The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, June 22, 1922, Page 7, Image 7
. Arsenate an?
Weevils
To the Editor cf the News and
, Courier: As boll weevils are now j
reported in greater or less quantities
y on nearly every farm in the state and i
as the weather thus far has been ideal
for their propagation it looks as if i
there is small chance of producing a j
^ fair cotton crop unless some cheap I
and effective method of checking j
them is found and put into effect immediately.
'
* I have heretofore recommended
* that the farmers experiment with a
f mixture of calcium arsenate and mo-*
lasses, having both experienced and
heard of good results from this treat*
ment and knowing that the exA?nse
* of the use of this mixture is so small'
that failure to secure results wojild
not mean a heavy loss.
r
During the past few days I have
become thoroughly convinced that
y this treatment is extremely effective.
On Friday, the 9th instant, on our
pedigreed seed farm eleven live active
weevils were placed on a few stalks of
cotton upon which a few drops of the
I molasses mixture had been placed. A
*tfew hours later our experimenters
f/Minii oiirht riPAri wppvils and no live
?
ones on these stalks. On May 30,
V Mr. J. W. Goodson treated half of a
field with this mixture and on June 5
he carefully examined this field and
f hundreds of weevils on the untreated
cotton and very few on the treated
cotton. He is absolutely convinced
of the great value of this treatment,
as are Messrs. Randolph Gillespie,
t iGeorge Newsom and George W.
t Threatt, of this section. Mr. A. H.
Rogers, of Society Hill, and Mr. R.
c' Lee Bass, of Lanes, all of whom have
. made tests with this mixture. In,fact
I know of no'test that has been made
which failed to result in killing a high
per cent, of the weevils on tfie treated
cotton.
I believe that if every farmer will
* make an application of the calcium
arsenate-molasses mixture this week
r ' (he will make a great deal more cotton
than otherwise. Weevils are already
puncturing the forms on the old cot-!
{ ton and these should be carefully
picked up. Additional applications
L of the molasses mixture should be ap'
plied at least once per week for the
next four weeks and oftener if washed
off by rain.
< Take two pounds of calcium arsenate,
mix thoroughly with one gallon
* of warm water and then one gallon
of molasses (the cheapest black-strap
is best), applying to tne cotton witn
t, a mop. A drop or two in the bud of
. eacfo^ plant is sufficient. A very small
f quantity appears to be as effective a^
a large quantity. The main thing is
to get it on at once and get it prop,
erly distributed. After the cotton is
two or three feet tall a mixture of two I
^ and one-?half gallons of molasses, seven
and one-lialf gallons of water and
10 pounds of arsenate may be applied
with a spray pump. We got good results
with this mixture last year, using"
an orchard spray with 5 nozzles,
easily covering forty acres per day.
For some reason the extension buv
-oao,* ie nr,t ro/>nmmf>nrtin2 the USe?Of
V A. C/AU 1C UW & VWAAAM* ?
tjie calcium arsenate-molasses mixf
ture in fighting the weevil although
a circular issued by B. R. Coad, of the
Tallulah Laboratory and dated July
6, 1921, shows this method to be a
^ most effective means of early season
control under certain conditions and
# although the dusting method recommended
by them produced most disas
trous results in some instances in this
section last year. In view of theabundant
evidence of the effectivev
ness of the calcium arsenate-molasses
* treatment and especially in view of
the fact that its use only involves an
V expenditure of ten cents to twenty
cents per acre for materials per application
can be mixed, and applied
by any tenant rarmer, i cannoi understand
their attitude which is still
4 more difficult for me to understand
because the dusting method recomI
mended by them involves the cost of
several dollars per acre for poison, an
expensive machine and night work?
i a combination which is, under present
conditions, entirely out of the
% reach of the average tenant farmer
and of many land owners.
With the evidence at work I think
it probable that if the calcium arsen*
ate-molasses treatment is applied to
v every acre of cotton in the state four
times during the next month it may
result in an increase of at least a
Quarter million bales to the crop of
i the state this year.
DAVID R. COKER.
Hartsville, S. C., June 12, 1922.
^ c5Kore A bout Molasses
x and Calcium Arsenate
To the Eidtor of the Xews and
Courier: During the past few days
^ many farmers in this section have
^ made tests with various mixtures of
calcium arsenate and molasses, and
y"
d Molasses f
Effective Says
in every instance with which I am
familiar, they are delighted with the
results., On our own plantations we
have experimented with several mixtures,
and are now using a mixture of
one-half gallon warm water in which
is thoroughly mixed one pound of
calcium arsenate, and added to onehalf
gallon of black molasses. We
have found a convenient way to apply
is to use a quart bottle which is
filled three fourths full of the mixture.
Cut a trench out of one side of
t the cork, reverse the bottle and ap|
ply to the bud of the cotton by a
shaking or plugging motion, dropping
two or three drops in the bud
of the plant. This method requires
less of the mixture per acre and
keeps it thoroughly agitated all the
time. We find that none of the
mixture should be carried over
night, as it is hard to mix the next
morning. No more should be mixed
than can be used during the day
and it should be thoroughly stirred
before pouring into the bottles (or
buckets of the mop is used.)
Randolph Gillespie applied the
mollasses mixture to three different
fields on the 12th, 13th, and 14th.
This morning (16th) he spent more
than an hour in these fields -searching
for weevils. He found no live
weevils and no recently punctured
squares. There were many weevils
in the fields before the poison was
applied.
J. L. Jordan was picking about
fifty weevils per acre from his fields
before poisoning. He poisoned on
the 8th and 9th and on the 12th and
13th. He sent hands into the fields
to pick weevils and the hands could
find no weevils. Mr. Jordan and Mr.
Middleton went into the fields them'
selves and looked for some time and
could find none.
On Monday, the 12th -instant, we
poisoned the field near the Pedigreed
Seed company's gin and warehouses
in which numerous weevils had been
observed. On Wednesday we sent
about twenty hands into the field, offering
them two cents each for live
weevils. A few quit pretty promptly
on not finding any weevils. About*
fifteen, however, kept looking for
some time, but none found a weevil
after going over about seven
acres. Mr. Sharpe, who was in
charge of the gang, raised the price
to five cents per weevil, but still
failed to find any. Later the price
was advanced to ten cents per weevil,
and not a single nana iouna a weevu
after searching for two hours.
George J. Wilds, plant breeder
of the Pedigreed Seed company, carried
out the following experiments
during the past week.
/ Test No. 1.
At 1 p. m. on the 10th instant,
nine hills of cotton were treated^
with the molasses mixture. There
"nlonto in oaf>h hill and only
aic tnu f/iuuwu AM _ v
one of the plants in each hill was
treated. Twenty-one weevils were
placed on these nine hills, about onehalf
being placed on the poisoned
plants and the rest on the unpoisoned
plants. At 6 p. m., the nine hills
were examined with the result that
six living and six dead weevils were
found on the treated plants. At 2 p.
m., on the 12th the same plants were
! examined and two live and eight dead
weevils were found. At 9 a. m. on
the 14th, the plants vwere again examined
and no live weevils and ten
dead ones were found. As weevils
-move about considerably at this season
it is assumed that all that re
mained .on the treated hills were destroyed
within the test period. The
mixture used in this test was onehalf
gallon water, one gallon molasses
and two pounds calcium arsenate.
Test Xo. 2.
At 1 p. m. on the 10th instant, ten'
hills were treated with the following
mixture: Eight gallons of water,
three gallons molasses and ten
pounds calcium arsenate. And on the
ten hills twenty weevils were placed.
At 6 p. m., on the same day, four living
and five dead weevils were found.
At 9 a. m., on the 14th, one live weevil
and eight dead ones were found.
Mixture used above is very light and
dries up quickly.
Test Xo. 3.
Same mixture was used on test No.
3, under about the same conditions,
and 75 per cent, of the weevils succumbed.
Test Xo. 4.
In test No. 4 a mixture of five gallons
of molasses, five gallons of water
and seven and one-half pounds of
calcium arsenate was used on five
hills. Twenty weevils were placed on
the five hills. At 8 a. m. on the 13th.
no living and four dead were found.
On the 14th, a shower having fallen
during the night of the 13th, another
search for weevils was made and
three additional dead and live ones
or Killing
D. R. Colder
were found.
The results of these experiments
seem to show that where a liquid
containing at least one-half molasses
and at least three-fourths of a pound
^ a a4-a nAw nro 11 Ar? i o
UL UctiLi Uill ai senate pci i^anun 10
used, 100 per cent mortality occurs
within four days.
The fact that a good many of the
weevils placed on the plants were
unaccounted for does not modify the
value of the experiemnt as our experimenters
observed some weevils
to fly away immediately on being
placed on a plant.
The cotton surrounding these experiments
had not been treated with
poison of any ikind.
I have had two letters from G. M.
Xorris, of Vance, Orangeburg county,
S. C., who last year applied on or
about July 10 a mixture of one ajid
one-half pounds calcium arsenate and
one quart of hot water mixed with
one gallon of molasses. He stirred
the water and arsenate for
thirty minutes before1 mixing
with the mnlasses and aDDlied
with a mop. He says one-man or boy
can apply to four acres per day. He
gathered 900 pounds of seed cotton
per acre and only made 200 to 400
pounds per acre on the balance of
the farm. He does not consider this
test positively conclusive, owing to
the fact that he had no untreated
cotton in the field with treated cotton.
He is confident that the poison was
responsible for 'his comparative success,
in a section which was almost
wiped out by the weevils last year..
The cost of the mixture, Mr. Norris
OOT7C- TT-Or. twontv t A f wPn t V?fi VP ppnfs
?J) uuo m vuwj w w ?? w** > w ? -?
per acre.
All the farmers who have reported
on the use of the mixture in this section
agree that the cost is between
fifteen and twenty-five cents for materials.
Mr. Norris reports that most
of the farmers in his section are using
the molasses calcium arsenate
mixture this year, and so far as he
has heard they are pleased with the
results.
I cannot be certain that by the use
of calcium arsenate-molasses treatment
any farmer will make a crop of
cotton and I can only be sure that
unripr thp weather conditions we
have had here since May 30 that the
vast majority of the weevils have
been killed and that few weevils are
left in the treated fields and few
punctured squares are appearing. The
cost of the application is so slight
and the results appear so manifest
that I feel that every farmer can ill
afford not to invest twenty cents per,
acre application for this treatment,
and apply it several times at intervals
of a week or ten days. There is not
the slightest question that ihillions of
weevils have already been killed by
this treatment during the past ten
days, and it stands to reason tnat
his has done some good.
DAVID R. COKER.
Hartsville, S. C., June 18, 1922.
i? wm
INFANTS BODY IN RIVER.
?
Skull Crushed and Anchored in River
With Rock.
Chester, June 12.?A tiny infant
girl, probably only a few days old,
with skull badly crushed, was found
in Sandy river, about'two miles from
Chester late this afternoon. The
body was wrapped in a cement sack,
the neck of the sack being tied securely
with a rope, whidh was fastened
to a large rock and anchored in
the bottom of the river.
The discovery was made this afternoon
by two boys while seining in
t"he stream. Coroner J. Henry Gladden
was quickly summoned and he
brought Dr. Henry B. Malone, w^o
made an autopsy. Dr. Malone made a
very careful and thorough examination
of the infant which, he thought,
had probably been in the river for
fully two weeks. The skull was so
crushed that Dr. Malone thinks that
it unquestionably was done by a
heavy, blunt instrument.
Sheriff Anderson has given much
study to the situation, which is the
most mysterious his office has encountered
in some time, but at a late hour
tonight he has been unable to get a
single clue upon which to work.
Says Husband is Woman.
After living a year and a half with
a woman posing as a "husband,"
afraid to reveal the deception, Mrs.
Janette Simmons today caused the
arrest of Mrs. Irene Gaul.
Mrs. Simmons said Mrs. Gaul dressed
as a man and employed as a restaurant
cook, courted her and continued
the deception after their marriage.
She said three weeks later
she learned her "husband" was a woman.?Des
Moines (Iowa) Dispatch.
Servant girls in Germany earn on
an average of $1 per month.
I
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4 CARROLL Q Q fARRftll
1u. J. vniiuvuii
teaches.
watches Watchmaker
TO and
tell jeffe,er
truth Bamberg, S.C.
notice of election.
Notice is hereby .given that an election
will be held, at the Court House,
at Bamberg, South Carolina, on the
27th day of June, A. D. 1922, upon
the question of issuing coupon bonds
of Bamberg School District No. 14,
in a sum not exceeding- thirty-five
thousand dolllars ($35,000.00), payable
to bearer in denominations of five
hundred dollars ($500.00) each,
bearing interest at six (6) per cent.
yci auiium, yayoiu ic sciui*duuudii),
said bonds to be payable at such
times and at such place as the Trustees
of said , school district deem
best, provided that said bonds shall
not run longer than twenty (20)
years frofn date of issue thereof, the
proceeds from the sale of said bonds
to be used by the Trustees for the
purpose of erecting a high school
building in said school district and
furnishing the same, and for equipment
for maintaining public schools
in said schdol district, and for such
other purposes as is prescribed by
law.
The following named parties:
J. D. Copeland,
F. M. Moye,
B. T. Felder,
| are hereby named and appointed as.
I managers of said election.
The polls will be opened at seven
(7) o'clock in the morning and close
at four (4) o'clock in the afternoon
of said day, to wit: the 27th day of
June, A. D. 1922. Only qualified
electors will be allowed to vote in
6aid election who reside in said school
district. \
Those in favor of the issuing of
said bonds will cast a ballot with the
words "For Bonds," and those
against the issuing of said bonds will
cast a ballot with the words "Against
Bonds."
D. F. HOOTON,
Chairman,
n O CTYT.MOVS
VJ? v./. a^a?u*uvai(w|
J. M. GRIMES,
A. M. BRABHAM,
B. D. CARTER, 4
Trustees of Bamberg School District
No. 14, Bamberg, S. C.
Bamberg, South Carolina, June
13, 1922. 6-22
J. WESLEY CRUM, JR.
ATTORXEY-AT-LAW
Bamberg, S. C.
Offices in Herald Building
Practice in State and Federal Courts.
Loans negotiated.
S. G-. MAYFIELD
ATTORXEY-AT-LAW
Practice in all courts, State and
Federal.
Onnnsite Southern DeDOt.
BAMBERG, S. C.
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All children troubled with Worms have an on*
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GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC given regularly
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UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CABoT
LENA.
Scholarship and Entrance Examinations.
1 i
The examination for the award of
vacant scholarships in the University
of South Carolina and for admission
of new students will be held at the County
Court House July 14, 1922,
at 9 a. m.i Applicants must not be
less than sixteen years of age. When .
scholarships are vacant after July
14 they will be awarded to those r
making the highest average at ex- "
amination, provided they meet the
conditions governing the ward. Ap- i
plicants for scholarships should write .
to President Currell for scholarship
blanks. These blanks properly filled I
out by the applicant should be filed I
with President Currell by July 10. p
Scholarships are\worth $100, free tuition
and fees. Next session will op- 1
en September 20, 1922. For further
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NOTICE CONCERNING PLOWING
IN PUBLIC ROOADS.
I
Pursuant to recommendation of
the Bamberg County Grand Jury, the
landowners of the county cultivating
lands adjacent and adjoining public
roads are hereby urgently requested
not to plow into or allow their hands
to plow into the roads. Landowners
are requested to plant two or three
rows of crops adjacent to roads parallel
with the road, so that there may
be proper turning space without the
necessity of turning plows in the
roads. It is against the law to al
| low plows to damage me roaas,
j and it is an unnecessary practice.
The county spends large sums i
of money in road building, and the
roads belong to the people. I have
no desire to prosecute anybody, but
I must insist that this practice be
stopped immediately. The farmers
and tenants can cooperate in this respect,
and there should be no necessity
to bring action against anybody.
Full notice is being given before I
take such action.
W. B. SMOAK,
Supervisor.
. January 31, 1922. tf
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NOTICE OF PROOF OF CLAIMS.
?*m
Pursuant to an order signed by His
Jonor, Judge J. W. DeVore, bearng
date April 20, 1922, in the case
)f Richmond Dry Goods Company,
nc., et al., plaintiffs, against H. Ka esh,
defendant, in the Court of Comnon
Pleas of Bamberg County, no;ice
is given to all persons having
daims against the said H. Karesh
hat I will hold a reference at my
>ffice, Bamberg, South Carolina, on
:he 27th day of June, 1922, at 11 ^
)'clock, a. m., for the purpose of
learing proof on all claims against
;he said H. Karesh. Notice is fur- s
:her given in pursuance to said orler
of the Court that all. persons
'ailing to file their claims before me
)y said date will be barred.
? 1
J. J. BRABHAM, JR., j
Acting Master lor Bamberg Coun- j
y*May 29, 1922. 6-22 'Jj!
J. F. Carter B. D. Carter !
J. Carl Kearse i
Carter, Carter & Kearse i
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