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Yfcge No. 4 Thp Horry Herald CONWAY, S. C. 1 Entered at the Post Office at Conway, S. C.? as second class i Mail Matter. ! mmtm**"* 1 TT TT \1rrvArv\17 ADD JTL. XI. VV V? wf\JCVA>, XUUICWI. ^ Published Every Thursday Morning by Conway Publishing- 1 Company. '* SUBSCRIPTION PRICE: J 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 Hor.vy Herald or H. ( H. Woodward, Conway, South Carolina. < THURSDAY MAY 3, 1923 ^ < rV.VA\VWAV.V.\\V.,.,.V.V.\,.%V.VVVW.,.V.D1VB,.V.,.V.,.,aV * HORRY HERALDING =: ( /VA,AV.V.V.VV/.\V.VV.V.,.V.V.,.V.%\V/.V.WAWiW.Vi,.V 1 Too much fertilizer is worse than hardly enough. 1 o * Mnvino- fla \t patyioc 4r\r\ nffnn fnr cnmo moii fa r<nn/ir>n/-l ?J VU1UV.U KVV/ Vi. I/Vll iUl U\/lHVy 1HV/11 llU iJUWUCUl o Find out where you want to go and then drive directly to the place. j o More people, more improvements; more money required, more taxes. ? P A tobacco crop is a jealous mistress. It resents the least bit. , of neglect. ^ o Deeper ditches would improve some of the farms we have seen in this county. ' o Before planting and cultivating the cotton crop, learn how to poison the weevil. o Man cannot change the laws of nature but he can learn how to work with them. o We have great expectations from the strawberry industry in this section of the State. o Better packing houses will mean a better tobacco crop on many farms in this county. o Some Horry farmers are making two crops now on land where they formerly raised but one. o Confidence is a great thing to spur men onward. Without it there Is failure to begin with. o Respect for the law, because it is the law: That is what we need in the cause of prohibition. o Many of us are afraid to face the cold fatfts as they really are and we throw up & smoke screen. o The wealthiest farmers in Horry today are the ones who have . been the longest at the same plantation. o ? Easy street comes to those who worked and never to those who thought they could arrive by doing nothing. o It is not what we do but the way we do it that makes the difference in our results and those of the other fellow. o By the time we are through worrying over one income tax return there is another waiting for us at the postoffice. o As population increases the tobacco habit grows, and there will always be a demand for the product of the tobacco grower. o Home demonstration leads to the building of better homes, and making conditions better in those which are already built. o The small merchant, as a rule, extends too much credit to people who cannot pay him, and the result is a call from the sheriff. o The advantage of one man will turn out to be an advantage of others in many instances where those others seem to resent it at first. o Raising two crops on the same land from the same lot of fertilizer is like making two blades of grass spring up and grow where only one did before. o There is a tendency to expect things to be easy whereas they must be hard. This is the reason so many quit their jobs and go off to hunt one somewhere that will be easy only to repeat the same thing over and over again and never do anything. Success means rolling stones up hill and down hill. There is no job that is easy when it is rightly filled. o I TWENTY YEARS SEES CHANGE $ J^/W/WAVW/.VMVAVWW.V.VAV.V.VMV.Vd" Many improvements have been accomplished in the public road system in this county within the last twenty years. Before that time travel in almost any direction from Conway off into the county was an uncertain quantity. In times of flood men had to Stop and enquire as to the height of the flood waters in the THE HOEEY HERALD, 001 iwamps before beginning the trij The county roads wound and t and over the blackjack hills, thr< the soil was of that class of eart were dangerous to life and limb nixed with clay. Upon coming which the 'roads pass, there was the vehicle would be able to pull water of the swamp filling the r and extending out on each side i siderable distances. You could r pools that met your gaze when through to the other side. If tl holes in the bottom too deep, th sometimes wet you as you sat on lo such conditions and it never fr you. The horse would exert his i efforts often turned into a swim 3n through the black water and those times it was a good day's j< Sea or Floyd's and return. It was 3r Socastee, or to the Little Rive All of that has been changed, c sxtend in almost every direction neans of transportation over the nakes now carry the people quic 3ver the bad swamps where mei :he crossing might not be made, ligh and strongly made bridges ing there is as safe as anywhere. This building of better roads i m an increased valuation of the 3ac.k yonder of which we have ju sold for one dollar per acre whe ten or twenty. Land which was and selling at from five to ten < Dought for from twenty to fifty ^elopment and increasing values rul cliange nas only really begur depression after the war lands w what they had been bringing. T1 ^rop in the valuations. They ar and will no doubt, before many y bo which they went in the time not go downward anymore, but r of prices. What has been done in the las the bucket compared to what wil Within the next twenty years otl the county perhaps in two or thr directions in which the steel rail today will be much better still ir and easier and quicker means c that next period shall have gone FREE SVGA Fine granulated sugar is sellir hundred pounds, f. o. b. New Yo Fine granulated sugar for doir wholesale in New York for about I he sugar tor export is retined since it is to be shipped abroad, sold to Americans is taxed at tl pounds. There is a difference of $2.40 sugar which pays the tariff and k What explains this difference cents a pound ? Will any Republican deny that $2 of this $2.40 a hundred? If \ ordinary intelligence "believe whs TARIFF O Bacon from the United States competition with Danish bacon i the people of New York and oth< ing all the way frm 32 to 45 c< same quality. "Retail price here represents a wholesale price, according to Lo: to the New York Evening World The Fordney-McCumber profil of 2 cents a pound on bacon, ham the packers and exporters get th< ly enough to permit them to cc Danish provision dealers three tl PEACE COMES TO KU KLUX Atlanta, Ga.?Hostilities for control of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan ended with the signing of an armstice between the opposing factions. William J. Simmons, emperor and H. W. Evans, imperial wizard, are retained in their posts under the agreement.. The controversy was brought to a close through the efforts of the commission of klansmen, aided, it was said, by independent counsel, Arthur G. Powell, anc\ Hollins H. Randolph, non-members of the order. Judge E. I). Thomas, on motion of counsel for both sides, dismissed his order and dissolved the commission of three which had been directing the affairs of the klan. Tills commission was composed of Emperor Sipimons, Imperial Wizard Evans and J. M. ueorge, marshal of the municipal court. The contest originated over the Kanielia, the women's organization formed and founded by Col. Simmons STWAY, S. 0, MAY 3, 1923 ). wisted through the pine forests ough deep ruts of sand where ,h, and through bog holes that , at places where the soil was to one of the swamps through always a feeling of doubt that through. There was the black un in the center of the stream into the road bed often to coniot see the bottom of the black trying to negotiate a passage lie water was too high and the e buggy would sink down and the seat. The horse was used ightened him as much as it did strength in pulling forward. His but nevertheless he would forge the mire until safely across. In Hirney from Conway into Green ; just about the same into lowr section of the county. >r nearly all. Good hard roads Instead of the horse as a 3 roads, automobiles of various ;kly trom one place to another, i and women were afraid that there is now no doubt, because span their depths and the gos one thing which has resulted lands of the county. In times ist written, land in many places re now it cannot be bought for considered good in those days lollars per acre, now cannot be dollars, or even more. The debrought about by this wonder1 to take place. Following the ent down to some extent from lis, however, is but a temporary e now on an upward tendency ears, reach the same high point of inflation, and then they will nay go still higher in the scale t twenty years is but a drop in 1 take place in the next twenty. tier railroads will have traversed 1 1 ! / /? 1 11 ee directions ainerent irom tne Is now run. The good roads of 1 that time. There *will be new >f getting over the land before by. Ir lower ig for export at about $6.60 a rk. lestic consumption is selling a? ; $9 a hundred pounds. in this country under bond and, pays no tariff duty. The sugar le rate of $1.7648 a hundred a hundred pounds between the the sugar which is duty free. 2 of $2.40 a hundred, or 2 4-10 'the tariff accounts for at least I le does deny it, will any one of it he says? o nbacon is selling in English markets in it about 25 cents a pound, while er cities in this country are payor?lo a nnnnH fr?v nropfinallv thn Uli to U I^VUllU IVi |/1 UV/ViVUAlJ Vltv ibout 17 per cent profit over the ndon butchers," says a dispatch leers' tariff law imposes a duty s, shoulders and other pork. But eir hogs from the farmer cheapen pete with both British and lousand miles overseas. along the lines of the klan. According; to Fred R. Johnson who has been acting as chief of staff for Emperor Simmons, the agreement reached with Dr. Evans calls for the imperial wizard to remove his objections to the Kamelia and to give it the support of the klan. Emperor Simmons, on his part, it was declared, agreed to cancel hi? court action for absolute control of [roil^Eflii] 1 SCOTT'S I EMULSION I has bMn a larg? jnjJ I factor In raiting J\jU J[ tha standard of | GOOD HEALTH | .> > OLD JAKE SEZ: ; C > .I. i 1 ?????< V T This is what Jake sez. 1 am * Jjc his tother brother. Jake noes # 5k more than 1 do, he went to col- j ? ledge. I didn't, but 1 rite the # t best hand. He does the thinking 4j j an' I does his riting. If yo say * # so we will rite more. * * * 'E sez 'e dun forgot to tell yon that our title is Smith, Jake Smith, an I am his tother = brother. Jake sez when the good Lord made this world he made Adam and Eve and named them Adam Smith and Eve Smith and put them in the garden an told them just as long as tha done right their nameL would be Smith but just as sure as tha done rong he would turn them out an change their name. You see theres Woodwards, an Dusenburys, an Burroughs & Collins, an Sessions, an Spiveys, an Thompsons, an Lemmons, an Atkins, an Gordons and all the rest what aini Smith, the las one of you's done suthin, but thank the Lord me an Jake am yit on solid ground. FINEST LETTER FILES Leader letter files are kept in stock at The Herald office. They are best at the price which they are sold and will take good care of the business letters and private correspondence. Call and buy as many as you need for your homo or store. the klan and work in absolute harmony \Vith Imperial Wizard Evans and both wi'l bend their efforts to establish friendly relations between the ra^ inns. Emperor Simmons, in o statement issued tonight regarding the settlement of the controversy, saidL his "supreme concern was to have clearly defined my rights and the rights of all other klans to participate in the ovtroni'/Mtio^ of Prot^st^ut, patriotic white American women." Such rights were established by today's agreement, the statement said. FOR OVER 49 YEARS HALL'S CATARRH MET>ICINB has been used successfully in the treatment of Catarrh. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE consists of an Ointment which Quickly Relieves by local application, and the Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces, thus reducing: the inflammation. Hold by all druggists. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. I Calco Automatic \ Turns Sw< Into Far i | w ; Gate is absolutely at water to flow off yoi flood or tide water j your land again. One plantation man Gate converted 1,50< i mosquito breeding s tive farm land. WRITE DEPT. FOR J The Dixie Culve I ATLANTA * The findings of the board will be k'' lade a court decree by consent," ^ Colonel Simmons said, adding that the original charter and the constlion and by-laws of the order were armonized and the organization was eestablished upon the charter foundaion." It was said that no changes in klan eadquarters personnel was contemlated. | After Every Meal ^ VHOEirs 5 Chew your food 4/ I well, then use I WRIGLEY'S to I aid digestion* 1 It also keeps I lite teeth clean, I breath sweet, I appetite keen* I The Great American 3 Sweetmeat >4 Steps, etc. Scrub the cold-cellar with a RED Seal Lye solution of one teaspoonful to a bucket of water. Prevents fermentation and mould, keeps vegetables and preserves sweet and good. Ideal for treating any grimy wall, k steps or floor. Rb?> Seal. Lye gives very fine result9 a wticii uscu wuii wimc-waaii on out - buildings, chickenhouses and the like. Write for booklet describing uses. Full directions in each can. Be ~^ sure and buy only the genuine RED SEAL Lye. P. C. Tom too & Co. ::ta^:532!33:r;r3^i : Drainage Gate j imp Land m Land J I iniMiwif.iirtTniTfntTrirr1 B ; V,v ' * . . . .... 1 -.f I itomatic, permitting lr land but prevents from backing up on writes that & Calco D acres of -vorthless bivamn into rV^nr. ! SPECIAL LITERATURE | trt & Metal Co. i GEORGIA 9 f r m 4II AH 1^1 J t 1 ,> uifl ?