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■I ■ . ...^ Vrri..^ THE BARNWELL PEOPLE-SENTINEL, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA ! Mu>'wr K**l><‘rt ai. UuH «t Suvaunali, (ju., anti lijs w<mu4n'.H rjOjIiiet which he has InVItfU |o hhkIhi In tha running of the city by atiKuestion. The women function In addition to the regular beard of aldermen and can advise, hut net legislate. Baldock Items. h Baldock, Ju’y IS.-i-Marahftll McLin hf fronton spent a few tlays this week with his parents, Mr. end Mrs. E. S. McLin. Conway Baughman of Guyton, Ga., is visiting L. 0. Bennet. .. Bryant Calhoun visited his uncle, S. D. Bryant, in Savannah, remaining over for the water carnival. t » T » ■r- . Jenny Items. t b Jerniy, July 18.—Miss Katherine Jones of Augusta is visiting Miss Win nie Folk and other friends here. Miss Sadie Bickle of Asheville, N. C., Is visiting her sister, Mrs. Lloyd Loadhdlt. Miss Winnie Folk entertained the Union Sewing club Wednesday morn ing. After a pleasant session of sew ing? the girls were Served with iced tea and cake. Watch Your Diet, Says Prima Donna B. Y. P. U. Convention. The State B. Y. P. U Convention, of which the Rev. L. H. Miller, of Black- ville, i* president, will be held in Greenvile, July 30, 31, and August 2nd in connection with the BaptTst Summer Assembly. The name of Miss Alva Baxley, of Bhckville. appears on the program, which is said to be an ex cellent one. For Wear n . ■ —~y- - Vacation time seems to require an extra pair or so of Shoes. Here are just the styles jrou- want, reasonably priced. F. W. Falkenstein Barnwell, South Carolina Cyrena Van Gordon. Cyrena Van Gordon, prima donna of the Chicago Opera company, believes In the flapper and her privileges. "Sho believes In the practice of this much-discussed person In wearing n o corsets. In wearing sttort skirts, going In for athletics and out door life and 1ft thoroughly upset ting the theories and pract'cea of her mother-.and grand mot he r. Miss Van Gordon, wbq is, in private life, Mrs. S. Bogart Muhns, the wife of Doctor S. B. Munns, says that all of these things are woman’s right and are necessary If a woman Is anxious to keep her youth and beauty. But exercise Is not the only thing that la necessary for the woman who Is de sirous of being attractive. She must watch her diet and he careful not to eat anything that will, In any way, be fattening?-'• ; There are certain dishes to which Miss Van Gordon Is partial and tq which she gives the credit for the re tention of her beauty. These dishes, ■he prefers to prepare herself and. when on tour with the Chicago Opera company, she carries a Small electric stove In order that she will not be deprived of the food she deems neces sary. These disht* are easily prepared. Miss Van Gordon uses for Celery and Cheese Casserole. 1 tbsp. butter 1 cup cooked spa ghetti H cup buttered bread crumbs tsp. salt I cUp cheese I cups chopped eelsry H cup evaporated milk tt cup water i tbsp. flour ; She makes white sauce of milk, wa ter, butter, flour, and salt, and mixes it with all ingredients except crumbs. She then places it in an oildd baking dish and rovers with crumbs, baking In a moderate oven until brown. Chicken a la King. 1 cup evaporated milk 14 lb. mushrooms 1 cup chicken, broth 1 eta yolk Salt and pepper S cups cold chicken, diced • I tbsp. butter I tbsp. flour 14 green pepper, shredded 14 pimento, dkredded Cook the peppers (also mushrooms, if they are used) In the butter for 18 minutes, keeping them covered while cooking slowly. Add the flour and sea- aoal&gft^olsa tlie TOiik and broth. Stir to a smooth sauce. Put chfrkea la sance to heat, and Just before serrlug, stir In beaten egg yolk. Cook in double boiler lo prevent curdling, Send U* Your Job Work. m - Denmark Milling DENMARK, S. C. * Send us your wheat. We are now grinding. Self-ris- ing flour a specialty. PRIDING BABY DURING BUMMIR Milk id recognised ns-the Ideal food for young children. It should be care fully guarded during the* warm sum mer rnonthg, to insure Its .freedom from germs of bacteria that might cause barm to the child. Because of Its nature, It Is. under certuln condi tions. a breeding and propagating ground for germ life and may soon be come unfit for use unless It Is handled with the utmost care and vigilance. Perhaps the Ideal way to obviate this risk Is through the use of evaporated milk. This milk Is only pure milk with sixty per cent of the water re moved from It and Is absolutely ster ile. It Is of double richness bur may be modified by the addition of watery which will return It to Its original volume with a greatly enhaheed food value. „ / ’ Evaporated milk Is sterilized and has a high putrltlve content. This causes if" to be a very excellent food i for the young child and the Infant. In fact, many pf. the leading pedi atricians of the country advocate Its use after ths child ft deprived of Its mother’s milk. A formula, evolved by these pediatricians, through experi mentation, Is as follows: From Sixth Week to Third Month. Milk, evaporatftd .. • • * • wTV y... • ouncaa Lima water «•••••#eooeeooee- ^ouncaa Milk sugar ••••••••#•••••••* 2 ounces Boiled water •••••26 ounces Seven teedlngs in twenty-four hours; 4 to & ounces'at three-hour intervals during the day and four-hour Intervals at nlffhC From Third Month to Fifth Month. Milk, evaporated 7H ounces Lime water ............. 3 ounces Milk suasr ............... k ouncss Boiled water .V 29 H ounce* Six feedings In twenty-four hoyrs; 6 to • ounces at three-tiour Intervals during the day and a feeding at 10 p. m From Fifth to Seventh Month. Milk evaporated 10 ounces Lime water 3 ouncee Milk sugar *•••••••.•••••••• 2 ounces Boiled water •*••,•••• .~v.. 29 ounces Five feedings In twenty-four hours: • to 7 ounces at four-hour Intervals, ths last feeding to be given at 10 p. m. From Seventh to Ninth Month. Milk, evaporated 11 ounces Lime water ...^'3 ounces Milk sugar 2 ounces Boiled' whter Siij ounces T to 9 ouncss at four-hour Interval* 'during the day. Last feeding at tea at night. From Ninth to Twelfth Mortth. Milk, evaporated ............12 ounce* Lime water ................. 3ounco* Milk sugar tounces ■orley iv at or 34 ounce* • to 9 ounces at four-hour Intervals taring dag, Last fssding at ieu of Bight. Giving Up Pleasure, Whco_.we..bflve given op an Immedi ate pleasure 1 foi^fbaracter’s sake, we are Impressed with bqtv much we have sacrificed. Jesus was Impressed with how much a man had gained.—Harry Emerson Fosdlck. \ - Overcoming We sometimes sing, “The Crowning Day Is Coming/’ That Is true, hut remember that coronation In Scrlptwo |g associated with overcoming.— Charles Inglls. — Personality Personality has been well defined as “capacity for fellowship.”—C. A. An- darson Scott. Abraham Lincoln Saidi : -OodJIes* Urn cburQhes. and bteaand God who gives us the churches." Advertise in The People-Sentinel. $10,000 FOR THROAT ia Duster Twelfth flight Custom* X Kept Up in England Many strange and curious riles and customs haVedoug been connected with the observance of Twelfth night. Twelfth night is the evening before Epiphany, the 6th of January, also called Twelftlitlde and Old Christmas day. v . In England the principal rite of the evening is the cutting of the .“kean cake’’—a cake in which a bean is cooked, the tinder of which is made the king of the night and the fol lowing day. It was in commemoration of this custom that Robert Buddely* an Eng lish comedian of the Eighteenth cen tury, who was Jong a favorite a( the Drury Lane theater, made one of the strangest bequests on record. Baddely died in 1794, and In his will he bequeathed his cottage to a theatrical fund, requesting that a sum of three pounds be annually expended on a cake, to be cur on Twelfth night, In the Green room of the Drury Lane theater, and divided among the actors and actresses. ; River “Rafts*’ Nuisances / One of the most remarkable of the Mississippi rafts began forming in the Atchafataya, a lower arm of the river. In 1778. By 1816 it bad become 10 miles long, more than 600 feet in width, about eight feet deep, and had become solid enough to support a growth of trees, some of which were 00 feet In height. Finally the state of Louisiana had to remove the obstruc tion at great efpense, the work oc cupying four years. The United States government has since that time removed a raft which blocked the channel of the Red river for 43 miles. _r BACK GIVEN OUT? Then Follow the Advice of This Barn well Resident. prescription ■k erfection - / Exactly in accord with the doctor’s orders, no substitution, no omissjons. That is pur rule for ftlling prescriptions and you benefit by better results from the medicine we compound. BARNWELL, S. C. - ' i The Most Practical Cotton Dusting Machine on the Market ~ For Sale by C KEYS SANDERS Barnwell* S. C. Are you dragging along day after day with a dull, nagging backache? Do you-feel tired, lame and achy; suf- fejr sharp, torturing paina at every sudden move? Then look to your kidneys! Colds, strains and overwork weaken the kidneys ^"T **"* ^ throbbing backache and knife-like twinges.' Dont risk serious kidney disease! Use Doan’s Pills-^a stimu lant diuretic to the kidneys,— Read what this Barnwell resident says.: Mrs. Clara Harley, says: “During the day the misery in my back played me out. A sudden twinge often dart ed through my kidneys when T stoop ed and when I straightened my head felt dizzy and peculiar. M* kidneys did not act right. The druggist told me to try Doan’s Pillsr They were fine apd I was able to go about my work without my back and kidneys bothering me.” 60c, at all dealers. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. * . NOTICE OF SALE s/ate of South Carolina, ' County of Barnwell. " In the'Uourt of Probate Ex Parte: E. B. Sanders, Jr. In Re: Estate of W. H.-Sanders, de ceased. - , — . By virtue of an order directed to me, as Administrator of the above named estate, by Hon. John K.' Snel-, ling, Judge of Probate for Barnwell i County, I will sell at public outcry to He,. Boo, Baron, p.»lor of . Kel- ‘ he W *ho.t Wddor *" '“’V. ** vf Ion (kflnn.l church/ win, rr„t«d . home near Klrae, ,n Barnwell County, sensation by announcing that he had \ South Caroline, at eleven ©clock ■old hli “two throata” to the Britlah m-. on Monday, July 20th, 1925, the f T ? f t T T t Y t Y Artistry in i. *’ - Hair -/% Trimpiing and arranging Hair woman s crowning glory—requires a developmentof artistic ability on the part & of the-operator, comparable to that T required in any of the finer arts. ❖ make it a careful study in this shop. A Men, follow yoifr wife and children to £ Bolen’s Barber Shop t Tom Bolen, Proprietor “ / V ^ We! INSURANCE Medical association for $10,000, de- ttvery. to to made after' his death. Doctor Bacon ia known at the “York shire Nightingale” and la famous for ponaaaelng twe complete sets of vocal cords. Thin unusual throat arrange ment given him a’ deep baas and also a high soprano voice. He has travaied aeteanlvoly in America and the Britlah Hgiplre, giving concartn. j following described personal property of said estate, to-wit: . f ~ \ One ' Hudson Automobile. v - One hay baler. One gasoline engine. Cotton bagging and ties. A E. B. Sanders, Jr. June 30th, 1925.