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I Help Your Dipstkm : When ncid-d'strcsacd, relieve the " indigeuUou with , Ki-hoidS ; Dissolve easily on tongue?as pleasant to take as candy. Keep a your stomach sweet, try KtanoMe MADS BY SCOTT ft DOWNS \ MAKERS OF SCOTTS EMULSION to HINTS TO THE GARDENER. 1 Clemson College.?Three essentials in gardening arc thorough prep aration, judicious use of fretilizer an<l frequent and careful cultivation. Plan to have a variety as well as ( a quantity of vegetables in your c .1 garden this year. Remember also s ' that you may have frfsh vegetables c tl^ year round?in the hot summer ^ tV^e 11 as the winter. I) Don't forget that rotation of crops is very necessary in gardening. It helps keep down diseases and in- ( sects as well as to supplement the . ? C _t A O I ' * ' nullity ui piant joou in me son. j Root crops that may be planted ; 0 now arc beets, turnips, carrots, and parnsnips. Start your celery seed bed. It should be located conveniently to water as the seed bed must be watered frequently during dry weather. A spent hotbed makes an ideal place. rIhc4Golden Self-blanching is a good eai? variety while the Pascal is a late variety. ... 0. A. SPIVEY & CO. W. B. King, Secty. BONDS AND INSURANCE ?Office in? PEOPLES NATIONAL BANK BUILDING H. H. WOODWARD. Attorney mud Counsellor ml Lmv ; CONWAY, 8 ~ < C ??> | - # B. a SCARBOROUGH Attorney at Law, CONWAY, a c. >1 T. B. LEWIS. Atty. &nd Oouncellor at Lee CONWAY, - - - S. I J. M.JOHNSON, CIVIL ENGINEER MARION, S. C. My Engineering and Surveying office will be open during my absence, and prepared to take cart of any work as usual. Add.res? ell communications as hereto I fore. WILLIAM EUGENE KING, M r Physician and Surgeon Office in Piatt Drug Oo. AYNOR,. S.C , "J . DR. J. D. THOMAS ; Physician and Surgeon loris, s. o. LUM JUNG LAUNDRY. CONWAY. 8. C. Beginning July 1st. 1913 ' All persons mast take tickets {for work left here. Possitively lie work delivered until ticket is pre sented. Laundry not called for ir 30 days will bo sold for charges LUM JUNG iSl 1 ' DR. 6.1 LEWIS DENTAL SURGEON Office Over Norton Drag Company CONWAY. S.C. I ~~ I QD?BHDD9tiaBD | HORRY COUNTY S | TRUST COMPANY S fri L. D. Magrath D gT Manager. B B Real Estate B Real Estate Loans B I 0 Bonds H B Insurance B | C3IR m 15 W ? B 0 B I? W| 1 :us seed. Once you got your bed tar ted, it will last a lifo time. A ow fifty foot long will supply the tverage family. Palmetto is a good ariety for home and commercial ise. ! Prepare to fight the insects and liseases in your garden. Secure a food spray pump and spray rrvaterals. It is easy to save your vegctibles if you start in time. Make successive plantings of snap >eans every ten days, in order to lave a fresh supply thruout the seaon. Refugee, Bountiful and Stringess green pod are good varieties. It is not too late to plant aspara o Circumspection. "I am sensible of the honor you lo me, Mr. Johnson, in the proposal >f marriage you have just made," :f 11 # 1 Vir?iw?V?f *. 1 -1.. V.M nuuguv; wun^ ItUiy, UlU ircumstances over which I have no ontrol compel me to decline the tonor." "What are those circumstances?" lemanded the young man. "Your circumstances, Mr. Johnion."?New York Evening Post. ?mmmmmm?????________??? I Get the and AvoidJ ? n ? m y | *-^in Every Cake Nobody wants anything when he buys from a merchai buy what he needs at fair pric At the Sam The year of 1919 finds 1 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 an*J Federal Courts. KULLINS, ? ? S. 0. y It Helps ("y I fl There can be no doubt fl|I IB as to the merit of Cardui, fl fl V B the woman's tonic, in fl fl II the treatment of many flifl M| troubles peculiar to women. The thousands ?+3 {fl of women who have been helped by Cardui in the V7fl past 40 years, is conclu- B fl sive proof that it is a IB good medicine for women fl I fl who suffer. It should 71 help you, too. BJB ^ Take OADnilli UHI1KJU1 g me Woman's Tonic Eg g Mrs. N. E. Varner, of BVU Hixson, Tenn., writes: fl "I was passing through the . . . My back and j J| sides were terrible, and &JO 1 my suffering indescriba- P2R Jji ble. I can't tell just how Pj 1 ^ and where I hurt, about N all over. I think ... I R began Cnrdui, and ray m pains grew less and less, N until 1 was cured. I am BR remarkably strong for a P4H 1 woman 64 years of age. 11 pM 1 do all my "housework." RmH J Try Cardui, today. E-76 SjjT THE HORRY HERALD, COH1 LEMONS MAKE SKIN WHITE, SOFT, CLEAR Make this beauty lotion for a few cents and see for yourself. What girl or woman hasn't hoard cf lemon juice to remove complexion blemishes; to whiten the skin and to bring out the roses, the freshness and the hidden beauty? But lemon juice aione is acid, therefore irritating, and should be mixed with orchard white this way. Strain through a fine cloth the juice of two fresh lemons into a bottle containing about three ounces of orchard white, then shake well and you have a whole quarter pint of skin and complexion lotion at about the cost one usually pays for a small jar of ordinary cold cream. Be sure to strain the lemon juice so no pulp gens into the bottle, then this lotion will remain pure and fresh for months. When applied daily to the face, neck, arms and hands it should help to bleach, clear, smoothen and beautify the skin. Any druggist will supply three ounces of orchard white at very little cost and the grocer has the lemons.? ?adv?(5) o - * The Quinine That Does hot Affect tha Head Hecc.n?e of Its toi:fc and laxative effect, LAXA* TiV'K BROMO QU1N1NX? is better than ordinary ? ^iiuiuic umt uucs uv/i viiunw uuvuusu^s uui rirminc In head. Remember the full tipmeatd too* io; the s# nature of 12. W. (jROVK. 30c. Buy Victory Bonds. | less than a fairly good article it; and a customer wants to >es. e Old Stand .;s at the same old stand with j which we offer at prices j as well as to us. ; a Trial il'.ng at Toddville before. jrnve I , 0-.& co. i s c i MAKES INSPECTION | OF SODS OF HOPE; The Door of Hope, Columbia, was visited April 21 by Secretary Wil-1 bonis of the State board of charities and corrections. This was originally! a rescue home but it is now a mater- j nity home. It is a private institution under a board of managers and is sun no rind wnlnntn,... ? ir^ - - i vi uuvai y UlJlM'lflf^a J Miss Anna W. Finnstrom is matron and Miss M. B. Holmes is assistant matron. These, together with the girls, do all of the work. The inmates go from all parts of the State. None can leave unless! she takes her baby with her or makes arrangements for its adoption. o No Worms in a Healthy Chila All children troubled with worms have an unhealthy color, which indicates poor blood, and as a rule, there is more or less stomach disturbance. (JKOVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC given regularly for tv/oor three weeks will enrich the blood, hn- j ,uovc the digestion, and act ns a General Strengthening Tonic to the whole system. Nature will then ! new oil or dispel the worms, and the Child will I* j ir. . erfect health. Pleasant *o take. 60c per bottle j ? VNOTICE 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 Notice will he set up in 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, J NO. G. FLOYD, Executors of the estate of Ida C. Floyd, deceased.?a-.lv Dated April 8th, 1010?4',10! 10 3t 0fi(> quickly relieves Constipation. Biliousness, Loss of Appetite ami Headaches, due to Torpid liver.?adv. 1-24-10 20t. frAY, S. 0., MAY 1, 1919 DEATH OF J. T. HOOKS. John Thomas Hooks died at his home live miles east of Nichols, S. C., Tuesday afternoon, Apiil 15, 1919 at 12:.??0 o'clock, after a brief illness of three or four days in the 02nd year of his age. He was attended by Doctors Bullock of Nichols, and Floyd of Fair Bluff, N. C. The former was at his bedside when the last breath faded away. All possible help seemed to be no good toward improving his condition for his physical breakdown went from bad to worse until his death. He was born Oct. 11th, 1857 and was the fourth son out of a family ! of 11 children of Patrick and Nancy Hooks, both of which are deceased. His father was born in 1818 and died in 1897, while his mother was born in 1801 and died in 1915. Both his father and mother always remained in the same community that he lived in. He was a native of the "Wannamaker community of Floyds Township in Horry County where he has resided as a farmer during* the entire period of his life. The results of his matured age has produced many warm friends whom have proven so faithful and true unto the last moment, which will never die even in an infinitessimal degree of gratitude to a'l those either immediatecly or remotely concerned. His genial disposition and his pleasing personality mi de him a universal friend and favorite wherever he was known. He is survived by his widow, who was Miss Eliza Jane Boone and ten children two of which are deceased: James C. Hooks, a member of the Junior class at the University of S. C., W. P. Hooks, Jr., Fork, S. C., Misses Annie and Dallie and Fannie (deceased) Hooks, Charlie and Walkei and John Ellis (deceased) Hooks, Mrs. E. F. Hayes, and Mrs. J. Q. Mincey all of Nichols. He has 11 grandchildren, three of whom are deceased. He also leaves four brothers jB. L. Hooks, A. J. Hooks, V. L. Hooks and W. P. Hooks, Sr., of Bayboro, S. C. The funeral services were conducted at the Wannamaker Baptist Church, by his pastor, the Rev. W. J. Wilder, at 3 o'clock, April 1C, after which the body was laid to rest in the * ? - 1 huuk.* v^emewjry nearoy. "Life, we've been long together, Tli rough pleasant and cloudy weather; 'Tis hard to part when friends are dear, Perhaps 'twill cost a sigh, a tear, Then steal away, give ltitle warning, Choose thine own time; Say not good night, but in some higher clime, ! Bid us good morning. o Get ready to take your share c-f the Victory Loan. J DO wi \Lsg$$SSiZZ$ SPIVEY MERCS TOWNS TO RECEIVE INSURANCE TAX More than $21,000 is to be distributed among 48 towns and cities in South Carolina as their proportion of the tax collected on premium/ paid for fire insurance. The tax on premiums for the year 1918 an:OU led. to $21,802.05. The tax for wi.i:- year ending December 31, 1917 amounted to $15,462.68. By an act of the legislature passed in March, 1910, every foreign fire insurance company licensed to do business in this State is required to make a true accounting of all premiums received from fire insurance business done during the year in any ! incorporated city or town in the State, having a regularly organzied fire department with fire apparatus to the value of $1,000 and upwards, which has complied with the terms of this act. The tax of one per cent on these premiums is paid to the towns in which the collections are made. Conway gets the sum of $147.28. o TERRACOTTA PIPE f H AMBROSE CONWAY, n'T ! NTILE COMPANY I PAOBSBvnr WILSON TO ENFORCE WARTIME DRY UW Has Not Instructed Any Department to Take Up This Duty REVENUE MEN TAKE TAX ON 2 3-4 PER CENT. BEER Commissioner Roper Says the Brewers Are to Be Prosecuted. Washington. ? President Wilson may have to decide which executive department shall enforce the Wartime Prohibition Act. He will not take action, it was stated on high authority, concerning the enforcenent of the act that goes into effect July 1 until after he returns from Furope. Ho has not given the Department >' Justice or any other executive dcuirtment instinct ions to take up the .ask. j Attorney General Palmer has not ldicated that he desires to assume his responsibility. Some of his sub rdinatcs have informed him that he termination of war activities has eft a surplus of agents who might ce that wartime Prohibition is obowed. It is said this would not inorforo with other duties imposed on lis department. Roper on 2 3-4 Per Cent. Beer. In case the President takes no acion in the matter the Department of ustico will enforce the act as it would any Federal statute which s not provide specifically for inorcement by some other department r Government service. Commissioner of Internal Revenue loper returned here today and said hat the advice of the Department of ustico in regard to the selling of tamps to brewers who manufacture I 3-4 per cent beer will be followed. lie explained that it should not be mderstood that such action means he Bureau of Internal Revenue coniciers the brewing of such beer tc? ral. He said the law would be enovced against the brewers who make -his beer. But four or five collectors, have been advised to accept the tax3s tendered. Two of them are ttt New York and two in New England. Reed Amendment Holds Good. It is not permissable for a man to take liquor into a partially dry state, according to a decision handed down \v the United States Supreme Court today. Without regard to the degree of aridity prevailing the Reed Bone Dry Amendment is construed as extending to the territory in question. The Prohibition Law of Tennessee differs from that of some other states. it forbids the selling of liquor within four miles of any schoolhouses. Two men brought i* liquor, although obsberving the requirement regarding the schoolhouses. They were convicted and brought the matter to the Supreme Court on a writ of certiorari. The court refused to review the proceedings, thereby leaving the Reed Bone Dry Amendment applicable in the same degree as in those states which are straightout Prohibition. o c / Hayes i Healing Honey Steps The T2 ? SGM iG 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 bottle of HAYES' HEAUNG HONEY You get the Cough Syrup and the Salve for one-price, 33c. Made, Recommended and Guaranteed te the Public by Paris Medicine Company Manufacturers of Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic