The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, February 08, 1923, Image 7
TH P P p f'Pi p P %RNWFt f . 9 r.
■■m
-
T7Z
THfY
I HAD T. B. AND
WOULD NOT UVE THMK MONTHS”
wm &
Mr. Harold W. Schmidt, Box 96,
Breooe, Clinton Co., 111., believes
he has reason to praise Dr. Hart
man’s Remedy lor Catarrhal con
ditions. *
naMd rs-vs-a* SUM
Bronchia)Catarrh. Idol
for Chronic
Ido not sat Urad. ff>«I lUe
Ida over normal vrisM and
. day. In March, ins, I con
tracted a aerera cold with apHOnr and took to
OT had. ThayaaldlhadT. B. and would not
am thraa moatha, Aftertaktn»a coupla hot-
a slaot, am Mx pooada
able to work erary
PEKUNA’
tloa of Pa-nfna and a box of J
Meta,
TABLETS OR LIQUID
ooold walk aroond and In aevonmontha went back to work. MV
trouble waa due to Chronic Catarrh of the noee and throat, whies
1 had ten yean, extending down into the bronchial tnbea.
“Po-ni-ha waa my Ufa aaver.”
A HALF CENTURY IN USE V
SOLD EVERYWHEltE
InstantRelief
Radium Output to Be Increased.
It is planned to raise the output of
radium at Joachimsthal, near Carls
bad, to four grams annually. To this
end an Anglo-American syndicate has
been formed with ample capital. Most
of tlds radium will find its way to
Knglish and American hospitals.—Sci
entific American.
SWAMP-ROOT FOR
KIDNEY AILMENTS
eiiova
(Cesdncted by Natlonel Connell of the Boy
- - . Scout* of Amertee.) •• t .
USr.D SINCE 1872 £/£
GOOD
CIGARETTES
!O c
There is only one medicine that really
stands out pre-eminent as s medicine for
curable ailments of tbs kidneys, liver and
bladder.
I)r. Kilmer’s Swamp Root stands the
highest for the reason that it has proven
to be just the remedy needed in thousands
upon thousands of distressing esses.
Kwsmp Root mskem friends quickly be
cause its mild and immediate effect is
soon reslued in most cases. It is s gen-
tie. heeling vegetable compound
Start treatment at once. Sold at all
drug stores in bottles of two sues, medium
and large.
However, if yea wish ftrvt to tsst this
r et prsperaUon seed ten rents te Ur.
laser A Os , Bmghe mtoe, N Y , far s
samp is bottle When writing be sere and
this pa per —Advertisement.
Lswdsn'i |very Warehouse.
» **f (hr ns*"I nosxh rful pleree In
FATHER AND SON ARE SCOUTS
The story of a fafher who in his
big-souled way formed a partnership
with his scout son, “to work together
fat scouting,’* and who both recently
received the highest award of rpah'
the Eagle badge, at a couVt of honor in.
Salt Luke City, <g a remarkable testi
mony of the spirit of comradeship
that the work and play of scouting
can develop between a boy and his
dad.
“One day,” says this father, “my boy
said to me in a joking way, ‘Dad, why
don’t you try and get some merit
badges if they look so easy toryou?’
I told him I could get as many as he.
So we started out. He would go to
one examiner and I to another for the
same merit badge, and for a while it
was nip and tuck between us, but the
new school of learning wus getting
the better of the old way with which I
was familiar. One day we made up
our minds to work together. We did
not always agree on the same subject
(we would hot have b£eh faflier ¥h<T
son If we had), but in the end we got
j our budges.
“In addition I hare found a son
I that like* to let me know he thinks his
dad is the only man In scouting, and 1
: think my boy will grow op to be a real
sroat—one that can be depended upon.
I have found the fountain of youth
since becoming a scout, because a man
! never grows old If be mltee with
! younger boys. I believe there Is no
greater religion than to be of service
to the boys. God bleos the man
who thought of smut lag and God
, bless the men who keep It up."
Hite Kitchen
Cabinet
(©. Kit. WMtarn N«wa|xtp«r Union.)
Th# men of the past overcame be
cause they had conviction*. We of
the present frequently fall becaune wa
have nothing blit opinions. ,,
LUNCHES AND DINNERS
If children carry a lunch to school,
It should be carefully packed with
food that Is
wholesdtpe and
also substantial.
Sweets;should be
used sparingly,
though.' ;A sur
prise in the form
of a cake, a few
datvg, or pieces
of candy, or a little fruit in season,
hidden in a corner, is a source of
keen pleasure to a youngster.
Sandwiches - are the usual food
first put into the basket. a These may
-.be varied as to fillings, majdng some
sweet, some sour, or tilled with meats,
cheese and eggs.
Pickles are not esiiecinHy g«>od
food for the young, but a good home
made dill pickle sliced .very thin, and
only one or two slices used, will help
M**-wake a nientdttted sandwich tasty.
; Lay the altee of pickle over the meat,
j Oil cucumber pickles, finely minced
and mixed with chopped meat makes
another good sandwich. Jelly, Jam
and preserves are all food, and when
used tha piece of cake may be omit
ted.
Molded Chicken.—Remove all the
meat from the buoea of an anmoked
fowl and put It twice through the meat
chopper Into a aau< epan place •eve
• half mpful of bread rrooibe and owe
cupful of artlk; .bent, stirring until a
paste la furuMd. Take from the heat
and gradually heat la the chicken, add
•court AND RADIO
tag a taaapaawfai «f
paprika to taste and
a tableopuo
OENUIWC
"Bull"
DURHAM
TOBACCO
half
red paratey with three
ll
Lnl
in**M. kxmtrvv- m waa* t r*
f- »«* • ua««s •e#»
Vi s»r*M » «nw t umvtoeg. %%
■f the d dee d ha
k r
tiered
■sae la
* .
up
Many hay
tnaaea
D M, CROSS CHILD NEEDS
‘‘CALIFORNIA FIC SYRUP”
MOTHER I Move Child's Bowels with this Harmless'
V •
Laxative—Children Love Its Taste
When a
old, hits
a child 1* constipated, full of
cold, his colic, or when tlie stomach
Is sour, breutli Imd. tongue coated, a
teaspoonful oN^CHllfornia Fig Syrup”
will never fall to vpen the bowuls. In
a fovr hours you can see for your
self how thoroughly it w<irks the con
stipation i>oIson, sour bI!e N and waste
right out and you have a well^playful
- child again. •
Millions of mothers keep “California
Fig Syrup” handy. They know a tea
spoonful today may save a sick child
tomoiVow. -It never cramps or over
acts. Ask your druggist for genuine
“California Fig Syrup” which has di
rections for hahles and children of all
ages printed on bottle. Mother! You
must say “California’’ or you may get
an Imitation fig syrup.
Bruises^jfrains
Apply Sloan's The blood circulates
freely and normally again.Tlie pain
ful congestion is broken up
- all soreness disappears!
sMwas
•re eucviMg Ukutr MtMwwMttiua by Iw
*dMy trswawMtttwg tk« vd>uab*< mm
Mg«t *•%! Met by vswmm seperv«»•«•»*
•f UM U cited be* tee pw> ecw«**M*t. »«d
by M»c»uv>f«cg etc«r peapt* Id ep-
eaiee ttkte Mtpfwi M»l«r«wpt*pw. Tbp
B*d>« Ametewr burudw. erpen eed eev
MWl jreer* *p# by tM United btetee
n««y. te —w—rvs tbp ictereeked p# tbp
CMMWf pereretiec Ml rpdtp Mtlvtty,
reearvee pn its membrshtp l>«t tM
wdmMrs ene te mm kwedred fpr eceuta
wM cave learned Id aeod sod rece de
code at tM rate •» 20 werde per
SCOUTS AND THE “TIGER"
France’s “Ttger" Is for the boy
scouts. He belongs.
At one time when Clemenceau was
lk pnsslng through Alsace he came across
.a group of scouts on a hike. The ex-
premier stopped the sturdy lads and
after n few words of praise ou the
work they were doing for “la Patrle"
and future citizenship, inquired, “Do
you know who it Is that is talking to
you?” *
One lad stepped forward and with a
salute said, “Yes sir, You’re the ‘Tiger’
and we’re the Tiger Patrol.’*
Said Clemen eau, “I’ve always want
ed to be a boy scout. Perhaps there
Is an opening here?”
When the tiger patrols throughout
France heard of thls'they clamored for
the illustrious member, also, and n^w
the veteran statesman is enrolled in
every patrol bearing this name.
» A i
MORE GOOD TMIMOb
Date Rpiid-
epful* of da
Sloan's Liniment
~kills paint
SCOUTS ARE PREPARED
One way in- which Troop 9 of Yakl,-
ipn. Wash., interprets the semit motto
“Be Prepared,” is to shovel during the
winter the snow from around city fire
ydrnnts and sidewalks nearby.
AUTOISTS SCOUTS’ FRIENDS
day In Main street to watch for broken
glass and other puncture-provoking
articles.
(hillTonic
Mark w a I ■ • I
Meat*, um tea*
•pwottful of strep
and a t aM***i "w o
fuT of the pre
served ginger,
finely chopped
Make Into balls,
roll In coconut.
Sour Cabbage.—<’ut a two-inch cube
of fat salt pork In dice and fry until
a light brown. Add one cupful of boil
ing water, two quarts of shredded cub-
bage and one sour apple cut fine. Cook
for un hour very slowly. When halt
dune add one-hulf capful of not too
•our vinegar.
Buttermilk Bran Bread.—Mix a pint
each of bran and white fiour with
one cupful each of brown sugar and
raisins and one teaspoonful each ot
salt and soda. Beat up with u pint of
buttermilk and bake in a moderate
oven an hour.
Chestnut Sauce.—Take one cupful
of chestnuts cooked as above, add to
a rich brown sauce prepared by thick
ening tlie fat in the pan with two to
three tablespponfuls of flour: brown.
well season upd serve with the roast
or fowl.
Chestnut Cakes. — Cook a pound
of chestnuts for fifteen minutcs. shell
and skin thorn, then cook in boiling
water until tender. Rub through a
sieve and to every cupful add the yolk
of an egg, white pepper, celery, salt,
onion Juice and salt to taste. Make la-
to neat -cakes, dip In egg and fry In
butter and serve with broiled .steak.
Bakad Hash.—Butter a shallow bak
ing dish, pile In the hash loosely,
Why Bake At Home
when you can buy bread like it,
ready baked?
C )UNT the raisins — at
least eight big, plump,
tender fruit-meats to the
slice.
Taste it—see how the rai
sin flavor permeates the
bread.
No need to bake at home
when we’ve arranged writh
bakers in almost every town
add city to bike this full-
fruited ra<*in bread.
Just ’phone and they’ll de
liver it—all ready to sur
prise the family tonight
It cooes from master bak
ers* modern ovens irf yoaF
city. And it’s made writh
Sun-Maid Raisins.
That’s another reason for its
superiority. A rare combination
of nutritious cereal and frui^—
both good and good /srjrou, so
you should serve it at least twice
a week.
Use Sun-Maid Raisins also ia
puddings, cakes and cookies. Yea -
may be offered other brands that
C u know less well than Sun-
lid t, but the kindsyou want is
the kind you know is good. In
sist, therefore, on Smm-M*ij
brand. They cost bo mors than
ordinary raisins.
Mail coupon for free book el
tested Sun-Maid recipes.
SUN-MAID RAISINS
The Supreme Bread Rabin
Yew
•■ll re*
J*
$
f CCT
imUm» (m<
• • area «
THIS OCT AND I EXP IT
I
D*V« M tat i
FWew sMtd
| "Recspee wwh
I Hem
I •raiet
BJb* Fe«9«#*
9i*n
YU# ill
J I
OVEO HER DRAPERIES,
SKIRT AHO A SWEATER
WITH -DIAMOND DYES*
Dyeaf* mm
* aunpAa tM* MR? mmmm
I M i* 4. dkehhf shOM
Mpseie*, eveothmg kM
kaowd Dye* ' m *tMr
•MB
t *.| teas poesMt bee
1**4. mew ifywi k*v
TeU fmmr whether the
mb wwh te «t?e a weal er eA. er
it la Mew. cott«w. er *****4 pew
mUm4 Pyee never arvek. spot,
row. 8o aae? Is wa* A
TM Creative Impwlae.
rw Bibs - "llorwr*! That lawl
• ey Iw make * New Cwuk
ivilji) “Whet te ir Thg tny 4<>
er-IJfe.
This Mother
Never
for Trouble
In Huntington Park, Cal., Troop 1
hasrmade warm friend* of autoists be-
•WHanii lire paYfol or onelcoirt Pach 'sntoDtrr fW top, r?otirTfimtP"7TrTirrfteT|‘ ?*** TVvnintlnTiN n" innamF.
— *>
Saves Need Buying a New
NEW SCOUT FIELD’S CALL
The plan in establish a special
j Add rdetloa artU) remote territory
* which l« • pert of or under the pro-
! tertorete of tM Ueltoff States bat
; wot drBwitrt? e pert of the IS reglawe i
, eC. the Ho, Srwata of Amrrtre. we* j
proposed at • rwreat Meetiwg af the ,
, wevtawaJ Reid OraemeeML TM wrw |
•ha reJMi Lw«waow ew Oortytwg Haw !
keeveaeea «SR twireoje |‘whle, Hwwaei Y
Nrew BMv Gowaw Mwrrewe 4Mwwb |
* EMdRRa CMoi Meet.
and bake until brown andjerisp. Turn
out on a platter or serve from the
baking dish.
Orange Frosting.—Take one rupfel
of confectioner*’ sugar, mix with one
Ublespornfttl of cream, pulp and rind
at wo orangr and a little orange ex
tract wifi some yellow vegetable mlar-
log. Boat aoril smooth
ewer the cake
•aigina •erawhSa. AA4 the JaAei
at half a Aemew aw eoa < apffaf at Rwety
col aaidiMa Few tM ell frees Mr rei
laatawd at hetter Mat Ml aggp BbR
“This la my fifth baby,” writes Mrs.
8. E. Maharrey, Route C, Box 14D.
Mlllen, Ga., “and I am giving It
Trethlna like I did the others. I don’t
wait for trouble, but begin giving
Teethlna at the first sign of teething
and keep It up till they are through
cutting their teeth and It proses to
he most satisfactory In every way. I
simply wouldn’t he without Teetliina
when my babies are teething.* -
Thousands of grateful mothers all
over the land gladly testify to the
sterling qualities of Teethlna In reliev
ing pain and distress caused by teeth
ing. Good for stomach and bowel
troubles iRso.
Teethlna Is sold by all druggists,
or send 30c to the Moffett Labora
tories and get a package of Teethina
and a wonderful free booklet about
Babies.—Advertisement.
. ' t || Good btbsjfut drop
WK« « miner of fact,
| the Jtrrt drop tdls wu
why Maxwell House
is specified whenever
one is particularly
anxious to have the
occasion just right
MAXWELL
HOUSE
COFFEE
—^.90U> EVERY WHFRF
Ryzon
BAKING POWDER
you use igss
Rapid “Skinning Machine,”
High-speed iu skinhlng animals Is
attalned^hy a Frenchman’s invention
of a tool in which three knives are ro
tated by an electric motor at a speed
Shave With Cuticura Soap
And double your razor efficiency ga
well aa promote akin purity, akin com
fort and akin health. No mug. no
•limy softia no germs, no waste, no Irri
tation even when shaved twice dally.
One wap fur all use*—shaving hath
»tread j lag and ahampool^.—Advavtiactnant.
A boat wear paopl* IM
yon can aa? la tM troth.
ooR awh (Ra
mm
la <m
waW wa**
Reiki* Uwith
Dr. KIN
* 11
». .