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n Ls *. ^ W mmnry-rft /> | Unc ( J *? +*-*** vr " "^^Vj f ^hl j'*-"' # poi , J i.i #;--??j?AIJGSIT| ! i ', t wjJ r,; ? ! v it r V-, - - r,^*'.tr,-'' ton ( V' * ... . . Pre C\V ma V fc*~ . hai X ? . U . . \? *. ll!27.inp?8, C ; n't ta italic H pra *' .- t i.??T .Miii tis uf li\t*r ? f a> . n'l'TM'its .. Stomach nnd n t> > . i.; . > !? u. ?iioy are, ^ haj I-' '? ' 1 ? "ii"X I'V pain. t. n,i\ ? i ) ! I : -v troubles, * Q,,< u.oi! i I -- t:! {'..i at Urn start. ;ir? v, '|'hi n iv r*fb < i itiedfvrd's 15. n < " ' f.vi's to limp- H ?ot j r I wr-"!'i?i'c(I kid- $ ,>vc . , ivir tl tor;.id liver f. 1 / <.-:t in *.?> <_ ; iovor a:id 4 *"*v / ' ' :: "f-irrntiv" j' bas ^ 'w ^ choli'r i r.nd !; dj-fiso of r? I W j ' i" vs. \> ;. 1 kiunev9 rr>- f* Pec ' V The :*? felack at I * 1*,... 1 noi.' .v. |? isons have jjt v - .11: in l ilstofyol- X 80 I -t I "op Mir-f ' )t'!ir9 live in ? V -t ii*?tr? an I " vo no other ? ,, j* . i. ii.i 11. ;n !'ii? nord'a black- u dri, {h-.f.-ftiit. it is al vayj 011 hand for p0^ Use in an enieremiey and saves & irirv rt;n'ii -alia of a doctor. j? t**n J Mti'iias, S. C., March 10, 1901. g 100 ? I Ujvt u.*:d The ifcfrJ'j Black-Draught . . lord, ct . ur? am ! have not had to ?0 t'l w ' ' c? ? rin c I avc been t-ki.ny it. &. 'I'llt I. the hc<t inedirlnc fr.r n>; that is ! k . the 11.din.et ior liver and kidney iS Pat t t.-< :dr> :-<* dyrpcpjia rnd other V-. *,,? I . *! comolaints. K?v. A. 0. LtWIS ' oft. m? i ?.,? .1 acr J IMTKKKST1NU F At ITS. ?** y Ke< run w o 1 Hie Variety and (Quantity ol ^ Teas That Uive Largest Vle Yield. bufi wil Southern Agriculturist Juno. in v In writing this article, we aim to give the farmers many useful faetn about the cowpea?vigna WftI ca'jang?which are not generally ! to * known, and to make it so instructive that it may be taken BP ?1 cnidp in ita miltnro Tha ! No1 seed of the eowpea were origirally brought from China or lnt< India, and first cultivated in Sv uih Carolina. The people were po<! si .w to recognize its value as a ! ^ feed and as an enricher of the land; but today it is spreading ^ ali over the Middle States. The first thing is in selecting j are the most prolific variety. There ! ?ro are constantly occurring new cor' sports, some short stock, others c Tiith vines trailing, pods varying i0 ' from four to twelve inches in cro' length, and the peas are of everv lucl imaginable shade of white, yel- per low, pink, gray, brown,red, black, wpe mottled and speckled. Some aU(' ripen in sixtv davs. others in ? (^r?' hwndred and twenty davp. Ex- ro* periments are developing new r varieties that appear to be an * .1 ?' der improvement over the oluer % v r *' KiuuM. Among the latest and .? Xiir??t profitable kind should be Cm classed the New Era, the Wonderful, the Klack, ihe Red Kip- ^ pi-r, the Whippoorwill, the Clay, an^ our ar.d the Large White Crowder. Tho editor of the Southern Agri- ecz cultmict regards the White can Crowder as the beat table pea P|fI among all of the varieties. There is on? kind of the Crowder that '' you is called the Yellow Sugar (}}. Crowder, which should bo grown me on every Southern farm for table npe. Three or four more new or, ( kiud pre now being cultivated ? in the South, among which is the rtn T. y lor, which are very choice ma pt ih. giv Now, we liave in tlie above I *)ea liht tb j most profitable varieties, rec . , ! Prn tb? ?;<?St thing is what quantity we! sh ill be used to seed an aero? <M1 Sc'ror-d experiment? mad'* at the hot Arkansas Experiment Station P'e ha.vo proven that to use one 7*al bu :o! of seed to an acre is a j.j^ w to ot heed, and caused a ro- ire, B'. . < ~ j d; , , . j I vine. One peck of seed ing-by time" will be is produced 3,314 pounds of $10 to $12 per aero, r and 31 4 bushels of peas, late the peas should ree pecks produced 2,G41 second plowing, as t inds of hay and 28 3 bushels peas are sown the la peas per acre. Four pecan of the yield. Do not f is sown gave a yield of 2,463 ter part of this monl inds of hay and only 25 4 peck of cowppas to < diels of peas. This is ati as- corn, and the peas i?hing statement, but we know tract from the co >f. Newman personally, wuo *bout ten dollars1 i de the experiment, and we tritious food to each TO r TT n/\ n f I I At* /l/\ t ?* l? t " T\..? ?- ? iL * ? r xj otoi j v?v*u uuDiiic in hip JL/U n Il? tuti IlfXT- fl .ctical test?. One pock of wheat and oats will d gave higher yields of both in Tennessee, and th r and shelled peas than any not be permited to I mtity greater than one peck. Turn the stubble la a is a wonderful discovery, in a peck of peis 1 establishes the fact that soil from the exhai >ry farmer who has been sow- of the summer so one bushel of seed per acre will be worth as a been throwing away three lo83 than $5 to $0 p ks of poas to the acre, which give at a low estima he present price is a loss of of hay. If hogs a cents per acre. Notice this turned on the peas i t, that the poas were sown in to be eaten green, t! lis 3-i feet wide. Thirteen on $20 worth of m inds of seed peas produced acre. What a won bushels more peas than did the cowpea ! No la pouuds of seed on same kind ing and harvestin and, sown at the same time, consumed on the la ise facts should save every there i6 no harvestn ron of the Southern Agricul- Who will be so i ist, three pecks of peas, or refuse to turn ovei ke one bushel to seed four soil, which will cost et, in place of one acre as has pay 35 cents for a pi etofore been the custom. The poorwill or Red Iiij 1 Ripper cowpea is a dense reap in sixty dayi ming variety and produces a worth of first class 1 .. .1 f--1 i-W- -r on r.a [juenui quannry 01 nay. iDe rearing mat this 1 Kipper will give the highest look too long for tl Id of hav, but uot near the read, we atop wri hels of peas that the New Era some other time \ 1 produce. If a stock grower beat process of cu wanting vinoa to be dried into hay, and give direct then the Ked Kipper pea is ing the peas durinj one for him to bow. If he from being eaten its to grow peas for the aeed weevil. )o put upon the market, then ??* should uae Whippoorwlil, Drlvrn Tn D?*i? go Black Eye or Warren's Living at an oul ? Hybrid. The latter kind place, remote from ( e not vet been introduced 'ani'ly is often drive > Tennessee. The OUy pea tlon in case of accid . . a .1 + ,D BUTUS, (JutS, Wo 1 produce on good soil 1,100 etc bay jn a piip inds of peas per acre. len's Arnica Salve. Vkat effect has peas on corn on earth. 25c. at Cr n at time of laying by corn! ain(^ F. Mac key s is done in South Alabama, ^tore. the width of the corn rows -? ? about five feet apart. The A christian Sen wing of the peas with the wa]kin(; iu the Co n have no etlect on the yiold across a small boy s lorn, but will on an average an Hpple treo doub mprove the land that the com r>ajn> r* t li/\ fAll/\nMr?? > *11 ! - P l.o )c?i win ue "My little man," 1j reused about three bushels ia the matter?" acre. A furrow should be ??j aj6 80me gr? ned between the corn rows moaned the boy, "an I peas sown in the drill. The RChe." led peas between the corn .?you don't ache," s will produce about two and ]ower Qf Mr. Eddy alf more bushels than when thi 11 k so.'' seed are sown broadcast nn- Tho boy Uj. the growintr corn. The cow-1 . . , * r , . . ment at such a sta weeds and iiay sown at lay- ,. , . ; then replied in a n ??'? iiioimI uikI Hiiin iUsi Hn< ^, manner: lublwK ilum?r*. "That's all right end no money?simply write think so, but I hav I try Botanic Blood Balin ut information." expense. ' _ t you sutler from ulcers, ema, scrofula, blood poison, To Ciirea Clold in cor, eating sores, itching skin, ,'*kH haxative lire lples, boils, none pains, swell- if A? 'Z'Vo* s, rhoumatiam, catarrh, or any Drove** signature is on .1 u:-a .J; 1 * I uvi ur nKiti msc-ane, we aaviae i to take Botanic Blood Balm B. B.). Especially reooni (>'oaia nded for old, obstinate, deep- ^orm a J1* ,? ted cases of malignant blood ^together ?v 0. T ikin diseases, because Botanic ',n*fr ')nK*"e8' .Ul ?od Balm (B. B. B.) kills the / nuperiu son in the blood, cures where foremen. Hi else fails, heals ever*' sore, ?^,rGePlllk machines i kos the blood pure and rich, thpfl^ r"h4 *s flib skin the rich glow of wmP'oym*nt for 1,60 ,1th. B. B. B., the most per- c?flt knf ,the "ervice t blood purifier made. Im a?out six pence a v?s the diges'ion, strengthen Per anauc** ill; kidneys. Thoroughly tost for thirty y"Rrs. $1 per largo Chamberlain's Cai Me at drug pf^res, with c^rn antisoptic Hnimer., te directions for home cure, applied to cuts, nple of Blood Balin sent fieo burns, causes them writing Blood Balm Co., At- out maturation and la. Ga. Describe trouble and | quickly than bv the s medical a<W)ce sent in s?*al-j ment. Kor sale by ? 1 iCJlAt , ?W ' v?, li. ft i worth from ADVERTISERS HAVE F If corn be OSOODS. he sown at The Abbeville Medium he earlier the practical woman reu irger will be 0^er ^av that, the mr ail ii. tne lat- tere?tiiig things in the n< th to row one perR jler Hre (be a(jve, each acre of co)urU|18>" "Long ago," sh< will not do- tij qUj( buying of those wL rn' P'N0 not advertise. It lias 1 vorlh oi nu- seemed to me that the mei ' Hcrft- ,'ho advertises invites i nonth all the truje w,tii him, while tli he harvested w^0 advertise inij e land should me wj^ ^be idea that he t remain bare. CRre enough for mv trade I nd and drill for jj. Then, too, I have to shade the {A^ ^lo management wl isfing ellects vertjBtjB jjftp fresher poods, n. 1 ho peas reason, I suppose, lie sells fertilizer not ^ er acre, and MiurtiiuK KtIUcuc?. to $16 worth n - . .. bresh testimony in great nd cattle be ^j8 cnustautly coming i n September, claring I3r. King's New Pis hey will put for Consumption Ccughf uscle to the to be unequaled. A , f , , . expression from T. J. JVlcK iderful plant 0 , Ar * Kentorville, v a., serves i bor but sow MLie writes: "1 had g, and when chitis for three years and i nd by stock I ed all the time without benefited. Then 1 began Dr. King's New Discover' jnwise as to .. . . ,, a tew bottles wholly curer r an acre of Equally effective iu curii $1.50, and to Luug and Throat troubles eck of Whip- sumption, Pneumonia and >per peas, to guaranteed by Crawford B 4io f? and J. K. Mackey <fc Co., to $1(! nisi,. Trial botle free, r, laP sizes 5()o, and $1.00 i article will m le farmer to what is probably the I iting, but at iOPf)motivp in the world lis vill give the been complete<l at Scheti ring peavine for hauling freight ove ions for keep- ^ocky Mountains. It me * the winter 70 feet au(j on a level trac t. _ .1 1 uy uie pen nam u train <?r eurn a niilo half long.?Ex. <>rnfton. Ladles and Children Invl t of tho wav ladies and children wli ?i vi I i 7111 i ftn ? lJ()t ?tand the allocking 8tl id to deepera- !?"??? syrcps, cathartic. cdt, resulting "? 1,n"te1d ,rv *h? ' uiida. Ulcers, Little Early Risers, lhey a dIv of Buck 'orent from all other pills. It's the heqt do not Pur^e ,lje HVHtem. J awford Bros double dose will notpriffe,* & Co., Drug ?r sicken; many People eal theEasy Pill. VV. 11.Howell, ton, Tex., Rays nothing bett ? - be used for constipation . , headache, etc. BobMoore, 3nti8t, while ette.lnd.,Rayp all others gri] uutry, came aicken,while De Witt's Li ttU itting under Bikers do their work wel led up with easy. Sold by Crawford Bi e"aid-IfllAYTTAW a XaST; II INSTITI WAX HA W, X. C. said the fol ______ ; "JWU ?uly FACULTY : > in astonish J. It. WALKER, Principal, dement, and WoflWJ College ; now sti aost positive <or A. M. ; student in Summer School two sum ; you may teacher of 5 years' experi two vears at VVaxhaw. 8 e school and intermediate d ments. K. N. NISI1ET, student in i One i>ay caster Summer School irao (Quinine summer ; teacher of 20 t refund thp ?ure. K. w. experience ; t wo years at -Men box Joels haw. Intermediate and school depart ments. srs of Paris O. K.CUNNINGHAM, teac I'hou n 11 mLor 1 1 vonra' av iiopi?n/><> " J - ~"I? ' hey are divi- years at Waxhaw. Pi vler the com- department. teudents and ,? ve hundred Intermediate ami prima ire used, and partmenth. (This leacln ?r rorts, find be added to faculty, n 0 horses. The faulty ot five), works out at MRS j R WALK EH, gri square yard of Peace in instrumental i student in Columb a 1' college; teacher ot 8 in Halm is an . : ?? ? . . CAUCI iriu;c , i wu yoain Jit , and when . , brm.es >.,.1 lm*' nw to heal with- ? partment. much mor? Por ,lGW catalogue and in usual treat- i address J. F. Mackey I J. H WALKKI I ?-.7 I A.\ . .V. .. J A BfSPiPSSA ' MFor *lx yean w?i Tlrtlin of d7?* larked pepal* in Its worst form. I could eat nothing out milk toast, and at times my stomach would inf i n no* retain and digest oven that. I.ast March I L '-r i|,rti I aivuna have steadily improved, until 1 ain as well as I swbpa- eTur waa lnmy .. rtiBing David 11. Moiipbt. Newark. O. 0 Pa'^' CANOY lO did gT CATHARTIC ^ ] t:z no to ^ijgfcn, ,n mr ie one jressee ^ PlttMnl. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. no loOSlll Good, Nutot Sicken. VVeuhcu.or Gripe. 10c. Sjc.aJC , ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... LO RfiK PUrlln* Vt*M?dj ( taping, flilffiin, Mon(r?al. K?? lark. Sll found ha rn DBO Sold nnil guaranteed by all drug, I Ht#?IU"0ftW glttato CVKK Tobacco Habit. i? ad- ??________ ?1 SOUTHERN RY Schedule In effect Jnn. 13. 1903 Read Down Kead Up tj 11Hn No.33. Daily No. 34. Daily ti, de- I 'Optn Lv Charleston Ar 3 50pm ? *2 pra A> Stimtnervlllo Ar 3llpm cuvtrv 4-lOpm Ar Kltigsvillc Ar 12 50pm 1 and These trains. Ncs 33 and 31, will step only at ....... Sumtiiervllle, Mranchville, Ornugeburg and* St. recent Matthews. arlatld Between Klcgsvills and Blacltsburg ju .v R?-ad Down Kead Up I No 33, Duiiy No.34. Daily I oron- f.oeprn Lv Kingsvtlle Ar 12 50pm ' lootor- " 15pm Ar Camden Ar It 30am s tMiptn Ar Catawba Jet Ar 9 Plain neing *'.Mpuj Ar Rock Hill Ar 9 15am b 59pm Ar Tirznh Ar H htaro IHKHig 9 09pm Ar Yorkvllle Ar b 12am C and 0 22pm Ar Shuron Ar x tyrant ,, 9 35 pin Ar Hickory drove Ar b ISain 1 me. 9 SOpui Ar Smyrna Ar x 05am LIE All 'U '^r '^bicksburg Lv 7 15am Trains Nos. 33 and 31 stop at all important , v>OU- stations between Kings ille and Uiacksburg (trip. Iletwecn Rock Illll and Marion Hrrvo* ''<-"1*1 Down litad Up lAroP No.35, Daily No 3(1 Daily Drug- tiooatn Lv Rock Hill Ar 1030pm air it la>- 6 Ar Tirzab Ar 10 11 pin aguiar ti3laui Ar Yorkvflle Ar luoipm 1 plant Ar Sharon Ar 9 pipm 7 oOnut Ar Hickory Grove Ar 9 35pm " Id.go Ar Smyrna Ar 9 25pm 7 30aiu Ar Hlacltnburg Lv b 10pm jig'^est 10* >'im Ar Marion Lv 5 50pm Nos. 33 and 30 stop.at principal stations be IH JUft twoen Rook Hill and Marion. . Between Marlon anil lllacksburg ectaay dowu Head up ir the No.66, Dally ex Sun No.67, Dally ex Sun 9 OUatD Lv Marlon Ar 8 50 pm lasures 2 00pm Ar Hlacksburg Lv 2 50pm Ir i?? t? Train No. 33 will connect at Rock Hill with iv savannali division No. 34 for Chariot to. Washantl a lujftou anil New York. Tralti No. 34 will make connection at Rock Hill with Savannah division No. 33 fiom Charlotte. Washington and Now York. Nos. 33 and 81 handle through Pullman Draw? j Ing Roots s'eepinv cars between Now Yck and leo Charleston, via Camden and Hock Hill, and Dining Car between Hook Hill and Washing10 Cftll- ton. Kor further Information address, rai U of '? W- H UNT, 11. P. A., Charleston, S. C. 1 . W. H TAYl-OK, A G P A , Atlanta. Ca. .1 3, etc., s It. llARDWIClv.ii.P. A..Washing ton. D.C. anions re LA^OA.STLR At CHESfUti They RAILWAY. kven a Hetween Chester and I,ancp.ster\ ^ en Ren i ?v ,? , | iijguj Schedule in Kffect NovemberOtb, IVU3. ilou?- Daily Kjccept SunUuf/. or fi?n Southbound. Northboun I No. 15. No. 17. No. 16. No. II , 81 Ck p, M A. M l > P M. A ~ I nfnv 11 8 I5ld Lv ...Chester... Ar 6 0 8 |5 iju i ny' ,, 6t s 281 " Orrs " 5 5i 8 03 SO aild 13 0 8 80 .... Knox .... " 5 15 ' 59 is i 12 17 8 39 "... Klchburg.... " 5 3t 7 60 'Pearly i.27 8 4. a ".. UascouiVlUe.. " 6 2. 7 il 11 unH '3 *' 'Mr ".. .Fort Lawn.. 6 731 u uuu & U0 " (iraces... ." 1.58 7 25 "08. I 10 0 i5jd Ar.. Lancaster.. L> 14- 7 it P. M. P. M-l P. M. t. M V- No. 14. leaving h.anea.sict 7 15 a. in,, makes close cenucctlo'. at Cheater witn southern TmT1 Railway No. 38 for Charlotte and points north; 11II L" an.i Seaboard Air Line "Atlanta Npt cial" for |j | Al'anta and points west. Mso with Carolina ? oi. .*oru?w?'^n:rn uy. ?>io. lb lur J.*t uoir. N. U and Intermediate points, and Southern Kail way No. S3 for Columbia un<l points south. No. 17, leaving Chester &lf>p in., connects with Southern Ry., No. Hti fr.nn Col itnbla and points south; Seaboard Air Clue "A tl an la Hp? clal" from Northern nod ICasiorn ' points and Southern Ky, No. 3.1 from Northern and K.-st em points, and at idtncasler with S. C. &. U. ? .. a ij for lll??iuhurK. I). .No. lu, ,r.iviiik' Laucastor 4 15 p. in., connects tfl init Lancaster with s C *: 'I K Camden J 1 1 r~ and Marion, Southern Ky. No. ;'i atChestcr fu(J Chariot to and points north No. 15, leaving Cuester 11 41 a m.. connects at mors * Chester with Southern Rallwa No 31 fro.. Columbia and points south. len<Te ; LKHOY SPJtiNQS, 11 itrli J. M. HEATH, t'fosirtenl epurt- I'n*. Atronf. Lan- ? g past was there a greater fc ^ years 3 popular mistake g Wax- Is than the notion that the whiter j* liich % the bread, the better. Ju?t the $ r g reverse is true. The mineral food tj elements ia wheat are dm k, and v? her Of 9 A '^"ur containing them cannot (? ] 4 be white. The (< three 5 & imary | JflUC jflOUt Of tl.K | I ? rt" J. 1.. ^ TYU ?- - - a. & -I-- $ lciuuc cuirccai g ry ue- # ? it will M as ground b/ tlie ? lakiui; * /K!V\ Franklin JVflS 2? |R f jK^fwL \ cont.litis the full X ? J iMln m| 1 complement of & tduute ->) a GK^I I brain, bone, nerve yj mnaio* ^ "w^ W SikI tv 1 *i Ic ! i!. ^ ! ,' * Lay aside oldideas ? ?.' 111 ale ^ yfjfgjgupg, ?ask your tKHer ? years' * for it to-day, and ? *WaX- 1 be properly nourished. j| lu ^4 " ,w nroecr not ktepil SIC (10- x srn.l u? ni9 nime with your ordT ! "2 -we will sre that you are supplied. ] J fnrma 2 Se* ?ha? ?h? R.>ii, ifrc! bran ? ,ullurt" our label; avea tu^iiiutev -% 'i mam ohlt n in* z mf *?,? ^ rr-l((in WlnTrs T^*-l-n-^ f* y. C: ^Ku.i.\i <h t,. 1.% i?, .]?*j. B n