The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, March 26, 1925, Image 6
Page Six
THE BARNWELL PEOPLE, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA.
Thursday, March 26, 1925.
Help That Achy Back!
Arc* you dragging around, day after
day, with a dull, uncoamug backache?
Are you lame in the morning; bothered
with headache*, dizziness and urinary
disorders? Feel tired, irritable and
discouraged? Then there’s surely some
thing wrong, and likely it’s kidney -
weakness. Don’t neglect it! Get back
your health while you can. Use Doan's
Pills. Doan's have helped thousands
of ailing folks. They should help you.
Ask your neighbor!
A North Carolina Case
Study Is Made
of Many Farms
Kanred Outyields
Other Varieties
Reasons for Success or Fail
ure by Indiana Farmers
Considered.
Most Productive Hard Red
Winter Wheat.
*r~r»
TstL • S
Mrs. W. F. Bell,
vv . m.. itrrii,
O r e e n w o oid St,,
Scotland Neck, N.
C . says; "At ttmea
sharp path* cut In
to my hack and it
was h a rd to
straighten, lity kid
neys acted too
often. Dizziness
land weak spells
came on and my
head seemed , to
whirl; ‘Spv. ks ap-
(t th front of
(Prepared tiy th» t’nlt^d Stii-» fteparttnent
of Asrt> ult ure.)
MtMlttnls by which certain Din am*
farmers in central Indiana made salis-
faetory ret urns, even •(hiring the dh-
ppt*8siun period, arf compared with tin*
nietliods used by less successful farm
ers In Ihe same area in a study Jusi
completed h\ the I'nited. States De
partment of Agrienltnrt*. In this In
vestlgatlon tin* bus ness records of ton
Indiana farms. eojVf-iing the period
''— _ t»ear«'d Iti from i
my eyes and blurred my sight. Af
ter using one box of Doan's Fills I
was relieved."
from If)K» to I'd’Jl!. were studied.
Hoa I be ^ncce-.sful faruiel s ,h)t a 1 m;d
(Prepared b)\(he ttnlted Htatea I>epartment
, 'lof AKricutlura.)
Many fiilltires of pioneer farmers In
the drier sections of the western
section of the United States were due
to the attempt to grow unadupted
crops, says the United States Depart
ment of Aferictflf'ttre, lih discussing its
varietal experiments with hard red
winter wheats in tlu* dry ureas of the
western United States. The introduc
tion pf hard red winter wheat into
certain of these localities whirl) had
dieeti abandoned by the earliest set-
llers Inter made fidAsible a permaneni
u beat growing industry.* 1 Hard red
75/ie
AMERICAN
HOW TWO WOMEN
AVOIDED OPERATIONS
“T
(Copy for This Department Supplied by tb«
American Legion News Service.)
FIRST RAISE
ENDOWMENT QUOTA
To Kentucky department of the
American l.egitm goes the honor of
DOAN’S''i' 5
STIMULANT DIURETIC TO THE KIDNEYS
Foater-Milbum Co., Mfg. Chem., Buffalo, N. Y.
their results is discussed b> the in
vestigators in delail. < >n tlie most sue-
(•<*ssfi:i farms lliere was less variation
in cropping systems than on other
farms. Tliiis the four mo> t protitnlde
farms Imd a yearly vlariation of otil.v
H per cent in tl eir corn acreage, com
pared to L’l per cent on tin* four least
successful farms. Variations in other
crop acreages likewise were smaller on
the most profitable farms. It was also
found that tin* most .successful farms
usually had as many fields of equal
size as there were years in the crop
rotation followed, or else-'they had
Helds that could he combined in such
a way as to divide the crop acreage
I Into as many equal parts as there
were years in the crop rotation. In
other words, tlu* best farms bad the
most scientific layouts.
winter wheal Is now the principal
crop in tnany 1 | sect ions’of limited rain
being the lirst state to name the chair
man of its state committee to carry
on tlu* American Legion endowmenj
fund movement. To that department
F^e Following Letters of Mrs. Thurston and Mrs.
Beard Carry an Encouraging Message
to Other Sick Women
it
Live Stock a Factor.
was shown too that while
high
Where There’s Health
There’s a Wayl
A BILITY and will cannot win
through to victory in life
unless there is also energy—
health. And l*k of energy in
eight cases out of ten is caused
by Anemia—blood starvation.
The test above is a guide to
blood condition. Press the flesh
between hand ancLth|umb firmly:
unless the blood coipes rushing
back, Anemia is indicated.
For thirty-two years thou
sands of physicians have seen
their patients regain health and
energy by the use of Gude’s
Pepto-Mangan. It rebuilds the
latent power in run down bodies
by supplying the blood with the
iron and manganese it lacks.
Your druggist has Gude’t
Pepto-Mangan In liquid or tab*
let form.
Gude’s
Pepto-Mangan
Tonic and Blood Enricher
crop yields alone do not Insure u good
farm Income, tbe yields on the suc-
I cessful farms averaged higher than
! on the unsuccessful farms. In the
case of corn the average yield on the
four best farnl's was f>0 bushels an
acre compared with 44 on the four
least successful farms. Similar pro
portions held for the other crops. In
general the men obtaining the best
yields kept considerable live stock,
used commercial fertilizer, drained
land and limed the soil when ueces
.sary, used good seed of varieties adapt
ed to local conditions and treated their
seed to prevent diseases, and followed
good methods of ^cultivation.
No one thing had a greater Influ
ence on comparative profits than the
live slock returns per head. On the
four most successful Clinton county
furniH the yield of butterfut per cow
was ICO pounds, compared with 9n
pounds on the four least successful
farms. The best farms had one calf
per cow every 14 months, compared
to one every to months on the least
successful farms, other comparisons
In favor of the most successful farms
were: 8.9 per pent pigs per sow per
year, .compared with fl.C; 0.3 eggs per
lien per year, compared with 15.8; and
1.8 chickens, compared to 1.2. One of
the four most profitable farms hud
enough live stock to consume 1.251
bushels of purchased corn per year In
addition to 2,400 bushels grown on the
farm. On the four most successful
farms the average amount of corn con
sumed was 2,702 bushels compared
with 2,015 hustmls on the four least
successful farms.
fall, including much of Kansas aibd
Nebraska, western Oklahoma, north-v|
eis-tern Colon do, central Montana,
and the drier portions of the Columbia
basin of Oregon and Washington.
Kaqred, In general, was the most
productive hard red winter wheat for
the Great I’lains area. Other high-
yielding strains are Alberta Red, Ar- |
gentine, Belogllna, Hlackhull, Knrmont,
Montana No. 30, and Nebraska No.
0O. Turkey and Kharkof, the two
leadlng^hard red winter wheats, were !
found to he practically equal in yield;
w inter hardiness. Und other agronomic
characters and In milling and baking
qualities. Minturkl and Knrmont are
among the most hardy and Kanred is
the most rust-resistant of the hard red
winter varieties.
The results of-.varietal experiments
with winter wheat at 15 different sta
tions form tlie basis of u new publi- i
cation Just issued as department bulle
tin 1270. A copy may he obtained, as
long as the supply lusts, from the
I’nited States Department of Agricul
ture, Washington, D. C.
also goes tlie honor of halving the tirst
post (Sterns post, Sterns, Ky.) to
raise its quota in this movement.
No small pairt of tin* credit for these
achievements belongs to Frank Dill-
main Hash of F/.rlington, tin* depart
ment conuiKinder. Mr. Haish brought
to the' tatsks of the eommandership a
long experience in business, in Na-
tienail Guard and army problems, in
fraternal circles anil in public affairs.
Dorn at St. Charles. Jvv., on Sep
tember 1, 1878, Mr. Hash received the
degree of Bachelor of Arts from South
Kentucky college in 1987. lie then
spent fotiY years in the study of mining
engineering and metallurgy at Massa
chusetts Institute of Technology, grad
uating vritli the Bachelor of Science
degree in 1910.
In 1 hat year lie became assistant en
gineer with the St. Bernard Min'ng
company of Burlington, advancing
through various positions to the presi-
Vepetahlo Compound that I told my
husband I would try it before I gave
up. i soon began to feel that it was
> ^ 1 rrnaorxr
MRS ETHEl THURSTON
924 N. PINE 6TRCLT, LIMA, OHIO
Lima, Ohio. —“I want to toll you
bow your medicine has helped me.
— . » 1 — f..l
^ CV A A ~ - ..
doing mo goW. The awful misery
began to leave me, also the backache.
I have a ^ood appetite and am gain
ing in weight. Taking the medicine
was the best thing I ever did. I feel
like it has saved my life and I do not
hesitate to suv so to my friends. At
least it saved me from a dreaded
operation and I am still taking it. I
am wHling to answer letters from
women asking aiHiut the Jnedicine. ’ ’
—Mrs. Ethel Thurston, 324 North
Pine Street, Lima, Ohio.
Mrs. Beard's Letter
Eddy, Texas. —“I will write yon •
few words, thinking it will do some
one else good. Two doctors said I
would have to beoperatedon because
for nearly twelve months 1 suffered
frotn a weakness from which I could
get no relief. I was restless and
nervous and was not al io to walk
across the house. They said it was
v/iiiw.— x ».A*** V j
bow your medicine has helped me. across the house. They said it was
For weeks I suffered with awful pains the Change of Life! I saw Lydia E.
from inflammation and I was in such , Pinkham s Vegetable Compound ad-
r tn i vertised in the newspapers, and as I
from inflammation and I Tin slioI") | ^ inknam v lc*a^—
misery that I had to bend double to ! vertised in the newspapers, and as I
get relief. I could not be touched or could not get any help from doctors
jarred, had awful pain all over my j I thought 1 would give that a trial,
abdomen and could not touch my feet I began with the liquid and it helped
to the floor. It was impossible for me some, then you advised me to take
. .l :— the tablet form and I began to improve
* T 1 —« nA in vt’rxi.-rh t f rOITl
W AAV/vr*. # aw » . . —, r
me to straighten up and the pains
never ceased. I took treatments for
some time and finally was told I would
have to have an operation. I do not
believe in operations, and I had read
so much about Lydia E. Pinkham’s
rapidly. I have gained in weight from
r t —-'ommend it
J * ■* “ ‘ ^ C7 - “ «_>
105 to 170 pounds. I recommenc
to all women with this trouble.”—
Mrs. M. E. Beard, R. Na 1, Box
143, Eddy, Texas.
THE BEST RECOMMENDATION
A safe and soothing
tremedv for cots.
burns, or skin trou
bles. Protects, re-
lievesand heals.Take
internally forcoughs
and sore throats.
Protein Deficiency.
Another important practice which
showed profitalUe results on the most
successful farms was the purchase of
tunkuue fur hogs. Operators of these
farms recognized that most farm
feeds are deficient in protein. They
consequently sui%*U*mented home
grown feeds with purchased protein
concentrates. During (he eight years
the four most successful Clinton coun
ty farms purchased un average of
1.4O0 pounds of tankage per year, us
compared less than 1(H) pounds pur
chased by the least successful farmers.
The most succes^iul farmers also pur
chased 3,308 pounds of mill feed a
year, compared to 510 pounds pur-
elnised by the feast successful fanners.
Vaseline
•Mu. Mtarr.
v PETROLEUM JELLY
Chetebroukh Mfg. Co.,Corn’d.
S'aU St. New York
Mother of Nine Convinced
After One Dose
‘Your pill* etrrelnly have don* ‘VC’otufcr*’
for me. 1 am thirty-tight yeata of.age, been
married thirteen yean and a|n the mother
of nine children.
*‘I was suffering from headfehea and con
stipation (or neatly fifteen yeata. One day I
bought a box of Beecham’a Pills. One dose
was a ‘life saver’ to me. Since then I have
had no more headaches, and my health la
good. 1 recommend them to whomever I
meet." Mrs. H. La Vigne, Jersey City, N. J.
For FREE SAMPLE—write
alj
B. F. Allen Co., 417 Canal Street, New York
Buy from your druggist in X$ aryl Joe homes
For constipation, biiicmsnesi, rick htad.u he; and
other digesriv* ailment; take
Beecham’s Ptllg
ITCH!
Hone-' taacK without queation
If HUNT’S SALVB falls In (be
treatment of ITCH, ECZEMA.
RINGWORM,TETTERor other
Itohlnc akin dlaaaaea. Price
75c at druffirlata, or direct froer
II. Hetvd* iadlafea Ca. Itanua.li)
Poultry contributed average sales of
$223 a year, besides averaging $8(1
worth of eggs and meat for (he home
table on The four most successful
farms In the county. These farms also
hud sales of dairy products averaging
$209 a year. In general il was noted
that the most successful farms were
better equipped with machinery than
the least successful farms, although
it was recognized that a Ido-acre farm
may easily he overequipped.
It was found that tne best 10 nor
cent, of the 400 farms •ffivestiguted
yielded an average yearly Income,
from 1910 to 1922. sufficient to cover
5 per cent interest on their capital,
and $1,405 for labor and management,
and In addition an important share of
tlie milk, meat, poultry, eggs, vege
tables, fruit and fuel .consumed in the
farm homes. Supplies thus obtained
with the saving made on house renl,
added an average of .$005 a year to the
fi rm income.
Farm receipts on the four most suc
cessful blit of 17 farms averaged $5.-
205, or a retutm of, 7.2 per cent on the
capital* Lp\esterl. compa. *d with re
reipts from the four least successful
farms in tills group averaging only
$2,901. of un investment return of 4.5
per cent. While a fariiiex here und
there made, good profits during the
wowa period of the depression, others
failed to earn a reasonable profit and
a fair wage for their labor even in the
war boom y’ars. Most of the 100-
acre farmers did well during the pros
perous period from 1910 to 1919. But
in the period from 1910 to 1915 only
about half of them succeeded In fuuk-
nlg 5 per cent on, their capital and a
wage of $300 for their labor In addi
tion to the family living from the
farm.
Good Plan for Heading
Back Young Apple Tree
’ Young apple trees should be headed
hack to about 20 to 30 inches from the |
ground. If it Is a one-year-old tree
then all that Is necessary Is to cut off
the top the desired height. If It Is a
two-year-old tree then the central lead
er should be removed and from three
to five lateral branches retained, these
being cut buck to about 8 to 10 Inches.
In each case the lateral branches f
should be cut to an outside bud, in
order to cause the tree to spread prop
erly. After the tree has passed its
thlyd year about nil that is necessary
Is to take out interring branches and
kegp the tree from becoming too dense.
If the tendency is for the tree to pro
duce long slender branches, then these
should he shortened in the same way
that peach limbs are shortened In, un
til the tree begins to fruit, after which
time little pruning will be necessary
with tlie exception of thinning out the
Interfering branches.
"v
>V : ivi-jv. r.
- FOR - "
BARE-TO - HAIR
Is the number who are trying to
\ Ht
imitate it. If Bare-to-Hair was not
growing hair on bald heads there
lli|gs&
would be no imitators. If there is
baldness or signs of it you can’t af-
11
ford to neglect to use ‘‘Forst’s
Original Bare-to-Hair.”
Correspondence Given Personal Attention
W. H. FORST, Mfgr.
SCOTTDALE PENN’A.
Building Stave Silo
The main feature in building a silo
is to keep the silage as slightly ex
posed to outside air as possible. For
that reason a place that lias a tight
bottom and sides is regarded as neces
sary. In recent years, silos mode of
staves, held together by iron hoops,
have been popular. These stave silos
are manufactured and sold by men
in different parts of the country, who
make a specialty of manufacturing
them. The farmer need have no dif
ficulty in setting them up.
Frank D. Rash.
Garden Plant Destroyers
I’otato hugs, cabbage worms and
plant lice In assorted variety are gar- j
den pests that appear as surely as the
season rolls around, and •-every gar
dener must he ready to meet and repel
the Invading hordes of insect destroy
ers. In addition, the cutworm works
insidiously and destroys some vege
tables, although committing nothing
if pni'inie* of tlie
Tn^oTheTTupt'ediUIons o-f 'pnemie*
garden that work out in the open.
There are also molds, blights and mil
dews to add to the toll.
lency and general managership In
t92U. He is now vice president of the
West Kentucky Coal company, in
charge of tlie Eu’rlington division,
which now contnWs the properties of
the St. Bernard company. He lias
been very active in mining circles and
has contributed a number of technical
articles on this and allied subjects.
Bussing through various grades in
the Kentucky National Guard, he was
major and brigade adjutant of the
First Kentucky brigade of infantry on
tlie Mexican border. He was called
into service in the inspector general’s
division of tiie United States army in
JuljV 1918, and assigned to duty in the
War department, lie was discharged
in December following and now holds
the rank of lieutenant colonel In the
reserves.
A charter member of Joseph Vernon
Lloyd post No. 2' of the American Le
gion at Karlington. the new com
mander was post chaplain in 1923 and
1924. He was elected department vice
conmrander in 1923 iihd commander in
1924. At various times in tlie past 20
years io* has held the position .of (*()iin-
nttu.m -rrnd muy-x 1 of Karlinwton.—LLe-
Bm Brand
Inaact Powdar won’t
stain — or harm anyfhrng except Inaecta.
Houaeho'.d alxes, 10c and 25c—otharaixea, 5oc
and $1.00, at your druggist or grocer.
Write for Free Booklet, "It Kills Them".
^ McCORMICK Ac CO., Btfawx, *4.
Lowering Herself
“Since Kthel married she has
stopped wearing French heels; her
husband disapproves of them."
"I always said she'd lower herself
by marrying that man.’’—Tit Bits.
MOTHER!
Child’s Best Laxative
"California Fig Syrup’’
is
One Secret of Beauty
Is Foot Comfort
m.
Frequently you hear people say. ‘‘My
feet perspire winter and summer when
I put on rubbers or heavier foot wear—
then, when I remove my shoes my feet
chill quickly, and often my hose seem
wet through”—in every community
thousands now use ALLEN’S FOOT = EASE
in the foot bath daily, and then dust
the feet and shake into the shoes this
antiseptic, healing powder. Full
direction* on b«e at all Drug stores.
Trial Package and a Foot-Ease Walking
Doll sent FREE, address
ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE, U Roy, N. Y.
Tongue Shows if
Bilious. Constipated
forth* Perfection of Your Complexion
ThU pure tnow-whlte crura rrraore* til dlacoloratlont,
bltmUhet. patch** pimple*, etc., and produce** *o(( skm
•nd creamy completion At druf or dept •toreior by mail
prepaid, tl. 25. Send for free Beauty Booklet Ajeno wantei!
OR. C. H. BERRY CO.. 2RTS Mlchl«nn Ave.. CHICAGO
is married and has one son.
Recent World Conflict
as Help or Hindrance
Nation’s Advance
-—W ee 11 h M idisLlote vv.(
lie* FnitM States in •1S5(). At
time Ihe wealth of the country
$7,135.780.1 H M». In 1922, tlie
Hurry Mother! Even .. fretful, peev
ish child loves lie* pleasant laste of
“California Fig Syrup" and it never
fails to open the bowels A teaspoon
ful today may prevent a sick child
tomorrow.
Ask your druggist for genuine "(’all-
fornia Fig Syrup" whi< h has direc
tions for babies and children- of all
ages printed on bottle. Mother! You
must say "California" or you may gel
an Im'tntlnn tig syrup.
Don’t • change an animal's ration
abruptly.
Guesswork never will tell whether
or not seed corn vvill grow.
One-half the value of manure may
lie lost in four months if it is left ex
posed.
Kohl raid Is an early-seasorr vege
table when at Us best, or a late fall
one. But lu some sped early.
Whether the “most colossal war of
history shall lie a benefit or a detri
ment to the world dejx*mls upon how
we, who were left in ,the world, nor
mal and little affected, shall use our
opportunities." declared James A.
Drain, national commander of the
American Legion, in a recent radio
message broadcast to veterans through
out the country froth Indianapolis.
"If the World war Is to prove a
greater help than a hindrance to man
kind.’’ he said, "those of us left be
hind, whom the war Inis not so deeply
scarred, are the instruments under God
to make it so,"
that
w as
total
wealth had risen to $320,Xtl3,S<i(i.oo;i
while tlie per capita weuljh has rDen
from $307.()9 to $2,918.
Worst Joke I Ever Heard
"Has that do\e-(*yed girl met tier
affinity yet?”
"Yes; he's pigeondoed. ’ Emmay
Enn,
Oak trees are more subject to light
ning than any other kind, according to
observations by the federal Depart
ment of Agriculture.
• • • t
Tbe best annual to hide an unsight
ly object quickly Is the castor bean,
tlie most majestic annual In (he flower
lists. ! The Zanzibar types are particu
larly fine.
• • •
It Is useless to expect sweet corn,
tomatoes, the main crop of string
beans, cabbages, cauliflower, turn i pa
and other usual garden crops to flour
ish In shady gardens.
Legion Most Valuable
"The Iowa Legionnaire” says a man
of its acquaintance belongs to twenty-
_£uur different organizations, including
the Legion, and that the Legion costs
him less and Is more valuable to him
Ilian any of. the others. The world’s
champion “Joiner” produced creden
tials to show that his fraternal spirt
was actually expansive enough to em
brace two dozen affiliations.
SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN” —genuine.
The harder times arr the greatet
the advantages of the very best farm
era over the very prior, for the waste
ful methods of the poor farmer take all
of the small profits r«*uDing from low
DflcM.
Too Honest
Six-ydbr-old Billie found a jmcket-
book and made haste to return It tq
its owner, , o
"You’re an honest lad,’’ the latter
cold him, magnanimously. “Here, I’ll
give you a dime.”
“Aw, you don’t hafta," replied Billie,
turning away. “I kept a quarter out.”
—American Legion Weekly.
Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are
not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe
by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years for
--TV
Colds Headache Neuralgia Lumbago
‘Pain Toothache Neuritis 1 Rheumatism
<0
Accept only “Bayer” package
which contains proven directions.
Handr “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets
Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists
lAgaUla to tks Usds mark-ot Bsjsr Maaafscuut ft! MoaoaosUcscldssUr ol BsltoyUescld
it
■kaRB 1 * v.; B)b-gw (I5fer ..J-
fcR . mm