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WILL DRY UP. Why We May All Die for the Want of Water. * DKAIl FROM THHI8T. Astronomers and Geologists Find Evidences that All Water is Rapidly Dissapprarlng from the Face of the Earth, Which Means D ath to All Life, Is the earth drying up and shall we imeaniug by "wo" the human race as re resentod by our descendant!), die of thirst? A warning fchat this fate Is not Impossible, or even Improbable, seems to be conveyed by some cf the older worlds around us. The moon has b come as dry as a hone, although the dark and empty beds of many seas and oceans are plainly visible upon Its sur face, showing that there was once a time when the lunar world posseSied plenty of water. The planet Mars Is more than half dried up, and now retains so little water that in the Winter tin e it appears to be all locked up iu the polai sn ,'Ws and ice tit-.lds, which are so thiD that they quickly melt away when the {Summer sun shines hot upon them. The plauet Mercury apparently p is senses no water at the present tune, although, in the nature of things, since it 1h composed of the samo gcLeral elements as the other planets, ir must have had water upon lis surface at some past period in its history. Some LhiDk that even Venus is a dry, hot world, with little or no wauer available to support inhabitants. Tne observations of Professor L ?well at any rate iuj>port Ibis conclusion. From these examples we hoc that theie is nothing essentially improoa bio in the idea that the waters of the earth may eventually disappear, le v lug it as dry and barren as Its near companion, the moon. But there is more direct and startling evidence of the drying up of the earth than any afforded by their analogies with other planets. This evidence is of a tclentillo nature, and wt find it in the known disappearance of many great bodies of water which <x isted on various parts of the globe in former limes, ana in the gradual, ana in some cases, rapid, dedication of vast continental areas. Nothing more ominous could well l e found than the proof all >rcJ?d by recent s cientific ex plorauou of Central A.sia mat a large part of the greatest . f tne continents, tho oito which is bexieveri to nave ooataioed the Garden of Eien and the cradle of mankind, has been turned into a waterless desert within the historic period! East of the Caspian Sea and north ana west or the vast ranges of the Himalayan mountains, wltnin a few years pa*o the remains of large cities Lave men found, covered with drifting H.'iXMis a/.U Ci fikii li riiiot ujh'fh i Ou dry vvi> <ld whirl up iuim uensesmothering Ciuudd. Some of tuese vanished towniMfuf Central Asia give evidence In their ruins that they onoe lay oil toe shores of lakes and rivers auci ot. ei b uiiesof water which have since completely dlsappt ared. Now they are inly the dedicated skeletons of a ci.il z ..lion w.^ose founders either per isbtu of thlrtt or were driven forth into more favored lands where the adVttDCii k aridity has nob yet altalned a fatal point. CtiivTal Asia Is a lofty plateau, and lb is on tress higher levi ls of the eaiththat the disappearance of the water has everywhere, first been mtnlfes'ed. Ail the Aria i deserts seem to bj udv ncini? th Ir sandy frontiers ou ? very slue, auci Invading tue surrouudiog lands which, s 111 retain, tho wh lu diminished mea?ure, their buprny ui lhe gviog water. The bin d r.-. aie evuywinre rtoeJh-g be for the K-moruel sm yel'ow wastes. The continent of Africa has l.rnw bituuiid rgulLg a similar drying prices. 'I?utre are In the midst of the Desart of Sahara plain evidences of toe foinier existence of inhibited oa, es that wire oiico green and 11 ,ur iih:ng vn iLh tre< s ai d t mailer v geta lion, out ? hloh are no v a vtpt bysai d bioio s and destitute of th least nr. p of vaitr. () i? of the thiols that not powerful y 1? prors'd the minus (f the u ciphers of one Bhish A-^ao ciatioi for the Advancement <f Science during tneir visit to Af:*?Ck lui. Summbr, was the la. k of water over va-^o areas of that o ,ntl'?<in and tne uu.vtrstil nioes.iity of irrigation to k ep aiiva the lands that are yet in a haol.abc Condition. The president jut the Engineering Section of the Ashic^.tii declared that It is a general co:.uition of African agriculture that the neided wate* must >e provided o> human intervention. Left to nature, m.viiy of the now inhabited parts ot Afiioa wouicl q ilokly bo turned Into Melons deserts. But the struggle can Maia^t uoainta tied sutocfabiuily as he was gui?\.Present supply of water the day. turned into irrigitMlller has olaln> undiminished, a id peared in Columbia ^te that a part ol this case that he i.; ?>ulT rtd lndibatea Bogart, a Chicago h to ?ome when Uisulllolent. 'As have disappear ?. _ -/ ed in whole or Id part within & few < generations Lake Ngaun, discovered i by Livingstone, Ik no lo? g r iu xiat- t eoct;Lake To had, wholi occupied a ( conspicuous place on ra p? of Africa when many i f t^e oider readers of 1 this newspaper were hchool children, has now half dried ud. Smaller b'?dlevs s of water have completely vanished. t T ie same story comes from Aus- i tralia, from South Amerl a, aud even ] from parts of our own Western c >un t try. The great Salt Lake in Utah is rapidly receding, like a puddle drying in the sun, h aving an ever broaden 1 ii g marge (f white salt waste around I it** shrirklng beaches. Some of the arid western lands which modern on ret prise has begun to cultivate with the aid of Irrigation webs and ditches are known to have been <>roe the bottoms of great, lakes and seas. The 1 pr e ss whereby these waters have dt-apporred Is a contlr.u ius one, al though Its progress may to masked for a time by human i If irt. Yet msn cannot make a water supply; he C:ui only take what nature gives and (1 tribute it in such a manner ?s ma best su t his needs. Hu*- wh< n the supply falls he must give ud his effort Through his own fault he often ac eolertes the dessLatioa of the lar.d t for all over the world It has been d- - . moust-rated that destruction of f 'red. brings about arid onditions. Even ( If the 'ordinate pr kcdco of mountain i ranges tends to keep up the supply of ; wat r tor certain districts by co- dens < lug tu? in isturA rtrifrim* _ ? - ? %.? . . ill UVI1U KjL If I ccco and storing it up in glaciers and springs, and especially lu tlie porous, l spong -like soil of gr a. forests; yet < thedi-stri.c <lon or t> e forests, and the I denudation of toe hill sl< p ?h defeats i this kindly purpose cf nature, causing I th.e water in rainy seasons and during the rn' ltlng of the mountain snows to I ru h down in destructive 11 ods, whioh i swiftly cr ss the !o*- r lands without < staying to moisten their soil, and hur- ? ry 10 be lost in the s^a. Man cannot lift the ocean waters to ( freshen the continents; only the pow- \ er of the sun can do that, and if, bv i making smooth and clear its rovl back i to tlie ocean lie enables tdie warmer thai < has descended on the hills in the form i of rain to hurry down again to 8c8- 1 level, lie loses all tlie advantages thai c the sun has effsred biro, aud Aids his i farms drying up and himself and his i cattle threatened with a thirst that i cannot be que> c led. 1 Lot this prociss go on long enough 1 and the earth will possess r.o more 1 fresh wafer, cxct.pt m c j as pours use 1 lessly and destructive 1/ down in the i firm of cloudbursts and deluging rains. Then it will not be possible for the great popuWtlnns of the globe t to And sufttt uai/C9 by hugging the s-ashores, And in the end seas them- I <elves will shrink at d ultimately dls appear. i But what, it may beaskod, becomes Of tiie waicr that haw rils > pp arr-d i <vhen lakes and rivers (iry u; ? Mi ch ' of it sinks into the earth's crest. T ie * rlob? is hot within and is gradually 1 cioiicg. As tlie interior coois crc- a vie. s and cavities are formed, and tin surface wa'er, seeking the lo ve?t level r under tlie force of gravitation, pcue- ( iratts to great depilis ' Underneath Soutn Dakota ard some ' of the other States bordering the 1 Bocky Mountain region, it has been 1 demonstrated that tueie Is an ini 1 merisc sheet of underground wa!?r gradually making lis way through the 1 sandstones towards the Missl^ippi 1 and the Guf. At present s imo of 1 tills water can he readied and brought * to the surface by meaii of art-, elan E wells, but as t.\e giohe c ntlcues to * cocl the wa-er win slc? Jjwer and 1 lower, until it i/ais too oeep to be i brought to the surface b/ Luiuan con ' trlvaoce. And not only does the water of the carta tend to dhapp ar by sit ki g ; into the c ust aud forming deep n Her- | voirs and vast snrets trie e, hut much of it prouably enters Into cnemical combination with the cooling rucks. In the case of the moon, wiiere the cooling prcc.-ss, owii g to the oompar- . ativelv sm; 11 dimensions < f hp lunar globe, has gone en much more rapid!} ( tnau in the earth, it Is believed by ( many that the water formerly ixMt nig on the surface as lakes, seas and rivers, has been completely aosorbeu : by oxidation, tlie oxygen of the watei ( combining with the me allif. r u? in terior recks. And th? ultimas fau of the waters of the earth may be similar. i In fact, the \>h>lo history of our planet, as geology has olsolcsed It, is i >uoh as to lead to the c ?i elusion Mia i 1 ssurface must eventually b< cnme a ury ami uarreu wa ;to. At ur.st a molten globe, the earth cooled down until It had a crust of solid rock. On , th 8 crust, as it In turn cooie > < IT, to vapors of the atmosphere dec ndec aid condensed into oceans. Some nave thought that In the beginning the emir evrth waxovered with wa i trr. Hut as r.ho cor>;lng of tne globe | continued much of the water cor.gtitutii g tue pfitui vil 00' an was ab < i ibed Iq-jO the deepening crust. Then c mth ents mad j tueir app aranc ann d en gradually became m no ? xten Hive. But In the earliest period at ( which gi ology has ventured to draw a chart of the earth, we see that the proportion of land to water was very , much leas than It Is today. Gradually the dessloation has pro coetied, a id apparently It Is destined ro go until even the Atlantic aud the Pac 11) have disappeared, and all the wat? fH of the eartih are withdrawn Into ItH Interior oi destroyed by chenn- 1 i ioal dissociation of the ltqu d and the r< combination of Its elements with solid matter. Long before that stage is attained, *however, all animal and v< get&ule life will have disappeared i from the lands, for they cinnot auri vivo the withdrawal of the fresh water upon which their x stance de> pends. The salt oce ng, becoming jvsr . v salt as their volum shilnks, nay at last reach a point of concentration w o re even marine life will be icatroy .d Thus i^;e last ploturo of the earth that g?v logy can form by glancing nto the future shows It stripped of its nhabitants mi of all forms of hf , iud oeprived of water and perhaps ilso of atmosphere?a bare wreck of a planet, drifting in the etheral ocean )f Immensity. G \rrefcw. P. Servl?. The aKovo article Is copyrighted by Harper & Brothers and Is published jy permission of Harper's Weekly. BURN AjLLVtv ? BANDITS LAUGH AH DIABOLIC DKIU) IS DONE. Fearfully Fonible Ftory Frcm Mexico. t urvivor rescribea Scene. A dlbp\tch from Purargo, Mexico, lays one cf the most frightful crimen In the history of that state has Just some to light. Three sheep herders named Felipe R?mr)s. Z *vta G litterrz and J oan Ob ritz, after being robbed )f tbelrtlock', were literally skinned ilive; then their quivering bidlrs wero thrown on an Immense brush ?eap ar:d incloera'ei, by a bind of iesperadoos which has been operating in the neighborhood cf Corral* s, northwest of t,h?re. in r.i>? fr mhiiiu ..f the Sierra M?,dre mountains The detail* are related by D tmlnico de Ljoli, who was one of the four le'derh attacked tu the vicinity of Jorraies the morning of Sunday. He fay ?: ' MyRclf, Itimos, Gulfcfcerrz and OboJez bad per for j ed our morning devotions within the sound of the church Delis of Gorrales Sunday morning. Tne jther three lay down at the slope of a round to take a siesta, while 1 went nto the hills In search of a stray amb. Wherv 1 returned within a quarter of a mile of the place where 1 i.id left my three companions, b'oodjtrrtllnc cries reached my ears, and 1 recogotz d the voices of my dearebt. 'rtfcnd.i shrieking In frightful agony. Dropping the lemb 1 had been carry eg, 1 uurrt.d foward, keeping well .vi bin the shadow, until 1 reached a jolno where I could s? e a 1 thus, was jolng on and s'lll not be seen. "The scene I witnessed was horrl )le. A ic ire of brigands, armed with (mis and long knives, wild, th rceooking fellows, were dancing around is though intoxicated. About a score iicre wt re paths ed arcund ihe protrale, naked bodies of my former com >anlons, who had be*, n stripped of cv,ry stitch of clothing. The s? cmd ja- g of brlgans were engaged in agin leg Rami z, Gulteiez and Obedtz ilive, with large siiivts. "The cries of the unfortunate men nade me heartsic k and I thought two ir t.hrpp. V.lnr?? 1 nr in.? fui>^ ?..* ?i ~ .a. KIUI1V irnUUi JDUU IL O rightful sight faolnated me and 1 jrcpt near or and n? arer, until I c mid tear the brigans demanding the hldng place of their victims money. Toe attor declared before God that they iacl none F ch denial brought forth nuro torture for them. Finally c fleeting a heap of brush, the brigands vavirig bound the three herders hand* uid feet, threw them on the heap ar d lit tire to It, watching the flames iC"roh and hum the quivering flesh md laugoir g vet the sarleks of ai:julih wruug from the tortured souls if rav companions. "Toe brig'nc7s remained Cuntil all was still when corralling the she?. p ny owu among them, they drove i,bw m In a northwesterly direction toward the mountains. For myself when the devils departed, I tried to rise but fell hack, fainting dead i way. "At nightfall I was discovered by :he parish priest of Corrales, who was >n bis way to a sick call to a herier named Fernandez Gorsalvos." I1aIi*?<-<1 liltllHOif. A speolal fre m Mouticcllo, 111., says lhat the dead body of William DaGn.f, an arred director of the First Nittonal Brnk of Manstleld, wee fi uud hap^ln^ In bis home at Manstkid, today, he having committed suicide The reason as l^md fur the deed is tnat the yrand jury is on the eve of an examination of the uonr.ltion (f the bank on report that i700,000 has been embezzled. W. O. Fairbanks, pre ldent, and L. M. Fairbanks, another director of the bank, are b others of Vice Pre ldent Fair w...* - # 4-1-.. j utu nn ?.i i/iif- U III I'O Mi'iU S. A lliut to ttoyw The boy woo haves his money pome r ay owns a farm of his or beoomes a banker, the m rc .&ut, the profesi-ion1 m*n. Toe boy who never havts a 3 :nt. makes the man who ''earns bis breid by the sweat of lils brow ;" woo n *vpr owns a h< me or enj 03 s the luxuries of life. lie always has a kick c inlng, and r? ver lets a chance to slok go by. Everything goes wrong vvlth him?wnen he is a man Parents should use every pothole means to make graduates of economy of the bo>s aid girls. A Ileal Tragedy. At Denver, Cal., Mrs. C. L. fielder leaving her seat In a box at Thursday's matinee In the Crystr.l Palace Theatre, made her way to the stage and after tl mrlshlng a revolver In foil view of the audience shot, herself Inflating a fatal wound. Tho audience ti ought the shooting part of a bui!<* q ?e act and made no outcry until the screams of the performers In the w ngs brought a realization that a real tragedy had been enacted. *earad \ * 4 <r\p aiiiiVM> THfeM KIliHT TUK TWO PIOKI'OCKKTSOKT TEN YE VliS APIECE. fr'chultz and Beckwith Convicted and tent to the Penitentiary for a Decade, Tie Sta-e of ^hu'sday says Joseph Schul z and A.J. Hock w 1th, alii us A. J. Katauaugh, Uo of the pickpockets arretted at the fair grounds on Wednesday of fair week, were convicted on Wednasiayof last week and sen tunc d to ten yearn' penal servitude The jury re ohed a verdict in about 15 minutes. The ineu were returned to Jk.il Taursday night aud so far as kuov.u uo further < tTort .vill be made to delay tno execution of their sentence. A great deal < f Interest was manifested lu this trial and the verdict of the j jry aud the sentence of theoouri met with an expressed approval whereever it was auuouuced. Shultz and Kavanaugh were arraigned and a jury drawn junt before the adjournment cf court cf Tuesday afternoon. Wednesday morning the case w.iscilied as soon as court convened aud the entire forenoon was devoted to hearing tLe testimony. Too t alimony was practically the same winch was brought out at the preliminary hearing a few days after their arrest in OjColer. Neither of the defendants wa,s put upon the stand, nor was any other evidence offered by the defense. The afctorueyu for the defense had little upon which to b i?e their arguments and the conviction of the mju seemed to be a forg >ue conclusion. Tn. testimony showed that there was a gang of nine of these plckpock els operating together at the fair grounds and t.he ueteotlves ou duty there watched them operating in the uiuv?ur> tut.; sijrci'ii car exits met tvheu boarding the cars. Tuey were surrounded by a numher of 0 til cor 8 after all of them had been spotted and four were arrested and taken to the tlloe of Magistrate Kiley at the fair 1 grounds. While the pickpcckel.8 were in the otlloe a disturbance wasc.eaied by a drunken outsider and one of the , four d'-ved through an open wludow and made Ids escape. An old negio man In charge of an outoulldlLg called H o attention of the ! detectives to the faol that several of these men, two of whom he later 1 identified as Shultz a* d Beokwith, 1 had cuter* d the house and buried s v 1 oral pocketbooks. A search showed that the men bird dug a hole, p'ac d the pock books In it aod c iver< d t.u m with dirt. A few mlnuf s la?.er they were uuearthed and nine purses, from 1 which the money hid been tuken, v/cre found. ( The ens" upon wldoh the men were, tried was for robbing D. J. (lault of ( Union. There are four other cases against Sbultz and li vq against Beckwlth. After sentence had been pro- . nounced the solicitor moved that the other citei against the prisoners be , placed on the continued docket.. Neither Sohult z nor Beck with would have anything to say after their coiiuinl l/iri Kiit I . ~ ?- - J ??J .iuiiuii, tin u r'tlU IU a null y UU<U I ttJJU only asked 1?0"/ Roon they wou.d be sont to begin i-betr Renterc. A fur arriving at the j II they talkod much In wblhpf rs, but would noi allow any one else to War t.|? . v nation Dont d;Cut>o you.* n if you have Indigestion to-.ko K.fcol D??popela Our?. lw wiil rait? w y? u. EUv. W. i? ILscu.t, South Midi N. C., r<a>?; 4,I <*a? troubled wt?h ehroolo iniigee Uou for tevwai y?*r*; whatever 1 **e Boomed to cairn# haaatura, ?our stomach flUiiWflog of nay hi art, gener?J d^prewitoii or ivlnd and body. My riruggtat rooommnr.Kl?<i Kodol, and lb his rruievtd me. I ran now e**> anything and gloep soundly at nlgut Kcxlol Digeelts what you eat. Conway Drug Co. Uuraod. At an early hour Wednendav morning the Infant child of Mr. John B. uie^ry, or the Trinity scoilonof Newberry county, was fatally burneo, th< child sutcuaiblnK to the h juries at noon. The child wee playioK before a tire In the house, the mother beirv ubsint from the ro* m at the time. 1. some way the clothes of the litth boy caught tire and t ofore the ti . me> could be extinguished the body ban been teiribly burned. Death rellev.r the little fellow from his soft ruiK aabout 11 o'cl ck i f tbe r-ame day. A roan who onoe had rot j<h horry hand'* made them soft and arcooth with Wifcoh Hazel S&lve but he um iJ k muur-vnw Glaring tne nsnr e "E. C DoWltl & Co 01 ego." F sores, bolls, cu burns, biulses, o o it baa no (qua!, and affords almo tmmell&te rell* f from bl nd, blc lug, l ot ing and po rudtr.g P:lt 8. Sola by Oonway Drug Co. They naver gripe or sicken, but o'aanefl and strengthen the stomach, lircr end bowels This In the. untfr sal verolot of many thousands wi o use Do Witt's Little K rly Theee faccout Untie pills r?l ret.n ache, constipation, bilious-><**4, )*ui dice, torpid liver. sail w e< mpii xlu eto. Try Little Ea'ly Itl-ors. Oonwu) Drug Oo 11 The new 0>>ugn Syrup--the one that acts as a mild carib&rlio on the bowels ?Is Kennedy's Laxltlve Honey and Tar. It expels all cold from th?> system, outs the phl*gm outcf th*' throat, strengthens the muoous mem branea of the bronchial tubes, and re I li^ves croup, whooping cough, etc Children love it. Sold by Conway Drug Co. |auJ f BANK OF CON W> CAPITAL STOCK, $20,(XK).00 TOTAL ASSE1 OFFIt H. G. COLLINS, Pu m dint. C. P. QUATTLERAUM, V-Puia. Our Rank, being a local institut building of Horry County and for th< vming this policy wo take pleasure in accommodation whan consistent with With gratitude for the liberal cordially solicit your future buaineee Reepeclfu D. A. SPIVE liobt. 11. Scarborough, H. I President. Vice-F BANK OF Conwjr ? Capital Stock 1)1 REC Robt, II. Scarborough, Hal L. Duck, GeorgoJ. Holliday, We will pay you 5 per cent, intei iali Havings banks to those wishing Try our plan for saving your nicklos these little banks and the interest we help yon. THE "HU ' OrfiT f'j-j/'l C^dim This brand on a shoe means The best for j/nor money call J. TO. IV Fatally Injured. Ml<*s Mary Lee, ri?u/liter of the late Colonel R'chfcrd Lee, atid * near relative of Gonerul Ribert. E. Lsp, was probably fatally 1r jured In a runaway accident near Winchester, Va., Wednesday. She was driving a thorough red borne, which took fright and ran away aud Rhe was thrown out of the buggy, landing on her hrad and Hbould'irs. Reports from her horrte near If >ycc Clark county wsy tl ere la little chance of her recovery. All old time (JougQ bjrupa bind tbe horvelR. This 1? wrong. A new lee* >vr?j advanced two Tears ago In Kann*dy'H L&iltiv? lb noy and Tar. Thla remedy ao*eon 4ho mucous membrane# of the tliroat and lungs and looems the bowsls at the wme ttcee. It opels all oold from tbe syateui. It o'ears the throat, flfcrengtnans th# mucous membranes, relieves ooughs, colds, "roup, whooping cough, etc. S I by Conway Prim Co. SIm p ()ut<loorH. "Sleep out of doors If you want to know the wild J.ty of living," wa.s the arlv e kI vi n to society women by Mrs. Blanche C. Martin, an apost'e of outdo or life, in Now York recently. It 'h a cure for many diseases. She wear-* just a simple white linen or irusl'n right- g<>wn and Is warm even at 20 below /to But don't start the habit when a is Lbt.i o dd. Just a little Kodol after meals will relieve that fulness, bf.lehlr-g, gas on I stomach, and all other symptoms of indigestion. Kodol defeats what jcu cat, and auabl?s tht stomscli and diirnative organ* to perform their functions naturally. Conway Drug Co. I THE BEST | I rascniE S1 I fo* WOMEN 1 If you aro nervous and tired out E continually you could have no I, clearer warning of tlio approach I of serious female troublo. Do not wait until you Buffer un- lj bearable p$in before you seek treat- fc merit. ^ ou need W ino of Cardui now just an much as if the trouble p were more developed and the tor- r taring pains of disordered men- E struation, bearing down pains, ft r leucorrhoea, backache and le ad- rj ache were driving you tolhoun- fm IB :i n~e ? ' i ? inning runiM 111;n >v ino 01 i ..arum MB lias brought hundreds of thousands Q of women and will bring you. "Wine of Card a i will cfrivo out H ' all trace of weakness and banish Pi nervous snol! i, headache and back- IJ ache ami prevent the symptoms ; I from quickly developing into dan- H gerous troubles that will be hard to check. Secure a $1.00 bottle of H Wine of Cardui today. If your H dealer does not keep it, send the ] money to the Ladies' Advisory f ! Dept., The Chattanooga Medicine J ; Co., Chattanooga, Tenn., and the I medicine will bo sent you. WlME 2f\ CARDUI J s CONWAY. w, s. o. SUURPLUS FUND, $20,(XX). \s, si8o,ooo.oa 1ERS' D. A. SPIVEY, Cashibi. M. W. COLLINS, AKST. Casfiikr ion, bat always striven for thafu{>9 Inittennenl of her citizens. In perextendiug to oer customers evsry sound banking. patronage received in the past, vro lly your* ^ V Cash IE:R j. Ruck, Will A. Freeman, 'resident. Cashier. ' HORRY, y. S, C. $25,000 TORS: W. R Lewis, W. A. Johnson, Will A. Freeman, rent on yearly dopositH. W ill furnl to open Hinall 'aceounta with us. and dimee, and you will find that wili pay you on your navingH wiLl B " SHOE. f3OTS^i^^| something! If you want for <4The Huh. For sale by icliol?. : i . . ; . jb.' T?rgi Professional Cards. McCord & McCord, SURGEON DENTISTS, \ Conway, S. C. Ha*~Over Bank of Horry. Rr5T^CA]RTR0UGIh CONWAY, S. C., ATTORNEY AT LAW. T. T V r t-v r~l- n? burroughs, Physician and Surgeon, Con^y^SjC^ H. H. WOODWARD, Attorney and Counselor atLLaw, |( ON W A Y, S. C. BTwoSJrd Wait! ATTORNEY AT LAW Conway, S. C. Office in Spivey Building. Dr. C. 8. Deitz, DENTIST. Conwav. S C. ?+ T ?. ~" Koom No. 4, Spivey Building. Conway, Coast and Western R. R. I)AII Y SCHEDULE. | KAST BOUND. Lv Conway 9-00 a. m Lv P'u* Inland 9:30*. m. Ar Myrtle Beach 9:45 a.tm WEST BOUND. Lv Myrtle Beach Vr P ne 1 land Lv Conway Conway Market Fresh Meats and^Sau- ? .. J sage always on hand. Orders are taken and promptly delivered AW Geo. L. Majjj; Fropretor. Livery nlt^/ i * i