University of South Carolina Libraries
r ' f , \ ! I OVER-ACIDITY | } of the touch boo vpaet many I niflafivMt UyourttocMchiiadd* I djahirhcib diaaoSvo two or throe jfl u RmioidS I on the tongue before retiring and oo? 1 |oy refreshing sleep. The purity end I goodneaa of KtmaidB guaranteed by I I SCOTT 4k BOWNE I MAEKgS OF SOOTTS EMULSION I mmmmmmtmmmmmMikm Arrangements have been perfected thereby Newberry College, the Pres / bylerian College of South Carolina and Wofford College will meet in an intercollegiate debate during the last 1*veek in April or the first of May. *;>. o 'T TRESPASS NOTICE. All persons are warned and forbidden to trespass on my land in fl Eayboro township, in any way, fashion or form which contains 300 acres, more or less, formerly known as the j Joe Hardee place. ' 15. Li. 15U1TMIN, s 3j20?4t-pd Bayboro, S. C. > r I iV D. A. SPIVEY & CO. j W. B. King, Secty. f BONDS AND INSURANCE I ?Office in? t-'PEOPLES NATIONAL BANK p BUILDING O. B. WOODWARD. j) I Attariey and Counsellor at La* CONWAY, S ~ i 1 |\ B. a scarborough '' \ Attorney at Law, i conway. a c. I > S. P. HAWES ( auto Supplies, Fancy Groceries j}) AJax Tires, guaranteed 600* \ miles. PHONE 57. QUICK DELIVERY. ' T. B. LEWIS, I Atty. and Oonncellor at Law I CONWAY. - - - S. C > ' i J. M. JOHNSON, j CIVIL ENGINEER MARION, S. C. My Engineering and Surveying office will be open during my ab once, and prepared to take cart of any work as usual. Address all communications as hereto Core. WILLIAM EUGENE KING, M r Physician and Surgeon 1 Office in Piatt Drug Go. AYNOR,. ... S.C OR. J. D. THOMAS I Physician and Surgeon ' t i.oris, s a tmrm -n-^ m n??? tnmm+tmi < imi-r? *iT frf^i ?f-?? ? > j LUM JUNG LAUNDRY, ^ CONWAY. S. C, I Beg inning July 1st. 1915 ' All persons must take tickets Jfoi work left here. Possitively n< f work delivered until ticket is prs sen ted. Laundry not called for I 30 days will be sold for charge* $ LUM JUNG GB. &.!. LEWIS DENTAL SURGEON A... n vihow nvi Miu I/rug Vywayanji CONWAY. 8. C. SHDjiauaaiaBiG J HORRY COUNTY g | TRUST COMPANY g B L. D. Magratta B B Manager. , B El Real Estate B 8 Real Estate Loans B B Bonds P 8 Insurance B QDHfinnnsenHj 4 / A BOX OF ORANGES. Andrew Carnegie, one of the wind's richest men, was the son of a poor Scotch weaver. He early learned the advantage of economy. At the age of ten he saved a few shillings?enough to buy a box oT oranges?which he promptly peddled at a profit of 100 per cent: At twelve, he was brought to America and put to work in a mill. His earnings were 20 cents a clay. "While still a young man, he managed, through thrift, to accumulate $000.00 which he invested. His first dividend served as the inspiration for his achievements and financial power in later years. [But the seed of his prosperity was f.'rst sown when he invested the few shillings he had saved?in a box of oranges. There are boxes of nrrnirns nil about us today?only they go under a different name. Wise men sec them?invest, and reap the profits in success. There are men?and women too? who sense the possibilities of small beginnings, even as Carnegie. Get your box of oranges today. Buy W. S. S. and keep on buying them. Get the and Avoid ?n,? t/ | Every Cake PAY A Fl Nobody wants anything when he buys from a mercha: buy what he needs at fair pri A I M At tne sam The year of 1919 finds 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 Federal Courts. MTTT.T.Wft en 11 Women! EI ||jj Here is a message to IggV I suffering women, from 1 fl B I Mrs. W. T. Price, of 1 I Public, ICy.: "I suf- I fl { fered with painful...", I fl I she writes. "I got down IIW y y with a weakness in my fl EJ I back and limbs...! I fl H felt helpless and dls- fl fl E fl couraged... I had about fl fl H fl ?Iven UP hopes of over fl fl Sj B being well again, when B N j I At ill a 'rien(* insisted I [MM I Take " , ?1. Ui. t- T. > iih wnmans innin WP t HI] I began Cardui. In I m * short while I saw ( | 9 marked difference. < J I U I grow stronger right I B along, and it cured me. I B jJ)U I am stouter than I LJjjy gg If havo been in years." I| JB H | If you suffer, you can fl 9 | B approciate what it B H fl means to be strong and I I a well. Thousands of wo- fl fl 'J. ft men give Cardui the T R U credit for their good |5l health. It should help fl fl you. Try Cardui. At all B druggists. E-73 B THE HORRY HERALD, CQ1T LEMONS WHITEN AND BEAUTIFY THE SKIN Make this beauty lotion cheaply for your face, neck, arms and hands. V. At the cost of a small jor of ordinary cold cream one can prepare a full 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 1 The war department has announced the selling of the transport Martha Washington, due at Charleston, S. C., about April 12, with the Second and Third Battalions of the One Hundred and Twentieth Infantry of the Thirtieth Division, which includ ' es Companies E to M. ' 1 PRICE less than a fairly good article nt; and a customer wants to ces. e Old Stand rs at the same eld stand with s which we offer at prices s as well as to us. ; a Trial _ _ d'ng at Toddville before, give RY & CO. S. C. HALF MILLION MEN BACK FROM FRANCE Million and Half Have Been; Disr.harnpH Frnm II <5 ? ?JVM Wi I \J m \J Army. Washington.?Figures made public by tlie war department show that from the signing- of the armistice to March 26th, 1,535,471 of the 3,670,888 officers and men under arms when the war ended, had been discharged from the sevice. * Since the >end of hostilities 573,471 officers and men had sailed from France to March 26 and of this number 502,830 had arrived in the United States. This left 1,409,789 soldiers overseas. The total under arms in this country on March 25 was 603,178. Enlistments in the army since Feb ruary 28 when voluntary recruitingwas resumed were 1,533 to March 26. Ot these 783 enlisted for one year, 714 for three years and 36 length of service not reported. IJctwecn November 11 and March 21., 96 regular army officers were dia charged from their emergency rank. They included one major-general tv brigadier-general, two major-generals to colonels, 34 brigadier-generals tn colonels, 20 brigadier-generals to lieu tenant-colonels, seven brigadier-genera Is to captains. o Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Day 3 Druggists refund money If PAZO OINTMF NT fa', to cure Itching, Mind, Diceding or Protn.di ;>j Pi!c V.-tantly relieves Itching Piles, t.r ' you con f restful sleep oftcr the first cprllor.ti n. Pri.vC o Legal blanks, Herald office. STAY, 8. 0., APBIL 10, 1?1? BIG APPETITE FOR SAFE INVESTMENTS Between Twenty and TwentyFive Million Bond Buyers Take Billions !n Short Periods. Pessimists who shake their heads and join the chorus of "I dunno" boys at the prospect of fioatin* a fifth Liberty Loan in April are administered a knock-out by figures which have recently been compiled by officials of j the Treasury Department at Waah| ington. The figures give an idea of just how big an appetite for safe investment this country has attained in its waryear. Some of the more striking of the figures referred to follow: A bond market which had less than 800,000 customers two years ago had at the close of 1918 between 20,000.000 and 25,000,000 buyers. The army of buyers absorbed $11,156,565,850' worth of bonds in Liberty Bonds alona in 1918. In the two years of the war?counting the first and second Liberty Louns which were floated in 1917? these bond buyers digested a total of $16,974,329,850 in Liberty bonds. This healthy condition of the bond market in explained, perhaps, by the fact that the entire indebtedness of the United States today amounts to slightly less than 7 per cent of Ihe estimated national wealth. The national debt amounts to only about $170 per capita. Some of the national debts are: Great Britain, 44.3 per cent cent, of national wealth or $360 per capita; France, 41.25 per cent of national wealth or $296.90 per capita; Austria, 84.66 per cent of national wealth or $242.90 per capita ;and Germany, 38.7 per cent of national wealth or $505.90 per capita. These figures on Germany are exclusive of the ninth war loan, accurate returns of which never were had, and in the cases of both Austria and Germany no account is taken of any indemnities which those nations will have to pay. SOLID SEGURITV FHR MR RRRR5 I UN I UUII UUI1UU It is the Wealth of This Great ? Country Somewhere Near Hundred and Fifty Billions of Dollars. How many holders of "Libertya" realize fully the security that is back of that property they own? It is the wealth of the richest nation of the earth. Here's but a glance at what that wealth comprises. With 6 per cent of the world's population and 7 per cent of the world's land America owns of the world supplies: 70 percent of the copper. 52 per cent of the coal. 20 per cent of the gold. 66 per cent of the oil. 40 tier pent of iron un/t r - waav ? v# ki IVIIU OtUCl* 33 per cent of the silver. 60 per cent of the cotton. 25 per cent of the wheat. GO per cent of the corn. 30 per cent of the meat supplies. Other mineral and agricultural products in proportion. Today Europe owes us $10,000,000,000; four years ago we owed her nearly half that, j Lastly our annual income, that of I all the people and industries, is today something like $70,000,000,000 annually and our national wealth close to $350,000,000,000. Don't sell your government securities. They will mean more to you by* and-by. Stamp sales at the Columbia post office for March show a slump of 10.63 from the February sales. COTTONSEED OIL TO FEED EUROPE ff. I. Manning to Discuss With Hoover Plan for Sending Oil Abroad. Former Governor R. I. Manning gave out a statement just before sail ing for Europe last Saturday in which he said that he would on arriving in France take up with Herbert Hoover one phase of the world's food situation, as effected by cotton. He will, he said, endeavor to persuade Mr. Hoover to use some of the revolving fund of $100,000,000 appropriated just before congress adjourned in order that cotton seed oil might go toward replenishing the diminished supply of fats in European countries. Thus the surplus seed now in the hands of farmers would in turn go into food instead of oeing turned into fertilizer. rn?i? >iil nfltinn u'ifh i-awi ivl * ' > - V . >. ?? ?. V4 Vi? 11 i VII I \ l V-V/ I [seed and its products, he said, grew! out of an arrangement made between j jthc seed mills and Mr. Hoover at the j | beginning of last season, whereby the government practically guaranteed the price for the various products with the exception of the oii cuke which is readily salable for fertilizer. The sudden ending of the v.ar, he said, has ended the demand for those products which were used for munitions, and there is on hand a large surplus of oil. As a result of the mills' inability to sell the oil, they in turn, have left about i?0 per cent of the season's seed on the hands of the fanners. This seed, valued at about $140,rwi/i i\/\r\ ...mi ?x i it * uv/u,uuw win not Keep inrougn tnc warm weather, and must soon be turned into fertilizer. Governor Manning felt, he said, that the government was obligated morally, though not legally to sustain the prices promised to the producers. This could best be accomplished, he said, if Mr. Hoover would begin buying the oil for use abroad where there is in many places more or less of a fat famine. If Mr. Hoover would devote some of his revolving fund to this purpose, he said, the mills in turn would | at once begin buying seed from the farmers and replacing the oil shipjped abroad, so that this $140,000,000 j worth of seed would go into human food at a time when the world is I short of food, and particularly of {jhts, instead of being dissipated a | fcitilizer. ways?producing more fats and oils Only by the strictest economy and by substitutions ordinarily regarded as impossible has the world's supply of fats and oils been made to meet the requirements of the last few years, declares the United States Department of Agriculture in a publication just released. The allied nations barely were able to secure enough to meet their military and civil needs, while the greatest suffering in the central empires appears to have resulted from a dire shortage of fats and oils. 'This was true during the war, and continues true in the reconstruction period notwithstanding the fact that the oil-producing possibilities, of America particularly, have never been utilized to anything like their full extent. To show the possibilities for oil production in greater quantities from recognized materials a.s well as from new materials and to demonstrate the possibilities of fuller utilization and conservation, the United States Department of Agri culture has issued, as Depai*tment IU diet in No. 7(59, a publication on "The Production and Conservation of Fats and Oils in the United States." The work was done in collaboration by Herbert S. Bailey, chemist in charge of the soil, fat, and wax laboratory of the Department of Agriculture, and B. E. Reuter, chief of the fats and oils division of the United States Food Administration. ButcH<?r and Farmer Should Trim Cloiscr. It is shown that conservation in food materials, especially in fats and oils, is as essential now as it was during the war, and to this end the small butcher and farmer are urged t i trim more closely the animals they slaughter in order to obtain all the fat possible for rendering as lard or tallow. Many possibilities are shown for increasing the yield of a number of vegetable oils, notably cottonseed* oil, and for a closer utilization of animal fats in packing louses. Every kind of oil and fat produced in the United States, both WWW . PAGE 8EVMT ALUES PREPARE TO STRIKE SLOW General Mangin Given an Important Command in Eastern Theater FRENCH CALL FOR FINISHING STROKE Plan of Marching Through Germany to Join Poland Is Suggested. I Taris?General Mangin, one of the I leading officers of the French army* will be called from his command at Mayence, the newspapers announce, to undertake a mission, the character and scope of which is "indicated plainly by the events in Hungary." According to the Gaulois he would receive a very important command in eastern Europe, undoubtedly the Balkans, with a view to possible operations on the Hungarian frontier and southwestern Russia. General J. M. G. Malleterre,- the military critic, in an article in the Matin annaront.lv . . ,, .viivwuig inn nary opinion, suggests that as a means of checking the Bolsheviki and rendering definite the victory of the Allies, Allied armies should inarch through Germany and effect a junction with. Poland. General Malleterre add? that the Allies must finish the job by a thunerstroke and declares that the sword of Marshal Foch is not yet sheathed. All Galicia in Revolt. Vienna, via Copenhagen.?A wireless dispatch received from the Soviet government at Moscow declares that all of Galicia is in a state of revolution. The movement is described as having begun in the oil dis t? icts near Dvobhobyoz, where the workers established a Soviet government and have spread to the surrounding districts. 1 I Troops dispatched by the Polish government, the message aserts, joined the movement. The Lembcrg Soviet, it is added, has declared a general strike. vegetable and animal, is discussed, and in many cases means are pointed out for increasing the supply either by producing larger quantities of the raw material or by bettor methods of recovering. The bulletin goes rather exhaustively into the subject. It shows the importance of fats and oils, the numerous uses to which they are applied, the ratio between production and importation, and how to safeguard the supply. One of the more important means of safeguarding is declared to be the substitution of the more abundant oils for those which are scarce, and the conservation of those oils for purposes to which they are peculiarly adapted. Oils like castor oil as a lubricant can v r?ct easily be replaced. Peanut Oil Gains Recognition. Cotton-seed oil, the production of which is several times larger than, the production of all other vegetable oils in the United States, receives. I rather lengthy treatment with suggestions for increasing the supply, the use of only good seeds, better methods of storing at the gins, crude nulls and refineries, and the use of more efficient extraction methods. The importance of peanut oil is dis cussed. This was almost an unknown pioduct in the United States prior to 1914, but in 1917 it ranked third in the vegetable oils made from home grown products, being exceeded only by cotton-seed oil and linseed oil. Peanut oil, it is pointed out, serves practically the same food purposes as does cottonseed oil, and has the advantage that it can be obtained bycold pressing, like olive oil, and becomes thereby a superior table oil. Tt has the advantage over cottonseed oil also in that the cake, after the oil is pressed out, forms a palatable human food very high in protein. Other kinds of oil discussed with suggestions for increasing the supply are: Castor, coconut, conuito. corn, grape seed, linseed, mustard seed, olive, palm kernel, rapeseed, sesame, shea nut, soy bean, sunflower seed, bone grease, cod and codliver oil, garbage grease, herring oil, lard, menhaden oil, neat's-foot oil neutral lard, oleo stock, packers' and renderers' greases, sperm oil, tallow, whale oil, wool grease, and recovered grease. I . I ? ? !" South Carolinians continue to enlist in the United States navy.