Barnwell sentinel. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 185?-1925, July 18, 1918, Image 8
OTHERS TOLD HER
SfAitanborg Woman Makes
' Hfebly Interesting
r Statement.
/ "/
PELT LIKE BRICKS.
S*YS SHE FEELS FINE NOW AND “SURE
CAN PRAISE TANLAC FOR ITS AID,
"It is ili® beat medicine I ever took
for ►tmiiftCii * l rouble, net Voiunet,* and
(M’fotHtiiHi of tne, henrt. I mire chi
4*raise and rec»mm.et <1*1 " deefarnl
/■- Mr*. tl. 1C. Lawt r q: lit* v\ il i ,hh St.,
6|)trtanbnrg in a *ta ement flic kkvimi/
viiii >>«• int4it of iTvnioc, ■* I Iri Na'imal
Toll o I Fib uary 1, 1917 ”1 Killer
*J from very tool ciss/of indigestion,
fteivoH ne.* hq.d |>n 1 fntatii>n i f tli-
cootiiiu'd MiVi fetweer. "I
.tdj hit 11 v i» **vo,'ail'd., would j iet. rol.
a. <1 tuniuii U or h -iirn, ahamy nerve*
were a ' Uhu ly din o rb* <1 teat 1 wan ke; t
ani eiatiV a nn st n't the lini*. 1 ev-ulu
4iot eat efttrcely any hi >«. Wht 1 did
vat felt tike onckei iii niy H'.omaoh, and
1 It «l.a kii cl ,of ciioKi.ig/ in my cheat
alt -r tiieais
"Mv heart ftut tor I n great deal and
and tills, 1 hi k.wan { art v ;Ci»uced l>v
the great quantity of y,as that lurmed
on my s’t» mat h
‘..Ffnaliy,1 decided to try Tanlac **
it had he prd no many othe 8 who hbd
... < i mi bleu so mew bat like mine and now I
am not botn.fvd w.nh 4 oinae ■ tr-uhle.
. dba kfl to lanlac.' 1 feel a g >od d< al
I*- ter ujev ry way. too. *uy nerves
are inuen n-ru.ger ai»d tteaii* Vr-eud 1
■ued t> get hi nervous that I jumped
when an yone spike to iiitT 1 in cer-
la*illy • i>i that w«v imw, ns Taciac tias
re ie\«*l th <re ne voiis troibhsaid I
}iave no been (other d a bit with pal*
f frmioii mice 1 t MjK t.ie tiisi buttle of
'lanlac
it for the change m mf condition. I
*.m fl'ty ni.i® tear* old and it takei a
powerfully good medicine to helo any
one as old a* lam aa much aa Tanlac
liA" helped me.” v
Sold bv—
J. A. Porter, Barnwell; Searaon Drug
Co . All**ndale ; J H Bandera,/Black-
ril e; H M. Ca st*ls, Jr., BOdoc; Fair
fax Drug Co.', FiTrfax ; KendalTi.am,
n
der Co. Kei dall; Bolfaat Plantatio
C .. Millet tv il le ; J. M. Smith A So >1.
v/illis on, and VV./H. WiUinaon, Ul
mer.*
CLASSIFIED LOCAL ADYS.
FOR SALK
FOR SALE—Desirable residence nil
Main street. Eight large rooms. Two
bath rooms. All modern conven
t.
i“ncen. Barns and staples ; orebard,
etc. L'befal .onus
tr
is... Apply to
M. B Hagood.
Barnwell, S, CL
FY)K SALK
’--Five
A _
grain aspirin tablets.
One di zt
✓
u fift
*
*en
Cents; two
'dozen
i w eiity- li
ve cell
ts
5 6 t'J ;
C:
N Burckha
Iter.
LOR SALK
-Dry
pin
s and pup a
wood
cut’any li
■I'gUi
tird
delivered.
Send
• me your (
rd*-f lor y<
>iir winter s
•ppiy.
6 6 tu
C,
N Burcklia
her.
Matter's Sale
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA
COUNTY- OK B^RNWKLI..
Court of Common Pleaa.
Comme eial Bank, >
* ' Plaintiff.
against
Witt Hay and Susie Nelson.
Defei dai.ta
By virtue of a d*Cretal oijder to me
direc ed in the above ent Hed cause, I
will.rell at Barhweil. in front of the
Court House~nn Monday, th- 5«h day
of August. 1918,It being salesday in said
month. wi»hiu the legal hours of sale,
the fi>>lowii g de.crdied real p*operty,
towit: A.I that 1 t <flf parcel of land sit
uate, iymg and i>er*>n in the (j. rp ira'e
limits o' Blacky ill , C unity of Bin -
Well.'State a f or*si|fi, *• ml bnu ded as
folb ws, t wh : Lit No. 63 with im
pr* veTfl'Mit* i he re on, oil a pit tiled
with the (’I rk of Court of Barnwell
co yn♦ y bv L 1*. Boll.stun.w h i coTiveyert
this. I tto, 8 H Ro«h W'lo e nVeyed
same to S> s eJSjji-on tie aunt* b* gin-
nj g a’ a -talcp on the smithws t e rner
thence runiin g north f 10 e* t. item** or
|Jess. to a stake ’tl.e.ir* lf5lfrtei't'11 thi“
FULL YEAR’S SUPPLY
■/
Th« Unltsd Stats* the 'Last
Reservoir of M#n, of Shl^a
and of Pood to Savo World
Civilization. 1
mm bo obtained tr »
pooads por moath por porso* upo*
tho olgnlaf of a pledge that tii* sugar
oo obtained wtll bo used for that puh*
poos only. Dealers throughout, tho
ateto have boon furnished with ear*
t Ideates.
/
/> /
Food Adminiotratlon Rulto Govtrninf
/ ” • -N y '
Grinding of Home-Grown Whoat
Modified.—Flour May Be Sold Under
Certain Conditona. n~
By Herbert Hoover.
PATBIOTIC PIOPLE
.1 •/ EATING LITTLE BEEF
ADMINISTRATRIX SALh.
NtHflcw ii hereby given that order
an order of thecourtof probate, I will
sell h 1 > of tliv pviHonttl pmpvrvty belong
ing to the Fst«t- of .A'ex R*-vnolds.' at
his late nsil^nc—, at public auction,
on Saturday the 27th day of July 1918
Sale hegi .ni,"g at 10:(X) o c'oek in th-*
forenoon a> d continue unt II all the
said personal-prop rty has t**en sold.
/ - -. Lizzie llay.
Dated the 10th day Administratrix
v of July. 1918.
nhrtlei-t efts' cor *r thoue** nl<dig a!
str et or {xml w iv fill fwt more m ess I
t • tl»— so itbeast.in rner the e> al ulg !
'Iiv easiefn Irt iIs o| v Stewaft Holman i
150 »* et to.the tieglMiii g —■
^•‘rllls of s»'e (<hsIi Pi.rubsser to t ay
for papers and stamps .
H. L O’Bannoii. ]
Mftst i, r for Barnwell County.
Master’s < fth*e, JoL 8'ti. I9|S.
ON ALL HAYS
■VTIHEACB fUBCHASEOr
VHLAI F1CXJ1 KJt HOftLOT,
ZJUmJSI BUY ALSO AN HJtlAL
AQOUHTCF OIHEX OUAli
1
fr
I
\
Give Such High Efficiency
*More Miles per Gallon
"More Miles on Tires”
Maxwell
Motor
Cars
We said recently that this Maxwell Motor Car is a
“featureless car.” _ — 1
l
By that we meant that no one feature was better
than any other—and none less efficient or effective.
Uniformity is the outstanding quality of Maxwell
design and construction.
J-?. .••n*«r Car •
RoatUter • • • •'
SPiiHtiitr, with
All-Weathar Top
5- PaSedan - •-
6- Pat*. Town Car
t S2S
*25
935
1275
1275
All pricei f o. b. Detroit.
Wipw wIihoI* regular equipuxeul
will* Ma and Tow u Cmr
Apropos that, we are frequently asked what par
ticular detail of the motor is responsible foe the
tremendous mileage per gallon of gasoline obtained
by Maxwell owners.
Columbia.—Undar modified regula
tions of the Food Administration
farmers are now permitted to grind a
full year’s supply of flour from home
grown wheat. Millers throughout South
Carolina have been authorized by the
Food Administration to grind, from
wheat made by farmers, enough flour
to supply their families and their ten
ants for 12 months. This amount
must, however, be based upon a cal
culation of 12 pounds per month per
person --4 • —
Although using flour grouiyj. from
home grown wheat, farmers -are ex
pected .by the Food Administration
to nevertheless observe -strictly the
fifty-fifty rule and to use flour substi
tutes, pound for jHiund, with-the flour
they have ground The fact that they
have produced tlieir own wheat does
not release them from this obligation.
They are also expected to see to it
that their tenants, furnished by them,
use flour substitutes on the fifty-fifty
basis,. ')
Farmers who grow wheat may sell
flour to ‘their neighbors who perhaps
have not, but in such cases they will
be required, under the rulee of ..the
Food Administration, to sell an equal
amount of flour substitutes, the sariie
as a merchant,, or take miller’s cer
tificates from the purchaser showing
that the purchaser has had flour sub
stitutes ground to cover the dkmr
bought, pound for pound. Farmers
may sell flour, from, their wheat, to
merchants, but when merchants re
sell this flour it must be sold, pound
for pound,. with, flour substitutes, to
the person? who buy It.
Th£se regulations apply to thresh-
ermen as well as to mrmers.
“If you could stand in the middle of
Europe* today and survey the land to
ita borders, you would discover Its
■ *—1* t..
whole population of JLOO.OOO,000 human
being short of food. Million* of peo
ple in Poland, Finland,Serbia, Ar
menia and Russia are dying of starva
tion and other millions are suffering
from too little food. Our Allies and
the neutrals are living on the barest
margins that will support life and
strength.
"This, the most appalling and dread
ful thing that has come to humanity.,
since the dawn of * civilization, ii to
me the outstanding creation of Ger
man militarism The Germans" them
selves are not the wost sufferers. They
are extorting af the cannon's mouth the
harvests and cattle of the people they
have overrun, .leaving them in desola
tion. . If the war were to cease to
morrow, the toll of actual dread from
starvation and its attendant diseases
within the German lines would double
j or treble the 5.000,000 or 6,000,000 of
. men who have been actually killed by
; Germany and her allies in arms The
10,000,000 people in occupied Belgium
and Northern France would have died
of starvation had it not been for us
and the Allies.
"We must build our food resource#
to stand I'eady for «tfly 'demands upon
us by the Allies. It is of no purpose
to us to send millions of our best to
France if we fail to maintain strength
of their men. women and children on
opr lines of communication. The Fni*
ted States Is the laet s reservoir of
men, the last reservoir, of ships, the
last reservoir of munitions and the
sf reservoir of food upon which the
Allied world must depend if Germany
is to be defeated and if we are to be
WStk N i -- - — —
irtf rwu.
Pubile Eating Place® Restricted and
Heueeholder* are Expected te
• ■ . - .
Restrict Thsmeelvee.
LICENSES ARE REQUIRED
® TO DEAL IN POULTRY
If you ask aft owner he will almost invariably give
the carburetor most of the credit.
Now, obviously the carburetor must be a good one.
If it were not, it would prevent, even if it did not
accomplish the result.
L
But a good carburetor does not make a good, motor
car—nor an efficient mixing valve alone an efficient
motor. J .
The factors that made that famous “Non-Stop”
record possible, and the test in which 3,000 owner-
driven Maxwell Motor Cars averaged 29.4 miles per
gallon of gasoline—were many. 'I
Every detail of motor design had to be right—
every proportion just ;ight in relation to every
other one.
Piston displacement^ valve .dimensions and valve
lift, compression, balance—everything in precise
ratio and correct relation to every other detail.
A. J. BENNETT,
DISTRIBUTOR
Barnwell' S. C. ;
’Twould require a volume to tell how Maxwell
engineers achieved that splendid result. Just as it
required long years of practical manufacturing
experience to know how. .
•; . •’ \ r . •
Of course the carburetor helps—but equally so does
the electrical system.
. Columbia.—Country or cross-road
storekeepers \yho buy eggs and some-
limes poultry from the farmers, for
Colombia.—Beef-steak baa dieap*
peered from the menus and /bill* of
fere of hotels, restaurants and public
eating places throughout South Caro
lina. Roast beef has likewise beeu
elimin'st'-d., These meats are serv
ed only aay a week, under order of the
Food Administration, and in many
public eating places beef Js not ecr. ■
•d at all. 'Patriotic people through
out -the state are expected by the
Food Administration to voluntarily
restrict themselves in the consump
tion of beef and to observe the re
strictions as rigidly on'their"Tfome ta-
v l)les as the rule is being enforced in
public eating places. The^demand for
beef for the arm* and the allied arm
ies and their civil population for this
summer makes if nocessarv that the
people who stay at home prac'ioally
give up beef By-products of beef, su; h
as ox-tails, livers, tongues, sweet
breads, hearts, kidneys, brains and
tripe may be served at any time, as
the regulations do not apply to these.
-4
POLITICAL BARBECUES
PUT UNDER THE BAN
i
CONSERVE SUGAR
EVEN IN PRESERVING
Rich Preserves and Jellies Should Not
Be Attempted—Sugar for Canning
and Preserving is Limited.
selling again, are required, under the
proclamation of President Wilson of
May 14th. to obtain licenses from the
Pood Administration. The fact that
most country stores are In the re
tail business on a very small scale
does not.alter the case,-but as a rule-
these storekeepers have not consider
ed themselves liable. The President’s
proclamation required the licensing
of all those engaged in certain lines
of business, including "operators of
poultry and egg packing plants not al
ready licensed under the United
Srtites Food Administration.” ynder
this classification, anyone who sells
poultry or eggs In any way than at
retail to the consumer, regardless of
the amount of business done, must be
licensed. In order to comply with the
law all country store* buying eggs
and poultry from farmers must fill out
blanks obtained from the United
States Food Administration, and have J
licenses issued to them.
Columbia—Because of the acyte-
n#8B of the shortage in sugar, house
keepers are urged by the Food Admin
istration. as far as it irf practical, to
preserve fruits this summer in other
ways than preserves and jellies,
which require a great deal of sugar.
A light syrup HallOWs the flavor of th®
fruit to predominate and gives a sauce
that is both wholesome and palatable^
Honey is an excellent sweetening for
certain fruits. Housekeepers should
not at this time attempt to furnish
canned goods for the government, but
they can^iake. care of th* local supply
of fruits sod vegetables, thus reliev
ing the demand upon the commercial
stock which may be used by the gov
ernment next winter. Although the
situation as regards the supply of
sugar is serious, provision has been
made by the Food Administration to
supply ample sugar for canning and
preserving, provided, of course, that it
is used in reason, for it Is regarded
as important that as much as possible
of the oerishabto products be conserv
ed. Suxar lor canning :.Tvd preserving
Columbia.—With the opening of the
political campaigns In South Carolina,
the food administration again urge*
that political barbecues, such as havo
been the custom in many parts of the
■tate la past years, be eliminated this
war year. William Elliett. food admin
istrator for South Carolin, recently
stated that political barbecues would
be frowned upon by the food admin
istration. Th* great waste Incident
to barbecues Is. of course, .the reason
nrged. and in the present world crisis
with reference to the food supply and
the absolute necessity of saving ev
erything. that can be 'saved to help
feed a htingry world the food admin
istration ngt only feels Justified la
asking’that no barbecues b* b' ld. but
it is felt that patriotic pec w 4 vel-
i untarily abstain from *.i !i indul
gences.
SUGAR FOR CANNING
SHOULD BE SECURED
Columbia.—The food administration
Is urging that all pereons who can
fruits and" vegetables for market ob^
tain their entire sugar requirement*
for th* 1111 season aa early as'
■ ible. Federal food administrations
in all the states are also being In
structed to see that .manufacturers of
esseetial food products /squiring
•ugar take the*-first oppo/tunlty of
building up their supplies/ The food
administration takes the Position that
preserves and Jams are nisentlal food
stuffs. and that canons perform a
valuable conservation^ function. In
the event that It isynecessary to re
duce still further /he shipping ton-
| nag* that brings kugar to the Unfted
| States, the faod ^administration Is *n-
deavoring to g/ard against any pos
sible lose of the fruits and vegetables
that could h* saved by canning and
I TT“
By the way, if this were the kind of motor car in
which any one feature stood out above others, we
would emphasize that electrical system.
ELLIS BROS.
Estill, S. C.
But it isn’t. Maxwell results are uniform; Those
results are the product of a combination of many
features— r not of one or two only.
Similarly, if one owner achieved a sensational mile
age or a high degree of reliability, that would
prove nothing. „
That happens with all makes of cars—the poorest
included.
But for 3,000 owners to average 29
gallon of gasoline;— i I
* i
/ '
.4 miles per
For the same model to run 22,022 miles—44 con
secutive days and nights without stopping—THAT
CAR MUST BE A MAXWELL.
1 1 f ~T“- ~ *|*| -|^|*4 - -
Wk.
x.
fV •
We have misplaced several of our steel
» vK. '
drums. You are warned to not use them for
■ _ - - * • V- ' *
storage purposes unless it is purchased .from
us. In the meantime either deliver or ad-
vise our local representatives, H. J. Baxley &
Son, Barnwell, Si €., the numbers you have
■ . • .. . •
on hand.
\
i Respectfully,
Southern States Oil Co.,
Head Office, Aiken, S. C.
' J. • -J"» *
/ — ? Sk-
V
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