The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, October 19, 1922, Image 7
I
- g
* SUMMONS FOR RELIEF
(Complaint Served.)
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA,
COUNTY OF HORRY.
Court of Common Pleas
Curtis Graham and Gussie Gowans
Graham, plaintiffs vs. Callie Graham
Watson, Ida Graham McQueen,
Glimpsie Graham, Marion Buck,
Arthus Buck, Georgia Buck, Ruby
Buck, Leo Buck and Claude Buck, defendants.
rii
To The Defendants j^hove 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 subscriber or subscribers
at his or their offices, Conway, S. C.,
within twenty days after the service
' hereof, exclusive of the day of ruch
service; and if you fail to answer the
I Complaint within .the time aforesaid,
the plaintiffs in tliis action will apply
to the Court for the relief demanded
in the Complaint.
Dated July 3rd, A. D. 1922.
sherwood & McMillan,
Plaintiff's Attorneys.
ITo Marion Buck, Arthur Buck,
Georgia Buck, Ruby Buck, Leo Buck
and Claude Buck.
CAN
JW PINO AHOU
M WHERE CAW
M riND A BUM
WHO HAS IT Fi
CT)f
1255-r
Iiise
r *
| All th<
W A
i Real and pei
I lomif
v/i V/ uaiiuc
FOUI
N^l
For $300.00
All and singular that
tract of land known as
the Isaac McCray land, of la
or Brunson land, contain- . ((
ing one hundred (100) y ^
acres, more or less, in less,
Simpson Creek Town- n
ship, Horry County, ^oun
South Carolina, and Towr
hounded on the north by Nort
the public road leading form
from Red Bluff, South n,
Carolina, to Pireway, N. ay'
C., on the east by Simp- *y "J
son Creek, on the South Char
by a line commencing at Soutl
the I. J. Parker line, pran
and running thence his
line South-east to We:;- West
ley Barnhill's line; know
thence Barnhill's line tratt
Westward to run of WQ .
Todd's Swamp; 'thence
the said rup to the pub- ?* '
lie road. ' lands
| PER
P One tractor engine and boil
N One mottftftji on the pas boi
B I have also the wi K. Holt
I will dispose of this propert
n
EF
ABSENT DEFRNI>ANTS;
TAKE NpTJCE That th? Complaint
in the forefcolrig stated action and the
summons, of which the foregoing is a
copy, were filed in the office of the :
Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas
for Horry County, S. C., on the 3rd
day of October, 1922.
sherwood & McMillan,
Plaintiff's Attorneys.
W. L. BRYAN, (L. S.)
C. C. C. P. irxifAd .
NOTICE TO MINORS
To Georgia Buck, Leo Buck, Ruby
Buck, and Claude Buck, Infant defendants;
and To Marion Buck, their
father, with whom they reside:
TAKE NOTICE: That unless you
procure the appointment of a Guardian
ad litem, to defend this action
on behalf of the above itemed Infant
Defendants within twenty days after
the service of the Summons herein
upon you, application will be made by
piaintitT to the Clerk of this Court, at
Conway, S. C., after the expiration
of said twenty days, for the appointment
of such Guardian, to appear and
defend this action in their behalf. I
n y-i av i i ^ n l 4 nnn I
<jonwav, s. vj., uctouer ara, i
sherwood & McMillan,
Plaintiff's Attorneys. I
10|5|22-St.
o
Tell it to The Horry Herald.
JeK
i * \
ER f \
OR SALE? \
VHERE 1
IAN I /
:?NO, /
*ELP f /
? /
/ k VC^^A|^Hh|F^ JVH|
eadand
WANT ADS
"
Will Se
5 remaining prop
iRD-BATE
rsonal. Must b<
iry 1, 1923.
* TRACTS OF I
No. 2 . No. 3
For $400.00 For $1,320.
, ;i~~7 . * , All and singula!
1 that certain tract . .
certain piece, pare
nd containing twen- tract of land siUlJ
dO) acres, mere or the County of Hon
lying in Horry State of South Ca:
ty, in Conway and being in
iship, and bounded ^ay Township c
hwardly by land kast s*de the
erly owned by W. ^piing road, at
s Moore, Eastward- tween ^be fifth
r lands claimed by s'x^ ni^c posts, 1
les R. Scarborough n*ng at a sta^e 0
iiwardly by lands of eas^ s'de sa'd
ces Stalvey, and SPrin* road and 1
wardly by land ed North by lan
n as the Rollinson ^rs# W. H. S
; being the South- ^y ^and
half of lot No. 95, f'1,a Sl ?' ^SouT
_ . ' land of B. F. I
rlomewood Colony and West by
i. Spring road.
SONAL PROPE
ler, on Dog Bluff Koad for $1,000.00 as i
it "Norman" for $225.00.
mher near Lorls, just now under option
y before January. See me i? you Ant
>' * 17y
L Wood1
- Attreney-at-.-Law
THE HOBBY HERALD. COW!
?????? ig i
JOIN BIG CLUB
Subscribers are joining thick and
fast the big club of Herald subscribers
that is being made up
Wampee, S. C.
Arrangements were made in Conway
about this club and when the
manager of it went back home one
day la-st w?bk/ he found no trouble
in getting names as pa id-in-ad vance
subscribers to the leading newspaper
in this section, and the paper in
which every Horryite Is especiatty
inte rested.
A lot of Heralds were sent to
Mr. M. B. Thompson, proprietor ol
the M. B. Thompson Company, so
that last week's issue might be
handed out to those who join the
Herald club at Wampee in advance
of the time when the big list will
be brought in and each name entered
on the mailing list at the office
in rnnwnv ?? ? imi irl_5?i_o*l%ro
?w. I'"'" 1,1 "Wiunvu
subscriber for one year.
The Herald has made inducements
for the people to join this club. The
Herald does not care how wide *
territory is used to draw the b!jr
list from. It may take in not oni^
the Wampee neighborhood, but the
o?
SILK EMBROIDERED CLOTH
l
A quiet and rich #tr night-line dress (
f %?? 111 r\l/\?? 4-1 \r\ ~ I I ?
t.?ui tim jfituov me ujiuiuii, capecimij 1
If she is stout and likes long lines?Is 1
made of a smooth-faced cloth and embroidered
tn silk in two colors, one of '
them matching the dress. Its aleeves
are uneven at the wrist and faced with ;
crepe de chine to above the elbow.
11 1
>erty of y
CO. |
i disposed of ]
.AND [
No. 4 I :
00 For $6,000.00 0 |
r that M >1
, All that certain tract U >!
el or h
ite in ^an(l in said County H *
-y and and State known as t! | H
rolina, Hammond and Red i It
1 Con- Bluff lands, containing J 3
>n the |
one thousand acres 1 U
Cool I 1
id be- more or 'ess> bounded I $
an.; North by the Conway j 3
begin- and Pireway road; Ea^* U
n the by the Todd and Sim; N j
son Sv. amps and Wacca a
>ound- rl H
ds of rn&w Ttiver; Sou';n by II 4
Ipivey, lands of T. W. Livings- jjj =i
Mrs ton ard lands of T. J. [1 ?j
^ b., Cox, and West by the H 1
Vloore, n
Coo! Conway and Pireway II
road I
rty [
, but it may ho open later.
fU' yum -ll ^
wa I
EI3K; ibb11-?ij|
ffAY, 8. P., OCT. 19, 1923
"Above All the
Germany the A
By MRS. BORDEN HARP
1
Above all the political clmos
above Coblenz, on the ruediveval for
out against the blue sky over those
wonderful impression of youth an
with charity to all, with firmness i
right."
Verily the world does move,
above the ancient Old World syml
there is being enacted what may &
drama?tlie American occupation.
Heie in the busy little town of
rud/lv-faced Anisriean 'boys?13,00
of the kindness and consideration i
dren the parents have become tolera
This army and the spirit of its
is holding the whole fabric of the <
that idealism and altruism are, aft<
world as applied to human affairs.
kittle River, the Wortham's Bridge,
he Hand Section, and all other
)laces down there in the seashore
lountry.
o
Colds Cause Grip and Influenza
LAXATIVE BROMO QUININK Tablets remove
the causc. There is only one "Ilronio Quluiue."
E. W. GROVE'S signature on box. '10c.
? o
COTTON.
Spot Cotton prices advanced 57
points during the week. New ^ ork
October future contracts advanced 61
points.
Spot Cotton closed at 21.7C>c per
b.; New York October futures at
22.18c.
TRAINED DOG
RECOVERED
The trained dotr that escaped from
;he M. L. Clark Show while the circus
was in Conway last week, was
Pound out in the country about six
miles at a negro's house.
The negro said that this dog followed
him home from the show.
The chief of police took the dog and
shipped it to M. L. Clark at Boykin
V/.,
v a.
O
Herald special envelopes are the
kind you need in your business to carry
the business message to others.
o
Let The Horry Herald do the work
*************************
I Will You Help th<
I to Win Thi
*
% Tf so the most helpful thing
* the Democratic Educational Cain
* al work of the Democratic Nation
* Harmed.
* .
* The Democratic Nationa
? And Nee
*
? For the purpose ,of getting
;ji publican Do-Nothing Congress a
? fore the people, and to show U
% Prosperity, which they traveled f
*
* Send Your Contribution
jf The Democratic National Con
publisher of The Horry Herald
!? Imt irnu A rlnnlinnln fnnoint
4' I'VIVIV'lltli A. K \l VI j/l IVt? VV 1 VVV ip V
jj National Headquarters.
j* Give What You Can Aff
\i
Give i
The Democratic Party has n
profiteers, no trusts or moneybum
the people, therefore it appeals on
This is a Democratic Year.
Victory.
Democratic Prosperity
The estimated wealth of th
Wilson went into office in 1913
to $.'<00,000,000,000 in eijrht yea
$1 l.r),000,0c0,000. The present
Slates is $225,000,000,000^-a lo
j$ months under Republican rule.
Since the Republican party v
t 1920, Die American farmers a>lc
\t $00,000,000 000.
Some Republican
The Republicans promised
j< have r.iven 11 ADVERSITY.
They promised to stimulate aj
{ given an industrial panic and
r Foreign I ade declined from $
I $6,000,000,000 in 1922. <
M The romi^ed to reduce tav
| multi i i r.aire and profiteering
& without lifting taxes, or reducin
? Profits tax reliever1 the Hig Ir
| taxes; reduction of the higher su
* $61,500,000.
T1 cj, , romtaftcl to reduce tl
* given a ? . .. teon' iaiiif Ijill .\\ii
? ing, ai . . ..s M . fcixJ elaipiV<
? .$10;'" .i 1 t ion' 1 e rets.
iit Tl ey promised to reduce the
* have increased the expenses of r
* the government (1023 budget), tl
* 000 compared to 1915, three ye
S mated deficit of $500,000,000
* crease.
1
a*************************
" I ,
Political Chaos in *r
merican Flag?"
II MAN, in New York Herald.
in (leriuaiiy the American Hag floats
tress of Ehrenbreitstein. As it stands
massed cliff-like walls it gives a most
d power?"with malice toward none,
n the right as God gives us to see the
Under that New World emblem flying
>ol of grim fear and force and hatred
d down in history as an epoch-making
Coblenz the streets are full of stalwart,
0 there are in the area. And because
>1 tHose soldier boys to the native chilnt
and even friendly to the Americans,
administration form the keystone that
>ccupation together by trying to prove
3r all, the most practical things in the
j PEOPLE OF OUR TOWN
Gus Hangdog, Nobody's Friend, got
[ Fined for Selling Short-Weights, and
, he Is going to Ask the Editor not to
Mention It In the Paper. Gns always
knocks the Editor and the Paper, nev*
er spends any Jack for Ads, and has
* his Envelopes printed out of Town.
Ous will get a column on the Front
Page I
*
)k
3 Democratic Party |
p o *
s Campaign; *
*
*
you can do now is to contribute to jj*
paign Fund so that the Education- *jal
Committee can be carried out as *
*
*
*
1 Committee Needs Money *
ids it NOW |
He
the record of failure of this Re- *
nd Do-Nothing Administration be- ^
iem again the road to Democratic >|?
or eight years of Democratic rule. *
to The Horry Herald *
nmittee has arranged with tlie J
to receive and receipt for fontri- *
will be mailed from Democratic J
*
ord?Much or Little-?But *
it Now *
*
o privileged classes, no protected *
N to appeal to. It represents only ?
ily to them. ?
Uo your share to help win the *
*
*
== *
jk
vs. Republican Disaster %
T
ie United States when President *
was $185,000,000,000; it increased *
rs of Democratic rule?a gain of *
estimated wealth of the United *
ss of $75,000,000,000 in fifteen #
*
^as voted into power in November, ^
>ne have suffered a loss of near *
*
<jk
Broken Promises *
the country PROSPERITY, they *
*
^riculture and business; they have ^
destroyed our foreign markets. *
13,500,000,000 in 1920 to near *
*
:es; they have shifted taxes of the *
r class to the smaller taxpayers ^
ig them. Repeal of the Excess *
iterests of paying $450,000,000 in ?
rtax relieved them of paying *
le hi#!# *A?st*<*? living; they have $
dchkincreases the high cost of liv- j
$5 on everything he buys for each ^
expanses of the government; they $
uniting the various departments of $
tree years after the war $536,000^ J
ara before the war, with an esti- %
in addition?or $1,000,000,000 in- *
^**************************$
RED CROSS WINNING :
IN FIGHT FOR HEUTH
Better, Stronger Citizenry Now
Emerging Out of Work in ,
United States.
The American Red Cross as AM
vsngelist of better health has looked
Its problem square la the face. How
It accepted the task revealed to It in
the nation's physical condition aa
brought out during the World War,
and conscientiously applied Its activities
to correction forms a vivid chapter
in the forthcoming annual report.
Historically and practically, nursing In
a basic work for the Ked Cross. In lUl
public health nursing service, In Instruction
In home hygiene and care of
the sick, nutrition classes, first al<l
and life saving courses and health centers,
the American Red Cross Is applying
effectually the lessons learned
during the war and making for a
healthier, stronger and better nourished
citizenry.
The task of the Red Cross Public
Health nurse In the 1,240 nursing services
now operating throughout the
country Instructing their communities
in health essentials and disease prevention
is demonstrating the possibilities
of human betterment and the great
benefits of enlightenment.
During the last year new public
health nursing services were established
by Red Cross Chapters, and several
hundred services so convincingly proved
their efYcetiveness that they wera
taken over by public authorities. In
order to promote this work $.'10,000 was
allotted to provide women to prepar?
i themselves for public nursing. The
home visits made by the 1,240 nursea
aggregated nearly 1 ,.r)00,000, visits to
schools numbered 140,000, and In si*
MAMfVxn 1 V. 1 -v. n 1
iiiuiii.113 si'iiuui cnuuren were
inspected by these nurses and where
defects were found advised examination
by physicians. In rural com utilities
this service has made a very
marked advance and has won thousands
of converts to approved methods
of disease prevention.
In home hygiene and care of the sick
instruction, which fits the student la
methods of proper care where illness l?
not so serious as to require profess
slonal service, the lied Cross conducted
3.8JW classes during the last year,
enrolled 2,350 instructors, 93,448 students
and Issued 42,856 certificates.
On June 30, 1922, nutrition service
embraced 1,199 classes, with a total of
27,523 children and 2,589 enrolled dietitians.
Seventy-eight food selection
' classes graduated 733 who received
Red Cross certificates. In general
health activities Hod Cross Chapters
maintained 377 health centers, serving
as many com+uunities, provided 38,751
health lectures for large audiences everywhere,
while clinics numbered over
10,000.
......
Red Cross Gains
Strength in All
Foreign Fields
In Insular possessions of the United
States und in foreign lands the American
Red Cross scored heavy gains during
the last year, passing the previous
membership high mark of 1918
by 4,201 and advancing the figure to
15(1,408. The Philippines take the
lend, gaining nearly 100 per cent, now
having 115,917 members. In Europe
uie iy-1 mm v^uii enronou n.i'JD,
with the Constantinople Chapter reporting
065, u pain of 33 members.
China was 1,782 members, a gain of
MM?; the little Virgin Islands Ivava
1.000, while the Dominican Republic
with 2,927 advanced from its previous
high mark by 1,423 new members.
Haiti, organized in 1020, now has
nearly 1,000 enrolled. Mexico reports
354, a gain of 327 In one year. Th?
American Red Cross has spread It#
membership over sonve 70 foreign
lands and Its Junior membership outside
of the United States is close t*
700,000.
Red Cross Water '
First Aid Makes
Life-Saving Gain
More than 32S Chapters engaged la
life saving or water first aid last year
with the result th^t the American Redi
Cross Life Saving Corps has set a new
high mark 'or enrollment and the
number -of qualified life savers developed.
The influence of "learn t?
swim week" In ninny localities is re<lii/?lnrr
tlw-v ??<? 1 U 1.%.. 4.1. ?l I ?
Muvuifi, nil: 1VHUM I <11 il I (Lies lllIMIUKr) III*
structlon and the wider dissemination
of resuscitation mettuwls demonstrated
by the Red Cross representatives. Excellent
work has been done In teaching
a large part of the American popula*
tlon how to take care of Itself In th*
water. Growing appreciation for thia
lied Cross Life-Saving Service 19
shown by the compulsory instruction
adopted In many cities for members of
the police and tire departments In th*
prone pressure method of resusclta*
tion.
Buy tablets at the Herald oMlce.