University of South Carolina Libraries
V V * A GOOD EXAMPLE. A recent pews item in the ^^ |K5 __ 5S5Ka!=!===! ^ B=== , News and Courier tells us that <hre«d »«d Published K?erj tburtd^f in order that Charleston may i- . w _ __ - i . « , • \ * _ ^ Cbc Barnwell Sentinel / ./ | 7 THE NEW 8ENTINEL PUBLISH „ ING COMPANY —AT— * BARNWELL, 9. 0. ,y j //( / Ohaa. Oari(<m • Preaident Jvo. K. Shkluxo, Sec.-!>*>«». And Gvn ernl Mtinaiier, W. M. JONES, Editor have an authentic record of those from that city who have aervejj in the European/war, a 1 suitable record has been pro- - vided in the form of a well bound ' and durable register which is/kept in the mayor’s of fice. This record is signed by The Barnwell Sentinel, Barnwell, S. C. true estimate on him, and take him at his own estimate/ In life, honesty is the best policy, and failure faces those who try to get by with something just, aU good, y f J ff y y / ■stored ae second-c'aas 1 —the soldier or sailor, and is de- ww .„, mail matter Feb* . , ro*ry 14,1905, at the Poetoffioeat Bum- signed to show the name, ranK, well, 8. o., under the Act ol Congress an( p organization in which the oi March 8.1879. resident of that .city served. Legal Advpriisiivg at the rate of fi.oo This will become one of the par inch first insertion, and fifti permanent city records. 4 * The keeping of the military Obituaries. Tributes of Respect. Reso- llliooi of R**epect. Cards of Thanks aad all oth* r r* aiing not'oe* not n**wa, will be chnrg^d for at the rate of fifty •eats per iunh. or one cent •aeh insertion, with a minimum charge 0f N Cents. AJ1 changes of advertiain* and all oommu meat ions must be arldreesed to Tbe Barnwell Sentinel and must be in this office nut later than Tuesday ting to insure publication in the at issue. SOUTH CAROLINA LIVE STOCK SUPPLEMENT. * / The year is just in its begin ning and what it will bring forth in its remaining months is but a guess in the dark, but it is safe to say that nothing in South Carolina journalism dur ing 1919 will excel the per- r -„ . formancfi of the ~Wews and records in former wars has Courier In" its 88 page supple- been shamefully- neglected, ^ent to its issue of February Many persons who are. toda^ ijth. It ismot a mass of news entitled to enrolment in pa- ’jjfcttt or paper without* rhyme triotic societies because they or rea son, but packed full from are descendants of soldiers and start to finish. Best of all it is sailors who fought in the Revo lution and the war of 1812 are Ail communication# must be algned |ff Uft writ-r. noi for publication, but Mao •vidcuc** of good faith,and topro* teat the new paiier. on the right line and points the way to prosperity in the face debarred because no records 0 f holl weevil conditions, were kept by either^he departs While it is especially devoted — 4. iUo nminfiaii frnm . i... 41 J ment or. tlje counties from which they came. All that ex- aiTBtU'RIPTIUH BATH* yaar $150: Si« month* Chree month* 60e. f IN AUVANCa ists is a family tradition that §tale, it also will be found true 90c; la remit in* check* or money order nmke payable to Tub N*w Hkntinki. PirauamNa Oo. FARM LABOR SHORTAGE. Each week the Department of Labor m Washington sends out reports as to the shortage and surplus of labor in the va rious states of the nation. . The last few weeks have shown that over the larger portion of the country there is an increas ing surplus of labor, save in the South where there is a shortage of labor for the farms and what is known as common labor. Two reasons suggest thera- ‘selves as answers to this condi tion. The practice of demobil izing the returned troops at the cities where, they are put ashore in America has been roundly condemned by those city authorities, on the ground that these discharged soldiers feel the attractions of a great city, and moved by higher wages there than they have ever received in the agricul tural section from which they came. With the result that sooner or later they add to the burdens of the cities where they stop. This may be true or not, but many who were taken from the farmf or the army t will never return to farm labor again. While farm labor receives a smaller money income than is paid for the same unskilled la bor in cities, yet it cannot be called underpaid when all things are considered. It is such an ancestor was a revolu tionary soldier. A few years ago the state of Virginia ap pointed a commissioner of Con federate records. In the back corners of the state the news never came, and the names of many brave soldiers who serv ed through four years will never be placed on that roll of honor. We should avoid this error of the past wars. In a sense we have called the drafted men our roll of honor. Beside them however should stand the names of those who served in the national guard, and those who served in the navy, and those from Barnwell county who were at the time in ’the regular service. This register of service should be signed in person by the men who fought. Who will take hold of it to make it a success? GETTING by with it. This expression belongs to true slang in that it tells clear ly in a few words what could not be clearly expressed if slang was not used. Its mean ing may be gained from a re cent conversation with a Barn well county boy who had join ed the navy. In mentioning the various rules and regula tions to which the naval recruit must conform he said, “It does n’t make much difference what you know or don’t know, but whether you can get by with it or not, but if you don’t get by with it you are good for the brlg:“~ “The brig" being sail or’s slang for the ship’s prison. If that young man succeeds in still *true that farm labor over- the navy^he will placehis main - " * dependence on keeping naval emulations rather than trying in increasing numbers. It has to get by with it also been suggested that the Once a professional man discharged soldiers who ' were said of another “he is doing the farm laborers have shown a biggest business on the small est capital of anyone he knew.’’ Yet he seemed lo this man to have gotten by with it. It is true that sometimes a man rolls in on the crest of a wave riot of his making, but in the long, run he faces failure. Sometimes in business a man disinclination to go to Work, but prefer to live on their army . pay as long as it lasts. Mean- whilr^he farm work needs them now. COTTON AGAIN. to care of the American women Cotton has again fallen be- depends on -getting by with it. returning from Europe. Alter production, In the politics.of a neighboring enduring the terror on the state twenty-five years ago a market now only, adds to the man rolled to the top on the - 1K)h]e 8istt . r . w , ie confusion of price. We might wave of Populism. His friends ^ U) t]w w . ir iu it ’ s take a look backward at the hailed him as the man of des- nwfu j a<ptct j e f t a p t ) un causes of the situation, but it is tiny. He rolled back however Wld g Pa! . t0 g () tS> the unknown " * ’ ” to his former obscurity. Some- * to conditions as they are found in the coastal section*of the of every section. Its keynote is better livestock and more of it. It brings the proof of its as sertions by showing those who have succeeded in stock rais ing in the state. We wish that a copy of it could be placed in the home of every ready of this paper. • • LONQ BRANCH PHILOSOPHY. W« have been used- to big words all along such as Cmbolicacid Constantinople V a n ceyoueroundsandknuckle- down etc but the biggest word yet is the Bond I>*sue for im provement of Public Roads we were surprised to see any M>rt of a Minority advocating Such a bit of Class legisla tion, they say Tax tbe Auto owners. Well we should >n\ that auch a scheme would rer ct the limit there are so many that are several times second hand, and as things become normal they will be abandoned right and left. There is now several within the Corporate limits of Barnwell that i* pasi Ke9orecting, we' predict that in tlie near -tuture such as Shear Croppers and other Neggar am and poor Bucra will not l>« able to Run Motor Cars even if it cost nothing but Ga-oline and time, while we presume that more than 90 per cent of the Auto owners pay Compul ation Tax and to have a Bond Issue for an unborn generation to contend with alter our graves have fallen in_and our posterly have forgotten where we \vere 1 Buried. Just to make a good hard road from Courthouse to Court house, wedeent it unthinkable Of course. Mr. Editor you have heard that everybody don’t live on a 3la\ed or concrete road and perhaps nover will, some people live out 4n the sticks ^ and getting out to these main roads with some of us would be like the fellow that walked two miles to Borrow a Horse to ride one mile and a biilL • • - ' ' - • ‘' •' ■ ——- Riah Mas. c" ALL KINDS OF Y. W. C. A. DRIVE. The Y. W- C. A-,~ha* a drive on. which ends on the 22nd. of rai-e money to take Feb. better to look to the future to find the remedies which will times in religion a man makes prevent its recurrence. Cot- hard-lvips and dangers. tha>t they might -orve our splemTio men : so’ clots it not seem a m the mistake of confounding ton producers must learn; that good habits with genuine re- ! v ‘ r y Utfo ihiug for ns to give only in unity is the^e strength, ligion, but in spite of the best « f °w dollars to help them until ( intentions on his part and of M ««*.! 'ami get work .1" ill en*Hei - '• ffS* • .■-••• .* - -*t A • ■ litem t<\ live; independently?. J There is no strength in a rope of sand. Success can come only when we combine our judgment, and are -united in the acreage to be planted, and in its 'grading, packing, and .marketing. others he can’t get by with it. We are not talking of the con scious hypocrite who knowing ly deceives others, but of the man who feels that the every day world will* fail to pr* * (i V*‘ wh;tt have eervi c! voUr *‘Ovir Hi* Mrs vmi can the y mtry very own met? tf r**m W. f! ,x untl Du la a naan. Statement by Secretary Glass Regarding War Savings Stamps. My attention has been direct ed to the numerous offers made by unscrupulous persons through advertisements and in other ways to buy War Savings Certificate Stamps and as a re sult of such offers I am inform ed that owners of such securi ties have suffered material loss es which could have been avoid ed by redemption of the War Savmgs Certfffcate Stamps “ST post offices, as provided by law. I therefore direct the atten tion of. the public, particularly such persons as have made of fers of the character above men tioned, to the following terms and conditions which are print ed on the back of the War Sav ings Certificate of the series of 1918: .“This Certificate is of no value except to the owner named here on, and is not transferable.” “The law provides that no one person shall at any one time hold War Savings Certificates to an aggregate amount exceed ing one thousand dollars.” “Certificate — This certifies that subject to the terms and conditions printed hereon, the owner named on the back here of will be entitled to receive on January 1, 1923, in respect of each United States Warjjavings Certificate Stamp of the series of 1918 then affixed hereto, the amount indicated thereon as then payable, or, at his option, will be entitled to receive at any earlier date, in respect of each such stamp then affixed hereto, the lesser amount indicated in the table printed hereon.” Treasury department circular No. 128, issued December ' 18, 1918, and referring to "War Sav ings Certificate Stamps, series of 1919, contains amongst oth ers the following provisions; “Any owner of a War Savings Certificate, series of 1919, at his option, will be entitled to re ceive, at any time after January 10th, 1919, and prior to Jan uary 1, 1924, at a money-order post office (the office where reg istered in th6 case of a register ed. certificate), upon surrender of his certificate and upon com pliance with all other provisions thereof, in respect of each War Savings Certificates Stamp, se ries of 1919, then affixed to such certificate, the amount indicated* in the following table, but_.no. post office shall make any such payment until 10 days after re ceiving written demand there for, and such certificate must be surrendered for payment within 60 days after such demand, oth erwise the demand will be deem ed to be waived and a new de mand will be required before payment,” “War Savings Certificates, se ries of 1919, are not transfer- . . * a able and will be payable only to lh* respective - owners named DEATH Of MRS. J. J. COCHRAN. Statement by Secretary Glass Tilt* death <*f Mis .1. .1. « o h-/ Regarding Liberty Bonds, ran. whirli orciim d at |iei Imim j attention has been direet- in Bennett Sptings townslm-| ed to the activities 6f un8cn, P«- Sunday w*s lous Persons who have been op- -hock u, ,l„. COM ' The| c , ratinff extensively throughout the country ar.d who are swind ling the dwxers of .Liberty Bonds by purchasing bonds at prices far below their actual worth. These swindlers get the at tention of Liberty Bond owners by publishing advertisements .Iculated to make the urs.ia- pecting bond owner believe that, the highest market price can be secured for his bonds through the agency cf the advertiser. funeral Nervier* were condm*-! ted the following dav by K* v.j Clark, in the pr. sem e of a large coneoui>e «.f no/iowing re atives and; friends and her remains- were interred in. 11»«- Joyce Branch Baptist cenu*ier\. Besides-her husband she i* $ufi-TveiTBy*tTfree“NiiNters, Mrs Marion Roufitn e. Mr*. Janie* Rountree And Mrs. Jack Matt den, and three brother, W. F. Bates, Howard Bales and Philip Such U rarcl >’ if ever - the CJU *- Bates, who have the sympathy R * COrds of t ' tr » n “' clions of ^ character, brought to the atten tion of the department of jus tice and the treasury depart- of many friend* reavemeut. in their be~ NOTICE OF MASTER’S SALE. Pursuant to *n ord**r of the Court of Comiuon PI*-r* hj iht> c*#** of J H Rt>b. • t*. ft a 1 ., ih# undt-riignad, a* M*>l**r for HainberK County, will rr.arll.at t' r n«k of * former purehaorr, *t public auction to th>- htidiM 1 bidder. *i tbe Barnwell Court Hon**. fUn>*<- l,9t*nh Carolina, on Monday, March Sr), 19 0. b-t«e*-t> thr irgyl tinun of iult* on eal** day. the folloning drecritK-d real ea- tate. to* it That certain lot of land eituate in t> e town of Allendale, County of Barn* we I, State of South Ca o'i a. known ai d de ianat-d a* 1 t No 16 on plat of •aid town of AlleoUalt*, u d b* in*: b o d d fttt the Nunh t• y Hick «r\ etr»-e«; Kaei by lot * ow or forno-rly ol I). Sam-; Soieh b» lot «.f estate of Mr*«. S. E. R b rte; West hy Mu he r % \ alreet. Said lot lemg the name d«- -onhe*d in and cnnvev»d b) d.el ol Mre. Sarali A Gray to " r*. S- K Rub *-rta, b**Hring ti n** May 8('th. 1902. Terme of rale cash. PurehHB**r to pay for paper# and revenue a ampr. J. J. Brabham, Jr, Master for Batnberjr Coui ty. F* bruari Uih K 1919. thereon, except in the case of the ow’ner.” “It will not be lawful for any one person at any time to hold War Savings Certificates of -any one • series to an aggregate amount exceeding. $1,000 (ma turity value) In order that the interests of owners of War Savings Certifi- a cate Stamps of either series may be safeguarded, I hereby notify all persons to refrain from of fers to buy War Savings Stamps or accept same in trade. The post- office department, cooperating with the treasury department, has issued instruc tions whereby payment will be refused whenever it is apparent ment, prove conclusively that these swindlers take' every ad vantage of bond owners who are forced into^their clutches by paying the lowest possible price which the owner will accept— and generally far below the ac tual value of the bonds. I regret to observe that many reputable newspapers are being victimized by accepting the ad vertisements of these swindlers, and I appeal to all newspaper publishers to scrutinize very carefully the character of indi viduals who use their columns to offer to buy Liberty Bonds. As a newspaper publisher, I believe ' that it is the duty of publishers to protect their readers against unscrupulous advertisers. Other swindlers endeavor u\ trade worthless articles or se curities of little value for Lil»a> ty Bonds! and I appeal to pa triotic publishers to assist in putting an end to this practice. - The treasury department will take such steps as are possible under the law to protect the in terests_of holders % of Liberty Bonds, and will use every means—- at its command to bring to jus tice all who seek to defraud the « people who tiave so partiotically assisted in winning the war by investup; their savings in Lib erty Bonds and War ' Savings Stamps. - Owners of Liberty Bonds and War Savings Stamps should in no circumstances part with these securities unless necessity compels, and then, they should deal only with reliable banks, trust companies, banking insti tutions and others w’hoso reputa tion for integrity is beyond ques- that changes have been m&de in the name of the original owner tion. If it is necessary to sell of any certificate which may be iLiberty Bonds the highest mar- presented to post offices for re demption. I earnestly request newspa pers an<J magazines to give this ket value should be received. The treasury department will welcome information concerning the operations of these swind- matter the fullest , amount of lers in any part of the country publicity in order that the rights of millions of people—investors ! in United States government se- ! curities—may be fully protect-! ed. ‘ ( igued) Carter Gj Si-v : »r Carter Gla^s, ., Secretary of the Treasury. II \ (I N.Uft (4 a. r.k JLl