The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, March 16, 1922, Image 6
±
the PEOPLE. BARNWELL, a C.
■
v-1
E
CORNS
Lift Off with Fingers
hurt a bit! Drop a little
' Fyeraone” on an aching com, inatantly
t*a» corn atopa hurting, then ahortly
lift it right off with fingcra. Truly!
Yoor <lruggmt aella a tiny liottle ot
for a few centa, sufficient to
t fTpr y hard com, soft com, or
between the toes, and the calluses,
Withowt norm can or irritation.
Is That Cold and
Congh Hanging On?
Y OU will be convinced that Dr.
King's New Discovery does just
what it is meant to do—soothes cough-
raw throats, congestion-tormented
cheats, loosens the phlegm pack and
tweaks the obstinate cold and grippe
attack, relieves the congestion in the
head. No harmful drugs, therefore
good for children as well as grownups.
Right awav you will notice the
change for the better. Has a con
vincing, healing taste that you will
appreciate. Duy a bottle at any drug-
^ i on the army home to-night, 60c.
1 Former Postmaster General Will Hays leaving his last cabinet meeting to become motion picture arbiter;
he's talking to Vice President C’oolldge; left to right are Secretaries Mellon. Wallace, Davis, Fall. Hoover and
Denby. 2—Mrs. P. Itadlck. Fields, Minn., with Senators Ladd (N. D.) and Norris (Neb.} on left and right; she
testified before Senate Agricultural commltte. S—Prjface Faud Pasha, heir to Khedive of Kgypt.
NEWS REVIEW dF
CURRENT EVENTS
y
Warren G. Harding Completes
His First Year as President
of United States.
Dr.
New Discovery
foi^old^an^Coudns
La? People, Lasy Bowels. Don't
neglect constipation. It undermines
the health, takes all vim out of
vom. Dr. King's Pills will invigorate
the system, stir up the liver, move the
All druggists, 25c.
FALL AND WALLACE IN CLASH
yV PROMPT! WON T GRIPE
l)r. King's Pills
16799
DIED
Id New York City alone from kid*
ney trouble last year. Don’t allow
yourself to become a victim by
neglecting pains and aches. Guard
thus trouble by taking
American Government Declines to Par
ticipate in Genoa Conference—
Lloyd George's Threatened
Resignation — Fourteenth
Canadian Parliament
Opened—Fiume
Fumea Again.
GOLD MEDAL
world's standard remedy for kidney,
fiver, bladder end uric acid troubles
Holland's National Remedy since 10V6.
Ail druggists, three si
f«r nam. Geld M.dal am mrt
• nd Slept as imitation
URIC ACID
SOLVENT
65 Cent Bottle FREE
(32 Doses,)
‘T 0 * 0 "" »t»rl th* day n.trrl^d
end tlrvd. utirr lf K!l and nrrint and mum I’-s
an arhina heatl. burnm* and b.«rlit* d,iwr
pajna In tn** bat-k worn out brf .rr rh, day
ihTi*!^ thlnh >' 0 u iiav. It. stay in
iBal condition
Oet Wvir Ii« fn-K from alifr Jnlnli
muaclra. rbrumatlt' p-lns, arhln« b«.
° r blatltipr t rmiblpM Start N<>\V
In*, arhlnff bmk. kM
ith
If yoo rufTer from blttiMpr wreiiknegB
.l”* 1 "" <>r If you arr in
-nI f ^ h “ f 11 <,0 * , ' n tlm«i al nl*ht.
L “ 'ho rrst. comfort and
vrrMiicfn thin treatment give*
f, ’ r y ' ,ur '' wn U"" on-
1>0»-1.) KKKK to convlnc-
n-v i'? !t.,*‘ lu * conuufr» kid
“T. 3 ' ** d b '»J‘>rT Iroubl-., Kh-unVtit Ism an.I
Sr “ ,|n ’r. nt " no mall-r how chronic
or^atubborn, when enu—d by pto-naive uric
w ' ,h >' OUr 'ntl-r to Th-
L. ?' William* Co.. D-pt. V-4906, P o
Block. Ea*t Hampton. Conn Pl-a— —n.i
° C ^ pt * pay P»rt coat of po.tait-
packtris Hr w- will mail to you by Par
r paid, a rppfular HS-cept
Tbf William* Treatment Cl!
POSES). tC'houT oblliratlon or experts- Only
one bottle to the same addreas or famlle
Rntabiiahcd ll<)2
TO KILL RATS
and MICE
* Always use the genuine
STEARNS’ ELECTRIC PASTE
It forma tbSke p«>»t» to rnn fn>si the burdlnK To;
I frssb air Rats. mice. Na-kroerheft,'water
n
water and .
bvsra and anaa deatroy food aad property and are
earrler* of disease. .
>Y FOR USE - BETTER THAN TRAPS
DlrsQUous la U laasuares In every box
Sot site Ike IIoi. Si te II &0.
MONEY BACK IF IT EmILS
By JOHN DICKINSON SHERMAN
\\F AllHKN G. IIAHIMNG at bmh of
* * .Mitn h 4 cninpU-tirrl Me first year
as Prtntltlnit of Ihe L’nltrrl Htetes. lit*
was n*ktil for nn exprvuNion rvgiinllng
the N'vompllahiiiftit* of hie utlntinlelra
tion to ilatr and auihorixtHl this etate-
nivnt;
’Th** rr.-ord of the Nilmlnl«tratlon
epi-nka for Itwlf; It wouitl lie a |MN>r
•rliiiliilstrntioii that required the execu
tive to a|Mwk foF I!.**
At an etiirr-talnment hy the National
Pres* club In honor of the first official
Mriltrlet the Prealdent Mid!"
••Tl»e long step toward getting back
toward normal ways of government
would a«■•mu to me to hare been the
achievement of the year."
ftc|irc«rnfatlve Fcm of Ohio, chalr-
| man of the Re|Mthli(*an congressional
j committee, made In the hoinse a speeefi
J aertlng forth In detail the aemmpll«h-
ftnufs of the year from the Itepuhllcan
| ,vlew |H*inf. He dwelt on iM-onomles.
«• find nid proiper-tlvh. ||e said that
tl'e I'rdttnl Rlatea would 1*e the only
govertimenf In the world living within
Its revenues next year. If l( could keep
within Hie ••stiinntes outlined hy the
administration. Reviewing the work
of the antis conference, he said: *’!
challenge the record to pr is luce a
greater achievement In the liiMtofy of
- f! diplotnuey.'*
1 kMioM'ratle members then pr*»oeeded
to fear to p : ece* the Fess eulogy frittif
thetr etandt>oinf. Cordell Hull, chair-
I rii tri of the hemiwrnflc nntlonnl cotn-
fnittve also took Issue with tlte Ft's*
Miiti'inetif. His geuernl position Is that
vvliili* tlie flepiihllcttn congress lias rn-
ttidetl a rmtlfIplfrlty of ttnlmportant
laws ami the arms conference provid
ed for a limited program of naval re
duction the fleptihllcnn party has
failed r.> carry out Its major prom
ise* made In fhe campaign of Ttrjo.
Vow. in the house .deflate over the
ndmlnlstwitton’s stntetrvxnf of econo-
mles F<‘s«, talke-1 exactly as If he be
lieved everythin^ he saM and the
Democrats talked' hack erjfcfFy as If
they befleved everything they said.
Ami the fiixpayer tVi the ggllery knew
flint everyfaxl<• eonPdti’t ho tellfiig the
truth, the whole tnifk ann nothing hnf
the truth. The upshot was that Tfep
resentittlve Hyrns of Tennessee, tiink-
Ifig Uemoerafic meniher of the appro
priations eoniHiIttee. sreured fhe f t »ss-
fixv of a resolution calling nT'Ot) the
Preside: t to inform the* house hi what
way tlu\ savings had been nvtrde, fn*m
w hat-parthailar approivrlaflonk arrd In
vvlmt speeitie amounts. Thetettpon the
Presitb'iit instructed (Intern t fhiwes
of the hudgef hureau to prepwre a
ciaiiphde statement eoverfng fhe en
tire situation. One thfng at least
stands out clegidT; Net)*e1y doulds
that "H—I and 5r»rl»" iNiwes wljl give
the facts ami tigtrres as they are.
President ami’ Jfpv. Harding left
Washingtoti Wednesday evening by
that he had protested to Prealdent
Harding against the circulation of
“vicious propaganda emanating from
the Department of Agriculture.” The
battle. In brief. Is .over legislation,
pending and prospective, which would
transfer the forest service from the
Agriculture department to the’Interior
department and practically tuni dver
the development of the natural re
sources of Alaska to the Interior .de
partment, with responsibility to the
President. This battle Is not a- petty
quarrel between two departments. It
Is a real battle between two cabinet
members. Some of the old-timers take
It so seriously as to predict the resig
nation of one or the other of the
secret sties. Moreover, the battle Is
significant as Indicating the dlfflrul
ties that Me In the way of the proposed
reorganization of all the executive
departments.
Until IH06 the Interior department
controlled all the public lands. The
national forests weri* then creeled for
the application of aclentlflc lumber
ing and erasing and Hie forest service
was established to administer them.
The Interior department retained con
trol of the remaining public landa and
the ten national parks, established for
recreational puri><»we*. In the national
foreats the Interior department la
charged 'with the execution of all
taws “relating to surveying, prospect
ing. locating, appropriating, entering,
neconve/lng or patenting of public
landa and to the granting of rights
of way amounting to easements.” The
nathmal forests now number H» In 21
states and territories and contain
about 242J3N) square miles. The na
tional parks now numtier 10 and con
tain lO.NTiO square miles.
Tlie nathaial park service was cre
al cd In 11MQ to administer the national
|»arks under tjie secretary of tlie In
terior. The Agricultural department
then begun a -campaign In print, and
from the platform, for the transfer of
the national park service to the Agri
cultural iletuirtmenr. It also set up
the national forest* as recreMtionul
rivals of the nutlonul parka.
Then came tlie pro|M)*ed reorgnnl-
zntioii of the executive department*,
approved by the I'resldent. Under
this reorganization, the Interior de
partment would liecome practically a
that the absence of the United States
will detract from the usefulness of
fhe conference. But If Euroiie will aot
hold the kind of conference In wnlch
the United States can helpfully par
ticipate, It must not expect us utfiec-
essarlly to liecome Involved In Fmco-
|»ean questions. Better luck next time,
maybe, when things get down to brass
tacks.
f LOYD GEORGE resigning the Brit-
Ish premiership doe.-ii't fit In with
American notions of the little Welsh
wizard. But tlther he had It seri
ously In mind—or he ran a gorgeous
bluff. Anyway, he served an ultima
tum on the Tory leaders of the coa
lition party that unless he could be
assured of loyal support and co-opera
tion he would resign. Whereupon all
Britain buzzed like a disturbed bee
hive. Sir Arthur Balfour was named
everywhere as the probable successor.
But the coalition chiefs got busy at
once. Mir Ge»»rge Younger, the union-
•at “die-hard” leader, was made to
step back Into the line; It was hla
speeches that had forced the Issue.
Other leaders publicly voiced tbelr
confidence In the premier. Balfour,
as a conservative leader, put the fin
ishing touch by declaring emphat
ically for a continuance of the coa
lition government and Indorsing the
leadership of Lloyd George, who he
declared was Ificomparably the great
est figure of the greatest age in Brit
ish history. Ho the crisis has nppar
ently been passed—tboqgh possibly
only fur tha present.
Sir Arthur, hy the way, la very much
In live British public eye Just now.
King George has beatowed upon him a
knighthood of the Ortler of the Garter.
Hla achievements at the Washington
arms conference are universally ac
claimed as regaining for Great Britain
the world dominance lost during the
World war. Anyhow, ifl declaring for
Lloyd George he bowed himself out
of the premiership.
NERVOUS AND
HALf-SICK WOMEN »
These Letters Recommending Lydia E. Pink- ^
ham’s Vegetable Compound Will Interest You w
’ ■ * , ' \ . , - - ; .• _ • " , V _ ' i. ;• : '
For Your Own Good Please Read Them
Youngstown, Ohia—“Last fall I
began to feel mean and my back hurt
tne and I could hardly do mv little bit
of housework. I was played out
when I would just sweep one room
and would have to rest I would have
to put a cushion behind me when I
would sit down and atnightl could not
sleep unless I had something under
my back. I had awful cramps every
month and waa just nearly all in.
Finally my husband said to me one
day, 'Why don't you try Lydia El
Pinkham’s medicine?’ and I said, 'I
am willing to take anything if I could
get well again. ’ So I took one bottle
and a second (me and felt better and
the neighbors asked me what I waa
doing and said, 'Surely it must be do
ing you good all right' I have just
finished my eighth oottle and I can
not express to you how I feel, the
way I would like to. If you can use
this letter you Are welcome to it and
if any woman does not believe what I
have written to be true, she can write
to me and I will describe my condi
tion to her as I have to you. ’'-—Mrs.
Elmek Heasley, 141S. Jackson St,
Youngstown, Ohia
“I was very nervous and run
down," writes Mr*. L. El Wiese of
706 Louisa St, New Orleans, La. "I
jydls
Peculiar to Women'* will be sent
to the Lydia E. Pink ham
would often sit down and cry, and was
always blue and had no ambition. I
was this way for over a year and had
allowed myself to get into quite a
serious condition. One day I saw your
advertisement in the daily paper and
began to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound at once. 1 have
improved ever since taking the third
bottle and find it is the best medicine
I have ever taken. 1 *
Benefited by First Bottle
'T was completely run down and
not able to do my housework. I just
dragged myself around and did not
have energy to get up when once I sat
down. I read advertisements of
Lydia El Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound in our paper The Indiana Daily
Times,'and learned all about it 1 re
ceived results from the very first bot
tle and now I am doing all my own
work, even washing and ironing, and
I never felt better in my life. I tell
all my friends it is due to you. "—Mm
Elizabeth Rknbold, 403 N. Pin#
St, Indianapolis, Indiana.
You should pay heed to the experi
ences of these women. They know
bow they felt before taking the Veg
etable Compound, and afterwazrfi,
too. Their words are true.
Lydia Pinkham’s Private Text-Book upon "Ailments
D sent you free upon request. Write
Medicine Co^ Lynn, Massachusetts.
Gentlemen
—I** tes*nl t* Mr*. Whaolow** Smtp* Mr bato
*** •fhe. and a friend told me of
1 can raonMMed thl* medkkM to ba
Yoantralr,
Wmmmm
Ml* WINSIOWf SYRUP
The /n/ant,’ W CAMrwm ’t RmgmUtor
quickly relieves diarrhoea, colic, flatulency and
constipation, and regulates the bowels. Non-
narcotic, non-alcoholic Formula on every label
Write far free t__±u« aiiiSJkS™ frtra
ANGLO-AMERICAN DRUG CO, 21*417 frfta. St, I
‘ *'^S ATr Tr-”Z** **•
C ANADA'S f< >u rt •filth pnrilameut
wa* >>|MMi>*ti WrUiifMdsy l»jr Gut-
Hor-Gewrsl lung W. L. Mackenzie
Klug I* the tirat lilteral jiricue minis
ter to hohl -tlie rein* of government
MitfV Sir Wilfred I-atirie^ wa* defeated
A Visible Excuse.
Tummy and Hilly had been fighting
on their way home from aeh«M»|.
The teucher received thin nut# the
Bext day:
“Dear Sir—A* >»ne of yuitr arhnlarN
hit my buy in the eye with a "tone, he
can’t a»v out of It. So will you pleaae
See into It?” ' L
When prvfificsl jrmfter* fall nut buti-
#td newspaper men get a lot of copy.
public works deiairtnient. One cun- ) ^ y«* r * «K«* uq hiapum-yof rertpruc-
For GROUP, COLDS,
INFLUENZA A PNEUMONIA
I (tooId keef Brxne'a
it WDn Ckmip lalueau or Pnon-
(ki* drliftxNl tilrr rebbed we'I lau
r Um armt. will fell ere tbe
l reecfut Bee*.
. wJ (1 Jin d Aw wrn «r OR ewdl I*.
PrwnCo. Nrw>lko*boro. N. C.
train for St. AugmGrie, Fla. Tl)e prea-
Idi'iitiiil fairiy li»« k hi>led Attorney Gen-
eruf rhinglierty, Sileaker (Jlllett, Un
dersecretary of State Fletcher. Brig
adier General Sawyer, his personal
physician. End George B. Christian,
his secretary. Mr. Christian said the
J^reshUMit w<Mild m'euiiytds time in
"rveit aiiTt reL-rvation.” In Florida for
a week or so.
DITCHED battle hetwi'en the^. In-
* terhvr and Agricultural, .ileparl-
ments wldeh ha* long be>*n v\at>he>l
hy official Washington with ateuirblng
Interest ha* now freoune “public”,
through u statement hy Smvigr) Fail
templated transfer I* that >»f the for
est service tV>>m the Agricultural de-
pertinent.
on toj» >»f this came ttn* ouuvrn
.viaiut the plight >>f Alaska, which is
tiflf pruejierlng. ’“Too iiuj> b bureau-
creftv government'
waa raise«l. It Is
take Alaska out of the hands of the
many hurettus ami hand It ovei» to the
Interr-w >le|iartu)eut for inlntiwiatra-
tlon n*d «levelupment. secretary
Is alrcedy building the govi-rxvgumt
Alaskars railroad and controls the oil
and inlsersl >let>osits in the nucsnal
forests. The Iwn big national 1 for
ests In Alaska axe the Tongas* amt
Chugac, ^vntainiag 22U.U00 acres, fee-
retary Fid! apiwio-ves this dis|Histtion
of Alaska. It kas b<*en announceil
that PrssMMst I limtlng will visit AJiia-
ka this stmnuer to get first-hand in for
mation. • Is was planned that Sbere-
Hy with the .1 uitol States, i'roiuier
King a veteran of the Lmirter rattK
intry of Kill, in which he served to*
nGaister of labor. Htofolphe Lemierrx
of .Mon tread, aelected hy I‘render Kind
is speaker. Ttie government com-
wns one cry that ! luanda abotw onr-half of «he memhers
now pnipostsl to i of parlliuneMi. Tlie ottlci*! opposition
group, numbering about fifty in a
house <*f 2.*??{ nteiuiers, is fc»tl by Ar
thur Maighene, the tleGntterf premier.
T. A. Ctefur ik»Hdi* an mndtirinl pro
gressive grtiup of a‘bout tiTy who are
expected tri 1 stqiporr the gwwerrimetit
In most .jof ita p»liel««t, espeeially on
the tariff. Both’ lllierals anrS progres
sives helie*o in euaftMus dtaXes “for
revenue otilr.'” ae> nguhiKt the-eoaaierv-
ative iNilicy of ptorect&ui. Who* said
“reciprocity r" * '
tary Fall sfiould Ke hi the presidentiul vins. The Fascist! and! their a (fiber
party,
Naturall? tlie rwpartinent of Agricul
ture Is not plenseii with tlds program.
The Aim*r!can F'orestry asso<thIiott
has sent •♦ut nnorfi “literature'” proe
testing against ftL Some of it D: pret
ty strong. The gist of It fs (tint the*
transfer of the notional forests; meuaa-
their exfibitatiMe by “private ihtee*.
ests.” Anyway. Secretary Fail' sac*s.
he Is Imibg txriSil up to “exeeratleoy
public idluse »a>d private caliaiimy.”
T HE Fnltv'd' States has fivumallgr (te^
cline<l the invitation of the- »N*ied
powers- to participate io tlw- Enratpetm
fiimncia-1 wad economic oirvfecence
w hUHiis new set for April Kb at Genoa.
The deetination rune franc Secretary
of State Hughes to the BjaWan amhas-
sadWr, Senator Ricci. The document
Ik a gem of purest ray serene. The
laaamage Is friendly, the statements
are plain, the meaning unmistakable.
In diplomatic tenue* he says that the
conference Is not primarily economic
hut Is rather a conference of. a politi
cal character le which the United
States cannot helpfully participate.
.“Nothing doing. See you later.- Wish
ing .Jim good luck, I remain, etc.”—
is about the way It would read In the
vernacular. Of course Enrofie It dls-
■PpolBttd ‘ It is fieoentlly •diui«®d
Libyan
Baby Can uigcs <sFurniture
Ask Your Local Dealer
Write Now
lor 32-Page
Illus
trated
Booklet
The Lloyd Manufacturing Company
(HtmooJ.WaktfiM Co.)
Dept E
Menominee, Michigan (16)
KING PIN
PLUG TOBACCO
Known as
‘that good kind’'
c Iry it—and you
, will know why
Aelita CATTLE—We hav* anm, vrry prvra
»»i«a Aua -mrttmrm mm b*lta «wr —*v.-air»#
by uur pound bull T-n calvaa from
•o'rub cow, slr-d by a Sanford A Klrh Annua
bull arc worth rdjukh more than common
ralvwa to pap for one ot our bulla. I'rac-
tlrally all half br«c<l Anxu* arc hnrnl-aa
and black Ilk* their fathac If Intcraalad In
FtartinK a pure bred herd or raining inarkH
toppln* bc^-f rati I* from common cowa. writ
ua Our herd won ail th* I’hainplonahl
»nd m»*t of the (1r*t prise* at the St
Fair# of N C. ft. C. and Oeorrla SANFoRri
A RICH. R F D No #. Mockavllle. N. C.
in
, ^
iJtOTH—<»IHL8. We hav* aomethln* to *lva
you If you will aend ua your name and xd-
i <lreaa today on a poalal card. Thla la aome-
i thlnx new. The trUt 1, abaolulely free to you.
WILSON MAM KACTI KINO CO.
P. O. Box 4lift - Atlanta. (■ eorgU*
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
BaaMvee nanoru B-8 top* Bair ralllaf
Raatoraa Color aad
Baawty to Gray and Faded Hail
Me. and ll.ooat Ixtinrlrta.
Rtaeos CTicm. W >«. Patcfaocue. tf. T,
MUME
seems
is
to
on tie map again, nod
le trying tte rivals Yesu-
eols have chased tme PtesldRar Za-
neiht of the Fhee City giwernmenc set
uj> nnder the treacj* of LLapipfio be-
rvreen Italy aad Jugo*Slu?via., ffiebri-
elBe »rAnnunzie has sent wt»rd ; tftwt he
styjaports the 'Tiprising;'’ The Etifllan
Parties have fhogeD Giovanni GEuri-
ttll, former chief of the poet-wiarrior’s
4*aiMnet, as heit*i of another pemistion-
»l government flbr the Free State. The
Jngtv-Slavs are- rushing trowps to th6
firvintler, ostenulMy tu repel threat
ened raids hy the Fe^clsti. They are
insisting upon eheerfMCt of the treaty
of Rnpallo. NaBy apporetrtly intends
to restore or<tor in Flame and enforce
the Ilapallo. treety. She also has
moved troop* forward.
AGENTS ~ HINDERCORNS Remora* Coma, 0*4-
_ ' louae*. eto., atop* all pain, enaure* comfort to tbm
^Rl.l. ORION CONCENTRATED PLAVOR- feet, make* walking eaev. Mo. by mail or at Draa*
I N<»H. S-nd 2&c for aainple, full size. an<l Bl«Ut RUoox Cham leal Work*. Patohocu*. M. X. . j
Ax«ncy Proponitlon on more than 3* Guar- ^^ - . , ■ - -r- ■
.ameed Tollijt Artlclea. etc. Make frbiif $5 to
SIS a rtay. The Orlon'Co., Reldavllle, N. C
W. N. U„ CHARLOTTE, NO. 11-1922.
M AX saj* he Isn't marrying Ma
thilda ft>r her money. Mathirde
began the> romance at eleven hy call
ing Max “Uncle.” Max has taught Me-
thllde fl>e “Swiss language.” Let the
wedding hells ring out and the Swiss ^
navy fire a sfilnte! _ »
“Potttb's makes strange hedfelKvws”
.—wMeh~l* to say that the new treaty
g1\ v« -Yap prohibition, with Atnerirans
exempted. .
WHtlam Jennings Bryan, rryjadlng
against l>«rwinism, says netavdy can
make a non key of him. Mr. Bryan
is a arifmade man. . *
No /work that you farmers do is too
rough for clothes made out of Stifers
Indigo Cloth.
All Overalls, Jumpers and Work Clothes
made of this cloth lest longer, wash bet
ter and keep” their ‘Took*.
Se# that you 1 got it. Look for this boot •haporf
trado mark stampod on thf bock of tha doth.
Garments sold by dealers -everywhart—
Wt are makers o! the doth only.
J. L STIFEL A SONS
lodigo Dyora and Printer*
WWlio*. W. Ve.
19*-. N.w Ymrk. N Y.