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>AOI HOW TURHYOUR CROP j INTO BEEFSTEAKS Thus Bringing big Profit to You When it Go:s to i. ' Market EXPERIMENTS SHOW PROFiTS ARE MADE From Feeding- Steers on Corn and Roughage?Hogs Following Cattle Helped. I That the southern farmer who raises a surplus of corn and farm roughages can market thorn at a handsome price through steers of j good quality, when properly purehas- | ed, and can retain fertilizing ole- j mcnts of the feeds on his farm, is clearly shown in recent investigations by the United States Department of Agriculture. Throe lots of native steers, grade j animals 2 to 3 years old. of medium to good quality, and averaging about 825 pounds at the beginning of the experiment, were fed for about five months on full feed. The animals in lot 1 received a daily allowance of 39.1 pounds of com silage, 5.7 pounds of cottonseed meal, 4.9 pounds of oat straw; those of lot 2, 37.4 pounds of com silage, 7.0 pounds of ear corn, 3 pounds of cottonseed meal, and 2.9 pounds of oat straw; and the steers of lot 3, 38.5 pounds of corn silage, 0 T'l/Min/lo oil nlln/1 enirn rw.AHw/lf J/VUIIVIO ouuil^U kV/lll, O pUUUViO I UVtUIl* seed meal, and 3.5 pounds of oat straw. Showing at Marketing Time. At marketing time these groups of animals averaged, respectively, 1.044, 1,059, anil 1,006 pounds an animal, the beeves of lot 1 having accomplished a daily gain of 1.56 pounds, those of lot 2, 1.66 pounds, and the animals of group 0, 1.7 pounds during the feeding period. When the pork made is credited to the steers of lots 2 and 3, they paid for corn at 70 cents a bushel, and then made over $14 a head profit, or almost as much income as resulted from the cottonseed meal-fed steel's. Without hogs following the steers the feeding of corn would have been considerably loss profitable than Teed ing cottonseed meal alone. It cost j $3.53 to make 100 pounds of gain in i the case of lot 1, $10.82 for lot 2. ' and $10.75 for lot 3, where no pork credit is given the steers. Each steer in lots 1, 2, and 3 made a net profit o" $11.67, anci respectively, when no credit is givan the steers of lots 2 and 3 for the pork produced. This work credit probably amounted to about $3 a steer. Shrinkage in Transit Small. It is particularly noteworthy thai the shrinkage in transit to market of these cattle during a 34-hour run ranged from 54 to 04 pounds a head, which indicates that silage, where pioper-ty fed Lp conjunction with supplementary grains, results in less shrinkage in transit than where cattle are fattened on grass and marketed. directly from pastures. The steers under consideration in this, experiment made good killing records, the carcasses being well covered with * LIFT CORNS OR '**? CALLUSES OFF X " Doesn't hurt! Lift any corn or callus off with fingers JlkM | I rr <A ) v ' !nii C\ '!1 i. Don't suffer! A tiny bottle of lYeezone costs but a few cents at any drug store. Apply a few drops on the corns, calluses and "hard skin' on bottom of feet, then lift them off. When Freezonc removes coins from the toes or calluses from the bottom of feet, the skin beneath is left pint and healthy and never sore, ten lex or irritated. fat and generally satisfactory. The animals of lot 1 made a dressing record of 58.2 per cent, those of lot 2, ">7.8 per cent, and those of lot 8, 57.4 , per cent of maikctable meat. DOES HACKACME WORRY YOU?, I Some Conway People Have Learned j IIow lo G"t Relief. ' I How many people suffer from an aching back ? How fe%v know the cause? If it hurts to stoop or lift? If you sudor sudden, darting' pains? If you arc weak, lame and tired, Si'spof I vour kidnevs. Watch for nature's signal. The first sign may be headache or dizziness, Scanty, painful, or too frequent urination, Nervousness or a constant, deadtired feeling. Avert the serious kidney diseases, Treat the weakening kidneys with Doan's Kidney Pills, A remedy especially for sick kidneys. End rosed in Conway by your friends and neighbors. J. T. Todd, farmer, R. No. 2, Conway, says: "Three years ago I had kidney trouble and it bothered me a great deal. Mv back ached and was sore and lame. 1 had nervous, dizzy spells and I couldn't sleep well at night, as I had to get up to pass the kidney secretions. The secretions wore highly colored and pained in passage. Upon a friend's recommendation I used Doan's Kidney Pills and they soon entirely cured me of all the ailments." Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy--get < Doan's Kidney Pills?the same that , Mr. Todd had. Foster-Milbum Co., Mfgrs,. Buffalo, N. Y. Often Done. Mrs. Rirhquick?"We must build a bungalow." 1 Mr. Uichquick?You're right, and 1 we'll hire the greatest bungler in town to build it, too."?News & Cour ier. o '' 666 has proven it will cure Malaria, Chills and Fever, Bilious Fever, Colds and LaGrippe. It kills the ^ parasite that causes the fever. It is a splendid laxative and general ton- ' ic.?adv 4j24|19-20t 1 ? - ' Parted Company. ; "Yes." said the stout man. "I went into thnt. donl with $10 000" ( "How did you come out?" 1 "Alone." ?News & Courier. 1,30C HORSE AT / jlai JL Jl If you need fine i is your opportunity to fully selected by govei Sales At 1 i CAMP GORI Atlanta, Gs May 5 177 Artillery Horses, 3; Horses, 160 Draft I r? r . *. i ror mrormauon write I Evans, Q. M. C., F Depot, No. 316, Gordon, Atlanta, These animals, are all ally fine farming stock. S shine?under cover, if nec TERR Sold singly, in pairs, o Railroad Agents will be oi i i I THE HORRY HERALD, CONV SIMS SAYS FLEETS SANK 205 U BOATS Many Crews of Submarines Had Killed Each Other in Desperation LISTENING DEVICES NEARLY PERFECT Made Kaiser's Craft Anything But a Dangerous Weapon, He Asserts. In Now York City Rear Admiral William S. Sims held an audience :>f Wall Street men spellbound at a Vietoiy Loan luncheon of the Bond Club last week while he told with more detail that he had before the story of| hew the British and Amercian Navies successfully met the submarine menace. A feature of the anti-submarine warfare which he revealed was that examination by divers showed many of the crews of submarines deestroved by the Allies had either killed each other or committed suicide after the U boat was sent down. The Roar Admiral also revealed that the destroyers of the Allied navies were equipped with "a great many different kinds of listening devices," which enabled the command ers to detect the submarine under ^ atcr. These, he said, had not attained at the end of the war the i progress hoped for, "but had reached a very interesting perfaction." ] Sent 203 U Boats to Bottom.' j The claims of officers of the Al- 1 lied fleets for sinking submarines 1 Admiral Sims said, were six and one half times the number sunk. Sub- ( marines reported sunk were fre- j riuently found later "doing business . ai the same old stand." ( "The only times we would give credit for destroying a submarine," he said, "was when they could find ; her on the bottom and identify her , ???? m 1 waaa^MMMaaMBn?I?j ) Goverr S AND ind well-conditioned farn get bargains. These ani rnment experts, and are w riie Foliowir )0N flS u North JO Cavalry 30 Cavali Mules. Hor?? Lieut. L. L. For infon demount bert Ka Camp ation Ca. 1 J prime, fat and in good condi ales will be held always at RE essary, and to Highest Bidder. /IS: CASH OR CERTIFIED ( r car lots, to suit purchaser, i the grounds. Come! It's yo / PAY, S. C., HAY 1, 1919 ?ad???????? by number or when we got a surv;voi: or a piece of a survivor out of the water. "We thought we had got 1G5 or 170 of them. When we got the surrender of the submarines we found 205 of them were at the bottom of the sea." Admiral Sims said he had been from the beginning of the war an aovocate of the convoy system, but there was much opposition to the idea at first by other Allied commanders up to July, 1917, when "affairs were so desperate that it had to be adopted." The second advance was in the invention of the depth charge. "1 happened to ask Admiral Jollieoe three or four weeks ago who in- j vented the depth charge," Admiral Sims said. "He explained it to me in a way that showed that if it had not been invented by the man who did invent it at the time he invented it, it certainly would have been invented inside of a week by somebody else." Listening Devices 'Great Aid. Of the other inventions, he said: "There were a great many different kinds of listening devices which enabled us to hear the noises made by the dynamos of the submarine when under water and also the thresh of tho nrnnollnr ?itwl i #> fr?llr?\%' Imi- I r . . v. v\? 1V11V/U I IV I > UUUIV lhachincs would keep the direction when you were a good ways off, but would lose it when you got close to them. Others would give the direction when you get very close. "The submarine also had a fashion \ hen chased in shoal water of running slowly in under soundings and sitting on the bottom and stopping all noise, even the radio compass until danger was past. ''Sometimes a submarine would be so shaken up by the depth charge that her horizontal rudders, which determine her depth below the water, would become jammed and she could not maintain her proper depth. In great danger of going to a depth where the pressure would crush her, the only recourse was to blow her tanks and come to the top, when the crew would pile out of the tower and surrender. In that way we got a submarine off the Irish coast and captured everybody. Survivors Rise in Bubble. "If you shoot a submarine and start her sinking you usually get one or two or three of the people iment 1V1ULE.SI now i and draft stock, this mals have been carerell fed. lg Camps: iKATION DEPOT Charleston, S. C. 1\Jt T may / y Horses, 350 Artillery ss, 250 Draft Mules. nation write Major Allb, Q. M. C., EmbarkDepot, No. Charleston, S. C. tion. They are exception MOUNT DEPOTS, rain or Lunch on grounds. CHECK Halter with each animal, ur last and best chance! \ , i t Don't Let Catarrh i You Avoid Its Dangerous Stage. There is a more serious stage of Catarrh than the annoyance caused by the stopped-up air passages, and the hawking and spitting and other distasteful features. The real danger comes from the tendency of tho disease to continue its course downward until the lungs become affected, and then dreaded consumption is on your path. Your own experience has taught you that the disease cannot bo cured by Pastime Program for part ing Mi mop "THE CI A .1 i ? - " - ?? aramaxic wonder-play with Its a Bluebir( tue: Years ago a feature entitled Country by storm, and convinc ture Thomasses that a comec ry Carey was the star of this of this type of play, which has ity since the war started. He in the most recent of his effor Owen Wister, a master of wes "A wow wedn Triangle Plays pres "THE LITTLE The girl with the eyes fri "Gloria S "SHIFTIN She is saved from sacrifice. 1 good. 1 sa.tu TWO-REEL WESTERN ? T1 | NEWS REEL. A fii who arc in the tower, which is above the hull. They open the hatch and allow the air to escape, come up on the bubble and we get, them on the urt'ace. 'Many submarines were found on I the bottom and cxamnicd by divers j to get certain information, and frightful scenes were discovered, where the crews had committed suicide or shot each other/* Admiral Sims said the submarine is not a dangerous military weapon, because where the sea is well patrolled by destroyers and other craft no submarine dares show its periscope. "The Grand Fleet cruises around the North Sea surrounded by a screen of destrovers so intimat.rdv placed that it would be nearly suicidal for any submarine to attempt tc penetrate it," he said. The submarine can go only thirty or forty miles under water. The outside screen will put out thrity or forty miles and the submarine must go down when she sees it and must stay down on penalty of being depth charged. If there is anything a submarine dreads it is the depth charge. "The reason why we were able to put down the submarine with small anti-submarine craft was that the German fleet had to stay in port. If anything had happened to the Grand Fleet so as to leave the Germans in superior strength the whole thing would have gone by the board." A Pleasant Prospect. A Philadelphia woman, whose given name is Mary, as is also the name ^ ^ 1 .1 i. j i i i i oi ner oaugnter, nati recently engaged a domestic when, to her embarrassment, she discovered that the servant's naprie, too, was Mary. Whereupon there ensued a struggle to induce the applicant to relinquish her idea that she must be addressed by her Christian name. For some time she was rigidly uncompromising. "Under the circumstances," said the lady of the house, "there is nothing to do but to follow the English custom and call you by your last name. By the way what is it?" "Well, mum," answered the girl, dubiously, "it's 'Darling.' "?Harper's Weekly. Drag into Consumption sprays, inhalers, atomizers, jellies and other local applications. S. S. S. has proven a most satisfactory remedy for Catarrh because it goes direct to its source, and moves the germs of the disease fr A the blood. Get a bottle from your druggist today, and begin the only logical treatment that gives real results. You can obtain special medical advice without charge by writing to Medical Director, 27 Swift Labora* tory, Atlanta, Ga, Theatre of week commenc2y 5th. M P. JDAY m RAVING" startling* photographic effects < i. 10c?20c _____^ SDAY "Love's Lariat" took the ;ed the doubting moving piciy western was possible. *irproduction, and the originator ; grown immensely in popular- j will be seen at this Theater I *1 a nlonnr tTicven Tinao o ntr> tt W"rr I % M WA\/A&g V A A A 1 HV? O ) C4/ ? / ItV J W J item drama. It is entitled iN'S FOOL" IESDAY ents Bessie Love in REFORMER" that speak. 10c?2Co. DAY wanson" in G SANDS" lou can bank on this being Oc?20c. * IRDAY tJO - REEL COMEDY AND le program 10c?20c. A GRAVE IN FLANDERS. All night the tall trees overhead Are Whispering to the stars; Their roots are wrapped about the dead And hide the hideous scars. The tide of war goes rolling by, The legions sweep along; And daily in the summer sky The birds will sing their song. ! No place is this for human tears, The time for tears is done; Transfigured in these awful years The two worlds blend in one. This boy had visions while in l? Of stars on distant skies; So death came in the midst of strife A sudden glad surprise. He found the songs for which ho yearned, Hopes that had mocked desire; His heart is resting now, which burned 'With such consuming fire. So down the ringing road we pass, , lAnd leave him where he fell, The guardian trees, the waving V grass, 1 The birds will love him well. JP ?Frederick George Scott, FirstXan ad inn FUv5uir\r? t.i - ...j.w.i, Diiu.in riX(MM,ion ary Force in the Living Chur^^ ^ McCormick seems to have taken on an after the war spirit of progressiveness and several new residences will go up in the near future. o $100 Reward, $100 'a' Catarrh is a local disease greatly lnflu?* ?need by constitutional conditions. It therefore requires constitutional treatment. hall'S catarrii medicine i is taken internally and acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the 9ysi tern. hall's catarrh medicine destroys the foundation of the disease. Rives tho patient strength by improving the general health and asalnts n?tiir? in doing its work. $100.00 for any dfco Catarrh that HALE'S CAWHRil MEDICINE) falls to cure. V Druggists 75c. Testimonials free" F. J. Choney St Co., Toledo, Ohio* o It is not long before Horry County will be producing one of the largest i cops of food supplies ever planted > therein, according to reports coming fiom the farmers in many sections.