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THE BARNWELL PEOPLE at the poet office at Barnwell, S. C., as lecond-cl&u matter. JOHN W. I §40-1912 v,,' B. f. DIV1ES, Editor and Nprlotor m&K-t ' . THURSDAY DECEMBER 3a 1915. ■ ■ ■ , • ./ • -a • • •••**•* ■p y yv . The attention of all subscri- bere to The People who are a year or more in arrears is call ed to the notice on the first page of this "week’s issue. • • • • • • • A Happy New Year! The lover who pays in sighs is re paid in hopes. . . _ L I r f I Those who forget today seldom re member tomorrow. Petulance is a the sunshine of life. shadow that clouds Love that is only half remembered is only half delght. The indifferent man soon becomes skeptical. in religion A man’s true interest is not always the advantage of .Self-gain. The voice of the candidate will soon be heard in the land. Rural Chorch. Is the rural church pulping? Are the days pf good, old fashioned re ligion y r thing of the past tv So it would seem from a report of. dent Kenyon L. Butterfield of/ ^ Massachusetts Agricultural College to’ the Commission on Church and Country Life. Butterfield 1 declares that the rural church must become a community institution and through its preacher and lay members pro mote the pauses of good roads, better farming, agricultural college exten sion courses, ^ temperance, public health, community beautification and planning, promotion coopera tion among farmers for buying, selling and recreation centers. Such radical change from a house where God is supposed to be worshiped t^ one where purely secular matteri are discused is bound to cause a wide spread opposition among the religi ous. Many students of religion daim that the decline of the country church began when pulpits were thrown open to politicians-when the local minis ter attempted to dictate political elec tions—when the church became a po litical forum. There is a sound basis for this claiip. Men. go to church to be told of God and spirit ual matters. They want to pray, to put their house in order, to hesitate in the mad rush for the ne cessities and luxuries of life to think of the future life. When this is de nied them, and, in its place, a minis ter' deliveres a political talk, urging them to vote for this candidate or for that cause in th£ name of religion, the religious man rightfully resents the assumed leadership of the preacher and, as a result, stays at home to comune with his God. It is a fact that two-thirds of the rural ■'; **vjr ” JEFFERSON STANDARD LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY - ■ ' ‘ . GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROUNA. . . , r, ;~.r^ Largest and strongest regular Life Insurance office in the South. v * ongesi Over $45,000,000 insurance in force. Over $ 1,000,000 Surplus. :: l Operates under the rigid North Carolina Laws. ' - ■ Loahsrits money in the section from which it collects its premiums—making it a Company in every section in which it operates. S. Op Notice of Sale of Real Estate , the Estate of the late C. E. , Gyles of Blackville. State of South Carolina, County of Barnwell. By virtue of the power vested in the .undersigned, executor of the late C. E. Gyles, I will offer for sale to the highest bidder, in front of the Court House at Barnwell, in the County and State aforesaid, on salesday in Jan uary, 1916, being Monday, the 3rd of January, at half past eleven o’clock, A. M. or following the Master’s sales, the following described real estate, which comprises the property pf the said estate. Terms of sale one-third cash, the balance in two equal annual installments to be secured by bond of the purchaser and mortgage of the premises sold, bearing interest at the rate of eight per cent, purchaser to pay for papers. Purchaser may pay all cash if desired.. The undersigned executor will re serve the right to reject any or all bids. I t^rofCBBionaf Carte Thos. ATTORNEY AT LAW . Negotiate loans on real estate. Ca' get 7% money in sums not leas than *5,000.00. ' ■ ■ Barnwell and Williston Williston office and Fridays. open Wednesday’s H. R. ERWIN I Well, girls, here’s wishing most successful leap year! you a A man is dead while yet alive if there is no peace at home. There is always one chance, whefi you think you havVa chance. To like poetry.is not a duty, but it iaa misfortune not to do so. churches have ceased to grow and that 83 per cent have a membership of less than 100. To change the country church to a comunity house may result in much temporal benefit to the comunities in which the house maybe located, but what of the church. The anti-religious could find no better way to hasten the com plete disruption of the church. Tract No. 1. Tract-of. land containing one hun dred and twenty acres more or less, having tenant houkes and barn, about four miles north Blackville, about ninety acres of said tract cleared, the balance being in wood and timber. The cract bounded as folows: North'by lands of Mrs. Mallie De- Witt, East by lands of J. E. Hair, South by lands of Lucius Reed, West by lands of McCreary.. The above land known as the Cain tract of the late C. E. Gyles. Speaking of Christmas, the. ent is now a thing of the past. pres- That slang is always expressed best When imagination expresses the rest. Man conquers strength; only through his in her wemknes. The man that is a slave to none, none slave to him, can well rejoice. A man often places his own value on himself by the bride he selects. ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS. Notice is hereby given that bids are requested to be submitted on January 4th, 1916, for supplies for the county’ chain gang and poor house as follows Meal, fl our, sugar, lard, coffee rice, grits, bacon (bellies), kerosene matches soap, tobacco, convict cloth- »P, 1 ing, shoes, hats, shovels and picks hay, corn, peas,. t Bids wif{ be opened and awards made on Tuesday, January 4th, 1916. The board reserves the right to re ect any or all bids submitted. S. R. Boylston, Chairman, N. M. Walker, J. M. Weathersbee, Members of the County Board of Commissioners. W. V. Richardson, Clerk. 3t Conclusion goes in leaps ahd bounds, while thought lags behind. F.-om out the sou>, pluck out the tigb. For hope i* r.ere while life.is ni^h. When youth’s ship is wafted by the breese of love, prudence flies with the wind. Too many men live for thoughtless of the future, forgot. the the day, past To love wisely of calculation; to to choose. is never love well i matter is never MASTER’S SALE. Itate of South Carolina, County of Barnwell. - « In the Court of Comon Pleas, drs. Hattie B. Stubbs, formerly Miss Hattie Bamberg, Plaintiff, against David J. Zorn, et a}.,— Defendants. By virtue of a decretal order to me directed in the above entitled cause, I will sell at Barnwell, in front of the Court House, on Monday, Janu ary 3rd, 1916, it being salesday in said month, within the legal hours of sale, the following described real property: All that tract or plantation of land, situate, lying and being in Barnwell County, South Carolina, containing One Hundred (100) acres, and bounded as follows: On the North "by the Aiken and Barnwell public road; Speech is the mouth-piece„ p/, t on the South by lands of T. C. Pen- thought; feeling is the influence exer- n er ’j on by lands of T. C. Pender; and on the West by lands of G. W. Greene and the Mill tract. A man who speaks of woman’s moods may often tell of his own ex periences. •, When you make junk out of your self some one may carry you tg, the scrap pile. cised by speech. When a man wants a wife, like his mother was, the home of his youth was happy. Some men can eat at a trot, drink at a gallop and let their tongues run a mile a minute. « ALSO: A1 that certain tract or^plantation of land, situate, lying and being in Barnwell Township, Barnwell Coun ty, South Carolina,' known as the Buck Creek Place, containing One Hundred and Twenty-five (125) acres more or less, and bounded as follows: On the North by lands of D. W. Hart- zog; on the East by lands of A. P. Ussery and others; on the South by the estate lands of Watts Mathis; and on the West by lands of E. W. - V* To interpret art we must be art ists, and the poet is not the only one who writes, but who ' Understands. H Peacock.^ __ ALoU: All that certain tract or plantation A black eye in a woman may indi cate temper.’ A black eye in a man of land, situate, lying and being in Barnwell Township, Barnwell County, may prove “the other fellow” has the South Carolina, known as the Mill tract, containing One Hundred (100) acres, more or less, and bounded as temper. “T Dimples in the cheek often denote roguery; but in the chin they are a mark of determination and strength of character. Tract No. 2. Fifty aix acres of land more or less with tenant houaes, barns, etc., about four miles North of Blackville, about forty acres cleared and the balance in timber and wood, and bounded as fol lows: The said tract of land known as the “Hart” tract of the Late C. E. Gyles: r Bounded on the North by a branch which separates said.tract from lands of Frazier and Henrietta Walker; South by lands of Mrs. Mallie DeWitt and lands of Judson Hair; East by lands of Judson Hair and of Carolina Reed; West by lands of the estate of Woods. Tract No. 3. Containing eighty-five acres of land more or less, about four miles South east of Blackville, having about fifty acres cleared and the balance in wood land, bc-unded as follows: North by lands of Elizabeth Mor ns, East by lands of Sam Dyches, South by lands of<Mose Templeton & H. F. Odom, - West by lands of Est. of C. E. Gyles. Tract No. 4. Store house in Blackville. Lot in town of Blackville, on the North side of Railroad Ave., at the in tersection of Clark Street, being nine ty-two and one-half feet front on Rail road Ave., by one hundred feet deep on Clark Street, containing a large 2- story brick store, a brick bam; also three small wooden stores fronting on Railroad Ave. This is one of the finest business lo cations of Blackville, and is a most substantially built brick structure, and is a very desirable piece of prop erty. Civil Engineer and Surveyor ALLENDALE, S. C. march 1916 A. H. NINESTEIN HERBERT E. GYLES Attorney s-at-Law BLACKVILLE, - - S. C Will practice in all Courts. - Money to loan on Farming Lands. John j. Jones Attumy and Coiloselor at Law Practice in all the State and Federa Courts of South Carolina and Georgia Prompt attention given to Collections Office 413 Lyer Bldg. AUGUSTA. - - GEORGIA. Bell ’Phone 3237. d # ATTENTION to accommodating T HIS bank pays ESPECIAL TREASURERS of fraternal order*, clnbt, social organization*, etc. Usually inch officer* hold complimentary poiitionz. They are ex pected to disburse certain moneys or keep them in resenre; Often the BOOKKEEPING ia a BOTHER or a WORRY. Treasurers who hank their funds with us feel SATE, and their RECEIPTS are. always ia GOOD ORDER. X IBt O IMI IE ~R A ~NT ~R~ . . BARNWELL, S. C. HARRY D. CALHOUN, Pwidant N. G. W. WALKER, Caskiar. Wm. McNAB. Am’L Caskiar. Dr. J. W. Reeves Dentist , In office lest week of each month. Barnwell, South Carolina Offlcs in Harrison Building. oclJl-lS-lyr 5. Tract No The Home Place. The home place or residence of the late C. E. Gyles, in the town of Black ville, fronting ou, Lartigue Street, inety-six _feet on the East; and measuring 191 feet on the North, on property of Hutto and of Kamnnr, measuring one hundred and ninety-" one feet, on the West on property oF Mrs. Charles D- Witt, measuring nine- y-two feet, on the SouJ*. on pi operty of Jijiss L'udtr:’ C. Gyles. EDGAR A. BROWN JAS. JULIAN BUSH Attorney s-at-Law. Honey to Loan ih any Amount for any Length of Time. Walker Building, • Barnwell, S. C DR. W. C. MILHOUS, Office hours: 8:30 a. na. to 6 p. m. Persons living away from Bat^well will please make appointments before coming. By so doing they will be sure -if inunerliate service hpH Wall & Hailey Well Drillefs That woman is best dressed whose dress is never talked about. A wo man may forget what she wears, but she will remember what a woman ri val wears. follows: On . the North by the .Aiken and Barnwell public road and (bids of E. P. R. Birt; on the East by ands of D. J. Zorn; on the South by ands of D. J. Zorn; and on the West by lands of G. W. Greene and Ashley Stansell. - Terms of sale cash. Purchaser to >ay for papers and revenue stamps. H. L. O’BANNON, Master Barnwell County, S. C. Master’s office, December 11th, 1915. Pension Notice. ~ , I will be in the Auditor’s office ev ery Saturday ip t January, commencing the first day, to’ approve pension blanks and all parties desiring to ap ply for a pension will please meet me _ there on ihose days for the purpose of Wi Rfeople sincerely hopes that - ^Securing pension ’bla/fks, which must We have the most profound pity for those unfortunate husbands and wives who haven't a little laddie or a little lassie in the home—especial ly at Christmas time. ’ every Jittfe child heart in Barnwell County—yes, and in the whole world —was made happy by a 'visit from old Santa CUoa last we be approved before the General Board meeting, which will meet the first Monday in March, 1916. G. E. BIRT. Tract No. 6. Known as the Mims Tract contain- gni seventy-five acres more or less, about four miles South West of Blackville, about fifty acres cleared, balance in timber; bounded as fol ows: North by lands formerly W. A. Ross, now J. M. Farrell r South by ands of H. F. Odom, East by lands of Est. of C; E. Gyles and West by lands of H. F. Odom and others. . The foregoing r/operty is sold in order to wind up the estate of,the late C. E. Gyles of Blackville. " The executor is willing to receive private bids for either or any piece pf the. said property, as he has power to sell at either public or private sale. Titles guaranteed. Privilege and right is reserved to reject any or all bids; and also to bid in the property at said public sale for the estate. . „ HERBERT E. GYLES, a . Qualified Executor. N otice of Final Discharge. Notice is hereby given that on Sat urday, the 8th day of January, 1916, I will file my final account with Hon. John K. Snelling, 'Judge of* Probate, ahcriSk ToT TmWs dfeiBtlttny flTSff ministrator of the estate of Mary E. Singleton,‘deceased. Doc. 8th, 1915. January Singleton, Administrator Work Let us.Estimate on Your Barnwell, S. G. R. F. D. 2. Treasurer’s Notice. The treasurer’s office will Is 1 open for the collection of State, County School and Com mutation Road taxes levied for the fiscal year commencing Januarv 1st, 11115 from the 15th day of October, 1915, to the 15th (lay of March. 1916 inclusive. A penalty of ene "per cent, will be added from January 1st, 1916 to January 31st.' inclusive. From February 1st to February ii8th, inclusive a penalty of one per cent, will be added making u total of two per cent, on all tastes paid in February. From March iflth to March 15ih a penalty of ftva.per cent, will be added making a penalty of seven per cent, on all taxes paid in March. ^ Books close March 15, 1916. t I Come at once! my horse is sick. Prompt attention must be giv en ailing stock so that farm work may not be delayed. Bell Telephone Service on the farm enablea you to get the veterinary quickly. It also keeps you in touch with the markets a#^ r nptorhhrtra w# your neighbors. If there is no telephone on your farm write to day for our Free Booklet. Address:- '*"i Farmers’ Line Department. SOLTHERN BELL^TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY OX 52, COLUMBIA, SOUTH CAROLINA. LEVY. For State purposes...... 7 Mills For Ordinary County purposes 5% Mills For ConstitutioOal School.... : 3 J Mills Total 15% Mills SPECIAL SCHOOL LEVY. Ashleigh, Baldoc, Barbary Branch, Cedar drove, Columbia, Fdisto, Ellenton, Friend ship, drwfls. Kline, Meyers Mill, Morris, Mt. ary7 Sew Forest, Oak Grove, calvary^ New Forest, Oak drove. Riverside, Sand Hill, Selglingvitle, Seven Pines, syca more No. 3 and Tinker’s creek, 2 mills. Barton, Bloomiugdale, cave. Hickory Hill, Owen* cross Roads. Reedy Branch, Shady Grove and Upper Rich Land, 3 mills. Appleton. Big Fork. Double Pond'. Healing Springs, Hercules. Hilda, Leea^ Bosmary, Sycamore, No. 51 and Ulmers, 4 mills. Dunbarton and Elko .5 Mills WmctvHW .T.. . ~. rrr.-7t» ■ MlHa 8 Mills 8% Mills Fairfax Allendale and Bara well W J. 8. ARMSTRONG, Treaa. B. c. Barnwell, 8. C. Sept. 20th. S and NEW YEAR Between all points on the Atlantic Coast Line and points on connecting lines. Tickets on sale December 1 7th, l$th. 23rd •-j • • t ■-—a*- ~ 24th and 25th, limited returning until midnight of January 10, 1916. tic The Standard Railroad of the South. For ticket and pullman reservation and any desired information call on C S. SMITH, Agent, Barnwell, S. C ^ -I „ ■*, ,,1 , ,.ir T • ... ... ^ .*