The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, July 21, 1921, Image 9
r
i
< V
Quick, cle;
for every k
IT is hard to appreci
convenience and satii
of cooking with the N<
fection until you have ;
done so.
It's a relief, especially ii
weather, to be rid of c
coal, wood and ashes,
ing up litter and black
stove. And then yoi
have to "rush the fii
baking days and heat
kitchen. Two burners
New Perfection will g
all the heat needed 1
1 i /* fl i ?V
Kind or baking. You ci
late the heat produced
burner, warm somethin
on one and roast over
in a New Perfection ov
The long blue chimne^
NO REASON FOR IT
When Conway Citizens Show a Way.
There can he no reason why any
reader of this who suffers the tortures
of an aching back, the annoyance
of urinary disorders, the pains
and dangers of kidney ills will fa l
to heed the words of a neighbor wh<
lias found relief.. Read what a Conway
citizen says.
, J. T. Proctor, fanner, says: "I had
\ pains through my back and loins. A
times headaches and dizzy spoils annoyed
me and my sight was blurred
The kidney secretions passed too
freely at times, breaking my rest at
r.ight. Cold settled on my kidneys
and made the backaches worse. T
read of Doan's Kidney Pills and
"bought some at Norton's Drucr Store.
Doan's relieved me of all signs of
kidney trouble and I gladly recommend
them."
Price C>0c, at all dealers. Don't
simply ask for a kidney remedy?get
Doan's Kidney Pills?the same
thnt Mr. Proctor had. Poster-Mil
burn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.?Adv.
o
IF?
If' you can keep your head ?when all
about you
Are losing theirs and blaming it on
you;
If you can trust yourself when all
men doubt you,
But make allowance for their doubting,
too;
If you can wait and not be tired by
waiting,
Or being lied about, don't deal in
lies,
Or being hated don't give way to
hating,
And yet don't look too good, nor
talk too wise;
If you can dream?and not make
dreams your master;
If you can think?and not make
thoughts your aim,
If you can meet with Triumph and
Disaster
And treat those two imposters just
the same;
If you can bear to hear the truth
you've spoken
Twisted by knaves to make a trap
for fools,
Or watch the things you gave your
life to, broken
And stoop and build 'em up again
with worn-out tools;
If you can make one heap of all
your winnings 1
And risk it on one turn of pitch-andtoss,
And lose, and start again at your
beginnings
And never breathe a word about
your loss;
If you can force your heart and
nerve and sinew
To serve your turn long after they
are gone,
And so hold on when there is nothing
in you
j Except the Will which says to
Jf them: "Hold on!"
are gone.
If you can talk with crowds and
hold your virtue,
Or walk with K'n^s?nor lo?e tho
common touch,
If neither foes nor loving friends
can hurt you,
If all men count with you, but none
too much;
If you can fill the unforgiving' minute
With .sixty nocond.i worth of di*sf
0
I
an heat
:itid of cool
ate the New Perfection suj
sfaction the right draught to
Jw Per- heat of the white-tip
actually forcibly against all th
utensils. The whi
warm tipped flame produ
carrying the most heat and d
sweep- no* soot UP your ket
ing the and Pans
j don't The New Perfectioi
re" on simple, practical, e
up the nomical. Supplies h
on the instantly,and when ^
ive you are through just shu
for any save your fuel. You
in regu- to watch it. No adji
by each take care of. A boy
g gently fill it and clean it,
another pQr t^e most satjs
cn* suits use Aladdin S
y of the regularly. You alw
clean and efficient.
N*ew ^ feet tort Oil Cook
t t mo. hardware, furnitu
DARD OIL COMPA!
t3ew perf
\ 0/7 Cook
tance run,
Yours is the Earth and everything
in it,
And?which is more?you'll be a
man, my son!
?Rudyard Kipling.
o
?
Dodson's Liver Tone
Instead of Calomel
Calomel is quicksilver. It attacks
the bones and paralyzes the liver. Your
dealer sells oaoh bottle of pleasant,
harmless "Dodson's Liver Tone" under
aji ironclad, money-back guarantee that
it will regulate the liver, stomach and
bowels better than calomel, without
sickening or salivating you?15 milliov
bottles sold. '
On Old Broadway.
First Actor: "What are you going
i to do this afternoon, Bill?"
Second Actor: "After 1 have a nut
sundae I'm going to the croquet
grounds and knock a ball around for
a while."?Exchange.
i i
Monuments
Dealers In
Marble and Granite
and Iron Fencing. I
See us or write before buying
and we will send our representative
to see you.
Lumberton Marble &
Granite Works
J. H. FLOYD, Prop.
LUMBERTON, N. C.
3<24
o
FORD FACTORY
BREAKS RECORD
During- the month of June, the Ford
Motor Company, thru its Detroit
Factories and 22 Assembly Plants
throughout the country reached the
production of l0tt,'t)G2 Ford cars and
trucks, setting up a new high record
for one month.
Despite the fact, however, that the
Ford Plants have been running at
maximum capicity the demand for
Ford cars and trucks is not being
met, and at the present time, many
' thousands unfilled orders have been
piled up ahead so that Ford sales
are still limited by manufacturing facilities
rather than marketing possibilities.
Particularly is tnis true
with respect to enclosed cars, for
which the demand has been uuusually
heavy.
One reason cited by the Ford Otfi
THE HOMtT ?MLtt, CO?
1
dngJSs
>plies just
drive the f I
ped flame Afc i U
e cooking J
oes [AUDDInB
tles ggg
1 is SECURITY OIL !
CO- STANDARD
ieat v ol!?S!??'Y
^OU ^
it it off and
don't have
istments to
or girl can
factory re
>ecurity Oil
rays find it
Stores are sold
re atid departNY(newjersey)
ECTION
Stoves
cials for the unprecedented demand
for Ford cars is the present tendency
toward economy. Many of those
whose names have been added to the
Ions list of buyers might well have
afforded larger and more costly cars
than the Ford, but it is the beliet
that most prospective motor car buyers
are investigating all of the coatf
incident to motoring much more carefully
than at any period during the
past five years.
o ??
poojg pan 'V o ! X J#;
S'S'S
4tsiflffnjp jnoA ?? 5 jag
VQ 'V)uvdv '9?yitd<*Q "?D S'S'S
'josiApy fooipsfyi oytiM
'oorApi//pnpi.t
iputjojjo f9jyoog ivtoadg joj
'OXUO%
3njpnnq poo{q pj-Bpu^s pozi\i3o
-oaa em '-g -g *g t^jm. poojq
paqopuo eA-Bix spuBsnoqj, poojq
pea 'tioji ?Aiq ^sjij ^snui no^i
4q^3uoj^s jt-Binosnra pure ?poq (jsnq
oj -b iJppiu pjrioM
no?. JI *S?I|T JO ^ROD[ tJ JO^ OiqTS
-ucdssj si poo^q inotuoM. 'sibom
pooig p3;;J 't]3!^ SAEJ.
lunu till "SMTSill
jiou^a Aisjiiassr
mmammmmmmmmmmsmacammmmmmmBmmmiaDu.
OLI) ADDRESS
ALSO THE NEW
The Herald has to have the old ad
dress as well as the new when makiiij
the change in an address, and if tlv
subscriber changes his address h
must send us both or we will have t
write him for both before we ca
j make the change and in the mea
time the paper has to go on to th
old address.
Some subscribers do not seem t
realize the difficulty of finding on
name in a long list of names all lo
I cated at the numerous postoffices t
which the Herald is mailed each week
It is about as often as once a da;
that we have to write to subscribers
or spend a long time hunting am
guessing, what the old postoffice o
some subscriber is, and we wish V
call the attention of every subscri
ber to this and perhaps avoid it fron
now on.
Therefore when ordering1 a chang
in the address, be sure to state thi
name of the old postoffice at whicl
your name is then located, and stati
the new one to which you wish th<
paper changed. Oo this and iheiv
will be no delay aoout petting tin
change made.
o
STRAY HOG.
V
A red and black ^p;>tted sow abou
t year old has taken up at ? iv farm
Marked split it) Yight ear; and upp<;i
notch in the left ear. Owner may ob
tain same by calling on the under
signed and pa* ing charges.
W. D. EDWARDS,
R. F. D. No. 2, Conway, S. 0
?Advertisement 7,21 lit
o
For all kinds of hauling, anywhere
bhort or long diojaace, gee my price;
before having your hauling done. A
D. Jones, Phono 120.? Adv.|l!13ltf
rwAT, a. o., jot,y at, 1921.
ROMANTIC TALE
OF BURIED GOLD
rreasure on The Island of
Pinaki in South Seas
is Sought
Romance is not yet dead. Talcs j
>f buccaneering, murder on th ,
ligh seas, buried gold o\\ lonely un- 1
labited islands and charts and'
;ryptograms of hidden treasuretrove
are not all nventions of
imaginative minds or legends of a
lay which is Ion:? past.
Such a tale is the story of the
treasure of the island of Pinaki,
whose hiding place, after a patient
search of over seven years, has at
last 'been discovered. And now a
schooner from Tahiti has been dispatched
to bring away the gold.
A half century ago, four sailors,
deserters from a coastwise vessel,
joined revolutionists in Peru and
Ipnrnoil nf ? f rnuciifn n f invi'nlc
iVMt IIVVI V A It I uov VI VUOU t V I t|V ?? V 10 I
plate and ignots, the property of
the church, which has been hidden i
in Peru to prevent it from falling'
into the hands of one of the warliny:
factions. Secretly the sailors
searched for the treasure, found i:
concealed in a church building and
moved it to another hiding: place on
the coast.
Going to Panama, the seafarers,
at night, boarded a small schooner,
murdered the crew, and, after putting
the treasure aboard, set sail
across the pacific, intending to
r ake some European port later to 1
dispose of their wealth. Recalling
that they had no clearance papers
and probably could not enter 1
European port safely, they decided
to hide the gold on some uninhabited
island and then get it
later in a vessel they would charter
at Sydney, N. S. W., for tradingpurposes.
Across their path lay the island
of Pinaki, in the Paumotu
Archipelago of the South Seas, and;
at this uninhabited spot they
stopped and hid their loot. One
native, who observed them from a!
neighboring island and rowed j
across to see what the men from
the strange schooner were doing
was killed and his tribal brothers,
who crossed later, found only his
empty canoe and strange markings
on the trees.
Snilnur rui tn A 11<t i>*i I!o flir? <V?n??
scuttled their vessel when a few
miles from shore and, rowing to
land, told of a storm at sea which
opened the seams of their ship. Not
all believed them, for some residents
had seen the ship approaching
and had witnessed its mysterious
sinking. There were no police,
however, in that section and as the
four men looked desperate, they
were permitted to strike out over.
land for Sydney, unmolested.
Years later, in about 1914, a Mr.
, Howe was accosted on a Sydney
street by an aged beggar. "When
Howe gave the man a few shilling
he was surprised to hear the
i ????? ???
I fp==========
I j??
Here's
, the
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*
c TURKISH Gs DOMESTIC }? ^
O BLEND
C I O A W ?C T T C >
e
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f
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e
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1
B *
e
HH
R. J. REY
I
WHEN RE/
FERTILIZI
LORIS,
/VIRGINIA
/ CAROL1N,
^ \ CHEMICA
\. CO.
hcggar ask his name and address.
Some time later Howe received an
urgent summons to go to a Sydney
hospital. There he found the l>fjr
gar, who told of how lie and three
others had buried their treasures,
had sailed on to Australia and had
set out overland for Sydney. On I
their way. blacks attacked them J
and killed two of the sailors. The |
beggar and his survivor companion,
Brown tried for years to got
a ship to go for the treasure, but
never obtained money enough. Brown
finally disappeared and he Ki!lr;\in,
had fallen into misfortune and knew
his end was near. Therefore he gave
Howe the map of the island, begged
him to believe the story true and 'to
search for the treasure. The followillO1
ft.MV /Jlrwl
Since then Ho wo lias boon searching
for the treasure and lately announced
that he had found it in a
shallow lagoon on Pinaki. Lately
he chartered a schooner at Papeete
to go to lift the gold, after making
ja contract with *the Colonial government
as to his lights in the matter.
It is said the treasure is worth
several million dollars.
o
GfiG has more imitations than any
other Fever Tonic on the market, but
no one wants imitations.?adv*
o
Much Taken With It.
Mrs. Swellman: "1 want you to
make my bathing suit this season. 1
was much taken with the one you
made me last season."
Dressmaker: "Indeed!"
Mrs. Swellman: "Yes, the camera
fiends simply camped on my trail."?
Boston Transcript.
why CAW
?quality cigi
Because we put tiie utr
one brand. Camels are
sible for skill, money and li
fine tobaccos to make a cigar
Nothing is too good for Ca
in mind! Everything is don<
best cigarette it's possible to 1
simply for show.
4-1 n 1 1 r
xaivc liic \^amei pacKage i<
most perfect packing scienc
tect cigarettes and keep them
?secure foil wrapping?rei
the fold and make the pacl
there's nothing flashy about
extra wrappers. No frills or
Such things do not improve
than premiums or coupons. .
must pay their extra cost or
If you want the smoothest
cigarette you can imagine?a
from cigaretty aftertaste,
It's Camels for you.
'air
NOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY, Wins
iDY FOR
ERS SEE
Hardwick
s. c.
I
, Agents
A\ for
v
S^FST** -. -.... ->;-.^'
jl'fxPEClk^L
j:'^MOTMEHST*
\ For Three Generations
; i iTf llavo Mode Child birth
(ij- ttk r^UrUyUcing ?
W' - ,,.^>
SWi n'* . . \r r)
.TOKtS <<;?.I*. l\i *>nhmW
WhiTt roH WOOKLF.T il kHOOOanDTHC BABY, mil
Oraufilld r.k;iu'_AT<jR Co., l ci-1. 9 d Atlanta, a a.
The days of last week were' cool
as compared to the weather of several
weeks before that. Showers were also
frequent at times in this section.
A. TONIC
Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic restores
Energy and Vitality by Purifying and
Enriching the Blood. When you feel its
strengthening, invigorating effect, see how
it brings color to the cheeks and how
it improves the appetite, you wilj then
appreciate its true tonic value.
Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic is s|mply
Iron and Quinine suspended in syrup.j So
pleasant even children like it. The blood
needs QUININE to Purify it and IRON to
Enrich it. Destroys Malarial germs and
Grip germs by its Strengthening. Invigorating
Effect. 60c.
?nw? ll
LELd are
irette
nost quality into this
as good as it's posfelong
knowledge of
ette.
imels. And bear this
s to make Camels the
)uy. Nothing is done
or instance. Tl'j llio
e can devise to profresh.
Heavy pa?or
fenue stamp to seal
[cage air-tight. But
; it. You'll find no
furbelows.
i the smoke any more
And remember?you
get lowered quality.
mellowest, mildest
ind one entirely free
ton-Salem, N. C.
?