The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, July 15, 1920, Image 4

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i hf Hiovi j) :iirr.$hl . CONWAY. r>. 0. ? ? fcitft* U at ?hc Post Office at Conway j C., rh second class mail matter. H. H. WOODWARD ftblinhed Every Thursday Morninp j by Conway Publishing Co. CHANGE SUBSCRIPTION PRICE: One Copy, One Year $2.00 One Copy, Six Months 1.00 One Copy, Three Months. . .60 J Payable in Ad\ance ^ TELEPHONE 21. Make all Checks or Drafts payable | to The Horry Herald, or H. H. Wood*vard, Conway, S. O. TITTTPftnAV .TTTT.V 1 fS 1020 What little sense we have should ho cultivated. T?and that is naturally drained is the best for the tobacco crop. o Lands in this section of the State will continue to rise in value. There are evident reasons for this. o Many men in business have failed yet to learn the value of advertising as a factor in successful business. o Even the unsuccessful will not always play a losing game, and thi> is some consolation. A man has hut a little bit of brain to start with. It gets still less when not used. o Conway is now doing some build- | ing regardless of the high cost of | materials and labor. > Wo are dependent on one another in this community, in the matter of progress and improvement, more than we sometimes realize. o There, is a lack of the necessary improvements on many of the tobacc<lo farms of Horry County, and this holds the planters back. -o When money is saved on the farm it can be invested in permanent improvements and thus made to yield a still greater return. Some farmers are planting their tobacco crops too often in the same land instead of clearing up a new tobacco patch from year to year. I E. M. MEAF I A. D, JACH I I i Program for wee July 1 wmmmmmtmwm mmmtm MOMC Frank Ma "THE BRUTE TUESE Enid Ben "NAUGHTY, , i j WEDNES Ncal Har1 SMASHING \ THURS "THE LlOr anc "RADIUM M Lion and Mor FRID William Par "HEART STB SATUR Hoot Gibso ? FAST WE Animal C COMING JUL The greatest of all "THE HONOR A big pic A New York City company mad ' up of business men has proposed to il build a six-day bicycle track. It o will have a seating1 capacity 01 zo,- 1 000 and cost $250,000. | v !ES, Pres., (SON, Secretary FOR THE this go farmers, iness on 1 orb speak: THE FAMOi ONE OF THi NOW BUILD THEIR INC! IN MAKING PATRONAGI AMIAIf tin UUIUK AM Hl( Below they give you the They speak for themselves. T ket. Read and be convinced Entire State average $21.91 Turner Bros $27.49 Nichols Market, average. .$27.47 Andrews Market, average... .$10.42 Ay nor Market, average $20.84 Cheraw Market, average $12.12 Conway Market, average $20.9") Darlington Market Average..$21.43 If any warehouse in Soi riot thn orlvnntnnn nf thoir rim VJVV II IV/ HU ? VV1 I VlUJ^z v/l VI IVil z) y tammuviisMXs^j jxi^uXkXiX7?:{,:z;;: >; IX " f J Theatre i * ' ;k commencing 9 AY I yo in BRAKER" I I JAY inett in I NAUGHTY" DAY. ' t in a VESTERN ; 5DAY I MAN" YSTERY" an Comedy AY num in INOS" | DAY I n in a SltKN omcdy. .Y 28TH human Dramas ! SYSTEM" ture. The French army has adopted for b\ airplanes a silencer, which not nly reduces the noise, but prevents ire from the eyplosion of gasoline i'hen the oxhause pipe is overheated. H. HlfviSON TURNER BRO : SALE Of f> If C IMPANY.IS OWNED AND A. M. TURNER WILL Rill [HE FLOOR AND J, S, TU S UJ1IDER THAN WORDS IS AUCTIONEER. A, E. Pi E REST AUCTIONEERS IF IIN6 SOME NEW PRIZE I 1EASED CORPS OF BUYEI MORE ROOM FOR SALES : AND PROMISE IN RETl I POLITE SERVICE. ^UII=D TU A N Sll 11_I I I f?11 1 sworn averages taken from ' he Nichols market led the 0 Dillon Market, average. . ... .$23.1 Florence Market, average... .$21.8 Georgetown Market, average. $ 1 (>.( Hartsville Market, average. . .$21 Hemingway Market, average. .$19.$ Johnsonville Market, average.$19.( Kingstree Market, average. . ,$22.( Lake City Market, average. . . $24.< Lith Carolina sold tobacco higi od judgment and hard work. ,/.'MP! caRK 'Jim nfj&IWA ?' rjrAM'MJA MORE PORK ! REGISTERED PIGS, ALL AC Duroc-Jersey hogs liavo a ter are easy-feeding animals, anc than 50 years ago, and yet try were "Duroc-Jerseys." 1 raising Duroc-Jerseys hogs. H. C. CANNON, Phone 90D CONWAY, s. c. RECOVERY RAPID IN THE PIAVE REGION Farm Land Cleared of Debris and Everv Sauare Foot Under Cultivation. 'Proviso, Italy.?A trip of about! 100 miles through the Piavc region revealed the extraordinary mannerj in which that territory, which was I under heavy bombardment for over J a year, is recuperating. Not a trac.il of a trench or shell hoV is t> be* seen. The farm land has he m clear | ed of all dcbiis and every square! foot of it is under cuUivnti n. The people have come bad: and are work j ing feverishly. Business is carried | on the same as before the war, with j the exception that most of it is done j outdoors, in wooden shacks or under , tent s, Some of the towns, such as San Dona, on the l'iave, give you the impression of being in tie m (1st of a very busy country fair. People buy and sell in the open air and j sppni unmindful tho furl that i many of the houses around thom are still in ruins. The correspondent saw even a young man proposing to his sweetheart in a little dealing m the midst of piles of debris, \vh;ch : was being used as a sitting room, i The unintentional intrusion started the young lovers and made the ; youth drop the ring he was about to place on the girl's finger. The extent of one devastated z ne in the Venetian provinces is of about , 1st V-Pres., S.. Managers - LEAr i ? CONTROLLED ENTIRE! Y ! ;l THE SALES AND MANA! nwcD the nccins: cms miLil I uL U* I 3Us? OfiULi , THEY HAVE WITH THEM ETTI8REW, WHO IS KN( I THE OLD BELT. THIS I MS FOR THE GONVE [IS, WHICH WILL GREATLY I FLOOR SPACE. THEY S IRN THE HIGHEST AVEI a,"' I THE HIGHE the books of the commissioner state in prices and Turner 6 Lake View Market, average..$22.! .0 Latta Market, average $18.i >0 Lamar Market, average $22.< Vi Lorix Market, average $23.! 25 Lynchburg Market, average.. .$19J 54 Manning Market, average. .. .$18. >f? Marion Market, average $20. 25 Mo Bee Market, average $18. ier than Turner Bros., the ficju combined with the best auctioi IN LESS TIME rES. START YOUR HERD NOW idcncy to put on great amounts I raise large families. These li in 1918, 51 per cent of all the Micy are uniformly red in color R. 0. 3.25 tf 5,000 square miles, and 350 towns were entirely or partially destroyed. Of the 75,000 houses badly damaged by shell one-fourth were so completely razed that several disputes have arisen among the owners as to the location of their sites. Nearly 1,000 school houses and 332 churches were destroyed. The total damage done to buildings of various, kinds has been estimated at 15,000,000,000 lire. For almost eery house destroyed especially in the rural districts a re spcctablc looking wooden shack has been put up temporarily by the government. An interesting feature in the reconstruction of these buildings is that tiie walls are not built two or three feet thick, as they were bc, tore the war, but thin, in the American fashion, as was remarked by a local .architect. This reduction in the wails makes it possible to rebuild the. h( use with the stones de- j rived from the debris on the premi- | sea. For tlio roconst)*uction of necessary works, such as railroads, elec- ; trie plants, mills, canals and aque-1 clucts, the government has already! spent 500,000,000 lire. Through the Federal Institute of Credit the government. has also distributed 200,000,000 lire to private citizens whose property was damaged, and who are entitled to an indemnity equal to the value of the property before the j war. The same Federal Institute has set aside 170,000,000 lire for the i ' acquisition of cattle, horses and sheep to be distributed among the farmers to replace the animals they lost in the war. Signor Nava, minister of State for the liberated provinces, declared re cently that as regards the reconstruction of devastated regions, Italy is at the head of all nations G. M. FOR J. R. BATTLE DBACCO 5. C. 1Y TOBACCO ;E the busTHESR REG! THIS .YEAR )WN TO BE COMPANY IS NIENGE OF r HELP THEM OLICIT YOUR RAGE, AND A \r ; ' j ST of Agriculture, Columbia, S. C. Bros., led the Nichols marf>! Moncks Corner Market, aver-.. f>l ago $17.' 08 Mullins Market, average $28.! 84 Olanta Market, average $28.! 1)8 Pamplico Market, average.. .$22.! KO Sumter Market, average $20. 07 Summervillo Market, average.$16. 56 Timmonsville Market, average $25. res fail to show it. You can i cering at The ' ? i m ^ J a ^ WiW?,1 <MA> Mil ?M1MMIM MIMWIMUHVUMWMWnMNMMMI I X of pork at an early age. They togs were introduced less hogs marketed in the counIncrease your profits by HANSON, The Auctioneer, 213 No. Sixth St. WILMINGTON, N. O. damaged by the war. After seeing what is being done along the Piavc ono is inclined to agree with him. o HOW TO STEER AN AUTOMOBILE. " Steer iner an automobile is th?1 a difficult task/' says a local dealer. "Perfection comes from confidence, not from knowledge. Within a few minutes the novice will have learned just how much of a movement on the steering wheel is required to turn a corner, pass other vehicle/; or obstructions. "Turning the steering wheel to the left will cause the front wheels to turn in the same direction and the car will trav< I to the left. Turning the steering wheel to the right causes the car to travel to the right. This applies when hacking up as well as when going forward. "Proceed cautiously, preferably on a road that is little frequented and wide enough to give plenty of room for your first attempt at automobile driving. "Don't forget that after tinning a corner the front wheels should he straightened up, otherwise you w ll run off the road. "Always bring your car to a Mead' stop before attempting to back up. Failure to observe this may result in serious damage to the transmission and cause unnecessary expense. With the car at rest and the gear shifting level* in neutral release the clutch by depressing the clutch pedal, and move the gear-shifting lever forward into imc ic11 tonvard position. INow lot the clutch pedal come back easily and at the same time accelerate the motor speed by opening the throttle slightly. "Remember that in moving backward the same movement of the steering wheel will cause you to . turn to the right or left as it would were you going forward. "Proceed cautiously?more accidents occur when backing up than when going forward, as you car.not see clearly, so take your time, lookaround and make sure that you have your car under control that a stop can be made instantly." D. 2nd V-Pres I v Treasurer i 75 24 97 r>9 01 i 84 I 00 1 j