The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, November 30, 1916, Page THREE, Image 3
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* Practical
1 Baking powders i
phosphate may be bo
than Royal Baking Pg
from cream of tartar,
Alum powders arc
they differ greatly in lc
If a cheap baking
fine cake and the call
there is a waste of cc
more than a whole c
ing powder.
Royal Baking Pc
finest food, and its us*
an actual saving.
ROYAL BAKINC
New
SAVE SEEO FOR NEXT j
YEAR'S PLAHflKG.
Clemson Ooilrge, 3. C.-Just bocause
cotton seed are bringing about
twice as much as they usually do,
farmers must not overlook the fact
that next year's planting seed slu u.dl
be saved. Tho high prices now tend
to cause a much larger proportion of
the seed crop to be placed on tin
market this fall, and us a conse
euenee there will be a shortage next
,\ear. It is also suggested that farm
its having exceptionally good seed
may find it advantageous to sum:
rw.n <? t.hnn enough to fill tlir?*?* own
?J " - ?
needs, since there should be a ready
sale for the surplus in the spring to
< '..her planter-:. Tim farmer saving
just enough for his own needs should
take into consideration the possible
replanting requirements.
Again, cotton growers should not
be willing, because of the shortage,
to take tne fiist supply available
without regard to its quali'y, but i
should be willing to pay an increasedj
price for the seeds of types of prov-1
cu worth.
Special care should be taken to
Sha<
Pathe's Wonder-Serial
DON'T miss t
serials. See
floating coffin ca{
secret of the dre
Ravengar Ledgeexploded
balloon i
drop into the seals
EPISODES OF
ADVENTURE
Feat
GRACE D
Leon Bary and
c
Economy
made from alum or
ught for a trifle less
twder, which is made
derived from grapes.
i not only cheap, but i
evening power.
powder is used for a
:e turns out a failure
)stly materials worth
an of the cheap bak>wder
produces the
e therefore, results in
r POWDER CO.
York
,.cep all seed intended lor planting'
loin becoming contaminated with
anthracnose and wilt.
o
NOTICE or ELECTION
Notice is herby given that a gen01
al election for Mayor and Aldermen
of the Town oi' Conway will be
held at the Town Hall on Tuesday,
Dec. 12th, 1910. Po'.ls will open at
d o'clock and close at 1 o'clock. |
doctors of the Town must be qualified
by registration for this election
iO (lays before the election.
Each bailot voted must contain the
names of or.e l'or Mayor and six Aldermen.
By order of Town Council.
A Tf I A\Tn
11. LUiNVI,
Town Clerk. ,
November 21st, 1916.
4)
Bring in your renewal for .subscription
this week.
o
Live stock as a means of combating
the boll weevil is suggested by
S. M. Byars, farm demonstration
agent for Anderson County. Mr. .
liyars has gone to the weevil territory
of Mississippi to study conditions
first hand. j
idingj
dov/
Produced by Astra
.his greatest of all
the horror of the
?the unlocked
:adful skeleton of
thp n^ril nf
V* itiv
and the hazardous
LOVE, MYSTERY,
AND THRILLS
uring
IARMOND
Ralph KeDard
I
THE HOBBY HBBAU
DAIRY COWS SUFFER
FROM LACK OF SHELTER
i
i
Clemson College, S. C.?The dairy
cow often suffers the most from exposure
to the weather before real
winter has bgeun. A fter steady cold i
comes the cow is generally stabled.
Exposure to cold rains in November
is often more injurious to the
anirr.al than the colder but dry weath
er later in the winter.
The dairy cow is not lik: the fa*
steer, protected from cold by a layer
of fat. As a result, bad weather
causes a big drop in milk production.
So long as the weather is dry it is
just as well to leave the cow cu s;d~
nights for some time yet, but every
cold rain should find her protected.
It is not necessary in this climate
to go to any great expense on most
farms in order that the barn may bo
warm. The main thing is to have
tight walls so there is no draft or
wind and a good roof. Care should
he taken in arranging the stalls in
the form of a platform of the right
or.gth and a gutter of sufficient
I pth to hold the manure. The
cleanliness of the milk depends to
a considerable extent upon having
ho barn built so the cow will keep
herself clean.
o
CROWS' ROOSTS NOT MENACE
Federal Department of Agriculture Explains
How Nature Has Arranged
Things Beneficially.
The latest year book of the depnrtment
of agriculture gives an account
of one of the most interesting bird
phenomena that still persist in the
thickly settled eastern ana central
states?in "roosts" where crows gather
every night In cold weather. Although,
even in the nesting season, crows are
more or less gregarious, their habit of
(locking is most conspicuously displayed
during the winter. In September
they begin to migrate toward a
comparatively small area of the country?the
territory from Connecticut
south to Virginia and westward beyond
the Mississippi river. Their
roosts are usually stands of pine or
other evergreens, although sometimes
they pass the night in groves of deciduous
trees, lloosts are often established
In the near neighborhood of
large cities; one at Arlington, Va., Just
across the Potomac river from Washington,
Is supposed to have contained
at times as many as two hundred
thousand birds. Several other equally
populous roosts have been observed
in New Jersey and Pennsylvania. Fortunately,
the crows do not feed together,
but as a rule disperse by day
and forage over a wide area, so that
the roost is not so serious a menace
to crops in its vicinity as might be
supposed.?Youth's Companion.
He'll Gtay.
"Still living in Brooklyn?"
"Of course I am. You don't think
I'd move away now that the team
stands a chance of winning the pennant,
do you?"
o
CONG R ESSION AL COM MIT TEE
BEGINS RAILWAY IXQUIJC.
(Continued from Page Two.)
sion be given the power to prescribe
minimum as well as maximum rate
so that in meeting complaints of (lis
crimination the commission may older
the advance of a rate which it
considers too low.
One of the most Important rccom
mendations for which the railroads
will ask favorable considoratlem Is
Tiinr i lie commission he specifically
Authorized to take into account in
late regulation the effect of rates
upon total earnings in the light of expenses.
While the Newlands Committee is
Required. under the resolution creat
lig it. to submit a report by January
,2 next, it is not anticipated that the
Committee will have come anywhere
aear completing its labors then.
o
The sense of direction in migratory
birds is as marvelous as it if
mysterious. The familiar inhabitants
of our dooryard martin boxes
return the next year to these same
boxes, though meanwhile they have
visited Brazil.
o
Pine-Tar Believes a Cold.
Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey contains
all f V>n OAAfVll'n? ? ' ? -
Mil vnv n\'\/viuil^ UIUIIKTII U I lilt" JMI1'
forest. It heals the irritated membrane,
and by its antiseptic properties
loosens the phlegm, you breathe
easier, and what promised to be a severe
cold has been broken up. For
that stuffed-up feeling, tight chest or
sore throat take a dose of Dr. Bell's
Pine-Tar-Honey and prevent a wearing,
hacking cough dragging through
the winter. At your Druggist, 25c.?
Adv.
?
YOUR SUBSCRIPTION PAID IN
ADVANCE ASSURES YOU ANOTHER
YEAR AT $1.00 IF WE
SHOULD HAVE TO ADVANCE
THE PRICE?Moral: Keep Ahead,
Not Behind ' I
P, OOKWAT, 8. 0.
THE KIND Of DAIR\
Eminent'# Best, One of the Greatest <
Large Barrel and Udder, Thin
In selecting a dairy cow, it is neces- j
sarv to examine both her appearance
and her history. By appearance is
meant especially those visible features
which indicate to the knowing eye
whether or r? f a cow has good dairy
capacity. In history is included both
the record ai.d the pedigree of the
cow
The picture of Eminont's Bess, reproduced
here, shows better than any
description what the shape of a Rood '
dairy cow is. The dairy cow should \
he fine-featured and angular, with
very little surplus tlesh. She is a
combination of wedges, all tending to
come together at her head. That is to
say, she is narrower at the shoulders
than at the hips, looking from the
front; narrower in the shoulder region
than in the rear, looking from above,
and shallower in the fore quarters
than in the hind quarters, looking
from the side. She should have a
large barrel, large udder and prominent
milk vein, sharp thin withers, and
a clean-cut. intelligent head, with
large, bright, expressive eyes. Her
^kin should he soft and pliable. Finally.
she should, it goes without saying.
he sound and free of disease.
Hut one cannot depend on looks
alone when selecting a cow for dairv
BRIEF NOTES.
I
Clean skimmed milk is a valuable
food, but it should be sold as skimmed.
The Chinese make an appetizing
table sauce out of soy beans, wheat,
Subscribe to The Herald nov
II BETTI
I WHISKt
I \Wf/
n
I R. M. ROS
1 RANDOL
8 ' JACKSON1
%
' COW TO CHOOSE 11
?f Jersey Co^vs. Note Wedge 8h?ps,
Withers, and Clean-Cut Head.
use. The best guide of all is the animal's
milk and butterfat record, as
found out by means of milk scales and
a Babcock tester. The records quoted
below indicate how important this
is.
In the Clemson College dairy herd
were two cows equal in appearance.
Both were of good dairy typo, as far
as could be seen. Yet consider the
following record of a year's milking:
Dolly Eurotus Difference
Pounds milk... 8...67 3.446 5.121 j
libs. butterfat 346.9 136.1 210.8
Value butterfat f 1TS. 1? 1 $69.70 $108.51
. . ? ,\ .'in . or nt I
v u?*i ui ii-t'ii . . f in. iu f i
Profit ^113.51 $30.07 $ 83.44
The labor involved in keeping these
two cows was the same. They were ,
of almost the same weight and about
the same quantity of food was needed |
to maintain their bodies. The differ- 1
ence in their value, then, is due to the !
fact that, for some reason not appar- 1
ently to the eye, Dolly could handle
more feed and was so constructed that
she could return more milk per pound
of food eaten than could Eurotus.
This illustrates the wisdom of the expression.
"Tost, don't guess."
J. M. BURGESS,
Associate Professor of Dairying,
Clemson Agricultural College.
and rock salt.
Concentrated cider, which keeps
better and is much less bulky than
the ordinary product, can be made
by freezing and centrifugalizing,
which eliminate water and leave behind
sugar and flavor.
i?another great Serial begins s
PD TF You mu
41C A trouble of
"W to ?et liquor shir
' Y why not get s<
^ really high-class
-ing sense of sati
It costs onhj as mu
REAL QUALITY I>
Remember this: As
run there will be r.cze
all bidding frr your j
fair, sonic dozer?-right i
of Idling lite good fro\
Select an <
i
The tafest tfoirift L to cer
V cri one irelkble, jusfcly-fam
\ old brand ? a brand will
\ rer.ufi>#rr.r* flirf r*>?wfr 1 a T'i
NR%\ to like
V. O. S. Black Arm<
\ blended I! 1th If-Year Old W.hi
Order such a brand rejjuia
knowing it will always bo
same hijrh cnality whiskey,
fSS kind of whisko , that ye n a
sent Ionian can drink c.r kc
jjteof J to another gent Ionian.
i|y V O S- Black Am
/x r mi v^uwrc y: I UU
r.xprc&u Collect -* * "
4- Full Quarts OO
Exprcon 1 repaid Nr ? 1
SE, COM PAN
PI I ROSE, President
VILLE, FLORIDA
.... . 1
f
THEKB
DELATIONS MAY
BECOME COMPLICATED
Charge Grew Has Filed Ten
Inquiries at Berlin
Recently.
-? ,
Berlin.?A period of complications
nay again be impending in GermanVmerican
relations.
Germany's conduct of submarine
varfare has brought forth an abunlant
crop of American inquiries, of
vhich Joseph C. Grew, the American
diarge, recently has filed no less
han ten?five of them today.
They remain to be answered, inluding
the cases of the Marina, on
vhich the American government de lares
to be inconsistent with the
promises of the German government
t garding the treatment of passenger
liners.
The United States bases its atti:ude
in the case of the Arabia on the
Assumption that it was unarmed and
orpedoed \k ithout warning, and is
.inable to see that there was justification
for forcing the passengers ?n
:o the boats. Washington belie es
he submarine commander on ascertaining
that there were women and
children on the decks, should have
refrained from making an attack.
Germany, in the four cases in regard
to which the ri plies already
have boon marlc, was found to havn
fairly convincing answers, which, ic
is believed, may put quite a different
aspect on affairs. It is pointed cut
here, for example, that, according- to
testimony of her own passengers,
the Arabia was armed and used her
cannon: that the sea was smooth,
and that ohter vessels were near. It
is argued that the Arabia, having on
board a large number of coolie war
workers should be regarded as a
transport. ?
o
Pick out any man with a large
family and watch the children as
they grow up and go out into the
world; and you will find that some
of them will be rich and some of
them will be poor. What is the reason?
We don't know. ,
0011: Price still $1 per Year
Gt go to the |
seeding away I
>ped i. i L y express, |
omcthiiig that is |
; and gives a lastLsf
action, such as |
ch as it takes to get 9
i LIQUOR?No more. I
Ion* pr:::t:r.g presses n
labels c:id rczv brands, H
\:vor, some good, some 9
bad. Yen have r.o way B
w the bad. Therefore: Bj
Old Brand I
tZ mm I