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Barnwell People. RSLKE!, Kiltw t Pm'r -i.rj;-aTa.«-y.-Jgi tf\«aSST COCSTI ClKCtLATK)* gv^BBrgayr 'X THWHs>l»AY, MAT, If 1W9. .; TOFlAXiDTMKWrTU. (ft* near, rerr iw*' 1 . fatuie tht t) l« 6/ i.Ttnr^rxti.Mi (mifi um tmiri iiorUivMt will Uirn townid t*« SMinty 4t U «•• (« «o»« (Mitt 2 fi w^l bejcln iduyrd on (ho South cnrncit »ft«r ib« urMT rovltlon now b^Jujc m it tie Krt*< While the reettll me the liking of the Xorth lie oeplullete then will heve to put with lU term*. The tooth I* the only ft*1«l open for p«yIng liivi-.tinent of their Idle moi.ey, end nowhere elee cen cheep water- power., town propertiee anil (arm .anile be bought. The dcrelopmant «f Krtnlhern. re* •onroea hr Northern capital and brawn •rill he thorough going and far reach ing. No Southern hccupaHon or eni- ployment will he .afe front' aggrenalve attack. The reconatritctlve d«vc^>p» A KOOMINO BUSINESS. Con-1 had receUwd tr..m the tale of fertUuer p^tot tea tegaehe big auna of f IU» ftJt, a* oompared with |IIUNU for the aante Mtnn laat year. All thT. money go** u> Clemwtu College. Aa the tag tax Is 26 cent* per pm the fertillaer aai*. to farmera tbit reason auiouot to h7d.2l<» ton*. 8TATKMKNT OF TUB CONDITION —OF«-y THE BANK Ol'HSARNWELL, located at Barnwell, S. C.. at the close ■* '—•'.'.'T**' of bu-ineM. April 2Sth. 190». r«?ji •■V r Mm* fee". Bpi:-; M- ’i ' -mM Pp^' 1 “SX . p., lake 4, ahtl hefe aTo lh* reaaohe i that naaaai totit ounciualon la»a than ala trarr three hundred eight .Urouaoud Amerltaii earntera have sola ihoifBMBto to the nf Wiecmnifi*. MitrnetaHa, the Nvbraaka, Arkansas and andeflilgrate.l Into th« CaWa diaii Northwest. 4n the same time n itwd thou sand Atnarlcan capital _i«ti t .speculators, miners *ad lumber Men have gone Into the same eouotry, Why did they sell and moVe, and Why did they not go Wo*t aou get new home., aa has lung been the onsvotn f They sold liielr homes, because they were paid all the wav Irom |ttf to I’ihu per acre. ’iTtev wtnt to tlm CauadUu Northwest because they were given tree houtesteHila of IU> acres each, pmlrlO loud, that would f make vh« llrat y^irTYblTahela of wheal to the sTjre’ and afterward s!5 to 40 bushels. ^— Tttey did not go West In the United dtatea because all ihe public lauds Worth having have been taken up True cb.ap laud, are j«“. advertised by •dark, and speculaiors, but they are worthless for sgrlculturul purposes ‘ These euiigiMtit fainier*, capiiall.t. and specuUtor. b.vocanted with them billion dollars. They have, with other Immigrants, secured possession of all the Canadian rich prairie lauds lit for cultn alien, and also of ail the timbered lands t>l ibe noithwest. There is room In Canada lor no more, nor la there place in the West of th^ lihlivd States for the home seekor. And immigrants from Kuro|>e have been pouring into the United Males at the rate of a iiriitton a year. The laud fever wa. never so hlzh a. now, and there Is no sign of its being whlllod. Land, use cheaper new In New Jfingland and the tooth than lu any other parta of this gieat country. In Now BugUnd the sol) Is lliiu, the wlimato cruel and except for the wanu lecturer, and factory operative there Is mo Induoeinent or attraction for Uami graata. to the farmers of the North will toon begin to sell their high valued homes and come touih to buy cheaper ones. .while the promoters, speculators amt oapltalist. will be ahia l to get in on the ground jloor. None cuu doubt that tbl. Invasion of rapitel and muscle will ncelve wcl- enmo and eni^ouragement from a Urge Momitieroial element In the South, thut the. short sigh tod sellishness of these who worship only the money Cod will meet tbs dollar omnipotent with the keys of surrender; A little more than a mon'.h ago, ac- «orJlng to data rouiteuusly furnished us by Managing Director G. Grosveuor Daw of the bouthern Coro morels 1 Con gress an ominous movement was binnclted at Washington In the inau guration of that volunteer junta to de velop the resources of the touih and All up Its waste places with sturdy Im migrants. Whether the large and live newspa pers of the South favoring such Ideas have overlooked this move oo the business chess board or have thought *neir silence would be more helpful to . ill success than their trumpeting ad vocacy I* an unsettled question In our mind, but the fact Is that as little has been said about it as concerning the ^digging of another canal ou the red planet Mars. Tht the Washington Herald thought k of sutllclent interest to give it a free write up of a section of 0 pages, co piously illustrated. On the lirst page of the Herald’s account is a handsome eut of fhe p<r»onnel of the Congress in the banquet hall of the New Willard Hotel in Washington. The cut is live eolumns wide, six nidus in height, shock full of masculine forms arrayed in broadcloth dress suits and siifT starched linen shirts. Beside, there are •ome forty single pictures of prominent members of the Commer cial Congress, all well groomed, ap patently po-sesslng fair proportionate shares of thl. world’s goods, yet hun gei lug atvd thirsting for more. In this gathering, according to our best information and belief, every one bad an nxc to grind, for we noticed in the roster the names of captain, of in dustry, of manager.) of properties mort gaged for millions, of statesmen out of Juba and men who are miserable be cause (heir money U not drawing high ✓ interest night and <Uy. This touthei n Commercial Congress iw to he a mighty force with a single pu/pose, lu maaager. are aaen who do thing* and its lieutenant, are as obedisnt to their commands aa the ay- orage-ltepubllcMion Benatoi to the he- bests Of Aldrich and the nurse* of the f Abo North. Be- l its continuous session with w rliy ©ontrlbnted cspitwl of a dollars the And act of the Con- its-liunre—U bat RKiOlTRCKS. jBtaos wlll oolmencowllli the a<?q»lsl-| f^ansand IHacounts. -. .r.. 1x9,811 7f thin of real piopmy, and will keep going until It get* control of rnomin- tile and Anancial iuterost. and will eventually Ogdenlze our educntionkl systerns, -— The conclusion of tbo whole niatter Is that every laud ow ner should hold his acres with Ann grip. Buell gospel a. we preach may not be popular, but If heeded and held tw it will be of mor«c fotnro Honertt to onr people and tbetr chlldien than ail the counsel and sd- vieo we have given since T«a Paoeta’s birth, September 7tb 1H7* tome may have dodged, but return* made to the Auditors op to May 1st show llrat. about 125 cIMxen. of 4»l* otate had Incomes lan year exceeding $•2,500. And this small array of pluto- ersta live in il counties. - In the other ill there are none acknowledging sirch pr.,sperlty. We have only one fault to Itnd with the Columbia Record tinder Editor Hoyt's mnnarement. but it Is the daily and a grievous one that it docs not go to pres* quite early enough for us to have the pleasure of reading it these spring evening* to the accompaniment of mocking bird music, ~ f “The golden hair that Walla weara l* her’s, who would have thought it; Khe swears tis hers, and true she swears, For I know where she bought it ” Years a o we saw the foregoing lines in one of the then popular school rea ders, now out of date. A Saturday nmole atating that the women of the Unite I Mate* buy an nually several hundred thousand pounds of Imlr shorn from vAilneae heads brought that hit of poetical aallre to recollection again. The wholeaale whiskey housrn that carried their claims against the old state dispensary lino the United Slates Circuit court, Judge Urltchard presi ding, seem to have accepted a* tlnal the decision of the II. 8. Supreme Court agnlBst them. No petition for a leheariug was tiled In Ihe time fixed by law, and Ihe door Is closed against further dalay. Tlio winding no conimlaslon ia to meet lu Columbia on the I7tli to map out fnture proceeding*. After hi* long rest Attorney General l.yon will he fresh for the further prosecution of his work. President Tnft will not have the long jolly summer that he calculated upon. The special session of Congress to re vise the tarllf has been wrestling with the job since March 15lh. and no ma terial progress lias been made The President expected the revision to be completed b\ June 1st, but now sees that It will not he done before July 1st, If then. The Republicans In Congress are as badly tangled as their sectional Inter- ests, hut too silff necked and stubborn to repent and embrace good Democratic doctrluS. The examination by the legislative Com.nDirion into the condition snd management of the State Hospital for the Insane in Columbia has gone far enough to develop these facts: 1st. That the capacity of ttie build ings Is largely overcrowded. 2ud. That the woman’s building Is a« nicely kept as could be wished, that the unfortunate inmates are well treat ed and aatist d. H'd. That In the ma e wards there is need for Insecticides, white wash Ac., and more and better nurses and attendants. 4th. That the cooking and sorvAe of meals ought to be better. The investigation is not yet finished . on'the slu of the iacred edl i where the religion of the Bible hM been preached for generations—a > which none wUI dud their ( government did not til fhe Y... n Their farin Of M «t fnitie I* !•> WAY TO CURB HICCOUGHS. ! I>id von ever take nine swallow, of water to cure the hiccoughs? !»o you remember the time some one soared the hiccoughs awav by telling you of a whipping due for some meanness? Well, science ha. been studying the hiccoughs and caught the hiccoughs by the’•nap of the neck.” The fiine swallows of water had a Iktle science in it, and so did the scare cure. The seientiHo hiccoughs cure consists of pressing down to numbness the nerve th it connects tha stomach, heart, lungs and brain, the pneumogastrlc nerve ! The pres.nre partly and locally par ' alj-sea this nerve and necessarily the hiccoughing must, oeasc. Have the hiccoughing pa ient sit dosrn a nl he at ease, with the muscles of the neck relaxed as mm h as possi ble. Grasp both sides of the neck somewhat toward the back part and pres* down steadily and as hard as the subject may permit for about one minute, having tha patient week the bead from side to aide. Within about one minute the nerve will be numbed and relied and the spasmodic motion will cea«e It mav r<quire longer pressure in some cates, but the result ‘.Ivurdraft*., Banking Hou-e. ............ furniture and Fixture., Other Real Kst rte .. , Due from Banks and Trust OompBnbrt .\--- Currency...i....... . Gold... fdlver and other Coin. Checks and Cash i.cms. . .... 4 DO tfh 4 (SSI ) UK! 480 BO 810 0T> ;u — a.tj 1 «1H5 84 88 14 1 i XVI—Farm Building By C. V. GREGORY. A^rfcattarai 7>ixfUien. lotua Slal* Cclltj* Copyright, 1009, by American Press Association T TIE kind of bulMIng* horded on the farm, their armn-ement swing luwu.rU from the top and provId- dicUHy, “I’d rather go with father!” And father U a eacou in the vhurch Totalr... .-.77;r, .-. :... 2G4.T52.4r —: T7TAB1LTTTBS. ^ Capital Stock Paid in GO.OfX) Surplus Fund ;4>,i»uo Undividcil I'roHts, less Cur rent Expenses and Taxes PaM...:; ao,isoo; Individual Deposit.. Subject* to check... 135 153.8G Tiuio C ertllicHfes of Deposi; 8.7hM.2.*» Uertltted Checks, 147 23 Total...., 264,152.41 Stale of touih Caroiloa t Cmmtv of Barnwell, f Before mo came G. \V. ManvIlU Cii.liier of the above named Baiik who l»eing duly sworn say. that Hie above and loregoing statement Is a true condition of said Bank, as shown by the hook* of said hank. G W. Mauville, Ca-liler. Sworn to and subscribed before me, th s (Jih. itwy of May, 1000, J O. PattcUop, jr. (U, S.) Notary Public S. C, Correct Attest FrttrRucki ng hAm, t J. M. Ka-terling V Directors. Butler ilagood, .) nud loraticn and the kind of nmtertal to mnke them of are problems that often perplex the farm er who is Just starting out to Improve hia place. No attempt will be made here to give any spectAc plans, since the buildings must be constructed to meet the varying requirements of dif ferent farms and the still more vary ing Idea* of the owners. A few sag; g«*tIona, however, mny help to solve some of the most troublesome building problems. > . . Aside from the house, which will be considered lu the next article, the most Important farm building Is tue barn. This Is usually built ns a shel ter for the cows, horses and young calves and to provide n storage place for hay. The barn should not be lo cated near enough to the house ao that the odor will be objectionable nor too far away, os this makes too many ex- tr-a slept). About 3UU f(Hd Is a good of ventnatton. By haring the window.) STATBMKN I OF TUB CONDI ITON OF The Cltlaons Bank located at Fairfax S. at the close ot bii»ine*» April 2Sth 15KW. RESOURCES. Loans and Discounts. D 'liiamt Loan. Overdrafts. Bond* and Stocks owned by the Bank Hanking H<>n*e, Furniture and Fixtures Other Real E-tate, Due from Banks and Trust Companies, Currency, Ooid, Silver and other Coin Check* and OaOi Item., Exchange, for the Clearing House, 28,418 GO unue none none r>nn<- 65G 35 none. 10.7*15 00 340 5 31X5 12 none none Total, UATHLITIKS. 40,»vS1 25 fi 800. Capital Stock’ Paid in. .Surplus Fund, Undivided Profits, less Cur- rent Expenses ami Taxe* PaM 1.309.41 Due to Batik, and J rust Com panies. none Dividends Unpaid, none Individual i4cposits Subject to Check. 2 !,907 84 Savings Depo-its 1,227. Demand Certificates of Deposit, I’iiiiH C’ertltluate. of Deposit 900 Gerllfled Check*. (’a.liier* Checks 437 Notes and Bills Kediscounled 3,COO Bill* Payable, Including Certifi cate* for Money Borrowed, Via. XXXI—OSK OP THE BEST FA HU HAHN. distance. If the yards and manure piles are on the side away from the house, aa they should be. Tito basement type of barn, though in use to some extent, Is not very pop ular. even on farms where It ran be easily built. The lowet part Is damp and dark, and it Is difUcult to secure proper drainage. These disadvantages make It desirable to eonstruct the barn entirely above ground on a solid foundation. On many farms there are plenty of “niggerheads,” which can be used as foundation material. The floor should be of cement throughout. The cost Is but little more than that of a wooden floor, nud It will last several times ns long. A cement floor Is cold and for this reason should be kept well bedded. If this Is done there can l>e Utile objection to this kind of a floor, even for horses, although some horse owners prefer to cover the ce ment with a false floor of plank. The remainder of the bam may be built of several different materials, of which wood. In spite of Its advancing price, Is still the cheapest and most convenient. Next In order come ce ment blocks and tile brick. When last ing qualities are taken into considera tion these are even preferable to wood. A good shingle roof Is very satisfac tory, though one of the many kinds of prepared roofing may be sulwtltut- ed at a saving In cost and will proba bly last Just aa long. In form tho hip roof Is the best, os It costs but little iqore and adds considerably to tho eg- t*. of cement. Ing triangular boards to close the open ings at the Hides the Incoming curreut of fresh air will be directed upward against the ceding and distributed over the stable wUhuut causing a draft. UutKdaa may be placed ou the roof to carry off the Impure air. A cheaper method is to leave some of the rafters unboxed at tbc lower cuds. lu case there are many dairy.ejttW* ot young animals to be fed -a silo D al most a necessity. Itshould be located at the end of the barn nearest tbc cow stable lu order to lessen the work of feeding. By having the yard for the young cattle close to tho silo they can lie fed from It with little extra work. A silo sixteen feet In diameter and thirty feet high Lx about the right si:)* for n 100 acre farm. The diameter should always be small enough so that two or three Inches can bo fed off the top each day. This insures fresh silage nH the time* The greater number of silos in uae r.t present‘are made of Wooden staves. These are cheap, and If a good quality cf wood Is used they will last a long time. Cement and brick silos are practically Indestructi ble, but are rather expensive. A new type of silo that D proving very satis factory Is made of Hollow building tile. This material Is as cheap ns staves and lasts as long as cement. For tho young stock, fattening cattle l and sheep cheap sheds fnrnisli ample shelter. These can be made of com mon boards well battened, with strong cedar posts for a framework. The roof should be water tight. A twelve foot opening on the south will answer the purpose of a door. These sheds should be on high, well drained ground anil must be kept well bedded. When this Is done they are fully as good ns a more expensive shelter. A separate lambing house will, of course, have to be provided for the ewes as spring approaches. For the man who is making a spe cialty of hogs tiie “colony system” of hog houses Is probably the best. For tiie average farmer, however, the extra amount of work which tills system In voices more than outweighs Us advan tages Of cleanliness, freedom from dls ease and keeping the hogs In smaller bnuchos. On most farms the centra! hog house comes nearest to meeting the requirements. Along with it a few individual houses are convenient for hauling around to the stubble and clo ver fields or other places where the hogs may happen to be located. I.ittte pigs need a great deal of sun light. and this, together with the ifa- bility of hog* to Income diseased, makes It Imperative that the hog house be provided with plenty of windows. By running il north and south and hav ing a row of pens on each side each j>en will receive an equal amount of sunshine. Where the building faces the south the north row of pens does not receive Its share of sunlight, and the outside yards on the north of the house aro almost always shaded and cold. The floor, like that of the ham, should It is ."Lgood plan to ex- Fire Insurance in the Oldest an^ * Strongest Companies 1n America. Adjustments ani Settlements promptly mad8 , Life Insurance in the Prudential Insurance Company of America. Total, d 11 581.25 6TA f E OF SOUTH CAROLINA J County of j Before mo came S It. Tallev, Cit*h ler, of tha above, named ibnik. who being duly sworn, say* that the above ami foregoing statement 1* a true con dition of Maid Bank, as fthowit by the book* of said bank. H. B. Tallev, Sworn to and subscribed before me, thi* 3rd day of Mav 1909. J. S. O’Neal (Seal.) Notary Public. Correct Attest (L. S.) Jo*. Norwood. 1 F.M. Young. - Directors. VV. ,J. Young. I TAX SALE. State of South Carolina, ) County of Barnwell, f By virtue of a Tax Execution to me directed by J. B. Armstrong, Treasu rer of Barnwell County, 1 have levied upMiatd will kell in front ol the Court House In Barnwell, w ithin tiie legal hours of sale, on Monday, the Seventh day of June 191)9, it being sale dav in said month, the following de scribed real property : All those two lots known a* Nos, 15 and IR in Allendale township, Barn well County. State aforesaid, bounded by lands on the North of Capt. LeHo) Wilson. East by Darlington Alley South by Wagoner Avenue, West bv Third Street. Levied upon and to be sold as tiie property of f>. A. Sander* to satisfy the *aid execution and co.-t* Terms Cash : Purchaser to pay for papers. Frank H. Creech, Sherilf Barn well County. Sheriffs Office. May 11th 1999. tend It out about Iwenty feet on each Hide to make feeding floors where the hogs can Ik? fed and watered without gettlngdu tiie mud. By having all pen and yard partitions movable they can be arranged for sows and litters or for fattening swine, as needed. A feed room iu one end of the building where grain can be stored and feed mixed up Is a great convenience. A eomcrib should Ik? located close to one end cf tiie feeding floors, so ns to If NOTICE. First Meeting of Creditors. IN DISTRICT COURT OF U. S. KASTKKX DISTRICT Or SOUTH CAROLINA. In Bankruptcy. A little boy, four y«*r* old, was s*y- la« bl* prayers lti« other evening, when lie suddenly Interrupted himself with the remark. * O. mamma. 1 don’t believe I’ll go to Heaven.” “Why nut?” demsuiled bU astonish ed pare % T ^ ' “I Uilnk,” replied the yo-ingater, jiu JH^ter bn»ine*««* may properly come In tha m ittcr of 3. 0. Kanuner, - Bankrupt, ^ To the Creditors of said Bankrupt, of BUckville. in thoCotintv of Barn well and District aforesaid : Notice is hereby giyen that on 7th day of May A. D. 1099, the said J. C. Kcmurer was dirty adjudicated a bank rupt. and that the first meeting of hi* creditors will be held at the office of the Referee in the town of Barnwell. S. f!,.on the 21*tday of May A. D. 1909, at 12 o’clock m.. at wh h time the said creditors may attend, prove their claim*, ag point a Trustee, ex einlne the Bankrupt and transact such before said meeting. R. A. ELLIS, Referee hi Rgnbmptcy, pacify of the haymow. Tito plan of having the hay come down to the ground In the center of the barn Is not economlc.il of space it ml Is liable to cause the bam- to spread. It Is better to obtain the extra liny room needed by making tiie sides a little higher. A small room In the bam wlrfrh can be ustsi as a workshop for repairing tools, harness and dofng other “rainy day Jobs" w ill be found very handy. It Is always l>est to have tho stock face to the outside. This gives them pave work when hogs are fattening. l**tter light and ventilation and keeps the stable wails from getting splat tered with manure. If the barn Is located on a knoti where water from surrounding ground cannot flow down around It tuul provision Is made for carrying away the water from the roof, little further drainage will be needed. It is wasteful to allow the liquid manure to drain away and be lost, and It causes unnecessary work to drain tt Into a manure pit and haul It to the places where it is needed In a water tight wagon. A much better plan 1) to use betiding enough to absorb it all. There will always lie plenty of this at hand in tiie form of straw, shredded fodder and spoiled hay. By this plan all tiie fertlllrdug value of the liquid manure will be saved with a sniail amount of work. A litter carrier or a wheelbarrow is a great help in cleaning out the stables. When a litter carrier Is used the manure spreader may bo left standing in the yard and tilled direct from the carrier. Whenever It gets full the manure may be liauled out and spread where it is most needed. In this way It reaches the fields with a —'i- n> - No; , v . .-•<>»> small amount of loss. A point that should lie looked after in the construction of the barn, and ono that Is too often neglected,^1s pro vision for sufficient light. Not only dot's plenty of light niak« the barn a more convenient place to work, but it also keeps the* stock healthier by dis couraging the growth of bacteria. The horse stable especially should lie well lighted, since horses are liable to have their sight Injured by being kept in a dMk bam. . . .. ; , / ... Along with light'BhohKl come plenty FINAL DISCHARGE NOTICE. Notice i« hereby given that on Mon. dav* M ay 11«t. 1U09, the undersigned wHHH* wBh ffnn. Jnhir K'Unerring; *udge of Probate for Barnwell County, hi* final return as Administrator with the will annexed of the Estate of .-Mra. Willa I. Loud, deceased, and apply lor Letters DiauiUsury. R M. Mixson, Adui’o’r C. T. A. April 2.1rd 1900.” Plenty of Note and letter Heads. Envelop) and Spring Ktattone-*’, all good, at Tux Paori-x Pium kkt. FIO. XXXII—HANDY TYPIS OV INDIVIDUAL HOO HOUSE. steers are fed another crib should he built with one end next to a string of feed bunks, so that the feeder can walk right out into them with tiie com when feeding. A double crib with a bin for oats ou one side should be placed near the barn, lu the winter the driveway may be used for grinding feed. A good weather proof machine shed should be built on very farm. It may be located almost gny piqpe where it will Ik? out of tiie way. There should be a row of wide doors all along one sldo so that It will be possible to take an Implement out or In without mov ing everything else ki the shed. All wooden buildings should be kept well painted. Painted wood will last three times as long ns that not no treated, to say nothing of the gain In looks. A little attention to some of these points In locating and arranging ibe buildings and yards will rut the work of doing choree In half. FINAL DISCHARGE NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that on Mon day the tenth ««av of May liK)»theun- anr-Igned wIH itiff wltF Hoii John K. Snelling. Judge of Probate for Barn well County, their insl report as Exec, utors of the Estate of L. A. Bush, Hr., deceased, and apply for Letters D mUftory, J Cresland Bnah. L, A. Bosk, Jt^ Executors. 6th April 1903. u- Plant month. May advertisements tbl* •v; - ■ ■fo" . r?> ■' STUONO AS TOfcj HOOK OP ClHtRALTAR; — ■■ ■■■ ■■■■■ ■ ■ * mmmmmmrnmimmmmm *■ •— More and better insurance to the dollar -invested than any- other Company in the United . . — —... States. - WRITE ©R 6ALL ON R- M. MIXS0N. , • Williston, S. C. FROST PROOF CABBAGE PLANTS. GUARANTEED TO SATISFY .PURCHASERS KiSLI jKIcn WAXCntXD I'llAILHfTDN LAIMK SVOnHSIOS ~ AIWL'IWA m«GUa MOST STOTHKO YYi-KWAKEMELB T*. Kutta. ^ . rUOtSSSl l- 'C'C (Irani J* r-iUrat. q rut lira* Tub,/. 4k H-- IfeeraftSM. li ,i - _ JJ®® Ms M! Is 4 n. s! IMS per a, $ |» t ■. it ttlf per k, H b. ■« mr. si tLM per ■. F. 0. B. YOUNG’S ISLAND, s. C Onr Special Express Rates ms Flmrts I* Very * § rc ' v t ^ c f' rst FtoH Proof Plants in 1868. Now have over twenty thousand satisfied customers; and we have grows sod sold more cabbage plants than >9 other persons to the Southern states cofcbaied WHY? because our plants must please or we send your money back. Order now; ft is time to set these plants in your sec- tion to get extra early cabbage, and they are the ones that sell for the most money. „ Wnr. Int iiiuraratnl < ir,W>rfo Win. C. Geraty Cft*. Box n Yosag's kind. s. C* THE Choicest Car Load •f OF — - ’ ' n New Year Stock Mini; links, 1 lligli C at HILL TOP STABLES, BARNWELL, S. C. They are all right, so are their prices. . . . Nice lot of Buggies, Surrics, Wagons, Lap Robes^ Harness and all paits of Harness to be sold CHEAP CHARLIE B R’0 W N. TIIF, Bank of Barnwell 'Fhe Oldest and Strongest Bank i?i Barnwell County Depository of The State of South Carolina. The County of Barnwell, ami The Town of Barnwell Capital, ------ Surplus and Undivided Profits, $60,000.00 $45,000.0# To save money i» not hard whentmer a bank account iMtarted fer money in a batik cannot burn a hole tbe pocket. A bank account mean* paying bills by check—the only absolutely safe way. Check*, leave no room for argument aa to when or how a bill was paid. Each check is recorded in the hank’s books. These togeher with your money nnd the cancelled check* are kept for you iu burglar and fire proof vaults, You hate acveSi to them at any time. Let us talk this over with you the next time yon are in town If im possible to call, write u*. STEPHEN 8. FURSI, JR., EDMUNDM. LAWTON. PURSE AND LAWTON, : vvewn ractors, Bagging and Ti^k Fertilizers, Ilirtid 1 e«- of ypland, Sea Island find ^torodora CoUpn. ■* - , - « / ‘ \ . > v » v liberal advances made on consignments of cotton ' - y - -—" Personal, prompt’ and careful attention to #|1 ^sincss t*ntrusted to us. FURSE & LAWTON, 212 East Bay St*., Savnuuah, Ha. M•*\ ... •: ’■ 7 . . r...... ..... .v s ... r -v >* - — *<-X / f . .. • ■ . .. ... .-iw i