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. *• -t v —“■ ff : “C •# . ' ' r .Sr _ ■ « ( “ . ' --l-’-a-.' — < H ' BAENWELL SENTINEL, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA l r PAGC l TRY A MEDICINE THAT PROVES ITS VALUE During the entire period of . time that I have been handling Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp- Root I have never heard a single' qom-' plainer My customers are generally pleased with results obtained arid speak' words of praise for the merits of the preparation. Very truly yours. * . - GILL COMPANY, Druggist, ' ' ■ tL Z- . Per Julian J‘. 0»11, . Sept. 29, 1916. ■ Starkville, Miss. ■ ■■ - v 3 t Letter to — Dir. Kilmer 6* Co. Binghamton. N. Y. > 3 Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For You < Send ten cents to'Dr. Kilmer & Co., ^ . .Binghamton-, - N-.- V., for >a sample ‘sir.e 3»"-' bottle. It will" nonvinre anyone; ‘Ydp , will also-receive a liooftfet of yalnable in-, formation, telling about the kidneys and bj'a^der,.-When writing. V - arid men tion this paper. Lai- . medium size bottles for sale at ;>!' -\>k ■Sxyp& stores^—Adv. On the Casualty List. ..A gallant Infantry officer who had faced a hundred perils and 'returned home from furjough without a scratch' j met with Ynlsfortune the first night home, says London TU-BUSi In the black darkness of a sld£ street he col- , lided with a porter’4 barrow and sus tained a broken arm. The llnib healed nicely, but so lonjg as L£ reposed In a sling tfie owner'was pestered wlth'-Wjnd inquiries from admiring friends who were blissfully 'unaware of the ren 1 cause uf the injury. The ilni+t was reached one day when he encountered h former- business rival, who at onro; alluded to the now hateful subject: ‘Tiy Jove, ~old - fetloW.‘ T Y*h vy^you with thiftjffioQVeutr .testimony of 5 ; our un)w«tss,mk«) what faction did you' -nine “Hang it, sir," was the testy reply,ij “can’t you read the blessed war news for yourself?” SHEEP TICK CAUSES LOSS TO THE OWNER •7 Nothing Wasted. ■ “.Tack Sprutt would eat no fat, liis wife would eat.no lean, and so be- tween them botlrthey kept the platter clean.” • "High types of' food coiiservers," commented Mr. Wombat.—Louisville Courier-Journal.. • . . . Arrogant. “Arrogant, isn’t he?!?- ’“Very, lie even lorded It oyer his- coal dealer last winter.’’” __ Lost In the? Shuffle. “I Vvns Just wondering." - if ' “Al.i.ut what?" '“Wondering what had become of the patriotic notion J had last April that I’d spend my vaeutioh this summer helping some farmer to hoe." •> i/ Don’t Lose a Day’s Work! If Your Liver Is Sluggish or Bowels /•: Constipated Take “Dodson’s Liver Tone.”—It’s Fine! fine, jtour liver will be working, " 9“L' k l!!m hwid.rt. -m* dtzrtn,... gone, rosif of the bones. , ■ « . . _ , MONEY MAKERS ON ANY SOUTHERN FARM. You’re bllloiis! Your-liver is slug gish! You feel lazy, dizzy and all knocked out. Your head is dull, your tongue is coated; breath bad; stomach sour and bowels constipated. But don’t take salivating calopiel. It makes you aick, you may lose a day’s ^ork. - Calomel is mercury T’whicBT'cauSel nec | Calomel crashes into sour bile like dynamite, breaking it up. That’s when you feel that awful nausea and cramp* ing. ** If you want to enjoy the nicest, gen tlest liver aind bowel cleansing you ever experienced Just take a spoonful of harmtos# Dodson's Liver Tone. Your druggist or dealer sells you a LO-cent bottle of Dodson’s Liver Tone under my personal money-back guarantee that each spoonful will clean your sluggish liver better than % dose at : nasty calomel and that it won’t mate you sick. < Dodson’s Liver Tone is real liver < a medicine. You’ll knovf it next mot» ing because you will wake up "Wright'* Indian Vegetable Pill* contain nothing but vegetable" Ingredients, which act gently a* a tonic and purgative by aUmU* latlon and hot by Irritation. Adv. The crusty old bachelor if consistent would make his.own bread. 1 i J Honest Advertising (IS is a topic yre all hear now-a-daya because so many people Are in clined to exaggerate. Yet has any physician told you that we claimed -unreasonable remedial properties for Fletcher V Castoria? Just ask them.. We won’t answer it ourselves, we know what the answer will be. ■, That it has all the virtues to-day that was claimed for it in its early day* is to be found in its increased use, the recommendation by prominent physicians, and our assurance that its standard will be maintained. Imitations are to be founi^in some stores and only because of the Cat- toria that Mr. Fletcher created. But it is not the genuine Castoria that Mr. Fletcher Honestly advertised, Honestly placed before the public, and from which he Honestly expects to recrffve his reward. Genuine Castoria always bears the signature of •UV*.A. — . Her “Meatless Day.” The day after Prosecuting Attorney Ilornce G. Murphy and Ids deputies and constables made a Sunday morn ing raid on a Muncle “blind tiger" and arrested 50 persons found there, many -of the men going to Jail on various charges, the wife of one of those whose fate it was to be locked hip, \yas con fiding to Billy. Blarney, ihe_ elevator mim at the• Wysor building, in which Murphy as his office, says the Indian-j apolls News. ‘Tin considerably worried," she told him, "about by Sunday dinner yester day and thought Mr. Murphy might straighten things out. You see, my hus- huhd started away from home about te no’eloek in -the’^ morning, to get sopie meat for dinner said said he intended to stop hr at the club (all "Mgers" are clubs in Aluncte) and get a bottle of beer on the wav-, llek lie always does Sundays. Well, he hasn’t brought that meat home yPt; and incut nowadays costs tpo much to waste.” METROPOLIS OF THE WILDS Spokane, City of a Hundred and Fifty Thousand People, Has Good Trout Fishing Within Limits. (W. H. DAI.RYMI’I,F>, Louisiana Station.) The sheep ticks or their young may be found on sheep at nil Mines* of the^ year, but appear most.numerous in- the spring and are especially noticeable at shearing time ©n the old sheep after they hav-e been deprived of their shelter. This pest, although it seldom cuuses any very serious damage, either to the sheep-or the wool, Is ut all times au annoyance, and occasionally causes de ckled losses to the sheep owner, be ing i blood-sucker and producing con siderable Irritation,, which varies ac cording to the number of the ticks present. Fortunately, thqse ticks may be readily destroyed by suitable dips or dressings; and itf would be wtftl, whenever discovered, to have the sheep treated to 1 prevent the dissemination of the parasites. , One of the dipping solutions reeom 1 mended is kerosene emulsion, which mair be prepared as follows : Dissolve one-half pound of common sOTfp In one gallon of boiling water. Remove from SWEET-POTATO ENEMY the fire, stir In two gallons of. coni "oil and agitate thoroughly until it Is emul sified. ■ Use one gallon of this emul sion to eight or ten, gallons of cold water, which should also be -well mixed. Fifty gallons of this solution will suffice for 50 sheep. Any quan tity of this solution may be prepared, by observing the above-mentioned pro-, portions. — r —- Any of^jfe coal-tar dips on,/the lilac-/- ket, suclf as kreso, etc., will also serve ms a dipping solution of about two per cent strength with water. .Sheep that have been- dipped should not be turned Into the old pens or pas tures uhtll about a week afterward, by whiqji time It may be presumed that any ticks left oir the ground will hnve died. And any sheep recently pur chased, especially from the northern section of the country, should always he dipped or otherwise treated before being turned-out -among 1 the home flock, so as to prevent, if possible, the further introduction mini distribution of these parasites. ' stomach will be sweet arid your bowels regular. You will feel like workie*; you’ll be cheerful; full of vlgof and ambition. ~ Dodson's) Liver Tone ii entirely vegetable, therefore harmless and eaa> not salivate. Give It to your children! Millions of people are using Dodson** LlyCr Tone Instead of dangprous cal omel now. Your druggist will tell yon that the sale of calomel is abate stopped entirely here.—Adv. Sold far 47 yem ftr Malaria, ttulk&Fmr. Also a Fine Geieral Strengthening Tmx. 60c tnd 91 00 at dl Drug Star**. Heredity. “What a bouncing baby I” “YeS’m; Its father is a rubber tnan. Many people Imagine that Worm* or Tape worm cannot be gotten rid of entirely. Tho*« who have uaed “Dead Shot”—Dr. Peery’a Vermifuge, know that they can. Air. A family Secret. j /."My dad co'uld whip your 1 one hand tied belli fid him.” "Shucks! My dad could whip your dad with both hands (led behind him." “He couldn’t" “Ho could!” . “How could ho? Ho couldn’t do nothing ’eept butt ,my dad." “That’s Just It. My .mother says my dad has tho hardest heatl of any man sho over knew." -— ~ Leaf-Folder Found at Browns- A city of a hundred and fifty thou sand people that has good trout-fishing ville, Tex., and in Louisiana. i Field Workers of Bureau of Entomol ogy Firjd Insect Can Be Controlled by Careful Spraying With Arsenate of Lead. Worried. “I don't know what I’ll do if my hoy has to go- to wspr.” “I wouldn’t worry so much If I were; you. Perhaps he won’t be drafted." “I know, hut 1 just can’t hear the thought of him ever having to' go." “That is a fear that all mothers have to face. Has your son reglsteced?” '“Dear me, no. not yet. But I’m just worried to death for fear that some day he Will be called away’froiipme." '"How old Is your hoy?" •* “Just six months old yesterday, and the loveliest hoy that ever was horn." ‘ - - r - -Ur—- - - . ' Whenever You Need a General Tonjc Take Grove’s The Old Standard Grove’s ’ Tasteless chill Tonic is equally valuable as a Gen eral Tonic because * it contains the well known tonic properties ot QUININE and IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builds up the Whole System. 60 cents. ' His Wife Liked.Him. “My wife," said a defendant to the magistrate In the court of domestic relations in Ne\y York, "doesn’t like me.” “Ah. but yho does," answered the magistrate. “That’s the curious fact of the matter, she actually does like you." “Well, even that doesn’t cheer me up any," answered the bur dened’ white tmfti. ,‘T took her for better or for worse, and believe me, I knmv it Hilt 1 £o witlnn its city limits and Indians liv ing In their tepees ajnile and a huff away is something that you cannot grasp unless you know the West. And even If you do, Spokane would strike 1 you as something of a surprise. It looks us-though It had been built yes- i '■'-.lay In wlint ..1. virgin vll(l. ; rn.-«.s (From lhe i, epartmmt the day before—and yet made complete I Aicriouiture ) with street ears and electric lights tmtl j Sw^et-potato growers are warned to everything that you could find in a be on the alert against a new insect New England town, except, perhaps, pest, the sweet^potato leaf-folder, tin- cultured atmosphere. which was" found in UMO In Injurious The Spokaneltes do hot miss the cul- ntpTfBWa In the region of Brownsville, tured.atmosphere. If you asked about. Tex. It has been noted^also in Loul.^1- it, they, would probably tell you that una. Field workers of the Bureau of GRAIN FOR PRODUCING COWS GIRLS! MAKE A BEAUTY LOTION WITH LEMONS they prefer the smell.of the pines. For they are, an outdoors-living crew. A citizen of Spokane may attend a hoard of directors’ meeting in the heart of tluL,cHy at 10 a. ni. and at 4*p. m; he 'may be hunting bear. The moun tains crowd right down upon the city and there are fifty lakes within a ra dius of. a hundred miles. ■' Spokane, like Rome, was not built in .a day. but it was set up at a cate thut makes till of those old saws about how h»ng-i‘t takes to do things look hollow and meaningless. It was only in 1858 that the Indians got their first.decisive defeat in this region and the first loco motive arrived in '1881. By 1S1HI (hey hud ^qmething of a town sturUul, hut It was wiped out f>v fire that year. The real growth begun'when the river was turned into eJectrjc power— 1711,000 horse. From this giant dynamo. iiectricUy reaches out through the can yons to hundreds of mines, driving the j tower trains Into the bowels of the mountains, bringing wealth to the city, which sits like a .spider at the center o£ its mighty web or current. r Much Depends on Quantity of Milk Given and Food Obtained From Good Pasturage. Does it pay to feed grain to cows on i pasture? The results obtained at the University of Missouri ToIIege of Agrl- T culture indicate that It depends largely upon how much milk the cows give j ” At the cost of a small jar of ordinary and how good the pasture Is. If n . cold cream one can prepure a full quar- cow Is producing.less than a pound of , ^ er p| n j 0 f ^j 10 tnoS ( wonderful lemon butter each day the necessary food ran 8 kl n softener and complexion beautifler, be obtained from n good pasture. If gqu^^zing the Juice of 1 two fresh she produces more thaif this som c , lemons Into a bottle containing three grain can ho fed profitably. This means ounrps 0 f orchard white. Care.should that a Jersey cow should he able to get |, e ^ H kon to straln'the Juice through a enough food from grass to make about ?0 pounds of milk dally and‘» Holstein God Won’t Mind. Location — Nonsteara-heated rte- dence In city on shore of fog haunte4 I’acltic.' Outslyle dense fog rolling In from the ocean; wind howling. Time—Midsummer evening. Sfene— Little Jackie, five yearn old, being put to bed by sister ik*veral years older. Youngster In his nightie, shiv ering. • 1 Sister Alice- (considerately)— Jarkl^ you can kneel In bed arid I will cover your shoulders with the blankets whll* you say your prayers. Jackie, promptly springs Into bedL and soon feeling quite comfortably kneeling. In supplication, he turn* hla head slightly toward his sister, with a whisper’: “Alice, do you think this la fair?”—Los Angeles Times. A Teetotal Lots. Mrs. Clubb—This article say* that the reputation of the colonists for obe dience went overboard at the Hoetoa ten party. . ! Mr. Clubb—Yes, and a lot of other reputations have gone overboard at tea parties siwe.—Judge.—*~“ Infection* or inflammation* of the whether from external or internal a are promptly healed by the u*e of R Eye Balaam at night upon retiring. Adv. Only those on the lower part of the wheel are In favor of revolution. 1 " J_JJI l . INSTANT • . Off, Morally. " An old SciWtish woman Wished -to sell a lien to a neighbor. “I’lense tell, me," the-- neighbor said, .“is she altogether a guld bird? Has she nne. fauts, nne fauts at all?" “Aweel, Margot,” the other old wom an ad hilt ted, “she lias got one faut.j Sh.e will hiy on the Lord’s day.”—Bos ton Evening TranscrlnJU^ Eniomology of the United States de partment of agriculture who. have studied the new qpest at Brownsville found It can be controlled by careful spraying. Arsenate of lead, used at 1 the rate of one pound of powder to 5() gallons of water, or zinc arsenate, used at the rate of one pound of pow der to 40 gallons of water, were found effective. These sprays destroyed from 93 to 90 per cent of the larvae on the sweet-potato vines. The* sweet-potato leaf-folder con structs a shelter by folding a leaf or. drawing two leaves together with silk which It spins for the ptfepose! As It Increases In size It devours most of the leaf except the larg^f velns mid naid- i rib. In 1916, at Brbwnsvll 1 e,“Tex., the pest was fi£st observed about the mid dle of September. By the middle of October the caterpillars had become so abundant that it Was found advis able to spray immediately. When done early one spray application may be ! sufficient, whereas If treatment Is de- . layed until a large number of larvae have spun cocoons, two or more uppll-- ' cations inny' ho necessary lp order to effect < complete -control. Natural enemies of this lpsect In Texas are the jackdaw or boat-tailed grrickle and the spined soldier bug. —• ■ COTTON CROP IS NEGLECTED Careless Wrappjng, Sampling Abpses, and Indifferent Storage Illus trate Disregard. about 25 to 30. It will pay to feed grain to all cows which give more than this amount, since high-producing animals cannot gather sufficient feed ln_ the.form of grnsJT A row giving n~ pound and a half of butter Wally shrfuld receive' about five pounds of grain dally, and one giving two pounds of butter should receive seven or eight pounds of grain. When not more than four or five pounds of grain are fed It may Consist of corn. If more than this Is needed, some bran or a small amount of cotton seed meal should be added. These recommendations hold good onlj* when pastures are good. In late summer*if will often be necessary to feed more grain to high-producing cows or -give some silage or greCn f(*eds to help nut the i>astureg.. Deafening Applause. r “iT’m,” meditated the manager. “So you claim to have every qualification of a first-class actor?” y;: “Well,” ref unit'd Jefferson -Hamlet, “perhaps I ought to mention Who- fact that I am slighth’ deaf—the result of ro much applause, you know.” Conservation. “DJ& you have any Tuck fishing?” WelL I didn’t catch any fisdi. But I made the same piece of halt last a remarkably- long time,” Not Exactly. ~ ‘Tfiese. society women are going to' dance In their hare feet.”— - “How bare-faced !’’t 1 ^ as coffee's si on table makes for better health and There Jsr.no jigrTcultural i>roduct tluit Is so neglected as American cotton-. The careless wrapping, the sampling | abuses, Indifferent storage and country damage all combine to Illustrate In a most striking manner,the utter ilhsre- gard of consequences and careless in difference which exists In the handling and marketing of this Important .and valuable crop. In no oth<*r case does a-farmer care for hlfTproduct from t^ie time tt„-is planted in the spring until Jt ls harvested in the autuiun, and then expose jijtjt.o all kinds of weather arid ahuse'. T ‘ .• * - fine cloth so no lemon pulp gets In, ! then this lotion will keep fresh for months. Every woman knows that lem on Juice Is used to bleach and remove such blemishes as freckles, sallowness and tan anil is the Ideal skin softener. wnoothener and hwnittfter- , -I Just try It I Get, three ounces Df orchard white at any pharmacy and two lemons from the grocer and make up a quarter pint of this sweetly frag rant lemon lotion and massage It dally Into the face, neck,-arms and hands. It should naturally help to whiten, soften, freshen rind bring out the roses and beftuty of any skin*Jt Is truly marvel ous to smoothen rough, red hands. Adv. Valley. Wash., Is to have a new bo^ pltal built by contributions from far*** ers. v 11 ■. . i ■ i” 111 —■* A GUARANTEED REMEDY FOB HAY FEVER-ASTHMA Yoor *o*rr WILL *■ HTnMD by yo«r ir^M wltboat to? qaMtion If tbl* remedy doe* i ‘ HOI * ' every cuetol Attbma, Bronrhlal Aiibmi AilhmaMc i matter bow Tlolent U>« attack* or o Asthmatic symptom* aecompasylnr Hay Twee. Ha lent Um attack* or obaUnaia Om cms A DR. R. SCHIFFMANN’S W% AsthmadoR AND ASTHMADOR CIGARETTES posItlTely give* INSTANT KBUBF la ererj ajM and ba* permanently, cared thousand* who considered Incurable, after bavin* tried ew mean* of relief In Tain. Asthmatics sho* tbemselee* of this rnaranteeoffer tbroa*ktl druggist. Bara fiO-cent package and present tMs announcement to your druggist. Xou will ba tha •ole judge as to whether |<>u are beneflttad and “ STAPLE FOOD CROPS NEEDED / —— Enlarged Production Is Greatest and Most Important Service Required . of Farmer*.”!- q MORE ACREAGE FOR TURNIPS triable.I. Fine fop Human CanT^ jwfot MaRea Ideal Spot tfon—6ov forj Growlhg Crop. The turnip' acreage shou)d be In creased this year. * Turnips-ar^ fine- for human Consumption and are easy to grow. Many fanners fix a cowlot at this season of yeai In which the cows are milked and penned at night, using thti rich spot for turnips in fall. a Seorefevfy of Agriculture Houston, In urging the planting of a heavy acreage i of food and f<*ed crops, emphasizes par- j tlcularly the practical certainty that ' all such crops will bring ‘ very hlgli prices. He says:,' ,‘Tt Is obvious thirit the greatest a most Important service that Is/'re- qulted of our agriculture un(U>T exist ing conditions Is an enlarged produc tion of the staple food*crops. Because of the shortage of such crops practical- ly Throughout the world 'there Is no risk In thfe near future of excessive- production sqch -as sometimes has re- , suited In unrernuneratlve prices to pri>- ducers. This Is partlcularTy^inie of the j cereals and of peas' beans, cbwpeas, j soy lienns and Imckwheat. In view Lif. > the- world scarcltyoffood, there Is hardly a ’possibility' that the' pro duction of these crops by.the farm ers of the United States-can be too. greut this year,' and there is a bun. dant reuson to expect generous price returns' for a’-l available surplus.” - ' -Ag ‘ • RAISE BIG CROP OF CELERY Cannot Be Done Without Liberal Sup- ply of Moisture,-but Many Gar-, deners Are Trying It. fo grow a big crop of celery without a liberal supply of moisture,, but many garden era-are ^trying to- do It. Numerous failures could Ife cited frhere thVre was little hope of success even If the sea son hajl lieen favorable. Unless It li possible' to Irrigate, It la never saie to plant this vegetable on a large scale except In naturally mol*t bo I 1b abound Ing In hum a*. He Didn't Care. A man pushed his way hurriedly into the subway at Brooklyn bridge in New York. In his. haste he. collided .with another man, who was-not too hot to fight. 7 \ / _1 “Look where you’re going," shouted the. mllituut aa Ire grubbed the other. “I’m going to knock your block off.” i “I sliould worry. I was caught in /-•the draft,” said “the other wtth an itlr of reslghatlon. / ~ ■ * The man who —wanted to fight/; laughed, ‘while everybody In the car Joined \u,/ ■ >-. ” ” ~4 druggist will gUe you back your money If yoa i know of any fiir not. We do not whlcb we could make. irer R. Schiffmann Co., Proprietori, 8L Pad, I ABSORBiNE ** KAOf MANMUG.O S PA’ Tommy Explains. *" - A coupl^ of-'Charlestown kiddies were celebrattfHL.Btinker Hill Day by exploding a few thrpedoes, according to the Boston Transcjrlptp-Sald Nellie: “I"don’t see how the GerBians"C«nblow up a big ship with one of these thln^lC/ “Oh, you girls can’t exp<£t to under- frtnml-abuut^uch- th IngK,” -said Tottery, - mfjuwr with a superior air. “Of cours*^ th*- torpednesthey use are about n hundred times as big and they-use a derrick lift them up -and- drop them -nn the ship,” ./ • . ^ Will reduce Inflamed, Strained, Swollen Tendons, Ligament*, or Muscles. Stop* the lameness and priin from a Splint, Side Booe or Bone Spavin. No blister, no kair gone and hone can be used. $2 a Bottle at druggist* or delivered. De scribe your caie for special instnso- tions and interesting horse Book 2 M FreeL ABSORBINE, JR,, the antiseptic liniment far mankind, reduce* Strained, Torn Ligs* jnent*. Swollen Glands. Vein* or Mn* Heal* Cut*. Sorea,« tlcer». Alley* pus. . II 00 » boniest dealerfor drlirered. B.«k "trideaee" I W. F. YOUNG, f. 0. F, 310 Temple Street, SplegfeM,! t ECZEMA! Money bncli without queation ilgUNT'a CURE fall* In the treatment of ITCH, ECZEMA, RING WCntM,TETTER or other Itching akin diaeases. Price 5(jc at druggists, or tUre<-t I rote A. I. RicharBa Midiciss Co .Sbtnka* Til English as She Is Spoke. \ “Filmiy thirig about'food.” • “Yos jCn skortago and a longing al ways exist #t tho saino time.” THE CROWELL SANi for MORPHINE and ALCOHOLIC ADDICTIONS Methods safe and successful. A high class * -cotublDlhg the facilities of a sanatorium wit* < tofts and freeduu, of a private borne, li treatment. Our method render* the tn MORPHINISM a* painless as an Write for reserved room. Tern s 11X00. 9 N. Caldwell St. ©HAKLOTT*. The ancients believed tlif^world was square—hut* tha) was long befoT lltleal InvestIgntloB cominlttees were}; Invented. ■‘ f ' "OUR GROCER TOLD ME ! * * After folks taste » Post Toasties they dont like - common corn flakes ANTISEPTIC POWDER FOR PERSONAL Dissolved in wnlar fotl i^nfcmretk Recommended hj Lydie E. Pink hem Med. Co, for ten pease. A heeling wander for nesel •ore throe! end Has HEED POTATOES—Cobblt-rs. Early d Bliss. Mains and Red January and Februi Per price* write Bey grown, for II - W. N. U, ■SB -: ' * NO. 33-HIT. ■F 1