University of South Carolina Libraries
V Page No. 8 : WVWWdW/MVAWA'/AW I ON I Send j J .WAV.WAW.V.V.V.V.V.V. SENATOR SMITH MAKESANSWERS (Continued From P.uge One) 000. But the exoenditure of the $200,000 was the business of the County Commissioners, and according to their statement as published in The Herald this week, Mr. Prince is wrong in every item of expenditure he quoted; but he pays the hopes of the eastern part of the county and Floyd's township were blasted when I killed his bond bill. The facts are: A little over four months ago, the people voted down the bond bill which proposed building the three bridges, and it will be remembered that he insisted that it be submitted to the npnnlp x r which proposition I endorsed. Just about four months after the refusal of the people to float bonds to build the three bridges, he proposed a bond issue of $35,000 to build one of the bridges and actually refused to let the people vote on it. He said he was going- to have the bridge; that it would be his and Carter's funeral if they didn't get it. I killed it be cause he would not let it go to the people. He said that I wanted to put $35,000 into our sup-| ply bill for roads and bridges, and I knew then that not one dollar of it would be spent in the eastern section of the county. He must know that statement is not true; he knows it would be spent as the County Comw n x A - 1 ' jMiftrtiuuui? tviw in to spend it, and that I did not even try to control them. He says the people of Little Kiver are denied the small bond issue of $20,000. I have seen no request from Little River for $20,000 bond issue to build a bridge. But Mr. Prince criticises me for letting the location of the bridge be voted on when there was no money to build the bridge; but if he had submitted his bond issue to the people and they voted bonds they would have had the money, but there could come no harm in their voting, on the locality when the yget the money. I did not promise anything that could be construed as 3 compromise on any bill. I did suggest that if the people will not issue bonds, it might pay a ioint stock company to build a toll bridge at all three places. But Mr. Prince tries to leave the impression on the people that I know just bow all public funds wil! be spent and that Simpsons Creek will not get one copper He says that I have forgotten, that I would not be in the seaate now if his section of the county had not voted for me. I will only remind him that I greatly appreciate the kind appreciation expressed of my public services by the people and in the last 01 l An fllAtr or! 1 ^ ^ * viwviuu uitji ikiu xi jrcai n ui n i #v left" islative record to consider. But he < was elected as a result of the issue in the campaign and his pledge to use his influence in the interest of economy, but what's his record ? When I got a hill through the senate and sent it to the house reducing the road commutation tax from six to three dollars, he killed it, although if one man pays out and the money is spent for dynamite it would blow up more stumps than the man would dig up in three weeks; and if five pay out, it would run the big road machine a day. But Mr. Prince says: "No, they shall pay six dollars. Then he proposed to raise the salary of the magistrates in Simpsons Creek and Little River; then he introduced a bill proposing to appoint a road commissioner for each township with a salary of $100, and then to complete his record, he joined a few other members and introduced a resolution to pay the mem1 ...... * -p * uvib caiia iur tnu tune uv?i luri-y days, although two similar resolutions had failed. Respectfully submitted, JEREMIAH SMITH. SINGLETON HAS SERVEDAPPEAL (Continued From Page One) Supreme Court on appeal but the defendant was not able to upset it and he had to comply with the sentence. Strong- showing was made for the defendant at the trial here. The law contemplates that there shall be no conviction in case it is proved that the woman at the time of the alleged offense was lewd and unchaste. A number of witnesses was produced to show this in behalf of the defendant. Recently it was said that if the case Js not remanded on appeal, that Singleton will not pay any money, but will prefer to serve out the three yenrs in the gang. ?_ Hung 'Em Up. /. man rn a Western town hanged hir^elf to a bedpost by his suspenders. The coroner's jury, which was composed of mothers, decided that the "deceased came to his death by comir?t., home drunk and mistaking himself for his pants." ^w.vwjv."Asv.VdVyswww LY i which will our name wit! v.v.mv.mvAmw.VA I RADIO EXPERTS CLOSE MEETING Washington.?Informed by two days of discussions of ether conflicts and obstacles now hampering: wireless use, radio experts and government officials attending the radio conference here went into executive session to consider action which may lead to betterment of conditions. Commissioner Carson, of the Commerce Department's bureau of navigation, acting chairman of the conference said a day or more might be necessary before the conferees could resolve all of its problems. The primary object will be to parcel out among users now and less conflicting brand of wave lengths and to prescribe operating conditions which will allow commercial service, broadcasters, marine navigators, the army and navy and amateurs to be less hampered in their operations. Problems put before the conference today ranged from the direct notice given by American composers, through J. G. Rosenthal for the American Society of Composers. Authors and Publishers that they would strive to extend the copyright laws to give them royalties from radio broadcast concerts, to the plea of Texas cattlemen for protection of the wireless launching of stockyard reports to give them knowledge as to whether packing centers were ready for their 1 i vestock sh ipments. For High Class Stations. Spokesmen for commercial companies and manufacturers asked that special arrangements be made in wireless wave allocations to high class, high powered broadcasting of expensive entertainment and informative programs, by separating their wave bands of those of less efficient transmitters. Amateur representatives likewise sought scope in the ether-cless congested by vibrations of other users. Operators of broadcasting stations, whose conflicts are considered most serious, argued for various rulings. "Newspapers have a bear by the tail which they can't let loose," Leo Fitzpatrick, radio director of the Kansas City Star declared. "There are no monetary returns from the installations. There isn't one of them which is self-supporting. Yet we consider it a duty to give the public any new an(j t0 pioneer in its utilizations." KEEPING* YOUR GARDENS BUSY Clemson College.?Procrastination is a thief of time, and regardless *of what has been said or done toward making the 1023 garden the best in the nrarHen history some might-be farmers will fall by the wayside and harvest vegetables from tin cans, thinks Geo. P. Hoffman, Extension Horticulturist, who makes the following timely suggestions for gardeners. From March 1. to April 1, may be planted beets?Crosby's Egyptian, Crimson Globe and Bassano; carrots? Half Long Turnip and Chantenay; cauliflower plants?Early Snowball; mustard?Giant Southern Curled; lettuce?Big Boston, Improved Hanson, and Iceberg; onion seed?Yellow Globe Danvers, Prizetaker, and Australian Brown; and salsify?Mammoth Sandwich Island. Asparagus (crowns), onions (sets) cabbage (plants), parsley, Irish potatoes, English peas, turnips, radish, spinach and onion seed should have | After Every Meal WWOEYS | Top off each meal with a bit of I sweet In the form I of WRIGLEY'S. I It satisfies the # sweet tooth and f aids digestion. * Pleasure and f benefit combined. THE HOBRY HERALD, G< $1.50 I interest you i $1.50. Get '.W.'.WMW.VW.VAWW.V been planted during the past two weeks. If you have not made your planting of these vegetables you should do so without further delay. Watch your hot-bed and ventilate every day. Lack of ventilation will cause weak plants. The need of ventilation is indicated by drops of water hanging on the under side of the glass. About one week before transplanting the plants the covering should be left off the bed and the water withheld. Exposing the plants in this way will cause them to harden and they will be less likely to die when transplanted. Several hours before removing the plants from bed water the soil well and the plants can be more easily milled Ofhorwisp snr.h nlanta as t.o matoes, eggplants, and peppers are likely to be broken when being pulled. If you have not grown your own plants be sure to know that the soil in which the plants you are obtaining have grown is not infested with tomato wilt and root knot. Rotations is as important with garden crops as it is with field crops. Avoid planting the same crop on the same land for more than one season. Root crops should not follow root crops, nor tomatoes follow tomatoes. The Horticultural Division of Clemson College is now issuing a series of garden letters?two letters per month, telling what to plant and how to handle. If you are really interested in gardening you would do well to get your name on the mailing list for these letters. To do so you should get in touch with your county farm or home demonstration agent. SOUTH NEEDS MORE COWS Clomscn College.?The South needs more cows. Cows to break the monotony of countless acres of "one crop" in summer and months of "nothing to do" in winter. Cows furnish a plentiful supply of milk and butter instead of the scanty supply that is now shipped in cans across the continent. Cows to furnish something to sell when money is needed?and money is always needed. Cows to eat silage made from thousands of fields of corn stalks now going to waste. Cows to change the cotton and grain farmers' periodic idleness into constant profitable work. So says W. J. Keegan, Dairy Specialist, who thinks that the dairy cow holds a rightful place in the agriculture of every country. Livestock farmers are generally speaking the most progressive farmers. These men live on their own farms, raise crops in roStop that Eczema/ You can be free of its itching and danger of spreading ! Amazing results have been produced by S. S. S. in cases of eczema, pimples, blackheads and other akin eruptions. S. S. S. will lead vou int/> **. wnrM ws.s.s. /S^U sred. tf eczema v^/ w'l'l i 1.3.9. will prove to you fa> your own uM the "how" and "why" of ita rtmiirk* oble Blood-Cleansing Power 1 you probably have nover known before,?a world of Joy, where pure blood Bhowa through clear, ruby-tinged faces, where clear eyes shine, where strong light and love is welcome, where embarrassment is no more! If you have been troubled with eczema, and you have used skin applications without number, make a vrmraoif ?? *???? V--. uvil, VII J UUI" self, with a bottle of S. S. S., one of the most powerful blood cleansers known. S. S. S. makes the blood rich and pure, and when your blood Is freed of impurities, your stubborn eczema, rash, tetter, skin eruptions, pimples, blackheads, acne and blotches are bound to disappear. There are no unproveu theories about S. S. S.; the scientific results of each of its purely vegetable medicinal ingredients are definitely, known and admitted by authorities. S. 9. S. helps build blood-cells?that's why it is such a powerful body builder. It will fill out your cheeks, help you regain lost weight. S. S. S. is sold at all good drug stores. The large size is more economical, I S.S.S. ONWAY, a, O. MAR. 89, 1983 mvywA*AiwwwAv JWUVA BY TH FOR" I Ai7AV*i7 iifoalr ir W J WW It your neighbor /A'AWMW.V.VAWAW^ tation and in general follow the very highest type of fanning. On every dairy farm we find a regular factory working the year around getting the greatest value out of the farm's crops and furnishing an income every week of the year. We find convenient homes, intelligent debt-free people in steady employment. The best methods of farming, the largest crops, and the greatest steady income on investments is found on the well regulated dairy farm. The dairy cow has made rn?ny hilly farms into comfortable country homes surrounded with grass, legumes and prosperity. The old cotton crop is all right to sell one month in the year, but a cream crop can be sold every week of the year. It pays i-u~ u:ii? 1 i ? wic um? ami n.eeps money jingling in our pockets, and leaves cotton clear as a cash crop. The old Southern fields that have been hashed and gullied and robbed under the ci?r.<e of a "With a m Fjw Best Pre _*r mixture is the roiult ol ftf dollars of investment, an hard labor and practical field tory experiments on my Bui farm. HilTs Mixture is a lie composed of calcium arsenate water and secret ingredients a combination that we are from results obtained, attrac ? WWJWU, HILL Approved by Georg Board of Entomt Hill's Mixture is manufacti South's largest boll weevil p< The calcium arsenate, moj other ingredients are accurs ured in the exact proportions oughly mixed by machines w bute the poison evenly in th Every mix is chemically anal; shipping. Hill's Mixture is approved b gia State Board of Entomolot weevil poison. D n D iv, r. D ^ A.gent for Marion a HILL'S turA trf, mt E YEAR THIS i' the year to do the sann a ?V "" one-crop system can still be converted with lespedeza, carpet grud3 and Bermuda into valuable cow pastures. o SUMMONS FOR RELIEF (Complaint Served.) STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF HORRY. Court of Common Pleas Virginia-Carolina Chemical Comnom? A Tll-i- a!a* j a. \ vui puittliuily XT I a III LI II , vs. G. Hoover, Mrs. C. G. Hoover and D. F. McGougan, Defendants. To the Defendants Above Named: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the complaint herein, a copy of which is hereby served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint upon the subscribers at their office in the building occupied by Gerrald Bros., Loris. S. C., within twenty days I after the service hereof, exclusive of bucket ar We got tl Boll w \ L /N^ That's all the e need to apply Hill' the cotton row, tot A* as you pass by; : kjfc weevils on the plai hi Section?Minimut f thousands Scores of tnd**** haV? rke County of endorsemc ^order> which form send you a be convinced, or my agent sts the boll will be glad I ia State Raise yc rtogy tot ured in the >ison plant. Go ahead classes and leave the we itely meaa- your order 1 i, ana tnor- uu, . #0 hich distri- bb\., plus $3. e molasses. funded upon y^ed before Georgia or I y the Geor- agent for yo ;y as a boll pears below, lars. LACKWELL, MARION nd Immediate Territory, and the Entire FOR THE MIXTURE CORPORA AUGUSTA, GEORGIA I 1 VPER I I te thing. j vwwmiwjw^A\WM\V.V; the day of such service, and if you J fail to answer the complaint within 1 the time aforesaid plaintiff will apply j to the Court for the relief demanded in said complaint. Dated March 17th, 1923. FORD & SUGGS, Plaintiff's Attorneys. To C. G. Hoover, Mrs. C. G. Hoover ami D. F. McGougan, ABSENT DEFENDANTS: TAKE NOTICE, That the Summons, of which the foregoing is a copy and the complaint, which is hereto served on you, were filed in the office of the Clerk of Court, Conway, S. C., on March 17th, 1923. Attest: FORD & SUGGS, Plaintiff's AttorneysW. L. BRYAN, C. C. C. P. Conway, S. C., March 17, 1923. 3t id stirlr he \J ??? weevil ,joked." quipment or machinery you s Mixture. Just walk along iching the bud of each plant inside of a few hours, the it will eat the mixture, and A Most Effective Poison Fve got a poison that I I am convinced the boll weevil SEEKS ? not one that has to seek the weeviL Then, too, Hill's Mixture can be put on IN THE DAYTIME. No nightwork. An inexperienced boy or girl can thoroughly cover 6 to 6 acres a day. n Cost! farmers who used it last ritten me unqualified letters *nt, and have already placed for 1923. I will be glad to K>k reproducing these letters, whose name appears below9 :o show them to you. , i iTruRF I I v I % rttr cotton on a preU weevil basis and plant your cotton and evils to Hill's Mixture. Flaca today. $36.00 for a 50-iral, 00 for bbL, which will be ra? return. Freight free to any South Carolina point. My or territory, whose name ap? will five you full porticoL. D. HILL, [, s. c. County of Horry LTION B (6)