The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, September 28, 1922, Image 5
%
\ =
This section cannot do better than
to devote the energies of the people
to the building of better roads.
ASPIRIN
Say "Bayer" and Insist!
Vnless you see the name "Bayer" on
package or on tablets yon are not getting
the genuine Bayer product prescribed
by physicians over twenty-twc
years and proved safe by millions foi
Colds Headache
Toothache liumbago
Earache Rheumatism
Neuralgia Pain, Pain
Acccpt only "Bayer" package -wliicl
contains proper directions. Flandy boxei
of twelve tablets cost few cents. I>rug
.gists also sell bottles of 24 and 100
Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayei
Manufacture of MoBaacetLcaciidester o
&alicylicaci<L
LO:
Found.?tli?t jflorloun f?4Mnr (that
omf* willi 41 deur4 jiucq, riul4j ?omplMlQH,
A Real
! Cars
I The new Go<
inch clincher
warmly wclcc
If: gives him, j
to pay for m;
quality cord t
< .? *
I ana tiirough.
It is made of
reliable Gooc
engages the r<
The scientific
center rib an
surface that ii
The tough t v
walls clear tc
dinary degree
In every part?
built to safeg;
Despite its hi
tion, it sells j
which lack its
The 3
Cord t
Goodyear Cross-Rib 7
I Buck
AUTH
c
I It * ? in n??mm*?wwn?a>rw? ns f/wrrn*
?irirmmiTiinnMifimniMn ittt
1
i iimwiiiiiiiiMiiiiiimiiiiimiiiniiiimnm'
( MAPLE NEWS |
(Intended for Last Week.)
The Children's Day here was a
grand success. Or.e of the largest
audiences that has ever been to Maple
was present. Dinner was served
on the grounds to a crowd of approximately
400 persons. Messrs fc.
C. Allen and Sam Bland made splendid
talks in the afternoon.
M iss Alma Hardwick. of Rchobeth,
was the week-end gaiest of
friends here.
Mr. Lea I^ewis, of Aynor, spent
Saturday afternoon and Sunday here
with friends.
S. T. Smith, who is teaching
school at Rehobeth this year, . pent
the week-end at home.
Miss Selma Johnson is visiting
friends in the Lake Swamp section
this week.
t Revival services will begin at Ma.
pie Sunday. Rev. C. Stanley is the
pastor.
A crowd of the young folks made a
pleasant trio to Myrtle Beach after
the picnic Saturday.
o
i A. F. "White, of Fort Meads, Fla.,
s writes The Herald for a copy of the
- paper containing the table of votes
*R8t in the recent primary. He has
r 'teen away from Horry for eleven,
M years, but he is still interested inj
politics over here. *
ST!
250 Pimples. 736 Blackheads
and 3 Boils!
No reward 1b offered, "hecauso they
are lost forever! No question will bo
asked, except one question, "How
did you lone them?" There is but otio
answer,?"I cut out new fax! treatments
and guesswork; I used one of
the most powerful blood-cleansers,
blood-purifiers and f ! es l^buildera
'known, and lhat is S. S. S.! tsow my
face is pinkish, my skin clear ns a
rose, my cheeks aro filled out and my
rheumatism, too, is gone!" This will
be your experience, too, if you try S.
S. S. It is guaranteed to bo mirolv
vegetable in all its remarkably effective
medicinal ingredients... 9. S. S.
means a new history for you from now
on! H. S. S. is sold nt all drug stores
In two sizes. Tho larger Also la the
more economical.
.J!' '
-77-7 -
k #///// ^
Cord Tire fc
at a Popular
^dyeJtr Croscs-Rib Tread Cord
type is a tire flint the small
utte.
it a price lower thr ri the net pi
any ,;!on[; discount" tires, evei
ire performance, for it is a qua I
high-grade long-staple cotton 5 :
lycar quality of materials; its
Dad like a cogwheel.
distribution of rubber in this t
d f iie semi'tfr.f; contour?^ivefi
? exceedingly u\ow to wear,
ead stock iu this (ire is carried
> the bead* making i'c .'ut-proo
cular <t is a representative Goo
.Uird the world-wide Goodyear
gh quality, and the expertness
at a price as Sow or lower ths
> important features*
0 x 3V2 inch Cross-Rib /<\
clincher
This / rice inrfudrs mcnuftuturer*s excise tax
read Cord 'I ires ore ulso wade in 6, 7 at
FOR SALE BY
Motor Con
ORIZED FORD DEi
ONWAY. S. <
MB MM I 11 III! II I I I I ||
tfiflMi-iiiiTi ihin iar waiinigriirrrinrt ?iir
fHB HOBBY HERALD, OOMWi
HOGGING DOWN *
CHEAP METHOD
Getting the Benefit From Corn
Without Labor of
Gathering
Clemson College?The hoggingdown
method of gathering corn is becoming
a more common practice
among farmers. But the Southern
- ?
farmer is not taking up the practice
as rapidly as his Northern brothers,
because much of his land is not fenced
and because he often needs part of
the corn for other purposes. A summary
of 'the advantages of this method,
as given by experienced men.
indicate that it is to be hiirhlv reconv
mended, says E. G. Gulbey, Assistant
Animal Husbandry man.
Advantages of Hogging-Down Method
1. Hogs make as good or better
gains as when hand-fedo
2. No more grain is required. Why
waste labor and time gathering com
and feeding hogs when they will do
it for themselves more economically?
4. Manure is scattered on the
field, where it is needed.
5. Cribbage space is saved.
The best returns are never made
when we feed the hog corn .alone, so
in the hogging-down process it is
necessary that a nitrogenous supplement
be furnished either in the form
of a commercial concentrate or a
forage crop. The best commercial
concentrates for this use are tankage,
fish meal or milk.
Forage crops that may be planted
in the corn or in adjacent fields are
sov beans, cow peas, rape, and other
legumes.
It is a good idea to get the hogs
on the green feed gradually. This
can be done by cutting and feeding
a few stalks every day for a week
before turning them on the corn.
It is well to remember that plenty
of fresh water is just as necessary
with this method as any other and
that ii good mineral mixture won't
hurt anything and may be very
beneficial.
o
The opening of the Co-operative
Tobacco Markets last week at Durham
Oxford, Henderson, Norlina, Raleigh
and a dozen other points ot
central North Carolina was marked
by the highest cash advances yet paid
to the members of the Tobacco Growers
Association.
'ir-r I
)
' r nrr (|<H?N?ir
u*v-Rrt> Trvtul <Jord
|
>r Small
Price ' r
?n the 30 x 3T 2 | I
car owner will
V
rice he is rrked
ry advantage of <
ity tire through j.
[
it embodies the
clean-cut tread
i
road?the wide
; a thick, broad
down, the side- 1
? to an extraor*
r.
h
dyear product,
reputation. * h
of its construct E,
i.n. that of tires g
50 !
i d 8 inch sizes for trucks J
lpany 1
aLERS I
r~. ||
kY, S. 0., SEPT. 28, 1022
r . 1
^ | "HAD TO DI
* (Published for the Benefit
X Said the little red rooster: "Gos
X Seems that worms are *rettin.tr si
* What's become of all those fat oi
? There were thousands through t
* can they be?"
% The old black hen who heard 1
X ^>he had gone through the dry
$ floods and rain;
$ So she flow up on the grindstone,
jjj As she said: "I've never seen im
> jjj She picked a new and undug sp<
$ The little rooster jeered. "New
* worm."
The old black hen just spread
% free.
* "1 must go to the worms," sh
* me."
I *
* The rooster vainly spent his day,
jjc Where fat, round worms had ]
* days.
j ^ When night time found him :
( * rough:
^ "I'm hungry as a fowl can be.
t He turned then to the old black
* you,
, * For you're not only hungry, hut \
, ^ 1 rested while I w.itched for won
sje Iiut how are you? Without worn
4c The old black hen hopped to her
, X sleep,
jjc And murmured in a drowsy t
* weep:
^ I'm full of worms and happy,
jje The worms are there as always?
NOW IS TIME
TO BUY HOGS
Now is the time of all times to buy
hogs if one has any thought of going
into the hog business within the next
few years. Times have been just as
hard for the men who were raising:
hogs as they have been for everybody
! else and cash looks good to them.
Most of them have learned by sad
; experience that notes and mortgages
are poor payments for livestock and
thev are now demanding- cash. They
1 will not sell on credit fit any price,
but they will make the price right to
the man who Ivis the cash. The wise
. breeders saw this coming and used
home-grown feeds, thus enabling
them so sell at very reasonable prices
while a few continued to feed commercial
feeds and are now forced to sel
at a loss.
With prices on bred sows and gilts
at the present low levels, the ad
visability of buying weanling pigs is
Very much in doubt, as this methot
is generally unsatisfactory to buvei
find seller, unless the buyer is ai
experienced hog raiser, says D. T
Terrman. Extension Swine Special
st. In too many instances the pif
:s not given a real chance to develoj
nd when grown looks little bettei
than a scrub. The buyer is disap
nointed with his pig and proceeds t<
tell his neighbor so. The news
spreads and will soon hurt the breed
er\s good name.
At the present time, too, no goot
breeder will sell a pig as cheap pro
portionately as he is being forced t<
sell his bred sows and gilts. Foi
*50 bred sows of any breed can b<
bought now that will in three month;
raise six or eight pigs which if pur
chased at that time would cost aroun<
? 15.00 apiece. Tt should be remem
be red also that the breeder has t.akei
the risk of loss from disease or acci
dent during development when yoi
buy a full-grown sow or gilt.
Buy Bred Sows
For the man who has more fee<
than he can use, who lives in a sec
tion where this is the prevailing con
dition, and who has learned how hart
it is to market corn, peas, or velve
r
K
TM 1
| numbing an
I te
<
? If you arc in the market i
4, of any description it wo..Id pa;
^ We have a large stock of Bath
? lions, Kitchen Sinks, and I'ipe u
* Areola He
t
We have several Areola V.
* suitable for heating four, five,
J wish to enjoy the coming winto
* the building and maintaining o
* Areola.
| NoKol Autom<
X Those who have a heating 1
! see us immediately with the v
matic Oil Burner and do awaj
soot and smoke.
Farm Ligl
* We have several Farm Ligl
? sell very cheap, so why use Oi
J cheaper. '
*
tA visit to our warehouse v
which we have on plumbing an<
t Bryce Plumb
\ ing Cc
2 Plumbing and Heating
'Phone 402
I FLORE
*
0
G LIKE HELL" ^ - $
3 t
J1
??? ? Jfc
of Conway's Pessimists.) i *
h all hemlock, things arc tough, *
:arcer, and I cannot find enough. %
nes is a mystery to me; *
he rainy spell, but now. where ^
*
*
sic
him didn't grumble or complain, J
spells, she had lived through *
*
sjc
and r;ave her claws a whet, *
' time there weren't worms to get." *
>t; the earth was hard and firm; *
ground! That's no place tor a ^
*
her feet, she dug both fast and *
*
e said; "the worms won't c?>me to *
*
*
, through habit, by the ways,
passed in squads back in the rainy ^
*
supperless, lie growled in accents ^
*
Conditions sure are tough."| j
*
hen and said: "It's worse with *
*
rou must be tired, too. *
11s, so feel fairly perk; $
us, too? And after all that work?" *
*
? *
perch and drooped her eyes to ? j
* !
;one: "Young man, hear this and ^ j
*
for I've dined both long and well, *
-but 1 had to dig like hell! #
*
beans as such, the purchase of one or
more purebred sows bred for fall litters,
will be a good investment. These j
1 sows will find a good market for'
feeds. Hogs at 8 cents per pound are '
commonly figured to be paying $1.00
a pushel for the corn fed to them, ,und
under normal conditions, if properly
handled, they will pay more for thenfeed
than will be obtained from any
other method of marketing. Why ;
can't we sell our feeds at a good price '
t.brouirh hoirx :niH keen 7f> i>er cent of
their fertility value on the farm ?
o
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
From Specie lists' Correspondence
With Farmers
! Would wheat that rusted do for !
I e;'d? Would it he any more rust re- !
' distant??G. T.f Pinewood.
. Yes, if it is not shriveled and con
sequently of low vitality. It would
I not be more rust resistant. There is
no rust proof variety of wheat in
* general cultivation, although varie
ties vary considerably in their re*
si stance.
1 Please advise mo as to soil for
i" blackberries and raspberries.?A. W.
i H., Chesterfield.
I would suggest that you plant
- these fruits in very fertile soil that
y ?s well supplied with humus. Rasp)
berries will do best on a northern
r slope or when partially* shaded by
- buildings. I would not advise plant^
ing raspberries or blackberries in an
5 orchard. The Eldorado is one of the
- '-est varieties of blackberries, and the
Tuvnov, Cuthbe?*t. -,nH Gregg are good
1 varieties of raspberries.
Please, advise me the best way to
) control root knot in a garden.?C. A.
r B., College Place.
5 The best method of control is to
s rotate crops, using resistant crops for
- two or three years in succession if
1 the soil infestation is bad. If possible
- locate the garden in .a new place for
\ a few years for this purpose. Corn
- small grains, peanuts, velvet beaiv.1
Florida beggar weed, nearly all g'rass
es, Laredo soy beans, and Barbham,
Iron, Monetta, and Victor cowpeas are
1 resistant crops crops.
o
Get good printin g of the kind
1 that helps your business at the Rert'
aid shop.
d Heating Ma- I
rial |
for Plumbing and Heating Material ^
y you to see us before purchasing. J
Tubs, Lavatories, Closet Combina
nul Fittings of all description. T
ating Plants I
'eating Plants including radiation, +
six and seven room houses. If you
r by heating* your entire home with 2
f only one tire, you will install an
atic Oil Burners |
plant installed in t'leir home should <
iew of purchasing a NoKol Auto- ^
r with the dreads of winter, uusc. o
<
hting Plants i:
iting Plants in stock which we will 0
1 Lamps when Electric Lights are o
<
/ill convince you of the low prices o
:1 heating material.
ing and Heat- |
>mpany z
Engineers and Contractors. <'
v
20 N. Sanborn Street *
NCR, S. C. 0|28-3t. *
4
TRY NEW PRESS
BETTER WORK
Better printing can be turned out
on the new job printing unit that is
now installed and running every day
in The Herald plant.
The Herald does not do all of its job
printing on the new Craftsman press.
There are many jobs that can be
printed, on the two other job presses
;n the plant just as well as on the
new machine, but there are some jobs
of work that need to be finer, and
then 'the new unit comes in for its
t:.sk.
Briny votir wnrlc :ird fpol
-urea that it can be done as well in
Conway as if cui be done anywhere
'n the country, and better than it can
possibly l>e done in some other shops.
Hem-miber that there is a counter
on this now outfit which does not regi
tor when no sheet is fed. This
means that you will get full count
every time. When, from any cause
a sheet does not feed and the machine
makes a revolution without delivering
a printed sheet., the counter remains
idle while a bell rings to call the Attention
of the printer.
On the other presses there are no
counters and there is no way to tell
the exact number of sheets that have
been printed. The operator must allow
as many over as he thinks he has
wasted. On the new press there is
a perfect register, which means that
the form has been printed at the exact
same place on every sheet in the lot.
The impression is rigid and an even
o ? ?vr^i on }^li 0f its work.
It was the best job press in the
whole State of South Carolina at the
time it was installed, und is yet fhe
only on^ of ii^ kind and pattern in the
State, unless some other printer has
purchased one of tho new models
since The Herald got this machine.
DISEASEFREE
COTTON SEED
Clemson College.?The presence of
the boll weevil makes it very important
to control evervfhing that reduces
the cot toil crop. A half-bale
reduction of the crop is a n*.v??h larger
percentage of what the boll weevil
leaves tnan it is of a full crop. Furthermore,
the necessity of wording
* ? 1.1 u uir '
with the 'low and after the plants jire
large will probably m.ike anthracnose
and other diseases harden to control.
There wili he more spreading*
of spores and more infections from
them under these conditions than
normally.
It is especially important, therefore,
that a constant source of clean
seed, year after year, be secured, according
to the plant pot ho1.ovists,
who think that the best, plan to secure
this is to save soed from healthy
plants which do not have diseased
plants within four or five feet of
t them. The seed so secured should
j be ginned separately in a clean irin,
delinted with sulphuric acid, and
stored in a dry place .
If the plan can be carried ;i little
further and be made to include the
growing of ft separate %<?eed plot, so
much the better. Tt will be more effective.
Very small lots of seed can
be freed from the fiber without ginning
if necessary by delinting in the
usual manner with acid.
If infected seed has to be used it
should be kept in a dry place till two
or, preferably three years old before
planting.
? o
Bank No. 290.
Statement of the Condition of The
BANK OF LITTLE RIVER
Located at Little River, S. C., at
the close of business Sept. 15, 1922
RESOURCES
Loans and Discounts $65,331.25
Furniture and fixtures 550.80
Banking house 1,250.00
Other real estate owned 8,"04.62
Due from banks and bankers ',931.18
Currency 1,045.00'
Gold 35.00
Silver and other minor coin 69.86"
I ('Iwclfs :m?l r:ivh itr-mv '.OOft 9ft
Total 82,725.97
LIABILITIES
Capital stock paid in 10.000.00
Surplus fund 3.500.00
Undivided profit*. loss current
expenses and taxes
paid 1,062.04
Dividends unpaid tf.00
Individual deposi':;
subject to
check $?0nt>0.t5
Savings deposits 37,52".96
Cashier's checks 5H2.82 58,157.93
Tiil's payable, including: certificates
for money bor
rowed 10,000.00
'I'**! .?1 on wnr i\n
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA,
County of Horry, ss.
Before me onm" 11. E. Thompson,
Cashier of the above named bank,
who, bein? duly sworn, savs that
the above and forepfoinjj: statement
is a true condition of said bank, as
shown by the books of said bank.
H. E. THOMPSON.
Sworn to and sub?cribed before
me this 22nd dav of Sept. 1022.
CLARENCE C. McCORSLEY
Notary Public for South Carolina.
Correct Attest:
W. H. STONE,
JOHN E. VKUEEN,
J AS. A. STONE,
Directors.
o
T' v- fnv i>'? r'tih of <*>?bscrib"is
sent in one bntch Inst week. This
is the way to show vour appreciation
of a good paper. No one except the
printer and publisher can know the
rc'ble it >< ok t > produce it while
reading the local news which is of
g^eat interest to all Horry County
people.