The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, April 27, 1922, Image 4
The Horry Herald
CONWAY, S. C.
Entered at the Post OfVice at Conway,
S. C., as second class mail matter.
H. H. WOODWARD, Editor. I
Published Every Thursday Morning j
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. Woodward,
Conway, S. C.
THURSDAY APRIL 27,"1922
THE COMMONPLACE
The lecture delivered l>y ,7. William
Terry last week at the Chautauqua,
entitled. "The Spirit of the!
Colonist" was dry in spots, but contained
many ideas that are indeed
worthy of consideration.
There was mixed up in the discourse
a number of illustrations from every
day life which the lecturer used to
show the romance that there is in the
commonplace things \\Je do and see
and hear every day of our lives.
The theme of the loc ure was based
upon the ambition and preseverance
of the colonists who came over to this
country and braved the hardships that
attended the development of a new
land.
The lesson taught by the lecture
comes in tlie realization that the one
who takes great pride in what he or
she is doing in this world and tried
to do it the very best he can, and is
ever striving to make improvement
and render better service, is getting
all there is to be had out of life and
finds true romance in the commonplace
things. Among the things he mentioned
is the romance of the cooking |
stove and referred to the busy housewife
who goes on year and year making
the same old dishes in the same
old way and compared that kind of a
housewife with the one who found joy
in her task by producing some new
dish and trying some new recipe and
making her work a great joy instead
of a great drag.
a * 4 K \tfoe mup 1i fond
UCl lis repeal ur-ic mv.v... .
for thought in what the lecturer said
Most of us must go through life filling
places that lack a whole lot of
being at the head of the list of high
callings and avocations. We mils'
find success in those or not at all
We must be happy in <he perform
ance of these humble tasks or not
happy at all. Great it is when we
take such a pride and interest in what
we do, no matter how simple and low
the service, that we find happiness in
doing it and in carrying on from day
to day to our final destiny, constantly
striving to improve ,and better the
work we do.
When men and women look at their
^vork in such a way then we will have
a country full of artists, yes artists,
even in the commonest walks of life
and they will be men and women who
are worth having'.
Things like the chautauqua get th<?
ypeople together and get them to thinking
and this is the reason why they
keep on coming back. Anything th.at
will make men and women* think will
'VIo them good.
Q ,
)' "Howe of Us arC attaching more imflio
ivtntfckv nf location of
|jui iiautc tn\. .. i?4. v
the national highway than it really
deserves as a business matter. It
should fro where the majority of the
people want it because that will he
the place where will he the most
convenient for the greatest number
of the population. Tt is certainly not
the location of this road that couM
bring business to Fourth nvenue. The
men on Fourth avenue and whpt they
have for the public is what will bring
business there if anything will.
Tobacco farmers will he compelled
to grade and tie their product this
year. This will he better for them
and this plan would have been better
all the time.
? o
The co-op-uM ive plir of marketing
tobacco will bring about a change ir
the plan of selling it that will alfecl
all of the warehouses of the state.
o
The course of iVitm through life wil
always difi>r. Just as 4hoy are o
differing features they will be of dif
fori 11 g destinies.
In tbo oniin?^? of ^ono there ar
several thyir'v in Conway that are ho
ing overdono jr,-t / t this time.
o
Laziness is of several ki^ds. On
kind is the sort that creates a deadl
r r ? 11 i_
jiinr ??i an woik.
The most successful man in an
community is usually the one that i
the most useful.
o The
1 jiggest business in the worl
is the one that rendered the nv>:
service to others.
o
The man who seeks pleasure so(
gets tired of the results he attains.
Make service the keynote of yoi
business and it should succeed.
o
There are ways whereby Conw;
can be made a tourist resort.
o
Saying things without thinking1
as bad as leaping in the dark.
o
Good honest work always brin
satisfaction in its train.
o
There is much advice on the co
trol of the boll weevils.
o
A man can succeed in any usel
calling if he tries.
t
FRIENDS WANT
W. B. COOPER
T ast week by the resignation of
Ion. A. S. Lever a place became vavint
on the Farm Loan Board. The
vany friends of W. B. Cooper of Wilmington,
N. CM the president of American
Bank & Trust Company, urged
him to applv for appointment to the
place. He decided to do so.
A news item from Washington to
The Wilmington Star under date of
April 18, stated that Mr. Cooper was
in Washington at that time seeking
the appointment for this position. It
ilso stated in the news item that Senators
Overman and Simmons of North
Carolina would urge the President to
give the position to Mr. Cooper, who
is a Democrat and a Southerner, and
upon the ground Ithat the place belongs
to Mr. Cooper on that ground.
Friends of Mr. Cooper throughout this
-oction of South Carolina as well as
throughout the eastern part of North
Carolina were all busy 'for the last
few d/iys doing what thev could in
:bo interest of Mr. Cooper's appointment
on this hoard. It is the place
Tor which Mr. Lever quit Congress in
order to accept, but he is now at tlie
head of a new bank in Columbia, S.
C.. and resigned from the board last
week.
HERALDSTILL
HAVING HOPES
The Herald has been interested in
the application of Lieut. Governor W.
B. Cooper for appointment on the
Farm Loan Board and sent telegrams
l ist week to both Senator Dial and
Senator Smith asking them to urge
the President to appoint Mr. Cooper.
The Herald has received letters from
both Senators reading as follows:
April 20, 1022
Mr. H. H. Woodward,
Conway, S. C.
My Dear Mr. Woodward:
In< answer to your wire I beg to
state that I am already committed to
another for this position. Further
I understand that the place has been
promised.
However, T know Mr. Cooper would
make an exceedingly able member of
the board and 1 will keep his name in
mind and if circumstances should so
shape themselves and 1 could assist
him I would be glad to do so.
With kind regards, and assuring
you 1 am always glad to serve you in
any way I can, 1 am
Yours trulv,
N. B. DIAL.
April 20, 1922
Mr. H. H. Woodward, Editor,
The Horry Herald,
My Dear Mr. Woodward:
Your telegram of t'ic 10th instant
in behalf of Lieut. Governor VV. B.
Cooper to succeed Mr. Lever received
i? Senator Smith's absence.
Senator Smith is confined to his
home with illness and will probably
not be in his office until next week,
at which time your telegram will be
brought to his attention.
X WUI ft vci V U U I v,
WILLIAM H. SMITH,
Secretary to Senator Smith.
o
SUCCEEDS SlTRE
Columbia, April 24.*? South Caro ina
is in the throes of the closing
stages of one of the greatest campaigns
ever waged in the history of
the state and which promises before
ihe end of .the week to result in one
of the greatest victories ever recorded
in the state. The campaign to
sign up 100.000 bales of cotton by
May 1, to he sold through the South
Carolina Cotton Growers' Co-operative
Association which has been in
progress since last August is closing
scenes of the frrea.t? :t cntlv;
i'.Aliv.osi everywhere in the state,
cones th/it have never been equaled
n some section.-, not c'*en during ihe
famous war drives.
Victory in the drive is deeclared
the leaders to he almost cenain, but
taking no chances on the rtmil outcome
ihe workers are out in the fiel<
' day and night pushing the light everj
minute.
o
When you have money to spend foi
i idvertising pond in the medium wliicl
t will give the highest class to wha
you have to display. Get it in th<
paper which stands high in Ihe esti
1 mation <>i he people from whom yoi
f are seeking trade.
New York city is hearing voice
from the clouds as Lieut. H. W. May
n nard, former army chaplain, is flvin
over Manhattan with a group of gii
singers. The airplane is equippe
with a radio broadcasting devic<
? The stunt was /irranged to raise fund
y for an American Lcsrion camp in t!i
A'livorul'fk rmunt?#ins for sick an
wounded service men.
V
Ar? you "up to tl?o nook" In blood In
:ul purities? 8. K. 8. 1m ono of tlio nroate
blood-purlUcrb Lnowu, Try IU
THE HORRY HERALD, CONWA
CAUSE OF HIGHER RENTS
The traveling: public, Imagining that
it is saving itself a few cents when
it holds clown street car fares, is
really paying over to the landlord
vastly more in increased rents because :
of the consequent congestion o " the
population in small areas, says Prof. :
David Friday of the Deoartment of i
Economics, University of Michigan.
Prof. Friday lias recently made a
study of the New York traction situation
and in his book just published 1
on the subject he reaches the obvious
conclusion tlv.it unless traction companies
are permitted an earning sufficient
to attract investors they c.ainot
obtain the money for needed extensions
to their lines or such added facilities
to their service us will permit
he building up of new residence addi 1
'ions or suburban localities. Consequently
the population must crowd
into a comparatively small area and
higher rents will naturally prevail.
Mr. Friday shows the tremendous
Increase in the general price level that
has occurred since the war. Taking
the 1913 price level as 100 per cent,
commodity prices have increased 22('?
nei- cent, lie says. Public utility rates,
including; those of telephones, telegraphs
and other utilities, increased
an average of but IS per cent during'
the same period, he says.
In the meantime, he points out, operating
expenses, including' the wage:
paid employes, prices paid for materials
and taxes paid have increased
much more rapidly than the gross
earnings of the utilities. Such companies
are therefore compelled to pa;
for what they buy on a price level
more than twice as high as it was in
1013, while they must sell what they
have to sell on a basis of the 1913
level, or at least only slightly higher.
Commenting on Mr. Friday's study
of the traction situation, an official of
the State Telephone Association states
that the comments apply equally as
well to the telephone industry. The
next two years, says this telephone <
man, should properly see a greatei
amount of new telephone construction
in this country than any five years
preceding, to make up for the lack of
extensions during the war and to provide
facilities for the growing population.
Whether or not this work car.
be done depends upon the attitude of
the public and regulatory bodies
toward the rates allowed the companies.
Unless these rates are made
commensurate with present costs of
operating, telephone companies can
not finance needed new extensions
and additional facilities, and the new
suburban sub-division or additions to
the city may have to go without telephones.
The situation is much more en- .
couraging to the utilities, however, .
say many public utility men, since the
nnnnla on^ tlin r:11 p-lYYfl ki nir bodies al
j /vjvy u i uiim VIIV^ > ???>, ? 0
most everywhere are seeing the necessity
for proper support of their
utilities. In many places new sched
ulos of utility ratos, more in keepiiu
with present conditions, have already
been approved and put into etVect.
? o
CALOMEL USERS
TAKE AWFUL RISK
Very Next Dose of Treacherous Druj
May Start Terrible
Salivation
The next dose of calomel you take
may salivate you. It may shock you?
liver or start bone necroisis. Calomel
is dangerous. It is mercury, quicksilver.
It crashes into sour bile like
dyanmite, cramping and sickening
you. Calomel attacks the hones and
should never be put into your system.
If you feel bilious, headachy, constipated
and all knocked out, just go to
your druggist #pcl 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 mp.Vijig you sick, you just go
,: hack and ^et youv mon?y>
Don't take calomel I It cannot be
trusted any hi?>Vo a leopard or :
wiMcnt. Take Dodson's Liver Tone
* which straightens you right up and
: makes you feel fine. No salts neces
sarv. Give it to tho children because
' : " ' - I X.., ,ww t
I it is periec: iv nai'imess aim ^,*nnv.^
; salivate.?Adv.
The Civi! Service Commission states
r t.hat il will hold examinations on May
i 10, 11 and 12, and on June 21, 22 and
t 23, throughout the United States, to
b secure eligihles to fill vacancies in
- positions of assistant examiner in the
-i rvitent office. The entrance salary of'feved
is $1,500 a year, plus the bonus
of $20 a month granted by Congress
s and there is provision for promotion
- on merit to positions paying from
g 1.(550 to .$3,900 a year. Technical
training is necessary.
d Full information and application
blanks may be secured from the UniIs
ted States Civil Service Commi ion,
e Washington, 1). C., or the civil servid
ic?' hoard .'it t he post office or customhouse
in any city.
.S. S. S. Will Rid You of Boils, Pimple?,
Blackheads and Skin Eruptions.
? A boil In a volcano.?your b1oo<l la
' ?.? r,wU<'l< of Pot?ons that thoHo
boll' out Into a boll. They'll keep
"boiling1 until you destroy thorn
completely ny xno uso or is. h. h., ono
of tho most powerful blood-cleansers
known to4 science. S. S. S. haa stood
tho tost of time. The power of 113
Ingredients Is acknowlodjrml by authorities.
Its mediclrml ingredients aro
guaranteed to ho purely voh'otublo.
tight off, it eloar3 tho skin of pimMjgples,
boils, blotches, blackheads, acne,
raMoc/.ema, rash and other skin eruptions,
HHand does it thoroughly, it drives out
jflBBof tho blood impurities which causo
KSrhcumatism, makes tho blood rich and
pure builds up l?>Kt flesh. It helps to
manufacture now blood cells,?that'll
" ono of Us secrets. S. S. 8. is sol<l at
Mt all drug ."tores, in two sizes. Tho liyKcr
t>uu ia ihc nioro cconuiulcuU
Y, S. C., APRIL 27, 1922
FLORIDA, STATE OF
BEAUTIFUL SCENERY
One of the pleasant incidents of a
trip through Florida is the wealth of
scenery which unfolds before the
visitor's enchanted eyes. Inland is a
succession of streams, lakes and lagoons,
paved with a floor of clear
[>reon water, bordered by a semitropical
luxuriance in beauty of
foliage, which is unrivalled. The
r./>nnfr>' Notvvoon is :i vnsfr. riini'P of
hills, valleys, wide fields, and dense
forests?in all, a beautiful, natural
ivmorarmi of nature .us seen only in
Florida.
Along such rivers as the Oklawaha,
and the Calooschatchee, the
scones are ever changeful?now
larkened into an awe-inspiring
'_rl )om by a jungle of overhanging
frees, forming vast, arched avenues,
now fairy-like and charming, and
again wierd and wild. Elsewhere
are streams like broad estuaries,
stretching spaciously between shores
whi"h close in on either side with
serried ranks of forest, tho whole
lapped i n soft, dreamy, de'icious
quiet, or tiny rivulets flowing through
hammocks, banked with the 1 >1 no and
green of water hycacinth, roofed with
dark foliage and streams of silver
grey moss.
The great forest trees are of immense
size?oaks ,gums, and glossy
magnolias, interspersed with palms
and pines, all laden and interlaced
with a perfect network of al5 colors,
flowers of all sizes, enlivened by the
snowy white and brilliant red plumage
of birds and water-fowls, which
wheel and skim gracefully through
the air.?Selected.
ARE YOU NERVOUS ?
Maybe There is a Cause For It That
You Can Correct.
Many who sulTer from backache and
weak kidneys are unnaturally irritable,
fretful and nervous. Not only
does constant backache "get on the
nerves," but bad kidneys fail to eliminate
all the uric acid from the system,
and uric acid irritates the nerves,
keeping one "on edge," and causing
rheumatic, neuralgic pains. When
suffering so, try Doan's Kidney Pills,
the medicine so well recommended by
- ' - TI 1 j.L:~ *,
Conway people. neau mis
resident's statement:
Mrs. M. K. McCall says: I had
symptoms of kidney trouble for a
long 'time and finally couldn't stand
the pains any longer. I was nervous
and the least noise frightened me. I
was tired and languid, too. 1 had no
ambition. My kidneys acted irregularly
and I was bothered on this account.
I got Doan's Kidney Pills at
the Norton Drug Co., and a few boxes
cured me."
Price GOc, at all dealers. Don't
simply ask for a kidney remedy?get
Doan's Kidney Pills?the same that
Mrs. McCall had. Foster-Mi Iburn
Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.?Adv.
II
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6 ******************<3
>
QUEEN LEAVES
FOR HER HOME
Flora Mae, reijrnin# member of the
house of Holliday and queen of Coiumhia's
Paimafesta, h/is left for her
home in Horry county, where she will
[take up the duties of queen of Horry.
Miss Holliday and her parents left
for the "independent republic." Nearly
all the county queens left during
the day, only a few. remaining over
with friends for a short while longer.
OMicers of Paimafesta escorted a
number of the county queens to their
l J ? ? * 1 1
trams during- me any and in tne |
CQ|i^
Fisk Premier Trend pry ' llf
30 x 3:2?$10.85 vf| jjj
Non-Skid Fabric . jlr \
30 x 3y2? I I.85 R?J a }
Extra-Ply Rcd?Top \&4l U\ y
30 x 3>a? i 7.85 M;A\ % '
Six-Ply Non-Skid \
Clincher Cord y
30 x 3 Vi? 17.85
Six-Ply Non-Skid
Cord Straight Side *? ? ?
30 x VA? 10.85 Timet
iBu
THE lower prices on F
ing to you because the
higher priced tires can g
other tires will show you
and lower priced through*
There's a Fisk Tire of
for car, truck
amzrzEciT?wvra?i? rzzHESC^ziKTS
for a Summer'?
Buy an
ctric Rai
MrfefAJ'
A
cook 111 comfort all the year
'icily is?
-Absolutely no danger in any
) the housewife or children.
)MICAL?Saves fuel, time,
ood by preventing shrinkage.
ARY?No dirt or bother?e
>oils over on it, there is no hai
he healed coils burn the food o
?You know the heat will al
ame, you can always be sure
electric servant you need to
e. Come in and see our com
iaum Light & Ic<
****************
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afternoon the queen of the big festival
was given a farewell greeting before
leaving for her home.* Miss Holliday
made a most charming queen
and was admired by thousands of
palmafesta visitors.?The State.
o
We are well stockcd with sugar,
l,??.,i * ?
imvi, i n.^, imvir, uunue, louacco, etc.,
unci would be jflad to sec our Horry
friends in Mullins at any time.?Palmetto
Grocery Co., Mullins.?Adv.
4(20 2t.
o
J. A. Clifton, M. D., specialist in
diseases of eye, ear, nose and throat,
at Conway Drill? Co. on Tuesday ^ \
afternoon and Wednesday only...Please
call as early as convenient. 11-3-tf
~ ~ nrrirnn inan !
bw ^ />
$$1/ Six-Ply Non-Skid
V j Cord 31 x 4 ?$27.00
i \ Non-Skid Cord
V f 32x4 - 30.50
TB Non-Skid Cord
\\ 32 x 4y>~ 39.00
tMkj Non-Skid Cord
^jV5f 34 x 4y2? 41.00
Non-Skid Cord
o Re-tire? 35x5 - 51.50
,y Kisk)
'isk Cord Tires arc interest;y
buy more tire value than
ive you. Comparison with
Fisk are bigger, stronger,
3Ut the range of sizes.
extra value in every size,
or speed wagon
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round. | y
way to the U
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ways be the * \\
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make housework a * U
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