University of South Carolina Libraries
r ?te iapitl giiwat ; Vol. 13 No. S ' PAGELANP'sTC-rWEDI^^ByRNtNG, OCTOBER 11. 1922. S1.00 per year CHESTERFIELD COUNTY BULL ASSOCIATION the County Now OrganizedOnly Best Animals of Guern sey Stock Admitted. One of the outstanding factori ^ in livestock development of tin present day is community enter prise, having to do with the co operative development of on< particular breed of livestock anc it it through this unified eftor that urn ara Irwlrinn tr? snmi uw? ??V ??v ?vn'jBk?u^ UV?M? county* community or sections flame generally as the trade marl Of excellence and progress ii hushing some breed of livestock to the foreground through tin maze of individual breeders?i thing which would be prohibitm for years in the making with th< individual breeders of such or ganizations. In the Guernsey breed thes< I units are making themselyes fel I and the bull association is be I coming the foundation for thesi L community enterprises. The* -i- t t__ _ - _ _i_ imngs Demg true 11 is a pieasun 1 * to announce %ind gratifying t< I Guernsey enthusiasts to learn o I the recent formation of a count: I organization for the particula I purpose of promoting the Guern sey breed. Pounded on a bul Bfr. . association. Chesterfield Count: m South Carolina, has entered it K name to the list under the captioi ^ of the "Chesterfield Count: H Guernsey Bull Association** an< it is sate to say that few such or W Willi equal deler'nTlffi^m^l thusiasm to take a place amd^l these organizations as breed|M of the best in Guernsey blood.^ The Chesterfield County Com^ . _ ..... . _ i munuy is typical ot ine wnoie state of South Carolina?a state abounding in resource possibili ties adaptable to dairying industry. Farmers of Chesterfield County were this year face to face with [ . a serious condition. For years and years cotton has been the crop system which ?ue uoiiea oi hiwk: ".qrapamsppH, ton boll weevil arrlnBH^P|i$' quent with it* arrival it becahte apparent that a change must be made. They investigated the posriblities of dairying and found that they were all that could be desired if followed intelligently. It was then that the Bull Associa tion idea was introduced. Atter careful study the temporary organization was perfected and nine directors elected representing eight blocks. At a meeting of the directors on May 29 it be came apparent that this Association was to be formed on bed rock and that only the best of animals would suit and only the most progressive provisions would be written into the consti tution as far as the spokesmen of I the organization were concerneJ. I The constitution in final form is a most business like and progressive one. It permits only bulls Of live bloodlines and from dams ^ 2 year old A. R record of BBjMeast 400 pounds of fat or the ^^Kuivalent Strict tuberculosis ^^Bsting is provided for, Stric ^Breeding rules are included and Mflkcitcuit arrangement within the VAssociation provides for an exk cellent system of line breeding B on exchange of the animals to P best utilise their breeding values. | Advertising the Association, 1 mowing (it fain and many other L progressive articles all combine Agmpocfirm the prediction that the Association will take its proper place in building Guernsey history. An extract [ from an official report on file at 1 the Clemson College Extension Department Headquarters is found the following statement: "In its fioal form the Associa tion includes eight (8) blocks, covering the county thoroughly. Twenty-five (25) scrub bulls were eliminated, approximately 5 130 non members will use the - animals. There are approximate ly 70 pure bred cows owned by - members and 50 owned by nob' members, approximately 400 l - , j _ 1 cows are locaiea to cue miuicuit ale territory where the bulls will s be kept. Of this total number of 1 cows 30 are extra well bred and t close up in the blood of the indi* viduais that are making Guern: sey history. 5 With a membership of 40 mem1 bers, the Association is large - enough to be influential yet not * so large as to be unwieldy. Mem< - bers owning the best of the pure bred animals are making prepa 2 rations to start advanced testing t within the year and a plan is on - foot to order a car load of well 3 bred heifers to be added to the 6 list thus forming the nucleus on s which to build a name synony> mous with the best in Guernsey f blood. f The officers are: Gus SherrelL r Cheraw. President: W. L. McCqb i- McBee, Vice-President; J C. Tjjgfl 1 rell, Secretary-Treasurer. M V The organization was dirdbted s by W. E. Wintermeyer, Assistant 3 Dairy Husbandman of the Wasfy ^ ington of the members, Mr. Two of the bulls, Grapelawn Raid (\700-i anrl Onppn \C\na nt Grapelawn purchased from W. H. Gould of Buikville, Va., are sons of Grapelawn May King: 45483 who is sired by Lass of Ledyard the dam of Lassies Ledyard Bay. These bulls carry 100 per cent the same blood out of full sisters, both sired by Mota's Golden Se- i cret. Golden Belle of Curls i Neck Farm 62183, dam of Grapelawn Raia has a record o/ 6391 pounds of fat and Queen of JJurls 0432 dam of Queens King: of has a record of over 5(K> pounds of fat. Grapelawns : May Kins is attracting: attention < among: the Guernsey Herd; Sires in the South. Two of his djiugh ters have A. R. records and his sons are at the head of such herds as the Pedigreed Seed Company, Hartsville, S C., and i \Connolh Tamoo HarlinntAn Q P ?VUUVIW I MU1VU) fl^UI Ul \yi Rose Vista Cricket, purchased from J. C. Couter of Burlj ville, i Va., is a son of Langwater Cyclop half brother to Langwater Steadfast who sold for $25,c|00.00 and out of Glen Gable Haziel, a daughter ot Lassies Ledyarc! Bay and has a record of 514 pounds of fat. She is also a big rugged show cow. Langwater Cyblop, a son of Langwater Dairymaid# was recently purchased hv J. S. Agnew and H. E. Bos well of Burkeyille, Va., to use or the daughters of Langwater Fore most. Rose Vosta Raymost, punches ed from J. C. Couter is a soil ot ' Ln lgwater Foremost 30191 who rei cntly sold for $20,000.00 out of Jewells Miss Raymond of Elm . yie v, an almost Derfect show 1 co , with an A. R. record of/ ov i 5uu pounds ot tat. sne is a i dau., titer of Princess Jewell 24077 i that has the distinction of siring two ^rand champions at the 1 tiotial Dairy Show. ||i , Handsome Golden 77138, purchased of a a V^Hj Bibles A Bible printed in Lon<^H 1551 was nicknamed Bible from the fifth ver$M Psalm 91 being translate?? that thou shalt not node t(l afraid for any bugeesby ign The Authorized Version is shalt not be afraid for the tefl hv ninlit " This is the rodftfl ?PI-** ? of a word that has become^H lessly vulgarized by later afl^B tions. We retain the ori? meaning in the word "bugb? The Printers' Bible issue? fore 1702, contained an abfl misstatement by David iifl one hundred and ninet? Psalm, a^d one hundred ancfl ly-first verse. He was patlB ally madtfe to complain that "B tres persecuted him withoB cause,'' instead of "princes.? The Vinegar Bible, publiB ; in Oxfordj by J. Baskett in ll j gets its DAme because the h| -? r ?h__ 4.??4.: Jin?ui Liurnc, iiweiibicun ^ua|.| r reads: "TJbe parable of vinegl j instead ofj the vineyard. It \ | also' from\ its numerous fai . been punniingly described as , baskett fu^of printers' error The Bre?hes Bible, served the regulq^ family Bible in reign, of Elizabeth."" The trani . lion was m4de by the English Jjormers in] exile at Geneva, i Hfcas published in 1566. It A ? ed its name! because in Gend | third- chamer, seventh vei I A$am and five are spoken of ; making themselves "breec J The co^^Buditwas 90^ I12 it was a crinB He said^^^Vthe life. His iriencl^Hd it with fiowX ^Jone can reach admirably ^ nrt loving his task.?A. BronsJj Acott. a; McLean, Vs., is a son of Gl$j Cable Jefferson 45903, a bull th| iti well known in South Caroliat a; the sire of Beautiful Ada, oa o the finest cows in the herd o R M. Cooper, that recently fifj i i - 1 ~ f -l.. C/f itueu a recuru ui ucnu; w pounds of fat as a two year old His dam Glen Gable Paulin #015, with an A. R. record C ;93 pounds of fat was first it (flass A in South Carolina at th lime the record was made Grapelawn Golden Secret 5262 purchased from Gould is an- it t red son of Mota's Golden SeCi^ 10784 and out of one of tafs be daughters now in the herd of til Porlinrvoorl QooH Pnrm of Hfltl \ille, S. C. Mota's Golden P cret sired only a few pure ti| daughters but they are prObiH as uniform a lot for both *29 and production as have efcjj been south. Four daughtetlftl i?iis bull sold in the Clevafl sale for an average of $1400,1 * ach. N. C. Best of Radier 63188* hull that was linked in with tl Association by L. L. Parker < ^ageland, S. C., is a line H border Radier bull carrying^ 2 per cent ot his blood out of laughter of that animal Radfl jolden Rose of Wadding! >7030. This cow was purchase rom the Waddington Farms I dr. I. C. Austin but burned i jf.is barn before being placed ( lest. Imp. Border Radier hi keen attracting attention as a si f*f a high class bunch of heife bpth type and productio ?eWen of his daughters averagtr ll?78.8 pounds of milk and 582 ( poiunds of fat in A. R. \fost of these bulls are df tl Maty Rose Golden Secret breo ins at present the most populi of the Guernsey Breed, I Strange Bible Facts ie learned Prince of Grenada, to the Spanish throne, im )ned by order of the crown fear he should aspire to throne, was kept in solitary Inement in the old prison at Place of-Skulls, Madrid. Af"hirty-three years in this liv tomb, death came to his rethe following remark* res/oarehes, taken from the * ?^nd marked with an old >n the rough walls ofitiSoeJJ, how the brain sought em Ioent through the weary the Bible the word "Lord" ind 1,853 times. Byword "Jehovah" 6,855 e word "reverend" but once that in the ninth verse of, 11th Psalm. b eighth verse of the 97th is the middle verse of the nineth verse of the eighth HHHLr nf Esther is the longest. rty-fifth verse, eleventh E if St. John is the short107th Psalm four verses ?the eighth, fifteenth, rsb and thirty first, pirse of the 136th Psalm les or words with more syllables are found in irty-seventh chapter of kd the nineteenth chapare alike. . iia ."w" A 1MH iUppTJ^^FB*' AiiQ' \JV - uOOKo 1 flHvwenty-firBt chapter of th< ^ J the Apostles, is the fin HbjHBmipter to read. HaBBe most beautiful chapter ii } fcrenty-third Psalm. I jw first verse of the fiftietl pH^Bfer of Isaiah is the one fo gHBfew convert, t] '|Pb^ four most inspiring prom ^wure John 14:2; 7:37; Matt. { Psalm 37:4. (| HgrWho flatter themselves witl . [vdhOt "boasting should read th faBft&bapter of Matthew. ^fi^HMumanity should learn th ZflHj^B&hapter of St. Luke, fror I uRwontieth verse to its ending n yjqjfirJSundav Afternoon J% Colleges And Athletics . "'LMhe colleges of the county 1 f flHB^restling with certain phase 'Mofwhletic activities threateain ?\?m<er *hadow the fundament! 23 Rpses tor which these institi were established, but, < 1 tV16, w^h no desire or intei discourage the develoi Llhrough athletic achiev ft, of the most essential ai liendable sort. m matter of fact athletic a ft simplify the problems ft discipline because th< K# standard of physical f and establish worthy idet I IK the students. Athletics Ke give the athletes som ; to do and the students wl sot athletic in their tu (thing to think about. It lalthful, morally and phy k and the educational i ions of the country recc Est a sound mind in a sou: H ?nnly attainable wh PQ aV"d mental develc " *'?teCmoXh'wn? often physically iir calls for t omhHI KILL THE 1923 ? WEEVILS NOW Destroy Cotton Stalks Early by ? Plowing Under Or Rip Them 1 Ud. 1 ? *? C. A. Whittle, Soil Imp. Committee. One of the most effective steps in boll weevil control is the early destruction of cotton stalks. Just as soon as4he ccUoa c&Q be harvested, go into the cotton field and either turn under the cotton stalks or rip them up with a plow. The object is to destroy the cotton plants. Weevils can not feed on dead cotton stalks. When their food is destroyed they migrate to where they can feed or else go into winter quarters. Whether they are thus driven away from your farm or driven into winter quarteis the probabilities of their damaging you again next sea ?uu Hie ?ieuuy leuueeu. Over most of the cotton belt it 1 is possible to gather the cotton ! early enough to permit ot the ] destruction of the cotton stalks three to four weeks before a killing frost will destroy them. 1 Three to four weeks earlier in going into winter quarters means that death of weevils from star 1 yation and cold will be greatly increased. It IB tho last aioovitc that ota in. to winter quarters that cause damage in the cotton crop the } accomplish a complete eradecation of the weevil, it is true that to the extent that this is done i the number of weevils and their damage will be reduced. . Chopping down stalks leaves r Bill US lUHl Dpiuui UCW KlUVf IU uu which the weevil can feed, therefore, the ooly safe way is to up root the stalks or else, with the aid of a drag chain, to turn them b completely under the furrow e slice. Knowing that many cotton e farmers do not plow deep enough to cover up cotton stalks, the r safest general advice is to uproot ' the stalks with a plow and to watch that no new growth starts up. . As long as there is green cot ton growth lefHa- thfejteld^ihe y weevil will be touudv * It will crawl ixito a lock of cot2 ton or half open bur to keep *1 warm and come out when the J- sun shines to feed on the green >f stuff. i- Don't burn the cotton stalks. > Let them lay. on_ thp_ ground al When the ground is plowed the} e- can be turned under where the} id will decay and add to the organ ic matter which the soils so mud u^vu* of Why not organize a commun ity-wide, or county-wide move ; ment for the early destruction o ll" cotton stalks. It means less troa lis ble from the weevil next year* ' in v \ ie- Good News 30 r.D The Rockingham Post-Dii is nctrh mvs the contract for a net si- bridge across the Pee Dee riv< n- on the Wilmington-Charlott g- highway will probably be mpd id next spring. That will potsubl en be bad news to (he owners o( th >p- electric ferry which has been ral ing in the coin in great auantitk ng from th? traveling public for th tit. past few yean. Autoists have a he ready contributed probabl to enough to emct a bridge. /Thoi to who are in rosition to kndw, sa ^ a ferry on alnuch-travel^yiigl [ Forest Buried Under the City of Washington Evidence of the existence of in ancient swamp in which great rees nourished in days long past possibly contemporaneous with earliest man in America, has ust beeu discovered in a deep the a layer otl nuck. containing) tree dumps. Some of khe of great a few'of them mg a diameter of 9 or 10 Much of the wood! is well served, showing clearly ? woody structure and the external^^^^H markings of the bark. A preliminary examination indicates that one of the more common trees of this ancient swiimp was cy- ^ press. j i The story 01" liiestp irees, IiOwever, is only a briejf chapter of the whole geologic history shown in the excavation, vVhich has just been examined by' Chester K. Wentworth for the United States Geological Survey]. Ages ago this part of the Atlantic Coastal Plain was from time'to time covered by the sea, into which Btreams swept vast Quantities of mud, sand, and gravel and boulders whj$h formed thick deposits that covered large ar eas. When the region finally em erged from the sea Potomac g|ver cut its SMF&SES which^g er pebbles come from pans of the Potomac basin beyond the Blue Ridge and others from yeins of quartz in the granites of the Piedmont Plateau. Over the layer of plant debris and muck in this old swamp fine clay and pebbles were laid down by streams of water during the glacial epoch, when the northern part ot North America, as far south as northern Pennsylvania, was covered with immense sheets of thick ice, showing that the trees lived in the latter part of the Great Ice Age, which is variously estimated to have ended from 20,000 to 30,000 years ago. Mrs. Senator Felion - Mm*W. H. Felton of Carterst vfHcL tift, appointed by Governor Hard wick te ^succeed the late senator Watson, has-been prominent in Georgia politics about i half a century. Long before Mr. Watson drew attention to him, self, Mrs. Felton and her hus- > I band, the late Dr. W. H. Felton, r were causing a stir in north r Georgia. Dr. Felton we believe, - ran once or 'qr rfjUTfMft 1 an independenL^nd ^ elected aod: though^!) thow days the hope ot ytbjnan auffrage being I realized wp scarcely entertained. 1 Mi ir Felton was not less conspic" uout at ft popular leader than he pat. The Feltons were persons /of first rate ability and excellent character but, years ago, they j were not held in high esteem by / the old line Georgia Democrats. ?The State, v e The imported reindeer, which e the Eskimos are raising with so y much success in Alaska, weighs ? only about one hundred and-fif? ty pounds, whereas the Alaskan e caribou, or native reindeer, often I- weighs more than three hundv red pounds. The United States e Biological Survey i9 going to try y to cross the one with the other, i- to increase the size of the domes - ? ?! - v .Li.