The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, April 29, 1920, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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J J m There is son in paying an acc( tling an account, an account with to get a receipt receipt that act but may not alwa Rnf if maii now on uui ii j vu |J?J mi a check on a bai count is settled celled check is a The Burroug Trust COPY SUMMONS FOR RELIEF. (Complaint Not Served). Court of Common Pleas. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, 1 County of Horry. C. E. Huggins and W. B. Gay, Plain * tiffs, , ( vs. John W. Roberts, Georgiana Roberts, f Susan H. Roberts, and all and sin- ^ / gular the heirs at law *>f John W. Roberts, Georgiana Roberts and Susie Roberts, the names 01 whom, if any exist, are unknown to plain . tiffs,?Also all other persons unknown, claiming any right, title, estate, interest in, or lein upon ' the real ^estate described in the 1 Complaint herein, Defendants. WO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE 1 NAMED: 1 YOU ARE HERE BY SUMMON- J ED and required to answer the complaint in this action, which has been 1 tfiled in the office of the Clerk of * the Court of Common Pleas, for the .1 aaid County, and to serve a copy of < your answer to the said complaint on ! the subscriber at his offfice at Con- : \ way, S. C., within twenty days after j J ( the service hereof; exclusive of the;, <lay of such service; and if you fail 11 to answer the complaint within the J time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief damanded in the complaint. April 20th, A. D. 1920. H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. TO John W. Roberts, Georgiana Roberts, Susan H. Roberts, and all 1 and singular the Heirs at Law of { John W. Roberts, Georgiana Robert:: and Susie Roberts, the names ' of whom, if any exist, are unknown to plaintiffs,?Also all oth er persons unknown, claiming any J right, title, estate, interest in, or lien upon the real estate described 1 I 666 quickly relieves Constipation, ; , Biliousness, Loss of Appetite and i -/ Headaches, due to Torpid Liver.?ad i FREE DEMOI How to Save A Goodyear tire expert will May 22, 1920, all day tire conservation. He gives a free illustrated ti care of tires both for and the proper use of In a half hour you can lean vation. Don't fail to during the day. His advice will make your \ REMEMBER THE DA 1920. Buck M' / ie difference >unt and setIf you pay cash and fail or lose your ;ount is paid ys be settled. ononimt u/ilh UUUUUI I I ??IUI ik, that ac. Your canlega! receipt. r Co. I i | in the Complaint herein, Absent Defendants: TAKE NOTICE 'that the Com)laint in the foregoing stated action md the Summons of which the foregoing is a copy \vere filed in the of'ice of the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas in and for Horry bounty, at Conway, S. C., on the 52nd day of April A. D. 1920. W. L. BRYAN, (L. S.) C. C. C. P. n. ii. WUU1JWAKU, Plaintiff's Attorney. Notice of Pendency of Action. Notice is hereby given that an acion has been commenced by the daintiffs above named against the lefendants above named, which said iction is now pending in this Court 'or the purpose of determining adverse claims in and to the tract of and hereinafter described, and the rights of the parties therein under the povisions of an act to provide a nethod of determining adverse 5 daims and quieting title bo real es- t tate, approved March 25th, 1916, and 1 rppearing on page 928 of Volume 1 JCXIX 'Statute of the State of South i Carolina; the plaintiffs herein being i n possession of and claiming law- t ful title to the said tract of land, 1 which is described as follows: ? All that certain tract or parcel of land located in Dog Bluff Township, in the County of Horry and State of ] South Carolina, lying on Chinners Swamp, containing Ninety (90) acres, more or less, and bounded on 1 the North by said Chinners Swamp, an the East by lands formerly be- ( longing to W. H. Jones, on the ( South by lands formerly belonging to one Duke Nobles, on the West by lands formerly belonging to Courtney A. Cooper and by other lands as will more fully appear by reference to a deed from John Roberts and Susan H. Roberts to Charles H. Spi- | vflv. dated km the. 11th dnv nf Jartu ary A. D. 1876; being the same tract of land dedscribed in said deed which is recorded in Book S. pages 4STRATI0N i ! Your Tires: i be at our Service Station , to talk with you about j silk on the manufacture and passenger cars and trucks tire savers. / ti much- about tire conserhear this man sometime risit here well worth while. iY, SATURDAY, MAY 22, otor Co. s THE HOBBY HERALD, OOKV Real I If you have or timb We are size proj thing to the foil Name R. F. D. No \T 1 A c iNumoer Acres ior * How Timbered ? ... Is Cleared Land in How Many Buildin Distance from Rail Is Property Locate* Lowest Price will ? 4|22|20?4t M3 and 244, records of Horry Coun-lh :y, and being" land which fomerly ! t vas known as a part of the estate C and of Ephriam Spivey, deceased, v ind is included within the bounda- t ries of the certain lands conveyed to rI die plaintiffs herein by J. T. Shelley, i jy his deed dated January 3rd, 1920, I ind duly Recorded. v H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. Dated April 20th,-1920. 4j29|20 3t J N. S. Hard wick was in Conway on ausiness one day last week. shippingIoard MAY ART SM1RTIY ' mwwwm w mm v P > I Relative to Placing Southeastern Ports in One . District. 1 0 " 1 Washington.?There are indica- r tions here that there might be action on the part of the shipping board at fc an early date relative to the matter o of placing the states of North and t South Carolina, Georgia and Flori- fc [ a in one district, which Southern senators have recently had up with r the board. The ports of Savannah, 1 Brunswick, Jacksonville, Charleston, f and Wilmington are all interested. Senator Harris urged the board to carefully consider the request of the t Southeastern ports fos creation of this division of the shipping board 1 which would comprise Savannah and 1 PiiinowiVlr TVin ni-Acnnt rllvision r r1 -- ?i . headquarters are at Norfolk and t Senator Harris told the board of the i great difference in the business and t interest of the five Southeastern i ports as a part from Norfolk. Senator Harris and the House < members of the Georgia delegation j have already presented a formal petition asking for the creation of a < new Southeastern di/ision. They 1 1 Habitual Constipation Cured in 14 to 21 Days LAX-70S WITH PEPSIN" is a specially- ' prepared Syrup Tonic-Laxative for Habitual ; Constipation. It relieves promptly but ' should be taken regularly for 14 to 21 days . to induce regular action. It Stimulates and Regulates. Very Pleasant to Take. 60c ' ?er bottle. /AY, S. O , APRIL 29, 1920 Estate Wa a farm or fi ered lands f ( 17C ? in position to hanc >osition; if you hav offer in this line, lowing blank and m les & Hardv LORIS, 5. C. Post Office Township property located in Sale? No. Acres Cleared? . Good State of Cultivation ? gs? [road? I on Public Road? Sell for: lave been joined in the request by he delegations in Congress of North Carolina, South Carolina and Florida cho represent the ports of Wilmingon, Charleston and Jacksonville, ['he shipping board did not give any information of their probable action, >ut it is known that the delegations ,rill continue to press the case. SAMUEL GOMPERS SOUNDS WARNING! 1 i Says Workers In Worse Fi- ! nancial Condition Than Before Armistice. ! I l < Cleveland.?Samuel Gompers, pres- | dent of the American Federation of ( ^abor, here to attend a convention 1 >f cigar makers, issued a statement egarding the general industrial unest. I He said that nothing practical had ' >een done to prevent the high cost >f living and that laws to protect he masses from exploitations have >een turned against them. He urged all workers to practice estraint, that rational demands of abor may be secured. The statement I ollows: Conditions Continue Tense "The conditions of the "workers In he United States has been tense since the signing of the armistice. That condition has been aggravate 1 jy profiteers, by a number of emllovorc ond U'n of no. t v ? ? * - - j -* - ""> " " ienal and state legislators in enact- 1 ng, or attempting to enact legisla < don, not of a constructive, but of a J estriclive character. < "Not a nrart.ipnl tVnnrr lin? Krvr.n ? , ....... lone to prevent the soaring of the price of the necessities of life. "Laws made to protect the masses i )f the people from exploitation have 1 seen turned against them, while the ' profiteers and exploiters chuckle with glee. < "No wonder, then, that the workers who did so much to win the wai and who are now 113 1-3 per cent, worse off financially than before the war, are discontented and resentful ( on account of their present condi-; tions and surroundings. It requires =",1 mted F >r sale lie any 8 e any- 1 fill out 8 ! ail to I * S. C. i I I I H no close social or economic student to understand the situation. "Unless wages are increased to meet the increased cost of living, it is equal to a reduction in wages and a corresponding lowering of the workers standards. Workers Become Impatient. "No wonder, then, that we find workers, non-members of organized workers and even some who arc union men, becoming impatient and disregarding the discipline usually practiced in labor unions. "I urge upon all the workers in their own interests, to organize and practice self-restraint, so that in an orderly and rational manner the demands of labor may be presented and secured. Little or nothing can oe accomplished by wild cat strikes. "Employers, business men and men in official and public life, whether * in or out of the legislative and ad- 1 ministrative bodies, should also un i ierstand the acute situation and heed < the normal demands made by the or- ; ganized labor movement, for rumb- 1 ings are menacing." 1 o ? OVERALLS SPREAD TO PACIFIC COAST ( l< Protest Movement Against' Clothing Costs Continuing Growth. j San Francisco.?The vogue of ; overalls for business wonr spreading throughout the Pacific coast from California to Vane:.uver 1 as a protest against the high price of clothing as an effort to reduce clothing costs. 1 Members of the editorial staff of the San Francisco Examiner, from assistant managing editor to copy boys, agreed to wear overalls during working hours beginning Monday. At Vancouver, B. C., city employees completed arrangements for an "overall league." All employees of the Salem, Oregon postoffice except carriers appeared today in overalls. Carriers telegraphed postal authorities in Washington asking permission to discard their uniforms for clothes "'"a * 'i PAGE THUMB rORNADO KILLS 140 STRIKING 3 STATES arts of Mississippi, Tennessee and Alabama Struck by Sudden Storm ULLAGE WIPED OUT 21 DEAD REPORTED 'wcrity Bodies So Far ftecovcred in Alabama?Cyclone Started in Tennessee. Birmingham, Ala.?A death list rhich tonight stood at more than 40 and a property loss of many nillions of <1 liars was the toll exictcd by a tornado which swept a core cf towns, villages and isolated 'arms in Eastern .Mississippi, North vostern Alabama and southern coun,ios cf Tennessee. Communication with many of the dricken districts was difficult, but fragmentary reports agreed that the tornado swept down with great sudlenness, obliterating everything that lay in its path. In at least one case that of Rose Hill, Miss.?practically the entire town is believed to have been destroyed, and in several instances all members of a family were reported to have been killed. Striking first apparently in Lauderdale County, Miss., about 10o'clock this morning, the .storm swept a narrow path across the State, carrying destruction to a dozen or more communities. About thesame time death and damage from the same or a similar disturbance was reported from counties in. the northwestern corner of Alabama, the extreme force of the wind being expended before the Tennessee line was reached, in Williamson and Maury Counties. Meridian Hard Hit. Meridian, Miss., the heart of a rich farming district, suffered heaviest, according to late reports, with a known death of twenty-one. The village of Glen, Alcorn County, numbered its dead at ten; Aberdeen, ten; Ingomar, six; Egypt, five; Baker, five and Bay Spring seven. A lumber camp near Philadelphia, Neshoba County, lost twelve workers killed and thirty injured, several probably fatally. In Alabama the rural districts around Sheffield, Gurley, Little Cove, and Wacco felt the full force of the storm and with some sections still cut off a score of bodies have been recovered. Heaths in Tennessee. Across the Tennessee lino, 160 miles from Meridian, near where it originated, the storm still had force sufficient to wreck homes and farm buildings and to cut a swath through forest and field. Only three deaths are known to have occurred in the State, however. The wide territory covered by the tornado led to a belief that there was more than one atmospheric disturbance. Reports today do cribe the local destruction as having been confined to a path measuring from 100 to 500 yards wide, within which the cyclonic wind, when at its height, left nothing but the mo6t solid structures standing. similar to those of their fellow work ers. Sharon, Pa.?An overall club formed at Wheatland, Pa., near Sharon, and one of the first to be organised in western Pennsylvania has gone so far in its zeal to protest the high cost of clothes as to impose a penalty upon members for failure to don denims. Any member who fails to wear overall at all times will be ducked in the Erie Canal by his fellows, according to a club agreement. The club iz composed of busine^ ,,nrl professional men. Dye That Skirt, ^ Coat or 6louse "Diamond Dyes" Make Old, Shabby* Faded Apparel Just Like New* T\ t A _ A A. # A SA __ Lfoni worry noout periecr reftnni. Uae "Diamond Dyea," guaranteed to fffcr+ a new, rich, fadeless color to any fanrlet whether wool, ailk, linen, cotton or mixed goods,?dresses, blouses, stockings, akirte, children's coats, draperies,?everyfchlngt A Direction Book is in package. To match any material, have defter how you "Diamond Dye" Color CudL