The Chesterfield advertiser. [volume] (Chesterfield C.H., S.C.) 1884-1978, August 30, 1916, Image 3
PEANUTS IN THE SOUTH; j
Tk?y Can B* RtUcd ia North An4
South Carolina at Handsome
For long years the tobacco industry
of North Carolina was confined
to an established belt, because of the
popular opinion that tollhcco would
not grow outside this particular belt.
A western man came along one day,
however, and showed our people a
thing or two. He began cultivating
tobacco in the sandhills and behold!
There was a rush of tobacco growers
to the sandhills that excelled the
famous rush of the Forty-niners to
the California gold fields. The tobacco-growing
area in North Carolina
has been vastly extended, and
so it may be in the case with peanut
growing.
This industry has been confined
commercia^y to certain of the eastern
counties and largely because of
habit. It has been demonstrated
that the peanut can be grown with
success in many counties outside the
established belt and there are indications
that the farmers of the State
are going to give more attention
this profitable branch of industry.
They should be encouraged with what
Texas is doing.
That State has put in :i(T0,000
acres of peanuts, "just as an experiment."
Peanut growing in that
State has given indications of possibilities
of such an attractive nature
that the agricultural agent of the
Cotton Belt Railroad has brought
about this experimental venture in a
300,000-acre peanut patch. He has
inspired the hopes of the farmers
through some facts bearing on the
cultivation of the peanut and the
possible profits. We believe the
farmers of this section will be interested.
It is a bit of knowledge
worth passing uround.
He tells the Texas farmers that
the cost of growing an acre of peanuti
is no greater, if as great as
that of an acre of cotton, that is between
$14 and $15, including all
labor and expenses. The returns, or
net profits to the farmer, are approximately
$10 greater for peanuts than
fnr ciifinn
Let us see what results are obtained
in oil production and profits.
Fdrty bushels, 1,200 pounds of
\ fii'st-cla:.s Spanish peanuts will yield
ifc approximately 40 gallons of oil and
pj 480 to 7vA) pounds of cake according
to the amount of hulls ground with
the meats. The greater the amount
of hulls allowed to remain with the
I meats to form a binder, the lower
1 will be the production of oil, owing to
V the absorbative power of the hulls.
K The hulls of Spanish peanuts contain
B fro.n three to four per cent of oil
It and the difference between this and
S the percentage of oil in the cake will
represent the loss. With oil selling
at d5 cents u gallon and cake at $30
a ton, the gross returns would be
$35 an acre, for which the farmei
receives $24, the hay remaining in
ft , possession and constituting a portion
I of his profits. On this basis ihi
peanut oil industry has a certain fu
ture in the United States us long as.
^ the above prices prevail.
? "The quantity of peanuts that
'cpuld be utilized by the oil mills 01*
M the South," says this agricultural
j agent, "is problematical. The oil
II mills of the State of Texas alone
* crush about 2,000,000 tons of cotton
seed annually, yielding approximately
I . 7.1,000,000 gallons of oil. To produce
a sinilar amount of peanut oil
will require 1,500,000 tons of poaM
nuts, or approximately 100,000,000
bushels of 30 pounds each. In Texas
I 1 alone there are about 12,000,000
N-'afreAof land annually to cotton, proj?
ducim? nearly 4,000,00# bales of lint
? and 2,000,000 tons of seed. If the
I farmers of Texas were to plant 2,|
500,000 acres to peanuts and make a
| ' yield of 40 bushels to an acre, they
I would produce 100,000,000 bushels
* | of peanuts, or snflicient to yieid more
^BLl_^oiJ. than is now obtained from the
^^ftHpPloOO.OOO tons of cotton seed. In
other words, 2,500,000 acres of Texas
sandy land will yield more oil than
is now obtained from 12,000,000
H^Bncres of cotton."?Charlotte Ob^^H^Brver.
In view of the excessive cost of
^^B^lpaper and other supplies, The Journal
^^^Bhiis been asked when its subscription
price would be increased, as many
papers are increasing. We do
l/rui W U/Kon fKia urill Kn nneno.. ??
HUSHo resent we urc only trying to get
^KuhsrntnTs to understan l that
^mm^|p*iption8 at the old rate should
be paid promptly. We are also tryibe
paid promptly. We are also trying
to get so that every paper which
Lr goes out of the office will bring back
A a dollar, that is that every one who
gets the paper must pay for it. Com
plimentary copies, useless exchanges,
| and all other copies which newspaper
people know go far to swell a socalled
subscription list, have been cut.
I We propose to carry out this rule
HI first?one paper^out, one dollar in.
Hr After that h^^Htn thoroughly tried
the matter d increase in price
B will be consideml if necessary.?
H Monroe Journal.
In no former war have the animals
Wt played so large a part as they have
in this now raging. Besides the
horses, mules and oxen, there are'
dogs serving in many ways, tin- cats
^ ridding the trenches of rats and mice,
the carrier pigeons, and even the
ft white mice of the submarines, which
are taken aboard to give warning of
escape of gas. Well did Edward
^^^Bkverett Hale once say, "We are ell
^HBHthe same boat, animals and men," ^
;
1 CROP ROTATION WILL
INCREASE SOIL FERTILITY
Clemson College, S. C.?Crop rotation
is the foundation on which
I permanent agriculture is built. Below
are six reasons why the one-crop
system is unsafe and why the farmer
should abandon this for more up-todate
methods:
First?Because the system depends
upon the market and crop conditions
of the one crop alone. Failure
of crop or failure of market alike
bring serious disaster.
Second?Because it does not provide
for the maintenance of soil fertility.
Third?Because it fails to provide
a sufficient livestock industry to consume
the waste products of the farm
and make its waste lands productive.
Fourth?Because it does not provide
for a system of farm mangement
under which labor, teams and tools
may be used to t.ho fnlln?t a a
Fifth?Because it brings returns
in cash but once a year instead of
turning the money over more than
once a year.
Sixth?Because it does not produce
the necessary foods tp supply the
people upon the farm and keep them
in health and strength.
START FREPARING FOR A
FALL GARDEN RIGHT AWAY
Clemson College, S. C.?A small
mount of time and labor spent in
the prepartion and planting of a fall
garden will bring valuable returns,
aside from the pleasure of having
fresh vegetables for the table during
the dry winter months. Following
is alist of vegetables that may be
included in the fall garden:
Beet*?Sow the seed the last of
September. The plants will stand
the winter and produce beets for
early spring use.
Cabbage?Good plants of the
field variety, if set now will form
heads before the cold weather. With
slight protection both cabbage ami
collards will carry through our worst
winters.
Kale?Seed sown during September
will produce an abundance of
greens during winter and early
spring. Siberian curled is a goo 1
fall variety.
Lettuce?Sow Big Boston variety
for a supply of delightful said during
fall and winter. With slieht nro
toction firm heads can be produced.
Mustard?Mustard will stand any
amount of cold and seed sown during
September will furnish greens
.hroughout ihe fall, winter, and early
spring.
Cnion?White Ponrl is a splendid
variety fc fall planting- Sets of j
this variety will furnish bulbs and j
tops durinj? the winter and early '
rpnng. Seeds may be sown from |
September *20 to October Id.
Garden Pea??Plant during the !
nonth of November for the earliest j
spring peas. Alaska is a good va- j
~!cly for fall planting.
Rrtdifth?Long white Spanish or
some of the other varieties of winder
radish will remain in good condition
throughout the winter. Sow i
seed the last of September.
Rape?Though commonly sown for
pastu.-age, rape seed sown in September
will yield excellent winter j
greens.
Spinach?One of our most delight- '
ful vegetables. Seed sown the last t
of September or early part of October
will produce greens throughout
.he winter until late spring.
Tumipt?This is one of our re- t
liable vegetables that will produce j
both roots and tops for winter and j
spring use. Sow seed from 1st to
2()th of September.
THIRST TAMES WILD BEASTS.
Savage Brutes Respect Each Other's
Right to Drinking Water.
Just-as one dog will respect another
dog's bone ho even the fiercest forest
Insists liave their unwritten laws and
their little eonveutloiis.
One eouinion idea which has found
its way into scores of books of adventure
Is that the lion and tiger take ad
vantage of the insistent call of thirst
to get a supper?that is to say, they no
down to the water pool, the only one
for miles around, take a good drink
themselves and then lie in wait for
some gazelle or giraffe or ibex coming
there for a like purpose in order to |
spring upon tho poor creature while in j
tile act of drinking and make a meal
of It.
fet tills is n libelous estimate of wild
beast character. The fact is that there
is a sort of truce of the water hole in
jungle and forest. As far as killing is
concerned the drinking place is out of
bounds. There is an Invisible notice
hoard on its banks which says, "Live
and Let Uve." and It is implicitly
obeyed.
There Is an order of precedence. The
rhinoceros gets first drink. He Is the
Dreadnought of the forest Jungle.
Then conies that ohl ironclad the elephant.
When he has lowered the fide murk
and made the wafer more like coffee
than anything else the big pussy cats
stroll down to Quench their ardent
tongues?the Hong, the leopards In Africa.
the tigers In India, the Jaguars
and pumas In South America.
Meanwhile the shy animals? the gl
ralfcH, deer, springboks and even the
buffaloes, although they are a match
for a lion?stand in the liackgroand
and wait till the carnlvorn hove done
But the latter never prevent their np
proach to the water or wnylay them on
their retlren: And that Is better
manners- aye. and better morals?than
many men show.?Pearson's.
Every man who is not his own master
is sure to have somebody else
for his master sooner or lator?usually
sooner. Be boss of yourself?
your mind as well aa your muscles
and success is assured.?Progressive
Farmer.
FREAKS OF NATUREJ
We Know There Are Giants, but
We Do Not Know Why.
THEY ARE A SORT OF PUZZLE.
j
Sometimes These Titans Are the Re*
suit of a Somewhat Mysterious Dis* 1
ease Called Giganticiem?Og and
Goliath and the Giant Races of Gath.
Giuiits and dwarfs abound in the re
gion of the Caucasus inountulns. Now,
why are some people big and some lit- j
tie? In families heredity seems to gov-J
ern the matter. Where races are con-!
cerned it is not so easily explained, j
We are accustomed, by the way, to |
think of the Chinese ns of inferior
height; but that is because our Chinese
immigrants nearly all come from the
south of China. The people of north
China are tail and occasionally approach
the gigantic.
Circus giants are not uncommonly
sufferers from a disease called* glgantlclsm,
which in the long run ts inevitably
fatal. It appears to be due to
something wrong with a small gland,
at the base of the brain, which In ? I
mysterious way, governs growth. A
strange tiling about this affliction is
that the victim may be attacked long
after lie lias become adult and lias
ceased to grow in a normal way. A
man over thirty years of age may suddenly
become a giant, the first warning
lie gets of the faet being the discovery
that he needs a larger hat and
bigger boots and gloves.
There are. however, occasional giants
who are simply people of extraordinary '
si/.e. in other respects normal. Llow to
account for them nobody knows unless
by calling tliem freaks of nature. Mmii
more remarkable are the giant families
which are found in the Caucasus region,
though most individuals of such
families are not big enough to lie worth
while for show purposes. For eireus exhibition
a giant ought not to t>c less
than seven feet six inches tall. With
than stature, plus boots with thick soles
and a high hat, u man may Is- safely a.dver'lsed
as touching the eight foot mark.
Such giant fumbles are not unknown
in history. Josephus and other profane
historians Indorse the statements found
in many places in ttie Ilible in regard
to the giants of Gntli, from which locality.
it will be remembered. Goliath
hailed. The ItIIdo puts the stature of
that redoubtable champion at "six cu
bits and a span"?in other words, about
three inches short of ton feet. This
would seem to U' tile altitude record
for a human being, even allowing that
,i>,. ? -
. i7 . v.-unuiuuiriii w?s i nun mi? ground
to tin- crest of Goliath's helmet.
The most celebrated of nil the plant
breed. not excepting '101111111. was < ig.
king of Ihishan. At the time when the
wanderings of the Israelite* In tHo \\i|
derness were brought to 11 elose he was
ruler over no fewer than sixty cities
"fenced with high walls, gates and
bars." Ills Indeed was n powerful monarchy,
and the eoiiijnest of his realm
by Moses is looked upon to this day as
one of the greatest events in Jewish
history.
Gg. by the way, was aeeustoiued to
sleep (11 a remarkable bedstead- uut of
wood or metal, but of basalt.
Whatever the circumstances under
which the plant breed existed in Pales
tine at the time of toe Iir<t arrival of
tiie Israelites, it. is certain that in later
jears they were scattered about among
other peoples. In a political sense some
were Ilirtlfes and yet others Amorites
Coming lnu> contact with other races
they became. It would seem, either ox
tinct or subordinate. From what little
is said of them in history it Is to be
inferred that they were mentally inferior,
though formidable fighters by reason
of their great size and strength In
an age whin mere bodily prowess
counted for much.
If Goliath be supposed to have been
(iiif-lmlf fnof fnllond....
for helmet ami crest) his stature did
not exceed that of the' eelehrnted
Winckolme.ver, tiie tallest man of modern
times, who. born In Bavaria, died
not so many years ago. The height of
many giants has been exaggerated, but
Winckelnieyer was carefully measured
by the anthropologist Doubes.
A man of less than eight and onehalf
feet could hardly have worn the
enormously heavy armor and accouter
merits described In the Mirst. book of
Samuel as composing Goliath's outfit
Tile siaff of his spear, we are told, was
"like a weaver's beam," the Iron spear
head alone weighing tMH) shekels, about
twenty pounds.
The giant breed in Palestine nppat
ently died out not very long before the
binli of < 'lirlst
There have been lessor giant breeds
ia modern times, nut lu some Instances
they have been the result of artificial
selection, a ? for example. In the case
of the wrestlers of Nippon, who, seen
In a crowd, stand head and shoulders
above the ordinary Japanese
In the neighborhood of I'otsdam there
are today many very tall people owing
to the fact that King Frederick Wll.
Ham's famous regiment of giants was
long stationed there. The regiment
numbered 2.400 soldiers, and all Europe
was searched by the monarch for
big men to serve in it?I'hiladelphln
Record.
8t i 11 Dear.
"Yon used to tell me that I had the
dearest little foot In the world," said
she poutingly.
"That was lover's talk," said he, "but
If you don't quit paying ?10 for shoes
bless rae If 1 won't believe I spoke the
truth."?Birmingham Age Herald.
Long ailments weai out pain nDd
long hopes Joy.?SlaulaUtM.
Passing of Russsll Ford.
Pitcher llussoll Ford, who was recently
given his unconditional release
by the New York American league
club, was one of the greatest sensations
of baseball history In his first major
year. For the Yankees, who finlahed
second to the Athletics, he won
twenty-six and lost but six games back
In inio. lie shared the limelight with
King Cole of the Cubs. These were
tho first two young pitchers who had
won more than 80 per cent of their
games In their first year In fast com-1
Pany. 1 1
A YEAR WITHOUT SUMMER
Weather This Year Very Different
From 100 Years Ago.
Although the weather this year ia
nothing like that of a century ago,
superstitious folk have an idea that
the "sunimerless" 1816 has had some
effect on the irregular weather this
summer, ,says The Greei\ville News.
Just now, the real hot weather is
here,yet it has scarcely been ever this
season that the thermometer has registered
Greenville's temperature
above 90 degrees. A local resident
is the holder of a reproduced account
of the phenomenal 1816 weather as
told in a diary consecutively kept
from the year 1810 to 1840:
January was so mild that most persons
allowed their fires to go out and
did not burn wood except for cooking.
February was not cold; March
from the first to the sixth, was inclined
to be windy. It came in like
a very innocent sheep.
April came in warm, but as the
a...... ?? i ii
uo^a iviikci me air oecamc comer,
and by the first of May there was
a temperature like that of winter.
In May, the young buds wre frozen
stiff, ice formed half an inch thick
upon the ponds and rivers, corn was
killed and the cornfields were planted
again and again. When the last of
May arrived in 1 SIC everything had
been killed by the cold.
.Tune was the coldest month roses
ever experienced in this latitude.
Frost and ice were as common as buttercups
usually are. Almost every
green thing was killed; all fruit was
destroyed. Snow fell 10 inches deep
in Vermont. There was a seven-inch
fall in the interior of New York state
and the same in Massachusetts
July came in with snow and ice.
On the fourth of July ice was as
thick as window glass and it formed
through New England, New York and
in some parts of Pennsylvania. Indian
corn, which in some parts of the
east had struggled through May and
June, froze and died.
To the surprise of everybody, Au
gust proved the worst month of all.
Almost everything in this country
and Europe was blasted with frost.
Newspapers received from England
stated that 1816 would b> remembered
by the existing generation ai
the year in which there was no summer.
Very little corn ripened in Now
England. There was great privation,
and thousands of people would have
perished in this country had it not
been for an abundance of game.
I am sorry for the men who do
not read the Bible every day; 1 wonder
why they deprive themselves of
the strength and of the pleasure.
There is no other book that yields its
meaning so personally, that seems to
fit itself so intimately to the very
spirit that is seeking its guidance.
Woodrow Wilson.
He Gave It.
Miss Catherine Merrill, who a good
many years ago held the chair of English
literature in Ilutler college, was
much beloved by every one for her
amiability of character, her courtesy
and her childlike simplicity. In eh-.ss
one day the question of slang and its
usage was mulct discussion
"Give an example of slang, please."
Miss Morrill requested of a young man
of the class. IIis renlv was nroimit
mid Idunt "I don't have to!" he said.
The toucher, shocked and flushing,
gazed at liiin amazed.
"What do you mean, sir? You do
have to." she declared indignantly, and
not until the whole class roared did she
suspect that she was a mere novice
in the matter of slang.?Indianapolis
News.
' \
in goodness and
in pipe satisfactior
is all we or its entl
astic friends ever c
for it!
It answers every
or any other mai
cool and fragran
smokeappetite ths
it in a mighty sho
Will you invest 5<
so on the national
R. J. REYNOLDS T<
-
THE CHEMIST AND THE SOUTH
Never before in the history of the
, world have the chemical possibilities
of the world and of every part of it
received the attention they have
within the past two years.
It is possible that Germany and
her quick and efficient marshalling of
, all her resources has done as much
as anything else to awaken us to the
value of the resources which nature
has placed at our disposal. Never
before has any people been able t<:
bring to their assistance all the powers
of intellect and of science and all
the resources of earth and of water
and of air as that people has during
the two years of this war. We have
learned of the Germans as even their
enemies have learned.
And we of the South needed this
lesson. We still need this lesson. It
will take more than any two years
of tutelage to impress it upon our
minds as it must be impressed before
we gain from it all tho good that it
holds for us.
For the South is richer in natural
resources than any other pari of the
world. And Texas is the richest part
of the South. Our natural resources
have never been touched. The dust,
upon the surface has scarcely felt the
breath of man. Tlvro are hidden it.
the earth of this State possibilities
undreamed of.
It will be the brain of the chemist
and the hand of the scientist that
bring these riches to our notice. The
every lay. business man is not g< in>
to discover til is wealth that nature
has hid in the depths of Moth -f
f'iarth. It will be his part to develop
these resources and to change tlu natural
wealth to marketable condit io
and to send it out to the consumers
in other parts of the world. But the
chemist must first say to him. here
is the source of wealth. And the
scientist must say to him, in this way
can this earth be made a usable commodity.
Then comes the part of the
business man.
And when we shall reach that stage
in our development, we are assured
that our business men will do their
part, and do it well. Meantime, the
' South waits upon the chemist, the
scientist. Until they come and lay
bare to us ihe riches that our world
1 contains, our business men will be
forced to lie idle and our resources
will be undeveloped.?Houston Post
I Tt?vn ^ I
TESTED \M) PROVEN
There Is a Heap of Solace in Being
Able to Depend Upon a WellEarned
Reputation.
For months Chesterlield readers
have soon the constant exprssion of
praise for Doan's Kidney Pills, and
road about the iro >d work they have
done in this locality. What other
! remedy ever produced such convincing
proof of merit?
.Mrs. J. \Y. Eskridtre, Iliph St., Cheraw,
S. C., says: "1 had an awful lot
of trouble from dull pains in my hack
jar 1 I felt weak and tired all the time.
My hea-l ached and I hud bail spells
of dizziness when 1 stooped. Sometimes
the dizziness was so bad, 1
could hardly walk. When 1 read of
Doan's Kidney Pills, 1 used some and
they soon relieved all the ailments."
Price r?Oc, at all dealers. Don't
simply ask for a kidney remedy?tret
Doan's Kidney Pills?the same that
Mrs. Eskridtre had. Foster-Milbuvn
Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y.
Princ
sm
\ deli
/ ? delight
/ I ~!|ca
>5^- x ?-it ca
i ? ?you
v ^ v! as har<
jf comebi
& pineas!
feSS^r^' On the
y Albertp
l? \<r That m?
^ /M-j . ' joyment
'Ji&r /AWL ?A_*-1 *\ sold wit
prefer tc
lure ii d
illllt ML.U
the national joy smoke
'XfOV'L.L find a cherry howdy-do ?
? -a matter how much of a ft ranker you
^vSl. neck of the woods you drop into P<
Albert is riifht there ? at the first
pass that soils tobacco f The
ba^ sells for a nickel and th
* tin for a dime; then there's
some pound and half
1US1- humidors and tl
crystal-ztlsss hui
:laimea '"XXJZ1,
smoke desire you
i ever had! It is so
it and appealing to youi
it you will get chummy w
rt time!
c or 10c to prove out our Si
joy smoke?
^BACCO CO., Winston-Salem, N.
.* it A . \ jfl w
i-i- l.'JJLL'-JL.LLL
WOULD WAKE MOTHER
WITH LOUD GROANING
Miss Madgi; Cleveland's Health Was
Very llil^O|ieratloni Failed
SHE GAINED TWELVEt FOUNDS
Her Mother Says Three Bottles of
Tanlac Gave Such Great Relief
That It Is Hard to Believe
There really seems to be no limit
to the number of eases wherein Tanlac,
"the master medicine," has fjiven
.relief that can he considered truly
' wonderful. Ami the case of Miss
Madjje Cleveland, of 1513 Main St.,
Equinox, Anderson, S. C.( considering
the results Tanlac nave her, takes
rank with the most remarkable. Her1
mother, Mrs. L. E. Cleveland, vividly
described her daughter's long train
of troubles and her many ailments,
and expressed deep appreciation for
the wonderful effect of Tanlac in
building up her health and strength.
Mrs. Cleveland's endorsement of Tanlac
and her statement rejrardinjj the
ease of her daughter follows:
"My daughter, Miss Madire Cleveland,
suffered from a number of ailments,
and her system was badly run
down and weakened. Sue hail no
appetite at all, and would eat scarcely
more than one biscuit for breakfast.
She had twice been operated
on for tumor and appendicitis. The
li'-st operation was not su ? ssful,
and the second was necessary. As
a result, her health was undermined
and her condition became very bad.
"She was so weak she could hardly
walk, and she was si res*.less at ni^hl
that she r- ally wa.-> very little refreshed
when the . . i .hi ean'ie.
Site lost a v eat deal of v. ht, too.
!l was her ide where th were
made when ^he was operated on th it
caused her so much pain. A; 1, too.
her system was generally out of
order.
i%shl? lltK 5i1l*n:irltr li'.-nn K-st
ties : {" Tanlac and if I had not seen
til'.- Improvement Tanlac lv.udo in her
coiditun, I don't know whether I 1
Would f .-1 y oolicvc it could bo so
great, should someone have told me
that. She has gained 12 pounds and
now weighs 122 pounds?more than
\ she has ever weighed before. Sin
has a wry good appetite an I it is
s eadily improving. Rea!!\ 1 have
t(d<l her if she continues to increase >
the amount of food she v u. 1 will
have to make her stop .a 1
And what she eais is << i. i .
"Her health has impn.. i -y
way and she is very much .>r.
She goe? to sleep now ju e >:i
as she ffots in I, nnd he sleeps i
soundly all night. Her nerve . re '
I <iuiet ar. l :si. .now, i! a
1 troub'.-d Iter a lot lie!' ( . i: b"?.
to take Taniae. She u- i ! h:
bad spells of heaiiaeiu*. te? . i i Tanlac
broke them up
had an attack sii.ee si. ' t
ing it.
".lust bcl'ore she begun tnkli . I nlae.she
decided to go <>. a \ i: i >
Pell City, Ala., hut V. a . <
not stand thi trip. Hut - < . .
that city just two days : r<> ii. .ine
! health, gre; i was th I e eli thvi
' bottles o! 'lar'ac ifave )i
?
I ' r:inla>* is . list a wo ill vful modi- '
| cine, and wo t n't say too nr.. v. i.
J praise of it, ami I certainly am j.; an ^
j to recommend it. The Tunhic did
j lier more ito.kI than any of ti.o man.
j other medicines she took."
Sold liy Chesterfield Hi'iiir Co.,
I Chesterfield, S. ('.; T. E. VV it i imal
ir A.- Son, Cheraw; Mt. Cr< .an Dru."
| Co., Ait. Cronhan, S. ('.: M< -h Ijru.
j Co., aicBee, S. ('.; I'nuel i,d Diu
Co., I'a^eland, S. C.; .1. T. .lowers ,
Sons, Jefferson, S. C.
e Albert gives
okers such
ight, because
e
lavor is so different and so
fully good;
n't bite your tongue;
L . .1 ?.
ii i paitu join mrudi;
can smoke it as long and
d as you like without any
*ck but real tobacco hapreverse
side ot every Prince
acka^e you will read :
"PROCESS PATENTED
JULY 30th, 1907"
ans to you a lot of tobacco en.
Prince Albert has always been
hout coupons or premiums. We
) give quality I
lERT *32^
on tap no ^ /"?-i?
SlfelSIMIHl I
toppv fx '1 gjj V M
" t"ty rod TODACCO 15 PREPARED S
pound "tin ' FOR SMOKERS UNDERTHE <j
m pound ! f-ROCESS DISCOVERED IN i
>tonor top VAKIHC EXPERIMENTS TO J
? tho PRODUCE THF. MOST DE- $
nj-up trim lIGHTf'JL AND WHOLE- ?
'" t'moi I SOME TOBACCO FOR CIG- j
J
... j WiHsn>MSAitM.RC.U.$.A. J
lin ; 00E? NOT BITE THE TONGUE ll
^ 1
jy. This U the reTene lid* of tho
T Prince Albert tidy rod tin. Rood
tkio " Patootod Procoaa" moaaaaoto-you
and realize what It moan*
hi malt ins Prince Albert ae aauoh
C. to rows hhie?.
A SLUGGISH LIVER
Crashes Into Sour Bile, Making You
Sick and Lose a Day's Work.
Calomel salivates! It's mercury.
Calomel acts like dynamite on a sluttish
liver. When calomel comes into
contact with sour bile it crashes into
it, causing cramping and nausea.
If you feel bilious, headachy, constipated
and all knocked out, just to
.o your drujrjrist and fret a 50 cent
bottle of 1 Unison's Liver Tone, which
is ? harmless readable su'ostitute for '
damrerous calomel. Take a spoonful
and if it doesn't tart your liver and
straighten you up better and quicker
than nasty calomel and without mat
ing you sick, you just go buck and
get your money.
IT you i r e c lomel to-day you'll
be sick and r. . uted to-morrow; besides,
ii !u;.y ale you, while if
you la e l'o.i m's Live Tone you will
wake up feeling great, full of anibi
'ion and ready for work or play. It's
harmless, pleasant and safe to give
.o children; they like it.
Get Rid of Tan,
Sunburn and Freckles
by using HAGAN'S
M agnolia
. i ' .
Ac^.s insh nl!y. Stop3 tbe burning.
C l -uts rrcompl >:ion of Tan and
Blemishes. You cannot know how
good it is until you try it. Thousands
of women say it is be^t of all
bcautificrs and heala Sunburn
quickest. Don't be without it a
clay longer. Get a bottle now. At
vnnr 1 ^ 11 -? ' '1 1" "
uy man cnreCt.
75 cents for either color. White.
Pink, Rose-Red.
SAMPLE FREE.
LYON MFG. CO., 40 So. 5th St.. Brooklyn, N.Y.
iiMiiii i mil i i in j_ hiji???b
r
5 COitb- GmndPrize;
(llitjliesl j
| Dictionaries
I aHliePunama.-^^jJj^3|
I PacificIxposiiic 11f
Was gran/ecf to ^ S
WEBSTER'S
i HEW SNTlLRNAJIOHAL
b # . y?a . i
I Superiority of Educational Merit, f
This new rival' a answers with |
; final atithoriiy all kimtsof puzzling |
questions such as ' How is J'rzruvisi ?
iironotino 1 ?" "\Vln-re is Flan- i.
" "What. is a c<--':nuom roy* 9
: ayr."' "W! at a / It: "" What ?
j is nhitu < -it: ' "How is fket pro- g
nonni-->l'.''' aa-1 Ihou-ainlsofothers. 0
t More than 400,000 Vocabulary Terms. 4
20,000 Geog-anli .it Subjects. 12,000 j
Biographical Entries. Over 6000 lllus
i trations. 2iOO Pages. The only diction- 4
, aiy with the divided page?a stroke of ,1
genius.
KrtglirinOolil* g
- S i ?' ' !; t rations, etc. j
?>ra :' (L :i|^l I
, |^. I;' ?KyV>l vo'i lit'iuo tins |j
MERRIAMCCO.f |
. .s;- / ?
. . .!!CivAFTS
Co- . -)n Powders
s r-mcdy f?T horses
si poor condition and
' ; i lie. Builds solid
in :s? '.(. . id lat; cleanses the sy-.t
. thereby jTtniucinu a smooth
glos y coat ?>t hair. Packed in
lioses. 25c. box. iSold by
D H. LANEY
Registration Books Open
U< -gn-tration books will be
open every first Monday at the
Auditor'-' ( Hire until kd days before
the general eleetion.
S. 11. Tinitnnns, (dun.
11 I'. White, e.leik,
W. M. Helk.
Nc
T "ii " sion p-eo.ir\ <1 cv rinlly
for MAI A 01 CHILI > . l.'fR,
rive < rill br< nk iy case, ana
. " : :i t f|l( t ic I i-ver Will not
/ it .els on tlie ,.v< |v t? r t! -in
Cliiiom n<! <1 in t,o;'
Pr mo Peanut Meal
IDEAL M
For
HORSES, HOGS and CATTLE
Ask Your Grocer For It
F<?r Sale Bv
J. S. Bl ROM, Ml. Crouhan
CITY MARtftT, CUtei-flcId
At m nuftiet it red by Sea IbIAikI
^^^otton^lU^o^rhail
jk, rf