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rv'-s j o-7 v invrii^ 1 %u;c, J BU'RLEY ;! j Rotables TURKISH j| j The three greatest cigarette tobaccos, blending MILDNESS- J MELLOWNESS-AI1CMA | | one-eleven j I cigarettes | I 20forI5 i Z? \r~ *" * 11! i'ifa NEGRO IS CAUGHT WHILE STEALING Brought to Lockup on Friday by Magistrate R. B. Nichols. GIVES HIS NAME * AS HENRY TAYLOR Tries Old Subterfuge of Trying* to Make Out He Borried Property. A negro by the name o{ Henry Taylor was brought into Conway on Friday morning by Magistrate II. B. Nichols. He was lodged in the county jail under a warrant whicti Mr. Nichols swore out before Magis- j trate Chestunt. charging the negro I with larceny of a set of harness, and the attempted larceny of a buggy. The crime was committed the night before, under peculiar circumstances. The property taken belonged to Mr. Nichols personally. About 7 o'clock Thursday night while Mr. Nichols was reading a newspaper inside the hou?e, his daughter stepped out on the front porch and called him. 1,~ ?- -. 4 ?i-- - tv licit nt; wtriiv DUl l-'I t! 11' purcil It negro wan was approaching, and when asked wha4 he wantead, ho said he would like to borrow Mi. Nichols' buggy. The latter went out into the yard with the negro nd discovered that the negro already had his harness on a mule and had turned Mr. Nichols' buggy around in readdiness for hitching up. It appears tha-t when the daughter stepped out on the front porch, although she did not see the ne?rvo who was about to make ( ff with thrt buggy and harness, the negro thougth she had seen him. and he came up near the porch and asked her if her father was at home. Ft was then she called her father out. Mr. Nichols arrested the negro himself and guarded him until the following morning when lie brought him to town. The negro gave his name as Henry Taylor and said that the mule lie was driving belonged to Sidney Brazier at Rowland, North Carolina, and that lie, the negro, lived on a farm nea?* Brazier. Ho is a strange negro and none of the authorities have heanl of him he fore, and they fully believe that the mule has been seolen from some farmer in the Gallivants Ferry section. Whiskey still is captured With a Juqfull of Monkov Rum Recently Made With the Outfit. Rural Policeman King carried ou4 a read in Simpson Creek Township last week, assisted by John Rogers, rrvnqtpble, and nerhaps others. They had been watching the farm of a man by the name of Hughes, whe wan suspected of having a still in a tobacco barn. It seems that the officers had suspected this place for some time, and when the still was discovered it showed sit^s of having been used in running off a charge. Not only the ?<til) was taken, but finally the still worm was found where it had beer hiden off in a thicket. After the officers had been thorugh the barr they turned their atteation to th? house in order to try to find the Ikruid evidence of the running of th.frtJll. The officers stated that be fore they could get into the hous?' a 'small girl had taken a jug of "monkey rum" out of tho back door and hid it in a patch of cane. They followed up this sign .and got the "monkey rum." On last Thursdav Hughes was brought in by King, and defendant made bond for his appearance at the next term of the court for trial. i , . \ t* ^ v" BOYS ANNOY PRESCOTT HOME Magnolia Prescott Complains to Officers While Husband in Jail. KNOCK ON DOOR, AND TEASE MULE Says That One of Parties May Be Near Relation of Family. Charles ProscoU was admitted t>l bail 'r. ;t Wednesday alter an application had been made by his attorney before Frank H. Gary in Florence, .S. C. A telegram was sen! here early in the morning1 to the effect that his bond had been fixed at $1,000. Magnolia Prescott, the wife of Charles Prescott, lived in the small house along with her several small children from the time Prescott wa< lodged in the county jail on Saturday, October 8, up to the time that h? was admitted to hail. According to a pitiful story told by her to several people in Conway, a crowd of boys made her life miserable almost every night from the time her husband left the home with the officers. Last week's issue gave an account in full of the inquest and the testimony given by five or six witnessed who knew all there is to know about the unfortunate affair when Prescott shot Fulton Davis, resulting in Davis' death, and two of he shots hit Alec Bourne in the hand. The same trouble which was im posed upon this poor old man and his family was not stopepd with the wounding of Davis. There was an interval of about a week while Davis was lingering. Even then this house was not free from molestation. According to stories told by Prescott acrowd went back along the road in front of his fence and dared him out on several nights, asking him if he did not want to do some more shooting. It would seem to any reasonable nerson that with the removal of Prescott to the county pail the miscreants who have been engarred in this conduct would have left his poor wife and little children in neace. To the contrary his wife has; been around Conway several days complaining of the annoyance around her house almost nightly. Last Wednesday she said that a crowd had come to the place and knorkod on her door, teased the mule which she drives. wlveh was stcvbled in ? stall nearby, and made noises and talked snd kept her awake the entiro night. She again applied to the authorities for assistance and they nromised to give her aid and it is hoped that thev have done so. \ccording to Magnolia Prescot' one of the parties annoying her ma;* b? a near relative of the McCracken family. o I Sunt? Again?"Why didn't you ar! rost that motorist? He was going GO miles an hour." "Ho said his house was afire," replied tho village constable. "Oh, that's different." "I?ut I didn't tecolleci: ! h' durned j catfish was out of sir.ht that he does not Iiva here' Birmingham AgeHerald. Mitltttal Constipation Cured in Js 'o 21 Days LAX-FOS WITH PEPSIN" is a speciallyprepared Syrup Tonic-Laxat ive for Habitual Constipation. It relieves promptly bu' should be taken regularly for 14 to 21 dayi> j to induce regulai action. It Stimulates and Regulates. Very Pleasant y.c Take. COc rer bottle. l'or the Modern Child. Mother had promised little Clara a doll, and Clara was allowed to accom puny her to purchase one. They on to reel the store where a large as sortment awaitol them. This doll, said the saleswoman, can say mamma and papa, this one here can shut its eyes, and this one can say Oh! when you put a now dress on it. Have you ono that cries when you I don't put a new dress on it? aske-1 little Clara. ?Klods-Hans (Copenhagen). I - o 000 quickly relieves Constipation Billiousness, Loss of Appetite ano Headache, due to Torpid Liver.?adv. o A it#** A iMUVil UllllllflllJ An American inventor has pro duced a raido- controlled motor car , that steers itself and sounds the horn at pedestrians. He is believed i to be experimenting with an at i tachment that will permit it to ap, pear in a police court and lie like a chauffeur.?Punch. o I Colds Cause Grip and Influenza LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets remove th< 1 <ause. There Is only one "Bromo Qnlxi!*~ : L W. GROVE'S slanci jr"? on bo*. I o . ? 1 (lood Proposition. Dad: Tommy, if you'll saw some 1 wood I'll tell you what 111 do. Bill: What's that, dad? Dad: I'll let you have vthe saw ' dust to play circus with.?Vancouver Province. ^ ? o In Demand. Great Lady (organizing concert at fete): Of course, you'll give you' ! services free, Mr. Warbel, as it'r ' for charity. Hut it's sure to bring I in lots of work. Singer: Er?what kind of work? Great Lady: Oh more chaiity! ?London Mail. I - THE HORRY HERALD. G< 1 " - _ ??? . . "Fundamentals of Bi the Ten Cor By ROGER W. B/ Business conditions are due to noss conditions can be changed for th life changes. Business runs in cycles--first a of depression. When studying these resort to certain statistics. In end( statistics, it was found: That a period of depression is estv, extravagance and inefficiency period of prosperity, and that a per I the righteousness, industry, integrity half of a period of depression. The meaning of this is plain, tories which cause our prosperity; i or commodity prices which give us I like the thermometer that register tl "Prosperity is based on those fi Hiice, service and thrift, which are 1 mentals of prosperity arc the ten c VIGILANCE WILL SAVE CAR TIRES Driver Should Realize Proper Care Is Important to Secure Maximum Service. GO EASY OVER ROUGH ROADS Make Careful Examination at Least Once Every Week and Seal Up Small Holes With CementAvoid Wet Crushed Stones. Tiros are really wonderful pieces of work. It Is remarkable that they stand up as well as they do when you consider the car weight, speed and rough roads encountered. Yet the average driver is apt to say that tires make him tired?especially after hp tin? tn Invoat In <>k W f ? ! \'i1v \?l IIIWICi i i c should realize their good qualities and not think they should stand any amount of abuse and still give maximum service. Having learned this proper respect, the next thing Is a proper care through their lengthened career. To keep down the cost per mile there are some things the owner must do. The manufacturers of most tires issue a pamphlet telling how the tire Is made and how to take care of it. CJet it and read carefully and follow the advice given. Look After Small Cuts. Iiuf. despite your care, there will ho cuts In the ruhher trend. Go over the tires regularly once a week or oftener and look for these cuts. Small ones should be sealed with cement before they get big. Larger cuts may need the putty-like repair material to be had of the 'supply dealer or may need vulcanizing. Hut it should be attended to at once. Water will get Into the fabric and it rots in amazingly short time, and then vulcanizing does no good, for the strength of the fabric Is gone. Sand works iit as well as water and makes "blisters" alongside the tread. Pressure on tires should be kept of tlw? f1<rni>n frh'iin >?*' ? !>/-. ..V J-, ? " II """ iiiMimuiti uier, not by guessing, but by gauge, and the reserve tire must be tested tbe snme as those in use. A oar systematically overloaded will wear out tires faster; procure oversize tires to correct tills evil. Grease softens rubber. Keep the tires free. Fast driving beats tbe tires, with faster wear, besides magnifying tbe bumps and giving a side swing which grinds the tires over tbe road. If the front wheels are out of alignment it also grinds off the tread. A harsh clutch does the same thing In starting abruptly, and brakes applied too rapidly also slide the wheels. Brakes unevenly adjusted fcause one tire to slide and grind. Whirling around corners sometimes makes all four tires Hllde, even when there Is no bad skid. Here Is a Good Tip. Oil a wet day avoid roads where crushed stone has been newly applied. Rubber workers in all tbe vulcanizing shops wet the knives with which they cut the rubber. Wet stones witli sharp corners slice a tire like a knife. Inner tnhes puncture, but may b patched easily with the handy klta sold In tire stores, ?nd there ar? handy vulcanising outfits for large* cuts which may be carried In the car, Blowouts should he tnken to the vulcanlzer. N'ew methods enable th expert to do wonders with tubes ysed to throw awoy. The manufacturer tries to show yoa how to save tire cost, and along wltli tills the fellow who follows his advice generally has less road troubles wltli tires than he who neglects them persistently. >WWAY. S. C., OCT 20, 1921 V isiness Prosperity Are nmandments IBSON, Statistician a man's attitude toward life. Bvsie better only as man's attitude towr.rd period of prosperity and then a period ! business changes, it was necessary to mvoring to ascertain what causes the the result of unrighteousness, dishonwhich develop in the latter half of a iod of prosperity is the reaction from and thrift which develop in the latter It is not railroads, steamships or faet is not bank clearings, foreign trade good business. All these things are lie temperature of the room, undamenta) qualities of faith, temperthe products of religion. The fundaommandincnt8. i CONVENIENT DINING TABLE FOR OUTINGS Much Comfort and Ease Afforded Picnickers. Light and Compact Folding Device Shown in Illustration ? Leather Tabs Are Attached Over Top of Curtain Fasteners. A family of live persons always takes the lunch basket along when they po for a day's outing in the car. It is not always easy to find a leafy '>ower with a clean, level space on which to spread the lunch, and he suii's, u is vastly more comtortaDie and loss bothersome to out In tlio car. To 11< 1 (1 to the comfort and convenience of such trips, the very light and compact folding tahle shown in the drawing is carried along. The.frame is made of 1 Vis h.v %-ineh whitcwood, in two parts, which are hinged at s. / TAQLE ??.T UP III I LEATHER >. MOLE TO^PIT GUOTAJN ^lWTTC*^ A Compact and Convenient Folding ninlnn *.* .. *U? I U. ~t A. ?-r i 111 mj uuiu ivi mv; at ui nuvuiliu* bile Picnickers and Tourists. the middle, while the legs are hinged to one section and joined together Dear the lower end with a hrass plate. The frames arc covered with extra thick pressboard, or wall hoard, glued to the wood. Leather talis are provided at ea<*h end, which are attached over the top-curtain fasteners on the edge of the car. The whole is painted or varnished as desired, to make it waterproof and to improve the appearance.?A. O. Rollins, Portland, Me., in Popular Mechanics Magazine. WASTEFUL DRIPPINGS OF OIL Leaks From Cap Screws Make Frightfully Messy Engine and Should Be Attended to. Oil drips frequently come from the cap screws being loose on the crankcase, from the bearings, from the plungers or tappets above the cam shaft. In addition to being wasteful, ciripn of this kind make a frightfully mossy engine and should be attended to promptly? In some cases where oil drips from the bearings the fan picks it up and scatters it over the Inside of the hood. AVTOMObHX Motor vehicle taxes are collected on the basis of horsepower In Belgium, France, England and Italy. All sales of motor vehicles In Den* mark must be registered by the police, and tlu-se cannot be effective without an Insurance policy first being secured. 1 Automobile shipments from .factories 1q May totaled 22,000 carloads, 14,800 drlveaways and 8,350 shipped by 1 boat, an increase of 13 per cent oyer 1 April. Average wholesale price of gasollna In 30 prominent cities of the United 1 States Is 22.2 cents a gallon, a de1 cline of 7.1 cents, or 22 per cent sine* .mnuary j. I * 1 Automobiles costing $4,000 at pres? 1 ent exchsngo rates would cost approx1 lmately 00,000 leva In Bulgaria, which at die normal exchange rate would amount to $17,370. I * ) "What Doth Strength Application of ft By DR. HENRY VAN D' Nsvr~v John Keats, MEm^z bra ted throughou w l very fine remark < -gya. find >t in hiu od Mirth": What dotli Now, Keats in distinctly a poe spirit in all its beauty. Here is a lii of the moral law to art: "What doth the question to ask about a work of a or weaker, does it build you up and and healthv feelings or does it erippl fill you with morbid thoughts and h Take the art of music. Great i has melody and harmony in it, flows water or, like the billows of the gTea but synsual music, lascivious music, i at all?irritates, demoralizes and vul Jazz, for example, I think, was i imbeciles. True, it does not contaii cause music is not a didactic art, b influence, because it confuses, bewild through the ears. It is, in elfect, ti of sound. Laws against immoral art? Th very much. To rely upon legislaiio in art?that is, as a real safeguard? must he found in the discrimination, vidual and the public. We must learn to ask ourselves ?i in art as well as in commerce and ot its effect and what is evil. After a art of the higher kind, I eome back "Whatsoever things are pure an he anv virtue and if there he any ]) A man is made by his thoughts, what lie looks at long he grows to 1 and morals. ? a^\the univei / rV .([ ^ ^ I -?y? sir =T ^Touring $355 f. o. a GoInC O at your plea! I"T choose and wl your family 01 the boundless beautic air, a lunch in a shs excursion, a rest by a You can in a Ford. A Ece that t not an ed that 1 m a Foi pleasures, often pay this mat gures. B. B., Authorli TAE ? I _ . . KUJI ien and What Maim:" loral Law to Ait JfKE, Address to N. E. A, ==H \\ whoso centenary has just been cel?it the English-speak ing world, has a 3ii the moral side of poetry. You will 0 entitled "Bards of Passion and of 4 ir earth horn souls still speak s of their I it lie week, lorrows and delights, Missions and their spiles, lory and their shame; 1 strengthen and what maim." t's poet; he represents the aesthetic ic in which he reveals the application strengthen and what maim.* That's rt?does it mnke your s]>irit stronger inspire von and move you with sane le you and lower your moral tone and ysterical impulses? nusic, even merely good music winch around us like a stream of pure, clear t sea, it refreshes and it strengthens nean musio? if it can be called muaic garizes those who listen to it. n veil ted by imps for the torment ofj ii any distinct immoral teaching, bent jazz docs contain a real immoral ers, benumbs and befuddles the mind tie dope or knockout drop in the ait ey ran do a little to help us, but i*>t ii as a safeguard against immorality is a great mistake. The true defense the taste, the conscience of the iudiind we must teach our children to ask ,her human activities what is good in II, in thinking of art, that is to say, to the words of an old hook: d lovely and of good report, if there raise, think on these things." What he loves he is apt to look at; jc like. These are my views on art . _ . * ( RSAi?CAR/ j ^ OT $> I I /* . omrort i sure?go where you len you choose, with your friends. Enjoy ;s of nature, the pure | idy wood, a fishing !| . cool lake or stream. lillions have learned o own ana operate II extravagance; they the many pleasures rd takes the place and the saving s" for the car and its ^ ;ter over. Get the ANDERSON ; zed Ford Dealer H 30R, N. C. J 1 ^ t \ *