The Barnwell people-sentinel. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1925-current, September 17, 1925, Image 2
"V
lV?
fAGE TWO.
'•/
< .. * •»*
•4
V *'' •'•*
;:+■
•4
■AKNWBLL
Mk
.•
Interesting Social
N*ws of Blackville
. .. .
,'V .
tion.
Mias Roxie Brodic of Sprinffflold,
ia viaiting her aiater, Mrs. JulUn A.
Prioe.
’ *'• "
> t ."
my-
Mf
br:
ITjind
’■ •
f;
Bbckville, Sept. 12.—Miaaea Doro
thy end Hebe Wragg and Vera Lowo
hav^ retun ed to Winthmp for the
coming term. /
Messrs. Henry and Sam Ptill and
Judion fanderk left seviMnl lays ago
for Charleston, to attend the Citadel.
The clubs are busy againT, after
ceasing activities during the summer
months. 1
Mr. and Mrs. Willis Gregory, of
Charleston, announce the birth of a
son, who will be called W/His, after
( the happy father. Mrs. Gregory will
be very cordially remembered here
as Miss Annie B. Hair and she is re
ceiving congratulations from hosts
of friend* in this section.
Mrs. C. E. Fishburne of Miami, Fla.,
but formerly of Blackville, has been
'* recent visitor here.
Friends of Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Bodiford will regret to learn that
their little son, Everett, accidently
received a bad cut on a piece of glass
last Saturday evening. Dr. D. K.
Briggs was summoned, And he took
eight or nine atitches in 4he gash, and
did all he could to alleviate the suffer
ing of the little fellow, and at present
he is just fine.
Miss Effie Punkett of Augusta, is
the guest of Miss Mary Martin.
Mias Helen Hendrix of Leesville,
Has returned home after a visit to
\ Miss Eugenia Still.
The Davis L^e Chapter, U. D. C.,
was delightfully entertained by Mrs.
T. L. Wragg, Wednesday afternoon.
A delightful event of recent date
occurred here when the Priscilla
Club and the Book Club met with
Mrs. Leroy C. Still in a joint meet
ing in honor of Mrs. C. E. Fishburne,
of Miami, Fla.
The Josaph Koger Chapter, D. A.
R., will be entertained by Mrs. J. K.
Still next Tuesday afternoon.
Mr. Harry Free, of Norway, em
ployed by the Turrentine Auto Com
pany, has moved in one of the bunga
lows on Hampjrm Avenue.
Some old time observers say that
two-thirds of a cotton crop has been
made. Others say one-half a crop.
The opinions are very diversified on
the subject
After a visit to her son, Mr. Julian
A. Price, Mrs. Price, of Norway, has
returned home.
Mayor Judson V. Matthews, was a
business vistor in Columbia last Wed
nesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Seaborn Williams, of
Norway, were guest* of Mrs. Nola
Williams last Sunday.
Mr. Frank Sandifer of Charleston
▼iaited his brother, Mr. Clifton San
difer, here, several days last week.
Mrs. Luther Still of Blythe, Ga.,
la on a visit to relatives in this sec-
Mrs. Laurie T. Ixier has returned
home from a visit to Bamberg friends.
Miss Edna Belle Pickling left laat
Tuesday for G. W. C.
Mrs. George Mackay and little son
Robert Joseph, are visiting home
folks in Orangtburg.
Mrs. J. A. Courtney, of Springfield
spent several days last week with
Miss Addie Altman.
Laval Johnson of the navy is visit
ing his brother, J. R. Johnson.
Mr, 6nd f Mrs. Wilbur C. Turrentine
Ufho have been visiting in North
Carolina have returned home.
_ Mrs. Herman Brown entertained
the Thursday afternoon Bridge Club
very delightfully last week.
Miss Minnie Atwater of Greens
boro, N. C., has been visiting Mr. and
Mrs. W. C. Turrentine.
Friends of Mrs Nola Williams will
be interested to learn that she is
planning to move to Charleston in
the near future, where she will con
duct a boarding house.
Mrs. Victor Dorr of Augusta, is
visitinfc her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
John O’Gorman.
Miss Lena Whittle left Friday for
Kingstree, where she will teach this
session.
Mrs. R. A# Gribbin and her daugh
ter, Mrs. John Molony, were visitors
in Barnwell last Sunday.
Messrs. H. H. Molony and Martin
Keller were among those who attend
ed the Ten Commandments In Au
gusta Friday night.
Mr. Everett Still, son of Mr. and
Mrs. J. J. Still; who formerly resided
here, has been visiting relatives in
town. From here he left for St.
Matthews to visit his sister, Mrs. W.
Q. Beard. From there he will go to
Silver City, N. C., to visit his sister,
Mrs. Ronald C. Gyles. Then he will
leave for Annapolis, to he ready to
report for duty by Septeirber. He -Hr
in the Senior Class there, and will
graduate In May.
According to reports fr^m the cot
ton weighers here, Messrs. Eugene
Boylston and Paul Allen, 3,000 bales
of cotton had been weighed here cp
to Wedr.csday night.
Miss Nell Weeks lw>s’ returned
home after a visit to Miss Sara
Molony
THURSDAY,
tt.
»
a.—•*v
Mr. Norman Brabham, of this city,
was a business visitor in Columbia
in# day last week.
ARE YOU ALL RUN DOWN?
Many
Barnwell Folks
That Way.
Have Felt
Bread
x ' has more f ood value,
V 1 /
Feel all out of sorts?
Tired, achy, blue, irritable?
Back lame and stiff?
It may be the story of weak kid-
beys! „
Of toxic poisons circulating about
Upsetting blood and nerves
There’s a way to feel right with
Doan’s Pills—a stimulant diuretic.
Doan’s are recommended by many
Barnwell people.
A. D. Furtick, Barnwell, says: “My
kidneys were out of fix and the se
cretions burned in passage and con
tained sediment. I had a dull ache
in my back most of the time and
mornings my back was lame and
stiff. Doan’s Pills helped me and I
kept on until I was rid of the trou
ble.”
Price 6c, at all dealers. Don’t
simply ask V«5T a kidney remedy—get
Doan’s Pills—the same that Mr. Fur-
tick had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs.,
Buffalo, N. Y.
^ r
F
r #vA'
;
Federal Tires give you all you expect in service, and ffl
little bit more. They w^built to give
rff' 2
mileage even under extraordinary conditions.
• n :
Jii ”
+■* ••
Station
S.C.
tur
BUSINESS IS GOOD.
SHE DIDNT CRY. . .
PITY TOOK NEW YORK.*
THINKING IS HARD,
f
w
'' !;•
V
......
; ' . - ,
• * w
Better BUICKawyasrr
. areMastersoftheRoad
\ •?. •' * • ' . ' ‘ '•
f
Once you have driven the 75 hone-
power, 75-mile-an-hour Better
Business IS GOOD. Tell that to
your inquiring friends. The value
of crops will be TEN THOUSAND
MILLION DOLLARS. Farmers are
more cheerful, prices good.
... Commercial business in cities is «
improving steadily. Extraordinary
t showings will be made for August
by many department stores and
other big institutions.
The state of New York pities
itself because it pays $500,000,000
income tax, almost a third of the
entire national tax.
New Yorkers shouldn’t forget
that if they pay $500,000,000, it is
because forty-seven other States
( end all their wealth to New York
anks, spend millions in New York
shops and hotels, and allow New ‘
York’s high finance to tap with its
corporations and its interlocking
ownerships 'the sources of wealth
all over the United States.
Since New York gets the in
come, it should be. content to pay
the tax.
“President Cpolidge will leave
the coal situation for the present
to Congress and hopes there will
be no profiteering in the mean
time.” So reads the dispatch.
That is a .large hope, for “in
the meantime” many dealers have
raised the priw fifty cents a ton.
With the public, piinic-stricken,
rushing to buy, that means capi-
fdrtable pToflteertng.
Mrs. Elsie Eaton Newton, Ohio
lady, found herself facing thp
emptiness of life, with her two
daughters married. Many ladies
would have sat down to have a
good cry. Mrs. Newton went to
Marietta College, worked hard, got 1
her A. B. degree, with her two
grandchildren sitting in the audi-
to eheer.
Now she is Dean of Women in
I! ’•'rtlu College, and h»ppy.
There is no life emptiness, ex
cept in the brain. Keep that busy
and life is all right, even if your
daughters are married and your
husband dead.
Boicki
in
The next generation will read
about “the navy patrolling the
route,” to save the filers if neces
sary, and that will seem as strange
as to send an automobile with a
carrier pigeon in case it should
fall d-v n .
Mi. itonkle in New York, to
prove gratitude for the recovery of
his son, supposed to be hopelessly
ill, will build a 65-story building,
partly religious, partly commercial,
made up of a church and a hotel,
with 4,500 bedrooms^ Ten percent
of profits will go to missionary
work, looked after by the son. The
father will look after the profits.
The dining room will hold 2,000
in the tallest building, thus far, in
the United States.
This religious buildftig contrasts
interestingly with the old sinful
Tower of Babel, which probably
was about one-half the proposed
height of this 65-story hotel. ^
The great Bernard Shaw, in a
mood of unusual but accurate
humility, says the world a
thousand years hence will know
nothing about him except that the
great French sculptor Rodin,
once made a bust of Shaw, bio
graphical dictionaries will contain
this:
“Shaw, Bernard; subject of a
bust by Rodin; otherwise un
known.”
* * *
Even that’s an erverstatement,
for in a thousand years ' Rodin
won’t be remembered any more
than Shaw. ' , .
Rodin in art, 1,000 years from
now will be aa unimportant as
Kipling in literature or Shaw in
philosophy.
After war broke out, the Czar
put Russia on a cold water basis,
stopping the sale of vodka abso
lutely. ' 'v 1
This column then suggested that
absence of whiskey would mean
more cold thinking by Russians,
and that one result of such think
ing would be the absence of the
Czar. That prophecy was fulfilled.
Now Bolshevism restores vodka
to its old alcoholic power—about
forty per cent
Men to whom thinking is new
dislike the unpleasant sensation -
anfi effort.
And governments that want to
rule iff peace find their work
easier when the crowd ruled ia
well supplied with whiskey.
Once you have wheeled It over some
particularly tough hill —ia high
gear —gaining speed all the way)
- • ^ .
Once you have observed the way
it.assumes the lead in traffic;
• Once you have accepted, on some
open road, the challenge of some
- car that boasts of speed, and have
seen the Better Buick leave it far
ther and farther behind;
• •• S
Once you have checked its econom
ical gasoline consumption against
your friends’ cars—
Then you will realize fully that the
Better Buick; with its 7^ horse
power Valve-in-Head engine, gives
you power —speed-and inex
pensive performance like no other
car you have known.
'v. . . ‘ * ‘ i ’
The best way to discover how very
much the Better Buick has added
to the pleasure of driving is to drive
a Better Buick. We have one wait
ing for your telephone call.
•
BUICK MOTOR COMPANY
FLINT. MICHIGAN
Division of Qrntral Motors Corporation
“ra Tell Anybody Under SM ^
f The San ft Took Kamsk ”
To Do The Wot* For
Me, And It Sure Did Do
It,” Says Charlotte Man.
Standard Six
2-pau.nfer Roadtter
$112*
S-pauengcr Touring
•
1150
2-pataengcr Coupe -
#
1199
5-pare, two-door Sedan
•
1199
S-pere. four-door Sedan
0
1299
4-pa Men*cr Coupe *
*
1275
Master Six
2'pareenger Eoedreer
■
$1290
S-paMenscr Touring
0
1299
5-paaa. two-dour Sedan
0
^1399
5 paaa. four-door Sedan
1499
4-paatanget Coupe -
1799
7-pa«fenger Sedan
0
1999
5 pawenger Brougham
1925
3-pata. Sport Roudater
0
1495
5-pare. Sport Touring
0
1525
V-pata. Country Club
•
1765
AU prices
. n. b Buick
ment tax to
fad
“When I tell you Hitt since tak
ing this, new medicine Kaxn&k I
can eat anything I want and feel
as fine as a fiddle afterward, it
means more than you might think
it does, for before I got this med
icine fifteen years suffering from
indigestion had gotten my stomach
in such bad condition it simply
rebelled against any kind of food,
T. R. Harwell, of 1011
declares
Siegel St, Charlotte, N. C.
‘*¥68 sir, everything I ate hurt
me," continues Mr. Harwell. “Food
would sour and form gas on my
ttomach which was terribly pain-
-ZT"-
_ ao,
several
years that I was forced to'stop
work at times and take a rest try
ing to build up my'run-down condi
tion. I wduld simply get to the
place where.! wasn't able to go.
“Well sir, I thank my lucky stars
that I finally decided to try Kar-
nak. Why, three bottles of this
medicine has set nw eating like a
house afire, and my food is now
doing* me the good it should be do
ing and is not causing me one bit
of trouble afterward.
“Ill tell the world I'm thankful
to be rid of all the suffering I
went through with, and 111 tell
anybody under the sun that Kar-
nak is what it took to do the Work
for lue, ,,
Karnak is sold in Barnwell exclu
sively by Mace & Deason; and by
the leading druggist in every town.
• ..
V
S. f. •. Ss. t. la 44,
mum
FOR GOOD
YEARS AGO
Keeps the Netictoe with Her for Safety
Mrs. Carl Linder, R. F. D, No. 2, Box 4V,
DasselMinnesota, writes: “I want to thank
you for yogi kindness and tae good your
remedy did me years ago. I am perfectly
well and visiting in Spokane, Wash. Were it
not for Pe-ru-ha I would not have been able
to make this trip. I always take your medi
cine with me for safety should I take cold.
Praise to Pe-ru-ns." •
As sn emergency remedy for everyday ills,
Pe-ru-na has been in use fifty years.
TAEIETS OR IIOCIO rl n FVERYWHnff
lertutne
Qovern*
%«-
Denmark Buick Co.
DENMARK, S, C.
All Lines of Insurance
i ■. ?/•
Farm Coverage,
a Specialtyl
<
Calhoun and Co. "
P. A. Price, Mgn
Bank of W. C. Bldg.
*;~X~X~X~X~X~X~X~X^-«“S~X~X«>«>
IRSM
SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSIST!
Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are
not getting the f genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe
by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years for
Colds
Pain
Toothache
Neuritis
Headache
. Neuralgia ’
Lumbago ~~
Rheumatism
Accent only ‘ Bayer package which contains proven directions.
Handy “Bayer” boxc*. of 12 tableta-Alao bottles of *4 and lGu_T> SL t
Trad* Marie
■v
V —.
ir
is a prcscriptiua far Malaria, Chills
• ' . «• ' 7"'
it kills ths
i
\ >•
l ♦
* ’s
>4 . k
;; . *
want to make an investment ih Long
Service, Comfort and Fine Appearance, Put
U. S. Tires on your car
fTPHERFS a U. S. Tire to meet your requirements no matter what
A they are. It is made right for the job. It is priced right. It gives
you your money’s worth—long service and continued good lodes*
There is srUftS. Tire Dealer right near you. Go to him mid talk
over this tire question. Let him help you select the one ideal tire
equipment for your needs frotn the full U. S. line—U. 8. R
Ballop$*U. S, Royal BallopfeType, U. S. Royal Cord:
or Extra Heavy, U* S. Royal Coed Bus-Truck, USCO
USCO Fabric. > f ^
UNITED STATES TIRES ARE GOOD TIRES
Bay U* S* Tim from
W. D. HARLEY, BARNWELL, S. C
...l
i' :
.Via.