The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, April 03, 1919, Page SEVEN, Image 7
' II
I OVER-EATING
it & root of Marly all digestive
vila. II your digestion la weak or
?al?kuw?batMrcwiouaBBiHo I
f RM10IDS
. At new aid to better digestion.
Plea Rent to take?effective. Let
Ki~moidm belp atraighten out your
jL digestive troubles.
MADS BY SCOrn 9k BOWNS
\ MAKERS ?i? CI
\ ^ Then They Canned Hira.
Customer?"Where will I find the
* candelabra?"
ijjow Floorman?"All canned goods
ape in the grocery department on the
|/ fourth floor."?Judge.
| TRESPASS^ NOTICE.
All persons are warned and for*
bidden to trespass on my land in
T? ? i i . . i
./ x?uyooro lownsnip, in any way, iaany
ion or form which contains J100 acres,
I more or less, formerly known as the
r Joe Hardee place.
i B. L. BUFFKIN,
?4t-pd Bayboro, S. C.
I D. A. SPIVEY & CO.
}j W. B. King, Secty.
[I BONDS AND INSURANCE
?Office in?
& PEOPLES NATIONAL BANK
| BUILDING
f H. H. WOODWARD.
V Attorney and Counselor it Lai
( CONWAY, 8 ~
m
f R. B. SCARBOROUGH
\s0 Attorney at Law,
CONWAY, a c.
I S. P. HAWES
5* ' Auto Supplies, Fancy Groceriei
\ Aiax Tires, guaranteed 500(
miles.
PHONE 07.
' / QUICK DELIVERY.
} *
L T. B. LEWIS,
/ Aity. and Oouncellor at Lav
\ CONWAY. . - - - S.t
I
f j. M. JOHNSON.
/ CIVIL ENGINEER
, MARION, S. C.
I My Engineering and Surveying
office will be open during my ab
j aence, and prepared to take cart
of any work as usual. Addresf |
/ all communications as hereto j
fore.
f . ?
WILLIAM EUGENE KING, !W t
Physician and Sturgeon
Office in Piatt Drug Oo.
J AYNOR,. ... S.C
DR. J. D. THOMAS
: i vPhysician and Surgeon
r LOBIS, 8. 0.
h{
LUM JUNG LAUNDRY,
f CONWAY, 8. C,
1 Beginning July 1st. 19197 '
A All persons mast take tickets|fot
W work left here. Possitively ni
| work delivered until ticket is pre
tented. C/aundry not oalled for ir
^ 30 djws will be sold for charge*
* LUM JUNG
OR. G.!. LEWIS
l DENTAL SURGEON
Office Offlr Nort.n l)rn( Ceaiu)
CONWAY. 3. C.
?aHooaSfinSSBD
I et* Attli.iH... msm.
[ ? HUKKY GUUNTY S
1 TRUST COMPANY S
p L. D. Magrath
B Manager.
B Real Estate
B Real Estate Loans
B Bonds
B Insurance
|aiBCSS99B99i
'
\a m83 sasasflM&s&asa&aP
53 THE DAY AND THE WORK p
w * s5
p m && m m s* gs ES sgs es &J|
Tu each man is given a day and his <
work for the day;
And once, and no more, he is given io
travel his way.
And woe if he falters from the task,
whatever the odds;
t or the task is appointed to him on
the schroll of the gods.
There is waiting a work where only
his hands can avail;
And so, if he falters, a chord in the
music will fail.
He may laugh to the sky, he may lie
for an hour in the sun;
But he dare not go hence till the labor
appointed be done.
To each man is given a marble to
carve for the wall;
A stone that is needed to heighten
>the beauty of all;
And only his soul has the magic to
give it a grace;
And only his hands have the cunning
to put it in place.
Got the GenuiReTZ^^HP^VevXl
and Avoid
??IPH
S?vw*^"on<*n?y I
H^JaStSg^ Evory Cakej
PAY AI
Nobody wants anything
when he buys from a merchan
buy what he needs at fair pric
At the Sami
The year of 1919 finds 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.
DUSENBU!
Toddville,
HARRELSON & HARRELSON j
Attorneys -at-Law
Practice both in the State and
Federal Courts.
MULLINS. ? ? S. 0.
y Reasons! L
^ 1 Why you should use
Cardui, the woman's
tonic, for your troubles, I ^
kl have been shown in
M thousands of letters from VS
actual users of this medi- I 1
k 1 cine, who speak from Ik
personal experience. If nfi
the results obtained by L ^
kl other women for so many ^k
^y years have been so unfformly
good, why not
^ give Cardui a trial? *
Take ?
CARDUI
^ The Woman's Tonic ;
Ikl _ rs* ^ar? J* inrin, oi I
^ Cullen, Va., writes: 1
"About 11 years ago, I
lj suffered untold misery |?w
with female trouble, bearWj
ing-down pains, head- Bk
ache, numbness ... 1 P?
^1 would go for three weeks i
almost bent double ... !
My husband went to Dr.
After taking about two
botlles f began going
around and when 1 took R?
^1 three bottles I could do
all my work." E-80 Ra
1 > .
Tgg BOBBY HEH
Yes, the task that is given to each
man, no other can do;
So the errand is waiting; it has waited
through ages for you.
And now you appear; and the hushed
ones are turning their gaze,
T?? see what you do with your chance
in the chamber of days.
?Edwin Markham.
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 remarkable
lemon skin beautifier at
about the cost one must pay for a
small jar of the ordinary cold creams.
Care should be taken to strain the
lemon juice through a fine cloth bo
r.o 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, whitencr
and beautifier.
Just try it: Get three ounces of
orchard white at any drug store and
two lemons from the grocer and make
ui) a ouarter uint of this swcetlv fra
grartt lemon lotion and massage it
daily into the face, neck, arms and
il.tllUM.-1?fcUlV? (1.)
less than a fairly good article
t; and a customer wants to
es.
e Old Stand
s at the same old stand with
which we offer at prices
as well as to us.
a Trial
*ng at Toddville before, ffivc
_ w W '
XI & CO.
s. c.
president Wilson
SEES BATTLEFIELDS
Paris.?President Wilson, accompanied
by Mrs. Wilson, Miss Benham,
Mrs. Wilson's secretary, and Rear
Admiral Grayson, spent the day visiting*
Soissons, the Chemin Des
Dames, Coucy-Le-Chateau, Chaunv,
Noyon, Mont-Didier and the neighboring
regions. The president followed
with the greatest interest the
movement of arms in those regions,
and received a very vivid impression
of the havoc that had been wrought
there. On his return to Paris he
saicl:
"The day has been very instinctive
to me. It has been in many
ways exceedingly painful, because
what I saw was deeply distressing-.
But it has enabled me to have a fuller
conception than ever of the extraordinary
suffering and hardships of
the people of France in the baptism
of cruel fire through which they
have passed."
At one place where the President's
car stopped to get a little group of
village people, together with some
from Mont-I)idier gathered around
the car and chattered. The President
and Mrs. Wilson were presented
with several bouquets of flowers
brought by children.
The party had lunch at a half repaired
inn at So if. so as, where a great
crowd of poilus gathered to meet the
PvrttifJ.wt TVn <.1 J i l.
% i uimiiv.i>v< jiui illou VIIilM'd VI1C
site of the "Big Bertha" , which a
year ago opened fire on Paris.
With pledges of contributions from
States, cities and individuals still
coming in, the federal employment
so rvice announced that 0f>4 of it
750 local offices could be kept in
operation until congress appropriates
funds.
*LD. OOlfWJLY, 8. O
?: " ? .11
DOMESTIC SERVICE
COURSES PUNNED]
Trained Home-Maker Is to Have
an Eight Hour Day and Stand*
ard Minimum Wage. ,d|
Courses for training home assistants.
who will go into the home by the
day, hour or week and work on a
schedule of hours and tlxed wages,
have been Inaugurated by the Young
Women's Christian Association as a
means for meeting the problem of domestic
service.
The object of this course, now being
tried out in New York City, is to place
domestic service on the same dignified
basis as clerical work, trained nursing
or other professions open to women.
The home assistant will work eight
hours u day for a salary of $15 a week.
Site will not live in the home of her
employer or take her meals there. She
1 will have an hour for luncheon, when
she can go to a restaurant or eat a
lunch which she bus brought with her
1 Just as she would were she employed
I In a factory. The employer will not
address the home worker by her first
name. She will he Miss Smith or Mrs.
Rrown, as the case may he.
Applicants l'or the course are carefully
selected, and registrants are appearing
In largo numbers. 'With the
same independence as to roerounon
hours, places of eating and living-as
the factory girl, house-work has v.
greater appeal, as being u less monotonous
and more interesting work to the
average woman.
The coufse is a thorough one in plain
cooking, wailing on table and door,
chamber work, plain sewing, care of
children, making of menus a ltd the
washing stud ironing of light things.
Heavy work is to be done by outside
workers. On graduation the student
receives a certificate which proves her
quun neai ion as a dependable Home
worker capable of attending to all ordinary
duties in a home.
The Young Women's Christian Association
has been interested in the problem
of domestic service both from the
standpoint of the employee and from
that of the employer for some years.
The first commission on Household
Kmployment made Its report tit the
fifth national convention of the Young
Women's Christian Association held in
Los Angeles, Cal., in May, lfilCi.
The difficulties of attracting capable
women to this field of work were laid
to the long hours, lack of independence
In arranging recreation hours, lack of
opportunities for growth and progress
and luck of social standing.
Girls have acquired a distaste for
the conditions which govern household
work since the freedom they have exnerieueefi
In worlclne In lmiiiiftmi fun.
j torles. By standardizing domestic servI
Ice It Is believed by the Young Women's
Christian Association that a
higher type of worker may be attracted
to the necessary work in homes.
The American Y. W. C. A. has opened
a Hostess House iit Germany, which
will serve as a residence house and
social center for American women war
workers who have advanced to do canteen,
Red Cross and Signal Corps work
with the Army of Occupation.
' WOMEN BEGIN Y. W. C. A.
FOREIGN TRADE COURSES
Courses in New York City Prepare
Girls for South Amerl"yU?.
can Job#- J
Sensing a suddeu call to Jobs for
American women in South America,
the Now York City Y. W. C. A. has
opened Foreign Trade courses, Including
classes in shipping, tiling orders,
trade acceptances, tariff, consular invoices,
documents, insurance, mull or
der trade and other lines of international
work hltheyto left mostly to
men. These classes are designed to
meet nftor-wnr needs
South America is receiving particular
uttcTition as the Y. \\\ 0. A. is Informed
of new jobs that are opening
in tlie southern countries. Many girl:in
New York who combine it desire to
see the world with a craving for llnati
cinl independence are registering with
the expectation of going there to gei
positions when their courses in trainlug
ure completed
ORCHAROieTING"
i AGAINST FROST
J Clcmscn College.?Is the risk from
j danger of late frost great enough to
jwarrant the expense of heating- the
orchard? Those who have made a
irmtt-M ul uiciinreung answer "ios.
They have proved that heating their
orchards has saved them the average
jun of a few years. The same practice
is advisable and profitable to
faimers with small home orchards,
says George P. Hoffman, Extension
horticulturist.
Commercial orchards are usually
heated by using 40 to 50 oil burners
distributed over each acre ready for
use when the temperature gets within
a few degrees of the danger point.
For the small grower, however, open
wood fires are more satisfactory and
IN SOLDIERS
DID DDI LET UP
And the Nation Will Show
That It Stands Behind Them
in the Victory Liberty Loan
Drive.
More than a million of Uncle Sam's
boys are "over there" looking; after
the common Rood of the world. / nd
they will lmve to stay upon the job
until it is done; until tilings are- righted
again; until order is brought out
of chaos.
While they are overseas they must
be taken care of adequately; they
must be clothed and fed and lodged
comfortably. Uncle Sam estimates
that it costs $428.27 a year to equip
and maintain a soldier in Europe.
Part of the proceeds from the coming
Victory Liberty Loan will be devoted
to caring for the "doughboys."
Part of it will go into the rehabilita
tion fund for putting the injured sol
diers back upon their feet. Part of
it will go for insurance claims. Tin
rest of it will go to meet the hundred
and one other demands for this great
est of world emergencies since the
| dawn of civilization.
! Every mother** son of them did his
| part, helped insure liberty and justice
j for (ho world at largo and restore
Uncle Sam to his rightful position in
trha "estimation of tho nations of
Pa'rth.
They did tiioir duty fully, those boys
who won. They fought to tho end.
through firo and flood. They never
talked about lotting up.
This is ho time for Americans t<?
think of lotting up. Tho nation must
stand by its guns, by its records; by
Uncle Sam and must make tho next
loan another big success.
THRlFTCfjRAMS [
God helps those who help thomselevs.?Buy
War Savings Stamps.
Spend one penny less than thy
clear gains. ? Buy War Savings
Stamps.
Look before, or you'll find yourself
behind.?Buy War Savings Stamps.
If you would he wealthy, think of
saving as well as getting.?Buy War
Savings Stamps.
Remember that money is of the
prolific, generating nature.?Buy War !
oa i iu|a utumim.
? Resolved. I
f fi
j* That peace will find us back- ,
? ing Uncle Sam as strongly as x |
| we backed him in war. 5
g That between now and April <|
| we will lay every possible stone y
2 of the groundwork for the Fifth f
% Liberty ^Loan and leave no act ?
| undone which will tend to keep I
| alive and quicken the con- i
| sciousnoss of the nation that <?
| savings and thrift are peace es- 1
X wsontials. ^
X <?
? That we will exert our efforts <
V <
to stop trafficking in bonds of >
j? the first four loans and will ^
*> keep our War Savings Stamps. |
That we will carry out our >
| War Savings pledge if that is ^
> unfulfilled, and make and keep "T
X new Savings pledges this year. ?:
? That We will work tooth and <?
nail from now till the last day y
<<f tl?i> A uvil vlriv<* t<*? mmrunlt. X
t scribe that Liberty Loan. J
| Vhat We will finish our job. j|
less expensive.
Previous to the * time when frost
injury is expected, make about 2
small fires of wood, old rails, orchard
prunings, etc., to each acre
taking care not to put piles neai
enough to trees to scorch them.
When the temperature drops L
within 2 degrees of the danger point
which is 32 degrees F., the fire
should be started. At first fire ev
cry other pile. This can be don'
quickly with kerosene or light woosparkles.
If the temperature con
tinues to drop, light the other fire
and keep the fires up as long as
there is any danger.
If some of the buds become frost
bitten, put some wet straw or saw
dust on the fires toward morning *o
form a smudge, which will hover the
trees and delay thawing, thus saving
many buds that would otheiavise
be killed.
o
y rowm
COUNCIL TAKES UP
INDEMNITY CLAIMS
Superior Body of Peace Conference
Considers Sum Germans
Must Pay.
WILSON DISCUSSES
COVENANT REVISION
President Issues Statement to
Allay Apprehension Over
Docutnent for League
* Paris.?The superior council of the
president and premiers now known
as the council of four, divider! its labors
today between the "White
house" and M. Clemenceau's private
office, adjoining the war office.
The Franco-German frontier was
the chief topic of discussion, this following
upon an agreement reached
last night on reparation for war
damages. It is understood that this
agreement includes the vital point of
the total amount of indemnity, which
Will not be announced at present, as
j likely to cause discussion and arouse
I hostility in enemy quarters.
it is noted as a coincidence that a
German financial commission is bein.?;
chosen to come to Versailles,
where the settlement of this branch
?ay include all interests.
The frontier question turns on tho
Imposition of the Saar Valley coal
cgions and the west bank of the
thine. The territorial experts have
aid their last word and frankly dc Inre
that it is a question now of political
expediency on which tho su)er
council alone can pass.
Marshal Foch and Gen Tasker H.
Hiss were callcel into the council dur
:ur the afternoon indicating that
rdlitary questions, including the serious
situation in Hungary and Rusia,
were receiving attention.
President Wilson, who has virtually
been silent since his return to
Vris, believes the time is opportune
or a statement which will allay apuehension
over the delay and show
!iat the revision of the covenant
lie league of nations had proceeded
d! night sessions, without any interruption
to the other main questions.
President Wilson today issued the
following statement:
"In view of the very surprising
r. prcssoin which seems to exist in
ome quarters that it is the discusrlons
of the commission on the lea?
^v,c of nations that arc delaying the
final fonnulation of peace, I am very
glad to take the opportunity of reporting
that the conclusions of this
,v. X \ e ? v
uwiiiniisMun were me nrst to be laid
bo tore the plenary conference.
"They were reported on February
14 and the world has had a full
month in which to discuss every feature
of the draft covenant then submitted.
"During the last few days the
commission has been engaged in an
effort to take advantage of the criticisms
which the publication of the
covenant has fortunately drawn "out.
A committee of the commission has
also had the advantage of a conference
with representatives of the
neutral States, who are evidencing a
very deep interest and a practically
liri.inimnitc flncivn <% -?
x.vuitt. v u au^n (.IlVdl*
selves with the league.
"The revised covenant is now practically
finished. It is in the hands of
a committee for the final process t?i
drafting and will almost immediately
be presented a second time to the
public. , ;
"The conferences of the commission
have invariably been held at
t.mes when they could not interferewith
the consultation of those who
have undertaken to formulate the
general conclusions of the peace conference
with regard to the many other
complicated problems of peace.
So that the members of the commission
congratulate themselves on the
fact that no part of thejr conferences
has ever interposed any form of de)ov
??
v
NOTICE.
There has taken up at my place
one black sow with a few white
spots, marked with upper square in
ti e light ear and smooth crop in the
left, about two years old. Owner
may obtain same by paying charges.
Animal has been' at my place for
about three months.
DANIEL IIAYES,
3^0;i9-:st-pri Nichols, S. C.
Pllcs^Curod In 6 to 14 Day a
Druffilst-j refund monev if PAZO OTNTMFNTftttt*
to euro itching, U.iud, Ulccdii! icrProt.ri PHetv.
::antly relieves Itchlr.;', Piles, ar ' yoa enn tfet
restful sJeepoffer tho cp?u^c:i:n. Frieoffc.