The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, January 05, 1922, Image 4
V
1&i? Efowg ffcetaW
CONWAY. S. C.
Entered at the Post Otlice at Conway
C.. as second class mail matter.
H. H. WOODWARD, Editor.
Published Every Thursday Morn in;
by Conway Publishing Co.
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE:
One Copy, One Year $2.00
One Copy, Six Months 1 00
One Copy, Three Months 50
Payable in Advance.
. TELEPHONE 21.
Make all Checks or Drafts payable
to The Horry Herald, or H. H. Wood
ward, Conway, S. C.
THURSDAY, JAN. 5, 1922.
ONE BRAIN PROBLEM
In the most humble walks of lift
we find men with the keenest intelJects,
and minds seemingly filled wit-li
education, or training of a kind; and
this often causes us to wonder why
in this earthly race they have not
made a better show. It is hard to
explain and we will not try to do it
but will leave it to your own ideas of
why this should be so.
It would appear that power of
1 ?
jiiiiiu uepenus upon tilings tnai we
do not yet understand. We have
seen ditchers and wood-cutters who
could beat the president of the United
States in calculating the amount due
them for cutting certain trees or excavating
a certain length, depth and
width of ditch; and we found these
men equally apt on any problem of
that kind. These same men we know
would have been capable of making
great bankers, groat engineers, or
great politicians. Rut somehow they
did not tend in that direction, and
while they had and still have lat^n
talents the euual of any man in the'
world yet they never aspire to anything
higher than cutting wood or
digging ditches.
We have often remarked in these
columns that education never depended
so much upon books and school
houses. We said this because we
huve seen men who were the most ignorant
in book knowledge and who
never spent more than a few weeks
in a school house finally outstrip the
college b?e<| men in making a living
and turning out to "be the most use
ful men lit thtf Important affairs of a
community.
The mind Is a curious thing anci
there are curious things connected
with it, Success in this world is a
curious tiling. Some men are born
with a desire 1vv ."U"C?Sfj
_wjthin them and 'no power on earth
seems able tQ hold them away from
it. Tf they need education they will
get it in some way. They place
their success ahead of the cheap,
gaudy things they find in life and
they live with an eye single to progress.
On the other hand there are
Snert who grow up with every advantage
that money and influence can
give them and they come to nothing
in spite of all efforts to make something
out of them. You have often
heard of the educated fool. Yet they
are not fools. They have bright
minds as you will have to agree.
But somehow their well trained minds
and well-stored information never
brings them any success in contending
with the world.
We repeat hero that you do not
have to go into the halls of congress
or into the domain !' big business in
this country to f'i.:d the bright minds,
for you can pick them up any day in
the back woods of the State. Ignorant,
you would say so, but still they
are not that way.
M any of the news itr?ir.s in the daily
Hanoi's ;i< this time :no duo to iho im
loaded in.
(i ?.
By the on'! <>(' 1022 this county will
have a splendid system of good roads
running1 through the county.
?.O?
The man who is willing to make
his living" l?y hore. t methods should
bo protected from the schemes of
sharpers and crooks to a greater extent
than he is now when crime is
said to he on the increase.
In the year 1922 the Herald expects
to keep up its policy of trying
to encourage the farmers of the county.
It will publish from week to week
the thirgs which look upon as being
the most i p< rtant for them.
When ? V !'! i oon the uccoss of
our p 4 " v 1 .i'(I <i > olid foundation
'or !'i It ro p j o ^ and improvement.
This woi Id -how that wr
must furnish everything that we car
hero to help the farmers dispose ol
their product .
Upon tho
an atfriculturnl community, depend:
its succo '!\ (i lici' v a\ . When wc
make thiirr hotter for 'ho fanner:
of the count- wo n>:i':c them hettoi
for all of tin* people. When I ho farm
crs fail tho rest of u will fail.
As time roc. on cheating and do
fraudiiuc increase-. it would com. Tin
jails are somo times fillet to over
flowing with chock flu hers, pro port;
traders under mort^a^o.^, formers
the ohtainers of food, or money h;
false pretenses, and those who usi
the mails in pioadino fraudulon
schemes. It is not <>n!\ tho hootloff
tfors that fill our col' . hut tho pod
dlers of fraud and decoit come in I'o
a full share of ail time, We sup
pose that tho ine-.' iso is duo to tli
fact that as time.- "-oo on rascal ho
come more u: od to he j';ai..o. Tic
serve one sentence only to jret fro
and do the a.no old unlawful stun
over BRain, and back into the jai
they k<>.
"Save Children of
Member of Re
Mrs. Florence
R e t u r n cd
From a
*
Journey ;
thru the
MRS.
Levant, !>avs
- " FLORENCE
j Scores of spencer
,1 11 DURYEA
Children are
Dying Daily
ri l O U S A X D S of orphans
throughout tile Near East who
owe their lives to America
still look to us for their food and
slul.cr, according to Mrs. Florence
Sj> uer Duryea, Director of the
\\ omen's Organizations of the
Xc.ir East Relief. Mrs. Duryea
was a member of the Commission
which has just returned to this
country after a two months' investigation
oi conditions in the Levant.
"They look to us, for they have
no one else t > look to," Mrs. Duryea
declares. "\\ o have hecn caring
for them during the long years
of warfare, which has not yet ceased
in the v ar ivast, and we must
continue while the present need
c.\i: t. .
riiough much of our work has
b en (Idle an! it will require just
a httle more ctT?>rt to complete the
task, 'lie situation this year makes
immediate and effective action ncce>>:
ry. Due to invasion and disturhed
political conditions an additional
burden has hecn thrown upon
us, especially in Armenia, where
there are thousands of little tots
lacing a dreadful death unless we
answer their appeal.
"T s"w hundreds of children, so
hin .* l weak from nnder-nourishto
; '
! Even in this time of strictest prohibition
a man went driving a buggy
along a public street here in Con,
way singing a song which indicated
his condition. Families living along
the street heard him and heard what
he said and perhaps they wondered,
maybe, where he got it.
SUPPLY COMPANY
WILL CONTINUE
There appears in this issue of the
paper legal notice published by the
officers of the Bell Supply Company
advertising a meeting of the stockholders
to be held on February 8 for
the purpose of liquidating the all airs
of the corporation and having mo
rharter cancelled. This well known
firm will not k'o out of business. Il
is not intended that readers of this
a per should understand the notice in
>ch a wav. The officers of the company
are .1. !.. Hell, president; Arnold
vice pre-id'Mit, and S. M. Allen,
ecretarv-t reasurer. The \ are all well
'nown business men of the 0Jurl<\v
o ! >11? it* *n 1 'lif'v will continue the
business <>f the Hell Supply C< mpanv
iu t the <ame, with the same property
and at the same place.
WORRIED WIVES?RHAD THIS
Half Sick, Cros*; Ha-ha^ds \\ i '
He Helped hv (iude's
IYpto-Manj?an
Is he "cross as a l^ar" wh^n Ik
comes home? Is he nervous and .
hit pale and always tired? Y"U <a
, help him hack to 1:11u with -'ii'.de'
f'onto-Manjran. He is run-down, an<
" 1 *' 1.1,WW
? rf1 j) to-,>i in nr. <m, i ** i
tonic with the ri'rht k?nd of iv< n in i
win build him up. Help your hu
' band cfet plenty of vo bl< od !dd'
band .<rf>t plenty of rod bloo*!
will I'o vol' rind good nafurod
and stronger, tor). Good blo^d
health, makes happy good humoi
that is the way it u*oes. !f von <1 >
t^ivo hitvi some kind of ;i loni" ' wil
probably uot worse?they >1 nallv ''
(la to the f'rin' tore an<' ; : >
Gudo's Pcpto-Mangan in liquid ?>
{. 'blot form. "H b pleasant to t; k
" and work wonder if taken dfi'y !
a few wo'ks. Advert isomont.
O ??
\ori( i;
Notice is hereby given that (her
will be a meeting of the stockholder
of the Dell Supply Company at 111
tore of the company .at (Jurlcy, f"
' C.. :it 10 o'clock in the forenoon o
v '02? for the purpose o
^ liquidating: the affairs of the corpor;
'ion and canceling1 the charter of th
v -i> >no
c ' r ni-'ij,, l're-iflont.
1 AKNOI.D 1H\1,L. Vice Provide nt,
S. M. AU,KN. Secrotary-troasuroi
I Dated January 2, 1922.
nn kl(omi:s m;r.s
O W( Von>ed l?v ll>r> cheers o r thoi
- s.'inds of followers, friend. and noi?d
y l>or , Mutfcno V. I >< I>s. the socialn
0 lender, ntusnrd to his {ionic after a
1 absence o*'aimo.st three years spent i
il federal prison for his anti-war specc
in 11)18.
THE HORRY HERALD, OOMV
Near East" Pleads
lief Commission
?V*. . '***1
mcnt that they could hardly drag
themselves along the ground, crying
for something to eat at the gates of
Near East Relief orphanages in
Alqxandropol ami Erivan. The in- ,
ctltntu..,- - 1 * *
.nuuuvii.i tilt aiiiMUV ovcrcrowcicci,
and. unless additional facilities are
provided, no more can he admitted.
"This means a situation so horrible
that 1 hate to think of it, for
winter is coming, and winter in
Transcaucasia is bitterly cold and
the starvation and disease that is
now carrying olT scores every day
will grow worse.
"If more American women could
onl; see (lie sights that 1 saw, of
babies dying in their mothers'
arms; of youngsters who still need
a mother's care scratching in refuse
for a morsel of something to er>t ;
of others so shriveled up from
starvation that they more resembled
mummies from some ancient
Egyptian tomb than anything human;
if they could only see these
sights, and worse, 1 know they
would see that America did not
forsake a task that up to this lime
has been so wonderfully done."
Mrs. Duryea was the only woman
member of the Commission to visit
Transcaucasia, where she was the
guest of the various local governments.
'pi
THE UNIVEI
I !i
< /4, ' "f\ \T
r\/^ V
| mQn_?L
ii "'' ? - - -, I
i! rtiNm#*
| i|
I Ine One*!
The Ford One-Ton Ti
to the farmer and the i
ij, ] merits of Ford Cars. Ar
reputation and great ?al"
up to every ci'tirn made
l The reliable Ford Mot
chassis, the aluminum
\' 5 combine to produce a t
capacity and strength -
service; a truck that so!1
, I jj , at a very small operatii
Hence the demand lor t
' [j is constantly on the incr<
For the ?ood of yout
f a r m i n g, merchandising
should come in and look
'* | Truck?NOW!
? IMPOF
>r
I- We nre prepared to furnis'
either vv.th Standard or Sj
!aru ueannjf >(lvrs tno tr
The Special Gearing i.^cr^
from five to sewn miles a
h Fast Delivery Car. '
B. B. AN
A ulhorizcd
I I al)oi
irn.tm
PAY, S. 0., JAN. 5, 1922
TRADE IS NEAR
WITH RUSSIA
Washington. ? Formal commercial
relations between the United States
mil Soviet Russia are believed to
bo imminent. It was stated at the
White House that while no official
information lias been received, it i.
rccognized that conditions in Russsia
are changing: and this change, if con
tinued, would tend to make the
? ?.K1~ *
i\u^i>iaii^ uuic IU u uuc*
The Administration thinks that the
Soviet Government is appropriating
the $10,000,000 remaining from the
Imperial Russsian Treasury for th?
purchase of foodstuffs to relieve famine
sufferers has shown a new spirii
and a realization that commercial
relations with other nations is a re
quisite to national stability and is
prepared to carry out lawfully the
obligations of contracts they may
make.
In discussing the question of the
resumption of commercial relation
between the two countries, officials
pointed, as significant, to the fac*
that the Government is permitting a
Soviet purchasing agent to comr
here to suoerintend the expenditure
of $1^,000,000 for foodstuffs to be
distributed under the direction of the
/American Relief Commission.
President Harding is understood tr>
have been impressed with the reports
on the Russian attitude mad^
by field agents for the Relief Ad ninistration.
These reports indicate
that there has been a complete
change of policy 011 the part of the
Soviet Government toward intei'ational
trade.
o
HAS COLD DAY
The coldest day tlv.it Conway has
seen this winter came off last Monday.
The weather went down l??wr?i> u
... ?? v? UUIII II
had boon during tho whole winter, on
Sunday night, and l>v Monday morning
there was a cold wind blowing
from tho North. It made icicles of
every drop of water that was exposed
to the air. Pipes were frozen up long
before midnight on Sunday night.
MOTOR TRUCKS SAVE TIME.
Of tho 753 f.'irmors who wore asked
to say what they had found the chief
advantage in owning a truck, 1)1 per
cent replied "saving time."
Tho experiences of 753 farmers in
Kastern States who use motor trucks
are described in Farmers' Bull< tir.
1201, which may be obtained free
upon application to the Division of
Publications, United States Department
of Agriculture. A complete
analysis of the reports which form
the basis of this bulletin is contained
in another bulletin, department No.
910, Experience of Eastern Farmers
;ith Motor Trucks,
RSAL CAR
~?One-TonTruck ! I
^^^Chassia $445 t
F. O. B Detroit I'
WithPnea- |j [
i A y. mntic 'Jtraa ^ k
fit and Do. ~ jj \
/.tv. \\ mottn'ablo r 1 v
> H \ \\ Rune '?11
7\ \ I
ZZZl itfeq ly
jU1 - II
-Hn If^i H I
'iBiSJlif
y.<~: j, :\A .:
'j'i I I 'J <~S '
?r t. L : i r*| ' '
! Iffif fjl ' I
-fe,> Y i
b &?' .--v
vp j*
*Jm Truvk* IJ
k"i V
pM :!
*u':k first made !is , ppcal
merchant because c^f " * i^
id it made its woruir.fv 1
r. record because it lived
for it.
Mtl
or, the special 1- >:d r'.eei
bronze worm-uriv< all
ruck of unusurl vo'.ver,
-a truck that lasts in
ires the haulage probl m
and uj.keot :*\*per.:?e.
he Ford One-Ton Ti ucU jj'ii
ease.
D
business, whether it be
or manufacturing, you
over the Ford One-Ton ii|
it ant jl
ti the Ford Truck ? c, ipped ft ij t
jocinl Gonrinp. Th>- Stunduck
a maximum of power. Bjj!^
a:.'*s iho : peed of the tiwck
n hour, convening it into n ^
derson h
' Ford Dealer I ''<1
, n. c. ;!i
ri-wrw w\r-, -<mv.vnwwimn-'M ?mmu mmv j &
I
i
DO YOU wish to know he
of women have gon<
knowing some of the pain
to childbirth? Listen to tl
Motherhood crcates almost a new
state of being for a woman.
As a result, new nerves, those heretofore
restful and quiescent, spring
into activity, they cry out, they tingle,
they burn in their unrest.
The network of nerves across the
abdomen, the loins, the back and
other parts now become super-sensitive.
All these nerves are being called
on to perforin unusual duties.
These nerves must be pacified
and comforted; must be put in
condition for the crisis that is
pending. t
If these nerves are not soothed and
quieted, they may set up aggravated
nerve tension, increasing in severity
from month to month, sometimes
even culminating in a nervous paralysis
of back and limbs. This leaves
the mother-to-be in a condition where
she is unable, fully, to meet the test
when the climax of maternity arrives.
WARNING: Avoid usi?z f>L
liny act only on the skin ? //</ nui
VlnN -SB
Used by Expectant Mothers
for Threo Generations
f SOUTHERN AC
| Nashvill
(THE GIANT Ol
Its immense popularit
n fact that every line in il
farm families by men an<
J appreciate Southern con<
S callv unlimited personal
5 subscribers without chai
Every year we answc
i on hundreds of differenl
[ charge. When you tacc
i valuable personal scrvio
L i-pncr*n U'hv kru'n
II JV^I 1 Y Y 1 I J Vy I1U > V
Fl
\i 375,000 CIR
III
:'JX: :7ZUSL-zixjjSL^-j^.x^z.jcn::
I have the earliest prol
North Carolina. To pre
testimonial showing wh<
State's Prison Farm, anc
that the U. S. Agriculti
their seed except enough
Also my booklet showing
hfic type of Cotton is grov
grown for years, right in
sections. My supply is
prices lor quick shipment.
i
| 12-22-It WAKE FC
. BRICK B1
Conic to oii?' |
we have to oi l
LAYTON BRICK
12l22.tr. Mari<
i i
I
QJlake
(Ihild-biiik
SosieH
>w thousands and thousands
5 thru motherhood without
s and discomforts incident
his:
Mother's Friend is used externally
as a massage; and its purpose, thru
dflilv 119^ ia tr> ora^imlln '
J V -w M\4uuiijr t Kvimjr aiiu
effectively relax the muscles and
nerves involved in the function of
child-bearing; to make the skin soft,
pliable and elastic so that it may
expand easily and naturally as the
abdominal parts enlarge?thereby relieving
the tension and strain on these
muscles and nerves of the otherwise
severe distension before delivery.
Mrs. C. J. Hnrtman, SIS Palm St.,
Scrunton, Pa., says:
"1 am willing nnd anxious to tell any
mothor about Mother'a Friend. It did
me so much good that I wouldn't be
without it if it coat $5.00 a bot tie. With
my first two children 1 hud n doctor and
a nurse and then they had to uso instruments,
but with my last two children
I only had a nurso; we had no time to
't a doctor because I wasn't very
sick?only about ten or fifteen minutes."
Many doctors and nurses recommend
Mother's Friend. It contains no narcotics,
or habit-forming dru^o and is perfectly
harmless. All drug stores carry Mother's
Friend.
in oils, grt'usi's and substitutes?
y cause harm s cilhon! doiJ/rguod.
1
I
I
BRAD FIELD REGULATOR CO.
Dept. Atlanta, Cio.
Please send no without < nsi a copy of your '
booklet on MOTHERHOOD ami The 13A1JY. i
i
i
Name J
St., R. F. D. - J
i
Town Siatc
I
"m~ TITii
iKlCULTURIST I
e, Tenn. I
F THE SOUTH I
y is due not only to the U
[ is written for Southern n
d women who know and U
Jitions, but to the practi- "
service which is given to 8
ge. D
:r thousands of questions n
: subjects ? all without |
:ome a subscriber this in- H
e is yours. 1 hat is one fi
LCULATICN
-.v.:. j |
..11
Dnll Ulnmfil !
mn mitiiH
ific type of cotton grown in
>ve this statement, write for
ere they were adopted at
1 so great was their success
iral Department bought all
i to plant their 192! crop,
that my Selected Early Pro
vn and has been successfully
the heart of the boll weevil
limited. Write for special
ikicst, n. c. ^
3 1 rir nmr^ I
\ iV'j\ ni MV^ix
)lant and soo what
'or 1)0fore you liuy.
WORKS, (Kst. 18h:?)
an, S. C.