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* F jBfm t?nui dupNMS lv ^AhMmonGastk * ftwhrt/* INTfcRN ATION At path* t i noMitutotl?IhitrlU turning instinctively || to JJarr for counsel, Parr struggling !?] toAigaln his poise. j. M length, consulting his watch, he ' announced: 1 "The first thing to do, of course, Is to ( *ee about safeguarding that treasure, t * It's sufo enough for the time being; t and I know where to find the right men to stand guard over it after the firemen and police have gone. Later, I we'll see about transferring It?but i there's plenty of time for that; no bunk ! | opens Its vaults before teu o'clock. | She nodded assent, und tucked a confident arm within his us they turned lowurd the nearer corner. ^ND OF SKCOND KI'I^ODK.^ < , WILL SOON SOUND j GALL TO COLORS j Governor Will Put Draft Ma? chinery in Motion in * State i 8,000 ON FIRST CALL MUST TAKE UP ARMS Natioanl Guard Protecting Property ? Officers Wanted. f Columbia, May 3.?W'thin a very short time after President Wilson signs the proclamation calling for men for the new army, the machinery for the enrolling of all eligible^ in JSouth Carolina and other States wiii be set in motion. The work of enrolling the eligible^ for the new army has been relegated to the governors ?f the several States.and witthin ten dtys it is beiieved that the strength of the nation 'indor the plan of congress for raising an army will be Jcovn. , Gov. Manning thoroughly alive to the situation and he will give his K bc.d energy to execution of the plans ^ a"? prescribed by the war department. Pull plans ar.d particulars as to how the work .s to ;e accomplished v/illj be announced from Washington at a; later date. The plans of Congress call for; BOO,000 rr.cn as the first unit of the j great a; my of 2.000,000 mem Sou In j Carolina v.i'l be expected to furnish j about b,000 enlisted men. Within i.woi years it is expected that about 32,000 ^ rr. n from this State v;i!i be under ^ arms, not including the members of the National <iuard. There is every indication in this cmercrencv thc.t the National Guard' will be used almost exclusively fo: j gu|?rl duty. The First reg.mont is now^&uarding railway bridge ami public property and the Secjnd regiment will probably be called out in a few days. More Officers Wanted, w The call for volunteers for the training camp at Fort Oglethorpe,! Ga., is urgent because the time for filing applications will expire May 7. Unless more South Carolinians enlei the camp, then the regimen's from this State will be placed under coni1 rnand of men from other States. Several hundred men have already ' sid^d up for the training camp p^ri ioo 'of three months and this number will be largely increased. Everything possible is being done to place South Carolina on a wv footing. A personal representative of Gov. Manning is in Washington for conference with the National Defense J committee on the question of estab> liphing a State defense council. There; is much work to he done. The State! defense councl will be named at a ' later date by Gov. Manning. I Politics in Background. Bad Cough? Feverish? Grippy? *' ' ; toll need Dr. King's Now Discov crjR.b stop that cold, the soothing b^jhom ingredients heal the irritated membranes, soothe the sore threat, the antiseptic qualities kill the germ and your cold is quickly relieved. Dr King's New Discovery has for 48 years been the standard remedy for roughs anil colds in thousands of homes. Get a bottle to-day and hmvr m it handy in your medicine chest for coughs, colds, croup, grippe ar.d all bronchial affections. At your drug gist, 50c.?adv?No.2? % * ? For once South Carolina politics tas faded into the ' background. The vur has dispersed all political talk md there is little discussion as to vho will be the next governor. The >oliticians are centering their energies on the war sttuation and are rusting to luck when the big fight s over. Most of the politicians will j >e engaged in the various services, j rhe quart a month whiskey law went nto effect without a ripple and is, >cing little talked of. The great wavej >f disease has not yet spread over; ;he State, according to the records of ;he probate judges. interestingWs i FROM FARMERS FRIEND The people arc about done setting I >ut tobacco in this part of the coun-i ty, com is up, cotton in some fields is1 ready to chop, crops are looking well and gardens are beginning to look green. But the farmers are not planting as much garden truck as they ought to> and the variety is too small. Some plant a few collards ai. ; cabbage and others a few beans and collards. Let us bear in! mind the fact that our gardens al-j most feed us the year round, or ought, to and let's plant a few beans, s;nr j turnips and some other vegetables) that suits us most, every month tins j Summer, then we can have something to boil for dinner and can't say w? are nearly perished eating so much fried rations as we often hear the farmer say. Oh, so many of oik farmers just stay ut the river and fish, they get the corn and cottcn planted, the tobacco sot out, and then turn it over to the wife and children, md the poor mother and children just have to 'ive in the cotton and tobacco field while the grass and weeds take the corn and garden. Sometimes the wife and children must suffer for vcgeiao;es r?gnt on tne farm just when they ought to he the most plentiful. It was a good law the people m;nU when they stopped them thorn fishing u part of the week, but it ought to have been from the 15th of Ma/oh to the 15th of July. It will be only a few more years until the mothers and children will stand around and beg their husbands and fathers tr take them to the show to ? e whu was once so plentiful?fish and squirrel tf. Mr. Farmer, let's stay away from the river, let's reserve a few fish for our grand-children and great grandchildren to see. Let us grub up our hedge rows and ditch banks, it will improve the looks of our farms and we ran make vegetables on them, if cleaned up now. We can plait them down and have some fine late beans and cabbage to put on the table instead of eating only the things that are fried. Mr. Renter, if you are on a rented place, see if you can't find a hedge row or ditch bank that you can clear oft in your spare hours and plant in something that you and your family can eat, it will keep money in your pocket, it will make people call you thrifty, it will give you a belter reputation, and all that will cause you to improve and improvement will give you better advantages. The big farmer today is looking for the thrifty renter, he is looking for the man that is wiiling to work. Mr. Farmer, did you ever stop to + 4-u^i. :r ?ii ii.- f bjiiuiv n tin tix*? i aimers product was taken off the market the great steamboats would never cross the Atlantic again, the huge locomotives would stand idle on the tracks, you would never hear the buzz of the saw mill any more, and you would never hear the shrill whittle of the great factories all over the world again. But the saddest of all, you would hear the little children in all the big cities and small towns begging the mothers for something to eat. Mr. Farmer, we have won the praise, now let's win the prize. Let's cultivate our own corn fields bettor let's make a better sample of tobacco pic w the cotton more often aval make more on our land than we have eve; made before. Let's keep the gras.s and weeds out of our gardens, pi an more vegetables and just jus soon a* one cr^p is usod up, put in another. Mrs. Farmer, lot's see that ou garden is plowed and planted in some thing that we can eat the yc:i around our yard, clean up cur bad yards, plant flowers in them unr make something beautiful to look at instead of a trash pile and weeds t< raise bugs and insects and germ? that may result in sickness. Lot' hatch off a few late chickens so wc can have some for market and horn use late in the Fall when priceB ar? good. Now, let us see how much improvement we can make on our e.rm and in and about our home this year. THE HORRY HXB "wo important sooth The Fly?One of the Greatest Enem Clemeon College, S. C.?The Mexi can cotton boll weevil made an unusual advance across Georgia during the last two yea>*a, due probably tc the high winds. At the close* of the season last fall the lnsact had reached the Savannah river and we may e? pert an invasion of South Carolini during 191T. Ordinarily it require! about three vears from the date of itj first appearance until the pest reaches its maximum numbers, which stil leaves a good opportunity for Soutl Carolina to study and prepare for th< situation that is to confront it. It it a mistake to regard the matter lightly because it is absolutely certain tha the weevil is coming and the climati< conditions of South Carolina are suc? that probably greater effort* are re J quired than in many localities in othe: states to produce a cotton crop unde j weevil conditions. To produce cottoi , after the weevil has become thorough ; ly established requires the best farm lng of one kind or another. The crop becoming an uncertaint; under weevil conditions must be math ; earlier. We must begin the pteparc , tion of our seed bed in the fall; i must study the best early varieties o cotton best adapted to the locality am ! The Cotton Boll Weevil. I learn how to keep It continually grov , ing after it is once planted. Whether the weevil is present o | not no farm can find an excuse for no , making a.living for those who till ii i This is the first duty and requiremen ' of any fa;nt. After the home supplie I have been produced cotton should r< i eelve serious consideration. Intell | gent fortlitzation is of great impoi I tance but still greater importance i the malntainance of the soil fertilit mainly by legume crops, j Not. only cotton stalks but all othe stalks which are a part of the cro refuse should be incorporated into th soil in the fall and as far as possibl the land should be planted into an e feotive cover crop to enable the lan to hold its moisture, unused plar food and to prevent washing. Ther is no greater agency to produce a co tou crop than water. This has bee demonstrated time and again in th cotton belt since the beginning of th weevil tight twenty-three years ago It is important to make a eotto crop and yet it is more important t maintain the health of the communit and tins matter has not been give sufficient thought as can bo plainl seen by the number of tlies we alio1 the right of way every day. Flies are best controlled by carin for manures, the places where the 1 breed, (a) Haul out and spread th manure once a week, (b) Store th ! manure in a dark shed?flies do m and how much happier we will fee! a the end of the year, j Now, boys and girls, give all you aid in every spare moment or hou that you have helping father an | mother improve the farm and hom< (Let's do something that will mak !ourselves and others happy. Wishing you all a prosperous ycai I am still the ?Farmers Friend. uauvants Perry, C., April 30, 1917. o STATE ITEMS j Within a very short time afto President Wilson signs the proclarna tion calling for men for the ne\ army, the machinery for the enrollin of all eligibles in South Carolina an other States will be sent in motion. Trials serve to bring out th truth. It takes a trial to brin, j things out. Thousands of \ Have^Found This modlcino fa rruav.intcorl to do for YOU a1aritic3 peculiar to womon; tone*., strcn^thona j petite, cIoam the complexion, or A builda up ckc benefited. Got it today. {.1 at your dirtier*"' Y: THACNEEt SlEUICiNS C ALD, COJTWAY, S. 0. CAROLINA INSECT PESTS is I ee to the Health of a Community. r( * | breed in dark places (c) Treat the ^ -; manure to kill the maggot and age * f ' Where It Is necessary to have the mai | nures exposed to dies, it may bo ? ' treated with borax, hellebore or Calf | oium Cyanamid and Arid Phosphate i as follows: o BORAX. Powdered borax aprinklad.lt 1 [ over the manure at the rate of 2-2 o 1 | pound to 8 bushels of manure and 2 0 1 or 3 gallonn of water poured over tho ' j, 1 ; borax-treated manure to wash th. bo-1 j 1 ; rax into the manure will kill the mag-1 * | got* and keep the eggs from hatch* Ing. The outer edges of the manure r' j pile should he carefully sprinkled as t , this is where the maggots congrogate 3; for pupation. 2 1 j Caution should he used in treating manures to be employed for agricul- | 1 ! tural purposes, because of the lnjuri- a i ouh action on the plant growth of th?% t excessive applications of the borax. 1 This is the least expensive method i where the manure is not intended for agricultural purposes. f HELLEBORE. Powdered white 1 hellebore whon made ia a solution by J * mixing one-half pound of hellebore to U ^ j 10 gallons of water and sprinkled overJc ^ 1 the manure gives good results in kill-'r I illET flv mnprots Thiw snliitiim mil ho!. w . - - I made up in large quantities and kepi until wanted for use. The best results have been obtained by allowing * the solution to stand a few hours bo- 1 fore applying. The composition of < the manure will not be materially t changed by using the hellebore. An-1 imals will not be In danger when manure is treated in the stables as the poison is washed into the manure. CALCIUM CYANAMID AND ACID ' '- PHOSPHATE. This mixture may b-' used at the rate of four pounds Cal- ' r eium Cyanamid, four pounds Acid >t Phosphate to every eight bushels of t. manure. The substances should be , it mixed and spread over the manure s after which it. is sprinkled with ten y- gallons of water. The addition of i- these materials to the manure in the r- proportions given greatly Increase th* s value of the manure for agricultural y purposes by holding the amonia which generally passes off as gas in the tin,r treated material. This form of nltrop gen is more slowly available as plant food than the ordinary nitrates. It e should he applied to the crop not less than seventy to eighty days before harvest in order that the nitrogen may be completely utilized by that crop, e NOTE. The Calcium Cyanamid t- which is a medium for slow acting ] n fertilizers is bandied by manufactur- . o ers of mixed fertilizers. , e MAGGOT TRAPS. This is a. simple J method to kill the fly in maggot stage n ?-full information can be had by writo ing the Bureau of Entomology, WashV ingtop, I). C. n SCREEN THE PRIVY CLOSETS. ! y Have the closets provided with a keg 1 vV or barrel of air-slaked lime and uso ; freely to dry up tjlie closet material, g TRAPS. Make or buy fly traps , y Place them in the windows at the ie stables, hog pens, and chicken houses. ;e Send for plans of the Clemson My , trap. ' EXPECT CHANGE IN ! : BRITISH ADMIRALTY <1 Lnodon.?Rumors ot impending changes in the admiralty continue current, one of them point Lv to the early resignation of Sir Edward Car' son. The Times claims to have authority to state that there is not the slightest difference between Sir Edward Carson and his colleagues, eithr. . ...i:~_ *.u~ ? ? > ?i:? i ?:i nu: nuviii [juuvy ur any other issue, but acids: 1 J, "If Sir Edward Carson should dosire to leave the admiralty, which is ' likely enough, it would be for entirely f different reasons. Tie is being attack ^ od on many sides for various moves, and although nobody is more hardened to criticism, he may conceivably feel that the work of the. navy is prejudieed by his prominence in controversies with which sailors are not concerned/' Suffering Women whnt It haa dono for "thera. It corrects too ;rroc \ml vltu'!ii.*:a the v/omtrrly functions; rertovei the ni wast.d oner?;! ?*. Your mono/ bac.'t ?f ycuraro > >ur dealer vi'.l otplai" the .-.nntn* to ft T T V r ft** A ay <t?> 6 j.Kj l; a . tt> .1 V w -.?.? >. U. . u ttO % DO YOU KNOW THAT Under-paid fathers and over-work i mothers lose many children ? The U. S. Public Heakh Service sues free publications on the care of lildren ? The infant mortality rate is the iost sensitive index of community itclligenee ? Dirty milk kills many babies? One eight of the children born in le United States, die before the> re a year old ? Removing the cause before it be jmvx a resun is tne Dest kind of ublic health work? Babies have a right to an officially ?gistered name ? The board hill for last year's baies was almost ns great as ho ertaker's bill for last year's babies? o Notice of Discharge, The undersigned administratrix f the personal estate of I. T. Belimy, dec'd, will apply to the Judge f Probate of Horry County, at his fTice at Conway, S. C. at 11 o'clock n the forenoon, on Tuesday May let. 917, for a final discharge as such dministratrix. MRS. RUTH BELLAMY, Qualified Admx., of I. T Bellamy, Dec'd. darch f?0th, 1917. GERMANY KEEPS IIP THE SOLEMN FARGr Berlin.?The German authorities1 iave ordered the immediate cancellaion of the Berlin order placing AmM'ican residents there in a sta* oi inemy subjects, says an Exchange relegraph dispatch from The Hague oday. The order, adds the message, is regarded as a blunder, the German for dgn office arguing that Germany iocs not consider herself nt v.-ji> v. if' he United States. 9 For one time in the history oi south Carolina, polities has t'ude< nto the back ground. The war h. lispersed all political t ilk and thev s little discussion as to who will lr .he next governor. TRY ITTSUBSTITUTE FOR NASTY CALOMEi Starts your liver without Mai ing you sick and can not salivate. Every druggist in town?you' ruggist and evei ybody's druggis has noticed a great falling-off in tin sale of calomel. They all give tin same reason. Ddoson's Liver Tone i: laking its place. "Calomel is dangerous and peoph know it, while Dodson's Liver Tom is perfectly safe and gives better re suits," said a prominent local drug gist. Dodson's Liver Tone is person Lilly guaranteed by every druggis who sells it. A large bottle cost f>( L'ents, and if it fails to give easy re lief in every case of liver sluggish noss and constipation, you have onl> Lo ask for your money back. Dodson's Liver Tone is a pleasan lasting, purely vegetable remedy harmless to both children and adults rake a spoonful at night and \vak< . ltiij; no omousne.-s, sicl adiche, imid stomach or constipat I bowels. It doesn't gripe or cause convenience all tho next day like iolent calomel. Take a dose ol . hnn.d today anl tomorrow you wil ' el weak, sick and nauseated. Don't . so a day's work! Take Dodson's aver Tone instead and feel fine, ful1 ?f vigor and ambition.?adv. o [load the Story in this Paper, *.1 1 A photoplay without an equal S7% . , j-tima fiftt drill zniptvrw wMrnonCtoslk . r< X. tfy r*'j+\J A.-J.'*'". *f>o/*^AO\ Jtwkv v :\1 UNA riONAL A. A >. ' A J H t 1 % . SEVEJf HOLLWEG'S CRITICS Ll/tltJ IAI 2-313 1 rtuw til MILL UK T Conservatives Attack Government for Weakness on Peace and Strikes j t SOCIALIST INFLUENCE IS GREATLY FEARED Say Peace Efforts Are Leading Germany to Brink . of Ruin. Copenhagen, May 3.?Such German newspapers as are permitted to reach here indicate that the campaign against Chancellor von BethraannHolhveg is again in full swing. The Conservatives, although inisting thai the other parities observe a political truce in the interests of the fatherland, have adopted a set of resolutions sharply attacking the chancellor and censuring the government for weakness and vaccilation on tie peace question and in dealing with the strike agitation. ; The. resolutions express grief and . concern at the steadily growing influence of the Socialists, whose peace making efforts are declared to be leading Germany to the brink of ruin. Apparently, this attack was timed to coincide with the opening of the Reichstag, and it is significant that the resolutions are endorsed by the free conservative wing under Baron i von Eeydiilz. Baron von Seyd'.itz has hithe to boon far less an extremist than Count Westarp and Heir von ; Heydebrnnd, lexers of the reg'd ?- o?* . junker cor.>"rvaUve.?;. Eiid.t * cring Monarch/. 0^^ Artom; the pipers which are direct, ing their fire against the chancellor arc the conservative organs. The Kreu.se Zeitling and The Deutsche Tages Zeitung. They ac'cbso the premier of endangering the monarchy and sailing a course prescribed by the Socialists. The Berlin convsyonile.it of The Hamburg Fremdenblatt declares that the political life of Germany is passing through an era of strife and difficulties of opinion on external and internal questions which daily grows more lively and of broader dimension. The correspondent says that classification wih the government's policy is growing in all direddens, and that its resistance on ^ peace terms i i being used to sharpen ? mutual suspicions and the antagon% isms of the parties. The Socialist ^ leaders, he continues, do not hesitate to explain and justify the latest ? strike movement on the grounds of ? th( delay in reforming the Prussian . franchise. On the oilier hand, the _ Pan-German reactionaries stop at .' nothing to prevent the forma Hon of .1 t majority party, capable of realizing ) the needed reforms in the body politic. _ The writer declares thai the national . liberals are coqueting with the conservatives and that the opportunist clerical center is intent only on a t preservation of its own influence. His picture of the situation at the opening of the Reichstag is in other words ^ one of general strife in which each - man's hand is against each other, a . condition promising an illuminating * parliamentary discussion on all the ? questions. This condition probablyf explains the decision of the Socialists, 1 whom their opponents accuse of havt ing captured the chancellor to post; pone the proposed interpellation on I peace and perhaps put the brakes on a discussion of the problems of political reform. Urges Workmen to do Slow. The Berlin Yorwaerts, in an editorial signed by Herr Landsberg, a Socialist deputy, attempts to convince the workmen of the necessity of going easy with reforms until peace is secured. The no-indemnity plank of the Socialist peace platform has been selected by his opponents for their heaviest attack against Phillip Schied mann. The workmen are told that ruin for the empire and penury for themselves are certain unless a heavy indemnity is exacted. Otherwise, tnoy are informed the war will end with a G:rman debt of at least 120,i000.000,000 m vi'ka, requiring an anneal tax a ion o4' half a billion marks for in'?V0't and redemption in ruldi!cn to three bihion for normal cxper.ditu r?;s. Ca: ?fa' v'nur ivt v T. save many a tv \)',4l. 'oo".\'Vthe course has been ?un.