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kdlls SelltldeI S, S. C.: PIL 3. 1913 HioTT MANAGER Pickens Fustoffice sd Second Clas MailMatter Sentinel is not responsible or the views of its corres pondents. Comparison. generally by comparisons are miserable or happy. :e ourselves miserable aring our condition .Avers who are in better tances than we, our selves are in. We believe it o-ld be wise for us to try the other way and compare our con duion with others less fortunate hafn we are. Let us look at the conditions for a while. Take Nebraska, the storm swept dis ict, or even nearer home, in labama, where houses were Nown away and many people Sled. Then in Ohio and Indi ana, the flooded district, where thousands of men, women and ii ren were drowned. of our country so God and blessed. Yet a any of our people are ining because we have a ore rain than usual. We nd fume, whereas we to be so thankful th:t it orse. It is very certain r farmers will be a little is spring and the cotton e may be cut down a lit t who can tell but that for the good of our y. Our God who controls ngs is all-wise, and He has purpose in all that He d . Let us try to look on the bright side of this picture, and as some of our old brethren used To pray,.let us thank God that itis as well with us as it is. king Upward and Onlard. may be dark and rainy here but the sun is shining some where. The road may be -rough and 3teep but it is smoother, and i more level further on AftMer a while may get to shines and the is smoot . T hink o4bout it. The churches could, if they ould, abolish every saloon in * s countrv. Oni thet won't. e sakoons woui4 if they could stroy every churAh in the <The weather has been favor Sble to compulsory eduication. he' children can't go to the elds~to work and so they con inne in school. McCravey, the ~eather and the legislature are 11 favorable to compulsory ed cation. Governor Blease and ajority of the senate are op any boy in the Pickens inty boys corn club this year ats Ralph Gilstrap's record of ast tear, he ought to have $25 n extra prize. The fesni~s the& foundation of prosperity. When he is -prosperous all other enterprises flourish, that is, all other honor able enterprises. We may have a litte more rain than usual, we may have the hookmorm, but the red clay hills of South Carolina are good for us. ought to be thankful that 'wed ' lve in Mexico Dhir inquis WMtRFS W1iT (T g0 Heart $ The ailments of women include symptomr of the heart. The palpitation is so viole leads the patient to fear she has heart dis not heart disease at all but only a sy mptc --the normal action of the heart, and on at throbbing ceases. The stomach and depressing effect of these disorders on ti For the latter purpose there is no more effI Sq DR. SIi quawV rveys a strengthening influence to the ar and healthy periods, overcome: niuves and puts the generative system in anddawel disorders one or two doses c needliL It clears the stomach and bowe] propr~oushment of the body the cond~~allthrough the system. ~QWi~. '[HlE MISSISSIPPI The hills and monntains of the great Mississippi watershed are weeping. They are crying because their crowns of snow are melting. The flood of wa. ters has covered the f e r t i l E plains. Man and beast had tr flee away or perish. The levee above Vicksburg. Miss., has yielded to pressure and surrendered the homes an the wealth it guarded to the un conscious and merciless flood. Thirty-one years ago today : spent a night and day on th< steamboat Katie Hooner, plyin? between Madison, Arkansas and Memphis, Tenn. The fort. miles of railroad between thes< two points was anywhere fron six to thirty feet under water and the iron horse had not beer taught to swim. The flat country of inexhaus tible fertility supported a lux uriant jungle of a great variety of undergrowth vines that grew in the shade. The cottonwoo( trees, which were from seventy five to one hundred feet high, grew so close together the tops shut out the sun. The dark jungle was a safe retreat fo] many wild beasts and much game. Nothing but the flood could drive them from thei1 hiding. All that could not fl or climb a tree would take refugt on the railroad track-that por tion west of Madison. Wher the train came along there wouli be a mighty plunging into the flood to escape the engine. Ther they would return to the refuge on the road where thousands of them soon became targets for the hunter's trusty rifle. Many deer, wild hogs and turkey: were thus gathered for the Memphis market. Every day a river steamer would carry the trophies. Much time was re quired to load all this kind 31 freight. The distance to be covered b3 the water route was SO mile; down the St. Francis and 8( miles up the Mississippi river There was no-extra charge or the boat except for meals a seventy-five cents each. Every thing served was first class ex. cept the fish. It tasted like bad mud. smells. It looked tempt. ing, but it was three vears.he fore fish tempted me aminore There were a ae~ mounds or each sid -L tne river which the %#f had not covered. Or these cattle and other domesti< animals were crowded as thici as they could stand, None of these herds were it the least danger of a stampede They were all surrounded by fringe of the dead and the dy ing. Men in boats were indus triously at work getting tha part of the dead animal tha goes to the tanyard. In thos< times a great many people wor< shoes made of leather from dea cows. For many miles I rode in th4 pilot house from which I could see men, women and childrer in the windows of the second story of their homes. Some of them would cry out: "Wha~t of the river?" The answer got s( it seemed to go back to the anx ous query as an echo: "Stil rising!" At the gable end o: many houses that had put ou1 the signal of distress was the re lief or rescue scout boat pulling the people out at the windows and putting them in the ark. I saw one man that musi have had pluck backed up by inventive genius. He was near his barn in a boat pitching hay up to a parcel of goats and fom~ mules on a scaffold. The ani mas were still about six feei above the water. There was nc balustrade or railing around the scaffold and I neve r heard of any of the nmules trying to es cape. I went to sleep that night trying to ,fuess how he man aged to get the mules up there. I am told that even birds buili their nests above high water mark. Julius E. Boggs. Feb. 14th, 191:3. itive Pup mpoms s of heart trouble known as palpitation t at times as to be really painful and ease. Ninety per cent of such cases are m of a liver disorder which has affected plying the proper remedies the unusual digestion need strengthening and the e female organism must be corrected. ctive remedy to be found anywhere than IMONS me Wine delicate female organism, re-establishes the painful symptoms, builds up the fine healthy condition. For the liver fSimmons Liver Medicine is all that is sof impurities, helps digestion and the result of which is sound, healthy Stcys Ba Sloan's Liniment is a splend joints, rheumatism, neuralgia and rub it in-just laid on lightly it gi Best for Pain a MR. GEO. B CHANAN, of welch, Okl iment for the past ten years for pain in b Liniment I ever tried. I recommend it is good for sprains, strains, bruis muscles, and all affections o: Q R. D. Btacov 5, writes:-"I ha ders; I got a botti relief at the fifth a Relieved S MR. J. UtN Chicago. Ill.. by occupati suffered n I could friends Thre me Resolutions of Camp Jasper Hawthorne. Whereas, We. the members', of Camp Jasper Hawthorne. No. 285 Confederate veterans of Easley, S. C.. believing that i partiality is being used among the old veterans of the State, in I that, a portion of our number are pensioned and the balance! are not, and Whereas, We believe that all worthy soldiers and their wid ows should receive a pension, Therefore, be it Resolved, That we heartily indorse a bill which was intro I duced by one of our comrades. Hon. T. J. Strait, in the Senate 'f South Carolina during the last session, which had for its purpose the pensioning of all worthy veterans and their wid ows. ~The majority who are drawing pensions are no more entitled to it than those who have lab~ored hard for self main tenance and to build up our State. No southern st .te ex cells according to population, -ours in property value, y et she -pays less in pensions to her old soldiers than any other state. We, therefore put ouselves oni record as favoring equal rights to all old soldiers and special privileges to none. We, therefore, pray that at the State re-unien some action will be taken favorable to thei Strait Bill or some other bill 1 that wvill pension all worthv eterans and their widows. B. C. Johnson, Elias Day, Comdt. Adjt.] Another Resolution. Whereas, The Old Soldiers' ~Home in Columbia, S. C. seems to have been brought under dis repute because of its manage ment, that it appears that it is being managed in a partial and( unbusinesslike way, that many are dlrawing useless salaries to the detriment of the State and the Home, and to the discom fort of the inmates, aud - Whereas, It is humiliating to every true veteran to see in the press of our State accounts of j mismanagement and unfair treatment, Therefore be it Resolved. That Jasper Haw Of FAKIRS ai And Take Care If you are inl needl of the madet a enreful anid conlscient its refr-actions, the man ho OT I(AL CO-\PA NY, the ( sale c-oncerni ini the State, G reen ville, EYV EiG (FT SPI W\e will be pleased to ha, dgreeC of eye eom~fort wVhich p)ossible to obtain fromi othlen' honor not to pr1~eribe)t g2lass leeesSary. chartge. Fit t ing Artificial E: WILL ] Hunter's Pharmac~ Tuesday A Keowee Pharmac' Wednes/ clache id remedy for backache, stiff sciatica. You don't need to ves comfort and ease at once. id Stiffness Swrites -- I have used your Lin ack and stiffness and find it the best to anyone fur pains of any kind." I9 [ENT es, cramp or soreness of the the throat and chest. >t Entire Relief E, of Maysville. Ky., RR. r, Box d severe pains between my shoul e of your Liniment and had entire pplication." evere Pain in Shoulders DERWOOD, of 2000 Warren Ave., writes:-" I am a piano polisher n. and since last September have ith severe pain in both shoulders. not rest night or day. One of my told me about your Liniment. e applications completely cured and I will never be without it." Price 25c., 50c., and $1.00 at All Dealers. Send for SloaiYs free book on horses. Address Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Boston, Mass. home Camp, No. 285 puts itself n record as condemning the lan under which the Home is uanaged, and favor a change n the law governing the same which will take the manage nent of the Home entirely out if politics and that will preyent nistreatment, partiality and raft, and we respectfully pe ition the State reunion to pass ;ome resolution memoralizing ,he General Assembly to pass ;ome legislation affecting this nd, and if the management ,an't be improved and cleansed, ce reommend that the Home be abolished. B. C. Johnson, Elias Day, Comdt. Adjt. In the Interest of Farmers. Robt. I. WVoodside, President f the Farmers and1 Merchants ank of Greenville. S. C., chair nan of the committee on Agri ultural Development and Edu ation of the South Carolina Bankers Association, and chair f the Department of Agricu lture f the Greenville Chamber of onmerce, has been appointed y the South Carolina Ltankers ssociation as a member of the merican Commission undler he auspices of the Southern omnmericial Con gress wh ichi vill visit Europe for the purpose f investigating the co-operative ankinig systems, rural co peration, marketing societies, miiversities and colleges, legis ation and law -. goverment lepartments, centra' banks, nethods of farming, etc., etc. mong the countries to be visit d are Italy, Hungary, Russia, alkan States, Austria, Ger nany, Denmark, Sweden, hvitzerland, Belgium, Holland, 'rance, England and Ireland. The commission which will ail April 26 will have official ower and influence given by authority of Congress. the Prnes lent of United States, the lovernors of the various states nd the ambassadors of the ~everal countries visited. There vill be two or more delegates elected from each State in the nion on the sekect committee vhich will be headed by United ~tates Senator Duncan U. 'letcher. Dr. Odom is coming. id PEDLERS of Your Eyes services of onel( who haUs ions studyv of the eye and1( s prsln of thle GLOBEL fly mnanufactuing whole ec Dr. A. A. Odomi, the Ci A LIST. Oi1lflay have fund it Iom . Hie? mfakes it a po(init of s unless t hey ar e rea liy W's a specialty. BE AT , Liberty, S. C., pril 8th; Six Mile. E.. Jeremiah Can ell, who resided hire last year died at his 'homenear Stamp Creek, Mfarch 17. His death came not unex p :ted. having been in ill health for some time. Mr. Cantrell made nianv friends during his stay here who regret to hear of his death. He leaves a wife and three children besides a host of relatives and friends who shall greatly miss him. Miss Mayme Rutledge spent Tuesday night at the home of Mrs. E. M. Jones. on Central Route 2. Miss Bess Dalton spent Satur day at her home near Mile Creek. Rufus Durham left March 15 for California where he expect ed to join his brother who has been in business there for some length of time. Garvin and Six Mile schools closed recently after having been taught successful terms. Sabbath school was reorgan ized March 16th at Six Mile. The attendance is good and vet there are others who will be come interested if they will on lv attend. Prayer meeting at Six Mile every Wednesday night. To be conducted by H. Wright next Wednesday night. The B. Y. P. U. meets at 7:30 every Sunday evening. Next Sunday being missionary Sun day, the Y. W. A, will render a programme on missions. The Six Mile Academy com mencement will be April 19, 20 and 21, This session of the school has been a successful one and Prof. Rutledge has been elected as principal another year. Pains In the Stomach. If you cont inually complain of pains in the stomach, and your liver or kidneys are out of order. Neglect may lead to dropsy. kidney trouble, diabetes or Bright's disease. Thousands rec ommend Electric Bitters as the very best stomach and kidney medicine made. T. H. Alston, of Raleigh, N. C., who suffered with pain in the stomach and back. writes: "My kidneys were deranged and my liver did not work right. I suffered much, but Electric Bitters was recom mended and I improved from the first dose. I now feel like a new man." It will improve you too. Only 50c and $1. Recom mended by Pickens Drug Co. Pickens,_Route 3. Health in this community is very good at this writing. An enjoyable egg hunt was given at A. C. Contrell's on the after on of the 2:3d instant. A large crowd was present and all report a good1 time. M1iss Flora Gravely spent last week with her sister on Oole noy. An enjoyable party was given at Dock Neely's home Saturday night and all who were present report a good time. Elber'tiBywers visited his fath er on Kotee river last week. Ansel Cantrell made a busi ness trip to'North Carolina one day last week. Well, it just rains these days for fun and the farmers are go ing to get behind with their work if it doesn't clear off pret ty soon. A. Beginner. Coughs and Consumption. Coughs and colds when neg lected, always lead to serious troubie of the lungs. The wisest thing to do when you have a cold that troubles you is to get a bottle of D~r, King's New Dis covery. You will get relief from the first dose, and finally the cough will cdisappear. 0. H. Brown. 31uscadine, Ala.. writes: "Mlv wife was down in bed with an obstinate cough, andl I hon estly believe had it not been for Dr.'King's New Discovery, she wvould not b~e living today." Known for forty-three years as the best remedy for coughs and colds. Price 50c and $1. Rec ommended by the Pickens Drug Co. adv. Where it WouM ftMY During the smallpox scare we interviewedl the doctor, says the Cleveland Plain Dealer. "We understand that you vaccinate little girls where the scr r won't show," we b)egan. "'That's my idlea," said the doctor. "A. girl who is being~ trained for a n elocutionist you vaccinat e on the leg2' "Yes." "And a girl who is studlying to) b a moderni dancer vou vaci (inate' on the arm" "H ow nhout a girl w~ho wants toi t he ('horns of a mnusical "[ have themi swallow the virus. Drives Sick Headache Away. Sick headaches, and sour gas sv stomnach, indigestion, bilioi.s ness disappear quicklyv after you take Dr. King's Ne L~Iife Pilb. They ~pirftT 60h 1~u new life and yigor in the system Try them and you -will be well satisfied. Every pill helps; ey .ebox guaranteed. Price 25c. ?"-nmended by~ P ekens Thrug - Y - -. '1C~" , '~: ' ---.C - _ , _ - . -T "" " h 71 - Folger, Thornley & Co. NewSpring Goods They are coming every day, on almost every train, direct from New York and Ialtinore, in large shipments. A complete and large assortment of Dry Goods and Notions. New Dress Goods and Trimmings, including all the latest styles and fabrice. The largest and most complete line of Linens and White Goods to be found in Pickens county. All the latest things in Embroideries, Laces and Dress Trimmings. Nothing old and shop worn and out of style, but everything new and up to date and right up to the minute. We haven't the space to enumerate the many attractive lines we are showing, but if you are from Missouri we can shov you, and all we ask is a look. Remember our prices are always right, and the quality unsurpassed. We are always glad to see you, and appreciate your business. Yours truly, I Folger, Thornley & Co. Clothing, Shoes. Hats and Gents' Furnishing Goods a Specialty. Sole agents for Walk-Over and Boyden Shoes, Carhart Overalls, Hawes Hats, s Iron King Stoves, New Home Sewing Machines,Chase City and Babcock Buggles,Mitch ell Wagons and Mitchell Automobiles. Attention, Farmers! Save Your Hay The Ideal Hay Saver. The Secret of Ventilation Applied. A Workable, Cheap and Effec- . ~> tive Device. A Time Saver, and a Money ~ Maker, and One that Will Last a ~ . Life-time. Demonstrated by Ac tual Test to be the Realization of Farmers' Need. Read and Study the Principle. This cut represents the DIXIE' DAISY H AYSTACK VENTIL ATOR as it appears wvhen actu- l ally in use. Hay is the basIs of successful . farming, and especially is this________________________________ true of the pea-vine hay crop of the Southern States. No other DXEDIYHYTC ETLTR cropthatis nw sucessully Adjusted for Use. Stack of Peavine dlay Mijnsted for Packing gron, o ay eten inth % ft. high on Ventilator or Hauling South, serves the double nurpose.. - f enriching the soil while prod acing au abundant yield of high grade feed at a, low cost. Pea vine hay is of the highest quality of nourishing stock food, its cost of production is very low, but the problem heretofore has been: How to save the valuable product, so easily produced and so asily lost, and thereby insure another crop that will add to the income of the industrious south em famer.Crude Methods of Curing Heretofore have been the cause of loss of millions of dollars worth of the very best class of hay that might (properly cured) have been made a commercial asset of the Southern States or added to the home supply of stock feed, promoting the profitable business of wintering cattle for purpose f home-made fertilizer, and profiting by their growth through the winter months, fed upon the omparatively cheap hay produced on the fertile southern fields. Pea-vines are not the only ource of hay production in the Southern States. But the one problem is how to save our hay, because the cutting and gathering season of the southern hay crop is usually attended with eather conditions--excessive rains-that make the saving of any hay crop one of doubt at times. In this question the merchant is interested, the small farmer is interested, the large farmer is vitally interested--in fact', all who look to the farmer for any part of their livig are deeply con cerned about the welfare of the farmer and desire his success. His success is the hope of the~coun try, AND HIS INDEPENDENCE OF FOREIGN FOOD SUTPPLIES for man or beast means the general progress of the country. This Device, The Dixie Daisy Htaystack Ventilator, is a blessing, because it fills, in a timely way, a long-felt need-it accomplishes the purpose of which men have thought for years. It will save your hay without risking the time required to allow it to cure on the ground. It is simple in construction. cheap and durable. This device is actually cheaper than the method of going into the woods, cutting poles and erecting, temporary, stack poles. There is absolutely no waste of timber or wood about its use, and it furnishes a per fet ventilator for all the green hay that can be piled on it in the open field so that yoar pea-vine hay or any other kind of hay growvn will not mould or rot however green it may be when stacked onthis dev-ice. This has been demonstrated. Its simplicity and cheapness appeal to every thoughtful man-its ease of operation is a surprise to all who have heretofore worked and tugged in the old-time method of trying to save our valuable hay crop. It is Ce nstructed on Strictly Scientific Principles. A tripod, substantially hinged, each leg of the tripod having strong spikes of sufficient length to Ehold firmly the hay as it is piled on it and built up thereon as high as it can begnveniently thrown by a man wvith a pitch-fork. The tripod is mounted with an adjustable fuegewhich al lows the hay stack to be built as high as desired. The process of ventilation is successfully assured by reason of the fact that the air passes freely up through the (center of the stack to the top from the bottom, the spikes being so arranged that no hay touches the ground. This device is light in construction, and when the hay is cured and it. is desired to move it from the field, the process of loading it on the wagon is simple and easy, as the whole apparatus (hay and appliance) can be lifted together and the hay easily lodged in the Teentire apparatus is easily adjusted, it can be used on hill-sides as well as on level ground-it enn11 be. mounted and used on terraces or anywhere in the field-it is entirely practicable, and is the hepest. and yet the most substantial device possible of construction and calculated to meet the vl y needs for which it was designed. eVetlio Is by means of an open flue in the center and fromu the bottom upwards. Th9 principle of me chanical construction is such that the legs of the miachin~e will hold more weight in hay than it is possible to pile on the appara-tus. The legs are 48 inches high, and the top, adjustable spike is 18 inches long, and this carries a stack of green hay 74 I eet high, as seen in the cut. When this ap paratus is used, even standing wate~r on the g'Uan aI the depth of six i eu 'ould hay, because the hay is actually clear of *w aced on this devic&e. cry 2-horse farmer should have not less these machines and so in proportion. Loattecut; std h rnil , yet how effective is this farm de vice which will prove the farmer's seab. This device is patented ona agesal y h ltasstack Ventilate' -~