The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, May 24, 1923, Page Page No. 4, Image 4

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Yage No. "4 The Hon CONWA' Entered at the Post Office at Mail I ti. Jti. WUUl^V Published Every Thursday M Com SUBSCRIPT] One Copy, One Year One Copy, Six Months One Copy, Three Months TELEPt Make all Checks or Drafts pay* H. Woodward, Con\ THURSDAY M rA%W.W.V,V.V.V.V.V.,.V. HORRY HE ^WAV.WAV.V.V.V.V.V.V.V Dust makes work in Conway, tee against haziness. o Debt is nothing but a sand foi ? r 1 i i-i Witvt: *J1 Ilcll'U llllieS. OHuman nature is not all bad, is and always has been. o j An important thing for busin more business to the town. < Conway ought to ship chickei other towns are getting ready t< o The only way to stamp out is to do away with the purchase The revival meetings do a gi entirely efficient if they could b o_ It is bad enough to put off u needed to be done today; but it c In matters of civic improvemei to stand back and wait for Geoi o The way we live and do busine socialism. It is different from t by the socialist party. o While dealing with the whis thing radical and be done with i ?hase contraband liquor? The man who has bad luck community is down on him is us for the source of his trouble. oConway needs more industry $ better way to improve the town by bringing in new enterprises. o Work is the best for all clasi nature to keep active. The hum* kept at some kind of useful perf quicker than it will wear out. o The man who gets drunk an< conduct is let off with a small fense ought to he about the sai the bootlegger and the whiskey o Whiskey stills multiply at the that is discovered and destroyed, from different sections of this c is too much of a market for the AVAVWAV.".VW.W.V.V.V. i THE MENACE ( WWAV///.V.V/.V.V.V.V//. The article which appeared in zen on the subject of street sprii the streets in Conway is a real i to the health of the people who it, but is is a source of cons tar and fixtures and furniture of th streets. T71 ror a number of years the e sprinkling was the lack of spri not own a sprinkler to be pull horses or mules, hence there wa* It was not done. In the course < by the dust was greatly increasec fic. The railroad trains passing fare we always had, and the du; as well as the noise of moving only added to the annoyance of as automobiles increased in num Later on the; town water syst it was thought that the hydra along the streets would now fur the dirt wet on dry days, but a 7 Herald Y, S. C. Conway, S. C., as second class flatter. /ARB, Editor. orning by Conway Publishing pany. [ON PRICE: $1.50 1.00 75 IONE 21. ible to The Horry Herald or H. vay, South Carolina. AY 24, 1923 ~t>* V.'.VV.'AV.V.V.'.V.'AV.V.V.V BALDING J V.'.V.V.W.V.V.VAVAW.W.' Dust is good only as a guaranmdation which cannot stand the but there is a side of it which ess men here to do is to bring o is and eggs by the carload as 3 do. whiskey stilling and bootlegging rs of bootleg liquor. o *eat deal of good, and would be e kept up all the time. ntil tomorrow the thing that is ; is worse to put off forever. > it it means failure for each man *ge to do it. George never acts. iss now is nothing but a form of he kind that is being advocated Key problem, why not do somet, by making it a crime to pur 0 and begins to think that the ually looking at the wrong place ^oing on within its bounds. The is to increase its taxable assets ses 'of the people because it is in machine will last longer when ormance. It will rust out much d is found guilty of disorderly 1 fine. Punishment for this ofne as that which is inflicted on stiller. I rate of about three for every one , judging by the reports coming county. This shows that there product of the stills. o W.V/.V.VAVAVAVAV.V.V DF THE DUST \ i V'.V.'.V.'.V.VV.V/.V.'.V.V.'.VV our last issue, written by a citiikling, was timely. The dust of menace. It is not only dangerous have to work in it and breathe it damage to the goods, papers, ose who do business along these xcuse Tiere for thp /\f I ? _ ? vow uiiyMVll^C U1 nkling apparatus. The town did ed up and down the streets by i no easy way of doing the work, of time conditions brought about 1 by reason of the increased trafthrough the principal thoroughst, smoke and cinders from that trains and locomotive engines, the ever increasing dust clouds ber, size and speed. em was installed and for a time nts placed at regular intervals nish the easy means of keeping it first there was no hose of thej THE HORRY HERALD, 00! right kind for use at these hy< after repeated urging, some ho chased. It was of the right ki] but still it was not used except needed at all times was a regula keep down the dust. Wheneve could stand it, the hose would be morning, and perhaps the next < to wet the worst places, but aft< seen of the work until conditio again. The hose was found to be a tir the time of a lusty laborer who waste places in the streets and i moved from place to place. It h two men to carry it. It took too the hose. The people still need< to take care of the dust propositi In the course of time when th of the army affairs, but thought investments have been made yet still said to be inefficient, it r Days and days will pass by when It may well be that the means The council wishes to save all t want is to have means fnrrrishi work often enough every day as town work. This must be done ir ty. SUGAR REFINERS ( Certain refiners have begun tc sugar a notice advising consumer: this commodity are due to the adopted following the women's I Commission's finding that the d added to the price, but that a re< necessarily reduce the price. (L* On the slip 'inclosed in each pa Tariff on With Free Raw S Would Cost Two Cents a The Federal Sugar Refining C "It! is apparent that the high are causing so much comment a necessary rate of import duty." fpi'lff U'CIO ^ VU<1?1 ii (vo 111LC11UCU LVJ pi and the cane sugar growers of the American public $200,000,0( /Sugar Barons to that amount. APRIL COMMER* Commercial failures almost as in point of liabilities involved as month were reported during Apr teen years have these failures I were this year. The failures reported by Brae ending May 1, were 1,638. This for April, 1922, but 228 more thi month of the Harding Administr BUS MACHINE WAS WAS HELD UP (Continued From Page One.) county is missing the benerit of a good money crop that it might now < he enjoying it' it had been able to get the co-operation of the railroad company. It is believed in some quarters uf fh A l'A fiif o 1 1 1 i ?; wi tut ran road company to co-operate came from the fact tlvit it believed that the Chamber of Commerce had taken sides against the company in promoting the establishment of a bus line between Conway and Marion. Of course it is understood that no . opposition was intended on the part of either the chamber or the people ] generally. They were only after ( securing the quickest and best service they could get in making the trip from Conway to other points in the State and return so as to save the time of the long trip by way of Chadbourn. EIGHTNEGROES PAY UP FINES On last Sunday the town policeman was standing on the corner of Third avenue and Main street when he heard a big racket that, was going on in the shanties of the Conway Lumber Com i J-_.I " ' ? ? jmny, lucateu near i,ne town oounaary, and occupied by a number of negro laborers. When he amved at the scene he found two of the negroes engaged in a fight. The remainder of the party were noisy and disorderly. He took eitrht of them to the guardhouse where they were kept confined until Monday morning and when arraigned in the mayor's court each one was fined in the sum of five dollars and allowed to go. Experience has shown that it is impossible to keep negro laborers in peace while occupying lumber camps and they are not at work. There is so much chance to use the cocaine snifT and the monkey rum bottle. Such a place affords a ready market for drugs of all kinds and strong- drink and hootch of any variety that can be produced. Seven of the arrested negroes belongs J to the crews of the Conway Lumber Company, while one was found to be an employee of the VeIneer Manufacturing Company. The fines imposed for this breaoh of the peace may have a good effect fbr a HWAY, S. 0, MAY 24, 1923 irants. In the course of time, se for this purpose was purnd and apparently plenty of it on rare occassions. What was r system of street sprinkling to v the dust got so bad nobody used maybe for an hour in the day there would be an attempt 3r that there was nothing more ris haDDened to o*pt nnhpovoWa A m 0 w V vt??iv/VM&U^/lV ne-killer. It took up too much of > was needed in rebuilding the sidewalks. The ho$e had to be ad to be small to allow one or long to do the work when using 3d something better than hose ' ion. e town bought a sprinkler, one to be efficient. Although thesr; the work of street sprinkling is nay not be thorough enough, there is still a plenty of dust, for doing the work are limited, he funds they can. What we 1 *d in some way for doing the ] a part of the daily routine of i viewiof the increasing necessi- ] > 3N TARIFF COSTS > insert in all their packages of s that the recent high prices of tariff. This practice has been [ )oycott of sugar and the Tariff uty of 2.20 cents a pound has iuction of the tariff would' not 1 mghter.) ! ckage is this legend: Sugar. I ugar This Sugar ! you About Pound Less. 'ompany says: prices for refined sugar which re due to the extreme and un'otect" the beet sugar interests Louisiana. It has already cost )0 or more and enriched the > Z\AL FAILURES large in number and as costly ever were recorded in a single il. Only twice in the last sixteen as many in April as they Istreet's awnnv for +V?p mrkr?tV? I ? ? ? ? ? - - ?' ^ ? VA V* illV/ll VU I | was 316 fewer than the total 11 an during April 1921, the first ! ation. I i i ???????????????? ( time, but it will not last. Just as i soon as the memory of it wears off and this crowd happen to be idle and knocking around the camps on Sunday, or on Saturday night, there is likely to \)e another outbreak of the same nature. INSECTS HURT YOUNG CROPS Reports from Socastee are to the effect that the young crops in the i swamp fields near the beach have been almost ruined in some places by insects. Stands of corn, beans and other small truck are very bad owing to the work of the small bugs. The warmer weather has come too late to prevent this damage, but most of the planters, so far as could be learned are planting labe, and hope to make a J good crop just the same. o ? Fine commencement programs and ' invitation cards at the Herald office. o FOR OVER 40 YEARS t* A t T ?n n a m a uriniiuo V/AI Aivrvn MIUUlLiniU naa 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 Burfaces. thus reducing the inflammation. Sold by all druggists. P. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio. Child-birth Valuable Illustrated Book Sent Fr?? How thousand* of women, by the simple method of an eminent physician, have avoided unnecessary miseries through many months and up to the moment Baby has arrived, is f 1 _ iL. ?1. ?1.1 - explained in me rcmarivauifi H book, "Motherhood and th?^^^'/^/>M Jin by." Telia alto what do before and after baby^^H^^^F comes, probable date birth, baby rules, etc., and Km ftwL1." about "Mother'a Friend," BV IT' ti?ed by three generations WK |\\ of mothers, and sold in alllW T*\ ^ drug stores every where, kf irOt f "Mother's Friend" ia ap-H^ \. plied externally. Is aafe, free from narcotica, permita easier natural read- 'k-p justment of muscles and nervea during expectancy and child-birth. Start using it to* day. Mrs. E. E. Kerger, Slayton, Minn., says J "It pulled me through." Send for book to* day, to Bradield Regulator Co., BA4I, Atlanta, Oa. "Mother'a Friend" to goM at aO drag atom. OLD JAKE SEZ: Whut is the use to fus an complain. It is jest as well to rejoice. When God sorts out weather an sends us rain, rain is his an shud be your choice. WORK ON ROAD THROUGH BAYS That part of the road to Myrtle Beach which runs from the bridges across lake and river to what is known |W.W.V,V.V,',V.V,V,V,%W,V \ Prepare for a Su ' I Buy l! Electric | NC I and cook in comfori I I- Cooking by electricity is I % j; SAFE?Absolutely ; way to the housew i| ECONOMICAL? < bor and food by pi j: SANITARY?No I if food boils over 01 / done, for the heate< . t ' off clean. r ; SURE?You know be the same, you c< results. We have every electric I housework a pleasure. Cc ; stock, j? Quattlebaum L * NS"' *' " ^ V^/-v ' X;: k ** # '*.> as the red hills, has been about the worst section of the whole line of travel from this point to the Myrtle Beach hotel. It will now be placed in better condition and it is hoped that this work will be finished before the busiest portion of the summer season has come. The road commissioner advertised in the last issue of The Horry Herald for workmen to place on this job. Last week surveys were bein# made so that the road bed may be raised hiirh enoutrh to avoid the hiirh water of freshets. * JL After Every Meal wwggry Chew .your food well, then use WRIGLEY'S to aid digestion. It also keeps the teeth clean, breath sweet, appetite keen* mmer's Comfort ? an : Range L )W t all the year round ? \ 1 no danger in anv rife or children. ^ -Saves fuel, time, la- ? reventing shrinkage. A> dirt or bother?even ^ i it, there is no harm ! ' d coils burn the food I; the heat will always ? an always be sure of ? servant you need to make 5 >me and see our complete ? .ight & Ice Co. W.V.V//.1. ... ...?r r^.V/JV i | ' T^A I j >lGEP;WEAVIN#m-^ ? y^UCCESSFULLY^Vt?7?- ' tNNid 1 il