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! Visit Our Sto ! r Let II j WHERE AND HOW TO BUY j PARAMOUNT QUESTIONS C ,jf The era of peace has ti ft ity all over the Country. W ft ity everywhere. Money is p n to buy where their money wi f You hear any where you [j out of sight but a VISIT to r 0 that there is but very little c will prove that to you. Our 1 Jf ticle of the same quality that / * cheaper than the other fello' V HQW WE ARE ENTITLED 1 ILi ILY ANSWERED? Si My long experience in t j and having the cash on hand own help, the volume of my ? j under which v/e work our hx J paper, The Horry Herald, in ( posted, and many other advs j these claims. Furthermore, I know tl / the County, and carry sucn ( those sections, and what I i r minc| is that I sell them been , the other fellow. / My record shows that i / better than they were twelv not attribute this to any thin { Thanking each and ever i this increase, I am, : j.m.m; "The Growir . i | \ * ? ? ??BMH??S, !?? f - " * " " LUM JUNG LAUNDRY. ; CONWAY, 8. C, j Beginning: July 1st. 1913 I J All persons must take tickets lfci , t work left here. Possitively n- < f work delivered until ticket is pre sented. Laundry not called for i 1 30 days will be sold for charge* ( LUM JUNG hr f fi-auooiDautiBBD 5 ? HORRY COUNTY i i a xnnoT nnuniiiv u j a inim uumrAni g ij (g L. D. Magrath B rt @ Manager. % ft ; ?3 Real Estate D j a Real Estate Loans B i Bonds B < Insurance B OHneetsiBWi I TOBACCO MARKETS' OPEN ON MONDAY i ? 4 Washington.?Sovoral days ago the railroads notified the shipping public |. that ???fctain goods including tobacco I PAY / [ Nobody wants anything / when he buys from a merchari buy what he needs at fair pric f i At the Sami X' I | The year of 1919 finds i a full line of staple gooda that are fair to our customers i n:_.. ii. 1 rave us If you have not been trac us a trial this year. ' DUSENBUI Toddville, re and p s Show You [ YOUR GOODS ?THE IF THE DAY. ti hrown a wave of prospere see and hear of prosperilentiful, but people want 11 go the fartherest. f go that prices have gone s ay Store will prove to you hange. My growing trade Motto is to sell every argoes out of this store tl w. t rO THIS CLAIM IS'EAS- 1 he Merchandise business ! to buy Goods, having my c business, the low expense ? isiness, using our County :i which I keep my friends 1 mtages entitles me to all of (I tie wants of all sections of v [Joods as readily sell in ivant to impress on your tuse I sell cheaper than ny sales are 90 per cent. e months ago, and I cang except the Price. y one of my customers for YOURS TO SERVE, ^RLOW ig Store." would be received with a clause in the l)ill of lading stating subject to delay [>11 account of labor troubles. The tobacco buyers were withdrawn from all the markets in South Carolina because the tobacco houses of America refused to buy and ship with this clause in the bill of lading. The result was the closing of all the tobacco warehouses in the State yireatening ruin to all the tobacco growers. Senator Smith was appealed to to see if relief could not be had through the railroad administration. He took the matter up with Mr. Chambers, director of traffic; Mr. Chambers took the matter up with the Atlanta office grower went again before Mr. ChamMr. Smith being himself a tobacco hers and gave him a detailed statement of the danger that threatened l \ A. - I ill' louuci'o KIUWUIS. Mr. Chambers got into communication with the Atlanta office over long (Uvtanco phone. While in Mr. Chambers office Senator Smith received a telegram from the tobacco growers organization of South Carolina stating that a delegation was coming. They also said the matter before Mr. Chambers, who said he was just waiting for a reply j fiom Atlanta. A few minutes after tin delegation left Mr. Chambers call e(i up Senator Smith's office and made this statement: "The railroad aciministration has ordered all restrictions and limitations on bill of ilR PRICE less than a fairly good article it; ana a customer wants to sea. e Old Stand :s at the same eld stand with \ which we offer at prices i as well as to us. a Trial Ung at Toddville before, give RY & CO. SUPPLEMENT TO TH3 .ding for tobacco removed at on^c nd that the railroads shall expediatc tie shipping of tobacco as rapidly as os.-ible." The warehouses reopened londay. o I CANDIDATES' CARDS. OR MEMBER OF CONGRESS FROM THE SIXTH DISTRICT: I am.a candidate for Congress from he Sixth District subject to the rules f the Democratic Party. W. F. STACKHOUSE. I hereby announce my candidacy or Congress from the Sixth District, ubject to the action of the Demoratio primary. JULIUS S. McINNES. I hereby announce myself a camliate for Congress from the Sixth Disrict, subject to the rules and regulaions of the Democratic Primary. J. W. LeGRAND I hereby announce myself as a andidate for Congress from the Jixth District, subject to the rules , md regulations of the Democratic arty. ?J. J. EVANS. I hereby announce myself a candilatc for Congress from the Gth Concessional District, subject to the ules of the Democratic Primary. PHILIP H. STOLL. TRAINING LITTLE CHILDREN AT HOME I r i It is the Ideals Held Before Little Folk and Spirit Infus- \ ed Into Work and Play That Help to Make Them Useful \ Men and Women. I ( Suggestions by mothers who have ( been kindergartners. Issued . by ] the United States Bureau of Edu- . cation, Washington, and the National Kindergarten Association, New York. By Mrs. Janet W. McKenzie. Kindergarten training is often begun at home unconsciously by both mother and child. It has its beginnings in the answers to the first questions familiar to every mother, such as "Mother, what color is this?" "How many are there?" "Which is my right hand?" Whis is heavier?" If mother will take a little time to play with her chidlrcn, as Froebel urges, the first question about color can be made the nucleus of a little game. Let the child find something of the same color as that which first interests him, then something in PJirli nf flip vjiv ivl nnnnt the artieies found; classify them as smooth or rough, heavy or light, and so on. In the same way the three type forms of solids?the sphere, cube and cylinder?can be shown the child, and articles around the house classified as cubical like the cube or block, round like the sphere of a ball, or cylindrical like a barrel. The size of objects should also be noted. Color, form and number can easily be made into games if mother has time to play with her children. "When the mother is busy with the pressing routine of housework, perhaps a box of cranberries and a long thread in a coarse needle would entertain a dear little meddler, and give mother a free hour to work Cranberries may be scarce, but buttons flourish in every home; also inch pieces of maroni which can be combined with circles or squares of colored paper cut out of bright advertising pages. When baking is under way, and little hands have to be kept from interferring, a piece of colored string one yard long with the ends tied together will afford much delight. Wet the string and make as perfect a firrlr* rvf it n? nriusjiMn aw o uin*. face. lly pushing a point in the circle to the center, we change what looked like a full moon into a crescent; pushing in three places makes a clover leaf. The variations are endless. And the child can learn, with an occasional suggestion from mother, to make familiar symmetiical outlines In this way. Perhaps it is bread that is being baked. What possibilities in a small lump of dough! It can be made into a loaf just like mother's, or rolled into tiny biscuits. Toothpicks have many possibilities as play material. With them pictures can he made in outline of housees, fences, furniture, boats or stars, and it is material that can be used over and over again. Chains of paper are made by slip g HORRY HERALD. OOWWAT, CHEVROLi MODEL F-B TO We are agents for these cars among the best machines m THE PRICE! For the 490 Touring Car For the F." B. Model Touring Car For the D-5 Model Touring Car REPAIR PARTS Al The model 490 is kept in stc other models on short notice. < nrmiifix# unrnn bUnWAT MUlUfi CONWA )ing one short strip within another > ind pasting the ends. Colored strips j nay be alternated with the white 1 strips that have been saved from < oils of narrow ribbon. : Coloring with crayons, cutting out 1 pictures and pasting are all kindergarten activities that can be carried :>n at home. A blank book in which pictures ol Furniture have been pasted for each room, of the house jrive delieht that I [ haVe seen last all summer. How eagerly the advertising pages in magazines are searched for the kitchen cabinet, bathtub, parlor suite, crib or bed! How carefully the selected pictures are cut and pasted on the proper page! With a hat box as the frame for a doll house, and" cardboard partitions making four rooms, child's interest and attention may be occupied perhaps for several months. The house can be furnished as to occupants and rugs from the magazines, while curtains can be made for the windows from paper lace used in candy boxes. The furniture can be made from folded paper or built with small blocks of dominoes. These suggestions only touch the rim of activities that kindergarten training opens up to the little child. What the mother may do at home I 18 cents a packag M C*m?/j are sold everywhere Hi scientifically sealed packages of |H cigarettes; or ten packages (2 I cigarettes) in a gin same - pnpt HQ covered carton. We strongly r> HQ ontmend this carton for the hoi | or office supply or when youtray S. P., AUO. 21, 1919. ET CARS 3 s t URING CARS r 1 , proved bv experience to be ade. i c 5 ARE: , $ 835.00 (4 Cylinder) 1,235.00 (S Cylinder) 1,750.00 1 LWAYS ON HAND ! >ck and we can get yon the r Call, telephone or write |' GAR COMPANY |; i1 ,Y S. C. ' vill be helpful, but what the kindergarten does every day for three hours will be far more so. In kindergarten the child is a member of a social group and learns the valuable I lesson of consideration of others and * the spirit of team work. May I say to mothers who are not within reach of a public kindergarten, that your best course is to agitate and co-operate to have one if it ia a possible thing. If that cannot be done and some kindergarten materials can be purchased, a catalogue' from Milton Bradley Company, Springfield, i Mass., or E. Steiger & Co., 49 Murray street, New York, will be helpful in selecting the list of materials desired. However, the spirit is more important than the material. "Come, j let us live with our children," says Fioobel, and "Come and play with us," say the children themselves. Look back in memory to your own childhood . What are your dearest recollections of your mother? Her' unceasing care for your food, clothes, teeth, eyes, health ? Or is it not rather that happy day you took your lunch, mother and the rest, and went for an unexpected picnic Did the shopping trips, the church going, the calling, the occasional matinees, || They Win You B j\ Your enjoyment of Came A because their refreshing : jLj and mellowness is so enti never tasted such a ciga nated and there is a che unpleasant cigaretty aft Je pleasant cigaretty odor! in Camels are made of an e Turkish and choice Dome -r* smooth and mild, but ha\ PCbody and certainly han< generous measure. You 1 blend to either kind of tob; Oive Camels th compare them \ ^^^N^the world at a R. J. REYNC cave the deepest impress, or the luiet hour when mother was alone nth you and read or told you tories ? Dear mothers, cumbered, like Mar ha, with many cares, can you not ee that the practical and necessary t rvices which you render your child minister to the physical, which passs, but the hours of play and mental ffort which you share and encour,ge and the ideals you set up for mulation, these are the meat of the pirit ot your child, which nourish he very essence of his life, dcvelopng in him that intangible something re call personality, and forming his ontribution to the race. Please pass this article on to a riend and thus help Uncle Sam each alj the mothers of the country. o The election for Congress will be leld on Tuesday, August 26ih. This A-- 1 ? ? wuiuy ikis a candidate in the race.-ad o lOOl) CANNING RECORD MADE BY THIS CLUB GIRL "I have dressed myself, paid for nusic lessons, bought books and hrift stamps, helped my mother, who < a widow, and have enough to pay r\ expenses in college next year," ,vas the answer of a club girl in Kranklin County, N. C.. when asked how she had used the money she had .lade in canning during the past five years. This girl. Monnie Stallings, a momtier of a canning club conducted by the United States Department of Agriculture and the North Carolina Agricultural College, has a fine fivcy< ar canning record. She joined a can ning club in the spring of 1914, when the work was new, and canned 550 No. .'1 cans of tomatoes from her t< nth-acre that year. She was award od the medal for the largest number o'* jars canned from a tenth-acre plot, and also won a number of merchandise prizes. The next year she canned 1,000 cans, and again won the medal for canning the largest number of cans in the county. Her exhibit in glass won $10 in cash prizes. In If) 10 her canning exhibit won several prizes?a pure-bred Jersey heifer, worth $100; a college scholarship in domestic science, and $5 in cash. The fourth year 1,300 cans were filled, and an exhibit of them won blue ribbons at her township fair and $27 in cash at the county fair. In the summer of 1918, although it was a bad fruit year in North Carolina, she canned 1.000 cans and won a medal and subscriptions to magazines. ? m The election for Congress will be held on Tuesday, August 26th. This county has a candidate in the race.-ad Wholesale whiskey dealers have been notified by the Bureau of Internal Revenue that they may divert to domestic trade whiskey bottled for e\yoi*t if the war time prohibition law is revoked. On Quality! I Is will be very great H flavor and fragrance H cingly different. You R rette! Bite is tlimi- H erful absence of any g nf frnpf rt r???? ?"? v/i cxuy Lin- H xpert blend of choice jstic tobaccos and are D re that desirable full- B i out satisfaction in g will prefer this Camel H *cco smoked straight! H e stiffest tryout, then with any cigarette in H ny price for quality, H faction. AJo matter B rally you smoke H hey will not tire H B )LDS TOBACCO CO. B on-Salem, N. C. H " [iHjfBnWiffllBllMB