The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, February 22, 1906, Image 4
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* I I
" The Horry Herald,I
CONWAY, S. C.
THURSDAY. FEBRUARY, 21 1900
STOCK FOODS
AND CONDITION POWDICKS AND
"WHAT THEY COST.
Hundreds of Dollars Are Paid Per
Ton for Some That Does Not
Cost Twenty,
The large amount of hard cash paid
out by the farmers and other stock
owners of this State for patent stock
foods and condition powders renders
the fullest information concerning
+>,?<. ?*.*? ?- -
vuou uuiupunitiun ana merits aesirable.
If these compounds possess any
value It must be as either food or
medlolne. At one time the manufao
turers of many of them made strong
claims as to their food value, as indicated
by the names they bear, but
the work of the chemist easily showed
their rather low food values, and
it accordingly became neoossary for
the manufacturers to modify their
original claims.
t present most of the stook food
manufacturers base their claims for
patronage on the alleged value of the
compouuds as condiments and medicines.
It was too easy for the chemist
and feeders. to determine their true
food value. Apparently became ne
oessary, Id order to maintain their
sale, to transfer them to the uncertain
and intangible Held of medicine.
The mystery and popular Ignorance
concerning medical practice make It a
much more secure field In whioh to
exploit fictitious olalms. As medloinal
or condlmental agents, It is claimed
that these patent compounds prevent
certain diseases, cure a large
variety of others, and enable the animals
to digest more food and make
better use of it.
Let us briefiy consider these claims.
Tue first ste,; In this will be to ascertain
just what these powders contain.
Fortunately, the Experiment Stations
have furnished this Information In
such a way as to preclude any probability
of error. Massachusetts, Connecticut
and North Carolina published
bulletins on this subject so nearly at
the same time as to make it certain
that the work was done Independently
and without any knowledge of one
another's results, and the c ose agreement
of their findings gives additional
assurance of their accuracy.
During the past year or two, International
Stock Food has been extensively
advertised and considerable of
it sold in this State. For this reason,
let us select this compound as an example
and give its composition as
published In the bulletins just referred
to. According to the Connecticut
Experiment Station, Bulletin No. 132.
International Stock Food contains
wheat feed, cayenne, salt, charcoal
and some bitter drug; Massachusetts,
Bulletin, No. 71, says it contains
wheat offal, pepper, salt, charcoal and
some material rich In protein, and
the December Bulletin of the North
Carolina Department of Agriculture
says it consists of wheat bran, red
DBDDP.r. oharnnal and lir?HPod mo?l Tt-.
will be noticed that all agree that a
wheat product of some sort 1h the
principal ingredient. Pepper and
charcoal are also found by all three;
while Halt and a material rloh in protein?linseed
meal by North Carolina
?are found by two, and a bitter drug
by one. This is, indeed, a remarkable
unanimity of results.
We are now in a position to judge
of the accuracy of the olalms made
for these compounds. There are two
ways of doing that. First, after the
chemist and the mioroscoplst have
told us the ingredients they contain,
tho medical man may judge of their
value or ell- ct, when used iu medioal
practloe; from his knowledge of medical
science. Judged on this basis, we
give it as our professional opinion
that wheat bran, salt, pepper, charcoal,
eto., possess no marked medlol
nal virtue for either prevention or
cure of diseases; but if any one does
not care to aocept our opinion, we
ask him to go to bis family physlolan,
in whom he has confidence, and ask
him If these substances are of muob
value aa medicines, and we are willing
to abide by nib reply.
The stoond method of judging of
the value of these condimental stock
foods or condition powders is by actual
trials or feeding tests, bub it may
be stated that no trial Is either practical
or worthy the name of a test
unless the food and the animals are
both weighed, and unless another lot
of anlmais of the same quality, age,
size and condition, and kept and other
wise fed in the same manner, are
oompared with those received the condimental
foods. Fortunately, several
tests of this sort have been made, and
while made by those whom the manufacturers
sneerlngly term theoretical
feeders, are the only real practical
tests made of the feeding value of
these patent foods. Two tests have
been made at the Kansas Experiment
Station with dairy cows with the fol
lowing results:
For the first test, thirteen cows
were divided into two lots as nearly
(Mjual as possible, based on the yield
of milk and butter fat for the preceding
month. Tne two lots received
exactly the same kind and amount of
lui i, except that one lot was given
"a i.ne Stock Food" according to the
manufacturer's directions. The re
sun of a one month Uibt was that the
buiur fat produced by the lot receiving
the "Stock Food" c;st 14.?c, per
pound; while the butter fit produced
by the lot receiving no oondlmental
food eoefc 12 3o. per pound.
The second test waa with twenty
oows divided Into two lots, m In the
the first bait, sad the result of a twomonth's
tost wm that the lot Helving
"Globe Stock Food" produced
butter fat at a cost of 7e. per pound
more than the lot whleh resolved no
suoh food.
The Iowa Experiment Station also
made a test of the value of these eon
dlmeatal feoda and several well known
eonoentrated feeding stuff* when added
to a oorn ration for the fattening
of steers.
There wore ten lota of twenty-two
steers each, selected so as to make
them all as near equal m possible. Of
the ten lots, three were fed patent
stock foods. The lot showing the
lowest net profits as the result of
ninety-four days' feeding had received
"Standard Stock Food." The lot
showing the second lowest net profit
had received "International Stock
F.>od." In other words, of the seven
lots reoelvlng no oondlmental food,
all of them gave a greater net profit
than the one receiving Internatienal
Stook Food.
Now, no one will deny that wheat
bran, pepper, salt and charcoal may
be good for live stook; hut the question
is, can we afford to buy these
materials under a patent name and
pay from $200 to $500 per ton for
them, when they may be bought un
der their good, old fashioned names at
from $20 to $25 per ton?
The question often arises, however, 1
Why is it, if these "foods" art all
frauds, that so many honsst and intelligent
men think tbsy have c btair- (
ed profitable results from their use? '
The answer is not difficult. S'ck i
animals get well without treatment? i
in many oases in spite of wrong treat- j
ment. GDod food and care are the ,
best tonics, and it should be remerr- i
bered that when a man vets to the <
point of buying condition powders for I
an animal; that is, becomes willing to <
pay from $200 to $500 a ton for wheat t
bran to feed them, he is ready to give i
him the better oare and food which <
alone would and does bring about the <
desired improvement in condition. 1
TIRED OF LIFE. 1
1
I
People Who Committed Huioldo For
j
One Oauao and Another.
Dr. R. H. Hutcherson, a well known
physician of Toccoa, Ga., committed j
suicide with a pistol on Wednesday.
Bad health is the alleged cause.
Rav T n Nnrtnn e Dn r>? itif min
x?v v? v* v* A.1 v/i vv/U| unj^moi) iiiiu*
later of Valdosta, Ga., committed 1
suicide on Tuesday by jumping Into
his well. He was 00 years old and t
was well to do and popular. I
Miss Bertha Marsden committed -t
sulolde at Selma, Ala., on Tuesday by t
taking chloroform beoause she was In |
love with a young man who did not |
reciprocate. 1
Miss Charlotte Ferrell, aged 20, of <
Roan county, W. Va , committed ]
sulolde on Tuesday by hanging herself
beoause her parents would not let
her marry the young man she was In
love with.
Mrs. Lllburn McNair, aged 34,
prominent in St. Louis society and
champion golf player of the city,
committed suicide at her home on
Monday with a pistol. She was in
bad health.
Eugene Moore, aged 26, manager
for a large cotton tlrm at Amerious,
Ga., oommitted sulolde on Wednesday
by shooting himself the head with a
revolver. No cause Is assigned.
Rev. Justin G. Wade, pastor of the
blrst Congregational ohurch of Waukegan,
111, was arrested by the postoftlce
authorities on Wednesday for
sending obscene matter through the
malls. Next day he committed suicide
by throwing himself under a
train.
Killed Herself and Children.
At Boston on Wednesday morning
a woman and four ohlldren were found
dead in bed at their home. An Investigation
by the police Indicate that
the woman, Mrs. Annie L. Dixon,
had killed the ohlldren and herself by
opening Ibree gas jets. The children ]
wers Annie, aged 6 years; George,
tbree and a half; Mildred two years
and Marlon, ons ysar. The tragedy
was discovered by the woman's hus- I
band, Arthur B. Dixon, when he re> i
turned home from work this evening.
Dixon found the house locked and
was obliged to break in the front i
door. He found the bodies of his i
wife and ohildren in a bedroom, j
Medical Examiner A. A. MacDonald |
decided that Mrs. Dixon had killed
the ohildren and herself. Dixon told j
tne ponce tnat ne lert home at 61 >,
o'clock this morning to go to his
work. At that time his wife was up,
the children were all awake and he
did not notice anything unusual.
Dixon Is 31 years old and his wife was
27. They had been married for about
six years. Of late Mrs. Dixon had i
not been In good health.
A Mine Disaster.
At least twenty-eight men are supposed
to have met death in a terrible
mine explosion in the Parallel Mine i
of the Stewart Colliers company near <
Oak Hill, W. Va. Thirty-nine men
were employed In the mine and
eleven have escaped alive. At midnight
Thursday six bones had been i
recovered near the mouth of the 1
m'ne and it is certain that all the others
In the mine are dead.
If the vagrant law was enforced In
all of our citirs and towns thousands i
of idle, loafing negroes aid soirr Idle, '
loafing w' .ite men would be forced t j
go to woik rn the hums or leave the j
S?ate Orangeburg has her fuM share i
t ?fe?- at d t> ls is a gcodplaoeto i
t-y the experiment. i
Japan's Bad Faith,
Prof. Hamer B. Hulbert, special
agent of the Emperor of Korea, artdressed
the Presby terian ministers at
*belr recent conference In New York.
Prof. Hulbert, who haa been a tea
cher at Seoul for twenty years, Bays
he "would not fflte thirty five cents
on the dollar for American Interest lu
Korea if the Japanese secure juris
dlotlon over American ottixens there."
At present the United States has In
Korea extra territorial rights. Amer
can oltlaena are tried by the American
counsel, not In Korean courts but
the Japanese having assumed a pro
teotorate over Korea, are seeking tbe
abolishment of the extra territorial
rights of this oountry, and wish to
assume jurisdiction over Americans
Mr. Hulbert says before the war with
Russia the Japanese started In Korea
a campaign of education. Th y suo
needed in hypnotizing the American
public. Tbey made Americans be
lleve that the Japs were about everything
that was right and proper, and
succeeded at the same time In get
ting a pretty low Idea of Korea and
Koreons fixed In the Amerloan mind.
As a matter of fact there Isn't a hand's
breadth < f dlllerence between Koreans
and Japs. Dress them In the
same clothes and you couldn't tell
them apart. Most Koreans look upon
the Japanese as barbarians. Since
tho Japs have overrun Korea they
have brought Into the oountry a low
class of Immigrants. They have bepn
brutal and tyrannlcxl, seizing proper
ty right and left and have gotten pos
session of all the resources and assets
of the Korean Government. I speak
-4 * T ? - -
nuiAi oApvrieuof, ot'causo 1 nave in my
possession now no leys than 50,000
deeds for as many paroels of land.
The owners of these plots, many of
bhem widows, oame to me and asked
mo to boy their land at one cent a
plot rather than It should go to the
J apanese. My name Is on doorplates of
many Korean houses. If 1 hadn't
iono that?of c( utse I will never
hold the land?the Japy would have
*1 >nflseated the lands and driven off
the Korean owners. The United
States had no right to take the word
it the Japanese that the Koreans
were willing to accept Japan'H protectorate.
The emperor of Korea cabled
me that the treaty by which the
protectorate waf established was obtained
from him "knife at, throat."
The Japs said at first that K >rean Inlependenco
should be preserved.
They violated their word, given to
the whole world. What Mr. Uulbert
says does not surprise us In the
least. Sooner or later Japan will
dominate the entire East and no forelgner
will be allowed to remain there
sxcept by her permission.
The new Oough Syrup?the one
that acts as a mild carthartlo on the
Dowels ?is Kennedy's Laxitlve Floney
ind Tar. It expels all cold from the
jystem, outs the phlegm out of the
throat, strengthens the mucous memoranes
of the bronohlal tubes, and re
leves croup, whooping cough, etc
Children love it. Sold hv (lonwav
Drug Co.
SooNKitor later the land owners of
the South will have to take hold of
the farm labor question and regulate
It. All that is needed to remedy the
diflloulty Is unity of action on the part
3f the farmers. The South Is the only
place that we know cf where the land
owners are at the mercy of the labor
they employ.
Tbey never gripe or sicken, but
Qleanse and strengthen the stomach,
liver and bowels. This Is the univer
tal verdict of many thousands who
use DeWitt's Little Early Risers.
These famous little pills relieve head
ache, constipation, biliousness, jaun
dice, torpid liver, tallow complexion
sto. Try Little Early Risers. (Jonway
Drug Co.
"Asia for Asiatics." This says a
Shanghta merchant, who had just ar
rived at San Franclsoo, Is the cry that
has been taken up In Oblna and spread
Ike wildfire from province to province
kindling everywhere the slumbering
hatred of the Mongolian sgalnst all
foreigners. The spirit of revolt U
rife, young OhlDa Is rising and In his
ypinlon trouble Is bound to come.
Dont deoeive yourself. If you have
Indigestion take Kokol Dyspepsia
Cure. It will relieve you. Rev. W.
E. Hscutt, South Mills N. 0., says;
"I was troubled with obronlo indiges
tlon for several years; whatever I ate
seemed to cause heartburn, sour stomach
fluttering of my heart, and
general depression of mind and body
IU u fi luf ^ J
iu/ U1U||||I|IV Ibutiujiuouucu iklHJlll) A11U
It hu relieved me. I can now eat
anything and sleep soundly at night.
Kodol Digests what you eat. Conway
Drug Go.
Hanicod Hlmnolt.
A speolal from Montlcello. Ill.. savs
that the dead body of William DeGrof,
an aged director of the First,
National Bank of Mansfield, was
found hanging in his home at Mansfield,
today, he having commit
ted suicide. The reason assigned
for the deed is that the grand jury Is
on the eve of an examination of the
condition of the bank on report that
700,000 has b?en embezzled. W. O
Fairbanks, president, and L. M. Fair*
banks, anotner director of the bank,
are brothers of Vice President Fair
banks of the Unit' <1 Staffs
A man who once hart rough horny
hands trade them soft and smooth
with Witch ll^zel Salve but he uncc!
the genuine?that bearing the name
l*B, O I) Witt, & "o (Jt ego." Fr
tores, bolls, outs, burns, bruises, eic.,
It hrs no equal, and affords a'most
Immediate relief from bl'nd. bleeding,
itching and pro rudlng Piles. Sola by :
Jonway Drug Co.
mamma ram kvumlaoh.
Vaa* Atmm hi Plarids Bacamlng
Available a* Qarden L?t4
The depertme*4 W ?crlevlt?r? a ?ot>
mr iatarestei ta Um yrojtot bow <m
f** o< draining Use Brer?la4e?> Theaa
half-taagad swamps ta the soath
Vb# Iui#a yowl 1ms an aa I. aba Ofcesmb?
bib a be eenrertad lata dry u4
fiabaaU>a lam kf aooaftawoMag dikes
sad pasip+ng awt the water?an
awhftaaaaaaat wMoK when oarrlad lata
CM, will brftag abent tkt shipment. a
*mm years frost saw, of Immense suppfhw
af tomatoes, aaw petatoes, ea.bbages*,
BtHng baaaa and other fraah
prtai prodace to northern markets all
IbiiBQlb the wlatar.
It baa area bean suggested that Lake
Okasochobee might be drained by conneatlng
It wtth tha Atlantic oaean by
a canal 60 miles long, thus redeeming
00,000 additional acres of first class
farming territory.?Outing Magazine*.
Men Are in Majority In tha U. 9.
Taking It "by and large," the mala
sax la In the majority In oht country
by soma 1,638,321, according to a recent
census bulletin. In some of the states,
however, tha women exceed the men
In number, notably in the District of
Columbia, Massachusetts and Rhode
Island. Usually men are In excess In
sparsely settled communities and worn- ,
an In thickly populated regions; cities,
for example, as a nils have more females
to an males. In the later years
of life the women exceed the men,
which seems to Indlaate that they are
li?r^A T? 4V. 1 - J ^ 4 * -
lusgw iitwu. iu ih puriou iruai 10 to
26 j?sn of ag?, also, the reports show ,
them to be in excees.?Buccess Maga tea.
King Alfonee's Boity QmwJ.
King Alfonso Is perhaps mora securely
and carefully guarded during the
hours of darknees than is any other
European monarch, except, perhaps,
ihe sultan of Turkey, h or four centuries
the slumbers of sncessstre sover igas
of Bpein hare been watched all
night by the '"Mooteraa de Bsphaosa"? i
a body of men to whom is relegated
the ecsclusivs privilege of guarding '
their monarch from sunset to sunrise.
They must hare an honorable military
career, and be natiree of the town of
Bapiaosa. Ceremoniously, they lock
the palaco gates at midnight, opening <
them at T the next morning.?London
Tatter.
Hospital Cars In Prusela. ,
The Prussian ministry for railways |
has placed at every Important railway (
center throughout the kingdom a mag- ,
nilicently built and appointed car for ,
the transport of sick persons. Thsue ,
cars have been speoially fitted up from ,
plana supplied by sanitary authorities. ]
Spring beds and every medical device (
for the alleviation of sufferings during |
transit have been utilized. There are j
ice safes, gas stoves for cooking, rooms ,
for attendants and Ingenious devices
for muilling the sound caused by the
motion of the train. It is not intended 1
to maks these carriages pay; tney have 1
been Instituted chietly on the ground <
of humanity. l
England's Best Known Church. t
Tho name of St. George's, Hanover ]
square, seems to be well known to (
very American who comes to England, 1
says tho London Chronicle, not so <
much because it is the fashionable '
"marriage church" in this country, as
because President Roosevelt was mar- .
ried in It. A few yoars back an Amer- <
lean dropped into the vestry and looked ,
up the marriage register, in which, un- i
der the date of Dec. 2, 1888, he found .
tho signature of "Theodore Roosevelt, (
28, widower, ranchman," and that of ~
"Kdith Kermit Carow." Till tn?n even j
the clerk, J. Moicey, did not know that
the American President's signature was
in the book.
Jape the Yankees of the East. fi
The Japanese traders, officials, sol- j
dlers and workers are pushing irreslstl- c
bly into Manchuria, and now that the ,
war is ended the Yankees of the east t
will guide and instruct the Chinese and '
dominate them and their market*. It
seems likely that, wunout any Chinese
boycott whatever, American industry
uHll KA mif *A fK* ^ ? '
? ... >v yu? IV VUV l U? V IU (A/111 IK310 UU
fair terms with the Japanese before
many years hare elapaod.?Philadelphia
Ledger.
Number of Feet a Second.
Few men eould tell If they were
asked how many feet per second they
walk. A press photographer, whose
work requires him to know all manner
of speeds, said the other day:
"The average man walks four feet
per second. A dog on Its ordinary jog
goes eight feet a second. A horse trots
12 feet a second. A reindeer over the
ice makes 26 feet. A racehorse makes
43 feet. A sailing ship makes 14 feet."
?Chicago Chronicle.
Large English Families.
A report of the awards made by the
Lincolnshire Agricultural Society to
farm laborers who bring up the largest
families without having received parochial
relief show* that eight men are
fathers of 124 children. One of the
men had 20 children born, brought up
17,. and placed 12 out In the world.?
Ixmdon Tit-Bits.
London's Consumption of Ice.
London uses In one way or another
quite 200,000 tons of Ice a year. Although
a great deal of ice is made artificially,
most of that consumed here Is
natural and Norwegian. The Norwegian
ice crop In an average winter
varies from 500,000 to 600,000 tons. At
least half of this comes to the United
Kingdom, the rest going to the pontinent.?Tit-Bits.
If you tell a woman that a 50-cent
article is worth $1.50 she will cheerfully
give up 98 cents for 1L
|
BANK OF i
OONWA
CAPITAL STOCK, (20,000.00
TOTAL ASSETS,
OFFICE
B. G. COLLINS, President.
C. P. QUATTLEDAUM, V-Pbes.
Our Bank, being a local institutic
building of Horry County and for the
suing this policy wo take pleasure in i
accommodation when con hi stent with t
With gratitude for the liberal p
cordially solicit your future business.
Respectful
P. A. SPIVE
Robt. B. Scarborough, H. L
President. Vice-P:
BANK OF
Conway
Capital Stock
DlRECr
Robt. B. Scarborough,
Hal L. Buck,
George J. I lolliday,
We will pay you 5 per cent, inter
ish savings banks to those wishing
Try our plan for saving your nickles a
these little banks and the interest we
help yon.
THE "HU
UfllAlfAC
\ shoe FOR
ikTbis brand on a slioe means e
Hie best for yuor money call
j. id. n:
Fatally Burned.
At an early hour Wednesday morning
the Infant ohlld of Mr. John B.
Cleary, of the Trinity section of New- j
berry county, was fatally burned, the
jhlld succumbing to the li juries at
noon. The child was playing before
a. fire In the house, the mother being
ibsent from the room at the time. In
?ome way the clothes of the little
boy caught fire and before the flames
xjuld be extinguished tbe body had
been terribly burned. Death relieved
the little fellow from his suffering at
ibout 11 o'clt ck of the same day.
All old-time Cough Syrups bind the
Dowels. This is wrong. A new idea
was advanced two years ago in Kenne- 1
iy's Laxttlve Honey and Tar. This)
remedy aote on the mucous membranes j"
Df the throat and lungs and loosens' l
the bowels at the same time. It ex- '
pels all cold from tbe system. It
slears tbe throat, strengthens tbe
mucous membranes, relieves coughs,
olds, croup, whooplDg cough, eto. "
Sold by Conwav Drug O.
Senatok Tillman has Introduced a
resolution in the Senate calling upon
the postmaster general for information
as to the number of postal clerks w
dlled In railroad accidents during the
past Ave years, also asking how manv
iteel cars are now used in the posUl
lervice and whether the fatalities
lave been so great in those as in other
?rs.
Just a little Kodol after meals will ]
elleve that fulness, belching, gas cn
itomach, and all other symptoms of
ndlgestlon. Kodol digests what you
?t, and enables the stomach and dlrestive
organs to perform their funoions
naturally. Conway Drug Co.
1 (V Jp jJw
I Wine of C&rduil
aB m* at At- t*. i? m. ?
Ittim ooau mer DtrMt,
atulktjl, ga.., march 21,1900. 1
I ruff trad lor four months with 1
uliwi nervousness and lassitude. J
I had a sinking foaling in my
stomach which no modiolus seemed |
to reliore, and losing my appetite ^
I hooama weak and lost my rital- t
ity. In three weeks I lost fourteen
pounds of flesh and felt that I must
End speedy relief to regain my
health. Haying heard Wine of |
Cardui praised by several of my j
friends, I sent for a bottle and was
certainly very pleased with the
results. Within three days my
tnnat.ifA ~? -* -
_rr....- .vuum oiiu Mi J IIUU1KU M)
troubled me no more. 1 could fl
digest my food without difficulty fl
and the nerrousnese gradually fl
fl diminished. Nature performed fl i
her function! without difficulty fl "
fl and I am once more a happy and fl
fl well woman. . fl
OLIVE JOSEPH, Li ?
Treat. At)ant* Friday Night Club, fl
Secure a Dollar Bottle of [1 1
ft^Winc of Cardui Today,
* " DONWAY.
Y, S. C.
SUURPLUS FUND, <20,000.
, <180,000.00.
;RS:
D. A. SWVEY, CASHIM.**
M. W. COLLINS, ABST. Cashue
>n, has always striven for lhe*upbetterment
of her citizens. / In perextending
to our customers every
lound banking.
atronage received Ln the past, w#
ly your*
" ^ 1M?
. Buck, Will A. Freeman,
resident. Cashier.
HORllY,
s, c.
<25,000
rORS:
W. R Lewis,
W. A. Johnson, ^
Will A. FrtSoman
\
est on yearly deposits. Will furnto
open small accounts with ua.
md dimes, and you will find thai
will pay you on your savings will
anaaMnanHi*. - " "5
B" SHOE.
:S:ek^ I
MEN ^5lomething!
If you want
for 4'The Hub. For sale b r
icliols.
Professional Cards.
McCord & McCord,
SURGEON DENTISTS, '
Conway, s. c.
KcjfOver Bank of Horry.
RTiTsCAREROiUGiL
CONWAY, S. C.,
ATTORNEY . AT LAW.
t-i- Burroughs,
Physician and Surgeon,
Conway, S- COTioiroT
Attorney and Counselor atLLaw,
ICOKWAY, S. C.
B. Wofford Wait, *
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Conway, S. C.
Office in Spivey Building.
Dr. C. S. Deitz,
DENTIST.
Conway, S. C.
Room No. 4, Spivey Building.
3onway, Coast
and Western R. R.
DAII Y SCHEDULE.
EAST BOUND.
> Conway 9:00 a. m
jV Pino Island 9:30 a. m.
^.r Myrtle Beach 9:46 a. m
WEST BOUND.
jv Myrtle Beach
It Pine Island
jv Conway
Conway Market
Fresh Meats amf Sausage
alwaVS On hand
Orders are taken and
promptly delivered
every day. ^
Geo. L. M arsh,
Propretor.
Livery ar d Drayage.
'Phone 38.
Horry Tobacco VY areliouse,
J. E. Coles.