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9 % mv •* THE PEOPLE. BARNWELL. S. C. Lest Cold? — try this method That chest cold can be broken up — no matter how stubborn and deep-seated it may seem! Apply Sloan’s Liniment to chest and neck tonight. Its tingling, glowing warmth goes to the root of trouble. It breaks up the con gested. inflamed condition. Relief quickly follows. Get a bottle of Sloan’s to day. All druggists carry it. Its effectiveness will surprise you. Sloan t Linimcnt-^/7/s painl For rhrcmattani. bruise*. itrainrcFwit roM* HIS HEADACHES SOON HEADED OFF POUCE VETERAN - REGAINS HEALTH Could Hardly Eat or Sleep Be* cause of Chronic Indigestion —Now Praises Taniac. W. N. Hatcher, 110 Luclle Ave., Greenville, S. 0., Is mill another- who has realized the wonderful merits of Taniac. Mr. Hatcher has been a mem ber of the Greenville Police depart ment for thirty years andja one of the most efliclent and popular oflTcers on the force. In commenting on his ex perience with Taniac Officer Hatcher said: “I know many others, besides my self, Taniac has helped and I am glad to speak out for it. I had suffered from indigestion and constipation for something like fifteen years. I had about reached the point where I could neither eat nor sleep, for every time I ate It hurt me and the misery kept me awake at night. I bad lost energy and strength until when rny day’s work was over I would feel completely played out." “I now eat anything I want, nlwaya have a fine appetite, and have gained eight pounds. I am certainly thankful to be able to enjoy a good meal once morn and not suffer afterward*. I am Just like a new man and TanluC gets all tin- credit.'* Taniac l« for sale by all good drug gists 0*«-r .V» million bottles sold.— Advertisement. flDOYfi Natural Court*. Kentucky Man. Who Suffered ^ ^ With Severe Headaches, Says He Found Relief by Taking Black-Draught. Sl* ll “I IMnk tier h ft dur ing I be tlilnl rMUlxs" States Bottle Fed Babies All Need Teethina if l l t. ~Mr fctby It • fcaltlv fed fctky." vfttrs SIrt T rtglet, Ib'SMe SL IVaj run, lit. “sad til twdlMVt ttka lha<t Wad <rt |wrist i <r a MW Itadtlv fad ra^i~t ktw W>«« n»ty It It fa# tt«*tr IMtta l« Wreustt FtltfWi Mtd bwvrt irmi* Ir It a* «rt. vaftartaH? Ml •mmm** t rad TaartfeMa «kv Wadi iiiad iwaa at aarW iiaaat atd Im»» at * a; a g~ t gaud raaalia ffadW (Conductad by National Council af^tka Bay Scout* of America.) PARENTS AID BOY SCOUTS One of the greatest tributes to the hoy scout program of character build ing and citizenship training Is the in creasing Interest of mothers and fathers In the work of their scout sons. Scouting Is creating a bond of com radeship between thousands of sons and fathers who In Increasing num bers are spending week-ends together at scout camps, relaxing-in the out of doors, skating, skiing, hiking and sled ding together. Father and son hikes, banquets, and get-togetlirrs are held lu practically every community. Con tests between “lads and dads’* create splendid rivalry and make dad want to get .out with son in the open more and more. ’ One big-hearted father who, ns an Incentive to his own hoy, joined the ranks of the tenderfoot stouts recent- i ly with his son reached the very top of the ladder together—Kflgle rank. And mother! You may be sure she 1$ very proud of son’s manliness, hts 1 scout bearing, his practice of the scouts' daily good turn, of being ready at all times tn help 'htfierV Ids coii’r- f tesy to the old. the weak, tfe sick, hi* deference to those older thtfh himself, bln growing strength front his outdoor* life. These things with their ultimate twilling on character huildhi*,', mothers are keen to appreciate. To further the work, acouts mothers' <<uh». com mittees, and associations Are being •swiMantly formed. Mother and ami hikes and even tu«4hefa’ week at ramp are r\ e that the somt ? w* know* “the hrwt |ml of all** la fight behind him la bis advance %t s<***ut Taft. iC'*wfi tag line* nM mi pi 4 ant the home training It Mppletamts It ami for Vtfirw It. Meant lag's I ■eat Mlppurtefa are (be mother* and father* a bo fawn dally aWBef*ai*«m tme null graltAca- thm nma «Wa are living esr-ry loch as Wrowt s •A WCOUT It TMMIMTV* *. f« • ». MKtMMm* Md u '•ear >tet Tr*a Ladies L'tLulicura Keep Your Skin Fresh and Young lomt SmdSW., TabaatS. IU n t« And Noti ng CIS# tO Oo Man \\ it* re arv %*wi gt*tag t*t attend *1 it*..| Hilo (all? At the uniiefslt)? Maid No, |*m tired of dnitelug £ —FAhKtk* ' HAIR BALSAM a«. MltMrrall g o.** oio* and mly •• Cray aad Fadad Hdkl Indian Vv««tabl* IMIla Tloy *« t f antly Ad* ae^aod yn*at lTvryi*'a A tnrsdd ll*»r i»r»»»nta ertty-r food aaa*m Hall >n T -na u|> yt>yr llvar with Wrlghi'B tea rh *"- w tmaadt T If Ih within the power of the IisihI •m m»t»* w* ,in* r*., tit* I f mail t>f at Orag- lii>)irl gwta BtaaaaOaJaal WarAa. r»am on. M V III .11 I HEALTH FOR WORKING WOMEN ——— • Let Lydia E. Pinkham’sVegeiable Com pound Help You to Become Well. A FEW SCOUT “GOOD TURNS'’ Thousand^of pMs Lave to work in homes, ofTices, stores, mills or facto ries who are physically unfit for work, with often an aged or invalid father or mother dependent upon them for support. Standing all day week in and week out, or sitting in cramped positions a girl often contracts some deranged condition of her organic system which calls a halt to her pro- f ress and demands restoration to ealth before she can be of uae to herself or anyone else. For these distressing weaknesses and derangements these girls have found health to do their worlr in Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound. Brooklj I had tapablee every Carolyn* Mangels, ' and they Inter fered with my work as 1 could be sore of my time. My moth soggeeted that Ptnko Lydia E. Plak- b*9 i Vegetable i.c.jpOMnd, hot 1 •ever did oatil laketv I bav* bad • 4*r I • a N Y.—'Tike many girls, lee ever* month," says had. Caholyne Mangels,407 14tb St, Brooklyn, N. Y. Office Worker helped Milwaukee. Wis.—“I have taken Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound and Lydia E. Pinkham’s Blood Medicine for three and a half years, and they have improved my health wonderfully. My mother also has taken the Vegetable Compound and we recommend it to our friends. I am working in an office now and can always do thy work as 1 do not have the troubles I had at first 1 read of your Vegetable Compound in the newspaper and ter in that way ir you — Eleanor Shuujui, 637 36th St, Milwaukee, Wia. Paint And Headache Webster, Mas*.—"I was all ran- down, bad a bad suffered with) "VS'I.T Here Is a series of “good turns’’ with a -splendid climax for which credit Is due Troop 1, Ashland. W. Va.: Pruned .50 trees, cleaned streets, removed de bris from lot where house had partly burned, cleaned around dwelling houses, set out C>0 trees end helped find b^f who had run away from home. I you may use my let- if you wish to do so.” CO-OPERATE WITH BOY SCOUTS 1 Thirteen theological seminaries in various parts of the United States are showing active Indorsement of scout ing by Including training for future scout leaders as a regular part of their curricull. BOV SCOUTS AID fllRDS Carrying fa*d <tiilj thn»i gh (be win- TME KITCHEN CABINET (£>. 1111, Waalarn N«w«pap«r Unluo.) ; Contents ISTluidl To be a strong hand In the dark to another In a time of need, to be a cup of strength to a human soul in a crlsfs of weakness. Is to know the glory of life.—Hugh Black. MORE GOOD THINGS f " I ■ ’ A good way to serve mutton and one which will he new to many Is: Serbian Mutton,—Put a cupful of rice on to cook in boiling salted wa ter and cook until soft. Chop one small onion and cook this in two or three tablespoonfuls of bacon fat until brown. Add one pound of but ton cut from the leg, the meat to he cut In cubes, then cook In the bacon fat and onion, turning until well browned on all sides. Place a layer of cooked rice In the bottom of a baking dish, cover with two toma toes cut in slices, or a cupful of sift ed pulp; then add one-half of the browned meat ami onion; over this one thin sliced green pepi>er. Pro ceed with another layer of rice, toma toes and meat and |>epper. Fill the dish wdth seasoned gravy or st«*ek k cover and bake In a hot oven thirty minutes. Mexican Stew.—Out one pound of calf* liver In eone Inch cube* and saute quickly In a hot frying pen In ■ very little fat. C«*>k together in a saucepan one pint uf sifted tomatoes with three onions very llnetj rhopped, two iahle*|N»>nful« of flour and one ffcoptM-d green l»epprr. one-half tea- spoonful of salt. <-9 fourth iea»|icon- ful of neoner. one half teaenoonful of CASTORIA For Infants and Children, Mothers Know That .. - ’ .. * • : - - • Genuine Castoria "xLGOHOL - *! PER Gjptt . AVe^dabkPreparatiMfaAs | tin$theStoma^andBCT^^M odlherOpliim^orpWne^ Mineral. NotNahcOTIC the Signature of ^dfevrri^^ 1 fcrXlaukSijniWL rf Copy of Wrappee. In Use Over Thirty Years CASTORIA r eke. tery fond of •tnpfl) ol>e)ed re toFI her to » her*use di»- k er. she Was i mother ex ■ Ms.* * .if Sp—Mfp Is «s aaN mmA • MM 1 f~lsi m 11 Nw .<• e term’ F 4 «t iff. tmmm ss l Ith a MsmwA mi v-wfasd a^hl a 1 I4i «d aeu—M^ mid a taj W+0% tnafes fMRPF A me favosC sss| flVMsy «■%* MBfa mfa flai kfUlsA «Mh Wrt Isiilxl •i m* met f «Wt fa# mi immwSM • aafftafi Cfa*—* Cseesps Mas* s-e #"»»% if sib ^VtkMMHl >e*se that pfw Is If *wf «# mm i * MM i<WMf i" |HisW MM* At Si •It, a# ai» «%4 flM % W H • rff ill tlur' fUs*"# ' r*'*m£9 ■ * t+%* 9*9W1 w MapS S’ •aia fail* -mm mi ffwHi *<% I" IblflbfaRIMS Hi f > i — 1—MK alaMM «r ai»t» i i A gift 4 OTED HER SKIRT. DRESS, SWEATER AND DRAPERIES WITH -DIAMOND DYES’ , Are your bonee cougk- mg or rwnoMig er tbs noerf If so. flies tbsos “ A velwabls tsw»s*i? fat CotMbs, (Xsirmpst. Infatstua, ISnk Lrs sod Worms — ung bossei a«vd f .!* * An c s**.iS\si doss ~Y,*ns* tKstn up. fluid el eff drug Mi SFC»e NIVKAI (CLCOSstt * < S MS fi u. CMAAvOVVfl. ■ * N> a flCAtONABtl GOOD TMlMCfl row strl|w. rotrer w ter and bring to the Ih>||i I*rain and re|M*at four time Bey scouts noncrcd tienjamm as an expositor of thrift, as well as a great patriot, on the occasion of Franklin’s two hundred and seventeenth birth day, when, in common with 40 other national, educational and civic soci eties, the scouts laid a tribute of flow ers at the great statesman’s statue in New York city. Scout Adolphe Schmidt, a member of Troop 2, Brooklyn, N. Y., at the ''ceremony impersonated Franklin at the age of seventeen, ar riving at Philadelphia. f*Ri dirt nhnt lug It |#f wild »sy Trw**p fS !*• V« xi£:l«Ci tsr Ur rso*s rrfug^. at plecr* whsrr tl birds rrdgrsgef. Is S* I. lleMffleMu OM^IffB cerr>- fag Mrt Ibd faith •rxwfa Uv •A Brsgt ha Kfad* tfaaXMg (be k t» Ca"d ed Grape f ru*t Urtuw« <* ti.V rlbd fr«*ui crn|«>frul t I r a v- i a g *MHM|aarti a r iarti ..f (hr pulp. Cut- In l'4ig nar llli r>»|i| salted wm- ing point. *. the lu*t time boUlng un I tender. Now drain and weigh. To each jumnd of the pulp allow u pound of sugar and one-half pound of water. lto|| the sugar and water for five minutes, then add the grapefruit rind and simmer gently un til transparent- about thirty minutes. Drain, roll each piere In granulated sugar and dry on a lray away from the direct heat. Serve in place of after-dinner mints. Date Bars.—Beat throe egg yolks, combine with one cupful of sugar and stir unlil creamy. SlfY one cupful of flour witji a teaspoonful of baking powder and- a pinch of salt, add one cupful of chopped walnut meats and one pound of dates, stoned and quar tered: bent three egg whites stiff, add alternately with the flour mixture to the yolks and sugar. Rake in a small dripping pan abouF'*TTnrty minutes. Remove from the, pan* into bars, roll in powdered sughr or Ice with orange icing, decorate with stoned da.tes and nut meats. , * Lightning Cake.—This is certainly a most delicious cake when it is put to other with n creamy tilling. Cream one-fourth of n enpful of butter, with one-half cupful of Sugar. Add the well- beaten yolks of four eggs and one ten- spoonful of vnnllln extract. Mix one cupful of pastry fhmr with two tea- spoonfuls of baking powder and odd this alternately with one-fourth of a mpfnl of milk to the first mixture. Spree t In two shallow pen*, rover the dmrrh srjih the ntUBr-beaten whiten mixed elth tbres friths of a cupful j of mr~i~ and sprinkle »Mh wr fourth ’ m$ s ewpAnl ef slioad nfassmda «■» me stl j iuk» ma » MMi*»m«n osep fee nk iqt S femtf famF flfaosod gtvh a rpmnefl MM. ! saeam faw l*jae* 'MkLUi TVWefai HelpYou Run the Ball -—bring home the bacon* collar the blue va*e v carry the message to Garcia* etc. TITTLE Raisins* Full of energy and JL/imn, will put the pep into you that makes winning plays. Use vim like it in your business, too. One hundred and forty-five cal ories of energizing nutriment in every tittle -five-tent red box that you see. Comes from fruit sugar in prac» tically predigested form—le^ulosej the scientists call it—so it goes to work almost immediately. Rich in food* iron also. - Try these little raisins when you re hungry, lazy, tired or faint. See how they pick you up and set you on your toes. Little Sun-Maids 44 Between - Meal* Raisins Sc Evffiywh«rs Had Your . Iron Today? • V M> v sit'• w \jfni L55 BAHTINS