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>um. THURSDAY, JULY 21ST^1»JT. r iwcll People-Sentinel JOHN W. HOLMES 1841—1112. B. P. DAVIES, Editor and Proprietor. Eptorad at the poat office at Barnwall S. C., aa aecond-clata matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATfBit Dm Year— J— fliS Hz Montha —— JO Rkree Months JO (Strictly in Adranee.) THURSDAY, JULY 21ST, 1927. Tho -man doesn't live who is dis- •ppointed in his obituary notice. The reason youth no longer respect* Ifray hairs is because most of them «re dyed black. * Why sro all the way to Geneva for a disarmament conference—with Chica go right h^re at home. - it before the President to give agri culture some relief or assistance, rise have the party face a vital issue , the 1928 election. -—- Concluding a strenuous two-day ses- ’ aio», in whicir ag^rtiltural leaders re- preaenting farm organisations from a dozen mid-western and Southern states participated, the Northwestern Agricultural Conference at St. Paul passed a resolution demanding that the McNary-Haugen Farm -Relief Bill be enacted into law at the next sdVfion of Congress. Further: An other resolution was unanimously adopted rehuesting the House Com mittee on Agrirulture to meet before the regular session of Congress and have the McNary-Haugen bill ready for introduction when Congress con venes. ‘ Senator Brookhart, of Iowa, Con- gres man O. J. Kvade, .of Minnesota, and many members of Congress from mid-western and southern, states were Two difficult places .to find a straight flush. .On the face of ye modem .flapper—or in a poker game. The seat of mo it of Uncle Siam’s troubles ithese days is somewhere be tween the 17th and 19th amendments. Thei prodigal son today may enjoy the fatted calf vpon his return home, as of yore—but that isn’t the kind he left Jor. The Mahanajah of Ratlam from In dia is in the U. S. to play polo. Can you imagine rooting for a name like that? “ Federal agents caught three New Jersey bootleggers who dumped sour mash in a stream which killed fish Evidently “dead fish tell tales.’’ It may be true, «s physicians claim, that more than 85 per cent, of the population use only one eye. We, fdr one, are afraid tf> 'risk more than ^^-rMttuwomen’s styles what they Yirili hut Kn/vui ffp , « (Zlnrl __ . - - »v Alh*t T. Reid ~ ) ' ymtmm nW' . among the speakers a t the conference and virtually all urged unremitting effort to gain “full equality for agri culture.” It was declared the admin istration had “clearly repudiated the platform on which it was elected” in it?, failure to give relief. So with our Flood Relief—Farm Re lief; Bankers laying a barrage or the groundwork for tariff revision down ward (scheduled immediately after election, and the usual presidential year manoeuvering of party leaders, the December session of Oonghess promises to be merry. are. Goth—we’ve begun to think' Henry FVmJ didn’t have anything to fio wtrh tiis apology for attack on Jewry— ; 'dging by the number who are now claiming credit for having brought it about. We are informed that both Presi dent Coolidge and Vice-Preaident Dawei were fairly deluged with fish ing tackle as gifts when they an- itounced th«ar vacation plans. We might mention here that “our” va cation «tart» week after next. Law of Creation LINDBERGH CLASSIC. (By N. D. Cochran.) Joe f llowing editorial in the New York Telegram is perhaps the out standing tribute to Lindbergh’s a- chievement. It was broadcast by the National Broadcasting Company’s “Blue Network,” olTMay 29, and has been reproduced by scores of news papers throughout the country, and ban been clipped and pasted in hun dreds of thousands of scrapbooks. Sqpifi. readers of the editorial predict that it will rank alongside Lincoln^ Gettysburg addre's as an American classic: It is easy for the superstitious to imagine*, that “nature” or the “de mons” or whatever they chooee to blame, in working against the earth. There have been sunspotr, a total e- clipse of the sun, extraordinary wea ther all around the earth, floods, elec- tical Jitorms, earthquakes. France and the British Isles within a few days had poured down upon them 100,000- 000 tons of rain with terrific light ning and thunder. If the earth we-e a? small as Noah thought it. and flat as he supposed it was, the 1,00,000,000 tons of water would have -cgHed f° r another Ark. -"If I ascend up into heaven, thou art thwei if f mwfcr ffl.V m > d'’m"'h£TC behold, thou art there.” David wrote 1 thus an the 139th Psalm, and the la test earthquake new? reminds us that if- we take the wing at the morning .and dwell in the uttermost part of the f.ea we shall not escape the pow er that rules all creation. Three we?ks ago there was an earthquake in Australia, the other side of the earth, “aggravated by loud explosions, buildings badly shaken.” Last ’week earthquake news came from ancient Palestine, a quake dead- - ly in its effects, destructive’to an cient building):, hundreds are dead, 19 killed within the Jerusalem area. Bedouins of the desert were terri- "fied by earth movements lasting for ty seconds. Some Christians will leam with dismay that the dome of the famous shrine containing the Sa- yiK*t’’s tomb was badly damaged. That should not disturb them. On the contrary, it proves that laws gov erning the universe, including this ^fmy earth, work evenly, without in terference, everywhere. ^ The pages of history are crowded with thrilling /tories of the heroic deeds of warriors, fighters—killers who marched to fame over the dead bodies of other sons of God, whom • L hey had killed in their vain and wicked strife for eaithly glory. When conquering Caesar marched through the streets of Rome, drag- gin? after him in - chains his con ouered victims, triumphant applause from exultant Romans—sweet music for the killer—rang in his eager ears, hut there was weeping and wailing of agonized widow* and fatherless child ren in Gaul. In every war the boasting cheers of victors and the anguished moan* of the vanquished mdde jarring dis cord in the oars of God as they mounted to His throne. And a'l the way down the bloody road of time to the World War this, mad me«lley of human strife had gone on with seemingly endle»s repetition. Its culmination came when the pleading prayers of Christian people at war—each demanding in the name of Christ Jhat God lend Hjs aid that the foe might more successfully m the other—went up to the . Supreme Ruler of the universe. - That waV witnessed fighting in the soala i^bath. of the ■ Armstrong as Treasurer of Barn well* County ^ / ^Defendants., TO THE' ABSENT DEFENDANT, Emmett R. Caih * , YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMQNED AND REQUIRED to answer the complaint in thig action which' was filed in the office of the Clerk of this Court, at Barnwell, S. C., on the 27th day of June, 1937, and to serve a copy of your answer to thV said com plaint on the subscriber at his office in Barnwell, S. C., within twenty days after the service hereof is complete, exclusive of the day of such .service; and if you fail to answer the com plaint within the time-gforesaid the plaintiff in this action will apply to the court for the relieif demanded m the complaint. —THOS. M. BOULWARE, Plaintiff’s - Atorney. Dated at Barnwell, S. C., this 27th day of June, 1927. NOTICE. TO THE DEFENDANT EMMETT R. CAIL, YOU WILL PLEASE TAKU NOTICE: That the original summons and complaint in this action were filed the Clerk’s Office for Barnwell in County, S. C., on the 27th day of June, 1927. THOS. M. BOULWARE, Plaintiff’s Attorney. the j^eat love of a mother to that same God. , From France, from Germany, from England, from Sweden, from Ameri ca—from everywhere on earth--the same silent prayer went up. And God understood them all; for no mat ter what the language of the tongue. standards* the language "of thought, of inward hope and silent prayer is one. How or why that prayer was ans wered makes bo' difference. It was answered. That is enough. And when the glad n^vs reached *11 comers of the earth that the uni versal prayef had been answered — that the boyl was safe —that < diaries Lindbergh -hlid won victory over the addition to being a most industrious person, she was very unselfish and was always wanting to favor others. She not only made friends, but held them, and loyalty to her friends was one of her strong traits. She was a woman of constant good homor and , Over a year agd the condition/ of Mrs. Heweltt’s health forced her re tirement from active home duties, but she kept in touch with the affairs of her church and home. She leaves three children and a number of other relatives to mourn her death. Her body was laid to rest in the Cave’s Churchyard, her pastor, the Rev. Mr. Attaway, assisted by the Rev. Mr. spirits of the air, the land, the sea—j Ward, of Allendale, conducting the the united human race sent up to funeral services^ Heaven one glorious shout of joy, of gladness, of thanks and of praise. Sotne may glow with selfish na- air. McNary-Haugen Bill Again Back comen the McNary- Haugen Farm Relief Bill. Agriculture in gen eral and mid-western agriculture in particular ia aroused and the battle for Federal aid l? -to continue.- For the «xth time this measure is to de mand the "'the the attention of Congress tending force* flew into the sky like bjrds of p!fty to. kill or be killed^—and their (Hir’hly; fame was measured by the number of their brothers killed. Thank God. that’* over. On a day in May, 1927, an airship mount-ni to the sky from the eastern shore of the American continent. Its sole occupant was a boy—by accident of birth an American citizen, come through descent from the loins of the Old World, and he started eariward, headed for the Europe of his ances tors. And as he disappeared into the mist and fog that hung over'the sea, in ev ery c pot on the earth where the news could reach by wire or wireless, the '•’Parts of the sons and daughters of me n attuned in a sweet harmony of hope. The son* of God were as one family. During the next , night, when this intrepid soul was winging its flight across the pitile 0 * sea, far beyond the sight or ken of men, some fifty .thous and people were gathered together in a hoseba'l park to see a prize fight. Inst a rugg“<-t : on from “a sports- refere'- and fifl’y thousand people atood at attention before God, and, h hat** off jn reverence, sent u® an eo-nest. silent prayer for the safety of the birdman. whom hi* fellows af- Innately had called the “flying fool.” * • Over in Detroit, in the solitude of her widow’s home, a school teacher’s prayer—a mother’s prayer for her meiruinp oi That enuren trom hood and was always inte’rested in church affaire and also in the affairs of ‘the community. Fot* many years shep prepared the bread and wine for the communion service at the church. In tional pride because an American citizen had done something that never was done before. Others may rejoice over the material conquest of the air hy the marvelous fabricated machin ery of man. All of us may find a vi carious thrill in this mortal triumph over the forces of nature. But^ after all, the greatest thrih was spiritual, and this wonderful youth’s greatest achievement was ^ bringing all humani;v everywhere on earth in tune with Gxl and a mother's l0V|k Mrs. Josephine Hewlett Aftei* an illness of several months, Mrs. Josephine Hewlett passed away at the t home of her daughter, Mrs. Willie Hazel, neaa- Cave's Church, July 9th, 1927. She was a child Dear Josie, you have left us And your loss we* deeply feel, But tis God Who has bereft us— He can all our sorrows heal. A Relative. Throwing la Good A forty-ton truck loaded with five thou-and imported eggs recently over-turned. Probably the truck was just throwing off the foreign yolk. “It’s a* plain as the nose on your face,”_ said the tactless idiot as he tried to explain something to his sweetie. No one can relish food after a visita tion by ants. Hours of painstaking labor are spoiled. Delicious dishes are tainted, made uneatable. Fly- NOTICE OF DISCHARGE. Notice is hereby given that we will file our final account as administra tors of the estate!'oFTL CT Baxlev, upon Saturday, the 13th day of Aug., 1927, with the Hon. John K. Snellinj Judge of Probate for Barp^aU-^Coun- ty, and StatarafS^said. and petitiort the said Court for an Order of Dis charge ancTLetters Dismissory. W. L. BAXLEY, B. F. OWENS, Administrators of the estate of O. C. Baxley, deceased. Administrator’s Sale of Personal Property. Tox kills,ants. Spraying should be continued for several days, because -BarnwelL--S. G.,-^July XI,'*192 ants are always present in colonies. Insist on Fly-Tox. Fly : tox is the scientific insecticide developed at Mellon Institute of Industrial Re search by Rex Fellowship. Simple instructions on each bottle (blue Labri) for killing ALL household in sects. Fly-Tox is safe, stainless, fra grant, sure. Every bottle guaran teed. r. ■ * ’ ’ 7-21-4t. Legal Advertisements SUMMONS FOR RELIEF. (Complaint not served.) State of South Carolina, County of Barnwell. In the Court of Common Pleas. ATLANTIC LIFE INSURANCE CO., Plaintif, vs. EMMETT R. CAIL, Mrs. Olaree Cail, N. B. Gamble as Receiver of HOME BANK OF BARNWELL, and J. B. Financial Statemenl of the Town oflBarnwell FOR QUARTER ENDING JUNE 30, 1927 President—and unlem all signs fall the next Centre s will again put. dearly beloved boy—went up with all * ♦. . • i Week-End I TRIPS Round Trip Reduced F sres from BARNWELL Fares from Other Points in Proportion. Wrightsville Beach |10.05 Augusta — 2.40 Tickets on sale Fridays and Saturdays and forenoon Sun day trains, gpod until midnight following Tuesday. Sunday Excursions Augusta iw.. $2.00 Tickets good day of sale. . Round Trip Summer Excur sion Tickets on sale daily tio re sorts in Canada and the United States, good until October 31. We are prepared to serve you. J. E. MAHAFFEY, T. A. Barnwell, S. C„ Phone 5. ATLANHC COAST LINE 1927. — • . April 1st. Cash i^Jahk _ , , ,> ' -$666.03. '' ■ !rX T IDR^ipts. *—: Fines collected during April, 1927 i $ 71.50 , License? collected during April, 1927 ' 1 $ 46.00 Property taxes collected*jn April, 1927 286.03 ' Apr. 20— Borrowed from Columbia National Bank $9,000.00 less discount and payment of note for $4JMJO.OO _____ 4586.92 Fines Pollec’ed during May, 1927 - 115.00 Licence ? collected during May, 1927 ‘ 60.00 Property taxes collected in May, 1927 501.49 Fines collected during June, 1927 15.00 Property taxes collected in June, 1927 168.96 5851.50 Total $6518.13 DISBURSEMENTS. f r Supplies and equipment for May, 1927 .$ 50.69 Streets and wage hands for April, 1927 307.75 Salaries (Mayor, Police and Clerk) April, 1927 388.00 Interest coupons on bonds paid in April, 1927 3488.25 Office rent 5 months® and telephone rent, April 78.50 Miscellaneous account for April (board for prisoners and payment of County taxes) .__ 32.68 Streets and wage hands for May, 1927 '251.26 Slarieg (Mayor, Police and clerk) May, 1927 362.00 I'May ll— Payment to State Treasurer of bid on note payable Home Bank 250.00 Supplies and equipment for May, 1927(including payment on fire hose) 341.22 Office rent and telephone rent for May, 1927 18.50 Miscellaneous for May (board for privoner?) ____2 3.50 Streets and wagei hands for June, 1927 ._■ 252.90 Salaries (Mayor, Police and Clerk) June, 1927 ______ 315.00 Supplies and equipment for June (including payment on fire hose) 160.38 „ Office rent and telephone rent Jor June, 1927 18.50 Miscellaneous for June (inspection of fire zone) 4.00 TOTAL .$6323.72 July 1— Balance on hand $ 194.41 IRA FALES, v v ' W. D. Harley, ■ • 'Clerk. . / Mayor Under and by virtue of the power vested in me. as contained in an Or der of the Probate Court, dated the 12th day of July, 1927, I will sell at public auction at the late residence of Lloyd Hughes, near Blackville, be ginning at 10:00 o'clock rn the fore noon, on Tuesday, the 26th day of July, 1927, for cash, all of the per sonal property belonging to said es tate, consisting, in part as follows: Five mules, one horcei, two cows, one calf, three wagons, one huigy. p’. ws mows, rakes, farming implements and household furniture. JOHN O’GORMAN, Administrator, estate of • / Lloyd Hughes. Barnwell, S. C., July 12, 1927 7-14-2t CITATION NOTICE. The State of South Carolina, County of Barnwell. By John K. Snelling, Esq., Prebate Judge. WHEREAS, R. L. Bronson. Clerk of the Court for Barnwell County, .State aforesaid, has made'suit* to me to grimt unto him letters of adminis tration upon the derelict estate 6f C. H. O’Cain. and - 1 ‘ ‘ ^ ■WHEREAS, the said deceased died intestiite, and no jidntfnistration having been had for more than six months passed. THESE ARE, THEREFORE, to cite and admonish all and singular the kindred and creditors of the said C. H. O’Cain, deceased, that they be and appear before me, in the Court of Prrbate, to be held at Barnwell, S C., o n Wednesday, August 18th, next af ter publication, thereof, at 11 o’clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they, have, why the said Administra tion should not be granted. GIVEN under My Hand and Seal this the 5th day of July, A. D., 1927. JOHN K. SNELLING, Judge of Probate, Barnwell Co. Published on the 7th day of July, 1927, tinri in The Barnwell Peonlg'-Sen- ^7 6tc. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Pursuant toi an order issued by his Honor, Judge Hayne F.'Rice, is sued at Barnwell, S. C., dated June 29th, 1927, this is to notify all cred itors of the Home Bank of Barnwell to file their claims with me, duly veri fied, on or before August 15th, 1927. All creditors failing to d> so will bp barred from participating in the dis tribution of dividends; provided, how ever, that all depositors in the said Home Bank of Barnwell, who are will ing to accept as correct the amount as shown by the books of the bank,'will notjoe required to' file proof of claim. N. B. GAMBLE, * Receiver. Barnwell, S. C.—6-30-4t.-