The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, July 02, 1914, Image 3
!<#?YraD5WEn
^4^ \\ DITH had so brooded over
I 1 the scene when her ac1
p?tion would finally have
|| to bo taken on the matJ
??ter, that she shrank with
every nerve, suffering as
she saw that her husband had finished
\ his morning chores at the barns and
^ was coming up tho path ready for
breakfast.
"We'll have to hurry up aiul get
ready or it will be a ease of takincr
, tho other fellow'H duct all the way
Into town," ho called enthusiastically
as he stopped at tho bench outside to
wash.
The girl kept mechanically at the
pans on tho stove.
"It's going to bo a great day for
the 'Fourth,' " lie continued. "Thero
ain't a cloud in the sky." He came
in whistling to stop short at the look
oil liis wife's face.
"I guess I won't go, if you don't
mind," she said with an effort, her
face white and her eyes meeting liis
as she turned around, staring in
frightened fashion. "ICs going to bo
so hot and?besides I've been to so
many Fourth of July celebrations."
lie waited until she had placed the
dish 011 the table, the anticipation
fgone out of his
being ? an embittering
suspicion
creeping in
"Not going!" he
echoed. "And I've
been counting 011
it ever since tho
Clarion said Hampton
was going to
celebrate this year
?counting on both
of \is going in together.
It's the
lirst time since wo
! got married that
? C UCCll ?IIJwhere
together."
Instead of responding she sought
refuge nt the window. The stuffy
midsummer morning seemed to he
lending an atmospheric depression in
keeping with her spirits.
f The sickening sun was fairly bla7/ing
against the side of the big, red
Itoarn, the shadows from the row of
Willows seemed half-hearted in their
(effort to relieve the sizzling landscape,
and the fan at the top of the tall windmill
was motionless.
He crossed to where she stood and
put u sunburnt hand on her shoulder.
"You've got to tell me." he said
evenly. "I've never paid much attention
to this neighborhood gossip, but
is it true?are you ashamed to go to
town with me?"
When she still refused to answer a
hardness came into his voice as lie
went on.
"I was all right to take you home
on Friday nights when you came out
here to teach school. I was all right
to build your fires on cold, wintei
mornings. My father's farm that he
left me here was all right. It was the
farm, was it, and tlie fact, that you
were tired of teaching school that you
|| gave in to marry me? You were tired
of the small pay, and the foreign kids,
.1 i ti- ?* ?
ixn(i tntj iruuuio wnn mo directors.
That was why you married me, was
it? Other folks have been saving
these tilings. I'm beginning to believe
them now."
AVItli a sob she turned until she was
in his arms.
^ "No! No!" she hysterically defended.
"Then you'll go," ho concluded, the
tenderness coming back. "It won't bo
so hot with the top on the buggy."
Ho drew himself away to get the
answer, hut it was not forthcoming.
^ow nftflin, her
> fi'ifici-s at her lips.
) ""SlIP limw 11 wo"<? 1.0 all
1 i ii t'f'M'i light lo go in her
TSvW) 1 ipt/Jfil "Oft ?f way?to
1 \ he onlookers rntiiI
c'r than a part of
\\lfT /Alia ' K! *'lG clownishness,
s T$ fc\'? but, as a girl in
k. r town, she could
'* ^ ! S A ""V ? , i 1
r* \ ^? distinctly renninf!vl
t ii < v *)Gr coin'uK
K '1 ill I *W A ^ *a W^1 a hunch
111 'Ivl 'l/C 1/9 & of companions on
ilii Ji ii i ^ Birch occasions.
Tt. was n diffor
ent sort of man she had married?a
man in keeping with the great
stretches of Holds and the big plans
> of growing things. Hut the thought
of being dragged by him before her
iold friends from an ice-cream parlor
to a dance hall had made her decide
ERROR IN HOSPITAL NOTICE.
It is Impossible to Avoid Mistakes
jf Even on a Typesetting Machine.
In our issue of last week there was
a notice issued by the Burroughs
Hospital, and by means of the misreading
of a word therein was published
incorrectly. The word "Misses"
appeared near the beginning of
/ the notice in place of the word
A "Nurses." This error has been cor^
rected and the notice appears correctly
in the issue of this week.
The Best Hot feather Tonic
GROVE'S T/ /TELESS^ ill TONIC enriches tlr
blood, built* . up the whf t system and will wor
derfully st'mgthen and forti(> you to withstan.
. the depressing effect of the hot summer. SCc.
y
PATRIOTISM 5
P<
It Isn't the flag that floats proudest j.
Or highest above the green eaith, tl
And it isn't the cannon that's loudest
Which expresses the patriot's worth; di
It isn't the pomp or the shouting, h
And It isn't the musical bltre 8'
That leaves us no reason fot doubting ^
That the future we face shall be fair. ^ ^
Think not that vainglorious vaunting ^
Shall strengthen the might we possess, 1
And it isn't by foolishly flaunting i
Our banners that we shall progress; *.
It isn't the challenge, the fearless ^
Defiance imposingly hurled, 1,
That shall keep us undaunted and peerless, y
The wonder and hope of the world.
a
It Isn't the riches or splendor ; tl
That the few or the many display h
Which shall fit us to rule o/ engender, a
Belief in our fitness to sway; li
The faith that our forefathers gave in.
The honor for which thev cnuM HI*- tl
Alone shall have virtue to gsve us !
And keep our star bright in the sky. ?
S.E.KISER. ?
against going to the celebration when
he had first mentioned it. L
"You are ashamed of me," ho interrupted.
"You're saying bo with your ^
actions if you won't speak. But you
bet I'm not going to have my fuu
spoiled. I'm going anyway."
When he came down from upstairs
a few minutes later his overalls and 1
big straw hat had been changed for I
a suit of ill-fitting black, a faded derby
was placed low over his long crop of
hair, and a handkerchief protected his ?
celluloid collar. When men dress up
but seldom the tricks come clumsily.
Neither spoke during the breakfast. \
lie ate sullenly, and the mado no ^
pretensions of an appetite. A half- ?
hour later he drove with a dash to
the door, the horses groomed, the t
buggy shining, a bow of patriotic rib- ^
boil from some former occasion tied (
to the whip. She knew it was his j
final Invitation. K
"I'm coming," she called from the
doorway with a half sob. "It won't
take me but a minute." .
How deeply she loved him was im- j
pressed on the verge of his really going
without her.
As she changed her dress hastily a
sort of pang came with her woman's f
intuition that the skirt was too full for t
the change of stylo that had come j
with the new season; the white of j
1'' *ler C(jllar was con*
trastyd with the <
j - *tail in her face as ^
(L -^?Y 8,10 lla(1 a?vcr noyP^^Sxknew
full well, as |
B*10 a(^in^r" i
*ng Kaze upon her |
^ &S '10 ^e^e(* lier i
^ As the horses
- y'' swerved madly j
int? the main road,
Edith became j
aware of how oth- f
ere were on their way to the county- *
I seat. The knee-high cornfields, robbed
| now of every trace of morning dew,
shimmered beneath tho blue sky as if,
| somehow, the occasion in town had
i affected nature itself. Among the 1
other vehicles of a more old-fashioned <
sort an automobile chugged past. i "
"We'll have one of those, too, one
of these days," commented Henry as '
ho reined the horses from their fright. '
! "It's Sid Koffmeicr and his girl. Did 1
you notico the paint on her face?"
"I was looking at the country," an- 1
Bwered Edith, arousing herself. "I'm ?,
afraid we don't appreciate what Dakota
is coming to."
"I like a big day In town myself," :
j mused Ilenry, cracking the whip as a
signal to the horses. "1 haven't missed
a 'Fourth* since 1 was a kid. Used to
get sick usually on candy and lemonade
and from walking around on the
plank sidewalks in a new pair of shoes.
Hast few years there's been a gang of
lis go in together. Sid and I and a
bunch of us have had some great times
together. The dance is about the best
part of it."
The girl turned her gaze to the roadside
vegetation?the mullein and the;
foxta.il mixed with the buffalo grass in
which the insects kept midsummer
. chorus.. The old fear seized her. Perhaps
she had made an awful mistake
as her aunt and her girl friends in
town had predicted?a girl of education
and refined tastes marrying un
uncultured "rube."
Goon after their arrival in town they
parted, and Edith decided she would
go to her aunt's. It. would be cool
! there and quiet, and away from the
crowds and anything Henry might do
beforo them.
; Aunt was in her garden back
of the little white house, puttering
about as if there were 110 Fourth of
July celebration.
She glanced up from her cabbage
and potato beds with surprise and joy
at seeing her niece. 1
"Yes, we came in tiiia morning,"
Bucklen's Arnica Salve for Cuts,
Burns, Sores.
Mrs. E. S. Lopcr, Marilln, N. Y., ,
write: "I have ne ver had a Cut, Burn, f
Wound or Sore it would not heal." i
Get a box of Bucklen's Arnica Salve '
today. Keep handy at all times for
Burns, Soi\ s, Cuts, Wounds. Pre
vents Lockjaw. 25c. at your Drug- 4
gist.?adv. J
To Prevent Blood Poisoning J
ipp'y ouce t':ie wonderful old reliable DR. f
PORTER'S ANTISEPTIC HEALING oil, a sur A
'ical dre??;:<i: that relieves psin and heals at *
ibe same time. Net a liniment. 25c. 50c. $1.00. *
astened Edith. "Henry 1b down*
>wn. We're both well. Yes, I supose
he may come down for dinner.
?I want to rest just a little while ia 1
io house."
Somehow she spent the day in the
arkened, old-fashioned rooms, while
er aged aunt, who had cared for her
Inco her early girlhood, fussed with
le cookhig and the house cleaning aa
er rheumatism would permit.
Occasionally, as the long afternoon
rent by, a strain from the band down)wn
in the park was borqe through
l? maples by the hot breeze, and the
zploslons of the firecrackers came lq
iu filed reports. And with each hint of
ie celebration she found herself jerk- ]
ag as she wondered what part Henry
ras taking in it all.
She could not help but picture him
s going even farther with his good |
ime as a result of their quarrel. There I
ad been times in the past when he
nd members of his crowd had gotten
ito fights and been arrested.
Evening came in the stealthy way
bat she had lately become accustomed
0 seeing it creep over the farm Some
f the country folk began going pust
n their way home. It caused a great
loneeomeness for
) ft /iWflllffJt their own place?
imMmk* tor 116"r y _ to'
'i IT~^" come over her. She
\ibegan chiding her*
\ Be^ ^or *u'r Bens*"
\ jM tiveness?her fcol'
/ lC8ffi W *8*11)ril^e- After all,
'i ' lJ' Slilll ^ was lie
! ll'S loved. Sim could
have Blood any1Jnil
r\ I lifli' wlfiS llft could
llr/ir l\ I 111 II ^nve done.
I Vrld IJ 111 l|^ She went to the
? IT 11i m T organ, but Instead
^ ?f her fingers
**" ' " 1 touching the yelow
keys, her arms dropped across
hem and she buried her head with
1 sob.
Twilight without made the shadows
hick in the room, yet ho must have
>een able to make her out from the
ioorway, for the screen was shut noiseessly
and he had her in his great,
trong arms before she could look up.
"Henry!" she breathed hysterically,
is she struggled to get free. "You've
tot gone without me. and vou're not
iurt!"
IIo did not speak for a time, but his
jresence was comforting.
"No, I didn't go without you," he
mswered finally. "I understand it all
iow. I couldn't mix in on the old
cind of a time. You've changed ma,. I
Udith."
"Oh, I was prudish and selfish," oh6
nterrupted. "I should have trusted
,rou."
"No," ho went on; "I came in with
lie plan of doing all the things that 1
lsed to. I found out I was changed
ust after I left you and joined Sid
ind his girl. Hut there was nothing to!
t. The dance hall was just cheap ondj
'oolish, and the thought of booze dis-;
pasted me Between everything 1 saw
rou, somehow."
She had loosed herself from his embrace
and had started for her hat.
"Come on, Henry," she called rogu*
shly. "If we don't hurry up and
;et down town we might miss part ol
.lie 'grand display of fireworks.' "
What Salvation Is.
Salvation is not the petty conception
of personal safety from some farDff
doom. It is, the saving of the
whole man; it is the domination of
Ihe higher nature over the lower;
it is the education of the spiritual, the
development, the evolution of the Clod
to us, that divine spark in all humanity
that can never he wholly extin
guished.?William D. Little.
THE SPIRIT OF THE DAY.
<1
Photograph by Frank Fournier, Stall
Photographer.
STiln Blemishes
CUUSeC* ^ermS
Germs get under tho ?
X^iy^-u.-yrliT* / skin or in a broken \
k ^U7^?JL?WA*vjy/ place, and it Is hard W
1? Aih fcr '' ,(> 8?t lid of them. \
| Pus sores or pimples A
follow. \
) DR. BELL*S A
> Antiseptic Salve \
I toon destroys th?vj germs and keeps them A
clean and healthy until nature heals, use it on \
| the face, lips. In the nose, anywhere, for it A
' Is CLEAN. PUiiE aUd HEALING. W
) -Toll It By The BslP f
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA
County of Horry.
Court of Probate.
Drake-Inness-Green Shoe Co., a Corporation.
Suing in Behalf of I.3C1f
and all Other Creditors of Isaac B.
Parker, Deceased, PlaintilV Petitioner.
vs.
0. 1?. Parker, Docia 1 arker Burroughs
;\1. B. C ox, Joseph Cabot Parker, Edna
M. Parker, Minnie E Royals, John
Parker Reaves, heirs at law of Isaac
13 Paiker, deceased, and Conway Savings
Bank, Administrators of the Per
sonal Estate of said Isaac B Parker,
Defendants-Respondents.
Summons for Relief.
To the Defendants- Respondents
above named:
YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED
and required to answer the petition
in the above stated action which is
now on file in the olllce of the Judge
of Probate in and for Horry
County, State of South Carolina,
and to serve a copy of your answer
to the said petition, on the subscribers,
or either of them, at their odices
at Conway, S. C., within twenty days
arter the service hereof; exclusive of
the day or such service; a?ul ii you
fail to answer the petition within the
time aforesaid, the petitioner in this
action will apply to the Court for the
relief demanded in the petition, and
judgement will be rendered against
you for the relief demanded in the
said petition, which prays for an order
of sale of the real estate of Isaac
B. Parker, deceased, in aid of assets
to pay debts, the said lands fully described
in the said petition; for an
accounting by the said Conway Savings
Bank as administrator of the
personal estate of the said Isaac B.
Parker, deceased, if such accounting
shall be required or wanted, and for
the distribution of anybalance of the
proceeds of such sale remaining after
payment of the costs, expenses, and
disbursements of this proceeding and
of such sale and the payment of the
said debts.
II. H. Woodward,
Attornev for Plaintiff Petitioner.
Dated May 14th, 1914.
To O. B. Parker and Minnie E. Royals,
absent defendants:
Take notice tiiat the petition and
the Complaint in the foregoing stated
action and the Summons, of which
the foregoing is a copy, were tiled in
the cilice of J. S. Vaught, Judge of
Probate of Horry County, at Conway,
S. ('., on the 5th (lav of June A. 1).
1914.
H. H. Woodward,
Attorney for Plaintiff Petitioner.
J. S. Vaught, (E. S.)
Judge of Probate for Horry County.
| "Cured" |
fe Mrs. Jay McGee, of Steph- &S
^ cnville, Texas, writes: 'For
A nine (9) years, 1 suffered with
? womanly trouble. 1 had ter- jr
S| rible headaches, and pains in
JJ my back, etc. it seemed as if &
I would die, I suffered so. A* rfj
? last, 1 decided to try Cardui, ft
g the woman's tonic, and it 3
B helped me right away. The S
ijfjj full treatment not only helped
me, but it cured me."
i ^ take y
L The Woman's Tonic J
w w
ft Cardui helps women in time 4|
B of greatest need, because it 9
contains ingredients which act
fe' specifically, yet gently, on the /m
/? weakened womanly organs. |M
$ So, if you feel discouraged,
g| blue, out-of-so:ls. unable to
^4 do your household work, on ^
account of your condition, stop |?1
IK worrying and give Cardui a toi
IthF. trial It hie liolnnH v?J I
kvw . ...V... . V ..wo >IVI|<VU uiUIIDUi;U5 ^
Ed of women,?wliy not you ? ^?fj
^ Try Cardui. E-71
I
1 Aris-Ym' a W.wn 9 1
\\ t>\io a iiu y Bf fciiimd & l'
a f
%?
T?i5.7ft |P* (?% ?f,fl st?i
uni ill
| Tha Woman's Tonic |
! F03 SALE AT ALL DRUGGISTS I
2 P4 U
BSHKBI?IIIII HI "III I1 T^CTMfr*W?MHrXMTBB
Whenever You Need a General Tonk
Take Grove's
me uia otanaara urove's Tasteless
chill Tonic is equally valuable as a
General Tonic because it contains the
well known tonic propertiesof QUININE
and IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives
out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and
Builds up the Whole System. 50 cents.
Cures Old Sores, Other Remedies Won't Cure
The worst cases, no matter of bow long standing,
are cured by the wonderful, old reliable Dr.
Porter's Antiseptic Healing Oil. It rclicvci
Paiu and licals at the same time. 25c, 50c, $1.0(1
The cleanness of polities depends
on the honesty of the individual voter
more than upon anything else.
11
1 ccAit&L J*icvi7tfL anc/j
1 7*%$Joori fcxft/n Jb-tfiJtire a
I CUf ivitJc mfjty -&J$fs-ac
I GteclitoU u<n<ULct^tfijic, /Too
i /? " '
j ^ Jucwtp?s'L ?stun
I i 7v/ic& Jt&rnidft/iclc li%A
\ uaJ Usbt ^f hun&su/x ^
jj he WAS Rl
Just plain, common horse-sense
' Franklin was absolutely right, just i
four. Creditors cannot insult you, i
have prepared for them by having s
your money is SAFE in the bank, m
from your own e\trov, ranee.
Do YOFU hanki
_ We Pay 5 Per Cent Inter
| 4 HANK OF HORIT
g Jt 'U *SFJ
r~ DANI
GROCEI
| JOHN DANIEL
iii
'J Thii new grocery has just
d ine&s in the elegant ne\
I ;l|
I dj Everybody's Store on th
| !j Street, conveniently locate
| STAPLE AND FANi
jj Also Heavy Groceiies of a
|j feedstuffs, always in stoc
1 j) New Clean building and (
jl Courteous Treatment to a
s|jOHN DAN I
1
'I Strong
i as
I The FARMER*' ST7
1 ^ith a view to assist the
j | growing section of Horry
! | jits worth from the start, j
I || Us any.
ilf you want to deposit yc
ing bring it ro us. If we (
i * vviil do so in every way cori
I 1
! r
I IT A o* g^a p\ a* fb ^ C/
i! f si 1 ill P p
|10IIlS^aa w
! II AYNORS
^SemwaawBsmmm dzossasz wauawtMvai
, . 3WSBS&S&h
a EfSP?$s r
.-I \ v; . \ I
: j 10 |p I
! MM ?! E"* &
1;! SIr U v BS L
J READ WHAT NOTKI)
; | LIPPMAN'S GREAT
? ti Dr. Alldredge, Retrency, Texas, writes:
I V it is tiio lending blood purifier."
Iir. Whitehead, Metcalfe, Li*., proscribes
k W it. and with 1*. P. P. completely cured J.
H. Davidson, v.-ho had safl'crod fifteen
; If years witli L.iood poison and sores.
i Jj IT WILL HELP YOU, TOO-A
| F. V. L1PRVJAN, SAV
, LA GRIPPED
AND BAD COLDS 26c acd 50c, ai
I
I
^ Aide rfousncf feoeAe^* E
vru{ TUfrels d^cvitx^ ft
tfai ; /ncitA&w irt?(Z
? ivcwitO/>j?LICJJ, sncZ* |
K&ediuUJi ^jee^e, ^AAulc^ |
U*eUJ ccltie/L cjf swv4?* 4j r
/ i i r" ,*?** * P
uHT a^?-^ # I
ought (o teach every man that 0
is sure as two and two makes H
lor can Want press you if you p
tomething in the hank; besides,
>t only from lire or burglars, but ^
ng with l*S. ?
est on Time Deposits p
ional Bank E
f BUILDING \ m
EEST "!
R,Y CO.
10!
iS, Manager.
been opened for bus- jl|
v store next door to
e east side of Main
L'd for the trad?.
CY GROCERIES, I
ill kinds, hay, grain, jr
ir ^
1
dean goods. \\
n. " |
ELS, Mn'drj
VIE BANK was started |
people & a busy and |
County, It has proved |
and is now just as strong ^
>ur money for safe beep- 1
Mm accommodate you we j
tsistent with sound bank- I
SI
vii IB Pu i i PL 11
7?i
W -VT' -VWAMT- re?HrJH*?--TC??> vwt.* im i w ?MJ
Rheumatism |]
Blood Poison p
Scrofula,JVHalaria jgj
Skin Disease jL
Because it Purifies M
the Blood g?
PEOPLE SAY Ol' g ?
REMEDY?P. P. P. L;
Rabbi Eotomon, of the fJavnnnah Con- K,'
pregation, writes: " Had sev< n nttacks of
Malarial fovor lasting from a week to ton wgj
d:.jr.. 1 took your medicine aj a forlorn Ugfi
hbje, t.\:t now con font) that 1*. I'. P. was P?
a real benefit." HQ
T ALL DRUC.CtSTS-$I.OO gfi
AtHBYIAU ART/\P?/^a H H
ii " ii i in ii nl
;?^E: JOHNSON'S
ad Tath tH 26c TONIC