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OVER-EATING it tbo root of nearly nil digestive tvila. If your digestion is weak or oat oi Inker, better cnt lest nudnoe RmioidS the new nld to better digestion. Pitt tent to take?effective. Let KfanouU bolp straighten oat year ^fijt stive troubles. MADE BV CC0T1 'A DOWNS Gentle Hints. Ethel: "I'm afraid that bell means another caller." Fred (Imploringly). "You knowthere is such a thing as your not being at home." Ethel (suggestively): "Yes, and there is such a thing as my being engaged."?Tit-Bits. m a Good paper for second sheets is to \>e had at the Herald office. / , ?- j i IfsWrsaPKSI D. A. SPIVEY & CO. W. B. King, Secty. BOt'QS AND INSURANCE ^ ?Office in? PEOPLES NATIONAL BANK BUILDING HARRELSON & HARRELSON Attorneys-at-Law Practice both in the State and Federal Courts. JYTULLINS, ? ? S. 0. H. H. WOODWARD. Attorney and Counsellor at Lav CONWAY, S ~ ft. a SCARBOROUGH Attorney at Law, CONWAY, a C. T. B. LEWIS. Atty. and Oouncellor at Lav | CONWAY, - < - S. C 1 J. M.JOHNSON, CIVIL ENGINEER MARION, S. C. My Engineering and Surveyingoffice will be open during my ab Sence, and prepared to take cart of any work as usual. Address all communications as hereto Core. WILLIAM EUGENE KING, M f Physician and Surgeon Office in Piatt Drug Oo. AYNOR,. - - - S. C . , DR. J. D. THOMAS re 1 W Ai _ ? 1 ^rnysioian ana surgeon LORIS, S. 0. LUM JUNG LAUNDRY, CONWAY, S. C, Beginning July 1st. 1919 All persons mast take tickets Ifoi work left here. Possitively n? work delivered until ticket is pr?* sented. Laundry not called for i HO days will be sold for charges LUM JUNG .. ' OR, G. L LEWIS DENTAL SURGEON Office Over Norton Drug Company CONWAY, S. C. Fii n'? vrn ifa rrri rn frvi rrn *=S irn R VI Ml an W M M ltd 2MB 2MB 2MB AMI fel U 1 HORRY COUNTY 5 I TRUST COMPANY p L. D. Magrath fl g , Manager. B T: Real Estate B Real Estate Loans B Bonds B Insurance aBBBBBagoes TRIBUTE OF RESPECT | Whereas ovr Heavenly Father saw fit to call from us on Dec. 5, 1918, , our dear belovt I brother, Nathan M. Harrelson, who Rave Yiis heart to God at an early date, and became a member of Mu Zion Missionary Baptist Church in -887, and he served as a deacon until his death. By his death < we feel that we have lost one among l our best members. We had his pies- ] ence and his prayers in all our work, t but our loss is his eternal gain, and ; wc desire to extend the high regard 2 in which he 'was held. While we | mourn the loss of his presence we i bow in humble submission to Him ] who doeth all things well. That we < extend to the bereaved family our sincere and heartfelt sympathy. That ; we record this tribute of respect in , oui Church book in memory of our , dear brother, who was loving, loyal < and true. Also a copy be given to j the family. 3 You are not forgotten dear brother, nor will you ever be, for as long as , memory lasts, we will think of thee ] Tis hard to break the tender cord where love has bound the heart. Tis hard, so hard, to speak the word , that we must part, but we rejoice in ( the hope that we shall meet again. t.T 1 1. : O XT, I \lf - Ml rur^ut iiini : ino: we never win. W e loved him then, we love him still. His memory is as fresh today as in the hour he passed away. , That a copy of this Tribute of He- j spect be sent to the Baptist Courier, , .The Biblical Recorded and the Horry Herald for publication. I Done by order of the Church. ] Rev. A. I). Harrelson, I Walter Grainger, Mc. D Harrelson, Committee. Regal blanks of all kinds at the Herald office. A FA Nobody wants anything I 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. VUULI!UU1 Toddville, . 91 Women! i | L f Here Is a message to IJ/ ffl suffering women, from jSf Mrs. W. T. Price, of raj nj Public, Ky.: "I suf- HQ |u fered with painful...", I [UttJI tmo writes. 1 got aowa IM'Tlll id y with a weakness in my |3 zA (3 M hack and limbs...I Ea M M n felt holpless and (lis- H 9 m m couraged... I had about D M given up hopes of over H *4 M 1 being well again, when W ejS ifly 111 a 'rientl insisted I |jU \| Take | Be Woman's Tonic ffHlI I began Cardul. In llfffj RV I ^ ?,VJ T I "wC Vl ICfc OiUM t ?* iUlU JL OU ?V % A ?dBI marked difference. J Kj I grew stronger right 1 M along, and it cured me. I 1 am stouter than I IN *J havo been in years." Rjj n If you suffer, you can M # appreciate what it 9 H moans to bo strong and- B R well. Thousands of wo- H E men give Cardul the r7 rjl fppHlf fr?r> Uinln i IWI II ! HI It should help H I flII you. Try CarduL At all 9 I B I! dru8glsts* E-73 Ki THE HORRY HERALD, CONV LEMONS MAKE SKIN WHITE. SOFT, CLEAR Make this beauty lotion for a few cents and see for yourself. What girl or woman hasn't heard 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 done 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 ooHle containing about three ounces :>f 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 ?f ordinary cold cream. Be sure to strain the lemon juice so no pulp gers 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 Grave Indiscretion. Miss Primmie?I should think that man would find a better place than a park bench to take his girl when he | wants to make love to her. Mr. Hardfax?It is reekleess. Just Lhink of the witnesses she might have planted in the bushes right behind him.?Evening Post. fh9 Quinine That Does Not Affect the Head Because of its tonic nnd laxative effect, LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE is better than ordinary Quinine and does not cause nervousness not rin<(iuK in head. Remember the full name and loo it for the nature of E. W, GROVE- 30c. ilR PRICE less than a fairly good article t; and a customer wants to es. , u 8 Old Stand s at the same old stand with which we offer at prices as well as to us. a Trial > j \ng at Toddville before, give ! ( | SALE FOR PARTITION. Under and by virtue, and author-1 it.v of a decree for sale in partition, I signed by ITis Honor, S. W. G. Shipp,j Judge of the Twelfth Judicial Cir-j cuit, at Chambers, in Florence, S. C., on the 2(>th day of April A. D. 1919, in the case of N. M. Hardee vs. J. E. Hardee, I will sell before the Court House at Conway, S. C., dur- j ing legal hours of sale, the first MondilV in .T11 r?n Jf ?1 _ ?t, ... v unv , iv UL'lil^ SUIt'SIIUy for said month, and being the second da> of said month: All and singular all that certain piece, parcel tract, or lot of land situate, lying, and being in Simpson Creek Township, County of Horry, and State of South Carolina, and | containing 15 acres, more or less, and bounded as follows: North by j what is known locally as the Sol j Prince place, East by lands of J. l?. j Hardee, South by lands now or for- j merly owned by ?J. E. Hardee, and i West by lands of N. M. Hardee. Terms of Sale: Cash. Purchaser to pay for papers. W. L. BRYAN, S. C. DU SEN BURY, C. C. C. P. Plaintiff's Attorney. o j. it. lacker, one of the progressive farmers of Bucks township wa,in Conway recently to spend a few hours. sttiBitmmituttnunnniinziixnxxKx quickly relieves Constipation, Biliousness, Loss of Appetite and Headaches, due to Torpid liver.?adv. 4-24-19 20t. TAY, 8. P., JUKE 8, 191? i' : ? ? I; I n% I w i i, m \s ii v $i i ii P; ^ ? m jjP; A rcccn (pi: and depend; 5gjfj Oakland and Sw: roads, throe i^S; places. The J?: r Let us ; jpjj record. & k ffjj ~ tc&; jig: Walterbc Overlam 8*E mStts. HOSTESS HOUSE" FAMILYREUNION How It Happened to Entertain Only A. E. F. Mother Who Visited Army of Occupation. BIG CORPORAL DUTIFUL SON. No Knightly Courtiers Ever Acted With More Gallantry to Lady Fair Than Did He and His Doughboy Pals to This Little White Haired Woman Dressed Exquisitely in Black. . 4-i*< % ' ' By GRACE GOULDER. (With the American Y. W. C. A. Overseas.) Coblenz, Germany, March 1>S (By Mail.) It happened right here in Coblcnz. A hig corporal came into the Y. W. C. A. Hostess House and asked for the director, Miss Ruth Woodsinall, who conies from Colorado .springs, Colo. "Could my mother stay here?" he began at once, trying his best to cover his excitement. "Your mother!" gasped Miss Woodsinall. "How did your mother ever get here?" "Well, she isn't here yet, but if she comes will you keep her?" "Of course I will, but?" She didn't finish, for the boy had smashed his cap back on his head and was out of the door on a run. The corporal's visit remained a mystery for two days. Then one evening flKt Of /I ilL'lr .? ? --- (it \t\anrv a l ' l ( IV >Y III i C lUllI't'lI WU* man dressed exquisitely in black appeared in the sitting room of the Hostess House, and the corporal was hovering behind her, trying to be beside her and back of her and in front of her all at once. He was carrying her coat?a big fur one. With them were three doughboys, pals of the corporal. They tried to keep in the background, but their eyes were glued on her face. Everyone in the sitting room sat ati attention. There are no English speaking men or women out of uni-j form in the Third Army area. Yet ' here was a woman in civilian clothes.1 Mothers are unheard of with the army, r.ut this was a mother, everyone knew. After awhile someone found out abAut this mother. Had Been Interned During War. She and her husband, who were born in Germany, but had been nut-, in a!i/.?.au, lived in Sun i'liUn Im u. lie- j fore tlie war they left for Woisbnden,! Germany, that their invalid daughter I might have treatment at this famous j health resort. They brought their other children | with them. One was Walter, a small boy, and the other was Ralph, now Corpora 1 Sleim of the Anioi'lr'iin Aim?h? When the war was declared they sont Italph hack to America, because he was of military ape, and they did not want him to dirlH for the kaiser. Then America entered the war. Mrs. Stepp?Mrs. Anna Stepp she Is ?told tl.ir. part of the story* "Until a month a^o I hadn't lieard _ OAKLAND 94? M;1 k\ in 28 hours?45 i Average 24.28 \ per gallon of ga only 3 quarts < ^ OS ANGELES \ ^ An Owner Test The Kind That Counts t demonstration of Model 90 power, ability was an impromptu round tri I Los Angeles?a most severe test, over igh a blinding storm, with mud hu : Model 90 never faltered, never failed show you a duplicate of the car that OVERLAND PALMETTO CO. iro, S. C. Charleston i Model 90 Five Passenger Touring Car $985; I. o. b. T from Ralph for two years and a half? even before America pot in the war mall was held up. I didn't know whether he was in the army or not? but I was sure he was, because?well, because he is an American." Here she stopped a minute to smile up at him. "After awhile we heard from some friends that he was in the army?and that he had come over here. That was all I ever knew. It's nearly five years since I have seen him ! "Of course it was awfully hara?T couldn't pet word to hlrn and he couldn't to me. My husband used to toll mo It wouldn't help Ralph any for nio to cry. r. tried not to?before the rest of them anyway. My daughter pot worse steadily?she is no better. We couldn't pet the proper food for her after awhile. And she hated to see me worried about Ralph, so I used , to try to keep up before them. ) "Last January my husband came to Coblenz about his citizen papers. An American soldier In Ralph's company who was In the olllce heard his name and asked him If he was any relation to Ralph. He didn't tell him Ralph was In Coblenz. but went after Ralph, lie didn't tell Ralph his father was here. When they met they couldn't j believe their eyes. "fiver since then I have been trying to see Ralph. TTe couldn't come to Weisbaden because It was out of the American area, and T couldn't get through until today?more than two months." They asked her If her Ralph had changed much In all that time. "Oh, yes?-very much. Rut do you know, I think it is because all that long time when T didn't know where he was or bow be was?I got in the habit of thinking of him as lie was | when ho was a baby?T kept seeing him as n baby r.nd remembering the way be felt when lie was little. Isn't that queer? And now look at him I" ; And the corpora 1 tried not to see the adoration in her eyes. "Five years is a long time to wait to see your hoy," she murmured, and i kept her eyes on lilin. Again she had forgotten the IW?nn1o nrniuwl ! !' * in \Mitni nt'l, The corporal clou rod his throat. "This 'is why 1 asl: d you If you could koop my mother, Miss WoodsmaH. I J didn't want her to come unless she i had a Rood placp to stay. Ah, e-e-r--| thanks awfully." And tJbat is the story of how the UosU*c IIouso happened to entertain the only known A. H. F. mother who visited the Army of Occupation. He Can After July 1. Some years ago some genius introduced a bill compelling everybody to qualify physically and mentally for marriage. Unfortunately, it was lost in committee; it should have gone through. The necessity of it was di: closed in a Main Street car last evening when seven or nine of us heard a prospective bridegroom coyly confess he was indeed "about to be- | come a bencdictine."?Buffalo News., ? The building committee of the hoard of visitors of the Citadel mej/ in Columbia to discuss plans relative to the buildings which are to be reared in the immediate future. ^ PAGE 8EVSTO ? ? =EBU1 BSSSlSaBSiffi * MaSaaa r tryS ?fljM es :j|fi minutes tjgjfj miles jjgf soline, !?S? <r i ^ ip * i J I 1 lit ii m endurance isp p between ijjig mountian ;%& b deep in m made this i!|hI m m s- 0 11 \m oledo V.*' jl wmmmmmm NO GRAIN LANDS USED FOR COTTON j St. Matthews.?J. Skottowe WanJ namaker, prescient of the American | Cotton Association, declared in a statement issued this afternoon that the report was being circulated by the bears in New York that the farmers in various sections of the South will plant their wheat and oats lands in cotton. Mr. Wannamaker received a telegram from New York parties ask ing that he advise them frankly as to what position he felt the cotton farm er^ would take concerning the plant' ing of wheat and oats lands in cotton. The telegram stated that wide publicity was being given by the speculators to the report that the lands would be planted in cotton. Their purpose, it is said, is to break the4 advance in the cotton market. The following statement was given out by President Wannamaker in reply to these reports: "I do not believe that there is a farmer in South Carolina, white or black, who will plant his wheat and oats lands in cotton. 1 do not believe that there is a farmer who would wish to do such a thing and I believe that if he should do it he would win the contempt and scorn of his neighbors. The same condition prevails practically throughout the belt. The farmers arc loyal . "The American Cotton Association, on.bracing in its membership farmers, merchants, bankers, business ami professional men from the borders of Mexico to Virginia, from the Atlantic to the Gulf are united as never before. An emancipation proclamation has been issued for the South and a new South has been born. With the continued assistance and co-operation of the loyal men of the South, the fanner realizes that the South will become the most prosperous part of the country, the heart and pride of this great nation, lie knows that hewould be untrue to himself, to his neighbor S ill ul to the South should be plant oats and wheat fields in cotton. "The bears who are circulating this report have only exposed themselves to the public. They have advertised to the world that thev will do anv tiling for money; that they place li t (loliai uriuie the man; that the dollar can buy anything1 from them, including- honor, honesty, character or what not." Or A Columbian, just returned from an extended trip through the Peo Dee section of tho State says that except for a few grassy fields, the crops were in splendid shape. ij Colds Cause Grip and Influenza 1AXAT1VE BROMO QUININE Tablets remove the cause. There is only one "Bromo Quinine." E. W. GROVE'S sifioaturo on box. 30c.