The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, August 17, 1922, Image 4
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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. Woodward,
Conway. S. C.
THURSDAY, AUG. 17, 1922
^*************************
* jjj
* BUILDING OUK MARKET *
X *
**********#*#*************
There is nothing: more important
for us to do just now than to spend
time and money in the improvement
of Conway and other towns of Horry
as a tobacco market. It is certainly
had foi< us to neglect our opportunities
in this respect, knowing
that the growers will learn to carry
their product to other towns outside
cf the county and there sell what
they have and perhaps spend their
money.
As we have so often said the
makings are here of one of the
greatest tobacco centers in the country.
All we have to do is to encourage
the growing of tobacco as a
money crop, and the bringing of this
crop to our markets to sell. When
we speak of encouraging, we mean
the holding out of inducements in
different ways, but especially the
providing of facilities for the grow- |
ers and buyers and the one thousand
or more ways in which we can render
service to those who produce and
handle the weed.
There was almost the making of a
serious mistake here this year when
at one time it appeared that the
entire market might be on the cooperative
plan of marketing. The
association wants to succeed, and in
their zeal they would have bought ,
up the last warehouse and fixed it
so that not a pound of tobacco could
have been sold here on the auction
plan. That would have been just
about suicide for Conway as a tobacco
market. Aynor went cooperative*
f?nt i rol V nnrl vmi coo r?\i* if if
Not a pound of tobacco can he sold
there except on the cooperative plan.
You see what happened there. The
tobacco which had been going to that
point from the surrounding territory
will not so easily be induced to go
back there. Once a tide turnfc it
takes its time to turn back. Just
that way it would have been here
if the owner of the Planters Warehouse
here had not seen the situation
in time and refused to come in
under the cooperative marketing
plan.
We arte not fighting the cooperative
plan of marketing, you understand.
We believe that this plan is
the hope of the farmer for all of the
crops he has to sell. What we are
talking about just now is the fact
that numbers of growers of tobacco
will not come in under the plan yet.
Some of them will remain out for
years and years and they will insist
on theii; right to sell their weed
wherever and whenever they wish to
do so without being placed under a
contract. To take care of those and
do it right was the duty of Conway
and it is the duty of every other market;
and it is the best for the markets,
as markets, to take care of
tnat element. The market this year
which failed to take care of the
growers who did not believe in th^
cooperative movement are down and
out in one sense and it will take
time and money to correct the
mistake.
o
-a-************************-*
* HORRY HERALDING *
* $
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Idleness is one thing that produces
whiskey.
I^et's make all good roads lead to
Myrtle Beach.
o
The farm produces little where
weeds are allowed to grow where
*r*in .should have been planted.
'0
All we need is a little more pep
to make something out of ourselves
fcnd something out of our State.
The Horry farmers are best off
They are in better financial condition
than the planter in many counties
are.
o
Ther^ is not a nuisance in th<
world more dreaded than the talka
tive whiskey soak. Yes, we wil
l?ive him 'i wide berth.
o
Let's quit trying to find grea<
"Let's spend our money at home aw
fellow will benefit as much as we wil
help our neighbors as well as our
selves.
o
People of Horry do not need U
buy a Summer home in the moun
tains. They have all the advantage:
t"bey need in a Summed home at th<
seaside, which is nearby.
o
It is time to quit the habit of build
in|f up the far distant mountain sec
tions. of North Carolina, as we hav<
been used to doing. Spend the monej
on improvement** at home, at Myrtl<
Beach. Murrell's Tnl^t. and Cherr;
Grove. The finest Summer resort:
in the world are located on the sea
j&ore and not among the mountain!
of any State.
' ?
Some men are unwilling to spend
a dollar today that may bring them
two dollars a year hence. They refuse
to invest unless they can get
immediate returns. This old world
is not balanced up that way either.
o
Happy is the man who realizes
that he usually pets just what is
coming to him. The man who is
always cursing others and the weather
and the times becomes a pest
whom no person wishes to entertain.
o
Some men and women do nothing
and make nothing just because they
do not want to do anything. Thev
have no one to blame except them
selves, though you may hear them
blaming the whole world for their
lack of success.
o
WASHINGTON COMMENT
Alexander Graham Bell is dead.
To the world at large, it is the venerable
inventor of the telephone who
has passed on. To a much smaller
group, it is a beloved educator, a
teacher of the most difficult puoila
of the world, who has left the sphere
of his activities.
Dr. Bell, whose labors in science
and invention brought him to rame
and fortune, did not cease his benefits
to humanity with the invention of
the telephone. Before the epochmaking
invention and during all his
long life, he has been a teacher of
the deaf and dumb, a student of
means to enable the dumb to learn
to speak, and the deaf to learn to
"hear," either through instruments
or by lip-reading.
The whole world talks by telephone,
nor gives a thought to the
man whose genius made it possible.
But no deaf mute learns communication
with his fellows, no dumb person
1 earns to speak, but pays mental
tribute of grateful appreciation to
the humanitarian, scientist, inventor,
teacher and educator who spent his
life in the amelioration of their
the whole modern science of speech
misfortunes, and on whose teachings
taughtless to the speechless may be
said to rest.?Contributed.
o
Prof J. J. McKenzie died August
1, in Toronto, and the world loses
a soldier of progress which it can ill
afford to spare. Dr. McKenzie, during
the war, was so impressed with
the ravages of pus-forming germs
called sterptococci that he devoted
his life to experimenting with them,
to enable medical science the better
to cope wth them. He became infected
with the germs, and laid down
his life, a martyr to humanity and
the work he loved. On the graves
of such men as he, is built the house
of progress of the race. Doubtless
it was of such as he that it was
written "He that loseth his life
shall find it."?Contributed.
o ?
I Special to Subscribers
The Herald was asked to wait by
many subscribers when times were
very dull some months ago. Arrj
angements were made to that end and
I the names kept on the list until the
tobacco season opened. There is now
no longer any excuse for doing this,
I and those who will not pay up for
1 the paper will be discontinued from
I the list.
I The Herald feels that it has done
its part toward helping along and
, must now insist upon being paid.
Send in the money today.
o
The Herald gives you more reading
matter, all of home people and home
affairs, the most value for the money
you pay for an Horry County paper
the sum of $1.50 for a year's subscription.
Send in the money toda\
and keep the paper coming to yOU'i
address.
IT was back in I
automobile wh
j Bicycle Tube was
Today the G &
t ?like the automo
i ter every year.
Ii you want pr<
Tube in competil
5 tube?no matter y
or name*
, G & ] Tubes he
better service*
CONWAY BA
r
n
y
I PricesonQ&J Passenger Carl
s fltc not subject to wartax, th
Tik ioitT nuu>, ooir
SIX SPEAKERS DRAW A CROWD
(Continued from Page one.)
South Carolina. He told how he was
elected to the House of Representatives
and served on the Ways and
Means committee. He was reelected
to office from then until now.
He has the solid endorsement of
the Darlington bar and of the Darlington
Democratic convention. He
spoke of taxation and the income tax.
He believed in equitable ways of taxation.
He also favored good roads. He
had been magistrate at Darlington
for eight years.
Philip H. Stoll came next.
He was a candidate for reelection.
He would not discuss himself or his
opponents. When elected to congress
he gave up his law practice. He was
no professional politician. He s;\id
mat promises are easily made and
hard to fulfill. The job is one that
has to be learned; that it was a mistake
that one in congress can ask for
what he wants and get it on a silver
plate. He had done as much as any
congressman from South Carolina
and as much as any Democrat in congress
from the South. He told of his
theory and that of the Republican
party. The people are interested:
1. In better drainage of low lands.
2. Development of waterways and
inland courses resulting in lower
freight rates and chaper fertilizer. He
told of how money is appropriated
for these objects. He was a member
of a committee that must be approved
by the military affairs committee. He
did not say he could do the impossible
but he would be able to do more by
being a member of this committee. He
believes that he can get the inland
waterway through.
3. In cheaper fertilizers. Under
this head he told of Muscle Shoals
where fertilizer may be extracted
from the air. He believed that this
great project can be carried through
and believed he is one of the six
Democrats who can interest the new
congressmen in Washington. He told
of the disadvantages of the majority,
being Republicans in the congress.
He said that no congressman could do
good if new men were constantly being
sent. He had done the best he
could under the circumstances.
All he asked was a fair and square
deal. His experience should be counted
in his favor.
W. R. Barringer was next on the
floor.
He spoke of the comparison made
i ??.. Ci.ii i :.i l. ? l J
uy mr. oif)ii aim saiu nt* wuuiu cin.nvci
the matter before he was through. Ho
said if he was sent to congress ho
would not he the ordinary representative
that Mr. Stoll had made. Ho
discussed the claims made by diagnosis
of the things the farmer wanted.
It had taken Stoll three years to make
the diagnosis. He said that it was
the unbusiness-like methods of handling
the business of the country. He
was not in favor of higher taxes> but
was in favor of a better way of handling
the business of the country and
the stopping of the waste of public
money. He had been born as poor as
Job's turkey, in Cheraw. He had
earned all he has and had been at
the head of all the things that built
up the town of Florence. He had
gained information and education by
actual experience. Ho had been
|, farming for twenty five years and in
business for about forty years. Now
he is mayor of Florence and is putting
a million dollars worth of im.
provements and twenty miles of
j streets and sidewalks. He had spenh
. some time in Europe and had travelled
all over the country and had learned
the needs of the masses of tha peo?
pie. He favored the good roads, the
development of the rivers and inland
waterways. In a few days every suit
r i
the days before the
lcii the first G & I
made.
J Automobile Tube
bile itself?gets bet*
3of try out a G &. J
ion with any other
what the class, price
i
Ip your casings give
RGAIN HOUSE
rtoem andTubc*, effective May 6th,
t war-tax having been included.
BBBaSSSSBBBBaB
way; o.ytms ii*
,L ?7V'~
will cost five dollars more by reasoi
of the tariff on wool.
He would favor the Riving: of th
contract of the Shoals to Henry Ford
provided the contract would bin
Ford to produce the fertilizers at th
rate of so much every year.
He said the continued expense o
running the country was outrageous
It was the waste in the land the peo
pie want to stop. This was a day o
the new political era?the women o
He would wind up his speech wit
n joke at the expense of his oppon
ents. He had found out that Stoll i
a twin .and a twin could not wor
well in single harness.
A. H. Gasque was last in the pre
gram.
He said all the candidates expecte
all the votes. He was last in the lisl
but he believed the last would be firs
when the votes are counted.
It had been a pleasant campaig
and enjoyed his first opportunity o
speaking' to an Horry audience.
Pate wanted to so on his youth
Stoll wants it because he wa3 al
read^y there. Stoll had fallen dowr
The law provides for elections ever
two years. Stoll had answered let
ters and had voted with the candi
dates. Barringer wanted to go be
cause he is a pood business man an
and connected with the business af
fairs of Florence. He would therefor
ask that itarrinjarer be left in Floivnc
to keep the town from going bank
rupt. The position needs a ma
who will go there and do something
Taxation had become a burden. Ther
had been too much business in th
congress?too much business inter
ests who were not working for th
masses. He said that the House o
Representatives should be represents
tive of the people but there are to
many lawyers there. He was makin;
no fight on lawyers, but they wer
not representative of the whole people
The big interests he said would no
1 j 1 1 _ A. i !?1-4.~ 'Pi.
accord me people meir ngnis. in
people need cheap money .and no
high money. He said the big interest
would not grant the common peopl
the things they need. We must elec
men who do not represent the big in
terests. Vote for no man unless yo
know his past record. He differe
with Barringer about voting for
man who is making money. He woul
suggest voting for the man who ha
tried to make the condition of me
better; that the greatest thing is nc
the financial end but the boys an
girls, their education and training, et<
We will never get a square deal unt
the representatives of the big intei
ests are put out. He stood for:
1. Every boy and girl an equi
chance for education.
2.. Restriction of immigration.
3. Drainage and good roads fc
which he will do all he can in the wa
i of appropriations.
4. Will stand for everything i
=====
The 0I(
Again
*
As will b<
of your neigl
b. P. Wi
lbs.
204 @
230 @
22 @
100 @
296 @
J. C. Bla
62 @
120 @
104 @
58 @
446 @
John L. CI
390 (a)
Bring you
patronize you
build up the
years, and vt
every interest
'* i. ?
surely do it.
per cwt. for ei
NIC
?V'
^ssss&ssssssstisssssss
I
n the interest of his district.
The crowd was larger than has
e been usual in the campaign so far
lt over this county. Nearly all of the
d seats in the court room were occupied.
Each candidate received more or
e less applause.
o
f CALOMEL USERS
TAKE AWFUL RISK
I- f
Very Next Dose of Treacherous Drug
f May Start Terrible ?
Salivation
h
i- The next dose of calomel you take
? may salivate you. It may shock your
k liver or start bone necrosis. Calomel |
is dangerous. It is mercury, quick'
silver. It crashes into sour bile like
dynamite, cramping and sickening
" you. Calomel attacks the bones and
should never bo put into your system.
If you feel bilious ,headachy, constipated
and all knocked out, just go to
" your druggist and get a bottle of
' Dodson's Liver Tone for a few cents
which is J1 luivmlnoo i.nKofl I
IIIIVOO rv^vun/ic oil UOtr
I* tute for dangerous calomel. Take a
spoonful and if it doesn't start your
\* liver and straighten you up better
^ and quicker than n/isty calomel and
without making you sick, you just go
" back and get your money.
(j Don't take calomel! It cannot be
[ trusted any more than a leopard or a
^ wildcat.. Take Dodson's Liver Tone
e which straightens you right up and
'">11 fool salts necesn
?ary. Give it to the children because
P it is perfectly harmless and cannot
p salivate.-?Adv.
e 0
" fififl Cures Malaria, Chills, Fever,
e OuU Bilious Fever, Cold? and Laf
Grippe.?tf
i- o
o Bring the job to the Herald shop.
K Let the Horry Heraiu do it.
e o
t Hall's Catarrh Medicine
Those Who ar? In a "run down" condlt
tion will notice that Catarrh bothers
s them much more than when they are In
good health. This fact proves that while
L Catarrh is a local disease, it is greatly
t influenced by constitutional conditions.
HAL#L/8 CATARRH MEDICINE consists
of an Ointment which Quickly
J Relieves by local application, and the
Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which assists
a in Improving the General Health.
.1 Sold by druggists for over 40 Years. ,
, F. J. Cheney fr Co.. Toledo. Ohio,
d
n
11 I
EAGLE "MIKAD0">^3
I ?? ?
For Sale at your Dealer
? ASK FOR THE YELLOW PI
y EAGLE
EAGLE PENCIL CO]
in .
I Nichols W<
Leads in Higlr
5 seen from the folloi
tibors made on our fl
lliams 436 @
Price 174 @
? K
z r.231/2 410 @
1714 5U @
43 214 @
inton j
40 '
44 170 @
;;;; 25 170 @
25 434 @
40 152 @
emmons 190 (a)
35 76 @
r tobacco to Nicholi
ir old friends who 1
Nichols Market for \
rho are ever ready
We are here to sei
i
We averaged Fridi
ntire s&le.
:hols & gill
I
Mother-To-Be,
Read This?
ttrre li a ?v?uderfu to all ex*
pert an? aiolUn. WLii. ;fc? Little One arrive.
you v';iii have I hi.* moment more tree
freir ?ff?*rlii?f than >vu*
have (ivrbMiif tmnRlnvd.^^^V V
Au eminent ^
expert la tl.l? McUuce.^
Lan hown way. 1
W1. H hu Whj
duced the great reuu-dy,^^^
"Mother * Friend." ilra.B^/ R,"
C. Hart man, Si-run-MM W'?
ton, l a., aaya? lu ^
**\V It h my flrat two fW "\ \
children 1 had n doctor^J I
and h uurac and tlienrW \.m \
they had to une lnNtru-|n^
ineutu, hut with my lujtHBi^QW^ioTM
two children I u ? o d '|V
[ Mother's Friend and had only a nursof
we hud Uvt time to get u doctor because
1 wasn't v?*ry nick?only about ton op
fifteen minutes.
Not?: Writ? for vtluable frw lllustratpd boo*.
"Motherhood ?n<! the lltby." (untaltiiiu important
uiiiuniaiiTu imuriuauuii wnicn rTtry t'XIXCiailO
mothtr Miould bate. and all ?lx?ui "Mother's Friend."
to Ilradtlold Regulator Company, HA -23. Atlanta. Gaj
"Mother' FiUud" U told by drutffUta ofurywbMa.
ASPIRIN
Say "Bayer" and Insist!
Unless yon see the name "Bayer" on
package or on tablets you are not getting
the genuine Bayer product prescribed
by physicians over twenty-two
years and proved safe by millions for
Colds Headache
Toothache Lumbago
Earache Rheumatism
Neuralgia Pain, Pain
Accept only "Bayer" package which
contains proper directions. Handy boxes
of twelve tablets cost few cents. Druggist#
also sell bottles of 24 and 100.
Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer
Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of
Salicylic-acid.
||g*jjp^VPencil No. 1741 I
Made in five grades
iNCIL WITH THE RED BAND f
MIKADO
MPANY, NEW YORK
irehouse
i Prices
11
!
I
ving sales some
oors: ]
j
231/2 i
25 ;i
n t 1 t 1
l. n. muggins
25
45 i
40 j
N. C. Ford !
36
25 i j :
45
30 1
45 1
55 9
i & Gilliam and II
lave worked to fl
the past twentv 11
to protect your jjl
rve you and will S
ly over $29.85 A
[AM. j