The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, August 10, 1922, Image 7

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WEEK'S NEWS BOILED DOWN / Sure flappers are liberty belles. And it looks as if the motto were + "Peel off, wild belles." 1 ***** Dr. Alexander Graham Bell, of I Nova Scotia, inventor of the Telephone, died last Wednesday. ***** After all, the kind of world one carries about within one's self is the important thing; the world outside takes all its grace, color and value from that. * * * France has rejected Germany's request for a reduction in the monthly payments on the debts contracted by German nationals with allied citizens prior to the World War. ***** A grandstand seating 4,000 or more .people, the largest structure of the kind in South Carolina, is being con structed by the Stale U'aif at tlie Fair grounds. * * * * * Princess Yolanda, the eldest daughter of the King of Italy, is declared to be the most accomplished horsewoman among all tho women of European royalty. * * * * * After living almost continuously for four years on a mattiXiss resting on water in a bathtub, Lieut. Milton B. Mackall died today in the Fort McHenry Hospital as the result of a shattered spine. * + * * * Ganna Walska has informed friend > that she has no intention of marrying Harold McCormick when her divorce from Alexander Smith Cochran is made final, within the next few days. * * * * * A lot of the young giHs who try to benefit by the paint-makers' slogan "Save the surface and you save all," are .'ill the less to be blamed when it is discovered that there is not much to them but sur- 1 face. ***** More than 100 persons were injured and an entire neighborhood terrorized last week by the explosion of more than 4,000,000 feet of gas and the collapse of its container, in Chicago. ? ? * ? * Bees are very jealous of their i queen; she is to them the very soul i of the hive. She can stop any squabbling among the bees by the j means of a peculiar humming noise that she makes. < ***** An Atlantic City barber, while : cutting a customer's hair, recognized a scar on his head and discovered that he had been attending 1 to his brother, whom he had not seen in twenty years. ***** Princess Nogako, of Tokio, the fu ture empress of Japan, whose engagement to the Prince Refeent has just been officially announced, ha3 attained her 20th year, and is regarded by the nation as the personification of beauty, virtu re and love. ; ***** Mrs. Blanche Shipley, of New J York, put a disinfectant in her mattress to kill vermin and now she is in the Newark Hospital, colored blue from head to foot and possibly 1 in need of blood transfusion. So ' are her two babies who slept with her, one eleven days and the other nineteen months old. ***** Frank Urbanavage, of Shenandoah, < Pa., died at his home at Girardsville, ; near here, today from the effects of a malady which has puzzled physicians all over the State for almost a ^ear. About a year ago Urbanavage fuffered an injury to his right leg 1 while diving. Several months ago the i % 1. A. .1 . ? / 1 i .4 1. A ' leg oegan 10 peirny, ana ai me ume ? of death outweighed the rest of 1 Tfis body. ' * * * * * John Hare, of DeFuniak Springs, ' 94 yeai* old, and Mrs. Lucy Ann ' Merrill were married last week at 1 at Bruce, according to information 1 brought here by friends. Hare, who has been in feeble health for several ' years, has used a cane when he walks, 1 but when he went to attire himself in his wedding suit an hour before ,( the ceremony he forgot the cane and did not remembor it until after the < wedding, when his attention was called to its absence. GOODYE Mrniriirr' l n l^LLNWLAK I can show you a full and complete assortment of neck ties. The right tie make you look right. ===== ' ? ? ; y r Full AT A 1 j ' * : i, While a mothesr and daughter sat 1 by the bank of the Sawmill River nt Thornweed, N. Y., near White , Plains, awaiting the return of the Two-year-old son of the family, who had lagged behind during a walk 1 along the river, they saw a body floating with the tide. It proved to * be the son, who had fallen in the 1 river and was drowned. i * ? When Joseph A. Burn's automobile balked while he was racing from Mid- ( dletown, N. V., to his home, No. 104(> South Orange Avenue, Newark, * in an effort to get there ahead of the 1 stork, he simply abandoned the auto- * mobile at the curb and hopped \ aboard u trolley car. He got home ' about live minutes before the arrival of a fine baby boy. ( Mrs. Victor Owens, a young white 1 woman of Spartanburg, was shot, it ( is alleged by her husband, Victor f, Owens last Friday night, and was ' brought to the tronoral hnanhui ->f ? ? * 9 "v ?*' j early hour Saturday. Victor Owens, who admits the shooting, came to ! I he city and gave himself up to the 1 authorities. * * * * ? I A waif, thrown from a moving y automobile in Bath, S. C., last January, found and adopted hy Air. and \ Mrs. J. 1). Johnson, of Augusta, and named Jewell Bath Johnson, died at ' a hospital there today of bronchial 1 pneumonia. The baby's parentage has i ^ never been discovered. f c + * + * * : Wynyard, Sak., July 25.-?A meteor fell in Big Quill yesterday with 1 a great roar and explosion that ' frightened people and animals for miles around. Bottles fell from their , shelves and pictures swayed upon the walls. Great clouds of steam and : smoke shot through the clear sky, ami many climbed upon housetops? some to see the phenomenon and others to pray. * * * * < Following the performance of four j marriage ceremonies in New York, j which included three actors, two t actresses, and two artists in the chapel of the Municipal Building j yesterday, Deputy City Clerk James . AlcComack expressed the opinion j that "while the coal and railroad strikes were slowing up the wheels of industry, there was no slowing up . in the manriage license industry." < * * + * + ^ Frederick L. Hulme, of Hochester, , N. Y., twentv-thl'PA fnrlnv i^ - v - , V III HVylU 1 Wl ^ murder, first degree, for the killing ] of Herbert George, eleven. George was slain when he was suspected of attempting to take apples from the tree in Hulme's yard. The man fired j ante from a pistol, the bullet entering the boy's stomach. He died a ' few hours later. : * * * * * ' In the Coney Island Court yester- ! day, Williann C. Koch, thirty, a sales- 1 man, of No. 412 Stratford Road, ii, was before Magistrate , Short, charged with manslaughter. 1 Ho pleaded not guilty and was held ( n /:! >00 bail for examination. Jack E. Nelson, thirteen, of No. Mf) East 311st Street, Brooklyn, was 1 instantly killed yesterday afternon 1 in a peculiar motor accident. Seeing t truck bearing down on him, ho leaped from his bicycle in Newkirk * \venite near Nostrand Avenue, and c I on the sidewalk. The truck wervii.g to avoid him, crashed into c ;he curb, toppled over on the side- 2 Aalk and crushed him. n c Let the Horry Herald do it. * PROBATE Citation for Letters of Administration STATE OP SOUTH CAROLINA, I COUNTY OP HORRY. " By J. S. Vaught, Esq., probate judge. Whereas, Wilson Roberts made suit ^ Lo me to grant him letters of administration of the estate of and effects 11 >f Elinor F.nzor, these are therefore ? lo cite and admonish all and singu- l lar the kindred and creditors uf the ^ said Elinor Enzor, deceased, that they i je and appear before me in the court d .< U-j..- i i ? >i (jruuutu to ue neiu at uonvvay, JS. J C., on the 15th day of August, 1 i?22 a next, after publication hereof, at 11 11 /clock in the forenoon, to show cause, d f any they have, why the said ad- " ninistration should not he granted. [ Given under my hand, this 28th day n )f July, Anno Domini, 1922. i Published on the 3d and 10th days fj )f August, 1022, in the Ilorry Ileraid. " J. S. VAUGHT, j Probate Judge. <j AR TIRES AND I Can Fit you on the Road. id complete new line of medicines. 3ELLTS at Baybc / u A- * < '? ? - * THE HORRY HERALD, COW MEMBEU OF MAPLE SOCIETY WHITES Dear Editor: 1 would like very much to have a few words to say in answer to Mr. i\. T. Smith, I sincerely dislike to >ay it, as I consider Mr. Smith my oersonal friend, but when a man goes thead and proves himself to be a thorough hypocrit, 1 can't help but express my opinion of him. i do not. wonder at him asking the "deai editors" not to publish Mtyfching el*e in regard to the question ho \va.liscussing, as this was his first article and he did not wish the opinion of some of the people in print. Now Mr. Smith was the organizer >f the Maple Literary Society, lie was elected president of the society, md filled his term with marked jfTiciency. He seemed to boost (he ;ociety In every possible manner Later he turns away from the soeie., ill of a sudden. He explains thai this was on account of iokes printed on the program; but the fac Is that he never left the society untill the jokes were banished from the programs of the society, so ho will have to find a better reason than hat in order for it to hold water. Ho cannot truthfully say that the soc ety has, with the expect ion of iokes being taken out, undergone an\ adical change. Why, then, did lie .visli to leave the society which ho organized and fostered in its youngei lays? He must have decided that t would be more fun to engage in a newspaper discussion, whereby lie ould criticize someone else and give hem no chance to defend themselves. I don't see why he should be :i 1 lowed to write his view-points and ^'et deny the other fellow that priviege. I do not see why his opinion s so much more important than anyone's. I do not think his subscrip Jon cost him more than any else's. The fact, is, 1 doubt if he is even ;i subscriber to the paper that hi ar ;icle was printed in. On the other land, I think Mr. Jenrette is a subscriber to that paper. I would like to assure Mr. Smith hat after he has reconsidered hi ; iction, that if he decides to come lack to the society, that he will be velcomed back with open arms, as all >r us are likely to make mi lake md go astray. VVe realize that Mr. ->mit h. beini'- o m?i? nm/.n ?<v: nency, has not given this matter thjroper thought, and we are going t>> expect his presence at our next neeting. MEiMHKR o Fine wedding invitations at the Herald oHice, wither paneled or plain and in the very size that you Ihink \'ou want for the occasion. Call at the Herald ofiice for good paper <4' any kind and the right kind of printing. o "Now is the time to get your life insured, young man. The longer you lolay it the higher your premiums will :>e." "I know that, but the longer 1 wait the fewer premiums I will have to pay." o Reprisals.?Wife?"Where, might ask, have you been till this hour >f the morning?" Husband?"\V?why, round at the :?club, of course, c?con i.lerin' of i strike." Wife?"Well, you go back to your lub and consider it a lock-out!"? jondon Mail. o Filing supplies at the Herald ofl'ce. Child-birth Valuable Illustrated Book Sent Free How thousands of women, by tho nimplo nethod of an eminent physician, have avoided innecessary miseries through many months ind up to the moment 'M/JST' " iaby has arrived, is fully xplaincd in the remnrkablo took, "Motherhood and the Jaby." Tells also what JMB lo before and after baby ^HE omes, probablo daio of^Er^T^Bj^H lirtb, baby rules, etc., and Im?* bout "Mother's Friend," ! ?f.' ised by three generations IV 1YV ^ f mothers, and sold in all IW 1 V Irujf Btorcs everywhere.Ijv If 'Mother's Friend" is ap-Q, V ilied externally, is safe, ree from narcotics, perflits easier natural readustment of muscles and nerves during1 exicctancy and child-birth. Start using it toay. Mrs. E. E. Kerger, Slayton, Minn., says; It pulled me through." Send fur book tolay, to Bradfleld Regulator Co., HA-30, Atanta, Ga. "Mother's Friend" is ?olU at ftU Irug stores. > TUBES VEW ENAMEL Large and varied ine of enamel ware ?f I he very best to fit you or housekeeping. ' ri:<\ ,;ri > ' J c J fnjt.vi >ro ?i^????????? ;-w\v . 1 >L? " * NAY, S. C., AUGUST 10, 1922 ANSWERS THE WRITER OF MAPLE ARTICLE Dear Editor: 1 noticed in a recent issue of the Field an article in reference to oiio, Mr. Rufus Jenrette. Jf 1 am not mistaken the article said something about Mr. Jenrette not being a fullblooded American. Knowing Mr. Jenrette as 1 do, 1 feel it my duty to ask for a definition of "A Loyal American Citizen." Mr. Jenrette is a young man of seventeen years; he supports an in valid father, a sister and a stepmother. He lives eight and one-half miles from town, where he serve; a trade. He rides a bicycle these eight and one-half miles twice daily, lie is in regular attendance at his Sunday school, and a member and a booster of a good literary society. According to family history, hi ancestors came over from France with the immortal Lafayette, and helped fight the American War of I independence. 1 luul not taken any stand concerning the Literary Society through the County papers, out 1 was involved in some of the articles of recent date, and I thought it best t clear up a few points to the public eye. 1 would like very much if the writer of the article referred to would give the public a definition of a "Loyal American citizen," as 1 would like to know what Mr. Jen rette's deficiences are. S. L. MOORE Kernel gritt, the wonder hand soap, for sale at the Herald office. Get a box and say goodbye to prime and dirt troubles with your hands this season. We li>e to Learn.?"1 never knew til! I pot a-car," said Bishop ICightly. "that profanity was so prevalent. 1 "Do vou hear much of it on the road?"* "Why," said the Bishop, "nearh everybody 1 bump into swears dreadfully."?Philidelphia 1 lujuirer. His Secret of Success We know a man who is noted foi petting alonp well in the esteem oi his employer. When asked how he did it, the man replied: "Well, 1 always consider that the boss is ripht, even when lie is wronp."?Hoy. aid ( Kan.) Courant. Gettinp Him Going Father (from upstairs)?"Helen, isn't it time fo,the younp man 11? po home?" Vounp Man?"Your father is a crank." Father (overhearing) ? "Well ,. K- i ,, i in n you cion c nave a self-starter a crank comes in mighty handy."?Boston Transcript. o Second sheets at the Herald shop ( i Is sellinj (before. Monday' I The folk sales. lbs. H. Cooper 256 18(1 L. F. Shannon 198 ). D. Bratcher 64 184 Spivey & Wood a i / 484 D. H. Moore 188 IH. C. Stanly 68 Bring us V V > . ' v? V , fl | ALLKllKOOK R. F. I>. No. I ^ Dear Kditor: Please allow me space in your valuable paper for a few lines from this place. Health is generally good except some colds. The farmers are busily engaged in grading and tiring their tobacco of which we hope to obtain a satisfactory price when marketed. Mr. and Mrs. Simon Tpdd also Air. and 'Mrs. I). T. Bbyd spent Saturday night and Sunday with their sister Mrs. .1. T. Todd. Mr. J. P. Hardee has recently purchased him a brand new "Ford" and was seen on our streets operating it Sunday. Mr. J. 11. Cooke and son 11..I 4 t* J v T ^ ntiueri oi wiimington, in. l., are , spending some time with friends and relatives at this place. Mr. A. B. Cox, Mr. I). T. Boyd, Mr. S. F. Todd and J. I1. Hardee were pleasant callers at the home of Mr. W. D. Cox's Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. L. T. Lovell and ' children of Dillon, S. C., spent last week-end with friends at this place, returning Sunday. Miss Rosa Cox spent Saturday night and Sunday with his cousin Miss Callie ('ox. Miss Lucille Cox spent Saturday night with Mrs. M. L. Duncan returning home on Sunday afternoon accompanied by Mr. L. K. Duncan. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Carter spent Sunday Last with Mrs. Carter's parents Mr. and Mrs. John Bellamy of Loris, S. C. We are glad to report that Miss Oilio Ilardee has a bountiful corn Rheumati How irlorloiifi yon will fool, mother, wlirn your rliouiimtisiit is ull ffono. L.ot 8. 8. 8. do it. It will build you up, toot :onway, s. c g tobacco high< s sale average* >wing are a few Price > @ 50 ' (r' 32 J. D. Hare i (ct> 54 @ 55 A. \V. Ha @ 49 " Page Skipi @ 40 i (a) 53 @ 50 > your tobacco. V. A. Free crop and that sin* is expecting: to furnish many of the farmers who havo lost their ntire crop by I he recent rains. Many tfood wishes to the Heralcl and its munv readers. SUBSCRIBER. We are not always glad when wo smile, For the heart in a tempest of pain May live in the guise <>i a laugh in the eves And the rainbow may live in the rain. ?J. W. Hi ley. "So you're a Boy Scout, eh? Have v >u done your daily Rood deerl today?" "Yes, sir. 1 taught Billy Jones that it isn't safe to call me a liar." I I TIRES TUBES I As good on your I automobile as they I were on yo,: ?? h ".cycle I CONWAY 11 BARGAIN I I HOUSE 2 I SBBBBSBBBwi mt *w>icmainrl S. S. S. Thoroughly Rids the Body of I Rheumatism Impurities, I Somebody's mother is suffering to- I night; Tho scourgo of rheumatism fl has wrecked her body; limping and Buffering, bent forward, sh<> sees but the common ground, but her aged I heart still belongs to tho stars; Does I anybody care? S. S. S. is ono of tho I greatest blood-purifU rs known, and it I helps build more blood cells. Its med- H iclnal ingredients are purely vegeta hie. It never disarranges tlio stomach. It is, in fart, a splendid tonic, a blood I maker, a i i enricher. It banishes I rheumatism from joints, muscles and I tho entire body. It builds firm flesh. I It is what somebody's mother needs tonight! Mother, if you run not go out tt> get a bottle of S. S. S. yourself, fl surely somebody in your family will. Somebody, get a bottle of S. S. S. nowi H ljct somebody's mother begin to feel joyful again tonight. Maybe, maybe H it's your mother! S. S. S. Is sold at H all drug stores, in two sizes. The H larger sizo is the more economical. 3r than ever nl I i 24 cents. nl of the high I 218 @ 41 I ly 54 (a) 55 m 90 (5) 37 H rely 56 @ 51 H 156 (ci 35 per 42 (a) 65 210 ? r>7 H 44 @34 n 220 r?: 54 m man. I ? H ^1