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COPY SUMMONS FOR RELIEF. (Complaint Not Served.) Court of Common Pleas. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Horry. Burroughs & Collins Company, a Cor- \ poration, Plaintiffs, ( ?vs.? j Hannah Moore, Alice Moore, Eva Moore, and all and singular any < pflfeon or persons whosoever by | whatsoever name or names called i or known, and whose names- arc 1 unknown to the plaintiff, being 1 heirs at law, or claiming to be -J heirs at law of Robert W. Moore, < Dec'd.; Stone Brothers Company, a I Corporation; and W. H. Stone, Administrator of the personal es- 1 tato of Nelson Thomas, Dec'd , De- j fendants. i TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE NAMttn- - YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED^ and required to answer the complaint j in this action, which has been filed in j< the office of the Clerk of Court of : ] Common Pleas, for the said County, i atni^i serve a copy of your answer to , the Said complaint on the subscriber (1 at his office at Conway, S. C., within j twenty days after the service hereof; i exclusive of the day of such service; ( and if you fail to answer the com- , jfdaint within the time aforesaid, the ""^plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint. Dated December 9th, A. D. 1919. H. Jl. W OODWA HD, Plainti ff's Attorney. TO Hannah Moore, Alice Mo i e, an I j Eva jjM?i?rc, Absent Dcfcndan's: TAKE!NOTIC'IO* That the Com- j plaint in the foregoing stated acti m and the Summons of whi h the f re- I going is a copy were filed in the o.- J fice of the Clerk of (ho Court < f j Common Pleas in and for Hori v j County, at Conway, S. C., on the 14th day of January A. I). 1920. W. L. BRYAN,( L. S.) C. C. C. P. H. II. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. ORDER. Upon hearing the Petition and Affidavit. in hnli'il f nf Iff I" ? . . ^ ... V W..WI A. ti IV- J / I <4 11 1 I II JL 111 the foregoing stated action; and it ap pearing that Alice Moore and Eva Moore, infant defendants in said cause, are now absent from the State of South Carolina: In pursuance of Subdivision 2 of Section 165 of th" Code of Civil Procedure of South Carolina A. D. 1912, it is hereby or- * dered that J. S. Vaught, Judge of Probate of Horry County, be and he is hereby appointed as Guardian A 1 Litem of said absent infant defendants for the purposes of this action, and is hereby authorized and directed to appear and defend this action in their behalf, unless the said irfant defendants, or someone in their bo half within twenty days after the service of a copy of this Order, either personally out of the State, or bv publication with the summons as hereinafter stated, shall procure to be appointed some suitable person as Guardian Ad Litem for the said infants; it appearing that J. S. Vaught is a suitable and competent person to act as such Guardian. It is further ordered that this Order shall be served upon said infan1 defendants by publishing the same for three successive weeks in the Horry Herald, a newspaper published in Horry County, immediately following the summons in said action; oi the said Order may be served on said inftbnts personally while out of the State: And that the service of said Order shall be completed on the day of the date of the last publication thereof in said paper or on the day that the same is personally served on said parties, and that the twenty .l?~ -ii v j iittjra xvi tuianxi ?? & Mlilll Ut'glll J iun from tho date of the personal service as herein provided, or from the date of the last publication thereof in said paper. Given under my Hand and Seal this 23rd day of Jan. 1920, at Conway, South Carolina. W. L. BRYAN, (L. S.) C. C. C. P. H. H. WOODWARD, Attorney for Plaintiff. i "Cold In the Head" to an acute attack of Naaal Catarrh. Persons who are subject to frequent "coldt In the head" will And that the use ot HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE will build up the System, cleanse the Blood L and render them less liable to colds. a ivD|whiwi BHUCao VI ..vu.c Catarrh may r leail to Chronic Catarrh. P HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE Is tftki en Internally and acts through the Blood ^ V* the Mucous Surfaces of the System. PP^CAll Druggists 75c. Testimonials free. 'flOC.OO for any case of catarrh that HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE will not cure. F. J, Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. GASOLINE SYSTEMS Oil Tanks and Pumps, Air CompfC s OlM. CAmnul.mu' SrPlnnr Sr?n1n* r O - 7 ? V -j Show Oases, Account Registers, Rej built Cash Registers, Safos, Store Fixtures. THE HAMILTON SALES CO., (adv) Columbia, S. C. 1 29 If ] \ REAL CAREER > IN AGRICULTURE Clemson College. . .. 6?"As a man hlnketh in his heart, so is he". So > peaks Holy Scripture, and all exper> S ence confirms its truth. The most important consideration, gherefore, for the farmer is his attitude toward his farm. What does he think shout it,?what does he think about Farming? Does he love his fields and woods ?Doe8 his eye rest with peculiar Fondness on his sleek mules and fat 01 cattle? Does he feel in his very soul that farming is a high calling, the only t< vocation for him? Or does he value i; Fields and woode and cattle in terms w merely of money? Will he sell them all ^ For a price, and gladly turn away from ^ them forever? Is he a farmer by chance .. t>r by choice? Has he simply "inherit- 1 Bd" a farm? Is he a farmer because he P lr n Axir (1 n /\ih/v?? 1.1M ? 11? I nuunn tiw uiimi w i\y U1 Ul<lftlll? U II Vs | Ing," because it may seem to him tbe(h aasiest, most independent life? Has he c< looked the world and its businesses in the face, and deliberately decided that, v. as for him, th*> plow and the fresh p earth upturned, and the gixnving plant A have charms above all? Before any further real progress can be made in the development of our country life,that country life must be \ saturated with love of the country. % Many more farmers there must be, b whoso determination to stay on tlioj1 farm is quite as fixed as their d term in { ation to win success, and comfort a. d thappiness, for themselves and their n families, by mcjins of their farming a Such farmers will not be bribed by a it sudden rise in the prices of farm lands b to "sell out" and move to a neighboring town. They will not be driven away by labor troubles. They may s* 11 a put of tin lr holdings, but they will st:?J j cling to the soil By the use of modern I S machinery in the home and on the b farm, they will so multiply personal efficiency as to reduce greatly the nam- ^ ber of laborers, and increase the output .j of all who work. These farmers will he a fully persuaded in their own minds, t that they above men in other callings, have opporuniiy to rnise strong healthy y children. They will appreciate at their true worth, the breeze blowing cleat jj and pure over the wheat, the sight of t cattle on the hill feeding slowly home- (j ward, the run In the woods after nuts, 8 for the children's growth, both of body and mind. Who but the farmer can furnbh in abundance to Mr children, clean milk, fres-h eggR, tender vogotablea, home-raised bread and meat? The medical records of the Selective Draft Board.have just revealed that the healthiest zone in the United States ia from North to South, practically coincident with the zone of greatest agricultural development, the great Mississippi Valley. May not the more abundant food supply there be lie secret of the stronger, healthier young men? "Bread" is the universal human cry. Only the farmer can furnish it. No other occupation fills so fundamental a need. Preacher, lawyer, doctar, merchant, manufacturer, banker,?we can not do without them, hut their importance to society is less than the farmer's. The first occupation both in point of time and point of logic is farming. And the farmer, the real farmer, will realize that he is, und'rr God, the dispenser of the bounties of Nature to hie hungry fellowmen. lie will value liis profession accordingly. The -'cry practice o! the art of farming affords opportunity to the farmer to grow to the full, mentally and spiritually. He ie not dependent on men and thinge as other men are. He is dependent on cloud and sunshine, on the hidden processes of life; that is, he is dependent on the wisdom, power and goodnesi of God. He ought to be a better man for it. Just because the farm gives fchii opportunity for closer relationship with the Lord of life, there is it higher dignty about this business than wa have oemmonly accorded Nt. We have looked at the dirty hand, and the bent back, and we have called the farmer uncouth and his profession urwclean. The world has taught hian to despise his work and t, J ? IS ~ -M J Ik . -1-M1 - * ? iu(iiST7ii. aamme uie *kiu or rn? great surgeon. bht forgets the yean he spent hi the gruesome work ot the dissecting-room. It praises the artist who sings a song, or writes a stcry. or paints a picture, hut the srtiat who gave us our breeds of cattle, or strains of wheat or com, our improved metfe orda of tiHago, are almost unknown. Yet their reward Is with them. In the quiet, even in the obscurity of theii farms, they so lived and worked that mankind is perpetually their debtor. Your farming holds the possibility of such a career for you. Some recent publications of interest to 5uui.ii Carol! Ha fui'iitSrs are list* J ed below and may be obtained free 'iy writing to the Agricultural Editor, Clemson College, S. C. Extension Bulletin 43, "Tobacco Culture in South Carolina." Extension Bulletin 44, "Fighting the Boll Weevil with Pastures and Fencing." Experiment Sta? tlon Bulletin 200, "Analyses of Commercial Fertilizers." Experiment Station Bulletin 201, "Cresotlng Fence Posts." - ...... ?-?Q.. , IV P. T~Tjl.rrn1fir.Tl Mmri .'f n of . ? ? c? VV^ cvu Finklca's Cross R. a Is, spent a clay liere on business last week. THE HORRY HERALD, COM iew zeaundhat many wonders trange Freaks of Nature in the Antipodeal Islands. I Even the New Zealanders, so far at of the beaten track of world trents that their institutions and cus>ms have developed along u ique ncs, and so self sustaining that the orld war scarcely affected their >od supply, are not isolated enough ) escape the universal pinch of high ving cost, according to recent disatches. The National Geographic Society | as issued the following bulletin conAMn:nn> n?H fining vui uiuipuuui iicignuui . Imagine boot-like Italy inverted, nth the tip of her peninsular toe ointed toward the eastern coast of Lusralia, some 1,000 miles distant, You Do More Work, ^ "ou are more ambitious and you get more njoyment out of everything when youj lood is in good condition. Impurities ir tie blood have a very depressing effect on tie system, causing weakness, laziness ervousness and sickness. 1R0VE*S TASTELESS Chill TONK ^stores Energy and Vitality by Purifying nd Enriching the Blood. When you fee! s strengthening, invigorating effect, see ow it brings color to the cheeks and how l Improves the appetite, you will then! ppreciateits true tonic value. iROVIPS TASTELESS ChlU TONIC * not a patent medicine, it i3 simply RON and QUININE suspended in Syrup, o pleasant even children like it. The lood needs Quinine to Purify it ai d IRON o Enrich it. 'lhcid reliable tonic proprtics never fail to drive out impurities in ho blood. die Strength-Creating Power of GROVE'S 'ASTELESS Chill TONIC has made it he favorite tonic in thousands of homes, lore than thirty-five years ago, folks rouldridea long distance to get GROVE'S ^ASTELESS Chill TONIC when o aeniber of their family had Malaria or leeded a body-building, strength-giving onic.? The formula is just the same tolay, and you can get it from any drug tore. 60c per bottle. r? I The A Buildi: ewweiuiiuwwiiimiiiiHiHiiimimiiiiiiiiitmiMum j 30x3^ Goo A 1 rdunc, mi' 30x31/2 Go Fabric, Anti C ? ' . . [WAY, S. 0., FEB. 19, 1920. and you gain a picture, both in size and contour, of New Zealand. Long accounted a social science laboratory and political exper'ment station, some physical features of New Zealand are equally unusual. Zoologists found there a tailless bird evolutionary souvenir, they believe, of the now extinct wingless moa, ranging in size from that of a turkey to a super-ostrich height of twelve feet from head to ground. Then there is a caterpillar which dies but to live again in the form of a plant, which blossoms and goes to seed. In the instep of the island boot is an area equal to that of Connecticut and Deleware together, where boiling I springs spout from shores of ice cold lakes, hissing pillars of steam and columned vapors puncture the surface, phenomena comparable only to tha steaming, vaporous Vallov of jTcn Thousand Smokes, near Mt. Katnial, Alaska. Here, as in Alaska, it is a case of 'cherchez le volcan,' and the volcano ir to he found in the extinct crater of j White Island. For the thermal j springs district extends into the sea, and cmergs again in the barren peak a thou and feet high, hooded in billow veils of whit? vapor. Attracting the publicist because it has the newc: t governmental experiments?compu'sory arbitration, oil age pen: ions, tax exemptions, ' en small farms, for example?New i ''ealand interests the go -g:st for an , opposite icasv n, bccfm i i> r.mo ; j the oldest poilians of ti o ai '.'n s sjlidi :'ied sin face. S Mom is a clearer il'.u trati' n t ho h? d of the effects of the g a g raphy upon a p?ople. In fact 41 t 'demonstration was dunlTate 1 in N v I ' Zealand, o ce with the .Maoris, an Hu n with tlio Kngish eoloni-ts. The j Maoris, among the m st remarkable 1 of all savage tribes, arc PMyne ian.>. They came, some 500 ye ?rs ago, some 1 ay frwi Tahiti. and fcur.d 1h.c abor- j Jnies 'unappetizing, hut, as the j ve t proved, not indigestible.' The climate of Now Zealand, with its 'eleslic air and perpetual moti n' is more stimulating than the oner- j vating air of most Polynesian is- i lands, food was not waiting t > he j i plucked from trees, and shelter had I IMMBIMMRXBBHnBBHMBMDmnMBa Vorld's Lai ir\ i aa i Llg JUAJj JUAJ Owners o \ high relat A gh-es ntm y\* costly mol . KtiN$h01 rT~'7 k~\ itllV;\'4 rheycaaV |\l||i;l amount of & lllltn by Goody I fig | worth in w / t tlli! inch sizes. ^ I .' ill :Hlj They can L i despite t! ^ I | in adaitios I I an average f ? I largest tir S sizes meat HI If you owr & I or any odl i M I i ^ I m M to uie nc * I mil Dealer foi 'Ww / I Heavy Toi d year Double-Cure $*7^00 vVcaiiicr Tread rcsn.c cheap odyear Single-Cure i-f *"765 tban Skid Tread?. *1722 proof to?bw?? to be provided. Hence the latent instincts of these, savage can* ibats were developed here ae nov here e so and, even before the EngPrh tame, the Maoris had gable roofed houses, with elaborately carved posts and lintels, and interiors decorated with designs of crude beauty. Women were needed in the stniggle against harsher natural forces, so they won positions of esteem, and were represented in tribal councils. They were ingenious to bake meats on heated stones; but not too civilized to roast especially tough cuts of human flesh on this aboriginal fircless cooker. They alone, among the Pacific islanders, discovered how to weave. Yet they know not the use of minerals, and their leviathan canoes, lashed together, were constructed with* tools of stone, shell, bones and even of human teeth. European discovery of the islands is attributed to Tasman, in 1G42, but exploration did not take place until tho t.imo of -Inmnj O.wvb i rr? , ? V%?Jt'Vt V vuv? r\ y J %J\t years later, while colonization \va s delayed until twenty years bi fore our civil war. When colonization did take place it resembled the stttlement of the American colonies, in that settlements! were made in half a dozen places,' instead of being promoted from a central base, according to the usual British method. The colonizers an? said to have profited by a study of the mistakes of England which 0 i brought about the A me ican r volution, and so well did they app'y the ( lessons that the far away islan 1 today is one of dm most loyd nut'oms of the British empire. T' is faet was attested by th.e way New /'.onhval,,v far exceeded their exported tju t 1 of troops in the world war, ( A chief iigui'o of the coloniz: tion was Edward Gibbon Wakefield, as hiza re a character as h's ass cii'oa with such a <! tinetive domi ?ien would imply. A ftor serving a prison entenco in England for ah aiding an hoirc. s by means of forged letters he was debarred from the Parlinmert upon which he later exerted an indirect but potent influence to aid m carrying out the colonization plan now associated with his name. A fundamental part of his policy was H* M??????a?M rgest Tire I >i and 31x4-in lmmmmimumum-'uiuuiunuiuuiri.'iuticui i.-H.uiiUHmicmitttuiMutiiii.'iiiiii ttini..:tuaiinttl f small cars can enjoy 1 ive value in Goodyear r ost sa.tisfacf.ion to ov/ne :or carriage:!, take advantage of that tre 'equipment, skill ;mcl care ; ear to build tires ol: extr; the 30x3", 30x3Vz', ai secure these tires without re enormous demand, a to its larger sizes, Goody< _ r ^a />/>/* * j or zu,uuu a clay in th< c factory devoted to t toned. t a Ford,Chevrolet, Dort, ier car using one of these ;arest Goodyear Service r Goodyear Tires and C arist Tubes. year Heavy Tourist Tubes are thick, str< : i.. ii7i ,.? _ t wmoii?k<> |7in|>vi iy< wily i i?tv u gc.M.?ct tube? Goodyear Heavy Tourist Tubes c tubes of less merit. 30x3Vi size in u bag U Wl1 m U31 J... ?^ac.TtJWMMaMiaiw i ir* :s>ffMVr.aB^-ii.* .->.- < n>? PAGE THBBB to avoid great landed estates, the promiscuous giving away of land to ne'er-do-wells and adventurers, an I finally, though his early disgTare still drove him to work under cover of pseudonyms and agents, he ranked as the foremost colonial authority of his day, as a zealous reformed and idealist. It was due. to Wakefield that men of substance gained a foothold in New Zealand, that industry rather than exploitation became the motif ol the colony, and that the fundamea tal aim of the government still is that of "no millionaires and no paupero.' The island population, exclusive of Maoris, now exceeds a million. The Maoris, numbering about 50,000, have risen to a position of eminence, being represented in the legislative assembly, in the cabinet, and having physicians, attorneys and other professional men of note among Ihcfr num II , pressIdemands for surrender Of Germans Accused of War Crimes, the C /jnoil Decide:!. London- I's.c allied si'prere co'.m(. i' l as dee! .x'd to ;/(< if - doma'ds for the M;ri'r;u'ov of Go mans a< u.sc ' of war I. rinirs dc -n'.c the prole, is of imo government id* Borlin, it va;i stated. It had in on reported i' at thoro were difference* between F finer an 1 Groat Britain as to who the demands should bo modified. It is probable that the p ition of 11)0 allies will he set f >nh soon in a statement. This may take the form of another communication to Germany, or p. ssibly one to Holland. As far as can he ascertained, how' ever, nothing1 definite has been do| cided regarding any further steps to i be taken toward Holland. ii ?actory || ch Tires I? Vl IS ? k Is Tires that jj ? rs of big, JI :meridous | employed i | icrdiiiary !|l rd 31x4- j|| t waiting, ill because. * jar builds 111 ; world's f 3 3 he three t; k Maxwell, ; sizes, go : Station 3oodyear * . >ng tubes that | caaiiig with a 31' OSt little mnn? >ater- $^90 ? p ? . -i-rrn ii ii MBW? ?Win -v^r . ? .. ii 11 n-????^hl