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CLUB HOUSE IS OPEN AT BEACH Great Hull Will Mark the Opening Day On New Hoards. COST OF THE BUILDING Completely Finished With Exception of Work In Basement and Front Piers. The Myrtle Beach Yacht Club will open tomorrow at Myrtle Beach its magnificent clubhouse on the strand. Besides other attractions there will bo a big ball in the dance hall on the second floor tomorrow night. This %* ? ! I tl-w-k fi l?i n? /) M n/tn t K n M I I 1IC U1L Ul.^l 1 \IClIIV-V. VI beach season. The clubhouse is finished with exception of some work yet to he done on the ground floor. All of the upper floors are completely finished. The long- pier in front leading into the surf is not yet finished. All of the forces of workmen will be turned on this work now and this will be rushed to a completion within a very short time. The building has been furnished throughout by Winstead's. Dan H. Winstead has been busy for the past week placing in the building the fine furniture selected from the leading factories of North Carolina. Complete with the furnishings the clubhorse has cost the promoters the neat sun of $32,000. The building is a great addition to Myrtle Beach, toweling high above any other building down there, and looking resplendent in its new coating of paint. It is located on a gravel bank, with solid foundations almost at the edge of .the surf and stands northward from the Mvrtle Beach Hotol. This enterprise was conceived by citizens of Florence, who bought land at Myrtle Beach and decided to develop it in this way. Numbers of citizens of Florence own shares in the company and shares have been sold to a number of people here in Conway. ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN Main* tit'ed American women are fast resuming their place as leaders in British society. In Detroit living-out girls earn from $<S to ?12 a week, against $15 and $20 last year. Mrs. Nora McKenzie of Lynn, Mass., is the only woman public weigher in New England. Already thfs ye.nr in Germany more tlian 1,100 women investors have been i egistered. The minimum pay for women laundry workers in Kansas has increased .$2 per week. Miss Laura Wiseman, purchasing agent for a large steel firm in Milwaukee, holds a full sized man's job. In Zulu wives are purchased on the instalment plan and the buyers are compelled to honor their obligation. The only woman supreme court clerk in the United States is said to be Miss Eugenia Davis of Phoenix, Ariz. The Canadian Legislature recently defeated the proposed bill prohibiting married women under au years 01 age from voting. Mi ss Helen Quinn is assistant secretary of the California State Federation of Labor, representing; more than 10.000 workers. It is estimated that a woman car talk four times as long: and foui times as easily as a man for the same expenditure of energy. More than 1,000 women have heei appointed postmasters of Presidentia ottices under the present Administra tion in the United States. Mrs. James Lee Shelton, promincn society leader, conducts in New Y??rl city a studio consisting of classes ii instruction of auction bridge. An enterprising New England wo man has adopted the novel occupatioi of painting sings for the wayside inn which cater to motor vecicles. "New Jersey's prohibition director i considering employing women to worl secretly in gathering evidence -igains violators? of the Volstead Act. 11 11 - ^r T T a! A! At me age 01 vr<ti>, nn.^ uv.<.i K. Wallace, a licensed minister of tlv Baptist Church in Alton, N. H.? i the youngest woman preacher in Ne\ England. Mrs, Mary Maker, England's onl; woman town crier, performs her du tjes wearing a picturesque coat am cocked hat similar to the uniform o Colonial soldiers. For the first time in its history o over 50 years the recent annual o England was presided over by a wo man, Mrs. Spencer Graves. When the Rev. YV. F. Sawyer, pas tor of a Pottsville, Pa., church, he came unable to preach, his daughte - *-*- - ?1-:* 1 took his place in me puipn uuu mlivered a rattling good sermon. COTTON MARKET Spot option prices advanced 14 points during the week, closing a 21.59c per pound. New York Jul futures advanced 138 points, closinj at 21.3Cc. GEO. HOLLIDAY JOINS GROWERS Meet in v Held In Florence On June 13?Hoi lid ay Signs Fiftyfive Acres. Florence,* S. C.. June 15.?More than fifty warehousemen and field workers of the Tobacco Growers' Cooperative Association from thirtyeight marketing points of the association in the South (Virolina belt met Wednesday in Florence, where T. C. Watkins, director of warehouses, said, I ' Those towns which support this movement of South Carolina tobacco farmers will reap a rich reward, and i those merchants and hankers who iiave helped to win new members throughout South Carolina will bring with the tobacco and the growers which come to their towns, .a new prosperity." Dr. J. V. Jovner, vice president of the association, A. T. Breedlove and C. I). Cheatham of the leaf department, assured the field workers and warehousemen at the meeting that the campaign for co-operative tobacco markets Kis been a phenomenal success todate. Telling how 75 per cent of growers in the old belt of Virginia and North Carolina were lined up with the cooperative movement and that the entrance of 3.000 tobacco farmers from eastern North Carolina into the marketing association during the past three weeks had developed into a landslide for the association, Dr. Jovner urged the warehousemen of the association to push their present majority sign-up in South Carolina to 75 per cent. Letters will reach P>.200 members of tlie Tobacco Growers' Co-operative Association in this state during the present week announcing that the member growers may take their choice of markets, among which are the following points: Andrews, Aynor. Hamburg, Conway, Darlington, Dillon, Georgetown, Hartsville, Hemingway, Johnsonville, Kingstree, Lake City, Lake View, Lamar, Latta. Loris, Lynchburg, Manning, Marion, Mullins, Nichols, Olanta, Pamplico, Sumter, Summerville. Timnionsville, Bladenboro, Cerro Gordo, Chadbourn. F/iir RlufV, Fairmont, Lumberton, Proctorville. P.owland, St. Pauls, Tabor and Whiteville. George J. Holliday of Aynor, Horry / an nl ' woe f \ n mrof nwv 1 ?? C? " |'l v. .'V III (I I II U IIILV Ull^, I and signed up liis crop of fifty-five acres witli the organized tobacco growers, also renting' his warehouse to the association. Mr. Holliday is well known as a successful merchant > and large farmer in Horry county. o Emulating the example of the American Legion member who gave a pint of his blood to save the life of a "buddy," fifty enlisted men of the regular army, stationed near Washington have formed a "blood giving squad," volunteering to give a quart of blood each to .any of their comrades who undergo major operations at the Walter Reed Hospital and who would be benefited by the transfusion. California American Legion men have won their firrht to use a $10,000,000 state bond issue for those World War veterans who desire to work farms or settle on land. John J. Tigert, United States Com, missioner of Education, will select the three national judges of the American Legion's essay contest for school children, which opened on June 2. Twenty state school superintendents i have notified the leg'ion that they are co-operating to make the contest a success. Middle Western communities on the ! route of the Southwest trail are being equipped with camping sites by "he American Legion for the use of 1 the thousands of motor tourists who each night escape hotel bills by pitch^ ing tents along the trail. o f / ( ' 11 roc: M {ilnri'i f'hillu - M - X VO IUf 1 T VI, i UlIU Bilious Fever, Colds and La' Grippe.?tf o Letter files and folders for vertical filing at the Herald shop, t ? -o ? < AGENTS WANTKD \ Men and women to handle city trade and retail the original and gen uine Watkins Products, Remedies, i Extracts, Spices, Toilet Requisites, s Household Specialties, Automobile Accessories, etc. Over 150 guaranteed products. Our values are uns equalled and Watkins Quality is in a k. class hv itself. Write today for free t sample and full details of our ofTer and what it means to you. The J. R. Watkins Co., Dept. 77, New York, n N. V.?Adv. 0-8-41. e o University of South Carolina v Scholarship and Entrance Examinations y The examination for the award of " vacant scholarships in the University \ of South Carolina and for admission f of new students will he held at the county courthouse on July 14, 1022, at <1 A M A itnlip.'inl J muct rw?f Kr> f than sixteen vears of age. When f scholarships are vacant after July 14 * thoy will he awarded to those making the highest average at examination, provided they meet the conditions - governing the award. Applicants for - scholarships should write to President y Currell for scholarship application - blanks. These blanks properly filled out by the applicant should be filed with President Currell by July 10. Scholarships are worth $100, free tuition and foes. Noxt session will open on September 20, 1022. For further \ information write V President W. S. Currell l' University of S. C., Columbia, S. C. Adv G-l-3t THE HORRY HERAEP, CONV ORCHARD NOTES We.uk and diseased limbs should not be allowed to remain on fruit trees during1 the summer. Bark beetles attack weak and slow growing* limbs and finally destroy the entire tree. Cut the limbs out and burn them. ; Cultivate the young and bearing orchards throughout the summei months unless they are to be planted : in some leguminous crop in June. Peas or soy beans should be planted ; between the rows or fruit trees ani' | the vines worked into the soil with a disk harrow in early fall. Two : tablespoonfuls of nitrate of soda applied around fruit trees one and two ; years old will be very beneficial. scatter tne nitrate ot soda in a circle about IS inches from the body of the tree and work it into the first fev inches of soil by hoeing. Rub off all suckers or sprouts whici appear on the trunk of the tree so as to concentrate the entire growth into the permanent branches. Summer pruning of newly-set fruit tree? should be done in June. This con sists of removing surplus branches After the young peach trees have made a growth of 15 inches, the tops of the branches that are to be perms; nent should be pinched out so as t force the limbs to branch. This wi do away with the necessity of sever pruning next fall, and cause the tree to form a larger and more symmetri cal head. Grapes and apples should be sprayed with Bordeaux mixture ever} two or three weeks for the contro of diseases which attack them ami cause the fruit to rot. o APPROPRIATE INTRODUCTION. When the illustration and the display lines have captured your attention, the opening statement must bo nii/V. .t.^4 1.. - ? - ouiiR'iniu.v strong 10 noici your int?ir? est and oven make you feel Unit you want the advertised article. The writer of good advertising la careful to make his introduction lit both the illustration and the display lines?to couple the idea expressed in the picture and the heading with the inn W or that is to follow. The illustration of a shoe clerk fitting a customer with a pair of shoes? and the display line "Perfect Shoe Fitting" would be utterly wasted if the advertiser were to jump right into a discussion of his stock of shoes, or if he were to talk about the scarcity of leather. A paragraph on the value of a perfect fit in shoes and the dangers of a poor tit will greatly Improve the advertisement, And it is thus more likely to induce you to read further and possibly go to the advertiser's store for shoes that you believe will feel comfortable. o The American Legion of Washington is endeavoring to locate Louis, or Antone Layman, whose father has died in Hoquiam, Wash., leaving his son an estate. Layman, World War veteran, was last heard of in Milwaukee, Wis. The Fox Mills Hospital on Staten island, in. ^ closed following charges of the American Legion that it was unfit to house sick and wounded service men, has heen sold at auction for $61,000. In 1918 the hospital cost the Government about $3,000,000. o CAUGHT A SHARK A tale of the sea that seemed almost incredible was brought to port by passengers on the Shipping Board steamship American .Legon when that vessel arrived in New York from the tropics. As the liner was crossing the equator during the night the passengers felt the ship suddenly recoil as though struck. The speed was decidedly diminished, but the ship seemed to ride easily. At daylight, officers started an investigation and found the mutilated carcass of a thirty-five foot shark clinging to the sharp prow. o One should eat snails to grow thin. Dean Aver of Akron University gave tlin I-T '?f VA * ? niv. 1*11n-11*?/ IUIIICU^ ku <ni /\ mui icaii Legion post, saying, "Follow the English custom, starting tho meal with some nice juicy, squashy snails and you won't want anything more for a week. The recent rains intorferred much in the plans of many of the farmers. Work in the crops could not he done in many places owing to tho extra amount of moisture in the earth. K- * * * -X- >: * -X- * -X- -X- -X- -X- * w -X- ? vv -x- -x* -x- x- -x- -X- -X" {HORRY COUNTYi i TRUST CO. I * * * $ |L. D. Magrath, Manager^ * # %Rcal Estate, Bonds ond% | Insurance. | rAY, 3. 0., JUNE 1922 ;************************* ! REAL PROFIT F 1 B17. * * * Everybody in the business ^ tobacco excepting you?the one i * one man who keeps himself close i and worries .all through the year 4c in the end?the one man who do< * takes every bit of the hazard?1 % make a profit. jjc Do you think that this sys ^ ment think that the system you 1 * is an intelligent or profitable sys ^ if you were really thinking anc * between that system as a perm ^ ought to go oitt of the tobacco i other line of activity! * YK KAKME GOSSIPE Good dairy cows and purebred hens are sure to yield good dividends. Soil building and diversification will take the "evil" out of weevil. Cutting farm timber to get a little eady cash, as many farmers are now loing, is "penny wise pound foolish" in less skillfully done. With all this talk about co-operative selling, wonder if anybody is giving enough thought to co-operative production ? "Danger: Sharp curve ahead" for live stock farmers who do not grow their own feed. Some forage in time will save kine. "Our aim is to put one of the legume crops in every acre of corn and Uubhle land in the county," say$ County Agent \V. J. Tiller of Chesterfield. All together now, let's make it unanimous. Kven if this is the busy season on the farm, that's no excuse for letting a good field go down the crock. Stop every tendency to erosion. A tip to Mr. Farmer. If you really want to give Mrs. Farmer .a square deal, rememl>er that running water and oilier labor-saving conveniences are no more important in the barn than in the kitchen. o The Kind's birthday list of honors includes five peerages, one of which goes to Sir liobert Borwick, the baking powder magnate.?Cable News? "Raised" to the peerage.?Milwaukee Sentinel. Pari - sets some styles; but flapper? <?o' their: from Scotland.?Nashville Tenneesseean. If there is anything that a flappei doesn't know she doesn't know it.? Washington Post. A woman in Tennessee who saw Marshol Foch while he was touring the United States under the auspices of tho American Legion, has written * i 11 i i i me marsnai asKing mm 10 seno noi one of his worn-out shirts. She want? to make an apron, she declares, and would like to have it autographed. o The Distinguished Service Order of the American Legion has been conferred on Marshal Joffre of France, by Hanford MacNider, commander, ir Washington. The highest legion decoration has been awarded only foui other persons, one of them Marsha Foch. ? o ? Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days Druggists refund money if PAZO OINTMENT fails to cure Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles. Instantly relieves Itching Piles, and you can get re6tful sleep after first application. 60c o SUNDAY SCHOOL RALLY DAY The Sunday schools of each denom ination are cordially invited to atten< a basket picnic given at Gallivant' Ferry Baptist Church on June 2.c There will be two good speakers pres ent and a few children's exercise? Come one! Come all! Let's rail round the cause and boost our Sun day schools. P. M. COLEMAN, Supi | DAD'S BEST FRIEND ^ The best friend of any father < or mother is your cobbler. He ^ is the one who really helps you o to economize. < My repair shop is run on a 0 strictly business basis, and my < modern factory equipment helps materially to reduce your shoe O. bills. 4> When your shoes are mended o by Hill Kulchycke you know that I * 4U -i i ? :n r i iiv,i an- uimic ii^iii, <iii(i will 2 aivc you many more months of service than they otherwise X would. Send the children's shoes to T me and you can see for yourself the A1 class of work that 1 daily turn out. BILL KULCHYCKE Hoot and Shoe Garaiye OR ALL | r THE GROWERS j has made a real profit oir of your j nan who takes all of the risk?the * to the soil?the one man who sweats t and wonders how lie will come out % ;s the real labor?the one man who * ne is the onlv fellow who fails to * * tem is correct? Do you for a mo- ^ lave had of auction sales of tobacco $ tem? You know as well as 1 that * I if you had to take your chance * anent thing- anil nothing else, you * growing business and go into some * ?Aaron Sapiro. * AJL AJL JUL JUL Aft. Ai. A?. A#. AJL JUL AIL JUL Al_ JUL JUL AL AJL JUL A*_ M O A#_ AJL U A? M II TV A TV T? A TV A TV TV TV TV 7V7? TV TV TV 4% TV Ti 7i TV TV TV TV VT 7i BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. M. VV. Gordon, pastor. Services as follows: Sunday school meets every Sunday at 10 A. M., with J. C. Spivey as su perintendent. Regular worship and preaching everv Sundav at 11:15 A. M. aiu 8:30 P. M. Junior Baptist Young1 Peoples Un ion meets every Sunday at 2 j30 P. M Mrs. W. 1H. Winborne, leader. x ? Senior Baptist Young Peoples Un ion meets every Sunday at 7:30 P. M John Vaught, president. Sunbeams meet every other Sun day afternoon at 2:30 P. Rl. Mrs Maud Washington, leader. (Jills' Auxiliary meets every othei Monday afternoon. Miss Lucy Spivey leader. Young Woman's Auxiliary meet: Thursday evening after each thirc Sunday in each month. Miss Maude Dusenbury, leader. Woman's Missionary Society meets on Wednesday after each third Sun day at 5 P. M. Mrs. Hoyt McMillan president. Regular prayer meeting services oi every Wednesday evening at 8:30. o If Seattle young men become sea sick at club meetings they will have an honest alabi. An American I.e gion post has bought one of the Uni ted States Shipping Board's woodei hulls, moored it to a dock and wil use it as a legion clubhouse. Five hundred armed American 1 e gion men patrolled the Forth Worth Tex. flood arejis during the disaster in which fifty-nine inhabitants los ihoir loves. The men responded t< the Mayor's call to prevent looting and aid in rescue work. About the only successful bathinj. ' suit censor is ;i mosquito. In Boston, a robber ran from ; ciapper. A single man, no doubt. The saddest sicht mi onrtb is : ' one-armed man trying to tell abou ; a fish that got away. i Harding is said to have shake. hands with 1;"?(),000 people. This i : much better than shaking heads. | o Get second sheets at the .Herald of . fice. You can choose from severa different kinds. * * * * ?. Get law blank supplies at the Her 1 aid office. * * * * * Fine box paper at the Herald shop I ***** Herald is now $1.50. I. = * * * | IMPC * ?? * j If Letter * c ' t X He * -J Je % To Our Customers: * If our service is not a % if our line of groceries | plete we would greatly | By your help we will * service surpass what it i * and make it the best ir * larger things. Let you * will strive to make our s< * * I % To Our Future Custom* ; * Our store has as comj I % fancy goods as can be * best in town and we wa [ * state. Your business a t % times and we will try t< [ | possible. I * I x i R.W.LA I * Call for the Sanitary G * f jp [ ************************ R. B. SCARBOROUGH Attorney ut Law CONWAY, S. C. EBB N. JOHNSON, Auctioneer of Real Estate and all other propert/. R. F. D. No. 2, Box 41, Gallivant's Ferry, S. C.?i-19-3m * . / . MARION A. WRIGHT Attorney-at-Law Offices Spivey Building CONWAY, S. C. S. C. DUSENBURY V Attorney-at-Law Spivey Building ? CONWAY, S. C. F. J. SULLIVAN & CO. Certified Public Accountants (Ut.) Telephone So. 706. \ Murchison Bank.Bldg. WILMINGTON, fN. C. T. B. LEWIS Attorney and Counsellor at Law CONWAY, S. C. 4 " J. I. ALLEN, JR. Attorney-at-Law i Office in Bank of Loris Bldg. 1 LORIS, S. C. D. A. SPIVEY & CO. W. B. King, Sect v. BONDS AND INSURANCE. Ortice it? Peoples National Bank Building. FORD & SUGGS Attorneys at Law Offices at Conway, C. Loris,S.C. ;; G-l-13m WILLIAM EUGENE KING Physician and Surgeon AY NO R, S. C. 1 ^ H. II. WOODWA HD Attorney and Counsellor at Law. CONWAY. S. C. j enoch s. c. baker Attorney and Counselor at Law Offices in Taylor Building i 2-9-3m Conway, S. C. 1 HARRELSON & IIARRELSON Attorneys-at-Law Practice both in the State and Federal Courts. MULLINS, - - - - S. C. DR. G. I. LEWIS Dental Surgeon Office Over Norton Drug Company. CONWAY, S. C. > Dr. J. D. THOMAS i Physician and Surgeon LORIS. S. C. a I " 1 ^To Stop a Cough Quick * take HAYES* HEALING HONEY, a ! cough medicine which stops the cough by s healing the inflamed and irritated tissues. A box of GROVES O-PEN-TRATE SALVE for Chest Colds, Head Colds and Croup is enclosed with every bottle of - HAYES* HEALING HONEY. The salve 1 should be rubbed on the chest and throat of children suffering from a Cold or Croup. The healing effect of Hayes' Healing Honey in side the throat combined with the healing effect of Grovr's O-Pen-Trate Salve through the pores of the skin soon stops a cough. Doth remedies are packed in one carton and the cost of the combined treatment is 35c.? ' Just ask your druggist for HAYES* HEALING HONEY. * )RTANT | '? * * . i. A ii i IU .Mil I * * * . * Iff. # * * * "v * jk is good as it should be and ? and fancy goods is incom- * ' appreciate you telling us. * try to make our stock and % low is?the best in town? * 1 the state. We work for ;i! r business continue and we % ervice better. * rr * ers: % L :>lete a line of groceries and * found. Our service is the % nt to make it the best in the * /vill be appreciated at all % * 3 reward you in every way | * M J NE&CO. i * rocery. Telephone No. 7 | * * *************************^