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SOUR STOMACH INDIGESTION Thedford's Black-Draught Highly Recommended by a Tennessee Grocer lor Troubles Resulting from Torpid Liver. East Nnnhvlllo, Tonn.? Tho efficiency of Thodford'B Black-T>raught, the genuine, herb, liver medicine, Ib vouched for by Mr. W. N. Parsons, a grocer of this city. MIt Is without doubt tho best liver medicine, and 1 don't believo I could got along without It. I tako It for sour stomach, head* ache, bad liver, indigestion, and all other troubles that are tho result ol a torpid liver. "I have known and used it for years, and can and do highly recommend it to every one. I won't go to bed with* out it in tho house. It will do all it claims to do. I can't aay enough for it." Many other men and women throughout tho country have found BlackDraught Just as Mr Parsons describes , ?valuable in regulating the liver to Its normal functions, and in cleansing the bowels of impurities. Thedford's Black-Draqirht liver medicine is tho original and only genuine. .Accept no imitations or substitutes. Always ask for Tliodlord'B. g_? MYRTLE BIOACil TRAINING SCHOOL The following IS llm 15?S* nf - V.IV/ 1KU w I and instructors of the Myrtln I? Training School for June !> to 1S, 1922: Courses and Instructors (General) "The Sunday school," Rev. J. E. Ford. "Principles of Religious Teaching," I lev. IS. L. McCoy. Courses and Instructors (Specialization) "Beginner Lesson Materials and 'Teaching," Miss Willette Allen. . "Primary Lesson Materials and Teaching'," Mrs. W. B. Ferguson. "Junior Lesson Materials and Teaching," Miss Bruce McDonald. Public Services Devotions, Rev. J. C. Atkinson. Addresses, Prof. .1. C. Guilds. Intermediate department demonstration on Sund/iy, June 11, conducted I>y Miss .Johnnie Atkinson. Schedule?Friday, June 9 Arrive in time for dinner, 1 to 2 -P. M. :IU) to 4:30, classification. 7'HO, Opening address. 8:15, Session of all classes. Schedule?Daily F.xcept Sunday 8:30, Devotions. Four class periods. Quiet hour for study in the afterniiim Committees Publicity and enrollment?A. ft. Goldfinch, C. A. Monroe of Marion, S. i C.; W. I). Jenrette of Mutttns, S. C. Arrangements?Hotel, church. etc.,' W. M. Goldfinch. J. E. Watson, Cordie Page. Reservations and Matriculation (To he handled through* A. E. Goldfinch, Conway, S. C., secretary to board. I o Oil! MV BACK! The Expression of Many a Kidney Sufferer In Conway. A stubborn backache is cause to suspect kidney trouble. When the kidneys are inflamed and swollen, stooping brings a sharp twinge in the small of the back, that almost takes the breath away. Doan's Kidney Pills revive sluggish kidneys?relieve aching hacks. Here's Conway proof: E. L. Moore says: "My kidneys were out of order and 1 had a soreness in my hack just over my kidneys. Mornings 1 was stiff and lame ant'l had other symptoms of kidney trouble. I heard of Doan's Kidney Tills * i i i ? ?i. a i aiKI nougiu some at uic v/onway i Drug Co. Tlie.v relieved all signs of kidney trouble." Price f>0c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy?get Doan's Kidney Pills?the s.ime that Mi\ Moore had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.?Adv. EXAMINATIONS AGAIN The Civil Service Commission invites special attention to the fact that in examinations held recently in Washington, D. C., and other cities throughout the United States for junior engineer, Bureau of Standards, fish culturist. Bureau of Fisheries, assistant agricultural economist and junior agricultural economist (mar- ; keting) in the Bureau of Markets and i Crop Estimates, Department of Agri- : culture, applicants were not secured ; i)i the number desired, and that these i examinations will be held again. The fish culturist examination will be held , on May 10; the others will be held on M ?? \r ' Persons interested in these or other examinations should apply to the Secretary of the United States Civil Service Board at the local post oOice for detailed information and application blanks. o No Worms in a Healthy Child % All children troubled with Worms hove on uo? healthy color, which indicates poor b'ood, and as a < rule, there is inorc or less stomach disturbance. < GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC ftiven re*u- < lariy for t^o or throe weeks will enrich this blood, < improvo the digestion, and act as a genera IStrcngth- * enlnd Tonic to the whole system. Nuture will then * throw offer disjH;! the worms. nndtheChild willbe ! 4 in perfect health. Pleasant to take.*Coc per bottle. $ \ r 4 SHIFTERS OPEN, GET COLD FEET Fathers and Mothers Find Out and Take Action in Matter ORIGINAL PURPOSES ARE Well Known in Large Cities Where Movement- Began in Lower Classes The independent order of shifters has met with disappointment in an effort to obtain a foothold in Conway. This is at it should be, for its aim and purposes have been exposed, and their spread opposed in all of the corners of this great country just as soon as those aims and purposes were understood. It appears that an organization was actually formed in Conway. Parents read the daily papers, many of their growing sons and daughters fail to do that. The younger set of hoys and girls in Conway did not understand that, if they joined, their organization would be attacked at once by the good mothers and fathers of this community. This was exactly what happened. No sooner had it become' known that there had been an initiation and badges be^an to appear than heads got together and as a icsult of Lhe expose that followed member after member had to notify superior officers that they would have to decline. The purposes of this juvenile order have been exposed several times. First the expose appeared in such papers as the New York World. Later it was taken up by papers in cities of smaller size as fast as the order spread. The main purpose of the order , seems to be to break down the barriers and serve to break the ice, as it were, between boys and girls that are before that time entire strangers to each other; flirting seems to be the ( main object in view, and this not with < Jie parties of the opposite sex that the member happens to know, but with any member of the opposite sex ( no matter how much a stranger, just , so he or she wears a badge and be- , longs to the order. i _ . . . I .1 jL_i 1 It is said upon good aumoruy uiat r its real purpose was to enable a big printing firm to sell badges and other printed forms for use of the members. The concern has succeeded to some extent with this idea and millions of < the ihings have been sold. J The movement is opposed by everything that tends to uplift and proper culture of the boys and girls of this >r any other community. It had its ^ beginning in the lower classes and not mong the better informed and better '.rained people of the towns and cities. 1 The attempt to establish it in Conway was no doubt due to ignorance. The movement hus been nipped in j the very bud. Fathers and mothers are glad it has. ^ o ORCHARD NOTES j Clemson College, May 1.?U pays to summer prune peaches. Ilub < IT I enough new shoots throughout the * *op of the trees so that they will not become crowded and pinch back the ' lops of those shoots that are growing too rapidly. WatHi closely the newly planted peach trees to see that the branches are forming properly. If the young shoots are well spaced around the body, select three or Tour to form tho head and nil) o(T all the others. But ( if they developed only on one side, r which would result in a poorly shaped 1 tree, remove all the shoots except one 1 of the strongest. Allow it to p.row until eighteen inches high ana then I jiiKii out the top. Side shoots will i J form and by the end of fie season ' you will have a well branched, nicely v shaped tree. * He sure to turn the orchard cover crop. If it is allowed to mature, the) ' trees will likely suffer from loss of j ^ moisture. ? It is often difficult to have a good ' garden during late summer on account of dry weather. As a remedy s for this a small irrigation plant might v be installed if water is available. It ? will pay for itself in a very short * while with the increased yield of all c vegetables. FOR OVER 40 YEARS ? HAi.ivn r* at a rtrit mrmnnm v been vised successfully In the treatment I of Catarrh. 1 HAM/8 CATARRH MEDICINE con- 1 Hints of an Ointment which Quickly s Relieves by local application, an<l the li Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which acts .1 through the Wood on the Mucous Sur- .. faces, thus reducing the inflammation. \ Sold by all druggists. fi P. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. t BRICK BRK % aaHi?c;.,i?. - Come to our plain ^ nvu imve to olier t :i; LAYTON BRICK W( * 12[22|tf. Marion, J t TaKO/>/*A n 1 VR/UVW VJ-i U 1 For tobacco barn flues communicatc puny, Inc. We are in position to sel other flue makers. We manufactui at Gurley, S. C. Get in touch with Our flues we will guarantee to give manship and material. SASSER CON Gurley, S. C. He gCE HORRY HERALD, CONWA STATE TAX LAW CAUSES MUDDLE Business Firms Holding That Income of Last Year Not Liable STATE TAX OME - THIRD Based on Amount Paid to FedI oral Government For Income HPn v A f rl /% ??< i *- ^ M ???%*/\ *3 hiaco. nuiuaviu ivjijuiuju Reports coming from other towns , are to the effect that persons who i have paid income tax under the Federal law are inclined to question the ! right of the state of South Carolina to collect further income taxes from < them under tlie state income tax law jvtssed at the last session after the 1 year 1922 had come in. The South ( Carolina law requires the payment of an income tax to the state equal *o one-third of the amount paid as Federal income tax. The new state 1 law does not require the filing* of fo'*- : rial returns for the income of 1921. hut does require an affidavit from each ' and every person who paid Fedora1 ncomc taxes, the affidavit to show 1 how much/was paid as Federal tax < so that the state tax can he estimated < The legal question that arises this. : "ear in regard to the state income tax i is as to the right under the law to ] collect'taxes on the income of 1921 ] before the state law was passed. Recently the supreme court passed upon ] the state inheritance tax law and held 1 that est/ites that were in process of 1 settlement would he clear of the tax. 1 as Mie law could not he made to reach 1 hack to a time when the law was not < in force ;uul require the payment of i taxes on that; so that the estate of a ; man who died before this inheritance '.ox law was passed, and the shares ' :>f his heirs vested before the law < came into effect, is not now subject i o the inheritance tax. The state in- ( :ome tax law is not yet before the t supreme court, but if'news items in other newspapers are to be relied j jpon several cases will be contested ,( >v business men in different towns, rhev will refuse to pay the tax and !et tho state bring a suit against them, rhis will bring tho matter before the i supreme court to be tested. Individuals ,'ind companies hero in Conway recently received copies of the affida- t fits required under the state law. ( Some of these who paid a small income 1 ax to the Federal Government will c loubtless pay the one third of that I imount to tho state rather than stand i 1 lawsuit, as that course would be ( .he least expense to them. c It appears, however, that there are 1 everal cases here in Conway and in j 'he county in which a contest may rise. In order to pay this unexnect- i 2(\ tax the companies or individuals t liave to go back over the books show- ! ing the business done in H)21 and are i ihere faced with the situation of de- < 'ucting an unexpected expense from c I he profits of the business. It is un- 1 just to require an income tax to be ?. paid for the income of 1021. This is ^ .lie way they all feel about it. o 1 CALOMEL MAY TURN c ON YOU NEXT TIME L \Text Dose You Take May Salivate and Start World of Trouble Calomel is mercury; quicksilver. It rashes into sour bile like dynamite, jrampinrr and sickening you. Calorie! attacks the bones and should lever be put into your system. If vou feel bilious, headachy, consti>ated and all knocked out, just go to ! 1 J l A i a A i J? . ? J /our uruggisc ana gei a oonic 01 i Godson's I.iver Tone for a few cents - ; vhich is a harmless vegetable substi- j < ute for dangerous calomel. Take a ; J ipoonful and if it doesn't start your i iver and straighten you up l)etter J md <|uicker than nasty calomel and j without making you sick, you just go >ack and get your money. ! Don't take calomel! It makes you i ick the next day; it loses you a day's i vork. Dodson's Liver Tone straight- I ns you right up and you foei great, j >Jo salts necessary. Give it to the hildren because it is perfectly harm?ss and cannot salivate.?Adv. . ?ri About a month ago forty St. Louis iien bought pages of newspaper ad rrtisinv to announce their opposition o adjusted compensation, adding that hey were World War veterans. Misouri is paying a s'ate war bonus, | lowever, and the American Legion, | istributing bonus application blanks ound that these men were among the irst to apply for the state compensaion. :k brick | t and see what % efore you buy. * >RKS, (Est. 1885) * 3. C. * wers, Notice \ | 1 immediately with Sasser Com- ? F 1 you flues for less money than [ *e the bes( flue in Horry county * I us at once for future delivery, a r ? perfect satisfaction in work- L I 1PANY, Inc. | >rry County 3-0-1 fit Z f < * u / .Y, S. C, HAY 4, 1922 DEAD BODY HAS I STOOD FOR PAY % Laurinburg Undertaker Has Gruesome Plan For Collecting His Dues ! notice in the columns of The News and Courier on Saturday, April 29, the account of the holding of the body r>t" one Sarniicea Cnm'otmn Hili-m. subject) by an undertaker at Laurinburg, N. C., for the past thirteen years. As a resident in the Laurinburg section of North Carolina /it the time Ihis Italian subject came to his death, I may add a bit as an explanation as to how this body came to be at Laurinburg, N. C. Canceppo was in tho employ of a circus (the ivime of which 1 do not recall) that was showing at McColl, S. C. In some way Canceppo became involved in a quarrel and was struck [>n the head by one of his assailants with a tent stake and was carried to [ aurinbuig. N. C., for hospital treatment. Here he died.' The body was delivered to the undertaker for preparation for burial. For a time it seemed that no one would claim the body, but at last the father arrived at Laurinburg to claim iiis son's body. The undertaken rendered his bill, but it seemed the father did not have sufficient funds to settle the bill, so paid what he could, paying that he would return later and pay the bill (the undertaker retaining possession of the body). I do not recall whether it was reported that more than one payment was made or not, but I do know tho body was in the custody of the undertaker the last time I passed through Laurinburg on the train, for the body could be plainly seen from the car window while the train was standing it the station. Some say the body is petrified; whether this be true I'm unable t ;ay ,but 1 do know that the body is n standing position just inside a winlow on the second floor of the undertaker's establishment. Whether or not it has been on display further than mentioned above, 1 lo not know. Yours very trulv, C. S. THOMTSON, 595 Kutledtre Avenue. Charleston. \pril 20. County Sheriff Joseph M. Poulnot, through a personal friendship and ,acluainttance with Mr. Charles Mauro, Italian consul here, as well as ollinallv, took the matter up with the Morth Carolina undertaker some days i^o, and stated in The News ,*ind Courier of yesterday, a repsy was 1 e:ei\'ed from the undertaker that if the )ill for embalming and storage was jaid, the body would he buried. The international featuios in collection with Mr. Mauro's co':imunica,ion with Washington on tlie subject lave not been nvule pu'dic thus far. f received. There is, however, a .ureat leal of interest in connection with the ase in Charleston. County M'liovi(V :>oulnot states that lie was ready to ;ee the case through to a finish regardless of more ollieial letters or. the subject and will seek to see if there las been a reasonable regard for dc ency ,and the sacredness of a diiad >ody shown. PHss Cured in 6 to 14 Days Druggists lefunri money if PAZO OINTMF.NT foils to cure Itching, Mind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles. Instantly relieves Itching Piles, and you ^au gut restful sleep after lirst application. (50c. A Will be oper usual, and w Bros, and A. YE FARMK GOSSIPH Keep the home grounds beautiful. Do it with flowers. A poor man cannot afTorcl not to have a cow. Purebred seed are as essential for crop success as purebred animals for live stock success. Diversification is the religion of farming. The boll weevil is converting many cotton sinners. Only 32 per cent of our farm homes have running water. Consider the plight ol iho other OS per cent! No farmer has a right to ho so husy in his own afTairs that he takes no time to help in his community activities. Marketing is a hig problem, but the farmer should boar in mind thai he can sell almost anything if he puts it up in marketable condition. "Thou shalt not steal" applies to robbing land of its fertility. Extension Bulletin 51, "Soil Building," will help you to keep the eighth commandment. An ounce of co-operation in marketing cotton is worth a pound ot' the "independence" which some farmers mistakenly think they lose in joining the co-operative marketing association. Ji ? We are the pioneers in I t in Conway, having Ion use ol the people the bes !j the most convenient and pleasure and business car Si 25 cts. gal. fc | 20 cts. per qi B w e suceeded in bringir * section CHEAPER G/ ^ nishmg it to them at ihe i market will allow. 1 People's Fil |j HARRY R. B1 ^ 4-5-4t * im iiimi- ?? i ii iii i i??a i NICHOLS, S. C. i for AUCTICW rill be managed H. Gilliam jb xzb^zrj:x-rr, tin 1^1 rjr.zjre I #To Stop a Cough Quick take HAYES* HEALING HONEY, a cough medicine which stops the cough by healing the inflamed and irritated tissues. A \>ox of GROVES O-PEN-TRATE SALVE for Chest Colds, Head Colds and Croup is enclosed with every bottle of HAYES' HEALING HONEY. The salvo should he rubbed on the chest and throat of children suffering from a Cold or Croup. The healing offset of Haves' Healing Honey Inside the throat combined with the healing effect of ('.rove s ()-Pen-Irate Salve through the pores of the skin soon stops a cough. Both remedies are packed in one carton and the cost cf the combined treatment is 35c.^r J*Just ask your druggist for HAYES" HEALING HONEY. * Quick Repair < Ibis is what vou need when ? the machine or equipment ljncs T % war and vou are in trouble. % t Skilled Service I J Hut of coursc you must have X + a skilled man to do the work to ?nsure against still more trouble. T % Bring it to us. X ! CONWAY IRON WORKS | 2 MILTON PITMAN, Lessee X I the Gas Filling Stations jlj g ago installed for the I t fixtures to he had and j handy location ior both i V ! ' >r gasoline r t. for best oil u lg to the people oi this U \S, and we still are fur- y cheapest prices that the ! ling Station | RAY, Manager U m-iaaruaju rem?m Enmnnia mat r. -<t?? u m I h i SALES as by Nichols | ?I