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■ ■ ■' .. s ^ ..-V . ... ;...- ........ . ‘. ’ -4 ■'' v; . s-t f * f s ■ f‘: L. P^aKFOUK. THE BARNWELL PEOPLE, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA. THURSDAY, MAY 7TH, W25. THE BARNWELL PEOPLE Entered at the post office at Barnwell. S. C., as secon<l-class matter. JOHN W. 1840 HOLMES -1912 B. P. DAVIES, Editor and Propriett SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year $160 Six Mon$yT -y 0 Tliree Months -60 (Strictly in Advance.) OT* min* THURSDAY, MAY 7TII, 1925^ Mother's Day. ]f I were handed on the highest hill, Mother o’ mine, 1 know whoto lo\ e would follow me still Mother o’ mine. If I were drowned m-the<lee|M*s{t +n*a. Mother o’ mine, 1 know whose tears would come down to me, Mother o’ mine. 1 If I wei'e damne<l of body and sohl. Mother o' mine, X. - cause we refused to siirn on the dotted time. In a period when political cur- lino and agree to help make up any, rents are deeper and swifter than evef deficit between what the- attractions before, with more violent whirlpools, were really worth and what the Chau- more dangerous rocks and shoals, ours tauqua people said, they wore worth, is truly a perilous position. Changes We believe that the same amount' of which used to be decades in the mak- money, judiciously spent for teachers ing now sweep over us almost before and school equipment will give bigger ! tee know they are in contemplation, turns educationally and are quite It is true *overywhere. In all the countries of Europe the pe.idulm is swinging, now far to the left, now fir to the right. Center parties have lost their power. They are in a very had w ly. And the South has belonged to the school politically which s >ught as a rule the middle of the road, eschew ing ultra-conservatism on the one IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL I know whose me whole. Mot her o prayers would make sure that it will purchase as much in the way of entertainment. Those who believe otherwise, of course,, have ai right to their opinions. We have nothing whatever to do with the disagreement between the guarantors and the Chautauqua that visited Barnwell this week, hut this 1 - 3 ; city’s experience with Chautauquas hand ‘and radicalism on the other, has always been a more or less unsat- With labor organized and militant, isfactory one. Why we are not pre- with radicalism organized and in pared to discuss, here. Perhaps the deadly earnest, with conservatism nr- pcople are at fault, as the promoters jranized and drawing the lines sharply, claim, hut in^spitp of the fjict that; what is the South to <lo, what course they have been, givjm! H>v opportunity shall we take, where <lo her interests of enjoying the edirf-ational benefits |of n,., ,1 U( , to happen to her? these institutions for a number of | These ar^tquestions. which already years, there is more op[>o,dtion to ( (l pr(>ss for answe**. Who is. ( hauiauquas here today thUnTit any j tu spealilfor the South-? How many time within the recollection ot the i 0 f her citizens are prp^ared to help writer. Maybe we have degenerated f ormu ] a te her replit^f^ to such an extent that the edueatroTvif 1 , , and moral uplife features ju t would-* n’t “take.” Lesson (By RF-V P B. FITZWATER, D.D.. 4 of *h« Evening* School. Moody lilhte: 1b- ■ tltuie of Chicago.) ((^t 1915'AVcstern Newsjm Union ) PHILIP Lesson for May 10 ETHIOPIAN AND THE TREASURER LESSON TF:XT—Acts * 26-39. GOLDKN; TIOXT—"The entrance of Tliy words Klvcth light."—l*s. 119 135. PUIAIAKY Topic—A Man Did What God Told Him. J UN loll TOPIC—Philip and the Kthl- opiah Treasurer. INTKRMGDIATR AND SKNIOft TOP IC—How Philip Won the Hthioplan. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADLLT TOP IC—The Uae of the IPbl^ in Evan gelism. ATTENTION, KLANSMEN! An important meeting of Blackville Klan No. 69 will be held Thursday night, May 14th. All Klansmen are requested to be present. . .;' REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED. Philip 26-.”»Oa). Meeting the Ethiopian Dr. VV. M. Jones, in his address to the Confederate Veterans at Meyer’s Mill Fridtiy, said th.-t the Woist thing that ha- happened to the Double Pond School Closed Friday Night JCONTINUFO FROM FIRST PAC.Kl mine. —Rudyartl r Kipling! During the World War, the Red (ross symbolized itself as fhe, **i‘ * , , ,, i, ci , , . , c v * ; woist thing that ha- happened to the dav of last vi^ -k at the homo of Mr Createst Mother of Them All." The! , r,. , • , , ,, X people of Hus country in recent years Isadore Hartzog. H organi/.ati('n paid itself the highest I ; ,i • i .• ,, 1 ,, ,, r i is their of eonfidenee in the gov- 1 dr. H. \\ . Jones attended the reun jxissible compliinent, for there .is. nothing more divine in this mortal) woild than a t.ue mother. She has been immortalize mother. Tn prose nndpoe- ernment and its officials. At one ion p>f ConfederaU* Veterans time, he said, jm otTice was i-egarded et s Mill Friday, ,t MeV- and try, and yet the half has never been told of that wonderful, self-sacrifi(> ing thing known as “mother love.” It is a (lod-given instinct that is found in even the lowest orders of animal lift*. Many men owe thqw greatness to the teachings they reivim! at their niaqtjier’s knock, 1 one of these fittingly expressed his sentiments in these few words: “Whatever I am or ever hope to Ue. I owe to -my mother." To whom did We go f n- comfort in our childhood disapointments? To mother. To whom did we go for aid when we* \v'(A-e sick or hurt ? To mother. To whom did we go with our hopes •—our ambitions? To mother. Aird the influence of a good mother did not end when ehHdippod merged in to manhood or womanh<HKl. Mot her! What a world of sweetness theye is it/ the name—whether it comes from the lisping lips of a little child or from those of more mature years that hav • tasted of life to its fullest, he it hitter or sweet, A few years ago, some one had the happy thought that it would Ik* a splendid thing to set aside one day each year on which to, pay special homage to Mother. That dav is the second Sunday in May. This year it falls on May 10th. The idea is to ren\embor M <:hor in some, special way—with a gift of flowers or candy or some other token of hive. A flower should he worn in her honor—a color ed one if (led so (dossed you that •she is yet spared to re j doe with you m your success or to comfort you in your sorrows, and a white one if He has seen tit. ,n' H s All-wise Provi dence, t * take her home to her eternal reward. But ilie editor ot The People believes that \ hat Mother will ap preciate more than anything else from her Bov or Girl is a nersoonl message of hoe. straight from your heart t > he’-, edh r \vrdt 'n ,,p rorhal, depending upon whether^ or not you are sepafatoil by ih-t.-aue. ' as a erown^ wliLk- iDmadays it is used merely as a siepping-stom* t i higher things. He is light. People have lost con fidence in their government and their officials. A striking example is the highway department, which som • nie already comparing to the old i Stute dispensary. They have come | to believe that tht* government’s/ chief function is to provide h.gh-sal aried offices for a vast army of men and women woo cannot or will not earn a livelihood in the humid r walks of life-.^J The P> ople believes that a political cevolution is ai hand. Only thefother Mr. L. E. Do Witt and family spent Saturday night and Sunday-with Mrs. DeWitt's parents in Olar. Mr. Henry Winton Jones and fam ily. Mr. and Mrs. Freddie Jones and little son and Miss Ollie Lee Jones were visitors in Blythe, (In.. Saturday n ; ght and Sunday at. the homy of Mr. and Mrs. Howell Still. They were also the guests of Mr. (Icorge (’bitty and family, of Langley, for a short while Sunday night. Mr. Isadore Hartzog motored to Denmark last Wednesday on busin ss. •Mr. K. \\ eeks w as in Blackville n bijg rne'-'s. Saturday. Mrs! Jane DeTI; spent a few days of day a certain public servant (?) as ! L’M week with her daughter. Mrs. Isa- good as said “the. public he damned." Others, drunk with power, have said the same thing in the past, but in the end it wasn’t the public that was damned. — . The asfotir.dirg .statFhr iir ha- dorc Hi.i’tzog, of this viciftity. Advertise in The People. Sue been made that, directly and indirect ly, the 'American people pay than half they earn in taxes! an outrageous situation cannot con tinue indefinitely. We warn the powers that he that the (Lpv of iie k- oning is close at hand. JUST .‘RECEIVE!).--A carload" oT ints direct from the West. Attrac- more 1 .jj | live prices on large lots.—Farmers . ! Unioji Marcantile Co., Barnwell.S. C. ! South Carolina is going to iD hoiise-elcani’ig day ^>Woiv more moons and a lot hoards and expensive due to be thrown out. have many of <•;utiy old bureau'-’ are A JoOO Editorial. The following is the editorial for which the Charleston Nows and Cour ier was awarded the Pulitzer prize of $000 for the host editorial during the past year: Teachers’ Examination. Vdke is hereby given that the regular Spring Teachers’ Examina tion will be held at the Court House in -Barnwell on Friday. Mav Hh. and Satu day, May '.'th. I'JJd. Both days •ue required to complete the examina tion. Questions fur Primary, Ele mentary, and High SchouJ ceriiticates will he affci’edd. The exam nation will start prompt ly at 0:00 o'cloik a. m. ' HOB VCE J. crouch; County Supt. of Education.- ~ Bnrnwe.l. S. April dO, 102."). 2t. This ai-tieie is being written on election day but before the result of the \ ding ran possibly be known. No matter. The -uggestions it contains will lie pertinent whatever the story told by the fu st page this n.'rning. It makes verv Tittle difference what R(*memlM'V Mot In r. dav ami n lier .any ot us wste'da y const dt not- th t he think about ;he outcumi s ha’loting. It makes aide difference people of the a ; whether or South realize. | DOUGHTY’S x !• the ol J reliable l DRY CLEANERS l | AND DYERS ? since .1895 4 X ^hene 6562. ColumbiaX Barnwell and (^hautauquas. The 1 k iiph’ i • ■ r, { ojipii^fsl u' Chan- cauipias 1 rat i- th 1 sjXWurthv of the name. 1 hey famish .mtot tainmentrto a large numlH'i id people and probably are more nr less educat:<»na!, as their prom ifers claim. The Icature that is objectinnnhle to so many pi >p!e. boweve'-. i< that re4 quiring a number' of local husincsi and profession il nreii and women toll guarantee tHe company or bureau q definite sum of money to come into a community. That was all well and good when Chautauquas weVo /raeti- eally unknown. l>ut atu-r they have- become established no such guarantee should lx* necessary. They should lx 1 ‘Willing pr-iake their chances’ just like other reputable businesses. Just so with a protective .tariff. L was probably needed at q>ne time to protrx-t “infant industries" from for eign competition, but nowadays q is nothing more nor less than a tax on the vast body <1 consumers for the benefit of the favored few. ^ os. wo know the sort trf arguments Pferru ions situaPj in which this , section has come to occupy politically. A< yet we doubt' if very n.any of them do. realize this: and yet it is,/ We tlfjfk. the. outstanding political .de velopment of the tme -o far »< we are concerned, laiok at the farts. They 1 are not pleasant to c intomnlate' hut- • •• »•« ► x*.** * *X*X*X*J 1 vwvwv- ignore i uuigei illy wc We in this port are to find they cannot be are in a sail fix politic: of the country and if a remedy for cur tr >uBVs we must ‘ jjflrst. of all determine what tiny are. mat will take considerable di -• u-s (and all w’e^can hope to do now is to help' start tht* ball of discus-: >n roll- | ing. If that can he accomplished we! may achieve the new program and the new leadership, which we so much need. . ! For at the root of the South’s pres ent nlightffies-the fact that it has. today virtually no national program ''nd virtually no national. leadership. I Is it strange that it should be treated ! by the i:cs 1 i of. the-c.quntry a.-fcmieh a nedlie-ible .factoF? , What is it con- ‘rihuting today in the way of political Ahought? What political leaders has : t who possess weight or authority Vvond their own States? What con No Locality or Section of the Country is Immune > tauquas. We have almost been in- , suited by them and given to - umlei- (stand that. we "v. ere narrow and pro- v vincial r.nd didn’t care a nrp Tor the i moral advancement of the town be- advanced bv representatives of Chau- ^ffiyUetive Policies are its people ready JF— f r fight for with th(* brains and zeal ’hat made them a power in the old 'lays t. k - The (flight of the South m ’those" respects would be perilous at any You cannot pi'evenF'windstorms —your only protection is insurance. Windstorms and tornadoes swoop suddenly down without warning, toppling chimneys, tear ing off roofs, smashing skylights and even wrecking stout buildings. Consider the cost of repairing a roof, rebuilding a chimney or re placing window panes and compare it with the cost of a Windstorm - v Insurance I’olicy. Low rate policies—give you pro tection you cannot afford to be without. 1. (w. L Leaving work py Thvluo Direc- tlon (v. 2(5). The Lord called Philip away from a great work In Samaria and specifi cally directed Him to this man. Abra- hamlike, he obeyed the divine com mand not knowing why be should leave tin* work in Samaria and go into a desert’'pinee. As he journeyed on by faith dip espied the state chariot of the Ethiopian treasurer. The Spirit pf («od directed him to go near and Join himself to the chariot. The tact- fni t question put to the treasurer gained him a seat by the side of this dignified officer. The mission which at first seemed so unpromising was now clear. 2. .'a Officer of State Seeking the Way of Salvation (vv. 27-2S). The Ethiopian had been to Jerusa lem to worship. Despite bis high offi cial position Ik* whs not ashamed off the worship of God. The journey from that far off country required much hard-diip and expense, luu t<< the one whose soul }earns after God, this is all Joy. fl. A Providential Meeting in the Desert (vv. 2'd-dO). . The coming together,of these two men was clearly the predetermined way of God. II. Philip Preaching- to the Eth : o- pian (vv. ffiihdini. 1.. I he Lit hit’tiian's ! ; l it on the Way (v. His occupation aftlie timp of tins ni**etii:g w..s reading the Word of God. At the invitation of the Ethiopian Philip Joined himself to the chariot and fouikf*him reading from tin* odd chapter of Isaiati. This is a most c\- cellent wa^^to sjw-nd one's time wldlo t ra veil rig] 2. The Absolute Need of n I'n^u her (v. .'ll). Tio* Ethiopian was reading, one of 'tic e.'eap st testimonies to tjie .Messiah in the Old Testament, yet lie was un- ahle to get anything out ( f it. ,'The fact that the Ethiopian, a great states man, needed an interpreter -of the Seriptur. >, even such a phyn passage as the odd chapter of Isaiah, shows the absolute net d of a preacher. 'I'ln* gos pel must he experiein-eil ^before on** cap beai witness t" its s.+ving p*'wcr. Ti>e human muol is blind to >(>iri;ual tilings, making the work <*! an evan gelist indispensable. If a/statesman ! of this rank wax unabl'e to grasp the meaning of stn h a i lear pas-age, it- should not he thought strange that for tlie rank and tile of men a’ guide .is needed, God has designed that through the foolishness of preaching the world shmild be saved. Preaching the Word' of God will always be necessary. d. Philip's Message (vv. d2 db). He began at the 'Scriptiirc-> which the Eth opk.n was reading and preael#cd unto him Jesus. This -dioe > us that the person represented in the odd chapter ot Isaiah as suffering In stead.of others was Je-us instead of Israel, also that the centra! theme of the preacher's • message should [,«■ Ji-sus lie did 1 not preach Jesus gs a great teacher, but as a Savior ' who had suffered and died instead of sin ners. He preached Him as the oti*- who luol ottered Himself as»a ransnin. III. Philip Baptized the Eth.opian (vv dtids). As a result of Philip's preaching the eunuch -proposed baptism. 'When (.’hrist Is truly preiiclied, m(*n natural > desire t*) confess Him In haptisng Where this feeling-is lacking, the gos pel In its fullness is evidently not preached. Th^j Ethiopian might have otfered 'pirffiy - *'» xeuses for neglecting this important ordinance, hvjt like every man who is honest before God. Ik* was willing at any cost to retidcr ■ obedience. ,Jlie pnxif that men realty believe in Jesus is their willingness to render obedience to Ills Word. It is faith .in Christ that saves, but th&se who have genuine faitli desire to seal It in baptism^ Having sequred from the Ethiopian the proper confession, Philip baptized him. IV. The Ethiopian Rejoicing.^v.-89). Confession of Christ always brings joy. Those who obey the command ment of the Lord can go on their way rejoicing. N Georgia Duster The Most Practical Cotton Dusting Machine on the Market. For Sale by C. KEYS SANDERS Barnwell, S. C. i i V \ i'h 41 Food, when a few cts. worth of ICE will pre vent, besides preserve its flavor and freshness. Phone 84 or 91-J and soon your. ICE will be on the way. City Ice & Coal Co. R. H. WILCOX, Mgr. Barnwell, S. C. i- - We Know Engines L When your enginee isn’t working just as you think it should, drive in and let us look it over. It may need the carbon removed, or it may be only a minor adjustment. We will fix it quickly- and at a reasonable cost. VICKERY BROS. BARNWELL. S. (. i 666 a prescription for Mala »i <1 |JI l-IM I IWI ( hills artd Fever, Dengue or Billmus Fever. It kills the germs. mus i-Tutfs Pills- Enable Dyspeptics to eat whatever they wish. Cause food to assimilate. Nourish the body, give appetite. DEVELOP FLESH Truth , Truth Is as impossible to be soiled by any outward touch as the sunbeam —Milton. .1 Calhoun & Co. • Barnwell, Makes Life Worth While It is fidtli in something. amh'en thusiusm for something that makes a life -worth looking at. Godliness Go(!liness shall fiot he an addition to ray life, hut it shall be my life itself.— C H. Spurgeon. Tru-li-Pure Butter Your orders will have A , our prompt attention - 1 '“■ - «.■, S. W. Blanton ADVERfflSE IN THE PEOPLE.