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The Horry Herald ' CONWAY, S. C ! i Entered at the Post Office at Conway, i S. C., as second class mail matter. < * 11 . 5 H. H. WOODWARD, Editor. I 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 - ? t TELEPHONE 21. ' ( Make all Checks or Drafts payable to The Horry Herald or H. H. Wood ward, Conway, S. C. 1 THURSDAY, OCT. 26, 1922 I ************************** * ? * SCARCELY HALF TIME % * T a-**********************-*-*-* When we consider the small amount of work that is done by the great majority of the people, we can scarcely wonder at either the smallness, or the entire lack of their achievements. Idleness is the thing which u keeping back the progress and wellbeing: of the people of our entire section of the country. Men do not seem to be willing to toil and stick on the job day after day except as .they are compelled to do it in order to get the necessaries , of life. So far as taking up all then time in the (performance of useful work for themselves and others, , they do not know what this means. This wholesale throwing away of time is going on all the time. It is in the stores, in the business offices, , on the farms and in the timber ^woods. Men show a tendency to "want | to spend their time as much as they ( possibly can in either .idleness, or in the pursuit of things that cannot ben- j efit. i A man may have a business that does not take his time. He makes ab- ( solutely no use of the one half of his time. He stands up by the dooi or sits in a chair and does not even , employ his mind in thinking out . new ways of increasing his business , by making it bigger and rendering a ; better service to those who patronize ] him. He finds pleasure in cracking ^ jokes with his neighbors, \ov with the t passing throng. He has no idea of ] putting to good use the time that ^ he finds on his hands. It is the same on the farms. In the > Summer the farmers will work them ; selves hard to raise a crop. They will c be late in getting it harvested. Then t "they will spend the most of their time in going to town and in talking a 1 bout the corner grocery stores. They \ do very little until it is time once I more to plant a crop. Each year ? they lose valuable time that wouia t make their farms the garden spot;* i of the world if they would but de- t vote their time to it. t By the great majority it seems that is considered as of no value. It c vis restJlv ?j] that they have but they 1 do not seem to know it. They loh*. c time from morning until night c and get up next morning only > to go to losing time again. Work ? that they do is a matter of necessity I only, and it is never a matter or c Ifreat enjoyment to put in all the tim that they have and thus increase ? the things that they may do for the benefit of others as well as for themselves. O a sjc V * HORRY HERALDING % * * V rrinung is always the constant s companion of achievement. t The story of prohibition in this c action of the country has not yet t been written. a o c It is a happy man who can be satisfied with less than he thinks he v is entitled to. ! o d The man who Knows the least is 1 the one whose voice is heard tho I loudest and oftenest. ^ o i The spirit of Rive and take is en- v couraged as it should be in many th ings now going on. v o I Great achievements <are hard to (1 accomplish. They are the life goals >1 of those who want to do something t o t Every man would have the public a highway go by his own door for the J purpose of keeping it from going by the door of his neighbors. I o | A still tongue may be carried in a t wise head, it is true, unless it Is V fear of timidity that prevents speak t ing when speaking is due. r o Monkey rum ms sought by those who want diversion from the ordinary when they get it and drink it of course they are not disappointed. ) The people of the Greenwood se<- I tion could not get what they thoughi i they were entitled to in - " ""V .WWV.V.VM I i of the national highway. Now they < are getting what they can which an improvement of the roads al- j ready in Greenwood section; but the> r are having to go down in their pock ; ets after the most of the funds to do j. the work with. o ( Asa G. Candler, the old rich man, c vrho made his millions from sweeten- f ed water, must have decided thai v his conquest of the young and beau- c tiful widow of New Orleans hail been ' too easy. At the last moment he be- 1 come disgusted with his bargain and ; broke it on the eve of the marriage, e saying that she had been slandered t ' ~ % >y two men in his homo city of e Atlanta. Now he refuses to divulgv p ,he names of those who had cast the w insinuations. He may say what fie ? >leases as an excuse for failing to F arry out his bargain, but of coura*. b ?ve know that he just got sick of s lis bargain. a -o 0 BUY ADVERTISED GOODS C Save Money?Protect Yourself t By H. A. (Iroth t Advertising benefits the consumer '' nost of all. Advertised goods are y jade market to protect the consume* t> 'or quality and quantity. I Think of the infinite variety of pre- > paro l foody, from which the greater 1 part of a wholesome meal may be prepared with almost no work for the lousewife. Think of the household conveniences and business conveniences?the ^ time savers in yoio oliiire 01 home the accessories which make your automobile a greater pleasure. * All of these things are rather intricate. It would cost a small for- v tune to prepare a few of them for' ;l private use. How do you suppose the man who first thought of these things was &ble to make them for you at a price you could afTord to pay ? Tt was through advertising?of coures. Advertising organizes co-operative buying units. The man with a new idea knows that he can tell 1 thousands or millions of people about ^is idea through advertising. He knows that the united buying power of all these people will enable him to produce his idea in practical form at a cost which is only a fraction of what the first article would cost. One of the best examples 01 how this is done is Eskimo Pie. Within six months after the inventor first had his idea, everybody in triu United States (knew about these delicious new chocolate covered ice :ream bars. This was a spectacular demonstration of how advertising can bring a new idea to the whole American public. But in every advertising success, the same principle holds true But advertising does more than introduces new ideas to you. It safeguards you in the purchase of an> idvertised product. You can depend r .inon it?nothinir can succecd throuirli xdvertising unless the article itself las 'merit. Advertising- a bad product ^ vill make just as many enemies for ^ ;hat product as advertising a good i product will make friends for the 0 ?ood product. And so, if an article has been ,videly advertised for a long time, /ou can be sure that it is good >r the jpublic would never have supioiled it. You know that the adverised and trade-marked product must lave a definite quality?and be fully vorth the price. You can be sure :hat you get more real value in m advertised product for every per. icy you spend, fthan you will in " lnadvertised product, because adver- ? ising is the cheapest selling method t here is. y You know the advantages of co- y iperative buying. You have heard a ,, ot about t.hp id?a, in thp last two >r three years. You belong to a co >perative buying society every time rou buy an advertised product. Reai! idvertising. Buy advertised products, t is the surest way to be certain ^ f satisfaction and monev's worth. v o having at the Spigot; Wasting at the j_ Bunghole. y To furnish the basis for a boast q ibout further "economy" and "sav- [.; ngs" in the expenses of the Govern- }< nent, the new director of the Bureau t f Engraving and Printing at Wash- $ ngton requires the employes of the lant, men and women, married and rp ingle, to take a vacation of one 01 wo days a week, without pay. This v>)an, its author has announcci, will "save" a couple of hundred housand dollars in the course of i year. What these employes are s< ompelled to forego in wages will ^ lelp pay the salaries of the nume tl ous experts of the U. S. Shipping n * d "'%n if the subsidy bill is e; lelayed for a f;?w mo.ith > longer, y i ?ie neco. sity f? r this lv U'dion of i?. he pay rol' of ihe Bureau of En; raving becomes apparen" Lho minute si t i? kno.vn that of the sc\e,,ai buiwi 'V ed officials of the Shipping !?< .?? .1 o orty-seven alone receive :m .*iggre;ate of $r>'.)9,S00 a year .? xalaiie.i. 'hey get an average of rra *i\ SI.! >00 a piece, or nearly twice as iiuch as a Senator or K pre-ei tuive, several hundred dollars more han a member of the Cm >wet and ilmost as much as an Assnci ite tl ustice of the U. S. Supreme Court, fi The Bureau of Engraving and 0 Vinting is one of the Government dants for making money. Just wh;, he Harding administration doesn't " :eep it going at full pressure while hf? SVlilinilWI" MnO.?vl uno/l p f ft man 'I I - - w P^?I VI I IWIIO O V IIIWIIjV nillions for salaries is not explained. I o 1 WASHINGTON COMMENT Why should all the great seats of 1 earning in the United States he I )uilt upon a fund/ition of private cap- I tal, or conducted as co-operative or I is money making institutions? Why I ihould not this nation found, conduct, md maintain forever a university to I ?ive its vouht the opportunity which juestions of finance prevent many | rom tak'ng in great private universities ? John H. Cowles, Sovereign Grand Commander of the Ancient and Acepted Scottish Rite Freemasonry 'or the Southern Jurisdiction, thinks ve should have such a national seat >f learning, as well as a Department >f Education in the Government, and aws requiring the compulsory attendince of school children through the J :ighth grade. Nor is he alone in such hinking; of the millions who are % m H+RRY KKRALP, OOMWA arnestly advocating the immediate assage of the Towner-Sterling bill, rhich will create a Department of Mucation, with a Secretary* in the , 'resident's Cabinet, a very large nuiner agree with Captain Cowles in his < tatement before the One Hundred < nd Tenth Supreme Council meeting , f the Northern Jurisdiction, in Cleveland. i A National University would offer o students, who could pass a certain i xamination, or who could show cerain educational credits, an opportun- | by to gain that larger outlook, wid r knowledge, and greater vision k-hich is the chief end of higher edu- j ntion, at a not prohibitive expense, t would be a training school for our ivil youth commensurate in stand- , rds to our West Point and Annapolis, t would send forth a constant stream , f young people, trained in citizenl! j i a : :?. .. ? ,.ii? - / ?.1 1 iiip arm /vmericciiiisiii, ui truication, disciples of the true patrioism, a leaven for industrial and soial unrest, a counter irritant for Bolhevism and anarchism. The country's universities do well; vhy confine such well doing1 to those ible to afford them??Contributed. n REPUBLICAN CAMPAIGN QUARTETTE. Tariff for Profiteers. Tax Reduction for Buccaneeis. .Ship SubvMies -or Privateer s. Senate Seats for Auctioneers. Scene: Washington. Time: Present.) Enter crowd of men, sleek and amiominous, and glistening in diamonds ike a pawnbroker's show window, forming n semicircle in front of the ?apitol they burst forth as follows: kVe are jolly profiteers )ur g%ins are growing fast iVe're fatter than we've been for 'ears Since Fordney's bill was passed Dome, trusts, and join our hearty Profiteers. They retire to make room for an>ther group, also showing signs of ?ood feeding and prosperity. These atter draw forth $1,000 bills which hey wave while they sing in this nanner, to wit: I ere we come, pray buccaneers, ''ea^e* note how ! iv*- we w;?\; fixe Harding has delivered our tears 3y cutting down our tax. Republicans, ain't they dears? ro be so kind to buccaneers? They quickly rcplacfe their $1,000 ills in their pockets (which they utton as they range themselves by he profiteers) and give way to anther band. The latter carol in this strain: We're mighty glad we're privateers That roam the briny deep The bill that Mr. Lasker steers Will give us vessels cheap. What care we for people's sneers While we're successful privateers. They fall back on the right flank f the profiteers to give room for a roup carrying red flags and mallets, 'he latter in deep voices warble in his fashion:: ye're just a crew of auctioneer Vith Senate seats for sale Ve'll start you out on fine careers? lur methods never fail? l quarter million gets six years >f glory from us auctioneers. All groups then assemble for a litle close harmony and chorus in this ise: < lurrah, huzza and three big cheers! i /e're privateers and buccaneers j ^e're privateers and auctioneers j ur hearts rejoice, as you may see, In joying great prosperity; 'or which we thank the G. O. P. ariff and taxes and subsidies enate seats?whatever, we make no fuss he G. O. P. is fine for us. o CLIO AN SEED POTATOES Get Only the Rest Clemson College.?Reports, from! >me of thfi Northern sppd-nntntn-I rowing states indicate that if weaker conditions remain unfavoiable, p i'i iber of the common see lliorne disuses r?f this crop v 'll be serious this ear. Market run seed from this crop ; apt to he diseased. That Southern potato growers liould insist on being supplied with certified" seed is the advice of the lant pathologists. Such seed has o CATARRH Catarrh Is a I-ocal disease greatly inuenced by Constitutional conditions. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE consts of an Ointment which gives Quick telief by local application, aid the nternal Medicine, a Tonic, which acts irough the Blood on the Mucous Burices and assists in ridding your System f Catarrh. 8old by druggists for over 40 Years. P. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo. O. 'oodpiusVitamines is efficient food. If there is I lack of normal vitamine 1 I content the food is like a I I wire without electricity ; it I I lacks the power to function* | v Ms Emulsion | enhances the value of the I I daily diet, because it adds 0 the precious vitamines <?yv I that help sustain and I promote healthful Vjlf I progress. Scott's I Emulsion builds strength. j Scott & llowtie, Bloom field, N. I. 22-31 ? 4 \ . * I Y, 8. 0., 00T. 26, 1032 FARMER SUED ON CONTRACT. (Continued from Page One) .os benefited gieut.ly by its case in uourt where the issues involved were liscussed with an eloquence, thoroughness and intensity hitherto unsurpass?d. A flame of loyalty has swept the membership of the Association in Eastern North Carolina. A Record br&iking week deliveries resulted in the growers bringing 12,000,000 pounds of tobacco to the Association houses in North Carolina and Virginia last week and official announcement from Richard R. Patterson, manager of the Leaf Department states that practically every important domestic company of the United States is now buvincr tobacco from the Assnrintinn at prices that .ire highly satisfactory. Several members of the Association who had sold tobacco outride of the Association came to officials of the cooperative, offering to tviy five cents a pound for these deliveries after hearing the case of the Association last week and the increased deliveries at co-operative markets of the east helped swell the total of twelvo million pounds which established a record for the Association. o Business Men Ask Attorney General Daugherty's Resignation. Business men generally seem to be waking up to the political situation. More than 1,500 leading business men of Chicago h/we formed an organization to aid the Democrats in this camraign. Th>? fren.l of business yenti nent throughout the country, whether openly manifested o?- n a;ip>r.st the Republican nartv I the Fordnev-McCumber teriflf. Business > >en too have a special grievance against the proponent of the Republican t.nritT act and Attorney General Daugherty, in connection therewith. This grievance was voiced by the Illinois Retail Merchant's Association in lesolutions recently adopted as follows: "We condemn the unfair tactics of Attorney General Daughercy in filling to make public the result of his investigation to sun port his ch.nyes. He charged the reta'lers with piofiteering and taking uncons<".onaole profits and then failed to oiTer evidence in support of his charges or make public the result1' of his investigation of their prices. Wo ask his resignation or removal from the cabinet." o been inspected in the field for purity of variety and for free loin from disease, and while it is not guaranteed to be absolutely fre*; from disease, it is guaranteed to Ifave been examined by disinterested inspectors and to have passed certain rigid tests. If therefore the most uniformly high grade seed to be found on the open market. There may be occassional lots of uncertified seed which are as good, but there are many others which are much poorer. Anyone who can not go north to inspect the crop from which his seed potatoes come can still have expert inspection if he insists on getting "certified" seed. In order to be sure, the dealer should be required to show a copy of the certificate or other evidence that the potatoes he sells are actually certified for seed purposes. o This year promises to yeild?a fine sweet potato crop for the farmers. In some sections we have heard reports of potatoes beginning to rot in the fields. This is not extensive and seems to be confined to a few fields that are low and wet. o Cures Malaria, Chills, Fever, OUU Bilious Fever, Colds and Ladrippe.?tf AU I FA] ? At the C.G.H Nov. 4th, THINC Jersey Cattle? Geurnsey Bull Mules Heifers - *.*' .// Vi. \ $ IA11 these a est bidders regai closed out under called in. * 4 Af&Jlnes ,V BY X-HMft, roT two little shoes that art ragged and torn. They're held as a ir:t>mory Hweet. Of many Lluck buttons these objects - aro ihot n. From ago they no longer are neat. And yet, as I sec them, I drift to the pa^?-wmo twenty-odd Ion* year.4 ago. These shoes are an echo that always will last?that means a lot more that you know. Hack thcv.'o in the days wnen the shoe solos wore bright, a little tot vvalkcO. thorn around. And all of the buttons were "fastened on tight? some lost, never now to bo found. Those two little shoes taught my non his lirsi stop; they taught him to toddle and creep. Hut now, in a closet, for years huvo they slept? to mo. in a memory sleep. For son has grown up and he's taken moro strides. He's learned to walk better, I gue&u. And sentiment says that his tiny tot shoes really started him out to success. o NOTICE OF SALE Under and bv virtue of the decree and judgment of the court made b> his Honor A. F. Woods, Presiding Judge, in the case of James L. Bell Plaintiff, vs. M. G. Ward, O. M. Ware and George J. Holliday, defendants and dated the 30th day of September, A. D. 1922, I, the undersigned J A. Lewis, Sheriir of Horry County will sell .at public auction, to the highest bidder before the Court Hous< door, at Conway, in Horry County and State of South Carolina, during legal hours of sale, on salesday ii November next, it being the Gth ela> of said month, all and singular thai cerfain- real estate situate in Horn County, and described as follows, te wit: All AND SINGULAR, all that cer tain piece, parcel or tract of land containing eighteen (18) acres, more or less, situated, lying and being ir Bavboro Township in the County ane State aforesaid, containing three tracts of land as follows, to wit: Tract No.l containing six acres more or less. j Tract No. 2 containing four acres more or less, Tract No. 3 containing eight acres more or less, &ame convened to me by G. Waj-1 Cartrett by his deed of Sentcvlv 12th, 1918, and this mortgage is giver to the said James L. Bell to securc him of part payment of said premises Bounded as foPows, to wit: On the North by land of A. Bei and Sarah Rabon, East by lands rl C. H. King and C. J. Holliday, Soutl Child-birth Valuabl* Illustrated Book Sent Fr?? How thousands of women, by the simple method of an eminent physician, have avoided unnecessary miseries through many months and up to the moment I3aby has arrived, is fully ^ explained in the remarkablo^^^^^H^^ book, "Motherhood and the /Y^ M Uaby." Tells also what jMH do before and after babyflHV\^^r^ comes, probable date of birth, baby rules, etc., and VVv. about "Mofhar's Friend,"MV !,' used bv three venerationsWK 1\\ . of mothers, and sold in all IV T\\ drug stores every where, kr f "Mother's Friend" is ap-Cul V \. plied externally, is safe, 1?^ free from narcotics, permita easier natural readjustment of muscles and nerves during ex| pectancy and child-birth. Start using it today. Mrs. E. E. Kerger, Slayton, Minn., says: "It pulled me through." Send for book today, to Hradfleld Regulator Co., liA-35, Atlanta, Ga. "Mother's Friend" is sold at aU drug stoves. C T1 RM_ST1 cover Place, at C i 1922, at 1 IS TO BE SOU 1 ractor Automobile Stalk Cutter V, Wagon Planter # 'A re to be sold absoli rdless of values. F chattel mortgages Y by lands of Add i^Ward and West by lands of I. C. King and estate lands of A. T. King. TERMS of Sale Gash. Purchaser to pay for papers and stamps. Octobor 2nd, A. D. 1922. H. H. WOODWARD, > Plaintiff's Attorney. J. A. LEWIS. Sheriff of Horry County. Read this issue and learn something about the county court which the people can vote in if they will on November 7. This loss of time is keeping back the general progress and improve- ' ment of the whole community, work? ers are the ones who accomplich the } l few things, that we do get. The 1 idlers have seemingly no interest iii getting rsults. y^Burns and scalds ' Skin Ablaze with Eczema Constant Itching Almost Unbear able! i We know there 1b one thing that Btops * , eczema, and that if* more red-blood-cells! S. S. S. builds them by the million! You l can increase your red-blood cell.-i^to tho r point where it 1b practically Impossible , lot eczema to exist. We know that as .1 blood-cells Increase In number, blood im purities vanish! We also know that night follows day. Both are facts! But havo you, eczema sufferers, ever actually taken advantage of this wonderful fact? Thousands Just like you huve never thought 1 about It! Skin eruptions, eczema with alT 4, Its fiery, skin-digging torture and Its soul- Ili tearing, unreachable itching, pimples, blackheads and bolls, they nil pack up and go, when the tide of blood-cells begins to roll in t Blood-cells arc the fight ing-glnnta > of nature! S. S. S. builds them by the million! It has been doing it since 182(1! , S. R. R. is one of Ihe greatest blood-cell builders, blood-cleansers and body builders known to us mortals! When you put these facts together,?then to continue to have eczema nnd skin eruptions looks more like a sin than a disease. Mrs. Arthur N. Smith, Pearl St., Newark, Ohio, writes: *'My little girl had a very bad eatt of eetemn. She began taking S. S. S. and it well vow. I thank yon very much. 1 tell my friend? what a good medicine it <?. f cannot talk too much about it, for I know it is O. K." Here Is your opportunltv. R. Tt. R. contains only vegetable medicinal ingredients. Because 8. S. S. does build red-blood-cells. It routs rheumatism, builds firm flesh, fills out hollow cheeks, beautifies the com- J plezlon, builds you tin when you are rundown. R. S. P. is sold at nil drmr stores. In two sizes. Tho larger size bottle is the more economical. SC C "takes you feel t A CP />*? yourself again i f\M I V 11 1 LJFF I { ireenSea,S.C. I i 1 o'clock D OUT: pAvminiv T/v^L MA 1111115 A WW Disc Harrows, 1 Mower and Rake i Top Buggy itely to the highVoperty is being and will not be I * . r