The Florence daily times. [volume] (Florence, S.C.) 1894-1925, February 16, 1922, Image 6
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THE FLORENCE DAILY TI^TES TF
■ r*7
IRDS A'MORAL LOT. ...
* f v'
hered Mates are Faithful, Says an
Ornithologist.
IRrds. v v ,
“Constant lovtftrs, faithful husbauds j
and wives, d-peadable puter.tu.” Thai'
i was the way Lee S. Crjmiull,
jeuruicr at the Tse./ iurk /.oo, an
ed the question.
CRSDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 1«, 1922.
'1
i»m the New York Herald. ^
our warblers strict moralists'i “These nice things may be said with
^the male lobin, fmcii, thrush and! conflde..ce about our b;r(lu,” lie s.i.d,
THE FARMERS FlOHT'
FOR GOOD PRICES,
stirt^oW has been lOAury ^
1 • 1 . ’-.n, r , *
•v Fj > *» . d
And Now Ireland Is No R-OngVr Plalh-1 T
tiff, but a Defendant.
\V. Wilson in World’s Work,
j The trouble now with Ireland iu!
that sonow has be.-n her one luxury,!
the theme of her poets, the nrnlcdy in |
luny.c'iuse of her mate the female dovtj
, | will mouru nd mourn, but never take ,
mother hu.baf d. I’m not prepared toj
j ul d|Say this ia not true, or rather that It
iluts never hupentd, bat 1 an i ic ined
'to think it la a pretty but false con
I colt. "
"The common bluebird, tin king;
f’s’ier, ::tii'ie t, ’cock)’ and exeeisive-1 RESULTS IfT KENT I. 1 SKY I’M HlfiH
ilink faithful husbands^ .\sk a 1 “ U111 the exceptions — the ‘had men iy flirtitious as these birds are, never*. j_Y ORGANIZED T03ACSO MAR* .
lover if birds nave intoiiwte ,i_ ■ about town’ in the bird world—are so tl , h moi.jr, moiH and when ma-i KETING ASSOCIATON. ; ter lllusic . the eloquence of her ora-,
f will smile at the I-ink- „r kn»wi,. m/. 1 L£ ,:ur birds niarr > r fu - 1 ' t - ! u ' a tilo i Parrot; Reman Trie. j Lexington, Ky , Feb. in,—Prom the withdraw the eye from Ern cruemea,
— - k ■ otliers for a season. Among the for- “{‘cacrclra have n*> mates. Of all| rp ys when buyers went i.om bara to a , nd £o sU bstitu.e satiety, seems a tac i
iner are the bald eagle, the go'deii |i, 0 r; .| i s the mo t falthft'l. I, , . v.* * , , i • r 'fh'e of Ireland’s essential individual-'
iiteTtoIly o, <~H.BW-o.twt~. ■ t"": St,n-6 Soiree of ".im. In. bo.n| ‘='" aE ' 1 ’’""fV 1° A “ lrcla "" «•«««-< if'®!
with a wc^U of fnttaa «i Can “' ln K008 ' ! »'.ttHlw«al to the tofet-ilc.l s , orstnuol Burl,.', ,ol,.,to.CMpe.o- ItuK teases to be the lrsla-0 wiul
details. f *
Summing them up on this one
cnly, they produce evidence tin
birds not only love add hate, but
they love they do so with a sure
Ry. In the world over, with few
■ ceptions, birds ate constant i
t hearts, and faithful wives and
’hands, as they are devoted and
fleing parents. j .. m ous. ivtenogatnous also arc too
Birds Faithful. , heron, Imwk and buzzard. |
That famous authority on bird life,] “It is true that some tinhr.rpy un-j
W. H. Hud,£on, has noted but a few | ions ocashmally occur, which are brok*
European birds that are polygamous i on off before the season inis taiily ne i
or polyandrous. j gun. T’ c robin may find (hat he lias
A strange fact is that when they mi-! mated with an unhealthy companion,!*?! 0
a flock of parrots flew low down from
the trees and past us. "There were
ten thousand of there birds, that flew
in pairs, each couple as if attached by
a bond. There were thren or four sin-
b'rdr—unhappy bachelors — that
renounced from which
union instinct tells him sought t0
vil were
grated to America they
such evil habits. The English cuckoo ' bo cannoL expect offspring. Then lie i . , , if
rlttcized for her lazy habit of 1 ying ’divorceT her and seeks before the moment onlv, then husband and wif
ittacb ih'“mselve; to a pair
nirmittcd to do so for a
»r eggs fn another biids red and
Itting on a foster parent the trouble
kd responsibility of i a ring tlie young
lekoo, had but to breathe the At
lantic breezes when she immediately
reformed. The Yankee cuckoo incu
bates her own eggs and ai.er hatching
feeds her children.
, William Beebe, another authority,
cicsid an-
turned on the interloper to their do-
i mosticity and drove him off.’’
mating sea'on has quite
other scosu'’s companion.
Dove Leccnc! Doubted.
“Other birds quar t! sometimes with
(heir wives rnd thro Hen a breakup of
,1,0 tail,- Mt " r8 i ^ F.n.r.1 .1 John Smith
rarely serious, aad quan n c.o 1 o;
when the r arions bus'ness of their |
LAST RITES FOR OLDEST INDIAN
a Thousand Chipncwas at
Cass Lake, Minn., Feb. 1 L—All that
bird lives la begun. It m s mu. e^ M . p
wsa the first to declare favorably on j pecially by the pacts, that doves malCj wad mortal o, tiai.i i a
the moral status of the Amor lean | for life and that on the death from Woncc, aged Chinp.nva Indian, was
— — I consigned to Mother Earth and his
Why
Announce Your
Marriage?
There’s A Reason, See
Elaine Hammerstein
—----■Tomorrow^™-”
O’Dowd Theatre
spirit wi ned God Speed, with a fin
oral service, according to the White
Mans creed, attehued by Indiana and
whites today.
Death from pneumonia cut down
. f o’n> Smith, as he also was known, in
hii l?cuh year last Tuesday.
Nrarlv one thousand Chipp-.wns, in
which tribe John a.so \\:-3 called Oa
Be, Non, which, translate'’, into Knc
lish means “daddy of them all,”
Hi ranged tins village in the midst of
the Northern Minnesota Indian coun
try for the fumr al. Six of them r.< ted
as pallbearers.
ULTERIOR GOLF
■ ».v.
HernKsgaKS’’
There once was a golfer named Sut
ter,
I Who c!way. dro .'e off with his putter.
T’e said—I must say
' It’s a very poor way,
| But 1 like ;a -. r.r ad ive folks spu*
ter.*'.
—Waysi e Talcs,
r|H
CD]
o
BULL HEAD BRAND
E JELLY
with the real apple flavor
Spread It Thick On Com
Muffins
Imagine what your folks
could do to a plate of
crisp brown com muffins
and a jar full of Gibbs
Apple Jelly.
It’s a flavor that’s just the
thing to “top-off” with.
Nothing like it for a Sun
day night’s supper when
everybody’s “hungry as
a wolf.”
Dorit “imagine” it. Try it.
Get 3 jars—one for
spreading on hot bread,
one for sweetmeats and
one*'for cake making.
Get tfiem qt your gro
cery'store to-day.
Other Gibbs Products
Tomato Catsup
Pork and Beans
Peanut Butter
Tomato Paste
y sjl heaD
AaaoLi
RAND
UTELY
PUR^
llBSSPHSERWHfiCd
vBfliriMont i
GIBBS'
puM-.
GIBBS PRESERVING CO.
BALTIMORE. MD.
) '
and dow, s. ihe 19^0 evSp brbu^i ( eliortctimlngs it can no lancer hlamt
linn the highest pr.e s lie ever lrecu;> -.the cpprersor; it entire up:m a new
ed for his otbacco, but the'192t crop, ‘ era 0 f duty to itself ar.d mankind: il
that cost upward of eighteen ctmm a' nu , st face as well ay arouse pul,Ho,
pound to grbw, was sold ala loss, the .opinion; it appears at the bir of ids |
sea ous average being :iiine.n and tory no longar as plaiutiil, but as do j
one-half cents. | Ife’dant. In Eastern Kuropo here are i
With a view to avorti g a repetition| many small nations, thus on trial, aad
of this, Judge Robert \Y. Biuglutn, i n ndapd will now be ap; lied '.lie
Louisville new paper owner, became game test
Her situation is peculiar. By om'
gration ehe lias become more tliai
herself. Beyond the seas her sot I
a-d her daughter;!* s'ill die im r.f Ui .'
old, sad Ireland. What they like I !
:o listen to the lilt of M iclmsl;.; ond j
as Ihe tears start to eyes which have j
never seen the land where Mae’.m dil i:
was written, it would seem like saerl-i
logo to remark that In Limcrek the!
city of the broken treaty and of price I
less lace—there is now a mos lucrv!
live tr do in haco -1 .
interested in the coopcrati\ : e market
ing plan, and in company v/ith f.avir..;
glowers, visited Luaev Baruch iu
New York and laid before him a plan .
for financing the crop.
On March 28, a mce’i rj-of tobacco j
growers from Wisconsin, Indiana, Ohio,
Kentucky, Tennessee, Yiigfnia, West 1
Virginia, North and South Carolina]
.and Georgia was lie d Li re, at which'
Aaron Shapiro preix ntu! the!. Can au-j
der which California f uit and grain
growers and othc- proniTTYs are or
ganized. From this mealing the nio/o-J
rent Io organize ihe iriiley tobacco Mascots arc pooular among ii’rmon.
growers was launched, mid after sev-j om . f, imoIIa t , inn | n „ his
eral months 85 per c ’ t of the crop tpp * n ii nf „ f .. Y
was pledged end the il n’ey Tobacco _____ __
Cooperative Marketing a:sqciatk»i in-]
corporated in North Caiolitia.
When the Kentucky G moral Assam-
bly mel the first of the year, the Bing-1,
hum Cooperative Maikeii-g biT was
passed in record time anil the arsoei.i- 1
lion then ineo:';oratH in Kentuck'’.
In the meantime, howeior, the asso
ciation had seeared H7 i maecn ware
houses in Ohio, Indiana, West VP'-
giuin and Kentucky for its exclusive
l o. The W'ar !'’in' n < Corporation
and bunks in the iiienscd d'striet.'-
plodged almost $'J,000 00!> to the a:.so
int'Ciu.
On Jarunry 20 tin w.nc’iou es li: i -
ive e opened for the r''ce'p^ of pledged
tobacco ami it was gva I <1. upon de
livery by the grower ar.'i a ahafk for
■’ euUtnntf 'M'lte ci •;». pert cent of
the worth cf the rrop at’vaneqV-tO ‘hg!|
growers. Four day: lat"“ .the Opuses .
throughmit the hurley district wore .
opened and tobacco ^egan to pour in. I
This I..Ian will he in onofatfon fo - i
it least live years, t'm J rmers nav j
ing signed up for th ! s mj/fod of time. !
Prior to 1904, the hairfyo barn sale
baeeo was taken by jirnuis auc
Hoi cd oft, was used g: ^ lively.
The first attempt.to .form-a tobacco
nol ir.ok place In Oini^Br-ni Jtt 1M'7, i
but was short lived. The famous
Equity Society, ^ith Its attoidant
night riding and bther evidences ol
dissatisfaction, was org uized in 1905.
The Burley Society was organized
along s.muai' lin^j the ic.u spring.
.fter sjv.rai yeafs the Emi.y ds>-
amled. The ilurlqy, however, eoiitin-
ued to operate, it is said ’hut never
more than Jo po: cent of the crop was
pledged to it In any year.
The loose leaf warehouse system
has beta in use during Mi,: last few
years ard there new are ccvonil hun
dred such liouucs in Kentucky alone,
with many others in tlu adju.ning
states.
The crux was reached in January,
Jwhen funnels offered their hign-
priccd 1920 crops for sale. The aver
itgj pi ice paid on the opening day of
...(; wncl-j w-ua iui* ualew im: on i ol
production, and nfoay growers faced
turn.
FEBRUARY PQULTR / NOTES.
«
The incubator is nat o:i!y a iiccea
rity but an economy v herli cmly
clucks are watrtud.
Brooding am, cdfkiiui chicks is
far more important than hat •hing. To
chill the chicks is always fatal. I
often costs something to lixirn this.
One of the best animal foods, both
to induce egg production and promote
growth, is cut fresh bon
Cold dan • i land is no*place for poul- i
try; that which dries soonest after u
ruin is .he best land on which to raise
fowls. :
Outside of the hrc:ding ions on the!
tarn no surplus male , .Uould be Kept,
luo many males to bother the laying
no’n ere a (Iju'inieni; nme are ie.d !
ed.
Fight lice, teeth and Uu uail, at this
season. We often thini. lice kill more
chicks than any other thing.
A wagon load of .ho fine gravel and
sharp sand thrown (ho ground in
the poultry yard mal es ii more sani
tary and helps provide grit.
It is a hard thing Ini do, but juse the
iiatchet frctly on fifing fowls. IJe]
sure that :hq fiilmqig j J U ot a fault ofi
'the caretaker. : 1
A neighboring pouhi y vnan sowed a
large patch of gvagr. i to oats and
Where
Wagon Calls Regularly
the Doctor Comes
Seldom.
. . In figflring up washday expense there is aw Item rightly
chargeable which many women overiook.
Thht jtem is doctor bi’ls—of all causes that bring com- t
4 r ,ficatio*s to wemen at this season of the year there are
». «?.-«,S3 *.v.
, Think it over for a moment—first, the heavy work; then
f the moist air,-Eamo yards^and wtt feet;, finally the run
ning in anji a wyiD^^mpLbRWI e < to a cpotoui^
licors. it a wisi risk ta take; a fair price to pay?
The litauty cf this service of oura is that wc take out
cf the home everything that pertains to yvashdpy. You’
eimo’y ca.. us, am. :n no v*mc a-, a ; your wasning is back'
sweetly e’ean and ready too iron.
Ac for the cost, >ou will find it truly moderate. Cal'
uc ami 5cr.h
Damp Wath --5c per pound
Dry Wash !.i._o.vC---,.* 6c per pound
, Ciy Wash, f at pieces, ironed ready to use, 7c per pound
The
Florence Steam Laundry
Phone 77
l
otiMtffe.: tr
fl
The Florence Dailv T imes by carrier 15c a week
Good News for the Ladies
\ x * -
New Arrivals Specially Priced
■AT
"The Store That Brought Good Shoes
in Florence at Reasonable Prices”
I
100 Prs Ladies Patent Sally Pumps
>ll*. • * r
100 Prs Ladies Patent 3 Strap Oxfords
100 Prs Ladies Patent 3 Strap Tongue Effect
100 Prs Ladies Black Vici 3 Strap Oxfords
100 Prs Ladies Russian Calf 3 Strap Oxfords
100 Prs Ladies Brown Vici 3 Strap Oxfords
‘ »
Cheap at $6, specially priced by Nettles
$4.8-
200 Pairs Ladies 2 Strap Kid Sir ppars Good for
the tired feet of the housewife. S3 values
specially priced
wheat rnd left the fo\ !
Tor tl emrelvfs afler t
ed. Tin lions were
to dig it out |
a seeds sprout-j
i ctively scratch- i I
by a minute:
under the j
?a. Apply car-11
a weak until i
ing nil day tong. I. vq-, a goad pian,
and wo roeomir.endo ii
Scaly legs lo causr 1
parasite digging aws
scales of the fowl’s 1
belated vaseline oner
cured.
Make the rest btxci of ample size
but not too deep. Th! liens, if large
in size, will break the eggs in getting
into the nest if it b“ t r> dean.
It will soon he the mason for gape
worms, nnd all yur< i not sown to
green feed should be .► uued or plowed
up. If the worms ai j thick, scatter
, ifi
(about the ward
i A few drops of carb
^ drinking watqr of the
to dislodge’ the wrtnh
, throats.—Farm Lifa
before plowing.!
allc acid in thej
(.-hicks^J
from
Nettles Shoe Store
Where Thousands uy Their
Shoes For Less
, .i.H" mi ytupfmuir im