The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, June 16, 1921, Page PAGE SEVEN, Image 7
V
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WE are sho
( in footwe
' will find here t
?most attract
world has pro<
!i r
; Florsheim Sho<
' where for tl
3 unusual qual
J To ivcar a pair of 1
Sill shoe satisfaction.
j S. T. Sessions <Sr t
Iji Conway, S. C.
'Ik * v ^fe?r5rT
1
SKIN TROUBLES
May Defy Lotions & Ointments
Eczema, tetter and similar affections
should be treated through
tho blood. Outside applications
offer only temporary relief. Tha
thing touseis S. S. S ?the standard
blood purifier, which has successfully
relieved such troubles
for over 60 years.
For Special Booklet or forindiv
id ual adv ice, w i t hou t charge,
write Chief Medical Advisor,
S S.S. Co.,Dep't43l, Atlanta, Ga.
Get S. S. S. at your druggist
s. s. s.
Standard for Over Fifty Yearm
ACTIVITIES OP WOMEN. i
Women outnumber the men by
9,267 in Boston, Mass.
St. Louis banks have more women
depositors than men.
In Switzerland it is a rare sight to
see women attending funerals.
/
Organized working women in New
York City now number more than one ;
hundred thousand.
Women are eligible for election to
the contsitutional assembly in Palestine.
(
Only about 11 per cent of New
York State's girl workers are members
of trade unions.
There are about 800 charwomen em
ployed in and about the Canadian
Parliament buildings
The privilege of smoking has been
extended to women guests at the
New York Athletic Club.
More than 100 women's organiza- (
tions entered contestants in the ,
spring games recently held in Paris.
Madame Curie, the noted French
scientist, was awarded Uie Noble
prize for physics in 1903. *
Eighty-two per cent of the people (
who died or were injured by fire in (
this country last year were mothers.
PECTASiL '
4<n-T
' \**j> a,~. t^^fL%h3 i
or Thro? Gorcrnticns
U?vo M^do Child-birth
.acicr By 'Jc.i:\<j -?
-o-o ^ c-e/(5 ;'i*?vcu <3
8? IFM??
W?l>?fi s BOOKLET OM MCTMCWMC'OD AIJOTKC DA BY, rjift
B?aofibl3 peculator Co., tKt't. 9 0 Atlanta. Ca. (
wing the new styles
ar by Florsheim. Men
he finest shoemaking
ive styles?the shoe
luced for the season.
ss are known every^
leir dressy style,
ity and perfect fit.
7lorshcitns is to have genuine
The new styles are ready.
'k ^ ^ ^ ^ 3$
ilSt* ??
|| gjgj ;"' ^
Iii England there are registered a 1
total of 000,000 women and girls who >
work only one or two days a week. >
The proceeds from all the plays
written by Queen Mane, of Rumania, ,
are devoted to the charities of her |
country. j'
~~~??~~ I s
Mrs. Lucy L. Wilson, called Amer-ij
ica's foremose woman explorer, is j
principal of a girls' high school in!
Philadelphia.
Mrs. Rosita Forbes, the noted wo- \
man explorer, was recently permitted !(
a visit with Kin;* George of Eng1- ,
land.
Mrs. Vivola V. Woodruff, of FJa.^h, '
N. Y., has mudo a fortune out of '
salted nuts which she makes at her-]
own home.
Onppn Vivtnviii nf Snitin vv;ic ??f
one time an enthusiastic ameteur actress
and was said to possess dramatic
talent a high order. <
Miss Olive Clapham, the first Eng- j
lish woman to pass the bar examina- j i
tion, may wear a wig when she |
makes her first appearance in court.
Mrs. Charles A. Kading, of Water- (
town, Wis., has been appointed a
member of the State Civil Service
Commission at a salary of ten dollars
a day. j
l
Another "first woman" record was j
made recently when Judge Florence
10. Allen, of Cleveland, Ohio, sentenced
a murderer to the electric chair.
Princess Beatrice, aunt of Kin# '
George, is a talented composer and is c
said to be the only really literary ,
member of the British royal family.
f
Practically all the Chinese eggs now t
arriving in this country are prepared v
for export by girls, who attend to all r
the breaking and separating. a
d
Rose Moriarity, of Cleveland, re- ,
cently appointed a member of the
Ohio Industrial Commission, is the
first woman ever to hold a post on
this commission.
Household duties and other pressing
activities is given as an excuse .
by Mrs. Anna M. McCleave for de- *
clininp the post of police and fire j
commissioner of Cumberland, Md. ;i
Nine hundred and five spinsters out :
of every thousand who have reached ;
the age of 25 live to be 45; 652 out of! :
every 1,000 reach 65; 110 reach 85, :
and 8 attain the age of 05. ;
0 II i M
Mrs. 01 lie B. Mackan, who for more ;
than twenty years has been the own- \
er and publisher of a newspaper in :
Plain City, O., has disposed of the j
property and retired from active busi- :
ness. 1
H
When a Turkish girl is of marriage- H
[11)10 ilI/O- th:it nftni* ulin li'io i.swtstU r
?n - , ? ? <? - '* vv? UIIV 1 ic*f? * Vttt II" I L
ed the age of tl, the parents make1*]
her marriage <-*1 business proposition, \ |
nnd the highest bidder draws the jj
prize. t
London has a school where girls |
ure taught to do "odd jobs" in their ]
jwn homes. The idea originated with (t
#
THE HOftftY 8SBALD. 009
ii ?????
i A
JrijH?.
Ji?w
tev
i Jo^nfJ
$ .? HI I 1
1 :* Vr
iim, '. r
,,Wv/ \?
4
iJ
1 i i. . ii i
Lady Robb, who now finds herself
vith more pupils than she knows
vhat to do with. I
??? I
Though she is heiress to $00,000,-,
)00, Miss Lolita Armour insists on
laving a school girl wardrobe as her
vedding trousseau and that there
-hal 1 be no "fuss" made over her marriage
to John J. Mitchell, Jr.
On some of the Greek islands,
Arhere the people earn their living by
;he sponge fisheries, no girl is allowed
to marry until she has brought up
certain number of sponges, which
must be taken from a certain depth.
In her twenty-five years as head
)f the pathological collections of the
bureau of plant industry of the Department
of Agriculture in Washingion,
Mrs. Flora W. Patterson has
wrought together more than 97,000
specimens.
A TONIC
drove'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. j
Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic is simply |
Iron and Quinine suspended in syrup. So I
pleasant even children like it. The blood I
needs QUIfftNE to Purify it and IRON to J
Enrich it. Destroys Malarial germs and ,
Grip germs by its Strengthening. Invigorating
Effect. 60c.
o /?
Comet.
( PVrk*v? !>? * r??x
v ? > VIII bllC UU.MUIl I IISSL
Don't worry any more about the
iability of the Pons-Winnecks comei
:oming into collision with the earth.
The astromers have now got it all
igured out that the comet will
each the point where its path crosses
that of the earth nine days before
he earth gets there. The two bodies
vill, therefore, be about 18,000,000
niles apart?which is not very far,
ifter all, as the astromers figure
listances.
o >
iOST?Saturday, June 4, on route
from Juniper Bay to Homewood,
one blue serge coat. Finder notify
J. T. McCrackin at Galivants Ferry,
S. C., R. F. D. 2, Box 61), and receive
due reward.?Advertisement,
6116 4t pd.
mtmtmmtmtxttntmttntxttttmtmttxn
NOTICE
j. TOBACCO ?
GROWERS
! ::
| For tobacco barn flues com;
municate immediately with Sas- ::
ser Company, Inc., Gurley, S. C.
; We manufacture the best tobac:
co barn flues in the county. ;
; File your orders with us im- ::
: mediately for future delivery.
Sasser Company, Inc.
Gurley, Horry County, S. C. :
Adv|7|l|21 j|
IWAY, 8. 0. JUKTK 16, 1*?1.
ARTICLES SELL
AS ADVERTISED
Away Ahead of The Substitute
That is Never Seen
in Print
HOME MERCHANTS
MUST ENCOURAGEj
Growth of Home Newspapei
% i
as Community Enterprise
and Service
Wc have from time to time called
the attention of the merchants of
Conway to articles that are advertised
in the Herald and, therefore,
brought before the people locally,
through the columns of this paper, as
well as other newspapers.
Wo have mentioned this with the
view of trying to got local dealers to
realize th'it they can have much great
or success with articles that are advertised
than with a similar product
that is not advertised. It is frequent-1
lv the case 4.hat a l>iu" company will ;
Droducc sonnet hinir tlu>t of cohovmI i
lvalue, and they will advertise it in all
|of the newspapers over the country,
jand create a general demand for what
they produce while some other comipany
will produce a substitute and
.never advertise it one single line and i
will expect to make large sales as a!
result of the advertising the other
company has done. As a general,
jrule when a local dealer tries to sell,
:to a customer an article he claims,
lis just as good as the one the customer
saw advertised, he either fails
to satisfy the customer, or fails to
make the sale entirely, if someone
.else in the same town \z carrying the
'advertised article. There is also another
good reason why merchants of
I Conway and other towns in the Counjty
should, if possible, carry on their
j shelves the goods advertised by National
advertisers. A good newspaper
'is an absolute necessity to the develop
ment of the community. It is, there-I
fore, to the interest of the merchants
and other business men to encourage!,
the local newspaper so that it may be j.
firmly established, and enabled to J
render to its readers such service as |
will make it profitable to all concern-jj
ed. Now if the local dealers in nat-[.
ionally advertised articles which ap- j
pear from time to time in the Horry
j Herald wni deal in those articles onlyij
I this will increase the sales and pro-j
j fits of the manufacturers, and will re- ]
I suit in still more advertising for the
paper. ~ .
o
Kill the Tobacco Worms with Arsenate
of Lead, 35c the po'md at 1
Piatt's Pharmacy.?Adv. ]
<2
tmk!fm nf\jfisf<itiion El .X
(D
Present lines
i models will
season.
Beginning Ji
prices will b<
Flint, Michi^
Model 22-44 Thre(
Model 22-45 Five
Model 22-46 Three
Model 22-47 Five
Model 22-48 Four
Model 22-49 Sever
Model 22-50 Sever
BUICK M(
Pioneer
Braru
4.
CONWAY
WHEN BETTER. Airjm
WHEN REi
F RTILIZl
LOR5S,
/VIRGINIA
/ CAROL1N
(4Ma!SRI?ll?l
\ CHEMICA
X, CO*
NOTICE OF ELECTION
In pursuance of an order made b\
1 ho County Board of Education for i
Horry County on the 10 day of June
11)21, the undersigned Trustees ot
District No. (>8 will hold an election ,
at Homewood School House on the
28 day of June 1921, upon the question
of levying a Special School Tax
of 10 mills upon the taxable property
of said District No. (>8.
Dated June 10, 1921.
C. H. SPIVEY,
W. J. WALLER,
J. M. ALFORD,
Board of Trustees, School
District No. 08
Advertisement?Gj 1C 2t.
HENS PAY FOR A HOME.
"I visited this week the home of a
little family that came here from1
Kansas five years a^o with just $33," j
writes a Florida home demonstration j
ift'cnt working in co-operation with
.lie United* Stales Department of
Agriculture. "Their White Leghorns
lave supported the husband, wife,
ind three children, paid for a little'
iiome, a motor car, several modern
poultry houses, and many other
hings needed in the business. At
present there are about 1,000 birds
m this place. The husband and wife
1o most of the work."
o
CLERKS?(Men, Women) over 17,!
for Postal Mail Service. $120 month. I
Experience unnecessary. For freej
i i
UIC
> of new Buick
be carried thi
me 1st the nev
s as follows, f. o
^an.
Old P
5 Passenger Roadster, $11
Passenger Touring, - $n
; Passenger Coupe, - $25
Passenger Sedan, - - $28
Passenger Coupe, - $29
i Passenger Touring, $20
i Passenger Sedan, - $32
DTOR COMPANY, FLINT
Builders of Valve-in-Head Moto
-firs in all Principal Cities?Dealers ICveryiohe
Local Dealer
UJES CO., S. P. Hai
10BII.ES ARK BUILT. BUIC
PAGE SEVSOr
\DY FOR
ERS SEE
Kardwick
s.c.
Y Agent#
A\ for
a? v
y_ c
particulars of examinations, write R.
Terry, (former Civil Service examiner)
994 Continental Blclg., Washington,
D. C.?-Advertisement 6; 1G 2t.
Get tho paper you need at the Herald
office^
ASPIRIN
Name "Bayer" on Genuine
Beware! Unless you see the twurm
"Bayer" on package or on tablets you
are not getting genuine Aspirin proscribed
by physicians for t\v( ty-one
years and proved safe by million Take
Aspirin only as told in the Bayer ^loxago
for Cold-a, Headache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism,
Karacho, Toothache, Lumbago, and
for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve Bayer
Tablets of Aspirin cost few cents. Druggists
also sell larger packages. Aspirin
is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacturer
of Monoaceticacidestor of SaiicylioacidU4
<i>
B m. Fmbltm ofSatuftictwm
Q>
six-cylinder
ru the 1922
v series and
. b. factories,
rices New Prices
'95 $1495
95 $1525
>85 $2135
195 $2435
85 $2325
>65 $1735
V5 $2635
MICH.
r Cars
rt
i
*ves, Manager
K. WILL BUILD THEM