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■4 BARNWELL SENTINEL, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA CORN WEEVIL MENACE TO GRAIN SHIPPERS Can Use Only Precautionary Measures in Elevators./ Aim Should Be to Destroy In&ecta Be fore Grain Is Shipped—Estimated Lota of 10 Per Cent in Southern State*. Time of Sowing Depends Largely jon Latitude ana Use to Be V Made of Crop. X Canton, Ohio.^—“I suffered front a female trouble which caused: me much - ,.r suffering,-and two 1 liltliiiiiilllllil doctors decided I!jHEStmui that I would have to go through an Jjy operation before I ML ^VEp could get well, i “Mymother, who I ke*n helped by W%'l - LydiaE. Pinkhama ! Wgni Ji I i Vegetable Com- pou^d, advised-me j] to try it before sub- . ^aT' JMrLfmitting'toan opera- nt * ' * ' r&j&t tion. It relieved me w ' ' from tny trouble* bo I can do my house work without any difficulty. I advise any woman who i* afflicted with female troubles to give Lydia E. Pinkham’** Vegetable Com pound a trial and it will do as much for them.’’—Mrs. Marie Boyd, 1421 5th St, N. E., Canton, Ohio t Sometimes there are ,aerioa8 condi tions whetft itjhospital operation is the only alternative, but on the other hand so many women have been cured by thi* famous root and herb remedy. Lvdia E. Pinkham'* Vegetable Compound, after doctors haveasdd that an operation was necessary — every w-oman who want* to avoid an operation should give iTa fair trial before submitting to such a trying ordeal. / If complications exist, write to Lydia HAS MANY DECORATIONS Genuine Shock Has Corne to Those Who in Old Days Admired Indus trious Hollander Whose Only Occupation Now Is in Deeds of Daring and Robbery—Country Is New Paradise for Thieves. —r* Plan,t& Grow Slowly in Co61 Weather and Ordinarily There Is No Ad vantage in Planting Earlier * Than the Corn Crop. The Hugue.—To tbase who knew the Hollander before the war as- a hplmina do It.” The plow did not ap peal nearly so modi as the light field equipment along the frontier. The long hikes along the towpaths were not nearly so attractive as the short quiet, well-behaved, thrifty and indus trious soul, copient to pursue the even tenor of his, way and sticking reli^1- ously to orderliness and goddt-behay- lor, his transforms tlon^inee the sj>_ r n- ing of the armistice , last November yoml his control. YetJie can indirect ly exert qn intluenee toward its eradi cation*.' Tlie Problem is weevils, in corn. While the matter rests primarily with The farmer, and while he is a heavier h-iser than the shipper, the business of ’the latter is handicapped:- - Against th<* increase of live weevils In* corn the shipper can use only pre cautionary measures while the grain i'H in his eletHUiirsip in transit after ship ment. The aim .should be to destroy them before the grain is' shipped. When this is hot done the weevils may ‘increase enormously in hot weather, should tbeneath • delayed in Jt/ansLt or not he onhTaded promptly - oh its ar rival at the terminal market. (Prepare*! by 4he United States Depart st r> t<'in-s betweea suuUrv posts on the. Agrleuttw**. > : border between Holland's eastern provinces and the Wostphaliun or Prussian country. It was found a hard matter to-get the Hollander hack Into a civilian job, not because the<Job W*g not there hut because the erst while thrifty Ihitehnmn no longer carhd for the Job. ' - Food Shortage a-Gause. For many months now life for the Although soy beans and cowpeas rmfybc* - >rrwn yiuring__a period from early spring until ‘ midsutnTner, the time of planting dependviuxgely on the latitude and the use to he made of :wil] come as a genuine shock Ing army of some 50,000 was com the Crop. 'As a main grain or hay crop the best time for planting is about the siunc as f*rr corn, or when the ground has become thoroughly warm. The plants will then start quickly and posed of young men who served their allotted time in the military service c»f- theircountry with the minimum of, grumbling, returning cheerfully to the I plow, or the dairy, or the fisheries, as law-abiding I>utrhmirn and his family soi>n as their term of army was over. Except for an ever watchful her«t**fiTT?r. Holland lived a grow slowly in cool Weather* and or dinarily there ’Is no advantage in planting earlier than Corn. Experi ments have shown that the soy heiui may be abte tn wtrhsnmd more entd trr has been anything hut a paradise and the shortage of food has.been but a small mutter In the grand total of this enerak unhappiness rn M«wWPT Unl g?. H ,v '</ iSs y / c«mt er i n- "E. Pinkham Medicine t^ur, Lynn, Um, it will for advice. The’result of many years he ate experience is at your serviee.- The principal * thing that, has been worryln'-T Holland has been the bur- p glur. who has.since before the f’hrist- mas holidays become a sort of nation al institution, like the cheese and the gin. Acts of,violence tire of dally, In firct. _ t nf. boorly, ntauJfTTtM'e— 111 the country districts - -as well ms in* the ■cTilcs. Not alone must doors be -e- I to sample grad** because infested With TTve' weevilk." rhat the p-rnin shipper must is ilia],the corn may go-into n Its arrival ,ut a terminal No terminal elevator eotn- I put corn containiniT *Tlve nervousness and sickness, ito n-. bins unless Intending CiROVE S TASTELES! You Do More Work, i You are more ambitious and you get mor* enjoyment out of everything when your blood is in good condition. Impurities in the blood have a very depressing effect on the system, causing weakness, laziness. GENERAL LEROY UPTON and Enriching the Blood. When you feel its strengthening, invigorating effect, see tier can destroy j, ow j t brings color to the cheeks and how •vutnr or ware- it improves the appetite, you will then licet the source appreciate its true tonic value, the farm. GROVE S TASTELESS Chill TONIC cd that weevils >* hot a patent medicine, it is simply al Ws uf 1U per an d QUININE suspended In Syrup. . the Southern 80 P ,easant « v «n children like It The blood needs Quinine to Purify it and IRON 1 he prevented. l0 Enrich | t . These reliable tonic prop* s. It is said, is erties never fail to drive out Impurities in ed at length in the blood. lirjh of the L’uL The Strength-Creating Power of GROVE'S t of agriculture. TASTELESS Chill TONIC has made it — U h Je .He - grain liea the weevils in his ele house, this .does not al of supply vfllieh Is oil .It Inis been estimuti causo an aveiage^tnnu; cent of. thy com i - rop i stnths. 'fills loss can Tin* control • if weevfli hinip.le. It is iHwrtissi Farmers' Bulletin No. ] ted States department Soy Beans Are Well Adapted to Culti vation in Rows. tlie country, ns (ip as the rights of others is concerned, obtains in the na tlon's parliament—tlie Stouten H^n- erual. Ultra hol-hevi-tie Ifl**inl»s-rs4 im*- eupv seats in the lower ehaniber lilld S*»uth and July 1 In the Nortli^ . Dates of Planting. . The extreme dates of successful planting at the Tennessee experi ment staton were found to be April 3 ami August U. although June proved to be the most favorable month in which to plant nny variety. The fields of foruge and seed secured from different dates of planting with tlie Huherlundt variety of soy bean and tlie limit vari ety of cowpe# at Arlington farm, Vir ginia, are as follows: • year before tin* war began In WH would not have been listened to by any se!f-re*pect1ng Dutchman. The self-re- speetlng I>11 tchraan must ltsteh- to ihes** doetrtges no\V| for they are preached on every street comer, from the forums and from the platform of the governing body, whenever the radical wing gets a chance to give voice to its sentiments. Blocked at the Frontier. Tlie govern me ui does everything hu manly possftde to prevent the Influx of the radical element from (»ennnny and every day .dozens of wnuld-he In truders, b,- they bolshevist or Spnrtl- cua, are turm-d *>a< k at the frontier with the admonition to go Fast. But receiving his discharge from the army, It Is safe to #ay Mint one-half of the sot 1,1 nto troop* has turned—its atten tion to either burglary, petty or grand larceny or highwuy robbery as a 'mean- to keep the wolf from the door without an undue amount of physical exertion. * f Tlie Visitor in Holland, ntthnugh he is still much in the minority because of the passport restrictions, has learned to keep his hand on his wal let pocket and his fingers firmly around the end of n stout cane when ever he ventures out Into the street or .along a country path, once - TlyL bind's delight and the safest prome nade In the wide world. PREVENT SAGGING OF GATES Run Piece of Steel Wire. or Cabla From Top of Frame P&*t to Oppoiite Corner. (TONS TO ACRE.) Haberhindt soy bean. Gr* Date of planting A furTn gate may read vented from sagging by ex ward tho side member to Good Digestion and natural bowel movement result from the use of May 1 May 15 June 1 June n July 1.. July 15 1 Daring Highway Robberies. violence mat nas >\eeu i-.n.u.s, , „ , . 1 fertile soil from the very day that the lhe ‘ kw alongems, who used - to .... , , . . „ i one-time kaiser entered the country ns stand in proper awe of the well- . . . ■ a., a refugee and the one-time crown dressed man or woman in the public . . . . . ..... , , . x K . prince took up h> tnvoluntury aboib thoroughfares of the city, now openly 1 ... , , , . . . - . . . . . , ! on the Island of \\ lerlngen. * and brnzenlv snatch nt watch •clialns, ^ . . . . , 1 ..1 1 There fs enough of the regulnrarmy hTrttps bags or pocket hooks that are ** earrbsl In the hands by the ladles. ^ to prevent any serious concerted Nine times In ten the culprit manages movepient \\ t ie uroe^_o_>, _? ,na -. to make a clean getaway In the erowd ’ tori tents, • spe< la ) as t 1* > ar« n • of sympathetic ruffians, who gather, nr ^ ,,niz, “^ 11,11 n " ‘ r ‘" s 1>n quickly at the first sign of disorder »" » n appearance. The jxdlca in tha various districts,' to*», still observe th< street dlsclpl 1 ne of tlie pre-war days although they have not been very, sue cessfhi In stamping out the lawless ness that Is everywhere evident, they are. trt least, holding the unruly ele nient In check and. to a certain de MRS In her well-ordered house, Holland Could not see sini.oimi families In want ho« au»e soo.immi male supporters wefe taken for the de/euse of th»- father 1 -and. She provided thN support «is punctiliously and as carefully as she pr»>vi<b>4 -for the thoiisiuwU of Belginrr and Freneb refugees, who have lived on the country’s - bounty from the day of- the siege df~ Antwerp to the day that Marshal Koch ntrnded his foun- WINSLOW S SYRUP (a) Did not mature This superior purely vegetable preparation for correcting baby’s troubles contains no alco hol, opiates, or narcotics. A Farm Gate That Will Not Sag Is Supported by a-Diagonal Wire Brace. ,- v- r. blaiee ai^ attached, and running a piece of steel wire, - or cable, from the top of this member td the opposite t Brings gratifying results for mother and child. Formula oo every bottle. At mil drmggirtm. CO-OPERATION IS GREAT HELP Children sent to the stores by. their mothers i^re often the victims of the thieves, wrhn take away - their pennies, und market baskets, on the way to the Irksome to resume their dirttrsTrs fani- I-cxpectant housewives very often go lly providers Instead of "letting Wll- astray and ultimately reach the dens Faith In Possibilities of Organization Is Essential—Must Be Expressed during the latter daysTir last N*bvem corner. course,-be attached to the Tipper cor ner, hut the fastening as shown places the least strain on the wire brace.— W, - Wallace Snyder. Bedford, N. In Popular HeefiShlos. — (Prepared by the United- States Depart-, ment of Agrte-uiture.) ..... — -While popular faith among farmers In co-operation as a means of improv ing marketing methods has been. strong In recent yesrs and has brought about the fopmation-of u large number of associations, the. term cooperation has been employed In such a way that’ many people have romp to believe that a co-operative organization offers a the, bettei The principal hope of educated class of Hollanders lies an early restoration of the regi; channels t>f food Importation. COMES TO KELP THE GIRL SCOUTS Horse Owner l|fjjjjgjf«n who has ever tried ✓ jrsir Yager^ Liniment will readily kdmit Iramre; that it ia-by far-the b*»i and m*«/ econom ical liniment for general stable use. For strained ligaments, spavin, harness galls, sweeny, wounds or old sores, cuts and any enlarga- RLAAl TO PREVENT DISEASES Farmer Shou|d Always Use Every Pre- V£«l.tiy.e Meature and That Precautions Are Taken. Just fu\\y T the Hollander ,is anythin? but tractable* He wTH-^drop his ham- his shovel, his hoe or his chum ’Huer, ing handle at the 'drop of a hat.m the whisper’ of a labor agitator. imagines that he Is the under dog ol Overy man whw -possesses ? a rileke more *tlmn he does. V4 From, a htntl of calm, peaceful seething quiet, J^lland has changis 1 • into a laml of unrest. It oozes out ol j the very ground at - every step on* | takes. Lack'of grains keeps the gri.<Y mills Idle, which consequently fail 'tc ; provide work f"r those who might b* induced to take up* the broken ktrartd- j of their task< and don trfe snow whit* ; Sometimes we cannot prevent out* breaks of live stock diseases on‘our farms.Jiut we ran and should" always use every preventive measure and'see that proper /precautions tire taken when the disease first makes Its ap- 4 menu, it gives quick relief. It contain* twice as much a* the usual 50 cent bottle of linimenL At all dealers. Price 35 cent*. YAGER’S LINIMENT pea ranci MAINTAIN WEIGHT OF HORSE GILBERT BROS. A CO, Baltimore, Bid. Animals at Hard Work Should Receiv* Stated Amount of Grain and / Hay Each Day. : KODAKS & SUPPLIES /Farm work horses .at^hard labor "should receive from one and_ one-fifth to one stnd one-thTrd'phunds of gmi£7 and from one t<t one and’ one-fourth pounds of hay, per K>o pounds of live weight petL,dTiTy,'"in'order that tiielr weight may be maintained; W> also do highest class ,o( finishing. Prices and Catalogue upou request. S. Gsletki Optical C*., Rickaead, Va. MUCH DEPENDS ON FERTIUTt Stirgnatlon in ,*;hl]»p1ng, owing.to th* .restrictions placed Upon the eountr\ by the allies, has had its natural .•? feet upon Hollliifid’s infand waterway* commerce, with the result jha-t tlmu sands of men who were employee ulong "the uumerott- canals, both a- boatmen and tow drivers, before th* war. now find thejr .vocations gone Thts~~Ts^ nwAher -lnn*>rta'nt jndustrj which, if It «<Mil*! resume lt< n<*rm\ pro|M*rti«imL would greatly* reduce th« nutnle-r of the unemployed. *“"■ t liver everything. ltow>-v«-r^ looms th* one large fnct that the f<»nn*-rly cor rect Hollander could v» ' readily hi changed into a man with criminal In Where She Was Sick. A school physician w*as examining the pupils of the first grade. II** looked at liiye child's tlfroat and asked her the usual line of question*, first saying: Prices of Land Seldom Based on Ca \ pacity ^of Soil to Yield Crops— _Improvement Ueg«d.- Few people realize the value of an acr** of rich s*>ll. In fact, [trices o* . land seldom are based entirely on fer- Of Great Importance in*Securing Bert Results—Mix Unpalatable Feed t With Those Appetizing. vely answered yield crops. The value generally is es timated by thc~Toadf. distance from market, kc|i«m»|s. church*** ami th** character »»f the |e**tple uml the r**mN. M-hotds, .'rhurchett etc. It «h**uld l*e the privilege *»f farmers to Improve the *o|| nnd conserve Its fertility for Your Eyes Palatabilltj Is of gr**at dmp*)rttinc# *0 successful feeding. The l>est results •unuot l*e <rf»ta|ne*l with any feed w lncj la not well relished by the row; . .< sequ»*nily gny unpalatable feed » Rclrcshiaf aad Icallaf Lattaa—Munne for Red neaa, Soreneaa, Granaia* tioo. Itching and Burning founder of the boy scout organization. Irl acouta, whlclf (wgsnlzation did such ke -war. In the group, left to right. lira. ; oyuacli ot girt:acouta; Sir ets-rowell; Mm Julietta' Low, president It*•♦•erf Baden-I and founder 'of jriaJd-^ofi* L " ] i J