The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, February 06, 1919, Page SEVEN, Image 7
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NOTICE OF FINAL DISCHARGE.
???? i
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,
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,
f Dated January 3rd, 1919. Minors.
1|9|19?td-pd.
D. A. SPIVEY & CO.
W. B. King, Secty.
BONDS AND INSURANCE
?Office in?
If PEOPLES NATIONAL BANK
* BUILDING
H. II. WOODWARD.
Attorney and Cohnaellor at Law
M CONWAY, a ~
R. B. SCARBOROUGH
Attorney at Law,
CONWAY. 8. C.
1 S. P. HAWES
Auto Supplies, Fancy Grocerier
Ajax Tires, guaranteed 500(
miles.
PHONE 57.
QUICK DELIVERY.
v
T. B. LEWIS,
Atty. and Counccilor at Likv
CONWAY. - - - S. C
J. M. JOHNSON.
CIVIL ENGINEER
MARION, S. C.
My Engineering and Surveying
office will be open during my ab
ence, and prepared to take car*
or any work as usual. Address
ell communications as hereto
tore.
? (
i
WILLIAM EUGENE KING, M t
Physician and Surgeon
Offioe in Piatt Drug Oo.
AYNOR,. ... S. C
DR. J. D. THOMAS
!: Physician and Surgeon
LOKIS. s. o
I. O. Norton E. S. O. Baker
NORTON & BAKER
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW
CONWAY, ? ? ? 8. 0
I
LUM JUNG LAUNDRY
CONWAY. 8. C.
Beginning July 1st. 1913
All persons must take tickets !f< i
t work loft here. Possitively r.
' work delivered until ticket i9 pn
v sented. Laundry not called for i
'' 30 days will be sold for charge*
'V LUM JUNG
| i
s* .
W C SINGLETON
z ATTORNEY AT LAW
I" Conway, 3, C0#rt
up Stairs B ick Building
j Jl ?
DR. 6.!. LEWIS
DENTAL SURGEON
Office Or?r Norton Drag Company
W CONWAY. 8. C,
SgflMKSMwmOsawiian
g K0P.8Y COUNTY J
| TRUST COMPANY g
p L. D. T/Iagratb
H Manager. fit
Rj Real Estate 0
P Real Estate Loans n
e Bonds a
S3 Insurance B
I OVER-ACIDITY I
ol the stomach has upset many m I
nighfsrest If your stomach is acid* 1
disturbed, dissolve two or three 1
KMfOIDS I
on the tongue before retiring and en* I
joy refreshing sleep. The purity and I
goodness of Ki-moitio guaranteed by I 1
SCOTT ft BOWNE 1
MAKERS OF SCOTTS EMULSION 1 1
NUGGETS ;
Picked up at the Annual Meeting of i
the Extension Service Forces.
1. There are more farms than miik
cows in South Carolina. "Brethren, i
this ought not so to be."
2. The exchange value of cotton
today is not what it was before the j
W'l V
3. The distribution of food is a <
greater problem than the production
of food.
4. The boll weevil in South Carolina
is a certainty. Get ready to
fij'ht him with other crops, cotton
for surplus cash only.
5. Cotton values since the war began
would not exchange for other
crops we have produced for sclf-su t(
nance. Hence, the South would
have bankrupted herself growing j
cotton alone .to buy foods and feeds, i
That will be even more true this |
year and next.
(>. Speculative farming in any one j
Nobody wants anything
when he buys from a rnerchan
bay what he needs at fair pric
At the Sami
I
/
m l * ? -
ine year 01 iyiy nncis v
a full line of staple goods
that are fair to our customers
Give Us
If you have not been trad
us a trial this year.
DUSENBUI
Toddville,
HARRELSON & HARRELSON
Attorneys -at-La w
Practice both in the State and
MULLINS. ? ? S. 0.
y Reasons! k|
^ 1 _ Why you should use
Cardui, ihc woman's
tonic, for your troubles, L ^
kl have been shown in
M thousands of letters from
actual users of this mcdi- L i
kl cine, who speak from
personal experience. If
^B the results obtained by
kl other women for so manv
M years have been so uni^B
formly good, why not
kl give Carduia trial? B^
Take
CARDUI
Tho Wnman'c Tnnio ? I
? IIIU 11UIIIUII U IUIIIU 1^
Mrs. Mary J. Irviti, of
qjfljj Cuiien, Va.f writes;
''About 11 years ago, 1
i jk/j ing-dcwn pains, headache,
numbness ... I \
Aiter taking about two B ^
around and when I took | j
! three bodies ! could do L
5
THE BOBBY HKft
rep unbalances agriculture as a
business.
7. Marketing the surplus products
if diversified farming is the chief
problem to face in this statement in
bell weevil times.
'8. *t takes 80 to (50 percent of the
consumer's price to get farm produce
from farm to table. This scandalous
waste must stop for the sake of producer
and consumer.
9. "Thar's more in the man than
thar is in the lan' " in safe successful
farming.
10. Look well to the feeding of
your own household and stock by the
products of your farm in 1919. Buying
high food and feed with declining
cotton is not even a gamble, it is
a sure loss, in farm economics.
11. Beef cattle, especially in lower
Carolina, will help to solve the boll
weevil problem.
12. "Pigs is more pigs," and that
in a comparatively short time. Hence
the value of hogs of hogs as a cash
crop.
1 _ . . ?i t 1 1. _ .
it*, i jon l use grounu rocK pnos-1
phatc at the present unreasonably
high prices.
14. ? !ix your own fertilizers ^and
save 20 to 20 per cent.
o
TRESPASS NOTICE.
All persons are hereby given notice
and warned not to trespass on
my land either cutting or carrying
any thing oft' without leave.
Sam Q. Eloyd.
Tabor, N. C., ? 1-16-19-41.
less than a fairly good article
t; and a customer v/ants to
es.
s Old Stand
a n n a a! / ! n 4-h I
a cv 11 oci/JiiiV v.au atdiiu WHil
which we offer at prices
i as well as to us.
a Trial
ling at Toddvillc before, give
BY & CO.
==f?3?~ S C.
" S.
TAX \OTICE.
The books will be open for the collet
lion of taxes for fiscal year 1918,
from October 1 fith to December 111st,
1018, without penalty.
Payable during January with 1 per
crnt. penalty; during February 1 per
cent, additional, and five per cent, ad
ditional for March, making a total oi
7 per cent, from March 1st to 15th,
at which time the hooks will close.
REGULAR TAX T.F.VY
The regular tax levy for 1918 is as
follows:
Mills
Slate tax 8 1-4
Constitutional School Tax o
Ordinary County Purposes ... 5 .
Courthouse and Jail Bonds 8-4
Past Indebtedness, Interest,
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 ^evy 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
j taxes voted for School purposes ?n
j certain Districts is as follows:
Districts Mills
No. 1 Port Harrelson 2
No. 2 Ever Green 8
XT/-. ?> I'l-rc ?-?
? >?. II I4IUI f"
i No. 4 Bayboro 2
I No. 5 Sandy Plain II
No. (> Athens 8
No. 7 Green Sea 8
No. 8 Bear Bay 4
i No. 9 Little Uiver 8
'No. 10 Dogwood Neck 4
No. 11 Socastce 8
No. 12 Collins Creek 8
No. Ill Withers 4
No. 14 Centenary 12
MJ>. OOJTWAY, 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. 20 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. 83 Finklea*. 11
No. 84 Oak Grove 8
No. 35 Howard 4
No. 36 Grassy Bay 16
No. 38 Hickory Hill 3
No. 39 Simpson Creek 8
No. 10 Joyner Swamp 3
No. 41 Daisy 8
No. 42 Hughes Mill 8
No. 13 Hulls Island 8
No. 44 Deep Branch 8
No. 45 Tilly Swamp 8
No. 46 Oakland 8
No. 47 Red Mill 8
No. 48 Might Mile 8
No. 49 Red Bluff 3
No. 50 Floyd? 16
No. 51 Floyds X Roads 8
No. 52 poplar Hill 3
No. 53 Allen 8
No. 54 Valley Forge 8
No. 55 Knotty Branch 8
No. 56 San ford 3
No. 57 Sweet Home 8
No..58 .Johnson 8
I No. 59 High Point 8
I No. 61 Wampee . .. 12
No. 62 Savanna! Bluff 12
| No. 68 Rrhobeth 8
1NO. l> 1 i'jnUrl'li'.JSC 3
No. 07 Ml. Pisgah 8
No. (5S Home wood 4
No. 09 Maple 8
No. 70 Poplar 8
j No. 71 Shell 4
t No. 72 Loon 8
j No. 70 Ml. Herman 8
j No. 74 Four Mile 8
| No. 75 Virgo 2
I No. 70 Toddville 5
NTn. 77 Strawfiold 8
No. 78 Ebenezcr 8
No 79 llucksport 8
No. 80 Spring Branch 8
Nr. 81 Salem 3
No. 82 Mill Swamp 3
No. 83 Red Hill 4
No. 84 Brunson 3
No. 85 Watts 4
No. 87 Norton 8
j 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. 96 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 null is made l.o pay interest on
the School House Bonds, and to ornate
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
and 00 years, able to earn a living,
except confederate veterans over 50
years old.
CAPITATION DOG TAX.
A Capitation tax of One Dollar is
levied upon each dog in iho County.
COMMUTATION ROAT) 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 ancf num
bcr of the School District.
TREASURER'S ITINERARY.
Tuesday, December 17th.
Aynor, 9 to 11.
Galivants Ferry, 11 to 2.
Rehobeth, 3 to 4.
Wednesday, Dec. 18th.
Mt. Pisgah, 9 to '0?Sam B. Ger
raid's house.
Hinaon's Store, 11 to 2.
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 20th.
Green Sea, 9 to 12.
Fowler's School House, 1 to 2.
Monday, December 23rd.
Bayboro, 9 to 10.
Lori.:, 10 lo 2.
Daisy, 3 to 4.
'3 uosilny, December 21th.
Nathan Bellamy's Store, 9 to 10.
Ebonezcr, 10:30 to 12.
Brooksville, 1 to 3.
Thursday, December 2f>th.
Little River, 9 to 11.
t
Wampee, 1 to 2.
balance of time in the office at
Conway.
W. L. BELLAMY,
Treasurer of Horry County.
G#t th# Ganui
and Avoid^^3ramv"l
I
Every Cake
KAISERSAWS WOOD
AND SAYS NOTHING
Amerongen. ? Sawing wood continues
to be the chief occupation of
the former German emperor who
spends several hours each morning
and afternoon within the castl
grounds working hard while several
men serv,\nU; respectfully hand him
legs and then pile the short sticks in
heaps for use later in the furnaces
of the castle.
The shortage of coal in Hollar. .
ompel: the hunim of woo i, p!o t
ul supplies of which are obtainable
Vdjn the sum.-unding ( talc. Wilfam
lonenzoucm worKs so well tivit he is
: *'11 to furnish the entire ronsump
iion of tlo* castle fires. The fonruv
uriporor scarcely ever spooks to his
.attendants while ho is at work.
The two moat, v.Ti.di enc'rclo the
a-tie are covered with ice sufficiently
thick to hear skaters. The vill :tv
. however, have been given to |
understand the accu turned perniis- j
sion to skate in Die moras can not he
arcordt d while the 1\ inner emperor
s in the east in.
There are various reports in circuk
it ion concur. ing th.e .alleged intention
of the former German empress
to retum to Potsdam. These
are ha: ed on the expressed desire of
the (1 rinan empress to end her days
at Potsdam, which she regards as
her home. The former empress, it is
said, has no intention of haxving her
husband in Holland. Communication
Ivtwecu the former 'anpress and her
children .and grandchildren is fairly
frequent by letter and telegram, but
no suggestion has aiisen to her joining
them in Germany.
For several weeks nothing has boon
heard from the former ciown prince,
who remains virtually alone in his
home on the island of Wicrengen.
Several more members of the
former emperor's suite are about to
leave for Germany, where as state
servants, they may place themselves
at the disposal of the government or
forfeit their right to pensions. Lieutenant
General von EstorfF, whose
wile is an American, will continue, to
devote himself to the former emperor.
The general has resigned his
rank in Dip German army.
, ^ i
LEMON JUICE iS
FRECKLE REMOVER
Girls! Make this cheap beauty
lotion to c.len,r and whiten
year skin.
Squeeze the juice of two lentous into
a bottle containing throe ounces of
orchard white, shake well, and you
have a quarter pint of the best freckle
nd tan lotion, and complexion beautiI
fier, at very, very small cost.
Your grocer has the lemons, and
any drug store or toilet counter will
apply three ounces of orchard whitefar
a few cents. Ma?sago this sweetly
fragrant lotion into the face, neck,
arms and hands each day and see how
freckles and blemishes disappear and
how clear, soft and white the skin
becomes. Yes! It is harmless.?adv
? (3)
o
GOOD MATHEMATICS
# ABOI T BAD ROADS
Clcm.son College, S. C., Jan. 20th.
? If it takes a farmer making a trip
t.hrugh the mud one hour and a hall
longer than when the roads are firm,
how many hours are lost in a year if
1.000 farmers make an average of 12
tvirw ft mnnfK *' U,' I...? ........1-1 I-- lL
.II.MIM1 . II 11(11 ? Ulllll lit* III'
monetary loss if each 1 1-2 hours lost
bo estimated at 75 cents per hour for
each m.'in and his team ? This "two
ir. one" proposition gave our old cm '
considerable trouble, but he finally'
worked it out thus: One farmer
multiplied by 1 1-2 hours miitipiicd
b\ 12 trips multiplied by 1,000 farmers
multiplied by 12 months equals
21(1,000 hours lort: e-ointr ;i fur.
ther, and nrult'plying 210,000 by 7'>
(V ?its you have $102,000 par annum
lost to tli* fanners. Our old cat is
now pondering how many road bonds |
this annual loss would float at ."> pei !
cent interest.?t'nion Times.
o
The navy has nothing to do with i
determining whore soldiers returned
fiom Kranee shall be landed. They
merely take the transports to the
ports designated by the military authorities.
P
IKVIt*vx?
FAINTS EX-KAISER
AS BROKEN EXILE
Sympathy Is Expressed by the
Conservative Press in
Berlin
MAY CUT THREAD
IN HiS OLD AGE
Junkers Assure Him of Their
Reverence for Idea of
Monarchy.
Berlin.?Sympathy for the ox-Kaiser
in his exile is openly expressed
b\ the ultra-conservative press. The
1 iOkal-Anzeiper says:
"Lonely and broken, the Kaiser,
an in\ xlunt.ary exile, steps over the
threshold into old age. Behind Wilhelm
lies a rich life ending in the
dreadful four years of war, during
which his tortured soul fell from
proud posts to hitter disappointment
when each victorious joy was drowno.!
in a flood of calumny.
"Before him lies a dark and joy's
s future. Over his head the hai
;,xd of the whole world suspends a
1 k'.moch's. sword judgment, the ner.esj
iiy for which is proclaimed by au
Ihoritio.? called up by his accusers to
make the intended miscarriage of
justice appear to the world as a deed
of \ ighteousness.
Victors May Cut Thread.
"!t is possible that the victors,
v.ho, on account of Germany's compYte
breakdown, can force any injustice,
may cut the thread of the
hanging sword on the sixtieth birthday
of their most hated enemy. It
i: wholly within the law of humanity
to express to this man in his misery
that he is remembered in love and
veneration. It must be expressed to
him that in the thirty years when
he were the crown, wtih all the rich
blessings he brought to Germany,
the people cannot be deprived of this
brightness by the judgment of the
entire world.
"The only consolation we can give
him is to tell him th.it millions of
German hearts feel deeply that this
awful accusation made against him
only veils the guilt of his accusers
and to justify his punishment?although
the people are equally guilty?and
to tell him that this judgment
cannot stand before the tribunal
of world history.
Cogratulations to Ex-Kaiscr.
Courage to print this kind of thing
comes from long lists of congratulations
sent to the former Kaiser. It
also represents that small but bitter
portion of the people who will not ad
I m i i vol I'lsl <lvn flnpnnl/v/l -- '
... . |T S V . ..>>v (il v. IIWIUUICVI) AII'I
whoso utterances constantly tone! to
prove the necessity for firm armistice
conditions, for*which the whole
German people suffer.
Their political unimportance is
shown by Sunday's vote for the Prus
sian Assembly, in which the Democi.ntic,
Social Democratic and Independent
Socialist vote has completely
srowed under the reactionary which
talks in words such as 1 have quoted
j above.
The Germans have not yet discovered
that as long as this type of
'bumptious arrogance is expressed,
even by so small a minority, the Entente
is bound to hold defeated Germany
in a firm hand.
The German People's Party, which
is composed largely of the Pan-German
element and Junkers, has .sent
the following telegram, according to
a despatch from Berlin, to- the exKaiser
on the occasion of his birthday:
"We gratefully appreciate the
work which your majesty has dove
for the German Empire and the German
people during more tlvm thirty
years. \We heartily wish our majesty
peace* for the rest of your life and
beg to assure you that millions of
Germans who will live with us under
new conditions and a new basis state
and of life, reverence the monarchist
idea and will repel every unv.01
thy c strangemer.t from the higli
ideal of German Kaiscrdom and Prus
rain Kingship."
Colds Cause Grip and Influenza
LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablet9 remove the
cause. There nnlv nno A..I..U.
_ _ . ... v*M/ VUV 4/IUIIIVI XUUJUUVt
L. \V. GROVE'S sigouturc on box. 30c.
The future of the colonics taken
fiom Germany has assumed a place
as one of the most interesting of the
immediate phases of the many-sider
problems under consideration by the
Supreme Council of the Peace ConI
ferenee.
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