The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, April 21, 1921, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3
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rt. scatco only |
bmhgp' ?fv0t?b6!j0c2rs I j
f Wiffl HOUSE r
-j COifFEE ? J'
ASPIRIN
i^Name ''Bayer" on G&trmme j
/ S \ !
f _ wKsrram -? A
Take Aspirin only as told in each p#ck ge
of genuine Haver Tablets of Aspirin.
Then you will be following tlio direction?
iuuI dosage worked out by physician?
during 21 years, and proved safe by millions.
Take no eUanc.es with substitute?.
If you see the I layer Cross on tablert?,
you can take them without fear for
' Oolds, Headache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, j
Karaehe, Toothache, Lumbago and for
Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve tablet?
cost few ccnts. Druggists also sell larger
IMtekftHnS Aunifin in \ li/?
n . . ill aw^ VU\ u U>U\7 lint! IV Ul
Bayer Manufacture of MoiuxRAfi&icacid.
C8t?'n .of Salicylioaciil. i
_ __ j
G AS 0 1.1 N F. 8 YST l: M S
Oil Tanks and Pumps, A i ' Compressors,
Computing Scales, Floor Scales,
Show Cases, Account Registers, Re!
built Cash Registers, Safes. Store
Fixtures.
THE HAMILTON SALES CO.,
. ^adv) Columbia, S. C. ! i!9 tf
DR. .1. 0. THOMAS
Physician and Surgeon
I.ORIQ. 0. 0.
*
DR. GUJEWIS
'DENTAL SURGEON
'CHk? Or?r Norton l)rof
CONWAlf. B. a
D. A. SPIVEY & CO.
W. B. King, Secty.
BONDS AND INSURANCE
-?Office in?
PEOPLES NATIONAL BANK
BUILDING
. HARRELSON & HARRELSON
Afctorneys-at-Law
Practice both in the State and
Federal Courts.
1MULLINK. ? ? s n
H. U. WOODWAttU,
Attorney mc'iCounsellor it L?.w
CONWV?, ti ~
U. H. gCAitlUHtOUGH
A ttorojvj at L
CONWAY, rt. C.
T. B. LEWIS,
Atty. &nti Oouuccllor ?t La-?
CONWAY,' - - S> t
J. M. JOHNSON,
CIVIL ENGINEER
MARION, S. ?G.
My Engineering and Surveying
office will be open during my ab-x
sunce, and prepared to take care
rt f Qnv nr. nn""! A J
?? ??wi n no uuuui< AUUrGBt
All communications a? bereto
Cora.
S. C. DUSEMBURY
Attorney-at-Law
Spivcy Building
CONWAY, ? S. 0.
J. I. ALLEN, Jr.
Attorney-at-Law
Office in Bank of Loris Bldg.
I.ORIS, S. G.
F. J. SULLIVAN & CO.
CERTIFIED
| PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS (Ut.)
Telephone So. 796.
Murohison Bank BIdg.
WILMINGTON. N. C.
WILLIAM EUGENE KING. M D
Physician and Surgeoi
AYNOR,. - - - S.C.
I
1
I
TTSEs ' SilMRSFIIDS"
Suggestions for Care of Sweet Potato
Beds and Setting of Plants
to the Field.
Clemson College. April 18.?At tills
season the sweet potato slips should
ho coming up in the sweet potato bed.
<C?iro should he taken that the !>e?l is
kept moist at all times In order to encourage
growth of the slips. Usually
four inches of sand or sandy loam boll
is 'placed over the potatoes in thchet!.
This will force the slips to come
up through four inches of soil or sand.
When the slips are three inches
above the surface of the ground they
will cbe large enough to set -to the
field. Care should be taken 10 wet
the sweet potato bed thoroughly two
or three hours before the slips are
drown; otherwise they may be broken
in drawing.
Lt will require three bushels of potatoes
to furnish suffeient slips to
;plant an acre. One acre transplanted
enrjy in thf? season, say during the
middle of May, -will provide enough
vine cuttings to set five acres more.
After the vines have made a growth
of from ton to twolve inches they are
cut and transplanted in the same way
as sli;>s. These cuttings aro usually
from eight to ton inches long, and set
their full length in the soil, leaving
two or three buds only above the sur
fare. In order that a large number
ot' cultinga may be available early in
i the season, it is desirable to transplant
the first acre of slips on com*
paratively rich soil, or to fertili'.^ the
and heavily with a commercial fertiliser
in order to stimulate a vigorous
growth.
Use Vine Cuttings.
Potatoes grown from cuttings will
bo freer from disease than those
grown from slips. Therefore, it is dMsirahl^
to have as large a per cent or
the crop as possible produced from
vino cuttings rather than from, slips.
Three or four drawings may be made
from the potato bed. provided tho
slips nre not allowed to grow too long
before removing them. The slips arc
supported by the plant food contained
in the potato itself, and after the third
drawing is removed, will rv>t sprout
Tnopjy.
in order that triKlips -or cuttinps
may bo transplanted to the field as
soon as they are Iwrpe enough, the
prrouird where the potatoes are to Iv*
planted should be prepared in ad
vance, so that advantage may be
taT<en of n p:ood season; otherwise ft
may be necessary to water the plants
*s they are transplanted to the field.
This, of course, Is very expensive and
frtiould "be avoided wherever possible.
Distance for Setting.
The usual xlistance for setting the
plants 1s from fifteen to eighteen
inches apart in three-foot rows.
When set eighteen inches apart it will
Tofiuiro 0.6SO plants to set an acre;
If set twelve inches apart, as is sometimes
recommended, it will require
14,520. Potatoes are seldom set as
close as twelve inches in the row.
and this is done only When the tend*
ency is for the poiatoes to srow too
large. Ry close setting a larger number
of potatoes is produced, but very
ft ?u? /if t I wt 1 <> iirrn tw i n tti l\/\ t im/t a i?r\
fV Ml I I . nil Ul jllill IV c\ 1 *"
found, the idea being to produce as
Ina percentage as possible of the
\"o. 1 potato, that i?. one that is not
more than or ler.F than 1-y, inches
in diameter.
Preparing and Fertilizing the Land.
After the land for sweets has boon
.horoughlv plowed, the rows should
he laid off three feet and a deep furrow
o >ened with a shovel plow. The
'er'ilizer should be applied in thir
drill at 'lie rate of fiOO to JSOO pound1'
>:?r acre, a rhige formed over this furtow
by running two furrows with n
half-shovel turn plow on each side.
The plants should then be set on thi?
'?ed. A fertilizer analyzing 8 percent
nhosphorie acid 3 percent nitrogen,
ind three percent potash is recommended
for the Peidmont region,
whose the soils are clayey, or clayeynam.
In the central and southern
nnrts of 11?e state, where (he soils arc
nore or less sandy, a fertilizer analyzing
S percent phosphoric acid. 3 percent
nitrogen, and 0 percent potash ?s
recomr.irndcd. The greatest care
should be taken in the preparation of
hi* land and the subsequent cultivation
in order that as high a yield af
. il l. 1 ?l 4 ? i 1 TIT ^ _ 1 I 1
XJVHIUII* TJI.iy 111' CJDlttJTieil. V\ I' JillOIMM
endeavor to produce not loss tl)nn lT>o
bushels per acre. Two hundred to
'\?S> bushels are frequently harvestod
where 'ho fields are properly plowed,
fertilized, and cultivated.
Varieties Recommended.
The Porto Rico. Nancy Hall, and
Triumph arc the three varieties now
')oint?; grown most extensively in thp
South. The Porto Ulro is the most
zonular variety in this state. The
Triumnh is :?11 crly variety and is
nlanted extensively when the potfi.
N>es are shipn d green to the northrn
markets during August and pep1
cm her.
tn an ago demanding efficiency
there is no place for the scruh.
Th<? progressive dairy farmer enn
not afford to he without a silo.
A good sow is a gold hond yielding
^ix to eight. coupons semi-annually.
There is no equivalent or substi
lite for good milk.
April and May are good month;
'or preserving eggs in water-glass to
all and win tor use.
Gel office supplies at the Hejald
TS& HORRY HERALD, OOMWi
TO USE TIMBER
OF MAYFLOWER
_____
In Peace Portal To Be
Lf-oud Acroso Canadian
Boundary.
Timber from the Mayflower has
been brought to Seattle to be encased
in a great Peace Portal being
erected across the Pacific Highway,
at Blaine, Wash., on the international
boundary between Canada
and the United States in commemoration
of more than 100 years of
peace between the two countries.
The portal will he dedicated this
summer, says a Seattle dispatch.
The bit of the Pilgrim ship, a
small piece of oak, was carried to
Seattle in an ancient English chest
of hand-beaten iron, believed to be
pirate's gold chest of olden days.
The chest was taken from a Scot
land yard dunireon and given for
the trip by Sir Alfred Thompson,
chief of the yard.
Impressive ceremonies were held
at Buckinghamshire, near London,
when the bit from the boat was cut
from the old hull, which lies upturned
on the banks of the Thames.
Samuel Hill, Seattle, president of
the Pasific Highway Association, I
and the leader in the portal construction
movement and Frank Terrace,
a Spittle good roads advocate,
negotiated for the wood and
were nrcsent when it was taker
from tho sliip.
After I ho timber was sawed f?'or
the hull, 1 he Knglish Quakers, whe
euard the rei-iains, said that novel
.'rr in would it be disturbed.
Following the cutting of the hull
Ko niece was tvVr>n by l'ill anr
Terrace to Hebrium and France
if WK' I'ofnro M il
hoi J< ffro. Icinjar Albert of Bcl/riun
M*fJ Cardinal Mercier, Torrance
|VMfl
"Marshal JoflYo told mo ho would
V in Seattle tins sunimcr to at??vl
tho dedication of the Peace
IV Terrace declared.
Probably tbo most impressive
vootinir v'ms wTicn the two Seattle
on earned the timber into an an
;ent room 111 a Ghent monaster*
To!t:w,o said. In tho samo room
according to records, moro than 10r
oiirs before, thoro was sijrned the
'' eaty of Ghent, according to which
there were to be no j?uns or fort*
ilomr tbo 3,000 mile boundary be
tween Canada and the United
States. And in commemoration of
he observance of this treaty the
Portal is beinjr built.
Terrace said that so' far as ca^
be ascrtained tho chest in which
the timebr was brought from Enft
'and. is 3f?0 years old ami was taken
from a pi raters ship off tho coast
>f Africa by a British man-of-war.
rhe Quinine That Doet Not Affect the Her
Tcccvise of Its tor.ic ptv! laxative e-ifcct. l.\XA
'T'K BROMOQUININJ? is belter tlmn c-dinn?
i':..ne ami riots not cause titrvoiisiifus i
i.r?n? in htftQ. t lli? (nil in# .
* " th** *4 ' ' '?"OV|J
NEW ARRIVALS
Mr. and Mrs. W. D. McCormick
and children arrived in Conway last
week, and have moved into the Main
street cottaire vecentlv vacated by
Dr. C. ft. Brown. Mr. McCormic!*
is enframed in farm demonstration
work in this county, and will aid
Demonstration Agent/W. O. Davi
in his work, and will have especiall'
in his hands the work of preW?ntinj
and treating hog cholera in the herd*
of our farmers.
C Dltls Cause Grip and Influenza
\XATIVE 13R0M0 QUININE Tablets remove the
use. There is only ont> "Dromo Quinioi."
... fi<v
drink ^
.4ntXZ\i ?rmw ?? ? i m ^ TW
First c amc Ward's j
Orange-Crush. Later
came Lemon-Crush and
Lime-Crush. AH three
are carbonated drinks of
supreme quality and j
fruity deHciousness.
Enjoy one today.
In bciilcs or at fountains J
Bottled by
Coca-Cola liottlinj: Co.
Phone 10!, Conway, S. 0
J\f
iY, S. P., APRIL 21, 1921.
[A GOOD KXAMI'LK
OF CO-OI'KRATION
i
Clemson College.?That co-opera-i
uve buying is profitable is shown by
recent experiences of County Agent
Vieo. R. Briggs, of Oconee, who held,
' meeting one afternoon of Wcst-j
minster farmers interested in buy-;
ing acid phosphate. There was a!
good attendance at the meeting, be-;
cause the farmers were particularly
interested in getting better prices t
than had been offered by dealers and
<51 tons of acid phosphate were listed,
by these farmers. The Hocal price i
prevailing before the meeting was'
* 18.00 per ton for cash, or $22.00'
to $25.00 on time. A price of $1(?.00|
per ton had been f secured from the!
outside and when this was made
known, a local dealer offered a price
of $15.75 and got the order. This
'ittle meeting was worth \ approxi-1
mately $135.00 to these farmers.
o
No Worms in a Healthy Child ^
All children troubled with Worms have an unhealthy
color, which indicates poor blood, and as a 1
rule, there is more or I ess stomach disturbance.
GROVF/S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC given regularly
for two or three weeks will enrich the blood, i
improve thodigestion, and act as a general Strength- [
ening Tonic to the whole system. Nature will then
throw off or dispel tho worms, and theChild will be
In perfect health. Pleasant to take. 60c per bottle.
O
MORTGAGE SALE.
Under and by virtue of a chattel1
mortgage duly executed and delivered
by Nicholas F. Nixon to J.
W. Brooks, dated January 31st, 1020.
and recorded on February 21th. 10120. ]
i ti Book X, page 545, records of
lorry county. I have seised all of
the property described in said mort i
gage, and will sell at public auct: >'
1 > the highest bidder or bidders f :
cash, on the day of sale and before |
delivery of property, at the hour of
eleven (11) o'clock in the forciieor I
'if t!i^ 2Sth day of April, A. 1 'J1
at Cherry Grove, in Horry Co.int^
near the residence of the said Nicholas
F. Nixon, and at such -r.^arhy:
points as may be- found conven'ont i
all and singular the following* deCP
1* 1 ? .. 4 '*
.ivi iovvi ||VI PMIIIII w J#\ : I I ^ , lll-Wll I
Three thousand (3,000) pounds <. r
seed cotton.
Five (5) bales line cotton at I.it
tie Kiver.
One (1) bale lint cotton at Con
way.
Twenty (20) bushels peanuts.
Two (2) black mules, about twelve
years old.
Forty (40) head of cattle, more
or less, marked swallow fork in riglv
ear and underbit and crop and hole
in left ear.
! J. A. LEWIS,
Agent for Mortgagee.
H. H. WOODWARD,
Attorney for Mortgagee.
Dated April 4th. A. D., 1921.
j ONE-H/
^ On New Tod
!1 his crop is being sol<
the cabbage is better that
is until heads are; lully gro^
pp Sales are being made
him and arrange to handl
I y??i
[?V \
(Buy what you need I
will help iill a long fell
field, should form a part
FLORENTINE TO
ADDRESS MEN
J. M. Lynch, Under Auspices of
Hut Class. Wil! Speak to Men
of Conway. April 24.
Sunday, April 24th, will ho a ml
letter da\ in Sunday School circles
in Conway. On that day Mr. J. M.
Lynch, attorney of Florence, will
speak to the men of Conway under
the auspices of the Hut Bible Class
of the Methodist church. This meeting
will be helil tit the Sunday
School hour in the Pastime The itre.
or in *the tent of the Radcliffe Chau'
v.a, which will be here on that
day.
Mr. Lynch is well lenown in Conway,
having spoken here frequent I v
during the war in connection with
the various drives ami campaigns,
and having more recently spoken I
here under the auspices of the'
Knights of Pythias. lie is teacher
of the large Men's Hiblo Class of I
the Florence Methodist church and I
,has had an active experience in
| Sunday School work.
The Hut Class continues to grow,
like Jonah's gourd vine. Now members
are received each Sunday.
Thirty-five adlditional chairs were
recently purchased and the indications
are that within a few weeks
time those will bo insufficient in
number to accommodate the crowd.
An alteration of the, speakers' p'at-j
form has given additional seating
snaoe. but is; in'irlnriimi r?
I Recently Kev. J. C. Atkinson
delivered a splendid lecture on public :
[health, using as a basis of his remarks
the lesson t"xt for the day.
Mr. Atkinson showed very clearly
that each one of us is under a moral
I responsibility for the care of his
I health and that conscious abuse of
health, a lessening: of vitality, is a|
violation of moral laws. lie discussed
in a delicate and technical
way the prevalence of what are
known as social diseases, and spoke
of the loss to the government of
thousands of soldiers on account of
their having been affected by these,
diseases.
The view that the church has ai
part to play in the promotion of
public health was strongly urged by j
Mr. Atkinson.
o
SPECIAL CRIMINAL TERM.
Solictor ' L. M. Casque is still,
thinking of having a special term,
of the court of general sessions some'
time this year in order to try and:
dispose of some of the old cases still'
hanging over on the docket of that I
court. it is not yet settled as to1
when this special week of court will?
be, hut probably after the holding
of the summer term, taking place
about two months -from now.
S.LF A CRT. NOW MAT I
AT THE
jj\ ft 17
dville Road, Two Miles froi
:1 a little m advance of matur
when fully headed up, thou:
iv n.
by J. W. Shackelford at the
i
e a part of this crop.
1 in Pace
J ill I uoc
for dinner?lay in a supply h
want at this season when ve?
of the diet of each and every
PAGE THREE
s
VjtataW
LUCKY
STRIKE
CIGARETTE
() V /Ox
Wf Wf\S SKt ' ./TMU'ttfAM. (.'I'ntiCt', Sj,
To Cure a Cold in One Day
Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE (Tablets.) It
stops the Cough and Headache and works off the
Coki. E. W. CKOVE'S signature on each box. 30c.
wmm FRIEND
Fo>* Expectant Mothers
ISsr.d Sy Three Generations
wthtc por booklet om mothl'hhood and tmr baby. pre!
Bhaofilld Hkuulator Co., Dkpt. 5-0, Atlanta, GA.
Y' * >' -Y- -Y' Y? Y -Y- -Y*
TOCACCO FLUES *
Mr. Farmer *
when you need i obacco *
Bain Mues, call and see *
me or send me your order *
'Y* for future delivery. *
*Y Ciood Flues at the *
* Right Price. *
* Place your order eaily to *
* insure prompt delivery. *
* MILTON PITMAN *
* Conway Iron Works *
* * .y. .y. .y .y y, .y *
B A 0 EI
JRiNG |
' U
rr, Court House ,%|
ity, tor the reason thai y
gli there is plenty to last B9
farm c-r delivered. See 31
CP H
over Sunday, ITiey P;
'ctaMrs, iiesh from the
r family.
E5Efi~Zl~IiS