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EIGHT
Many Pigs Will Make Prosperity
In Old Barnwell This Good Year
Bank Will Make No Advances Unless Farmer Oustomers Agree
to Buy More Pigs and Raise Plenty of Corn-- Signs of Im
provement Are Unmistakable---Farmers Have Gotten Over
Scare and Are Taking Things Philosophically, Building
More Solidly For the Future.
Barnwell, 8. C.—Pis* m«k* frrr pros
perity. The hog Is becoming popular
In Barnwell county Blits, persever
ance and prosperity may be said to be
the slogan of the Home Hank of Barn
well and hundreds of small farmers
who never before save any attention to
hla hogahlp are very much Interested
In pigs right now
There is more than one reason, hut
one reason Is the fact that In making
advances for the good year of 1915,
the Home Bank Insists that the farm
er buy pigs—if he nlready has pigs,
to buy more pigs This Is going to
be a pig year in Barnwell county. And
there Is going to he hog prosperity.
*'\\> are going to take care of all our
customers, making advances as usual,
only we shaJl have to make smaller
advances," said Harry D. Calhoun, the
genial president of the Home Bank."
As a matter of fact, we have already
begun to make advances, but we In
sist strongly on one main point—
everybody to whom we make advances
must buy pig* If he already has pig*
We Insist that he take 15 more and
buy another pig
"We also Insist that our customers
plant corn, more and more corn, and
We find them very ready to adopt our
Suggestions Already there has been
more wheat and other grains sown In
old Barnwell than ever before In one
season.” continued Mr. Calhoun.
Signs of Rsstorsd Confldencs.
Business In all lines has been cur
tailed In Barnwell ns It has been In
•very other section because of the de
pressed conditions arising from the
European war, hut according to re
ports from town nnd country there sre
unmlstaksble signs of restored confi
dence, and already since the beginning
of the new year, Improvement In many
lines of business and In the general
situation
Of course, as one prominent business
ACT QUICKLY ON
TED INJUNCTION
Speedy Determination of Pro
ceedings to Prevent Organized
Ball From Interfering With
Outlaws is Expected
Chicago.—Si»«-r«ly determination of
the Injunction nrm'«*«*dlnnH instituted
by tho WiWnl lyC'nicue to prevent <>r
prA nixed hak» hall from InterfeHn* with
It«« operati* ns mid players I* expected
when the esse is opened here next
Wednesday before Judse Landis, in
the United State* district court.
Both officials of the Federal* and
leaders of th«* oriranised forces are
agreed on this point, it was learned
today. They expressed the opinion
that the esse will be decided In am*
pie time to atlow the clubs of the three
leagues to atart their sprlns training
trips without any danger that a ver
dict may disarrange plans for the
championship season
SAVANNAH COTTON CARGO
LIBELED IN SUM $50,000
Savannah. —The steamship Aqutlii
now lying el Savannah n* been Übelleil
by the New Orleans Kxport Company
fnr 150,000 for fail In* to tranaport a
cargo of cotton need cake to Stock
holm, Sweden. It ia claimed the own
era of the eteamer have demanded an
exorbitant fretuht rate for transport -
!n* the cargo because of the new war
risks
The collector of enatoma of Savan
nah haa been directed by wire not to
clear the ehlp pendln* the serving of
the libel today.
SOUTHERN B*ASEBALL
GAMES FOR PENN
STATE COLLEGE
State Collage, Pa.—Twenty-three
fame* are Hated In the Pennsylvania
State College Imeeball echedtile an
nounced here laat night. The open
ing i-otitest will take place on March
SU when the United State* Nava!
Academy's nine will be met at An
napolis Other game* on the Southern
trip Include A A M of North Caro
lina at Halelgh, N O- April 1; Trin
ity at Chapel Hill N. C.. April 2!
Washington and 1-ee at 1-exlngton. Va„
April S; Catholic University at WMsh-
Ingion, April &.
On the Eastern trip Dartmouth will
be pi*rad Mlf I. Vermont. May 4;
Weat Point. May &, and Princeton.
May «
TICKET SALES UP *45.000.
Railroad Travel Show* Dig Ovoe No
vember of 191 S.
Kansas City, Mo.—’Mie Union Statton
la prosperous too No.-ember ticket
aale* showed an Increase of I*s 000
over the corre*|«inding month In If 11
and December likewise surpassed Its
lfllt month In ticket receipt a While
tm statement for the first week In Jan
uary la yet available the dally Bales
•lip* show healthy Increases and the
passenger agent* to a man, note stim
ulus of travel
"The 1915 travel la starting well*
Unn 8 Hanks, ticket atent at the sta
tion. »atd yesterday. ‘Trip tickets are
being aold and our Information depart
ment la bealeged with questions re
garding trip* and tour# Traveling rep
resentative# for mercantile firm* are
also preseni in large numhes. The
new rales for the exposition* on the
roast go into effect March 1 This
will mean a heavy traffic through
Kansas City.
"It looka prosperous here, and the
heat part of It is that everyone ia talk
ing It. There art* a lot more smiles at
the nrket windows than there were a
ivar ago.
man points out, It In hard for the ne
gro- and Barnwell has more negro
than white farmer*—and for the small
white farmer who has been accustomed
to farming entirely on a cotton basis
to fall In with the new' order of things
which has become so necessary for the
salvation of the Booth, but the negro
farmer has, as a rule, paid up pretty
well even at the low price of cotton
and these as well as the whites are
laying their plans for new and better
things during the next twelve months.
While business has been curtailed
and the merchants of Barnwell have
been. In some instances, hard hit,
there Is evident a disposition among
the people to help one another, and it
is very doubtful if there will result a
single busliienK failure in Barnwell.
Farmers Down to Business.
In the country the people, it Is said,
have gotten over any panicky feelings
they may have felt, when last full cot
ton broke and continued to go down,
down, down, and are taking the mat
ter philosophically, realizing, as do
the business people of the town, that
the forced necessity of raising food
stuffs hogs and tattle and other farm
products Instead of the old so-called
“money crop," cotton, will in the long
run bring the Southern farmer, both
large and small, Into bis own.
To relieve business cotton is moving
more freely possibly than at any time
since the market began its downward
course early last fall, and there Is still
an enormous amount of cotton stored
In country enough to keep money in
circulation for a long time
In spite of the temporary blighting
effects of the gigantic war In ISurope
on business conditions, Barnwell peo
ple are going ahead confident of the
future, and If there is a spirit of econ
omy abroad In the land, building the
more solidly for the future.
WAR BRINGS U. 8. 15 MILLION
Australian Representative Sees Big
Business Increase With America.
Porterville, Cal New business worth
approximately 15 million dollars year
ly to American manufacturers has been
obtained In the last three months ns
a result of the war, according to n
statement today of W. F. Shoohrldge
of Bushy Park, Tasmania.
In a tour of the United .States, which
began In October, Mr Rhoobridge, who
represents the Australian government,
salrl he had arranged for supplying the
markets of his country with paper pro
ducts, calcium carbide ahimnlnum, mo
tor cars. agricultural implements, boots
and shoes, which, prior to the outbreak
of hostilities were procured almost
exclusively from German and Austrian
manufacturers.
He believes these trade relations will
he permanent, regardless of the out
come of the war.
Mr. Shoohrldge cam« to Porterville
to study Irrigation methods, on which
he will submit a report to his gov
ernment.
IF BLADDER OR
KIDNEYS BOTHER
Try the Favorite Recipe of
Old Folks.
Everyone knows that Burhu and J».
nlpsr proparly compounded it the hest
medicine for weak kidneys or bladder,
of which the following are the symp
toms: Urine becomes cloudy, an unusual
flow of urine, scalding, dribbling, strain
ing or too frequent passage from the
Madder head and back aches ankles or
eyelids are swollen in- puffy, spots hefors
the eyes, leg cramps, Shortness of
Meath, sleeplessness and despondency
dlixv spells, dropsy. Don't waste time
wondering If you will get Bright 1 * ills
ease or diabetes, but get from any re-
ItaMe druggist a bottle of Stuart’s Bu
chu and Juniper Compound. Take a
spoonful after meets. In a day or so
>our kidneys will act fins and natural.
Smart's liuchu mixed with Juniper has
been used for i ears to clean out Impuri
ties from the ktdnava and Madder, also
to nsufrallss the uric acids In ths blood
and urine so It no longer irritates, thus
ending all kidney and Madder weakness
and doing away with all Irritating symp
toms Stuart's Buohu and Juniper ts a
fins kldnev and bladder regulator ami
has helped thousands of sufferer* from
weak kidneys when most every other
medicine fnllrd to help or cure.
Don’t Merely “Stop” a
Cough
•»* Tfctna tin Cnwa If
•ai Ik. Cough will
Stas Itself
A sough i* really on* es our b*»t
friend*. if warn* us that there is in
nsiumstrnn or obstruction in a danger
ous } Is:'.. Therefore, when you gel a
bad rough don't proceed to does yourself
with a lot of drugs that merely "stop”
the rough temporarily by deadening the
throat nerves. Treat the cause--heal the
inflamed membranes. Here is a home
made remedy that get* right at the earn**
and will make an obetinate cough vanish
more quickly than you ever thought pos
sible.
Put SS ounce* of TMnrT (SO cent*
W'orthl in a pint bottle and fill the bottle
with idem granulated sugar svrup. This
gi.es you a full pint of tne most pleasant
and effective cough remedv you ever vise I.
at a cost of only 54 i-vnta. No bother to
prei>are. Full direction* with Pines.
It heals the inflamed membrane* so
pntlv and promptly that you wradep
now it doe* it. Also loosens a dry. hoars*
or tight rough and atop* the formation of
phlegm in fh* throat and bronehial tubes,
thu* ending the |>ersiatent loose oougli.
Pines |* a highly concent rate. 1 com
pound of Vorw*v pine extract, rich in
?xiaiacol, and i* famous the world over
ur it* healing effect on the membranes.
To avoid disappointment, ask votir
druggist for "2U ounces of Tines,”'and
don't accept anythin* else. A guarantee
vs si-solute satisfaction, or money prompt
ly refunded, goes with tbi* preparation,
rhe Pines Co, Ft. Wayne, InX
THE AUGUSTA HERALD, AUGUSTA, GA.
How Thin People
Can Put on Flesh
A New Discovery.
Thin men and women—that Mg,
hearty dinner you ate last, night.
I What became of all the fat-producing
j nourishment it contained? You haven’t
! gained In weight one ounce. That food
; passed from your body like unbumed
j coal through an open grate. The ma-
I terial was there, hut your food doesn’t
! work and stick, and the plain truth is
you hardly get enough nourishment
i from your meals to pay for the cost
of cooking. This is true of thin folks
the wbrld over. Your nutritive organs,
your functions of assimilation, are
sadly out of gear and need recon
struction.
Cut out the foolish foods and funny
sawdust diets. Omit the flesh cream
rub-ons. Cut out everything but the
meals you are eating now and eat
with every one of those a single Bar
gol tablet. In two weeks note the in
ference. Five to eight good solid
pounds of healthy, “stay there”
fat should he the net result. Sargol
charges your weak, stagnant blood
with millions of fresh new red blood
corpuscles gives the blood the car
rying power to deliver every ounce
of fat-making material In your food
to every part, of your body. Sargol,
too, mixes with your food and pre
pares it for the blood in easily assim
ilated form. Thin people gain ail the
■ way from 10 to 25 pounds a month
while taking Bargol, and the new flesh
stays put. Bargol tablets are a scien
tific combination of six of the best
flesh-producing elements known to
chemistry. They come 40 tablets to a
package, are pleasant harmless and
Inexpensive, and T. G. Howard and
all cither druggists In Augusta and
vicinity sell them subject to an ab
solute guarantee of weight increase or
money back.
TO ASSEMBLE. PENSACOLA.
Washington, D. C.—The submarine
nnd reserve torpedo Flotillas, mine
layers and the navy’s aeroplane squad
ron will assemble at Pensacola, Fla.,
for exercises during February, March
and April.
Most Old People
Are Constipated
The wear of years impairs the
action of the bowels. With ad
vancing nge people are disposed
to restricted activity and exer
cise, which Is responsible for
the constipated condition of
most old folks. The digestive
organs are more sensitive to the
demands made upon them and
rebel more quickly.
A mild, effective remedy for
constipation, and one that is
especially suited to the needs
of elderly people, women and
children, is the combination of
simple laxative herbs with pep
sin that is sold in drug stores
under the name of Dr. (’aidwell’s
Syrup Pepsin. A free trial bot
tle can be obtained by writing
to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 452
Washington Bt„ Monticello, Ills.
The Herald’s
Almanac and
Encyclopedia
For 1915
648 PAGES
Read About Your State.
Here’s What it says about
Georgia in the Index:
Georgia 301-303
Agriculture 302
Area 66, 301, 302
Boundaries 301
Climate 302
Capital 66, 302
Coal production 198
Cotton production .. .180
Crime, Poverty and
Insanity 138
Education 302
Farm statistics 302
Gold and Silver
production 196
Government. .. 302, 418
Hydrography 302
Incorporated Places. 302
Industries 302
Judiciary 90
legislature . . 93, 96. 302
Live Stock and
Farms 191, 302
Manufactures . . 203. 302
Map 303
Militia 107
Minerals . . . . 196, 302
Negro population 66, 301
Political parties .. ..140
Population 66, 121-8, 301
Public Roads 209
Religious Statistics. . 129
Rosin and Turpentine
production 206
Rivers 302
School statistics 136-7, 302
Shipping 802
Tobacco production . .183
Transportation . . . . 302
White population 66. 801
Wool production .. .182
648 Paget of up-to-the-
Minute, Valuable Informa
tion for 1915. A Book of
Reference for Every Home.
GET YOURS TOMORROW.
25 CENTS AND A COUPON
AT THE HERALD OFFICE.
The Glistening
Beard Seemed
Always At Her Shoulder
From the time she ran from her husband this man was ever
at her elbow, with his sharp, handsome features and his
coal black eyes. She knew no reason for his persistent
attention. She was haunted by his eloquent expressions
and his low, persuasive tones.
“JZm2aWs*yJim<g
By George Randolph Chester
and Lillian Chestef
is an enchanting story, an entrancing story, a story of
absorbing suspense.
It is illustrated with moving pictures produced by the Reliance
Motion Picture Corporation by special arrangement for this
paper. No expense has been spared to make them mag
nificent; no effort has been stinted at any point.
"Read the Story, See the Pictures,
EVERY SUNDAY EVERY FRIDAY
IN AT
THE AUGUSTA HERALD THE MODJESKA
BEGINNING JANUARY 17th BEGINNING JANUARY 22nd
“Runaway June” has never before been published. It was written for
America s greatest newspapers; in this city it will appear exclusively in
Ai& paper.
THURSDAY, JANUARY, 14.