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The Growinc Look-al. This? V 4 - —•. ■ ‘V - ■ State Bank Examiner Nov. 20th. 1917 Do businers with a growing bank, they, wit! take carb of their Customers interest Harry D. Calhoun, Pres. NormanG. Gamble, Cashier - 4 r William McNabb, Asst. Cashier. Better Farming in the South The Costs of Most Materials and NE’PONSE'^ * WALL BOARD takes the place of wooden t rimming,- paneling, wainscoting, or plaster. May be paiMud any color, so is* eminently adapted for use on upper walls and ceiling*. Anyone can put it on. FRUIT Neponset Wall Board < ’ om b.i 11es^.epQnowy and attract ivenu.es.. Its dura v is longer tlrau plaster. It cannot crack *or fall maximum FARMERS Youngblood Roofing & Mantel Co Mantels, Tiles, Orates, \Ietal Roofing Lite. 007 Broad St. . Augusta, Qa Agents for THE FARMER—ONE OF UNCLE SAM’S DEFENDANTS NUNNALY’S f » ■ , ■ « Fine Candies By D. B. Osborne, Chairman Soil Im provement Committee, Atlanta, G* ^ Mr. Farmer: The above picture yBH exemplifies 'the yRiitA V u vital t»*ie of your most pressing prob- K^ais and one to be acted ypon without delay, is the matter of obtaining your fertilizer. * i • . , : In spite of the best efforts of the manufacturers and the Government, materials for making fertilizers a.re scarce and high in price. Therefore, it is all the more necessary that what fertilizers are to be distribute^!, should be used upon soil that has received the very best preparations the farmer is capable of giving. The mobilization of our army, re quiring a maximum movement of troop trains arid supply trains,, has qv- er-taxed the capacity of our railroads as never before., and- in order for fer- lilizers £• be distributed this season, the. movement must of necessity, be gin. earfy and the unloading of cars at destination be done with utmost despatch. Every car must be loaded to capacity. Today fertilizers are cheapen than • farm crops or farm labor. A bale of cotton, a bushel of corn, oats or j wheat, wifi'buy more pounds of fertil izers, now than ever before, hence to assure the, performance .of a patriotic duty, with great profit to yourself, or der your fertilizers promptly so that you rtiaV be sure to get them:- And when ^enu get them, use them with the greatest degree of intelligence x \ Satisfactory results are bound to fol low —Jjadh to you and to the Govern- ; ment. ’ * . ' ! AN APPRECIATION importance of your position , in p'"4> fbe World War - f. The fight of free- 11,1111 l!:i1 '*• (, y against (b-ri. .in autocracy. ' : C I Tip on y-o-u +s placed the grave '*322 responsibility of m producing abund- D. b. OSBORNE ant crops » with which to feed and clothe our army and navy; the armies and navies of our Allies—our own people at home and the peoples of ouy Allies in. Eu- tlu* ligtiros in i iu ih> h iiidred** i thou ands is umisua We uiH 1 / Htjd (to j»iy Hjifire-. i de 'he fact.-that 11.i^ pin T i ' mn a i'cr»M«f js dn* ; to our old Mends and the hun dred*-oi * ew ones »e li v rre-n'ly gained, g *ne*'iu-1 v t. o king tin* i r ceetlsTrt-rhis je» rs bountiful hurvert with rope Failure would bring disaster to our army and an untimely and unneces sary death to many of our boys who have gone forth to battle in defense of our liberty. But, Mr. F'arm'er. we know th.'ft ufi- der tbe great responsibility placed' on you by our Government, that there is no such word as “fail” in your vo cabulary aqd that nothing short of in surmountable providential causes could prevent your answering fully to 'this responsibility. However, maximum crops can only be had by the Judicious and intensive use of .fertilizers, good seed, thorough cultivation, and labor-saving machin- SHAVE AT / fll. L. Middleton’s Barber Shop Bank of Western Carolina Read Office: AIK tN S C BARNWELL, S. C Everything Strictly Solitary Every man gets 4 a c 1 > a r be rs*. E veryfc 11 i n g are experts in childrei the best- shine r.t uicl i Ron out in very insoluble ' forms, Further, land that is well supplied with organic, matter makes a better use of ground phosphate rock. The principal winter legumes adapted to South Carolina arp the vetc hes anil .clovers, while in sdmmer feeding .peas and beans give best re sults as legume crops. Alfalfa is an excellent nitrogep gatherer but is rather expensive and., sometimes dif ficult to get started, and then must remain on the land for three or four years to give Its full returns. The idea that a large part of the nitrogen fixed by the bacteria is stor ied in the r.oots of the legume is wrong, j Experiment^ indicate that only six :per cent of the nitrogen in the cow- Ipea plant is stored in the root^, 6.5 per cent in soybeans, eleven per cent /on the roots of vetch, six percent for' • crimson clover; ami as much as j thirty-two per cent for red clover and.I I forty-two per cent in case of alfalfa, *- . > — .The stubble contains some nitrogen in addition (to that sIDred ip the roots, ij The armriint of nitrogen takem^-up i\i-fl+TT the plant is about two-thirds of the total. In other words, one ton of ’ cow peas- or soybean plants -which We solicit your pain magi M, L. Middleton J Proprietor How many pounds to a ton—2000 or 1500? - ORGANIC MATERIALS CARRYING ELEMENT B^ING USED FOR OJftER PURPOSES. H OW many pounds of real roughage are you getting to a ton? If you are buying old style hulls you are getting about 1500 pounds because they are about one-fourth lint which has no food value. If you are buying HULLS • LINTLESS you are getting 2000 Tull pounds because they are free firom lint-and are practically 100 percent roughage. Try them and see how much farther they go. Other Advantages > Cost much less per ton than old No trash or dust, style hulls. Sacked—easy to handle. Allow better assimilation of other They mix well with other for* food. , age. Mr. W. C. Owens, Charlotte, N. C., * '• ' 4 , feeds ihirly cows. He considers Buckeye Hulls the cheapest feed and yets the best results. To secure the best results and to develop the ensilage odor, wet the hull$ thoroughly twelve hours before feeding. It is easy Jo do this by wetting them down night and morning (or the next feeding .-Tit at any time this canpot be done, wet down at least thirty minutes. If you prefer to feed the hulls dry, use odly half as much by bulk as ef old style hulls. Book of Mixed Feeds Free Gives the right formula for every combination of feedq used in the •South. Tells how much to feed for maintenance, for milk! for fat tening, for wort. Describes Buckeye Hulls and gives directions for usipg them properly. Send for your copy to the nearest mill. Dept. X The Buckeye Cotton Oil Co. Dept. X Atlanta Birmingham Greenwood Little Koch . Memphis Augusta Charlotte Jachson . Macon Selma its services to those lookin any kind. No aecoi . * 1 or too small f6r us Ns. * v ,.., . . . .* “m .. . both will receive tlie ful attention. same care J. \. lUrley, President, i W. G. W. Walker; Vice Pres A. M. Denbow, Vice Pres. L. P. Wilson, Cashier. nitrogen' problem. By growing good, erops of legumes not only will a good supply of n'trogeh be added tq the soil blit the deray of the organic mat ter of the plants will bring lnto^ avail able form a ldTra- amount of notash Tb!3 potash is already present in 1 the