The Barnwell people-sentinel. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1925-current, April 28, 1927, Image 6
Now New York to Paris Air Favorites
W**«»T**I
Bert A cotta ano Clarence Chamberlain, American civilian aviator*,
who last week broke the world’i sustained fitfht record by staviM in
the air SI boors are now the favorites in the New York to Paris Bight
lor g pnv of £?5.000. They may hop off any day now. .
1 ’ A
Cotton Plant
is Like
an AUTO -
* :r
Johnston, S. C.
"Tho tortili—r on my
prim 3 mens in 19H was
900 Jbs. of acid phos-
phntm, 400 lb*, of mod*
mnd 90 lb*, of muriat*
potmah. My ymid of lint
wmatuound 1132 lb*, par
wore. It ooat around 5c
par pound.” ,
B. R. Smith
Wja. 2d Prim*, Cotton Contort
X.,
V
Tranton, S. C.
"Tha cotton was given
* aaoond side-dressing
~ about 600 pounda of'
of Soda early in
yield of aaad
cotton par a&ra was
3400 Jba., Jint par acre
about 1,100 As. My !mt
coat about 9cpar lb."
O. T. Swearingen
Win. tat Prime, dtate Contest
■—.—
m
A CAR can go just about so far on a
tankful of gas—and, if it goes any fur
ther, itcan only do so by coasting down hill
Same way with a cotton plant. It starts
out with a full “tank” of growing power.
That’s the fertiliser you put undar it.
Rut along about chopping time, you
need to “Si her up” again by side-dress
ing 150 to 200 pounds of Nitrate of Soda
per acre.
Then your cotton plants don’t
have to “coast”. Instead they
pick right up and carry along to
maturity under full growing
power supplied by that side
dressing of Nitrate of Soda.
Thousands of cotton growers
have tried it and proved it for
you. They own good places, wear good
clothes Bind drive good automobiles today
because they can turn out bale-to-the-acre
cotton. And that pays them no matter
what price cotton goes to. .
They know side-dressing pays
with com, too.
f 4
How about you? Are you willing
to profit from the experience of
others—or to try it for yourself?
Just cut out this advertisement
and write your name and address
in the margin. Then mail it to us.
We will seftd you, without one
penny of coat, our little book
“Side-Dressing Cotton and Com.”
Our manager is a practical cot
ton grower and knows just what
conditions call for here in the
Palmetto State. s. c
ian Nitrate of Soda
aL Bureau
str'
Social and Personal
News from Ellenton
mrty of young people enjoyed a
ride given by J. B.^Bagnal Tues-
Ellenton, April 23.—Mr. and Mrs.
F. D.JBush were in Augusta Tuesday.
Dan'ell Johnson, of Crawfordsvilie,
Ga., is visiting his aunt, Mrs. W. M.
Walton.
Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Youngblood, Mis.
John Hood and F. M. Youngblood
were in Augusta Tuesday.
Miss Myrtle Mayes has returned,
after visiting friends in Augusta.
Mr. and Mrs.E.O. Glover, of Meyers’
Mill, were visitors here Tuesday.
A party of young people en
straw
day evening.
Those from here attending the
Wolf-Bryant wedding in Orangeburg
Wednesday were: Mr. and.Mrs. A. A.
Foreman^ Miss Louise Cassels and
Mrs. Elmore Ashley.
Miss Betty McLeod, who is teaching
in Bath, spent the week-end at hoene
with her mother, Mrs. Myrtle McLeod.
Linwood Bush has returned to the
Citadel, after spending the spring
hrftdays here with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. D. C. Bush.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmo Ashley. Mrs.
Carrie Ashely and Mrs. Mit^ Howell
were in Augusta Tuesday.
.Sumpter Cassels spent Sunday in
Rock Hill.
Mrs. G. R. Boswell and daughter,
Mrs. George Schuler and son, at Au
gusts, spent Tuesday with Mrs. J. D.
warn.
Friends of Mrs. Russell Bailey will
be giad to know that she has returned
from the University houpital.
Mr. and Mrs. Bowers Morgan were
visitors in August* Tuesday.
Miss Alice Miller spent last week
end at home with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. J. D. Miller.
Miss Helen Brabham, of Hattie-
eille, spent Sunday with Mrs. E. R.
Buckingham.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Aahley were in
Augusta Thursday.
Mrs. H. C. Cassels, of Charlotte,
has returned, after visiting relatives
here.
Miss Grace Walton, who is attending
school in Crawfordville, Ga., spent the
week-end here with her parpnU, Mr.
and Mrs. W. M. Walton.
Miss Gladys Owens is spending this
week-end with her parents near Way
nesboro, Ga.
A large crowd from here attended
fields day in Aiken Friday. Those re
ceiving honors were: Doris Peritt,
lot place in broad jump for girls over
13; Stanley Eubanks, 2nd place in
high school declamation, and Lila
Bush, 2nd place in grammar school
ekeution. ,
T. S7 Moody, of Dunbarton, was a
business visitor here Thursday.
Misses Marie Foreman and Mary
Quarrels, cf Allendale, visited friends
here for the week-end.
Mrs. William Bush and Miss Tutt
Youngblood were visitors in Augusta
Thursday.
Mrs. P. H. Buckingham was in Au
gusta Thursday. , >
coat faded grey, for yonder in the
ViJley I can see the «rmy gathering.
Long ago, I thought the war was over,
but I must have been mistaken; surely
that is my generad calling to me and
waving hia award, lest I come too late
to join them. Somehow, I dreamed
that they were all dead, that I was
the last cf the glorious number left on
earth. See, they are marching now,
a mighty host of heroes, with their
feet no longer bare and their flags no
longer tattered.
<4 On, on they go, and I see them,
clim/bing the golden sunlit hills, into
an endless day.' Company after com
pany, battalion eft$r battalion, regi
ment after regiment, and yonder rise
the white walls of the city they mean
to take.
“But from the battlements of that
city no menacing guns are pointing;
no sentinels pace the ramparts; there
seems to be no apprehension of dan
ger, no preparation for attack. Look!
the army is entering the wide portals;
net a shot, not a struggle, no dead er
dying men.
“Ah! I see—I know why the con
quest i| b'oodless, for the name of
the city is Peace!”
The little patch of sunlight faded
and the soul at tne . Soldier passed;
and the Sexton, leaning on his spade,
smiled and koked into the grave. —
T.mp, Tribone..
The Last Confederate.
ammmamwmmm a
(Published by Request.)
He was the last Veteran; of all
those who had fought for home and
henor, he alone was left alive.
And now death came to lay its hand
upon him. One soldier’s grave was
still unfilled, and the sleepless Sexton
waited, leaning on his spade.
A little patch of sunlight fell upon
the coverlet, and the dying man placed
his cmly hand there that the. tender
warmth might kiss it with its lips of
gold.
And the words he spoke were as the
woods cf one who dreams at distant
things; for they had a mystic meaning,
and Death tarried that It too might
hear. , ’ ' ; .
Now I kn^# that the dying have
visioae, for the words he spoke wore
Cotton and Corn
Yields Increased
By Top Dressing
Nature in a tolerant mistress. She
stands a lot ot nbuoa and la qalck to
respond to kind treatment. The farm
er who year after, year takes nourish-
meat from the soil without doing any
thing to replace It can farm after a
fashion. Nature will go her bast to
bring tho crop to n hoalthy maturity,
bat ovary effort leaves her a little
more exhausted. '
Pleat food administered at tho prop
er time and In proper amounts Is an
Important stop towards profitable
farming.
In former years fertiliser was ap
plied to cotton almost exclusively be
fore or at planting time Taste con
ducted by a number of Experiment
Stations, however, show that two of
our major crops, cotton aftd corn,
thrive batter It a major portion of one
element—nitrogen—4a reserved for a
tide or top dressing. *
According to the “Auburn Method."
developed by the Experiment Station
at Auburn, Alabama, all acid phoo-
pbate and potash used on cotton
should bo applied at planting time, but
only one-fourth ot the nitrate need
should go under the crop. The re
maining three-fourths should bo ap
plied at chopping time. Thp experi
ence of many farmers Indicates that
the yield of seed cotton can be In
creased 400 or 600 pounds per'acre by
the use of 200 pounds of nitrate of
soda per acre in the above way. At
chopping time cotton plants have de
veloped a root system able to take up
readily available nitrogen within a
few days. Delay In application of tho
tide dressing means diminished yield.
sms
SEEDS
WE HAVE IN STOCK s supply of
fresh Garden Seeds of all kinds and a
limited quantity of Excel, Improved
Tom Watson, Irish Gray and Thur
man Gray Watermelon Seeds, Kirby
Stay-Green and Henderson’s Improved
Whtie Spine Cucumber Seeds. Get
our prices before buying elsewhere.
%
Deason’s Drag Store
MAIN STREET
BARNWELL, S. C
■
HALL & COLE, Inc.
94-102 Faneuil Hall Market
BOSTON, MASS.
Commission Merchants and Distributors of
ASPARAGUS.
One of the Oldest Commission Houses in
the Trade. Send-for Shipping Stamp.
SAY “BAYEft ASPIRIN” «hd INSIST l
Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are
not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe
by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years for
“Rip'''"
Colds
Pain
#
Toothache
Neuritis
Headache
Neuralgia
Lumbago '
Rheumatism
O
4
Acce P t only ‘’Bayer” package which contains proven direction*,
Handy “Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets-Al*> bottles of 24 and lOO-DnArtu.
Xjptrla Is We traS* nark at Bum. »»— - I _ ™ „
nsxk et B*rw MaaafMtor* of
100—DraggistsL
et
LONG TERM MONEY to LEND
T. B. BUM
l. B. BOM
"r 5
6 per cent, interest on large amounts;
Private funds for small loans.
■ V.
BROWN & BUSH
LAWYBBS BARNWELL. SOUTH CAROLINA.
* , , • - ; X
; ELLIS ENGINEERING CO. o 4 ’
> < ► ; ’
* Land Surveying n Specialty.
Lyndhnrst, & C.
Sand Us Your Job Work.
r
NOW—
That the Easter rush is over—is the
best time to get a permanent wave.
You will enjoy it through the Spring
and Summer months.
Phone or write for an appointment.
* 1 % ,1 — - ,
Leonard Beauty Shoppe T
MRS. A. DBAS, Prop.
Ldenayd Building Na tSB7 j;
Room No. 408 Augusta, Ga. 1
A ,1