The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, March 29, 1923, Page Page No. 5, Image 5
TakaT^f^l?
the Work Out ^
of Dish-Washing
Every housewife hates
the drudgery of washing
dishes and welcomes RED
SEAL Lye, because it makes
the job easy. Spotless pots
and pans, as well as shining
silverware and dishes are
sure when RED SEAL. Lys
helps.
Thoroughly dissolve one*
halt teaspoonful in dishpan of
water?then put the dishe9
in. (Do not use on aluminum.)
Write for booklet of household
uses. Full directions
Pay at the Bank of Aynor.
i?
Saw Your Owr
With your Fordson or other Tra<
Century Saw Mill and saw good, j
specially convenient, and easy to
money with it sawin
VANCE 20TH CE1
Built in 5 sizes, to suit all sizes
liameter of your timber, how muc
fnd of power. We will then send
v^ANCE Saw Mill best suited, to t
Planers, Matchers, Edgers, Saw Di
way, S. C. sells VA>
V i - - - - ' - ?
IJ. A. VANCE CO., De?k
nmmm
mmmm
I n~n i
| Dull <
A new tested I
ss base. Put up in f
? 5 gallons water 01
? ses. Applied wi
EE Regardless of wh
EE parative results.
== CRAWFOF
SB Place orders with I
% J. B. McC
>?PP?i???MM??,
IT'S FOOLISH TO SUFFER
When So Many Conway People Are
Pointing the Way Out.
You may be brave enough to stand
backache or headache or dizziness.
But, if, in addition urination is disordered,
look out! If you don't try to
fix your sick kidneys, you may fall
into the clutches of dangerous disease
before you know it. But, if you
live more carefully and help your
kidneys with Doan's Kidney Pills, you
can 8top the pains you have and avoid
future danger as well. Don't experiment?use
the remedy Conway people
are publicly endorsing. Read this
case:
R. H. Hewitt, a millwright, 14 Race
Path St., Conway, says: "I have been
working in the millwright trade several
years and the continuous heavy
lifting strained the muscles of my
back. My kidneys were disordered and
I felt nervous and irritable. When I
attempted to bend over, stitches
caught me in the small of my back
and it seemed as though something
had given away and my back broken.
1 had seen Doan's Kidney Pills advertised
and Kot them at Piatt's Pharmacy.
One box of Doan's cured me."
60c at all dealers. Foster-Milbum
Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.?Adv.
o
SUMMONS FOR RELIEF
Complaint Served.)
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA,
COUNTY OF HORRY.
Court of Common Pleas.
M. B. Thompson Co., A Corporation,
Plaintiff, vs. J. R. Ward and E. V.
Ward, Defendants.
To the Defendants Above Named:
YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED
and required to answer the complaint
in this action, of which a copy is
herewith served upon you and to serve
a copy of your answer to the said
complaint on the subscriber or subscribers
.it his or their office at Conway,
South Carolina, within twenty
days after the service hereof; exculsive
of the day of such service; and
if you fail to answer the complaint
it., i! :J _i_:_
wiuiiu uie nine unnc.saui uie piaiutifT
in this action will apply to the
Court for the relief demanded in the
complaint.
Dated February 6th, 1923.
H. H. WOODWADD,
Plaintiff's Attorney.
To J. R. Ward:
ABSENT DEFENDANT:
TAKE NOTICE That the Complaint
in the foregoing stated action
and the Summons of which the foregoing
is a copy, were filed in the ofM
i Farm Lumber!
:tor you can belt up a VANCE 20th
accurate lumber. The Vance Mill is
move, so that you can also make
g lumber for the community.
NTURY SAW MILLS
and lengths of timber. Tell us the
h you wish to cut per day, and the
full specifications, with price on the
he work. Ask for catalogue also of
jst Rigs, etc. Buck Motor Co., ConCE
Saw Mills. f
Bl, Winston-Salem, N. C.
???1
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiliii
C.&L.
Weevil F
liquid concentrated poison of ,
>int cans which sell for $1.25; <
1 the farm treats 1 acre through
th a mop. Cheap and effecti
at remedy you use, try some of
T> & LUKE, MFRS., AUC
lorry Hardware Co at once, so as '
utcheon & Co., Coui
iniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiii
THE HORRY HERALD, OONWA
flee of the Clerk of the Court of
Common Pleas m and for Horry
County, at Conway, S. C., on the 8th
day of February, A. D. 1923.
W. L. BRYAN, (L. S.)
C. C. C. P.
H. H. WOODWARD.
Plaintiff's Attorney.
3l22|23-3t
HOUSE DOORS
WERE LOCKED
Columbia.?At the end of one of
the longest and most tedious days of
its lengthy session the general assembly
shortly after 7 o'clock last Saturday
night, adjourned sine die, direct
* Jf oivci HiOTlll^ 1CWC1VCVI UlllLlttl HUH"
fication from Governor McLeod that
he had no further communications to
submit. It was a day full of hopes
and fears and tremblings, beginning
in the early morning as normally as
the average legislative day, but shortly
.after the house adopted the free
conference report on the general appropriation
bill, things began to happen,
and a critical situation was created,
fraught with the gravest possibilities,
for senators and representatives
began leaving the capitol for
their respective homes in carload lots.
As a result for the first time in the
history of the State a Legislature adjourned
sine die without waiting thej
approval of the Governor of the|
State's annual . appropriation bill.
And the reason was this: There was
certainly one item, if not more, in the
bill that would not command executive
sanction?the appropriation of
$15,811 for Albert W. Todd, State
senator and architect of Charleston,
for plans for a state house he drew
in 1911.
Holds Conference.
When the bill was ratified at 4:20
P. M., and sent to the Governor for
his signature, both houses eagerly
awaited its return, in joint session,
that is, the few representing both
houses, it became evident by the delay
that a snag1 to prompt action on
the Governor's part had been struck.
He sent back word for the session to
continue until he could further consider
the bill. All throughout the afternoon
he held numerous and lengthy
conferences with legislators, Senator
Todd among these, and finally, after
seven o'clock announced that he had
no further communications for the
legislative body. Adjournment sine
die by the corporal's guard, still at the
capi^ol, quickly followed.
The reason Governor McLeod did
not veto the Todd item was because
the point of the quorum would in all
> probability be raised and in that
event a parliamentary entanglement
could arise that would indefinitely
prolong this session or inflict upon
the State an extra session, which the
already heavily drained taxpayers
would have to pay thousands of dollars
for. Under the law the Govern
can veto any item in an appropriation
bill or as many items as he sees
I fit to veto, without impairing its le-1
gality. And after the adjournment'
| he can veto the Todd item and his
action could not be challenged or an
attempt made to override it until next
session.
House Doors Locked.
To emphasize just how acute the
situation was, while the house this afternoon
was considering a resolution
the house and senate, George Bell
Timmerman, representative from Lexington,
made the point that there was
no quorum of attendance. The doors
of the house were locked and there
was found to be something like a
dozen shy of a quorum. The doors remained
locked and those within were
kept there for nearly an hour. Mr.
Timmerman finally withdrew his motion.
This brought the few remaining
at the capitol to a realization of
a condition and not a theory confronting
them. There was hostility to allowing
the Todd claim when the free
conference brought in the bill to thf.
senate yesterday, but the upper body
IIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIUllf//Z~~
%
'oison I
ss <
Arsenate of Lead ?
:ontents mixed with SjjS
season. Nomolas- EE j
ive. Sticks, kills. ? 1
mmH j
; ours and see com- EE j
iUSTA, GA. H
to get early shipment SS5
ity Agents.
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIW#
Y, g, 0, MAR. 22, 1923
sustained the report. When the con- '
ference report reached the house this 1
morning bitter uncompromising was i
the fight against this Todd item. A i
large quota of members, in voting to i
adopt the report also petitioned the <
Governor to veto this item, as they 1
only voted as they did to end the long i
weary session, or to avoid bringing j
on an extra session. ]
The final conference of the after- \
noon was held in the Governor's of- i
fice at 6:30 P. M., and in attendance f
were Lieut. Governor Jackson and j
Speaker McMillan and several law- i
yers of both senate and house, and the 1
result of this deliberation was that the ,
best thing to do under the circumstances
would be for both houses to shut i
up shop with the bill in Governor Mc- ;
Leod's possession, the understanding j
being that only the Todd item would t
hp vetoed.
This was carried out ,and as a re- .
suit the senate adjourned sine die by ]
action of the house.
Resolutions of Esteem. '
Throughout the day the customary
resolutions of esteem and affection were
passed by the legislature in each
body, testifying the appreciation of
the presiding officers and the clerical
forces, and others.
The session ended is the longest the
State has endured since the reconstruction
era. In its closing moments
a revenue producting measure known
as the sales and luxury bill was passed
along with the stock and bond
transfer bill of Representative McKissick,
the entire affair being a
"stamp act." It is not retroactive,
but goes into effect May first of this
y<**r.
TOIL PRICE
OF SUCCESS
While the world has been following1
with unabated interest and curiosity
the wonderful archaeological discoveries
in the Valley of the Kings,
little thought has been given to the
years of toil, research and patience
given by archaeologists in these faroff
ruins in order that these wonders
of a vanished civilization may be made
available to present generations. It
is perhaps little understood that the
recent unearthing of the tomb of
King Tutankhamun by Howard Carter,
the British excavator, represents
a continuous effort of 33 years of research
and excavation. Carter began
digging on the site of Thebes, the ancient
capital of Egypt, when he was
eighteen and has never ceased his
labors.
He was never rich enough to conduct
his own excavations, but has ininvariably
worked for others. Some
of his most notable work was done
under Theodore M. Davis, of Boston,
who from 1907 to 1914 discovered six
royal tombs and a wealth of rare
and valuable antiquities, In more recent
years Carter has been associated
wiih Lord Carnarvon, who financed
the excavating work of Tutankha|
mun's tomb. Carter has derived no
i pecuniary reward from his years of.
research. A friend has described him
as "poor as a tomb mouse.". American
visitors at the newly-found tomb
have remarked that the famous excavator
wears the same suit of clothes
and the same hat and shoes daily,
Sunday and throughout the year.
Carter's devotion and labors in the
cause of Egyptological science are
typical of the exa?^r?le of p'1 excavators,
British, American and French
in the ancient ruins of Egypt. These
men may be described as modern hermits
in this 5,000-year-old Valley of
the Kings. They le,?d a ore-sided and
narrow existence. Cut off from all
civilization and uplifting influences,
he siore or more of them who comprise
t^o foreign colonies of Luxor
move within a narrow groove and seldom
even come in contact with one ail*
other. Excavating is almost a religion
with them.
The Valley of the Kings and the
Theban hills, 450 miles up the Nile
from Cstiro. are infested with wolves,
jackals, wildcats, foxes, vultures, lizards,
scorpions, vultures, beetles and
vermin. The archaeologists live in
unpretentious stone and mortar
houses with nothing but the barest
rough-hewn furniture and the most
primitive household equipment. The
house occupied by the American experts
were built through the generosity
of the late J. Pierpont Morgan,
who was moved to pity by their privations
and exposure. I J
/\ nn^i'trAo r\-C f Un t?r? 11 At? q i?n nci- ! ^
x tic natives vi vttiiu^ c*i^
thetically poor and untutored. Food
is scarce and expensive. Water,
where it exists at all, has to be o
nought from afar in hand-buckets, t
rhe nights .are cold, and fuel is diffi- c
suit to obtain. Many of the other a
leeds of life also are lacking. The
ieat of the valley is distressingly
severe during the day, and the entire
area is pleagued with flies and
pernicious insects.
The archaeologists have few sojial
contacts. They live like recluses.
Mother-To-Be,
Read This?*
Here ts a wonderful message to *11 expectant
mothers. When the Little One arrive*,
you csn here that moment more fr*o
from suffering then
bare perhaps lmsRtncd.^^^^^??
*n eminent physician,JS _ H
ixpert In this sclenc?,^^^^^//J*
has shown tLe way. lt^AJr ^
wee he who first
diced the great remedy^^PvfVL"
"Mother's Friend/' MrslKf
C. J. Hsrtman, 8cr&&-H |r? 0HI
ton. Pa., says: BV
Vlth my flret twolf i\ v ^
children 1 had a doctorKJ f
ad a none and thsnm Vjl \v
they had to nee Instra-yft^
moots, but with my lait^A|n^Mji|
two children I
Mother** Friend and had only t nnrset I
we had no time ts get a doctor bee*mo
I wasn't very *lck?o&ly about. t*o or
fifteen minute*. |
>***?!* *****
hMNMUMlllI So Mt/ShtrJ? SJUS'S
t
rhe whole west bank of the Nile in
the neighborhood of ancient Thebes
is a desolate, forbidding waste of
mid, sand and rock. No flower oi l
vegetable or blade of grass has rearid
its head above the barren terrain
?or 50 centuries. Only the most primitive
roads exist. Houses are few
md far between. In selecting this
place for their eternal entombment
the ancients choose with an eye to
its solemnity, seclusion and silence,
rhe only human beings that move
among the sequestered ruins of what
>vas once the most flourishing city in
the world are lean and spectre-like
Arabs dressed in white robes.
The American visitor to the caverrialnous
valley which holds the imperial
dead of by-gone ages is overawed
by the majesty and dignity of
the great, precipitous sandstone
cliffs that stand sentinel on either
side of the necropolis. He is reminded
of the heights of the Grand Canyon
of the Colorado, or of Yellowstone
Falls when the noonday sun
transforms them into a golden valvey.
By day nothing disturbs the deep
repose of the place except the sound
of the pickaxes and shovels of the
crowd of native boys and men employed
in combing the earth for its
still hidden archaeological treasures.
By night the stillness of the
valley of death is broken only by the
hooting of owls and the cries of
jackals and wildcats. In the midst
of the silence and solitude one feelk
himself standing upon the brink of
two worlds, with eyes gazing into a
vista of the unknown. N
Sleeping in the heart of these
muntains are Tutankhamun and his
royal kinsfolk. Some of the tombs
go down 150 feet and extend back a
distance of three city blocks. The
ancients believed these were the portals
to heaven and everlasting life.
American visitors to the chasms of
death get a fleeting sense of eternity
and immortality as they enter the invncncc
rtf fllO trtmhc fltlll lnnlf
I IV* I. Iliv/ov ? V/WOil V .A. Diiv v vr i i i %? l VI w??
upon the wan and pathetic features
of a Pharaoh just as he was laid away
3.000 years ago. A modern electric
light throws its rays upon the emaciated
face, and gives the be holder a
thrill of awe and trepidation.
Day after day, throughout the
years, the silent, patient archaeologists
pursue their lonely calling, finding
here a broken statue of a sovereign,
there the tomb of a high
priest, here the shattered skeleton of
a human, there the crumbled figure of
a goddess, and everywhere small tokens
of a civilization that gave the
world its rudiments of culture, art
and humanity.
THREECENT TAX
ON GASOLINF
Columbia, March 22.?Spurred to a
high degree of energy after the spemnccno<?
finwvnor Mcl.ood de
livered to the Genera! Assembly at
noon today, the senate held an all afternoon
session, at which the bill,
which has already passed the house,
providing a tax of three cents per gallon
on gasoline was lengthily debated
and finally passed by the vote of 20
to 12. Senator Rogers, of Spartanburg
voted for the bill.
The increase is one cent over the
existing tax of two cents and the
terms of the measure provide that
one-third of the revenue derived shall
be used for defraying the ordinary
expenses of the State government.
One-third to be distributed to the
counties of the State, to be used exclusively
for the construction and
maintenance of roads and the remaining
third be held by the State treasurer
to the credit of the State Highway
commission for the purpose of
maintaining and improving roads
which are now or may hereafter be
incorporated into the State Highway
.rvstem without reference to county
lines.
Regardless of County Lines
Of course, the big feature is that
the increase of one cent goes to the
maintenance of highways of the State
highway system "regardless of county
lines."
Quite a lively debate was provoked
when Senator Ashton Williams, of
Florence, brought the measure up, but
this brilliant apostle of good roads
again demonstrated his executive ability
and generalship by keeping a
tense situation well in hand and never
allowing his equilibrium to get out
<* 1 i
j i pocKet.
Stewart Against Bill
Senator Roach S. Stewart, of T.nnaster,
made a forceful speech against
he measure. Senator Stewart frejuently
speaks in the senate chamber
ind is always conversant with the
MOTHER! MOVE
CHILD'S BOWELS
"California Fig Syrup" is
Child's Best Laxative
Even a ?ick child loves the "fruity"
taste of "California Fig Syrup." If the
little stomach is upset, tongue coated,
or if your child is cross, feverish, full
of oold, or hss colic, a teaspoonful will
never fail to open the bowels. In a few
hours you can see for yourself how thoroughly
it works all the constipation
tender, little bowels and gives you a
poison, sour bile and waste from the
Page Ho. 5
M'LEOD WILL Jfj
VISIT HORRY
Governor Thomas G. McLeod will
come to Conway on Saturday, April
7th, as the puest of honor and the
speaker of the occasion, which is the
annual field day for the Horry County
! schools.
His address will be delivered at 3
o'clock before the teachers, pupils,
trustees and the many patrons who
will no doubt be here to celebrate
the day.
On Sunday morning' at 9:45 o'clock,
at the school auditorium, he will deliver
an address for the members of
the men's Bible classes of the churches
of Conway.
On Sunday afternoon he is expected
to po to Murrells Inlet where he will
deliver another address.
Governor McLeod, it is said, comes
at the invitation of Miss Wil Lou
Gray of the State Department of
Education. This applies at all
events to the Field Day exercises, and
pfter he had promised to come it was
decided to ask him to deliver an adI
J _ ? 11- - 1 - 1 1 1 ! " if
j uress ai me scnooi auditorium ior ino
men's Bible classes of the town.
1 His addresses will be fully up to
his high standard as a speaker. He is
among the best speakers of South
Carolina.
VISITS HERE"
FROM FAR OFF
Dorsey Turner is the name of a
young: man. just nineteen years old,
who is spending some time here on a
visit, to Levi and Clyde Norman, the
two sons of E. G. Norman, the painter
and decorator.
This young visitor is a resident of
Woodland, Pa., and comes from that
far-o1T town aP this long distance as
a result of a friendship which had its
growth in a special column in a newspaper.
Prom what can be learned he is a
young man of exemplary character
niul inrlnt'tviiMic ??o if i o L-oiil
llivauovi IV?VIO UO ll- lO OIHV4 VIIUV
he supports his widowed mother, two
sisters and a little brother.
In a certain weekly newspaper,
which has a national circulation, more
or less, is a column conducted especially
for boys and girls in which they
may exchange letters to each other.
In this way the young- Norman boys
got to corresponding with young Turner
and the friendship thus commen1
ced and cemented by the letters had
led to this visit of the young man to
spend his vacation in the Southern
State.
subject in hand; he knows what he
wants to say and after saying it in
simple, telling language, ends. He
I stated that if all other properties and
sources of the S.ate had been taxed
as the gasoline commodity, the senate
could have easily raised $18,000,000 in
revenue. He considered the bill an injustice
to the poor man, the farmer
and the toiler.
During the debate a number of
amendments were offered, but all
'were voted down. There were in all
(six roll calls.
j On the passage of the measure the
vote was 20 to 12.
aspirInSay
"Bayer" and Insist!
^e^YT\
J ipAVgplJ
Unlftas you bw the name "Bay?r" oo
packa^v or on tahlota voii nr<> art*
ting the genuine! Bayer product pre
soribod by phytfioiana over twenty-tw<
years ami proved eafe by millions foi
Colds Headache
Toothache Lumbago
Earache Rheumatism
Neuralgia Pain, Pain
Accept "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin"
only. Each unbroken package 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 ol Mcmoaceticaoideoter of
Salicylicadd.
well, playful child again.
Millions of mothers keep "California
Fig Svrup" handy. They know a teaspoonful
today savee a nick child to*
I morrow. Ask your druggist for genuiao
I "California Fig Syrup' which has direc|
tions for babies and children of all pgta
printed on bottle. Mother! Yeu must
say "California" or you may get aa ?
imitation Jig ryrup,
jtj
JJM