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tl|? H?. 4 THE HORRY HERALD CONWAY, S. C. Entered at the Post Office at Conway, S. C.? as second class Mail Matter. 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. THURSDAY JUNE 21, 1923 m -??2* WWW.W.V.V.V.,.,.VAVV.Wi,AS\W.VA\,.V,,.V.VAWAW | HORRY HERALDING jj WW/.VAW.V.VAV.V.SV.W.SSSSVSW/.W.V.WAWWV v The growing crop wi)l not take any neglect now without show ing its resentment. o Each man must do his part toward keeping this country what it has been in the ways of morality and religion. o The making of each new road and the opening of each new bridge puts the seaside nearer and nearer to the people of the interior. ' ^ o Railway passenger service all over this State is going to suffer as a result of the establishment of bus lines over the hard surfaced roads. o Old methods of farming are fast going out of practice and the better and more intensive kind is coming into play more and more every year. o ' Whpn th p mfkof COVOfa niinicVi tvi ^ J ' , , waav Aaav/M V UV T VI V pUillOlllllCll t W ill llUt UC tCI SOII1C I IlCIl from engaging In the liquor traffic, what will be the result when they are let off with small fines ? o Dq not top the tobacco plants too low as this will produce a large heavy leaf, while the leaf wanted this year will be the smaller kind suitable for making cigarettes. o One way to make it harder for the law breakers is to make them pay heavy fines and thus contribute to the immense cost of enforcing the law for which we all have to pay more or less. o Advertising is the best way to bring the attractions of the Horry Seaside resorts to the attention of the world. The way to keep Horry tobacco to be sold on Horry floors is to have in Horry all f the facilities and marketing improvements that growers could ask. The number of warehouses will have something- to do with this. o Until the cooperative marketing of tobacco grows much more extensive than it is at present, it will be necessary to run auction houses for disposing of tobacco under that*plan. Towns where there are no auction houses will lose business and trade by reason of tobacco being carried to the independent floors of other towns. Conway expects to be better off this year than last by reason of having more independent floors than it had last year. Bowles & Bass will run the Peoples Warehouse. It is said that another new auction house will be provided in the brick building in the rear of the Kingston Hotel, thp livpstr^u v?i icin ac o r\t I j ? ww VW?? MUUIIIV/OO U 1 V>U II" way Livestock Company being moved for that purpose to one of the new buildings across the street. o AWWAW.VA'.V.V.VV.V .V.W.W.WMW.VV.V.V.W.V ^ BRINGING OUT THE SEASIDE 5. TJWJW^.V-VAVWW.V .V.V.VVAP.V.V//.ViVAV/AVJ" The ceremony attending the opening of the Pee Dee bridge between Marion and Florence, held on last Thursday, June 14th. marks the beginning of a new period of development of this entire section of the State, and especially the Summer resorts along the coast* of Horry County. In honor of the event, considered as a most important one in the history of the two counties thus united, a big pageant was planned and carried out representing the wedding of Miss Florence to Mr. Marion. It was attended by one of the largest crowds that ever gathered to witness any outdoor entertainment. While the completion and opening of this bridge to the general public is indeed a great event for Marion and Florence it was equally a great event for Horry County. It puts the people of this county within easy touch, by automobile, with other cities *mH fnwnc ^ n 1:-~ ? -- ?.v. w.. nu vi uuuui v^aiuuiitt, wnne on the other hand it brings to our very doors those people of other cities and towns, and the whole wide country as people of other cities and towns, and the whole wide country as to that matter, so that they can reach the attractions which becken more and more along our ocean front. Things like this will aid in the making of the great seaside resort, which we have often predicted, will at some time extend, all the way from Murrell's Inlet to the mouth of Little River, and possibly further beyond. It is not every seashoie that is as well formed as this, which we have, for the making of a Summer resort. There js plenty of coast but very little that is suitable for this purpose. The advantages of this coast of ours have already become known to the outside world and every year finds new owners of homes and lots of land by people from far-distant sections of the State. With the improvement of roads and bridges there has been w. % THE HORBY HERALD, PC a marked development at Myrtl< increased population at Murrel most important because there ii cottages where people live durii mer colony which is increasing > Nothing has itaken place lat portance to these resorts than across the Pee Dee river. It was before the completion of this bi this fact will increase the nun the number of those who will 1 part of Horry County. By all means in the world we portunity which is afforded to i ment along all lines. The one g tages to the attention of the wo should be done, beginning right I NO CON Compacts with the deau re dini, the acrobatic magician, fa vvormout of strait-jackets, hai without limit. Mr. Houdini, w ism and legerdemain, has often i and claims there is not one trie! unearthly it may appear, that h he complains, therefore, that n< pledged to communicate with 1 his pledge and come back, he i wizard, who has delved into th mystic, should recognize a mess possible for it to come through. In the July number of Th ville, Tenn., Walter Hart Hall tempts to hear from his friends and tells why he failed. It cert* he himself says, "No one could receive such a sign, because it \ lightenment I could possibly ha "Mr. Houdini's experience be it agrees with the greatest auth the Bible. There has been no or ume disproved, and new evider tronomy; and theology is bein* thinkers are constantly bearing reliability." A - it may be surprising to the hackneyed cant about the "soul hear that 'the Bible says nothir tensively to show that the Bib not anything, neither have the memory of them is forgotten. 1 and their 'envy, is now penshc forever in anything that is don< "The dead cannot commur linues, for the Bible plainly sa .Trave shall come up no more, house, neither shall his place kr finite indeed; this departed one ( haunts, his home, *his business 1 tied. He does not come back, stays. This is what crafty Mr. pacts made with friends ended have returned if they could, b reared to pass a cemetery at ni are sleeping." Mr. Hall claims further that are interchangeable and at deatl leaves the body at the awakenir 10 the question, "Do we then ha "Oh yes, but the body is n< c,oul, but the combination of bi the soul?the entity." THE STARS , No real American needs to be lag. No real American ever 1 Stars and Stripes. But sometimes a real Americ ment of his flag from lack of kn respectful. There is occasion tc July the Fourth, Washington's E American Citizen gets out a lot < place of business or his house. >n festoons, in crisscrosses, and he thinks the American flag the wants to honor the occasion wi him that he is doing wrong, o jnterwined streamers are a dese It is therefore unfair to black* cule him for lack of laste; what He is to be taught that the flag, and ideals of this country, is ne\ something else! It must be tre* hang free, or be stretched flat draped in rosettes, or circles, the red, white, and blue bunting dictates; tell him he can make hi thing he pleases, but that the Flag, to be honored with the fir utmost freedom, and never to I draped so that it becomes a me else. Nothing comes ahead of IS THE WEEVIL FOOLING ALONG? Clemson College.?Farmers tn.d others report to us daily in writing or i verbally, says Prof. A. F. Conradi, >NWAY, S. 6, JUNE 21, 1923 3 Beach; great improvement and U's Inlet. Myrtle Beach is the s a seaside hotel there and many lg the Summer months?a SumA'ith each passing year. ely which we deem of more imthe opening of the great bridge 5 feasy to reach the seashore even ridge. Now it is still easier and iber of visitors and will increase buy lots and build homes in this should take advantage of the opis to make progress and improVereat way of bringing our advanrld is advertising. More of that now. IING BACK main unkept, claims Harry Houimous for his uncanny ability to rtdcuffs, and man-tight devices ith his familiarity with hypnotimpersonated spiritistic mediums, \ of the mediums, no matter how e is not able to reproduce. When )t one of the seven friends who lim after their deaths has kept surely knows. A hard-headed e vitals of clairvoyancy and the ;age from the Beyond, if it were e Watchman Magazine, of Nashtells the story of Houdini's atwho had proceded him in deeath linly was not Houdini's fault, for accuse me of beieng unwilling to vould have been the greatest enve had in this world." ars the stamp of truth because ority the world has ever known, le statement from this great volice corroborating its history, as? discovered continually. Great * witness to its inspiration and >se familiar with the unusual Is in glory looking this way" to lg like that. Mr. Hall quotes exle teaches that "the dead know y any more a reward; for the Uso their love, and their hatred, id; neither have they a portion 3 under the sun." licate with the living," he conys. 'He that goeth down to the He shall return no more to his low him any more/ This is deloes not return to his place. His know him no more. That is set\\T^ i- - w nerever ne .^oes, there he Houdini has proved. The seven 1 with their death. They would ut they could not. If you ever ght, fear no more; the inmates the terms "spirit" and "breath" ti it is the "breath of life" that ig, or the resurrection. In answer ve no souls?" Mr. Hall says: )t the soul, nor is the breath the *eath and body makes possible \ND STRIPES told to reverence and respect his fails in showing respect to the tan may fail in respectful treatowledge that what he does is not ) decorate . . . Thirtieth of May, birthday ... no matter what. Mr. [>f American flags and drapes his He drapes the flags in rosettes, circles. And he does it hecAtiftft most beautiful in the world, and th his flag. It doesn't occur to r that his pretty curlicues and cration of his flag. juard him as unpatriotic, or ridiis to be done is to educate him. representing the heart and soul rer to be used as a decoration for ited as a unit in itself. It must against a wall or house; never Tell the offender he can use all he wants in any shape his fancy s rosettes and his drapes of anyAmerican flag is The American st place, the finest position, the 3e twisted br tied or curled or re embellishment to something the flag! Entomologist, the excellent weevil control they secure by the use of one material or another. One man uses !?as; another a liquid; still another a powder. Some use ke?*osene and Red Devil Lye; others an arsenic mixture flavored with the choicest flavoring extracts. These materials are applied to the plant, and later examinations show dead weevils. Of cours^i, they claim that these dead weevils are the result of the application of their material. In most cases they do not run a check against these experiments, using plants that receive no treatment whatever. The fact is, Prof. Conradi explains, the old over-winter weevils are dying otT rapidly, and by June 18th over the* greater part of the State, they will have become very scarce. Our own experimental work on weevil killing we have to suspend, because the weevils now in the field are old devitalized, and in our check cages where we use nothing whatever, they die as rapidly as where we use the various powders, sprays, dusts, etc. for killing them. Do not let the weevil fool you. o HARDW1CK GOES A THIRD TRIAI (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) tick-free. Nevertheless there was a case of violation of the dipping regulations tried here in Conway before Magistrate W. H. Chestnut last week. It was the case of the State against Noah S. Hard\*ick. He was tried hv a jury and found guilty of refusincr and neglecting: to clip bis cows, and was fined by tbe court in the sum of S50.00, or to serve the term of thirty days or. the public works of Horry County. The reason for the severe sentence is to l>e found in the fact that this i<? not the first time that Mr. Hardwick has heon involved with the cattle dipping1 regulations. Mr. Hardwick lives between here and Bnyboro and his place is *.ot located very well as regards convenience in the dipping or spraying of tfle: so that this trouble between him anil the regulations begyn in 1022. or soon after the opening of the campaign against the tick for that year, and as he failed and refused to spray and dip. the first prosecuM.?n was started against him in 1922. He applied to the magistrate and protested against the hardships of the law. He was advised by the court that the law might be hard to comply with in some cases, as all lawsmight be; but it was nevertheless r law on the statute books and the de fendant would have to comply with it; but as allowed to do by the law 'he magistrate suspended a fine or imprisonment under the regulations upon the rood behavior of the defendant and he was allowed to go free with a lecture to the effect that he must obey the law thereafter and show a bona fide disposition to comply with the requirements of the laws. It is understood that he tacitly promised %? comply. Again, however, there was apparently a neglect and refusal to carry out the orders ot' the agents in dipping; the cattle, and Hardwick w; s haled before thr> court t^e second tir e in the winter of 1022-23. the prosecution having started I efore the winter but continued from time to time until it was tried. This second prosecution resulted in a conviction for evadine and refusing to comply with the (lipping: re(|uirements and he was fined in the sum of ten dollars. This second prosecution was regarded as placing an end to the trouble. Not so. Last week Mr. Hardwick was tried before a jury in the magistrate court for the third refusal and neglect to ''mi and spray the cows. This last time was a battle royal with attorneys on both sides fighting for every advantage they could obtain for the respective sides in the game. The jury returned a verdict of gxiiltv and the sentence of the court was that the defendant pay a fine of Jfc.'O 00 or ?''rvp neri^d cr thirtv days on the public works. The defendant gave verbal notice that he would appeal the case. At last accounts at the magistrate's office to written notice of appeal from the judgment and sentence of the court had l>een served, but it was exj ccted that this would be done. Thus Noah S. Hardwick has turned out to be the most persistent fighter in the cattle dipping matter that the county has yet had, unless it be a number of defendants in the Pee Dee section of Bucks township, \vh& fought the enforcement of the law in various ways two or three years ago. While the general stock law is gaining ground for the farmers of the ounty by showing them the way to *reep and raise improved kinds of livestock, it is gradually making it: .These cast-iron installed in conneclion with reclamation, irrigation and drainage work. The Calco automatically protects the land from freshet, tide and flood?enables crop pla all seasons?makes crops grow where fore?and never fails to work. Ve in any size from 12 inch to 72 inch 4 Write Dep't C For Descriptive Dixie Culvcn ATLAN I unnecessary to have the cattle dipped, for when a herd has been freed from the tick, the herd stays free, for the reason that they are not alt awed to wander about and catch a fresh supply from the stock of others that may not have been dipped, or from other sources hard to explain except by experts. OLDJAKE SEZ: , r -J This is the longest day and shortest nite in the year an thut the sun an the quater is gwin to cut some kind of a caper today. I speck it is that the sun starts back to thie quater. 'E dont no but ses tell the skule chillun to ax the teacher. o CURES THIS WEEK H. M. Reynolds, of Gallivants Ferry, was in Conway last week and stated that his tobacco crop had mature^ 1 early, and he was afraid that his M plants had grown too large to make the best cigarette grades; but he would begin gathering and curing tobacco this week. He expected to be filling a barn last Monday. How To Stop ^ Habitual Constipation Most Any Medicine Will Relieve Temporarily. To Stop Entirely Is Another Problem Many people have this disagreeable thought worrying them daily. Purgatives and laxatives prove to be fine for a day but leave them worse ofF than ever. The secret of the success is in getting af the seat of the trouble. A livev filled with impurities and' Poisons can never be made to pei^MPm properly. Cleanse it thoroughly for once and the trouble is over. The cleansing, however, cannot be done over night, but must fce done systematically. Here's the way: Buy a 30c bottle of Dr. Hilton's Life 1"or the Liver and Kidneys No. 2. Trke 2 tablespoonsfuls the first night and follow it with a smaller dose each succecding night. You will find t|iat it will thoroughly cleanse the liver and kidneys, stiengthen them and" prepare them for normal function and purify the blood. It is excellent also for improving the appetite, Dyspepsia ,Indigestion, Nausea, Sick Headaches, etc. If your druggist can't supply you, write Murray Drug Co., Columbia. S. C., for a bottle. | o CATARRHAL DEAFNESS la often caused by an Inflamed condition of the mucoua lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube la Inflamed you have a rumbling sound or Imperfect hearing. Unless the inflammation can be reduced, your hearing may be deatroyed forever. HAL.L.S CATARRH MEDICINE will do what we claim for it?rid your ayatem of Catarrh or Deafness caused by Catarrh. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE has been successful in the treatment of Catarrh for over Forty Years. | Sold by all druggists. A P. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, O. T -CO Automatic ainage gate Turns swamp lands into farm lands, by keeping land thorW oughly drained and prevent? ing back water flooding. \ It needs no attention, w *or *8 absolutely automatic. worics wnne nting at ' - : v ? I none grew be- "" ** I ry inexpensive. Made I Folder and Price List I jfl I & Metal Co., U ta, ga. jah