The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, April 05, 1923, Page Page No. 5, Image 5

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SUMMONS FOR RELIEF | Complaint Served.) STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF HORRY. Court of Common Pleas. M. B. Thompson Co., A Corporation, Plaintiff, vs. J. R. Ward and E. V. Ward, 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 subscriber or sub scribers at his 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 February 6th, 1923. H. H. WOODWADD, 1 Plaintiff's Attorney. To J. R. Ward: 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 the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas in and for Horry County, at Conway, S. C., on the 8th dav of February, A. D. 1923. W.' L. BRYAN, (L. S.) C C C. P. H. H. WOODWARD. Plaintiff's Attorney. 312212 3-3t. ( ADRIAN NEWS (Intended For Last Issue) Judging from the work that thfr people are doing through this com Before Ba THERE aro thousands of ? much useless suffering tor moment when delivery occurs, nerves and vital organs weake child. An eminent physician fo unnecessary suffering?the san mothers have used for three g< j Mr*. Walter S. Hadley, Brldgepo came I was so pnralyied in my hips a days after a little extra exertion I ? on this time; in fact. I could hardly i using one bottle of Mother's Friend, I almost owe my life to Mother's Friend "Mother's Friend" Is applied exterr penetrates remarkably, permitting tl muscles, nerves, tissues and ligaments during expectancy and at child-birth. Start using "Mother's Friend" now?i | Mrs. C. J. Hartman, Scranton. Pi had a doctor and a nurse, and then my last two children I used Mother's ] time to get a doctor, because 1 wasi I minutes." "Mother's Friend" contains no narc I three generations "Mother's Friend" useless suffering. Mother! you must i tutes. Begin using "Mother's Frien everywhere. FREE BOOXL Don't let fobe modenty keep you / and to your home. By all means, ] book sent free. Send for your a V BA-42, Atlanta, Ga. Get "Mother' #\miiiiiiiiiiH mmmmm | Boll I sss EE A new tested ! . base. Put up in p 5S 5 gallons water 01 ?? ses. Applied wi SS Regardless of wh 25 parative results. 5= CRAWFOR Place orders with H ^ J. B. McC ^///iiiiiHiuiiiiiinii munity, the 1923 harvest will be very abundant. Dr. H. L. Scarborough seems to have lots to do through this section. He passes through the streets of our town three or four times a week. Mr. Purley Tompkins has returned , from the University of South Caro- j lina to spend the Easter holidays , with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Kelley ( Tompkins. ' Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Anderson, who 1 after a short stay in Conway have j moved back to their residence near ] here. \ The people of this section were very ! much shocked to learn of the death ] of "Uncle" G. W. Sessions, who was ] p'xid to be the oldest merchant in 1 Horry County. A little item was published in The i I Herald a few weeks ago, which read: "Adrian seems to be a glorious place ! in which to live, because all who i move away, move back." This has been true in all instances. TOBACCO MEN ARE TO MEET 1 Tobacco farmers from 127 counties < of the Carolinas and Virginia will start the election machinery next ? week, by which 22 directors for the Tobacco Growers' Co-operative Asso- 1 ciation are to be elected for the com- , ing year. Mass meetings in over 300 counties ] all the w,ay from Virginia to the 1 Georgia line, will be held Saturday, April 7th, when the organized growers will nominate the , members of their association from whom the delegates will be chosen to elect the directors who are to market the crops of 85,000 tobacco farmers for 1923. From the hundreds of delegates to JrMM V rW I ' ^\ Nfl /\ V - ? . ? ? I expectant mothers who undergo months before, as well as at the These months of suffering, with raed, leave their effect upon the und the way to stop much of this le easy way which thousands of merations. rt? Ind., itfi: "Before my little boy ind limbs I could hardly walk, and tome couldn't walk a step. I felt it coming' ret up when I sat down, but now, after I am ao much better. I feel that I L" tally to the abdomen, back and hip*. It he eaaier relaxation and distension of , and their constant easier readjustment Have no more fear or dread, moAhcrt the sooner the better. u, sa^s: "With my first two children I they had to use instruments, but with Friend and had only a nurse; we had no n't very sick?only about ten or fifteen otic* or harmful drugs. It U safe. For has relieved expectant mothers of mueh avoid mere greases and useless substid" today. It is sold at drug stores? ET ON MOTHERHOOD rem this duty to yourself, to your ehild you ehould have our valuable illustrated apy now to Brad/leld Regulator Co., a Friendr from your druggist today. JM llllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllll C.&L. 1 > '* t? ^ . 1 ^ < ' % * iVi O . ? . . ^ *' kifftAllll II vvccvii r \ liquid concentrated poison of i int cans which sell for $1.25; c n the farm treats 1 acre through ith a mop. Cheap and effecti at remedy you use, try sotti? of :D & LUKE, MFRS., AUC [orry Hardware Co at once, so as t utcheon & Co., Coui llllllltllllllllllllllllllliRlllllI I Wi FERTILIZE FRUIT TREES Clemson College.?Fruit trees should be fertilized just about the time growth begins in the spring. The quantity of fertilizer to be used an fruit trees depends largely upon the condition of the trees and *he fertility of the land on which they are growing, says Prof. C. C. Newman, Horticulturist, who advises that, as a rule, one pound of an 8-4-4 fertilizer should be applied to fruit trees when planting, 2 pounds the second >ear, 3 pounds the third year, and every year thereafter from 4 to 6 pounds, according to the need of the tree. A bearing peach tree should make an average terminal growth of from 12 to 24 inches. A bearing apple tree should make an average terminal growth of from 6 to 12 inches. If the trees are making more growth than this, the amount of fertilizer recommended should be reduced accordingly. Two applications of nitrate of soda or sulphate of ammonia should be applied to both peaches and apples, the first application about '.he middle of April and the second not later than the first of June. The quantity should vary with the size of the trees. The nitrate of soda should be scattered broadcast under the branches of the trees and lightly dug into the The nuantitv of soda to be applied should vary from V\ to V.2 pound ; to trees that are from one to three years old and from 1 to 3 pounds to trees that are from four to six years old, the amount depending on the growth the trees are making. o SALE AT A. BELL'S A. T. Collins, the trustee of the bankrupt estate of Arnold Bell, held a sale at the A. Bell store, at Bayboro, on last Friday and disposed of the stock of goods and fixtures provided the prices bid for the goods can be confirmed by the court. The property sold did not bring very i*i _ i_ a . n ii _ _ 1 _ nifrn prices ann a report ot tne saie lias been made by Mr. Collins to the referee in the case. o Read The Horry Herald for all the local news. >e chosen next week the farmer members of the co-operative association Arill later select by ballot those representatives from the counties and districts who will complete the final election of directors. Next week's mass meeting for members of the Tobacco Growers' Co-operative Association in Horry County will take place at the court house. Two delegates from this county will be nominated at. this meeting, and association members are to elect one-half of these at the final election to be held on May 5th. Members of the tobacco co-operative in the old belt will double their money on all deliveries of bright tobacco between January 1st, and April 1st, as early next month as accounts can be calculated and checks made out and mailed to the warehouses of the association. Not Last. Payment. Rumors that $2,000,000 to be paid shortly to co-operative growers in the old belt of North Carolina and Virginia will constitute a final settlement, were emphatically denied by director Patterson of the Leaf Department, in a telegram received at Raleigh headquarters yesterday, in which Mr. Patterson stated: "This is not a last and final payment, as there will probably be at least two more payments made after the payment above stated." Further information from officials at Raleigh headquarters of the association is to the effect that co-operative growers of all three States included in the marketing association t il _ v ?# i. will receive iuriner casn aisoursements as the remainder of the co-operative tobacco is 9qW. 5Sy *arm oison | mmmm 1 Arsenate of Lead = ontents mixed villi EEE season. No mo)as- 2; ive. Sticks, Kills, 5= ours and see com- 5E iUSTA, GA. j x> get early shipment -55 ity Agents. ^ liiiniiiiuiiRiniK^ lY, S, 0, MAR, aa, 1923 STRANGER WAS NOT THEIR SON Family Receives Glad News From Chicago About Death Although the plate on a coffin in a vault at Holy Mount Cemetery, Tuckahoe, N. Y., bears his name and his parents have mourned him as dead, Thomas Fay, Jr., twenty-eight, will be welcomed home within a few da^ys by his parents and the whole town. 1 The son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Fay, of Main street, Tuckahoe, left home for the West last November. On Feb. 13th, came word from the Pittsburgh police that a man in whose pocket had been found a c,ard bearing young Fay's name and address, had been killed by a train. Identification was impossible because of the condition of the body. Three days later the body was placed ! in the vault with military honors. The parents put on mourning. Yesterday morning, while they were at break fast, the nostman brought a letter. "My God, this looks like Tommy's writing!" Mrs. Fay called to her huszand. Both hesitated to open the envelope. Another member of the fain- , ily, with trembling hands, tore open the flap, and, sure enough, ,at the bottom of the letter was "Your lov ing son, Tommy." The young man wrote he was "getHnp along fine /*nd had a good job at East Chicago. Mrs. Fay wrote to her son, urging him to come home at once, but said nothing of the burial of the man she thought her son. All Main street quickly heard the news and soon the Fays were being i overwhelmed with visitors. Even the family dog wagged his tail as though he knew of the letter. Everyone liked Tommy Fay and yesterday .all Main street was buzzing with excitement. "I am so overjoved I can scarcely believe it is true," said the happy mother, when asked if there could be any doubt about the writing being that of her son. "Oh, no. I know that ; writing and it is Tommy's," she said Tommy probably will take the first train home when his mother's letter reaches him and all Main street will i be on hand when he arrives. The poor man whose life was snuffed out by a train probably will be allowed to re- ] main in his last resting; place. How the identification card got in his j os- j session is a mystery, unless Tommy Fay lost it with his pocketbook. o WOFFORD MEN?NOTICE! All former students of WofTord Collegt are especially requested to take notice that the annual Marion-Dillon WofTord Alumnae association dinner will be given at Marion on Saturday, April 28th, at two o'clock. The meeting will be held in the basement of the Masonic Temple. The alumnae residing in Horry County have been invited to join with up in this dinner and h.ive accepted. We want every man living in Marion, Dillon and Horry Counties, who has ever attended WofFord College, to be present. No collection will be allowed. Dr. Snyder will be present. Governor McLeod ami Dr. J. C. Guilds have been invited and it is expected that both of them will attend. Don't waif for a personal invitaI tion. This bid is for YOU. Also don't forget to send your check for *2.00 to P. B. Hamer, secretary, M/uion, S. C., in advance for your plate. We wish to know how many to provide for. Forget the bill bug and the boll weevil for one day and let's get together and show our loyalty to old Wofford. W. F. STACKHOUSE, President, P. B. HAMER, Secretary and : Treasurer. r r NOTICE OF SALE Itrti Ml m Under and by virtue of an execution dated the 7th day of March, A. D. 1923, and issued and lodged, and to me directed, and based upon the judgment rendered in the case of Bank cf I,oris, A Corporation, Plaintiff, vs. E. V. Carter, J. H. Carter, et al., Defendants, I have seized levied, upon [and taken, as the property of the defendant, W. E. Stroud above named; and will sell at public auction, or vendue, for cash, in front of the court house door of my county, within legal hours of sale, on salesday, in May next, it being the 7th day of Paid month, all and singular all of the following property, to wit: All that lot of land in the Town of T rti'i o PAnfnininir Aim / 1 \ oni'rt 1>w\rn m. my v/v/u v/tii iini^ wii \ v. ) iiiwi v v/i less, bounded on the South by J. T. Rhodes and Sidney Harrelson lands; on the East and North by James McGougan; on the West by J. A. Diyant, and Daisey Cox, this being a part of the J. R. G. Cox land conveyed to Daisey Cox and from Daisey Cox to W. E. Stroud. Purchaser to pay for necessary papers and stamps. L. A. LEWIS {Sheriff Horry County. H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. Dated at Conway, S. C., March 26th, 1923. o j FRUITS ESSENTIAL 1 . ( The chemical composition of fruits j is greatly varied?the value of fruits! in the diet is due chiefly to the ashj content rather than to the protein, fat and carbohydrate content; though'! some are high in carbohydrate, such ns the banana, dates, ftgs, prtrtftes and grapts, When we consider their etiergy value and their important ash content, the staple fruits are found'to he more economical as a food than fe generally recognized. {V GREAT STORY OF ALL TIME Over the Hill Feature For April 5th at The Pastime This film which will be shown at the Pastime here on Thursday right, April 5th, is said to be founded on the human interest story of all time. It is full of laughter and also tears. "Over The Hill" tells a story as old us life itself and as new as the present moment. It is a story of motherlove divine?of beautiful sacrifice suffered uncomplaingfly, and finally rewarded. Tears there are, of course, but tei'rs that are immediately followed by \uV> nl ncAmn louivUf ai* T* ^ iivMvovint IV I tl 11 l \ UUUbles with fun?the kind of fun such as the older ones have had in their youth and such as the youthful are now having:. It is the humor that results from the inconsequential things in the every-day life of a plain unpretentious family?the kind of humor that ?.enters about a family of six lively children, a dog, a shiftless father and? a loving, forgiving mother. During its phenomenal run in New York more than a million persons flocked to see it, creating frequently a traffic problem of no small proportions. The crowds that gathered twice daily in the theatre lobby before it constituted, too, a veritable Vanity Fair, inasmuch as it drew to its doors people from every walk of I life, the young, the old, the rich and poor. The. universality of its appearance makes "Over the Hill" at once the picture for everybody. There is i?o type or class of theatregoer extant that "Over the Hill" cannot amuse and entertain. o BISHOP GUERRY TO BE HERE APRIL 10th The Rt. Rev. Wm. A. Guerry, Bishop of Lower Diocese of South Carolina, will be in Conway on his annual visitation April 10th. Celebration of Holy Communion .it St. Pauls Episcopal church at 12 o'clock. Services at 7:30 Tuesdav evening. ***** finmo moii nro linvinw tn nnv r??cV? Cor fertilizers now whereas they could formerly buy all that they wanted or needed on a long- time credit plan. Some men who have had credit and proved unworthy of it need not expect to be Able to obtain credit forever und never pay. The dietetic value of fruits is greater than could be inferred from nAWionforvA onm nnci f iAr\ n ] Ann 1\D. tnc vvinpuoivivii ?'v cause of their refreshing, cooling:, stimulating, and other desirable qualities which cannot as yet be subjected to quantitative measurement. Thsir agreeable "ethereal" and acid flavors stimulate the appetite and doubtless aids digestion. Fruit may be either a laxative or an astringent or both, as in the case of fruits which contain astringent substance in the skin, while the pulp is laxative. Fruit is also valuable for its antiscorbutic property and often seems to act as a mild and beneficial diuretic. The cellulose is useful in giving bulk to the food residues and preventing their stagnation in the intestines. A given fruit often shows quite different properties at different stages in ripening, the most distinct changes in composition being usually a 1ecreqse in acid and starch with an increase in sugar content . Thoroughly ripe fruit should be freely indulged in, and to many ;\re m (ivo nr>ponf!)l)lo tl^nn flpsspvts Tll'f* pared in the kitchen. If possible, fruits should always appear on the breakfast table?fresh, canned or dried. Unquestionably, the more general and liberal use of fruits is to be encouraged, o ANALYSIS ARSENATE Samples Should be Sent to Clemson College, Not to Delta Laboratory Clemson College.?The attention of South Carolina farmers is directed to the recent announcement from the Delta Laboratory of the Bureau of Entomology, Tallulah, La., that yampies of calcium arsenate will no longer bdftanalyzed by that laboratory, and also the fact that farmers of this State may have such samples analyzed at Clemson College, says Prof. A. F. Conradi. Entomoligist. Delta Laboratory's Announcement Following is the announcement from the Delta Laboratory: "We wish to announce that circumstances are now such that it is impossible for us to continue the analysis of calcium samples, as we h/ive been doing for the past several years. This service was stavtpd onlv as a temporary expedient to meet certair conditions, and the work has now expanded to a point where we can t.c longer take cave of it. Furthermore the manufacture of calcium arsenate is on a much more stable basis thar was the case during the early days o1 its production, and the quality or the market is correspondingly improved; consequently the necessity foi this service is greatly diminished, and the farmers will still continue to receive the protection offered by the Federal Insecticide and Fungicide Board in its regular inspection of calcium arsenate along with all other insecticide*.!' In this connection Prof. Conradi repeats his recent suggestion through the press that farmers should not de lay but should secure the requirec amount of calcium arsenate and have it examined by the Division of Entomology, Clemson College, S. C., foi the necessary specifications requirec by law. He will mail instructor blanks upon request and will als< give imformation, if desired, regard ing manufacturers of calcium arse nate and of dusting machines. Page Mo. 5 WEEVIL POISON NOW AT COST Legislature Appropriates Big Sum for Purchasing Arsenate WRITE TO MR. RfVERS Farmers Who Want the Poison at Cost Should Order Early 1 + V> P O VaI i n 4*Alio nMA ? m A ijwwui vui 1/illUk lUI IIICI>1 (UC 111 ? better position to secure all the calcium arsenate they need for fighting the boll weevil than the farmers of any other State in the cotton belt, according to a statement today by J, Clifton Rivers, State warehouse commissioner, who is charged with administering the law passed by the recent session of the Legislature providing that the State should buy calcium arsenate for resale to the farmers at cost. Information received by Mr. Rivers while at New York recently, he said, indicated that the State's arrangement would enable him to secure shipments of the poison that would otherwise have gone to other States. That the farmers will benefit by securing their poison at a lower price has already been demonstrated by the course of the Market, Mr. Rivers declares. Acting as soon as the Legislature passed the bill setting aside $50,000 as a revolving fund to finance the calcium arsenate business of the State, the Commissioner secured options on fourteen carloads of the poisons at prices which enabled him to suppiy soum uaronna farmers at twenty cents a'pound, although the latest market quotations name twenty-two and twenty-four cents a pound for the poison. Columbia will be the clearinghouse for the State's dealing in the calcium i arsenate, Mr. Rivers said, and all shipments to purchasers will be made from here, except when carload lots are bought, in which case the shipment will go direct from the point of shipment, probably New York, to the destination designated by the purchaser. The Commissioner is prepared to handle orders on a twenty-four hour ! schedule, after the arrival of the first carload from New York, which is exI pected the latter part of the week. That is, of course, he declared, unless his office is swamped by orders. Applications will be filled in the order in which they are received. Should Order Early. ' Mr. Rivers urged that prospective purchasers send in their orders as oarlv as possible, owiifg. to the fact that much morp of, the material can be mirchased if the turn-over is rr- ' '. At the prevailing price, a carload is I worth approximately $6,000, he pointI ed out, and unless there w; s a quick turn-over, the $50,000 allowed him by I the act of the Legislature, would * finance only eight and a fraction cars at one time. However, in view of the fact that his olnce has been deluged with requests for information and orders for calcium arsenate for several weeks, Mr. Rivers continued that he did not anticipate any drag in tne business. More than 2,000 letters had been received by him by the day on which the Governor signed the appropriation bill, thus actually appropriating the $50,000 for the purchase of the material. The price of twenty cents a pound w.is set by Mr. Rivers, he said, in order to prevent any inequalities, and to cover the cost of handling the poi(Continued On Page Seven.) Boils I&S.S. will prove to you in your own CMe tho "how" and "why" of . itf r?m?rkab!e 1 CUansiny Power! 1 There is a reaaoti f6i everything that happens. Common-sense kills miserv. Common-sensa also Ht.mm hniiat S. S. S? is the common-sen so remedjr chic gone ^ ( 1 for boils, because it is built on reason. Scientific authorities admit its pow? ) er! S. S. S. builds blood-power, it builds red-blood-cells. That is what 5 makes fighting-blood. Fighting-blood 1 destroys Impurities. It fights boils. It F always wins! It fights pimples! It i fights skin eruptions! It builds nervepower, thinking power, the tight-fisted 1 power that whirls a man up into sue* 1 cess. It gives women the health, thai - angelic complexion and the charm ? that moves the world! These arc the ? reasons that have made S. S. 8. today . the great blood-cleanser, body-buildf-r^ . success builder, and it's why results have made tears of joy flow from fio . souls of thousands! Mr. V. D. Schaff, ! 567 15th St., Washington, D. C., writes: "I tried for years to get relief from \ a bad case of boils. Everything failed , until J took S. 5. S. I am now ab*o~ . lutely cured. and it was S. <S?. S. that . did it." , Try It yourself. S. 9. S. Is sold at all good drug stores. The large site * It more economical. youtitfogam ' ,