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*Ll 1 "^SSmm ASPIRIN FOR COLDS Name MBayer" is on Genuine Aspirin?say Bayer Insist on "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" in a "Bayer package/' containing proper * directions for Colds, Pain, Headache, Neuralgia, Lumbago, and Rheumatism. Name "Bayer" means genuine Aspirin ? prescribed by physicians for nineteen years. Handy tin boxes 6f 12 tablets cost few cents. Aspirin is trade mark TJ U. f..i. _ t if At. vi vaj ci jnnnuiavtur? UA fllOBOWeiir acideater of Salicylicacid. | After you eat?always take FATONIC -./e^ff6K y6or A<atEgfoSAC? ' Instantly relieves Heartburn* Bloat* id Garry reeling. Stops food souring; repeating* and all stomach miseries. tie dimtion od appitHa K?en tornacfa earwNmd eteeee* Inoreun VluBb end Pep. HhTONIC fa the baet remedy. Tana of tboa* ean#i wooderfelly benefited. Only ooete* c?M erteoa day t6 umH. Paafttvelyguaranteed ftgl'M'*OTlPfaad m-oa* Citato* eaWf wienm CONWAY DRUG COMPANY 8|24 CONWAY, S. C. 52t. O * ? The paint brush has been used on the new One Price Shoe Store, as to both outside ami inside decorations, and it adds a great deal to the appearance of the store. ? o Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic reetores vitality and energy by purifying and enriching the blood. You can soon feel its Strengthening. Invigorating Effect. Price 60c. J. M. JOHNSON, CIVIL ENGINEER MARION, S. 0. My Engineering and Surveying office will be open during my ah eonce, and prepared to take cart of any work as usual. Addreai all communications aa hereto t IIFT CORNS OR - ! CALLUSES OFF Doesn't hurt! Lift any corn or callus off with fingers HV, -IK# Don't suffer! A tiny bottle of Frcezone costs but a few cents at any drug store. Apply a few drops on i the corns, calluses and "hard skin" on bottom of feet, then lift them off. When Freezonc removes corns from the toes or calluses from the bottom Of feet, the skin beneath is left pink and healthy and never sore, tender or irritated. ? I I hox/o'in thic waaV AR ovtrr IIC4 V v* III IIIIU IIV/VIX VV/ VAII { ^carloads to arrive January nice quality. Big lot Buguie G. B.JE1 CONWAY Y MR. DODSON WARNS f USERS OF CALOMEL * Says Drug Acts Like Dynamite on Liver and You Lose a Day's Work. There's no reason why a person should take sickening, salivating calomel when a few cents buys a large bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone?a perfect substitute for calomel. It is a pleasant, vegetable liquid whichc will stai% your liver just as surely as calomel, but *t doesn't make you sick and can not ' salivate. ? , 1 Children and grown folks can take Dodson's Liver Tone, because it Is perfectly harmless. Calomel is a dangerous drug. It is mercury and attacks your bones. Take a dose of nasty calomel today and you will feel weak, sick and nauseated tomorrow. Don't lose a day's work. Take a spoonful of Dodson's Liver Tone instead and you will wake up feeling great. No more biliousness, constipation, sluggishness, head ache, coated tongue or sour stomach. ! Your druggist says if you don't find j Dodson's Liver Tone acts better than | horrible calomel your money is wait- | aing for yotu.?adv. (7) o NOTICE TOBACCO GROWERS. For tobacco barn flues call on Sasser Company, Inc. Gurley, South Carolina. We ! manufacture the best flues 1 A 1 ...Ul. inauc, j.iic yum uiuci wiui us immediately.?adv 1|1|29. 6 mos. j i I Thelbert Lewis, of the University cf South Carolina, at Columbia, is visiting his parents, Dr. and Mrs. G. /. Lewis. A FAMILY MEDICINE Iii Her Mother's Home, Says This Georgia Lady, Regarding BlackDraught. Relief From Headache, Malaria, Chills, Etc* Ringgold, Ga.? Mrs. Chas. Gaston, of this nlnr?? wi-ltno" "I ??? ? ??? ' ? ? -? ?! * a am A uocr of Thedford's Black-Draugbt; in fact, j It was one of our family medicines. Also In my mother's home, when I was a child. When any of us child.en complained of headache, usually caused by constipation, she gave us a dose of Black-Draught, which would rectify the trouble. Often in the Spring, we ^ould have malar! . and chills, or troubles of this kind, we would take Black-Draught pretty regular until the liver acted well, and L we would soon be up ana around _ again. Wo would not be without It, for it cortainly has saved us lots of n doctor bills. Just a dose of Black- n Draught when not so well saves a lot of days in bed." Thedford's Black-Draught has been in use for many years in the treatment of stomach, liver and bowel troubles, and the popularity which it . now enjoys is proof of its merit . Tf your liver Is not doing its duty, cil you will suffer from such disagree- mi able symptoms as headache, bilious- in ness, constipation, indigestion, etc., and unless something Is done, serious th trouble may result. wi Thedford's Black-Draught has been to1 found & valuable remedy for these lu troubles. It Is purely vegetable, and acts In a prompt and natural way, regulating the liver to its proper ga functions and cleansing the bowels of gti impurities. Try it. Insist on Thed- ? ford's* the original and gramlas. B 79 SI i * Mi % fln|Kv mm cm mm NsQHKSKf^ cm mc i , "I i good Horses and Mules. '"', kin f 7,1920. All good broke, ??} m> s, Wagons, and Harness. St< NK1NS ~ s. c. |o - Co. *. : ' . * . BT.HOURY HERALD, CON WAT "MACHINERY FOR ( hfC3 jMj -^??. ?- jj * ; ?v . , We have had orders wilh and they are now beginning to following machinery coming t delivery; viz:' \ ^ 2 No. 1 American Saw Mills, \ with Extended Mandrel, light power, for use with etc. 2 No. 2 American Saw Mills, I Drive, Equipped with Ext Balance Wheel. 3 No. 2 American Saw Mills, I Drive, Regular Equipment 1 No. 2 American Saw Mill, Hi riag'e, Wire Cable Drive. 2 No. 3 American Saw Mills, 1 Dlive, Regular Equipment 1 No. 3 American Saw Mill, H< riage, Wire Cable Drive 4 1 No. 4A Farquhar Saw Mill,. 1 Drive. * / \ 3--American 2-saw Pony Gang Rolls. 3--22" New Williams Corn M 1--20 H. P. Farquhar Cornish Engine mounted on Whee 1--20 H. P. Frick Boiler and 1 1--25 H. P. Frick Boiler and 1 1--10X12 Frick Center Crank 1 --20 H. P. Muncie Crude Oil 1 Gasoline e,nd Kerosene Engine We also have listed with i end-Hand Machinery. Let us ments. HYMAN SU Mill Supplies ar Wilmington, N. C. 2|2G?tf. DEMOS AIRES TO ~ I HAVE GREAT STATUE o1 Buenos Aires.?As voyagers en- tl ring the harbor of the greatest fi ty of North America behold the pi ajestic Staute of Liberty, so with- to the present year those coming to e greatest city of South America th 11 behold a majestic sentinel, a pi wering statue of Christopher Co- in mbus. w The monument of the great navi- bt ttor will not, like the Liberty rt atue in New York, stand in the cc .rbor, for Buenos Aiies has no aj hi 'RAIGHTFORWARD TESTIMONY m ??? |,( any Conway Citizens Have Profited By It. to If you have backache, urinary v' mblos, days of dizziness, head- fo hes or nervousness, strike at th" pr it of the trouble. These are often J symptoms of weak kidneys ard ire is grave danger in delay. w< an's K:dney Pills are especia^y spared for kidney ailments?aie 0f rlorsed by over 50,000 people. Your ighbors recommend this remedy? 4 ve proved its merit in many tes's. R( nway readers should take fresh re irage in the straightforward testi- pa my of a Conway citizen. j .. J. T. Proctor, farmer, Conway, say.<: had pains through my back and *' ns. At times headaches and d'zzy to; ills annoyed me and my sight was re irred. The kidney secretions pas - x* too frequently at times, breaking ? r rest at night. Colds settled on k I1 r kidneys and made the backacVc rse. I read of Doan's Kidney PiHs is l1 bought some at Norton's Drug ^0j >re. Doan's relieved me of all signs kidney trouble and I gladly recom- 11 nd them." Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't toi lply ask for a kidney remedy?get (je an'a Kidney Pills?the same that . ; Proctor had. Foster-Mi Iburn ? Mfgrs. Buffalo, N. Y.?adv ' r, 8. 0., FEB. 26, 1920. IlilGK DELIVERY" i1 B BBSf'Sk ft m ^2^ factory for several months make shipment. We have o Wilmington stock for quick w , i Vire Cable Drive, Equipped 100-lb. Balance wheel for , Gasoline Engines, Tractors, leacock Feed, Wire Cable ended Mandrel, and 500-lb leacock Feed, Wire Cable . > > ?acock Feed, Log Beam Carleacock Feed, Wire Cable I i sacock Feed, Log Beam Car- j I i leacock Feed, Wire Cable i ' r Edgers, Double Pressure , i ills. i i Boiler and Center Crank ! Is. . ' j Engine mounted on Wheels. Engine mounted on Wheels. Engine. Sngine. s 1 1-2 to 12 H. P. us all sizes and types of Secfigure on your require- j PPLY CO. id Machinery. I New Bern, N. o. i ___ I 2al harbor, but will rise nearly 100 jet in height from a point near the atre's edge. The site selected is i the broad Paseo Colon, in fron-. f the government house, whonr^ ic statue will overlook the beautiil Plaza Colon and the wide exEinse of the River Plate as it ents the ocean. ; Representing ten years' labor of < te sculptor, Arnaldo Zocchi, ap j ropriately a native of the country 1 which the discoverer of America born, the monument soon will j shipped from the artist's work-1 y lop in Rome to Buenos Aires, ae- j rding to recent advices. The im 1 *c of the navigator is itself 22 feet 1 gh carved out of a single block of arble. It will therefore have to ( i "brought over in one piece. ( Critics who have visited the sculp* r's workshop recently and seen the [>rk virtually completed write that, < r symbolic beauty and grendcur of , oportions the monument will be | ie of the most impressive in the 1 arid. > "The column supporting the statue ( the navigator is placed upon an ( rplc socle covered with sculptured enes and figures" says a Rome cor spondent of La Razon. "The front ( irt of t.bo ii- 1 - MUX a v. ?.-! tilt; Ul/W (> I ii it in ship about to be launched into o sea by four youths with naked R ir.os bent with effort. The .scene t present.'? the start of the caravels r Columbus from the post of Palos, ?ain. High up on *the bow of the vessel ^ the figure of Civilization. In the n ?a of a Roman matron, she ex- B ids with naked arm the torch " lich illumines the new lands and ti vard which a youth beside her? h nius? gazes with inspired coun- m lane*. "Ptbm this base rises the pedes- al [ REIMS FINANCIERING REVOLUTIONIZED The Interchurch World Movemenr of North America is an attempt by * forward-looking loaders of the various rva"" lionI denominations of tho United Stales and Canada to co-ordinate in m^n. men^v and material for Protestant America. Historically it is the logical outgrowth of a tendency of the national board* in ea^h denomination to form working alliances among themselves. | in which each board shall preserve its , identity and control its own personnel and treasury. In former times, the homo mission society, the fore'gn mission societv, the church extension society and the various philanthropic and elopmn?v I nary agencies of any denomination conducted their affairs independently of one another. Each surveyed Its own restricted territory, prepared a budget of money and workers for its own purposes and made its own appeal to its constituency for support. This could only mean that these agencies were more or less in com-1 petition with one another: that there were waste and duplication cf work and money, and that among them all some work was neglected and some denominational resources were entirely overlooked. Reeause of their spe j cialized training, the leaders of each agency regarded themselves as peon j liarlv fitted for their tasks, and Jeai- , ously regarded attempts nt outside . interference. Decide On Experiment After decades of such haphazard methods, the leaders of one denomination decided on an experiment. They thought it would be possible for the agencies to get together for a common study of all the opportunities and resources of their brotherhood, to I make out a unified budget of men and money, and to conduct a concerted appeal for funds. It was made clear that each constituent board should preserve complete autonomy. When the board representatives met they found it possible to eliminate a great amount of organization expenses. They ultimately worked out a budget and plan of campaign that was satisfactory to all. This resulted In the famous "Men and Millions Movement" of the Disciples of Christ, which brought in what was then considered the staggering sum of $6,300,00' for a five-year program. The iiirmuvrs or ine communion were bo pleased with this business-like method of conducting affairR that they contributed even more generously than had been expected. The success of this enterprise revolutionized the whole business of church financiering. The other great denominations immediately adopted the plan. The denominational associations have come to be known as "forward movements," and some thirty of them are in existence today. Each one baa clarified all the information in relation to enterprise within the denomination, and has reduced the business of collecting and spending money to a science. World-Budpet Formed The Interchurch World Movement is simply a plan to do intordononiinationally what the forward movements have done within the various com-1 munions. It means that every denominational budget will be made in the light of world needs instead of in the semi-obscurity of incomplete information. It means that contributions to one denomination will not be in wasteful competition with contributions to another, because all the fellowships will have worked out their program together. The functions of the Interchurch YV nrUl ~? *1 i?uf chichi rtl"*? m?*eerold. First,! It collects, by means of world surveys, nil the pertinent facts on which denominational programs may be built. Second, it sets up the practical machinery of co-operation. Third, it acts In an advisory capacity whenever its advice is requested. The Movement has nothing to do with organic church union or matters if creed or doctrine. Each constituent init preserves complete autonomy, and Is bound only so far as it wishes to be bound. Financial appeals are m.ide by each denomination to its own constituency. Any surplus in undesignated funds, over and above the actual *ost of administration, will be prorated among the denominations engaged n a given financial undertaking. An illustration of one thing the Movement can do is to be found in ? vestern community of 1.600 persons n which thirteen denominations have >een supporting separate churches vith missionary funds, while an adja jent territory of 50..000 persons has? >r.ly three churches. By seeing thai aii nissionary boards are supplied with nformation in such cases, the Movenent will make possible a wiser disribution of funds. Its first goals are to reduce unnecesary duplication and overlapping tc nnrnmr/n and to bring about an inollfg^nt division of labor in unoccu ?tod fields. ? o ? Colds Cause Grip and Influenza AXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets remove the 1 tuse. There Is only one "Bromo Quinine." ? . W. GROVE'S signature on box. 30c. N _____________ c il, slender as the tower of a lightouse, and on its summit, straight # nd upstanding, in his hands a navlntlon ihart half unfolded, towers ** bovo all the yet youthful figure of C PAGE SEVEN FARMERS ARE URSED TO MAKE LIME TESTS Whether Soil Needs Lime May Be Determined?Various Forms May Be Used. Whether or no1 limo ! - ? ?^ v ?IIIV 10 u\,tvroai / 'or the successful growth of peanuts will depend entirely on the nature of the soil, says Prof. C. P. Blackwelt, agronomist of Clemson Gol'ege. Soils that are low and poorly chain* ed or that have been poorly drained in the past are generally in need of lime. It is doubtful if lime will payon well drained upland soils. In a three year test at the Pee Dee substation at Florence lime gave no increase at all. Any farmer who is in doubt as to whether or not his soil needs lime for peanuts should try the following scheme: Lay the field out in several sections and apply lime at a good rate to some of the sections and leave some unlimed. Keep a careful record as to where lime has been applied and at harvest time make careful comparisons between the limed sections and an equal area where no lime was used. This will give a> good test of the lime require meats of the soil and may save a great deal of money in future years. Satisfactory results will be secured from any of the high calcium, high grade oyster shells and marl, or the burnt products of any of these. The finer the limestone is ground the greater will be its imme hate availability. Limestone ground to pass through a tenmesh screen, all finer particles included, is recommended when a heavy application is made (one to two tons per ace). Either very finely pulverized limestone or bunit lime 12 recommended where only a few hundred pounds are used. The amount which should be applied will depend on the frequency . C i ii. - i--'?i -* wi ii.]ipuv:ai>JUII U 11(1 till* KIIHI OI lime applied. Some farmers who raiso, peanuts apply about 500 ^pounds of finely pulverized limestone or burnt lime every year. A much better piactice is to plow in one or two tons of ground limestone or half that amount of burnt lime, once every three or five years. This will |?ive just as good results and will savemuch labor. Lime may safely be used at any time in a crop rotation. Perhaps the best time would be in the winter before peanuts are planted. * It can beapplied to the land just before plowing, and this method has the advantage of giving one a firm ground on which to work. It may also be applied just after the land has been plowed and then harrowed in with a pike tooth harrow. It is most easily aplicd with a regular lime or fertilizer distributor. The effects or lime arc likely to be in. proportion to the thoroughness with which it is mixed with the soil in which tho plant roots are to develop. Citation Notice. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Horry. By J. S. VAUGHT, ESQUIRE, PROBATE JUDGE. WHEREAS, Josephine Jenkins made suit to me, to grant her L#eters of Administration of the Estate )f and effects of Arthur M. Jenkins. THESE ARE THEREFORE to itc and admonish all. and singular ho kindred and creditors" of the said Arthur M. Jenkins, deceased, that bey be and appear, before me, in he Court of Probate, to be held at >on\vay, S. C.f on March 6th, 19'20 u-xt, after publication hereof, at 11 'clock in the fcrenoon, to shew ause, if any they have, why the aid Administration should not he '. ranted. GIVEN under my Hand, this 20th ay of February Anno Domini, 1920. Published < n the 2G?h' day of FVfoam vy 1920; and the 4th day of '.arch 1920 ,in the Hon y Ilcrald. SEAL) J. S. VAUGHT, Probate Judge, H. C. Dye That Skirt," ^ Coat or Blouse "Diamond Dyes" Make Old, Shabby* Faded Apparel Juet Like New. Don't worry about nerfect rMnUa Jsc "Diamond Dyes," guaranteed to gtwn i new, rich, fadeless color to any fanirie. vhether wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed ;oods,?dresses, blouses, stockings, skhrte, hildrcn's coats, draperies,?everything! A Direction Book is in package. To match any material, have dealer how you "Diamond Dye" Color Gara. Shiistopher Columbus.