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I . HAVE You f Do colds settle ou your chest or in your bronchial tubes? Do coughs hang ou, or are you subject to throat troubles ? t Such troubles should have immediate treatment with the strengthening powers of Scott's Emulsion :o guard against consumption which so easily follows. ^ Scott's Emulsion contift us pure cod liver ?U which peculiarly strengthens the res? piratory tract and improves the quality of , the blood; the glycerine in it soothes and ' heals the tender membranes of the throat. | Scott's is prescribed by the best special|. lits. You can get it at auy drug store. Scott St Bowne, Bloomfield, N. J. UNDERSEA VOYAGE WAS NO JOY RIDE One -of Deutschland's Crew - i Tells of Discomforts of Trip. The New York Sun publishes the following from a staff correspondent at Baltimore: Some time, some place perhaps the young German sailor who leaned beside the Sun correspondent over the rail of the German liner Nec kar's upper deck today and talked for almost an hour of the U-boat Deutsch land's wondrous transatlantic trip, will meet the interviewer again and I ffive him his nniriP- Hp snirl cn V?im- I self before he put out his hand in parting and disappeared across the gangway leading aboard the little undersea blockade runner, to whose crew he belongs. On this the first visit of the his-' tory making stranger interviews and names are taboo, for reasons best known to the "old man," Capt. Paul! Koenig, who gave the order. And it certainly was not an interview, not j at le?.st so far as the Deutschland's | man was concerned. Gazing most of t^o ' *>? ?'v nnon muddy waves of the Patapsco, this young man talked in his native tongue, as if filling in pages of his mental diary, for from the hour of their departure until they arrived at this port a week ago yesterday, he said, the Deutschland's men had no time to give a thought to anything but duty. Only an occasional question stirred him in to the realization that he was not alone, and then he did not know he was talking to a reporter. "I've been with the green little devil from the moment she got her nose wet for the first time," he said. "I've been with her on every trial trip?and we've had many of them. I have been with her even when she was put back into dock time and again, when experiments proved that 'in this nook or that corner something was wrong, or at least could be better. This is the first time I've been off the boat. And, do you know, I'm homesick. No, not as you think, not for my country and my family. I'm homesick for my little bunk down there on the Deutschland and for the whole of her. "Bad air. Oily. Oh, well, whoever is bothered by such things would better keep off a U-boat and get a job on the Vaterland. "I noticed the old man told reporters our trip was uneventful. Ha, ha! There's excitement in every minute, every second. Of course, that doesn't mean that a warship is lurking over head in every part of the ocean. Anyway, warships are not our chief concern. They bother us little. It's the merchant ships of all sorts and sizes that we worry about. And, you know, the meanest feeling in the whole business is when you see one of them glide by quite near and you hfiven't got a torpedo to send into her. \, "We were not attacktd by a single ship on our trip here. In that respect th? old man is right; the trip was uneventful. But we had a lot of fun; ! and the old man konws it, too. But he 1 is a wise fellow, the captain is, and he knows how to talk to American reporters?he's been through it many times. "What is the hardest job on a submarine? Stoker. "The best? To be on guard in the conning tower; still, that is in a way the hardest, too. But there isn't that stifling heat that threatens any minute to make you fall dead. In the conning tower you feel like the guardian of the boat. You peer out into the darkness?that is, as much and as often as old man Neptune lets you. Like a nutshell, the boat jiggles and staggers and stamps?up and down, up and down?and all the time your face is spanked and splashed by the salt water and the storm wind whips your ears. There's not a light around. All is black, and around you goes a howl that you dread the first few nights, but soon get to love." "And down below?" ventured the % f reporter. "Aii, it's different down there,' quite different?ueafening noise and heat. You tee, there's not a single t opening to let the heat out. You have to stick it out down there until the \ storm is over, and storms in the Atlantic don't blow over in a hurry. ? "You can not think, you can not t sleep down there when there is a j .orni and the hatches are shut. You t can do nothing, but mechanically do your uui/. ii you re oif duty you \ wish you were on, lor you can't sleep < .uid can't think; you ie continuous!} .; tne verge of becoming crazy. Tn? ( jiily thing that saves you is the reaii j cat,on that you have to pull throug. and keep your reason. One look o. , .veakness or despair will bring you . .ook from your comrades that wi. , make your blood freeze with shame j Oh, it happens to all of us once in . while. I "The only spot where there is ai occasional wnut or air is in the cer: cei, beneath the conning tower. 7Y stand guard there is a comparativei. pleasant job, but it is hot, hot e-.oug' 1 to make life miserable. "One of the boys almost collapse a few days before we approached th( American coast. "Yes, we have beer on board, bu' . not a drop of it is taken on stormy days or nights. We all tried at one time or another to quench our thirst with beer in our rest hours, only to suffer more intensely when we were , back at our posts. It makes one perspire a hundred times worse than water." ? o HUSBAND BESGUED DESPAIRING WIFE After Four Tears of Discouraging Conditions, Mrs. Bullock Gave Up in Despair. Husband Came to Rescue. Catron, Ky.?-In an interesting letter from this place, Mrs. Bettie Bullock writes as follows: "I suffered for four years, with womanly troubles, and during this time, I could only sit up for a little while, and could not walk anywhere at all. At times, I would have severe pains In my left side. The doctor was called in, and his treatment relieved me for a while, but I was soon confined to my bed again. After that, nothing seemed to do me any good. I had gotten so weak 1 could not stand, and 1 gave up id despair. A* U.i ?.. I 1 i * ? m uai, nijr uusoanu goi me 1 DOtlie 01 Cardui, the woman's tonic, and I commenced taking it From the very first dose, 1 could tell it was helping me. I can now walk two miles without its tiring me, and am doing my work." If you are all run down from womanly troubles, don't give up in despair. Try Cardui, the woman's tonic. It nas helped more than a million women, in its 50 years of wonderful success, and should surely help you, too. Your druggist has 9cld Cardui for years. He knows what d will do. Ask him. He will recommend it Begin taking Cardui today. Write to: Chattanooga Medicine Co.. Ladles' Advisory Dept., Chattanooga. Tenn., for Spcctai Instructions on your case and 64-page book, ' Home ireetaaent tor Wmms." sent in plain wrapper. E66-B DEUTSCHLAND IS CLEARED Baltimore, July 2G.?The German submarine liner Deutschland to-day was cleared by her commander, Capt. Foul Koenig, for "Bremen or an> other port in Germany." Any hour now the vcssal may start down the , Chesapeake Bay, prepared to make a dash for the open sea through the Virginia Capes and the guard of allied warships off the three-mile limit. Secrecy surrounds the plans of Capt. Koenig. After securing his clearance papers at the custom house, he said in reply to questions asked for the benefit of the Maryland Pilots' Association, that the exact time of his departure was indfeinite. < o WILL MY CHILD TAKE DR. KING'S NEW DISCOVERY? ' This best answer is Dr. King's New 1 Discovery itself. It's a pleasant sweet syrup, easy to take. It contains the medicines which years of experience have proven best for Coughs and Colds. Those who have used Dr. 1 King's New Discovery longest are its' ] best friends. Besides every bottle is1 j guaranteed. If you don't get satis- . faction you get your money back. Buy a bottle, use as directed. Keep what i is left for Cough and Cold insurance. ( 1?adv. < h o Drives Out Malaria, Builds Up System The Old Stindtril 1? 1 ? >I|XU|UICUIH| ionic, GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC, dt ives out Malaria,enriches the blood,and builds up the sys- . tem. A true tonic. For adults and children. 50c. ' RUB-MY-TISM ! Will cure your Rheumatism 1 Neuralgia, Headaches, Cramps, * Colic, Sprains, Bruises, Cuts and Burns, Old Sores, Stings of Insects Etc. Antiseptic Anodyne, used in- 1 ternally and externally. Price 25c. THE HOBBY HEBA DO YOU KNOW THAT j Rural sanitation is a health proection to the city dweller? j It's foolish to educate a boy and ' hen let him die of typhoid fever? The U. S. Public Health Service issues a free bulletin on the summer rare of infants? ' Exercise in the garden is better ;hun exercise in the gymnasium ? Clean water, clean food,' clean louses make clean healthy American itizens V The State of California has reduc- ? id its typhoiM death rate 70 per cent, n the past ten years? Rats are the most expensive anilials which man maintains? It is estimated that the average lianure pile will breed 900,000 flies * per ton ? o JOPY SUMMONS FOR RELIEF. (Complaint Served.) Court of Common Pleas. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, ( County of Horry. 1 Bank of Tabor, a Corporation, Plain- i tiff. vs. Z. M. Buflfkin, J. B. Johnson, Solo mon Scherr, Tabor Supply Co., a 1 Corporation, and C. E. Williamson ' and D. G. Nance, Copartners as Williamson & Nance, Defendants. TC THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE NAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the complaint in this action, of which a copy is here with served unon von ami t n sown n I copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscriber at his office at Conway, S. C., within twenty days after the service hereof; exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer tho complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint. Dated July 12th, A. D. 1916. H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. To Tabor Supply Co., and Williamson & Nance,?Absent Defendants: Take notice that the complaint in the foregoing stated action and the summons of which the foregoing is a copy were filed in the office of the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas, Conway, S. C., on the 19th day of July A D., 1916. H. H WOODWARD. Plaintiff's Attorney. W. L. BRYAN,( L. S.) C. C. C. P. o ? COPY SUMMONS FOR RELIEF. (Complaint Not Served.) Court of Common Pleas. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Horry. H. H. Woodward, Plaintiff, vs. Felix Friarson, Sylvia Friarson, David Faison, Hamp Durant, Eliza McRay, Lilly Cooper, Mit Johnson, Peter Brown alias Peter Logan, Minnie Durant, Tooga Durant, and All and singular the heirs at Law of Hamp Durant, John Durant, Bessie Durant, Henry Durant, and George Durant, the names of whom are unknown to Plaintiff, Henry Lance, Sealy Lance, Ludie Lance, Cuffie Lance, Maggie Durant, Etta Durant, Dode Durant, and Bubba Durant, Defendants. To the Defendants above named: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the complaint , in this action, which has been filed in the office of the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas, for the said Coun- ( ty, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscriber at his office at Conway, S. C., . within twenty days after the service licreof; exclusive of the day of such ?i - * - 3V A y iVC f ciini 11 yuu ian to answer the I, complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded , in the complaint. , Dated June 21st, A. D. 1916. ] H. H. WOODWARD, , Plaintiff's Attorney. \ To Felix Friarson, David Faison, { PTamp Durant, Peter Brown, alias ^ Peter Logan, and all and singular the < loirs at law of Hamp Durant, John , Durant, Bessie Durant, Henry Du- ^ *nnt, and George Durant, the names ( )f whom are unknown to plaintiff. Sealy Lance, Lutie Lance, Magpie , Durant, Etta Durant and Dode Du- ( *ant, absent defendants: ( Take notice that the Complaint in ^ :he foregoing stated action and the , Summons of which the foregoing is , \ copy were filed in the office of the , Dlerk of the Court of Common Pleas j Tor Horry County on the 24th day of ( June A. D., 1916. H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. W. L. BRYAN, (L. S.) 1 C. C. C. P. 1 LP. OONWAT, 8. ft GOOD MILK REQUIRES: CLEAN, GOLD, COVERED In Order That it May Remain Clear of All Contamination FHEY ARE THE THREE BIG "C" IN HANDLINC Great Care Needed in Homes Where There Are Children to Feed. I'M f t I The three '"C's" for the propc :are of milk in the home, according to the dairy specialists of the department, are: Keep milk: Clean, Cold, Covered. Milk is a highly perishable food, and the length of time it will remain sweet and safe, especially for children, depends, the specialists say, almost entirely upon the constant care | it receives from cow to consumer. I Milk passes through three agencies? the producer, the dealer, and the consumer. If' the first two have done their part, clean, safe mf.k will be delivovnil tl%nt>oll<rlil,r .. ! ? i 1 I .-v. J * ^ *1.. ? V & V\I^ Viivi LII111CU) LVJ UU" consumer. The consumer's responsibility begins the moment the milk is delivered at his doorstep. Because milk poured from vessel to vessel on the street is very liable to contamination from dust, manure particles, and germs, milk is nest delivered in capped bottles, ii bottled milk cannot be obtained, the housewife should try to have some one in the family receive the milk in a clean, scalded utensil, cover it instant ly, and put it without delay into the refrigerator, or the coldest available place. Under no circumstance should an uncovered pitcher, bowl, or pan be left out on the porch to receive bulk milk. The vessel, both before and after the milk is poured into it, is accessible to flies and collects particles of dust and dirt. Even in the case of bottled milk, however, the consumer must see that the bottle is not left out in the heat for a moment longer than is necessaiy. Milk should be delivered and I kept at a temperature of 50 degrees F. or lower?the colder the better. At such temperatures bacteria develops very slowly and milk undergoes little change until consumed. A slight rise in temperature above this point, however, permits bacteria to multiply rapidly and brings about rapid deterioration of the milk, which may render it unfit for ordinary use and make it highly dangerous for babies and little children. For this reason bottled or other milk should not be allowed to remain in a warm place, as on a sunny pore', or in a hot kitchen, for a moment longer than is necessary. Delivery of Milk in" Hot Weather. In hot weather the best plan is to have the milkman put the milk directly into the refrigerutor, because at that time of year milk can not be kept properly without ice. If a refrigerator is not available, provide a small box containing ice; and if ice is unobtainable, provide some tight container with insulated walls that keep the heat from getting rapidly to the cold milk. A homemade fireless cooker is admirable for this purnnso ncnnni'ilKt M'.W- I miij n }utriiiiny illlO(l with ico. In the absence of any of these devices, arrange with the milkman not to leave the milk in the sunlight, but to put it in the coolest, shadiest place around the house. Handling Milk in the Home. In handling milk around the home, do not pour it from one vessel to another until it is to be consumed. Do not let the bottle of milk remian out of the refrigerator a moment longer! than is necessary. Keep the milk 2overed>? using caps or an inverted tumbler on bottles, or storing it in covered utensils. Any household Jtensil that is to be used as a vessel for keeping milk should first be clean 2d thorouirhlv and sraldod. Before opening a bottle of milk, wash and wipe the neck and outside >f the cap with water and a clean doth. The little depression on the top of the cap may collect dust or water and any milk that leaks out may attract flies. Lift out the cap with a pointed instrument, so that the outside of the cap, which may be contaminated, will not be pushed iown into the milk. Each time the milk is to be poured from the bottle it is a wise precaution to wash the neck as described. Milk in a Refrigerator. The refrigerator where niilk is stored shouhl be cleaned regularly, especial care being given t:> keeping the drip pipe free and clean. The ice rack also should be cleaned and any place where food is kept or milk stored should be sealdde occasionally with sal soda solution. The refrigerator, even though cold, may quickly be contaminated by a few drops of spilled milk, or by small particles of food. No matter how clean the refrigerator, milk should never be kept in an open vessel. As milk assorbs odors easily, such food as fish, cab huge, or onions should not be kept it proximity to it. Clean Empty Bottles. As soon no a milk bottle is emptiet rinse it thoroughly with cold watc: Do not return dirty bottles and do not use milk bottles except to hold milk. Returning dirty bottles to the milkman may mean that a few days later either you or your neighbor will get contaminated milk. Milk bottles should never be taken into a sick room. In case of infectious or contagious disease, all bottles should In boned thoroughly and should not returned to the dealer withouf they press permission of the attending ohysician. Such diseases easily cat be made epidemic through disregard of this precaution. Where There Are Children. Care of milk, important for all, is a vital necessity in a home where there are children. It is absolutley essential to the safety of babies. No intelligent mother will leave to an ordinary servant the task of caring for or preparing the milk for her baby. Mothers of small children should get, from their own physicians. exnlicit directions for thn proper handling of milk and for clean ing and sterilizing nursing bottles Pamphlets on infant feeding may b obtained from the municipal milk stations or health officers. Milk foi babies can nut be kept too cold, and too much care can not be given t< keeping it clean and covered. Further information on this sub ject may be had by writing to the U S. Department of Agriculture. Washington, D. C., for Farmers' Bulletir 413, Care of Milk and Its Use in th Home. o BAD TO HAVE A COLD HANG ON. Don't let your cold hang on, rack your system and become chronic when Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey will help you. It heals the inflammation, soothes the cough and loosens the phlegm. You breathe easier at once. Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey is a laxaHvA Tni" Sirwm 4-V.*. I v? v -w A MI K7 jf K. upy tuc pine viir umnuiu heals the raw spots, loosens the mucous and prevents irritation of the bronchial tubes. Just get a bottle of Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey to-day, its guaranteed to help you. At druggists.?adv. o The Word Bible. The word Bible furnishes a striking instance of a word's rise from very low to high estate. To the bulk o: English speaking folk it now mean.' the book of books. In Chaucer's day i4 meant any book whatever or scroll? to speak by the card lest equivocatioi undo us. Tracing the word Bibb straight home, we find it as bublos but another name for the papyru reed of Egypt. o Printed copies of the acts of th< last general assembly were issue( from the press last week and wen mailed out to members of the legis lature and State officials during tlv day by Mrs. V. G. Moody, State li brarian. o I - $6.50 Best Flour Made at $6.50 per barrel, cash. Only 410 barrels in stock. Special prices on rice, sugar, coffee, etc., for 30 days to Horry customers. Pailrrvetto Grocery Co, COOPER --- MULLINS Capital and Surplus $80,000 WW NITRATES GONETOP DRESS AT ONCE % The recent long continued rains have done a great deal of damage to our lands by leaching an unusually large amount of nitrates from the soils. Especially is this true \.:iere the soil is sandy or porous. Unless something is immediately clone to re pair this loss the crops will suffer greatly and yields will be reduced. Probably the most important loss will be to cotton. The plants have put on a surplus "sucker" growth, and this growth needs extra plant food for support. Td meet this need a top dressing should be made on medium to thin lands of 50 to 75 lbs. per acre of nitrate of soda. This application wi/ll supply sufficient nitrates to stimulate growth during August and will give as good results as can now be expected. Fertile land should still contain enough nitrates to supply the needs of the advance growth. While a top dressing would do good, it is not so necessary as on thin lands. o So far as is known the Deutsehland is safely at sea on her way to Bremen. Charles S Davis of Denver was elected supreme vice chancellor of the Knights of Pythias last week. o ANY FARMER CAN SOW RYE. Clemson College, S. C.?Humus is the crying need in Southern agricul, ture. We haven't enough woods rakings to cover the cultivated area one time even lightly. Then we should have to wait for years to make the second application, which would be too costly even though a sufficient quantity could be had each year . There is no reason why all otherwise idle lands should not be sown to rye in September and October to furnish this humus most cheaply and most abundantly from year to year and in addition to furnishing humus, if enncomnM-' "-1 4.1* ? A. .-1-1 v v.wiiov.1 ico ^taiii lUWll U1UI WOUIU otherwise leach out of the soil and be lost. Such a cover crop, furthermore, prevents land from washing, which means a heavy loss to all hill and rolling land. Abruzzi rye is the best known variety for this purpose as it makes a rapid, vigorous growth, and makes it earlier than any crop on ordinary lands. It is a well known fact that one heavy crop of rye turned and followed by cotton or corn will, in a dry season, often make double the yield on poor land fertilized as similar land without such a cover crop. This i3 true because water is the limiting factor in crop production in a dry summer. The turned rye holds moisture and gradually feeds the plant on the fertility present, when otherwise the crop would ruin of starvation in the midst of plenty of fertility which it is unable to Use for want of humus to hold and supply moisture. With rye there is no inocculation problem?just a negro job of scratching about one bushel per acre in the cotton rows, corn rows, and on the oea stubble in September and October. Even when clover or vetch is used as a cover crop, rye, should be | sown with them; for, humus is our greatest need, and the two crops together will fi f-nish more of this material than either one growing alone. Rye, furthermore, paves the way for easier success with all winter legumes in that it supplies the soil with humus, which always makes easier the inocculation of the land for the legumes. During July and August put your surplus money in RYE?not the bottled variety, but the RAGGED article. DOYOU HAVE SICK nr a n a rnr (Who of us does not suffer at from this awful pain? Allare s ject to it?a disordered stomach, J? ? inactive liver, constipation arw?< causes. But headaches are mer&X warnings of something more . rious. Heed the warning, take ' ? I Dr. THACHER'S f | Liver and Blood | ! Syrup | I and head off the more serious ail- * ^ ments. This preparation positive- fc ly relieves all perils of constipa tion and its kinared disorders, and ^ restores the system to its normal k ? condition?gently but thoroughly. I Get a bottle today. Two sixes, 80a ^ All dealers. j|