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TWO MANY LIQUOR BILLS WILL BE CONSIDERED Latest Bill, Introduced by Senator DuRant, Proposed New Resrtictions. It may sound paradoxical, but liquor bills in the senate are as thick as hops. The committee on police regulations, which in former sessions j has had a nice easy time, is kept busy i this year examining and reporting on bills which provide for everything from the strictest not-a-drop legisla tion to a more liberal attitude toward intoxicants. James A.. Hoyt, of Columbia, continued hi3 remarkable record when he was re-elected without opposition speaker to preside of the house sessions of the 72rul South Carolina Gen eral Assembly. A desperate battle is raging along the northern end of the Russian line Berlin reported the Russians unable] to stop the German attacks. o Whenever You Need a General Tonic Take Grove's The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless cliill Tonic i9 equally valuable as e General Tonic because it contains th* well known tonic properties of QUININ I?* and IRON. It act9 on the Liver, Drive: out Malaria, Enriches the Blood anc. Builds up the Whole System. 50 cents o TRESPASS NOTICE. All persons are hereby forbidde to enter or trespass on my land jr. Little River Township, known p the Windy Hill and Willard land under p Malty of the law. W. R. LEWIS. w' . i;; V rats*-d?c>. u The latest bill to make its way into the senate was introduced by Senator Charlton Dultant of Clardon. Its chief provisions, briefly stated, are the shipment of one quart of liquor per month to any male over 21 > ears of age or to any woman who is the head of a family. There is no alternative of light wine or beer which lias characterized several other liquor bills which have been presented this session. Senator DuRant's bill sets forth in its preamble that the policy of the State is against the use of intoxicants as beverages, that whiskey is used by many for medicinal purposes, and that it is the experience of j the State that the sale of liquor by i drug stores or by officers appointed j ^ _ * i i ' ny me government cannot properly be undertaken. Terms of New Bill. Under the terms of the DuRnnt1 bill, the consignee must make affidavit that the express office where the liquor is received is the nearest one to his place of residence, and that he or she is authorized under the act to receive the shipment. The delivering office of the common carrier through which the shipment is received is required to file a weekly statement with the clerk of court of the county, giving the names of all persons to whom whisky was deliv/ cred, Possession of more than two t quarts of whisky is prima facie evidence of violation of the act, under its terms, as is the concealment of whisky in any way or the refusal to i.pll iinv non/?n n m r> 11 n h and exact location of whisky on hand. Liquor can only be k2pt at the place of residence, says the bills, which specifically excludes its storing at any place of amusement or busines, or restaurant. Senator DuRant is well knowr throughout South Carolina as a prohibition leader. has spoken widely in favor of limiting liquor traffic. Other Proposed Measures. A bill reducing the legal rate of interest from 8 to 6 per cent was introduced in the senate by Senator Njc^les, of Abbeville. Senator Evans' bill providing for the "reciprocal registration of pharmacists of other states" was passed on secofit} reading. The bill provides that pl^rnfiacists who have been granted licenses in other States shall be admitted to practice of their profession up South Carolina. o Winter Brings Colds to Children. A child rarely goes through the whole winter without a cold, and every mother should have a reliable remedy handy. Fever, sore throat, tight chest and croupy coughs are sure symptoms. A dose of Dr. Bell's Pine Tar Honey will loosen the phlegm, relieve the congested lungs and stop the cough. Its antispetic pine balsams heal and soothe. For croup, whooping cough and chronic bronchial troubles try Dr. Bell's Pine Tar Honey. At all Druggists, 25c.? adv. o ! STATE ITEMS i OF INTEREST TO ALL SOUTH ft CAROLINA PEOPLE | South Carolina this year will receive $143,616, of ten million dollars apportioned under the Federal law to aid the States in buildi ig post roads. Travel on the Coast Line has beei. very heavy all the winter and the through trains are nearly all run in two sections ve:y often. The executive council of the South Carolina Bankers' association meeting in Columbia instructed general ! cuonsel for the association to withdraw the appeal from the United States supreme court in the case against the South Carolina tax com mission. W. A. Stuckey of Bishopville will bo a candidate for governor in 19IS The announcement by others of his faction for governor will not inter fere with his plans, he says. Representative Crews has introduced a bill to amend the gallon a ?V> b 1 I1??? f/\ n i- rv l-? 1-1. - ^1-1 ? 1 iiviiiii uin , jw as iv; niiiKL* tilt* wiKilllling of a permit a prerequisite to the receiving of same and the following of a report of said deliveries by persons, firms or corporations making such deliveries. Action against the State is contem plated in a bill introduced by Senator Banks of Calhoun %which would em- . power the administration of Thelmajj Sanders and Minnie Sanders, deceas-I, ed, to sue for damages, it being al-;( leged that the death of the children | was induced by antitoxin sent out by i J.1 O i _ 1 1 I. . . Ill uiu ouaitr uuaiti ui iieuiui. O ?; Your Money Back If Not Benefited We Guarantee j r ,i i hirrr. jib !. For Sick Women I H 1 If you are suffering from wo- I men's peculiar ills, we know this I medicine will bring YOU relief I < because it has helped thousands I , of Other women for more than 30 I years. Its value has been proven, I and that is why the dealer, back- I ed by our own guarantee, will I positively refund your money if I , you are not benefited by the very J nrs^bettlei I TRY IT! THAT tS ALL WE ASK. | $1 at your Dealers*. See them today. | ^ THACHCR MEDICINE CO., H Chattanooga. Tenn. 5 CARRANZA REFUSES |: TO DiSCUSS MATTERS: Mexico City, Jan. 20.?Gen Car-j, vanv.-i int'nrmrwl thn Ao?n/'inEn I Pvoa-; i today in a telegram from Queretaro that he had no official cognizance of 1 the termination of the conference of the Mexican-American joint commission and therefore, was unable to say whether he was satisfied with the recommendations for the with- , drawal of Gen. Pershing's expedition from Mexico and that Ambassador Flether be sent to his post here. Gen. Carranza's message was in reply to a telegram asking him whether these moves were satisfactory. He replied as follows: "In regard to your telegram of previous date, officially I have no cognizance of the termination of the conferences and, for that reason, I am not able to give the declarations which you ask." BUY DIRECT FROM FACT MAN'S PROFIT, SEE ME SAVE YOU Dan W. I LORES, _____ THE HORRY H WHAT OTHER PAI Two Kinds. Legislators aie of two kinds? those who serve and those who sit.? The State. Does Not Advertise. Woodrow Wilson has less to say about \vh9t "I have done" and "I do" than any member of the United States senate perhaps and most small bore politicians in the State are his infinite superiors in self-advertising. ?The State. Was a (lump. The Mr. Gump who entrusted himself to the tender mercies of Harry Thaw seems to have demonstrated .hat there is something in a name, after all.?News & Courier. Annex to Door. Some women buy doormats; other women marry them.?Cincinnati Enquirer. So that's why they call it wholly matrimony? Well isn't one's husband an annex to adore??Winthrop News. Don't Get Too Enthusiastic. The Houston Post is endeavoring to get Texas to engage more generously in the manufacture of cotton. The Post calls attention to the fact that the Denison cotton mills gave the employees a Christmas present a 10 per cent bonus?Evening Rec [?rd. One Lost. When two \vo|ien get wound up, another is usually run down.?Coped. Spared The Rod. The rod must have been completey spared in the upbringing of Harry EC Thaw.?Exchange. :OPY SUMMONS FOR RELIEF (Complaint Not Served.) STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, ] County of Horry. i Court of Common Pleas. s \. M. Sutherland, Plaintiff, ; against I I. J. Rheuark, J. R. Allsbrook and N. 1 B. Allsbrook, Copartners Trading < as Allsbrook Brds., J. A. McDer- 1 mott, M. V. Patrick, Cora E. < Ilearn, Dora E. Harrclson and H Mary F. Patrick, Defendants. ' 1 rO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE j NAMED: 1 YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the complaint in this action, which has been CPed in the office of the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas, for the said 1 County, 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 hereof; exclusive of the day i of such service; and if you fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint. January 10th, A. D. 1917. H. H. WOOD-WARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. To M. V. Patrick, Cora E. Hearn, Dora E. Harrclson and Mary V. Patrick, 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 at Conway, S C., on the 11th day of January A D., 1917. H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorrfey. W. L. BRYAN, C. C. C. P. DRY AND SAVE* MIDDLE BEFORE BUYING. I CAN MONEY. lardwick, s.c. ERALD, CONWAY, 8. 0. 'ERS ARE SAYING Took a Man. The ladies are generally conceded to excel in politeness, but it took a man to teach the suffragettes "picketing" the White House a lesson in courtesy.?Evening Post. Will Fly. A law prohibiting importations of liquor might encourage the art of aviation among South Carolinians.? Copied. Great Money Saver. There is no greater moncy-savei than the efficiently handled farm garden, and in these days of high prices for foodstuffs of all kinds it is more important than ever before hat the Southern farmer's garden, he a good one. Next week's "Llcttci Gardens and Orchards Special" of The Progressive Farmer will be filled with practical suggestions for getting better gardens and orchards, and all of our readers are urged to read it closely. Some of the feature articles will be "Preparation and Fertilizers for the Spring ard Summer Garden"; "Hotbeds and Cold Frames and How to Make Them"; "Preventing Frost Damage to the Orchard"; "Some Vegetables We Should All Grow"; and "Hints on Pvillli 11 ir mi/I Snrnvirnr " T> c o - n "..v. ^ {4, ' r> ivt Farmer. o COPY SUMMONS FOR RELIEF (Complaint Served.) STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Horry. Court of Common Picas. The M. B. Thompson Company, a Corporation, Plaintiff vs. James Grissett, otherwise known as Jim Grissett, Nancy Lewis, Julia Ann King, and Emma Gore, Defendants. TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE NAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the complaint in this action, of which a copy is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscriber at !iis 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 the complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint. Dated January 9th, A. D. 1917. W. L. BRYAN, (L. S.) C. C. C. P. H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Atoorney. To James Grissett, otherwise known as Jim Grissett and Julia Ann King, Absent Defendants: Take notice that the Com nl a int. 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, at Conway, South Carolina, on the 10th day of January A D., 1917; H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. W. L. BRYAN, (L. S.) C. C. C. P. "Curcd"^ m Mrs. Jay McGee, o! Steph- I Jl ^ enville, Texas, writes: ' For ?| (nine (9) years, I suffered with Kl I womanly trouble. I had ter- IV rible headaches, and pains in wA my back, etc. it seemed as if BJ I would die, I suffered so. A* rV last, 1 decided to try Cardui, ft] the woman's tonic, and it ml helped me right away. The 91 I full treatment not only helped |WA I me, but it cured me." Yak I TAKE_ _ il lis Women's Tonic jl ] Cardui helps women in time [3] I of greatest need, because it 19 I contains ingredients which act* wl I specifically, yet gently, on the M weakened womanly organs. M So, if you feel discouraged, K| blue, out-of-sorts. unable to El l i do your household work, on fk account of your condition, stop Al g worrying and give Cardui a W E trial. It has helped thousands 91 wl of women,?why not you ? ml FOREIGN ITEMS GAFHEKED AND CONDENSED FOR EASY READING ! The British navy now employs a life raft made in the shape of a huge doughnut. Each battleship carries the'"kind of life-saving craft. At the request of the American embassy in London the State Department has warned Americans who contmeplate going to Great Britain to work elsewhere than in munitions plants; that permits from the British Board of Trade are essential to such employment. In an address to the United States Senate, President Wilson has made known the things he considers necessary to a lasting peace at the conclusion of the present war. Whether the United States shall enter a world peace league, and, as many contend, thereby abandon its traditional policy of isolation and no entangling alliances, was laid square ly before Congress and the country by President Wilson in a personal address to the Penate last week. Itobt. T. Ervin of Mobile was confirmed by the senate as judge of the southern Alabama federal district court. In an engagement between British light naval forces and German destroyers in the North sea last week a German destroyer was sunk and the other torpedo craft scattered. Accorrding to a Hague report to the Exchange Telegraph company two German ships were sunk and three others badly damaged in the North sea fight last week. Canada has recruited an army of 434,539 men for the war, 120,000 in; excess of the force Great Britain asked the Dominion to contribute at the beginning of the conflict. President Wilson's speech is regarded by Berlin newspapers as bringing up certain points impossible for the Central Powers to concede. American exports for 1916 reached the unprecedented total of $5,481,000,000. 1 COPY SUMMONS FOR RELIEF (Complaint Not Served.) STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Horry. Court of Common Pleas. Rey Worley, Plaintiff, vs. W. P. Causee, L. C. Causee, J. H. Causee, W. H. Causee,| and J. W. Holliday, Jr., surviving copartners of the firm of J. W. Holliday & Son, and J. W. Holliday, Jr., and i George J. Holliday, surviving executors of the last Will and Testament of J. W. Holliday, Sr., Deceased; and Noah H. Jenrette, Defendants. PUT YOUR BEST EFFOF ING THE BEST WORK THIS i The conditions of our Un demands a crop better and lar Factory, Railroad, and all ind therefore it is up to you Mr. F clothes which of course with c WILL BE GOOD. I am prepared to help so cess by selling you as good FE When you are ready to b see where I come in. TERMS W. PERCY T Y P E W 1 I have the foiiowina Second t - ^ ? ? ? 1 L. 0. Smith (used very little) 1 No. 5 Oliver 1 NO. 10 Remington Visible 1 No. 5 Royal 1 Blind Fox 1 Blind Smith Premier All of these machines have t and are guaranteed to be in firs Will sell on monthly payments, c for cash. Write me your needs. R. G. SCARl SUMTER. SOU" Dealc L. C. Smith & Bros, i * I M^rigaajar..-.irTn TT-i-in mriTTH TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE NAMED: 1 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 County, 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 hereof; exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer the complaint within. the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Coafrt for the relief demanded in the corn-plaint. Dated November 8th, 1916. , H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. To Noah H. Jenrette,?Absent Defendant: 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, at Conway, S. C., on the Xlth day of November A. D. 1916. H. H. WOODWARD', Plaintiff's Attorney. W. L. BRYAN, (L. S.) Ulerk of the Court of Common Pleas for Horry County. o ? TRESPASS NOTICE. All persons are hereby forbidden to enter or trespass upon our lands in Simpson Creek twonship, known as the Round Swamp lands, under penalty of the law. N. E. HARDWICICE. H. H. WOODWARD. The Quinine That Does Not Affect The Head Because of its tonic and laxlltive effect, LAXA> TIVK BROMO QUININE is betterthan ordinary Quinine and does not cause nervousness nor ringing in bead. Remember the full name and look fur the signature of E. W. GROVE. 25c. CHEAP FLOUR 450 Bbls. Flour (bought before advance) 1000 Bu. Red Seed Oats I 700 Bu. Fulgum Oats 200 Bu. Abruzzi Rye 338 Bags Rice Can save you big money on flour, cotton seed meal, acid, hulls, etc. Get our prices. ? ? ? ? Palmetto Grocery Co. COOPER - - - MULLINS Capital and Surplus $80,000 ITS, BEST LANDS, USE-t FERTILIZER TO ! , TEAR, 1917. v> lited States are such that, it ger than ever before; Every lustries are running full, time, :armer to furnish the food: and onditiohs mentioned PRICES J A mewhat to attain your suc[RTILIZER AS YOU CAM GET my get WIY PRICES, you will k if* ill i e I mm mm m ? II- WAIMItU. HARDWICKE 1 ^ _ 11T E R S. ! land Typewriters for sale: $55.00 30.00 35.00 35.00 10.00 12.50 ieen thoroughly overhauled ;t class working condition, ir. give five per cent discount tOROUGH, TH CAROLINA. I ir in ind Royal Typewriters