Barnwell sentinel. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 185?-1925, September 18, 1919, Image 3
NEW COMMERCE CHIEF
Often Caused by
Tm, uv>M, mor» oft*n than ■ you . think.
irwmjjir ATTO-STOSTA'CH. ItlriTftV’wlOi
dtgesnon, heartburn, belching, food-repeat'
In*, bloat and gaa.'if not checked, .will «*«»-
tuilly, affect every vllal-Organ <ijt the body.
Severe, blinding, splitting headaches are,
therefore, of...freqoent occwrrence as a resalt
of this upset condition.
Take EATON 1C. It quickly banishes */cM-
stotuach with its sour bloat,'pain and gaa.
It aids digestion—helps the stoVnach get
full strength from every mouthful of foe*,
you eat Millions of people are mlserabTa,
weak, sick and ailing because _of ACID*
STOMACH Poisons, created by partly dl*
geste 1 food charged with acid, are absorbed
Into the blobd and distributed throujjjoat
tha-*ntlre eyatem. Tnls often causes rt»ea-
matlsm. biliousness, tftrrhorfls of the liver,
•heart- trouble, btcere tnd • cancer of
the jtomartnIt- Fobs Its ^victims of ^helr
health, undermines .the' strength of the
most vigorous. •. •>*
If you want to get back your physical
and mental strength—be full of vim aa4
vigor—enjoy life an*T be happy, you moat
get rid of your acid-stomach*
In EATONIC you will find the very help
you need and it's guaranteed. So get a big
10c boa from, your druggist' today. If it
falls to please vou, return It and he will
refund your money’
Most Austrians Suffer From-Rav-
ages of the Many Wartime
Maladies.
therjChHdren I saw by feeling their
•v«ft»*shless arms. When I touched -one
child the father said: ‘Don’t touch
him., lie ha,s this had new disehse, and
j it hurts him so much.’ I realized ; nt
i had hurt film, bub-the child was ♦ »o
listless to shrink from the bain.
‘‘The doctors could do practically
k g jMM! ik‘ - '•'U —■ ^
nothing for the out-patients who couid
cot h«* taken to the hospitals. The
mothers .Were in despair. The doctors
said the greatest wapt of all was for
cod liver oil. Funds raised in England
had sthit a supply,.hut It •only lasted
’ two dtiysT Practically every child in-
Scrawny/ Limp, Listless From Malnu
trition and Seldom Smile or Play
—American Red Cross Is
” during the past two years is graph u,iH* (letnppjilrutetLJ.n figured comped
by the navy department's office of naval' infellig^nce. The -United States,
»' ’ closely pressed by France tm 101T fyr
—■**.-. _ its place As tjiird naval power iti the
| • — L w °cldr—is now se<*»ndj otriy to Great
JL r* cEJa. - Britain "atirMs pushing to completion
d\1f md A building program that will make the
.II ^ j x\ _ American navy *u formidable eon-
‘ YXJlw tender for first naval honors.
A little more than two'years ago,
lilt Mthe figures show, Germany, -then sec-
fl!»! ond naval |tower, buasted'-murc than
x. ^100 more ships of all classes than tlie
stiftes, with a total tonnage
exceeding tha,t of- the American navy
hy nearly 200.0(10 tons. Great Britain’s fleet at that time numbered a total of
GNO ships, aggregating 2,375,504 tm^f, as compared with Germany’s 2G2 siiips
and 1.058,240 tons and the United State’s J53ships and 8GO.017 tons. *
riie. completion of all vessels now buifUing‘*nnd projected will ad(I~'2'liT
ships totaling 500,000"tous to the Br 11islrrmv>vus compared with .‘MG ships and
1,110,389 tons for the United States, 24 ships and 107,200 tons for Japan, and
13 ships and 1)0,000 tons for Gernllmy, according to the most authentic figures
available at the navy department. • ' t
"I he completion, of the.present UuiUtlng programs, a'matter of about three
years, w 111 find 4he chief naval powers of 'ThvwnrHf U'Ttr'TTre'TnTTowing "reln-
tive strengths: Great Britain, 955 ships aggregating 2,772,. r »42 tons; United
States, 008 ships totaling 2,117,022 tons; Japan, 170 ships, 785.230 tons;~Frunce,
25.3 ships, 719,237 tons, and Germany, 043 ships measuring 923,437 tons.
Helping.
London—Dr. Ethel Williams, a New
castle doctor of 30 years’ experience,
recently lias returned to; England from
Vienna. She. attended the Woman’s
InternaTlohal conference at Zurich,
where she beard so much about the
conditions-of disease in'Austria that
she decided to £ee for' herself what
those conditions really were. She
spent a . week In Vienna, visiting the
hospitals and the school kitchens,
studying medical statistics, Interview
ing representative people, and seeing
ns much as she could of the ity.
Speaking to a Manchester Guardian
representative, she' said :
“What impressed me most was the
appalling condition of every old per
son I saw. and of 95 per (cent of the
children. The old people 3 Mere like
(Tor y6ur acid-stomao#
Philip It. Kennedy, newly appointed
chief of the bureau of foreign and do
mestic'commerce/ says that trade res
toration in Europe.* Including that in
enemy .countries, is dependent jippn
flu* return to work of the different
peoples.
is t<. help you to keep well and strong.”
The American Bed Cross is opening
feed 40,000 or more children, but that
on I v tii ean s fooQ for. xuie section the
people.'the ebihlrerv-of school nge—and
even thcrTimfy one'meal In the day
rrmny thmgs—ttprt persons -over -sixty
cannot digest. The mortality among
the old has increased by 150 per cenW
wnlk-
“What struck me most when
lng about the streets was that there
veer? 1 mr-toddlers. Children of three
and even four years were carried bv 1
their mothers. The children did not
run about. ■ or ■ shout.* 'nr~ quarrel. It
was four days before I saw a child
U. S. Army lists Emphasize “What’s in a Name?
INDIGESTION
— Quickly rclluved by 8A L- BP KAS-MlUTOk
1 , , , , , ... Bend 25 cent* In stamp* for larc* trial box to
insurance has, compiled a statement showing that Tho Kol-Hp*ar-Mlnto Co.. Now York. Who wt»'
sons in the army, 51,950 Smiths, 49,000 Williams^ ‘ rafund money If reaulto ar# not aatlafaetory.
•s, 22,000 Anderson^, and 18,500 Walkers, Of th» r " 1 1
• Couldn’t Follow It ■***>
“Can t you uvnld quarreling?”
manded Judge White the other day
I of a man who appeared for ( the third
time in Ills court for fighting.
“Yea, sir. I could.” answered the cul
prit. “I have a recipe that was writ
ten by Bill Shakespeare or Kipling or
someone, hut I don't know hut what
Td ra t TUT PeF TnTo” TriTuRTe once I9
a while, rallier than follow* It.”
“What's the recipe?" demanded
White. Airhmsly. and the tnan an-
TO FIGHT FIRES
playing
Most Children Emaciated
At least 95 per cent of the practical
first name John ami
2,002 answering ■
to William. Of the Smiths, 3,412 were nv J__rj V .
Johns and 2.625 Williams, *wlth 1,200 * U> 1
of them using the baffling title of "E. pi -0~
Siuith.”
Twenty-three men in the service
carry the famous namP"‘hT"T7oTiVrt Jl. ^
Lee,” who have no middle name, using
merely the initial *211' Of “Geur«« r-»>^
Washingtons” there are 123, and tlmre J
are six with the iqodest name of "(Jen-
oral Washington,’’ 47 "John Quincy
Adams” and five “Abraham Lincolns.” Every
namesakes in the bureau files. General Grant
Pickett, General Jaekson, Napoleon Bonaparte,
a.re all there, although their rank in the world
Localities some (hues run to similarity in
Iticans in the army minted Rodriguez. There
Domingo, Francisco, J«^e, Juan. Itamon. r l'uma
The most unusual names Include these;
Isaac Didnot Butcher, the mystery of the .bureau.
Asad_ Experience Wilson. Van Hook, N. D.
Mill G'osTi, 220 Halsted'street, Chicago, 111.
Green Horn, Statesboro, Gu.
Velvet Couch, Brinkfej - . Ark.
Will Swindle. Centre^Xax.
Paris Green, iluntlngton, W. Va. *7^
~ Slaughter Bugg, Oscar Turbin, I.a.
Chocolate Candy Chirk, Prescott, Ark.
Harry Crles-fyr-rlh, White Eagle, Okln.
Owen Money, SUddle shhro. Ky.
Willie DarlingT J W«sUipgton, D. C.
Toy Brush, Kenton A> Tenn.‘
ly well children were painfully emaci
ated. with discolored circles arorind
their sunken eyes and the tendons of
their necks showing like fhose-v»f- eld
people. Even middle-class children
have these scrawny necks, and when
they run their cheeks flap like those
of old people. But they seldom run.
Shortage Makes Forest Fire
Situation in the North- •
. west Desperate. ...
One large fire In the Pack river dis
trict, northern Idaho, hurst entirely
beyond control and spread over forty-
five square miles of., territory without
showing the least signs of dying down.
1 Men to fight It were few and far be
tween.
In Spokane as well as -the—coast
cities tin* forest service is waging re
cruiting campaigns slmiWr—'to-^ThnSe
carried on during the war. It is a
war—against (lames almost as destruc-
"The scene In the out-patients’ de
partment nt the biggest state Chil
dren’s hospital Hvns pitiful—110 souncT
or attempt to play. The children sat
quietly on* their mothers’ knees or
Husky Man Who Is Willing to Work
Looks <ood as M.tlion Dollars to
Officials of United States
Forestry Service.
he noth-
Sny nothing ; do* nothin
broke out in Europe.
LtHnlterjm-ks, -those btff-shnutileivd
veterans of the forest 'life, make the
tii lest tire fighters.. This summer the.\
have had little chance to engage in
their regular work of cutting timber,
and hsive bent all their efforts to sav
ing the forests that house the nation
The forest service inafnnTins a cease
less lookoiiL As soon as smoke is ffis-
cerned llnL trews is Hashed Lo_heud-
ipiarter*-; a-ervtv is hastily recruited
and equipped, and sent Into the bunt-,
ing area with full supplies of food,
iools mid bedding.
But they have little chance to use
the Jbcdding.^ Fire fighting Is an a 11-
Important to all Women
names, (here were W
were hut seven first iTuutes—
s and Autuuio.
seen bad been shown to me as a ci,rl- ,rujr w
osity. It-seems to come from lack of A good-, fmskj man. with two stiong
fresh food, aiu\ there have been 250 arnis and a Willingness to work, iook-x
cases In Vienna, ami I heard of an- !1S good as a million dollars t«* the of-
other epidemic in a German town. ficliils \>f the l njted States forestry
’“The holies soften and heroine dis- service, and the big lumber concerns,
torted, the pelvis hones fold inward, who are losing vast vafucs in timber.
In early stages Jt Is curahje. but a had There is a famine In men. flint ts
case never will walk again, and a the great reason fires, started by car»*-
rnther bad ease ahvays wilLhuve diHi- less campers or lightning storms, have
culty'Tn walking. “ beer) aide to spread over many miles
“The cases were those of^older chll- of Apigrica’s. richest lumber lands and
dren nn<l adults. 3’hey told me th'at cause <lamage that will not he replaced
the hospitals were receiving about 15 for a generation.
Readers of this Paper
Thousands upon thouiwnda of womea
have kidney or bladder trouble and never
•uapect it.
Women's complaints often-prove to bo
nothing else but kidney trouble, or tto
result of kidney or bladder disease.
If the kidneys are not in a healthy eo»-
dition, they may cause the other organ*
to become diseased.
You may suffer pain in the back, head
ache and loss of ambition.
Poor health makes you nervous, irrita
ble and may be despondent; it makes anj
one so.
But hundreds of women claim that Dr.
Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, by restoring
health to the kidneys, proved to b« just
the remedy needed to overcome eocfc
How Fire Is Beaten.
The onljr successful method of stop
ping a lire is -to get In front of it,
clear n Mbfe trull, and widen ft by
backfiring.
A slight change of wind will make
the back fire cross the trail and cn-
PERSHING QUALIFIES AS A MARKSMAN
No Civilian Successor to
conditions.
A MEMORIAL to congress from Harold W. Rhss, former rnannglng editor of
the Stars and Stripes, has been referred to the committee on military
affairs. It says, among ottm r ~things; ,rr- .
“In behalf of the six soldiers who.
jumter up the editorial council of the
Stars and Stripes, and Expressing the
unanimous und often-voiced sentiment
of ull men who, from first to lust,
wrote the text and drew the, pictures
of that weekly journal pf the American
expeditionary forces, I respectfully
Many send for s sample bottle to ng
what- Swamp-Root, the great kidney,
liver” and bladder medicine, will do fee
i them. By enclosing ten cents to Dr.
Kilmer A Co., Binghamton, N. Y., yen
may receive sample size bottle by Pared
{-Post. * You can purchase medium an£
large size bottles at all drug stores.—Adv.
danger the workers L -ttves.
Blazing trees frequently. fufT with
the wind, across the trail, ami undo
the work of a day. _
One result of the ( epidemic of fires
In the present summer will he n vig
orous effort, on Jhe paTt, of lumber
companies and forestry men alike.'ter
secure from congress a greater ap
propriation for the forest-service than
ever before. America’s forests are no
longer so .numerous and well-grown
that the trees can he -sacrificed with
out notional suffering.
USTAdS *1
VLLC0f1ET\
. Not Hard to Satisfy.
There, were two plates of cake oa
the table and the hostess asked Arthur
whleh-he preferred, chocolate or cocoa-
nut. “Oh, I’in not pertlckler like some,
folks Is,” said the little chap; “an* ao
I’ll Just have a piece of each ktniJ.'* ^
How’* Thl* ?
We offer 1100.00 tor any case of catarefe
that cannot be cured bv HALI/8
CATARRH MEDICINE.
HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE Is tak*
en internally and acts through the Blood
on the Mucous Surfaces of the System.
Sold-by 4fug*1sts for over forty years.
Price 76c. '’Testimonials free.
F. J.-Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio. -
-Bells for City Dogs.
Asheville. N. C.—As unreasonable as
it sounds the .city authorities have an
nouneed that every' canine re*44e«4-
of this city must wear a hell dtiring
the next year, and to prove tlielr ear
nestness They have purchased a large
supply of the necessary ornaments for
Still Looking After Stock.
Church—When he was a boy he
IIvet! on a farm and he used to feed
the stock.
Gqtham—I understand.
“Now he’s irtWtmslness hi Wall
street.”
"Ail’d doesn't have to feed the ^tock
any more?”
“No; only water It.” <
Mans. France, distribution among the owners of dogs
General Pershing, on a visit to me greai rifle range al l
American expeditionary forces,
demonstrated to the onlookers how he handled a ritle in his frontier duys,
er Now of Extinction of American Bison
eral scouts appeared. Tl\ey have
learned various tricks of deception
during the years of evading ’the fed
eral*, and even drive a herd of burros
with them so they may transform
themselves* Into’ wood venders on oc
casion.
P ROVISION Is made in the current agricultural appropriation Set-for tho
secretary o£ agriculture to give buffalo to municipalities and public Insti
tutions from any surplus which may exist in the herds, now under the control
of tlie department of agriculture. This
provision is made Uecuuse of the sur-
plus of bulls In some of the department ^
of agriculture’s buffalo herds,' partieu-
larly'the one In the Wichitu National ’
.Forest and Game Preserve, in Okla- 0 j
homa, and because the department Is - T i^%PKw
nearing the real’zution of tlie first J (J
sttige in the preservation of the spe- IjjlV m
ties—the acquisition ot_at least-1,000 K U |
head of buffalo by the government. JT' r /j . j|
el bands do the same thin'g when a
superior .federal column approaches.
Often Villa s band will number 2.000
men under hisT chiefs, Angeles, LApez.
fl>mz ami Garciar—They make a col
umn whlcl} colls a/rhss the plains’like
a ghmt snake’'and leaves a great dust
cloud in its wake.
But let General (Jastro’B government
troops approach with artillery, ma
chine guns and cavalry mounted on
former American army, horses and the
column will break upHuto little hands
Even the j of 100 under petty chiefs, will disap-
has been pear In some mountain canyons and
n always go into hiding until the federal* pass,
ig which Vince ^e danger of nttkck Is over the
•cape and column reassembles, occupies some
ley travel j tow n In its* path and ngmui.iL"appears
Villa and His Men Foil
Pursuit. -
T* Purify and Enrich the Blood
Tako GROVE'S TASTELES8 Chill TONIC
which la almply IRON 2nd QUININE #u»-
nanrted In Syrup. 80 Pleasant Even Chlldroa
Like It. Tou can toon feel ita Strengthening;
Irrlgoratlng Effect. Price 50c.
ANTHRACITE PRODUCTION UP
Shipments Show Hundred^ of TtrOU
;ands of Tons Over Latest Nor^
• mal Production. „„
* Right Hen, Wrong Tack.
Lucile whs visiting auntie In the
country. It was the Joy of the four-
year-old to hunt for eggs in the barn.
One day she brought in a very small
one. presumably laid by a bantam.
^ “Auntie,'* said the little mal(L,
nhowlng It. “the hen that laid this egg
didn't have the right recipe."—Terre
Haute Tribune.
Philadelphia.—Shipments of anthra
cite for July as reported to the nnihra-
' cite bureau of Information' aggregated
, G.052.334^ tons, an Increase over Juue
are approximately 7,000
buffalo in North America. Canada htfy^*^ r-
sotnething over 3,f4K) and the total number in the United SUtes It more than
Compared with July. 1916, the luteitf 4 ’D*>0. This is about seven time* thd number in the United State* In 1S$9,
normal year In anthracit^ pnaiuction, the first buffalo census was taVn. Individuals In the United States own
the shipments last month showed au In ! approximately 2,000 of the total number In thjs coyntgr.
crease of 619,456 ton*.”' 1 There are eight government iichl*. six of which are under the control of
The shipiueut* lor the first our ( the depurtmeut of agriculture. ’The Ijirgeat herd In this country Ivdn charga
mom hx j*f the ami year. Anqcinuiog.; ut the interior depart bin. t and is located *n the Yet town one- National park,
April k amounted tr» 22.608.ft55 tons. | there tin re are ah^ut 50 bison*. The SmfcJwmian iustltu . n gow has a herd
compared with 21.146.536 tons for th >f 18 at the NatloaaLZr» logical b: rk, Wash Aetop. D. C
eorreupondink peri<»d In 1916, an la I Thg. hrrt herd of huffaW nxqjkr the department of agriculture wag estab
ertmaa of nearly LaUOJXlO tor (shed in 19U6 00 the Wiehtta pregarve. Ine 13 gnlmaig bare Dow lacreuggd
TPAOE MARK MiG J S PA^ Off