The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, December 16, 1920, Image 6
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4, iSi^^RpP
# aS';1'
WA TCHES FOR .
We carry a truly wonder!
the best makes, such as b
and Hamilton o( Ame
Patek Philippe, Vacher
Longmcs and Jules Jurge
facture.
The Hallmark Watch i
have seen for a moderate \
A postal card wi 11 biing
JAMES ALLAfl
The Hallnn
Established 65 years.
Charlestc
iT?7 Tiiror n r\b& !
I in incoL ohto |
physicians seldom ?
I advise the use of ?
| tonics that are I
I largely alcoholic;
I more often it is
I SCOTT'S
j EMULSION
Every physician
firr knows it is the
WT essence of purity |
and goodness I
(and that it does not I
contain alcohol. J
ft ftnmt, IMoomficld. N. ). 20-70 |
AM innrn m
Ml AITLAL I u
PURCHASE SEALS
Columbia, Dec. 13.?An appeal to
the people of the state to be as liberal
as possible in their purchases of
Christmas ?eals was yesterday made
by Mrs. Bertha T. Munsell, of Columbia.
"As campaign manager last year
for the Christmas Seals," said Mrs.
Munsell, "1 had a real and intimate
insight into the scope and bigness of
the South Carolina Tuberculosis Association
and the groat need for education
along this line.
"Many of our ne.v.ro nurses are
tubercular or com;; om tubercular
homes. They are not physically able
to do heavy work, so they nurse our
children, and young children are very
susceptible to the disease.
"The large majority of incipient
cases are curable, but they must have
special care, plenty of milk and eggs
and fresh air.
"The cherry little Chrirtmas Seals
with which wo are a il familiar i. the
means which the association uses to
raise funds for this big splendid
work.
"Let us urge wo s.e: p; :i?>. ly to
buy these seals for tin-'v ia;
IMMMfMIO filiitnau
I y- t y * ? * r \
' i I
m. j :. a v i. Jl .j j -.
Palmetto Colic o~ thor<
Secretarial \\\ .. \:.v i'i >
kindred b, c.i.e \ scho'
es you a vn - in ov
merit. We re<
all otner ccF ;;e:, in the
old establi 'led bvis'ness ccll
ual instruction. K i < cr.vp
Day and 1 \t scho 1. Pos
complete the; p::c o/ioed oou
lege in Tc ti
school. Ovr student body re
south and a3 far eas! a~? 1\ n
Palmetto College is known e
Address Box C
(Mo the
or Box 173, Orangeburg, S.
Charleston, S. C.
Palmett
sir tf. T!e school that's
We pay your railroad fare t
LADIES OR MEN
ul stock of Watches of all
Ioward, Elgin, Waltham
rican manufacture, and
on Constantin, Majestic,
nsen, of European manus
the most attractive we
3iice.
a catalog and prices.
!& COMPANY
/eioelcrs
285 King Street
>n, S. C.
V
*mmm un m utu mmm?mmm?m
packages and thus do their bit to- j
ward wiping out this dread disease
and at the same time giving it chance
to those who have been so unfortunate
as to have contracted it."
TRY S&RDRASTOR
AN UGLY TEMPER
Cleanses the System, Purifies
the Blood. Stimulates the
Stomach and Tones Down
the Temper.
(
Ever hear them say: "Poor fellow,
his liver is out of shape"? Maybe
they say it of you when you foci
blue, mean, despondent; and maybe
theyVc right.
A stomach out of order, a sluggish
liver and a nagging indigestion
of dyspepsia surely will affect
your equilibrium. It is a reason
rather than an excuuse for "flying
off the handle."
Watch your feelings. When the
early morning finds you mean and
cross, think of your liver, kidneys
and stomach. They need cleansing.
Your digestion needs assistance.
Stop your rash eating, regulate
your habits and help your stomach
and liver along with SarDraS, and
A-1 Liver, Kidney, Stomach and
Blood tonic. Contains no calomel.
It is a scientific preparation of
medicinal roots and herbs especially
prepared to invigorate the liver and
kidneys, cleans the blood and digestive
system and helps the stomach in
performing its duty. A tablespoon- J
i'ul before each meal will do the
work. Common laxatives only leave,
you in worse condition thun before, i
SarDraS cleanses the stomach, liver)
and iodnoys and nature does the
rest. All dealers andd jobbers. Adv.
TRESPASS NOTICE.
All persons are hereby warned not
to hunt, i'ish, trap, cut and haul wood,
straw or remove anything from my
k?nd in Simpson Creek Township,
.ont-'inlng 11!) acres, konwn as the
I'oard Landing Place. Violators of
notice will be punished to the'
.!I extent of the law. I also offer a
v ward oi $D.OO for proof and coni'.
11 -?n of any person violating the
.bove notice.
W. G. TODI).
Adv. 12 1 (ij4tjpd
O ?
! O'iWgio Ttet l'oc-.s net Ai.tcv tin Hr&i;
.Hecc'ise of ? toi.ic pnd larti.'ivo- or feet, LAMAf'itillO.MI)
v.'ININK is 1>< Utr tU&ii c-dinn:y
Ou'*..ue ami dot i not came nervousness nor
>n head. Remember the iu'l nnincnrd
loo* ior the tiatuve cf E. W. OKOVE. 3jc.
Mk.'tSiiifUAuarJbwiJtan.MMUwjijH ?CUMI
1
i CO!fFCV
-4??' ... .ilAnf ^VaI* Jb^.m? I
o courses in Stenography, J
okkecping, Accounting and ]
;ir 1 ip in r; li letto College &'iv- ?
r Free Employment Dapart- '
o for trained executives than I
South. V7e furnish a 1 tlic j
cges with teachers. Individ- j
mailt. Experienced teachers, j
itions guaranteed. You can j
rse of study in Palmetto Col- j
me required in any other s
presents every state in the j
risylvania. The reason is ,
very where. j
>5, Varnvillc, S. C. j
r School)
0., or 57 Wentworth St.,
o College
known everywhere.
;o Palmetto Collccro.
_ _
THE HORRY HERALD, <
RUSSIAN DEVOTED I
TO TEA DRINKING
Considers Englishman Only
a Piker in Imbibing
Beverage.
Revolutions may come and go.
Tea remains. Among the newcomers
from Europe in our mills':
are many exponents of tea dunk
ing. The greatest of these is the
Russian, says a writer in the New
York Evening Post.
The Englishman, in the common
view, is held to be daily dropping
everything else to take up his 5
o'clock cup. The Russian, sure or
his supremacy as a tea drinker, is
either unaware of the Englishman's
pretentions or dismisses them with
a shrug. Stooping to discuss them,'
he makes a few swift points.
The Enblishman (says the Run-1
sian) makes of his tea a meal. J
Eggs, muffins, crumpets, not infre-j
quently cold meats, flank the cup!
and dwarf its position of honor in
the occasion. Has this any serious
claim to he considered tea drinking?
'
The Englishman continues the
Russian?how far does this "tea
drinker" go? Two cups, perhaps
three at most?usually ho imbibes
hut one, and afterward declares (in
all good faith, not knowing any
better) that be has been drinking
tea. Bah! Of tea drinking there is
no end?or should be none. (It is j
still the Russian speaking.)
4 1 1 I ? J 1 * 1 - - I ' >
fvnu, in'Tcn no oovs nis n^si lo
carry out this theory. If a Rus?iari
cnnnot get his glass of tea before
going to work ho fools that he has
not * breakfasted though he may
have partaken of three or four
other dishes. For the noontide he
has made arrangements with his
fellow workers, and a little china
pot is brought forth, and a huge
kettle is heated, at a trifling expense
to each. (To the Russian
immigrant who fares forth witft
section gang or logging crew the
matter presents dificulties ofien in- j
supcrable. We deal here with the
Russian tea drinker of the city.)
Talk inevitably follows the tea?
and the Russian is a talker. What!
does the Russian talk about? What
does the German talk about over
his beer; the American with his
coffee; any other race in its hours
of relaxation? First, second, and
usually last, his job?the prospect
of its continuance, its scarcity, its
hardships, or its advantages. First
work, then tea and talk of work,
then work.
Not until the evening, however,
does the Russian assume his proper
place as the world's champion tea
drinker. Supper over (often managed
in his hall bedroom, for he is as a
rule a young man) he hurries forth to
one o fthe half dozen tearooms. There
are one or two in certain Yorkville
streets, several in the vicinity of
St. Mark's Place, a few in Brwnsville.
The Russian tea room is far
from ornate; a basement houses it,
sawdust covers its floors, its coiling
is low, its lights dim, its tables
are shiny, its seats roughly constructed
benches. But it is a club
to the Russian, for here he finds
friends, homely talk, good fellowship,
an atmosphere redolent of a
smell suggestive of, a warmth induced
by, and a well-being, which
can only .come from?tea.
In it* very cvudeness it makes
its appeal. He remembers the l^ng,
hard winters on the other side,
made bearable largely by the amenities
of the evening gathering
around the huge oven, with a smoky
oil lamp, an abundant flow of:
talk?ail'1 tea. Ho escapes from th * I
harsh realities of a workday world j
through the only means known to
him, and in the Rus: iai tearoom
the hum of conversation never)
drops, and gesturing arms weave
paiterns in the air, from opening to
elosin,'* time.
There are various ways of using
tea. The Russian is large-minded
on the subject, but difficult to
'ihr^ge from his own pel method,
jonce he ha; adopted one. lie ob>e
ve eth< rs squ:vczir.rr a lemon
into th^i1* t?a. adding milk or ere-vm
to ;t. < . yt'ning sugar into it. For
bi "!i. ell\ ho cons.de s the important
i part el* tea dvinking tv> be th 1 tea,
i and |.a. o- by the various <'ovio6
; f< v (: ho believe-:) avoiding thie di'
rcet, 1> "inontac! wit t t^e bevrtuL'-c
it e'.r ]-.c v 11 take his tea
;stralgh4. or not a!: a".
Occa i nail he ' i been w n to
1 ' .
a half lump o'' hard cry tal sugiAf
: ! d< it u]h ' ; o > ue.
'
'
11 at has r mon'r\ F,v "ltua! y lh?
i v ol' '*' 1 but by then the
<, * j-' .( ) jii^
! As over tho preparation, so over
I i.' <. ? afctual <.ri.il'i'if, there are
! fcohisms: it would bo fatuou to ht|*
II ply 1 bat all Ru? ia i ; . of <- f?
i . ; \,| ;1 <o ' .% pv no \\:> o'
ivn'v 1Tho con flirt. in th?
in, is between the <cup and the
'i f.1*- or the r.la s and the sau 01%
fov often a" noi t bever<
mo - 'M ;iu ovd:? " tumble*',
i.-m of the oM . h ol li; i 1 fafct
by their crre<! 11 t iho o ly rjalurr'
vay to drink toa is f oni t:> x saucef.
Tl' v cite reasons, they bring arguments
to boar.
J First. they ask, is not tlio lea j
I hot ? !t. i.c< nnt alwavs (when propjorly
prepared) too hot? Docs it
not fake a long time to c< ol in #t,he
| run or glass? What better an 1
! quicker metho I of cooling it than
I to pour it into tho sjiucor?
Ono niitrht blow? True, but the
L4om in (he saucer presents a levrer
upon which (o b'ow. Hniv!
!<o h i'? Your veteran mvvo<? his
1-n^d r,h-u4 tho sivroi', thumb nve??*?:
., , M f. . - I ' ~ />'# rk r i -I '"?-> 11 TV* '
ing the bottom where the ma* jfac
OOliWAY, S. 0., DEO. 16. 1920
O I La!J* if!
Until Chris
Boys' Clothi
| Skirts, Dres
WE PAY THE HII
I BRANCH STORE. TAB
?? ????? a
turer has caused a non-heat conducting
ring to be made and calmly
absorbs the grateful drink, gesticulating
in derision at the youngster.
But quietude, the younge:* genera ^
tion points out, is imperilled when ^
the tea is thus absoibed. The el- \
del1 retorts by bidding the tiaduce." <.
observe nature. Does not the c.av j'
follow natural laws in every action!
?and is not the cow pre-eminently!;'
a healthy, happy, contented creature?
Nonv tell me, you (the elder (
demands), how does the cow drink?
Silently, by pouring a < ket down x
its throat, or with a certain gusto,;*
slow, enjoying absorption of the I
fluid, accompanied by?sound ? 'Mien!
since the natural way of taking li-i'1
qui-is into the body is to draw it11
in?instead of pouring it in?where *
do you get off at? / ,c
Quietude! 11
And neither being in the least 1
convinced, each continues his rwn
tried and proven method, be it cup, it
glass or saucer, so long as it contains
tea.
o |
FREE RANTIE MKKTINC
A.T THE COURT HOUSE
There will be a meeting of the
Fif e Range* \ ;sociatu?n held i 1 t!
Court ilcu n ::t Con vay at II o'clock
? m December 3i. Every precinct
is urged to be well represented.
J. IT. linker,
Sec'y f the A ^ociulion.
?ZZIZ ~~ I
I
< , I
: 1!
. '? mm!
: /I 1 - |
v a
A. -,V, * _ *> '' * , ' '.'y. vS
%s* -! ' v"s
> -> n
? r , ft
_J1
t V. rm rat- ?fc.? * mrnmmmm rnmtnmmtwm i
We will be in our officc over
Horry Drug Store every first
Monday in the month, i
L. A. WSOGPilJFF
EYESIGHT SPECIALIST |
,? I
\k ]
tmas on all 3
incr, Ladies' C
ises, etc.
3HEST MARKET PRICE Ft
$*
OR, N. C. CONV
SAVED HIS HORSE ~\l
18
Mr. R. L. Mcintyro, of Aro na, .
Ua., says: "Dr. LeGear's Antisepic
Healing Powdi r quickly healed
iomo bad wire cuts on my horse.
defy arty fitrnr ger to find the
slightest scar on l.!m."
Dr. LcGcar's Advice and Remedv
saved thivaVai'Me anim: l. Me j
.vamp y? u not to >c:.ivc a woi.nd, sor |
>r cut exposed, but <o dust or Pr. i
iO(>;.v's Antisep'.ic Ilaiin.e Powd \ |
vhich instantly form a i anti epti
)rot.ection and piomotes healthy
icaling.
In hi ; 28 years of veterinary prr.c-1
-ice and expert poultry breeding, Dr. I
LicGcar has compound- d a remedv
'or every curable ailment of st- ck
>r poultry. Wliei ever they require a
*emedy, it will pv.y you, as it did Mr.
Vlclntyro, to purchase from your
Djiu 1st thf
Bill 111 Ills
a>
Where high rents arc not io
u ~ ~ ~ tu:.. :a ? l ?
iiuijs u-.s iiuiii uues fiui i3x:&i
only the State and County t
expense in seiiinn goods; am
C3 Co not i:ave to be paid.
Our store as m tlio covw\
where you ny n como and sec
ani the advantages we enjo]
some mon- v when you arrive
We keep the b:st fjood:
and we keep a good stock.
1S20 for fertilizers, dry qoc
ers' hardware.
Come to the old rcliabl
DUSENBIIf
Toddville,
IL ? I ?' I Ml* 11 I ? I ? I ? II Ml?ill ? MI HI HIM I?
4
I r
?
Men's and !
\ I
2oats, Suits, I
<i>
IR YOUR FURS j v
VAY, S. C. i
A
W
caler the proper Dr. LcGear Rom<lv.
on a satisfaction or mnnov huok
;uiuar.ter.
USE "DIAMOND DYES"
Dye right! Don't risk ma*
**tV' t^rLal. Kacli paekagc of "DiaJ\
V inond Dyes" contains diroc/v\
:',vl p?> simnle that any
{.Awoman cun diamond-dye a
v new, rich, fadeless color into
old garments, draperies, covT'
ifT(r,n"s' everything, whether
\ j ) IJ wool, silk, linen, cotton or
| l IJJ\ mixed goods,
V /// liuy ''Diamond Dyes" ? no
/ / I other kind ? then perfect rei
ults are guaranteed even if
Ji 'I you have never dyed before.
Ll Va Dcuggiat has "Diamond Dyes
\j Color Card'?10 rich colore.
9 bduikry ,
be considered, where perat
all; and where there is
axes to he added in as an
I U /S A n VU/* ! ^ t ^ X
.J WHO! l!!U lliyil IUWH tax,ry
but it is on a good road
) u?i v, tholit much trouble,
r will cnaL'lo us to save you
> to bo had for the moncv
fry us at ToJdviSlo during
)ds, groceries, and farm!e.
tY & CO.
3?> s. c. ;
i
D
I
I