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mm ??? ??mmmm 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. Sl'HSi KIPTION PUKE: 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. ************************** * CONWAY ADVERTISED % 4. * The coming of tho South Carolina Press Association last week was an event of great interest to the people of this county. Aside from the advertising it held for this section it has been proved again, as it has many times in the past, that the people of Horry county are among tlie most hospitable in the world. The people found pleasure in entertaining the men of the press. If anything lies near their hearts it is the pleasure and well-being of those who are their guests. s The men of the press were the guests of the people. The host caused them to feel at home. Among the party were some of those not engaged in a strictly newspaper profession. Those are the ones who can express an unbiased opinion in this matter, and according to them the reception could not have been better. The welcome extended to the visitors was not the surface kind, put on for the occasion, neither was it a half-hearted expression of a lukewarm kindness. It was from the heart and it was expressed in a way that made the visitors know that it was true. The material benefits to this section in the way of taking to other sections of South Carolina the knowledge of the possibilities of Horry county cannot be estimated. The advertising secured by means of the coming of the editors is a kind tint is not paid for and at the same time the kind that never fails to bring the greatest results. Each of the members has seen for himself things that we would like 1 1 i ! 1 1 A A A I . rtM. me rest ot me siaie 10 Know. i ney are bound to write about it and thus convey the knowledge they have gained to the readers of their m^vspapers. It is impossible to tell tlie value we will get. from this. Its results may last for all time. Result? will not stop in .a month or a year, They will go on forever in a neverending cycle of the years. The association attended to its important business affairs at a pleasant place at this season. It was different from the places where former meetings were held. They have gone back home to the daily or weekly grinding of the printing presses, .and it will be impossible to prevent the products of those presses from reflecting the advantages of this section of South Carolina, especially for long enough time that the whole people will find out. We cannot end this article without saying that this incident in the history of Conway shows the \'alue of a live Chamber of Commerce. Without the chamber this would never have been done. We doubt that the association would ever have met here at any time. Even if they had decide! to come without being invited by that responsible business body it would have been impossible to have entertained them in the right way. r> - * >t % HORRY HERALDING J * ' The st. a to camp-nun is again afflict C(1 with John T. Duncym. Service is the thing that the public wants and will have when it can tret it o Conway hopes to induce the editor.1 to come hack hero again some time It will not he hard to do. o Wo know a few married people ii this section who wish they lived ai Reno. How do we know? We musi not tell. o Some men can net up early and d< more work before breakfast than othei men can accomplish in a whole daj of twenty-four hours. o Why should a man seek away fron home the things ho can easily find a< his very door? Distance lends enchantment to the view. o It is generally a fool who thinks h< can do the other man's work better He finds difficulties that did not ap pear to him while he was looking on o No fortune was over picked up ai the end of the rainbow. No success was ever the result of mere luck. Moi have worked and worked in vain aiu went to earth without any gain. Never judge the whole of creatioi by one isolated example. There is i world of difference in things tha would appear to he the same at firs' sight, even the bathing suits that arc worn {it Myrtle Beach. o One of the editors declared lasi week that lie did not 1 ike fish and s/iic he never ate any. When the dish wai passed at the supper, given at th( club, he took the largest that lay 01 the plate and after that he asked foi two more. Fish at Myrtle Beach art better. There was regret that Miss Wil Lou Gray was prevented from appearing* before the State Press Association last week in the interest of the adult schools. All of the ptapers will support the cause of education anyway. Si ill thev would have boon $lad to listen at the interesting- talk Miss Gray would have made. o Miss Gray will not go before the people as a candidate for superinten!cnt of education as many of her friends wanted her to do. She can be of more benefit in the work she is already doing- and in which she has placed her entire heart and soul. Politics would ruin her if they had the same etVect as on men. o It is not the man, or the woman oitllDV (1m(X t lin tollriiwr \rlin renders the greatest service to the rest of us. Good old honest work in the cause of serving others is the thing: that counts in the world today more than anything else. Empty words are soon spoken and soon entirely forgotten. The tilings that we do for others will last. o * COMMENDS, YET DETRACTS * X * When a man cannot vent his * ^ nage outwardly he is sure to * * grieve and bleed inwardly; like * ? a wretch falling on his own * * sword, because he cannot thrust ^ ^ it into the body of one whom * * he hates. Envy hates abroad ^ jj| and grieves at home. Guilt and * * sadness are its inseparable com- * * pa. lions; it being impossible jjj ^ upon the principles of philoso- * phy and reason for an envious ^ * man to possess either a good * >i< conscience or a cheerful mind. * ^ It is the great and good that are $ * envied. Envy sucks poison out * r\4' Un *1 n/l inncl 1 \P11 - T V ' I III*- 11 ?"1 I (I I IV1 111 \/ C V W i? v? ^ ^ tiful flowers. It is not safe for * * anyone to he much commended. ^ ^ to l>e borne on tlie wings of ^ H< fame, and to ride in triumph on * ^ tlie tongues of men; for the ^ jfc tongues of some but provoke * * the teeth of others. Men gen- S sj- erallv detract more heartily * * than ever they commend. Shad- ^ * ows do not more naturally at- $|c sic tend shining bodies than envy * ^ pursues merit. Envy is a sharp % * blighting east wind, killing the * Hf noblest productions of virtue, ^ jj: grace and good sense. Then let * * us individually and collectively j * say clamor and wrath and war ij? H? be gone, envy and spite forever * % cease. Tender and kind be all H: our thoughts, through all our * * lives let mercy run. 3! ? ?Contributed. sjc "I" o AS A MAN THINKETH A man is literally what ho thinks, . his character being the complete sum of his thoughts. Man is made or unmade by himself. : M an is the master of thought, the moulder of character, and the maker ' and shaper of condition, environment, k and destiny. Good thoughts bear good fruit; bad | thoughts bad fruit. Men are anxious to improve their circumstances, but are unwilling to improve themselves. The man who 1 does not shrink from self-crucifixion can never fail to accomplish the object upon which his heart is set. \ A man is not rightly conditioned until lie is happy, healthy, and prosperous. There is no physician like cheerful thought for dissipating the ills of the hndv: thorp is no romfortov to com ' pare with good will for dispersing; the ' shadows of grief. ' Thoughts of doubt and fear never ' accomplish anything, .and never can. They always lead to failure. Purpose, energy, power to do, ar.d all strong t 'houghts cease when doubt and fear : creep in. The will to do springs from \ the knowledge that we can do.?Allen. ' GILMORE COMES FOR AN OFFICE M. I-. Gilmore announces in this issue as a candidate for the olTice of magistrate at Daisy. lie is a merchant who has been located at Daisy for a number of years and knows all the people ol . that section of the county. Ho is competent for the position he is seeking, in the opinion of many friends at that place. , o? We have big business at Conway, but we want still more business. CATARRHAL DEAFNESS 1 is often caused by ?n inflamed condition t 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 be reduced, your hearing may be destroyed forever. HAL1L.8 CATARRH MEDICINE will do what we claim for it?rid your system - of Catarrh or Deafness caused by . Catarrh. IIA T.L'S CATARRH MEDICINE has been successful in the treatment of Cntarrh for over Forty Years. Sold by all druggists. * E. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. 1 : | Tobacco Grc t * L < I For tobacco ham flues communici 5 o pany, Inc. We are in position to $ * * other flue makers. We mannfact o at Gurley, S. ('. Get ?n touch wil L Our flues we will guarantee U ^ ^ manship and material. |'| SASSER CO i | X Gurley, S. C. 11 THE HORRY HERALD, CONWj RELAXATION IN POLITICS Senator Frederick Hale of Maine, who was renominated at the late primaries in that state, is one public man who can find no reasonable fault with the cold, wet summer. Maine Republicans of fixed habits tramped through the rain to vote for him in the primaries; as many more voted for his two opponents on the Republican ticket, but a large percentage stayed home. A livelier time is in store for him in September, however, when he encounters the militant Democracy with ex-Governor Oakley C. Curtis as its senatorial candidate. The Democrats have also nominated a Congressman in every Congressional district, and will contest every inch of the ground. The Democratic campaign began there on June 22 at a statewide Democratic meeting addressed by Chairman Cordell Hull of the National committee, and received a momentum which insures unusual activity. WOMEN SHOULD NOT ENTER BUSINESS Entrance into business by large numbers of women who are not obliged to support themselves but merely desire spending- money is disapproved by Mrs. Edith Jarv's A!den, the recently appointed secr* tary of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy railroad. After only four years of experience Mrs. Alden was given what is said to be the bigge.?' mil road office held by a woman. On the other hand, Mrs. Alden believes some business experience would profit almost any woman, if only to make her more appreciative of her husband's problems. * A wife can understand better how her husband feels on coming home after a hard day's work if she has been there herself," she said. "Before I hadl business experience, I imagined that business demands were sometime unreasonable. Then, too, it is well for a woman to be equipped to earn hei own livelihood if necessary. "Efficiency and hard work seem to be the keys to success in the railroad business as in every other. It is undeniable that business offers a more promising field to women than even before. "My own work has been simplified by the knowledge of railroad matters which I absorbed as a railroad man's daughter. My father's children, including myself, referred to trains b\ their numbers even when we were little. My father, H. E. Jarvi>. was with my company forty year..-, and was assistant secretary twenty years "1 entered the company's e.npioy in the liberty bond department during flip win* A finr ll-io 1 -1 j.i.' o.l my father, and gradually too:his duties when his health failed. I was appointed to succeed him when he resigned. Tie died soon after." o death or mk. hicks Olen Scarborough Hucks, son of Collin P. Hucks, died at his home in the section near Aynor last Saturday about 1 o'clock after an illness of some duration. He was 11) years of age and is survived by several brothers, among them Spark Hucks, Albert Hucks, Curtis Hucks and Fred W. Hucks. He is also survived by his wife and a number of children. One of the children is deaf and dumb while another is a cripple. He was taken with a serious case of the flu last February. From it he never fully recovered. After the flu he developed a case of erysipelas of the face and this disease seems to have been the immediate cause of his death. 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 the case of Peoples National Hank, a corporation plaintifT, vs. E. Perry Hardee and Henry ('. Gore, defendants, and dated the 25th day of May, A. D. 1022, I, the undersigned W. L. Bryan, C. C. C'. P. as special master of Horry county, will ;if tnililir* nmti/wi /? (Kn l-i!?rlinc< . I It V/ J/V.li/1 IV UUVll"M \.\J tliu III^IIV.^1. bidder before the courthouse door at Conway, in Horry county, and state of South Carolina, during1 legal hours of sale, on salesday in July next, it being the 3rd day of said month, all and singular those certain lands situate in Horry county, aid described as follows to wit: All and singular, all that certain piece, parcel or tract of land containing fifty (50) acres, more or less, situate, lying 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 1019. Terms of sale cash, purchaser to pay for papers. Conwav, K. C., June 1, 1022. W. L. BRYAN, C. C. C. P. as Special Master. H. H. WOODWARD. Plaintiff's Attorney. * >wers, Notice I 11<? immediately with Sasser Com- X <ell you flues for less money than ture the best flue in Horry county T th uh at once for future delivery. Z ive perfect satisfaction in work MP ANY, Inc. | Horry County 3-0-1 fit % KY, S. C.^ JUNE 29, 1922 PREACHER AND SHERIFF DIE Albany, Ore.?Three bodies torn by gunshot wounds were brought here one day last week. They were those of Rev. Roy Healv, pastor of the First Christian Church of Albany; Sheriff 0. M. Kendall of Lynn county, and Dave M. West, 70 year old rancher and trapper. Their deaths were the result of a raid on West's moonshine <t:l! by Sheriff Kendall, accompanied by the Rev. Mr. Healy. The sheriff and minister were shot and killed instantly by the aged rancher who, after barricading himself in his house and holding off a posse for hours, crept from the building when night came and in his barn ended the episode by blowing off the top of his head with his riflo. The killings occurred at 3:30 P. M. and until the body of West was found in the barn, the bodies of his two victims lay where they fell inside the West yard, members of the posse fearing: to enter the premises and remove them. West threatened any one with death who should attempt to Approach, except the coroner who, he said, could remove the bodies of the men he had killed. For fear, however, that West T?igrht mistake the coroner for wouldbe captor, no effort was made. West shot and killed both Kendall and Healy without warning while they were perhaps fifty yards from him. He fired only twice. Sheriff Kendall, armed with a search warrant, left Albany for the West ranch, accompanied by Rev. Mr. Healy, who desired to see a raid on a still to obtain material for a story which he was intending to write. The minister went merely as a spectator. After the shooting: West returned to the house and sat down in a chair with the rifle between his knees. As long: as it remained daylight he barricaded himself in the house and defied the possemen to capture him, but when night fell he bade his wife, who had remained with him, farewell, telling: her to g:o away where harm would not befall her. "This is the last goodbye," he said, i ^ lir> lric?orl linr nrwl elmu'Pfl hoi through the door of the house. Shortly afterward lie reached the barn where he killed himself. o Early corn has been coming in for sale from the farms. 4> <>(ifi quickly relieves Colds, Constipation, Biliousness and Headaches. A Fine Tonic.?tf ' ' tai ( <ju: t?r I M*b mc Ifa of] iv* Tho buying pal*. I /jpjV Uc U the surest I nytii barortMter of ih? I ?ys[i aios^of any ?rtt- | ytwii CM. 1 li?lr ai>? KMI provid erf OldfWui VS yf; vuu? hat b*?c dVI dtmoiMtrttMl by OY th? IfHTtKOO .of U.1 165 % in btMlnM? U (or t lie first five Vj montlu of 1923 I X over th? com** I "Ti a c TheOldfieli h / FOR POISONING "i BOLL WEEVILS I A calm atmosphere is the most important thin^ t<j be considered when ^ applying calcium arsenate to cotton to control the boll weevil?more important than dew or other moisture ' on the cotton plants. This statement 1 is made by the specialists of the Uni- : ted States Department of Agriculture | who, at the Delta Laboratory at Tal- j lular, La., worked out the calcium arsenate system of control. Success depends, they point out, om petting ' all the plant surfaces thoroughly cov- ered with the fine particles of poison 1 .1.. .? nM._ .1.. i " ? me uusi conies out o: me in a- * chine in a cloud and hangs in "*;!te air . for some time before sett ling. If the wind blows during this time much of it never settles where it is \w.\pted, but drifts beyond the cotton to o'her crops or to weed patches or is dissipated by the wind. It is not always o NEXT DOSE CALOMEL MAY SALIVATE YOU It Is Mercury, Quicksilver, Shocks Liver and Attacks Your Hones Calomel salivation is horrible. It swells the tongue, loosens the teeth and starts rheumatism. There's no reason why a person should take sickening, salivating calomel when a fewcents buys a large bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone?a perfect substitute for calomel. It is a pleasant vegetable liquid which will start your liver just as surely as calomel, but it doesn't make you sick and cannot salivate. Calomel is a dangerous drug, besides it may make you feel weak, sick and nauseated tomorrow. Don't lose a day's work. Take a spoonful of Dodson's Liver Tone instead and you will wake up feeling great. No salts necessary. Your druggist says ! if you don't find Dodson's Liver Tone | acts better than treacherous calomel | your money is waiting for you.?Adv. EAGLE "MIKAD0">^?*| ifflJKiMfalm For Sale at your Dealer ASK FOR THE YELLOW PEI EAGLE ft EAGLE PENCIL COW X- *X- w -X- -a* -X- -X- -X* V: -X- -X* -X -X- vr "X- 'X- *X -X *X -X- "X- -X- -X- -X- -X- -k , | BRICK BR I I ^ Come to our plai I * we have to offer * LAYTON BRIC K W J 12122! tf. Marion, ^ -x -x x -x- * -x- -x- * -x -x- -x * -x- * -x- -x- -x- * x -x * -x- * * -x * i Race Vii at IKOIANAPC Road Vii at WICHI1 felp tjou Choc >00 miles at 94.48 miles an hour ?f a ronfih-ftnkhM. min-KalrA^ * cement at record-breaking speed? t Oldfteid Cord Tires underwent su< 3lis Speedway May 30th. They w for the third successive year and ishing hi the money, upholding the race drivers have in the trustwortl tires to meet the greatest dema ce and safety. Their records in ev ? have been equally as good. ZormdcT this achievement along with ; ility made at Vfidur-^ Kansas, this Ay525 miles on ratted, icy Kansas d night on a Studebaker stock car i snge. This teat was made by a gro rttve dealers in a tire, oil and gas lyor Kemp of Wichita was official [davit to the mileage and service gi fou may never subject your tires to t Indianapolis nor the steady grind of ba ;ood to know you can get such safety buying Old held tires. Ask your ncares ^ ~ rajqmiYfflg?" to Moat Truthsjrthy Tirmm Bvrili" 1 Tire Company, Ak " - - - possible, of course, to n??t a perfectly :alm atmosphere at the time the dusting must he done, but the specialists lirge that the absence of win J be made i primary consideration. o A "Knockers' Night" meeting held jy the Douglas county post of the American I.egion at Omaha, Neb., proved a howling success. Every member was invited to air his grievmces and make suggestions. The post chaplain recommended the formation of a Saturday night "Ameri- ^ L'an Army" that with fife, drum and >rator would preach the gospel of Americanism on the street corners, especiallv in the foreign quarters of the Jity. W anted To sell cheap, a bargain* Overland ninety in perfect condition. Can be seen and tried out before buying. Rev. W. L. PARKER ; Conway, S. C. G-8-tf No. 174 Made in five grades { ^CIL WITH THE RED BAND 1IKADO IPANY, NEW YORK ** ? ?# **#*{( ***** CK BRICK 1 it and see what * before you buy. * DRKS, (Kst. 18Hr?) * S. C. % x X- -X- * -X- -X- -X- -X- -X- -X- -X- -X- -X- -X- -X -X- -X- -X- -X- * -X- -X' -X- -X -X- -X- -k* ctory ' I11S P ctory / rA. se Tivcs > r ?a relentless grind + r*. ? J I 1 - A/uui ^ * 3 miu uriCK that is the gruelling ' < 2cesafully at Indianere on the winner's I on eight of the ten > confidence success- / hiness and ability of mds of speed, endurery other important another test of Oldfield /* past winter and earljf / I roads, running day without a single tir* } up of Wichit^a autooline economy run. I observer and made ven by Oldfield tires* he gruelling experience , id winter roads, but it and milease ecnnnmv t dealer. vt >| Agent* Everywhere ^ OlAAoUl TttM f - dlatrlbotfd through 71 brtochM ?nd dl?- / trtbacinfl w?r - ; horos?? in alt p?rt? { o* tho Unfted Statti. Mor* " dttltr* m coo* Stantlr becoming a CHdOald tMndN tod Oldduld TtrM m now aratlabW* t in your commun- V tty. ,r ron, Ohio *& | i