The Barnwell people-sentinel. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1925-current, December 31, 1925, Image 3

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- ' 'THUESDAY, DECEMBER SI, 1925. ■r. THE BARNWELL PEOPLE-SEh FIN EL, BARNWELL. SOUTH/CAROLINA ..rr doesn’t wony-C»pper. - The Government help* railroads by raising rates and compelling the pub lic to pay. If Uncle Sam can act as ticket lalesman and price booster for the railroads, why not as wheat sales man for the farmers? \ > Two million five hundred thousand American income taxpayer* will wel- come one change in the-proposed in come tax law. It increases the ex emption of single persons to 51,500 and of married people to $3,500. t » Why not increase the exemption for each child? You can’t bring up a child for $400 a year; Parents rais ing children are working for the State without j±AQ^JUid.oiigltt .nut. to be taxed for their trouble. __ " j‘i Sycamore Items. — - — Sycamore, Dec. 26.—Mr. and Mrs. Willie Cone and baby spent Satur day afternoon visiting Mr, and Mrs. H. II. Lightsey. * ^ Misa. Allie- Mae Lightsey hee re turned home, after spending two weeks in Augusta with. her aunts. Misses Allie Mae and Met a Pearl Hennies. - ^ Mr. and Mrs.’ Harry Ford of Col umbia are spending the Christmal dolidays with Mrs. J. W. Deer. Eugene Cone has returned home spend from the university The school closed Tuesday for the Christmas holidays with * a. Christ mas tree, which was much enjoyed by a crowded house. t ’ . ■ •> ■ * - Advertise in The People. J^y_Art^w^ Srisbane IF NEW YORK HAD A BOOM ' CANCER STILL GAINS. UNCLE SAM WHEAT SALESMAN $400 FOR ONE CHILD. 7 | Changes are slow or they are vio lently rapid. For thousands of years men were content to travel on ani mals, or . slowly moving, clumsy ve hicles. . ‘f And in less than one century came the change to the .stoam railroad, au tomobile, flying machine, the subma rine, and from Jthe messenger on foot to wireless. What will the race do in the next 1,000,000 years? I For real deals in real estate ob serve New York City. Millions upon millions are poured out; no one ■otices it. One man, F. F. French, announces a building project to supply living quarters for 800,000 people. • They will be housed in buildings towering toward the sky and covering a small p ot on ManhAtan Island. In one eerner of Greater New York there will be a little group of 800,000 peo ple, in itself.“one of the great cities of America.” What will happen New York ever has a real real estate boom? Cancer, steadily increasing for seventy-five years, is still on the in crease. The highest cancer death rate in the United States is found .in Massachusetts-, and doctors do "not know why. South Carolina has the lowest cancer death rate. Investiga tion of diet, number of unmarried women, and other social statistics might enlighten the profession. All records are broken in freight traffic. In October railroads earrietfi more than FORTY-FOUR BILLIONS •f tons, about a billion tons more than October, 1924. The growth of California’s fnlit • ~ business is reflected in orders for more than 5.000 new refrigerator tars for the Union Pacific and Sou them Pacific. Before long, un'ess a prominent automobile manufacturer fails in bis undertaking, flying machines will do a great deal of this refrigera tor business, swiftly am! much more cheaply, making “cold” cars unneces sary. The fruit will be taken on board and carried to a height supplying natural refrigeration, the plane go ing up or down in accordance with the thermometer, and arriving at its destination with the fruit naturally sefrigerated to just the right point for storage. Young men now making a living with ‘ independent . passenger buses will make a better living with inde- pendent refrigerator flying cars. . Senator Capper, of Kansas, one of the ablest friends the America farmer has in Washington, says, Uncle Sam might well co-operate with farmers by actually helping them to selj their grain. High spirited financers say this is close to anarchy, but this sheriff sale" X State of South Carolina, , County of Barnwell. THE STATE vs. J. P. FELDER Under and by virtue of a Tax Exe^ cution to me directed by J. B. Arm strong, Treasurer of Barnwell Coun ty, I have this day levied upon and will sell, to the highest bidder for cash, between the legal hours of sale in front of the Cpurt House at Barn well; S. C:, on Monday, the 4th day of January, 1926, this being Salesday in said month, the following describ ed real estate: -29 acres of land, in Ashleigh School District, designated as tract No. 1 and two, €h plat made by E. McNair Carr, dated Oct. 1918, re- corded in office of R. M. C. for Bam- * x well County, title book 8-C, page 672, said tract containing respectively 14 and 15 acres and bounded as follows: North by E. H. McDonald and tract No. 6; East by tracts Nos. 4 and 6, and South by tract No. 8. X Levied upon and sold to satisfy the above Execution and Costs. BONCIL H. DYCHES, Sheriff, Barnwell Co. Barnwell. S. C., 15th day of Decem ber, 1925. gives us great pleasure to announce NO-NOX our new Motor Fuel. NO-NOX is the product of many months of exhaustive scientific and chemical research by a staff of our own skilled chemists, infinite care being given to all de tails to insure the absolute perfection of NO-NOX Motor Fuel. Strenuous nights and days were spent in our thor oughly equipped laboratories by these scientists before NO- NOX Motor Fuel was perfected. Hard grilling road tests .followed to develop any weakness overlooked in the labor atory, and we are now ready to offer the most efficient anti- knbqk fuel in the world. - . . •/* - 0* Manufactured in one refinery under the same skillful super vision and from the same grades of crude, it is continuously uniform which means much in carburetion. When the car buretor: is once properly adjusted it requires no further change—care should be taken to see that the mixture *is not too rich as NO-NOX works best with a thin mixture, thus insuring economy. With NO-NOX, perfect Combustion. takes place at just the right position of the piston head which entirely does away with carbon knocks or motor detonation—promoting greater efficiency of the engiae, smoother operation of the car on the road, in traffic, and especially on heavy grades. This wonderfully efficient gas is guaranteed to be Won- * . • • • Noxious, Non-Poisonous and no more harmful to man or motor than ordinary gasoline. • ? s NO-NOX is priced only three cents per gallon higher tfyan) That Good Gulf Gasoline. . * . -w » ■ . v .* • . * , Drive to the nearest Gulf Service Station and try it out. It • is readily distinguished by its color. I I 5