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ain ir- ■ -Trf V X :38amwell S»o■ nnel, u PUBLISHED iEYFKY TMIJ/KSDAY ■<r-,\T — ,..ftA,KN W KI4^ ^ r U ' +-■ *v. —ft • n> vi; < Ll M iU-jJ l' Entered us i»n• 1 r mi; l iii.itler 1 runny I4,.18v ) 5\u’t. i i-l;i\l’"rt4l!i •• »i I* • veil, 5Li*'\.n,!fl«-i- :•••*' 1 ••* l of Mart'll 3,-11 < !*. V '■ 1 .vVi eiwMijrt 4 of mIm-' * ‘ - -» g hi d—*+t emn iiu'ufH ions nr'in'Jte i > «I;i« 1 flicu not ti ftM I'.ii rtliiv »v urn' g. to^qi- iif r»> • Ji• • c r r.j-snK. " 1 .'JT girin* puh‘11* 1 ' " MIIMKimilS It AT Ki* _* Qiu> yeur $ 1 f)0 ; S-X ti»*. lit lit* .W Th ree month- Barntvki.i..'Tiiji ifftOAy AnirsT U3. 1917 ""Altogether for the War. * Mr. Samuel (I. Blythe the .foremost ■writer on contemporaneous History and one who has intimate relationship with the distinguished fnen of the pres ent day and an acute perception of current events has recently written at some length in the Saturday Evening Post upon the political conditions now existing as compared with them before the waft l . lie afTirms that President Wilson in the. selection of his Cabinet if he had dreamed of the world war would not for a moment have considered the pres ent officers of his Cabinet as .eligible for selection; but on the contrary fi-Ued with a comprehensive knowledge of have surrounded with V necessity wool the ablest advisors possible to bo. on- listed in the common good of this country irrespective of their former political faith and profession. He is ’ induced to this opinion because of the fact that in this war where millions of dollars are required and the blood of the thousands to be shed and death to come to the homes of the entire people in the sacrifice of their loved ones; and that these requirements so abso- ’ lute in their nature are to' be borne by all classes and conditions of men and women and that every household of the political faith and every political party that all narrow and bitter par tisanship should have no place in the counsel of the nation, hut a people of necessity united to face a common en emy in a common fight for Cbristep- dom and democracy should have for their leaders and advisers big'men in brain and heart to become the arbiters of our common cause and fate. Without following him in his angu- jents we all must be impressed wit the enlivening thought that this is a war of'-all of us and o\ir forces how ever' disorganized among ourselves mus! now become solidified if the war is to be won and the least disaster come to our soldiers and sailors. Our cause is armed with justice .and wage! unselfishly and no littleness of pur pose or ambition should enter our minds or hearts. TREASURER’S NOTICE : :J " I-., The tax boob's will be open fur't hr- collect ion '.of slat’V Col!Hr. Ll ~»'d 1 j.) I11 / V.’lX ft-H' 44*+* {"Will ; -uf 111! 7 flout flic’ ll’h of ;..r ' rhh'-l^tfi ' W R*-l '* ’ '■ .. i. 11 t of W\ !- I j ;) 1 S ,‘f. -TVt * 1; <»; ' > r •) l " . i . 1 ,1 1 < i i s-.i i • ,'t oi > . 14 I' : i • i i* \' -t .it, . fen thofsanti kdis Velvet Beans in pod coniequcncco. •• ‘. I - . • ; h Ji ' • ‘ i • [>Up rv ■There’s- Dange? AprifaiuLMay.are pneumonia mem?!is. lit this tinte^a weak-, ened system k a constant source of danger, fytr the pneufnonia and grip infect ions nre in the air, and after a long winter the -body is so eluded with wastei Jit cannot resist them. Fortify the health, remove the catarrh, and improve the digestion. - V For Quick Relief This reliable tonic is recommended to remove the waste from the body, counteract the catarrhal poisons hnd allay the inflammation that is catarrh, restore the regular appetite and tone up the entire system;to resist disease. A well man is safe. As a tonic after grip it has won many commendations, while its effect iveness In catarrhal conditions is unquestioned. TAke no chances—Take Peruna. Peruna Tablete or* always ready to take. /. You- may carry a box toy Co . ... . . - igit ft yoa and ward off colds and chill. Tha luftud medicine in your Aome is a great safegmard. Protect yoyr foddly. T The Peruna Company, Coltunhut, - r iiri.y . <'• i 1// w iij- i; f t* >’ i L of. 2.^.. b.»c- . . M;ii+4+ “4m •-- tn v iq-i\v n jh’iwUv uf Tvffi iiliii ij mu Lot 4 't tot.'ii '-J- ■ f to. rch tb<‘ Ifftli Jit which lini'-diu- tax i»uuk" will clo-e H AVE YOUR JOB WORK DONE BY THE l*4i x ievov vljil 1 be ; For -tut»: pui'p'b-e' ^ 1-2 ini ordinary,county purport*' K 3-4 litiHm' rTbiisltltitloji; 1 Scho--l 3 -—■•jr" ,t." r | mills,. -X- '1'ota^ Levy ‘ii* 1-1 mill-: "Conimutation road.tax is .+ 1 b() special school ievie- are a- follows": * t - 2 tnill<. ^A-hleigb, Ibvldock, Barban Branch, . Cedar,- (Jrore; .<4"lum- , bia, Edisto, Ellcntun^ Frifi'd- ship, (ireens,. Haimopy, Movers Mill. Morris, New Forc-t, Oak Orove. Riverside, Sand Hill'. ySeiglingville, HeyenBines’ Tink- Je.r> (.'reek. x ,, 3 niilTTr^v [ Bjirion, BlofMning Ibi.le, 11 li'ku ry 11 ill, () w-i.u i f»oad>, Shady (l-rovt Ivichlaittl, lb.1 Oak' List with us what you will V.iwv am) name . V , .••/*• ~'A • ; ; i. | 1 /«• ’ ' 1 • s L * Y> \ 1 date* caii shii), Alsu in nun ki t for corn. Will pay highest mark(‘t pri<*e. jr Adiuli Milling Company, *•" r >• " / ’ Columbia, S C. (h.Ve Salesman Wanted IRON FINE FOR Lubricating oil. grease, spe-r yiahies p ; *int., l*a it.or wit ole i • time, ('piinnis-ion ba-is until; ability is establisbe<l. Man* \Vii4i rig preferred. Riverside, Refining ('o (.'Ievelaild, (Miiol ' 4-■ BLEEDING GUMS If troubled witb Sore Bleeding Gums, Use ' This Mouth Wash — Dentist Use BARNWELL SENTINEL DAYS BEF0RE CHRISTMAS SHOES MAY SETTLE THE WAR - 4 Till i l <. ’ Applet chi, Big Fork, Calvary, Rouble Pond, Heeling S|>rinu. y/hen the Joy of Your Brings Tender Memories - Years Ago. Kiddies of \ Congressman Rymes In his Very ad^ mirablo address delivered in Barnwell on last Friday emphasized the thought expressed in the foregoing, and applied the same as. to conditions irt South Carolina. He plead earnestly agaipst the narrow limits. This great is.tue is, sought to he limited jn somljFtiuar- ters <a)ii both sides of the present po litical alignment and alluded to the fact that in recent elections in the State it appeared that both factions-]-. H’ere about evenly divided in strength In these strenuous shopping days, writes Louis James, have you caught nnber.i Hercules, Hilda, Lees, Rosmary. Re.edy Brancli, Sycamore. 5 mills.‘“LIku *2 mills ordinary, expenses 3 mills for bond, jfl mills. Kline 2 .mills ordinary, Berlin dispatches via London are ^ x P ens . es 4 mills foi bond, Germany Has a Badly Shod Artny, Do- Clares American Just Returned From the Frpnt. - - TEACHERS WANTED y (i) Mi > 1 ’ ■ ,- v .chqob fTo in m jijiO tq . (;’J # Lnd e-c inhi ii g llllMC Hi d CiHlilll -sell ol, 'll P M‘h). • nt>-(i/ in-rmii ji *(.3) (>"d» and high, sbfibo!. thi I '.iiCt- h » ■•<)•;« ihVo leaeh ?r- foriny hetiNMif. SI’ECIAL EN- KOI.I \iF.Vl . ' SOUTH F BN TKACII FB^-AOKXCY C lumb'iftjS. C. < hot the hest,criterion of how,Germany * Bii,ll.S. Dunbarton 4 millsordi- yourself remembering suddenly, in all is standing up under the tfurden of nary r .3auills for bond, aorta of queer, unexpected places, all war, but a late bit of news regarding; 8 mills. Blackville 5 mills oi'di- sorts of queer, half forgotten things? Have you remembered how these days before Christmas are the wonderful days in the life of tho child, more wond^ffui days, perhaps, than' any that are to come? You know that yourself. You can’t help recalling how time went by those days before the great day. You re member how each day seemed some how mor^wonderful than the one be fore, each day a prelude of real Joy to that first marvelous' moment of the scarcity of leather there is cor- robora^eij by first-hand information, nary, 3 mills for bond. • Tlie dispatch says, according to the Fairfax 5 1-2 mills OTdiuary, N r s j , >K. . ' 2.1-2 nulls for bo.rdr- ' •‘Berlins bank clerks today set an u . n ... ^xuinple in patriotic self-sacrifice. To ^ 1-2 imll.s. Allendale G nulls aid the movement in economy of-leath-xordinary 2 1-2 mills for b?nd. er, the clerks discarded their shoes. 9 mills. Williston 8 mills ordi nary , 4 mills, for bond. 10 1-2, mills. Barnwell G mills ordinary 4 1-2 mills for bond. Drafts anil checks will not be accepted for taxes,'except at tax payers risk. County and school Scores* of barefooted Individuals were seen on the principal streets gingerly stepping along and saving their.tender feet as much as possible. Berlin’s shoe stores are now selling wooden sandhis, Christmas Earning, when, after a . the only leather being In toe guards^ night of little ,f any sleep, you scram- | in the News there was an Interview ^d up and stood breathless on the , with Dr. Joseph Ames of Hopkins, who ( \] * lms nrfmerlv •mnrovod V wili thrhsliold of the room which had been has Just returned from the front on , 8 1 ' a PP ro ' t -d Mill forbidden you all* those interminable | government busfiness, hnvlng been sent * there as a member of the national re search council. Curiously enough, Doctor Ames saw hut one sign.of weak ening In Germany, and that, he said, was shoe leather. To quote from the DAY OF THE RIFLE NOT OVER interview: ~~ 4 ■ r WTbl1 VV A N T EH \ NT hi) \V AN T ID Men a (1 i a I «*• ■ (wi it* h H c Tircd) C<t*q> ii • ehHi ic.' La> pr * r-, etc. work, ^«- oil nnk< *. FREE HOUSE BENT-I’hj ly.li u-n. ly in eaVli—K. 11 road fa-e refolded u wurk one wee- "4 rite or come to ^se« uss. ColointiiH Clay Company, 7-19 17-tf-. ColumbiH, v S. O. * A. J. SALIMAS COTTON FACTOR AUCUSTA, .1EORCIA. (ilYE ME A TRIAL - ECONOMY WITH GAS STOVE hours thaT went„.J?4jXope. The child y.oU take with you through anHa^ r% -of numliers and that the enlistments for the war were in about the same ratio. That,whether “Bleaseites” or reformer^, or “Mannmgites” or any other ites, W^uld degenerate into “Mil- ignites” if sueha word couldlje coined. If these personal Tuiimosities an<F po litical jealousies wdyhKnefmit them to use~this wpr as a means umthe accom- plishmeitt’ of any personal ambition, and so far as our 'soldiers in\the trenches, in the .airplane and in vessels'are concerned would make-no difi'erence to the Kaiser, who in his lust for blood would destroy all alike and it would lie in the estimation of -- +■ this paper a most melancholy /ate if the good fellowship, brotherly love and esprit do corps should not prevail, amongst our hoys, fighting, our battles ami should- r Ip shoulder helping,vach." other iii a common defense of each' Other's live! to a successful determina tion of tile war by reason of political hostfilit 1 os. D .should die qjtir one thoy^hi* •^uiimaf-U i ig' .’11 .alike that this is :t .iigltl of theco’umon American the wonderlands" of the modern toy department wants what you did. The little girl stops before the baby doll,' wide eyed, still with desire. The boy Stands flooded with happiness before an ark in which is every imaginable creation. You remember what a small thing your own was, a fourth the size. But his Joy is n$ greater than yours. He pushes toward the rocking horse. Now it runs by machinery, when onde you ran your own across the floor to the imminent danger,of total destruc tion to persons and furniture that might stand in the way. But Christ mas day was your day. The day when don’ts” were pot and you were king or queen in your kingdom of toys. Ypti pa$s on to trains and there again electricity is running them. You pulled- them yourself. Then you catch the look on the face of your boy. He is watching the huge engine move slowly, smoothly along. It passes under Infinite tunnels and bridges and over made hills that pre sent intricate difficulties of passage. Your tunnels were of chairs and the (table 1n your kitchen made a splem did bridge to cross. He turns to you, the child of this twentieth century. His smile is be atific. H«Twants it—that, train. He never wanted anything so much be fore. He' never will again he *is sure.. And as you move uway you smile, a ttle sadly- a little gladly. Yon are proud to bo ablo to mpke him so wonderfully happy, this child of yours, but you are'sure, too. that N he is no happier than you were these same pre- Christmas da.vs.xHiose years beforo. JL *-~ - Mice Overrunning Australia. be accepted for taxes. B. Armstrong, L (Jounty treasurer. - ~10-4-5m Woman Tells How She'Saved Money by Making Plans Ahead for Her Baking Day^ • “I saw thousands of German pris oners while I was in France, and In none was there the slightest further sigp of want or privation excepNshoes.. They-all wore shoes that were In bad shape, and that, you know, Is a thor- Whly good sign, for a badly shod army Is a iy is a half-crippled nrmy. M It may be put down as cerfirin that the army Is the last to be deprived either of food or of clothes and shoes. In wirr the needs of the people at home must yield to the necessities of the men at the front. An army without Shoes is-in a bad way. The dispatch and Doctor Awe*’ account of what ho saw with his own eyes are Interesting as indications that Germany Is having troubles of her own and, doubtless, a great many more of them than we know, anything of. • la Still Valuable In Warfare, Despite Advent of Machine Gun, Hand Grenade and Other Weapona. A woman has.written in to the Wom an's Home Companion about her gaft stove and she says: “The Idea of telling other women how to economize time and money iu the use of my- gas stoyp came to me on hearing a young housekeeper tell about baking n pudding, or just one _The. overwhelming, position In thh thing, in a gas oven ns large astray war picture occupied by the big gunv, own, which struck mens amazingly.ex the machine guns imtLLewis guns, the ; travngunt,” writes a woman in the ^ m P.?r^ HI ? c e of .trench mortars, hand Woman's Home Companion., grenades, bombs, rifle grenades, and “.When pluunlng to have a baking other accessories of trench warfare, day with the oven, I sit down the day make some men think that the day of. before and think out just what Is heed- tile rifle as an important adjunct to editor several meals, ahead wtiicK must UNDERTAKING. Having purchased -a Motor Hearse, 1 am no\>v-prepared tA handle funerals within a radius of 40 miles. (’barges reason able. Night or Day. M. B. CALHOUN, Funeral Director. Phone No. 25 ALtrEJVDALB, S. &r M. A. Wilder Thos. H.‘Peoples t - PEEPLES & WILDER ATTORNEYS AT LAW fnrndy. A !<*fty ambit'On .shoujtl j>er varl% liniaiis. \V Blue Flag in thcYmm'd inber of our souls with alU^iriL dts tender memorieti of the imsJD and v Star Spangled Banner unfurled b 1 owi ng .ta _the..winds —of—^-urviversal freedom we should march soldiers and civilians to the-accomplishment of vic tory and the salvatidn of the World, scornful of littlenesses of men who might belilfle the accomplishment of this great purpoae. Mice by the million are overrunning a large part of Australia. They are adding mightily to the wartime- troif- blcs of the farming community^and oflioinls-tpnrtieuLurly the former. The havoc , they are causing in bagged wheat—for Austmllajms not, the grain elevator system as ; yet—i-titndTng in many rural districts awnlt|ng"i>o^ ibk sldpimmt to overseas markets is fast beennjlog a que^tibu ot^graye hatlonal Import. v Poisonings in Munition Plants. j The industrial Intoxications arising from the. maT<Ing of war munitions Apert a quite new field of study. Alice Hamilton, In lier Investigation among fiO.OOO workers In 41 plants, fount! that the real'cause of Illness was recog nized by few even among the factory, physicians, but there was evidence of poisoning In 2,5(18 cases, of which 53 resulted fatally. The most harmful materials were nitrogen oxide .fumes and trinitrotoluene, which, with ben- zinc, caused all but three of the fatal poisonings.. Among -other injurious substances are included nltrnbvnziive, toluene, phenol,' ether, mixed acids, sulphuric''acid, picric acid, fulminate, ammonia, mercury, nH'roaplMhalbnos and chlorine, biit these- a re-nut likely to produce se'rlous resulM Lady- little oo Much Practice. Yhat are you crying f an? - . •«- Bobby—My father has been beatln Girls as'Ticket Collectors. employment- of girls as tidket- collectors in Britain lms iced one nr tyo men to,endeavor to travel without paying n fari*. Si^-h jm oiu.- v.,; --r! 1 cmitly-chArged ftt'W • \ rT;i• deuce, a girt c'olb-eTot-- ': (o allow the n+v'Trti-d t>i. because be bad. not n tieket^Ti*0><out- at Tut. success In battle ls^well-nigh *]?nst. Such Is not th^case, declares Fred eric Coleman In the Saturday Evening I‘ost.\ Those of us who can remember the brave advances of the Prussian Guard at XP res . when they - marched In buttallon formation right up the Monin road, straight at onr trenche* —on one occasion, If not more, march ing to almost sure death at the goose step—knew the value of accurate, rapid rifle fire. So do these Prussian guardsmen. If any of them are still alive, _ Not many of them were left when the broken wav.es of gray were swept back, like leaves by an autumn win'd. - - - - : >. Tha rifles did most of it.„ Machine guns we had, to be sure, hut Woefully few of them. Those - that we had were overworked to a point that made dish ; a us wonder, not when they jammed, but when they worked long without jam ming. The rifle, in the-hands of a mnn who can shoot straight and-shoot wi great rapidity, Is a wicked wefipon still; and the value of ephL steel,' though’it . Is not a subject on which men who haye seon ic used love to dwell, has not, so/far as I can see, chtinged greatlj - it at all, In the three years Of crlip-Yvar in Europe.' be dooked. For Instance, I place a roast in a pun just barely large enough to hold it, thus economizing on space as well. Then, if possible, I cover the roast with a pan which can be made to sit'qult-e level, Into which I put several potatoes; or, if this ar rangement Isn't practicable, I put the potatoes on the grate. Beside' the roast I place!! Small pudding dish con taining a bread pudding, on a sninil asbestos mat beside the pudding dis a small pan of-biscuits. A vegetable may sometimes be baked in a fiupple with all these thinga-m»-welb (‘The .following, all ofi-Whlc-h 1 .have tested, will be found geod combinations any baking da meat ltaif, covered, in a bread jian; e$( ; aIjoped tomatoes In-a pudding n of corn gems. Time about an -ftbur. ^Tjaked 1 potatoes ^niay be crowded iu utmost always. “Boast chickefir^n - small cake tin sweet potatoes peeled and sliced, sen^ sonod and covered with milk in pud ding dish; macaroni and cheese in a bread tin. Time about ohe and one- half hoars, oven.moderate. Practice in all the poiiri*. Abstracting mid preparing papers of all kind, nffmes formally oecupud by l. Willis, Esq. liHncas'ir’s -bail BARNWELL S tiiUjibg. COl TON - l’K VR(OjF& B ATTE Y. the Savannah Cotton Fal'tors. are Hib.xtan- lial, reliable ampenergetie. Their ex- re-neive warebrnising faiobties and gup* ejior salesmanrIiip ate at your eonl.- marul./They ^gre abundant f y al le/to finance any (juant ty of cotton slopped I-n’t U tP Voiir i-i». rest pj try hem.?: Do it now and be eonvlhced. 8*2. dmo H,R. -Erv:in -Civil Engiwt'i'.-Uiitl ^ui'veyor ALLENDALE, S C. !• 666 v aved Napoleon’s Heart. A Star’s Lightf/ear 1 . A star’s light year means the length of time as measured by our yearsrthat I •’ * . T— . ( a particular slur’s li.ub| takes in reaeb- Thii i» a prescription prepared eipeclally (or MALARIA or CHILLS & FEVER. Five or six doses will break eny case, and if taken then as a tonic the Fever will oo( return. It act% on the liver better than Calomel and does not gripe or sicken^ the Affierifan military -leaders. in g the-enrih. Light travels at' the fMgN don’t cry. All father* have to bea|^thelr boys sometimes. IBobby—But n^ftu^ather isn’t like other fa-fathera. He’a m^a brass band, and be-beata the big Tit-Bits. itook her )ry tin* C< <• Li push, past. Tho pound?” “T -tq.-'U*. H.d d q *sitc<jniini-qptsi*i iu -Ar-.- 4 ll,. 1 C V sat up with his old muzzle-loader to I To, Look ♦*»' <-;iI tu repp - " — " i.»-| • . J.‘ Happily Married. H«*'s happily-married.” “Sc ?'* r T “Yes, he thinks murriage Is going exempt him from war service.”, »• been vh>KIng Napoleon’s tomb, re- rate of-about 180,IXH) miles a second, marks the London Chronicle. Did even at that speed some of the they, one wonders, hear the story, of p^-d stars are so distant front the his heart, which the tomb incloses? On the night that he died bis. body was prepared for embalming and the heart was placed lp water In a silver ewer. An Irish soldier who loved Napoleon guards* the. body, for Longwood swarmed 'with rpts. In the midst of his vlgli bo heard a,splash .In the ewer. He fifed, just in time‘to save the heart from the vile rodents which were dragging it away. Americana knew tfiat •entry's grandson. Sir Ar thur Sullivan, .and loved his music. - earth Jlmt it talrcs T thcir light several years to reach us. The sun is 93,000,- 000 miles from the earth and its light reaches in less than nine minutes, but the light from Sirius, sometimes called $10,00" Ic $15,000 To Lend at Once 3 ■¥.. S. OWENS J Any person rtoubled''with Mire, bleed ing g'lms, which o tune* nr>- alfn ist too - i<_«'11v»* 10 titueh win b- n Hi-d after rnisii g the ui u »i wth t ti D a- d hatf souition of w-iier ami ilatur I iron, kliown as Acid Ir^n-Min r*i widcbm^Y be Ht-eur» d uf uiy.-t ni»i ilnti ore. ^ - Dentists u-e it. t > si\,p til >oi< g and as n m iniliwash «h-ii ex racting teeth and ft is | erft etly.JiarinlrS'. ^ D acts as c-riniciue ana t, i is Yt a nV well ns a st I-nuid bealing hgf-iit. *■' 'F rents, this i>*me nmu a iron is . tine Pouring a in tie on < h* - pot snips iii. ■ ding a» d . prey« m* s - epess and f*'-i.ri..g. TiioiisunD oi p pie trdu- t)l»»l with o d >mei m-u 1 ' i g have fqund the s boi di i« Atod I on Mineral tvliicli heiug a h gtit> v ■ ceiitratedf form i f natural iron, mates a superb external remedy. All diuggi^t-.have it, or ^<d dirret to the Ferrndiio Chemical Corp., B a dXe. Va $1 prepaid Note: For pi I h, ulcers sores and skni. n (Tect'oi.s ttieFerridi e.Chemical Cor;) bus perfi g^o mu on tment con- ' sistingxif tin's h ghly cm i i eiorsted nat» oral iron sooti ink triedn-iioj e ements, which cpiiihipad tna'ke. tuis «iotaneat Vnexcejled A*-U \ ■ u.*__druttisi ror a fifty cent jar - of A-I-M Otntment or stool direct. X V 1 Attorney »t-I.uw ~—"Barnwell, '8. C. the Dog stur, is eight years in reaching ' Ar 1 r r „ f ^ us The Pole star or North star, has ! ^°. Moiiej’v Otl Long 1 CrillS. BROWN <S: BUSH a 4. r i light year, that Is, its light is 45 year’s.In reaching the earth. If one of these Inconceivably distant fixed stars should be blotted out of existence to night we should continue to See It. for years to confe from Its rftys‘-6f light already on their way to the earth. IW-ELL, *\ A- v y.- l