The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, August 21, 1919, Image 2
SAYS PROPOSED
LAWS TOO DRASTIC
Would Decrease Efficiency of
Cold Storage, Says
Authority
NEW YORK CAMPAIGN
BEGINS IN EARNEST '
I
City Officials Are Arranging
for Sale of Government
Supplies.
"Washington.?Hearings on proposed
legislation regulating cold storage
concerns were continued by the house
agricultural committee with F. G.
l/ineer, editor of Products Review, of
New York, opposing any further restraint.
He said the leiislation under
consideration would tend to decrease
the usefulness and efficiency of the
cold storage systems.
Tomorrow the committee will begin
hearings on the proposed amendments
to the food control act suggest
ed by President Wilson.
Recent opinions by food administration
officials that elvvon cents fas
a fair price for sugar arc being trans
nutted by the department of justice
to district attorneys for their information
in the campaign against profiteering.
Attorney General Palmer
said, however, that no price for sugar
cculd be fixed by the government.
!Mr. Palmer conferred with Clarence
Wilson, food administrator for
the District of Columbia about efforts
to reduce prices in Washington,
lie also had a conference with F. C.
Henderschott, secretary of the New
York fair price committee.
New York Gets Busy.
New York.?The fight to lower the
..4- , XT nur Va^It r?ifxr our) I
VV/Ol/ l/I IlVlli^ 111 lit** JLVfl.1V V1VJ U1IU
state began to take definite form
with the commission appointed by
Governor Smith ready to start on its
inquiry into the causevS of inflated
Brin
To the
IHIGHES1
AS GOOD AS 1
OUR STF
TOBACCO ANI
I TOBACCO MA
WE GIVI
TO PLEASE 1
I THEBRI
I ED IN THES
I LOOK BETTf
I TER WHAT
I WE GU/
bri
prices and the activity of city officials
in arranging: for the sale next <
week of vast stores of surplus army
supplies. i
A call for special session of the
legislature to deal with the present I
high cost of living and the hoarding i
of food supplies. Governor Smith <
said depended on the nature of infor- \
mation disclosed by the investigation. 1
The first order for sudplus army '
good stores at a total cost of i
$1,(>">0,000 includes 1,000 pounds of <
ham, 500,000 pounds of bacon and 1
<1^5,000 crates of canned vegeteables l
and soups, condensed milk and syrup. <
Army trucks will be utilized to deliv- 1
er the huge consignment to distribution
centeres throughout the city.
(
"BAYER CROSS" :
ON ASPIRIN ;
I
Always Ask for Genuine
"Bayer Tablets of Aspirin"
(pATHIM 1
Vv iSd yJ
Only Aspirin Tablets with the
safety "Bayer Cross" on them are
genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin"
owned and made by Americans and
proved safe by millions of people.
Unknown quantities of fraudulent,
Aspirin Tablets were sold recently;
by a Brooklyn dealer which proved |
to be composed mostly of Talcum j
Powder.
"Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" should '
always be asked for. Then look for
the safety "Bayer Cross" on the
package and on each tablet. Accept
nothing else! Proper directions and
dc sage in each Bayer package.
Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer
Manufacture of Monoaceticaeidester
of Salicylicacid.?adv
growTngsugaIbeets
as money crop
10 assist sugar-oeet growers m
deciding upon the best farm practices
Rub-My-Tism is a powerful antiseptic;
it kills the poison caused
from infected cuts, cures old sores,
tetter, etc.?adv. 4-24-19 20t. I
g Your loba
Brick Wa
AYNOR, S. C.
PRICES GUARANTEED. "OU
"HE BEST?AND BETTER THAI
IONG FORCE OF BUYERS ARE
D MAKING MORE FRIENDS FOF
iRKET EVERY DAY.
e you always the best we
0
{ou.
ick warehouse is one of th
tate and it often makes 1
:r than you expect it to i
' GRADE YOU SELL.
L r\ ii bi T" r? r? ^ ^ ^ i i r\ ^ ? * %
\nAIM I tt I U UU UUn btb I hUH
ck Warehi
HGLUDAY & LAROQUE
AYNOR, S. C.
?Sd^!UMSQfiff9kli9UHE'2H
THE HORRY HERALD, CONW,
in raising a crop and determining the
cost of production, specialists of the
United States Dcgtartmcnt of Agriculture
have made a study of four of
the most impotrant sugar bsct areas
in the United States. The department
has published four bulletins,
one on each of the four areas studied,
giving in detail the results of the investigations.
The first bulletin deals
with the Utah and Idaho area, the
second takes up the work in Colora- j
[lo, the third gives the results obtained
in Michigan and Ohio, and the
fourth, Bulletin 7G0, just issued, discusses
the practices on 165 farms in
three typical sugar regions of California.
While the requirements of the beet
crop in terms of value that prevailed
Hiwincrli 1 Q1 K nrwl 1 01 C ??vn /InnU .ttifli
va a wvv^ii A V* V' Ml V VIV d 1 t >1 I V"
in the recent publication, the authors
state that when such requirements
are known the cost of producing sugar
beets can be ascertained for any
Kivoh crop year by substituting
current rates for labor, seed
water, etc., for those given in
the bulletin. The cost data, therefore,
are valuable solely for purposes
of comparison. While the suggestions
are directly applicable to California
districts, the authors believe that
certain features relating to increased
production will be found vluable to
growers in other regions. w
In two of the California districts,
Los Angeles and Salinas, on the
farms visited more than 50 per cent
of the tillable land is utilized in
g> owing beets, while in the other district.
Oxnard, over one-third of the
tillable land is devoted to this crop.
The average acre yields for the three
districts during the period covered
b\ the study (1915-16) were: Los
Angeles 14.52 tons; Oxnard, 9.53
tons; Salinas, 15.59 tons. The cost
per acre during this period was, for
the Los Angeles region, $67.11; Oxnard.
$54.88; and Salinas, $66.45. In
general, the bulletin savs as acreage
increases acre cost decreases, while
a; yield increases acre cost increases,
although cost per ton decreases.
Labor Principal Cost.
Labor was the principal cost itemin
the three districts, amounting to
5C per cent of the total cost of production,
while the use of the land
amounted to 35 per cent. The more
important factors which enter into
the cost of producing sugar beets arelabor
interest on land or rental, seed,,
water, taxes and insurance. White
these factors expressed in tcjpns: of
CCD 1
IK |
R PRICES ARE 1
? THE REST." I
ANXIOUS FOR I
I THE AYNOR I
! CAN AND TRY I
IE BEST LIGHTrOUR
TOBACCO
.OOK NO MAT
I YOU. TRY US.
ouse
I
I
*
AY, S. 0., AUG. 21, 1919.
- <\
Lar
'*
I have one of th
Eastern Carolina,
for man from the
passes out.
/
I have an espcc
the time,?Rice,
and almost everyl
Clothing, Dry (
Skirts, and almos
I at prices that loo
to-day.
i For Buggies, V
ail Farming Uten:
Drugs of all I
robes. Ask for w
I sell a large li
: from me.
1
Geor
J9RD4NVILLE
money vahies are variable, fucH |
items as hours of man Labor, hours ai
of horse Sabor, pounds of seed, hours hi
of use of equipment, and amount of ^
| fertilizers required do not fluctuate
| appreciably.
Beet tops are usually plowed under ^
I in the- Salinas area.. They are of ' ej
J cons inferable value fi?r fertilizing th?
land* the best results being obtained
v/htrf* they are evenly distributed ower ! g
tb<- field. After thcv are cut the
* g
tops are allowed to remain in the , ^
rows, but before the land is plowed i
they are scattered over the field with I
a harrow one harrowing being suf- ficient.
Farm manures are used in
the California areas to enrich the
soil, but they are exceedingly scarce.
Deep Plowing Needed.
For the successful production of
an intensive crop like the sugar beet
I it is necessary to have a deep, wellprepared
seed bed. In regions where
rainfall is limited and occurs mainly
during the winter, as in California, it
is especially desirable to pracitcc
deep fall plowing This enables the
soil to store large quantities of water
during the rainy period and increases
the yield by facilitating the
I development of a beet with as long
tap root. On the farms included in
the study the depth of plowing ranged
from an average of 9.5 inches in
the Salinas district to 11.5 inches in
the Oxnard district.
After the seed bed had been further
prepared by rolling, harrowing,
and leveling the seeding was done
from December 1 to June 1, the time
varying according to localities. Cultivating
ranged from February 15 to
July 15, but in the Salinas disrtict it
was practiced chiefly in May, June
and July. The first cultivation preceded
blocking and thinning. In the
T,os Angeles and Salinas areas irrigation
is sometimes necessary, but
usually only one irrigation is required.
-o .... Almost
any business that can succeed
anywhere in the world can
succeed in Conway. This town has
the back country and almost every
other advantage for the business
I man.
o
No Worms in a Healthy Child
All children troubled with worms have an un?
healthy color, which indicates poor blood, and as a
rule, there is more or less stomach disturbance.
GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC given regularly
far two or three weeks will enrich the blood, improve
the digestion, and act as a General Strengthening
Tonic to the whole system. Nature will then
t.irowoff or dispel the worm.}, and the Child will be
' in >crfeet health. Pleaseni \) take. 60c per bottle
/(
gest of H
te largest stocks of goods of an\
I carry almosf everything thai
time that he comes into exisiei
FINE GROCERIES
tally fine lot of groceries kept u
Flour, Sugar, Bacon, Lard, C
:hing else that is to eat.
GREAT BIG LINES
Soods, Shoes, Hats, Ladies' Di
t everything else that is to wear
k like bargains as compared v
LOOK HERE NOW
i/agons, Harness, Mowers, Rake;
sils, at practically wholesale pri
|_ -1 - r f
<inas, lonex gooas, corrins, c?
/hat you want. We are likely to
ine of Cook Stoves. Get the t
ge J. Holli
AYNOR
France has begun demobilizing hir
my to its strength in aiijateen four- i,
1
Rub-My-Tism Ls a great pain killer.
, relieves pain and soreness caused ^
s Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sprains,
:c.?auv. 4-Z4-iy zut. j
O 1
Rutledge College, University of
outh Carolina dormitory now trnderoing
extensive renovations, will be
nadv for occupancy by the opening
f thee t919 season.
Il^roduct
^ienqjt
There hardly can
sharpening dull appeti
tempting results of
SENA
SELF RISING
A product highly
the South for many y<
feathery muffins, lighi
and beautiful cake are
housewives know from
best when this self-risir
I
I
ill . [I
t merchant in , I
t is necessary I
ice, until he I
p to date all * . I
anned Goods, / I
resses, Hats, *1
,?all bought I
vith prices of I
I
s, Disk Plows, >f|
ces. 1
iskets, burial I
UAlfA I
nave n.
(intl you want
i
?
j
s I
A
?A
i
day |
6ALIVANTS FERRY J
( olds Cause Orlp and Imiuenza >
^AXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets remove
ausc. Thero Is only one "Bromo Qulnlas" ,
L W. GROVE'S signature on box. 30c.
o T
Thousands of tons of moats,, poul- '
;ry, fish, butter and eggs are held
n warehouses by brokers, and specuators,
according to reports by theUnited
States bureau of markets.
o
Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Day s
ruggists refund money if PAZO OINTMENT falls,
> cure Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles.
\.r.tnntly relieves Itching Piles, and you can get
.catful slcop after the first application. Price 60c.
iimwimiiinniiiiiiiiiium;;x
7H I
s^oveiv Ji
appetite I
be a surer guarantee of H\j
ite than by offering the H
otmwII
> FLOUR. I
appreciated throught^t 0 1
cars. Delicious biscuit, jH 1
t and wholesome bread j"3 J
some of the things that H j
long experience are made H \
lg flour is used. m
And the saving that re- i|| $
suits is a big economical j/fci
factor. Neither baking El \
powder, soda nor salt is fcl j.
needed, all the ingredients H <<
required to give the finest E) j!
bakings being so exactly H j
mixed that there is no H i
i possible chance of failurjp H I
1 FOR SALE IN CONWAY
J it
f A. T. COLLINS CO. ?|f]
i
n
!
' 1
. Ma