The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, January 31, 1924, Image 6
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THK PEOPLE. BARNWELL. S. C.
jak%at<
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A
s
St .Joseph’s
LIVER REGULATOR
for BLOODIIVER-KIDNEYS
%e BIG CAN,
POLISH PA
\-f WRl
6r •
of v/s/r
UfROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
Impres
lent.
(Copy (or TMa Department Supplied by thi
Amerlt an Legion NgJf.A-MTVtO.%/
MAY BE YOUNGEST
. MEMBER OF LEGION
Spohn’s jfcW
DISTEMPER JQrf ^
COMPOUND
Hones and Mules
can be kept on their feet and work'
ing If owners give M SPOHN’S M for
DUtem per,Influenza, ShlppingFever.
Coughs and Colds. Cheapest ana
surest means of escaping tnese dis
eases. Occasional doses work won*
dera. Give ‘‘SPOHN’S" for Dog
Distemper. Used for thirty years.
60 cents and $1.20 at drut
stores.
t * l. C ’ • C /* l. ( o
Who is the youngest member of the
American Legion?* Just at this time,
Jefferson post of the organization In
Louisville, Ky„ lays claim to that dis-
m’tioTrriTr nnnounctng- that"F*. Strotti- In
er 1’arton is a mem be/ of the post.
Barton was horn April 3, 1902, and
whepsthe Marine c«.rps issued a call
for buglers It) 1G10, he attempted to
enlist. He was unable to meet the
requirements" for age, though be passed
all others successfully. * Denied his
parents’ consent to enter service, ns
he was but fourteen at the time, he
bided his time and enlisted In the
navy in 1910.
He^ was jient tP Charleston, S. 0;,
for training in naval aviation, from
there to^ he sent to Hampton Roads,
Va. Barton was discharged In 1919,
and soon after “hooked up” with the
Legion in Louisville.
One brother, Lieut. Frank R. Barton,
served two years in the air service,
was awarded the Croix de Guerre, and
received special citations for hrnverv
by the great Industrial de-
the co-operation in civlq
and the boundless good fellowship
In America, Gen. Joseph Haller, noted
Polish patriot who was tho guest of
the American Legion while in the
'United States, has returned' to his na
tive land. - *
In a letter to National Commander
Jolin It. Qufnn of the Legion, the
great Polish warrior said that his
pleasure in his visit was unbounded,
and was an experience that he would
always necall because of the associa
tion with his former comrades' of the
World war who had fought under the
■American flag.
By ReV. P. B. F1TZWATER, D.D..
Lean of tho Evening School, Moody
Bible Institute of Chicago.)
<(B.,U>»4. Western Newpuper Union.)
LESSON FOILEEBRUARY 3
WHAT
ISRAEL LEARNED
SINAI
AT
LESSON TEXT—Deut. 4:32-40.
GOLDEN TEXT—Thou shall love the
_ , Lord thy God with all thine heart, and
General Haliers \isit- began early_ with. a1t~"thy goul, and with aTT’thy"
/*S
.Ad b*
0
I
might.—Deut. 6:5.
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOP
IC—Knowing and. Obeying God's Law.
YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP
IC—The Foundation of lerael's Life.
OcUhlVT umf continued tmtii a tew
days before Christmas. His. tour
started with a visit to the White
House and a visit Jo the tomb of the -
Unknown Soldier at Arlington, across
the coittlnent to San Francisco, where | Deuteronomy, the book from which
he received highest honors at the | our lesson is taken, means'second
hands* of the* American Legion. As law.” It is a second law in the sense
-the official guest of the organization, 1 that it is a restatement and interpre-
he “was presented with the American tation of the law given at Sinai,.for a
Legion’s Distinguished Service Medal. j n^v generation in a new country. This
TOOKCARDUI
- Tfl BUILD UP
Georgia Lady Say$ She’s Sure of
theJVIerit of Cardui, Having
Taken It for 25 Years, '
Whenever Needed.
Ellijny, Ga.—A quarter of a cen
tury’s successful use of Cardui, taken
on many different occasions when
needed, is reported by Mrs. Thomas
H. Kell, n near-by resident. >
“When I was a girl of 13," said Mrs.
Kell, “my mother gave me Cardui as
a tonic, with very good results.”
Mrs. Kell explained that her second
use of Cardui came after her mar
riage, shortly before she became a
mother. “I needed something to build
me up,’’ she said, “and I Immediately
sent and got a bottle of Cardui. I
took It regularly before the birth of
every one of my children, and I have
always gotten along well at that time.
. . . My last two babies were twins,
and before they came 1 grew very
weak ... I could scarcely get
around to do my work. 1 got Cardiff
and took it and kept it up. I never
went to bed and am sure the-Cardui
did it.
“My health is very (good now. I
recovered my strength quickly after
the twins came, and this I attribute to
the use of Cardui,”
Cardiff is a safe, purely vegetable,
medicinal tonic medicine, proved valu
able in helping to relieve thousands
of cases of womanly weakness, such us
Mrs. Kell describes above.
For sale everywhere by druggists.
worn only tyy two Americans and by
but four otherb—Marshal Foch of
France, Admiral Beatty of England,
General Jacques of Belgium, General
Diaz of Italy. • •
Back across the nation with a party
of representative Legion men, sped
the great Polish patriot, to visit nearly
fifty of America’s greatest cities,
where he was greeted by members of
that organization, Polish colonies and
many officials, statesmen and promi
nent persons.
new generation needed ,a true concep
tion of God .and also an apprehension
of the wonderful- grace which had
selected them and made^them a chan
nel through which God’s grace would
flow to the world.
i. God's Unparalleled Goodness to
Israel (Deut. 4:32-34)."
This was shown:
1. By Speaking Audibly Out of the
Midst of the Fire (vv. 32, 33).- This
honor conferred upon them was
unique. It was unequalled. (1) la
SAY “BAYER” when you buy
Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians foi
Colds Headache Neuralgia Lumbago
fain Toothache Neuritis Rheumatism
Accept only “Bayer” package
which contains proven directions.
Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets
Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists.
Aspirin Is tb« trade Mark of Bayer Mas of actors of MoooaoeUcacldeater of Salley Ucacld
Before his flepnrture. General Haller past' history—"the days that are past
expressed his deep satisfaction at the since the day that God created man
QUtcume ; oil Uui—visit, and.-ideeply upon the earth.” . {2) Anywhere-
thanked the American Legion for the “from one side of heaven unto the
opportunity to see the nation. He other.” (3) In character—“there hath
said in ids letter: been no such great thing,as this great
“What has given me the greatest thing is." (4) In story or'rumor—
pleasure lias been’ the evidence on “or hath been heard like It!" (5) In
every hand-that the American soldier dignity and majesty—"did ever people
who readily gave up his peaceful pur- hear the voice of God speaking x out
suits to don .the uniform of his proud of the midst of-the fire/’
country *nnd help put down oppression 2. By His Marvelous Deliverance
in Europe so quickly returned to the of Israel From the Egyptian Bondage
Industrial and commercial occupations (v. 34)". Here, too, His grace is unique,
following the signing of the armistice, (i) j n liberation—“take him a nation
I have noted the happy homes, the from the midst of another nation."
contentment and the prosi>erity of (2) In the method employed. (aX. By
those liberty-loving and unwarlike | temptations—testings, that is, plagues,
lads. It has been a constant Inspira- (\>) Ry signs and wonders—crossing
tlon to me. The officers of the many S( . ai pillar of cloud, (c) By war
More Babies Born
in Hospitals Now
Seeking out the birthplace of Ameri
cans Is a practice destined to disap-,
pear, according to the present trend of
birth statistics. Figures gathered h)\
physicians and l^ealth agencies show
that the percentage of babies horn at
home is steadily falling off, with a
corresponding increase in birth at ma
ternity hospitals. In many comnuini-
lh.’-U Ihrpughyut tliq . 1. nilcd iU pf»ace. so t^n going - '/
His Nagging Wife —
“There’s no ^ath*fyin’- wimmen,**
bitterly complained. Hunk Smith to a
fellow commuter. "Here’s Marie—wife
—naggin’ me for months to let her
have a maid. I gets tier one and thinks
everything’ll be hunky for a hit. But
Is it?” '•
Smith snorted. “Now she fcants new
china, glass and furniture. Says she’s
ashamed before Olga, the maid, of all
our old stuff. It’s up to me trrLpcp
Legion posts, the .officials of the or
ganization are all enshrined in my
heart."
Britisher Anxious to
Be Legion Member
Harold Hall, a veteran of the Brit
ish Royal engineers, who served on
every British battle front from Mens
(See Exod. 14 :4; 15 :3-10)'. (d> By out
stretched arm—Divine ’ interposition,
such as opening the Red sea for Israel
and closing it upon ttnr-Kgyptians. (e)
By great terrors—the death of. the
first horn.
II. The Reason Why the Lord So
Dealt With’Israel (Deut. 4:35-38).
1. That They Might Know That the
Lord Is Unique in the Midst'of a
was said, at the recent convention of
the American College of Surgeon#,
more than n quarter of the children
are iiospital-born. In certain locali
ties tho figure is- as high ns 75 per
cent.
The New York Nursery and Child’s
ho^flital, 101 West Sixty-first street,
has completed a survey of facilities
for maternity service* bn tlip upper
West side, in which it was found that
an increasing number of women are
having their babies at the hospital. An abundance
John R. Howard, Jr., superintendent, of luxuriant hair
pointed out that while « niy 31 ward full of gloss,
cases of every >00 attended by the hos- gleams and life
pital’s physicians in 191') were handled, shortly follows a
at Hie hospital, the number today is genuine toning up
57 out of every 100.
"Fipe-tlio maid?’’
Hank looked pityingly nr his friend.
“It’s easy, to see..Bill, you ain’t a mar*
riedr-Htan.”—NeW York Sun.
• *
Y
&
c
.
' t v
GIRLS!.' A GLEAMY MASS
OF BEAUTIFUL HAIR
35-Cent "Danderine” So Improvn Life-
* less, Neglected Hair.
THE
WOMANS TONIC
Uses Aerial Propeller
By using a row boat motor rated at
one and a half horse power to drive
an aerial propeller on the stern of- u
boat a. Frenchman has made, it tow-
four more boats, carrying 20 passen
gers.
In the Argonne and other engagements.
Another brother, William II. Barton,
was a member of the Tank corps,
serving with those forces in the Somme
offensive.
Tiie young .nan Is now twenty-one,
but the department of Kentucky be
lieves that’ in him they have the young*
est Legionnaire in the whole organiza-
ttmr :— : — —~~
Yr>u nevor can know how ouporlor 1« Dr
Popry'a “IWa Shot” for Worm* until voii
have trlod It 372 Pearl St.., N Y Actv
Opportunity saves time by tetephon
log.
Mexicans eat salt with orange#!*
J. W. Kitchersid
When Run-down or Recover
ing from a Prostrating Ill
ness, Here’s Good Advice
Atlanta, Ga.—“During a time of
the ‘flu’ epidemic, in a mining town
in Tennessee, I found it necessary to
close my store, that I might act as
nurse. There were a great many
cases there at that time. _We found
Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis*
covery to be the best tonic for con
valescent patients. They all gained
strength rapidly on this treatment.
“My own case y/as no exception.
The ‘Goden Medical Discovery’ gave
tone to the digestive organs and en
riched the blood, with the result 1 of
restoring me to ,a general healthy
condition.”—J. M. Kitchersid, 154
Whitehall St.
Obtain the Discovery in tablets or
liquid at your nearest drug store or
send lOq to Dr. Pierce’s Invalids’
Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y., for trial
Pkg-, or write for free medical f.dvice,
Arkansas Legion -to
Aid of City Schools
Broadening the scope of the com
munity service program, members of
the .\meriP*ii legion auxiliary in Lit-
tlo Rock, Ark., are. co-operating with
Affiliated School Improvement associa
tion to bring about better school con
ditions in that city.
B* cause school funds w ere low the
authorities made a ten per cent reduc
tion in teachers’ salaries and planned
to dose the schools earlier in the year.
Not daunted by the action, women
workers- of the Legion and persons
Interested in the city’s schools, raised
funds with Which to complete a thirty-
nine-weeks’ term and pay the teachers
the full salary provided for in the
contracts. Members of the M. M.
Ebert unit of the American Legion
auxiliary and department .officials of
the organization joined in the allied
movement. .
——7—.— : —
NeXv Post in Honduras
Far off in Honduras, thirt.s World
Trar veterans liave troTird /tie call OT
the American Legion and have-formed
the Legion’s newest foreign post. The
men. pra< tieall.v ;i]| of w hom a re-hr the
employ of tlie TruxUlo Railroad .corn-
party'sent in atr application for jpiyost
charter which was granted, making
the new post the first foreign unit to
he chartered in the new year. It Is
located at Puerto (’astilla, Honduras,
and Willard Beaulac, vice eorl&ul for
the United States at that station, lias
been named post' rtomniandor. r *
to tho Dardanelles, is looking forward
to aoceptaneeYf his application by the Y° r 'fi Idolaters. God s aim was to
American Legion. Hall was one of establish a nation who would-know
Him as the only. God and make tills
essential and blessed truth known to
other nations.
2. That They Might Know His Love
for Them (vv. 37. 38). He loved them
for their fathers’ sake and through
them would make real His covenant
purpose.
Hi. The Obligation' of Israet (Thnrtr
4:39.40).- " ' ‘ . .
They were to consider and receive
in their heart the thought that^ the
Lord was the alone God. What we
think about God is revealed in our
lives. The law to which obedience
was to he rendered w;as that set forth
in the Ten (Vrnmandments, as re.cord-
-ied in Exodus 2:1-17.
1. The first emphasizes tire unity
of God and enjoins tire oldlgatiort of
single-hearted worship and service
(v. 3). " j
WOMEN CAN DYE ANY
GARMENT, DRAPERY
Dye or Tint Worn, Faded Things
New for, 15 Cents.
the first to learn of the new ruling
rtiado by the Legion at the fifth annual
convention, which permits those who
served with allied armies who were
at the time citizens of the United
States, or later became naturalized,
to affiliate with the Legion.
-Hall is a resident of Minneapolis,
lifllT aJifilTcd' fof rt'uTunilizn11 on' pTfprtTsr
following his arrival in that city in
January, 1923. His next step was to
make application for Legion member
ship, but was told that he would he
1 (oreed to wait until completion of nat
uralization requirements. He declares
that every* American World war vet-
! eran should avail himself of the op
portunity to affiliate with the Legion:
Diamond Dyi
es
Don’t wonder whether you can dye
or tint successfully, because perfect
home dyeing is guaranteed with ’’Dia
mond Dyes” even if yhu have never
dyed before. Druggists have all colors.
Directions In each package.—Adver
tisement.
Canada Would Have
Legion Convention
Montreal seeks to entertain a na
tional convention of the American
The Spectrum
A ray of sunlight, shining through a
pri-m and serrated into the suoees-
sinn of colors called the spectrum, is
only visjj.de in part, to human vision.
Below- tin* red. at one end and above
tin* violet at the "oilrer, as we ail
know, are colors which are invisible
to TFs, and whose quality we cannot
conceive. We know, however, that* they
of neglected
scalps with do-
pendable “Dan
derine.”
Falling hair,
itching scalp and the dnndrrtff Is cor
rected immediately. Thin, dry, wispy
or fading hair is quickly invigorated,
taking on new strength, color and
youthful beauty. “Dnrujcrinc” is de
lightful on the hair; a refreshing.
• stimulating tonic—not sticky or greasy I
Any drug store.—Adve/tlsement.,
' »
Oldest Historical Tree
The oldest historical tree (not tiro
pldrtst tree) is one in Ceylon. It i»-
known to have been pl.mted, as a cut
ting -from j he.: B<». tree under which
Gautama’ mcditnled. in the year 245
B. From that t^mt to thfs it has
been carefully teb*.h‘d and watered ; its
great branclres are supported. h\ pils-
hirs. and the earth lias been terraced
t .
UP,about it so that Jt lias been able to
put out fresir routs continually.
The second is directed against Insects.
“CASCARETS” FOR LIVER
AND BOWEL?—10c A,B0X
— r
Oires Biliousness, Constipation, Sick
are appreciated by the eyes of some , Headache,Indigestion. Drugstores. Adv
r* of u* ^ _
the wonffrip of tire true God under
! Legion, according to an invitation sent f (i | S( , f orms
to national headquarters of tire xet-j —Tire third is directed against tin*
ta’klng of God’s name in vain ;’that is,
•in a lying, deceptive, unreal way.
4. Tire fourth enjoins work <>n six
days and furbids'work on the seventh.
5. The fifth rests upon tire fact
that pahent.s'sRfnd fw their children in
the place of •'God—-therefore .errjojns
obedience'-* to them.
G. The sixtli shows the sanctity of
human life and that the one who liirfr
dors lias sinned against God, for man
* * f r
was created in tiie likenass and - image
erans’ organization through Legion of
ficiaHs in Canada.
The 'Invitation was extended by
Mayor Martin * of Montreal;' who de
clared that the entertainment of- the
former, comrades of the British s<d-
dief-s wofcrld grve great pleasure to eltV
zens of ids country, as well as afford
ing ri means for rrtore closely linlirft
tin* people of the two nations.
Tire invitation was not received in
tina* for'eonsider.itj"n, liowever, as tiie
Extra
Why is a newslmy never cold?
Becnus** selling'papers keeps up the
circulation.—Bms’ Life.
i
r
1
■ -——-B&msTi-Right
There is, here and there, a man who
boasts that he says what he thinks,
but most folks rejoice that they are
aide to restrain .themselves In time.
(«
CRY FOR
Legion convention for 1924 had already
been authorized for St. Paul. Victoria^
B. anotl«?r Canadian city, invited
the veteran’s organization to • .romc
there In 1924, this invitation Ivefng ,ex-
Would Increase Police Pay
Increase of pay fort members .of the
Chicago police department was sought
by a number of organizations in. that
city, but none were, more ardent in
support of the demand of the police
than members of^Commodore Barry
post of thf* American Legion. A letter
- Jo city officials from tiie post sup
ported the request for Increase of pay
to $2,500 per year, on fire grounds
that the members of the department
were not receiving n wage “commen
surate with their work —nr 11 ving ex
penses.” ’ I
teiTded during the fifth national conven
tion at Sari Francisco.
Would '‘Show” Them
Clarence R.- Edwards, loader of the
Yankee division in the World war,'
and now leading iris former ‘soldiers
as department commander of tiie I
American Legion in Massachusetts, |
says that the Legion can become the 1
finest body of men In America.
General Edw ards./« under Whose
guidance Legion interest has reached
a high tide"-in his state, appealed to
his comrades ' with" the words: 1
“Justitvs soon as you show the non-
Legionnaire—irten who are nftw elig
ible—that tire purpose of the organi
zation is to be behind eterytlring fine
Tn civic life In every town ifnd city,
just so soon will you have the in
dorsement and hacking of all your
fellow citizens.”
of. (Jod;
7. The Jigventh is the bulwark
thrown around the home.‘ This com
mandment may be broken by unclean
thoughts and affections as well as by
outward acts. , t „ .
8. —The eighth strikes al the sin of
tijeft. /
!». The ninth* strikes at the sin of
tying. •, „
10. The tenth strikes at tin* desire
Tor that which Is unlawful to'own. ...
a A SurejCure
De LanceJfi—How’s yo'iif■ wife now?
Clnilrncrs*-Qlu {sphyidid recovery.
Irijirod a yha
change of scen-
Tlre doctor
cry. •* - Ti/
De LaneeyJBfc(l it worked?
Ch a 11 aera—N or^lrnd to do that—-to
•pay for the scenery. She Alrougli't he
meant clothes. — American “ Legion
\\’eekly.
Him, T00 .
In a state of considerable excite
ment, tire dreys manager rushed up
to Sam, the colored canvasman.
"We need a little help, Sam," he
cried. “Four lions have escaped from
cage five."
"’Scaped? ejaculated Sam. "Hoi’
dis hammer, boss. Dat’s jes’ zackly
what. Ah’s gwine to' do!"—American
Legion Weekly.
Building for Eternity.
If we work upon marble, it will per
ish ; if-we work upon brass, time will
efface it; if we .rear temples, they
will crumble into dust; hut if we work
upon immortal souls. If we imbue
them with principles, with the Ju,st
fear of God and love of fellowmen.
we engrtnve on these tablets some
thing which brightens all eternity.—
I aniei Webster.
•' ' Keep Climbing.
The vine that lias no treiHs lovses Its
beauty in the dust, and dies beenuse
it, cannot climb. . It is even so»-»44b-the
spirit of man. If it cannot climb, It
dies.^—Herald of Gospel Liberty.
I
f-
I
MOTHERFletcher's Castoria
is a pleasant, harmless Substitute
for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Teeth
ing Drops and Soothing Syrups,
—1. especially prepared for Infants
in arms and Children all ages.
To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of
proven directions on each package. Physicians everywhere recommend it
l, * v
l ,
Learning to Walk. —
One mu§t be'willing >0 fall down In
oiMertn lx* able to got up and walk.—
!*aptist World.
TWA.3B
mdnt wen
tp relieve a cougl
Take your choice a ; nd suit
your taste. S-By-or Menthol
flavor. A sure relief for coughs,
colds and hoarseness. Put one
in your mouth at bedtime..
Always keep on hand.
MARK
An Open .Gate,"
Idleness la the gate of nil haym.--
The Gideon. . . v.
SMITH BROTHERS
S.B. COUCH DROPS menthol
—' ~ * Famous since 1847 ("mptalondbm)