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SOU'Ti CAROLIN.A TO B E I N' TIE 6i.i:(1ON" Call for Caucus at Florence i Issued frllun .1111.19 Dr. John 1). Smur ser, Fiorence, S. C., teiporaiy olairman of South Caro I.ina has iSSu(ed a call to all the coun ties of South Carolina tihroughl the iewspa -rs an'd by personal letti'ers to send dlecat es to a caucus to he held in l-lorenrce .june 18th and 19th. 1919. for lit purpose of forming- an organizat ion and thereby becoming a imember of the American Legion. The American ba-ion held its first cattctus at St. I M. Mo., May Sth. 9th and 11t0h. Sout h Carolina was represent ed at t his convention by Dr. Smyser. N. S. Lacbicotte and It. 13. Fulton. all of Flotict. Every state in the ln ion was repre-ented at the caucus in St. Louis with a full quota of delegates except one1. 'lach county of this state is en titled to have seated in the caucus to be held at Florence two delegates and two alternates and it is earn estly hoped that each county will take advantage of this opportunity and be represented with a full quota of representatives. It is suriosted by the organization committee that a tenative organization he formed for each county and that the said tentativ.- orua nization name the del' eares to the Florence cauticus. The oredential for the delegates will be a letter of appointment signed by ithe chairman of the local orrganiza tion. M1any of the tounties of this state have already formed an organization but it is Ih #- sire of the American losion to have each county perfect a permann' 0rianization of all service men before Novem Or of tht present yea r. T I"It is ac o-te .- ne,:s sa-y for . Ci-olna to or'anize andil se :--. ha t f'om'r TI f gion in :t.t ' bcamea-m in ti- n a - 'i *- \'' ty.Na y and Ma \'t>. t:r. t nan.-ttes anI nir es of the enlisted Nurse Cor;. P-.ndin - orzanization of South Carolina. th 1e followina committees have been named for this state: Or:aniza'i ommittee: J. D. Smy ser. chair-!.an, R. B. Fulton. secre tary and N. S. 1ochicotte. vice chair man. N:- inal PuhiIcity Committee: Charles S. Gardner, chairman: .J. D. E. Meyer. Charleston. S. C.: W. D. Workmap Gr.:enside. S C.: W. Hood Rethea. D;;:on. F. C.: .. B. Cantey. Columbia. S. C. -" - "Let each 'ounty of South Caro lina be fully re:-,esented at Plirence June lI th and 19th for I' s cattetus. 'At that :i r.' a tinmporiar i-ganiza (don wll 1: fo'mti~d and! et in the year after a:: of ou r men trom from overs.as. a convention wil! he held at which1 'm th;r-t-:na m ti ,r~ zat ion Wil I . for .'' i h irs atnds of i' : on who sei-n-d so faih futlly in A--. -n d ira & ris ('(OM[%f; SimNl Opera H1'os Will ifaie la, A Siating! of 'v..n '4 9:' willI be at tij. Ouera Hrci s for .,no week (omtmenei.. ing Mionday nex:. In is a veryr r-'ptu able cornpany. -'ares Mnr. Tyvlr, and Comes to Laurens with a very good reputa: in for1 the (Vuailivty f the shows that it iuts on in the vatlris towtns that it has visited. With this troupe are a nurmber of singers and lancers of abil ity t.oget her with a ( hinese mearieian. who givc-s vaudi ville ske'eh:.s het w'eon arts. The pr-ogramo of plays to b)e aiven here wvill be announedu in a few (days andI It wvill be of interest to see the many plays that wvill be given lby this t rotupe that have breen big sutesses on thre toad durIng the past season. Matinees are announced for Tuesday. Thursday and Sattuday. The Opera House wIll i-tn the regualar pictuires in connection swith the plays given by this company during the engagement here. The admissIon prIces annotunc ed are (-hidren 25c and adults 40c, includIng war tax. To Decorate Oraves. Fair~view ('amp No. 422, W. 0. W. at Watts MIIll will decorate the graves of all deceased Sovereigns at the Watts Mllis re-met(-ry. Jrune 8, 1919, at 5 p. m. Everybody Is Invited to h~e pries ent. Grove's Tasteless chil Tonic sestores vitality and energy by purifying and eum riching the blood. You can soon feel 1ts Strengtth ening. Invigorating Effect Price 60c. GOOD CROPS FOR PRODUCING PORK Industry in Irrigation Country Subject to Periods of Expan sion and Depression. LACK OF KOWLEDGE NOTED Department of Agriculture Has Been Making Observations in Its West. ern Projects on Utilization of Field Crops. (Prepared by the United States Depart ment of Agriculture.) "Guni shoe" farming for ham and bacon production does not presuppose web-footed hogs. It merely means that irrigation as practiced by some western farmers involves conservative use of moisture for production of for age crops which may be harvested di rectly in the fields by the porkers. The swine industry in the rubber-boot coun try has been subject to periods of ex pansion and depression. One cause is lack of knowledge as to the possibility of using certain irrigated field crops, and as to the value of these crops when measured In terms of po-k production. If full advantage is taken of the wide range of feeds available to swine grow ers on irrigated lands, pork production can be conducted more extensively, and with more assurance of success. Irrigation farmers interested in pork production have had to rely on results obtained in nonirrigated sections, and applied to localities where web-footed crops grow. This lack of definite In formation was especially noteworthy In the case of field crops. which in other sections of the country are pas tured by hogs or hogged off. Hence. since 1912 the department has, been making observations in its western ir rigation projects on the utilization of Irrigated tield crops as hoir pasture. These investientions include pasture tests with 149 lots con-isting of 3.7115 hoas pasturol on alfalfa. swvt clover ihll1 peas. and mil. Alfalfa Needs Supp!ementary Ration. Past\1ring aifial fa with hlo ha- beien demnons't roted a sotisfacit ory meth 'd of utilizinu th1 fbrnZ.- and onle of the cheoapest ways to prnmr'.o pork. 114w ever. to oltain satl factory riesults. the alfalfa pasture must he suppit mented with some carbonaceous fted, such as a 2 per cent ration of orn, barley, nilo. wheat, or shorts. Under such conditions one good acre of good alfalfa pasture will produce, with rea sonable surety. about 2.500 pounds of pork a season. Exceptional gains, am high as 4,292 pounds an acre, were reported in the case of one lot of hogs pastured on alitefa, and gIvena3' 'Per cent supplementary ration of corn. Naturally the gains on alfalfa depend on the size and quantity and quality 01 the supplementary feed. It is poor policy to try to make pork on alfalfa pasturage alone without supplementary Eop on alfalfa pasture, supplement. ed with about a 2 per cent ration of M birfey, wheat shorts, or milo, will consume from 250 to 350 pounds of in for each hundredweight of gain. Wegeneral the grain requirement in cefeWees as the hogs get larger. The feeding values of corn, barley, shorts, and mile as supplements to alfalfa pas turage are so nearly identical that the choice among these side dishes shoult dependl on prices, cultural adaptability, and general economic conditions. Where the grain is to be grown by the swine raiser, preference usually is given to corn, barley. ad the grain sorghums. depending upon the adapt ability of these crops to local condi tions. An acre of good alfalfa pasture supplemented with a 2 per cent ration of grain will support 2,500 pounds of hogs during the entire growing season, TIhe carry-lng capacity of alfalfa pas tures increases rapidly with greater grain allowance, aind it varies some what during the growing season wit!! the rate of crop growth. According to specialists of tihe Unit ed States department of agriculture an acre of good alfalfa pasture, if sup plemented with a 2 per cent ration of corn, or barley, will support. six to eight sows and 50 to 70O sucking spring pigs for about 60 days in early summer, during which the pigs should gain from 25 to 30 pounds apiece. Sweet Clover Often Valuable, A few tests have been conducted to try out the value of sweet clover as hog pasture, and the results have proved that this crop cannot be regard ed as a rival .of alfalfa, However, on soils, which are too wet or too salty for alfalta, the irrigation farmers find sweet clover a valtuable forage erop. Robber-boot farmers are comning to ap precdate hogged-down corn and field pea# as a desirable combination for por* production, in that If~ saves Iab~r, prodpces satisfactory gains lnathe hogs, and 'adds manure to the Roll. Exten sive. tests of "hogging corn" reported in tbie bulletin show gains of from 183 to f48 pounds an acre of corn when no ~uppl ementary feed was provided, and from 335 to 1,377 pounds an acre where the corn was supplemented with other feed. ft is estimated that in these tests an average of about 450 pounds of corn was required to pro duce 100 pounds of gain when no sup plement was used, as compared with an average of 409 pounds when the corn was npt in combination with for age, late alfalfa pasture, or rape. Al falfa pasture ia preferable as an ad junct tn iogged-down corn on Irrigated lands, because of its cheapness, rela. tives abundance, and reliahlituy. JURORtS AE DRAWN. Criminal Court tlo Coivene on Third .11onday iI tii. Month. The jury com: . Isloners met in the office of the Clr K: of Court Thursday and drew Jurors or the term of crimi inal court whic> will convene Mon day morning, J u' 1kth. Ju(ge F. B. G.Ary. of Abbevilie, will .res :di. ov*er the court. Several murder cases in wKhich negroes are Involved will most probably be tried at this term. The jurors drawn are as follows: Laurens-C. It. llabb. R. C. Gray, C. '. Johnson. A. B. Stone. Austin Bram lett. J. S. Medlock. Dials-Jas H. Abercrombie, Jno. H. Jones. Sam D. Garrison, J. S. Gray don. Geo. F. Wolff, W. G. Taylor, J. B. Owings. Youngs--J. Wister Martin, W. P. Patton, C. D. Cox, Elbert M. Riddell. Seuffletown-E. B. Bolt. Jacks-J. F. Whitmire, J. B. Nabors, J. H. Bonds, W. L. Lynn. Hunter-E. G. Fuller, Edgar Todd, ). T. Godfrey, Geo. W. Young, Wmn. A. Moorehead, Jno. H. Young. Cross Hill-R. F. Spearman, R. C. Smith. G. N. 'Boozer, R. W. Boazman. Waterloo--I. F. :.\lartin, A. C. Iomg. Sullivan--H. F. Crawford, M. L. Mc Daniel. In 1lonor of Miss Kiddle Arnold. Mlountville, June 2.-On Monday af ternoon, May 26th, a miscellaneous shower was given by the ladies of Mouintville, in the auditorium of the high school, in honor of Miss Kiddie Arnold. whose api)roaching marriage to Mr. 13. B. Crisp of Greenville, is heard with much interest by her many friends. The gifts which consisted of many handsome pieces of cut glass. linen, silver, several dainty pieces of lingerie and silver tea service by the Sunbeam society, of which she has been for the past four years, their faithful leader, were brought In on two daintily draped express twagons drawn by Dorothy Bryson with Fuller Motes and Miriam Nelson with Clay bourn Hipp. ice cream and cake were served. Hot weather White and Palm Beach Oxfords at Red Hot June Sale. Prices 9Sc to $2.98 at J. C. Burns & Co. Palm Brushes. Power for Good and Evil. The same Chinese palms which pro- Into the bnds of every Individual vide the ordinary palmleaf fans are Is given a marvelous power for good now being cultivated for flber as well or for evil-the' silent, unconscious, as for leaves. The outer portion of u Influence of his life. This Is the leaf stems is removed, the fiber fimply the constant radiation of what cut into different lengths, and the a man really Is, not what he pretends product is ready to be shipped 'to the to he- Life Is I state of (flvtnt mdi United States for use in brush manu- ation ... )srption ; to exist is to facture. radiate; to exist Is to be the recipient of radiations. 0 W E N BROS. MARBLE & GRANITE CO. DFKSIONERS - MANUFACTURERS ERECTORS ealers in everything for the ceme The largest and best equipped mon umental mills in the Carolinas. GREENWOOD. - - - S. C. WALDROP'S GARAGE NOW READY WITH THE MOST COMPLETE AND UP-TO-THE MINUTE GARAGE IN UPPER SOUTH CAROLINA Ford Autos and Parts Expert Mechanics W 1 ar h I.:ireins .ents for th Foi Au\tt - Our mp iai 'is p tunle t h.e imsll supie rvi.sion th, IUniversal Car. "Nuff S ed." Ii addition to the of \lr.John T g u led in iny Fvery Ford Car. we now have a complete line of F1ord Part's. iuehanie is 11n expert. BsringI yout r Ford to the Ford Dealer wiere each mechanoi is a Ford expert. We the g!-nuine parts from the big Ford plant. We kee now have plenty of r'ooimt aind plenty oit ' repair e111n in stock every part that you need. t handle all j)is promptly .and effietitly. Storage Battery Department Gas and Oil Department This garage is properly equipped to handle all f~ your s4torage battery t rouble. We rent or selI Good Gas and good Oil are essential for a good M itii totor. We handIlt the 'Standar d Gas-t he them at moderate prices or we re-charge them cor.'r r -tly for- One Dollar. best on the market, ain1d all of the higlest quality Oik. We Guarantee New Storage Trade with us and be assured Batteries for Twenty Months of the Best in Gas and Oils THE WORLD'S BEST TIRES We have a complete stock of Fisk, Goodrich, Federal and Diamond Tires of all sizes. A selection from one of these brands means you have selected the best Tire the world produces. We quote a few prices on a popular American Tire. Compare them with prices quoted by others and you'll buy from us. Smitooth Sqqueegee Grey Red Size Type Tread Trtad Tube 'Tu!, 30~x3 CL $11.00 $12.25 $1.90 $2.25 310x3 1-2 CL4 14.35 15.65 2.15 2.53 312x3 1.2 811 16.65 18.25 2.55- 2.95 31x4 OL 21.95 24.35 3.10 3.50 32x4 S11 22.40 24.80 3.20 3.60 33x4 S11 23.35 26.05 3.35 3.75, 34x4 Sl1 23.95 26.65 3.50 3.95 32x4 1-2 SR 30.35~ 33.75 4.10 4.50 33x4 1-2 S11 31.20 :34.70 4.20 4.60 S34x4 1-2 .S11 32.30 35.90 4.30 4.70 35x4 1-2 S11 33.70 37.55 4.35 /4.80 36x4 1-2 S11 34.25 38.10 4.55 5.00 WALDROP'S GRAGE NEAR THE DEPOT .