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TAX NOTICE The b*?ks will be open for the collection of taxes for fiscal year 1922, from November 15th to . December 81st. 1922, without nenaltv. Payable during January with 1 per cent penalty; during February 1 per cent additional, and 5 per cent additional for March, making a total of 7 per cent from March 1st to 15th, at which time the books will close. REGULAR TAX LEVY The regular tax levy for 1922 is as ftllows: Mills State Tax 7% Constitutional school tax 3 Ordinary county purposes 10 Special County purposes 4% School Deficit 1 Highway fund 2 For Backs, Conway, Dog Bluff, Bayboro, Gallivants Ferry, Green Sea, J Floyds, Simpson Creek, Little River, Dogwood, Neck, and Socastoee an extra levy of 2 mills for township Road fund. An Oflclifi'nnol !?"? ?- * ? .... uuMiviviiui ICTJ IU jiay sjjecjai taxes voted for school purpones in o Skin Ablaze with Eczema Constant Itching Almost Unbearable! We know itbere is one thing that stops eczema, and that iu more rud-blood-cellis I 8. 8. B. builds thoin by the million! You can increase your re<l-blood cells to the point where it is practically impossible, for eczema to exist. We know that Uo blood-cells Increase In number, blood impurities vanish J We also know that night ifollows day. Both ;ore facts! Hut 'have yon, eczema sufferers, ever actually taken advantage of this wonderful fuctY Thousands just like you have never ^thought about it I Skin eruptions, eczema with all Ita fiery. Skin-digging: torture and its soultearing, unreachable itching, .pimples, iblackheads, and boils, (they all pack up.and fro, wbcntbe tide Of blood-celle begins to roll in! Blood-cells are.the flgb(lnf-(lnnta of nature? 8. S. 8. builds tbein by the million! It boa been doing It ainee 18261 f. S, 8. Is .on? of'the ^greatest blood*eell builders, blood-elennnern and bodybuilders known to us mortals! When you put these .facta .together,?-tton to continue to bare ccseraa and skin eruptions looks .more like ? sin than dinense. "Mn, Arthur N. Smith, Pearl at,, Newark, Ohio, writes: "My little girt had a very bad cmme .Of ergema. She began taking 8. S. S. amil ie w?U now. I Ouutk you wi/ much. f rtcU tny friend* what a good muxlieine it is. It eannot talk too .much about i it, j for 1 Imam' n it o. Kr Here is your 'opportunity. rt?.'8. 8. contains only rcgetaWe. medictaAl .Ingredients i Because 8. R. -Redoes builrt>f%rt*b]ood-<*ais.; it routs ?rheumatism, >build# firm fletflt' fills out hollrtw.ebeeks, beattOfief? thecowplcxion, builds yon np when >you are run-1; down. R. 8. 8.'is ?old at jiU?dm*r stores, in two sixes. The',larger size fcottlc is the j more economical. Stf (C* makee you feel .(9.0. Xke yourself again You can make your cows do their level best and also cut your feed bills by feeding Happy Cow Sweet Feed?24% protein. It's the best ' winter ration k n o w n. Feed with your home- ] grown roughage. 1 Jfade by Edgar - Morgan Co., Memphis. We tell it. 1 Call or 'phone us for prices. i < ? T. Collins Co., Conway, S. C. 1 i 6-W-ll ( t Confcn General Contractor and E hanger and Decorator. PI fully furnished. Have y< pert of long experience in A. K. H/ Uli?it. Box 324, Co Ti certain districts is as follows: ) Districts Mills No. 1 Port Harrelson 8 No. 2 Ever Green 10 No. 3 Dog Bluff 8 No. 4 Bayboro 8 No. 5 Sandy Plain 8 ^ No. 6 Athens 8 ) No. 7 Green Sea 36 f No. 8 fcear Bay 8 \ No. 9 Little River 23 ? No. 10. Dogwood Neck 8 c No. 11 Socastee 12 t No. 12 Collins Creek ? 8 No. 13 Withers 8 j No. 14 Savannah Bluff 30 ( No. 15 Haw Branch 8 j No. 16 Pine Grove 26 j No. 17 Waunamaker : 32 j No. 18 Loris 30 * XT _ 4A T? - - ** j^io. ii7 ourrouj^ns It) . No. 20 Mt. Olive ! 30 No. 21 White Oak 8 . No. 22 Burcol 16 ( Np. 23 Good Hope 8 < No. 24 Cetlar Grove 8 ? No. 25 Gurley 8 < No. 26 Cool Spring 18 * No. 27 Zion 28 ? No. 28 Chapel Hill 12 No. 29 Powell - 12 , No. 80 Princeville 8 ( No. 31 Sidney 8 ( No. 32 Hickory Grove 12 No. 33 Finklea 11 T No. 34 Oak Grove 8 j No. 35 Howard 10 f No. 36 Grassy Bay 24 ? No. 37 Midway 8 t No. 38 Hickory Hill 16 No. 39 Simpson Creek 30 No. 40 Joyner Swamp 8 t No. 41 Daisy 8 4 i No. 42 Hughes Mill 16 * !%>. 43 Hulls Island 8 No. 44 Deep Branch 12 j No. 45 Tilly Swamp 8 No. 46 Oakland 16 i No. 47 Red Hill 8 , No. 48 Eight Mile 30 % . No. 49 Red Bluff 8 No. 50 Floyds 24 No. 51 Floyds X Roads 28 No. 52 Popular Hill !. 8 ( No. 53 Allen 18 , , No. 54 Valley Forge 8 No. 7>5 Knotty Branch 20 No. 5o Sanford 8 No. 57 Sweet 'Home 30 i No. 58 .Johnson 8 | No. 59 High Point 8 J \ No. 61 Wampee 12 No. 63 Rehoboth 30 No. 64 Enterprise 11 No 65 12 No. 67 Mt. Pisgah 8 No. 68 Home wood 8 No. 69 Maiile 12 No. 70 Poplar 8 No. 71 Shell 18 No. 72 Leen -8 . No. 73 Mt. Herman 8 No. 74 Four Mile 12 ' No. *75 Virgo ..... 8 No. "70 'ToddvHle '8 No. 77 Straw field '3 ' No. ^8 Ebenezer 8 No. 80 Spring branch 14 No. 81 Salem 8 No. 82 Mill Swamp 8 ' N/>. m Red Hill 8 j No. 84 Brunson '8 : No. '85 'Watts 8 j No. 87 Norton 8 \ No. 88 Waccamaw 8 No. '89 Seven Mile -8 1 No. 90 Vauley Swamp 8 No. 79 Bucksport 8 *No. 92 Naughts 4 . 'No. .94 ?ak Grove "8 No. 95 Twelve Mile . No. 9C, Eldorado .. 8 ! No. 97 Carolina 28 j No. 98 TCingston 10 ! rr?. 99 Aynor lf? | i JZo. 101 Feasant Grave 12 ^ SCHOOL HOIT$E BOND TAX ! ? An additional levy of ten (10VJ crfiDs? in district Nos 18, a nil'59; eigtat (8) mills in district No.! t 51, and five and a half <5^2) mills in [ distnrct No. T9; two (2') mills in dis-' r trict 'No. 80; ten (10) mills in dis-j 1 trict "No. 10 ^'Special Act.) 'CAPITATION TAX < r A poll tax of one dollar for '! stehoo'1 purposes, is levied upon every 7 male Citizen between the ages of 21 f and CO years, jtfjle to earn a living- i except Confederate veterans over 50 f years -did. h DOd TAX f A ~ J-ll 1 - A? ' - n i<i.\ ui unc uciiuii ?iiu a quaner,j | payable from Jan. 1st to February t 1st, is Jevietl on each clop in -the coun- n ty. Do# tag's can be obtained at the r treasurer's office. r COMMUTATION ROAD TAX ], Road tax for 1923 is $6.00 and v nayable from January 1st to May v 1st, 1923. FISHERY STAMPS P'ishcry 5-fcamps can be obtained at ^ the countv treasurer's office at .any , time. ? Those who write for statement of n( taxes will please state whether or p not their property is all in one schocrt district, and give number of district, >r districts. C. E. BARKER. * County Treasuiw- t L2j7'22-4t. v December 4th, 1022. RENT NOTES w Rent notes, the best you have ever . lad, are on sale at The Herald office. .V 3et some and use them in closing your contracts for this year. They will do w he work. == di I ^ - " I bf acting a r<i Guilder, Painter, Paper- re lans and estimates cheer- 1 mr work done by an exhigh class work only. MMET nway, S. C. f tii % IB HOBBY OOHWAY. WOMANTAKEN ' HAIR CUT OFF Houston, Tex.?Aided by seven- ? 'ear-old Bonnie Lee Harrison, said to lave seen a mob of 15 or more dis- e fuised men drag her mother from her n tome, cut off her hair and whip her, e luthorities expected today to come v >ut in the open with their investigaion. * tl The whipping was administered to d Mrs. Harrison, 30, a wido>\, the night h >f January 5th, she admitted to ofIcers, but had been kept secret until ? Friday when rumors were circulated. S X. A. Armand, 28, of Middletown, Tex., was also taken out by the dis- t ruised men. ? The child was the first to see the a nob members, one of whom knocked >n the door of the Harrison home at c, 3oose Creek, an oil town 35 miles 1 southwest of Houston, about 9 A. M. r 3he told her mother that the caller o vas dressed "all in white." Later, ;he victim8 of the mob told how two >f its members wore the garb of wo- 1 rien while others dressed as circus J 'lowns. comedians and other odd characters. Mrs. Harrison when interviewed by newspaper men, refused to describe i :he alleged assailants other than to" ?ay they were disguised. Armand alio failed to throw light on the identify of the fifteen or more men. At least one of the mob members s expected to be identified by the lit;le . She told Deputy Sheriff Hamilton she would know one of hem. * Arnvind is confined to his bed, his > 3Hck lacerated by many lashes. Sheriff Binford, who was said to lave had the endorsement of the Ku Klux Klan at the election last fall, lenied that the klan had anything to 1 lo with the affair. I Similar cases previously had been s reported in which residents of Goose t Dreek wore taken from their homes v Mid whipped, but few of those who s eturned covered with bruises arc will- c ng to talk. t Armand said Mrs. Harrison bad y ieen ill for several days and he had y rone to her home with fruit only a a "ew minutes before the masked mob ^ irrived. o N A Paradox j Old Doctor McChesney I Grew grey at his work; The poor were his charges, a No case did he shirk. No elaborate system x Of accounting for him? I T-T n eiMirvIt* iv, i-iuij/i,* innuc vii-lltv?" g Collections were slim. Now swell. Doctor Bluffer. Though his technic was bad. ~ 0 He practiced in mansions, And the poor?seldom had, j 'Thev call him "successful'" ^ 'And ;a "'wonderous NM. T)'.M 'For he always collected f A magnificent fee* ^ But poor OM McChesney * 'Was a failure, they say, He cared not for plaudits He cared not for pay. Here's a tip from St. Peter, t At the heavenly pate? "There's a harp for McChe^ney, I For'the'Bluffer, a skate." ?The Augusta Chronicle. v + I ilOKRY LVDUSTWAL } SCHOOL NOTES ^ v February 2nd is a fateful day at the f lorry 'Industrial School, for mid- r :erm examinations begin then. The * m Pet in hoard showing the dates and c Objects "is a place of common inter- ?^t .and snvone curing to'know some- f Wing of what the students have on heir hearts along now may gain this r> tstimate by loitering about the hall ? ooking on. The dining room was a cheery, hap- v >v and homelike place from 7:30 to t 0 o'clock Saturday evening, January (1 '3th, when t.hp faculty entertained <s he student body. Interesting games (j ncluding many participants were z Hayed, but the most interesting nuni- n >er was a contest after the puzzle a^hion made up from Bible names. |> ''he students' were coupled two and wo and allowed to make up their pn- Q ers accordingly. Two prizes were ofered, one for the best and one for fj he poorest paper. The first was won l> y Ralph Lewis, .and Sadie Floyd, /hTle Forest Floyd and Hazel White -ere awarded the booby prize. In The Watson Literary Society electel new officers January 5th, for the econd three months. Thev were as ?allows: Tv. A. Bass, president; BilA Dr. * 1 " 1 c i ukc. vicu-president; Hazel "White, 1 rmsor; Sadie Floyd, critic, and Nell 'a pre secretary. "j We have just now come to the real m ews. Our steam plant and hot water astern have been completed. When ^ earn was let Into the radiators on unitary 10th, and they hegan to mut- , !r and hiss, (but best of all began to law out these brick walls), there ere merry hearts about this place. ^ Then it was not long1 before the . >ys put the shower bath equipment 1 irough its initiatory service, nor ould it be the least unfair to sur- q( ise that the bath tubs on the upper . oor soon had their long: period of ^ suse broken. Now we are comfortable and at ime. Our greatest handicap has ?en removed aijd we are coming into .. lr own. With every part of the . lilding comfortable, hot and cold ^ inning water, a sanitary drinking untain in the lower hall for the i if o?\/l ? .-.v.* auu cictmt iikiii^, we see no " ( ason why we should not do work of e highest quality. u( o * is The meeting of the Stnte Teachers' Th Rsociation has been postponed from ^ arch 8th-0th-10th to April 12th, Tr< :th. and 14th. This action was taken be cause it was thought it would l>e iwise to have the meeting during the xn< ne Billy Sunday is in Columbia. 8 F S. C, JAM. 25, 1923 DITFORD NEWS 1 I Sowing tobacco beds is the order 1 f the day. 1 The local unit of the Tobacco Grow- ( rs of Floyds met last Wednesday 1 ight with a good rrwany farmers presnt. The outlook for the good tl>ey ( /ill do is very bright. Mr. E. M. Mears is chairman of his unit afod when he puts his shoul- j er to the wheel he makes things | um. j Mr. and Mrs. C. F. DuBose motored ver to Mullins on a shopping tour iaturday. Miss Hattie Willoughby, one of the eachers of Floyds school has been way from her school for a week on iccount of having the "flu." Almost every man you meet in a ar is a guano agent. Mr. C. F. DuJose, the agent for A. A| Co., is worying some of the farmers about their rder for his goods. IRA GERALD. KLAN ACCUSED IN LOUISIANA racts Drawn From Unwilling Witness at Bastrop Louisiana SKIPWITH COMES IN Jaid That Klan Usurped the Rights of the Constituted Authorities Stories of a meeting of the Ku tlux Klan in the Morehouse Parish, -.a., court house, of a meeting of a elect committee to pass on the quesion of a Mer Rouge citizen charged villi "anti-Klan" activities, and of infractions given three Mer Rouge itizens "to leave town" contributed o the record last week in the open learings, now under way into the looded band activities in Morehouse ind the kidnapping and slaying of Vatt Daniel and Thomas Richards. For the first time during the instigation the name of Governor fohn M. Parker was brought to the ore by a witness. 111.. '4. ? 4- rt.. ..4. Ol.! ill. IJ"> It IIUl true Lllill V-V'ipu OKipWUIl ilways became indignant when Governor Parker's name was mentioned?" vas asked of R. I/. Dade, mayor of Acr Rouge, who described himself as i former Klansman. Dade replied in the affirmative. Capt. Skfpworth is exalted cyclop*? >f the Morehouse Klan organization. Dade was testifying as to the meetnirs being held to "restore peace in iter Rouge." "Under the regalia of the Klan had here not arisen a condition in the wish that is intolerable?" Dade was isked. .Activities of Klan. "Is not it a fact that the Klan ha.? superseded the constituted authoriies ?" "Yes, in a great measure," said )ade. > Hugh Clark, Mer Rouge merchant, i*ho admitted that he is a Klansman, nought forward the case of Addie tlay Hamilton, who testified that she kas deported from Louisiana by memierp of the Klan with a declaration hat nt. the request of the young wonan that she lie permitted to return o her home near Mer Rouge, he eirulated a petition and obtained the i^proval of Capt. Skip with for her "turn. Throughout the testimony today as n previous days, the name of Capt. Iklpwith had a prominent place. One Wilness, Fred Higginbotham, /ho testified that he was a member of lie Klan, declared the only officer of lie organization he could name was Ikipwith, and""another asserted that irecti011s that three Mer Rouge cit.iens quit the community was given v Skipwith. Membership of the Klan was Riven y Clark as between 300 and 400. "The woods was full of them," lark said in describing the attenance at an initiation ceremony in a eld some distance from the highway etween Bastrop and Mer Rouge. Clark on Stand Seven Hours. Clark was on the witness stand a trge part of the .afternoon. Clark told of circulating the potion seeking permission for the return '' Addie May Hamilton but he could r>t recall all those who signed it. here were only five men he could ame as members of the Klan. One s said was Capt. Skipwith, and the hers were Dr. B. M. McKoin,- former ayor of Mer Rouge, "Pink" Kirkatrick, George Sims and L. T. Sny>r. McKoin and Kirk Patrick were two the men the young woman previisly testified she recognized as nong a delegation of six hooded men ho came to her home and ordered r to leave the State. Pressed for names of Klan memrs, Clark asked Judge ' Fred L. lom, before whom the inquiry is beg held, if he was compelled to anrev. Judge Odom advised him to do so. "Well there was Sims?I can't resmber any others. The woods were 11 of them. Everything seems to ve slipped from my memory," ark said. "Where were you the night of Auist 24th?" was the next question. "Well, you know that's a funny o? COLD TNT TUT? HI?An" _ ? A A U llJUill/ an acute attack of Nasal Catarrh. o?e subject to frequent "colds" are orally In a "run down" condition. tALJ/S CATARRH MEDICINE Is a >atnrient consisting of an Ointment, to used locally, and a Tonic, which a^ts Ickly through the Blood on the Muis Surfaces, building up the System, 1 making you less liable to "colds." old by druggists for over 40 Years. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, O. thing," Clark replied. "I have heard so many rumors that I decided to find out just where I was on the 24fh. I asked a friend and he recalled I was at a Masonic meeting on that date and 1 went to the sercetary of the organization of which I am treasurer nnd he checked up and established that I was present. I then remembered what happed there. Some of the fellows who live in Collinston came in and told us of having brought back J. L. Daniel and W. C. Andrews and "Tot" Davenport. They said they had been flogged by masked men." August 24th is the date of the disappearance of Watt Daniel and Richards. J. L. Daniel, Davenport and Andrews were taken prisoners by the black hooded band at the same time Watt Daniel and Richards were kidnapped. Acted as Bodyguard. Clark said that on the night an attempt was made to assassinate Dr. McKoin?about which the kidnapped men said they were questioned when they were taken?he acted as a bodyguard for the physician to allow him to complete his round of calls. Clark described the bullet holes in McKoin's car which he said were made by buckshot. He declared it "Miraculous" that McKoin escaped injury. Mrs. Clark preceded her husband on the witness stand. She testified she did not know her husband was a member of the Klan. Mrs. Clark was 11 i ? ? I f.'Mioci to verity a statement made bv another witness that she had remarked thM "the next time the Ku Klux eot T??chards he would not get off so light." "Tf 1 made that statement I was just like all other women, talking about something that everybody else was talking about," she said. During the testimony of "Dade it developed that he had received anonymous instructions to "clean up the town." "What was the substance of the letter?.," Dade was asked. "That we were wallowing in a cess pool of lawlessness, he replied. "They said for us to clean up?-I clean up the town and if 1 did not, they would swoop down 1,000 strong/ and do it themselves. The letters! ?ailed to verify a statemend made by j were signed '100 per cent Americans,' and 'vigilante committee."" "You showed the letters to Dr. McSkipwith, who told me if I cleaned' not ?'' Why Don't You Clean Up? "Yes. T handed the letter to Cnpt. Slcipwith, who told me if 1 cleaned up the town I would not be getting such letters. Dr. McKoin also said, 'Whv don't vou clean up the town like I did?' ' "I said it is just as clean as when you were mayor." It also was during Dade's testimony that it was brought out that meetin ?rs were held between Mer Rouge -1 1/1 l 1 - - " 1 i-iiiaciin una rvian le/iuers lonowen oy instructions from Skipwith that three Mer Rouge citizens should leave. Reports were current that A. H. Davenport, of Mer Rouge, was "the brains" of the anti-Klan element,1 Dade testified. Then a conference at Monroe was arranged, he declared, to "clear the Devanport family name," and also to discuss A. C. Whipple, Tom Milner and Walter Campbell, and Governor Parker. "Davenport's position was satisfactorily explained," the witness testified. "and Skipwith said he would see to it that the Davenports were protected, hut that 1 would have to tell Whipple, Campbell and Milner to leave." Fred Higginhotham declared one of the meeting places of the Klan in regalia was tho Morehouse court house room, in which the present hearing' is in progress. Hi'vgirbotbam said he was well acquainted with men in the parish and that lie practically knew everybody in Bastrop, but "to save me 1 just couldn't recognize anv of those present at any of the Ku Klux Klan meetings." Asked by Stranger. "Who asked you to join the Klan?" Higginbotham was asked. "A stranger who came here to organize it." The court took a recess until tomorrow morning at 10 o'clock, after J. C. Nell is, who discovered the bodies of Daniel and Richards in Lake La Fourehe, had testified briefly as to the roads leading to the lake. The names of nineteen prospective witnesses were made public tonight. Mayor Dade and Sidney White are to be recalled, and in addition the following were included in the list of IF SICK, BD STARTJ Don't Take Calomel! "Dodson Doesn't Gripe, Salivate or Lose a Day's Work \ i ugni Calomel makw you sick. It's horriblo! Take a dose of the dangerous drug tonight and tomorrow you may lose a day's work. Calomel is mercury or quicksilver which causes necrosis of tlio bones. Calomel, when it comes into contact with sour bile crashes into it, breaking it up. This is when you feel that atvful uausea and cramping. If you are sluggish and "all knocked out," if your liver is torpid and bowels constipated or you have headache, diz/.inese, coated tongue, if breath ia bad NOT ABSENT NOR TARDY The following "tire the names of the pupils of the Burroughs school who have neither been absent nor tardy, and have made a general avemge of ninety-five per cent on scholarship to be on the highly distinguished list or have made a general average of ninety per cent to be on the distinguished list foi the school month ending January 12th, 1023: Grammar School. First Grade. Distinguished?Lucille Cook. Mary H. El well, Margaret McCormack, Martha F. Quattlebaum, Sara Sherwood. Advanced First Grade, Highly Distinguished.?Louise Collins; Distinguished, Madeline Dusenbury, Edna Newton, Rebecca Sarvis, Ernest Richardson, Sam Rabon. Second Grade. Section B, Highly Distinguished.?Winnie F. Eubanks, Cecil Hawes, Adelyn Goldfinch. James Booth; Distinguished, Francis Anderson Lessie Mitchell. Second Grade, Section A, Highly Distinguished.?Esther H. Baldwin, Helen Goldfinch; Distinguished, Helen Johnson, Vera Rheuarke, Mary O. Ward. Third Grade, Section B, Distinguished.?Hoyt McMillan, Jr., (Hoyt, what became of the others ?) Third Grade, Section A. Highly Distinguished.?Lula Hardy, Ruby Jones, Maggie Price, Leila Taylor, Eleanor Winborne, L.*iura J. Quattlebaum; Distinguished, Rembert Lane, Alice R. Harrison. . Fourth Grade, Highly Distinguished?Eugenia Buck, Sadie Long; Distinguished. Katherire McCoy. Edward \ vf U /\1 I i/-li\ A . Win ?u/ut r i i l wi l n Kl v , niCAiUIUCl" Quattlebaum, Fleet Tyndall, J. S. Vaught. Jr. Fifth Grjide, Section B. Highly Distinguished.?Jamie Norton, Cle^ia W ilson, Ralph Moore; Distinguished. "Rubv Anderson, Mary W. Scarborough, Donald Anderson. J. B. Chestnut. Fifth Grade, Section A.? High 1 v Distinguished.?Daisy TV Bellamy; Distinguished, Sidney Goldfinch, T. J. Price. Paul Quatt'ebaum, Jr. For last morth distinguished list: Sydney Goldfinch, T. J. Price. Six^h Grade, Highly Distinguished.?Vivien Cox. Elizabeth Mitchell; Distinguished. Mariam Alexander, Billy Barrett, Geraldine Bryan, Gertruds Davis, K.ute Harris. Samuel Hawes, Jr., Edgar Jordon, Annie Wait Scarborough. Adelvn Sherwood. Seventh Grade, Highly Distinguished.? Vivian Burroughs, Ernest Cannon, Henry Hollidny, Elizabeth Ward; Distinguished, Ruby L. Dusenbury, Clarkie Martin. High School. First Year, Section B, Distinguished.?John K. Stalvey, Esther Gordon, Olvan Powell, Annette Etyps. | First Year, Section A. Distinicruish ed.?Alvin Anderson. Second Ye.or. Distinguished.'? Franklin Burroughs. Aubrev Hawes, Teddie Ludlam, Christine Dusenbury, I Rnbv Kuss, Mnnl'ev Stalvey. Third Year, Highly Distinguishfid.?Estelle Pur roughs, Evelyn Snider: Distinguished, Sara Gordon, Irma Lewis. Fourth Year, Distinguished.? Ernestine Little. Eugenia Anderson, Mildred Collins, Jean W. Norton. J. M. DANIEL, Superintendent. o Don't wait to come to Conway in order to renew for The Horry Herald. If you go to Aynor leave the money for us at the Bank of Aynor, or if* you go to Loris, leave it at the Bank of Loris. witnesses: Marshall Lott, now a student at Mississippi College; Zoe Higginbothani, Comrade McDuffy, John Barham, George Sims. Kelly Harp, J. A. Davenport, John P. Parker, A. L. Smith, of Monroe, Dr. Barham, Flood Madison, A. N. Williams, W. R. Norseworthy, Carey Calhoun and Tom Williams. Mayor D;ule testified today that he, with Parker, of Monroe, Smith, Drf Barham and Mr. Madison, were members of a committee which met with other men in Monroe to adjust differences in M<frehouse Parish. Sims and Harp, according to testimony given by E. W. Andrews, were named on a Klan comKiittee to do certain work, but refused. IAITQI jivuij: OUR LIVER i's Liver Tone" Acts Better and Make You Sick?Don't ?Read Guarantee or stomach sour, just try a spoonful <>f harmless Dodson's Liver Tocic tonight. Hero's my guarantee?<?o to any <lrug store ami j^'t a hottlo of IX>d* son's Liver Tour for at fow cents. Take a spoonful ami if it doesn't straighten you right up ami make you feel lino ami vigorous 1 want you to go back to the storo and g?'t your money. Dodson's Liver Tono is? destroying tho sale of calomel localise it is real liver medicine; entirely vegetable, therefore it cau not salivate or make you sick.