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t ■Vfl Union Department i Builders’ Materia) JANUARY 17. 1»1S. .T HID ALL THE THE ^ nu rABMBRS UNKMf. Official Mrwftorjr far Vammtf and L «cal I'BknM. ColMoa Cooatjr. , Praaldaat, J. D. Rishar. Ronad. VlTa-praatdrat, J. O. Jaqaaa. Jr.. CoctageTlII*. 8«c. and Treaa . W. W. Raaoak Wmlterboro. 'Chaplala, Job. LangdaU, Waaka Good actor. J. A. Willis, CotUga Villa. Door. Keeper. W. E. O’QUln. Wal- tarOoro. Executive Committee. J. 11. Ben ton, A. C. breland. L. H. Roger. I^ocal f alone. Ashton - U H. Yarn, president T. J., Simmons, secretary. Bells—W. W. Bryan, president H. W. Hudson. Jr, secretary. Bethel—C. H. Breland, president H. W. Breland, secretary: Black Creek—C. C. Litchfield president; P. A. Si na secretary. Brant- H'. B t’rosliy. president; | d A. Blocks^ escretary, — Sdleto^-A. G. Yarley. president J. Patrick, secretary. Puller—C. Q. Crosby, president B. J. Crosby, secretary. Hall—A. V. Rlcken baker, preal dent; J. O. Jnnuo* Jr., secretary. Hendereor'vllle, G. S. Clerk, pres ident; J. H. Hamlin, secretary, tary. Horae Pen—Jos. Langdale, pres Ideal: C. N. Langdal# secretary. Hudson Mill—J. D. Hudson, pres ident; C. J. Crosby, secretary. Islandton, F. H. Polk, president; C. R. Hears, secretary. Omega—A. C. Breland, president, A. 1. Martin, secretary. Penlel—W. E. O’Quin. president L. Belllnaer. secretary. Pleasant Grove—G. F. Copeland president; H. A. Crosby, secretary Rtokes I>. M. Kaundern, presi lent; E. C. Beach secretary. Tabor—J. A. Breland, president W. H. Breland, secretary. 'Walterboro,—J. Y. Beach, preal dent; S. P. Goodwin, secretary. Mt. Carmel—E. B. Way president O. M. Bennett. Secretary. Sniders-^W. C. Brant, president; I. 1L Getslruer, secretary. |M> NOT BKt O.MK mMNH'KAt.KD t» ' " _ ' Tr "* Ailvlce bn-ni a IVm ughtfwl Writer In News mm! Ooarler. The followlr^c clipping from The News and Courier has been hand ed The Press and Standard for publication. Space la gladly given it To the Editor of The Nkws and Courier: To the farmers, mer chants apd business met* of South t Carolina: Soon the year of 1911, with its blessings, trials and. re sponsibilities. will pass into his tory. And we tee led up to the duties apd responsibilities of 1912. And among all classes of clttsens Is, or akould be the question How can we best meet them? And es pecially so as to preserve the best business interests of the State. Of course conditions owing to the low price of cotton are not what we would like to have them; but It Is not as poor as the mbvt of us •eem to think that it is. When **e take into consideration the great value that has been sdrinl ♦<** ev ery {arm In the State in the way of improved lands, more ard bet ter houses, better stock, awlctiltur al Implements and machinery. In f&ct, there are more and better Equipped farms today in t.ve State than has been In her history, which is a valuable easel to hei future hope and success. The big business Interest of the.State up to date has never handled an acute crisis better. "Now, 1 appeal to the Xormers to acquit >ourselv»s like men to be equal to this emergency that |x upon us. devise every known method of economy and enforce It. l*o not for a moment becot-’e dis couraged. there Is a greater and ^better time for all of us If we will owly mr.’ie it so As to the smount of frotton each farmer is gMng to try and produce that is a matter •he IndKbtually has to deeit1« for himself I am not t;ne of those thal, when disaster .comes to the fsr.’ncr to charge |t up to toe fer- flliser people, und brand them as thie\« * and robbers; hut to the contrary. I think the fertiliser lr- alustry is the greatest boon thr-t jhne ovr vome to the industrial wel fare (.? tho State. A^id my exper ience and observation has !>een with 9feem Is that In any"crisis of the "itfiie wclfj.re. the fertiliser people have always berne their part of th**- burder* ex«-«edlngly well. And will atate rial’* hi re, should some pos sibility arise that would remove ill fertilizer companies out of the State Jicurry 1. 1912, I would go along witty them. To you. "jTlIcw farmeij.. do not charge this seeming calamity of low price cotton to the fertiliser com panies. merchants, or bankers, hut to ourselves. We have persisted in ydi Mug ell eottrn We have re fused to rotate our lands. We have persistently refused to provide our- ae)ves with something to live on. w We have persistently refused tr look after home-made manures and counted on' nJI cotton atvl bought manures to do the business and It has done It. Now, I want to ap peal to every farmer In the State whether he runs one plough or one hundred, to put that derd force on bla farm to work earlp In January to making home manure*. Take youraelf and every hand you have for January, February and March. To Whom It May Concern or Blue vale. Oat. May 4. 1919—“I was sick for two years with chronic bron chitis and a consequent run-down dltkm. | received no benefit from doc tor* or from n trip which 1 took for nty health, and I bad to glve up work. Vlnol wan recommended, and from the second bottle I commenced to Im prove. I gained In weight and strength, my bronchial trouble disappeared, and I am at work again. It ie the combined action of tho curative elements of the cods' livers, aided by the blood-making and strength-creating properties of tonic Iron contained In Vlnol which makes It so successful In curing bronchitis. Vlnol Is n constitutional remedy for chronic coughs, colds, bronchitis and pulmonary tronblee—not a palliative Uka cough syrups. Try Vlnol. If you don't think It helps you, we will return your money. Jno. M. Klein, Druggist, Waiter- boro. 8. C. slbiltties cf cork growing, and the rapid increase in our average pro duction per acre Is the result. A few gears more of this work of the Boys' Corn Cluts. will, sure nt>D * trough, put tbe South in the corn 0o11 ' belt.—The Progressive Farmer. Drain That Rich Spot of Low land. More or less bwampy land abound on tha majority of Southern farms. The start ic underdrr.inage should, in my opinion, be made on this clae of* soil when the need is so very pressing. The writer krows hundreds of farms where there are from one to twenty-five acres of land. In most cases tbe very richest on tbe farm—the* have not produced SteEkon tidy Mfmd a Cral Deal. Bat is Mil Shellhorn, Ala.—In n letter from thin place, Mrs. Carrie May pays: "A short time ago. I commenced to have weak spalls and headaches: I felt bad all the time, and soon grew eo bad I couldn’t stay up. I thought I would die. Jit Quit my husband got me a bottle of Cardui, and It helped me; eo he got ■ome more. After I had taken the second bottle, I was entirely well. I wish every lady, suffering from womanly trouble, would try CarduL It Is the best medicine I know of. It did me more good than anything I ever used.” Cardui Is a woman’s tonic—a strengthening medicine for women. the taxes ass* used on them for tbe past ten years. And yet an expend!- mr.ds from ingredients that act spe- ture of $20 per acre lr- tile draina« would make these rich rpots capa ble of producing an average of 50 bushels of corn or a bale of cotton per acre yearly. The owners pf these fibrins are in Clean your *tj.ble*, cow lots from around your place and under every hc-rer, aid, haul tuff from woods and compoft with your stable man ure, put a little acid or kalnlt with |t or both. Then refill jour statrips and lots amd by April 1. you wtH" have as much manure aa you have now, and by the 1st of April, with a vigorous fight every acre of land on your place will have a bumper pile on It. Put these people to work and get to work youhelf that baa for the past ten years for the three first noKhs of each year bee riding the ^oads, living |n Idleness and running to the etores' buying everything they cr« lay their hands on, and counting on all bought' fer- tillxers to do everythlin. The farm ing Interest of South Carolina migh as well ait up and take notice, wre have got to get back original prin ciples cf self-help- common sense. And get to work ourselves and mak every one associated with us-go to work; ai<l not count on a cotton crop eternally to buy and pay for everything. If the South thought half as much about producing some thing to sell as she is trjlng to eternally to buy somethit->K we wouldn’t know what to do with our money. South Carolina Is going to many cases cultivating four or five acres of poor upland to secure the annual crcp that could be produc ed on one acre of these potentially rich ewamp lands. Should it not be a good business preposition to ex pend on this cne acre of low rich land the amount of the annual cos of cultivating the three extrr. acres of poor land, when this will put the piece In condition to produce the same crop without fertiliser that th four acres produced annually with three or four dollar* worth of fertil Der per acre added to the expense of cultlveHon? 'And again, this Improvement on swamp landvot-ce made would last a hundred years.— A. L. French, In The Progressive Farmer. ciflr&ily on the womanly organs, and thus help to build up the womanly con stitution to glowing good health. As a remedy for woman's ills, it haa » successful record of over 50 years. Tour druggist sells it Please try It N. B. Writf fo: Lid**' AJvMory Dvpt. Quttta- rooea Medicine Co.. Chattanooev fwin..for tiyrriel /Nt/rurtumt, and bodk. ’’Home TraSUiaet tor Wanes,” tent Is plain wrapper, on regasM. .MASTER’S SALE. _A GirPe Wild Midnight Ride. ^ To warn people of a fearful for est fire in tbe Catskills a young Mved r0 ^al!v r Hv b e«' k ^ 1*^ai'tua'te in saved many lives. Her deed was glorious but lives are often saved by Dr. King’s New Discovery in curing lung trouble, coughs and The State of South Carolina. Colleton County. COMMON PLEAS. W. B. Easterllr-g as Executor of Wm. DuBoyce. deceased, vs Wm. DuBoyce, et al. By virtue of the decree of the above Court herein, I will sell at public outcry before the Court House In Walterboro, on Sale Day In February next, (5th day) the following described realty. All the county and State aforesaid, con- talMng one hundred and thirty-six (136) acres more or less, and u j , . -bounded, North by lands formerly colds. % Inch might have ended in , of the eBtatV of p c an J J. W. Gruber, East by lands of consumption or prvnnionia. “It i cured mq^of r. dreadful cough and lung disease,” writes W. R. Pat terson. Wellington, Tex., “after four In our family had died with con sumption, and I gait-ed 87 pounds.” Nothing so sure c-nd safe for all throat .and lung troubles.” Price 5h< and $1.00. Trial bottle free. Guar- redeem herself; but no farmer or anteed by'! John M. Klien. merchant need be nlmpleton enough to think it Is going to come the wr.y thpt most of us have been go ing. C. P. Hodges, Brownsville, S. C„ Dec. 29. o Why W> H»ve Poor PeMurm And Poor Stock. it is* astounding how many things our climatic or local cor-ditions are made responsible for, by some farmers. If a man puts beef cattle on land where There la no graas, never haa been any grass and no place for grp*s to grow because of briers, brush and weeds, he says our lard la not adapted to growing grass, or the breed of beef cattle is not suitable to our conditions. If a man buya a calf or a pig, and be cause cf not being able to - make celf or pig flesh out of nothing, or out of materials differed from those provided by nature, this calf or pigs fails to make an animal of goed site, and the owner declares that the brted is at fault, that there Is not lime enough |n our soil or that our cUniate is not adapted to the growing of large term ani mals. Pastures ran ha. made, but they do i-it come without effort. They must be planted, fertilised «nd the weed# for non-pasture plants kept doen just i* with other crops. Moreover, If pastured so cloaely tha they ha\e no chance to grow, grass plants die just as corn and cottoi-* would die if cut down close and often. ’ Legumes con-tain sufficient pro tein i-nd protein contains sufficient ash, no matter where grown, to de velop big, atrong-boqed animals If they simply get enough of these le gumes or enough protein. It is not that our legumes do not contain enough ash to make boi-?s,' but that our r-nlmals do not get enough protein. There is nothing In our soil or climate that prevents us growing large and first-class live stock; it Is all in the man.—The Progressive Ftwmer. Why The Houth Should Be The Real Own Hell. The scientists tell us It takes a certain number of heat units to pro duce a corn crop. This means that corn does Its host in a warm climate. Of course, a liberal atiioan of moisture and 6 rich soli, well ftllfd wfth orgai-io matter or hu mus, are also needed. In short, there are about four important fac tors which go to uiske up suitable* conditions for the growing of max imum corn orops: 1. Warm weather, including a moderately high temperature both day and night. 2. A compenlively long scaosn of warm weather, or a long grow ing period. • 3. . ‘'Abundant molstn^e main tained'without tpo great variatlona. An exceaa of moisture r-nd drouth are equally antagonistic to large corn yields. 4. \ deep, loose, fertile soli, well filled with delaylr-g organic matter or humus. It will be aeen that three of these four esaentla4a of a corn coun try are naturally ours. Tbe fourth alone la lacking, but by no means Impossibly at* even difficult of at>> taieweai.- The experieacee of re cent yeqt* have opened the eye* of Soathpra faraera as to the poe- OVKR-KKA RAILROAD ('ELEIIRA- TION. Key West, Florida January UO-Febiniary 8. 1918. Acount the above oerreirn the Atlantic Coast Line Rallrcad offers special reduced round-trip rates from points on its line in South Carolina. Helling Dates. Via Jacksonville and F. E. C. Railway—January 20th and 21st. Via Port Tampa and P. O. S. S. Co.—January 17th and 20th. Final Limit. Via F. E. C. Rwy. and Jackson ville—January 31st. Via Port Tampa and A. C. L.— February 4th. For schedules, rates, reservations etc., apply local ager-t or address W. J. Craig, Pars. Traffic Mgr., T. C.. White. Gen. Pass Agent, ^ Wilmington, N. C. T. B. Berry, South by lands of H. A. Stokes, and West by lands of Mrs. Martha Hlott, Wm. G. Hiott i-nd M. G. Hiott. Terms of sale cash, purchaser to pay for papers. C. G. Henderson, v Master. January 13, 1912. MASTER’S HALE. Notice to Creditors. State of Houth Carolina, tVuuty of Collctf r*. IN COMMON PLFAS. Carr line ? <*r!ey ir hr? t".v ~ , '»M >::d as Adnr. of ''Ftrtc J. S. Kir-'-y vs. Jultn Hudson, et r>. Fotlte le h<rct; niven to •'ll the creditors of the estate of J. 8. Kln- aey, deceased, that each of them, is hereby required to prove their claims before me within sixty days from Dec., 2r.d, 1911. By ordei*. Hop. T. 8. Seaae, presiding Judge. C. G. Henderson, Master.. Jan. 9th. 1912 l-9-3t. The State of South Carolina, Colleton County. . COMMON PLEA8. Sarah Crosby, et al. V8. J. W. Grant, et al. By virtue pf the decree of above Court herein, I will sell at public outcry before the Court House in Walterboro, on Sale Day in Fe’b- ruary next, (6th day), within legal hours, the following described resJty. All that piece, parcel or tract of land, situate in the County and State aforesaid, being the extreme western portion of the Gaugh tract, lying and adjoining the right of way of the Charleston aixl Savan nah rallrcad (now Atlantic Coast Line), and bounded; on the North by said right of way. East by lands of C. Nicholas, South by lands of Edwards, and West by lands late of Bissell, now of Smith, Mclver & Co., containing five acres, two roods* and twenty-four perches. Aa per Plat of Crmpbell £ Lemacks Surveyors, of date, April 9. 1897. Also, all that parcel or tract of land next with the buildings there- ot?, situate in same County and State,, containing one 'acre and terenty-flve perches, and lying on the North aide of sc4d Charleston and Savannah railroad, (now Atlan tic Coast Line), aa per Pla-t of A. F. Lemacks, surveyor, dated March 6, 1907. Terms of sale cash. Purchaser to pay for paper*. C. G. Henderson, Master. January 13, 1912. What *the Future? 3 NOW AT THE THRESHOLD OF 1912, CONSIDER WHAT THIS YEAR AND THE YEARS TO COME WILL BRING YOU. Twenty years fre m rmw your earning capacity may he much leva, many of your opportunities will have fliol into the unrecoverable past. Will you be as free then as you are now? Will you be rereivina or giving orders? Will you he working for another man, or.will he be working for YOU. If you will START AN ACCUNT WITH THIS BANK at r912. a oil persist in netting aside as a SAVINGS. A PART OF YOUR RECEIPTS, ail the years to* come will bring vnu manv opportunities, w I* »* in YOUR powerjto lie a FREE MAN if YOU will do less than you make, and ’ ou will find that SPEND ING LESS means in almost every case EARNING MORE. Smoaks Banking Company J. E. SM0AK, President. SMOAKS, S. C F. J. BERRY, Vice-President. C. A. THOMAS, Cashier. Wanted the public to know that we havn a most complete line of all kinds of builders’ material, such as DOORS, SASH. ' vj ^ BLINDS, - SHINGLES, MOULDING, BRICK. LUMBER ETC. At prices to suit. Let us know your wants. C. A. SAVACt Manufacturer of Rongh and Dressed Lumber. v ^YOU NEED THE BANK 1 ' b A good banking connection may mean the difference between suc cess and failure in your enterprises. Establish banking relations with a strong, experienced institution like this. It will help your credit and promote your interests in a great many ways. a*' The Bank of Smoaks SMOAKS, J. S. WILLIAMS. President. 1 Pre mmm W. H. VARN, Vice- Prest. - 5. C. W. C. PATRICK. JR., Cashier Fall Announcement We desire to announce that we have greatly en- larged and improved our stock of Goods, adding several new liftes. We have just completed a hand some new store building, and are prepared to give you die best of service, and take care of your every want ✓ 0 • «5 We Sell Furniture ^ One of our new lines is a complete stock of Fur niture to be sold for cash or on installment plan. Other Lines % We carry a well selected stock of Ladies Dress Goods, Dry Goods. Notions, Shoes, Hats. Our stock of groceries is also complete. Special Sale of all Summer Goods at Greatly Reduced Prices. [Mail Orders Given Prompt Attention. J. D. Ackerman & Sons Cottageville, South Carolina CORTRIGHT shingus THE TIGHT ROOF For further Suitable for ell kinds of information apply to proot-Hrla buildings. Brown Furniture & Hardware Wslterboro, S. C