The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, January 18, 1917, Page FOUR, Image 4
TOtTE
- '
(fclu- iiorrj |mU
IP>kwa..?.C
iilM < at Ik# Post OAce at Conway
I C, aa second claaa mall matter.
HTEL WOODWARD
falBoM Every Thursday Morning
by Conway Publishing Co.
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Trfoutes of Respect, and Obituaries
frill be charged for at the rate of one
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Resolutions of Thanks, Cards of
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not NEWS, taking the run of
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otices in the local columns at the
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All changes of Advertiments must
he In the office by Saturday noon to
Insure their appearance in the fol
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A.11 communications must be signed
fcy the name of the writer, not for
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Legal Notices at $1 per inch first
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Kates on long term contracts for
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Make all Checks or Drafts payable
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THURSDAY, JAN. 18, 1917
The world will not be quite destroyed
before the present war
ends we trust
o
He who trusts a memory not well
trained depends on a broken twig.
o
This counti y has had all it could
do to keep out of war.
o
Nine tenths of the people who
claim to be ill, only think they are
sick.
n
Some men never try to take advantage
of the things that are near
them and therefore possible for them
to reach; but they go chasing wild
geese and never know whether they
are tending.
o
It does not rain every time the
sky grows dark.
What would drive some men as
crazy as a bat will build up the
nerves of others
o
Every problem would be easy of
solution were the human brain equal
to the task.
o
Let 1917 bring nothing but progress
and prosperity to Conway and
Horry County.
o
The war is still on but Ford's
peace trip is not forgotten.
?:?o
Can you a Ford and Dodge ?
When the automobile notion
strikes a man there is no remedy except
to get a car.
o
The thing for farmers to do when
they borrow money is to think out a
good plan for spending it, so that it
will not be lost.
??o
A man who is careful in his own
affairs will be apt to be careful in
yours. Think of this next time you
go to vote for men to fill your offices.
o
Never ask a man if he has done
wfell.y He is always sure he has, and.
to him it is a foolish question.
? * '
, <:Y. 0
The information we give you in
this paper every week is worth many
times the sum of one dollar. You
are not obliged to take advantage of
it unless you want to.
I
I .
. ' v ft
Let better roads be one aim of the
year 1917. ^
The end of the war is as uncertain
as a woman's age.
?0
Lynch law is a horrible thing as
everybody knows. But there is no
sense in blaming our laws, our courts
and juries So long as some creatures
grow into brutes, just so long
will the danger of lynch law remain
with us to be used ocasionally. Must
we blame nature it self perverted
through the meanness of generations
or nature not yet civilized and
brought down to the proper tone?
Three is food for thought in all this.
o
Never ask a woman if she is
pretty, for she is already sure she is.
o 1
It is no absolute proof of any
man's goodness that he goes to Sunday
School.
o
Not many of us can face danger
and remain as cool as a cucumber.
o
Those who stick to the job arc
those worth while in every avocation
i of life. The work of the world has
to be done.
o
It pays to advertise in the right
way
o
The story which was published in
the papers recently about how a crip
pled and diseased mill operative suffering
from rheumatism, managed to
make ends meet by raising fruit and
vegetables on his one acre of land;
proves that agriculture lias not
reached its limit of profit in this
country as yet.
o
You never can keep a secret by
giving it away.
o
Even the under-log has some power
left.
o
t ^ i i. _ i.. au ~
in unil'i iu remeuy uiu miuuiiuii
which confronts every counrty weekly
in the United States owing to the
[ high prices of news print paper;
j Uncle Sam is going after the paper
trust. That there is a combination
in restraint of trade appears beyond
doubt from the evidence so far
brought out. But it will be some
time before the situation can be relieved,
if it is at all; and in the mean
time editors will have to live hard,
just as they have always done before.
o
It takes more and more leather to
make woman's shoes, and therefore
more and more money to satisfy
their soles.
o
"What is gained in one way in the
matter of fashions for women, is
always lost in some other way. Look
out on any public street any fair day
and you will see.
o
Esteem nothing as a trifle which
leads t6 some larger thing; and near- |
' ly every small thing does in fact lead
to something larger in the end.
COPY SUMMONS FOR RELIEF
(Complaint Not Served.)
Court of Common Pleas.
I STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA,
I '
County of Horry.
Burroughs & Collins Company, a
I Corporation, Plaintiff
Against
John P. Stanley, Australia A. Har-1
dee, Eliza Hardee, Docia Russ,
otherwise known as Mrs. H. D.
Russ, Mary Stanley, Mattie Stanley,
Orilla T. Russ, and John S.
Stanley, Defendants.
TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE
NAMED:
YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED
and required to answer the comnlaint
in this action, which lias hern
filed in the office of the Clerk of the
Court of Common Pleas, for the said
| County, and to serve a copy of yotir
i answer to the said complaint on the
j subscriber at his office at Conway,
i S. C., within twenty days after the
| service hereof; exclusive of the day
of such service; and if you fail to
i answer the complaint within the
| time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this
action will apply to the Court for the
relief demanded in the complaint.
Dated January 8th, A. D. 1917
H. H. WOODWARD,
Plaintiff's Attorney.
To John S. Stanley, Absent Defendant:
TAKE NOTICE That the Complaint
in the foregoing stated action
and the Summons of which the foregoing
is a copy were filed in the office
of the Clerk of t^he Court of Com
mon Pleas at Conway, S. C., on the
10th day of January A D., 1917
H. H. WOODWARD,
Plaintiff's Attorney
W. L. BRYAN, (L. S.)
C. C. C. P
THE HOMLY H*Ri
Says Simple Remet
F
Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin
Effective as a Remedy
for Constipation.
* i
Among older people the various
organs of the body nave a tendency
to slow up and weaken, and this is
usually first manifest in a pronounced
inactivity of the bowels.
Good health is dependent on regularity
in this important function;
whenever there is the slightest indication
of constipation a mild laxative
6hould be taken to relieve the congestion
and dispose of the accumulated
waste. Cathartics T or " purgatives
should not be employed, however;
these are too violent in action
and their effect is only temporary.
A mild laxative such as the combination
of simple laxative herbs with
pepsin, known as Dr. Caldwell's Syrup
Pepsin, is the ideal remedy. It is
gentle in its action, bringing relief
in an easy, oaturgdmanner, without
griping or other pain or mfctfomfort,
is. pleasant to the tafctev arnd can be
obtained in hny dijug stbre.
Mr. Robert L'ePbpgec; 918 Kirkwood
frouievard, Davenport, Iowa.
says he has always had a battle of
Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pebsin in the
TO PUBLISH REPORT i
UPON BOLL WEEVILj
i
I
Tillman Arranges to Have
Commission's Findings
Distributed.
r\r ,?u i
tance does Senator Tillman think the j
recent report of the South Carolim j
boll weevil commission, that he has
secured consent of the senate to
print it as a public document Till
man said: "It is well known that tin
boll weevil has wrought immense
damage to the Southern cotton grow
ers. Entering this country 25 yearsago,
it has steadily marched east
ward along isothermal lines, until
new it is in the middle of Georgia,
rapidly approaching the South Carolina
border.
"The necessity for teaching the
farmers the right steps to be taken
to meet this invasion induced the
foundations of our agricultural college
in conjunction with national
government to send a commission to
Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and
other States which have been devastated
in the past. That commission
has made a report which is published
by Clemson college as bulletin No.
20. This bulletin was prepared by
Dr. Riggs, president of that college,
and merits very wide circulation,
even in those States which have alraedy
been devastated, because it
contains information and suggestions
for those engaged in agriculture
which are very valuable any
where in the South. I have offered
this resolution which I ask to have
referred to the committee of print
ing as the law requires."
?o
TRESPASS NOTICE.
All persons are hereby forbidden
to enter or trespass in any manner
upon my lands in Simpson Creek
Township, one tract of 119 acres,
known as the Board Landing place,
the other tract of 100 acres more o>
less, bounded by S. A. Gore, and
others. All violators will be prosecuted.
4t. ?W. C. TODD.
o
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f? U m?i aland, aand It.M far a raar'a aabaariptian. ]
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Cautaraa at Marhaalaal Baaba fraaa* rrpaaat. L
POPULAR MECHANICS MAGAZINE
NO Nor tl? MaMgaa Avaa**, OM**S* : '
?? ii i J |
Pojpwfwr M*cA*si<* el/ore se prmmfmmtt
4*09 ww? jmim to "e/wiitogr e/Pore, " mm J i
Mttff/I SO lo eocwre fvlicr^pil
XD, CONWAY, B. 0.
4y ~~
Prolonged His Life
house for the past eighteen yearl, \
and that by using it occasionally as ^
the need arises, and in this way keep
ing his health good, it has prolong- 1
ed his life, and brought ease and 1
comfort. 1
Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is sold '
by druggists everywhere, and costs (
only fifty cents a bottle. To avoid
imitations and ineffective substitutes 1
bo sure to get Dr. Caldwell's Syrup 1
Pepsin. See that a facsimile of Dr
Caldwell's signature and his portrait
appear, on the yellow carton in which j
the bottle is packed. A trial bottle, (
free of charge, can be obtained bv
writing to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 455 1
Washington St., Monticello, Illinois. U
^ v ?-?? '
TO OUT OF STATE
SUBSCRIBERS.
If you are living out of this
State and taking this paper, and '
your subscription is out, this is a
special request to you to send in
all back dues and renewal money .
to the editor of this paper, without
any further delay Failure to
comply with this request may result
in your name being taken off
the list next week.
Send the money by posc-office
money order, express money order,
currency, registered letter, or
your personal check on a bank.
i
o
Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days
Your druggist will refund money if PAZO |
OINTMKNT fails to cure any case of Itching, |
Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 6to Udays. i
The first application gives Huse and Rest. 50c. ,
COPY SUMMONS FOR RELIEF
I '
(Complaint Not Served.)
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA,
County of Horry.
Court of Common Pleas. j
A. M. Sutherland, Plaintiff,
. ^ I
against
J. J. Rheuark, J. R. Allsbrook and N.
B. Allsbrook, Copartners Trading
as Allsbrook Bros., J. A,. McDer- j
mott, M. V. Patrick, Cora E.
Hearn, Dora E. Harrelson and
11
Mary F. Patrick, Defendants.
TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE (
NAMED:
YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED
and required to answer the complaint
in this action, which has been (
filed in the office of the Clerk of the
Court of Common Pleas, for the said
County, and to serve a copy of your
answer to the said complaint on the
subscriber at his office at Conway, i
S. C., within twenty davs after the
service hereof; exclusive of the day
of such service; and if you fail to'
answer the complaint within thej
time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this 1
action will apply to the Court for 1
the relief demanded in the complaint.
1
January 10th, A. D. 1917. 1
H. H. WOODWARD,
Plaintiff's Attorney.
To M. V. Patrick, Cora E. Hearn,
Dora E. Harrelson and Mary V.
Patrick, Absent Defendants:
TAKE NOTICE That the Com- ^
plaint in the foregoing stated action ;
and the Summons of which the fore- 1
going is a copy were filed in the of- ]
fico of the Clerk of the Court of ]
Common Pleas at Conway, S C., on ]
the 11th day of January A D., 1917. 1
H. H. WOODWARD, >
Plaintiff's Attorney. ^
W. L. BRYAN,
C. C. C. P. i
PRINTED LETTER HEADS. 1
Wihen I get a letter from a farm- <
PV uivif
M.ivicn in iiik on a printed letter-1J
head, I assume at once that here is'f
a reading man and an intelligent,J
farmer, and much the contrary is j >
the impression when I get a letter t
scrawled in pale pencil on dark poor 1
paper which makes it hard for old <
eyes to read. Then another advantage
in the printed letter head, es- t
peciallv whop the letter is from a J
business man, is that many of these t
business men make their signature
In the most complex manner, and but
for the printed name at top I could t
bardly know to whom to send the t
reply. One can guess at a good deal *
in any one's letter, but cannot guess y
a signature that is unreadable.? d
W. F. Massy, in The Progressive d
Farmer. y
ACTIVE SEARCH FOR
THAW IS BEING MADE
Slayer of Stanford White is
Charged With Severely
Whipping Youth.
"N". . ' .
New York.?Search for Harry K.
rhaw, indicted on charges of kidnapping
and assaulting Frederick
3?ump, Jr., of Kansas City, Mo., was
particularly active to<lay in New
i ork Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and
Washington. Thaw was not known
>o be in Philadelphia Monday, but it
tfas said there he left there Monday
tight for Washington and had intend
?d to leave Washington lust night
Tor Pittsburgh. It is charged that
Thaw enticed Gpmp, who is 10 years
:>l?, to a hotel here on Christmas
light and boat him with a whip until
the youth was covered with bloody
whelms. ,
Frank P. Walsh, here as attorney
Tor the boy's father, said Thaw's ac
[juafntance with young Gump dates
hack to December, 1015. Thaw, he
Said, had written Gump a number cP
letters, sent money and offered to
pay his tuition at the Carnegie institute
in Pittsburg.
Evidence laid before the grand
jury here recalled testimony presented
at the hearing en Thaw's sanity
at White Plains in July, 1900. A
New York lodging house keeper s;:i<;
Thaw, before ho killed Stanford
White, lashed girls with a dog whip
in a room which he hired at her
house.
A man said to he George F. i
O'Byrr.cs, and known as Thaw's body
guard, was arrested in Philadelphia!
yesterday as he was about to leave
the city. O'Byrnes was indicted here
with Thaw on the kidnapping
charge. He is held under hail for a
hearing next Friday.
The Philadelphia prisoner denies
that he is O'Brynes, and says that
his name is Oliver Browner. The
Philadelphia police said they found
in his pocket a telegram from the
authorities of Long Beach, Cal., replying
to a message alleged to have
been sent by Thaw seeking information
as to the whereabouts of young
Gump.
Got the Wrong Man.
It developed today that the man
whom the police of Philadelphia
have arrested is not George F.
O'Byraes, Thaw's bodyguard, alleged
to have been involved.
Frank P. Walsh, counsel for the
Gump family, consulted the district
attorney today. He informed the
prosecutor that the man is Oliver
Browner of Utica, N. Y. Browner aid
ed Thaw in Utica last October when
Thaw conducted a political campaign
there against a supreme court justice
who had denied Thaw a writ of
habeas corpus during Thaw's legal
fight to obtain his release from MatLeawan.
Walsh told the prosecutor today
Thaw apparently left in Brower's
rase a number of letters and documents.
One, according to the lawyer,
is an agreement, drawn up but
~A. .11 ? ^ -
iut aigneu, wnereoy uump set forth |
hat he had no objection to being
whipped. 8
o
OBITUARY.
Mrs. Ann R. Vereen, wife of J. D.
Vereen, departed this life on Jan.
>rd, 1917, at the age of 70. She
raves a husband and seven children,
Mis. W. H. Vaught, Vaught, S. C.,
Mrs. A. C. Murrell, Mrs. W. H.
Price, Mrs. J. P. Graham, Mrs. J. D.
Rbyals, Mr. S. W. Vereen, Mr. J. B.
VOreen, and Mr. T. A. Vereen, Conway,
S. C.
She was a daughter of the late
V. W. Waller.
She was a dutiful wife, a kind and
oving mother and was held in highest
esteem by all who knew her. She
oined the Methodist church in her
rirlhood and was a faithful and consistent
member until her death. She
vas laid to rest at Bear Bluff ceme;cry
Jan. 4th, her pastor Rev. Mr.
^hoads conducting the funeral exer
laett.
The host of friends who gathered
o pay the last sad rights 't to this
rood woman shows in what high eseem
she was held.
s
Should you live ten years and coninue
to buy booze from her, and
hen die with snakes in your boots,
he will have enough money to bury
ou decently, and educate your chilIren,
buy a house and lot, marry a
ecent man and quit thinking about
ou entirely.
Pi; c insurance I
Life insurance I
i1p"L? Bonds 1
Office in 1
PEOPLES NATIONAL BANK I
0. A. Spivey W B. King I
?? B
H. H. WOODWARD, ;1
Attoney and Counsellor il Law* f I
CONWAY, 8 **/ I
??rr?i "Lf ,'T 1 """* I
J. T. BOOTH I
Sign Painting and ^Lettering I
ALLEN, S. C, I
R. B. SCARBOROUGH ^ 1
Attorney at Law, ? ^ ;* I
CONWAY. S. C. >l|
WILLIAM EUGENE KING, M 01
Physician and Surgeon ' I
Office in Piatt Drug do, Q I
AYNOR,. ... S.C.1
CHAS. R. SCARBOROUGH I
CON WAV, .SOUTH CAROLINA I
Complete Waterworks, Steam Hot wi. I
ter and Hot Air Heating Plants. 1
INSTALLED ANYWHERE I
Only Plumbing and Heating good* 1
and material of highest quality used. I
Full line of Tub, Toilet, Lavatory, I
Sink and other Bathroom Accessories |
and re^"" ' on hand at all times. 1
Pin.?.o<tig and Heating. I
PUT HOT WATER AND |
HEAT IN YOUR HOUSE
| S. P. HAWES
i Auto Supplies, Fancy Groceries
Ajax Tires, guaranteed 5000
miles.
PHONE 57.
| QUICK DELIVERY.
T. B. LEWIS, I
Atty. and Oouncellor at Lav I
| CONWAY. - - - S.C. I
DR. J. D. THOMAS I
Physician and Surgeon I
loris, s. c. I
J. O. Norton E. 3. C. Baker I
NORTON & BAKER
ATTORN EYS-AT-LAW I
CONWAY, ? ? ? 3. O. I
LUM JUNG LAUNDRY, I
| CONWAY. 8. C. 1
Beginning July 1st. 19181 1
| All persons must take ticketsifor I
| work left here. Possitively no I
I work delivered until ticket is pre- |
sented. Laundry not called for in J
30 days will be sold for charges. 1
LUM JUNG s
J. M. JOHNSON,
CIVTL ENGINEER
Marion, S C.
Railroad, City and Land Surveying;
and Drainage. Road-building an
Sewers Draughting and Blue Printing
W C SINGLETON i
_? -
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Conway, S. C.
Office up Stairs Buck Building
DR. 6.1. LEWIS
DENTAL SURGEON
Office Over Norton Drug Company
CONWAY. S. C.
QBDliBBSnnSFSmssm
g HORRY COUNTY g
i TRUST GOUPANY g
19 ; D. Majfwitlig
S Manager. Q I
g . Real Estate a
g Real Estate Loans a
? Bonds a
u _ Insurance O
ODBfiBBBBOBOB