The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, March 13, 1919, Image 6
^Hk for my baby^fl
^HBimply can't do w
^H^kouse."
/From a letter to Dr. i
I Mrs. John W. Chris
\ East, Brighair
Dr. Call
[ Syrup
ft The Perfect
H Sold by Druggi:
A 50 Cts. (si
^wickly corrects disor
^Bct, relieves the conge
^^Kregularity. It is ge
^Dkoe. A trial bot
W. B. Cal
BB^BjBBB^^llinois.
V
the
of
between
houses
s
^H|^H^^^^^^KJouse
B^^^B^^B^^^^^piopriation bill
amountc to
hi<'h
I^^H^^^^^^^Bfurnishing
receive
an
m.
B^n
^B^BBBi^^approp! iated $?V"fJ1
^fc_Jntensive work throughout the
^tate to put property on the ta*
hooks. This was cut in free confe^-'
ence to $15,000.
The appropriation for the office !
the State superintendent of educaticm
was cut from $24,200 to $19,050. Th5s 1
?r the general maintenance of- the1
H^Ll operation of the depart- i
^Bhe appropriation for the j
^Hkool system is $524,602.66, i
^ xpended balances to bring!
P^il up to $719,657.83. j
home made
cious home
os have the
lemingway,
roven their
oldiers and
p Jackson;
ng energy
11. A box
.vas receivonvalesceftt
jway Red
t generous
nee it has
:ustom of
us to exme
to the
of the big
cori'oH
tea and much of
around the wards.
^o
service which has been in
H^^^PHing for some time at the
Church will be held on Sunj^^^Rarch
16. Arrangements are
made to obtain a special
occasion. A flag
^^^^^^^RtaAeven blue and two
hung on that
ithout a botueofitnM
Caldwell written by\
tensen, 603 So. 2nd 1
1 City, Utah /
dwell's
Pepsin
Laxative
sts Everywhere
S) $1.00
ders of the intestinal
stion and restores norntle
in action and does
tie can be obtained by
dwell, 458 Washington
.Salvation Army to Enlarge its Work.
Kxew York, March 10.?The SalvaK'on
Army, through Its commanderKr-in-chief.
Evangeline Uooth, an[nounces
a nation wide campaign to
i secure the sum of $10,000,000 with
which to carry forward and extend
the work of the Salvation Army in
America and overseas. Miss Booth
announces that when the fund is
raised the Salvation Army will cease
the collection of funds with the tambourine,
which for thirty-five years
has been the method by which the
army has financed its work. The
.campaign will take place the latter
part of May of this year.
"The Salvation Army," said?Mis;
1 Booth, "was given a very small percentage
of the funds raised in the
j United War Work campaign and solidiers
and citizens l:a\e for some
months been urging us to put on a
Campaign for funds in order that the
'returning soldiers and the public mn.v
have the opportunity to give to the
j Salvation Army a thank offering expressive
of their appreciation of the
j earnest services rendered by the Salvation
Army during the period of th"
war.
i "Ir# due time detail announcement
will be made as to how the money
will be expended," said Mis Booth. "It
will go to the enlargement of the
[work of the Salvation Army and to
the perfection of the machinery of
ihe organization. For many years
the Salvation Army has strug
gled against terrific odds financially
and we believe that our friends will
now rally to our aid gladly and
^cheerfully and give us the money
a.Nked and badly needed at the present
time."
i In discussing the coming campaign
Brigadier A. W. Crawford, of the
Southeastern department, with headquarters
at Atlanta, said:
nt
X ieei quiie sure UIUU lim incimn
of the Salvation Army in the State.;
of the Southeastern department,
r( Georgia, Florida, North Carolina
and South Carolina) will gladly rally
to the standard of the Salvation Army
and will raise the quota of the
department without serious effort.
We do not yet know just what the
quota of the Southeastern department
is to be, but I am sure it will be
a. just and fair proportion of the total
askqd of the nation."
o
i TAMBOURINES WILL GO
V aw Vnrlr Af rV> 10?Trnnhfttinno*
I and free will offering boxes which
for more than 35 years have been
used by the Salvation Army in gathering
funds are to be abandoned,
according to a statement issued here
today by Commander Evangeline
Booth, in anjiounceing plans for a
"drive" for. $10,000,000 next May.
"Indorsed by millions of new
friends and adherents because of
successful war relief work in
France," the statement said, Vthe
old time methods of soliciting alms
would be unwarranted waste of
time and an imposition on the public.
"In future it was decided by the
anny's executive council there will
be one general effort to collect necessary
funds, thus giving nearly
250,000 Salvationists, including officers
and relief workers an opportunity
to "concentrate on works of
mercy upon a greatly increased
scale."
o
We understand that rapid progress
is being made toward the erection of
the tobacco warehouse at Trio. The
merchants and farmers are very enthusiastic
and have adopted as their
slogan "Bite off more than you can
chew, then chew it." Judging f?-om
the incorporated spirit now being
manifested, Andrews better look
to her laurels as a t/ba?.^o market.?
Andrews News. I
J l
HMaluable- Pedigree Pins
Individua'ity.
College.?"It is a common
sayi^ that the sire is 'half the herd.'
As a matter of fact, in most cases, he
: is of even greater value," says Thos.
, W. \Toseley, Dairy Specialist of the
Extension Service.
A rcpimon Practice.
Yet many fasmers do not appreciate
the above state / ;nt and year
5 after y?ar are content to use any bull
that will make their cows come fresh.
The result of the use of inferior or
i scrub sires is that the calves are nearly
always inferior to their dams, and
after awhile the farmer complains
j that his stock has "run out." One
j farmer who owned a scrub bull bred
j him to his cow, which had produced
j 146.8 pounds of butterfat in one year,
i and their daughter when she came
: into milk produced only 126.3 pounds
i of butterfat. This heifer was bred
I harlr fn thp ecmh hull and a hpifpr
from this mating produced only 99.7
pounds of butterfat. of 47.1 pounds
less than her grandmother. At 50c
per pound for butterfat this would
j mean an annual loss of $23.55.
An Investment That Paid.
Another farmer who had become
discouraged with scrub sires decided
to buy the best he could afford. He
mated him with hi.s cows, which were
just "ordinary," and the first six heif
ers produced an average of 93.S pounds
i of butterfat more than their dams
! With butterfat at 50c per pound this
| would mean an increased yearly income
of $281.40. These heifers were
retained for five years and in thai
time brought in S1.407.Q0 more than
their dams. In other words, through
j the use of a good pure-bred sire foi
j only one year he "ealized $1,407.00.
Only Pure-Bred Bulls Are Good Bulla
But you can't expect these resulti
by using a scrub bull. The scrul
bull has no individuality. He is the
result of years of careless, indiscriminate.
haphazard breeding. In hit
blood runs the inferiority of many an
tagonistic breeds. The scrub bull is
a mixture and almost without excep
tion the had far out weighs the good
The scrub bull chokes instead of promoting
improvement in the herd.
And you can't expect these results
from a grade bull, no matter if he is
the son of a high-producing cow.
The grade bull has no lines of good
blocd back of him. He is more apt to
transmit the weakness o'f hi* make up
than his strong points.
But you can expect these results by
using a good bull. A good bull must
be a pore bred bu'l. He must be
more. He must be a good pure-bred
bull.
Use Only Bred-For-Production Sires.
A good bull must have back of him
a family of high producers, because
he can transmit to his offspring only
what h? has received from his ancestry.
His mother must be a family of
high producers, because he can
transmit to his offspring only what
he has received from his ancestry.
His mother must be a high producer,
and his sire must come from a high
producing dam. His ,?ire must have
sired high-producing daughters.^ If
his family for two or three generations
back has a record of uniformly high
production, there is little doubt that
he will be able to transmit that quality
to his offspring. And such a bull
ran earn for the dairyman many times
his cost.
But Pedigree Is Not Everything.
Many an animal has a fine pedigree
but is a very poor individual. The
right dairy sire should be a good individual
as well as have a good pedigree.
He should oe fairly typical of
his breed and show Masculinity, Capacity,
Size and Quality.
The real value of a dairy sire to
any herd is told when his daughters
freshen. Then we are able to^tell
whether he is imp-oving the herd. If
his daughters ar- better producers
than their dams were at the same
age. then we are on the right track.
A sire which does not improve the
herd and whose daughters are not
better than their dams should be sold
at once.
If you caught a man running off
with $100.00 worth of your property,
would you sit l?::ck in your chair and
Jet him do it? Well. then, why be so
partial to the scrub or grade bull?
fie is robbing you of $100 00 every
time he breeds one of your cows. He
is breeding your herd down and not
up.
HOW TO PREVENT COTTON ANTHRACNOSE.
Cotton anthracnese. the fungus boll
rot of cotton, is carried in the seed.
The fungus lives over from one year
to the next in the boll. To prevent
this troublesome and destructive disease
it is necessary to nractice a r<v
tation, and to secure seed for planting
purposes from fields where there was^
no diseaae last yerr. Seed may also
come in contact with the disease at
the gin, and thus carry the trouble
into the field. Cotton seed three years
Id will be free from disease eren
though they came from fields where
the disease was present Avoid this
disease by observing these precautions.
' -Been when they appear clean, dairy
tsnsfls may barber large numbers of
bMlBria. Ctarffise thoroughly.
I
J
the new aid to digestion eoiSJH^
today. A pleasant relief frok^J s
the discomfort of acid-dyspepsia. I
MADE BY SCOTT & BOWNE I
MAKERS OP SCOTT'S EMULSION I
I???gJ
y It Helps! g
B There can be no doubt If
I as to the merit of Cardui, Rj
M the woman's tonic, in I
the treatment of many I
m* troubles peculiar to m*
rX. women. The thousands ?X
of women who have been mL
g helped by Cardui in the j
past 40 years, is condu
I sive proof that it is a
I good medicine for women
B. who suffer. It should B^
5 help you, too.
^ Take ^
CARDUI
BThe Woman's Tonic Eg
Mrs. N. E. Varner, of BB
Hixson, Tenn., writes: SB
"I was passing through H
sides were terrible, and BJi
my suffering indcscriba- PTJ5
fe^ii blc. I can't tell just how Ki
arV and where I hurt, about Pj
9 9 all over, I think ... I En
R] H began Cardui, and my E 1
y I pains grew lees and less, I ?
|J until I was cured. I am 1 R
?r>8 remarkably strong for a
?40 woman 64 years cf.agc.
Mj I do all my housework." &.4g
g B Try Cardui, today. E-76 W
VI. D. NESMITH,
DEMIST.
Lake City. S. C
BENJ. McINNES, M. R. C. V. S.
B.Kater McINNES,M.D.,V.M. D
VETERINARIANS.
One of us will he atKing^tree the
irst Monday in each month, at Heler's
Stables. 9-28-tf
SEE
John M. Eaddy
FOR
CiimrAvinn and Plottinn
uui vvjuiji huu a iuiuuj|i
Notary Public with Seal.
5-9-lyp JOHNS ON VHXE. S, C.
A. M. SNIDER
Surgeon Dentist
Office at Residence
Railroad Ave., KINGSTREE
If vou need Glasses, come
to me. Single and double
Senses fitted correctly at lowest
prices. Broken lenses duplicated.
I. E, BAGGETT, Jeweler
vlv KINGSTREE
SjSKSfe Lodge, No. 46
meets the second Thursday night in cacb
month. Visiting brethren are cordially
invited. B. E. Clarkson, W. M.
W. W. Holiday, Sec. 2-27-lv
I
) ,
r ware,
China, Hot W
T1 r* n
i raveling c
Eye G1
of every descriptk
convince you as t
these goods.
Baggett's Je\
East Main Street,
Bring me your broken Watche
pairs made same day received.
COFFINS ANI
A 1 1 1
a large ana variea assor
Automobile Hearse
Horse-Drawi
Experienced Sen
Day or
Kingstree Ha
Phones 35. 4*
We Lead; Otl
OHHBBBHBHHSn
CHICKEN F(
If you want a nic<
your Sunday <
i yuur ur
The People
We can Supply our Ci
Fowls (CHICK
ALSO FRESH BEEF, PO
Poultry Boug
THE PEOPLE
H, A, MILLER,
CALL
M. F.'Helle
where you will alw;
to be had in Mule
o;ies and harness.
o
Come if you neei
I will surprise 3
and in
Fresh Car Co
M. F.
| ENGRAVEDTOTOICCAH
WEDDING IN\
AI
All kinds of Coiqmerci&l P
THE COl
Hand Painted^^^H
ater Bottles,
tags, and
asses m|
>n. A call will | ] I
vehry Store,
KINGSTREE, S.
:s, Clocks and Jewelry.
? CASKETS. I
tment to select from. and
Rubber-fired 1
i Hearse. : A
/ices Rendered
Night.
irdware Co.
>. 59 o&t22
tiers follow.
IOINNER! I
- r
? I al vmc&eu iur
iinner leave / Jgtf
der ,^H|
?'s MarKet^H
astomers with Dresse^^B^H
EN) any time.
^TanTsausmH
ht and Sold
T markH
i Proprietor.
/'*?~f~? ^
a rt, r
. AT
rs Stable IV
IITP (tnrl tlio k/act \ H
a \ 3 1111U lilt UVOL I
s, Horses, bug- ' "
?
d anything and
fou in quality
price
ad Coming.
Heller,
is? dl
STATIONS v
WOUNCEMENTS, ET?H
rinting neatly executecH^^^H
JNTY RECORD.
i i ^