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The Horry Herald! CONWAY, S. C. Entered at the Post Office at Oomvay, S. C., us second class mail matter. ~ H. II. WOODWARD, Editor. Published Every Thursday Morning by Conway Publishing1 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^ AUG. 31~ 1922 * * ?? a 'ivnrn /\vi m? a vt a % i^\'rn siC T >1 J\ I I I'/IV ur 1 jj. ijs ? Many a man with some capital and pood chances for success in other* ways has been marked down anions the total failures of a community on account of bad management. Had management is the underlying cause of many failures. Where there is one failure on account 01 some misfortune, there at least ten caused by bad management. Bad management has its effect among the small operators, farmers, and wage earners, as well as among those who would organize and carry on big business. Had management gets the small man as well as the would-be large man. When bad management gets through with them they are all alike, and one is no bigger than the other. The fellow who started out with big pretensions managed badly and came out at the end in just as sorry plight as the one who had but small means and started out on the road to success in a small way. One cause of bad management is a lack of he supreme desire to succeed. He who would like to have all the benefits of success without tlie attendant labor of attaining it, fails to exercise the faculties that have been given to him and refuses to bother his mind with the details and monotony of a routine through every day and every hour that it takes to manage rightly. There are obstacles in this world". They have always existed and will continue to place themselves in the path of man. They can be met only by a mind that is on he job. The man who invests his money in some thing, we don't cai-e what it may be, and then goes off and leaves it to take care of itself, will fail in getting results, for while he is away the opposing obstacles will take his lead from him. Many people fail on account of a lack of any management, and not because of bad management. Thifl means that they have not really wanted to succeed in what they have undertaken. Duties become irksome, rest and pleasure were more alluring than the day's work. Neglect is what puts this class of man on the brink of ruin. In the race for success, one thing naturally leads to another and this one thing must be in view. In case of things going to the bad. one thing leads to another and failure looms up in the near distance in ever increasing size. As success will multiply when rightly sought, so failure will multiply when invited by the conduct and habits of those who get it. After all it is only the man who sticks on the job regardless who can succeed in anything. o ********* * ** ****** ******* * * % HORRY HERALDING % * * ************************** Horry ?Countv tobacco needs to ba kept in the right order. o Prices of tobacco have been better than in several years. Business has taken a new start along all lines. o It is predicted that Horry will go back to raising strawberries and will make a success of raising them. Laziness and lack of forethought, often have just as much to do in th Ios> of crops as the floods and rail . Tobacco farmers of Socastee ha nothing loft except the naked stalk when the rains got through wit them. Wo feel sure that the un fortunate people will get help fror several sources. o The it'an at old I.ayboro who go about $250.00 for the tobacco raised one one acre, is a good example fo other farmers 1o follow. His method should be studied by the others. Hi success shows what can be done wit' Horry County tobacco land. The rain a h? * uvuii worse in so ill ^ places than others. In Socastee an' lower Bucks, also in sections of Bay boro, the rains seemed to l>c heavie and oftoner and in these sections th damage has been much the wors' In some sections of the county therr was no damage from the rains. o I There is one place in this count* where there were tobacco fields <>? opposite sides of the public road. Th rains came. On one side the gratook the tobacco. It was plowed uj and grain planted. On the othe side the grass was kept down an/ cultivation continued and on tha side a profitable crop of tobacco Iv been produce'* in spite of the hear rains in a section where there w:; almost a general damage from thi auat t Tobacco farmers must storwe to make the grade. It ki? ,more important to them than it is to railroad men. Horry County had one of the wetLest years that the people have even seen. The new roads in places where ne roadbed was built over soft earth are in worse condition than ever occurred before at this season of the year. No road in the world, except concrete or macadam could possibly .vithstand the strain that has been put over our roads here this year. WASH1NGTON COMMENT i Wliqw the' , still led trains, deserted by crews in Southern California, ..nally bore their suffering passen vers out of the intense heat, they lid so under armed guard, protectnj? the passengers. In New Jersey a train was bombe<i :is it passed, regardless of tlie fac'.. that it contained, not strike breakers or soldiers, but women and hildren returning from the seashore. A St. Louis railroad bridge was damaged by explosions; rail spikes were drawn in an attempt to wreck a train near Chattanooga. Attorney General Dougherty says that I. W. W.'ism is responsible for much of the trouble incident to the rail strike. And in the daily press here and there comes the hesitant query. "Have men a right to strike, after all, in transportation ?" From small beginnings and by careful steps the cause of unionism fought its way up out of nothing to be a poiyer for good in the world. Tt filled a need, it guarded interests otherwise not protected. It was conceived as a beneficent influence: it was to fight tyranny and oppression, and in the cause of that freedom guaranteed by the Constitution. Its best friends believe it has "-ono too fnr* tlml if f? ? - - -? j v.. v iv iicir** riU I el I overstepped its original purposes, so rar encouraged, even if secretly, violence, and bloodshed, with no care whether or not the innocent sufFci with the guilty, that it must now he deprived of its misused power by he only power greater in the country today, the United States Government. From high and low, rich and ^oor, east and west, come demand:* hat Congress make it impossible for 'he intolerable public affliction ot either a railroad or a coal tieun id happen again, a demand made without regard to whether or not it i>e stockholder, emnloyer, covpo at ion union, A. F. of I,., or individua* worker, who is forced to give ovev \ private interest ^id a rivnt.<? wa* to the all important interest and right of the great maiority. The American Bar Association, in convention assembled, has made many recommendations, doubtless all wise, 'ooking towards judicial reforn Chief Justice Taft, whose world-wide reputation as 'a Jurist ruflFers 'mt all from his able exposition of need ed legal changes, has outline throM-^1 this association to the Mga profession of the counfry, the thingwhich he believes should h? d'ne t' make our iudical system better. All of which is we'l, verv well* but pe"!""in?: not we" ennnrrh, F)i? it ever occur to a lawyer, do vov suppose, to ask a layman for hi ideas of iudical reform ? It probably did not. The "legal mind" can not think as the laymar thinks, and yet law is for the layman, 'urticc is for Hie layman, courts arc for the layman. If you have a case of any sort it is put on a dorket. When it is reached, you must be there to defend or prosecute it. If they say tomorrow and you come tomorrow and bring fifty witnesses tomorrow, and the court isn't ready for you, von wait. The witnesses wait. The indge must not wait. If court rar to a schedule and the schedule ran nit once in a while, and the court i did nothing but hold its hands, more I monev would be saved than under I ilm i- * - ' mi |)ici>cia Hill', woiri! IS 10 Keep tho court busy, though hundreds of witnesses, lawyers, comolainants, and defendants wait around and lose money. If you are sued?and any one car. I sue you for anything, whether you j owe or not?you must pay your lawyer; lawyers have to live. If it costs you a hundred, a thousand, or fifty housand dollars, von nv>' pay it. Tf you win the unjust ^uit, you are told -ou have iustiee; hut your bank account doesn't show it. What we need is not reform of the law from within, so much as reform from without; what the law needs ho layman'?* point of view, which s that speed and absence of oxpen-! os are hoth parts of true justice; M;nt 10 decision, no matter how correct is truly .iust if it h:ts cost nuch inonov and time to obtain. Thlrtv 'miirs before the declaration of hostilities which plunged almost every civilized nation into war, Corporal Andre Peugeot, of France wa-< killed. He met death at Jonchery, Franco, on August 2, 19M, at th hands of a band of Uhlands. Franclias just dedicated a monument t * Corporal Peugeot, the first man kiP I ' (I in the world war. I I fVITAMINES] precious health-building elements are essential factors of growth to every child. Scoif s Emulsion is the food-tonic of special \ value to children. It ts rich in vitamines-- *--'"K Ids health and pro j.\l[ I . Kites growth! [ .votl K; liowi?4. Hkomtirld. N I. 21 I I \ ft THE HOBKT HKRJLLD, CON\ CONWAY. HAS BIG MEETING d From Page 1) I ^ of the Supreme Court. He. said ^ that they voted consistently for N, Judge Shipp as long as there was . any use in it. He said he had the '! approval of L. M. Casque that he, V Prince, had done his duty in the Legislature. The case against him I1 would he noil prossed. He hac; -1 studied civil government" and,; pur- ] lianientary rules and* coftld answer all tl questions. He had lost sleep while ? in Columbia in order to stay on the job and do his duty. He gave an ? account of his duties on important )' committees. All charges would be noil prossed on Tuesday. He had J1 been meek and humble in all his J speeches. He and his colleagues * hafl saved the people sixty-nine a thousand dollars. He wcharged " with changing the law about the county commissioners. He went and 1| asked the Secretary of State about s when the present board went ou" ? of office and found out that the 11 commissioners were not under bond. 1 He thought the commissioners should e be uiulei* bend and they will now be ? placed under .$1,000.00 bonds each. c tie said it is safe now and was noi * before or might not have been. He I1 took up the matter of taxation and told of various tax measures to 11 raise taxes on something except * property and had reduced the lev> J1 from twelve to seven mills. He " favored other bills that were not r passed and these would have made a still further reduction. He wanted to go back and help pass these ad * ditional revenue measures. He had '' been blamed for extending time for I1 paying taxes with an additional cost v of $1.00. This had been done not s for the rich man but for the poor P man. The man who has money does " not have to wait to pay his taxes, but can pay them any time. He disclaimed responsibility foi e the tie-up in teacher's salaries, but said the free conference committee 1* and E. T. Hughes was responsible a for this being done, the amount ap- a propriated being cut to thirty thou- 'J sand dollars. (j J. K. Carter then taook the floo* and spoke. He felt handicapped as 11 to making a political speech. H'_ * felt that the interest of the peopi-* ? was realized by him as much as by I1 any man in the race. He thanked 11 .the^>?ople for the heavy vote given ;l him'two years ago. He wanted t> * thank them in advance for a goo.*1 vote on Tuesday. He said that a t preacher could accomplish great 1 good in the Legislative halls. H-' was proud of his record as a minis- s ter in Horry County. He had tin kinterest of the people at heart and lv^ c promised to stand by everything in T the interest of the people. He stood ? in the interest of education, for goo- f roads, to which we are entitled. H?> told his ghost story of the preaches. r who saw a ghost while passing an _ old fi<?ld. It also concerned a rabb.that was scared from cover by the two. The joke caused a big laugh as he told about how the preachei saw that the rabbit was losing the 1 race and told the rabbit to gej. oui of the way and let him showjj him how a preacher could run. H# toll! the joke of the old man who yoked himself up with Ai axe to break the ox, and the old man had to call his wife to keep them from running away. This brought another laugh. He wound up with several little campaign jokes, including the one about the frog. He wanted th^ people to stop and consider and look at the five candidates and vote for the man who would best re ore sent their interests. He would stand for the interest of the people in every respect. G. Lloyd Ford was the last candiA CALOMEL SALIVATES AND LOOSENS TEETH The Very Next I)ose of This Treacherous Drug May Start Trouble You know what calomel is. It's mercury; quicksilver. Calomel is dangerous. It crashes into sour bile like dynamite, cramping and sickening you. Calomel attacks the bones, and should never be 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 a harmless vegetable substitute for dangerous calomel. Tak4 a spoonful and if it doesn't start your liver and straighten you up better and quicker than nasty calomel and 'without making you sick, you just go back and get your money. Don't take calomel! It makes you sick the next day; it-loses you a day's work. Dodson's Liver Tone straightens you light up and you feel great. No salts necessary. Give it to the children because it is perfectly harmless and cannot salivate.?Adv. I # I wII I [I I IB v TIRES & TUBES As good onyour automobile as they were onyourmcyife 11 CONWAY BARGAIN HOUSE . " L r \ PAY, 8. O., AUG, 31, 1923 ate on the Ji^t ffpr^the House of lepresentatiye*;-; - tfelol$tya^ged lib pponents with being 'Kke a man ick in bed. He sent for a doctor /ho looked at him and said he was ii a bad fix and then went off and id nothing" for him. He thanked hem for their confidence reposed n him before. His opponents, like iim wanted the office, lie was asktig for re-election on his own record nd npt on the demerits of the thers in the race. Two years ago ,e .were emerging from the effects f a World Y\ ar. Our State had assed through a financial crisis 'he State and county could not process. His aim had been during thcwo years to see that the instituions of the State were kept up ai 11 hazards. He went over his record n account of charges being made, le had acted as the servant of the icople. During the two years he had tooa tor each county governing its \vn affairs. No change had been nade without a vote being taken on t. He introduced a bill to allow ach school district to borrow money n its own notes. V He served on the ommittee of education. He wa. he chairman of the Legislative comnutee. He opposed the repeal of u nw which provided for a sevenuonth term in every school. He alked of taxation. Two years ag< axes were paid on visable property e asserted, and now it was real I. educed. He spoke of the measures <**.? ? jca^u it.cn were passed aiu laced the taxation on other things uch as gasoline, inheritance and tin ike. The hydro-electric bill was not assed, or a still greater reduction r'ould have been the result. H poke of the extension of time fo* >aying taxes. He showed how onl\ ne per cent more penalty was ad ed for the six months extension, le said he stood for economy whei ver offices could be reduced. Hr tated that as to the marketing lan he stood for each man's sell in;r s he pleased. He did not represent ny class, but the whole people. He id not believe taxes should be re uced for building the roads, 1101 or keeping up the dexf and dum') nstitute, nor for paying pensions t > he Confederate Veterans. His rec rd was before the people. The eople are the judges of his recoiv s 10 wnetner he had been 1.ones' nd faithful. He appreciated tin rust the people had ^repose'i in hiiv. ind would go back if re-elceted o. he same record he had made dui ng the two years he had been their Probate Judge candidates the: poke briefly. They were C. H. Jpivey and J. S. Vaught, the latte >ut for re-election. C. H. Spivey ronised good service if ejected. J % 5. Vaught had lived here twentyive years. The people knew his re>: ird he said. He stated that he wa ?ot a good speaker. He was charge*. ==( PUT II 27 CT ' This station is Rufus A. Daws Wlen we say that is measur The gas we sc wFere in this < seven cents. Make the old c by getting oui every gallon. % This station is again and pron Convenient loc and easy to get < People , 4 / I with much as Cole Blease. Fake reports had been circulated he asserted that he was a Bleasite. Another man had told that he was fighting Bleasv. He had not referred to Spivey, nor Spivey to him. He had heard that morning that Spivey had told thn: he, Vaught, was stealing one-third of the pennon money. He had been informed, he said, that such a story had been told. Here the speaker turned to Spivey and asked hilii ill', he had ( told anything like, that. Spivey denied th;A he had told it. Several men in tne audience spoke out and said that they did not believ eit. Judge Vaught thanked tho people of Conway for their suppori Candidates for auditor came next. They spoke in?the following order: J. , Calhoun, J. W. Cook. Both of the candidates for this office made sjieecnes or greater leiiKtli than usual. The candidates for auditor wero followed by the candidates for county treasurer ,C. E. Barker, D Sanford Cox, and B. S. Butler. At t"he close of the speeches abov> mentioned the candidates for magistrate in Conway township addressed the people, W. H. Chestnut and W S. McCaskill, both stating their claims for the votes that would be Vcast ol last Tuesday. Mr. Chestnut was running for re-election and Mr. McCaskill was opposing him. It had been stated by the chairman of the meeting that Mr. W. R. Barringer, candidate for Congress from this district would make an address after all the other candidates had spoken. Mr. Barringer came over in answei n Cures Malaria, Chills, Fever, Bilious Fever, Colds and LaGrippe.?tf ( Hall's Catarrh Medicine Those who are in a "run clown" condition will notice that Catarrh bothers them much more than when they are in good health. This fact proves that while Catarrh is a local disease, it is greatly 1 ? - - - .... iiiuueiii-eu oy constitutional conditions. ilAIjl/tS CATARRH MEDICINE consists of an Ointment which Quickly Relieves by local application, ar.d the Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which assist:.' in improving the General Health. Sold by druggists for over 40 Years. F*. J. Cheney Co., Toledo, Ohio. EAGLE "MIKADO For Sale at your Dealer ASK FOR THE YELLOW PE1 EApLE IS EAGLE PENCIL CON v * _i A S VI YOUF -? AT S. A fiA I now under new mar iey in charge of the gas, we mean gooc 'ed to the full and \ ;!1 is as good as you country. It costs yc / , ar feel like new and ' gasoline. Save tl / now under its own lises quick service tc ation at town hall, out. Drive in today ai is Filling St # * to a rumor that hed been out in some way to the effect that votes were being bought' .by a candidate for Congress. He made an effective answer to these rumors and had the close attention of a, big crowd of voters. 0 o } Follow a "tii-" given by American Legion men, the N Department of Justice has picked up Arthur A. Starnes, 27, who was decorated with "medals" purporting to represent the French Medaille Militaire and Croix de Guerre and Italian Iron Cross. Starnes, when spotted by the Legion ^ and arrested by government officials, was dressed in the uniform of a colonel of the United States Arm.\. rnougn arrested in Washington, V. C., Startles' home is said to be in Dallas, Texas. *- - o~ 1 Teli it to the Horry Herald. ASPIRIN / Say "Bayer" and Insist! f A \ (pAVBciJ Unless you see the name "Bayer" on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer product prescribed l?v physicians over twenty-two years and proved safe by millions for Colds Headache Toothacho . Lur Imgo Earache Rheumatism Neuralgia Pain, Pain Aeccpt only "Bayer" package which contains proper directions. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few cent*. Druggists also sell bottles of 24 and 100. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer \1 ti...... '.t M i : i - * ' nm; \j t .tiwiMldHTHiUKU'SlLT Ol Salievlicocid. No. 174 ^ Made in five grade* NC1L WITH THE RED BAND i 1IKADQ IPANY, NEW YORK ? I V i 1 ) = I t CAR .LLON lagement, with j __i 1 1* l i estaonsnment. I I gas, the kind 1 running over. 1 i can buy any- 1 >u but twenty- 1 I run like new j| iree cents on 1 management > everybody. j !| Easy to get in 1 id be satisfied. ia :ation. J n