The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, February 17, 1921, Image 3

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, - ' " "aspirin Name "Bayer" on Genuine i Mt\MJ \ Take Aspirin only na told in each package of genuine Haver Tablets of Aspirin. Then you will be following the direction# and dosage worked out by physicians during 21 years, and proved safe by raillions. Take no chances with substitutes. If you ?ee the Bayer Cross on tablet*, you can take them without fear for ' Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache, 'Lumbago and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve tablet* cost few cents. Druggists also sell larger packages. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticaoidester of Salicylicacid. MARION A. WRIGHT Attorney at Law. CONWAY, s. o. Office in Spivey Building WILLIAM EUGENE KING. M * Physician and Qurgfun AYNOR,. ... S. t DR. J. D. THOMAS fliysiwan and Sui geo>> lokis. a. o. DR^UEWIS DENTAL SURGEON Uf?r Norton Druf Ccttpunj CONWAY. 8. a f D. A. SPiVEY & CO. j W. B. King, Secty. BONDS AND INSURANCE ?Office in? PEOPLES NATIONAL BANK BUILDING HARRELSON & HARRELSOfv Attorneys - at - La w Practice both in the State arvi Federal Courts. JSULLINS, ? ? B C IL H. WOODWAHl). Attwiay ud Counsellor at CON WAV, a ~ K. a SCARBOROUGH Attoraey at Law, CONWAY, 8. C. * ?? ? T t q ? r* iii > ?n I. B. LtWlt. Atty. and Oonucollor at JL** CONWAY, - - - S. L J. M. JOHNSON, CIVIL ENGINEER MA&ION, S. 0. ily Engineering and Surveying office will be open during my ah ivnce, and prepared to lake c&r? of any work ah usual. Addreu.' til communications a* hereto tore. S. C. DUSENBURY Attorney-at-Law Spivey Building CONWAY, ? S. 0. ********* * VULCANIZING * # * * We Do It * * * * Why throw away a tire * * that can be made practi- * * cally as good as new? * * All work guaranteed. * * * * Milton Pitlman.. * * * ********* J. I. ALLEN, Jr. Attorney-at-Law Office in Bank of Loris Bldg. LORIS, S 0. F. J. SULLIVAN & CO. CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS (Ut?) Telephone So. 796. Murchipon Rnnk RMj*. WILMINGTON, N. C. 4. ' jjl THE ROSE |j if By IZOLA FORRESTER. || : ?$?${? i It fell at Burtram's feet as he was , hurrying to the elevuted station and ' lay in the trodden snow, a pink La | France rose. He was lute, yet he stopped and picked it up, trying to see where It hud come froui. Tiie neighborhood was far from fashionable. Rows of second-rate apartment houses lined both sides of the street, with stores on the ground floors and the elevated tracks between them. But as he looked up he caught a glimpse of a face at a second-story window, a face that matched the rose. Young and very girlish it was, with eyes full of mischief and dismay, too, seeing him with the rose iu his hand. Just a moment, and it was out of sight In the room back of the window. Bartrain went up the long stairs io the elevuted station with a curious tingling at his heartstrings. Romance did not usually stalk his footsteps. All the way downtown and during the day's work he was vividly conscious of the rose In his waistcoat pocket. Several tries he surreptitiously took It out and looked at it when he was alone In the otllce. The next morning when he catno to the newstand at the foot of the elevated stairs lie glanced up at the window. There was no sign of the face he wanted to see, and he rode down I town feeling the joy of the day gone. I Hartmm puzzled for several days, seeking to meet her. Then toward the end of the week there mine a sudden, blessed relief. A sum II. discreet sign hung in the upper left-hand corner of one window. "Room to Let." Hartram took his noon hour, and went up to engage the room. The door In the second hallway was opened by a middle-aged woman, pleasantfaced and hopeful. Yes. she had a room to let, the front hedroom o!T the parlor. The young lady who had occupied It before had just left. Bartram stared at her. Could fate be so unkind? ! "Nothing happened to her, 1 hope?" he said slowly. "Oh, nothing contagious, sir," replied the wotmm. "She was just hurt a little hit in un automobile accident ?run down on Columbus avenue. Slip's lit tlio iuuv hut vaii mustn't bo afraid of that. It don't J hurt the room a bit." "No." Bartram answered. "I'll take the room. I?I expect to be called out of town for u little while, but I'll keep the room." He paid 11 couple of weeks In advance. not the name of the hospital and went out on the street again. From a booth In a cigar store he telephoned to the office. They must excuse him that afternoon. I-Ie was not well, and had gone home. That done, he started for the hospital. He had her name now. Dorothy Bennett. It sounded like the name of a girl who loved roses. At the desk he asked for her. They looked up the name, said It had been an emergency case brought In during the night. She was not badly injured. He could go up to the ward and see her. liartram held tightly the big cluster of pink roses he liad brought and made his way to the elevator. At the door of the ward a nurse directed him to the right cot. and he tiptoed to it cautiously. She was sleeping. Her hair was braided in two girlish plaits down her shoulders. She looked pale and wistful. There were no (lowers on the little stand beside her. After Rartram had sat down the nurse took the roses and brought them back in a tall green glass vase. Then he waited. When she opened her eyes without stirring there was no alarm or surprise In them Sl?i? ?znillo#1 sit him ovor so little, and looked at the roses understandlngly. "1 wondered If you'd find out," she said. "I'm not hurt much." Dorothy smiled up at him wlion he left, and watched him as he went down the room. It had been horribly lonely, coming Into the strange hospital with no friends at all. She hod been In New York two months now trying to get work, and eaeh day had made the quest more hopeless. She lay smiling at the roses i long ' while, thinking of all he had said. He , had promised to come overy day to j see her. ' j It was a month before the broken j ankle was healed and her shoulder felt light, but there came the day - when she was to be discharged. Bartram came for her in a taxi, his eyes eager and purposeful. ; "You know," Dorothy said, as she came down the wide steps, leaning on ; his arm, "It's so good to get out again, . but I haven't any idea where T'm go'! ing. Do you suppose Mrs. Kinney i would take me back Into my same L. _ t _ - i u oiup a wuugn yuiCK take HAYES* HEAUNG HONEY, a cough medicine which stops the cough by healing the inflamed and irritated tissues. A box of GROVES O-PEN-TRATE SALVE for Chest Colds, Head Colds and Croup is enclosed with every bottle of HAVES' HEALING HONEY. The salve should be rubbed on the chest and throat of children suffering from a Cold or Croup. The healing effect of Hayes' Healing Honey inside tlie throat combined with ihe healing effect of Grove's O-Peu-Trst? Saive through the pores of the skin soon stops a courth. Doth remedies arc packed in one carton and tb? cost of f ho combined treatment is 35c. >,Tp"t nsk vour druggist lor HAYES' HEAUNG HONEY. IfttVe roftffi JUst uufil T could get work T" "It'B waiting for yon now,** Bnrfrniu told her. "Warm ns toast, and your going to stay there until we're married. Oh. I know I haven't asked you regularly before; but you knew, didn't you? 1 haven't a soul In New York that cares whether I live or die, and when you dropped that rose at my feet In the snow. It was like a message right out of the skies. You meant to drop It, didn't you?" Dorothy's lashes raised as she smiled up at him. 'Td watched you pass by every Ingle day," she said, "and ju^t the minute 1 tet It fall, 1 was frightened, hut now 1 think It Just was to be." <Copyrtffht, 1917, by the McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) 0 TRESPASS NOTICE. All persons whomsoever, and especially Jess J. Chestnut, are hereby for bidden to enter or trespass in an\ manner upon my land, whether on c'osed or unenclosed lying in Conway township; hereby calling attention t' the fact that there is no public path through niy property; and I will pay the sum of $10.00 in cash reward foi proof of any violation of this noticc lj20[4t B. M. CHESTNUT. o STOCKHOLDERS' MEETING. Pursuant to a resolution of the Moard of Directors of the Cox-Lund> Company, a corporation of Conway. S. C., passed at a meeting of the Hoard on January 20th, 11)21, a mec' ing of the stockholders of the said Oox-Lundv Company is hereby called, to be held in the office of the saiv Corporation on Friday, February l.Sth 192'1, at ?S o'clock p. m., the purpose of said meeting being to consider the . eduction of the Capital Stock of said Corporation from $50,000 to $40,000 COX-LUNDY CO., By J. B. Cox Conway, S. C., Jan. 20lh, 1921. o Sevaral different kinds of sanitary papers are carried at the Herald office. Call and get the kind best suit cd to your needs. o A TONIC Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic restores Energy and Vitality by Purifying and Enriching the Blood. When you feel its 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. Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic is simply Iron and Quinine suspended in syrup. So pleasant even children like it. The blood needs QUININE to Purify it and IRON to Enrich it. Destroys Malarial germs and Grip germs by its Strengthening, Invigorating Effect. 60c. o USE FERTILIZERS INTELLIGENTLY CI em son College.?I found en? rir.er recently who has been usng G per cent potash on his corn nd this on red clay land," says ??. i. Clark, Richland County agricul ural agent. "He had used !a<< car about GOO pounds per acre ol mixed fertilizer containing G pe: "Mit potash and had put most of it under the corn at planting time think I have convinced him thy.f 'lis does not pay. I am advising all f my farmers (1) against the us* ^ ^ il ifyrkl1 uri I U/Mlf v. iv.i vin i n iliiuui i 11 ra in iu li ii|? what they need, and wha\mount will be best, and (2) not to end money for high-priced ingre clients from which they will not get lierjuate returns. o A PRAYER 1 would not stand apart nor dwell alone, Nor live, as one too good t:> soi my hands, would not guard the soul that i. mv own So closely that it shrinks fr.m: life's commands And scorns to go where shame an sorrow reign i For fear it, too may wear a scav let stain. I would not say, "I'm holier than thou," And stand aloof when others cry for aid; I would put down my shoulder to the plow, And join men, understand, un afraid. If through the mire with purpos high I go, How came the mud upon me Go*' will know. Clean hands at night! That is th pride I ask, But let me stand to service through the day* Let me go gladly to my grimy task I'll bear the dirt which I ca wasp away. Though doop ;r mire life calls or me to fight, What matter*? that, if I am clea? by night? --Ed' * -f in February Good Housekeeping. "California Syrup of Figs" is Child's Best Laxative Beware! Say "California" or yot may not pet the genuine "California Syrup of Figs" which doctors recom mend for babies and children of a! ages. Nothing else clears the little bOwels and liver so gently, so thoroughly. Directions on each bottle But you must say "California." Don'1 bo talked into an imitation fig syriq which hasn't the delicious, fruit t-v to or the perfect "laxative physic' action. I The Jazz One of Marital Discor By DUQUE, Summer i.?oes a jazzing woman make a good husband? No! to both i|uesti< I look upon the j;izz as one of tin eiuv toward divorce and ruined mari normal after darning to the music o ; au hour. Not one temperament in a thou and remain sane. Jazz music prodi leading to bad temper, slackness, las These are the reasons the danci 1 Husbands don't take their wives to means a raggedy temperament afterw to jazz because it leads to irrespons The only hope for the dance is t , old, healthy dances?the waltz, the These were beautiful dances because 1 beautiful. ; No one-step danced to jazz mus Production of Farm Labor Supply M By CHARLES S. ! Chairman Executive Committee, Nation The truth is that unlet* prompi our country is headed straight toward in compelling our allies to appeal to 1 | we protect the production of labor-sn of skilled farm labor, we, loo. must s< Anybody can realize how calamitou well as the economic sense. We arc now confronted by she labor that will begin to be manifest machinery this fall and will result in next year. Stocks on hand in impor smaller than in normal years, becaui and a rapidly tightening scarcity of spective conditions as to both clemei of our output will soon be serious. For the last ten years farm lal to secure, and now, with an enormc in munition factories, and the withd ductive occupations, there is bound as this country has never known. We regard it as vital to keep o know the business, especially the m machinery. It would be wasteful n ward try to replace them with unsk We seek no advantage for our ii that without this product and withe United States cannot increase, or foodstuirs next year. These arc the measures that wc this natron and its allies next year: 1. That the manufacture of fa ence with the manufacture of war m eary raw materials. 2. That service to the country eiderod of equal importance with ser eminent or private. 3. That, lahor on llio farms ho c< the production of war munitions. 4. That raw materials for farm be given equal preference by the tr with munitions of war. GETMORFBUTTFR Mrs. Hattie Meece of Glenn, Missouri, says: "I was not making enough butter from my cow's milk production for a family of two. After using Dr. LeGear's Stock Powder | a short time, she gave a pound of butter a day." Dr. LeGear's Stock Powders give to milk cows just what is needed to keep the digestive organs in proper condition, so that thoy get the most possible good from their feed, (jive equally wonderful results when used for horses, hogs and sheep, because fhev are a tonic, appetizer and worm expel ler. 11 matters not what ailment you may have among your stock or poultry, it will pay you to get the proper Dr. LeGear's remedy from your dealer. They are the doctor's personal prescriptions, compounded duving his 28 years of veterinary practice :nul I expert poultry breeding." Thoy must I satisfy you, or your dealer will re. fund your money. / CREDITORS OF DORSEY MEET The creditors or W. -T. Dorsey mot again in Conway last week to con wider the best stops to he taken ir ,regard to closing his estate. Some: time a*ro he made an assignment to : S. M. Allen as assignee and notices were mailed to the various creditors. I including American Fertilizer Work*, whose claim amounts to about $?,000. An effort was made by the creditors . to get Mr. Dorsey to continue the business with extension of time as he > mi<rht need on all of his debts. He stated last we ok that lie did not see ' any way whereby lie couV* puM the business out and it is not likely that Direct Causes of ! d and Divorce. ? > Palace, Paris, France. good wife or a jazzing man imike a )!18. u direct causes of the increasing tendtal happiness. No man or woman is f a jazz orchestra for more than half i?:ir. ' "fin an afternoon of jazz i:cet. a fevered disorder of the brniw situde and bad health. ing craze in Europe is near its end. dance because they find it inevitably ard. Mothers forbid their daughters iible actions. o abolish the jazz nnd bring back the polka, the tango and the maxixe. ! the music the)' were danced to was ic can be anything but hideous, r I I Machinery and the ! a ust Be Protected !i BRANT1NGHAM j < al Implement and Vehicle Association ?J1 i 1 t action is taken by the government, < the same mistakes that have resulted ( us to save them from famine. Unless , ving farm machinery and the supply ' )on face a shrinkage of food supplies. , s that would be in the military as ; < >rtages of raw material and factory in shortages of certain lines of farm serious shortages in many vital lines tant kinds of tools and machines are se of earlier scarcity of factory labor 1 all raw materials. Present and pro- < its make it certain that the shortage * >or has been more and more difficult >us increase in the demand for labor rawal of many young men from proto be a shortage of farm labor such n the farms the men now there who J en trained in the use of labor-saving! md foolish to let them go and afterilled men. tidustry over any other, but we realize >ut sufficient labor the farmers of the even maintain, their production of ? declare to be vital to tlte feeding of rin materials be given equal prcferninitions as regards supplies of neeesin farm machinery factories be convice in munition-making plants, govmsidercd as of equal importance with ing machinery and the finished goods asportation agencies of the country such a plan will be carried out. The only matter now pending is the selection of an agent to represent the creditors in closing out the stock of merchandise and collecting some accounts due to Mr. Dorsey. This store is located at Adrian, where there are several other stores in operation. is a prescription for Colds, Fever and LaGrippe. It's the mos> fpeedy remedy we know. 12,13. Get legal blanks from the Herald. ?al GRAHAM'S We are assents for the L is equipped for repairing when things get wrong wi GENERAL RE *9 ?f T ? We are also prepared any other make of car, < business. Give us a trial. GRAHAM'S E. M. CRAI Aynor, i ^sll^ LUCKY STRIKE cigarette. Flavor is sealed in by toasting N TEXAS COTTON TO BE REDUCED Columbia, Fob. 14.?Texas farmers ire jcoing t > reduce their cotton from 13 1-3 to r>0 per cent according1 to a etf.er received by the South Carolina livision of the American Cotton Asociation from George 13. Terrell, commissioner of agriculture of that state. Mo states in his letter that lis department is sending; out leaf' ? v.-> ?inv. i.u.iv u.!.. in mrji'e numuers lealing with the situation "and with ivery fibre in our being we are appealing to our Texas farmers to reUioe then* cotton acreage tliis year :*.nywhere from 33 1-3 to 50 per cent." A letter from A. W. Swain, secretary of the North Carolina Division, :l.;o brings the news that North Carolina ii; certainly going to reduce. In iliis letter Mr. Swain says: "We are going to reduce more than \vo are asVcd to reduce and are signing up right now almost 100 per cent an the proposition. We are just in receipt of a wire from some of the counties reading thus: 'Signed up 1,300 to date in my county. Will complete the job with around 05 per cent signed up.' We have several telegrams to this effect and letters from almost every county, saying, put us down for 100 per cent in favor of reduction this year.' " Reports from other states indicate that the reduction is going to be south-wide. Officials of the Association declare, however, that with a surplus of 0,000,000 bales staring the south in the face, it wi'l be financial suicide for over a half crop to be raised. Colds Cuumc Grip csmi knbuer?:s ' ' AXATIVE bROMO <5UIKINEIablets remove tilt ausc. There ia only oou ' Dromo <J?uuiiie." E. V?. GROVE'S slttwiam* r.t? Ihjx. SlV\ lit'CKLKY BROS. It was stated recently that Buckley Bros, would again engage in the restaurant business in Conway, and that they had leased the brick building formerly occupied by the Conway Bargain House, and would turn it into a modern cafe, with stooping rooms on the second floor. La'.er it lias been learned tha* they v.ill not go into business just at this time. Tho\ will be absent from Conwa> for a white, ;','ter which they will return here and probably resume their business affairs at that time. Advertise in The Herald. IKi-MOIDS (Tablets or Granules) Esl INDIGESTION tWith 01 without ivnter; pleasant to take. QUICK RELIEF! Price, 25-50-75^ MADE fJY SCOTT A. BOWNC MAKERS OF SCOTT'S EMLHL8ION 11 ? ' GARAGE )orl Cars, and our garage .1 _ T mem on snori notice, so th your car, bring it to us. :pair work to overhaul and work on md will appreciate your 3GARAGE HAM, Prut). S. C.