The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, July 05, 1923, Page Page No. 5, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

???????? PROBLEMSOF , DAIRY FARMING : ?? i When should I cut crimson clover < for cows??R. H. C., Abbeville. < If you want to cut crimson clover i1 for dairy cows it should be cut at I the time the flower at the base of the i most advanced heads has faded. Af-. >ter the clover has become more ma-j ture, the barbed hairs of the bios- < somed heads and stems become ha?*d and wiry and if fed to horses and mules especially, mat in the digestive tract forming large masses which often grow to the size of a baseball i and thus plug up the intestines and m cause death. However, this condi-! |f(on does not hold true to such a JJrfeat extent for dairy cattle, but in,' order to get the most feed value it is < necessary to cut the hay before the.se ? barbs harden. 1 Which is better, the open or the closed top silo??B. B. B., Frogmore. I I believe that it is alwavs best to I use a top on a silo to prevent the 1 rains from soaking through the si- i lage, and more especially on account of the disagreeable features in removing silage during rainy weather. Of course, in the North they practically always use tops on the silos to pre- ( vent snows and sleets from piling up on the silage. However, we do not have these conditions in this climate. ; We have used four silos here at Clemson without tops for a number of years with satisfactory results, but we are planning to put roofs on these i silos this year, for reasons stated 1 above. 1 would like information on varie- < ties of crops to plant for ensilage.? ( W. C. S., Wjlliston. j We have been running some tests with corn silage and sorghum silage and find that sorghum is within (> to 10 percent as good a feed as corn sil/?re for dairy cows pound for pound. < \/e used for this test Japanese seeded ifbhon cane and can recommend this as being a satisfactory sorghum for silage. In putting sorghum in a silo it is necessary to remember that it shollld l?P vino pnftiiwp I ~ ? . . ,'V. .?V, . ?/i v, V/UVllli^ (IU.^l about the stage at which you would usually cut it to make syrup. How can I remove bitter weed and wild onion flavors from milk??T. >1. P., Ward. ^ As yet, there has been no treat ^ ment devised for taking these flavors out of milk. The only recommendation we can make is that you t?ke your cows off pasture infected with these pests three to four hours before each milking. By doing this, you can very satisfactorily control this f ^rouble. What can I do to make the in ilk from my herd test more than 4 1-21 percent??B. A. P., Fort Mill. ' Butter fat testing 4 1-2 percent would seem to be a reasonably fair test for average cows. However, the matter of test of cows' milk is inherited, and you can not change that for any length of time by different methods of feeding. Of course you can ret more milk and in that way more butter fat by feeding the proper amounts and kinds of feed to good cows; and I would certainly recommend that you change your ration to one which includes a -greater variety n cottonseed meal and hulls. 1 1 o TWICE-TOLD TESTIMONY Conway People* sire Doing all They Can for Fellow Sufferers Conway testimony has been pubI" t'lifl I nfnvo (lio < ? C T^/w>?V ' v vi?v- mvi II W| L/V/CUI r Kidney Pills to others in Conway *vho j suffer from had backs and kidney ills. F/est any sufferer doubt this evidence of merit, we produce confirmed proof ?statements from Conway people w^o again endorse Doan's Kidney Pills?confirm their former testimony. Here's a case: E. L. Moore, 100 Main St., said on December 18th, 1914: "My kidneys were out of order and I had a soreness across my kidneys. I was lame and stiff in the morning and had other symptoms of kidney trouble, too. 1 heard of Doan's Kidney Pills and bought them at the Conway Drug Companv. Doan's relieved me." OVER EIGHT YEARS LATER, on January 27th, 1923, Mr. Moore, said: "I have used Doan's Kidney Pills several times since 1914 and they have always helped me and finally cured me. I gladly confirm my former statement." J Price C)0c, at all dealers. Don't limply ask for a kidney remedy?get Doan's Kidney Pills?the same that Mr. Moore had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs.. Buffalo, N. Y.?Adv. ?o SUMMONS FOR RELIEF (Complaint Served.) STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF HORRY. Court of Common Pleas. Mullins Motor Car Company, A% Covnoration. Plaintiff, vs. N. M. Shel- .< ley, L. V. Todd, and A. W. Hodges and J. C Hodges, Co-partners rn trade under the firm name and style of A, . W. Hodges & Son, Defendants. To The Defendants Above Named: < YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the complaint < in this action, of which a copy is 1 herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to the < sp.id complaint on the subscriber or 9 subscribers at his or their office at Conway, South Carolina, within twenty days after the service hereof; exclusive of the day of such service; i and if you fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff* in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint. ^ Dated Mav 21st, A. D. 1923. B H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attornev K To I.. V. Todd, A1 *SENT I)EFEN1)A NT: V TAKE NOTICE, That the Com plaint in the foregoing stated action and the Summons of which the foregoing is a copy, were filed in the office of the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas in and for Horry County, at Conway, S. C., on the 24th lay of May, A. D. 1923. W. L. BRYAN, (L. S.) C. C. C. P. H. H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attorney. o CELEBRATE THE "FOURTH"? APPROPRIATELY Year by year the "Fourth" grows saner and safer. The trend is unmistakable. such increase as was n/>ted in destruction from Fireworks, Firecrackers, etc., in 1021, being attributable to the accident of one or two large fires rather than to a general "falling from grace" on the part [)f the public. Community celebrations, prearranged and orderly and properly superintended, have displaced to a large extent the promiscuous noise-making which, in an earlier day, so often degenerated into mere rowdyism; and no rational person laments the change or sighs for a return to the insane "shootin' .off" type of observance. . , w . %/ v f i%n ?-> iivv PC? i u t> n | even in those cities which have wisely banned the old-fashioned fireworks, two insidious sources of danger to life und property remain. One of these is the so-called electric sparkler, which has achieved an unwholesome popularity. It is especially hazardous for the very reason that it is deemed harmless by the unthinking and there; fore is permitted to children whose elders would deny them the more npenly dangerous cannon, firecracker und skyrocket. Although its dancing sparks themselves may not cause iglilion, the wire which holds the sputtering material quickly becomes incandescent and in that condition will set fire to inflammable material. Four i little girls, participants in a Mardi Gras held in Minden. Louisiana, this' year, were burned to death when their flimsy costumes were ignited by, sparklers. Five others of the group survived but were horribly disfigured. The other dangerous toy is the paper balloon which uses lighted kerosene-soaked waste to heat the air it contains and so cause it to rise. Frequently, these pretty affairs drop, blazing, upon inflammable roofs and other combustible surfaces and thus cause damage. Let the "Fourth" be kept safe and sane* again this year. The character of the celebration should be in keep r*! vth the sublime event that it commemorates. That does ?iot imptv a heavy, joy-killing solemnity, which is no more to be desired thrn a witless and purposeless license. There is a happy mean which all sensible folk will choose who realize that the tradition of American independence is not so obscure as to need the illumination afforded by burning homes, nor so in danger of extinction as to require the sacrifice of little children to keep it alive. o SUMMONS FOR RELIEF Court of Common Pleas. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF HORRY. Virginia-Carolina Chemical Company. a Corporation. Plaintiff vs. C. II. Tucker, Defendant. To the defendant above named: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the complaint in this action, of which a copy is herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscriber or subscribers at his office or their office ati Conway, South Carolina, within twen- i ty days after the service hereof; ex-: elusive of the day of such service; and if vou fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint. Dated June 1Kth A. D. 1023. H. H. WOODWARD, _ i /?/ ? 4 i i jriairum s Attorney. TO C. H. Tucker, Absent Defendant: TAKE NOTICE that the Complaint in the foregoing stated action and the' Summons of which the foregoing is a copy were filed in the office of the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas in and for Horry County, at Conway, S. C., on the 10th dav of June A. D. 1023. W. L. BRYAN, (L. S.) C. C. C. P. * H.' H. WOODWARD, Plaintiff's Attornev. C>||28i23-3t o ON THE UPGRADE The South is on the eve of a mightv industrial development, declares Edward T. Franks of Owensboro, Ky., member of the Federal Board for Vocational Education. Influences now being felt in the Southern States promise to place this region in the forefront of American manufacturing enterprise, he asserts. As the Southern representative on the Federal Board, Mr. Franks has felt grave concern over the present backwardness o? his native region in manufacturing and agriculture, but he believes that corrective influences are now at work, which foreshadow a great revival. o No Worms In a Healthy Child All children troubled with Worms have an u?? healthy color, which indicates poor b'ood, and as a cule, there is more or I ess stomach disturbance. GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC given regularly for two or three weeks will enrich the blood, improve 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 in perfect health Pleasant to take. 80c per bottle. o To Cure a Cold in One Day fake LAXATIVE PROMO QUININE (Tablets). It stops the Cough aud Heaaanie cu .l wot *? r ft" r ^ 'old. E. W. GROVE'S signature on each W.w. ?. ?1???1? THE HORRY HERALD, CONWi BANK HAS SUED ON LAND DEBT (Continued from page one.) virtue of a tax title made by Sheriff J. A. Lewis of Horry County to S. D. Bryant, dated on or about the Gth day of December. A. D. 1922, upon sale under an execution for taxes duly assessed. and while plaintiff's lien was a subsisting lien upon the said land. That the said claim, based upon the said tax title, is illegal and invalid, void and of no effect, for that the Sheriff attempted to deliver title for said lands and premises to S. D. Bryant without giving or attempting to give to W. T .Wallace, mortgagee of record, not less than 30 days notice of such sale having been made, a?jd without giving or attempting to give the said mortgagee an opnortunity to redeem the said real estate. That the plaintiff has at all times stood, and now stands ready and willing to redeem the said real estate from the State's lien for taxes under the provision of the statute, and to pay the said Sheriff the taxes, penalties, interest and legal costs for such redemption. * Wherefore, plaintiff prays: (1) That it be permitted to redeem t^e real ect"to herein described from the lien of the State for taxes; (2) That the Sheriff pay back to the defendants, heirs-at-law and devisees of S. D. Bryant, purchaser at the tax sale, the amount paid by the said S. D. Bryant on his bid for the said real estate at Sheriff's sale, with interest, at the rate of eight percent per annum from the date of his said payav\4 o ?-\/1 4 V% r% 4- U i o t? n i /I Im/-) Kn n . ! Ill* '11 . (II M I tIKIt I 1 I r? .^clivi UiVi V CIIcelled; (3) That it have judgment apainst J. H. Newberry for (a) $2,000 with interest at the rate of fi percent from March 30th, 1021, and (b) for tlie taxes, penalties, costs and assessmpnts duo and parable by the said J. H. Newberry to the State for the fiscal year ; (4 ^ that its mortpraere be foreclosed, all equity of redemption in the mortgaged lands he barred, the said lands sold, and the proceeds thereof anplied to the satisfaction of the morttraore debt and the iudcrment herein: (51 for the costs and disbursements of this action: and for ?uch other and further relief ns to v.0 Court seem meet and just. June 21st, 1923. It appears that improvements of considerable value were made by the lo4 a \fPv\ronf nn fUio fnllnW. UUC mil 1J 1 > ? II V VMI VII to ir?ii\a inn" the execution of the Heed to him by the sheriff of the county. Tho rose will doubtless come rn in court before very long and will be tried. -n NEGROES HAVE HARD TIME "Un North." where "big money" is offered neirroes who are migrating from the South, is not such a good pln^o for tho blar?V man after "I1 aecordine to t^o **ollowinp: telegram sent out from Detroit: "Petvoit. Mich.?So many friendless and unknown Southern negroes have di^d. bpon taken to the niorpno. prd failing identification, have been buried in the potters field hove thnx civic authorities, together with negro ministers, are taking steps to provide every immigrant Southern negro with an identification card, trivine the address of his nearest Southern relatives. or 'white folks.' "Seventy-five percent of the unidentified dead in the Detroit morirvo are negroes, according to the Detroit News, and the majority of these are newly arrived from the .South. Tuberculosis, typhoid, and in some rases actual starvation, are respon?ihJo for .the majority of deaths, although a ^urnnsingly large number of killings i occur when the negro competes with |^he low grade immigrant, and race flashes between the negro and the imI migrant classes are becoming more l and more frequent." | The South i? the place for the negro. He is understood in this section, and he understands his place. Those who are making a living in Georgia, Alabama, Florida and other Southern sections had better let (labor agents) well enough alone.?Columbus, (Ga.,) Ledger. o THE WONDERFUL *| S FOOD-TONIC p 11 Scott's Emulsion [ Child-birth Here U a wonderful message to all expectant mothers I When the Little One arrives, you can have that moment more free from Buttering than you have perhaps imagined. An |HH(J*' eminent physician, expevt B/I in this science, has nhown the way. It wan he who first produced the great remedy, "Mother's Friend." j^^UI Mrs. C. J. Hartman, Scran- Kf Wy ton. Pa., says: IV ml* "With my first two chil- 1\\ * ^ dren I had a doctor and a wj f nurse and then they had to Wr L ^ I use instrument*, but with LAl my last two children I used Mother's Friend and had V^HBe\!kF^< ->?? only n nurse: wo had no time to get a doctor because I wasn't very gick?only about ten or fifteen minutes." Use "Mother's Friend" as our mothers and grandmothers did. Don't wait, start ! today, and meanwhile write to Rradfield Regulator Co., PA 46, Atlanta, CSa., for a free illustrated book containing information every expectant mother should have. "Mother's Friend" j u sold by all drug stores?everywhere. HY, S C, JTJLY 5, 1923 QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS From Specialists Correspondence With Farmers How can 1 destroy honeysuckle?? W. M. M., Honea Path. First, cut off all of the vines, then plow the land with a two-horse plow and harrow with a spiked toothed harrow, harrowing and raking all of the roots out of the soil and burn them. Repeated plowing and harrowing is the only way 1 know to get rid of the honeysuckle. !f you will begin now, however, and continue to fight the honeysuckle as fast as the young plants come up in the spring and . summer 1 think you will he able to practically eradicate it by fall. What are the best breeds of pigeons for squab raising??T. D. M., Clio. Two of the most popular breeds of pigeons for squab raising are the Homer and Carneau. Farmers' Bulletin GS4, giving information on squab raising, may be had from the United States Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C. Would you advise planting sweet potatoes on the same bed with corn ? ?A. J. I., Savannah. I have never seen the two crops growing together in this way, but from the natn'p of the p'anis T feH .sure they would not thrive well together. - - ? - - - - - i rti y ? i ? * -?..-4.x i now laie can x i??aiu |hm<itoes from vinos??A. J. I., Savannah. Sweet potatoes can be planted from vines as late as July 15 and still [make a good crop, provided you doj j not have a long dry spell in August I or September. It generally takes, around 12 to 15 weeks for a crop of J notatoes to mature when planted from vine cuttings. Please advise me in regard to controlling blight on roses.?F. L. B., Dillon. The only way that T know of by which you can control this disease, which causes the leaves of the roses to shed, is by spraying with Bordeaux mixture. In applying the spray solution remember that it should be ap-| plied with force and in a thin spray in order that every part of the leaf and branches may l>e covered. To control this disease properly the apraying should begin before the leaf buds begin to unfold in the spring and should be continued throughout the summer and spring. o What to do about weeds in field or "JIVflpit ' Piifrli 'om "ii-i/l voof , v/t, WII VIII vt?l i ^ Ull\l tl 'em rough. Note well?the cream check is by .no means the only income from dairy cows. THO IKS? \\ \| BtottcBSBII 1 %&?* II 1 1 ^ IB ? , Long Lif to Your Mole The Pofarine Chart recommends a certain consistency o/ Po/arine /or your motor. Consult it at yowr dealer's. ''WW' ., SAY "P0LAR1N DAMAGE ACTION ! WAS PUT OFFc T The damage case of Walter L. Mishoe against the Atlantic Coast Rni'road Company, wherein the plaintiff is suing- the railroad company for the sum of fifteen hundred dollars for damages which he alleges he sus- 1 tained when misinformed by the of- c ficers of the company concerning the making of connections at Chadhourn. . N. C., some years ago when the plain- f tiff was trying to get home to sec I his sick child; was put off from last j < Monday, July 2nd. to Thursday of ihis 1 week, July 5th. This was on- account of the neces- ' sary presence of some of the attor- 1 neys engaged at an important trial being held on last Monday in Darlington. TIllO CIKO nf AT 1* \l ic-Krtn't- if i>^ . V??. v VI 4'i i . *'l ^ I <1 ! I IVM I u .1 bo most interesting at court. Tt has already been tried once and resulted i in a verdict for the plaintiff. The J raPropd company appea'ed from this judgment to the Supreme Court of the State, and on the question of in- , structions given the jury in the ?ourt below by Judge Memmenger, the Supreme court granted a new trial to ' Boils THERE is a reason for everything that happens. Common-sense kills misery. Common-sense also stops boils! S. S. S. is the common*** sense remedy / i cause it is built I 1 on reason. I I Scientific ?Vwj J authorities \ / admit its power! \ y s- s- s- builds blood-power, it builds redblood-cells. That is what makes fighting-blood. Fighting-blood destroys impurities. It fights boils. It fights pimples! It fights skin eruptions! It always wins! Mr. V. D. Schaff, 557 15th street, Washington, D. C., writes: "I tried for years to get relief from M bad case of boils. Everything failed until I took S. S. S. I am now absolutely cured, and it was S. S. S. that did it." A S. S. S. is Bold At all good drug atore* in two sizes. The larger aiso ^M|h i* more economical. BBMC C C World's Best * ffilood Medicine S E W HQ K The Experienc knows that it pays to ? I >f * . - ~ \ possime protection. Yo \ service out of it. He 1 ft can depend on Polarinc m in can or in hulk. It r turing and inspection t e ? petroleum oil?difterc different motors?one st ity. Large volume pre methods makes possible Protect your motor \vi tion that Polarine givei STANDARD Ol (New J( I 4! f////////////////////////MH/l/J/l/Wi4J4///W/W/t E ?NOT JUST*X C Page No. 5 he defendant. It will doubtless^come ip for the second trial before the ourt on Thursday of this week. WILL BROWN'S EARLY COTTON Will Brown, a cotton farmer of the *ee Dee section of the county, had >pcn co;ton bio vioivt.-, on Friday. June 12nd. ' He is said to have u fine crop. The ield looked over l>y the man who >rought the item to The HernM of tie e contained about live acres as fine as ~e has >een in ?ever:H years. Brown says that lie raised a bnle to the acre last year regardless of boll .veevils, and lie fully expects to do iust as well this year. He is farming on one of the places 'belonging to George J. Holliday between Conway and Jordanville. Club boys have proved that it does not require much time for a real pig to make a hog of himself. The South Carolina Sweet Potato Association has made the sweet potato business economically sound. Now will the farmer produce the goods? ASPIRIN Say "Bayer" and Insist! Unless you soe the name "leaver" on package or on tablets you nre not getting the genii ine Bayer product prescribed by physicians over twenty-two years anil proved safe by millions for Colds # Headache Toothache ' Lumbago Karache Rheumatism Neuralgia Pain, Pain Accept "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" only. Each unbroken package contains proper directions. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Druggistis also sell bottles of 24 and 100. Aspirin is the trade mnrk of Bayer i Manufacture of Monoaeetioacideeter of | Salicvlicaoid. NOW :ed Chauffeur ;ive a motor the best u get finer and longer mows, too, that you i wherever you get it, eceives 56 manufao T 4- ? n v-oin. il in (I ;nt consistencies for :andard, highest qual* >duction by modern its reasonable price* ith the finer lubricas. L COMPANY jrsey) > r VMznmmi? w///////////////////////////'' ART OF OIL" ?I??i H .J