University of South Carolina Libraries
GREAT MASS OF PROOF Report of *0,000 Cages of Kidney 1 Trouble* Some of Them Conway Cases. 1 ?_ ] Each of some 6000 newspapers of ; the United States is publishing from . week to week names of people in its ; particular peighborhood wno have usea and recommended Doan's K:d- ; ney Pills for kidneys, bachache, weak , kidneys, bladder troubles and urinary disorders. This mass of proof in- ^ eludes ver 50,000 recommendations. . Conway is no exception. Here is . one o fthe Conway cases: Wm. H. Chryst says: "A cold J caused my kidney trouble and my . back was weak and sore. My head ached and I was nervous and run ( down. The kidney secretions passed ( too frequeatly, too, and were highly colored. I used Doan's Kidney Pill^ and one box cured me of the com- J plaint. I haven't been bothered since." 1 Price 60c at all dealers. Don't 1 simply ask for a kidney remedy? i get Down's Kidney Pills?the same that Mr. Chryst had. Foster-Milburn t Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. J o > iMUTltK UF SALE ' i Under and by virtue of the order 1 of Hon. R. J. Kirk, Referee in Bank- * ruptcy in the matter of Prince Bro- 1 thers, bankrupt, as well as in the mat- * ter of E. W. Prince and F. G. Prince * as individual bankrupts, which order ( is dated on January 31st, 1923; I, the ' undersigned Trustee of said bank- 1 rupts, will offer for sale at public auc- '< tion for cash at the Post Office at ' Bayboro, South Carolina, at eleven t o'clock A. M., on Friday, the 16th 1 day of February, 1923. t ALT, ANP SINGULAR. The remaining book accounts, notes, bills of A sale, chattel mortgages and other bills receivable of the said bankrupt es- 1 tates, said book accounts and bills receivable consisting of those not held * by secured creditors of said bank- 1 rupt concern and for a more particu- f lar description reference h> hereby made to the schedule of said bankrupts, a copy of which is in the hands of the undersigned. c Dated February 1st, 1923. v A. BELL, Trustee. j o T FINE PROGRAM 1 The program of the State Teach- r ers' Association has been practically * completed. r Judge C. A. Woods, of Marion, will be one of the speakers for the general j sessions. James H. Hope, State Sup- r erintendent of Education, will also be * 1 on the program. c o PAY UP NOW f We have sent out some c/irtls to a | few subscribers who have been slow in renewing their subscriptions and if they do not respond and send or t bring us the money for a renewal, we v cannot do otherwise, under the law, . except stop the subscription by striking the names from the mailing list. , Never let this happen. You need the paper and The Herald needs the money. ? tl Mak^ % Cleaning- | Time Easy & ' PTC T1 Old Spring-cleaning e? backaches are out of style. jJJ A little Red sbal Lye does at the work better and a lot ne L easier. The clever woman J.. uu finds-many ways of making pr It wank for her. tu 4 L**t us suggest a few of ths ecany uses to you. , ed . Write for booklet. Full directions in' each caau ^ Be aure and ha ' 1 ?? WHAT IS UP IN COLUMBIA Editor Herald: The inclosed bill is to be introduced by the ways and means committee. It may or may not be passed. Our Supply bill has gone over to the senate, where I understand Senator Smith has amended it. I don't know just what they are. Guess that we will have a free conference before we settle it. # Under Senator Smith's amendment the levy runs up to 14 or 15 mills. I im still receiving letters from parties in Conway asking about the deficit :>n the school funds. They certainly must not have read The Herald week aefore last, in which T stated that the leficit. which is about $8,000, is being jared for. W. A. PRINCE. Columbia, S. C., Monday, Feb. 19th, .1923. This bill is not passed yet, but is bo be introduced by the ways and means committee The proposed tax measure follows: n i. - ? vyoiumoia.?stamp taxes on coffee, :ea, tobacco products and soft drink syrups and essences, provided in the -vays and means committee's comnodity tax bill introduced in the house n place of the so-called luxury tax neasure. are expected to raise from *1,500,000 to $2,000,000 a year in 'evenue, according to estimates made )y the committee. The bill provides hat all money raised from these taxis shall be used in meeting the State ippropriation for schools. Opposition to the proposed taxes developed it committee hearings held before the nil was introduced and it is expected ;hat a lively debate will be nrecipated lefore the hou?e finally disposes of ;be measure. Following is the scale of fees provided in the bill: On all finished or fountain syrups, 10 cents a gallon. On all concentrated essences, exacts, all o*her flavored syrups and mfermented fruit juices, 40 cents a gallon. On coffee, two cents a pound. On tea, five cents a pound. On cigars of all descriptions, made f tobacco or any substitute therefor, UflifrViiniv ? -4'1 .^.et.w.ifc, nv/v mule inun xnree pounds >er 1,000, 50 cents per thousand. On cigars weighing more than 3 ounds a 1,000, a fee in accord with he following scale: Such cigars im>orted or manufactured to retail at lot more than five cents each, $1.50 >er 1,000; such cigars imported or nanufactured to retail at more than ive cents and not more than eight fents each, $2 per 1,000", such cigars mported or manufactured to retail at riore than eight cents and not more han 15 cents each, $3 per 1,000; such igars imported or manufactuied to etail at mere than IB cents each and lot more than 20 cents each, $4 per ,000; such cigars imported or manuactured to ret.iil at n-ore til an 20 ents each, $5 ]>er 1.000. On cigarettes weighing not more han 3 pounds per J.000. ?1 per 1,000: /eighing more than 3 pounds per ,000, $2.40 per 1,000. On chewing tobacco, smoking toacco and snuff, six cent? n pound. The tax is to be paid by means of tamns !i(Tivo/l ? -1 ?1-- * r- i/.v me ueuier maKing he first sale of the commodity within he state. The State tax commission, nder the bill, would have charge of nforcing the law. o 4 EGGS FOR HATCHING 'areful Selection Means Profits Next Season Clemson College.?The problem of sleeting eggs, by which we mean th^ andling and grading of eggs accordig to size, color and shape, for incnation, is one of the most important roblems in the poultry industry. The careful and progressive poul yman knows that to improve his ock he must breed from only desirale males and females, and that durg the incubation period he must set ily uniform eggs. In other words, it is the eggs we set id hatch from which Ave expect to ake our profit .another season, says . R. Mehrof, Extension Poultry Spealist; thence the best pnmmowiai wltrymen and the farm flock owns pay very strict attention to the fgs that are used for hatching. For < :ample, on a commercial poultry ant at this season of the year, we id that the manager wants onh* alk-white eggs, which must be unirm in size and shape, must have a. 1 >od shell texture, and must be fresh, le manager Will cast aside tinted gs, eggs that are abnormal in size id shapes, eggs that have poor shell xture. Why does he pay so much tention to this phase of his busi- i ss? Simply to eliminate all undesir- i le characteristics and gradualy \ ild up a flock of poultry that will 1 oduce a uniform product which in > rn means more profit for the owner, j In Selecting for Hatching. l 1. Use only normal eggs, those \ ither abnormally large nor small. 2. Discard ill-shaped, rough-shell- t , dirty eggs. 3. If you hold hatching eggs, keep sm in a cool, dry place. Turn them c ce a day and handle them with clean nds. ' f. ? , >, ? IT INCORPORATES F The Conway Oil Company was char- > ed one day last week, with Messrs. W. Barrett and S. S. Du'senbury. i former of Conway, and the latter Florence, S. C. s rhe firm has already been doing d siness in gasoline and lubricating v s at this point for a number of t irs, running as a partnership, and e ire may have been other business V n interested in this with them. They decided to apply for a charter J become incorporated under the k ieral laws of ^ the State, a THE HORRY HERALD, OONW TREATING LARGE LOTS OF SWEET POTATOES Clemson College.?A method was recently outlined by the Botany Division for treating large lots of Irish potatoes with corrosive sublimate at f. minimum expenditure of the chemical and of time. Through an oversight a slight modification of the method, which is suitable for the treatment of sweet potatoes was ommitted. Practically the only change neeeed to adapt the method for treating sweet potatoes is to change the amount of mercuric chloride (Corrosive sublimate) added to maintain the strength of the solution. Instead of adding % ounces of the chemical for each four bushels treated, add V2 ounces for each ten bushels treated. After each addition of chemical add enough water to restore the original volume, and discard the solution after the twenty-fifth lot is treated. If the potatoes are treated in bags *'?. ounce should be added for each 8 bushels treated unless the same bags are used over and over so that they become saturated with the solution. Another difference to be noted is that sweet potatoes need to be soaked in the solution only ten to fifteen min~ ~ ? --I Al- - 1 A J uvea ujs upputseu to me longer ireat-ment required for Irish potatoes. The solution should be made up at the same strength (4 ounces to 30 gallons of water) in non-metallic vessels: and, for convenience in dissolving, the solution should be made in a small amount of hot water and diluted to the proper amount later. An excess of dirt and debris in the solution will cause it to become weakened. o FERTILIZING OATS Quickly Available Nirtopen Important Clemson College.?The fertilizer tests conducted by the South Carolina Experiment Station to determine the best fertilizer for oats indicate that on most soils in this State only quickly available nitrogenous fertilizers may be applied with profit. The yield of oats, where this crop follows cotton in a systematic soil-building rotation, has been in almost direct proportion to the amount of nitrogen supplied. The application of phosphorus and potash often has not increased the yield over that obtained when no fertilizer was used. It would appear then, that where a regular rotation is followed, in which the cotton and other crops received a well-balanced fertilizer, nitrogen only may be profitably applied to the oat crop. However, on soils which are very deficient in plant food, such as the light sands of the Coastal Plains, and which have not been fertilized liberally for the preceding crop, the application of one hundred pounds of acid phosphate broadcast at the time of planting is to be recommended. Potash will not ordinarily be reouired, unless the soil is unusually deficient in this element. The nitrogenous fertilizer should be applied in February or early in March, the agronomists advise. Earapplications are to be recommended "tld should consist nf reventy-five one hundred and fifty pounds of nitrate of soda or sulphate of ammonia. In applying sulphate of Ammonia. it should be remembered that pound for pound it contains one and one-third as much plant food as does nitrate of soda. .Only such quickly available sources of nitrogen as these should be used. o LOWLY PEANTTT GREAT FRIEND The lowly pen nut is one of the ? * i * * poor man s nest inencis. The great reason for this is found in the fact that it saves many a hotel hill. When the man goes to town to cnend the day on business he cannot afford to pay the price of the big dinner that would be served to him at the hotel. Here the peanut comes in. The peanut can always be found in the parched state at many different nlaces, kept for sale on the streets. With one or two packages of this ^iost delicious edible, he can stave off his hunger until he gets home at night where, over a dish of cold collards and dumplings, and a hog jowl, he finishes up for all that he has missed during his day ^fT. The peanut is sold all over the world. It is even now one of the createst crops in some sections of the ountry. The peanut has not yet attained all of its glory, but it will continue to come into its own. ***** HELP THE WILDEST Two hunters in the North Carolina .voods had chased a wildcat to a clearnp: and were terrified to see the beast jump into the window of a cabin Tom which the sound of a woman's ice had just been heard. On the )orch, rocking comfortably and apparently unperturbed, sat Friend Husband. "For heaven's sake, is your wife in here?" screamed one of the hunters. "Yeah." "Good Lord, man, get busy! A wildat just jumped in the window!" "Yeah? Well, let him git out the >est way he can. I got no use for he pesky critters and danced if I'm roin* to help him."?American Legion Veelkly. ?- ~0 1 1 PAY TODAY. Send in the money for one year's ubscription to The Herald office toay. You will not regret the money vhen you read the many interesting hings that will appear in the paper very week?things that you want to :now about. 1 o? Plenty of notes of three different inds are kept in stock at The Herald hop. AT. 8- 0. FEB. 32, 1983 WILL TAX ICE 1 TO HELP OUT I Things Done up to Last Friday Night in Colum- < bia i ' I Columbia, Feb. 16.?Both houses of the general assembly adjourned today < until 8 o'clock Monday night. Taxation of ice as a means for raising revenue is provided for in a ] jrill introduced in the house today by ; tjie ways and means committee. The measure provides for a tax of one i cent per hundred pounds on all ice : sold iu the State. Still More Taxes The revenue bills of the ways and means committee, to tax transfers of stocks, bonds and other certificates of indebtedness and to impose a tax on commodities, are scheduled for debate in the house next Tuesday, *hat body having made special orders of them for Tuesday morning and night. This Bill Was Killed The senate today killed the MooreButler-Duncan bill to abolish the office of county game wardens. On mo- s tion of Senator Padgett the enacting words were stricken out by a vote of 2G to 9. Twin Highway Bills The Williams twin-highway bills, providing for a $00,000,000 road building program, were made special orders for Tuesday night by the senate today without objection. , TR A HARRISON ACTS CURIOUS Columbia, Feb. 10.?Ira Harrison was electrocuted in the State prison today for the murder of J. C. Arnette last May. He was placed in the death chair at 10:46 and was dead four minutes later. He was carried to the chair by two prison attendants. Harrison remained in a state of apparent unconsciousness, which has marked his case for the last two months. He failed to show signs of consciousness even when Lanel Bonner, a newspa- , per reporter, deputized because Captain Roberts had left his glasses at ' home, read the death warrant. The prison physician informed Governor McLeod today there was no reason to change his opinion that Harrison was malignering. Rev. H. F. Schroeder, pastor of the Church of the Good Shepherd, at tempted to administer the last rites of the church but Harrison failed to respond. Former Governor Blease visited hi?,-> but he showed no signs of recognition. The case of Ira Harrison is in some respects unique in the criminal annals of South Carolina, according to law yers. ine aeatn sentence ^n:s upon him while he was in an apparent stupor, lying motionless on a stretcher in the courtroom for sixtysix minutes. Three physicians declared he was feigning unsconsciousness. and Judge T. J. Maudlin accopted their opinion, refusing* to grant an appeal by B. B. Evans, attorney for the defendant, for an examination as to his sanity by a lunacy commission. Harrison, according- to penitentiary .authorities, was apparently in a comatose condition from December 8th. until the end, with the exception of two days when lie war reported to have gotten up from Ms be?d and showed signs of being normal. This week, only a few days before the hour set by law for him to pay the death penalty, the condemned man was visited by his mother, but her presence, USE FER FOR I ?2E *> Get my ED L. SMIT % according to observers, did not cause him to come out of his stupor?real or feigned. From the legal standpoint, the Harrison case furnished South Carolina with one precedent, if not more, in the opinion of attorneys who have expressed their opinion. That was the action of Governor Wilson G Harvey in granting a reprieve in his }\vn initiative to the defendant, with the declared purpose of hastening the late of his execution, should the Su-. preme court dismiss his second appeal, which was then pending. The Supreme court dismissed the appeal on . February 8th, after an en banc hear-1 ing, and at the same time sDecificallv upheld the constitutionality and lawfulness of Governor Harvey's action in issuing the reprieve. SWINE DOCTOR IS ACCUSED Farmer Tells Him he is a Conjurer of Pigs WAS ONLY A TREATMENT His Way of Treating the Sick Pigs Fully Explained Clemson College.?D. T. Herrnvin, r>f Aiken, District Swine Specialist for the Extension Service of Clemson College, is accused by Mr. E. C. Matthews, of Blackville, of "conjuring" pigs, because of the results of some management practices recommended in Mr. Matthers' herd of hogs. It seems that the entire herd of around 125 pigs, ranging in weight from 10 to 75 pounds, was in bad shape and in a very unthrifty condition ,while 10 of them looked as if they might die within a few d:iv? when certain changes in management and a medical treatment were recommended by the specialist. The effects of this care were so unusual and came so quickly that the "conjuring:" charge was made on Mr. Herrman's IF BILIOUS, TAKEN* "Dodson's Liver Tone" Strai; Salivating, Dangerous Cal You?Don't Lose a Day's You're K'ious! Your liver is sluggish! You feel lazy, dizzy and all knocked out. Your head is dull, your tongue is crated; breath had; stomach sour and bowels constipated, lhit don't take salivating calomel. It makes you sick, you may lose a day's Avork. Calomel is mercury or quicksilver ' tiiuv.li iiuisw Hl'CrUSlH OI L! 10 DM110H. Calomel crashes into sour bile liko dynamite, breaking it up. That's when you fee] that awful nausea and cramping. If you want to enjoy the niefst, gentlest liver and bowel cleansing you ever experienced just take a spoonful of harmless Dodson's Liver Tone tonight. Your druggist or dealer sells , Virginia Chemical TILIZ JEST RES //<virginia\ r CAROLINA \ < CHEMICAL 1 CO. J p prices before I H, Agt., CON\ return one week later. Denies Charge: Announces Treatment I In spite of the evidence he pleads not guilty and, to prove his i innocence, makes public the treatment he recommended. The pigs were infested with both lice and mange, but worst of all, many ofthem had a bad cough, and were not making any growth. They were being sheltered under houses and barns that were dry and drsty and h.4d sheltered pigs for several years. So Mr. Herrman surmised, and it seems rightly, that the pigs were suffering from a very heavy infestation of the common stomach [.worm of hogs. The treatment was as follows: First he placed all of his pigs in pens where they could get absolutely no feed, giving them nothing but water for 24 hours; and then he sprinkled them thoroughly with agood standard stock dip (a 3-per cent solution is commonly used for this work) one tablespoonful of the full strength being sufficient for the ordi | nary sprinkling can of water. Next, j he divided the herd into groups of 15 or 20 pigs of approximately the same size, to insure equal distribution of the medicine. After 24 hours without feed, the pigs were given 1 tablespoonful of oil of American wormseed and 2 ounces of castor oil per 100 pounds, the oil being mixed into just as little feed as would absorb it so | that it would be eaten readily. If he had 15 pigs averaging 20 pounds each in a nen. he mixed three teaspoonfuls of oil of wormseed and C> ounces of castor oil into a lit*'e feed and gave all of it to these 15 pigs. Six hours j later they were given a thorough sprinkling with waste cvlinder oil and were turned into the fields. "Magic" Effects. The ejects were noticable almost immediately, the hair and skin of the pigs took on a more healthy appearance and instead ot' ten pigs dying, only one died, and the rest are getting bettor "every day in every way." Practically all veterinarians recommend individual treatment of pigs infested with stomach worms, giving the oils with .a specially constructed syringe. but the treatment has been so successfullv used in thr manner rip i scribed above that many farmers prefer it* SICK! D CALOMEL ghtens You Up Better Than lomel and Doesn't Upset , ; Work?Read Guarantee you a bottle of Dotb.on's Liver Tone for a few crnls un?ler my personal moni-'v-baok guarantee that eatoh spootif..i i) i .... mi vim i k'uji your siuggiaii liver bettor than a dose of nasty calomel anil that it won't n.ake you sirk. Dodson's Liver Tone ia real liver medicine. You'll Know it next morning because you will wake up feeling line, your liver will be working, your headache and dizziness gone, your stomach will be sweet and your bowi Is regular, You will feel like working; you'll he cheerful; full of vigor and D inbit ion. Dodson's Liver Tone is entirely veflfetnhlc, therefore harm leas and can not balivate. Give it to >our children.. Carolina I Co.'s ERS ULTS | ? I raying I I VAY, S. C. I