The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, April 20, 1922, Image 6

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In a new package At a price that j The some unmatcf Turkish. Virginia j c/7 Guaranteed by l/i' ^xxc?<r^. )? MULDROW OUT FOR SOLICITOR (Florence Times) Capt. C. W. Muldrow has announced his candidacy for tlie office of solicitor of the twelfth judicial circuit of South Oaralina. now held bv L. M. Gasque of Marion. So far he is the first to /.announce, though the present incumbent is unders ood to be standing to succeed himself. The twelfth district includes the counties of Florence, Marion, Horry and Georgetown. As a member of the law firm of Arrowsmitn Muldrow, the Florence candidate ranks anions the well known attorneys of this section. "1 feel that my experience, study and training qualify me for tho office of public prosecutor and while 1 am personally very fond of Mr. Gasque, I believe a change in the office would be benefici.al to the district. My inclination has long been in this direction and I have prepared myself by consistent study and observation for the duties of the oflice. 1 have received encouragement from all over the circuit and am in the race to win." Capt. Muldrow 'is a Florence boy. having lived here all his life, and is a member of a large and well known family. He attended the Florence public schools, finished at Citadel in l<>0f>, took law at South Carolina, and later a special course in criminal law in the Council of Legal Education, known as Inns of Court, in London. He organized .and was first captain of Company K of the Second South Carolina Infantry, which was conducted into the Federal service and on the Mexican border. On July 25, 1017, lie answered the cal! for service in the American Expeditionary Forces, with which he served in France and England during the war, with the -rank of captain in the field /artillery. He is now a member of the staff of Governor Cooper, with rank of Lieutenant Colonel. Capt. Muldrow has always been interested in politics, having served in the Legislature with distinction and has taken a leading part in local affairs. He is a Knight Templar. Scottish Rite Mason, Shriner, Elk, Junior Order and Woodman. Ihe O.ulnins That Dogs Net Affect the Head Because of its tonic ftlaxative effect, LAXA? n,TE BKOMO QUIN! \V<) is better thau o-clinary Qu'n.ne and clocJ not. cause nervousness nor rinsr'.nv: in head. Kemctnber th* iuii namear'i Iook thr it nature of 12. v.\ GHOVE. 30t. Pimples Keep Young Mesi They Make Women, Too, a Puzzle! How S. S. S. Stops Skin Eruptions Positively. TMmples uml sUin eruptions hnvo a Trice,?you pay lor every pustule, black-head and pirrmle on your face. Pimplet; produce prejudice nnd prevent prosperity. Your heart may be yold, / S. S. 8. Will T:i(l Yon v ? nf the CruHliiitg Pini- /ov .mil ple-Culumity, i?ihM\ inn w)h? w!iiits kiss eruptions? I'imply men don't look liUe the owners of anything. Pimply women, too, aro puzzles, with no prospects and no power. Young men and women, here's the positive way out. Physios and purwatlyfs will fail. What you need is ti ?Mr?itifio blood-cleanser. S. S. S. is one of the most powerful destroyers of lihxul impurities. You can prove this In a short time. S. S. S. has been passed on hy a Jury of millions of people Just like yourself. It is considered one of the mor.t powerful vegetable Wood-purifiers and flesh-builders in existence. That's why yuu hear of so many underweight people putting on lost flesh in a hurry, why you hear of so many rheumatics being freed from this scourge, with S. S. S. Start today with I*. S. S. and see your face clear and your ekin got ruddier, your flesh firmer. It will give you a boost in your career. S. S. S. is sold at .'ill drug Htoro:\ in t\v<> ! !/.< ?. Tho larfcor fclzo 4s iho mcro economical. ' v eleven cigarettes Three Friendly Gentlemen TURKISH \Yuf}^ VIRGINIA V/^g BURLEY % p FIFTEEN that fits the pocket ? its the pocket-book ? icd blend of L and BURLEY Tobaccos ? *111 FIFTH AVE. 3 " JI^JI HIW YO?H CITV IN GARDEN AND ORCHARD Plant garden corn and snap beans. Use the stringless varieties of beans. Plant enough vegetables of the standard sorts that you may have a surplus to can. If you are troubled t with wilt or root knot of tomatoes, set plants on land that has not been planted in tomatoes before. If snap beans or other tender vege, tables are threatened by frost, cover the plants lightly with soil until the danger is past. Grow enough asparagus to lvavc I some to sell. It ships well and usI ually brings a good price on the local ! market. Remember that it is just as necessary to rotate for garden crop^ as for field crops; therefore, in the management o f the garden keep this fact in i mind and avoid planting the same j crop on the same land two or more seasons. j To avoid having wormy peaches | spray with arsenate of lead solution just as the flower shucks are ilropI ping and again two weeks later. lTse ! one pound of the powdered arsenate .and two pounds of lime to fifty Kal'ons of water. To prevent newly set fruit trees from dying their first summer, pljvce around them a heavy mulch of stable manure, straw or pine needle*. In planting spring Mowers do not leave out the perennials. Hollyhock, .May pink, Sweet William and foxglove are excellent standard sorts. In the sandy sections of die South ' a good lawn car. be made from PerI muda grass and bur clover. Plant the Burmuda roots now and in Sep| tember sow the clover seed. o QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS From Specialists* Correspondence )Vith Farmers . Honv should I treat sweet potatoes for disease control before bedding ?? A. H. M.. Blair. The best treatment is to soak for ten minutes in a solution of one ounce of corrosive sublimate to eiVht gallons of water. Farmers' Bulletin No. 10o9 will trivc further details "oncerninir sweet potato diseases .and methods of preventing them. Is it true that the land could not t?d*e over 100 pounds of nitrate of soda on oats??J. B. G., Yemassee. The information that you have had that the land could not take more ."ban 100 pounds of soda is incorrect More than 100 pounds would be of .?o;ne value to you, but 1 doubt if it wo id 'I l>? profitable fm.anHally, for it would lik^'v not increase the yield of ats enough to pay you for the extra I'd" i': "or. What spray shou'd I use to prevent disease in tomato plants? ? li l. R.. L's" 1-1-10 BoH^aux mixture. ! am askine the a.erivul'ural editor to vend you a copy of Extension Circular 2~>, which explains tlic^ method of making up this spruy. It is undcrtood oi* course that this spr.ay material will not prevent any soil di. oases such as root-knot or wilt. To uatoes i i <?i; 1' 1 1)0 planted on clear' oil in order to avoid tliese disease: Citation Notice. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, Count v of Hon v. Rv .1. S. V AUGHT, ESQUIRE, PROHATE .JUDGE. WHKIMvAS, Mrs. Freddie 15. Lewi., -.ado ;uil to me, to p.rant Letters of mMi> IraM'iii (if the E ;talc of a:ul ?fVects of' Stephen .1. Lewis. T;iESE ARK T11 ERFFORE to cite and admonish all and singula) the icindrod and creditors of tlie said 'lophen .1. Lewis, dece.ascd, that they !;o and appear, before me, in the r,ourt of Probate, to bo lield at Conway Court House on 28th day of April 1!>2l!, next, after publication hereof, at 1 1 o'clock in the forenoon, to shew cause, if any they have, why he said Administration should not be granted. GIVEN under my hand, this IXth i!av of Ami!. Anno Domini. 1022. Published on the 20th and 1271h d \vs of April, 11)22 in the Horrv Herald. J. S. VAUGHT, Probate Jud^e Horry County. _ o r, ^'r~ rttbitual Constipation Cured in i . o 21 Days LAX-FOS WITH PKPS1N" is a speciallyprepared Syrup Tonic-Laxat ive for Habitual Constipation. It relieves promptly buf should be taker, regularly for 14 to 21 dayii 1 to induce rogulai action. It Stimulates and ' Regulate s. Very Pleasant *.o Take. 60c | r bottle. THE HORRY HERALD. COM NEW ADVlCJi ON WEEVIL SUBJECT Much has been written about the boll weevils and the numerous ways of fighting them. There has been so much printed on the subject that it is a relief to find a writer who can produce something' new. The5 following" .advice has boon clipped from the ICatonton (Ga.) Messenger, and is amusing: HOW TO BIS AT TH10 WKKYH, "1. Prepare your land in October bv blowing it up with dynamite. 4'-. Lay it off in rows I- t'eot apart \nd plant your cotton seed in ^ocetiihc)'. ?? > \l ' I ^ <?. ?\ Mi-ii your cotton corn's up. thin it to one stalk in a hill twentythree foot apart. " !. Spray ouch stalk twice a clay with Hoyt's German cologne. Cover your cotton with mosuuito netting; when it is l\vo weeks old, th-s netting- to he stretched ovoi poultry wire. "(>. Spread tanglefoot between all your coiton rows and replace it evcrv day. "7. Burn ofV nil the nearhv wood? and cut down dead trees and burr them. "S. Dust the following mixture or your cotton twice a day?Epsom salts calomel, cream of wheat and the white of an egg. "9. Have two hired hands foi every acre in cultivation. Furnisi barbers' tweezers to be used in pinching the heads ofV of any boll weevils which show up. "10. Mortgage your farm and bu\ nitrate of soda ami spread plentifully around the roots of the cotton. "11. If any of the bolls should get punctured have the place vulcanized at once. Any good automobile tire man can do this for you. "12. Begin picking your cotton in February and try to have it all ginned and sold by the 15th of .March, and this will enable you to go to work and grow corn, peas, potatoes and hogs for your own home consumption. This kind of consumption does not need the services of a doctor." o COTTON ON POOR LAND Experience and Common Sense Say No! Clemson College, April 20.?Experiments conducted by the Agronomy division of Clemson College, as we!1 as the experience of many practical farmers, go to show that poor soils will give a late crop of cotton. A late crop of cotton means no cotton at all in the presence of the boil weevil. !t seems unadsivable, therefore, where there was a heavy infestation of boll weevil last year, to plant cotton at all this year on very thin land unless generous applications of fertilizer are used. Consequently, anyone finding il necessary to plant cotton on thin land should plant onl\ such an acreage as can be well for tilized and well cultivated. As a general rule the agronomist.* of CTemson College think, it will be better to plant such land in othei crops rather than cotton and to niak< an elVort this year to plow under i crop of velvet beans, cowpeas, oi some other leguminous crop in ordei to improve this land for cotton nex year, as it will probably never pay t< raise cotton on very thin land undo boll weevil conditions. If no contro masures are used, the boll weeevil i rather certain to y;et the crop, and 01 land that makes less than one-lvil bale to the acre it doesn't pay t< poison with calcium arsenate anyway I'Kom.KM FROM .MOTTE 15!"SIMOSS COLLKGIC AKITH.MKTK 3 If one hat cost .$1.00 , what wil .003 .>ne dozen cost at same rate? A s2..")0 tfoldpieee wi'l be awarde< '10 lirst person in Horry county wh< son<Is in the correct .answer to tin above problem. o The fine points of bra-very are no 111.!<iown to Gov. Ii. Davis of Ohi but when he was asked to pick th bravest ex-soldier ;in Ohio t.o re pre sent the Buckeye population at , nationv.! assemblage in San Francis co, Cal., he declined the large >e sponsibilitv. At his request th Amevican Legion undertook the -e lection. Ii _ EAGLE <<MIKADO">^gS V For Sale at your Dealer ASK FOR THE YELLOW EACH L EAGLE PENCIL C( 1 1 ' ?I i C! j , 1? I JUdWUC Mill ions of purebn varieties at wholesale p growers. Vv rite for free tion and prices of each Vc E. W. Jol Salisbur WAY, S. C., APRIL 20, 1922 FARM FACTS ^ From Here and There In South Carolina v t The state of South Carolina has sot a jrood example to the farmers in the co-operative marketing; of cotton by si^nipK the contract to se*l through the Sou h Carolina Cotton Grower;' 1 Co-operative Association all of the cotton vruown on tiBe 'jMat&rfajuns clur\vy; the next tiv?' Ifcuvlti Qjovovnor Cooper signed the special act to this* effect on March 21. The Uamherir County Truck Grower's Association, recentlv organized ( hv the majority of the Bamberg rowers of {ruck crops hepan it sei I i; >MM H , I I ? nr. >.1111 I | | / I I IV" I 1 of asparagus. The association w?l' lip tills season many cars of truck ? nder t!to association label, thus doiag by co-operation what could not ! o done successfully by individual 1 fanners growing limited quantities of produce. Chesterfield countv, under the leadership of \V. .1. Tiller, county agent, N , held a dairy institute on Mi-rch 2S*>0 1 to set forth the /idvantages of dairy ' fanniny; as a source of immediate and ' legular income and as a means of .oil building for better farming. As 1 a result of the meetings held over ' the county many Chesterfield farmers 1 1 will go into dairying on a limited * ; scale. t "Batesburg Industries" is the name of a $25,000 organi/.'ition of business men and farmers in and around Bates- ? 1 burg recently organised to aid far " mers in developing money crops othe: 1 than cotton and fiiuling markets fo/ ' them. To encourage the swine in- < dustry the organization will finance the farmers in securing brood sows upon pledge that the farmers will market through the association all r' [ increase from the sows except what ' is needed for plantation use. The "lettuce festival," held by " Beaufort county truck growers on r March 22 and 23 was attended by many visitors to Beaufort's "thou. and acres of lettuce fields" and other truck crops, who were impressed with ' the co-operation and the diversification practiced bv Beaufort f/irmcrs. i y ?o e AS BUSY AS A BKE jp I. It is not considered primarily s government function to test th< ^ fiMitb of sa vines. But scientists of j the United States bureau of ento- |-, I mology liave prepaid a test for on h iat least. They have devised a gat t ' - - ' - 1 - ? 1 1 , with a moter aevico 10 oe piuceu ii the entrance of a bee hive. A tele jphono attachment there to record ielectrically the passage of every* her as it noes out for honey. What if the machine shouM shatte 'la tradition, and prove that a be< ' j isn't busy? What if this time clocV ' showed ho hung around the hou every other day? We shall son. ' know what to think of this bee crc " ture? It is just as well for1. a phrase " lazy race that no one takes th 1 trouble to prove whether a cat i ; weak, whether a dm.? gets ospocial lv tired, whether a fish drinks mor."* i' than he ought, and whether a lark -; is happv.?St Joseph News-Pre>s i (Ind.) i' When John A. Ishan >f* Poise. Ida ( L ho. discovered that Oscar Wove irr ) his old bunkmate in t!v? army. lv i' not paid his Americ m 1 egion di.es , 1 ho decided to visit vYe^m're. Tro l".t s ter was trapping '100 milos away, bu' i I sham made the t * i i > by foot, horse f and sk.ates and ?)i*-?*irent in the fines 3 ^_____ ! / fXPECTli^ f: /ilPMOTMEES^ Hi i A Fop Throo Generations HI \ Fj Have Made Child-Birth ,, AJl I j u J Lasicr 13 y Using ?? ' .... %'^'V kss 2KMS?? WxirtFf.H booklet oh motherhood ahdthe BABY.Mtt Bhadheld regulator Co.. Dept. 9-0. Atlanta. Oa. , No. 174 j Made in five grades i PENCIL WITH THE RED BAND : MIKADO 5MPANY, NEW YORK rry Plants ed Klondykes and all other rices direct from nursery to : catalog giving brief descripinetv. 10 (ui/ inson & Co. y, Maryland | r E F A R >1 E G O s S I 1* I' K j TvJnn tlfift Cluh, I>oy in the right vay: he'll make a .uood farmer sumo uturc day. Farmers co-operate for churehe^,! :chool? and pirsiics. Why not f'?>r narketintf? Echo answers "Why lot?" It is easier foi* a c.amel to go hroup.ii the Cyc of a needle than for i man to get rich raising scrub live itock. | It is hardly worth while fighting he boll weevil away from cotton on >oor land, and it' you don't fight the veevil he'll get all the crop. So here you are! The conn utility fair is the fanner's how window. Now is the time to lan for products thai will make a' vood display next fV.ill. Never let a pig have a birthday; vhich, being interpreted, means feed vm fast and furiously and market dm before he has a chance to cclelrate his first anniversary. A weedy, unimproved pasture neans thin live stock. Extension Cir ular 32, "Hotter Pastures for South Uarolin/i," will help you to have beter cows and hogs, April is a busy month for the farrier. Other months in which the real 'armor is busy are December, June, February, March. October, November, fanuary. September, May, August ind July. HIS ESCAPE The grateful citizens had purhas ed and furnished a club house 01* the local American Legion. A' ne formal opening a group of doughoys were discussing the benefits de ived from service in the Army. One tall, sturdy chap said: Whe ?. enlisted I was stoop-shouldered, !at-chested, and its thin as a rai1. ,ook at me now! Said another: Well, boys the trip cross was worth ten thousand ?M ?.... 4 . ??? /\ WMt/\n 1 nnlioi ft/1 1 \t l , fell ll> lllf. >> IICII I ' ngaged to be married. Three ,eoks after our outfit sailed fo" "Vance, the jri i*l married another fel aw. lief ore I returned to the Statedhe had been erranted a divorce im en thousand dollars a year alimony ust suppose I had remained at nme and married her. Wouldn't ' ave a hehiva time trying to rais'? hat much money every year? ASPIRIN Name "Bayer" on Genuine Beware! Unices you see the name "Bayer" on ]>;i<*kor f>n tablet# you are not getting genuine Aspirin preBcribed by physicians for twt <-r-one years and proved s:if<? by million -:'cf Aspirin only a- told in ti?f? Bayer for Colds, Headache. Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache, Lumbago, and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve Bayei Tablets of Aspirin cost few c-nts. Druggists also sell linger packages. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bavor Manufacture of$)Monoaceticacidestor of Salicylicucid. V 0<- *4 4 < 4 <4 < 4 44 4 4< I ? No matter what your wan ^ wo ojj:i tr.ee t them always w <> only kiiul you would hti\ or s <* % We carry not only the ^ta that ;;? to mal/c a eomj>let< /? We want to % W. S. ( ~$2.G0 6 $350 Rc : to .. ^ Dili This is the ori Give us your p want us ? announcement! *************************^B Curds in this column for County or State OHice, $7.50; ^ Magistrate, s:..,;o; payable in advance. I : : :< * : : ****** * ****** FOR CO\(JRI0SS fl I hereby announce my candidn^^ for congress from tho sixlh <iistri<^M subject to the action of the Democra^B i'riinarv. I W. R. J3ARRINGER. Florence, S. C., April 12th, 11)22. I Ire lit ici'i i n> W \ V. 1 I ' I 4 I ho!vl>\ minouixc " yso! f ;i c;mh^| date for Solicitor of the 12th Judicial Circuit subject to the rules of tl^| Democratic primary. cil \S. W. Ml LI.)ROW ENOCH S. C. BAKER I Attorney and Counselor at Law Offices in Taylor Building I 2-9-3m Conway, S. C. EBB N. JOHNSON, I Auctioneer of Real Estate I and all other property. H R. F. D. No. 2, Box 11, Gallivant's Ferry, S. C.?l-19-3m Hj MARION A. WRIGHT I Attorney-at-Law Hj Odices Spivey Building H CONWAY, s. c. m F. J. SULLIVAN & CO. I Certified Public Accountants (l t.)H Telephone So. 796. I Murchison Bank Hldg. I WILMINGTON. N. C. S. C. DUSENBURY I Attorney-at-Law H Spivey Building H CONWAY, S C. J . I. A L L EN, J iT.I Attorney-at-Law H Office in Bank of Loris Bldg. I L O R I S , S . C. H. H. WOODW^HD Attorney and ( ounsellor at Law. H CONWAY. S. C. R. B. SCARBOROUGH * I Attorney at Law H CONWAY, S. C. T R 1 Wl? Attorney aid Counsellor at Law H CONWAY. S. C. W1LLJAM EUGENE KING I Physician and Surgeon H AVNOK, S. C. Jl i). a. spivr;y & co. ( I W. B. King, Sooty. I BONDS AND INSURANCE. OfVtce ip People- National Bank Building. HARRKLSON & HARRELSON I Attorne\?at-Law I Practice both in the State and I Federal Courts. ML'LLINS, - - - - S. C. DR. G. I. L r:wis I Dental Surgeon I Office Over Norton Drug CompanjB CONWAY, S. C. J Dr. .1. I). THOMAS I Physician and Surgeon I LOR IS. S. C. I Meats a ts may be in the me:;t line S it!', first (jr;ili-y meats, the 9 erve on your table. pies but also the delicacies X l* market stock. 4 serve you. X 1ATLIN 1 ne Way unci Trip isrinal Bus Line] - patronage if yoi i to stay.