University of South Carolina Libraries
1.1 I ?! <EIk gortjr gmW. CONWAY, 8, 0, Mm ill at Ike Poat Office at Omway i. G, aa MMid clan mall matter. H. H. WOODWARD fabllaM Every Thursday Morniag bj Conway Pnbliaking Co. CHANGE SUBSCRIPTION PRICE: One Copy, One Year |2.00 One Copy, Six Months,.... 1.00 One Copy, Three Months. M Payable in Advanca TELEPHONE 21. Make all Checks or Drafts payable te The Horry Herald, or H. H. Woodward, Conway, S. C. THURSDAY, OCT. 21, 1920. Some men have plenty of ability when it comes to saving five cents in order to lose a dollar. a The sooner that cotton is picked out of the fields the more it will weigh and the higher it is apt to grade on the market. This is one of the tim^s in the history of this country when men must be careful to keep from jobbing Peter to pay Paul. We have a good corn crop in this county. We hope that farmers have raised plenty of hogs. If they have tli n the people of the county are independent of packers and jobbers. o The boll weevil is so rapidly advancing in this State that thr quarantine against shipments oi cotton 11 oducts has boon removed. It is time for us all to got scared The people of this -county arc greatly divided on the questions ol the stock law and free range proposition. Many have made this a personal matter of di putc as between themselves and their neighbors who happen to hold the op" posite view. As we said some time ago t;u housing situation in this State wii not improve until the pri"e o1 building material goes down to what is a reasonable limit of cost. A> things are now, and have boon f >i a long time, there is no adequate return to be made from the build Sng of houses to rent until the cosi of building is within season as con pared to the amount of rent thai landlords may charge in norma! Itimes. o REDUCING CRIME. Regardless of the severe penalties provided by the laws of this country against crime, hundreds find thousands of people, both old and young, are tried in the courts every year for the commission of heinous crimes. It is 'a wonder to many why crime thus goes on regardless of law and order. Those who notice this and think about it hardly ever picture to themselves THE WARD || Has Dec ii Continue [ i heir Mill Pre! 1 i; The management of the W* j; that at the present price o J; be compelled to close down I [ J) but the matter was taken i J | [ has decided to operate for 51 of the Countjf will be extre] j! this Company is the only on \\ now. The company says tt } [ high prices for logs that the \\ will pay from ten to twelve C them now. ** .'"l"**1* nyi?pwwpwrt??mmmmmmrnmrn N i the state of affairs we would have in case there were no law. Then human nature in the raw and the bad would turn itself loose in every form; crime would be engaged in by those who are now never susI pec ted of having criniinal thoughts and tendencies. Thfc fact -is, as we understand it, that the laws furnish restraint to the great majority of the people only, the exact per cent of the population, we are not prepared to even guess at. We have laws and regulations and these are sufficient to stay the : most of the men, women and children, in the world; but no penalty, however severe, no laws or regulations, however strict and well enforced, can restrain a certain element of our people to prevent the commission of all crime. This teaches us a lesson which we should never forget, and that is that we must work on the minds of the people and by teaching and training from childhood upward, reduce to as low a per centage as possible the people who will commit crime regardless of the laws and their penalties. HARDLY KNOWN. A return of the influenza in this section this fall is not_ expected.^ It | is said by health authorities mhi. | there may be some cases of very mild form, so mild that they may indeed be taken for ordinary colds. I "GOOD EATS" That make delicious dishes, and help wonderfully in preparing breakfast, dinner -or supper. Check over the following and then phone or call on us for your wants: CURTIS & PAUL'S J/VMS ; AND JELLIES. SARATOGA CHIPS PLUM PUDDING > j CANNED CHICKEN '| CHICKEN HADDIES i! ASPARAGUS CHIPS OLIVES CRAFT'S CHEESE PERMENTER CHEESE CANNED SHAD j I ! UNDERWOODS DEVILED f. TONGUE AND HAM r HEINZ'S SWEET AND ; SOUR PICKLES - DILL'S PICKLES t LOBSTERS ) i We carry everything usually found in an up-to-date Staple and fancy grocery store, and the above is only a few of our good things ! ? iTw. LANE & CO, The Sanitary Grocery I- BATE CO. 1 J tided to !! Running II Is for the I 11 sent 2 - || ird-Bate Company thought jt f lumber that they would <! their mills for the present j| up with Mr. Bate and he jj the present. The log men ![ mely interested in this as ![ le buying logs on the river j[ 11 lat they cannot pay the <j jy paid during the war but \\ dollars per thousand for |[ _ ' 1 1 ? BCT HOMtT MPUULP, WIW^ NOTICE OP ELECTION. State of South Carolina, County of Horry. Notioe is hereby given that the General Election for Presidential and Vice Presidential Electors, United States Senator and Representatives in Congress will be held at the voting precincts fixed by law in the county of Horry, on Tuesday, No- 4 vember 2, 1920, the said day being Tuesday following the first Monday, as prescribed by the State Constitution. c The qualifications for suffrage ^ are as follows: i .Residence in state for two years, ^ in the county one year, in the polling precinct in which the elector otiers to vote, four months, and the payment six months before any election of any poll tax then due " and payable: Provided, that minis- I ters in charge of an organized ( chuurch and teachers of public s schools shall be entitled to vote af- t ter six months' residence in the 1 state, otherwise qualified. I Registration ? Payment of all taxes, including poll tax, assessed and collectable during the previous year. The production of a -certificate or the receipts of the officer authorized to collect such taxes shall be conclusive proof of the payment thereof. ! Before the hour fixed for the opening of the polls Managers and ^ i i < i i i .:i.? ?> v;iei'Ks musi uiKe anti suuuscnuc w the constitutional oath. The chairman of the board of managers can I administer the oath to the other I managers and to the clerk; a no! tary public must administer the oath to chairman. The managers elect their chairman and clerk. Polls at each voting place must be opened at 7 o'clock a. m., and closed at 4 o'clock p. m., except the city of Charleston, where they shall | he opened at 7 a. m. and closed at j (? p. m. rl he managers have the power to Lfill a vacancy; and if none of the ! managers, attend the citizens can : appoint, from among the qualified 1 voters, the managers, who after ! being duly sworn, can conduct the election. At the close of the election the ; managers and clerk must proceed ! publicly to open tho ballot box and j count the ballots therein, and con, tinue without adjournment until the 'sumo is completed, and make a j statement of tho result for each ofI fice, and sign the same. Within .*'? I days thereafter the chairman of !the board, or some one designed by the board, must deliver to the commissioners of election the poll list, the box containing the ballots and wrtten statements of the result of the election. i Managers of Election ? Tho fol| lowing managers of election have i been appointed to hold the election i at the various precincts in the said jcounty: Adrian?Cleo. W. Sessions, Thos, W. Booth, J. A. Dorman. Aynor?W. A. Cook, John Shelley, Mnvcon TVTnvfiri | Bayboro?A. S. Dudley, W. G. Durant, W. C. Bell. Blanche?W. S. Mishoe, D. B. Sarvis, C. I). Graham. Cedar Grove?L. L. Johnson, H. L. B. Jordan, J. A. Calhoun. Conway?M. G. Andersen, W. H. Officer, B. E. Sessions. Cool Springs?D. M. Mishoe, S. C. Rabon, John Doyle. Daisy?W. E. Porter, Ben Carter, B. M. Caines. Dog Bluff?Joe Johnson, O. E. James, C. C. Reynolds. Dogwood?B. R. Parker, L. C. Faircloth, M. E. Milligan. Ebenezer ? J. Hiram Long, Wm. I. Cox, G. Willie Gore. Farmer?J. L. Butler, G. W. Vaught, G. D. Cox. Floyds?A. D. Jackson, E. M. Mears, A. Alford. Galivants Ferry?Ed Doyle, Geo. M. Huggins, Cleveland Mishoe. Grahamville?J. D. Watson, W. I. Parker, D. M. Edge. Graham's X Roads?F. Marion Johnson, G. W. Harrelson, R. C. Graham. Green Sea?Geo. M. Fowler, E. L. Buffkin, J. P. Derham, Jr. Greenwood?S. _ H. Brown, Leon cannon, w. L?. Singleton. Gu.rley?B. S. Stevens, H. H. Anderson, E. C. Harris. Hammond ? T. W. Livingston, Jasper Tyler, N. B. Gause. Homewood?J. H. Baker, N. T. Collins, J. H. Harris. Horry?W. K. Smith, O G. Allen, W. B. Allen. Jernigan's X Roads?J. D. Fowler, E. M. Phillips, Fred W. Jernigan. Jordan?ille?Geo. T. Capps, H. C. Lundy, J. C. Roberts. Knotty Branch?W. O. Lewis, Gilbert Lewis, John Hughes. Little River?J. I. Ward, Luther Permenter, B. N. Gore. Loris?J. J. Elliott, W. A. Prince, J. P. Tyler. Marlow?J. J. Vereen, B. W. Lee, C. C. Smith. Port Harrelson?G. C. Anderson, B. F. Singleton, Jas. R. Thompson. Sanford?S. S. Stevens, J. H. Stevens, H M. Sarvis. Shell?S. M. Chestnut, J. L. Gore, S. W. Vereen. Spring Branch?C. Z. Enzor, R. M. Bullock, R. B. Anderson. ! Socastee?B. F. Watts, Bishop H. Stalvey, Ben T. Vereen. Tayiorsville.?A. Mc. G. Small, P. D. Gerrald, H. H in son. i Vardelle?B. T. Holmes, Roy N. Blanton, S. E. Williamson. Wampee?R. Vance Ward, J. C. Livingston, R. L. Bell. Withers?G. W. King, W. M. Todd, L. B. Ownes. The managers of each prc-cince egate one of their mmbers tohraht named above are requested to delegate one of their number to secure the box and blanks for the election. Call at Hotel Grace any time af tor Oct. 25, 1920. JNO. E. WATSON, M. C. DORMAN, S. M. ALLEN, Commissioner* of Federal Election for Horry County, S. C. October 19, 1920. r, C , EOT tl, 1H0 W. a W. UNVEILING. There will be three W. O. W. uneilings at Methodist Rehoboth cemetery the fourth Sunday in October it 11 o'clock a. m. to unveil the nonuments of the late Sovereigns *ev. H. B. Roberts. W. C. Barnhill ind Jack Graham. All Woodmen and he public has a cordial invitation. IT|lt A. L. ALFORD, Clerk Dog Wood Camp No. 862. o Bring us your orders for all kinds >f job work, as we have engaged he most skilled printers and we ceep good paper and type to do ;he work. o Habitual Constipation Cured in 14 to 21 Days LAX-FOS WITH PEPSIN" is a speciallyxepared Syrup Tonic-Laxative for Habitual Constipation. It relieves promptly but thould be taken regularly for 14 to 21 days o induce regular action. It Stimulates and Regulates. Very Pleasant to Take. 60c >er bottle. PEOPLE OF OUR TOWN If the Farmer over Tucked his Pants in his Roots, said "(.Josh all Hemlock!" and Worried about the Mortgage, that was when Hector was a Pup. Now he is a Live Business Man who drives to Town ill ids Sports Model Speedhoy, amputates a few Liberty Bond coupons i and Pays for this Paper Two Years ' in Advance. rite Quinine That Does Not Affect the Head J I\ K HiiOMO QU1NINJC is better than ordinary Qiru.tie niul does not cause nervousness nor ringing in head. Remember the full name OLd look for the s# nature of 1?. W, CJUOVK. 30ct HORRY CONWAY,: This fair is scale tli The Exhibit The mana for the IV The Zii Exp WHICH IS A W JUST FINISHED i PASTIME THEATRE radBBlM HIB MEM CWIIIBICIWC (Mil, g Monday Tsurw Aokl IN "A Tokto Siren" Tuesday "Eyes cf the World" Admission SOc Straight L Wednesday House Peters IN un*ii ww i i 1 x-m i? iir* %% oiiK nusbands and Calico W lves I Thursday I "The Lion M an" | and "Radium, Mystery" Friday William S. Hart IN ' Money Csurrol" /Llso Monkey Com edy i SafnrHav **' I ^ Hoot Gibson j IN "A Fast Western" Also a Comedy COMING, Wednesday, November 3rd, Mary Pickf ^j J i i ? iui u in t/ttuuy ijun^ _ J JOB PRINTING A SPECIALTY countyTjm 5. C. NOV. 9-10-11-121 being staged on a larger ian EVER BEFORE * s are Many and Varied - igement has secured lid-Way Attraction ^ edman and Pollie . osition Shows , ; i ESTERN AGGREGATION HAVING I TOUR OF THE LARGER CITIES J >