The Barnwell people-sentinel. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1925-current, February 24, 1927, Image 8
K jsinesq
TILDERO
'' ' ,
IICKS.—Hatch coming off every
TUESDAY. All heavy breeds, 20 ct*.;
light, 15 cts. 75 per cent live delivery
guaranteed. We aleo do custom hatch.
. ing «t per tray , of 96 eggs.
-&40k your orders now and get chick?
Hi
WB*
g-'H*
m \
y's .
1. t ; V —
'when you want them.—Blackvillc
Hatchery, Blackville, S. C. 2-24-10tp
. '“PROFITS FOR THE FARMER:—
'' Get more money for your crop by
growing cotton of full inch fibre or
longer. The mills want it. Coker’s
strains of Cleveland meet the require*
ment. They won five out of six prize*
in the Statewide Contest. Write for
free ofcpy of 1927 catalogue describ
ing our seeds and breeding methods
It offers practical suggestion* that
will help you make money tht* year.
—Coker’s Pedigreed Seed Co., David
R. Coker, President, Hartsville, S .C.
2-17-4tc. . , '• •
it- K
IBP'..
mt'M ■
i.-
■
FOR SALE.—White and yell >w
chrysanthemum plants, 10 cents each,
$1.00 per dozen.—Mrs. B. P. Davies,
Barnwell, S. C.
FOR RENT.—Four-room cottage in
town of Barnwell; lights and water;
conveniently located.—Apply to B. P.
Davies, Barnwell, S. C.
HELP WANTED. Instruction-
Men 18-36, Railway Mail Clerk posi
tions. Big salary commence. Exper
ience unnecessary. Write George Rob
bins, for free particulars about in
struction for this examination. 697
Burchell Bldg., Washington, D. C. 2t.
• FOR SALE—Watson Watermelon
Seed, saved from large melons last
July when the market slumped. Ex
cellent quality. Price 75 cents P<?r
pound delivered.—Mutual Trading Co.,
Blackville. S. C. ‘ 2-10-10tc.
J. C. Prldmore.
FOR SALE — Several hundred
thousand feet of pine timber, located
about a mile and a half from Kline.
For further information addiess Mrs
L. A. Beet, Barnwell, 8. C. 1-20-tfc
CHICKS.—Hatch coming off every
Tueaday. All heavy breeds, 20 eta.;
light, 16. cts. 75 per cent delivery
guaranteed. We also do custom
hatching at $4.00 per tray of !»6 eggs.
Book your trders now and get chirks
when you want them.—Soujourner
Poultry Furm, P^•’mark, S. C
2-24-7tp
C. O. D. CABBAGE PLANTS —
Milliona ready; extra early and frost
proof; 500 for 60 cents; $1 per thou
sand. — Stokes Plant Co., Fitz
gerald, Ga. l-6-8tp
FOR SALE:—Fio«t Proof Cabbage
Plants, grown in the open air, all
early varieties. By parcel post: 200,
75c; by express collect: f>00. $1.25;
1,000, $2.00. Lettuce plants, 30c per
* Hundred. These are fancy plants.
Will ahip day. order is received.- Cash
with order. Send check, money or
der, cash or ore and two cents stamps.
— —Dr, C .$!• Burckhalter, Barnweil,
S. C. ' v t4-l-27.
JUST RECEIVED—A suuply of
Real Estate Titles and Mortgages.—
The People-Sentinel office, Barnwell
Pigs and Shoats
Wanted
IF YOU HAVE 10 OR MORE
lOR SALE, DROP US A CARD
AND WE WILL COME AND
BUY. WE PAY HIGHEST
CASH PRICE
Gleaton Bros.
SPRINGFIELD. S. C.
National Fertilizer Chief
Cite* Need in F^rm_
Short Course. .
•4 ^
T HAT the east cotton belt acreage la
rivaled by furmera weat of the
slaslpph river waa the outstanding
statement made by J. C. Prldmore, di
rector of the Southern Division, Na-
^ tlonal Fertilizer
Association, in a
talk for the Ra
dio Short Course
over WSB, Atlan
ta, a twd-weeks’
course conducted
by Sears - Roe
buck Agricultural
Foundation In co
operation with the
Fertilizer Associ
ation.
“Speaking of
the economic sit
uation prevailing
over the south
eastern states, It Is absolutely essen
tial for cotton growers In this terri
tory to avail themselves of every pos
sible means of reducing the cost of
growing cotton," said Mr. Prldmore.
"Let me give you a picture of the ex
pansion of cottonyicreage west of the
Mississippi rlv^r, where we now have
approximately as much land devoted to
cotton as the whole belt had five years
ago. Not only Is tills true, but in
that section It la possible for the
farmers, through the use of machin
ery, to cultivate large areas and,
thereby, make cheaper cotton than Is
possible In the southeastern states.
"To meet this altuatlon and to grow
cotton In com|>et!tlon with the farmers
west of the river it Js apparent that
the southeastern growers must use
every possible means of making big
yields per acre, which Is the way to
produce cotton nt a low cost per
pound. W’e not only must practice
those methods known • to Influence
yields,-but fertilize more wisely than
ever before. We must feed the cott >n
plants liberally to get a profitable har
vest. The fertilizer must contain those
plant foods that will meet soli deficien
cies and supply crop requirements and
furnish the three elements—phosphoric
arid, nitrogen and potash—In propor
tions to constitute a balanced ration."
Detpit# evasive denbls, report If
Current that Judge E. It Gary, heao
qf V< $. Steel, plans to retire to
__,&; h on--
U 16 take his place
athan Miller of New York (above)
ilace at $200,(frri year.
Early Marriage not
- Beet for HappiniMM
The Ideal age for marriage la twen
ty-nine years for the groom and twen
ty-four for the bride, according to a
report In the Journal of Social Hy
giene. Deviations of four years on
either side for the groom and of two
years for the bride make little differ
ence, but marriage In which either
party is nineteen years or younger are
from ten to a hundred times as risky
as at the ideal age.
These Conclusions were reached
from a study of 1,000 Impartially se
lected cases from the domestic rela
tions court of Philadelphia. The two
most plausible explanations for the
findings are either that premature or
delayed marriage Is a symptom of
permanent character traits that are
unfavorable to success in family life,
or that the boy or girt under twenty-
one has not a sufficiently broad expe
rience to select a mute with* whom a
successful home can he established.
If immaturity, rather than perum-
| nent instability is the cause, postpone
ment of marriage and education*!
guidance may do much to eliminate
domestic disaster.
Remember the
s
Dates and Places
The Book Club met with Mrs. T. A.
Holland Saturday afternoon.
Early Spring
Fashions
%
Now on
Exhibition
' Scrap Rubber Wanted
I am in the market for automobile
inner tubes and casings, and will pay
tx)fl market prices. It will pay you
to save your old rubber, metal and
rags. Let me know what you have—
I will call for a sufficiently large
amount. Small lots should be de
livered at my store.
• C. H. PINCHUK
Blackville, So. Car.
For Sale
CUCUMBER SEED
We offer for sale the genuine "THE
HENDERSON" Cucumber Seed in*
.original 1 pound printed bngo:
1 to 5 pounds at $1.25 per pound. j
I to 25 pound* at $1.15 per pound. I
25 to 19$ pounds at $1J6 per pound.
;nt pounds at 95 cents per sound.
Few Leave Much Wealth
Eleven people out of a hundred—
whose estates are probated with the
courts—bequeath -to their heirs less
yyftj leave from $500 to
$1.0borfwunty from $1,000 to $2,500,
sod eighteen from $2,500 to $5,000;
about fifteen out of a hundred .will
leave estates valued from $5,000 to
$10,000; fifteen will pass on to their
reward and leave from $10,000 to
$25,000; between five and six will
leave estates fnun $25,000 to $50,000,
according to figures gathered by the
federal trade couimlsslou when it was
making a survey of our national
wealth. The records of tha probate
courts of twenty-four “sample" coun
ties throughout the United States
were searched to see Just what the
average Individual leaves to his heirs,
tlfe records covering a period of twelve
years.—Thrift Magazine.
The Departed Hero
Now there Is no place In the modern
novel for the hero. The novelist main
tains, not without Irritation, that It la
none of his doing; he has no choice
but to write of things as they are, and
he finds no hero In modern life to
occupy the place. “Tone Bungay” set
the pattern Tor a whole school of
novelists, until' Dorothy Richardson
and James Joyce broke it again. In
“Tono Bungay” H. G. Wells gave to
his principal character, young Pon-
derevo, a reasoned excuse for his
Inadequacy In the heroic role: "I
began With the supposition that life'
consisted in doing things. 1 discovered
that It consisted In having thinga done
to nie."^-Isabel Paterson in the Book
man.
Cull out your poor laying hens and sell
4
them along with all extra roosters, broilers,
friers, turkeys, ducks, etc. Indications are
that prices will be lower later in the season.
Keep nothing but the best layers - eggs are
cheap now. Turn surplus poultry irito cash.
* Car will be at- . ^ T > .‘.L -
Dunbarton, Wednesday, March 2nd.
Barnwell, Thursday, March 3rd.
Hilda, Friday, March 4th.
, Car will be open from 9 a. m. to 4 p. m.
Poultry MUST NOT be fed the day they
are sold. Do not tie the feet, bring in crates.
All expense of loading, advertising, etc., is
paid by buyer.
Net price paid at car door:
Colored Hen* 23c per lb.
Leghorn Hen* 21c per lb.
Stags 15c per lb.
. Cox (roosters) 10c per lb.
New Broilers 32c per lb.
Winter Broilers 28c per lb.
No. 1 Turkeys 30fc per lb.
Old Toms and No. 2’s . . 25c per lb.
Geese .11c per lb.
Ducks 20c per lb.
Guineas . . each
Sale Handled by
MISS
ELIZABETH
McNAB,
Home Dem. Agent
• ' and"
H. G.
BOYLSTON,
Co. Dem. Agent.
NOTICE OF DISCHARGE.
Here you will find everything
you desire in your new Spring
Goat, whether for dress or sport
wear. Fashioned along slim,
graceful lines, every ocat is dis
tinguished for its simplicity and
beautiful workmanship. A wide
selection of modes and colors
available.
. 7 . 4 . *
See. Our Windows
Mazursky’s f
Barnwell, S. C.
Your Profeteion
It Is In the nature of man to abuse
his own profession. In his own pro
fession he realizes his limitations, hut
he blames them upon the profession
and not upon himself. On the other
hand, seeing things from outside, he
Imagines that 'other professions are
easier than Tils own and that If he
had entered one of them he Tvpuld
have gone higher. In his own profes
sion he is inclined to note only the
failures; In the others his eyes are
on the successes. Between disloyalty
to his profession and disloyalty to
himself he Instinctively chooses dis
loyalty to his profession.—Baltimore
Sun.
Odd Fellow Old Order
The “Odd Fellows,” as such, were
formed in the Eighteenth century, but
with the intermediate link of the trade
guilds they stretch back to Roman
times. From a marble monument
fonnd at Lanurium. near Rome, It Is
clear that the practice of combination
for providing decent burial, and peri
odically spending a convivial time In
each others’ company, waa a feature
of the life of the ancient Romans, and
those two objects (with others) bare
always been part of Odd Fellowship.
Some, Indeed, contend that the Roman
legions founded lodgoa la Britain 1—
London Mali
Notice is hereby given that I will
file my final account as Executor of
} the Will of G. W. Boylston on Febru
ary, 29th, 1927, with the Hon. John K.
Snelling. Judge of the Probate Court,
for Barnwell County, und pet; 4 nn udd
Court for a n Order 1>f DDclurgc and
Letters Dismissory.
E. F. BOYLSTON,
Executor of the Will of
G. W. Boylston.
Barnwell, S. C., Dec. 31st, 1926.
l-6-27-4t.
INSURANCE
FIRE
WINDSTORM
PUBLIC LI ABILITY
ACCIDENT - HEALTH
SURETY BONDS
AUTOMOBILE
THEFT
Calhoun and Co.
P. A. PRICE, Manager.
< M X~X~X ,, X—X~X' ,, X~X~X~X~X~X M >
Notice to Farmers!
VISITING
CARDS
Send u» your orders for En
graved Visiting Cards.. We
- t /V *
represent one of the best en-
ivers in the country.. If you £
already have a plate, the cost
is much lesst Drop in and look
over our line of sample^. *
If you prefer something a lit*
- h ^
tie cheaper in price, let us print
you 50 or 100 cards in the best
style.. We have some beautiful
new type faces. *
People-Sentinel
BARNWELL, S. €.
*
♦
DON'T GAMBLE on your crops this year. V.
V
Insist on getting fertilizer with on established repu-
tation for Quality and Plant Food Value that will in-
sure you. A
PROFITABLE YIELDS
That is what you get when you buy
S. S. QUAUTY FERTILIZERS
Manufactured by
Southern States Phosphate &
. Fertilizer Company
OFFICE—AUGUSTA, GA.
- Sold bp
C. F. MOLAIR
Bafnwell, :-l S. C.
H ALL^t COLE, Inc.
94-102 Faneuil Hall Market
BOSTON, MASS.
Commission Merchants and Distributors of
ASPARAGUS.
* a
One of the Oldest Commission Houses in
the Trade. Send for Shipping Stamp.
Improved Wannamaker Cleveland Big Boll
\ COTTONSEED.
One year from Wannamaker. Several hun
dred bushels. Not mixed with any. other seed.
A SPECIAL OFFER TO FARMERS:
Will exchange one bushel for I Vt bushel? '
of any sound cotton seed.
Q. A. KENNEDY,
Williston, South Carolina-
* ■ * w