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THE BARNWELL PEOPLE-SENTINEI^ BARNWELL. SOUTH CAROLINA V THURSDAY, OCTOBER A 1W7* How many egg a did yon get YESTERDAY? ’ r 4 Right in thb neighbor- * hood there are folks who are making their hens produce lots of big, fine-flavored eggs despite the weather and short daylight. Why' don’t you feed mojsfp , and get more eggs, too? This is the famous feed that contains Cod Liver Meal —makes hens lay right through the season when eggs are at top - price. Just try it 1 Mmd* hy Tho Qnakor 0** Ootpiny Farmers Union Mer. Co. Barnwell, S. C. 4* Renew Your Health by Purification physician will tell you that rt Purification of the System Any "Perfect la Nature’s Foundation of Perfect Health.” Why not rid yourself of chronic ailments that are undermin ing your vitality? Purify your en tire system hy taking a thorough course of Calotabs,—once or tt^ice a week for several weeks—and see how Nature rewards you with health. Calotabs are the greatest of all system purifiers. Get a family pack- •age, containing full directions. Onl S5 eta. At any drug store. (Adv INSURANCE FIRE WINDSTORM PUBLIC LIABILITY ACCIDENT - HEALTH SURETY BONDS AUTOMOBILE THEFT Calhoun and Co. P. A. PRICE. Manager. MONEY TO LOAN Loans made same day No Red Tape HARLEY & BLATT Attoraeys-at-Law . BarnwelL S. C. *»*- ifr’U^ -V V KOD^KERS! Send your films to m for derelop- ing and printing. One day service. Write for prices. Lollar’s Studio 1423 Mai* Street COLUMBIA SOUTH”CAROLINA We sell Eastman Filma it; Wm. McNAB Representing FIRE, HEALTH AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANIES. Personal attention given an btudness Office in Harrison Block, Mgia St BARNWELL. 8. C Local and Personal WTlliston,’ Oct, 1.—Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mobley, of Batesburg, were guests Sunday of Mrs .Crews Bol*mL • Mr. and Mrs. W. I. Wilson, of Au gusta. spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. William Melvin. Mrs. H. S. Mellichamp, of Florida, is visiting her sister, Mrs. J. W.. Odiome^ * * / • Miss Gertrude Batnett, of Laurens, visited for the week-end her sister, Mrs. J. E. Kennedy. Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Kennedy and daughter, Julia, spent Sunday in Al lendale. Mr. and Mrs. Speed Ray, of Den mark, were visitors Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. S. B. Ray. ' Mrs. S. A.- Wise, of Aiken, was a recent guest of Mrs. W. C. Cun ningham, Mrs. W. H. Crogan and Mrs. G\ W. Greene. Mrs. Elizabeth Harley, of Allendale, is visiting her daughter, Mrs. W. H. Croghan. Mr. and Mrs. T. M. W.'ilis and M’*9. W C. Smith, Jr., and s.n, Norman, Were vi. itors in f vhr.sor: Sunday. Mrs. T. C. Hair and jJaughtn-a spent Sunday at Kitchins Mill, the guests of Dr. and Mrs. W. A. Whit- lodt. Mrs. Willie Lee Porter, of Macon, Ga., and Mrs. Ruth Crawford,.)of Sa vannah, Ga., were recent visitors of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Burnett. Dr. and Mrs. Wallis Cone had as ^heir guests Sunday, Mrs. W. F. Dicks and children, Mrs. F. H. Dicks, Mrs. Connor and Mrs. Hamilton Dicks, of Dunbarton. Mrs. L. M. Hummel, of Charleston, is visiting Mrs. W. C. Cunningham and Mrs. W. H. Crogan. Mrs. W .A. Whitlock, of Kitchings Mill, and h#r two daughters, Mrs. E. G. Evans and children, of Pendleton, and Mrs. A. P. Snyder ami daughter, of Portland, "Ore., were the guests last week of Mrs. T. C. Hair. Mr. and Mrs. B. D. Carter and Mi«s Edna Lott, of Bamberg, and J. J. Mc- Swain, of Greenville, were the guests Tuesday of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Lati mer. Mr. and Mrs. D. G. Weeks have re turned with Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Ful mer, of Augusta. Mrs. J. J. Bell honored here little son, James, with a party Thursday afternoon of laat week, the occasion being his sixth birthday. His class mates of the first grade were invited to come and play. Outdoor games were played for a few hours, after which ice cream cones, candy and cake were served. Mrs. Bell was assisted in entertaining the little folk by his teacher. Miss Kent. Mrs. W. C. Smith’s lawn presented a lovely scene Monday afternoon when about twenty-five little tota gathered to (elebrate the third birhday of her little grandson, Norman Smith, Jr. After games, ice cream and cake were served and souvenirs given to the little guests. \y Arthur Brisbane AMERICAN LEGION LEADS WAT. MAN’S ACHIEVEMENT. LIGHTNING RODS WORK. THE BAST’S EARS. The American Legion in Paris last week adopted the report of its National Defense Committee, de manding establishment of a nation- , al air force as a separate depart ment, with an “Air Force Secre tary” in the Cabinet. Common sense. The man that had employed a coachman got a chauffeur when the - automobile came in. Intelligent nations will add to their Secretary of War and Secretary of the Navy a SECRETARY OF THE AIR, now that flyinjgf'Tiiachines have come. The National Mach^ie^ Tool Builders’ Exposition in Cleveland' recently was a concentrated dem onstration of industrial genius and of the tools that have built pros perity and civilization. Man differs from all other ani mals in *that he js a tool-using creature. Animals work with their bodies, the beaver wftb teeth and broad tail, the woodpecker with his beak, the mud wasp with her sting, put ting stunned caterpillars in cold storage for her unborn children. Man with his brain, creates tools OUTSIDE of his body, then . he harnesses the ox, horse, ele phant, Niagara Falls, and the light ning to work those tools. Cleveland’s exhibition contained 300 carloads of machinery "Sent front eighty cities by 180 compan ies. There were machines that will turn thirteen-inch guns, others measure a light wave, a million waver or so to the inch. Throughout the South Through its Development .Service, the Southern Railway System Is con stantly striving to locate new Indus tries at pointa on Its lines and to Im prove agricultural conditions through out the South. In addition to the manager of this department, the Southern has four trained men who are engaged ‘solely on industrial matters. Tt also main tains a mineralogist, who Is constantly at work In the field of research and seeking to interest Investors In unde veloped mineral properties In the South|l " Immediately after the organization of the Southern Railway Company, In 1894, an Industrial department was formed under the direction of the late Mr. M. V. Richards. Since that tlmle more than 13,000 IndustrlaLenterprises have been located on the lines of the Southern and more than 5,000 existing plants have been enlarged. The agricultural work of the South ern is in charge of the General Agri cultural Agent at-Atlanta, Ga., who has six assistants In the . fTeTdT They are engaged In co-operative effort with farmers looking to the adoption of Im proved ■ agricultural methods, the breeding of farm animals of all kinds and the promotion of the dairy in dustry. On ths staff of Its development ser vice, the Southern also has one of ths most able horticulturists In the coun try, who, together with an assistant, located at Asheville, N. C., devotes his entirs time to the aid of horticultural developpients in the South. Ths ser- rlces of these men hsvs beep of the greatest value to farmers and fruit growers of the Sonth. » Lightning struck a barn in Vir ginia, killed four persons, and two mules, paralyzed a dog and •tunned two men. Modern light ning rods properly installed would have prevented that disaster. Modern protection against light ning is included in the recent White House alteration. All around the balustrade above the White House roof, sharp, short, copper points stand at close inter vals, connected by a copper cable, the whole system being connected with the earth, also by copper con ductors, buried deep enough in the* ground to reach perpetual moisture. Such lightning rods give real protection. Insurance companies recognize that in lower rates for factories thus protected. Old fash ioned, badly installed, eheap light ning rod construction is worthless or even dangerous. ^ LY ON PAST PERFORMANCE. A CEN TURY OF SERVICE IN AUGUSTA. No other cotton market in the whole belt has such a record Jor performance in the past as the Augusta cotton market. There is no question as to what can be done with cotton in Augusta. The record of the past demon strates conclusively that this city lias an envi able reputation for reliability, durability and (year-round service to the Cotton growers and business men of the Augusta district. Superior Marketing Facilities and Long Experience Enter Into It. If you wanted to buy goods you would proceed to a market that had established a reputation for providing goods wanted with in range of what would suit the purpose you had in mind. When you go to sell your cot ton, consider the same factors ^nd in the last analysis you will find the most important thing you want to know is embraced in the record of Augusta as a cotton market for more than 100 years. * Many reesponsible firms that have been in business 25 years, 50,75 or even 100 years are still doing busi ness in Augusta. You take no chances when you patronize the Augusta cotton market. You will always get the maximum results. Liberal Advances, Insurancee Safety, Low Storage Rates and Every Courtesy Consis tent with Good Business Extended on Cot ton Stored in Augusta. The Augusta Cotton Exchange AUGUSTA, GEORGIA O' r J . ( ) —— ■— ■ — ^ ■ -a.,—,..nnww» , Ill W • * Books and Fountain Pens When in Augusta visit Walker’s Rook Store and Magaziae Agency, at 213-215 Seventh Street. Where you will find books on all subjecte—Song and Relifrioua Books. Year Magazine subscrip tion* accepted at lowest prices. We repair Fountain Pena.. Also sell them at popular prices. 7 CHEVROLET A “Friendly Neighbor of the Air *» Mrs. Smith had a baby in a Cleveland hospital. She and her husband said it was a boy, when they gave her a girl baby to niffiT*. The father says: “They can keep that girl, so far as I am concerned, unless they prove it . is mine.” Something of a prejudice against girl babies in that, perhaps. One proof offered is-that the girl baby’s ears arc C\*CtU kkc . Uwstf.vT the mother. .That is “Darwinian tubercle’’, that some times goes with them are often in herited from generation to genera tion, and prove heredity at a glance. Anyhow, ANY girl baby will re pay richly any one that takes care of her. Young William B. Leeds, son of the "Tin Plate King,” started his Fokker three-motor engine flying machine ftfr Chicago last week with six passengers and a relief pi lot. he, Leeds, running the machine. They were, to stop at Cleveland, then on Jo Chicago. Young men with money can promote flving in this day as W. K Vanderbilt, Jr., and other young men with money promoted motoring twenty-five years ago. What to do with that little felt hat, how to cull the poultry'flock, when to prepare the seed bed in the back-yard garden and a thousand and one simi lar questions are received regularly by the Home Service Division of the Sears Roebuck Agricultural Founda- tiou. These questions, every one of them, are answered on the air >and by personal letter over WSB, the Atlanta Journal, by Mrs. R. F. Whelchel, Home Advisor of the Foundation. Mrs. Whelchel’s long service In ax-, tension work and her wide circle of acquaintances throughout the South east lends a personal touch to her programs, uncommon to most broad cast* This same long experlenco also gives an authority to her answers that goes entirely unquestioned. In Little Rollo’s day a good boy would stoo'p' to pick up a pin. The rich, observant hanker would no tice him, employ him, marry him to his daughter, leave him his for tune. Economy was the watch word. Modern James McStowe, of Can ton, Ohio, says it’s an exploded watchword. In Chicago he picked up a dime from the floor and as he stooped so ne one stole his pocket- book with $800. His motto reads? "Look after your $800, and the dimes will look after themselves.” Large Crowd Here Monday. One of the largest salesday crowds seen here’in several months was pres ent Monday to attend the local sales of,real estate and inspect the horses and mules offered for sale by various dealers. Keen competition was shown in the sales, which were marked at times by lively bidding. turn to beauty/ Embodying all the masterly design and craftsmanship of bodies by Fisher, —offering such marks of distinction as full- Crown, one-piece fenders and bullet-type lamps— —and finished in lustrous colors of genu ine, lasting Duco—today’s Chevrolet is everywhere acclaimed as one of the world’s most beautiful automobiles , . so refresh ingly different, so outstandingly smart and stylish that people everywhere turn to admire it! And this remarkable smartness is matched by a type of performance that is no less outstanding—perfect comfort at every speed, flashing acceleration, and delight ful handling ease. Come in and see* today’s Chevrolet. One glance at its custom-built beauty, one rifle at the wheel of your favorite model—and you will knbw why Chevrolet is every where classed a* the world’s finest low- priced car. I The IMPERIAL LANDAU Reduced to at $ 745 Hie Touring or RoodMer The Conch . The Coupe • The 4-Door Sedan • . The Sport Cabriolet V^-Ton Truck *525 *595 *625 *695 *715 .1 •395 V a (CfcuriaOniy) Sf 1-Ton T rack $495 (Chauis Only) All price, t^o. b. Flint, Thor include the low- mm handling and tl- ■pacing charge. CAUSEY YOUMANS CHEVROLET CO. BARNWELL, - - S. C. 0 w CO.S T