University of South Carolina Libraries
O O yoq 0 O@9 A~erve r b.rink tDelicione 41(lefr es hi e c otflaa. By . Lim t Coca (oa8;o. OF INTEREST TO FARMERS POULrItY POINTERlS. Clemson College, S. C., Dec. 11. By adding a bucket of cowpeas to every three buckets of cracked corn, sorghum seed, wheat, or whatever mnxture is fe-1 the laying hens, the production of eggs is materially in increased. Sorehead is cauisedl by the chickens coming in contact with mold spores. By keeping them away from moldy litter or moldy grain or other car riers of mold, the disease will not appeair in your flock. To cure sorehead dip the head of each affieted chicken in at solution of acid iron sulfate or cresol. Full particulars about the treatment of this and other diseases are in the bhird edition of Bulletin 16, Pool 18T CAR mu cle;~ a ar terveanywhe~ W ams Colg s.C, L1. ByaligabCto f cweat O O . . * S 00 000 OO600a 0000 00" 066 000. 0 0 I Every Where try Cultur3 for South Carolina, which has just been published. It is distributed free of charge to any one in the state. Pullets hatched in January make excellent summer and fall layers when the mature hens are molting. '1 h Simplified Clemson Egg Mash is mixed as follows: 15 pounds cottonseed meal, 15 pounds cowpea meal, 30 pounds cornmeal, 20 pounds ground oats, 10 pounds wheat shorts, and one-half pound fine table salt. Unless you can obtain prime, bright 2ottonseed me(ral reco.nmended for noultry feeding, reject this product and increase the amount of cowpea meal to 30 pounds. Keep this mash dry before the layers constantly. Morning and night feed them the mixture of grains and cowpeas in litter to make them exercise. A supply of ground limestone or ground oyster shells and 0 ye just receiv rules. You cs >u want, whe medium mnul n mule oracd .n extra fine 1< 11 not be able re. have severa rk Horses. 3e of Harness ap Robes, Et< 'EY & RJ a dish of clean water are also nec essary. Turkeys fatten well in confinement when fed as recommended aboke'"'for laying hens. They will eat the cow peas readily and also the dry pash. MISGRADING CAUSES HEAVY LOSSES IN COTON Clemson College, Dec. 11.-In a re port to the Secretary of Agriculture, made public recently, the Office of Market and Rural Organization stat ed that the losses to cotton growers in the United States probably reach ed $7,500,000 in 1913-1914 because grades were not properly taken into account in the primary sales, and that in spite of a tendency toward improved conditions since the promul gation of the official cotton standards of the United States the losses due to inaccurate grading are still great. The growers are urged to familiar ize themselves with grades and to insist that the proper classification be given their bales by buyers. Em phasis is also placed on the econbmic importance of securing proper gin ning, adequate baling and covering, and proper storage. It is shown that great and incon sistent variations in prices are paid L. W[II[MRHORN & SON, Sole' Distributors of Moisture resisting and Special Manufacture makes it the best. Write us for samples and prices. Black Rock Wall Board. m. .jus fE. ther it isa traft mule d ao muleso to do bet .1 fine driv 3, Buggies, GBY, F i l.,.:" PELLAIIA. BEING ERADICATED IN SOUTH CAROLINA Disease Once Pronounced Incurable Now Being Dislodge by 'Remedy Which is Already Com pounded by Nature. Pellagra is fast losing its terrors owing to a remarkable remedy which is being put on the market by a Birminghams concern. So far as is known it is the only remsdy which goes directly to the seat of trouble in Pellagra cases and now performs its healing work with absolute cer tainty. Mr. Alex R. Tharin, known for miles around Greenville, S. C., was, a victim of this dreaded disease and writes: "I suffered with Pellagra a long time and could fn nothing to help me a particle. I wa ill at home when a friend advised me to try Sul ferro-Sol. Within two days I had improved so much I could go back to work and after taking three bottles I am perfectly well. Seeing the good it (lid me I made my wife use it for nursing sore mouth. She had been told by the Doctor that it could not be cured but Sulferro-Sol healed it right up, and she has had no further tirouble with the disease. We consid ei Sulferro-Sol the greatest curative remedy ever put on the markdt and we cannot say half enough for it." Sulferro-Sol can be found at any Drug Store. If your Druggist does not have Sulferro-Sol he will order it for you. The Murray, Drug Co., Columbia, State Distributors.-Adv. for cotton of different grades. The average of prices on observed trans actions in Alabama for one month for example, was 13.51 cents for strict good primary and 13.47 cents for strict good middling, the latter being six grades better than the for mer. The higher grade of cotton thus sold for 20 cents less per bale than that of the lower grade, when on the basis of New Orleans difference it was actually worth $7.50 per bale more. Investigation showed that for the same grade the prices paid were on the whole considerably greater in the eastern States than in those west of the Mississippi. These differences are much greater than difference in freight rates to the mills alone would account for. The other factors in favor of the East are believed to have been the direct purchase by mill buyers, the existence of better stor age facilities, the availability of rela tively cheap money, and the more general knowledge of grading among faimers. Although the grading in the East is a trifle better than that in the West, the eastern growers must nevertheless exert tremendous ef forts toward proper grading. _.o H1OW TO MAKE HEAD CHEESE FROM HOGS Clemson College, S. C., Dec. 11. In making head cheese, split the head and divide again crosswise. Cut out the eyes, remove the brains, and cut off ears and snout. Soak over night in cold water to draw out blood and dirt, and rinse several times. When thoroughly cleansed cover with hot water andl boil until the meat falls from the bones. Pick out all the bones, dIrain the meat from the soup, andi chop up tine. If there is much soulp or liquor boil it down, then place the meat in the liquor andl season to suit the taste with salt and pepper. The cheese can be flavored by plac ing some sliced onion and spices in a cloth sack and allowving this to b)oil with the liquor. Also add a lit tle vinegar to suit the taste. Let boil for about half an hour or until it has cooked dlown nice and thick, and then pour into small crocks and weight dlown while cooling. When cold it should. be a solid gelatinized mass. Pour melted lard over -it, enough to cover it well, as this seals it from tht air. Cover and set awVay. Ily using small crocks only a portion needl be unsealed and the meat wvill Constipation elinsent., Fever Indigestion. ies Sick Hleadeoh., k"oIsoned Systens an a scoro oi other troubie follow. Don't let ConstIpation East. Kee yor RdnesLiver and Bowela Nothing better than Dr. King's NewLife Pills All DruggIsts 25 cente SATIBFACTION OR MONEY DACE For Best Results Ship Your Long Staple Cotton to WHA LEY & RIVERS, Charleston. S. C. Oritrinal promoters of Staple Cotton In'the Southeast. THE ESTFERTILIZER to use this year is a mixtude of equal parts of Acid Phosphate and Cotton Seed Meal. This mixture will analyse NINE per cent, available Pho'sphoric Acid. and THREE AND ONE-HALF per cent. Am monia, and nearly if not quite ONE per cent- Potah. We are prepared to furnish both the above materials and. alsh . Blood and Tankage. and we solicit inquiries. MANNING OIL MILL Manning, S. C. Our Representative is as nea' as your postollice or Vyour telephone. A caird or a long distatce call, and our service is at your d isposal. TYPEWRITERS RENTED. Writing Machines Repaired by Experts. We carry a full line of Oflice Fixtures and Supplies and are sole dealers in L. C. SMITH & BROS'. TYPEWRITERS. (The "Silent Snaith") and SHAW.WALKER FILING CABINETS AND FIXTURES. RODGERS OFFICE SUPPLY CO. 57 Broad St. - - Charleston, S. C. VINOL!. A MODERN TONIC. It is recommended to Improve the Ap petite, give tone to the stomach, build up that run dlown condition and promote strenqth. Order a bottle today. Dickson's Drug Store "Time tells wha ouI~ did yesterda If fr o thr eaon) than I the un i oreseent demnuIds inici to huitin life, you ow oursellj a Iiank - co'unt. Il1 Ia dut-y. bec~aLuse youP hiaven't the p)ower to predict futureo but you l''-e poe to starit a Bank atccount and t'ortif the' fatore.C Beides i -v tVoit I> b itlp worth vyVou g in-3m to sunc Begin today with $. The Bank of MannIn keep all winter. It is nit e sli. ed and served cold or sonme can'be laid inCA weak- vinegar, thus pickling enough WrJtn for a .serving, or the slices can be rolled in flour and fried a nice brown. 1I@FoOvar By kee ng eveFaotiInyfatti sone op eventuall latnever at gne t 'f