The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, July 11, 1918, Page EIGHT, Image 8
IMP
KEEP HENHOUSES
FREE OF PESTS
Fowls a"e infested by two kinds
of, bo<ly parasites?lice and mites.
I.ice live continuously upon the birds.
The common mite feeds upon them
or..the roosts at night, and after feed
irtg secrets itself in the cracks and
crevices about the roosts.
There arc many different kinds of
poultry lice. Those most common on
fowls are? the body louse, yellowish
in color and about one-tenth of an
inch in length, which remains on the
skin of the fowl;, the shaft louse,
somewhat smaller and ery pale in
color, which is usually seen on the
' .s ji... nml <ho head
SiiailS (>1 UK" ll'dlin I .->) v..v
louse, a large gray species which is
most frequently observed on the
heads of young chickens.
Lice are not usually very abundant
on healthy fowls which are kept under
sanitary onditions and provided
with dust baths. They multiply rapidly
upon birds of low vitality and
sluggish temperament, and are quick
ly distributed through flocks upon
premises where attention to cloanlir.v.
ss is indiff erent.
Individual Treatment Vrivisahle.
For ne rices in poult'V keeping,
arid with small tlceks generally, it ?
advisable to make sure that the
flvck is roe from lice by giving tlvloads
indi"i(.i'.! treatment. wheh \vi:i
; i cure thai re u!t. The most universally
procurab!' article for this purpose
is powde red sulphur. The method
of applying this is to hold the bird
by the feet, head down, and dust the
sulphur freely into the feathers, using
either a small insect-powder gun.
or a can with a perforated cover,
l'yvethrum may be used in the same
way. Neither of these remedies will
* 1 ' * 1 ?r\ rvAIll
inorougmy ami puriuuiieiiLiy i ivi j/uu.
try of lice. When they are used
treatment must be repeated at more
or less frequent intervals, as may
appear necessary.
By using commercial sodium fluorid
in the form of powder, or as a
dip, all species of poultry lice may be
destroyed at one application. As tlm
high efficiency of sodium fluorid in
destroying lice on poultry is of recent
discovery the material is not
ordinarily found in all drug stores.
"With a demand for it, however, local
druggists will secure supplies. Poultry
keepers who desire tq thoroughly
eradicate lice from their flocks should
write the United States Department
of Agriculture, Washington, D. C.,
for Farmers' Bulletin 801, which gives,
with full details of the use of
sodium fluorid, complete information
or. the control of mites and lice.
o ,
SATURDAY j
OWE. HEAL
WHEATLESS jj^
OSt MO B&FJVXX CTXACHinoJ.
TKKVTX CM BJLLAKIAST RXJU1
OOWTAJLNEMG WHEAT
o
Statement of The Condition ot Th*
CONWAY SAVINGS BANK
Located at Conway, S. C.. at the Close
i of Business Juno 29, 1918.
RESOURCES
Loans ami Discounts $127,208.09
Furniture and Fixtures 100.00
Other Real Estate Owned 2,029.29
Due from Bunks and
'? Bankers 1,G18.7G
1 7
TOTAL * $130,956.14
LIABILITIES
Capital Stock Paid In $10,000.00
Surplus Fund 2.000.00
Undivided Profits, less Current
Expenses and Taxes Paid 1,910.19
Dividends Unpaid 2.00
Individual Deposits Subject
to Check 49,518.46
Time Certificates
of Deposit 65,767.22
Cashier's Checks 4.00
Reserve Fund Carried on
General Individual or
Savings Ledger 1,754.27
1 ?*
TOTAL $130,956.14
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, )
County of Horry. )ss.
Before me came Will A. Freeman,
President of the above named bank,
"who, being duly sworn, says that the
above and foregoing statement is a
true condition of said bank, as shown
the books of said bank.
WILL A. FREEMAN,
) President.
Svrorrr to and subscribed before me
this 10th day of July, 1918.
A. H. LONG
Notary Public, S. C.
Correct Attest:
H. L. Buck,
W. A. Freeman,
Roht B. Scarborough,
DIRECTORS.
No. 666 "
Hii ia i pit*riprioa prepared etpeciau
ftor MALARIA or CHILLS A FtfVEfl
Five or tlx dotet will break any care, an
If taken then at a tonic the Fever will n<
return. It acts on the liver better tha
Calomel and doet not gripe or tickca. 29
D. A. SPIVEY & CO. |
W. B. King, Seciy.
BONDS AND INSURANCE
?Office in?
PEOPLES NATIONAL BANK 1
BUILDING
H. H. WOODWARD,
Attorney find Counsellor st Us
CONWAY, a ~ ,
? (
R. a SCARBOROUGH
Attorney at Law,
CONWAY. S. C.
<
S. P. HAWES !
(
Auto Supplies, Fancy Groceries i
iYjax Tires, guaranteed 600C P
miles. I v
PHOKiS 57.
QUICK DELIVERY,
|i
! i
CHAS. R. SCARBOROUGH ?
CONWAY, .SOUTH CAROLINA <
Complete Watenvurkb, Steam Hoi w? 1
ter and Hot Air Heating iMante
INSTALLED ANYWHERE
July Piumoing and Heating gooo
.tnd material uf higHeat quality un> 1
( uil line of Tub, Toilet Lavatory
*>itvk and other Bathroom Aecesaorte
and rep*"""-* 011 hand at a 1.1 tune*.
i'luiwOiiig and ileating.
PUT HOT WATER AND
HEAT IN YOUR HOUSL
T. B. LEWIS,
Attjr. and Coancellor at Law
CONWAY, - - - S.C
J. M. JOHNSON,
CIVIL ENGINEER
MARION, S. C.
My Engineering and Surveying
office will be open during my ab
sence, and prepared to take caror
any work as usual. Addres
all communications as hereto
fore. t I
WILLIAM EUGENE KING, M C
Physician and Surgeon
Office in Piatt Drug Oo.
AYNOR,, ... S. T
j
DR. J. D. THOMAS |
Physician and Surgeon
LORIS, S. 0.
J. 0. Norton E. S. C. Baker
NORTON & BAKER
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW
j'ONWAV, ? ? ? 8. 0
LUM JUNG LAUNDRY,
CONWAY, S. C,
Beginning July 1st. 1913
All persons mast take tickets{foi
vork left here. Possitively no
work delivered until ticket is pre
sented. Laundry not called for in
<0 days will ue sold for cna ges ,
LUM JUNG
W C SINGLETON i
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Conway, S. C.
Office up Stair* Buck Boildins
DR. G. L LEWIS
DENTAL SURGEON
> Office 0?*r Norton Drug CoanptH)
CONWAY. 8. C.
|Qi5aS9?HiH?ra?BBfiaC)
% HORRY COUNTY S
? TRUST COMPANY S
13 L. D. Mag-rath fj
11 gjj Manager. |
i sa Real Estate
T; a Real Estate Loans 1
d m Bonds I
? a Insurance I
*iiiDBsasBogK
CTKEOiltUt
GHRISTIEBENETTO !
SUCCEED TILLMAN
i
i
Governor Appoints Columbia
. v
Man United States |
I
Senator.
: '
I .1
V '
Columbia, July 6.?Governor Manning
late this afternoon appointed
Christie Benet, of Columbia, United
States Senator to succeed Senator,
rillman.
In appointing Mr. Bcnet the Gov- ;
?rnor said:
"My responsibility in appointing'
Senator Tillman's successor impressio
me deeply. The occasion calls for
i man of full physical and mental
rigor who can present to the people H
>i our State the grave issues of the H
var and the supreme necessity that I
?very sacrifice should be made, who Q
:an gain for the government the full 18
support of our citizens, and who 8
\nows and can explain the colossal 8
:ask that confronts President Wilson 8
and his assistants. 1 have appointe* I
me whose sterling Americanism is M
undoubted, who is familiar with the a
plans' and needs of the administra- jf
tion, and who will stand four square ?
and undismayed in support of the g
war ami the successful and forcibl 8
conclusion of it. $
i it i\u iipin'iiiwi'u v miotic Di'llt/i* y
: Columbia. Ho huti his papers prepared
to eniis. in tho army, and had
nat'i'iou the proper military officerto
that effect, but I am justified in *
appointing him by the valuable work E
he can do."
Mr. Benet, who is thirty-eight
years of age and a son of former
Judge W. C. Benet, was a star football
player at the University of Virginia
and afterwards coached the ,
line of the Virginia eleven. He has
been engaged in the practice of law
at Columbia for a number of years. ;t
o
WOULD CONNECT CHICAGO
WITH NEW YORK {
The Type Used in One Year/to Pub 1
lish Endorsements of Doan'sKidney
Pills. , I
Of the many kidney remedies on
the market today, none other is recommended
like Doan's Kidney Pills.
Fifty thousand benefittedpeople
gladly testify in the newspapers of
their own towns. Forty-five hund? i
red American newspapers publish
this home proof of Doan's merit. Hi'
type used in one year to tell this
wonderful story would make a soHd ,
column of metal twice as high as tHc
world's highest mountain. Placed
end to end the lines of type would
reach from New York to Chicago
These miles of good words told by
50,000 tongues sound glad tidings to
anv Conwav sufferer who wants it?
lief from kidney and bladder ills
Here's a Conway case. Don't exper
iment. Use the remedy endorsed bj
people you know.
Wm. H. Chryst, says: "Because o
a cold I had kidney trouble and m
back became weak and sore. M
head ached, my nerves were all un
strung, and I felt badly. The kidne* .
secretion., parsed too often and wcr
highly colored. Finally I got Doan'
Kidney Pi'hi and one box cared m
of all the complaint. I haven't been
bothered since."
Price 60c. at all dealers. Don'
simply ask for a kidney remedy?see'
Doan's Kidney Pills?the same that
Mr. Chryst had. Foster-MiIburn Co..
Mfgrs., Buffalo, N. Y.?adv
o
ON AIXBAfSj I
VTTH EACH PUBaiASt Of
vheai rux;a fob. hckii irsi
WO MUST BUY ALSO AH FQUAL
ArtOOKT OF OTHEH CE3IALS
Tobacco S
JVL'
WE TAKE THIS OPP
OUR MANY FRIENDS F<
AND HOPE TO SEE TP
AGAIN ON OUR COM IN
w m rf-v a *v ?? ? T/ n f > f f ?
r lKrvl LUA1J Willi I ^
THE BALANCE OF Y0U1
i
I FARMERS V
j Fullertcn
I
| r COiNWi
!>
' pp J '
,/t.Lu \ i
iu>, 069WH9, 8. 0
The Fart
s ? \
Ay
> yrm m
, V- .V %*'
The Buildei
* /
Your Toi
Treatment for mites consists in
1 t
applications of lqiuid insecticides or
disinfectants to them and to the
places where they harbor, repeating
the applications at intervals of about
i week until all are destroyed. Any
f the petroleum produ:ts commonly
cfced for disinfectant purposes will be
found effective for the destruction ot
mites.
???
$100 REWARD, $100
TiiC readers cf tins paper will ho
pleased to b arn that there is at least
one dreaded disease that science has
bio.n able to cure in all its stages
and that is catarrh. Catarrh being
greatly influenced by constitutional
conditions requires constitutional
tieal u.< ?t. Hall's Catairh Medicine
is taken internally and acts thru the
dlood on the Mucous Surfaces of the
System thereby destroying the foun
lation of the disease, giving the
patient strength by.building up the
onstitution and assisting nature in
doing its work. The proprietors
have so much faith in the curative
nowers of Hall's Catarrh Medicine
that they offer One Hundred Dollars
for any cas^ that it fails to cure.
Send for list of testimonials.
Address F. J. CHENEY & CO.,
Toledo, Ohio. Sold by all Druggist,
75c?adv
tales Open
r 9*k
OKTUMTY TO THANK
OR THEIR PATRONAGE
i J.^IU r ? mi r i D f A
rrtiuiijirtn, r uo
('. sales. sell your
asd you will sell
r crop.
warehouse
& Johnson j
k>x9 s- c.
... ! 1
',1 . ?
"t } 'v ^
<; I ' {.- i t.
y .
ners Wart
NOR, S s
of the Aym
s Recognize
We stand ft
for the ore
n
Horry Farme
BRING%
' / * ' '
lacco to o
* . '
1
F-RTHE
FARMERS & J
FAIR BLUFF, N. C., WIL1
DEPOSITING ALL OR Pi
CHECK, A SILK AMERIC
PRESENT J#P|tLV?ftAS
DON'T MISJTYOUR FLAG
.
Farmers & I
Bai
FAIR BLU
R. C, Tuckei
PRECAUTIONS FOR
HANDLING HOGS
Every hog that is killed in transit
! due to overcrowding or mishandling
| means, a loss, at present prices, of
probably more than $.'10 to the shipper
as well as a waste of meat needed
by the Nation. Mortality in tran-;
s:t or after arrival at the central
i - a i i i 1.1 . i 4. I
marKCL can ue tusseneu grcatiy in nut
weather by the practice of the following
simple precautions on the
part of shippers and dealers:
1. When hogs are very hot, dur- \
ing or after a drive, never pour cold
water over their backs.
2. Before loading, clean out each
car and bed it with sand which, during
dry, hot weather should be wetted
down thoroughly. Hogs in transit
during the night only are not so
likely to be lost from overheating as
are the animals shipped in the daytime.
With day shipments in hot
weather it is highly advisable to suspend
burlap sacks of ice from the
' . ' i
I
>1 x.1 1 ihouse
"i
c
? ??
ir Market!
us as theN
)r a Home ;
:rs' I
lur Floor >
ji
E-E
MERCHANTS BANK OF
L GIVE EACH PERSON
VRT OF HIS TOBACCO
AN FLAG, UNTIL THE
GONE. BE FIRST AND
Merchants
ak
FF, N. C. ^
r, Cashier.
ceiling in various parts o." the car in
order to reduce the temperature and,
incidentally, to sprinkle the anmials
with cool water. The ice sometimes
is placed in sacks on the floor, but
the animals are likely to pile and
crowd around the cakes so that only
those close to the ice are benefitted. ^ t
The ice should be sufficient to last
to the destination.
3. I)o not overload. Crowding hogs
in a car during warm weather is a
prolific source of mortality.
4. The feeding of corn, because of
it sheeting effect, before and during
shipment in hot weather, should be
reduced to a minimum. Oats are pre
ferable where grain feed is necessary.
The maximum maintenance
requirement of hogs in transit for 24
hours is 1 pound of grain a hundred
weight or approximately 3 bushels of
corn to a car. In the past thousands i
of bushels of com have been wasted
in 1 Itfa ofnnD
tt ii*c-oi<WLIV VU13.
Scandal is a thing that it will never
do to dare. The least thing is
enough whether anything wrong waa
intended or not.
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