The Anderson daily intelligencer. (Anderson, S.C.) 1914-1915, November 05, 1914, Image 6
s
,1. -%.
KIHimorfn*. \a?4l&x:H
JS0W|efn %dk'al . ^iBb'ociation.,
?lefcotAfci? Balo Sov. C to fe .final limit
fcov. 22, 19914.
KpurUnbufc, &. Cikf^.
ti~.^***?l*nlr*'. 1 Fair f Association.!
Heitate op salo .j?v. i to:*; llnal limit,
?. ?.14.' '
'' ' r ??^iate^?formatioa, tieJ?rtsj
U on tilka ofcajki
AnoVraon/ Supt,
Jjidtu-abrl. S C.
f a?r,i T.! Pl
orotAfiiiV, wm
Igi E. Jacftao^A.' ?r^Krlt/'?
: Cqlumtjla, H. (.'.
sAsfcaa?
om ;the
EST
r>:?O .A.. M.
3:35 P. k
5 . I-. .10:50 A. M.
\<. :55 P. M.
?rtruition, Schedules,
zs, etc., promptly
B. CURTIS,|p. A
... ? i4Mai*?-/-k?r ' CL.
. s?V4iJ? ?.j?
?SENC1
AN
HIKED-'
?CHED CHICKS.
.;Srly Fed Thoy Bring High
Priec?> In Spring,
ron I?-a pound for chicken-not I
-J-ron ?ter? Bounds attractive to
Belier, writes B. P. Thorpe in
ann und Fireside. A few nre jotting
this ia ney figure, mid moroccan do so.
Tho fiirtuuntc ones do lt this way:
..C'bfcks are hatched In Oetolter or
thpr?auoti?H hud aria raised In comfort
it Mo ?iU?irt?ra where they "can he V ->t
Healthy nod btwy ?crntchi?y; In dry 1?
ter ia tho sunshine and still bo pro
from draft , and storms nt nil
Hmes.
birds of the "urger brec<ls nro
.-..nv big steadily till May. when
they are crate fattened for two or
, M
"?mm
^lustration shows a plano box
'horihouM built by a correspondent
?rf Country Gentleman, who ttiua
.'dts<rl"S*a Itt We act the two boxes
ana.SWvtwO.iPy four ur four by four
'RtHli, or o:i comiT pcs tu. nbgut two
or three ?vct In lenstli. Thia af
oran tho opportunity to utilize the
? o or both ot the boxes
bonni?, whit At ne tow la
'??\ underneath. It ni*') means
cr structure, tn which one
M k vrith soire comfort. But
If of tho houso ls pictured.
thrt
Ssh,
for the required fine On
;o then killed und plucked,
, feet hud .entrails for tho
> pay fm', making six to
carenases for imltets nnd
f oi being nblo to get these
?or such de luxe ronst
J3 to tiaro the t entier*pen fattened
.oven or eight months
Just before tho broiler sea
?P nnd when .v^imr, fresh
Sd roos tine stock ls practically out
;kot. l?itetMuy and carly
\\m\m\wS.'fl?J rt Ktrobg demand for
tia in every big city fer use nt
iquets nial special oplco
i Luise who hare the
ling for thia kind of ban
>w that tho cold storago stock
nuit tho diacrlmlnntlug palate
;Wunt thc bent.
uti n poultrymau
uni touch with the
tea tn it that they;
ie buyer* dr this'taney
deliver just when the
mark. This 4Q to GO
and lasts only o few
Ung. Trli?.
"crsohlans spent a
Walhalla yosterday on
d from' the Mountain
where they wero -tho
A. King,, who tender^
irret stow." The par
of W. L Brissey. B
M. Woodruff. Archlp
nnnell, J. H. Godfrey,
joined bete by, H, C.
md Ciydd Smith;
I^ong end C. A.
ourler.
Important
nu ihat ChaihMTafAV
?ly movo, tho bowels bu,V
appotlto and strengths*!.
For salo hy all dealers.
r Aids Digestion,
tv moat healthful ?xor*
of tho greatest helps to
which I nm acquainted;
n j Vi j val ont amone our
exciting It at table by
ffdona, was founded OH
rinciplea,-Huf eland.
- Moral i??n.
as io. soils whore so mc?
I a vida ot gold which Usa
??* ?t-Swift; .',
loee
impathy.
*ets never'
mts Bi
?vtbit,
* LIVE ?TOCK NOTE8. %
%
Tllbro ba* IUD long I icen au un- v
reasonable prejudice against ?
muiiK. ami yet (bey may in* Y
nani?' una of tilt* moat valuable if
wollom li: features of tho farm. J
l im? wooled cwi's ?TO M ?I with X
ono of the lil Ut tull breeds will T
DlUku u sheep pussi-nsltig both ^
wool nuil mutton quail ?f*. V
<'ollar bolls ueed tho Hervlces
of II veterinarian. iii' will cut %
out till' ?ill.!?; Site that rauMca tho jj"
trou bli?. X
Keep the shei'p un i form in type Y
mid M bte. X
Tnnkngo ls a highly profitable T
summer food fur fall pig*?. Use X
ono gallon for each lifty pigs, fed ?
lu thc ?!O?). i,
A few hones of the most prof- J
Ita ldc type cnn be raised on or- ?j.
dlnary slx?d furtns where high T
class sires uro available. .:.
WATER MORSES OFTEN
DURING HOT WEATHER
In there hot sommer days nico never
think of going to their work without
taking plenty of drinking water, says
tho National stockman. And they, have
wry little to fear.from heat so long as
they pcisplru freely and by drinking
often keep up perspiration, But while
providing for their own comfort and
necessity very few over give a thought
to the fnct that their horses when
worklug lu thc hot sun perspire ns co
piously mid oven more HO than the
driver mid ueod water fully ns much.
It ls but very lit t lo trouble to lia vi- n
barrel or ii tnnk on n log boat or sled
nud when going to tho field take lt
ulong with a pail in it and two or three
timon lu n half day give each horse a
drink. In tact, the horse should bnvc a
drink as often ns thc driver.' Ile will
appreciate it fully us much. Tins is
nut very little trouble, tts the water
fan bc drawn along tho headland, mid
PrtCiis of draft norse* and
mules doubtlesa wilt continue to
advanco und th?'supply remain lr:.M
than thc demand until email farm
er? uno moro mares aa work ani
mals and ot tho samo time
.Jt* muni ?ive w&f-t?, (armara xre
to have etuclent tunms on tba farms
at prices UiM/we can ?if?erd. !TJ?
best way to novo efficient t ao?ts at.
roaconoh'? profits ls to raia? than
cn farms. The illustration ?hows a
pure TJTfU Pctehcroh stalllou.
when stooping te rest the collars
should ti? raised from tba shoulders
sud thc-horse given n sip of water.
When this fe? done when the team ls
ii '.hiv tiru, pinliic ut noon ibey uro
to bo fod grain, and tho trouble
raking out to water after standing
-'id; cool off ta obviat?L_ I have noticed
that tho team very quickly will learn
. fd Indicate to tho drlvor when' they
want a drink. A merciful man hi mer
ciful to b|? beast He certainly ought
to ho kind to one of bis roost faithful
"'if* Boya, sec to it that thc horses
a drink. -
THE SHEEP QUESTION,
Flock Naed Net Be Largs In Or*rr to
Provo Profitable.
lt has be?? Ruggwsted ibr? thone
who nd vise farmers to koop sheep
should recommend larger Cocks, so
that they wilt " be of sufficient hn
p?rtnncc In tho farm operation? to he
given the 'attention they desert?
so lt wlii pay to keep up the fences
fur t?:s:=. ?herbart two sidras to
-.iio National stockman.
While perhaps many hare gone out of
sheep oecuuHo they wore not inclined
to glvo tho v?jrJ^e?? $*cka- they
possessed sufficient caro to rooke '.Itt
'peri many others keep twenty to ?o>
owes all tho time and dud'theurinj*
profitably investment.
If A tnnn's 'thSTU is weil fenced'he
not no?ef? to ,'o into sheep ex
tensively lu order to warrant foe ?Je
ponan of probet fencing. Tho aron 11
M pt fit t. O'
d will to a much
th? tarse ftock
itt?T tihui
waste, which ls
In farro *fc*op
..otild
Hos? Fol lewin u Cettf?.
> ls nractlcall? no dan
of
VS*? W
S aft'
ca Ula
? IIMWtllMIHCIMIIM*
tl ?I
Scientific
Farming ii
' III I Ml ll I ?MM?! 11 ?????' '
GOOD AND BAD GRAIN YIELDS.
Stat? Experiment Station at Pullman,
YVaah., Conducting Researches.
?Irire than 2?00 different grain ex
pcriuients with legumes, grasses, etc.,
huvo be^n made nt the state experi
ment stat ??ni nt rollman, says the Spo
kane Spokesinanltevlew. Two hun
dred varieties of winter wheat are
grown on the farm, together with 150
varieties of spring wheat In the last
teu years, with n crop of some kind
crown on the ground every year, the
productivity of the soil bas increased
SO per cent, due to tillage and crop
rotation.
Tho principal grain experiments In
selection, breeding nnd variety testing
ore conducted on n Held which ls di
A FIELD OP WE.STEHN O BAIN.
vlded Into three parts, and each part
grows grain only every third year, peen
and corn being alternated. The breed
ing experiments are for smut resist
ance, high nitrogen content straw that
will nut lodge, nonsbatterlug heads,
bigger yield, etc. Several varieties of
grain, notably among which ls the
Alaska wheat, have been found to' re
sist smut almost entirely, but none of
these i'rains proves of commercial val-'
oe:' h nee their powers to resist the
disease avail the farmer nothing.
In a five year experiment for yield
Co ll ere Hybrid No 14JL a rrna* hew
tween Little Club and White Tract,
shows n Ave bushel per year advantage
over red Russian, the heaviest yielding
of the older varieties raised in this sec
tics, and :r. tho smut resistance ex
periments with these two' breeds there
was practical ly no di ff er once, which
would disprove the somewhat general
idea that Na 143 smuts easily.
"^rlfod,,Wf.*tCje most interesting of the
experiments, which are now almost ut
maturity, ll that in which two parallel
plots of ' 4Jpeat figure.-"One plot on
which wsjflplanted wheat treated for
arnot and jSuvu in chum soil shows a
magnificent M & ta ml of 'cheat almost wa
tJrcly free ?om smut while the adjoin
ing plot -Xhlcb waa planted at the
same tim?] Rith seed wheat which had,
?>??S tyfiewfU stutii and the soil inoco-,
lated witnlthe smut germs, showa a
stand of ta sr.t 93 per cent smutty.
A convia lng argument In favor of
crop rotati i is the magnificent stand
of oats OE: JO of the fields. Toe yield
of this flea ia estimated at nearly, sev
enty bushe i per acre. Last year the
some field) educed forty-three bushels
cf field pst i. the previous year forty
seven busi ls of wheat to the acre,
and the yt r before that eleven tons
ol corn fol 1er were taken from each
acre of th? eld.
That etan and loop cultivation and
packing ari essential to the production
of a bompa crop is tho realization that
mint com? to even the novice who
vie vs th?j stensive plots which are
given over o exp?rimentation in soi!
cultivation! J conserve moisture. The
grain on tl >se plots, all of the same
variety, Hjirid Ko. 143. hi nt the har
vest stage,', id. while exact figures and
perc^Bfte? will not be available until
after the cfgp on each plot hr thrashed
and meeba} d. an intimation of what,
the result* viii show maa" be gained
by compara) ; the stand in the different
plots. Thc e experiment-, cover a
three yeer' eat different methods of
cultivation, eing followed each year.
Moat cot!? ble in the different plots
is the adre] tage which the plots that
a nacki show over those'which
J not pt ked; also the plots which
were plow? early show' a decided ad
tag* in j osent sf nod bf wheat over
Inte plowey lots.
, ?Probamy ; ie prender plot or tho eb
! tire experta at ls that which in 1012
[waa text bs] meat stubble* The year
j following ?t was plowed early, packed
? and later jM rod again and now ebowa
an almost ? cuomenal stand of winter
j wheat, moe better than the adjoining
plot, on ari ch the same methods of
I tillage wert employed, except that H
! waa not pt? :ed to conserve the mci*?
iWr*.; :' 1
Ss? ?ting 6-6 Cern.
Early saH ? lon of seed corn from the
^HBBH y important advantages
j-MUM i later In the season. In
th? first pla! s lt enables ooo to select
eira that at known to hove matured
fHHH| i time, white tr tb? selec
HBHl d and weather condition*
ira ble some of the tater
^?Bm . may be selected, be
they wo likely to ba larger and
"SOT SO PLEASED**
H ITH TUE 'RESULTS
< onimiKsioner Watsoa Tells Storr to
?Ire UploIojB of Extra. Legisla -
tire Session.
Fron> The St?te.
E. J. Watson, aa pn-sldent. of the I
Southern Cotton congress and com
mlEsioner of agriculture of this State,
was asked yesterday what he thought <
OZ the session of the general assem
bly that bas JUBt adjourned md Un
results.
"As one who has worked almost |
night and day with this cottor prob
lem since the war began in Europe," I
he sai'd, "I have silently watched the '
course of the general assembly. What j
I think of the results can best be ex
pressed hy telling you. a little story
of the Dutchman and his dog, assum
ing thai the legislature is. the Dutch
man and I am the dog:
"The Dutchman, returning from a \
hunting expedition, was met by ai
friend, who noted the flatness of his j
game bag, and said, tauntingly:
".Well, I see you have been hunt
ing. '
'Thc luckless hunter nodded.
"Did yon shoot auythin???* persist-1
cd the friend.
"'Veil,' was the reply, 'X shot wy-]
dog.'
"'Shot your dog?' said the friend-,
In amazement. 'Waa ho mad?* .
."Veli, he vasn't so tam pleased,']
retorted the Dutchman."
liest Cough Medicine for Children.
"Tn ree years ago when I waa living1
in Pittsburg one of my children had i
a hard cold and coughed dreadfully. I
Upon the advico of a rugglst ? pur- J
chased a bottle of Chamberlain's
Cough Remedy and it beneficed him
at once. I Had lt the best cough med
icine for children because it ls pleas
ant to take. They do not object to
taking IC ' writes Mrs. Lafayette
Tuck, Homer City, Pa. This remedy
contains no opinion or other narco
tic, and may be given to n child as
confidently as to an adult. Sold by
all doalers.
Screaming on Main Street Last Night
Was not hy some woman, aa a great
I many people thought it waa the
j crowd in the Palmettot screaming
with laughter at the funny antics of
tho comedian in "Too Many Babies"
which was presented io several pack- j
I ed audiences yesterday and last night j
This company appearing at the Pal
? mc.tto this week has fulfilled every
promise so far, and the people seem
delighted with them. Mr. Finkstoh
says he bas 'ecelved Innumerable
:ompluncnts on the shows all this
week. They present "The Scorners"
today and tonight
Remarkable Cure of Croup.
"1 .nat win??? \?hCS ZZ7 IjtilG Xruy
had croup 1 got him a bottle of Cham
berlain's Cough ' Remedy. I honestly
believe lt saved his life," writes MraJ
J. B. Cook, Indiana, Pa., "It cut the'
phlegm and relieved his coughing
spells I am most grateful for what
this romody has dono for him." For
sale by all doalers.
Tho panic is over and Jake Thomas
and J. C. Thomas are in the Cleaning,
Pressing-and Dying and Repairing
business. Prices cheap. Give tte a
trial. We are at the Colombia Tail
oring. Co., 122 West Whitner Street
Clothes called for and delivered.
Foley's Honey, and Tar Compound
fer Croup.
Croup scares you. The loud hoarse
croupy cough, choking and gasping for
breath, labored breathing, call for im
mediate rollet The very first doses of
Foley's Honey and Tar Compound will!
mastpr the croup. It cuts the thick
mucus, clears away the phlegm and i
opens up and eases the air passages.
Harold Berg. Mass, Mich., writes
.?We give Foley's Honey and Tar to
our children for croup and lt always
acts quickly." Every user is a friend.
Evans Pharmacy.
World's Darkest Moment
. The darkest moment ia said to bs [
just before dawn. Thia la how dis-j
covered not to bo so. The darkost j
moment relatively speaking, ls when
the noonday sun shines. Then lt ia
Shat living things on the earth are
blinded by tho dazzle of thu sun and
tail to recoj^ta^ih?^lw tani ?ere*
fnllsoutmsnaoul- . j
H'i ?!.i -'uu i'll j, ,inwttJiy>^
For Home and Farm.
"A SORT OF NOTION.'
Well, lail?n' about moonshiner*, there'* tan? of them thai .might
Be better'n they ?re, I reckon, and Kane coull be . r'ght
Worse than they are; they're people, and tba difference ain't ao great
'Twixt them and other i ?tiple ai moat vould calculate. y
It'a true, they're all law-breaker*, but they think ti? law's unfair
Beano vf theo do, and otters don't partie'arly carr.
I waa a mootuhiner once, and I went in for rt strong-,
I knew 'iwant on the level ai.d I knew 'twa? rather wron?:
I waa tolerable free and eaay in my helter-skelter ways.
Wa worked aux*if the kitoba there, and we did a thrivin' trade
In aa fina a grado of "moonshine" as ever mortal made;
Twaa u rather risky business, but it paid us very weN,
Till i quit of a sudden. You never heard n>' tell ^
How I ooma to quit moonshinin', for I hktaa'i ever tole.
The secret of the matter to any human ?oui.
Well, you see herc was a lady-old fellow, look-a-herc,
It'a tough to talk this over, und if my words appear
Like foolishness, remember that what I'm try in' o say
No matter, though-the lady, she was yoting, and peert, and gay,
And finely dressed and handsome; she was sweet and childish, too,
With eyes that seemed to soften a fellow through and through.
She come hero with her mother from Louisville, her home,
And boarded through the summer with Aunt Elmira Strome;
That's how I come te know her, for S?ss Strome and nie
Wara thick as "bobbyshalica," and often used to lie
Together at his mother's; ao bein' about the place,
Almost ? before I knew it I wm dead ia love with Grace.
Of course I knew 'twas folly for a mountaineer like tai
To look so far above nte as that, but then you ace
I couldn't no more have hclpc-l it than I could to-morrow keep
The mum in'/cun from shinin' and wak in' the world from sleep.
Beal rles, abe took to me kindly, and it wasn't many daya
Before ?he seemed to like me and my rouj;h and awkward ways;
She pouted und laughed and chatted, till I thought her the dearest lot
Of mischief and o? goodness that all the world had got.
And bein' so much in her company, it wasn't'very tong
Till I got in tlie way of thinkin' U>at moonshinin' waa wrong; v>
I begun to be uneasy and ta feel dissatisfied,
And mean and low and sheepish, whenever by ber side; "*. ,
And somehow I kept n-wishin' I didn't belong to the. ban'
And ha tin' my luck that I wasn't s decenter sort of man.
My work was losin' its interest', and lotiit' rdighty fust;
And after wai tin' and wai titi'. I nv.de tip my mind at last
To doit, for good, tee busineee-and I did-and quit it quick,
Ti. ?ugh th? boys were dead against it, and made a troublesome kick;
They called ma chicken-hearted and.such, and wouldn't hush
Till I knocked etta's mouth in condition for di?tln' cn mush. '
Weil, the summer soon was ended, and site went back to town,
And I "come too" of a sudden, and then I settled down
Unsatisfied and tongi1!' for things that couldn't be, '
For of course I knew that never could she belong to me.
In the spring I ?nit to the city, to buy a few supplias,
And knowin' aha was so near me, I couldn't keep my ayr* -
From storm' at'all the women'that over I chanced to meet,
Jost barely bopin' maybe to ase her on tho street.
But no; I had finished my business, and et iii I staid in town,
Waitin' and loofcln' and walkin' the streets all up and down,
Till at last I got determined to sae ber any,way.
So I took and figed, and started Without atty more i ll??
To call outright upon ber.
Twas a nicely fixed, up place,
And when I stepped in the parlor, ?hy. there : was littl?. Orw?
With two or Utrea town fallows. Aa soon as aha caught sight
Of me, her face turned whitish and hardish, jus*, a mite.. ' f.,
?ind before I told ber "Howdy." aha satt sllsmot?n and cool
"You wish, air to see my father? Ba taja* bis office; bia rule
" ia to "ta??& 'Ut hi? buaihe*? Vitt?;, sir-it'a somber SS
B'.ank stteet. Opod morning."
I thanked her and said I hoped that she
Would pardon my interruption. Thea I groped my way outside,
And walked the streets till midnight, kind o' stunned and stupefied.
Hext day I left Ute city, and came again up here.
Where I've plowed and hoed and harrowed these billa year after year.
I manage to make a.livia', but in this neighborhood
The pecpls r.;s??iy 'fitln?u, mod they've never understood
Why I am one po longer, .and to I'm left alone, '
And their feet in' and how they show lt, ain't th* pleasantest, I own.
But I can't go back to the bellin*-, ber memory ?till remains.
And somehow I seem to see ber in' the woods and fields and lanas.
Where every bird and flirter c^c? famigar placa
Where we used to be together, reminds me of bar face,
And it's imncl ?nd sweet =sd tender, jiu; ai iv usad io i? .
Here in the hills that summer when kite wasn't ashamed of me.
Abd it's not the face of the woman I saw that time in town *
With ila words so proud and worldly and it? heartless stare and frown.
Wail, well, i was mistakrn, of coursa, in mile Grace; . ; '
Instead of bein' an annal, abe waa weak and maybe base;
But if I was mistaken, 'twas ? good mistake to make,
For it left'toe a sort of notion, whirJ? notbin' can ?ver shake,
Of a woman pure and nobb Mid good and true and-kind,
And its Grace I always rall her-t think of her that way
But whatever ber real name is, and wherever she may stay, -
And whether in lite future ? anon ?ver See ber face, t -,v ? ^
There must be some such w. man aa K thought my little Grace.
HARRISON ROBERTSON,
i ?;. .( - .- .- ;f .*.' ft .. .". ?-. JA' /'-.s
. . " -?? ' ??..''?f.:Vi?-?i. .> ?;5?-v:v>*. '\ '
J
Being giran th? Xroedom ot the eea
ought to perk King Cotton 'some.
-O-7- I
It ia a dull day in which nobody d?
clar?e war,.
?- *
MM
hot aoapeudd
; Then scour
with an old
?apopar,
? \
I ii
"Ii/*? is a chance. ??fe Insurance is a dead
certainty"
i ? . '.
/ - .
MUTUAL BENEFIT LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY j
M. ' M. MAITtSQN, Qm?? Agent ll