University of South Carolina Libraries
TO CONTROL AKMY WOK.W Practical Su||M|(lotM mi Applylnx I'oUon tu IVnIkt ? ? ? After t.?ru or cotton ha* bccoiuu inftvted du>t the plants wlltli arsenal* of lead or calcium anaenate using about two pound* of the 'Poi$t)D i it acre. Im? for very young plants and two and a half, to 1 1 1 1 pound* for <?<>! t < ?i? over three fe*?t hl?fo. Araemate of lead and calcium arsenate art* ready for hh?'* when purchased t?ut may Ik* diluted by mixing with arsenate Jliue equal part*. To apply tlx* poUon to amall areas the moKt practical method to to dust it through a oheeso cloth bag attached to the oud of a stick. <>n large areas the butter met bod of application would l/c the Use of two sacks a ad polo car rlod on a mule. This method Is a* ???!?. low* : Take n >trlp of WQClifl thic.' Inches wide, one ljioti thick, aiid quo foot loo* uor than width of row*. Sl\ inches from1 each cud bore a bole' one Ineli Jn diameter. 'Make two sack> of eight ounce duck six Inches deep and twont.v Incite* long and a hob I the width of the atrip of wo?'d. The open shies are at tached to t ho end* of tlit- strip and these can he filled with noiaon through the augur holes In the ends of the p<de. A funnel can be u*fid to advantage. One man can polsoi uhonl twenty acres per day with the lug, pole and mute method. All livestock ahotild be kept out of t<He poisoned field for tit leant, three weeks or uulll after one or two big. r:iln*. Mny./je the. mule while applying the |>ol*on. Do not lu bale the poi>?>n -dust. To prevent the worms from spread ing plow a deep furrow around the t'ield and when the worms pile up In t-'ie furro-v drat a pole through It. Poison the adjo'.ul-ng margins of corn and cotton fields. If a 'road or drive way separates the Infested from the threatened area iihc drag In killllng the enteplllar* when crossing. ? I J. W. Sanders, - ?Count,v. Agent. Kind in the Nami*. Will all the churches In tie* Ker tftiaw assocla I lo'i please send names of their delegates who I'.xpee? to at tend the Sunday School Convention, at Wat erne Itaptist Ohnreh, Aug. lis and ?)th. to W. 1?. Fnreron, Camden. S. Thl- Is Important. \V. I'!. Furcro'n. Pastor. V complete movie ontf.lt ha* been lu st a I Ted at (he White House. IIINHOrVIIJJS NEWS N0TB8 i ?-> IIhP(h*iiIiik? of Interest M Told by The VliuHt?(or ? Mr. **? Hut ton,' wife ami aon, ??f Cobb, (jm., came out on a vUlt ten (lays or two week* ago and rode all ih*- w i i > In IiIh auto. Ho bad a good view of t'rtitp* along 1 1??? road* and ??ay* the crop* on t lit* whole arc above l lie average. Notwithstanding tills V* the fourth year #lneo the bolt weevil struck Ids motion of (leorgla, yet the < i >t 1 1 >i i . when he left there two week* ugo hid fair to make at leapt half a crop. The weed Is f i lit* and tin* Iosn will be entirely to the ravages of the weevil. He .says the crops Ih South Carolina are ivrtalnly f I n?*. but hi- n jetted to ace such $mall acreage In corn and small grain planted. The farmers, In* .said, just as well make up their minds to plant more corn and peanuts in order to boat the weevil. i-l?' also stated tbat the roadi iu ??? County C9p0 nearer being np to the liorgla roads than any other county In the State ho passed throiiRh. That he loiild tell as soon an he crossed over Into Leo by the go >d roads we have here. Messrs, (Jus Wood ha in a ud Klwyn Stephenson went to Kichiuond the f I r?t of last week on business and while up there decided they would come back through the country by private con voyant'e, They bought a Ford and made {he trip back In a, day and a half, Apeudtng tlm.iilhgt In Kalolgb and get ting here about .'1 o'clock. They say the loads all the wav down through Vir ginia and North Carolina are like turn pikes. and the crops the finest they have ever eeen. Last Friday night at a hot supper near the store of Player & Itrown? lav b?w Billot t, itoliert ShariH'r stabbed Walter Hudson in the left shoulder ?near the ms-k, severing the large ar tery. which caused internal heraor age; and from which lie died in about an hour after being stabl?ed. Sheriff Scarborough was nottftrd and left at once for the scene, but IW'fore he got ther<* Mural Policeman \V. T. 1/aCoste had him arrested and lie is now in jail. No particulars of the difficulty. Mi'. .1. S. Corbet I received a telegram last week that his s?>n James, who lias been s|>ending the summer at Hender son vi lie, was taken suddenly very s'ek. Mrs. Corbet t.' went up Immediately to him. She found him very sick and phoned Mr. Corbet! to come at once and bring I >r. A 1 ford with him. They left Sunday morniug unit when they got thf re they found JUumle very sick. but no! of a aerlou* uaturo. I>r. and M r?. l a ey Corbett were a bo uotifliHl of Ul>? Illness and they went up through the country bj private conveyance, arriv ing there About midnight. After the lone rldu retired for the night with their ?weet little four mouth* old baby In ita usual health. About f> oclock Jn the morning they discovered that the bafcy had died during the night. The little body was brought t<> Bish op vllle on Tuesday and laid In the family jrtot 00T OM Y THRBR YKAltS Chaplin Murder to Serve Short Term at Fort Jay, I'rUon. Washington, Aug. ? Dishonorable discharge and confinement with hard labor for three yearn at the Atlantic branch of the 1'nlted States dlsclpllna ry barracks, Kort Jay, N. v., was. the M iitcMiv of thd war depart men I today* placed on Private Roy Sanders, who, on January 10, 1020, with other soldiers attached to Camp Jackson, shot and killed William X. Ohablla, a citizen of Columbia, near ilcstliwood. Corporal Edmund Maaton, Company (<}. Fot.velght Infantry, has already been senteiuvd ti? serve one year In the disciplinary barrack* at lantveuwortb. to be" reduced to the ranks, to be dis honorably discharged from the army, and to forfeit al| pay and 'allowances due or t?> become due, for his part in the matter. Lieut. Talbot H. l?\?w ler was recent ly > sentenced to lose 1<K> flies In the lineal list of Infantry officers, and fin ed $300. Private Jatiusz was tried and acquitted. With the- sentence of San ders the case ends. Sanders was the man who actually fired the fatal bullet into the car In which Chaplin was riding when kill ed. Sanders admitted, during the trial tlnft be fired the shot, but claimed that he shot Into the ground a few feet be low the rear light oil the machine* Because of the seriousness of the mat ter, unusual time has been taken by the judge advocate general of the army to examine (Sanders' part in the ho micide. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Sides, their son Arthur and wife and it heir little son. of Pont lac. Michigan, were killed at Orion, Michigan. Sunday when nil automobile Sn which they were riding wmn struck by an inter-urban trolley car. Begin the month right by placing an order for that Fall printing with us now. We have in stock a full line of printing stationery and have the following choice brands of paper with envelopes to match for you to select from : \ CASTLE BOND TEMPLE BOND HAMMERMILL BOND JAPAN BOND TOKYO BOND GOVERNOR BOND Ruled goods of all description, with the very latest in type faces; and the printing is of such a high-class that you will re-order. Give us that next order. THE CHRONICLE PHONE 29 ANOTHER TRIUMPH FOR AUTO Southwest'* Moil Dreaded Spot, Death Valley, Hat Jjfcen Mad* Siife for Tfaxeler*. Death valley, once the terror of the traveler In the Southwest and the last rusting place of many early day prospectors, Is being mad? sa> tor travel both day and night. This erstwhile harrier to human progress hu? been conquered h.v the automobile. Its trackless waste of sand has been sign-posted and Its hid* den water holes market) by Uncle Ram. Not content ,wltb merely mak ing the desert easy to cross for trav elers in daylight, the Automobile Club of Southern California Is going far ther and is placing signs In such man ner that the rays of the headlights from passing machines will fal^ upon them and guide the night tourist as safely and surely as tho day traveler. The Automobile club also will sign post all lateral routes of the famous Death valley district. Included In the sign posting being done will, be a com plete set of road signs dhvetlng tour ists to picturesque Palm canyon, on tho edge of the desert one of the most unique spots in the world. This oasis in the sandy wastes Id to be made a national monument by the government. Its distinctive fea ture . is tho presence of ancient palms o^ weird beauty, standing lp straight rows, apparently planted by the hand of uiun. but antedating history of the tlrst human beings in this section. ;j NOT ALL DUE TO COMEDIAN Part of Laughable Entertainment Was Being Furnished by Original Tenants of Barn. Speaker Swe/?t sajfl the other day In tho New York state legislature at Albany : "Because an agitator gets a lot of newspaper space It does not necessa rily mean that he Is a great man. Newspaper space may mean something else. It reminds me of a story. "A rich man hired a comcdlan to enterta'.n the workers on his estate one evening. The entertainment was stagtMl in the ham. and It went well almost too well. The comedian, In fact, had hardly got under way when the barn began to shake with shouts of luughfef. Soon the laughter became so uproarious that the rich man rose and said : '? 'Friends, I know how difficult it Is , to restrain our mirth when Mr. Back chat Is on the stage, but really, you know, If we don't hojd ourselves In Just a little the performance will hard ly be over by midnight.' "Then a burljr plowman nvse in his turn. " 'Excuse, me, boss,' he said ; 'It ain't Mr. Bnekchat we're laughln' at ,but somebody left the door open and all the pigs have got In, and they're nearly pushin 'us off our seats.*" , Blue-Jay Ways. Last ' spring n poir of blue Jn^rs nested In the crotch of a tuaple Just below my study window. Whafra time they had of nest building! The female Insisted on building In a crotch below,, while the male thought a crotch higher up afforded a more advantageous loca eatlon. They talked and scolded, building first In one place then In the other- In the end the female had her way, and the nmkeshlft bunch of twigs and brush was collected. The birds > wt " ^eeks, temSng strictly to family care*; the half of which the male bird assumed without a murmur or complaint All summer long they were silent, hut toward fall they Joined their voices with those of the other Jays In the neighborhood. It was a new slant on blue Jay methods, and hereafter I shall regard the birds \* 'th a wee bit more appreciation. ? Chris tian Science Monitor. Poor Father.* Marian Is eleven years old and thinks that she Is old enough to stop having her hair bobbed and let it grow out and be braided as do the other lit tle girls in her class. But her moth er has different Ideas. -So, of course, there is an argument every time hair cutting time arrives. Last time moth er brought forth a new argument. "I want your hair to be pretty and thick when you grow up," she said, "and there Is nothing which makes your hair grow better than to cut It often." Marian's eyes opened wide. "Then why don't you begin It on father?" she said. "lie says himself that he Is ger tlng bald." Flowers. To dream of picking flowers slgnl fle? future fortune. Of holding, seeing or smelling them In aeaaon means pleasure, but 1 1 out of season, ob stacles and lack of success. If \.vhe flowers are wl/ite the obstacles will be less; If yellow, they will be pain ful, and if red. tffey foretell the dream er's serious Illness. If you dream of being bedecked with flowers It means a short happiness Is coming to you. If you dream of buying them you will hear some good news. ? Chicago Amer ican. No Imitations for Her. A yonng physician took bis best girl to a local picture house. Advertise ment* were being thrown on the screen, among them this one: "Make them happy with a photograph of your self at Christmas. Our shop, etc." Th?? young man turned to his girt with the facetious remark, "Would a photo of me make you happy?** She r?,o<?k her head. "I don't yke Imitations." she pouted. Tm used to recelvltg real things.** Ripe Luscious Fruit . Phone 90 : k *? - freshly picked is the kiojj that goes into canned and preserved Roods. || SO great is the variJ that no home put up sun] ply could equal it. Trt some and you'll find it dd licious and almost as go?j ?as the fresh fruit itself, i * McLcocPs Grocer] Insurance We write Fire, Life, Accident, LiveStock, Hail, Plate Glass, Automobiles, -Parcel Post and Burglary Insurance?furnish fidelity and^ surety bonds and sell Real Estate. We thank those who have so liberally patronized us,, and will appreciate any busi ness you place with us. v 1 >2 a i CAMDEN LOAN & REALTY CO. . .. . I. I. C. HOUGH, Maimer , You sit in front of phonograph Num ber One. It plays a" record .v?,'Vou listen critically. When it haa fin ished, the Tjiirn Table revolves. Phonograph Num ber T wo faces jrou and plays The sa me record. When Number Two has finished, Phonograph Num ber Three ficea you and plays the same record. The Turn! revolresapii Nek Editor you tnd pUyi same tecofi Hear them toj 1 here are clean-cut differences between the phonographs. J play the same record alike, nor reproduce the same performance^ \ ou can't tell much about these differences from what you b^j store demonstrations, visiting in homes, etc. Hut hear the various phonographs in the Edison Turn-Table Cc^ ison ? and suddenly each difference stands out clean-cut, distiod The Edison Turn-Table plays the same artist's performances <* phonograph from the same position in the room. It makes mere claims of superior tonal quality, fidelity, real is?n, way to the actual facts. Your ear instantly classifies the*1 phonographs, according to thair respective merits. You kno*' one you want in your home. ' .1 EDISON TURN-TABLE Companion . ( Qirtn Only on fUqu+it) The Edison Turn -Tabic Comparison is conducted apart from the Mm eod of our business. It is a service for1 all music k>rers, whether they come to buy or not. Come in whenever *ou have 10 minutes to spare, but kindly ask for the Edison Tarn-Table Comparison, since it is given only upon definite re quest. Man^faeturtrt and ts^^SSi inrited to lD^J?S?r?i3 lh?m, or to .obitlttjj*^,* tba mm mak?. w ?af of ?t?*l or ^ during bu?h??M hourt' EDISON TURN-TABLE Compare (%) Ask to hear it YS/ Camden F uraituTf Comp&of ^ Phone 1?6 Cssd** | _ ? 4