The Barnwell people-sentinel. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1925-current, August 25, 1927, Image 2
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Tht charm mmI simplicity of the
little girl's dress offered this week
tislKrald appeal especially to the
mother who sews. Carried out in
juiy soft crepe or silk material in
at pretty shade of rose, blue, cream
tan color,—this style would be
agitable for any “dress-up” occa-
jmM.
. A dainty, yet simple trimming is
Ovpplied by the two rows of nar
row satin ribbon, in either the
mme or darker, color, which is
SS. A Diaclc satin
or velvet bow at the neck finishes
it off with an attractive touch.
May be obtained in sizes 2 to 6
Size 4 re quires 2'i yards of -10 inch
material. 1’atterns will be delivered
to any address upon receipt of 25c
til cash or U. S. Postage. Always
mention size wanted. Address,
Practical Pattern Department, 17
West 28th Street, Now York City,
and always mention this newspa
per.
tarsonal
New* from Williston
WUHstoo, Aug. 20.—Mr. and Mrs.
W. E. Pro thro and Mias Louise Pro-
thro visited last week, Dr. and Mrs.
T. S. Barnhill on Sullivan's Island,
Charleston.
Mrs, R. A. Weathers bee, Mrs. W.
L, Bolick and children motored to Au
gusta Monday.
Mr*. S. J. Powell is spending a few
days in Asheville, N. C. -rX
Mrs. William Melvin has as her
gueet, her sister, Miss Lurile Wilson,
of Augusta.
Mrs. A. A. Myers spent the week
end in BranchviUe.
Min Anlee Whitaker, of Newber
ry, was a recent visitor of Mr. and
Mrs. G. W. Whitaker.
Mrs. W. T. Willis, Jr:, and daugh
ter are visiting in Roweeville.
Miss Leonora Scott, of Greenwood,
was a recent visitor of Misses Florrie
Lee and Lou Belle Soott.
Miss Ruby Courtney is visiting her
aunt, Mrs. W. L. Ott, in Wagener.
Mrs. Guy Cox and son are sending
thfa week with Mrs. Bryant Bush iij
Ellenton.
Theodore Hicks has returned from
Rome, Ga., where he spent several
weeks with relatives.
Mrs. M. L. Bolick and children, of
Hickory, N. C., are visiting her par
ents, Mr. and Mro. R. A. Weathers-
bee.
Mr. and Mrs. 0. N. Courtney, Misses
Marguerite and Ruby Courtney, spent
Sunday with Mrs. Mary Garrfck, near
Aiken.
Mro. J. V. Bracey and children^ of
Augusta, were visitors last week of
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Hair.
Mrs. J. W. Cook has returned from
a delightful visit to Detroit, Niagara
Fails
Philadelphia, are visiting Mr. Thomp
son’s mother, Mrs. Susan Thompson.
Mr, and Mrs. R. M. Powell, of
Bamiberg, were visitors this week of
Mro Powell’s mother, Mrs. L. Hamil
ton.
Mr. and Mrs. S. B. Ray have ns
their guects, Mr. Ray’s sister, Miss
Julia Ray, of Denmark, and Mrs. W.
H. Ray, of Columbia.
Mrs. George Dukas and attractive
little daughter, "of Pinewood, are vis
iting Dir. and Mrs. Wallis Cone and
Mm. Lizzie Diclu.
Mr: and Mrs. L. R. Hair and fami
ly, and Mrs. H. B. Kitching* have
returned from a motor trip through
the Shenandoah valley of Virginia.
. Mr. and Mrs. WRUam Melvin have
returned from an absence of several
weeks and are occupying the bunga-
loy on Brown avenue fromerly occu
pied by John B. Harley. v
Mrs. Chester Parker and Mina Ruby
Parker are visiting in Dublin and
Vidalia, Ga. Miss Parker has been
the recipient of*a number of parties
in both towns. v
Mr nnd Mrs. Hamp Hair have re
turned from a visit to Mr. ind Mrs.
William Hair and Mr. and Mrs. Lu
ther Fender, in Gastonia, N, C.
Mr. and Mro J. F. Purvis and fami
ly, of St. Petersburg, Fla., were visi
tors last week of their parents, Mr.
and Mm R. S. Purvis and other rela
tives.
Rev. F. W. Carnette, of Fayette
ville, Ark., formerly pastor of the
Williston Baptist Church, was a visi
tor in Williston last week.
Billy Patterson left Friday for Hen
dersonville, N. C., to'Visit his grand
mother, Mrs. Edwards. From there
he will go to Knoxville, Tenn., where
he will attend a boy scout camp near
that city.
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Kennedy spent
several days in Charleston this week
visiting Mr. and Mrs. J. V. Murray.
Their daughter, Elizabeth, returned
home with them after visiting in
Charleston for several yeeks.
Mrs. Lil Baxley and Miss Kahron
Folk, of Cohimbia, Mrs. S. H. Usoery
and Michael Ussery, of Barnwell,
were visitors Sunday of Mr. and Mrs
W. C. Cook.
' fi 4 M ra - J - A. Kennedy complimented
on, "of Mrs. Loy Bolick, of Hickory,
with a lovely little party on Tuesday
afternoon. Duplicate bridge was
played at two tables in the living
room which was attractive with sum
mer flowers. The high score was
won by Mrs. William Melvin, who was
given a dainty handkerchief. Mrs.
Bolick was presented a bridge score
pad as guest prize. Delicious frozen
The United States College
torinary Surgeons at Washington, D.
C., founded thirty-five yeans ago, has
just graduated its last class. The
passing of the horse has made neces-
ary the closing of the college.
SOME DRINKING FIGURES
EGYPT CONTROLS DOLL WEEVIL
FARM LONELINESS BANISHED
SCIENCE AND RELIGION *
l y
to
United States capital has fecent-
lent nearly
fruit salad* with iced te a was served.
America’s millions, who imagine
they are thirsty for light wine, beer
or something stronger, will be in
terested in this.
> capi
$300,000,000 to help
oreign countries develop their
liquor and beer business. Even in
the Far East this country has
financed liquor production to the
tune of more than $5,000,000.
Mr Hayward Kendall, who rep
resents unorganized drinkers that
ought to be saved from them-
zelves, says: "The Eighteenth
Amendment is saving America (in
cash expenditures and increased ef
ficiency) from six to eight billion
dollars a year.’’
The nation’s purchasing power
has certainly increased amazingly
since prohibition came.
i N ■ -
In 1919 there were in America
6,500,000 automobiles. Now there
are 20,000,000, and not enough. The
country spends half a billion a year
on radio, many millions for wash
ing machines, vacuum cleaners,
electric refrigerators. Workers in
America spend more lavishly than
the rich in Europe.
Mr. Kendall thinks it would be
a national calamity if the outpour
ing of money were diverted from
automobiles and radio to wine and
beer.
While the boll weevif continues
spreading in the United States
Cairo telegraphs that:
‘‘Thanks to vigorous Govern
ment measures, the area af
fected * by the boll worm
has been considerably circum
scribed.” "•
, Egyptian acreage affected by the
pest has been reduced from 89,000
to 5,000 acres. What Egypt can do
this country certainly ought to do.
We have the scientists, the money
and the boll weevils. What is the
matter with us?
Thirty different diseases ire trans
mitted by flies. They deposit germs
in three way*. By contact, vomit
spots and excreta. Flies are the
filthiest insects known. They taint
everything they touch. Fly-Tdx kills
fliee. It is safe, stahdeae, -flagrant,
sure. Simple instructions..on each
bottle (bule label) for Wiling ALL
household insects. Insist on Fly-Tox.
Fly-Tox is the scientific insecticide
developed at Mellon Institute of In
dustrial Research by Rex Fellowship.
Fly-Tox brings health, comfort and
cleanliness.
—f
j —uuiuniiiifiiiiu 11
^ ’ ClltviUfS use '
Clansseiis
has more toed laluc
■BoonsRiras.i .u p.
SURANCE
■FIRE
WINDSTORM .
PUBLIC LIABILITY I
ACCIDENT - HEALTH
SURETY BONDS
AUTOMOBILE
\ THEFT
Calhoun and/Co.
P. A. PRICE, Manager.
MONEY TO LOAN
Loans made same day
application received.
. No Red Tape
HARLEY & BLATT.
Attomeys-at-Law
BarawelL S. C.
KODAKERS!
Send your films to us for develop
ing and printing. One day service.
Write for prices.
Loll&r’s Studio
1423 Msia Street
COLUMBIA SOUTH CAROLINA
We sell Esstman Films
f>r Economical Transportation
orld's Lowest
-Mile Cost
Tens of thousands of users have mission and sturdy single-plate
learned by actual comparison that disc-clutch. Mark the rugged, qual-
Chevrolet provides the lowest ton- ity rr>ngru^|jipti thro^iMHlM hT*^T-
J*- ^ ft ytY O MS s i V €
^commifcial car industry! * banjo-type rear axle—long extra-
J-ome to our salesroom and learn leaved, heavy steel springs, set
tor yourself how Chevrolet is de- parallel to the frame. Go for a trial
signed and built to save you load demonstration—and see how
money. Note the advanced, perfectly Chevrolet meets your
modern engineering—typified own haulage requirements,
by a powerful valve-in-head If you do that, the next truck you
motor, with three-speed trans- buy will be a Chevrolet!
This news will not sell extra
papers, like a Dempsey-Tunney
fight, but will he important long
after Dempsey and Tunney cease
to be important. Pennsylvania
State College has discovered that
the vitamin B, so important to life,
is manufactured by the cow in her
stomach in great quantities.
Scientists cut a little door 1 into
the “rumen,” or second stomach of
the cow, and deprived her of all
food containing vitamin B. Never
theless, in a little incubator in
that second stomach the cow pro
duced the precious vitamin B in
profusion.
That may mean to child life as
much iu the admirable fight against
impure milk made 4)y Nathan
Straus.
In cities people go‘crazy more
frequently than they qnce did. Ex
citement, bootleg liquor and other
things help. In New York State
one person in every twenty-five
has been in t]ie insane asylum, ac-
FOR
Metal Roofing
We buy in large quantities and sell cheap.
SEE US! SAVE MONEY!!
Williston Hardware Co.
* Williston - * South Carolina
•
"
*Ton-n%lle coat is the coat of
transporting a ton of material
one mile—or Us equivalent.
4m ■
&£u Truck *395
1-Ton Truck
Chassis
1-Ton Truck -e /%
Chassis with Cab OlU
Ail prices /.a. b. Flint, Mich.
They Include the lowwt handling
and inasscing rnergM available.
hi
Uff
wsssm.
•7u
Thero tr less insanity than for
merly among women on farms.
Loneliness, that used to drive them
insane by the thousands, has been
softened by telephone, radio, par
cels post, and, above all, the auto
mobile.
President Vinson tells young
people of Western Reserve Uni
versity that no conflict exists be
tween science and religion; they
occupy different fields. He wisely
remarks that science, without re
ligion, would lead to hopeless ma
terialism, just as religion, when it
denies the plain truths of science,
leads to fanaticism add supersti
tion.
Religion and science are like
astrology and astronomy, or like
alchemy and chemistry.
Astronomy started in astrology,
chemistry started in alchemy, with ,
experimenters seeking to make
gold.
Science started in,religion. Men,
qitcstioning the origih of things,
first gave a rcljgious answer, ev
erything based oh x miracles. Then
they studied more closely and be-
.gan giving scientific answers. - -
All told 24,000,000 automooilcs (
arc in use in fifty-nine countries
of the earth. The United States
owns 20,000,000 of the 24,000,000.
The United States Commerce De
partment gives the figures. We
have one automobile for every six
persons, Hawaii one to eleven,
Canada one to thirteen. Afghan
istan has one to 1,200,000. Poor
Afghanistan, happy America. To
have a motor is to defy the law of
gravitation, and be a free man.
if . m
■ .* K **,»
CHEVROLET CO.
. / ^
- - S. G
[’ ^ , • • ■ • -■ .V- ' f' 4 \ ' * vieJ*-,' • . f
*
OEST t BUILDER OF .GEAR-SHIFT TRUCKS,
The Same Here.
' >• gJ t
aw - l&t
. a?
Many London factories and business
offices have posted an order fotfcid-
ding girl employes to powder their
noses during business hours. Prior
to this order the average
business girl pafwdar~ta> neoe U
mee an hour, taking two m hates to
do it each tea /
Summer Trips
BARNWELL to
Atlantic City.
and return
$26.40
Tickets on sale:
July 27
August 2, ID, 16, 24, 30
September 7
Niagara Falls
and return
- $36.25
Tickets on sale:
July 28
August 3, 11, 17,25,31
September 8, 14, 22, 28
October 6.
Herr' .
• area from other points in proportion^
Return limit 18 days, including date of sale. Stopovers on return
trip ab-Bakimore, Philadelphia, W ashington and many other points.
Tickets, information and schedules from
J. E. MAHAFFEY, Ticket Agt., Barnwell, S. C., Phone No. 6
Atlantic Coast Line
MOTHER :-Flct-
cher's Castoria is es
pecially prepared to
relieve Infants in
arms and Children all
ages of Constipation,
Flatulency, Wind Colic
and* Diarrhea; flaying
Feverishness arising therefrom, and, by regulating the Stomach
*nd Bowds, rii, the of Food; giving natural deep.
To avoid imjCahaos. always look for the signature of.
LT IS® Physicians everywhere recomamnd It
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