•k »•' THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1887 THE BARNHEIX PEnf>LR.mmTlNEI. KAVVWKV.f. anrmv r jwa |. >- • HBRB AND HBRBABOUTB. • • • Miss Hazel Smith spent the week end at her home in York. James Riley McNab was a business visitor in Columbia Friday. Miss Louise Cope spent the week end in Cope with her parents. E. B. Sanders, of Columbia, spent the week-end here with relatives. Louis Rosen, Esq., of Orangeburg, was a business visitor here Saturday. Miss Mamie McNab spent several days in Columbia last week with relatives Miss Elizabeth Mace, of Columbia, spent the week-end in Barnwell with relatives! tt* Mr. and Mrs. Furman B. Davis, spent Sunday in Lexington with the latter’s parents. Mrs. Dan M. Hartley, of Norfolk, Va., spent the week-end here with Miss Anna Walker. Miss Rachael Pratt, of Columbia, spent the week-end here with Dr. a nd Mrs. Martin C. Best. Henry Spann of Sumter, spent the week-end here as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Perry A. Price. Col. and Mrs.Harry D. Calhoun, of Bamberg, spent Sunday afternoon in Barnwell with friends. Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Bronson spent Sunday in Columbia with the latter’s mother, Mrs. F. F. Bell. M^s. E. D. Robertson, of Kershaw, spent several days last week with her sister, Mrsi W. J. Lemon. Miss Connie Waters, of Spartan burg, spent the week-end in Barnwell with Miss Grace League. Miss Portat Seabrook, home econom ics worker, of Winthrop College, spent Friday here on business. The Bank of Barnwell will be closed Monday, February 22nd, in observance of Washington’s birthday. Gene Parler, of Summerville, spent the week-end here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Parler. Paul Bolen, of Springfield, spent the week-end here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Bolen. Mrs. H. L. O’Bannon, Mrs. W. E. McNab and son, James Riley McNab, spent Thursday in Columbia. Timothy Kimpe, of Greenville, a for mer resident of Barnwell, spent the week-end here with friends. Mr. and Mra. Charlie Brown, Jr., and Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Cave were visitors in Augusta Saturday. S. B. Moseley, Jr., of Charleston, sepnt the week-end in Barnwell with Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Girardeau. Mrs. Douglas T. Calk, of Charles ton, spent several days this week with her mother, Mrs. E. W. Holman. Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Scoville and young son spent Friday in Orange burg with Mr.* Scoville's mother. . Miss Claire Dicks, of Westminster, spent the week-end here with her par ents, Mrs. and Mrs. J. N. Dicks. Jim Bush, of Summerville, spent the week-end here with his grandpar ents, Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Brown, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. I. W. Rountree, of 'Dunbarton, spent the week-end here with the latter’s mother, Mrs. J. C. Hogg. Spencer Mcllwaine, Jr., of Aiken, spent the week-end in Barnwell with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Mc- Jlwaine. Mr. and Mrs. Allen Bell and chil dren, of Columbia, spent the week-end here with Mrs Bell’s mother, Mrs. S. R. Drew. Miss Polly Fales, a student at Co lumbia College, spent the week-end here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ira Fales. Cadet Brown Easterling, of Clem son College, spent the week-end in Barnwell with his mother, Mrs. Lessie Easterling. Mr .and Mrs. Claude Sanders, of Bambeig, spent Sunday here with the latter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. B F. Martin. The many friends of little Penny Baxley, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Baxley, will regret to learn that he has been confined to his parent’s home with a slight attack of pneumonia. * • * L****,'., NOT ENOUGH POTASH , . ill IT 2°° pouNDS KJ\/ U AINU PtH ACHt • IN THIS FIELD 3*9-3 NPK fertilizer at planting plus nitrogen top-dressing pro duced only770 pounds of seed cotton per acre. Where NV POTASH was added to the nitrogen top-dressing the yield was increased to 1,640 pounds of seed cotton per acre. A little potash is not enough to prevent Rust and increase yields. You must make sure you use enough to produce a healthy, high-yielding, high-quality crop. Top-dress with 100 pounds of NV MURIATE per acre, or 200 pounds of NV KAINIT, or a nitrogen-potash, mixed-goods top-dresser containing 10 to 2S% NV POTASH. If you prefer to use your extra potash at planting, select a fertilizer containing 8 to 10% NV POTASH. Where Rust has been very severe you may need both high-potash fertilizer at planting and potash top dressing to STOP RUST and START PROFITS. Thousands of farmers have found that it pays to use a lot more potash than the average fertilizer contains. When you buy your fertilizer and \Op-dresser, tell your fertilizer man you want more NV POTASH. It costs little and pays BIG! N. V. P0TASI EXPORT NY, lac, Bart BMg, ATLANTA, 6A.-Royster Bldg, NORFOLK, VA. PLENTY OF NV POTASH COTTON nevet RUSTS when weLL-hed with POTASH ATS B usiness I cilderO I; _ a