University of South Carolina Libraries
% tT' ASPIRIN FOR HEADACHE Name "Bayer" is on Genuine Aspirin?say Bayer Insist on "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" In a ''Bayer package," containing proper directions for Headache, Colds, Pain, Neuralgia, Lumbago, and Rheumatism. Name "Bayer" means genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for nineteen years. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets jtnii fov Mnti Aanirin ia frail, rrtarV -of Bayer Manufacture of ttonoMttif culcster of Salicylicacid. ~ 41 NOTICE oF?blSCHARGE. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned administrator of Harrj { A. Dietz, deceased, will apply to the Judge of Probate of Horry Count> atw.his officoc at Conway, S. C., at el^fen o'clock in the forenoon on tht 19th day of April 1920, for a fina discharge as such Administrator. C. S. DIETZ, Administrator of Harry A. Dietz, March 10th, 1920. Deceased. ^ 4il8 4t ?pd. After yon eat?always take FATONIC In ( FOR YOUR AClD-STOMACflO Instantly relieves Heartburn, Bloat* od Gassy Feeling. Stops food souring, repeating, and all stomach miseries. Aididigcitionux] appetite. Keeps stomach weet and strong. Increases Vitality and Pep. EATONICtsthobest remedy. Tens of thousands wonderfully benefited. Only costs a cent or twos day to use it. Positively guaranteed ao.please or we will refund nmcoy. Get a big Jam today. You will sea. I w r. r-? tin ?i?. UUIMWAT UKUli UUMPANY 8|24 CONWAY, S. C. 52t " o Grove's tasteless chill Tonic H restores vitality and energy by purifying and ei iching the blood. You can soon feel its Strengtl qning. Invigorating Effect. Price 60c. J. M. JOHNSON, l?i CIVIL ENGINEER MARION, S. 0. If j Engineering and Surveyin; office will be open during my al; Ounce, and prepared to take car of any work as usual. Addrea 11 communications as heretc fore. COOPERATIVE SALE IN BEAUFORT COUNT1 CUmson College.?Seven Bcanf i County farmers with the assistant of C. L. Baxter, County Agent, a i I. L. Harkev. Extension Ser/ic Marketing Agent, shipped two ca' of hog's cooperatively last we ] which netted the fanners 2 to cents more than the local mark< offered. One car was shipped 1 Wilmington, N. C., and the other t Greenwille, S. C. Most of the hrj came off the islands around Beafort and were loaded and shippe> says Mr. Harkey, under considerab difficulties as there were no gra< ingyfjens or scales for this use i the shipping point. The marketing agent followed if Greenville car through the si aught' house operations in order to find ci ^ It'll soon hi Calomel loses you a day! mercury; quicksilver. Calon sour bile like dynamite, cram] attacks the bones and should Take "Dodson's I % When you feel bilious, sluggis constipated and all knocked out ar believe you need a dose of dangoroi calomel, just remember that yoi ^Kruggiat sella for a few cents a larj bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone, whit is entirely vegetable and pleasant i take and is a perfect substitute f< 1 whether the hogs killed hard or j "soft." They had run on pasture | with abundance of acorns, and had' tlien been fed on com for 3 or 4 I weeks previous to shipment. M >st of these hogs turned oul "soft" pork, for which is it impossible to get top prices. It appears that a few week* finishing cn corn will not make | firm pork out of "soft" hogs. Many of the hogs now going ou*: of South Carolina, according to Mr. Harkey, are killing "soft", and big markets do not want to take them at all. Mr. Harkey alvises that hog growers study the local Car.lina j market i since by doing so they will 1 often be able to get better prices < for hogs about which there is doubt i as to whether the product will bo l hard or "soft". In the case of the ( dars shipped from Beaufort co isj< erably better prices were secured i from Greenville and Wilmington than could have been secured i \ Richmond, Baltiomre, and other big ' ger markets. r s. t NOTICE TOBACCO GROWERS, j For tobacco barn flues call on Sasscr Company, Inc. Gurley, South Carolina. We manufacture the best flues made, file your order with us immediately.?adv 1|1 J29. C mos. ( jius Cause Grip and niiitieiiza ' .AXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets remove the > r.uae. There ie only one "Bromo Quinine.' E. W. GROVE'S signature on box. 30c. . || It Helps! |y B There can be no doubt 8 & Ha as to the merit of Cardui, H g I the woman's tonic, in R E ' 19 the treatment of many E k M troubles peculiar to rid women, 'ihe thousands of women who have been ^4$ >. II helped by Cardui in the V i m past 40 years, is conclu- flj g a hS sive proof that it is a E E - a a good medicine for women E f who suffer. It should lUf help you, too. wyf . n I rihm ' m The Woman's Tonic jg SgB Mrs. N. E. Varner, of gg; a H Hixson, Tenn., writes: I K 2 a "I was patting through 5 v I | the . . . My back and ? I'll ! sides were terrible, ar.d I ' fii >ny suffering indescriba ble. I can't tell just how ?T,? 32 91 where ? hurt, about ?*-. s SI B ah over, I think ... I fe. & K I30?311 Cnrclui, end ray jj fo 'e | 1 pains grew less and less, s j j ,1 |J until l was cured, lam HMU . remarkably strong for a wo"33" 04 years cf age. s Sara! 1 do all ray housework." &?' ? k H ^jj rS J. H. Brown, of Charleston, J3. C., j- passed through Ccnway last week d, after visiting relatives in the county. e n :1- A. P. Capps, formerly of this it county, now with a leading furniture company at Florence, S. C., visited io h;3 parents in Dog Bluff township, ?v last week and passed through Con it way on his way out there. Vou know what calomel is. It's lei is dangerous. It crashes into ping and sickening you. Calomel I never be put into your system. Jver Tone" Instead I h, calomel. It is guaranteed to start K| your liver without stirring you up inside, and can not salivate. 1ft Don't take calomel! It makes you sick the next day; it loses you a day'g work. Dods<!>n's Liver Tone straight !n ens you righC up and you feel great, to Give it to the children because it is >r perfectly harmless and doesn't gripe. niK HOttRT HERALD, CONWA 30L6ATE FACES MANY CHARGES ndictment Returned Against Big Company on Question of Prices. Trenton, N. ?An indictment con mining 56 counts charging violation >f the Sherman anti-trust law was returned by a federal grand jury ^ere against Colgate and ocmpany jf Jersey City, N. J., manufacturers [)f toilet preparations. The indictment claims the company illegally fixed resale prices of its products to wholesalers and jobbers. The company was indicted in 1918 for fixing resale prices, but was sustained on the ground it did not make any fixing agreements. The grand jury's action today, 'quotes alleged correspondence be tween .the company and its selling \gent and dealers in its prcduits The correspondence it was charged, contains "a long series of instances of written and general agrcv?ments on resale prices." The indictment charges further that the company 'sympathetically and continuously followed the practice of procuring such agreements and tl e resale prices of its products thus were continuously mantained." Colgate and company in a statement given out after the indictment was issued, denied that price fixing agreements were made with dealers. The statement said: "This is the second time the attorney general had brought suit against Colgate and company, on account of our efforts to insure fair and reasonable prices for our goods. "In the first action we were merely charged with refusing to sell price cutters, which is our openly declared policy. The suit resulted in a unanimous decision of the supreme court that the policy is lawful. We shall continue it. "The present charge is that we make them to adhere to designated re.4 ale prices. We make no such agreement, as our customers know. We deny the charge as heretofore." URGES FARMERS TO STUDY COTTON COST Washington.-?The Department of Agriculture anncunced that invest'^^4-.' ~ -C 4.1 J A. 1 -1 tedium uj uiu aupurinit*ni snuwv that a price based on a "bulk line" cost of 28 cents per pound lint, 8" per cent of the cotton grown in 191H on 848 farms from which cost figures were obtained would have produced a profit. Sixty-six pei cent cf the farms concerned would have made money, the department said. At a price based on the average cost of production, which the department figured at 23 cents pei pound, only 351 of the 842 farmers or 41.7 per cent, would have made a profit, it was stated. The "bul:< lino", it was explained, marks th( point on a scale of costs aboul vhicb the price of a commodity must hang if an adequate number o? v \ "A HflMPI FTC I IN n uubvii litn 1i. Liiav BOILERS Si ENGINES P] CRUDE OIL ENGINES E3 GAS ENGINES T1 STEAM PUMPS Lj We also have listed of second-hand machinery - quircments. HYMAN SI Mill Supplies ! Wilmington, N. C. | 3|18?if. lY, 8. C . APRIL 1, 1920. / 3 * I I IN PERFORMi I Its 50-Hours a I But that is proof of Only ( I ESSEX NEW WORLD EN 1 THE SAME ESSEX STOCK 9 Essex Sets a new Worlds J H than 22,000 cars in its fir 1 HUDSON I a Note how it Sets the Style, | per cent and adds Years ti 2 It is true that in speed?ir E matched it. Official recoi 1 They were made in test t< I ALL ACCEPT HUDSON A I CLUSIVE MOTOR WITH IV I PLAHF YOUR flRHFR NO I CARS HAS NE' w. c. producers are to be kept in the bur>. iness. In the case of the 1918 crop the price actually obtained coincid; ed with the bulk line, the farmers receiving about 29 cents for the pro i duct. i The farms on which the experiment was conducted are located in s Alabama, Georgia, Soulh Carol na and Texas. I Cost of Production ; The net cost of production, it was found, ranged from 8 cents to $1.97 per pound, only three farms, total ing thirty-five acres, twenty-tw > , showing less than fourteen cents, ' v/hile more than fifty ranged from : 50 cents to $1.07. > "The more generally farmers sludy their costs and adjust their ' production on the basis of costs and ' prices the more readily will econom* JL* / _? E OF MACHINERY" XW MILLS cotton gins [.ANERS corn mills OGERS feed mills SIMMERS wood saws 5lTH mills pumps ...tJ-U ~ 1! _: I I. . - - whii us ctii sizes cinu types I. Let us figure on your reUPPLY CO. i and Machinery. New Bern, N. 0. \ \NCE AS IN STYLE ESSE! t Top Speed Endurance Mark i )ne Fine Car Quality Essex Brir DURANCE MARK OF 3037 P ANOTHER TEST CHASSIS TRAVELED 5870 Mil Sale record with more thar. $ 3 C st year. \LS0 SUPREME IN OiSTII , and the Super-Six Motor Whi 0 Endurance is Exclusive IN H 1 hill climbing?in quick accelc: *ds show that. But they are I? o prove Hudson.endurance. S PATTERN CAR. A DISTINC IINIMUM VIBRATION. W FOR SUMMER DELIVERY, ' */ER BEEN SUFFICIENT FOR " , ADAMS, CONWAY, S. C. ic forces operate to maintain production on a profitable basis," the ,lpn!irtnir??if Hatnu .v vuivjiv ovuvgoi i uu f^wvn itir.cnt used the 'bulk line" during th i var for price fixing in industries other than agriculture, setting a price so that from 80 to 1)0 per cent of a commodity could be produced at a profit. A certain percentage of pro ducers may be expected to lose on a given staple in any year, but economists agree if prices sink so low a- to make this percentage very urge, say as low as the line of the average cost of production, so many v ill lose that production that the staple will tend to fall off until prices rise to a point where they wi 1 again cover the cost of the bulk of the product." fh9 Quinine That Dots Not Auoct tin Hea Because of its tonic and laxative effect, I,AXA T1VK liROMO QUININE is better than ordinar: Quin.ne and does not cause nervousness no ringing in head. Remember the lull name at-C took for the a# nature of K. W. GROVE. 30c PUBLiclXPECfiNG" MUCH OF RAILROADS Return to private ownership has hi ought many requests for improvements and alterations of service a^ tendered by the railroads of the country. The South Carolina Railroad Commission is in receipt of many complaints and requests for improvements. une thing- that the commission has been asked frequently since the roads were returned to their owners March 1 is to order the erection of now stations. Towns in many parts ot the state want new stations. There are also requests for changes n schedules, requests to have trains stopped at small stations, and other improvements in service. The railroad commission members S HORRY COUNTY ? i TRUST COMPANY ? T. n Ma<vt>o4k M MI M. wAnf.iavu Hi ?g Manager. 0 Real Estate fll Real Estate Loans til Bonds 1 fil Insurance fiBBRBOIlBDRH PACE SEVEN ' < IS LEADER o I Inmitnlinrl I I O UllllllUV/IICU. B igs to the Light Car Field jl /IILES IN 50 HOURS || :,ES IN 94 HTtS., 22 MI II ),000,000 paid for more II MOTION I ch Increases Power 72 II U DSON. || ration, no stock car ever I I rCIDENTAL. 11 TIVE DESIGN, AN EX- 1 THE SUPPLY FOR THESE || THE DEMANDS. || A^eiit || state that they are somewhat up against it to know what to do. The toads are in bad financial condition and cannot stand heavy expense h.viii.^ now, il is said. One question that has been frequently asktxl recently of the railroad commission is whether or noc the "reciprocal demurrage" is in lorce, this being a charge which beore the war shippers could make against railroads not providing cars within a certain time after request 101 them had been made. Members c f the railroad commission state tHat this demurrage cannot be replaced now, because the act of congress under which the roads were returned to their owners does not allow the state commissions to change ates or demurrage charges for six months. The present rates are to remain in effect temporarily at least. EXPORTS OF COTTON SHOW BIG INCREASE Washington.?Exports of breadsaiffs and dairy products decreased in February as compared with the Mime month a yoar ago, but cotton shipments increased both in bulk and value, according to a review issued by the department of 'commerce. Shipments of breadstuffs were valued at $44,000,000, as compare*] with $56,000,000 the same month last year and meat and dairy products at $57,000,000, against $95,OCO,000. Cotton exports increased 30 per cent in weight and 10'J per cent in value, due to the increased prices of the fibre. Shipments totalled 640,000 bales, valued at $135 950,127, igainst 449,000 bales, valued at $73,552,274 in February a year ago. Cottonseed oil exports were vaTuel at $20,000,000, a-! against $32 00?,Little change was shown m the outward movement of cereals, except wheat exports, which fell off 1,000,000 barrels. Exports of wheat for fhe eight months period totalled only AM AAn . ~: ? i. nrv ' i ,OWU,V/UII uunut'in, ^l/,l/W|" 000 bushels for the same period in 1910. ?- a V ies Cured In 6 <? 14 Days rudiilst* refund money if PAZO OINTM1? NTfhha u'urc Itching, Blind, B?eodi:vjorPro?n:dl irt Piles. .:antly relievos Itching Piles, at y yon enn net .citful sleep after thn fir^t cpDliccthn. PiitcPOc.