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SENATOR E. D. SMITH TALKS TO FARMERS TELLING THEM THAT HE WILL WORK FOR THEM HARDER THAN EVER FARMERS SCORED VICTORY ? t i f > . . t * I t { : r ^ i He Says That the Farmer's Trust in Him Will Not be Misplaced,?Tells of H is I'laris and His Hopes for the Farmers of South Carolina. Senator E. D. Smith addressed an audience of about 500 farmers at Bishopville last Thursday. It was while the scattering votes from the different counties of the State were coming in showing* that very evidently the farmers had reelected him to the United States Senate. In his speech he urged the farmers to organize and get ready to hold their, cotton or rather a portion of it. He stated that he would wait until all of the returns of the election had come in and there was a full count to make a full statement, hut that he did wish at this time to thank the farmers and the people of this State in general for the supoport they had given him in the race. He said that he has talked and planned and dreamed for the farmers of South Carolina and has endeavored to in every way look after and protect them and that deeply grateful to them for th^Confidence displayed by their returning him to represent them in the sen&e. As to his opponent's charge thati he had done nothing but talk cotton for the five and one-haif years he has been in the senate, and as he had plead guilty to the charge, so he would serve notice now that He was going back to do just ing more experience than during his as he had always done, and tnat havhe expected to be able to accomplish more for the .farmers and thus for the whole people of the Stato and South. Cotton being the basis of their wealth, he said, that which raises the price of cotton and raises the standard 4 N of living of the Southern people as a whole is a benefit not only to the farm ers of South v Carolina and of the &outh but that it benefitted the whole nation in that the money coming from Europe to pay for the cotton keeps the balance of trade in our favor. This is no Smith's victory but the farmer's victory and he believes this will demonstrate to the people generally and to politicians in particular, that factionalism does not stand a ghost of a show any longer, especially the factionalism that depends upon the support of farmers to keep going, for by this election the farmers, all of them, rich.and poor, high and low, served notice to all selfish and scheming politicians that they were no longer a bunch of "rubes" to be caught by the nose and led to any trough that suited the politician and made drink whether he wanted to or not. Senator Smith said he believes hat factiionalism is dead in SouthflETA Carolina. t . / . . SUBSCRIBERS PLEASE HEED This is the time of the year when the tobacco crop is being harvested And T>1 An tliA moi-taf If io ><. M vx'^t vr>* VIIV7 n W. it lO tllC time of the year when this paper expects the farmers who read it and have the funds from the year's crop to come in and pay us up for the past dues. It is not even necessary that they call, if they do not feel so disposed. It is easy to write a check or get a postoflice money order and mail us the money. For each and every remittance received through the mail a receipt made out in proper form will be mailed back. We have spent a good deal and spared no effort this year to give the news to the people just as it is without fear or . fayor. The fact has been called to the attention of our readers time and time again that we needed what is coming to us for past due subscriptions. While many have heeded the call and sent in the money or called and paid it at the office, there are many others who have so far neglected it. As is above indicated, we have patiently waited until now the marketing of the crops of 1914 lias begun, and we must now ask again those who owe the paper send in what is due. There is no use in waiting. The money is needed now. - W* jock in ot liealize Task. The military correspondent of the London Times comments upon the extreme secrecy with which the British war ofiice is shrouding movements of the British army. He says it is to be feared the present policy is having an ill effect upon recruiting and adds that the nation does not yet realize the stupendous nature of the task to which it is committed. MENACE'OF THE ZEPPELINS I 1 1 t" i Work of Now German Airships Raises | Big Question. "Wry soon Germany will have several new Zeppelins ready for use or the Belgian coast and the British Channel." This announcemnt, coming recntly from Berlin, has agaii struck the terror fof an airship i"^n i sion into English hearts and raisted everywhere the question of just what these great dirigibles of unknown I powers, may be dole to aecomplisa 1 i I war. The question was discussed in 1 a late issue of the London Pall Mail Gazette. TAKING CALOMEL IS A HAI) HAH IT So Powerful It Shocks the Liver and Leaves it Weaker Than Before. Hudson's Liver Tone is Bet To Take. Nearly everybody who has ever tried calomel has found that it gives only temporary relief. For calomel J is such a powerful drug that it shocks 1 and weakens the liver and makes it I less able afterwards to do its duty than in the first place. This is one of the reasons why the ; Conway Drug Co., guarantees Dod! son's Liver Tone to take the place ot : calomel. Dodson's Liver Tone is a pure vegetable liver tonic that will cure constipation quickly and gently, without any danger of bail aftereffect, It is guaranteed to do this with a guarantee that is simple and fair. If you buy a bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone for yourself or your children, and do not find that it perfectly takes the place of calomel, then return it to the store where you bought it and get your money back with a smile.? adv. Rheumatism Pains Stopped. The first application of Sloan's Liniment goes right to the painful part ?it penetrates without rubbing?it stops he Rheumatic Pains around the joints and gives relief and comfort. Don't suffer! Get a bottle today! It is a family medicine for all pains, hurts, bruises, cuts, sore throat, neuralgia and chest pains. Prevents in' vf_ r~?i tt \ir?i. il k.tv-mi. v/iius. n. YVfiuwurin, California, writes: "It did wonders for my Rheumatism, pain is gone as soon as I apply it. I recommended it to my friends as the best Liniment I ever used." Guaranteed. 25c at your druggist.?adv. BLEASE WILL PRACTICE LAW. A report is that Gov. Cole L. Blease defeated in his race for the United States Senate agaist Senator E. D. Smith, will move to Anderson when his term of office expires and practice law there. It is said that the Governor will make his home at the beautiful estate of his wife's family, a few miles from Anderson. Another report says that the Governor has been offered a partnership by B. L. Abney, general counsel for the South Carolina division of the Southern Railway. Train Wrecked. > y ' More than 25 persons are reported injured in the wreck last Friday of the Kansas City Southern passenger train No. 1, southbound, near Marble City, Okla. The smoking car and chair car, it is stated, went into : ditch. r: vi . uirts iuonry. The Paris correspondent of the Reuter Telegraph Company in a dis, patch says: "A more than favorable impressior has been produced here by the dicession of the British government to advance $50,000,000 to Belgium, f - - , Early English Newspapers. Newspaper circulations in the prov ince were in 1714 a were bagatelle The first two country newspapers came from the Jacobite party, and both belonged to coffee houses. Norwich was first In the field with the Gazette and next came Exeter with Joe Bliss Exeter Post Boy. Both these papere were given away to their coffee house customers, and advertisements were inserted for nothing. Oddly enough, 1< wac increasing circulation that led tc a price. In 1739, 30 years after itfi foundation, the Norwich Gazette edltoi announced: "This is to inform my friends and customers that on Satur day next this paper will be sold for a penny, and be continued at that price; but advertisements will still be taken m gratis, as formerly. The reason ol my raising it to a penny is becauee the number I print is too prodigious great to be given away any longer, and ] hope most of my customers will not think it dear of a penny, since they shall always have the best intelligence, besides other diversions."?London Chronicle. To Cure a Cold in One Day Take LAXAT1VK JiKOMO Quinine. It stops the Cough and Headache and works oil the Cold. Druggists refund money if it fails to cuic. K. GROVE'S signature on ach box. 26c. JRUB-MY-TISM Will cure your Rheumatism Neuralgia, Headaches, Cramps, Colic, Sprains, Bruises, Cuts and Burns, Old Sores, Stings of Insects Etc. Antiseptic Anodyne, used internally and externally. Price 25c. ENGLAND'S FORCES ' LOST OUT IN FIGHTING lj\VHENr THE ENGL^-H ./M) GEU1 MAN FORCES JOINED IN RATTLE WEDNESDAY. y DEFEATED (nIRENCH TOWN i 1?i ' i ' T I L ' j * ! Germans Claimed to Have Put West* 1 . I i | ern lane of Allies to Flight*?Bell plan Attacks Repulsed,?Germans Advance South of Lille,?After ; Nine Days of Fighting. A serious reverse to British arms on the French frontier was officially 1; announced in Berlin last Wednesday, i After nine days of fighting the Geri mans put the western line of the allies I to flight. The English were defeated " at Maubeuge, France, and the FrancoBelgian forces driven back toward , Maubeuge. Belgian attacks from Nancy and Antwerp were repulsed. Field Marshal Sir John French, com mander-in-chief of the British expeditionary force,reported that his troops 1 were attacked bv five German army corps and cavalry Wednesday in the neighborhood of Cambrai and Le Cat,'eau; and that their casualties were heavy. He did not state the out come of the battle. Cambrai and lie Cateau ' are French towns about 10 miles , southwest of Maubeuge and the description of the scene of the fighting by Field Marshal French and announced in the house of commons by Premier Asquith fits in with the battle line indicated at Berlin. An English correspondent at Lille, ; France, said that thp advanrp cruuvri of the Germans was at Point-a-Marcq and Marchinennes, French owns just south of Lille, in the department of ' duNord. A newspaper dispatch from Boulogne reported that the Germans i broke through the French lines near Arras in the provice of Pas tie Clais, but that the French had the situation , well in hand. British marines were in force at Ostend. A press dispatch from that town said that the Germans were within 20 miles of that place. King Charles of Rumania was reported seriously ill. A British destroyer sunk an Aus| trian destroyer off Corfu, according to a news dispatch from Brinisi, Italy. German troops reported as taking the offensive in the Belgian Congo. The Russian miliary attache at Paris was credited with the statement that additional Russian armies were about to invade western Prussia with the intention of marching on Berlin. Henry S. Breckenridge, American assistant secretary of war, was in Vienna. lookinc for 400 Americans i there. He expected to conclude his ' work at the Austrian capital and pro! feed to Switzerland. I ' - . . ^ German Ship Sunk. The Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse has been sunk off the coast of Africa by '-.e British crusier High Flier. NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of the de. ! decree and judgment ofthe court I made by his Honor C. J. Ramage, Presiding Judge, in the case of Wil1 liam A. Gause, et al., Plaintiff vs. Amelia Gause, Defendant. And dated the 30th day of March A. D., 1914, I, the undersigned J. A. Lewis, Sheriff of Horry County, will sell at public auction to the highest . bidder before the Court House door at Conway, in Horry County, and J State of South Carolina, during the legal hours of sale, on salesday in ; September next, it being the seventh 1 (7th) day of said month, all and sing* ular those certain lands situate in Horry County, and described as fol> lows, to-wit: > That certain tract of land situate > in Simpson Creek Township, in Hor^ ry County, containing one hundred ^ (100) acres, more, or less, and boundI ed on the north by lands of J. J. Simmons, lands of I. D. Hardee, and lands claimed by Worth & Worth, on f j the east by lands of J. B. Hughes, on . the south by lands of Benjamin Stei vens, and on the west by lands of J. A. Gause, and lands of Avery and { Russell Todd,?Being land which was , conveyed to Reuben W. Gause as follows, that is to say: 75 acres, more or less, by M. M. Barker by his deed ; dated March 27th, A. D. 1873; thirty I ^ (30) acres, more or less, by W. A. j ; Clause March 27th, A. F>. 1873; and j ' ten (10) acres, more or less, by John ! ( Rogers by his deed dated April 28th, A. T). 1883, less five acres thereof conveyed by R. W. Clause to Avery and i Russell Todd, and 5 acres thereof conveved to him by J. A. Gauso. TERMS of Sale CASH. Purchaser to pay for papers. Conway, S. C., Aug. fith, 1014. J. A. To wis, Sheriff of Horry County. H. IT. Woodward, Plaintiff's Attorney. FOR SALE?In Loris one good new seven room house, nlso a fine \ farm in edge of same town. j A. M. McKenzie, i 9-3-4t-pd Chadbourne, N. C. ( H WAR SPIRI ... wBf 9 N-fv - - L^ yj;.'''On the right is shown Servian soldiei teers on the way to enlist r^foa^to f /f' i5 the rE l v*?^:?"?? -' J ' B "Cured" | I Mrs. Jay McGee, of Steph- 41 enville, Texas, writes: For M ' nine (9) years. I suffered with womanly trouble, 1 had ter- WI rible headaches, and pains in K] my back, etc. It seemed as if BJ I would die, I suffered sp. A* B last, 1 decided to try Cardul. * Bl the woman's tonic, and it w helped me right away. The ]w full treatment not only helped Ml me* but it cured rae." MB take 11 Cardui | The Womai't Tonic kl .. Cardui helps women in time 11; of greatest need, because it II f contains ingredients which act I] * specifically, yet gently, on the '4 . weakened womanly organs. r|; So, if you feel discouraged, K| j blue, out-of-sorts. unable to El 1 do your household work, on account of your condition, stop F? 1 worrying and give Cardui a 1 trial. It has helped thousands I si yu of women,?>why not you ? nj I Try Cardui. E-71 N ?sgggsgar*i $ 9^i?*Z^SSSESm3?SSS?T?S^dt^J ^ NOTICE AND WARNING I All person? and companies are here by notified and warned not to furnish j Q shelter, food, clothing or employment to my minor son who left his parents recently. He is only sixteen years of age, and his name is J* O. Booth. J 9-3- 3t. J. A. BOOTH, RFD No; 1, Conway, S. C. TRESPASS NOTICE. ... , /. All persons are strictly forbidden to enter or trespass in any manner upon our lands in Conway township. Ashbey & Eastoup, oui :ZZ IsnSny rnssr** Notice of Discharge. *"**' 1 Notice is hereby given that the undersigned W. L. Bryan, Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas in and for v Horry County, administrator of the ^ derelict estate of S. M. Stevens, Sr., deceased; will apply before his Honor J. S. aught, Judge of Probate of Horry County, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon on Tuesday the 8th day of Sept. at his office at Conway, S. C., for a ^ r. i ??i ? iiMill uiftcuurn^ ?*s suci^ administrator, ^ having finally wound up said estate. W. L. Bryan, C. C. C. P. ^ Administrator of S. M. Stevens, dcc'd H. H. Woodward, Attorney. cj G ^ w No. Six-Sixty-Six [ This is a prescription prepared especially for MALARIA or CHILLS A, FEVER. Five or six doses will break any case, and r if taken then as a tonic the Fever will not | return. It acts on the liver better than *" Calomel and does not gripe or sicken. 25c ^ IT AT FEVER HEAT IN v | . h; \ > \*r. lv :-' '.Sa v. rs receiving the blessing of the chure ?t I > j ? < i j , {. * * * I : t \ . 11 * m success if har& [fte shortest cat to prosperity cirU 'mgfo, crappy, bruising path of ler in the bcgmnir\pr bul your ti r as the journey groWs Cougar, c\0ari at the goal.*' Herbert h tfgk Q|our fin+ dollar itt the hardest that!? tt f]%s. follovO the thrift tit easier. Qjon KMQWjfe xtf hy not IS 8 Ills 8 FOR \ Cfeat good busiiwHA fat ?mh Main at There anph vaait on fron Ad t*ukh if you want 1 t ? t V* J Vr'?-W X *" ' ' " ' ? ? Oil? Nice Lot and Smoke H****. Bur*. Stables anc vaal tbla piece of property on the above i/tr.'lrtv# io* ?>'i io* ' . E. A. JORDAN fill If it is a nice Si lave it. If it is a cl ve have it. We "hi rant in the Clothinj Men's Suits rang >20.00. Boys Suife Ve have a nice lin *ants worth $4.00 ithef HfM* nanJe _ -www * VO A A ' Don't fail, to see 1 rou want. # ; f* ? , f ' . Our Cool Drinks, Try a Fountain ( Lewis Mer ' / . / ? = ,iiaiiL A * QA#ot::*c KN0 fUn W ^ - ik \ , 't))'w 1( \ SOUTHERN SAW & rite for Catalogue E. Tell us what yot Whenever You Need a General Tonic t Take Grove's The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless i ,ill -- * .... avuiv, is cquuny valuable as a eneral Tonic because it contains the ell known tonic propertiesof QUININK id IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives it Malaria, Enriches the Blood and uilds up the Whole System. 50 cents. . A GRIPPE;! .ND BAD COLDS" 25o aad 50c, ai 7 $EnyiA h. The iqaert ahows Servian volunt ?? I.. ? . . ! | ' only atjir/t j I contentment the pioneers i n uselc5 ^rov) j and therein aV fajman fhelbatik h alvOqy^ | u .start. Others tCiU! II make the burden; $ tu ought ta^aOe.. I matte the statrH I ^ M Hili :ai n 1 ? ; . . . ? I ' >? reet, with rwwm dwelling, t for a gooiffc mm<1 store. I ; a bargains At*** . * ' > ' Ten-Room House * /' 1 1 ' , ' . y : 1 Ovt^QMM. Get busy if you Fur price and tc mts , a Vtkt t% AYNOR, S. C. 4 t , * t f\ i i? sww Suits. <. ' t , ;? ? v :V.' {-,ii IK - ' J f lit you want we leap suit you want 1 ive any thing you ? line. i ;ing from $2.00 to i from 50c up. e of Palm Beach going at $2.00 om 95c to $5.00. ^ is if it is rlntK in rr > 1 ' ' i x > ,< j s?- ' I < ' ! 0')(J ,!.!', ,/v.H vlV' /O are Unsurpassed. ! 1 aOca-Cola. J l cantile Co. j'J > M ^ I v l.ll hi lINC that can be Absolutory Depended Upon j -.tixl ?the only attention needed is oiling?parting jt us prove to you why the K AWLE.1GH baa beor Big Surplus Power, Simplicity, Reliability, Ea- :l rfect Balance. The smoothest . unning engine built, j , no Vibration. The Rawleigh saves time, expense, j Never oet? *:red. aiw*v? read", soon Oav* lot ilaelf^^ Vj ir word for it. (Jo to the plant where' this paohdjjof a 4 h noperating the entire plant I lirl mill aud tee V larger ermine. 1 MACHINERY WORKS, Atlanta Ga, I i need an engine for. 1 low To Give Quinine To Children. II 'RBRIUNR is the trade-mark nnme given to vi i a proved Quinine. It is n Tasteless Syrup, pleas- . I nt to take and does not disturb the stomach. 1 uildren take it and never know it is Quinine. 1 Jso especially adapted to adults who cannot 9 ke ordinary Quinine. Does not nauseate nor 9 vise nervousness nor ringing in the head. Try the next time you need Quinine for any pur os?. A?-k for 2 ounce original package. The > I nine Fl\liRlL,INl{ is blown in bottle. 25 ceuts., T ISEJOHNSON'S | >1 Tablets 25o TONIC I