The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, June 02, 1921, Page PAGE TEN, Image 10
PACKS TFTT
Winthrop CollPRe
SCHOLARSHIP AND ENTR**iCE
EXAMINATION ^
The examination for tho award of
vacant Scholarships in Winthrop
College and fv>r admission of new
studentwill l>e held at the Comity
Court House on Friday. July 1. at 9j
a. in. Applicants must not be less I
than sixteen years of aire. When 1
Scholarships are v:ic.int arter July 1
they will he i'.w:rded t > those making
the highest average at this oxnmiration,
provided they meet the conditions
governing the aw; vd. Applicants
for Scholarships should write to
President John -on before the examination
for Scholarship examination
blanks.
Scholarships are worth $100 and |
free tuition. The next sessi >n will :
open September 14, 1021. For fur- !
ther information and catalogue, address
I'reo. O. It. Johnson, Kock Hill,
S. C.?adv. Gj2j3t
NEW QUARTERS.
It is now said the Conway postof-j
fice will occupy one of the new brick
buildings being erected on Laurel
street, the one immediately at the cornel
of that street and the alley running
through to Main street.
Recently there was some talk of
-' " 11 . i .T, i.
paving- liiis aney ;ui tin* \\<i\ uuuu^n,
connecting up with the hard walk laid
some time ago hy Mr. .). W. Taylor.
So far the business men have not
agreed in what proportions they will
stand the paving expense and the
work may not be done for some time.
NOTICE OF KLIXTION.
In pursuance of an order made by
the County Board of Ivlucation for
Horry County on the 23rd day of
May, 1921, the undersigned 'trustees
of District. No. (>9 will hold an election
at Maple School House on the
11th day of June, 1921, upon the
question of levying a Special School
Tax of 4 mills upon the taxable
property of said District No. C>9.
Dated, Mav 23, 1921.
J. hamp long, i
j. t. andkrson,
n. t. collins,
Board of Trustees School District '
No. 09. 5 2<J2t|
o
as \\i: <;o on
As we go on, grow older, grow more
wise,
Grow iriendlier with every friendly
tiling,
The honorable trees, grave dusk, the
swing:
Of upland meadows toward the skies,
And even the old new fraudulent surprise.
Of that quaintly smiling paradox the
spring,
How greatly beauty once again can
bring,
In smaller ways tears to our tenderer
eyes.
We do not wait on mountains or on
seas,
For there's a little lake between the
hills
That rustles with the sedges and the
bee*',
And great ail venture found in daffodils.
Stirs April gardens, when the world
again
Is quick with mice and moles, crickets
and men.
?Maxwell Struthers Burt ,
o
,^To Stop a Cough Quick
take" HAYES* HEALING HONEY^ a
cough medicine which stops the cough by
healing the inflamed and irritated tissues.
A box of GROVES O-PEN-TRATE
SALVE for Chest Colds, Head Colds and
Croup is enclosed with every bottle of
HAYES* HEALING HONEY. The salve
should be rubbed on the chest and throat
of children suffering from a Cold or Croup.
The healing effect of Hayes' Healing Honey in
bum* me tnroai conioinrn wun win neaiing rnrci 01
Grove'* O-Pen-Trate Salve through the pores of
the skin soon Mops a cough.
Both remedies arc packed in one carton and the
coat of the combined treatment is 35c.^
Just ask your druggist for HAYES'
HEALING HONEY.
Thero will be no more court until
fall, unless a special term is called.
There was talk of a special term of
the court of common pleas to he held
In the> summer, but we have heard
no talk of this for some time.
* DR. P. M. BLANTON *
* DENTIST *
* Office in Herald Building *
* Conway, S. C. *
***********Y- *
OfflCE SUPPLIES
Check Over (he Following and
Send Us Your Orders:
PRINTED STATIONERY
TYPEWRITER RIBBONS
CARBON SHEETS
BOX PAPER (legal size)
ADDING MACHINE ROLLS
STENOGRAPHERS' PADS
LEGAL CAP PAPER
BLANKS Or ALL KINDS
RUBBER BANDS
SECOND SHEETS
Also carry a stock of Paper
Napkins, Toilet Paper, Paper
Towels (in rolls).
Write or Telephone
THE HERALD
I
BOLL WEEVIL 1
LIKES IT ALL;
Attacks Long Staple as We!1 j
as Short Staple i1
Cotton I
ADOPT THEMSELVES h
TO NEW CONDITIONS ;
They Live Just as Long* 011 Up- <
land as 011 Sea Is- ! J
lands. !1
p
Boll weevils develop about a?; rapid- <
ly and live as long on one kind of (
cotton as another. They seem to
(adapt themselves to new conditions
j rapidly and become organized to carry j i
Jon their work of destruction without!'
idelay. These points are brought out j
, in detailed studies of the pest in the I
!states east of the Mississippi river,
covering a period of two years, conducted
by entomologists of the United
| Stales Department of Agriculture at
i Madison, KMa.
A complete report of the studies
has been published in Department
Bulletin Studies in the Biology ,
of the Mexican Cotton Moll Weevil on
Short Staple t'plnnd. Long Staple L'p,
land, ami Sea-Island Cotton. Sincej
methods of control are usually based
1 iiunii facts secured from biological
(studies, the results of recording thej
life history of the weevil in this bulletin
are of considerable importance to i
tlx1 cotton growers ea<t of the Mississippi
river.
Weevils Mature in Same Length
of Time.
|
j The studies were conducted both !
| under outdoor insectary conditions!
and actual field conditions, the main j
object being to determine the differ-j
ence, if any, in the biology of the i
weevil on the different kinds of cot-i
ton. The results all indicate that iJ
wide variation exists in the length of '
time required for the weevil's develop
mcnt under insectary conditions compared
with normal field conditions.
M
On Sea-Island cotton plant lets the .,
hibernated weevils lived 11.05 days, i
The first and second generation!)
weevils fed on sea-island cotton n
squares lived 10.07 days, while the"
weevils fed on sea-island cotton bolls |(
lived 15-3 days. It was found that j j
there was practically no difference I,
in the longevity of boll weevils on ,
sea-island and upland cotton.
The largest number of eggs deposit- (
ed by a single female weevil was 432.']
This record was made by a hibernated i
female on upland cotton squares un- t
der insectary conditions. The largest
number of eirirs deposited during any
one day. The field-bred weevils showed
more vitality than those bred un- i
der artificial conditions.
Under field conditions the average
length of time infested squares hung '
on the upland cotton plants after egg
puncture was 11.5 days. The time re-,(
quired to complete the development:
of the immature weevil after in infested
square dropped to the groundj
was 10.S days in the upland cotton
.squares. There was practically no
'difference shown in the length of developmental
period of the weevil bred i
in the short-staple upland, longstaple
upland and sea-island cotton
, squares.
The hibernation of the weevil at j
i Madison, Fla., is incomplete, and the
adults are seldom inactive more than ,
180 days at a time. They emerge from I
'hibernation very gradually, the total]
daily emergence bearing a direct relation
to the total daily rainfall. The!
weevils survive the winter in large j
numbers, but it was found that only i
17.54 per cent of the hibernating!
weevils survived the winter of I1S- i
1010.
o
COPY SUMMONS FOR RKLIKF.
(Complaint Not Served.)
The State of South Carolina, County
of Horry; in the Court of Common
Pleas.
H. M. Reynolds, Plaintiff, vs. Miley
Best, Conway Live Stock Company,
a corporation, George J. Holliday, S.
H. F i ve. Burroughs & Collins Com
Ipany, a corporation, Louis Best, Dock
j Best, Etta Kirton, Mella
Davis, Carrie Davis, Sis Davis, Mazie
(Belle Vereen, Frank Vereen, Jesse
Vereen, Rufus Collins, Leila Bushy,
John Vereen and Richard Best, heirs
at law of Polly Best, Deceased, defendants.
To the Defendants above named:
You are hereby summoned and lequired
t<> answer the complaint in this
action, which has been filed in the
office of the Clerk of the Court of
Common Pleas for the said County,
and to serve a copy of your answer
to the said complaint on the subscriber
at his office at Conway, S.
within twenty days after the ser\ice
hereof, exclusive of the day of such
service; and if you fail to answer the
complaint within the time aforesaid,
the plaintiff in this action will apply
t o thfl {'oiirf ml' I no rr?li??f dnni'mdoil
in the complaint.
Dated December 23rd, A. I). 1920.
H. If. WOODWARD,
Plaintiff's Attorney
To Etta Kirton, Leila Busby, Dock
Host and Louis Rest, Absent Defend'ants:
Take notice that the complaint
in the forejrointf stated action and thr
summons of which the foretfointf is
J a copy, were filed in the office of
the Clerk of the Court of Common
Pleas in and for Horry County, at
Conway, S. C., on the 27th day of
December, A. D. 1I?20
II. II. WOODWARD,
Plaintiff's Attorney.
W. L. BRYAN (I.. S). C. C. C. P.
Cot the paper you need at the Herald
office.
rm HORRY HERALD, QQMWi
M ARKETING TO
FIT CONDITIONS
)
. , '
In co-operative grain marketing it
s more essential that the system
>e suited to conditions and practical
iced than it is that the system itself
his hv'on successfully applied in othei
'ields. This has heen brought out in
?u investigation conducted by specialsts
of the Bureau of Markets, United
States Depnriment of Agriculture, a
report of which lias just, been published
in Department Bui-etin 'JST, Co-j
>perative (irain Marketing. One can
lot carry his investigations of co- 1
>perative grain marketing far, says !
the bulletin, without realizing that .
a !Kit may lu> an excellent method for |
me section and for a particular coalition
will not always work out successfully
in other sections or when applied
to other conditions. The bulletin
makes a comparative study of
methods in the United States and
Canada.
The Canadian Plan Explained.
In the United States the most common
type of farmers' grain elevators
is owned and controlled by a body of i
stockholders in the immediate surrounding
community, and the elevator I
is operated as a separate unit inde- '
pendently of any other similar eleva- '
tor.
In Canada the line-house type of |
farmers' elevators prevail and is high- |
ly successful. The line-house type i
consists of a number of elevators con- j
trolled by one central office in a!
large marketing center. Two such ,
companies in Canada own and operate
over C?0() country elevators in the
three great wheat growing provinces. j
In comparing the two systems, the j
bulletin states that the line-house
operation of farmers' elevators would
seem to ofl'"r tho greatest advantages
in those states where crops are somewhat
uncertain or where the crop
year is of short duration, and under
which conditions it may be necessary
to close the elevators for certain periods
each year. It is possible under
the line-house method of operating
elevators to economize in accounting
und to standardize in construction and
in tho machinery used.
Favoring single-unit elevators is a
legree of community pride which
usually centers around these organi-1
zations quite independent of the ser- !
rices rendered. In many sections there J
is a prejudice against centralized authority
which is not easily overcome.
Elevators in the middle west section
>f the United States were established
primarily to solve marketing problems
:>f local character. That they have ]
not sooner attempted to extend their 1
activities to the terminal markets 1
loes not, according to the bulletin, 1
reflect upon their success. Rather, i
it indicates a conservativeness too of- 1
ten lacking in movements of this kind. I
o ;
? A I V. ITMnPR VVWriTTlOV
Under and by virtue of executions
issued upon the judgments in the
matter of Otto C. Brauer and Herman
E. Kaston, co-partners in trade
under the firm name of Brauer & .
Kaston, plaintiffs, against C. B. Jordan,
defendant and Loris Hardware
& Furniture Company, a corporation,
plaintiff, against C. B. Jordan, defendant,
both of said executions being
dated on October 2nd, 1920, and
by virtue of two attachments issued
Lit that time in both of said cases,
and to me duly directed; notice is
hereby given that I have seized and
levied upon and will sell at public1
auction to the highest bidder or bid j
ders, during legal hours of sale on!
salesday in June next, it being the 1 j
0th day of said month, in front ofjl
the courthouse door at Conwav, in
the County of Horry and State of
South Carolina, all and singular the
following described real estate seized
and levied upon as aforsaid, towit:
All that certain tract of land con-j
taining one hundred and three (103) j
acres, more or less, situated in Simp
son Creek Township, in Horry Countv.
South Carolina, on the Loris and
Pi re way Public road, and hounded
by lands of VV. M. Rhodes, Daniel!
Bellamy, Willie Prince, J. J. E. Har-j
relson, and others; being the same,
tract of land which was conveyed to,
Mary A. Heaves by C. M. Reaves]
January 20th, 1914, and conveyed to
C. B. Jordan by the said Mary A.
Reaves November loth, 1918, by
deed recorded in Book Q-4, page 50,
records of Horry County.
Terms of sale cash, purchaser to
'pav for papers and stamps.
J. A. LEWIS,
Sheriff of Horry Countv.
H. H. WOODWARD,
Plaintiff's Attorney.
I May IHth, 1921.
o
By means of search warrants recently
issued by the magistrate court
at Aynor quite a quantity of furnijture
and other house furnishings were
| recovered from the hands of colored
residents near that place. It appears
that there has been a systematic robbing
of the stores in the town and this
had been carried on for some time
before the right parties were suspected
and warrants for their arrest
I placed in the hands of officers.
W
/, i IrXPECTAfe,
/,'! f-'MOTHieaS''
\ For Thrro Generations
!' >( ". . i > . d'Dirth
/ jl 1 Ha sic r L5y Using
s Nmro
WH.reroH BGOKLCT Oil MOTHCK HOOD AN3 THC FUBY.mii
DRADFICLO UCOUt.ATCR co., DEPT. 0 0 Atlanta. Ga.
IY. S. C., JUNE a, 1921.
| RareVa
EXPO. BUILDING
GREAT IN SIZE
Charlotte, N. C., May 30. ? The
Exposition building for tlie Carolinas
Exposition, Inc., will be erected by
Lin1 .Jones uonsti uction Company 01
this city. Contract was signed this
morning and calls for an expenditure
of $60,000. The building will
be of modern fire proof construction
and will he 200x200 feet and contain
10,000 square feet of floor space.
The contractor agrees to turn the
<
i
With Spri
Each year tli
cars after placing
months.
?
By placing )
against delay. \
on your Ford Cai
it most?this sun
Don't put of I
'
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! H
AUTHORIZED FOF
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year Service Station Dealer i
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The Goodyear Tike Ri
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completed building over to the Exposition
Company not later than August
20.
Additional floor space will he provided
in a frame structure 150x250
feet, to he erected immediately adjoin
jing and connecting with the permanjent
building, and the building com|
mittee was instructed by the board
[of directors at the meeting this morniiur
t o Imvn nl'inc nrfiruirofl fnr lliw
building immediately so that contract,
may be let as early as possible.
The building site is splendidly situated
immediately west of the city.
A spur track of the Piedmont and
Northern Railway will run into the
3*kyi*ci
THE UNIVERSAL CAR
MM".
140 F. O. B. DETR<
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Ford Cars
iousands have been compelle
their orders. Sometimes they
four orders now you will be
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building and t\?o trolley linos run
nearby and roads approach from all
sides. All these roads will he nut in
good condition before the Exposition
is held. Parking space for automobiles
will be provided in a fenced enclosure
surrounding the building.
The board of directors is composed
of John L. Dabbs, president; G. L.
Etheredge, H. O. Miller, A. B. Alexander,
Jr., Norman A. Cooke, J. B.
Efired, Joe G. Fitzsimmons, David
Efird, Joe G. Fitzsimmons, David
Owens, J. C. Patton and C. W. Parker.
The building committee is composed
of C. L. Ethercdge, chairman;
R. K. Blair and R E. Scoggins.
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Season for
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CONWAY. S. C.