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two JAPAN SUPPLYING j MUCH TO RUSSIANS i . i Soldiers Completely Clothed and Carry Jap Guns and Cartridges MARCH TO VICTORY IN KOREAN SHOES ? f ? a*1% TRT o | Supplies uome nuuugu ters Free From German Submarines. Paris.?The extent to which Japan is clothing, shoeing, arming, and r iur.itioning the Russian army was forcibly presented to a military observer who has just returned from a t?up along the Russian front: "1 was astonished," he said, "to find great numbers of Russian soldiers clothed from head to foot in uniforms maded in Japan. And the stout trousers but even the leggins. They carried on their shoulders Japanese guns. Their cartridge be ts were filled with cartridges made in Japan. Their leather belts and Luckles were made from Japana. And the stout bonail shoes they wear are from hides gathered in Korea and made into shoes in Japan. So that there you see a Russian soldier in Japanese clothes, Japanese 3i oes with Japanese gun, Japanese ammunition nad Japanese accoutrements. "It is strange," he went on, "that Russia went to war with Japan over Korea and now Korea, the source of all the trouble, is supplying Russia with the shoes in which her sohliers ate. marching to victory. Korea is a great grazing country and is proving a vast reservoir of raw hides which the Japanese are rapidly turning into boots, shoes, saddles and leather furnishings." ? How Obtained. "How did these supplies get from Japan to the Russian front?" the observer was asked. "It was noted," said he, "that about the only vital point where the Germans had not been able to send tiKiir submarines was in the waters' of the East China sea of Japan which tie open and without menace." "What sort of arms and munitions is Russia getting from Japan?" was asked. "All sorts," was the reply, "from I the service rifle and small field pieces up to the big 22-inch guns. The Japanese 12-inch is a terrible weapon, and they are content nnt to make any of the 14-inch, and 10-inch guns, as they consider from a? military standpoint the immobility of the monster gun offsets its advantages. whereas the 12-inch gun is a ( mobile gun and very deadly. "It is said that French and Japanese officers now are furnishing the expert direction of the Russian artillery fire, which has made it so ef- i fective. Did you see any of these officers?" was asked. "No, and the report is not correct," said the observer. "The Russian artillery ollicers are directing their own fire, andd are setting splendid results. The only Japanese and French officers are those temporarily assigned to explain the workings of a new piece, just as an expert is sent along to explain any complicated piece of machinery. Japanese experts accompanied the big 12-inch Japanese guns not to maneuver them in action, but to explain how it was to bo maneuvered. Thllt is Ihn ovtnnf of Ihniv help, and tho Russians should get full credit for what tfu y have accomplished in operating their ar-illery. No, the Japanese have clone remarkable in arming, clothing and munitioning the Russians, but they have not had a chance to do the fight ir,g." , o THE IMPLEMENT SHED. V ' i From now till next spring most of the implements of culti/; ion will net be used, nor will be planters. The place for them, and for all implements not in use every day, is under the shed. Why? What docs a rnar. work for? Implements co: t money. Exposure to the elements causes them to rust, watp and decay. When they are gone more work must done to get more money to buy mere !?1 just a little work "? care at the right time v.o u have made thorn last a year or t'vo or three, longer. % | S T A T K ITKiHS OF INTEREST TO ALL SOUTH CAROLINA PEOPLE George Gill of Columbia drove the locomotive that pulled the president's special from Raleigh to Columbia. Only one step was made between Iialeigh and Columbia, that being at Hamlet, where the special stopped eight minutes. A. C. Johnson was conductor of the train between the two points. The United States civil service com mission will hold an examination for stenographers and typewriters, both men and women, on September 20 at Columbia, to fill vacancies in the departmental service, at Washington. D. C. The fourth consecutive day elapsed last week in which no cases of infantile paralysis hive be'in reported to the state board of health. This is very gratifying to the state health cf ficer, Dr. J. Adams Hayne. Over 700,000 vaccine points have been issued by the State board of health since J908, according to James Himr \ D., State Health officer. He estimates that at least 600.00i) persons were vaccinated. W. F. Clayton has gone to Atlanta to attend the funeral of Mr. J. E. Schofinld, his son-in-law. whose deaths occurred sr..Mealy in that city sever-1 al days ago. Gov. Marking returned to CMumbia after a brief vacation trip to J Washington and Atlantic City. i William Mallette, a negro, was ar~ j rested by U.iited Slates secret service j agents aboard the president's special j train after he had threatened and at- j tempted to board the private car occupied by the president and his party returning to Long Branch, N. J., from Columbia, S. C. o Drives Out Malaria, Builds Up System The Old Standard general strengthening touic, i OROVB'S TASTELESS chill TONIC, drives out Malaria,enriches tire Mood .and builds up the r.yK. tcm. A true tonic. I'ot adults and children. ZOq. 0 The belief is entertained in the Entente copitals that the retirement of the Zaimis cabinet is preliminary to i the entrance of Greece into the war. CALOMEL DYNAMIT MAKES YOUJICI Dodsoe's Liter Tone" Starts Your Liter Better Thai Calomel and You Don't Lose a Day's Work Liven lip your sluggish liver! Feel fine and cheerful; make your work a pleasure; be vigorous and full of ambition. But take no nasty, dangerous calomel because it makes you sick and you may lose a day's work. Calomel is mercury or quicksilver which causes necrosis of the bones. Calomel crashes into sour bile like dynamite, breaking it up. That's when you.feel that awful nausea and cramping. Listen to me! If you want to enjoy the nicest, gentlest liver and bowel cleansing you ever experienced just take a spoonful of harmless Dodson's Liver A NO HIGH Will moan a saving of mone; if you trade at Toddville, It i River six miles from Conway, < \\ Steamers making this point i i' Clyde Line at Georgetown. 9 !l WATFR Hi ? . sm war*m J * ^ % V 5 I Water freight rates are low, > own property stands for no it us and we will give you the bei A hint to the wise is suffici< jToddville, < THE H0RS7 1 i WHAT OTHER PA At Last. Hurah for Cansler of Tirzah!? County Record. Strange Doings. Pditics make* strange doings. Dici not Col. Jno. P. Grace once cicerone | an mvuetigation of graft on the pari of whiskey constables in Charlestor under th? very governor for whom ho is new a cha npion ??Daily Rccoid Which One. A Nev/ York paper stated a few days ago that an intoxicated mar seated great excitement at Oyster day. In justice to other citizens ot Oyster I?av, the paper should have stated which one of them raised all that excitement.?Morning Star. Crisis Passed. National Guardsmen who are still held in their State camps no doubt eel that the crisis with Mexico must be pretty well passed by now.?The State. All Happy, Now, forget L. Let's have peace, ami rest. ami contentment, ami prosperity ami plenty ami quiet ami a '.rtlo firesale, at home happiness.? Marion Star. The Song They Pang Last Night. Oh, v c'll ride old Coley en a rni-i-1 Oh, we'll r de old Co-cy on a rail; Oh. wiM'l ri le old Coiey on a rai-i-il Oil. we'll ride old Coiey on a rai-i-1 A men! ! In the second, third, f< I'rih sran :c3 !o".i! r.an.es of more or less prominence or notrktv were substitutoded i:i the ringing c;l i refrain that th y "rode" Cokv by last night.?Florence i in .03, Learning How. The bakers are getting read" to cut the loaf or charge more. Hoarding houses always cut it and charge more?Georgetown Times. Easy Victims. Dorothy Dix asserts that there are plenty of good men to be had for the catching. Why. of course, for innocent by-standers are more than apt to become victims.?The Star. ES YOUR LIVER! [AND SALIVATES Tone tonight. Your druggist or dealer soils you a 50 cent bottle of Dodson'a Liver Tone under my personal moneyback guarantee that each spoonful will clean your sluggish liver better than a doee of nasty calomel and that it won't make you sick. Dod son's Liver Tone is real liver medicine. You'll know it next morning because you will wake up feeling line, your liver will be working; headache and dizziness gone; stomach will be sweet and bowels regular. J>odson'8 Liver Tone is entirely vegetable, therefore harmless and can not salivate. Give it to your children. Millions of people are using Dodson's Liver Tone instead of dangerous calomel now. Your druggist will tell you that the sale of Calomel ia almost stopped entirely here. I RENTS i to you in the prices you pay s located on the Waccamaw )n the line of the Waccamaw n close touch with the big \TES LOW , and our store situated on our i igh rent charges. Trade with ! lefit of the difference. ?nt. !Y & CO. s c 3EBALD, CONWAY. S. C. PERS ARE SAYIN6 | j Warehouse System. The Record is not opposed to the State cotton warehouse law, and any comment we may have made in the past with reference to the operating 1 of the system had no application to ! tho law js an economical remedy. Wo ; believe that the cotton warehouse law i has no sincerer friend than Governor , i Manning, and he so announced in ^ February to the farmers' union, but he als) wished to see the law perfect- i od, so as to place harmless restric- ( tions upon transactions, in this way 1 i giving stronger backing to the insti tution. The warehouse system is a business proposition, but if it gets in i to politics will go the way of the old ] State dispensary.?Daily Record. Manning and the Warehouse. i Governor Manning was advinod by < many of his close friends that John L McLaurin would betray him. Notnnf orifli fKio .4 F i -- niviiavaiiutliy bill 3 1 tH' ., II1S* II1' I UtllCI* war, givcn to aid in the election of \ iMcLnurin as Warehouse Commis- * sioner, and the Governor, in a formal ( message to the House, came out , squarely and fairly for the establishment and maintenance of the ( State Warehouse. But notwithstanding his attitude in this matter, Governor Manning is being represented as opposed to the warehouse system. 1 and McLaurin is braying from every ' stump in praise of Blease, but an intelligent fanner is told of Manning's onposition to the warehouse all he j can do is to call attention to Goveri nor Manning's message upon the suhi jeet.?York News. j Plain Spoken, j The Hon. Robert Bacon, who is p Republican candidate for the United < : States Senate in New York, decleared | a few days ago: "Emphatically I I would have not voted No." He was ! rcferrnig to the passage of the Adam son 8-hour bill. Mr. Bacon does not leave us in doubt as to what he would i do or would have done. If Judge ! Hughes would speak out like Mr. Ba' con, the people could understand exj actlv what to expect of him, should he be elected presidnet.?Exchange. J o A Clogged System Must Be Cleared. I You will find Dr. King's New L;f | Pills a gentle yet effective laxative for removing impurities from th< system. Accumulated was^e poison*I the blood; dizziness biliousness and pimply, muddy complexion are th? j distressing effects. A dose of Dr | King's New Life Pills o-nierht wil! assure you a free, full bowel movement in the morning. At your Drug gi3t, 25c.?adv. i COLDS&UGRIPPE | 5 or 6 doses 660 will break any case of Chills 8c Fever, Colds & LaGrippe; it acts on the liver ! better than Calomel and does not ! gripe or 6icken, Price 25c, S Colds, |j kXJ should be "nipped in the|Qf\J VUl bud", for if allowed to run |/Wj| rfyjunchecked, serious results i,,o7 i v 11 v *v ? numerous itll/l I cases of consumption, pneu- VI I monia, and other fatal dis- 1 I eases, can be traced back to I I a cold. At the first sign of a | 8 cold, protect yourself by B thoroughly cleansing your I system with a few doses of I THEDFORD'S I BLACKDRAUGHT 111 the old reliable, vegetable 1 !5| liver powder. I iypa mr. c.nas. a. Kagiana, o* j|M 11?I Madison Heights, Va., says: III "jl "I have been using Thed- III TP ford's Black-Draught for aXA stomach troubles, indiges-fili y''pK tion arid colds, and find UtolAJk Ary l# the very best medicine IhrV fjk/v ever used. It makes an otdl^nl |4f man feel like a young one." nJ[T | KjN Insist on Thedford's, theflO T or^g'na*and Cenu*ne< No. 666 I | This it prescription prepared especially for MALARIA or CHILLS &. FEVER. Five or six doses will break any case, and if taken then aa a tonic the Fever will not return. It acta on the liver better than i Calomel and does not gripe or sicken. 25c i FOREIUN ITEMS GATHERED AND CONDENSED FOR EASY READING December 3 to December 10, inclusive, has been set aside as Tubercu- j losis Week in the United States, ac-! cording to an announcement by the I National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis. Seventy five business men organized as a committee tried to persuade labor leaders last week to refrain from declaring a general strike in sympathy with the street railway employees of whom it is asserted there are 11,000 on strike in New York. i A commission of five naval officers headed by Rear Admiral Helm, last' week began studying the question of whether additional navy yards or stations are needed on the Atlantic south of Cape Hatteras, and on the Pacific coast. Unwilling to submit to the demands made by its 8,000 cigarette workers at two of its New York city plants, who want the company to recognize the union, the American Tobacco company, officers here state, leterminnd t4 ~ u VV ? V. 1VO IU Richmond and Durham. Urging that labor supnort President Wilson in his campaign for reelection, W. C. Lee, president of the Biotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, sent cut a bulletin in which it was "urgently requested that the position taken by President Wilson and both branches of congress be not forgotten ;\nd that all members use every honorable means t> retain in office, regardless of partisan beliefs, those who have proven their loyalty to the cause of labor." Fighting on a huge scale is in progress along the Eastern war front, whence the center of interest has shifted following the let-up in the heavy allied attacks along the Somme. o FINAL DISCHARGE. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned Executors of the Will of the late Ready Chestnut have matfe application to the Honorable J. S. Vaught, Probate Judge for Horry County for a final discharge as such Executors and that September 27th, 1916, at 2 o'clock p. m. has been fixed as the time for a hearing on said petition. J. E. PRINCE, D. J. BUTLER, Executors. Loris, S. C., Aug. 23, 1916. 4t | o NOTICE. Taken up at my place one black sow about 1 year old, marked swallow fork and upper bit in right ear and upper bit and crop in the other. Owner may obtain same by paying charges and applying to R. O. JORDAN, R. F. D. No. 3, Conway, S. C,| 3ti, Life Insurance, Fire Insurance, Health & Accident Insurance, Guardian Bonds. Writes Deeds, Mortgage W. Percy K FERTILIZER, CO' TON ! P. S. 1 AM IN POSITION T ANCE IN STRONG OLD LINE ATE YOUF TYPEW1 I have the following Second t 1 L. C. Smith (used very little) J. No. 5 Oliver 1 NO. 10 Remington Visible 1 No. 5 Royal 3 Blind Fox 1 Blind Smith Premier All of these machines have fc and are guaranteed to be in firs Will sell on monthly payments, c for cash. Write me your needs. K. U. SUAKt SUMTER, SOU! Dcalc L C. Smith & Bros, s ? WHY YOU ME NERVOUS The nervous system Is the alarm system of the human body. In perfect health we hardly realise that we have a network of nerves, but when health is ebbing, when strength is declining, the same nervous system gives the alarm in headaches, tiredness, dreamful 1 sleep, irritability and unless corrected, leads straight to a breakdowns. To correct nervousness, Scott's Bmul- : sion is exactly what you should take; its , rich nutriment gets into the blood exd I rich Mood feeds the tiny nerve-ccUs while the whole system responds to its refreshing tonic force. It is free from alcohol. 1 Scott Sl Bowue. Btoorafield, N. J. WEIGHT OF CRIMSON CLOVER SEED IN HULL j Cleaned crimson clover seed weigh 60 pounds per bushel. Careful weights and calculations recently , made by the Experimnet Station indicate that 109 pounds of-seed in the hull are equivalent in weight to a j bushel, or 60 pounds, of cleaned seed; or, that any weight of seed in the hull will give 55 per cent, of that weight in cleaned seed. o TRESPASS NOTICE. All persons are hcrby forbidden, under penalty of law, to enter upon or in any manner to trespass upon that certain tract of land in Horry County, Bayboro Township, bounded I by lands of: North by P. Grerald, East by Peter Moody, South by Horace Johnson, West by G. J. Holliday and known as the estate land of Martha J. Jcnrette, and containing One Hundred and Eighty (180) j acres, more or less, and all hunting and fishing and netting is strictly prohibited on said land. All persons violating this notice I will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law. i HEIRS OF MARTHA J. JENRETTE 4t. | o j GEORGIA NEGRO LYNCHED. Chattanooga.?Henry White, a negro accused of attacking a young white girl, was hanged by a mob at | Durham, Ga., Wednesday afternoon. \ White is said to have confessed after being identified by the girl. White was wounded while resisting arrest, according to reports here. j The girl's brother, attracted by her i screams, is said to have frightened the assailant away. ? ' o , NOTICE. | Taken Up?at mv place one black male Hog. Unmarked, ten months old. Owner may obtain same by paying charges and applying to ?M. A. SPIVEY. Tabor, N. C., Route 1, Box 66 2t-pd Dr. Lycurgus WOODRUFF; ~0. P. T. D.~ OFFICE DAY: Every SatII urdav. HORRY DRUO CO I t? 1 I Live Stock Car Lot3, i Cattle, Hogs, Sheep and Goats. j is, and Other Documents. i lardwicke TTON AND COT- ! SEED I 0 WRITE YOUR FIRE INSUR- ' COMPANIES, WILL APPREC!! BUSINESS. '] t1 t i?: it s. land Typewriters for sale: $55.00 | 30.00 1 as.00 35.00 10.00 ' 12.50 1 ieen thoroughly overhauled ; ;t class working condition. >r, give five per cent discount WROUGH, TH CAROLINA. ! )r in ind Royal Typewriters i