University of South Carolina Libraries
The l*autiful University of Mlefhitan Lawyers' club, .,rh« |1,800.<X)0 gift of William, W, Cook of New York, which ■was dedicated on June 18. The structure Is the first of four units, which, when completed, will comprise the new Michigan law campus, all of which Mr. Cook Is financing with the royalties on several legal volumes of which he Is the author. Wm.McNAB ^ Representing fflRE, HEALTH AND ACCIDENT ; INSURANCE COMPANIES. Personal attention given all business Office in Harrison Block, Main 8t BARNWELL. 8. C Is a prescription for Malaria, Chills ■and Fever, Dengue or Billioua Fever. Ttidfts the germs. SUMMONS FOR RELIEF. (Complaint Served.) Local and Personal News from Williston Williton, Juno 20.—Killy Patterson is visiting his aunt, Mrs. Gills, in Charlotte. Miss Annie League Merritt is visit ing relatives in Woodruff. ) Mies Marie Wise of Aiken is visit ing relatives here. Mrs. J. H. White has returned from a few davs in Columbia. Miss Eloise_Quattlebaum is attend ing the Winthrop Summer School. Mrs. Ben Lewis of North Augusta spent Sunday with her mother at the homo of Mrs. G M. Toole. Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Sykes t nd chil dren of Augusta were week-end visi tors of Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Bell. State of Soyth Carolina, County of Barnwell. Tn the Court of Common Pleas. Mattie Bell Besinger, '•* Plaintiff, vs. 'Cecil Mims and Verlee Elisabeth Mims Register, Defendants. YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED »nd required to answer the com- t>laint in this action, of which a copy ft herewith served upon you, and to ■serve a copy of your answer to said complaint on the subscribers at their ■office in the town of Barnwell, S. C., within twenty days after the service "hereof, exclusive of the day of such -service; and if you fail to answer the roippleint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Const for the relief demanded : in the qomplaiut. HARLEY & BLATT^ Plaintiff’s Attorneys, l^ated June 3, A. D. 1925, State of South Carolina, County of Barnwell. In the Court of Common Pleas. "Mattie Bell Besinger, . Plaintiff, V8 ' Cecil Mims and Verlee Elisabeth Mima Register, Defendants. TO THE DEFENDANT, CECIL MIMS: ► YOU WILL PLEASE TAKE NO TICE that the compilaint in the above ■entitled action was, on the & day of June, 1925, tilod in the office of the *C < rk of Court for Barnwell County, -South Carolina. HARLEY & BLATT. 1 Plaintiff's Attorneys. Mr.-TV-BrQuatttebaum visited rela tives" "here this week. • Laura Smith spent Tuesdav with Miss Eloise Corley. — Miss Louise Prothro has had as her house guest Neal Reames and Miss Louise Salley of Columbia and Misses Christine and Evelyn Faust of Kitchings Mill, and Miss Cora Pro thro of Springfield. Leonard Mellichamp of Charleston was a week-end: visitor of Mr. and Mrs. L. S. Mellichamp. M isses Louise Kennedy and Sara Trotti are spending this week with Mr. and Mrs. C. H. TrottL Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Black left last week fdr Miami, Florida, where Mr. Black has accepted a position in one of the hanks there. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Page were the guests of Col. and Mrs. R. M. Mixon Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Kennedy apd Hamilton Owens spent Sunday in Allendale; — Mrs. W. T. Willis, Jr. has returned from u visit to relatives in Rowes- ville. Mr. and Mrs. Q. A. Kennedy, Jr." Mr. and Mrs. Q. A. Kennedy, Sr. and Q. A. Ill, left this week for Saluda, N. C. Smith Purvis is spending some time in Petersburg, Fla. % - Mrs. and Mrs. T. M. Willis and Mr. and.Mrs. W. C. Smith, Jr. were visi tors in Johnston Sunday. Mrs. Willis remained there for a visit. Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Thompson and children were visitors in Augusta Fri day. Dr, and Mrs, Ashley Weathersbee of Belton visited their parent*, Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Weathersbee last Sun day. A * i Sidney Shelton and two so«s anj Miss Hazel Shelton of Wauchula, Fla were visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Gv Greene. - v_ Misses - Mattie Lee Bennett and Mayo Rountree are visiting Mrs. A, *•—jW:— ' Norman Snelling in Atlanta. Prof. Marion Willis has returned rom Newark, Delaware, where he is on the facuty of the University - of Delaware, and is spending the summer . with his mother, Mrs. W. T. Willis, SA Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Weathersbee Mrs. Rosa Matthews and Miss Bessie Greene motored—to Hickory, N. C. After visiting in Cheraw for t\yo weeks, Mrs. W. C. Smith has return ed home accompanied by her neices Misses Naomi and Mary Louise Pe- gttes. '• ” . V_ Misses Helen Pegues, Bessie Pe- gues. Lucia Pogues of Mt—Plemmiit. bv Rev; W. and Alealey McCellan of Me Cellan COACH 7'Pass. Sedan *1795 Freight and Tax Extra The world’s largest production of 6-cylinder cars permits the lowest prices in Hudson history. And for the finest Hudsons ever "built. Thus Hudson is more than ever the “World’s Greatest Buy.” * * ^ ' 1 , ' • • * Hudsori'Essex Now World’s Largest Selling ^Cylinder Cars .... A * ' t* ' - . ■ f7 W. D- HARLEY MOTOR CO- , tv. .. , ' ' ; • ’ . ' . ' * A . • " • • ———-— Barnwdl, S. C.'"‘ ♦♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ You Need Good Tires ' i’V i , * .. - .. . • v" L? Whether for everyday service round home ville are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Smith. Mrs. Wagener and little daughter, Misses Louise and Julia Ray of Den mark were guests last week of Mr. an Mrs. S. B. Ray. Mr. and Mrs. Q. A. Kennedy, Jr. attended the commencement of the University of . South Carolina where the brother of tl^ latter, Dubose Boy- leston, graduated in law. Mrs. Marvin Boone, son, Mr. Boone and daughter, Mrs. Kerr were week^ end visitors of Mrs. Q. A. Kennedy, Sr. Mr. Boone and Mrs. Kerr ren dered beautiful vocal selections at the services of the Williston Baptist Church last Surday. Mrs. H. E. Raines of Charleston is visiting Mrs. G. W. Greene. Hart’s Battery Chapter, U. D. C. met Friday, June 12th, with Mes- dames H. Manning and J. W. Odk iorne as joints hostesses at the home of Mrs. Manning. There was quite a full attendance as the teacher- members are home for the h.Ii mer. Mr. James M-. Rytfn, R. A. Ellis, Miss Kate Simms and Mr. John K. Snelling, Mr. Snet- lin# was also the general manager. -.rFire destroyed the building in which’ The Sentinel wag printed while it was under the management of Mr. Brown and its files of papers, from 1852, for nearly 50 years, were consumed^ an irreparable loss historically. . In the early seventies,! Mr. John S. Shuck started a paper in Barnwell called “The Journal” which he after wards moved to Aiken. This paper is now known as The Journal and Review and edited and published by A. K. Lorenz. At one time James F. Byrnes was Editor of ..the same. Mr. Shuck also issued a small daily ■paper in Barnwell years afterwards out the nineties that venture liston ^Wtey* 5 amounted to nothing, passing after a week or two. With the exception of nine months during the War Between the States, The Sentinel has made weekly visits to many of this section, some of whom were Mr. Bronson’s subscri bers. Many will be saddened , by the thought that so valuable a land-mark as The Barnwell Sentinel has passed. Mr. Bronson was able to save from Sherman’s raid in 1865 only his type which he buried in the. ground. When the South Carolina Press Association was formed fh 1875, Ed ward A. Bronson was elected one of its vice presidents and served in this capacity for years. Upon his death, he was the oldest editor in South Carolina.—“Old Timer” in The Wil- or >r trips to distant pointsyour safety and ■ ' \ comfort demand tires of sturdy construc- r m. History of The Barnwell Sentinel The town of Barnwell was survey ed and divided into lots and streets for a court house town in 1817. From that date to 1852, Barnwell County was without a local paper. Local ad vertisements were published in the Charleston papers, the Mercury and the Courier. In or about that year, 1852, a pro minent member of the bar, Col. Wil liam Aiken Owens, induced Mr. Edward Bronson of Camden, to move from that town to Barnwell, to es tablish a -paper, and the Senti/iel was the result. Mr. Bronson received from Col Owens not only encourage ment and moral support but ftnincial aid. Mr. Bronson _ wa* a practical printer and the Barnwell Sentinel was issued as the qWy paper of Barnwell District except as hereafter stated, until about the (dates in this Article are approximate) year 1878 when Mr. James M. Ryan and some others launched The Barnwell Peo ple. After one or two years, Mr. Ryan parted with his interest; and Major John W. Holmes acquired a part of the whole interest in the “People” and published it until his death in 1912. After the death of Mr. Edward A. Bronson, about 1887, MrP Clarence Brown, who married Mr. Edward Bronson’s daughter, and was him self a practical printer, owned and edited the paper until he disposed oft it to Messrs. Marshall Moore and R. Boyd Cole. They were at the head of the Barnwell Graded School at the time. Moore soon disposed of his interest in it, and afterwards had something to do with the establish-" ment of the Greenville Piedmont. R. Boyd Cole was sole owner and i&dkor .[at tfip time or bis acceptance or a Captain’s commission in the srmy on T ~4 i 'j ' i Now Packard Presents New ease of routine care Qreater motoring comforts E VERY : five years or so it has been Packard’s privilege to ~~ make some revolutionary advance for others to follow. Now, having exhausted present possibilities in power * ' „ and smootlipess, Packard presents improvements of an x entirely new nature: ^ ’ • •» -4- .) r . 1 I.. . * i — . I—New ease of routine care ' 2—Greater motoring comforts The thousands who have taken deliv ery of new Packard Sis and Eight cars during the past few weeks have found the Motor Oil Rectifier and the Chassis Pressure Lubricator, a combination not to be had in any other motor car In all the worid. They have found that motor oil life has been multiplied by five; that they need to change oil but four or five thnaa a year. They have found that they may lubricate the chassis in less than om second of time, die pull of e a plunger forcing oil so die 45 points These new Packard owners have also' found greater motoring comforts; notably an ease of steering and wider and even more luxurious enclosed bodies. For example, the endosed models of the Padcard Eight have the widest and roomiest bodies offered on any motor car. • They have found that the utmost in beauty, distinction and comfort is now combined with an easy ability at least to double the mileage life of their Packard cam. ‘ And Packard has found Miat now. mors than ever, Packard should say— aJ. - M • X? JET*, Apt*-- Ask the man who owns one Packard Six nunca pi ww ooay types* n reduced by an average of $750— level as the open cars. Packard Six and Packard Eight both are fur* Packard Six W. D. HARLEY MOTOR Barnwell, South Carolina