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V. Page two. PM 4nM l T '' w| P*" " c /... ^ THE BApyWELL PEOPLE-SENTINEL. BARNWELL. SOUTH CAROL IgA THURSDAY, OCTOBER Sth. If25 Hilda School Opened Monday, Sept 28th Hild% Opt 5.—The Hilda graded school opened Monday, Sepwmber 28th, with »n enrollment to start with of lli. The opening exercises were held in the Baptist Church, the achool having no auditorium. Very appropriate addresses* were made by Or. 0. B. Falls, of Denmark, and r;9 BET BP NIGHTS YOU’RE OLD BEFOREYOUR TIME aad[ Bladder Tcouhl* Malt** Many Man reel Twenty Year* Older Than They Are. It Is said that fifty per cent of men neat forty and many younger ouea are victims of proetate trouble. One of the commonest symptoms of this dcagerous disease which saps vl-. taUty and makes you old before your time la the necessity of getting up sev eral times a night. - ' . .Other symptoms are dull, dreggy, aching at the base of the spine, pain In groin, burning sensation of orgnns, lack of vigor and frequent attacks of the blues. , % But thsre is hope for you, no matter how old your case, from a wonderful rew formula. It seemingly brings new health, vigor and freedom from theae troubles to both old and young. This wonderful treatment Is known «g Walker’s Prostate Specific, and Is. erspared In convenient, pleasant tablat form. All you need do Is take one tab let after each meal and the aymptoms ■e*m to vanish like magic. To prove these statements the Walker Jnetltute, 1S94 Gateway Station, Kansas City, >1o . generously offers to •end a IX treatment under plain wrap per. postpaid and free of charge to any Sufferer who' wltl write for It. If It cures you tell your friends and pay whatevsr you think Is fair, otherwise the loss la ours. . 4 Remember that you are the judge, wnd you pay nothing now or at any time unless you wish, so send your name today before the Introductory offer la withdrawn. ’It Is good for only in days and guaranteed In every way. —rf County Superintendent of Education Horace J. Crouch, o/ Elko.- The teachers this year are as follows; . ... The Rev. J. W. Boggs, principal and teicher of-the seventh, eighth and ninth grades. Mr. F. C. Nettles, teacher of the fifth and sixth grades. J Miss Made E. Farquhar. teacher of the third and forth grades. Miss Katherine Robinson, teacher of ‘the first and second grades. Mr. Nettles is also a singing teacher and will instruct all pupils above the second grade in vocal music. Miss Robinson will (teach instrumental music. •. • Furman-Gcorgia at Augusta. „ ’ i • . ■ •« Surpassing even the memorable football classic of last year, which drew to Augusta between 7,000 and 10,000 ardent gridiron enthusiastic* from Georgia and South Carolina for the clash between the Georgia Bull dogs and the Furman Hurricanes, will be the great battle of these elevens to be staged there on the same field Saturday, October, 17th. The seventeenth will be a gala day in Augusta, bringing, as it Will, thousands of people to that city from a hundred miles on either side of the Savannah River 1 . In addition to the great football classic there will be a boxing exhibi tion, which is expected to attract the attention of ringside fans throughout the Southeast. While all details of the boxing event have not been com pleted to the point where the card may be announced, the promoters de clare that within the next ten days they will make public fistic events ,‘hat will be comparable with any event staged in this section. ' Blonde Hess Opines. Who says motherhood interferes with a woman’s chosen career? We read in the .paper the other night where a woman with a baby in her arm* robbed a store. Submarine Survivors DOUGHTY’S the old reliable DRY CLEANERS AND DYERS • since 1895 i iPhone 6562, Columbia! > v All Lines of Insurance ; ;Farm Coverage a Specialty^ :: Calhoun and Co. | P. A. Price, Mgr. I Bank of W. C. Bldg. BBS •• • “U .;V * I-* Survivors who crawled lorougn open hatch, when9ill-fated sub marine S51 was rammed and sunk off Rhode Island. Top photo, D. G. kil£5 Middle, M. Lira; Bottom, A. Geief. ^x^x^-xkk“;-:~:x’~xk-:-x~x<^X“X~x*-x~x-x-Xvvx-x-x*-x-*:« ^ Y by us. Watch this ' paper for advertisements * Barnwell Filling Station Barnwell, S. C. i ie« mi h»m > THE E1ECTR1C POWER AGE. AN OLD MAID’S MONET. WHO IS RESPONSIBLE? THE HORSE WITH CLAWS. COTTON FACTORS ■■y' ♦> The State of Washington plan-; gigantic water .power development, ba..ku it. Seattle reflect general prosperity in the Northwest. Those Seattle banks will need bigger vaults and capitalization increased by -a billion, when the power be gins its work. . Maine will harness 700,000 horse power in the Bay of Fundy. The plan approved by voters and scien tific experts calls for one hundred millions. Power enough will be produced to supply the whole of New England, and ten times one hundred million would not • equal the value of such power. In waterpower and the electric j force generated lies not the hope,, but the CERTAINTY of prosperi ty beyond imagination. London is agitated because the great art collection of Lord Lever- hulme, successful soap maker, is to be sold in New York City, not in London. This is said to mean that the art r centre of the world has moved from London to New York, but that isn’t so. The MONEY centre has moved, and in 1925, as in the day" of the Medici, art goes where money is. “How can’I succeed?” is answer ed by Juge Gary thus: “LISTEN. Let the other man do at leant half the talking.” ’ Judge Gary, of course, puts hon esty ahead of all other qualities. And honesty is important, although Judge Gary knows more enterpris es have been wrecked by honest fools than by dishonest knaves. “The average man likes to hear himself talk too much,” says Judge Gary. .Salesmen should remember that. Thousands of them talk themselves INTO a sale, then talk themselves OUT again. W’hen you me^t a customer remember the vice of Aristotle, who, was Judge Gary of his day. “Not too much, NOT TOO LITTLE.” (Established 18S5) 'V For Forty Years t A poor old maid of Massachu setts, called “poor,” not because she was an old maid, but because she spent fifty-six years in the in sane asjdum, has just died. While she was in tho asylum her small fortune increased to $2,000,000, to be divided now among seven nieces. “Money runs into money” rapid ly in this country, if you give it any sort of an opportunity. % What becomes of all the money the people earn? Why does the average American die with about" enough to bury him or her?. The Deputy Attorney General b New York shows where some of the money goov Bogus stock sale.: rlone take f500.930,000 from Ha people o.‘ the State each year. Even that leaves a good ileal of money ••for other swindlers to take. Evidence at the Shenandoah in vestigation shows that Command er 1-ansdowne, who understood fly-- ing, protested against taking his • ship through the storm belt of the Middle West, and asked for a post ponement. Those knowing nothing-about fly-- ing, but unfortunately controlling aviation in the United States, or dered him to go, in order to “im press certain State fairs on thp way.” Because his advke was not takeq,. Lansdownc was killed. ' . - Who is RESPONSIBLE for his , degth? And how good a suit fot damages have his widow and the other Shenandoah widows against those that '•ent their husbands to death ? The Museum of Natural History will soon present to your kind at tention a fossil horse, "with claws instead of hoofs, dug up in Asia. According to scientists, this lltde creature, ancestor "of the big liorse of today with its hoofs, vanished from the earth long before men came here to need horses It will amaze you to J read the various kinds of “despair” listed •by Professor Glenn Frank, new president of the University of Wis consin. There is BIOLOGICAL fear, PSYCHOLOGICAL fear, POLITI CAL fear, ECONOMIC fear, HIS TORICAL fear, ADMINISTRAT IVE fear, MORAL fear. These fears Uan all be- boiled down into one word, “NERVES.” The only thing wfc need be afraid of is our selves, ouf weaknesses. And for-"' tunately, wk <iie, ahd our fears with us. Then ^omes a new, un frightened generation. % REASONABLE ADVANCES ON CONSIGSMENTS | v. ❖ X It lias Always Been and Still is our Custom to In- % % vite Parties to Inspect at any time Their Cotton % $ stored with us. — — . ❖ ♦> * > A * Why not ship your Cotton to the BEST MARKET * | to a Firm of Experience and Financial Respon- * X sibility who will Render you prompt and Effi- % X cient Service? * JL • ^ ♦ t * -i 666 X it « prescription for Malaria, Chills and Fever, Dengue er Billious Fever. It kflla the germs. . Why Gum-Dipping is so Important to Car Owners G UM-DIPPING — the Firestone extra process builds into tires extra quality . by impregnating and insulating every fiber t s of every cord with rubber. ] . -. . - , . i <.• This exclusive method is carried out in - special Gum-Dipping plants, after which -- the cords are put through the usual calen dering process. By this method, added strength and flexibility are imparted to the cords, mak- * ing Gum-Dipped Balloons most service- over rough roads, » ■/' ■ • v . •; i ' " • •' . •- _ ' •, * • • . - . i * Save money—buy Gum-Dipped Balloons now—while prices are low. • r MOST MILES PER DOLLAR U — Dicks Auto Company, Barnwell; S. C. ' ’ . •' - ' i:.a . ^ ' ■ -f ‘ Barnwell Filling Station, Barnwell, S. C. AMBmCAW aHOULD »ROPPCB THBIR OWN RUBBS*..., -