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« ■* rAGB FOUR. L . / ’PRPWPpiiVinpHiM T; X- 1 / f i. 4 l'- L ■ ■ ) ■ U. J L tHfc BARNWELL PEOPLE-SENTINEL, BARNWELL. SOUTH CAROLINA THURSDAY, APRIL 15TH, 192?. JOHN W. HOLMES im—1912. B. P. DAVIES, Editor and Proprietor. r > 'i " 1 . Entered at the post office at Barnwell S. C., as second-class matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year — $150 Six Months .90 Three Months ... .—... .50 (Strictly in Ad ranee.) THURSDAY, APRIL 15TH. 1926. Not , Ciril War. Some time ago, The People-Senti- nel received a communication in > '' v ' f refence to a forthcoming reunion of Confederate Veterans in which the late unpleasantness between the North and the South wr»s referred to as the “Civil War.”- The term was used ty ere who shiuid have known better «nd the error was pobably due to a slip of the pen,, While Webster’s International Dictionary classes the War Between the States a “civil war," tho term is in disfavor among well informed Southerners. Strictly speaking, a civil war is a war between people under the same Tt is a misnomer when’ ossa rupees fovernwmr applied to the War Between the States because the South set up and maintained for four years a separ ate and distinct gtoveymnent, the union of Southern States being known as the “Confederate States of Am erica.” The Confederate States, dur ing the four years of their existence as such, passed their own laws and ■issued their own currency. The war, therefore, Was fought between the Confederate States of America and the United States of America, and 3*sjmfcawJu>w’ ■»?-«<* The Difference. wrnaaww»» •:*** , liWYtrV, aw -tflunmny erroneously be lieve. We believe that “The War Be tween the States” has been adopted as the correct name by all Confeder ate organizations and we are giving the above information again in the $K>|>e that the term “civil war" will he dropped from the vocabulary of Southerners in so far as it appuies to the conflict between the North and the South. Sycamore News. Sycamore, April 11.—Miss Thelma Mack, of Swansea, spent the week-end with her sister. Mrs. J. E. Brown. M rs. Estelle Loadholt and daugh ter. Matty Lou, and Mrs. Smith and daughter, Marie, motored to Allen dale Tuesday afternoon on business. Miss Elizabeth Allen spent the week-end in Milletteville with friends •nd relatives. Mrs. John B. Hiers, of Ehrhardt, is spending some time with her daugh ter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. T. T. Vernon. John Myers, of Fairfax, was in Monday on business. p Mr. and Mrsu Bill Allen and chib motored to Augusta Wednesday. J. E. Lightsey, H. H. Lightsey, J. X y<Brnftn*i»ate We find this interesting announce ment in an advertisement, in the cur rent issue of the Patriot published at Cuba, New York: ‘tHey. yafr.Dollars ITfWTnr-fW Mow/large or smaltf quantity.” The price of hay in South Carolina is $30 a ton. The wide dif ference in price represents the mid dleman’s profit and the freight char ges. According to New England aver ages the price of lands around Cuba runs from $250 to $400 per acre. In South Carolina the average is from $50 to $100. One wonders why the Now England farm offers hay at $10 a ton when it is worth $30 :n S*uth Carolina. The New England farm is seifsustaining.—Dillon Her ald. Ty Cobb Young Wife Afraid to Eat Anything “I was afraid to eat because I al- atomach. ti-jouhla aflarwartk. -SrrTrF-ttt^trr}r~Adl?rttra”T' T5r“7?r*rrf<I feel fine.” isigned> Mrs. A. Howard ONE spoonful of .Adlerik n removes GAS and often brings surprising re lief to the stomach. Stops that full, bloated feeling. Removes old waste matter from intestines and makes you feel hfpppy and hungry. Excel lent for obstinate constipation. Dea- son’s Drug Store. if • • * Stop That Backache. Many | For Summer Sports 4L '.wM- Simplicity is the key-note of this practical two-piece frock for Sum mer sports wear Of . striking heather-toned jersey, the inverted plaits on the shoulder, and the Wedded belt relieves it of much of Jta severity of line, while the skirt, with the popular kick plaits, allows fmedon* necessary to Barnwell Folks Hav*> Found the Way. Is a dull, nerve-racking backache wearing you out? Do you feel older a fid slower than you should? Are you tired, weak and nervous; find it impossible to be happy, or enjoy the good times around you? Then there’s something wrong and likely it’s your, kidneys. Why not get at the cause? Use Doan’s Pills—a stimulant diuretic to the kidneys. Your neighbors rec- ccmmend Doan’s. Read ^ what this Barnwell resident says: T. J. Attaway, propr., grocery, Main St, says: “My back bothered sten/i long, my back - through my kidneys. My kidneys were disordered and didn’t act free ly enough. This complaint was pain ful, too. at times but I used Doan's Pills and they corrected all the trou ble.” / 60c, at all dealers. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. m •\< u , Mi i m <** m v ; ’:‘ \ I << t, \ picture just received from the Tigers’ training camp, showing the veteran star trying out his orbs on the pesky pill. Cobb had an operation performed on his eyes and is wearing a special mask fur protection. ~ The Image of God Even the birds build their neats and feed their young, singing the while. And the animals dig their barrow* in the ground, working as if It were play. And yet It has not been said of tbam that they were made in the imaga of Ood.—Willard Browu Thorp. Cow Works Three Months to Give =—Year’s Milk for One Person M ASTER’S SALE State, of South Carolina, County of Barnwell. In the C urt of Common Plea- The Southern Cotton Oil Company, Plaintiff, vs. J. J. Ulmer. Defendant. Under and by virtue of a decretal order to me directed, I will se'l in front of the Court House door at Barnwell, S. C., between the legal hours of sale, on the 3rd day of May, 1926, the same being sutesday in the month aforesaid, to the highest bid der, the following described real es, tate: All that certain piece, parcel or tract of land, together with all build ings and improvements thereon, situ ate, lying and being in Great Cypress Townshipj in Barnwell County, South Carolina* . containing two .„ .hundied of the original “J. M. Ulmer Tract” and bounded now or formerly as fol lows, to-wit: On the North by Salkc- hatchie River; on the East by lands of Ed. Sanders; on the South by lands of the Estate of J. M. Ulmer, am| on the Wes* by lands of me, the said J. J. Ulmer. The successful bidder at said sale * is to deposit the sum of One Hundred ($100.00) Dollars, with the Master immediately after the fall of the { hammer, the said sum to be~applieT Co the purchase price upon compli ance with Ahe terms of the sale, and to be forfeited upon -non-compliance therewith. i “- Terms of sale: CASH—Purchaser to pay' for stamps and papers. G. M. GREENE, Master Barnwell Co. Barnwell, S. C., April 14, 1926. ' LONG TERM MONEY to LEND ' **-*-- ‘■■VI 1 — 6 per cent..intefest on large amounts , • *-—• Prjvate funds for small loans, , i K 1 BROWN & BUSH BARNWELL. SOUTH CAROLINA. ■ - : \ • r. " « * • a-* New manufacturing'enterprises in the territory served by us are invited to communicate with us, as we may be able to afford assistance in the financ ing of their enterprises, as well as as sist in the distribution and sale of their products. — Any service that is within our power for the development of the Edisto-Savannah section will be cheer* fully afforded by us at any time. The Edisto Public Service Co. / Denmark, *South Carolina « 6 66 6 is a prescription for MALARIA, CHILLS AND FEVER, DENGUE OR BILLIOUS FEVER. It Kills the Germs. Notice of Discharge. Notice is hereby given that we will file our final account with the Hon. John K. Sneiling, Judge of Probate, for Barnwell County, upon the 3tst day of March, 1926, and petition the said Court for an Order of Discharge and Letters Dismissory, as adminis trators of the estate of Clark Brown, deceased. HORACE BROWN. GEORGIA BROWN, Administrators, Estate of Clark Brown, deceased. March 2, 1926. 4t. CUways use x ClanSSeriS Bre ad , x-has move feed lalue ^ Advertise in The People. “Gifts That Last” Sterling Silver Flat Ware. Ingersoll Redipoint Pencils from 35 Cents Up. A FIRST CLASS REPAIR DEPARTMENT. Let Us Save You Money on Your Next Purchase in the * Jewelry Line. , P. W. STEVENS, Jeweler. Barnwell, . — — South Carolina. ' —i' i KUNETY days of hard labor on the part of the average dairy cow will keep one person milk for a year, aceordljig to the I^irrowe Institute of Animal Economics. At least. It takes three months for her to turn out the 1.004 pounds of milk necessary to provide the fluid and canned milk, cheese, butter and Ice cream consumed per capita per year. " bile this fact may be merely Interesting to the person consuming the tnllk, it Is of vital Importance to the dairyman who depends upon this milk for ft living. For while the 4.368 pounds of milk produced by the sverege cow In a year will meet the requirements of a family of four person^ the time one hat figured up the coat of the feed that, has gone Into the tfuctlon, there really Isn’t very much left. The only way to pennant,.. increase the income per cow is In greater milk production per unit, govern ment figures showing that when a cow’s milk yield is doubled the profit la tripled, and when th« yield Is tripled the profit la increased almost five-fold! Experiments have proven that It la entirely possible by better feeding and management to Increase the milk yield of the average cow to a point where three cows could supply four families with milk. To do this, however, the hocus-pocus feeding so commonly practiced on many dairy farms wHI have to give way to more scientific methods. Comfortable quarters for the cowa, ■n abundance of fresh water at all rtmesL a plentiful supply of good hay. and a properly baianccc green ratios are some of the things that go ter towyrd a^rpring jreatar proper cow. Advertise in The PeOple-Sentinel It’s a Doggone Good Rule • All Lines of Insurance •! Farm Coverage a Specialty;; Calhoun and Co. P. A. Price, Mgr. Bank of W. C. Bldg. Advertise in The People-Sentinel ) To remember that if an apple was the cause of man’s 1st down fall peaches have kept him there ever since; sad case-, isn’t it? It ts said that it is the woman who always pays, but that is easy after the man has handed heir over the money. But when a man puts his money into a g*od welding service, having those broken parts welded at Vickery!***., he pays for sorqething. tha/t means value on the investment. Vickery Bros. Barnwell, S. C. i