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ihmr.AsJ »AC* TWO. V ■- SOUTH CABOUNA THURSDAY. DECEMBER tS. Local and Personal News of Blackville n ■ !*• Blackville, D«c. 18.—Miat Emily laenutn wa» m recent visitor to Miss Kies nor DurAor, in El lento n. Friends at Mrs. Cud tfut- and Miea Juanita West will regrat to / loom tf the death of their father, Mr. West, which occurred ill the Chester hospital, last Monday. Mr. and Mrs. M. P. Fanning and Mrs. A. V. Collum were recent vis* iters in Columbia. Mrs. Collier, of BUoree, was the guest of Mrs. D. P. Martin, last Sun day evening. Mrs. Ida Bush and Miss Mamie Bash, from Ellenton, visited relatives near here recently. A Edvard Nir.eetein, from University of Carolina, spent the week-end at W'% 'home. * Mrs. Briggs Hammer entertained very delightfully wish two parties recently. , Miss Ida Alice Crimea, whose ap- . preaching marriage to Dr. Everett 1 E. Herlong, of Florence, is an event ml unusual interest here, has been the honor guest at quite a number 'of delightful social functions recent ly. The marriage will occur at the Baptist church here, December 23rd. Mrs. D. P. Walsh. Mrs. Stan Walsh •ad Mrs. Jerry Johnson visited Mrs. George Moody, at SaJBy last Sunday. p’s friends Will regret to learn of her illness. Mr. and Mrs. Hannon Templeton & i m R 1 J' moved into their home, which they purchased from Dr. and Mrs. Ben Storn^, sevetel weeks ago. Mr. and Mrs, B. E. Cooper and xhildren, Elmer and Jacquelin, have returned from a pleasant trip to var ious placet in Georgia. E. Gl Sanders, who is studying pharmacy in Atlanta, is at home for the holidays. Luther Still has returned from a visit to his sister, Mrs. Ellen Smith, in Gastonia. N. C. Floyd Turner, who has been work ing in Georgia, ia at home. , R. M. Turner and his mother, Mrs. John Turner, were called to Georgia recently on account of the death of the latter's sister-in-law, Mrs. Willie Minus. Mr. and Mrs. J. Hollenwetmer, ‘from Baltimore, Md., were guests of Mrs, Char lee Fickling last Monday and Tuesday. Mrs. Hollenweimer will be 'Cordially remembered as Mrs. Leda Ray Maddox, who has visited relatives in thja section before. They were en- roote to Florida for the winter. Mrs. Carrie Kenrody and Miss Lalla Kennedy, of Columbia, are the guests of Mrs. Belle Huggins and Mrs. M. P. Fannirg. • Mr. and Mrs.. W W. Cain have moved into the hom.* formerly occu pied by Mr. and Mrs. Harnon Temple ton. Mrs. Tracey D. Ray, of Chariottd, was a business visitor here last Mon day and Tuesday. Mias Evelyn Ray, of the Friendship section, has been visiting her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. ar.d Mrs. Otto Ray. t W. Carle Buist returned from Ch°s- ter Wednesday night, where he went to atterd the funeral of hi B father-in- law, Mr. West. Mrs. Buist and her mister. Miss Juanita West, will re main with their mother till after the holidays. Mrs. A. A. Hair and Mrs. Sam Buist are teaching for them dur ing their absence in the Double Pond school Thomas M. Boulware, of Bamwoll, -attended services at the Preebyterian '■church last Sunday morning. Messrs. L. F. Hair and J. V. Baxhy were among the numbers from here who attended the Red Shirt re-ur ion ia Columbia. • Stan Walsh and D. P. Walsh and Jerry Johnson visited an Augusta hospital last Sunday to see their nephew, Norman Moody, who had to have big foot amputated as the result of a railroad accident dfear Augusta recently. Mrs. Joe Chapman, of HartsviHe, is visiting her parents, Mr .and Mrs. W. M. Altman. Mrs. Carrie Dyches visited her sis ter, Mrs. Irene Rush, in Denmark last Saturday. m Social and Personal News from Ellenton Elientor, Dec. .18.—Mrs. Ida Bush and Mias Mamie Bush have returned from Blackvilla ' Mr. and ^drs. E. R. Buckingham went over to Columbia to attend the “Red Shirt” parade the past week. Mrs. Hays and Mrs. William Dun can spent Tuesday in Augusta. Friends of Mrs. Harry Brown are glad to known that she has recovered after surgical treatment at the Uni versity hospital, and is with her mother, Mrs. Crosland. Mrs. Emmett Johnson, Mrs. Black- bon and Miss Arnett Dickson spent Tuesday ^n Augusta. Mrs. H. M. Cassells, Mrs. W. B. Cassels, Mrs. Mike Cassels and Miss Louise Cassels were in Augusta Mon day. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Kent and Mrs. H. Harding were in Augusta Wed nesday. Mrs. F. D. Bush spent Wednesday in Augusta. T. S. Durbar was in Barnwell Tues day. * Miss Alice Miller spent the week end at home. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Jones, Mrs. T. S. Dunbar and Mrs. Z. D. Miller were shoppers in Augusta Friday. Miss Mary Foreman, of Allendale, spent Sunday here. Mr. P. B. Bush, of Barnwell, was a business visitor here this week. Miss Grace Walton will arrive this week for the holidays. Mrs. WiMiam Bush and Miss Mamie Bush spent Saturday in Augusta. Charles and W. B. Turner will arrive home this we.'k for the holidays. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Glover were visitors here Wednesday. Mr. and Mis. Elmore Ashley and Mrs. Harold Buckingham spert Tues day in Augusta. Mr. Stephen Harley was a visitor here this week from North Carolina. Mr. F. D. Bush is in North Carolina. Mrs. Walter Moody, of Dunbarton, is the guest of her sister, Mrs. F. C. Brinkley. A committee of ladies from the Bap tist church had a rummage sale Sat urday afternoon, wtuch was very successful, the money will be used to beautify the church grounds. Mr. and Mrs. Furman Bush, of Florida, will arrive next week to be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Crosland Bush. « Some one has remarked that there are three things that are past the it; «ier standing of nVre man'— * woman, u gasoUne engine and a mule. To which might be added tht uncer tainty of a petit jury’s verdict. About your Health Thin* You Should Know MOSV ttfcN’S CAU-ING IN UFE’SEEH'TO DOV4H by John Joseph Gaines, Vi. D. DISEASES OF CIVILIZATION The civilised world possesses ad vantages over the uncivilized; all except in the matter of health. lx>ok at our formidable array of life-destroyers, that were unknown to the cave-man: Cancer—un known to the Aborigine. Consti pation—parent of a hundred seri ous conditions—the American In dian never heard of it. Colitis, ap pendicitis, hemorrhoids—all civil ized adornments! Neuritis in all its forms—none for the Hottentot. Ulcers of the digestive tract—no Zulu or Sikh ever had one. Pyorrhoea—the can nibals had the finest teeth explor ers ever saw. Did you ever hear of the Siwash Indian having dys pepsia? A Hopi having gout? A Senegambian with “blood-pres sure?” Any apoplexy among ths Seminoles? Heart disease has never caused the death of a noble Red Man! Queer, isn’t it? When we stop to think, the facts are astounding; perhaps the healthiest bread ever made, was from com kernels pulverized be tween heavy stones, the meal mix ed with water to the proper con sistence, and baked upon brick-like earth, under the embers of an out door fire. At least it produced the healthiest human beings, even if it did its “tickling'* below the palate. A kernel of wheat possesses six teen nutritive ingredients. Our en terprising mill men remove fifteen ef iheee, in Order to s611 us a flour that will make something pretty! HOOVER'S PLAN. DON'T KISS THE BABY. CONGRESS MEETS. 290,000,000 MAN POWER. Secretary Hoover’s plan for waterways in the United States is a magnificent, common-sense pres entation of .what this country should do. Mr. Hoover shAws that 3,000,000 horsepower, more than three times the amount now ^ taken from Ni agara Falls, could be developed on the Tennessee and Cumberland rivers. Reservoirs and .dams in connection with this development Would check floods in the Missis sippi valley, and provide a six-foot channel connecting the Tennessee and Cumberland with the Ohio and Mississippi. , - x Champion* The South knows what that power, now wasted, would mean to Atlanta, Birmingham, Chattanooga and Nashville. i That is only one item in a great programme that the will of the American people should put through. Dr. Bundesen, Health Commis sioner of Chicago, says many fa thers and mothers “kiss their ba bies into the grave.” * To kiss an infant on the mouth is a crime. Paren.s stupid enough to allow strangers to kiss their children al most deserve the result. , An infant’s blood lacks the pro- tec* ivo strength, the disease fight ing lei.cocytes, that come laUr in life. For that reason consumption r-'iHy always starts before the child is two years old. Millions of unfortunate children have had the tubercular germs planted in their mouths by loving but ignorant of its head. Let no one else kiss or handle it. Congrees, resuming business, will find the indignant farmer sitting on the Capitol steps tell ing big income taxpayers, “Until the Government does something for us farmers, YOU don’t get that re fund of $260,000,000.” Lord Rothermere says Britain misses prosperity by failure to de velop electric power. "The eco nomic welfare of the United States,” says he, “is based more than anything rise on the fact that she has 2*1,000,000 electrical horse power in her factories, equal to 2^0,000,000 human workers.” John* S. Martin (upper photo) has won the poultry raising cham pionship 21 years in succession. At the recent Philadelphia show he won 4 silver eupe—10 firsts and seconds and 86 ribttxu fer 40 birds, q * ‘ » Herman Trelle (lower), an American by birth, now a home steader at Wembley, Peace River, Alberta, was crowned Wheat and Date King of North America. This is the first time both honors have been won by the same man. FOR SALE Ford Coupe in good condition for quick sale 160.00 Apply P. H. OWENS GARAGE Joseph S. Donovan knew exactly what he wanted when he went to work in a carpet factory for $1.60 a week. While he was working in the shop he said he would make a million by the time he was forty- five and retire. I>aat September, not yet forty- four, he had made his million and retired as he promised. Now ha is dead. The best thing, when you have made your first million, is to go on and make the second. It isn’t the money, but the fact that you are working, which enables others to find employment and independence. The right kind of American be gins his rest when the undertaker gets him. That is a long and an early enough rest for anybody. There is no room on the earth for a parasite and any man that stops working, before he’s ninety, is that. . Dr. Spahlinger, Swiss scientist, has shown that cattle can be made immune to tuberculosis by vacci nation. The fight against tuberculosis could be made successfully with out vaccination, although that would be a great blessing, should it prove successful in advanced cases. Good food, fresh air, rest and reasonable exercise are the tuber culosis cures that nature supplies. John Bates - J Civil Engineer and Survey*! JACKSON, S. C. Notary With Seal. Prompt, J High-Class Work Assured. Reasonable Prices. Your Work Solicited. :: Supreme Court Justice William Harmon Black denounces “chicken- hcartod judges and juries” that en courage crime, wants quick trials, with two-thirds of the jury decid ing, no unanimous vote necessary. The two-thirds Idea would v not suit criminals, and the prosperous among them would be obliged to purchase at least five of twelve ju rors, whereas now one or two pur chased “game guya” can prevent conviction, Wm. McNAB KopnMBtilkg EIRR, HEALTH AND ACCIDHMT INSURANCE COMPANIES. Pains ■ disappeared -CEVERAL jtm fa Iwu badly run-down,” says Mm John Bunch, R. F. D. 3, Colum bia, S. C. "I could not do any of my work. I waa ao weak I could not wash a dish. My bmsk and aides hurt me at times dreadfully. I dragged around nntB I finally got down in bed. 1 * Then, explains Mm Bunch, she happened to read about Cardui, the woman’s tonic, and decided, to give it a thorough trial, the results of which she describee below: "It seemed to reach the cause of my trouble at onceu 1 did not take it long before my appetite began to improve. I gained in weight from 114 pounds until now I weigh 125 pounds. I soon was able to be up around the house. I took up my household duties end was delighted with my return- ing strength. 1 sow do aQ my eera weak. The peine in ay aides and . bade have disappeared and I fod like a difisrent person." fV—frri has baashslpkMMd Mac women for nearly 00 ymn. Sold fay all NOTICE OF DISCHARGE. Notice Is heriby given that I will fils lay final ^account with the Hon. John K. Bneliing, Judge, of Probate Court for BarnWeA County, as Ad ministrator of the estate of L. M. Mace, and petition the said Court for an Order of Discharge,* and Letters Dismissory, upon Saturday, the 18th day of December, 1920. * ' ' r MARIE B. MACE, Administratrix of the Estate of L. M. Mace. Barrwell, *S.C Nov. 18, 1926. , 11-25-4 tc. Keep Eliminative System Active v NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES —FOR: THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF SOUTH CAROLINA, v In Bankruptcy. In the matter of BEN F. DAVIS, Dunbarton, S. C., Bankrupt. Notice ia hereby given that the above named bankrupt has filed a pe tition for discharge and that a hear, ing has been ordered to be had upon the same on the 9th day of December, A. D., 1926, before the Court, at Charleston, S. C„ at 11 o’clock in the forenoon, at which time and place all known creditors and other persons ip' interest may appear and show cause, if any they have, why the prayer of the said petitioner should not be granted. BICHD. W. HUTSON, ll-4-4t. Clerk. st feel wdl when there is jutfcm of poisonous waste j in tbs Mood. This is celled a toxic' condition, and is apt to make tired, dull end languid. Other symp toms ere sometiince toxic beckachee and headachee. That the kidneys are not functioning properly b often ' > ahown by scanty or burainc passage of secretions. Many people have f learned the value of Doin’• Pill*, a ’ stimulant diuretic, when the kidneys seem fonctionally inactive. Every where one finds enthusiastic Doan's ,Aak your neighbor l' !! ~ * . < All I of Insurance I •» • ;;Farm Coverage .. a Specialty! Calhoun and Co. P. A. Price, Mgr. # Bank of W. C. Bldg, i • * . ** DOAN’S 'Si 3 Stimulant Dimrmtic to th* Kidnmyt ybater-MDbum Ca.Mfg. Cham.,Buffalo, N. Y. JUST RECEIVED.—A suuply of v ; V- • Real Estate Titles and Mortgages.— v - » The People-Sentinel office, Barnwell. ADVERTISE in The People-Sentinel. L" ’ ——— ■■■■» Clean Child's Bowels “California Fig Syrup” is -dj Dependable Laxative for ^ Sick Children ' tvsa If cross, feverish, bilious, ean- •tipsted or fun of cold, children love ths plssssat taste of "California Fig Byrup” sod it sever fails to sweetea the sUMuach sad open the bowels a Uaspoonful today may prevent a sick child tomomr Bread Juls more focdioluc Doesn’t cramp or ovsgact. One tains no narcotics or soothing drugs. Ask your druggist for geonine "Cali fornia Fig Syrup” which has dirsctioaa for babies and children of ail ages printed on bottle. Mother) You must any "COlifarain” or you may get an imitation flg syrup. LONG TERM MONEY to LEND :! • 6 per cent interest on large amounts /v Private funds for small loans. LAWYERS BROWN & BUSH BARNWELL. SOUTH CAROliNA. © Colds Headache Pain .. Toothache SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSIST I Unless you see the “Bayer Cross" on tablets you are . not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years (or Neuralgia Lumbago « Neuritis Rheumatism onl] i contains proven directions, Haodv “Bayer* bom of It tabloM A lap bottles of 24 and 100—Druggiato.