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• r*' rAGBBDL V<* THE BARNWELL PEOPLB-SENTINEI* BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA THURSDAY, JUNP HTH, 1926. SIDE DRESS WTTH- NITRATE of SODA' * ^ • V W xFor Quick and Sufe Results Use Only . NITRATE OF SODA |Vom Can't Afford to Lose Your / Season's Work by Experimenting With • late Spring and many weevil* expected, a Nitrate of Soda aide dreadng of 100 to 200 pouada per acre ia abaolutaly neceaaary to aot aguaree before them. A Nitrate oi S > and inoreaee* profit* \ QUICK: drouth or weevil# can hurt them. A Nitrate of Soda aide dreaaing inaurea yield* < To be effective a aide-dreaaer moat be quick acting. Official reaulta obtained in thia country and abroad •how conclusively that only in Nitrate of Soda i* the plant food 100% available immmdimtwly itia applied. / It leave* no add residue. . _ ^ J SURE: t. W. Gaaton, a prominent farmer of Duncan, S. C^j V v and breeder of Gaiton'a Cleveland, aaya: #' ^ “1 have been using Nitrate of Soda for about . twenty-five yean with fine results. On cotton » ' I have side-dreased with nitrate immediately * after chopping out at the rate of 50 to 100 pounds per acre. Since the bod weevil came ^ I have uirnd Nitrate of Soda as my source of X inorganic ammonia under my cotton to push ^ it forward and make it early as possible. t "On com, I put 75 to 100 pounds around '* the crop when knee to waist nigh with good results. On oats I broadcast 100 pounds per < acre about March first." Yeara of actual reaulta ahow j Nitrate of Soda the beat aide-dreaaer Ask your county agont or tend a postal card with your address to our nearest office for our fro* bulletins which have helped thousands of fanners to grow bigger and more profitable crop*. , CHILEAN NITRATE OF SODA 1 EDUCATIONAL BUREAU Dr. William 5. Mytrt, Director HIS Hurt BMg., Atlanta. Ca. ST William Street. New York feUfeek NORTH POLE—LADIES’ KNEES. WOULD TAX CHURCH LANDS. DANGEROUS BONDS. THE KANSAS FARMER. A heavy spear, with a sharp iron point at one end, a Norwegian flag , at the other, was thrown on to the NorthvPole from the dirigible Norge, says the courageous Mr. Amundsen, therefore "the North Pole and all the land around it be long to the King of Norway. The statement is to some ex tent poetic. The exact location of the North Pole was in all prob ability not -calculated within twenty miles, unless by accident And there might be some ques tion as to whether throwing a ppear at property establishes o\vo£rship. i The only human being that ever landed on North Pole territory and came back to tell about it was an American, Peary, and he left the Ftars and stripes. IT IS JUST GOOD , Business Sense To protect your family with a Life Insurance Policy. 1 haVe plenty of facts and figures to prove this point and will be glad to go into this subject with you* in de tail at your convenience. NORMAN B. GAMBLE Barnwell, S. 0. I ) Drive Down! Let us grease your car with our new high power “Alemite Airline Lubrigun” We grease ALL the moving parts of your car except the steering wheel and cushions. \ ’ s Tires Tubes Gas Oils Barnwell Filling Station LLOYD PLEXICO, Manager . However, there are more ser ious things to worry about than ownership of the North Pole. In Paris, for instance, they worry about the knees of beautiful lu'iies. Fashion, seeking to change dresses, that foofish wives may buy new ones frequently, says dresses must go higher. The knee MUST BE SHOWN. That seems silly, but fashion tends in a useful direction. The kneecap, a most ingenious contri vance, is not particularly beauti ful. If Tashrdn demands that tallies show their knees, knocking ‘•gettag or with a sort of bulging protu&rance on each side, like t "beg spavin” on a horse’s hock, I a ladies will obey fashion. They will also try to develop BfET.l,-SHAPED knees, and that is possible. There is no doubt that the races ot long ago in Greece, when no skirt or anything else wa« worn, by men or women, de veloped extraordinarily beautiful human bodies that Greek art has immortalized. The White House denies, un necessarily, a foolish yam about spiritualistic seances held there in the Coolidge administration. You couldn't have any first-class table rapping in that atmosphere. One look at Calvin Coolidge’s cold blue eye, aud “Little Minnehaha,” spirit of the lovely Indian girls would say, “I-et me get back to spiritland, where it is warm.” £' m *$7 t There are more soy beans being planted in Barnwell .County than has ever beon-knowifc flueh men l» W. E; Prothro, R. R. Moore, B. F, Owens, W. L. Cave and E. C. Matthews think that they ar* one of . the most vaiu- able crops that oan be planted for hay, soil building, production of seed, etc. Have you planted ^ours? If not do so this week. For controlling rot on tomatoes, dieseased water melons, cantaloupes and grape^ bordeaux mixture should be applied, two to four applications being usted. Either the spray or dust form will be found beneficial. J “A doHar invested in nitrate of soda or sulphate of ammonia for top dress ing com will increase your yield very greatly when used properly, Although cvieumbers are selling for only $1.00 to $1.50 those farmers who have them are being greatly benefit ed. Byrnes Will Not Offer for Senate Tuesday, the 27th day of July, 1926, which shaH 1* the, last day of cn- -rolhnenr/-Tltnl^No*-lTTmt!-‘l2. r (3) Co.’s Btora. FOUR MILE—Club District: vetrout iff 6-above As Spartanburg, June 11.—Former Re presentative James F. Byrnes, of this city, who has been frequently men tioned as a candidate for the United States Senate against Senator E. D. Smith in the coming primaries, said today that he will not enter the race. He was a candidate for the Senate two years ago and was in the second race with Cole L. Blease. Advertise in The People-Sentinel NOTICE OF ENROLLMENT. ver announces the drafting of an amendment to the State Consti tution that would tax church prop erty. It reads, “Lots and buildings thereon used exclusively for relig ious worship shall NOT BE EX EMPT FROM TAXATION.” The change in Colorado’s consti tution is drafted by Barney Haugey, single taxer. It will prob ably not be adopted, nor will a modified proposition, which would compel any church selling its property for profit to pay back taxes with interest, be adopted. In all probability churches and schools, tax fret for .so Jong, -wily- "probably remain tax free. —— ■ • American investors are warned once more to invest their money in America, and keep away from foreign bonds. Foreign nations want to pay, but if they can’t pay they can’t. And the private in vestor, unlike the United States Government, cannot bring pres sure to bear. . On hundreds of millions of European bonds sold in the United States interest payments will be stopped and the value of the bond wil] gradually dwindle away, TAKE WARNING.' Some of the bonds are probably good, but where European nations bor row at usurious rates, interest and principal will not be paid in full. Phrsuant to Rule No. 11 of the Democratic Party of South Carolina, I, Edgar A. Uiown, County Chair man of Barnwell County, hereby giviL notice: - (1) * . ' • • • ‘ (Rule No. 6): ‘‘The. qualifications for membership in any. club of ihe party in this State, and for voting at a primary shall be as follows: vi.?: The applicant for membership, or voter, shall be 21 years of age, or «hall become so before the succeed ing general election and be a wV»te Democrat. He shall be a citizen of the United States and of this State. No pet son shall belong to any club or vote in any primary unless he has re .-Tided in the State two years and t in the county six months prior to the I succeeding general election and in the ! cluh district 60 days prior to the J first primary following his o.fc to enroll: Provided, That pubhv scnvol teachers and ministers of the gospel in ihargo of a regular organized church shell be exempt from the pro visions of this section as to residence, if otherwise qualified.” (2) Books of’ enrollment for the re spective Den^x ratio dubs required un der the rules for the new enrollmeat irt Barwell County will be opened by the secretaries or the enrollment committee of the )-espectrve clubs on Tuesday, June 1st, 1926, and will re main open for the enrollment until Each applicant for enrollment shall in person write upon the club , roll hi& full name and immediately there after his age, occupation and post of fice address, and if in a city or town shall write the name of street and the number of his house in which he re sides, if such designation exists in said city or town. If the applicant cannot write he may make bis mark upon the roll, which shall be witness ed by the secretary or other person then having the cusitody thereof, and the secretary shaJl fill in the. other requirement*. 1 • - __—_1 (4) No person sail be enrolled in any club or-vote in any primary except In the club district in 'which he resides (Rule No. 8.) Tha.t the names of the clubs in Barnwell County, the boundrie* 'of the club districts as required to be set out "in Rule No. 11, the names of the members of the enrolment or., mittees and the places where the re spective club rolls are to be arq. as follows: (6) The club districts and boundries of the clubs in Barnwell County are as follows: In all cases the voter must enroll in the club nearest his place of residence, calculated by the nearest practical route, and can only volte at the voting place of such club, and ter- ritory included by this test shall he considered the club district of such club: BARNWELL— Club District as set out in 6 above. Enrollment Committee— Perry B. "Bush, N. G. W. Walker and Rt A. Deason. Book to be opened at Deason’s Drug Store. BENNETT- SPRINGS^-Utub m<- trict:-* As set out in 6 above. Enrollment Committee—J. B. Kirk land, J. F. Swett and L. L. Peeples Book to he opened at J. F. Swett’s store. » BLACKVILLE—Club District: As set out in 6 above. Enrollment Committee—H. D.^ Still, C. C. St'; me and W. S. Grubbs. Book to ha opened at Rush’s ‘Drug Store. DOUBLE POND—Club District: As set out in 6 above. Enrollntent Committee — Isadore Hartzog, J. D. Collins and 0. H. Delk. Book to be opened at residence of Isadore Hartzog. DUNBARTON—Club District: As set cut in 6 above. Enrollment Committee—J. M. Kil- lingsworth, B. F. Owens and R. M. Burckhalter. Book to be opened at B. F. Ander son’s store. ELKO —Club District: As set out in 6 above. Enrollment Committee—Paul S. Greene, Alonzo Bate* and Horace T. Crouch. Book to be opened at Greene and Enrollment Committee—C. -M. Tur ner, D. C. Bush and T. G. Cobb. Book to be opened at residence C. M. Turner. FRIENDSHIP—Club, District: set out in 6 aboYe. . - Enrollment Committee — H. E. Creech, James Ray. and Frank San ders. ' Book to be opened at ( residence of Jamis Ray. * A ; , V . GREAT CYPRESS—Cflib District: As set out in 6 above. EnroIlWnt Committee — G. C. Best,' Victor Lewis and G D. Owens Book to be opened at store of Dis- M. 4 Lewis and Best. HEALING SPRINGS—Club triot: As set out in 6 above. Enrollment Committee—W. T. Wal ker, L. P. Boylston and T. J. Grubbs. Book to be ^opened at residence of T. J. Grubbs. HERCULES—Club District: As set out in 6 above. — Enrollment Committee—J s A. Mor ris, Hayne Dyches. and L. S. Still. Book to be opened, at residence of J. A. Morris. - HILDA —Club District: As set out in fi above. Enrollment Committee—F. D. Ro ar- ell, W. G. Collins and A. F. Carter. Book to be opened at A. F. Carter’s store. REEDY BRANCH—Club District: As set out in 6 above. Enrollment Committee — J. iL Grubbs, J. C. R. Grubbs and M, Creech. Book to be opentLd a; rc.-idencel J. M. Grubbs. RED OAK—Club District: As set out. in 6 above. , Enrollment Committee—W. L. Bax ley, O. D. Moore and W. B. Parker. Book to be opened et store' of M. R. Moore. — ROSEMARY—Club District: As set out in 6 above. Enrollment Committee—M. S. Hair, R. E. Woodward and R. S. W’eathers- bee. Book to be opened at residence of R. S. Weathersbee. S1LOAM — Club District: As set out in G above. Enrollment Committee — J. W. Bates, W. P. Moms and Belton Hol ley. Book to be opened at Yenomc de pot. 'SPUR BRANCH—Cluh District: As set out in 6 above. ( Enrollment Committee — F. M. Stubbs, M. B. Utscy and James J. Ray. Book to be opened at residenee of James J. Ray. WILLISTON—Club District: As set out in 6 above. Enrollment Committee — T. P. Mitchell, J. W. Johnson and J. L. Smith. Book t.> be opened at Drug store of J. M. Smith and Son. EDGAR A, BROWN, Chairman, Go. Executive Com. Attest: B. P .DAVIES, Secretary. .M MOTHER cber’s Castoria is es pecially prepared to vdseve Infants in and Children «M ages of Constipa tion, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhea; allaying Feverishneaa nriiigg therefrom, and, by regulating the .Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. ,T> awtid knitallniH, always look for the stgnatorc of -No Opiates. Phyriduu wqrwhMI fWO—intit The train on which this is writ ten is passing just now through Kansas wheat fields so big that from the car window you cannot see to the end of them. You can understand how farmers, scat tered over these wide plains, feel as they read the grain market re port, believing that men who never saw a Vlieqt field or ran a harvesting machine fix the prices of wheat, and usually put it up after the fanner has sold Mo wheat. ADVERTISE IN THE PEOPLE-SENTINEL. t» - .. , • Many Parapet* Plant Soy Beans in County County Agent Harry Boylston says: You will find that: All nitrate of soda and other top dressers should already be applied to the cotton; if not it must be done .within the next few days if the lar- rert net profit is to be’received from Rs Superpower (or South Carolina <3 Power for Home and Store, Farm. Factory and Public Buildings ■[> A long stride toward progress haV^eeh made by a combination of producers for the distribution of eU’.tric energy. The joining of-resources and facilities of the Fdisto Lublic Service Company, (Denmark, S. C) the Carolina Light and Power Company, (Aiken, S. C^]Kand the Augusta-Aiken Railway »nd Elec* trie Corporation of Augusta, bring a guarantee to the resiaOots of this community that unlimited power, at very favorable rates, will be available to do all sort^ of useful work for the farmer, the housewife the storekeeper and the manufacturer. The output of these three corporations is drawn from the sti earns of^qur own neighhohood— Augusta alone producing 24,000 horsepower from the Savannah River. Added Lo this great volume, are all the steam plants that the central towns, which in the past, have been thK^ole source of electric supply. By this modem arrangement, these steam equipments v will be held in Reserve, to be used as auxiliaries, to be operated only at very infrequent intervals, when repairs may bebeeded to the water wheels,- or other branches of the service. 0 To anticipate future needs, and provide for the boundless commercial and agricultural activi. ty already awakened in this section, the Augusta-Aiken Railway and Electric Corporation hasi re cently completed a physical connection at Toccoa, Georgia, with the limitless supply of hydro power generated in the five States of Tennessee, Alabama, Georgia, North and South Carolina, s&h distri buted through the switch boards of the Georgia Railway and Power Company at Atlanta. These are the visible—the tangible evidence of the supreme faith shown by the managements of these corporations in the business possibilities of the district in which they have spent, and are spending, hundreds of thousands of dollars to provide the most important agent—the most needed essential, for the development and prosperity of a favorable section, that needs but the work and faith of it* Citizen* to achieve the very limit* of- industrial success, commercial supremacy add' cultivated home life. ' Augusta-Aiken Railway & Electric Corporation