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/ fe THAT MUCH SETTLED (From the Kansas City Journal.) ii you uon t like this one, why don't you change barbafls?" "This one has become reconciled to the fact that I won't buy any hair restorer." ? o Boll weevils have not yet attacked the tobacco. The rains have been quite enough to injure that. I Central \ B A. Marvin 1 I FOR THE I LEAF T< I MULLIN H I Tobacc< I Mr. Farme I think. I aver< I $6.79 on open I was a good I that year, f I they tell you I no higher. W! I $18.94 for ev? I on my floor I Warehouse, I GOT THEIR I day. So come I I will show you. I Your friend, HI c I Is now of | your toba< | If you 1 in and w U care of it I iirr OT n VYEi Jl M I GUST 1ST. I Plant , . ;t v* .. -.'?..?*: i.iiftfcJ?i-j.:i?-*.'jLJij: iim i i'l?j| i i'l'Miill Mfiif ilil i I * ,1 HIS MYSTERY. ?5551,5 (From the Detroit Free Press.) "It's queer," remarked Jinks. "What is?" asked Binks. "That with all the people looking for and borrowing trouble I can't get rid of mine," remarked Jinks. 1 0 ,j Get the kind of paper you want . and nicely printed at the Herald office. ( ] 1 r i narenouse ^cwis, Prop. 9 j SALE OF I < OBACCO I S, S. C. If ) News. 11 ir, look and 11 iged in 1921 1! ing sale, which 1; average for |j )ow in 1922 I j the sales are 11 len I averaged I! ? ? ? Bl ;ry pound sold |: at Central I AND THEY I MONEY that I i M t6 see me and 1| A. Marvin Lewis. I ? :onway, s. c >en and ready 1 :co. have it graded e will insure it for vou. * ART SELLING I ers Wareh< THE HORRY HERALD, CONWA NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of the decree ?nct judgment of the court made by lis honor, S. W. G. Shipp judge oi I'vfclfth Circuit, in the case of Anna t>. Bryant, plainti.f, vs. Simeon K. [iryant, Douglas U. Bryant and Hu)ert W. Bryant, defendants, and datid the J1th day of July A. D. 1922, [, the undersigned W. L. Bryan, clerk >f court as special master of Horry :ounty, will sell at public auction, to -he highest bidder before the courtlouse door, at Conway, in Horry coun;y, and state of South Carolina, durnjr leflral hours of sale, on attlftuHAV in \ugust next, it being* the 7th day of said month, all and singular that cer;ain real estate situate in Horry county, and described as follows, to wit: Tract No. 1 containing forty (40) icres, more or less, and lies on the south side of Fox Bay, .and is known is J. C. Bryant's last homestead, beginning at a point on the sfluth side >f Fox Bay, on west side of light of ,vay of W. C. & C. Railroad, thence unning with said right of way south *3M> degrees west nine and one-half chains to a stake at the edge of Jen ett street, thence westward along vith Jenrett street to A. F. Cannon's uid Dan W. Hard wick's corner, thence lorthward with Dan W. Hardwick's ine to Black Gum 3XN, thence northward with Dan W. Hardwick's line to )ine in south edge of Fox Bay, thence eastward with south edge of Fox Bay ,o stake in edge of Fox Bay, thence south fifty-eight (5N) degrees, east seven and one-half (7Ms) chains to joint of beginning, the said property fully described in deeds from Moniac Dhemical Company to .Limes C. Bryant inder date of March (>, 1908, and recorded March 12, 1908, in Book AAA, >age 236, records of Horry county, and Nathan E. Hardwick to James C. Bryant, under deed dated February 20, 1909, and recorded March 22, 1909, in Book GGG, page 19, records of Horry county. Tract No. 2, known as the William tlickman lot, containing four (4) acres more or less, beginning at a point on south side of Jenrett street on W. C. fc C. Railroad right of way and runs south with right of way to Pine street, thence west with Pine street o Second street, thence north with Second street to Jenrett street thence sast with Jenrett street to the be^inninjr and is better known as lots mrnbers 1,2, 11 and 12, plat made in Li)G"> by N. E. Hardwick, surveyor. Terms el' sale cash. Purchaser to pay for papers and stamps. Julv 11, 1922. J.' I. ALLEN Jr., Plaintiff's Attorney. W. L. BRYAN,' Clerk of Court as Special Master, Horry County. i warn mm vm?wm\ mm ficfl ' \ \ to receive I , bring it and take ON AU* I juse. | Y, S. C., AUGUST 3rd, 1922. GURLEY CROPS ARE ALL LOST Gurley, S. C., August 1. Special:? The Herald of last week contained an I article from Gurley which made some 1 mention of the damage done to farm- ors by the recent rains in the neighborhood of Gurley, but the information was not complete. The situation can be expressed in a few words by saying that there is not , a planter in the section who will be | able to pay his fertilizer bill. Here are the names of some of the . farmers, and the crops of those not mentioned are damaged fully as much as these: F. G. Prince has 15 acres of corn , .and will not raise 20 bushels. He is ; cutting the stalks down to use for feed. He has 6 acres of tobacco, , which has not yet been cropped and will not he cropped as it is not worth i it. He has (J acres of cotton entirely lost. Three acres of potatoes pro- < duced six h.nrrels while three acres of beans produced 25 crates. I W. R. Tyler's cotton, tobacco and corn will not bo worth gathering'. J. M. Bland has five acres of tobacco which produced three hundred pounds. His six acres of corn will not make half a crop. One acre of beans produced five crates which sold for 50, two acres of cotton is a total loss. J. C. Horsey has several acres of cotton that is lost. His corn and potatoes are not wo?*th the gathering. II. 11. Anderson has lost practically all his crop of corn, tobacco, col'.on and potatoes. Mrs. Eliza Anderson is a heavy loser hi tobacco, cotton and corn. This list gives but an incomplete history and many more names might be added and their loss stated about the same. All of this damage has come about by reason of the heavy ' 1 _ ! _ 1. 1 _ .. . <./\ i\-? ?>? iv AI rams which nave ue?-n cvn sinco May. It is still raining in this section. The rainfall in thfs section recently was so he.avy that the Atlantic Coa.^t Line Railroad Company hn> 1 about GOO feet of its tract moved from its foundation, the trestle across Pug Swamp was carried several f<?et down the stream. There was an article in last week's issue of the Herald concerning the loss from the heavy rains in Socastee. The damage-to the crops is fully as bad around Gurley as it is reported to. he in Socastee. All of the farmers in this section are in bad financial circumstances by reason of the loss of their money crops. - - DIZZINESS IS ANNOYING As Many Conway People Know Too Well. When the kidneys are weak or disordering, they fall behind in filtering the blood of poisons. As these poisons attack the nerves the result is felt in spells of vertigo, just as drunkenness will make a m.nn dizzy from the poisoning of alcohol. Dizziness, headache, backache and irregularity of the kidney secretions are all signs of weak or disordered kidneys and should not be neglected. Use Doan's Kidney Pills, the homoendorsed kidney remedy. Read this Conway resident's statement: Mrs. S. F. Gasque says: "I Ivul all the symptoms of kidney trouble. My back was sore and lame and my head ached. I also had dizzy spelN. My kidneys acted irregularly and bothered me. Doan's Kidney Pills soon cured me of the trouble." Price fiOc, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for ,'i kidney remedy?get Doan's Kidney Pills?the same that Mrs. Gasque had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. V.-?Adv. weei^s'news BOILED DOWN Talk about love at first sight, some of them must fall in love without looking at all. One day last week a girl stood up in a street car because her stocking had a hole in the knee. May Walsh, seven feet, six inches tall and said to be the tallest woman in the world, died in Chicago. Down in the heart of West Virginia, Jack Clark, claiming to be 108 years old, is still hewing crossties for a lumber company, though he is handicapped by the loss of an eye. Three men who had drifted in a small boat on Lake Ontario from Saturday afternoon until the next Wednesday morning, landed exhausted, twelve miles east of Fort Niagara. 1 I Marilynn Miller, theatrical star, promised to obey "and everything" when she married Jack Pickford, brother of Mrs. Douglas Fairbanks, ' *t the latter's Hollywood home on I August 1. < Tho Rvitiah T?<vl Prnss. nfier inves ligation, has decided to purchase the < vaccine treatment against tuberculosis originated by Henry Spahlinger, the I Geneva biologist, and a contract for j the sale has just been signed in Lon- 1 don. 1 1 William J. Hill, who insists he ( never drove .a car in his life, was ar- 1 raigned in the police court at Man- > Chester, Conn., charged with operating \ a motor vehicle while intoxicated. He i was fined $100 and costs by Judge i Johnson. 1 O ft* (Mum That Dots Not Mtoct lbs Hm? l BtccJk of it* tonk and laxative effect. LAXA rr'E BROMO QU1MIN8 iiWuuthan ordinary 'Ja'nine and dot# not cauaa nervoaauMi not iSRAit-JSttV*. MT | AYNOR PERSONALS | Misses Maude Dansey, and Rosena Floyd returened Friday from Rock 1 Hill, where they have been attending i 'ummer school at Winthorpe College. Mrs. Lanson, of Baltimore, spent I ho week-end here, the guest of Miss Julia Page. Miss Lacy Buss, who has been attondimr qnnimoi' >* IT.,.' r, I I y\> I U t KJ 111" t'ersity of South Carolina returned home Saturday. Mrs. Hill Stucky, of Columbia/ 's spending some time here wi'h her parents, Dr. and Mrs. R. A. Bass. Miss Nita Page returned from Rock Hill Saturday, and has as h?? ' i^uest this week Misses Viola Dopier und Ellon Jolly, both of Rock Hill. Isaac Shelly, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ino. T. Shelly, has been awarded thr scholarship to Furman University for ' the coming session. Mi Ss Nettie Webber, bookkeeper fo?George J. Holliday store here, ha- i just returned after a vacation to her home in Spartanburg, S. C., < hi Pennsvlvania, Prohibition Director .Tohn T. .Davis has become the ' "man with Hie plough." H^ and his agents are running* furrows over a farm near Log.nnton, in Clinton countv. and so far they have turned up thirty-five barrels and more than 1.000 quarts of moonshine. Two-year old Woodson W. Woodward of Richmond lost his toy balloon throiuvh the window of .a train traveling thirty miles an hour near there recently, fell from the train when he reached for it, and was found later by a farmer, walking contentedly along the tracks, bolloon in hand. He was uninjured and was returned to the train, which had been stopped to permit passengers to search for him. "Let me introduce Mr. Fish, he is <1 n nv o\im " (iii VAJIV 1 K, %v | 11 I 111C I "Ah, yes, take him down and lot him enjoy himself in the pool room!" ?Penn State Froth. ***** Tom (colored)?T just met a nigger out there all cut up and his shirt was might' nigh covered with blood. Radv?Good l.an'! Who done it? "Well, 1 done ax'd him dat question and he said 'a friend o' his.' " ***** "Jimson is the worst old fogy T ever saw." "lie still thinks that liouor has to he at least, four years old before it is fit to drink." # 5(5 * * * Sculptor?My dear young lodv, I'm looking for a model who's aged and ugly. You are entirely too pretty for the type I desire. Model?What are you going to sculpture? "A st/itue of peace."?Le Journal Amusant (Paris.) o Legal blanks at the Herald office. SALE UNDER EXECUTION Under and by virtue of an execution issued upon a judgment rendered by the court of common pleas in the rise of the Bishopville National Rank, plaintilf, vs. Waccamaw Land Company, Inc., and dated on the first day of July A. D. 1D22, and to me directed, as well as by virtue of W'w: of Attachment levied in the action above stnted prior to the issuing of said execution, I have levied upon and seized ana will oiler for siile at the courthouse door of Horry county at Conway in said county .luring the legal hours of sale on salesduy in September next, it being the fourtn day of s.aid month, the following described real estate to-wit: All that tract of land in Simpson Creek township, Horry county st;?te aforesaid, containing sixteen hundred and eighty-five (1,085) acres, more or less, the same being composed of your four tracts to-wit: Tract No. 1: Containing twelve hundred and fifty (1,250) acres, more or less, lying on the northwest side of public road leading from Star I>iuff road to the Loris road, bounded on the north by N. Hardwick and the Carter land, east by X. Smith, M. Stanley, T. L. Lee, et al.; on the south and east by the above mentioned public road, on the west by lands of S. P. Watson, I. L. Lee, et al. Tract No. 2: Containing twentyfive (2.5) acres, more or less, lying west and contiguous to the above described tract; bounded on the e.nst by j said tract, south by lands of Faircloth, west by lands of- : Bryant. * Tract No. 3: Containing three hundred twenty-five (325) acres, more or less, lying southeast of the said public road, which divides it from the . first above described tract and on . both sides of a canal leading from r* ? * uun|;cil ltfJiy l(> VUWpt'll OVVUIlip j bounded on the north by public road, east by F. L. Wilcox, trustee; Percy Butler, et al.; south by S. Vaught and west by said public road, I. L. I^ee, t 5t al. c Tract No. 4: Containing eighty- I ive (85) acres, more or less, known \s the Hardee & Faircloth tract and 5 >ounded on the north by lands of S. ( P. Watson, N. Hardwick, et al.; on 1 ,he east by A. Smith, Butler lands, s it al.; on the south by S. Vaught and < [. L. Lee, and on the west by N. Hard,vick, S. P. Watson, et al., all of J vhich are more particularly described t n office of R. M. C. for Horry county n Book G-4, page 108, and Book TTT, e sage 59. j Terms of sale cash, purchaser or 1 purchase** to pay for papers and stamps. Dated July 24, 1922. J. A. LEWIS, Sheriff of Horry County. < ANNOUNCEMENTS ************************** ? * * Cards in this column for J # County or State Office, $7.50; * * Magistrate, $5.00; payable in j * advance. * n * K ************************* FOR CONGRESS I hereby announce my candidacy for congress from the sixth district, subject to t lie action of the Democratic Primary. W. R. BARRINGER. Florence, S. C., April 12th, 1022. 1 hereby announce myself a candidate for Congress from the sixth Congressional district, subject to the rules governing the Democratic primary. Florence, S. C. A. 11. GASQUE To the Democratic voters of the Gth Congressional district: 1 hereby announce myself a candidate for Congress from the Gth Congressional district, subject to the rules of the Democratic port v. j. F. PATE 1 hereby announce myself a candidate for re-election to Congress from the sixth Congressional district subject to the rules of the Democratic primary. PHILIP H. STOLL FOR SOLICITOR 1 announce my candidacy for reelection to the office of solicitor of the 12th judicial circuit, subject to the action of the Democratic primary. May 23, 11)22. L. M. GASQUE. 1 hereby announce myself a candidate for Solicitor of the 12th Judicial Circuit subject to the rules of the Democratic primary. CHAS. W. MULDllOW PROBATfc JUDGE The friends of C. Hinson Spivey hereby announce him .as candidate for the office of Probate Judge of Horry county, subject to the rules of the Democratic primary. 1 hereby announce myself a candidate for re-election to the office of Probate Judge of Horry county, subject to. the rules of the Democratic primary. J. S. VAUGHT. FOK AUDITOR 1 hereby announce myself a candidate for Auditor of Horry county, subject to the rules of the Democratic primary. JAMES A. CALHOUN. I hereby announce myself a candidate for Auditor of Horry county, subject to the rules of the Democratic primary. J. W. COOK. FOR HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES I hereby announce my candidacy for re-election to the House of Representatives from Horry county, subject to the rules of the Democratic primary. G. LLOYD FORD 1 hereby announce myself a candidate for the House of Representatives from Horry county, subject to the rules of the Democratic party. T. ii. U'JWIS. 1 hereby announce myself a candidate for the House of Representatives for Horry county, subject to the rules of the Democratic party. CORD IE PAGE. I .hereby announce myself a candidate for re-election to the House of Representatives, subject to the rules of the Democratic partv. pd W. A. PRINCE. FOR MAGISTRATE 1 announce myself a candidate for magistrate of Bucks township. S. D. BEVERLY I hereby announce myself a candidate for reappointment to the offico in magistrate at Conway, S. C. VV. H. CHESTNUT. To the women and men voters of Conway township: I announce myself a candidate for the office of magistrate. I ?hank you for the patronage which I shall get. Very respectfully, W. S. MpPAQKIT T The many friends of M. L. Gilmore announce him as candidate for magistrate at Daisy, Simpson Creek township. subject to the rules of the Democratic primary. pd FOR TREASURER I am a candidate for re-election to he office of treasurer of Horry coun;y, subject to the action of the demo;r^itic primary. C. E. BARKER. o #To Stop a Cough Quick ^ ake HAYES* HEAUNG HONEY, ft >,ough medicine which stops the cough by lealing the inflamed and irritated tissues. A box of GROVES O-PEN-TRATE 5ALVE for Chest Colds. Head Colds and >oup is enclosed with everv bottle of 1AYES' HEALING HONEY. ~The salve ihould be rubbed on the chest and throat >f children suffering from a Cold or Groups The healing effect of Hayes' Healing Hooey la* tide the throat combined with the healing effect off ".rove's O-Pen-Trste Salve through the pores off he akin soon stops a ooogh. Both remedies are packed In ooe carton and Dm ioat of the combined treatment la SSc.g, 'Just ask your druggist foff HAYES* iEALING HONEY. o PHm Cored in 6 to 14 Days