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THURSDAY, JULY 1925. THE BARNWELL PEOPLE-SENTINEL. BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLLVA *AGE —it. These pJetures, transmitted by American Telegraph and Teleid.ene wires, show the ruins on State street, the main business thoroughfare of Santa Barbara, immediately-after the earthquake. Local and Personal News from Williston Willistori^. July 11.—Miss Frances Rankin left Wednesday for Anderson. Mrs.^A* A. Meyers is spending some time in Branchville. Mrs. Edwin Lee visited her parents in Greenville last week. ^Connie Hall and Hastings Kitchings it the Fourth at- home. ——^—- Alphonse Kennedy of Elloree is vis iting relatives here. Misses Mae and Lucile Hair spent the week-end in Aiken. , Miss Lou Belle Scott is spending this week in Augusta. J, W. Black made a business trip to Augusta Monday. a Miss Pearl Peacock of.Columbia was a week-end visitor of relatives here. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Hall speilt the Fuurth Tfi A'ugusta With relatives. THE SOUTHERN SERVES THE SOUTH for • • necessities to spare for luxuries Railroad profits are limited by law, and ratgs are fixed by the Government. In no other large business is so great an amount of capital _ risked for so small a return as in railroad transportation.* The new money put into a railroad, therefore, must be profitably employed, either in in creasing capacity for service or in effecting • economies of operation. The Southern, never yet able to control all the new capital its management would be pleased to invest, necessarily has to give preference to productive improvements, such as yards, shops, engines, cars and tracks. But it is because it has devoted Hs resources to necessities—rather than non-productive improvements/like monumental passenger stations—tbaft the Southern has been able to keep its/dervice abreast of the demands of the tefntory it serves. <0 + The net ineomm earned by the Southern Railway Company omta property i/rveatmenthas averaged', 'only per annum during the laatlen years. ' « SOU ^H ERN RAILWAY SYSTEM -ia-" a v - Edwin Carroll of Greeville spent the Fourth with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Carroll. Miss Annie Lillian Reeves of Dur ham, N. C., is visiting Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Self. Mr. and Mrs. Miller spent the week end with relatives in Batesburg. Mrs. M. W. Rankin left this week for Lancaster, where she intends to be foi wimfckMnMSv'T Mrs. Anna B. Weatlier^bee is visit ing Mr. and Mrs. A^* M. Corley of Salley. Miss Mayo Rountree and. Free Thompson spent the week-enchain Charleston. M*-. and Mr« A A Meyers spent the Fourth in Brnn.’bville. William Kennedy and W. C. Wood ward of Greenville were week-end vis itors here. Mr. and Mrs. N. C. Toole and family of Newberrv wore guests last week of Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Toole. Miss Annie League Merritt is spend ing some , time in camp at Biltmore, N. C. Mrs. Elmore Bland and Misses Mav and Lucile Hair spent Friday in Ai ken. * - J. D. Elkins and family of East man, Ga., were visitors last week of Mr. and Mrs. Allen Hair, Mr. and M’*?. Norman Snelling of Atlanta are visiting Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Fe’-nott..' Mr. Rushton of Saluda was a visi tor- this week of his daughter, Mrs. M. T. Quattlebaum. ‘ Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Thomas and fam ily of Aiken spent Sunday with Mrs. L. Harley. Miss Mattie Lee Bennett has re turned home after visiting Mr. and Mrs. Norman Snelling of Atlanta. Mrs. G. 0. Cadden and children spent the Fourth with relatives irt Au gusta. ^ , • ' - Miss Catherine Woods of Fountain Inn is the guest of Miss Virginia ~ 'V;" * V- Kennedy. ■ Miss Katherine Hair-of Elko visited Mrs. W. T. Willis, Jr., last week. Mrs. Cora Peacock Sanders of Au gusta is spending her vacation with her mother, Mrs. Ben Grubbs. beth Kitchings. , Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Latinier and children left .Tpbsday to attend the Pre^s association in Greenville and Brevard and will spend some time in Clyde, N. C„ before returning to Wil liston. -- - , " Miss Anna Salley and Miss* Mattie Rutbe Martirv of Salley and Miss Richardson of Jtoanoke, Va., were vis itors in Williston last Monday. Misses ; Marguerite amt Ruby* Court- ney. r Chlotilde Weeks imrtO. NrCotfft- ney were visitors in Aiken W r ednes d&y. Misses Marguerite Thompson-., is visiting relatives in Walterbonfc- When she returns she and Miss Eliza beth Stallings will spend seve^l weeks' at Camp Laf-a-Lot. Mrs 1 . C^W. Sules and ?harming daughter, Elizabeth, of Augusta, are spending some time with relatives in Williston. Quite a number, gathered at Smith’s swimming pool Tuesday for lunch in honor of Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Polcen, of Akron,' Ohio, and Dr. and Mrs. Polcen. Mjssos Ruby and Elma Hair of Au gusta are expected this week to visit relatives in Williston. ,-—.tr: Dr. and Mrs. E. F. Polcen left Wed nesday morning for ,Akron, Ohio, where they will make their future home. ’ ... Mrs. C, B. Holley of AugHsta has been visiting Mr. and Mrs. J.’A. HoL ley for a week at Hotel Williston. Mr. Holley spent the week-end. Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Cheek and son Aubrey, of Durham, N. C^, ware week- end visitors of Mr. and Mrst. M. B. Self. Mrs. Cheek, who is a sister of Mrs. Self, will remain in Williston for a visit oLseveral weeks with Mrs. Self. ' - ' , / it ^ Dr. G. J. Trotti is attending the an nual clinic of the First district Den tal Society of Georgia, in Savannah. After three days devoted to the clinic, •the society will take a two days’ fish ing trip down on the goa$t. Dr. and Mrs. L. D. Boone and dau ghter of Langiey were visitors. Sun day- of Mr. and Mrs. F. T. Merritt. Q. A. Kennedy, Jr., spent the week end in Saluda, where Mrs. Kennedy and baby are spending severrd weeks. Mr. and Mrs. B. D. Cartel and lit tle girls, Sarah and Berte Dean, ’ of Bamberg, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Latimer Friday. Mrs. Weeks spent Sunday and Sun day night in Aiken with ‘her husband, who’has been very ill at his mother’s but is slightly improving. , Mrs. M, D. Bell has been spending some time with her daughter, Mrs. D. C. Weeks, while her husband is away sick. Fight Ine Boll Weevil. ► Celebrated Medicine Has Become Talk Of The Town—Vast Numbers Here Are Benefited. , ^ r- »Karnak, the -remarkable new medicine, is producing such phenomenal results that it has become a sensation here. ■ Never before has any medicine brought forth such overwhelming outbursts of praise from happy people made well and strong through its use as Karnak. Vast numbers of local people are every day reporting phenomenal return of their old "time strength and en ergy and quick relief from their suffering after taking it. Men and women of all ages, in all ^ralks of life afflicted with stomach, liver or kidney disorders, some of them weak, thin and nerv has fully restored them to their normal healthy condition; they have regained their- weight and strength and feel like their old selves again. Still others, who seemed fairly weU, yet who suffered with indiges tion, constipation, sluggish liver and sour, gassy stomach; as well as those who complained of walu ing up dull and tired—-eyes heavy —head aching and dizzy—-tongue coated—bad taste and offensive breath, state that they have been entirely relieved of these distress ing symptoms and restored to health and happiness through the use of Karnak. Kartiak ia unquestionably the greatest medicine of all times. It b fast coming into universal use and recognized by aothsri- ties as the greatest been te nf- _ faring humanity the world has ever known. Over 500,000 bottles of Kny*i%lr sold in four states in ten months. Karnak is sold in Barnwell exclu sively by Mace. A. Deason; and by the tending druggist ia every town. Think of the money invested in your cotton crop, and keep close tab on what the boll weevil is doing, you will find that the first generation of new born weevils is now emerg ing and infestation is quite general. Observations made within the past few days show infestation to be as high as 20 to 25 per cent, which showed only a slight infestation up to 10 days ago. Keep watch on your fields and begin dusting with .calcium arsenate as soon as 10 per cent of the squares show weevil puncture. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Pace of Ai- , M * kc "t JSkS ken were the rnests of Mr. and Mrs. ‘ nter ' & 80 to , ( ays. is very R. M. Mixson Sunday. Owen Manning of. Davidson, N. G. was a visitor this week of his brother, W. H. Manning. E. A. Johnson of New Holland was a week-end guest of Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Smith. ’ E. H. Woodward . of Aiken and Alonzo Hair of- Aiken were visitors • s * here Thursday. Prof. Isadore Ussery, superintend ent of the Blacksburg school r-ystem, is visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. P.’ "S’. UsserV. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Hall spent the Fourth at the home of Mr. and Mrs. M. Wall, where a delightful bar becue was served. 1 .. Cecil Hall enjoyed spending last week with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Wall, in the Hickory Greve section. * * Mrs. M. B. Self and Marvin Self have returned from a visit to rela tives in Burlington and other points in North Carolina. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Jones and chil dren and Mrs. Dora Ott were visitors of Mr. and Mrs. O. N. Courtney. Robert E. Lee was compelled to re turn from camp near Chattanooga on account of an attack of appendicitis.. Mr. and Mrs. Monroe Beasley imd children and Mr. and. Mrs. E. R. Beas ley and children enjoyed a barbecue given at the home of their parents on the Fourth. , . Mrs. W. (j. Thompson, Jr., Miss Bet- tie Matthews and Wiley Trotti, mo tored to Spartanburg Friday to spend several days with Mr. and Mrs. PhUlip Harris. ” The Rev. Arthur ftiteffings and Mrs. Kitchings of Metter, Ga., spent a few days last week,, with Relatives in this section. They were accompanied home by Mr- Kitchings 1 mother, Mrs. Eliaa^ important to keep up the fight and maKC a close w.-»tcli or each fie'J that has been dusted, continuing to dust as often as necessary to keep infes tation - below 15 per cent. The most accurate index to the boll weevil in jury in the fields is by making square infestation counts. These farmers which may have already applied as many as three applications of dust will find in all probability that 2 to 3 additional applications will be neces sary. So continue to make 1 the ap plications of dust as often as is necessary until. the crop is made.— H. G. Boylston, County Agent. Send Us Your Job Work. J i ^ TheJSealof All Lines of Insurance: Ffitrm Coverage a Specialty: Calhoun and Co. P. A. Price, Mgr. Bank of W. C. Bldg. ; DOUGHTY’S the qld reliable DRY CLEANERS AN1> DYERS since 1895 : Phone 6562, Columbia: When you Uk« out an Insurance Policy on you* t life with the strong com pany which I represent, you are placing a seal of protection upon the fu- jRjBt »f: JpV^l OtHS. should anything , happen to you.' NORMAN B. GAMBLE Barnwell, 8. C. A Bargain in Rubber Belts We are offering the very best Stitched Rubber Belt at Um following prices on the sizes shown, and will sell at these prices as long as what belts we have lastv ' - - ' Three irieh 4-ply at 25 cts. per foot. Five inch 4-ply at 40 cts. per foot. Ten inch 4-ply at 85 cts. per foot. ' The above is the very best Stitched Rubber,Belt. We also offer the following Radio Friction Surface Rubber Belt, which ii? a first class belt in every respect, and will make a special price of 45 cts. per foot for the 5 inch 4-ply, this sold at .d0 cts. per^fobt. SEND FOR CIRCULAR. Columbia Supply Company 822 West Geil aig ISt. 2 XqtemMa, §. C. i HIGH UP IN THK SOUTHERN APPALACHIAN MOUNTAINS OF - WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA EASTERN TENNESSEE and NORTH GEORGIA Land of the £ky Are Many Good Places to SPEND YOUR SUMMER VACATION ^ ■ f , - ■■ Reduced Summer Fares to All v Summer Tourist Resorts Tickets on Sale Daily Beginning May 15th Good Until October 3 let, 1925 Write for Summer Vacation Folder * *V ■ Jr Consult Ticket SOUTHERN RAILW As AY ent SYSTEM ■■iir«i.r I ^ STANDARD CASOLI ME ALL EXPENSE TOUR PERSONALLY CONDUCTED NIAGRA FALLS, TORONTO, CANADA, NEW YORK CITY • v AND WASHINGTON, * AUGUST 5TH to~AUGUST 1«TH FROM VARIOUS SOUTH CAROLINA POINTS. Most economical. A wonderful vacation tour without worry. Everything pre-arranged. Splendid chance for parents to give their children sn educational trip during this vacaition period. * * Write for descriptive folder, showing cost, etc. 8. H. McLEAN, - ' District Passenger Agent Southern Railway Company ' COLUMBIA, SOUTH CAROUNA. .dvertisein THE PEOPLE-SEJI1WEL