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I on hit ften and hit hair u».ypdfy of It U triaoMd tad hit tytt bloodshot tad hit britches top rest'd tad hit shoot untied, be*! an insUllment buyer. M, f. DAVIES, Editor tad Pmyrlttor. Eittrtri at the poet office at BarnwtD 8. C, at tecond-dats matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATBS: 9tet Tear ...... ItM Rtz Montha SO Three Months ,60 (Strictly la Adraact.) If he talks louder than the crowd and tells how he beat Wall Street last (Selah.) Heada or Talla. I know noth inf at all about stocks and the atock market. When Spilt Milk* sella at 76 today and 84 tomor row becauae call money was reduced fall, and how ( he protected himself fro™ 6 per cent, to 4 per cent., I con against any losses in 19 and 20 and eimple ignorance about financial what caused the deflation, he’s a liar, matters. sss THURSDAY, JUNE 6TH, I960. Well, at least there’s no mistaking the views of Claud M. Aman, candi date for Congress, on the prohibition question. Mr. Aman refuses to “pussy-foot” on this question and ad vocates repealing or modifying the “noble experiment.” p,-. / The News and Courier has made a Valiant though apparently fruitless ef fort to tie the candidacy of W. W. Smoak, of Walterboro, to the prohi bition faction of South Carolina, if indeed there be such a faction. The prohibitionists, however, refuse to be tied to the WaKerboro candidate and claim that should he be defeated it Vrfll not prove that Sooth Carolina is “wet.” We are inclined to take this view, as many prohibitionists in this neck of the woods will vote for candi- fdates other than Mr. Smoak. The Preee Association. lifer- fg'*: By Gee McGee. Who’s Who and How. If he has a straw stuck in his louth and is cussing the speculator, he's a farmer. If be is bareheaded and his shirt -tail is hanging out in three places and Ilia socks are supporterless, hell a lisard. If he walks down the street with a smile on his face and his pocket chocked full of papers, he’s an install- If he recommends himself highly to the people and talks 'about the down-trodden laboring class Sand shakes hands venomously with every person he meets and raves about rich folks getting richer and poor folka get ting poorer, he’s a politician. If he ig seen about town only at night and complains about the high cost of fruit jars and whispers a great deal to Dick, Tom and Harry, and pays cash rather than give checks and de mands the same from others, he’g a bootlegger. But if she lounges around the house all morning in a kimono with her head wrapped up in a towel and lets the kids get off to school without being properly prepared both mentally and physically, she’g a mighty sorry wife and mother and housekeeper—and the old man is hen-pecked. ‘ The People-Sentinel was represent- Ud at the annual meeting of the South Carolina Presg Association in Char leston last week by Mrs. B. P. Davies, lira. Louise Bauer, Billie Davies and the editor. Leaving Barnwell early Thursday morning, the party arrived at the Isle of Palms in time to join the other delegates for a boat trip across Charleston harbor and up the Cooper River to the Navy Yard, where they were guests of Admiral vMcCully, Retruning to Sullivan’s Is land the newapaper people and their friends were entertained with a regu lar army dinner, the hosts being the New a and Courier and the Evening Post. It was at this time that an ad mirable address was made by David Lawrence, editor of the United States Daily and one of the foremost men in America today. Mr. Lawrence is a forceful speaker and give hie audi- •nee much food for thought in hig dis cussion of economic condhions at home and abroad. In the afternoon, the press party again boarded a government launch and visited historic old Fort Sumter— a hallowed spot to South Carolinians. A businesg session was held Friday morning, at which time a short me morial service was also held in honor of the memory of August Kohn, treas urer and former president of the press association, the news of whose death the day before brought sadness to the hearts of his fellow members. At this meeting the association was ad dressed by Mr. Allen, a representative of the Mergenthaler Linotype Com pany, who discussed the mske-up of a newspaper. The closing business •ession was held that afternoon, at which time Mrs. Allen made an inter esting talk. ' The meeting was brought to a fit ting climax by a banquet tendered by the South Carolina National Bank to the followers of the Fourth Estate. During the evening, talks were made a number of gentlemen and vocal and instrumental music added greatly to the enjoyment of the occasion. A fUhing trip had been arranged for lUturdty morning, but due to the audden change in the weather, which turned very cold and disagreeable, this<trip was called off. At an early hour, various members of the associa tion began to “check out,” and by late afternoon all had departed for their homes, carrying with them pleasant memories of hospitality, new friend-’ ships made and old ones renewed. However, if she rides around all day in her daddy’s “one-third down and balance on easy terms’’ and frequents drug stores frequently and has no in terest in her home or her church or her neighbors, she’s a flapper, and it will take a long stretch of matrimony to fetch her to her senses. If she use 8 the terms: “I heard” and “They say” and “Don’t tell any body I told you” and “I smelt a rat last week” and “John said” and “Last night and this morning,” she's a gos- sipper and should have her phone and tongue taken out at once. But if he and she both speak of our fine children and our good preacher and our excellent choir and our won derful school system and our little home and our delightful neighbors and our good friends and our patient- and-efficient doctor and how pretty the whole world is with fier flowers and sunshine and showers, they are the salt of the earth and deserve to be loved and respected. (The End.) When You Get Into Politics They Say: “Well, I think Bill Smith ia a pretty good fellow, but he orders all of his clothes and shoes from Spears and Jo- buck, and he let an out-of-town man fix his dog house last summer.” “I meant to vote for Sam Hipps, but I just heard that his great-grand- daddy was a Tory, and it would be a dangerous thing to put such a man into the office of treasurer.” “I notice that Peter Billiken is out for Mayor. He has made a mistake. He shaves himself, and that means that the barbers will fight him. He walks to work, and the street car folks have it in for him. His wife’s cousin is a Catholic and that is enough for the Baptists to fight him on. Nope, he can't make it.” “Jule Smoots is possibly all right to run a bank, but he is a high-hatter. And he drinks some at night, and I heard this morning that he refused to buy any War Savings stamps in 19 and 17. The Methodists will scratch him because he doesn’t believe that Jonah actually swallowed the whale. Looks lige he would have more sense than to run for congress.” - x •• “Guess you heard that Mike Strong whipped his wife about 20 year s ago while he#was living out West? Well, they say he did that thing. And fur thermore he believes in evolution: that kills him with the Presbyterians, and his oldest son hag jake paralysis, and he won’t get a single prohibition ist vote. And he ain’t fit for the legis lature nohow. He don’t pay no taxes except the poll and the dog. He’s al ready beat.” “I thought old mafi Bulldozer was a fine man until he came out for the sen ate. He broke up 5 different bird’s nests when he was a boy, and he snores in his sleep, he eats with his front teeth, he won’t let his girls run around at night, and he owed the Last National Bank a note for $11.00 when it busted. He won’t get the vote of his kinfolks—as he endorsed and paid notes for nearly every one of them.” up the street with s So, friends, when you enter politics you invite the smut toters and the gos- sippers and the “they aay” folks to riddle you and your family and your character. and their religion from Adam to last night They will talk about you and your dog and your debts and your everything also, and the went pun of Un whofc $04 it— It is doubtful if Spilt Milk ig worth any more today than- it was yesterday, or that it will be worth any more next week than it was last year, but when the gamblers run it up from 75 to 100, that increased the value of pilt Milk speculatively in the sum of $250,000, but mebbe the company ain’t even making expenses, much less a divi dend, but who cares. ri L Walfat To illustrate: WalfStreet could put 10,000 plain bricks in a pen and name those brick Split Silk and Bevo com mon and Jackass preferred and Tad pole 5s, and the gamblers could buy and sell them just as well and as sat isfactorily as if these bricks were real stocks and bonds. Nobody much cares anything about owning those stocks (bricks), what they want is some suck er to buy them for more than they cost the seller. The pile of bricks need not grow larger or smaller. Buying and selling stocks don't increase or decrease the real value of the manufacturing plant that issued t))e atock. Take a dog, for instance: His tail don’t make him run any faster or smell a rabbit’s track any keener, but it’s fine for wag gling purposes; and stocks that are bought and sold everyday on the stock exchange mean exactly to the com pany that lithographed them what the tail means to the dog. Bull Snort common sold as high as 455 last fall on the board, and Bull Snort was paying only a 2 per cent, annual dividend. When the crash came, according to Sammie Knowall, none of those high-priced stocks were owned by the presidents and treasur ers and directors of the companies whose stocks were being exploited. Why should they not sell out at 375 and buy back at 75? They might need a few shares all along to keep them selves elected. Where there’s big money, it’s trad ing. Where it’s dimes and pennies, it’s gambling. When you lose, it’s specu lating. When you win, it’s big bus! ness. The average small trader(?) in the south who sends good money north to try to beat the game has just about as much chance to win as a grub worm has of becoming a rattlesnake. Yet, they got our State for aboqt $14,500,- 000.00 last fall. ...SUCCESSFUL HOMEMAKING • y GRACE VIALL GRAY “IT IS SMART TO BE THRIFTY” By using Inexpensive foods rather than the more expensive ones, we can cut our food bills considerably. For instance, there are many (lelicious In expensive cuts of meat that gives us the same nourishment ns the expen sive choice cuts. If these cuts are properly prepared and then cooked and served attractively, we are not depriving our family of good food even if we pre saving money. >Milk Is one of our best foods and when the food value is considered. It is an inexpensive one. Use milk In all forms and In all possible ways. But- Add Mgar an4. continue to until the granules have dis solved, add the unbeaten egg and beet until Mended. Add tie flour and the milk alternately, then the flavoring. Fold the flour In quickly and gently, handling as little as possible. Pour into a well-greased |*n and bake In a moderate oven—350 degrees Fahren heit—thirty minutes. This makes one large or two small layer cakes. This economy cake makes an inexpensive hut elaborate dessert when served as ‘Washington pie. that Is, baked In two layers, with a cream fUllnp placed between layers and whipped cream on top. / ^ rVfldag History All the vikings to about the year 1000, with few exceptions, were pa gans. The wirings (more southerly people) were also pagans but they were Christianized at a much edrller date In Great Britain, where the Jutes (Jutland, Denmark) first landed In 449, while the vikings in greater num bers began Invasion of the British Islet In the Eighth century. ADVERTISE IN „ I The People- Sentinel. Legal Advertisements Notice of Club Meeting. The Barnwell Municipal Democratic Club wgll meet at the Court House in Barnwell, S. C., Thursday afternoon, June 12th, 1930, at 4:30 o’clock, for the purpose of reorganir.irg, electing officers and an executive committee. A full attendance is requested. P. W. PRICE, June 3, 1930. Prcs dent. Notice to Debtors and Creditors'. Notice is hereby given that all per sons holding claims against the es tate of J. B. Armstrong, deceased, must file them duly attested to the undersigned Administratrix and all persons indebted to said estate will make prompt payment to the said Ad ministratrix. SARAH C. ARMSTRONG, Administratrix. Barnwell, S. C.,* June 3, 1930. follows: <«> NOTICE OF ENROLLMENT. A One-Egg Cake Can Be turned Into a Wonderful Deseert termllk and skim milk Lave good food value. Milk can be used as the basis in soups, Id white sauce for vege tables and left-over meats, and in many desserts as custards, puddings and souffles. Self-rising flour Is economical. It Is cheaper to have the manufacturer combine flour, salt and baking powder thab for each individual housewife to do so, for the miller gives the house wife the advantage of car-lot. prices on these materials. Fewer eggs are required when using self-rising flour for cakes, cookies and maffins. Use' only 1 egg for each one and one-half cupfuls of self-rising flour In butter cakes. By using flour that has been prepared for use wt can save many dollars. And not only are we saving money but we are giving our family good food. The economy cake below If well worth trying on your next baking day. Economy Coke (Using iJnly One Egg). % cup sugar M cup b u 11 • r, washed, fret of salt M cup liquid 1 lit cups sslt-rls- lng flour H tsp. vanilla Cream the gutter to the ccneUtencj Persuant to Rule No. 11 of the Democratic Party of South Carolina, I, Edgar A. Brown, County Chairman of Barnwell County, hereby give notice: v 0) (Rule No. 6): “The qualifications for membership in any club of the party in this State, and for voting at a primary shall be a s follows, viz: The applicant for membership, or voter, shall be 21 years of age, or shall become so before the succeeding general election and be a white Demo crat. He shall be a citizen of the United States and of this State!. No person shall belong to any club or vote in any primary unless he has resided in the State two years and in’ the county six months prior to the succeeding general election and in the club district 60 days prior to the first primary following his offer to enroll: Provided, that public school teachers and ministers, of the gospel in charge of a regular organized church shall be exempt from the pro visions of this section as to residence if otherwise qualified.” (2) Books of enrollment for the re spective Democratic clubs required un der the rules for the new enrollment in Barnwell County will be opened by the secretaries or the enrollment committees of the respective clubs on Tuesday, June 3, 1930, and will re main open for the enrollment until Tuesday, the 22nd day of July, 1930, which shall be the last day of en rollment. (Rules Nos. 11 and 12^)' (3) Each applicant for enrollment shall in person write upon the club roll his full name and immediately there af ter his age, occupation and post office address, and if in a city or town shall write the name of street and the num ber of his house in which he resides, if such designation exists in said city or town. If the applicant cannot write he may make his mark upon the roll, which shall be witnessed by the secretary or other person then having the custody thereof, and the secretary shall fill in the other requirements. (4) No person shall be enrolled in any club or vote in any primary except in the club district in which he resides. (Rule No. 8.) That the names of the clubs in Barnwell County, the boundaries of the club districts as required to be set out in Rule No. 11, the names of the members of the enrollment com mittees and the places where the re spective club rolls are to be are as The club district and boundaries of the club* in Barnwell County are h follows: In all leasee the voter mdst enroll in the dug nearest his place of residence, calculated by the neareet practical route, and can only vote at the voting place of such club, and ter ritory included by this test shall be considered the club district of such club: 1 BARNWELL—Club District: As set out in 6 above. Enrollment Comittee:—Perry ‘ J B. Bush, N. G. W. Walker and R. A. Dea- son. Book to be opened at Deason’s Drug Store. BENNETT SPRINGS—Club Dis trict a 8 set out in 6 above. Enrollment Committee — B. W. Peeples, J. F. Swett and L. L .Peeples. Book to be opened at J. F. Swett’s store. BLACKVILLE—Club District: As set out in 6 above. < Enrollment Committee—Sim Buist Rush, C. C. Storne and J. Dewis Grubbs. Book to be opened at push’s Drug Store* DOUBLE POND—Club Districts As set out in 6 above. Enrollment Committee—Leon Hut to, Sammie P. Hartzog and Jacob Delk. Book to be opened at residence of Jacob Delk. DUNBARTON—Oub District: As set out in 6 above. Enrollment Committee—H. P. An derson, B. F. Owens and R. M. Burck- halter. Book to be opened at B. F. Ander son’s store. ELKO—Club District: As set out in 6 above. Enrollment Committee—Paul S. Green, Alonzo Bates and A. E. Hair. Book tq be opened at Green and Company’s store. FRIENDSHIP—Club District: As set out in 6 above. Enrollment Committee — H. E. Creech, James Ray and Frank San ders. Book to be opened at residence of James Ray. FOUR MILE—Club District: As set out in 6 above. Enrollment Committee—C. M. Tur ner, W. F. Duncan and C. G. Young blood. Book to be opened at residence of C. M. Turner. GREAT CYPRESS—aub District: As set out in 6 above. Enrollment Committee—G. C. Best Victor Lewi? and J. W. Sanders. Book to be opened at store of Lewis and Best. HEALING SPRINGS—Club Dis trict: As set out in 6 above. Enrollment Committee—W. T. Wal ker, L. P. Boylston and Jas. J. Ray. Book to be opened at residence ori Jas. J. Ray. HERCULES—Club District: As set out in 6 above. Enrollment Committee—J. A. Mor ris, L. S. Still and J. A. Creech. Book to be opened at residence of J. A. Morris. HILDA—Club District: As set out in 6 above. Enrollment Committee—A. P. Col lins, W. G. Collins and Isadore Hart zog. Book to be opened at store of Isa- dore(Hartzog. REEDY BRANCH—Club District: As set out in 6 above. Enrollment Committee—J. C. R. Grubbs, M. O. Creech and J. B. Still. Book to be opened at residence of M. O. Creerii. RED OAK—Chib District: As set out in 6 above. Enrollment Committee — Micagy Birt, O. D. Moore and J. M. Hill. Book to be opened at Moore’s store. ROSEMARY—Club District: As set out in 6 above. Enrollment Committee—W. R. Bell, R. S. Weathersiee and M. S. Hair. Book to be opened at residence of R. S. Weathersbee. SILO AM — Club District: As set out in 6 above. Enrollment Committee: J. W. Bates, W. P. Morris and Belton Holly. Book to be opened at residence of J. W. Bates. WILLISTON—Club District: As set out in 6-above. Enrollment Committee — M. C. Kitchings, R. L. Hair and J. H. Mc Donald. ^ Book to be opened at R. L. Hair’s store. Attention is called to the fact that, under Rule 11, there shall be a new general enrallment of all vbters every four years, beginning with the year 1926, particular attention being called to the following provisions: “(a) Provided, further,' That in each election year the books of en rollment be opened a 8 now provided, and, those persons meeting the re quirements for enrollment since the last general enrollment, or who are not enrolled, shall be enrolled by the secretary, or by the enrolment com mittee. In case any properly enrolled voter has changed his voting precinct, he shall be entitled to be enrolled in hi 8 new precinct under the following rules, to-wit: Application for a cer tificate of transfer shall be made in writing to the secretary of the former club, who shall certify in writing to the secretary of the precinct club where such enrolled voter desires to be enrolled, to the effect that such voter was duly enrolled in his club, giving date of enrollment, name, age, occupation and address. At the time he shall note in ink on the enrollment book the transfer so made. Upon pre sentation of the certificate of trans fer to the secretary, the applicant shall be permitted to enroll in his new voting precinct club, provided he is in all other reespects qualified under the rules of the party. “(b) In case of the death of any* voter, the secretary, or the enrolment committee, under supervision of the County Executive Committee, shall have authority to strike from the >ooks of enrollment the name or names of such deceased voter, giving the approximate datej of death of deceased.” EDGAR A. BROWN. Chm., Co. Executive Com. Attest: B. P. Davies, Secy. Barnwell, S. C., May 17, 1930. v T. B. El 11a J. B. EUis ELLIS ENGINEERING CO. Land Surveying a Specialty. Lymdhuret, 8. C 'An Unpleasant Subject* All of the functions of life are not pleamnt to coowder. Perhaps this ie why some mothers refuse to think that such symptoms as restless deep, loss of flesh, lack of appetite or itching nose and fingers in their children, can be caused by round or pin worms. Many mothers have proven, however, that a few doses of White’s Cream Vermi fuge, that sure and harmless worm expellant, will make these symptoms disappear. You can get White’s Cream Vermifuge for 35 cents per bottle from R. A. Deason, Barnwell, S. C. Epps’ Pharmacy, Blackville, S. C. For Sale I have good Hay and Oats for sale here at $20.00 per ton and Corn at $1.00 per bushel. D. A. DYCHES Hilda, S. C. SAFE INVESTMENTS NEVER CAUSE WORRY. A safe and profitable invest ment in the $6 Cumulative Pre ferred Stock of your Power Company. It pays regular quarterly dividends. Both cash and easy payment plans. Call Phone No. 4161. SOUTH CAROLINA Power Company Investment Department Charleston, & C.