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' " ?he itorrjj giewilfl. OONWAY, S. 0. fcUred at the Post Office at Conway 8. G, ai second class mail matter. EL H. WOODWARD Published Every Thursday Morning by Conway Publishing Co. TELEPHONE 21. CHANGE SUBSCRIPTION PRICE: One Copy, One Year.. ..$1.50 One Copy, Six Months 75 One Copy, Three Months. . .50 Payable in Ad>ance PUBLISHERS ANNOUNCEMENT Tributes of Respect, and Obituaries will be charged for at the rate of one eant 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 bt the rate f five cents per line; and all other notices in the local columns at the rate of ten cents per line. IC** rharce of 50 per cent, for otices set in black face type in local ?alumn. All changes of advertisements must be in the office by Saturday soon 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 ol th{s paper. Lega Notices at SI per inch first insertion, 50 cents each subsequent fnsertion. Rates on long term contracts for display advertising very reasonable, and made known on application. Make all Checks or Drafts payable to The Horry Herald, or H. H. Woodward, 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 iD adface. THURSDAY, MARCH 20, 1919 It is a mistake to expect great things from a small amount of effort tint -f I 1U1 Vllt o It is poor economy to save a nickel now when as a result of it a dime will bo lost later on. ? ? The best way to get good roads in this country is to he willing to pay for them. They will cost money any time. o This is a great country and is full of all sorts of opportunities; but there Is yet no way here to make a fortune over night. i Permanent improvements on the farm should result from the prosperity our fanners enjoyed during the war, while the high prices of their products lasted. If the human ra^c v. as over contented in this world they would never make any improvement. It is the desire for better conditions that has raised the question of good roads. I -?-o? Business intere. ts are showing a disposition to wake up to opportunities since the war has been ended, and everybody expects a good business in this country. i o A great item of expense^ on any farm is the upkeep of tools and implements. Some farmers neglect to protect machinery and appliances from the weather when they are not in use and their expense is heavier ir. consequence of this neglect. The farmers of the cotton growing belt of this country are better organized than they have ever boon on the matter of controlling the price of cot ton. Speculators, vho, up to this time made much money at the expense of the farmers, are getting scared that their business will soon experience a change. o One of the greatest things that ever happened lor the farmers of this country is the organized effort they are now making to reduce the acreage of cotton planted and hold the present crop on hand for higher prices They will learn from this the benefits to be derived from organizing. ? e Nothing will last forever as every tody knows; but you have noticed how much longer some things will last for some people than for others apparently under the same surrounding circumstances. The difference is in the people and not in the mater?als. Even tools last a long time in the hands of some workmen while the same article in the hands of other workmen prove to have no temper and are gone within a few days, or even a few hours use of them. It is all in the way a man takes care of a thing or thd way he handles a -.atonal with which he is working. PUBLIC OPINION REAL SOVEREIGN Bcmstorff Delivers Address in Berlin on Leading Subjects. Berlin.?Public opinion must become the real sovereign in Germany, but it must be enlightened opinion based upon democratic development and conscious of its great rcsponsi- i bility. This was the central idea of a speech made tonight by Count von i Bernstorff, former German ambassa dor to the United States, at a meeting to organize "the democratic 1 club." The former ambassudor told his i hearers that when he returned to < Germany from the United States, he < endeavored to learn why ruthless < submarine warfare, which he said 1 was responsible for Germany's down ( fall, was decided upon instead of the : acceptance of a less severe course. ? H c added: 1 ^^''j 'PHONES TO FLYER I; 15S MILES AWAY : ! 1 ? ''! Sec'ty. Daniels Talks With i Aviator Far Off and High Up Washington. ? Secretary Daniels today talked by radio telephone with Ensign Harry Fagenwater, in a navy flying boat cn route from Washington to Hampton Roads. Communi 4: ....... ui:..u ? .1: I VitllUIl Witrt t'AUIUllBllt'U it it UIMUlllUC of more than 150 miles, by far the longest transmission of radio telephone signals with an airplane in flight ever achieved. /The secretary used the ordinary desk telephone on, his desk at the Navy Department. Officers in charge of the development of radfo signaling, including Rear-Admiral Griffin, chief of the bureau of steam engineering, were grouped around the desk. Mr. Daniels spoke of his -pleasure m making a tost oi the constantly improving navy apparatus and asked tne ensign how far away his machine was. After a moment's delay, the officer replied he was then more then 150 miles from Washington and flying at a high altitude. The officer's voice came very inI THB HOBBY HKBJ ? t4The answer was regularly that public opinion in Germany would not have suffered any other solution. I will not discuss whether this judgment can stand before history, but in any event it demonstrates how highly public opinion was even then regarded by us. An elemental movement in favor of peace at that time would have secured peace without victory." If a similar movement had come earlier, the count continued, it also ncght have prevented the carrying out of many undertakings in America which eventually compelled him to appeal to the Germans there to respect the laws of the United Stages. Public opinion, he added, must be so developed that no government can stand against it, but it must not disregard the ideas and habits >f thought of other peoples. That German public opinion had failed to do this, the count said, was demonstrated by the fact that all Cicrmans who returned from America with him, with one exception, ivere opposed to U-boat warfare, and considered it a fatal mistake, as did : ilso most Germans acquainted with ( American views of life and ways of l thinking. lllPttlfi wM#?i^$iiiiii I,I|1 mm ' j jii 11 Willi'" 1 pipe i out for i 'or, with Prince Albert, you've got a nat cuts you loose from old stung i /lade by our exclusive patented pro om bite and parch and hands you ab bat ever was scheduled in your direc Prince Albert is a pippin of a pipe eats the band! Get the slant that ] nan ever longed for in tobacco! ' igure up the sport you've slipped-* Ubert quality flavor and quality satisi rou'H talk kind words every time you Toppy red bags, tidy red tins, handsome dors ? and?that classy, practical pour sponge moistcner top that keeps the tol t. J. Reynolds Tobacco Compi listinctly toward the end of the con- 1 /ersation as the distance increased. ] rhe experts at the Department said hf 150 miles was practically the extreme range of radio telephone communication with an aircraft with present equipment, and more than loublc any previous distance covered in a similar test. o SENTENCED FOR FORGERY. The United States Civil Service Commission reports that on February 5, 1919, in the United States Distinct Court at Columbus, Georgia. Ullman A. Everett was sentenced to seive a term of one year and one day in the Federal penitentiary at Atlanta for a violation of Section 28 of the Penal Code. Everett entered an examination for the United States Civil Service at Columbus, Georgia, on December 7, 1915. When his application was received and examined at the office of the Civil Service Commission it appeai*ed that the application itself) and the character vouchers attached i thereto were in the same handwriting, although the vouchers bore the names of John Purge and L. P. Taylor. The Civil Service Commission immediately placed the matter in the hands of the Department of Justice It?r investigation and the possible prosecution of Everett for forgery. Everett was indicted on May h, 11)17, the case being assumed for trial on December (>. 1017. At the appointed tinv* Everett failed to appear. Accordingly, his bond wa forfeited and he was declared a fugitive from jus LLP, OOiWir, B. 0. DIFFICULTIES OF A MAID. I am a little maid only just fourteen* I dearly like to run and jump when the grass is green; But now folks say I'm most too large to run about and play, And now Pm very lonesome all the livelong day. I miss my little playmates as every one would do, But some times I get a good book, I like to read, do you? But then when that is finished it makes me awful sad To think I must relinquish everything that makes me glad. I'm five feet, four inches tall, and am a little stout, And sometimes when I'm blue 1 just sit down and pout; To think because I'm over-grown, and still a child at heart, That I just have to sit around and play the grown-up's part. ?Macey Johnson. o Information has reached responsible quarters in Paris that the American government is contemplating i the enactment of a law banishing Former Emperor Karl. ?|mnf I 11 1I I in R- J- R?ynoJd? "* Tobacco Co. I ' , i | the smokegame with a jimmy if you're hankering for a handivhat ails your smokeappetite! new listen on the pipe question tongue and dry threat worries! cess, Prince Albert is scotfree out the biggest lot of srnokefun tion! ;-pal; rolled into a cigarette it P. A. is simply everything any kTou never will be willing to on once you get that Prince faction into your smokesystem! get on the firing line! j pound and half-pound tin humi id cryata! glaai humidor with lacco in such perfect condition. any, Winston-Salem, N. C. j 1 Lico. Ho was later apprehended and his case set for trial in the next! term of the court. i TO BRAND KAISER WITH WAR'S BLAME Paris.?It will be the fate of former Emperor William to bo branded for all time as an arch criminal by the solemn declaration of all the nations assembled at the Peace Conference, to which even his own countrymay be called upon to subscribe rn the peace terms, according to the present plans of what is believed to be a majority of the commission on responsibility for the war. The report of this commission will be ready within a few days, and the indications are that the members are harmonious on the main points. There are likely to be differences, however, regarding subordinate Gorman officials, although a majority of the commission is understood to hold that they can be punished for orders given or acts permitted by them in vi< lation of the national laws of Germany or the rules of war. Such a rule would apply to the officer who executed Capt. Fryatt, but not to tho executioner of Edith Cavill, who, it is pointed out, might ln.ive been technically guilty of espionage. No doubt is felt as to the liability to punishment of a German officer taken prisoner of war and j found guilty of atrocities. Hail In # Your crops are your livelih< your thought, energy and : expect a fair return. It is safeguard them in every p< of hail bullets will cut in thirty seconds. There is there is a way of protecting A Hartford Hail Be on the safe side, it costs your peace of mind. Let us Policy and about the Hartf pany, an institution that fc and fully and promptly pai Horry Court L. D. Magrat! AG! FORAGE DROPS AND ~ | PASTURE GRASSES I Clemson College, March 17.?Two publications of the Extension Service are timely just now in connec- j ta n with the increased and incvcas- j ing interest in all kinds of live stock 1 in South Carolina and the reduction of the cotton acreage. These are Extension Bulletin 112, "Forage Crops in South Carolina," and Extension ' Bulletin 33, "Permanent and Tern- i K-rary Pastures." The first of these contains instructions which should help to solve the uock feeding problems of the time \nd to suggest the wise use of some the land left from reduction of :otton. Due consideration is given | f? this bulletin to the double value of he- various legumes as forage crops n furnnishing excellent feeding /alues and in enriching the soil. I have this week the best ever shipped. One ear ioai Studebaker Wagons and nic G. B. JI CONWA The oldest Ame THE MUTUAL LIFE INSUR, W. B. Coxe, F. F. Govingto Bullock R. M. Bui I Citation Notice. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Horry. By J. S. VAUGHT, ESQUIRE, PROHATE JUDGE. 'WHEREAS. Florence B. Lee made suit to me, to grant her Letters ot Administration of the Estate of and effects of Willis S. Lee. THESE ARE THEREFORE tc cite and admonish all and singulai .? the kindred and creditors of the said , Willis S. Lee, deceased, that they be i Mid appear, before me, in the Court ol I I* iwvLfifrk f/\ L/vl,l nf P/vnitfntr QJ C* j i v/wair, iw u*; iiuiw <*! vywuvya^ f u# v>. |0ii 5th day of April. next, after pub; Mention hereof, at 11 o'clock in the I forenoon, to shew cause, if any the} II have, why the said Administration j should not be granted. suranee 1 cod. Into them you put M money. Out of them you M therefore essential that you ^ M ^ssible way. The raking fire a a field of tobacco to pieces no way of preventing it, but m ; against loss. That way is I Insurance Policy I > little and adds so much to I \ explain the Hartford Hail u 9 ord Fire Insurance Com>r 104 years has cheerfully Tm d every just claim. ty Trust Co. | li, Manager, 1 5nt Jr~4 !The second publication deals with 1 tho necessity of good pastures, soil 1 requirement**, preparation, how to I plant, and instructions how to secure brst results in makinjr pastures with the several pasture grasses. Both bulletin:; are by W. R. Elliott, formerly district agent of the Extension Service, who is an authority or. such matters. They are <*roet as long as they last, to all who ask for them. 4+ - / Twisted. This Spoonerism was committed by n clergyman while reading the morning ?. lesson?And presently the wig tree flthored away.?Boston Transcript. St. Paul in Macedonia. Macedonia was the lirst part of Europe which received the gospel direct from St. Paul. The account of this 1 Journey through Macedonia (Aet? 10:10; 18:15) is marked by copious detail and well-detiued incident. - - ' 2 | ! v>-'.'/ lot Mules and Horses I have i Mules just in, also car load ;e lot Buggies, Harness, Etc iNKINS ys. c. rican Company ANCE CO., OF NEW YORK I " Special Agent I n, District Agt. I Bros.? I lock, Mgr., Agents. I uiv*;n under my Hand, this lSt^ (lay of March Anno Domini, 1919 Published on the 20th and 27th days of March 1919 in the Horry Herald. J. S. VAUGHT, Probate Judge. t r Where Woman Excels. ' Another evidence of the difference between the male intellect, If any, and ( the female one Is the way a woman can stew cherries and make soap on adjacent holes of the same stove, ap1 parently without incurring the slight* j > est risK or getting to thinking about something else nnd putting sonie lm, portnnt Ingredient of the one Into the . oihor.?Ohio Stnfo .Tnnrn?l. ' o drove's Tasteless chill Tonic } restores vitality and energy by purifying and en? rlehlng tho blood. You can soon feci ito Strcogtti* nlufl, Invigorating Effect. I'rlco GOc.