The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, June 21, 1923, Page Page No. 5, Image 5
(
rrs foolish to suffer
When So Many Conway People Are;
fWkrtia.: the Way Out,
You may be brave enough to standi
backache or headache or dizziness.'
But, if, in addition urination is dis-i
ordered, look out! If you don't try to
fix your sick kidneys, you i"nay fall
into the clutches of dangerous disease
"before yo>u know It. But, if you
f live more carefully and help your
? kidneys with Doan's Kidney Pills, you
can stop tihe pains you have and avoid
future dangier as well. Don't experiment?use
the remedy Conway people
are publicly endorsing. Read this
(Vise: '
R. H. Hewitt, a millwright, 14 Race
Path St., Conway, says: "I have been
/forking in the millwright trade sev%^ral
years asvd the continuous t\eavy
lifting strained the muscles of my
back. My kidneys were disordered and
I felt nervous and irritable. When I
attempted to bend over, stitches
caught me in the small of my back
and it. seemed as though something
had given away and my back broken.
1 had seen Doan's Kidney Pills advertised
and trot them at Piatt's Pharmacy.
One box of Doan's cured me."
60c at all dealers. Foster-Milburn
Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y?Adv.
o
SEASIDE TRIP
RESULTS BADLY
Miss Louise Manning and P. M.
Cropland were on their way to visit
"Myrtle Beach last week when they
came to grief In Latta, S. C.
They were about opposite the residence
of Dal Bethea, when the driver
in a car ahead of them is said to have
driven a misleading signal as to the
direction he intended to turn his machine.
The Crosland car learned the
error too late and in trying to turn
and avoid a rear end collision with
/the car ahead, the Crosland car struck
telephone pole with great force and
'was overturned. Crosland was said
to have" sustained several broken ribs
and a bad bruise on the knee, while
IVSiss Manning was so badly broken
un and crushed that she was not expected
to live.
Both of the injured parties were
t.-iken to the Florence hospital in a
special train. The Florence Times in
a recent issme in describing the fright^
ful injuries sustained by the two
young people, says:
"The condition of Miss Loui?e Manring,
who was brought to Florence on
a special train yesterday and carried
to the Florence Infirmary for treat
rrent for injuries received in an automobile
acciden in which P. M. Cros*
land, of Bennettsville,* was also injured,
was reported this afternoon as
still critical, although ,jt was stated
tMt she was resting more comfortably.
Due to Miss Manning's condition an
X-ray examination has not yet been
mr.de to determine the extent of her
injuries. It is stated that her chest is
crushed and it is feared that one of
her lungs has been perforated by a
broken rib. The right arm is broken
and her body is badly bruised. She
has been suffering from profound
shock.
"Mr. Crosin nd is said to have sevckal
broken ribs and his right knee is
^^Jtriously bruised. He is reported to
t>e getting along fairly well this afternoon.
The accident occurred in front of
Dal Bethea's residence in Latta yesterday
morning, when Miss Manning
and Mr. Crosland were enroute to
Myrtle Beach. Their car was overturned
when it struck a telephone pole
in attempting to escape a rear end
collision with a car ahead which is
said to have given incorrect signals
for a turn. The injured were brought
to the Florence Infirmary on a special
train soon after the accident."
BOLLWEEVILS
AND KIM.tiRS
Increased Yields the Real Test of Efficiency
in Remedies
Clemson College.?"At this time of
the year the weevils are abundant in
the cotton fields throughout the State.
This was true last year, and yet on
June 25th, 1922, they had become so
scarce that we received numerous letters
from farmers asking for the
I ASPIRIN
Say "Bayer" and Insist!
Unless you aee the name "Bayer" at
package or on tablets you are not getting
the genuine Bayer product pre
scribed by physicians over twenty-tw<
years and proved safe by millions fo?
Colds Headache
Toothache Lumbago.
Earache Rheumatism
Neuralgia Pain, Pain
Accept "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin"
only. Each unbroken package contains
proper directions. Ilandy boxes of
\ twelve tablets cost few cents. DrugI
gists also sell bottles of 24 and 100.
Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer
J? Manufacture of Monoaceticaoidtster of
y Salicylioartid.
reason. It was merely a case of the
old over-Wintered weevils having died1
otF. The same thing is going to happen
in this State again within the.
next coiyile of wedks."
So states Prof. A. F. Conradi, Entomologist,
regarding present boll
weevil conditions. He says further:
"At this time our laboratory looks
like a museum with its one hundred
and one devices, machines, solutions,
powders, gases, and what not. Practically
all of these things kill weevils
under cage conditions, some slowly,
and some with almost lightning
rapidity. This is nothing new, for
we did this last year, and it has been
done by entomologists every spring
for the last twenty years. It is unfortunate
that frequently farmers are
willing to accept the conclusion that
when 'these materials kill weevils
under cage conditions they will kill
them under field conditions after
fruiting begins. The fact that these
weevils die under cage conditions is
no proof whatever that the material
1 applied is worth anything for "boll
weevil control.
"We wish to again state that with
our long experience in working with
weevil control materials we have
I - * j ' ? -* -
ie??rnen not 10 endorse any material
until 18 has shown ]py its actual use
in the field that it may be expected
to profitably increase cotton production.
To kill weevils in cages at this
time of the year is quite interesting,
but it is the additional dollar that
we -want at harvest time."
BOTTLED FORM
GAINS FAVOR
Washington.?While new emphasize
to the , value of carbon dioxide and,
therefore, carbonated water, was recently
given by announcement of the
discovery that carbon dioxide destroyed
the germ of tuberculosis, and hereafter
is to play an important part in
the fight against the great white
pleague, that carbon dioxide, or car"
bonic jras, has long been "known to he
healthful as well as to have medicinal
qualities, is an old. old story.
Many publications on health, diet,
etc.. some of which haw; Ion.* been accepted
as standard -works, cite the
health fulness and the medicinal qualities
of carbonic gas and point out the
benefits the system derives fr.om the
consumption of carbonated water.
One of the works, l<nown to the
medical and scientific world, which attests
to the value of carbonated water,
i is that on "Mineral Waters in the
United States and Their Therapeutic
Uses," by Dr. James Crook, at the
time of publication of his work Adjunct-Professor
of Clinical Medicine
and Physical Diagnosis at the New1
York Post-Graduate Hospital. Commenting
on the advantages to be
gained from drinking carbonated
water, Dr. Crook wrote:
"Carbonic acid promotes the flov
' f salvia, terds to allay nausea, and,
eastric irritability, aids digestion, as,
<ists in rendering the fluids of the
body alkaline, promotes diuresis prr1
imparts a sense of well being. T' o
rnrbonic acid waters are often better
borne by the stonwh than any other
form of drink, and thev form a nleasxuit
medium for the administration or
milk to fever uatients."
Tt is the carbonated water, containing
the health-giving properties ^
Crook refers to, that go into the
manufacture of the eight billions of
bottles of carbonated beverages government
officials have estimated iVe
Ax evican peop.^ wiii coi.? > .e d: ring
1023.
o
SUMMONS FOR RELIEF
(Complaint Served.)
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA,
COUNTY OF HORRY.
Court of Common Pleas.
Mullins Motor Car Company, A
Corporation, Plaintiff, vs. N. M. Shelley,
L. V. Todd, and A. W, Hodges
and J. C Hodges, Co-partners in trade
under the firm name and style of A.
W. Hodges & Son, Defendants.
To The Defendants Above Named:
YOU AHE HEREBY SUMMONED
and required to answer the complaint
in this action, of which a copy is
herewith served upon you, and to
serve a copy of your answer to the
said complaint on the subscriber or
subscribers at his or their office at
Conway, South Carolina, within twenty
days after the service hereof; exclusive
of the day of such service;
and if you fail to answer the complaint
within the time aforesaid, the
nlaintiff in this action will apply to
the Court for the relief demanded in
Mie complaint.
Dated May 21st, A. D. 1023.
H. H. WOODWARD,
Plaintiff's Attorney.
To L. V. Todd,
ABSENT DEFENDANT:
TAKE NOTICE, That the Complaint
in the foregoing stated action
*
TOBACCO WILL
HELP BUSINESS
Some of the tobacco crop of 1023 la
being cured in the barns this week.
A number of growers in Conway
last week said that their crops werf
ready to begin putting in the barm
this week. As many as half a dozer
farmers were sure to begin picking
the leaves this week and placing ther
in the barns for the curing of the
weed.
There is no way of telling just nov
the date on which the warehouses wil'
open this year.
There are two kinds of warehouse:-.
The independents and the co-operatives.
Last year Conway had but one
warehouse for the sale of leaf tobacco
on the auction or independent plan
This was the Planters Tobacco Warehouse,
owned by W. A. Freeman, and
THE HO&RY HERALD, CONW
his associates. The three other warehouses,
Peoples Brick, Farmers and
Horry Warehouse were all within the
association, and were conducted on
that plan.
This year Conway will have three
warehouses running on the auction or
independent plan, and will *have only
two 011 the co-operative plan: the
Farmers and the Horry. The independent
warehouses will be the Planters,
and Peoples Brick, run by Bowles <?
Bass, and the new warehouse which
will "be made out of the brick building
until now occupied by the Conway
Livestock business of A. C. Thompson.
This new place is located on Fourth
ivenue in the rear of the Kingston
hotel building. It is large enough and
also conveniently located fov the vunring
of a tobacco warehouse busii.*ss.
It cannot be told just now as to who
will have this new warehouse in hand
to he run, but with three warehouses
running in Cunway this year on the
auction plan, Conway ought to be able
to sell its full proportion of the leaf
tobacco raised in Horry County.
The tobacco business of H o r r y
County this year will amount to a
greht deal in case the season remains
erood. The crop at this time is look
Iiip; fine. The county never hod'a better
prospect. From Murrells Inlet all
the way to the North Carolina State
line the tobacco plants are green and
flourishing. It is rapidly maturing
and as stated in the beginning of this
article, it is already being picked and
gathered into the curing barns of the
growers.
Now is the time to encourage the
bringing of the Horry County tobacco
to Conway warehouses for sale.
Loris -vvil 1 enjoy tobacco business
again this year about the same as last
year. We have not heard of any great
changes in the tobacco situation there.
Last year Ay nor had no independent
warehouses in operation. If there
is to be any change in the plan there
The Horry Herald has not heard about
it.
o .
SALE UNDER EXECUTION
By virtue of an execution upon the
judgment in re M. C. Dusenburv trading
as Dusenbury & Company, against
V. C. Lovell, T have levied upon, and
will sell at public auction to the hiirhest
bidder for cash during legal hours
of sale on salesday in July next, it
being the 2nd day of July, 1923, at
the court house at Conway, South
Carolina, the following described personal
property, to wit:
One set of carpenter tools heretofore
seized by me under attachmp^t.
writ issued against P. C. Lovell in th^
suit of M. C. Dusenbury.
J. A. LEWIS, Sheriff
of Horry County.
** oriii- <Af?A
Lru(.cu may ov/iil, llfZcS,
What
4
Made right here in the Carolinas,
at Charleston. Sold
at hundreds of pumps that
bear this seal
J 'H U
I
AT. S. C, JTJHE ? 1923
50 THOUSAND
NEGROES GONE
Ciemson College.?Fifty thousand
r.egroes migrated since Nov. 1st, 1922,
from 41 counties reporting figures;
9,324 one-horse farms abandoned in
22 counties reporting figures; L4,722
acres in cotton abandoned since March
31st, 1923, in 14 counties reporting
figures; and 4,GOO acres of corn abandoned
in 9 counties reporting; the
present cotton dondition reported as
poor in 20 counties and medium
in 10, and the present corn condition
reported poor in 9 counties and medium
in 21.
The above in brief is the answer to
a recent inquiry sent out by the Extension
Service to every county in
the State. , To secure this information
Director W. W. Long, at the request
of many citizens, sent out the following
telegram to county agents and
(in those counties without agents) influential
citizens.
"Please confer with leading farm
r?rs, bankers, and merchants and gi\e
s t1^' fcMoving information: First,
approximate migration of negroes
from your county since November 1st,
1922, expressed in number and percentage
of negro population; second,
number of farms abandoned since
November 1st, 1922, this to include
tenants as well as land owners; third;
number of acres of cotton, corn and
tobacco abandoned since crops were
pitched March 1st, 1923; fourth, brief
statement as to condition of cotton,
corn, and tobacco at present time
expressed as medium, poor, good;
fifth, please read this telegram with
gre-it care and act promptly."
Among the counties reporting, the
average number of negro migrants
per county was 1,217, the average
number of farms abandoned per county
was 423, and the average cotton
acreage abandoned per county was
1,051.
n i . j* . i i ,
counties reporting me Diggest migration
are: McCormick, 3,600, Newberry,
3.500, Orangeburg, 3,500. Ai
l-en, 2.5*00. Bamberg, 2.500, Greenwood,
2.440. Cherokee, 2,200, Laurens,
2,000, Calhoun, 2,000.
The biggest cotton acreage abandoned
has been in Anderson. 7.000,
followed by Marlboro, 2,000, McCormick,
1.875. Newberry, 1.000, Richland,
800. Cherokee, 500, Sumter, 500.
Prepare to Live at Home.
"It will be observed," says Director
I.<ong, in commenting upon these
facts and figures, "that forty-one
counties reported, leaving five counties
that have failed to answer. Inasmuch
as the crop is from three
weeks to a month late in a large prrt
of the ^late, the scarcity of labor,
?
??i?Ifc? .1.1. II if*
is "ST
? that
others
It is a
Gasol
yardsl
good ;
who c
oline <
?but
nrtain
veal th
has es
all-rot
ing, sr
econo
specifi
satisfa
sands
CT
ox,
"ST/
M.
and the leaching from the soil of the
fertilizers by continuous rains, the
broken stands and the presence of
the weevil in large numbers throughout
the State, unusually favorable
conditions from now on will be necessary
to make a normal crop. It will
be wise for us to begin to prepare for
a short crop by putting all the stubble
lands in forage crops, such as
cowpeas, or soy beans, and later on
vetch and oats, crimson clover, Abruzzi
rye, and by all means, the seeding
of a large acreage in oats and .
wheat.
"The man who has his barn filled
with forage, his crib filled with corn, i
and his meat house filled with meat
this fall, even though he crn not pay
his debts, will be in a position to receive
more favorable consideration
front his bank than the man who has
failed to exercise this foresight. All
of this is preparedness."
o
NOTICE OF SALE
Under Execution
Under and by virtue of an execution
dated the 7th day of March, A.t
D. 1023, and issued and lodged, and'
to me directed, and based upon the
judgment in the case of: Regal Pants
Manufacturing Company, Plaintiff,
VS.
Gent$ Furnishing Company, Defendant,
I have seized, levied upon and
taken, as the property of the defendant
or defendants above named; and
will sell at public auction, or vendue. I
for cash, in front of the court house
door of my county, within legal hours
of sale, on salesday, in July next, i
being the 2nd day of said month, all
and singular all of the following
property, to wit:
All and singular all of the stock
of goods, wares and merchandise of
I,. A. Permenter and John M. Vaught.
copartners under the firm name and
style of Gents Furnishing Company,
s contained and beinj? in the store
> >f said firm on Main Street in Conway,
South Carolina, together with
all of the store furniture and store
fixtures, tools, implements and appliances
used in and about the said business
and also contained in said store.
Sales will be made in convenient
lots until the amount due under the
said executions with interest and
cost has been paid in full.
J. A. LEWIS, SherifT of
Horry County.
H. H. WOODWARD,
Plaintiff's Attorney.
Dated at Conway, S. C.,
June 12th, 1923.
| o
ANDA
by "which
are comp
ls true of " Standard
ine as it is of the Gov*
tick and Troy pound,
as Standard," says tt
loes not know when
:omes from. And m;
\7A11 ~1
j v/wi van oaiciy bllCJ
al. A distillation tes
le uniform high quali
tablished "Standard
md pacemaker in qui
nooth acceleration ;
mical mileage. " St;
cations mean that i
ction can be bought
/ + -
ot Standard pumps.
A.NDARD OIL COMF
(New Jersey)
IN DA
otor Qasolh
Page No. 5
W. L. MISHOE
WITH NEW FIRM
W. L. Misho* will be connected with
the new warehouse firm of Bowles &
Bass in the running of the Peoples
Brick Warehouse this season. He
will be an assistant manager on the
warehouse floor. He has had experience
in the tobacco warehouse business
and will make a good man for
this place.
The Peoples Warehouse will operate
this year on the independent or
auction plan, the farmers getting pay
for their tobacco as soon as sales are
made.
Bowles and Bass will operate their
business with enthusiasm and energy
throughout the season at Conway this
year.
I FOR 50 YEARS j
;! SCOTT'S I
EMULSION f4
has been a large n f
factor in raising JjJf
the standard of
GOOD HEALTH I
Child-birth
Here u a wonderful message to all
expectant mothers 1
When the Little One arrives, you
can have that moment more free from.
uttering thnn you huvc
perhaps imagined. An
eminent physician, expert
In this scicnce, has shown
the way. It was he who
first produced the great
remedy, "Mother's Friend."
Mrs. C. J. Hartman, Scran- W*m IW.y
ton. I'a., say*: BfiV nv
"With my first two chil-^V 1\\ * ^
dren I had a doctor and n [
nurse and then they had to Mr I I
use instruments, but with MR|. jrAv .j,
my last two children I used
Mother's Friend and had wflHBi
only a nurse; we had no time to get a doctor
because I wasn't very ?ick?only about ten o*
fifteen minutes." Use "Mother's Friend" as ourf
mothers and grandmothers did. Don't wait, start
today, and meanwhile write to Bradfleld Re?u*
lator Co., HA 46, Atlanta, Ga., for a free illustrated
book containing information every extectant
mother should have. "Mother's Friend**
i sold by all drutf storca?everywhere,
it ju'mhbbbbpiwl?mbmhm
KIT 7
>ared
" Motor
ernment
"It is as
le dealer
si
t his gas
aybe it is
k to the
t will rety
which
I" as the ,
ick startand
big,
andard "
uniform
?
at thou
ANY
tRD"
ne