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FAO* TWO THURSDAY, DSC EMBER It, ItlT- rN Those Whose Business it is to Know Lucky Strik —the fineat rettea ever 11,105^|( doctors give written opin ions about smok ing and throat protcction- W HAT is the quality that Giovanni Martinelli, Mary Garden, William Hodge, David Belaaco, Lenore Ulric, Fiske O’Hara, Blanche Ring, and other famous singers, actors, broadcasters and public speakers have Found that makes LUCKY STRIKES delight ful and of no possible injury to their voices? For the answer we turned to medical men and asked them this question: Do you think from your experience with LUCKY STRIKE cigarettes that they are /ess irritating to sensitive or tender throats than other cigarettes, whatever the reason? 11,105 doctors answered this question “YES.” These figures represent the opinion and experience of doctors, those whose business it is to know. Fiske O’Hara, PI—ring Stags Star, writes: "The throatisadeL icate instrument which all singert protect with the ut most care. To avoid irritation, l smoke Lucky Strikes. They pnl^kmdtm my rif the finest flavor/* “It’s toasted No Throat Irritation-No Coujh. hmrmba certify wH*v • tamSmmd tl, 103 menmd emrdm oon- ArmunS ihm sborm •tatmmwnt Arming thm t LrBRAND.RO— PROS a MONTGOMERY Arrcmitant* and Auditor* Nr» Yorfc. Juhr ti. —7. : SEND U8 YOUR ORDERS FOR JOB PRINTING. : FOR RENT 2-Horse Farm, conveniently located on State highway 1 mile from Barnwell city lim its. Some fine cucumber land on place. % % • a 4 For further information call at v . * • . e ,• « Sm 4 The People-Sentinel Office Barnwell, S. C. NOTICE! Against Hunting, Fishing & Trapping • * dtP"* Any person or persons entering upon the lands hereinafteir referred to, -T- ‘ ‘ - situate in Barnwell, Richland and Red Oak Townships, or the purpose of hunting, fishing or trapping, will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law: ^Chevrolet Promises J Spectacular New Car Detroit, Mich., Dec. 24.—Promising the most spectacular low priced au tomobile bf all time, the Chevrolet Motor Company announced here to day that a complete new line of motor cars will be ftitrbduced to the pubiic January first. In confirming reports that Chev rolet would very shortly introduce a new ca • of surprising interest, W. S. Knudson. p.jsoti r-S the Chevrolet Motor Company, declared that the of ficial announcement covering aU^dip- tails of Chevrolet’s sensational new product would come Sunday, January 1st. No details will be available until that time, he said. Chevrolet assembly plants have been in production o».' the new car sincci December 12th. Factories in Flint, Mich., Tarrytown, N. Y., St. Louis, Mo., Oakland, Cal.* Buffalo, N. Y., Janesville, Wise., and Norwood, 0., have been humming with activVy pre paring for the highways the first of the new cars that promise to make motor car history in 1928. ^ Shipments of the new cars to dealers have been leaving the various assembly plapts sincci December 15th so that the vast country-wide dealer organization may be prepared for the introductory' showing next Sunday. Unbridled enthusiasm is being dfs- payed over the new cars by Chevrolet field sales officials, who have bein milling into Detroit fpr-prfvate show ings of the new line. ~ Practically every dealer in the United States will have cars ready for public inspection January 1st. From Bangor, Me. to San Diego and fijom Miami to Vancouver there will be simultaneous exhibitions of the new car that has caused so much dis cussion in the last few months. This gigantic distribution achieve ment of supplying thousands of deal- such • brief—v of time was made'” possible only through the farseeing policy of the Qxivrolet organization and the tre mendous • resource# and production facilities of the Chevrolet Motor Co. Never in the history of the industry will ao many new models of one make have been placed in dealer’s hands in such a limited space of time. Cara will be ready for the boule vards and highways immediately af ter the first of the year. Production at the various assembly plants throughout the United States la rac ing along as fast as precision menu factoring will permit. Unofficial reports from the Chevro let offices here say that the new car will embody many improvements in design and construction. New stand ards of beauty are promiaid. Easier handling and smoother riding quali ties are heralded as some of the out standing features of the new Chevro let line. Many unlooked for changes have been mad* in the appearance of the car, according to reports, providing the new Chevrolet prith a beauty and style appeal, unexampled in the low "price field. • • Without disclosing details, Chevro let officials declared that th<. new cars would embody the results of 18 years experience and progress in the build ing of low priced transportation. Lessons learned from millions of miles of testing on the General Motors proving ground havo been brought to bear oq the new product, officials declared. In fact all the re sources of General Motors have been employed for months to design and build the car that is heralded to be a wide margin the greatest auto mobile ever offeraT by Chevrolet. More than 5,500 miwspapefs across the entire country will assist through their advertising columns in broad casting the announcement, which will take the form of one of the most comprehensive advertising campaigns ever attempted in th« automobile in dustry. Every city, town and hamlet in the country will read the details of the 1928 '.Chevrolet on New Year’s day. Mrs. G .W. Boy 1st on Pisses. L. W. Tilly . 200 J. M. Weathers bee . 572 Mrs. Flossie Smith 1,000 Jessie Middleton . 300 Harrett Hutson __ ... . 17."» Estate of H. A. Patterson 2,009 W. H. Duncan __ . 405 Joseph E. Dicks .. . 800 Mrs. Kato M. Patterson 3,003 R. C. Holman - - 400 Duncannon Place 1,650 A. A. Richardson 2,000 Simmons Place _ .. __ - 500 Lemon Bros. j, Mrs. Jane R. Patterson 1,000 - S. B. Moseley — 80 Barnwell, S. C., Nor. St, 1M7. G. ARTHUR EVANS, ANGUS PATTERSON, Managers. us your Orders for job printing. V By Arthur Brisbane LINDBERGH NEEDED. JHINKING COMES FIRST. BACK 5,000 YEARS. ABOUT FLOOD REUEF. Lindbergh, world’s champion fly er, landed in Mexico City, notifies the world that young men in this / country know how to fly, in spite of the fact that their Government does not yet realize the importance of flying. '*1 The United States Government ought to enlist the services of Lindbergh to .instruct American fliers and enlighten those respon sible for our air defense. If an other war ever comes it will-scem very extraordinary to future his torians,* writing of American cities bombed and gassed, that the rich est cities in the world should have gone along without adequate air. defense. Not one of our cities is protected today by anything but distance. Coast defense guns and battleships are obsolete, anti-air craft guns absolutely inefficient. We spend $600,000,000 a year for “defense” and have none. The United States Gypsum Com pany, with offices in twenty cities and twenty-two mines and mills in fifteen States, has this'good idea: all headquarters managers devote two hours, from 9 to 11 a.m., to “concentration." They allow no interruption except in emergencies. From 11 to 5 they see subordinates and business visitors generally. Each manager has at least two hours a day for real thinking. 4r ■ "■ ■ " John D. Rockefeller had that idea many years ago. One of his local managers, pointing proudl) JO a desk—loaded, down-* kpers, said to him, "A lot of de tail, but I shall get through it all by night." Mr. Rockefeller, quot ing that, said to his directors. "I want •all important managers in our organisation to sit with their feet upon clear desks, thinking bow they can make more money for Standard Oil" They made it. with Rockefeller’s direction, and now he spends it utefuliyr lighting disease and ignorance. To pet ahead, remember that thinking comet first The rest is secondary. Learned orofcaaors in the Uni veraity of Southern California say that slang, within renson, is good. It makes students select tbeir ex- • presaions instead of using them automatically. To call your friend a “dim bulb'' is better than saying to your brother “Thou fool,” and it means the same. Use of slang “makes a dent in the brain" and causes thought, says one nrofessor. It also takes the place of thought, but that is too long an argument Britain is sending a commission to India headed by bir John Simon to see about helping India toward self government. Toe help should have begun 5,000 years back. How can you give self govern ment to a people in whose litera ture the word liberty does not ap pear in 5,00p years, to millions who believe that little girls eight and nine years old should be mar ried to middle aged men and that when the old husband dies the young woman should be burned alive with the husband's miserable corpse? That’s a long way from self government. The President recommends *• ten-year plan for Mississippi Val ley flood prevention, involving $296,100,000. Altogether, $25,000.- 000 v/tinid be spent the firsi ' | rar and $30,000,000 a year thcieaitet.- Why not^spend every year as much as can be spent wisely to hurry the work rather than risk, in the course of ten years, another flood that might cost in destruction more than the total appropriation? Sec-N retary Mellon could borrow the money for three per cent, if he couldn’t take it out of the surplus. Haste is important; wait. Mrs. Emma" Boylston, 73, widow "of the late George W. Boylstonf" of Blackville, died at 9:20 yesterday < 0 morning at the home of her grand daughter, Miss Corinne Mixon, 1430 Marion street, hfter gn*»illness of seven weeks. • - Mrs-. Boylston, upon the deathS-of her husband in 1925, came to Colum bia to live with Miss Mixon. Since coming to Columbia she had made many friends, who were saddened ter learn of her death. Besides her granddaughter, ah* 11 suivived b>> a'flUflllglV HU *- Nevils, qf Blackville; two son*, Rich ard Walker Reed, of Washington, and Eljott W. Reed, of Savannah. ^ The body will be carried to Blacky ville this morning and services a/"’^| interment will be held there upon arrival of the bod**—The State, Dec. 25th. ■ , ~t-'- “iJigger and better ^ impeachments’’ seems to be the sloga^ of the Okla homa legislature. > . :V * rl * i ii .Some drivers claim they never take-ehances-.yet they often purchase .motor oil ji • i. -» , !> without knowing its name. v - r If you stop to think how much depends on eorrect lubrication—mileage, free dom from repairs, resale value, even personal safety —you will always insist upon a reputable brand like "SttuidfiTtl" All ri/lfco hnafi qualities are united In* ."^tamlard”. “STANDARD” MOTOR OIL The Measureo^ Oil Value STANDARD ( ) rpr floods don’t Mrsb Ernest C. Smith. Williston, Dec. 22.—Mrs. Ernest C. Smith, of Bainbridge, Ga., died at the University Hospital, Augusta, yester day morning after an illness of sev eral months, • Mrs. Smith was about sixty years of age. Several weeks ago she came to Williston to be under, the care of her brother-in-law, . Dr. J. Lewis Smith, and recently underwent several operations. At flrsj.she seemed to be improving but a turn for the worse took place last week and since then •he was in a critical condition. Mrs. Smith was before her mar riage Mias Lixzie Ixiar,.of Orange- b«nr. She is survived., by her hus band, Dr. E. C. Smith, oldest son of the lata Dr. J. M. Smith, of Willieton, Last August the stock market^ broke when President Coolidge’s first “do not choose” came out. i^id a few days ago that foolish market broke again because the President said he meant it. What frightens gentle stock brokers and specula tors? Do they think Hoover, Lowdcn or Dawes would declare war on Patagonia, abandon the gold standardL suspend the writ of habeas corpus, close factories, stop the rainfall and destroy crops? Mr. Coohdge Is a good President, wisely allowing those thjit know how to run the country’s business ‘i to run it. 3Other good men are ready to do the same. The wise will not choose to sell their stocks because Mr. Coolidge does not choose to run. Money to Lend SEVERAL THOUSAND DOLLARS IN. AMOUNTS OF $400.00 AND UP. APPLY TO Ninestein 6 Baxley BLACKVILLR. SOUTH CAROLINA. » LONG TERM MONEY to LEND i 6 per cent interest on large amounts Private funds for small loans. BROWN* BUSH LAWYERS BARNWELL. SOUTH CAROLINA. ; . * shire, of Moultrie, Ga., and one son, T. Inman Smith, of New York City. For a number of years Mr. and Mrs. Smith lived in Williston. - She was a member of the Bainbridge Bap tist church. Funeral sirvices were held at the Williaton cemetery at 11 o’clock on Tlmnday, Decern bee 22nd. MOTHER;- Fkt- ,cher’s Castoria is a pleasant, harmless Sub stitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups, especially pro pared for Infants in arms and Children all ages. -WF ♦ w To avoid jaritatioos, always look for the signature of Proven direct torn on esch pnekage. Physirisas Try a Want Ad for Results ■