The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, July 27, 1911, Image 10
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' You Wil
II All hats worth
I Calicos, not on
S in ourston
J Oil cloth per y
I Suits of clothe
I One lot of dre:
| that you may
| these.
All 12 l-2c whii
Ulil ?1flUI BMBMBMBBBWBPMP
WE are not i
of us befor
cause if you c
heart glad to s<
WE EAR!
i
j Conway,
HUSTLING IN THE PEAS.
On Progressive Farms the Traction
Engine Hauls Them to the Cannery.
Not the smallest part of the labor
connected with raising peas for the
cannery is getting the crop to the factory.
The ordinary way, of course, is
the wagon. Hut where great quantities
are canned peas are shipped di
42k z
"'a.
JOY 1UD12 FOR PEA. VINES.
rect to (ho factory located at a convenient
point.
The picture above gives an idea of
how the traction engine, which on
some farms stands idle most of the
year, can be put to good use as an
auxiliary in the work of moving unhulled
vines.
?? I"l* 'H*
Take your oldest son into part
*|* ncrship with you and let some
J* of the responsibility of manag- ?
Y ing the farm fall upon his shoul- M
T ders. This will please him, end
N if he is an ambitious, indue
T trious boy he will accelerate hie *?
It interest and pride in the work
Y of the farm. But do not forget
T that partnership means that H
J. your son is to share the profits
Y as well as the responsibility. **
X Without the profits his interest 11
4? will hardly increase.
l/llOOAf\r VAlin AHAHA
nfiHooHUu iuun onuro.
Experiments Abroad Show That Plants
Love Electricity.
There Is n field of wheat near Evesham
which is like no other field of
wheat in England, says the London
Graphic.
Up north, at Balmakewnn, however,
there is a field of oats which
looks very much like it. On both these
fields thero are rows of rough telegraph
poles, ubout seventy yards apart
and somo hundred yards between the
rows. i
On the top of each pole is an in-'
sulator ten times the size of those seen
on ordinary telegraph poles. The Inaulators
carry the usual telegraph
.wire. and. extended between the.rowe
'
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Next Pi
II Find Gi
$1.75 reduced to
ily the 5c kind, bt
e can be had at p
ard
s from
ss pants at $1.0(
not see again if y<
te goods now
.. *
entirely a new co:
e? If you have i
ome in you will
sll you.
HESTLY RE
~W
mere are straoas or nun wire, rastened
to the telegraph wire, about ten
yards apart.
Very soon there will be a difference,
perfectly visible to the passerby, be
tween the part of the crop which is
below the wires and the part which is
not The difference is duo to discharges
of electricity from the curious
network. It is connected to a wire
which runs to a little shed and from
that shed to a dynamo at the farm.
But it is what happens in the little
shed that matters. The current from,
the dynamo is transformed to high
tension and rectified by Sir Oliver
Lodge's well knowu valves. They look
rather like glass fire extinguishers, and
they glow in various tints.
There are about twenty-one miles of
wire on the Induction coll. Although
it is easy to produce in the shed the
lightings and cracklings associated
with wireless telegraphy, nothing ordinarily
happens but a slight sizzling
and a much greater generation of
ozone than is pleasant
The field wires are kept running at
the high tension of 100,000 volts.
Walking below the network bareheaded
one feels a sensatiou as if brushing
against spider webs.
For five years now this "crop shocking"
has been going on.
The result seems to have been in j
the case of wheat at Evesham an Increase
in crop of from 23 to 30 per
cent. Last year the iucrease was not
more than 23 per cent, but the electric
discharges had been much weaker than
in previous years. At Baliuakewan
there has been a marked difference in
oats.
Experiments have also been conducted
with strawberries and tomatoes at
Evesham, again with encouraging results
as to yield. One year the electrified
strawberries were found to be
much sweeter than usual.
Any one who has a dynamo or access
to on electric cable could begin
experiments in electrification on between
five and ten acres at an expenditure
of about $500. To deal with sixty
acres the expenditure would be about
$1,000. Apparently what electrification
does is to give the plants a kind
of electrical massage. That was Sir
Oliver Lodge's phrase. The discharges
are not needed on fine, sunny days,
but in dull weather they take the place
of sunshine.
Of course the whole problem of the
nutrition of plants is obscure. It is
perfectly clear that this discharge of
high tension electricity has done some*
thing to the crops treated, but what
exactly is in some doubt.
So far there Is no evidence of shocked
plants suffering from prematura
exhaustion due to overwork. Indeed,
there is some reason for believing that
tho effect of electrification is to give
the plant tone and go.
An American worker has shown that
electrical discharges help the microorganisms
of the soil, so electrification
may be doing something in that direction
too.
awdCURETM?uN<5
wmi dr. king's
new discovery
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AND ALL THROAT AND LUNG TROUBLES
ci/AffANrseo $AT/sMcro/)r
^mL^!2^?m??iS^S?S!mmt '
HOLLIHTER'%
ftocky Mountain Tea Nuggets
A *Bmy Medlolae for Buny People.
brings Golden Health and Renewed Vigor.
h aneciflo for Constipation, Indigestion, LIts
mil Kidney Trouble*. Pinuplcs, Ecr.eme. Impure
Blood, Baa Breath, flluggVH^Bowel*, Headache
-ml Dnckaelie. It's Rmitty Monnlaln Tea In tab- j
Jet form, 85 cent* a bo*./ Wnulno made by
holltstkr dnro ooittynv, 3tndtij???. wis.
iCLOEN NUGGETS EOS IttUOW .PEOPLE
<f& y\ , .> ;n. 'W
HOBBY HHBALP:
por to t
eat Bargi
/
$1.25
it all
e yard 5c.
15c.
$3 to $20
). Something
3U miss seeing
8c
!
ncern to to you, y
lot, come and gi\
be sure to see 5
;qvest yoi
nrci
nmmmmmmmmmmmammmmmmmm
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA
County of Horry.
Court of Common Pleas,
wuiie Jenkins, otherwise known as
William II Jenkins, Plaintiff,
against
Andrew Jenkins, William Jenkins, John
Jenkins, McClellan Jenkins, Boss Jenkins,
Ellen [Jenkins) Bear, Solomon
McQueen,, J M Lewis and George J
Holiiday, Defendants.
COPY SUMMONS FOR RELIEF ,
(Complaint Not Served )
To the Defendants: Andrew Jenkins
William Jenkins, John Jenkins, McClellan
Jenkins, Boss Jenkins, Ellen |
I Jenkins] Best, Solomon McQueen, J
M Lewie and George J Holiiday,
You are hereby summoned and r
oulred to answer the complaint in this ac ;
ilon wMoh has been filed in the office o
the Clerk of the Court of Common Pless,
for the said county, and to serve a copy
of your answer to the said complaint on
the subscriber at his offfce at Conway,
C\, "within twenty days after the service
hereof, exclusive of the day of luch ser-i
vice; and if you fnil to answer the complaints
with the time aforesaid, the plaintiff
in this action will apply to the Court
for the relief demanded in the complaint
May 25th, A D IA11.
H H WOOD WARD,
Plaintiffs Attorney.
W L BRYAN, CCCC P.
To Andrew Jenkins William Jenkins,
John Jenkins, McClellan Jenkins Boss
Jenkins and Ellen (Jenkins) Best, absent
defendants:
Please take Notice: That the summons
in the foregoing stated action, Is a copy
and also the complaint In said action, 1
were filed in the office of the Clerk of the t
Court of Common Plena for Horry county j
ul Conway, S C., on the 27th day of May,
A I) 191 /.
II H WOODWARD,
Plaintiffs Attorney,
W L BRYAN, C C O P. Uwl7.
THURSDAY ?fPLY 27, 1911
he Post Office
ains in Anything
I Our shoe side is complete. W
a big lot of fall shoes and s<
over that can be had at coj
up a great shoe trade in the
II * think we are entitled to fo
shoe that can be bought for <
than any merchant in the
see if if this is not right.
A few ladies hats that we wa
be bought at the same kind
^ ^ ^ am * ^
mu nave neard of us before, and
'e us a look at least and we will
something that you want and 3*<
Jr presence at .
STcompany
Soi
No Matter How V
The First Time , "
A DOLLAR BIL1
f \ was ever able to reach
I f . ^ Shirts as high in quali[\
V - ty and style as these?
Mf I HALLMARK
\ | SHIRTS
* / ^*1 > Just opened up. Don't take
r flj^l Tj our word for it?come in and
rl/ |j?|j measure a dollar bill against
aU J, ||1 them. never saw their
H;| tf% equals at the price.
{ Vu I I $1 ""J Wore.
? ^ J fed[ Plain, Fancy or Pleated Negligee?* *>
^
% } ^ ?
Conway Bargai
AND LIVE STOCK CC
CONWAY. S0U1
7
I'
??
I
la
III
io wear
e have in already
Dme low cuts left *
st. We have built
county which we
r we sell the best
a smaller percent
Rnrn. Come ond *
mt you to see can
of price.
no doubt bought
I be satisfied, be>u
will make our
ANY time:.
\
i
I
nth Carolina .
find Blows.
\
f
I
One ship sails east and another west,
While just the same winds blow,
'Tis the set of the sails and not the
gales,
Which settles the way our competitors ^
go.
I
1 We have set our sales to
close out all spring: And
summer goods before going
on the nothern markets.
1
See us for dry goods,
shoes, hats, caps and a full
I
line of groceries at prices
that no other concern will)
give you. Half profit at the
store and half at the stable
makes it easy for everybody ^
' but our competitors.
See us for buggies, wagons
, and harness, cheap for cash
or on time.
r
in House
O AMV
/in i
H CAROLINA.
\ .