The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, October 28, 1909, Image 1
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BARKW JBIL
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FAI1EN ASLEEP wuwhewom
Dr. its. H. Carlisle Passed Away at
Syartaabnrf Ikrsdaj Neniai
FUNERAL HELD FRIDAY
NEW COTTON PICKER MAID TO BE
AN ENTIRE SUCCESS.
USEFUL
Dr. Jams H. Garble Passes Away Sv-
roaaded by Ured Dies.
Fall of \>»n» and of Honors, South
Carolina'?* Grand Old Man Lajra
Down. His Burden and Enters
Upon a Higher Life In the HeaTen-
ly Land.
Dr. James Henry Carlisle died
at 7.4 5 o’clock Thursday morning
at his home on Wofford College cam
pus in the city of Spartanburg. The
end came quietly after several days
critical illness.
Last Monday morning early he was
taken with a fainting spell, but after
medical attention by the attending
physician. Dr. 11. R. Black, he quick
ly rallied. Tuesday he took a turn
for the worse and Tuesday night ht*
was not expected to live through the
night. Wedm-sday morning he show
ed signs of returning consciousness
and about 9 o'clock Wednesday
morning he was partly conscious.
Early Wednesday afternoon he be
came delirious and continued to grow
worse. Wednesday night Dr. H. R
telaok left Dr. Carlisle a bedside at
% o'clock, leaving his patient in
charge of a skilled trulned nurse;
medicines w* «e administered to
soothe the delirious mind aud bring
rest. At 2 o'clock Thursday morn
ing Dr. Carlisle was reported by toe
nure to be resting under the influ
ence of anesthetics, but that he was
growing apparently weaker.
The end came so quietly that no
one could tell just when life was
breathed out. At 7:4a It was an
nounced that Dr. Carlisle was dead.
The wonderful strong constitution
that had never known abuse either
by dissipation or unwarranted ex
posure had made a stout fight agatusi
death Several tim«s he had ral
lied from attacks that were thought
to be Anal, but the harvest of a weil
■pent life was full with the ripening
of the years.
Funeral Ws-* A cry Simple.
The funeral, w hlch took place at
4 o'clock Friday af(•10000. was ver>
simple, and was held in Wofford Co
lege Cliaiel in I he presence of a very
large crowd of jemple from all over
the Flat,k There was no speecb
making or tributes from eminent
ment. The life of the grand old man
spoke more eloquently than the lip^
of any matt could have spoken in
his praise
Two members from each of the
classes In college and two from the
fitting school were chosen as
active pallbearers, as follows:
Senior Class—R Leon Keaton
Keaton; W. F. Klugh. Greenwood.
J union Class-M 8 Livel-y.
Waynesboro. Ga ; D. T. Outz, John
ston
Sophomore Class—G. M Crum
Orangeburg; C. R Moseley, Ijiurens
Freshman Class —B M. Keller. J
T Moore.
Fitting School J H Anderson.
W. C Moore.
The honorary pallle-arers were K
T Hodges. R A. Child, ( A. W ood.
L Glenn, Marion Dargsn. W F
Claims That K Will Pick a Thousand
Pounds an Hour Without Injury
to Bolls or Plant.
The practical working of the Prlce-
Campbell cotton picking machine was
demonatrated on the plantation of
Senator John L. McLaurln,. near
Bennettsville one day last week In
the presence of a large number fit
plant? s and other citizens, and if
what is claimed for the new ma
chine is true. It can be truthfully
aaeerted that the days of hand picked
cotton will <oon be a thing of the
past. It is asserted that the ma
chine nicked cotton at the rate of a
thousand pounds an hour, without
injury to the plant or unopened
bolls. About 90 per cent of the open
cotton was obtained at the first pick
ing. and by running the machine over
the same rowa again, it got about
90 per cent of the balance, making
99 per cent. There was a consider
able amount of trash in the cotton
picked, but many practical farmers
said they had aeen more trash in
hand-plckod cottton.
A hundred-acre field of cotton was
bought last summer from Senator
McLaurin by Theodore H. Price of
New York for the demonstration of
the machine.
No cotton had been pekod in the
field, and the bolls which opened
early in the season had been damag
ed by dust and smoke in the field,
and the foliage had become diy aud
rotten, so that the cotton naturally
made f* poorer appea ance than if it
had been picked soon after open
ing. Some of the cotton was ginned
and submitted to buyers here, who
classed it as low middling to strict
low middling They said they had
bought a great deal of cotton this
season which was not as good as that
picked by the machine.
Upon the invitation of Mr. Price,
a number of Northern capitalist
came down and witnessed a private
test of the machine. They saw-
bale of cotton picked in an hour and
then ginned. The party included
V. Ernest Macy, Marshall P Slade.
W. H. Loftus, N. F. Carpenter. Geo
W. Baxter, Rudolph H. Kissel, George
C. F aser and Elwood Hendrick, of
New York. Herbert E. Walmsley and
Herbert E. Walmsley, Jr , of New
Bedford. Mass.; Stephen C. I»we, F
P. Sheldon, Frederic 8. Goodwin, C
L. Hathaway, F. W. Perkins and O
D Hammond of Boston, 8. H. Mc-
Klbbon and George P. Gordon of
Pittsburg, and Joel Hurt of Atlanta
They were fully convinced that the
machine is a success.
The machine is driven by an auto
, mobile engine, and the driver sits
in front and steers the machine
astride a row of cotton. It moves
over a row as fast as a man can
walk, picking about an acre an hour
The projecting "noMs" run ahead
of the machine, on each side of the
row. and lift up the limbs that are
all gathered up and pn>ssed into a
space atamt a foot jside. \t htle the
atalk is thus held
dies reach Ihrtm
sides, reaching
On one side of
WAS TRULY A GOOD MAN
FARMING FOUND GUILTY WANT him free
/ -
SCHEME OF THE PRESIDENT OF
THE FARMERS' UNION TO
lifba ud Avut Cwmcted gf Mia-
silifker tad Sort Up far
all steel spin-
it from l>otl»
inch of space,
idndle is a row
_ I worked
com# out ill right I
- beneit „f
Br*ef Sketch of the Distinguished
Educator's Life and fits Great
Work for the Young Men of South
Carolina as President of Wolford
t3oUege. 1 * -
James Henry Carlisle was born in
Winnsoboro, Fairfield county, South
Carolina, May 4, 1825. Hia father,
Dr. William Carlisle, was a native of
Ireland and came to this country in
1818, settling at Winnsboro, where
he was a practicing physician for
many years. Young James Henry
Carlisle received his primary school
ing In his native town. Later on his
parents moved to the historic town of
Camden, where the young man was
prepared for college, being taught
by Profeeaora McCandless, Hatfield
and Major Leland.
He entered the sophomore class
of the South Carolina College Feb
ruary 1, 1842. During his course
at the college he was under Dr.
Robert Henry, who had charge of
the department of languages, and Dr.
Leiber, who waa in charge of de
partment of economy and civil law.
Dr. Carlisle graduated in 1844; be
ing the second honor man in the
class, the first honor man being Gen.
P. H. Nelson, who was killed in the
battle of the "Crater."
Being the second honor man it
fell to his lot to deliver the Eng
lish oration. His subjecLwas "Shel
ley,'' the poet. It is said that this
oration elicited much favorable com
ment and many predictions were
male of his future career, but his
achievements have surpassed the
most sanguine hopes of his most ar
dent friends.
The real teacher, like the poet, is
born, not made. Young Carlisle 1m
mediately passed from the school
room as student, to the school room
as teacher, being elected principal
of the Odd Fellows' Institute in Co
lumbia, which position he held for
four years. In 1884 he was elected
to a (Kistion in the Columbia Mala
Academy.
In December, 1 850, Benjamin Wof
ford died. He left by his will one
hundred thousand dollars "for the
purpose of establishing aud endow
ing a college for literary, classical
aud scientific education, to be located
In his native district, aiid to be un
der the control and management of
the .conference of the Methodist
Episcopal Ohuflch of his native
State.” A charter was duly secured
and the trutees held their first meet
ing to organize under It at New
berry, November 24, 1852.
Thus was established the institu
lion which was destined to be the
centre of the intellectual life of South
Carolina Methodism, and which was
to l>e a potent influence in the pro
dnctlon of the highest t*p.- of citt
zenship for the State <>t South Caro
lina On*; of the United States Sen
ators from this State, one of th
SupreiMe Court judges, several clr
cuit jt^p-s and many other official
are graduates of Wof
1"
lions ft m the ce««t truck rtcl.li
Be Mtre Onf T Ati reed the article In
•Wrd column of second page from the
I rogrpMlve Farmer. All exe-m tlm
Jasl paragraph ..fit is a* true as gos
pel The exploiting of the South Is
the immediate purpose of Northern
promoters and soldiers of fortune.
So satisfied are the farmers of Wes.
tern towushin. that a tfrat class flour
mill will he a-lablished at Dunbarton
or M-yer’s Mill that they continue
sowing small wheat acreages. Rut
they select the best suited, gravelly
lands. «nd will fertilize sensibly.
Mr. If. A Kay and family moved to
II lack vide this week, where they will
twke charge of the .Southern Hotel
They have been residents of Bamberg
for a cumber of year*, and their many
friends regret their leaving. However
they have the best w Ishe* of us all for
•uccesa. —daiuberg llerakf. 2nd Inst.
now to make iikn
WINTER
The Baptist State Convention met in
annual session at Anlrrsoo on Tues
day. live hundred delegates and visi
tor* were expected to attend. From
this territory the following were dcle-
gates ;
Geo. W. Boylsfon, W. G Britton. J
V I ( ,''’ l l,0n ' y, ' er < J K Hair, H.
r- V."*' W M ' Jl ' ne *. M. Mixson.
C. H. Turner.
The Court of Common Hea* made as
rapid progress last week as the Gena-
eral Sessions did the week before All
the case* on the roster for the week
were disposed of by Friday afternoon,
ten cases by trial aud several were con-
, tln lM bec.au*** of the absence of wit-
UexMwr Herrhrfnre owe Jvtey'ewse bee
been the average dav’s work. This ex
pedition allowed Judge Gage to go
home Friday eyening. The T court en -
tered upon its third and last week
Monday morning.
A farmer had some Leghorn hen*
running about hi« place during the
spring and summer, and the women
folks had raised quite a number of pul-
le;» Down at the bain he had a sort
of side loft, in w hich ho had stored a
l-t 01 oats in the bundle. The hens,
and the pullets, as they matured, and
as the season grew colder and the out
side forage w a* ent off, pwk to work
ing in the oats up („ the lott, for their
daily bread . Th.y had kept this going
for some time before our friend noticed
it. But he had noticed collections of
eggs in the nests in various trough* at
the stable, and was wondering what
had stirred the hen* up to laving so.
He was a sensible and practical man
and. putting this and that together
after watching the Leghorns working
up in theoil loft, and seeing them
about the nests, singing, laving and
cackling, he soon came to a conclusion
"I he eggs are worth more than the
oat*, 1 ’ he said to his wile. -i’ll keen
them at it if I can,” F
And he did. He had a »taek of oats
outside the harp lot in the corner of the
tl-l I and so he. ju*t fe.i that loft with
fresh oats along a* th,. y wore worked
down, and he kept those hen* bn-y all
the winter
Establish in Each State a School to
Teach Actual, Practical Fanning
Means Much.
The movement recently broached
by President Charlea S. Barrett of
the National Farmers’ Union look
ing to the establishment of school*
in each State of the Union as purely
schools for actual teaching of actual,
praetioai. farming.—hi other word*
farms and school conjoined is the
most novel and radical movement of
the kind ever conceived by anyone.
In discussing the matter W. M.
Sherrill, of Denver Colo., says: "1
have recently read in The Atlanta
Constitution a lengthy article .by Mr.
Barrett, giving hia Idea of the pos
sibility and practicability of such
schools and I must say his idea,
while novel and radical, as before
aald, seem to me both sure and prac
tical.
For instance, his Idea that there
ahall be one great national training
or farmers’ school centrally located
and subsidary small feeding schools
to not only teach, but practice sure
enough old-time farming (not pid
dling) is certainly a movement, if
carried out, would mean an absolute
revolution in farms uud farmers ev
erywhere—especially in the South
Mr. Barrett, as is well known, is a
practical, cultured, sane man; aud he
says his idea has been In his brain
many years; that he is going to work
the scheme, and promulgate and car
ry it out in every detail.
It is known that ao many farmers
In the South, say in North Carolina,
South Carolina and Georgia, are
dragging not a living, scarcely, but
hand-to-mouth distance on old
wornout red gully hill sftdea and
dales. It is his aim and determina
tion to show those worthy men (none
more worthy on God's green earth)
that these conditions are wrong; need
not be so; can be changed by actual
tratning schools for young men. mak
ing farming what it surely and real
ly is—a study aud a science.
We all know, if once some of th
dear old-time farmers could be g"
to see that “book-farming” is not
nonsense, not a bugaboo, but a neces
sity, if farming is to be tightly done
I say if these schools can be run
so as to show them, through train
ing their sons in farming schools
transform with high intelligence and
ntensity and to "bring up” the so
called worn-out farms (not worn out.
as supposed all too often), if the
farm school can do any such work
as this, their establishment will sure
ly mean more for us all, whether in
town or country, than any movement
I have heard of in a great time.
Mr. Barrett is already at work;
says he has money and support bg-
hind him; is not talking as a visiona
ry; has studied the situation, and is
going to do what he has long felt
and desired and ought to be done.
In what I write I do not mean
to place the farm head and shoulders
above other occupations. We are to
consider the thousands of wage-earn
ers and all other classes. I do mean
that, so much depending on right
farming, that the farmer of all men.
uweds schooling—just as the lawyer
-er the doctor or the minister must
‘EB.'wTl«. rr- -
THREE YEARS AND A HALF
It Will be Remembered TtuU Avant
and ItigliAin Shot and Killed
Blgham’s Wife on the Evening »t
September 4 Last, at Murrell's
Inlet.
Three years'" ftfOT gtruwoHm ta-
FOOLIHH. SENTIMENTAL WOMEN
IN ATLANTA PETITION
Wki Tfaf hf to
mUnv CM*
mo»t
And I kna«*•W.'f*?-
j)<*,-** Tael ifi
LAY IS
ADMINISl'KA TKIX’d
l n«W xml hy virtue of the power
c'ontM ned In «n Order of the frohjite
Court, dated 20th November Usip |
will *eli to the highest bidder for cash,
at public outcrv, at the re-idenee of
CAIJ Loap OF
Cj. O., •*---~ng.T‘ . "iCo-J
Loan* on*tv5tT V
negotiated In arnount* of'^rufp?
$1,000 00 Long or short time
Carolina fuud*.
J. A. ivjiii., Artv.
Barnwell, 8. G.
prlsonmeut In the State penitentiary
was the sentence passed by Judge
Wfitts Friday afternoon at George
town upon W. B. Avant and G. C.
Higbam, for the killing of Mrs.
Ruth Crisp Bigham, the Jury having
rendered a verdict of guilty of man
slaughter after two bourn' deliber
ation. Thus end* the ntory of a deed
that baa shocked the people of the
entire State.
The correspondent of the State
says the majority of the people are
Inclined to think the •entente ex
tremely light. In •pile of the ver
dict, though, the killing of Mrs. Big
ham has not been explained, mys
tery still enshrouds the affair. The
tight for the accused men centered
around the fact that they considered
the "object,” which proved to be
•its. Bigham, a tresiidiv-t.v aud thai
there was reason for suspicion. This
was ably combatted by the State,
although the prosecutiion was at dis
advantage in not having reply to Mr.
Ragsdale.
Considerable surprise was created
when the defense permitted the case
to go to the jury without offering
any testimony.
The State touched another phase
of the case when in the teetlmony of
M. J. Pearce of Waterloo, Laurens
county, it was shown that Mrs. Big
ham while on a visit to her old home
in August had received a letter and
telegram from her husband, the con
tents of which caused her to weep
The matter of unhappy married re
lations was merely hinted at in this
manner. Mr. Pearce had seen this
letter and the tears of the deceased
.* oman.
Mr. A. C. Leonard^one of the
■Rates witnesses, was ou the boat
10 Georgetown, with Mr and Mrs
Avant, after the killing Avant had
told him "It was a sad oocurrance,
but I believe any one else would have
lone it under the excitement and
'right. Dr. Htgham doesn't blame
me; he told me to shoot.” That
aord "excitement" pla>ed a great
part In the argument by counsel,
t»«i ticularly in that of Mr. Raks
lale. Attorney J. W. Wingate open
ed for the defense, speaking but 10
minutes, dealing largely with the
tuty of jurors.
He was followed by Solicitor
Cooper of Laurens, who spoke fot
30 minutes. Mr. Cooper dealt some
what at length with the law on tres
pass.
Mr. Cooper pointed out that ac
kvrding to the testimony Mrs. Big
ham was Hitting ou the beach when
shot, that there was no suspicious
action or movement, that the men
lid not hail b< r as she pawa-d th'
house. He argued the complete ab
sence of any circumataucos that
would warrant suspicion; be showed
an iutenOlon ou the part of the de-
f an /J wMitWHied that
Gtrrmor Brows to Pardos a Doable
Murderer Because He Claima a
Change of Heart.
A dispatch from Atlanta says Gov.
Brown Is being besieged by a dele
gation of Atlanta women. Interested
^r--" ‘ ■ - .... ■
in religious work, who made an ear
nest and tearful plea for the life of
John Harper, convicted of the mur
der of Sheriff Ben Keith in Mur
ray county and sentenced to die.
The delegation Included repreaen-
tattves of the King's DiOftiteft wad
active workers in some of the lead
ing churches of Atlanta. They urged
that since his conviction, Harper had
experienced a decided change of heart
and If given s chance to live would
be an entirely different man. How
ever, they were not hopeful of secur
ing his release but would be satis
fied with having hia sentence com
muted to life Imprisonment.
In connection with the governor's
action on this case, it should be
borne in mind that Harper, although
public aentiment seems to have
changed towards him In his own
county recently, wss reputed to be
a desperate man and It was for a
homicide.that Sheriff Keith was seek
ing to apprehend him at the time he
was killed.
The case baa been before the
courts and the pardon board iu va
rious shapes for several years. At
one time after his conviction Harper
succeeded in making his escape and
was at large for about six months
before his recapture. Since then, he
has been eon fined for safer keeping
in the Tower In Atlanta, where he
has been vdsited almost dally by
religious women who have greatly
Interested themselves in the man.
Harper's case baa been before the
supreme court twice and before the
pardon board several times. When
all hope seemed to be lost the de
fense would assert that new evi
dence had been discovered and aecure
THEY PAY TO THE RILLS
respite in order to have it heard.
In this way, Harper has escaped from
the very shadow of the gallowa six
or seven times. His tether has play
ed out, now. however, and hia last
die has been thrown.
In Ita report on the came, It Is
understood that the prison board was
divided, there being two for extreme
punishment and one in favor of com
mutation of sentence.
A JOKE THAT LASTED.
The Wholesale
to ifef Msyi Mu
and Trinamtags, aad Jo They Arc
Compelled to Raise the Price and
Cheapen the Qnnlttg*.
One of the matters which the p#d-
pTi 'Tna-'ni 1 Hum ■mr
asked the govrnment to arrange the
tariff law so that it would bear a
little leas oppressively upon them waa
clothing. Clothing costs far more
in the United States than It doea In
any other part of the world, though
this country produce# moet of the
world's cotton and a great part of
the world's wool. In Bidte of tha
fact that this nation sella abroad
vast quantities of both of these prin
cipal materials for ck>th«e-mag|ng.
and that with It improved machin
ery and intelligent labor It ought to
beat the world, th* price of clothea
is higher here than it is anywhere
else in the world; and the reason In
that the tariff schedules are so high
as to tax all the people through every
article of clothing they buy, almost _
entirely for the benefit of a few mill-
owners who have done nothing to
earn this fat special privilege.
Congress did not lower ths wool
schedule. It Is aseerted. in Its de
fense, that It did not raise them,
either, though until the foil extent
of the sleight-of-hand work accom
plished by Aldrich Is l«id bare, no
body can be sure of that. Congress
did not lower the cotton schsdttlna,
but It did raise them, and it rained
most heavily those covering nrtldM
which moet people bny because most
people can afford nothing better.
These things were done by the tariff
law which President Taft praiees,
and for voting against which he has
chastised the Insurgents of the west.
These abstract facu are made
more interesting by a few figures.
Clothing has already Increased in
price, and still further lucmuese are
prom lead for next spnng. The salt
of clothes that you used to buy for
f 16 is now $20; and the additional
$4 represents your tribute to .he
wool trust] L>d the mill-owners,
* , y a large tribute la
Conductor Gave Exhibition of Work
ing in Handcuff?*.
A dispatch from tf«*w York says
Constable Bloscher of Leonla, N. J.,
Is a practical Joker of the flrat wa
ter, at leaat he was until he had
an experience, the other day, which
may have soured him on practical
Jokes for a while. The other after
noon be went down to Fort Lee with
m pair of handcuffs lu bis pocket. He
was fairly itching with a desire to
have his little joke and at last the
opportunity came. Coming back on
the Hudson Kiver trolley line be play
fully snapped the steel bracelets dp
on the wrists of the conductor of the
car. The conductor did not enjoy
the joke so much sa the constable
and the other passengers, but he
laughed good naturedly with them
while h« asked Bloscher to free him
The constable, still shaking with
bed out hia key, pul n U
' ‘ —die it o*
though thf
the old prtlfcjc.' 1 $1$. The whole
sale manufactOk&i have to pay more
(or cloth, linings, and tiimmiagv,
and so they declare they nr# com
pelled to raise prices—and, what la
worse, to cheapen the quality of th#
goods. .
The consumer has this tempting
choice; He can pay $25 for the kind
of suit that be bought last fall for
$20, or he can pay the old price of
$20. and get for It the kind of salt
that he could have got for $11 last
spring.
A pattern of goods that need to
be sold to the manufacturers at $1.75
l» r yard now costs him $2.10. It
takes three and a half yards to make
a suit so the added cost on thin
Item alone la $1.22. Adliug In the
additional cost of trimmings and
linings K la estimated that’ the In
crease tn. the miking a suit out of
that doth Is 94.23. r .
A dealer quoted by the Cloctnnntl
EijjY|1rer asys; "The retail store-
- TKsfr | ' N ''' ^ suits that
blhckville.
s. c.
th** Utc I> L. Mixson.
<l*y of December. 190W
upon the 10th
at 10 o’clock ».
m. all the personal property belonginjr
to said estate, consisting of Mules,
Horses. Wagons, Buggies. Farm Im
plements, Corn. Fodder Etc.
Jane Elizabeth Mixson.
.. , , Administratrix.
November'JUlt loot).
A FINK PLANTATION,
FOR
SALK ON KASY TKRMS.
i 5 Jo acres of land, 5 miles from
Allendale and 2 miles from A|>—
■ | P'eton, situated in a good locality,
FINAL Discharge notice. tenant houses, Gin House, Saw
Notice Is herebv given that on Tues- an ^ Machinery, Dwelling
dav the fourth day of January 1910 the House, nil in good repair, ■ 8 horse
Mmlersignlul will file with Hon, John farm in a high state of cultivation
h, smelling, Judge of Probate f,.r Ti,„ u 1 **?-”* cimnation.
Barnwell County, bis final return as • u ance land is well
surviving Executor of the estate of tlnibcr C'i- VVc can make you a
[3"- ,Wc !' rlce . »»<1 Rive you
gocu terms on this property.
J O I’atterson & Son.
Barnwell, S. C.
" . B. Cb I tty
,, ... Executor.
December 3rd 1900.
• WftbmnxHrninK a work horse, mule
$*to» th!* year on « 4* mre W tfttrer.
pea «*rep. The land was unrented
and in April he concluded fo plant it,
hiring •II the work of preparing, p:*nt-
log, working am) gathering at the rate
f-f fl SO per day for man. mule and
!»!•%. After deducting all expenses
from proceed* of Sales of corn, pern*
and fodder he la $.V0 better off. The
|and Is ao much Improved that he has
rsnrea it for »ereh bales of cortou next
year.
The Baptist Christians at Anderson
Md the Methodist LhrUtlans at Abbe
ville are th>« week balanced a ^
-twodsuHfrcetw la Washington.
It was in February—nearly March
— when he told me about it, ami he de
clared that those hens and pullers had
heel) the greatest source of profit durin<-
the winter, that he had.
“Why.” raid fie, "they fed the cows,
fed us and r#ld for the oats with their
SMaJl; ■
Now, this Ts fin ramcy'fFRrcTrrTTSTTTrPr
B ueoeaaarlly take a bunch of
l^^horn« to luv at a gooft profit in win-
ter. Under such conditions any good,
healthy lot of hens or pullets will do
It. The farm fl ick will 4fhrf» Yoti-
fiock and nitne wilt, ami
Wot necessarily fi* tfrts etcher. But rhe
situation, and the Incentive to scratch
for the grain, and be happy contented
corwlitlon of the h*n nrui*t bo
ECONOMY IS WEALTH”
I'ALSE ECONOMY means FAILUKE.
ENyINK ECONOMY Save.nn the C ns t of p roll „ ci „.
under such condfi
Itaieigh tff. C.)
Dr J IT.
nf the Stall
Coluc
on
H. B. Geer, In*
jve Farmer.
tT TJV l, > £u£'fertil-
cro > Tf a ‘'° r ? n P T SCC(1 - Hc ccon ' ,r »iical by produc ing a far-c
SEKD
EDEN' GEM CANTALOUPE SEEDf
8. KLK8K. JR.
fl
EDMUND \L LAWTON.
E -
* - « w #
Cotton Factors, bagging and Ties, Ferti izers,
Handlers of Upland, Sea Inland and Flc^doi a Cotton,
Liberal advances made on oonRi^nmen:- Teoifon.
1 erecn«l, prompt and careful attention
entrusted to us,
FUKSE ( V
triLf East Bay St.,
i all Di:nincBg
Vi\ J ON,
we hope
Houses and ho,
from Bern w ell Oour»
acres in etiltlraiJoh
wood and timber.
Terms easy.
400 A ere* Three miles from Bamwel,
L.mrtHouea. lOOacre.ln celUfatL,,
balance In 1 itnher end Wood.
Term* ca«y,
80 Acre* three mile* from Bersweit
Court House. Hevaas and I is pros r.
ft), nts 80 acres to oultlyatlou haleuo
in A ood and Timber,
ivnn* easy.
fl.OOO Acres also In ime |
Cypr* a*. 1’oplar, Mb
woods.
jjj®*** ar ** them
Co*r • sMI see these n->pertlee.
•J. O. P* rsoe * •#».
' ■' nn iU Ua
c r. ciitaH, p. a. tiduaki*
Is. Icbk
Superintendent
will* Insane at
rspaper reporter
pellagra wa«
ific disease, $2
i Usd been treated
which about half
w*
FS7, iff
COn ’" m,ml ' UnikT *^ c 'personal
cs
the vines
super-
SM£ OLD MAN, IN THE SAME OLD WAY.
OUT WITH NEW TOOLS AND NEW IDEAS.
**» *•"" •*»
Avoid these Jaeklegs scattered over th# eoi.MirTn'T wa ■—-*
work to do over. Give it to us at first, .nd save money. ^ ” 0,t ° f
Maine of our specialtiesr \
HeadaparUMtf
Calhoun it o
• - -e*- ,
A. F. YOUNG.*
Ldcn and Holmes Melon and Davis Cuke Seed
fqrsaleonly^x ^ -
’•'TWruiveii S. Q " I
Mir,
p.,, -•v*ie'r Gasoline
Call ar Work,
past ottf’ lOiope,
A, and swBq7lr
wad, .
mothei we h<,r * * n nn
JFimjBJS,
Life, Accident.
LIGHTNING
MW
- J*lv}nc#d. 7-1 . We ,
** U lli J'Q I> H K ; jy »y. _ m nig A,* . $ \* r ^ A
V • - "• :: ^ Oto *
^TRONge^t ^
"thf „ I
?%*&S*E**~
e/ackvj/e;
—OFFd
THBaANgoT^;
‘<eOO(J fTEr *