The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, May 22, 1919, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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MOB rOUR Jvluf |iont| Itrmlth CONWAY, 8. 0. filtered at the Poet Office at Conway S. C, u second class mail matter. H. H. WOODWARD Published Every Thursday Morning by Conway Publishing Co. TELEPHONE 21. CHANGE SUBSCRIPTION PRICE: One Cojp'j, One Year.. .$L5,0 One Copy'Six Moriths.V ..'''.TO One iCppjy Thyeo Mopfcfis. . .50 Payable in Advance PUBLISHERS ANNOUNCEMENT Tributes of Respect, and Obituaries will be charged for at the rate of one cent per word for all words over 150. Resolutions of Thanks, Cards of Thanks, and all other Teading Notices, not NEWS, taking the run o' the paper, will be charged at the rat*1 of five cents per line; and all othr? L" nAlnnrinu fit til t' nOULTS ill H1U VWIUI....U *" ? I rate of ten cents per line. j Extra charge of 50 per cent, for , aotices set, in black face type in loca j taluinn. All changes of advertisement must be in the office by Saturday aoon to insure their appearance m the following issue. All communications must be sign <1 by the name of the writer, not f< r. publicaiton, but for the protection << j this paper. Lega Notices at SI per inch fir:' i insertion, 50 cents each subsequent j 'nsertion. Rates on long term contracts foi l display advertising very reasonable, j and made known on application. Make all Checks or Drafts payable j to The Horry Herald, or H. H. Wood- i ward, Conway, S. O. Notice in Special Column at the rate of one cent per word each insertion, and none of these taken for less than 25 cents, to be paid for iD adrace. THURSDAY, MAY 22, 1919 (Only time can cure Spring fever. r o There is no worse thief than the robber of your valuable time. o The seasons so far promise well for the fanners of Horry County. Taxes that we pay is money well spent, but there are many who fail to see it that way. . <v o I 'As the roads are built, Conway will prosper; and so will the farmers along their route. The prices of lands will go up along those roads. t o In the winning of the world war, no man did it all. He couldn't in the nature of things. But the man who j went over the top did the most and I should have the greater credit. ? O? I Everything that we have and en- j joy in this world is the result of care and somebody's toil; and the greater these that produced the thing, the higher we prize it. v o?? The rains fall on the just and the unjust, it is true, hut the rains did some more good than others, because they were ready to take advantage of them. o No man had better have much power in this world unless he knows how to use it for the benefit of those about him instead for purposes of oppression. o The mere dreamer has his place in the progress and development of the world. His thoughts may ho pronounced visionary at times, and yet they may turn out to be reality as they have in fact done in the past. o X.o\V-priced cotton is a thing of th? pes I according to the ideas of some leading men who have studied the movement now being successfully carried out by the growers to cut down the arceage and hold what they have for a better price. The fact is that there Is nothing I yet perfect that we see. No plan or j method has yet reached the place where it cannot be improved upon and greater results obtained fhohl the same beginnings; , X b ' (Ine thing ihiat Is Overlooked when small .pdwhv* dNs being given out, is . V tl' 1 ..t .n.n.I An that Miuy may dc coiibwuuu ?.>> muvu Kfbadey, when they are applied In actual use, The grant of even Uie smallest amount of power must therefore "be guarded by limits and restriction^, * *> o The reason that we fail to succevc is often because we cannot see the necessity of taking- advantage ol time a-s it goes by; and when it i: gone, it is gone forever and wil never return. By some this is calle, p rocr: '.sti nation and it gets to be ; hi. nt .vith some of us. / >. -V ( Horse S I Good toba bred hossall th' spei You see, half in the breedir Ill tobacco that'; HI Velvet. The || Thar's only c | results ? Na ! | watcher. Sh I two years or So when she \ \ Burley that 1 for two years ll!A | illilii I.AI.XV 1|, Bare II Unhec | j | BDiWfliBLfilllEjCRVHRBI 'I I *? ^ t . i tjj People who | II kitchen floors un II 11 i . . i I jiit a mistake, In / - -l it's insanitary. Wwll/P clean an uncove IlVlWlf erly, no matter IP scrub. ?| Oilcloth an< fcasy to keep ? look nice, and W years, dependi y grade you buy Look over if Lowest prices. ||???|y)THERLAN! 1 Household and Kitchen Furnis v; After havinir been in the army | 11 , ? (three months, during which time ahef masqueraded and performed the du } '?< ? * of an t)Vdinary soldier, a H> year I ' ! fill vciis rent hack to her homo | -.jv ; oo by the authorities of i 1 ' is' Detention Home in (iroeni, ' : o. i THE HORRY HERALD, COE J ?'-, * i\?TOBi >ilense About T cco ought to be lil ?all th' kick takei rit left in. the secret of makin' a ? 1' an' half in the breakir 3 grown right is only agein' is the other half. ine kind of agein' that g ^ TV T < ? iui c v-> uwn.iNature s ie does a job right whet two thousand. jets through with the fir ive put away in wooder , it's just right. v It ain't been hi ^ or short - cutte ^ Nature-done job, jj|j[ All kinds of Wk packed in toba Ml your good neig you "Velvet is tobacco." Prov i self. lll5?* W .1 B?mtr Roll a VELVET ^loors 11^ iltby I ) leave their covered make the first place, You can't ' red floor prop- KTOffl how hard you lllllff J linoleum are <jcg|L clean. They J?,7r they last for ftr\)in ng upon the KY ' our nattems. w tf "" 4 ) FURN. CO,^^3 hinys ? Bicycles and Supplic Dedtrtive Reason in tp "Why do people say, 'As dead as door nail?' asked the Boob. "Why a door nail any deader than a door "Because it has been hit on t head, 1 suppose.''?Cir.cinatti Incjn WAY, S. C., MAY 22, 1919 if V* U |5 | *1 n ESi L.T 1 11 .i . a ? ACCO . '. -* - i ' 'obacco ce a well- I a out but I jood hoss is || i\ Selectin' l | If of makin' 111 I ? m ^ets th' right ||| no clock I nj 2 | her it takes 311 le Kentucky ||t i hogsheads 11| irried none, d. It's a I things are cco tins, but hbor will tell the real pipe e it for your- ' I """ ijiui A) ' Cigarette ' lousiness as Usual. j A sorry blow has been dealt at i those who maintain wc are not a commercial race. "You gave me 1 prussic acid in mistake for quinin this morning," a man I dd a chemist ; the other day. "Is that so?" said I the chemist; "then you owe me i * another two pence."?Punch. o A war department circular received j at camp will make it hard for a mi:noj to enlist. During the war hundJ reds of boys under 18 years of age 'were taken in the service. In many cases the parents applied for discharge for the lad and he was dis charged without honor. DREAMS. Some send out their dreams to sea in search of yellow gold, Some send them in search of fame on explorations bold But most of us keep all our dreams within the little space Where mother sings her gentle songs and children romp and race. i ' 11The sailor dreams of cottage walls, II n_ml dies uio nviviivi ^ ^ * v>? -- / That from a little chimney stack the smoke of peace may rise. All men are brave and men are true and men do splendid things While all the time they seem to heai the tfong the kettle sings. hse\v men there are who toil for gold and few who toil for fame! The cherished dreams of most of u are very much the same; Wc toil when all is said and done I and measure our success " By what it brings into the home o 3 j leve and happiness. |Our dreams are bound to tende things, to laughter an<i to piuj To brave farewells and welcome :x; true with every passing day, is 'If those at home find pride in us an i joy in all we do lie! Then wo rejoice because we've sec i,s. our fondest dreams com I; (C py right, 1019, by Edgar A. Gucsl t PALMER BLOCKS PLAN OF BOARD ? ' Washington.?The abandoned price stabilizing plan of the department of commerce's industral board was declared "unauthorized by law" in an opinion of Attorney General Palmer %'? Secretary Redfield dated April I, previous to the resignation of the board, and made public.today. t. The plan was hold to be illegal by the attorney general on the, ground that it constituted price filing f among producers in violaton of anti trust acts, a situation which was not changed in legal aspect by participation of the industrial board, an agency not created by statute. The attorney general also held purchases by the government must be on the basis of competitive bids. The opinion, which was requested by Secretary Redfield March 2G, i was in the commerce secretary's hands during the latter phases of the controversy between Director General Hincs and the industrial board over steel prices. Mr. Redfield accepted the resignations of members of the board which had been in his hands for several weeks. o SORGHUM BECOMING POPULAR. Clomson College.?It is of interest to know what two County Agents have to say about sorghum in their fast annual reports. < "The farmers are about all ready ( to agree that sorghum is one of our very best hay crops, as it makes heavy yield of hay and withstands 1 almost any kind of weather and seasons. Aside from being a great hay producer it is a good crop for making table syrup and has been a good substitute for sugar."?John R. Blair, York County. "Snrchlim wifll lie le ! - 1 M v . n . . v. I ff I Wit MO 1U CI f-y L V.IVI V v/ I I I bination crop. About one half of ' the acreage is used for forage and 1 the other half for syrup-making. There arc three chief ways in which 1 we use sorghum as a forage: lstk as 1 a green feed for work stock after 1 crop cultivation is over in summer; i 2nd, late seedings of large growing varieties are cut and shocked just ] before frost to be used for winter feeding to work stock and cattle; 3rd, in silage. Very ?ew acres are , used for hog grazing/'? R. W. Grac ] ber, Lancaster County. j 2 Jhk LoadsBe I i I have this week the best i ever shipped. One car load Studebaker Wagons and nic G. B. JE CONWA' I The oldest Amei rue Ml ITI t A I 1 I ETC IMOIIDA I inc. IVIU I UHU Ul L 11V O <J 11 t I W. B. Coxe, ! I F. F. Oovingtoi Bullock & R. M. Bull j To a Postoffice Inkwell. How many humble hearts have dipt ped Ir?lo you, and scrawled their manuscript! I, Have shared their secrets, told their cares, s Their curious and quaint affairs! ?, Your pool of ink, your scratchy pen, Have moved the lives of unborn men, f And watched young people, breathing hard, Put Heaven on a postal card. ' ? i *-? i ? l'j ?HiVVin MCaCIC KODIIIswu iii itiuiv Melodies." is o Charleston is to have a large, new (1 theater building, with a seating ca , parity of 3,554 persons, according t< n an announcement made by Alber c.; Sottile, president ot! the Pastircu L) Amusement Company. / i SAME OLD TRICKS I OF KAISER'S TIME! I I The Government and Press Has Its Bluff and Bluster f - t\' > ^ i ? I Berlin.?-Muxroilian ..Harden, ( e?Mtoi of the Berlin Die Zukunft* >Writ-..' ing on the peace treaty, says: "The. peace conditions are not hard or than I ex/pec ted. They woro un- ] pleasant to the greater part of the people. But could one really have expected them otherwise? ! "The Germans have not given very convincing mental guarantee during the six months since the revolution that they have changed their system; \ on the contrary the present govern- r ment and the press have use<l - the same methods of incitemenf^b^the Jm same tricks of bluff as under tlw old rule of the petty nobility. "The government's proclamations and speeches are only bad copies of the kaiser's time. The whole press resounds in protests and has started a campaign of incitement against th"^ allies in violent language. It is agi-^t tatmg for refusal to sign the treaty, and to what use? All must know that the allies by keeping the blockad*' and occupying the coal districts, can force Germany to sign whatever they want. "The allies have been thrJRned that Germany would join the Wlshesiki. Hut that would be suicidal. The only way to rescue the country is by openness and honesty. "Then Germany would have sent men who would have laid their cards on the table and got the allies to understand that some of the conditions were unacceptable. If Germany show ed its good will to do what is in its power to comply with the allied requests, the allies would see that conditions were changed in favor of Germany because they know there must be a Germany and that it is uiifjunzMuit; ia? uuhuuy uie vjuimun people." / We are proud of the confidence doctors, druggists and the public have in (>(>(> Chill and Fever Tonic.? adv?4i24,19-20t a m Par WW mi Loads lot Mules and Horses I have 9 Mules just in, also car load e lot Buggies, Harness, Etc :nkins i S. C. %ican Company I tNCE CO., OF NEW YORK I Special Agent I District Agt. I Bros.? I ock, Mgr., Agents. I Wm'^RUlisioCKF^TOUR^fi^^ We use genuine Ford Parts only in our repair work. CONWAY MOTOR CAR CO., O i K'. The following have been named * gam?i wardens, in South Carolina by Governor Cooper on recommendation o? Wade Hampton Gibbes, State ' game warden: A. M. Grimsley, Mars Bluff; J. F. Graham, Hamer, and S. G. Taylor, Pompton. o ' Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic' restores vitullty and energy by purifying and en? ricliing tlic blood. You can aoon feel l.vj Strengtn* ning, Invigorating Effect. Price 6Qo.