
not likely if you do succeed in getting |
into Russia, that yen will be able I
to get out a'ive. It is, for the wretch j
\] people of Pctrograd, a choice bvi
tweru slow starvation in the city or a
quick death shot from a sentry ' n th j
way out cf the lend. I
Of the Ru 'dans now in He'sing-.
fors it must be said, however, that J
some a. 'r ist are improving the waiting
h jr. Th.ere are tho e win represent
ail that is permanent and
peace loving in the Ru.h dan cl a ac
ter, but there are many who arc j
im-n: ?*uveiu ui errs, ma'.viin; iiivuu.^i.
fortunes by gambling on the exchange
for moncvs.
It it a complicated business, or 1
course; rather oltsoure to the ordin-j
ary ninn or woman. Hut the rumors
YOUR i |
KIDNEYS
Bej Maybe you Til I MIC they're -.1
B ?ll right and maybo you'ro ?B
Bt wrong about it. B
Br Pains in tho back, cloudy !
B* reddish sediment in tho '
.K urine, palpitation of tho B
Bf heart, i)uffy skin under tho
-^p eyes?these are SOMIC of B
B the symptoms of kidney B i
HL trouble. and they eel) for V
gr UR. I HACHER'S 1
X LlVII ARB BlOOO I
1 Syrup i
A remedy of 67 yearn stand- V
ing. Laxative or cathartic;
t liver regulator; blood purl- 9
B? fler and kidney tonic. At
B your drug ntore.
Ht Tliraw Catomol Away m
'BB Wrn. 8. Prince of Birmingham. JK
Ala., writ oh : "I was suffering
V with indigestion. billiouHnees and fl
Ml H',r?,y trouble. I tried calomel |S
and the doctors for at>out a tS
H month. Finally I tried DR. V
TlfACIIER'S LIVER ANI) BLOOD W
SVRllP and the first bottle re- A
^B lieved mc very much. I am jB
^B sound f and well, can cat any
B thacher Medicine Co. x
B tttaiiiigi, Ttiw., 0. (. A. S
1
which constantly enianatic from the
Hclsingfors or Stockholm or Copenhagen
of the fall of Petrogi ad or the
defeat of the Reds, for instance, arc
not always the result of idle gossip;
they are sometimes deliberately set
in motion by these gay financiers to
suit their own ends.
There is a very curious and almost
hidden money market in Helsingfors,
an unending experimenting in Finnish,
Esthonian or Russian va'ues.
Even the casual visitor never knows
from day to day what his exp:n ewill
be. On exchanging money en the
ship in port he may get 85 marks to
the pound; at his hotel ho - will perhaps
he offered 75; the banks will
give 97, and a private individual well
over 100. This is a variation in
values to which every one now travel
ling abroad is accustomed, but it will
be readily realized that these ! gitimate
variations lend themsehes to
all kinds of speculations in which the
Russian financiers play a leading
part.
Helsingfors, I am told, used to be a
cheerful, entertaining town. It is not
very entertaining today. The man of
affairs has to pay 25 marks for a
table d'hote dinner in a good hotel;
i* he is English and can get some
advantage from exchange, it is not so
depressing. But if he is a Finn, it is
another matter.
The country is still short of food.
There is no white bread. It is almost
black, every sour and indigestible Sugar
is scarce. There is little milk.
The shops here do not advertise the
prices of their goods in the windows,
but clothes look shoddy in the extreme.
All these hardships have their
reflection of the Russian situation.
Finland cannot at present accommodate
more refugees from Russia,
and if the territory between Petrograd
and the Finnish frontier is
evacuated by the Reds there is little
doubt that the starving Russians will
want to come to Finland. Relief will,
U ~ 1 J.. 1 .1 K
nuwevei, nave to De given inem irom
other sources, for this hospitable coun
try can take 110 more victim of Bolshevism.
Housing and house room are now
being rationed. There are already so
many Russians in the country that
house room is difficult to find, and
every one is to be rationed at the
rate of a room per head per family,
exclusive of kitchen. The family of
seven may have even rooms and a
kitchen, but the maiden lady living
alone in a three roomed flat may
keep only one room for herself, which
must serve for every purpooe except
a kitchen.
There has been no ouilding in Finland
for five years, and although
householders are naturally grumbling
at this compulsory letting of looms,
it is recognized that something of the
kind must be done if people are to
live under decent conditions.
S E E M E
or write, if you have a good, improved
farm to sell at reasonable
price, easy terms. I might sell
it for you as I am meeting land
seekers all the time.
R. O. HANSON
213 No. Sixth St.
WILMINGTON, N. C.
IBSSMiWBURN
or heaviness after mab iuw
ciost annoy lag anamierttatina
r.cidrdyfipqp&L
1 kimoids i
pleasant to take, neutralize
1 aciditu nnrl linln restnrn
I normal digestion*
MADE BY SCOTT A BOWNE
MAKERS OP SCOTTS EMULSION
I can make you see better. I car
mi.ke you feel better. I can make
you look better and you will do bettei
by using the best Lens for the
least money.
J. E. DAWSEY,
Optometrist.
UMUiiaiiDBfiBID
Z HORRY COUNTY I
! A TI\IIOT AAAinillU H
3 mudi uumrANi
a L. D. Magrath
tj Manager.
a Real Estate
* a Real Estate Loans
a Bonds
a Insurance
? in a is si a a a a s
too QuMm Tkat Does Not Affset the Hoo
Because of Ho tooic and laxative effect. LAX/
riVK BKOMO QUININE Is better than ordlnar
uln.ne and does not cauee nervousness no
In head. I*.rn?embe?" the full name at*
.<.* lor the i# nature of E. W. ttttOVE. 30<
m
. THE HORRY HERALD, CON
PROMISING MARKETS
FOR GRAPE GROWERS
Will Come About From Large
Amounts Manufactured Into
Non-Alcoholic Drinks
EUROPEAN VARIETIES
RECENTLY ACCLIMATED
Will Compete With Fruit Formerly
Imported at High
Prices.
Grapes from the wine sections of
California are likely to find a numLcr
of outlets never thought of
while the making and selling of
wine was permitted in the Unite J
States. Several such outlets were
indicated by experiences during the
vintagefof 1919, according to specialists
of the United States Depart
rnont of Agriculture who recently
visited the wine-grape regions. The
pioblem, however, is still a big one.
Not only are uses and markets to
be found for the product of 175,000
acres of wine vineyards but for the
considerable portions of table and
raisin varieties that formerly were
made into brandy. The leading va
riety of raisin grape, the Alexandria,
usually has a heavy second
crop, which matures too late foi
drying, and this was formerly use 1
in brandy making. Of the leading
shipping grape, the Flame Tokay,
only the best clusters are usually
,.u: i e 1 AV
tui iuuu: [jurpust's, anu mc
inferior clusters were converted into
brandy. ,Now, other markets must
be found for the culls of raisin and
table grapes.
During the past season there was
a very heavy demand at high prices
lor anything that could be called
grapes. Only a few growers, therefore
attempted experiments in finding
new uses, and these few experiments
were incomplete, but they indicate
probably satisfactory results
when they are more fully tried.
Many Shipments to East.
At least 4,000 cars of fresh win"
grapes were shipped into the Ea tern
States and made into s'-calle i
nonalcoholic wines and grape s'rup
A large gallonage of un ferment jJ
juices was made, a large per cent
Lcirg pasteurized and put up in f>0ga'len
barrels. Much of this ha .
already been shipped east.
Considerable work was done in su \
drying and dehydrating wine grape*,
and the product found a ready marjl:ct
at prices much higher than thos.j
paid for raisins.
Important grape varieties that
i have been imported and tested by
the United States Department of
Agriculture have paved the way for
some new features of the grape industry.
Among them a:e a number
ot varieitcs of shipping and storage
giapes that are considered superior
in every way to the v^rieites heretofore
grown in this country. Some
of them ripen at the same time an
varicltes now grown, some earlier
and some later, thus offering the opportunity
for greatly extending th?
grape marketing and consuming sea
j ? ? ca
son. In addition, a much larger demand
for table grtq^efr-can be created
*han ha* existed up to this time
because the new varieties have superior
eating qualities. One of these
is annually imported into Europe ir
considerable quantities in late wintei
and sold at high prices. It thrive
so well in California that it could b?
sold at prices considerably undei
those of the imported product an<
still net the growers a good profit,
lia ' ? Importations S ipplanted.
The work of the Department o
1 Agriculture has shown, also, how U
* fruit the Ohanez, the best keepinj
variety of all storage grapes. Thi;
' should make it possible, with Cali
fornia-grown Ohanez packed in red
wood sawdust, to supplant larg<
importations of Ohanez and othe
Almerian grapes packed in cor!
! dust.
I The Department of Agricultur
| has also demonstrated that curran
| grapes can be grown in this countr
by grafting on resistant stocks an
* girding the vines while they arc i
I bloom. Mom 4,uui> to 8,f>uu acre
| of these grapes would be neede
| to produce the 34,000,000 pounds o
I dried currants imported annualy dui
! ir>g the decadqe previous to the wai
I?, some districts where raisin varic
I ties arc so late in ripening tha
| they can not be dried, the currar
I varieties ripen early enough to b
? dried and put away before the fir9
4
L. PIIm Cured Hi 6 V> 14 Days
y >ru??Utt refund money if PAZO 0INTMF NT fki
i. tcure Itching Blind, fWedgtior ProtralUf Pile
*\&:aatly relieve* Itchknd PHee. ant yoe oen a
u restful sleep after the urn application. Price 60
WAY, 8. 0., FEB. 20, 1020.
fhappycf
i I Childhood days are ha
child; they are intende<
SCOTISI
brings to a child that is not
strength?substance that de
is concentrated tonic-nourisi
A. 1-4-J 1
fiaiea ana transmuted
Give Scott's Emulsii
The exclusive rnide of cod-live
8. & B. Process." made in f
Laboratories. It is a sua ran
Scott tk Bo*
rains come. In districts where the
raisin varieties succeed, currants, it
; appears probable, can be grown a
an advance crop and cured and
stored by the time the raisin grapes
are ripe, thus furnishing a longe *
[ and more profitable period of ems
ployment for the labor that must be
i kept in raisin vineyards.
In the distinct dry wine districts
; where many of the vineyards are
on phlloxera-resistant stocks, regrafting
can be done with other varieties,
if the vines are not grafted
i too near or below the ground.
Where there are vineyard plantings
i of resistant stock they can be graft,
i ed to such varieties as are found
most desirable.
COPY SUMMONS FOR RELIEF.
' (Complaint Not Served).
Court of Common Pleas.
1 STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA,
County of Horry.
? Willie E. Randall, Plaintiff,
?vs.?
Alva Randall, Annie May Randall,
1 Marion Randall, children of Caro
line Griffin Randall; S. E. Griffin,
Jack W. Griffin, Stephen G.
Griffin, Henry Griffin, Isiah
Griffin; Moses Smith; Lila Smith,
Juley Smith, Henry Griffin, Jr.,
and Murdock Griffin, Distributees
of Jimmy Griffin, Dec'd; and all
and singular all other persons
whomsoever being, or claiming to
be heirs at law of Benjamin Griffin,
Dec'd., the names of whom are
unknown to the plaintiff; S. T.
Sessions, and G. H. Bellamy, DeKSHOC
Is built so solid full of waar and
Kchock-full of comfort that wo arowlllli
Jgto sond It to you ON APPROVAL i
charges prtp?ld. Just otato your th
that's Mil* You will be delighted with t
splendid. 6oft, selected lcatl.cr uppers. T
double thick so.es of Cenuitie Indeslructo
Oak leather often wear on 2 year before tnpvj
pin?. Customers ore wr.t'.n? us-dailyj^l
''1 hoy aro the easiest cr.c'< lonRKjaP
eat wearing shoes I over had."
Especially tanned to exclude barnyard acids*
Especial dirt proof tongue. Scientifically ?
treated to exclude snow n*id water. Send JK
for a pairnt our risk, li v.iry are not
worth %U.OO sond them back at JVm*,
our oxpanao?you bo tht /gSEn
Judge. Send NO money
2'12 3tL
: Etiwan F
%
(THE PRIZI
I
! HAVE GROWN FINE (
i
a
Made on well est
e
k from the be
' /
i USE ETIWAN FERTILIZER!
; EtiwanFe
{.
J CHARLES
iG
<t
r "
h <lU6|8t)
ft.
H
e. -
IILDHOOD
rpy days to the robust
to be days of growth.
UIIICMU
.PIULJIVI1
: thriving, power that sustains
termines growth. Scott9*
iment which is readily assimi*
into strength.
oti to growing children ofteiu
r oil used in Scott's Fmulslon is the famous
Jorwny and refined in our owns American
tee of purity and palatabilty unsurpassed.
me. Bloomfield. N. J. IMS
| fendants.
TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE
NAMED:
YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED
and required to answer the complaint
in this action, which has been
fled in the office of the Clerk of th^
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
service 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 complaint.
Dated January 28th, A. D., 1920.
H. H. WOODWARD,
Plaintiff's Attorney.
TO Stephen G. Griffin and Henry
Griffin and all and singular all
other persons whomsoever being,
or claiming to be, heirs at law of
Benjamin Griffin, Deceased, the
names of whom are unknown to
the plaintiff, Absent Defendants:
TAKE NOTICE That the Complaint
in the foregoing stated action
and the Summons of which
the foregoing is a copy were file 1
in the office of the Clerk of the
Court of Common Pleas in and for
Horry County, at Conway, S. C.,
on the 6th day of February A. D.
192&*
W. L. BRYAN, (L. S.)
C. C. C. P.
H. H. WOODWARD,
Plaintiff's Attorney.
Sen<l my pnir Army Work
Shoes postage free ao4 on
8l*e? Color?
Name
Address hI
ertilizers
3 WINNERS)
1R0PS FOR 52 YEARS
:ablished formula,
st materials.
i AND RAISE GOOD CROPS
rtilizer Co.
>TON, S. C.
i i ii ii
1
1rT~T|?" . ?iiitfBgBaaBMI
NOTICE OP DISCHARGE. H
Notice.is hereby given that the
undersigned, Ora Hobbs as Administratrix
of G. Fred Hobbs, deceased, I
vill apply for a final discharge as I
such administratrix at eleven o'clock II
in the forenoon on the 19th day of
March 1920 before the Jud{?frf Probate
of Horry County at mr office
in Conway in said County.
ORA HOBBS, Administratrix I
of G. Fred Hobbs, deceased.
?2|19 4t pd.
WILLIAM EUGENE KING, M D I
Physician and Surgeon n I
Offioe in Piatt Drng Oo. |
VYNOR,. S. C. I
OR. J. D. THOMAS
Physician and Surgeon I
LOBI8, s o C I
~~ OR. 6. L LEWIS I
DENTAL SURGEON
Oflct 0??r Norton Drag Ciapi^P I
CONWAY, 8. C *
LUMJUNG LAUNDRY, I
CONWAY. & C,
Beffinainr July 1st. IMS I
Ail per&ont> uiujsI lake tickets tfdt
*ork left here. PoSSRively am I
erork delivered until ticket is pH- B
tented. Laundry not called for in fl
10 daye will be Bold for charge* fl
LUM JUNG I
D. A. SPIVEY & CO. I
W. B. King, Secty. I
BONDS AND INSURANCE I
?Office in? fl
t'EOPIJflS NATTHM A1 OAWtr B
? *vu unni\ H
BUILDING I
HARRELSON & HARRELSON I
Attorneys-at-Law I
Practice both in the State and I
Federal Courts. H
MULLINS, ? ? 8. 0.
H. H. WOODWARD, I
Attorney and Cennacller at
CONWAY, 8 ~ I
8. B. SCARBOROUGH | I
Attorney at Law, ! I
CONWAY. 8. C. I
? - 8
T. B. LEWIS. 1
Atty. and Oonncellor at Law I
10NWAY. - - - S O. I
^Theioy'of.Motherhood
gxplains. why?
Mother's Friend
Is a veritable balm for the nerves;
an int msely penetrating application
that softens the muscles, relaxes
nervous tension of the delicate organ*
ism involved in maternity, and pre*
pares the way for an easier, quicker and
more practical delivery. Such reflects
so markedly upon the unborn child*
I Mother's Friend is used externally.
At all Druggists.
Special Booklet on Motherhood end Baby tree.
Brad field Regulator Co. Dept. F<?, Atlanta. <Ga.
I
John I. Ward, of Little Riiofr, was
among those visiting Conway on business
last week. t
THtU&r 1^1
^^ 2 /UMA
SCALEO TINS ONLY |
ATYOUR GROCeSS I
ptAXWELL HOUSE I
, O
j No Worms In c Healthy Child
All children troubled with worms hnve en ua>
, healthy color, which iodicotee poor blood, and as a
rule, there is more or less stomach disturbance,
j GROVE S TASTELESS chiil TONIC given regularly
for two or three weeks will enrich the blood, lie*
prove the digestion, and act as a Gaosral Strength'
*nlng Tonic to the whole system. Nature win then
irow off or dispel the worms, and the Child will be
in perfect b*?Uh. Pleasant *.o take. ttc pet bottle