e?CR BtCHT EUROPE TWICE SAVED BY AMERICA'S CROPS America helped to cave Europe and to preserve civilization, not only during- the war hut after the acinic tice, by making available, through in creased production and conservation, large supplies of foodstuffs. This assertion is made bv David F. Houston, Secretary of Agriculture, in s tribute to the fanners of the United ; States in bis annual report. "But for Pus contribution," s:iy? the Secretary, "it is difficult to- set how tite allies could have waged the war to a victorious conclusion. Lack ing- such support and with their ow) producing capacity seriously crip pled, the German people experiencec partial famine conditions; then health and vitality were gieatly inv paired; and the collapse of their military power was due in no smal measure to the shortage of food. "The cessation of hostilities brought no immediate improvement in Europe. On the contrary, in some respects more adverse conditions developed. Revolution became the order of the day, the directing hand of government was removed; discipline was relaxed; the morale, particularly of the people of the Central Powers, was broken; idleness and unemployment prevailed,; and in some sections anarchy reigned. It was obvious tSwCt Eui-ope could not produce suffkrieni foods for herself. Her crops had beem short for several years, ami it was scarcely probable that those of 191$ would be greater than the crops of the la.n y Telephone Company, ft ^ the Company, its patroi u To give you some inte m telephone business ant telephone exchange? ue To show you why, for l0t must be certain rules ^ operation of the tclepl special services are in phone "troubles'* some To make suggestions lit rr use of the telephone, >ut operation between com ft to assured "for the good of "At You snt 2 coNvmT| THE HORRY "HERALD, COM i Implemen SUCCESSOR TO Burroughs & Collins Co's Implement Dept. nd, the easier cultivated, and th< i : r DISK DEEP with 2-HORE DISK n we will be ready with all thj ! make a specialty of "F A R M E nplement Co CONWAY, S. C. R BUSINESS. There is but one genuine Pepto- I Mungan and that is "Gudc's." Ask your druggist for riGudcV and look for the name "Gude's" on the package. If it is not there, it is not Pep- * lo-Mangan.?adv r T r WHY IS A BOYS' CLUB? ? Clemson College?The boy of today j ? is the fanner of tomorrow. He is passing thru the changeable, t iharacter-building, and self-develop- * ing period of life. Therefore, every 1 opportunity should be given him to T make and all-round, well-developed, 1 business-like man, capable of success- r fully managing and operating his ij business affairs in later life. So says B. 0. Williams, Assistant Agent of ' Boys' Club Work, who mentions the following as some of the objects of Boys' Club Work: 1. To enlarge the vision of the ( boy and to give him definite pur- * poses at a very important period of 1 his life. \ 2. To interest the boy in im- * proved agricultural methods at a pe- ! riod when he can most easily bi [ reached. 3. To assist in the development ' of the spirit of cooperation in the family and in the community. 4. To dignify the vocati:n of la raing, to emphasize its possibili- ' tic^. and thus encourage the boys to rer..a;n on the farm. 5. To emphasize the importance 1 of keeping farm records and ac- ' runts. j1 G. To make of the boy a demon j1 -?tralor of the facts of scientific agriu'tusc. 1 7. To develop leadership and re- : sponsibility in cooperation and organization. 8. To give him opportunity of making money for himself. 9. To give him an opportunity of exercising his pwn judgment to sojve his own problems. See your County Agent about joining the Boys' Corn, Pig, or Permit Clpb. r. ;-.-u ,r . ? r ' V* / " N J\IcrcAt^ 1.1 ?)* Ao*C O"MA rentlemen? advertisements by the I >r the mutual good of V is and the service? resting facts about the 1 the operation of the your own benefit, there and regulations in the lone system; why some ipossible, and why teletimes occur? dpful to you in your own that the utmost of copany and patrons may be of the service." o ir Vrvirp II K-/V. V BVV ? ELEPHONE Cf J VAY, 8. a, JAN. 29, IMP. J. H.Marsh, Sec. & Treas. t Co. - FARMERS HARDWARE ; more you make. TURN WITH A CHATTANOOGA or VULCAN PLOW i ! Standard Plows for cul R S WANT S." impany fOPER ADVANCES TWO SUCCESTIONS Daniel C. Roper, commissioner of ernal revenue in a letter to Chairnan Fordney of the house ways and noans committee, made public, Migrested two alternatives for granMng fovemment relief to holders of warelouse receipts. The first method, was hat the government take physical possession of all liquors, issue treasury certificates of indebtedness in pay nent, concerntrate the liquors at coram noints whoro thov rrnilH ho I lomically guarded and create a monopoly for distribution. *ROF. BOYAJIAN TO SPEAK IN HORRY COUNTY From February 1 to 22 the people art of their means to relieve famine conditions which still exist in Armelia, Syria and other portions of the Mrar East. South Carolina and Horry County will be called upon to give he modest quotas which have been i 'signed the State and county respectively. Trie campaign in this county wilt ict be marked by personal canvasses, "he aim will be to hold three or four ;mblic gatherings at which speakers will unfold their stories of the appaling situation in the Near East and leave it to the generosity of the people to do the rest. It is hoped to have Prof N. A. Boyajian, an Armenian, himself, a former prisoner of the Turks and the sole survivor - of his family of Turkish brutality, t*> speak at several meetings in this t County. Prof. Boyajian has lectured e throughout the country on the Ar- a menian situation and has a gripping j story to tell. j Herbert Hoover, a cautious and coir t servative observer, says: "In the t Near East is the most desperate sit- 1 u at ion in the world." Major General James G. Harboard, head of the American military mis- 1 sion to Armenia, who recently visited every section of that tragic country, rays: "Armenia's need is'still before j us as the most tragic picture of the i world's history. The martyrdoms j of the Christian era down to 1914 did j not equal in number the long line of i those who laid down their lives for { th$ Christian faith in the Near East, : in the deportation and slaughter that ' marked the oppression of this subject ration under the heel of the Turk." ?? ? " COPY SUMMONS FOR RELIEF. (Complaint Not Served.) Court of Common Pleas. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Horry. Burroughs & Collins Company, a Corporation, Plaintiffs, ?vs.? Hannah Moore, Alice Moore, Eva Moore, and all and singular any person or persons whosoever by whatsoever name or names called or known, and whose names are unknown to the plaintiff, being heirs at law, or claiming to be heirs at law of Robert W. Moore, Dec'd.; Stone Brothers Company, a Corporation; and W. H. Stone, as Administrator of the personal estate of Nelson Thomas, Dec'd., Defendants. TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE NAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the complaint in this action, which has been filed in the office of the Clerk of Court of Common Pleas, for the said County, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscriber at his office at Conway, S. C., within > <4 Cooper-Smit Wholesale ( In Stock. At 100 OASES TOMA1 15000 Yds TOBACC 150 BARRELS HI< . FLOUR 1 OAR DAIRY FEE 2 OARS NO. 1 TIM' 1 CAE BURT OATS 1 CAR FEED OATS 1 CAR RICE 1 CAR WHEAT SH< 1 OAR HORSE & N 5000 lbs PLUG TOI 15000 lbs Flake W 50 BOXES CAKES 7 5 SACKS GREEN 50 CASES SALMOl 50 CASES SARDIN 100 CASES SOAP 35 SACKS LIMA ? 50 CASES LYE 100M CIGARETTES LOTS OF OTHER GROCIRIE GOODS BOUGHT, 1200 SACKS HEA1 500 BARRELS FL< 3 CAR IRISH COB! POTATOES 1 CAR BURT OATS 1 CAR FEED OATS 2 CAR NO. 1 TIMO 200 CADDIES SLTi BACCO 2 TONS HEN FEEI 2 CARS SALT 500 BUSHELS 9017PT DTP A TkT f UJL uunn i 100 BUSHELS WE ISH SEED We have lots of Rice, Flour a that we can sell you cheaper t day's market. Clemson Collei nuts, Sweet Potatoes, and Vel Beans and Peanuts bought 1 before buying elsewhere, we c: wise and don't plant all your c of the Boll Weevil. Cooper-Smii ED. L. SMITH, S BURROUGHS & COLL] wenty days after the service hereof; c'ei xclusive of the day of such service; del ind if you fail to answer the com- foi Daint within the time aforesaid, the Ho daintiff ij\ this action will apply to in he Court /or the relief demanded in lov he complaint. ; 01 Dated December 9th, A. D. 1919. sai H. H. WOODWAKD, 1 tfa Plaintiff's Attorney. ?ai rO Hannah Moore, Alice Moore, and da; Eva Moore, Absent Defendants: th< TAKE NOTICE That the Com- tii riaint in the foregoing stated action sai md the SiURmons of which the fore- da $oing is a copy were filed in the of- ru: fice of the Clerk of the Court of sei Common Pleas in and for Horry th< n. A... -I /"? r? /i A L - r uuuniy, at Conway, o. v>., on tne uj 14th day of January A. D. 1920. W. L. BRYAN,( L. S.) thi C. C. C. P. w? H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. ORDER. H. Upon hearing the Petition and Affidavit in behalf of the plaintiff in ? the foregoing stated action; and it ap pearing that Alice Moore and Eva Moore, infant defendants in said cause, are now absent from the State of South Carolina: In pursuance of Subdivision 2 of Section 165 of the Code of Civil Procedure of South Carolina A. D. 1912, it is hereby ordered that J. S. Vaught, Judge of Probate of Horry County, be and he is hereby appointed as Guardian AJ Litem of said absent infant defendants for the purposes of this action, and is hereby authorized and directed to appear and defend this action in their behalf, unless the said infant defendants, or someone in their bekolf urifViin Hirnnttf /loiro o 4-V%I I nuii vtiviiiii VTTViivjr iiajro ai tvu uiu < service of a copy of this Order, cither personally out of the State, or by publication with the summons as 1 hereinafter stated, shall procure to be appointed some suitable person as Guardian Ad Litem for the said infants; it appearing that J. S. Vaught is a suitable and competent person to act as such Guardian. ' It is further ordered that this Or -I . . I. L. 1.,' r t If I h Co., Inc 11 Grocers ^ I Conway I 'OES 30 CANVAS 3H GRADE ' ^1 f>TWV WAV - 1 ORTS H IULE FEED jfL I JACCO W rhite v LARD COFFEE mt t S ES ^ _ |fl EANS H * . 9 S NOT MENTIONS). |fl TO ARRIVE ; m > RICE fl )UR 3LER SEED H n THY HAY A r COON TO- H DAY VEL- I FT TIP CD A TOT PEANUTS. 1 I nd other goods bought j han we can buy at on to- . 11 ge advises planting Pea- ^ 41 vet Beans, we have or you. Get our prices in save you money. Be -Jl ;rops in Cotton. Beware ' th Co., Inc 1 ec. & Treas. ;.fl NS' OLD STAND | shall be served upon said infant I fondants by publishing the same jj I three successive weeks in the jtjl rry Herald, a newspaper published , I Horry County, immediately fol- il ving the summons in said action; 1 I the said Order may be served on } fi d infants personally while out of I i State: And that the service of 1 d Order ahall be complej^- on the y of the date of the last publication jreof in said paper or on the day HI xt the same is personally served on l5j id parties, and that the twenty 11 ys for mnswering shall begin to *JM n from the date of the personal ,S1 rvice as herein provided, or from H| b date of the last publication there- flj in said paper. Given under my Hand and Seal flj is 23rd day of Jan. 1920, at Con- S ly, South Carolina. 11; W. L. BRYAN, (L. S.) M C. C. C. P. 1 H. WOODWARD, I Attorney for Plaintiff. jfl TOBACCO CANVASS I 100,000 Yards Tobacco Mk rass. U L125 Bags Plant Bed Gnano. ?g L50 Tons Whale Gnano. 3J 500 Tons Obers Tobacco Guano. 500 Tons V. Goat Guano. ijH 200 Tons 0 S Meal, beafc" ^5 Grade. 575 Barrels Best Flour. U 450 Bags Head Rice. H 4 Solid Cars Hay. fl 3 Solid Oars Oats. I 4500 Pounds Tobacco4k I H Come to see us, please. We have the goods and want your trade. PALMETTO GROCERY CO. 1 'Cooper?Mullins" ?12|25|19 6t :