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1?M - - I Help Year Hipstion I When acid-distressed, relieve the indigestion with I Ki'MOlDS Dissolve easily on tongue?aa 1 pleasant to take as candy. Keep I your stomach sweet, try Ki-molds I MADE BY SCOTT & BOWNE | MAKERS OP 8COTT8 EMULSION I- o CARD OF THANKS. Editor Herald: * Please allow me space in the Herj aid as I wish to tell the readers of i! the Herald that were good and kind * enough to help me to get a wheel | chair that I havo received it. I just | i*ecfcjycd the chair a few days ago jj aid I like it fine. It is a heap of / Satisfaction to me. It is much bety ter to luive a chair that I can roll < about in than it is to have to sit in one place. I am sure thankful to y you kind readers for what you have done for me. ?Javy Mills. : i.. D. A. SPIVEY & CO. | W. B. King, Secty. BONDS AND INSURANCE ?Office in? PEOPLES NATIONAL BANK ^ BUILDING H. H. WOODWARD, Attorney and Counsellor at Law CONWAY, S ~ i * R. B. SCARBOROUGH Attorney at Law, CONWAY. S. C. S. P. HAWES Auto Supplies, Fancy Groceriet Ajax Tires, guaranteed 500C j k ^ miles. \ PHONE 57. i QUICK DELIVERY. ? ? T P I F VA/ I C M 1 W? hi hi WW I W f Atty. and Oouncellor at Law CONWAY, - - - S.C m J. M. JOHNSON, ] CIVIL ENGINEER MABION, S. C. My Engineering and Surveying office will be open during my absence, and prepared to take care Df any work as usual. Address all communications as heretofore. u? " WILLIAM EUGENE KING, MR I Physician and Surgeon Office in Piatt Drug (Jo. AYNOR,. ... S.? DR. J. D. THOMAS h Physician and Surgeon | LOBI3, S. 0. LUM JUNG LAUNDRY, CONWAY, S. C, Beginning July 1st. 1919 ] All persons mu9t take ticketsjfot work left here. Possitively m work delivered until ticket is pre sented. Laundry not called for ir 30 days will be sold for charges LUM JUNG f _________ DR. G.!. LEWIS DPNTAI filiRftPHN Office Owe* Norton Drug Coapib} CONWAY. 8. C. BuBBBBBilBsiBII 1 HORRY COUNTY S ? TRUST COMPANY S p L. D. Magrath B B Manager. B Real Estate B Real Estate Loans B Bonds B 7 Insurance BBBB?SH!!!1BBPW) \ COTTON SEED STILL UNDER REGULATION' I < Mr. D. V. Richardson, County Food ; Administrator, has received the fol- j lowing* letter concerning cotton seed: } To all Food Administrators: A meeting was called by the Unit- ( ed States Food Administration in i Washington on February 10th and f 11th to discuss the cottonseed sta- i bilization price plan. Farmers, seed i dealers, ginfiers, oil mill men, refin- \ ors, lard substitute manufacturers | and Federal Food Administrators from all the cotton states were pres. | cut. The meeting unanimously agreed j with the Food Administration i that the cottonseed stabilization plan should be continued. The fol- \ lowing suggestions and recommen- ] dations advanced at the meeting will be carried out to the best of the ability of all concerned: (1) Cottonseed producers are to use their best efforts to maintain the < stabilized prices which are $(58.00 per von in wagon lots ana $71.uu per ton in car lots. (2) Seed dealers an<4? ginners are tc continue to purchase seed at the stabilized prices from producers as provided in regulations of the Kood Administration. (3) Oil mills are to purchase seed fiom farmers, seed buyers and ginr.ers at the stabilized prices and to Nobody wants anything when he buys from a merchan buy what he needs at fair pric The year of 1919 finds r a full line of staple goods that are fair to our customers rove us If you have not been trad us a trial this year. DUSENBUI Toddvjlle, HARRELSON & HARRELSON A11 orncy s - afc - La w nf i/ia i n 4 li r\ C!f nf n n ?\ ?1 I 1 KILHIA' UWlll 111 Hl?^ UUHC ?UIJ | Federal Courts. MULLINS, ? ? S. 0. . _ __ 1 jig Keep Well j|j 8JJ| Do not allow the BLdjP poisons of undigested HPT, Ifl food to accumulate in \jjjgA your bowels, where they are absorbed into your Wkgm S\~ system. Indigestion,con stipation, headache, bad MHfl N blood, and numerous HJ other troubles ^are bound flJV system ^clean, as^thous- Ffj WL* taking an occasional dose JjaB of the old, reliable, veg- Bat wrW etable, family liver meatj Black-Draught jxising^Fawu, Gd.', writes; 9^9 ford's Black-Draught as O mother^n-law could not Kjl "ffVJ take calomel as it seemed J0& too strong (or her, so she Mjk BTII used Black-Draught as a m Mr mild laxative and liver regulator We use it JJR in the family and believe hI it is the best medicine for m^Tt the liver made." Try it. y Insist on the genuine? krH npMThedford's. 25capack^W^I mnknmUMmm; - THE BORBT HBB uakc an extra effort to relieve the situation by buying seed whenever >ussible in congested districts. (4) The Food Administration is to lse all the power at its command in reoperation with the farmers, buyers md mills to maintain the cottonsee I nice stabilization plan to which all lave agreed. All Food Administrators in South Carolina are asked to assist in carry r.g out these recommendations and >uggcstions. The office of the "Food Administration in Columbia will rcliain open. It has been moved from ,he Arcade to Room 612, National [iOait & Exchange Bank Building. The services which you have so freely given in the past to the Food Administration have been invaluable i.nd arc deeply appreciated. From the present outJook, our work for the Food Administration will end with [he completion of the cottonseed price stabilization plan. Yours very tmly, ( ?William Elliott, Food Administrator for South Carolina. Columbia, S. C., February 17th, 1919 # CARD OF THANKS. We wish to take this method of returning our sincere thanks to our friends, who so thoughtfully rendered help and assistance to us, during our illness with the Flu. We will always remember them with loving hearts. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Vereen. ... - X . less tlio,n a fairly good article t; and a customer wants to cs. s at the same ckl stand with which we offer at prices as well as to us. a Trial ,ing at Todclville before, give %lff A A u & uu. - s. C. BSOIAMD PAYS HONOR Tfl Mmm SAILORS Washington.?Eleven officers and men of the United States navy have been awarded decorations by the British government for distinguished service in combating enemy sub marines. The list of these, announced toright by the navy department, shows that Capts. Alfred W. Johnson and Joseph K. Laussig were awarded the medal of companion of the Order of St. Michael and St. George. The following were awarded the distinguished service order medal: rv?vwK... r??? i.- xt -i i vuniuiiii vicui^c r. iNt'iu tiiui unar les A. 131akely, Lieut. Comdrs. Arthur S. Carpendcr, Walter O. Hency, and Frank Loftin, Lieut. Henry N. Fallon, Chief Machinist's Mate I a C. McNaughton, Quartermaster W. H. Justice and Coxswain N. Loomis. Lieutenant Commander Carpender, commanding1 officer of the destroyer Fanning which sank the German sub nvirine U-58, was handed his decora ticn by King George last July. o Colds Cause Qrlp and Influenza LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets remove the cause. There is only one "Brorao Quinine." E. W. GROVE'S signature on box. SOc. o CAUD OF THANKS. We wish to take this method of returning our sincere thanks to oiu friends, who so thoughtfully rendernd on I oocMjfnnoA ( ? v>i n\.i|< uuti uiiiiisvoiitc iw u M ) lulling our illness with the Flu. We will alv ays remember them with lovinr hearts. Mrs. and Mrs. 1"). E. Turbeville. o The Mexican Kovemment has re tinned to their owners more than < thousand properties confiscated immediately after the revolution. ALD, CONWAY, B. O INDIAN PRINCESS " TO WORK OVERSEAS Princess Galilohi, Descended From Cherokee Chieftain, Joins Canteen Forces in France. |*MI jSBBB mm| 5 . I BB1 A roal, sure-enough Indian princess, 1b going to France to help entertain the American soldiers and sailors until the last one of them ha. been returned | to the United States. She is Princess Galilohi, great ' granddaughter of the famous King Cooweoskowee, chief of the Cherokee and her mi. sion in France will be in connection with the canteen work of the Y. M. C. A. Her Amorieanirvd name is Miss Anne Ross and for two years. , v.'i HIW11' mm- iiii> . as a u'ciuriT, Linger, dann r and exponent of tin- tribal hfe ol' her <-boson people. She was clios( n to pose for the Zolnay statue of S< (juoia, an ancestor of the Cherokee nation and inventor of the tribal alphabet. This statute stands in ihe Hall of Fame at Washington, D. C. The princess will have a rather di; versified program. She will sing In* dkm songs and dance Indian dances for the American soldiers and sailors and between times will dispense ihe dozens of different artieles that are part of the stock of every V. M. C. A. canteen. Sin1 is highly educated and has several times acted as a mediator between her people and the white resli dents of Oklahoma, her native state. frenchIokor Y.M.C.AJXECUTiVE Dr. John P. Molt Is Made Chevalier of Legion of Honor?Extensive Work of " Y " Among Poilus. ___ 1 DR. JOHN R. MOTT General Secretary oi National War Worit Council, Y. M. C. A., Who Has Been Accorded Hi&h Honors by French Government. A.8 a mark of recognition and appreciation of the work done for the French soldiers by the American V. M. C. A. forces abroad, the French government , has conferred the signal honor of | Chevalier of the Legion of Honor upon General Secretary John R. Mott, of j th?> National War Work Council of the Army and Navy Y. M. C. A. Telegraphic advices from Washing (on convoyed the news of the distinction granted Dr. Mott, whoso home is i in Nov.' York City. The telegram, signed by Kdouanl dcRilly, Deputy High Commissioner, was as follows: "i ihkc ph nsuiv ir. notifying you that the French government has conferred upon you the title of Chevalier do j la Region d'Honnaur. Please accept . I mv heartiest congratulations." Tho National War Work Council, . under Dr. Mott's supervision, in addl, tlon to Its labors among tho American Expeditionary Forces, has maintained more than 1,500 foyers du soidats, as the Red Triangle huts are known by tho French poilu. Up to tho month " of October, 1918, close to eight mili lion dollars had been expended in "YM work among the French and other allied soldiers served by the huts. WRITTEN PIERGES WILI, BE OBTAINED All Growers and Producers in United States Will Be Called on to Act. Now Orleans.?A program for the | reduction of the 1919 acreage planted to cotton and the holding of the present crop for higher prices was embodied in resolutions passed at the closing session of the conference of bankers, merchants and farmers front .all of the cotton producing States. The salient features of the resolution are: 1. Reduction of the 1919 cottofr acreage by one-third as compared with 1918. 2. A pledge not to sell any part of the present crop for other than ' remunerative prices" and to hold litis crop until the demand calls fot :t iv ??v ovtv. ii 17 I formation of Siato cotton acreage reduction associations whoso business it will be to obtain writt 1 >.Vd;;os to carry out the first two provisions from eveiy cotton grower and cotton produce)- in the United States. 4. To brand any man who refuses to < ooporate as ">o larking- ir. public rpi it as to forfeit the confidence 01 the community in winch he lives." Ik A future convention of cotton producers before which a detailed report of the progress of tic plans out bred above is to be made by every c turn growing' State. HOW CATTLE DIPPED IN SOOTH CAROLINA -X T /\ * ? ? lNcw urieans, La.? 111 describing the results ot the cooperative cattle tick eradication work between Clcm, son Agricultural College of South j Carolina and the bureau of Animal i Industry, U. S. Department of Agri1 culture, Dr. W. K. Lewis, in charge ol the work, reported at the tick ciadication conference here that pieparations are being made to dip ( ut the comparatively few ticks re maining in the State. 4,,i he release last December of the entire state from federal quarantine does not mean that the territory is entirely free of ticks and that it will not he necessary to conduct the work this year," said Dr Lewis. "The regular disinfection of cattle in the coastal-plain counties wlil be eonducted this season. In laige areas ol these counties it will not he necessary to dip the cattle every fourteen days, but all cattle will be dipped regularly every fourteen days in those sections that have not been entirely freed of lick^. In the sections that have been freed of ticks and in which the cattle do not show an infestation, the cattle will be rounded up for inspection every thirty days, and when so inspected will be put through the dipping vat as nrecau tionary. measure." The cooperative work between C'lemson College and the Department of Agriculture was inaugurated in April, 1914, up to which time the area released from quarantine v:n8 01") spuare miles. The area released from quarantine since April 1914, is 21.880 square miles. The annual loss caused by ticks and sustained by cattle owners prior to April 1914 is estimated to have been 81,500,000. This great loss has beer, reduced annually in direct ratio to the amount of territory freed ol ticks until at this time, Dr. Lewis said, the loss is negligible, figuring the increase in market value of 224,358 cattle in the 31 counties released from quarantine at $7.50 a head South Carolina cattle owners have gained $1,832,085. o HOME MIXING OF FERTILIZER. A very important saving in the fertilizer bill can be made by buying the ingredients and mixing at home. February is usually the time of slack work on farms in the South, and this ill be an excellent time for farmer o lay in their supply of fertilizing mtevials and do their homo mixing > that this work will be out of th ay at the time of planting1. o iT.egal blanks, Herald office. B1VU UPHEAVAL YET TO COME IN GERMANY Dr. Taylor Says Present State Is Unnatural and Cannot Continue PUBLIC MORALE IS AT VERY LOW EBB Old Bureaucrats in Charge. Food Conditions Are Serious. Paris.?"The German Government is the same bureaucratic regime of tlie Kaiser's day with the same attitude toward labor and capital and does not represent the forces which caused the revolution," says Dr. Alonzo E. Taylor food specialist, who has just returned from Germany v hero he made extensive investigations in behalf of supreme food relief council. Count l.lcrnstorff is in charge of American affairs at the foreign office and the bureaucrats of the old school are in evider.ee everywhere, he added. "The Germans are be.com 11?jv Kussianizod. They are afraid ta ) ut untried men int the service ana consequently they tolerate the old older ol things." (! rman p^opogandists, Dr. Taylor f??vnd favor the league of nations rial are filling the newspapers with articles saying President Wilson's loci rim s should bo considered a > giving become effective on the day :he armistice was signed and should have been interpreted as leaving Alsace Lorraine in German hands. The German has, apparently been disorganized and demobilized for the mo i part, Dr. Taylor says, but he believes it will be possible for a well oiganizcd bureacracy to restore militarism if it is deemed desirable. Many Germans believe they will recover their battleships and merchant | fleet and do not expect to give up any territory and, in Dr. Taylor's opinion, a grave political upheaval is probable with the signing of the treaty of peace. The present lull is regarded as unnatural by Dr. Taylor who says was it possibly created by the payment of large indemnities to unemployed persons and bv susnendinir action ovi jail questions vital to the future or" tire nation. Unemployed men in Bar l<n are paid eight marks per day, while railway workers and street cleaners only six marks daily. Consequently the men prefer to remain idle. Plays so immoral they would have been prohibited under the imperial regime are now tolerated; thieving is prevalent, looting is common and the general public morale is very low, Dr. Taylor remarks. He says the food situation is critical and that, in spite of the great reduction made in rations the nation cannot live until next harvest unless sunplied by outside powers. The death rate has increased, especially among children between five and fifteen years of age, children under two years faring better than the re<t through the self-sacrifice of their mothers. Lack of fuel and raw materials has closed virtually all industiies and the railroads are hampered by lack of coal. GIRLS! LEMON JUICE IS SKIN WHITENER How to make a creamy beauty lotion for a few cents. The juice of two fresh lemons strained into a bottle containing three ounces of orchard white makes a whole quarter pint of the most re iikii ivauic iriiuMi nivm uriiuiiiict' stL about the cost one must pay for a small jar of the ordinary cold creams. Caro should be taken to strain the lemon juice through a fine cloth bo no lemon pulp gets in, then this lotion will keep fresh for months. Every woman knows that lemon juice is used to blench and remove such blemishes as freckles, saiiowncss and tan and is the ideal skin softener, whitener and beaut ifier. Just try it! Clot three ounces of 1 1 1. _ A. 1 * | uicnaru wimt' at any drug score an/i ' 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.?adv? (t.) - ... i -1 I. i . The 44wets" and the "drya" are mustering their forces for a bitter i?ght over prohibition.