The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, April 12, 1923, Page Page No. 4, Image 4
Ti|? Ho. 4
I The Hon
1 CONWA
Entered at the Post Office at
Mail
* 1 ?
H. H. WOOD!
Published Every Thursday ft
Con
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Make all Checks or Drafts pay
H. Woodward, Con
THURSDAY A
wwwjv.vvavw.v.v.w.v:
I HORRY H:
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Credit business is bad for bot
Make it your object to get so
A good name is hard to reg
<
It is useless to plan unless t
Time spent in useless argum
c
Each member of the commun
member.
Land is going at the block nc
tion will not remain so.
The cooperative marketing i
tention to the matter of seeds,
This section is recovering fr<
It was freely predicted that it v
A man had just as well be yo
he is and you allow him to kno*
The granting of a favor to i
is a test of human kindness tha
The man who is always tall
- different ways is the one who ii
ment.
i
Most law suits have their i
which could be easily adjusted
the right spirit towards each ot
The cold weather of recent w
i
. ; the safety of the young tobaccc
bacco belt. So far the injury 1
, and perhaps none.
The smaller tracts of timbe
sought by lumber interests. F
wanted. Lumber mills did no1
get a string of big tracts. Tin
small tracts are growing in vali
c
Credit is a thing which is I
there is confidence it is easy to
is shaken and lost, credit goes
not realized until the ability to
' of the other blessings that cor
appreciated while it is plentiful
desired when it is lost.
yy+jMW/wwwwaw.
5 AVOIDING TT
V.WWAV//.WWAV/W.
It is impossible to succeed ii
have been eliminated and we cj
i main issue.
In everything that we tack
leading away from the direct
time turning out on those we a
toward the destination we had
Things would be accomplish*
, pense if we could concentrate
efforts and leave off for all t
? and which are allowed to take
This is one of the things w
of the General Assembly. Th<
posed meet each year without
. the things that must be done \
man has his own views of wha
: most of the time of the longes
struction was spent in trying
. the numberless side issues tha
When the assembly met th<
to tackle was the tax situatic
. vising ways and means of pro>
rising tide of expenses. Prope
. the burden of taxation for all t
the increase that would be neel
; property. More money must c
jpJT?., ,, I , ,
^??????
ry Herald
T, S. C.
Conway, S. C.? as second class
Matter.
WARD, Editor.
lorning by Conway Publishing
ipany.
'ION PRICE:
1 ;.*1.50
1.00
75
HONE 21.
able to The Horry Herald or H.
way, South Carolina.
PRIL 12, 1923
?
WV.W.'.VAW.V.V.VAW.V.V
ERALDING j'
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h parties.
-o
>mething done.
_o
ain once it has been lost.
o
he plans are to be carried out.
?o
ent would make fortunes for us.
>
ity has something on every other
-o
>w for small sums but this condi-o
ticovA^iauuu suuuiu pay nwre ai?
)m the effects of the boll weevil,
rould.
o
t
ur enemy as for you to think that
r that you think that he is.
?o
mother who does not deserve it
t many of us cannot stand*
-o
ring of his unbounded success in
5 usually behind others in achieve3
Inception in a misunderstanding
between the parties if they had
her.
-o
eeks caused some fear regarding
> plants in all sections of the tohas
been reported as very slight
0
r in this section are now being
ormerly a tract by itself was not
b want to buy unless they could
iber is being depleted and the
je every year.
)
)ased on confidence. As long a3
obtain credit, but when confidence
with it. The value of credit is
obtain credit is lost. Like many
ne to men in this world, it is not
but is made much of and greatly
?o
mvvv/.v.vAV.v/.VAW.vj;
-IE MAIN ISSUE $
VV/.VA-W.W.V.V.V.V.V.'.V.V
1 an undertaking until side issues
in HirPri. our ar?1 a
- w vv?* MV1V Hl? W11V/1U11 IU LUC
le in this world we find avenues
road and so long as we spend our
re losing time in making progress
in view.
2d in less time and with less exmore
on the main object of our
ime the side issues that come in
up our time and efforts.
hich prolonged the recent session
3 two bodies of which it is comany
idea of getting together on
for the welfare of the State. Each
it is proper and necessary and the
it session since the time of reconto
smooth out the differences on
t were allowed to come in.
2 most important thing for them
>n. There was a necessity of deciding
more revenue to defray the
rty had been standing too much of
his time. It was not right to raise
led by an increased levy on visible
;ome or else the institutions of the
THE HORRY HERALD, 001
State would Buffer. Instead of ti
with the main issue in view from
their abilities came at the time
been adjourned and everybody g<
By putting off and wrangling <
taken up and the session ran to <
to a close and there had been
^letely done. The tax1 problem \
have been had the makers of out
problem at the beginning and h;
side issues to step in to confuse
The problem is left for the ne>
one left it off. In the tax laws
flaws. Thy contain numerous ch
pie as a whole. All classes of
made equal in standing the burde
These things miffht have been fo
and in much less time than it tool
In affairs of State it is especial!
shall be set aside and the main i
doing that they get into heated
are not important and spend neai
It has been said with truth th
Legislature has lost its time in n<
bers who want to dispute over th
RISE IN WOM
Women will find the market v
somewhat informative if not alt*
The trade reports on women's goc
silks, pongees, hat trimmings an
teresting. For instance, this itei
"On 4-4 bleached cottons, price
a yard to a basis of 13 1-3 cents
head bleached goods also have ad
1 cent yard. Advances (on wide
expected when the new lists are
basis of 72 cents for 10-4 goods i
has prevailed for some time past
The tariff is responsible for
moHo irt tVio nef nf ?
AAtMV&V AAA Vi&V VO V VI VV/ttV/U dilU yy
is due to the higher cost of raw
GINGHAMS UP 5
Gingham is an attractive, was!
women's summer wear, and it o
-i?
But the profiteers' tariff is makii
view of the cotton textile mark*
prosaic but useful reading for w
"The last of the important li
opened here (New York) yesterd
cents was put on 26-inch Bates i
previous price on this goods wa
ginghams were also priced, yest
cents a yard."
These increases of from 5 to 1
mills. They will be pyramided by
as the ginghams pass from the i
The retail price-will show a consi
MARLOW GAINS
COTTON SUIT
In the suit of H. L. Marlow against
the Conway Iron Works over a bale
of sea island cotton, the jury found
a verdict for the plaintiff for the value
of the cotton. It appeared from
the evidence that this bale of cotton
had been left with the company to be |
ginned; that when the bale had been
finished it was placed out in the yard
where it was supposed to have been 1
taken by the owner, but he introduced
testimony which indicated that the
bale of cotton was taken by W. Percy
Hardwick, who was in the cotton
brokerage business at that time.
There was a good deal of contradictory
evidence in this case and the ,
jury did well in arriving at a decision.
It appeared to be a case in which a
mistrial would likely result.
o *
TALKING HARD TIMES
Some people have thought hard
times and talked hard times until it
Appears to be really hard With them,
and there is more hard times in their
imaginations now than really can exist
in fact. It is a mistake for men
XMHttK
?
IS
M HB * IB V
IWAT, 8. 0, APE. 12, 1923
ickling this problem at once and
i the beginning^ the real test of
when the session should have
>ne home to rest.
over the subject the time was '
eleven weeks. The session came
something done, but not comlas
not been solved as it might
' laws got to the bottom of the 1
ad not allowed the unimportant >
and bother. 1
;t session to take up where this t
as they stand there are many *
ances of unfairness to the peo- t
the people are far from being
n of taxation thrust upon them,
und and removed from the laws
k to get ready for the work,
ly needful that the unimportant
rnrpose carried out. Instead of
arguments over questions that
iy all of their time at that,
at most of the sessions of our
othing but useless talk by memings
that are not important.
i
EN'S GOODS
ages of their daily newspapers \
[)gether enjoyable these days.
>ds?woolen and cotton textiles,
id the like?are particularly inn:
s have been advanced 1-4 cent
for Pacific mill goods. Indian
vanced and brown goods are up
sheetings and pillow cases) are
issued and they may run to a
igainst 65 cents, the basis that
If
80 per cent of every increase
roolen textiles. The remainder
cotton. i
1
ro 10 PER CENT
i
table and durable material for
Uflrht to hp rPAAnnfthlo in nri/?o
ig it costlier every day. A re- i
t contains this note, which Is \
omen: 1
ines of Eastern ginghams was J
ay for fall, when a price of 21 '
seersucker gingham. The last ?
s 19 1-2 cents. Bates zephyr
erday at an advance of 1 1-2 \
1
.0 per cent are in prices at the t
all the middlemen and dealers <
nanufacturer to the consumer. .
iderable advance.
to get into this habit of doing nothing
but talk hard times. Hard timeshave
always b?en with us, more 01
less, with more er less of the people
of the world. Imagination c.an play
a wonderful part in this losing game
of hard times.
0 7
Let the Horry Herald do it.
Child-birth
Valuable Illustrated Book Sent Free
Bow thousands of women, by the simple
method of an eminent physician, have avoided
unnecessary miseries through many months
end up to tho moment
Baby has arrived, Is fully
explained in the remarkablo H
book, "Motherhood and the y/ B
Baby." Tells also what to^^^^T^pr
do before and after babyHV^^T
comes, probable date of HyTHrv'
birth, baby rules, etc., andKf VKr.
about "Mother'a Friend," IV mX%4
used by three generations mm 1V\ ^
of mothers, and sold in all VV T V\_ A'
drug stores everywhere.m/ \rrJ f
"Mother's Friend" is ap?H %JB V
plied externally, is safe, InvJTvVlN^L
free from narcotics, permite
easier natural read*
justmcnt of muscles and nerves during expectancy
and child-birth. Start using it to*
day. Mrs. ?. E. Kerger, Slay ton, Minn., sayst
"It pulled me through." Send for book today,
to Bradfleld Regulator Co., BA-M, Atlanta,
Ga. "Mother's Friend" is sold at all
drug stores.
jOOOOC"JOL>P?
i
$ Wome
uu^uyyuM
mnrnrmnn
J ? w*?11 11 ?
W. A. PRINCE :
ANSWERS SMITH
Reply to Article of Jeremiah
Smith in a Recent
Issue
Sditor Herald:
Will you please give us space in
roiir Herald just this once more to re>ly
to the Senator of Horry?
To begin with, I shall ask the Senaor
to disabuse his mind now and for
ill time thnt the eastern section to
vhich Mr. Carter and I have referred
x>, is not my section, as he statei in
lis nrfipl/i I !!"/? m ?--i'
V4VIVI A Uf V Alt Vll^ IIUHUC III
;ection of Horry, only & few miles
prom the State line, near Tabor, N.
D. All my property is in Green Sea
ownship. I live twenty-eight miles
rom Little River, even further than
he senator resides, and twenty miles
rom Nichols, so neither of these secions
caiv be called mine. Also I reeived
20 votes at Little River and
II at Ployds. The reader can very
eadily see that I owe neither section
ny thing because of political honors.
iVe are servants of the people and
vere only trying to answer the call
>f duty.
The Nichols bridge, as we stated,
s already condemned. Marion and
lorry Counties are responsible for
my damage which may happen there.
The two small bridges would aid the
armers of Horry in marketing their
jroduce; the bridge would serve the
ourists.
The Senator states that we erred in
very statement. We stated that out
>f $200,000 bond issue, of which Little
liver and Simpson Creek will pay
>31,000, that they have not had as
nuch as one mile of highway built.
Mr. Carter and I may have erred as
he Senator states, but we leave it to
jvery taxpayer, also to the records at
he court house as to the proof of our
tatement. The Senator may seek to
ell the truth, yet, in his old age. he
las become absent-minded and forgets
he facts set forth in his own bill,
-{e says that I know the estimated
:ost of the big bridge to be only $200,)00,
and that Horry's share would ony
be $60,000. Yes, I do remember
hat there has never been such an es;imate
made. If he is correct, then
jl;Vi v rliH Via nnf t7R AAA i? "
tvmnj \*?>? ?IV V VjVW HI VCI^ l/VIIU Ifl"
sue to take care of a $50,000 item ?
The Senator would have you believe
3iat I don't know what I'm talking
about when I intimate that Horry's
jart of the cost of the big: bridge
would be $100,000. For his information
I am submitting: the following
etter from the Highway Department,
vhich shows the total cost, and Horn's
share is one-fourth of it:
'Mr. W. A. Prince,
Loris, S. Cr
'Dear Mr. Prince:
"In reply to your letter of M.irch
&9th, addressed to Mr. L .H. Thomas,
ror estimated cost for construcing a
bridge over Big. Pee Dee Riv^r at
fawhannah Perry near Port Harrelion
was $400,000.00. This estimate
was based on the main spans with
iFKlfK Tf
TAKEN
I '
"Dodson's Liver Tone" Stre
Salivating, Dangerous C<
You?Don't Lose a Day'
I discovered a vegetable #compound
that does tho work of "dangerous,
sickening calomel and I want every
reader of this paper to buy a bottle
for a few cents and if it doesn't
straighten you up better and quicker
than salivating calomel just go back
4/\ 4 ll A ft ^ A B A AM/1 a 1\A
iu I'll" diuiu aim juur iiiunuy imcn,
I guarantee that one spoonful of
Dodson's Liver Tone will put your
sluggish liver to "work and clean your
thirty feet of "bowels of 4he sour bile
and constipation poison ' which is
clogging your system and making you
feel miserable.
1 guarantee that one spoonful of this
harmless liquid liver medicine will
relieve the headache, biliousness, coated
ttWWWM
in's To
joooouoooo
nnnnrvVVVV
s
JB L?LL'I11"JL"1? JUJP1F JIW^'IL . ?HI
concrete and steel and creonoted timber
approaches. It was based on pric- "
es current about January 1st, 1922r
Which were somewhat below the present
level. It is probable, however,
that by substituting local cypress for
the cresoted timber piling a bridge*
could be constructed at present for
about the amount of the estimate. '
"Yours very truly,
THOS. H. MOOREFIELD,
"State Highway Engineer" ^
I am quoting from the Acts of *
1922, the Senator's own bill, page
1462, "Bond Issue by Horry Count#."
For bridge at Yawhannah Ferry 1
$75,000, for Waccamaw $26,000; for
Lumber river at Nichols $7,500? \
making a total of $107,500. 1
This is the bill that I submitted to
the people last year. A recent estimate
of the Waccamaw bridge by
Messrs. Little and Pitts was $18,000. 1
Mr. Moorefield stated that it would I
take $7,000 to build the abuttments
and road; also that Horry's part of 1
the Nichols bridge would cost, at least,
$5,000, making a total of $80,000. The 1
Senator states that our bill called for J
$35,000; you can decide who is tell
ing the truth. "Just absent-minded."
(Continued On Page Seven.) 1
CATARRH 1
Catarrh Is a Local dlnase greatly In* 1
fluenced by Constitutional conditions. I
HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE con- 1
tuts of an Ointment which gives Quick M
Relief by local application, and the
Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which acts
through the Blood on the Mucous Sur- M
faces and assists in ridding your System
of Catarrh.
Sold by druggist* for over 40 Tears.
P. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo. O. I
ASPIRIN ]
Say "Bayer" and Insist! 1
Unless you see the nam* "Bayer" on
package or on tablets you are not getting
the genuine Bayer product pre- i
acribed by physicians over twenty-two
yeara and proved aafe by millions for
Colds Headache *
TM4k..k. T V
AWVU?VllO UUUllMgU I|1
Earache Rheumatism ||V
Neuralgia Pain, Pain | VI
Accept "flayer Tablet* of Aspirin*' U
only. Each unbroken package contains
proper direction*. Handy boxes of
twelve tablets cost few cents. Drug- iB
gists slso sell bottles of 24 and 100.
Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer M
Manufacture of Monoaoetioacidecter of >1
Salicvlicacid. !
IDAY!
0 CALOMEL
lightens You Up Better Than
Eilomel and Doesn't Upset
s Work?Read Guarantee
tongue, ague, malaria, sour stomach
or any other distress caused by a .
torpid liver as quickly as a dose of
vile, nauseating calomel, besides it will
not make you sick or *eep you from
a day's work. 1
Calomel is poison.?it's mercury?it
attacks the bones often causing rheumatism.
Calomel is dangerous. It \
Bickens?while my Dodson's Liver Tone 1
is safe, pleasant and harmless. Eat
anything afterwards, because it can
not salivate. Give it to the children
because it doesn't upset the stomach
or shock the liver. Take a spoonful ]m
tonight and wake up feeling fine and
ready for a full day's work.
mm mm M| mm mm mm
^h*t^h ^m
nic I ]
? . ^m ^^m