The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, January 15, 1891, Image 3
fThe Barfiwell People.
MiTES OP SUBSCRIPTION.
In Advance, per Annum..... $1.*0
On T Une. $2!6o
THURSDAY, JANUARY 18,
The wxt regular communication of
Harmony^ Lodge No. 17 A. v F.-. M.'.
will be held at the new Maeonic Tem
ple in Barnwell upon 10th day ot
Jan., i»yl, the same bcirtg the BndSaturday
in aaid month, beginning at “High twelve.",
By order of W.\ M.\
R. C. Kirkland, Secretary. *
t4 ; ,' •
For finest family groceries go to Mo-
lair's. »
Mr. Joseph C. Keel has been commis
sioned post master at Buddenville. . _
And now the prophets are predicting
a first class fruit crop for this year*
You will find the choicest fancy gro
ceries at Molatr’s—cheap for cash.
▲ Mr. Jones died last week of small
pox at Hardeeviliei He contracted the
disease in Savannah.
Cases from the Second Circuit will be
cal.cd in the supreme Court lor live
uay^ beginning next Tuesday, 20th mat,
Molatr is receiving a heavy stock of
'TlhifiTariCy'groceries and family supplies
and solicits the patronage of the good
house keepers oi Barnwell and vicinity.
For sale on • easy i terms, a red bay
horse, sound "as a dollar, gentle and
kind. A. T. Woodward.
M*ss Carrie Kirkland has been elected
Assistant hi the Barnwell Graded
School, increasing the faculty to four
teachers.
The election to fill the vacancy in the
legislative delegation caused by the
death of Dr. S. S. Owens will not be
held until summer
A colored girl li year* old died on
Saturday on Col. Mike Broen’s place
west of town of burnt accidentally re
ceived the day before. Coroner Pea
cock held the inquest. -
Mrs. Baynard wife of Rev. C. 4.
Baynard, died at home in Grahamville
on the 6th lust. Her n mains were
buried in Uma-OW-Allendale cemetery.
Col. Lee Hsgood s life was insured
for |20,000; divided $3.(XX) with the
Knigbrsof Pythias, $3,000 in the Vallex
M itual, of which ne was Agent, and.
$14,00 in Accident Companies.
Clerk Simms administered the oath of
etffice to new h nipuinted TrhrfjTi >d"l(Tr«,
R W 1> Rowell, o('Grahams, and J.
F. Grimes, of Buford’s Bridge, last
week.
Sixty cars of ste^l rails for the So>rth
Bound Road have been received at
Campbellt'»n I hat will inm 17 or IS
mile a The contractors are grading with
might and main between i ampbelitoii
and the Savannah river.
A Tribe of Independent Order of Red
Men was instituted in Barnwell last
Thursday night with 45 charter mem
ber*. The olHcera elect are G. Duncan
Bellinger, Sachem; ( harlea < arroll
Simms, S. S.; The. J. Simona, J S.
TEACHERS’
Adopted as the County Orgaiuby the Teach
ers’ Association of Barnwell County Sept. 27th,
1800.
A. F. OTIS, - - Editor,
To whom all communications should be ad
dress jd on Saturday before evtry i&ue.
It has been decided to omit the Janu
ary meeting of the Barnwell < ounty
•rCTchers’ AwocUtlon^
A * *oet atten^wlll meet at Barn well C
11. Feb. 13th and 14th, 1801.
The new \ ear la the time iet aside to
make godft resolutions f< r the year and
so teacher* of the county, make this
good resolution among other* that you
will attend and become an a live mem
ber of the Association.
All teachers and friends of education
are cordially invited to attend.
On Saturday at 11 a m the following
program will be carried out:
1. The History of South Carolina—
Prof. E. Y. Perry.
2. Uow"to teach current history—
Prof. J. Bullen.
3. Howto teach primary numbei * to
two—Mrs. G II Center
4. How to introduce ami teach per
centage Prof A. F. Otts. "
5. Language Lesson*—Miss Laura'
Willi*. ■ 1
6. Grammar In advanced grades —
Mrs. Kelly. -
~ 7. The method* of teaching spelling
—MiwTillie K. Johnson.
—8-. IVninan-b-ipitethe errmmoiTach7h>Ts
Jhey do not understand it. Thousands
• of young men 1 and women are needed in
1-e very State to organize and teach classes
_ i in tlm cimntry district*, villages, and
citie*. in order that this apparently,
neglected branch may be advanced so il
will stand on an equality with other
branches.
Good penmanship should he acquired
while yet young so you nred n< t pay
much a'tehtion to it afterward. While
a lawyer is engaged hi a murder case lie
eannot give much atrer.tionj6 the little
t, u or other letters. Children six years
of age should he.taught, correct posi-'
uliX
receive a thorough drill in movement
t during eat h lesson; but their progress
in learning the muscular moveasei t will
Tie SW at first, as the nerves are too
.weak for proper development. Pupils
should use slate and pencil during the
first halt year in school, in second half
pen and ink. Three year* ago many
jjood educators considered 'it impossible
1 to train children at the age of seven‘to
use pen aiyl ink, but today tho wmk
done by rthcsejittl^children verifies the
fact that the time 14 forever past, at
least in our s< boo’s, when childre<n w ill
ho+iem to school for three years before
learuinc to use the pi n The. speqijiH
teacher sliould plan 1 the lessons so that
the pupil will he accustomed to the use
• •f pen and noils paced paper before
| reaching the fourth gra<lc in school.'
, • ‘ ■ * J. T. PrtxcE.
SOUNb mind In a sound body" la the greatest •arthiy bleailng. With
that man it master of all human aflort-, and woman qqcen over all sit
uations. Health and happiness go band in hand and w ithout tnem
there is no real and lasting upward progress and growing prosperity.
To safeguard health is the llr-t duty of parent* to th'-mselve* that they may
faithfuliv support the responsibilities that life has given them, and equally
sacre&ahould be their care that the olive plants of their households should grow
into strong, reliant manhood ami beautiful and accomplished womanhood.
Against the thousand ilia that flesh is heir to the study and researches of the
best minds of many centuries have discovered from the secret* of nature, rented lea
that strengthen humanity against the attaeks of open and Insidious disease and
that are continually lengthening the short span of our lives, so hedged 'sboiitr
with cruel foes. All the moat approved remedies that the past ha* j^rven to the
iresent, "the heir of all the'ages," can be found in their beet purity at the new
Stations,
1* 1
4
|r. m.
jftrVP
Barnwell Y. .,
... Ar
8:46
f*80
Wooodward’s J unc
lion. ..
8-A2
Ashley
Iv
4
8:58
6:40
Blackville
.. Ev ft] 9:10
6«t
' N
L
A. M.
P M
>UNDAY SCHEDULE.
parnWeHj S. C-
Leave Barnwell
Arrive BlackvUia
Leave Blackville
Arrive Barnwell
Which invites, with the utmost, cordiality, the patronage of all In need of medi
cines for the prevention of incipient or the relief of confirmed di*ea»©** None
ont the beet goods, bought from the best houses la the best markets of the Un
ion will be kept on hand and our
Prices Will Please The People.
For those who have faith in patent or oroprl^ary medicines uc will keep in
stock all preparations that nave won their way to public approval.
Our stock of FanoT"Goods, Toilet Accessories, Soap*, Perfumeries, Brush***
aisd misccl'aueoua sundries is so cohtpleie and superior that it speak* for itself as
“filling a long fe t’’want in the County. *
Counoisshra ol good Cigars and* Tobacco, chewing and*smoking, will find our
—I stiQ* -1 ' “t qua ity grown in A merles and foreign fields.
Fresci ifition* compounded at any bOdr oTthe dsy or night with the most
careful exactness.
a m pm
»:!5 6:00
♦****•-'
10:15 8:35
10:45 IOiOO
t?FECIAL ixbtructioncs.
Barnwell Railway Train* will wait M
minutes for connection from Koixtli Car*
ollna Railway Trains unless otherwha
specially Instructed.
Tyainrs will wait indefinitely on aacli
other at Barnwell and Blackville*
All Train* daily.
I>o not run ahe*d of schedule time.
Clock in Telegraph Olfli*e at Black*
ville Will Ik* the standard time.
JOHN. T. WILLIS, Bupt,
Hlackville, AMoiict? Xi wberry K. K.
—Prof. J T. Prince.
The Reason why Writing Should be
Taught in All Schools'.
It is not very diiiicu.t to learn the
shape of all letters, but it t* much more
difficnlt to learn to make them r.ti idly
and easily.- A person may know where
to hit a nail with the hammer in order
to drive it into a board, a-mi yet at the
very first blow he may hit his thumb in
stead of the nail Would you say the
iiiati was too Ignorant to know that he
should have struck the nail instead of
hi* thumb? That man knew that be
Children Cry tor Pitcher’s Castoria.
On the ground that h^ feil many
housand years ago.some men still p»r-
*ist in -trying to ritiae the devil
Tim following w ritteii-defiultlon of
the word ‘ bachelor" w-as h tnd d in hx
a liitti gf> de boy: ‘A Uach-doi is a
man wim has no wife, nor uauUuo
w tfey-wo r ca n’t get ntl'WIFe.?*
When-a man, cannot have what he
1 >ves, he must love w hat lit- has.
* * • S ..
The people are taxed in-the United
S ales lor Federal purpose* $800 a min-
Utr*.
“'ay, Bill, what do yop do when
your wife begins o*eold ''T
Bill'—“Pinch the liahy."
SPENDING HER HONEYMOON ALONE.
Time Table taking effect October f4th, 1888.
raascRoiaa tkuss. xobtm rovkd.
We will be glad to w ait upon our old friends and w ill rejoice to make legions i^» V e Ikrr!*!..,.!...
ot new patrons. Ail visitors to the County seat, for business or on pleasure bent,
are sincerely hmfed to call.at the ' ‘ __
OPBH X HOUSK DO l < 8TOK
. The last and best chapter in Barn well’s boom.
KIRKLAND & HOLMAN, Proprietors.
from
oct 30-tf
Cards are out for the marriage of M i*s
B;-rtha, eldest daughter of ( apt. Jno
T. Willis, at d Mr. E. Burgls, •*! should have strmk the nail on the head
Charleston, next Wediresday aftertwK»n.
at 4 o’clock. Th a Pkoplk offers Its best
congratulations Barnwell will lose
one of her fairest flowers, but w e hope
•he will be as happy in the city by the
•ea as she has been in the eld home.
The newly elected officers of Willla-
ton Lodge, Knights of Pythias, were
publicly in-Urlled at WilHston on the
Pith inst. by Diatrict Deputy‘’James
Thomson.
The toMts were responded to ss fol
lows :
1, Our Order—Charles f'arroll Simms.
2, The Press—E. Y. Kerry.
3, Woman—J. B. Burckhalter.
4, Our Sister Orders—James Thom
son. S'*
6, Our Lodge—Dr J. R Smith.
6, The three 4 ardinal Principle* of
our Order, Friendship Chanty and Be
nevolence—Rev. D VV. Key.
, On public road between WiTHstonand
Barnwell, one4plaiu gold bracelet with
chain atUcoed. Liberal reward offered
for iu return to
A. M. Kennedy, «
Willistou S. C
, ; - ■■ntgmmm. —rSHSiTTt
On the 24th December near Barnwell
Mr. Cannon C. Langley ai d Miss Alice
Attaway, Rev. F. J. Sandersofliciatiiig.
On the 7th inst. at the residence oL
Mr. Geo. W. Green by Kev. F. J. San
ders Mr.. Frampton Richardson and
Mios Katie Green, all of Barnwell coun
ty-
BUekTille Hews.
A t the regular meeting of Mutual Aid
Lodge No. 14/8 K. of H. on the 12th in
stant, the following officers were in
stalled by D. 1). D., W. A. Gyles.
A. Buist, Dictator; H. W. Briggs,
Vice Dictator; I . M. Walsh, Assistant, real penniHi^hip i* placed. Good move
and that i* wiiat li * ►trmji^iir, bur h-
missed it besause the muscles w ere p)0
awkward to perfornt the act. Of course
iu all physical exercises the mind and
muscle* should work together. The
object of every teacher should Im* to i**
present and help M* pupil* to overcome
the real difficulty. In penmanship the
real difficulty is to make the letter*, and
it-can only be accompli*hcd through
movement power. There can t>e no
harm done by giving scholar* plenty oi
engraved copies »o practice from; but
after all can a scholar learn any fa*ter~
by having five hundred copies composed
of the same characters than if he had
only a few? Repetition is one of the
ways of emphasizing, and we usually
empliavize and explain the ino*t difficult
parts of any thing when we teach.
( Most works on penmansliip devote
nearly g.l of their space to copies v\ bile
very little is said about movement, po
sition, pen bolding, and speed. The re
sult ot such teaching is that pupils w ill
neglevt the real difficulty, movement,
and draw the copies as best they can,
and of course, rewutfo scHhhW* for a
life "time. Tiost Effy one r an tell a
straight line from a crooked one, but
there arc not many that can make a
straight line.
A* soon as you know the shape of a
letter you can make It with the hand
you have trained. Penmen are as aw k-
ward in w riting with their left hand as
miost auv one Movement pow er is real
penmaiiKhip; there is no fraud about
it; it is the executive part, the retain
ing part, and the most difficult part to
acquire. Its cornerstone is position;
its next layer is pcnholding; appropri
ate training exercises constitute the last
layer of the foundation upon which
Dictator; W. A. Gyles, Chaplain; O.
C. Able, Guardian; John Gribbin,
Guard; C. E. Gyles Sentinel. The
Lodge is in a flourishing condition.
Mr. Charlie Martin has moved back
to town from Sally’s and oomroeinvd to
build a nicedwellingon Pascallis street.
He will build a store near the Alliance
warehouse. No place like home.
D. D. G. C. James Thomson, assisted
by Blaekville Lodge No. 18 K of P. in
stituted a new Lodge at Grahams on
Wednesday, 14th inst.
The tVo-*tory wooden hall of the col
ored Odd Fellow's in Blackville wa*
burned Monday night. The tire started
within the building, but it is not known
whether It was set by an incendiary or
not. It wa* insured for four hundred
dollars with Mixsou’s Agency.
ment can only be acquired by the teach
ers’* being present when students are
practicing; good movement allows your
reserved power to think of the logic of
your composition.
If you think ^tnd compose the sent
ence* the pen w ill put them down for
you almost unconsciously as easily a*
your feet carry you over the ground
wh.ile.you are singing. \\ ithout it your
writing will he a task and a labor, no
difference how good ypur conception of
form may be. Movement is to form,
what a locomotive is to ihe ears; audio
haul the car* with mules is like writing
with the finger movement in “old style
copies.’ 1 Therefore it is necessary for
wr’ting to be taught at the beginning
and in aH_*eliools. We cannot train tht-
muscles unless we know what to train .
Economy Prevent* a Bridegroom
Accompanying His Bride.
Wedding tours are expensive affairs.
It sounds like treason, but tho honey- !
moon usually costs a good deal more than
it id worth. A young Pittsburger who
fell into matrimony the other day hit
upon a novel plan to reduce the expenses
of the wedding trip. His bride to be ,
and he^efore the wed'Ung d.’.y come j
around^Talked as most young lovers do
of alitbeplacea they would visit during
the honeymoon. Tbe drew up a nejvY
itinerary every evening and altered it
the next night—as others in the same
delightful state of imbecility have done. 4
But a* the fateful day drew near tho
young man fell to counting his pile and
estimating how much it would cost to
go to Niagara Falls and to New York
city and the rest of the places that had
figured in Jove’* young dream. Then he
footed up tho coat of furnishing a little
home, and uo matter how he tried to
keep the figures down, paring off a dol
lar or two. from a table here and a car
pet there, and economizing ou plates-
and other prosaic things—which lovers
very seldom think of at all till the col- I
lector rings the liell and will not go
away without that little amoant—no
matter how he clipped and lopped and
pinched, the total expenditure for hon
eymoon and the home at the end dt it
covered all tho assets, and lapped over
into the.bargain. -** >
‘this would never do. he thought—and
then he went on thinking. The boldest
fact of -all that stared him in the*fate
was the cruel indifference of the rail
road companies and hotel proprietors to
tho needs of the newly married. Though
a minister or a magistrate declare tw..
people to be one, the railroads and the
hotels insist upon charging»for two.
Contetnplation of this cruel condition
led the bridegroom-to-be a solution of
the problem.
When next he visited his beloved he
spread the minutes of his self com
munion before her and boldly suggested
that she should take tho tour they had
planned alone, while he remained be
hind to prepare the ‘ home. She do*
murred at first warmly, but he persisted
that she needed the change of air and
scene—she was a hard working girl—
that he did not. ffiie had set her heart
upon the trip and she should have it. At
last she gave in. They were married,
and she went to Niagara and the other
places alone. ...
They belonged to a sphere where Mrs.
Grundy is not a power, and very few of
their friends to this day know the unique
character of ffieir honeymoon. It ac
tually occurred as has' been told—in
Pittsburg, too, and not a great while
‘ago, either.—Pittsburg Dispatch.
-ID'OT^nsrSUDEIFOT.
The Kouth Bound Railroad has missed Barnwell, but the old town will not miss
the South Bound, for
ID-clilicl’s Depot,
Northwest of tb« Court Houne Square, I* completed and a new era of push and
pluck is begun to help forward her progress and prosperity. Everybody knows
that
TWO AND TWO MAKE FOUR-
It Is just a* true and plain that Good Good* and a plenty,of them. Bed Rock
Prices and Fair Treatment «ill draw and keep trade *^nd lie of equal and mutual
profit to buyer* and sellers On that line I have entered and upon it IJnb-nU to
hold the fort. The public generally will please accept the challenge to examine
my goods, oompare my prices and pass judgment npon my claim to bo lira
z' LEadkr in low prices
Ie Choice staple and Fancy Groceries that will strengthen the laborer and coax
the apnetit^s of the delicate.
In Clothing that • ill defy th| cold of winter and dispense with the attentions
of the doctors.
In Dry Go<k1s that can not fail to please purchaaers of all classes.
In Dress Good* that will make their wearers happy iu the knowledge that they
are the observed of all observer*.
In Shoes that give comfort and gra e and beauty in alljbe dally walkaipf life.
In Notions in endlexa variety, Gloie* Handkerchief*, Hosiery, Ribbon*, Lace*,
Perfumery, Embroidery. Soap*, Combs, Brushes, Ac., Ac.
Iu all the Household Goods iu constant use, Crockery ware, Tinware, Hard*
ware, Cutlery, Am, Ao*‘. ^
In all the wide variety of articles kept In all first class stocks of General Mer
chandise.
Come and lie convinced to your own profit and pleasure. This advertisement
is simply my invitation and program, and not any attempt to describe all the at
tractions and advantages i am offering.
COME AND COME QUICKLY
- nd you * ill come again and again.
La^tand by no means least don’t make your cholco of Christmas Goods until
you have seen my abundant consignment direct iroui SANTA CLAUS.
jilssk nuNisr*
BARNWELL, S. C.
rrTO 80 a m 8 19 p as
Leave WimUy* ... 10 UH a Rl 8 18 p in,
Leave Aklrich :10 3* a m * 20 p m
Leave Springfield 10 50 a m 8 »2 p m,
Leave Kafir's ,,11 04* m 8 44 p
Leave Perry....^... 11 l**ni45gpn\
Leave Waio-iier r...‘ll 28 a id 808 p«\
Arrive tk-iTetn , » m
* ^ - socte Bor*n. *.
Leave Silvern,,.. .4 47 p m* 7 00 a my
Leave \V»*rmcr J 6 03 p mu 16 a m
L-ave i’err) ., .A44p«»*7 J »• m -
Leave Kully’s 5 28 p bi.7 41 a El
Leave KuriuglieW 0 44 p m 17 56 a m
D-ave Aldrirti 658pm8Hram
Leave Whaley*...., COO pm [*12 am
Leave Walker*.....,...,.! 606 pm 8 1ftam
Arrive Blackville j .ft 18 p mlftftftam
•Monday only. tDaily.
Blaekville. Springfield, Bally's and Wageos*
are telegrapHic stations.
Close connertiocs made at BlackriTis with
the Kouth Cuxuona Raff way and Barnwell
tralua.
J. C. KEYS, Baperintendsaj.
Y
t them for. . The teacher should be pres-
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. ent, while the learner should practice j
with »he proper speed at all times, not 1
The visitor (viewing the new baby)—
Do you think he i* going to resemble
his father? The mother—1 shouldn’t
be surprised. He keeps me up every
night, • _ -
“Father, mother save you are ju*t
like the money market, most of the time
a “Ah! a source of interest, 1 presume,
my son.’ 1 «
. “No. Tight." -
She Had Tried It —Mra. Bloobump-
er—Maria, 1 think that young man of
yours is too forward. You must sit on
him., Maria—1 often do, ora; and he
•eems to like tL
too fast and not too slow. Of ai ft the
diffichltie* to, be overcome in learning
to write discouragement is the greatest.
It does more to keep boy* and giris
from becoming good Writer* than any
thing eli*e. \\ hen students get discour
aged they will lay down their pen and
write a miserable scrawl for life, unless
they have some one to encourage them
and help them through the difficulties
. In America in 187048 per cent, of the
bridegrooms and 70 per cent., of the i
bride* were unable to write their names. *
m
ii'dren Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria.
VWomau Uvea longer than man, goe«
insane less numerously, commits sui
cide one-third as often makes one-tenth
the demand- on tbe public purse for
•upportin jail, prison and alms house."
Brown—I can marry any girl 1 please.
Van Riper—There’a the rub; you j
don’t pieiue any
I therefore say this branch of study
all
nts Marriage Aided Him.
Abram S. Hewitt affords an example
of the value of profitable marriages.
Naturally a man of great force of char
acter and a zealous student with-worthy
ambitions, he would have succeeded
anywhere and in almost any Hue of
activity, but Ids marriage to the daugh
ter of Peter Cooper placed him at once
on a plane which ho, unaided by tbe
fortunate alliance, might neveiThave
succeeded in attaining.
He was bnt a teacher when he first
loved his respected wife,’ bnt once the
son-in-law of “the great benefactor and
tmild not be so shamefully treated any philanthropist he assumed a prominence
longer, but have mure and better work i the public eye that gave him prestige.
,imm in .vitrv .nh,..l „n th«t Im. „f As plain Abram 3, Hewitt, tho teacher,
he would have been no less a man; but
done in every school on that line of
work. 1 think it would be a good idea
to h»ve writing laugh' in every school
at least one month during each fife
mouths term,- or one hour every other
day. In one county in North Carolina
they have a teacher employed by the
year to teach in the six high school* in
one county, and 1 hay's been informed
that h pay* the Association of that
{-county ♦raodsomety, Tairt ‘Barnwell
L Will.
Abram 8. Hewitt, the son-in-law of
peter Cooper, the public was predisposed
to hear him.f
The marriage leveled for him barriers
that long years of self, unaided labor
might never have overcome. He profited
by the cixCTimstances ami becinmrTO Al
most natural fignre. That he improved
his opportunities is to his credit, but that
the opportunities were available was the
W compete with any county in her sister
By clM way, do you make your wife State ? Penmanship i* not at a par with
an equal partner in the farm plans? other branches not becsu*e people do . u . , .. _ . „ -
be the better hail of the farm not appreciate it, nor because they do 4 ^ 6ZUL * k*VP7. fortunate marriage.—
not givjKenougb time to it, but because
i 1
-:-Are too Busylo Write up a Many Worded-:-
Advertisement of Gushing and Glittering General
ties, but.thcy will be Very Glad to see and Serve
THEIR MANY FRIENDS
—AND— ^ „
THE GENEKiL PUBLIC WITH
G-oocL Q-oods,
Barnwell Oil
—AND—.
Fertilizer Company.
Capital $50,000.
JOHNSON UAGOOD,
i'KEilDSXT,
MIKE BROWN,
bxc A Tueas. A Gen’l Maraosb«
D1RECTOK8;
Jorksox Haoood. Barnwell C. II. 8. C.
Mixe Baowx, Bamweil 47. II., 8 C.
I>. F. .sojocunke. Lees, n.C. '
Simon Bkowm, Blackville, 8 C.
O. W. Mohball, M illcttvUle, 8. C.
Jko. M. Okkkk, Atlanta, Ga.
G A. W aoen ke. Charleston, 8. C,
J. K. Garkett, Savannah,Ga.
D. Ii. Sally, Sallyg, 8. C.
Tiffs Company lalhow ready for bust*
ness.
THE GINNERY.
We will gin and pack cotton at 9ft eta
per 100 pounds, being $126 for a ftM)
p<>und bale. Not more than one pereon
need accompany tbs wagon, as our ni*»
chinery handles the seed cotton and the
cotton seed.
THEWA REHOUSE.
For parties dasirlng to hold their eot
ton we will warehouse and Inture tho
*aine for it period not exceeding ono
month at 60 cent* per bale. For longer
period* 50 cents each additional month.
Special rates made with Sub-%hlanees
for *hort period* of fitorage, awaiting
Alliance sales days.' Our warehouse
receipt* will t»e taken by The Bank of
Barnwell as collateral upon loans to tfe*
extent of SO cents upon the dollar, thua
enabling farmers to meet pressing lia
bilities without forcing their cotton
upon tbe market.
-AND—
Golden Rule Treatment.
Ouf Stocks of JVIerchapflise
'1
-ARK-
,arge aqd Coppiete7^
' " -AND -
Have Been Selected With the Closest Care.
T hey Were bought right a ht>
Will be aold riglff. We do not expect to ~-
get rich this season but we do hope c# -•
. \ ' transact lot* of business, at quick, low profits.
/ We feel very sure that * e suit al good tastes and
satisfy all sensible judgment. Upon that plat
form we gu before the people and ask their trade. *
All in favor of buying tbe BE8T GOODrt at tbe
FA I REST FIGURES and of selling
3011 COST
at the best quotations are cordially Invited to try
M C NAB, WALKER & 60.,
pealere iq General Merchandise.
OIL MILL.
Cotton Seed bought at market ratee
and paid for in cash, cotton seed meal
or Fertilizers. ,
IE UTILIZERS.
We will fill orders cash or approved
credit
For Acid Phosphate,
For Cotton 8eeU Meal,
For Blood,
For Kainir,
For Chemicals,
Our own brands of first class Manip
ulated Fertilizers and make, are spe
cial Fertilizer to order.
Farmers and dealers are Invited to
personally inspect our works and meth
od*. We are convinced that, tbeir ap
proval and patronage w ill follow*.
Cheap, Quick and Faithful Work
Guaranteed; aug31
-i-Don’t Delay a Day.-:-
Now that money Is In circulation ev
ery sensible man and every thoughtful
woman sbopld prepare against the dan
ger of loss from fire by securing lns«-
vance over the home that shelter* the
family. A policy in a good company Ui
the best investment that can be mad*. ,
T. J. prooker,
WILLISTON, 8. C.,
Representing the Lancashire, trf Ea-
gland,the-CoMmerciaft,of Montgomery,
the Knoxville, <>L'Tennessee, will be
glad to answer all inquirtot relatlva to
cost id the