The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, July 15, 1920, Image 10
Hp
BRICK
I
We arc n
orders fo
If you int
! you to bu
,
will be in
Coal has
months a
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if interes
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! The Li
^ 7-15 1 mo.
STATE OFFICIALS
THINK OF MEXICO
Much Thought Given Problem
%
in Washington?Many
Angles Found |
. "Washington.?The Mexican siuvi-'
* tion is receiving more careful study
' J>y the American government than i
~hns ?nv snhiect since the PaiTs
f peace conference, it was stated at {
the state department. This is with
! a view to according recognition to !
j de la Huerta's provisional govern-!
Iment provided satisfactory assurances
are given that it can and will
maintain order and will live up to
its obligations respecting the protection
of the lives and property of
r foreigners.
\ Iglesias Calderon, the special envoy
sent by de la Huerta to urge j
recognition, will ask for another con
"ference with Acting Secretary Davis!
as soon as he has discussed the sit- !
j nation with the members of his
ataff who have just arrived here
i from Mexico City.
American officials, it is stated authorit.atively,
are impressed with the
evident sincerity of the expression
of Provisional President de la Huerta
and of the efforts to bring about order
in Mexico but they have taken
i ' no action. Workers in the various
department of the Mexican governiment
have not been changed and the
newly appointed cabinet officers
leave the work of their offices chieflv
to the same men who conducted
k the affairs under Carranza.
Reports reaching Washington from
? Mexico City .state that foreigners
& who went to the Mexican caupital to
compose the differences between
r their companies?agricultural, minL
ing and manufacturing, were forced
f to. deal with the very men who
| hampered their woric, ana in some
c'-wtts directed the confiscation of
their property under Carranza and
that they air meeting with the same
difficulties ar. before.
General Obregon desires to re-1
duce the size of the army, as has
been reported in official and unofficial
advices from Mexico City, are
believed by officials to he sincere but
it is noted that the army has been
increased bv 30.000 men as a result
of the revolution.
| The school teachers in Mexico Citv
have not been paid since June 10.
and recently a petition was sent to
the senate ashing for the restoration
of the department of public instruc-1
tion which was destroyed by Carran
za. Jose Vasconcelos. who has been
restored as rector of the university,!
after having been driven into exile,
IflAUAd a nroclamation on resuming
|> his duties of which the opening son-1
R tome was:
"It is with a feeling of grief and
j? sorrow that I come to this heap of,
Hf 7^ v
BRICK
**
a**/ in nocifinn fA fill nrnmi^lw
V/VV III p JOI I I VI I IV/ MM pi V/I I IfJ 11 J v
r Brick.
end building tins year, we won
y now, as the Rush season is m
npossiblc then to fill orders pri
advanced 300 per cent in the
nd every indication is that, i
d this will force an advance in
ted write, wire or phone.
ivtnn Rrirlr \
II CWII Ul lull
MARION, S. G.
ruins of which was once a depart-!
ment (of education) which had be- j
gun to direct public opinion along the
paths of modern culture."
THIRD PARTY PLAN
GIVEN SETBACK
Chicago.?Plans of a group of li-1
beral and radical organization for j
united third party, with candidates1
for President and Vice President in;
the field, received a setback when
Single Tax party members announ-1
ced that they would not support :
Senator RRobert M. La Folletto,
who is expected to be the choice of,
the other groups.
The Single Taxers, who arrived
to prepare for their convention,
which opens Saturday, declared they
would bolt and combine and nomI
n :i r> ii uniiii rotn 4 iC <
vv m UtV/ H V t 11 V111' I I 1CI- I
jority chose La Follette, while the;
Single Taxers were threatening to
present their own ticket.. Amos
Pinchot and George L. Record, of
forty-eight, were in Madison, Wis.,
conferring with La Follette, who
has received a majority of a small
^ 1X1
Wc will be in our office ov
i ..on ?jt 1 -
wity, o. o., monciays, July
Wc will be at the Drug Sto
day, July 20, August 3, 17
We will be at E. W. Page's
clays, July 30, August 13,
Office Hours at above plac
L. A. WOODF
Eyesight
7-15 tf.
THK HOKRY HERALD, OOlfl
I
BRICK 1
w^.. jm w t- *?r ** t9
I
I
any size f
Id advise I
ear and it |
omptly. |
last three I'
t will go |
i Brick,
' j
Itfnrlfc i
vi wi ii<i
straw vote of the party. |
The committee of forty-eight and
Single Tax Convention open Saturday,
and on Sunday the labor party
of the United States, another prospective
member of the proposed
third party combination, meets here.
The National Non-Partison League.
Triple Alliance of the Northwest
National People's League of Minnesota,
World War Veterans and
National Public Ownership League
have been invited to send fraternal
delegates to the conventions and
later endorse the platform and candidates.
o
Ci tat ion Notice.
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA,
County of H or ry.
tsy J. is. VAUGHT. ESQUIRE, PRORATE
JUDGE.
WHEREAS, J. M. Horn made
suit to mo, to grant him Letters of
Administration of the Estate of and
effects of J. L. Horn
THESE ARE THEREFORE to
cite and admonish .all and singular
the kindred and creditors of the
said J. L. Horn, deceased, that they
he and appear, before me, in the
Court of Probate, to be held at
^
cr Horry Drug* Store, Con19,
August 2, 16, and 30.
re at Loris, S. C., Tucs,
and 31.
Store, Aynor, S. C., Friand
27.
es, 9 A. M. to 3 P. M.
IUFF, G. OPT
^Specialist
i
t
I
* AY, S. a, JULY 15, 1020. ^
Conw.->v> s. c., on the 27th ?
July, i920, next, after day o
^'w-reof, ut 11 o'clock . publicatioi
.noon, to shew ce' in the fore
have, why tho .-*??, if any thej
should not be *a'd Administratis
rrvFN v granted,
day of V , ad?r mv Hand, this 8tl
Public ,J y? Anno Domini, 1920.
0r -ied ort the 15th .and 22nd day;'
?>uly, 1920 in the*Horry Herald.
1' J. S. V AUGHT,
I ,'mm _ Judge of Probate.
[withTabor SHORT ,
I - USE HELP WISELY
j Haymakers Advised toy Plan
Carefully and Use Fewer
Men for Work
! IISF MArwiWFRV
? f t w I Mil I? 111
WHERE POSSIBLE
Transfer Back-Breaking Work
From Man to Horse Say
Expers of Department
Tho hay crop, even when the labor
supply is normal, causes more worry,
anxiety, and disappointment than
any other crop. The time for harvesting
is comparatively short. Other
crops require attention at tho
same time. And the weather is to
be reckoned with. This year, when
farm labor all over the country is
very scarce, the difficulties of haymaking
will be much greater, and
larger quantities of hay will be lost
than usual?unless labor-saving
methods are more generally employed.
F r !
A great deal of labor is wasted
every year during hay harvest, say
specialists of the United States Department
of Agriculture, not because
] of actual idleness on the part of the
workers, but because labor is expended
unnecessarily on operations
that do not utilize it to the best ad- j
vantage. If an old method can l>e
superseded by a new one that will
enable the same number of men to
! accomplish more work in the kame
length of timei, or fewer men to acI
. * ? i
i
UNUSUAL BUS1NES
FOR YOUNG MI
MEVER before in the hisi
there been such crying
and women to till high sf
and big business offices,
ing chartered daily, the r
announcements of the laui
j and opportunities by the t
! young people properly trai
keeping and office work.
i
Draughon's Bi
"Largest Be
One of the nationally kn<
Business colleges, most wi
offers you exceptional ad\
best paying positions. I
esteem of the leading busi
Nation; the unqualified
l i J
uuBiiiess men, ministers, s
cials and the United Stat
tion. "Draughon's" offer
to courses of study and tJ
good paying position, wh
fords. It is one of the larp
ind best equipped in the c
ARRANGE FOR EN1
IS TOO LATE?
Present conditions indica
to have a waiting list bef
lions are filed the date of
! the date of entrance. To I
lege this fall and winter,
- information.
"WE GUARANT
DRAUGHON'S BU
WM. liYKES,
1?46 Main St.
??I I I II I ?I
I
f complish the same work in the sam<
] length of time, it will mean mor<
r hay saved, more profit to the farm
1 er, and a better condition for th<
i country.
, Although tnere is a scarcity o!
man labor, there are still plenty ol
horses on most farms, and largely
lies *lhe solution of the problem. Or
farms where considerable hay i?
grown methods must be adopted by
j which the greater part of the heavy
J labor is done by horses. This will
necessitate the general use of certain
types of labor-saving machinery,
some of them not so common in the
East, which have been thoroughly
tested and proved satisfactory jn the
western part of Uh? United State.-.
i ne small hay grower, however, need
not make a very heavy inves'mcnt in
hfeW haying apparatus, for by roarranging
the Working of his crew and
using a little more horse labor for
the hard work he can add considerably
to the efficiency of his crew.
Here are some suggestions made
by the specialists for avoiding wasl.o
of labor in haymaking*.
Do not run two or more mowers
close together. If the front mowe
|has any trouble that causes it to
I stop, all of the mowers usually wait
I while repairs are made on one.
There is a tendency, also, for drivers
to waste too much time talking when
they stop occasionally to let the
teams rest. A good practice when
tw<; more machines are use4 *"
for each driver to lay off a "land"
for himself and work independently,
so there will lx? no interference from
other machines.
Side Delivery UaKt* Is Bed.
Do not turn hay by hand. It is too
costly. The cheapest and most efficient
way of stirring hay in the
^vindrow is wjtji a two-hors$ te<ld$r,
One man will do more woi'k tlliin 12
men stirring with hand forks. It is
not even necessary to have a man to
run the tedder. A boy big enough
to drive a team will do just as much
work.
A one-horse rake operated by a
! man makes raking very costly. A
two-horse sulky rake is better, but
the side-delivery rake is best. When
curing is done in the swath and a
hay loader is used, the crew can
atart taking the hay from the windrow
as soon as the side delivery has
made one double windrow across the
field. If the sulky rake is used, the
S OPPORTUNmES |
iN AND WOMEN
:ory of South Carolina has
; demand for young men
ilaried i>ositions in banks
New corporations are beicwspapers
are filled with*
iching of new enterprises, j
housands are presented to .
ined in stenography, book.
isiness College
CHtlAC
)wn group Big Draughon
dely indorsed in America,
antages to qualify for the
t has the confidence and
ness men of the State and
indorsement of bankers,
tate and government offi- \
es Department of Educas
you advantages, both as
lie absolute certainty of a i
ich no similar college af;est,
most widely attended,
ml ire South.
FRANCE BEFORE IT
WRITE TODAY
tc that we will be forced
ore October 1. Applicarcceipt
without regard to
>e sure of a seat in the col- |
WRITE TODAY for full
EE POSITIONS"
SINESS COLLEGE
Manager
Columbia, S. C.
I
I BENSON ISSUES
SHARP WARNING
r
r Admiral Speaks Frankly to
[ Foreign Interests on Mer;
chant Marine
Washington, ? Warning foreign
interests not to attempt interference
with the development of the Ameri,
can merchant marine Chairman Ben
son of the shipping board declared
that the board was determined to
build up an American merchant marine
as contemplated by the Jones
shipping act, despite threats and
propaganda by such interests to defeat
the lav.
1 "The United States," said Admiral
Benson, " is in earnest in its efforts
to place within the ownership
by U. S. citizens the control of
at least a part of its traffic in imports
and exports. If it should by
any possible means be held that the
| departments of the government
lack such authority as will insure
their being able to protect American
interests in such control .additional
authority will ho asked by the
administration and undoubtedly be
granted by congre ss.
"Foreign carrier.1, and those in the
IJ. S. interested more in foreign
ban American institutions will do
well to Met sleeping dogs lie.* "
Admiral Uenson's warning was
sounded in a talk to representatives
I oi Pacific coast chamber of comi
mercc and tivule bodies and Ameri- ^
' Aan railroads who have been u'.TtuI'h^
ed by threats of foreign carriers to
divert business from American ports
on the Pacific coast because of the
section of the merchant marine act
permitting a preferential race over
carriers with the U. S. on merchandise
moving in export and import
in American vessels. Such a threat
the chairman said, is "futile and
idle." i ; I - :
crew will have to wait until the rake
has gone several tlrtt&S across thre*
field. In this matter the extent of
the haying operations has to be considered,
of course. On vow
? -? f VI J OlllOftl
farms the use of the side-delhrery
rake might not be economy.
If the weather is clear and the
hay is in proper condition, there will
be no necessity for hay caps or fer
further labor till the hay is thorough
ly cured and ready to be hauled. Buthay
caps will pay for themselves is
one year when the weather is bad.
They are more especially needed with
clover, alfalfa, and pea vines, all of
which cure slowly.
If hay is to be bunched, the hasd
method is too expensive. A twohorse
sulky rake can hunch 30 acres
or more a day and a boy can drive
it just as well as a man. Even more
labor can be saved, however, by using
the push rake to bunch hay after
it has been raked into the windrow.
It is a good plan to have two
men working together to round up
a- i '
tut: ouncnes, since more can be accomplished
than when each works
alone.
It is a waste of time to pitch hay
onto a small hayrack on a highwheeled
wagon. Use a large hayrack
on a low-wheeled wagon.
Loading hay with pitchforks is the
hardest, slowest, and most expensive
way. The men are working constantly,
but the horses are doing
nothing most of the time. If a load
or is used, the hardest part of the
work is done hy the horses and the
man can handle about 30 per cent
more hay.
Save Labor on the Stack.
The push rake furnishes the most
economical method of hauling hay to
the stack, ham, or hay press if the
distance is not much more than onefourth
of a mile. One man, or a boy,
with a good push rake and a team
used to the work will handle three
times as much hay as two men with
a small rack on a high-wheeled wagon.
Stacking hay with a push rake and
an overshot stacker mounted on
wheels eliminates nearly all of the
back-breaking work of tho
w
fork method. With a yield of <me ti>
one and a half tons to the acre, two
men on the stack can easily handle
all the hay brought in by three push
akos, accomplishing a vast saving
in labor and hay over the pitch fork
mehtod. Another method not so.good
but still vastly better than the pitch*
foik method is a stacker equipment
?vith a double harpoon fork. The outfit
can be made at home and will
cost very little compared with the
labor it saves, but harder work is
necessary to get. the hay on the stack
than with the overshot stacker.
When hay is to baled from the
field, one man by working in the
mcernoon, can round up enough hay
which has been bunched by push
i-akes to keep the press going next
morning until the dew is gone from
the hay in the windrow. When the
hay is not thus rounded up the crew
will lose two hours or more on morn
ing" when there is a heavy dew.
Carlossness in setting the preea,may
result in loss of labor. When
the press is properdly set two men
can get plenty of hay to it from the
stack.
*
I