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^ . . . I Address .11 AMONG I inquiries to m. w. wall. Articles in thi? Conway, S. C. ^ l; how HOG CH >lera IS SPKEAD.j Clemson Collide, S. C.?Hog chol-j . era is to hogs just about what TyI phoid Fever co man; and the ways I in which th cholera germ is carried are probab'.; well known, if noi f better kv .1, tuau the ways in which i most (. ...e human diseases are spree:!. I. carcasses of a hog which died with cholera is thrown out in the woods, or left unburied or unburned, buzzards, dogs, and other animals are attracted. The buzzards, after gorging themselves with the infected I inoaf on,l 41- ~ ? - J ? .iivHk, ??11vt getting me: germs on mcir feet ami bills, fly away to alight on uninfected premises, most probably in the hog pen or pasture. They drop the germs there and the hogs take it up. The dogs, after having eaten their full, take u bone home with them, probably passing right through the hog pasture on their 1 way back to the house, and in this way also, the germ is brough to un1 anfeeted premises. Other animals i might spread it in similar ways. Veterinarians learned about this by careful study and watching, and went to work to get laws {passed requiring the carcasses to be buried or burned, j South Carolina's law requires the car cass to be buried six feet deep, or to be burned, and .fixes a penalty of .$.*?.00 for each violation. In the classification of "other animals'' we should include man; because, a man walking around the farm of a nieghbor whose hogs have cholera and then com inn; back 1 n his own premises, can carry the germ just as easily as tin4 buzzard or the dog. You sec, .germs are not at all particular about what they ride. This particular germ seems to be a! mighty good rider too; he will go down stream for quite a distance in branches and creeks that drain infected premises; he will take the train with hogs that are being shipped, and stays right on the train after the hogs get off, making the car dangerous to other hogs' health until after it has been disinfected; and, he will come with hogs from infected premises to uninfected premises. This last is a very common way of spreading the disease, hut a way which need not be fwired if the new hogs are kept to themselves until their freedom from disease has been' established. There are other ways in which the disease is spread, but the 1 above are the most common. If care is taken by all the people in a com- i i niunity there need not be much loss from this disease. o Lax-Fos, A Mild, Effective Laxative & Liver Tonic Does Not Gripe nor Disturb the Stomach. In addition to other properties, Lax-Fos 1 Contains Cascara in acceptable form, a , stimulatingLaxativeandTonic. Lax-Fos acts effectively and does not gripe nor disturb stomach. At the same time, it aids digestion,arouses the liver and secretions and restores the healthy functions. 50c. o ' ' - $6.50 Best Flour Made at $6.50 per barrel, cash. Only 410 barrels in stock. Special prices on rice, sugar, , I coffee, etc., vor 30 days to I Horry customers. ( Pat.lm.etto | Grocery Co. COOPER ... MULLINS I Capital and Surplus $80,000 R UB-MY-TIS M Will cure your Rheumatism Neuralgia, Headaches, Cramps, Colic, Sprains, Bruises, Cuts and Burns, Old Sores, Stings of Insects Etc/ Antiseptic Anodyne, used internally and externally. Price 25c. j IQRRY'S PROdBESSIVE F Department are Prepared by )eal With the Problems of the H County Farmer. LOOK TO YOUR LIVE STOCK. Clomson College, S. C.?The impetus given the live-stock industry in South Carolina by the organization of wo packing houses, and the establishment of cattle markets at different points in the State, should cause the man who keeps live-stock to look towards that part of his business with more interest and care. First, he should look towards improving the grade of his cattle or hogs by using a pure-bred sire. The day has already passed when lfTv premium is paid on high grade cattle for slaughter, and, as the market develops, which it is sure to do, this premium will become more pror.ounc , ed. Second, he should provide cheap food in plenty to carry his cattle until the marketing season at the lowest cost of production. Silage, corr stover, and pasturage are cheap foods, and can be used to a much laiger extent in the state than thev uio used at present. Bulletin No. IK of the Extension Division of South Carolina furnishes interesting anu valuable information about forage crops that can be gro\vit? in the State. Third, he should ."safeguard his stock against contagious and infectious flisPJIKOC Hrw. * ? W^ ^ 1 UUl'J J culosis, Black Leg a,ud other diseases may be carried to the premises by I careless hands, or by the farmer him-1 srlf. The loss of six or eight hogs, or j three or four hea^ of cattle through J these diseases may kill all the profit ! for the year where the amount of live-stock is small. The Vetrmar\ | Department of the state college is i ready and anxious to cooperate with ] the farmer in preventing these dis- j cases, and it will mean considerable; in dollars and cents to the state, and to the individual farmer, to have the. j diseases stamped out, or even well under control. Fourth, NOW is the time the farmer should act. A .pure-bred sire NOW will* give higher grade stock j fei market by the time the packing houses open .-a year or a year and a! half hence. Peas planted NOW will j give good forage for the cattle this winter. Caution used NOW will sav< the loss of hogs and cattle by disease. o "No leg no horse, no trunk no tr.?c.' Therefor.?, keep the trunks of your fruit trees in a healthy condition an< epcl diseas.es and insects by washing the trunks from the branches to the ground with tree trunk wash. This is very inexpensive and is easily applied with a paint brush. Tree Wash F?r Trunks Lump lime 20 poundrScap (whale oil, homemade, or turpentine) 3 pound Sulpher 4 pound; Water 25 gallon? Making the Wash. "Dissolve shaved soap in thre.e gallons of hot water. Make a thin pastor sulphur and add to the soap solution. While the lime is slacking in : half barrel the mixture is poured ovoit and the whole is gradually dilutee to 25 gallons, which is enough t< wash three hundred trees eight y.ear: old. Peach Tree Borer. Between July 1st and 10th pull ii] th.'" earth around the-base of the peach tree to a height of 8 inches: take these mounds down Oct. 15. Tlu reason for the above recommendation is as follows: 1. The peach tree borer has foir life history stages:?(a) The egg? laid in the fall hatch into (b) worms: these worms when full grown come out of the ti'Oe into the ground and form the (e) pupa, or resting stage. This stage is passed about an inch from the tree and about an inch below the surface of the soil. From these pupa the (d) full grown, beautiful, clear-winged moths emerge, which lay the eggs for th.e next year's genoru i inn ?i *- 1 l imkiuiii a iici c ia umy une generation each year. If you mound too early many of the worms in the tree will work upward. They begin to come out int0 the soil July 1st, and continue to come out until about August 22nd. If you nr-ound th.e trees as above stated then the pupa has about 8 inches of soil over it, through which the moth cannot dig to come to the surface. The Keep Your Hogs Healthy. Keep your hogs healthy with Bigler's guaranteed Anti Hog Cholera Tonic?in 30 and 50c sizes. Delivered ficc. P. F. HARDEE, Myrtle Beach, S. C., R. F. D. No. 1?Box 29. 2t?pd THE HOBBY HERA LI ARMEBS I^SoilBuilding I I ?? and f Able Writers Economic | Orry Production. Q female lays her eggs on the bark at the surfac.? of the soil. As the eggr are nearly all laid by Oct 1, and hatched by Oct 15th, it is readily seen that when the mounds are taken down the worms are 8 inches high on the tree, and if the tree is examined the second week of November any worms may be easily located, and working in the outer bark they can be remov.ed with the least trouble." (S. C. Expr. Sta. Cic. 25.) o WILL SLOAN'S LINIMENT RELIEVE PAIN? Try it and see?one application will prove more than a column of claims. James S. Ferguson, Phila., Pa wiites: "I have had wonderful relief since 1 used Sloan's Liniment on my knees. To think after all these years of pain one application gave me relief. Iviar\ thanks for what your remedy has dom for me. Don't keep on suffering, apply Sloan's Liniment where your pain is and notice how quick you get relief. Penetrates without rubbing. Buy it at any Drug Store. 25c.?adv. ii The Russians have cut the Delatyn ivorosmeao railway, the principal line of communication for the AustroGermsm forces defending Lemberg, and have routed the enemy on the right bank of the Dniester. t ENDORSED AT HOME Such Proof as This Should Conviute j Any Conway Citizen. The public endorsement of a local; citizen is the best proof that can he produced. None better, none stronger can be had. When a man comes for-: ward and testifies to his fellow-citizens, addresses his friends and neighbors. you may be sure be is thoroughly convinced or he would not do so. Telling one's experience when it is for the public good is an act of kindness that should he appreciated. The following statement given by a resident of Conway adds one more to the many cases of Home Endorsement which are being published about Doan's Kidney Pills. Head it. W. 15c <1 Jones, Wholesale grocer, Conway, says: "My kidneys bothered me and the kidney secretions passed ir I regularly. DoarTs Kidney Pills relieved all signs of the trouble. 1 have ; recommended them to a number of people who have used them with good results." Price 50c, at all dealers. Don't sim-' ply ask for a kidney remedy?get Doan's Kidney Pills?the same that Mr. Jones had. Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y.?adv. Such tobacco enjoyment as you never thought could be is yours to command quick as von hinr enmo Drit-?r.o j w w* k/Mj uvinv^ x J. Albert and fire-up a pipe or a home-made cigarette! Prince Albert gives you every tobacco satisfaction your smokeappetite ever hankered for. That's because it's made by a patented process that cuts out bite and parch! Princi been sold without cou We prefer to give quali fvmi I pmr has a flavor as different as And that isn't strange, eithe Men Buy Prince Albert every- rette where tobacco ie eoId in . loppy red bage, 5c; tidy red Alber tine, IOc; handtome pound Ollt C and half'pound tin humidore?and?that corking fine COmil pound cryetal-glaee humi- PrinC dor with eponge-moietener top that heepe the tobacco q ? im each clever trim?mlwayet K* J* >,JC0NWAT, S. 0. ANTS VERT HARD TO GET RIO OF ' I I Simple Methods of Freeing the House of These Common Pests As long as household conditi ns are such as to attract ants, measures for getting rid of the insects will be of little value, says a new publication of the department, Farmers' Bulletin 740, by C. L. Marlatt. The first step j in freeing a house from these pests is, therefore, to clean up all food that may be scattered about and to keep | food supplies which may attract ants in ant proof metal containers, or in ' ice boxes. Cake, bread, sugar, meat' and similar substances are especially J likely to attract the insects. The use of baits, is not recommended in the bulletin already mentioned because of the danger that these will serve merely to draw more insects into the house and thus actually to increase the nuisance. Where it can be safely used, however, a sirup poisoned with arsenate of sdoa has been found effective. The formula for this sirup is 1 pound of sugar uisolved in a quart of water, to which should be added 125 grains of arsenate of soda. This mixture is boiled and trained and on cooling is used U moisten sponges which are placed where they can bo reached easily by the ants. The insects collect the % ... ' sirup and convey it to their nests, s that the whole colony is ultimately po'soned. Although this method has been foim effective, as has been said, it should be remembered that the arsenate of soda is poisonous to human beings and to animals as well as to ants, and that its use milt he safeguarded by the greatest precautions. \\ ncn the ants can be traced back to their nests and these are in accessable places, it is possible to destroy the colonic by injecting with an oil can or small syringe a little bisulphM | of carbon, kerosene, or gasoline into the ne;ts. All these substances, however, are inflammable, and precautions must be taken, therefore, against the danger of fire. Though the common garden or lawn ants which build their little crater nests around houses are dis tirct. species from the true house ants, they may find their way int? the house. Their colonics may be destroyed by drenching the nests with boiling water or injecting a smal' Mii!inf ittf r\ r *i ' >|u?uiiiti kj l ftciv.ifin1 Ul" COill Oil 1HI them. Where large areas are affected it is sometimes advisable to you will 3 Albert has always 3oth.p?? . has mad* pons or premiums. m?k'?. 1 * on* *mol tyi jrr li df VOL ALDL the national joy smoke > it is delightful. You never \ r. who think they can't smoke can smoke and will smol t. And smokers who have not ertainly have a big surprise ai lg their way as soon as the e Albert tobacco will tell its ow REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO. spray the lawns with kerosene emul- j sion or with a very strong soap wash ; prepared by dissolving any common laundry soap in water a* .he rate of one-half pound to 1 pound of soap to a gallon of water. Another method is to inject bisidphid of carbon into the nests, the quantity of the chemical depending upo?" the size of th' < nest. After the bisulphid of carbon has been injected, the cut a nee to th( nest should be closed by the foot in order to retain the chemical, which will then penetrate slow y ih rough the underground channel and kill the ants. Although its fumes are <lis- j agreeable, they are not prisonous to man and the higher animals. o FRl'lT. Clemson College. C.?Is your < home orchard furnishing a : u cession of fruits with a surplus for canning? \r not, plan now to establish durin*" the fall and winter an orchard of this kind. A home orchard of one acre o? careful!, selected fvvitc and varieties V ' is usually sufticb.et to fu .ash a per. crous supply of frub throughout Uk season, and a canning surplus foi ( winter. ( By planting i 11 fall and winter j more time is had for the tiiorougl preparation of the soil, time is saved . and trees will become w 1' establish- . c.i before the growing season and the conserved moisturc lessors the pc cent of dead trees. Cheap trees usually p'ovc to b? very dear; therefore, den! di 'ceth with some reliable nursery rat he" than through the tree agent and in sist on having viviotie"? that are I adapted to and rcermivrdcd foi your section, For fv InformaI'. . I ; lion write Horticultural SrcDmi of [ Ivxtension Division. Com son College. S. C. o Another eomme' -ial u'wnrino. the) Dromon, constructed hv the sam. company that hi;:1! fh a Peutschland new in an American port, already iw,q hn''ho?*. nc"or<h* o the He"lin Vossische Zoilung, which says the Dcutsehlancl was built in the Clermania navy yard at Kiel, and the several other like submarines are being ' there constructed. o The greater part of the village of Poziercs is reported to be * in the hands of Australian troops. o WHEN Vol' H \XV. \ COM) Give it attention, avoid exposure, ho ; regular and careful of your (Hot, also! commence tal<ing Dr. King's New Dis! covcry. It contains Pipo-Trr. Antisop-j tic Oils and Balsams. Is slightly laxative. Dr. King's Now Discovery easesj your cough, soothes your throat and j bronchial tubes, checks your cold, starts to clear your head . In y short time you know your cold is better. Its, the standard family cough syrup in use over 40 years. Got a bottle at once. Keep it in the house as a cold insurance. Sold at your druggist, t ?adv. *?> ?'* - - ''*&*?/?v RT I tasted the like of it t I a pipe or roll a ciga- I jr ce if they use Prince H yet given P. A. a try- H nd a lot of enjoyment H y invest in a supply. I n story! \ , Winston-Salem, N. C. | THMR SARRANZA ABIE TO""* | CRUSH UPRISINGS Says Villa Has Only Few Ill-fed Bandits as Followers t t\1 < t\RMY IN SOUTH PURELY MYTHICAL Says Presence of American Troops Hinders Work of Reconstruction. t } " * A'\ f Mexico City.?General Carranza in .n interview with the correspondent >f the Associated Press today dismissed the conference to be held between the delegates representing Mexico ami these of the United States for the purpose of reaching \n agreement relative to the withdrawal (if the American troops now in Mexico and patroling the frontier in such a manner as to prevent further border raids. "Late paprrs from the United States, said Gen. Carranza, "declare that my goveinmcnv is threatened on the nevth by an an > of 15,000 men led by Viila, who is threatening the ity ei T(?!V(:on. On the south, they crv, I am to be aluaked by an anued .'out it-vl i y u ;a .:ona. ics ai.d clonals, wb h plenty < ' mo; oy and men.. Well, all I tan say is let them come and 1 will knock tlum on the head, singly or united, as I have dene be Hie. "As a matter of fact you knew perfectly well that Villa is followed by a few ill-fed, miserable bandits and the reputed army of the south is a myth. But, even if these two imaginary armies have existed in fact, 1 have every confidence that my own soldiers will take care ol them, as they did in the time of Huerta, wheir 1 started without men and money and drove the dictator from power. You may remember also that Villa with his great army crumbled up and melted away before our attacks ilftil any other uprisings will be handled by me in a like manner. f v$ Troops a Hindrance "What is bothering us at the pros cut time is the presence of American troops on Mexican soil. This is hindering our work of reconstruction and pacification because it gives encouragement to t ho lawless elements of our population. It is to obviate this that the coming conference will be held. "1 can not speak in detail of this ^..lcrcme un;:i my government revive 1 he reply of the United States note s at on July 11 last, sugesti:.g that such a meeting be held." "will tiiis conference be limited to ho question of the withdrawal of the Maori an troops?" titn. Carranza was asked. " fnat is a question which I can not u.swev indefinitely at this time," relied the firs*. chief. But you can he assured that the withdrawal of the roops ami the vigilance of the border ire the points of prime interest for he Mexican government." When asked as to Mexico's pro)osal regarding the protection of the crder. tien. Carrair/a said thj>t nn ?fi'eciivo patrol on either side of the ne by the respective troops of the wo countries would solve the quesion. It is understood that details of r.ir* plan already have been drawn up n-.i will be pri seated at the confereco which is to be held early next nonth. (ion. Carranza was asked, if he .01}lei be a candidate for the- presi lency. lie paused before replying ind then said smilingly: "I can not answer that question at his time, but legally I have the same ight to be a candidate as any other itizen of Mexico." (ion. Carranza said that he did not vish to consider tlw> nnn?t!A? ...V i|UUOI>lUII VI 21 '(/reign loan at this time, but he ould say thi.\ the economic situation >f Mexico was slowly but steadily mproving, that the crops this year >romised to be among the best of the ast decade, and that altogether conlitions warranted optimism. "We have enemies," he said, "the eactionaries and clericals in the Jnited States and in this country vho are working to destroy us, but ve are ready for them." o drives Out Malaria, Builds Up System The Old Standard general strengthening tonic, 5 ROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC, drWes out Aalaria.enriches the Mood,and builds npthc syscm. A true tonic. For adults and children. 50c.