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f Buyers to Share in Profits Lower Prices on Ford Cars 4 . • ' » - Effective .From August 1, 1914 to August 1, 1915 and guaranteed against any reduction during that time. TO0R1NG CAR $490 RUNABOUT 440 F. 0. B. Detroit, all cars fully equipped. * 4 (In United States of America only.) ft Further, we will be able to obtain the maximum efficiency in our factory productidn, and the maximum cost in our purchasing and sales departments if we can reach an out put of 300,000 cars between the above dates. And shouTfr we reach this production, we agree to pay as the buyer's share from $40 to $60 per»car (on or about ^August 1, 1015) to every retail buyer who purchases a new Ford between August 1, 1914 and August 1, 1915. For further particulars regarding these low prices and profit-sharing plan, see the nearest Ford Branch or Deale’\ rJ'orci ^Atotor (Bompanu R1ZER AUTO CO. Distributors for Barnwell, Bamberg and Hampton Counties Olar, S. C. HARMONY LODGE NO. 17 A. F. M \ ▲ /A re<rularcommunication of Rjwmony \® / Lodxe No. 17, A. K. M. will be hel.l TwL. ,f > Maeonic Temple on Tbursdaj ^NflEJuly 7.30 o’clock Vigttiuji krethrea are ooruiany invited to attend. J. E. Harley, W. M. Wm. McNat. Toe regular meeting ot Barnwell ^ Lodge No. Hi, Kuiithtii pt Pvthiae will jbe held at their Hall on Tit-xt and y Third Frida; nights at H o’clock. A _ ~ full attendance is requested. By order of R. S. DICKS, C. C. Win. McNAB. K. R. A 8. The days lose 10 minutes in sunshine this week. Mr. C. F. Molair returned Tuesday from a business trip to New York. Quite a number of Barnwell folks' attended the Baldoc picnic Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Cole, of Mul- berry, Fla., .are expected here Sunday. •Mrs. R. C. Kirkland and daughters are visiting relatives in Williamsport, Pa. Mrs. B. G. Parks, of Waycross, Ga., is the guests of relatives and friends here. Miss Bertie Halch, of Hickory, N. C., is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. B. P. ■‘ft H. A. Simms, Esq., spent the week end with relatives and friends in Co- T lumbia. Mrs. Moye and daughter, Miss Annie Mae Vogel, of Washington, D. C., are the guests of relatives and friends here. >,w ■* -» Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Brown are at home again, after spending several weeks in the mountains and at the sea shore. Mrs. A. M. Wray and sons, of Mem phis, Tenn., fend Mr. Biliie Christie, of Macon, Ga., are the guests of Relatives and friends here. ]Klr. Ralph B. Stuart, the popular catcher for the Columbia base ball club, spent the week-end with his sister, . Mrs. B. P. Davies. Mrs. Amelia Falkenstein and daugh ter, Miss Lula, went down to Charles ton Tuesday for a few days before go ing to Glenn Springs. J. Whitner Reid, president of the State Farmers Union, has been in BarnweR-for several days -during- the past week investigating the Hall cotton maturing machine. Dr. R. C. Kirkland returned home Saturday afternoon from Glenb Springs. His friends throughout the county will be pleased to learn that he is very much improved in health. . <» The appeal of Robert Bowers, colored of manslaughter and sent- i three years at hard labor, has —•~ST tT T ' vpfi ! and he is now serving Only 53 votes were cast in Tuesday’s municipal primary election. As the candidates for Mayor and Alderman had no opposition it will be unneces sary to held a second primary. The many friends of ^fr. M. E. Black, the popular manager *of the grocery department of the Farmers’ Union Merc .ntile Company, has been confined to his bed for the past two week^‘ with fever. , Home Bank has a Cotton Pickers’ Book free to their customers and friends. Call at the Bank and ^et one. Money will be furnished for cotton picking. Send us your checks and drafts.—adv. , , Mr. W. T. Aycock, manager of the dry goods department of the Farmers’ Union Mercantile Company returned home last week after spending several weeks very pleasantly at Clyde, N. C. Mrs. Aycock is still in the mountains. Annie Bright and Janie Oliver, both negroes, were carried to Columbia Monday morning by Messrs. G. M.Main and Ed Morris, the ftrst namedtu serve a sentence of two years in the peniten tiary for manslaughter and the latter to the Asylum for the Insane. | Mr. A. M. Sanders invites anyone who doubts the beneficial use of Ground Limestone to visit his place. He has been selecting seed corn iu the field for three years and says there has been marked improvement in the pro duct. He also has some vetch and clover seed to dispose of. feed. It is not hard for a dairy farmer to sleep well on cold winter nights when he has a silo full of corn and a barn full of hay. • Immediately after milking, strain the milk from the pail through three thick nesses of cheese cloth. Advertised Letter*, Letters remaining in the Post Office and advertised August 10th, 1914. MALI. Jackson Brisbon, D. M. Eaves, W. N. Ginn, F. M. Harley, Capt. Morrall, J. E. Warren. KKMAl.B Nonie Allen, Fannie Diver, Lizzie Dunbarton, Elsie Jones, Mary Myers, Etha Smith, Carrie Thomas, Essie Wil- litypis, Mrs. M. E. Walker, Mrs. Lizzie Walker. Persons calling for these letters will please say advertised. Chas. E. Falkenstein, P. M. THE COW AND HER PRODUCT Clem ton College Weekly Notes for Far mer and Dairy m in. (These notes are prepared weekly by the Dairy Division of Clemson College, which will be glad to answer all ques tions relating to dairying.) It is hard to churn cream at too low a temperature. Keep it cool after sepa rating it, until some time before churn ing. Then expose it to an ordinary room temperature, about 70 degrees, until it sours. . Cream should be at such temperature that butter will come in twenty to thir ty minutes. f The first requisite for clean milk is a dean cow. The cream separator increases the value of the dairy products, upon the farar. Pension Notice. Notice is hereby given to the Con federate soldiers in Barnwell countv that, under the law, they are requested to meet at Barnwell on the first Mon day in September to elect a Pension Board for the ensuing year. • G. E. Birt, August 12, 1914; Pension Com. Malaria or Chills & Fever Prescription No. 6M is prepared especially for MALARIA or CHILLS & FEVER. Five or six dotes will break any case, and if taken then as a tonic the Fever will no* return. It acts on the liver better that! Calomel and does not gripe or sicken. 2St »Messrs. Harry D. Calhoun and J. Porter, of Barnwell, W. R. Darlington, ‘ Jr., of Allendale, and Isadora Brown, of Blackville, left yesterday for Wash ington to attend the special session of tile Southern Cotton Congress. When'i farmer makes and sells but ter and feeds the skim milk to poultry, pigs and caftes, he is not sending a great deal of his farm’s fertility away. Keep the farm’s fertility on the farm. Cows do not become great producers “just so.” .They must have the blood of good producers ip them. An important point to inquire about in buying a cow is the milking record at the saw’s d—s that appears to be in trouble, whether it is your cow or your neighbor’s. Grain and feed marketed through the mold and the cream can will gen- bring top prices, no matter bow the market may be for your grain and Notice of Final Ducharge. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned will on Saturday, August 15th, 1914, file with Hon John K. Snell-N ing, Judge of Probate for BarnwelP County, her final return as Administrix of the estate of Jas. L. McCreary,- deceased, and apply for Letters Dismis sory. Ella McCreary, July 14, 1914. Administrarix. waTtedT! ~r- Bed Cattle in any Quantity. We pay highest; cash prices. Write and let us know what ' * * -■ ■ • , | • • yon HifrgtPfh af»H. . . , lU' ' — r- - Proprietors of The Parlor Market, Barnwell, S. G Win core jam Bhwii—H— Neuralgia, Headaches, Cramps, Colic, Sprains, Braises, Cots and • Old Soros, Stints of Insects used in* ternaDj and sntsrnaily. Pries 25c. lour Blood is Igtil, Yooi Whole System is igt If You Have any Blood or Skin Disease Do Not Delay Until it is too late but Order. THE HOT SPRINGS REMEDY . * c • - - . ' ■ < A Complete and Positive Remedy for SYPHILIS, ECZEMA, ERYSIPELAS, ACNE. MALARIA, ^ RHEUMATISM, And all other Forms of Blood and Skin Diseases. Hot Springs Physicians pronounce this the Greatest Blood and Skin Remedy ever placed on the Market. Full Course Treatment - Three Bottles - $12.50 Single Bottle - $5,00 We Prepare a Remedy for Every Disease Write us your Troubles. All Correspondence Strictly Private! Hot Springs Medicine Company, 817 1-2 Central Avenue; Hot Springs, Arkansas 3 — Equals — 25 A startling statement but a true one in this case. One teaspoonhil of medicine and two pounds of your own ground feed (cost about 3 cents • equal, —in what they do for your animals and fowls,—two pounds of any ready-made stock or poultry tonic (price 25 cents). There you are I If you don’t believe it, try it out! Buy, today, t can of— STOCK ft POULTRY MEDICINE CkugM Im4 hi* Write lor I trial packace ol Bee Dee STOCK A POULTRY MEDICINE, alto our 32 pace, illustra ted book, hilly explaining its uses. Address: Bee Dee Stock Medidne Company. Chattanooga. Tenn. 25c, BOc and f 1 At jronr 'Mi Notice Of Primary Electigsu Executive Committee, Democratic Par ty, Barnwell County. . i Barnwell, 8. C. August 3,1914. Notice is hereby given that s primary election of the Democratic party will be held on Tuesday, August 25th, 1914,tnd s second primary, if one be necessary, sldtwo v * " will be heli weeks after. ap; The following managers are hereby serve at both * ipointed to sei Allendale:,W i th elections: O Kearse, J. L Harley, J E Warnock. 1 , " ■ Baldoc: Barnwell: S J Halford, J Staff Halford B M Darlington. Bennett Sprin Me; ever. Blackville: “THE OLD ORDER CHANGETH, YIELDING PUCE TO NEW.” King Arthur sadly realized this truth when in passing away, he gave utterance to the above thought. So it is in all kinds of business, banking included: the old way if not adapted to modern progress must give place to newer methods. Keeping money at home, subject to loss by theft and fire, has for the most part passed away in Barn well County by reason of modern facilities in banking. - .MONEY IN BANK, CHECK BOOK IN POCKET is the new order now practiced by all who are really • progressive. First, select the bank wisely, and if the acid test of capi tal stock protection is used, you will choose this bank. Then ask for the check book which we furnish without cost to you. We want your business and heartily invite you to maintain business relations with us. J 1 4 per cent. Paid in Savings Department. Bank of Western Carolina HhuI Office Aiken, s>. U. Barnwell, S. C prings: C B EllU Jr, W A Jas. Duncan. CS Wilson, C C Stone, D P Martin. Bull Pond; J L Box, J A Rouse, J J Furse. Double Pond: J L Croft, Jacob Delk, J P Chitty. Dunbarton: B F Owens, P J Hiers, B F Davis. Elko: Fairfax: J T Wilson, W L Brooks, W W Anderson. Four Mile: L A Bush, W F Duncan, R A Griffin. Friendahip: H E Creech, James Ray, Ben Zorn. Hercules: L S Still, J A Morris, J A Creech. 1 Hilda: J B Grubbs, P G Eubanks, FD Rowell. - Red Oak: O C Baxley, S E Moore, W B Parker. Reedy Branch: J M Grubbs, M. L. Still, M O Creech: Rosemary: W C Bell, P F Parker, B O Mitchell. Siloam: O H Owens, C P Morris, H W Sanders. Sycamore No. 1: J D Jenny, J A Cope, S E Bailey. Sycamore No. 2: J A Vernon, D S Deer, B R Loadholt. Well Branch: J O Griffin, J L Augley, J P Harter. Williston: A Owens, M F Weathers- bee, O N Courtney. Zouave: W S Snelling, J J Waiker, V W Peeples. Special attention is called to the fol- lowina new rules: Rule 36. The managers shall open the polls at 8 o’clock a. m., and snail close them at 4 p. m. The managers shall then proceed publfdy fo counf the votes. After tabulating the result, the managers shaB certify the—same and forward the ballot box, containing the ballots, poll list and all other papers, except the club roll, relating to such election, by one of their number to the chairman of the countycommittee within 36 hours after the close of the polls. Rule 41. The county committees shall assemble at their respective court houses on the morniug of the second day after the election on or before 12 o’clock noon to tabulate the returns and declare the results of the primary, so far as the same relates to members of the general assembly and county of ficer!, and shall forward immediately to the chairman of the State committee at Columbia, S. C., the result of the election in their respective counties for Unites States senator, State officers, congressmen and solicitors. Rule 42. The protests and contests for county officers and members of the general assembly shall be filed within two days after the day of the declaration by the county committee of the result of the election with the chair man of the county committee, and said county committee shall hear and deter mine thei after. : same at its first meeting there- gers Copy of rules will be mailed to mans- :rs of each club with tickets. R. C. Kirkland, Henry Johnson, County Chmn. Secretary. 3t. . Notie* of Stockholder* Moetii*. Notice is hereby given to the stock holders of Barnwell County Building and Loan Association that a meeting of the stockholders of said Associanon will be held in the directors’ room in the Home Bank of Barnwell, at Barn well, S. C., on the 21st day of August, 1914, at 5 o’clock p. m. for the purpose of considering a resolution by the board of directors to increase the capi tal stock of the said Association from Fifty Thousand Dollars ($50,000) to an amount not to exceed One Hundred and Fifty Thousand Dollars ($150,1)00). Full attendance desired. Wm. McNub, Geo. H. Bates, Secretary. President, 7-30-4t Send us your orders for Engraved Cards,[Invitations, etc. ■ Deginning july the all lumber, wood, etc., will be sold for spot cash only. Noth ing will be charged. Send check or money with^order and avoid disappointment. MINNEAPOLIS LADY BADLY SCALDED WHILE COOEING While preparing dinner a young Minneapolis wife had the misfortune to scald her hand so badly that over half the skin came off. She was alone at the time and rushed over to her neighbor’s for help. .This neighbor promptly ap plied Allen’s Ulcerine Salve and in ten days the hand waa completely healed without a scar. This salve is one of the oldest remex dies in America and-since 1869 it baa been known as the only salve powerful enough to cure chronic ulcers and old sores of long standing. P^cause it ia so powerful, it will bea: bums and scalds without a scar in a remarkably short time. Allen’s Ulcerine Salve heals from tht bottom up and draws out the poisons. If applied on new cuts and sores ithials in one-third the time that common salves take. Sold by C. N. Burkhalter, and other leading druggists -adv. Barnwell, :: S. C