The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, September 07, 1922, Image 9

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BLEASE CANNOT REDUCE TAXES Cole L. Blease has full page ad4 vertisements in the daily papers oi ^ Sunday, comparing the taxes of 1914, when he was governor, with the taxes of 1921, when he was not governor. Every man of this county who can read and does read, knows that the V matter of taxes is not controlled b> the governor, but by entirely different officers, and that the gov ernor has too little to do with th matter of taxation. a ^ ,1 o* i-i i_i_ r\ a vrn ttit m TVIHi OICKICS Willi VjrCili CUUIIIK praised by thousands of users in the \ Write for particulars to THE MAHU' TENN. 7-20-5t-E()W I \~1 ~ * *********************** | If you thoui * I to-mc I | Would you cor I sician, or would * cure -all? You'd II suit the best phys se Then why take ><and filth by buy < >| store. Trade wi I doesn't allow filtl If |j R. W. L \\ "The Sanitary Grocery" % *********************** Spi d* .1 TH f U KJt tne or tag Re D THE ENTIRE II hrinp. TO niv H I I vy I V 1 1 1 "V-^ A 1-^ X k./ -V U COST OF GASO I n RE-CARBURET n It Fulfills Evei K I its Kind On the Ma I U You will be Ai I] r Motor and Increases I When installed On ft U GUARANTEEl ft u Read what TI AQ MR. LEO SPIVEY: I ANSWERING Y n as to h?w 1 l,k U BURETOR WILL S I ALL THAT YOU < In AND ! WOULD NO 1J IT. MY CAR PUL 1 HIGH AND I C I] STALL IT ON LO\ U * Yours I J. S. D iU I represent this y Bridgers Company, < n it is doing for them and be convinced. I If the governor alone had the control of the tax problem, then ini deed we would have an easy time I in paying taxes. If Blease can make the people believe this that he states, and cause them to vote for him on that ground, ' he will go into office on false prei tenses just a? he did before. ; It is time for the people of Horry County to read more and know i more than they have been knowing, i On just such grounds as these they r gave Blease about five hundred more votes than McLeod in the first prlm ary. This vote was the result of pure ignorance?inability to understand that Blease cannot deliver the Imported PIWwjfy Mowing Blades edpfe "THE MARUGG SPECIAL" are United States. They Shave the ground. GG COMPANY, Dept, S, TRACY CITY, ************************* * * $ ?ht you'd die | * rrow? 1 * * isult the best phy-| you see a quack * most surely con-1 ician. % * 5 chances with flies! ing from a quack % ith the store that! * i. % * * sic I \NE & CO. 1 * Telephone No. 7 j ************************** * -*.l vey Has P ers Process of Reclai with the -Carburc MOTOR WORLD HAS :OVER A REMEDY TO IL1INL,. i he Remedy Has t OR. y Claim Made for It. It is thi irket. mazed to See How it Increase ; Gasoline Mileage From 50 p Your Car. The Results Are ) TO LAST AS LONG A iese Conway Doctors Say: i have r OUR REQUEST THE RE-CA E THE RE-CAR- MR , ? ?p| AY THAT IT IS 1 CLAIM FOR IT, HAVE USED >T BE WITHOUT I FIND IT 1 ,LS BETTER ON CLAIiYlS FOl AN SCARCELY Very Truly, MORE POWl USENBURY. H. I > great money and trouble sav of Florence, S. C. Ask the < and I will install one in your LEO SPIVEY, Sole Agent Conway, S. C. \ THE HORRY HERALD, CONW. STATE FAIR Fair time is rapidly approaching. The first tinge of autumn in the air brings one's thoughts to the joys, pleasures and educational advantages of these county and state institutions. The South Carolina State Fair will open in Columbia, Monday, Oct. 3rd, and continue throughout the entire week. ?o LOSS FOR BLEASE In the first primary in this county, Blease got 21,115, while McLeod. who will run the second race with him got 1530. Blease got more votes in Horry than any other candidate for governor, but he did not get the vote that he once got in the county. Since the campaign was tarred out last year1 to remove the cross mark from the county, we sec that there has been an improvement Our Efforts at education have done some good. o? CHILDREN'S HAY EXERCISES There will be a Children's daj Exercise at New Home Baptist Church Saturday before the seconc Sunday in September. The public is cordially invited to attend with well filled baskets. N. J. Stevens, Superintendent o THOMAS-DEW M iss Martha Mae Thomas and Mr A. D. Dew were married in Petersburg, Va., on Sunday afternoon August 27th, and the marriage was noted in the Petersburg papers. 'Flic bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas, of this city, where she is quite popular and has a host of friends. Mr. Dew is a son of A. J, Dew, of Bucks township, and ha? filled a position of importance witli the Seaboard Air Line Railway foi the past several years. They have been at home to their friends in Petersburg since September 1st. CIVIL SERVICE EXAMINATION The U. S. Civil Service Commission will hold an examination foi Clerks and Carriers on Septembei 233ixl, 1922, at Conway, S. C., to fill vacancies in the PostofTice in that city. The examination Is open tt all who meet the requirements. Application blanks and full information including sample questions, can be obtained from the Secretary, Loca Civil Service Service Board, at the PostofTice, Conway, S. C., or frorr the Secretary, Fifth Civil Service District, Atlanta, Ga. o Let the Hori*y Herald do it. things he would claim that he cai t deliver. roof | rning Gasoline ! Btor BEEN ENDEAV- U CUT THE HIGH fl Jeen Discovered in the 1 e Greatest Invention of [] s the Power of Your 9 er cent to 75 per cent II Phenomenal. P 5 THE ENGINE L 1JRCHASED ONE OF [ RBURETORS WHICH I VEY IS SELLING AND IT FOR TWO WEEKS. | ro BE JUST WHAT HE f I IT IN EVERY WAY. L AS0LINE AND GIVES ' 3R? SCARBOROUGH. er made by the J. D. L 3onway Doctors what i m r a I- nnm I tar II II V<U1 ui uiiV/Vi Jl 1 y H110 I ?l , / AY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1922 PROVING WILLS A COMMON FORM There was a new law passed at the last session of the Legislature of this State, making it easier to prove a will in common form where the subscribing witnesses to the will happen to be dead. The result oi the new law is to allow proof to be made of the handwriting of the testator and of one or more of the attesting witnesses, and this answers the purpose, as will appear by reading the act amending the I law as it stood before that: Section 1. Act (1920 XXXI Stats. 825,) Amending Sec. 3579 . Civil i Code, 1912, Amencied-Probate o! i Wills in Common Form. Be it ens acted by the General Assembly oi j the State of South Carolina, That . an Act entitled an Act "to amenc 5 Section 3579, Code of Laws 1912 Volume I," approved February 26th 1920, he amended by striking out ol Section 1 all after the word "form T on line 11, so that section as amen ? ded shall read as follows: j Section 1. Without citing or call , ing before him such as have inter { est, he may examine one or more of the subscribing witnesses thereto or in case of their death or theii .removal from the State, or whei their whereabouts are unknown, b\ proof of the handwriting of tlu testator or testatrix, and one of tlu subscribing witnesses, or if it i.for any reason impossible to provt j the handwriting of the testator oi ? testatrix and of at least one of the j subscribing witnesses, he may re , ceive any other secondary evidence > admissible and sufficient by tlu rules of the common law; and il such proof shall satisfy the Judge i of Probate that the paper is tlu . last will and testament of the de , ceased, he shall admif it to probate in common form. 9. lVnhnfn \xr:n~ ? * 1 v/1 VU1 iiviu ?? 111^ L'tJ clared Valid.?Any and all wills aiu [ codicils admitted to probate in com . mon form since the 26th day o February, 1920, are hereby declarer to have been duly and sufficiently, [ probated in common form, provide* they shall have been probated ac > cording to the requirements of the - law as perscribed in the tirst sec , tion of this present Act. ; 3. All Acts or ports of Acts in 1 consistent with this Act are herein ; repealed. i 4. This Act shall take effect Inv ? mediately upon its approval by th< Governor. Approved the 3rd day of Februarj A. D. 1922. o CAR HITS ANOTHER ^ Some person, whose name has no been learned, driving a car at j rapid rate at the G. B. Jenkin corner, where Fifth avenue crosse Laurel Street, last Sunday ran In to another vehicle being driven b; John Holt, and in which he an* members of his family were rid ing. Mr. Holt and his family wer badly shaken up and painfully In jured though their injuries were no serious. Once more a warning has beei given on ; the score of rapid art. careless driving of motor vehicles and against speeding on the street of Conway and on the public roads o Pay your subscription at tin Farmers Bank, Loris, S. C., and savi coming to Conway to renew. o The Quinine That Docs Not Affect the He* Bccvnse of its tonic and lH?ative effect, LAXA rr'P. BROMOQUININK is better thau ordinary Ju'a.ne and does not cause nervousness no ringing In head. Remember the full name rl< IooK lor the s# nature o< *i. W. GROVK. 30c O To Cure a Cold in One Day Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE (Tablets). ] stops the Cough ami Headache and works offtb '.'old. E. W. GROVE'S signature on each box, 30< SOUR STOMACH INDIGESTIOt %*t tf i? ni ? n ? . t ineaioras Di&CK-isr&ugnt nignt Recommended by a Tennessee Grocer for Troubles Resulting from Torpid Liver. East Nashville, Tenn.? Tho effl lency of Thedford's Black-Draught, tb gonulne, herb, liver medicine, I vouched for by Mr. W. N. Parsons, grocer of this city. "It Is withoi doubt the best liver medicine, and don't believe I could get along withoi It. I take It for sour stomach, hea< ache, bad liver, Indigestion, and a other troubles that are the result < a torpid liver. I"I have known and used it for year and can and do highly recommend to every ono. I won't go to bed wit out it in the house. It will do all claims to do. I can't say enough f< It." Many other men and women throug I out the country have found Blac Draught Just as Mr Parsons descrlh ?raluablo in regulating the liver its normal functions, and in cleansli the bowels of impurities. Thedford's Black-Draught liver mec cine 1b the original and only genulc Accept no Imitations or substitute Always ask (or Thedford's. a. ? . -o Af>6 qtfi<*kly relieve Colds, Conatlp tion, Bi1ionsno?? nnrl Headaches. -J Pine '"onic.?tf CALOMEL MAY TURN ON YOU NEXT TIME Next Dose You Take May Salivate and Start World of Trouble Calomel is mercury; quicksilver. 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 dnncerous calomel. Take a spoonful and if it doesn't start your i 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 j sick the next day; it loses you a day's work. Dodson's Liver Tone straightens you right up and you feel great ' No salts necessary. Give it to the . children because it is perfectly harmless and cannot salivate.?Aclv. o NOTICE OF SALE. Under and by virtue of the certain instrument denominated as a collator ; al note, dated September 9th, 1020 and executed and delivered by Moore 1 Thompson to the American Bank X Trust Company of Wilmington, Nortl Carolina, whereby the securities ami documents hereinafter enumerator were pledged to the American BanV & Trust Company as security for certain debts of the said Moore Thompson: 1 will offer for sale at ele\cn o'clock in the forenoon in front of the courthouse door of Horry County, a' Conway, in the County of Horry atu' State of South Carolina on the ISt.l day of September A. D, 1922, all am singular the following stock and se curities, to wit: Certificate No. (?7 for one share ol the capital stock of Bank of Little j River, par value $25.00. Certificate No. 7!) for four shares ol ' the capital stock ot Bank oi Little 1 River, par value $100.00. Certificate No. 72 for two shares oi 1 the capital stock of Bank of Litth . River, par value $50.00. 3 Certificate No. 57 for two shares oi - the capital stock of Bank of Litth River, par value $50.00. Certificate No. 66 for two shares ol ; the capital stock of Bank of Litth River, par value $50.00. Certificate No. 74 for four shares oi 5 the capital stock of Bank of Litth River, par value $100.00. ,* Certificate No. 22 for eight shares of the capital stock of Bank of Litth River, par value $200.00. ALSO t The two certain prommissory note: . of J. F. O'Quinn, each made from J * F. O'Quinn to Foy Motor Car Com pany, one of said notes dated oi March 1st, 1920, for $035.00, an< I maturing- thirty days after date, th< other dated on March 30th, 1920, fo the sum of $585.00 maturing 30 day; e after its date, the said two notes be ing collateral to each other and hav , in# due thereon the sum of $585.01 with interest from April 30th, 192< 1 at the rate of 6 per cent per annun t less the sum of $104.85 paid on Maj 8th, 1920 and the sum of $100.00 pak ! oil June 4th, 1920; together with at r torney's fees of 15 per cent. Terms of sale cash before delivery e of property sold. Q H. H. WOODWARD, Attornev for Pledgee. JAMES A. LEWIS, Agt. o j Pledgee. American Bank and Trust Co. t 8]31|22-3t. J o J NOTICE Under and by virtue of Docreta Order made by His Honor, S. W. G Shipp, dated the 8th day of June 1922, in the case of Peoples Banl i. i of Darlington, So. Ca., a Corpora i: ? ? i (Kill, |) I 1111 L 111 , Vh. k>iuiit:\ maiiiMii Carter, et al., and Conway Lumbe Company, a Corporation, defendants The undersigned will otTer for sal before the Courthouse door at Con I way, S. C., within leg-al sale hour? 1 on the first Monday of October, to ?! | our modern establish people of this commu] h- _ " Our & has that delicious fla1 distinctively its own in to is appreciated. The sai cakes, doughnuts and ? Quality and cleanlin l0- W> of this bak IS. \ HYIV BUILDING HOME CONWAY MAN Haynsworth and Lawton have just closed a contract with Don Burroughs of Conway, to erect for him a very fine residence in Horry county. When finished the residence will be one of the finest in the state of South Caioliua, Mr. Lawton sa'd this morning It is be?ng constructed on Colonial lines. ?Florence Times. o MIGHT HAVE BEEN. Former governor Coleman L. Blease missed election in ihe first primary, over five opponents, l.y 9,248 votes, out of total vote reported v of 163,891, with a total of 1,228 boxes out of 1,307 reporting: up to 2 o'clock | Thursday. VOTERS AWAY :l FROM POLLS Columbia. ? Approximately fifty i thousand enrolled voters in this state i failed to vote in Tuesday's primary . j apparently awaiting the second pri, i mary on September 12 when former I Governor Blease and Thomas McLeod - : will contest for the gubernatorial i nomination. State Superintendent of I | Education Swcaringen and J. H. Hope I of Union will also be in the run off. wit, on the 2nd dav of said month, i 1922. ! ALL AND SINGULAR, that ceri tain parcel and tract of land situate > in Buck's Township, County of Hor1 ry, State of South Carolina, con1 taining Six Hundred Forty-two - (042) acres, more or less, bounded 1?\" tlin 4-1. ' v.. niv jioifuvv iiiim.*' V/L tilt; late J. M. Johnson; East by the Public Road leading from Fair 1?KiiT, N\ C., to Georgetown, S. C.; South by lands now or formerly known as the V. I). Johnson and E. R. Singleton lands, and West by the Big Swamp. Being the same premises formerly owned by one C. A. Causey, later by Mess. A. E. and S. J. Page, and by H. W. Carter. Saving and excepting from this sale the timber thereon and rights of way privileges on and over the same, owned by Conway Lumber Company. The reversionary interest in said timber to be vested in the purchaser or purchasers hereunder. Should the purchaser or purchasers fail or refuse to comply with his, her ~ or its bid, the property will be reJ sold at the risk of the former purchaser. Purchasers to pay for the neces* sary papers and stamps. W. L. BRYAN", Clerk of Court, i ROBT. B. SCARBOROUGH, 1 Plaintiff's Attorney. e o r NOTICE OF SALE s Under the order of J. S. Vaught, Esq., Judge of Probate in and for - Horry County, dated September 4th, 3 1922; I, the undersigned qualified ) executor of the estate of Elinor i Enzor, deceased, will sell at public / auction to the highest bidders for 1 cash at eleven o'clock in the fore noon on the 22nd day of September, 1922, at the late residence of the j deceased, the following described personal property to wit: All and singular all of the personal estate and effects of the said f Elinor Enzor. the same consisting of farming- tools, household ; nd kitchen furniture, cattle, hogs, interest in crops now growing in field or otherwise, as the same may be located and a number of other articles. 1 Any of said property covered by I. any lien of any kind whatsoever will be sold subject to such lien or liens, k All bids must be paid in cash be fore delivery of the property. >i * WILSON ROBERTS, r Executor of Last Will and Testament of Elie nor Enzor, deceased. -. Dated September 5th, 1922. *, H. H. WOODWARD, <- Attorney for Executor. MAKING bread in a Bedouin tent on j the deserts of Arabia is quite a different proposi- j i.: ? * 1 l i uun iioiu uatunguicau in iment?a difference the nity appreciate. Bread " vor that gives it a place homes where "good eating" Tie thing is true of our pies, | all other forms of pastry. ess are the twin mottoes I cry at all times. Qjji lAN'S