The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, July 20, 1911, Image 6
Art you interested in
, on ydur purchases?
Do you desire Honest and
ecus treatment? y if so we ai
Jpus to fulfill these requit
Send us your orders for L
Material, Sash» Doors, Blir
terwr and Exterior Trim,
Stairwork, Mantels, Grille^
Lumber Lath and Shingles.
COST YOU NOTHING fo inVf
A postal card will
prices on anything you
Complete housebills a
viVrite us
w
well
R4VK8 OP 8UBNCR1PTIOH*
in AdTtnoe. p«r Annum
)n Tlnw.-...
. 48 Oft]
cSiTSt
fore .boring be rare
splondto dock and learn
pg.jes. 1
The Fall Term of the Heel
High S.-li.M.) will commence i
folTffwTngeble nod etperlettc
on Mondey new. U(b laet. I
De
The flret eectlon of the chain *abg Prof. |» B. Ooggl n, Principal,
will be at the DavU omealng on the School department.
Rnghee Piece on the Jenny, and Fair- MUePauUae WbltlCr. fnterdw
fax Road this week. 1 r~\
The eecondWectlon of the chain Bang
will be at Pum’* Mill thla week. 7
W. V. Rtcbarriaon, J. B. Moma,
Clerk. Bubr.
JEX
T- M »
ale
epartment,
MIm Norm
ortaa Oato, Primary
:UG(JSTA, ;r
,UM
.• Hi- v
ti
CO.
lEORGIAt
HAR1IONT I.Oi>»K NO. 17 A.
r A re$m1ar commanteattoh of narmofty
Ledge No. 17, A. F. M. Will be held
In Masonic Temple on Thnredajr
Sept. 7tb 7.90 o’(;k>ck Visiting
brethren are coMiauy invited to attend.
If A. A. Lemon, W. M.
Wm. MeNab, 8or
•BUY 0$ THE MARI
V .lX n ‘ '■ • |
MCE
ma-
really good bats and
^avan buy their •
^ :e of the surface. This isn’t always a safe way
[ For instance the appearance of
ROELOF’S "frntte” HATS 1
d Euf^he througlvand through quality,
Models- ‘ ‘ ‘
Vi
FOR SAl.K—SIX hundred acree of
(Ine farming land, nortb of Blackvllle,
In a verv deulrahle aeoilon. ■
i tt. D. Still. Ulackvllle. 8. C
A fbW thorohred f Ks*eX plga for
•ale, Eligible for registration. Apply
at once to
MUa Clara L Johneton,
sept7-4t : -
Elko, S. C. _
THE MOON THIN MONTtti
September:—
First Quartvr
Full Mm>n
... 8
l,H*t Quarter..
16
New Moon . .
22
Tbe *Ob rf*es to<1av at
6:53, acts at
6:47.
FOR saLF.- 1348 acres land Li De-
THR PENBiOS BOARD.
The fotlawlng gow^Ocn
erana were ea Monday el
Countv Pension Board, to aerve
September, 1WI, to September, 1
• J. A. Mem, Meyer’e Mill; O.
Blrt. Elko; J. W. Thomas, Thorn**^
B. tfagood, Barnwell. . -
RILL THE RATS.
Before gathering corn this scant
war ‘'all bauds and the cook" should
wage war on the rata that annuklly de
stroy bushels of corn III the average
bams of this State. It would he ar
good expenditure of e little labor and
money to make the core house* rat on
proof by putting under them Invented
trapping blocks topped by broad piece*
of ptank. If that cannot be done It
would be money well apent tooell the
cribs With due meshed wire netting.
* - .
. Southern
August Slat,
commercial
’the l*p9crop of
bales Ion
13 CENTS CoSoJfT
The meeting of the Coanty
Union on Monday Was vet
leaded, weather considered,
than
and Cal ifotnla.
Aarnr
amounting to
IW.StO last
before.
the cotton
i more than
ess than In
flyen out
crop ; It
' bat4*
It reported
Ippl, Loufti
ikoma end poorer
ila. North Caroline,
Alabama, Missouri
Farmers’
well at
ari d a wise
,the new Fall Models—just arrived
ictive character.
PRICE $3.00
-every
6. A.
V 1
Sole Agency
;iLL, «THE QUALITY STORE”
ICKVILLE, SOUTH CAROLINA
“Korrect Shape" Guaranteed Patent
^ Leather Shoes
#+#+ «+o+e+efe+e+e+i<t?«jM+s+M+e+*+*+*+ # +*+ # + #+ * + * + * + *
I
catur couty In four, miles of Balur
bridge, the county seat t)f Decatur
oounry, there Is a four horse farm of
open land on this place, the balance
easily pot In coUlvatlon. Price f7 an
acrei half cash, balance on terms. Ad
dress T. U. Henderson, Macon, Ua.
IF YOU WISH TO BELL THAT
farm, timber land, store or residence,
write us «t once Mid send full descrip
tion as we have an attractive proposi
tion to offer ymr.
LIGON LAND CO ,
]uly20-l2t Sumter, S. C.
•••••••••*••••••••••
• •
• HERB AND HEREABOUTS. •
• •
•••••••••••••••••••*
A lady farmer advertises today,
Essex pigs for sale.
The Barnwell cotton weighers han
dled 265 bales of new cotton last week.
Sunday visitors to Charleston de
scribed the storm wreckage as Inde*-
•crlbabie.
The opening of the Barnwell High
and Oraded School has been postponed
until Monday, September 11th.
1 Monday >eod Tuesday wore both
September sale days, but did not
amount ta/butlncss to ooa old timer.
will be in Barnwell
forty-flr„t winter In the Palmetto State.
You need a Bag for many uses and
George A. Still'iias In stock exactly
what you should have. Go to him and
get satisfaction.
F.stimates of sto-m dama
ton vary. A bale to
by one Inquiring
about the average.
With the opening of the cotton sea
son the Florida liquor sellers are again
burdening the mails with their teduo
live circulars. They want a share of
the short crop.
Of course every tntti will need, be
he young or old, a new hat for cold
weather comfort and George A . Still
has the newest in style and top most
in quality In all lower South Carolina.
The Bank of KllnC was chartered by
the Secretary of State last week to do a
general banking business, with a capt
tal of f25,000. Mr. B. M. Jenkins. Sr.
is President, B. M. Jenkins, Jr., Cash
ier.
Mrs. Harry Hammond, sl*tflr»ln-]*w
of Major K. 8. Hammond of Btackville,
died or. Monday, at Redcliffe, Beech
Island, of pneumonia. Last October
she and her husband oelebrated their
golden wedding.
Monday reports showed deterioration
ng cotton In all the States East of the
Mississippi. In Alabama and Missis
slppl worms are stripping the plants of
leaves Conditions were better It Tex
as and Oklahoma.
resolution adepfd that the members of
(he Union will bold 60 per eentof their
cotton crops off the market until the
price reaches 13 cents a pound. Farm
Union forces by bolding a similar part
at their crop for 13 eeuts.
|v If half the crop of the of the South la
Dr. J. La Bruoe Ward nf George
town. District-Inspector. 1« to flslt
in the 30th and 28th
Inst, to ace about the establishment
miteary for-the- treatment
IForto trouble, ; •
This ‘ parasite Is said to be the
held 60 days the price will,
lieved, advanco to 13 cents.
OAK GROVE S. 8.
■Oak Groye Sunday School met and
reorganizad Sunday, Sept. 3, With the
following officers:
Jesse Banders, Superintendent; Mrs.
Pauline Jtdrich, Secretary] Miss Bee
ale Still, Treaaurer; Mies Foeafe Bar
ker. 1st teacher; Mlae Rosa Sanders,
2nd teacber; Mite Edna SttU. 3rd teach
er; Floyd Creech, Assistant Superin
tendent.
AH of the officers ere ytxing people
We Invite ail to come and especially
the old folk*. .We meet on Sunday af
ter noon at 3:30 o’clock.
JessS Sander*.
cause of much laxlness In grown peo
ple and of the mental back ward ne.* of
it ba- msuy school children. The munificent
donation of a million doHars by John
D. Rockefeller, the richest mtn In the
world, pays the cost of the treatment
Includingtke aaUres of the physician*
In chafge with the exception of seven
cents to be paid by each patient. It Is
-“‘“Olished fact that the Hook
a well
Worm (4
out thef
Is vety general through-
and that Ita eradication
great Improvement to
Olar, 8. C.
GOOD FARMINQvHpH
In this year sqj^ebmy'wlth drought
damage and storm disaster It was In*’
deed cheering to chatfOn Monday with
IffTL R. Baughman of Dunbarton.
Hero Is part of his record: From
seres, fertilised with 400 pounds.,
commercial manure, planted 18 to 30
Inches apart In six feet row* be baa
pulled 1800 bundles of fodder, each
3 “bands ”
,’3
tle f *2talS < of l the perso ns treated.
—I* a i
The remedy U a simple one but
should not be taken except under ad
vice of a-doctar. as It would other wise
be dangerous.
About tbe same time the Southern
Railway’s Good Kosdi train Is ax petted
to ylstl this place and to glya free
stereoptiooo views of good roads as
contrasted with bad opes. ^
^ Fur the County Fair next month H
' Is expected to have a cooking demon
stration by the expert lady cooks trained
at WiathropGti'ege and the work done
by the boys at detnaon College will, It
Is expected, he another bright featnro
of the FairPresident Harry D. Cti
ll oun la giving a full per centage of hla
tlrelaaa energies toward the success of
the Drat County Fair since 1883, ^
me
verdict is sure to be
r 1
are i
Ranges . r
The latest eed the beat, |
cookers, always f
crossett
Men
The Shed
walk eaay.
Quean
for
The standard
comfort. In latest styles j
Mall
0
Children
They keep the llttla <
and healthy by keeping IjMf.J
as nature intended.
joy
promising (he
to cot-
the plow Is aald
to be
ires
plow
townsman
Ifmar
irCTjistc
[udson Car No. 33
If Sri want a car that will be
sasure to you and your
for years ^ou
if
should
guarantee satisfaction and
e glad to demonstrate my
anyv/heref in Barnwell
tontv. Write to me if you
thinking of buying I..
r**** 4 ' for 14 cents
back I
f
new weather prophet I* a good
foreWttcr next year will be one of
drought. He advises the sowing of
small grain crops that will ripen before
the summer heat barns or tba sea
storms may blow.
Clothlng»-For Fall and Winter wear,
in door or out, for business or for
pleasure, select a good late suit of tbe
very best quality .and moat approved
style from George A. Still’s entire new
stock. Prices will please and profit
tbe buyer.
Thyre is good lu every thing. While
the latter rains are damaging cotton
they are beneflttlng the wells and put
ting the land In good condition for
small grain planting after a killing
frost shall have removed the danger
of Hessian files and leaf hoppers.
not ail. for be hasTh his barns
enough to last a year. And that’s not
all either, for he brought ns a noble
rattlft anake melon and a sack of forked
leaf pumpkin yam*, the first potatoes
presented us tuts season. 1 Bo Monday
was not a blue day to oi.
—JB
H1 M’W
TO ELKO GO.
On nrxt .Monday the dedication of
tbe new Graded School wHl take place
and the fall term begin. Tbe building
cost $6,000 and la the beat school build
ing In tbe County. Eloquent and dis
tinguished speakers from abroad and
at home have accepted invitations to
deliver addresses. Tbe programme will
conatst of morning and evening exer
cises.
The auditorium contains comfortable
seats for 600 persons, so none need
fear being crowded out.
A basket plcnio dinner will be served
on the aohool ground* end Its patrons
are sincerely requested to contribute
to the entertainment of visitors.
The public cordially Invited to at*
tend.
SAVING CORN. .
Mr <3. F.. Grimes of Baok Creek as
good an all round farmer and atook keep
er as can be found In a day Vrlde, has
practised «,hia plan for tan year* with
aatlsfactlon to himself and bit horses
and mules. He sow* small grain eVefy
year, one third of tbe acreage In red
May wheat and two thirds In oats
These croys are ready for harvesting
the Utter pm of May or first of June.
When cat und cured be gives his work
stock at each feed time a ration of one
third sheaf wheat and two thirds sbesf
oats, and on thisfbed they can fiulsb
working bla crops all right and lay by
In good ordar. Oats alone are not
S rengthenlng enough and wheat alone
too beating hot mixed In tbe above
stated proportion tbe two are next to
corn and fodder.
SUNDAY SCHOOL CONVENTION.
Although the rata poured and wind " After a joeg Hines* Hr C.
ew tbe Barnwell and Bamberg Sun- defUrted this life at «n
Bamberg
Convention convened at
at aftd
blew
day School
Olar on Wednesday morning last
surprising as jt-may seem there really
Goto G*orj»_A. W alway.
wag a large gathering of de _ ■
visitors. The organisation was effected
for OfcarlfMou and Jacksonville tells
bow tbe Ship Was aavad during the
great storm of August 27 and 38. Tbe
good eblp arrived off Charleston at
night hut oonid not enter tbe harbor/
The Increasing force of the storm that
had accompanied It from Hatters*
drova the vessel down the coast with:
resistless force, Tbe great engines
were powerless against tboterrlfiil fury
of the wind that blew a hundred miles
an hour. Two anchors were put out
bur tbe obalne snapped like thread*.
Below Tv bee on tbe Georgia coast the
ship entered tbe vortex of the storm,
wh’cb waa as calm as a Und locked
lake. The passengers thought the dsn-
ger past but the officers knew better,
rbe still vortex petted and tbe storm
swept tbe ship onward, Tbe Uapteio,
a veteran of tbe d< ep, assembled tbe
passengers In the cabin, had Ilf# pre
servers put upon them, said tbit be
had done all he could and would drive
tbe ship on the beach within an hour,
that each must make tbe best possible
struggle for life.
The appalling silence that followed
his farewell address was brokan by the
voice of an aged lady with snow white
hair who stepped out and aaked all to
join her In repeating tbe Lord’s prayar.
AH the hundred and twenty five pas
sengers foifywedTier Id repeating tbe
prayer, ^ext another lady, saying
that aha was a CbrHtlpn scientist, aald
that aha had a message and detiverod lt
In a few words. " ‘
Then, ae quickly as the twinkling of
an aye, the prayer for help and eafaty
was answered, tba wind changed from
the South-east to the North west and
bore the ship to deep water and out of
danger. As It waa blown saaward the
ship would grata Its koel upon tbe
mergedwoeks and qnlver as if a fright
ened thing of life. In tan mlnatee
more the passengers were told tbe glad
newa that they would aooff get safely to
tbeir anxious home*.
mi.
get them i
collect the
e^ e■ mmv wnwwr
subject to
Come and
■-fR
CAPITAL A:
LO<
Georg* HJ
Butler hi
MR. CHARLES C. OALIFMje
tm once. Then
etandlng in the
Lh&d Ip his hand
right side
the ma-
during September and
October, 15 cents after that. This
was the agreement reached Tuesday
night by the cotton growers of the
South attending the National Far
mers union meeting at Shawnee,.Ok
lahoma. Uttle of the proceedings of
Abe union was mgdo public, although
l he price tbe farmers ask for - their
cotton, food roadi. parcels post and
dabbling in cotton futnrea were dis
cussed-by the cobventiox-r
Id have
^V^ 36 Kan ® on th * principle that by forc
ing the prices down they would In
crease the supply/ Three-quarters a
century past and even up to a few
years ago that was (he case, kit la not
ho any longer. CondRiom-have ab
solutely changed. Economic devel
opment ban made it posrtble for the
South to tarn its attention to other
crepe and to other nativities which
yield a fir larger prof* than cotton,
unices cotton commands what manu
facturers regard as a high price.
"If during the last few years the
cotton manufacturers of this country
bad given more attention to educat
ing the public to -tpaylmg n higher
price for cotton goods, instead of
spending their time, ae they have
done, la emklag to put down the
pries of the raw material, the Mtua-
Ooa would have beta far mere fav-
_ _ j or able to them. Persistently claim-
store the, pext day aa’d ther* woo|| tag ae aaost of them do. that trices
be tome money for me. I went the of the raw me
and If I told on him he wwl
me killed aomeho#r'He said nobody
would bellve my story if 1 appeared
in court against him. anyway, sad I
had bettor get hat He said would
give m« some money and -a suit of
elothek if I would go away.
“I told the man I wobld go away.
Then hh told me to come to Msqttle'B
fkoney
next day and he get some money
suit of clothes. J stayed in
id for two days then,
scared and got so ner-
1 took the
bertal were toe kjfb.
they convinced the huyera that cot-
tea goods ought to decline la price,
and therefore the price of the tt**
ished article continued lew,
this life at an early botnr on
Bunds? morning at tbe Sanitarium of
Dr. Knowltan in Columbia, aged shout
_____ 50 years. His body was brogghAfl R i T( , r
of delegate* and | Barnwell and In * r red ‘hAM^tported to tha
yard, Rev. #^Tt^SL£a E
nan) General wilder, at
Shanghai, and the question of ten
dering Red Cross aid la under con
sideration.
Tlsf eatire territory between Hen-
kow and Shanghai, a distance of
about six hundred miles, has been
overflowed. Cities sad towns sre un
der water, many dwellings being en
tirely submerged. CondKiona among
Drastic Measures Bring Taken in One
Chinese Province.
The disaffection in Mongolia, where
the princes and religious h jadi are
uniting against the Chinese develop
ment schemes, seem* now tabs trac
eable to the Tlblane. The princes,
It Is tain, have appealed to Tibet for
protection. Regarding the situation
In Sstocbnan province, where the peo
ple have risen against the railroad
projects, Sbeng-Hanniua-Hasl. who Is
the strongjaMMa tho Peking Gov
ernment, ordered a foore of decapi
tations of the ring leaders of the riots.
* - • • • .i nfii
Mined hr
Running at a high
auto, which struck a
Glenn Elkin waa killed ai
other members of th« party *
lously injured at Lexington.
Wednenday.
tbe people are, distressing, and a
famine thrsaUne them.
DoJess the tide of tho Tang-Tee
soon subsides it is believed that
ditkms will become (nr worse.
h ! . OM Mna Win Uvo.
Jimmie Welker, n Shawaee Indian,
108 yean old, will live
fact that he lost a leg In
accident at Tulea, Okla.,
night, according to a
bis phyridane. Walker
chief of his elan. ^
"8 P.
Saturday—8t.
wit, 10 a.
George.
»:S0 a. m.; fl^jamefvttta, 3 p. m.
Bept 28, Moyiay—Charleston,
10
10 u. m.; Edge*
Sept 30, Aiken,
Held, 2:30.p. m.
Bept 27, Wednesday—Hatoebtug,
10:20 a. m. #
Bept. 28, Tboreday—Lexington; 10
a.'*. -
Bept. 20, Priday—Hepbalbah, Oa..
0:20 a. m.; Wrens, 1 p. m., Glbeon,
4 p. m.
Bept 20, Saturday—Bandersrille,
Oa., f:S0 a. m.; Warthea, I p. m.;
MMchell, 4 p. m* -f-.
Pree lectures and
showing tbs
roads and how to build
hasp them
ji
‘ jeadi by two
the United States department of ag
riculture, M leers L. C. Boykta
H. A Falrbaaka, nssislai by a
rOaeataUvs of the
trial department at the
Railway,
am filled with