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X ,!R»V- .■'Sg . V THURSDAY, APRIL 15TH, 1U7« THB BARNWBLIi PEOPLE-SRNTINEL, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROUHA PAGi verm HBRB AND HRRBABOUT8. Mrs. B. D. Ellis spent Friday in Augusta. — I * Brown Dyches, of St. Stephens spent Sunday with his family here. Miss Hazel Smith spent the week end in Columbia with friends. Miss Elizabeth McNab was a busi ness visitor in Columbia Saturday. G. B. McClendon, of Charleston, spent the week-end here with friends. Miss Margaret Free spent the week-end in Bamberg with her par ents. B. D. Ellis and R. A. Ellis, Esq., spent Sunday at Martins with rela tives. Miss Grace Hogg spent the week end in North with relatives and friends. Mrs. P. J. Drew spent Sunday with her daughter, Mrs. Allen Bell in Columbia. Mrs. I. W. Rountree, of Dunbarton, spent Frid!ay here with her mother, Mrs. J. C. Hogg. Mrs. Buster Morris, of Olar, spent Friday here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Carter. Dr. Will Greene, of Beaufort, spent Friday in Barnwell with Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Greene. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Ruff are spend ing several days in Charleston with relatives and frinds. Paul Bolen, of Springfield, spent the week-end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Bolen. Mrs. M. H. Morris has returned home after spending several days in Fairfax with relatives. H. G. Boylston returned home Sat urday after spending some time in Florence with relatives. — * David S. Hair, of Miami, Fla., is spending several days here with his mother, Mrs. B. M. Hair. Misses Louise McCullough, Mary China Stevenson and Margaret Ellis spent Saturday in Columbia. Gene Parler, of York, spent the week-end in Barnwell with his par ents, Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Parler. Mr. and Mrs. Robt. Keel, of the Long Branch section, were the guests of Mrs. Ira Hair Saturday night. Miss Elizabeth Thomas, of Holly Hill, is spending sev ral days this week with Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Greene. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Rosier, of Black- ville, were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Brown Dyches Saturday evening. T. R. Brown, L. A. Cave, Eugene Brown and Tarleton Cave enjoyed a fishing trip near Beaufort last week end. Mrs. W. R. Moore spent Sunday in Columbia with her husband, who is recuperating from an appendix opera tion. Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Bronson spent Sunday afternoon in Columbia with the latter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. F. Bell. Dr. L. T. Claytor, county health of ficer, who is taking a special course at the University of North Carolina, is spending this week here with his family. USINESQ TILDE RO A REWARD OF $100.00 will be paid for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the party or parties who wilfully and maliciously set fire to our woodland on Dry- Branch Farm in Red Oak township on March 13th.—Dr. L. W. and N. C. Anderson. 4-l-3tc AUCTION.—We sell livestock at auction each Tuesday at 11 a. m. There’s no cost if they do not sell to suit you.—Tri-County Livestock Auc tion, Co., Bamberg, S.C. 3-11-tfc FREE! If excess acid causes you Stomach Ulcers, Gas Pains, Indiges tion, Heartburn, Belching, Bloating, Nausea, get free sample doctor’s pre scription, Udga, at The Best Phar macy, Barnwell 2-18-20tp TALK IT OVER TH YOUR FERTILIZER MAN •\ will tell y°j* STOPS RUST and STARTS PROFITS Ask Your Fertilizer Man why so many successful farmers top-dress cotton with NV POTASH. He will tell you that leading southern experiment stations, after long and extensive tests, now recommend pot ash as well as nitrogen as a top-dresser. He will tell you that during the last ten years thousands of farmers have found that NV POTASH STOPS RUST and STARTS PROFITS. That the many extra ppunds of valuable seed cotton added to your crop by potash top-dressing are very profitable because they are pro duced at such low cost. Top-dressing with NV POTASH keeps cotton strong and healthy, maturing fruit until a full crop is made (including a good top crop). It PREVENTS RUST, helps control Wilt and produces strong, vigorous plants with less shedding, larger bolls that are easier to pick and better yields of uniform, high-quality lint. Follow your fertilizer man’s advice. Top- dress with 100 pounds of NV MURIATE per acre, or 200 pounds of NV KAINIT, or use his nitrogen-potash, mixed-goods top- dresser made with genuine NV POTASH. Remember, NV POTASH PAYS! N V. POTASH EXPORT MY., Inc. Hurt Bldg., ATLANTA • Royster Bldg., NORFOLK TOP-DRESS WITH MV POTASH TftAOK MARK R CO Miss Ethel Anderson, who teaches near Bamberg, spent the week-end in Barnwell with her mother, Mrs. F. H. Anderson. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Harley, Jack and Martha Ayer Harley visited Mrs. Jno. S. Dunbar, Jr., at the Columbia hospi tal Friday. Misses Daisy Anderson and Cather ine Black, students at Columbia Col lege, spent the week-end here with their parents. Bob Dicks Bennett, a student at Newberry College, spent the week-end here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Bennett. Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Rosier and daughter, of the Ashleigh section, were the guests of relatives here Sat urday evening. J. W. Patterson and Mrs. Henry C. Wingo attended the funeral services ofMrs. Wingo’s maternal grandfather in Augusta Sunday. Mrs. Frank LaBee, of Savannah, Ga., spent several days here last week with her sisters, Mrs. Minnie E. Holly and Mrs. Walter Baxley. Mrs. T. R. Brown, Mrs. Mordecai Mazursky, Mrs. Charlie Brown, Jr., and “Buck” Marks were visitors in Columbia on Wedneday of last week. Miss Hattie Alexander, of Seneca, returned to Barnwell this week to resume her duties at the Barnwell Beauty Shop, after spending the past several months in Anderson. Mr. and Mrs. Thos. E. Snelling, of Charlotte, N. C., who are on a busi ness tour of South Carolina, spent Tuesday night in Barnwell with the former’s father, Judge John K. Snel ling, while en route^from Aiken to Orangeburg. Among those attendi|g the annual services at Sheldon Church near Beau fort, Sunday were Mrs. T. R. Brown, *Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Brown, Sr., Mrs. L. A. Cave, Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Brown, Jr., Miss Helena Brown and “Buck” Marks Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Girardeau an nounce the birth of a seven pound son on Sunday, April 11th. The young ster has been named Edwar Freer Girardeau, for his paternal grand father. Both Mrs. Girardeau and son are getting along nicely. The friends of Mrs. John S. Dunbar, Jr., of Columbia, will be glad to know that she is convalescing in the Colum bia hospital following a recent opera tion. She was visited Sunday by Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Morris, Mrs. W. E. Giles and little daughter, Shirley Ann, and John Dunbar, III. Woman’s Missionary Society. The Woman’s Missionary Society of the local Baptist Church held its monthly meeting at the church on Tuesday afternoon with the Clifford Barret Circle in charge of the pro gram. At the close of the meeting the members held a social gathering honoring Mrs. Frank LaBee, a former teacher of the Sunday School, whose recent marriage took her to Savannah, Ga. Mrs. LaBee is pleasantly remem bered here as Miss Ida Kate Sanders. A miscellaneous shower was given for her and she received quite a number of lovely gifts. The Clifford Barrett Circle served delicious refreshments, consisting of several kinds of sand wiches, cookies and spiced tea- Cggflfl