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SUMMONS FOR RELIEF (Complaint Served.) ^ ;ate of south Carolina, ^ >unty of horry. Court of Common Pleas. ^KjBank of Little River, A Corporan, plaintiff, vs. Mattie Suggs, JoseI nne Stanley, Thelma Stanley, Julia ^V ve, Addie Suggs, Etha Suggs, Rob Nellie Suggs, Elva Suggs and >ra Suggs, Defendants. The Defendants Above Named: IBVOIT ARE HEREBY SUMMONED Ijjd required to answer the Complaint [this action, of which a copy is hereth served upon you, and to serve a t>y of your answer to said Comt'xint on the subscribers at their ofjes, Conway, S.' C., within twenty ['ys after the service hereof, exclude of the day of such service; and f you fail to answer the Complaint ithin the time aforesaid, the plainIt in this action will apply to the fiirt for the relief demanded in the jtaplaint. [Dated March 13th, A. D. 1923. f sheRwood & McMillan I Plaintiff's Attorneys. It Josephine Stanley and Thelma, ianley, Absent Defendants. ffTAKE NOTICE That the^ummons, I which the foregoing is a copy and \li Complaint, which is hereto served ' you were filed in the office of the i'erk of Court, Conway, S. C., on krch 14th, 1923. Ltest: 1. L. BRYAN, r c. c. c. p. I?nway, S. C., Inrth 14th, 1923. i sherwood & McMillan, P Plaintiff's Attorneys. [ NOTICE TO CREDITORS U the District Court of the United [States for the Eastern District of I South Carolina. I mi s a a a _ i ne maiier 01: |j G. Holliday, Rose Lake, S. C., k Bankrupt. Notice is hereby given that the Love named bankrupt has filed a percion for discharge, and that a hearI/? has been ordered to be had upon le same on the 25th day of April, A. fc.1023, before this Court at CharlesCn,k S. C., at 11 o'clock in the forelion, and that .all known creditors and |her persons in interest may appear 1 the sajd time and place and show l.use, if" any they have, why the raver of the said petitioner should pt be granted. RICHARD W. HUTSON, Clerk. fc-Adv. 3j?2j23-4t. | No Worms In a Healthy Child Uu children troubled with Worms have an unftaithy color, which indicates poor b'ood, and asa Je, there is more or 1 ess stomach disturbance. JfOVES TASTELESS CHILL TONIC given regaWly for two or three week3 will enrich the blood. It j.rovo tho digestion, and act as a general StrengthMing Tonic to the whole system, tyature will then I row off or dispel the worms, and theChlld will oe | perfect health. Pleasant to take. 60c per bottle. | A TONIC U-ove's Tasteless chill Tonic restore uiergy and Vitality by Purifying and '.inching the Blood. When you feel its lengthening, invigorating effect, see how I brings color to the cheeks and how II improves the appetite, you will then Appreciate its true tonic value. Drove's Tasteless chill Tonic is simply Ion and Quinine suspended in syrup. So peasant even children like it. The blood Ipeda QUININE to Purify it and IRON to nrich it. Destroys Malarial germs and [rip germs by Us Strengthening. Invigor* king EfTec* fifl* j************************* HORRY COUNTYj! TRUST CO. jj |L. D. Magrath, Manager;; Heal Estate, Bonds and" I Insurance. jj Uhhhhhhhhhhwh ? * mt? mm m ? mf I ' 1,1 m m >IP' ? I ^ WhP MM IL i n J-J ave your own homo garden. 0 ur home gardens, properly care<^ one-third. M ost people' now-a-days realize the point of health and economy. JT very family can grow vegetables i Q ardening is one of the oldest an the most profitable occupation ^ good garden helps a poor man to living ' | D ight at the hack door caiV be gr< t a balanced diet. ^I1I1IV'' Q octors rarely warn against eating ? very well kept garden is a combir ]\J owhere In South Carolina should upon the commercial supply. g o let's all determine to have profit* THE MENACE OF T] WEEVIL AND C Address By Harrie Jordan, Secretary' of the American Cotton Association Before The Bankers Club of Richmond, Va^ Dec. 14, 1922. (CONTINUED FROM LAST WEEK) would have left no cotton for our domestic mills. The surplus of American cotton brought over from 1920 has now been absorbed and the supplies of raw cotton for the future to meet domestic and foreign demands for the American staple has reached a serious stage of acuteness which can only be relieved by the production of at least thirteen or fourteen million bales in 1923. In view of the fact that the world's cotton textile industry depends upon the United States for about 84 per cent of %-inchS staple and above, the extreme seriousness of the present sihintinn hponmao nuifa /?laa? !? ?*? ?VVVIilVU VM w VIMUi 111 ^111phasizing the Ameircan cotton crop as a national and international necessity of the deepest concern. The cotton industry of the United States is the most valuable monetary asset of the nation, both as a domestic product and for export. There are more people employed and capital invested in the production and manufacture of cotton in this country than in any other single industry. The problem of the rehabilitation of To Cure t Cold In One Day Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE (Tablets). It Mops the Cough and Headache and works off th< ' old. E. W. GROVE'S signature on each box, 30c o SUMMONS FOR RELIEF (Complaint Served) STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF HORRY. Court of Common Pleas Mayo Sarvis, Plaintiff, vs. Charles lrby and S. G. Godfrey, co-partners, and Burroughs Bank & Trust Co., A rnrnnrnfinri Tlofon flonfa | v w m. f v m. m v A\/ i i | V* 1 V* I IV4M K I VO 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 subscribers 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. FORD & SUGGS, Plaintiff's Attorneys. Dated March 12th, A. D. 1923. To Charles Irby, Absent Defendant: TAKE NOTICE, That the summons, of which the foregoing is a copy and the complaint and warrant ot attacnment against lumber which is hereto served on you, were filed in the office of the Clerk of Court, Conway, S. C., on March 17th, 1923. FORD & SUGGS, Plaintiff's Attorneys. Attest: W. L. BRYAN, C. C. C. P. Conway, S. C., March 19th, 1923. * 3t. '' Y nwimi IM ? ' if Not JTA jtAd )RK FOR OU f ticK.Certain, \ V vO' SCt " ' ~,*?i3SSw .; ppppp*?^ ?' *?.? '- ?: *??.? -? >?? ^ni i& *4fc- >.. . g HOBBY KKKA1P, OONWAY, for, will reduce our grocery bill* i value of the garden, from the standTor its own consumption. d most human of joys, and is one of is.?Dr. Frank Grane. bid defiance to the high cost of >wn the vegetables which will give us too many vegetables. lation of use and beauty. vegetable consumers be dependent ible home gardens this year. ' * * HE COTTON BOLL ONTROL METHODS the cotton-growing industry must, therefore, be considered, not from a local or sectional standpoint, but as a problem of the deepest national concern. The correct solution of the boll weevil menace must not be left to the growers alone or to the ineffectual efforts of governmental weevil experts, but every department of the cotton industry and every business directly or indirectly dependent upon the cotton crop should give whole-hearted suDDort and co-oneration tnwarH nrar tical and efficient methods of boll weevil control which have been tried out with success by many successful farmers in the heavily infested boll weevil areas. Large Proportion of Cotton Growers are Small Tenant and Share-Croppers Who Must be Reached and Encouraged to Success by Practical and Efficient Leadership. It has been fully demonstrated that cotton can be profitably grown under boll weevil conditions. The methods employed in many instances are simple and inexpensive. The general application of these methods, already known to be successful, must be secured by the great masses of the small tenant and share-cropper farmers who are largely left to their own devices by the absentee landlord. It has been established by practice that the cotton stalks must be plowed up before frost; the terraces ditch banks and hedge rows eleanee off or burned before cold weather; that in the spring a well pulverizet seed bed must be prepared; that wel selected seed must be planted; that liberal fertilization is imperative; that not exceeding eight acres can safely be planted in cotton per plow and thai the culture of the growing plants musl be rapid and often until the crop is matured, which means the intensive culture of cotton so as to increase th< vield of good quality cotton per acre. The cotton rows should be close anc the plants thickly spaced in the drills Every effort must be made to push fruitage and maturity by the middle or latter part of July. When the weevils first appear on the young* plants the insects must be picked and de stroyed. The infested squares in Ma> must be carefully gathered and burned. Poisons must be applied to th< young plants in liquid or powderec form by the simple and inexpensiv* devices now recommended. Th( spread and propagation of insect: must be checked on every cotton f#rn infested during the months of Maj and June in order to prevent th< heavy migration of the weevils, be ginning about the 15th of July. If the multiplied millions of the in sects can be prevented by weevil con trol methods actively employed 01 every farm, there will be no extf?n?iv< MA ? 4 /\M A M /-] M ? i- n rMM A ? 4-1? . iiu^iatiuu *aiiu cut? n uua^c ui tn< crop can be saved. The cotton crop in heavily infestec areas is destroyed each year by the millions of insects that are propagat ed on fields where no efforts are mad< for weevil control, and so long as thii condition is allowed to continue, th< production of cotton will not only b< extremely hazardous to .all the grow era, but must necessarily result in ai abnormal shortage in yield. The methods of culture and weevi control which I have outlined to yoi are simple and inexpensive , whicl every farmer ,large or small, cai adopt with success if all the growers are reached and shown what to do This can be done by the establishmen of one or more demonstration cottoi farms in each infested county and thi placing of the proper literature and di rections in the hands of every growe in such counties. Such a campaigi will necessarily cost a considerable sum of money but which in the aggre gate will be infinitesimal compared t< the enormous losses which ?va aapI year taken from the crop by the wee vils and the destruction of the pur chasing and debt-paying power of s< many thousands of cotton growers. Exodus of I^abor from Cotton Farm; ....in Heavily Invested Weevil Area A matter of Serious Consideratioi for Cotton-Growing Industry. During the past two years man; thousands of,the small one and two o To Stop a Cough Quick r take HAYES' HEALING HONEY, ( cough medicine which stops the cough b; healing the inflamed and irritated tissue* A box of GROVES O-PEN-TRATl SALVE for Chest Colds, Head Colds an< Croup is enclosed with every bottle o HAYES* HEALING HONEY. The salv. should be rubbed on the chest and throa of children suffering from a Cold or Crout The heftling ?ff%ct of Hayes* Healing Honey lo aide the throat combined with the healing effect c Grove's O-Pen-Trate Salve through the pores c the skin soon stops a cough. Both remedies are paciddHn one carton and tb coat of the combined treatment Is 35c. Just ask your druggist far HAYES JIEAUNG HONEY. r , 8, 0. -MAS. S3. 1983 BILL BOOSTER SAYS umk w??\ umi \J rou?y? Ms^oMato eenoovvwu. ee wwwtwflL OW tOWM M KfBti MSMttt OUA?CMOOUl AMDtVACMGHC VlMIC Mt *MO<UA006 RWPOtt tiSiUM MIO VML SMOVM.O 4H0WJ AM \UTSRRVr \UtH*VR ' VlOfttC AMD OVW tV?*A ouft.tuppm.vi mcsjwu WEEVIL POISON NOW AT COST [: (Continued From Page Five.) son. If there is any money left over 1 when the $50,000 is returned to the ' State, pro rata return will be made to " every purchaser. An advantage that will be given farmers who buy through the ware: house commissioner's office, it was said, will be the fact that no boll wee1 vil poison will be sold until after it ' has been analyzed, and found to be ' up to the proper specifications in r chemical composition. [ Rock Bottom Prices. | Supplies of the poison will be kept ( in Columbia in State warehouse No. 2, which occupies what is known as the Old Dispensary building on Gervais street. With the possible ex5 ception of probably a few laborers to j handle the shipments, Mr. Rivers said ; he uia not plan to increase his regu| lar force to take care of the new busif ness. Every possible effort will be made, he declared, to handle the arsenate as economically as can be done in order that the farmer may get it at rock-bottom prices. ^ Applications should be sent direct 3 to the commissioner's office, he said, ; accompanied by a money order or a I certified check for the amount of poison desired at twenty cents a pound. , They must carry a statement that the poison is not desired for resale or for ; speculative purposes. ; Freight charges from Columbia to ! any part of South Carolina will not , exceed ten to fifteen cents ,a Hundred . pounds, the commissioner estimated, T pointing out that calcium arsenate . takes a low rate as sixth class freight ? and that the rate has been cut in half j for the cotton season by action of the ? railroads. 5 o 3 Colds Cause drip and Influenza 1 LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets remove 7 the cause. There Is only one "Bromo Quiniue." > E. W. GROVE'S signature on box. ^Uc. O SECRET OF SUCCESS All great fundamental principles ^ are, when revealed, simple and easily a usable. e The secret, if it is a secret, of success is no exception to the rule. 1 Two words comprise the whole story ? of what's required to win the high re1 wards in business?tell the qualities 5 that makes a man forge easily ahead s of other men who in native ability ap3 pear to be his equal. B And those two words are?intelli KCIIt MCIV1CC. 1 All material rewards come in return for service?of one kind or an1 other. i Intelligent service naturally comh mands high rewards. ^ And the ability to render truly Ins telligent Service is not born of chance i. or genius, but is the result of one t thing alone?knowledge.?Selected . J horse renters and share-cropper farmers have left the cotton fields east of r the Mississippi and migrated to industrial centers, in order to provide a e living wage for themselves and families. This is especially true of the aivi'a fni>n-\nvo 11/V1 n onncfifnfa flip nin> liU^ i v iui iiivi n ?? iiv/ v\/i invi vv? wvy v??v u jority percentage of the labor engaged in cotton production. The closing of our ports to foreign emigration has " created a demand by Northern industries for negro labor and the South now invites an attractive field from which to draw that class of labor. If this exodus of negro farm labor from the cotton belt continues, it means that vast tracts of land hereto^ fore planted in cotton and other staple farm products will lie doumant because there is no other source from which farm labor can he drawn. BetI ter living conditions and higher wages f must be provided for the labor on cotl ton farms or the present serious exo5 dus of such labor will continue to i Northern industries. I The problem can only be met and 8 O t Habitual Constipation Cured *> In ?4 *o 21 Days >- "LAX-FOS WITH PEPSIN" is a specially, prepared Syrup Tonic-Laxative for Habitual Constipation. It relieves promptly but should be taken regularly for 14 to M days to indute regular action. It Stimulates and > Regulates. Very Pleasant to Take. 60c rar bottle. COMMON PLEAS GRINDS ALONG (Continued From Page One) as much as she was before the accident. J. M. Floyd testified. He is a farmer and a horse trader. He saw this mule a few days ago and examined her. He could not find anything the .matter with her. Witness said he could not find any lameness in the mule. He had nevflij.seen her working, except in pulling a two-horse wagon. A limp in a mule would cut J 11 ,_!? _ * ' " ' '?^ aown uie selling price one nait to <>u per cent of its value. In describing the mule he said this was a mule that would want to stop and talk awhile when passing a place where it had been used to stopping. Kemper Page said he examined this mule and could not find anything wrong with it. F. C. Roberts testified and then the arguments were made. The court went on with the case of Johnson against Waterman Cook and Corn Page when the court convened on Tuesday morning. This case was finished on Monday with exception of the charge of the court. On Tuesday morning the jury found a verdict in favor of the platntiH' for the sum of $100 actual damages, against Mr. Cook. This meant that the jury did not hold Mr. Page as being responsible in the matter. As The Horry Herald goes to press the case of J. W. Little & Co. \s. Veneer Manufacturing Co., is being tried and the result may not be known in time to appear in this issue. o GOOD SCHOOL AT CONWAY Conway has the honor of being the first "B" type school to receive a large seal from the General Sunday School Board for attaining points on the Program of Work. The grades 90 per cent. The only point rot fully reached is number 7, relating to leadership training. This will ne rceomplished within a short time through the work of training classes and the next session of the training school at Myrtle Beach, making Conway a standard school of the B t\ pe. Who will be next? The Conference workers are checking the local schools as rapidly as possible, and soon volunteer workers in the various districts will assist in this work. solved by teaching the masses of the cotton growers how to successfully overcome the boll weevil and maintain the price of cotton on a profitable basis to the growers. The people of this great Republic have overcome every vital economic problem which has confronted them since 177(>, and it must not be said that the AngloSaxon race has gone down into defe.nt and despair before the rapacious presence of an insect. for Boll Weevil Control in 1923. Heretofore there has been no widespread concerted effort made for practical weevil control so as to reach all the growers and enlist their effective co-operation. The United States Department of Agriculture has maintained a. weevil laboratory at Tallulah, La., for a number of years and Fed(CONTINUED NEXT WEEK) I A/letter vjrltten toy ; ; County wfro learned t : ?pg m - * ,*v - -v . ' A /f ^sCiftnJ'C- I -2.. /#* /TP^-tLb -$?. ? AyC^J/?i^eP7\ 3K/^X *hUs?yrr, ? V* A * JLcutstf- a ??jt ??&< Ajf&a^ ^QL-st^ ^fO sCOffriJL op<u. / O^/ sn*Ut?r? rf. s6 /rux Jc strain /letz 4 sfoO'Ct J? zc Ms-A*?l ^ 0 O c / * ot ;>. A' ^T tf f =i v >: . ^ y^U^tjLx2- -&Ls(-4j>-Q. --C"<2^77 V/. ft* i ' i.n ' i , ,, Page Wo. T p. J. SULLIVAN * ca Certified Public Accountants CM. Telephone So. 796. Murchison Bank Bldg. WILMINGTON. N. a T. a LEWIS Attorney and Counsellor at Law CONWAY, S. C. I i i . ???m J. I. ALLEN, JR. Attorney-at-Law Office in Bank of Loris Bldg. LORIS. S. C. D. A. SPIVEY & CO. W. B. King, Secty. BONDS AND INSURANCE Office in Peoples National Bank Building. FORD & SUGGS Attorneys at Law unices at Conway, S. C. Loris,S.C. 6-l-13m R. B. SCARBOROUGH Attorney at Law CONWAY, S. C. WILLIAM EUGENE KINO Physician and Surgeon AYNOR, S. C. H. H. WOODWARD Attorney and Counsellor at Law* CONWAY. S. C. ENOCH S. C. BAKER Attorney and Counselor at Law Office^ in Taylor Building 2-9-3m Conway, S. C Law Offices of M. C. HARRELSON and R. B. HARRELSON Mullins, S. C. DR. G. I. LEWIS Dental Surgeon Office Over Norton Drug Company* CONWAY, S. C. Dr. J. D. THOMAS Physician and Surgeon LORIS. S. C. MARION A. WRIGHT Attorney-at-Law Offices Spivey tfuilding CONWAY, S. a S. C. DUSENBURY Attorney-at-Law Spivey Building CONWAY, S. C. DR. E. P. ALFORD Dentist Located in Mullins, S. C. Office f ver Champion Shoe Store. tf. a truat.eo in Hofceitg ':'v; o write. < , -; W-/. < : ' :v? 1 ..' .* : > : 1 " i-e /-V <-?-4. asuotg* n/: <&k . z* ,eJh2Ja?. ; <co/fyje jhJl^k * ' 4 O nTtZjjCd ^<zJ^ ^ A S * - 1. ~ ^ ? a^i < cc/7% * Aa. oA^n Xo 7f y%%^ -^~ 'Tj CP C4zst <?&- ? ' - i % t v'4 . /"J