The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, June 15, 1922, Image 5
IfiMt?1 Cjw^aHwi'Dwta 1
! 11 'ill TNhjh
"LAX-FOS WITH PCFSlN ' ka special*-!
; prepared SynipTaoie-LaxatWetfor Habtaai)
Constipation, it wlieves {promptly bar
1 should be tahmregtia^lyffer?4 to 21vdeysi
' to induce regaikar action. tltSfaroiileteaaaB
r\ Regulates. Very Wsasant toTake. ttc
per bottle.
o
666 quickly ivfirwa (GdUbt, i Constipation,
Bilioiwnew and Headaches. -A
Fine Tonic*.?ftff
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* MMMIMMNN<M<<I ?M?
- I FI IIFQ I
i: For Curing
jj TOBACCO |
J[ My force is making up a bijr
i supply. Guod wurkmonHhip and <
< best materials.
o QUICK SERVICE, *>
J[ L AST TNG (FLUES*
][ Write ?r i?n?e crrllecH with J|J
. it COM jHRN MIRKS ?
: ;; MILTON PITMAN, l-e??ee ^
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Save 1
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We want every
with the purity,
have made gei
Crush and Lii
A" Belling, fruit-fia
That is why \
parent Orangeon
this interesti
You should d
wholesome drii
will afford you
Serve these del
' social gatherin
refreshments ar
f every time. Yo
fast youx colleci
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U.S. MAY
CONTROL CUBA
(Columbia Record)
Havana.?The Government of Cuba)
is virtually in the control of the United
States. i
Intervention, while still unofficial!
and indirect, is as potent and effec-^
tive as if internal Cuban affairs 'were
being: personally directed from Washington.
;
The entire cabinet of President
Zayas is now in the process of dhrarrge.:
Four cabinet ministers resigned'hist)
week. The resignation of the bal-^
ance of the cabinet is expected before!
the end of the week. Other important
and fundamental changes m thq
processes of the Cuban Government;
are rumored.
" The cabinet officers who resigned
are: ,
"Rafael Montoro, secretary ?f state
and treasury. ,
1 'Dr. Guiterras, secretary of sanita^
tion. j
Francisco Zayas, secretary eft" 'education.
j
With the balance of "his cabinet
awaiting word to drop out of <dfticial
life Havana sees in the dramatic
changes that have talce-n pTact President
Zayas* determination to reorganize
his government valong l^ht?'lines
declared necessary by General CrowS'lljiip1!
23 casta;
4 addif ional susei
the crowns ?1
fe/non-CKUSH
Zime-CRUSH
'one to 4:take his first drink.'*
one to become well acquainted
quality and deliciousness which
mine Orange-Crush, Lemonne-Crush
by far the largestvored
beverages in the world.
ve, in co-operation with the
Crush Company, are putting
ng prize campaign.
rinlc several bottles of these
ik3 every day, and each drink
i one crown.
icious drinks at home, parties, .
gs, dances ? everywhere that
e in order. Save the crowns
u will be surprised to see how
don will grow.
In case cf tics, full prize will be R
Ingredients??g
or limes, to which are added juices from these (
carbonated water and citric acid, the natural ac
Prepared onlv l>v Orance-Cmsh fnmM
Bring or send
CONWAY COCA COLA
C. T. Sloan. Propri
Telephon
THE HOKRY HERALD, 001
der, observer for the American Government,
and thus stop actual intervention
by the American Government.
Dr. Zayas, whn> has long been a
leader in progressive thought in Cuba,
is iregarded as tbe one man in Cuba
at present who can by determined action
bring about the changes which
General Crowder has outlined as essential
if the Cttban republic is to be
saved from bankruptcy. President
Zayas and'Genenil Crowder, it is said,
are working together in perfect harmony.
Havana is in .a turmoil of excitement.
The late 'evening editions of
the local papers, carrying big red
headlines are announcing the fall of
four of the island republic's leading
statesmen and reporting the changes
that are still <ogiected to come. In
the crowded cafes along the Prado
and in the 'Central Park crowds are
congregating anfl irumors even wilder
1.1 x - VI J 11 I 1 -
man reported m me iaie extras are
being passed from group to group.
Although ino" dflicial statement has
been issued from :the national palace
or by General Orowder, information
with the events that have been occurring
during the 'last few days at the
national palace indicates that General
Crowder has submitted twelve notes to
President Zayas during the last few
days bearing upon the financial and
political condition of the republic and
pointing out certain specific changes
that must be made in order to prevent
official American intervention.
scMii '-fciiJ'
!*chatidise prizes
ifO$??H $7 Prizes in J
1st Prize ... $
j[Jf 2nd Prize ....
One . . . $4.99 ;
Four . . . 2.50 \
Five . . 2.00 j
Ten . . . 1.50 \
4 Cases of . "Cru:
Although only the finest and
clients are used in the "Crush*
is very low. Only 5c.
Rules and inftormati
Contest closes at midnight. Saturday. Inlv '
r / W J ? - / be
announced following week.
Wrap and tie crowns securely, and write yo
dress on outside and inside package.
Only used crowns hearing the regulation tr;
Ward's Orange-Crush, Ward's Lemon-C
Lime-Crush will he considered.
Our count will be carefully made anil must
correct.
Everybody is eligible to this contest except
This contest will last only a few
have a splendid chance to win 01
cash prizes. Enjoy a drink of C
during the next hour and start yo
For sale wherever bottled drinks
iven each tying contestant.
irinks get their flavors from the delicate
the fresh outer kins of oranges, lemons
Vllifo rnnA o* IT O 4 * ^ 1 ' *
......vani. kukui, v-i. o. cerunea ioou color,
id of oranges, lemons and limes.
ny?Chicago, Winnipeg, London
crowns to
BOTTLING COMPANY
etor, Conway, S. C.
i' No. 101
j .. i . . # .
SWAT, S. 0., JUNE 15, 1922
Eight of these notes, it is said, referred
directly to the composition of
the cabinet. The other four bore on
the necessity of enacting the budget
law immediately and passing other
remedial legislation.
, The silence of the officials of the
Cuban Government and of General
| Crowder has undoubtedly aggravated
i the situation in Havana. The newspapers
are demanding that the real
facts be placed before the people and
! that they be informed as t? the contents
of the Crowder notes. At a
; meeting of the Veterans of Cuban In1
dependence last week a commission
, was appointed to interview President
Zayas and Crowder and demand that
the truth of the situation be placed
frankly before the people. Rumors of
American military intervention had
' been thick in Havana during the last
day 'or two. In some instances even
the date American forces are to ar!
rive and take over the Administration
of the government is given.
Aft a secret meeting of the parliamentary
committee recently it is said
serious charges were made against
the certain cabinet officials, high po-i
lice officials in Havana and the ad-j
ministration of the national lottery.
666
i Cures Malaria, Chills and
Iuenput' or muous rever. it kills the
rms,?tf
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15.00
10.00
5.00
>rize
>rizes
prizes
frizes
shes"
purest ingress",
the price
I on?
12. Winners will
iur name and adule
mark namea,
>tish and Ward*#
t be accepted a?
our employees.
weeks. You
ne of the big
>range-Crusn
ur collection,
are sold.
(
GROWERS OF KY.
ENJOY ADVANCE
Some days after the organized
growers of Kentucky had received
notice of a second advance of $9,000,000
to be paid them for their deliveries,
and following the statement
of James C. Stone that the Burley
Tnlwi/?/.? r> ? *
ivmm-iu uiuncrs svssociauon nad received
29 r?er 100 pounds for it? February
sales, as compared to $20.02
for sales by the unorganized growers,
the opponents of co-operative marketing
paid for the advertisement of a
let er from one Leon Oettinger at
Lexington. Ky., with the somewhat
obscure statement that "Farmers here
who brought their tobacco have only
had the one advance on it."
Paying for the space to advertise
that advances to members of the Kentucky
pool had been but 7 cents per
pound, in the same paper which two
days previously had published the fact
that the Burley Tobacco Association
was sending checks for $9,000,000 to
the members in a second advance, an
amount sufficient to bring their receipts
to over 15 cents a pound, the
opponents of co-operative marketing
have gone to lengths to discredit the
organization of tobacco farmers which
make their efforts pitifully futile and
ridiculous.
Facing the advertisement of those
who seek to befuddle tobacco farmers
of North Carolina by misleading statements
from Kentucky, and on the op
isvoj w pci|^c ill (I itTclU I (IK Uclll \ (M
North Carolina were these words of
James C. Stone, an outstanding figure
in the tobacco world, and president
of the Hurley Growers* Co-operative
Association, taken from a telegram:
"Farmers have been advanced about
R cents per pound and payment of
about same amount is being made
this month. Growers will average 4
to G cents a pound more on final returns
for their tobacco than outside
growers. Reported sales during the
month of February averaged $29 per
100 pounds. Sales over auction floors
in Kentucky averaged $20.02,"
Completely contradicting the statements
of one Oettinger, who migrated
from North Carolina to Kentucky,
in the letter which anonymous sponsors
of the speculative system had
desperately used as an eleventh-hour
device to bolster up their case, came
letters from leading bankers, farmers
; nd merchants of Kentucky, men of
-tr.tiding, from several counties and
communities. These letters repeated
!y disprove the statements of those
cowardly opponents of the marketing
association whose ambiguous and un-ignod
thrusts at 70,000 organized farmers
are stinging the real producers
of the wealth of both the Carolinus
and \ irginia into an eleven'h-hour
campaign which is bringing thousand ;
rf new members into the greatest cooperative
marketing association of
The United States.
rRICKETS-?
j A bone-disease of early child- $
a hood may be prevented by the g
! faithful use of cod-liver oil. 1
Scott's Emulsion |
| contains tiie wonderful anti- '|
rachitic vitamine in 4\ X
I abundance. It is the I
(J ?'lcal way to Rive cod- ; '/) (
5 nver u'.l to cl n v, jj
Sv-oti ,S: I'- u I'l < 1:1! < '(: X ' JJ ' r
f'amirt it * "b mjiinA
O
Never Had a Doctor
*
Vet Strong and Healthy at
Five Years ()ld.
nW^\C\
\$A\
I
.Mothers who watch children cnreiully
can prevent the development of
serious illness. At the first si^n of
fretfulness, fever, colic, coated tongue
or cold give a course of the old reliable
l)r. Thornton's Easy Teether
and note the immediate improvement.
J. Culle-n Wright, J. P., of Ilartwell,
Ga., writes: "My baby is now five
years old, and 1 used only Easy Teether
prepared by your during her teething
period. I have never had a doctor for
her since she was born. I feel like it
is the only remedy, and heartily recommnml
il "
For fifteen years this scientifically
prepared prescription of a successful
baby specialist has been winning hundreds
and hundreds of such unsolicited
testimonials from appreciative
parents, doctors and druggists.
Dr. Thornton's Easy Teether is a
sweet powder that children like and
take more freely than sticky syrups
or liquid medicines. It is composed of
antiseptics, digestants and granular
stimulants that work efficiently and
harmlessly on tin- stomach, bowels and
kidneys. It positively contains no
opiates or harmful drugs; this we
guarantee. If it fai's to help your
child, your money back immediately
withou' ?iii -^Po:'. ^ Twelve powders in
a package w th full direct tons, 25c at
our druggist?Advertisement.
HE AMPLIFIES
A RADIO SET
One Hundred Thousand Times
Is Proved at His Demonstration
An invention amplifying an ordinary
radio receiving set 100,000 times
and eliminating outside aerials is
demonstrated by Major Edwin H.
Armstrong, formerly in charge of the
radio service in France. The demonstration
was before the Institute of
Rario Engineers, in the Engineering
Societies' Building, No. 25 West 39th
street, New York.
Major Armstrong pfe\*fected the radio
audion and recently won a sevenyear
suit against the General Electric
company to establish his title to the
invention. He is also the inventor of
the super-hetrodyne and the amplifying
device demonstrated last week,
which he calls a "super-regenerative
circuit." Major Armstrong lives in
Yonkers and does his work in the
Hartley Research Laboratories at Columbia
University.
The radio amateur who tunes in
every night to WJZ will be benefited
by this new invention in two ways,
Major Armstrong Averts. *"An
outfit equipped with a superregenerative
circuit," he said, "is so
sensitive that outside aerials are unnecessary.
Receiving sets without
outside aerials have been possible for
some time, but they have boon so expensive
that most amateurs have not
been able to afford them. With the
super-generative circuit, inside sets
can be manufactured at the same price
as those requiring the cumbersome
outdoor aerials.
"The other practical result of this
circuit will be the ability to detect
wave lengths under 200 meters with
ordinary amateur sets. In the past
short wave lengths were undistinguishahlo
for small receiving sets.
Now that the range under 200 meters
is available for the broadcasting stations,
the cost of operating will bo
greatly lessened.
"To illustrate the difference between
a receiving set equipped with a super.
regenerative circuit and the ordinary
set, I have found that a signal which
can just be heard with a simple regenerative
circuit at the most critical
zero point can bo heard all over the
loom with the super-regenerative circuit."
-
This tost was made successfully by
the Major before the experts, to whom
he was explaining the invention.
"A short way to describe the superregenerative
circuit," Major Armstrong
concluded, " is that one vacuum
tube is made to do the work formerly
done by three. It has been
known for several years that the limit
. of amplification is reached when the
negative charge in the uhe approaches
the positive. In experimenting 1
found that it was possible to increase
the1 negative charee temporarily, for
about one 'JO,000th of ;i second far
above the positive. :tn?l still keep the
average down. It is possibility of in
crease which perm its the enormous
j amplification which 1 have demonstrated,
and enables me to elimin.ate
two tube-; from the circuit."
Major Armstrong's invention is still
in the laboratory st t&e, but he says
that he has received several offers
from radio equipment companies to
place it on the market.
district col'rt of t11k imtkl)
statics for thi-: fastfr.\
district of soi th Carolina.
in HAnK IU I* rcV.
!n the matter of F. li. llollid/iy of
Rose l/.'.ke in the county of Horry and
district aforesaid, bankrupt.
To tlie creditors of said bankrupt:
Notice is herein uiven tha* on the
<?th day of June, I O'.'L'. the above
. anted was duiy adjudged bankrupt;
and that the first meeting of his creditors
will tie held at the oillce of undersigned,
Florence, S. C.. on the 10th
ay of .lune. 10'2'J, at 12 o'clock noon,
.i1. wlil 'li ti' *e the said creditors may
aiiend prove thm'r claims appoint
a trustee, e\an ine the bankrupt
and traa.-act >uch other business
as may properly come before
said meeting. At this meeting will
also be considered the sale of the
-aock of merchandise and other pernvil
property of the bankrupt, withfurther
notice to creditors. Claims
tist be fi'ed in the manner prescribed
/ the rules of the sunreme court for
in.u: of claims in bankruptcy.
Florence, S. C., June X, li>22.
ROHERT J. KIRK,
Referee in Bankruptcy.
SiniERALD'S
AD-AIiT SERVICE
Don't yet it in your head that tho
erald is not in position to u'ive you
?od service in /ulverwising. With u
rue assortment of fine cuts accualating
since the Herald started the
l-art service two months ago, there
i a fine cut to suit any business.
>u can look over the whole assortment
and choose the one which best
aits the nature of your business and
\e wording of the message you wish
> convey to the readers of the Her
(I. Let the Herald help you in this
ay without any extra cost to the
ivertiser.
#? ?
Love is blind, and with people marintf
in times like these we suspect
is also wholly i.unorant of arithmetic.?
Birmingham News.
The Quinine That Does Not juveei ite HevJ
Brcc.we of it9 tonic and laxative etfect, LAXA*
T1*'U BROMO QUININK is better than cdiaary
??e and does not cause nervousness nor
in head. .Remember th-? iiiil u?nser.t.d
loo A (or the ->0 uutuic of 1^. W. ciROVK. 30c.