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p - ? . 'V1 V . 4 % The Horry Herald CONWAY, S. C. . . t Entered at the Post Office at Conway, S. C., as i^eond class mail matter. . H. H. WOODWARD, Editor.' Published Every Thursday .Mornim? by? Conway Publishing Co. SI udftuPTlON. PRICE: Ono Co*y, One Year. $2:00 One Copy, Six Months 1.00 One CfOpy, Three Months o0 Payable in Advance. t TELEPHONE 2 Make all Checks or Drafts payable to .The Horry Herald or H. H. Wood _ nwu'u, toiiway, S. C. THURSDAY FEB. 23, 1922. TOWN NOT CONSIDERED As the Herald understands the proposition there is no such thins: as f 41 "state aid" in the building of new highways, or helping- in the building of national highways. Whatever comes from the state funds to be used in the various counties of the state comes by reason of the provisions of the law under which such taxes would be collected in the first place and would come to the different counties, as a matter of course, and not'as the result of something that might be done by a particular county in order to obtain that money. There is such a thing as "federal aid" in the building of good roads through the states of the Union, connecting up the counties from county seat to county seat, under the certain rules and regulations fixed by the national government under the laws and regulations provided for that end. As we understand it, this aid from the federal resources can be applied in ntfVioi* ?i nmintv nr n town, nrtd in fnet. is applied in tlie same ratio where the road in question passes through an incorporated town, as it is where it passes onward through the territory of a county that is not included within the confines of any incorporated town. In either case the municipality has to do the part which is required of it to be done. Where the road goes through county territory the county board of commissioners will furnish their part of the cost money; and where it passes through an incorporated town the necessarr* proportion is put up by the council. Tn view of these things it appears that the town of Conway will have something to do with the new road that has been located from a point near the old brick yards, out across the town line and by the Melson place to the Quattlebaum farm. Before it leaves the town the location /3s now staked out by the engineers starts in a bay just beyond the houses on Fourth avenue, and it runs along from that point to the town line, a distance of what appears to be nearly onefourth of a mile, through branch heads, sandy bottoms ,and hardly at any single spot on high land that will *" not have to be tilled in and graded up at a great cost to make the road there of any permanent benefit; through this distance, out across the boundaries of the town, it takes the lowlving border between the highland and the low land. It would appear that so far the matter of this location has been confined to the county otTicials and the , highway commissions, and that the [ town of Conway as a corporation has not been tied up on the proposition. | just why this has not been done as one of the first requisites is more; than the Her,aid knows or can ex-1 plain. In the final windup the muni- | cipality may refuse to go into the ( contract by reason of the great cost j that it will entail to build through this swampy territory, whereas Third avenue would have been very easy and not expensive as a location for this road. o ? s, LAZINESS IS BAD i Laziness has always had much to do in keeping some of the people back. Since the grading and tying process for handling tobacco has been made a law it appears that some growers ale prepared to drop tobacco as a money crop and plant no more of this. But tTiese are the lazy ones that are making this decision. The smart and progressive planters of thi^ county are not grumbling at the grading law. They advocate it as being one of the best tilings th.it could ever happen to .the industry. For years the growers hi.ve been placing their product on the warehouse floors in any old wav, hoping against hope, that they would get a good price for it. How could thev expect it when the buyer himself had to separate the bad from the good? How could the buyer tell how much good and how much Uid he had in the pile? Several grades mixed up together and weighed that way when placed on the floor! The law ore of the host that we have ever Kid. It* may ho hard for 'azy men, but it is good for the smart men and they knovy it, % ^ /f*v -?^?o ? " This is the time of all times when the people of thfe country need to keep themselves full, informed as to the movements now Wnng made for the benefit of the farmers of the land. Thero is not a iv-au who should not bo interested deeply in the co-operative marketing movements 1)\ behalf of cotton, tobacco and sweet'potatoes; also live stock in the not far distant future. Those whose best interest.; may be conserved by spreading knovl edge can learn only by reading and keeping up with the timos. o -rEnvy and ill wiil <f^not fail to play their parts in tfie ,itl'aiis and destinies of the people of <:hr' Uiwn. They can be seen in action every i:. \y out of the 305 days that we have in the year. It goes on forever. V' i ) A, ? \ I The Tri-State Tobacco Association is now fully organized and we believe that it will be able to take care of the situation during the coming- tobacco season in this state. i . o W'l! the ex-soldicis fin,'illy get a bonus as they deserve? It would fhat so much hitching and red t-ipe ah; ut this would he regarded as \ dls'rrace ih view of the great service that these men gave .heir qount ry. o The hard thinns that we throw in Ihe path of others will turn back and become obstacles in our own path. This is true as life itself is a reality. It is be-1 to stop and think wheif we ire about to do something that will not benefit us, but which will cause someone else to, suffer loss or discouragement. StfK LOOKS SO WELL AND HAPPY See (he Rich, Ret! Blood. I he Sign of Health, Showing In Her Lovely Cheeks Some women ha-'e na* ura'ly beaut iful complexions that lc'! you there is plenty of richness in their ulood. Their figures become \veli formed, supple, rounded md graceful. Thoko are the results of rich, red blood, and plenty of it. ' There is no need of being- thin and scrawny from poor blood. Get a few bottles of Gude's Pep to-Manga n ? alee it \?it!i your meals for a few week-?. It will give you plenty of red Mood. By budding up the blood, you give f;\e entire system a chance to restore itself naturally, and that brings natural bloom and beauty and all the effects and joys of good health. Get Gude's Pepto-Mangan at your druggist's in liquid or tablet form.?Adv. o No Worms in a Healthy Child v All children troubled with Worms hove an unhealthy color, which indicates poor b'ood, and as a rule, there is more or 1 ess stomach disturbance. GROVE S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC given regularly for two or three weeks will enrich the blood. Improve the digestion, and act as a general Strengthening Tonic to the whole system. Nature will then throw off or dispel the worms, and the Child will be in perfect health.4 Pleasant to take.* 60c per bottle. o JORDAN-RABON One of the most interesting marriages of the season was that of Miss Mollie Jordan to Mr. Rollins Rabon, Which wyas performed by Judge J. S. Vaught, at Conway last Sunday. Mrs. Rabon is the only daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Pink Jordan and is a lady of much refinement. Mr. Rabon is the son of Mr. Thomas Rabon of the Bayboro section of this county. Mr. and Mrs. Rabon will be at home on Mr. Rabon's f.arm near Allen. They have the best wishes of their many loyal friends throughout Horry county. r> We are not in favor of a law< prohibiting cigarette smoking; there i? entirely too much of it being done now.?Kansas City Star. o ? NUISANCE TAXES The General Assembly appears tc be determined to inflict the people o. South Carolina with the irritating luxury taxes which the federal gov ernment has just removed, in consequence of almost universal d/-ssutislaction. The luxury taxes were, no doubt, necessary as part of the burden of the war, but they have been the most annoying and depressing of all the tax impositions. It is astonishing that the State legislators should be so bent upon resort to f U II 1"\ ll A n .? i. ... .... nivni ^niic viicn unjiifu>un i< m"inorj is still fresh in the mind of the public. The luxury tax is misnamed, as a rule. There are, of course certain things that might be subjected to to special imposts as coming under the classification of luxuries and therefore tapping- the resources of the 'veil to do, on the principle fiat these should bear a larger portion of the government expense?however i'lusory this idea may be?but the taxes which the General Assembly is in the course of enacting, upon soft drinks, amusements, tobacco and such are too general in their application to be regarded in suchcategory. There will be few tc escape, not merely the yielding of the tax but the constant feeling of it.?Evening Post. i Good S t Our sausages arc gbod vor but in quality of me< X made under absolutely sa i \ <> Whether you buy linl < feel perfectly sure of ob selected meats and frest ^ made clean and kept cle; t J prices yoi I Grier's t ! rX : , - -A* ?v '* r f* . THE HORRY HERALD, COtlW l)KA\V JURYMEN FOR MARCH 6TH > ; .I Grand Jury Will Serve Through Year? - Petit Jurors for j Just one Term The jury commissioners, composed of W. L. Bryan, the clerk of the court of common pleas; C. E. Barker, the county treasurer, and N. O. Adams, auditor of {he county of Horry, met at the ofrice of the clerk of the court last Thursday and drew the prand jury to servo through ihe criminal courts of the year of 1.022, an J also the petit jurors for the approaching; term of the court of general sessions, which will convene on Monday, March G, 1922. Following is a copy of the venirie as prepared by the omc.ers* U. A. Johnson J. W. Humphrey U. M. Bullock A. T. Martin J. B. Gore PerlQJi Doyle , ,s w Vprnpn .T 1) W u I'snn B. H. Hinson Corn R. Page H. N. Anderson A. M. Mills W. L. Singleton F. W. Hucks S. C. Davis J. C. Sessions Olin Lewis Ben M. Owens List of* petit jury for the court of general sessions to be holden at ffonway on Monday, March (>, 1J>22. His Honor, T. S. Sease, judge presiding: F M. Johnson J. Causey J H Sawyer Arthur Prince A. J. Mishoe D. W. Grainger H. D. Crawford it. ? . :i. Jordon Sam G Singleton J. Walter John,sen W. M. Todd B. G. Gil mo re B. H. Vereen F. L. Edge N. F. Nixon, Jr. Elbert O. Oox Moses McDowell G. G. Anderson P. D. Boyd F. W. Lancaster A. M. Dorsey W. J. Chestnut T. J. Booth Walter Parke'* B. G. Johnson Luther Gibson Homer Powell George Cribb Willie E. Watts W. Oliver Hardee Geo. T. Bellamy G. F. Hardee II. V. Ward J. M. Huggins T. A. Harrel W. H. Lawrimore W. L. BRYAN, Clerk of Court. fiftfi is a Prescr?P^on f?r Colds, UUU Fever and LaGrippe. It's the most speedy remedy we know. Advertisement. ll-17-15t n Twelve majors, five naval commanders, 27 captains, and nearly 100 lieutenants have applied for. jobs at American Legion employment headquarters in New York since September. <5 CATARRH Catarrh is a Local disease greatly influenced by Constitutional conditions. , HALL'S CATARRH MEDICItfE consists of an Ointment which gives Quick Relief by local application, and the Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces and assists In ridding your System of Catarrh. Sold by druggists for over 40 Years. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. O WHITE OAK SCHOOL > Please Mr. Editor vill you allow me a word or two it* your paper for : the White Oak Night School. I think it is a doing1 well. We have twentyeight members and six have been every night. I think we will soon be able to cut out the X. I think those who have not had much learning are 'earning fast. We are going to make the map white by the night school. Some think they are too old to learn, but they aren't. I am not going by myself, 1 am going to bring somebody with me. RASTUS BLYTHE, Night Pupil. o ffiQ Quinine That Does Not kiitct tho Hsu) Because of its tonic and laxative erfcct. I.AXAX1"R BROMO QUININK is better than cdioary yn's.ne and does not cause nervousness noriucnnn in head. Remember thr full npmec . 1 th< * ncUu*. II. V, VH9V2J. 20 e l-ast. Saturday was a busy uay in the office of the county treasurer and county auditor. On Saturday morning the auditor's office was crowded with men wanting to make out their tax returns. In the treasurer's ottice numbers wanted to .pay theiv taxes, many were looking after the dog tax .and obtaining the collars and tags to show to the world that the tax on their poodle dogs has been duly paid over. iausage I, not only in taste and fla~ *t as well. And t^ey are nitaty conditions. * | k or bulk sausage you can* Gaining the most carefully} iesl spices^ sausage that is an. Any kind you like at ull like. Market ' ' [ I / ! , i i . ' I ' AY, S. C., FEB. 23, 1922 CALOMEL MAY TURN ON YOU NEXT TIME Next Dose You Take May Salivate and Start World of Trouble Calomel is mercury; quicksilver. It crashes into sour bile like dynamite, 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, just go to your druggist and get a bottle of i Dodson'k Liver Tone for a few cents | which is a harmless vegetable substii tute 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!1 without making you sick, you just go back and got your money. Don't take calomel! It makes you sick the next day; it loses you a day's work. Diidxnn'x Livor Tonn J<* !-?4-_ ens you right up and you feel great. No salts necessary. Give it to the children because it is perfectly harmless ami cannot salivate.?Adv. Persia has no old maids.?News item. Who keeps those Persian cats? ?Arkansas Gazette. OTKT. OF SA?E. Under and by virtue of authority vested in me as agent of mortgagee undo;- two certain chattel mortgages held by W. A. Stilley, Sr., made, executed and delivered by J. S. Beverly land W. A. Stilley, Jr., duly recorded in the office of Clerk of Court for (Horry County in Book D-2 at page 2.4<i and in Book D-2 at page 2o6, I (will sell to the highest bidder for cash before the court house door a< Conway, S. C., at noon on Friday, March 3, 1022, "all the goods, wares and merchandise, furniture and fix tures; all tanks, engines, air compressors, or machinery or apparata of whatsoever sort; all stocks of gasoline or oils, or tires, or greases; all equipment, stock and merchandise of any sort whatsoever now located at the People's Filling Station in the Town of Conway, County and State aforesaid, or hereafter to be located .there or elsewhere in said County, ' as a part of the property of the said People's Filling Station. This mortgage covers all property of the said People's Filling Station, regardless of location, together with the building in which -?aid stock of goods is now located." The above mortgage does not cover a certain gasoline tank near the platit cf the Veneer Manufacturing Company, a certain gasoline pump and two motor oil tanks, which were sold to the said People's Filling Station by S. F. Bowser & Company, and which will not be sold at this sale. / , H. N. SESSIONS, . Cf Agent of Mortgagee. '' - T- f - And other ^ ^^Bes % * I handle, in add ? These all r GALLIVANTS ' Use Big-( | of fertilizers and Acid and Nitrate ti Never for: business just the s tilizers, bring it'to best. ltyojJare; am yet ready and cumstanefrS, and th< 1 GEO. I . I j? ? iwt n-vm-f " np ^ T**" - " i 1 *''Tt'< - " ":v7 <:*;> ; V-; POISON SALTS Centralia, Wash.?The package of epsam salts from which Mre. LCdwurd Rhodes of Klaber, Wash./ administered doses to her five children last Saturday after which all five died, confined about 10 per cent of an alkalojdal poison, according to Hernan Allen, prosecuting attorney of Lewis county, foil6wing aniaftalysi of the remainder of the package I y the st;^te chemist. An analysis of tiio ito l fkch of one of' the children hi. not been completed. Mr. Allen Maid that, an inquest probably wou'd be held. ^To Ston a Cough Quick take HAYES* HE AUNG HONEY, a cough medicine which stops tho cough by healing the inilamed and irritated tissues. A box of GROVE'S O-PEN-TRATE SALVE for Chest Colds, Head Colds and Croup is enclosed with every bottle of HAYES' HEALING HONEY. Tho salve should be rubl>ed on the chest and throat of children suffering from a Cold or Croup. The hcnHurt efToct of Hayes' Healing Honey inside tho throat combined with the healing effect of Grove's O-Pen-'frato Salve through tho pores of the skiu soon stops a cough. Doth remedies are packed in one carton and the cost of tiie combined treatment is 35c.^ > Just ask your druggist for HAYES* HEALING HONEY. o If the girls of today coukl have been pictured twenty years ago they would have been incorporated in valentines and sold as penny comics.? Pittsburgh Sun. A TO IVI ^ Orove's Tasteless chill Tonic restores Energy and Vitality by Purifying and Enriching the Blood. When you feel its strengthening, invigorating effect, see how it brings color to the cheeks and how it improves the appetite, you will then appreciate its true tonic value. Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic is simply Iron and Quinine suspended in syrup. So pleasant even children like it. The blood needs QUININE to Purify it and IRON to Enrich it. ? Destroys Malarial germs and | Grip germs by its Strengthening, InvigorYing Effect. 60c. o ?? The world without the Irish question is as lonesome as a house when the children have all gone to school. ?Great Fall (Mont.) Leader. o Habitual Constipation Cured In I', 'o 21 Days ' LAX-rOS WITH PEPSIN" is a specially, prepared Syrup Tonic-Laxat.ive for Habitual Constipation. It relieves promptly buf should be taken regularly for 14 to 21 dayu to induce regulai action. It Stimulates and Regulates. Very Pleasant *.o Take. 60c rer bottle. o Why not be honest and refer to it as "there sphere of aflluence?"? St. Paul Pioneer Press. t for AH Cti ~ ' - ' ? ' ition to Big "O" Guano: Wilcox & Gibbs Mani Swift & Co. Fertilizers Royster's Fertilizers; Read's Fertilizers, Union Seed & Fertiliz epresent standard grades of fc>es See Me First at FERRY. JORDANV )-Guano and get big crops; b fertilizing materials; Cottonse of Soda. Save money by see mf tnviNm ITIH f ?l# V I1I1VI k I 1 t >' ' * get that I am at tlie three ipla ame, but perhapsTto a limitec me and I will save y$4rrmone; obMgcd to buy on time see me willing to help you in accord e times. See me first. , J. HOLL f " v 01 . vfli| '' ^jSIS ?* '* '?v a jSSwBifcy.^iAtoM ASPIRIN Name "Ba}'er" on Genuine y IE?O \ / ^ \ pAVdm Warning! Unless you so? tho name "Bayer" 011 package or on tablets you are not getting genuine Aspirin proscribed by plrysicians for twenty-ono years and proved safe by millions. Toko Aspirin otuv as told in tho Bayer package for voids, Headache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache, Lumbagoand for Pain, Handy tin boxes o# twelve Bayer T<tblet?<if. Aspirin cost few cents. Druggists alao sill larger packages. Aspirin is tho trade mark of ( Bayer Manufacture of MonoaceticaciU ester 01 i^aiicy l loackl. FINISH BY SEPTEMBER 1ST Washington.?The American Relief Administration expects fo withdraw from its* undertaking in the famine stricken Russia by next September 1, Edgar Rickard of D ?-ton said after he had conferred with Secretary Hoover. Time to Plant and the best varieties of vegetable and Held seeds to plant lor each purpohs is told In the 1922 Catalog of WOODS SEEDS Now ready to be mailed, free on" request. Rcduced prices are quoted on Seeds, Poultry Supplies, and Feeds, Garden Tools and Spray Materials. Write for vour copy today. T. W. WOOD & SONS, Seedsmen, 17 R. 14fh St., Richmond, Va. y , ? , dard Brands J % pulated brands, ? er Co. brands. t qualities. (\LLE, AYNOR >ut I sell all kinds :ed Meal, Kainit, iing me. J J ES ices. I am doing 11 1 extent, owing to 11 y and1 sell you the IL just the same. I J1 ance with the cir IDAY I i * . I \ A