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THURSDAY, MAY 17TH, 192$. THB BARNWHIX PBOPLB'SBNTOIBL, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA bu Manci/ Mart To ring the doorbell, to open the {door*., to enter the house—isin-’t this always an adventure, when you call at another’s home? The personality of the house is first felt in the hall, which should extend a cherry welcon\e to the family re turning from the outside, and offer to strangers a cordial hospitality. This may be expressed by an ar rangement of bright pictures, hung at either side of a central mirror or by a Jairger picture, with a mirror on the opposite wall. Another plan is to hang the mirror between two lamp brackets, over the hall table, with a group of color prints on another wall. O* a colorful wall hanging may be used above the table to prove a backgiound for candle sticks anjd a fWtery bowl vase. So much depends on first impres sions—-and in the hall good ones can be achieved so easily! ^ A Nutritious Simmer together T cup of bailed vice, 1 cup of tomatoes. While cook ing, mix together 1 pound of chopped round steak find 2 or 3 onions. Add 1 tablespoon ehffi powder and heat thoroughly in a skillet containing a laige lump of butter or margarine. Add to the* rice and tomatoes and* cook' for 10 or 15 minutes, stirring constantly. A Did You Know— That a survey of public U VERY LATESTS” By Cecile. Have you a printed frock ? Oh, cer tainty you have—or will have—for who can resist the colorful, versatile, universally-becoming appeal of these fabrics ? A— Lesa season we may have used prints au natural. This season, how’- ever, we plan them in combination with a jersey jacket of a harmonizing plain shade for sport use. Then for afternoon purposes we shed the jersey coat and appear with conventional cor rectness iir the piinted silk alone. Two style notes of importance in the figured silk frock illustrated (which hails from the wardrobe of Maxine Carson, in “Sunny Days,’” by the way) are its jabot and trimmed cuffs. We can think of a dozen dif ferent places in our own wardrobe where a simple, colorful frock like this would just exactly fit. . t * I 9 i Printed Undies, Too. * To further impiess us with^^gir vogue, prints have stamped them selves upon steprins, slips, gowns and pajamas. And they are exceedingly fresh and Spring-like. M^st frequent ly the designs are dainty floral pat terns; but in the case of pajamas, of course—some very exotic effects are shown! A Colors Have a National Flavor. . if ~ u * ■ ^ Jl ^1 . ^ tfoar * t I# ezzh] Listen to the lesson of Parisian cos tumers, and know that today red \is not plain red, nor green just green. It is *\ t English red and Japanese green—if —^ ■ r—v-~y - ■ — ; one would be fashionable. - Patou’s English red is a brilliant, characteiful color just a shade different from any red you have ever seen before. The Japanese green is a delicious shade of chartreuse, as fresh and tender as the new leaves of a willow tree. •T'v*V , ■ .T*? ' : . _ mm*. From Poverty To Riches^ i schools proyed the physical development and grades of.children who used stimulat ing drinks at mealtime were, far be low those of children who did not? We should aemember that weak cocoa, a cereal beverage or a fruit drink takes but an instant tq prepare. Each is safe and wholesome for Iktle folk*, and, in justice to them, should take the place of other beverages th;i retard mental activity and growth. Packing Picnic Salad. Next time you plan r a long diive, with a picnic basket tucked away in the (Car—remember that salad can be keep fresh and cool if-you put it in an enameled ware bucket with a small bottle filled with cracked ice set in the center. \ » Fry Cakes the Smokeless Way. Make a little salt bag and rub the gridiron wdth it instead of grease; then cakes won't stick and there will Ik* no smoke odor. Removes Pain Spots. No matter how hard paint spatter- ings have dried on windows, they ean he removed by rubbing the glass with that she thinks I am\looking at her ^Elizabeth Hildegard Welsh, ll- k earJold Chicago girl who inher- it^dfhalf a million dollars. Her fatherj invented a centrifugal pump engine, on which he worked night after night before going to war and Raving his life for his country. Little ^lizabeth was in need, but now ha's every luxury. UEEliuCCi iort Skirts. • It always offends me to see a girl in short skiits reaVh down every few moments and tr>\ to pull the skirt over Her knees. That is, it offends me if she is facing me\and is aware of my presnee. The ac\ is a confession About your 0 Health Things. Ypu Should Know Safe Place for Watch Stratford, Ont—A safe place for a good watch seems to be a coal pile. E. C. Sanderson., locomotive fireman, found one when firing his engine. The ‘watch was keeprng~gbod time ns San derson forwarded U to the owner at a Pennsylvania coal mine. YELLOW PENCIL WITH THE BED BAND HaveYour Scribbling ‘flnafyzea by John Joseph Caines, M. D v PROTEIDS. boiled vinegar. Keeping Butter Without Ice. Butter may be kept hard without ice by setting the dish in which it is con- Tained in cold salt water. Do not al low the water to come over the top of the dish. To Prevent Curdling. V ire gar often curdles when mixed with salad dressing. A generous pinch of salt added to the dressing will smooth it out at once.- M akes Brighter Lights. Lamp wicks soaked in vinegar and -thoroughly driejri .wiR-giye much,bet- te$ light and eliminate smoke. knees—which I may be.\ But I always want to say to her: “My dear, you needn’t he so paitkulay. Pm not interested in your darned le' not particularly fetching, a I’m an old man.” My bel a modest girl wouldn’t pul skirts that way. For one They’re way, and is that at her g, she (f thi wouldn’t be thinking about 'h«V legs all the time; and, for another,\ she wouldn’t call attention To thern so often, even if she did think about them.—Robeit Quillen in The Foun tain Inn Tribune. Saving Steps. If a holder is fastened to a tape pinned to your apron you will always have a hot dish holder handy when cooking. I Aerial Surveys Save Time for Geologists Ottawa, Ont.—Geologists formerl> wasted 75 to 80 per cent of their time exploring unpromising areas, but now aerial surveys haye largely ^banished this loss, says A. M. Narroway, assts _tant director of topographical stir veys. Canadian airmen, Narrowa> says, have led the world In such work In the last five years they have mapped out 200,000 square; miles of hithertr unexplored territory. ,A Superstition in Twins ~—Prevarenl fn Hawaii J Honolulu.—Old Japanese resi dents of the Hawaiian islands still cling to many superstitions, one of which is that if a twin dies the other also will die. To circumvent the fate which they believe impends for the survivor when one of a pair lias died, a dummy is made, using some of ids hair and linger nail trimmings.* Then the dead twin and the dummy are buried or cremated together and it Is pre tended that both have passed from life. The remaining twin is regard-^ ed as a “nobody” until he or she can be taken to the temple to receive a new name and to be considered ever after as s new I member of the family,- 1 Mil 111 H Proteids are non-crystalizaWe ele ments of animal and vegetable tissue, an,d are absolutely essential to human life; death follows the deprivation of this food-element. It abounds in ani mal and vegetable substances. The “protein balance” in the human sys tem is one of the finest points we have in our maintenance of health diet. It seems to me, a good understanding of the Uses of pioteins, Would do away with much of the nebulous chat ter about hormones and vitamines. Of course some ^protein is lower in building power Wan others. Gelatin is a protein, but enough of it could not be eaten to sustain the body''by itself. Meats are especially rich in protein. If more meats are eaten than needed, he nitrogen is “split off” and rapidly excreted—if the kidneys are equal to the task; if they are not, this element is retained, and sends thF blood-pressure aloft, sometimes - to very dangerous limits. High blood- pressures demand kidney examination at once—pnd, certainly limitation of meat diet. Beans are of high protein content, cooked as they are in many forms with meat seasoning. Men at hard manual labor can dis- -pose of more heavy -protetne—tha indoor workers; hence the predomina tion of kidney diseases in the latter class. When we boil meat in water, we iemove much of its flavor and other! ingredients in the “extractive” or soup. Soups yield very little, if any tWrgy. They arouseT appetfifef hovT- eter, and, as they allay muscular fatigue, they are mild stimulants. ' r e paitake of the carbo-hydrate to mooHfy and assist the proteids. Cor- bo-hydrates (starches) are stored in liver and muscles, if taken to excess, prodiwing a,dded weight or “fat.” Ex cess of ^starch is very hard on the liver and produces sugar in the urin often. Both fat\ and starch protect the pro- tein, and \ are necessary to food-bal- By Romdine 5. Wore Plan Now for Winter Bouquets. Now is the time to plan for the winter bouquets of Straw' Flowers. They are so easy to grow arid you will enjoy them all winter in the house. They must be planted simply by sowing the seed right where you want them to bloom, 'and in a few w'eeks you will not only have a good display of jcolor in the garden, but you will be picking the bloom and putting it away for the wdnter. There are several varieties of Straw' Flowei s, probably the best known is ftelichrysum. There are several* others listed in* some of the English catalogues. In cutting blooms ^or winter cut in the morning while they are still covered with dew, and hang them heads down in a cool, shady airy place till thoroughly dry. Also to be giown* for winter decora tion are the Ornamental Grasses. They' are also very decorative in the garden. These, like the Straw Flowers, should be cut in the early morning while still w r et with dew', but they should not be hung head dow*n, but supported in their natural position. Then, when they are dried, they will make up into bouquets and look nat ural. The perennial Gypsophilia is good when dried, as is also Static latifolia (Sea Lavender). These two plants are slow in establishing themselves, but are very permanent. There is a large market for these winter bouquets, as many people do not go to the trouble of growing them, and they will be glad to punchase if they had the opportunity. 1 know of many that have built up a nice little side line with them.' Flowers as a means of making money have made a very prominent place for therpselves, as there is not only money in them bdt health as well. Many folks who cannot do w6rk inside _ can putter around a garden- and turn their time into cash. The roadside flower stands have made a real place for themselves in the country. Thousands of dollars worth of flowers are sold by them every week-end. . Louise Rice, world famous graphologist, can positively read your talents, virtues end faults in the drawings/woeds and y/hat nots that you scribble when “lost in thought”. Send your “scribblings”or signature for analysis. Enclose the picture of the Mikado head, cut from a box of Mikado pencils, and ten cents. Address Louise Rice, care of EAGLE PENCIL CO.. NEW YORK CITY Wm. McNAB Representing FIRE, HEALTH AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANIES. Personal attention given all btudneas Office in Harrison Block, Main St BARNWELL. 8. C. ❖ 1 1 T y y y y y y y y y y y y y y y y y y y y y y V T. B. Ellis J. B. Ellis It tastes so EvmyDuy : Every Meal Its the flauor that counts, and good ^avor comes onlu from good ingre** dients. More and more house*ire; art turning to this hatter bread daily Insist on Bread Sitsce 1841—South *s Favorite ELLIS ENGINEERING CO. Land Surveying s Specialty. Lyndhurst, S. C. <~x~x**x**x~x**x~x»«x*«x*«x~x**>x INSURANCE FIRE WINDSTORM PUBLIC LIABILITY ACCIDENT - HEALTH SURETY BONDS AUTOMOBILE THEFT Calhoun and Co. P. A. PRICE, Manager. KODAKERS t Send your films to us for develop ing and printing. One day service. Write for prices. Lollar’s Studio 1423 Main Street COLUMBIA SOUTH CAROLINA We self Eastman Films J 66 6 Cures Chills and Fever, Intermittent, Remittent and Bilious Fever due to Malaria. It kills the Germs. "money TO LOAN Loans made same day application received. No Red Tape HARLEY & BLATT. Attorneys-at-Law BarnwelL S. C. Advertise in The Facile-Sentinel. GIRL’S CONFIDING UPSETS NAVY TRIP Leads to Finding Four Others on Ships. Quiet economical operation has helped to make FRIG I jto. ance. Freddie Rjggs, of Seattle, four years old, is a constant user of tobacco. To juflge fromY the statements made receriUy in Advertisements, we can safely predicts that Freddie, who has started training eaily ,wjll have a brilliant career\in the opera! Washington.—Five girls who sought adventure oil the liigh seas might still be sailing with Uncle Ham's navy had not one of them confided to her phuiu that she intended to ship on a de stroyer ns a stowaway. But she did. and now five trills are on Ifihd again, one sailor under arrest, and a court of inquiry will go into the matter. The girl who lold was Cynthia Al- berta Poole, fifteen-year-old high school student of St. Petersburg, Fla. The chum told Cynthia's pafehts and , her father got in touch with the naval 4 authorities!/ A search of the destroyer BillingsleyHfesu11ed In the dtscovery of the girl and she was put ashore at May port, Fla. Poole’s message also resulted In a genera 1 search of vessels In south At lantic waters and four other girls were found. Besides the Poole girl, the navy hud been informed one gin each was discovered on the light cruiser Concord, the destroyer Sands and the destroyer repair ship Dob bins. Dispatches from Florida, how ever, accounted for a fourtli besides Miss Poole. The four gave their names as Billy Lncer, Rose McGuire, Flossie Rice and Ramilda Avary. Placed ashore at Key West by the Concord, they said they had “shipped” at New Orleans to return to their homes in Phila delphia where (hey were employed as waitresses. All were given fares back to New Orleans. Cynthia was said to have told the cpmmai 'u* of the Billingsley that she met a su.ior named Kramer at a soft- drink stanu in St. Petersburg when the vessel was anchored there. She added that Kramer,* who is being held by the authorities, persuaded her to board the d^troyer. ^ “He persuaded me, but I wanted to go,” Cynthia told Judge J. L. Gavan. in whose ^custody she was placed pending arrivWy of oftl£ers from St. j Petersburg to return her to her par ent*. THE CHOICE Frigidaire operates quietly, automatically, without attention. It is remarkably low in price, and surprisingly economical in the use of current. Learn how a few dollars down and easy monthly payments put any modet in your home. Come in today. Williston Hardware Co. WILLISTON, S. C • PRODUCT. OP - GENERAL . MOTORS 2184 Barnwell Oil Mill A. W. E. NcNAB, Manager Fertilizer and Fertilizer Materials “Reliance Brands” Complete Stock of High Grade Fertilizers Carried at All Times. See Us For Prices. **-