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I . ? . . -,. - 1? KEEP IT SWEET I Keep your stomach sweet today and ward off the indigestion of tomorrow?tiy t KinoiDS the new aid to digestion. As pleasant and as safe to take as candy. MAO* BY SCOTT A BOWNK MAKERC OP SCOTTS EMULSION ' IV1 SOY SCANS, VELVET BEANS AND COWPEAS Clem son College.?Do you have your Soy Bean, Velvet Bean, and Cowpea seed on hand ? There seems A to be scarcity of seed of Velvet Beans, Cowpeas, and Soy Beans this yt jw There are many Soy Beans w* 1917 crop on hand and probabm ly a great many of these will be sold for use this year. Farmers A should make an effort to secure seed 4 of the 1918 crops if possible, as these seed will deteriorate rather rapidly, / and the 1917 seed may not give a y-jrsod germination. In any case they should be teste<l for germination before planting, advises Prof. C. P. Blaekwell, Agronomist. Because of the scarcity of Velvet Bean seed and Cowpea. seed, fanners may find it necessary to use Soy Beans as a substitu'*^ for Velvet Beans and Cowpeas." o The outlook for good business in this country could not be better. 0. A. SPIVEY & CO. W. B. King, Secty. BONDS AND INSURANCE ?Office in?? peoples national bank bxjilding H. H. WOODWARD. Attorney and Counsellor at Lav CONWAY, S ~ B. B. SCARBOROUGH Attoraey at Law, CONWAY, a. C. ^T. B. LEWIS. Btty. and Oouncellor at Law CONWAY. - - - S. t J. M. JOHNSON. CIVIL ENGINEER MARION, S. C. My Engineering and Surveying office will be open during my ab ence, and prepared to take care of any work as usual. Address oil communications as hereto i Core. WILLIAM EUGENE KING, M C I Physician and Burgeon i Office In Flatt Drug Co. AYttyjR,. - - - S.C i DR. J. D. THOMAS * Physician and Surgeon f lows, s. o. I LUM JUNG LAUNDRY, CONWAY, 8. C, ' Deginoiiitc July lit IMS * ' All persons mast take tickets |foi / work left here. Possitively n< 4 work delivered until ticket is prs ' /\ tented. Laundry not oalled for 1' 30 <%wra will be sold for charges 3 LUM JUNG * OR, G.!, LEWIS JJENTAL SURGEON tlflw.O?9r Norton Drag Company ? conway. a cl BaBfliBBSSSBB S HORRY COUNTY S | CTRUST COMPANY ; (g L. D. Magrath Q Manager, t B Real Estate B Real Estate Loans B Bonds B Insurance tialBBDBBBOBQ 1 x / ' IMPORTANT NOTICE. ( The regular teacher's examination for certificates will be held in Burroughs School on Saturday, May at 9:80 o'clock. ' All who wish certificates should be on hand. Remember that no War Emergency Certificates can be renewed. See last week's %paper for fuller announcements. * The Teacher-Training School re- f opened Monday with a good class in % attendance and prospects are bright ; for thi? spring term. All who arc t planning to attend should join the F class as soon as possible. j M. J. Bullock, v Co. Supt. of Ed. o- < The body of 3adith Cavell, the t English nurse who was executed by 1 the Germans in 1915 at Brussels will c be brought to England from Bel- c gium on May 15 and taken to West- c minster Abbey, where ceremonies !: will be held. r The British embargo policy which has fallen heavily on many Ameri- f can firms, will come up for review and consideration of modifications j by the British authorities Sep. 1. ; |^Sg|gpgl|aa] |, PAY A FA Nobody wants anything ] when he buys 'from a merchanl buy what he needs at fair price At the Same The year of 1919 finds vi I a full line of staple goods that are fair to our customers Give Us If you have not been tradi us a trial this year. DUSENBUI Toddville, HARRELSON & HARRELSON Attorneys-at-Law ] Practice both in the State and i I Federal Courts. * MULLINS, ? ? S. 0. ' "ifi t |Q Keep WeU ml \H Do not allow the r poisons of undigested gjSL t WL food to accumulate in jifl g^B your bowels, where they ^^g 1 U are absorbed into your g^B s ~ kt system. Indigestion, con- r gg| stipation, headache, bad gg| f ^^g blood, and numerous ^^g 1 P other troubles are bound TP \ Jg to follow. Keep your ||L r ^^g system clean, as thous- g^ g^P ands of others do, by ^Bg WEL* taking an occasional dose fcJTl r Ig of the old. reliable, veg- gg s WW etable, family liver medi- gj .. mi Thedford's 0 f Blaek-Drauffh! i t ML Mrs. W. F. Pickle, of Jflfl i Rising Fawn, Ga., writes: m M M "We have used Thed- ftP ford's Black-Draught as 1 H a family medicine. My c ^1 mother-in-iaw could not WtM [ TC take calomel as it seemed JH too strong for her, so she 1 used Black-Draughtasa m < f mild laxative and liver < regulator . . We use it fi inlhe family and believe ML Mm it is the best medicine for m Mr the liver made." Try it. J By Insist on the genuine? k|H t ^ Thedford's. 25c a pack- t \ THE HOBBY HERALD, COH1 jllRLS! WHITEN SKIN WITH LEMON JUICE Eake a beauty lotion for a few cents to remove tan, freckles, sallowness. \ our grocer has the lemons ana any irug store or toilet counter will supply you with three ounces of orchard vhitc for a few cents. Squeeze the uicc of two fresh lemons into a bot!e, then put in the orchard white and hake well. This makes a quartei >int of the very best lemon skin vhitcner and complexion bcautifiet mown. Massage this fragrant, rcamy lotion daily into the face, teck, arms and hands and just see (.ow freckles, tan, sallowness, redness ind roughness disappear and how ;mooth, soft and clear the skin be:omes. Ytis! It is harmless, and the icautiful results will surprise you.? '.dv?(4) vAji invitation to the United Concderate veterans to hold their 1919 eunion in Savannah is being serious y considered by Commander in Chief an Zandt, Forth Worth, Texas. o rhe Quinine That Does Not Affect the Head Seccuse of its tonic mid laxative erfect, LAXA* PI VK BROMO QUININE is brtterthan ordinary .hiinine and does not cause nervousness not iuaing in head. Remember the full name and oqjc 1 or the ?# nature of E, W. QROVR. 30c. o W. H. Gore was in Conway last ?riday. , IR PRICE ess than a fairly good article and a customer wants to ts. i Old Stand i at the same eld stand with which we offer at prices as well as to us. a Trial | ;ng at Toddville before* give IY & CO. No Worms in a Healthy Chilct All children troubled with worms have an unhealthy color, which indicates poor blood, and as a ulc, there is more or less stomach disturbance. jROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC given regularly or two or three weeks will enrich the blood, improve the digestion, and act as a General Strengthening Tonic to the whole system. Nature will then .irew off or dispel tho worms, and the Child will be n perfect health. Pleasant *o take. 60c per bottle o TIME EXTENDED. Icitor Herald: In view of the short time, between ht date on which forms were availible and the due date (March the 5th) of calendar year returns retired under the Revenue Act of 018, notice was given through the rnblic press and otherwise that tenative returns (Forms 1031-T and 040-T), accompanied by a first inilalment of one fourth of the estinated tax due would be accepted on hat date, and in such case 45 days vould be given in which to file compete returns, but that interest at the ate of one-half of 1 per cent, per nonth upon the amounts by which nxh instalment payments fell short >f the correct amounts woud be colocted. In the case of corporations which iled Form 1031-T on or before .larch the 15th, a further extension, vhere needed, to June the 15th, | if 19. in which to fil*? complete reurns on Form 1120 is hereby grantid, but all such coiporations will be equired to pay on or before June he 15th a sum sufficient, with the .mount paid on March the 15th, to iqual one-half the tax due as shown ty the return on Form 1120, toother with interest at the rate of me-half of one percent per month >n i any deficiency in the first inn ailment. It is not deemed necessary to fvant an extension of time beyond he 45 days originally granted for ;he completion of personal returns, jycept on special request therefor for sufficient reasons given, but the ibove ruling as to interest on de WAY. 8. P., APRIL 84, 1919 "PRICE OF PEACE" GREAT WAR PICTURE Columbia.?The high tension under which our people existed during the days when the daily bulletins from the front kept us in suspense and dread on account of our loved ones being exposed to all of the hardships and dangers of war, gave way to a complete relaxation of nervous energy which for a time caused a condition of almost apathy. The people had become so accustomed to the daily thrill that they missed their regular news stimulant and when their minds were filled with the nearer sorrow caused by the diead influenza the war came very near taking a second place in the attention of the public. Now that the boys have commenced to come home the people are learning in a way that the newspapers were not permitted to tell, of the great fortitude and endurance of our soldiers, and the public is be- I Winiintr m r>yr> nml J 4- ~ ,1 * ? I 0 ...vtv uuvl 1IIU1C IIIWIUMWU 'II the success of the Victory Liberty Loan Campaign. Several new features are being introduced into this campaign. One of them is "The Trice of Peace," the wonderful and thrilling picture of Americans in the Great War. "The Price of Peace" is a 5,000 feet film which shows every phase of the soldiers' activity in the war. The story takes the recruit from the arms of his mother to the royal welcome of the "kitchen police" and shows his progress from "rookie" to the day he boards ship for some place "over there." Passed by censor. The picture records the progress of the great convoys and the transports with the human freight which the kaiser wished he could send to the bottom of the sea. The scenes grow in interest as they approach the front line trenches. Life in the trenches is potrayed more vividly than any writing can tell. The calm composure of the soldiers as they fix bayonets and prepare to go over the top would mam* il appear mat rnis was a posed production, but that is just the way our dear old boys got ready for the job. This is declared to be the greatest picture ever made, and the thrill that it brings is but a recognition of the fact that it is life which the film presents, life?and death. For while the picture shows the brave American troops swinging leisurely into action in their advance on the mouth of Hell, it also shows the work of the bullets and the shrapnel of the Hun, as our boys fall, but the waves that are carrying Old Glory cannot oe stopped. In short?this is the story of the American "doughboy." It is the picturing of the job that he undertook, and the job that ho finished. It makes an appeal to every patriotic American to finish the job as the boys finished theirs?to leave nothing undone to pay the debts of Uncle Sam. The South Carolina Headquarters of the Victory Liberty Loan has received two of these wonderful pictures and they are being routed over the State by Henry S. Cathcart, State Director of Films, Columbia, S. C. ill ficient instalments applies to them. An extension of time in which to file returns of corporations making returns for a fiscal year ended either o* January the 31st, or February the 28th, 1919, will on request be granted to June the 15th, 1919, but such extension shall not operate to extend the due date of any instalment of tax after the first. Interest at the rate of one-half of 1 per cent per month will be collected from the t me the first instalment would have been payable if the extension had not been requested. The time for filing returns of infoimation (Forms 1096 and 1099), Fiduciary returns (Form 1041), with holding returns (Form 1042, accomnnniorl k\r l^avmo 1 aoq 1 a"1 o \ jsi??a?VsVi A VI II If} AVfc/U au\l AUXO / | IVturn of partnership and personal service corporations required to file returns on a calendar year basis, and all other returns required under the income tax and profits tax provisions of the law, which are not the basis for the assessment of the tax, is also extended to June the 15th, 1919. 0 % COPY SUMMONS FOR RELIEF. (Complaint Not Served.) Court of Common Pleas. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA* County of Horry. Mary E. Todd, Administratrix of John D. Todd, Dee'd.; also in her I own right, Plaintiff. vs. Jassamine Virginia Todd, Hubert Archibald Todd, Heirs at law 01 John D. Todd, Dee'd.; Susan M. Housend, Samuel Isaac Housend, William T. Housend, Ollie Minnie I Gore, Exie Dora Gore, Lou Dessie Cartrctt, Benjamin Housend, George B. Housend, Robert G. Housend, Richard Bellamy, Maggie M. Bellamy, Letha Gertrude ( Bellamy, Blanche Pearle Bellamy, D. Leon Bellamy, Ethel Mary Bellamy and Richard E. Bellamy, Heirs at law of Alva T. Housend, Dec'd., Defendants. TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE NAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED und required to answer the complaint in this action, which has been filed in the office of the Clerk of the Court of Common Picas, for the said County, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscriber at his office at Conway, S. C., within twenty days after the service hereof; exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to ir.swer the complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action . ill apply to the Court for the relief iviiiiuiMivi III l/IIVJ UlMll jMilJIH.. November 25th, A. 1). 1918. H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. W. L. RRYAN, (L. S.) C. C. C. P. To Letha Qertrude Bellamy, absent defendant: Take notice that the Complaint in the foregoing stated action and the commons, of which the foregoing is a copy, were filed in the office of the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas at Conway, South Carolina on the 2nd day of Dec. A. D. 1918. ORDER. Court of Common Pleas. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Rorry. Mary E. Todd, Administratrix of John I). Todd, dec'd.; also in her own right, Plaintiff, vs. Jassamine Virginia Todd, et al , De fendants. Upon reading the annexed affidavit made in behalf of the plaintiff for the appointmenet of a Guardian Ad Litem for Letha Gertrude Bellamy, an absent infant defendant of the oge of Sixteen (16) years now known by the name of Letha Ger tiiule Cannon and residing- at Lumberton, in the State of North Carolina; and it appearing by showing duly made that said infant is absent from the State and claims an inter-' est in lands in Horry County dost ribed in the Complaint in the foregoing stated action for foreclosure of a mortgage of the same, and it appearing that J. S. Vaught, Judge of Probate of Horry County, would bo a suitable and competent person to act as Guardian of said absent infant: In pursuance of the provisions of sub-division 2 of section 165 of the Code of Civil Procedure of South Carolina A. D. 1912, it is ordered that said J. S. Vaught be and he is hereby appointed as Guardian Ad Litem of said absent infant defendant foi the purposes of this action and directed to appear and defend this action in her behalf; unless the said infant defendant, or someone in her behalf, within ten (10) days after the service of a copy of this Order by publication with the Summons as hereinafter stated shall procure to be appointed a Guardian Ad Litem for the said infant. It is further ordered that this or-1 dor shall be served upon said infant defendant bv nuhli shiner t.ho for v i O * ? throe successive weeks in the Horry Herald, a newspaper published in Horry County, with the Summons in said action and by mailing with the Summons to said infant at Lumbe,> ton, North Carolina, in care of G(orge Cannon; and that the service )f said Order shall be complete at the same time that the service of said Summons is completed as provided by said Code. Given under my Hand and Seal this 31st day of March A. D. 1919. W. L. BUY AN, (L. S.) Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas . . .i C TT ^ n i... in ami iur nuuy vtiuiity. H. H. WOODWARD, Attorney for Plaintiff. o ? Formal charges of pro-German activity by certain American missionaries in Bulgaria and northern Persia have been forwarded to the Amer.can board of foreign missions by the state department. o Colds Cause Grip and Influenza ! AXAT1VE BROMO QUININE Tablets remove the r.use. There is only one "Bromo Quinine." E. W. GROVE'S signature on box. 30c. liWMIIIVMr TOO MUCH COTTON DANGER TO SOUTH Chief of Extension Work Urges Safe Farming Program For . Our Farmers RAISE PLENTY FOOD COTTON AS SURPLUS Advises Out in Cotton Acreage Mainly That Farms May be Self Sustaining. "Cotton fanners and business men are in a critical situation in the spring of 1919," said Bradforcf Knapp, chief of the Office of Extension Work South, United States Department of Agriculture, in outlining at a recent meeting of extension forces some of the difficulties of farming in the South in 1919, and the importance of safe farming. ??Tr ? x* out: ooum plants as large an acreage to cotton as in 1918 and has & good season resulting in a large crop, the possible danger to Southern prosperity can scarcely be oveerestifnated," continued Mr. Knapp. Safety in Food and Feed. "A well-balanced system of agriculture is the best answer to this problem, not only in 1919, but in any year in peace or in war. The safety and security of the Southern people depend greatly on the production for the people and the feed necessary for the increasing live stock." ; Mr. Knapp pointed out that the exchange value of cotton to the retail price of necessities of life was no different when cotton was worth 80 cents a pound in 1918 from what it was when cotton was worth 12 cents a pound in years before the war. Every Farm Self-Sustaining* Th<> hnrnrt no*''"" - ~ ? ? - * nuiucut luiu ?m a Dasier of Southern food production, plenty of feed and forage for live stock, increased production of meat* milk, and cfcSfs, with cotton as a strictly surplus crop, is the program strongly urged. Mr. Knapp urged the reduction ? f cotton acreage, not so much by a level cut of a certain proportion of the acreage of every farm, as by convert ing every farm into a self-sustaining unit. He urged getting on to a cash basis instead of a credit basis, and selling the execess products of the farm to supply the living expenses. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. All persons holding claims against the estate of Ida C. Floyd, deceased, are hereby notified to present the. same duly attested, to the undersigned or this Notion will ? - ? r--'w vw mm* ?/V OV i/ Up tn bar of their recovery; and all persons indebted to the said estate are notified to make payment in full to the undersigned. F. W. FLOYD, JNO. G. FLOYD, Executors of the estate of Ida C. Floyd, deceased.?adv Dated April 8th, 1919?4fl0|19 3t 11 - O? Former Senator Christie Benet of Columbia will deliver the address to the graduating class of Wofford College at the commencement exercises to be held on June 2. o ?? ??i? Hay em' Healing Honey Stops The Tickio Heals The Throat Cures The Cough Price 35c. ^ A FREE BOX OF GROVE'S O-PEN-TRATE SALVE (Opens the Pores and Penetrates) For Chest Colds, Head Colds and Croup, is enclosed with every bot* tie of HAYES* HEALING HONEY You the Cough Syrup and the Salve for one*price, 33c. Made, Recommended and Guaranteed to the PuhUc by Parts Medicine Company ' Manufacturers of Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic