University of South Carolina Libraries
MAKESCOTTON SECONARY CROP BARNWE1X county farmer SCORES SUCCESS; T. R. Pender Find* Snle of AapnraKUs 1 • ' and Aiparafua CroWQa Highly \ * PyodteWe. Williaton, Nov. 80.—Showing thal in his rose cotton waa a secondary crop and proving that raiaing aapara got and asparagus crowns was more remunerative, T. R. Pender, of this town, has had r.o trouble convincing himself that the earth will yield com pensation ' commensurate with the energy and intelligence of him who ’ <*- ' Ur Per.der has juit turned his 33rd year. Twelve years ago he own ed gn $8 suit of clothes and an equally valuable bicycle. He bought 48 acres of lirnd “on a credit” and contracted to pay $1,600 for it He ar d his wife ntyvod into an unpainted two-room house and faced the future with stout hearts, strong bodies and “$1,600 in oirVie.’’; Three ^norths ago Mr. 'Pender bought an additional 47 acre tract of laud. * His seven room bungalow is fitted with an office, ronnirg water, electric lights, telephone, a high- powered radio, comfortable furniture and screened porches. Th re’s a flivver under the shed ar»{ two happy faced children p’»ay : i^ taound the sugar cane mill qn^.ne hib fide*; and there’s an infant in the cradle. Eleven cent cotton doesn’t worry T. R. much, the cotton that used to be king is now but a count. When Mr. Pender waa asked what waa hia chief sourae of revenue he said without hesitation, “1 sold $3,- 600 worth of asparagus seed and rrewna last year and will do equa'ly aa well this year. I ginned 19 bale* of cotton, gathered it aa fast as it opened and sold it as rapidly as it was girwed. The first hale brought 18 rests a pound and only one bale was sold at im cents. I make enough cora every year to last me, often sell •ome of it and never boy a bushel.” t ontinamg Mr Pender said, “You see, asparagus is my main crop and cotton my meat, but I also sell cotton seod, waMrmelon seed and about $100 worth of cabbage plants from the bod you aee behind the garden. Oh, you want to know about the cane miU. I dort operate that. People bring their a agar cane, grind it and cook it in my pots. For every ten gallons they make they leave a gallon for me. I average about 160 gallons a year and self it for a dollar a gallon ” Rack in 1918 T. R. didn’t know the lint thing about asparagus. Four consecutive years he loot money try- inf' to raise crowns for growers and then, whea hia expenmei ts and obser vations began to bear fruit the market was flooded. Almost everybody quit raising crowr s but T. R. stuck to his r T Today he claims to be the larg est’producer of aapiujigas crowns ii Annrnca. shipping aa far Wmt a? Oklahoma and aa far North aa British Cnlvmbia, last year every order was accpmpanied by a 30 page catalogue and “insttuctscn book” telling how to g«t the beat result*. Mr Perder has • tapfe mailing Hat of asparagus growers and purchasers of crowns and a and. Every person and firm on his Rat is sent a personally signed type written letter telling of the superior ity of Mtry Washington crowns and need An the interview cloned Mr. Per dir waa asked how did he account for the productivity of land obviously not above the average. This in what he naid. “It used to take two years to grow crowns ready for planting, now it t*kes but ote. 1 use as much as I need of the best fertiliw: t > l>e had. In short l buy the best things to work with 1 can find and then work.” g 1 *. g&W» Grubta-Birt. ¥£' £;* looming a s quite a surprise to maty friends will be the <announcement of the marriage of Miss Iris Julia Grubbs of R&rawell, to Mr. Aaheicy Franklii B«, of Elko, which was quietly sol- emfixed on We<rmv»day afternoon, Nov ember 23rd, with the Rev. C. K. Tui- nar officiating. ' Mrs. Birt is the attractive young •daughter, of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Gfubbs. Never was she moie charm- mg than in her wedding costume.. She more a brown satin back crepe gown and a turquoise brown coat with all accessories to match. Mr. Birt is a fine young man imd a son of tha late Mr. Ben Birt* He is alaoa properout young business man. Immediately after they were uni- tod in the bonds . of matrimony the happy couple left for a honeymoon trip. They will make their ' future bogie near Williaton. < Tkair friends wish them a long Hfe ipiasas aad prosperity. Social and Personal - News from EUenton Ellen ton, Dec. 4.—Z. D. Miller was a buameas visitor in Augusta Thurs day. f Luke McElhenny spent Thursday evening in Augusta Mrs. T. 8. Dunbar, Mrs. Id, Jor.es and Mrs. Z. D. Miller spent Friday in Augusta. Misses -Gladys Owens, Ruby Brown and Elisabeth Miller were visitors in Augusts Saturday. Miss Betty McLeod ape'r.t the week end here with her mether. Miss Myrtle Mayes was a visitor in Augusta Friday, > W. W. Mayes, of Hartwell ,Ga., vis ited his mother, Mrs. R. D .Mayes, this jVeek. The ladies of the Daisy May Mis sionary society an. putting on a special program for the celebration of “Woman’s Day,” on Sunday, De cember 6th, at 11:16, at the Chris tian church in Ellenton. All are in vited to come. Mr. and Mrs. Courcil Bush and F. D. Bush spent Wednesday in Char leston with their son, Linwood, who is still in the infirmary at The Cita del, but i$ rapidly improving. Friends of Mrs. Clarisey Bush will be glad to learn that she is im proving after a recent illness. - Dr. and Mrs. John Hood attended “The Arabian” at the Imperial in Augusta Friday evening. Dr. F. C. Brinkley, Ted Killings- worth, of Dunbarton, and Mr. J. F. Sweat, of Meyer’s Mill, are hunting in North Carolina and Virginia. Mr. ard Mrs. Joe Ashley V«*re visitors in Augusta Friday. Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Youngblood were visitors fn August, Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Wyley Kitchens and sons. Ralph and Junior, spent Surday with Mrs. J. II. Kent. Miss Gladys Owens has returned after sperding some time with her brother in Sumter. Miss Mary Foreqrmn, of Allendale, and Mr. Perry Bush, of Barnwell, were visitors hrre Tuesday. Miss Eleanor Dunbar has returred home after visiting in Hartsville. Miss Mamie Bush, of Hendenvon- ville, has arrived to spend the winter with her mother. Mrs. Ida Bush. Mr. and Mrs. Moise. Carroll and children, of North Augusta, spent Sunday with Mrs C. J. Ashley. About youf Health Thingi You Should Know bf John Joseph Gsincs, hi D.' DIET AND AGE “What is one man's antidote is another man's poison’’ refers more to the age of the man, than to the mutter of chemistry- Age has its limitations of capability; to go be yond the limit may be very dan gerous for the man grown old. Almost every day we read of the death of a man, flfty-flve to aixty- five, who was in good health ap parently, tiie evening before. The report gercrally is, that he ate heartily the last meal preceding the altacl: of cerebra’ hemorrhage; the conclusion I draw is, he might have lived right a!ong, if he had only fed * according to the needs of his body. No aging or aged man needs more , than one-third of the food of which lie usually partakes. The young, active man, strenu ously employed, may eat quantities and qualities of food that astound —and feel no inconvenience there after; his capabilities are almost' unlimited; his digestive apparatus is new; .he has the ability to cast aside the elements that he does not need; with the old man or woman; it is a different matter. I once saw a v/oman of 52, in apparent good health, topple over from her dinner-table, unconscious; she hail eaten at. least a half gallon. She became conscious sev eral days later, from her cerebral attack. She remained paralyzed in the right arm and limb, for eight, years—then, tiled from a second “stroke.” If she had but refrained from that first meal! Nothing comes by chance; there is always a cause. 6 6 6 Is a Freseription for CoM^ Grippe, Fht; Den gue; Bilious Fever end Malaria. ... UKHitWOoa* Flaw fee NOTICE OF DISCHARGE. ▼ap#rt \y Arthur ANOlHER BRYAN WANTED SCIENCE NO MENACE V 170,000 AND TOO CHEAP DEWARE OF EMPATHY Head and Chest Colds Relieved In a New Way A Solve which Releasee Medicated Yap era whan Applied Over Throat and Cheat. The Iowa State chairman aays the Democratic party, ought to find man like W. J. Bryan—something hard to do. Bryan liad one great quality, and you could say; as it U ■;a ! d of ^pother, “That man believes every word he says. Such men are dangerous.” v ' • There is a tremendous power in sincerity, and, right or wrong, on ■fold, silver or prohibition, Bryan had that power. Dr. Lorenz, “bloodless surgeon > ftf Vienna ” >uys science is injuring humanity by keeping the unfit alive. Nature tries to wipe out those not. fit to pci petuate the species. Sci ence prolongs their lives and adds unfit .children to the population. T.cd Indians used to kill babies that did not seem vigorous, and killed nil children born deformed. That didn't make a great conquer ing race of the Indians. Some of the most useful men, Voltaire for instance, would have died in in fancy but for extraordinary scien- t fic care. Pope, who wrote the “Essay on Man” and other things worth while, would have been killed had he lived among the Indians. He h ul to be sewed up in a can vas jacket each day that he might ^ it up and write. And consider the good moral ef fect that helping tha unfit has upon the abler types. What we call charity is largely a philanthropic gymnasium for the Inhaled as a vapor and, at the same tune absorbed through the skin like a liniment, Vicks VapoRub reaches imme diately inflamed, congested air passages. This w the modern direct treatment for all cold troubles that is proving so popu lar in Canada and the States where over 17 million jars are now used yearly. Splendid for sore throat, tonsilitis, bronchitis, croup, head and chest colds, catarrh, asthma or hay fever. Just rub Vicks over throat and chest and inhale the medicated vapors. It quickly loosens up a cold. VICKS OmZtHtiuomJAas UscoYuutur prosperous. A Stock Exchange seat sells for i 1.0,000. the highest price na record, but a great deal too low. In *heM* booming times, and with tbs prosperity that I* ahead, every able broker ought to earn the price of a seat in a year. JEWELRY , 1 ■ r . Ladies and Gents watches. Gold and platinum diamond mounted jewelry. Gorham sterling and plated sil ver ware. Waterman Ideal pers and pen cils. “ Engraved visiting, business cards and invitations. A first class watch and jewelry repair department. Diamonds remounted in white and yellow gold mountings. You can appreciate fully the quality of our goods and services only by sampling them. P. W. STEVENS Barnwell, South Carolina. NOTICE OF SALE. The value of Exchange seats shows that it is better to buy and sell things than to make them. You know how cotton growers feel lust now. In some places cotton Un’t worth picking. Yesterday in New York a seat on the Cotton Exchange sold for V2.000 more than the last previous Hale. Whether cotton stock* *ell high or low, the intelligent, broker makes IBs profit. Notice is hereby given pursuant to Section 885 of the Criminal Code of Laws of South Carolina for 1922, tbit I have seised ard will sell at public auction to the highest bidder for caih a tll:00 o’clock a. m., in front of the Court House in Barnwell, South Caro lina. on the 24th day of December, 1928, the following described property, to-wit: One Hudson, seven-passenger auto mobile, touring car type, motor No. 164966, seisod on June 21, 1926; and also ore black mare mule, and a one- horse wagon, seised on November 19, 1926. B. H. DYCHES, Sheriff of Barnwell Co. Rabindranath Tagore (fine, old poet of Bombay) join* Europe’s hymn of American hate. He won’t come here again; did not like us last time. We are “too aggres- wively anti-Asiatic and selfish.” We are not "aggressively anti- Asiatic,” but we notice that India in five thousand year* ha* done nothing but turn from slavery un der the rajahs to slavery under Britain and rajahs combined. We, on the other hand, hive done sev eral things, steamboat, flying ma chine, automobile, telephone, phono graph, radio, in much less than five thousand years. John Bates Civil Engineer and Surveyor \ 0 JACKSON, S. C. j \ Notary With Seal. Prompt, j | We don’t believe that Asia and America would go in harness any better than a yak and a submarine. Nevertheless, we like Asia, all but the re jabs, caste, suttee and child marriage—and Britain is attending to them. High-Class Work Assured. Reasonable Prices. ..#■ ■—r r ^ ’• Your Work Solicited. Are you inclined to empathy?. It’s the new word of psychologists, and explain stories of witnesses describing in detail what they never saw. That new word may play a part in the Halls-Mflls murder* ca.se. First we think about a thing.with sympathy. Then we get mixed, in ject ourselves into the affair, in our imaginations, and soon are ready to swear, with perfect sincerity, that we saw what we never saw. Dreams lead t<A empathy. You dream you saw a friend in a certain place, think about it, and in a week you believe that you dreamed of him and then saw him, just where you had dreamed of him. And you tell your friends how your dream came true, when it did nothing of the kind. . Beware of empathy. The world is full of it. Professors Fryer and Shaw, of New York University, invented or discovered it Wm. McNAB Nervous hot flashes “COME time ago when In a ° very nervous, run-down condition,” says Mrs. Marcia F. Marlow, of Broken Bow, Okia., "1 tried numerous reme dies to try at least to keep going, but I could not I waa weak and tired—just no good at alb My back ached and I had hot flashes until I was so nervous I smothered, couldn’t sleep and I was never hungry, end I kept get ting weaker. I couldn’t stand on my feet This was an un usual condition for me aa I had been pretty strong all along. I knew that I would have to do something, and that pretty soon. “Some friend suggested that I idle Cardui, and it certainly waa a good suggesttaa, for after taking one bottle I could Notice Is hereby given that I wNl file tut Anal account with the Hon. JoWMt. Skteiling, Judge of Probate Court for Barnwell County, as Ad- ifliniftrator of the estste of L. M. Macc^ sn<f petition the said Court for an Order of Discharge, and Letters Dismissory, upon Saturday, the 18th day of Decembef, lj>26. MARIE B. MACE, t , Administratrix of therEstate of , L. M. Mace. Barr we}!, S.C ., Nov. 18, 1926. ll-25-4tc. =3= NOTICE TO CREDITORS V - - A IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE UNITED STATEJ> — FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF SOUTH CAROLINA, In Bankruptcy. In the matter of BEN F. DAVIS, Dunbarton, S..C., Bankrupt. Notice is hereby given that the above named bankrupt has filed a pe tition for discharge and that a hear ing has been ordered to be had upon the same on the 9th day of December, A. D., 1926, before the Court, at Charleston, S. C-* at il o’clock in the forenoon, at which time and place all known creditors and other persons in interest may appear and show cause, if any they have, why the prayer of the said petitiorer should not be granted. RICHD. W. HUTSON, ll-4-4t. % -“Clerk. :A11 J of Insurance ^ • ► < * » • > farm Coverage - # * a Specialty; < Calhoun and Co. P. A. Price, Mgr. I Bank of W. C Bldg. ► Too Much . “Add?” B«*a» Urte^Acid^ 01011^ hUmj AUTHORITIES agree tint an< JrXcesa of uric add is primar due to faulty kidney action. Rett tkm of this toxic material often makes ite preeence felt by sore, pafo- - fkl joints, a tired, languid feeBna and, sometimes, toacic backache and headache. That the kidneys are not functioning right is often shown by scanty or burning passage of secre tions. Thousands assist their kidneys at such times by the use of JDonn’a PUJm—a stimulant diuretic. Doan’a are recommended by many local peo ple. Aak your naighbort DOAN’S Stimulant Diwratic to t, Ifilbura Co..Mfig. Cheat., JUST RECEIVED.—A suuply of Real Estate Titles and Mortgages.— The People-Sentinel office, Barnwell. Clean Child’s Bowels “California Fig Syrup” is -Dependable Laxative for Sick Children niiimiuiHuiM" ' 1 ^ ilLaaqs use v ClauSSenS Bread , V Juts mure* jeed\alne y * Hurry Mother! A teaspoonful of •California Fij; Svrup” now will sweeten the stomach an<l thoroughly clean the little bowels and in a few hours you hare a well, playful child t^rain. Even if cross, feverish, bilious, constipated or full of cold, children lore its pleasant 'taste. It never cramps or overacts. Contains no nar cotics or soothing drugs. Tell your druggist you want only the genuine “California Fi-„’ .Syrup’ vht<h has direction* for h-ibies and • aiMn-a ol all a^e* printed on hottle. Vo. ..e:\ ynn trii*t say ''California.’* latuce auy imitation. i LONG TERM MONEY to LEND i 6 per cent interest on large amounts Private funds for small loans. BROWN & BUSH . LAWYERS BARNWELL. SOUTH CAROLINA. very: "I < tell I wee stronger and better. I dido** quit I kept k up ell through the change and did flne. I felt tike a FIRE, HHALTM AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANIES. Sold by all druggiata. CARDUI 'tflM fc HanlMa Block, Mate fit SAY “BAYliR ASPIRIN” and INSIST I Unless you see the "Bayer Cross” on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millipns and prescribed by physicians 24 years for Headache Neuralgia Lumbago Rheumatism Accegt only 1 •'Bayer M package which contains proven directions, Haajy “BayeriVkaree at IS tableto—Aleo bottha of 24 wed m ‘ *-• - •