The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, July 03, 1924, Image 1
/
V :
t^TJE OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF BARNWELL COUNTY.^a
Priced
dCar
y l y
y ^ es, if you w ant money we have it’.?
*!• If you have money w^e want it. *1*
,j. 5 o o I’aid in Savings Department.
HOME BANK OF BARNWELL. |
-X-* X-X-X-X->*X-»X* ? Established in 1877.
•> ^x-x-t-'x-xxxx ♦
Jlh? ’2t S'jb^criptions Have V
%
‘Just Like a Member of the Family
rt
•j* Expired. «£
> V PLEASE RENEW PROMPTLY! ?
Largest County Circulation. ?<->-X^>^xx^>.>>>x^x-xxx^>-X^
ront and Rear
— 7
than the Overland
tirland Coupe-Sedan
closed car value. All
features of a coupe
tves big loading space
ythmg. Seats adjust
rd. Seats also make
the car—great for
patented springs—
y — record-breaking
nd see it.
ng car with sliding gear
ler $500, /. o. b. Toledo.
us-c
/lotor Co.
e, S. C.
W 111 in
arge amounts. Town prop-
al and business, 7 per cent*
rnptlv :it lowest r >st.
nil Harnwrll (' nmtit's
BOULWARE
•!!. SC'
)f South Carolina
/•,’/' f ' <! i'ci /■’. n o int!'' • -.
»;• the ;i\v;tr i ot • r.
<>1 S.m.th < ai'"'i: i .a aad t a*
> _wi>l Ik* firlil at t 1 : i'
l.- aC*:* p* l ick a.
fa— !•'. c.•! ^' . .
■ m. 1 1 ‘Tmgt >n. i 1 . t ii'
•xingl 'll. > , a•. Y •:
:i - , i tv. ’il t '• I’v -
'hia ir:tiion 1 iiai.k- !’ .■•
i*re>: it'tvi : .'i:il> >. >
tuition ml f -
Septrn.o.T i Tip, .'J
alion u iv -• ’ -:
V /’ iC.'/V >\
'■ ,r , ■
v
NG SPELLS,
SACK AND SIDES
eramimv#- s|w4{s- at aHa-antf" my
health was as good as anybody’s,.
I am feeling line now and 1 give
all the credit to Cardui, for I
-had been suffering for years be
fore 1 took it.”
Cardui is a veKPtaTiTp extract, con
taining no harmful ingredients. It is
made from mild-actthg medicmal herbs
with a gentle, tonic,’ strengthening ef
fect upon certain female organs ami
upon the system in general. Its users
have testified to its special value at
the time of entering womanhood—at
maturity and at the time -oC tbe
change of life..
For over 40 years. Cardui has been
tested in use by thousands of women
who have written to tell of the great
benefit they have received from it
For over 600 years, medical authori
ties have recommended one of the’
principal ingredients of Cardui .in the
treatment of certain female com
plaints.
rardui, the woman’s tonic, tested by
time, Ls today the product of many
years of experience and investijfation.
It is manufactured in up-to-date labo- I '
ratories by the .most modern and)
sanitary methods of pharmaceutical
science and is for sale by all dru*- •
(fists. 1«
■JLUME XL YU.
BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA. THl RSI)AY, JULY MD. libit.
NUMBER #.4* * *
ALLENDALE MUST ..
PAY UP DAMAGES
MONEY TO WIDOW (TT’ EDWARD
KIRKLAND.
PORTKR-W I DM AN W EDITING
WAS BRILLIANT AFFAIR
TILLMAN STATES HIS POSITION
THIRTY BALLOTS FAIL
Popular Barnwell Girl Becomes Bride
*. x
of North Carolinian.
TO SELECT CANDIDATE
f
The following is the text of
Judge Henry Is Cpheld in Directing
Verdict for Plaintiff in Lynch
ing Case.
A
Columbia, June 26.—The Supreme
Court today, in an opinion handed
down by Associated Justice J. H.
Marion, affirmed judgment of the
circuit court of Allendale Countv dir
Stately in its beauty and of unusual
interest to hundreds of friends
throughout North and South Carolina
was the marriage Thursday evening,
June 26th, at 7:J() o'clock, in the
Churrh of the Holy Apostl«s at Barn
well, of Miss Emily Molair Porter anti
Mr. John Lawrence W’idman,*of Ashe
ville, N. C., the impressive Episcopal
ring ceremony being performed by
| the Rev. I. Del,. Brayshaw, of Orange-
ecting payment by the county of $2,-j ^Lie quaint little church, with
000 damages in the case of Edward , c ,‘k s ,. J ,j.i t '.t2. ratH)ris °T Southern s my lax,
Kirkland, negro, alleged to have been
lynched by a mob at 'Appleton, on
October 24th, 1921.
•fudge J. K. Henry, presiding over
the circuit court, directed a' verdict
for the plaintitf, Lillian KirklamL of
.the deceased, from which the county
appealed.
The appeal questioned the correct
ness of the ruling of Judge Henry,
on the grounds that the evidence was
• usonahly su-ceptable of other in-
ejices than that the death of Kirk-
• I was caused as a proximate re-
of lynching at the hands of a
mob.”
Kirkland was shot and wounded in
the knee while trving to e-cape after j
having killed Eugene Walker, a |
prominent white nan of the county.
, on the street, of Appleton. R. H.
W slker, a cousin >i‘ the deceased, who-
had witne.'-ed the slaying followed
Kirkland to the outskirts of~ the ' 1,11 rn ‘ ,, '- r '.'- a Hbt*d i
town where the chase wa< given u’>— an '* 1
for the time. * — ‘ pink loses and silver
Shortly after, Kirkland wa, arrest
’d, the sheriff Tinived on the scene
an*I tind-ing mm in a serious condi
tion because of the wound inflict'
by W alker. The sh.eritf. aeeompanic
by Walker :u 1 another citizen, then
’N
arned Kirkland to Gitford. a station
• n th<- Seaboai’d Ain T.ine Railway in
Humnt ,n ( tunty, whet** the t*tf;.»*r
tmi hi- orison,t boaialed the train
foi Columbia.
. W ••lie oa-'inu through Fairfax, in
Ailendai • Couo*y. a number of mas!;-
e tmard^d the train, took th -
white gladiolas, white roses and ferns,
with numerous white candles casting
their soft glow upon" the twilight
scene, .was a fitting -cttlng for this
occasion that united the hearts and
lives of these young people. „
Miss \ jsta Brabam. of Bamberg,
accompanied by J. Punaro’s orchestra,
of Augusta, sang “At Dawning” and
‘‘O Promise Me” just before the bri
dal party entered in the following or
der to the strains of “The Bridal
( hocus" from Lohengrin:
The ushers, Messrs. Charles Par
ker and Lavon G. Sarafian, of Ashe
ville; the bride’s-maids and grooms
men, Miss Evelyn Brabham, of Bam
berg, and Mr. Leroy Molair, of Barn
well; Miss Margaret Minge, of Tale-
j dega, Ala., and Mr. French Toms, of
Asheville; Mi-s Miriam Robinson and
Mr. \\ m. S. Pottinger, Jr., both of
A sheviWe. / The ^ brloe s-,maids were
in Freneh blue
arc, with wreaths
leaves, .and
carried shower bouquets of pink Kil-
J larney roses. Next came little Miss *s
Betty Irvin, of Augusta, and June
Milhous, ( atherm*'. (iamt>h' and Stuart
Hen-ley. Irma Brown and Elizabeth
Mace. Eleanor Sanders and Patricia
Dicks, dressed in pink and .blue chitfon
and eanying stag's garlande<l with
1 stnylax and roses, forming a pathwa*
I "i the bride. The flower girl- were
Lath Hen-ley a’nd" e.ary. P.ush, wb a
1 wore dainty white chitfon dresses and
carried-b : ,-ket.- ,,f white roses. The
pillow bearer. Helen Irvin, of Au-
i>: It*
\ •
larr.ed hjm
Appleton .Tlia
negro lodge was
■ •Jr; nex* nve n
1 o ' K min'id
\ • d : i
the 1"' i ll 1 hot Hi
by automo- 1
night
mrne
ng w
-> -
c’U-ta. in whit* elTiflon, and the rin '-
■'■aia-!-, .Emil;, Bl oWii.^also in white
1 bidon. ’I ( he ring was carried in th*.*
mxti • of a white nv-e.
Tne ’•!'U.eMe ' •. .au!y of the" .j,.m-*
‘ • M t's. El mi r F. B:
>.auer,
address recently prepared by B. K.
Tillman, of Trenton, candidate .for
congress from the second district:
Fellow citizens:
The! American congress is the law
(> i
making body of our government and
upon its work is dependent' largely
the. prosperity, peace and happiness
of the masses of the people.
—Lam a-candidate to represent you
in that congress, becau-e by experi
ence and training I foil that I am
fitted for the work, and b\ instinct
and'feeling I believe in and’ will
fight for those principles of govern
ment which furnish protection to the
large body of toilers in the country.
I am a farmer pure and simple, In
governmental affair- the farmer as a
class has been unmercifully sinned
against. It is a fact that in any
body of men, the class not repre
sented. will not get a square deal
During fourteen years of hard wonc
in the eapitol at Washington, I saw*
the legislation of the nation shaped
year after year, largely by lawyers
many of whom had previously been'
employed by railroads and corpora
tions. .
There has heerv-sime the Civil war
a callqus indifference to the inter
ests of the agricultural South, and
a tariff soothing syrup administered
■ ^
to the agricultiu^J West. Not until
the organization of the farm bloc, in
congress was any considerable., relief
undertaken. Very little has been ac
complished to. date. Agriculture m
the nation staggers under heavy
tiixf^and di.-Ti’imiiiatinn, while pro-
tX^fwF’industry prospers..
a,n guise ofL a tariff, pays a New Eng- McAdoo Lost Ground .Steadily Tues-
I am running and wi
b
elected as
DEATH OF BERRY
CAUSES ARRESTS
land shoe manufacturer ten dollars
for ar five dollar pair of shoes than I
can see in a system where the gov
ernment would directly pin to i
farmer a bonus of ten cents for rais
ing a pound of wheat or cotton or
meat. If one is right the other is
right. Either both must come or
both must go. If that is socialism,
shoot. If there is going to be social
ism for the capitalist, there ought t‘>
be socialism for the protection of
the producers.
Upon the question of taxation, I
shall, sseok to place the burden where
it belongs: upon/ those most able to
bear it. Taxation largelv due to
day.—Davis May Be Choice.
the war should be born by the prof-
i leers and t ml tors who pilfered while
real men fought. I believe if the
government could draft a man and
send him t<> battle at the front, the
same government can draft wealth
to pay the bills. In the recently en
acted tax reduction bill Big Business
got off. as usual, too light. Henry
Ford’s -corporation, for instance,
pays a tax of 12Va per cent, with u
hundred million dollars carried to-
surplus, when the average fanner s
tax is 16 per cen f . for all purposes.
Mr. Ford has much company.
The agricultural masses are en
titled to representation on every
agency of government. They com
prise forty million of our people. *6
per cent of them arc pure blooded
Americans. Thev have never been
After dt) ballots in the Democratic
National Convention in New York, the
party was apparently as far from the
choice of a Presidential Nominee 1 as
when the voting started Monday
morning. McAdoo,-as. was exjK'cti' l
led the field, starting off with 4.‘11
votes on the first ballot and gradual
ly climbing to his high mark of 479,
which was rea lied on the lath ballot
Monday night. 1I>* steadily
ground all day Tuesday, the doth bal
lot finding him with lib.a. Governor
Smith, starting with 240 haFhits, had
■succeeded in must* ring 32d.5 votes
It i- general'y
of the leaders
NOT SATISFIED WITH ACCIDENT
THEORY.
Death of Youth, M hose Dead Body
W as Found Under Automobile;.
Investigated.
on the doth ballot,
conceded that neither
has any chance whatever of winning
th* 1 nomination, John W. Davis, of
West Virginia, being the best bet &t
this tim \ The convention resumed
balloting at 10:d0 o’clock Wednesday
morning.
Quite a number of Barnwell people
have been keeping in touch with the
night -'sessions of th? convention by
radio. ''
Quite, a sensation was caused h?re-
Saturday when it became known that
several arrests had been made in
, . connection with the death of Benja-
min Berry, 19-year-pld youth of the
Double Ponds section of Barnwell
County, whose d>*ad body was found
under his wr**cked automobile Sunday
night, May 2oth. To date three
wom^ti and nine men, all'white, have
been taken into custody. They are
George Proctor, Furman Cave, Robert
Cave, A— Bazemore, Henry
Professor Joseph Alfred.
ball of American
true because they
enforce their
a Democrat but the hope of the Am-j
erican farmer is in the "Farm bloc.’'
1 will align myse'f with it and work
with it if sent to Washington, as
your representative. All the farmer
wants iv a -quart' deal. This he i-
not getting and. will not get until
a demand, i- made, followed up with
a hard fight and persistent determin
ed effort on his part to enforce a
square deal.
A- voters you are entitled t" know
where l.-tand on the publit questions.
Aspiring to b your servant I
am g’ad to inform yiur:
I believe in common every <7ny
man to plan, heart to heart honesty,
‘'rhis, pot on: r in [irivate matter- l»ut
other than the fo<i
politics and this i*
do not demand and
rights.
Freight rates must come down.
Freight on farm products is too
high. -There lias' been, an advance of
ao per cent based on an absurd valu
ation of railroads and a government
guarantee Of* a return to the rail-
roail
>f :.H> tier
cetu. on
their
nv-
i lea'
K
Ulls.
, .1:
H '
t.O
naials.
Loirv. v
of. The.
i ' 1 . it’-.- v.’a-
eiilmm;
iv w a *
1 a e'y i
' • ’ lime of !’■
-k sa!11
! a- a
i' (
'.. i\ 111-
(i . w : h. .- i 1 v
er Tail
I tv *
< ar’yit
r/ show •.•
b' |U(|U(
s rt >n-
K •: !.i ’ i
:ey roses. . ’1’
Ik mail
i‘*l h’.iy (
M i
if.,,' ; p >
■!
%
1 yo'.ing!
a sjster. \va
‘tviV *!
“m.Kt
-." th ■
O’ a g'
'Wll ot |in\vd(
‘f Idlle
a -case
> ream
silk lace.
v. i, T: I
IK'- i' 1
lea \ a • -
.'ii.'l pink Vo.
; es' and
of t he
-iioWe'
i
1" illqllet i
f pink
'o? thi-
! al.iug
roses.
The
I'rid.'’.- moth
er. Mrs.
-hcrilf.
1 ?er.' w
ote crepe ya
tin alfd
.'(•aken-
i kua . with a ♦ orsa
ac o.f .
darn! mi*
.... c
Mis.' .1
; R. Gie.-ham'. of A
ir all mat
( a! expendi' ure
The srainia]- a
Wa-?/ngl-.i; •
thCiil.Ve- ant)
de. tot *ip. ; iyct.s.
weak la--.- i'-. ti."
f
f the guilty v swift
will rapidly bi-int n
member.*
n-- mert ?-- eConomr-
n nub'ic moneys,
fraud going on in
'• tin* 1!' t ub]*, an-
: ■ k- all men with
.They discluv* 1 a
’'.vernment wah'i
by ; and puni irment
: nml -ure. or. w
a'grnte as a renub-
of the cabinet
vestment. The roads have made big
profits when poorly handled, and
it i- rotten to exact tribute through
governmental agencies when a road
is mismanaged, or overvalued.
‘The Prohibition law is the l\,v *0
the land and I ’oeii'.M in 't - vi t. nt ion
••nd (‘gtOrcemero. P :■ ut’erly .a'o-
sui'd to have as cliief et 1 ue'nt< * t
O',
H'/e
..O
an owner or large stn
ef. the 'arge-t distill*
..< i ..a. n .....
Lyndhurst, Jute df). — Professor
Joseph Alfred, ag«*d 7S years, passed
away at the Baptist Hospital in Col
umbia on June 11th. Though he
had been in failing health for some
time, his (hath came as a distinct
shock to his relatives and the many
friend* who knew him.
Profe-sor Alfred was born in Ire
land, <?>ming in bis childhood to South
Dakota, and later in lift* moved to
this local iffy,*' where he made h’s
home until he was removed to the
hospital for treatment.
For many year- teacher of the
local school, ho greatly ondeared'him-
self to the hearts of his pupils by his
kind treatment and fairness of meth
od-. and was familiarly known among
them as “Professor” until his deatdn
He was a man well known jlor his
unswerving honesty and uprightness
of purpose, and was e-teemed by all
who know him.
Surviving him are his wife, who
was before her marriage Mi-- Annie
' -X '' ' ' v •
Havener, of this place, and one sister,
1 vs.
Mrs. Houghton, of Cleveland, Ohio.
'V
of
1 1 g,
! >ent h of M r-. .! ulia* Bush.
a trie town-.Hi'
A ' • p »■" 1 * . e ‘ ,a *»? -Inal 1 he Moment of
^ s’linmary put: -bin t t by t!r ir.fV: •-
t ui of pliy-’ral iniuty. regardle-s of
s* .•• '’••■’ th." vi Mm r.a.s ’hereafter
o' i'a*ied '.-a’ c 1 ') due f >rni'~f Ivnc't
ace
he
Barnsscl! Man in Limelight.
♦ .
Yota
, ot the groom, wore cream sj!k
"V Ol’ehi*i ge. ■''“••Me
• I he brnio. who imtined with
fulia . vvas hands, meiy gowifed ni j .
white glue Ill's.- -ttPHa ■ftdmm» i d • with j
pea !'!s. bet veil . be in
wit h a Ru
-om- .‘Uid f»earls. HetcJiouquef was
-tf— • evlu.i-, . 111 l id>•'s—to>-(... eh<I s-'-a 1 **• e
in. When
. an. in bought, it Js /high time to
learn whaj e’a.-s of citizenship—lares
to pi’n-r-itute *lie ' governments
agent-. BIG BI SIN'ESS ha- not
'hositatod to eommi (•'rime.- in.,a co't-
eertiai .effort to steal and pilfer. In
undertaking to t oil the country .of the,
nava! oil . rese-rve, Y, st-sakes at ' .the'
vital--' of the. reptiidie.
ro'ty cars ago ',ii
■A *o’re ..ted .! i mi tin- < :• ' ■ ”/' u
,an<i hi < me.:: y’s p »lit'i- ,T .a im-
Mi’oscd M an - pot.'at ion and m’h'd-
■ t roniqi'inn aMop w ith no-v,-■•opi
:m.iMV for*’igi; ianguagf . make
him. if tic, cluiose . reman, an a wn.
Of tic thirty bile million of ' c; ten-
ple twenty (ce y.-.aj- id i o ! •'dd( , l’
the fathe’s and m.otfie) f Amer
ica - mo:v tha.n half arc not pative
white Americans. New Yo’i'k ‘ ( ity
with,a puijority of foreign 4" , tn. can
qd.ffe'en r
im o', igral
•a * >
EKe
liu T,
this '
ntoa. .lun, * to., Mrs.
b( ! a\ '>r,an and
'(•t ion, di ■• i at the re
s•hu\e ' ■
••'I’d ‘L
v .'
her d.
night; r. Mi B. C. (
Blumi', Minnie Rlunie,* Willie Farrell,
Leon Clayton. Hattie Proctor, Moya
McKerley, John Derriso and Mrs.
John Derriso, all residents of the
Elko section of the county.
No inquest was held over the body
of young Berry, it being thought at
the time that his-death was due to
purely accidental causes. His neck
was broken and there was a gash in
his head. The supposed accident oc
curred on the Blackville-Williston
highway, near Reynolds station.
J. W. Berry, father of the dead boy,
was not satisfied with the theory that
bis son met death as the result of an
accident and suspected foul play. H 1
employed the services of W. W.
Rogers, a detective. W t'rant.; wv
-worn out for the men and wtfhien
named above. A preliminary^was sec
for Monday morning at ^ten o'clock, J.
O. Patterson, Esq , bhving been em
ployed to assist/Tn the prosecution,
while Brow n/tt Bush were retained
by the dgfemlutits. Mr. Patterson is
ill at Jus home here and at the re
quest of Solomon Hiatt, Esq.,Mho a;>-
!eared for him. Magistrate W. P.
Sapders |)*istpolled the hearing until
eleven o'clock Tuesday morning.. Mr.
Blatt stated that the prosecution had
about 100 witnesses whose testimony
was to be taken. - .
v.
Much interest is being manifest? 1
In *t’be case, the court room »be:?tg
acked with penple Monday, a large
imber of tln-m being' from the Dou
ble Ponds .-.ei’tion.
\
Manv vi-itiu’s wa re in town Tuos-
i
delict;
lame.
[.< ■ •■ i f 11(1 iV. i_! I • del . ; I vvn
jr ' ’ ~
ns Vi ai I- d and' liieVtiet’n ? 11 ! *i 1 *b**
pa ! si.x munth-.
The tuM'-va! w 1 b(* con'lucted frum
the Christiat Church of Elb-ntun ti
mui row rnot tiitii: is 10:.”,u o'clock with
assisted by Rev.
, .S
and interment
family burial
W T. Smithy
J .ae^'officiatir.g
fiM o w in the
, i
held in place ! *
c i 1
an crown oi orange olo
Satunlav ! tli "‘ s
■ '• ; the •
New York. June 2i
tn li ning, tho New York j inie- carrie i
a a.’ g< |>ictqre f Me-. I.-i'ey Springs
on its font page-and the anridun'e-
"Tt, uyt that -1 c wotiiii. be put in nomi-
Siie was met at the altar by
r eidi 'j morn, attended by hi-, lin-
a'4 Mr. V\ . !• .“ Browti. _of '.'Yt 1 An.!a.
j During the ceremony the orchestra
“played very -aiftiy “To a Wild Rose.”
1 MendeTssolur- vveiMing march was
nation for vice-presidency. Senatoi
—Wheeler. of Montana, favors Mrs. i
Springs: (> • of the re(|iiirt‘ments of : Immediately -after the lei’emony. a
vhV-pre-blent i- t’r.at he or she nru-t Bbi ilHant reception vva- held nt '■ the
Ik* thirty-five years old. Mrs. Sprtmr= homi' of the bride’s parents «m—MarL
. i. 1 m 11 ..—-lie—naea..‘.t-.a—t b ig—r e< j u i re me ti——hoi < >—A-v e n u* 1 .—where—sc < ires—ot—f r i (*n < 1 s.—c \ • r trtrg rri i i a * t
favor- Mrs. 1 !’J a .v?d as a recessionr*.
BIG BCSINESS
ngum. It
!i • • • A afw.iv ■
he vested intere-
the -tr inufaeturer
.lit ’ few y(eti;s of,
ist rat i iti^f th
uvg ruled
power now.
a party fi>;
a party for
’jee-ptil’g/ the
lulniitt-
T
0
•■» i• Wi -o'
TTTTv
c la''?. Viody of Amori-
ci'Mzehs have. ‘ beiUi paying 'trl-
to Big Busitiess a:t*i Mofiopo y
tese years.
-f
ia n
but *
tdl
1 believe in a tariff tor jcveniv
oniy. The net (*>.<!? ip. of life mu.-t
cong^.i.upw the country free of duty.
their produi
in
a u
but the New York papers can’t he- ! despite a terrific
• lieve it. Mrs. Spring' will be tile “gathered to sTTovv' 1
first woman to !>e !iominat“d for thi- i with good wishes.
Fat met s se
open marked. Practically everything,
we iiuy i- pjvrtrcted by a tariff* thus
jSfivjn**- big busines . n monopoly
govertiment
nt numiHU- of n'byr«
rn > to Wit bin t*in To nulify
actio'e- .iiif loqirescntativesMYom
oi th.i e- . So-.ith-ern States anil '
nine fact applii - to other <:!'■. .
—l... ■■ a
My ' hope ,|£or the Tutpn ot
country isTn, tiie r haiiilitat n", of
tcuiture. There are fewc w
FTiuirrT
mv
■jroiind-- near Ellenton.
T)h' surviv ovs ;i!'.e: 'I’vvo daiightcr-'.
Mi-. B. tf, Chanc 11 . of Lce-ville, and
.Mi . C. 1'k Smith, of Augu ta; tvv>)
in. . S. B. Nowman. nr fla fonia. NT
-i'., and I'. W.'Bu-h, of Kansfis City,
a'lnT one sj ter an.d three brothers.
New Subscribers.
lU'ol; Mi y,(
dovvnpomg of
r the young couple
The interior of
offte
Governor MMeod will make (this
Mis. Springs
will make
and Beautifully
the smylax. white
charming colonial home was
decorated with Southern
rose, juid pipk and
gladiolas. The guests were
th ' nominatiotj of
Edgar A. Brown
seconding speech. j white gladiolas. Thu
Homer Cummings in -peaking'»f met at the - door by Mesdame
tbc resolutions ( om.mittee Saturday ! Cummings and I.. M. Calhoun
'or/ of a—man from
Catholic who had
come instructed to vote for th?
t.’iti klan measure by name. After
told touch'ag
Pennsylvania, a
TTnrTFT
.can see no more justitica-
for a
sy-tehi Vvhefe the buTcr. through th"
; n,< 1 qw iicr. m
than th 'ie were in 1910. _Th" and-
■ f farmei - have h ft the farms all
over the country and tbn-ugh gov-
"i nuugui...|h-'•i < -M : nitiation a: d / •• ■*
many, many thousands nai..:.. gone
Inoke. A -quare 'dea! must 1 r had.
Lower ;the tariff; lower ’he fiatcght
rate : legTsbite in the inter"-: of the
agricultural masses in levy.ng iitx.-s.
deiyairl and get recogniti ’; af '* as’i-
ington'foi' those who toji. and fight
Among th? i.
r**- ’itie I‘ettpi*-—a
day to attend tin
Mae i-t rate Sandei’ . acting, it
' ?ood. under inslsructions
preliminary, Imt
is; un-
HTroi i
R. L. Gunter, postpone
indetii ; t( 'v/ pending
tm:. into the matted 1
the
further
< OI M Y ( \MP.\IGN WILL
OPEN AT HILDA FRIDAY
Big
Barbecue Picnic to Be
\ isitOi-^,
Served
The Peiipie has been requested C>
announce that the opening county
campaign meeting, which was sched
uled for June 16th at Hilda and post
poned for a later date, vvffT be held
at that place tomorrow. Friday, July
t nt new sub -e i iber ’*
,■ W. .b, Hni.t...- -w+»
P.aniW'ell route 1;, A. I),. Cnijnor, of
Barnvvi'll; S. T. '< 'ar»er, W. P. Black-
well and W. V. Southerland, -of Col
umbia. and Frank Trowbridge, of
Donora. “There’-' a reason.”
1th. There wall oe
basket picnic. No
made for -the lattei
will }-V " a rid
The
aT a'
pitalde people
,*v barbe ue an^l
marge will b<3
but ‘cued meats
re'a s(tn a bl e • p rice;
of Hilda hope
Mrs. J. Julien Bush and children
and Mr-. Edgar A. Brown and lit'!* 1
daughter left -Monday morning for
Beaufort, where they will spend some
time. .
ram. I auspices.
. . '
tier in -morals or economics
sporral interests, graft, disjioiiesty
and corruption. - ,
adv. - -Ik R TILLMAN..
bA
ovei by Misses -Sarali—Fogh'nuui. of lament of the occa
.on/
fHE PEOPLE
(lung plea on the part of a mem-
Y r of the commttte? Tor preserva
tion of the party this-member with
tears in his eyes.-aid he could not vote
to divide .his party by naming the
U-
klan. The speech that changed this
man was made by Edgar A. Brown,
of Barnwell County. South Carolina’s
member of the resolutions committee.-
T E.
They
were introduced to Mrs. L. P. Wilson,
V
bf Ocala, Fla., who in turn presented
them to the receiving limn Mes
dame- B. P. Davies and Chas. A. Hens-
ley presided over the gift room^
Mesdames Carter Price ami Eugene
Ea-terlin'yr fnvited the guests into the
spaciou- dining room, where delight
ful refreshments were served. Mr;.
T. S. Lewi-sg of Atlanta, and Mrs.
Ralph Smith received the guests bp
the music room. £
Burlington, N. Helen Calhoun,
Jean Riley. Elizabeth and Caro' Eas
terling. Pauline and Carrie Hrdman
and Ella Louise Molair.
The cutting of the bride’s cake at
tracted much pleasurable interest, as
did also the throwing of her bouquet
from the Lptunda of the large hail.
Miss Blanche Porter was thc^ fortun
ate one t" catch the omen of good
luck.
Selections were played througout
the evening by the orchestra and
dancing was enjoyed by a numl>er of
~ ] couples. Vocal solos by Miss Brab-
The punch bowl.; were presided- ham also added much to the
. a .. • ^— :, . , _
enjoy-
Ali’s. Widman is ‘he daughter of
Mr and Mrs. J. A. Porter,of this city,
arpl^ is a young woman of
personality and charm. She is u_
graduate of Converse College, where
she won many honoi s. and numbers
her friends hy the hundreds. Mr.
Widman is one of the leading young
business men of Asheville, being
president of the Southern Paper Pro-'
ducts Co., of that city. Their popu
larly was attested-by the magnificent
display of gifts.
At' a late hour and while the fes
tivities were at their height, Mr. and
Mrs. Widmap stole away in their car
for a trip to Atlantic City. k
The »ci it - of * town guest/ were: Mr.
and Mrs. J. R. Gresham, of Atlanta;
Mr. William E. Brown, of At
lanta: Mi-s Miriam Robinson, of
A heville. N. C.; Misses Vista and
Evelyn Brabham, of Bamberg; Miss
Margaret Minge, of Tellodga, Ala.;
vvinsorn" f-Mc'-rs. VVilliam S. Pottinger, Jr., h.
Toms, Charlie Parker. Levon G. Sara
fian. of Asheville; Mr. and Mrs. W.
G. Simms, Mr. and Mrs. Charlie
Blooker and Mr. Marion Rhoad, of
Bamberg; Mrs. T. S. Lewis, of Atlan
ta; Mrs. Gibbes, of Philadelphia; Mr.
and Mrs. Willis Irvin, of Augusta;
Miss Sarah Fugleman, of Burlington,
Nr C.; Mrs. 1 Clark" McCaslin, of SG
Matthews; Mrs. L. P. Wilson, of
Ocala, Fla.; the Rev. and Mrs. I. DeL.
Brayshaw, of Orangeburg; Mr. Clay
ton Stroup, of York. ’
that a large crowd will be. in atten
dance' to hear the candidates present
their claims for uffrage.
Easterling-Phillips.
A surprise marriage of interest to
a wide circle of friends, was that of
Miss Caro Easterling and Mr. II. J.
(’’.lack") Phillips, which occurred’
Tuesday, evening about nine o’clock at
the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Carter
Price, the Rev, Howard Cady per
forming the ceremony in the presence
of a few close friends of the young
couple. Immediately after the cere
mony Mr. and Mrs. Phillips left for
Augusta. ^
The bride i- the attractive daugh
ter of Mr. and Mr-. B. L. Easterling,
of this city, and the groom is a popu-*
lar young business man of Barnwell,
(wing part owner of the J. and *T:
Sanitary Market. The People joins
with other friends in wishing them
much happiness and prosiperky.
“Please change my address on the
good old Barnwell People from Barn
well to Williston," vyrttes Mr. J. L.
Lowe.