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' r; » V ^ ■^S J- THURSDAY, APRIL 8TH, 1926* THE BARNWELL PEOPLE-SENTINEL. BARNWELL. SOUTH CAROLINA ^ PACE l * , ,rAT NEW FSUEfc GOT THINKS HE'S SkART— ■WojAS.ee wh laugh , 1 when ma £au_ed neour Of THE PARUSRTDMkGHT?] I -ftjr pwcd him \>\otfr f 1 V^SCJBAPS;0nCHAHt9i OLE CAte NCVCC, HAeotO CANT get hip, CAR STACrED-ANOir? raining TCeraiRCC' WHAT'LL WE 00? WAWZCN/^eNOO AWAKE?, COMEON GET UP ~ SMI Hi HA? TO STAY ALL NIGHT--^£LL SLEEP IN YOUR 060-rLLW YOU A PLACE ON THE AW GEE H^f T T GOT IT ALU, WARMED UP* 1 About Ifout 0 Health Thmgi You Should Know Local and Personal ^ News from Williston hy John Jowplt Cunc*. SCIATIC NEURITIS. Sciatic ireuritis is, of courM, limited to the sciatic nerve. It ia often excruciatingly painful. There is no swelling. Lameness is pro nounced. Fever is absent in the majority of cases. Absolute rest is the best treatment, though other measures may go along with bene fit. T find it very difficult to con vince these people that they do not have- rheumatism. Old-time physi cians indeed, used to pronounce this disease “sciatic rheumatism" when conditions were not under stood as they are now. An aged physician war. ore of the worst .si:Tercr< that I have ever .seen. Medicine-* foi rheumatism were ao- solute failure.* hr his ca-e. A piaster-parts east which enforced absolute rest for two weeks cured I i—without a drop of .medicine! Rheumatism, so-c.:l!c*l, is an in flammation of the joints, it is char acterized by swelling, pain, limited motion, and fever in acute stages. The correct term is arthritis. Rheu matism is an obsolete name, or rhould be. Neuritis is an entirely different proposition, and requires entirely tafferent treatment. Blcod- lisorders an ! germs cause arthritis. Injuries, over-use*.-sUains, and nis- ra-*e of -adjacent organs cause r.eu- Willisbon, April 3.—Master John White has returned to Columbia af ter having spent several weeks with his grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. S. Mellichamp. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. White are now occupying their at tractive bungalow which has just been completed in Slpandon Terrace, Columbia Mr. and Mis. J. W OHinma visitad. Dr. D. D. Salley in Orangeburg Sun day. i Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Johnsop and their guests, Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Johnson, were guests of Judge and Mrs. J. Henry Johnson in Allendale Thursday. Mrs. Rosa Matthews and Miss Bes sie Greene were visitors in Aik in • Thursday. . Mr.' and Mrs. Angus Riley and daughter, Nancy, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. W .R. Kenritedy. Messrs*. M. M. Player, Joe K?n- nefly and Richard Odiorne were visi tors in Spartanburg last week. Mesdames Lang Buist. W. W. Mo- lony and Sim Rush ,of Blackville. were visitors here Friday. Mrs. A. H. Ninestein and daughter, of Blackville, visited Williston last week. M iss Maybelle .'Holly spent the week-end with her parents in Aiken. Miss Virginia Mims, of Orange- ritiy—A r* ' a: - l^c*- ; - a y cau l sciatic iif-jri*’.', w uch treatment <-f t ie u!c r-c.:»T- pron ptly. Wo’uea have .-c;u ic : srtttr* from cu.*e.* IP'Capo of en •’»' phy-i- ciar him-'If ‘ui.’-N ‘.t 'u'.e-tl'.e source. V hit of reff'c.b*; » gat to c nvirre iry >( t’ce '"ut'lny burg, spent the week-end with Miss Jacque Davis. Dr. Henry Cone, of Orangeburg, has been sick here for a week at the home of his brother, Dr Wallis Cone. Mrs. C. A. Smith and Mis4 Gladys Givens, of Springfield, spent the week-end With Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Cook. Misses Florrie Lee Scott and Mil dred Willis ■ and Mr. Melbourne fcreech motored to Augusta Sunday ’.Jlr. R. P„ Kennedy, of Augusta, spent Sunday in the city. Mrs. Bessie Anderson, of Saluda, was ►tie guest of her sister, Mrs.. J. P. Hall, Sunday. Mrs Louise Hancock has returned * . ( to her home in Augusta after spend ing some time with Mrs., Myrtle Waidr Mr und Mrs. Homer Eidson, of Springfield, were Sunday guests of Mrs. Levi Bolen. ftfr Hnhorfr Farmrir, nf Charley ton, attended services at Edisto Sun day. Misses Kate Edenfield and Clara Mae Edenfield and Junior Edenfield, of North Augusta, spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Weathers- bee. “Isn’t she divine? She looks like a Goddne&s of Liberty." . “She it. She has been divorced four times."—The (Jatawban CANDIDATE CARDS. Far House of Representatives. Barnwell, S. C., March, 17, 19M. I hereby announce myself a candi date for the House of Representa tives from Barnwell County, subject to the^rules and regulations of th* Democratic Primary Election. THOS. M. BOULWARE. Advertise in The People. SUMMONS FOR RELIEF. State of South Carolina. County of Barnwell. Court of Probate. ADD1E ANDERSON in her own right Advertise in The People-Sentinel. Applications Shoidd Be Finished By June 1st As a result of four years’ experi ments on cotton, ’the Mississippi (Delta) Experiment Station recom mends as “the safest and most paying rate of application" from 150 to 200 pounds of Nitrate of Soda per acre. These results are so typical of the large majority of those secured with Nitrate at experiment stations throughout the South, that they are summarized here to show the 4-year average net profit from 5 different treatments, as follows: 4-Year Avaraga Nat Acre Prafit $10.73 15.92 26.19 * 30.10 33.67 N Strata at Sada AypBad par A era - 50 JOB 150 200 250 The Station’s -results are interesting ‘ from aether standpoint, for accord ing to tSe Director of the Station they indicate that there is danger of apply ing Nitrate too late. Thus, when the application is much over 100 pounds per acre, it is recom mended that half be used at planting and half at the second cultivation, but, says Director Ayres, “Those who are not sure the fertilizer can be ap plied as a side dressing by the time the first squares appear should apply it all at or before planting.” This, of course, is true not simply of cotton but of many other crops as well. For example, Farm Agent H. H. Hester, Red River Pariah, Louisiana, reports that demonstrations on sugar cans in which 200 pounds of Nitrate of Soda per acre ware used gave excep tional yields despite a dry season. It dearly shown by these teste that and as administratrix of the Es tate of FRANK ANDERSON, de ceased. Plaintiff, * * * vs. JOHN DOE. a fictitious name, and Mary Roe, a fictitious name, and any other heirs at law of the late Frank Anderson, deceased, and any other person or persons who might have any interest An. or to the es^ tate of the said Frank Anderson, deceased. * Defendants. To each of the defendants above named: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMON ED and required to answer the com plaint in this action, which is filed in the office of the Probate Judge for the County pf Barnwell, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint; on the subscriber, C. Alva Baxley, at her office at Blackville, S. C., within twenty days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of service; and if-you fail to answer the complaint within the time afore said, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the court for relief demand- ed in the complaint. C. ALVA BAXLEY. Attorney for Plaintiff. JOHN K. SNELLING <L. S.) Judge of Probate, Barnwell Co .S. C. March 16th, 1926. early applications of Nitrate "are l—entisf to give full protection against a poasiblf drouth.” As a general rale, side dwringi of 8oda at the rate of 100 pounds per acre can be nroAtably made if the work can be leiehed by the lint of (*) NOTICE TO MINORS. l TO any 5nd all minor heirs at law who map exist as to the estate of Frank Anderson, deceased, and to the person or persons with whom such minor, heirs at law of Frank Anderson, deceased, may reside: YOU WILL PLEASE TAKE NO TICE that you are hereby required to apply to the court and have a suit able guardian ad litetn appointed to represent you in this action, and that if you fail to have such guardian ad litem appointed to reprt -lent you within thirty days from date hereof, then in that event if it be found that there are minor heirs to the said es tate in existence the-plaintiff will ap ply to the qourt for the appointment of, a suitable guardian ad litem to represent you . and each of you that may be in existence in this action. C. ALVA BAXLEY, Attorney for Plaintiff. March 16, 1926. ^Jll that a Fine Car should be A’ • • I. ■ » V . 7 j\ v ' V'' i ■.* ^ vl • t V * I N every part of the world motorists of wealth and taste have pronounced the Packard Ei&ht to be all they could ask in a fine motor car. This international reputation is well deserved. For the Packard Eifcht provides a more nicely* balanced combination of all those qualities universally desired than even the most experienced have learned to expect in any car at • . ..... ' ^.»», i .■■■ J»'-— any pnee. Its beauty, £race and distinction have been acclaimed supreme time after time in European beauty contests, and acknowledged and frankly imitated here at home. Yet the slim fcrace of Packard lines has not impaired the cars luxur ious roominess. r • . • , Packard Ei&ht performance has yet to be surpassed by any car,' American or foreign. Yet the simplicity of its superbly smooth land powerful ei&ht-in-line motor results in surprisingly economical operation and in lon& life. Speed is available to the fullest of ' man’s desires. Yet in its four- wheel brakes lies the insurance of safety—the ability to brinfc the fcreat car quickly to a smooth and even standstill with the easy pressure of a woman's foot. Even the bother and inconvenience connected with the care of most cars is eliminated for the Packard Ei&ht owner. For example, the chassis can be lubricated in an instant from the driver’s seat. And with the advanced engineer ing, the modem design and work manship, the last word up-to- dateness in style and trim,-comes also an indefinable satisfaction in the ownership of, a ,car which has been ^distinguished by the patronage of social eminence for more than a generation. Only by driving a Packard Ei&ht can one appreciate what a wonder ful, .almost living thin& it seems. Only then does one realize that Packard Ei&ht owners are not immoderate in their superlatives. i ' fi*.' W.D. HARLEY i * .1 Barnwell, South Carolina .. > * -. /y Y •V t.. -v-vy, ' v ; r.'V v rSainKT- ' ^ * - sAsk ^The CMan HUho Owns One