University of South Carolina Libraries
l^i&'^I^^SEALEO TMS ONLY | < 1$?* AT y3U0 GKCCEBS g i ) [Ml&lHOUSE S i | I COFfEE ? J ASPIRIN I Name '"Bayer" on Genuine , f ^ Ail^\ 11 J jtfj \JL/ Take Aspirin only as told in each package of genuine Haver Tablets of Aspirin. Thon you will he following the directions <md dosage worked out by physicians <lnring 21 years, :ir.d proved k;if<? l?v niillions. Take no chances with substitutes. If you poo the Bayer Cross on tablets, you can take them without fear for OoKIb, Headache, Neuralgia, IJheumatism, I0ara<-bt\ Toothache. Lumbago and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Druggists also sell larger packages. Aspirin is the trade mark of 1)? \? f i r .. j?iiv?T ?i;imiiiicilire oi ^iouoaceticaciaestcr of Salicylicncid. GASOLINE S Y S T EMS Oil 'ranks and Pumps. Air Comp.e 3 cjs, Computing Scales, lloor Scaiei Show Case. , Account Registers, Ro1 built Cash Register*-*, Sales. Stoi\ Fixtures. THE HAMILTON SALES CO., l&tiv) Columbia. S. C. 1 20 U OR. J. I). THOMAS Physician and Surgeon loris. s. o DR. 6. S.lfWlS DENTAL SURGEON Ol ? Over Norton Drug CtK^kt. CONWAY, 8. a D. A. SPIVEY & CO. W. B. King, Sccty. BONDS AND INSURANCE ?Office in? PEOPLES NATIONAL BAN! BUILDING HARRELSON & HARRELSON Attorneys-at-Law Practice both in the State and Federal Courts. MULLIN3, ? ? S. 0 H. B. WOODWARD, Attorney and Caunatellar at Law CON WAV, A ~ It. U. SCARBOROUGH Attorney at Law, CONWAY. 8. C. T. B. LEWIS, Atty. o-uct Couoce.Uor at La* CONWAY. - - - S. C J. M. JOHNSON, CIVIL ENGINEER MARION, S. 0. My Engineering and Surveyinn office will be open during my absence, and prepared to take cc.ro of any work as usual. Addrea* All communications a* hereto for?. S. C. DUSENBURY Attorney-at-Law Spivey Building CONWAY, ? S. 0. J. I. ALLEN. Jr. Attorney-at-Law Office in Bank of Loris Bldg. LORIS, S. 0. F. J. SULLIVAN & CO. CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS (Ut.) Telephone So. 796. Murchifion Bank Bldg. WILMINGTON, N. C. WILLIAM EUGENE KING, M D Phj?icl*B and 8or(?oa AY NOR,. ... S.OL I T ST WEEVIL CONTROL. IK EARLY SUMMER Weevil Picking. Clemson College. May 9.?Tho cotton boll weevil requires a long time t?? | tiome from its winter quarters in the spring anil early summer. These pests begin to eniorg" usually during the latter part of March and while nearly all of them will he out by the first week in June, yet there are straggler* that will not come out until tlie first J week in July. They feed upon the tender leaves and the tips of the buds until the squares begin to form. Whenever weevils are present in noticeable numbers on the young cotton, it will pay to go over the Held carefully once or twice and collect these overwintered weevils from the buds, says Prof. A. F. Conrad, entomologist. This can be dono most economically and effectively just before the time with tho utmost care, the majority of the weevils may be gathered before any eggs have boon laid. Tim weevils 'nay b'? liiled by crushing them when caught or by putting them ' in a vessel containing water with a film of kerosene over it. The collection of weevils before the squares are fornu d, it is estimated, will not pay where u ion thorough search less than r-o weovils per aero aro found. To catch weevils from the plants, the following method is generally used: One ' and is hold horizontally under the tip of the plant >-o that when this tin bent over with the other hand it ; nny he r Tdi'y :,M:.ht. Th's ;.i(V I at j is ba d en the fact thai the weevil "playa x >r<m" and wlli drop to t'..o pround like d'ad when d'sfrbed. The j oix iator will : x n 1 *arn v?ii. \ great many weevils will escape by dropping to the g "ound :; > ?i-kly that they are not even noticed by the collector. Square Picking. Where an a'-tei.nt at :-quar> pickin.-, is contemplated, the following shot Id receive car ;fnl consideration. First, collecting should be begun about ten day- a!;er the first bloom is seen in the field. Soeond, unless the work is done thoroughly it is not profitable, and this means not only that squares must bo picked from the ground, but also those that have dried on the plants, as well as those that ;;how by theii unnatural pale or yellow color, or by tl u ing, that they aro injured so that those squares hanging on tho plants may not give the weevil sufficient time to come out before the next collection. This moans that collection should be made about every fifth day. Fourth, the collection of squares should be continued for Ht least six weeks. Fifth, the col- ! lection of squares i ; generally advise d j during the first few weeks of tho square forming p; riod where wnevils have lived through the winter in large numbers. Sixth, Jt must not he forgotten that under boll weevil conditions much d *i>; nds upon cultivation. Tho chief object is to urge the growth and fruiting of the plants as rapidly as possible. Seventh, it is estimated that it will not pay to pick weevils or unless low priced labor is av.iila! le. Frequently this can ho f-r-'urcd by t he emoloyment of women .*nd hildren who have an interest in th" crop. Thus- who are planning to use the calcium arsenate poisoning method for con'rolling the boll weevil are directed to Cir nlar 102, IT. S. Department of Agriculture, Washington. D. 0., wNeh "ive-. < xplicit information in the fewest words possible. To Control Chicken Lice. _ Sodium Fluoric! Most Satisfactory. _ Clemson foliage, May.?-Poultry lie'" do not suck blood. They feed on portions of the feathers or on the scales of the skin. The greatest loss from lice is possibly that of young chickens, which may become infested from tho mot nor 11011, even before they become rlry after leaving the egg shell. Though there are several kinds of poultry litre, they can all he controlled by the same method. Control. Sodium fluorid appears to he the most satisfactory chemical to use for the control of nil kinds of poultry lice. The treatment mir-t ho thorough, and every fowl in the poultry yard must he treated, because if one infested chicken escapes, it may then be hut o sort time until the entire flock is Rain infested. The commercial form of sodium fluorid may he obtained at most drug stores. P.mnll amounts or "pinches" of this chemical should he placed on diff -rent parts of the body ')* the chicken as follows: Place the fowl on a table in an open vessel, hold the lees and wines in one hand, and with the other hand place a am all pinch of the chemical next to the skin among the feathers on the head, neck f>ach thigh, underside of spread wings, and distribute by pushing the fingers among the feathers. One pound will treat about 100 hens. For young chicks Ihe head, back and body are the only parts that are necessary to treat. Precautions. Wash the hands thoroughly after using chemical. It will not injure the hands, but it is frequently Irritable to sores. 11 snoum ot course never n? taken internally. The rending farmer is the lending farmer. Do you take a pood farm paper and do you get the bulletins from your agricultural college? Increase the farm income hy growing timber on poor sioils. steep Mopes, rocky lands, and unused cornel*. [ HE HORRV HF.RAT.D. CONW* GERMAN TERRI- ] TORY IN AFRICA First Colonv of Former Empire Located in Not Very Attractive Country The former German Southwest Africa details of whose government under a mandate to the Union ot South Africa have just been formulated by the league of nations, is the subject of the following bulletin issued from the Washington, 1). C., headquarters of the National Geographic society: "At its worst the territory which was Gorman Southwest Africa before the world War and Germany's firs* venture into the colonial field might be described as a country too dry for agriculture, lying between a desert and the sea, with one of the most baron and desolate coast linos in the world. The entire coast for a distance of 10 to If) miles inland, consist < of sand dunes on which growi* only the sparsest of desert vegetation. "No perennial rivers flow into the sea across this dreary wasto throughout the nearly 1.000 miles of its oxtent. Kxcept for brief periods after heavy rains in tho interior, all tho sea ward draimn'o of the country lose.it'-ell in ;i wilderness of sand. Simi'arly, much of the drainage to tho ^ast and south sink ; into the dr:;rT' that separates Ger?van jouthwrt Africa from the r?> itish territories lying ? tho we. t of the Transvaal. "0;ilv oi.' iTr.'onably goo ; or'. t; alom? the com ;t hot ecn tiir north and routV limit*, of the tevri* iv, ;'.:i V! is?W J>11 is'.l - ^ a.'?wit' :? ' a'l area around it, was in the 'ha .?! of u*G r I ,n:>ny c. :d i! - ; ?* n 18? j *i'hr? o\i,-.i n.'c of 1' i t:ny ; 'and <v? | liiiU-h tr.Titory in Gorr-an Sou*': t Africa, and above all the fact i!,at it (' seel the one- port solely needed by the colony, was a sharp in t.^e sides of' lii? German*. 'Ill1 arlificia' harbor-- consrtucted by ?rc (Germans at Kwakopnntn, .in?' (i i.h o<" Wa'fish ;it Lnderitz hucht Anjirra IViiuma), 200 miles I the .outh, were only makeshifts. "i'ut there is a somewhat brighter ride to the ?>!< 1 Gem an Southwest Ar I'ica than that seen whoT one sail: iiletij/- its forbiddinjv coast. Hack ? ' the strip oC sand is an upland co::n try which, though it will not suppor* agrculture, is well suited to stocl raising. Hundreds of thousands of ca* <le, sheep and goats are raised there. Ranches are of tremendous sh'.e like those in the old west of the United States, averaging about 25,000 acres. ramels were imported by th^ Gernans for use in the drier portions of 'ho country, and are doing well. "In the northeastern corner of th< territory, which is in the tropics, tlr "-induct of agriculture is possible Cotton, tobacco and cavonls k jrrown. "Even the strin of snnd along tlv "on r has nroved in one p!a"? 1o 1" spe?tar*ularly valuable. Diamond were discocvered in the sand by rai' road workmen in 1003 and the com: t?*v now produce approximately one fifth 'of the world's output of diamonds*. In 10M tho value of (he d;n monds from this field readied $45. 000.000. It is be'ieved that the peni' have h^en washed i:f> from the m';i and what is perhaps the ru'y sea going diamond minirg company in o* istenee has heen framed to dredge for preciour stones off the shoro. "Copper i ; mined in sovera1 nlaco* md forms ono of the principal ex Morts. Railroads connect thr mine with t he coast and have boon built ' ^ a number of other sections of tb-" "ountrv. The Ciorman built wo'* Their oiiring plant:- and railroad s\. drink j jOWMMf ~ ? w j I The refreshing, tangy f 1 avor ; j of West Indies Limes is the j distinctive feature of this newest of the "Crushes' ?- j j the companion drink to Ward's Lemon "Crush and Orange-Crush Delicious! j In bottles or ctt fountains I ftofticcl by i l IMiono 101 Coca-Cola Bottling Co. Conway, S. C. iY. S. 0., MAY 12. 1931 W -. gxtp. ? .... : fv>, j 1 M Jm < ; S'-:' ^ ." ap" -r;_. . . f ?i s-' ' . .... ... ? . ^ -.t'-.. ?'* vP^h'M ' v t? / % i'^'.r ii *' tvJ)7T ^ f t'-.'^r *ffe:.;?, ::vi ... i&-r;"-' """' W4I mm. _ BteSSSS 2?ua^A.*y*w ~?. -- ">v ?? >' -?4iVi?l 5/--tuL.x? V Z\V OF U. s. CAPITi The* dome ot iIh- niu?<l Si;iir> < .1 lrnt eondillot: l>v |> 1 n 11:111: " ovrrv low an* steadily employ?mI for throe r..on'..i mint are s't?1?1 in*<I for or.e eoa1. I *.o ' e^ulut intervals 'v' lo ?*\ <?? tcms in South wo?i Africa, as w\'i ; in their other Afrieav colon! >, hav< ! coil aid to bo the be. t on tho co.i r.c nt. In some of the copper m'nii regions of l-'outh wo. t Africa snicltinwas done by electricity. PEACEMA KER S PORTRAYED Clcmenceau Dominant?Some thinq of Romance About Wilson ar.d Paderewski Georges Clemenceau was easily the dominant figure at the Paris Peace Conference, according to Col. Edward M. House, who will soon take his place among the historians of the war when the book, "What Really Hapnonod at Paris," which he edited jointly with Dr. Charles Seymour, professor of history at Yale, is published. The volume is the story of the T'eace Conference, told in articles by men who look loading* parts in the work of each department of the American delegation. These contributors include Secretary of Commerce Hoover, Thomas YV. Lament, Samuel Gompers, Admiral Henry T. Mayo. Gen. Tasker H. Hiiro*, .lames Hrown Scott, Charles 11. Mask ins and Robert II. Lord. Col. House's contribution, according; to a statement issued by Charles Scribner's Sons, the pubii dicrs, > ; foreword devoted to analysi and criti cism of the faivou.- figures in the shaping* of the Versailles Treaty. The reference to Clorr.enceau runs as follows : "There were some who towered j NO\ I Chevrol j; Effective toda) t duced in price to ! j! This reduction )[ as we have I he 1c 2 the market. j! j! Chevrolet rep! !| where you go, yoi j! Some day yoi I 490 Tour ]l 490 Road )[ 490 Coup ;! 490 Seclai r J Conway i; ?- - , t- yt+mt % * fc L k I ' * f ^ ;-' !? t -V. . .,. $&Mw, aafe . * > . . ? ?V ', w" . .. .; , ft ''^V^ ' ' ' -s ^4' ***** iw<- -. * *.-' ' '"""'^""--.^a w * : &\ . :i^a ! ?M$Hr ffiffi* #?? tW$' Y-V< * *> VP? * '* z&k \ r*t tCJ?igs ' ;'*? >6/^daa 1 . .. .. . A 1 C/L DURING PAINTING. iiniol :u NVjisIi;: uidm is kern In i-vrl i M years I'oi t!?ij- work J*??1*1 \ p'liniers | is' lime. Over Ii\i* iliousai ! gallons of fot pain; in;: o < apUol ilniin1 s*i ?! ,. i |(.M ..| ' :i<- : : i' : {j above their follows, fikI Clemcnceau I' stands out the clenvest-cut figure ofjj them all. No doubt or mystery suv-L rounds h'tv. i!i loughi in peace* ;; ; he fought i:i war, ponly, int jlliaently : "id courageously. r<>r M beloved France. No one within that notable!' gathering had so well within grasp the grit of accomplishment, lie inspired the affection of many?the admiration of all." Referring to other figures, Col. House says: "PaderewsVi and Wilson had about them something of romance and spir- j ituality lacking in others. The one had gathered together the fragments of a broken kingdom and moulded it : into a virile and Uherty-loving repub! lie. His fervored eloquence brought j about t he renaiscence of Poland, and added new lustre to a famous name, I 44 V. il :r\n nn a< lmv K?\twl 1 ? \MI v?.v " I HV I IKI llVlf J ? * I V I routed the comcicnce ami aspirations : of mankind, an I was the spokes-' j man of tho moral ami spiritual forces of tho wor'd. )Ii work at Paris was1 I tireless ami unselfish, ami it was m t ur.til ho returned to America to ronIdor an account of his stewardship 'that disaster < vertook him and | wrecked tho structure huilt in co-' {operation with our allies with such | painstaking care." No Worms in n HcaStby Child All children troubled with Wormn have ?n unhealthy color, which indicates poor blood, and as a rale, t here ir? more or 1 ess utomach disturbance. : GROVE T> TASTKLESS CHILL TONIC given regularly for t'Aivcr three weeks will enrii h the blood, I improve the digestion, and act ns a j?eneral Strengthening Tonic to the who'.c ystem. Nature will then throw off nr disfxl the worms,and tbeChild will l>e in perfect health. Pleasant to tane. GOc per bottle. o I Try some of the paper napkins kept I for sale at the Herald office. I N ?846 WAS 8820.Q0 F. O. B. FLINT, MIC11. r the Chevrolet 490 1 our in g $645.00 f. o. b. factory. i places the Chevrolet in a most west priced completely equipp jtation has traveled around th u will find it your neighbor's < i will own a Chevrolet. ing (Jar ster e ! n ! Freight and War Tax F.xtra. r riotor G t PAGE THKEF. (fiiickt\ ^strike\)j Cigarette T? seal in the dcflicious Burley tobacco flavor. It's Toasted ^$^4/ 'fh)L. WlU.W.I.- fX'l/M< <?.. - -! LATK C HOPS. In sojv.o serrti.ms of tho county tho *ar IT:' uot their crops planted early, ?ut they h; vc. been backward in Ketin a stari just the same, on ac"oii!it if jio cool weather which haM >revai!od. 'n other communities tho i \ .vc 1 .een slow about tfettm^j ul tin I- cott >n and tobacco and they, ! 1 loul oss make as good crops, >tt r, than those w ii?? plantvl so early. vivl - ?kv i4 I ?M IS NOTICE 11 i T O B /\ C C O iji |l G R O W ERS | ( > For tobacco bavo flues com- < ii: municate immediately with Sas- :: ' ser Company, Inc., Ciurley, S. C. <; We manufacture the best tobac- i;i ?: co barn flues in the county. !!! ii; File your orders with us im'V> mediately for future delivery. ::i | Sasser Company, Inc. * , < - \ t1 ]" : Gurley, Horry County, S. C. \ Adv{7|l|21 ill n 8 zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzizmz'.zzzzzzzzxzzzzizziizizizmz * -Y- * -Y -Y- Y? * * V * TOCACCO FLUES * * Mr. Farmer * v when you need T obacco * "Y" Barn Hues, call and see* v me or send me your order * *Y* for future delivery. * * Good Flues at the * * Right Price. * '* Place your order early to * v insure prompt delivery. * * MILTON PITMAN * * Conway Iron Works * Y -Y- -Y- *Y -Y- -Y Y Y- .* <c<r><r |! . ringCar i ! i Car has been re- ![ ?ed automobile on i e world. Every- !{ ..$645.00 i ...$635.00 | ti inm * 4' ? ) I J J ,\J\J J $1,195.00 ! |: ompany ||