The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, June 22, 1922, Image 5

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KHp' f I r??? VARIED CROPS 1 NOW THE PLAN .Shown by Reports Made by Farm Demonstration \ Agents of State j IS TREND-AT PRESENT! I Farmers in Dillon Are Taking ! * More Interest in Poultry Than Formerly Wayne G. McGowan, Abbeville.? I The foundations have been laid fov a g purebred hog breeders* association, a Jersey breeders' association and a county fair. The county fair will be one of our biggest projects and looks | now like it can be put across. Z. D. Robertson, Allendale.?Have done some good work in getting cukes 1 graded. Have three grading places for farmers to bring in cukes for grading. What we get inspected flings more than others; in fact, those consigned ungraded brought little more than expenses, while graded stock brings good profit. Next year we will have an association to handle all cukes. S. M. Byars, Anderson.?More farmers are keeping a few cows and selling milk and cream, and are giving their cows better attention and growing more and better feed for them. | There is a bee craze on in the county. The county beekeepers' association i i - *- * * nas oeeiv active, anct l have had more calls for assistance than I could answer. The outlook is good. C. L. Baxter, Beaufort.?Several farmers are mixing their own sprays, | FLUES i \\ For Curing f I TOBACCO I My force is making up a big % 0 supply. Good workmanship and best materials. ? *1 QUICK SERVICE, J 1 LASTING FLUES I T Write or leave orders with ? | COW/ IRON WORKS f J MILTON PIT.MAN, Lessee % * n n c eufc u a ii * n J * i. u ? ? m ? n k u ? n b s a a a s ? a n cvntnaaiiiuiii y ? _______ ' f > # -j Guee: ?n <<Pome out : the pla . : was beautiru % : But love ; women INTO : Kitchen-tii : mum in hon ; ating without smnlfP snnf r : heat does not : utensils, dair bright dispoj : are no ashes 5 carry, no flue 5 * J resorvoirs to s in reduced fo< f. mit cooking : turned off; t\ * ! : dissinated thv*i : An Electri jl :| regulation is s :< simplicity sup: ij \quattle Si <VtV>VViVtV?VWWW.V?'i MURRAY LEE PASSES AWAY News reached Conway last week of the death on June 13 of A. Murray Lee, a former Horryite, but who hue.' moved into North Carolina and lived near Cerro Gordo for several years. He was a good citizen. He had numbers of good friends in sections of both of the states. He had beer at work on his farm the day of his death. Going' in to rest on the front porch of his home he was found dead after a few minutes. He had not been in good health for some time. His body was interred at Green Se/i. near his former home, on Wednesday evening- of last week. He is survived by three sons, Swinton Lee of Washington, D. C.; Walker Lee, and Ambrose Lee, and by five daughters, Eva Lee, who was sick at the time in Florida; Dessie Lee, Cecile Lee, Eufa Lee and Annie Lee of Ashville, N. C. o the Quinine That Docs Not Affect the Hw.> Because of its tonic and laxative effect. LAXA rr'H BROMO QUININE is better than ordinary au'u.ne and does not cause nervousueas no ntitng in head. Remember the lull numeot Took for the st nature of E. W. GROVE, y and I am instructing them in the mixlnp' Thp Knvnvs tlinu niivnrl nrft mnvo effective and less expensive than those bought ready mixed. S. C. Stribling, Cherokee.?At any suggestion and solicitation Mr. J. N. Lipscomb, manager of the Victor Cotton Oil Company, will carry a supply of ground limestone to meet the needs of the small farmers for use unde: alfalfa and clovers, which will be a big help in getting these crops es tablished in the county. W. J. Tiller, Chesterfield.?I have pushed the seeding of summer legumes such as velvet beans, soy beans cow peas, and have secured for farmers during the month over 500 hushels of these seeds. There will be an unusual amount of stubble land seeded to velvets for turning under. H. INI. Kinsey, Colleton.?We have shipped a final car of hogs this month, thus ending the shipping season with a total of seventeen cars of hogs handled through the county agent. . S. YV. Epps, Dillon.?Our farmers are taking more interest in poultry than evei' before, and there are some who have gone in a pretty big'scale, after the visit of Mr. N. R. Mehrhof, poultry specialist, we organized y poultry association which will hold regular monthly meetings. -o Habitual Constipation Cured in t 'j ^.o 21 Days IJiX-FOS WITH PEPSIN" is a specially ^ ^ -1 c t . r tt ? . j jirtjptireuoyrup lonic-^axarivemr naoitual Constipation. It relieves promptly but should bo t<iker. regularly for 14 to 21 dayt. to induce regular action. It Stimulates and regulates. Very Pleasant *.o Take. GOc ' r it bottle. wanaonnn?anaari*?M?'<izvw uj litunjifliuA insiaiiiBiiiiiiXA t (i o ii of the K: of the kitchen, " Sc y, when he found !, and that he love in real life is more than out of kitchen me, however, is redi les owning electric x flame, fumes, jftt >r odor, electric pjfrjf tarnish shining ^!j| ity walls, nor ??| ' u * iitions. There nor wood to , at ? to clean, no fill. There's delig] xl-shrinkage. Insulc with stored heat a lis hf*at is lfpnf in ough the kitchen. c Range is a super-r ibsolute, its econom reme. "BAUM UGHT W?V>,tVW.VAV>%V/.V.V,'.V THE HORRY HERALD, CONWA Col. D. A. Spivey, chairmai , Arrangements, appointed by the'Cc the entertainment of the State Pre at Myrtle Beach, Col. Spivey has 1 L of his committee. Any boy can tell you that an apple i day won't keep the doctor away if it is a green apple. I Mi quickly relieves Colds, Constipaion, Biliousness and Headaches. A Fine Tonic.?tf j i u c j 'j I j) ? " ' .1 .! I ' ? ' - V It n t n m 4ti iichen i mK :] lid the hero in that his cook : ;u jlic:I y a* : likely to lead J s. ? < ' r? iced to a mini- ? ?l" anges. Oper- J I fitful economy J ited ovens ner- : iter current is : the oven, not 5 ! ange. Its heat i| y is certain, its 5 I & ICE CO. ? ?I V, S. P., JUKE 22, 1922 K jjjl j p ^ i 1 of the Committee on General iiiway Chamber of Commerce for ss Association meeting this work lad al)!e assistance from members AGAINST THE BOLL WEEVIL Clemson College.?The following points were empha. ized at recent district. conferences of extension workers for restating boll weevil fighting policies. 1. Rapid, thorough cultivation once per week. 2. No late side dressing with nitrate of soda. 3. Picking of weevils and squares during June and July provided labor is cheap and cultivation is not sacrificed. 4. Opposition to the use of all weevil traps and patented devices until they have been tested and endorsed by the college or the Dalta Laboratory, Tallulah, La. 5. The use of liquid or sweetened poisons in the light of available information, to be discouraged rather than otherwise. r,: '!'!,? i m: us two caic'.um .arsenate method of poisoning* to be regarded as holding more hope than any other method of direct control, but to be undertakei very conservatively with the most intelligent farmers. and" to bo regarded as experi-| mental for the present. 7. Kach county agent to have several demonstrations in growing cotton ui'/'cr weyvil conditions. 8. Tiie fi ee use of Extension Bulletin 48 and Farmers' Bulletin 1262 among reading* farmers. S. S. S. Fills Out Hollow Cheeks, Thin Limbs! Men and women,?whether you will over bulM yourself up to your normal. Just-right weight depends on the number of blood-cells in your blood. That'a all there is to it. It's a scientific fact. If your blood-cell factory isn't working right, you will bo run-down, thin, your blood will bo In disorder, ana perhaps your faco will bo broken out with pimples, blackheads and eruptions. S. S. S. keeps your blood-cell factory working full time. It helps build new blood-cells. That's why B. 8. S. builds up thin, run-down people, it puts firm flesh on your bones, it rounds out your face, arms neck, limbs, tho whole body. It puts tho "pink" in your cheeks. It takes tho hollOWnCHS from thn avna nml ! Father Tlnto by smoothing out wrinfcles in men and women by "plumping" them up. S. S. S. is a remarkaljlo blood-purifier. While you aro getting plump, your skin eruptions, pimples, blackheads, acne, rheumatism, rash, tetter, blotches uro being removed. The medicinal ingredients of S. S. S. nre guaranteed purely vegetable. S. *5. S. is sold at all drug stores, in two pizes. The lurger xizo ia tho more economical. YE FARME GOSSIPE. Spare the plow and spoil the crop. The price of health is the price of ;ood milk. ^ An hour's work a day, Makes the home garden pay. As far as the east is from the west >o far is the purebred from the scrub. Idle thoughts of a boll weevil: "A | farmer in a cotton country has a lot to learn." 5 Th? best way to treat weeds is to i nip them in their tender infancy. i One advantage of keeping "board- j er" milk cows is that it doesn't take } long to milk them. f ... ( Putting humus in the soil is like ] putting money in the bank?dividends , are sure and regular. < Says wise Solomon to live stock ^ farmers: "Be thou diligent to know j the state of thy flocks, and look well ( to thy herds."?Proverbs 27:23. i ( Every .farm is also a human fac tory turning out boys and girls. Are j South Carolina farms as well equipped . to produce people as to produce corn, j cotton and live stock? < The Southern darkie mav already 1 know how to "raise" chickens; but j the rest of us may learn a lot about poultry raising in South Carolina from Extension Bulletin 53, just printed. The country newspaper is a real * asset to the farmer, the more so if 1 it carries a good farm news department, and the farmer should support it by subscription and by advertisement. TIRED, WEAK" AND NERVOUS ' Why Are So Many Conway People In This Condition? ( Fee! tired out, irritable and depressed ? I Urine irregular; back weak and i painful? These are symptoms that suggest ! kidney trouble. I When the kidneys call for help. I Assist them with a tested kidney remedy. Give them the help they need. No remedy more highly recommend- J eil than Doan's Kidney Pills. Backed by home testimony. j Endorsed by Conway people. Mrs. J. M. Dusenbury, Conway, says: "I had symptoms of kidney ' trouble and my back was sore and lame. I was tired and languid and nerves were unstrung. My kidneys acted irregularly, too, and I was in misery. 1 knew something had to be done so I got Doan's Kidney Pills. They cured me of the complaint." Price r?0c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy?get Doan's Kidney Pills?the same that Mrs Dusenbury had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.?Adv. L()lTlS CORNAKO Louis Cornaro lived in Venice over 100 years ago. He was given up to lie when forty years out. By eliminating had habits and bad i'ood, and by limiting the amount of his food to 'ess than 2f> ounces daily, he lived in heallh and happiness over 100 years. "I am firmly convinced that nothing rescued me from death but the orderly life * * * in all of which, time .10 kind of sickness had ever visited me. <<* * * \r_j J i-: I ... ...i.i I CI tins IlilfjpillU.SS won III he the portion of every man if he would but lead a life similar to the one I have lived."?Louis Cornaro, at age of 05. What useful lessons might our r/tce from Cornaro draw! Earth niij;ht become a joyous place would man I mi reverence nature's law.?John Witt Randall. fretfUlbabses Olioer Up Instantly When I )i* Thornton V Rasv Tcri h er Removes Cause of Pain. I 13^ W mW Mother! When the child becomcs J cross and peevish with feverif hnvss. ' sour stomach, coated tongue, hoxvel i trnnliln * ? ? - .v, xv,\, v/i win- kivi* <i course oi i the old reliable Dr. Thornton'? finsv Teether and note the quick improvement Dr. Thornton's Easy Teether is a harmless sweet powder composed 1 of antiseptics, digestants and prnnu- 1 !ar stimulants, contains no opiates or harmful drups. Rabies like it and '.nke it more freely than stickv svrup? it liquid medicines. Hundred? of unsolicited testimonial* received during the past fifteen years- < from doctors, druppists and npprectntive mothers prove its efficiency be vond question of doubt. If it fails tr help your child your money back with >ut question. Twelve powders in r tackape with full directions. 25c a* our drurflfiM?Advertisement. , ATTEMPTS TO ASSAULT GIRL Mleged Assailant Captured by Camden Mawr. Citizens on Man Hunt Camden.?Bradford Boyd, a negro >'outh, sail! to be about IS years of lire, was arrested by city officers and placed in the county jail, being barged with attempted criminal assault upon an 11-year old daughter of i white farmer. The alleged crime kvas committed in Richland county, just across the line from Kershaw, and occurred about 8 o'clock on Wednesday morning. Eniviged citizens rom Camden and both counties joined fvnm 1 ..w.ii miii v,v_>vi11i.y turn ivicnand in a man hunt. A description )f the negro had been telephoned to Damden, and Boyd caught a ride to Damden with a white man. Upon eachi 111? Camden he attempted to lave a check cashed at the Bank of Camden, and upon being- asked for his indorsement on the check he readily subscribed his name. H. G. Garrison, Jr., the cashier, who s also Mayor, took the negro in charge md placed him in jail until he could lave him positively identified. To ivoid any possible trouble from engaged citizens the negro was spirited nit of town by auto and it was thought le was taken to Sumter from Canilen, there to be carried to the state penitentiary for safe keeping. It is relieved that the right negro has been jaught. Aside from the fright and diock the young girl was uninjured. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS From Specialists' Correspondence With Farmers. Is it advisable to food corn and :ob meal to suckling sows and hogs? E. R., Batcsburg. The bulk of the experimental data shows that the cob in the meal is objectionable for .nig reeding. Corn :obs are very hit h in crude fiber and for this reason it is be.tor for the logs to secure the bilk tor their 1ainn fivini nth inn* ol -;<> loi-i! mi inous viys or pastures. It should "always >e borne i ) mind that. he stomach of he hog is not prepared to handle a large amount of fiber such as is round n corn cobs. Kindly identify the di-e.ase on the enclosed peach leaves. It seems to )e causing1 a whole lot of shedding in in orchard here. Ci. C. McD., Charleston. The peach leaves seem io be affected with bacterid I spot. This disease sometimes causes considerable >hedding of -peach leave-, Inn usually there is more da na^e on rather unthrifty trees than on very vigorous one--. Applications of nitrate or soda have given beneficial results in some cases, but do not se? >1 always to control the trouble. We have lots of liseased rye this yc.ar, especially where rye is planted after rye. Please advise what is the matter and also a remedy if any.?I. W. H.. Wolf ton. The specimen of rye which you sent is infected with anthracn<>M\ caused by colletotrichum cereal. This disease often causes reduction in yield in rye fields, l>u' there is no known remedy for it. I do no; know whether planting rye after rye in succession will cause jit to be icoie severe, but I suspect that it might do co. Please advise me about pigs which eat sand. A. F. A., Aiken. This trouble is probably due to tlio fact that the pigs need a mineral mixture. Keep before them a mixture similar to the following: 1 bushel wood ashes, 1 bushel charcoal, 5 p-Hinds salt, 5 pounds lime, -1 pounds sulphur, 2 pounds iron sulphate. o No Worm* in a lloast.iiy Child ^ AH children troubled with Worms have, an unhealthy color, which indicates poor n'ood, and as a rule, there Is more or l ess stomach disturbance. GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC given regulurly l'or two or three weeks will enrich the blood, improve the digestion, and actus a general Strengthening Tonic to the whole system. Nature will then throw olfor dispel the worms, and tin Child willbe In pcrfeet health. Pleasant to take. *C<Jc per bottle. TO CONTROL HOG LICE Clemson College.?The following remedies, any of which will prove satisfactory, are suggested by V. L. Starkey, chief of the animal husbandry division, in answer to inquiries from farmers c 1 this subject. 1. Crude Oil Treatment.?This is the most widely used treatment for hog lice. It should be app.ied to the hogs by pouring it down the back and rubbing it over the entire body, taking pains to see that the head and ears are well covered. One application of crude oil, provided it is thorough, will eliminate hog lice. Of course, in all cases it is necessary to clean up the hog houses 'ind sleeping places and disinfect then; with the same preparation. 2. Creolin.?By taking an ordinary coal tar preparation such as cveolin, and diluting it about 1 to 85, you may l)e able to control hog lice. As in the case of crude oil tlie application of this material should be thorough. When a coal tar preparation is used it is necessary to report the treatment in ten days, because the lice are killed, but the nits are not. Oil f VfttM fidvnnpflo ^ ?Ar>? ? - ^ ? V?II VUUI^VO. V/ 1 I Ill/Ill parages which has been drained from the motors has been used very satisfactorily to cor.tiol hog lice. However, some of the oil which is obtained from garages has a great deal more kerosene in it than others and when this is the case it sometimes blisters. Oils are also beneficial in laying dust, which is almost as injurious to hogs as lice.