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Mir iiorni iur iljt ~l CONWAY. S. 0. Altered at the Post Office at Conway I tk Ch tfl second class mail matter. $ H. H. WOODWARD i < PvWahed Every Thursday Morainx < by Conway Publishing Co. CHANGE SUBSCRIPT20N PRICE: \ One Copy, One Year $2.00 j One Copy, Six Months,.... 1.00 j One Copy, Three Months. . .50 i Payable in Ad>ance * 1 " 1 "1 1' i TELEPHONE 21. ? Make all Checks or Drafts payable i to The Horry Herald, or H. H. Wood- : wmrd, Conway, S. C. r ... 1 THURSDAY, JUNE 17, 1920. < THE FACE OF TRUTH. 1 The more we know about things in , general the more we are able to do - j for our own good and the good of I our neighbors. By getting together , like the chamber of commerce does ! \ and discussing the things that lire \ 1 needed here for the common good, J \ the business men learn facts from i J one another so that what one hap- 17 pens to know becomes the common { knowaledge of all that are concerned, f hence the chamber of commrce is a f great power for good in the com- ( nvunity by reason of the extra \ amount of information that will r be gathered by the individual mem- , bers and handed over by them to the j chamber as a body. There are some, } however, who claim to know when r they in fact do not know. Usually ^ such ignorance exposes its own self, | ^ but sometimes, unless we are very ^ sharp, one who appears to be extra j supplied with informatieon will put ^ one over on us by making us believe something is so that is not so in v fact. The truth is something which ^ as a usual thing bears the stamp of f actual fact on its face, while state- .. ments made at random without actual knowledge to back them up, will not bear close study before their true character is found out. ^ -o The satisfaction which follows * work well done and time well spent, is not the least among the rewards of honest toil. h 6 Farmers will do well to increase their production of corn this year till that they can. One reason is the - pilOI'l wncm crup auu i"uiirw|uciiv high price of flour next year. I; ??o Judging by the conduct of some, there are many who see no pleasure in trying to help out the big scheme of things that is behind this world and its continued existence. o The Herald hopes to sec the time when the waters of the Waecamaew River or Kingston Lake, or both, are harnessed up to produce power for the people of this section. There is nothing in the world today that is worth having, speaking of material things of course, that is j not the result of hard work on the j part of somebody. All that we en- j joy, all that we have to comfort us in the way of material thing > comes as a result of the toil and sweat of some one. o ? When wo start out in life we can take either one or two courses. We can have a good time, in which case we will have nothing else; or we can determine to succeed, in which case we will have that, and will not have a good time. e One feature of the restlessness of some people is found in the determination of some to get pay for everything they do. The fact is that you cannot find any successful doctor, lawyer, or other professional man, but who will tell you that he never gets pay for all that he does, and that he does not expect. o HOW TO DETERMINE WEEVIL INFESTATION Clemson College.?Farmers in the boll weevil territory are interested in tho suggestions made by Prof. A F. Conradi, Entomologist of the State Crop Pest Commission, concerning determining the amount of weevil infestation as referred to i?; Information Card No. 7 entitle "Boll Weevil Poisoning in Sout' r? ?: moA ? M-ll,....: V^UrUllIUl ill i i' uiiuv> iii|; ir> cii explanation of a simple method f<? .determining weevil infestation. Make counts of 100 squares o forms at each of five points < f th field. These points should he pro';" rrly distributed in older to rep sen average conditions. One j> i?r shoul be near eaJi eoinci and one nta th !0\Y TO MAKE YARD 3 FOR POULTRY FLOCK 1 If convenient, it is well to have 1 louble yards, for then one may ] otatc green crops. Small yards may ! >e sown to cats, wlioat, rye, rape- ' ;eed, etc., but if large yards are ; tvaliable they can be kept in a permanent sod of bluegrass, alfalfa, >r clover. While the fowls are using >nc yard the green feed in the >ther is getting a fresh start. If the yards are to be on only :>nc side of the house, they should be the south side in order that the fowls may have the benefit of the first dry ground in early spring. It not frequently happens that in localities whew snow is abundant the ground on the south side is dry many days before that on the north side. If the yards are to he permanent sod and are to furnish green feed for the fowls, 70 to 80 square feet! should be allowed for each bird. If part of the green food is to be pro vided for otherwise, and the yards used mainly for exercise grounds, 3o to 40 square feet for each bird will 1 t>e sufficient, poultry specialists of the United States Department of Agriculture say. Hexagonal wire netting, 2-inch mesh, is suitable for fencing and can >e bouglit cheaply. wnere several uns are adjoining, tlx1 fenecs may )e boarded up at the bottom to a leight of 2 to 2 1-2 feet, or l-inch nosh wire can be used in plaie of J Jiese boards, to prepent the males 'ighting one another. Height of 'enccs will need to be regulated by he variety of fowls. The heaviest meeds, like the Brahams, may be estrained by a 4-foot fence, while nost of the other breeds can be kept n by a G-foot fence. Some of the famburgs and Leghorns, however, leed a 7 or 8 foot fence. By clipling the flight feathers on one wing hey can be kept in without much rouble. Gates should be provided n order to permit access from one rard to the next. Shade of some kind should be pro rided, and this can often be advanageously furnished by planting rait trees (such as pear, plum, icach, cherry and apple) o STARTING FALL TOMATOES. Clenison College.?Plant seed for he fall crop of tomatoes as early ''^ ll3 ~-A ROM>1 ;4P?i?P Or THE GR BATTLE : If ON THE BAT7 j0& Ji ^ fr TUESDAY, Three Shows: 4, 7:30. and 9: Matinee, 4 o'clock Night Show center of the field. Examine the squares or forms on the plants, not on the ground. During each count of 100 squares pull off those that are punctured but let those not punctured remain on the plant. The punctured squares may be put in a small sack. After the count at each point has been completed, the punctured squares should i he counted so that they will not con fuse counts at other points. At the completion of counts at the five points, an average percentage of punctured squares should he made. To simplify this work a hand tally counter may be bought. This little instalments can be used to great advantage in so far as it does all the counting by just pressing a small lover with the finger as each square is counted. It saves much head work. These tallv counters can generally be obtained from hardware stores. In making the counts at each point of the field it is not necessary &s possible In June, sowing them thinly so that the plants will not become crowded. During the latter part of July or the first of August set the plants to the garden. The1 weather is usually very dry at this season and it is necessary to transplant carefully. In the first place, use only strong stocky plants, a d in removing them from the seed bed retain all the soil possible on the roots. Set the plants deeply* pinching off the two bottom leaves if necessary, pour about a pint of water around the roots, and cover with a thick layer of dry soil. If the plants are to be trained to stakes, they may be set two feet in the row; otherwise they should be set tYiree and one-half feet. Fall tomatoes usually bring a good price on the local market. The; fruit that fails to ripen before frost ran he kent far into the winter if! wrapped in paper and laid away in a cool dark place. THE WEALTH WORTH WHILE. longed ror wealth to hold it.; I longed for might and fame; My youth ? I shrugged, and sold it To triumph in life's game. 1 toiled and toiled, unceasing. To win my place but when I gained the thing I toilecl for, I did not want it then. For then I found life's flowers, All faded at my door; I found the springtime showers Less cooling than before; I found the very sunshine Had lost its gleaming light, And that the stars were pallid That lit the world at night, I longed for wealth, to hold it, 1 longed for might and fame; But when?I could enfold it, I found it just a name. And the things worth saving Were youth, and smiles, and flowers, An that the wealth enduring Was found in the golden hours. ?Margaret E. Sangstcr. The Last Gone "I see where they are going to take the word 'obey' out of the marriage service." "Aren't they going to leave a man the last shadow of the illusion fV?of V?? it? r>iocfo>* in Viie n\vn homo?" VI1UV Ut J U * * w " ?Baltimore American. PITH'S''JhtSMtrtST k?X cot/c ?roBy m r<au> s~ J? ^ rJIP3 I &' ''& ' SjUw *i' M a* Jp|^1 5CE | 1 tieatre JUNE 22ND 30 O'clock. Children 2 5c, Adults 75c. Children 50c, Adults 75c. to count all of the squares on each stalk. Count an average number from each stalk from several rows at that point. It is usually best to start counting on the second or third row from the edge of the field and about the same distance from the end of the rows at each corner oi me neui. . o?? What We All Want to Know. "George, dear!' began the worried woman. "Yes, wotisit?' grunted George, without looking up from his news paper. "Would you mind helping me with a little bit of arithmetic?' she pleaded. "Not at all." "Well, if we pay the new cook the wages she wants will we have enough money left to buy anything for her to cook ??Houston Post. WVWWWWW?/WN.V^?WW%^/VW>/WW\/1 quickly relieves Constipation Piliousness, Loss of Appeti'e an r Headache^, dot to Torpid Liver.?a< MORE PORK II REGISTERED PIGS, ALL AG] Duroc-Jersey "hogs have a tem are easy-feeding animals, and 'than 50 years ago, and yet i try were "Duroc-Jerseys." T1 raising Dnroc-JeTseys hogs. H. C. CANNON, Phorve 900 ? , CONWAY, 3; C. . I i I i 'in NOTICE OF SALE. 1 Under and by virtue of the de- i cree and judgment of the court made by his Honor, S. W. G. Shipp, Presiding Judge, in the case of Temperance Gore, Sam Anderson, Adie Todd, Helen Anderson and Tilda Anderson, Plaintiffs vs. Mary Anderson, ?harlotte Anderson, < George Anderson, Mary Elizabeth' Anderson and Nettie McDowell, Dc-i fendants, and dated the 12th day of; June A. D. 1920, 1, the undersigned W. L. Bryan, Clerk of Court as Special Master, of Horry C unty, will sell at public auction to the i highest bidder before the C )urt , House door at Conway, in Horry County, and State <,f South Ca.o ina, during legal hours of sale, on i salesday, the first Monday in July j next, it being the fifth day of said I month, all a.id singular those cer-! tain lands situate in Horry County, i and described, as follows, to wit: All that tract of land in Simpson j Creek Township, C unty and State, afoiesaid, containing acres, more or less, being the Northward part of the estate lands of James 1 I T. Anderson, deceased, bounded on I To Keep Air on the For the first time since th< merchant murine. It cost us The farmer, manufacturer, interested in holding our posl As a first step in this direct those articles of existing con I operated to thwart the upbuild By giving the notice of term treaties provide. This action is directed in t now before Congress; Which declares It to be lh< "to do whatever may be n< couruge" a merchant marine. This policy deserves the si Lacking this support the p merchant marine may suiter attempts of the past. Send for a copy of "For an Committee of Am< 9 30 CHURCH STREE ? MR. FARMER, Wl _ \SURE SHOT M I ^SURE SHOT HOO REMED' ses the blood, promotes th< HOO in a HEALTHY condii sist disease, and insures y< and the food you give. DON'T WAIT until you se1 gish and staggering aroun giving them SURE SHOT ! means LOSS of MEAT an We can supply you. Pri SATISFACTIO The RE> CONWAY, ; 6-io tf ? \ i ^ r N LESS TIME ES. START YOUR HERD NOW icncy to put on great amounts < raise large families. These ho in 1918, 51 per cent of all the h iicy are uniformly red in color. R. 0. I y ' 3-25-?tf <.K ?i the North, East and West by original boundary lines of said estate land, and on the South by a ditch running: castwardly across said estate land from the estate land of Malcolm Fowler to the Sarvis land; ** this being- four-ninths in value ofl^ said estate land of James T. An- E derson as laid off to Temperance 6 Gore, Sam Anderson, Adie Todd, Helen Anderson, Tilda Anderson sioners in partition, and this four- ^ ninths (4-9) is divided off from the 0 rest of the estate on which the t< dwelling- is located, by the said 11 ditch. TERMS of Sale Cash. Purchaser bo pay for papers. Conway, S. C., June 14th, 1920. d W. L BitYAN, C. C. C. P. C and Special Master. s H. H. WOODWARD, c Plaintiff's Attorney. TOBACCO STICKS. Tobacco Sticks, $12.50 per thousand f. o. b. Georgetown. Limited supply, c First money orders get first service, k WILSON & WOODRUFF, Waverly r Mills, S. C.?adv 6; 10 2t pd. c f lerican Ships 2 ^ Seas " e Civil War we have a neal $3,000,000,000 to get it. (J laborer?every American it b ition on the teat. I ion it Is necessary to modify linerclal treaties which have ln<r nf mir niurpliunf indrlnu?. dilation fur which the several v he constructive Shipping Bill r i policy of the United States j, cessary to develop and eujpport of every American. ^ resent effort to maintain our I p the fate of many ineffective !> American Merchant Marine." y i , I erican Shipbuilders 1 T, NEW YORK CITY ? . h i- < 111 B "r ! 1RTAKT TO YOU ill I /e have at last secured a HOG REMEDY that is a salvation to no HOG RAISERS. ^hy, because your pigs begin gcting worms when two or three \ lonths old which stunt their rowth, sometimes causing fits, 'hey become weak in the back, mstipated; the general health of he hog is poor. He does not grow .s he should. This means a loss o you. Y removes the worms, clean e appetite, and keeps your tion, and better able to reou the most for your effort e your hogs becoming slugd the lot, but BEGIN NOW HOG REMEDY. To wait d MONEY. | ce $1.00. N GUARANTEED Drug Co. [ALL Store SOUTH CAROLINA * I >f pork at an early age. Thoy I gs v/ere introduced less I logs marketed in the coun- I Increase your profits by I HANSON, The Auctioneer, x - I 213 No. Sixth St. ? I WILMINGTON, N. 0. I l.'i' I fil? | mmmmI Candidates Cards. FOR CONGRESS. I hereby announce myself a canidate for re-election to Congress rom the Sixth Congressional Disrict, subject to the rules of the lemocratic Primary. |17|4t pd ?PHILIP H. STOLL. FOR CLERK OF COURT. I hereby announce my candidacy or re-election to the Office of Clerk f Court for Horry County, subject j the rules of the Demcratic Prilary. -W. L. BRYAN. FOR SUPT. OF EDUCATION. ^ I hereby announce myself a can- r/\ idate for re-election to the office of lounty Superintendent of Education, ubjcct to the rules of the I)emoratic Primary. ?M. J. BULLOCK. v FOR TREASURERR. At the request of my friends, my andidacy to the Treasurer's office > hereby announced, subject to the ules and regulations of the Dcmoratic Primary. \\r T T*Y?*T T A W. lv liTiljIJ/VIVI I . FOR CORONER I hereby announce my candidacy or re-election to the office of Corner of Horry County, subject to he action of the Democratic prilary. ? L. W. COOPER. FOR STATE SENATE. I hereby announce myself a candiate for the State Senate, and will e governed by the rul^s of the )emocratic party. JEREMIAH SMITH. Losing His Aim Dobbs, who was a diummer in the illage band, was inclined to stoutiesF. For years he was the most popuar figure in the band, then his Irumming began to fall off. At last, one clay the end came. Vith tears in his eyes, Dobbs approached the conductor. "It's no use," he groaned. "Youll lave to sack me! I've known all dong why my drumming went off. md there's no use keeping the truth ^ >ack. Fact is," and here the poor nan broke down completely, I've jot so stout that I can't hit the Irum in the middle any more."?Baltimore Sun. Citation Notice. 3TATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Horry. By J. S. VAUGHT, ESQUIRE, PROBATE JUDGE. WHEREAS, Robbie Stalvcv made * % suit to me, to grant him Letters of Administration of (lie Estate of and effects of Dr. Edgar A. Stalvey. THESE ARE THEREFORE to eite and admonish all and singular the kindred and creditors of the sail Edgar A. Stalvey, deceased, that they be and appear, before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Conway, S. C., on 24th day of June 4920 next, after publication hereof, * at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to shew cause, if any they have, why the said Administration should not be granted. GIVEN under my Hand, this 8th day of June Anno Domini, 1920. Published on the 10th and 17th days of June 1920 in the Horry Herald. J. S. VAUGHT, Probate Judge. ? SCHOLARSHIP AND ENTRANCE EXAMINATIONS. University of South Carolina. The examination for the award of vacant scholarships in the UniverC? /~vit 4- U on/1 /ov o/l_ ailty i/i owuiu v/m uinm <uim ivi ?\imission of new students will be held at the county court house on Friday, July 9, at 9 a. m. Applicants must not be less than 16 years of ago. When scholarships are vacant after July 9, they will be awarded to those making the highest average at examination, provided they meet the conditions governing the award. Anplicants for scholarships should write to President Currell for scholarship examination blanks. These blanks, properly filled out by the applicant should he filed with Piesident Currell by July 2 Scholarships arc worth $160, free tuition and fees, total $1">8. The next session will open Sept.. 15, 1920. For further information and catalog, address President W. S Currell, ,6 10 8t Columbia, S. C. *