The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, February 24, 1916, Page THREE, Image 3
GET READY NOW
4, F3P. SPRING GI?EK
' i
T.rcc For Planting (iow Or.
Ha..* a;u! Ground Must
E; Ready.
ft)
Clemson College, Feb. 20.?The
fc.iison for spring garden preparatiens
is here ami everything shov '
io got in readiness for planting \ane,|
"wl ich for soi^e vegetables wil* scon j
Va here. The information g'.eu below
is to be found in fuller form in,
bulletin No. IG6, Home G Honing in
South Carolina, which is to be obtained
by addressing the South Carolina
Hmporimont Station at Clemson Col|
lege. I
The facts given below will be in the
| following order: first the vegetable;
second, quantity of seed or plants to j
sow for a family of six; third, when
to sow in the open ground; fourth,
depth io plant seed; fifth, width of
lows; sixth, whether in hills or drill;
afefonth, distance between plants in.
row,
I
Li Garden pea, 1 quart, January 15 to j
y March 20, 4 to 5 inches ?dcep, 3 feet,
^rill, 18 inches.
wd Kale, one-half ounce, February 15
to March 15, one-half inch deep, 3
(feet apart,.
*' Lettuce, I packet, February 15 to
? pril 1, one-fourth inch deep, lo inehfl'
Ij-iills, (i to 10 inches apart.
\rclery, .1 packet, February 15 to
March 15, one eight inch deep, 5 to G
feet, G to 8 inches a.}art.
[ Onion (Sets) 2 quarts, February 15
t to April I, one and one-half inches
deep, 13 inches, hills, 4 to G inches
apa rt.
Parsley, 1 packet. February 15 to
Ufbrch 15, one-half inch (loop, 3 feet,
hills, 12 inches apart.
Beet, 1 ounce. March 1 to April I,
one-half inch deep, 3 feet, drill, " to <1
inches apart.
Carrot, one-half ounce, March 1 to
April 1, one half inch deep, .'? feet,
drill, 3 inches apart.
Parsnip, one-half ounce, March 1
to April 1, three-fourth inch deep, 3
feet, drill, 4 to 5 inches apart.
Irish potato, one-half bushel.
March 1 to April 15, 4 to 5 inches
deep, 3 feet, hills, 12 to 15 inches
apart.
Radish, 1 packet, March 1 to April
1, one-half inch deep, 18 inches, drill,
1 to 2 inches apart.
^Spinach, one-fourth pound, March.
T \r> April 1, three fourths to \ inch
deep, 3 feet, drill, 4 I., (I inches apart.
SCIATICA'S PIERCING PAIN
To kill the nerve pains of Sciatica
you can always depend on Sloan's
Liniment. It penetrates to the seal
of pain and brings ease as soon us it
is applied. A great comfort too v?ith
Jjiean's is that no rubbing is required.
Sloan's Liniment is invaluable fe?*
stopping muscular or nerve pain of
any kind. Try it at once if you suffe r
with Rheumatism Lumbago, Sore
Throat, Pain in Chest, Sprains, Bruises,
etc. It Is excellent for Neuralgia
m>'' Headache. 25c. at ail Druggists.
?adv
, fr ?
,"A printed letter head, (especially
; >.] 1 he farm has been given an at'
.|icUv,o name, as every farm should
) v:ill create a favorable impression."
says Clemson College. The
Herald will print your letter heads
j neatly and at a very reasonable price.
( nil and see the Herald man, Mr.
M Farmer!
A o
S There is more Catarrh in this seclion
of the country than all other disC.(1I?PR
nil I lowflinr o:i(l n*-0!l lr.r.?
% > < | r ... 1/ V?? W* ' ^ | C% I v | VI i I l* * i L I i V? 1 fclJV l1
few years was supposed to bo incurable.
For a great many years doctors
pronounced it a local disease and prescribed
local remedies, and by constantly
failing to cure with local treat
ment, pronounced it incurable.
Science has proven Catarrh to be a
institutional disease, and therefore
requires constitutional treatment.
Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by
F. ,J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is
the only Constitutional cure on the
market. Jt is taken internally. It acts
directly on the blood and mucous surfaces
of the system. They offer one
hundred dollars for any case it fails
to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials.
Address: P. J. CHENEY & CO.,
Toledo, O.
*'Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Take Hall's Family Pills for con_j.i
SUIJUtlUII.?ttUV.
0
Notice of Dissolution.
r I
Notice is hereby given that the co-j
partnership heretofore existing be-,
twcen C. K. Gerrald and Hugh B.
Jofeftson, under the firm name of Ay-1
nor Supply Co., has been dissolved by
mutual consent; and that the undersigned
will no longer be' responsible
or liable for the obligations of said
firm.
lit pd. C. K. GERRALQ.
ft
INCREASES CREAM
rm ONE-FOURTH
r
Liy Saving All Cream, Separator
May Earn Enough to
Pay Fcr Itself.
CLomson College, Feb. 21.?Would
; ou, Mr. Dairy Farmer, you who have
four or more cows?would you care to
invest a small sum in a machine that
would add one-fourth to the cream
proceeds, provide fresh skimmilk for
feeding to the young stock, enable
you to get sweet cream at any sensor
of theycar, and save the housewife no
civ' of labor? Would you stretch a
point to get a machine like this?
Then, say the dairy experts at Clem
sor College, buy a good cream sparator
Farmers who use a cream separu
tor are frequently amazed at the increase
in the quantity of butter they
make. It is not uncommon to hear
a farmer say that he makes as much |
butter from four cows as he used to
make from five when he was raising
cream in pans or? crocks* Moreover,
the saving of labor and the case with
which sweet cream can be obtained at
any season of the year are other separator
advantages that are worth
even more ttinn saving in butterfat.
;Skimmilk fed fresh from the separate'1
is warm arrd has saved the lives
of many enlvcu that would have boor,
fed on cold milk or 011 no milk at all.
I)o not make the mi ;i:oke of bovine
to-j sipuII t>r too cheap a separator.
One < f the standard makes will last
!for year:: and is one e l' the best h vestments
that a farmer can ntrake.
Fa cry farmor who has as ir.apy a: j
four cows should have a diary scpr.- j
ra'.or.
NOTICE OF SALE.
j TJruler ami by virtue of tko decree
arl judgment of tne court made by
his Honor Frank B. Gary, Presiding
'judge, in the esse of Underwriters j
; of Greensboro, a Corporation, Plain\
tiffs vs. Sam T. Creech, and J. A.
Lewis. Trustee in Bankruptcy of
| Sam. T. Creech, Bankrupt, Defendants,
and dated the 1st day of Novcm
j her A. D. 1915, I, the undersigned
! J. A. Lewis, Sheriff of Horry Coun;
tv. wili sell at public auction to the
highest bidder before the Court
House door at Conway, in Horry
County, and State of South Carolina,
dining legal hours of sale, on
isrleadsy in March next, it being the
Oth day of srid month, all and sirgu'ar
those certain lands sitc.uto ir
Horry County, and described as follows,
to wit:
Tract Vn 1 All
...... . , < Hi HIIU ' I I v< ' ' 1 I
tract of land containing scvrnty-siv
. (VO) acres, known as a part of Id e
Long: Point tract of kind, situate in
the Simpson Creek Township one
i and on? half (1 1-2) miles from the
town of I .oris, in TVbrry Cour.t v,
South Carolina, and represented on
a plat by N. E. Hardwick. surveyor,
dated in 1011, as follows: Beginning
1 at a mile post on the Long Point
j read, thence running S. S9 E. 21 1-2
chains to a corner in Hay, thence
due North 1ft 1-2 chains to a corner
in Bay about run of Big Branch,
thence with the run of Big Branch
i North-wcstwardly course to a' stake
2>:n by Big Branch, thence S. 21 W.
5 1-2 chains to a stake on Long
Point Road, at J. Q. Graham's line,
thence with said road to the beginning
point, a distance of 37.80
I chains: lying on the East side of
! Long Point Road .and bounded by
! lands of J. Q. Graham and others,
1 1>> said road and by the run of Big
! Branch: known locally as a part of
i
i the Todd land which was conveyed
to me. the said Sam T. Creech by I).
J. Butler and George C. Butler, by
their joint deed dated the 18th day
of March A. D. 191.1, and which is
duly recorded in the office of thei
I Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas I
j in and for Horry County, South CarI
olina, in Book of Deeds "LLL", at
page 803.
Also that certain lot of land in
the town of Boris, in the County of
i Horry and State of South Carolina,
situate on the East side of, and
fronting on, the right of way of the
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad, and
bounded on the North by Lot No. 6,
owned by J. V. Collins, on the East
by D. J. Butler, on the South by lot
No. 4, owned by B. S. Butler, and on
the West by the said railroad right
of way, being known as Lot No. 5,
measuring twenty-five (25) feet
front on said right of way by fifty
(50) feet in depth, and being the
certain lot conveyed to me by P. C.
Prince by his deed dated November
27th, A. D., 1912.
THE HORRY 'HTJRAIj
HOW m \Y.i[fl I0J
(Two branches of grape vine3 th*
That on the left was properly pruned.
The habits of growth and fruitbearing
of the bunch grape make it
easy to prune and the work can be
done much more systematically than
won most otiier fruits. Furtliermoro,
it will stand very severe pruning without
injury. 'I he fruit is borne 011 new
shoots from the preceding year's
growth and unless the vine is continually
cut back, the fruiting area
will become farther removed from the
main stem each year and will produce
long, naked canes, which serve no
purpose other than to convey plant
food to the more remote fruit-bearing
parts. Moreover, if the vine is left to
itself, more fruit will form than the
plant can properly develop. The important
objects in pruning, then, are
to get the most bearing wood in the
smallest space and to limit the bearing
wood according to the ability of
the vine to produce well developed
fruit. Not infrequently vines are allowed
?o retain too much bearing wood
and there is a consequent waste of
energy in the production of many
small, inferior bunches. For beat results,
our common varieties more than
four years old should be pruned so as
to bear not more than from seventy
to one hundred clusters.
The method of pruning is determined
in part by the kind of training
practiced. There are several good
systems. One oT the simplest, which
is also one of tire boHt for the South,
is that known as the double Kni<Tin
system of training, in which are developed
two trunks, eacih of which
carries two arms trained to a twowire
trellis.
Use a omv or two-year-old vine for
transplanting and cut back the top to
: three or four strong buds. That vigorous
canes may he produced, rub off
; all sheets that appear during summer,
except the strongest three. Only two
shoots are necessary, but it is well
j to leave three, iri case one should be
|
I i? iSoi:xSdewn
th? feed bill an
1HK REP i
i apr Morse and imli
' fSpr It's f**methinp; 1 hi-, horses an
: appef.il c?starts the saliva
*al ?*tjwiiior to an all grain
mules a treat, and at the same
Wm Our RED SKIRT (first grade)
contains Corn, Oats, Ground A1
and pure cane .molasses, and ana
Protein 10%; Put 3%; Pin
PIEDMONT HORSE & MULE MOLASSF
12%; Carbohydrates 63%.
fSff AMP FOX HORSE & MULE MOLASSES FF.l
' I PERFECTION HORSE & MUL5 FEED
! $ Protein 12%; Pat 3%.; Fii?r? 12%; Carbol
i | gram and ground Alfalfa Meal.
i f RED SHIRT ]
j ^ First Gmdo: A balanced ration ccataii
5 Icceps thein in jroori condition, increases t
i nt a reduced conl of fcedinji. Contains j
j IjN Ground Alfalfa, Pure Cane Molasses and
i ^ Fibre 12%; Curhnliydiatu) 4>0%.
! jfePlEPMOWT DAIRY FEB) J
I i REP SHIRT HOC FEED
i S iYvS$v w-nnufacturc also REIi SHIItT ScraU
|H "SPEH EGGS A WEEK" HEM MASH [
ltice, Cottonseed Meal, Cow Pens. M<
Z /\wV Protein IS%; Pat 1%; Fibre 12%;
I A? shown on the bags in our ad.nenrl
I 2&SW3S. products, even to the br.g* and twii
l/>0vluilwV wtt a i it* ir
We also tarry ,
^cp/ Sift ^YV ^ur a* "^ov
?iy/?""N / ?T ^\ on Hcientific print
W K^- V, / JB Vy Kreatest^ nourUht
|v jjjr J Molony
CHARI'E!
Ttw Quinine That Ooaa Not Affect The Head
Because of its tonic and laxative effect, LAX A.
T1VK I1ROMO QUININKis better than ordinary
Quinine and does not cp.usc, nervousness nor .
ritiuitiif in hcn<l. Remember the full name and ;
look for the signature of K. W. GROVK. 2Sc. ;
0 j
TERMS of Sale Cash. Purchaser
to pay for papers.
Conway, S. C., February 7th, 191G.
J. A. LEWIS,
Sheriff of Horry County.
H. H. WOODWARD,
Plaintiff's Attorney.
D. CONWAY, S. C.
'ME BUNCH GRAPES I
|
i I?i ?? ?wi* i ? mm ?m.- ..
\
it grew side by side In the same row.
That on right was not pruned at all.)
: Injured. The following winter (af*er
I constructing the trellis) remove tiio
i weakest of the three canes and cut
back those remaining, one at the first
j wire and the other at the top wire.
Securely tied to the wires, they form
i the permanent trunks of the vine.
in me tniru year, select two strong
1 canes coming out near the extremity
of each trunk and train them along
the wires in opposite directions to
form arms. Then shorten them back
to a length of two, three, or four feet,
this depending on the vigor of the
vine. Ail other canes are cut off close
to the trunk.
Pruning in the fourth and subsequent
years consists in cutting buck
new canes to two buds or entirely renewing
the arms by cutting them out
and training new canes to take their
1 places. It is not always possible to
renew an arm, because of the probable
lack of a strong cane to take its
i place. On the other hand, the practice
of cutting back canes to two
buds, continued a long time, will
cause a thick, objectionable mass of
spurs to accumulate along the arms.
The most desirable way is to combine
the renewal plan with the spur incth:
od and thereby suit the pruning to
j me vigor ami general lorra 01 tne vine.
| In eases where it soms best to prune
' an arm to spurs, thin tliem to a (listanee
of six to eight inches apart to
! provent the setting of more fruit than
the vine can properly develop.
The best time to prune the bunch
grape is in spring, just before the buds
come out. Do not delay until the
season is too far advanced. That
pruning produces results is shown in
the accompanying illustration, the
only difference between these two
bunches being that the vine of one
was pruned, while that of the other
wafj not.
' T. J. CR1DER,
, Associate Professor of Horticulture.
Clemson Agriculture College.
"il^^ -mI
rn fccdiui
x _ _ _ _ _ pSLOMY&ty.RTERCO ?
5 HIRI %
iMai * core
j kuvknoQE& A ww/ m \
i
id mules 15I;c?j*;vcm them an
running and aids civrcstinii. 'igi*?^?n
l'eeil. Give yoi^r horses and
: time save money.
Horse and Mule Molasses Feed
faltii, made appetizing with suit
lyzcs as follows:
re 12%; Carbohydrates ?>7% ;
'C PTFF) Second Grade? Analyzes; Pro- it
"l.LL.L.r tein 9W/o: Fot 2 Vj.lh\ Fibre ^
PH (3rd Aade) This Analyzes; Protein 9%;^
Fat 2%; Fibre 12%; Carbohydrates 55%. ^
Mixed) Wc manufacture nlno n dry mixed (no Z \
ssos) Horse and Mule Feed, which analyzes: I
tydralcs &1c/v This is composed of struiKht * 1
V I
DAIRY FEED J
nine Molasses. Cattle are very fond of it? >1
he (low and enriches (he quality of the niitk \
ground (.torn, C. S. Meal. Wheat Middling, ; 1
Kali. Analyzes: Protein 1 ; Fut 3%; *>
V
-Analyzes: Protein 12%; Fat 2V?.% ; Fibre N
Iralca .'>5%.
o? Di.ges'ive Tankage, Ground Corn. Rice '
r fattening. Keeps the hogs in irood' ondilion. fyn)
h reed ur.d TAVJ SKIRT iiaLy Chick Feed. .mj
'ompoaed of Ground, Ctrn, Ground J/j. I|
lata. Ground Wheat, Parley. Maize,
. at Meal and Linseed Meal. Analysis; :rr.~i
Carbohydrates lO'/c. f
y all of our feed is made from Carolina
>e. Wc are, therefore, in the* market
Hay and any other kind of Hay 5??Srii??
stock of GRAIN, IT AY
Coroner Mansfield was notified
that the body of a colored man had
been found washed ashore on Edingsville
beach, Edisto Island. From the
description given of the body and the
clothing found thereon, there is a
strong belief that it may be the remains
of one of the twelve colored
fishermen who were lost when the
mysterious disappearance of the fishing
smack Dart occurcd on Jan. 22.
TO m FARM'S COST J
I MAKE AH INVENTORY
I ?
,
iTake Stock of Everything Be-'
fore Crop Scaco.i
i Begins.
Clem son College, Feb. 22.?One cl !
the first steps toward finding
leaks and increasing profits on the
farm is to take an inventory of all
i
property included m the larmstcud
such us land, buildings, stock, equi;
mcnt, feedstuff's, etc. This is a gocd
, ti;r.c to make such an inventory ii
South Carolina and another invcntor>
'should be made at the close of tlu
yg.d comp:*.red with t' ,
;-. c r.cw.
Use an ordinary composition book,
jgiving each subject a page to itself:
I this is, a page to farm implements.
(cnc to cattle, etc. Inventory each
|class in detail first. Then at the end
of this detail inventory make a sum'rr.ary
for the whole farm. In ruling
,t if the pages for an inventory, leave
a column for which may be placed the
values ht the end of the cropping
year, in order that a comparison for
I the year may be easily made.
In deciding on the value of things, [
! .llow for an annual depreciation as
(follows: in buildings, 5 per cent; in
I machinery, 10 per cent; m\ horse:
'more than five years old, 10 pen ventin
cows. S per cent.
The following headings arc suggested
for the inventory:
Land.
Farm buildings.
| Household goods.
mtu implements and vehicles.
Fertilisers, including manure.
Horses and mules.
Cattle.
1 logs.
Sheep.
Poultry.
Cotton. ,
Grain. t
\ lay.
Miscclkmeous feedstuffs.
Cash on hand and in bank.
Paid up life insurance.
Money due you.
If such an inventory is made at
regular intervals and if from the total
amount owing, a farmer will always
have an accurate idea of the
net worth of his holdings.?Extension
Division, Clemson Agricultural College.
o
MANY PEOPLE DON'T IyXOW.
A sluggish liver can cause a pcrsoi
an awful lot of misery. Spells of dizziness,
headaches, constipation am
biliousness arc sure signs that you
uvor needs help. Take I)r. King's Nov
Life Pills and see how they help ton<
up the whole system. Fine tor tin
stomach too. Aids digestion. Purifies
the Hoed and clears the complex
on. Only 25c. at Druggists.?adv.
"A pointed letter head, (especially
her. the farm has been given an at activc
name, as every farm should
ot will create a favorable impiesIon.."
savs Clcason College. The
Herald will print your letter heads
ut'.y and at a very reasonable price
a!! and sec the Herald man, Air.
'arincr!
o
iiUSSAKB RESCUED
rfcfT'Aill ? e r>i c,r r* r.
U&rAIKIRti Wlfl
\ftcr Fonr Years of Discouraging
Conditions, Mrs. Bullock Cave
lip ia Despair. Husband
Came <to Rescue.
Catron, Ky.?In an interesting lettc:
rom this place, Mrs. Bcttie Bullock
writes as follows: "I suffered ior four
years, with womanly troubles, and during
his time, 1 could only sit up for a little
while, and could not walk anywhere at
ill. At times, I would have severe pains
tn my left side.
The doctor was called in, and his treatment
relieved me for a while, but 1 was
;oon confined to my bed again. After
that, nothing seemed to do me any good.
( had gotten so weak I could not stand,
ind 1 gave up in despair.
At last, my husband got me a bottle of
^ardui, the woman's tonic, and I comnenced
taking it. From the very first
iose, I could tell it was helping me. 1
:an now walk two miles without its
iring me, and am doing my work."
If you are all run down from womanly ]
roubles, don't crive un in d<??nair Tr?
3ardui, the woman's tonic. H fias helped j*
more than a million women, in its 50 1
/ears of wonderful success, and should
jurely help you, too. Your druggist has j
Kid Cardui for years. He knows what r
t will do. Ask him. He will recom- |j
nend it. Begin taking Cardui today. j t
WriU to: Chattanooga Medlclna Co.. Ladles' |?
\dvisory Dept.. Chattanooga. Tenn., for StxckU L
Instructions on your casa and 64-page book.* Home 1
fraatiaat far WaoMa." Mm la plaia wrappar. fM B \
THREE
business Methods
for ouh farmers
Mow Coming Mere ar.c! More in
to Use Among
Them
MEAT BUSINESS HEAD
ONE STEP BETTET
%
Good Looking Letter II vJ is
Conspicuous and Carries
Good Impression.
-
Clomsor. College, Feb. 22. It i~> becoming
increasingly necessary fcr
the farmer to be a business man and
it is advisable for him to imitate the
methods of city business men, "ho
have been at the art a longer time
than lie and have developed it move.
It is chiefly in what might be railed
little things that the difference between
the business-like and the unbusinesslike
farmer is revealed and i:i
none more than in the business letters
of each.
There is really little reason why ?\
lawyer or a merchant or a manufacturer
should show more courtesy to
the farmer than the farmes shows to
them, in the matter of correspondence.
Vet that is the way it s^cirs
to work when one compares the '.enters
of the two sides.
The cost of neatly printed stationery
will not hit the expense side < C a
farmer's ledger hard enough to
count, while the lisp of it is morn
than likely to do fine things for the
profit side. A printed letterhead
(especially when the farr> has been
given an attractive name, as eve-y
farm should ho) will erode a f. v able
impression, will advertise the
farm and its products, will idcv.tiD/
the writer no matter how he scrawls
his signature, and will make him and
all his family feel a little extra fide
in the farmstead.
In South Carolina, and the South
generally, farmers who use
letterheads are as yet eompaiuuvjly
few and the number is still small
enough to make a good looking farm
letterhead conspicuous. For this
reason, ihose who begin this practice
at once will got the benefit of the extra
publicity that goes with novelty.
o
COPY
SUMMONS FOR RELIEF
(Complaint Not Served.)
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA,
County of Horry.
M. C. Dusonhury, Trading- as Dusenbury
& Co., Plaintiff
Against
H. K. Marlow, F.niorprise (Irocery
Company, a Corporation and I. J.
Hardy, I)ofen<lants.
TO THE DEFENDANTS H. K.
Marlow, Enterprise Crocery Company,
a Corporation and 1. J. Hardy,
YOU ARE HERERY SUMMONi
ED and required to answer the complaint
in this action, which has been
filed in the ofV.ce of the Clerk of the
Court of Common Pleas, for the said
County, and t.i serve a copy of your
answer to the said complaint on the
subscriber at his oflice at Conway, S.
C., within twenty days ; ft or the service
hereof; exclusive of the d: y of
such service; and if you fail to answer
the complaint within the time
uiorcsaiu, ino pJamtii'f in this action
will apply to the Court for the relief
demanded in the complaint.
Dated January 28th. A. I). 191('?.
H. H. WOODWARD,
Plaintiff's Attorney.
To Enterprise Grocery Company,?
Absent Defendants:
Take notice that the complaint in
the foregoing stated action and the
summons, of which the foregoing is
a copy were filed in the office of tho
Clerk of the Court of Common
Pleas, at Conway, S. C., on the 9th
day of February A. D. 101 (>.
W. L. BRYAN, (L. S.)
C. C. C. P.
H. H. WOODWARD,
Plaintiff's Attorney.
Gov. Manning preaches "economy,"
Fie urged in a special message that
;he legislature pass certain hills, but
lot a word did he say about passing
i bill for the legislature to moot once
ivery two years instead o! once a
/ear. triennial sessions would save
he taxpayers many, many thousands
>f dollars. What's the matter with
>ur Economic Executive ??Orange.
>urg News.