The Barnwell people-sentinel. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1925-current, October 13, 1927, Image 4
TAQM fOn
CAKOUNA
rt
THURSDAY, OCTOBER It, 1*27.
TKeBarnwil PeopU-Sentinel
m
ion w
“ IWA-Ifll.
B. P. DAVIES, Bitter ani Praprtator.
Bntered at the poet office at Bareweil
S. C., aa second-daae matter.
v SUBSCRIPTION* RATES:
Om Tear Itia
Six Month! w*.*.*— &
rhree Month* ^0
(Strictlj In Adrance.)
THURSDAY, OCTOBER IS, 1M7.
SAPODlL is BroSdway'e newest
word. Taken from the word Dalfydi]
and meaning “rolled in dough.”
three years, and has depended wholly
on immigration from Maaieo and
Canada and, to * neglible degree, to
othea countries not subject to quota
restriction.
Labor immigration from Europe
consists roughly of half unskilled in
dustrial and half farm labofr, but in
all about three times as many com
mon laborers have returned to Europe
than hays some from Europe since
1924, while farm laborer* generally Gulf Refining CoT, ’license
have remained. , -'V*.w*3‘
Geese are flying South early, indK
Sating a severe winter. Who knows.
It may be propaganda framed up with
the geese by coal barons.
France wants to talk about that war
debt again. Just like Mark Twain’s
weather, “everybody talks and talks,
but nobody does anything.”
Such Reasoning.
Senator Hiram Johnson appealed
to the convention of union labor in
Los Angeles, last week, to work for
the Boulder Dam project, harnessing
the Colorado River, for power, irriga
tion and water supply. He told the
union men, “public utilities companies
■ay thsy have seven billion dollars of
FINANCIAL STATEMENT
Of T*wa if Barnwell far Month of
Octeher. 1927: ^
- RECEIPTS:
September 1st to 30th:— , *
Cash on haindjn bank, Sept. 1 $262.08
Robert Cave,*fine 8.50
John Eve, taxes 10.00
C. C. Rountree, taxes 1.13
B. Mazursky, taxes 132.32
Mrs* Mary Arledge, taxes _._i 13.23
50.00
A. C. Ry. Co., License 60.00
Only a small proportion of the; Mrs. Louise McNab, taxes 62.72
combined immlgMon from ¥«ico William McNab, Taxes 36.00
gnd Canada consists of fihn labor, 1 Wes. Union Tel and Tel Co. lie. 26.00
averaging less than 4^)00 a year for Sou> Ry# COi| ij C€ng6 50.00
the 1925-27 period, of which Mexico | So> Eastern Ex. Co., license .. 25.OQ
Contributes only about 300 annually. Florida Blossom Shows, license 25.GO
The Influx of fcommon and farm. lBiah Gadson, fine 2.50
labor during the past fiscal year, in-, A c Hayes and
Co, r Jicense __ 15.00
eluding immigration from Europe,. M rs. M. I. Walker, taxes 100.00
has been heavier and emigration from ( standerd Oil Co., license 60.00
the United States teas than the aver- Mns . T. Cornell, taxes J..1 15.00
age in the two preceding years. R c Holman, license 10.00 j
G. C. Beck, license 10.00
Lige Halford, forfeit \ 5.00
Bob Hunter, fine 2.50
Spite of Boll Weevil Henr y Terry, fine 2.50
— I Oscar Jones, compound 3.00
Thursday, Friday
and Saturday
October 13,14 and 15
• »
Thursday, Friday
and Saturday
October 13,14 and 15
Rexall
Sale
Makes Cotton Crop in
Su
and Used Cultivator Harrow in
Making Good Crop.
ter County Farmer Poisoned Pest Jame8 Odom, compound 3.00
Bessie Smith Shows, license 25.00
Mace Jeffcoat, license 10.00
Babe Zissett, fine 5.00'
Henry Roberts, forfeit 5.00
A correspondent of The State tells Bub Hogg, fine 2.50
about the methods used by a Sumter Bob Hunter, fine 5.00
County farmer in combatting the boll Vamp Theatre, license 15.00
weevil. His letter which is worthy Home Furniture Co., taxes — 45.31
of being passed on to the farmers of Geo. Weathersbee, compound— 3.00
Barnwell County, is as follows: \ H. Antopolsky, compound 3.00
To the Editor of The State:
J. A. Creighton, Jr., compound.. 3.00
investment, and dedare that our Gov-, 1 a o • 1 j
ernment shall not be’ permitted to Co 14 *" growers in Sumter County,'compound 3.00
build, a generating dam at Boulder ' *t least practically all of them realize ^ ^ Stevenz, compound 3.00
Canyon. If it takes twenty years R has been hard sledding this year to * * ug an - coroP 0 ™* 1 3.00
well teach the public utilities that keep their heads above water, growing „ 'n COmpOUnd ~~~~~ ^
there ia something bigger than seven cotton because of excessive rains for * *°^ rt8on ’ CO “J OUnd J 1
billions of public utilities dollars, and * ton* Period and unusually heavy ^ ”• est \ compound 3.00
that is the Government of the United w e« viI infestation, this Utter greatly • com P° un f 3.
States” v l : favored by late raias. j J. M. Brodie, compound ..3.00
_ * . . . . I . ... .. . . IR. K. Arant, compound 3.00
ror»«riy It 71-^---;^
would nave opposed power -develop- ter part of the summer to visit the
ment by government Ust it "take bread arm of J. L. Gillls, of Rembert, whoie
from mouths of working men.” cotton at that time promised from
American labor is too intelligent for one and a half to two bales per acre,
that now. In China when'the British Curious to know after the havoc of
H. P. Compton, compound 3.00
Ed. Sanders, compound 3.00
N. 8* Gamble, compound 3.00
W. H. Vaughan, license _■ 10:00
. ... ... , _ ... . ... K. H. Eitner, license 10.00
built an electric road up a steep grade, the rain and the weevil what the out- . . „ „ ^
^ . , , . ... Augvsta Grocery Co., license 10.00
they had to promise not to haul any come was, I returned today and found
paaaengers, no freight. Chinese this same Cotton was turning out from
coolies, men sod women, wanted to 1,500 to 2,000 pounds seed cotton, a
carry the freight on their heads and case of “seeing is believing.”
bade*. , | A number of questions as to this
Some of our big companies fear achievements aa "What kind of cot-
national improvement as the Chinese ton is -this?” Coker’s Super Seven
do. They will get over it, and realize
that what helps the country helps al]
big «nd little interesta in the country.
At present private interests are the
biggest power in the country, and
prove it by holding back whatever
does not please them.
Kbb Tide.
The tide of tabor migration, that is
of common or unskilled indistrizl
labor from Europe to the United
States since the enactment of the
quota restriction law has not only
ceased, but actually has been reversed,
according to an analysis of immigra
tion trends made by the National in
dustrial conference Board' of New
1 and 2.” *“How many times did you
poison? "Four, because one was re
peated, having been, one application,
washed rff by rain.” “How much
fertilizer did you use per acre?” “Six
hundred of 8-3-8.” H
Noticing in adjacent fields, the road
separating, that the cotton was in
every way inferior to his, on inquiry
as to cause, the answer came Gist it
was the cultivation, the one field be
ing worked by a cultivator harrow so
constructed as to be used even when
the plant is small and tender, sweep
ing out an entire middle at one pas
sage. This harrow, so light one horre
chin pull it easily, is adjustable to the
Kirkland Dry Cleaning Co., lie. 25.00
Mrs. L. A. Graham, taxes 41.49
Rosa Rice, taxes 3.96
Dicie Duncan, taxes .... 3.78
Isiah Carter, license 5.00
A. M. Sanders, fine 2.50
Sol. Bradley, fine 2.50
Odell Hampton, fine 5.00
Brooks Bennett,* compound 3.00
W. G. Hill, compound 3.00
R. S. Dicks, compound 3.00
E. D. Peacock, compound 3.00
Eugene Singleton, compound .. 3.00
N. B. Gamble, taxes 20.00
Mrs. C. E. McGregor, taxes 1.80
E. E. Goodson, taxes 4.32
S. J. Halford, taxes ...... .... 12.00
Mrs. M. T. Cornell, taxes 7.00
There is.po limit to the quantities you may buy during this
Sale. A genuine Money Saving Sale. Every article is
Standard and Guaranteed. .
- What a Rexall One Cent Sale Js
It is a sale where you buy an item at the regular price, then an
other item of the same kind for one cent. As an illustration:
The standard price of Klenzo Dental Cream is 50c, you buy a
tube at this price and by paying I cent more, or 51 cents, you get
two tubes. Every article in this sale is a high class standard
piece of merchandise, just the same as is sold every day at the
regular price.
This sale was developed by the United Drug Co. as an adver
tising plan. Rather than spend large sums of money in other
ways to convince you of the merit of these goods, they are spend
ing it on this sale in permitting us to sell you a full size package
• of high standard merchandise for I cent,. It costs money to get
new customers, but the sacrifice in profit is justified, knowing
—the goods will pteasg-r
v
t
f
T
T
t
t
x
:
T
f
♦Is
R.
Barnwell
SAVE WITH SAFETY /
at Your Rexall Drug Store.
A. Deason Drug Co.
- - - South Carolina
B!
T IL,DER
TOTAL $1,396 58
DISBURSEMENTS.
- ,
W. H. Duncan, clerk, salary ._ $100.00
John C. Hogg, police, salary .. 75.00
middle, does not interfere with cotton ^ .
teeth ”* ^* Mahaffey, frt. on feed, i._ 2.56
large or small, with its many i „ • _
York. Whereas before the war,-our cleans the grass out But the two!®* 0, P 6 '**’*”*? -f
annual net gain of common labor, in- greatest things about it are reducing Pe *„ e *’ T 'l*" ,
eluding term laborers from Europe the labor to one-third and cultivating ' Jf^***’ ^ ^ eIk!, k 0 ^--
averaged about 260,000 for the period the plant without ,mjury. By 4Bia- Jo ” n ^* " 0 *** P°" ce salary 25.00
1919-24, the United States since 1924 method both middles receive attention Peep l eS * p<>lice ’ * sla p r *-j** 1
has bean, losing annually an average every .week without injury, but with Gt«. Peeples, Street hands 52 60
of abotf 20,000 mote of this group to positive help to the plant because the . * * * . ' T
European countries than we have re- roots are not disturbed,-the short teeth-,"" c ^ Ho **> P° lic *' 8 a ,a ry —
reived from them.* I of the harrow just crusting the
Balancing all immigration against ground, making a dust mulch.
FOR SALE:—Leonard refrigerator,
porcelain lined, 100-pound ice capaci
ty; also Star Detroit flve-«bumcr oil
stove with built-in oven.—M'. C. Mil
hous, Barnwell, S. C. 8-2.'utf.
FOR V SALE—Well rooted rose
bushes, 25 cents each.—Mrs. B. P.
Davies, Barnwell, S. C.
emigration, our annual net gain of
common an d farm labor from all
sources, including Europe, has aver,
aged about 25,000 a year for the past
Hops Off for Paris.
J. R. Harrison, rent 15.00
J. N. Anderson, agt., frt. 7.20
Geo. Peeples, police salary 16.00
Geo. Peeples, police salary 30.00
Geo. Peeples, street hands 28.00
Geo. Peeples, refund of Halford’s
i bond 2.50
John C. Hogg, police, salary __ 25.00
Geo. Peeples, police, salary 25.00
Geo. Peeples, street hands 28.00
Geo. Peeples, extra help st. hds..7.00
Geo. Peeples, cleaning and re-
1 repairing guard house _. 46.89
Bell Tel. Co., phone rent __ 3.59
Sc.
TOTAL $718.67
Cash on hand in bank __ 677.91
$1,396.58
This is Ruth Elder, Florida aviatrix,
who hopped off from Roosevelt Field,
N. Y., Tuesday afternoon for Paris in
her airplane, “The American Girl.”
She was accompanied by her pilot,
Grtrge Haldeman. If successful, she weevil,
sril] be the first woman to ffy across
Jeaaa. , Rembert.
, - t
This being true, is it wonderful that
development is fast, that squares soon
appear near the ground, the stalk
fruiting from the ground up, putting
on more fruit and larger bolls by con-
oonsiderable than cotton cultivated by
the old proce«s of cultivation by sweep
shovel and Dixie Boy, by which the
feed roots are cut off, turned up, ex
posed to the sun ? We wonder at the
crude methods of our farmers; our
children will wonder at us and how
we* managed to live.* __ '
Lest some one should hesitate to
accept the above, I will say I saw* the
same results on another farm where
this method of cultivation obtained.
Comlusion: What one sensible man
can do can be done by another. This
, Jtas been an excellent year to test
out this method. Our first trouble
was grass, which threatened to tri
umph with much damage to the crop.
Not so by this method, the grass was
cleaned out of the fields with no grass
to speak of right now. Easily under-
stood if we remember every middle is Flies cause more deaths than all
swept weekly. None of the feed roots wars. In the ‘United States, each
out or disturbed, the plant, unretard- year, 40,000 deaths. Flies must be
ed, grew off at once and naturally, killed. Health authorities advocate
fruited to the limit. Early planting the use of Fly-Tox. Fly-Tox is the
was stressed by Mr. Gillis, though 1 scientific insecticide developed at
saw young cotton, tremendous weed. Melon Institute of Industrial Re
producing three-fourths of -a bale per search by Rex Fellowship. Insist on
acre. No doubt by this method we can Fly-Tox. Fly-Tox is safe, stainless,
T. R Ellis
j. a Eiiis •»
ELLIS ENGINEERING CO.
Land Surveying ■ Specialty. < •
Lyndhurst, S. C
Advertise
The People-Sentinel.
Avoid Excess
Uric Acid!
To B« Well There Mtut Be Prop«$
Kidney Action.
A STIFF, achy feeling is a
common sign of sluggish
kidneys and excess uric acid.
One is apt to be tired and lan
guid: nervous and depressed;
suffer nagging backache, head
aches and dizziness. A common
warning of sluggish kidney ac-
* tion is scanty or burning accre
tions. Doan’s Fill*, by stim-
' ulating the activity of the kid
neys, assist them to eliminate
excess uric acid. If your kid
neys are acting sluggishly, use
Doan's. They ha’ve been rec
ommended since 1885. Are en-
dorseethe country over. A*k
. _ ya*ar rtmrghhnrf '
DOAN’S
Stimulant Diuretic to the Kidney*
Foatci-Mil burn C«.. Mlg. Cham.. Buiftlo.N. Y-
GENERAL
AUTO REPAIRING
ELECTRIC WORK
Day or Night
^ W. F. REYNOLDS
722 Ellis Street, Augusta, Ga.
compete with Texas in spit*, of the
H. C. BETHEA.
fragrant, sure. Simple instructions
cn each bottle (blue »abel) for killim;
ALL household insects. Fly-Tox is
the modern safeguard to health. •
•x-x-x-x-x-x-x-:~x**x*<*<-x*«x-:-
TREES and PL ANTS
• Let us furnish the trees and
plants for your lawn. We have
a complete line of evergreens,
roses and shrubs.
Write for Catalogue
THE C. C. DORN CO.
101 9th Street Phones 3061-635
AUGUSA, GA.
NOTICE OF DISCHARGE. .
Notice is hereby given that I will
file my final return with the For. J.j
K. Snelling, Judge of Probate for
Barnwell County, as Guardian of
Herman Kammer upon Saturday, the
15th day of October next after publi
cation, and petition the Court for an
Order of Discharge and Letters Dis-
misaory
Mathilda E. Lange,
* Guardian otf Herman Kammer.
Sept 22* 1927. 9-22-41.
Church Benefit Sale
ON FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14TH
*
•
We will give 5 per tent of the cash sales on
that 4ay to the Organ Fund of the Barnwell
Baptist Church. We will offer on that day
at popular prices a complete line of Fancy
and Staple Groceries, Fresh Meats, Fresh
Fish anchan extra good variety of Fresh
Vegetables.
The people of Barnwell and neighboring
community are urged to cooperate by laying
in a supply °f groceries, etc., on that day.
The mapagement announces that sales of
a similar nature will be given to the -other
churches of Barnwell on future dates. '
Reed Grocery Co.
: Phone 102 ; Barnwell, S. C.
c
-- ir-.
in