The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, June 15, 1922, Image 4
The Horry Herald
CONWAY, S. C.
Entered at the Post Office at Conway,
S. C., as second class mail matter.
H. H. WOODWARD, Editor.
Published Every Thursday Morning
by Conway Publishing Co.
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE:
One Copy. One Year $1.50
One Copy, Six Months 1.00
One Copy, Three Months 75
TELEPHONE 21.
Make all Checks or Drafts payable to
The Horry Herald or H. H. Wood
ward, Conway. S. C.
"THURSDAY JUNE 15, 1922
**************************
$ $
% PLEASURE HUNTERS. $
* *
**************************
> Men and women regard business
and pleasure in various ways. Some
po in for pleasure entirely, others for
business entirely. It is only the few
who seem to know how 'o divide their
time in the right way between the
two things.
He who succeeds in business must
want success bad enough to let pleasure
go to the four winds rather than
i 1. . 1 i 1 i i i f* k%
taKe ms rime ana attention trom tne
pursuits of business. Man cannot
serve two masters in this no more
than he can in matters of right end
wrong. Success in business comes
only from close attention to detials,
and the business that is neglected for
pleasure will go to the dogs in short
order.
On the other hand every man needs
more or less of rest and recreation
from the constant grind of work and
the little annoyances that are hound
to arise in anything that he tries to
carry on. He can work until he has
become tired and disgusted and then
a short rest is needed to bring him
back to his former interest and efliciency.
It becomes important, therefore, for
a man to fix some standard by which
he will map out his course as to the
division of his time between business
and work on the one hand and his
necessary pleasure on the other.
By far the better way, as many
have found, is to take the work and
pleasure about as much as is needed
every day in the year. This plan
eliminates the hard working for a
while and then the rest spell long
continued until some of the threads
in the skein are about forever lost.
By this plan both men and women
have worked out great things by work...,.1
nl.tMMwr <i nfivl din of
Illli inn i |iui \ i iif^ >A L\ i _.
their time each day. Such men and
women usually go to their work each
day renewed in body and spirit. Kach
day sees useful work accomplished
and each day finds plenty of rest by
means of sleep and exercise in tin*
open air. Instead of working themselves
to death for several months
and then running off to the mountains
or the seashore for a month or two
they take their rest and pleasure along
with the work and thus they hold out
better than other people.
With some people tlie matter of
pleasure and vacation is carried to
such an extent that they never do
anything else exccpt to exhaust their
taste for pleasure; and they spend
most of their time hunting for new
forms of pleasure and wasting time.
With them the pleasure hunting soon
becomes more distasteful than work
of the hardest kind. The seeking of
pleasure becomes to them the hardest
kind of work. Their nerves finally
wear out in the struggle and they become
physical wrecks of the worst
kind.
o
y? -x- -x- -x- -x- -x- -x- -x- -x- * -x- -> * * -x- -x- * -x- * -x * -x- -x- x- -x
$ *
% KDITORIAL IT K.MS %
-x- -x- -x- -x x* -x- x- -x* -x- x- x- -x- -x x- -x- -x- -x* x- x- * -x- x- x- xOne
lesson thoroughly learned is
worth a dozen skimmed over.
o
Too few ol us til ink /1 n d plan for
the future as well as tako advantage
of the opportunities of the present.
0
Some foresight is needed in tho successful
management of any undertaking.
Blind luck cannot he trusted.
o
The coming of the holl weevils will
learn the farmers how to raise other
things besides cotton and make money,
Opportunity is worth nothing to the
nvm who is not in position to t;ik(
advantage of it. It is best to he
ready.
o
Some things are getting thoroughly
overcrowded in Conway. This is nol
best for the general good of the
community.
o
This season will he the most sue
cessful the beach resorts ever had aw
will result from the making of bettei
roads to the seaside.
o
A wise man will avoid a lawsui
while fools will encourage it. Somi
men will go to court when they evi
dently know they have no case agains
others.
o ?
The public square will soon ho tlv
equal of any \i\ the state. This worl
was a long time in being done, hu
it will he effective when at last ac
coniplished.
o
Conway niust make the best pos
sible showing when the editors of th
state pass through on Juno 21. Th
rlea.i?up week appointed by the Civi
League is now on.
o
Farmers have left cott'-n off in th
sections where the boll weevils wer
I
thick last year. They will later learn
how to raise some cotton notwithstanding
the weevils.
o
On June 21 the South Carolina
State Press Association will meet at
Myrtle Beach. Both Conway and
Alyrtle Beach have in this a great
opportunity for advertising.
o
Conway wants the railroad tracks
moved out of the principal street. In
the opinion of the Herald the object
can be attained better by agreement
than it ever can be by any kind of
force.
o
So long as there are buyers for
monkey rum there will be those who
will take the risk of making it for
sale. If we could get rid of the buyers,
the makers would certainly have
to stop.
HARDWICK WAS
LEAGUE WORKER
Resolutions Are Passed by
Members, Following his
Rnr>nnt flooth
IIVVV/MI UVUlll
Odell Hardwick, sixteen-year old
son of Mr. Noah Hardwick of the
Poplar church community, was held
in the highest esteem by the members
of the Ep worth League of Poplar
Methodist Church because he was one
of their most earnest workers and
young supporters.
He was a member of the church
and was remarkably active for one of
his age in the work of the M listen
The interment took place at Poplar
on June 8. There were many beautiful
bouquets and wreaths carried to
ihe grave in honor of his memory.
The members of the Epworth
League of Poplar Church passed resolutions
as follows:
Whereas God, in His infinite wisdom,
has seen fit to remove from our
midst one of our most faithful workers,
Odell Hardwick, and whereas our
hearts have been made sad by his going
and in token of our love and sympathy,
we, the members of the Epworth
League of Poplar Methodist
Church offer the following resolutions:
Resolutions.
First, That we bow in humble submission
to God's will, knowing that
He doeth all things well.
Second, That we extend our heartfelt
sympathy to his devoted parents,
brothers and sisters.
Third, That a copy of these resolutions
be sent to the family, a copy be
published in the Southern Christian
Advocate, and in The Horry Herald,
.. . . / 1 a> nrx rvtt 1 , ? k 1 it /irv/1 #\ t L / \ Aff
cl I 111 I i I ?C J-McH-CTU I'll Llic: lllllllll^O
of the Epsvorth League.
Ruth Cartrette,
Eugene Anderson,
Alvin Anderson.
o
NOTICE OF SALE
Under and by virtue of the decree
and judgment of the court made by
his honor, S. W. G. Shipp, presiding
judge, in tlie case of Peoples National
Bank, ti corporation plaintiff, vs. E.
Perry Hardee and Henry C. Gore,
defendants, ,und dated the 25th day
of May, A. I). 1J)22, I, the undersigned
W. L. Kryan, C. C. C. P. as
special master of Horry county, will
sell at public auction to the highest
bidder before the courthouse door at
Conway, in Horry county, and state
of South Carolina, during legal hours
of sale, on salesday in July next, it
being the 3rd day of said month, all
and singular those certain lands sitv.nte
in Horry county, a id described
as follows to wit:
All and singular, all that certain
niece, parcel or tract of land containing
fifty ( *>()) acres, more or less, situate,
\ving and being in Simpson Creek
township and in the county aforesaid
and known as John Steven's place,
bounded on the north by W. F. Faulk,
on the east by estate lands of Allsbrook,
on the south by M M. Hardee
and on the west by run of White Oak
.Swamp; this being the identical land
bought from Allsbrook Brothers. No*
papers on above except one for $100
given to H. C. Gore in 1 i>l!).
I onus of sale cash, purchaser to
pay for papers.
Conwav, S. C., June 1, 1922.
W. L. BRYAN,
C. C. C. P. as Special Master.
H. H. WOODWARD.
Plaintiff's Attorney.
CALOMEL MAY TURN
ON YOIT 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 he put into your system.
If you feel bilious, headachy, constipated
and all knocked out, just go to
. your druggist and get a bottle of
1 Dodson's I.iver Tone for a few cents
which is a harmless vegetable substitute
for dangerous calomel. Take a
spoonful and if it doesn't start your
t liver and straighten you up better
P and quicker than nasty calomel and
without rmikimr von vnu inst irn
- ? - n ? " v' ?' w ^ j ~ n "
t back and tfet your money.
Don't tako calomel! It makes you
sick tho next day; it loses you a day's
f work. Dodson's Liver Tone straightens
you rifjht up and you feel great,
. No salts necessary. Give it to the
children because it is perfectly harmless
and cannot salivate.?Adv.
n
h ^ m l hb
i' Ibsss^ss^sss^ssssSSM
rHE HOEET HKBAUD, OOHWi
BEST SOURCE
OF NITROGEN
Clemson College.?It has generally
been the custom during the past several
years that farmers have paid
considerably higher prices for organic
sources of nitrogen than they have
for mineral nitrogen, such as nitrate
of soda or sulphate of ammonia.
There has often been a question of
nitrogen secured from green manure
crops, such as cowpeas, velvet beans,
etc., as compared with stable manure
and mineral sources of nitrogen.
The New Jersey experiment station
has been conducting a series of experiments
along this line and Prof.
A. W. Blair has recently reported the
results of some of the work of that
station in the Journal of American
Society of Agronomy for May, 1922.
As an average for a ten-year test
slightly better results were secured
with mineral nitrogen than with or-,
ganic nitrogen, all organic nitrogen
being furnished in the form of blood,!
fish scrap and tankage. The mineral
nitrogen was supplied in the form of
nitrate of soda and sulphate of ammonia
and calcium nitrate. There
was very little difference, but the results
indicate that the organic nitrogen
does not last longer in the soil
than the mineral nitrogen, and that
the mineral nitrogen does not leach
out readily .as has generally been supposed.
The combination of one-half mineral
nitrogen and one-half organic nitrogen
gave slightly better results than
any single source when taken alone.
For example, with potatoes, nitrate
of soda alone gave 251 bushels per
acre; fish scrap gave 244 bushels, and
tankage gave 241 bushels; while a
combination of nitrate of soda and
fish scrap gave 257 bushels per acre
acre, in a five-year test.
A comparison was made also between
green manure crops when grown
regularly in a rotation,.and stable manure.
The result was that higher
yields were secured from the green
manure crops than from the stable
manure, and that the average gain
per acre was from $10 to $12 in favor
of the green manure crops, making
due allowance for the phosphoric
acid and potash in the manure and
without regard to the larger yields
secured from the green manure crops.
This indicates the very great importance
of the use of green manure crops
for soil building purposes.
These results indicate, says Prof.
C. P. Blackwell, agronomist, that here
in the South we can save a great deal
of money by planting velvet beans,
cow peas, and soy beans as sources of
nitrogen instead of depending entirely
on commercial nitrogen, for which
we always have to pay a very high
price.
o
MASK 10D MKN ACTIVE
Anderson.?Veriticatoin of reports
received here that a band of masked
and while-robed men, about thirty in
j number, seized Ollie Crompton, Anderson
county farmer, residing near
Williamston, some sixteen miles from
this city, on Thursday night ,takiqg
him to a point near the boundary lino
>f Anderson and Greenville counties,
where ii is alleged lie was severely
beaten and cautioned by members of
the party to cease dealing in whiskey,
was made by Chief of Police I\. M.
Patterson of Williamston.
Chief Patterson stated that he has
been unable to apprehend members
ot tlie Danct.
CATARKii/UL, .DEAFNESS
i3 often caused by nn inflamed condition
of the mucous lining of the Eustachian
Tube. When this tube is inflamed you
have a rumbling sound or imperfect
hearing. Unless the inflammation can
bo reduced, your hearing may be destroyed
forever.
HALLS CATAURII MEDICINE will
do what we claim for it?rid your system
of Catarrh or Deafness caused by
Catarrh. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE
has been successful in the treatment of
Catarrh for over Forty Years.
Sold by all druggists.
I F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O.
*
? Annour
A
*
% After July 1, 1922, \
storeroom known as the c
Main street, next door tc
t pany.
Before we move we c
J in older to reduce our sto
*
t Come izet your hat w
^ W *
% them away.
1 $1.50 Hats
i * $2.50 Hats
? $3.50 Hats
t $5.00 Hats
5 $10.00 Hats
$ 15.00 Hats
t
4
! The SPA
IY, 8. O , JUNE 15, 1022
MONKEY RUM IN
FEDERAL COURT
Clyde Justice and Others From
Horry to Be
Tried
MANY CASES ON DOCKET
Many Are Pleading Guilty and
Getting Hard Sentences Imposed
by Judge Smith
Charleston, S. C.?With a vast array
of alleged prohibition law violations
on the program for attention
and the usual number of narcotic and
"postoffice" cases added to the grand
total, the June term of the United
States District Court for the Eastern
District of South Carolina, convened
here with Judge Henry A. M. Smith
presiding. At this term the official
family of the court has three new
faces, these being Major J. D. E.
Meyer, district attorney! Louis M.
Shimel, assistant district attorney,
and Samuel J. Leaphart, marshal.
The first two hours of the court was
taken up with the swearing of the
witnesses and such other details
while the grand jury soon began to re-,
turn batches of true bills. By late
afternoon the court was down to the
jury trials in earnest tnd the receiving
of pleas of guilty.
Lony Alexander, charged with a
prohibition law violation, was the
first defendant to go on trial, getting
an acquittal. This case came up
from Florence County. Mrs. Sallic
Cox, of Charleston, was next tried?
she also getting an acquittal. Robert
Dunlap was also ti iecl and the
jury returned a verdict of guilty.
Sentence in his case has not been pronounced.
E. B. Bennett, a defendant
also on a prohibition "possession"
case, pleaded guilty just before court
adjuorned and he was given a fine of
$200 by Judge Smith.
True Bills Returned
The trrand iurv returned a lonii"
list of true bills all of these except
one charging violations in some of the
various stapes of the national prohibition
law. The exception in the list
was that charging C. M. DuCosse,
with a violation of Section 281). Criminal
Code, of securing money or valuables
in an alleged irregular manner
on federal owned property.
In the list of those against whom
the grand jury has found true bills
are: Benj. H. and Clyde Justice and
Criss Jewell, Horryites who were
tried in the court of general sessions
at Conway. They will be tried in the
Federal Court also. Witnesses were
i
Wanted
1 o sell cheap, a ba I'guin.
Overland ninety in perfect
condition. Can be
seen and tried out before i
i
buying.
1
Rev. W. L. PARKER
Conway, S. C.
1 1 1 mmm.m,
V
icement I
a
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A
,ve will be located (at the *
*
)ld post office building on
> Gents' Furnishing Com- *
ire going to cut our prices J
ck before moving. X
hil Giwe are almost giving \t
!
$ .49 t
98 |
$1.48 I
$2.48 X
$4.98
$7.48 t
lRKS CO. !
i
?, ?
summoned for the trial in Charleston.
The case against Justice resulted
in a verdict of not guilty when tried
at Conway on March 9th, as appears
by the following account of the trial
appearing in the Horry Hei\ald in its
issue of March 16th, 1922:
The State vs. B. H. Justice and
Jack Bessent for violation of the prohibition
laws was tried as the first
case on Thursday morning of court
week.
D. F. BeJlamy of the rural police
testified he found the still on land of
B. H. Justice inside of the Justice
plantation.
Fate Bennett testified that he had
stilled some whiskey with B. H. Justice
some years ago; that he, Bennett,
did not own the still and Justice did
not say it was his. They found it in
the woods.
Dick Causey was called by the state
and testified to finding the still worm
on the Justice place and the keg of
whiskey behind the house.
Owing to lack of evidence several
counts in the indictment were stricken
out and no verdict asked; but the
state insisted it was entitled to a
verdict of guilty on the count for
transporting.
Jack Bessent made no effort to defend
himself in the case and there
was really but little testimony against
the negro.
The jury found a verdict of not
guilty. I
O
"Reports of Lenin's Critical Illness
Confirmed." But the confirmed Illness
of Russia is even more critical. ?
Philadelphia Record.
o
No Worm* in a Itealtliy Child ^
All children troubled with Worms havr. an un?
healthytxjlor, which indicates in.or h'ood, and as a
rule, there is mure or less stomoch disturl>aiice. <
GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC given regularly
fortwoor three weeks will enrich the blood,
improvethe digestion, and net as a generalStrcngthening
Tonic to the whole system. Nature will then
throw off or dispel the worms, and theChild will be
In perfect health. Pleasant to take. * HOc per bottle.
EAGLE "WKADO"^^J
For Sale at your Dealer
ASK FOR THE YELLOW PE1
EAGLE IS
EAGLE PENCIL CON
? BRICK BR;
^ Come to our pla
* we have to offer
* LAYTON BRICK V
% I2|221tf. Marion
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I Tobacco Grc
t
X For tobacco barn (lues communica
* puny, Inc. Wo are in position to .?
* other flue makers. We manufact
X at Gurley, S. ('. Get ;n touch wit
* Our flues we will guarantee to ni
? manship and material.
| SASSER co:
t Cur lev, S. C. ]
*
I RED -TOl
Extra Ply of Fabi
Price i
FOR poor roads, for Y
anywhere the Fisk R
for small cars. An extra
tread of extra tough red
built to meet exacting coi
Time after time one Re
ordinary tires. Its distin
selection of a high-grade I
more than justifies your <
There*s a Fisk Tire of c
I for car, truck <
V?1?? ??? mil I ?M ? !! WBIM
p?mm?***** 1 * r"T " " " ^
- -? - J
CHICAGO AND THE ARTS
It used to be considered when a
hypothetical resident of Chicago was
quoted as saying that his home town
would yet "make culture hum" the
older centers of culture used to think
that this remark was quite too deliciously
indicative of the Middle '
Western attitude toward belles lettres
and the arts. But, as it has turned
out, the joke was the other way
around. Chicago is making culture
hum, and this time there is nothing
funny about it. ^
It turned out the other day that
Chicagoans do not leave the pursuit
of art to the professional artist, nor
the cultivation of literature to the
writer who does nothing but write.
There are in Chicago successful business
and professional mefi who are
painters, pets, authors and composers
and good ones, too. Outside of business
hours these men seek neither golf
course nor the cabaret, but woo the
several muses to good effect.
Naturally in such an atmosphere
the material rewards of art are anything
but meager. Poets in Chicago
do not live in attics, nor do painters
gasp gratitude when presented with
a square meal. Any one in Chicago
who can nvike beautiful music, or non
_ ?J 1
honeyed lines ,or improve upon nature
with paints and brush, can live
well. Presently he finds the older
haunts of culture bidding lavishly for
his services and his Chicago origin
he discovers to be a recommendation
rather than a bar sinissuperable opposition.?Spokane,
Wash., Spokesman-Review.
o
Perhaps you are not enthusiastic
enough about the sweet potato as a
partial substitute for cotton. Or
maybe you are too enthusiastic. Extension
Bulletin 52, "The Sweet Potato
Industry," just published, will
help to give you the right slant at
the industry.
||^p^^^^Pencil No. 174
Made in five grades
NCIL WITH THE RED BAND
11KAPQ
IP ANY, NEW YORK
us ****** ** *? ***************
ICK BRICK 1
.nt and see what ?
before vou buy. *
jjc
/ORKS, (Kst. 1885) *
S C *
; -x- x- x- * "X- * -x- -x- * * -x- * # * -j* -x- * Vc -x- -x- *
>wers, Notice |
to immediately with Sasser Com- X
;cll you flues for less money than *
lire the best flue in Horry county T
h us at once for future delivery. X
ve perfect satisfaction in work
MPANY, Inc. |
llorrv County 3-9-10t +
I i I
> 4k ^ Time to Re-Hre? v
L*% (Buy Fisk) 1
TT \ Trmdo M?r k He*. U. S. I'?t. Off II
5 30 x VA
ric?Heavy Tread
H7.85
icavy loads, for hard use
ed-Top cannot be equaled
ply of fabric and a heavy
rubber make a strong tire
nditions.
d-Top has outworn three
ictive looks indicate your
[ire while its extra mileage
choice.
*xtra value in every size,
>r speed wagon
i im iiifnw wn man ri??rwm?J
mmmmmmrnrn n?mt mi ?d