The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, March 18, 1920, Page PAGE SEVEN, Image 7
ASPIRIN FOR HEADACHE
^ Name "Bayer" is on Genuint
Aspirin?say Bayer
C ' : ' v*
Insist on "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin"
In a ''Bayer package," containing proper
directions tor Headache, Colds, Pain, |
Neuralgia, Lumbago, and Rheumatism. j
Name "Bayer" means genuine Aspirin
prescribed by physicians for nineteen
years. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets
cost few cents. Aspirin is trade mark
of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetio-'
cidcftter of Salicylicacid.
After you eat?always take
FATONIC
y (TOR YOUR Agp-STOMACiO
^ Instantly relieves Heartburn* Bloat dGauy
Feeling. Stops food souring*
repeating* and all stomach miseries.
AM*direction and appetite. Keeps stomach
eweetand strong. Increases Vitality and Pep.
EATONICIsUm best remedy. Tens of thouearn**
wonderfully benefited. Only costs a cent
or two a day to eaaft. Positively guaranteed
fo please or WseMI refund msney, Get a big
skmk today. TotwfflsM.
tiftNWAY DRUG COMPANY
8|24 CONWAY, S. C. 52t.
O - Colleton
County will have an experimental
farm on the lands of the
county farm. Tests are to be conducted
in fertilizers, liming, boll
weevil poisoning, etc.
(,
Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic
restores vitality and energy by purifying and enriching
the blood. You can soon feel its Strength
ening. Invigorating Effect. Price 60c.
J. M. JOHNSON,
CIVIL ENGINEER
MARION, S. 0.
my Engineering ana surveying
office will be open during my ah
nee, and prepared to take cart
of any work as usual. Addreai
all communications as hereto
flora.
* j- LIFT OFF CORNS!
Apply few drops then lift sore,
j touchy corns off with
! fingers
\ \ ^
^rul NV^S\/
j
/doesn't hurt a bit! ?)rop a litti
F leezone on an aching corn, instant!
that corn stops hurting, then you lil
it right out. Yes, magic!
A tiny bottle of Freezone costs bi
few cents at any drug store, but :
sufficient to remove every hard con
oft corn, or corn between the toe
nd the calluses, without soreness <
irritation.
Freezone is the sensational discoi
cry of a Cincinnati genius. It
wonderful.
GOOD LOT HORSES, I
ONS AND HARNESS A
?
r D i
VS. U.J
COI\IV\l
1
GHINESt EXPRESS
GRATITUDE TO U. S.
Feel Grateful on Account of
Attitude on Shantung
Question.
? \
Peking.?Gratitude to America for
the attitude of the United States
! Congress on the Shantung question
'was expressed by Chinese statesmen
1 in addresses welcoming Admiral Albert
Gleaves, commander of tho
United States Asiatic Fleet, here.
Premier Chin Yun-f'eng who gave
a dinner in honor of Admiral Gleaves
said:
"The friendly relations which have
always existed between America and
China, and especially the recent attitude
of your nation toward the
peace settlement in Europe cannot
but command the gratitude and admiration
of our people.
"We believe that our country has
in late years made some progress as
a republic; but we realize that from
you, a republic of riper experience,
we may learn many profitable lessons.
We hope to secure from you
constant advice and counsel so that
we may cooperate to maintain tho
permanent peace of the Pacific. This
is the sincere wish of the Chinese
people."
Marshal Tuan Chi-jui, former premier
of the Chinese cabinet and
I .
NOTICE TOBACCO GROWERS.
For tobacco barn flues
call on Sasser Company, Inc.
Gurlcy, South Carolina. Wo
manufacture the best flues
made, file your order with
us immediately.?adv l|lj29.
6 mos.
[
HANDS, ARMS.
LIMBS ASLEEP
And Wat Ron-Down, Weak and
Nervous, Says Florida Lady.
Five Bottles of Cardor
Made Her Well.
| Kathleen, Fla.?Mrs. Dallas Prine,
of this place, says: "After the birth
I _ A I A I It ? _
i 01 my lasi cnna...i got very much
I run-down and weakened, bo 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
.vorse all the time...
I knew I must have some relief or
l would soon bo in the bed and in a
serious condition for I felt so badly
and was so nervous and weak 1 could
hardly live. My husband asked Dr.
about my taking Cardul. TIo
said, 'It's a good medicine, and good
for that trouble', so he got me 5 bcu>
lies...After about the second bottle 1
felt greatly Improved.. .before fakir?
it my limbs and hands and arnu
would go to sleep. After taking it,
( J however, thta poor emulation dis?ay*
l** peareu. M** tiue'ugtu cam? back to
y me and I was soon on the road to
ft health. After the uso of about 5 bottles,
I could do all my house-work
and attend to my eix children belt
sides."
is 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, vegeM
table, medicinal ingredients with no
bad after-effects. Thousands of women
7. have voluntarily written, telling of
:h the good Cardul has done them. Jt
should help you, too. Try it E 74
VIULES,> BUGGIES, WAGLWAYS
ON HAND. .
ENKINS
'AY S. C.
i - ? .
*TTV HOKRY HERALD, fcON WA
J """"
*~ ?.
"A COMPLETE LINE
BOILERS SAV
ENGINES PLA
CRUDE OIL ENGINES EDG
GAS ENGINES TRI1
STEAM PUMPS LAT
We also have listed w
of second-hand machinery,
quirements.
HYMAN SU
)
Mill Supplies a
Wilmington, N. C.
3118?tf.
present head of the National Defense
Hoard, said:
"I cannot refrain from mentioning*
the admirable attitude of the American
Congress toward the Far Eastern
question in the matter of the
peace treaty. It seems that public
opinion in America is being guided
much more by ideals than by interests.
Your diplomacy is endeavoring
not merely to maintain peace
"v ?t .. r:
luicvci. i uu si-i u line eAitnijJie I-JI
the people of your sister republic
who will look to you for co-operation
and counsel when the Pacific
question comes to be settled."
o
THE DREAM AHEAD.
What would we do in this world of
ours
V/crc it not for the dream-' ahead?
For thorns are mixed with the fairest
flowers,
No matter what path we tread,
And each of us has a golden goal
Stretching out to the endless
years;
And ever we climb with a hopeful j
soul,
With alternate smiles and tears. |
The dreams ahead are what hold us
up
Through the strain of a ceaseless
fight;
While aur lips are pressed to the
wormwood cup
And storms shut out the light,
To some 'tis a dream of a high
estate
To others a dream of tiuce with
fate,
In a ceaseless search for health.
On dreams of a hearth and a home
1 to be;
; One sees but golden store;
I While the burdened toiler dreams of
i ;
i rest
Where toil shall be no mor6.
So, eve)', it in irt Rrtma sweet guise,
Hope hangeth her lanterti high;
Oh. the dreams ahead are are golden
stars
That help us to live or die.
?Buffalo Times.
o
Washington.?Coincident with t1 e
signing of the adroad bill President
Wilson issued executive orders
'providing for continuation of the
powers of the fuel administ' a* ion,
but dividing them between the director
general of radivads an 1 a
commission of four. Director General
Hines will retain juris tic !en
over domestic distribution, while
? y \ mercury\
I \ bones. 'I
1 day and 3
\ seated to
work.
Take "Dodson's Li
Here's my guarantee! Ask your
druggist for a bottle of Dodson's
Liver Tone and take a spoonful tonight.
If it doesn't start your liver
and straighten you right up better
than caloinol and without griping or
making you sick I want you to go
. * : - ... v
7, S C , MARCH 18, 1920
-
I1F M4RHIMFRY"
w. iiinvniivkaii ?
7 MILLS COTTON GINS NERS
CORN MILLS
1ERS FEED MILLS
MMERS WOOD SAWS
H MILLS PUMPS
ith us all sizes and types
Let us figure on your rei
i
(PPLY CO. ;
nd Machinery.
New Bern, N. o.
\
the commission will handle bunker
and export coal matters.
( aids Cause Grip and iniiuenza
' AXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets remove th?
& use. There is only one "Bromo Quinine.'
E. W. GROVE'S signature on box. 30c.
NEW WORLD
PROGRAM DEVISED
BY CHURCHES
By S. EARL TAYLOR
DR. S. EARL TAYLOR,
'General Secretary Interchurch WorM
! Movemnet,
{ if Christ, on the day lie was born
j had started on a tour to preach ir
| every village in Irrtlia, He would stil,
j have 30,000 more to visit.
I We now believe we have, found t
way by which the leaders of the Prot
I est ant churches can sit around a com
, mon table and have the Christian pro
gram of the entire world laid before
them. By means of the Intercliurcl
World Movement we can see when
the Methodists are, and where tin
Baptists are. We can see the genera
outline of their forces, their presen
status in this great world struggle
and may also have some idea of tlx
unoccupied places, and what may b<
done by all of us to enter these unoc
cupied parts of the world field vhicl
Christ sent us to occupy.
is a dangerous drug, tt is
-quicksilver; and attacks your
*ake a dose of nasty calomel to'ou
will feel weak, sick and nauimorrow.
Don't lose a day's
iver Tone" Instead!
hack to the store and get your money.
Take a spoonful of harmless, vegetable
Dodson's Liver Tone tonight and
wake up feeling great. It's perfectly
harmless, so give it to your children
any time. It can't salivate, so let
I mem cat anything aitorwardfl,
r
??w, '. - n*
>
.. KOHS iiAiSED FROM SEED J
Inc'urtry 1? Profitable if Proper Methods
Are Used?Difficult to Keep
C'ean of Weeds.
Gesd onions are of better 11avor
r.nd keep longer and are more profit- .
a bio to grow than sets, though some '
fail to grow them in the home garden
be : use they are more dillicult to keep
clean of weeds.
The best way to raise onions from
seed is by sowing the seed in a bed
or cold frame early in the season and |
transplanting later to the row where 1 ,
they are to grow. 1 '
A small section of the liotbe.d will |
grow 1,000 plants until they are the
sizo of quills, or they can be crowded.
Llv that time the around will be warm
and all seed will have germinated so } that
the plants may be sot in clean '
ground that has been worked over to
kill all the young weeds.
If one lacks for room in the hotbed
the seed may be sown in a sheltered
place, an old brush heap, ash
bed or some place where the soil is
good.
If there is room to sow the seeds In j
drills six inches apart they may be ,
worked some to keep them growing (
before they are transplanted.
When you are ready to transplant
them, wet the ground and pull the
plants and then cut off about half
the top and slightly tip the roots.
Set the plants from two to throe i
inches apart in the row and in rows j
of 15 Inches apart. If very dry use
water when transplanting and every
one will live.
If the soil has been weljl manured
with stable manure or poultrv. droppings
and worked over several times
before tiie onions ;\ro transplanted
to the rows there will ho but few
weeds to contend with and the plants
will not ho checked in growth.
Onions should be pulled and placed
to dry in the shade when the tops hegin
to turn yellow and drop over,
which is usually in August.
ESSENTIAL FEATURE OF SOW
Besides Belonging to Prolific Family,
Animal Should Have WellDeveloped
Nipples.
(By J. G. FULLER.)
Although she need not be pure
bred, the sow as well as the boar
should have marked characteristics o!
I tliP hrPoH Rv cnrpfnllv
ing young sows from the most typica
and largest litters and properly devel
oping them, a splendid herd of females
can be developed in a few years' time.
To avoid any possibility of mistake,
the choicest sow pigs from the best
sows should be marked while they are
still nursing their dams. They should
not be penned or yarded with those
which are being fattened for market,
but, if possible, should be given free
dom and exercise in the open, where
a growing ration of green feeds, etc.,
A cement hog wallow should be lo
cated In a shady spot and contair
eight or ten inches of water. Crud(
oil or coal tar dip poured on the watci
will keep swine free from lice anc
their skin in good condition.
are available. The sow should not b<
as compactly built as tlie boar aiu
nufy be somewhat finer in conforma
tion and bone. When in fair ttesh a
maturity, the most typical sows of tin
lard typo weigh 350 to 450 pounds. /
1 good breeder and mother cannot b<
picked with certainty until she hni
been tried out. Besides having tlx
proper conform0tion h*donKinr- i?
' I a proline family, ihe ideal boA' shouh
1 J have ten to twelve well-develope<
1 nipples. The essential feature of tlx
sow is that she regularly produce
t large, strong litters of pigs and moth
ers them well.
SELECTION OF POTATO SEE!
*
1 One of Most Imoortanl Farlnr*
Success in Industry?No Waste
J of Plant Food.
r One of the essential and most 1m
portant factors for success in the po
tato industry is the selection of per
feet seed stock from the hill, in mucl
the same way as seed corn is se.lectec
1 | in the field from the best individua
I stalkii.
. There is no other way to get trm
breed characteristics in potatoes ex
oept by selecting seed from the per
feet hill, and seed should bo savec
only from hills producing a first-class
marketable potato in the growing o:
which there is no waste of plant food
No manufacturer in this day ol
economy could stand the loss entailec
by methods of manufacture undei
which he was compelled to cull oui
and throw in the scrap pile 20 pel
cent of his product as waste, and nc
one can expect the highest success ir
potato culture who adopts methods re
suiting In a loss of 20 to f>0 per ceni
J aT Lin - * * ? ? 1 1 - 11
WL mo VIU|J III UIIU UIlIlinrKUltlUU
potatoes. But this is what the potatt
growers of the United States are
many of them, doing today.
Possibilities of Pork.
The possibilities of expanding th<
production of pork are so great tha
we shall never see a scarcity of thli
product
PAGE SEVEtt I
PREPARES TO SET I
Ili'RY. TRIBUNAL I
Nilson writes to Unions And I
Railways to l\lame Rep- I
resentatives I
DECISIONS ON BOARD
BY MAJORITY VOTE
Provided One of Majority is
Member of Public
Group.
Washington.? President Wilson is
preparing to set up the tribunal pro?
vidod in the railroad bill for considering
the wage demands of the 2,000
000 railroad employes.
It was announced at the White
Home that lie was writing to the
unions and railroad companies asking
that they nominate representatives
to the wage board. Under the
i.iw the unions name six representatives
and the roads six From each
of these groups the President will
elect three and in addition he will
name three representatives of the
public. The board of nine as thus
constituted will be subject to Senate
approval.
Decisions of the beard will be bv
majority vote, profided one of themajirity
vote, provided one of the
law does not make acceptance of the
findings mandatory on either the
workers or the roads, but members
o<' Congress during deb it" on the
measure expressed the belief that
public opinion would compel accepfa
nee.
Representatives of the brother
hoods still are meeting in Wasning'.cn
considering the President's reply
to their wage demands in which he
promised that if the new law did
not provide for a tribunal for settlen
ent of wage controversies he would
use his efforts to have a board appointed.
In asking the President to
veto the railroad bill, the railroad
men said the mochinery set up by
law would result in a delay of many
months in the settlement of their
demands.
o
NOTICE OF SALE.
Under a chattel mortgage f^om A.
J. Stroud to T. L. Hooks, dated the
f:r?t day of August A. I)., 1919, and
since that date transferrer to the
undersigned A. 11. McCoy for valivi
received; we will sell at public auction
to the highest bidder for cash
at eleven o'clock in the forenoon on
,itho 26th day of March 1920, at the
j shops of Conway Motor Car Comp
pany, all and singular the following
1 ('escribed personal property, to wit;
One Chevrolet touring car known
as the Carl Hooks car, and recently
? seized by the undersigned J. A.
^ Lewis us Agent of the said A. B.
McCoy under said chattel mortgage.
, Terms, of ^alc cash on the day of
^ -ale and before delivery ot the ar3!'
ielc. ?A. B. McCOY, ~
hi Assignee of Mortgage.
&<?. A. LEWIS, Agent.
: "V.ted March 9th. 1920.?a1,11?td.
| Ba R No. 290
? ?TANDARD TREAD ^
FOR VEHICLES
The house last week passed to
Ihird reading, without material op)
ptsition, the bill by Mr. Berry ofOrangeburg
to prohibit, the sale afp
tor January 1, 1921, of any nevrwagons
or other vehicles of other
than a standard tread of f?G inches,
i he bill exemuts tiaicks and trj??*
* ors with the dual tread or wheels.
It also allows dealers to d'spose of
^ vehicles in stock and unsold 011 the
I 'ate fired. Tt was emphasized by
1 the author of the measure that
wagon manufacturers bad agreed on
j the 50 irch tread, and that many
* ;tates was adopting similar meas6*
ures. Violation would be a mh'd-I
i^c nor, punishable by a tine of not
5 less than S10 nor ir.on than $100
>r by imprisonment not los .* than
1 . five days nor more than HO days.
I Dye That Skirt, r
r
: Coat or Blouse
t
1 "Diamond Dyes" Make Old, 8habby,
Faded Apparel Just Like New.
Don't worry about perfect reunite.
T'?P "niMnntlll n.'flo " r? i> Jn.J 4a -
W ? ? 4MVO, ^U(%I(%IIVWU tv
a new, rich, fadeless color to any f antic.
9 whether wool, silk, linen, cotton or mtxetf
t goods,?dresses, blouses, stockings, skurtsw
9 children's coats, draperies,?everything^
A Direction Book is in package.
To match any material, have dealer*
how you "Diamond Dyi" Color Cam