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—july rra, i»» v NOTICE OF BLBCTIOX A petition having been ffted in ac cordance with section 2603, General ^School Law, 1924, notice is hereby "given that an election will be held ft Ashleigh school district No. 24, on Saturday, July l?th, 1926, for the pur pose of determining whether or not a special school tax of two (2) ad ditional mills ghall be levied in the above named school district.' The said election shall be conduct ed as is provided by law for the hold- ji»g of general elections. The polls will be opened at the school house and the following trustees are here-, by appointed managers tff election: L. F. Miles, H. BV Odom and Lee Lan caster. Those favoring the proposed levy shall cast a ballot with the word Yes’ written or printed thereod; and those opposing the proposed levy shall cast a baHot with the word “No” written or printed thereton. 1 HORACE J. CROUCH, Sec. Co. Board of Education. Barnwell, S. C .,June 26, 1926. *7-l-3t. THE BARNWELL FBOPLE-SENTTNKL, BARNWELL, 800TB CAROLINA Local and Personal ^' News from Williston Williston, July 4.—-Misaps Iva Mae, Boylston apd Eljule Goudie and Mr. G. P. Boylston, of Orangeburg, were recent visitors here. - Misses Nina Frederick and Iva Mae Boylston and G. P. Boylston spent last Sunday at Euton Springs and report a very enjoyable time. Misses Linnie Mae Jones, Maggie Hair and Alberta Odom, who are at tending the " Orangeburg summer school, spent last week-end at their respective homes. Mrs. C. B. Buist, of Ellenton, and Mrs. 4. K. Ellis of Woodbine, Ga., are visiting relatives here this week. Ernest Givens of Bishopville is visiting Relatives here. Mss Lottie Dubose and Mr. and Mrs. 0. B. Fields and Masters James and Dubose Simpson of Bishopville spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. S. B. Ray. Misses Alma and Ethel McLemore, after spending some tim^with their grandfather, J. W. Kennedy, and their uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. W. R. HALL S COLE, Inc. 94*102 Faneuii Hall Market BOSTON; MASS. Commission Merchants and Distributors of ASPARAGUS One of the Oldest Commission Houses in the Trade. Send for Shipping Stamp. Good Intentions TS. A Good Income • Good intentions are all right, but they won’t provide for your family when you’re dead and gone. Many men who always intended “to take out some insurance” have died and left their families with nothing but regret that the good intentions were never carried out^ . WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO LEAVE YOUR FAMILY- GOOD INTENTIONS OR A GOOD INCOME? Norman B. Gamble Insurance Barnwell, S. C Drive Down! \ Let us grease your car with our new high power “Alemite Airline Lubrigun” We grease ALL the moving parts of your car except the steering wheel and cushions.- Tires Tubes -:- Gas Oils Barnwell Filling Station r * LOYD PLEXICO, Manager SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSIST I Unless you see the “Bayer Cross ,, on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayerr. Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years for Neuralgia Lumbago , Neuritis Rheumatism Accept only “Bayer” package which contains proven directions. Colds Headache Pain Toothache Boll, have returned to their home in North Augusta. Mr. E. W. Black has returned from Miami, Fla., where hu has been the past several months., . ,. Mrs. W. H. Bair is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Hicks, of Rome, Ga. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Latimer and children, of Greensboro, N. C., ar rived Saturday for a few day’s visit Mr. M. M. Player, of Elliott, was tho weekend gue^t t Mi and Mrs.< Arnold P. Lee. v . Dr. and Mrs, W. C. Smith left Friday for an extended visit to points in North Carolina. Miss Josephine Boland is enjoying a visit to relatives in Charleston. Mss Carey Ahl, Mrs. W. C. Cook and daughter, Pa'tricia, are visiting friends and relatives in Columbia. Miss Johnnie Dennis, of Hamlet, N. C., is the guest of Miss Anna Baker Black. V Mr. and Mrs. W.' C. Smith, Jr., and Mrs. fcregg Smith, of Salt Lake City, Utah, were visitors in Columbia Tuesday. ~v Mr. and Mrs. N. B. Gamble and Col. Harry D. Calhoun, of Barnwell, were visitors to this city Monday. Messrs. Lee Garvin and B. J. Roun tree, spent Sunday and Monday at Glenn Springs. They report a ve^y enjoyable trip. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Mellichamp and children, Leslie, Jr., and Tanes’a, of Savannah, Ga., were recent visitors of her father, Mr. L. S. Mellichamp. Mr,.Mellichamp has recently moved from New York to Savannah, where he has established a branch for-- a New York concern. » , Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Lee, of Atlanta, are visiting Mr. Lee’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. P. Lee, of Elko. Mr. a nd Mrs. Guy Cox and little son, of Altha, Fla., are visiting Mra. Cox’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Trotti, Jr. . Mr. G. C. Matthews Is on a fish ing trip to Monks Comer with Messrs. Matthews, of Blackville. Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Weathers bee are visiting their daughter, Mrs. M. L. Bolick, at Hickory, N. C. It was their intention to attend the Barras- Owens wedding Monday in New York City. Mrs. J. H. E. Milhous is visiting Mrs. G. C. Matthews and Mrs. Har- vey. No Lynching* in Thi* State in Six Month* According to the records compiled at Tuskegee Institute in the Depart ment of Records and Research, thgre were nine linchings in the first six months of 1926. This number is the same as the number for the first six months of 1925, it is 4 more than the number 5 for the first six months of 1924, 6 less than the number 15 for the first six months of 1923, 21 less than the jiumber 30 for the first six months of 1922, and 27 less than the number 36 for the first six months of 1921. The races of the persons lynched and the number in" each race were: Negro, 6; White, 2; Indian, 1. The offenses charged were: murder, 3; rape, 1; attempted rape, 2; making improper proposals to woman, 1; bur glary, 1; wounding officer of the law, L The States in which lynchings oc curred and the number in each State are as follows: Arkansas, 1; Florida, 3; Kentucky, 1; Mississippi, 2; New Mexico, 1; Texas, 1. Guvaa News. 1&- ■ ~ '■ l ■■■ ■■ ■ ■ Govan, July 8.—Misa Alma Lancas ter has returned home, after spending several weeks with her sister, Mrs. J. F. Craig, of Eastover. ^ ... , Mrs: Mary L. Hutto and family, of art visiting the former's lister, Mrs. A. R. Lancaster. '*■ Alston Browning has returned borne after spending sevonl days in Liv ingston with reUtivhs. — " * - Mrs t Sue Kittrell and daughter, Evelyn, have returned after attending Watch the Red Spider. the exposition for the Philadelphia. Elisabeth Browning is lives in Dunbarton. Mx. and Mrs. Laurie Cox, of berg, visited Mrs. D. E. Hutto Itp. day afternoon. ts ms This,season of the year every far mer should watch for the Red Spider All poke berry bushes should have al ready been cut; if not they should^bc destroyed immediately. In practical- ly^evfrjr^case of Red Spider we .find that they start from poke berry bushes. A few cas^s have begun fropi 'black-berry and rose bushes and from t;here spread to the cotton field. If Red Spider is found to have started in a cotton field the following proce dure should be carried out: Find' the poke berry bush, pull up all cotton badly affected and pile into one pile with poke berry bush and burn. Do not plow or walk through from in fected cotton to cotthn that is not in fected.* For spraying: The top and under side should be thoroughly spray ed for some distance around with' kerosene emulsion made as follows: One ounce of laundry soap dissolved in one quart of hot water, add one quart of kerosene, beat thoroughly, add this to 5 gallons of water and spray. If car« is exercised, in destroying the source of infection we should not have any damage from the Red Spider. Watch for the ^oll Weevil, picking up the first punctured squares. Get ready to poison if necessary.—H. G. Boylston, County Jfg Advertise In Tho People-SantineL V* c My the South has economic health S ound prosperity arise* only from the praporfty of many different type* of industry. Section* of the country that are dependent upon one buainM* or one crop sometime* have extraordinary pnafriff ity; and they also have hard time*. But it is those sections where production is diversified that ham real economic health. The present prosperity of the South springs fires* many different sources. This is seen from the record of freight carried by the Southern. Last year this traffic was made up as'fbOows: Products of agriculture and ' Coal.. Clay, gravel, eand and i Other mine product Forest products •.. < Manufiacturod products and miaooSaneous goods. 94JM Mhrchandiee in less than cartoed shipments- . • •• S.9S Just as the diversification of Southern indurtry bss brought the South economic health, so also the di versification of the Southern's traffic should rend Is stabilise it* revenue* and make its five to investors in the South. .O UTHjER.N RAILWA Y[(Of)\SYSTEM! %e Southem sav&§tT*$the South; i Z/l bird in the haruf is worth two in he bush “Take off-brands of gas- * oline for example. They may be good or bad. But why use something you don’t know anything about and run the risk of all sorts of trouble? When right at your very door—everywhere you go—there’s “Standard”, the reliable gasoline— always dependable.’ t» • • <1 9t ! I a * GASOLINE 4 «r • A. L-W AYS D E P E N D)A B L B