The Barnwell people-sentinel. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1925-current, May 16, 1929, Image 5
THURSDAY, MAY MTH, 1»M
THB BABHWBLL PBOrU-SBNTINBU BABNWBX. BOOTH CABOUXA
4
OHere and ^Hereabouts
Thone Us the Names of Tow Visitors, or Other Items of Local
Interest for This Column.
Mrs. Maude Holmes visited rela
tives in Columbia this week.
Mr. and Mrs, R. S. Dicks spent
Saturday and Sunday in Columbia.
X^^Mr. and Mrs. Gilmore S. Harley,
announce the birth of a son Monday
evening.
Mrs. J. H. E. Milhous is the guest
of her son, Dr. W. C. Milhous, and
Mrs. Milhous.
Mrs. R. P. Searson and Mrs. Jasper
Johns, of Allendale, were ' visitors
here Tuesday.
Perry B. Bush and R. R. Moore
have returned from a business trip to
Brunswick, Ga.
Mr. and Mrs. Boncil Dyches were
the guests of Mrs. G. W. Durden, of
Augusta, Surjday.
Marion Miller, of Columbia, spent
Sunday with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. F. H. Miller.
Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Attaway and G.
M. Buist motored to Aiken Tuesday,
where they visited friends.
Mrs. Hubert M. Shannon amd chil
dren, of Southport, N. C., are visiting
her sister, Mrs. Boncil Dyches.
Mrs. E. E. Lane and daughter, Miss
LilKan Lane, of Sylvania, Ga., spent
Sunday here with Mrs. Olaree Cail.
Mrs. C. F. Molair and Mrs. W. L.
Molair visited Miss Carrie A. Cave at
the Columbia Hospital on Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Cantey, of
Sumter, %peen* Sunday in Barnwell
with Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Brown, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. L. P. Wilson, of Ocala,
FT*., spent the week-end in Barn
well with the latter's parents, Col.
and Mrs. N. G. W. Walker.
Dr. E. A. Alderman, of Richmond,
Va., spent the week-end in Barnwell
with his sister, Mrs. Eugene Easter
ling, while en route to Atlanta. /
Capt. Henry B. Cava, of Kline, was
the guest of friends here Monday.
Mr. Cave was en route to Dunbarton,
where he will spend several days with
his nephew, Lee All.
Mr. and Mrs. Mallory Cave, of
Charlotte, N. C., were the week-end
guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Molair.
Miss Grace Hogg, who holds a re
sponsible position at Brunson, spent
the week-end in Barnwell with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. P. Hogg.
A. Seigal, formerly of Barnwell,
but more recently of Charleston, is
now located in Allendale. Attention ig
called to his advertisement in this is
sue of The People-Sentinel.
Col. and Mrs. B. J. Stevens and
children, of Thomson, Ga., spent Sun
day with P. W. Stevens and family.
Mrs. J. Julien Bush, Mrs. Edgar A*
Brown, Mrs. Charlie Brown, Sr., and
Mrs. Thos. M. Boulware, spent Mon
day in Augusta.'
Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Killingsworth
and son, of Dunbarton, spent Sunday
here with Mr. and Mrs. B. L. Easter
ling.
Mrs. H .Grady Davis, student at
Chicora College, Columbia, was the
week-end guest of her sister, Mrs. E.
E. Goodson.
The many friends of Miss Carrie
A. Cave will learn with pleasure that
she is convalescing at the Columbia
hospital, following an operation Sat
urday morning.
Mr. and Mrs. T. M. Boulware, Sr.,
of Bainbridge, Ga., are the guests of
their son, Thos.' M. Boulware, Esq.,
and Mrs. Boulware.
Mrs. George Batten and daughter,
Miss Emeline Batten, who spent the
spring months in Barinwell, left Thurs
day afternoon for New York City.
They have many friends in Barnwell
who sincerely hope that they will re
turn to this city again next year.
Archdeacon Joseph Burton left*
Tuesday morning for Sumter to at-1
tend the 139th annual convention of
the Episcopal Diocete of South Caro
lina.
Ralph Smith, formerly of Charlotte,
N. C., spent the week-end in Bern-
well with relatives while en) route to
Atlanta, to which city he has been
transferred by the General Motors
Corporation'.
Announcement is made that Mrs.
Ira Fales will present Miss Betty
Banks, pianist, airtf Miss Derry Pat
terson in a recital at the Barnwell
High School auditorium Friday even
ing, May 17th, 8:30 o’clock.
Shine or Rain
You are fortunate to be bring
in Barnwell, you may have
beet quality whole sweet milk or
rich cream at prices lower than
in other nearby larger cities.
See our deliveryman every day-
on the sheets of Barnwell, rain
or shine, or write
APPLEDALE DAIRY
BaMofk — Lyndhurst
TOMATO PLANTS
Mrs*. E. L. Patterson and daugh
ters, of Spartanburg, spent the week
end in Barnwell with relatives. Dr.
Patterson’s friends will be interested
to learn that he has accepted a posi
tion in a government hospital in
Texas, where he is now located. He
will be jointed at an early date by his
family.
The Woman* Bible Class of the
Barnwell Methodist Church will serve
a chicken supper at the church on
FViday evening, May 17th, beginning
at 6:30 o’clock, the proceeds of which
will be for the benefit of the organ
fund. The public is cordially invited.
Several good varieties
Cheap for Cash
E. E. GOODSON,
Barnwell, S. C.
daehe
Relieved without
“doting.” Rub on
visas
Ovi R t\ Mm ion Japs Us£D Vf aply
- TRY A BUSINESS BUILDER
FOR SATISFACTORY RESULTS.
Mrs, Angus Patterson^
BEAUTY SHOPPE
EUGENE PERMANENT
WAVES.
WATER AND FINGER WAVES
MARCEL WAVES.
Fadala, Scalp Treatments,
Shampoos and Manicures
Phone 117 — Barnwell, 8. C
“A* Industry Prosper*--So Prosper Tkt People"
Prosperity Through Harmony
RN, war-scarred and broken by a harsh reconstruction, which had left even deeper wounds than the years of battle,
South Carolina in the SO’s faced a sorry plight. „ /
Her agriculture was prostrate, her people, knowing few other occupations, learned the meaning of a poverty such as
we today can hardly comprehend. Pride and courage only carried them through the dreary years.
t / /
But amid the hopeless were some who dared to dream of a new and happier states of harnessed rivers turning wheels
in humming factories; of men and women released from the bonds of poverty, ai^d made comfortable in the employment which
the realization of their dreams would bring.
Thus in the early SO’s the modern textile industry of South Carolina was bom. Dreamers, with little besides their
dreams, contrived somehow to build factories; and farmers, worn with long struggles against unequaled odds, gladly left their
plows to man the looms.
Shoulder to shoulder they worked, the dreamers and the farmers. What matter if the pay was small at first, the
profits meager. Together they were laying the foundations for an industry destined to become great.
* * * / /
Now, despite many difficulties that have beset its rise, that industry directly provides support for one-fifth the
white population of South Carolina, and indirectly provides for many more of her people.
, - . . > ' / /
2 ' ^ ‘ \
* Upward has been the course, and upward the rewards of the operatives. Efforts to increase production by introducing
improved machinery and methods have, with rare exceptions, received the willing support of operatives, because they under
stood that their own opportunities would improve as better management helped themio increase their productive capacity. Turn
over of operatives has been so low as to excite the wonder of other parts of the country. Loyalty of officials to operatives, and
of operatives to officials, has been the strongest force in the industry, /
T
Today, South Carolina’s textile industry is great because of the friendly relations that have existed from the begin
ning between those who were working to build it. As South Carolinians, all cherishing the same proud traditions and hopes,
they solved their problems in a spirit of mutual confidence, and of mutual understanding.
Tomorrow, South Carolina’s greatest industry will be greater still because of those friendly relations.
* Xj,
* '
Cotton Manufacturers’association
<af south Carolina