Barnwell sentinel. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 185?-1925, September 27, 1917, Image 7
, BOTW01BULUIA
LU7TDDIJ CDHKS.
OFF WITH FINGERS 1
~ From tie farm nianagetuent'stROil-
point It. Is always .a great deal better
to .have things ready for the silo long!
before they are needed. It does not|
take any more time-to see that; t^et
knives of the cutler are sharpened aiulj
that the binder Is In good working pr-jj
def at one period of the yeay ihdtij ltj
doeH at another .and it uijiv me^a aj
good many dollars to the ran^ierj|
writes C, W., I'ugsley. In field omg
Fanp. No mouey is saved by mietl&pl-j}
ing to get along with too little help?
‘Filling the, siki at tbe'bf*<?i is rotlieijj
heavy work and as a rule'we do notjj
like that part of It which demuhdi'.thq
handling of heavy bundles of corn* In
teams and men chough ari: on hai#! tol
Tear aoaiT wnx u umnn by your arngglnt
Wtthont any question If tbla reinedr iloeebot beneflt
•very case of Ant h ms, Bronchial Asthma, Hay
F«w or HlfflqoU HreatlUoK- ho matter boa
v How, to loosdn m tender com
iwpififly *dWL.MK P*5. ult *i If the
his own silo and de-
niw u cutter with,
knives from 14 to 2<j> inches, depending"
upon, tfi& capacity’’ of the silo, will give
the ht^t r Jr thy s!Io is^ kbOve^
t'roulva lllywr - tit t«r should he i
of callus so i|t lilts out
\tV withfeut pain.
Ihcrfonn (Cigarette, Pipe Mixture or Powder)
lively giree INSTANT KH1.1UK in cyery case
b&s permanently cored tbuus&nds'wbo bad been
ldered incurable, after haring tried every other
se of relief-1 n vain. Sufferers are afforded an
irtnnlty of availing ihctamelvcs of (his "llun«y
i” guarantee offer as through purchasing from
r own regular Druggist, they aro sure their
ey will bo refunded by him If the remedy rails.
by pll iiiMrw. 4J’Jins «n hnitgp-
ground sirs ky\ uloQgr'Wiili s
chain 1 carrrt^i^lvf imtttW thr SfyloNiT
cutter, it should have a distributor.
Thlsgiyi^DKyoJy »i seried of. joktffc^of.
plpef /H^fDpd with snaps mod rings4^
JMBg|§£!«&3'“Wke, it jTexfe . It ex
tends fr.om tin’ cml,of Uh 1 ,|ilo>ve.f qv
froift the end oLtiie carrier VowTUifn
Easy to Remedy.
. - Jones W ims 'wt-ways cpm|>falning of his
wife's mertiury. ■
-“She can* never remember anything,",
said he. ,
“My wife wns.'jukt :is;b:nl," said
Brown, “till I found out a.capital ry-
clpe.” -vf
‘‘What is-ft ?“ nske<L Junes. eagerly.
“Why,” said Brown, -"whenever
there's any I fling particular I wpnt this
missus to, remember I write if* on-a
slip of jiapcr ami gum it on The looking
glass.”
Jones is now a contented rinm:;—
» f.-w n-et of fhV* bottom of the silo,
less trouble will be experienced in get
ting help. *
Heaviest Expensee. 1
One of (In* heaviest expenses,Ipjfcoif
nection with filling is ike cost of in
engine and an Yngineet* and whet nr
outfit is hired the farmer should se<
that It Is used to, full eapneity. 3Thi;
Evenly Distributed
In this-min#^
distributed all <n
not t lid Paso wftn
fall's, from the toj
or chain carrier,
of the ensilaar
pieces of ears xi
fl# benefi lal as it is ei
■ 1 • -> / * ‘ '' • : - ' ”.” r
abU —in other words, dc
r 1n:l mert if . “ "*
* tne beneficial: that’s why
COSTLY CHIMES FOR CADETS
Big Set of Bells Is Being Made for
Chapel at United States Military
Academy at West Point. ^
GLEYS
; A Poor Counter.,
“fje’*5 an expert accountant
“I ilou\Xbelieye if. I I da
with hlpvthe other day and t
he hflnfted in convinced .me
never studlm! iiriilTmetic." ‘
Whatf ls' said to be The most costly
chime of bell's lrt America and one - of
the most musical sets In existence is
now being made at the foundry of the
McmNdy-Bell company of Troy, N. Y.,
for the mrrtc-ive tower of Cadet chapel.
Rev. If. rv^Jilver, rlmpfaln at .the
trpited States military aeaTlemy, West
Point, as the'gift Sirs. James ^1.
the world over;
. 9
g watch or a hard
le more cheerful
• ' 1 - 7 A 7
lasting refreshment.
is topula
Many a lo
Deliberation is a l
broken few recufds
m'mm
Dawton. in memory oilier father, the
A PHYSICAL WRECK
Laid Up In Bed, Barely Holding
Onto Life. Doan’s Effected
Marvelous Recovery.
late MaJ. Gen. Robert Anderson, who
graduated from the aeadeniy in
-was -graduated from the nendemy in
1825, and whose brilliant coimnand of
Fort*-Sumpter at the outbreak of the
•flvll wor has thrilled millions of read*
ers of American • history, says the
Watchman-Examiner. ’ ..
.There will be 12 bells in the Chime,
the largest weighing nearly two tons
and measuring od inches, at. its mouth.
The cadet chii.pel Is of stotle quarried
from 1 rock found on the military
grounds and cost to build about half
a million-dollars.'. 11s commanding po
sition on the. lull -back from the Hud
son river flakes an ideal place for
hells, and the patriotic airs from the
chime will sound throughout the beau
tiful highlands, In the midst of which
tjhe military academy is situated, and
pruxe a source of pispfration to the fu
ture generals of thy Fnited Slates
jinny.that will always Huger with them
tbe Flavor Lasts
“Without warning- 1 was dragged to
the brink of the. grave by malignant
kidney trouble. 7 ’ .-ays Robert’ Wrn-
gatz, 114 Cypress Are., Bronx, N. Y.
"My kidncye’eeeined to stop acting and
the pains in iny back
^ were’ terrible. Big,
jL A bloaty puffs caTne under
101S my eye's and attacks of
ft. dizziness qftdn blinded
'vY / jH rtic. My linvlw swelled
) -Vi twice normal size and I
could pn*ss big'denta in*
Atter EveryMeJI
: V ? I
Aids appetite
and digestion
"1 was confined to
Mr wr <1 an( ^ convulsioaij
nr. Wtagitz. gt-vcral times a ‘ dgy.
Defipite the best of treatment. I grexv
worse and Aas tc,ken to the hospital.
1 didn't improve, however, and was
hro'uglit home agaiu, barely holding
onto life. ■ . r
“Toward the last of I013T a~friend
persuaded me to try Doan's Kidney
yills and I cannot put into woriu
what they did for me. The first box
helped .more than all the other medi
cine* and .treatments I had taken. ' I
continued and from an emaciated xvreek
of a man I have taken on good, solid
flesh until I now weigh 225*pounds and
am in the best of health, Doan's alone
deserve the credit.”
fif-'orn lo before me,
JAMES T. COUGHLIN, Com. of Deeds
Get Doan'a at Any Star*, 60c a Bos
DOAN’S VOSS?
FOSTER-MILBURN CO^ BUFFALO, N. Y.
FARMER CANNOT AFFORD TO' BE WdTrtOUT SILO.
Between U* Girls.
Miss Sharpe—Some men can 1m* led,
hut others must be driven.
/ Young Sharper—Oh, yes I Bnf whijie
you can ..drive a mun to drink you
can’t always lend him to tin? altar,
Soldiers and Officers.
The iientenant was testing the squad
in visional pofvcr. »X < .
‘‘TelLme, No, 1," no said, “how many
mini nrc In the trench digging party
over there?”
"Thirty men snd ono officer,’* was
can only bp done by supplying a* suffi
cient amount of labor to keep every
thing running. Some 1 farmers favor
a smaller cutter and letflng the titling
period extend over piore tjme. 4n some
Instances this Is probably an eeo-
I knoxv
point of distribution, w hile the lighter
portions, the basks and the stalks will
be scattered further away. This makes
it necessary'to fork over the' ensilage
and with the greatest of care the corn,
husks and stalks are not evenly dis
tributed. The distributor will give on
CLEAR YOUR COMPLEXION
While You Sleep With Cuticura Soap
and Ointment—Trial Free.
nomical practice.
ope man
who uses a small eutter with a chain
carrier—the type that demands the
least power—and runs It with his
farm gasoline engine. He uses the or
dinary help of the ranch with perhaps
an additional man or two ami extends.
the filling of a hundred ton silo over a
period of a week. This of course has
the.disadvantage very often of allow
ing part of tfoy corn to become too
ripe, as it Is nowv*while' that which
was put In first'may be a little green.
Different Cutters.
Tbe mitter selected will depend
? i somewhat upon the kind of silo nirtf
t upon the system of filling adopter If
REMARKABT.K LETTER FROH \ WELL
* KNOWN WASHINGTON DRUGGIST,
ip reference to Rltxlr Babek tbe gr*mt r«m«g>
tor cHUU and fmvr end all matmrimt Wi*«a««<.
“Within the lam Are month* I have sold
hot tics of Elixir Babek for Malaria,Chillsand
Fever. Oar customers npeak vrty well of It.”
Henry Evans,922 F*8t.,N. W.,Washington, D. C.
Kllxfr Babek SO cents, all druggists, or by
Parcel Post, prepaid, from Kloczewski A Go.,
Watihicgton, D. C.
Oa retiring, gently smear Flic face
with Cuticura Ointment, wash off in
five minutes with Cuticura' STiap and
hot water, and continue bathing a few
minutes w;lth the Soap. The influence
of tliis treatment on the pores extends
through the night.
Free sample each by mail with Book.
Address postenr^, Cuticura, Dept. L,
Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv.
“Quito right. But how do you know
one was an officer at this distance?”
: “Cos he's the only one not workiug!”
—Scottish American.
Plenty of It.
“BraglCy says his new house Is heat
ed with hot air.” , -
“Then it Is well heated. I've beard
BragleyThlk!*
Chills and Fever, Biliousness.
Constipation and ailments
requiring a TONIC treatment:
A Measly Haul.
"first Burglar—- Hello, pard! ]
haven't seen ye since you Tracked dill
crib on Jenkins street. Git anything'
Second Burglar—Yes. but * I difln'1
know ii until.about a week afierward
I got dc measles.-
In profanity It Is not so much what
one says as the manner In which It Is
uttered. ' , '
Indignation prodnr»# 4lwgre«oblo a
•omotlmc-a alarming- aymptom*. Wrlgk
Indian VrgrtaM* Pill* *tlmulat« th* dip
tlv* pro, <•**«* to function naturally. A4v.
DETERMINE AGE OF CHICKEN EXCELLENT AS COVER CROPS
GUARANTEED
and made bt)
Behrens Drug Cd
Waco. T»x. _, /v
Sold bu U|
All Druggists tIUl
After a woman reaches a certain ago
she never mentions It.
If your eyea amnrt or feel ocalded. Ro
man Eye Balsam applied upon going to bed
la just the thtnp tb relieve them, Adv.
Bur Clover and Melflotus Indies, For
meffy- Regarded as Menacing
Weeds, Now Useful.
Amopg^Many Other Signs or Indicu*
^-^tions Legs and Toes of’Young
Fowl Are Quite Smooth.
Love-in a-Cottage.
He—Their engagement Is broken off,
There is no place like home—wh
a inan is broke. ' ■ —*
I understand
A score of years agotuir clover was
considered but a weetl and such a
menace TrrtJTWT^ gardens anil fields
that afl feared to encourage It. Later
it became a'famed cover crop. I.ike-
wlse Mclilotus Indlea. the-yellow-flow-
ering melilot. is now a high-grade
cover crop for djry lands. Vet for. ail
I time It has been h vile weed know::.
You can rarely tell the age of a fowl,
after It is over one year old. The tip
of a young chicken’s breast Tmne U
flexible, so are the pelvic hones, but '
are rigid In the old fowl. Tin* legs’}
and toes of a young hlrd are touch }
s.moother than the old. There are f
fewer pin-feathers In the old bird, and
more long hairs. The plumage of the
young bird Is usually brighter •'H
smoother, and not so faded, as in the 'rt
older bird. The face of the old bird
is more Wrinkled, and there Is more of
a shrunken appearance around the
eyes. The Hen often hex a baggy,
broken down effect behtnd. The spurs
ripufnn Indicatfon of If you notice
beneath the wings of an old bird, you
will fail to % seix atr evidenceof^ veins,
but In tin" yntuiger birds ihe |ulrpb*
crrlo^l M ins' avUilUe uitdCr' the
wing. Yoipwiil find the bortofn or 1 all
of the fom of tju* tnrtnre birds harder
and, iinch more eiUloused than in. 'He
• •astyhf the wofinger fowl.
She—Oh, yes.'
He—What was the reason?
She—Why, both were satb-fied that
they could , live on love In a cottage.
hut when they got to details they dls
Net Contents 15 Fluid Draohi
covered jhat each of them coatem
plated supplying nothing but the love
For Infants and Children.
Fifty-Fifty.
Bernard was present at a dinner par
ty, In w hich some of the guests brought
their children: One little girl wanted
to play wlth^Bernartl's toys, but- he
wjrs selfish ami wouldn’t let her.
“Now, Bernard,” said mother, “you
must lie a little gentleman.”
“Yes,” s:Mfj he, “but she must be a
lady.”
ALGDHOL-G riilt CENT.
ALuLUiOL«-o 1 ^*-‘**’
i AVe^ciaWc Preparation &r.\s
i’similatimiLhcFocd Ir.’K^ula-
Gows freM-.Q-t»m itmUuig* and dirt. est.
pecially lu the regmirof the udder nnd
flanks: .utojij^<th.‘it ore ertrefjilly
e|< a used. s;ejfh)l'(r:'nfl.drix*d ; ami * are
Oil -profectien of tin' milk froth flies
ajuT dirt, after prod’.le- ‘*o ; .will pi : »--
vent tlie entrance of b.e *Tia ‘ imo
tin^thc S’omRdts aiwjUo^jsrf
IFYOUOUrMAUmEFiaD
I FOR THE UMtfS SAKE ,
DRjUB IT IYELIT0 MAKE IT TIED
^\i(ould Give Him the Li
Roundm^This g,*is i»ili is
cents. .'
Clerk-**Well A >«ir?
Rounder—Better malee it S
wife keeps the bills, but I’vhhj
ing her that during her abst
spent all my .evenings at Imini
ThcrctJjf Promoting Diction
Cheerfulness atuj Rest.Ccf^^
neither Opidtu,Morphine n0 .
Mineral. Not Narcotic
■h'm/KXX ■
Jtociptaf OUtD:
Pumpkin 5*d \
JixSrtum I
JhthfUr Seilt I
jOuMiitd I
/
HmnSml I
(UnMSojer I
hfiArymsi Flaror J
A hclpfulRcmedy for
TWELVE THINGS TO DO IN SEPTEMBER
When He Howled.
“Hubby, the maid ha* gone and sh<
*
took inv dinmoraJ ti«rn;V
“Well, I don’t like notoriety.'"Let
It go.” -
“She also toek a jiei-k.of potatoes.’
.‘ Send for *he ;«oli»*o“’• .
I. Riant a big turnip pat< h ff you have not already done *
1 Avoid loss by peeping-the cotton'picked a-j fast as it
fi. Select,’ydiir cotton s.*(*d for next year’s, planting from th
stalks, and then have them'ginned separately.
-4./Select your seed com In-the field, and - then ehr< fully st*
prevent loss. : -
5. St-art planting oats, especially in. the northern half of th
ton belt. 7 ' ✓ ^
6. Try a patch of Abniy.zi -rye-for early fall and winter g
7. Be sure to plant,crimson clover on all cotton lands-that
go In corn nvxt year. ' - ; . • - ~'-~Z ^
8. Try some bur clover on your Bermuda pastures; it will 7;
valimbb* winter uml splTHiiaiuaMRO 11 f V" [,i< i
9. Save an abundance of -seed peas for next year.
IQ. Start the children to school.jnd visit the school your*el
II. Don’t rush your cotton on a depressed market; arr.Thge
all yon can for better price*.'*'4' ^
• 12. Savfe all the hay and other rrtqgHnge
feeding. \ ;
0) Men for town'ao.t oountry schools, ITS to
1100; (2) Lodlt *. combining music and commoa
school; (3)j&r»dc sod high school. Can plooa
sll qualified teachers. Copracedaotad da-
mana: Writo today. Special enrolltnent.
Sootkcro Teachers’ Ageacy, Cdambit, S,C.
Cbnslipalion and Didirhoc*
ij and Fearrishncss arul
LOSS OK SLEEP
! resulting tticrefroraunlirtancy
,
•facsimile Si^natwrof
Who Wants bffea
butter when a 1
can have
KODAKS
EXPERT
DEVELOP! NQ
All roll Alans developed 10c. Prints31*
5 cts. Promp^attcnUontoinallardara.
B. C. BERNAU, UreoiiaUoro, If. O.
jst Cental CoMP,oor '
T J1^V”Y0HK«
winter
KODAKS &
*)oo Drops
LET US SUBMIT PRICES
COLUMBIA CLAY CO.
COillMBIA^SOUTH CAROLINA
m
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