The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, March 08, 1923, Image 5

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EVERY STREET IN CONWAY Has Its Share of the Proof That Kidney Sufferers Seek. Backache? Kidneys weak? Distressed with urinary ills? Want a reliable kidney remedy? Don't have to look far. Use what Conway people recommend. Every street in Conway has its cases. Here's one man's experience. Let J. M. Marlow, proprietor dry goods store, Third avenue, tell it. He says: "A stitch caught me in the small of my back one day when I was lifting something heavy and I thought my back would break. After that I had considerable trouble with my back, and my kidneys acted irregularly. I had seen Doan's Kidney Pills advertised and began using them. It was no time at all before my back became stronc and a counlo of boxes of Doan's strengthened my kidneys and made a well man of me." Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy?get Doan's Kidney Pills?the same that Mr. Marlow had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.?Adv. ASPIRIN Say "Bayer" and Insist! *VQ/I?f s \ \E^/ Unless you see the name "Bayer" oe package or on tablet? you are not getting the genuine Bayer product pre soribed bv phy&icians over twenty-tw< years and proved safe by millions foi Colds Headache ^ Toothache Lumbago Earache Rheumatism Neuralgia Pain, Pain Accept "Bayer Tablet? of Aspirin" only. Each unbroken package contains proper directions. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Druggists nlso sell bottles of 24 and 100. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of #* BalicylicacricL IF SICK, 611 START 1i ? Don't Take Calomel! "Dodso i Doesn't Gripe, Salivate c [ - Lose a Day's Wor Ugh! Calomel makes you sick. It's horrible! Take a dose of the dangerous drug tonight and tomorrow you may lose a day's work. Calomel is mercury or quicksilver which causes necrosis of the bones. Calomel, when it comes into contact with sour bile crashes into it, breaking it up. This is when you feel that , awful nausea and cramping. If you !are sluggish and "all knocked out," if your liver is torpid and bowels constipated or you have headache, dizziness, coated tongue, if breath is bad I BOI I | You have lj ss The mixtur ft ~~ contents mixec ft Sjj: 25 cent. Thii ft Sjjj covering the se I == It will stick 32 one-third cost I = See our agent: I = CRAWI IS' J. B. M I ^ CONW I ^//fllllllllllllllllllll T BUILDER SHOT AND KILLED Woman Seen Running, From Big Car He Drove POLICE .TAKE UP THE CASE Mystery Murder Again Takes Up Time of The Officers Frederick Schneider, Bronx contractor and a captain of engineers in the var, was found shot to death in his automobile last week, at a lonely place on Sound View Avenue, near Rosedale Avenue, in New York. He was alone in the car, but a man who heard the shot told the police he saw a woman run away. Dr. K. F. Kennard of the Bronx Medical Examiner's office, said he did not think it j was a case of suicide, but that some one sittincr beside Schneider in the automobile had fired the shot. There was a bullet hole in Schneider's right ear and another in the back of his head. It was thought possible the bullet went through his head, although on the seat beside him was a 38-calibre Colt pistol with two cartridges discharged. Only one shot was heard, however. The ear was powder burned. Body on Steering Wheel. Schneider's body lay on the steering wheel of the car. a left hand drive. His right hand gripped the wheel ,?nd his left was in his coat pocked. His driving gloves were at his feet. The car was in third speed. Evidently, when he was shot his foot slid off the accelerator and the car. with a small flow of gas through the carburetor, came to a stop. In the back seat of the car. a seven-passenger touring, which had the *ide curtains around the rear seat, were two chows. Zulu and Hulu, dogs Schneider carried with him on the rounds of his business. The dogs were barking when a farmer named Hubner, who was walking up Sound View Avenue, heard the shot at 5.20 P. M. He saw the touring car going in the direction of Clason Point. The car gradually came to a stop and he saw a woman running. He did not see her get out of the car. Had $1,000,000 Business Hubner went up to the car and saw a man leaning over the wheel. It is a lonelv snot, with vacant lots all L10US! m LIVER n's LiverTone" Acts Betterand ir Make You Sick?Don't k?Read Guarantee or stomach sour, inst try a spoonful of harmless Dodson's Liver Tono tonight. ? T nrn'a rmr mm nf/w? C ? 4 . > ri tt tf iaci i; 9 jiiy una; ai? v ? \j iv an v drug store ana get a bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone for a few eeivts. Take a spoonful and if it doesn't straighten you right up and make you feel lino and vigorous I want you to go back to the store and pet your money. Dodson's Liver Tone is destroying the sale of calomel because it is real liver medicine; entirely .vegetable, therefore it can not salivate or make you sick. IIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII JL WEE FOISOIN tried the rest, Now t e is put up in pint cans, $ 1.25 1 in 5 gallons of water, making s quantity sufficient to treat one ;ason, applied every 20 days bj attract, and guaranteed to kil of other mixtures. Place you s. 7ORD & LUKE, AUGUS' cCUTCHEON & CO., Dillon ? AY HARDWARE CO., Con* IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIII \ gg HORRY HERALD. CONWAY WILL ORGANIZE THE MUTUALS Average Cost of Fire Protection Low Dr. W. H. Mills, Field Agent in Agricultural Finance, announces that j he has scheduled meetings for the purpose of organizing Farmers' Mu- ! tual Fire Insurance Associations .at the following places: Pickens, February 6; Morion, February 16; Chesterfield, February 20; 1 Sumter, February 21; Bishopville, March 7; Camden, March 6; Kings- , tree, March 9. The report of the Insurance Commissioner for 1922, shows about $31,000,000 insurance in force in farmers' mutual -nssnoint.inns nt. an avprnirp cost of about 65Ife cents per $100 of insurance. o INCREASE IN DUES At the recent meeting of the twenty-fifth Masonic district, hel i with the Conway lodge, a resolution was introduced and carried to increase the dues of the grand lodge from one to two ri.dlars, and to apply the extsvi one dollar to the Masonic rtei;,?f Fund. around, the nearest building being the Clason Point Military Academy, a quarter of a mile away. Hubner found Patrolman Doyle of the Simpson Street Station, and identification of Schneider was made by a card in his pocket. Dr. Kennard had the body sent to the Fordham Morgue. Capt. Bruckner of the Bronx detective force and Capt. Carev of the Homicide Squad took up the investigation. Schneider's place of business was at Westchester Avenue and the Bronx river. He was building' a cut-under at Grand Concourse and 161st Street as well as doing five other contracting jobs. His business was said to amount to $1,000,000 a year. His firm was Fred Schneider, Inc. He lived at No. 1152 Grand Concourse with his wife. They had no children. He had a summer home at Thembera, Old Forge, in the Adirondacks. His business associates said he was worth fully $500,000. The Traverse Bridge, running from McComb's Bridge to Third Avenue, was built by him. He also did the excavating for several large apartment houses on Grand Concourse. He owned twentyseven trucks, five derricks, three steam shovels and four air compressors. There were 500 men in his employ. None of bis associates could ascribe any reason for his possibly b/winpr shot himself. Neither could they understand why he was driving toward Classon Point. His nephew, William Schneider, who was in business with him, talked with him at 3.30 o'clock on a .iob at Broad-! n-av and 173rd Street, and Schneiderj ado an appointment to meet "him #t office on Westchester Avenue at 5:30 o'clock. No One Else in Car. The nephew said Schneider had the does with him. but no one else was in the car. He also said Schneider had several other appointments at his office after 5:30. At noon he had driven the three stenographers in his office .to places where they lunched. He was a strapping man, 6 feet 1 inch, and always ready to give a lift to employes or acquaintances in his car. He was forty-six. Schneider began life as a poor boy ;n Ninth Street. He sold newspapers Cny n time and when sixteen managed * '-et into the arm v. He served oiVht vears in the Philippines. After that he went into the contracting h'Hness with his brother Charles, who died. . ? w< Iff - fll ?l He married miss minnie wiener. When tlie World War broke out he obtained a commission and was made a captain of engineers. He was stationed at New Orleans. VIL \ I I S55 ;ry the best | _ ^5 " per can. The cost per gallon =?= acre of cotton, = fmop or spray. ~ II, and is about ? ir orders early. SETA, GA. EE ray, S. C 55 IllllllillllllllllliUV^ V J , S. 0, MAR. 8, 1923 HAND GROUND INTO SAUSAGE (Florence Times.) With his right hand ground up*in t an electric sausage mill, Abraham I Brooks, colored boy working at the i Biinson and Wilson meat market on < North Dargan street, was yesterday ] afternoon taken to a local hospital, i where an operation was performed before the hand could be recovered < from the mill. The attending- phy- 1 sician removed all of the fingers and part of the right hand. After completing the operation the severed digits could not be removed ; from the hopper, and it had to be reconnected and the fingers ground through the mill. As soon as the accident was reported, the health commissioner went to the market, had all of the meat that had been run through the mill destroyed. He took the mill itself to the health laboratory in the city hall, where it was thoroughly sterilized and returned this morning. The accident occurred while the market was making sausage meat yesterday afternoon. The negro boy came from one of the stores across + Vi r> utvnot occicf in tlin urnl'Ir !)nrl VI I \ Oil Vv V UCJKIlilV III VI IV VI while feeding the meat into the hopper caught his hand in the mill, which ground the fingers to a pulp. PARTIESLAW^ OVER DRAIN There has been trouble more than once about public roads and drains from the same, along the \vav between Conway and Little River; and on the branch roads which lead out from the main artery of travel. This time it is John Graham and Mack McDowell who have locked horns in the magistrate court in a test of which is in the right about blocking up a ditch intended to drain the water away from a section of road leading between their homes on the cut ofT across from the Whiteville | road to Reaves Ferry on the Waccamaw. There appears to be a ditch on both sides of the road there. The water had to be led, it is claimed across the road into the ditch on McDowell's side in older to get the water away from the line of travel. After the cross ditch lmd been cut. it is alleged that McDowell went and blocked it up so that the water found a dam, and instead of getting away as it should have been permit?ted to do, it blocked up 011 the farm of Graham, and also damaged the road. Graham took out a warrant in the court of Magistrate Chestnut some time ago, the magistrate finding a section of the law which he said covered the case. The hearing, which is within the magistrate's jurisdiction, was set for Wednesday, February 28th. HOW GERMAN MONEY FALLS A fine, cozy, fifty-room castle on the Rhine opposite Coblenz, furnished with fifteen acres of vineyards, is advertised for sale for $1,000. F. Morchu, of Chicago, an army official, who will depart with the American trooys, has just bought as a farewell present for his wife's father an apartment house at Mainz consisting of six three-room apartments and a plot of land. It cost him only $65, but then there were two pre-war mortgages for 43,000 marks, or the equivalent of $10,000. It cost Morchau, $2, the present equivalent of 43,000 marks, to pay them off. An American army officer a year ago ordered a hunting rifle, then valued at $100. Yesterday it was delivered and he paid for it the mark equivalent in American money? 30 cents. o ? RAISING CALVES Proper Feed and Care Will Pay Big / Dividends Clemson College.?The success or failure of a dairy herd over a number of years always depends upon the attention given the young heifer calves which ultimately become the milk producers and in turn progenitors of their kind. At times, dairy farmers must of necessity purchase heifers of about producing age, but this is not the best method of maintaining a herd, once a good foundation is established. The greatest measure of success will come, then, to the dairyman who raises his own heifer calves up to producing cows, provided he raises them in an intelligent manner. The first principle of calf raising, suggests I. R. Jones, Assistant in Dairying, is: Do not stunt the calve's growth; or, expressed positively? Feed intelligently and liberally to VTT vui 111^ \ Ml 1 n?.. tWT^l V III/I I I calf is born with a certain inherited ability to produce milk, and unless she is given the best of feed And care when she is young she will never produce her maximum when she becomes a cow. This fundamental fact must be always kept in mind if economical results are to be obtained. A procedure similar to the'following has been found successful by many dairymen in raising their calves: the new-born calf is allowed to remain with the dam for two or three days after calving and then it is placed in a pen by itself and taught to drink milk out of a bucket. Only a little warm milk should be offered and that when the calf is hungry. One or two fingers placed in the calf's mouth and slov/ly lowered into the bucket will usually start, a backward calf to drinking. Kernember, while teaching the calf to drink, in addition to keep MASONS HAVE FINE MEETING The district meeting of the twenty- y ifth Masonic district of South Caroina, took place in Conway on February 2Gth, 1023; representatives from ill of the lodges of this district met with the Conway lodge Number 65, i n the Conw,ay Masonic lodge. ' An attractive program was prepared and sent out by E. S. C. Baker, 1 District Deputy Grand Master. There were delegates present from Winv.uw lodge No. 40; Conway lodge No. 65; Green Sea lodge No. 205; nnd there were visiting brethren from lodges in the States of Tennessee, New Jersey, North Carolina, and from ( other lodges in this State: Franklin , No. 96; Shibboleth No. 28; Landmark , No. 76 and Richland No. 39. The constituent lodges which form district No. 25. of South Carolina, are: Winyah, No. 40 at Georgetown; Harpers No. 225 at Andrews; and the lodges of Horry County located at Conway, Loris, Aynor and Jordanville. Evprv Mnson in thp wholn HistriVt w.is invited to attend the meeting:. The Conway lodge was opened a2:30 in the afternoon and the first thing on the program was receiving the grand master, J. Campbell Bissellx whose address on the subject, "Are You a Mason?" was perhaps the best feature of the entire meeting. It was delivered later on in the program. There was a suitable response upon the receiving of the grand master at the lodge and after this reports from the lodges were taken and other busi ness attended to. Dinner was served by the loca' chapter of the Eastern Star, and at eight o'clock degrees were conferred. The grand master presided and delivered an interesting lecture on . ? subject that is near the heart of every Mason. There was an illustrated lecture and the program was closed by an interesting number handled by Mr. O. Frank Hart, the grand secretary. It was one of the best meetings the order has ever lvid at Conway. The supper served was one of the best and most enjoyed of any of the entertainments like this in some time. Much credit is due to Messrs. J. O. Cartrette and E. S. C. Baker for carrying out arrangement plans for the meeting. o WHERE ARE YOUR HOGS? Clemson College.?If you are raising h<fgs where are they now? Are; they in a small pen being fed on com 1 alone? If they are you are on the wrong track. Are you feeding them on feeds which you have bought and hauled to your farm ? If you are yc are on the wrong track again. So advises Prof. L. V. Starkey, Chief of the Anirrial Husbandry Division, who makes the following suggestions: If you are pasturing your hogs on rye, rape, or velvet beans and are supplementing these pastures with some home grown com, you are prolably on the right track. We are using the double-track svp tem with our hog raising in this state. It makes a big difference which track you are on. One track leads to success and the other to failure. At the present time the Animal Husbandry Division has some pigs in a dry lot and is feeding them on corn alone. They are losing us money. we have another lot in a dry lot and nre feeding1 them on corn and tankage. We are just about breaking even on this lot. We have a third lot on corn and rye pasture and with corn at SI. 14 per bushel we are making pork for 6 cents per pound. With the facts and figures before us we can usually tell who is making money on hogs and who is losing money. Buying feed is out of the question ,<is it is better to ship hogs to corn than to ship corn to hogs. ??- o J. W. Roberts, of Dog B'ufT, spent some time here last week on business. ing the calf hungry, to use patience and perseverance. Feeding the Growing Calf. A calf 4 to 10 days old should receive from 8 to 10 pounds of wholr milk per day in two feed in us; that is one-half in the morning and one-half at night. The exact amount c?an be varied according to size and breed o' calf. Prom the 10th to the 30th dav the calf should receive 9 to 12 pounds of whole milk. From the 30 to th^; 40th day there should be gradual change to skim milk with no increso | in amount. From the 40th to the 180th day, 12 to 16 pounds of skim milk, after the 18th day, take ofT skim milk. Always remember the milk should be given about the same temperature as freshly drawn cow's milk. Care should be exercised in keeping calf buckets clean?they should be washed, scalded and aired daily. Another important point to remember is to feed the calf at regular intervals. The young calves will start to eat trrairi when about three weeks old. Various combinations of corn. oats, wheat bran and old process linseed meal give excellent results as grain rations for calves. A good one: 100 pounds of corn meal, 100 pounds of ground oats, 25 pounds of wheat bran, 25 pounds of linseed meal. Another important calf feed is hay, of which one of the legumes is by far the best, since it serves the double purpose of increasing her capacity for roughage and supplying the lime necessary for a strong framework. An extra $50 invested in the feed and care of a dairy calf until she first freshens has been figured to return $5.00 more profit during her lifetime than if the same animal had been stunted during her young life. I LAST CALL FOR I STRAWBERRIES I A/hy Should Families Pay high I Prices for This Lux- I ury I SUGGESTS OWN PLANTING I Wilson Newman Ex - Soldier I I Shows Neighbors Small I Patch 1 Clemson College.?When strawber- I ries are so easily grown, plants so I ?h<v\p, and South Carolina soils and I climatic conditions so ideal why I should the home gardneY pay as nuich I as 35 cents per quart and many times I be unable to obtain a single berry? I For the little sum of S1.00 enough I plants might be had to grow a family supply of strawberries and a sufficient quantity of plants to reset tho same area tenfold. Mr. Wilson Newman, an ex-stldier, and a 100-per cent gardner, living at Clemson College, showed his n^ighbors last spring the profit and pleasure affoixled by a small patch of strawberries. Mr. Newman, has in addition to three rows, about onefourth acre long, strawberries planted between his fruit trees in his home orchard of less than one-eighth acre, from which he gathered some days last season seventy quarts. Suggestions on Growing, Strawberries ^oil.?While the srawberry does well on sandy or well drained c'ay soil, it thrives best on a combination of clay and loams. Avoid cold undrained black soils. Preparation of the Soil.?The land should be subsoiled 14 inches deep after having been well turned, and harrowed until in good condition. Incorporated in the soil a good application of barnyard manure is very helpful, but if this can not be had use a good 8-4-4 commercial fertilizer at the rate of 800 to 1,000 pounds per acre; or a home-mixed fertilizer of one sack of cottonseed meal (100 pounds) to one of 10 per cent acid (200) pounds,) which analyzes about 11-2-2. In the spring apply 50 pounds of nitrate of soda per acre. Planting and Cultivating.?Strawberries should be planted in October or November or early in March. Best results will be obtained from fall plantings and a few berries will be had the first year. Hill Culture.?Rows should be 3 feet apart and plants set 14 inches to 18 inches in the row. All runners must be kept cut off and plants kept to single crowns and cultivated shallow. By this method the largest and s most perfect berries can be had. Renew the bed every second year by setting new plants or allowing runners to take root between old rows. Matted Rows.?The plants are ?et in the s,ime way as for the hill sys- : tem but, instead of the runners beincr cut off, they are encouraged to take ; root and form a "matted bed." Average berries grown by this method are smaller than in hill culture but the yield is greater. Setting plants.?First remove all dead leaves. Exercise great care and spread the roots, pack soil well around plants, and do not cover the bud. andersonImILl MAKES MOVE The saw mill of M. G. Anderson that was located across the lake from Conway, was recently moved to a new location below Bear Swamp, where it will remain for almost a yea)* engaged in cutting the timber on two deferent tracts of land. The lumber produced at this mill is hauled into market by teams. It has cut and marketed a large quantity of lumber in the last few years. ? o FOX FARMING Fox farming in Alaska utilizes material from salmon canneries that would otherwise be w;iste, according to the Biological Survey, United States Department of Agriculture. The heads and tails of salmon, of which the flesh is canned, are fed <o blue foxes and is much relished by them. Much of this food is salted for preservation and ?ome of it is smoked. Many fox farmers believe that 'he foxes pielYv the rav\ fiish, after the salt has been taken out of it by soaking. The fox farming industry which is being fostered by the Biological Survey, is thriving along the coast. After Every Mealjr^ WRtOEYS 'I Top off each meal with a bit of I sweet In the form I of WHIG LEY'S. / It satisfies tbe m sweet tooth aad m aids digestion. f Pleasure and combined.