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PAGE TWO. ' T '4r THE BARNWELL PEOPLE-8ENTINEU BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA THURSDAY. JUNE 7TH, 1928- $1500 to Lend' ON HIGH GRADEtFIRST CLASS SECURITY. V. S. OWENS, Altomey Barnwell, S. C. WEEK-END TICKETS At very low round trip fares now on sale to mountain and t seashore summer resorts. Travel by Train Com f ort able— Econo m ica 1—Sa fie Southern Ry. System Winthrop College SCHOLARSHIP AND ENTRANCE EXAMINATION The examination for the award of vacant scholarships in Winthrop Col lege and for admission of new students will he held at every County Court house jin the State on Friday, July 6, and Saturday, July 7, at 9 a. m. This examination will bf held whether there are vacant scholarships or pot, as va cancies may occur after the examina tion. Applicants must not be less than sixteen years of age. When* scholar ships are vacant after July 6, they will be awarded to those making the high est average at this examination, pro viding they meet the conditions gov erning the award. All who wish schol arships should attend the examination whether there are vacancies reported or not. Applicants for Scholarships should write to President Johnson be fore the examination for Scholarship blanks. Scholarships are worth $100 and free tuition. For further information, and catalogue, address President I). B. Johnson, Rock Hill, South Carolina. CLEMSON COLLEGE Scholarship Examinations Competitive examinations for the awaid of vacant scholarships in Clem- son College will be held on Friday, July 13th, 1928, beginning at 9 A. M., by each County Superintendent of Ed ucation. These scholarships will be open to young men sixteen years of age or over, who desire to pursue courses in Agriculture and Textiles. Scholarships are awaided by the State Board of Education on the recommen dation of the State Board of Public Welfare.' Persons interested should write the Registrar for information and appli cation blanks befoic the time of the examinations. Successful applicants must meet fully the requirements for admission. Each scholarship is worth $100.00 and free tuition, which is $40.00, addi tional. Membership in the Reserve Of ficers’ Training Corps—R. O. T. C.—is of financial assistance. These examinations may also be used as credit toward admission into college. For further information write— THE REGISTRAR. Clemson College, S. C. Social and Personal News from Williston Willistcn, June 2.—Miss Mattie Lee Bennett has returned from a visit to her sisteTV Mrs. Norman Snelling, nr Atlanta. Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Bolen, of Black- ville, were visitors in Williston dur ing ccmmencement. / Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Hiers spent -Sunday with Mrs. h. D. Hiers, of Denmark. ” Mrs. William Melvin and little daughters, Lillian and Bettie, return ed Saturday from a visit to her sis ter in pinpinnati. Mi^s Naomi Claymon spent the^ weekend with Mrs. W. R .Kennedy and left Tuesday for Columbia, where she will visit her aunt. - Mrs. B. R. Lewis, Mrs. Annie AVeathersbee, of North Augusta, and Mrs. Grayton Bamberg, of Bamberg, were visitors of Mrs. G. M. Toole dur- ing commencement. ~ v -Misses Dorothy, and Anna Rosa Smith, Jr., their guest, Miss, Edith Gait, of San Diego, Cal., and Miss Louise Prothro, motored to Charles ton Wednesday. Miss Gait \s t en route to New York, from where she sails for England to spend the summer. Richard Odiorne is at home from '0 Presbyterian College, Clinton. Miss Nancy Harley is at home af ter attending school in Aiken. E. O. Garner, of Lockhart, was a visitor here for the week-end. * Miss Ruby Courtney has returned from Andews, N. C., where she taught this year. Mis. J. M. Hickson, of Chicago, was the guest last week of M*»s. G. W. M Whitaker. Miss Christine Faust visited Mrs. Anna Weathersbee last week. Misses Catherine and Vivian Haii^ of Barnwell, were guests last week of Miss Cecil Hair. H. J. -Grouch attended Furma university commencement last we< and while there spoke at the alumn association banquet of which he is vice-president. —_, Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Whitaker, Lander Whitaker, Mrs. A. C. Schum- pert r Miss Marie Schurppert, John Walker Schumpert, of Newberry, and Mr. and Mis. Paul Whitaker, of Bam berg, were visitors Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Whitaker. A National Single Stalk Cotton Show which will award approximately Bracey, of Augusta, visited their $10,000 In prizes was the basis of an announcement recently made over grandmother, Mrs. J. C. Hair, during WSB, the Atlanta Journal Radio Station by Louis E. Brackt^n, Secretary commencement, of the Sears Roebuck Agricultural Foundation at Atlanta. In the belief that successful cotton production Is built around the pro- ; R. M. Matthews, of Hendersonville, was the guest last week of Mr. And Mrs. V. W. Too)e. | Mr. and Mrs. Paul Garber and Sam Garter, cf Batesburg, were among the7out-of-town visitors for com mencement. While here they were the guests of Mr. nd Mrs. A. N. Gar- br. * Miss Mary HarVey Ntwsom is at home after a successful season , as teacher in th? Swansea high school. | Miss Eva Toole, of Augusta, visited relatives here during commencement. | Rev. and Mrs. W. R. ;Davts.,L. H. duclng ability of the single stalk the Agricultural Foundation In co-op0ra r tlon with the Soil Improvement Committee of t‘he National Fertilizer Asso ciation will award twenty-eight prizes in the Southeastern territory includ ing the states of Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia and Alabama. The judges of tlie show, who will be outstanding cotton authori ties from the Southeast, will award to the grower of the best single stalk of cotton in the territory named a cash prize of $r>00. To the grower of the second best stalk $250, third best $200, fourth $150, and numerous oilier prizes for the runners up seal lug down to $5.00 for the last prize. In the possible event of a tie, duplicate awards will be made. The contest is open to every cotton grower, landlord or tenant, man, woman or child, in the ter ritory named. There Is only one condition fo the contest. The entry must be selected from a field containing not less than one acre. The cotton when matured will be sent to the Agricultural Foundation at Atlanta and will he Judged during the Southeastern Fair where it will be on exhibition during the judging period. Another feature of the show will he the awarding of expense paid edu- ’ Fcland and Miss Mary Harvey New’- eatlonal trips to the county agents and Smith Hughes Vocational Agricul ture teachers whose efforts in the county are outstanding. To the four county ugents In the territory named through whose efforts are sent in the largest and best number of entries there will he granted all-expense edu cational trips anywhere invthe United States. Duplicate educational trips will b^ awarded to the Smith Hughes teachers who give evidence of the best work In community standardization of varieties by encouraging the growth 7 Macon, Ga. of one or two varieties best adapted to the soil, climate and market condi- i Mrs. E. G. Fletcher and children tions of their respective communities. returned Sunday to their home in Similar shows, offering identical prizes, will he held about the same time in Dallas representing the Southwest and Memphis representing the Mid- South. The prize winning stalks in all three districts will be taken to Mem phis during the Trl State Fair at which time the best stalk in the entire South will be awarded the capital prize of $1,000. This prize will-be in addition to the regional prize. “The interest that has been displayed since the radio announcement,” declared Mr. Bruckeen, “is very encouraging. We are going to broadcast cotton authorities and suggestions for entrants nil during the growing sea- ion. From the number of letters from farmers who desirs to enroll, the show Is meeting with no little enthusiasm in The field.” HALL & COLE, Inc: ; , 94-102 Faneuil Hall Market BOSTON, MASS. Commission Merchants and Distributors of ASPARAGUS. One of the Oldest Commission Houses in the Trade. Send for Shipping Stamp. som attended commencement exer cises Monday and Tuesday at Coker C ; ci< ge. Miss Elizabeth v Stalling« 4 has re turned from Wesleyan College, at Spartanburg.' Mrs. W. C. Smith, Sr., Mrs. W. C. MOTORISTS ARGUE FOR ADDfOONAL “ SAFETY MEASURES ON HIGHWAYS Old London Building Has Many Memories • One of London’s ancient institutions is the Watermen’s and Lightermens company of the River Thainek. It oe cupies a building, built in 1780, in St. Mary-at-Hill. near 'Billingsgate Convince Officials of^Ferils on Many Crowded Roads- Pr event ion of Dust an Important Matter t6 Be Considered. fish m a rket. - v . — : v - The interior ot the hall has scarce )y changed since 1780 and it contains many interesting relics; among which is the Bachelors’ howl, an ornate sil ver cup hearing the date 1059. The custom was for a widow selected h\ the company to wait in the passage of the court, and each young water man taking up his freedom she would offer a draught of ale from the cui and receive a shilling from him. ,In Queen Elizabeth’s reign boatmen petitioned against the- building ot playhouses in the city. In their opin ion 'Bankside was the correct place, for playgoers needed a boat to get them there. That they feared compe tition is evident, for in 1034 they pc* titioned against hackney coaches amt se’dun chairs. The man who has for many years suc cessfully treated Pellagra by mail. No genuine Rountree Pellagra Treatment with- tmt label bears puiurt and signature—Caution tyemr friends. Have You Found Complete Relief? Have you any of the following lymptotm? Nervousness, Stomach Trouble, Brown, Rougher Irritated Skin,Lossof Weighty' Weak ness, Peculiar Swimming of the Head, Burning Sensations, Constipa tion, Diarrhoea, Mucousin the Throat, Crazy Feelings or Aching Bones. Don’t Waste your money and risk delay by trying substitutes. Put your case in the hands of a Physician who has been a proven success for many years as a Pellagra Specialist. ' READ WHAT OTHERS SAY: Mrs. R. R. Robinson, Stiglcr, Okla.. writes! •*1 am glad to tell you wliat your wonderful Pellagra treatment has done for me. I feeiJike • new woman.” Mrs. W. S. Hays, Eagleton, Ark^. writes: “t look Dr. Rountree s treatment for Pellagra in 192& I feel better than 1 have for 15 years.** WRITE TODAY! Rountree Laboratories, Austin, Tens. For FREE Diacnosu, Ques- fieaaaire and Blue Book, "The Story of Pellagra”, also for hundreds of additional Teatimonialk ADVERTISE IN The People- Sentinel. ■ a In South ('aro- lina several new circuits will be. added by the close of 1928 re presenting OOP miles of new circuit. This will ffrt-e this - state IT .000 miles of circuits and 2,- 500 miles of pole line. MORE SERVICE to Distant Points T HE work of extending and improving long div tance telephone service in the Southeastern States will continue this year. The program calls for an expenditure of more than $4,000,O^Xj. Present long distance facilities in this section will be aug mented by the construction of 11,385 miles of new circuit, including 134 new direct circuits. Many long distance users are expressing surprise at the speed with which toll calls are completed. New operating methods, now in effect throughout the territory, make it possible to establish long dis tance connection at an averege time ot 2.7 minutes. Incidentally, the quality of voice transmission is $lso perfect in 97 per cent ot all toll calls. These new circuits and improvements have been planned to care tor the increasing volume of lomg distance business and to provide facilities lor high speed service to additional points. SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE AND _ TELEGRAPH COMPANY l ■ ' {Incorporated) i . x. m t-- * I* r . r gas mileage It may surprise motorists The White Painted Girard'Raft* Help to Make Curves Safe for the Motorist. D ESPITE the increase In the use of white painted guard rails, whitewashed traffic indicators of one sort or another and more elab orate danger signals, automobile acci dents are steadily growing more nu merous, automobBe associations point out in reviewing the summer’s casual ties. The next great important step to re duce the number of accidents will be the elimination of dust, in the opinion of those associations. Dust, in spite of the greater mileage of concrete rd^ds, is causing many ac cidents. a condition due tn part to the constantly growing highway conges- tlon. —7 High winds and passing cars raise dust clouds that have been compared with the smoke screens of naval de stroyers. Through that screen the average motorist must guess his way and trust to luck that no one is di rectly In his path, the automobilists assert. _ In some sections of the country, where motorists have been able to con vince officials of the perils in dust- covered highways, the authorities are applying chemicals to the road sur face, particularly calcium chloride, a moisture-absorbing material that fays the dust. The prevention of dust is unquestionabljuu large factor in any safety first campaign. Mrs. Charles Read Banks, of Plain- that the remedy has worked so well field, N. J., advocates that men do among our feminine population! kn : tting as a means of keeping out of ♦ t trouble. Well, it doesn’t teem to us ADVERTISE in The PeSple-Sentinel. and mechanics who know most about oil to read this proof of how a different 03 / , 4 “STANDARD MOTOR OIL t*Standard” Greases. Transmission Oil and ■ - Gear Compound are made withfhe same care su u Standard** motor fuels and motor oils. \ 91 ACTUALLY INCREASES GASOLINE MILEAGE Tests were made by a motor car manufacturer by driving cars fof two thousand miles cross country, comparing “Standard” Motor Oil with other well-known brands. The same gasoline was used in all cars. The use of “Standard” Motor OH showed increases of from 7 to 11% in the number of miles per gallon of gasoline. This is because “Standard” Motor Oil forms the best seal between piston and cylinder wall, thus in suring a more perfect combustion and a more powerful piston stroke. More power means more miles per gallon of gasoline. * ©