The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, May 11, 1922, Image 8
CHARLESTON FIRM
IS APPOINTED
STATE AGENT
G. C. BALZEIl
Balzer, Molony & Comar get Klim
Sales for the Entire State
LOOKING FOR ASSISTANTS NOW
V* ~1 o /~i ? - ~
uai6ci, mDutiiy ec Lomar 01 l'lis
Calhoun Street, Charleston, are being
congratulated by their many
friends on having been appointed the
General Distributors for Klim milk
for the State of Sout h Carolina. Their
years of experience as Klim salesmen
make them invaluable men in
this new capacity.
Chance to Get a Klim Agency
Talking to a reporter the other day,
Mr. Balzer said that his primary interest
right now was to find good live
men and women throughout the state
who would be interested in selling
Klim. Considerable headway is being
made but he pointed out that there
were thousands of towns and villages
in the state where Klim is known to
the housewives, and he wants an agent
in each town. It certainly looks like
a good chance for men who are looking
for something good to work on,
or women who would like snare time
work. From what Mr. Balzer says,
the work is easy and interesting, and
pays well. He wants to hear from
any man or woman who is interested.
r, How to Get Klim Now
* Until the state organization of distributors
is solidly under way, Mr.
Balzer wants it known that he is
ready to ship Klim by parcel post to
the numerous South Carolinans who
are using it now. The prices which
will prevail for these parcel post ship
__ _ 11
inenis areonows :
Ivlim whole milk - 1 lb., $ .70
44 - 2*4 lbs., 1.45
y " 44 4 4 - 5 lbs., 2.80
Until there is an agent in your
town, send Balzer, Molony & Comar
your order, together with a money
order to their address given in the
first part of this article.
i> New Organization Means Much
"With every little town in South
Carolina having a Klim distributor,"
Mr. Balzer went on to say, 44much
will have been accomplished towards
giving the different communities a
steady supply of good country fresh
milk.
4 'According to figures recently compiled,
many of the farms in the state
have no cows. That means that good,
fresh milk like Klim is needed. liecause
of its uniformlv hisrh standard I
of purity and quality some of our
greatest baby specialists are recommending
it for infant feeding. You
can be sure that the value of such a
?roduct will be quickly recognized by
outh Carolina housewives. It is just
what is needed to supply the milk
we lack."
SURE, JACK SAYS HE
tr , WILL TIGHT WILLARD
Paris.?Jack Dempsey, the heavyweight
champion, referring to announcements
in the United States
that arrangements for a bout between
him and Jess Willard were
progressing favorably, said he would
be glad to meet Willard again. He
was also ready to meet the winner
of the Carpentieiv Lewis bout in
London, lie declared.
"Sure, I'll be glad to meet Willard
again," said Dempsey to the correspondent.
"He was once champion and
ought to be given every chance to
regain the title. Whenever the time,
place and conditions are decided I'll
be ready to sign up.
"Willard is a good, clean, game
fighter and I would eniov another
match with him. I am in fine shape
and haven't a doubt that I can easily
repeat my victory over Jess."
PLANS FOR VETERANS.
Darlington.?The general committee
in chai*go of the preparations foi
the State reunion of the United Confederate
Veterans to he held in Darlington
on May 17 and 18 is bus>
working up an attractive program and
the details for entertaining the veterans.
The general committee i<
made up from the officers of the various
organizations of the town. There
will he {i ling line of march am
several distinguished speakers. Th<
United States Military Band will b?
here to furnish music for the ocea
sion, and the town will l>e decorate(
Gen. Julian S. Carr, commander o
the North Carolina Division, will l><
here for the reunion. Governor an<
Mil?. Cooper have accepted an invita
tion to attend and will he here oj
May 18, the second day.
o .
Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days
Druggist* refund money if PAZO OINTMENT fails
to cure Itching, Blind. Bleeding or Protruding
Pile*. Instantly relieves Itching Piles, and you
can get restful sleep after first application. 60c.
WARTIME FRAUD
IS UNDER FIRE
Washington.?Steps were taken recently
by the executive and legislative
changes of the Government for
investigation and prosecution with
vigor of wartime fraud cases.
President Harding sent to the
House a request for a special appropriation
of $500,000 to ho used by the
Department of Justice to investigate
and prosecute all cases, civil or criminal.
growing out of the war.
Simultaneously, Attorney General
Daugherty announced the appointment
of former Representative Roscoe
McCulloch, of Ohio, as a special
Assistant Attorney General to take
charge of the Government's investigation
and possible criminal prosecution
of cases involving war camp contracts
and expenditures.
The House rules committee also prepare;!
to take up immediately the
question of giving, privileged status
to the Johnson WoodrulV resolution
calling for appointment of a special
committee to investigate all contracts
, >ini] nvnnnrlif livnc 1\\? f lio W n v niwl
Navy departments and the alien property
custodian during* and since the
war, and the settlement of Government
claims arising out of such contracts.
No Objection
The Attorney General in announcing
the appointment of Mr. McCulloch,
said he had written the chairman
of the House rules committee
that the Department of Justice Ivid
no objection to its investigation, and
"to go along with it."
"I want to say this," however, he
added. "Investigations by the department
of wartime transactions has
been going on as rapidly as possible
with the funds Congress has provided,
and the use of other funds where
they could legitimately be used for
the purpose."
Mr. McCulloch was a member of
the House committee in the last Congress
which investigaated the conduct
of the war and devoted most of his
attention to camp contracts.
o
CALOMEL GOOD HUT
AWFUL TREACHEROUS
Next Dose May Salivate, Shock Liver
or Attack Your
? Bones
You know what calomel is. It's
mercury; quicksilver. Calomel is dangerous.
It crashes into sour bile like
dynamite, cramping and sickening
you. Calomel attacks the hones and
should never he put into your system.
If you feel bilious, headachey, constipated
and all knocked out, just go to
your druggist and get a bottle of
Dodson's Liver Tone for a few cents,
which is a harmless vegetable substitute
for dangerous calomel. Take a
spoonful and if it doesn't start your
liver and straighten you up better and
quicker than nasty calomel and without
making you sick, you just go back
and get your money.
Don't take calomel! It makes you
sick the next day; it loses you a day's
work. Dodson's Liver Tone straightens
you right up and you feel great.
No salts necessary. Give it to the
children because it is perfectly harmless
and cannot salivate.?Adv.
o
SUMMONS FOR RELIEF
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA,
COUNTY OF HORRY.
Court of Common Pleas.
Burroughs & Collins Company, :i
Corporation, Plaintiff vs. Alice Floyd,
Eliza Mincey, Sallie Smith, Costa
Williamson, Hannah Harwick, Lid?
Floyd, Richard Floyd, and Jesse
Floyd, Defendants.
To the Defendants above named*
You are hereby summoned and re1
1 ^Amrxlninf ill
(|U11*6(1 to answer une xjum^iaiuv
this Action, of which a copy is herewith
served upon you, and to serve
a copy of your Answer to said Complaint
on the subscribers, at their
offices Conway, S. C., within twenty
days a-fter the service hereof, exclusive
of the day of such service;
and if you fail to Answer the Complaint
within the time aforesaid, the
plaintiff in this action will apply to
the Court for the relief demanded
n the complaint.
Dated Api;ll 12th, A. D. 1922.
Sherwood & McMillan,
Plaintiff's Attorneys.
NOTICE TO ABSENT DEFENDANTS:
Eliza Mincey and Sallie Smith
TAKE NOTTCE that the Summons
and Complaint herein, of which the
foregoing Summons is a copy, wa
filed in the Clerk of Court's office
Conway, S. C., on the 14th day of
April, 1922.
Conwav, S. C., April 14th, 1922
sherwood & McMillan,
Attorneys for Plaintiff
ATTEST.
w. l. bryan,
C. C. C. P. 4 20 3t
NOTICE OF DISCHARGE.
Notice is hereby given that the un
dersigned administrators of the per
sonal estate of J. Hartford Baker
deceased, will apply before the Judg<
of Probate of Horry County at hi:
1 office at Conway, South Carolina, a
? i _1. J- il.? 4 k,
eleven ociock hi iih: iuiciiuuh ?>n uu
20th day of May for a final discharge
as such Administrators.
\ J. Gary Baker,
Mary E. Baker,
Administrators of tho personal es
tute of J. Hartford Baker, deceased
" H. H. Woodward,
' Attorney for Administrators.
I i on itMA
I MV J I I I w?
Habitual Constipation Cured
In yO 21 Days
1 '*LAX-FOS WITH PEPSIN" is a specially,
prepared Syrup Tonic-Laxative for Habitua
Constipation. It relieves promptly bui
should be taken regularly for 14 to 21 dayi
to induce rcgulai action. It Stimulates an(
Regulates. Very Pleasant to Take. 60<
~ar bottle.
\
THE HORRY HERALD. CONW
GARDEN NOTES
AND ORCHARD
Clemson College.?For killing plant
lice on cabbage, roses or other plants,
spray with a strong soap solution or
with a tobacco solution by soaking
tobacco stems in water.
Garden plants may be transplanted
safely during very dry weather if
water is poured around their roots
and a thick mulch of dry soil placed
over the watered surface. To pour
water on the surface soil without covering
it with dry soil does more harm
than good.
In pruning tomato plants remove
all shoots that appear in the axis of
the leaves. The fruiting stems come
out of the stalk about midway be'tween
the leaves.
* v??vi\ inv. wpo vi lit n i
berry and blackberry canes when
they reach a height Gf about three
feet. This will make them branch,
increasing (he fruiting wood for next
year.
Thin peaches, plums and apples if
you would have the fruit reach maximum
size, color and quality. Remove
the surplus fruit by hand, thinning
so that no two specimens will be
nearer together than three or four
inches.
Newly planted orchard and shade
trees often fail to grow well or even
die during a prolonged drought. The
trouble can be avoided, however, if
a heavy mulch of stable manure or
other litter is put around the trees.
In addition, the orchard should be
kept well cultivated.
A good summer treatment of the
young orchard is to plant it to peas
in rows. Iron and Brabham are the
best varieties.
To make a good lawn preparation
of the land should begin at least several
months before sowing. Break
the ground deeply and thoroughly
now and sow thickly to cowpeas. In
the early fall the pea vines can be
turned under and a good seed bed
formed.
o
MAY FARM CALENDAR
Things to Do This Month
Agronomy
Kill the weeds while they are small.
Plant Spanish peanuts thick; rows
three feet apart and plants three
inches apart in the rows.
Plant sorghum for the home supply
of syrup.
Plant some Sudan grass for hay.
Plant every acre possible in soil
building crops, such as velvet beans,
cowpeas and soybeans.
Garden and Orchard
Plant tomato seed in May for transplanting
in July. The Stone is excellent
for the late crop.
Spray the tomatoes with Bordeaux
mixture to greatly prolong the fruiting
season.
Plant early this month all tender
vegetables, such as cantaloupes and
cucumbers that have not already been
planted.
Cultivate the garden after every
rain, to keep the land free from grass
and weeds and to preserve a soil
mulch.
Spray the grapes with Bordeaux
mixture as soon as the flowers have
dropped and the fruit has set, and
later at intervals of two weeks.
Continue to spray peaches and
plums with self-boiled lime-sulphur.
Plant Diseases
Keep the sprayer going according
to schedule.
If you buy sweet potatoes or other
plants, investigate carefully to see
that you are not introducing soilborne
plant diseases.
Let a few choice stalks of tobacco
go to seed. Wildfire and some other
destructive diseases are seed-borne.
Better not take the risk of introducing
them in next year's seed.
Put each crop in a new place.
Where a crop follows itself year after
year its troubles pile up.
Pull up and destroy any raspberry
or cultivated blackberry plants infested
with the orange rust.
Animal Husbandry
Wean March pigs, which should be
eight weeks of age.
Breed beef cows.
Sow soy beans and cowpeas for
hay.
Run mowing machine over pastures
to kill weeds.
Observe the pastures and if unsatisfactory
plan to improve them
next year.
Dairying
Continue to feed grain to cows or
i pasture. They will pay well for it
, Keep salt before cows on pasture
Screen the milkhouse.
Destroy breeding places for flies bj
. keeping manure pit dark or by removing
at least every four days.
Provide shade, pure drinking watei
and salt for young calves.
Hoys' Club Work
Don't neglect the community meet
jngs for club members. The boys an
looking forward to these occasion!
. for information, fun and recreation
o ,
NOTK l?; or TKACH.
ERS' KXAMINATI(?
^ The regular teachers' examinatioi
L will he held in the courthouse at Con
way, S. C., on Friday, May 12, an<
j Saturday, May 13. The examinatioi
will cover primary licenses, first, sec
ond and third grades, and general ele
menUury licenses first, second am
- third grades.
The examination ror high scnoo
certificates vsill be hold later.
All teachers desiring to teach ii
the public schools of Horry Count;
that are not already qualified ar
urged to take this examination. Th
examination will begin promptly at
. o'clock A. M.
1 o
r tin QuWro That Dots Not Affect the Hee
H Because of ita Ionic And laxative effect. I.AX/
J ntrK BKOMO QUININK is better than ordinar
. Qu'n.ne ami does not cause nervousness no
3 ringing In head. Remember the full name at
look tor the t$ nature ol B. W. GROVB. 30<
AY, S. C., MAY 11, 1922
j Brick wi
Tobacco a
y As Manager of B
a the farmers of the Pee E
I house is owned and opei
P and Horry counties, and
li friends know that their he
"
I W. H. DANIEL, Presi
HUGHKS IS OUT
FOR CONGRESS
E. T. Hughes published his card in
our last issue announcing his candidacy
for Congress from the sixth district.
He had stated some time before
that he would be a candidate
and his friends in many places in this
district got busy long since in pushing
his candidacy for the office.
More information about Mr. Hughes
as a candidate for this important office
appears elsewhere in this issue
of the paper.
o
DIZZINESS IS ANNOYING
As Manv Conway People Know
Too Well,
When the kidneys are weak or disordering,
they fall behind in filtering
the blood of poisons. As these poisons
attack the nerves the result is
felt in spells of vertigo, just as
drunkenness will make a man dizzy
from the poisoning of alcohol. Dizziness,
headache, backache and irregularity
of the kidney secretions are
all signs of weak or disordered kidneys
and should not be neglected.
Use Doan's Kidney Fills, the homeendorsed
kidlney remedy. Head this
Conway resident's statement:
Mrs. S. F. Gasque says: "I h,id
all the symptoms of kidney trouble.
My back was sore and lame and my
head ached. I also had dizzy spells.
My kidneys acted irregularly and
bothered me. Doan's Kklnev Pills
soon cured me of the troubfe."
Price KOc, at all dealers. Don't
simply ask for a kidney remedy?get
Doan's Kidney Pills?the same that
Mrs. Gasque had. Foster-Milburn Co.,
Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.?Adv.
o
TRESPASS NOTICE
All persons are hereby forbidden
to enter or trespass in any way upon
the estate lands of the late Daniel L.
Bellamy, containing 350, more or less,
acres in Simpson Creek township,
and bounded by lands of H. C. Gore,
W. L. Hardee and others. Persons
entering on said land without the consent
of the undersigned will be subject
to the full penalty of the law.
4-13-4t T. C. HARDEE,
For the Heirs of Daniel L. Bellamy.
Taste is a matter of
tobacco quality
, We state it as our honest
belief that the tobaccos used
in Chesterfield are of finer
1 quality (and hence of better
taste) than in any other
i cigarette at the price.
Liggttt Gf Mjert Tobacco Co%
I
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L'
; a
. -j v
I
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n
(
II
y
e
-x ^ A t < n .
u 4.V ior ioc
9 10 for 9c
Vacuum tins
t of 50 45c
it
o
11
/
irehouse C
MULLINS, S. C
WUl Sell
t Auction Tli
rick Warehouse Company, w
)ee section know that the Bri
rated by seventy of the best fc
we take this method of lettini
use will be open as usual to sel
dent ODI
MuHins, S. C.
POINTS ABOUT PEANUTS
A Good Stand Needed for a Good
Yield
Clemson College.?A great many
farmers are planting peanuts this
year either for feed or as a substitute
cash crop. It is very important
in making a good crop of peanuts to
have a good stand. The rows should
be 3 feet apart for the Spanish variety
and the plants should be 3 inches
apart in the row. They will make a
larger yield if thicker than that rather
than thinner. A good many farmers
plarit their peanuts f>, <S or 10
inches apart and, of course, get a
very low yield as a result. It is important
to have a good stand to get
a good yieifcL
It is important also not to plant
nuts which have been shelled for a
long time. They deteriorate very
rapidly after being shelled and for
that reason ft is best to plant them
in the shell or Ik? sure that they are
freshly shelled nuts. The safest plan
is to plant them in the shell.
The peanut is a good, crop if prop>erly
grown, but to be a successful
crop economically ft should bo grown
at a low cost per acre. If the nuts
.rire planted thick then cultivate early
with a harrow, ft will reduce the cost
of production and enable one man to
grow a large acreage, thus making ft
a much more profitable crop per man.
For further details may be had Extension
Bulletin 45, "Peanuts."
0,
AG A INST SHIFTERS
Summerville.?The "Shifters" have
reached Summerville, coming during
the latter part of last week and made
rapid progress among the young neopie.
Very few of them seem to have
much idea of the meaning of the socalled
order and. have entered it in a
spirit of fun, with rro? realization of
its dangers. On Monday it > .* explained'
to the pupils of the school
and some of the dangers of its "constitution"'
or "oath** were pointed out. i
Later the high school pupil's re-1
quested that a meeting bc? heldL over
which the? president of tire j^Tsiduatin^
crass presided.. At this meeting
a motion: was passed by ix larger majority
condemrutcj^ the iwdec ;url requesting
that all high school pupils
who are members destroy tb^;,r badges
and drop from the order.
W/I1C9ICJ
CIGARE
of Turkish and Domesti
-.1
\
tompany
lis Season
e think it our duty to let u
ck will Operate. This n
timers of Dillon, Marion I
y them and their farmer n
1 their tobacco at auction. 1
Z.LL LEWIS, Manager I
FIVE TO RUN,
FOUR ARE NOT
The county offices to be filled this
year by the Democratic primary are:
Auditor
Treasurer
Representative
Probate Judge %f
i ?
magistrates.
The offices that will not he again
filled until two years hence are:
State Senator
Clerk of Court
Sheriff
Superintendent of Education
Already the political pot i.s hegifining
to swell and will be at high boiling
point in the course of a few weeks..
o
SUMMONS FOR RELIEF
(Complaint not served)
State of South Carolina, county of '
Horry, in court of common pleas:
Thomas VV. Livingston, plaintiff, vs.
C. M. Stalvey, R. C. Ghainger, Rhody
Grainger, Wm. P. Miller, Henrietta
Miller, W. E. Osteon, II. P. Hardee,
Wm. G. Sarvis, Wm. E. Sarvis and
G. W. Harrefson, deifendants.
To the defendants above r?amed:
You are hereby summoned and recjuired
to answer the complaint in this ^
action, vvhifch has deen filed in the
office of the clerk of the court of
common pleas, for the said county,
arid to serve a copy of your answer
to the said complhi'nt on the sub,
scriher at his olliCe at Conway, S. C.,
witlun twenty davs after the service
hereof? exclusive* of the day of such
service; and if you fail to answer the
complaint within the time aforesaid,
the plaintiff in bhis action wii apply
to the court for the relief demanded
in the complaint._
H. H. WUUDW A RD,
^lUmtifTs Attorney.
Dated M,av 3, A. D. littar.
To C. M. Stalvey, absent defendant::
Take notice that the c<un plaint in
the fore^om# ^ated action and the
summons of which the foregoing is a
copy were filed in the otlice of the
clerk of the court of common pleas in
and for Horry county, &t Conway, S.
C., on tlie 3rd day of May, A. I>. 11)22.
W. h. BRYAN, (L. *v) C. C. C. P.
H. H. WOODWARD,
Plaintiff's Attorney.
i?
* A \
rfield
TTES
c tobaccos?blended
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k