Barnwell sentinel. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 185?-1925, July 31, 1919, Image 6
m wm
Approved Afternoon Gotyns
Restaurant Owed Them Money.
•What .became of that odd reatao*
rant you u*«*d to have here, where -they
Sighed ‘you <>n fnterlng and leaving
and charged 4»u-Jfqr the dMTeflSrcV Tn
"Had to close up. Fellows used to
go in with bricks ^concealed under their
coats and after easing leaye'thP'brieks
under the table. They weighed less
going out than when they entered."—
Boston Transcript. x ~
Nothing Like Plain Bitrg-Phosphate
Put on Firm, Healthy Flesh and
to Increase Strength, Vigor
and Nerve Force.
FRECKLES
Judging: from the countless preparations
and treatments which arc continually be
ing advertised for the purpose of making
thin people fleshy, developing arms, neck
and bust, and replacing ugiy hollows and
angles by the
JEAaHBMjBJh , s o f t curved
^MoTiTmtTi lines df health
'TOk an.] beauty,
jgto&SnAf .Afe-tyra there are evl-
JSgkaeffi/ gma dent i > o u-
' gr4 sands of men
igM and vs .. m e n
HR - wf. w i.o l< e e r. I y
LM- EFT secret
; and special
and personal for
you is
New It the Time te Get Rid of These Ugly Spoti
There’s no looger'the-slightest n>-ed of feFling
•shamed of ' your freckles, as Othlne—double
strength—Is gusrinteed to ceuaoTe these homely
■pot#.
Simply get an ontice of Othine—double
strength—from your druggist, and app\^ a little
ol.lt Bigbt-snd auorning and you sboula eoon see
that eien the worst freckles hare,begun to dls
• ppear, wlflle the lighter ones hare vanished en
tirely. It i« seldom that more than one ounce
te eeeOed-tTfwM-nileli'lv i'lesr~Ttre skin and "gain
a beautiful clear complexion.
Be sure to‘a^k for the double strength Othtne,
as ttrtr’*tT"*otit under guarantee of money beck
If tt falls to reinov# freckles.—AdV.
WRIGLEY5
xessive thin*.
ness.
Thinness and
weakness aro
often due to
starved
In its air - tight
sealed package.
nerves
His Turn to Be Audience.
“Wlmt art* you going to say to your
constituents?” ‘~‘ r '7
"Nothing,” replied Senator Sor
ghum. “There comes a time in . the
career of every statesman when it Is
to ills udvuntug^ to Jisten anti, take
notes, and let the constituents do the
bodies need
more phos
phate than is
contained in
modern foods.
P h y s i clans
A goody that is
GEORGIA HAMILTON
claim there is
Botolnji | ... ■■
so well as the organftf phosphate known
among druggists as bitro-phosphate,
which fs Inexpensive and is sold by most
worthy of your
all druggists under a guarantee o
tasting regard
because of its
lasting quality.
talkin,
faction or money ’back. B
-feeding the
nerves directly and by supplying the bod:
cell* with the.necessary phosphoric foo<
elements, bitro-phosphate should produce
a welcome transformation In the appear,
ance; the Increase In weight frequently
being asfonlVhlng
Increase in weight also carries with tt
a general improvement tn the health.
Nervousness, sleeplessness and lark of
energy, which -nearly always accompany
excessive thinness, should soon disappear-.
The Scintillanf Lure
If you don t approve of > my
spe**ches,” said the hrlllinnt orator,
“why do you pay so much attention to
them?”
answered Senator Sor
I *kn't see much sense In fire-
and yet I always ettjoy look-
Three flavors to
dull eyes ought to TfrigKten. and pale
cheeks glo# with the bio..in eg perfect
health M u Georgia Hamilton, who was
once thin and frail, reporting her owa
experience, writes: “Artro-Phosphate has
brought a m.agtc transfnrmatimi
with me I gained Li pounds and nevas
before fftt so well"
CAl'TIOVi— Alt hough* bitro-phosphate it
Unsurpassed for rel.eving nervousneea,
sleepless ne«e and general weakness, It
should not oxring to Its tendency to In
crease weight be used by enyooe whs
does not desire to put on flesh.
ghum
suit all tastes.
Be SURE to get
Port (inent) Question
WRIGLEY5
lace appear^ In the sleeves Evidently
tlsr plain nock Is passing and few will
regret It for the plain neck flnlah is not
rslip of satin or fou-
foundation for after
’ dresses ' has proved
in the Summer ward-
slip serves fur wear
THE MOST DANGEROUS
Sealed Tight
Kept Right
OF ALL DISEASES
iMIrtttl to health
Flavor Lasts
mi HHitt
are not perf..rtm: g their fuocuoaa
properly. TWy ora only half doing
thru work sod aro al!o*rj lapurities
to aerwaslats gad bs converted into
vk arid aad other potoens. which
are causing vss distress and xrtU do*
•troy yes oalsaa they are drtvsa (tea
your asooey will be reloaded. Ask for
tbea at aay drag store, bat be ears
to get tho origins) Imported COLO
MEUAI. brand. Accept as sxbsutsUa
la sealed packages. Three mesa
PREPARE FOR A LARGER SALARY
Question of Patriotism.
Virginia xras trying to lonuaite her
Panther tn go to the home cxwnlng cele
hration and stay all day “But li will
be too hot. dear,“ RH*(brr rx*ta**n*t rated.
“We’ll Just go up for a while la the
morning while tt‘s cool end then well
come homo for dlaner and rent during
the afternoon ”
Hot Virginia tnii not pemtsd**«l. and
coatiaoed the arguing. Father chanced
to overhear her. “What'* the matter
In here?** he asked, cinniag Into the
room. “AVhat's the difference between
you two?**
^Njulckly came Virginia's retort.
“It s Ju*t a tlifTcrenoe In our patriot
Ism; mother's m
M.ght Regret it
TAKE OATH ON SACPEO BOOKS PEER DESERVED HIS VICTORY
Quick Wit enabled Him te Win toe
case When Others Wewld Have
Given Up Heps.
The Last Arrivals
Hypay Smith, the noted evangelist,
>td on his recent voyage from Liver
Quite Ready
Vow. Willie, (
Gospel seems derived from the late
Jewish inith tukrii holding la the hand
the srrool of the law (or the phylae-
tarlee), a ceremony I tee if possibly
adapted from the Komaig custom. The
asual mode was to lay the hand on
the Gospel, and It was krpt up to a
modem date In the oath of the Uni
versity of Oxford. The practice of
kissing the hook, which bocama so
well established In England, appear*
In the Middle Ages. The book was
often laid on the altar, or (after the
manner of ancient Home) the swear
er laid his hand on the altar Itself or
looked toward it. obuvu ull. It became
Customary to touch the relic* of saints
on the altar. Other object*, a* the
cross, the bishop’s eroxler, ete.. were
•worn by. An outh ratified by con
tact or Inspection of a sacred object
was called a corporal or bodily oath,
oa distinguished from a merely spo
ken or written oath. The English
word signifying the "sacred object” on
which the oath is taken Js "halTdonie.”
The “halldoine” on which oaths are
a worn in England is a copy of thfe
New Testament. Jews are sworn on'
the Old Testament; the sacred books
of other religions ure used in like
manner, a Mohammedan swearing on
the Koran, a Hindu on the Vedas.
tlon any crmtui
brute creation?
Willie—Yee'm
say*.
“Thefe ure Mime men
make u even in fai
there wns a certain peer
rove to make hie ninhlea »|*e»-< h—a
speech granting to all arcaned per
son* the right to routine)—and when
he put hi* hand In hi* pocket for hi*
note* they wereu't there. Ill* note*
can
Thu*
In the
Indian-
imorning and I nm all duy
a poll* News. -—*.
No one I* useless In thlx world w he
lighten* the burden of It to upyone
ef*e.—C'httrles Hit-ken*.
Worat Part of It.
“Why do you waste your day* and
nights on these picture*?" uxked tlu*
wife of a struggling painter. '“You
don't get enough for them to pay for
the paint you use/’
—"I know, my denr,^ tie answered,
"but Ihlnk! Heiuhrandt and others
painted pictures and sold them for
trifles, and now they are the master
pieces of this world and sell for a mil
lion dollars! I am not painting for us,
I am painting for our descendants."
“Humph!” was the wife’s discour
aging reply. "You don’t make enough
for us to raise any descendants.”—Sun
Francisco Chronicle. v ’
"The peer gulped. He looked about
him wildly. He gulped again. Then
he said:
“’If I, my lords, who now rise only
A calm 1* welcome after a storm.
to give my^ opinion on Ihtw hill—tf-4
nm so confounded that 1 am unable to
express what I had In mind, what
must- be the condition of that man
who, without any assistance, has got
to plead for his life?”
“Then the peer sat down to the
cheers of a converted chamber, and
his bill passed almost unanimously."
Babies
^ when stomach* do thair Si—
7 work and bowels move naturally. *
Fretful, erring babies need
MRS. WINSLOW'S
SYRUP
to make the stomach digest food,
and bowels to move as they
should. Contains no alcohol.
\ opiates, narcotics, or other £
\ harmful ingredients^
■ Af OPT Jrmm-i.t. /■’.
The Ingenuous Lad
Small Boy—Father wants to know,
.Mr. Jones, If you’ll trust him for a
joint of beef till pay day.
Butcher (amazed) — He didn’t say
that?
Paper Fjom White Pine.
Manufacturer*? of rough pine lum
ber state that the white pine in
northern Chihuahua Is
admirably
adapted to the manufacture of paper.
A twilling company In El Paso. Tex., is
now making boxes of rough pine lum
ber produced in this district on the
Small Boy—What he wants Is a
Okie Million Five Hundred Thou*
sand Pounds of Powder for
the Feet
That is what the government sent lagf
year to make the soldiers’ and sailors’ feet
comfortable and fit- for the kind of war
pound of pork sausage; but I thought
I’d begin high and tjhen come down
bit by 1)11 if you proved stubborn.—
London Answers.
The latest arrivals In blouses are not
different from those that came early
In the season, except in Inconspicuous
There
that very fine blouses qre made by
hand of It and rank with the best of
silk blouses. The hand-made blouses
Paradoxical Sort.
main line of the Mexico Northwestern
railway.
are- expensive, the time required to
details of making or trimming,
'A doctor is a queer sort of man
make them being the chief Item In
js no good reason why designers
should run after strange gods as
long as . there Is an insistent de-
nmmCtor the styles now in vqgue or
“Why so?"
"He is most angry and irritable
vhen he finds he must have patients."
their cost. Women who are expert with
the 1 needle can make them for them
selves and in this way own waists
that are far out of reach of the Aver
age pocketbook.
In silks, crepe georgette, crepe de
chine, pongee nnd silk shirting^ are
all dependable If carefully laundered,
and crepe georgette, most fragile^look-
tng of all, willwear as long as any of
them. It Is of all silks the most popu
lar for blouses. One of the two
blouses pictured Is made enHrtly of
It and the ether Ij a combination of
georgette nnd crepe de chine. In the
lafltfr. showjt at the left of the pic
ture. a skeleton waist of crepe de
chine la slipped over a blouse of geor
gette. * Edges are finished with piping.
This makes a “V” of georgette at the
front which Is emhrolderfd with silk.
The blouae at the right te fleets the
Chlnewe Inspiration and Is handsomely
ornamented with anntarfce braid oewsd
A silver lining may have a copper
cloud.
they fought and finished
Constipation r«nerally Indicate* disordered
■tomach. liver and bowel*. Wright’* Indian
Vegetable Pill* restore regularity without
(rlplng: Advr
\ Tn Peace and War for over 25 year*
Allen’s Foot = Ease, the Antiseptic, Healing
Powder for the' Feet, to.be shaken into tha
shoes and sprinkled in the foot-bath has
been the standard remedy for all aching,
swollen, hot, tired feet} misters and spra
spots and for the instant 'relief of coifos,
bunions and callouses. "—- 4 —S
k
Thousands of people sent packages f
Allen’s Foot “Ease to Jheir sons r brothers
or sweethearts in the army and navy be
cause they knew .from experience that it
would freshen and rest their- feet, make
their shoes comfortable and walking eaay.
Those who use Allen’s Foot*fEase have
until some change In skirts opens the
way for a change In blouses. What
women are most concerned In Is
knowledge *of the merits of materials
used In blouses an?f of the most prac
tical and becoming styles for various
uses. • '
The most durable and at the same
time dainty blouses for dally wear are
made of fine cotton voile. It does not
seem possible that so sheer and fine a
fabric could have such powers of re
sistance to wear and tubbing, but ,the
fact ramalns that it will outlast any
other. When made up with strong
finny or fillet, or'hand cn*i h»-t laces,
one may depend ^upon"a voile blouse
for two years’ wear, some times more.
Tatting makes as fine a finish n« the
Worse Phase.
Mrs. Johnson—Dat husban’ er mine
he done break mnh haht.
Mrs. Simms—Dat’s nuffin, honey,
Mnh husband, he breaks de furnltjure.
—Boston Transcript.
Make your morning ce
real dish, a strendth<
The Way of It
He Is long about paying his bills
I guess that Is because he I
xolved their foot ’ trouble*.
short
Naturally.
*‘"I saw Mabel going secretly to a
beauty parlor.*?*’
'' “Ha ! That ha* na ugy look !*
MONEY BACK
is not only most d<
cious in taste, but
a builder of tissue
‘There's 4 Geasa
* It taka* BiOta attk
a Gal tar go a* taag way.
uTcYFRUJi
Mi*
V» Vpir