The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, August 10, 1922, Image 5
-*! wm 1
i
BUSINESS CARD
FOR OUR BANKS
Should be Creed of All Banks
in This Section
DISCARDING-ALL SCRUBS
No Farming System is Complete
and Right Without
a Livestock Business
1. I "believe that the future welfare
of my state is, in a large measure,
dependent upon agricultural prosperity:
Thereore, it will be my purpose
to encourage those farmers with
whom I have influence to do. those
things {agriculturally which they
4 /\ rl/\ it tt/l f/\ <.f/\?\ rJ/?i w #% 4lw\t?r*
tvy uuj aiiu tu otwp uuiu^
things that may be harmful in connection
with the safe and sane farming
operations.
2. I believe that soil fertilty is
fundamental; and knowing that the
Coastal Plain soils, generally speaking
are deficient in organic matter,
I will strongly advocate the improvement
thereof by drainage, Mining
by the planting of leguminous
and non-leguminous cover crops;
and by intelligent crop rotations.
3. I believe that every farm should
be self-sustaining: therefore, I will
urge and encourage the growing of
food and feed for the family, for the
work-stock and for all domestic animals
on the farm, with a small surplus
for a cash income.
5. I believe that the scrub animal
and the scrub field-seed should
be discarded: therefoie, I will encourage
the use of better sires and
better seed for bigger profits.
I believe that no time should be
wasted in making a safe, sane and
well balanced farming program:
therefore, I will use the intelligence
and power with which God has endowed
me to bring about, in due
season, the realization of "The Full[SUMMER
COLDS]
! usually leave a trail of
weakness. Build up on
Scott's Emulsion
! It promptly, pleasantly and
! effectually adds
I strength to the body. y?jJ
. I It builds up resistance! J\\\f
I Scott & Howne. Bloom held, N. J 22-4
SPECIA
MEN'S BLUE
BRAY WORK
4SC ea
Run for
Mf?n'a All f.<
V A A AM -T ^
WORK SH
?nly $ 1.6!
H Liool^, L
I Men's Heavy
I Stitched Elasti
OVERAi
I $1.50 val
| Now 95c
U Good a ualitv Ad
n ~ *
y 9c per yari
N ALL MEN'S and BOY
I PANTS GREATLY I
' I N
mess of Our Day/' as expressed by
that eloquent and gifted Georgian
of a former generation, the Honorable
Henry W. Grady:
"When every farmer in the South
shall eat bnead from his own fields
and meat from his own pastures and
disturbed by no creditors, and enslaved
by no debt, shall sit amid 1
his teeming gardens, and orchards, i
and vineyards, and daries, and barn- s
yards, pitching his crops to his own
wisdom and growing them in independence,
making cotton his clean *
surplus, and selling it in his own '
time, and in his chosen market, and .
not at a master's bidding?getting
his pay in cash and not in a receipted
mortgage that discharges his
debt but does not restore his free- 1
dom, then shall be breaking the '
fullness of our day."
o
RETURNING PROSPERITY
\s evidence of returning prosperity,
and the accumulation of
savings and the willingness and desire
of the public to invest surplus
funds in a safe and sane manner,
Howard T. Cree, director of the
Government Savings Organization of
the Fifth federal Reserve District,
has informed the local postmaster
that the people of this district have
purchased in the first six months of
this year Treasury Savings Certificates
to the amount of $4,414,086.
This is more than five and onehalf
times the amount sold during
the same period last year, and represents
a per capita investment of
48 cents for every man, woman and
child in the district.
o
EASY TO PREVENT GOITRE
"Simple goitre is the easiest of all
diseases to prevent," wrote Dr.
Marine, the great specialist in this
disease, some time ago. Iodine is
known to be necessary to the normal i
function of the thyroid gland. Goitre '
is an expression of deficiency of j
iodine in the thyroid, and the ela
borate experiments made recently by;
Dr. O. P. Kimball on the school chil::cn
of Akron, O., furnish conclusive
evidence that administering a min
utc quantity of iodine every day acts
as a preventative in such regions
where goitre prevails.
_ -?-?? : . . i
Chamois skin iray he cloanftl by
soaking in soda and water, and then
in soapsuds.
?o
No Worms in a Healthy Child
All children troubled with Worms have an uo- !
healthy color, which indicates poor h'ood, and asa I
rule, there is more or 1 ess stomach disturbance, j
GI'OVE'S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC {{iven regu- |
larly for two or three weeks will cnrich the blood, '
iin prove the digestion, and act as a general Strengthening
Tonic to the whole system. Nature will then ;
throw off or dispel the worms, and the Child will be i
in perfect health.* Pleasant to take. bUc per bottle. 1
V mimt:?ram ?ME.ezzLiJwa ?ira res
WALK~A
x- -x- -x -x- -x- -x- -x- -x- -K- -X- -x- -x- -x -x- -x- -x- Y? -x- -x- -x- * -x- -x- -X- * -xSHIRTS
it! Wher
J TT
gather LU 1
IQES partm
\ mean
GARI
IT W.
ook! . ...
As it will
Double WHAT W
ic Back
LLS ONE 1
ues LADIES
Colored
> Pair HAM 1
~~ ~ values up
ron Check Now $2.
A _
P All Batl
IXULfVVUiy. ||
ew Spivey Bloc
THE HORRY HERALD, 00
???????i
THINGS TO DO
DURING AUGUST
Agronomy
Harrow frequently during August
and that is to be planted in alfalfa
n September to secure a firm
smooth seed bed.
Make arrangements now for cover
:rop seed which are to be planted ir
September and October.
If you are unfortunate enough tc
lave weedy terraces, clean them up
thoroughly during this month.
Instead of pulling fodder for hay
plant a late crop of German millel
or Sudan grass and get more haj
with less labor and save the con
srop.
Horticulture
Plant rutabagas, snap beans, anc
Irish potatoes. Transplant cabbage
Keep all vegetables gathered t<
encourage fruiting.
Cultivate old and young orchard:
and fertilize weak trees with stabh
manure or 8-4-4 fertilizer.
Watch the pecans and remov<
caterpillar worms.
Remove decayed grapes and whei
the harvest is over, give clean shal
low cultivation.
Beans planted in late August usu
ally bring a good price. Plant th
Late Refugee variety.
Clean up the yard and fertiliz
the shrubbery that is not mak'nj
good growth.
Animal Husbandry
Breed all sows not previousl
settled for fall litters.
Breed all beef cows not previousl
bitxl for spring calves.
If convenient change livestoc
from one pasture to another, thu
allowing fresh grass and control o
parasites.
See that livestock has plenty c
shade and pasture.
Destroy all stagnant pools no>
used as mud wallows.
Make use of pasture for idl
horses and mules.
Cot together as much hay for win
ter as possible.
Seuarate the pork hogs from th
breeding stock and give the breed
ing stock especial attention.
Fix up the weak links in the fenc<
and if possible get more of you
land under fence.
Dnirviinr
Heat and dirt are the causes c
sour milk. Exercise giteat care t
keep the milk clean and cool at a
times.
Provide cows with shade durin
the hot days.
Plan now to show animals at con
munity, county, or state fairs.
Corn, sorghum, Sudan grass, etc
pay well when fed green as soil in
crops. Feed 20 to 30 pounds pc
1 day per cow.
, BLOCK Ah
r -x- -x- -x- -x- -x- -a- -x- -x- -x- -x- -x- -x- -x- -x- -x x- -x- -x- x- -x- -X- * -x- :<e
Goods are be
PRICES, Come
ent Store. You
Sh/rfc imii* n/ci:
y XJ' <UL? v SUaSL
)LES OF PRIC
ILL PAY YOU 1
mean big savings
rE SAY? Ask you
Friday anc
RACK OK I
;? FAST
GING- One tat
Dresses, dies Ha
to $4.50 up to $(
25 each at $1.0C
hing Suits now
:k, Upper Mail
# V
NWAY, S. 0., AUGUST 10, 1922
I Ask the dairy specialists for help
with plans to remodel the old or
i build new dairy barns, silos, milk
houses, etc.
Plant Pathology
Clean up the orchard after the
crop is harvested. Burn, bury deeply,
or feed to the hogs all diseased
1 fruit and debris from under the
i trees. Trjm out and bum all cankered
or dea<l twigs.
Notify your seed dealer that you
^ are going to require certified seed
Irish potatoes for next spring.
?o
J YE FARM GOSSIPE
Weeds are robbers. Treat 'em
I rough.
i Find out what the insects don't
1 like and give 'em lots of it.
Strange to say, there are still
\ some farmers who are opposed to
scientific investigations, but their
3 tribe is growing beautifully less.
s The high cost of careless farming
? is greater than the high cost of
living.
5 Every good farmer should begin
now to think of fall and winter cover
; crops. They build the soil.
It is human nature for buyers to
like fancy packages. That is why
careful selection, grading, and pack3
ii'ir of farm products pays.
Many of the farmers' problem?
e are at the city end of the railroads.
^ It's up to farmers to study marketing
as closely as production.
A small investment in repair parts
v of farm machinery will pay big dividends
in time and money saved latei
N on.
"Have a cow and a garden and add
, twonty-five .years to your life."?Slof
gan of the Southern Medical Asso
ciation.
Clean-up days are all right, hut
let's put more emphasis on making
v and keeping the farm premises beau
t i f u 1.
e With the farmer who would pros
per. it is not a question of time t(
read and cost of farm papers aw
other suitable reading. What doe:
e it cost not to read?
[_ 44If advertising pays the merchant
and other business men, why no1
? me?." says Farmer Brown to himself
i)? Woll, why not?
I f vim li vr? n 11 v doubt that th<
livestock industry in South Carol im
>f is growing, you may bo surprised t<
;o know that the value of the state':
II livestock is now $84.000.000.09,?
renter by $(5,000,000.00 than the cot
g ton crop. Get in the procession.
o
l- A Recipe.?To avoid a colorles:
existence, keep in the pink of con
dition; do things up brown, treat peo
g nlo white, be well read, and get ont<
;r the golf green under the bin
occasionally.?Boston Trtnscript.
i D S A veaI
X- -X- -X- -X- -ft X- * * * -X- * * -X- X- -X- -X- -X- -X- -X- -X- -X- -X- -tt * * XWant
to S
iing offered at F
) to the Conwa?
. know what our
iYTHING GOEI
17
JLj*
COME HERE F
to you. ARE WI
ir neighbor ; he was
! Saturday.
.adies! 4000 >
i c i wide fii
or JLjSL" Qr? i l
Lts, values ^ .
5.50, going Dun
) each. 10c p
1 O f? all shoe
1-*$ oil PERS now
i Street, Conws
t
HOW TO FIGHT THE WEEVIL 1
Clemson College.?"The most striking
feature in the boll weevil situation
is the irregularity of the amount 1
of infestation, not only in the various 1
counties but on individual farms and 1
even in single fields," said Prof. A. 1
F. Conradi, Entomologist, at the <
weekly boll weevil conference here :
today, after hearing reports from
the field specialists who veie present
for the conference and from the county
agents over the state.
A* the c'ose of the conference the
following statement was given out:
K/\?? 4 Un o \i Anlr
iiic uauiui viui iii^ ui^ j/uov " wi\,
while hot, was moist and generallv
favorable to weevil development. It
should be explained that h ot and dry
weather is the weevil's worst enemy,
but with the exception of a few
localities we have had no such weather
during the past week. Showers
have been frequent and the atmosphere
moist, which offset the benefits
that would have been derived
otherwise from hot weather.
The percentage of squares infested
varies, as shown by the reports, from
a small per cent to (?0 or 70 per
cent. This condition frequently is
very misleading to farmers who are
giving the credit of low infestation
to one or other of the control measures
they are attempting, when as a
matter of fact the infestation was not
there to begin with. We lcno\r this
to be the case, because there have
been accumulated over a period of
years a series of most elaborate data
in experimental work showing what
results may be expected from one or
the other of these various control
measures under the best conditions.
Keep lTp Control Measures
Souare collecting when done thoroughly
on the plant and on the
ground is still advised throughout i
the Piedmont section, and in other
sections and areas where light square
j infestation occurs.
Frequent shallow cultivation should
he continued so long as cotton does
not sufficiently overlap for this t?> j
be injurious.
It is very necessary that tho labo
situation be controlled during August '
for the purpose of square collecting
and cultivation. Failure to have
labor available may mean much loss.
Fruiting over the state generally
is very good. But. it frequently happens
that individual farmers hav?~
a small crop of fKiit set at tHs
* time, a condition which would hardly
- i l?r? rlnr? to nnt urn 1 conditions bill
- probably a poor soil and poor seed
It must be kept in mind that good
soil and good seed are two things
^ most necessary before one may ex
- peel profit from any operation for
- boll weevil control.
Frequently we are asked to advise
o whether dusting should be undertaken,
where square infestation has reached
rnzzriixzzzj/HK '.'.-asi mar tzzmm n
DOIJLAR
fad a I SP
|*fyj Men's B
IN
Shirts c
brill! Du
? y 11# pei
IEAL
Y =__
' sales HERE
3 RE- 150 pair ]
ms t j*;
? DOING Greate
here last
$1
rds. Yard A/t
Mens ai
all colo
ISLAND 9<
ng sale Three
>er yard .. . ?-=
All Ladie
:s and slip- Rea<
at Sale Prices
ty, South Carolii
RESULT OF TREATING SCARLCT
FEVER AT HOME
The Borroufch of Tottenham, Enjp*
and, permits scarlet fever patients to
t>e treated at home, without isolation.
What may be the results of;
this are shown in the I>aneet (London,)
which quotes a letter from z*
resident of that town, relating his
own experiences. bays tne i^ancec:
"The method used was swabbing?
the throat with carbolic oil and an*
ointing the body with eucalyptus oi?r
which is well known to have strong:
strong medical support, so that many
believe infection to cease from the
time the ti/eatment is applied. Hut
differences of opinion between the
public on the subject may lead to the
inconveniences which Mr. Jones details.
"A member of his family, living"
away and following employment, arrived
home twenty-four hours after
the first application of the treatment
to a patient in his house by the
nurse supplied by the Tottenham Urban
District Council. The visitor's
employment was suspended by hi.?
employers despite the official asurances
that there was no further risk
of infection. Twenty-two days later
he was in one of the Metropolitan
Asylums Board's hospitals sufing
with scarlet fever.
"Mr. Tones adds that this person
was allowed home only on tho
strength of the assurances that there
was no i4isk. Further, one of the
children in the house was suspended
from school. In the meantime, and
on the tenth day, of the patient's
illness, the treatment by the nurse
ceased, and the case remains in bed,
while tho medical officer of health,
awaits instructions from the MinitfI
try of Health."
o
Habitual Constipation Cured
in B'j ,vo 21 Days
"LAX-FOS WITH PEPSIN" is o speciallyprepared
Syrup Tonic-Laxative for Habitual
, Constipation. It relieves promptly butt:
! should be taker, regularly for 14 to 21 days
[ to induce rcgulai action. It Stimulates and
regulates. Very Pleasant *.o Take.* 60c
rvvr bottle.
upwards of <>0 per cent. This depends
on:
1. Whether the farmer is prepared
to dust immediately. If so,
then \vc advise him to dust, but
there is no time left now to secure
dusting machinery and poison, knowing
that weevil dispersion is about
to begin.
2. Wherever the dusting schedule
has been begun it should be continued
with view of i7educin<: these
infestations before the dispersion
i begins.
naizzTOczzKiiBr?arise?wr~nam p}
r -X- X -X- -X * -X -X -X -X X -X -X- -X- * -X -X -X -X- -X-X-* j
ECIAL!
albriggan and I
fainsook U
J Ffc C-* A *W **"*> ?! m
uiu iLJ7fL awcn5 u
iring Sale J
garment jj
'THEY GO! |
Ladies black and I
white Ij
ippers 1
E OR STRAP n.
st values ever jr[
offered E|
.00 Pair |,
id Ladies Hose |j
rs, during sale y
B
; pr# pair v
pair for 25c. I
s' and children's n
dy to Wear I;
itly reduced I
na I