The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, October 25, 1917, Page SEVEN, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

i ' _* 10,899 DRAFTED MEN SLATED FOR SEVIER Taken from Camp Jackson and Gordon to Swell Ranks of ^ Thirtieth Division. G'eenville. Three thousand, scvom r hundred and tour Tenncsseeans from Camp Gordon, at Atlanta, and an equal number of North Carolinians, and 2,592 South Carolinians from Camp Jackson, at Columbia, will make up the 10,000 drafted men who will bo sent here to swell the ranks of the Thirtieth division, it was learned today from headquarters at Camp Sevier, The movement to Greenville i? start about October 18, but will bo dependent entirely on whether transportation can readily be furnish( ed at that time. About 8,000 more men will be required to bring the di vision to in 11 strcngtn and active plans to enlist this number will be commenced shortly. LEMON JUICERS FRECKLE REMOVER Girls! Make thi3 cheap beauty lifiotion to clear and whiten your skin. Squeeze the juice of two lemon4 into a bottle containing three ounce of orchard white, shake well, and you have a quarter pint of the bes freckle and tan lotion, and complex icn beautifier, at very, very smal. cost. Your grocer has the lemons am', any drug store or toilet counter will supply three ounces of orchard white for a few cents. Massage this sweet iy fragrant lotion into the face, neck, arms and hands each day and see hew freckles and blemishes disappeai and how clear, soft and white the skin becomes. Yes! It is harmless, adr ' *"* o > The presence of United States Marshal Lyon in Spartanburg for a conference with Sheriff White and members of the military police of Camp Wads worth is understood to mean a closer cooperation on the part of all authorities in the war that Is going on waged against illicit stills in that section. COPY SUMMONS FOR RELIEF. (Complaint Not Served.* STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Horry. Court of Common Pleas. George J. Holliday, Plaintiff, Against Albert Norris, Manassa Norris, Mag nus Norris, Helen Norri;;, Mar, Norris, Flora J. Holliday; and a and singular each and veery of th hiers at law of J. A. No r:-;, decea e l, and of Purifoy Norris, decease ! tire names of whom arc unknown t? p 1 a in tiff, Def enda n ts. TO THE DEFENDANTS A BO VI NAMED: * YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the complain' in this action, which has been filed ir tho office of the Clerk of the Court i n on Pleas, for the said County ntfd to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscriber at his office at Conway, S. C., will tin twenty days after the service hereof; exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer th c.'oniplaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded ?n hte complaint. Dated October 3rd, A. D. 1017. H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. W. L. BRYAN, (L. S.) Magnus Norris,' Manassa Norns, Helen Norris, Albert Norris, and all and singular, each and every of the Heirs at Paw of J. A. Norn's, Dcc'd., and of Purifoy Norris, Dec'd, the Names of Whom are Unknown to Plaintiff, Absent Defendants: 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 the Court of Common Pleas in and for Horry County, at Conway, S. C., on the 6th day of October, A. D. 1917. W. L. Bryan, (L. S.) C. C. C. P. H. H. WOODWARD, V Plaintiffs Attorney. . o James B. Addy, of Lexington county, filed a petition with the supreme ccurt of the State asking that the State board of education be enjoined from enforcing the contracts made with the publishers of the Mft text books recently adopted by tho board. The court accepted^ original jurisdiction in the case cri^ 3et November 11' as tho date for hearing the action. 1 1. 1 NOTICE OF SALE. Under and by virtue of a Decretal Order made by His Honor John S Wilson, Circuit Judge Presiding in 12th Circuit, at Chambers, Georgetown, S. C., in the case of Ex Parte: W. A. Freeman, Receiver of Farmers & Merchants Bank, Petitioner, In Re. The State Ex-Relatione I. M. Mauldin State Bank Examiner, Plaintiff vs. Farmers & Merchants Bank. W. R Lewis, et nl, Directors, Defendants, \nd dated October 10th, 1917, Notice is hereby - iven tint I? W. A. Freeman, Receiver, will offer for sale be fore the Court House door in Con way, S. C., within legal hours of sale on Monday November 5th, 1917, th: t being the legal sales day in said month, the following described p?"op erty, to wit: 1. All and singular that certain lot and the buildings thereon situate, within the Town of Conway, Ci unty ol Horry, State of South Carolina, and on the North side of Third Avenue >n the said town, measuring and contain ing 24 ft. and 3 inches front on said avenue, and running back same width 70 feet, together with the four (4) foot alleyway running and extending therefrom out to Laurel street. Bounded by Conway Bargain House property, J. E. Nicholas, Third Ave", ue and Laurel street, and being the identical property conveyed to th<Farmers & Merchants Bank by W . Russ, et al by deed of date Decembc 2Cth, 1912), recorded Clerk's office foil orry County in Book XXX at page 185; and by A. C. Thompson to Farmers and Merchants Bank by deod dated May 15th, 1914, recorded Clerk's office in Book at page 257, to which deeds and the record thereof reference is craved for a mor< complete description hereof. 2. AH and singular that certain parcel of land, situate in Galivants Ferry township, Horry County, State aforesaid, and in Lake Swamp, containing Ten hundred and eichtv-fivr (1085) acres, more or less, bounded North by estate lands of E. Gcrrald S. P. Gerrald, E. E. Gcrrald, F. B. Graham, J. M. Elvington, and Mayo Holmes; West by lands of Burroughs & Collins Co., South by Buroughs <fc Collins Co., and Reddin Smith; West by lands formerly owned by Y. P. McQueen said lands being represemted on plat made by J. E. Moore, Surveyor in 1912, and being the identical lands conveyed to W. A. Freeman, Receiver by Will A. Freeman, Special Master, as Tract No. 2, by deed dated December 14th, 1916, recorded Clerk's Office, Horry County in Book HHH ? pege 818. 3. Those two certain parcels situate in Conway Township, Horry County State aforesaid, containing in the ag gregate 50 acres, more or less, and known as the F. S. Powell land, parcel No. 1 containing 40 acres, more or less, and parcel No. 2. containing acres, more less, bounded by lands of Si rah Hardee, Jasper Powell, Hamp Gowham, J. T. Jordan ar.d Mclto. Jordan, and being the identical prop rrty conveyed to Farmers & Mer chants Hank by L. I). Magrath, Trustee, by his deed of date October 9th 1017, unrecorded. 4. That certain parcel situate i: Crtvvny township, Horry County State i.foresaid, containing One iiund ed seven (107) acres, more or lessknown as the L. J. Watts lard, full. ' represented on plat made by E. Hamp | llardwick, surveyor, of date May 18th, I 1011, aid is fully described in deed from M. J. West to W. A. Freeman, COULD HARDLY STAND ALONE ^ Terrible Suffering From Headache, Sideache, Backache, and Weakness, Relieved by Cardui, Says This Texas Lady. Gonzales, Tex. Mrs. Minnie Philpot, of this place, writes: "Five years ago I was taken with a pain in my left side. It was right under my left rib. It would commence with an aching and extend- up into my left shoulder and on down Into my back. By that time the pain would be bo severe I would have to take to bed, and suffered usually about three days .. .1 suffered this way for three years, and STOt to he ft mflPfl alrnlotnn on/1 xtraa _ w _W ...w. V */??VtVVVU l?UV4 U?* I bo weak I could hardly stand alone Was not able to go anywhere and had to let my house work go...I suffered awful with a pain in my back and 1 had the headache all the time. I Just was unable to do a thing. My life was a misery, my etomach got In an awful condition, caused from taking so much medicine. I suffered so much pain. I had just about given up all hopes ot our getting anything to help me. One day a Birthday Almanac was thrown la my yard. After reading Its testimonials I decided to try Car dui, and am so thankful that I did for I began to improve when on thr ssoond bottle...I am now a tei woman and feeling fine and tho cur* has been permanent for it has bee* two years since my awful bed he&ltl I will always praise and recommen Cardui." Try Cardul today. E ?. THE BOBBY umua A Y4- < .,v. * -\ /,3*} TXVftW/V Betts:: Banking Ser The Federal Reserve Ban Lined resources of a thousand established by Act of Congr forming and business interest We are members of this s better than ever before, to J the credit and currency they and to protect them against < If you are not linked up w our depositors come in anc helpo you. PEOPLE -vk KtrnnoAi ourPASf*- ? H^n \\Ta -? r v. m ?.* . * - ^??? "? ? * W ?T i. SYSTEM Receiver, of date January 2nd. 1910, ; recorded Clerk's Office Horry County 1 in Hook H4 at page 159, to which plat and deed reference is craved for a < more complete dscription hereof. 5. All and singular that certain lot in the town of Loris, Simpson Creek township, Horry County, State aforesaid, measuring and containing 25 feet frontage and 500 feet depth fully described in deed from B. S. Butler to < B. L. Robertson of date March 30tn, 1S14, recorded ZZZ at page 317, and is the identical property conveyed to W. A. Freeman, Receiver by J. A. Ivewis, Sheriff of Horry County, by his deed of date April 3rd, 1916, recorded Clerk's office Horry County, ] in Book HHH at page 256, to which deeds and the record thereof reference is craved. 6. All and singular those certain Five (5) parcels of land situate in Mucks township, Horry County, State Aforesaid, known as the Joanna R. Harriaon lands, containing in the wg i ^reg&te Two Hundred fifty-four (254) acres, more or less, fully represented >n compiled plat by H. C. Cannon, nnveyor, of date Sept. 16th, 1915 tract No. 1 containing 81 acres and icaignatcd on above mentioned plat as Parcel B. Tract No. 2 containing 66 acres and represented on said plat as Tract B; tract No. 3 containing 25) iTC3 and represented on said plat as Parcel C.; tract No. 4 containing 32 ' res and designated as the upper or j northern part of tract marked "1;M{ and tract No. 5 containing 100 acreij \rd designated on said plat as Tract j \To. 2. These being the identical , tr.ds conveyed to W. A. Freeman,! Receiver by J. A. Lewis, Sheriff, by ' his deed dated Koby. 7th, 1916, record- : rd Clerk's Of fi e for Horry County in ! 'look OOO at page 556, to which , b od reference is craved. Terms of Sale, Cash. Purchaser to pay for papc7-s. W. A. FREEMAN, Receiver of Farmers & Merchants Bank. 'Conway, S. C., October 16, 1917. : O OBITUARY.. Early on the morning of September | the 12th, 1917, God saw fit to take nwnu frr?rr\ na ntir Knlrt?A/l f.ifViA,. T ? ????** ? i fill uu ^114 UVIV/YLVI I (VlilC 1 J ?fa P. Macklin. Ho was taken sick in the afternoon while at work, and passed away the next morning at 9 o'clock. Ho was born at Socastee and died at his home 40* sat ! have in this week forty can buy. I have enlarged my this season a full supply Hor and Harness. .You can get a g my line. Come to see me and your money than you can possi G. 6, J! LD, CONWAY. 8. 0 f o ' J. / i u?e;\jd -v vice for Farmers king System, with com} million dollars, has boon ess to stand back oi tlie Is of the country, ystcm v/hich enables us, supply our farmers v/ith need for producing crops disorganized markets, ith this system as ;ne of 1 let us tell you how it :S NATIONAL BANK Ly, South Carolina. nc the age of sixty. He is survived jy a wife and ten children. D, Father while you are lying asleep in death; We miss thee. We can no longer hear the whisper of thy breath; How can it be. Gcd has seen fit to take you away from us; Your loved ones you leave. But God says to part is just; And leave our loved ones to bereave. Dear Father, in Heaven we all hope to meet you; Our joy to impart. Whero no pain nor sorrow will be; And we shall never part." A Son. o The weekly report of the Charleston Clearing House indicates greatly improved businses conditions in Charleston, in comparsion with the same period last year. o Run Down, Aching nQAnla naod o Hnnd tnni/> 1AWVI U | that will send the blood tingling through the body, enrich it by improving the digestion, and clean it by expelling the waste matter. Health is a matter of plenty of rich blood, free from impurities. PERUNA dispels inflammation of the blood making organs, the digestion-gives tone and "pep" to the membranes that line the lungs and the digestive tract, and invigorates the entire system. You can have health if you mke Horses and Mules, the best I Stables and will keep during ses, Mules, Wagons, Buggies, ood selection of any thing in will give you better value far bly get any where else. iNKIHS FULL INFORMATION ABOUT LIGHTNING RODS Weather Bureau Gives Specifications For Their Installing on Buildings. Lightning rods, according to the* Y\ oather Bureau of the United States Department of Agriculture, are worth while for much more than to make ''earfui folks comfortable during a thunderstorm. It goes on to say that with good lightning-rod installation they not only feel but are more secure, and that protection against lightning is generally thoroughly justified for farm buildings. In a bulletin just published the department gives specifications for installing lightning rods. These specifications are meant not so much to enable the householder to construct his own protective system as to make it possible for him to understand and inspect adequately the work of installation as done by an expert. Copper-cable installation is recommended as the best, but it costs the most. Competitive bids should be secured if the installation is to be extensive. A few of the main points to be considered are: C inductors should be installed in straight runs, and when bends are necessary they should, if practicable, not he abrupt. Changes of direction should preferably be made in large radius curves that is on curves with a radius of a foot or i 1 i ? * * nt\;ru. insulators snouui not be employed, because a good electrical connection wiht the wet roof and walls of a building helps to conduct the discharge to the ground harmlessly, j Along ridges and flat roofs the aerials, or upward-pointing conduc| tors, should bo not more than 25 feet j apart; steeples and towers, because of ! their prominence, should be given extra protection. The most important part of the work is the grounding of tho conductors, or their electrical connection to permanently moist earth. Ample metal plates, or pipes, etc., are buried in the earth and permanently and thoroughly connected to the conductcrs on the building, and this metal in the ground should be of a noncorrosive type, such as copper, bronze, or aluminum. Steel towers, such as those which support windmills, do not require special protection, as a rule, because they err constructed of metal and are weilgrounded through the pump. Deep rccted trees are some protection to buildings near which they grow; on tho other hand, it is recommended that especially valuable large trees might well be rodded. warmers' Bulletin 842, "Modern Methods of Protection Against Lightning," will be sent free to all who will apply to the United States Department of Agriculture, Washington, I). C. o W. J. Singleton was in Conway one day last week. amvm ON OPEN BOATS London. James Tringor, of Roanoke, Va., according to a dispatch to The Daily Chronicle from a British port, was killed by shrapnel fired by a German submarine upon the open 1 hr.Il t.a l?f II fi-.rnnil/irt/l Hi'it ot'nnmr.i. v, V4. 14 V\/I|/V.VIWV\I IM IIIOII .HVUIIIVi >n which the American was employd. Another member of the crew in Tringor's boat, a fireman, was wound ed by a shell from the submarine and ! lied as he was being placed upon ;> rescuing ship. There were 12 Americans among the 41) survivors landed at a British port. Bryon Wood, one of the America vjrvivors, said that eight survivors had been taken to a hospital sir ferine from serious wounds. "We were attacked at 0 o'clock Sun day morning by two German submarines," said Wood. "We tried to escape by r.ig-zagging, but it was no use. They got our range and soon shells were bursting all over the dock.; We succeeded in launching two boats on the starboard side, those on the port side, having been shot away. When the nearest submarine was only a quarter of a mile away sho sent six , j shrapnel shells at us, only one of I which took effect. The annroach of ! the rescuing ship caused the submarines to dive." o Whenever You Mud Qefltral Toole Toko Grove's. Thi Old Standard Grove's Tasteless ehiU Tonic is equally valuable M s General Tonic because it contains the | well known tonic properties of QUININE 1 and IKON. It acts on the Liver, Drives j out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and1 Builds v.p the Whole System. 60 cents, t I svnsm SUBMARINES FEAR U. S. DESTROYERS American Craft Have Steamed 875,000 Miles in Five Months MO LIFE LOST AND NO SERIOUS MISHAP' Have Aided Materially in Weak cnins Morale of U-Boat Crews. Base of American Flotilla in British Waters. In the five months of active service that they have seen in the war, the American destroyers have steamed collectively a total distance of 875,000 miles. This, is more by several times than the distance cruised in two whole f*virs of peace. a net what makes the figures ali the more impressive is that they have i)een reached without the loss through an accident of war of a single life or a very serious mishap fce any of the units. The Americans can claim no small part of the credit for the gradual decrease in shipping losses. First of all, the addition of their units to the Allied forces, patrolling as they do an area as large as that bounded roughly by the great V-formed by New York, Detroit and Knoxville, was certain to make life less comfortable for the U-boats. Next, the Americans applied all the tactics of the long experienced British and in some instances improved on them. All destroyers added to their equipment depth charges and other devices. Then the crews learned some more about the business of smoke screening a merchant fleet while they beat off the attacking submarine with gun fire and depth charges. Their gunnery, too, has greatly improved. One crew saw a spar of a sunken ship the other day which they at first thought was a periscope and shattered it at 2.000 yards. New Ideas Worked Out. New ideas also have been and are constant!V h??ir?cr wnrlrArl rvi?* --- o T. ?? nvtl UUl If IU1 A view to rendering the work of the submarine increasingly difficult. For instance, two officers working on design for new destroyers, have introduced many new ideas gained from observations made in this anti-submarine game. Still others have suggested changes in gun firing. WHY YOU ARE NERVOUS The nervous system is the alarm system of the human body. In perfect health we hardly realize that we have a network of nerves, but when health is ebbing, when strength is declining, the same nervous system gives the alarm in headaches, tiredness, dreamful sleep, irritability and unless corrected, leads straight to a breakdown. To correct nervousness, Scott's Emulsion is exactly what you should take; its rich nutriment gets into the blood fu:d rich blood feeds the tiny nerve-cells while the whole system responds to its refreshing tonic force. It is free from alcohol. Scott & Nowne, Blooinfield. N. J. a COPY SUMMONS FOR RELIEF (Complaint Served) Court of Common Pleas. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, International Harvester Company, of America, a Corporation, Plaintiff, vs. O. C. Connelly, and J. M. Connelly, j Defendants. I TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE NAMED: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the complaint in this action, of which a copy i? herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to the aid complaint on the subscriber at his office at Conway, S. C., within twentv days after the service hereof; exclusive of tho day of such service, and if you fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid, the plainitff in this action will apply V> the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint. Hated September 1st, A. D., 1917. H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. '1 "> O. C. Connelly and J. M. Connelly, Absent Defendants: Take Notice that the Complaint in the foregoing stated action and thn Summons of which the foregoing is a copy were filed in the office of the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas in and for Horry County, at Conwny, S C., en the 4th day of September A. D., 1917. W. L. BRYAN, (L. S.) C. C. C. P. H. H. WOODWARD. 61 9-13. Plaintiff's Attorney.