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xjLLp (jlpA. / / IW J /Baking I I The only Baking Powi I with Royal Grape Cream ?made from grap< % Insures healthl delicious food foi home?every Safeguards your i alum and phosp WAS TK.M I'OHA Itl LY IN SANK. Chicago Woman Cast Uc|' Two Children Out of Window. While temporarily Insane, Mrs. Km ma Loftgren, 25 years old, of 327 North Albany avenue, Chicago threw her baby girl and her three-year old boy, Arthur, from the second story window of her home at 10:15 o'clock last night. Both children probably will die. The crazed woman was prevented from jumping from the window herself by ner husband, who ran into the room in answer to the boy's cries of help. Beware the geese when the fox preeches. Kennedy's Laxative Cough Syrup? the cough syrup that tastes nearly as good as maple sugar and which children like to take so well. Unlike!; nearly all other remedies, it does not constipate, but on the other hand it acts promptly yet gently on the bowels, through which the cold is forced out of the system, and at the same time it allays inhumation. Always use Kennedy's Laxative Cough Syrup. Sold by Conwa y Drug Co. Time will tell; but gossipers man-j age to tell it first. DeWitt's Little Early Risers, the famous little liver pills. Sold by Conway Drug Co. iobf.rt b. scarborough, h. President. 1 BANK OF Conwa1 ? CAPITAL STOCK SURPLUS LIABILITY OF STOCKHOLDERS. SECURITY TO DEPOSITORS DIREC Robert B. Scarborough, H. L. Buck, George J. Holiday, We continue to pay 5 per cent intcrei it youraccount BANK OF CON \A/ A CAPITAL STOCTf TOTAL ASSETS DIHEOH D. T. McNeill, J. A. McDe B. ?. Collins, M. W. Collins, A "Savingc Bank has recently beenc stitution. Inquire for terms and rate We wish to thank the public for th and cordially solicit their future busii D. A SPIVEY, [att ?cr oe rtadv to mvn. Pleaae send me Illustrated Catalog No. 1 FAIRBANKS, MORSE ( ... . 1 . M flu\ I Povi^^r\ J every I **Jj^ Soldier Han Amuck. A telegram received bv Hie adjutant general from Manila Tuesday announced that Private Mike Heacham, of the First cavalry, ran amuck, killing three and wounding three of his comrades, one mortally. All the killed and wounded were members of troop F, First cavalry. Details of the tragedy are lacking, but it is presumed that Henchman was insane. Kodol for Dyspepsia has helped thousands of people who have had stomach trouble. This is what one man says of it: "10. C. DeWitt & Co., Chicago, 111, Gentlemen: In 1897 I | had a disease of the stomach and bowels. I could not digest anything . I ate and in the spring of 1 902 I , bought a bottle of KODOL , and the benefit I received from that , bottle all the gold in Georgia could not buy. I still use a little occasion- , ally as I find it a fine blood purifier , and a good tonic. ]\fay >011 live long and prosper. Yours verv truly, O. N Cornell, Itoding, Ga, Aug. 27, 1906." ] Conway Drug Co. j , When you see a man advertising , 111fs virtues 11 is to Keep your aiienuon , off his real character. A his or a little cut, small snatch >3 . or bruises or big ones are healed quickly by DeWitt's Carbolized Witch Hazel Salve. It is especially good for piles. Gets DeWitt's. Sold by ' Conway Drug Co. l. buck, will a. fkreman, T'ice President. .Cashier. HOKRY, y. S, C. $ 50 000 10 000 50 000 110 000 noRS W. R. IiOwie, W. A. Johnson, Will A Freeman, it on yearly deposits, andwesolicCONWAY. vY, S. O 9 no,ooo.oo 9250,000.00. rOR8 mmott, Jno. C. Spivey, C. P. Qunt tlehaum, D. A. Spivoy, rganized in connection with our ins in this department. eir liberal patronage in the past, aess. % V. P. & Cashier. teTjackof All'Trades 8 QASOLINE ENGINE \ IpX NEW HOLLAND FEED MILL B Va Thla la tho only outfit that will 9 grind Ear Corn satisfactorily R I -If Va with small power. Tho engli<? can M - \m also be used for pumping, miw ln? wood, shelling corn, cutting H foddor, running cream separator, PI churn or washing muvhlno. Hisos M L952 from 2 II. P. nfi to 206 H. P., vor ileal, horizontal or portable. & CO., Chicago, III. I ,1 & & A PAIR OF ItOOUES Mituincd Money Cutler False Proton- ' sions and Plow It All In. A young white man by the name f Zeb Vaughn was arrested in this 1 ity and carried to Newberry bv SIut- f li IT M. N. 11 uford of that county to ,, tand trial for misappropriating n unds entrusted to him by a cotton t till in Newberry* Vaughn is charged 11 it 11 securing forty dollars front the till to take certain of his relatives i rom Orangeburg to Newberry to i ,ork in the mill. Instead of using t he money in this way Vaughn is ti luirged with using it for ilunself. t Deputy Sheriff Dukes returned d nun Newberry on Tuesday with a a oung white man named Willie h onell, who is charged with doing n Orangeburg what Vaughn is charg- |] d with doing in Newberry. Mrs. t 'aughn, the mother-in-law of r| 'atighn, the mother-in-law of Van- i ;hn. charges that she got forty dol- | urs from the Orangeburg Manufao- s uring Company nail entrusted it to , 'onell to go to Newberry and ship $ ome of her furniture from that ?. ?luee to Orangeburg and arrange \ lOine other matters up there. Instead , if doing as directed Ponell is charg- < d with appropriating the money in- i rusted to him by his mother-in-law , o his own use. ( lloneli and Vaughn are hrotherali-law, and it senims Hint they were using the same family of people to got money on from the mills. These young moil have boon committed to jai to await trial. This is a sad case, and these young men will llnd this way of raising money will not pay. They will find hard labor more honorable and profitable in the end. Fatal l<]\plosion. At Quarr, Fla., Tuesday \V. T. McDonald was seriously injured and his nine year old son was instantly killed by the explosion of several thousand dynamite caps. The boy's body was cremated, lie had just handed his father some tobacco when the explosion occurred. It is evident that Mr. McDonald cut into a cap while trimming off the copper wire from a lot of condemned material. Young <*irl Shot Father. At Duburqup, Iowa, defending her lother with a rifle. Miss Madue Fleming, 2ft years old, shot her father, Mont Fleming, in the head. lie is not expected to live. Fleming, according to the young woman's statement to the police, was about to atI * k fit lull' mnllwii. nil.nn ..I... C. .... .1 CI... Lciv< r* iiv i iiiim mi u n*;u nllV/ II It'll. Olltf was arrested but released on her own recognizance. The sympathy of the community is with the young woman. To. have perfect health we must have perfect digestion, and it is very important not to permit of any delay the moment the stomach feels >ut of order. Take something at once that you know will promptly and unfailingly assist digestion. There is nothing better than Kodol for dyspepsia, indigestion, sour stomach, belching of gas and nervous headache. Kodol is a natural digestant, and will digest what you eat. Sold by Conway Drug Co. Don't be afraid to change a man's opinion, but beh careful how you do it. Tired mothers, worn out by the peevish, cross baby have found Cascasweet a boon and a blessing. Cascasweet is for babies and children, and is especially good for the ills so common in cold weather. Look for the ingredients printed on the bottle. Contains no harmful drugs. Sold by Conway Drug Co. , The HorryHerald CONWAY, s. c. Thursday, May . 1908. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. W. E. McCORB, SURGEON DENTIST. CONWAY, 8. O. Over Bank of Horry H. H. WOODWARD Attorney and Councelor At Law. CONWAY, S. O. B. WOFFORD WAIT. Attorney at Law. CONWAY, S. C. an a n j wo iui i/iiico in apivey nuiiams. H. H. BURROUGHS Physician and Surgeon. CONWAY, 8. O. R. B. SCARBROUGH CONWAY, 8. 0. i Attorney at law. C. E. ST. AMAND, Attorney at Law Conway, 8. C, I'lUiKU TO IIOIJ) COTTON. 'I'fsidont Harris Call 1'pon the Farm- Y ers to Stand Firm. President Harris, of the State ''armors' t'nlon Friday gave out a p tatenient In which he savs: It Is (? < ?!use trade conditions .i?e In tter r a cause of necessity. Futures ran " tot be spun and woven in< > cloth, if al hey could, cotton won I I not have hi nade tills advance. p Do not let a little ad vane it; pi h e. nlluence you to sell. Hold on until he mininiuni is readied. Keiueinher lie cotton broker has sold .< ntr cat " on to the mills; now make hi n gov 1,J he minimum before he gets it to Ml eliver t*? the inanfaet urers. They al re calling him for cotton is why it ol ias advanced. a' "Now, hoys, freeze to it, an I the 1,1 irice will got right. The spot cot- r> on is in your hands, and it is yours. '? 'he other fellow is beginning 'o want " t badly now. Keiueinher, l.r?no.OO'i '( ailes short means something and tin hortage is all in your favor. h "We all know that crop conditions ire bad, not only Fast of the .Missis- K ippi, but west also. The cotton crop " s at least three weeks late and bad <1 stands, and the cold weather has h aused much replanting. Kvory day I' will have to be an ideal day from now a until the crop is made for us to dupll- ' mite the 1 i?o7 crop. ' "The Furopeun mills will need I,- t 000,000 bales more of American c<>t- i ton this year than they have been us- i ing. The Hgyptlan and India crop I is 2,000,000 bales short and they i have been getting most of that cot- < ton." i FATINC AWAY KOAPS. I i Fvperimonts Prove that Automobiles ( Are Wry Destructive. Automobiles mo road destroyers. This is the conclusion reached by the exports of the good roads department of the National Department of Agriculture and of highway experts in practically every country of the civilized world., The net results of the conclusion eventually will bo that every owner of an automobile will have to pay a tax on his machine, the proceeds of which shall go to the repairing of damages done to roads by the horseless vehicles. The good roads department is conducting a series of experiments to determine just what amount of damage is done to highways by automobiles. The experiments are being made under the direction of L. W. Page, director of public, roads, and he expects to submit an elaborate report. to the international road con- a gross, which is to be held next October in Paris. m:iti ki;s mow lands. i .Major J. .Hemphill Calls the Nevada Down. \ A dispatch from Washington to ( The State says iMaj. .1. C. Hemphill, I editor of The News and Courier, in ' the drainage conference Tuesday at- I tornoon reproved Senator Newlands i of Nevada for criticising the South, t oeilUlOl 1\UWI1II1(I? 11 ill 1 (IWIilU'll UlUl I the South before the war, because of i slavery, was strict in construction of < the constitution and a habit of mind t had descended to tills day, which un- I fortunately kept the South from be- < ins prominent in the great reclarna- I tion measures. Maj. Hemphill said that the Southern people were willing at any proper time to discuss with Senator New lands their habit of mind towards the construction but that the drainage conference was not the place for a discussion either of that question or for the resurrection of the , slavery issue, lie therefore deplored j the remarks from the senator from , Nevada. ( LOST HKH WAY And Died From Exposure and Hunger in Kona. Mrs. T. Snow Miller, siste rof the < Countess Roberts, wife of the British field marshal, died last week of exposure and hunger in the forest of Kona, on the west side of the island of Hawaii. Mrs. Miller, who was eld- : erly, had been visiting on the shore of the Kialskekua Bay, near the place where Captain Cook was mur dered. She started out for a walk . and lost her way. Her body was found on a trail only a short distance from the house. , * , UKYAN CALLS ON TILLMAN. The Ncbraskan Confers With South | Carolina Senator in Washington. The Washington correspondent of 1 The News and Courier says Hon. Wm. ] J. Bryan called on Senator Tillman on Tuesday in that city and spent some time with him discussing national politics ana tne ouiiook ror tne lormer to receive the Presidential nomination at Denvejr In July. This is significant by reason of the fact that It was almost the only call made by Mr. Bryan upon any one since he reached Washington. They Will Swing. At New .. 'cans on Tuesday death sentences were pronounced on Edward and .P'ck Pierre, negroes, convicted of murder. They are members of a sect of negro fanatics who last fall barricaded themselves in a house < and defied tho police for several ; hoars. One policeman was killed, li / WARNING TO I'OHTMASTEItS. lerchunts Resort to Tricks to Have ^ Their Packages Delivered. Information having reached the ostolllco Departnietit ?.?f certain '' icthods by which the postal laws in 'Kan! to the mailable and nntnail- ^ L>lo merchandise on rural routes m live been evaded, Kourth Assistant tn ostinaster Degruw has taken steps , ! r . i h( > prevent future evasions. In itural carriers are permitted to de- g, ver as express matter for hire, for (.| itrons of their routes, uninailahle t-, erchandise and packages of mail- tM de merchandise weighing in excer.s u| f four pounds. An example of the s( liuse of this privilege is that of a erchant w ho sent out b> rural car- |( er as extra matter a pair of shoes w > which lie added a hag of salt to p lake the package overweight and , | > avoid paying postage so that the irrier might carry tlie package for ,| ire. ,, In view of such abuses, Mr. Deraw lias issued the following state- ,, i\ lent: "All packages of merchan- . ise to he sent out by rural carriers y mercliants of tlio town should be , resented at postolllco for Inspection nd in case it is found that extraneous natter not ordered by the patrons uis been added to any mailable mater or package for the purpose of nuking such package matter nninnll- j tide, postmasters should refuse to , term it the carrier to carry any such ( natter or pack age for hire outside >f (he mails, and rural carriers ( dionld not receive any mail matter 'roni patrons as nnmaiinhle matter ' 'or hire which they suspect lias heen ( nade unmailuble hv such devices as , idopted hy the merchant referred to o. ! ? ENDS HIS OWN LITE. | Iteeause His Daughter Was Not Al- i low?*<! to See llim. ( Hecause his visits to his ten-year- 1 >1(1 daughter were stopped oy iiis di forced wife, Rudolph Wit to, a hook- 1 ceeper, sliot nlinself through tin* 1 lead in a hotel in Brooklyn, llis wife 1 ihtahied a divorce years ago and so- ( aired the custody of their daughter ( lelon. Wltte was permitted to see * lis daughter at his former wife's 11 ioiuo until recently when site mar- 1 ied again. Pleadings and letters were * Unregarded hy the former Mrs Witte. 1 t was said that the father became ( n-iiii iinmni. in1 weui hi mo Hotel iitd told liis story to a friend. Then 10 wont into another room and killed linmolf. Wit to died before a doctor irrived. , NIX 14 ('1111 jl>ltl4\ IIITTI4N ; ( !\ a Mad Dog and Sent to Atlanta i for Treatment. Nine children and a colored nurse ' voro bitten in (Iroenvillo on Thttrs- ' lay by a mad dog, and they have ' ieen sent to Atlanta for treatment. ' Hie head of the dog was sent to the 1 Pasteur Institute ;it Atlanta and it. ' .vas pronounced th;it of a mad dog. Several weeks ago another child was 1 litton and as a result of the oxami- 1 nation the offending dog was deelar- 1 3d rabid. The child was treated at he Pasteur Institute and no ill ef- 1 Feets have appeared. The dog that 1 lid the biting was apparently a harmless little Collie puppy. ? * ??????? 1 INSTRUCTS FOR BRYAN. Wyoming Joins the Triumphal Procession of States. The Wyoming Democratic State Convention Thursday selected delegates to the national convention instructed for William J. Bryan. Resolutions were adopted favoring the election of United States senators by a direct vote of the people, favoring an amendment to the Sherman antitrust law, excepting labor unions from the effect of its provisions and opposing tho forest reserve policy of the present national administra lion. , * KILIiKI) IIIS XKICaillOll In a Dispute Over lTso of Mule llus Fatal Itesult. At Rdison, Calhoun county, Oa., Thursday afternoon, Clarence C. Weaver, a well-known citizen, shot and killed Benjamin Duke, a farmer. The tragedy occurred on Duke's farm find followed a difficulty over a mule belonging to Weaver, which, it is alleged, Duke took without the owners permission. The dead man leaves a widow and four children ?nul Weaver is also a man of fam !y. Duke was about CO years old It is said be drew a knife up n '.caver. * Ify<lro|?li tin I net-casing. It, is row<i that hydrophobia is increasing . mlngly in the United States .< is the conclusion reachjd bv .eminent, experts, who have *\-p ei the subject. They say the ..o is not confined to any partic- ] .-:ir section of the United States hut ] s generally prevalent throughout tho , ountry. The report on tho subject drongly recommends that all dogs be 1 nuzzled, and the declaration is made ' hat the disease cannot be stamped ; jut until tho dogs are muzzled for a < period of several years. The experience of some European countries is 1 sited to show that only by the muzzling of dogs can the disease be absolutely eradicated. . . V ' . ,/ J III ' ri\K I I . K l,I.N CASK. hi Appeal Tak< u to tli?> United Slate* ('ourt. The State says the case of Pink rank Mil, the negro tried and collided of "milder, will he tak?n to U! I*lilted b a m Court. Tuesday oorer and Adam , i'.;e negro attort\vs repi <>sentlng ti?e do.ondu lit. oIh i I lied from Cel. f It. Itrooks, the erk of th? supsemc court, the eorllt'd copies in the ease and the hearig means that the suffrage laws of nith Carolina will bo tested. It. is aimed by the attorneys tor the <)euidant that l''raiiklln was in t grantI a fair trial and that the selection f Jurors was in violation of the eonItntfoil of tlie United States. Franklin was charged with the, illing of a constable and on tlral as convicted and sentenced to lie nig. lie was captured ishortlj ifter to hotnlcide and \\ as carried ii > i the penitentiary, tiie feeling in lie neighborhood being such that a niching was feared. lie was taken back to Orangeburg t the convening of the Sep;*- Mier crni of sessions court, and there lined on trial for murder. Mo< ver & Idrims defending hiin and inadi 'tie anie pleas upon which the case >w joes to the United States sup < mo ourt. hut were overruled l?y the limit judge presiding; but Franklin vas convicted and was sentete t to >e hanged Octolier 2 "?, 1007 'Mis ivlfe. b> the way, was tried with film, nut acriuitted.) Mooter and Adams then appealed Lo i lie State supreme court, and th f uppcaI ot course stayed (lie execuLion. The supreme court aflirmml I lilt .1,1, > tut, ?n ,vt llw> liiunr cfMtrt hnrifl iuu clown its decision March I "T; 1\ last, I?11T Chief Justice Pope 011 Marc h LMKh slaved the remittitur, upon notice from franklin's attorneys t hat a writ of error to lice I lilted States supremo court was in course of preparation. The stay of remittitur or coursa cperated to prevent Franklin s being esontenced and executed. The pacers in the case were Thursday trnns11 It.ted to the court in Washington, is before stated, and the case will low remain as it is until 'he* hearing onies on at WashiuKton on the writ cf error. At tills hearing Mower ind Adams will represent l-'ratik'.la uid the State will prohd'dy ice recrosented Icy Solicitor I'. T Ifildecrand. who is the State's attorney of ecorrt. IVIIEKE DO THE OLD PIANOS AO? rhat Is, When Tliey Oct So Old Yon Can't Give Them Away. What becomes of all the old chinos? Any piano dealer will take four (dd pin no when von wnnr n iipui mo and will allow a suhstnnt I a I jrodit on It oven If It la of another naUo. From time to time the Joal- ra announce hales of used pianos. All dealers have largo stocks of them )ii hand constantly. One piano firm has on exhibition an old fashioned square piano which was made it least half a century ago. The )lftiio bears a placard to the effect that any one who will pay tho cartAge may have It for tho asking. No 3ne has accepted the offer. Suppose no one ever takes that piano off the hands of tho dealers who want to get rid of it. What will tho dealers do with It? Obviously with rents as high as they are It wouldn't pay to store a piano you cau't give away. So tho question remains.d What, In the last stage of undcaiffcb'llty, becomes ol ull the eld piaoaitS ?N. Y. Sun. 1! f I Filling Many Wants. { One of the most useful trees In tho world is a species of palm which grows In Brazil. It might safely be railed a vegetable emporium, for 10 yields everytulng from medicine to rattle food. From the roots Is obtained a very valuable medicine which is used for purifying the blood in springtimo. Its timber takes a very, high polish, and Is much sought after by cabinet makers for fine work. The jsaji becomes wine or, vinegar, according to the treatment it receives. From tho sap, stared* and sugar are also obtained. The fruit of the tree Is given to cattle for food; the nut, around o powder, makes a good substitute for coffee, and the pith becomes bottle corks. \ Birds Tlmt Figh? Windows. "The mating Beason of the birds approaches," said a nature student, "and, if you live in a good bird country your windows will kill off many a male. Male birds In the matins season become extraordinarily bold and fierce. Houses have no terrors for them. Approaching, they ses their own reflections In the glass of the windows, and mistaking these Images for rival males, they dart Indomitably upon the glass, to fall back stunned, or bleeding, or brokenwinged. I have a south window that I can always rely on In the spring to kiu mo two birds a week. I grill them on toast." Congressman Hammond, of Minnesota, who is the only Democratic member of Congress from the Went who favors the nomination of Johnson for President, says Gen.J Mites would make au idealx running mate for Johnson. This shows how much the so-called Democrats of Minnesota feel for Southern people. Johnson and Milet'equld not get the elect or ial vote of .South) Carolina^ , ' M