University of South Carolina Libraries
-V. 1 u." '<9>«.4.W'Whf»c«. • «rr^N-v« -*.v ■ . swu. 3nr B«mw«U People. )|I3. fFMNES, Ed ill r i Prop'r ''(pfet^sSice^ser-ai j.:. J.t ^ ■»’* ~Xit. B4R0K8T COUNTY CIRCULATION THI IRS DAY, M A Y. 0, 1 !NK*. After »1I IhU iendinj: m >n»T »>v in*n rence crmpenlvn el fi nml ?> for itimv effect lioma rapiteHets. I h« l^nDletttro mey revise the rnte Interest tlownwsrd. of Pf 5 IP Hew« eonite from Texes, via New York, of s greet incr*-e*c In the cotton orop ecreegc of tho lor>c s'«r Steti*. DfOMgUU* said io here rtja*lljr Xi ,l 'L etl the Texes oet crop ei»iT ttvetoed of let ting the le.ul rest farmers have planted more cotton. Turkey. Jong-jutd well called /‘the sick man «f Kurone,'' took a turn for the worse on Monday. The new cabi net, which had been In ofllce less tlian a week, resigned, prolmbly to save it* member* from another revolution and an ending of their earthly careers on the popular gallows. Tuesday wa* ihe last day for the whisker creditors of the old State dis pensary to file with tho l ulled Htatcs Supreme Court their application fora rehearing, The signs wetc that thei would ask that last chance, which would stop further proceedings until .the Fall term of the Conrt. J ‘ president Taft has promised to help the North Carolina Republicans In the next campaign. Senator K. !>. Smith thinks t'taf the President Is courting the South because lots of Republican* up North are see ing the error of tfnlr ways and are mightily Inclined to hike Into the Democratic camp It Is said after J. A. Patten, the verv devout Chicago church member cleared several million dollars by bis wheat speculation his good wife became sad dened by the rl-e In the price of bread and the fall In the size of the loaf and prevailed upon her husband to get out of the game. Rut her curtain lecture haa not been followed by any big gift to charity or church. One reason, and a sutllcient one, for Ihe prosperity of the middle We» l Htates of the North Is thai products of Ihelr farms are live stock and things to eat. Last week, after supplying the markets of their own towns and cl tier they shtgged a daily average of 8,- •iO0,OHt>*fga to New York City. That great city &*>ld not use all, but put many In cold storage for a future scarcity. * TO BARNWKLL COUNTY BOYS. Now th»t vacation lime draws near we want to aay something to you,- or some of you. that wc hsye been think ing about a good deal. * j As to your alma to make good In business lile wo lake it you are all right, but the boy we are now hunting is of a HfTcrent make up from the many w hose ambition Is lo get itches. We don’t know whether the one we are now specially interested in Is alive, or ha* eter lived, but If there iasticb an one we want to It ini him . We want one W ho lias in him such elements a* .fn#)^ ('handler Hanls of Tlenfgfa combined tn his personalty. When a lad of thirteen yean of age,— befoie Ihe war between the. Stales, Joel read lu a county paper a Utile adver tisement of about these 16 words; - •‘Wauled, a heslthv boy, over 1< years of age, to learn the printing business,” lie applied for .lie place, was employed and learned to *et type on the plantation of a well to do country man of education and schol* arly tastes. Joel learned more about birds and animals than any one else knew and the book* that he wrote in later life have given more pleasure tlian all the speeches of all the poll- tii bin* of hi* time, lie ticca me a great new*pa|»er man but preserved the youtlifulneaa of head nod heart until the hour of bis death. Getting rich did not spoil him. Now, we‘think that farm life i* the best life for the average boy, but there are niuny boys, as veil men, of manv minds, and most who make fail ures in life do so because they miss rhclr callings in the beginning. Should there he, among our readers mie boy or a dozen who would like to learn to lie an editor, not altogether for tho money in i$ (for tliat’s not much j but because lie is, in hi* opinion buiJjLtbat way and may be of some good service tohi* country In the fu ture, we invite one or all (o write us personally ami freely. lie will not give iliein away and we may lie able to help one or more, tor there arc some where openings for the right sorts of boy*. If your constitution Is not good and your disposition is cross grained, your habit* lack industry and your appetites run to cigarettes and strong or soft drinks don't write us. But if you arc healthy and morals are good, if you are not afraid or ashamed of work and really desire and intend to be somebody write u<as freely a« you would talk to yourself, or to your best boy friend. We make no positive promise, but if we find good ground for hope In the future of any one or more we will try to help tho worthy along Don’t come to see us. ' Write to Drawer A. Barnwell, and the letter w ill come right. There Is one good Shurman, but he •pella UR name with an u instead of *n e. In a (Saturday night speech In Ulilca- gn he told how heavily tho expensive jjrepnratlons for war among tho civl- llzed nations bear In times of |ieace with tremendous weight On all classes, disorganizing Industries and enor mously raising the cost of living. Though only the head of Cornell University Jacob Gould rthurman ha* the head and heart to be a worlyL teacher. , — commission of Senators and Representatives created at the last ses sion of the Legislature to Invest gate •Im management and status of the State Hospital for Ihe Insane has entered oiwm the Inquiry in a thorough going painstaking and impartial manner that la creditable to the good sense, clear judgment and fair play feeling of'ton- ecleniiotiR public servants, who will do their fqU duty to the State and give atrlct justice to the executives of the «om moo wealths noblest charity. The beginning made promise* an ir.- IfVjnn chat wfli sift to the bottom, and while thoroughly thorough It will ks absolutely faithful and fair. \ \ President Taft is predicting the early baeaklng up of the Solid South Democ racy. The wUh is father to the thought. But if some Southerners be come apostates at this late day more than their number of Northerners will •aka their places in the better political tine. The Republican party, based on wrong principles and prospering by worse practices has flourished like the green bay tree, but its winter is near. It has led the country Into all sorts aud degrees of troubles, plunging iis in dustries into a panic hoia from which alt the prizing of its big men can not lift It to tbo old time level', 'Hicy have faoled some of the people all me time, all of the people seme of the time, hut they can’t fool all the people all the •ime. f.f •e- TUs a good rule in war to tlnd out what the enemy wants done, then don’t dolt. In business that policy holds equally good. Last week the bull gamblers of the New York Colton V,x- dispatches declaring a considerable de crease of cotton acreage m all. lljy tltatea and predicting a short crop for this year. As planting time is not pver •he presumption Is strong that these JfAwfTftrt i1nt,el* expect irmUtmeml Chat ibis news of their own creation will came an increased acreage awonf the farmers who are eager to an neb. An honest speculator, if there la such will not tell tho game lie •flag, and Judged by their pa»t York cotton the* head of their been and never for ton# . - / . = IS THIS A TRUK BTUL* ((Jollier's for April 17 ) Does It sound sensational to declare that American law, to a very large.rx- teut, makes for injustice? The facta are a* sensational a* tbe sound. The American Bar Association lias admit ted it; leading judges have admitted it: and President Taft once framed a pointed aincmimend that no judgment, civil or criminal, should be set aside unless It appeared afllrmipiy^y t |, a t ihe error of ihe eom^ H j nt had resulted In miscarriage *:f- justice. Americans ofiOft- hj.rjrn about lynch law. No* al wa vs do they take into account tbe part played by the law’s deiay in en couraging rough attempts at justice, in Kngland procedure is swilt, and punMimcnt follow* with certainly For seventy live year*, in Kngland, Ireland, Mcotiar.il, and the British col onies all over the world, there has not been one oasis of lynching. We have recently pointed out that the lawyers succeeded In beating simplitieatiop In Montana. In an admirable article in tire Kansas City Bar Monthly for March, Prof. John l). Lawson, of the University of Missouri, recall* the fad that when the Missouri Legislature passed a law simplifying procedure the supreme court of that slate upset it. Judge Lawson believes that our civil procedure is immeasurably behind the age -and timt in criminal procedure we have not 'advanced a step since the day* of Ijueeu Klixaheth. Judge Ar- midnn, oi The federal bench, has sta ted that ii a man lias I he-means tn keep up tlie tight he van, in a majority of cases, escape punishment for crime, A* our rules are now, thc-main con cern I* not a search for truth. Law yers struggle to get errors into the record, witnesses are hulliei) and judges are afraid. Those complicated technicalities, which the Kngli*h judges Invented long ago to protect the Individual from cruelty and oppression, have been retained and exaggerated by us. The English threw thorn away when the day* of cruelty and oppres. slon were at an end. An indictment, in England now states, in perhaps forty words of utmost simplicity, that, a cer tain crime was commuted try a certain person. We till pages of foolscap with most ridiculous language,r and then upset convictions if some one of the unnecessary words can ire strained In to a failure to observe some minor rule. The eon\ iction of a man for murder is upset because the foreman of tire jury having spelled lirst • fust.” Another conviction for murder is upset because the indictment charged that the victim died instantly, instead of then and there; another, because breast was spelled without the “a”; another, ho- catise tlie record failed to state the fact that the prisoner was present at his own trial, although the court could readily have detin mined that lie w as. These tiling* truly sound ineredihle. We. need a Jeremy Benthsm to goad Spartanburg want* the 1010 ataw re union of Confederate veteran* to be beld Here; lk»l. Roosevelt evidently did not carry bis ctiurob credential* to Africa, for be killed another Hon on Monday. Western Pennsylvania had • heavier snow fail on Thursday than in last winter. New York Mlgte wen also blsnketted with the fleecy rtske*.. (lol. Roosevelt’* quickness with hhr rifle In last Monday’* hunt saved the lives of some of hi* mounted escort, who hsd very narrow escapes from the infuriated lion that T. R. slew. The Southern Railway on Saturday cut the work ng hours in its shops at (’oluultda from nine to eight hours a day. No rea«on was given the worker* for the reduction in time and wage*. ^ Killing frost* were reported on Fri day mnrning'from the e.ast end of Lake superior to New Mexico. That ini* fortune to the apple grower* should boom thtr yrrioe* of cantaloupe* and waicr melons. Col .Fame* IL Tillman returned to Edgefield last week from Tucson, Arizond, where he soent the winter and early apring for the benefit n< hi* impaired health. He look* stronger and better than when be went away. At the funeral of Miss Alda Cooley, who died at the home of her parents, at Cooley Springs, Spartanburg coun ty, last week, eight ladie*, school mate* of tho deceased, acted as pall bearers. All of them were dressed in white. School trustee Charles II si the Wit of (he sand bill section of Richland county has a ten thousand dollar suit on hand for saying that Roach Wit- son’» children had negro blood in their veins, thereby causing their exclusion from school. The Charleston oliic.iai dog catcher begun Ills Mummer hunt on Monday, rounding np .'IS curs before quitting for the day. He might be a good one to chase the abounding blind tigers in the King and Meeting Mtreeli and ad jacent. jungles. Voters in Minnesota who smoke ciga rettes will have a hard time ’‘geitii g even” at the next election. A lepuhli can legislature has passed a hill which ■ makes It a misdemeanor to manufac ture, sell or give awav cigarettes or cigarette papers,” and Governor John son, a Democrat, has signed It. Confederate veterans who attend the great reunion in Memphis next month can have a double trip On the llth Juno oho can go by rail road from Memphis- to Vicksburg, witness the unvei ing in the natiooai cemetery of a monument to Gen. .Stephen f>. Lee, and return to Memphis, for only f.'t the round trip. Bamherg County, now about l.'i vesr« old. had its first legal execution on Friday when Willie Garter, a young negro man. was hanged for the mur der of a colored wom*n last Summer He admitted hi* guilt, professed to have obtained forgiveness for hi* crime and manifested no fear of death or the luftire. His neck was broken by the fall. On Friday, foulest d iy of the week, cyclones and tornadoes of terrible in tensity swept through tlie middle South West. Tennessee, Arkansas, Missouri, Alabama and Mississippi were the greatest sufTerers, o\cr 100 persons being killed and several times as manv injured. Million* of dollar* worth of crops and buildings were de stroyed. The Aiken Courty prohibition cam paign had a large beginning on Mon <lav, '21 a men attending the court house meeting. Col. C K. Sawyer was elec ted campaign chairman, G. L. Toole Secretary and H F. Rice Treasurer. To help them 14 vice presidents we;> chosen. An aggressive t1c»>/ 0 wVil be made to vote ciR The dispensary in Abtfust. The Bank of GafTney, which last year gave a good money prize to the Cherokee county farmer making the most corn to the acre, is now encoura ging cattle rauing, by offering a ni e sum to the most successful contestant. Tlie wa-lied hillside.* and overflowing bottom lands of the up country will lie more profitable «* pastures tlian if crop making thereon is attempted. New York i* tlie greatest city on the Western continent, yet it tias its dis advantage* The municipal debt is about a billion dollars, as much a* the federal griverninentowes. It mu*t also, lead in wickedness, for in a Sunday night speech District Attorney Jerome stated that in the seven year* he had been district attorney over a hundred thousand criminal cases had passed through ids office. Andrew Uariiegie agrees to give $1n,- Ouu toward building the model school at Win Hi rep College. The Legislature appropriated $20 out) for tills purpose, with tlie understanding that President Johnson would raise $25 000 more. He has exceeded expectation*, having raised $115,000, and will keep on raising until lie get* $ 100 Out with which a model school w ill he established second to none anywhere. Capt. G eorge A. Shields of Columbia mu»t he a man of wonderful constitu tlon. He is now in his nine!ietlr year. On Wednes’av of but week ids l ight leg was amputated after confinement, to hi* tied lor several weeks On Fri day lie was well enough to lie givetj an airing in a roller chair on the pi- hzz* of tho hospital. During the war between the States Capt. Shields cast the heavy siege guns for the Confed erate army. First accounts of di*trou« a* occur* rences are generally overdrawn, but that was not the ease-with the wide spread storm of Friday The cyclones and tornadoes that swept though the SoulIi were offshoots of the general storm conditions of tlie North . The number of tlie kiljed and Injured mav never he totally known. Tlie al most torrential rains that fell in the upper part of our State must have washed the rolling lands disastrously, while the overflow of creek and river bottoms will force replanting or aban donment for tins vear at least. FOR THE PUBLIC GOOD. On the 15th inst. tlie State Board of Home Course In Modem Agriculture XV.—Breeding Live Slock By C. V. GREGORY. Agricultural Division. Jotva State College Copyrighf. 1900. by American Prejj Axociation IIK science uf crecoup-, i- v».*, cuLuplkatril. but there arc pome points that should l>e no ri era toed ami followed by ev ery farmer. No matter bow well stock may lie fed and eared for. if they do not have the Inherited capacity tc ’ transform their feed economically luto milk or beef or power they will ni- wnys be “Kcruhs.” On the other band, poor feeding and enre may make a scrub out of an animal which haa the Inherited ability Jo develop into some thing much hotter. To attain the best results breeding, feeding and Intelli gent care must go hand In hand. Furo bred stock not only have the ability ,to make much more profitable use of tlie food given them, but they also add greatly to tlie appearance of tlie place. A pasture dotted with well bred, uniform calves, colts or sheep marks the owner'as a progressive farmer. There Is a great deal more plensun.V'too, lu caring for good stock Ilian there is in vainly trying to get unprofitable animals into market con dition. Tin* first thing to consider In start Ing in with pure bred stock Is Wtiflt mMUngluAKl jn.Hss » reality I We need a novelist to do w list Dickens did in ••Bleak House.” or what Gold smith did in "A Citizen of tlie World,” We need a John Wesley to point out that our attempts at justice would have brought discredit on any cqttrt of een- tnriea ago in l»rt-eewor Romo, X PREACHER POISONED. Rev. P. F Kilgo, one of the foremost Methodist Ministers of tlie Htate, ha* been verv critically ill at Clieraw from taking a headache |H»wder containing atrychnlne. On Monday hi* condition wa* still set ion*. largest pin factory In the world Birmingham, England. It turn* fcttt 37,000.1X20 pin* tyery day. charge of tlie Lahoratarv and Pasteur Institute to be citahlDhed -Ip Colum bia . At this benevolent institution all In fectious and contagion* diaoase* will be diagnosed without cost to the pa- ‘tlMItS There wiil bo no charge for adm’nD- terlng the Pa*teur treatment to person* who have been bitten by dog*. When one is bitten by a clog supposed to have hydrophobia the dog should he killed and it* head sent to Columbia for ex amination. If the phyaiclan finds that the dog was mad the patient can go to Colum bia and receive without co*t the same Pasteur treatment that is paid for In Baltimore or Pari*. For the netr fu ture the patient will have to pay for board and railroad fare. no. XXIX- TUB WAY A PAT BEEF AW UAL IS I X’T t;R.' [N'Ote the high prices of the back and loin ] breed to releet. Do not make a hasty choice, fur nothing nill ruin your chances of success more certainly than frequent changes from one brood to another. Select your breed with care and then stick to it. All the leading breeds have good points, and tlie mat ter of selection Is more a question of individual preference than anything else. In beginning with pure bred stock the best plan for the average farmer to follow Is to purchase a pure bred male of the desired breed and proceed to grade up his herd. There are two principles of breeding that should be kept lu mind In this work. The first Is the old law that ‘ like produces like.” In the main this law holds good, and, other tilings being equal, the offspring will resemble the parents. The second Is the law of “atavism," or the tend ency of the offspring to take after Borne remote ancestor. This is where the'value of the pure bred sire comes tn. His ancestors for generations have been animals of the same type as him self, and lienee there is little -fiance of his progeny differing from tills type td any serious extent. This long con tinued breeding along n certain line gives to the pure bred animal an abil ity to reproduce ids type that tlie grade sire lacks. This ability Is called prepotency. Recause.of his great prepotency a pure bred bull when mated to grade cows lias much more inlluence over tbe characters of ills offspring than tho mothers have. This Is most striking ly shown when a polled hull is mated to horned cows. Nine out of every ten of the calves will usually be polled, it is the same with other characteris tics—the ability to quickly turn corn into high priced beef or to u.;c tbe feed for profitable milk and butter produc tion. Of course if the cows are pure bred also (here Is loss chance of the calves resembling some inferior ancestor on their mother's side, and improvement will he more rapid and certain. The cost of an entire herd of puroTlTCds is very great, (lowercry and profits will come more surely by tlie grading up plan. After this has been carried on for a time, so that the farmer has some exis'rience in breeding anil ear ing for high class stock, a gradual start In pure bred females may be made by buying a cow and calf or a few yearling heifers. As the offspring of these Increase the number of pure breds in tlie herd tlie grades can grad ually be disposed of until an entire pure bred herd finally results. In tlie selection of a sire to begin grading up a herd it is important that be be of the type which it is desired to reproduce In tlie offspring. Tlie most important tilings to look for in a beef bull are constitution, form, quality and thick fleshing. Of these constitution is probably the most Important, as a bull that Is strong in this point will have the ability to sire a largo num ber of rugged, healthy calves. Con stitution is indicated by a deep, wide chest; large “barrel.” giving plenty of room for the digestive organs; good sized nostrils and a large, clear eye. A point that must go with constitution If Hie best results are to be obtained is prepotency. Prepotency means the ability of a sire to reproduce his good |>oints In his offspring. It Is Indicated by a heavy crest and n masculine look ing head. A bull that has a fine, fem inine appearing head will not lie at all certain of producing good calves, even though he Is a good individual hiin- Constitution and prepotency are of FINAL DISCHARGE NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that on Mon- daw, May G-Hi, lixW, the uudersigiieU- will lile with Hon. John K. Bnelllng. Judge of Probate for Barnwell County, ill* final rsturn as Administrator with the will annexed of the Estate of Mr*. Will* I. Loud, dccea»ed, and apply lor Letters Diamluory. R M. Mixson, / Adm’o’r C. 1’. A. April 23rd 1009. little account, however, unless the bull has the proper form. The buck and hind quarters of n beef animal anr the parts that produce the high priced meat. Great wli^h all along the back, especially over the loin; good spring of rib. plenty of depth ami short lega Atie! tMjInig' thnt should be looked for. I/ODg legged bulls aro usually narrow aud rnugy. The legs are of little value ns meat, so the shorter they are the better. Quality Is shown by fineness of hair, pliability of hide and not too much coarseness of shoulder, head and bone. An animal with good qual ity will 'furnish a better' grade of meat, and there will be less waste In killing. Thickness of flesh Is one of the most Important point;? to look for. Ry this Is meant not fat, but the nat ural covering of lean meat. Fat can l>e put on during the feeding period, but lean meat cannot. An animat that Is thickly mimclod at the begin ning of tlie feeding period will fur nish a carcass that will be well mar- hied with streaks of fat and lean, while another on the same feed will put most of his fat on in the form of tallow. These same points are the essential opes to look for in (lie selection of a tain or hoar. ' Strong constitution, wide, deep, blocky form, fine quality and thick fleshing are just as impor tant in these animals as in tlie bull. Of course it will be impossible to find an animal that is perfect in all points. If the females in your herd are badly lacking in any particular be sure to select a male that Is ospo- cially strong there. On the other hand, a slight weakness on the part of tlie sire in a place where the fe males are especially strong may be overlooked. An animal that has any very serious faults, however, should not lie considered for a moment. Dairy hulls lack (lie fleshing and compactness that characterize l>oef animals. Low setness mid extra width of back aro not so essential. Constitution, ns shown by a deep chest, wide on the bottom aud a roomy barrel, is Important. A clean head, smooth shoulder, flno limbs and pliable skin show the quality that ts so necessary In a dairy animal. The most Important point Is prepotency. A strong chest, masculine head and large rudimentary teats are aH Indi cations of tills. The liost way to fore cast a dairy hull's prepotency, how ever. is to look up tho Uiilk and butter producing records of his dam and granddams. A bnll out cf a high pro* duclng cow will almost certainly lie- get heifers that will be high ylelders. The most Important points to look for In draff horses, which sre the most profitable kind—to raise on tlie (arm, aro power and endurance. Tow er Is indicated by size, compactness and heavy muscling, especially in the bind quarters. Endurance is shown by a strong constitution and fine qual ity, especially of limbs. Mtrict observance of these points In the selection of a sire of any kind w ill give you an^mimal that will in a few years bring about a great improve ment in your herd. Pedigree should not be neglected entirely in picking out a sire. Its chief value la tn show ing that the animal is pure bred and that his ancestors were of tlie type which you wish to develop In your herd. To determine the latter point, however, requires a longer study of herd books than most farmers hard time for. If you put tbe chief stress upon the Individuality jot the animal and file the pedigree away In a drawer where it can be referred to whenYicc- essary you will not go far Wrong. 5Vh?n you have found an animal of the desired tyi>e do not hesitate too INS U RANGED FIRE A5D LIFE. Fire Insurance in the Oldest vStrongest Companies in America. RdjiMmEnts and Settlements promptlu mads Life Insurance in the Prudential Insurance Company of America. STRONG AS THE ROCK OF GIBRALTAR. More and better insurance to the dollar invested thin any other Company in the United States. WRITE ©R ©ALL ON R. M. MIXSON. Williston, S. C. FROST PROOF CABBAGE PLANTS. * GUARANTEED TO SATISFY PURCHASERS ■ABLY i TU ferltaat rjjBHruL? LTIARLOTO* LA BOB SUCriOMOM ADOUKTA TOL'CAH* AH< >BT BTKM M fcD TYPt: WAXkCnCLD EMiUrt ^ A Uute ItUr n YLAT DUTTII 1 V OrfitMT M 0 fWl Y«iAf. W ttk** B" ™ r-‘J— v fUC*: l> tots Ml I* 4 a. $1A* per ■- $!•$■.*! (US per n. It ■. met. at SLH per F. 0. B. YOUNG’S ISLAND, & C Oar Special Express Rates oa PlaaO Is Very Low. • Wc grew the first Frost Proof Plants in 1368. Now have over twenty thousand satisfied customers; and we have grown and sold more cabbtge plants than all other persons in.tbe Southern states combined. WHY? because our plants must please or we send your n?oney back. Order now; it is time to set these plants in your sec tion to get extra early cabbage, and they are the ones that sell for the most money. Writ* fof ttfwCnfeet c*r»*oju*. Wbl C Geraty Co., Box 73 real's bland, s. C THE Choicest Car Load OF New Year Stock ivlllg i 1 1 High C at HILL TOP STABLLS, BARNWELL, S. C. They are all right, so arc their prices. ... - Nice lot of Busies, Sun-ios, "Wagons. !.;i|> Harness and all parts of Harness to be sold CTIEAU CHARLIE 13 R 0 W N. FIO. XXX—A TYFlCAAi ItBAIT HORSS. long over the prire. A hundred and fifty dollars may look like a big price to pay for a bull, but an increase of $2 I a head in the value of the calf crop will pay for him in two or three years. In many cases you may be able to join with two or three of your near est neighbors in tlie purchase of a bull, thus not only saving money, but also obtaining n better animal than you would be able to secure otherwise. This applies with still more force to tlie purchase of a stallion. In many communities R Is Impossible to secure tho services of a first class horse of any breed. In such a case If fifteen or twenty farmers will agree upon a breed and subscribe $100 each a horse can lie procured that will almost pay for himself in tbe increased value of • 2-. THE Bank of Barnwell T/ie Oldest and Strongest „ Bank in Barnwell County Depository of Tlie State of South Carolina, Tlie County of Barnwell, and 'Hie Town of Barnwell Capital, - — — — — Surplus and Undivided Profits, - $60,000.00 $45,000.00 To save money ii not hard w hen once a hank account iMtarted for money in a bank cannot burn a hole the pocket. A bank accotfnt means paying hilt* by check —the only absolutely Safeway. Checks leave no room for argument as to when or bow a bill was paid. Each check is recorded in the hank’s book*. These togeher with yOur money and the cancelled checks me kept for you in burglar and fire proof vault*. You iia>e acce«i- to them nt zny time. Let u* talk this over with you the next time yon are in town If im possible to call, write us. EDMUND M. LAWTON. Plenty of Note and Letter Heads, Envelops and Hpring Stationery, all good, at Tuk i’aorut Pjumak v. FINAL DISCHARGE NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that on Mon- daV thfc tehflnhtV of 3hir IWHF the-uw- dersigned will file with Hon John K. duelling. Judge of Probate for Barn well County, their final report as Exec utor* of tlie Estate of I.. A. Bush, Sr, deceased, and apply for Letter* DU- mlssorj^.. * JTL. J Cresland Bush. L. A. Rush. Jr., F.xecutors. Gth April 1909. Plant May mouth. advcrtutUROU thi* STEPHEN. S. FURSE, JR., FUHSE AND LAWTON, Cotton Factors, Bagging and Ties, Fertilizers, HuiiHeTs 6f TTplFnT/ Sea TsTand"and Fl drodo^ CoTtoijP 11 Liberal advances made on consignments of cottonC” Personal, prompt and careful attention to nil business entrusted to us. FURSE A LAWTON, 212 East Bav St., Savannah, Ga.