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fUUl Chr ||ortg |mU, CONWAY, S. O. blend at the Post Office at Conway 8> C, as second class mail matter. H. H. WOODWARD Published Every Thursday Morning by Conway Publishing Co. ? 7 TELEPHONE 21. CHANGE SUBSCRIPTION PRICE: One Copy, One Year.. ..$1.50 One Copy, Six Months 75 One Copy, Three Months. . .50 Payable in Advance PUBLISHERS ANNOUNCEMENT Tributes of Respect, and Obituaries will be charged for at the rate of one cent 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 | of five cents per line; and all other notices in the local columns at the rate of ten cents per line. Extra charge of 50 per cent, for notices set in black face type in local column. All changes of advertisements must be in the office by Saturday aoon to insure their appearance ui the following issue. All communications must be signed by the name of the writer, not for publicaiton, but for the protection of this paper. Lega Notices at $1 per inch first insertion, 50 cents eacn subsequent insertion. Rates on long term contracts for display advertising very reasonable, and made known on application. Mfikp nil Chocks or Drafts payable to The Horry Herald, or H. H. Wood*rard, 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 adrace. THURSDAY, JAN. 9, 1919. Leave nothing for tomorrow except what cannot be done today. Putting things off never got anything done in this world and never will. o The happiest thought we know i< that this year finds us out of the war. o Find out what has caused your failure in 1918, and remove the cause during 1919. o Things that suited our forefathers will not suit us; because we live in a different time. o During the year, food supplies are bound to be in demand. Food crops should be profitable to the farmers. o We can show you people who apparently are exceptions to the rule that it is not human nature to be perfectly satisfied. o Tobacco growers should not allow the good prices of last year to cause them to raise too much of the weed J this year. o The capable brain will not be content with the same way of handling problems for all time, but will search for new solutions and will find them. ??o Careful study of the laws of this State in regard to such tilings as game regulation, and the running of the schools, shows that in the course ol a number of years these matters have become somewhat tangled up and there is a lot of apparent nonsense mixed up with it. The only way to remedy this is to pass laws that suit the present time and make. tnem 01 general application, and let the old ones go as a consequence. o FARMERS ANI) BUSINESS. MoTe and more it is being proved in this country that it pays a farmer to apply business rules to his business. He gets along much better where he transacts his business in a business way, keeps accurate accounts of what he does, knows what it costs him to porduce certain things under varying circumstances that may arise. A.s soon as he learns the ways of business he begins to see the foolishness of trading out what he makes ahead of its production; and learns the great advantage there i is in having to spend this year the the fruits of his toil during last year; in other words he knows at last that the only good way for him to do is to have something ahead so that he can buy what he needs to advantage at the lowest cash prices and is not alv.ays and eternally in debt. There are things like these that we recommend to the careful study of every farmer in Horry County. Auctioi FRIDAY, 11 O'CI GREEN S on lu nc FRESH GUERNSI MILCH Cash or Bankable Acce C.G.H Green S D n LT a. i/. nansoi NEW YORK TO PAY I HONOR TO JOFFRE This is the sixty-seventh birthday of Marshal Joffre, who first "stop- i ped them at the Maine." 1 The anniversary will be celebrated ] throughout France, doubtless in ( many parts of England, and also in Revi The assurai productior Buick Mot< following ? i models, effc These price our present Three Pass Five Passer Four Passei Five Passer Seven Pass< Seven Pass< Buick Mote II Pioneer B BUCK C DISTF _ L'_I1L 1 THE HOUv HKEJ n Sale JAN. 1TTH. LOCK . '(*))' . ' , ? .' . < . *. , r? !EA, S. C. AD 20 "<17 A ^Tf\ tnnnntr '*1 AINU JLKdLI COWS e Papers Will be pted. I00VER ? c r? Cd^ kJ* V/t i, Auctioneer Now York City. The local celebration will be hold at St. Mark's-in-the-Bowerie, 10th Street, west of Second Avenue, with the French Consul General, Gaston Liebert, presiding. French officers will speak and opera stars will sing the "Marseillaise" and other French j patriotic songs. Money raised by the church for the fatherless children of j Franee will be presented. i 9/D, J ks / f \5aVE-IW-HEADA13 nee of material fc i of Buick cars ei >r Company to es * 5rices on the van jctive January firs s will not be chan : dealers' selling a enger Open Model H-Six-44 iger Open Model H-Six-45 iger Closed Model H-Six-46 tger Closed Model H-Six-47 enger Open Model H-Six-49 enger Closed Model H-Six-5 >r Company, Flint builders of Valve-in-Head M< MOTOI ION WAY, SOUTH CAROLINA tIBUTORS FOR HORRY COUN "" "1 FOOD CONDITIONS SEEN IN GERMANY London.?A long article written by a member of the allied naval commission in German waters on the subject of food conditions in north Germany is published by The Times. The writer is careful to point out that he deals only with what various meiinbers of the commission saw with their own eyes in a very considerable area and that he ignores hearsay evidence regarding other p&rts of Germany. "But if food conditions in the rest of Germany," he goes on, "are not very much worse than in Oldenburg, Mecklenburg and Schleswig-Holstein there is certainly no need for haste on the part of the allies in going to j their relief. I am confident that j none of the score or more members of the various sub-commissicns which covered many hundreds of miles of country and saw tens of thousands of the people at close range noticed any | " evidence of palpable underfeeding i " among any of the inhabitants. In- j deed, they are of the unanimous | opinion that the whole population, both urban and rural, in these regions have been and are being fed near enough to normal requirements to keep them at full physical vigor. A member of the intelligence staff who had spent many years in the country before the war, said: "'You don't see so many people J with rolls of fat on them as you did j five years ago but you do see a healthier, hardier and generally more fii looking population.' " o Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local appllcatipns as they cannot reach i me diseased portion of the ear. There Is only one way to cure Catarrhal Deafness, ; and that Is by a constitutional remedy, i HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. Catarrhal Deafness Is caused by an Inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube Is Inflamed you have a rumbling sound or Imperfect hearing, and when It is entirely closed, Deafness Is the I result. Unless the Inflammation can be re- I duced and this tube restored to Its nor- ! mal condition, hearing may be destroyed i forever. Many cases of Deafness are caused by Catarrh, which is an Inflamed ! condition of the Mucous Surfaces. ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for any 1 case of Catarrhal Deafness that cannot | be cured by HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE. All Druggists 76c. Circulars free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. h 1 w raws llnfil SANS BUICE j I ! ices I i ^ >r quantity nabies the I s tablish the I ious Buick f " t, 1919. | 1 ged during j ? greements. 1 * * : - $1495 ! b - - 1495 I p . - 1985 i - " 2195 [ J ? - 1785 i iO - 2585 I * l\/f: : I o , IVAl^UlgiUl II y otor Cars | y R CO. : j i?.) j !TY 1J? uppppii Loads?!! . - j?| vik *' ! ? ''(),{ I have this week the best I ft ^ ever snipped. One car loat Studebaker Wagons and ni: G. B. JI 0 CONWA "HISTORY of thi By Francis A. March Ph his brother, Gen. Peyton Staff, highest officer in Size of book 7X9 1-2, lllnct Vn+i/^v>n 1 jrnue oni according to binding. B can deliver some time in orders early or call and i mand for this book is ve] C. H. Snider L Notice t s Having decid< business, we hi tice that we wil ating for frcigt ger service on 1 River after Janu WACCAMAW L NOTICE CONWAY GUARDS. ino following- order has been isued and sent out to the Conway luards, calling a meeting cf the lompany at its Armory, Thursday vening, January 9th, at 8:15 o'clock, or the purpose of Muster. Ipecial Order No. 1. You are ordered and specially (quested to be present for Muster t the Company Armory, Conway, S. at the hour of 8:15 P. M., on 'hursday, January 9th, 1919. 2. Bring with you a complete item ced list of all property and clothing hich have at any time been issued ou. , > 3. Pull winter uniform will be 'crn, and <rvery man should have air trimmed, shoes shined, be clean havod, except that mustache may o worn if desired, and otherwise resent a neat and soldierly appearrcc. 4. A business session is also to be eld for the transaction of impor-. *nt business. 5, Youv Commanding Offiror ron-I ratulatea you for the good work ou have done throughout the past car, and extends warmest greetings f friendship and good wishes for ou through the new year and the eaTS to come. Let this year see ven better work done, as we labor >gether for the good of the Comp.ny. 6. The Social Committee announces that refreshments will be served. E. S. C. Baker, Capt. Commd'g. Co. "D." an. 6, 1919. > I > * t .* : lot Mules and Horses I have I t Mules just in, also car load ;e lot Buggies, Harness, Etc fl ?NKINS ^ 1 2 WORLD WAR" I w D., with introduction by j H 0. March, Chief of y I the United States Army. 'J , 750 pages and over 2 00 fl y $2.75, $3.00 and $3.75 M Dok not yet completed, but 9 January. Mail in your J see prospectus. The de- A tv great. Conway, S. C. 9 \r 1 J :o Public I >-1 ed to go out of ? ereby give no- jj II not be oper it and passcn the Waccamavv M ary 11th, 1919 fl * v ANE STEAMERS 1 '^1 ONE COLD WAVE ] STRIKES HORRY J The coldest weather this county has experienced during the Winter ^ m?'m of 1018-19 set^in last Friday even ing and by midnight the thermome tcr registered several degrees below .1 the feezing point. iV Sunday morning brought a slight ? rise in the temperature as the sun . came out and began to wnrrt^fche I frozen earth to some extent. This I gain was lost on Sunday night when the mercury dropped down to a point I below the freezing point again. Mon- I day morning was a very cold morning I when compared with the several o* n days of mild weather this section had the first of the week before. Pumps were frozen and cracked r ^ nnon i ? * m>mii ' 11 u|/vu iii inctiijr wncrc Ultiy '3^ jifl were exposed to the cold wind. Wa- T| ter pipes in the town bursted where j| the water had not been drained-^ut 2 in time. V The cold weather cut down the ll usual travel over country roads dur- 1 ing Saturday, Sunday and Monday. Jl SPECIAL TOWN ELECTION. 1 Public notice is hereby given that I a special town election will be held 7^' M at the Town Hall on Tuesday, Jan. 2 21st. The object of this election is J for the voters of the town to elect E two members of the Board of Publio E Work to fill vacancies on said Board, I Managers of election are C. R. Scar* borough, Chas. Dusenbury and F. ML I Bloyd. Poles open at 7 a. m. ana E /IIAQA of A ? ?? vtvov ?%v ** in* y TOWN OF CONWAY, By C. H. Snider, 1|9|19?2t Clerks \ i ?