The Pickens sentinel-journal. (Pickens, S.C.) 1909-1911, April 20, 1911, Image 6

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DOCTORS PRESCRIPTIONFAILED-. THE GREAT kIDNEY REMEDY PROVES ITS MERIT It gives me great pleasure to say a good word for Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root be. sause it has cured ine of a severe case of Kidney Trouble. I had suffered for some fve years with this trouble, and more especially for the first three months of 1909. Physicians prescribed for me, but with-. out much success, and any relief obtained was only temporary. I had severe pains In my back and at no time was I free of pain. When I stooped down it was with some difficulty that I could straighten my body again. I could not lift any weight of conisequence without great pain. I would be compelled to arise and give the bladder relief. A friend of mine advised me to take Dr. Kilmer's Swamp Root, whereupon I wrote to Dr. Kilmer for a sample bottle which so benefited me that I was led to believe it would be a great help to me. Accordingly I pur. chased two bottles of Swamp-Root from Air. A. P. Perry, my Druggist, and the effect has been truly marvelous. I feel like a new man and have every reason to believe that I am cured, and that no other medicine could have accom plished so much. Now I can raise a heavy load, can bend my back over my desk all day, and feel none the worse for it. In view of the foregoing facts, I sincerely trust that this testimonial may reach some of those who are suffering after the manner before described and that it may convince them that the merit of this great medicine should be given 9 fair trial in their case. Very truly yours, B. A. IIBON, Agt., Pac. and Wells Fargo Ex. Co., Rockdale, Texas. You may publish this if you wish. D r. Kilmer C. I Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For You Send to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingham ton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. It will convince anyone. You will also receive a booklet of valuable information, telling all sbout the kidneys and bladder. When writing, be sure and mention this paper. For sale at all drug stores. Price fifty eants and onc-dollar. Full life exists in throo dimensions, art in two, and science In one; liko a solid, a superficios, and a line. Take Garfield Tea in the spring to purify the blood and cleanse the system. Classification. "Sir," said a little blustering man to a religious opponent; "I say, sir, do you know to what sect I belong?" "Well, I don't exactly know," was the answer; "hut to judge by your make, sliap(, and size, I should say you belonged to a class called the in meet." An Individualist. The reason for the individual drink Ing..cup had been explained again and agath to the children and they had become sturdy supporters of the idea. 1B it was not surprising to hear Hexiry calling: "Ala, ma! Melville's got my individual apple!" Grouch Still With Him. When Brown dled he left an old frieid living, by the inio of Jones, .who always had a grouch. After 'lrown .hadl been .In heaveni some time, be met JTones just coming through thi 39o and as t ho newcomer did not' Icok as happy and ('ontonted as lie abould, Brown asked him what was the mnatter'. "WVel," JTones said, "I got my feet wet coming across the river Styx and caught a nasty cold, broko my left wing and haveo to carry it in a sling, and my lilo don't fIt worth a darn." Preventing a Disturbance. Colonel Scotch'em was weary, Hie Mad had a very arduous day retreating 'lromi the enemy, and lhe wished to re .coup lisa strength in order that he might retreat still further on the mor .ow. "AMacPherson," lie said to his new servant, "I'ni going to snatch forty winks' 51le1p. Stay in my tent and see that I'm not disturbed." hiao saluted. Five minutes later the snores of Colonel Scotchem were cut ahort by the loud report of a gun. "Great Scott!" cried the colonel. "Are the enemy upon us?" "Na, dlinnla fret," replied Miac, in serting hIs head reassuringly through thbe tent flap, "it was only a wee mousic. hut as I thought lie might wake you up I shot him."-Answers. It Does The Heart Good To see how the little folks enjoy Post Toasties with cream Sweet, crisp bits of pearly white Corn, rolled and toasted to an appetizing brown. "The Memory Lingers" I POSTUM CEREA L CO., Ltd., . attl Creek. Mich. OiARDLN DOLD FRAMES AND.HOT BEDS Viany Vegetables Are Started Early by Their Use-J-forse Manu're Is Preferred in Making. (By R. G. WEATrIIRSTONNI.) Cabbage, lettuce, cauliflower, toma. .'oes, peppers, egg plant, radishes and such vegetables are usually started in sot-beds. Many gardeners place a 'ew inches of good. soil directly on the manure (horse manure preferred), lepositing the seed in the soil. Shal ow boxes in which canned tomatoes ind soap have been shipped are con renient to use, ripping off the bot oms. The hot bed should be two feet leep, six feet wide, and long enough 0 accommodate the length of sash lou are using.- Let bed slope toward he south. The frame covered with glass is so >laced that the warmth of the manure vill warm the four inches of soil in ide the frame, causing the seeds to prout and grow. In about four weeks he seedlings will be ready to trans. lant. Vhere the sash is 3x6 feet in size ross supports about three feet apart hould be placed. Fresh horse manure Practical Hot Bed. ontaining litter is the best for the pit. Place this in the pit about two wveeks before the seed is sown. Cover he manure with good rich soil. The soil should be well packed on the nanure. Wh'lien the manure is thoroughly lented, which will take several days, Pork it over level and tramp firmly -lown; fill to within about six inches .o the tol) of the frames. Now place 'he'sash on the frame and plunge a thermoieter into the manure. When the thermometer registers 95 degrees it is safe to sow the seed. Cypress )r cedar frames are much better than pine. Cold frames simply consist of a wooden frame, covered with glass and ssh, placed over good garden soil without artiflcial heat beneath it. LOST HER CHANTICLER HAT Voung Lady From New. York . City Loses Her New Bonnet In Peculiar Manner on Jersey Farm. While visiting an uncle, a farmer n Newv Jersey, a young lady from New~ York city had .an experience vhich caused hysterics. Sauntering ilong the lane leading to church one yright Sunday 'morning, taking lpar lonablo ipride in her huge chanticler mat, a big chicken hawk spied it and tfter circling around the horizon once >i' twice, made a dive for it. His laws wvere firmly fastenged in the hat, Lnd in spite of the girl's screams and ier efforts to drive him away, he Lost Her Hat. mcceeded in tearing it loose from its astonigs of hatpins, and when last meen was sailing away across the 'iver. Desirable Young Men. The kind of young men wanted on he farms are those that are not tahamed of the work, who believe hero is no better business than farm ng, who are willing to take right mold and do everything that conies to hem, and do it all the very best they an. Young men are wanted who will ako the timne to learn what scientific, ip-to-date farming is, and who love Wve stock. Potato Speculators. Too many farmers like to speculate n potatoes or some other crop, and met be tied to cows, but you may go nto any commiunity, and you will -tind lie up-to-date dairymen the men who an pmay their bills. Full Crop of Rape, When barnyard manure is plentiful ress the land selected for rape hea vi y with it, and if you are particularly lesireus of getting a full crop, sow little commiercial nitrogenous ferti izrn with the seed. WOW. TREATING FOR HESSIAN. FL Amount of Damage Will Depend Weather, Fertility of Soll and Re. slating Power of Plant. A Missouri farmer w'ites Wallace Fartner for advice regarding a fie of wheat infested with Hessian f given follow: 'I have -twelve acres of wheat th is- full of, the Hessian fly. I woul like to krfow if weqther condition Will have anything to do with tb hatching of these flies? There at eggs in al;nost evefr plant. In cas there is no chance of a wheat crop, would like to sow this ground to oat Hessian Fly Maggot in Larval ant Flaxseed Forms. and clover. This wheat is looking flne now, and we are seldom if ever troubled with the fly here." If examination of the winter wheat fields shows that nearly every plant is infested with little brown objects resembling flaxseed, there is probabil ity of the field being .badly damaged in the spring. Our correspondent has mistakenly called these brown objects eggs. They are not eggs, but are forms into which the maggots that did damage last fall have developed. These flaxseeds, as they are calledj will do no more damage themselves, but will develop in the spring into the small black flies, that will lay moro eggs on the - wheat, which, in turn, will develop into maggots and b.rrrow into the straw. The develop. ment of the flaxseed into fIle Is hindered by hot, dry weather. Fields which are badly infested with flax. seed this winter will produce a re. duced field, due to the damage to the straw of the next generation of les sian fly maggots. The amount of this damage will depend on the weather, the fertility of the soil, and the re sisting power of the particular variety of wheat. We cannot give definite advice as to whether badly infested fields should be plowed up this spring. If the plants were not badly damaged by the maggots last fall, and came through the winter in good shape, we would be inclined to let the field re main in wheat. Otherwise, we would disk as early in the spring as pos sible and seed to any crop other that wheat. Barley and rye are slightly tioublo. by the fly, but oats seems tc be free. Plant New Vegatables. In planning your garden this sum mier, why not includo some of the nev vegetables that are cominag into us< in the cities, but are little known iT the country.- Brussels sprouts, for in stance, is a vegetable' for which cit3 folks 'domand more than can he sup Plied. Farm Help. Married men'shou'ld bo em loyed by the .year and furnished witll a'house This -would help to solve thie farm-la her problem. Disking kills many weeds. There are various kinds of dodder Gravelly land will not hold manure Any good corn soil is gooed for sor ghum. Oats and field peas should be sowr as early in the spring as possible. Sow clean, newv crop of clever seed; old seed will not germinate freely. As soon as the weat~her turns muiis the canker worms ascend the tree. An acre of good sorghum shouk produce three to five tons of fair hay The value of a good tomato is -duc to the fact that .It has but few seeds There are two points in favor o1 the gra~in drill that are many times oved~ofkedl. YIn butying a farm, select good land, evn3. if you cannot afford to buy more than 90O acree. idu ess wvith the garden depends to . great extent upon the quality o1 the sA-ds that are used. * .rghunm appreciates warm weather eve~ nmoi'e than corn, and should be sowe'o a week or two later. A very large acreage of corn land will be plowed this spring and a seed bed prepared for another corn crop. Tthr clover stubble and roots con. taire nitrogen, part of which is oh taitted from the air and part from the soil. Ycnng clover should never be0 pas. tures', as the tramping of the cattle will compact the soil so hard as to kill out most of the plant. Successfu.l cranberry culture neces, sitates such a situation and control of the water supply that the entire bog may be easily and quickly flooded. A little nitrate of soda is a good thing to hurry along the growth of early vegetables, and especially in gardens that are not well manured. Strips of clbver, rape, cabbage, etc., may be0 sown in the orchard for the fowls to lpick at, and later errimson clover and rye may be rown b r a winter enoe- crop. .Y WAS THE FIRST SUFFRAGETTE Dn Mary Wolistoneoraft Struggled for inq dependence for Women in the Year 1759. 's ondon.-Mary Wolistonecraft is Id admittedly the great pioneer of the ly woman movement. By her vigor and ly her vehemence, by her heart-whole earnestness and her passionate sym. it pathies, she may lay claim to the title d of the first suffragette. Before her s time there' had been a few tentative e tracts on female education, "Serious. e Proposals" that amounted to very lif. e tie. The "Vindication of the Rights I of Women" sprang, like Minerva, glit s tering and full-armed, with tremen. dous dazzle and shock upon the smug respectability of that most conven tional of all centuries-the eighteenth. Mary Wollstonecraft. The book still stands, brilliant and unassailable, and few on the same subject can take their place beside it for sheer logic and insight. The "Vin dication" was 'born out of suffering and bitter experience. Mrs. Brown ing says in "Aurora Leigh" that life blood is necessary to the making of a great book, and, though the "Vindi cation" holds its importance as a piece of reasoning, yet it is Mary's very life blood that gives its argu ments vitality. Born in 1759, her pity -her "darling passion," as she calls it, was first claimed by her own mother and the very dogs of the household, subjected to the caprice of a brutal father. Then her difficult struggles against poverty, her pitiful attempts to earn a living by keeping school, taught her something of the harshness of the outside world. "In dependence," she writes in her dedi cation to the "Vindication," "inde pendence I have long considered as the grand blessing of life, the basis of every virtue, and independence I will ever secure by contracting my wants, though I were to live on a bar ren heath," How modern it all sounds! BUDDHA HEWN IN A CLIFF Crude Testimony to Religious Fervor of Disciples Seen at Kiatang, China. Kiatang, China.-Gamtama, the al leged founder of Buddhism, was bor-n 624 B. C., the son of Sudhdana, king of Kapilavastu, in the north'of India. The story of his life is a tissue of monstrous fables,' but it is generally believed that ther-e is a historical ba sis to the story. In early life lie was of ascetic habits, but, tempted by his father, he abandoned himself to every pleasure for ~a time. His singular wis dom (which like his other marvellous gifts was the fruit of merits gained in previous states of existence) led him to renounce the world and. after years of profound study, severe bodily mac eration and long contemplation, he dis covered the supreme truth that to r turn to the ignorance and state of non sentient rep~ose from whence man Giant Buddha at Klatang. sprang is the highest possible good and the final reward of the just and pure. After this discovery he was made a'Buddha and after a time pass *ed into Nirvana, or unconsciousniess, having died at Kusinagara in 5-43 Ii. C. A -crude testimony to the religious fervor of his disciples is a strange -cliff-Buddha located at Klatang, China. The full figure is about 150 feet in .hight and the feet are washed by a foaming mountain torrent, It was to guard against the danger of the rapids that the figure was cut in the cliff ~side by the lifelong labor- of a single priest. The rock is somewhat soft and there is much earth in the crevices. This has been ingeniously utilized for a monstrous growth of hair, eyebrows and mustache, which adds considera, hiy to the appearance, Bprlng Felt by so many upon tl Is due to the' Impure, condition of the blood feeling and loss of appe1 boils and other eruptione It Is qured by the grei Hood's Se which effects its wonderful cures, nc la, but because it combines the utmc different ingredients. There is no i If urged to buy aiy preparation sai it is inferior, costs less to make, an Tried E "I suffered with my hea writes Mrs. R. L Bell, of M get anything to do me any everything except Cardui. what other suffering womer decided to try Cardul. Nov I don't feel like the same p( and better 1. I recommend ( TAKE C The WoM This is just a single on receive from grateful ladies, benefit they have received All these ladies are glad If you suffer from pair nervous and worn out, take you, and that you'll continue Cardul is sold at all dr for use, printed on the wrai Will Be World Representation. When the International Congress on ruberculosis meets at Rome next Beptember, representatives or over thirty national and provincial asso ciations organized to fight tubercu [oats will be present. Among .the aI sociations which will be represented are the United States, Canada, Cuba Trinidad, England, Wales, Ireland Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Russia Germany, Belgium, Hollandl, France Switzerland, Portugal, Italy, Gree..e Bulgaria, Hungar'y, Austria, New Zea land, Jap~an, Cape Colony, Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Newfoundland, Rou. mania, Uruguay and Venezuela. HO0W TO CUREI RhEUMATISM. The cause of rheumatism is excess urio acid in the blood. Tro cure rheum atism this acid must be expelled fron the system. Rheumatism is an inter nal disease and requit-es an internal remedy. Rubbing with oils and litni ments may cano the pain, but they will no more cure rheumatism fhan' paint will change the fiber of rotten wood, Cures Rheumatism To Stay Cured. Science has discovered a perfect and complete cure called Rheumacide. Test ad in hundreds of cases, it has effected marvelous cures. Rhleumacide removes the cause, gets at the joints from the Inside, swveeps the poisons out . of the system, tones up the stomach, regulates the, bowels and kidneys. Sold by drug lists at 50c, and $1: in the tablet form at 25c. and 50e., by mail. Booklet free. Bobbitt Chemical Co., Baltimore. Md. Qet. At The Joints Fromi The Inside, His Hope. "I suppose," the beautiful girl sa-id, "you write for the mere love 01 writing?" "Yes," the Bad looking poet replied, "but I still hope to some (lay be able to write for at leart fifteen cents ,.a line."-Judlge. Indication of Wisdom, "Why do they call the owl the bird of wisdom ?' "It stays out, all night and doesn't tell what It sees or does."--Judge. Reducing the waits between the icts will not lighten a heavy play. Take Garfield Tea to overcome constip~a dion, cleanse systemn and maintain health. A man doesn't have to lie a detee ive in order to find fault. Facts for Weak 1 Nine-tenths of all the sickness of won ease of the organs distinotly feminine. every day by Dr. Pierce's Favc It Makes Weak Wo It acts. directly on the organh affected at tive tonio for the whole system. It.ecur of home. It makes Unnecessary the die local treatment so W Jlversally insisted every modest Woman, We shall not particularize here as tq those peculiar affection. incident to a wanting full information as to their means of polpitive cure are referred to ti mon Sense Medical Advser--1008 pag< and up-to-date EditIon, sent fre, on re ent stamps to cover cost of wrappmn~ in Frenoh cloth, binding. Address:1j No. 663 MaIn Street BuIe.: N Yr 10 return of warn weather - Impoverished, devitalized I which' equees that' tired ite as well as the pimples, I so common at this season. It constitutional remedy Irsaparilla >t simplxbecause it contains earsaparil. et reme ial values of mQre than twenty real substitute for Hood's Sarsa arilla. I to be "just as good," you may bo sure d yields the dealer a larger profit. verything d and back for over six years," cAlester, Okla. "I never could good, although I tried almost One day, while I was reading t said It had done for them, I r I am on my third bottle, and rson. I feel so much stronger ,ardul to all suffering women." ROWc an's Tonic of the thousands of letters we who want to thank us for the from Cardul. I now that they took It. is In head, back, or side, are Cardul. We know it will help the treatment and get well. ug stores, with full directions oper. Try it. NATURALLY. This world is but a fleeting show, And yet there's not a man But wants to see as much of the Performance as he can. The pleasure of love is in iovingt we are happier in the passion we feel than in what we inspire.-Fra~ncis Duo de Roebefaulcau'ld. For HIEADACH5E-.4Hicks OAPUDINE evouis Troubles, Cap udine will reliv ou Envy is punishing ourselves for be ing inferior to our neighbor. -Is GUARANTEEE! to stop and. perma nently cure that ter.. rible itcaing. It is compoujnded for that / Purpose and your money will be promptly refunded 4 WITHOUT QUESTION if Hunt's Cure fails to cure diret 50 atItch, Eczem:, Ttter, Ring Worm or any other Skis dietif he hasn't it. Manufactured only by A, 0. RICHARDS MEDICINE Co., Shefman, Texas "____' ..IThompson's Eye Water DEFIANCE ST A RCH "~: Vomen sen is due to some derangement or die. Suoh siokaness can be cured--Is cured >rite Prescription men Strong, Sick Women Well. id is at t~ie same time a general rester, em female complaint right in the privacy agreable questioning, examinations and upon by doctors, and so abhorrent to the symptoms of romen, but those symptoms and to People's Corn. ma, newly revised lr iceipt of 31 one. E U~, r. R, V. Pierce,