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vont TL . .. he iLomi Jlcrald. CONWAY. .8. C iii?rcd at the l*ost Office at Conway 9 f,, ? second class mail m&Ovr. fl H. WOODWARD fetish* 9 K\e?y Thursday Morwstg by Coii vRj Publishing Co. TELEPHONE 21 TERMS: SUBSCRIPTION RATES On* Copy, One Year $1AM) Dds Copy, Six Months 76 i One Copy, Three Months 60 j PUBLISHERS ANNOUNCEMENT Tributes of Respect, and Obituaries rill be charged for at the rate of one aant per word for all words over 150. Bsaoiutions of Thanks, Cards of Vhanks, and all other reading Notfcaa, not NEWS, taking the run of tha paper, will be charged at the rate a* eve cents per line; ami all other aotices In th^ lo<\al columns at the rata of ten cents p?M- line. All changes of Advertimcnts musi i to in the office by Saturday noon to 1 insure their appearance in the following issue. All communications must be signed fey the name of the write*, not for publication, but for the protection of kkls paper. Legal Notices at $1 per inch first insertion, 60 cents each subsequent insertion. Rates on long term contracts for 41spiay advertising very reasonable 1 ana made known on application. Make all Checks or Drafts payable i fro The Horry Herald, or H. H. Wood- j ward. Conway, S. C. 1 . Netice in Special Column at the r^ta of one cent per word each inser- 1 don, and none of these taken for less than 26 cents, to be paid for in ad- ; ranee. THURSDAY, OCT. 4, 1917 Never allow laziness and lack of initiative to prevent you, as a farmer of Horry County, taking advantage of all that nature has provided for your comfort, convenience, and bodily wellbeing. A portion of the year, it is cold and the usual crops you raise will not grow. During that time, you, and generally your fields are lying dormant, in Winter quarters, so to speak.! Nature has provided a few serials that will grow and thrive during the cc ldest Winter we have in this section. The principal of these is wheat. While you are confined by the fireside in the cold Winter, your fie.d , will produce for you, one of the bes: ( foods known to man. Why not take j advantage of this. All the talk now isj to produce plenty of food to aid Uncle Sam in carrying on his war. It will not only help Uncle Sam for you to plant wheat, it will help you by giving you a valuable crop that you car, grow in the Winter time and harvest in May. Get busy to-day and ordei your seed. Road books and papcis! and learn how the land should br* pro-, pared. Get the seed and plant t'noj wheat. See about the seed to-day. G to preparing the land without delay. The very foundat ion of the count*, v , is upon the rock e" equal p ivileg s to all, and discriniination aganist no race or class. All must he treated J alike and by the same measure. o In our view, the action of Germany j in sending flying machines against defenseless towns and bombing helpless women and children in England and France; calls for definite action in retaliation on the part of the allies, and in the same way. They demand it and it should he done well and at once. 1 f you .happen to get a copy of this paper, or if you see it at your neighbor's heme, look it over and e mpa'c: it with any county paper you hav S'/er seen. We have faith that you will admit that it is the best by fa?* Then send us the money for a year's subscript ion. Let a wheat crop grow for you during the coming winter when nothing else is making for you on the farm. 11/^ ~ ?i i Yf 1 tw IU tVUUI <11 011C O for prices of wheat seed. You may be able to pet your merchant or supply house to get the seed for you. Anyway get your seed now and make the land ready for planting the wheat crop. We need it. Have you ever noticed that in the case of a man who lias succeeded and accomplished anything worth while -n this world; that the smaller men are always looking and searching for something to tell against him, and use ic to his down-fall if possible? On the other hand take the lazybones who have never done anything and who is probably a drag upon the progress of the community where he is suffered to live, and you will not find anybody at any time who is looking carefully into his actions cither public or private. Nature is nature we suppose. There are a few people in Country, who show by their every action, that they favor Germany, if tlwry 1 really favor anything*. A time is coming for all such when they will be sorry they were ever born in 'this country. Even the substitutes for common articles of food in Germany are getting short. How long will it last ?is the question* the hungry people are asking. o If ?e can induce the farmers oi Horry County next year to plant wheat, we will feel that the Heralu has dane no small thing in publishing all the information the paper could get during the past several years in an effort to show the farmers the way to further progress and prosperity. 4) Most of the labor strikes in this country now are helped on by German interests. The sooner the ring leaders are in jail the better it will be for this country. o Given a little time and Uncle Sam will be fully able to cope with all obstacles in the way of a com plete victory in Kurope. How many men in "business wiil \ ou find in a day, in any of the towns or cities of this State, whoshow by their attitude and their tieatment of customers that they actually want their business and want to keep it ? They come up o Germany deliberately planned this war, and deliberately plunged the world into it, at what that country believed was the proper time for it. The true state of affairs is not allowed to get into the understanding ef the German soldiers. o Some men say the war will last about two or three years longer, while others figure on fifteen or twenty; and none of them know anything about it of course. o Some German sympathizers last week tried to claim that the attorney general in Illinois had rendered an opinion to the effect that the prcsi dent had no authority to send troops to France. A telegram was sent him asking for an explanation and he answered and explained by telegram, showing he rendered no such opinion, at least not in the way the Germans wanted to take it, and wound up with the sentence: "Damn the Raiser." TABOR NEWS. Tabor, N. C., Oct. 1. Owing to the e< ntinued cloudy and rainy days recently the farmers arc- badly Lehinin their work saving hay and cotton. We have just recently closed a fine meeting of days at Pleasant View Baptist church. Our good pastor, W J. Wilder, secured the services of R? v. M. M. Ibmsau, of Bishopville, S. C.. ?o do the pleaching. He preached with great power and earnest of soul. A'< the close of a ten days' meeting wc had an increase of twenty for baptism. Oui pastor baptized them with nix m eight from Wannamaker church in Lumber River Sunday afteinion. In spite of th.e fact so many y un men are being called to service f :>r their country it doesn't stop them from getting married. On last Sunday morning, Sept. 80th, Miss Pinkie Illanton was married to Mi. Joan Stroud, both of the Pleasant \ iew vi einit.v. We wish for them a long anhappy life. On Wedii< sday, Sept. 20th, the wif of .Mr. 11. 1'. Lane, formrcly of Ma rion County, but now fanning wtil. .Messrs. S. Q. and J. K. Kiovd, of thi c< mmunity, passed away, and in c in nliaiuo with her rc(|uest was to l> taken hack to Marion for burial, but. owing to Mr. Lane's financial cvndi lions was unable to do so. Uut th< good people of the cornmui ity hired a motor horse fro.n Mull ins Uj t: ke he back, and following are the ones tha" contributed to same: lb T. Holmes, $1.00; T. A. Harrelson, $1.00; Sam Strickland, $1.00; Rey Worley, $1.00; C. P. Willuoghby, $1.00; Mack Grainj?er, $1.00; C. C. Grainger, $1.00; 1). S. Grainger, $1.00; J. M. Klvington, $1.00; Odell Hutchinson, $1.00; Sandy i Williams, $1.00; Burn Shelly, $1.00; I). W. Williams, $1.00; J. D. Shelley, $100; I. P. Mincy, $1.00; J. P. Floyd, $1.00; F. E. Floyd, $1.00; A K. Shelly, $1.00; Mat Skipper, $1.00; C. H. Shelly, $1.00; N. A. Shelly, $1.00; C. P. Shelley, $1.00; Mat Skipper, $1.00; J. M. Johnson, $1.00; G. D. Shelley, $1.00;; J. E. Harrelson, $1.00; Brad Foley, $1.00! Lewis Foley, $1.00; E. E. Shelley, 50c; W. C. Hooks, 50c; Nathan Grainger, 50c; J. E. Grainger, 50c; N. C. Grainger, 50c; C. 0. Grainger, 50c; Willie Strickland, 50c; S. F. Willoughby, 25c; Wade Strickland, 50c; Dave Shelley, 25c; Will Skipper, 25c; D. B. Shelley, 15c; P. H. Collins, 25c; J. B. Shelley, 50c; W. F. Floyd, 50c; Dred Mincey, 50c. ?Americus. . ifU 0 TKK HORRY HERA1 SIMPSON OUSEK NOTES The Simpson Creek School opened up September the 3rd with an enroll- , meht of 54. The trustees and a good many of the pttftrons came out on the ^ morning of the oponing. The faculty 1 for the ensuing year is as follows: Prof. Walter P. Gore of Longs, S. C., Principal; Miss Margaret A. Stanley, ol Loris, S. C., intermediate work and M iss Sallie D. Richardson, of Loris |l S. C., Route 2, has charge of the primary department. We feel sure that this will be one of the most successful years of our school work. There was an ice-cream supper given ;at the school house on Thursday night, Sept. 20th. The funds will go for ithe improvement of the building. The amount of $26.00 was raiaed. The teachers had prepared just a shoK pix>gram for the ociasion. It consisted of a few patriotic songs by the school, and a quartett, "Just Before the Battle Mother" by Misses Carter, Richardson and Stanley and Prof. Gore. The building was decorated in patriotic colors ar.d United States flags. Great interest was manifested by the people of the community. Everybody seems to be enthusiastic over School work in this section. A pocial tax has been voted on in this district and \vc have been successful ir. getting a seven month term with Jrrce teachers, which we have never had hcrtoforo. We believe that great' progress will be made during this | year, and that the people will become more and more interested in the advancement of thci:- children. "One Present/' ?o There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put to aether, and for years it was sup posed to be incurable. Doctors prescribed local remedies, and by con stantly failing to cure with local treat ment, pronounced it incurable. CataiTb is a local disease, greatly influenced by constitutional conditions an > therefore requires constitutional treat ment. Hall's Catarrh Medicine, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is a constitutional remedy, is taken internally and acts thru the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. One Hundred Dollars re ward is offered for any case th \t Hall's Catarrh Medicine fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Bills for constipation ! ?adv. OBITUARY, Mr. Frank L. Lynch passed away ai his home at Cool Spring, S. C August 28th, 1917, and was laid to rest in the Cool Spring cemetery the j following- day. He was born and j reared in Wayne County, N. C., Fork Township, near Goldsboro, and came to Horry in the latter part of the year 1881, and made this County his home ever since. When he died n?. ' was Go years, 2 months and 1G days old. He was manned to Miss Mary ilice Wilson, of Marlboro County on 'opt. 17th, 1882. lie leave; his wife here, two brothers, one sister, rn i everal other relatives in the oi North State to mourn their less. We L hope soon to meet our dear one where there wlil be no more parting. ( One who loved him, { His wife, Mary Alice Lynch. Cool Spring, S. C. o Notice of Discharge. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned administrator of the person al estate of Peter Skipper, Dec'd., \ will apnly to the Judge of Probabte >{ Horry County, at his office, at Conway, S. C., at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, on the 15th day of October, A I>., 11)17, for a final discharge as such administrator. George Skipper, Qualified Administrator of Peter Skipper, ^ tcl-(pd) Dec'd. r O v Notice of Discharge. S Notice is hereby given that the un- 1 dersigned guardain of Causey Dimery, t Minor, will apply to the Judge of Pro- ( bate of Horry County, at his office at t Conway, S. C., at 11 o'clock in the < forenoon, on the 15th day of October. 1 A. D. 1917, for a final discharge as t such guardian. ' t H. G. Turner. Qualified Guar- i dian of Causey Dimery, i td. (chgs.) Minor. 1 o 1 Suggested Program For The Buck Creek Union. j ??? i Friday ? Introductory Sermon 1 preached by the appointee, 11 o'clcok 1 a. m. i Moderator calling the Union to or- J der. i List of Churches called, Letters 1 read, delegates enrolled. < Query No. 1: Are the Promises to i the Saints of the Gosoel Aec Heaven- 1 ly op Earthly Promises? 1 Qpery No 2: What is the Soul ? v Query No. 3: Is the Union conduct. ' ed on the best possible basis. Query No. 4: What is the Cares, Riches and Pleasures of this Life, as referred to in Luke 8-14? < Query No. 5: Are the Spirits of the 1 I>ea?- Concerned About any thing in this World? Other concluding business. tir s-.v M>. OONWAV. S C > * a- * ^ * B I Five-Passenger Touring Car Three-Passenger Fteur de lys Roadster $725 secari, sum Sedanet, $845 #** * B * 13c -2 Its our season-end sa'( and 'till 15th inst we \ orvnl/o onH Ta!r?n!ofto I c. UUU(\0 Ul IU I uiuviv/iio i can or two cans for 25( window display. Conway Dr? The Store GREATEST BATTLE A FRENu.i VCTOfflf World Has Known Nothing Bofore Like Great Battle of Verdun. Verdun.? (Correspondence.)? The greatest battle ever fought, tin 18 nonths' struggle for Verdun, which uis been in progress since February 21, 1910, has been a brilliant triumph or the French army. Today not onty he famous city but 'ts outlying beit >f forts arc in the hands of the vicarious French defenders, while the liscomfited German assailants lie benn<l their shell shattered lines suf'ering severely from the hard bits hey have received and unable to do anything more for the moment to retrieve their most recent defeat than to try to hold back their antagonists while they recover breath. Among the one time wooded valleys md hills in the vicinity of the fortress V) fewer than 000,000 Germans have fallen dead or wounded. Tens of thousands of their bodies were hurled where they fell only to be disinterred again by shells tearing up the ground in the course of the incessant bombardments and then once more covered by earth thrown up by other explod ing projectiles. The correspondent of Associated Press had frequent v>v ? evidence while crossing the torn up battlefield during the fighting of the temporary character of ^he graves. Around Douaumont, Vaux, Pepper Hill, Goose Hill, Dead Man's Hill and Hill 304, all centers of the most serious fighting during many months, the earth is impregnated with blood and the churned up soil is so dessicated that in dry weather it forms into deep beds of dust, while in wet weather it % ? *H ' * lality Goes Cl< by an es tfcbfu factor T ho Dort is not a no 1 iTJ^jr ^las ^een on mi IVi# ^ias T1evcr bc^n sold territory opened up f< wk ^7X1 tread. It was never l\fy backed by mtr hl? i tr Mr. Dort, an old time and his sons own this }l are putting their best JL money in this one make / When you buy a Dort, hind it men who are highest business inte^i tory that is permanent rfer OWN A DORT. Yi YXp IT?WE ARE DAIL ING A SHIPR JP CONWAY SAI Conway, South for 25c I J ; on Talcum Powders < ivill sell Colgates, Babi jIc Powders 13c per ' / ' ? ? ! i ! ;. cash only. Sec our t < i ig company of Quality. i is just a swamp of o ze, through vhich it i j difficult to make pro^res \ Pelair. I'ogins Pudi. In the battles of August and Ojfoi bor, 191G, Verdun had freed itself of i seme of the heavy pressure of the G'-r I i. an hosts, but the cuter lir.e of buls i and woods suri-ounding the city was still in the occupation of the enemy, j The great Flanders battle this summer was well under way when the j French commander in chief, General j Pctain, decided that the time had ar| rived for a new push at Verdun, be. : fore which a strong German armv un. i do?- the orders of the crown prince was i sitting. ( Preparations were carefully made * I and the artillery began its work of do- ' j struction of the German positions y j about the beginning of the second 1 < week of August. The Germans ve! plied vigorously and the reciprocal | cannonade gradually increased in volume until the morning of the cl jy ( j fixed for the French infantry to go < I "over the top." That dawn when the i writer ipade his way across tlie sear- < ed and scoche<i earth towards the front line in order to observe the op'n j ing of the engagement every noise conceivable by the human imagination 1 seemed to have combined to break the ' ear-drums and shatter the nerves, while all about great slugs of steel fell and scored and wracked the soil. Take Manv Prisoner**. t The result of this last battle may i be told in a few words. On , a fiont I stretching in a straight line just about i 12 miles territory of a depth of from t 1,500 yards to 8,000 yards had been i recaptured by the French, the villages i of Champneuville and Samogneux, as 1 well as the woods of Malan court, 1 Avocourt, Camard and Cumieres has i been occupied, Goose Hill and Talou ^ Hill had been taken, Mort Homme and i Hills 304 and 344 had been stormed < and occupied, over 11,000 prisoners i had been rounded up and nearly 50 ] German cannon had been taken or de- i stroyed, together with more than 200 j machine guns and about 40 trench i mortars. < *mt ... . 1 = ? < ?~?ry sax* Through TABLISHED \v automobile, VSil^rYk South until the ^ or a f>f> inch ^ 1 made in a tG') k^M'/Tv J OF CHAR- [7?/ buggy maker, yjLnT^ factory. They Il/il ktl?fn l\/\ !X\l \f/ I > \/tA IIUVC I-"-"" \M 1 / I strong, of the OU'LL LIKE : .Y EXPECT- I^QWl LES CO. I?! Carolina DNE DAY EACH WEEK WITHOUT MEAT OR WHEAT David R. Coker, United States Food \dministrator for South Carolina, has ssued an appeal to the people of the stetc advocating a meat'ess and vheatless day for each week. The following i? the appeal to tno vacple of South Carolina: ' f 1 m /k .V>M O 1* - - uug twnn' \vj our people o.prove their patriotism by a little sell lenial. While the soldiers of our alios are bravely fighting and our own iplendid boys are getting ready for he big push we mu I do cur part at lornc to support and encourage them. "The United States Food Adminisration has asked every family of theUition to abstain from using wheat inmy form during one day of each week md also to absU.in from the use m neat for one day. It is estimated hat 80,000,000 to 90.000 000 bushels >! wheat and 2,200,000,000 pounds of neat would be saved if the entire na,:'on adopted this program. Most of our people thoroughly ap).'eciuto our great cereal, tern, and t vould bo no hardship of them to use f t exclusively not only one <lay, hut om f u veral days of the week. With well >oiled hominy for breakfast, corn-y ircad for dinner and corn muffin omL ?poon bread for supper, none of 'JiTW ?vi 11 feel the absence of biscuit or light jread. "The need of saving wheat an 1 7\eat js very great, and I, therefore all upon the people of South Carolina' ,o respond to the call of the National h'cofl Administration anl abstain from a heat and meat on one day of each kYeek." ______ m Expert Work. Mr. Push, of Slackcm & Push, sudlenly entering his counting house the Aher day, found one of his clerks < steadying a large hook endwise on his^ :hin. "Why aren't you at work!" he growled. "1 am sir," replied the clerk; "I'm balancing the ledger, sir."?London Telegraph. Verdun had been freed from the constant menace of the Germans and .1 n v- * ... me rrencn troops nad shown their * narked superiority to the Germans t>oth on the defensive and the offensive. They defended the citadel with tenacity and wonderful courage wken 4 t was threatened by apparently overwhelming: forces, and when their own time came they executed a brilliant of fensive movement which pushed the X invaders back until at the moment of writing the nearest German line north ward is over six miles away from the city, while to the eastward the Germans are only slightly closer. The French, however, are in possession of all the commanding hills and are able thus to observe ; the enemy's movements and to take the necessary precautions against any further attack.