The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, June 14, 1923, Page Page No. 4, Image 4
Yftge Ko. 4
THE HORRY HERALD
CONWAY, s. c. ;
Entered at the Post Office at Conway, S. C.? as second class
Mail Matter. I
H. H. WOODWARD, Editor.
Published Every Thursday Morning by Conway Publishing
Company.
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. Woodward, Conway, South Carolina.
1 - mmmm
THURSDAY JUNE 14, 1923
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? HORRY HERALDING J
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The less you do the less you want to do.
o
The more you do the more you want to do.
?o
The way of the transgressor may be long as well as hard.
o
The time-payment plan has made it still easier to own a motor
car.
o
There are too many graduates who do not seem to know anything*
vet.
c? /
o
Laziness would be a good thing if it would keep people from
going in debt.
o
Things not paid for may or may not remain to come again; but
the bill will come again.
o
It does not pay to fight against right and justice for things
will turn in spite of all.
o
To the man who has had his time and did not use it, the door
of hope is forever closed.
o
The most important man on any job is the one who succeeds
in keeping the details straight.
o
One man may have less book learning than another and still
have a whole lot more common sense.
o
Most things accumulate. Indolence does that very
thing. It increases out of all proportion to what it begins at.
o
We all want success and the things that this will bring but
we are unwilling to do the hard wrork that is required. Very well.
-o
We wait in vain for the things that seem to come to others
by chance while in fact the others did not get them by chance.
o
As a community grows in population and wealth the harder
becomes the fight that must be made against the forces which
deprave and then destroy. *
o
The enforcement of the law against whiskey is fast becoming
the costliest thing the government has to stand. It is about to
cause an increased schedule of courts.
o
One great extreme follows another in the affairs of nations as
in affairs of individuals. Germany went from one to the other
as a nation.
o
The trouble about our jails and penitentiaries is not in these
institutions themselves, but in the fact that crime exists and the
perpetrators must be confined. What has the jails to do with
it except to hold in check those who would be a menace if they
were set free?
0 I
JJJUIJJ
i TAXATION BURDEN EVER INCREASING 5
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There is not a doubt that can arise of the fact that is now
staling this country in the face, that the cost of maintaining the
government has grown too everlastingly high. This problem of
increasing cost and the consequent Struggle to devise plans of I
taxation and then enforcing them is being thought about a
great deal, and. it is well to study 5t long and carefully, for the
reason that this very thing will brine: trouble to the ronntrv
sooner or later.
Most people will bear unusual burdens a long time, doing the
best that they can and without complaining, but there comes a
time when they refuse. Like the balky mule who has worked
out a long existence in hauling the cart, he comes to a time and
place where he will refuse to go any further. And the great
trouble is that like the mule who first balks and then kicks out |
behind with all his might, the people will turn against things
which they know are not right and things which their representatives
ought to have corrected and failed to be equal to.
When the time comes that the tax burdens have grown to
such an extent that men can stand it no longer, the country will
long for the old days when men were free. It takes, even now,
such a great force of experts and agents, so much red tape of one
kind and another, and so much time in making reports and
getting kinks straightened out, that it is tiresome and disgust
THE HORRY HERALD, C<
The Federal income tax lawi
ing.
thing in this country that the
These laws placed a severe penal
masses who worked one day for
before were allowed to get off >
burden, while the man who pai
ness throughout the night and
was able to help others to empl
proportion of what he had gain
the government which is for th
But that was not enough. Car
all respect^ on the Federal law.
cloth. The statesmen of Soutl
a plan for the State that would
ser powers of a State as compa
so they copied and adopted the
burden and penalty doubled.
Men have been elected to offi
people and devising the best la
ment; but anybody who will si
little time will see that they a
able principles. The penalty in
cake all that the best-of-man h
stances where men have been c<
to bankruptcy by these laws. T
without serious trouble some tir
AS TO IMI\
A phase of our immigration
tention than it gets is the har
and women who leave their for
ca, hoping for the blessings of f
turned back at the port of entr,
inability to pass the mental, mo
wise laws impose.
Various plans have been pro]
such unfortunates. One such pi
at ports of embarkation, who w
grants and admit or reject abro;
open to several objections, such
ernments to a selective process
keep at home undesirables and
also the difficulty of maintainir
force of inspectors abroad at ai
gration service could expect to
Another plan is the proposal
responsible and fine every ship
migrant brought over who has t<
attractive, but seems somewhal
company if it transports a crir
and has so many legal difficulti
it will be attempted.
Whatever the answer, it obvi<
timentalist who craves the adm
in spite of the law'. Our first
the unfortunate victim of a dr
desire to join his family, regard
But it would seem that with a
cans are famous, some f)lan mig
1,r i J- v >
i.v icuuie, 11 it aia not completel
who make the passage over her
other perfectly valid reason tha
lected.
PASTOR BRINGS GIRL
FROM TURKISH HAREM
Armenian Will Go to School in Denver
and Live With Family of
the Rev. Mr. Riggs.
An Armenian girl, who was sold in
a slave mart to a Turk and presented
to his son as a birthday present, and
set free two years ago when the British
took Charum, reached New York
recently. The Rev. Theodore D. Riggs,
Congregational missionary, broughl
the girl, Koharig Goumaian, to thij
country. She is eighteen years old
The missionary's wife and three children
also returned on the steamship
F'atria.
The girl's home was at Trebizond,
At the age of thirteen she was seized
[ssxeee
Calco Automati
1 Turns S\n
\ - Into Fa
- -fgBgi
: . III jjisjii
1 '
v; '
4
rt
Gate is absolutely f
water to flow off y<
flood or tide watei
your land again.
One plantation ma
Gate converted 1,5
- mosquito breeding
tive farm land,
WRITE DEPT. wcr FOl
I The Dixie Culv
ATLANTA
* *
)NWAY, 8. 0, JUNE 14, 1923
s
s came along and added somepeople
had never known before.
Ity on thrift and hard work. The
what they ate and wore the day
without bearing any part of this
id attention to his work or busiday
and by saving his earnings
oyment, was made to pay a big
ed to the expense of maintaining
e benefit of all.
ne the State income tax based in
It was copied out of the whole
i Carolina were unable to devise
be more in keeping with the lesred
with the union of the whole,
Federal law. There was a great
ice and paid for representing the
ws for maintaining the govem:udy
the income tax laws for a
re none based on just and equitsome
cases is severe enough to
as in the world. There are in
ompletely broken up and reduced
his is not right and it cannot laat
ne.
Migration
problem Kvhich merits more atdship
worked upon hopeful men
eign homes and come to Amerireedom
and franchise, only to be
y because of quota restrictions or
ral, and physical tests which our
30sed to mitigate the troubles of
lan proposes American inspectors
ould examine all would be immi
Lid rather than here. The plan is
as the animosity of foreign govon
their own shores which would
send to us only desirble citizens;
I g an intelligent and high mora!
ly rates of pay which the immiobtain
from Congress.
to make the steamship companies
a thousand dollars for every imo
be turned back. The plan looks
t on a par with fining a railroad
ninal from one town to another,
ies that it hardly seems possible
>usly can not be that of the senission
of any given "pitiful case"
duty is to our own country, not
eaded disease who has a human
less of the health of others.
II the ingenuity for which Ameriht
be devised which would greaty
eliminate, the number of aliens
e only to be told for one or ant
they must go back again. ?Seby
the Turks, who deported her parents
and sold her and a younger sister
inso slaverv. For two and a half
years she was in the harem vritb
other girls, also of tender age.
Koharig has been unable to find her
r parents, but found her younger sisI
ter. She will enter a school and live
[ with the Riggs family in Denver.
For several years the Rev. Mr.
: Riggs has been treasurer and busi,
ness manager of the Anatolia Colt
lege. When the Turks became hostile
; to foreign institutions the college was
. closed.
o
) t\ F. Cartrette, of Wilmington, N.
C., visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs,
. G. W. Cartrette, of Allen, Saturday
1 and Sunday.
B3iaaa?gfi3gB? :
ic Drainage Gate \
ramp Land |
rm Land
i
r
lutomatic, permitting
:>ur land but prevents
r from backing up on
P
*
N
n writes that a Calco
00 acres of "vorthless
swamp into produo
R SPECIAL LITERATURE
ert & Metal Co. ;
GEORGIA I
rg-T ; ! i I I"! i'J. j-n-r-r-L-rrnn.-^jrrrrj |
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/
OLD JAKE SEZ:
E's been aUi over the country
an from the way the people
tnck to the stock law, an the
WA V tVl CI + ollr 'f
?.? win) ucviiv 11U W XU
judges tha would not chang
back for nothing, an in teni
years time tha will be mo]
chillun named Walter Mishew, |
Will Russ, an Hal Buck than
was ever named after Geo.
Washington, Abraham Lincoln1
and Jef Davis.
? o
REFUSES GRANT
OF NEW TRIAL
There was a motion made last week
for a new trial for Albert Singleton,
who was convicted of the crime of
seduction at the spring term of the
court and sentenced to serve three
years in the gang, suspended upon
serving six months of this time upon
his paying $150 on the 1st day of
October each year until the child involved
reached the age of twelve
years.
Numerous affidavits were read in
behalf of the defendant showing misconduct
on the part of the prosecutrix.
The solicitor opposed the motion.
He called one witness in oDoosition
and after making1 an argument left
the matter to the court. The motion
for a new trial was refused.
The case will now go to the Supreme
Court.
? o
M ss Marie Nicholas left Saturday
for Columbia and Spartanburg, where
she will spend the summer with her
sisters.
o
CATARRHAL DEAFNESS
is often caused by an inflamed condition
of the mucous lining of the Eustachian
Tube. When this tube is Inflamed you
have a rumbling sound or imperfect
hearing. Unless the Inflammation can
be reduced, your hearing may be destroyed
forever.
HALLS CATARRH MEDICINE will
do what wo claim for it?rid your system
of Catarrh or Deafness caused by
Catarrh. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE
has been succecsful in the treatment of
Catarrh for over Forty Years.
Sold by all drugglst?.
P. J. Ch?U'?*y A Co.. T< >edo, O.
More Royal
fnr I
Whereto buy US.
> S. P. HAWES
' GEORGE J. HOLLIDAY, . '
, D. V. RICHARDSON
GEORGE J. HOLLIDATk ...
i RAINS MERCANTILE CO.
^ Mil %.
The Most Pleasant
Way To Stop
Kiddie's Cold
Delightful Syrup Gets Around Child's
Natural Horror of Nasty
Medicines
Nearly all children despise medicines
because nearly all medicines are'
repulsive to the taste. There are s* M
many opportunities for coughs, colds, ^
croup, etc., with children that it is
absolutely necessary that cough and
cold medicines for children be pleasant
in taste. Children like Murray's
Horehound Mullein and Tar and not
only does it please them, but it is
immediately effective.
Composed of three well-known [Separations
used for years by
grandmothers for pulmonary troubles,
it heals the soreness, soothes the
irritation, breaks up the phlegm and
clears the air passages.
It is excellent for Coughs, Colds,
Croup, Sore Throat, La Grippe, Influenza,
Pneumonia and other bronchial
and pulmonary trouble. Fine
for children as well as adults.
Ask your druggist for a 35c bottle
or write Murray Drug Co., Columbia,
S. C., for it.?Adv.
o_?
MAGRATH WINS CONTEST
L. D. Magrath left here last Tuesday
for Greensboro, N. C., where he
goes as a winner in the contest put
on among the insurance agents by the
four leading companies in this section;
George Washington
Fire; Greensboro Fire Insurance Co.;
and the McAlister Underwriters. The
test is the amount of premiums collected
and the low percentage of Itj^s.
The winning of this contest is regarded
as a prize worth while each
year. Mr. Magrath is the only avjpiit
to win this year east of the Foe Dee
river. He will be in Greensboro until
the week-end.
ASPIRIN
Say "Bayer" and Insist!^
A
K B %
Unlet* you see the name "Bayer" on
package or on tablets yon are not getting
the genuine Bayer product prescribed
by physicians over twenty-two
yoars and proved safe by millions for
Colds Headache
Toothache Lumbago ^
Karache Rheumatisro^L
Neuralgia Pain, Pain
Accept "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin"
only. Each unbroken package contains
proper directions. Handy boxes of
twelve tablets cost few cents. Druggists
also sell battles of 24 and 100.
Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer
Manufacture of Monoaoetioacideater of
Salicvlicacid.
* V
r
Clinchers
1923
d States Tires
Good Tires
i
rHE U. S. Tire people
? % wo pivfttiy v l I.1I&IC 111
leveloping the Royal
Clincher Cord.
When it was finally placed
>n sale there were no mis- 1
akes in it. *
Last year we couldn't
nake Royal Clinchers fast
:nough?
Production for 1923 has
>een more than doubled.
But whenever and wher*
iver you can get a Royal
Clincher?take it.
Tins I
Conway, S. C. I
Ay nor, S. C. 1
Buck?port, S. C.
Jordanville, S. C. lij 7
Rains, S. C. I' ^ 4