The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, April 15, 1920, Page PAGE SEVEN, Image 7
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ASPIRIN FOR HEADACHE f
.* \ *
Nome "Bayer" is on Genuint
Aspirin?say Bayer
E
Insist on "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" D
in n "Bayer package/* containing proper t
directions lor Headache, Colds, Pain, .
Neuralgia, Lumbago, and Rheumatism.
Name "Bayer** means genuine Aspirin * I
prescribed by "physicians for nineteen 1
years. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets (
cost few cents. Aspirin is trade mark {
of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetkh ?
y AOiilnstav nf .QuliittrliAoniil *
r?WIUUOVVI VI KJM1IVJ iivnv&u* ^
?o
NOTICE OF DISCHARGE. 1
Notice is hereby given that the f
undesigned administrator of Harry j
A.^tetz, deceased, will apply to the
Judge of Probate of Horry County ,
:jt his officec at Conway, S. C., at!
eleven o'clock in the forenoon on the (
19th day of April 1920, for a final | (
discharge as such Administrator. ! {
'1 C. S. DIETZ, 1
^ Administrator of Harry A. Dietz, <
TV'iareh 10th, 1920. Deceased. I
4j 18 4t ?pd. i
how MAKE southern ;
'Woodlands profit '
I <
|i
Washington, D. C.?A bulletin con- 1
taining numerous illustrations has ( I
been prepared by forestry of south - ( 1
cm specialists of the U. S. Depart- '
ment of Agriculture for the benefit
of southern farmers interested in
iraking their woodlands more profit- |
able. It contains suggestions regard
ing the marketing of many kinds of
logs, and calls attention to the im-j
portance of wise cutting. The need (
of protecting seedlings in woodlands |
is emphasized, and the wasteful
stripping of land, slch as has laid
hare so many slopes, is condemned.
Photograps show the evil results
that follow shortsighted practices.
This bulletin is entitled,"Making
.Woodlands Profitable in the Southern
States," and can be had free of |
charge by addressing the U. S. Department
of Agriculture, Wa hington,
D. C.
o
Tested Seeds |
For Field and Garden 1
' T3rt our free Catalog which tell \
about the best varieties of Gardci
Seeds?for home use, canning am |
Wf shipping?what Held seeds to plant fo .
~ heavy yields of grain or hay?which t<
sow for abundant pasturage.
I WOODS
t SEEDS
ire choice strains of the best varieties
re-eleaned and tested for gerrninatioi
and purity.
Write for Catalog and "Wood's Croj
? Special." JZlvino: timnlv ^fnpmflt.lnn nti(
loumwdj prices." Mailed free."
T.W.WOOD & SONS
SEEDSMEN,
RICHMOND, .... VIRQINI#
[ ZEEmlmmimmmSmZm * " ' ]
I \i ? ? |
In the boll weevil counties of this
State, the farmers are shelling: peanuts
for planting and they expect to
make good money from the crop.
, SThe Herald expects to have a great
, Heal in its columns about peanuts as .
' Ume goes on.
; ThoJlipneme Y
IdfrYfl
dip r
j \wmm-' i.
i > I
I ^ J
r Apprehension is avoided by
Motiier'sFhiend |
AttMfcaration of penetrating oils and <
medicinal ingredients which is used to (
lender the muscles, cords and tendons .
(pliable?thus greatly reducing tension.
The period should be one of calm
repose as the new dawn draws nearer.
Mother's Friend is used externally^
% At all Druggists. .
Special Booklet on Motherhood and Baby free. i
^ Brad acid Regulator Co* Dpt. F-15, Atlanta. Oa. )*
|
i
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* . v * \ ? ' * /
i* Jk? ~ 'i
. . , , . , ...... . .
armers urged to
raise foodstuffs;
ifforts of the American Cotton
Association Are Highly
Recommended.
Columbia, S. ?Letters of oom?
nendation of the work being done by
he American Cotton Association are
>eing received by the association from
uominent men all over the 6outh. The
otters are coming from public offk
3ials, merchants, farmers, bankers,
liters and professional men. All
inlte in declaring the association enitled
to the hearty support of the peo
ne 01 in? pouin.
Senator Hoke Smith, of Georgia, l
jends the following endorsement: |
"I cordially commend the work of
he American Cotton Association.
"Every cotton planter should Join |
:lie Association, and seek earnestly |
;o carry out its policies. The farmore
,f cotton growing states have the
jreatest opportunity of any farmers
n the word. The lands furnish exceptional
advantages for the produc;ion
of foodstuffs; they can raise hogs
ind cattle at less cost than in- any
jther portion of the United States.
With a monopoly in tho raw material
which practically clothes the world.
Lhoy have sacrificed their great staple
by selling at prioes far below its
real value. This has been due to
unwise methods of marketing the
crop. The crop has been thrown upon
tho market two or throe months immediately
after it h^s been gathered.
Manufacturers were not in & position
to buy it, and speculators alone could
handle it.
"Cotton farmers have yiot raised
their own foodstuffs, and have been
compelled to sell. They should unite
with the American Cotton Association.,
raise their own foodstuffs, and sell in
each county not more than one
twelfth of the product of the county
each month.
"Organization and co-operation Is
essential for the success of cotton
farmers. Cotton, before the war,
should not, for years, hare sold for
less than twenty-flve cents a pound
in? prices, recently advised By tut
American Cotton Association, are
only fair prices for this year's crop.
"If the farmer will join the American
Cotton Association, and carry out
its plans, we will sell no more cotton
at prices which have lost to the cot
ton trowing section the advantage?
which a Divine Providence haa bestowed
upon them."
Senator Robert. L. Owan, of Okla
homa, writes President Wannamake;
an follows:
"I am delighted to know of your
progress in organising the American
Cotton Association. Cotton ^lothet
the world; its importance as a com
nierclal and financial factor cannot b
overestimated. Every banker, ever:
merchant, very cotton raiser, and
every business man In the South
should take plrasure and pride in be
roming a member of this association.
"I wish you ever/ success In your
campaign for membership.
Senator Jos. E. Randsdell of Lou'? ana
solids the following endorsement:
"I wish to say that I was very muc'
gratified to be selected as a member
of the Louisiana division of the
American Cotton Association and to
subscribe myself as one of its charter
members. This Is ample evidence, 7
believe, that I have faith In the alms
and -purpose of the association.
"There can be no doubt about the
necessity for organisation among the
cotton planters ef the South along progressive
lines, and the advantages to
^e derived by co-operation, and union
among them. There le great strength
In unity of counsel and purpose, and
an association comprising one hun
dred thousand of the most progressive
and enteiprlslng of the South's cottor
planters?the real cotton producers?
Is bound to have a genlulne beneficent
effect upon the growth and good of th
Industry.
Mr. W. C. Lanier, president of th
Oeorgla Bankers Association, e
dorses the American Cotton Aeeocit
tion in the following terms:
"I feel that the association that yr
represent has been the greatest meat
of boosting the price of cotton that hr
ever existed to my knowledge. Yor
business find aggressive methods
handling a campaign for the bett/
ment of the cotton producer has be
phenomenal. T certainly feel that y
should have the cooperation of eve*
business man In the Southern Stat/
Hon. CharlAi W
... ? VH5U1 ?VTV1II(
->f Arkansas, hae written the followir
etter to President Wannamaker:
I most heartily endorse the car
[>afen for a membership drtre for t*
Anicrloan Cotton Association, belie
nc that the work that is being dor
by this splendid organisation ! r
more farreaching Importance to tk
cotton growers of the South than ar
ilmllar movement that has been ii
ingnrated in resent years.
A JSMaMHSMMMMBmeSHS.
( jlds Cause Grip and influenza
AXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets remove t!
'.use. There is only ?no "Bromo Quinize
. W. GROVE'S el?aaturo on box. SOo.
THE HOURY HKRAT.D, OOHWA
It/you want a.
pleaoarrt aurprls
Keep a. close
watch on
jyour
"Diamond _~2.e>t;
mileage v
i ^ ^
We are pleased to
nn n i nmAn r nnrl l/r\M*i O
UII LMaiiiuiiu CUIU r\cuj\
Tubes, and believe them
the market.
HAVOLINEI
By reason of havinrj
advance, we have attrac
oil.
HYMAN SUPP
WILMING'
tfr-4|l
PINK BOLLWORM
THREATENS COTTON
t mm?mm?mm
Seed Widely Distributed From
Newly Found Infested Area
in Louisiana.
The pink boolworm of cotton, previously
supposed to exist in this
country only in Texas, has been discovered
at a number of places in
PamnaAw PnidoU T !A. !_ L ^
V/UIIIV1VII 1 UIK-MI, ua.., Wllt'It" It lb uelicved
to have been for at least two
years. It has been found also in Cal
casieu Parish, but so recently that
definite information as to distribution
is not available. The old infest
ed area around Trinity Bay has also
been somewhat extended. Lots of
cotton seed ranging from 1 to 20
cars have been shipped from Cameron
Parish to Alexandria, Brous ;ard,
Shreveport, Bunkie, and Monroe, La..
San Antonio, Fort Worth, Tloust M
San Marcos, and New Braunf(^|
Tex. Several of these points ha^B
r( oil mills and the seed was prol^
ably used for planting. Thus, there
is the possibility that the pink bol''worm
has been scattered to all of
these sections and possibly to other*
not yet determined,
j This brings about a serious situaj
tion for tho COttort industry of the
j United States, says tho United States
Department of Agriculture. Unless
the radical but necessary steps
are promptly taken by the States
concerned in cooperation with the
Federal Department of Agriculture,
"A COMPLETE UNE
BOILERS SA1
ENGINES PLi
CRUDE OIL ENGINES ED
m n riMrttrnTTiM rnT?l
uno ijiivruiuo jlxvj
STEAM PUMPS LA'
We also have listed v
of second-hand machinery.
quirements.
HYMAN SL
Mill Supplies e
Wilmington, N. C.
3jl8?tf.
Y, S P., APEIL 18, 1920.
) C
?
quote attractive prices
pringfield Tires and
to be the best values on
ilOTOR OIL
|
purchased before the i
live prices on this fine
l.Y COMPANY v
TON, N. c.
the
pink boll worm will certainly get
out of hand and the work of extermination
already carried out in
Texas will be lost. Congress has
been asked to provide additional
funds and to make them immediately
available.
Conference to Plan Work.
A conference was held in New
Orleans on March 5, which was atI
tended by representatives of all the
cotton States and of the Department
of Agriculture. The conference was
called by Gov. Pleasant, of Louisiana,
in cooperation with Governorelect
Parker, who is president of the
American Cotton Association. The
purpose was to consider the whole
situation as it has now developed
and to secure the taking of necessary
steps by Texas and Louisiana
and any other States concerned to
meet the emergency.
The newly discovered infestations
in Cameron and Calcasieu Parishes,
Lu., and Orange County, Tex., are
along the lower course of the Sabine
River, near the Gulf of Mexico.
In addition, there is some reinfestalion
of thfrVy,! Trinity Bay area in
Texas,.1! ? work of recleaning
BMhLI ? _ .hnost been complet?
g "owevcr, has consum
I
Department of Agricultur^^^^avftllpble
for pink bollworm
eradication, Reinfestation
around Trinity Bay was due to a
'modification of the policy originally
agreed upon by the department and
State authorities of avowing- no cotton
to he grown in infested areas for
h period of two or three years. A
revision of the State pink bollworm
act. permitted cotton to be grown,
under restrictions, in the Trinity
Bay area during 1919. The reinfestation
which has resulted from such
! OF MACHINERY"
W MILLS COTTON GINS
&NERS CORN MILLS
GERS FEED MILLS j
CMMERS WOOD SAWS
TH MILLS PUMPS
Alh us all sizes and types
Let us figure on your reJPPLY
CO.
md Machinery.
New Bern, N. o.
j
growth of cotton is scattered pretty I
v. ell over the old district, but the |
actual points of infestation are very j
few us compared with 1917, and the
amount of infestation in the fields
where the inject has been found is
insignificant as to numbers. The
results clearly indicate, say the
specialists of the department, the (
ro. ibi ity of extermination by the
method of establishing non-cotton
ones r.nd the cleaning up of all volunteer
cotton ii continued for a sufficient
peiiod. It was deviation from
thi^ method that brought the reinIt
station in Texas, and the department
will insist that it be st: ictly (
followed in the tremendously great-!
or task that now confronts the country.
"This is the only means of con- ^
trol," says the department, "that '
gives any hope of ultimately eradi- j
filing mis most destructive post or
cotton, and the success of the work |
oust necessarily depend on the ah- d
solute cooperation of the States con- 1
corned.
Louisiana Takes Action.
Louisiana, immediately upon the i
discovery of the infestation in Cam- ]
erdn Paiish, declared a diastio q ar- ,
antine prohibiting the growth of
cotton and providing for the destruction
of existing cot ten an I cotton
seed within a radius of 15 mile
of any infested point in that Stale
No provision lias been made, howover.
foi compensating plnnmr - for
colt: n destroyed It is absolutely
necor niy, the department say , that
some provision bo made to reimburse
the planters for losses which
they must accept in the inteiest of
the cotton industry as a whole. The
payment of these losses, it is pointed
out, will be very small as com- j
pared with the risk to the cotton
crop should the pink bollworm get,
beyond control.
The possibilities of further spread,!
due to the shipment of presumably
infested cotton and cotton seed from
Cameron Parish makes it necessary
that all such shipments be traced to
destination and that steps he taken
to safeguard any local infestations
that may have resulted.
mmmt
ALARMS TEXANS
Washington.?Reappearance of the
pink boll worm in Texas and discovery
of the insect in Louisiana present
the most serious situation which
has ever confronted the cotton industiy
of the United States, according
10 experts of the department of agriculture.
Unless preventative measures
be immediately taken, a review
of the situation issued said, the boil
worm will become a permanent and
serious limiting factor in the production
of cotton,
COULD HARDLY
STAND ALONE
Terrible Suffering From Headache
Sideache, Backache, and Weakness,
Relieved by Cardui,
Says This Texas Lady.
Gonzales, Tex.? Mrs. Minnie Phil
pot, of this place.. writes: "Five years
ago I was taken with a pain In my
left side. It was light under my
left rib. It would commence with an
aching and extend up Into my left
shoulder and on down into my back.
By that timo the pain would be so
severe I would have to tako to bed,
and suffered usuaJly about three days
...I suffered this way for three years,
and got to be a mere skeleton and was
eo weak I could hardly stand alone.
Was not able to go anywhere and had
to let my house work go...I suffered
awful with a pain In my back and I
had *he headache all the time. I just
was unable to do a thing. My life
was a misery, my stomach got in an
awful condition, caused from taking
so much medlcino. I suffered so much
pain. I had Just about given up all
hopes pf our getting anything to heln
me.
On? day a Birthday Almanac Vva^
thrown in my yard. After reading
its testimonials I decided to try Cartful,
and am so thankful that X did,
for I began to improve when on the
second bottle...I am now a well
woman and feeling fine and the cure
lias been permanent for it has been
two years since my awful bad health.
I will always praise and recommend
I Curdui." Try Cardul today, E 78 |
BBSBaQea&iBl'
a unoov nnnuTv >
n uunni uuunii m
1 TRUST COMPANY Si
ia - L. D. Maprath
g) Manager.
0 Real Estate
fl Real Estate Loans 0
Bonds
H Insurance i
9BBI!IRBBBBBIS&D<
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1
19
PAGE BEVElf
BANDITS ACTIVE IN |
STATE OF VERA CRIIZ
^arranza Government Has
Strenuously Tried to Suppress
Them.
In the state of Vera Cruz the
L-nnanza government confronts one
its greatest problems in bandit ex
Eormialion. It is this fact that adds
'est to the present situation in his
interesting region, and heightens the
thrills of travel on the railroad line
k tween Mexico City and the port of
Cera Cruz, says Vera Cruz dispatch
to Atlanta Journal.
Danger has been decreased to the
absolute minimum on this line, but
lire ride has a thrill?bandits or no
1 andits?for the trip from the Mexican
capital to the scaecast, from a
enic viewpoint, has few livals in
this world of natural w aiders. Tt
.a.- liri- same scenic splendor which,
in the old days, proved an ally of
'he reaming bandits. With the train
.-winging around high precipices and
Inrough mountain gorges, and with
nigg d p aks affording excellent hiding
places, the wary bandit had tho
a Iv nlage, whether his object was
hold-up or blow-up.
Those were tiro days, however, before
some wise head in the Carranza
line-up outguessed the bandits and
conceived the notion of erecting
block houses on the very eminences
that formerly had been points of
vantage for the bad men. So block I
houses blocked tho bandit. The traveler
to Vera Cruz today, after he has
traversed about half the distance
and has entered the mountainous
district, sees at intervals of every
j one or two kilometers these pictur
c: que iortresses, constructed of
adobe or cement and containing aper
tures where the trusty firearm may
le rested. Inside the , houses are
Carranzista soldiers. At' some places
the block houses seem to be in the
most precarious positions, perched
up on the mountain sides, but their
piesence has not met with favor in
bandit circles.
Also an .Armel Escort
But the government }ias another
card which it plays against the
maurauders. This is the armed escort
which ftccompanies the train.
In fact, there are two armed escorts.
Attached to the passenger train is a
freight car containing a body of Car|
anza soldiers, nondescript, but with
ruausers very much in evidence.
Then behind the passenger train is
another string of cars, a troop train,
v hich carries s^ill more soldiers.
The troops in this train act as reinforcements,
If the occasion do- ^
n ands, after the soldiers up front 4
jhave engaged the attackers in a preluninary
skirmish, I
Time was wlien the troop train, or ^
J' explorador" as it was called, travel
! O'J ahead of the passenger outfit,
doing scout duty. But there was a
f?aw in this arrangement. The canry
banditti graciously allowed the
troop train to pass, then dynamited
the passenger cars. At least that
was the theory, accordintr to the
Hoyle of banditry, and the troopers
r.ight have continued many miles
ahead before they learned what had
happened in the rear. So the position
of the train was reversed.
Safety for Travelers.
With this bandit-proof combination
of block-houses and armored
escorts, the traveler to this picturesque
port may revel uninterruptedly
in the offerings of nature. From
Mexico City he advances toward the
tb'vide, the highest point which separates
the mountainous plateau district
from the tierra caliente, or
"hot country" of'the coastal regi n..
Finally he reaches this divide and
then, peeping downward through the
mountpin passes, he catcher sight of
tl e tropical country beneath him.
He has begun to coast to the lower
levels. He is still in a high ultitude,
amid the temperate climate . of tho
mountains, but there beneath him, in
full view, are banana trees and coecanut
palms?a South Sea I lan 1
setting. Around and around the
mouniuins the train passes and tiie
same fruit vendors who have displayed
their wares up above are
waiting for the traveler when he
reaches the lower levels. They have
descended, by means of the shorter,
more precipitious foot paths.
Finally the traveller has reached
the low-lands; he can almost reach
out of the car window and pluck
bananas. He is crossing: into Vera
Cruz.
?- 0
P'les Cared In 6 to 14 Days
rufidlats refund money if PAZO OiNTMFNTfWIt
?curo Itching, blind, It.ceding or Protruding PUm.
relieves ltch:ig Plies, ar. \ you can get
.artful sleep after (he first application. Price 60c.
'I i