University of South Carolina Libraries
IT'S UNWISE I1 to pot off to-day's doty until to* I Borrow. If your stomach is I add-distnrbed take I KMfOlDS I now aid to digestion comfort I i i /day. A pleasant relief from I < the discomfort of acid-dyspepsia. I MADE BY SCOTT & BOWNE I I MAKERS OP SCOTT'S EMULSION 1, "KILL WEEDS WHILE j THEY ARE YOUNG" ! Clemson College. ? It is highly . important at this season of the , year for farmers to remember that I it is much easier to kill weeds while ( they are small than it is to allow . ,them to get thoroughly established j yarn! then attempt to eradciate them, j The^mike-toothed harrow should be , usef|Wreely at this season of the ( myeurjjrhoth before planting and after , W planting. Professor C. P. Blackwell, Profes? sor of Agronomy, suggests that corn ( and cotton should be so planted that , they may be cultivated two or three Aitres with a spike-toothed harrow /before the regular cultivation begins. '' I'' this is done, the weeds should never he troublesome in these crops. -o? Authority has been granted by the militia bureau ni Washington for the organ'*Ytion in South Carolina at once m two battalions of National , Guard. D. A. SPIVEY & CO. W. B. King, Secty. BONDS AND INSURANCE ?Office in? PEOPLES NATIONAL BANK BUILDING H. H. WOODWARD. At tor ae j and Counsellor at Law CONWAY. S ~ ( _ / R. B. SCARBOROUGH Attorney at Law, CONWAY, a C. T. B. LEWIS, v Atty. and Oouncellor at Lai CONWAY, - - - S.C J. M.JOHNSON, CIVIL ENGINEER MARION, S. G. My Engineering and Surveying office will be open during my ab ence, and prepared to take cr.rc of any work as usual. Add res.' all communications as hereto Core. U" WILLIAM EUGENE KING, M f Physician and Surgeon Office in Piatt Drug Oo. AYNOR,. ... S.C -'5 ! . ^ DR. J. D. THOMAS Physician and Surgeon LORI8, S. 0. LUM JUNG LAUNDRY, CONWAY, 8. C, Beginning July 1st. 1913 All persons must take ticketslfor .? work left here. Possitively nc work delivered until ticket is pre eented. Laundry not called for 1; 30 days will be sold for charges ? LUM JUNG ' OR. 6.!. LEWIS DENTAL SURGEON Office Over Norton Drug Company CONWAY. S. C. 'tiDSBDBSQfiBBB | HORRY COUNTY k rniiftr nnimiiiu a ? IKU5I UUMrANT i 13 l L. D. Magrath g hJ' Manager. B Real Estate B Real Estate Loans B m Bonds B j B Insurance B [ BBHHBHilHiaranH)]? CLUB WOMEN HEAR 1 OF WORLD LEAGUE, Rock Hill.?Declaring the league >f nations the greatest document [>ver penned in the history of this , nation, not even excepting the de- ( duration of independence, former , Senator W. P. Pollock of Cheraw of , Chcraw last week in an address bo- t fore the delegates to the 21st an- , nual convention of the State Federa- < ticn of Women's club at Winthrop i College presented impressive argu- , ments for the support of a world ' league. Senator Pollock's address ( was based on a speech on the pro- , posed league of nations delivered by \ him on the floor of the senate. Ho , declared that America has been , pointing the way to a league of nations from its infancy, even before ( it gained its independence, and now j she bids fair to be the founder not , only of a national democracy but of | a world democracy. , ! The weather was good for young crops following the rains of last week. I ?1 I. PAY A FA Nobody wants anything ] when he buys from a merchani buy what he needs at fair pric< At the Sami The year of 1919 finds v.i a full line of staple goods that are fair to our customers Give Us If you have not been tracV us a trial this year. DUSENBUf Toddville, HARRELSON & HARRFt SON Attorneys - at - Law Practice both in the State anl j Federal Courts. j VIULLINS, ? ? S. 0. k| Suffer? h V/\ Mrs. J. A. Cox, of Al- LJ V/jk derson, W. Va., writes: K/j L/l "My daughter . . .suf- a Yjk fered terribly. She could WyM a I/J not turn in bed ... the d doctors gave her up, and wJk YyM we brought her home tc kyl ^ Kl die. She had suffered so } KJ much at. .. time. Hav- lyl Kl ing heard of Cardui, we f>41 got it for her." s>nl CARDUE The Woman's Tonic ? In a few days, she be- 1^1 can to improve." Mrs. y'J Cox continues, "and had L/a c I no trouble at... Cardui ^/t| h | cured her, and we sing W/\ c its praises everywhere. iyJ We receive many thou- WyM ^ sands of similar letters wrA ym every year, telling of the |/1 f s\ good Cardui has done for 1/1 t women who suffer front complaints so common to 1^4 ] n| their sex. It should do w\/M t rfj you good, too. Try mrJk THE HOEEY HERALD, 00HI GIRLS! LEMON JUICE I 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 ! >unccs of orchard white makes a ^'hole 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 j lemon juice through a fine cloth bo r.o lemon pulp gets in, then this lo- | tion will keep fresh for months. Ev- ! ?ry woman knows that lemon juice is j used to bleach and remove such blem- ; ishes as freckles, sallowness and tan and is the ideal skin softener, whitenrr 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 Jaily into the face, neck, arms and 1 nanus.?u?iv?(1.) c The Qulnino That Does Not Affect the Head [lee.-use of itn tonic and laxative effect, I.AXA* riVB BROMO QUININE is betterthau ordiuary Quinine and does not cause nervousness nor riiufitiK in head. Remember the full name and lootor the s4 nature of E. W. GROVE. 30c. o Gov. Robert A. Cooper has accepted an invitation to deliver the principal address at a county contention to be held in Spartanburg*, }. C., on May 30 and 31. JR PRICE less than a fairly good article t; and a customer wants to ?s. j Old Stand 3 at the same eld stand with which we offer at prices as well as to us. a Trial mg at Toddville before, give IY & CO. <& S. c. o Model ServiceBishop Partridge is a collector of necdotes about ministers, and in an necdotal mood he said the other iay: "I once asked a minister how he ad got through a certain service. Ie answered grimly: 1 " 'Well bishop, the service was nothing, moving, and satisfactory.' 44 'Yes,' I said a little puzzled. " 'Yes, exactly,' said he. 'It was oothing because over half the conlegation went to sleep. It was loving because half of the other ( alf left before I was through. And [ t must have been satifactory, inas- < tuch as I wasn't a.^kod to come i gain.' "?Los Angeles Times. c o i The complete text of the amended ovenant. of t.hn T nomiA ~c ? ' . V V..V 1. INUllOIUS I ar reached the State Department by ( able from Pans. t Weather conditions were favorable < or cotton planting in nearly all sec- j ions of the belt during the past I :eek. mnumttmtttnmimnnBnnniitxn *\ quickly relieves Constipation, tiliousness, Loss of Appetite and leadoehe?, <lue to Torpid liver.?adv. -21-10 20t. ; 1 i?AY, S. P., MAY 8, 1919 MORTE PQUR FRANCE | Spring has come again and tender green covers the battle-scarred earth. Nature, the sovereign panacea, has already begun her work of restoration ?flowers blossom over the graves oI fullon heroes. Soon May will briug the poppies, "betweeu the crosses, row on row," little gray crosses, each with its aluminum identification tag?and those that mark the graves of the men who are buried in French cemeteries inscribed with the words "Morte Pour France." Sixty thousand Americans lie asleep in France, "Morte Pour France"? surely no other sentence could teU the story half so well. "Dead for France." Probably the best known poem of the war is one quoted below, "In Flanders Fields," breuthing the fine spirit of sacrifice for an ideal. "America's Answer" stilled all fear that the sacrifice was In vain, and now when victory in battle is won comes "America's Consecration," pledging a victory of right. "He it our task to save. 'In memory of the life you gave, "Those rights for which your blood was shed "In Flanders Fields!" This is our task, in memory of those sixty thousand dead, to insure the victory they won, else they have died for naught. To every citizen of the United States belongs this opportunity, the last opportunity to measure up to the standard set by the boys. The greatest victory of all must be won now, and the shots that will bring it about will be made of dollars. Lend yours to end the war. Buy Victory Liberty Loan bonds. IN FLANDERS FIELDS By Lt. Col. John 1). MeRae. i wrmen iiuriliK The second l>;ittle of Ypros, llMTi. The author, Dr. John D. McCnie, of Montreal. Can., was kllle<l In Flanders, January 28, 1018) Tn Panders fields the poppies blow Retween the crosses, row on row. That mark our place; and in the sky The larks,still bravely singing, fly. Scarce heard amidst the guns belonr. We are the dead. Short days ago We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow, Liored and were loved, and now we lie Tn Flanders fields. Take up our quarrel with the foe! To you from falling hands we throw The torch. Be yours to hold it high! If you break faith with us who die We shall not sleep, though poppies grow In Flanders fields. AMERICA'S ANSWER. By R. W. Lillard (Written after the death of Talent. Col. Mcltae, author of "In Flanders Fields." and printed in the New York livening Post) Rest ye in peace, ye Flanders dead. The fight that ye so bravely led We've taken up. And we will keef True faith with you who He asleep, With each a crose to mark his bed, \nd poppies blot wing ovjrrh'jfad. Where once his own life blood rar red; So let your rest bo sweet and deep In Plunders fields. Fear not that ye have died for naught. The torch ye threw to use we caught. Ten million hands will hold it high, \nd freedom's light shall never die! We've learned the lesson that v? taught In Flanders fields. AMERICA'S CONSECRATION. By Charles Hall Davis, Petersburg, Va, (Written on December to, 1918, after the armistice was signed and Germany defeated) The poppies' blooa.id now mark in red : Your resting place, ye gallant dead. In Flanders fields. And as they wave i Above each cross-marked, Allied i grave, And breathe their opiates overhead To ease each narrow, earthen bed. Where you now rest?your spirit * tied Sleep peacefully, ye warriors brave In Flanders fields! The cause that you so boldly led 1 With dauntless spirit, unafraid, Is won. Be it our task to save, In memory of the life you gave. Those rights for whidh your blood was shed In Flanders fields! WANT TO CONTINUE BUREAUS OF LABOR Continuation of the United States unploymont service with the cooporition and partial financial support the State is contemplated in a neasure which is to be submitted to ongress as soon as the extra session s ordered. Maj. John D. Frost has returned Yum Washington, where he went as iovomor Cooper's representative 10 he conference, of governors and la- j >or representatives. The conference j liaftod a measure calling for this | oint plan for the exchange of sur)!us labor. o Buy Victory Bonds. o Colds Cause Grip and Influenza uAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets remove the T.U00. There 13 only one "Bromo Quinine." 2. W. GROVE'S oignature on box. 30c. BOLSHEVIK CHIEFS PLANNING FLIGHT \cutral Nations, Approached I by Agents of Lenine and Trotzky Washington. ? Realizing that the | Bolshevist regime in Russia must soon come to an end, Lenine and Tiotzky are casting about for a place to fall upon. Trusted agents have made inquiries in Sweden, Gcr- j many, Switzerland and Spain, all of which countries have lot it be known they are not welcome. This information reached Washington through official channels from a neutral country. According to these advices, the two Bolshevist leaders first made inquiries in Sweden. The Stockholm Government * called a conference of Swedish, Nor- ( wegian and Danish officials. A de- l cision was reached that Lenine, 1 Trotzky and other Bolshevist olfi- ' eials could not find sanctuary m Scandinavia. 1 Spurned by Swiss and Spain. ; Remembering the former close 1 ties with the old Imperial German 1 Government, Lenine and Trotzky ; n< xt turned to Berlin, but were 1 promptly advised that it would be impolitic for them to come t<> Ger- 1 many "at the present time." It is ' said Lonine and Trotzky had counted 1 on the former German ti* to give theni a haven of safety when the i crash came in Russia. They were vi icviousiy disappointed. Emissaries then approached the 1 Swiss and Spanish Governments, < with no bettor results. Finally, in- ' qui l ies were made of the new Red Government at Budapest, where Bol- < shevik officials are having a hard ' time to maintain their regime, a success. So far as known, the Magyars did not turn them down, but the security offered for them in Hungary is far from satisfactory. In the opinion of Washington experts on Russian affairs, with each day's advance by loyal troops the plight of the Bolshevik Government becomes more desperate. Our Men's Morale Good. After having talked with every man of the American forces in Northern Russia who could be reached before the breaking up of the ice, Brig. Gen. Richardson, the new American commander at Archangel, cabled this report to Gen. Pershing: "Men have almost no complaint to make in respect of food, housing ill* iwiniumfirl UnolfK 4 .? |.,I .V 11 V. 1 VIIIVII <11111 OJM1 II good. No apprehension on my part respecting morale. Consider situation satisfactory both from standpoint co-operation of Allies and mil- ' itary operations. The high com- ' mand is alert to the situation on the 1 Dvina River, but without anxiety. ' The Bolshevik commander has 1 been planning* a strong blow on the 1 Dvina front, but recent reverses on v many other fronts tend to weaken ' anv effort there. m ( Postal mail planes will make daily * round trips between Macon, Ga., ' and Montgomery, Ala., the week of 1 May 11-10 in connection with the * Southeastern Aeronautical Congress * at Macon. f o - * <??- ' The Baptist Publishing Company ( :>f South Carolina was commissioned last week by W. Banks Dove, secretary of state. <1 j ii Hayes' c Heating Honey 'c Stops The Tickle \ Heals The Throat s Cures The Cough c Price 35c. !! \ I A FREE BOX OF J1 GROVE'S O-PEN-TRATE SALVE ? (Opens the Pores and Penetrates) For Chest Colds, Head Colds and Croup, is enclosed with every bot- 11 tie of HAYES' HEALING HONFY t You get the Cough Syrup and the Salve * for one-price, 35c. Made, Recommended and Guaranteed to the Public by ! Paris Medicine Company [ Manufacturers of > f Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic \ i PACK SEVEN CONGRESS FOR PEACE BE6INS ITS SESSION Serman Peace Delegates Meet Representatives of the Allies FIRST PRELIMINARY AT OLD VERSAILLES V(en From Berlin Present Their Credentials and Receive Those of Victors. The peace congress at Versailles las formally begun its sessions. The ?ventful day which the world has iwaited since the signing of the arriistice on November 11, last year, lias at last arrived. The German peace delegates have TlPl tlw? J. _ a v.v. it-pic?t'iuauvcs ol the allied md associated powers and across the green baize table have carried nit the first preliminary which probably will mean a return to actual peace in the not far distant future. This preliminary was the handing to the representatives of the allied and associated powers by the Germans of their credentials, certifying their right to act for Germany in accepting the peace treaty which the peace conference in Paris has lecrecd. Germany shall meet in or:le? to secure that peace and a return >f normal conditions which Germany has professed she desires so ardently. Similar credentials of the allied unci associated representatives then were handed to the Germans. Scarcely five minutes were taken up with the procedure. The formality of addresses were entirely dispensed with. When the brief ceremony ended the Germans immediately left the Trianon Hotel for their place of residence. BELGIUM TO TAKE STRONG MEASURES Will Demand Complete Fulfillment of Allies' Promises to Her. Brussells. ? Extremely strong measures relative to Belgium's demands at the Peace Conference have been decided upon by the Belgian government, according to the Soir. "Belgium will not accept the terms the council of three desires to impose ij'on her," the newspaper says. "She vill demand a complete fulfillment )f the purpose contained in the decaration addressed to her, France, 3rcat Britain, Italy and Japan and hat expressed in the seventh of resident Wilson's fourteen points, -he will refuse to sign any peace ;rcaty which does not restore Belgium to political and economic indejendence and does not entirely inlemnify her for damage sustained hiring the war." Award Not Acceptable. London.?One of the principal feaures of the arrangement for inUmnity to Belgium against which lolerium is nvofpsHnnr , 10 uiat counry will receive 100,000,000 pounds is* a part of the 1,000,000,000 which crmany will be asked to pay by the iid of next year as part of a total eparation to be exacted later, according to the Paris correspondent f the Mail. The Belgian delegates, it is added, lecline to accept the arrangement without consulting their governnent, because it leaves undecided the iroportion of the ultimate reparaion money to be allotted to Belgium. A Reuter dispatch from Paris tates that a meeting of the Belgian abinet has been held under the residency King Albert and that the uestion has been discussed. It has icen decided, the dispatch states, hat three members of the Belgian abinet will he sent to Paris to intruct the Belgian delegates. o "The supreme economic council net at 10 a. m. on April 28 under ..I,..: - L miniuiuiisnip ot Lord Robert Jccil. o No Worms in a Healthy Chilo All children troubled with worms have an unicnlthy color, which Indicates poor blood, and as a ule, there is more or less stomach disturbance. iKOVK S TASTELESS chill TONIC given regularly or iwo or three weeks will enrich the blood, imtrove the digestion, aud act as a General Strengthnlng Tonic to the whole system. Nature will then urow off or dispel the worms, and the Child will be a perfect health. Pleasant *.o take. 60c per bottle.