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I FAR] cu ijl J. Mr. Farmer, you You opght to be w now. We have so these shoes to farme tion, but never befc farm shoe to equal i ing this season. Foi treme comfort it cai where. , In spite of the gi cost of leather, you > priced just right. C r Tin j. East Mai bfe- Rinastree, 'Ill 100 per cent Rough BUCKEYE HULLS are real roughage in ever cle. They are free of everything that has r as forage. They are free of lint. They ar< trash. They are free of dirt and dust. When j ^ rftADC MAffg r- micKFvr W COTTONSEED H V HULLS N LINTLESS you art* raylnq for nothing but roughage, and you are feec stock nothing that is worthless or injurious. Buckeye I like a real feed and are a real feed. Their very appear convince you that you should use them. ! Even if Buckeye Hulls cost as much as old style hulls it v | be to your advantage to use them. Selling at several d ton less, they put old style hulls beyond consideration. Other / 'ages Buckeye Hulls allow better ?r- * well with c I similation of other food, i Thw arc marked?easvtohrw ' v.! noes fartl iThey take half the spac _ :. < of real roi storage. .. . not 1500. Mr. S. L. Jones, Jackson, Lc., sa^s: "I have been feeding my dairy cows Buckeye Hulls find that they do as well on Buckeye Hulls as on style and that they like the buckeye Hulls better t the old style." To secure the best results and to develop the ensilage odor, wet thoroughly twelve hours before feeding. It is easy to < wetting them down night and morning for the next feeding. If a this cannot be done, wet down at least thirty minutes. If yoi feed the hulls dry, use only half as much by bulk as of old style Book of Mixed Feeds Free I Gives the right formula fcr every combination of feeds u: South. Tells how much to feed for maintenance, for mill tening. for work. Describes Buckeye Hulls and gives dire using them properly. Send for yonr copy to the nearest n Dept. K The Buckeye Cotton Oil Co, a At la::' a Dirmingham Greenwood Little Rock Augusta Charlotte Jackson Macon I * OUR BIG SPECIAL OF Thrifc-a-Week New York World H The County Record Southern Ruralist, twice a month Total price for the three papers \ *\ =jl IV Jt LY1 PES ought to see them. ! 'earing mew ngiii Id vast numbers of rs all over this sec>re have we seen a the one we are sellr long wear and exa't he equaled any *eat increase in the vill find these shoes all and see them. CKER n Street - - s. c. EM 4 4 T ; LONG BRANCH SCHOOL h - Greelyville, May 9:?The closing i exercises of this school were well attended and deeply interesting. The rjM-jf ! '?Howing programme was rendered: ^ : Welcome Address Eight Children Drill and Song . "Star Spangled Banner" School Recitation VMy Little Kitty" Alice Timmons ftfS0 Recitation "Where They Grow" Jane McGee Music ^ not+i Dialogue "The Doll's Sad Fall" " pa. Four Children LO value Recitation "A Little Girl's Wants" i free of Lila Drose rou buv Recitation "Mamma's Gift" J Bettie Rradham Music Recitation...."Just a Glimpse at Baby" Jane Drose Dialogue-^ "Our Boy" Boy and Girl Recitation "A Mortifying Mistake" Kathleen Easter Recitation "Maud Muller" Miss Norma McGee Pantomime "Rock of Ages" ling your Five Girls lulls loolc Recitation "Out of School Again" ance will William Boddiford Recitation. "Our School Term Is Ended" .. Mary Drose rould sti Essay on Girls Ernest McGee ollars per Dialogue... "The Model Class" Twelve Children Music Recitation ...."A Smart Boy" ther for- Willie Timmons Essay "Boys' Rights" ier. William Boddiford ighage to Recitation "A Boy's Belief" t Jasper Drose Dialogue...."The Mothers'Aid Society" Seven Girls an(j Recitation.. Ernest McGee old "President Lincoln's Favorite Poem" han Song "Swinging 'Neath the Old Apple Tree".. School Recitation Bertha McKnight the halls "She Got Tired Popping Corn" do this by Recitation Beulah Timmons t anytime "Valedictories Are in Fashion Now" i prefer to Awarding of Prizes hulls. Recitation "Good-Bye" T% T* . J J Bessie ooaauora ;cd in the Prizes were awarded by Mr J S k, for fat- Terry to Misses Anna Drose for ctions for highest school average and Mary 1 Drose for highest marks in spelling, rpt. k The exercises were good from beWwnpAi? ginning to end, the children being well trained by their teacher, Miss _..J DuRant Epps, who deserves all the praise. Her pupils love her and ? hated to tell her good-bye. She will be missed in the community for a 'P?D while,but we are glad to say she will be with us at our next school term. S 1.25 The day following the closing ex1 nft ercises, the school, patrons, teacher I and f riends gathered on the banks of .50 Black river for a picnio and to bid Miss Epps good-bye. N B M. $ 2.75 ? $ 2.00! Send us the news. TELLS FRIENDS THEY ! CAN FEEL LIVELY TOO; MRS THOMPSON OF SPARTANBURG FINDS NEW PLEASURES?WERE FIVE HARD YEARS. In Interview She Explains How She Overcame Great Obstacles to Her Happiness. "I suffered from asthma for about five years and I also had indigestion badly for several years, but I took Tanlac last fall and I have not had an attack of asthma since, and I enjoy my meals now?something I did not do before I took Tanlac," declared Mrs A J Thompson of Spartanburg, whose husband is an electrician employed at the SpartanKiira citv nnn'pr r?lnnt ''Rpfurp I uui6 rM,v' "v.w.v took Tanlac, everything I ate caused me to hurt and feel queer," continued Mrs Thompson, "and I felt puffed up at meals. I also felt tired and worn out and I was so weak I just had to drag myself around. I was also troubled with nervousness and headaches. "Since taking the Tanlac I sure do feel well and strong, and I tell my friends if they want to feel smart and lively, just take Tanlac. It sure was a fine medicine for me and it got my nerves in fine shape, relieved the headaches and certainly did build up my system. I gained a good deal of weight, too." Tanlac, the master medicine, is sold by Kingstree Drug Co, Kingsfvoa* \f n 11 o T iimlior Pa flroolv iucuiaiu uuujia/i Wj uivvijville; Farmers' Drug Co, Hemingway; S S Aronson, Lane; R P Hinnant, Suttons; W D Bryan, Bryan. Should Visit the South. The British and French commissions ought to include the South in their tour of the country before they return home. Especially should the French representatives come to this section. It was at Georgetown that Lafayette first landed when he came to fight for the American colonists and from Charleston he set out to join Washington. On his revisitation to the United States in 1824 he came again to South Carolina and was enthusiastically received atmanylpoints in the State. The trowel with which ho IniH tho rnrnorstnno nf thp mnn ument to DeKalb at Camden is still in the possession of the South Carolina Grand Lodge of Masons, and there are other relics of his visit preserved here Though Admiral de Grasse found it impracticable to engage in the relief of Charleston, as urged by Washington, his son lived in this city for a time and two of his children are buried in St Mary's churchyard. "Citizen" Genet, when he came to toi3 country to represent the republican provernment of France, landed at Charleston and was feted here and at other pointsinthe State. In other parts of the South.especially at Mobile and New Orleans, there are lively traditions of the French in America, and the commission representing the republic would have a glorious welcome.?Charleston Post. Protects Your Profits By keeping all Live Stock Healthy. Easy and Safe to Use Economical a # rsi o i 1 I Nolls Lice, Mites, Sheep Scan ana Ringworm. Heals Cuts, Scratches, Wounds and common skin troubles. Prevents Dog Cholera . and All Contagions Diseases Experiments on live hogs prove that a 2dilution of Kreso Dip No. 1 will kill Virulent Hog Cholera Virus in 5 minutes by contact. Write for free instructive booklets on the care of all live stock and poultry. Kress Dip No. 1 is Original Packages For Sale by The Scott Drug Company, Kingstree, S. C. , i ... SOME VULlffiffi 0 0 Figure I. Clover Seed Harvester Macjc v - , 4** o} I. VALUE OF CRIMSON CLOVER AS [' A CLOVER CROP: - - ?> Crimson clover.is no doubt the r best winter leguminous crop to | plant in the orchard, as. well as on . the farm. The acreage in crimson clover in South Carolina * is its great value as a soli builder is fast becoming appreciated. II. TIME TO PLANT: Crimson clover may be planted i from August 16th to November ' 15th, but best results will be ob- j tained from seed sown between September 15th and October 15th. III. AMOUNT OF SEED , TO SOW PER ACRE , f Twelve pounds of cleaned seed, or twenty-four pounds of seed In f the bur, per acre will give a good seeding. When sown as late aa October i5th, I Would advise sowing fifteen pounds of cleaned seed! ' or thirty pounds of seed in the bur. 7 ' TV. COST OF SEED PER ACRE: The prioe of crimson; clover seed was very high during the. past season, due to the increased , demand for reed, and to the cutting off of practically all importation of clover seed from Euroge. Even at the high price o( $8jbo per bushel, the cost of seed tor ' one acre of crifhsori clover l&'oufy $1.60. ' ? V. SAVE YOUR OWN SEED AND SOME TO SELL YOUR NEIGHb?r _. - ' y c Four hundred and fifty pounds ( of crimson"clover seeijrih -the buf may "b$ .harested' per *ac^e>( wh^W 1 will be aufficient to sow fourteen* acres. If .Jhe seed are sold at * seven cents per pound (the price last faff), thfs-would give a-gross f return oOsi&O for the.se^d peV i acre/* Z vi. cost;op.saving seed Three men- -and-one mule* wjWi ) a home made seed harvester ilke?- . the one-shown In the accompanying illustratwjn'cao tiat*es$,.fro;ii' one tb fcwo.gctes.'pf.ctlm^on rioter seed ier .day ' - ' " m COST OP HOME "MABE ' HAR- : * ? ^ 'V ' ft ; VESTfiR: ' j ? c The'seed harveetep V Ff#? 1.*) 41- lustrateil ab!6Ve \ta& ptacl^ qq'^he' faVnj 'Jh oite'dSjy. Vy itfo inert'. The, total cost off t?fs ^acjifne^fhc^tMl;' ? ing ktbop was 14.60, /}t was made , from scrap 'material picked < up about Uje.tariq^ ,0 ? ? . j . VIII. STORING' OF SEED;". j The seed must be dry when ' gathe^jl. otherwise they wjll pot strip from the stems easily. The* Figure II. Field of Vetch and Clover S< Neither Veich Nor Clovi ' * - ' 1 KSIMtTHE FOREST FIDES \ Clemson College, S. C.?During the months of March and April forest fires 1 frequently brfeak out and 'hum ovejr 1 large areas. In South Carolina. The | strong winds whieh we have at this 1 season of the year drive off all of the ] moisture accumulated during the .win- 1 tar rains thus leaving the leaves, straw j and other litter, dry and very infltiih-.'i mable. These winds at the ?ame time 1 serve to fan the smallest blaze into 1 a dangerous and destructive fire. . 1 i Fires cause an annual loss of |50,- J 000.000 in the United States by burn- "1 lng standing timber and destroying. 1 the anil covering, thus impoverishing 1 the soil, and by destroying the seed < and seedling trees, the future forest 1 Spring fires are especially destruo- 1 tive to all vegetation because the 1 trees are growing and are easily kill- 1 ed. In many instances where fires 1 i in One Day tfy'Two Men'at'a "Potalb $4,50. .... .4 ! seed an* removed- from* the bar... I vester and'immediately pjaeed in nat ^acka Thpv should than JHL I sunned for a few days until' the * seed have thoroughly dried, aud then stored in, the bars, A good - , plan is to. suspend the bags Cr'dia the ceiling. This will get them * out of the way, and givb a' free; rt circulation of air about thereof). t.. which wifl prevent any possibility, of their moulding. QC. A SIMPLE AND' EF^FEfctlVfc WAY OF INOCULATING SBED:~ Where clover has not previa* y- ly grown, it is necessary to ino>* culate the seed before sowing. Secure a bushel, of soil from land where crimson rioter .hagrbp$h grown successfully, and place it in a water-Eight barrel. Then add' about thirty- gallons of water, ami /'[stir thoroughly.. The ^eed ,are . then placed in an oat sack and plunged several times into jflie' water until they ore thoroughly? j. wet. Remove the eeed from the., sack, spread them out on a clean * floor, and allow them to dry .id ^ ' the' shade for about 'two hours. The seed are then .sown and. the land harrowed immediately, f would advise sowing the seed oV freshly hdrfowdd land late itf the r. ' afternoon, or on. a cloudy (Jay. !C HAIRY.VETCH AND CLOVER: *"J Hairy vetch and crimson clover sown together made ah ideal eov?r ' er crop. Fig. II. shows,*: fleRL A? of vetch and clover sow# Septem-" ber 20th on land where neither' clover nor vetch had- beeft grown *' before. ? The photograph* was " made when the vqtch. and clever ^ , were in bloom. The seed were Inoculated as described above. Eight pounds of clover seed and ten i nnnnds of vetch were sown 3er - j acre. x|. WHEltf TO TURN UNDER: f rt Is necessary to turn anderj clover when thp soil Js in good v, condi ypn, regardless of the stage* of the clover at the time. I would" ' a'dvise' tufhlng under tRe'dOvef as soon after blooming as soil i conditions will permit, retaining sufficient "acreage for seed pur* poses. If'cdttori ot* "bbrtf is ip folr' low clover, it will, of oourse, be j i necessary to turn.th^ land as ear0 ( ly in March as soil conditions wlH ' permit. "Seed sown In Septefnbei'1 -' will'give a heavy cover crop by 0 I the 15th,.c? March. / ' . . C. C. NEWMAN, " k ' Prot. it Horticulture. '' Clemson Agricultural College.* ; ? k 1,' ?? f? w B 'jap K. jwn September 20, on Land Whcro w Had Grown Before. * M . ' .. " burn over areas in March and April the land is left perfectly liare. Ysuch irees do not come back into kroffUr' ble forests for half a'century'. f? .1 There aYe a numbfcr. of w<nrs itrwhich the people of a community -can. co-operate to prevent the damage dono-. bx forest fires. In some sections of tb? country it is the duty of the R. F? D) carriers to report all fires seen by.? them on their routes. Game*wardens In many stated as ^e'jwardens and have authority to summon men toj fight fires. There qught, of course, to* be organized flrq/fightln^ macfain-. ery in..every .community but wj^ejethjjs j Is ' not .the .tease .co-operation among all the people la the next host* thlng? If everyone* who Sees-a lire' Inja forest wllf hlthself see that ' the owner of the land If notified '^nb if necessary the neighbors summoned to hcjlp fight it we would have far lets damage done to our timber and. to our future forests than we now have Bvery spring. 9 - , ? _