The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, December 22, 1910, Second Section, Image 5

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I* j I Second Section. If- ? l VOL XXIV. I = I I QKrlsima I the year I I For you and I cheer. . The Spirit of Christmas. Rembember them that are in bonds, as bound with them; and them which suffer adversity, as bein# yourselves also in the body.? Hebrews, xiii, 3. Stop a moment in your early holiday planning and working, to listen to a little story that is true. The scene is the interior of a big prison in this very city. A man who helps manage the institution is walking along one of the corridors. He came to a cell in which a man and a woman are crying bitterly, and the guard standing near has wet eyes also. ' What is the matter? ' he asks the guard. "She has come to tell him their child is dead and there is no money for the funeral. The undertaker wants $75 and they have nothing." The man who asked the question walked into the cell. He did not say anything, but put his right hand in his right trouser pocket, counted off the needed sum from the roll of bills taken out and gave it to the woman. Then he walked on down the corridor. Vao ko oniilfl nffnrrl fn rln it. hilt. UV. ~ - -> I that is not the point. He wanted to help. He remembered those in bonds as bound with them, And at this time of year, when somehow the heart grows more responsive to things worth while, we should not forget those who are in bonds. Barred walls do not the on ly prisons make. Anything that shuts out the common light from: life binds to some sort of imprison- 1 ment, and surely the Child of Bethlehem has taught us how to help those who sit in darkness; those who are still our brothers though strayTed from the path. And now, another little story that is true. There is a certain public school in Philadelphia where many poor children come to be taught. One day, the wife of a certain politician hap pened to visit ohis school, and she was impressed by the hunger that showed in the faces of many of the children. Quietly she hunted up their homes and found that many of them went to school each day without breakfast. She said nothing, but in a little while the old woman who kept a lunch stand on a nearby corner ^ began coming to this school every morning at recess time, and she always brought a big basket of thick sandwiches, which she gave to certain of the teachers, who in turn saw that they were delivered where ! needed. j To this day not one of the teachers has ever been told the name of the woman who did this, but they know who she was, for after she died a few months ago the sandV* wiches stopped coming. Which would be very hard on poor children like these were it not that it opens the way for others to carry on the work so beautifully begUQ. As we busy ourselves with Christmas lists and Christmas buying, let us think first of those who need our help; of those to whom our gifts are far mere than expressions of love or friendship already known and better evidenced in ways other than giving. Let us think of those to whom Christ would give, if He were here among men! ? Pniladelphia North A morinan. iJk U4V ? v TAKEN UP?There has taken up at my place one white barrow. Own- 1 er can get him by proving property < find paying expenses. W. S. Beaty. < ' Inc" i hi is comes but on' I yours we wish go< In Loving Memory. On July 1(1 h, 1010, the d ath and ge 1 visited the homo of Mrs and Mr. I W. E. Williams and took away their j darling little baby, William Brooksy. j He was a sweet little one. On, how ; hard it is to part with our dear lit-! tie ones that we love so well. Little Brooksy suffered what no j tongue can tell but he bore his pain patiently. Little Brooksy was spared to live but a short while when Jesus called him to go and stay with him in that sweet and happy home on high where we all hope to meet some sweet day and be with our loved ones. Little Brooksy was one year and three days old when he fell asleep in the arms of Jesus His little body was laid to rest the following day in the Williams cemetery in the presence of a large crowd of sorrowing friends. Grace Stephens. Clarendon, N. C. Respect the Lord's House. Editor Herald: I am now fifty years old and went to chuc.h on last Sunday night to hear preaching and mere wurc &u inauty ? >? um > people misbehaving that I went home. I do hope that when our people tfo to church the}7 will respect it as the Lord's house and keep it ever sacred. Mary Lewis. Nichols, S. C. LOST?A black dosr about one year old, brindled legs and sharp i.iose. Notify me at Nix >nville, S j C., and I will pay a reward of $2 00 and call for him. J. V, McDowell /UZIANNEW COFFEE | Good with mill<^ de.lic.ious with pure sweet jfj'gp | cream. Blends j>erfectly with either losing no part of its flavor. Its guaranteed to IgM please. Try it. >t |||/ ^B^rT^^IL^W^Col ^1,1 NEW ORLEANS,U.S.A. IflHSsSyil Reward. Of twenty five dollars will be paid nr?r?ri nrpasf unH mnviM.inn nf nnv i v. f-r vr u ?. t vw. ?..? .7 | one for selling whiskey wiue or anything that will cause drunkenness within two miles of Carolina church . C. C. Whittington, ( Levi Grainier, Luke Watts. Church Trustees. J. C. Whitting, For School. ( L. J* Clewis, of Conway, is at Mt Tabor putting up some buildings J for C. D, Elarrelson and has con- ' traded for one for B. B. Anderson. The ground has already been broken for the latter and it will be push- ] ed to conpletion. c / Mm CONWAY, S. C., THURS And further wish tc not only for the little f AMONG THE Manicure and shaving sets Military brushes and toilet s< Ebony and other hardwood h mirrors HO Post cards and photograph bums. Handsome boxes of stationei Dressing combs, brushes comb and brush sets. _ Cathedral chimes--they ring JU. and gladness to the he refreshment to the inner i (Cut glass and silver, powder puff boxes, baby sets. Jewel and trinket cases We invite you to call i 8 IIU UU Keeping Cabbage In Fall. Enrly in December turn each head over to the north and bank the Roil . over the stem and base of the head, leaving merely the top exposed. Some make the mistake of turning the heads south, and the heads will be certain to get damaged, for the stem and base of The head are the most tender parts, and these will be to the north, while the morning sun will strike the open head to the south when frozen and damage it, says Progressive Farmer. The Corn Knife. A good corn knife makes the work of cutting corn easier. One with a strap for the wrist relieves the ache wonderfully. The Hum of the Hive. Economy in the use of foundation is wasteful, and it is a poor practice to put first strips or slatters of foundation in the section boxes, for it is an indisputable fact that a full sheet of foundation in each section box means not only their ready acceptance by the bees, but also the building of straighter combs. By selection and restriction in the matter of queens we can improve our bees just as we can other stock, and mere is aiways present in every apiary some choice queen far ahead of the others which will give us most excellent queens for requcening. Don't keep bees unless j?u mean to give them the proper care and attention. If you can't do that you had better leave some one else keep the bees and buy your honey from him. A man who knows "all about bees" and does not believe that anything more can bo gained by reading bee journals, books 011 bees, etc., will soon be far behind the age. The present Improved system of management requires that hives should not : stand too near each other. There should be at least six feet between them, and ten feet would be a preferable distance. Bo sure that your bees have a good, prolific Italian queen and the ants will Pot bother them. Old Fashioned Oratory. "We don't have no slch forensic ora- . lory as we used to have," said the old sotiicr. "lawyers nowaday?: oon't orate. Tbey only Just talk. "Take old Bill K. Slmmons\ of Eau Clair. If Rill was defendin' n lowly ehlekon thief he'd speak with the tongue of nngols. I'll never forgit tho peroration of his Impassioned philippic In the Clay Bull case about the poisoned cat. It runs like this here." The little, thin old man rose, reared back in a defiant attitude and shouted ? In the cracked treble of age: . " 'Restiu' upon the couch of republican liberty as I do, covered with the blanket of constitutional panoply as I am and protected by the aegis of Ajnericau equality as I feel myself to be, I despise tho buzKln' of the professional inseck who has just sot down and defy his attempt to penetrate with puuy sting tho interstices of me Impervious coverin'.' "?New York Press. Ilctppinena In Marriage. It all comes around to one of two ( things. With all married couples who ilffer in habit, in taste, In opinion, in J mode of life, if there is to be any happiness somebody has to learn to give up or give up miuding that there is a [lifTerence. Either way is as good na the other. It is surprising bow many things are not of any importance It one can only think they are not.?Har? ? per's Bazar. . |. Henry Grantham, of Galiyants ^ ?erry, was a pleasant caller one lay last week, r ? DAY, DECEMBER 22, 1910. \ > remind you that we can materia oiks, but for every member of the Et S' from our well assorted stock MOST POPULAR $1.00 to $5.00 its $1.00 to $20 00 We arc Agents f< tand ^ ?0SE hill grei and can furnish you with y* all kinds on short and joy NUNNALLY'S arJ i FRESH by ] 75c to 53 00 EVERY WEI 9 and see our stock of pretty Holiday Goods?all 1 ?B?MBMM?H3BBPHB?HHBMBBHBM MiiKI 1 aenu us < ?1 : SH We are prepare Guaran 1 Try us v 1 CHIGHESTES S PILli g | ? DIAMOND BrtAND f|Mi VV c A** j? ladies f & k your Ui>u*fftst for CHI-CHES TKR'S A IAMOND BRAND PILLS iu Red nnd/A Gold metallic boxes, scaled with Blue(*/y Ribbon. Takb no other. Buy oF your V/ Drufffilftt and ask for OlM.fHEH.THU ft V DIAMOND Hit A N l? PILLS, for twenty fivO fears regarded as Best,Safest, Always Reliable. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE S8SS Arrnnfl sending n sketch and dcsorlptIon nniy f O qutchiy ascertain our opinion froo whether an I I V Invention Is probably patentable, Communion- ? tlnnsstrlctly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents ,ir u 4 sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. yy 111 Patents taken through Muim A Co. receive tpecial notice, without charge, in the A *A VmAiiSibAu suenuik nmuiwiii. we A handsomely Illustrated weekly. T.arpeat clreolation of any sclontlllo journal. Tonus, f.T a year: four months, *L Hold by all nowsdcnlcrs. , SlflCG MUNN & 0O#361 Broadway, New York . Branch Offlco. 636 F 8U Washington, D. C. dClVCI*! " ~ - ~ suffici Christmas Piano and we no Organ Bargains. stores H"rito us at once if you want to nlaatifu present your wife and children with piCIllj a good piano or organ for a Christ- . mas treasure. Good upright pianos 111 Wfl from $i85 up, Goods organs from ? 55 to $75* When you get a piano or an organ ^ from this house jou take no chances J"j ? Terms to Suit the Buyer. tUTC D.'tt'tdelay, for only a few weeks j n rY till Ohiistmas. Address, II1J? Malone's Music House, WC COLUMBIA, S. C. _p? The Herald hopes for each each of |^11 Is many subscribers, a merry Jhi istiras. W B^Shelly was in Conway one eccntly. i 9 I! | Nine Pages. "t No 3 illy assist you in making this the best Christmas family and all your friends, by selecting your : ARE THE FOLLOWING: IBombayreed hand bags.jardaniers and work baskets 5c to $1.00 I 1 1 II 1 ut-uiiici iiciiin uiikb, ctinar unu :NHniKF^ cu^ cases? bill folds, card lillUUuLO cases and purses for ladies and gentlemen 25c to $6 00 cut flowers of We have a variety of choice cut notice. glass nappies, celery and pickle trays, 6 to 10 inch bowls $4 00 to $12 00 INDIES Oil rr *l vinrcar cruits, wine sets, ciaiik> j u^s, finger bowls, etc. I I KjXX^I'OS > Watermnns Ideal Fountain pens, iJ I*a.! er's Lucky-Curve, and Franklin Self-filling fountain per .-, the best made. jeing staple goods and at MOST REASONABLE PRICES. a c^s^ z&m &&&$ &m Hour Job Printing 1 d to do your work with a Hi tteeof Satisfaction HI irith an Order. | LL PLEASE YOU II 7e are after your trade, now, i new and up-to-date goods, retly purchased on the big mar5, in large quantities and there 5 at the very lowest prices at ch merchandise can be sold. have been too busy large and varied assortmoving to write a new ments. * tisement, and it is! enthereto say, that You are already acquaintw occupy large new ed with the lines we carry on Main street, with and we ask you to call and ' of light and the room especially look over our nch to display our complete stock of >es, Clothing, Hardware, Furnii,"Dress Goods, Groceries, Sew Machines, Crockery Ware, are always glad to serve you. troughs & Collins Co. MAIW STREET ' . V