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4 - V • |V ■ BARKWKLL SENTINEL, BARNWELL, S. 0. I BITRO PHOSPHATE Famous French Discovery replaces nerve wastage. Increases strength energy. endurance, and vlgoh. builds firm healthy fie fash. l BesY ^THing Known For THIN NERVOUS PEOPLE GH00SIN6 BEST > BREED OF HOGS , %■' ft. ' * %■ ’' ■•■"■■■■ ■ — , Whichever One the Farrper de cides Upon H^Should Develop to Highest Standard. ^ ' r- BELCHING Caused by Lpt EATONIC, ,_.the Wonderful modern •toniach remedy, Kl^e you ' quick relief from dlugustlng belching, food-repeating, indigestion, bloated, gassy atomach, dyapep- • la. heartburn and other-etomacl) miseries. They are all mused by Acld-Ntoniarh front which about nine people "but of ten aufTer in one way or another One writer as fol lows; "before I used EATONIC, 1 could not •at a bite without belching It right up, aour and bitter. I have not had a bit of trouble ■lnce the first tablet*-’ 1 ' Millions are victims of Acid-Stomach without knowing It. They are weak and ailing, have poor digestion, bodies Improp erly nourished although they may eat heart ily. Grave disorders are likely to Follow If an acid-stomach Is neglected. Cirrhosis of the liver, Intestinal congestion, gastritis, catarrh of the stomach—these are only a few of the many ailments often caused by Acid-Stomach. A sufferer from Catarrh of the Stomach of 11 years’ standing writes; ”1 had: caiareh- of the stomach for 11 long years and 1 neVer found anything to do ms any—good—Just temporary relief—until Tawed EATONIC. It Is a wonderful remedy and I do not want to be . without It.” - If yon- are not feeling quite right—lack •nergy and enthusiasm and don't know just Where to locate the I rouble—try EATONIC and see how much better you will feel In • very - way'; > J At all drug stores—a big box for 80c and Jfour money back If you are not satisfied. (tor y6ur acid-stomacr DEATH CHILLS Remove the cause by destroying ths germs of MALARIA. .At your dru.j •tore, (50c; money back if no good. UEIIHFVS DRI O CO, • Waco, Texas e j. DXISINE rAKM HELP W ANTKI) $tiO per month; permanent Jobs, board at cost, good <j|*ar-4 l«r* gardens for families, only 12 ntlles to big city; good chance to ucqulro home easily Gol>len (Hailes Farms, Miami, Fla, Useful Portable Saw, Tlu» portable circular saw, attach able to any lump socket am! capable of doim; much of the bam! saw's work, Is mol the least of recent labor-saving de- ■viivs. Such a tool, self-contained, 'weighs only 11’ pounds, lias three and -one-quarter Ijtvh-blades, 11ml consist* •xtf a sliding cylindrical-base carrying r the blade and a one-qiiarter liorse- jpo-wer motor having a sp«>ed of 12,000 revolutions per minute, Special gauge* Jnsure accurate cross-cut or rip-saw work. The tool is guided by an ordi nary saw handle, a push button con trols the operation, and h suitable guard give* it safety. N LARD TYPE MOST POPULAR At Present Time Animals Weighing From 173 to 250 Pounds Command Highest PriceoJlBacan Hog Is Not Raised Extensively. -r~-‘ .. H (Prepared by the U/ilted States Depart ment of Agriculture.) ~ T~” There la no best breed of swine. Some breeds are superior to others In certain respects and one breed may be better-adapted than another to cer tain local conditions. The essential point Is that ufter the farmer has once decided upon the kind of hog to raise he should stick to this decision ami develop the chosen breed to Its highest possible standard. It Is not feasible for one Individual to'raise several dif ferent breeds and bring them to per fection,- - In making his choice, too, the farmer should he guided by the kind of breads already established In his locality. ‘ If tA; selects one of these he Is not lHreli , 'to-mtike a mistake. Two Type# of Swtrre. There are two djstlnct types of swine,'namely, the lunF'nnd the hacort types. Swine of the lard lyp^ far-oup number those of the bacon type In the Pulled Stales. The. lanl type Is pre ferred- by -ihe |wupb* country, consequently th<r majority (if feeders produce a—rapbl-fattening, heavy fleshed lard type. The bacon type is not raised extensively in the United States. The production of choice-ba con is more general in those sections GRAIN VARIES DURING YEAR Feeding of Oats Is More Uniform ~ Than That of Corn. ■' „' ^7.. / Barley, VVheat and Rye Abroach Monthly Uniformity in Degree Lesa Than Oat*—SI lage Reaches High Point in February. Jttb " v /' ' * ’YW r (Prepared by the Jlnlted . .Stgtee—Pepart- ment of Agriculture.) _W* ''Whether the supposition Is that the consumption of corn by live stock op J farms hi * the United States varies little from month to month, .or that the summer consumption Is relatively sirndi, the fact, ns ascertained by‘the- bureau of crop .'estimates. United States department of agriculture, Is that during tjie'slx months from May lo October nearly three-eighths of the BLIMP IS ADRIFT FOR TWO DAYS / ’ I Story of Hardships, Daring and Escape From Death-Dur ing War. Made Me a Well Man THREE IN WILD RIDE Big United States Dirigible on U-Boat Hunt Year Ago Runs Wild 300 Miles Frorp Port-e-Loaded 'With Bombs. \t." w- Louis Youitg, 205 MerTitRac St.‘, Rochester, N. Y., writes: '■•■y ‘I suffered for thirty wtth ChrutitC bowel trouble, .tom- nek trouble and, the bowel*. year* ■tom- hemorrhage* of We bought a bottle of Peruna and I-t*cnc It-faithfully, and I began to feel better. ' My wife persuaded me to c*n- tlnue, and I took It for some time as directed. Now I am a. well min.” Suffered thirty years witli stomach trouble and hemorrhages of the bowels. '"V . V*‘ > •*' mu' Liquid or Tablet Form —Washi r1gUm.~AuL4.nuusual storv of ilnritig and remarkable escape from .death during* the w* wtfs brought to Ifght. when naval officers made public an account of ti e adventures of the year’s corn ration ls^eaten, and ffom crew of the navy dirigible B-12,-whicR- November to April five : elghths. The warm-weathsjr fruclium-will seem large or small according to the'"Size of the guess,.., Put*. more than corn, Is the -feed from April to September, and the monthly consumption of oats Is- more^dug waiter. The dirigible finally was uniform throughout the year than that /•v was given up for lost by the. depart-, merit. In Jqlv. 1018, after it had drifted (round, at sea.for more than two days, during‘Whb’b-the crew had practically nothing to cat and ran'short of drink-' forced -to descend -and the "crew was “BAYER CROSS’* ON GENUINE ASPIRIN "Rnyer Tablets of Aspirja” to be genuine must be marked with the safety “Bayer Cross.” Always buy an unbroken Bayer package which con tains proper directions to safely re lieve Headache, Toothache, Earache, Neuralgia, Colds and pain. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost hut a few cents at drug stores—larger packages also. Aspirin Is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetlc- scidester of Snlicylieacid.—Adv? Explained. Howell—How did your money take wings? r-' Powell—I put It into an airship. Cuticura Soothes Baby Rashes. That itch and burn with hot baths of Cuticura Soap followed by gentle anointings of Cuticura Ointment. Nothing better, purer, sweeter, espe cially if a little of the fragrant Ctitl- cura Talcum Is dusted on at the fin ish. 25c each everywhere.—Adv. Purebred Poland-China Barrow*. where the feed of the hog Is more varied nnd wheWi corn Is not relied upon as the principal grain for hogs. . The principal breeds of the lard type are the Poland China, Berkshire, Chester White, Duroc-Jersey and Hampshire. The lard type of hog is low set and compact, with a very wide and dii*p body. ^The shoulders should l>e full although not coarse, with full hind quarters and hams cur ried qut straight to the tail and thick ly fleshed down to ihe hock. The tlesh should he thick and evenly distributed throughout the body. The size and weight are largely de termined by market conditions. At present pigs weighing from 175 to 250 pounds ordinarily command the high est prices. Best Bacon Types. The.judnc.ipal bbeeds of the bacon type ore the Tam worth and lurge Yorkshire, both of British origin. The bacon type is very different from t^ie lord type, being longer In leg and body, with less wkltji of back and lighter in the shoulders and neck. The first impression that this type copvCys is one of leanness nnd lank (nets. Mu ell emphasis is laid on the develop ment of side, because it Is the side of the Wig that Is used for the produc tion of bacon. -On the other hand- large, heavy hams are not desirable on a bacon Tiog. ~ — SHIP EGGS BY PARCEL POST Weight of Single Dozen of Eggs Will, Run From 2 to 3 Pounds, De pending on Packing. A gentleman is a man who wouldn’t argue one second with any other wom an but his wife. About the only way .to convince e girl that her favorite young man Is noi an angel is to let her marry him. A secret Is something that a woman does not know. . • Some finished orators don’t seem to know when to quit. -- SfM ,*U Smart, Itch. 01 Burn. U Sore, Irritated Inflamed or Granulated _ Safe for Infant or Adult Write for Free Eye Book If. N. U, charlotte, no. »-im (Prepared by the Ufiited States Depart ment of Agriculture.) Average hens’’eggs will weigh about 1%. pounds to the dozen, or 2 ounces apiece. The wcigltfl of a single dozen of eggs in a carttm^YirOperly packed and wrapped for mailing will run from 2’to 2 pounds, depending on the nature of the particular container, the size of the eggs, and tiie packing and writp :> ping used. If the container be u very light one and the eggs small, the par cel may fall within the 2 pound limit, and the jiostage, therefore, within the fii-st and second zones, or 150-mile lim it, would he 3 cent s. Most, pa reels con taining a dozen eggs will exeoeil 2 pounds hut "’HI notreacti 3; therefore the postage on them will be 7 cents within the first and second zones. A pit reel (smtainlng 2 dozen eggs will add perhaps 2 cents to tin? postage, though sometimes only 1 cent,- depend ing on the nature ofjhe container and the packing and wi'pnping. . - V PREVENT DISEASE OUTBREAKS Ui* ~£very Preventive Measure and See That Proper Precaution* Are Taken. (Pn pared by tb« United States Depart Brmetlmea we canpot prevent out breaks of live Stock diseases on our farm*, but we can and should flwajaj use every preventive measure and see that proper precautions are taken when 1 t&e tteuaae first makes Us ofcorn. Barley, wheat and rye ap- rescued by the Swedish ship Skngeru. proaeh monthly uniformity In degree The B-l-2, witii Ensign \Y. B. tirif- less than that of oats throughout the .fin us commanding officer. Ensign W. year and a concentration of consump- ‘ Briscog as assistant pilot and mu- tlon In the colder months Is found In dtinf^tV Mate E. A. Upton as nie- hay, allu*ge*"anST"mill Feed; S8"fir*tlie TTiT.nlc, was ordered tq leave Olmtliani, case of corn. ' *' ; Mas*s.,. v early* July 11) on a putroling Of the year’s entlrC' confcunipt Ion ol exp< ditlon. . . __ corn by live stoi’k on farms the high- 1 Herman submarines were then, oper- est'‘consumption In one month Is 11.5 atlng off the Atlantic eoast and the dir- per cent in December, and tfre lowest igihle was well loaded with homhs. 4Ui -per ccOTTitt August. Eor lUits tho -^v-auty. food suppluis—u-to^ 4-wr-i liighest Is U.8"ijM‘r' coidln-ApriramT tTiq~~ Ensign 'Tfglffirr v\\ii'ivish-to lowest 0.8 j>er cent in December; bar- Chatham that night. The radi » equip- ley, highest 10.9 |M*r-cent in November ment had only been partly installed and lowesP7h-per cent in June and also < Rudder Brace Lost.. * -7— in July; rye, highest 10.3 per cent In The B-12 patfoleiLTo the north and October nnd lowest J.l_pcr cent In sighted a/transport about 3:3U p. in. July; wheat, hi‘.’he*t 11.4 per cent In, Ensign -Hilffin headed toward ihe ves- Novemhcr and lowest O.fl'per cent in set, intending to escort’ if towaitl fiorL when th»- heel brace on tpe rudder-was cjiirttd 4iway,j^iaking it fiapossThle fo slt-t" 5 )- ♦ t+rr- craft: ' —r — A s ( >a amiior was^rlggcd tiji and all effort uiade to retard tin* dirigildc’s i»rogr«*ss. After, a few moments, how ever, the towing cable parted ami the nerthuard progress was resumed a! ati iuereased spe; d. About S;3() o'clock t!:at night a ship yvns sighted atid nine rockets wee-* fjj-- e«f from a pistol. The\ess<*| a|ipTiTcnt fy saw the signals and directed tTS • course toward t^ie onf^ to turn n- COMMUNITY LIME SPREADEIT way in a Jew tnotu* Ids and leave the • , 1 helpless gas bag to the mercy of Jji* Farmer* of Otsego County, N. ' ln ' 1 ' ...... _ , _ . , *: 0 About that time the pipe line leading Solve Problem of Spreading Lime . ^ . _. to the, emergency oil tank broke ana at Proper Time. - (I'repareil by the United Ptates Depart ment of Agriculture.) Members of the farm bureau In one of the communities of Otsego county. New York, have combined and pur chased a lime spreader, and have thus taken a long step in solving their problem of applying lime at the. proper time of the year and iii sufficient quan tities to get results. The spreader is Babies Mrs. Winslow’s Syrup and watch the smiles that follow. This has been ^ - - • ' the happy experience of many mothers after being sorely tried over baby’s fret fulness, sleepless nights and other disorders due to stomach and bowel troubles. MRS. WINS LOW’S SYRUP ...-The Infants' and Children's Regulator is purely a vegetable preparation that causes stomach to digest food and bowels to move as they should thereby overcoming constipation, diar rhoea, flatulency, wind colic and similar trou bles. During teething time it is especially good. Contains no oniates, narcotics, alcohol or other harm- • ful drugs. Absolutely harmless. Formula on every bottle.,Agreeable and useful as a household remedy. At Alt Orpggi»t» ANGLO-AMERICAN DRUG CO.. 2:5-717?■*•• SL. *.T. Omrsl AjnkHtrait! f lUAw&Ctaln, Haw York Taraoit, July. Mill feed con*tir 1 rpflnh sags to 4.8 per ccftf'fn Tfrrty' irrwl tImts 1 tn T1.5’ per cent tb^T’oTinuiry nml itgiiln in March., More unequal yet i” hay consumption, with its range from the hiirlieat, I4.y per cent in February and also ln M.iri-h to 3.2 per cent in August; nnd another degree Is readied by sllagOj the consumption of which rises to 13.fi |ier cent of. the year’s total in Feiiru- ary and falls tod per cent,In July and again in August. ' ^ V So That’s Why Stream Is Warm. Headline—”l>evil fishing In tlie-Clulf stream.” Hope they catch the old boy.—Best.nr Transr-rf-jw. ■SWAMP-ROOT FOR KIDNEY AILMENTS ABSORBiNE MADE MARK tU6.US.PAT Off There is only one medicine th*t rlallv stands out pre-eminent as a medicine for curable ailments ot the kidneys, liver add bladder Dr. Kilmer's Swamp Root stands the highest,fur the reason that it has proven to he just the rimedy ueeued in Uiousanda upon thousands o i distressing cases. Swamp-Root makes friends quickly be cause its mild antMVmfiodiate effect is soon realuod in most cases. It is a gentle, healing vegetable compound. — 4»tart treatment at once. Sold at all drug stores in bottles of two sizes, medi um and hrrjpT However, if you wish to test this great preparation send ten oents^to Dr. Kilmer & .(,'0., Binghamton. N. Y. f for a sample bottle. When writing he sure and men tion this p .per.—Adv. Reduces Bursal Enlargement*. Thickened, Swollen Tissue*, Curbs, Filled Tendons, Sore ness from Bruiees or Strains; stop»„Spavin Lameness, al!ay* pain. Does rot blister, remove the hair or lay up the horse. $2.50 a bottle at druggists or delivered. Book 1 R free. ABSORBIN'E, JR., foi an v antiseptic liniment for bruises, cuts, wounds, strains, painful, swollen veins or glands. It heals and smthes. ft.25 a bottle at drug gists or poupaid. Will tell you more if you write. Made in the U. S. A. by _-tr ML F.YOUNG. P. D. F., JlOTimsI#St.,Sprint;ftsld.lias*. t*!( for 50 Trart FOB HALAJUA. CHILLS AND FCVOL Aim t flu G«s«r»l Stna|tAuls| Tssls. At All Drag Slant. Clear Ytjt Skin While You Sleep queer cld “magic “mirror” ; wifhCuiicura One in British Museum Known to Have Been Used by Aztecs and Ancient Mexicans. All druggi*ta. 8c»p 2f>. O ntmentXA-V. Tilonm T£>. Stmrlp i>ai h froeof ’’Cauttrt, K. Boatoa ** Community Ownership of a Lime 1 Spreader I* Practical and Feasible. to hCT-rdtatvd among tin* ruemhers. NonintMiibers may. also use It by pay- ing 25 cents an acre. In the early stages of the use of lipie' in a com- uunity, especially in a small, way, spreaders are often not available be cause single land owners hesitate to ^purchase them. Even after-the use of lime Is established a single machine will often, meet the needs of several fanners, \ . HOW TO INTRODUCE QUEEN If Is Necessary to Remove Old and De fective Ones and Replace Them Wi*h Younger Stock. Everj- beekeeper who IS really car ing. for his bees should know how to Introduce queens, because It is neces sary to remove old and defective queens and replace them by young vigorous ones. s , Queens may be Introduced In cells or after they have emerged from cells, while still unfertilized, or after they have begun to lay. Rockets Were Fijred. before the leak «if*f discovered-nil of the oil was lost, causing a consider- | able decrease ~rif ballast. The B-12 j began to rise and ascended steadily nn- i fll fill altitude of 3,000 feet 1 was reach ed. Wild Dash Northward. ' . ■ ■ . ■ T All night tin* dirigible c<jntinned Its ; w ild da si 1 north vard. the crew menu- tinie consnmitig iln> small amount of food ahoTird. Ensign Griffin lmd no idea of his whereabouts.' On the morning of the third day of cruise the sun sBuia gas in the bag ex panded rapidly tin* B-12 start'd to rise. ! Ensign (Jriffiy. aff-r a conference TT^’trir--the other mt*mlters of tin* ^rewg decid'd to bring lie- B-12 to the sur face ami-take a eham-i* of being pick- ' ed up." |- Shortly after descending a ship was sighted and i’ directed its course to ward tin* 'dirigible,— the crew of “wTiTrtr lYirtmwtrttr' were- ittrrtn g- crear difficulty’ In keeping clear of -the Crystal gazing and the use of magic | mirrors played an important port in religion and wizardry in the past, and though almost every nation had its own method these did not vary as much as it would be suppose^ ' Thus while Japan had in her inner temples mirrors which only the priest i saw, and which .were always to reflect the good and the beautiful for the gods, the ancient Mexicans taught that their god Tcxcatllpuco had a magic mirror in which lie "saw every thing that happened each day in the WCrld. .. ■ A real obsidian mirror with its strange textile string still attached is in tin*'British museum now and ivu^. used tty the Aztecs and ancient'Mexi cans for various purposes and very probably for crystal gazing. - It Is much the same as the other crystals, used by so-called “wizards,” so far tiff its shape is_concerned. Even in recent years crystal gazing has been prac ticed, aiuFTt “is said by those who have tried it that the mirror or crystal seems to disappear into n mist after it has been stared at in complete silence foi a greaNjeqgth of time, and then— f every—the visions appear. to J»l>e ii bright I v and as the The Main Point. , “Has S<-4-jhsoii found anybody produce his play?” ‘‘No. lR^still living in hopes."* “If he' can keep hi-* landlady in that frame of mind, well and good.”—Bir mingham Age-Herald. Wonderful Persian Shawl. Mrs. Bernard E. (trace, a collector of St. Lotus, submitted a rare Per sian shawl at the Vow York Metropol itan museum. The owner had traced its history hack 133 years. The shawl is eleven feet by four feet, worked In long (Towing designs of the palm leaf and the River of Life w’ith the stories of the mosques. The predominating colors' -arc mellowed garnets nnd IfrotVn. with alternating sheens of steel gray and ri:3y brown. A Washington > xpert to whom the shawl was shown said its make-up probably represented the .'lifetime of the w eavers. — "■ I ....... ■ i 1 lit • Already Occupied. Harold and his mother had 'been on journey .inrUnn <‘dhlihg mune stopped at a hotel. When tliey-had- retired the)^ found Mie bed full of bedbug*. They summoned the inndlad) and asked- her for another room, where upon she said: "Wliy, 1 didn’t know there was a single bedbug here." “No,” replied Harold, “tlfev’V'nll married and has got families.”—Chicago Apierican. Willing Enough. \ “SuMoths. why don't you make a garden ‘Tm wlYifng. if- you’ll tell me what I can grow with a fin lean suhstratlrtn ami ashes for a top soil.”—Louisville Courier—Journal. “ Cholly's Type. • “I can read Cholly like a hook.** “You’Te foolish to strain your e ; ye* over a small type.”—Cleveland Press. Crrmnuiiiimss •***,* TROUBLE IN FIGHTING WEEDS Sheep and Goat* Will Be Found Effi cient in Eradication of Manym.. Noxious Plant*. Some of the trouble and expense oe- dinnrily experienced In fighting weeds might be dispensed with by keeping sheep and goats tr graae thf noxious plnnta.' At present price* for wifoT mohair and mutton these anli.uil> ought te be urofitable. water. The vessel .-proved to he ihe | Swedish steamer Skagern. hound for j Halifax. A small boat was put over thej+ble omfYlie crew; of the B-12 tak en off. Then as the increasing heat from the smi caused the gas further, to expand. Jhp dirigible rose a few .feet ( above the surface, was pulled ovArTTf the Skagern. the rip <*ord pulled, and the H-12 salvaged without much dam age.'more than 300 guiles fr«»m Its home station. " — 3 u Eviction Postponed. New York,—Jm a-* the city marshal I as engag'd Ip. evicting the Kant | rowltx family fir nonpayment of rent the *t.>r< arrived. KvicUoa is a notorious knocker of ill-health! Try It. It contains the vital mineral elements and all the nutriment of wheat and barley.