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— ■ ^ * s *•*—.....' • ' / ' - . * \ THURSDAT, JUNE 2«TH, 1»28. . « Furnished Houses for Rent Unfurnished CONSULT Barnwell Brokerage & Realty Company Also / Houses -- City Property For Sale , Lots Local and Personal News of Blackville OHere and Iffereabouts . «■ * ^ ’Phone Us the Names of Your Visitors, or Other Items of Local — Interest for This Column. ... Miss Ethel Beck, of Williston is the guest of friends here this week. Mr. and Mrs. K. S. Dicks and chil dren spent Sunday with relatives in CorJova. Miss Rivie Webb, of Williston* was the guest of relatives and friends in Barnwell last week. Beverly Simms, of Washington, D. C., is the guest of his parents, Judge and Mrs. C. C. Simms. L. G: Richardson has returned from * . a visit to his daughter Mrs. A. C. Matthews, in Newberry. Mrs. W. W. Carter and children leave tnis week for a visit to rela tives in Philadelphia, Pa. Jas. £<> r nell, of Waynesboro, Ga., was the guest of his sister-in-law r , Mrs. Marie T. Cornell, Monday. Mrs. S. B. Moseley entertained the Duplicate Bridge Club Tuesday af ternoon. Mml-JGL-JiL Greene has returned home after a delightful visit to her sister, Mrs. George GJaspy, ht Bur lington, N. C. \ Ben Davies, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. B. P. Davies, i s spending some time at Camp Capers, Lake Kanuga, near Hendersonville, N. C. Mrs. Louise Porter Bauer and little daughter, Jo-Ann, left Saturday for a visit to Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Wid- man in Asheville, N. C. Mr. and Mrs. Louis King, of Beau fort, were guests of friends in the city Sunday. Mrs. King is pleasantly remembered here as Miss Elma Cave. M rs. Leona Kneece and MVs. Annie Kearse, of Columbia, were the guests of Mrs. J. S. Still last week. Ralph Smith and Mr. Wells, of Char lotte, N. C.* spent the week-end here ■with Mr. and Mrs. S. B. Moseley. Misses BeBee and Mary Pa'tterson have returned to Barnwell after spending a couple of weeks in Atlanta. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Mirmow, of Orangeburg, w’ere the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Solomon Blatt Friday even ing. The Rev. and Mrs. Chambers, of New York, are the guests of Arch deacon and Mrs. Joseph Burton this week. * Mrs. Leona Kneece and Mrs. Annie Kearse, of Columbia, and Mrs. J. S. Still, of Barnwell, visited relatives in Allendale last week. The many friends of Judge C. C. Simms will be glad to know that he has returned home after spending several weeks in a Columbia hospital. Little Miss Dorothy Richardson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Terie Rich ardson, is spending" some time at Camp Hi-Lo, near Hendersonville, N. C. ' • " , Mrs. Lena Davies arrived in Barn well Thursday afternoon from Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Ga., to spend some time with Mr. and'Mrs. B. P. Davies. v Col. J. E. Harley left Saturday for Houston, Texas, to attend the Demo cratic National Convention as a dele gate from the Second Congressional District. Mrs. T. D. Fogleman and daughter, Miss Sarah Fogleman, of* Burlington, N. C., and W. N. Jefferies, of Greens- horo, N. C./ Who were the guests last week of Mr. and Mrs. B. P. Davies, left Saturday morning for a visit to relatives and friends in Greenville be fore returning to their homes. Attorneys Edgar A. Brown and J. Julien Bush are in Saluda this week attending Court as counsel for the defense in the case of The State vs. John Henry Baker, charged with the murder of Miss Sarah Clark, his schoolteacher sweetheart. wB! USINGS TILDE R APARTMENT FOR RENT:—Fur nished or unfurnished. Apply to Mfs. Marie T. Cornell, Bafnwell, S. C. Itc. FOR SALE:—Boy’s bicycle in ex cellent running order. For further ink- formation see Billi§ Davies, Barnwell. FOR RENT:—Four-room cottage on Washington Street; large lot. Ap ply to B. P. Davies at The People- Sentinel off ice. Roberts-McLean. r 1 : The following announcement has been received in Barnwell: “Miss Kate Woodward announces the marriage of her niece, Mary Cath erine Roberts, to Mr. Jack Harold Mc Lean, on Saturday, the twenty-third of June, one thousand nine hundred and twenty-eight, Asheville, North Carolina. “At Home, Belmont Apartments, Asheville, N. *C.” Mrs. McLean is very pleasantly re membered here, where she was born an,d spent the early years of her girl hood. She is an attractive and ac complished young woman and Mr. Mc Lean is to be congratulated on win ning the heart and hand of such a charming helpmate. Trwmiporlmtijm sag You Get Definite, Known Value When you buy an “Q.K/d” reconditioned used car from us, you can be certain that all such vital units as motor, body, electrical equipment and brakes have been checked and tested—and that all necessary repairs have been made. It is a car good for thou* sands of miles of satisfactory service. USED CARS inlh an 'OK that counts WILLISTON JUMPER CHEVROLET COMPANY, I«t, WILLISTON, S. C JUMPER CHEVROLET CO. INC. SPRINGFIELD, S. C. QUA L I T Y AT LOW COS T Blackville, June 23.—Mr. and Mrs. Farrell O’Gorman entertained on Thursday evening with a lovely bridge party, five tables of friends being present. High score prize for the men was won by L. B. Creech and for the ladies by Mrs. V. G. Door, of Augusta. An iced course was served. Mrs. Herman Brown was hostess to tHfe Regular Bridge club on Thursday afternoon at 5 o’clock. Mrs. C. H. Siebenhausen ,of Dallas, Texas, won high score prize. Guest prizes were given to Miss Leah Brown, of Bruns wick, Ga., and to Mrs. Ed. Atkinson, of Charleston. ^ Mrs. Pat Coggins and Miss Mable Mimms were joint hostesses to the Joseph Koger Chapter, D. A. R., on Tuesday afternoon, at their home in Healing Springs. An interesting pro gram was given and the guests- were then invited into the dining room where an elaborate dinner was served. Those enjoying the delightful hospi tality were Mesdames H. D. Still, L. C. Still, E. H. Weissinger, S. Compton, T. 0. Boland, J.V. Matthews, J. S. Nevils and Misses Eva Blume and Lela Walker. Mrs. H. H. Crum was hostess to the Green Parrots or. Thursday after noon at 5 o’clock “at her home in Pas- cellas street. Touring was played and Mrs. G. K. Fickling was winner of pretty shade pulls for having the high est score. Ten guests were present. Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Murray and children, Estelje, Galphin and Walker, cf Beech Island, were visitors at the home of Mrs. P. M Halford Sunday. Mrs. Ed Atkinson and little son, of Charleston, are the guests of Mrs. Somers Pringle. Miss Leah Brown, of Brunswtck.Ga.. is visiting Mrs. Herman Brown. Mrs.„W. H. Walker and daughter, Miss Elder W T alker, of Beech Island, were the guests of the former’s sister, Mrs. O. T. Still on last Sunday. S. H. Rush-has returned from Col umbia where he has been for the past two weeks under special treatment for. nervousness. Mesdames S.iG. Lowe ,T. L. Wragg, Miss Beryl Chisolm and Samuel Lowe, Jr., motored to Augusta Thursday af ternoon. Mr. and Mrs. W. 0. Brodie and children, of Orangeburg, spent Fathers Day with the latter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Halford. Mrs. W. C. Buist has returned from Chester where she spent some time with her mother. Mrs. Buist has re cently had her tonsils and adenoids re moved in the hospital at Charlotte and because of her weakened condition was compelled to prolong her visit in Chester. with t few d«yf of hot, dry weftther, or ftfter an application of calcium ar senate dust. The grower who knows the condition of his field may perhaps not' dust at all and know that he is safe, while his less careful neighbor may dust when it isn’t needed, may then fail to dust when it is needed, and end the season with a profitless dusting expense and with a crop badly hurt by weevil also.^ TELLS HOW TO DETERMINE WHEN TO BEGIN .DUSTING . TO CONTROL BOLL WEEVIL Clemson Collge, June 25.—After the season of early or presquare poison ing, it is generally agreed, say the entomologists, that standard dust poisoning is the main reliance in fight ing the boll weevil. To* determine when to begin dusting it is safest to determine the “dusting point” of 10 percent infestation for each large field separately. In Extension Circular 95, Controll ing the Boll Weevil, Prof. Franklin Sherman, entomologist, gives a simple method, briefly as follows: With paper ar.d pencil go to four (or five) typical, well-separated points in the field, and at each point examine all fair-sized squares on plant after plant until 100 squares have been examined. Those which do not show weevil puncture leave on - the plants, but pick and put in pocket the ones which do show weevil puncture When you have thus examined 100 squares which you picked; if 7, it in dictates that 7 percent are infested at that point in the field. Put the figure on your paper. Go to the second point in the same field and repeat; perhaps here the percent will he 5. Write it down. Same at third point. At the fourth point it may be 6 percent. Com bining these findings for the four points in the field we have 7 plus 5 plus 10 plus 6, equals 28; divide 28 by 4 to get average 7 percent infestation for the field,—not yet quite to the point where dusting is necessary. As long as infestation is far be low 10 percent one may feel safe for the present; at 10 percent if will prob ably pay to dust. If one part, end or side of a field repeatedly shows higher , infestation than the rest of the field, that part may profitably be dusted when it goes above 10 percent, and af the same time save money by not dusting the remainder of' the field until it also shall reach about 10 percent. One may easily become interested in thus watdhJng the progress of in festation—how it may rise quickly with a brief rainy spell,*and subside Mrs. Angus Patterson’s BEAUTY SHOPPE PERMANENT WAVES, MARCEL WAVES, FINGER WAVES, WATER WAVES, SHAMPOOING, MANICURING, Everything for Beauty’s Aid. Phone 117 — Barnwell, S. C. x~x~x-x-x~x~x~x~x*«~x*<~x~x* You Are Invited To spend July 4th at Wilmington, N. C., or one of her wonderful beaches. Round trip tickets via the Atlantic Coast Line good on any train going July 3rd, or morning train July 4th, and return* ing before midnight July 8th. BARNWELL, S.C., to WILMINGTON and RETURN $6.00 J. E. MAHAFFEY, Ticket Agent Phone 5 ., • " ■ ■ Barnwell, S. C. University. of South Carolina. Columbia, S. C. DR. D. M. DOUGLAS, President Scholarship and Entrance Examinations. -Examinations for award of vacant scholarships in the University and for entrance will be held at the County Court House Friday, July 13, 1928, at 9 a. m. Applicants must be 16 years of age . Scholarships are vacant in the fol lowing counties: Abbeville, Aiken, Beaufort, Berkeley, Charleston,^ Col leton, Darlington, Georgetown, Green wood , Jasper, Marion, Newberry, Orangeburg, Richland and Spartan burg. Applicants for scholarships should write to Committee on Normal Schol arships by July 10th. Scholarships worth $100 plus tuitionl and term fees. Next session will open September 19, 1928. Summer School. June 19 to July 26, 1928._ Faculty cf 50, offering more than 100 courses for teachers, superintend ents and principals. Many graduate courses. Degrees conferred at end of summer term. Full informatiom. upon application to Director of Summer School. >* WEEK-END TICKETS At very low round trip fares now on sale to mountain and ^ - seashore summer resorts. Travel by Train Comfortable—Economical—Safe Southern Ry. System Vacation Time TRY THE COOL PLACES in the ; Southern Appalachian Mountains of Western North Carolina Eastern Tennessee and North Georgia “The Land of the .Sky” Jersey Seashore Resorts Old Point Comfort (Including New Chamberlin-Vanderbilt Hotel) vVirginia Beach - (Including New Hotel Cavalier) Breaches at Ocean View (Norfolk) Charleston, Savannah, Brunswick and Jacksonville Mountain and Lake Region of New England Resorts on the Great Lakes Die Black Mountains of South Dakota Pacific Northwest Colorado California Resorts . National Parks Lake Region of Canada _ . . Canadian Northwest 7 _L_ REDUCED FARES to AH Summer Tourist Resorts Tickets on Sale Daily Beginning May 15th, Good Until October 31 Write for List of Summer Retort Hotels and Boarding Houses; also Boys’ Camps and Girls’ Camps. • Consult Ticket Agents Southern Railway System 9 I ■;‘*X»%K~X*<K~XK*%KKKKK~X~X~X~X-X~XK~X*<K-XK~X~X~XK***XK-<~X^X~X~X~> •# ' I , • • - . • 4 ’ / Used in the Finest Homes, Hotels and Ships—Marvelous Comfort! s When you see the Nachman Spring-Filled “Comfort First” Label on a mattress, you know you are getting the finest inner-spring construction made—a mattress that gives years of perfect service. The patented anchoring holds each spring permanently upright. Guaranteed not to tip, sag, mesh or develop noise. Made for people who Hair Upholstered $60 to $100. (Nachman Licensee) Ask About Our “E-Z” Payment Plan, R. D. REID ■Ifct -% Barnwell Vamville