The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, July 08, 1909, Image 3
«>B Che th&dy »4ri« wat aueh • AS OLD KA8tilUMlCl> JliOtiJu
pj*M f It »»• •>r«4 ^tn* b<*»t «•' «.. tef UM> 1 »omeilm«» _
thln*t e*Ubl« th-t the food 1«dle» of Hon of a charge by
1KS!M#i5»S xs 1
aenta I4>at w«r#*et»ei
*t»undnncc nod pnlv *a ahofl, dtetaocC -
off oolil Ue lemoiiade tr*» acryed to thf
thlrutr T,rc<». tfifW * yr«r 4# not «£t«n
enougb for iooh ai» o©c*»k>n.
Ovaeiona).
iftoctore from New Jerwv
were orer In The tVe
week. Tliay vklted
the <imh»I farming
ana ailtie oelgh-
» w»»
olrtier ofHoUla
kern Ipnuntaoe
, nail tlielr bn tine** w»* one
n. to apy out Ihe land and
If ther* ware pood chance* for the
bf ikeltlle tnoacy of tkelr
nompanlea. In the way of, gilt e«lg«*
Mortgage* of hratnlaea fariwXat a lit
tle lower rate of Intereit than
«nd flaoney lender* of the
AUfottrthciawpotao/U^ia-arc now.
quaflflcd to iMiie money order*.
For our Gloriou* Foiirlh breakfaat
we received from onr «p|d*ew Will
Holme* a H.<d Oak grown August*
Market Oantalontie, larger th»n the
,ethrofW"t^~iuM-iwwn^ tlniir^
journal 1st it: tethpat. ' '
COTTOX WKIOIIKUd.
Barnwell- O. li. Beat Sr.\ S, J.
flalford . •
Blackvlfle--Paul E. Allen, Kugene
F. Bovloton.
Williaton -J. B. Given*.
Air, a uaBuacrlpt copy
of which
hi* de*k.
mlar
fact that
m
They •eena d to be in no
hurry to make loan*, yet the
they wwre there and -will -come back
later In the year for further Inquiry,
being nolaed about may have the effect
nf caeatag -tome- fnconahUrnU people
Who are gnltlng along fairly well with
nld dme method* V> hcglu to think
that they are In aore need of cltoaper
»vn if they have to give higber
vlmaa aecerlty than b jaa felke have re-
^ulre8 of them.
At we understand tbo *ltuation there
I* more money than bn*tne«s up
Morth, end the doHar klnga have got
to And new field* for Investment, To
the money woriblpen it I* the greateat
> of herdtblpt. the moat bcinou* of *lna
V) beta to let their capital lie idle ami
ueproAtabla. While the politician*
end flntoerati of the North have no
eyWfiUiy except of bamboozling word*
for the agricultural Intereata of the
(tootli the fact baa bean burned through
experience Into their mind* that land
valuta ere better aecuritle* than stock*
end bond*, and that the utan behind
the plow end hoe U e better servant
end more easily managed than the mill
operative, the railroad aectlon hand, or
the ewe) miner—the disciplined thous
ands of tbeir labor unions. And there
U the nUlMMtc hope that through the
operation, Uie day end night working
of these proposed loan*, the inortg*
: mtf grow to he e fee simple title
the lender ef today become the
lord of the borrower, some future to
morrow.
Jfe don’t know enough df law or
legtetatlve power to ray whether or
not each Inaurenoe embassador* can
he kept by etetete fr<pn coming this
eMe of lleeon and ' ^Ixon’a lino. The
good common aybse of the people
ought to give thyfm notice that no auch
tnisalonerles aye needed here
__ For the home creditor U lenient
when crops ere short or price* poor or
•!okiie*e / M other mlafortune befalls.
While ^be far off lender of money end
of mortgage* may be as Inex-
es death and texes, aa destitute
sympathy as the stones of New
fork's streets.
We And no pleasure In rubbing the
fact in but It I* a melancholy truth tu
which the eyes of the victims will
come day open (hat Northern capital
has already obtained control of the
snoot valuable water powers of all the
riedmout section of the State, from
Columbia to the Blue Illdge. and for
their light and manufacturing power
the boasted and boasting boom towns
..of the up country will always Int Ulb-
nte payers.
But worse than tbat Is the gathering
of one seventh of (he white popnlailoii
of the State In mill communities and
Adjoining oUica and towns, the coun
try abandoned by the Caucasian and
all dependent fur prosperity or meagre
support upon the labor of the hopeless
operatives.
Kecent events In Georgia have shewn
what douth Carolina people may ex
pect as tbeir future medicine. The
Georgia Railroad, a State property,
leased to and operated by the !.o.iis-
villa and NssWviila system, controlled
by Northern canltal, preferred tl.e
cheaper negro as a fireman to the na
tlvf white Southerner or immigrant
Northern white work hunter, ho Tar
flic mosquito has kept the cotton mill
out of lowar Owroliira so that only a
email part of tbw white people have
% been tempted from farm and field to
factory. Yet that has not given us
a troai peace. VVe rentnre the prophecy
that When tHy got an approximate
of the trucking advantage* of
tCamlina tjmyjgUjLtrjLta become
outright land buyers tbat they may
With cheat) Italian or other Southern
Europe labor grow all the Vegetable*,
cabbage to cucumber*, that their rall-
foada can cary fo Northern and Wes-
Aorn consumers.
riCNIC AT BETHEL.
Foranvthing In Jnwelry nr silver
ware, from the engagement ring to the
wedding present, call on J. K. Har
rison for tne beat at the price* that
please and prodt.
Look after your Boilers, If they
peed i’au-.hing or new Tubes have it
done before the ru^h at
HOWARD’S SIIOIM,
Blackvllle, S, C,
SNAP SHOTA OF CLHRENT
EVENTS.
Tli* f rst Texas hale that sold for Hfi
ent* a potmd m twuno was auctioned
off In New York at 33 cent*.
The goyernment fl*call yer.r ended
on .1 line ;K)tli. in balancing Uncle
ham’s book a it was found that hi* ex-,
penses exceeded hi* Income liy $33/
Ml 1,1.V*. Washington is well pleiad
Ibat, the deAelt i* noflarger.
Tbo front door of the store pf Mr.
II. J. Bamberg .lr. In Bamberg wa-
prized open on ihe'nlght doth ult. by
deflberate burglars who wn piled mob I
and grist sacks on the fl<K>r and tilled
them with shoes, clothing Ax:, of the
value of »KK) and wept away without
detection. /
Knoxville, Ten/!., has bought the
Charleston baae/ball tranchlse. I,**t
year flic old city by Hie sea won the
pennant, thia year it is the lirst to quit
the game. /The near future coming ol
two coal r/tads gives CharlcStirfi more
happine** than high priced hired base
ball hallUt* could knock out for tiic
sea aiders.
be automobile scored its first vie-
tM” near Greenwood last week. VV. G.
udd, a drummer, wa* croasing a rail
road traciLin an auto, which stalled on
the raifa. A train was approaching
and he jumped out, unfoftuuatcly on
the wrong aide, for the engine struck
the auto and knocked it upon the poor
fellow, crushing him to death.
The earthqnake wrecked cities of
Mussina and Keggla hi the i-laud of
Sicily suttered two severe aetsmlo
shocks on Thursday, As iho cities
were prsetlcmHy heaps of ruin* from
the great disaster of several months
ago there were few casualties A young
mother standing at her door at the
first shock ran Into the hone for her
baby, but the second shock levelled
the budding, burying both under Wns
of brick and mortar.
Btatowfde prohibition went Into rf
feet in Tennesaee at midnight of the
30th. In the last Mate campaign M.
B. I’rttterion, local option!,t, wa* elec
ted Governor over K. W. Carmack,
prohibitionist.
Carmack was shot to death on the
atrects of Nashville by Robin Cooper
after the election. hec*u«e of his edl
torial* toiicning up Duncan Cooper,
Robin’* father.
The legislature passed the prohl
bltton law otter Governor Patterson’*
veto. ’I he change from wet to dry
wa* made peacefully. Oil next new
year all dUtllle-ics, breweries and rec
tifying houses In the State must close
The present law forbid* the sale o(
liquoi* within four miles of anv school
house, and there’s no place in the ijutt
tnat distant from one,
This n£w situation puts PJ,<KK) peo
ple and ten million dollar* worth of
hufldlogs and machinery out of busi
ness.
Have your Automobile* overhauled
b«r« whore you can aave tummy i«-
atead ol shipping them ott at
ir HCW AlttP.-i SHOPS, ~
Blttckvillc, S. C.
-«•*"
MOKE OFFICES
The next legislature will he asked to
crea-e a hoard of three men of ability,
experience and character with appro
priate salaries to devote their entire
time to Inspecting, investigating and
general Mi|a‘i vising the penal and
charitable institutions of the State, in
eluding the county jail* and alms
houses :ia well ns^he state Hospital for
the Insane, the penitentiary, th« re
formutnry at Florence and the institute
for the deaf, dumb and blind near
Spartanburg.
The measure « ill have sticb able sup
port as that of Chairman Christensen
of the asylum investigating committee
and other members of that eouimi-sion,
and perhaps not a few newspapers and
Atatn otticials.
“We should have such a board,”
said Mr. Christensen, • - a* has Just been
created In Virginia or Midi as Is work
ing -so splendidly-Hr-14Mw»U, where
there has been a big shake up among
these in-tltutions . bthink the creation
of such a hoard would be of great and
tasting practical value, to the State.
The time is ripe for putting such a
board to work . Its service* are need
ed and it* recommendations would Irts
of great practical worth. 1 don’t like
the word ‘expert’ in this connection.
Wa* * treat jo bear him read It, in
pure and undefllcd English, at it
doubtlearcame from Judge liudiey’*
1ip«;
■•You bavc heard, gentlemen of the
jury, what h»* been haht in UiU cose
ny Hie lawyer* the rascal*; hot no, I
will not abuse them. It D their busi
ness to make a'gooT cauie Tor rtretr
client** they arc paid for it and they
hava.done in this caae well euough,
hut you anti I. gentlemen, have some-
tbing else to ronalder. They talk law.
Why, gentlemen. It I* not liw'rliat we
wanUhiTfJulirdflT The? wontrPirmrenr
0* by l he oommott law of England.
Story of a Survivor of the Bat*
- tie ef firavelotte.
^ . m« TtljAfili i i
INTO THE JAWS OF DEATH.
Trrrrt me, gentlemen, common
is a much snNr gultta for n*^ the com
mon sense irf Raymond, Kpping, Ex-
otcr and the other towns Which have
sent us here to rfv this case Jictween
two of our neighbor*-, A clear bead
and an honest heart are worth more
than all the law of all the lawyer*.
There was one good thing ssiid at tlyd
liar It was from ono Shakespeare
Kngllrlt player. I believe. No mister;
It *s good enough almost to be >h tiie
Bible. It i* tbis: ‘Be ju.t add fear
not,’ IMs our business to i|t> justice
between the parties, not by/hny quirks
of the law out of Coke or/ Black-tone.
b<s)ks that I have never fcad and never
ill, but by commotT sense and by
common honesty, as between man and
man. Tbqt is our/tuisirless. and the
curse of God I* upon us if we neglect
or evadwAt tsuuf aside from It—And
now, M r Sheriff, take, out the jury,
ami you Mr, Foreman, do not keep us
wairtng w>tfi Idle talk, of which there
ha* bretytoo much already about mat
ters which have nothing to do \vl,h
the iperlts of the case. Give us an
hoiyest verdict, of which as pls4o, coni-
ren«e men, yon need cot be
ahamed."
STRAINING AT A GNAT.
Thn Missouri supreme court has
rendered a decision showing the im
portance of one word. A special to the
Post Dispatch from J> HYrson City,
Mo., say*. “The two year peni'eml
ary sentence of Fred Warner, s former
member of the 8t, Louis hoti-e of dele
gates, lixed by the jury which convict
ed him of bribery, wa* reversed and
remanded by the Missouri supreme
court. Warner and Fred I’liesmeyer.
also a inamber of the city cnumdl, were
arrested, after a transaction with
marked bills furnished by Henry
Aschcr, w ho was seeking the pas-ag.’
of a garage regulating bill.
Justice Gantt, who wrote the de
cision, declared the indictment de
fective because itslleged that IVarner’-
ofTeose whs “againat the dignity of
state ” The phrase, the court hold*
should hayo been “the dignity of the
state”
TORTURED ON AHORSE.
“For ten years I couldn’t ride a horse
without being in torture from piles,’'
writes L, H. Napier, of Rng.oss, Kv,
“when a I doctor* and other remedies
failed, Ibicklen’* Arnica Salve cured
mw.” 1 ofalHhlc lot Pile*. Burns,
Scalds, Cut*, Boils, Fev.- sure*, Kc-
aema, SaR Rheum, Corns, ‘ifte. Guaran
teed hy N . Burckhaltcr, R. A. Dea
son A Co.
ell
District Court of United State*.
Eastern District of South Carolina,
In Bankruptcy.
In Re
L. A, ^Stoney A Rro . and L. A.
Stoney, and J. G. Money, B uinrupt.
To tire Creditor* of L. A. S'oney and
J. G, Bjtnney and L. A. Ktonev A Bro
of Allendale, liillhc County of Barn?
and District aforesaid Bankrupt.
Notice I* hereby given that on or
about the 80th ilav of December A D
H«)s the said L. A Stoliev and J. <«.
stouey as L. A. fciloney A Bro. were
duly adjuuicat-d Bankrupt and tbai
the First Meering of ilieir creditors
will he lield at theoOlceof uuderslirned
Referee in Barnwell, S. C. on tt»c Kith
day of July I'.HJO at 10 o’clock A. M., at
which tune the said ( reditors may at
tend, prove their claims, appoint a
I’nistee, examine the Bankrupt, and
transact such other business a* may
properly come before said meeting.
R. A. Ellis,
Referee in Bankruptcy.
June otli UH'O.
NO t ICE OF ELECTION.
To all Whom it wav-Concern :
By Virtue of the order of the County
Board of Education, an election w ll
l>o held in and for the Fairfax Scboo
District, within its territorial limits,
for the. purpose of ascertaining the
will of the people upon the question ol
the establishment of a High School
within said District, under the pro
visions of Section 120S of the Civi
Code of said State and of the Acts ol
General Assembly of IPOS. Page HIM
said election to be held upon the Jlth
day of July, IffdO, during the usua
hours prescribed for said elections, tin
der supen Mnn of the Board of trus
tees of said District, at which election
only such electors as return real or
personal property for taxation and
w ho exhibit their tax receipts and reg
istratton certificate*, . as required in
general oleetion-, shall be allowed l<
vote Said election to be held at the
store of F . M . Young and Co in Fair
fax in said School District, Iteginnintf
at 7 o’clock a. in. of said date, tho-e
favoring aaid establishment voting
“For High Schools" and those oppo*
lug •‘Against High School
~ BOUtD OFTKUHTEK'*,
Fairlax Graded School Di-trict.
hut the Imard should he made up of
tbl XBnn*1 8 ft. pkule *vxx hetd-mr-|-* ut)d ul)le niceu,_w j L o would devote
‘ * . . their Whole tiuto to the work.—Colutn-
hTa Record /
2iHh Jnoe, with-* hwauJiGil Aatgbc day
etijnj the occasion. The attendance
wtimbef oattaHtcoff
M about one thousand present. The
m
■«iFa4ir»rTI» bwitfay Srtrool crm.-
mwitood at JH o'clock, continuing, for
In theae exerciser the
young tnwn and children
,iahool did thenrselve* **
CORN PUDDING.
Mix ears of. corn, one pint of milk
two eggs, threu tablaapooufui* of
melte i butter, one heaping teaspoon-
fill of eoru starch or flour, one tea-
NDTICE OF ELECTION.
To All whom it may concern:
By virtue of the order of tbo County
Board of Education an election w ill
he held In and for the Ultnors School
District, within its territorial limits.
for the purpose of ascertaining the will
the
establishment of a high School within
said Dial net, umterlbe 'provTftffBT r»r
f*eutloqjTJ(i3.of Utu Civil Code of^said
Ktate amt of the Acta of the General
said
Assembly of IfViS. pageJ44>s-.-a»td feleCr .
ttmi to he hejd iipoa the L’ldt Jay of
July, lOO'J, during the usual hours pro
scribed for aaid elecliouv- under the
SnpCrvNIon of the Board of Trustees of
MU*
ftain
Pollhe
iuale for DM day. Then-
l*»y. C- If. Turner,
® TpMimn of rttt Itnd haff'trteinpwmf-ui■ aaid4-f*kriot,-ai wLtluk oieclloH oulv
• of l>epper. Hlioe off the tips of the k'ich electors a* return real or personal
property for taxation aqd who exhibit
Boy and hi* relation
ftuadajr School of this,
ronid be be kept la the
•aose which be
4 ably (H*cna*ed.
Introduced bo
nra-
|«d-
of
Mtii
*■- oMiisiW
grain* with a sharp knife, and ttorane
the corn from the cob ^oaa to get the
bewrt. hot h«*kr AtH the com
to the well beaten yolk of the egg*
next, the b^Htel, e >ru starch and salt,
and then the milk, and iaatly stir In
the wlrtte* of the eggs. Pd\iT In a
greased baking dish and bake in a
quick oven.
Our nMtchiue shop- is of the latest,
pattern of tools, one machine weighing
nearly, i.000 lb*. Remember Brass
Castings made every day at
\ ilOWAKD’8 SHOPS.
k-:.-'. »m*ytlle r tt,U\
their tax receipts and registration eer-
tiUbatos, as required la general ejec
tions. r.liall b« allowed to vote. 8aid
e.leeitqu to be held in the store of G. A.
Beat in Ulmer, S. in said School
District, beginning at 7 o’clock a. m.
of said date and concluding at 4 o’clock
p. m. of said date, those favoring
said establrsh'meut voting “For High
ttwiioola” and those opposing, Voctng
•‘Against High Schools.”
'' BOARDOF TRUBTKB8.
Ulmer* Graded School District.
Udhack J. Ckoucir.
Wevbupt KUv
An Advance Under Fir# From Behind
Barricade* That Literally Mowed
Down the Charging Troepa—A Hand
to Hand Conflict In the Street*.
William
bettto of
Guldncr. a Burvjvor of the
the .moat Mrd j
of tl»e Franco-Pruaslan
H»rt>er’a Magazine bow
fotjgbt
vrnr, folia
he saw dhe victory as color becrer of
his regiment: ,
must have l>een, 1 think, about 4
locjc when Colonel von Boehn tode
to the head of the regiment, and we all
straightened quk-k. ns ou parade. And
he said sharp n few words, something
like, ‘Men, the regiment has a-good
name, and you will give It a still bet
ter one.’ 1 was in front and could hear
part of what he raid.
“The colonel led us to the left, and
we crossed a railroad track and went
through another little white village,
and then we faced a slope—a long slop*'
—with a village on It. which the
French had made Into a fort, and we,
,ohr regtnr^nt and others, were fw enp—
ture It, and there wore many French
men ami cannon there, __
"The colotjol rode on a horse, he and
the majors and the adjutants. Our
enpUlox usually rode, too, but this
day the captains sent their htfrees back
and went on foot.
"And siKJii our first men Ix-gun to
fall, for wc came under the Are of the
chnssepot. It was hard, for wq^rouid
not see the enemy. Thtae first ones
were many sharpshooters In a ditch,
and the noise of their firing was like
that of a coffee mill—kr-r r-r-r-rl They
drew off ns wo went forward. It was
only at a walk that we went—a steady
walk. Just as If there were no bullets
there.
"And now we would run forward
fifty yard* and throw ourselves flat,
then another fifty yards and the halt
and the falling flat, and each time we
ronid see the village that was n for
tress nearer.
"And once when we were lying down
and I saw that the officers wove stand
ing, Just cool and quiet. It came to me
that a man has to pay in such ways to
he an officer.
"I sow the colonel fall. Ho was shot
from his horse and carried hack.
"The first major, he took rommaud,
and ho galloped = to the skirmish line,
and he was shot. Then the second
major, too, was shot, and he tried to
get up, hut he could uot stand, and he
sat on a big stone and shouted: ‘Go
on! Go onT And he took a guu from
a dead mnn and fifed it.
,r We were ordered to fit bayonets,
and that made ns glad, but even yet
the men carried their rifles on their
shoulders as they ran. Wc were not
near enough to charge with bayonets.
“I wish I could tell you what It was
like as wc got near that village of St.
Prlvat — the noise, the smoke, the
flaahes, the falling men and only one
desire In our hearts.
"There were three sergeants In the
color section, one at each side of me.
And first the one at my right was
killed. Then the one nt my left was
shot—eight big bullets in his body
from a mitrailleuse—eight! Yet ho aft
erward got well, while mitny a man
died from only one little bullet.
"And nt last we went nt a bayonet
charge, and for the first time there
was a cheer, a wild and savage cheer,
nud we raj) ou, eager to plunge the
bayonets, and m-o could 1 see as wc came
near the village that the French were
flriug from behind barricades and gar
den walls and from windows.
"And wo looked Into the wild faces
of the French, and they met us hand
to hand. Ah, we climbed over walls
and barricades, nud wc fired and bay
oneted, and we fought them In the
streets!
"On~nnd on we went. It Mas a wild
time of shooting, bayoneting, wres
tling, clubbing, shouting. On and on,
but It was slow work and terrible, for
the French fought for every step.
"I was nt the front, for I had the
colors. There wore a few officers still
left, and they were shouting and wav
ing their swords, ami other regiments
stormed Into the village with us, and
after awhllo—I can’t say how long—
the place was ours.
“As I tell It to you It seems perhaps
a simple thing. But when the regi
ment was paraded before the battle
began we were more than 2,000 men
and more than fifty officers, and we
lost In the fight forty officers and
more than a thousand men. Yes, that
was the loos ef just my regiment alone.
It uas morderlsch, but It was neces
sary.
"Well, It was over. The village was
blazing, and many a dead man lay In
tbc ruins. Koine sat upright, dead,
with their backs against walls.”
4 IfpJUJbt
PAH) o:x SAVINGS DEPOSITS-
Courtesy, Liberality, Prompt Service ^
and Safety are onr Cardinal Principles.
«»
II. D. STILL,
ISIDORE KICIL
H. MURRAY MATHIS,
REYNOLDS S MARTIN,
President,
Vice President.
Cashier.
Asst. Cashier.
V’
i
The State of South Carolina,
County of Barnwell,
In the Court of Probate,
M )C L. Ackerman, a* Administratrix
of the Estate of Thomas J. Ackerman,
Sr. deceased, Plaintiff.
agaitW
Thomas J. Ackerman, Jr., et al.. De
fendants.
Upon reading and filing the petition l
of the plaintiff in the above entitled ,
cause it Is ordered that all creditors of j
the estate of Thomas J. Ackenra i. Hr. ,
deceased, late of said county and Mate, I
be and appear before the court of Pro i
hate nt Barnwell on Wednesday, July !
20th U>09, at 10 o’clock in the forenoon j
or as smm thereafter as possible to J
pros e and establish their claims against
said estate in the manner and avoiding
to the rules provided in law.
it is further ordered that this notice
be published in Thk Baknwh.i. J’ko-
plk on the Kill and 15th day* of July
1901).
J. K. Knelling,
J udge of Probate.
July 3rd 1909.
ON
HILL TOP STABLES,
BARNWELL, S. C.
Ten Firs
r
0 W 1
j u
Udo f
India’s Fame.
They were holding nn “exam" in nn
east London school, and the teacher
was explaining the chief products of
the Indian empire. One child recited a
list of comestibles. “Please, miss, Ir
dla produces curries and pepper rnA
citron and chillies and chutney and—
and"— "Yes, yes, and what comei
after that?” "Please, miss, I don’t re
member.” "Yes. but think/ What U
TtuTI.l sft famous for?” “Please, ’m,
Lndla-geatian.”,
The greatest of nil human benefits,
that, at least, without which no other
benefit can be truly enjoyed, ii Inde-
pondeace.—Parke Godwin.
LIFE 100,000 YE ARB AGO.
Hcientist* have found in a caye 'in
Switzerland bones of tnton, who lived
loOjOOO year* ajfd! WTKJrt Itta waslrrcon
stant danger front wihf beast*. Today
STATE UF SOUTH CAROLINA,
County of Barjiweli.
In the Court of Common Picas.
Henry B. Cave, Plaintiff.
v».
Washington Hankerson, Henry Hau-
kerson. Rbodie Green, Jo*ie Mixson,
Fred Mixson, Evelina Sanders, Wil
liam Mixsor. J r ., Jacob M ixson. Isaac
Mixson, Rosa Mixson, Jinnet Mixson,
Snow rein MIxmm», Ursey Mixson. Min
nie Mixson, Carrie Morris. Hattie
Robert-s, Moses M vers, Rufus Hankt-r-
son, Rosanna Carter. Jonnie Hanker-
son, Chester Hankerson, Sadie lieu
kersoTF, Garfield Haukerson ami KUa
Hankerson, Defendants.
Summona for Relief (Complaint no
served.)
To the Dcfeudants:
-‘You are hereby Summoned and re
quired io answer the complaint In this
action which i* till d in the office of the
Clerk of the Court of Cobmimmi Picas
for the said County in Barnwell in
said State, and to serve a copy of your
answer to the said complaint on the
subacrTbefi attTietroffice in the town
-of .JiM-R^ll- &HU.1) Carolina, within
twenty days after Aha service hereof,
extdusivd of the day of auuh service;
and if you fail to answer the com
plaint within the time aforesaid, the
plaintltf iri tbia action will apply to
the Codrt for the relief demanded in
^ Plaintiff's Attorneys.
’Dated’Get. Hth. 1908.
the danger, as shown by A. VV. Brown
of Alexendar, Me. is largely from dead
ly disease. ‘'flit had but been for Dr
King’* New Discovery, which cure
me, 1 could not have lived,” he write*.
f, Buffenng aa I did frqm a severe lung
trouble and stubborn Codgh.” To cure
Bore Lung*, Colds, obstinate thmgbs
and prevent FaeuMioula. its fhtJ bat
medicine on earth. tOo and
GaruamVed by C N-r-Rurckhalter,
M. A. Deaeot) 4b Cb.Trial botUe Met,
Which I am offering very cheap.
ALSO
A Nice lot of Buggies, Same*, Wagons, Lap Robes,
Harness and all parts of Harness to be sold CHEAP
Come and see me if you need anything in my line and
I will do the rest.
CHARLIE BROWN.
THE
To thfc Defendanta, Rafw* Hanker
aon, don tile Hankerson, Cheater Hah
kerson and Garfield Hankerson :
wr TAKE NOTICE, That the Corti-
ire( j plaint ih thit action, logethei 1 withjtne
,sumM6t)tf. of which tlMfor^goin/t I*' a
copy, #aii filed in th® nfllce of. tl)8
Clerk of ftte Court of Cbiimon Pleat
for Batnstell County, Star8 of South
Carqlida, On the 26tb day Of. October,
$I6, }
J. O. Patterroh A Son,
FUitittiTs Attorney*.
z# r
'jiAe, Oldest and Stronger , u .
Bank in Barnwell County
Depository of The State of South Carolina, The Coflrfftf of Barnwell;
and The Town of Bamwcil ;
Capital,
Smphm and Undivided Prof Ha,
f60,0(R).fHr
- »4S,OW.04f
To aave money la not hard when once a bank account Icitarikd rer
money in a bank cannot burn a hole the pocket.
A bank account means paving bill* by check—the ohly abfeohiUly
aafe war. Check* leave m? room for argument a* to When or 1 li«>w a
bill wa* paid. Each check la recorded in the balrk’a b0)»ka. These
tngeher with your money and the cancelled cheek* are kdpt for you
In burglar and firo pi’oof tauHa. You haye nueSsb td tiiear at any
time. .**
Let uk taljf this over with ybu the next -fluid yon are hi town * rf Ith-
poaaible to call, write u'a. /
0