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A " - ? ' ' .. y ' p [Meet I *% 4 Just re dred pairs: to about 60< during the i J Shoe yc I ?At the Busy C I CONWAY, r/mmmmmamimmmmmmmmmmmm NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of the decree and judgment of the court made by Jiis honor W. C. McLain, Presiding t..j <* - ? - * * "? ? ?iuuge, in ine cti.se ot j. w. joyner, JV P. Mills, W. H. Stroud and J. R. 'Furbeville, co-partners under the Firm Name and style of J. W. Joyner ? Co., Plaintiffs vs. Uawsey Tuberville, Ella Tuberville, et. al.y defendants, and dated the 28th day of October, A. D. 1922, I, the undersigned W. L. Bryan, Clerk of Court 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 sales- i day in December next, it being the 4th day of said month, all and singular that certain real estate situate in Horry County, and described as follows, to wit:, All and singular a certain piece or tract of land lying and being in Green Sea Township, and conveyed by W. P. Baldwin and Ida Seward to D. F. McGougan on the 15th day of October, 19lfr, and as per plat made by J. B. Gore, C. E., and said plat recorded on the records of Horry County, Book t, page 34, and known as tract No. 10 of said survey. Bounded as follows: North by lot no. 9, East by Johnson and Harrington, West by Johnson and Harrington, South by run of , Crooks Run Swamp, containing 21.2 ; acres, more or less. ' TERMS of Sale Cash. Purchaser j to pay for papers and stamps. October 31st, 1922. ' B. H. WOODWARD, FlaintiflPs Attorney, W. L. BRYAN, J Clerk of Cotirt as j Special Master, Hor- j ry County. I I ?o NOTICE OF SALE 1 i Under and by virtue of the decree j and judgment of the court made by j his Homoc W. C. McLain, Presiding t Judp;e, in the case of J. W. Gerrald > and W. K. Tyler, Plaintiffs vs. B. ( L. Buffkin, defendant, and dated the \ 28th daj of October, A. D. 1922, I, < the undersigned W. L. Bryan, Clerk j f Court a? Special Master, of Horry t County, will sell at public auction, to [ the highest bidder before the Court ( House door, at Conway, in Horry County, #ind State of South Carolina, t during legal hours of sale, on salesday in December next, it being the i 4th day of said month, all and singu- j lar that certain real estate situate in Horry County, fand described as follows, (a? wit: All and singular, all that cerfcai? Diece, parcel or tract of land containing ten <10.75) aftd seventy-five one- I hundredths acres, lying and being in Bayboro Township and in the County and State aforesaid, and having ourses, distances, metes and bounds * /VAtiuT i' '- - r.'-f \ r? mm myi IK pwt Bj?. WAN! wM Hfe to work mm quick-< j| * ? * ?' * 1 . i . ? ' l- .. 1 . ' ??? HOMI ceived another Shoes for the w 00 pairs of men' month of Dscsi >ur family and i Corner? S. C. as follows: Beginning at a stake 0 i at the junction of Placard road and the road leading from Bayboro to i Gurley, running with said Placard < road to blackgum XN in the run of Gulley Branch, thence with the run ( of said branch to a maple 3XN in the 1 run at the junction of Gulley and Rem Branches, thence with the run } of Rem Branch to a stake No. 50 at < the junction of said branch and the i road leading from Bayboro to Gur- t ley. thence with the said road to thft 1 beginning corner. . j The within mentioned premises be- 1 ing conveyed to me by J. W. Gerrald t by his deed bearing date of June r 2Gth, 1920. This mortgage is given ^ il 1 1 * tu secure trie uaiance ciue on tne pur- I ?liAQP Tiripp TERMS of Sale Cash. Purchaser lo pay for papers and stamps. ( October 31st, 1022. t H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. h W. L. BR VAN, r Clerk of Court as d Special Master, Hor- 1 ry County. o NOTICE OF SALE 4 Under and by virtue of the decree made by his Honor W. C. McLain, Presiding Judge, in the case of O. B. Hard wick, Plaintiff vs. W. E. Porter, defendant, and dated the 28th day of J October, A. D. 1922, I, the under- ' signed W. L. Bryan, Clerk of Court J as Special Master, of Horry County, ^ will sell at public auction, to the j ^ highest bidder before the Court . House door at Conway, in Horry J: bounty, and State of South Carolina, luring legal hours of sale, on saleslay in December next, it being the 1th day of said month, all and singu- v ar that certain real estate situate in " Florry County, and described as fol- ?, lows, to wit: v AH those certain two parcels of ots of lqnd situate, lying and being c n the Town of Loris, State and Coun- 0 ;y aforesaid, being lots Number ? Eleven (11) and Twelve (12) of a p jubdivision of the said O. B. Hard- y vick's land in the Town of Loris, ac- a :ording to a plat of said subdivision :o be recorded in the office of the j 21erk of Court for Horry County, a eference being thereunto had will a nore fully appear, each of said lots tl >eing fifty (50) feet bv two Vinndwwl .. [200) feet I in dimension. li TERMS of Sale Cash. Purchaser tl o pay for papers and stamps. g October 31st, 1922. f i. H. WOODWARD, s 3laintifT's Attorney. t W. L. BRYAN, a Clerk of Court as B Special Master, Hor- c ry County. E o t< PETITION FOR FINAL SETTLE- F MENT AND DISCHARGE e / n In The Probate Court. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, u S . p not^|j|% e i adIh i inctr i M ds cumin 111 W s * 1 ? fg lWiOT MMIJ. ?II t the l OF C shipment of G hole family. 1 s, women's and n^er at vary at keep the diffei F. C. COUNTY OF IIORRY. EX PARTE W. K. Suggs, Administrator, IN RE The Estate of Mary Frances Walters Turner, Deceased. TO ALL AND SINGULAR the KinIred and Creditors of Mary Frances Walters, Deceased: TAKE NOTICE, That the undersigned will apply to the Honorable J. 3. Vaught, Judge of Probate, at his >ifire, in Conway, S. C., on Friday,! ;he 22nd day of December, A. D. 022, at 11 o'clock A. M., for a final settlement of the estate of MLary ^ranees Walters Turner, Deceased, md discharge from the office of adninistrator of said estate. uonway, S. C., November 15th, A. ). 1922. W. K. SUGGS, Administrator. 5. I/. FORD & F. A. THOMPSON, Administrators Attorneys. TAKE NOTICE, That there will ?e a hearing: on the above petition at ny office, in Conway, S. C., on FriLny the 22nd day of December, A. D. 922, at 11 o'clock A. M. J. S. VAUGHT, Judge of Probate for Horry County. t. o NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of a Decree if Foreclosure and Sale made by His Tonor W. C. McLain, Special Judge >residing at the October term of ?ourt for Horry County, S. C., in the ase of A. L. Todd, Plaintiff, vs. onathan Blanton, Defendant, notice 3 hersby given that I, W. L. Bryan, 'lerk of Court as Special Master, will fl'er for sale to the highest bidder beore the Court House door at Conway, S. C., within legal hours of sale n Monday, December 4th, 1922, that eing legal Salesday in said month, he following described property, to /it: ALL those certain tracts or parels of land being a part of two tracts f land in State and County aforeaid, situated East of Loris and Daisy ublic road and being a part of the V. I. Todd and Mary E. Todd land nd bounded as follows: Beginning on a stake corner on the ohn W. Todd line the old residence nd runs east course with said line cross Lobby Branch to a stake, hence with high water mark down aid branch with Furney Hardee's ne to a corner at Shelley Mill pond; hence with high water mark to a um in the Raleig hTodd Line; thence rom the erum pnm#r o . ...?*tyvuw o wan aid line to mouth of Trumpet bqt3m branch at Mill pond; thence bout N. up run of Trumpet bottom (ranch to the C. M. & Albert Todd orner; thence about E. to the Mary ?. Todd corner in the J. WT Todd line 5 the beginning:, less 2 acres .sold to 'urney Hardee by Mary J and Cathrine Todd, containing Eighty acres, lore or less. TERMS of Sale Cash. Purchaser 5 pay for papers and stamp*. herwood & McMillan, 'laintiflf's Attorneys. W. L. BRYAN, Clerk of Court as Special Master, Horry County. ovember, 6th, 1922. o SUMMONS FOR RELIEF (Complaint Served.) STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF HORRY. COURT OF COMMON PLEAS E. P. Widmer, Plaintiff vs. W. . Porter, Simon Boyd, O. B. Hardick and Armour Fertiliser Works, Corporation, Defendants. 0 THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE XI A urn. ai n.iTii^w YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMOND and required to answejr tho mplaint in this action, of which copy is herewith served upon >u, and to serve a copy of your iswer to the said complaint on e subscriber or subscribers at his their office at Conway, Soutl irolina, within twenty days after 4 e service hereof; exclusive of the iy of such service; and if you fail answer th4 complaint within e time aforesaid the plaintiff in is action will apply to the Court >r the relief demanded in the com aint. Dated Hovember 9th, A. D. 192ft. tL tL WOODWARD, I m t | * * . . i; -v . K * ^"v? ?. WAT, 8. O, HOT. SO, ltll ?????^p??????i "Bus; iOOD ? odman Shoes c This shinm^nt hi children's shoes tractive prices, ence. TODD Plaintiff's Attorney. TO Armour Fertilizer Works, Absent Defendants: TAKE NOTICE That the com plaint in the foregoing stated action and the Summons of which the foregoing is a copy were filed in the oflice of the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas in and for Horry County, at Conway, S. C., on the 11th day of November A. D. 1922. ~ w! L. BRYAN, (L. S.) C. C. C. P. TT If nr>N/%%v? n. n. WUUIJWAKD, Plaintiff's Attorney. 1 ljir,;S2-.?t o CALOMEL MAY TURN ON YOU NEXT TIME Next Dose You Take May Salivate and Start World of Trouble Calomel is mercury; quicksilver. 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 nasty calomel and without making you sick, you just go back and get your money. Don't take calomel! It makes you sick the next day; it loses you a day's work. Dodson's Liver Tone straightens you right up and you feel great. No salts necessary. Give it to the children because it is perfectly harmless and cannot salivate.?Adv. o TURKEYS TAKEN FROM SCRERR Solomon Scherr, conducting a c(ry goods store on Third Avenue, had five turkeys in a coop located behind his store. They had been purchased for holiday purposes and were in fine order. The son who conducts the store fed the birds in the middle of the day and returned to the store just after dark to put the turkeys in the store for the night, and found the coop empty. A board had been torn loose at one end and he found evidences of the turkeys having been stolen. o Governor-Elect Thomas G. Mcl^ecd highly endorses the work beinfc done by the South Carolina Tuberculosis Association to eliminate tuberculosis from South Carolina. ASPIRIN Say "Bayer" and Insist! ft Unless you see the name "Bayer" on package or on tablet? you ere not getting the genuine Hayer product preanribed br physicians ovrr twenty-two years ami proved safe by millions for Colds Headache Toothache Lumbago Earache Rheumatism Neuralgia rain, Pain Aesept "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin*9 only. Eaeh unbroke* package eontaint r roper directions. Handy boxes of nreiTS tablets cost few cents. Drug riato also sell bottlep of 24 sskS 100. Asptrin im At ijtade mark of Bayer Talli ^ ^ kr^rwlifcrtcj <d y Con >HOES ontaining about ings our shoe d< which we are j --At th< CON WHITE ROBED I KLAN VISITS (Continued From Page One.) the late Jim Shelley, and not so far from the Horn neighborhood. Here Shelley lives, on the old home place of his father, with his wife and several children. His wife is the daughter of (. P. Mincey. Apparently the same crowd of fifty or sixty men, riding in six or seven automobiles, and robed in white, went to Shelley's home at about 8 o'clock on me mgnt ot iMovembher 22, rapped on the door, calling Shelley out. When Shelley was told to pro with them he refused and in his efforts at resistance, he tore one of the robes from a Kluxer, exposing his lace; but he did not know the man, had never heard the voices of any of them, and could not remember ever having seen any of these men before. He was overpowered taken by the men in one of the cars one and a half or two miles away t o the grave yard. Before proceeding with him from his home place they placed a cap over his face, completely hiding his sight. They stopped with um by the side of his mother's grave. Taking off the cap they told him to behold his mother's grave. Then he was made to kneel by the grave and t prayer was held. After this he was made to lie down by the side of the grave and emblems placed at his feet and at his head. They explained to him that he had been called out to be warned on account of drinking, wreckless driving on the highways, and shooting thereon, as well as the use of profane and vulgar language theron, and on account of mistreatment of his wife; and they warned him that without a change he would be in his grave soon, or words to that effect. Then he was taken back home and warned to live the life of a good citizen as his father had lived before him. Either the night before or the night after this occurrence, E. M. Holmes, whi!e on the road to or from Mullins, met a group of six or eight cars, with about six or seven men in each car, all dressed in the white robes which is the regalia of the Ku Klux Klan. They were driving toward Mullins. Holmes did not talk t9 any of tnem but remained by the side of the road until the party had passed. About the same number took part in the Horn raid. I John Rogers Case. Another instance of visitation which took place last week and followed that of the G. Bright Shelley instance, is said to have occurred on the night of November 23rd, when a white robed band went to Finklea's Cross Roads, and called out John Rogers, constable under magistrate B. B. Harrelson. They are said to have warned Rogers that he was not doing "his duty as an officer of the law and that he must mend his ways, or words to that effect. E. B. Sarris. It was reported here last Saturday that a few days before that time that E. B. Sarvis had received a note supposed to have come ffom the same source, containing warnings of what he must do in the m atter of his way of life, or words to that effect, one admonition being that he must attend Sunday school. It was reported that Sarvis had complied and went to Sunday school. J. C. Grainger. J. C. Grainger received a warning note to the effect that he must reform in certain ways, and which was along about the same line as the one written to E. B. Sarvis. J. D. Anderson. / Some of the activity displayed seems to be concerned with the suppression of illicit whiskey stilling in that section of Hor^ County. It was reported here recently that members of the fraternity had called on J. D. Anderson, a miller in Floyds township, and told him that he must not grind on Saturdays more than enough meal to last a" family until the following Snturdav. This was supposed to have something to do with the ability of the alleged whinkey fftinero to obtain the meal for making sour mash. Whether or not this afcory is confirmed by Mr. Ander on, eooM not be leanMd when this article vu vrittem. V 'L.WWWffB" J..'. I wmTI I ner ! H eleven hun- | L/pai uilClli lip I voing to offer I 5 Busy Corner? I WAY, S. C. | In the Mace Horn matter it is said I that Horn refused to tell what it 1 was he told the members of the party I as to the truth about the Bailey-Gib- I son shooting scrapes, and says that I he w,as warned not to tell these facts I to any outsider, but to be sure to tell I the same tale when he should be I summoned in court to tell it. I In the Horn raid the party car- I ried Horn to a place where they would 1 be able to carry out their intentions I without being bothered, as at that I I pluce guards could be placed to stop I |traffic. I Several years ago Charles lewis tl was called from his hou^e and given II a severe beating. He claimed to 1 pave recognized his assailants r.nc 1 started a prosecution in uie courts 1 against them. It finally developed I that no proof of sufficient strength I could be brought to idoit;rv Hie party I of six or eight men w.io h id commit- I - ? icu me ueeu, ann me case never amounted to anything-. j o NEGROES FALL OUT Town policemen were looking last { Sunday for two negroes, Joe Cochr&a and Citrus Johnson charged with having broken the peace in the colored residential section of Conway. It was alleged that one of the men had a shot gun and menaced the life of the other with this. j o Tell it to The Horry Herald. I o EARLY AGAINST LATE PLANTING Clemson College.?"We continue te j advise planting cotton without delay in the spring, using early varieties, ' and pushing the crop to early maturity," says Prof. A. F. Conradi. Entomologist, in answering a number of farmers who, having observed that >a some instances the weevil darrvige was worse in early planted cotton this year than on late planted cotton, have asked us in regard to the advisability of planting late hereafter than early. The fact that infestation in some instances was heavier on an early planted field may be accounted for fii two ways, as follows, Prof. Conradi continues: 1. The weevil rarely occurs uniformly over a given section, farm ?r field. The farmer will invariably find that some spots are more heavily Infested than others, and this accounts for early cotton in some cases having been more heavily infested than Tate cotton. 2. In some sections, especially in the Piedmont section, cotton planting was greatly delayed iri~ many fields, because of Adverse weather conditions, but due to the mild winter and the very early spring, the weevil began to come out of ^winter quarters very early. The result was (hat a large number of the over-wintered weevils died before eotton began to aquare. A condition just like this may not occur again for many years and, even if it did, there is no evidence that it would be worth anything. Comparatively few of the weevils that enter winter quarters in the fall succeed in passing the winter and puncture the squares the next spring. Therefore, cotton production amounts to a race between the cotton crop and the time when the weevils beconjje abundant; or, in other words, it amounts to an effort to get bolls formed and hardened before the weevils become very abundant. Any t>pe rati on that delays planting and maturing is dangerous because tfie squares and young bolls will be lost later in the season by the increasing number of weevils. In short, there is no evidence at hand that anything is gained by fajfce planting, but abundant evidence is It v. ? hv rpnu i>iinv wi?i? in?? uf? muCA 19 lose. We therefore, aavia? planfiaff without delay when conditions fca*e become favorable, and we advise db~ everything poesibfe and prao&W bit to fceep the plants fruiting *m> tn hasten matnrtty*