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BARNWELL SENTINEL, BARNWELL, 8. 0 AMERICAN ORNAMENTS FOR AMERICA’S CHRISTMAS in Q 1 A 1 JjWX-.'Jfl.jJjjlfD 1 -> J uypir XTX '—‘ <**■.‘.y.•,J By REV. HOWARD W. POPE Moody Bible Institute, ■ j Chicago * of PE-RU-N, to catarrh or in any part letter is an .*y» .5 I Then took PE-RU-NA and truthfully say I am well. Whe began to use PE-RU-NA, Pweig one hundred pounds. My wei now is one hundred and fifty, cannot praise PE-RU-NA < WPlioto Western Newspaper Union] bowel Avoid Influenza «• You can't afford to trtfla with a cold. It may lead to laflucou or other serious trouble. Start fightia* U at once with Applied external]? to the throat and cheat, k quickly penetrates to the seat of the In flammation. reliering conge*, tlon and aorenes*. and aiding to premit pneumonia. It is THE CRA DOOM NASTY CALOMEL Folks Abandoning Old Drug “Dodson’s Liver Tone/* Here in South. - for Ugh ! Calomel makes you sick. It’s horrible!, Take a dose of the danger ous drug tonight and tomorrow you lose a day. 1 Calomel is mercury! When it comes Into “contact with sour bile, it crashes nto it, breaking it up. Tinm is when you feel that awfu.1 nausea imd cramp ing. If you are sluggish, if liver is torpkl and boweis constipated or you have headacjie, dizziness, coated tongue, if b r cath is bad or stomach sour, just' try a spoonful of harmless Dodson’s Liver Tone tonight. Here’s my guarantee—Go to any •drug stpre and get a bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone for a few cents. Take a spoonful and if it doesn’t straighten you right up and make you feel fine and ■vigorous, go back to the store and get your money. Dodson’s Liver Tone, is destroying the sale of calomel because It can not salivate or moke you sick.— Adv. TEXT.—Lord, teach US to pray.—-Luke 11:1. The best sermon is the one that goes over your fread and hits the other fel low. Grayer may be defined as an instinct which God has implanted in the hu- i man heart by means of which he retains com- J munieation with | men and supplies j their needs and at the same time carries out his j great and gra cious purposes. Though sin has biased man’s rea son, debased his affections and perverted his will, it has not stroyed the —.not rralse tMt Remedy too Highly * THE WAY OK UDY FEELS AFTER tUFFOUNQ TWO YEARS Judging from her letter, the mia- and wTQtchedness endured by . Charlie Taylor, R. F. D. No. 1, . 144, Dillon, S. C., must have been terrible. ~ No one, after read- her letter, can continue to healing power troubles due stinct for prayer. ^^ Never has a na tion existed so low and degraded that It did not worship the Supreme Being In some form. ~ t Instinct Must Be Trained. Prayer is an instinct, but it requires proper training or it may lead to dis astrous consequences—as it leads the Hindu woman to throw her child into the Ganges to appease the wrath of the gods. Tin* first lesson in prayer which our Savior gave to his disciples is pre served in Mathew 7.7. /‘Ask, and ye shall receive; seek and ye shall find; knock and it shall lie opened unto you.” Here the Lord teaches us tnat it is our privilege to ask things of God. lie does not promise us that we “ 'T' • will receive what we 1 a sic-for, but he Physicians and Druggists are advis- encourages us to ask and t<* make that ing their friends to keep their systems tho h . lMt of oljr lives Gur attitU(le purified and their organs in perfect ghf)U , (j bp that nf f ! hlhl who miKht working order as a protection .against , „ ’ , the-return of- inGuenza. They know * a * v - *-•*> nnt «»ways obtain what.I that a clogged up system and a lazy m . v father f*»r, but I always got liver favor colds, influenza and.serious something, and he gives me good complications. , .J things.’’ So it is with the soul who To cut short a cold overnight and to turns to Gn*l in extremity or grati- pre\ent scriouc complications take one tilde; it is sure to receive some hene- Calotab at bedtime with a swallow of- flt/ FN ; rh;ips it w ,„ be the benefit of water—that s all. No salts, nc nausea, . . ... „ . . no. griping, no sickening after e/feci i. "cqmilntm.ee with God. or perhaps we Next morning vour <p>ld lias vanished, U1 ' s *‘ e onr own hearts more truly in your liyer is active? your s^atwn is puri- the light of his countenance, and thus fied and refreshed and you are feeling realize our own sinfulness and self- fine with a hearty appetite for break* ishness. fast. Eat what you please-^no danger. An interesting photograph showing American girls In an American factory making American Christmas tree orna te- i ments from American material colored ( with American dyes. Experiments for the past three years have shown that the in- , United States can make these trinkets as successfully as Germany. t * ; "7 ~ v" GET READY FOR "FLU" Keep Your Liver Active, Your System Purified and Free From Colds by Taking Calotabs, the Nausealess Calomel Tablets, that are De lightful, Safe and.. , Sure. 33,000,000 Aliens by U. S. their homeland and those who have died since their urrlval. it will he seen that there are fewer than l.OOfbOOO for mer subjects of the kaiser in this coun try who have not been here more than ■JO years. Of more titan S.OOO.OtX) peo ple, of German birth and Immediate ancestry among us, fewer than 1,000,- 0M) fail to have the background of and suffering man or woman anywhere. Here it is; “I suffered two years with catarrh of the head, stomach and bowels. Tried two of highly, for it was a Godsend to me. I got relief from the first half bbttle and twelve bottles cured me. I advise all sufferers to taka PE-RU-NA.” As an emergency remedy in the home, there Is nothing quite the equal of this reliable, time-tried medicine, PE-RU-NA. Thousand* sole dependence on it 1 colds, stomach and ’ \ constipation, rheu matism, pains in the back, side and loins ana to prevent the grip and Spanish Flu. To keep tne blood pure and maintain bodily strength and robustness take PE-RU-NA. You can Wy PB-RU-NA any where in eijtheir tablet or liquid form. Ireland and Britain Contributed 8,400,000; Germany 6,000,000. NOTHING LIKE IT IN HISTORY Interesting Facts_J3rought Out ih an Analysis of Immigration and the Foreign-Born Element in Popu lation of Country. Calotabs . are sold only in original scaled packages, price thirty-five cents. Every druggist is authorized to refund your money if you are not perfectly delighted with Calotabs.—(Adv.) . A woman bus’ no right to grow old vantlt she has been married at least «6nce. -DANDERINE” PUTS BEAUTY IN HAIR Girls! A mass of long, thick, gleamy tresses Let “Danderine” save Vour hair and double its beauty. You- can have lots of long, thicki strong, lustrous hair. Don’t let dt stay fifeless; thin, straggly i»r fading. Bring back its color, vigor *nd vitality. Get 'a 35-cent bottle of delightful "Danderine’ at any drug or toilet coun ter to freshen your scalp; check dan druff and falling hair. Your hair needs this stimulating tonic; then its life, color, brightness atfd abundance will return—Hurry!—Adv. • Many an uncivil young man manages to pass a civil service examination. BOSCHEE’S SYRUP. ' A cold is probably the most com •tnon of all disorders and when, neglecl- , 3 «d Is apt to be mos| dangerous. Sta tistics- show that more than thre e times as many people died from in fluenza last year, as. were killed in* the greatest war the world has ever known. For the last fifty-three years Boschee’s Syrup has been used for coughs, bronchitis, colds, throat Ir ritation and especially lung troubles. It glvea the patient a good night’s _ rest, free from coughing, with easy __ expectoration In the morning. Made i KumflTty Becoming. In America and used in the homes of HumUTty among Christians Us a prac* thousands of families all over the.! *^*1 virtue, not a self-suppressing Civilized world. Sold everywhere.—Adv ^ 18 90 making our- serves small as seehjg how small we Not' a Substitute for Work. Our Savior further tenches us that prayer is never to be regarded as a substitute for work, but rather as a supplement to our normal activities. If a child ^isks his mother to pick up his playthings a wise parent will re fuse. What the child can do, he must do; but what the child needs to have done and cannot accomplish himself, that the mother fcill gladly do. In John 15:7 our Savior gives ns a lesson in prevailing prayer, by which I mean prayer which prevails with God and secured the very thing for which It risks. There Christ says: “If ye abide in me, and m.v words abide in you, ye shall ask what ye will and It shall he done unto you.” This prom ises that if we fulfill certain condi tions God will.give us our desire. Appeal Sets Even Law Aside. The place of prayer may be illus trated by an appeal which Senator George Ho'ar-of ^InjAachusetts carried to -Tlktoibm* Roosevelt when the latter was president of the United States. An Armenian who lived in the sen ator’s .home city had earned enough moqey to .send,, to his native country for h4s wife and two .children. When arrived at New York it was dis covered that the children had an in curable disease of the eyes which, un der the laws of the United States, made them ineligible to land in this country. The Armenian engaged a law yer, who went from one immigration olficer to another seeking permission for the afflicted children to hind. Meeting failure on every hund, the lawyer enlisted Senator Hoar’s influ ence. The senator came to New York, but. found the immigfatUm officials im movable. He then wired the facts in the case to President Roosevelt, and concluded 4 his telegram by saying: “If this Is the law. then the law ought to be changed, and you are the man to Start the revolution.” Twenty minutes later th& officials M New York were directed .to allow the children to land. What the parents, the lawyer and Senator Hoar could tiot do, President Roosevelt could and did do. Even so, vrtwt we cannot do for ourselves and what our friends cannot do for us, Jesus Christ cun and will do. He is the one - to whom we are bidden to come at all times fbr all things that pertain to oar own. or bur friends’ wel fare. The Savior who sits upon the throne of the universe, and who has the ear of the Father, is able to do all things for us. Washington.—“High hope for the pro posed Americanization program is held out I y a study of tin* remarkable way the United States lias absorbed the amazingly large foreign element of its population.” says a bulletin from the National Geographic society. In describing the volume of this In flux, not generally realized, which was halted by the Eurppean war. the bul-. let In quotes from a cofnHiunicution to the society as follows; “Who can estimate our debt to immi gration? Thirty-three million people, have made ;lie long voyage from alien shores to our own’ since it was pro claimed that all men are born free mid equal, and liberty^ eternal fire w as kindled first on American soil! “H'story records no similar move ment of p*-inflation--which in rapidity or TTdlime 'an equal tills. Compared to It. ihe h >rdes that Invaded Europe from Asiu, great and enormous as they were, were insignificant. “Of the 33.00w.000 who have come more than 14,000.000 still live among us. and their children and. children’s children are now in good truth bone of our I tone and blood of our blood. “Not long ago America crossed the hundred million line iii the number of its citizens, and it note tlon. with a little less than 4.000,000, and Scandinavia, with something less than 2,000.000, have together with Germany, contributed more than of the total Immigration to our shores since the beginning of the Revolutionary war. “When we take the German Immi gration to tin* United States between 177(1 and isyo and compare It w ith that froth other countries, a somewhat startling result, and one usually unsus pected, Is disclosed. The total arrivals •of aliens in those 114 years aggregated r\ rrtffSfi.om. of Whom more than O.OtWI,- ooo wert* Brltislunnd Irish and 5,125,- 000 were Germans, which shows that 010* alien out of every three arriving in America during more than a cen tury of our existence was a German. Trends Different Since 1890. “Since IStH) the trend has been very different. With more than 17,000.000 immigrant arrivals since thht date, only 1,023.000 have been Germans. If birth or long residence In America be hind them. ‘ It is interesting' 1 to note the other foreign elements that have entered into the makeup of American popula tion since 1770. More Irish people have crossed the sens to become port of us titan have remained behind. “Austria-Hungary stands next on the of contributors ’to 1 the immigrant stream that has (lowed from Europe to America. “Italy has sent us enough of hqr jlenple to duplicate the population of Montana. )Vyomlng. Idaho, Oregon. Nevada, Utah, Colorado. Arizona and New Mexico, while England's and Scot land's contribution* 3.880.000 in all, to gether with 1 Ireland's 4,500,000. gives a total of 8,380.000, or plenty to popu late all of the states lying west of Texas and the Dakotas. . “The Russians w ho have come to our shores number 3,410,000. They HORSE OWNERS Keep a bottle of Yager's Liniment in your stable for spavin, curb, splint or any enlargement, tor shoulder •lip or sweeny, wounds, galls, scratches, collar or shoe bods, sprains and any lameness. It sbsorbs swell- . .. Ings and enlargements* and dispels pain and stiffness quickly. YAGER'S LINIMENT At all dealers. Pries 35 cents. The large 35 cent bottle of Yager's Lini ment contains twice as much asTtie »«■■■-> 50 cent bottle of liniment. GILBERT BROS. A CO„ Baltimore. M4 from this number a proper deduction J could replace one-half of the populji- is made for those who returned to f tlon of New England.” UNIQUE CURES ARE USED * —— : Tobacco Quid Montenegrins’ Remedy for Wound. the composition of that popula 11,000,000 Colored People. “To begin with, there are 11.000,000 colored people,- including ■ negroes, In dians, Chinese, ete. Then there, are 14.5lKl.000- people of foreign bir?h among us. In addition to lliese, there are 14.000,000 children-of foreign-born Charms for Ills Lose Ground When Red Cross Aids Suffer.ng . Mountaineers. Niegosh, Montenegro. — American physicians doing relief work in Monte negro tell of some curious methods of treatment employed by the Inhabitants of tills little mountain country. 'When a Montenegrin is wounded the first thought of the natives* Is to appiv is interesting to chewing tobacco, horsehalr^or a freslj rabbit skin with tin* hair facing inside.-* Common ink is considered a sovereign remedy for burns. To stop bleeding sores or wounds cobwebs are u<e*l. When a person is bitten by a dog, tin* favorite remedy Is to ^jull off the ani mal's ear and rub the wound with It. The pqtrou saint of Montenegro Is Saint Yascilla. whose .shrine is sitiiat- Red Gross hospital at Niegosh In an iron soup pot. h required four days to* get her 'over the many mountain ranges. In another Instance a farmer carried his typhus-afflicted wife on his back h distance of ndles and at the end of the Journey fell exhausted on the steps of the Red Cross hospital. He was re warded for his labors, however, four weeks later by the complete recovery of his wife. CAB BREAKS HEART OF ! KING EDWARD S HORSE fathers anil mothers a,nd 0.500,000 chil- ed on tlie summit of a mountain l»e- dren of foreign-born fathers and un tive vice versa. When all of these have been deducted from, the 100.ooo.ooo only 54.<KHl,0OO remain of full' white native ancestry. “Yet the -33.000,000 American people who are of foreign stock—that is, for eign born or tin* children of a foreign- horn parent—include some of the most illustrious citizens of our republic. “An examination of the statistics of A{nerican immigration siiows that since the foundation of our govern ment the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 1ms contributed 8.4(K»,(XKt of her people and Germany -more than 0,000.000. Ireland, with more” than 4,0OP.tXHr; Great'Britain. tweiffi Bodgoritza and Nikisic. Every week thousands of devout Montene grins come to this mountain shrine seeking cure for their ills. But since the arrival of the Ameri can physicians the pilgrimages to tin* ancient shrine have not hetjn so numer ous. 'For the natives have found that their ills can lie cured much nearer home and with greater certainty at any of the numerous Red Cross dispen saries and clinics. The inhabitants come from the remotest mountain re gions. They are carried Jn all sorts of conveyances, wheelbarrows, donkey carts, buffalo wagons or on horseback. In one case an old woman, suffering with scarlet fever, was brought to tin* Paris.—Minoru, pet racer of the hit** King Edward, the only horse that ever won a Derby for the royal house of Windsor, is dead in Paris. He died of a broken hoaxt. It was the King's dying reqile&t that Minoru never Should he sold. But Lord Beret*- ford’s staide* manager disregard ed this wish and sold the mag nificent steed for a song. Mino ru stood Ids new Job one day— then lie lay down and died. * Bicycles and BICYCLE TIRES Writ* QUEEN CITY CYCLE CO. CHARLOTTE, H. C Victims of Smash Rode to Safety. Coldwater, Mich.—Except for bruis es neither John Ambrose nor ids wife, was hurt after a ride on the cow catcher of. a passenger train, during which time the woman’s heipf was only a few Inches from the car wheels. The train hit their automobile, hut the en gineer did not know, he had struck anything until the train stopped_at a stfttion. one block distant. — r '-'— * TRAPPERS Since 1876 thousand! of trapp<*rs have shipped ua annually their en ure catch of RAW FURS They knew they/would receive apot cash and absolutely fair and aquara treatment. Send 'ua your next consignment of Skunk, Fox, Bear, Muskrat, Oposaum, Beaver, Raccoon, Lynx^ etc. Hltrhent Market PriceaJ - No commis sion charged. Send for price list today. OTTO WAGNER 134. 136. 138. 140 West 26tl» S treat . NEW YORK CITY. N. Y. EXPORTS SHOW INCREASE Nothing will take the conceit ont of are. But smaTTncss Empties contrast, bachelor like marryibg a widow. tt everything In the universe were ^ small, c* thttfg * "u!d b*- MMil m any real sense. Fur we should have no •euse vt smalloess or bigness. If we find ear tasks mean, ft is because we have wfthin ns the promise of. Qinit* that shall be mighty. If we feel within os the sense of sin. ft ts because there to gnawing there the fooqoertDf aenae of the PteeewL* of Qal-W. H. Blaze Department of Commerce Give's Out Statistics. Meat, Breadstuffs and Dairy Products Sent Abroad in Large Amounts. Washington.—Breadstuff* exported from the United States during October were valued at $(’*7,704,078. a decrease of about $4,000,000 as compared with October. 1018. ‘ For the last ten months brotulstuffs exports were 8703.8H.O2U. as against $041,855,409 for the same period in 1^1*- t - I most valuable meat export, with 50, The monthly rejeirt of the depart- ) j3* pounds, worth $18.293501. meut of commerce also show ed < )ctte 1 t**r 'cotton exports totaled 352.231 hales. valu«*d at $00,732,807 ns against tn.tr* bales, worth $06.027.J(M. for Or- t<4«er. 1918. In the last ten month* cotton exports aggregated ,4,7VviKt j O lalt* at fTT5.413.7Cl2, compared with | 3,173,850 bales at $513,405,022 fbr the corresponding period of 11)18. Meat and dairy products expoiffed In October amounted to ■$00,494,243, against $014,040,018 a year ago. While for the first ton months of this year they totaled $1,035,776,252,' a heavy In crease over the totnl of $782,353,845 during the same period last year. Cottonseed oil exported during the month amounted to 11,747,514 pounds at $2,653,479, and mineral oils reached a totnl of 271,767,087 gallons, worth $34.705 895. . Wheat was the heaviest grain ex port for the moHtii, totaling 13,086.675 bushels, at $33,010,872. and baceo the asked sweetly. Ed got the. bottle. “Oh, what-pretty olives,” .she ex claimed, moving toward - the rear of the store. Ed ^looked, 1 as* he was a man, and hadn't noticed such things, “Oh-0-00,” she blushed a bit. “may I step behind your counter a moment? You see I—m.v—Just a moment.” Ed turned and went to the-front of the store. Suddenly she up and thanked him and started to the door. He remembered and looked. The bot tle was still on the counter. “Here, lady,” he explained, “here’s, your bottle of milk.” But the lady kept on going. Then he looked at the cash drawer. It was open aud $75 was missing. ; . ABSor BINE Next Time Ed Will Look kmi^a* C.l>. .\U*.—A fair floated Into the rn»*er Catlln <hi KuHid avenue. A bottle of all*, piea Plague Killa Mexicans. El Paso. Tex.—Hundreds of Mexican federal soldiers have died of hern- orrhngic malaria in the Tampico oil district recently.‘"according to Excel- * sior Mexico City. The Mexican iaiuoel . weerctary of war nas ordered the dis tort* of Ed patch of two additional military sani tation brigades to Tampion t* try to mam4 the STOPS LAMENESS from a Bone Spavin, Ring Bom, Splint, Curb, Side Bone, or similar troubles and gets horse going sound. It acts mildly but auickly and good re sults are lasting. Does not bliater or remove tne hair and horse can be worked. Pqge 17 in pamphlet with each bottle tells how. $2. SO a bottle delivered. Horae Book 9 R free. ABSOR BINE, JR., the antiseptic linimMt for mankind, reduces Painful Swellings, En larged Glands, Wens, Bruites, Varicose Veins j heals Sores. Allays Pain. Will tell yoe more if you write. $1.2S a bottle at dcaleie w SclirarcS. Liberal trial boot! hr 10c WX W. F. Y0UN6. P. 0. F.. ttOTsaats ILfarisalsM, I Bookkeeping and hhurt hand Tho rely Twa ‘Winter term Jan. S. Add. Oreenaboro Com mercial Sell.. Qreeoaboro. N. C. for eatnJn*. FRECKLES »■ .. ■ p m...L —'■■■ r - - t min i.. ■—■■■nT —■—— Old Folks’ Coughs * " ‘ T Ms rzz •hr w:a hr br P.ao . Tbs fifty PI SO S