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MOB MUST GO, SAYS MR. LEVER Makes Ringing Appeal Against "Wave of Positive. Out Spoken Revolt." "The mob spirit must bo suppressed if the priceless constitutional guarantees of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness are to be preserved to the individual," declared former Congressman Asbury F. Lever in a ringing address delivered last week at the ar.nual r.uppei of the Young Men's Christian Association in Charleston. Mr. Lever's speech was ;x vigorous arraignment of the forces which are 4 wni?b 1*1 f A ^ Ii?wln*? ?v ?vi i\ iii viic ?? im iv* iv?\m > iu unuui * mine the security of life and property. "A wave of positive, outspoken, brazen revolt against organized institutions is litertlly sweeping1 the world," he said, "threatening the very pillars of civilization itself." I of civilization itself." The large supper room at the Y. M. C. A. was crowded to its capacity and Mr. Lever was applauded again and again. His address made a great impression upon his audience, many of whom crowded about Mr. Lever at its conclusion to express their approval ^of it in warmest terms. It was declared on all sides to be one of the most striking speeches heard in Charleston in a long time. ?o BAPTIST CHURCH PROGRAM The lower Pee Dee union will meet with Mt. Pisgah Baptist church on Ocober 28, 29 and 30, 1921, at 11 A. K. , Friday. Introductory sermon by W. A. C. Hsrvelson. 12?General business of union. 12:30?Query No. 1, "Characteristics of the True Church of Jesus Christ that Distinguish It from Unchristian Societies," by J. C. Spivey and W. J. Ingram. Saturday. 10 A. M.?Devotional exercise by S. B. Gerrald. 11?Query No. 2, "What Is a Church Member's Relation to His Church or His Church to Him Who Only Goes T>nce Every Three Months Just to Answer the Roll Call; also a Lukewarm member's Relation to the Church of God," by J. H. Causey and S> L. Pevis. 12?Sermon by S. F. Knaflf. Report of committees. Sunday. 10 A. M.?Mass meeting conducted fcy superintendent of Sunday school. 11?Missionary sermon by L. F. Westburry. L. D. Holt, I. T. Skipper and W. J. Ingram, committee. PICRIC ACID FOR LAND CLEARING Clemson College. ? The United States Department of Agriculture has allotted to South Carolina farmers 480,000 pounds of the picric acid from Hie government war stores to be used for agricultural purposes such .as stump and rock blasting and ditch digging. This material is given to farmers who will have to pay only cost of making into cartridges and of shipping from storage points in Wisconsin or Arizona. What Picric Acid Is. Picric acid is a high explosive which was used during the World War. When dry it is a fine, dusty, crystalline, lemon-yellow powder. It be conies slightly darker when moistened ! or exposed to sunlight. It cannot; properly he classed as an agricultural j explosive because of its insensitive- ' ness and high-shattering effect. Furthermore, it could not compete with \ commercial dynamite because picric acid is more expensive M mam'fn'*ture under present conditions. It is furnished by the United States Department of Agriculture to farmers for land-clearing purposes, at the cost of cartridging and distributing. Strength and Shattering Effect. Picric acid is somewhat stronger than the ordinary dynamite. Each stick contain** ?ix ounces of material and a stick of dynamite contains eight ounces, but a stick of picric acid will do as much work as a stick of ordinary dynamite. In other words, six ounces of picrir acid ic as strong as eight ounces of dynamite. Picric acid is ouicker acting than the ordinary low grad" dynamites that are usually recommended for stump blasting. For cracking rocks by means of "mud-capping" or "bulldozing" it is very desirable. It is satisfactory for ditch blasting, if the electric method is used and an electric cap is placed in each charge. Because of its insenitiveness it cannot be exploded by "propagation" in ditch -blasting. i I nst ructions ('ondenc ed. Picric acid may be used for agri-' cultural blasting in exactly the same 1 way that dynamite is used, except il. -i ^ * xnal ino. ? masting caps must be used 'instead of No. 6 caps. Since a sixounce stick of picric acid is about as strong as an eight-ounce stick of ordinary dynamite it should be used stick for stick like dynamite. It was cartridged in this way for the man who is accustomed to use dynamite. Arrangements have been niado with the Department of Agriculture for the distribution of South Carolina's quot,:of this government picric acid thrQUgh the Extension Service of Clemson College, and county agents have been instructed to receive orders. Tho. farmers interested should see <h< county agents for further infoi nvilion. - ?-!? . - ?. Ctiw\ in 6 to 14 IJay* ri v If PAZO VNTMV NT frtii }>cui-oltchintf, Hiinrt. BiccdinlcrProLn:dij?j colics. ictontlv rollovci ltchii Pi . ai ' yo<: canfloi netful slccK oftcr the first cr/pllc.itLn. Priced;t A . . , I MOTOR'S FRIEND IS BIG OIL CAN Auto Owner Should Have WellFilled Sqwrter and Squirt Lubricant Frequently. AVOID 0VEHHEA1ING ENGINE Make Careful Study of Lubricating Chart Which Goes With Car and Become Acquainted With Mechanism?Oil All Bearings. Some day I am froing to write an ay about the "oil can." It will contain such phrases uh "The Motorist's Best Friend"?"King of the Medicine Chest"?"A Friend in Need," etc., and every word will l>e true because the oil can ranks high among automobile accessories and is used only too seldom. says a writer in an exchange. Recently a friend who 1 had always considered a careful driver, iuvited uie tor a short run. He suddenly seemed to have changed trout a caivful driver to one of the most reckless. If any car happened to cross the street ho would almost drive Into it and thou Jam on the brakes. I noticed h\H strained expression, und asked him what was the trouble. "The throttle will insist on staying open." he replied, "and I have to hook iny toe under the accelerator pedal to close it'l Visions of broken l>ell-cranks, bent rods, a broken spring or a tight bearing flashed through my mind. lie stopjKul the engine and worked the accelerator while I traced the throttle action. The spring which operated the pedal ran along a guide and this part looked particularly dry. A few drnnu nf /?11 ftvuvi ??? .-.i-i ?*> ?|/v \rn i * \-ui vui inimiui VMU I friend. "tlie oil can." looeened the action so that the pedal worked freely once more. A few more drops oo the bell-cranks and other 22,nt3 complete Tut? vvas effected Sometime? an engine overheats and the owner ts perplexed, lie fas observing all the rules to prevent overheating?-running with spark advanced, keeping oo high gear, not letting the j engine race and taking proper cam of the puiup aod the rest of the cooling system. Investigation to one case disclosed that ttie fan belt was braken. In another that It was sllpptng. A i seized fan bearing was found to be tlie cause?ami an expeusive replacement might have been avoided by timely recourse to our little friend? j the oil can. j Study Lubrleatlng Chart. Such Incidents could be multiplied almost indefinitely. Study ibe lubricating chart which goes with your car. Take up door boards and become acquainted with the mechanism. Traca out the o|M>ratlng rods and connections and put oil wherever metal Is In contact. Some bearings may be found to be Inaccessible. In one oar, ii-l.t/.K ^...11 ? ?? - * ...... ii nun11 m- imiu^ifsa, ine DrtlKe equalizing tubes under the body ?nnot be o!led from below except by un oil gun with a curved tip. Economy Not Worth While. I nm sometime* naked If It will pay to use a cheaper oil In the oil can, instead of the expensive cylinder oil. Unquestionably a good lubricating oil for such purpose can be obtained for I less money, one that will meet ordinary requirements. But economy in this respect is hardly worth while. If you have no chart with your machine, put oil on every bearing where there is no grease cup. Trace out tlw* connections for clutch, brakes, accelerator, spark and throttle lever, and oil them frequently. Do not overlook fan bearings, s*alter and generator, magneto, or any other part of the mechanism. It will be time wHI spent. Repla^vr.ent will be lessened and your maintenance expense reduced accordingly. Sow To Get Relief From Rheumatism Scientists Agree That the Cause Is Due to Waste Products In the Blood. The blood is the means by which all tissues, muscles, ligaments anil flesh of the body arc directly or indirectly nourished. It is also thru the blood strc;im that worn-out tissues and waste products arc cast out of the system. I When waste products accumulate, they arc a menace to life. They cause a lowered vitality, many skin disorders and rheumatism. Genuine relief from the agonies ol rheumatism can be had only by correcting I the basic trouble?waste products. Tl - , -i f I i iiousunus ana tnousancis or men and , women during the past 50 years have cleared their blood of waste products with S. S. S, ; It is the ideal remedy for rheumatism, because it removes the poisonous waste inattei which is causing the trouble. There are n< bad after effects and the result is wonderful Begin taking S. S. S. today and write for Sf page illustrated booklet, "Facts About t/n JMood"?free. Personal medical advice, without charge, may also be had by sending a complete description of your case. Address ChicMedical Director, Swift Specific Co., 731 S. S. S. Laboratory, Atlanta* Ciu. All gooc drug stores sell S. S. S. Imitation -Many a child learns I?\ watch in i1.< mother lh:<f ci vinjy fV a thiiif? will get it. -Washington I\. 1. fHE HORRY HERALD. CON Wi GETTING CAR OUT OF MUD IS EASY MATTER Hitch Machine to Tree and Motor Does the Rest. Spool op Spindle Mounted on Frt?nt of Auto Is Rotated by Worm andGear?Engine Is Arranged to Wind Up Steel Cable. Roads In the country ore by no int'ims always in perfect condition Every driver of an automobile who has attempted cross-country tours especially after an extended perloi. of rain, knows that the danger of becoming stalled In the mud Is ever present. The device shown here, which Is the work of an Inventor In the southU'listprn nnrt a# ?1 |/mk ??i iiiissimii, wiierc inuody roads are frequent, offers on oxcellent suggestion. Tn front the car has a spool or spindle on a horizontal Hhaft on which a Jong piece of cable is colled. The " " Another way of getting out of the mud: Hitch the car to a tree and the motor does the reel. spool con l>e rotated by a worm and pear, driven by the engine shaft. When the automobile becomes stalled In the mud, the cable is unwound, the free end Is fastened to a treo, telegraph pole, or some other fixed object. The engine Is coupled to the worm shaft and started, winding up the steel cable, thus effectually pulling the car out of the mud.?C. A. Brlggs In Popular Science Monthly. DETERMINING LIFE OF TIRE Ordinarily the More Air the Longer It Will Laet?6a fe to Start With 20 Petmde. The life of a tire le tfie atr U contains. The more air, ordinarily, the longer the life. Of coarse, there are exceptions, hut It la a safe rule to start with '20 pounds of air pressure to toe cross-section men, ana ?r more is needed, to add to It. Tbus a three and a half-lnrh tire will require 70 pound* and a four-Inch tire 80 pounds. Road, load and speed are determining factors In the pressure required. AUTOMOBILE GOSSIPS Motor trucks are now displacing mules and carts for heavy haullitg la Jamaica. * In Denmark, a driver's license 1? IcrOiiArl /\n1 tf oftAt* n nvon*l?*?i 9UUV VI wii a n i it;i ct nvt VAAiiillin UVU by the state officials, I Of the 12,000 motor vehicles in Brazil fully one-half are found in Rio de Janeiro and .Sao I'aulo. The discovery of the process of vulcanizing rubber, for which a patent was granted, was In 1S.'54. The wholesale business in automobile parts and accessories last year was valued at $725,186,942. + A 30 by 3% automobile tire makes approximately 607 revolutions to th? mil#; a 85 by 5 tire makee 671 complete turns to the mlta. The Kast Is West?In a London club, when the Chinese minister happened to be present, a rather tactless speaker referred to the position of v/umen in China ,*iini how they were debarred from so many of the privi lejjes of men. He meant no ill. but what ho saj<i was indiscreet and led to a m^iien'** embai raising si.?!.ice, after which the conversation was resumed on other subjects. The minister did not speak for a while, hut presently, during a pause. ! he turned to the man who had ir/ule j tiie critical remark: , "This is a vcrv be'Jutirul oluh you ( nave here( sir." ; Yes, I believe il is the finest. "Much liner than your ordinary pri/ate houses?" f "Certainly. None of our private r> louses is as large and beautiful a.< 'ii> " was the response. ' "1 suppose you have your womer ' hero?your mothers and sisters am wives and daughters. Of course, yoi nuM iiavo them here to enjoy youi 3 beautiful house with you. "Why, no. It is against the rules They are no allowed here at all." . "Why not?" said the minister. And the clubman saw the point.Sunday at Home. To Cure a Cold in One Day ; ?ako i,AXATIVF. HROMO QUININC (Tublct.O 1 ? pcoj?s th? Cough Hcudachc nrvi ?ff t!*? Con*. L. W. GROVE'S signature on each box. :iCc. FOR SALi\?My farm, good build' int?s and good drinking water. II j.Mayo King, Loris, S. ?0;211f DH RHI IBM B VY, S. 0., OCT 20, 1021 ? ' Bores?Secretary Mellon, & brilliant talker, has a hearty hatred of bores. He said the other evening at a dinner: "Bores are not always loquacious. A silent bore is like a dead donkey? not to be found. In a bore's presence it is impossible to got a word in edgeways. "'Our friend Sniih is an iiripolite duffer. While I was talking to him yesterday ho yawned eleven times." " 'But/ said I, 'perhaps he wasn't yawning. Perhaps he wanted to say something.' "?Detroit Free Press. ^Qfil 18610^12 ESE3CS3 |?i 13 Ks ? Indigestion g !>*] Manv nurnnna ftMioi-wlpo B? ? r... v?I UbUVt II ?OV ? |3 vigorous and health/, are Eft B mothered occasionally with |]Jj JjJ indigestion. Tho effects of a ?w im disordered stomach on the JZ JJ system are dangerous, and < ? prompt treatment of indigos- E r3 tion is important. "The only ' hj medicine I have needed has mm [ jjJ been something to aid digea- Jjf ?| tion and clean the liver," j wr**CB Mr. Fred Ashby, a a* 1 J* JMcKinney, Texas, farmer. ?JJ Kl "My medicine is fc? a Thedford's I j Hj for indigestion and stomach g 22 trouble of any kind. I have M never found anything that L n touches the Bpot, like Black- P { C Draught. I take it in broken J? Hi doses after meals. For a long fr 1 Q time I tried pills, which gripBed and didn't give the good results. Black-Draught liver L. ' Q medicine is easy to take, easy jp ' ? to keep, inexpensive." ? ? Get a package from your J* * druggist today?Ask for and ? D Insist upon Thedtord's?tho C < Q only g?nuine. El 1 Q Get tt today. ? BO emOE. : BBBDBBBBBBBBji pARI^RS^UIDlFFRE? I Written by Dr. J. W. Buchanan, late of the I'. H. Department of Agriculture aud Professor of Veterinary Science at Cletnson College. Remurkublc book on treatment of dis- , orders, accidents aud diseases of , horses, mules. cattle and bogs. There , is a huge demand for the valuable informs tion contained in this book. | Ovor 80.000 copies have been distributed among farmers. For a li:n- ? Jted time, as lone as our sunnlv lasts. i | we will supply every farmer or live > I stork man with a (rv*> copy this . D book. Write toduy for your copy. S CAROLINA REMFDIFS TO. Hoir.r of Remedies J Dept. .1-23. Union, S. C. o ] Church Directory Conway Baptist Church, Myron W. Gordon, Pastor. I Services every Sunday. | Sunday School Exercises 10 a. m. j Morning worship and preaching I 11:15 a. m. I Evening worship and preaching J 8:15 j>. m. I Prayer meeting services every Wednesday evening at 8:15. Strangers and visitors cordially .velcomed to all these services. Kingston Presbyterian Church, J. M. Lemnion, Pastor. Services every Sunday morning. Sunday School at 10 a. m. Morning worship and preaching at 11:15 a. m. Prayer meeting services fuesdaj 7:30 p. m. We welcome one and all to our ervices. Conway Methodist Church, J. C. Atkinson, Pastor. Services every Sunday. Departmental Church School 10 m. Bible Class for men only 10 a. m. worship and preaching 11:15 a. m. Evening worship 7 p. m. Prayer meeting services Wednesday evening 7 o'clock. Welcome extended to everybody to attend all services. o ? Catarrh Catarrh a local disease greatly Influenced by constitutional conditions ! HALL'S CATAURH MEDICI NI? is r, Tonic and Blood Purifier. Ry cleansing the blood and building up the Kysten HALT/8 CATARRH MEDICINE restore normal conditions and allows Nature 1 lo its work. All Druggists. Circulars free. F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo. Ohio. n FINAL DISCHARGE. Notice is hereby given that H. A. I Administrator of the 1 Estate of the 1j:te Levi Gerrald. der ceased, has this dav made annlica or? '*n|o for a Pinal Discharge p- sucb Administrator, and thnt Or' !i^r 21 fit. 1021. at eloven o'clorV M nt r>iv office, Convav. S. C. b}\t boon anpointed as the time and , \noe for the bearing of said Petition. Oonwav, S. 0.. Sent. 261 b. 1921. .T. VAUCTTT, TVr<bf> tr> J,h1R0. Th<? Day's Work. TTolol ClerV?Will you register ' fail* ? Absent-minded Movie Actor? Love, bate grief or gladness? _ ? |ji|-JJmmjTjnMWIMtf"TT_: SQUABBLING SECTS IN LIBERI.' | Denominational bigots and con flirting creds, Fays a writer in tlv field, should have no place in tlu program to Christianize Liberia, but rather should be considered "a mer ace and a handicap to the highes' welfare of both tho Christian Church and the nation." Th ? negro republic, writes John H. Reed ?n the Li* beria Methcdist. a vwanHv frumrioi journal of which ho is tho editor, is the chief gateway to the "Dark Continent," and its population must bo the leaven for the whole mass of Africa. Therefore "if behooves tho wise ecclesiastical leaders of all the various denominations to catch tho significance of this world vision and situation, and aeordingly form zones of influence in their present missionary operations in the Republic of Libera." Here %vo are told, a nation is in formation and conflicting religious forces must only tend to disrupt and disorganize the governmental agencies at work in tho building iof the State." In the second place, "such a missionary propaganda becomes a waste of men and means when the chief aim of these ecclesiastical leaders in the field is tahe making of Bantist'. Met^orl^ts Episcopalians, Presbyterians, Lutherans, or any other denominational cult based upon the dead husk? of wornout tencnts. dogmas, creeds and antiquated doctrines, foisted upon the heathen mind for the r^r" sake o* numbers. tberohv mobilizing the forces of baptized heathenism, which becomes a mora notent foe to OhHsrtian civ'ligation than if tho heathen porulnt'on were lot alone to wovlc out its own eternal destiny. The rworlnppinrr of t^ese denomination's for the past three-quarters of a cenhury be1? been, and now. a fruitless effort at so-called African redemption within this republic. Alto; against altav. f've struirl'nir churches and congregations where tbor? should be one, is tho pud story of missrionarv operations of the denominations alonpr the seacoast of Liberia, where one i<? piled on the othe^ with the din and confusion of church bolls, callimr together remnant < of a shattered population in the strutftflmtf attempt to perpetuate the denominational unit, while the extensive heathen population, nur^herthe \vhol#? population of tho republic, still stalks the hinterlands in the m'mlesrs and hopeless quest for tho unknown God." o LALUiVlfiL Ml I r | AWFUL TREACHEROUS Next Doae may Salivate, Shock Liver or Attack Your Rone You know what calomel is. It's mercury; quicksilver. Calomel is dandynamite. cramping and sickening you. Calomel attacks the bones and should never be put into your system. If you feel bilious, headachy, constipated and all knocked out, .iust fro to your druggist and get a bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone for a few cents which is a harmless vegetable substitute for dangerous calomel. Take a spoonful and if it doesn't start your liver and straighten you up better and quicker than nasty calomel and without making you sick, you just go back and get your monev. Don't take calomel! It makes you sick the next day; it loses you a day's work. Dodson's Liver Tone straightens you right up ,-\nd you feel great. No salts necessary. Give it to the children because it is perfectly harmless and can not salivate.?Advertisement. o Is It Possible?"How is former Senator Droll getting along in private life?" "He seems fairly contented," replied Cyrus K Savage. "I fancy he derives a good deal of consolation from the expectation that his successor will prove to be even a bigger fool than he was in tho office."?Kansas City Star. NOl IF YOU ARE EXPECTING TO OK IN CONV CAPPS & General ( 7j21|21 tf Address: Myrtle Beach, S. ( I Baltimore I o o I Resumption of Baltimore, Ge Charleston. Ail this line t< For Further Info B. A. MUNNERS 4-t - George A V flf } 1 1% POTATOES ROT ~~ v ! WHEN IN PITS Columbia-, S. C.?"In spite of tho experience of every Southern State ?as well as the experience in New \ * Jersey and Delaware that storing sweet potatoes in pits is rank folly'* says Ml\ If. E. Morton, of the South Carolina Developemnt Hoard? "many of our farmers will chance it again this year and complain j theiv is no money in sweet potaj toes." I The last yearbook of the U. S. j duties unescapable. His principal objection, he said, was that it provided for disarmament of Germany without pledging the United States to protect j Germany against aggression, other nations were pledged in the Versailles treaty. Another development in the situation was circulation about the Senate ! .. i.Lnl ! A- rw -A in a it'fiui t tnut prominent L/eniocrats out of public life were appealing to Democratic Senators to "stand by"' the Versailles treaty. Named in the reports as especially active in this respct were William G. McAdoo former Secretary of the Treasury, and Bernard M. Baruch, former chairman of the War Industries Board. (? The Other Fellow?Much objection to laws arises from ihe impossibility of making them apply only to the other fellow.?Detroit Journal. Rub-My-Tism is a great pain killer. Relieves pain and soreness, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sprains, etc.?Adv. HARRELSON & IiARRELSON Attorneys-at-Law Practice both in the State and Federal Courts. MULL1NS, - - - - S. C. H. H. WOODWARD Attorney and Counsellor at Law. CONWAY. S. C. R. B. SCARBOROUGH Attorney at Law CONWAY, S. C. T. B. LEWIS Attorney and Counsellor at Law CONWAY, S. C. G. Lloyd Ford W. Kenneth Suggs FORD & SUGGS Attorneyn-at-Law Office* in Buck Building CONWAY, S. C. WILLIAM EUGENE KING Physician and Surgeon AYNOR, S. C. D. A. SPIVEY & CO. W. B. King, Secty. BONDS AND INSURANCE! Office in Peoples National Bank Building. DR. G. I. LEWIS Dental Surgeon Office Over Norton Drug Company*. CONWAY, S. C. Dr. J. D. THOMAS Physician and Surgeon LORIS, S. C. I . MARION A. WRIGHT Attorney-at-Law Oflices Spivey Building CONWAY, S. C. F. J. SULLIVAN & CO. Certified Public Accountants (Ut.) Telephone So. 706. Murchison Bank Bldg. WILMINGTON. N. C. S. C. DU8KNBURY Attorney-at-Law Snivey Building CONWAY, S C. J . I. ALLEN, JR. Attomey-at-Law Office in Bank of Loris Bldg. liUKIS, S . <J. rICE BUUII.D EITHER ON BEACH v'A Y, SEE US STANTON 'ontr?ctors C. 9. Horn lino I q uui oiiiia | co. Service Between I jorgetown and I I water route via | o Conway. I rmation, Apply to I LYN & CO. Agts. I town, S. C. I