The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, December 01, 1921, Image 5

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Chri: Jj J Santa CI n * I toys an< line and Wbel ieve times a in 1920, ju^t $867.1 I m< don't believe anyone els< we did kist, as we are e in November, 1921, as v dersell and give our com r= I Men's Bates $10 s Men s Hats, $5 gra special line of Ladies' L We have a carload We have ^another Cc Caoking Stoves, O. Sweet Potatoes 50c LIQUOR BUYERS ARE TO BLAME /As Well as Bootleggers in Failure of Prohibition Measures RAPS THE YOUNG SCHOOL TEACHERS Judge Watkins of Faderal Court Spares 110 Words in 'Telling of Conditions ? " Anderson.?In Judge H. H. Watkins' Charge to the grand jury of the federal court he emphasized tlutt 'the twenty^vwo bills he was handing the foreman wee all for violation of Ihe prohibition act and that of the 8'20 -cases ready for trial p^r cent were for violation pf the prohibiten law. The Charge which Judge AVutkinH made to the jury was very string* He said that the people are now going through a period of unrest, <?f impatience vftth thf law and all rect il * - ' 11 1 1 ntruiiiu ^upn MUM'si uie wwki nau nevW seen. "I d^ Rflt know but U\at this unrest among the ymW.ffW people is reflected by the f?0t tfhai our schools .nre not ?>ro%>erly conducted. Young, inunaMre .girls and boys in the roles of teachers do not instill the right ideals, perhaps, into the minds of their pu- j pils. It is like turning over the government of the family to the baby, to ' consider the children who are now ' holding the important positions as teachers. If there is one thing that . a boy or girl should be taught while in school or college it is self-restraint, ' obedence and respect for law." Judge WAtkins also told the jury- 1 Tr\en that "we may not think the law wise. In general discussion I And no man who does not recognize the use, or rather the abuse of whiskey. It J has grown into one of tlie greatest ( evils the world has ever known. Yet f ' K now, because some people think the , M national prohibition act an unwise j ^ law, a restriction of personal property, j a restriction of the right to pet dead j | drunk, abuse the family, commit crime, etc., they are willing to violate j | it and see it violated openly. These j, Isame men think buyinpf whiskey is re- t spectable, yet condemn the bootlegger i for selling; it. The buyer of liquor is v I certainly as bad as the seller. I'll li I tell you I see no cure for the situation t | until the respectable people stop en- h couraging the siJe of liquor. !p j ^ "ft* I could go into the churches on r Sunday morning; arid j-ee every man Jo stmas aus having joint i Christmas pi get what you w re getting hard because the hs xe. Our cash book and banl 5 can. This statement woulc [iving more than twice as ma ve did in 1920 we would exp petitors?well just ask them ^ ?* hoes reduced to $3.98. Yoi de only $1.89 each, brand ne )resses, Silks and Serges fror of American wire fence, the I ir of Velvet Flour at $1 per b K. 1 ine at and below cost. per bushel. We collect the r the self-same goods. Why r.oNvt ^2^ A W 1 ?- i~iaii-ii'Z2f?n_, riviiZiEis: stand with his ,n.nd l/iiscd unci take a solemn vow to bu> no more whiskey 1 would know the prohibition question would be answered. "I am not worried about the bootlender. Me wouM be an easy problem if it were not for the church members and others who buy from him. 'We seem to hrve established two standards. <i>e by which we shall jud'.ce the poor, ignorant man, and another by which the better class, educated man ivill be judged. "l would like 1.o sec the present let down in public morals eneckcd. Not only in the violation of laws, but in the payment of debts. Some of us think nothing at ail o' our obligations, refusing to meet them, even though it means bankvwj*l?r and luin for the man we owe. This tendency is entirely too prevalent." ThiM is only a part of the forceful charge of Jude:e V*"aVkins and applies not only to the v e: Urn district, but throughout tlie work: at tills time. THERE IS VIGOR i\t nr/iTi nr nrvT\ in min DiMiu Pepto-Myngap in LupiM or TabjftM ?a Wood Itinfder Vigor and strength luive j*s thpll' t^se rich .red blood. fllopd is rlpj) when there are plenty of red corpuscles. They are the tiny red eel}* wli'ieh swim in blood and give it its color. Without red corpuscles b}w?d would he white. When overwork, or straining, or illness weakens the blood, it diminishes the number of red cells. Without, a sufficient number of red cells the blood becomes watery, the body weak. Vigor and strength fall ofT so that physical life diminishes like a fading plant. The physical pleasures of eating and sleeping and exercise lose all attraction. There is no zest in living. After Glide's Pept-Mangan has been , taken for a while the blood becomes , rich with red cells. They help to , lourish the entire system. With good . jlood at work there is a great differ- , > .? t- if.-f ,.i~ : i ;nc? 111 iivnijr. rjttuiiK, ?ick|?iiik ?"? j sxercise are enjoyed. All druggists tell Glide's Pepto-Mangan. Adver- j ,isemen t. PECK'S BAD BOY < Perhaps the worst boy on record < s known by the name of Peck's. It ] as been so written, many times in * ho past, and reader after reader , ias laughed until his eyes watered, chile reading the escapades of this: .< ?oy, the creation of the brain of he author, of course. But Peck's 1 ad boy has been placed in moving 1 ictures and will be shown at the ( 'astime theatre here on the night : f December 7th. V J * I . THE HORRY HERAI.D, CON W ; and sd the big sale at esents, you are ant before the b irder the times the more we sel t book are both open to inspec \ cause many honest men to clc ny goods for a dollar as we di ? r n n ect you to be trom Missouri, \ what. j can shoe the whole family c w stock. Full line of Dress C n $4.19 up. See them. Th< $15 kind only $1 1 per roll; th< ag; none better. We have the best line of Heat : rent and don't pay any rent. r be deceived longer? Buy it IAY E i.d~ZErai~-13?r, ,V3?: ius:: WORLD SERIES TELEGRAPH Enough to Reach Fifteen Times from New York to San Francisco To satisfy the demand? of fans ir every quarter of the Unite] Stato> and Canada whro could not be icachod quickly enough by i >;e pres.and who could not crowd in at the newspaper bulletin boards during tho world series just ended, the Western Uioti Company* in addition to providing telegraph circuits for all the press associations and for scores of individual newspapers was obliged to j set up a "circuit" containing over ' 45,000 miles of wire. The company chose its most expert baseball reporter to manipulate the "master key" at the Polo Grounds. This key flashed the signals through a mass of multiple" repeaters" which connected np all th# large centers on the North American continent, an<) from each of ' these centers a fu*ther net-work o < wires was set up to supply city and 1 hamlet ia immediate neighbor i hood with # <tetai]f4 fa . sdfiptiOH of #V(M> Ml pMwj, decision pf tM #iuj movement of tfw plttypra. ] of thousands of ffw? filfli in * tn*itttrei?f riFniorte*, opener < un>s and other towppiwy meeting grounds often knew that tho ball ' just pitched was a called before A many of thos<> at the Polo Grounds x could catch sight of the signal on c the gieat score-board behind left f field to which they had to refer T when they missed the gesture of the I umpire himself;' for the "master v key" knew everything, and translated the intricate mysteries of rvery game into the language of fan * dom, and flashed the magic words S to the cheering multitudes with tinspeed of light. The descripti? n wa sent from sight, no "copy" being supplied to this operator-reporter, '1 who flashed the plays exactly as he P> saw them before a pencil could have C1 written them down. 8' An idea of the magnitude of th< ^ circuit which furnished the news o every game simultaneously to all thehundreds of cities connected to it without the intervention of any hu nan agency other than the man at Polo Grounds, and .his worthy assistant, may be garnered from the act that it bounded tlvp country in he form of a- vast rectangle. New i orK 10 Montreal, Toronto, Detroit, Chicago, Winnipeg, Vancouver, Seittlc, Portland, San Francisco, Los \pgeles, Phoenix, Albuquerque, San AY. S. C? DEC. 1st, 1021 rKBt?artv : the Bargain He cordially invited ?i!l of fare is sera ] p tnnk in mr\rp> mcK rJm-i ? . % wift <ii i i*\/i v- V. U Jil VIUI L tion to the sore heads and doi >ubt as we would have to wrap d in November, 1920. So wl lence our books are open to al it prices unheard of. ^!i! B^ys Pn ioods, Silks, Satins, Serges an< sy cost more than three times tV * $1 3 kind now $8. ers in the city. Keep warm a The fellow that does is autoi all from i , Anonio, New Orleans, Jacksonville, Savannah, Wilmington and Xori'ol back to Nov. York v?a Host .mi, and that between those fringes of the electrical spider's-web side lines criss-crossed arid intersected each other at every important rcpeatepoint or the Western Union system, ( and extended to the haunts of the i fans in many a village whose lota' < population is less than a thousand souls, mostly rooters. 1 COITONASS'N : DECEMBER 7TH 1 Expecting One of The Largest Gatherings of Farm1 ers Yet J ? ________ Columbia, Nov. 30.?Officials of the e South Carolina division of the American Cotton Association say that the * annual meeting of the association association which will be held on '' WodnjescJay, pecember 7, will be nne ol" the largest gatherings of farmers * ever held in the state. Reports re- " ceived from over the state indicate v that there will be thousands in attend- e Ejnce, [v Chamber of Commerce ' [)rs tafcep it upon itself to see that P 0UP)ter ei>uni,y is represented by not 11 than 150 farmers. Merchants, a MJikws and business men are also jxpected to attend. The 'meeting will resolve itself argely into a eonfeence on the boll ^N, veevil and how to best meet the in- , asion of that pest. Prominent plant- " ts from the boll weevil districts of ^ ther states have been invite<l to be . iresent and tell how they solved the j" problem created by the coming of the .. veevil. f The meeting: on December 7 will ^ eg-in promptly at noon and an inviatin is extended to every farmer in South Carolina to be present. . j o Habitual Constipation Cured in I'. Ko 21 Days LAX-FOS WITH PEPSIN" is a specially- N ropared Syrup Tonic-Laxative for Habitual ixistipation. It relieves promptly but lould be taken regularly for 14 to 21 dayu > induce rcgulai action. It. Stimulates and j egulates. Very Pleasant ?.o Take. 60c .; 5T bottle. EFFICIENCY !*? ilS 'It ain't a senseless hoardin' Nor stinting of our need, But efficiency in spcrdin' That should become our creed. on It ain't some money set aside 12 On impulse once awhile, ch ii..* ?i-- - -? ? uin niciiuy savin (lay day o'c That builds the steady pile. le< ?S. V. Perlman. 12 gzuiML Mcrrmwc >use and open* [ to call and im tched. ng the first 26 days of Nov jbting Thomases that can t1< up more than twice as man ten we teU you that we have II. Come and be convince* d Staples, all going just as le price asked. nd bake that tur! ey brown, natically out of <.ur class in MR. BONDURANT, TO OUR FARMERS 1 have read with interest in you ountv priper very urgent request trom your editor nncf tho count lenionstration ajyent to take som <tepx to better your fiivuci.* ' c< lid" ion by adopting a mote sane syst?r >f marketing vour tol>acco crop. A i grower of tobacco and :i warehou - nan of ?"nny years experience, I be? ^o submit to'you some very import ant questions for your careful con :ideration: 1st. Do you prow tobacco fo ?rofit, or just for pastime? 2nd. Do you think you can evei ret much profit when other i>eopl< et your price ? 3rd. Are you satisfied with pres nt marketing conditions? K you are not satisfied why no! ake advantage of this opportunity o improve marketing conditions bv nitins? with rther formers in Norti nrolina, Virginia and Kentucky, ami orni an association to soil your to acco co-operatively?als<? to offci our tobacco t > the buyers in bettc hap?-~and not rush it to maket ^fore you are through cuiirur and pfor/? the polor# are set? J$uch a ractice will absolutely <l?wtroy th* idustry and brlnjr continued poverty nd depression to the grower, This co-'?perative marketing asw? niton will not only t<?ach the grow r? how to grade their tobacco but ill also put a sailing price on #?nv tat will componsate thorn for llioir ,bor. The bankers and business en should also got bark of this lovement here as they have done other counties where the move ext has been launched, ttealizimr lat a contented and prosperouirming community will inake al' jsinoss interests flourish. This i; > idle tale, but a business propositi. Let ovory tobacco grower dr. is duty and do it now. Yours for co-operation. E. T. BONDURANT. Farms vi lie, Va ovember 2.r?, 1921. HCIilI)AY OBSERVED. Thanksgiving Day was generally >ser\"0'l by the people of th's seo>11. In Conwav all of the stores ?re closed throughout the day. lrber shops were open until noon, usual in that kind of business. n ?? NOTICE I will be at Jernigan's Cross Road. Thursday, December 15, from II to o'clock and at Pleasant Vic v urch the same day from P> to ? ;lock P. M. for the purpose of co!iting taxes. C. E. BARKER, -l-2t Treasurer Horry County. ' ^ id up his r jpect the I ember, 1921, than we did ij ell the truth themselves and |j y goods this November as ||, *. sold twice as many goods jj i, We underbuy and uni tin Bone I advertised. We have a jj that respect, so he cannot I;) t V?v--:.? vr "":*"-v.nr -'3:^^o? | TEACHERS MEET >, DECEMBER 3D ' New Meeting Place is at y Rooms of . Conway Chamber of Commerce. ' ' The Horry County Teachers* Association will hold its regular meeting* at 11 o'clock December 3. This meet ins; will he held in the rooms of & * Chamber of Commerce in the ?W courthouse. This change- was made in order to avoid the confusion and >' terruptions of tire usual Saturday* crowds at the new courthouse. '* It is hopeil that every teacher ?& 5 Horry county will be present at tfi?< meeting. A representative from Mr Swearintfin's office will in all probability lw? with us to discuss nvitter* " of especial interest to the teachers oT rural schools. The program commit iiee nas planned a numbe of vocal &n&' I {instrumental selections and reading*. 1 iThe meeting will l>e called to order,pr<?ri'|'Uy at 11 o'clock and dismiss?# at 112 o'clock. Let 'every teacher t*r on liand. B. D. A 1,1'JXANDER. Piles CarH ig 6 to 14 Days Arvitfkts rofuoo iif PASW ^NTMJfNTfcjbi L.. t#re Itc-hlAd, n.uui, t or Protn Al.%? sUn.. ' tfot'f lrc&iiu* Pi <??. 1 y??? cao a* rcptful *Uir?i# oft* ' 0r t r ?, Prv*?#c? Good Art. G?>txl art h I ways consists of tw? tldnu'H : Klrsi. the observation of fnet ?. secondly. i In* manliest Iiik of huniRS.: design and authority in I he way that fact Is told. Great and koo<I art must unite the two; It cannot exist for an moment hut 'n their unity.-? Husk in. ? - -o Peanut Known as Goober Pea. The territory of in'ewaler Virginia i ous inon p? >iiiiii" than any other l>l?rt of the United suites, To that territory niny be a?.?'ed parts of th* ^nrolinus jilso great poaimt-gmwiitg' Mates. Some places in the Carolina* .he peanut is referred to us "the goot*> *r pou." o Early Greek Writing. Tin* earliest *Jroek Inser'ptlona won* writ ton from ?*i jjclit to loft Next cam* tlio tnotliofl oolleil "hiuisS .n-phodon," ic wtiloh the writ Son lines rw> alternately from left to rinlit, or a vica versa. Lastly, writ Ink' from left to right b?~ cauie universal, \