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SUMMONS FOR RELIEF (Complaint 'Served.) STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF HORRY. Court of Common Pleat* Isaac L. Loo, plaintiff, vs. Louis D. Hardwick, O. B. Hardwick, K. B. Hardwick, A. F. Cannon and A. J. Mishoe. Trading1 as Cannon & Mishoe, I O. E. Todd, J. H. Richardson, M. W. Collins, L. M. Stanley, J. A. Lewis, J. M. Hardwick, E. H. Hardwick, and J. N. Hardwick, defendants. To the above Named Plaintiff, Isaac L. Lee, and Defendants Louis D. Hardwick, O. B. Hardwick, K. B. Hardwick, 0. E. Todd, J. H. Richardson, M. W. Collins, L. M. Stanley, J. A. Lewis, J. M. Hardwick, E. H. Hardwick and J. N. Hardwick: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the crosscomplaint of the above named defendants A. F. Cannon and A. J. Mishoe in this action of which a copy is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said cross-complaint on the subscriber or subscribers at their offices 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 cross-complaint within the time aforesaid, the defendants A. F. Cannon and A. J. Mishoe in this action will apply to the Court for the re'ief demanded in the cross-com plaintDated Julv 7th, A. D. 1922. E. S. C. BAKER, Attorney for Defendants A. F. Cannon and A. J. Mishoe. To Louis D. Hardwick, K. 13. Hardwick. O. E. Todd, and J. N. Hardwick. ABSENT DEFENDANTS: TAKE NOTICE That the CrossComplaint of the defendants A. F. Cannon and A. J. Mishoe 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 o<* Common pleas in and for H orry County, at Conway, S. C., on the 15th day of August, A. D. 1922. W. L. BRYAN, (L. S.) C. C. C. P. E. S. C. BAKER, Attorney for Defendants A. F. Cannon and A. J. Mishoe. o Fine typewriter paper at The Herald shop. o No Worms in a Healthy Child All children troubled with Worms have an un healthy color, which iudicates poor h'ood, and as a *ule, there is more or i es3 stomach disturbance. -GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC given regularly for two or throe weeks will enrich the blood, improve the digestion, and act as a general Strengthening Tonic to the whole 3yst<*m. Nature will then throw off or dispel the worms, and theChiid will bo , - -fa perfect health."* Pleasant to take. * 60c per bottle. RED CROSS HEALS WOUNDSOF WAR 25,000 Disabled Ex-Service Men in Hospitals After Four > Years of Peace. CHAPTERS' FIELD OF SERVICE Every Veteran Needing Help Gets Individual Attention of Sym; i pathetic Workers. When on November 11 the world halts to observe the fourth anniversary of Armistice Day, ami the Amerl* ran lied Cross inaugurates its Annual Roll Call for the enrollment of th? , membership, the people of the j United States may well pause to think of the unparalleled contribution to the cause of peace made by our Army and Navy in the World War. The glory It is a common tradition; but the wounds of war remain. They are not liealed in a day, in a year, nor in four years. And on Armistice I>;iy there will be under treatment in Government tiospitals over 2~i,0(X) ex-service men, broken physically by wounds, exposure, nervous strain and exhaustion incident to their service in the war. The (Jovernment without stint is undertaking to furnish these disabled men with the compensation and medical care to yvhlch they are entitled, yet their especial care is a duty of the Ited Cross. Why? Because the Government cannot handle the cases of x-service men individually; it must handle these men in bulk under a standardized policy. The Government . "lias neither the authority, the fundi or the equipment for working out the problem of the Individual man. There is where the American Red Cross finds 'ts greatest fleld for service, aiding through its very active Chapters i in reaching the disabled man with im- I mediate nractloal hoi l? nualatlnn lit* ' unninmi^ family while his claim is emerging from the process of adjustment, furnishing articles of comfort, funds to tide over the difficult periods, the friendly touch *f personal encouragement helpful recreation and worry-dispelling amusevnent. It is the warm hand of sympathy and understanding which the American Red Cross extends to the Bialorlty of these disabled ex-servics . o HaMtaal Coaitlpitkm Cured In 14 to 21 Days # 1AX-P0S WITH PEPSIN" is a specially, prepared Syrup Tonic-Laxative for Habitual Constipation. . It relieves promptly but. abould be taken regularly for 14 to 21 days ta fodoce rogulai action. It Stimulates and Bitnlitw. Very Pleasant to Take, a $0o pm bottle. i rm SOUR STOMACH INDIGESTION Thedford's Black-Draught Highly Recommended by a Tennessee Grocer (or Troubles Resulting from Torpid Liver* East Nashville, Tenn.? The effic lency of Thedford's Black-Draught, the Genuine, herb, liver medicine, is vouched for by Mr. W. N. ParsonB, a grocer of this city. "It Is without Al. ^ II 9 I ^ t _ _ J 1 uuuui iu? ut'Bi nvor wuuicme, uua l don't believe I could get along without It. I take It for sour stomach, head? ache, bad liver, Indigestion, and all other troubles that are the result oi a torpid liver. "I have known and used It for years, and can and do highly recommend It to every one. I won't go to bed without it In the house. It will do all it claims to do. I can't say enough for It" Many other men and women throughout the country have found BlackDraught just as Mr Parsons describes ?valuable in regulating the liver to Its normal functions, and in cleansing the bowels of impurities. Thedford's Black-Draught liver medicine is the original and only genuine. Accept no Imitations or substitutes. Always ask (or Thedford's. u~m mm, nvrnr rrt rnrm rncrrnTO^S1 TTI TTTfi whirl of life, thousands of thefti with wives an(1 children dependent upon them, and hundreds of them frequently helpless in the face of grim necessity. 2,679 Chapters Aiding Veterans In this work, upon whose accompli* hment the American Red Cross Is urging a record-breaking enrollment in the Roll Call which opens on Armistice Day and closes with Thanksgiving Day, 2.079 Chapters in all parts of the country are engaged. This ts 350 more than were working for ex-service men last year when approximately $10,000,000 was expended by the National Organization and the Chapters working together in harmonious unity. For the current fiscal year National Headquarters appropriated $3,030,092.00, an increase of $3(55,500.84 over the amount spent for the work among ex-service men in the year ended June 80 last. Since it is estimated that the Chapters will expend close to $7,000. 000 from their own funds, the grand total of Red Cross expenditures for this single work is expected again to reach the $10,000,000 mark by June .10, 1923. Hospital and District Office Work During the fiscal year a total of over 1,000 persons, paid and volunteer, has been engaged in Red Cross duty !n hospitals or district offices of the U. S. Veterans' Hureau. An average of 8,000 new cases requires definite and particular attention each month. The demand for Chapter-made articles for hospital patients is constant. During last year Service Claims and Information Service at National Headquarters handled 87,200 compensation and insurance claims, 24,500 allotment and allowance cases, and 0.700 miscellaneous claims. Since February, 1019, It has disposed of 04,174 allotment checks payable to veterans which the Post Office Department reported undeliverable. The Chapter is the unit of the Red Cross organization which Is accessible to every disabled veteran or his family. Between July 1, 1921, and June 80, 1922, the Chapters had reported 1,005,079 instances of service to ex-service men and their dependents, at a cost estimated from reports now at hand of more than $5,8-10,000. The basis of this far-reaching work of the Red Cross is the individual needs of the disabled veteran to the end that he may obtain his rights under the law, that his especial wants may be Immediately supplied, that his lv t m t 1 At t- _ own in(i iii> 111 inii.v n siiiimiumi iiuiy r>? rendered happy and cheerful, and that their outlook for the future may visualize Incentives for independent and fruitful effort. Spread Christmas Joy Abroad More than 100,000 Christmas boxes for the children of Central Europe were packed by the Junior Red Crosi last year. The spread of Christina! Joy through these boxes will be large]) Increased thlx year because of thi nlans already under way. 666 Cures Malaria, Chills and Fever Dengue or Bilious Fever. It kills th< i^erms.?tf ! ? ? Chas. M. Manufacturer of 1 Buy directly and save Easy Terms or 1 D. W. SMITH CHADBC iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniimy . it S HOBBY HERALD," OONWAY, RED CROSS PUTS UP $9,739,872 ~Year's Budget Stresses Relief and Services at Home and Overseas. MILLIONS FOR VETERAN AID Over $3,000,000 Allotted to the Disabled?Foreign Work Lessens. i Washington.?Expenditures totaling $9,739,872.47 for carrying through its program of services and relief during the fiscal year in the United States and overseas are authorized in the budget of the American Red Cross, effective July 1, 1022. This total is $2,735,975 less than the expenditures for the last fiscal year, when disbursements reached $12,47f>,847.69, it is announced at National Headquarters in a statement emphasizing the necessity of continued support of the organization by enrollment during the annual Roll Call, November 11-November 30 inclusive. This total for the budget ic exclusive of the large linanclal operations of the 3,300 active Red Cross Chalmers, which, It Is estimated, will more than double the total. War Veterans Have First Call First call on Red Cross funds Is for the disabled ex-service men, of whom 27,487 were receiving treatment from the Government on June 1 last. This work for veterans and their families in a wide variety of service that the Government is not authorized to render and for which it has neither funds nor facilities has the call on $3,080,692.90 during the current year, or alvout .$3<>t>.000 more than was expended last year for soldier service. Adding the funds disbursed in this humanitarian work of physical reconstitulion following the World War by the Chapters throughout the country will approximate a total for the current year approaching $10,00r>,ix>0. ! This work, In the opinion of the Sur| geon General's ofllce, will not reach : its peak before 15)26. Through its Chapters the American 1 Red Cross Is equipped to find the individual ex-service man, help him in his problems and difficulties, provide i Immediately for his necessities, and open the way for him to the Government compensation and aid to which he is entitled. The extension of this work to the families of such men proves to them that the Ked Cross lias lost none of its sympathy nor will to service manifested in wartime. Similarly the service goes out to the men still in the Army and Navy, 11,087 of whom were under treatment In (*? eminent hospitals on June 1, 1922. Greater Domestic Program This year?after five years of constructive effort during the war and j after the armistice?brings with It a greater responsibility for domestic hervioe to the American Red Cross, j The budget for foreign operations, j however, totals $U,404,000, but of this 1 amount $1,884,000 Is for medical relief and hospital supplies for Russia, which is a part of the gift made by i the American Ked Cross in 1021 to I the Russian famine relief work of the | American Relief Administration proj giam. The child health service in Ki*I rope continues, moreover, and $054,, 000 is appropriated for this work undertaken in 1020. Other items in the j stringently diminished foreign prol gram include $200,(M)0 to support the , League of Red Cross Societies, $22,| OoO for nurses' training schools instli ti.ted hv tin* R<*<l ('r<?s>4 uhr<?!wi t??wi J $000,000 for liquidation of tin* general J Red Cross foreign relief program. i Prepared for Emergencies For disaster relief the lied Cross has set aside $750,000, and for einergencles in Chapter work $500,000 to be available for domestic, insular and foreign demands. This is more than $305,000 above last year's expeni ditures. For service and assistance i to the ft,.'t00 Chapters and their \ branches $1,293,000 is provided by the L National organization. ' i Other budget Items of Importance \ in tha ilatnMitir nmrrim inrlndt* V200.Vm QuMm Tbat Dost Net Afftct the HmO Because of its tonic and laxative effect, LAX/ tr u bromo quininr is better than ordinar ' Guanine and does not cause nervousness n? ! ringing In head. Remember the full name ci look for the # nature of H. w. orovs. ) t uinnmnmniiimmnmmmmmtmmn Stieff.Inc. | tligh tirade Pianos. the middle-man's profit. Discount for Cash. [y Local Representative )URN, N. C. ' i wtwMmttmtttMatitmumtmttmtntm S. P., OCT. 19, 1022 OW ror assistance to other organizations and education institutions for training Ited Cross nurses and workers; $11)0,000 for Roll Call assistance i furnished to Chapters', $100,000 for i unforeseen contingencies. 1 Of the total budget less than $500,- t 000 is allotted for management in the. * National oiganiaation. NocusU est|j mate, of course, is possible to weigh 1 the value of the service by volunteers j ^ in the Chapters. I THE RED CROSS SUPPLEMENTS . nnVTTPMMITKTT QPD VJIV/ f 1J1V11 AUJUll JL ULJ1V V xvu BY MEETING THE PARTICULAR NEEDS OF THE INDIVIDUAL EX-SERVICE MAN. THIS WORK CANNOT GO ON UNLESS YOU SUPPORT IT WITH YOUR MEMBERSHIP DOLLAR PAY UP TODAY Striking New Re 111 n aalMiC IBmHKIJ fl^KS p*y wm&rw v , i |% :- .-:. . ... .. *: ->,vi;; Chartered t jToRelieveandP r In Peace s At Home< ? -f, V - , Riveting: the attention of the to' can Red Cross is chartered by Conj organization the dome of the Capitol j imposed a large Red Cross, is the cei Annual Red Cross Roll Call. The poa of the most striking of innumerable i is the work of Franklin Booth, a New be displayed throughout the country d Day to Thanksgiving, when the Red enrolled. FARM GOSSIP. If I could wield poetic pen. i would sing of cow, and sow, and hen. Home improvements cost money but save Mother. 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 SALVE for Chest Colds, Head Colds and Croup is enclosed with every bottle of HAYES' HEAUNG HONEY. The salve should be rubbed on the chest and throat of children suffering from a Cold or Croup. The healing effect of Hayes* Healing Honey Inside the throat combined with the healing effect of Grove's O-Pen-Trate Salve through the pores of the skin soon stops a cough. Both remedies are packed In one carton and the cost of the combined treatment Is 96c.? Just ask your druggist for HAYES' HEALING HONEY. Notice . Fur Trappers and Hunters I am on the market this : season again to buy fur. If I don't call on you in the week I will be at Wood! ward's Millinery Store each I Saturday. Get my prices before selling the fur dealer. J. G. WOODWARD 10-1!) tf, J .* . t . m.,L, NEGRO RECoitiRED It is reported that Joe Lesesne, a I legro barber, who was sent to the State Hospital for the insane about two years a?o, has recovered, and , Jiat steps are beintf made by his relatives to K?t him out and back home. Before his illness Lesesne operated i barber shop in Conway for about 'ifteen years, possibly longer. Red Cross Roll Call Heard World Around The Annual Roll Call of the American Red Cross for registration of the membership for 1923 will begin on Armistice Day, November 11, and close on Thanksgiving Day, November HO. The ground work for this stupendous task of re-enrolling the membership throughout the world has been laid In a plan for the first complete ] iiuri ooinn'^hcnslvft svstprn of rt?i?iRtr??- I . j t ?1? ' r? ? tton of the Red Cross membership In all its S,300 uctlve Chapters at home and abroad. d Cross Poster , v^vS! ' ~ZZZ7rs^^BIB wai ^_ I >y(bn?ress d revent Suffering; indlnWar i. d ' tek A- J holder on the fact that the AmerifresR as an official volunteer relief at Washington, upon which is guperitral figure of a new poster for the i iter, which has been pronounced one representations of the famous dome York artist of wide renown. It wJM uring the Roll Call period, Armisticc Cross membership for 1923 will be 1 J Are fence corners and trees sufficiently tfood winter-quarters for farm machinery? o A TON1U ] drove's Tasteless chill Tonic restores Energy and Vitality by Purifying and Enriching the Blood. When you feel its strengthening, invigorating effect, see how it brings color to the cheeks and how ! it improves the appetite, you will then i appreciate its true tonic value. Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic is simply : Iron and Quinine suspended in syrup. So j pleasant even children like it. The blood i needs QUININE to Purify it and IRON to ; Enrich it. Destroys Malarial germs and Grip germs by its Strengthening. Invigorating Effec* HOr.. I I For Sal< I My House and Thi next to Horry J- C! grounds, oix room screened porch an trie wiring, all on well. Cost $4,000 for quick sale. T S. C. MORRIS, F. J. SULLIVAN 4c CO. I Certified Public Accountants (lit.) Telephone So. 796. * Murchison Bank Bldg. I WILMINGTON. N. C. 9 T. B. LEWIS 'I Attorney and Counsellor at Law 1 CONWAY, S. C. I . _ J. I. ALLEN, JR. I Attorney-at-Law I Office in Bank of Loris Bldg. I LORIS, S. C. Ill D. A. SPIVEY & CO. I W. B. Kinff, Secty. I BONDS AND INSURANCE. . I Office in I Peoples National Bunk Buildinf. I H FORD & SUGGS I Attorneys at Law I Offices at I Conway, S. C. Loris,S.C. ll 6-l-13m ? R. B. SCARBOROUGH I Attorney at Law I CONWAY, S. C. I WILLIAM EUGENE KING 1 Physician and Surgeon I AYNOR, S. C. I B. H. WOODWARD I Attorney and Counsellor at Law. I CONWAY. S. C. I ENOCH S. C. BAKER I Attorney and Counselor at Law I Offices in Taylor Huilding I X-9-3m Conway, S. C. I Law Offices of M. C. HARRELSON I and I R. B. HARRELSON Mullins, S. C. I OR. G. I. LEWIS I Dental Surgeon I )fflce Over Norton Drug Company. I CONWAY, S. C. Dr. J. D. THOMAS I Physician and Surgeon I LORIS. S. C. I EBB N. JOHNSON, I Auctioneer of Real Estate I and all other property. I R. F. D. No. 2, Box 41, I Gallivant'H Ferry, S. C.?1-19-Sm | MARION A. WRIGHT I Attorney-at-Law I Offices Spivey Building CONWAY, S. C. I S. C. DUSENBURY I Attorney-at-Law I Spivey Building I CONWAY, s. a I To Cure a Cold in One Day I take LAXATIVE BKOMO QUININE (Tablet*). h I top* the Coudh and Headache and works off the I old. E. W. GROVE'S itfnature on each box. 30c. I A dead weevil in time save nine I nillion. Plow under cotton stalks I iarly. I Next to "know thyself" the most I mportant thing for a farmer is I 'know thy land." I I I Most of us won't take the trouble I ?o find out how easy it is to provide I y^ood pastures for hogs. I Piles Cured In 6 to 14 Days | ? " **" ~ / uhuio iciuuj money 11 rA?U UIN1MENT fails to cure Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Files. Instantly relieves Itching Pil?s, and you can get restful sl*ep afte- first anolication. 60c. O $ iHORRY COUNTY! I TRUST CO. ! i * % * |L. D. Magrath, Manager| Real Estate, Bonds ond% | Insurance. * *******#************ ?***** 5 Cheap I ree Lots in Aynor I Industrial School I is, two large halls, I id windows, elec- I itbuildings. Deep I >, will take $3,500 I erms. I Brevard, N. C. I