The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, April 06, 1922, Page 3, Image 3
How to Raise (
Boll W
/
1. Prepare your land
up with dynamite.
> 2. Lay it off in rows
your cotton seed in Dece]
<"* TTT1
6. wnen your cuiiuii
stalk in a liill 23 feet apai
> 4. Spray each stalk 1
German cologne.
, 5. Cover your cotton
when it is two weeks
. stretched over poultry wi
6. Spread'4 tanglefoot
and replace it every day.
7. Bum off all the nea
dead trees and burn then:
8. Dust the following
. twice a day: Epsom salts
and the white of an .egg.
9. Have two hired har
vation. Furnish them wit
used in pinching the liea
show up.
10. Mortgage your far
and spread plentifully ar<
ton.
11. If anv of the boi
%/
have the punctures vulca:
automobile tire man can c
12. Begin picking you
try to have it all ginned ar
will ;enable you to go to w
potatoes and hogs for h<
kind of consumption does
doctor.
13. Pay your preacher
all your old debts, and liv
?The Carroll County (G
PASSING OF YOUNG GIRLS.
Restraint of Otber Days No Langer
^ - Recognized.
. I
Twenty-five years ago, when the
middle-aged wom^n of today was a
young girl, there were no movies, no
automobile, no jazz and there had
been no war with its terrible reconstruction
days, for a quarter of a century.
The girl of that day ran on an
even keel. She was assidiously chaperoned.
Whether she needed it was
not the question. She was, and that
was all there was to it.
True she could sometimes escape
for a buggy ride, but if she came back
only a minute or two after dark she
found an anxious and perturbed
mother wringing her hands at the
front door and frantically glad to see
t her daughter.
r The girl of that day was hemmed
ill by conventions, and she obeyed
them to the letter. If she didn't She
was frowned upon as*"the fast girl
in her set," . She found other girls
* SN-V-r
* \ Bnunmng nor a nine, rciuaps mcj
had been warned to ahun her by parents
or chaperones. Even if she were
popular with the boys and had a better
time o? it than some of her more
careful sisters, she couldn't be quite
happy over the sent-to-conservatory
feeling that they inspired in her.
Some of the careful ones rebelled
some times. They knew they were
not held to be responsible human beings.
Some one was constantly being
responsible for them. They were
allowed to enjoy themselves, to be
1 happy and gay and bright; at least
that was what they were told. But
j the enjoyment, the* brightness and
. the gaiety was cut by pattern. They
- * dared not be original about it. They
must follow the laws of the conventions
laid down for them.
^ Sometimes during the last six or
eight years the great upheaval came
for the young girl. What started it?
Was it the automobile? The movie?
^ The war? Nobody knows. The shackt
les of convention were suddenly
struck off by some means. The girl
was free.
Her freedom went to her head. It
intoxicated her. She indulged in
V every wild, madcap thing she could
think of, pretending to herself all
the while that they were neither
wild nor madcap. She must live
Jier own life, she said to herself, a life
not cut out by any save her own
' original and individual pattern. She
must think for herself, decide for
herself.
The first thing that went into the
discard was the dhaperone. ' Chapi
r ierones themselves had been growing
younger and gayer. The girl had no
f longer any respect for them, or for
the ideas they so feebly represented.
r They only wanted their chance, she
\ * felt, to be wilder and more madcap
than herself.
The experience of older women?
her mother, her aunts, her sisters?
r meant nothing to her as a lesson for
J guidance. No, she must have her
own experience and net the preached
I
Zotton Under
eevil Conditions
in October by blowing it
t
12 feet apart, and plant
aiber.
comes up thin it to one
*t.
;wice a day with Hoy t' s
;
I
with mosquito netting
old?this netting to be
re.
" between all cotton rows
irby woods, and cut down
L.
mixture on your cotton
, calomel, cream of wheat
Lds for every acre in culti
;k barbers7 tweezers to be
ds off any weevils which
i
in and buy nitrate of soda
Dund the roots o? the cotLls
should get punctured
nized at onc?. Any good
lo this for you.
r cotton in February and
id sold by March 15. This
ork and grow corn, peas,
ome consumption. This
not need the service of a
'. Trade for cash. Settle
e happy ever afterwards,
a.) Times.
GOOD PRICE FOR BONDS.
Orangeburg County Sells $325,000
Issue.
Orangeburg, March 29.?The bond
issue for $325,000 which was recently
authorized by the past legislative
delegation for paying the present
indebtedness on the county and
for maintenance and upkeep of the
roads and other expenses was sold
yesterday /for par and a premium
of $2,866, with interest at the rate of
5 per cent. This is considered an unusual
sale for county bonds. There
were seventeen bidders present at
the sale.
"Fed Up."
Ben F. Looney, former attorney
general of Texas, was in Dallas and
when asked by a newspaper man
whether he would be in politics this
year, said: "Some of my friends recently
asked me to enter a political
race this.year, but I told them I was
remided of a story I had heard, a
negro version of Jonah and .the
whale. An old negro, telling the
story, recited an incident after Jonah's
escape, saying: ."Den he wuz
in a great hurry ter git ter Niniveh.
He run ercross de san' and he race
erlong de road twel he wuz passing
de house er uh ole frien'; De frien'
say: 'Stop en res' erwhile,' but he
say: 'Suh, I'ze in er hu'y.' En.den de
frien' say: 'We'ze got good eatin,'
yuh better stay.' He 'spon'. I loves
good eatin', but I'ze on my way.'
'Huccum?' his frien' say. "way, man,
us got fresh 'feesh.' 'You ain't talkin'
tuh me,' Jonah say, Tze plumb
fed up on feesh.' "?Witchita Falls
News-Recen^.
results- of another's. Mothers say today
that they have no influence over
their daughters. They cannot make
them lower their skirts, or leave off
painting, or buckle their flopping
galoshes. They cannot keep them
from going with young men whose
names they scarcely know, or prevent
them from taking long and late
automobile rides, and getting home
at all hours of the night.
It is an equally mysterious matter
how the mothers came to lose their
influence on the whip handle over
their young daughters. But lost it is,
and gone.
Will it come back? Will the young
girl of twenty-five years ago come
back? Will she be content to come
back?
No, not she. She has passed and
gone. In her place is a girl of poise
and determination, a girl who feels
deeply her responsibility. A girl with
reasoning powers. A girl who may be
reasoned with but who cannot be bidden.
A girl who will rise to the oc/
casion, who has a far and broad-visioned
view of life. A girl who knows
life, who hates shams and artificialities.
A girl who is the girl of the future.
strong, self-reliant, four-square
to the world.
Give her room to grow.?Cally Ryland
in Richmond News-Leader.
MARY'S LITTLE LAMB.
Historic Pet Belonged To Girl in
Massachusetts.
There are not perhaps any children
of school age who have not heard of
Mary's Jamb. And again ther? are
not mar.y that have heard the his
tory connected with the little pcem.
. Mary B. Sawyer was born March
22, 1806, at Sterling, Mass. Mary
was seven years old when twin lambs
were born to an ewe that belonged to
her father. The sheep mother refused
to care for one as her own. So
Mary took it and raised it with a
I mother's care. When the lamb was
seven months old it followed Mary
to school one day. Before the teacher
came some of the mirthful boys
suggested that they put the lamb in
Mary's desk, which they did. And
the little lamb went to sleep, but
waked up and began to kick and
scramble out of the desk. This is
what made all the children laugh
I and play to see the lamb in school.
Of course the teacher put the lamb
out but never scolded Mary in the
least. She only laughed with Mary
and the children. The lamb stayed
all day at school and went home with
Mary that night never to return to
school again.
But that day was sufficient to gain
fame for the immortal little lamb.
For some time later John Roulstone,
a Harvard student, was visiting the
teachef and he heard of the lamb at
school and sat down and wrote:
Mary had a little lamb,
Its fleece was white as snow;
And everywhere that Mary went,
The iamb .was sure to go.
It followed Mary to school one day,
Which was against the rule;
It made the children laugh and play
To see the lamb in school.
So the teacher turned it out,
But still it lingered near;
And waited patiently about,
Till Mary did appear.
The little historic lamb lived only
two years. It was gored to death by
a cow in the barn of Mary's father.
The wool of the lamb was spun ana
knitted into hose for Mary by her
mother. Mary never would wear the
stockings, <but kept them in memory
of the lamb.
History says many years later the
Old South church in Boston was
about to be sold for debt, then Mary
with other young ladies got up a sale
for the benefit of the church. Mary
unraveled the stockings made from
her pet lamb, cut the the yarn in one
yard lengths and wound it on cards
on which she had written her name.
The yarn and card were sold for 25
cents each. The sale of these stockings
alone brought $200, which saved
the old historic South church of Boston
from the sheriff's hammer.
Yes, Mary Sawyer married, we are
told. She married a man by the name
of Tyler. She lived in Somerville,
Mass., until 1889 when she died. History
tells us that she was buried in
Mt. Auburn cemetery near Boston.
And that her tomb is beside that of
the famous poet, Longfellow. Clary's
'husband died before she did so after
her death their home was turned
into a playground for the children of
Somerville.?Monroe Journal.
Grow Big in California.
> i ?? u
"It's a lovely day if I do say so myself,"
says the southern Californian,
and no mere earthly being can utter
the obvious retort which the clothing
dealer made when'his clerk remarked,
"We are having some wonderful
weather lately." What the clothing
dealer said was, "We? . .. Since when
was we partners?"
All this was by way of prelude to
the story of how his own wonderful
climate confounded the southern Californian
who bought a diminutive
Chihauhua terrier from a peddler in
Tia Juana, just over the Mexican
- -
border. It was about the size or a
j hot cross bun and peddler assured
| him it would never become larger. A
| month- later the Californian was
! again in Tia Juana and encountered
the same peddler.
"Look, senor," the peddler said,
forgetting his former customer's face,
"Chihuahua dog! Ver' lettle!"
"Very little is he!" the Californian
exclaimed. "Always stays small
like that?"
"Si, senor. Always!"
"Never gets any larger?"
"No, senor. Never!"
"You're a liar," the Californian
said. "You sold me one of those
pups a month ago, and he's the size
of a Saint Bernard right now."
For a moment the peddler was
embarrassed?but only for a moment.
"Where you live, senor?" he asked.
"I live in Los Angeles," was the
reply.
"Oh, well," the peddler said with
?1 ? ?V < {rnnHo/l tTlA
I 2. &[irug W ill fell vuu w
I "whole matter had been thoroughly'
explained, "everything grows beeg
in southern California."
New stock of Waterman Fountain
Pens is expected in a few days. Herald
Book Store.?adv.
A TONIC
Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic restores
Energy and Vitality by Purifying and
Enriching the Blood. When you feel its
strengthening, invigorating effect, see hovr
it brings color to the cheeks and how
it improves the appetite, you will then
appreciate its true tonic value.
Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic is simply
Iron and Quinine suspended in syrup. So
pleasant even children like it. The blood
needs QUININE to Purify it and IRON to
Enrich it. Destrovs Malarial germs and
Grip germs by its Strengthening, Invigorating
Effect. 60c.
NOTICE OF DISCHARGE.
Notice is hereby given to all persons
interested that the undersigned
Administrators of the estate of Thomas
Black, deceased, will on the 14th
day of April, 1922, file with the
Judge of Probate, for Bamberg
County, their final accounting and
reutrn as such Adminstrators, and
will on said day ask for letters Dismissory
as such Administrators.
MRS. S. H. BLACK,
J. B. BLACK, JR.,
Administrators of the estate of
Thomas Black, deceased. 4-13
To Stop a Cough Quick
take HAYES' HEALING HONEY, a
cough medicine which stops the cough by
healing the inflamed and irritated tissues.
A box of GROVE'S O-PEN-TRATE
SALVE for Chest Colds, Head Colds and
Croup is enclosed with every bottle of
HAYES' HEALING HONEY. The salve
should be rubbed en the chest and throat
of children suffering from a Cold or Croup.
The healing effect of Hayes' Healing Honey inside
the throat combined with the healing effect of
Grove's O-Pen-Trate Salve through the pores of
the skin soon stops a cough.
Both remedies are packed in one carton and the
cost of the combined treatment is 35c.
Just ask your druggist for HAYES'
HEALING HONEY. .
THAT BAD BACA
i
Do you have a dull, steady ache la
the small of the back?sharp, stabbing
twinges when stooping or lift
ing?distressing urinary disorders?
F<*r bad back and weakened kidaeys
Bamberg residents recommend Doan's
Kidney Pills. Read this Bamberg
woman's statement.
Mrs. Nora Sanders, E. Main St..
Bamberg, says: "The muscles in my
back were lame and I was so stiff,
I couldn't bend over. I often got terribly
dizzy. I used Doan's Kidney
Pills and before I had finished one
box I was cured and the cure has
lasted."
60c, at all dealers. Foster-Milburn
Co., Mfrs.. Buffalo, N. Y.
Habitual Constipation Cured
in 14 to 21 Days
"LAX-FOS WITH PEPSIN" is a speciallyprepared
Syrup Tonic-Laxative for Habitual
Constipation. It relieves promptly but
should be taken regularly for 14 to 21 days
to induce regular aetion It Stimulates and
Regulates. Very Pleasant to Take. 60e
per bottle.
NOTICE CONCERNING PLOWING
IN PUBLIC ROOADS.
1 Pursuant to recommendation of
the Bamberg County Grand Jury, the
landowners of the county cultivating
lands adjacent and adjoining public
roads are hereby urgently requested
not to plow into or allow their hands
to plow into the roads. /Landowners
? in nlnnf fntn An fVinOO
die i equc5Lt;u ^iaut l v? u ui vu.iv>w
rows of crops adjacent to roads parallel
with the road,, so that there may
be proper turning space without the
necessity of turning plows in the
roads. It is against the law to allow
plows to damage the roads,
and it is an unnecessary practice.
The county spends large sums
of money in road building, and the
roads belong to the people. I have
no desire to prosecute anybody, but
I must insist that this practice be
stopped immediately. The farmers
and tenants can cooperate in this respect,
and there should be no necessity
to bring action against anybody.
Full notice is being given before I
take such action.
W. B. SMOAK,
Supervisor.
January 31, 1922. tf
????=?.?
I1 Tired (
"I was weak and run-down," H
relates Mrs. Eula Burnett, of 4l
Dal ton, Qa. "I waa thin and 0
Jmat fait tired, all the time. Jp
I didn't rest welL I wasn't l|
trer hungry. I knew, bj K
this, 1 needed a tonic, and A
as there is none better than? Wd
CARDUll
gJ Th Wnnan's Trie I
. ? I began mini Gardcf," 9
continues Mrs. Burnett V
"After my first bottle, I slept H
- better and ate better. I took M
flj four battles. Now I'm well, Eft
fl feel just fine, eat amd sleep, R
H my skin is clear and I haye ?
gained and sure feel that 0
M Cardul is the best tonic erer
JH Thousands of other women H
V hare found Cardui Jest as A
A Mrs. Burnett did. It s&f aid E
19 heln yon.
?
Ink Tablets with 169 sheets go<
Herald Book Store. Over four times
SOUTHERN AGRI
Nashville, Tc
THE GIANT OF TI
Its immense popularity is
J? _ J J V J 1* _ * - - * 1
iact mat every line in it is v
*
farm families by men and wc
appreciate Southern conditioi
callv unlimited personal servi
subscribers without charge.
Every year we answter thous
hundreds of different subjectsWhen
you become a subscribe
sonal service is yours. That ii
have 375, (XX
Carroll ti
Teaches UlltS 1 u2lt
Watches WEDDING PRES1
Tell YES
m Don't foraret this is the ol
Ibe
them, the kind that c
Truth appreciated.
S. CAR]
The Jeweler
f Coe-Mort
Quality Ffiftili
Reliable crop
|| growers for
sixty years
Formulas for al
SEE:
C. F. Rizer, 01
I J. D. Copeland, Ba
As you d
the heav
?!
Kur-Fa-Cite you in8tantly
! A high-grade* (hides) and ]
varnish stain much better.
1 for furniture,
w _ v i auv/ui
' fl00rLa?nr Good painte.
I woodwork r
i any color. 11 because 11 ?
. , per gallon. I
(Granitoid ? ,
B Pure Carbo
Floor Paint Pure Zinc 1
Put it on toi
day?walk on "* T .
it to-morrow. It s surpnsi
! Shines like ?f Kurfe^
I 5S?f?
1 1^ the beauti
Kurfees makes a Paint for every P
G. O. SIMM
BAMBERG, S.
fi?ii J. Z. BROO
p^gjr DENMARK, S.
>d paper for 10c at the
as much as in 5c tablets H
CULTUR1ST I I
'nn* 9
EE SOUTH. H
due not only to the j IH
written for Southern ! Wt
)men who know and m
is, but to the practi- H
ce which- is sriven to 1 U
>ands of questions on | ma
?all without charge. I SH
: this invaluable per- 1 ?1
s one reason why we 1 Wk
) CIRCULATION. | |g
t Also I
Last I
Clocks, m
? Spectacles, :m
Eyeglasses, /fl
ace to buy Jewelry,&c. I
Promptly I
and Neatly. I
ROLL I I
Bamberg, S. 0. I m
jmeml I
izers I
w
' :^ll
9
fl
cil Paint I
ip your brush into I
y lead body of > I
Aflat alagfr I
ure Paint | 1
realize why it covers J
protects the surface so J
There isn't any magic fl
fees is just better paint. I
" "?i nn/J .annmmanH jg
.3 U9C UUU i^buiuiuviiu HI _
Dntains more pure lead H| g
.ook at the formula: ID
nate Lead - 80% 11 8
Oxide - . 20% I
ing the small amount jj 9
required to paint a k 8
it. Let us figure the ] 8
r you and show you U 8
ful color selections. I
'urpose?We have them 1
I