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B i FJlQE TWO BI6 IMMIGRATION ONLY TEMPORARY Say Authorities at Port' of New York?No Great Influx Presaged CHARACTER HIGHER , THAN EVER BEFORE ' i Says Representative Siegcl. ' Many Have Large Sums of Money. New York.?Heavy immigratn n, hich hus taxed the facilities of Kiln ltd and and delayed unloading of ' steamships at this port i^ only temporary and presages no great influx of foreigners that will affect the later market of the Usited States in the opinion of immigration authorities here. They estimated that next year's immigration through New > ork witl be only 300,000, as -compared with pre-war figures of from W0,000 to 1,000,000 annually. Few of the thousands of passengers arriving here daily from abroad are coming to this country Onless they have been before or unless reletives are already here. 'Probably fifty per cent of the recent arrivals are >esonrisU\ mostly Italians, who left the United States to fight for the native land. Many of them are American citizens, about whoso admission ' there is no question. 1 The character of the present influx '* >s considered by Representative Isaac * Kiegel., a member of the House immijualioA committee, as higher than ever before. Many of the arrivals lmve thousands of dollars, represent- ^ ir>g in some cases the conversion of 1 property in their native land or the residue of prosperous mercantile or j manufacturing business damaged or * destroyed by war. ' A reduction of 50 years from the 55 in the minimum age for illiterate par 1 enta is contemplated by the Hnus? ( committee, according to Mr. Siege). He cite** the case of brothers who im- 1 migrated to Boston years ago, b'- ( came citizens and were worth $100,- ] 0(H) when they sent for their parent 1 The father waa 51 years of age an i s could not read. He was deportc 1. It is believed that the new literacy te.v? ^ which requires the reading clearly of ] 40 word3 of English will rcilu e im- j( migration by 40 per cent upon which ; 1 the estimate of immigration of ''00- ' <s(K) through New York ne*;l y.ar [ : predicted. 1 Only Temporary. 5 Further indications that the pre.;- ( ent inrush here is but temporary are the difficulties for many p v * "* 1 S j * t< obtain passports and the i !'. ms- 1 ' f other ports of entry such as 11 s- !' U>n, Philadelphia and Baltimore. The v> ;? of an American consul j' abroad is necessary on an imnii-!' grant's passport. Each consul luus a ! ighoo list for his distinct, names of j Vch-iUoutH who are .suspected :f h v I ;? HELPS; liiAiiPii p WOMEN Protects Young | ti ; girls ; I Regulates, tones up, drives ? u | away "the blues" and makes | c I them glad they're living. J e, | The prescription of an old 5 01 I Southern doctor who treated ? 1 and cured thousand** of ?uf- | I ferine women, jj SfiiiarviTMi | Is also good for young girls? g tf ? to bring them safely thromrh ? ? i tho period of adolesconce which A g all mothers 1;now is a tlino at % | which tliclr daughters need i la | the utmost care. g 01 I At all drug stores. MONEY ? I REFUNDED if tho first hot- ? _ 5 tie fails to benefit. 4 | Thacher Medicine Co. i f Chattanooga, Testa., V. 0. A. I Mr*. Paralco Prar.lcr, bongvicw, To*., a ni B CXftf. >-s<'rl oppreci.ilion of HTKLLA^ H VITAK in fluw words: "I cannot |i h1 v say too much for this wonderful * medicine. I had taken other female ] ( m iMKH^itK-a for two years with no good 3 : h rwU>. I nw truly prutoful for the 3 j good frn?M,A-VITAU has done mo." \ . J ing aided the enemies of the Allies during the war. None such is permitted to emigrate to the United States. When the consul receives as application for a passport he has to investigate the character of the applicant. Affidavits are required from the United Stttes as to the char actor and resources of the rela'ives whom the applicant proposes to join. So rigorous is this passport contrcl system and so rushed are the steamship lines for accommodations for those fitted to come to this country that it i-j believed* in official circles lhat any people besides citizens or relatives or residents have about one chance in 1,000 of immigrating at present. This condition has resulted in an tbnormal number of stowaways in 1 i l n v r xr l t _ _ '.111ps uounu icr rsew i one. in some icccnt week the unprecedented 1 umber of fifty was caught and deported. Besides stowing away the enly other method a foreigner unrelated in this ?cuntry, can immigrate is to ship as v sailor on a vessel bound for New York and desert when the ve sol makes port. It is in this way, Mr. Siegcl believes that Bolshcviki and other reds arc now coming to this country if at all. demormatioT FOREIGN EXCHANGE Three Factors Contribute Most to the Present Conditions. New York.?Three factors in the demorilization of foreign exchange, intelligible to the average man, rise nbove the complexities of the present situation, according to old-timers in Wall street. These are: 1. Allied and other nations of the vorld owe the United States approxl nately $15,000,000,000; 2. American manufacturers hesitate, owing to peace treaty uncertainty, to accept big; advance foreign orders; 3. England's virtual suspension of sjold exports outside of the British colonies is repulsing American trade. "Just why the British pound sterling, normally worth $4.8065 in Amen :!an gold, should have declined so much since the war ended, and what t all means is an obscure question," 'aid a New York financial cxner:. "The present situation, Sir Goorg Paish's apprenhendons notwithstanding, is by no means hopeless. "Prophecies of a 'breakdown' of credit are 1 not well founded. ' | "America, the storehouse of the vorld and now the world's bank* r, is j n the same position England wai in' tfter the Napoleonic and American dvil wars. She bought the < heap j securities of impoverish- <1 nations in i . i l ? . i must, prodigious manner and merely 'aid the foundation for her future .vcalth. We must do likewise and do ! i within the nex two or three years y which lime t!?es? abnormal conditions will have parson. "With pound sterling 25 per cent or .'.ere below par Kn.gland can sell to ! ho United States :?.! a great a'.van- i .age. We can sell American goods .broad only at a great disadvantge .realise we must add (he abnormal < ate of exchange to the goods to gel ? rto foreign markets. Premier Lloyd \ icorge recently declared, when sterl- f tig was selling,at a discount of 1 "> ? or cent, that the discount really repose ntcd a 'protect;ve tariff' of 15 or cent on goods manufactured in ingland. Certainly it is helping to ecp American goods out of that sun try. n "The only remedy for this condi- ^ on is for the United States to buy 1c How's This ? We offer $100.00 for any case of catarrh iat cannot bo cured by HAUL'S ATARKH MEDICINE. HAUL'S CATARRH MEDICINE Is tak- f] l internally and acts through the Blood n ,i the Mucous Surfaces of the System. H Sold by druggists for over forty year*. A Price 75c. Testimonials free. V P. J. Cheney & Co., Tolodo, Ohio. TIM'CI) A UO Mr\'Pi/'n Aii persons arc hereby forbidden t idev penalty of law, to hunt, fish, ? ingc, trap, or in any manner to en- ? ir or trespass upon my lands, in onway and Dogwood Neck Town lips, known as the Martin Royals K nd and containing 1728 acres, more <jj v less, and being in three tracts. a ?K. D. BOYD. J adv 4t pd?111119 * . ? 1.08T MONEY. | Suitable reward for the return to f ic of about $25.00 in currency, lost y me in Conway on Saturday, Do- ' imher 20th, while in some of the ;oros or business places.?Adv. J. M. Johnson, 1.120 31 pd. Yawhannah, S. C. . >1 * % THE HORRY HERALD, CONWAY foreign securities and extend loner time credit for merchandise. We are in a strong economic position. The nations of Europe must have our cot ton and wheat and, since they are ^ so heavily indebted to us and we must extend them many more mil- ^ lions to put them on their feet what is the difference whether we buy their bonds or send them our merchandise ? "Everyone in Wall street knows that if the peace treaty had been signed in Washington an international exchange committee would have been organized long before now to stabilize exchange ?And bring about other necessary readjustments. Never during the darkest days of the war, when the Germans were almost at Paris, did British and French exchange go to where it is now. The British rlnrintr thn wnv Kir o iifofmni f - !-> <" " " c* njr.vv.<i of credits with the United States, had sterling "pegged" to $4.52. "The tension over and gold exports curtailed there was nothing to . keep it that close to parity. Indeed unless the United States loosens its nurse strings there are London finan- ^ rial experts who say the pound sterling will drop as low as $2.50. That would be a calamity. It would be a \ two-edged sword injuring ?both Eng- ^ land and the United States. g "Europeans like a man on the verge * of death due to starvation. When you ^ find such an unfortunate vou feed * ? Km gradually until the stomach b comes accustomed to digesting food, j Now our aim has been all along to ^ 'stuff Europe wth all kinds of American products. We have piled up a trade balance, according to forn er Secretary of Commerce Redfield, aggregating $4,000,000,000 a year. ^ Europe's financial system, like the j starved human stomach, has been ^ unable to assimilate it. Consequent- | ly, we thus contribute to the demorili- j zation of foreign exchange and, incidentally, by inflation help to lower j the purchasing power of our own dol- ? lar. iJ?. -- ? i ii iicii ^uu cuiiauifi, as mr. ice a * ^ field points out, that $4,000,000,000 lepresents American dollars at par and must be paid by those who owe ,, it in depreciated currencies, making it the equivalent of $5,000,000,000, ^ the result cannot be healthful to fu- r ture American trade and commerce. n Foreign buyers are going into more ^ favorable markets." ^ o 1 Help Your Digestion j * When acid-distressed, relievo the { indigestion with | i ] Kn-isms i * Dissolve easily cn tongue?a? * pleasant to take as candy. Keep a v. r?:vr stomach cvrcet, try Fi-moids ? vl MADE BY SCOT-.' & DOWNS C b MA KEPIS OP SCOTT'S EMUcSlON ? * ' I'FiiiWWiiiiiPWfc mnt\ill1 i'Wijwiiii 0 i wv?^?iweii>ii'v**viii mrmexmamjam , '1A\EN UP?One heifer y ending, about 18 irn. old, unnarked, color, d dark reel with black feet and white u spot in face. O'.vner can gel same by calling and paying charges. D. t' O. IV yd, Allsbrook, S. C.. Route 2, z Box 80?adv 3; pd J2;25|19 v (* Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic t] restores vitality am. energy by purifying unit enriching the blood. You can soon feel its Strength ening. Invlgoroting Effect. Price 60c. C Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Martin spe t a d lay here last week. Tlvy were ao- d oinpanied by their son, Colemrn, tl vho returned to the University the II irst of the week. fl t ri I can make you see better. I can if.ke you feel better. 1 can make ou look better and you will do betn by using the best Lens for the ast money. J. E. DAWSEY, Optometrist. ? O 19 QMra That Does hot AHect tha Head eccuse of its tonic aud laxative eifect. LAXAIVK HROMO OUXNINK is better than ordinary uininc and does not cause nervousness noi n?inft in head. Remember the full name ai.d ox for the j$ nature of 1?. W. GKOVIt. 30c. a (.' ? CU wi'-im rr-'aa rr^i irii m'-Zri ill | HORRY COUNTY ? ' TRUST COMPANY ? | L. D. Ma^rath & j? Manager. a Real Estate o 1 Real Estate Loans tt 1 Bonds 0 1 Insurance 0 IIBIIQBQunnngi^ Piles Cured la 6 t<> HDa;j ratyttets mtmey If PAZO 0 ^frM? STJato ; cnrc Itching, B.irnL 0fc<Nlln4or Vttfrt dl 94FIM\ sfllTy r*!!nvrs !*obtnt* r?'M, t?r ' y; :> r** * **? .ratal t<?op oKcr t.:* lir.t ? u. + *+,. *0 r, 8. 0., JAN. 8, 1920. COPY SUMMONS FOR RELIEF. (Complaint Not Served.) Court of Common Pleas. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Horry. /. D. Johnson, Plaintiff, vs. Lilian Cooper, Sylvia Friarson, David Faison, Hamp Durante E'iza McCray, Mit Johnson, Peter Brown, alias Peter Logan, M'nni? Durant, Tooga Durant and all and singular the heirs at vlaw of Hamp Durant, John Durant, Bessie Durant, Henry Durant and George Du rant, the names of whom arc unknown to plaintiff, Henry Lanco, Sealey Lance, Ludie Lance, Cuffic Lance, Maggie Durant, Etta Du rant, Dode Durant and Bulba Durant, Defendants. TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE I NAMED: YOTT AI71P UTriJtPliV OTTM?m\Tn^ 1 > V V IkAtU A i AJ1V1 J II ' OUiUHlWnpU | incl required to answer xhe coir.pl unt n this action, which has teen filed in he office of the Clerk of the Court >f Common Pleas, for the said Couny, and to serve a copy ?f your ansver to the said complaint on the sub- 1 icriber at his office at Conway, S. C , 8 vithin twenty days after the service lereof; exclusive of the day of such icrvicc; and if you fail to answer 1 he complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will ipply to the Court for the relief de- 1 nanded in the complaint, darch 14th, A. D. 1919. V. L. PHY AN, (L. S.) C. C. C. P. H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. TO Maggie Durant, Ludie Lance, Stta Durant, Sealey Lance, Henry .ance, Bubba Durant, Dode Durant >lit Johnson, Peter Brown, alias Peer Logan, Cuffie Lance, Sylvia Yi arson, Hamp Durant, and all and f ingular the heirs at law of Hamp i )urant, John Durant, Bessie Durant, > lenry Durant and George Durant, ,< he names of whom are unknown to t he plaintiff, Absent Defendants. 1 TAKE NOTICE That the Com- .? ilaint in the foregoing stated action < ind the Summons of which the fore- * roing is a copy were filed in the ofice of the Clerk of the Court of Com t Til i -f-- " - ^ iiun i il-us m anci ior norry county, i it Conway, S. C.. on the 24th day of i larch A. D. 1910. j V. L. BRYAN, (L. S) ] C. C. C. P. IL H. WOODWARD, t Plaintiff's Attorney. < ORDER. i Upon hearing the petition and af- t idr.vit of the plaintiff in the fore-! c ,oing stated action; and it appraring ; t hat Dcde Durant, Sealey Lance, i iiulie Lance, Buhba Durant, Henry Y ?ancc, are infant defendants now hs'nt from the State, in pursuance ] f Subdivision 2 of Section 165 of the t lode of C'vil Procedure A. D. 1912, j > : is ordered that J. S. Vaugkt. Judge | c f Probate of' llorry County, be and o ir hereby appointed a; Guardian , id Litem of said absent infant defon- j i ants for the purposes of this action ' n'ess the said infant defendants, or | \ or.ie one in their behalf, within | j evenly days after the service of aj( cpy of this Order by publicafion j 1 nth the Summons as hereinafter | < tatcd, ? ball procure to be appointee! i Guardian for the said Infants; that ; he said J. S. Vaught is a suitable i nd competent person to act as such i \ iunrelian. 1 It is further ordered that this Or- ? ev shall be served upon said infant j cfondants by publishing tlie same for j i -iroo successive weeks in the Horry :; terald, a newspaper publisheel in J; lorry County, with the Summons in i ; lid action and that the service of ? l |^As D?adjj| Every druggist in town?your < gist has noticed a great falling of! all give the same reason. Dodi place. "Calomel is dangerous and pe Liver Tone is perfectly safe an< prominent local druggist. Take "Dodson's Li\ Dodson'a Liver Tone is personally ' guaranteed by every druggist who 1 sells it. A large bottle costs but a * few cents, and if it fails to give easy * relief in every case of liver sluggish- j ness and constipation, you have only ^ to ask for your money back. y Dorison's Liver Tone is a pleasant- t tasting, purely vegetable remedy, ' harmless to both tb.hlrcn and adults. ' 1 "The Fisherman" is the " Mark of Supremacy" which for nearly five decades has marked the fame of SCOTTS EMULSION When you need a tonic to help put you on your feet again you will want Scott's that is known around they globe ? the highest known type of purity and goodness in food or medicine. Look for 44Th* Fisherman " Buy Scott's! The Norwcrrlan cod-liver oil used in Scott'? Cmu!?lon is super-refined in our own American laboratories. >-y|r Its purity and quality is unsurpassed^ FlIf Scott &Bowue, Bloom field,N.J. 19-35 said Order shall be complete at the mmc time that the service of said Summons is* completed. Given under* my Hand and Seal rhis 26th day of Nov. A. D. 1919. W. L. BRYAN, (L. S.) C. C. C. P. H. H. WOODWARD, Attorney for Plaintiff. o FACED BY TASK OF RECONSTRUCTION Valencienens, France. ? France's >teel and iron indu try, virtually cut n half by war's ravages, is faced by ,vhat engineers intimated to be an Tight to ten-year task of reconstruc;ion. Details of the problem were r_* ated to th^correspondent of the Asjociated Press who is visiting the levastated regions of France by pecial government dispensation. Engineering experts, however, say ;he country's steel and iron produoion may be much quickened by the r.ineral mining and metal treating ilants of Lorraine, returned to France uder the terms of the Versailles treaty. The seriousness of he loss to the industry by war, nevertheless, is heightened by the great iccessity for metal construction hrouprhout liberated districts and the lependence of nearly 150,000 inhabiants of these regions on the blast "urnaces and metal mills for a livelilood. In Valenciennes, Denain, Trist, St. jCger, Fresnes, Anzin and other .owns of this district the destructicn uttered as a result of the conflict 's sli mated at OS per cent, includiiTg he obliteration of the Denain and \iizin works, which were the most rnportant in Franco. Of the more than 500 small metal reating and metal construction slants of the devastated region government reports show 47 per cent lave resumed work but only 14 per xnt of the pre-war force. This does lot include the large plants which done are said to be capable of meotng the country's chief needs in the vay of structural material and imlovtaril' nifirh'nnvv * r?ri ?*? ?>ir r?.?> / 1r? .troycd during the war. No note of pessimism is intended, t is said, by engineers who forecast m eight to ten-year period of reconstruction before the nation can rerain her former place in the iron and steel industry. s*h? Dodo iruggist and everybody's drug' in the sale of calomel. They If f StrAO T /\n a f O !*? M l >U1I a LlYtl 1 U11C Id UMII^ lid iople know it, while Dodson's 1 gives better results," said a rer Tone" Instead I rake a spoonful at night and waka ip feeling fine; no biliousness, sick icadache, acid stomach or constipated >owels. It doesn't gripe or cause in* convenience all the next day like vio* cnt calomel. Take a dose of calomel ;oday and tomorrow you will feel weak, sick and nauseated. Don't lose i day's work! Take Dodson's Liver Tone instead and feci fine, full of rigor and ambition. WILLIAM EUGENE KING, M oH Physician and Surgeon H Office In Piatt Drug Oo. 4YN0R,. ... S. C.H j. DR. i. D. THOMflt Physician and Surgeon , LOR1S, 8 O. M DR. G.!. LEWIS I DENTAL SURGEON 41 Oflco Oyer Norton Drag Ctnpug I I CONWAT. & C. A* LUM JUNG LAUNDRY,^H CONWAY. 8. C, tl I Beginning July 1st. 19131 v^| I All person8 ,must take ^kets|for^^| work left - here. PosdmVely no j^H work delivered until ticket is pro-1 I rented. Laundry not called for ill 10 days will be sold for charges I LUM JUNG H D. A. SPIVEY & CO. I W. B. King, Secty. BONDS AND INSURANCE I ?Office in-^ PEOPLES NATION ?LBANK^B BUILDING HARRELSON & HARRELSON H Attornoys-at-Law H Practice both in the State and Federal Courts. HH (VIULLINS, ? ? S. O.^p H. H. WOODWARD, WM Attorney and Counsellor aft Lav CONWAY, 8 " I 1 * ^^B R. a SCARBOROUGH I Attorney at Law, CONWAY, a C. T. B. L E W I S . I Itty. And OoaDcellor At Law I ;0NWAY. ? - S fel I ? ? . NOTICE OF DISCHARGE. Notice is hereby given that the un-^^| dersigned, having filed in the Probate IB Court of Horry County his Final turn; will apply to said Court for a fl^B final discharge at eleven o'clock in I J the forenoon on the first Monday in fl B February, 1920, at Cojiway, S. C. W. H. STONE, Administrator of Personal Estate of Nelson Thomasg I I Deceased. ^^B IT. H. WOODWARD, Attorney. Conway, S. C.f Dec. 20th, 1919 ?td '^ JVo \v you why the "BirdrJing Nervousness, bearing-down ftfu1 stretching pains in the abdomen ate I 'avoided by the use of Mother's Fiti eni> i according to the testimony of thotn- jfe^H and of mothers who have used this time honored prcparatioru Mother's II Friend coorhcs the tine net work of nerves beneath the ckin, and thru its regular use, during the period, the muscles arc made to cxp:..:d more cas? I ily. Mother's Friend !.t t:.v:d c..:cn?idly, At all Druggists. Speci.il Booklet cn Motherhood imd Tii.hy free* Bradiicld Regulator Co. Dpt. I--13, Atlanta,O*, TRESPASS NOTIC^L All peraonn arc hereby T6ibidc^^B^B to hunt, fish, trap, range, n f i n 'lnlf mnnriAK f-v Mi*j iiic4iiu^i IU viivl'I ur upon our land in Green Sea Townshnl^^M containing 1,000 acres, more or less,^^H and bring- in three tracts all joined two of said tracts belonging to 11 Sallie J. Hornc individually, and the MB other to the estate of M. A. Home; MBj Said land bounded by land of'Vlf'R. Rouse, Mrs. Gasgoe, Henry Bullard I and others. Violations of this notice I I will be prosecuted to the full imitHT II will be prosecuted to the full limit of the law. SALLIE J. HORNE. I MARSHALL M. jjp)RNE, For the Estate of m/a Home. II No Worms in a Healthy China H All children trembled with warms have na on* | | healthy color, which indicate* poor bleed, and as a rule, there is mere or less itomach disturbance. GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC given regular* for vwo or three weeks will enrich the blood, tin* I P> ovc the digestion, and act as a General Strength' rpin<! Tonic to the whole nystem. Nstate will then |^H X cn-r c(T or dispel the wsrraa, and the Child Will hs Q I i? perfect health. PJcaeoni .# take. 69c per bottlt