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FIKT* COMMON WORDS I How many of them can you spell I -where any I having read ' I answer said I v piece grammar | + - raise separate 11 ready shoes ' I much enough 1 beginning truly I trouble they 1 hearse straight 1 Instead busy I to-night again 1 wrote xnatt&gL I sugar sifice I breaks ? used . Tuesday > verv Wednesday v;y won't j?' dear whether Mf s?ys hear always here wear ache cough tear believe choose knew tired WORKKD TO DEATH Nine words do one-fourth our "work, And these nine words you see: the x it you 'r ^'ill and . are to be Thirty-four more words do one-half our work, These words their duty never shirk; ^ We wish you each to learn tlieni all, The reward is great, the labor small: at come as they all dear go hear if much jn save me that on this | *T)Ut time | can with get your toer about not there one tho see write she for sew Spoiling Match Try these words In a spellng match! Cut them out and paste them somewhere wher<i you can look at 'them often. While you brush your hair in the morning, or wash dishes after supper. o A?is for apple which hangs on the tree, B?is for bees which make honey for me, C?is for cow who gives us our . food, >D?is for dairy whose milk is so good, E?is for eggs which our hens sometimes lay, F?is for ^fertilizer to make corn, cotton and hay, G?is for grapes that hang 011 the vine, H?is for harrow which makes fieldss so fine. '1?is for ice which in summer we buy, J?is for jay bird that chirps in trees nearby, K.?is for kitchen where mother bakes cake, L?is foi lamp you should never shake, M?is for market where farm crops are sold, N?is for North wind that always blows cold, ()?is for oil thjit all farm tools need, P?is for plows tha.t opens furrows for seed, Q?is for quilt which Aunt Mary likes to piece, It?is for rooster whose crowing will not cease, S?is for silo which supplies cows with green feed, T?is for tractor whose service we need, U?is for umbrella J.hut keeps off the rain, .V?is for vetch which makes the soil rich for grain, W?is for wagon in which we may ride. <X, Y, Z may go by our side. TRUE EPITAPHS Here was a cemetery, u real cemeterv. tombstones, cedar trees and all. Why are no many people reading those epitaphs and laughing? "Grandma washed herself away." "Sacred in the memory of Jane. "She scrubbed herself into heaven.' "Mother?walked to death in hei kitchen." A long-distance kitchen shorten life. JOKF.S A teacher sent a small boy hom< because he had never been vaccinal ed and thi<- ?r>te came back: Tnn/?liPv* "He dun had every sickness bu . ^ the bol weevil let him stay. "John's Pa." Tn Sunday school the teacher asks "Tom, who w.us Jeremiah?" "I don't know, hut I do know : lot about Jerry Moore." "Why are watermelons full o watier ? o A GRANDMOTHER GRADUATED FROM PUBLIC SCHOOl A grandmother graduate of th Chicago public schools received he eight grade diploma while her onl son and his 2-year-old baby sat i the audience and witnessed the cere mony. The grandmother was one o 14^ grown men and women who ro ceived their credentials from th r? r hools. The class roll wa? made 'P of three Americans, one Italian, 110 Bohemian, one Lithuanian, two Koreans, two Hebrews, three Greeks, And one Chinese, and the*"co(irse of tudy was only open to these wouldbe masters of American institutions >y earning the wherewithal of life by night that they might feed the nind by day. The majority of the graduates iiave already signified heir desire to continue their school work. ... j o \VHY~\VE HAVE DAY AND NIGHT \\To know that it is day when the &u}f shines-, but why does the sun *ToT aways shine? What makes the sun set and rise? Some people tliinL- th'ii llio <1111 rnn.llv <? nn and goes down. We know Hhis is not true but that the earth turns around from west to east which makes it look like the sun rises and sets. To illustrate: Take a hat pin and push it through some round object, an apple or an orange. * lMa-.e a light of ary kind near the object. Turn the < bject around on the hat pin and you will f-jfe how the light fa'ls only on one side at a time. Thus half the time one halt of the object is in darkness and one half in light. Now the hat pin is an axis for tho apple. Thfc earth does not have a hat pin foi* an axis but does have two points called poles on opposite sides which act as an axis. The earth r?volves on its poles just as the annlt- revolves mi fhn luif nin we have day and night. it takes the earth twenty-four hours to revolve on its axis. Which is longer, now, day-time or night-time ? o MAN AND WIFE DIE IN GEORGIA Remains of T. T. Turheville Pass Throurjh Conway on Saturday T. T. Turbeville, known to many friends as Hose Turbeville, died in the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Hospital at Waycross, Ga., last week and his remains were sent to his former home here, near Socastee for burial, passing through Conway last Saturday. From this point his body w.is taken by the undertaking establishment of Goldfinch Bros, to the interment at Socastee Cemetery. Mr. Turbeville's wife preceded him to the grave by about five weeks. Roth of them died from the same cause, typhoid fever, followed by the complication of an attack of pneumonia. Mr. Turbeville was employed bv the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company at Waycross, Ga. He was a son of the late J. J. Turbeville and Harriet Turbeville jmd belonged to one of the oldest and 'most distinguished families in the eastern portion of this county. His wife was a sister of Mrs. J. M. Mariow of Conway. They are survived by an only son who accompanied the remains of his father here. o oe Vcirp or t- Strain Irritability of the stomach, loss of appetite, dyspeptic symptoms after partaking of food, dizziness. nausea niid vomiting are often caused by eye strain. After the eyes are examined mkI glasses are worn the symptoms 'li>appi"U\ Children during the period of school" life who frequently suffer *:<>m heartache, loss of appetite and Haziness and are behind in their work <h?'uid have their eyes examined and he eye strain relieved by prescribed glasses. x- -x- -x- -x- -x- x- x- x -;< -x x * -x -x- -x- # r $ I * ?*> mu * I Delicio * . t I Ou r wholesome Ladyfi | Cream Puffs, fancy Iced - % Macrones, Chocolate M m % nnfo A 1 1 \Y7_r. ? liuio, aisu J~\1II1UI1U w aie % copias, St. Germanis. x * $ I \ T | p They are made of th< r | % (he most sanitary conditi $ * ?| Hyman' c ************************* I ! t > THE HOBBY HERALD, OQN ^ NEW TIMES HERE t OLD TIMES GONE < Deur Old Herald: [ I will drop you a line or two for J your valuable paper. I hope it will ' escape the waste basket. 1 ,1 will say first, all things have J passed away and all things have,(be r , come new. " ,^ I will say seepnd, We^u^'-to go to t church, the pi6kc'heV(l stood : Up irt a \ high place called the pulpit, he t preached hell and damnation to. ( s'nners unless they repented for ] their sins. Heaven and Eternal Bliss , to (he Christians if they be faithful ( and true. It is not so today, when ,\ he comes in the church now, a.id > looks at his little yellow watch, takes t from his pocket often times a well written sermon, he talks about thiity minutes. When he gets through we i take him home with us and give him i a nice chicken dinner and compost i cake, and a lot of other good things. t Somtimes seme of us are curbing and j \ quarreling before he ^ets home. We use to have the old lvymn books J ] scattered t bout over the house. Sai;.e,v brother would often raise a tune, i Often someone would b;? shouting and ; praising CJod, there was so much j. -w>i old time soncrs. it 1 w.->|n_-i in v..v - is not so now, we get us a little g girl;md put her on an organ stool with fc a little wad of hair over each ear and I a choir around her, singing for peo- i pie to do that they never have done, s which is to net salvation. t We are looking for the letter now t instead of the spirit "The Letter ? Killeth", but the spirit "Maketh Alive." It was not so forty or ? fifty years ago. 1 passed old Rehohoth church, the first of last fall ' and there was a crowd of young peo- f pie and some of the older ones. There was a service held there that j5 P. M., I>ut not like it use to be. The meeting house is a big white ' one with glass windows, it was * painted up nice the seats and stand 1 lip to d"1'\ B"< ' did"'4 same spirit in it that I did thirty |. one years ago. Jn^Phe old Ifouse that was made out of beards riven with | a frow and smoothed with a draw 1 knife. The men that did'this work rn the old house are no doubt in j Glory this P. M., for that was their ^ last words of all of them that 1 knew and I knew about all of them t They often rode to church in their U carts drawn by old fashioned oxen, J they would stay there sometimes and 11 sing, preach and shout until mid-'c ni/rht and after. The women were > the old fashioned stick bonnets. But ( it is not so today. We say that is * foolishness today, that noboby does t '* *' - a 11 .?li f iviinrloil nn/ir\lrt J, 11 111UCII llllt uimuvu jt That is the third meeting; house 1 that lias been built there at the ( above mentioned place. They use to 1 do the same way at Cool Springs, t Pisgah, Poplar, Brown Swamp, Antioch and Salem, .an old log house where I was converted. Good Hope church and others I have not mentioned. There is only three things asked for as a whole by the public, one is good roads, good health and an education. I know when there was not a person in jail in Conway and a call court to do on a- crimnal action, and nothing on docket. Now it is slaughter of each other both life and character. The jails are about filled to their capacity now, I guess. We use to go to school and study our lesson in the old blue-back spoiling book. We knew about as much when we got to the pictures athey know when they get to the j seventh grade, now hey have to learn their lessons at home and go to the school house to recite them. Hoys use. to say speeches Friday P. M., and the girls oftimes spoke ov j > essay, or both. Now it is .some worldly songs, the brown jug or lyankee doodle, or some dlher song. * "X* -x-x * -x- * * * :< -x- * -x- -x- * -x- x- -x- -x- -x- -xi I! f * II V* 9 1 us! - 1 it - :t ' * * mgers, Sponge, Jelly Drops, | Cake of all kinds, Cocoanut \\ 11 acrones, Chocolate Dough- \\ rs, Turkish Wafers, Cornu- 1 S I 9 J 3 9 9 9 9 i very best ingredients under j ons. f | i s Bakery I WAY, S. O., FEB. 2, 1922 Old man Earle Ellis, and others^ aught school for twenty and twenty ive dollars per month, nowjmq&t of )laces it runs from seventy-five to wo hundred dollars per month. Hore taxes, more schq^ls and more jcople and worse crimes. Useto the pirls got up and cooked breakfast, the >oys fed the stock as they were told. It is not so now, the girl lies in bed Q,.'a Jate hour, and so does the boys ill tfcM*wwutheiMKqt,ffryb ready for hem -U> .eaitJ, bead may, iche and also tier ;Rftck. ..She may call Mariah Jane...ihiuJ the, Jesses. Lt useto was not so, the father and nother aie born iirst, %but the :hildien seem to be the oldest in the lead. Anywhere that the train scops and there is a drug stoit2 you an look in as you go by, you can .ve the girl>! with their long bosom waists and their high up skirts with i \ oung niuu ahead of them drinking eel dopes thro a quill from i-bouour o'clock in the evening till abour. jloven at night before th< y g^t thro a ith# their drinking and moving pic ic .-rows. ino cow Knows wnere licr calf is, and all the animals know vheiv their young are. Rut the i nothers do not know where her girls | ire! Sometimes they say I am just oing down the street or to a rieighk)r-s house, but instead steps into an lutomobile, and may be gone acnty or thirty miles and gone in >athing almost (as God made) it iseto was not so, and should not be 10 now. These are the future wives hat stand out ahea-d of the young i n-en today. Oh Clod, where will this Lop at, when the few old heads are jotie? Where will this take up at. )h dear girls God gave you thac iead for something else than to save a- plac^ to put your hat. You ire the only ones that can reform his world, lift up the standard and ay that to that young man when ie offers to go to the movies, tell lim that you want your lives enter :ained better than by those trashy lungs. Your mother used a wash tub for ler baths, now you use the Atlantic jcean and rivers and lakes nearest >y at a late hour at night. I would ike to say now that we are no stronger than the ones who have i'od life's road before us. The aire old vine that tripped and threw others morally is still there to lip and throw us. 1 "passed GaU,ants Ferry some time ago and saw t Pavilion building out over the iver and a refreshment house ready lone. God only knows what satan .vi 11 do there. I was in Tennessee >nce a few years ago and 1 saw ;ome who would have been glad if hey could go back home, both men ind women. I have heard them say "I would almost give the world if I could stand where I once stood." We can never go back, we have got ,o go ahead. There is only two I _ r arr< v-: *. ^ raw. -m '/ak'O^ I I_ All made at tl know what is in t ing the quality oi work and care uj better value in th< I Scratch Pac Dozen Two Dozen Writing Ta I Dozen i %The scratch that you would i in the pad and 1 for shopping an< aie taken out anc The writing the nice letter, and there are p while |liey are ii 11 Horry I t tK=MM==3ma=^m==jmM==mm=zm N slopping places, we are on our way to one or the other. Young men there is but one thing on earth to 1 make a man out of and that is a boy 1 Lift your head above the ball room ' floor and the slop stands. We are ] not any higher in than we are in i our hearts. You have, got more to \ be thankful for than your father i and mother had. Where there is', union there is strength, and all that , is .good. I remember whan the Meth odist and the. Baptist lexers would help each others meeting^,'. God only knows the joy .and souls v that wer^i saved.. We* use to kneel tJk prayer, I but now they stand up. I <Jqn 1t why this is only to get tjuj, i?'ay?r??' *is high as they cfrn, in other''vvo^is. y^bout health agaiiv I will say'alj of the food now-a-days is examined; whether we eat it or not. Our fathers shot a cow down ami turned her on some rrils or poles and butchered her, with his neighbors help he carried it to the house, his, wife cooked from eight to ten rounds of it and iltni nV?ilrlvor? cat it to their satisfaction. People in those days often lived to be seventy and eighty years of a fee, it is m i so now. When a man marries now be had better buy a share in a drug store or hire a doctor by the year, for now it takes more paragorlc. 'oria end soothing syrOfTs and rubber nipples to raise one baby than it did to raise a whole townj ship in years gone by. 1 u^cto live, near Cool Spring and Ji go and come ! Kv rw old home. There is not anything there that looks like it useto, i but the same old road that leads to i heaven and character is still open. Well I will cU>se this time with best wishes to all who read this article, j "DICK." P. O. Box 81, Cerro Gordo, N. C. , j o Ffmoub Kiclcon.rta'll. The original Haiidon hall Is iv-i allies southeast <>f I? *Ut*.vel 1 Perbv shire, ICnglund. It belongs to I liu duke of ltutland and Is a notable oxample of the medieval residence of a great English proprietor. o Mica an Excellent Insulator. Mica does not burn or melt, excepj at a very high temperature, and therefore. Jt Is an excellent electric insula* tor. It Is non-hygroscopic and otters more resistance to high voltage electricity than any. Insulating material known., ? o improvement Always Mutual. No improvement that takes placo In either of the sexes. can he confined to itself; each Is a universal mirror to eaeh; and the respective refinement of the one will he In reciprocal proportion to the polish of the other. ?Col ton. BMBEna2SHZ3!HEBL153^ Mmrrm? vamm?r;/ j-if. fl r ELW* n t> ? >.< hie Herald office by the Herald hem and know they are well nr f the pctper that ^oes in them $cd in producing them we'knc 5 world. PRICES Is, each rf m m m / blets, each 0 pads will save you much moi ase for mere figuring. You ca eave the rest of the leaves intcd keeping memorandums. ^ 1 the others left. i tablets will give you just What) They are in either letter~hea< lenty in stock. Get your stijb i stock. derald Pri . v - .' q i - gggg NOTICE OF SALE. Under and by virtue of a decree in the case of Bank of Loris, a corporation, plaintiff, vs Sarah E. Cox and W. S. Cox, defendants, signed by his honor S. W. G. Shipp; Judge of the nary 14th., A. D. 1922 I, W. L. Bryan, nary 14th., A. D. 1922 1, W. L| Bryan, v. Clerk of Court, as Special Master, will ^ offer for s&le at the Court House door, to the highest bidder during the legal hour.? of sale on sales day in March next that being 1he 6th. day of said month, the .following lands and tenements', to-^'it: ALU AND SINGULAR: \11 that certain tract or parcel ot land situate, lying and being in Simpson Creek Township, Horry County, South Carolina and on the east side of Buck Ci'eek, waters^of the Waccaiflaw, and on the West side of the public road leading- from Loris to Little River, beginning at a ditch in .T. M. Butler's 1 i.he; thence North 45 VV 3S.50 to a stake corner; thence South 34 1-2 W 9.r>0 to a black gum; thence South v 15 1-2 W. 12.50 to a small pine corner; thence S. 33 E. 3.50 to a knot; thence S. 78 E. 18 chains to another knot; thence S. E. 5.75 to a ditch an agreed line between Rufus D. M41IKgan and wife. Sarah Milligan, and John M. Butler; thence with said agreed line to the beginning, and is bounded on the East and N-^rth by lands of John M. Butler, on the West by lands of W. L. Prince, on the South by lands of S. J? G. Milligan, containing fifty (50) acres, more or less, and is better known as the identify* 1 piece, parcel or tract of land conveyed to William Hughes by Rufus D. Milligan and Sarah Milligan under their deed dated July 20th. A. D. 1894, and filed 3rd. dav of September. A. D. 1917. i'nd. recorded in Book G-4 page 23S Records of Horry County, South Carolina, and was conveyed to Sarah E Hughes Con by William Hughes and Prudence Hughes under their deed dated .Jul.u. 30th. A. jy. xut'v/f aim i c.ui \?i \i >.i - wi *. ?.? A. D. 1917, in Ro >k G-1 p.'lpe 2r-{<>. Records of Horry County, South Carolina. Terms of sale cash. Purchaser to pay for papers and damps. W. r, BUY AN, Clei k of Court Special Master. J. I. ALLAN Jit. Attorney for Plaintiff. Names Originally French. The famous Scottish dish "haggla" obtains Its imuio lroin the , Prencti "haciiis" ihinced meat. "Ashet" ? plate or large im-ntdish is directly derived from the Kn-fich "ussiette." A Human Salamander. Kngilsh Ad ? The Model Laundry, rhnnge of Proprietorship. Shirts ironed on the new priucipul.--lioston lYunscTint. ' ! 's own force. We f] lade, and consider- I and the amount of y >w that there is no R ,05 I .50 0 $1.00 I .10 I $1.00 U [ley in better paper U. in tear out any leaf f] ict. Just the thing' I rhen posted, leaves N y fou want for writing I J>fi>r note-head size U ply of all of these n / 1