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' S. C. IS THIRD IN COTTON RAISINS 1 Washington.?The combined proy^ftion of cotton of Texas, Georgia, South Carolina and Mississippi, the only states which produced more than one million bales each in 1915), I represented G3.2 per cent of the total ciop in this country last year, accord ing to a census bureau bulletin on the industry. South Carolina Third. I Texas alone produced 2,GOG,561 "bales or 22.4 per cent; Georgia 2,122,405 bales or 17.G per cent; South Carolina 1,169,913 bales or 13 per cent and Mississippi 1,22G,051 bales P / or 10.2 per cent. j ^ The only two counties tnat produced more than 100,000 hales each fr^rn the growth of 1918 were BoliV( 1 Mississippi, "with 124,000 bales and Orangeburg, in South Carolina with 110,718 bales. 8 ? hi Papers executed by Governor Smith asking for the extradition of fa Jlarry K. Thaw from Pennsylvania were mailed by District Attorney Swann to Gov. Sproulor of Penn| sylvania. t o . i D. A. SPIVEY & CO. 4 W. B. King, Secty. BONDS AND INSURANCE ?Office in? j PEOPLES NATIONAL BANK A BUILDING HARRELS0N & HARRELS0N a i 4^ viva /\trri of T.OIKF txbtui nyjf j}*ui/-jju Y* Practice both in the State and Federal Courts. l MULLINS, ? ? S. 0. I * I H. H. WOODWARD, I Attorney and Coansellor mi Lav J CONWAY, S ~ & I R. a SCARBOROUGH Attorney at Law, I* CONWAY. 8. C. i 1 T. B. LEWIS, A Atty. and Oouncellor at Lav CONWAY, - ? - S. I A M 1A I I M O A IVl IP m J- IVI. Juni\iouiM, j! v>l 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. Address !J mil communications as bereto$ fore. < < i *~m ??? ???????? 1 WILLIAM EUGENE KING, M t | I PhJrsiclan and Surgeon Office in Piatt Drug Oo. I AYNOR,. ... S. I I DR. J. D. THOMAS I Physician and Surgeon || (? LOBIS, S. 0. | LUM JUNG LAUNDRY, t CON WAY,. 8. C, | Beginning July 1st. 1913 ' K. I All persons mast take tickets|foi t work left here. Possitively m I work delivered until ticket is pre f sented. Laundry not oalled for 1' J 30 days will be sold for charge* % LUM JUNG DR. 6.!. LEWIS IDENTAL SURGEON iMm Over Norton Drug Company CONWAY, S. a I fiDBnnnia&HBO g | HORRY COUNTY S I | TRUST COMPANY ? H 0 ? L. D. Magrath Q * Manager. n Real Estate B Real Estate Loans V B Bonds >B Insurance flnflBQBlBBnBS CALOMEL SALIVATES AND MAKES YOU SICK Acts like dynamite on a sluggish liver and you lose a day's work. There's no reason why a person should take sickening, salivating calomel when a few cents buys a large bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone?a per feet substitute for calomel. It is a pleasant, vegetable liquid which will start your liver just as surely as colomel, but it doesn't make you sick and can not salivate. Children and grown folks can take Dodson's Liver Tone, because it is perfectly harmless. Calomel is a dangerous drug. It is mercury and attacks your bones. Take a dose of nasty calomel today and you will fell weak, sick and nauseated tomorrow. Don't lose a day's work. Take a spoonful of Dodson's Liver Tone instead and you will wake up feeling great. No more biliousness, constipation, sluggishness, head ache, coated tongue or sour stomach. Your druggist says if you don't find Dodson's Liver Tone acts better than horrible calomel your money is waiting for you.?adv. o Get paper doilies as fine as were ever made at the Herald office. How long will a hundred last you? ITh9 Quinine That Ooos Hot Affect ths Head Because of its toi:ic awl laxative eifect, LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE is Letter thun ordinary Quinine and does not cause nervousness nor ringing in head. Remember the full name and loo it for the at nature of E. W. GROVE. 30c. niv a ri rm H N Nobody wants anything when he buys from a mercha buy what he needs at fair pri At the Sam The year of 1919 finds a full line of staple good that are fair to our customer Hiiio lie UIVU uc If you have not been tra us a trial this year. Toddville, COULD HARDLY STAND ALONE N 'V Terrible Suffering From Headache, Sideache, Backache, and Weakness, Relieved by Cardui, Says This Texas Lady. Gonx&les, Tex.? Mrs. Minnie Philpot, of this place, writes: "Five years ago I was taken with a pain In my left side. It was right under my left rib. It would commence with an aching and extend up Into my left shoulder and on down Into my back. By that time the pain would be so severe I would have to take to bed, and suffered usually about three days ...I suffered this way for three years, wtuu f,ui/ lw uo n IUC1D nivciciuil UUU WttS> so weak I could hardly stand alone. Was not able to go anywhere and had lu lei iuy house vvuik go...I buffered awful with a pain In my back and I had the headache all the time. I just was unable to do a thing. My life was a misery, my stomach got In an I awful condition, caused from taking i so much medlclno. I suffered so much pain. I had just about given up all i hopes of our getting anything to held I me. 1 One day a Birthday Almanac was | thrown in my yard. After reading I Its testimonials I decided to try Cardul, and am so thankful that I did | for I began to improve when on the ? second bottlo...I am now a well ' woman and feeling fine and the cure | lias been permanent for it has beer . two years since my awful bad health ' I will always praiso and recommend | Cardui." Try Cardui today. E 78 i THE HORRY HERALD, COW CAMPERS1 CH1GORRS MAY A'lTACK FARM CHICKENS 'Chiggers harvest mites, or "red blips'" which so frequently annoy campers by the intense itching they produce, may also attack fowls. Young chickens having a free range, especially if it includes low-lying land, are the most liable to suffer from these parasites. The mites penetrate the skin, causing an intense itching, and abscesses may be found where clusters of mites are feeding. These abscesses are sometimes a third of an inch in diameter, surrounded by an area of inflammation. The birds become droopy, refuse to oat and may die from hunger and exhaustion. If an abscess has not yet formed the inflamed area may be treated with sulphur ointment, Peruvian balsam, or a mixture of 1 part of kerosene oil with 3 parts of lard. If suppuration has occurred the scab should be removed and the area washed with 4 per cent carbolic acid solution. Frequent light dusting with flowers of sulphur will keep the chickens from becoming infested. In the Southorn and Central States, where harvest mites are most numerous, it is aften necessary to keep young chickens off the range in summer. In these sections it is a good plan to hatch the chickens early in the spring, so that when the warm weather comes, in which the mites are most abundant, the birds will oe old enough to resist their attacks. Get the Genuine^<j?^^^^/!^l and Avoid i in nninr tin rnibL less than a fairly good article nt; and a customer wants to ces. e Old Stand us at the same eld stand with s which we offer at prices s as well as to us. ; a Trial chng at Toddville before, give RY & CO. c. LEMONS MAKE SKIN WHITE, SOFT, CLEAR nir?i? it.- _ i a? 1 i< -? i jLuaitu tnis oeauxy loxion ior n few cents and see for yourself. What girl or woman hasn't heart of lemon juice to remove complexion blemishes; to whiten the skin and tc bring out th? roses, the freshness and the hidden beauty? But lemon juice alone is acid, therefore irritating, an;i should be mixed with orchard white this way. Strain through a fine clott the juice of two fresh lemons into ? bo*tle%containing about throe ounces of orchard white, then shake well an-: you have a whole quarter pint of skir and complexion lotion at about th< cost one usually pays for a small jai of ordinary cold cream. Be sure U strain the lemon juice so no pulp gcu into the bottle, then this lotion wil A . i ciauiii jiui c anti xitou iv/i iiivntiirt When applied daily to the face, neck ' arms and hands it should help It bleach, clear, smoothen and beautifj ; the skin. Any druggist will supply thre? I ounces of orchard white at very litth cost and the grocer has the lemons.? i ?adv?(5) o No Worms in a Healthy Chha ' All children troubled with worms hnvo an uo healthv color, which inrilcntoa noor ttlrvr?<1 nml n* i 1 rule, there ia more or less stomach disturbance i GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC ftiven rcgularl l tor iwo or three wceka will enrich the blood, im , prove the digestion, and act aa a General Strength ^ nin<? Tonic to the whole system. Nature will the lrcv off or dispel the worms, and the Child will h in perfect health. Pleasant *o take. SUcperbotth YAY, S. C., JULY 10, 1919. Farmers I J. A. I fi I FARMERS WHO SI I BUILDING HAS THE 1 THUS PREVENTING I GRUMBLING UP. 1SAME MANAGE!! ENCE AND A FRIEN TRY OS WITH TH PROTECT YOUR INT J. T. SHELLEY Wl AND KEEP IN TOUG I SEASON. Dm I B LLt I AM GLAD ' PERUi Glad to Try Anything "Three years ago my system Was In a terribly run down condition and I was broken out all over my body. I be pan to be worried about my condition and I was glad to try anything which would relieve me. I'erunn was recommended to me as a fill? blood remedy and tonic, and I soon found that it was worthy of praise. A few bottles clinuRed my condition materially and in a short time I wan all over my trouble. I owe my restoration to health and strength to Peruna. 1 am glad to endorse It.*' Sold Everywhere FALL IRISH POTATOES Clemson College.?As the time ap* proaches lor the second crop of Irish I 1 1 t l 1 ' ' jijiauucjs, into snouiu dc seieciou and prepared thoroughly, so that | when planting* time comes in July, everything will be in readiness. A rich sandy loam is preferable, but almost any well drained soil will gvow potatoes, if the land is well picpared and fertilized. Thorough preparation consists of ' deep turning followed by harrowing 1 until a completely pulverized seed' bed is formed. Rows or deep fur' rows should then be laid off 3 to 3 J 1-2 feet apart and well thrown out ' with a turn or shovel plow. Thorough barnyard manure and 1 commercial fertilizer are recom1 mended, but the former must be well ; retted and judiciously used; othor' wise, scab and similar diseases may 1 mult. In the use of commercial for5 tibzer, a complete mixture containing an excess of potash should be ap) plied. Because of the shortage >f | potash, the element of plant food |most needed in excess in potato production, liberal applications of weii ? rotted barnyard manure will be found } to be. very effective, in helping to re1 duce this shortage, and to correct the physical condition of the soil. Barnyard manure should be ap! plied broadcast, f> to 10 tons per acre, and thoroughly disced into the soil. In the use of commercial fertilizer, apply in the drill, using COO to 1,000 pounds per acre, and thori* y GCC quickly relieves Constipation, Biliousness, Loss of Appetite and n Headaches, due to Torpid liver.?adv. .e 4-24-19 20t. wmamammmmmwmmmmmmmmmmm Tobacco Wai . Pell, Mans kYNOR, S. C. ri I IT nilPl lift nniAiiftr LLL AI UUfi WAKM1UU5C ADVANTAGE OF A HIS THE LEAF TOBAGGO FRO AS LAST YEAR, A MAN 0 OF THE FARMERS. IS YEAR'S CROP, AND SEE EREST AS TO HANDLING !i I. DFVflTF HIS TIMF Til 7 . . _ U* .? II w aaa M ? W I k ' 'i ! II W I ;h with the growers i . & SHEL AYNOR, S. C. rO ENDORSE Was in a Terribly ,J| Run Down|^ Condition Minit ntcka Leopold, 288 Layco St.. Menasha, Wis., Sec'y Llcderkranz. Miss Leopold's letter opposite conveys in no un certain way the gratitude she feels for Peruna. YJquld nnd Tablet Porn* outfhiy mix with the soil; otherwise, a poor stand may be obtained as the result of the contact of fertilizer and tubers. I Preparatory to planting, reopen the. furrows and drop the tubers or parts of tubers 14 to 1(> inches apart in the drill covering to a depth cf three to six inches., depending upon the character of the soil,? I heavier soils planted more shallow than lighter soils. Packing the soil ! about the tubers, either by stepping jdi'ectly upon the tuber when dropped, or by use of a light roller follow jing covering, insures a much better I stand. If tubers of the spring crop of the current year are used for planting the second, or fall crop, "sproutlings," preparatory to planting, will be very helpful in obtaining a stand. This may be done by drying the tubers 10 to 14 days and spreading upon the ground in a cool shaded place, covered with straw to a depth of o to (> inches and watering sufficiently to saturate the straw but by no means such as to cause | the tubers to become drenched. Frequent shallow cultivation either by harrowing across oi with the rows, should be given at intervals of one week, or as soon after each rain as soil conditions will pre* mit, until a good stand is obtained; after which, such as may be necessary to keep the crop in a high state of cultivation. Under normal conditions, from 90 to 110 days from N?ianimtf will be required to make i the crop. ? o Colds Cause Grip and Influenza I AXAT1VE BROMO QUININE Tablets remove the \ II use. There is only one "Brorao Quinine." E. W.GROVE'S signature on box. 30c. I PAGE SEVE1C rehouse iger SAY THAT THE I H SHINGLE ROOF I M DRYING AND I OF LONG EXPERI- I IF WE DO NOT I AND PRICES. I HIS WAREHOUSE I HROUGHOUT THE 1 LEY GREAT ROAD PROGRAM MORE STOCK RAISING Former Horryite Writes From Florida and Tells What We Need Here. Greenville, Fla., July 4th, 1919. Editor Herald:? 1 am enclosing my subscription for another year. 1 cannot afford to let a copy miss me,?always glad to get it Thursday noon. We are having a great Road Build ing program in this State, and we think it would he the thing for Horry to do, and get busy and build good roads and thereby get in touch with the neighbors in adjoining Counties. Then the Horry people will be better acquainted with each other and the different communities will know each other better. All South Georgia is on a boom building paved Highways. Florida is beginning to get busy. We have great grain crops this year. Cotton in North Florida is not doing any thing now, as, it has been three years in the clutches of the Boll Weevil, and is just getting about a third crop this year. There H t'O Krrnot ?^? *.wui crops in tms section now made, and will be dry to gather by Sept. 1st. Farmers are paying more attention to Hogs and Cattle raising, and this is profitable and is making a good showing where the farmers have improved stock. ?J. T. Prince. Greenville, Fla., July 4th, 1919. 0E0RGET0WN HAS BIG GOTTON SALE Georgetown.?One thousand bales of cotton were sold here Friday by Messrs. V\ Khem & Sons and delivered today to the George H. Mc Fad den & l>rothers Agency of Columbia. The sum received by the owners aggregated something over $170,000. The firm of H. Kaminski & Company also sold to Mr. McElveen, a buyer o." Williamsburg, some 225 bales, at a price averaging over 32 cents per pound.