The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, May 27, 1920, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3
/ I From
I T^OUCTTNUTS made
I R f the doughboy happy
I during the war and no wonI
dcr. There is nothing more
I wholesome and delightful
B than doughnuts or crullers
y rightly lr/uie. Their rich,
H golden . .,'..?r and appetizing
jS envoi vi!l c:v;.lo an appc0
tite ukkev than anything
R else in the world.
OK i iler*: are the. famous doughB
nut and cruller recipes
E from the New Royal Cook
I? Doughnuts
E?. liiuiv. ppuno snoriemiig
c-i run sugar
1 of.'K
* ;| t'' IT? ir-UlC
] 1 t< .. !'o( !i nutrrog
! ! trnjr.oon salt
j< ;<cn;i!i Hour
n 4 toasjioons Royal Raking
5 lewder ,
i Cream shortening; a'11 sugar
^ and veil-beaten egg; stir In
J mlllc; add nutmeg, salt, flour anil
A btiking powder which have been
t i alfted together and enough adI
ditional flour to make dough stiff
L enough to roll. Roll out on
S floured board to about % Inch
fiS thick; cut out. Fry In deep fat
Kfi i liot enough to brov/n a piece of
H bread in 00 seconds. Drain on
jjj ungluncd and sprinkle
B with powdered sugar.
gj Afternoon. Tea Doughnuts
0 tal?,ofcpoons sugar
fi % teaspoon salt
m tcarpoou grated nutmeg
I "Bake w
ARSENATE OF LEAD
; CONTROLSOAKWORM
The live oak and the valley oak,I
which are characteristic of the land- j
scape of central California, often a'o|
stripped of their leaves by a darkstriped
worm which is the young
stage of a light-brown moth. Besides
stripping the trees of their leaves
and making the owner think that
they are dead, the worm crawls on
lawns, walks, fences, and into houses,
swimming pools, etc., becoming a
general nuisance.
Two generations of the pest occur
during the year. The warms are
most noticeable during April and
May and again in August and SepItub-My-Tism
is a powerful anti'
septic; it kills the poison caused
from in'ecled cuts, cures old sores,
tetter, etc.? Adv
IPfTffT 'jiji fpmrn
I ilji i] I j
||l|P
BLENli ^ 1i\M
mother Royal Suggestioi
'I ITQ ? ?%*] rzl
u 15 aid %_**
i the Nev/ Royal Ccok ?
1$ /% F/fM
POWPEM
iicrfjf Pcxro
ith Royal and I
HeHBneaEBsaHEBiBeHKKiBfflm?$ra
tember; Iho moths, during June and
July and again in October and November.
The best method of control is to
spray the worm-infested trees with a
mixture of 3 to 5 pounds of arsenate
of lead Dllst.P (I i v?r?l \rr?fl in r.n .....It...-. .
- ? j T VVI III <J\I It'll >
of -water.
This shuuld bo done while the
worms are small. The live oaks
should he sprayed in April and again,
if necessary, about the first of August,
when the deciduous oaks are
sprayed.
Farmers' bulletin 107(5, "California
Oak Worm," describes and illustrates
the worm and its work,
tells about its habits and natural
enemies, and explains the methods of
control. The bulletin will bo sent
free on request to the United States
vvvvvvw^^vww*A?vwwvvvvvvwwyv>A
The Online That Dots Not Attest tin Head
Hecviseof it*"- tonic end laxative edict. T.AXA*
i lVl$ BROMOQUINlNKisbetterthan ordinary
i}\>' ..n<; and cloi s uot cane nervousneas not
'.xj i? in lund. .nnuemlv-r lb" . till pfmcnrt:
'.?? < fu: tMe >4 nature ci H. * /. (iKOVlJ. aUc. i
j I J t| CvG"!
|,iy . zL.'aL>6 <.j) Lcli
J *Jr Lfc-catfi!*aa ,mif.a uouikiir^'.M
k .?,!
iLliL .J LiiiV^AiiS
<! V
V1UU m?r X J luoirr. /:. ^ JXL-f
No Til.aa ever smoke
better cigarette tbai
You'll find Camels une
an"/ cigarette in the v/c
price because Camels
every feature that oo.
cigarette supreme/
Camels expert blend
Turkish and choice
tobaccos puts Camels n
themselves. Their sr.
will appeal to you, a
you to smoke liberally t
iag your taste!
Camels leave no unplei
retty aftertaste nor u
cigaretty odor I
You'll prefer Camels ble
kind of tobacco smoke<
m
t Cameia are aula ovurytvnorO In Helen
I packages of 20 cigarettes; or ton f
cigarettes) in n gla&aine-paper-covert
\ strongly recommend thin carton foi
office supply or when you travel.
R. J. Reynolds Tobacci
Winston-Salem, N. C
THE HORRY HERALD, GOB
ROLLERS' '
^COiC I 2
tablespoons shortening H
0 tablespoons niiilc jfi
2 < up t Hour
2 teaspoons Itoyul Making S
i'ow uur
Meat eggs until very light; add
i.ifuw, bait, nutmcr and molted 9|
fhor'cnlng; add mill:, and Hour n
and b.'il lirr powder which havo 3
been ?!fUd together; mix well. H
l>rop by teaspoons into deep W
hot fat and fry until brown. ?1
L-nin wM! on unbiassed paper ?1
nnrl inHnlrlA lli?l,n? ?... ??.
?(' iiniiu 11f, m.i/ uuii yuw* |J
dercd augur. Id
Crullers ij
4 tablespoons shortening raj
J cup sugar .a
:t nips flour ?
1 teaspoon elr.namon ?s
*a teaspoon suit M
3 teaspoons Royal Baking HS
Vowder m
'{i cup jullk
<'renin shortening; add sugar 8
gradually and beaten eggs; sift H
together Hour, cinnamon, salt fi
M.d baking powder; athl one- ?
half and mix well; add milk and 1
remainder of dry ingredients to 3
make soft dough. Roil out on 8
floured heard to about. Yj Inch S
thick and out Into .-trips about Jj
f. inches long and \~t inch wide; ffl
Toll in hands and twist each I
strip and bring ends together. jS
I'jy in deep hot fat. Drain and Rj
loli In powdered sugar.
FREE I |
Now Royal Cool; Boole con- MH
turning tn. se a1;.; scores of ffl
oth t delightful recipes. ea
AV-Re for it TODAY Sj
uoyjl:. n* ::'m; powdbii uo. s
l'.S lull on Slrroi TO
Now York City p]
_ SU f
?e Sure" j j
BAD NEGRO IS (
WANTED HERE
Frank Mitchell, a negro man, was
arrested in Georgetown County last
week bv Constable II. NT. Session i
an<l was lodged in che Horry County
jail in default of bail. Mitchell is
charged with the larceny of a lot of
hogs from the Myrtl3 Heach Farms
Company the early part of 1919. A
warrant was sworn out for his ar- j
rest and a Magistrate's constable in
Socastee attempted to serve it on j
j Mitchell in February 1919. The negro |
j resisted arrest and drew a gun on
| the constable and finally made his
escape. He remained in biding until !
recently the authorities located him!1
in Georgetown County and he was i
! brought here to answer to his crime. M
i Department of Agriculture, Wash- ,
! ington, D. C.
I
!
r|.<5 j
anoiinn !
1; now! j
a . 1
.1 Cancel! /ffM >i? 1
quailed by i j |(Mm
>rid at any A j W
> combine
n male? a mMMmW
mmqMB
of choice
Domestic fj j J ' f'
a a class by h I I
noothness |j ' I
nd permit |i' j I
vithout tirasant
ciganpleasant
7
nd to either | lljlfji
J straight! I JhEA
tXci!!yzz3!:* H ' I
' 1 ** ' V ' ' - r '.j|
i
" _*J
(WAY, S. C., MAY 27, 1920.
?
A MAN MAY BE KNOWN
HON. MITC
Attorney General of the I.
the Democratic Nt
HAS MADE ENEMI
PRO-GERMANS
RED REVOLUTIONI
PROFITEERS
HOARDERS
W
BECAUSE, As Allen Property Cu?
U?ed it to Help Anierl
BICCAUSK, He is Driving the Ali?
MUN1STS ami 1. W.
BECAUSE, lie is n?? ?....
and I ' N UK AsV) N A ViL 1
Country.
BKCAUSK, He is Arresting the II1
the Sale of Commoditi
lMHCKS.
BECAUSE, He Forced the "Hip: Fi
Which Limits their A'
lion of Meats and I'l
Unrelated Lines of In
BECAUSE. He Acted in Behalf <
Labor Agitators Who
COAL in Mid-Winter.
Starvation and Cold.
BECAUSE, He Opposes the S*TA>
LIGANS and Fights f
MITCHEL
Is 100 Per Cent American
SOUTH <
Is Alco 100 Per Cent /
Dei
THEREFORE
South Carolina Shou
and His Candidacy.
WRITE?For Palmer for PrfisU
ney General Stands for and what
C. G. Cnriin, Chairman Palmer
sey Gldij., Washington, D. C.
j HYMAN SUP
"ATTENTION
Now is the time to pi
hinery for Fall use.
Put more Machinery
help work all the year
trouble keeping help.
After the crop is laye
work running a Saw !
Corn Mill, Feed Mill, i
Saw.
We make a specialty
use. Corn Mills, Feci
HYMAN SUP
The Machinery 1
WILMINGTON, N. C.
| 5.27?tf.
fHlf'
It'll soon hi
Calomel loses you a day!
mercury; quicksilver. Calon
sour bile like dynamite, cram]
attacks the bones and should
Take "Dodson's I
When you feel bilious, sluggisl
constipated and all knocked out an
V ^ A ?*>? m n A -1 1 n ~ n a C 1
utiit j sjti UCCu ?i uuat' ui uaD^clou
calomel, just remember that you
druggist sells for a few cents a hug
bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone, whic
is entirely vegetable and pleasant t
take and is a perfect substitute fo
Federal Incor
TWO SPECIAL SERVICES?\V
Al'LlTINC AN
F. J. SUL
a"RTJFI7JD ru
IV ej.lior.o So. 7: (>.
V? T' A '!v
i .f 1. ' ? .1'- i.nh r k .
BY THE ENEMIES HE MAKES!
HELL PALMER
Jnited States arid Candidate for
omination for President
ES OF THE FOLLOWINQ: Tl
PACKERS \
STo RADICAL LABOR
AGITATORS
REACTIONARY
REPUBLICANS !
rHY?
todlan he Took ENEMY PROPERTY and ;
ca WIN THE WAR.
in ANARCHISTS. BOLSHEVISTS, COM- IW.'s
BACK TO RUSSIA. K\
je who see': to Extort UNWARRANTED
W PRt ?F!". U v i i U.-e Consumers of th? I
ii
OA RISERS ami Bringing out and Forcing
es THEY ARE HOLDING FOR HIGHER ;i
V
ve" PACKERS to Accept a Court I>ocroe
etlvitioH to the Production and I>istribu- it
ItEVENTS Them from MttXOl'OLIZINU
duatry.
ALL THE PEOPLE Agra Inst Radical n
Sought to Prevent the PltOl >1JCTIt )\ of
thus Endangering the Entire Public to C
I 11
IDPATISM of RIOACTK ?N"AKY RKPl'U- I
or CLEAN and HONEST POLITICS. fc
,L PALMER
and 100 Per Cent Democratic
CAROLINA j
American and 100 Per Cent '
nocratic *
Id Stand for Mitchell Palmer |
tent Literature Showing what the Attor- 5
iie HAS DONE. '
Primary Campaign Committee, 8C5 Mun- I
<
PLY COMPANY
j
ac j your orders for Macon
yonr farm and give your
around, and you wont have
d by, put the Tractor to
Mi l, Lath Mill. Shingle Mi 1.
Corn Shelter, Cord Wood
of Light Saw Mills for farm
d Mills and Farm MachinPLY
finMPA.*!Y
Jcuse of the South
NEW BEEN, N. C.
0 m Museums''
You know what calomel is. It's 1
id is dangerous. It crashes into
ping and sickening you. Calomel ^
1 never he put into your system.
Jver Tone" Instead 1
h, calomel. It is guaranteed to start /
,1 your liver without stirring you up V
inside, and can not salivate.
Don't take calomel! It makes von
ir .
sick the next day; it loses you a day's [
l' work. Dodson's Liver Tone straight- 1
h ?.
- ens you right up and you feel great.
0 (live it to the children because it is
r perfectly harmless and doesn't gripe.
nc Tax Returns i??
ASIIINGTON U K PII ICS KN T A TIV K
il) SYSTKM VTIZINC
.LIVAM & 00. 11
t
BLIC ACCOUNTANTS y<
Miji'.'hison Hank Iildg. 11
ir.TON, N. C. 01
\'
ji t * -J .u-.- . -..WM-* vi
-.' v m,
W '
PAGE THREE
-? r | *
.4 .4. - : T
!' l:> farmers
'Cim'.inuce fivm Page two.)
.. itb agriculture is very intense. Tho
commissioner of agriculture estimates
a 25 per cent shortage in farm
abcr. The Worchester County Farm
bureau, serving- the largest county
n the State, estimates a decreased
)i*oduction of 20 per cent, due to
ack of help."
From Minnesota.?"The manager
f the employment office conducted
ointly by the Unitde States Pelartment
of labor and the State
lepartmont of lab >r reports that
armors for the mo.;t part are offerng
$70 to $75 per month plus board
.ml washing, but that it is somewhat
difficult to supply the deman 1
t that figure. Ho rep ?rts that good
nen can he secured at $80 p t
nomn.
From Oh <>.?"Ni ur the large man
iiaelufing cities of the State, such
Akron, Youngstown. and Clevoc.nd.
tho^ farm labor situation is
penally se ions. Many farmers
re paying up to $100 per month,
vith p- ivilogos, for rion in that Seci
n of the S ate. Very little good
elp can be /ecured at much less
n oi'b >r $80. Many farmers in
?ut iV. C 11 O do a*"* c.itimg drwn
eir n-uenye c.n a'count of labor
h i age."
F ern P vn 've.nin. "We ccnsidv
ou I'arn-'abor ituaikn in this
state the most serious that it has
iver been, even more tb n during'
the war. One of the contrihutine:
causes seems to be the high wagepaid
in industries and cities. A num
her of farmers in Cambria Counts'
paid $7.) per month during the war,
even during the winter, and recently
their men quit. * * * The <lai,-y farmers
are especially hard hit. * * *
The big tendency of the farmers ot
to-day seems to be to cut down their
farms to just what they can handle
themselves with the aid of the wife
and small child] on. As soon as th '
children are large enough they folVw
the same trail that the hired
..uen too!'."
From Uuo:!e Man'.?"Our farm
i's are finding the lab ?r situation
lore serious than at any time in the
eco'loctii n of farmers m w living.
C" ufn.'ctui ing ir.du tries are paying
so high for labor that the farmers
arc afiaid to compete."
From Wisconsin.?"In connection
with meetings which 1 have attended
during the last four to six weeks 1
have found that the ntttitude of farmers
almost invariaMy has ho m that
thov would do what tl ey could themselves,
with th ir fan;'.lies, hut they
do not feel justified under existing
conditions in hiring tlii> high-price 1
labor. One man told r.u he was going
to reduce his actual cion acreage
hv about 20 per ee.it, reverting
to the situation that existed on hi >
farm prior to the war."
While the great majority of reports
show the faun-labor sanation
to he unfavorable a few correspondents
report their States will be ah 1
to continue production at about tl o
normal basis. In Idaho, for example,
there is no apparent labor
shortage and county agents anticipate
n ? shortage until haying serpen.
Reports 1'icm different parts < C
Nebraska indicate that the farmlabor
supply is being fairly well no .
Phe usual demand for In Ip during
lie harvesting and threshing seasons
s anticipated.
i ia. mon ).>usunLurv a. a i 11 . >er,
of Toddviile, spent s? no tiai ;
c?ontly with luhnds near Hrnbngvay,
S. C.
tibfi c.ui.kly relieves Constipation,
-i;O- SM }>s, ! os o A ipef e an I
Jo d chcs. dne to Torpid Liver.?ad
/V lV*'W\'WVW ?/wwws
Lift off Corns!
Doesn't hurt a bit and Freezone
costs only a few cents.
%
) \l
VA \ I
VLIV
With your fingers! You run lift
L C 1 .
11 any naru corn, soft com, or corn
twccn the toes, and the hard skin
illu es from bottom of feet.
A tiny bottle of "Ereozone" cost;
I tie at any drug store; apply a few
cop < upon the corn or callus. Inantly
it stops hurling, then -hortly
>u lift that bothersome corn or
s right off, root and all, ?\vit! <
m bit of pain or s e-e T. iy!
o luimbv.g-.- arfv (E. O. W.)
1
I
1