The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, April 26, 1923, Page Page No. 7, Image 7

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SUMMONS FOR RELIEF (Complaint Served.) STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF HORRY. Court of Common Pleas. M. N. Jenkins and G. B. Jenkins, Co-partners in Trade by the Firm Name and Style of Jenkins Bros., ik* Plaintiff, vs. M. F. Harrelson, D. M. Harrelson, Hinson & Battle, Inc., A Corporation; E. V. Harrelson and A. L. Phillips, Defendants. TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE NAMED: YOU ARE REREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the complaint in this action, of jvhich a copy is herewith served upon yoii, and to serve a tftopy 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. Dated March 12th, A. D. 1923. H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. To E. V. Harrelson, 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 14th day of March, A. D. 1923. W. L. BRYAN, (L. S.) C. C C. P. H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. ft************************* I s |HORRY COUNTY} 1 TRUST CO. ;; 2 j* J i: i c JL. D. Magrath, Manager; *Real Estate, Bonds and\\ f St . , I Insurance. jj * Q Frequent ? z. Headaches S XI "1 suffered with chronic [t M constipation that would bring on LJ very severe headaches/' says Lj Mrs. Stephen H. Kincer, of [Y W R. F. D. 1, Cripple Creek, Va. pi kJ "I tried different medicines and kj XI did not get relief. The head- [Y f% aches became very frequent I w% U heard of ^ $ Thedford's * BLACK-DRAUGHT and took it for a headache, and ^ y| the rellel was very quick, and Nf m it was so long before I had wk Li another headache. Now I just L If! keep the Black-Draught, and nf A| don't let myself get in that M JTJ condition/' Thedford's Black - Draught [x M (purely vegetable) has been rl kJ found to relieve constipation, Lj T] and by stimulating the action of IT M the liver, when it is torpid, helps kJ to drive many poisons out of kj XI your system. Biliousness. IT M indigestion, headache, ana W \A similar troubles are often jla # U relieved in this way. It is the IT M natural way. Be natural! Try ^ Black-Draught. XI Sold everywhere. yL I Notice y Standard War y " kc Q will run as usual n representing all t n We hope to h ^ P vuiiuug season. | We look for t I C.H.HARDWK j Propriety | I F 4 J Propr B 4|19-3t. THE BILL BOOSTER SAYS ?TOW OOWT ?suo V "WM POUAA AVMAH \ <r? ?cem vuomuho pavthpul CVJtRM DAM, PANmft ?\U,?, BvjNAvta e\.cm?i POW. tw*. VODft, PEEOWIO "tv\6 FAMU.W, WkNm<s iw nut. buhmgi GtA4 PO?.tU6 CM*,9ANVV1Q OUR. TEACURR*\\MK CAWfT ?er kvomGl vuvxHoorr tuw OVJO PAVtVAPUU OOUAR\ OOUX UUD ? " TR/U* HOM?? HOME DEMONSTRATION As district agent for home demonstration work in the eastern part of the State, I have made a survey with your county home demonstration agent, of the condition and needs of your county along the lines of this particular work. We have found the main problems in the district that need development are organization, leadership among the rural women and money making in the rural homes. Your county agent is employing the following methods in attacking these problems: Organization of girls' and women's clubs; County councils for farm women; South Carolina Home Producers' Association; Short course; Contest in many lines of work; Production and conservation; Poultry work; Dairy work; Sanitation and health; Recreation. J Clubs have been distributed in many pnrts of the county affording opportunities for rilral women and girls to rjQrne once each month and tp.fce regular courses. There are county-wide activities that put some phase of the work in reach of every interested woman in the county. Many contests, campaigns and school for local leader development .are being conducted, so it is believed that 1923 will see marked development and results obtained in many lines. MRS. S. O. PLOWDEN , District Home Demonstration Agt. o RECORDS OF ABRAHAM MIGHT SHED LIGHT ON THE BIBLE London.?American and British archaeologists engaged in excavating the Tomb of the Moon God in the ancient city of Ur of the Chaldees, have begun the search for the records of Abraham, says an airplane dispatch from the Bagdad correspondent of the London Daily Mail. The excavators, says the correspondent, hope to recover the world's first and oldest library of original works on history, religion, art, law, science, and the narratives of the affairs of men 5,000 and perhaps 10,000 years ago. When the work of the expedition is done, he adds, it may yield a wholly ?.i _ n 11 ? " new story ot ine inception ot the religious movement that prepared the world for Christianity, or it may corroborate the story in Genesis. Describing his visit to Ur, the correspondent says it is probably to this 6,000?year-old city that the world owes the development of cities, great Tobacco I ehouse and Case^ iris, South Carolii to sell tobacco at am he companies. ,,, lave the pleasurte of f 1 *' > obacco to sell good 1 :K & J. W. MISHOl irs Standard Wareh \ R. CASEY & SCW ietors Casey's Ware! HORRY HERALP/ 'OOHWAY, 8. OLD SOUTH AT FLORENCE Florence, S. C.?All South Carolina j will take a pride in the elaborate paJ j geant of the "Old South," which vrtll he staged here on the night of May 3 in honor of the Confederate Veterans, who will be assembled in State reunion. This pageant will be one of the most , spectacular and dramatic productions ever staged in this State, and comparable with the best attempted in he entire southeast. Fifteen hunf 1 fori nannla un toU no%.+ I v* a vvt |#vv|^iv mju |/wi v A distinctive feature of the pageant is that it will be confined to one per- j iod of history, that previous to, clur- j ing and succeeding the War Between 1 the States. Thrilling incidents of this i trying period will be faithfully por- < trayed. Life in the "Old South" dur- 1 ing the slave days when there w;as . peace, happiness and plenty, with its \ rude interruption by the boom of the ] jruns at Fort Sumter, followed by i stirring war scenes, ending with Sher- j man's March to the Sea and the re- i turn of the war-worn Confederate i soldiers to their devasted homes, will i be depicted by thoroughly trained and realistically costumed groups. Then will come the radical days, the period of reconstruction in South < Carolina, introducing the famous red- J shirts, the Ku Klux Klan and other 1 forces striving to wrest the South from the rule of carpet baggers. ? The pageant will close with a vision 1 ui returning peace ariu prosperity and fraternity. ] Preparations are practically complete for the great spectacular pro- < duction. The pageant will be presented at the Pee Dee fair grounds where ! numbers of workmen are now engaged in placing the grounds in order. The i country around about has been scoured for war relics and..many have been contributed, including historic cannon and an old-time stage coach. These relics will be on exhibition. The costumes to be worn will be identical with those in vogue at the period and effective lighting arrangements have been made to produce the irrigation schemes, gardens, water supply, the use of lead and asphalt, drainage and fortress building. Bricks, he writes, were made in Ur earlier than in Egypt. Here the arch .vas invented and the vault sys- ? tematically used in monumental structures, and it was in Mesopotamia that the dome became prominent. Forty centuries before Christ Ur was ,a great city, in the midst of cultivation! Even now the line of silted in canals can be seen stretching away . to the far horizon. For more than 2,500 years, since Darius and his Persian hodes swept over the land, Ur has been deserted except for Bedouins. That the ruins of a vast city which was once trod by Abraham are there is definitely known. Only tenative exploring shafts have been sunk here and there over.j the wide expanse, but each has yield- j, ed relics of a lost people, the Sumer- j ians. i I; It is now known that after Abraham left Ur there came a long period , of difficulties. The impending collapse of the dynasty was probably the rea- i son for his departure. i It has been discovered that after i floctrftvinr* flift nit" <-t>? v.?,.Jv.vr>T,.ift vjiv; v-iv,v uic cuinjueiuis i laid pavements over the principal buildings. The tablets buried in the ! archives beneath each set of pavements, tell the intimate stories of the daily lives of the kings and leaders, < merchants, property owners #nd 1 slaves. Tablets found at Ur show 1 that legal transactions, including marriage contracts, sales and tenan- < cies were witnessed by six persons. It is expected to find the record of : property sold by Abraham before < leaving Ur. j Among the finds are tiny leaves of 1 gold. Which, according to the records, i were set upon the lips of the dead; a < manikin of three feet, clad in a sheepskin with tail hanging down, made of 1 some hard, green stone, and hoes and 1 axes frought in stone, which were < placed on the altar of the Moon God as emblems of industry. firowers ||| j ir's Warehouse y . cia \ y ction with buyers Q serving you tuis | this season. y E and BARNES, B ouse Co. | I hoiiu 1 I '? ;y house 1 \ M s A.w i . 0, APRIL it, 1923 COWPEA GREAT FARMER HELP Ope Thing Which is a Neglected Opportunity For . "" H im MOST NEGLECTED CROP rhe Oowpea Will Readily Respond to O&re and Attention Clemson College.?There is no crop in South Carolina that has been of greater benefit to the farmers than the cowpea. It has been universally used as a hay crop, a soil building ;rop, a grazing crop and ao additional money crop. Every farmer acknowledges its value, yet it is our most neglected crop, think Rs. W. Hamilton, Extension Socialist in velvet beans, soy beans, and cowpeas. Seed are obtained from any source regardless of purity and trueness to variety, planted hurriedly in any convenient manner, rarely cultivated or fertilized, harvested and threshed when all other work is completed. But even under these conditions the :owpea has always given the farmer a profit either in seed, hay, or soil building. Will the cowpea respond to cave and attention? It most assuredly will. Every farmer can prove this for himself by planting an acre of pure seed, preparing the ground v/ell. fertilizing with acid phosphate and cultivating a few times. Where can I obtain pure cowpea seed ? Here lies a great opportunity for some intelligent farmer. Pure seed of any variety of cowpeas is almost impossible to obtain. No attention has been given to the growing and keeping pure of the various variety of peas. Recently an attempt was made to obtain a few bushels of absolutely pure Brabham peas. Farmers and seedsmen all over South Carolina were written to, but not a one could supply 100 per cent pure Brabhams, and manv stated that it was impossible to find frVmm By careful hand selecting, enough pure seed can be obtained to plant a se$d plot, and from this enough seed can be saved to plant a larger acreage next year from which guaranteed pure seed may be 5- old. Care must be taken to cut out all volunteer peas. Guaranteed pure seed of any variety can be sold at a good premium over field run of peas, and by care and attention a farmer can build up a profitable business in growing pure seed off a certain variety. ??? (WILDFIRE AND BLAC'KFIRE Wildfire and blackfire are two diseases of tobacco which are causing great loss to the tobacco growers, and the Extension Service of Clemson College has published Extension Circular 53, "Tobacco Wildfire and Blackfire " by Dr. C. A. Ludwig, Associate | Plant Pathologist, to help farmers recognize and fight these threatening diseases of the tobacco plant. Though only recently recognized as such, these diseases are widly distributed, and while there are no estimates of the losses from them in South Carolina, both are known to be present and are a distinct menace to our crop and may become a serious factor in our tobacco production. As explained in the publication, each disease is caused by a particular species of bacteria. These bacteria are carried over from year to year on seed, crop refuse seed bed cloths, etc. It has been shown that they are primarily seed bed diseases \nd that if the plant bed remains ;lean the crop will not be seriously affected. The essentials for control, therefore, are clean seed in clean soil, which can be secured by sanitary measures explained in the circular. The publication is free and may be lad from the county agents or from ,he Division of Publications, Clemson College, S. C. o WILLIAMSBURG LEADS Saluda.?Williamsburg County was ;he leading county in production of ;obacco in South Carolina during l922, according to the annual report >f B. B. Hare, United States crop!, ifafiofi/x'nn 1- - ..OA AAA I I up ueing ju, iiivj.uuui jounds, valued at $2,o73,(J00. Fiormce County was second with 9,000,000 J lounds, vaiued at $2,203,000. createst effect. Rehearsals for the 1 >ageant are now going on. It will be 1 he closing feature of the Confederate 1 eunion in Florence May 2 and 3. \ \ ( It's a Surprise!? I If there are those who have I * thought that they could not | I I take cod-liver oil nourish- | y | .'Pent, there is a surprise in J t I sloi t for them when they take I t Scott's Emulsion t It is plezsintf to the palate | fand is assimilated so readily thai it is the a exceptional person 11 who cannot take it easily. If you are run* ^ down in strength, n j take Scott's Emulsion I {j I Sct.tt & Bowne. Bloom field, N. J. 12-33 It * ' i r tl k "CALLS" ON SICK BY WIRELESS Among his associates on shipboard, , and for that matter among his landsmen friends, he is known as Wireless Doc Irwin. Professionally he is Dr. William S. Irwin, ship's! swrgeon of the United States Lines steamship President Harding, and it has fallen to his lot during his twenty yjears' service as a ship's surgeon to diagnose and treat by wireless myriad cases of sickness and emergency operations. Recently he gave emergency treatment to a seaman who had been stricken blind on a freighter and to another Who had fallen down a hatch and sustained concussion of the brain and internal injuries. At the time, the President Harding was 200 miles or more from the vessels asking medical advice. Later both men were taken aboard the President Harding in midocean for direct treatment. On March 24th, the wireless operator picked up a call from the freighter Narcissus, stating that Joseph Larue, a seaman, had been suddenly and :_i i-1i. j Ti.n' jujrovci luuoi^ muckcu umiu. Dom vessels were then 1,000 miles from port and twenty-four hours distant from each other. Questions Through the Air. With infinite patience Dr. Irwin sat in the wireless room and talked with the officers of the Narcissus. There was questioning and cross questioning flashed through the air. Dr. Irwin diagnosed Larue's case as one of toxic amblyopia, necessitating immediate medical treatment in order to save the sight. The vessels' courses were headed for ea^h other and in a few hours Larue was taken from the Narcissus in a small boat and transferred to the President Harding, where he was under the immediate supervision of Dr. Irwin. Larue is the son of a Texas banker who had shipped as a seaman for the benefit of his health. He is a graduate of the Texas Agricultural and Mechanical University. 'ifljarue had hardly been made comfortable on the Harding before ?.another plea for medical help flashed across space. It came from the freighter Morristown. Martin Netter of Philadelphia, a member of the crew, while at work had fallen down a hatch. The captain of the Morristown wirelessed Dr. Irwin that Netter was unconscious and apparently in bad shape. Again Dr, Irwin wirelessed for every symptom shown by the injured man. "Concussion of the brain, probable internal injuries," reported Dr. Irwin. "Patient must have immediate medical attention. Bring him to this ship." Once Again within twenty-four hours the President Harding was sent olf her course to succor a human being. The following morning the President Harding took Netter on boari' in a wild sea, transferring him a . once to the ship's hospital. He was so badly hurt that he was taken to a hospital when the President Harding reached Hoboken. f n /n i i juuruc recovers digtu. Larue completely recovered his sight under the care of Dr. Irwin and appealed to Capt Grenin# of the President Harding to permit him to sign on as a member of the crew. He is now a member. In many cases of appeals from freighters who have had no doctors on board, Dr. Irwin has been particularly successful. All his "wireless" patients have recovered. He has a peculiar faculty of getting from the lay mind over the wireless the exact symptoms. Perhaps his most remarkable exper- 1 ience in that line was a "wireless operation" while he was serving on a liner in the South American service. Passing through the Caribbean Sea a i wireless reached the doctor th/jt a keeper of a lighthouse on Swan Island, j o(T the coast of Honduras, needed sur- j gical aid. On the island, far from the mainland, was the keeper, his wife, a wireless operator and two workmen. ( The message stated that the keeper , had developed gangren in his leg. Dr. Irwin's vessel was nearly 1,000 miles distant. Symptoms showed an immediate operation was necessary to j save the life of the keeper of the light. Part of the gangrenous leg would have to be amputated. Here was a big job to bo tackled by unskilled N lands. ? As it meant death within a short j time anyway unless attempted, Dr. c Irwin wirelessed them in detail how to :ut ofT the gangrenous portion of the f eg. With the wireless operator at the f key every minute, Dr. Irwin told the e ay surgeon how to sterlize the knives, now to cut, how to tie arteries and f iow to sew the flesh over the stump. r Dnly a local anesthesia was given. Dr. Irwin had his vessel slowed lown for a while so he could keep > ^ ouch with his patient. After two n lays, word was received that the Z :eeper was responding to treatment f ind no infection hud resulted. He ventually recovered. Two or three n ears ago Dr* Irwin met the keeper of a he light, 0 who congratulated and ^ hanked him for Ms great service. The doctor receives several calls ach trip for medical advice from reitfhters, which do not carry a docor hut have to depend upon the ves- ^ el's medicine chest. D O Get good writing paper at The Her ai Id office. h o No Worms in a Healthy Child All children troubled with Worm3 have an uo* ealthy color, wh ich Indicates poor h'ood, and as a *1 lie, there 1s more or I csa stomach disturbauc? ROVE'S TASTELESS CnLL TOMlC diven retfu- 3v. irly for two or thr."0 weeks will enrich the blood. nprovotho digestion, and actus a general Strength 40 rdrnl Tonic to the whole system. feature will then to irow off or dispel the wormwood the Child will be ?U ?perfect P?#??*i*nt to ir?ke IfV* t*r hottte rn I Page No. f F. J. SULLIVAN 4c CO. Certified Public AccomUnto (Di) Telephone So. 796. Murchison Bank BIdf. WILMINGTON. N. C. T. R LEWIS Attorney and Counsellor at Law CONWAY, S. C. -- i J. I. ALLEN, JR. Attorney-at-Law Office in Bank of Loris Bid*. LORIS, S. C. D. A. SPIVEY & CO. W. B. Kin it, Secty. BONDS A TNSURANOL Office is Peoples National Bank Building. FORD & SUGGS Attorneys at Law Offices at Conway, S. C. Loris,S.C. 6-l-13m R. R 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 Offices 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. 1 " 1 1 ^ 1 ' Dr. J. D. THOMAS Physician and Surgeon f\ LOUIS. S. r. lj.^ _ __ L MARION A. WRIGHT -fWf* AU?m\?y-nt'Law Ortte?# SplVey liuilding CONWAY. S. C. U S. C. DUSENBURY , Attornoy-at-Law I i Spivey Building . * CONWAY, S. C I 1,1 1 " ? DR. E. P. ALFORD Dentist lx>cated in Mullins, S. C. Office rver Champion Shoe Store. tf. FARM GOSSIP Garden exercise is as good as golf ?and cheaper. The real farmer is no loafer and never lets his land loaf. It's as unprofitable to overfeed a poor cow as to underfeed a good one. Send for Extension Bulletin 54, "Feeding and Management of Dairy Cattle." The cotton sinner who fails to repent and be baptized under a safe and sane system of general farming is lost* Consider the neighbors, and use poultry wire to keep chickens in and not out. "A good tree can not bring forth jvil fruit, neither can a corrupt tree wing forth good fruit."?Matthew 7:18. Spray away the currupting bugs md diseases. Come ahead club boys, let's show )ur dads how to grow big crops and ine livestock this year. Don't sponge on your soil, but make four soil like a sponge by filling it vith organic matter. Another pathetic little ?ign of ipring is the smoke cloud from bmnnpr pVint food and woods?which >ught not to be. We ought to act just as sensibly in eeding our crops as in feeding <>ur inimals. Different crops, )iko differnt animals, call for different rations. You have worn a collar that doesn't It, haven't you? Well, a horse cr nule is even worse off with one that s too large or too small. "The Southern farmer luis lowered lis standard of living by the purchase f necessities that he should have roduced at home at less than he pays or them."?Dr. Clarence Poe. The rural mail carrier is a powerful lan. He can bring your college of griculture right to your farm?it" you rish it enough to ask for it. o Harris Drug Company Columbia.?The Secretary of State as issued a charter for the Harris rug- Company, of Greenwood. The >ncern has a capital stock of $3,000 id M. H. Harris is president, and B. . Matthews secretary and treasurer. o Habitual Coaitipatloa Cured In 14 \to 21 Days AX-POS WITH PEPSIN" it a specially, epared Syrup Tonic-Lay?five for HabitiuM >nstipatk>n. It relieves promptly bat ooki be taken regularly for 14 to 21 days induce regulax action. It Stimulate* and *gulate&. Very Pleasant to Take r bottle. lac ...J