The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, July 27, 1922, Image 6

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fr > * > *? ; . . The Horry Herald CONWAY, S. C. Entered at the Post Office at Conway, S. C., as second class mail matter. H. H. WOODWARD, Editor. ??? i , . . 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 JULY 27, 1922 ************************** 3)C j{{ * CHANGING CONDITIONS * * * *************************.. We believe that it is true without any exception that any man or woman who c.unnot got interested in something: outside of themselves will allow their minds to dwell on their own organism and the functions performed by the human machine to such an extent that they will he more or less in the doctor's hands, who will persist in telling: them that there is nothing: really the matter with them. There are some who think about health .and the necessity of having it, watching each changing condition in their lives and the effects on their bodily functions until nothing else can be permitted to occupy their minds. They magnify any slight change in their feelings to such an extent, allow their imagination to go wild and their fears to take hold of them body and soul until thev are not fit for anv-i thin* ? much except a lun.utic assylum. I ? T 11 .1 ' usually tney belong to the class that l ave never been interested in any great work to bo done in life, 110 great purpose to be accomplished. Hi ving nothing else to do except to th?nk inward all the time on what their stomachs are going to do after the next meal, or will they be more bilious than they ought next day from clrinkirf'- too much novo, and a thoj sand and one other tilings that *viIi take up their attention from hour to hoar as' they try to while away the time that is hanging on their bawds; they allow their minds to dwell till the time- on their health. Such a condition often becomes enough to brin.* on real sickness and then they know what it is, a thing they did not know before. The healthiest and lustiest human body that ever breathed found it impossible to live through the changing conditions in this world without functional disorders, more or less, at all stages of existence. Being a delicate machine, in fact the most delicate ever devised, it is impossible to keep this machine from being affected by every change in the atmosphere, every change in the temperature, every change in the water or the food, and by every change in the mental attitude as influenced by outside causes. You have seen the man who was never in bed a day from sickness, and who persisted in living far beyond the threescore years and ten, always -1: ~i." -- <1-- > 1 buiiifjiaiiiui^i tiiwiiyjs on nit! int, claiming he was not able to get up when he wa s down. The explanation Is plain in the light of what we have before stated. On the other hand the man who had a great work to do became interested in what he was doing and trying to do. He occupied his mind with that. Such a man will get along better. o -x- -x- -x- -x- -x- -x- # -x- -x- * -x- x- * -x- -x- -x- -x- * * * % HOKRY H ICRALDING % * # All Conwayites say, "How bad I want to see the streets paved!" o Too much of even a good thing becomes a nuisance. Remember the drives. o When the cats are away the mice will play. It is the same with the blindtigers. o The road is not . o good from docastee to Murrell's Inlet. The people want a better road down there. e Horry county has both methods of marketing tobacco this year The new plan will get a good trial. ? (i If you are hungry come *o ConVrutl I.. ?..! 1171 ..?.y cm. w non sieepy remember there are rooms in Conway t'or you. o Horry county usually has the most accommodating officials. Citizens should encourage thorn to give good service. o Success of any movement depends on the kind of men who are behind it. Man has everything to do in such matters. o Conway and Myrtle Beach are more dependent upon roads than anything else, for it will take roads to get people here. o There would appear to he more interest in moving things by truck on good, hard roads now than in carrying the produce in small boats along a river. ( o The water supply is important to look after. Bad water is usually behind every bad case of fever that occurs. Be sure that you have plenty of good water, then keep it safe from poiution from all sources. t, ' - - - One interested citizen has rightly asked, "Why not put the big money on building roads along the Waccairvaw River from Conway to Pireway instead of trying to spend it all in the bottom of the river?" o Good roads along that section of the Waccamaw River on which more money is now asked will do just as much good for the people as will the work on the river. We would have both improvements if possible. o One thing calls for another. Putting in one big improvement always calls for another, hence we must not stand, but must go forward from one great big thing to another until we 1. I -Mi nave nuiii vjonway and Horry county into the greatest town and the greatest county in the state of South Carolina. TOBACCO LOST, CORN CUT OFF (Continued from Page One.) and bean crops very bad. W. K. West is damaged in the corn crop so that ho will get only about 30 per cent; three acres of sweet potatoes only 20 per cent. Hay is a total loss, while the sugar cane is in fairly good condition. I. K. Collins has a 15 per cent corn crop, hay a total loss. Beans are down to 40 per cent. He has one acre of sweet potatoes recently set out. Beyond Socastee Creek From Conway In Socastee Township. In Socastee township, in the part of it which lies beyond Socastee Creek from Conway, the names of the f,'\risers have been tabulated with the number of acres of corn p'anted coining in the first column, followed by a Farmers' Names Acre W. J. Singleton 1 Mrs. J. P. Mack I in. ?' I W. I). Sinilli 1 G. W. Watts, Ji .J. A. Sessions ] J. G. Brown 1 J. A. Lewis t R. M. C. Owens 1 W. G. Turbeville < 11. H. Stalvey J R. Stalvey ( W. B. Clardy < J. N. McCormick : B. F. H ucks [ Marion Mishoe < Mrs. E. Stalvey 4 James Murdock 1 B. F. Watts 1 B. L. Hardy 1 E. J. Hardy 1 T. P. Cooper ' i F. D. McCormick i E. H. Lay 5 A. Outlaw ' John Outlaw C. B. Huton 1 W. A. Dubose ' G. W. Tindle H. S. St/ilvev..'. 1 A. F. Cox 1 Shed Stalvey 1 G. C. McCormick 2 M. W. Watts 1 In the Collins Creek-Burgess-Marlow Section of Socastee Township. B. H. Vereen has fifteen acres planted, fourteen in corn and one acre in sweet potatoes. He will not make over five bushels of corn. He cannot tell what his potatoes will do. J. F. Veree-i is better ofV than the others down theie, though he i-; not loing like lie usually does He has ninety acres cn'tivated tins veur, sev erty acres in corn, on which he may ri;ise 100 bushels, and fifteen in peanits, from which he expects 200 bushels. H. D. Causey has planted twentysix acres. Sixteen are in com, which will produce about eitrhtv bushels; v.nd ten acres in peanu's lliat will produce about one uindred busneh. S. T. Jordan is working eitfht ;icics, of which six are in corn and will produce five bushels; two are in tobacco and are a total loss. C. C. Lawrimore has twenty-four and one-half acres, of which twenty arc in corn and will raise fifteen bushels, two and one-half in cotton to raise half .a bale, and two acres in tobacco, a total loss. B. W. Lee has ten acres in coin which will raise about ton bushels, one acre in tobacco lost, and balance of fifteen acres in other crops with a very bad prospect. G. F. Lee has three acres iv corn and will raise a bushel co the acre, and three acres in peanuts, which will produce about twenty-five Imsheis. EXAMINATIONS GIVEN AGAIN The Civil Service Commission invites special atatention to the fact that in examinations held recently in Washington, D. C., and other cities throughout the United Rintes for juni ior engineer, Bureau of Standards; junior physicist, Bureau of Standards; junior technologist, Bureau of Standards, applicants were ?iot secured in the number desired, and that these examinations will be held again on August 23. Persons interested in these or other examinations should apply to the Secretary of the United States Civil Service Board at the local post office for detailed information and application blanks. o Her Social Policy. Harriett?Why are you at such pains to exclude folks from your social ciUcle? Agathac?So they won't find out how little they miss.?Judge. THE HORRY HERALD, 001 STRIKE COMMENT i ( "This is a free country. The majority rules here!" A proud American boast this, which we are all fond 1 of making to our foreign friends. 1 Is it a free country? Does the ma- j jority rule? Many a patriotic and home-loving citizen is asking himself ; these questions. Is it a case of ma- ' jority rule when the well-organized * minority in a basic industry can jeop- 1 ardize the entire nation? Is it a free ' country when q man who says, "I want the job a striker doesn't want," must pay the penalty with his life if he dares take it? Is it a free country, 1 or a majority rule government, when 1 any "bloc" in House or Senate can dictate legislation in the interests of 1 any part of 100,000,000 as opposed to . the interests of the whole? Is it a free country when any religious bias column showing the percentage of their loss, then a column showing the total loss of all tobacco planted by them, and in the last column of figures will be found the percentage of their loss in the other crops planted, such as sugar cane, beans, hay, potatoes and the like. A look at this table will show the whole world what a great misfortune has come to many farmers of that section of our county by menus of the heavy rains and floods of this year. The rains began when the crops were young and ready to take a fine start. The tobacco willed up in t!io fields and in the course o?* a few week? had dwindled down to nothing but u small, dry staik and small, parchedup leaves that will never do to gather and place in a barn. The co* i f'ned up and has never grown any since in many places. Other crops down there have sulVered. The table follows: s Corn Loss Tob. Loss Other Crops f>0 85% Total 90?/c *0 80 " 90 L2 total " 05 30 75 " 00 15 85 " 95 0 total " total 15 85 " 90 14 85 " 95 io or; " nr. 8 90 " 85 53 95 " 97 10 90 " 90 15 90 " 90 J5 93 " 97 >0 90 " 90 10 90 " 90 [0 80 " 95 5 total " 90 0 total " total [2 80 " 95 10 90 " 95 i >0 85 " 95 >0 95 " 95 30 85 " 95 15 85 " 95 LI 99 " 80 25 95 " 95 3 80 " 95 0 total " tota'l 5 total " 90 10 total " 95 :0 total " total 0 total " 95 F. T. Wilson has seven acres in corn which will possibly myke him fifteen bushels. Mrs. Moses McDowell has twentyfive acres of corn which will make possibly fifty bushels. Five acres in tobacco are a total loss, while one acre in cotton is a total loss. W. B. McDowell has four acres in corn and will raise about twenty-five bushels: throe norths nf ?<vr? lost, and two acres in cotton will produce about a half bale. Mrs. S. P. Vereen has ten acres planted in corn and will get about twenty bushels, and her two acres of cotton will raise about a half bale. J. A. Jones planted ten acres in corn and will got maybe twenty-five bushels. His two acres of tobacco are a total loss. He has three acres in sweet potatoes, hay and the 'ike, which look better. W. K. Burgess expects only thirtyfive bushels of corn from a field of fifteen acres. J. VV. Marlow will get ten bushels of corn from a field of twenty-five acres; his tobacco is ,*i total loss, and his two acres of cotton the same. W. H. Cox looks for only twenly bushels of coin fro>.i thirteen acres. He has one acre of sweet potatoes. J. W. Fullwo'ul will get seventvfive bushels of coin from a crop of twenty-live acre.;. The negroes in Ihe Free wo.od section, about twenty families in all, will not make anything whatever. We have less merchants who are in financial trouble than many another county of this state. There is a reason why. TIRES & TUBES I As good onyour I automobile as they I were onyour bicycle I CONWAY I BARGAIN I HOUSE I 1 WAY, g. 0., JULY 27, 1922 ittempts to interfere with the schools >f the nation? War breeds hate, hate breeds fanaticism, fanaticism breeds intolerance, intolerance breeds oppression, anarchy, Bolshevism, fear. We have had the war, and experienced the hate and the fanaticism. But we, the American people, with the love of freedom and independence, which is the priceless heritage given us by our traditions, our history and our love of what we truly think of as God's country, do not have to follow the road to the end; we do not have to absorb the intolerance, or experience the oppression, anarchy, Bolshevism, fear. The way is clear; we have but to up ply to these our nvpspnt _ _ w ? ? ?? WK/Wat v |/1 VUtVlllO Common Sense About Eczema and Eruptions! Here's Something About S. S. S. That You'll Be Glad to Hear. Toil might just as well know it right now,?tho cause of skin eruptions, pimples, blackheads, boils and so on, is right in tlie blood. There is no getting away from it. Science has proved it. We prove it. You can prove it. When the cause of skin troubles and eruptions is in tho blood, it isn't comJ fix X,et S. S. S. Givo You Au Angelic Skin! mon senso to simply tront the skin. A bottle of S. S. S. will prove to you what is happening in your blood. ri.S.tf. is a scientific l)lood cleanser.?it drives out tlie impurities which cause eczema, tetter, rash, pimples, boils, blackheads, blotches and other skin eruptions. When these impurities are driven out, you can't stop several very nice things from happening. Your lips turn naturally rosy. Your eyes sparkle, yoiir complexion clears. It becomes beautiful. Your face looks like that of a prosperous, ruddy, well-fed, refined gentleman, or if you are a woman, your complexion becomes the real kind that tho whole world so admires. S.S.S. is also a powerful body-builder, because it builds new and more bloodcells. That's why it fills out sunken cheeks, bony necks, thin limbs, helps regain lo3t flesh. It costs little to havo this happen to you. S. S. S. ia sold at all druj? stores, in two sixes. The larger size is tho xuoro economical, o f*Cures Malaria, Chills, Fever, QOO Bilious Fever, Colds and La(Ji-ipiic.?tf Let Us 1 | Wl.QP mnfn ? V bW VV^. always drive < I We have the \ j and economica We use the the motorists ? money's worth | ALL YOUR TIRES, TUBE Anc Our station ' we charge rea Give us a give the best i CENTR Cor. Mai that ideal for which our forefathers fought, which Washington put in practical operation, which Lincoln upheld. We have but to remember that before we are railroad men, farmers, strikers, strike breakers, legislators belonging to a bloc, members of any special j?roup, or upholders of any special faith, we are first of all, good Americans. While we all remember that, this will be a land where the majority rules. When we forget it, and only when we forget it, can this cease to be a free country. o Let the Horry Herald do it. EAGLE "MIKADO">^^| For Sale at your Dealer ASK FOR THE YELLOW PE1 EAGLE IV EAGLE PENCIL COIV | WAN | 500 bales Strict 1 500 bales Midd jj 500 bales Stri< 1 Cotton. I Will also buy s I Staple Cotton. I Before selling, I prices. Write or SL. L. R1 MULLIIV firaaBH5Ga?HSnBW Fill Your G rssts, when the gas around to our statioi gasoline with the pep 1. FRY guarantee visil sire always assured < when they buy from NEEDED SUPPLIES :.S, OIL, GREASE, SF 1 All Popular Accessc is the most conveniei isonable prices at all trial and let us shov service at all times. A.L FILLING ST in Street and Fourth % . .J ^ rRICKETS-i A boM-diiMM of early childhood may be prevented by the faithful un af cod-liver oiL Scott's Emulsion contains the wonderful anti- I rachitic vitamin in | I abundance. It is the I I ideal way to give cod- Ytlf | I liver oil to children. J&jL I |^>cot^^^own?^U()oin fi Htl. j^g^^^^Pencil No. 174 Made in five grade* NCIL WITH THE RED BAND 11KLADO SPANY, NEW YORK ITED I t Middling Cotton I ling Cotton, | ;t Low Middling | ?ome good grade | see me for best 1 phone. | OGERS I IS' S. C. I as Tank I supply is low, I i to fiil 'er up. I I ?sure shooting I ble pumps, and I :>f getting their us. I ARE HERE 'ARK PLUGS >ries I it in town, and I , times. " / you that we ATION i Avenue '?