The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, September 28, 1922, Image 7

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I NOTICE OF S4LE Under the order of J. S. Vaught, Esq., Judge of Probate in and for I Horry County, dated September 4th, q 1922; I, the undersigned qualified o executor of the estate of Elinor ? m Enzor, deceased, will sell at public auction to the highest bidders for . j cash at eleven o'clock in the fore- c I noon on the 22nd day of September, ^ 1922, at the late residence of the I deceased, the following described . I personal property to wit: ' All and singular all of the per sonal estate and effects of the said ? I Elinor Enzor, the same consisting of ^ farming tools, household md kitchen I furniture, cattle, hogs, interest in . I crops now growing in field or other- P' I wise, as the same may be located 11 I and a number of other articles. ? I Any of said property covered by } any lien of any kind whatsoever will * be sold auhifiot. t.n ?ijrh lipn nr lipns. ^ All bids mupt be paid in cash be- ji fore delivery of the property. Jj WILSON ROBERTS, ? Executor of Last Will 's and Testament of Eli- ^ nor Enzor, deceased. '! Dated September 5th, 1922. 1 H. H. WOODWARD, ? Attorney for Executor. J NOTICE OF FINAL DISCHARGE s Notice is hereby given that J. J. ? McDowell and Ellen Gause, Exe- * cutor and Executrix of the Estate ^ of Jas. F. Gause, have applied to me 11 for a Final Discharge as such of- P iicers, and a hearing will be had in said matter before me in my office f at Conway, S. C., on Friday, Oct. 0 6th, 1922. 1 s J. S. VAUGHT, P Probate Judge. Conway, S. C., Sept. 2, 1922. 9|2-4t s o NOTICE E. M. GRAHAM , Don't forget the sacrifice sale that ' K. M. Graham is making at the Aynor Mercantile Company. This sale will 1/ist still longer as you will find by reading the half page ad appearing in this issue. < If he is willing to offer his goods 1 at big reductions, give him a chance to prove what he says. o I Habitual Constipation Cured in E'? vo 21 Days "LAX-FOS WITH PEPSIN" is a specially- ! prepared Syrup Tonic-Laxat ive for Habitual Constipation. It relieves promptly buf. * should be taken regularly for 14 to 21 days : to induce regular action. It Stimulates and \ Regulates. Very Pleasant to Take. ?60o per bottle. j rimmaDOflnron i on | Indigestion jj i Many persons, otherwise D vigorous and healthy, are D 1 bothered occasionally with Q Indigestion. The effects of a mm I disordered stomach on the 55 system are dangerous, and prompt treatment of indlges- D tlon is important. "The only Q medicine I have needed has hd been something to aid diges- J? tion and clean the liver," ^ writes Mr. Fred Ashby, a McKinney, Texas, farmer. J"? "My medicine is EjX Thedford's B BLACK-DRAUGHT H for Indigestion and stomach Q JJ trouble of any kind. I have 55 D never found anything that B |J touches the spot, like Black- rj E Draught. I take it In broken 55 M doses after meals. For a long D n time I tried pills, which grip- H E ed and didn't give the good M results. Black-Draught liver B B medicine Is easy to take, easy B E to keep, Inexpensive." mm 55 Get a package from your 55 ? druggist today?Ask for and B PI Insist upon Thedtord's?the B B only genuine. Q Q Get It today. Q gg -'-55 *************************** 1 ANNOUN * j|c | ing, and will be j | friends call on me | plumbing fixtures. | More importa | motor car or a pi< | completely moder * : i-_ll i * mc ui5iau IIIUU^I i] I H. H. E | Phone 46 or 65 M ?******#*******#********** Ntfficr ^? Under and by virtue of Decretal >rder made by His Honor, S. W. G. hipp, dated the 8th day of June, 922, in the case of Peoples Bank f Darlington, So. Ca., a Corporaion, plaintiff, vs. Sidney Madison larter, et al., and Conway Lumber lompany, a Corporation, defendants* The undersigned will offer for sale efore the Courthouse door at Confay, S. C., within legal sale hours, n the first Monday of October, torit, on the 2nd day of said month, 922. ALL AND SINGULAR, that cerain parcel and tract of land situate i Buck's Township, County of Hory, State of South Carolina, confining Six Hundred Forty-two 642) acres, more or less, bounded Jorth by the Estate lands of the i _ T T I - a * il ^ * lie j. ivi. jonnson; nast ny uie runic Road leading: from Fair BlufT> N. J., to Georgetown, S. C.; South by inds now or formerly known as the r. D. Johnson and E. R. Singleton a>nds, and West by the Big Swamp, leing the same premises formerly wned by one C. A. Causey, later by less. A. E. and S. J. Page, and by I. W. Carter. Saving and excepting from this ale the timber thereon and rights f way privileges on and over the ame, owned by Conway Lumber Company. The reversionary interest n said timber to be vested in the lui'chaser or purchasers hereunder. Should the purchaser or purchaser.* ail or refuse to comply with his, her ?r its bid, the property will be reold at the risk of the former lurchaser. Purchasers to pay for the necesary papers and stamps. W. L. BRYAN, Clerk of Court. tOBT. B. SCARBOROUGH, 'laintifPs Attomoy. AM MENDEI) SUMMONS FOR RELIEF (Complaint Served.) 5TATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF HORRY. COURT OF COMMON PLEAS Rosa Clark,* Plaintiff, vs Alva Dlark, James Monroe Clark, Olive Burns, Evelyn King, Hosea Clark, Ida Brown, Mckinley Clark, Joseph Clark, Minnie Shelley, Quince Clark, Orilla Johnson, Sarah .Simmons, Alice Richirdson, Georgia Woodburv. Robert Oliver, Willie Oliver, George Clark, Robert Clark, and Frank Clark, defendants. To 'Hie Defendants above Named: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED tnd required to answer the complaint i*1 this section which has been filed in the office of the Clerk of the Court t)f Common Pleas for the said County in Conway, in said State of South Carolina, and to serve a copy of your Einswer to the said complaint on the subscriber at his office, Conway, South Carolina, within twenty days after the service hereof, exclusive of the 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 eliof demanded in the complaint. Dated September 13th, 1922. ROBT. B. SCARBOROUGH, Plaintiff's Attorney. To Alva Clark, James Monroe Clark, Olive Burns, Minnie Shelley M c K i n 1 e y Clark, Quii^re Clark, Hosea Clark, Robert Oliver, Willie Oliver, Robert Clark, and Frank Clark, ABSENT AND NONR ESI DENT DEFEND A NTS: TAKE NOTICE, That the complaint in this action and the Summons of which the foregoing is a copy, were filed in the Office of the Clerk of Court of Common Pleas for Horry Countv the 19th dav of Sept. 1'.)22. ' ROBT. B. SCARBOROUGH, Plaintiff's Attorney. W. L. BRYAN, (L. S.) Clerk of Court. 9|21|22-3t o BAD TOBACCO Some of the growers of tobacco who should have learned better, are bringing tobacco in that is not fit to be sold at all. Some of it is badly handled, not properly graded , entirely too wet and some of it is just * _ 1.1 rotten. i>aziness is uie gruuuu of most of this trouble. o IvCt the Herald help you put it over. CEMENT | I have retu n ed to Conway and 1 am again en- * gaged in plumb- } jlad to have my J when in need of j * nt than haviner a J mo is to have a j n bathroom. Lei 1 i fixtures. &RYANT I ?>. 2t ; **************************^ % v .. .. . J,., THE HORRY HERALD, 00*0 SUMMONS FOR RELIEF (Complaint Served) STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Horry In the Court of Common Plea* Rey Worley, plaintiff, vs J. E. Harbour and Union Guano Company, defendants. To the defendants above named: You are hereby summoned and required to#Answer the Complaint in this action, of which a copy is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your Answer to said Complaint on the subscribers, at their offices, Coilway, S. C., within twenty days after the service hereof, exclusive of the 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 the oCmplaint. Dated September 19th, A. D. 1922. sherwood & McMillan Plaintiff's Attorneys To the absent defendants, J. E. Harbour and Union Guano Company: TAKR NOTTCtf fh* mons, of which the foregoing is a copy, together with the Complaint herein, were filed in the Clerk of Court's Office, Conway, S. C., on the 19th day of September, a. D. 1922. Conway, S. C., September 19th, 1922 sherwood & McMillan, Plaintiff's Attorneys ATTEST: W. L. BRYAN, (Seal) C. C. C. P. o THAT 15M) HACK Do you have a dull, steady ache in the small of the back?sharp, stabbing twinges when stooping or lifting?distressing urinary disorders? For bad back and weakened kidneys Conway residents recommend Doan's Kidney Pills. Head this Conway statement. Mrs. Dora Burroughs, Burroughs st., says: "Doan's Kidney Pills have proved a reliable remedy in my case. 1 suffered from dull, nagging backaches and other symptoms of kidney complaint. Finally 1 got Doan's Kidney Pills and they relieved me of the backache, corrected the kidney action and benefited me genertllv." EIGHT YEARS LATER, Mrs. Burroughs said: "I take pleasure in again recommending . Doan's Kidney Pills. Doan's are the only remedy that ever did me any good." Price GOc, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy?get Doan's Kidney Pills?the same that Mrs. Burroughs had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.?Adv. o SUMMONS FOR RELIEF (Complaint Served) STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF HORRY, COURT OF COMMON PLEAS W. H. Bell, plaintiff, vs A. C. Suggs, Burroughs & Collins Campany, A Corporation; D. F. McGougan,, Qualified Executor of Josoph R. Allsbrook, deceased; N. B. Allshrook, Surviving co-partner of the firm of Allsbrook Brothers; H. M. Sarvis, E. P. Grainger and L. D. Sujrgs, Defendants. To the Defendants above named: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the complaint in this action, of which a copy is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscribr or subscribers at his office or their office at Conway, South Carolina, within twenty days after the service hereof; exclusive of the 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 the complaint. Dated August 22nd, A. D. 11)22. H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. To D. P. McGougan, Qualified Executor of the Last Will and Testament, of Joseph R. Allsbrook, Deceased : 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 tho Clork of the Court of ) Common Pleas in and for Horry County, at Conway, S. C., on the 24th day of Aupust, A. D. 1922. H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. W. L. BRYAN, (L. S.) C. C. C. P. 9|21|22-8t. Renew your health by purifying your system with lalotabs T o A 0 C M*?? ?(0 [ The purified and refined tcaJomel tablets that are free from nausea and danger. No salts necessary, as f nlntoKa ??*? lll?? I ?I Kiuiuuo nvi ii rvc miunici and salts combined. Demand the genuine in 10c ? and 35c packages, bearing ? above trade-mark* k * % frAY, 8. O-^SEPT. 28, 1922 PRETTY DRESS-UP FROCK M 4^ X. m % Tliis dress-up truck for the "tlapperette" suits her pretty slender figure nnd early youth exactly. It Is made of duvetlne and trlnuued with petals 1 of the same cloth lined with crepe de chine In a bright, contrasting color. The petals are set about the round neck, which Is finished with a corded piping, and the kimono sleeves artlengthened to the elbow by puffs of crepe 4e chili e drawn up Into n hand. o Statement of the Condition of The BANK OF LOUIS Located at Loris, S. C.. at the close of business September 15th, 1922. RESOURCES Loans and discounts $110,340.SO Overdrafts 1,467.96 Furniture and fixtures 3,1 (>7.70 Ranking house 2.000.00 Other real estate owned 10,303.72 Due from banks and bankers 35,101.34 Currency 5,570.00 Gold ?. 02.50 Silver and other minor coin 1,133.87 Checks and cash items 51.50 Other resources viz: transit 771.92 Total 170,3(51.40 LIABILITIES Capital stock paid in $ 10,000.00 Undivided profits, less current expenses and taxes paid 1,465.88 Individual deposits subject to check 71,080.35 Time certificates of deposit 26,064.21 Cashier's checks.... 4,250.96 101,395.52 Bills payable, including certificates for money borrowed 57,500.00 Total 170,361.40 STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Horry, ss Before me came G. D. McQueen, Cashier of the above named bank, who. hoinir dnlv sworn. savs that the above and foregoing statement is .a true condition of said bank, ai? shown bv the books of said bank. g. d. McQueen. Sworn to and subscribed before me this 2fith dav of 1022. B. DAWES, Notary Public, South Carolina. Correct Attest P. S. COOPER, y. p. mcqueen, g. o. mcQueen, Directors. Pay for the paper at tho B/.\nk of Avnor and save the trip to Conway, or the writing of a letter and the mailing of a check. Get the Herald coming to your address. o Let the Herald do it CALOMEL USERS TAKE AWFUL RISK Very Next Dose of Treacherous Drug May Start Terrible Salivation The next dose of calomel you take may salivate you. It may shock your liver or start bone necrosis. Calomel is dangerous. It is mercury, quick-1 silver. It crashes into sour bile like dynamite, cramping and sickening you. Calomel attacks the bones and should never be put into your system. If you feel bilious ,headachy, constipated and all knocked out, just go to your druggist and get a bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone for a few cents which is a harmless vegetable substitute for dangerous calomel. Take a spoonful and if it doesn't start your liver and straighten you up better and quicker than aasty calomel and without making you sick, you just go back and get your money. Don't take calomel! It cannot be trusted any more than a leopard or a wildcat.. Take Dodson's Liver Tone which straightens you right up and makes you feel fine. No salts neceslary. Give it to the children because it is perfectly harmless and cannot salivate.?Adv. o ^To Stop a Cough Quick take HAYES* HEALING HONEY, a cough medicine which stops the cough by healing the inflamed and irritated tissues. A box of GROVES O-PEN-TRATE o AT x;i,' / PU . .1 _ TJ .1 n.u. I V li IUI VIIC81 VAIIU9, I1CHU VAI1US ctllU Croup is enclosed with every bottle of HAYES' HEALING HONEY. The salve should be rubbed on the chest and throat of children suffering from a Cold or Croups The healing effect of Hayes' Heal inn Honey inside the throat combined with the healing effect ol drove's O-Peu-Trate Salve through the pores ol the skin soon stops a cough. Doth remedies are packed in one carton and the cost of the combined treatment Is 35c.f Just ask your druggist for HAYES* HEALING HONEY. WINTER-SPRING FORAGE CROPS Clemson College.?The extent to which forage crops and pasture supply feed for hogs will determine the imount of profit made in the hog business, says D. T. Herrman. Ex- . tension Swine Specialist, basing his statement on the experience of the most successful hog raisers in this state. Since there are no permanent pa*- tures that supply feed for the winter and SDrintr months wo must turn t.o forage crops' for this part of the year. The crops to be used are determined largely by soil types and for this reason we find Piedmont farmers using crops different from those used in the Costal Plains section. September is the time for planting all crops for winter forage, and immediate attention should be given to them. In the Coastal Plains section rye or oats in a mixture of hairy vetch and rape is about the best winter pasture we have. Rye Is prefer red to oats by most men because f gives more growth during the win ter months. A good mixture of thesthree can be made of 4 pecks of i\\ 1 peck of vetch, and S pounds of rape. Ryewill grow on almost an kind of soil and vetch will be a light if it is properly inoculated but rape requires a good rich so it For this reason it is be*t to pick . good fertile plot, work up a goo seed bod. and inoculate for hairy vetch before planting this mixtureBest results are obtained by planting ' between Sept. 15 and Oct. 15. a! though earlier and later planting;are often satisfactory. In the Piedmont section bur clover supplies such excellent pasturage for the winter months that it is un necessary to plant anything else fo* these months. Both of these, however, become too coarse for hogs r>\ the middle of March and it is nee essary ' have .some other crop for the spring months. Five pocks of oats, one peck of vetch, and 8 pounds of rape fill this place admirably. On poor land rape should bo left out and the rate of seeding fo? oats and vetch increased. Not that oats takes the place of rye in this mixture, because hogs can handle thin grain if it heads out better than they can rye. The prime essentials to success in getting a stand of either bur clover or crimson clover are Inoculation and a firm steed bed Tf giver these two essentials those clovers will make fine winter pasture. A good soil-building program calls for cover crops during the winter months. By using the above-mentioned crops not only are we building our land and saving the losses of fertilizer through leaching but am making our pork more economically. o NEW COURSES IN AGRICULTURE Clemson College.?With the beginning this week of the session ot 11)22-28 the agricultural department adds a complete new line of study in the form of a two-year course for young men who want good training in agricultural subjects but can not take the four-year course for graduation, and adds also to the agronomy division a new subject, the marketing of farm products. These are important additions to the work of the resident teaching in agricu! ture, filling needs that the faculty is glad to bo able to meet. The new two-year course in agriculture was created to give a broader training than that given by the one-year course. It contains fnn/lnmniitMl n/lll?n.f I/\I1 in Hi O ! II1WI'~ 1 l( I 1M(( I I K. I I III I VVIUVlVtlUII III VIK first year and more agricultural work in the second year. The onecourse in agriculture, which teaches the practical application of the simple principles of good farming to young men who have some agricultural experience will he given also. Neither the two-year course no; the one-year course is intended as a substitute for the four -year course* in agriculture, hut to reach with practical agricultural training those of more limited opportunities who can not take the four-year courses. The subject of marketing which will be added to the course of the divisions will be given by Prof. L. D. Howell, the new assistant prof-1 fessor of agronomy, who will handle the farm management and farm marketing work for that division. Marketing work has been conducted by the Extension Service for severayears and has been very effective in aiding farmers in the orderly selling of farm products, but so far no course of instruction in marketing has been given to Clemson students In this connection it may be well to say that the teaching work of the agricultural department as now organized is done through eleven divisions; namely, agronomy, horticulture, botany and bacteriology, chemistry, zoology and entomology, veterinary science, geology and mineralogy, rural sociology, and agricultural education, these eleven divisions offering over 100 courses covering the various phases of these sciences as applied to agriculture. o Matches are made by machinery. Big machines cuts up wooden boards into match splinters. These splint.pass through a parifin bath an receive thoir heads. It is all done at lightning speed. lr~ 6(56 quickly relieves Colds, C+nstipa tion. Biliousness and Headaches. / Fine Tonic.?tf r r O fhe Quinine That Docs Not Affect the He> 1 Bcccuseof its tonic and laxative effect. I.A.S IT'}? BKOMO QUININK is better thuu cmIip ' }<t'n.ne and does not cause nervouenen* inking in head. Remember the full nrme m>r *r>w the 4 nature of H. W. GROVU r. J. SULLIVAN k LU Certified Public Accountants (lit) Telephone So. 796. Murchison Bank Bids* WILMINGTON. N. C. T. B. LEWIS Attorney and Counsellor at Law CONWAY, S. C. J. I. ALLEN, JR. Attorney-at-Law Office in Bank of Loris BIdg. LORIS, S. C. ' ' D. A. SPIVEY & f W. B. King, Sec* BONDS AND INSf Office in " "N FORD & SUGGS Attorneys at Law Of!ices at Conway, S. C. Loris,S.C. 6-1-13m X' i R. B. SCARBOROUGH Attorney at Law CONWAY, S. C. WILLIAM EUGENE KING Physician and Surgeon AYNOR, S. C. H. H. WOODWAHD Attorney and Counsellor at Law. CONWAY. S. C. ENOCH S. C. BAKER Attorney and Counselor at Law Offices in Taylor Building 2-9-3m Conway, S. C. Law Offices of M. C. HARKELSON and R. B. HARRELSON \ Mull ins, S. C. i DR. G. I. LEWIS Dental Surgeon Office Over Norton Drug Company. CONWAY, S, C. ^ Dr. J. D. THOMAS Physician and Surgeon LORIS. S. C. EBB N. JOHNSC ^ Auctioneer of Real * and all other propeifyftv R. F. D. No. 2, Box 41, a Gallivant's Ferry, S. C.?l-19-3ra * MARION A. WRIGHT Attorney-at-Law Offices Spivey Building CONWAY, S. C. S. C. DUSENBURY Attorney-at-Law Spivey Building XT 11 r A -%r n ^ n a i, a t. SUMMONS FOR RELIEF (Complaint Served) STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF HORRY. Court of Common Pleas J. W. Joiner, J. P. Mills, \V. H. Stroud and J. R. Tul>erville, Co-partners trading under the firm name and style of J. W. Joiner & Co., vs. Dawsey Tuberville, Ella Tuberville and (i. H. Foley, defendants. To the Defendants above Named: YOU ARK HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the complaint in this action, of which a copy is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscriber or subscribers at his or their office at Conway, S. C., within twenty days after the service hereof; exclusive of the 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 the complaint. Dated September (>th, 1922. H. H. WOODWARD, * Plaintiff's Attorney. To Dawsey Tuberville and Ella Tuberville. ABSENT DEFENDANTS: TAKE NOTICE That the Complaint in the foregoing stated action and the Summons of which the foregoing* is a copy, were tiled in the otnce or tne Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas in and for Horry County, at Conway, S. C., on the 7th dav of September. A. D. 1022. H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. W. L. BRYAN. (L. S.) C. C. C. P. 9!28!22-3t. o John P. Grace, publisher of the Charleston American, the Pro-German paper of war times, shows his lack of staple character by his changing attitude in regard to Blease. Once he was an ardent HI ease supporter and then withr.it any apnarent reason he turned against Please and went to the Piedmont section of the State and delivered a number of fiery speeches against the then candidacy of Please. Later, and in a recent effort at coming back of Blease, Grace was again in the lead in supporting him in Charleston, turning his once German inclined newspaper to Hlease's interest in the campaign. The people have turned Blouse down and before long they will turn Grace down. o ?*By the end of the present year the registration of automobiles in South Carolina promises to be much larger than the registration for th? year of 1921. | ,u-.w