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?x Si I A l UCIfl We will sell the J. R. ceased, estate and w County E. M. Mea two to three hundrec I! We will cut this prop s Today is the time to twice their former p price paid before the balance in five enna I Three Hundred and 1 years. It will then ments on 25 acres w You should be able tc unless you try. Dor There is a large gradi ? Come to the sale and We will have also a f Pi DEPARTMENT ADVISES ON CARE OF SEED CORN Care Should Begin Immediately After Gathering the Seed Ears i POOR STORAGE WILL GRE..TLY IMPAIR IT ' > I ?. . . , . If Left in Shuck May Sprout or Mildew in Wet Weather. The same day that seed corn i. gathered from standing stalks as tie \ grow in the field the husked ear. should be put in a dry place whert there is a free circulation of air. an so placed that the ears do not tout one another. This is the only safe way. accordiiv. t) the United States Department '> Agriculture, which says that mu/ good seed has been ruined hecaust i \.as thought to he dry enough wise gathered. Many farmers think tha their autumns are so dry that thes precautions are not necessary, y there is no locality where the cor win not bo bettered by a thoroug drying treatment. If corn is left ' the hu.sk it may sprout or mildo\ during warm wee weather, and it more likely to become infested wit weevils. Poor Storage Impairs Vitality. The vitality of seed may be reduce by leaving it in a sack or in a pile fc even a day after it has been gatherer during warm fall days, with som moisture in the cobs and kernels, th ears heat or mildew in a remarkabl short time. The best and cheapest treatmnn immediately after the ears are gathc and husked is to tie the ears sing! on binder or twine at about 8-inch ii tervals, the twine being looped aboil the middle of the ears so that th'> hang balanced ond horizontal. Ord; rnrv hinder twine is strong enough l support from 15 to 20 ears. Wire racks are cheaper in the Ion Id iber 12,1! . Battle, et al, farm located eight ill be sold absolutely without res rs' home place and others and is I dollars for their tobacco this se lerty into small farms to give ev buy real estate, and especially fa rices, cotton, corn and tobacco a i advances, banks full of money , -1 - ? i >*> i v jany payments. vvny pay r "vvolvc ($312.50) Dollars and Fi bo paid for. or take tor qranted ' ou'd be $156.25. and $93.75 wi > raise enough tobacco on one ac I't let this chance pass. The ed school within one mile, chur< bring your family. You, or some roe barbecue, and a brass band ( COME, there will be a run and more convenient. A goodj | lorm is made from welded or wovej .viie fencing, the upright wires being ised as the hangers, and the latere.! wires cut off and bent upward being used as supports for the individu; ' ears. The lateral wires, about 3 inch es long on either side of the main ur right, are thrust into the butt end oi the cobb. These racks will last man. years and are easily stored when no', in use. In use, with the corn up >1. them, they have somewhat the ap pcarance of giant fern fronds. The central wire is the midrib of the leaf, and the ears of corn stand out on each side like the fern leaflets, or li.<leaflets on a locust tree. Wooden seed racks, in which tin oars tire stored in rows on separate shelves, are convenient dryers, and! have no drawbacks in a dry, brcez\ place, although the air can not em ulate freely on all sides and dampne v. may be held where the row of lu rnels rests on the wood. Only during unusually damp weath I i (>f ;?t ynrwl-cr-il hnvir ( i m a will .. C* ?* V "W M f. I \ V I I * i ^ V n i n* VY III (( I I I \ { necessary to help the drying. Yet j it' heat is applied in a poorly ventilaci I place, it will do mo;e harm thai, good. 11 used, the l ire should he slow and long-continued. It shou'd bo is !<w the oars with plenty of good von : Ilati >n above them. Ad in the family. At a recent dinner, given in l-.h honor by the Society of Kentuck'an a New York, Champ Clark, re pond ng to the address of welcome, t >M this story: lb* said that the corner of the o'' State in which he was born had in i quite a colony of members of the fam i:y that gave Abe Lincoln to the na tion. They were as poor as were mo: of the residents of the neighborhoro , in those early days. One of the mor prosperous members of the tribe way an uncle of the future emancipatoi , This man, so Champ Clark said, Iw a good share of the wit and commor sense and some of the physical char ( acteristics of his great nephew. "As a small boy," said the narrator "I remember the old fellow very well One night, as he slept in his loj cabin, his wife nudged him into wake. 11 | fulness, and then he heard a sound 01 1 squawking in the hen house. N " '(let up quick!" said the wife 'Somebody's after our chickens. Tak< 1 your gun and shoot at 'em be for* tb.ey get away.' r " 'No,' said the old man, as he set ; tied back in bed; 'I reckon I'd rathei g r.ot do that. I might kill some of the . , TT-tE PORBY HJBRAI no 117?10:; (8) miles south of Nichols, S. i crve to the highest bidder, Th located in one of the best tobac; ason and will average about a ba' c rybody a chance to buy a home. rm land with billions of dollars fc: t prices never heard of before a: and anxious to loan, and we are onts when you can probably buy fty Cents, and One Hundred and ! you buy it tor loss money (we do' th interest each year for five yo; re of land to make your paymonl jnd will be sold at whatever it bt ;hes and stores close by. Then: member of your family, may gc loncert. large crowd. DON'T FORGET < A B M Bh A 111 LI ' 1 4K n ^ ^ HUlVlh Uf-MUt!" tins in in n ii minii kin folks.' "?The Saturday Evening * I\st. i the tiioknwhll orphanage. The ThornweM Orphanage located n Clinton, S. C , is the i anic of th Home for Orpha: s under the er.ro c. he Presbyterian churches in S^u 1 Carolina, Georgia and Florida. 1 has thirty-five teachers and m ilror for it ; twenty-four depui tmcnts ancottage home:;, irt which are slielte hove throe hundred orphans Tin Home receives children from a y pa t o." the Union, and from any denomina ion. During Juiy and August eighty two applications were received, ??' whom only nineteen could be acccp ;-d. Above two hundred are on tin waiting list. These are all supported by the generosity of the Presbytcria' public. We hope the friends of th' school will do as all the other Orphan Homes arc expecting, observe Orphn< work Day on the loth of October. Th )l? ervance consists in sending you day's wage for that day to the In-t 'utian you favor. The Thornwrl Homo has filled up every vacancy, *ot cithsta: d:ng the War : nd high price: id will shortly erect another cottage.i f' e pup 's of the Nome have the bes j -ckooiing- and manual framing a'd e very ci refu'ly t; ught. None bu' vphans are received. Contribution hot.Id he rent to Kev. J. lb Uranc ' Clinton, S. C. The life of the Institu.'on has been forty year.- in which in.e ivi >re than a thousand boys and rirls have been made into useful and derated citi'/rms. Essentials of Happiness. "The grand essentials of happiness I are something to do, something to love, unci someuung to nope lor."?Chal, tuers. : BLANKETS IN BALTIMORE SEIZED BY GOVERNMENT f Baltimore, Md?Government agents r have commandeered thousands of com . forts and blankets which were in the f stock of local wholesale houses and se veral large department stores for the use of the army. It is said terms } on which the United States obtained > the comforts were fair and occasioned no discontent. The only difficulty faced by the shops being the depletion of the;r stocks and the possibility that Ibey would be unable to replenish ' them. ,p. C01TWAY. 8. O. X n )0 A. M.C., on the Alma Road. This farm e location and type of land can i :o and cotton sections of the st e of cotton to the acre. :ing spent by the government tin w* I -Pit* . II ig contiuioiis so nicy win Slav 14 soiling this property at t'rins a; twenty-five acres at Fifty ($50. Eighty-seven ($187.50) Dollars ft know what it will bring) say ars. ;s and to have what is grown on ings. :ighborhood can't be beat. "t the Twenty Dollar Gold Piece; THE DATE, 0GT03ER 12TH. i m & ^2^ &a a EENSB0R9, N. C. SUBMARINE MENAGE !' GREATLY LESSENED: Washington, Sept. 22.?Un'ess ome new outbreak of sui)nia? 'ne aciv.'ty develops, many cffici Is nr. atisficd that the situation, L; fairly | :e'l under control. Enjou aging re- " u'ts have been obtained thrc ugh cor- ^ oying fleets of merchant craft, th< ..ss having been reduced to less than nc-half of 1 per cent. The employon t of smoke screens, k te I alioons nd other dctectH" <x' s also ha.hown good results u.ii progress being made with the reduction ?*L smoke from merchantmen an 1 b> painting ships to make them almost invisible at a distance through a periscope. o Wood's Feeds 1 I Rosen Rye j| The most vigorous growing and productive cl Seed Ryes. Stools out better, superior quality of grain, and destined, in our opinion, to tal - the place of at! other Iv> Wood's Fall Catalog Gives full description r*"?d information, and also tciis about t.?<; best SSED WHEAT, CATS, RYE, and Other Seeds for Fall Sowing Write for Cataiocr and prices of any Seeds required. ?> T. W. WOOD O SONS, SF5DSMEN, - RicJimoad, Va. . O World la Changing. The world Is changing, and human ity has less patience with dlfllcult people. Cranky workers are not given preference even when they are distinguished by unusual skill. Women who aspire to popularity know that they must bury all annoyance at whatever does not please them in the treatment accorded thein. They cannot afford to voice any sensitive feeling or take any step toward retaliation. The lesson may he hard, but it Is decidedly wholesome, and the pity of it is that so few women care to take w it.?Milwaukee Wisconsin. 3AI Rain or S is better known as a part of tin not be beaten. It adjoins the ate. Farmers adjoining this ounh jiit llie country aw farm f )' You* eaa buy laritt lands at ly one should bo able to mect.on 00) doiiars per acre and pay c and Fifty Gents with interact e Twenty-five ($25.CO") Uollars t the remainder clear profit. Yo and Green Back that we give av On the grounds at 10:30. 1 ? 1 I i II III ?HIM llllll I III II III 1111 lllll I Mil "ire Insurance Life Insurance ? Bonds Office in PEOPLES NATIONAL BAN* J. A. Spivcy W. B. Kirn H. H. wooinv AKi). AttorD<-j and Counsellor at LaCONWAY. S ~ K. B. SCARBOROUGH Attorney at Law, CONWAY. S. U WILLIAM EUGENE KING, M ; Physician and Surgeon Office in Piatt Drug Oo. AYNOR,. - - - S. I I CHAS. R. SCARBOROUGH CONWAY, .SOUTH CAROLINA Complete \Vaterwork?, Steam Hot w? ter and Hot Air Ileatir.g Plants INSTALLED ANYWHERE Only Plumbing ami Heating good/ and material of highest quality need j Full line of Tub, Toilet, Lavatory Sink and ether Bathroom Accessorieand repe*"H on hand at all tiroes. Plumbing and Heating. PUT HOT WATER AND HEAT IN YOUR HOUSE T. B. LEWIS, Atty. and Oouncellor at Lav CONWAY, - - - S. C i M inuMcnai J. III. J VJIIIMOVJIM, CIVIL ENGINEER MARION, S. 0. My Engineering and Surveying office will be open during my absence, and prepared to take care oi any work as usual. Address all communications as hereto fore. / m hine | e James Battie, de- f H best farms in the Ivl place received from Ml I V eroducts selling at ?1 practically the same 91 c-fourth (1-1-) cash, ail ash on day of sale. gjl ach year for five II jor acre. The pay- ftl I I l /1 II inm/v J OUUVjJUU vay, abso'ute'y free. fl S. P. HAWES I Auto Supplies, Fancy Qroceritm.W A 1 r? ?r '|| 1 xhub, guaranteed 5000J lillluB. PHONE 57. QUICK DELIVERY. 1 DR. J. D. THOMAS I Physician and Surgeon I loris. so m J. 0. Norton E. S. C. Bakerll NORTON & BAKER L ATTORNEYS-AT-LA^ 4 CONWAY, ? ? ? S. O.l LUMJUNG LAUNDRY, 1 CONWAY. 8. C. 9 B?{{innin)i July IhI. 19131 All persons must take tickets fo: ^ork left hero. Positively rol work delivered until ticket is pr?* I pr>%cds La\?ndry not c iled ?o? in I iO fhjfcVS will He snlil fur n.hiYf.r?..a LUM JUNG W SINGLETON . ATTORNEY AT LAW Conway, S. C. Office up Stairs Buck Building no f! i icu/io Ulli Ui It LLTVIO DENTAL SURGEON K Office Oyer Norton Drug Company CONWAY. S. C. ir* 9 igSogQii'SBSS HORRY COUNTY , I i TRUST COMPANY! [@j L. D. Magrath I ; g? Manager. K Real Estate . I '- a Real Estate Loans * i a Bonds * 3 Insurance _ * PbdhbbbddbDI