University of South Carolina Libraries
■ ■ V . > .. / 7- T ■ x i X -#=- J: S .s"' V*. • A ' - .. The ‘ Barnwell Sentinel T 17 F Owned and Published Every ■fh urs- day by The New Sentinel Publish ing Company at Barnwell, S. C. Ch&s. Carroll Simms, President. John K. Shelling, Sec'.-Treas, and General Manager. W W. M. JONES,Editor. 4. • - Entered as second class matter, Feb ruary 4 14, 1910") at the Postoffice Barnwell, S. C., under the Act of Congress of March 37 J 8 79. Yr - -Legal advertising at the rate of *1 .00 per inch first insertion and fifty cents - each subsequent irt- 'Our neighboring counties, Bamberg )a humheri of years. It may not -therefore ,be ou£ of place to remind out people of 1 some things. In the first place webcam not ex pect that the extended road mileage of our county can be put into first class condition and Maintained, sole ly by the efforts of the ehaingangs. They are too few and the mileage is too great. Tlj^ criticism received by • formeu- aUper.vifeors from various sec tions of the county was a demand -that they perform the impossible The township 'road bonds haVe also proven insufficient. We haveWeach- ed the Convj^SU^t we have great er sums of money than ever before. Realizing that good roads was a supreme need; of the south our rep resentatives in "Congress have secured federal aid for the building of such roads as will'be permanent:,. Many counties in the state* have availed themselves oT’this supplementary aid. CITATION NOTICE. The ’$tate'of “South Carolina,. County of Barnwell, By Johne K. Snelling, Probate Judge. ■ Whereas, Berkley Sally hath made suit to me to grant unto I. F. Still Letters of Administration - of thO Estate of ynd effects of Jacob Salley, deceased. — These are therefore, to cite and admonish all and singular the kin dred and _ creditors/of the said Jacob Salley, deceased, that they be and appear before me, in th,e court of Probate, to be held at Barnwell on Wednesday, October 8th, next, „ail£r .publication thereof, at 11 o’clock «in the forenoon^to show cause, if any they have, why-said Administration shouUTnot be grant ed. Given under my Hamit this 22nd, day-, of Septr ’Anno Domini 1919. — / John K. Snelling, Judge of Probate. Published on . the 24 day of Sep tember 1919 in*"thg. Barnwell Senti nel. x" • — . L •' F sertion. . - Obituariek, Tributes of ’Respect, Resolutions of Respect, Cards of Thanks, and „other reading notices not neWs will be charged for at the rate of fifty centos per inch or one cent per word, each insertion, with a minimum charge of25 cents. All changes of advertising and_all communication's must be addressed to The Barnwell Sentinel,and must be in this office not later than Tuesday morning to -insure publica tion the current issue. All communications must be eignel by the writer, not. for publi- and Aiken, are both bpilding greater road mileage and securing more fed eral aid than We are. Our office seekers In the past have greatly helped'some of opr people to believe that we should get all the ad vantages of moderff life without taxes. Out-of this has come the opinion-that while we would all en joy the advantages of good roads only ascertain-privileged class should pay for them. While Automobile owners were willing to bear the greater taxes called for in the Jast legislative scheme, yet it would not have been fair to permit those w'ho cation, but as an evidence of .good didn’t own cars to receive something faith, and to protect the newspaper. T Subscription Rates. One yera $1.50. "Six months. 90c, Three months 50c* ' In Advance. In remitting check or money order make payable, to The New Sentinel Publishing Co. they didn’t„pay for. The principle wasT wrong. The next-step, w*ould logically have been that some other class of people be held responsible for some other improvement. Every one helped by good roads should help to bear their burden. . While it is a splendid thing to have a system of improved roads from- county seat to county seat, forming a net work over the state, yet for every man who "Would take' a trip over a hundred miles, there would be a hundred men who would only trav- rlOTICE OF, DISCHARGE. Notice is hereby given that I have filed my first and final report with I « the Hon". John Snelling, Judge of | Probate for Barnwell County, and will petition the said Court for an order of discharge and letters dis- missory,/upon Wednesday th$ 15th day of OcTbh'er, 1919, giving notice to all personsXqncerned to show causeHon-&r befort/said date why the petition of the petitioner should not be granted. Take due notice and; govern .yourselves accordingly. ; H. G.- Boyleston, ....Administrator: -Sepfc 17, 1919. ' .. • ... . f = ’ ■ ►OM^NCE is calling to you! Stonge and smilifig foreign lands are beckoning to you. .Shove ■ - - ’ . i { off and see the world! the red-blooded, hard-working, hard-playing men of the U. S. •i Navy/ T -j-:. LOANS ON FARMING LANDS. In sums of $1,500 and up.. Five years and over. Low interest rate?; payable annually. • No restrictions as to use-of money. If interested state amount wanted, giving full description of property. .Prompt Service. R. L. FARMER, Agents y * R. P. D. No., 2. l-T-20.— — Springfield, S. C. ^ Learn to “parley-voo” m gay Paree. ‘See the-bull-flghts in Panama. Sec surf-riding on the beach of Waikiki. V A MALARIA SURVEY. el five or ten miles. If we provide!' * • • .on , *^ * .re piunuc containing 120 acres. In fufe sta indc thn ctoto : : : r r —r —S- a county system of roads, the state system will come of its own accord. The—county is the only reasonable unit on which we can work. The >The federal government is doing many things in a fatherly sort of a way for rural communities.Qife of its most useful activities is ill the I coun ?y delegation might secure the direction of disea.se prevention. The P assa £ e °f a n act that will provide medical examination of.-many men I the bond issue, and the necessary or- for the army revealed the fact that Kanization to handle the bqnds, am many are below par on account of I carr y 0u t the woi*k, ATTRACTIVE FARM FOR SALE. I haye~arvery attractive farm for Sale, within two miles of Barnwell, of cultivation. Especially adapted to the growing of various kinds of vegetables, corn, cotton, and would^ be fine for asparagus. —• „ ...' — • t _ -fcf . ... — Leam the .. .lure that comes -with the swish and swirl of the good salt- sea. Eat well—free; dress well— free; sleep clehp—free fand look ’em all straight in the eye—British, French, Chinese;, Japanese, ’ .Spaniards, Egyptians, Algerians Pay begins the day you join. On board ship a man is always learning. Trade schools develop skill, industry and business ability. ‘ c Thirty days care-free holiday each year with full pay. The food is rood. First uniform outfit is -fur nished Tree., 'Promotion is un- limited for men of brains. You can enlist for two years and come . out broader, stronger and abler. -*4 Shove off—Join the U. S. Navy. 1 ' and all manner of people. For price and terms apply to, 9-25-2t. E. W. HOLMAN, Barnwell, S. C. Come! Be a real man of the world. See the world. See it with If you’re between 17 and 35 go to the nearest recruiting station for all the details. IF you don’t knoit where it is ask your postmaster: T- 1 i _ x One of these a remediable disease, is malaria. It is beyond all question that a certain type of mosquito is the sole agency in the transmission of the disease from a sick to a well person BARNWELL COUNTY LAND. ANDREW CRAWFORD Broker - An incideht^ of the flush money that has come to us in past years is the sky high prices of farm lands. Destroy the mosquito and the disease I * people find that their money is COLUMBIA, S. C. Show off»-Join the U. S .Navy Phone 753- Loam dies out from the community. Ma laria control becomes a question of mosquit,o.control. The French failed at the Panama Canal because they failed to control the mosquito. We succeeded there because we first con- , trolled the mdsquitmjm)b 1 em. The federal government has pro vided maluria experts to vlfcuXarious localities in this state which rinjngst it to survey the malaria situation am suggest adequate methods of mala ria control. Barnwell has been largely free from malaria, hut it pos sesses as good malaria mosquito breeding places as can be found any where in thp state. It'nrfight not be amiss to have the government expertsi visit vis and find out just whajt we need to control the mosquTtorand its attended malaria problem. 'burning hoIesTn their pockets. They are buying lands at whatever figures the owners gsk for them. Two things call for attention,'are these farms actually -worth what is often paid, for them.? In some cases they are sokTTbra falrvaluation. In other cases the advantage is taken of the fact that “a fool and fyis money are soon parted.” Ownership of land makes a man a better citizen Room 5J3 - National Exchange Building .X \ EXAMINATION. Hay—Grain—flour—Rice Twine—Molasses—Coffee When in need write or Telephone "Collect. NOTICE TO DRS. AND CRS. “Notice is hereby given that all t>hun a floating tenant It is a i sf J-persons indebted to the^ estate of Paul trnmtksf .) ' i. , I). Priester must make payment of -L-3 The Compulsary Attendance Law. To wipe out illiteracy in the next cv II ha/ generation the state haV adopted a compulsary school atteiiflaiiee law “with teeth in it. This countryXin- der that law has provided the mm chinery for carrying its^ provisions into effect. In some counties con victions have already been had un der this law. Convictions will 'also occur in this county sooner or later. Now jt is characteristic of some, people to want to hit somebody or something whenever they are hurt. When some unfortunate patron is brought into court under This" law they might feel that the attendance officer or tjje superintendent of edu-^ cation ^/srespi true that prosperity depends not only on what 'S* s nian cam sell his land for, but also on wW the land buyer must pajafor it more fhqn it is worth. The other factor^Kthat high sell ing prices for land woulC/ndicate a spirit of speculation 'ratlibiX than solid prosperity. As ha/ been shown in manx of our exchanges, the valu -»f- a farm depends ru>t so much on the number of^loUars that will buy it in the market, but on the*" number of dollars that Can be made on that farm* year after year. Apart from reasons of sentiment or family or payment. the same to Wallace W T . Priester, administrator, at Allendale on or be- fqre the 80th day of August, 1919, and aH qiersons holding claims against said estate must present the saipe for payment to the* said ^Wallace W. Priester administrator; at Allendale, 7$. C., on or before Saturday the 80th, day of August. 1919 duly attested.'" ' Wallace W. Priester, Administrator. Jirtqd this 12th day of August 1919. 8-13 By authority from the State Board of - Education^notjce-iS hereby given that the Fall, teacher's f examination will be held in the Court House at Barnwell, S. C., ^on Saturday, Oct. 4, 1919, beginjhinff~9 o'clock A. M. and closing at 4 “P^M. This examination will be based up on the following subjects: Agrucult- ure. History. English, Algebra, Arith metic. Physioligy anil Flygiene, Civics and .Current Events, % Pedagogy and Geography. The examination on the subjectJywill be based upon the State adopted text books. \ " HORACE J. CROUCH, C. S. E.' Barnwell, S..C. 9-18-8t. - Sept.18, 1919, Itching, Scratching, Skin Diseases „ That Burn Like Flames of Fire Her^< Is a SensiBlfe- Treatment That Gets Prompt Results. Eczema and shn.ilar ^kin troubles ^onic from a disordered, impure condition of t.l.c blood, and they can only be cured by giving the blood a thorough cleansing, and -removing from it all traces of-im purity.—- * - This is why S. S. S. has been used so successfully iu hundreds of cases of Eczema and other skin eruptions. Thisvwoiidcrful remcyfjj; is one of the oldest and uiovKre- liable medicines onMhc market. It has been sold by dcug^ivts.b.r buys years. Get a bottle tockn-’aiul be gin treatment that Avfft gc< results. You are invited to Avrite'\|tr*ii:iy; for complete ap<l full adviceNis to the treatmcnClof your own rase, r ' Address, £vicf Medical * Advisgr, Swift Specific .Co., Dept. 52, At»\. Ca. *“ lauta CITATION* NOTICE. F'or immedij ^ceptancr^.we-are offering.a.new any t-o be. worth as much to the seller as thfe-obuyer. The seller is often mortar sighted in seeing that it is a good timxto unload, than the buyer in loading up, ' The spirit oix^peculation - is un-. healthy. It often j>oes ’just before the crash. We may be^iply guess ing, but it is our guess that'"farms can be bought more cheaply in a verys^ew years than they are now soTd foV. you wanrxt) b u y farm ew scll a farm. Do you want to bny home or sell a-home. See Harry D. Callioun, Home Bank Ban sfell, S. C, co cite ami The State of South Carolina, County of Barnwell. By John. K. .Snelling, Esquire, Pro bate Judge. Whereas, J. F. Fields, hath made suit to me to grant unto him, Letters/ of Administration of the Estate and effects of Mary E. "Creech^de ceased*. These ^are - ‘therefore admonish all and singular the kin dred and creditprsof the said Mary E. Creech d^eeased, that they be and appear before nie, in the court of lob&te, to be held at Barnwell on lay, September 29, next, after following trustees are hereby ap pointed managers of election: H. J. Hair,I. KeefeiC D. W. Heckle. Those- favonhg the proposed levy shall cast ^ballots,^with the _word “Yes” written or printed thereon, and x o Hid Lathe for $4(T0.00 f. o.J). Colum- ’reserif price on this Lathe is $438.00 f. o. b. faetory/ISoutH BendTInd. Se can save you some $40.00 f • / _ .. v • >50.00. Can inspect same at our store. A-,. COLUMBIA SUPPLY COMPANY, o23 West Gervais Street Columbia, S. C. responsible for their ap pearance in court. Don’t take it out on themybut on the law./ We might change these officers, every year, but each new incumbent ^uld have to enforce the lawr The best thing to" 1 tfo Is to abide by • the-law; = The of- ? . : 5 >^- . 5 you Can Save Money And Find Best Assortffrent of Clothesat ficer doesn’t aim to punish people but to get every child in school. Work with it instead of againsMt. The Barnwell officer wilj>rendej; ev^y help needed to make^it a help to the patrons. J.b. white & co. publication thereof, at iSL o’clock in the forenoon, to show cau>e- if any they have, why the said Administra tion should no? be granted. x; | Given under my Hand this 16t> day of September, Anno Domini, 1919. John K. Snelling, THREE SMALL- FARMS, THREE TO FOUR MILES FROM BARNWELL, FINE IANDS., WELL LO- / CATED, CllEAP AND ON EASY TERAfSf (1) 115 Acres, 105 acres under cultivation, 12 acres Judge of Probate. Published on the 18th day of Sep tember 1919 in the Barnwell Sentinel. * i NOTICE OF ELECTION. in'prime asparagus, one 5 room, one 4 room house (new) two wells, barns and stables. X (2)10^4-2 acres, 78 acres under cultivation, o$* 6' room, one 4 Toom residence, *barn, ,large shelter with A A A A * A A * A A A A I BARNWELL COUNTY ROADS. THE- HOME OF We arg firmly convinced that the gf •' matter of .gpod roads is one thing $ that the people of the county will ex- | pect our representatives to plan for „ .during the doming session of the leg- x islature. We are also confindant that the legislature will take some definite action along tliis line. In J HART SCHAFFNER ANDr MARX CLOTHING .i V- >■ Write our Mail Order Department —.. JL- ' ’ fu m _ 7‘100 Minute Service’ fine form or another the agitation j.w SATISFACTION X UARANTEED good roads has bfcen with us for petition having been filed in ac cordance with /section 1742, general school law of 1912, notice is hereby /riven thafr-an election will be hejdjn Healing Springs school dtstri?F No. k6, on Thursday, October 2, for the purpose of determining whether or •not a special school tax of two (2) Additional mills shall be levied in the ibove named school district. The said election shall be conducted ts is provided by law for the holding vf -general .^lections. The polls ^wfll [v ie opened at thd school house and the [ V * hose opposing 'the proposed levy I * ’hall cast a ballot witlrthe word^o” .ritten or printed therenn. HORACE J: CftaUCH, - /Sift. Co. Board of Education. rxBarnwall, S. C., Sept- 19W* 15-2t. • i-n a. f -- W shed, 4 stables,^sprfeQdid w’ater, plenty of wood, 8-10 acres pn stream suitable formill site. (3) 133-1-2 acres, 110 acres under cultivation, balance in Woods and s\vamp K one 5 room, one s 3 room, one 1 room house, two barns, 4 stables/ • . - - 1141 One four room residence and lot and forge lot adjoining, running- from street to street, in Barnwell. . For price and |erms, apply to 4 ; ' l 1 V. SEYMOUR OWENS, Atty “ - - barnwell;s.c. "Wv T A A A A A* A A A A A A A^ S A > A 2 2 A :x_ A A A A A Advertise in The Sentinel •j. A- 1 v- '-iTT ; H