The Barnwell people-sentinel. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1925-current, October 22, 1925, Image 2
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FACT TWO.
THE BARNWELL PEOPLE-SENTINEL, BARNWELL. SOUTH CAROLINA
MASTER’S SALE*
f«r' • f v—* . ._t •
State of South Carolina,
County of Barnwell.
• .
V*- In the Court of Common Pleaa.
Arthur T. Vanderbilt, et al., a« Re
ceivers of the Southern Cotton Oil
Company,
^ «• *;> ‘ Plaintiffs,
vs.
W. H. Harden, et ai.,
* '1
Defendants.
By Virtue of a decretal order to me
directed in the above entitled cause,
I will sell at Barnwell, S. C., in front
of the Court House, on Monday, No
vember 2nd, .,1925, it being salesday
in said month, within the legal hours
of sale, the following described real
property, to-wit:
All that piece, parcel or tract of
land in Great Cypress Township,
Barnwell County, S. C., containing
one hundred and fifteen (115) acres,
more or less, bounded on the North
by lands of Mrs. A. M. Harrison; on
the East by Mrs. Lorena Harden; on
the South by lands of B. M. Jenkins,
and on the West by lands of J. E.
Sanders.
Terms of sale, Cash. Purchaser to
pay for stamps and papers.
G. M. GREENE,
i x
Master, Barnwell County.
Masters office, October 14, 1925.
SHERIFF'S SALE.
State of South Carolina,
County of Barnwell.
THE STATE
VS - 4
ESTATE OF O. P. HAY
Under and by virtue of a Tax ex
ecution to me directed by J. B. Arm
strong, Treasurer of Barnwell County,
I have this day levied upon and will
sell v to the highest bidder for cash,
between the legal hours of sale in
front of the Court House at Barn
well, S. C., on Monday, the 2nd day of
November, ld25, this being Salesday
in said month, the following des
cribed real estate:
Seventy-two acres and one building
in Red Oak township, ahtTbounded as
follows: On The North by Spring
Branch and Burlyn tract; East by
Est. Richard Allen Gantt; West by
Est. J, M. Gantt and Est. Richard A.
Gantt, and South by Est. Richard A.
Gantt. nr_
Levied upon and sold to satisfy the
above Execution and Costs.
BONCIL H. DYCHES,
k - ^ Sheriff, B. C.
•*» •*-4,1 ••[>♦■
o n
PROBATE COURT SALE.
milttlMUlHIIIIDl
^ illu'dlJS use v
CXauSSenS
has mote feed laluc
DOUGHTY’S
the old reliable
DRY CLEANERS
AND DYERS
since 1895
Phone 6562, Columbia
•x*«*x»<-x~x-x-x-:-X“X~x-:-x~x*
l . *
!• All Lines of Insurance
Farm Coverage
a Specialty:
Calhoun and Co.
P. A. Price, Mgr. |
Bank of W. C. Bldg, i
? *
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State of South Carolina,
County^ of Barnwell.
In the Probate Court.
James M. Templeton, as Administra
tor of tha estate of Jullia-A. Tem
pleton, deceased,
Plaintiff,
vs. <
Sarah Templeton, et al.,
Defendants.
By virtue of a decretal order made
in tho Probate Court in the above en
titled cause, I will sell at Barnwell, in
front of the Court House, on Mon
day, November 2nd, 1925, it being
salesday in said month, within the
legal hours of sale, the following de
scribed real property, to-wit:
All that certain tract of land situ
ate in Barnwell county. State of South
Carolina, containing one hundred and
twenty (120) acres, more or less, and
bounded by tracts one, two and three
of the estate of Alex Jempleton,
which was set aside respectively to
Maggie L. Birt, Ann E. Dyches and
W’. A. Templeton and by lands of
Simon Brown and estate of L. L.
Lancaster, as shown on plat of said
estate of Alex Templeton, made by
J. S. Mixson and recorded in the office
of the Clerk of Court for Barnwell
County in Book 4-P, page 305.
Terms of sale cash, the successful
bidder at said sale shall immediately
deposit with the Probate Judge the
sum of One Hundred Dollars as guar
anty of complince with his bid, un
less excused by the Court; and that,
should said successful bidder fail to
nake said deposit that the premises
be immediately resold on th** same
terms. Purchaser to pay for stamps
ami papers.
John K. Snelling, .
Judge of Probate.
Trespass Notice
Any and all are hereby
forbidden to hunt by day or night,
fish, haul wood or straw, or trespass
in any manner whatsoever upon any
of the lands of the undersigned, un
der penalty of prosecution of the
full extent of the law.
Idis Brabham
HAT NEVILLE.
■ ❖❖•X"X-XK~X'%-X~X~X~X~X"X~X*X"X~X~X~X~X~X~X"X"X~X~X~X*
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us. Watch this
paper far advertisements
a s' ‘ j» .
iwell Filling Station
Barnwell, S. C.
GREATEST OF AU WEALTH.
AMERICA’S GARDEN SPOT.
ALFALFA AND FREEDOM.
KILLERS FOR HIRE SCARCE.
—5
About your
Health
Things You Should Know
Gur crops are worth billions
or ? r: year That’? rr.s-.Y:
In our mines and oil wells arc
hundreds of billions stored away,
and that’s- encouraging. - - ^
The unused water power of this
nation is worth tens of billions,
and other tens of billions for irri
gation afterward. That’s encour
aging, and also the fact that in
the atmosphere above there are
endless billions worth of nitrogen,
which can be brought down by
electrical potver.
But there is a greater wealth,
and its figures more important.
One single city, New York, has
for the first time in its history
MORE THAN ONE MILLION
CHILDREN-ENROLLED IN ITil*
PUBLIC SCHOOL CLASSES
That is the REAL wealth of to
day, and the real power of the
future.
, Take away these children, and
this country, with all its mines,
water power and fertile soil, would
amount to as little as it did when
a few Indians possessed it and
spent tbeir time murdering each
other.
At the Genesee, N. Y., fair Lieu
tenant-Governor Lowman arranged
to ride one mile on the back of a
five-ton dephant.
The f: rmera doubtless laughed,
as they saw 150 pounds of human
being carried by 10,000 pounds of
elephant.
A 10,000-pound elephant will
carry on its head one mahout, to
guide the tug beast, and in the
howdah on its back an English
gentleman eager to kill a tiger
without giving that tiger a chance
to kill him.
Consider the gap between
Kublai Khan and Automobile man
ufacturers who gives you for a
few dollars a little machine that
will carry seven people forty :niles
an hour, carrying more than its
own weight in freight.
If our progress in THINK.NG
had equalled our progress in
transportation, we shoulu ue bet
ter off than we are.
Riding over the desert lands,
destined to be the world’s most
beautiful garden, from Colorado
to Arizona you could not resist
buying land, hoping to live there
some day, at the end of your migh-'
ty dollar huqt in the East.
Nothing grows until you ini-
gate. And when you irrigate
EVERYTHING WILL GROW.
Do you put fertilizer or lime on
Mojave Desert alfalfa? Not an
ounce of either. Alfalfa roots go
down eighteen feet through soil
washed down from mountains
made up of lime, minerals and
centuries of growing ami decay
ing bunch grass, grease wood and
sagebrush. You cut your alfalfa
seven times a year for fifteen or
twenty years; ,tli#n plant it again,
irrigate it, and Nature does the
rest. -
soil also produces democ-
Any man witli a hundred
d -ilarr, who thinks he is
than Tome other American
go there. He would gather
information.
Going through, that country
Aery Ivmvn golden hill in the dis-
tr.nce more beautiful than any
inhir' or ca-tie, under a mag-
i licrnt blue sky as big as the
country, van care nothing for news
that cones oat cf human swarms
dn tin East.
Your only hope is that the Gov-
ernnont'Yvil] know enough tq pro
vide the flying machines neces-.
: u y to take people to .that land
r.r l to protect it. 7
by John Joseph Gainea, M. D.
Tuberculosis Germs Not Inherited.
Most anybody nowadays can
write or speak intelligently of tu
berculosis. My little neighbor, a
lad of ten, not yet in “Junior High”
refers gravely to ‘ T L” a her.' c..n
versing with his play-fellows; the
-learned scientists and the statisti
cian bewilder us with technical
facts. What to do with the dis
ease however—to combat it suc
cessfully—remains a dark and un
fathomable secret. We have found
out to a certainty” that itw caSse is
a definite baccillus, a living, virile
organism, shaped like a tod, multi
plying by dividing itself into short
er sections when each individual
readies maturity. Colonies assem
bled produce peculiar tissue-growth
—tubercules, —nature trying to
ward off the intruder. When thfe
baccilli develop destructive power
within the tubercle, its walls break
down, and general tuberculosis rc-
fults.
The outstanding fact to be re
membered in tuberculosis is^ it is
communicable. People do not in
herit germs—they are acquired. A
child may be infected, and harbm
the bacteria^ for years without
symptoms. Let him get influenza,
or pneumonia or even a severe
“cold” and the tubercle baccilli
awaken to do serious mischief. This
brings up a positive conclusion:
All tubercular patients should be
subjected to rules of quarantine.
They should be taught to save and
bum all expectorated matter, and
should sleep alone, using individu
al bed-linen. Their towels should
be kept separate and sterilized by
boiling.
The germs when dry, blow every
where! A dozen school children
racing along in their glee inhal
ing millions of these deadly germs!
If there is an ordinance in YOUR
town against spitting on the side
walk, make it include the entire
street at your next meeting!
Next Week.
More about Tuberculosis
Wholesale
* _ -'** ,'7 -r fr. -
HAY, GRAIN, FEEDS *
FLOUR, MEAL, GRITS
POULTRY AND DAIRY FEEDS
SEED OATS and SEED RYE.
—Buy Cotton Seed and Peas.—
W. P. FRANKLIN
Opposite A. C, L. Depot.
Office Phone 87 — Residence Phone 8
Reliable Service—
It is of the utmost importance, whether the ‘nttmey
invested is one cent or one dollar. That is why our drug
store is the most popular in Barnwell. We have proved
to our customers'" that we are not only interested in
securing new business—but equally interested in merit
ing the continued trade of old -friends.
PRESCRIPTIONS
CAREFULLY AND
COMPOUNDED.
THE BEST PHARMACY
STATE FAIR GROUNDS
’ COLUMBIA S. C.
IN FOOTBALL STADIUM
THURSDAY AT 8P. M., OCTOBER 22
THE AMERICAN LEGION, RICHLAND POST, >Io. *), Presents
W. L. Young Stribling
OF ATLANTA
The South’s Own Son and the World’s Coming Champion in a
lb
ROUND
10
REAL BOXING BOUT with
Tom McKieman
The Pride of the Irish Race Has Wdn 22 Decisions in New |Tark
Said to be the Best Heavyweight Ireland has Turned • ut in 'tears.
ROUNDS
PRELIMINARIES £\J
— Extraordinary Being Arranged
SEATS NOW SELLING AT THE COLI MUV \ HEATRE
Mail orders received Now if "accompanied by remittance payable
to Brown and Propst, Mgrs.
PRICES IN FULL: Ringside $72>0. Other reserved seats will sell
for $6, $5, $4 and $3. General admission seats will be $2.
20
BARNWELL INSURANCE AGENCY
John K. Snelling, Mgr.
Representing the Best Old Line Companies
Surety Bonds
Insurance of All Kinds
Fire — Health and Accident — Life
John IIulb?rt. official execu
tioner at Sing Sing jHisorty quits
his job .after killin': Vy the
electric Chair. For/this he has
he n n paid $21,00^^5150 fer each
killing, 'S
Will the/ retiring executioner
ever niqptf on the other shore, the
140 that he serit on ahead? • If so,
what will, they say to each other?
hank him. very likely.
U is difficult to find another
executioner; because he must be a
trained electrician, willing to kill
for a living, it should be not
difficult but to find
sue 1 ' ' * - ’''-■'■I' ? ate.
-rH
is a prescription for Malaria, Chilla
and Fever, Dengue or Bilitoos Fever.
It killa the gerasa.
For Satisfactory Weights and
Grades, Ship Your Cotton to MID-
DLETON and PETERSON, Inc.,
Savannah, Ga.
Advertise in The People-Santinel.
N. G. W. WALKER
INSURANCE
Office in Walker Building
1 am no longer connected with the firm of
X Smith and Walker
CALL
— FOR -
The Barnwell
ffV
I *
Lf
November 2nd to 7jth. - 6 Days - 6 Nights
0‘
In its entirety presents a galaxy of High Class
V Entertainment.
Fair Grouii)
Court House Square
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