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I How Co '* The competi ^Bl among the hun HK I tributors, large n ? It it ruvatry u I I Rivalry li f Rivalry ii Rivalry ii I It Swift & Con | I m &t the lowest p I sistent with qv I Our profit of 01 II cent a pound ! ft evidence of kee I' A I Swift St Compa I best service to yc I buy from our com I /a supply of fine , I ^ on hand for you a I Swift & Compc I manufacturing ai I use all by-producl I else lose money n . I competitors who c I I Swift & Comn I products of the hi you turn to other ter meat for you a of appetizing, whc [i We are as glad as you should be. on our mettle. m Swift & Cor jl1 ?^ WORLD TRADE HAS NEARLY DOUBLED Seventy Billions in 1919 Against Forty in First jfear of War. I The internatiaonal trade of the world in 1919, will approximate $70, 00,000,000 against about $40,000,000,000 in the year preceding the war. This estimate, by the National City Bank of New York, is based upon returns received from a scope of principal countries covering in most ca :es 10 ajonths and in the case of Great You Do More Work, You are more ambitious and you dot more jnjoyment out of everything when youi Mood is in good condition. Impurities in I the blood have a very depressing effect on Jhe system, causing weakness, laziness I jrvousi^ess and sickness. 'iROVE^S TASTELESS Chill TONIC . mores Energy and Vitality by Purifying f Jd Enriching the Blood. When you feel I is strengthening, invigorating effect, see how it brings color to the cheeks and how it improves the appetite, you will then appreciate its true tonic value. OROVE'S TASTELESS Chill TONIC Is not a patent medicine, it is simply IKON mid QUININE suspended in Synm Scwfieasant even children like it. The blood needs Quinine to Purify it and IRON to Enrich it These reliable tonic properties never fail to drive out impurities in the blood. The Strength-Creating Power of GROVE'S TASTELESS Chill TONIC has made it the favorite tonic in thousands of homes. More than thirty-five years ago, folks would r/dj^a long distance to Cet GROVE'S TASTEKESS Chill TONIC when n member df their family had Malaria' or needed a body-builaing, strength-giving tonic, c-The formula is just the same today, and you can get it from any drug store. GOc per bottle. rjy-#* ' * s 5 *.'> ' . '?4 - n ... .. it1-- -- ?^ % I mpetition I s You I ition that exists I dreds of meat dis- I and small, means I ? Prices I ? Service I il Rrnnnmv I n Quality . - I ipany sells meat I ossible price, con- I lality and service. I nly a fraction of a I on all products is I >n competition. I my must provide the 1 >ur dealer or he will 1 ipetitors. This means 1 fresh meat always 1 t your dealer's. a my must keep down | id selling costs, and | ts to avoid waste, or i meeting the prices of 1 lo. I any must make its I gnest quality, or see I s. This means bet- 1 nd a greater variety | >lesome food. B for this competition I 'I It helps to keep us 1 ? npany, U.S.A. I Britain 11 months of tho year ami upon these figures of 10 and 1! months it estimates the world trr.de j of the full year 1919 at about $70,090,000,000 as against $66,000,001,000 in 1918, $53,000,000,000 in 19V*. and $40,000,000,000 in 1910, the year preceding the war. These figures are of course an aggregation of the totah imports and total exports of all countries for which figures are available and there fore represent in fact about $35,000, 000,000 worth of merchandise passing between the countries of the woild, since all statements of "world international trade" are an aggregation of the exports of every country plus the imports of every country, and as all merchandise exported is counted a second time when it becomes an import in some other country, the usual aggregation of "world international trade" is practically double the actual "Value of the merchandise moved. Practically every country in the list for which 1919 returns are available shows a material increase over 1918 and a very largo gain over the year preceding the war. In the case of the United States, the imports will approximate $3,800,000,000 as against $3,894,000,000 in the fiscal year immediately preceding the war while the exports will show a total of considerably more than $7,000,000,000 as against $2,305,000,000 in the year pre ceding the war. Our total trade for the calendar year 3919 seems likely to pass the ?11,000,000,000 line as egivipst $4,259,000,000 in the fiscal year 1914, all of which preceded the war. British trade is also showing very large figures and will probably slightly exceed that of the United States, possibly reaching the $12,000,000,000 line, though in her case imports form about two-thirds of the total, while in our own ca-e exports form about two-thirds of the total. France, in which the export trade showed a heavy fall-off during the . - TBB BOUT BBBJULD,- 001 1 - I T 1 " \r, is beginning to show a material \provement, as the figures thus far 3ceived% indicate that the 1919 tota1 vill be about $1,200,000,000 against pproximately $8,000,000,000 in 1918 ^hile the imports for 1919 showed a narked inctease over 1918, but stanJ it about the same figures as in 191? vhen her importatiins for war purposes were heavy. All the countries supplying, food show marked gains. For Argentina, the total exports will apparently approximate $800,000,000 against $523,000,000 in 1917; Australia about $520, 000,000 against $177,000,000 in 1917; Canada shows little change as compared with last year; Uruguay, a slight gain over. 1918; Brazil, a large increase -owing to the extremely high prices of her principal export, coffee. Manufacturing material and manu lactures also participate in the in. crease of 1919. In our own case's, manufacturers exported in 1919 show a value of about three times as great as that of 1914 while foodstuffs also show a marked increase. British export figures which show a gain of over a billion dollars over 1917 occurred chiefly in manufactures, and this is true also of France in which the exports show a material gain. How much of this large increase in the figures of world trade, is chargeable to higher prices, says the bank's statement, can only be estimated. We know, however, from our own official figures that nearly all articles both of export and import show much higher prices per unit of quantity than at the beginning of the war, while unofficial reports from practically every country of the world show also large advances, suggesting that a very large proporti n of the apparent increase in world trade an advance of about 75 per cent over (he year immediately preceding the war?is in fact due to higher prices rather than to increased quantities of merchandise moved. In ad dition to this it must be remembered that the figures for 1919 include but very small sums for interior Europe, which had before the war a trade of about $9,000,000,000, suggesting that the commercial world exclusive of Germany, Russia and the Austro-Hun garian and Turkish area Vme tvy^K ..V.U K* "W I mmammmmammmemmmmammmmmmmmmmmmmmM Urn 30x3^ Ooodyci Fabric, AU-Wca 30x 3*/i Good\ c ? ? Fabric, AntbSkid I ?-7 . fWAT, S. 0., JAN. IP, 1920. ably doubled the stated value of its international trade when compared with 1913. . | Some of the nights last week wete | very cold so that pipes would freeze. | Some damage from the ice was reported. Take good care of the sweet potatoes* Study how to keep them sound all Winter, and they will be good next Spring. COPY SUMMONS FOR RELIEF. (Complaint Not Served). Court of Common Pleas. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA. County of Horry. The" Southern l^and Sales Corporation, Plaintiffs, I ?vs.? ' Ora Hobbs, Keniier Odum, Nettie Hobbs, Susie Hobbs, and all and singular all other person or persons whose names are unknown to plaintiff, but who claim to be heirs at law of G. P. Hobbs, Deceased, I. V. Cook, and Ora Hobbs, J Administratrix of G. F. Hobbs, De- . ceased, Defendants. TO THE DEPENDANTS ABOVE NAMED. YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and requirod to answer the complaint in this action, which has been filed in the office of the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas, for the said County* and to serve a co~y of your answer to the said complaint on the subscriber at' his office at Conway, S. C., within twenty days after the service hereof; exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the reli f demanded in the complaint. November 18th, A. I). 1910. H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. LOST MONEY. Suitable reward for the return to me of about $25.00 in currency, lost by me in Conway on Saturday. December 20th, while in some of the stores or business places.?Adv. J. M. Johnson, 1 jl|20-3t pd. Yawhannah, S. C. isual Val JLV/JL VJllu iNot only if conspicuous but ordinar not greater is actually l( The combii cost and ve result of G and carc e making | H as it is in t 0 Goodyear C 1' priced autoi H For this ren | B sizes were i I -S ! Goodyear T I I Get this uni a I I Ford, Chev; 0 / | small car, ai IB I I OlilUUlU UCt J' Tourist Tub ar Double-Cure jfe'lAOO Goodyea thcr Tread ? reinforce cheap till ar Single-Cure <t-fl ry than tut 1 Tread. ^17? proof bat 'vavMamNnMHRManHannNHM rTUnuMUrr.r-Tr?-i.m1.uw. -'Ju.. itir-;.jetrwewarwi a?mm? . v ili K. ' i . - - STREET VENDORS IN MEXICO CITY Merchants Ply Their Trade At Every Corner in ' the City. Mexico City.?Conditions in the republic which have crowded a million persons in Mexico City, or more than 300 000 abo *e its normal population, I tiva greatly increased the number of itinerant merchants who set up shop where their whim wills. It is impossible to find a street in the city ' where some vendor has not set up a stall. A person desiring to outfit a house can buy almost everything n/NA/loil * * ..v^ucm mvuifuv placing loot within ft regular shop. I>et a prospective buy1 ei merely hint that he is in the market for something and he is immediately besieged by a crowd of energetic salesmen who dilate in machine gun Spanish on the worth of their wares. Sunday is the busiest day for those merchants. They foregather princiHow's This ? Wc offer $100.00 for uny case of catarrh that cannot be cured by HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE Is taken Internally and acts through the Llood on tho Mucous Surfaces of the System. Sold by dmgglsts for over forty years. Price 75c. Testimonials free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. NOTICE TOBACCO GROWERS. For tobacco barn flues call on Sasser Company, Inc. Cm ley, South Carolina. We manufacture the best flues made, file your order with * us immediately.?udv 1|1|29. G mo8. u???mb lue ?In T ill Cars ? characteristic. Goody eai i in Goodyear Tires for sir ily the first cost is fount than that of other tires; ESS. nation of unusual value ry low final cost, of com Eoodyear experience, exp mployed as insistently 10x3-, 30x3 Vz'and 31x4-in :he construction of the 1 ord Tires used on the 1 nobiles. soil, moro rorc ncm/v ^1 LiU* JL I ^ LL.1C31 Factory-equipped last yea ires than with any othei isual tire value to enjoy o rolet, Dort, Maxwell, or t the nearest Goodyear J : these tires and Goodyear es at this station, ?j- - _ ?j?.???? MBMB BHH ' ' - ^ tagg I > r Heavy Tourist Tubes are thick, strong i casings properly. Why risk a good casi be ? Goodyear Heavy Tourist Tubes cost 1 >cs of less merit. 30x3V^ size in ivatei g - me*mamFTrmmtmiwwn.1 ijmnwMiwwMiin .'jOTagrw r pally in the plazas, spread their goods about them and patiently wait for customers. Their numbers are augmented by men and women, boys and girls , all of them selling candies, fruits, shoe-strings, pottery, tobacco, drinks, bright or colored ribbons, shoes, hats, dogs, cats, gophers and the dozens of varieties of food of which chili is the most important component. The plazas present an animated appearance. Bands are playing, whiBtles are blowing, newsboys call their editions, a man with a wheel of chance beseeches the credu- , lous to try their hack, a boy with u huge basket balanced atop his heat! offers sweetmeats at five centavo* each and following him comes a seller of ice cream with his frozen dainties tucked away in a container which he juggles perilously on his head but never loses a spoonful and above all shines clorinne ????> .. 0 Mull TTI11VI1 KiVtTi HO hmt of brooding problems of existence. It is a happy life the native leads on Sunday when with a few centavos he may fill his stomach with sweets, bask in the warm sunshine and listen to music furnished by a Mexican band, than which there is no better in any land. A man from the United States, who, on a recent Sunday morning: took a seat in a plaza, within a few minutes had his shoes shined, his nails manicured, his breakfast served, his morning paper delivered, his measure taken for a suit of clothes and was offered an assortment of diamonds and opals at a bargain. H" concluded thai there may be more modern methods of conducting business hut there certainly is none more picture que than that employed by the outdoor meitdniut. PAST1MK CROWDS. One of the best places to spend a Winter evening is the Pastime theater, whore each night in the we k tlu re is shown on the screen the best pictures to be obtained in this country. All of the plays that are enacted on the films at the Pastime are the work of world famed artists in their line of endeavor. This is one of the I several reasons, why the Pastime has \ large crowds. ires I ^ * i* merit IE? iall cars ??J :1 to be !|j often it 11 in first y se, is a ! i iertness jj1 in the | ch tires | famous f lighest- i \ if! e small ? i; r with f kind. f ! n your | other j Service Heavy tubes that inn with a little more r- $390 - H -?? ?J MwiwnKvaBwuu < ?" 1 a