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"NOTICE OF FINAL DISCHARGE. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned Guardian of the persons -and estates of Uriah L. Causey, Samuel Causey, and Cora Belle Causey, minors; will apply to the Judge of Probate in and for Horry County, i at his office at Conway, S. C., at 10 o'clock in the forenoon on the 10th day of February, 1019, for a final discharge as such Guardian. S. V. CAUSEY, Guardian, of the persons and estates of Uriah L. Causey, Samuel Causey, and Cora Belle Causey, 'Dated January 3rd, 1919. Minors. 1|9|19?td-pd. D. A. SPIVEY & CO. W. B. King, Secty. BONDS AND INSURANCE ?Office in? PEOPLES NATIONAL BANK BUILDING I H. H. WOODWARD, Attiriey and Counaellor at Law CONWAY, a ~ \i ? B. B. SCARBOROUGH I Attorney at Law, CONWAY. S. C. L S.P.HAWES Auto Supplies, Fancy Groceries Ajax Tires, guaranteed 60Of miles. PHONE 67. QUICK DELIVERY. ^ T. B. L E W I S, Atty. and Councellor at Lav ' CONWAY, - - - S. C J. M.JOHNSON, CIVIL ENGINEER MARION, S. C. My Engineering and Surveying office will be open during my ab Sence, and prepared to take cart of any work as usual. Address* v, all communications as hereto ' Core. V ~ 1 WILLIAM EUGENE KING, M I Physician and Snrgeon Office in Piatt Drng Oo. AYNOR,. ... S. t OR. J. D. THOMAS I Physician and Surgeon loris. s. o. J. O. Norton E. S. 0. Bake? NORTON & BAKER ' ATTORN EYS-AT-LAW CONWAY, ? ? ? B. 0 V- - 1 LUM JUNG LAUNDRY I CONWAY, 8. C, Beginning July 1st. 1913 All persons mast take ticketsI ft) wqpk left here. Possitively n 4^ work delivered until ticket is prt (sented. foundry not called for ! v 30 days will be sold for charges V LUM JUNG i '' W C SINGLETON , 4 ATTORNEY J?T LAW Conway, 3. C. ( j Office op Stairs Bick Building A 1 DR. 6. !< LEWIS ; DENTAL SURGEON Office Over Norton Drug Company CONWAY. S. C. r | HORRY CCUNIY t ' f TRUST COMPANY fc [gj L. D. Magratb & p Manager. fc B Real Estate ? P Real Estate Loans ? B Bonds r B Insurance ? |SOPI!Q@!Sif>PP^ ? V OVER-EATING I is the root of nearly nil digeetsre eriU. If your digestion is week or out of kilter, better net lees and ose Ki-mqidS the new eld to better digestion. Pleasant1* to take?effectirei. Let Ki-moub help straighten out your digestive troubles. MADS my SCOIT A DOWNS MAKsnn QfcFIFTH ANNUAL TUBERCULOSIS ASSOCIATION. South Carolina will have a large delegation at the Fifth Annual Tuberculosis Association, Southern Division, Conference, representing ten Southern States. This meets at Birmingham, Ala., Jan. 23-24, under the auspices of the National Tuberculosis Association. At the 1917 confer once, problems were outlined, and a program suggested. This year, the Conference will, for the most part, be devoted to the discussion of the tuberculosis problems related to the war. The erpcriencc of a year's war work will^ be described and used as a basis for the discussion of moth ods and programs needed in the immediate future during the period of Reconstruction. The program of the Conference in eludes a session on health education of the civilian population. Miss Clutuncey Blackburn, Executive SecNobody wants anything when he buys from a merchai buy what he needs at fair pric At the Sam ( I i The year of 1919 finds 1 a full line of staple good: that are fair to our customer: Give Us | If you have not been tra< us a trial this year. DUSENBUI Toddville, - HARRELSON & HARRELSON Attorneys-at-Law Practice both in the State and Fedcral Courts. MULLINS, ? ? S. C A FAMILY MEDICINE In Her Mother9! Home, Says This Georgia Lady, Regarding BlackDraught. Relief From Headache, Malaria, Chills, Etc* Ringgold, Ga.? Mrs. Chas. Gaston, of this place, writes: "I am a user of Thedford's Black-Draught; in fact, It was one of our family medicines. Also in my mother's home, when I was a child. When any of us children complained of headache, usually caused by constipation, she gave us a dose of Black-Draught, which would rectify the trouble. Often In the Spring, wo would have malarl . and chills, or troubles of this kir.J, we would take Black-Draught pretty regular until the liver acted well, nnd we would soon bo up and around again. Wo would not be without it, for it certainly has saved us lots of doctor bills. Just a dose of BlackDraught when not no well naves a lot of days in bed." Thedford's Black-Draught has been I 1 n HSirt f AT? motixr vn'iro lr? + ... ??MW *x/A J VCV& ?.* IU tuu ti cat" ! inent of stomach, liver and bowel, troubles, and tho popularity which it now enjoys is proof of its merit. If your liver is not doing Us duty, you will suffer from such disagreeable symptoms as headache, biliousness, constipation, indigestion, etc., and unless something is done, serioun trouble may result. Thodford's Black-Draught has been found a valuable remedy for those troubles. It is purely vegetable, and nets In a prompt and natural way, regulating tho liver to Its proper functions and cleansing tho bowels of impurities. Try it. Insist 011 Thedford'a, tho original and gnnuiue. E 79 * * * <*? - ..J* ~ X TH? BOBBY HKftJ rotary South Carolina Anti-Tuberculosis Association, will make an address at this session on a State Health Institute. Other session will include plans for community control of tuberculosis; the experience of the army as an aid to medical knowledge, at which addresses will be made by Army Medical officers; ade quate care of the tuberculosis soldier; public nursing care of the tubeerculosis soldier by the Red Cross Heme Service; the tuberculous Ne-? gro; and plans for a Children's Health Crusade. Among the delegates will be John P Thomas of Columbia?one of the Vice-Presidents of the Southern Association; Miss Blackburn; Mrs. W. B. Fulmer of the Richland County tuberculosis Association; Miss Mary Hart of the Charleston Association; Miss Jane Fraser of the Department Public Health of the State Nurses' Association; Mrs. Iaul Seabold of the State Tuberculosis Association; Miss Nora Hamner of the Darlington Red Cross; Miss Ida Haney, a Laurens Mill Nurse; Miss Virginia Agncw of Watts Mill, Laurens; Mrs. Ruth Dodd, State Supervisor Public Health Nurses; Miss Martha Bonham, of Anderson?Secretary of State Tuberculosis Association. o Government agents in Columbia seized MGO dozen one-ounce vials oi lemon extract in the possession, of unknown parties :n Columbia, .and *tho liquid is in the custody of J. L. Sims, United States Marshal. less than a fairly good article it ; and a customer wants to DCS. e Old Stand us at the same eld stand with * which we offer at prices s as well as to us. ;a inai cV.ng at Toddville before, give RY & CO. o. TAX NOTICE. The hooks will bo opon for the colloction of taxes for fiscal year 1918, from October 15th to December 31st, 1918, without penalty. Payable during January with 1 per cent, penalty; during February 1 per cent, additional, and five per cent, ad ditional for March, making a total ol 7 per cent, from March 1st to 15th, at which time the books will close. REGULAR TAX LEVY The regular tax levy for 1918 is as follows: Mills St?te tax 8 1-4 Constitutional School Tux 3 Ordinary County Purposes ... 5 Courthouse and Jail Bonds 3-4 Pnnf T ? A i M. t?nv 1IIUCUICUI1U9H) lllltTCSl, and Bridge Bonds .. S. F 1 Township Road Fund 2 Total 20 Mills For Bucks, Conway, Dog Bluff, Bayboro, Galivants Ferry, Green Sea, Little River, and Dogwood Neck Townships an extra levy of two mills (2) for Township Road Fund, and for Floyds Township an extra levy of five mills (5) for Township Road Fund. An additional levy to pay special taxes voted for School purposes in certain Districts is as follows: Districts Mills No. 1 Port Harrelson 2 No. 2 Kver Green 8 No. ?"? Dog Bluff 8 ! No. 4 Bayboro 2 | No. 5 Sandy Plain 8 No. (J Athens 8 I No. 7 Given Sen K | No. S Roar Hay 4 J No. 0 Little River 8 i No. 10 Dogwood Neck 4 | No. 11 Soca ;teo 8 j No. 12 Collins Creek 8 No. 13 Withers 4 No. 14 Centenary 12 I klD, CONWAY, B O No. 15 Haw Branch 5 No. 16 Pine Grove 4 No. 17 Wannamaker 12 ( No. 18 Loris 12 No. 19 Burroughs 11 No. 20 Mt. Olive 8 No. 21 White Oak 3 No. 22 Burcol 8 No. 23 Good Hope 8 No. 24 Cedar Grove 4 No. 25 Gurley 8 No. 2G Cool Spring 2 No. 27 Zion 8 No. 28 Chapel Hill 8 No. 29 Powell 8 No. 30 Princeviile 4 No. 31 Sidney 8 | No. 32 Hickory Grove 8 No. 33 Finkloa 11 No. 34 Oak Grove 8 No. 35 Howard 4 No. 30 Grassy Bay 16 No. 38 Hickory Hill 3 No. 39 Simpson Creek 8 ( No. 40 Joyncr Swamp 3 No. 41 Daisy 8 No. 42 Hughes Mill 8 No. 43 Hulls Island 8 No. 44 Deep Branch 8 No. 45 Tilly Swamp 8 No. 40 Oakland 8 No. 47 Red Hill 8 No. 48 Eight Mile 8 No. 49 Red Bluff 3 No. 50 Floyd* 10 No. 51 Floyds X Roads j 8 No. 52 Poplar Hill 3 No. 53 Allen 8 No. 54 Valley Forge 8 No. 55 Knotty Branch 8 No. 50 San ford 3 No. 57 Sweet Home 8 No r?X ? No. 59 High Point 8 | No. 01 Wanipee 12 No. 02 Savannah Bluff 12 I No. 0,1 Rohobcth 8 No'. 04 Enterprise; 3 No. 07 Mt. Pis-gali 8 j No. 08 Homewood 4 | No. 09 Maple 8 | No. 70 Poplar 8 No. 71 Shell 4 No. 72 Leon 8 i No. 73 Mt. Herman 8 j No. 74 Pour Mile 8 j No. 75 Virgo 2 No. 70 Toddville 5 Nvi. 77 Straw field 3 No. 78 Ebenezcr 8 No 79 Bucksport 3 No. 80 Spring Branch 8 Nr. 81 Salem 3 No. 82 Mill Swamp 3 No. 83 Red Hill 4 j ino. K4 lirunson 3 No. 85 Watts 4 No. 87 Norton 8 No. 88 Waccamaw 4 No. 89 Seven Mile 4 No. 90 Pauley Swamp 2 No. 92 Vaughts 4 No. 94 Oak Grove 8 No. 95 Twelve Mile 2 No. 90 Eldorado 4 No. 97 Carolina 8 No. 98 Kingston 2 No. 99 Ay nor 8 No. 101 Pleasant Grove 8 SCHOOL HOUSE BOND TAX An additional levy of two mills (2) in Districts Nos. 19 and 80, and in District No. 61 an additional levy of one mill is made to pay interest on ! the School House Bonds, and to create a Sinking Fund for their final retirement. CAPITATION TAX. A Poll tax of One Dollar, for School purposes, is levied upon every male citizen between the ages of 21 nn i-i- ' i cum uv jfcain, iw I'uni a living, except confederate veterans over 50 years old. CAPITATION DOG TAX. A Capitation tax of One Dollar is levied upon each dog in the County. COMMUTATION ROAD TAX. Road Tax for 1919 is payable from January 1st, to March 15th, 1919. FISHERY STAMPS. Fishery Stamps can be obtained at the County Treasurer's Office at any time. Those who write for statement of taxes will please state whether or not their property is all in one School District, and give the name and num her of the School District. TREASURER'S ITINERARY. Tuesday, December 17th. Aynor, 9 to 11. Gal i van Is Ferry, 11 to 2. j Rehobeth, 3 to 4. Wednesday, Dec. 18th. Mt. Pisgah, 9 to 10?Sam I'. Ger raid's house. Hinson's Store, 11 to 2. I Stevens X Roads, 4 to 5. Thursday, December 19th. Floyds School House, 9 to 12. Spring Branch, 1 to 2. j Stroud's Store, 3 to 4. Friday, December 2(>th. Green Sea, 9 to 12. i'o.v'ors School House, 1 to 2. Mmi/'ov r*.. /....I j Jlayboro, 9 to 10. j Levi. , 10 to 2. Daisy, 2 to 4. Tuesday, December 21th. Nathan Bellamy's Store, 0 to 10. Kbonoaor, 10:30 to'12. Brooksvillo, 1 to 3. Thursday, December 2Gth. Little River, 0 to 11. Wampee, 1 to 2. Balance of time in the office at Conway. W. L. BELLAMY, Treasurer of Horry County, o Gat the and Avoid Every Cake <? OFFICERS' SALARY BILL NOW A LAW Columbia, Jan. 20.?The officers' salary bill, carrying a yearly remuneration of $5,000 for Governor and $2,500 for elective State officers, is now a law. It was signed by Governor Manning tonight.. The bill was given its final reading by the House of Representatives this afternoon after an impromptu filibuster had been attempt ed and abandoned. U was immediately sent to the Senate which concurred in the House amendment. Tonight when both houses assemb'ed at S o'clock the hill was engrossed and sent to the Governor, who signed it. The bid as written into the statute books is the product of W. R. Bradford, chairman of the ways and means committee. When the senate bill was reported to the ways an 1 means committee Mr. Bradford gave up the chairmanship to a member of the committee and argued that all but elective State officers should he sincKcn rrom the bill, the Governor's salary to be reduced from $0,000 to $5,000, a I. carried in the Senate bill; the salary of elective State officers be reduced from $'1,000, as prescribed by the Senate to $2,500, and that all other officers las contained in the Senate bill, including the justices of the Supreme Court and the circuit judges be eliminated. Mr. Bradford's ideas were adopted. ; LEMONS WHITEN AND BEAUTIFY THE SKIk Make this beauty lotion cheaply for your face, neck, arms and hands. At the cost of a small jar of ordinary cold cream one can prepare a run quarter pint of the most wonderful lemon skin softener and complexion beautifier, by squeezing the juice of two fresh lemons into a bottle containing three ounces of orchard white. Care should be taken to strain the juice through a fine cloth so no lemon pulp gets in, then this lotion will keep fresh for months. Every woman knows that lemon juice is used to bleach and remove such blemishes as freckles, sallowness and tan and is the ideal skin softener, whitener and beautifier. Just try it Get three ounces of orchard white at any drug store and two lemons from the grocer and make up a quarter pint of this sweetly fragrant lemon lotion and massage it daily into the face, neck, arms and hands.. It is marvelous to smoothen rough, red hands.?adv (2). o IN LOVING REMEMBRANCE. The death angels visited our hom * and took from us a loving husband, and father, J. W. Stevens. He was .r>i) years old and had teen in failing health for several years but bore his suffering until his death. He leaves a wife, two sons, four daughters, three grand children and he leaves two Brothers, three Sisters and a host of relatives and friends to mourn the loss of him. But we feel our loss is his eternal gain. Father dwells in Heaven And will for ever more; On angel wings they took him, To that Celestial shore. His pilgrimage here is ended And his crown of glory won, His life well spent in happy deeds, His life on earth is done. 1 j Tho ho is gone wo will not forgot, His loving ways whilo noro, His happy srnilos his chorry words, And grootin rs fond and d?ar. V.VU irv r forgot tlm hap >\ day.. That \ ith him w luivo ? n. And our duty now hone* forth bo To hoc p our on mory grof n. Oh. doar papa thou art gor.o, Tho sad wo now a.ay ho; Because you will no more h with us. Nor your loving faco wo see. Wo miss your low and gontlo voice As wo gaz( on your ompty chair, . ***** TO EXPLAIN WHY HE SEIZED CABLES Inquiry Into Postmaster General's Action in Taking Control of Systems "CONGRESS AND PEOPLE WERE KEPT IN DARK" Telegraph and Telephone Lines Operated Subject to Burleson's Individual Will. Washington. ? Postmaster General Burleson may be called upon by the Fouse to explain why he seized the cables after the war was over. Representative McKinley of Illinois introduced a resolution providing for a , thorough inquiry into the action of ' Mr. Burleson in taking absolute control of the wire systems, and into increases of charges. The preamble of the McKinlcy resolution gives his reasons for ask| ing- an investigation. It roads: "Wliomnc A? U; * .. ..x ?. ?..x, 111^ l\ll IlCSb ill 1(1 1(1sistant request, Congress empowered President Wilson in the so-called V. ar Control lvuv, il* necessary, to take over and operate the telephone, tele graph and cables systems of the United States to enable the President the more successfully to prosecute the war, and, Says Hurle.-on A-d.s for Himself. "Whereas, During actual hostilities and before the armistice was signed tl\e President did not exercise such authority and take over .aid systems, and "Whereas, subsequently to the signing of the armistice after the surrender of the German fleet to the Allies, after the disintegration of the German army and after the partial demobilization of our own and the Allied armies, Postmaster General Burleson, on his own initiative, for reasons of his own of which Congress and the people are kept in ignorance, seized or took over under his control il... i - l 1 * * * * ~ * me ujifpnone, leiegrapn and cable systems of the United States, and proceeded to operate and is operating them according- to his o\\Tt individual i ideas subject only to his will and pleasure, and "Whereas, Postmaster General ' Burleson, without investigation and arbitrarily by his own dictation has increased the ehrages and raised the rates to the millions of users of wire i communication utilities in this coun1 try to an extent that is burdensome* ' onerous and unjust to the public." 1 Demands Now Partisan Inquiry. The resolution proper provides: "That the Speaker of the House of Representatives is hereby authorised to appoint a special committee to consist of six members of the House, three Democrats and three Republicans, whose duty it shall be to inquire: "1. Whether such seizure or taking over by Postmaster General Burleson of such wire systems of communication and their oDeration sary. "2. Wore, And arc the increased charges and rates fixed and prescribed by him, justified? "Said committee is hereby empowered to send for persons and papers, to administer oaths to witnesses, to employ clerical and stenographic assistance, and to incur other necessary expenses not exceeding $6,000 and to report its conclusions and recommendations to the House at the earliest practicable date." Friends of Mr. Burleson will state his position on the floor of the House when the resolution comes up for consideration. They will assert that the President, under the law, took the wires over. They claim that the McKinlcy preamble is full of erroneous statements. It was stated tonight that if the resolution passes Mi. Burleson will gladly go before the committee and state the case as he sees it. Mr. Burleson will deny that charges and rates "nave been increased throughout the country. o Colds Cause Orip and Influenza LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets remove the causo. There is only one "Dromo Quinine/* E. W. GROVE S oljiouture on box. 30c. And in our joys and sorrows too, You always used 10 share. Dearest papa thou have left us, And our loss we deeply feel; Hut 't is Clod who has bt reft us, He can all our so rows heal. His Loving Daughter, Dertlia Stevens.