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SUMMONS FOR RELIEF (Complaint Solved.) STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF HORRY. r COURT OF COMMON PLEAS Armour Fertilizer Works, a Corporation, Plaintiff, vs. .1. T. Smith and W. J. Dorsey, Defendants. To The Defendants above Named: YOU ARE liKRKHY SUMMONED and required to answei (lie complaint in this action, of which a cop\ is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscriber or Monday Av At Nichols We are lead M. F. STKICKI,A\I) 380 at tl 250 at l.~? 301 at 51 21 at 30 261 at 3<) II IN SON SMALL 101 at :u H>2 at r?0 RtJSS MINCF.Y 38G at 15 1 (>() at 20 1). iM. IIAIIKKLKON 1 1(? at 50 150 at 15 90 at 31 M A \ IMS & 1,10 WIS 192 at 20 3-1 (i at 10 ."0 at TO Nichols & Gillia F < uase FOR I "Tob {at Loris. I averaged j Monday, I CASI n < subscribers at his or their office at Conway, South Carolina, within twenty 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 plaintiff in this action will apply to the court for the relief demanded in 1110 complaint. Dated July 7th, A. 1). 1!>22. II. II. WOODVVAKI). Plaint il l 's Attorney. To ?T. T. Smith, Absent Defendant. TAKK NOTlCtt That the complaint iii the I oieivoim;' stated action and I lie Summons of which the foregoing is a , erage $29.40 jj Warehouse 1 ing in high prices: | MAVIORS & PAGE :U0 at 18 1 ;o> at ir> r? li ill (i7 1 CI. VIIDK FORD 200 at 10 8 HOIK; 15 & CANNON 100 at II C. P. IMINCEY 100 al 29 y FRANK KING 100 at 3;> 10 1 al 50 gg 300 at <i0 9 0 at 80 B im, Nichols, S. C. | :y*s wareh THE SALE OF LEAF TO P. R, CASEY & SON, Owners and Pro] Loris, South Carolina acco is se Casey's V 125c for e Aug. 7,19; EY'S WARE! THE HORRY HERALD, CONV copy wore filed in tlu* office of the dork of (he Court of Common Pleas iu ituil for llorry County, at Conway, O., on the TrtV^ftuy^bf August A. I>. 1^2, W. t- BUYAN, (1,. Si> c. c. c. r. 11. II. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. ? - o .i (Jood Waiter. Tito clock indicated a quarter to ihree, his face grew j.vrinian* J jle$?Waiter, he said, what time do you close this shop? Half-past six, sir, replied I he waiter. With a note of deep agitation in his A I A. I I * ' voice 11 li' i"ii si hi i li' r asKeu: 1 Oil II ho very careful not to lock me in, won't you. Kxchange. olsaaaaBQDQDaD mi on 1 Indigestion | m Many porsons, otlierwiBO Bl vigorous and healthy, aro Q El bothered occasionally with g^j indigestion. The effects ofn m disordered stomach on the 5! jjf| system aro dangerous, and S" prompt treatment of indigos- IB ?? tlon is important. "The only Q medicino I have needed has m frj been something to aid diges 0 tlon and clean the liver," Q l?i writes Mr. Fred Ashhy, ft m McKinney, Texas, farmer. JJ M "My medicine it* 13 S Thedford's S I! DK-DRAUGHT tw for indigestion and stomach M troublo of any kind. I have 5? {tit never found anything that M 1 touches tho spot, like Black- Q Draught. I take it in broken doses after meals. For a long D IS 1itne I tried pills, which grip- H im| od and didn't givo the good r^, reHiilt8. Black-Draught liver H medicine is easy to take, easy to keep, inexpensive." ? J.-, Hot a package from your "J druggist today?Ask for and H ?S insist ui>on Thedtord's?the ES j?3 only genuine. jgj n C?et it today. Q mm f. 84 an ^^oanQoaoDDBD larai1 - iwBi-rnsaM^z^aaczrwia?] II J. J. CASEY I OUSE | BACCO t I 0 U P n u I n ' u t A*. U4 t m 11"v " h Warehouse | ntire sale j IV I I i * i : o ... I mi**** ht %? .?? ? e ?AY, S. C., AUG, 17, 1922 | DUFOllD NEWS X X -pnvtesd n ^ JIH * + Miss Alma Jackson delight f\il ly entertained tl?o Music Club and parents :it her home Saturday afternoon. Who 11 all the quests lvul arrived they assembled in the living' room and en|oye<I selections rendered 1 ?y the Cluh. The program was as fallows: Signs of Autumn Daniel Rome. ( p Vol ma Price. KloWers of Spring J. S. Fearis. Myrtle lOlliott. Willi My iVts Arthur C. King. Ernestine lluggins. The Sunset Hour .... C. C. Crammond. Mary Hotli DuHose. Soldiers Joy Rudolph Holler. Ruth Railoy. Starlight on the Hudson CI. D. Wilson. Mary Wilder. Juba Dance It. Nathaniel Dett. Narcissus Etholhert Nevin. Alma Jackson. Immediately after this, a delicious salad course with iced tea and afterdinner mints were served. Those parents present were: Air. and Mrs. A. D. Jackson, Mr. and Mrs. W. II. Price, Mr. and Mrs. II. M. Elliott, Mr. anr Mrs. C. F. DuHoso, Mr. and Mrs. YV. J. Wilder, and Mr. and Mrs. J. 1, .Hujjgins. Mrs. C. P. DuHoso and little daughter Mary Heth are spending this week at Myrtle Beach. There will ho a picnic at Wannamakor Church Wednesday, August \l'). Kveryhody is invited to come and bring: a lull basket.. There will be lectures by groat men, one of whom is .1. Dean Crane of Greenville. Miss fiallie Proctor is visiting- Mrs. W. II. Jordan. Mrs. Onory Floyd is spending; the week at Myrtle Hoach. Mr. J. I.. Proctor of Conway visited his daughter, Mrs. W. 11. .Ionian, last Sunday. Mrs. C. \V. Hurgoss and daughtei Put otby have returned from visit ing frionds in Scranton. Messrs. (J Ion and Malcom Hinson visitI friends here last Sunday. Frank Owens a very aged negro died last, fiat unlay night, lie was IK; years of age. DO NOT PULL CORN FODDKR Clemson College The old practice of pulling fodder is not followed b\ the best farmers any more. Thej have come to realize that fodder is have come to realize that fodder i: the most expensive form of forage which they can raise on the farn and have began to raise cowpeas | soybeans, sorghum and other thing for forage and leave their corn alone until mature. They have stopper thi practice because they have fount it to he, not only at hot, dirty piece of work, hut also that it. reduces the yield of corn so greatly that thev cannot afford to do it. Several different experiment sta tiona have carefully tested the matter and have found that pulling tin fodder reduces the yield of ear coir by 10 to 12 per cent, says Prof. C P. Blackwell, agronomist. This loss amounts to 8M bushels per acre or tlio average. Frequently the loss tc ear corn is worth as much as tin fodder saved and the farmer has had his work for nothing. The loaf is the factory of the con plant where the raw materials which are taken from the soil and the ail are united by the energy of the su? to form starch, oil, protien and fats for the growth of the entire planl and especially for storage in the ear As the leaf dries out, these foods are transferred, in a large measure from the leaf to the ear. If the leal is pulled before it is thoroughly dry this transfer can not take place anr the result is a loss t.o the ear. Tt i: because of this loss that the more progressive farmers no longer ele pond on fodder as a storage for live stock, but use instead cowpeas, so> heans, velvet beans, sorghum, o QQ{ fffljSto Docs J.I c Live /one CMSTAKUX He will await his in or in other public pli I stand patiently while B waits on the custom M when the telephone f seconds longer than 1 he swells all up an "rotten." Me can pee that t seller are busy, but phone operator?so lazy, or "asleep!" He forgets that ahead of him at the the same as at the \ store; that calls are cession and must be that when half a d< at the same time, th first! 1"At Yo , CONWAY TEI CON'W. .. % 0 men fight at campaign meet There was a terrible racket kicked up a4 tj.ie recent county campaign meeting at Johnsonville, according to the following account printed in the Florence 'limes and other papers: S. W. Young, of llanta, in advocating; his candidacy for the lower branch of t.l\o stale legislature, emphasized that he stood for "law and ordei'i" Just at this point his recommendation was hitotrupted hy Charlie Prosser, in the audience, svHo stated he desired to ask a question. "Certainly," Mr. *Yoling replied, without hesitancy. "I'll he glad to have you ask ine any questions and .. . .. f* A \ ? iis many 01 mem as yon wish." "If you stand for law and order,' returned Mr. Prosser, "why in hell didn't you prosecute those Truluck hoys?" One may recall that last fall, while Mr. Young was away with his family, a party of thieves broke into' his house, bodily carried away a mas-| sive iron safe, and robbed it of about .$(?(),000 worth of securities, including mortgages, notes, liberty bonds, and some oilier valuables. Subsequently some of the Truluck boys in that sec tion were arrested and charged with the crime. The cases were dropped i for some reason generally supposed in the lower section of the county, it it said, because of family relations. At any rate, the matter seemed to have been forgotten till Mr. Prosser sprung it on M r. Young, as the princi pal prosecutor, before the big audi ence in Johnsonville last Saturday. "I am not hiding behind my wife's shirt tail," replied Mr. Young. "Nor am I hiding behind my wife's shirt tails," replied Mr. 1'rosser. "Neither have 1 ever given a check which has been turned down by the bank," added Mr. Young. "Do you mean to insinuate that mv check ever ; has been turned down?" inquired Mr. Prosser, scrambling among the i benches as if he were going after Mr. Young. , "When God made me," parried Mr. Young, "lie didn't put any scare in the mix. "Yes, and when God made me, he made a man," rejoined Mr. Prosser. "I'll meet you right outside just as > soon as this is over," Mr. Young said, promptly accepting the challenge. "I'll be there," said Mr. Prosser. ? Mr. Young resumed his speaking, without showing anv undue excite ment, cither, under the circumf stances, though lie is a man well ad^ vanced in years. Mr. Prosser retired ^ to the edge of (lie meeting and com? menced to walk up and down so that i he and Mr. Young could meet readily t as soon as the latter had finished his s address. * Mayor Prosser then undertook to 1 avert any clash between the two. The 1 mayor, taking Mr. Prosser by the * nrm led him to one side and attempt ? od to reason with him. Mr. Prosser was not in tlie mood to reason, and when the mayor persisted, he moved . as if to shako oil the mayor. Mayoi . Prosser is a man of advanced year-; > himself but we was game?and tried i to hold Mr. Prosser forcibly. Before anyone had time to size up ; the situation or to act, Mr. Prosser , had turned all t.lio force and strength , of his rage onto the mayor, whom he , felled with a terrific blow. I Immediately council was convened in special session to try Mr. Prossei. , After hearing the evidence, it seni tenced him to pay $15 tine or work on . the streets for so many days, j "I am not going to pay you any ; money and I am not going to chop a [ sprig of grass on any streets either," promptly asserted Mr. Prosser?and . got up and walked out. At last reports, council had not yet enforced its * sentence. ; some other source. Most of these ; are not only much cheaper forage . but also bettor. Let us hope that it will not be / long before until "fodder pulling" will r ho a relic of the past , A1 J in Our Town? J tOCAt I [jOHC QlSTAXC^ irn at the ticket window vgin.n.iy aces cheerfully; he will M j. the clerk ih the store I ers ahead of him. Hut \ operator takes a few usual to answer his call ^ id says the service is he clerk and the ticket he cannot see the telehe thinks she must he others are frequently telephone switchboard, Licket window or in the coming in in rapid sucanswered in their turn; r/en subscribers all call ey can't all be answered ur Service" f rni i/^mp L.nrn^iNU, i \Y, S. C. J ? WASHINGTON COMMENT The United States Government is the supremo power in the United Sl,?tes or it not. There is' no middle course. IT the United States Government is the supreme power in the United States, it must show, that supremacy by making impossible the dictation of any man, any body of men, any corporation, company, labor union, or organization of any kind. Th?> spectacle of one hundred and I.IMI million iw>?il\ln Itniiwif LMiliiaoiAil - |'^ v.|?i*. a'uiu^ UVIMJWIVU VV discomfort, possible danger, .and loss of money and business in order that I wo dist inct groups within the hundred and ton millions may settle their differences by legalized combat, is one at which Ihe hundred and ten millions are looking more and more with disgust. If John works for James and doesn't like the job, he quits. That is John's business. If James thinks John is a poor worker, he fires him; that is James's business. But if John blows up James's shop, or James brains John with a club, that is the State's business. And if John and James engage in a gun fight, which endangers every one near them, that is every one's business, and both of them soon find themselves in jail. For John and James, read union laborers and coal mines and railroads. If they can fight without injuring the bystander, no one cares; let them fight. Hut the miner can net cea^ to produce coal, or the railroad cease" to move cars, without freezing the bystander starving the bystander, robbing the bystander of business. That, then, is the bystander's business, everybody's business, the Government's business. Public ownership of coal mines and railroads is abhorent to American business ideas; but better paternalism in Government than dictation to Government by private interests! MOTIPK HP SAI.E Under and I?y virtue of the decree and judgment of the court made by his Honor S. W. G. Shipp presiding .Indue in the case of S. M. McNabb Plaint iIT vs. J. II. Carter; Tower-Binford Electric & Mfg. Co., a corporation; A. R. Moffitt & Co., a corporalion; W. M. Rhodes, B. B. Anderson, Continental Gin Co., a corporation; Eva May llardwick and The J. C. Bryant Company, a corporation, defendants, .and dated the 15th day of August A. I). 11)22, I the undersigned W. L. Bryan, Clerk of Court of Common Pleas, as Special Master of Horry County, will sell at public auction, to the highest bidder before the Court House door, at Conway, in Horry County, and State of South Carolina, during legal hours of sale, on salesday in September next, it being the 4th day of said month, ,'iil and singular that certain real estate situate in Horry County, and described as follows, to wit: All that certain parcel or tract of land in the State and County aforesaid, known as my Homestead; Bounded on North by land of J. J. Carter, on East by the Robt. Boyd land, on South by .1. G. Gore on West by G. M. Gore and contains forty acres, more or less; above boundaries include two separate tracts of land; one known as a tract given mo by J. J. Carter, my father; the second, being a tract conveyed to me by ,T. G. Gore and known as a part of his homestead tract. Terms of Sale Cash. Purchaser to pay for papers and stamps. August 10th, 1922. W. L. BRYAN. Clerk of Court of Common Ple-is. as Special Mastei Horry County. J. I. ALLEN Jr., Plaintiff's Attorney. o GARDEN NOTES Continue to plant beans until the first of September. The Bountiful is the bost variety for fall planting. English peas may be planted in the middle of August for harvest in early November. Plant an extra early variety. Lettuce seed may be sown now and i i i l * _ i a _ n transpiantou as soon as pianis ar? or sufficient. size. Big Boston, Iceberg and Hanson are excellent varieI ios. Plant onion sets in early September. They will produce ediblfc onions during November and Decernher. Transplant celery during the last part of .July and first par of August. CIiant Paschal and Perfected Hartwell are good varieties. Celery pi.an ted at this season must be blanched with soil. Spray grapes with Bordeaux mixture after h/irvestintf fruit. This is necessary in order to retain leaves until killed by frost. o Not Ilini. A story is going the rounds that is amusing. It, is said that a woman boarded a belt line car and as she got. on she said to the motorman: Do you stop at the Hotel Clark? No, ma'am, he replied I'm married and live with my wife and children in Ansonia.?Ansonia Sentinel. ? o Miss Green?It seems to me that all the nicest men are married. Mrs. Wyse?They weren't always so nice, my dear; the secret is, they've been caught early and tamed. ?Boston Post. o Five Boy Scouts from Columbia, S. C., rode into the White House grounds on bicycles, having completed a 500-mile bicycle trip to the capitol. Presented to President Harding by Senator Dial, of South Carolina, 1he boys delivered "greeting from a democratic state to a republican president," conveyed to the executive from Governor Harvey, of South Carolina.