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KB FOUR ?he H0rf8 Herald . CONWAY, S. C. * ' T > > * iMund it the Post Office at Conway l> G? as second class mail matter. H. H. WOODWARD FtrtiHahid Every Thursday Morning by Conway Publishing Co. TELEPHONE 21 TERMS: SUBSCRIPTION RATES Obi Copy, One Year $1.00 One Copy, Six Months 75 One Copy, Three Months 60 PUBLISHERS ANNOUNCEMENT Tributes of Respect, and Obituaries will be charged for at the rate of one **nt per word for all words over 150. Resolutions of Thanks, Cards of Thanks, and all other reading Notices, not NEWS, taking the run of the paper, will be charged at the rate ?f five cents per line; and all other notices in the local columns at the rate of ten cents per line. All changes of Advertiments must be in the ollice by Saturday noon to Insure their appearance in the following issue. All communications must be signed the name of the writer, not for publication, but for the protection of this paper. Legal Notices at $1 per inch first Insertion, 50 cents each subsequent Insertion. Rates on long term contracts for display advertising very reasonable and made known on application. Make all Checks or Drafts payable to The Horry Herald, or H. H. Woodward, Conway, S. C. Notice in Special Column at the rate of one cent per word each insertion, and none of these taken for less than 25 cents, to be paid for in advance. THURSDAY, AUG. 26, 1915. Beware of the man who vants every other day to be Sunday and the other day pay-day. o Competition stimulates trade provided it does not put it entirely out of business. o Every dog has his day, even if it. is the day that the house cat scratched him in the face. o Information is a great thing. No man i3 worth anything beyond Ids information though this may be a queer way to express it. Son, get information, for it is what you rmed in this wo rid. It is only another name fo>- knowledge, and you If n A11T ?vii v >> wic.i, in puw vj t ' - ? It is fear that hcops man> a man or woman down in the world and prevents the accomplishment of wonders they might perform, -o Regular every day work is what counts in anything. Nothing adds to experience in any line of work or business as this will do. Some unsuccessful men never applied themselves to their work or profession as clcsely as they did to their courting. The general run of men and women have just got to have something to talk about. If they cannot fIr*J .scandal about the ordinary they will find something to cay about those in higher walks of life. T'l"'- r. 1 ' f/si I Ul 1U V (' ISCCmfe smooth and easy going until the hard rocks of matrimony come into hold review, seems to be proved by the occupants of some of the divorce trials heir.g tried in the New York courts. o Germany will hold out to fight for a long, long time because she was thoroughly prepared for it and had intended it for many a long year. She is destined to be humbled in the dust at last. The ideals for which she is contending arc not high enough tc sustain her people always in thisstruggle. Many varieties of the bunch grape are now ready for market. See that they are graded properly and placed ?n the market in attractive packages The "Climax" basket is the standard package for use in marketing buncl: grapes. jW p H' \ COTTON PROBLEM W0RinE?EN6UND Many Delicate Points Involved in Treatment of Subject Over There. London.?Cotton is the subject of editorials in all the newspapers. Some urge the government to declare the staple contraband, while others address the United States and ask sympathy with the British viewpoint. "We do not conceal from ourselves," says The Morning Post, "the injury that will be caused the United States by our refusal to permit cotton to enter Germany through neutral counttries. This injury we deeply regret but in justice can the United States hold us to blame? The responsibility must be placed on Germany, the aggressor in this war. "Greatly as we deplore the loss the United States may suffer, we simply ask it to put itself in our place. It is not a matter of what the United States did in the past under similar circumstances but what it would do today if placed in the position we are in." The Daily Telegraph says the mere declaration of contraband'can not decide fhe issue. "Such a declaration," the- newspaper adds, "to be effective must be supported by an arrangement with such neutral countries as are in touch with the enemy's frontier." The Daily Telegraph declares that the government should carry out its i delicate task unhampered by meetings or demonstrations. o NOTICE OF SALE By virtue of a distress warrant issued for rent by J. R. Allsbrook and directed to me, I have seized the following described personal property in the house of L. K. Rogers, at Loris, S. C., and he having failed to replevy the same, according to law, I will otter the same for sale at public auction to the highest bidders, for cash, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, on September 10th, A. D? 1915: The property to be sold is as follows, to-wit: 1 Dining Table, 1 1-2 Set Knives and Forks, 1 Bench, 1 Bowl and Pitcher, 1 SJof of Snnnns. 8 Glasses, 1 Sofa, 1 Small Table, 5 Rocking- Chairs, 1 Stove Range, 1 No. 7 Stove, 3 Pots, 2 Kettles, 1 Window Shades and Curtains, 3 Saucers, I pair Schles, 20 Fruit Jars, 2 Lanterns, 1 Bicycle Pump, 1 Bread Tray, 2 Wooden Buckets, 1 Tin Bucket, 1 Wash Pan, J Coffee Mill, 1 Carf, 1 Bowl & Pitcher. 2 Small Tables, 3 Window Shades, 1 Wash Pot, 3 Wooden Tubs, 3 Lamps, 3 Curtains, 2 Small Tables, 3 BeadstcAd, 1 Matress, 1 Bed, 2 Sewing Machines, 2 Clocks, 1 Trunk, 11 Plates, G Cups, 3 Dishes, 2 Bowls, 2 Table cloths, 2 Mantle cloths, 1 Floor Rug, 1 Cot, 3 Center Tables, 2 Art Squares, 1 Iron bedstead, 1 Spring, 1 Mattress, 2 Bolsters, 1 Dresser, S Pillows, 3 Mattresses, 2 Bedsteads, 2 Window Shades. D. F. PRINCE, Agent for Landlord. H. H. WOODWARFD, Attorney. Conway, S. C. "TOBACCO If7 500 Lbs. Best Twine 200 Bags Salt 27 Bacrs Green Coffee 175 Bags Good Corn i 750 Lbs. Job Tobacco 5 Tons tLard For Cash We'll Cut Close * Petlxrvetto Grocery Go. ! COOPER -. - MULLINS i : Ten vegetables that may be planted I for fall use are beets, cabbage, caulii flower, celery, kale, onions, rutabagas spinach, tomatoes and turnips. THE HORRY HEEAL . NOTICE OF ELECTION. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, ' County of Horry. Notice is hereby giVSn that an election will be held on the 14th day of September, A. D. 1915, at the voting precincts fixed by law in said county, upon the question as to whether the manufacture and sale of alcoholic liquors and beverages shall be prohibited or continued in this State, as provided by Act No. 76, to submit to the qualified electors the question of the prohibition of the manufacture and sale of alcoholic liquors and beverages' in the State and to provide for the carrying of these provisions into effect, approved the 16th day of February, A. D. 1915. The qualifications for suffrage are as follows: Residence in State for two years, in the County one year, in the polling precinct in which the elector offers to vote, four months, and the payment six months before anv election of nnv poll tax then due and payable. Provided, That ministers in charge of an organized church and teachers of public schools shall be entitled to vote after six month's residence in the State, otherwise qualified. Registration.?Payment of all taxes including poll tax, assessed and collectible during the previous year. The production of a certificate or the receipt of the officer authorized to collect such taxes shall be conclusive proof of the payment thereof. Before the hour fixed for opening the polls Managers and Clerks must take and subscribe.to the Constitutitional oath. The Chairman of the Board of Managers can administer the oath to the other Managers and to the Clerk; a Notary Public must administer the oath to Chairman. The minister the oath to the Chair man. The Managers elect their Chairman and Clerk. Polls at each voting place must be opened at 7 o'clock a. m., and closed at 4 o'clock p. m., except in the City of Charleston, where they shall be opened at 7 a. m., and closed at 0 p. m. The Managers have the power to fill a vacancy; and if none of the \ T r> n f fh a nil m ao % n v\ o uvvcim, cit^; titiiiCiio tan ajy poini, irom among tne qualified voters, the Managers, who, after being sworn, can conduct the election. At the close of the election, the Managers and Clerk must proceed pub licly to open the ballot boxes and count the ballots therein, and continue without adjournment until the same is completed, and make a statement of the result, and sign the same. Within three days thereafter, the Chairman of the Board, or some one designated by the Board, must deliver to the Commissioners of Election the poll st. the boxes containing tho hnllnt and written statements of the result , of the election. Managers of Election?The following Managers of Election have been ippointed to hold the election at the various precincts in the said County: Adrian?S. S. Anderson, Tom Booth and Jack Dorsey. Ay nor?S. J. Lewis, Tucker Gore., and I. T. Skipper. Shell?Pink Todd, Norton Chestnut!j ^ 1 S. W. Vereen. Daisev?J. J. Carter, Jim Cause and W. H. Cause v. ? Floyds?V. T. Rowell, J. D. Ander- ' son and G. D. Gibson. '< Taylors Vill?F. A. McDaniels, L.M L. Stephens and M. B. Small. ! 1 Spring Branch?M. L. En/or, \V\ P. < Grainger and Claud Hammond. ' I Vardell?1. P. Mincey, W. F. Floyd t and Sam Strickland. i i Green Sea?Bill Watson, A. J. Brun < son an'd Luke Watts. Loris?J. G. Rhodes, J. D. Single- < tarv and Dol Brvar.t. 5 Graham's X Roads?J. Q. Graham, i F. M. Johnson and Vance Carter. Grahamville?William Jordan, John and Vance Pniker. Bayboro?H. J. Johnson, Henry Bell and James Hameiton. 1 Dogwood?J. Buck Edge, F. E. Edge and Tom Addams. 1 Cedar Grove?I. W. Johnson, E. J. Marsh and E. B. Singleton. Cool Spring?K. L. Mishoe, Sam Rabon and W. I. Graham. Galivants Ferry?Ben Floyd, Ed. Doyal and D. C. Johnson. Blanch?J. M. D. Cannon, D. B. Sarvis and W. F. Mishoe. Gurley?H. H. Anderson, H. W. Mishoe and E. C. Harris. Dog Bluff?Charley Johnson, Y. C. Thompkins and II. G. Turner. Horree?D. H. Baker, Thomas Floyd and Whiteford Hughes. Jordan Vill?T. M. Lundy, W. H. Singleton, and Bruce Davis. Greenwood?W. L. Singleton, S. C. ry and Chap Martin. Bt. flarrelson?Robert Dawn more, Ben More, and .1. P. Williams. Socastec?Roibt. Stalvey, W. J. Singleton, and .1. F. Outlaw. Warnpce?Allen Skipper, V. C. Ward, and Drew Patrick. kittle River?B. N. Gore, R. G. ! Sloan and W. E. Bessont. MLWlSMERCli It ATA AM I BUB" AUI5 UN LlVt I "Dodson's Liver Tone" Starts Your Liver Better Than Calomel and Doesn't Salivate or Make You Sick. I I _ Listen to mo! Tako tto more sickfining, salivating calomel when bilious or constipated. Don't lose ft day's work! Calomel is mercury or ouicksilvcr which causes necrosis of the bones. Calomel, when it comes into contact with sour bile crashes into it, breaking it up. This is when you feel that awful nausea and cramping. If you are slugI gish and "all knocked out," if your liver is torpid and Ivowels constipate or you have headache, dizziness, coated tongue, if breath is had or stomach sour ' just take a spoonful of harmless Dod* ton's Liver Tone on my guarantee. ! i v y D, CONWAY, 8. O. ??p????Ml Sanford?Dow Suggs, James Sarvis and Joe Tyler. Ebenezer?Pink *Gore, W. L, Hardee, and George Long* * Withers?D. J. Cox, Ed. McRacken, and W. T. Todd. Marlow?S. T. Jordan, Thomas Johnson, and'John Vereen. Conway?W. H. King! J. Monroe Johnson and Rollin Johnson. Farmer?J. H. Richardson, E. W. Vaught and J. M. Butler. Homewood?W. J. Sessions, T. A. Anderson and I. A. White. "Hammond?T. J. Cox, Tom Livingston, and I. L. Holmes. Knotty Branch?Dave Lewis, James Graham, and Bud Hughes. The managers at each precinct named above are requested to delegate one of their number to secure the boxes and blanks for the election by calling at W. L. Bryan's office, at Court House by September 9th. 1915. H. N. SESSIONS, W. N. GERRALD, A. McG. SMALL. Commissioners for State and County Elections for Horry County, S. C. FOR RENT. FOR RENT.?The shop in rear of the Town Hall, formerly occupied by Buckley Bros., as a lunch counter. Apply to H. H. Woodward, Conway, South Carolina. 8-19 SPECIAL NOTICES. I NOTICE OF SALE. Under and by virtue of a deed of assignment made to the undersigned by Todd-Adams Company for the benefit of creditors; notice is hereby given that I will sell at public auction to the highest bidders on the 3rd day of September A .D., 1915, beginning at 10 o'clock in the forenoon, all and singular all of the stock of goods, wares, and merchandise of the said Todd-Adams Company, at the store occupied by them in the Hammond section of Horry County. The goods will be divided into convenient small l_i-_ 4.1 4,'^./, ? t nn1? iuis at mc tunc; ui ?aic. > H. C. GORE, Assignee. H. H. WOODWARD, A Hornov NOTICE. . All persons owing debts to ToddAdams Company are hereby notified to make immediate payment to IT. C. | Gore, Assignee, or to H. H. Woodward, attorney for creditors, and legal proceedings will be instituted against all of those who do not make satisfactory arrangements within the next twenty (20) days from this date. H. C. GORE, Assignee, Loris, S.C. j H. H. WOODWARD, Attorney, ! Conway, S. C. Notice of Dissolution of Charter. Whereas, Casey & Sanderson, Inc., a corporation, lias hertofore gone into liquidation and wound up its affairs,! and the entire, stock and shares there- i af transferred to and owned by the ; undersigned: :orporatioa, or other persons interest-] 2<l therein, is hereby called to he held it the office of II. If. Woodward, attorney-at-law, Conway, S. C., at 11 j'clock in the forenoon, August 30th, j I 01 :"V fftV t Vifi ni1t>nnao r f woeenti* two . ? - - j J' v. fv?v. - i [/wooing a I. volution dissolving said corporation ind cancelling the charter thereof; said charter bearing date September, 3rd, A. T). 1913. P. R. Casey, Fannie J. Casey, Board of Directors. EL H. Woodward; Attorney. Conway, S. C. MAGAZINE PRICE LIST 1 Pictorial Review and Metropolitan Magazines both one year only $1.60. Either of the following two years only $2.00, Ev eryboclys, The Delineator, Womans Home Companion, Hearsts and Cosmopolitan Magazines. Send us your order for any Ma\ gazino, paper, or trade Journal. MUTUAL MAGAZINE 00.' CONWAY, S. C. J lY! IT SICKENS! R LIKE DYNAMITE Here's my guarantee?Go to any drug i store and get. a 50 cent l>ottle of Dod- ( son's Liver Tone. 'lake a spoonful to- i night and if it doesn't straighten you ! right up and make you had line and vigorous by morning I want you to go back to the. store and get your money. Hudson's Liver Tone is destroying the sale of calomel localise it is real liver medicine; entirely vegetable, therefore it can not salivate or make you sick. I guarantee that one spoonful of Dodson's .Liver Tone will put your sluggish liver 'to work and clean your l*>vrcis of that sour bile and constipated waste | which is clogging your system and mak- j ing yon feel miserable. I guarantee that a bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone will 1 keep your entire family feeling fine for months. Give it to your children. It is harmless; doesn't gripe-and they like it* flcotjuit taste. k\ ^ > - I > $1.00 = Cash A mm* m it means that we nave putoi articles, foreign makes exceptei the months ot August and Sepl 13th inst. FOR EVERY OOLLA the counter we will give you one < worth of Toilet Articles regular p worth of Toilet Articles, regular N. B.?Mail orders must have 10 reach us on, or before da> YOU NEED THE GOODS, NC Vonway 1 __________ OUR BANK J TO THE STAIRS ( Every Dollar You Bank Gained Toward the Go ? n ; 1 1 di*:vIn1.'. ?' -jlfiSSS? 1{S Jr\\ _ - % - J V.'tft. . ZI XT jit.- i.. r.i.'/. ... , _ i ii^B I iIM I I FARMERS 8 MER A illllfltf A A mb a uUNWAY, aUUIr this R EYES scientifically examined? jsl ! Glasses fitted by Amctropome- jjj ter, the most modern Thstea' ter that Optical science has giv- f jj[ en to the world. Artificial eyes $ ki fitted. * * ? ?? * jjj; || .1. K. DAWSKY, Mgr. EKj^agssSHwrnmnB! swd?^l? i ' | FRESH MULLET \ V Mew Catch properly handled and cured. Send me your or- C ders for prompt attention. Give me your business in this line. & Address, bi I'J ri F. E. T 0 D D, ? Myrtle Beach, S. C. [] / % J m m T ?r , = $1.25 1 Toilet i a special sale of all toilet d, for every Friday during I * tember beginning with the R GASH ACROSS Jollar and twenty five cents rice selected as you wish, price, selected as you wish. 4 ic additional postage and / ot sale. >W IS YOUR CHANCE. iru^ Co. "i . _ M J [HE GATE OF SUCCESS c (5 One Solid Steo al of Your Success W5EZ I i M 1 =JS gf p I I CHANTS BANK"" j I CAROLINA " I 1 I ???mmmmmm ???? i i i i n To Cure a ColJ in One Day tkr. LAXAT1VK HKOMO Quinine. It stc.pn the >ukH ?',(i Headache and works oil the Cold. ru??{i.'.t.s refund money if it failp to cure. , V' GWOVF/S (mature on ac'u box. *6t. ^ | )EATflTOVERMI!t S nm m ' BAT CORNH, | Tlost rr.t nmf mioo oxt^rmlmi tor rondo. Sj*r Kill;!quickly :nj(Iabsolutely wlthoutodor. Mummifies?Uiv.s provonlinK ducompost? tlon. Hdtor than all tho traps In the 1 \\??r 1 d^ Insist on Gonulno RAT CORN. 2~>e, 60c, $1 at dealers or by mail, post* paid. , BOTANICAL MFG. CO. 4/A Race Sta., Philadelphia, Pa* "OLDS & LaGRIPPE R or 6 doses 660 will break + ly case of .Chills & Fever, Coldt , LaGrippe; it acts on the liver rtter than Calomel and does not ripe or sicken. Price 2i>c. o ie Quinine That Does Not Affect The Head ?cause of its tonic and laxative effect. I.AXAIVK HROMO QUININE is better than ordinary uiuiuc and does not cause nervousness uor v aging in head. Keutcinbcr the full name and W ok for the siKcatJie of IS. W. GROV1S. 26c. i #