University of South Carolina Libraries
Li'. . ’ > > y , August 29, 1917. THK FS8S8 AND STANDARD PACE SEVEN By F. F. ROCKWELL v Anther of “Around the Year in the Garden,” “Home Vegetable Gardening, etc., etc. (Copvright l&l” by W. Atlee Burpee & Co. delphia, Pa.. Seed Growers, Phila- Work you ran do and Crops You C an Plant Now to Save and Increase tbt Plant Food in ^ our Garden to <>et Better Yields Next Year. A . --w.. —|ft ow ing plants, and when there are plowed or spaded under in the spring and decompose. yOu get J’our plant foods back again, ready for use by the vegetables you plant next spring. In addition you fiill Jour garden soil with “humus” or vegetable matter, which is almost as essential' for the healthy, vigorous growth of your plants as haying plenty of plant food In the soil. Humus keeps the soil broken up and porous nhd absorbs • the surplus moisture, storing it up for the fu ture needs of the growing pbjnto during dry weather, a \ For these reasons Vou can readily that the sowing of winter or ! fhat is .h tonus plants can while X tn such Undergo tie- idant -.e m»t- v. • may The told saying that “You cannot eat your cake and have it too” does ao t altogether apply in the garden. Or. to’put . it differently, if you handle your garden in the right way In the fall ypu can get a lot cf the raw plant foods. which it contains “cooked-up” and ready for your crops to use next season; and also s**e the next season’s use the ‘‘•left-overs” that otherwise, would go to wja^te from the plant foods you applied this year. The plant food in the -ini exists >.} a t^ro forms-—called ' .f ..liable” and ••unavailable." T'o-s simply means that the pin it/! • termed available i? in r that the toots of per- mg niake immeduifo use M that termed una* a. condition that it i.is to chemical changes-b»f. :^ can take it up. T' :..:rs.' ter plain for th>* >«* g un say that the unavail fbl • piant foods in the soil cotresp n i to t :/ ma terials of various .kinds ..high the cook may hare if " the kitciv n cup board-flour.. rice. l.aiH l ansj spa ghetti. etc. These'are* air “foods”' but not available for human use un til after they have be.-u changed diy cooking. The paralM may b<; car ried a step tmher, ip. that^after they have been pfepa-. 1. ti • n can- crowtn not be kept indefinitely, an ! unless made use-pf a large per entage of them will, be lost ot-wasfed. How to Keep Remlv-t«»*u»e Plant Fon,| fr<*m f»«*ing t«» Wit'-te. During the winter and early spring a great" deal t-f- food in soil-that i? left bare is car ried away in the surfa<*- washing and in the drainage v.at-r resulting from rains anil from melting snows. In the case of nitrogen, which is th<- most valuable of the three plant foods most likely to be ••-hort” in any soil—nitrogen, phosphoric acid and potash—further toss is occas ioned by its passing off into the air. One of the gardenet’it raos't- impor tant problems, therefore, is to savo what there may b*- left of theso available plant foods at the end of- the season for another year. And. like the surplus foods in the kitch en they may be saved by “canning.” * It may at first glance seem a rather difficult problem to ran an ^invisible something hidden away in a Toot or so cf garden ^oil which it would tane ?n expert chemical analy sis to find. But in reality it is much ♦ asier than the kind of canning you do in the kitchen. By planting a crop that will grow through the win ter and ear^v, “print the surplus available food- 1 •vill he stored uj> in the roots. «tsms and leaves of .the sirs HE NOW FEELS 20 HEIRS YOURSER Jl'DCiE WOODBO!?® NOW HALE ‘"And hearty after tak- - ING TANLAC, FbnnaThSK IS A WEALTHY FARMER gf»«» cover crops on every square foot of your garden left uncovered before freezing weatlier is not merely a 1 obby. but just about as important as nutting manure, on yoijr garden in the sprigg.’ In latitudes north of rhiladelphia. the best crops to sow for this purpose, are rye and winter vetch. South of Philadelphia cith er these of crimson, clover may bo used. iloth' the vetch and the clover are.-'^iegumes” ;ind not onlv conserve plants food as described above but gather nitrogen from the air. a dually epriching the garden soil ,qn which they grow. Jhe ear lier these ertn-h*^ sowtv^he pioro they Vill mSke* tveTore th« ground freezes up. The best wav is to have enough sec-d on hand and sow each patch of ground as soon as :t is available, instead of waitin': uj^til you can -clear off all of the gcnlen. Next ' spring the parts which were shwn last can be left ‘It Certainly Has' Made a New Man of me,” he Says—Held Pub lic Office. “I can pick upui log of wood and throw jt on the tore with as much ease as I could 20 years ago,” said Judge M. L. Woodson, of Jericho. Ark., in telling of the remarkable results he has gotten from Tanlac. Judge Woodson, who is now 70 years of age. served the entire fqar i'vyirs of the Civil War. -ne ilved/twio years in Memphis right aftet 1 the war and then settled down aV his present estate, w here he has lived for 5't year?. Judge Woodson said, his only possession when ho started out for himself were a pair of mules and $38 in cash. He has made his fortune farming and trad ing and is now probably the wealth iest planter in Critenden county. He served two years as tax assessor and twenty years ps Justice of the peace, and is one of the mpst prom inently known men of Arkansas. . “I had been in a generally run down condition and failing “health for Irt or 12 years.” he continued, “and for the past lb years I wasn’t able to get on mjr horse from the grotml; I had to lead him up to a block or something beiore I could mount. Jericho is a mile and a half from tny \ plantation, and I hadn’t bean able, to walk there for my mail, as had been my custom fhi - 7;;tv 1 cTopSi-such as melons fcnd. f Hr A year or t wo. I had lost my ap- hean *, so that the cov#r crops* wilt have more of a chance to grow. The clover can be sown any time up to the first week of September, and the rve and vetch until early frost." Fall Trenching to lacrense Fertility. There is another opportunity to make your garden for next year bet- te>- by giving it an extra deep spad ing up this fall. If it is a small one ami usually spaded or forked up, you can go over It now and dig it several Inches deeper than usual by Throwing the soil out of the first row and then digging up the soil be low that, turning it over and break ing it tip where it is.^The soil from the next row. if„ throw n on top, of this, will leave piiother strip of th^ subsoil uncovered so that It can be ThisLtrenching broken up. soiling of the garden not only gives nroie room for the roots of your pi ant a Jo gather their food in hut grlso thakes it possible to “work” it much sooner in the spring. the improved drainage enables it to dry out more rapidly. or sub- Some Political Economy The argument has that^tfie wealth the Cnited States are impaired to the--«»xifci»t > of all the money spent by the govern men t fbi war-purposes. The argument is very dnsound. There is a ►harp contrast between cost to the government am^ cost to the people of the country. The United ?ta*es has sold two billion dollars worth of- Liberty Loan Bonds ta the people of the United States and thp.r.efore owes two billion dollars nior> tnau it did a few months ago. When tlv money for the bopds has been col lected In full and f-en expended ir« full the matter will “tar 1 in this shape:—- ‘ ‘ ' The peonle,,of the United States will have loaned to Their govern ment two billion dollars ut return for which they will have received two billion dollars worth of Liberty la>an Bonds which is as valuable se curity as the world affords. More over they will have in their pockets or their banks the two billion dol lars which they loaned their gov ernment. "" The government will have expended part of this money itself and those European nations engaged in war with Germanv whose obligations our .government has purchased with pert of the mon ey realized from the rale of Liberty Loan Bonds, will have expended the other, part, and all of it will have spent in America *or American products and in pay neat of Amert- f *r wages. The resources of the nation, i.t* '’tfpltal *»ock so to speak, will not have been impaired at alt. Our farms, our mines oar factories, in fact all of onr fixed property and industries will remain intact. Our People will sirnplv have sold aome of the annual products of thje coun- try, „the products of its farms, th** prtodficts of Its mines and products cf Its factories. Thus the government will have value received foi tht* money U borrowed from tho people and the people will have value received for the mnnev they loaned the govern ment.products tho>z sold th*te eovemmeut atV the Europeaup hatters engoe, J \r. r •'.“! G‘ r - tnPtov. As Becrcdarv c 1 ' the Treat- Urv CTP'"- 1 ■>-*"t H— “All /'f th is firkn' •o*. :« * • 7f 'v roe’- Ji ^ o* vb’rt-.rr. e-. fit- Ml ,of the money -ill e ->jn in th - emm- try^nd ■••(th mt >n' tve um" lo.^ as beta advanced j lag to pay these-bonds at maturity and resources ol and is going to pay interest on/theni ;n the meanwhile. - It is gbing to pay part with the money it will later collect from our debtor Euro- pean governments engaged in war with Germany; it is going to pay part with money raised by taxation, ft ,is going to pay them out of the capital of the United-Stated or out cf tiie capital of the peov'le of the United Stated. The money is to c >nie from , the annual income and i> oduction of the country which now amount to fiftv billion. Tb • yraily agricultural ‘production of tie United States is more than ten billion dollars and the mineral pro- d actUijv. three billion. The prftfits of concerting raw material into finish ed* products amount annually to ten billion dollars. These are just some of our main sources of annual in come. The raising of money by the sab 1 of bonds and the expenditure of that money for purposes of war are not going to injure or destroy the productive capacity of pur fields, factories, or mines. Thofe is waste :n war. and a .great deal of waste, hut" war is not all. waste.' The act- •ial wa*te in this war may be more ■than made up by the speeding up of our industries under -the stimu- lur of the war. ■ Thete is going to be loss by rea son of this war—wealth shot away /h battle and wealth sunk at sea. And there fs going to be loss of some of America’s bravest sons. But the price is one. that America is willing to pay, that her fighting men and her people are willing to pay, for the maintenance of ou -- rights and o'f our national honor, th** <’ause of democracy, the perser- *,ation of liberty and civilization and ini inanity. The loss caused by wa- wjil be small, indeed, compared to the worth of these things, to A merica and to the world. \ petite aJDd coaid hardly eat anything at all. I realize a map 7d years, old will give way, but I got so I could not put a log of wood on the fire when the negroes were* not handy. My doctor wouldfi’t allow me to eat any meats or much else except vegetables, as I had been threatened. ! was badly out of sorts and it looked like nothing I could take would do me any gotxi or give me enough strength to lodk after my farm hands any , my crops. "Last sfiring. when Tanlac began to be advertised and everybody wa# talking about it, I decided to see what-it Vould do for ni e * Well, it udY.fne started upuhRl.at once: but, without going into details about my .rapid improvement with each bottle. I’ll just say that after taking six bottles I .could straddle my horse from the ground and walk that mile and a half for my mail with all ease. In fact, it just buHt me up until I felt 2<> years younger^ I’m more actiye and have more strength and energy than I’ve had in years. ^That’s what Tanlac has done fo/- me. I don’t know what Tahlap/has in it that does you so mucK good, l^ft whatever-it is, it cf*iuinly, made a new man of no*. Ar.il I've told a lot of people about it. My wife ha« taken- it. too, an ! it has built her 4ip wonderfully. Ami I'Ve bought lots oUjt fqr my yogroes and it has helped ai! of them that have taken it.” Tanlac, “The Master' Medicine. is sold by Jno. M. Klein.' .Walter- boro; The t'olleton Cypress Col leton: CoUagevlIle Drug Co.. Xot tageville; Islandton Mercantile C>v. •jslandton; W.C. Glover. Green Pond and Jacksoaboro; E. ft. Bish' op Co., Lodge. ILL CHILDREN LOVE * SIRUP OF FIES" FOR LIVER IND BOWELS Give it When Feverish, Cross, Bil.* . . ions, for had Breath or Sour Stomach. MEDICINE FOR FOOD You have always bought th'* bulky {dock food and given 40 your -to k as a medicine. Why not buv only the medicine and furnish voue on n food,? The medieine w ill b^ e-,-'-h more certa J n. In faot^P. A. ^Jhatnas Stock Renic dv is so < er* iln to give the "ight result® that wo i! if C" Hie mope- bacl-- p’Sn -J r Look at the tongue. Mother! If coated, it is a sure sign that your little one’s atomach. liver and bowels need a gemle, thorough cleansing at once. When 'peevish, cross, listless, pale, doesn’t sleep, doesn't eat or fornla Syrup of Flga,” and in a few hours all th« foul, constipated waste, lindfgested food and sour bile gently moves out of its little bowels without griping;, and you have a well, playful child again. You needn’t coax sick children to take this harmless “fruit laxative: they love its delicious taste, and it always makes them feel splendid Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bottle of “California Syrup of Figs,” which has directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown-ups plainly on the bottle Beware of counterfeita sold here. To b** sure that you get the genuine ask to see that it is made by “Cali fornia Fig Syrup Company.” !{*• fuse any other kind with contempt. No. 666 This la a prescription prepared especially .ARIA or CF for MALI CHILLS A FEVER. t Jq.v r.’f s-fiUsli 4 *") up -ow or sheep •• •- u/ o m V«| Five or six doses will break any case.'and v b-u!:. A. Wi> T.i n £ > •’ \Y s uL • if taken then as a tonic the Fever will net ef rboro. and A. V. !'a return. It acts on the liver bet*er :kao Of conrse the TlrFred Staler I* go- siayrtlP. 1 mo. 1 c * J oajei and doe* aot ^ripc or lickcn -x*-- Mr Mas lack A SMITH FORM-A-TRUCK and the famous 8-in-l,farm body covers every possible use for a truck on the fann—an exclusive Smith Form-a- FWi a And Any one n e/'Efeht Bodies *s inui'C. J’j ' M H (Truck feature. p jj • Simply pull lever and get any one of 8 combinations of farm bodies—stock rack ’—hay rack—hog rack—grain—flat rack —high flare board—flat rack, scoop boara down. ? Then chapge from one type to another in an instant without a single tool. . Twice the Work of 2 Teams Don’t take your horses out of the field - don’t de lay farm work. Use Smith Fonn-a-Truck. Haul twice as much as two teams. And at one-half the coat Yet it costs no more than a team and haroesa—$350. Use the Smith Form a-Truck for hauling milk- grain—crop*—feed—manure—lumber—coal—and everything else on the iarm. , Savq % Time ' When you haul crops or milk to town with horses you must leave early. You get back late. Your day is wasted. V 1 Smith Form-a-Truck will make the same trip in two-thirds less time. Save tnis time for profit able work on the farm. Save 20 Acres and - Government statistics show that in • si horses require the feed of 20 acres and cost stable. Bedding, veterinary, medicine, al cost extra. The Smith Form-a-Truck cost# 01 year—and saves this 20 actes. year four^ 1 to feed an<r mg, care — iiUy 9M0 a IsskatRack flat lack Usrdfcwai Wonderful Economies Pr S»rt!/?«MTn^*"'fntck costs you absolutely not tine penny while idle. Made for 6_ Cars The Smith Form a Truck attachment and a new or used Ford. Maxwell. Dodge Bros.. Chevrolet. Bunk or Over land, makes a lully guaranteed. p< wt rful. rtrotie. 1 ton trutk. Every day you d**lay Ming a Smith runn-ft* 1 iul» oo your farm >ou are tufting money, e- . W Walterboro Garage Company, Ltd. Ni. S. x. issskstsKssasseinRiffi fThe Knock-Out blow is given to malaria in all forms by the champion of all fever fighters, 0X1- DINE. It wardsoff as well as stops; tones up the system and puts rich red blood into the veins. The finest kind of a tonic for the whole family—from the chil dren up. Good for Malaria. Biliousness, Constipation. Lack of Appetite. CHILLS AND 7 llt’s Gaaraated: your druggist ^•will refund your money if you’ll take back the empty bottles and can truly say •you've had no benefit from it. Hundrestoof lestimonJnls (from all over, the malarial belt.' Sold at all drug stores i| for 50 cents.* Madefy | [TVs Bckrow Drag C«, W«c«,Tcx. Enjoys a Long Automobile Trip Tlj^ following account of an au tomobile trip taken by Rev. and Mrs. C. P. Curry, who will be re membered here aa the choir leader mgaged in holding the revival a f*w months ago. was taken from th* Laurens Advertiser. “Rev" C. P. Curry, a native of this county, but now a resident of tfiloam SprineS. Arkansas, made an tin usually lorn: autiHnoblle trip re. • •rl'* from hi« hointv to ri“!t tebtflves n*-Sr'Gruy-4 /.uri. Mr. C'hr- jy was abourt a week ip making the t■ i*. th** total disfanci. heJnx around 1 : , *0 iiiiJr®. H,, experienced' 'iille tio ,h' • of any kind When he ar- r/e.-j IT this" section he was -itlj I'iding cm Arkansas air He'wa- ac companied by his wife and soe ham Payne Curry. Mr. Curry states that the cropfc in South Carolina, es pecially in the lower part of the State, ate better than any along the route he covered. MtyCurry is vis iting his brothers. Messrs. L. I). and Collier Curry and other relatives. A family party was made ,up last week and an enjoyable trip through the mountains of *orth Carolina was made. Included in the party were members of the families of C. P.. L. f>. W. Collier and Festus Curry and Re*. Mr. Blackwell. Liver Tronhle. “I am bothered with liver trouble about twice a year.” writes Jnn Dingman. Webster C!t>> Iowa. “I havi- pains in my side and b-e-k «ind an aw ful ?nr* in my stomach. T heard of nuuubjaplain’s Tablets ttnd tried them. By the time I had used half a TffiMle of them I wax fueling fine ;ind'"hxd ro slims of pain.” Obtainable everywhere. • Opinions from Folks Who Know For malarial headacne. Granger Liver Regulator entirely relieved my, trouble.—J. Height, Wetumpka. Ala. Had heavy headache. Vomited 1 twice to six times a day. Four dcsea of Granger Liver Regulator made me well.—Loundas P. Brindley, Somer ville. Ala. * Mother had sick headache. Granger Liv*r liegulator did her more good than all the medicine the had taken before.—Beasley Davis, Pacio, Ala. • 1 nK c r rxfiect 1? i>o without it in my h' rr.e.—J* nie .Usty, Gadaden, Ala. It h a great ..vrr of doctors htils. — I.miis N. Kent, Houoraville, Ala. c Thiio ii n,no hetUr.—Dr. 1. Cothrum, Alexis Ala. AH ilrui-.gi'ta Sell Granger uve< Reuilatv..—S3i. Try i-