The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, November 29, 1906, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

^ ' > CONWAY IRON WORK& Workers of Iron and^Wood. THE OLD BUILDINGS AND MACHINERY WERE DESTROYED r BY FLAMES LAST SPRING. WE NOW HAVE A New Building, New Machines, New Determination;* that with the better and more complete equipment we now have to torn out Wood and Iron Work, neatly and promptly, When you need a Blacksmith give us a call. You will had Mr. Dozier alwavs rpnriv ? to vonr wants ?t/ _ . .MMJ VVS UUIVIIU CONWAY IRON WORKS. 1 NORTON BISCUIT | Prevent and Qnre. c A medicine lliat will prevent chilis antf^cver and other malarial affections, as well as cure those ailments, is absolutel.y needed at this season of the year There are jF many preparations made abroad and put on the market, ^ but the people prefer a remedy made at home, a remedy ^ prepared under the prescription of a home physician and the result of his long experience in this part of the country. Such a remedy is ^ NORTON BISCUIT < They are guaranteed to cure. Put up in convenient form and arc easy to tako ??.? ??i\j 1^1 . iiurtuu s oww presbription, and experience with them in a long practice shows them one of the best remedies ever invented for chills and malaria. Try them; if they do not do the work, ? your money wil be refunded. ^ ^FOR SAf.R 1!Y EVERY STOREKEEPE""h?JJ THE COUNTY^ ^ Norton Drug Co. ^ j Why? [ ?^? I J Because we give every customer i | a big dollar's worth for their $1 ? ( TAK5 great pleasure in calling the attention of the pub-Jtc lie to the fact, that I am now prepared to supply your r ^ wants. My Stock of GROCERIES is strictly First Class'J J /aCD an(* always Fresh. Our Line of Crockery is as nice as P 34^ ever struck the town, and our prices are always right S_. Our Line of CLOTHING is strictly of to date in every m respect, and was bought so we can sell at the right price. P , OUR SHOES AND HATS i ARE NOT SO CHEAP | I BUT JU?T WHAT YOU ARE LOOKING FOR I jJOS. D. OLIVER j Jc ALL AMD SEE WllllN YOU COME TO TOWJVW / . . ...... I FINE SHOFft I la m m I FOR FALL & WINTER I WE GUARANTEE OUR SHOES TO GIVE ENTIRE SATISFACTION AND THE VERY LATEST STYLE. CL O TH I NG I MY CLOTHING DEPARTMENT IS COMPLETE AND WOULD I RE GLAD TO HAVE YOU CALL AND LOOK OVER SAME. I YOU WILL FIND JUST WHAT YOU ARE LOOKING EOR, I ^ fre8^ nn(* complete line on hand and at I ^^^^^'^'^5*A?fSirea8onable prices. I3e sure to call to see me be| fore making your purchases. R. T. HARMON y I COMMERCIAL HOTEL CORNER HYMAN'S BREAD ALWAYS FVesH and Wholesome FAMILY GROCERIES from the daitiest goods to the most substancial. When yon Select from ^ny stock you may he sure you are getting the best and that it is fresh. B. T. HYMAN. AtU u G?n<? of flaita. The ants which are really protective i to plants are not those which obtain their food, Indirectly for the moat part through the aphides, from the vegetable kingdom, but those which are really carnivorous. These are numerous In temperate climates, and their usefulness to agriculture and sylviculture Is Incontestable. Thus the field aut Is a great Insect destroyer. A nest of this species Is capable of destroying as many as twenty-eight caterpillars and grasshoppers a minute, or 1,000 an hour, and such a colony is at work day and night during the pleasant season. In the arid plains of America tho beneficent work of ants is revealed In the Isles of verdure around their hills. There are plants hospitable to ants, which furnish them shelter and often food, within the cavities of which the lnstlucts of the ants prompt them to take their abode. This Is tho case with several ferns, among them the rolypodlum nectarlferum, the sterile fronds of which bear nectaries on their lower face and are, moreover, of n shape favorable to sheltering the Insect. Sign of a Trained Name. "I used to wonder why it was that I noticed so ninny young women lugging suit eases all over town." said tho man on the street corner. "At first I thought perhaps they were Independent young persons who were ou their way to the Grand Central station or to the ferryboats to take trains, but then I no tlccil tliem In parts of the town where they couldn't possibly be making for a railroad station, since they were going in the wrong directions. 'Now I have learned who these women are. Most of them are trained nurses. When they leave the hospitals or their homes to attend a case they pack their unlforms and other necessaries In these ' suit cases, which they carry with them. So when you see a young woman carrying a suit case and bound In a direction nway from a boat or railroad station It's very likely she's a trained nurse and Is either starting out to attend a case or is returning from one." ?New York Tress. Colon* of flie Illuelilril, Of the male bluebird Thorcau said, "He carries the sky on his back." To this John Burroughs added, "and the earth on his breast." The bird's back, wings and tail, chin and throat are a vlvkl blue, while his breast and flanks are a chestnut brown and his abdomen a dirty white. The female is very much duller in coloring, often having a reddish tone that extends from the middle of the batk over the shoulder. The Bcmtnole Indians say that the male bluebird once flew ho high that his back rubbed against the sky, which imparted to him Its own azure tint. Returning to earth, his wife so admired his new coat that she determined to have a like one for herself and the next morning flew away to get It, but the day proving somewhat cloudy tho color given to her dress was not so brilliant as was that received by her mate. The World aa It la. A world without mistakes and without suffering would be a world without real men and women, without literature, without music, without painting or sculpture and without love, and even without history, for history Is a record of struggles toward better and higher things. Without obstacles to overcome and errors to correct men and women would lapse to a level with beasts In mentality. Intellectual and spiritual development would cease and souls not refined by the fire of ordeals would die of something akin to fatty degeneration. The races would perish of ennui or Inanity. After all, It's a pretty fair sort of world as It stands. ?Louisville Courier-Journal. The Aleutian Ialandn. Until the time of Peter the Great the Aleutian Islands were unknown. Tho famous Russian monarch, consumed with curiosity as to the distance between Asia and America, started, In 1725, the first of tho expeditions that at last revealed those haunts of the bear, the beaver, tho ermine and the seal. But Captain Cook told more about tho Islands than did all the Russian explorers before him. The Price. If one sets one's heart on tho exceptional, tho far off?on riches, on fame, on nnwor Um nhnnn/iH ??/? " . , rw IrUV VUUUVCO aiu lie will bo disappointed. He will waste his time seeking a short cut to these things. There Is no short cut. For anything worth having one must pay the price, and tho price is always work, patience, love, self sacrifice?no promise to pay, but the gold of real service. HIm N?me. An unpopular man who was refused membership In a certain aristocratic club had the audacity to write to the club secretary demanding the name of uie inun wno macKDauea film. The secretary could not resist the chance of sending the following reply: "Sir, I have received your letter demanding the name of the man who blackballed you. His name Is Legion." All Aronad the Clock. "Grandpa says his stay In the mountains last summer did him no good. His room was right off the piazza, and people made love under his window until all hours." "But couldn't he sleep after the lovers went to bed?" "No; as soon as the lovers went to bed the children got up." ? Harper's Weekly. Twai Ever Thai. "I suppose you havo found," said the plain citizen, "that every man has his price." "Yes," replied the lobbyist, "except the man who is worth buying."?Philadelphia Press. _ ROTH? THE I NO SALESMEIV We have over Because we sel SPRING CORIN You pay $2.50 where else. W OUR ROTh Ifor $2.90 Expi ommended by ROTHSC 1 >V1 TAX NOTICE. Consvay, October 15, 1P05. Public notice is hereby givou that State, County and School taxes in I lorry county for the fiscal year l!KM5, will be due and payable at this office and other places designated below, from October 15 to December HI, accord in l' to the following tax levy IN A I.I. Til K COUNTY. For State . . . 5 mills For County 5J mills For School . .. H mills For Court House.etc.,bonds 1 mill In Conway, Bayboro, Simpson Creek, and Green Sea townships: For payment of loan by the State Sinking Fund -1 mills In School "District No. IP, (Burroughs) For Special School H mills School B'ldg Bonds 2 mills In School District 11 ^Socastee): For Special School 4 mills In School District 7(? (Toddvilie) Jboropeeial School rf nulls The Tax of Three Dollars in commutation of road duty during 1007, will be receivable at this olliee until March 1, 1007. Stalvey Thursday, Nov. 15, from 8 to 0 a m Marlow Thursday, Nov. 15, from 12 to 1 i) m Klondyke Friday, Nov. lfi, from 10 to 11 a tii Dongola Friday, Nov, 10, from I to 2 p m Sanford Monday Nov. 10 10 to 12 a m Loris Monday Nov 10 5 to 7 pm Loris Tuesday Nov 20 8 to 10 a m COKWAY. COAST & WESTERN 11 IN KFVKCT JULY 11, lOOO. DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY. KOTTIIBOUNI) TRAINS No 7 No 5 No 9 Lv Aynor Lv lola 8 50 a m Lv Conway 1 50 p m 9 50 a ni 0 15 p.m Lv Burcol 2 20 p in 0 45 p m ArM Bench 2 35 p in 7 00 p in NORTHBOUND TRAINS No 10 No 0 No 8 Lv M Bench 0 45 n in 2 50 p in Lv Burcol 7 00 a m 3 05 p m Lv Conwnv 7 30 n m 8 00 a m 3 35 n in Lv Iola 8 40 a m Ar Aynor Close connections at Conway for Chadbourn. For Quick. SALE! Kiulitcen and One Hull' . Acre* ol* llltfti l'|?liniid Suitable I'or llulldlng Lots. Just outside the Corporate Limits of the town of Con way, part of the estate of the late YVm. P. Melson, dec'd. This land should be worth, as an investment, $100.00 per aere but it will be sold much lower than this to elTeet a quick sale. It lies near the Conway & Georgetown road, bounded on the north by Nellie Adams, east by Miss Galbraith, west by% W. P. Melson, and south by It. G. Melson. Some of it cleared CALL ON OR WRIT PI H. H. Woodward CONWAY, S. C. 5CHILD & FIVE QUART HOUSE. I NO AGENTS NO EXPENSE. 4 thousand customers WHY? 1 5 quarts of our famous "ROCK I" for FVDDFQQ fHT r PPT 1 v a ^ i v I l \ VV7LwL^L^ V A I ' a gallon for this quality any- I e sell you five quarts for $2.00 I iSCHILD RYES full quarts I 'ess Paid. This whiskey is rec= I physicians. NONE BETTER, 1 WWW* p, 4"^ ft. Tin: FIVK QUART p 'HIJUU '?&, iiounk ) liMITVOTC>>, IN. O. | MEW a? C* ? ? E> S TI1 10 SAM K OLD STAND THE SA M E OLD FIRM THE SAM 10 OIjII REPUTATION BUT! We have nothing else old except a few odds and ends that are rapidly going at any old price. Every 1Tiirilv else New New hats, now shoos, now clothing, now hosery, new shirts, collars and tics. Newest designs in dress goods, laces etc. New furniture, new customers, renewed energies to oloasnour customers, em* em*** e.-.* ply full of new thingsYes we have the goods and there is more corning. We bought to sell and not to keep. Wo have graded carefully our pet notion of keeping the ?|uality up, and have spared no pains in making our prices attractive. We are in a position to save vou money. CALL AND LOOK OUR STOCK OVER BEFORE YOU BUY. Burroughs & Collins Company i nil mm unuTrn niiuniiiinriiriiT i ! I MIL HIIII MNItK flNNUUIUNI! j Wo take pleasure In announcing tc ?"r customers ami ho public generally that wo have B opened up a very complete and attractive linoof seasonable gootls suited to the want* B of the trade, and which we uro offering at reasonabl prices- B OUR.GROCERY DKPARTMENT, J Consisting of Corn, Crist, Meal, Flour. Iiacon, Lard, Sugar, Coffee. will bo B found complete and all sold as cheap as same quality can bo purchased elsewhere. ? NO BARGAIN DAYS OR SPECIAL SALES, I to work off old stock and rubbish as we have none of that class of goods on hand, but B we are selling the goods all the year round at Close prices. Crude Turpentine and ail ^ kinds of Country Produce purchased at full maiket value. We fully appreciate the B very liberal patronage with which we have been favored in the past and respectfully ask w I a continuance during 1U06. B DUSENBURY & CO. I |todi )\ jllio, s, q j | a: j. bass | c Dry Goods Clothing Shoes i c Hats Groceries Etc. i ^ The highest market prices paid for Country Produce. Vog- ^ ^ etables in season. The Host Goods. The Cheapest Prices. ?r y 1 .