The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, June 02, 1921, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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B ppj |/iuciS\ llSTRlKEJ! IG ARETT E/M 51 , Ten for 10 cents. Handy size. Dealers carry both. s 10 for 10c; 20 for 20c. '] It's toasted. ;J i : KV K U YTIIIN ? ( LKA N Kl),' DYKl) AND IMtKSSKI). HATS CLKANHI) AND ISIjWI KIM). | Work Called For and Delivered. Special attention to mail orders. CONWAY (' L10 A N1N (i H PRESSING CO. '.MJ ATUMMinwar .... J 3AS0LINE SYSTEMS 3il Tanks and Pumps, Air Compressors, Computing Scales, Floor Scales, Show Cases, Account Registers, Re>uilt Cash Registers, Safes. Store Fixtures. < TftE HAMILTON SALES CO., 'kadv) Columbia, S. C. 1 20 tf ( DR. J. D. THOMAS Physician and Surgeon LORIS, S. O. DR. G. i. LEWIS DENTAL SURGEON (Mm Over NtrUn Drag Ccapay CONWAY. 8. C. . D. A. SPIVEY & CO. * W. B. King, Secty. BONDS AND INSURANCE ?Office in? PEOPLES NATIONAL BANK BUILDING _???????????? HARRELSON & HARRELSON Attorneys - at-La w Practice both in the State and Federal Courts. KULLINS, ? ? 8. 0 H. H. WOODWARD, Altoracy and Ctunicllw at LawCONWAY, a ~ a a SCABBOBOUGH Attorney at Law, I CONWAY, a c. j T. B. LEWIS, Atty. and Oouucellor at Law CONWAY. - - - S.C. , J. M. JOHNSON, I , CIVIL ENGINEER ? MARION, S. 0. > My Engineering and Surveying office will be open during my absence, and prepared to take care f any work as usual. Address all communications as heretofore. S. C. DUSENBURY Attorney-at-Law s Spivey Building CONWAY, ? S. 0. J. I. ALLEN, Jr. Attomey-at-Law Office in Bank of Loris Bldg. LORIS, S. 0. F. J. SULLIVAN & CO. CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS (Ut.) Telephone S<>. 796. Murchison Bank Rldg. WILMINGTON, N. C. WILLIAM EUGENE KING, M C Phycician and Surgeon AYNOR,. ... S. C 9 ( forejf'n trade of importance; i In view of the vital importance of ' Dur foreign trade to the maintenance { of our national prosperity, the Guar- * anty Trust Company of New' York has 1 just issued a booklet, "Our New Place ' in World Trade," analyzing the for- ' eign trade situation and discussing this country's duties and opportunities as creditor nation of the world. ( Emphasizing the importance of ' holding our new place, the booklet says, in part: "We are now at the parting of the ways. What are to he our policies in this new relation which we hold in the world of trade? All of the elements required to control and extend our commerce are at our command. Are we in the mood to seize this greatest of all our opportunities? "We must go forward, or we shall inevitably be forced to retreat from , our present relation with heavy losses all along the line?in shipping, banking and trade. We are already vigorously challenged by competitors in for eign markets. A courageous national , policy of legitimately aggressive development of all these newly co-ordinated resources for the conduct of for eign trade is essential. Without con- i stant initiative and positive efforts we shall gradually be driven out of our : ,iii Miuuuon. mere is no h uiie American? merchant, manufacturer, banker, farmer or laborer?who has not some stake in this struggle. We have definitely reached the position of other highly developed nations. ' Foreign countries have borrowed from lis to the extent of more than $13,[)()(),000,000, of which huge amount : >2,500,000,000 of funded debt is owned to private lenders in this country. , Moreover, the movement of capital < from this country to other lands istill going on, for foreign loans o; ;i total of nearly $100,000,000 we replaced in this market in the first two months of 1921. In short, th : , change has taken place by the pressure of circumstances beyond our control, and it is doubtful if we could return to our former status wihout retrogression in all our agricultural manufacturing, and commercial iindustries. We must contnue on the path of development which we are treading, or we shall lose our place of economic and political power in the world, and with it our high hopes and ideals of service to mankind. "If we set out to travel consciously and wisely the path of foreign trade which opens before us, building firmly on the foundation of our own ex peri nee, we may reasonably expect in the future to pass through certain other changes. The> e will be no more than other creditor nations found thev must iinHevom in order to .sustain their prosperity. "At the present time we are in the anomalous position of exporting both capital and merchandise in excess of our merchandise imports. Such a condition cannot continue indefinitely, for it would lead far away from any true balance of trade. Already the balance is over-weighted, and foreign countries are finding great difficulty in paying their debts to us. Interest payments on our loans to other nations are now very large and will be enormous when payment temporarily suspend* eu on the government is resumed. Cioiu is a latent factor in the balance since it is now embargoed by f.e:.?*1 y ??ll the principal countries In ?I. ? .t(i; and ii %v??y remain sc temporarily, as there is not enough gold to liquidate the present foreign indebtedness to this country. "It is obvious, then, that when those countries which owe us for oui goods and capital are again re-established financially and economically, tiiey will have to pay us with something rqore tangible than new or lefmuted loans. Obviously, there are only two methods by which this indebtedness can be liquidated. "One considerable means at hand for payment of the enormous sums ftM'pd f/i nu i ti form of cr/wirlc im. ported in excess of our exports. Clearly, other nations cannot well goods to us in sufficient amounts to liquidate their hugs indebtendess, if our international trade is to he saddled with burdensome duties. This, however, is now more of an economic than a political question, which must be dealt with in such a way that differences in cost of production will not pfevent the competition in foreign markets of our goods with those from other countries. "The only other considerable means at hand by which foreigners can pay their debts to us is by our continued export of capital on a large scale. Among the invisible items are several which other creditor nations do not have to any considerable extent in their trade bal-! ances. Our people tour abroad for! education as well as pleasure, j spending their money more or less freely. Many of our immigrants still have close ties with their relatives at home. In the future as in the past our generous impulses are likely to be stirred by the appeal of distress from distant lands. "More important than all these, however, is the likelihood that we? will continue to reinvest in the bonds of foreign governments, municipalities, and corporations, and that interest on our government loans will remain suspended for several years. While these and other in in.->, rmtii <im n|R'tuiilllllll III 1UI " ?ign currency bonds and bills, remain of considerable importance on the debit side of our foreign trade balance, it is quite conceivable that our exports of merchandise will remain in excess of our merchandise imports. It is entirely probable, however, that, the enormous excess which is characteristic of our present trade will be considerably diminished. "Such a change in our foreign trade balance need not, and probaibly will not, be made at the ex THE HORRY HTOALD. OOKWA pense of our export trade. The ? world still requires things which we jan best supply. What men need they will purchase if they are able to pay therefor. When the present reaction in prices has run its course our export trade in merchandise can, if adequately supported by credit and banking facilities, be increased; though the present great ex cess over imports cannot bo carried for long. "The barkers charged with, the! duty of devising machinery for1 carrying and settling international! balances, and the banker, feeling his responsibility is already at work oi? the task. Several of our larger financial institutions have been furnishing many banking facilities and information services to their customers doing business in other lands. These have met our immediate requirements and have taught our mer chants that credit, when granted wisely, is a universal commodity. "By and large, however, the duty of supporting our foreign trade does not rest entirely on the banker. Our banks cannot work alone they must have the co-operation of their! customer, if our trade is not to suffer a decline as spectacular as has been its rise. If they tied up their liquid funds in long-term invest-1 ments, no matter how good the security, there would soon bo no more liquid capital and the wants of our agriculturists and manufacturer could not bo supplied. " i ii?> varioly of our foreign trade I is; now so wide that nil excess of f product :on over consumption react upon every class of our population. The duty, therfore, of supporting our i foreign trade in this time of readjustment to the more permanent con- ! litions of the future rests on every i individual who feels that his welfare j md prosperity are not independent of the economic position of his country in the would. "If we go on taking measures to prevent the sale of foreign commodities in our country, if we try to erect harriers which retard Onflow of commerce, we will in the long run handicap ourselves and work incomparable injury to our future prosperity. Already we are sec intr the product of field and factory piling up in granary and warehouse. The real problem, therefore, is the maintenance of the volume of our trade. "The future rests not so much on government and politics as upon the wisdom and sagicity of business* men. The American dollar now stands at a premium in every important financial market of the world. It is, therefore, repeated that an imperative duty rests upon [ every American who would see his country so steadily forward on the path of a prosj^trous foreign trade to take thought of how its future may be properly financied. Surely we have the energy and intelligence to solve the problem." o To Cure a Cold in One Day Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE (Tablets.) It stops the Cough and Headache and works off the Cold. E. W. GROVE'S signature on each box. 30c STONE STEEDS FOR MUSEUM. Two of Six Famous Chinese ti Pieces of Sculpture at " II. of Pennsylvania. ? 8 After thirteen centuries, fame n still surrounds the Six Horses of ]\ T'ang T'ai-T'sung, whose sculptured J, portraits, adorning the tomb of tho * master who loved them, have be- P come known through the ages t according to a writer in the New 11 - ..i. iv? ? ** ~ uhk rivi'nmjj rosi. |" Hewn from the solid rock by an P obscure sculpt.ur whose name alone, (P Yu King-shu, has been preserved to 0 posterity, the stone charters stand tl today as a mute but eloquent wit- KJ nesses to the art that flourished inic China so long ago and the love thaf a an Emepror bore the steeds tha? carried him through many victori- 11 ous campaigns. " It is with particular pride, there- ^ fore, that American art lovers will t! learn that two of these stone mas- " terpieces have been brought to thi* country, to remain hero permanently. They are now in Philadelphia, the * property of the University of Pcnn- * sylvania Museum. ? Tang T'ai-T'sung was a Chinese 0 Napoleon of the seventh century. s Few there are among the literate Chinese of today who have not. ? heard of his horses, their marvelous swiftness and endurance, their '' courage and intelligence, and the P very real part they played in the ** making of the history of their time. ' And few, no doubt, there were in s the emperors own day who did not ^ approve and applaud his desire to ^ perpetuate their memory in stone. c The Emperor Orders His Tomb | As many an emperor before and ^ since him has done. Tang T'ai- * Tsung had his sepulchre built during his lifetime, planning its ar- \ rangement and construction himself * and expending unlimited time and energy on the carrying out of its elaborate details. Here it was in , I the place of honor on the walls of il -1 ? ine mortuary cnanu>er, that t lie 1 caused to be carved the images of his six chargers. The mausoleum j was completed in (>44 A. D. Five J ! years later T'ang T'ai-T'sung died and was burled beneath the hug*? j i tumulus which still stands not far , from Li-ts'uan Hsien, to the north- | I west of the provincial capital of Sian Fu. Each of the six horses is carved in a separate slash of stone, about six foot in height by seven feel in breadth and over a foot in thickness. Each originally stood upon a pedestal, bearing an appropriate inscription composed by the emperor himself, but the pedestal? have disappeared and with them j ,Y? S. C., JUNE 2, 1021. W?\ We have a free hand to CU make all previous sales in C With more thar\ spot for goods, ana the storey a Very str a very small mar git the year. This is i 1 Marlovv's "Money Bacl every purchaser. We wan dom have to refund the pu don't fit. Everything in our store 1 mer goods until the buying usually go \sith late buying stores when you come to Co SUMMER S\Lb Tun and Fancy Silk Pongt^e, value $ Silk Shirting, beautiful patterns, val. .'?(> inch Silk Poplin, all colors, value Now Organdie, per yd. Now Organdie, nil colors, per yd. Now Fancy Organdie Lisle Full Fashion Stockings, value 5 Lisle Full Fashion Stockings, value Silk Hose, value $1.50 Fibre Si'k llose Fancy Pure Silk Half Hose, sold up Half Hose LADIES' WAIS Embroidery Voil Waists, value $1.25 Embroidery Voil Waists, value $2.50 One big rack of Georgette and Crej Waists, value up to $12.00 Silk Waists, all colors, value $2.75, WE WERE Til ERS HAVE T) ALWA YS "SEL OUR GROCERY DEP Ml ave been lost for all time some of he most interesting facts eoncernlg the animals' battle records. "Autumn Dew" and His Wounds Each horse is shown pierced by everal arrows, according to the umber and location of the wounds eceived in battle, but it is a curious act that, in spite of tlie numberless < icrce encounters in which they took art, none of the six was killed on < he battlefild. Perhaps the most itcresting of the stone reliefs is < ne of the two now in this country, icturing a groom in the act of < lucking an arrow from the breast f "Autum Dew" (a photograph o < his relief is reproduced in the Jraphic Section today), one of the hargers. This animal, described ccording to literary sources as "of he color of the red wild goose," or i less fanciful terms, a chestnut ay, was ridden by T'ang T'ai"sung, while he was yet a prince to he capture of the eastern capital of 'ung-ti, in the year 621. T iL. -il -I-'- - '-'-I in nit- otfier siao, w men is m a ?ss perfect state of preservation, our arrows may bo seen protruding rom the back and breast and flank f the horse, while the same is true f the four other sculptures that till remain in China. The two reliefs now in this counry were first taken from the omb during the first Chinese revolution. At that time a military ;ovcrnor, realizing their importance ,s works of art, removed them to 'eking, whence they were later muggled out of the country by a ;roup of Chinese dealers , brought o New York and stored in a remote ellar. Here they were at last ound by men who realized their rue value and removed them to he place where they will remain. Plaster casts of the two horses ave been presented to the British use urn. o The concrete walk on Fourth aveuic was finished last week. TINS ONLY [igpr AT YOUtt GBGCEttS rnAXWELL HOUSE j COFFEE . In nil ? ! T DOWN PRICES, and b( on way look like PROFITE1 \ 30 years experience and hacii f everything is sold for cash c ong buying power is eslablisl i of profit and turn our stock r chy We win out. k If Not Satisfied" policy is t satisfied customers and we a rch asc price oi anything exc< s new and up-to-the-minute, was good, and thereby uoi . So it will be to vouv ad\an nway. :s DF 1.25 Vtl. $ .Ki> $2 r,b Vtl. l.DS ( pcv .vd. $1.25 vcl. .7i? Curtain Wt. per iiost yard wide 1 (;.) Pleaching liL Sheeting o- Plaid Homespun ~r? k> Men's Work Shir ,, , ()S; Alcn s Sox Ladies' Hose to SL50 !(><) Standard Overall: jq Dress Shirts Men's L 11 ion Sui Hoys' Union Suit: yc PIG NKW SMIPP ' Accordion Pleate< $ .55) White Skirts, val 1.25 White Skirts, val >e de Chine White Skirts, val 3.50 Silk Poplin, value . 1.5)8 All Wool Plaid P E FIRST TO CUT PRIG RIED TO FOLLOW, Bl X IT FOR LESS" T. IS RUN WITH THE "SELL IT FOR LESS" VRLOW TAXKS. J Taxes on your drinking taxes on , your food, Taxes on your clothing ? and you | can't go nude. Taxes when you're walking, taxes when you riilc, Taxes on the bridegroom and upon the bride. Taxes on the chickens, taxes on the cow, Taxes on the eggs in the old haymow. Taxes on pour income, taxes on your breath, Pax you while you're living, and then tax your death. ?Exchange. .y. .y. ? *Y" 'Y' ? ? Y- *Y * TOCACCO FLUES * * Mr. Farmer * * when you need Tobacco * * Barn Flues, call and see * *Y* me or send me your order * * for future delivery. * * Good Flues at the * * r>:~Li D- __ * i\igm i nee. *pi ace your order early to * * insure prompt delivery. * * MILTON PITMAN * * Conway Iron Works * i To Our Friends We wish to announce Barber Shop from the buil< niture Co., on Main street occupied by the Sparks C We expect to be in this i i ciiiu reaay 10 give the sam at this new stand. Visit us?we apprccis Horry Ba: Successor lo King Li D. WILL PAGE THREE A ?lieve me, we are going to ?RING. ig the cash to pay is fast as it enters I ieel. We sell for nany times during . an absolute safeguard to ire proud to say that we sel?p[ on the grounds that it We did not buy our sumall ol the reductions that itage to visit Mallow's two *ESS GOODS IS to 21c yd. 15 to 25c ?ioachinj.>; 12 1 j c 10c ..SI -3c ! Oo ts . (i<> 10c 10c < 98c 98c ts 79c ; <>9c UK NT OF Hl.OUSES and SKIRTS 1 Skirts, value $7.50 3.49 uc $1.50 $ .98 ue $4.00 2.25 lie $(>.50 3.75 .$4.50 2.19 leated Skirts, value $8.50 4.98 ES AND OTHJT WE WILL SAME MOTTO, rs See I). A. Dozier for best prices on your cattle.?adv.|4[14|tf DR. C. S. DIETZ DENTIST Office over S. T. Sessions Store. CONWAY, S. ( . AnniniM rtorinm Name "Bayer" on Genuine f X Take Aspirin only ns told in each package of genuine Raver Tablets of Aspirin. 'Hien von will be following the direction* and dosage worked out by physician# during 21 years, and proved aafe by millions. Take no*chances with substitute?. If you see the Bayer Cross on tablet#, you can take thein without fear for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, Rheumati?ra, Earache, Toothache, Lumbago and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelvo tablet* cost few cents. Druggista also sell larger pack ngen. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of MonoaceticacUIester of Salicylioacid. k and Custc me :s ? that we will move our ding next to Kingston Fur, to the building formerly o., on Third avenue. J > building the first of June, e satislied service as usual 1 In * 1-.. uv. juui uusmess. rber Shop !slon Barber Shop IAMS, Prop.