University of South Carolina Libraries
m B / Mi In l ^M*# I ^ GENUINE | DURHAM tobacco makes 50 good cigarettes for 10c We want you to have the bcr.t paper lor "BULL." So now yen can receive with cach package a book of 24 leaves of the very finest cigarette paper in the world. Cuwr?n?f?Ki toy .Mo RiCHTli'icATlON OF HOG LOTS i i ?ri ' r? ? important ining in i-armers Fight on Cholera "disposed of dead animals Destroy Hogs That Fail to Recover as They May Carry Infection When hop: cholera sweeps through a neighborhood, causing the death of hundreds of animals, a simple precaution as the proper location of the hog lot, may J;-e the means of preventing infection. Where not to have the hog lot is pointed out and other suggestions on the control and eradication of this disease are given in a leaflet published b> the United States Department of Agriculture. Hog lots should be located away from streams and highways. Free range, streams, irrigation canals, etc., help in the spread of cholera outbreaks. Don't visit neighbors' hog lots or allow neighbors to visit yours if they have sick hogs. Infection may be carried by teams and wagons from highways; don't drive into hog lots. Isolate for at lea?t two weeks all new stock hogs and those just returned from stock exhibitions . nd sal??. Don't borrow or lend hogs for breeding purposes if cholera is in the communitv. Burn or Bury Animals Thai Die. Burn to ashes or bury -1 feet deep all animals that die on (he farm and tho unused internal organs of slaughtered animals, since they attract dogs, which may carry infection. If cholera appears in the neighborhood, confine your dog and encourage others 1/* ,1/. KI/AUlloA . 1? ?,w ui) i i i\ ' v? i i 111 i it u i1 i it- I r ' i I " M>cated dangerously near infected crater . Careful attention to tho foprjin?r and handling of tho herd after immunization is an important matter. Man^e, lire, and worms lower tho vitality of lings jind render them more susceptible to disease. If cholera appears in the herd, post warning notices so your neighbor.-, will know about it, suggests the department.. Have all susceptible hops miimur'aed at once by some one with pperial traiivng and experience, preferably a competent veterinarian, Insist that the temperature of all hogs be takeii at time of treatment and an increased dose of serum given to tho: e showing a temperature of 101* F. or over. Confine all treated hogs to limited, clean quarters; keep on light. restricted diet for at least two weeks and ,c;\c plenty of pure drinking water. Anti-hoc cholera serum is not a cure, but when used as soon as cholera appears in a herd it seems to have a favorable etfoct on some animals in the very early stage of the (licrtnud TW.M I'nlir All </> 'Itii'n MIUWMDVt 4/V/JI 1/ J V I V Mil 1 (.1111 IU V U I ' sick hogs; it is primarily a preventive. If the disease comes to your farm and runs its course, disinfect thorough Jy afterwards all places where sick hops have been. First remove all infected manure and spread on fields inaccessible to hogs. Hum all litter, rubbish, and old troughs from infoctr<' yens and lots. Turn over portable hog houses, exposing the interior to sunlight. Thoroughly clean pens and buildings in which sick hogs have been ke pt, and disinfect by spraying with compound cresol solution, 1 part to 30 parts of soft water. In sumr or. nastures and lots nrr> usunllv made safe wiUiin throe weeks by the ' action of sunlight. Fill, drain, or fence off miu) wallows. Disinfect and ^fv.rd up all runs underneath buildDestroy hogs that don't fully \or; they may carry cholera infectioji. Viles CarM In 6 to 14 Day.'* re'unu i..o..?ry !f PAZO OINTMV NT fall .ore Itching, Mind, iJioedlnflor Protnidljg Piles uiilly relieves Itcliinfl Piles, ar,' von ran H>;fi,J fcicftf* affr' th<~ f- * ,'rr-t Price ftOc. 0 LOST?One blue serge coat with discharge from the army in inside pocket. One Junior p?n was attacned ito lapei of coat. The inside pocket bore the initials D. E. T.. Finder please return to the Horry Herald office and receive reward. lmo T * . .4Pk* m _ oldIiesident passes awa\ There was a telegram received here last week from Dock Sessions, addressed to John Sessions, telling the news of the death of George Ses. i< n.\ at Raleigh. N. C. Mr. Sesions lived near Conway for many years. After the death of his son, I George R. Sessions, he removed to .nev on, k:., wnere ne uvea tor several years. He was very old at the time cf his death. Ms mortal remains arrived in ( nway last Thursday and the interment took place at Brown Swamp chv.rch on last Friday. Monuments Dealers In Marble and Granite anrl Iron Fencing. See us or write before buying and we will send our representative to see you. Lumberton Marble & Granite Works J. H. FLOYD, Prop. LUMBERTON, N. C. 3|24 lyr o The Pastime had a good progran jll through last month and promises still better things through September. The attendance is increasing at this popular show. o DAYS OF DIZZINESS Come to Hundreds of Conway People. There are days of dizziness; Spells of headache, languor, back ache; I Sometimes rheumatic pains; i Often urinary disorders. Doan's Kidney Pills are especially for kidney ills. Endorsed in Conway by grateful friends and neighbors. Ask your neighbor! Mrs. D. W. Harrison, Conway, I says; "About a year ago I had a I terrible backache and didn't know i what was the matter. I was awful , ly nervous and I couldn't do my housework. Dizzy spells bothered me and I would have to hold on to 1 something for fear of falling. M.v kidneys acted irregularly and bothered me a great deal. Finally I got Doan's Kidney Pills and after I had 1 taken one box 1 was cured of all the misery." Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy? ; get Doan's Kidney Pills?the same j that Mrs. Harrison had. Foster Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.? adv (G) o ! IK M m M m M jp| SB H p HORRY COUNTY | % TRUST COMPANY g s? L. D. Magrath Manager. 52 ^ Real Estate & *3 Real Estate Loans ^ Bonds Pf U Insurance w a ins 5674 JfS frit i-s E3 85 BS S3 MAKiON A. WKIGHT Attorney-at-Law Offices Spivey Building CONWAY, S. C. Dr. J. D. THOMAS Physician and Surgeon LOUIS, S. C. DK. G. I. LEWIS Dental Surgeon Office Over Norton Drug Company CONWAY, S. C. I). A. SPIVEY & CO. W. H. King. Secty. BONDS AND INSURANCE. Office in Peoples National Bank Building. HARRELSON & HARRELSON Attorneys-at-Law Practice both in the State and Federal Courts. MULLINS, - - - - S. C. H. H. WOODWARD Attorney and Counsellor at Law. CONWAY. S. C. R. B. SCARBOROUGH Attorney at Law CONWAY, S. C. T. B. LEWIS Attorney and Counsellor at Law CONWAY, S. C. G. Lloyd Ford W. Kenneth Sugg! FORD & SUGGS Attorneys-at-Law Offices in Buck Building CONWAY, S. C. WILLIAM EUGENE KING Phvsician and Surgeon AYNOR, S. C. I HE HOBBY HERALD. OONWA1 S. C. DUSENBURY Attorney-at-Law Spivey Building CONWAY, S C. J. 1. ALLEN, .IR. Attorney-at-Law Office in Bank of Loris Bldg. LORIS, S. C. F. J. SULLIVAN & CO. Certified Public Accountants (Ut.) Telephone So. 796. Murchison Bank Bldg. WILMINGTON. N. C. We are proud of the confidence doctors, druggists and the public have in 6GG Chill and Fever Tonic.?adv. FOREIGN INSECTS INVADING S. C. Moxican Bean Beetle and Velvet Bean Caterpillar May do Great Damage Glemson College.?Two foreign i*v sects, pests which are likely to do much damage, are being watched close ly, says Prof. A. F. Conradi, entomologist; namely, the Mexican bean beetle, which has already reached this state: and the velvet bean caterpillar, which is rapidly working its way upward from Florida and southern I Georgia. 1 Tl,n ? i *?1? ' jl m, mc.Mum wfctu uuuLie nas oeen reported by Government scouts at two points in the northwestern corner of this state; viz., Long Creek and a point near Easley. The spread of this pest has been so rapid during the Spring and summer that it will possibly spread over much more territory before being shopped by winter. This is an especially destructive pest to all kinds of beans in the garden i and to cowpeas.. The grubs, which do ; the principal feeding, are one-fourth . to three-eights of an inch long, of a ; bYight yellow color, and covered with spines which are branched and colored black at the tips. The velvet bean caterpillar has been reported by the Florida entomologist to be spreading in central and nortern F lorida, it is believed that this pest may be expected in southern Georgia in early September, and may reach South Carolina by the middle of September. Throughout Florida this in, sect is a most serious pest to velvet beans. This caterpillar when full grown is nearly two inches long. After it is half grown it is generally dark green with prominent bright colored lines with darker borders ' running lengthwise on the bod.f. ' Many are pale green with lines either indistinct or absent. The line ? along the side of the body is wider I than those on the back and is often , pink or brown. If disturbed it throws itself violently until it reaches the ground. Prof. Conradi urges that the occurrence of any suspicious insects be re' J ported to the entomology division, Clemson College, S. C., so that steps may be taken to control the pests. ^ ^ : * TOCACCO FLUES * * Mr. Farmer * | Y' when you need T obacco * 1 Barn Hues, call and see* I me or send me your order * for future delivery. * * Good Flues al the * Right Price. * 'v Plnre vour order earlv to * v insure prompt delivery. * | MILTON PITMAN * * Conway Iron Works * o kim.inc; those hog lick. Clemson College.?We frequently receive letters asking what is the best and cheapest way to keep hogs free from lice, says Prof. L. V. Starkey, chief of the animal husbandry division. Some say dip them in creolin solution and repeat the process in teri days. That will do the work provided you dip them the second time and then pur them in a place where there are no lice. Others say use crude oil. As I a manor 01 iact, crude oil is prob I ably our best louse destroyer, but whore can you get the crude oil and what will it cost? Probably the best control measure for the average South Carolina farm or is to go to the nearest garage with a five-gallon can or barrel and ask the man in charge to save some of the oil which ho drains out of the rv)tors. The mechanic usually flushes out the motor with kerosene and this makes a> splendid mixture. It doesn't cost anything and it does the work. How To Apply the Oil. a good way is to hurdle the hogs in a close place and pour on the oil and rub it in taking care to cover every square inch of surface. Then take an old broom or burlap sack and k<) after the hop house. It is not necessary to spend money for hitfh priced preparations. Just use the by-products of the garage p and save money. No Worms In a Healthy Child ^ All children troubled with Worms hove an unhealthy color, which indicates poor blood, and as a rulo, there is more or 1 ess stomach disturbance. GROVE S TASTKLESS CHILL TONIC fliven regularly for two or thrre weeks will enrich the blood, improve the digestion, and act as a HonernlStrengthenintf Tonic to tho whole system. Nature will then throw off or dispel the worms, and the Child wlllbe in perfect health. Pleasant to take. 60o per bottle. t, S. 0., SEPT. 8, 1921. ICED TEA FROM PERFECT HOT There is no beverage in hot weather more refreshing than properly made iced tea. The common method of making an extra-strong infusion of hot tea, on the theory that the melting ice will dilute the drink t^ the right strength, is unsatisfactory, I in the opinion of the tea specialist of the Uii'ted States Department of Agriculture. Through carfeul experimentation it has been ascertained that three minutes is the averag pro.ier length of tir^.e to infuse t^a The aroma and the caffeine, fo. whicl? the tea is used, are then cle veloped to their best point, and there ;i minimum of tannin. AftM* thiw minutes the amount of tnnnin in cvMstv. but only a trace more of ra trine is available. To .nake a pot of perfect tea, the expert said: Bring freshly drawn w: ter tc a boil; pour it on the requisit amount of tea (one even teaspoon for each cup) in a previously sca'doc pot; allow it to remain covered fo three minutes; then decant or strain into another receptacle. The spent leaves should be used again. OI'Mously, when one intends to serve iced 'tea on warm afternons a supply of tea brewed and strained earlier in the day is advisable. When the tea is cool it should be placed next to the ice to chill. Cracked ice added just as the glass is served will not dilute it appreciably. Sugar J and a slice of lemon may be used I according to individual ta^tc. ' ll would hn imnnfiftihli* f-.n sfntr which Kind of tea is best for any person i.o use. There are three primary teas, whose names indicate methods of curing?preen, black, and oolong. Tea from any of the teaproducing countries may be cured in any one of the three ways, but it has been found that certain varieties are better suited for making one or more of these kinds. Again, "grades" of tea are misleading, as the term refers to the best and the poorest leaf grade in any one locality. Everything else being equal, tea grown in ^ligh altitudes is so much superior to tea from low altitudes that the lowest grade in a high-altitude tea may surpass in flavor the best grade of tea groawn at a low altitude. The choice of a tea which suits one's taste can only be determined hv nprsnnnllv twiner vnrimia ~ j | j '"B . ?.? .v?.. teas until the right flavor is found. For both iced and hot tea the green and oolong" varieties are usually most pleasing without milk; many users of black tea prefer milk or cream in the cup when it is served hot, but cold tea is best clear. 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 GROVE'S 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 instrip the throat combined with the healing effect of Grove's O-Pen-Trate Salve through the pores of the akin soon stops a eouf.h. Both remedies are packed in one carton and the cost of the combined treatment is 35c., *Just ask your druggist for HAYES* HEALING HONEY. CROTSMALLEST IN 33 YEARS Cotton Suffers most Disastrous Month?Biq Jump in Price ONLY 10 PER CENT OF A CROP PROMISED l Boll Weevil, Etc, In South Carolina Cause Great Damage Washington.?Cotton growing has just suffered the most disastrous month in its history. The indicated crop will be the gmallest in the last thirty-three years, while its condiiton now is the lowest ever recorded in any month in the history of the industry. Ravages of the boll weevil are principally the cause of the severe decline of the crop, amounting to a loss of 1,110,000 bales in prospective production since last months forecast. The Department of Agriculture in announcing its forecast of a total production of 7,0^7,000 equivalent 500 pound bales, based on a canvass made August 25, declared everything seemed to have gone wrong with the crop. A yield of 127 pounds to the acre is indicated for the country as a whole this year. Never- in the last fifty-six years has the yield t een so low. The nearest approach was 120 pounds in 1880. Only 10 per cent of a erop is promised in some counties of South Carolina. Parts of Oklahoma will have not more than 15 per cent of a crop. About one-third of a crop or less will he produced in portions of Texas, South Carolina and Georgia. A half a crop or better maybe produced in Mississippi, Northern South Carolina. State:; on the Northern ed^e of the cotton belt may have about two-thirds of a crop. Last Month's Forecast. The production was forecast a month airo at 8.20,'?,000 bales, based the July 25 condition of the crop which was 04.7 per cest of a normal Last year's crop was 13,439,603 bales and the August 25 condition was 67.5 per cent of a normal. The averajfe condition of the crop on Aupust 25, for the ten years 1011-20 is 67.7 per cent. The decline in condition from July J25 to August 26, was 15.4 points, compared with an iwerage decline of 7.7 points for the ten years. The condition of the crop. on August 25, and the froecast of production based on the condition by States, were: Virginia: Condition 63 and production 11,000 bales: North Carolina: 02 and 523,000: youth Carolina 50 and 744,000; Georgia 41 (Mid 827,000; Florida 59 and 10,000, Alabama 53 and 427,000; Mississippi 57 and 079,000; Louisiana 45 and 244.000; Texas 42 and 1,938,000; Arkansas 03 and 729,000; Tennessee 74 and 235,000; Missouri 78 and 60,000; Oklahoma 48 and 474,000; California 83 and 75,000; Arizona 85 and 47,000; all other States 85 and blank. Lowest in History. The condition of cotton on August 25, was the lowest it has ever been in any month in the history of the cotton growing industry according to the records of the Depart? ~ i \A 1.. 4 nient OI AgriCUllUre. in cuimm-iiv- I inn: on the conditions the department, in a statement said: "The damage has been the greatest in the area from Central Oklahoma to North Central Texas, the fall in condition amounting to from 125 to 5S0 points. Declines of from 110 to 20 (points are shown for 'Southern South Carolina, for Georgia. Northern Alabama, the Delta section of Mississippi and throughout the belt west of the Mississippi river except in the northern edge where some slight improvement oc cured. "Conditions, are especially bad not above 15 per cent in Southern Oklahoma and not over a third of a crop is promised in the adjoining portions of Northern Texas. In Southern and Central South Carolina the promise is far less than a third and in some counties not over 10 per cent of a crop. The Central belt of Georgia and most of East and South Texas promise about a third. "Everything seems to have gone, wrong with the crop. In southern South Caiolina. in Georgia and in Arkansas and in portions of other stiifoc nvco?? minfiill and cool wea> ther have combined to give a big weed which the bool weevil in the flush of early invasion has attacked voraciously, destroying all squares and bolls set during August and even attacking the larger bolls. South Carolina Hit Hard. "From 40 to 90 per cent of th^ bolls are affected in Southern South Carolina and the proportions run very hjerh in other States. Westward from Georgia through Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana Texas and Oklahoma the weevil ha multiplied far 'bevond the usual experience. In Oklahoma, notluvithstanding heat and drought, it is worse than ever experienced in Texas, it is the chief cause of deterioration. "The mild winter is held responsible for sharing an unusual number of weevils as well as other insects which have multiplied beyond measure and are devasting1 the new growth in practically all the area of its present range. The army worm is present in large numbers throughout most of Arkansas. Tennessee and North M ;ssisr-ippi, but the defoliation of the heavy growth is not !<>uh ed upon as an unmixed evil. ''oil worms and the usual pests are present in greater numbers than usu'i' but their damage is aoall competed with the weevil. In North Carolina am! Virginia the long dr.'light has been almost as destructive as the weevil elsewhere. "The northern ed'/es of the 1> >11 from Virginia and North Carolina through Tennessee. North Arkan a. and Northern Oklahoma promise about two-thirds of a crop. Mississippi and the northern porti< n of Alabama, Georgia and South Carolina still forecasts better than half a crop. o Dodsnn'fi I.iver Tnn? I Killing Calomel Sale Don't sicken or salivate yourself or paralyze your sensitive livrr by taking calomel which is quicksilver. Your dealer sells each bottle of pleasant, harmless "Dod son's Liver Tone" under an ironclad, money-back guarantee that it regulates the liver, stomach and bowels better than calomel without making you aick?15 million bottles Hold. CLIMATEOF PERU VARIED The Peruvians are celebrating the one-hundredth anniversary of their independence day on July 28, and on behalf of the United States President Harding has sent an official delegation to Lima to take part in the festivities. In connection with the celebration of the anniversary the National Geographic Society has issued from its Washinjrton, I). O., L-... a. *_n ; i ii > iivu(it|uiti ici^i Hie lUIIOWlHg UUIICtlP on Peru: Most countries, unless they ancontinental in extent, says the bu1 letin, must be content with a sma'' range of climatic condition; bu* Peru, occupying less than a tenth of South America, has every climate under Heaven together with many of the products that go with them. T< has the sand dunes of the Sahara the fertile, sun-bathed, irrigated valleys of California; the dry graz ing lands of Australia; the productive mountain valleys and upland of Kashmir; the snowy peaks o" Switzerland; and the tropical jungle* of Central Africa and Brazil. Much of Peru is occupied by th^ towering Andes, with few nasse* less than 1,5,000 feet high, and with p numerous peaks exceeding 21,000 feet. These great ramparts are chiefly responsible for the diversity of Peru's climatic conditions. They precipitate the moisture of the A> lantic winds and so create the trop:cal jungles that stretch from their bases toward the interior of the continent; thus slopes and plateaus up into the cool regions of the upper air; and < ut off the Pacific section from the moisture-laden winds, making much of it a desert. Although the strip of Peru between the Pacific and the western foothills of the Andes is devoid of rain and largely desert, many streams from the mountains traverse* this region, and the relatively narrow valleys, irrigated from their waters, constitute the most fertile land of the country. There grow cotton, sugarcane, corn, vineyards and olive trees, various fruits and practically all other products of the semi-tropical regions. From the most remote part of Peru, on the | east side of the Andes, come the products of the country with which Americans are perhaps most familiar: Quinine, cocaine, rubber an I cocoa. Isolated on the Pacific coast of South America before the building of the Panama Canal; and because of the World War, not yet receiving the full benefit of that great waterway, Peru is not well known to the people of th\2 United State*. In many cases, no doubt, it is looked upon as a small patch of territory. In reality it is only a liti tie less than a- third the area of the i United States exclusive of Alaska an^l is larger than the latter territory. It has a sua coast of approximately 1,300 miles, practically equal to the Pacific coast line of the United States south of Canada. If Peru were laid down on the surface of the United States so that its southernmost point coincided with the southernmost projection of Texas its northeastern corner would lie near Peoria, 111., and its northwestern extremity near Cheyenne, Wyo. The rough t triangle would cover practically all of Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas, half of Nebraska, parts of Illinois, Missouri, Colorado, Iowa and South Dakota, and fragments of New Mexico and Wyoming. Peru, no less than the United States, contains a mixture of race a. The total population is not accurately known, but it is probably more than 3,000,000. The chief numerical element in the population is made up of the civilized Indiana, numbering about 1,800,000, who live* J for the most part in the upland plains and on the mountain slones. The number of wild Indians in the tropical jungles is not accurately known. In addition to the Indian* there is a large number of mixed * Indian and Spanish stock. These together with the relatively few inhabitants of pure Spanish descent, have largely controlled the political fortunes of Peru. The complexity of the racial make up of Peru has been increased by the I importation in the past of large num [ bers of negro laborers, and later of I Chinese coolies. These have intermarried w ith each other and with the Indians bringing about the existence in parts of the country of unusual hybrid types. Peru was the last of the South American colonics to throw off ther yoke of Spain. Lima was the seat of government for the administration of the entire continent. The viceroy maintained there a court which was a faithful copy on a minor scale of the court at Madrid, and kept many of the Spanish nobility about him. Monarchical sentiment was strong und the few pat ...1 - 1 > < " kiiubs vmiu wiuneu to coilow til? examples of other col on i ox. and establish tHoir independence were unable to make headway. Finally San Alar tin ill) Argentinian general, persuad ed his own countrymen and thf* Chileans that their independence could be made safe only by driving the Spaniards from Peru. He spent many years in his labor to liberate the Peruvians. He succeeded in entering Lima, with his army on July 9, 1821, and on July 2X issued the Peruvian proclamation of independence. Ho was made Protector and served until a Peruvian Congress was elected. FOIt SALE?My farm, good buildings and good drinking water. H. Mayo King, Loris, S. C.?6j2|tf o The Prize Puzzle. (From London Opinion.) The man who used to "hide behind a woman's skirts" would be puzzled to do this nowadays. Of the Old School. "aspirin" Name "Bayer" on Genuine j Beware I Unions you see the name "Bayer" on package or on tablets you are not getting genuine Aspirin proscribed by physicians for twi ity-one years and proved safe by million Take Aspirin only as told in t.l?e Rayor xxckttge for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache, Lumbago, and 1 for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve Bayer Tablets of Aspirin cost few cents. Druggists also sell larger packages. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture pi Monoacetic acid ester of SalioylioaaMk