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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. Wood ward, Conway, S. C. THURSDAY -NOV. 9, 1922 ^************************* * 2 * thw nnnnvp nwi av t v T ************************** DeLay never got us anywhere in this world and never will. Delay is the enemy of progress the world over and it is the enemy of progress here. It has been such an enemy ever since we can remember and unless we change our habits it will continue to be the enemy of many successful lives or careers for all time to come. It is only another name for procrastination. The putting off of the doing of things that ought to be in progress this very hour, until some future day and hour, which future day and hour in some cases never come to pass. A thing never started .is never finished and still in the face of that great fact men and women put off from day to day. from week to week, from year to year, the beginning of things that ought to have been going on and by now finished, and they wait, and continue to wait until they are dead and gone, then their children after them presist in living the same old habits of life until they too have passed away and their chance to accomplish things entirely gone. This matter of waiting and never beginniDg is what holds back many of our business houses, and enterprises that would succeed if they did not have a mortal dread of beginning. It takes its toll among the planters nf fV?io /?A?ir?f it n f.i?n11 \?i vuin v.v/uut v. nuiiui cun ui farmers could do much better than they are doing- if they would onlv turn something1 up and make o beginning. then push things through instead of sitting down on the job. In the same way lawyers allow their clients to wait and sweat, sometimes grumbling, while they spend their time hunting for excuses to delay the trial of a case a little further on and on, until sometimes the other fellow rakes up the spoils and makes a getaway. Again some valuable cJient will place an important case in the hands of his lawyer with instructions to bring the suit and get the decision so that he can collect and have the use of that which he thinks js rightly his. The lawyer will put off the entry of the suit for . one cause or another until perhaps it has become a useless task as the other party has moved away to some other jurisdiction or he has had time to put his property beyond the reach of fris creditors, or he has died and gone to his reward^ and his heirs has used up all that he had. Too many of us seem to forget that the golden time is now. We forget the rule which says that we should never put off until tomorrow the things that we can do today. That old saying is one of the best and the truest tnmgs tnat was ever said. It is the sum and substance of what has been learned by experience down through ages of time. It contains advice that would make many of us better off if we would but follow it and always put into each day the maximum amount of action along lines that would improve us. Delay should never he allowed to rob us of our opportunities. Opportunities will come, but they do not have the habit of returning to us. When they do come they should be embraced and used to our benefit. The man who is always delaying will not be in position to grasp an opportunity but will have to let it go by just as others will go by. o ************************** * * % HORRY HERALDING * * $ *************************** Real work is the last thing that some men will do. o It is easy to shoulder responsibility on another. o Never forget that there is still room for improvement. o Making a charge against another if? an easy thing. Proving it is another matter. o Many tobacco crops will grow next VMr in fUto ' ' * >T ... v...o >.uuiit>, un mnas wnere cotton crops formerly blossomed. o Lack of co-operation is what loses all of us a great many advantages that we would enjoy aftd which we are entitled to-have. o The very scheme of life is progress. No man can ever attain the highest point of success in this world. He must keep going: on. 0 v The man who does no work and pays no taxes to amount to anything gets just as much enjoyment out of the public improvements as any other. o Those who do not succeed take a delight in throwing off on the methods | la***. T of the fellow who does something. < They usually credit him with being < a rascal. c o The greatest man in any commun- J ity is he who will not allow false i pride to keep him from acknowledg- | ing a fault and admitting, that he is j mistaken. o One hundred and fifty cases on the docket and only about ten of those disposed of in one week, is the record of the fall term of the Couit of Common Pleas just over. o Those who have- been favored will turn and make the worst sort of enemies. This is one element perhaps of primitive man still making itself evident in human nature. o .Tiiflirincr V?\r 4Vm I . HIV 1 VC III IliC IICWJSpapers, women have taken up the pistol as being a ready weapon when men have not been true to them. o Primitive man existed by reason of his cunning1 and skill in preserving his life against the similar powers of his fellows. The same thing crops out now in modern man in their relations in civilized life. o Things done wrong will persist forever, and their effects are never wholly lost. Things done in the right way are a joy forever and we continue to reap from them the lasting benefits that we appreciate. o Almost all of the lands in this county will produce an abundance of sweet potatoes, a valuable crop for any planter to have, yet nine tenths of the small farmers fail to raise as much as they need of this crop. o WASHINGTON COMMENT "Inasmuch as ye have done it unto the least of these, ye have don? it unto me." There is no man or woman who reads these lines who would pass by a hungry, cold frightened, abandoned child in the street and SJ1V "Oil T Pilll'f Kn LntUn?-nfl " %r w a vubi v i/vy villi v;u. No frnan or woman who reads these lines but would instantly share their dinner with a< woman, flaunt with hunger, a pale /and sickly baby at her breast, an injured and helpless child at her feet. The cry we hear, the sight we see, touches our hearts. The cry we hear of, the sights we are told about they do not reach. , Five hundred thousand woman ' and children and men, more babies than grown-ups, more 'women than I men raise thin arms and send a pitiful cry across the sea to 1 to you and -to you and you 1 for help. Not theirs the glory of war; 1 theirs but the bodies to suffer, the souls to cry in anguish at the pitiful childish wail for food that is not, for shelter that is not, for 1 clothing that is not. Not theirs to understand why; theirs only to face ( the West, the great and glorious and prosperous cand happy and safe ? and secure West our West, our f UnitedStates, and ask for 'did. The President of the United *' States has asked your aid. The Red Cross stretches out eager hands for G your dollars, to Hase in aid. Your own chubby baby, healthy child, s strong and well young son or daughter, 4s an appeal to you, that you pass these suffering ones of the * near East not by; that you do not say, "1 can't be bothered," but that J you Vut pour ten pennies, or ten * dollars, or whatever you can afford, ( in an envelope and send it to the nearest Red Cross headquarters, marked "For Near East Relief." { And no one will know about it, except you and God. i y " WIlPllPV'PV n nmi'unonni' . > , . .i\> ? ?'|/c?|/v/1 i iviivuiur* a law, plays up a policy of contempt J for law and its enforcement, and in its news and editorial column^ ' fosters law-breaking, that newspaper is doing more to destroy American institutions than a Fed- \ oral judge can do to maintain them," ) ty in a recent speech. ' No one will disagree with him. Hut there will be many who disagree with the implication some may find in this pronouncement, ( fV?at disrespect for law is bred in the 'American press. 1 vViLhoui trying to place any blame where it belongs, attention of ' the thoughl'ul is ?Jrawn to two re cent instances in which those who administer the law taught people 1 to disrespect it. In Wilkes-Barre, Pa., a man ' charged with wife beating, was be- J ing tried before a magistrate. Becoming intensely incensed with the * prisoner because of the character of i the evidence given against him, the ? ntHstrate iumped over his desk, s gave him a black eye, had him stand ( up and blacked the other eye, after which he fined him ten dollars. c There is here (no sympathy for f the wife-beater. Doubtlesr. he de i . ? - e rscrvuu more tnan ne got. Hut he didn't "deserve, in a court of law, . anything- but a calm, dispassionate, 1 and judicial hearing. The law does not provide for magistrates doing their own eyeblacking. The governor of a middle-western ' t.ate commuted a death sentence to life imprisonment, first getting the . convict in question to sign a paper agreeing that should he or nia friends attempt to gain futher cle- J mency for him, the commutation a will cease Jmd he again face the . death penalty. "Poetic justice," perhaps, but there a law anywhere ? permits an official with commuting power to bargain with con. net does it make for respect for law to deprive any convict of hope. To most of us, law is impersonal; it is the law officer who tnakes the law live for us. As we respect him, jd?uh jo q2n?| Xbui 9m ko lspu?v* -padsaa 9M HK HMt&T HKRALD, OOKWA' >r condemn him, so, unconsciously, 4 io we wrongly but very humanly " condemn the law.?Contributed. o Suggested Program for the Waccamaw Association to be Held at Tilley ^ Swamp Church. Friday, Nov. 17th, and Continue Through Sunday, Nov. 19th: ( Friday. 10:30?Introductory Sermon by t Rev. J. T. Goings. N 11:30?Organization ( 12 ?Religious Literature by Mrs. <C. H. Snider. I 12:30?75,000.000 Campaign By t Mrs. C. H. Snider. * 1:30?Dinner (On grounds.) 3:0ft?Missions, State Home and <> Foreign, By W. C. Hoo!;s. I 4:00?Miscellaneous Business and \ Ad iournnipnt. 7:30 P. M.?Devotional. 7:45?Public Morals, by L. F. Westbury. 8:15?Laymen's Work, by J. C. Spivey. $;45?Miscellaneous and Adjournment. Saturday . 10:00?Devotional. 10:15?W. M. U. Work, by Lucy Spivey. | 10:45?Benevolences, Orphanages, ; Aged Ministers, by C. H. Snider. ' 11:30?Education, by J. H. Mitchell , (Mr. Wilder.) i 12:15?Report of Executive Com- . mittee, by E. S. C. Baker. 12:30?Digest of Letters, by Com- J mittee. 1:00?Miscellaneous Business and Adjournment. ; 7:30 P. M.?Evangelism, by E. A. ^ Fulmer. i 8:00?Sermon. ^ 8:45?Miscellaneous and Adjournmnet. Sunday. ' 10:00?Sunday School, B. Y. P. U., and Col portage, by J. T. Shelley. 11:00?Missionary Sermon, by?to be appointed. 12:00?Miscellaneous and Adjourn- / ment. o NOVEMBER FARM CALENDAR [ c Things to Do This Month. J Sow wheat on fertile well pre , pared land. Agronomy Continue planting of cover crops j lid small grain until work is fin- . ished. Do as much deep plowing as l Aeather permits on heavy soils and where no cover crops have been ? planted. Store next year's planting seed in , ... ? ,.ii.v fnuct? wen protected from ats and weevils. Fumigate if necessary. a Horticulture. e Pune scuppernong grapes. Set out strawberry plants and as- 4 tragus roots. " Set peach, apple, pear, grape and ( sther fruits. Clean up terraces and ditch-banks ibout the orchard to destroy winter juarters of insects and diseases. J Prepare cold frames Ifor wintei < ettuce, radishes, etc. Set narcissus and other bulbs ! arly this month. 1 Dig dahlia and canna roots and t tore in a dry place for the winter. * Animal Husbandry. Repair or build comfortable cjuarers for all livestock. Castrate all boar pigs that arc ;o be fattened for pork. They will ?atten more rapidly and more iheaply. Keep all animals free from lice. They are more comfortable and rejiiire less feed. Breed sows any time after November 8th. for March litters. Give sows to be bred a ration supplying plenty of protein to have hem gaining flesh at breeding time. This insures a larger and stronger litter at farrowing time. Dairy in ir. As soon as frost kills the velvet can vines, pasture the fields. This s the most profitable method to larvest velvet beans for dairy cows. When the silo is opened, see that ill mouldy material is thrown out )efore feeding starts to avoid |iriligestion and other serious troubles. Remember that in feeding calves nilk, the quantity should not vary tuddenly, and that the *milk should ie warm and clean. Feed calves milk (from a pail >vhich is sterilized after each feedng. \ Feed the service bulls rather leavy grain rations (containing no cottonseed meal) and legume hay ;o prepare them for heavy breeding season. Entomology. Rush cotton picking and destroy .talks. Continue farm cleaning to lestroy the weevils' winter quarters. Plan for the winter sprays for the rchard, the shade trees, and hedges. Winter is the time to spray for ic?les; write for information. Get the spray pump in good workng order find do not wait until time /<> use it. Pack the bees. Beware of unscrupulous fruit tree igents. Plant Diseases. n a. a - - - - v/onvraci ior "certified" Irish poato seed for next spring's planting. Plow under cotton stalks and >lant a cover ?rop to help control inthracnose and other diseases, 11 ii' ffBunM andhrniMt?% Imentholaiumj ^^cools and I, 8. 0, NOV. 9, 1922 ,. %' .. >.?? ? COTTON GOING TWENTY FIVE Yeekly Cotton Letter By Savannah Cotton Factorage Company. All inquiries answered promptly.) The oredictions made bv us from ;ime to time this fall that cotton vould sell for 25 cents per pound have some to pass. Round lots of cotton rtfering at 25 cents are being snapped up quickly .and we now believe ;hat the market will advance to new ligh levels. It will give us pleasure to answer my questions the readers of this paDer wish to ask concerning the cotton market. November 4th, 1922. PREACHER HAS BOOZE CHARGE That Dorchester County as well eis Greenville County has a minister > f the gospel who does not exactly >ee matters of regulation in the *ame light as one Mr. Volstead, is >aid to have been brought out rejently at a hearing before Magistrate Limehouse, near Summerville, the [lev. Washington Fields being held Tor the grand jury in the State court >n a charge of vioi'^-rjr 4he prohibi;ion law. State Constables J. J. Healey and 1. L. Poppenheim attended the hearng before Magistrate Limehouse, as witnesses for the State. At the same ;ime, one Josiah Cook, a white man, .vas held under a bond of $300 also )n a charge of violating the State jrohibition laws. The two State officials with Federal Agents Curtz and Henderson md several citizens raided two ilicit stills early Wednesday about iight miles west of Summerville. 3ne plant was of about 175 gallons ind the other about sixty gallons capacity. Josiah Cook, a white man md the Rev. Washington Fields were iharged with being: the operators of he plants. The officers further allege that Parson Fields had concealed in his lome, about ten gallons of a concoction, supposed to be composed of )lackberry wine and moonshine liquor, t is stated that the beverage was of i hue and aroma sufficient to make lim a most popular individual in his ection of the State. Poultry. Take an inventory of your poultry nd keep accurate records for the nsuing year. o Cures Malaria, Chills, Fever, jUU Bilious Fever, Colds and Laxrippe.?tf FOR OVER 40 YEARS TAIL'S CATARRH MEDICINE) ha* >een used successfully in the treatment >f Catarrh. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE conlists of an Ointment which Quickly Relieves by local application, and the internal Medicine, a Tonic, which acts hrough the Blood on the Mucous Suraces, thus reducing the inflammation. 8old by all druggists. it. j. uneney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. ' 7 The packag Your taste < The sales pi Over J billic . b ? % J I " * f s ' t . v ^ ? Ligoitt 8e Myeks Tobacco Co. ????????i M ii i H???? YOUNG FARMERS I AT STATE FAIR Clemson College.?There were 39 exhibits of corn, 28 single ear exhibits of peanuts in the Boy's Club Show .at the State Fair this year. Every club boy who saw the exhibits has reason to feel proud of the work in which he is engaged. Many visitors of prominence admired the exhibits and complimented the young farmers on their work. Among these were Mrs. Mclver Williamson, of Darlington, noted authority on corn, who said that the exhibit was a very creditable one. The State Fair officials thought enough of the work of the club boys to give them a luncheon at the State Fair on Wednesday of Fair Week, at which about 30 members weri? nres ent. Manager J. W. Fleming, of the State Fair stated at the lunchebn that too much could not be done for these club boys who would be the exhibitors at future fairs and on whom our future agriculture depends. PRIZE WINNERS Com* Ten-Ear Exhibit. 1. Ashley Long, Prosperity. 2. J. Boyd Horton, Jefferson, R. 4. 8. Wingard Harmon, Lexington. 4. Furman Long, Prosperity. 5. Robt. Gibson, Blackston. R. 3. 6. Horace Boiter. Moore. R. 1. 7. Curtis Long, Prosperity. 8. Hovt Boland, Prosperity. 9. Robt. Stevenson, Winnsboro, R. 3. Corn, Single-Ear Exhibit. 1. Curtis Long, Prosperity 2. J. Boyd Horton, Jefferson, R. 4. 3. Hoyt Boland. Prosperity. 4. Furman Long, Prosperity. 5. Wingard Harmon, Lexington, fi. Tillman Mills, Prosperity. ~ Peanuts. Four Quarts Spanish?1. Hoyt Boland, Prosperity. Four Quarts Virginia Running? ? 1. Faber Barry, Moore; 2 Louise Monts, Lexington; 3 Franklin Monts, Lexington; 4, Hoyt Boland, Prosperity. Four Quarts Virginia Bunch?1. Robert Dubard, Blythwood; 2, Henry Curtis Buff, New Brooklyn; 3, John S. Roberts, Lexington. Vine Spanish Peanuts with Nuts. 1 r>~i 1 m . x uyjr v UI'IUUU, FrV8p6riCy? Vine Virginia Running with Nuts? 1. Louis Monts, Lexington; 2, Franklin Monts, Lexington; 3, Hoyt Boland, Prosperity. Virginia Bunch with Nuts?1 Robert Dubard, Blythwood; 2, John S. Roberts, Lexington; 3, Hoyt Boland, Prosperity. / ] Chas. M.? | Manufacturer of H Buy directly and save I Easy Terms or Di D. W. SMITH, CHADBOl H c suggests it. 3onfirms it. rove it. &iltl#fe r -( ^ Lhestei CIGARE1 . *0*$ t II> hi* i mi hi i' artfiti l AjfafllfrMldliiyttfr " ... . ^ ....?... .. i MAPLE NEWS I The farmers in this section are I busily engaged in making syrup and I harvesting their corn crops. There will be a shooting -natch at I J. W Norris' itoie on TbUnkStfUiiift day. All those interested will do well to he there. Rev. T. H. Patterson will preach 1 at Maple next Satuivlay and Sunday. I He is the pastor at Maple for next I year and this is his first appointment. I A large crowd is expected. 1 Mr. G. B. Collins, of Conway, I preached at Maple Sunday. This was | his first time sinnp h* vm .w * VVVIIIIWI I I Ulll HendersonVille, N. C., where he spent the summer. CALOMEL USERS TAKE AWFUL RISK Very Next Dose of Treacherous Drug May Start Terrible Salivation The next dose of calomel you take may salivate you. It may shock your liver or start bone necrosis. Calomel is dangerous. It is mercury, quick- i silver. 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. Take a spoonful and if it doesn't start your liver and straighten you up better and quicker than uasty calomel and without making you sick, you just go back and get your money. Don't take calomel! It cannot be trusted any more than a leopard or a wildcat.. Take Dodson's Liver Tone which straightens you right up and makes vou feel fine. No salts necessary. Give it to the children because it is perfectly harmless and cannot salivate.?Adv. / 3tieff, Inc. ilj igh Grade Pianos. :he middle-man's profit, iscount for Cash. * l r* - " Local Kepresentative ; JRN, N. C. H 10-19 tf HP MjM Convenient package ^ ?glaMine 'Wrapped. field TTES If*10