The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, July 26, 1923, Page Page No. 8, Image 8
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No. 8
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NEGRO OUTLAW I
' - LEAVES SIGN
The new.ro pilferer who frightened
a number of families by trying to en
ter their homes and by standing1 behind
tiees and bushes in the yards,
kept up his insane work at other
places last week besides those mentioned
in the news items in the last issue
^f the Horry Herald. It was said
that he had tried to enter the home of
Mr. C. H. Snider, the city clerk, and
when Mr. Holt, the night duty police **v>n
went homo one morning he found
where a man had moved a goods box
up to the window of his house and had
evidently spent some time there look,
ing in.
Upon measuring the tracks left in i
the sand, they were found to be the (
same as those seen at the Snowden
home. i
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PROGRESSIVE FLORIDA
1
Florida's legislature has submitted ..
to the people a startling amendment :
to their state constitution. It proposes \
to prohibit the levy of income or inheritance
taxes on citizens or resi- ,
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aenrs ior tweiuy-iive years.
Evidently somebody in Florida rec- J
ojrnir.es the necessity of first creating ;
capital before taxing it. Think of the '
inducement a measure such as this '
would be to the prospective investor s
and developer of industry, to locate in J
Florida. {\
The increased value in real estate [
and industries that would result from 1
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such a measure would undoubtedly
furnish the state a great deal more
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lax than it can now collect through
an income tax from a few citizens who
are in increasing: numbers putting
their money into tax-exempt securities.
The Florida proposition has more
hard sense in it than the man who
cries, "Tax wealth," would have us believe.
HEAT EXPLODES
SOME PAVING
Under the terrific heat that has prevailed
during the last few weeks, certain
types of pavements have been
"exploding" with uncomfortable frequency,
throwing huge slabs of concrete
and paving block-; high in the
air and often endangering lives of j
pedestrians and motorists.
This phenomenon is rare enough to
make an explanation interesting, and
x remedy worth while, the latter from
x safety standpoint alone, to say noih-1
ing of public economy.
It is only the "rigid" type of pavenent
that "explodes." Rigid types are
limited to concrete pavements and to
^lock pavements in which the interstices
between the blocks are filled
Aith what is known as cement grout.
The grout clings to the blocks and
?ets up even harder than concrete, and
the result is a slab just as rigid as a
plain concrete pavement.
In these types of pavements there is
little or no room for expansion, that
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BIG WHOLESALE
IN THIS ISSUE
The advertising columns this week
carry an advertisement for one of the
old established and reliable wholesale
firms of Charlestion, S. C., where they
carry big lines of Dry Goods, Dress
Goods, Ginghams, Staple and Fancy .
Goods, Hosiery, Underwear, Overalls,
Pants and many other things that are
needed to stock the stores of the mer- .
chants of this town and county.
We refer to Pringle Brothers of
which Walter Pringle is president.
This wholesale concern is a home institution.
Walter Pringle travelled
Horry County in days gone by and he
knew every nook and corner of this
big county, and was acquainted with
almost every business man who lived
here. He has built this big business of
which he is now the head on straight
and square dealing. Little more need
be said to call the attention of Herald
readers to their advertisement in this
issue.
They do business in a business way
and they believe in kindness and courtesy.
Letters and orders sent to 1 hem
by mail will have quick attention.
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irresistible force brought about by 1
intense heat. Even where expansion 1
joints are provided at intervals, rigid
pavements have been known to "blow
up". The heat expands the rigid slab.
In those cases where expansion is rot
held in compression, there is only one
direction in which this force can ex
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ON WAY, S. C, JULY 26, 1923
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pend itself, and that is upward. Pedestrians
or motorists in the immediate ,
vicinity are in more or less danger.
This is one of the reasons why engineers
are more and more specifying
flexible instead of rigid surfaces. In
brick or stone block surfaces this is
brought about by the use of asphalt
between the units. This bituminous
material absorbs expansion and permits
contraction without "explosions"
cr cracked and crumbled surfaces.
Such engineering design also allows
for the upward thrust of a freezing
sub-grade and for the continous swelling
and shrinking of the earth's surface
under the influences of moisture ,
and drought.
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HAS FINE C ROP
County Auditor James A. Calhoun
has a total of thirteen acres planted in
tobacco this year. This is on his farm |
in the Cedar Grove section of the
county.
He has three tenants' operating the '
tobacco fields. They are: I
Jim Todd, five acres; 1
Berry Todd, four acres; j
Tim Cooper, four acres. \
At last accounts the crop was doing .
well and the ripe leaves were being
:ured. j
This is good tobacco land and sever- .
ill big crops have been raised there (
during the last several years. }
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VISITS OLD HOME
Charles L. Glasgow, now of 701
Delwood Street, Jacksonville, Fla., arrived
at home recently to spend two
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to gi
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last Ir
$75.00
our windo
lation
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Men's and
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in Furniture
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or three months vacation. He will return
to Jacksonville in the fall. He is
engaged in business there. He was
formerly in business in Conway. He is
a son of Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Glasgow.
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Let the Horry Herald tell the world
for you.
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OBITUARY
M rs. Emma D. Mosely diet! at her]
home near Little River on June 29th,
at the age of years.
The deceased was twice married.
Her first husband, who was a Mr. Nixon.
livpd nnlv ;i shnrt while nffor tl.oiv
marriage. Her second husband, Mr. A.
Mosely, preceded her to the grave just
five or six years ago.
Her only surviving child is Mr. N.
F. Dixon of Cherry Grove Beach,
while she leaves several grandchil-;
ireti, brothers and sisters to mou.-n
lier death.
She was a woman cf exceptional
ability. She was educated in her voung
iays and had a literary turn of .nind;
tier duties as housewife never caused
\er to loose her education or let it go
into decay. She continued to read rnd
to keep up with all the
activities of the world until about a
year before her death, her eyesight
began to fade, then she requested
someone to read for her. She often
juoted from Sheakespeare and Tennyson,
and other great writers, and was
tvell trained in music?her piano was
Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days
Druggists refund money if PAZO OINTMENT fails
to cure Itching, Blind. Bleeding or Protruding
Piles. Instantly relisve3 Itching and you
?u get restful first anoliearion. j
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Everything in Hai
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Boy's Furnishings
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Conway, S. C.
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a great comfort to her in her last
days.
She often spoke of having1 perfect
faith in God and often said in her last
days, "She didn't know why the Lord
let her live so long, it must be for
some purpose."
She was a member of the Little River
Methodist church and was laid to
rest in the Church Cemetery on June
30th amid a host of sorrowing relatives
and friends, the funeral being
conducted by her pastor, K. S. Carmichael.
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OPTICAL WORK
DONK ON CREDIT.
Don't worry with or about your
eyes. Come to see us and let us solve
your problem for you. It is better to
know that . our eyes are all right
than to guess. We have the latest
styles in glasses. ^
We will he at Horry Drug store
every 1st and 3rd Mondays of each
month.
Yours for service,
L. A. WOODRUFF, D-Opt.
Eye Sijjht Specialist.
6121-tf.
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