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bm r f V i • l ■ ■ f '• : I t a r. da Tim amt SUBSCRIPTION RATH: T«ar — $160 Dtat Months JO ffkm Months ,60 t (Strictly hi AOtmos.) TMUR8DAY, AUGUST 28, 1930. Of all the nauseating diatribes against the candidacy of any man that has ever come to our notice is con- tained in a dirty little campaign sheet published at Bennettsville and edited by Baxter F. McLendon. We are not certain whether or not this is the so- called evangelist preacher known as “Cyclone Mack,” but if the editor and evangelist are one and the same man, we can only say that the love of man kind ig not in the heart of the one nor the teachings of Jesus Christ in the heart of the other. McLendon’s filthy language was directed primarily against Leon W. Harris and secondly against James F. Byrnes and in be half of Senator Cole. L. Blease. Talk about dirty politics—but what’s the use of dignifying such^a man by more 1 than passing notice? Vara R M far a law 4aa ards, and possibly a few particular psopls, the barbers would starve to death. Urey simply could not get along on patronage like unto mine: Visaly—a 36 cent hair cut about every 3 weeks. When my curls on my neck get long enough to invMe the use of hair-pins, 1 have them severed forth with. GRIND TO CLOSE Madv Final Appeals te Veters In Bara- well Friday Moraiac —All Gat Applause and Borne Received Flowers.—Harris’ Attacks on Blease (Steered. • A Joint meeting of the senstorial tion in the Southwest,” which Byrnes I watched a young fellow get doll ed up in that barbershop. He was a mechanic in a garage. He drew pos sibly $17.50 per week. He was hand some and had found it out from some body. He was in love. I saw that at the first plance. He stayed in the barber’s chair 1 hour and 43 minutes by my watch. When he got through, the man poked the following bill at him: Rubber Farm Peats. Hair Cut $0.35 Shave .16 Shampoo .50 Head Wash .25 Neck Shave . .10 Nose blowed -- —-- .15 Eyebrows Trimmed . 10 Eyelashes Groomed — .15 Pimples Squeezed — Hair Singed 25 Bone Massaged .35 Lips Painted — _ - .25 Face Steamed .15 Ear 8 Washed - ' .10 Shoes Shined . . .10 Tip - - — .10 $4.45 In case we ever have occasion to complain that a neighbor’s chickens have devastated a corner of our gar den, or that his pig has rooted there in, we may reflect upon the woes of himself and took a check for it, there- the rubber farmer and take consola- fore—1 am not yet able to tell you tion. | just exactly how much he lost. The manager of a 5,000-acre plan- ■ N. B. The barber added the bill up and county candidates , held in Barn well Friday, brought the 1930 cam paign to a close, while the candidates for State offices ended the long grind in Columbia that night with final ap peals for support. The meeting was held in the grove at the comer of Main and Marlboro Streets and was attended by some 1,500 men, women and children. The candidates for county offices were the first to speak and J. J. Bell, candidate for county treasurer, was ^the only unopposed aspiratnt to ad dress the audience, he being more or less of a stranger to the people of the county as a whole. Horace J. Crouch, incumbent, was the fiist speaer in the race for temoon. county superintendent of education. As on previous occasions he defended his record and during the course of his remarks paid a high compliment to the recent political edition of The People-Sentinel. He was followed by B. S. More, Jr., of this city, who spoke pretty rpuch along the same lines as at the other meetings. v Jas. Arthur Kennedy, of Williston led off in the race for the House of Representatives and was followed by Winchester C. Smith, Jr,, also of Wil- declares ia responsible for the great increase in cotton acreage and the present low price for the staple. He also advocated freedom for the Philip pines and then a tariff on coconut oil in order to restore cotton seed oil to a profitable basis. He reviewed his 14 years in Congress and said, “My De mocracy has never been questioned.” He was warmly applauded throughout his address and was given three bou quets of flowers. News of Lyndhurst. Lyndhurst, Aug. 25.—Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Gaunt and. daughter, Margaret, of Allendale, were here Thursday af- Mr. and Mrs. Cummings Hay, Mrs. Carson Steele and children, Jack and Charlie, are spending a while here. Mrs. A. P. Hay has returned from Savannah and wa s accompanied home by Mr. and ftL-s. H. G. Classen, who will splpnd a few days here. Henry Hay, R. L t Gaunt and Harold Hay were in Allendale Thursday on business. Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Gaunt/and Henry Hay were visitors in Barnwell tation in Sumatra recently told of Mike Has a Visitor. some of the difficulties of rubber mr editor: farming. His plantation i s adjacent to s natural jungle, where all sorts of a sperrit come to me last night and , now i believe in same, i don’t know wild beasts have their habitat when w hether it wa R mr. conann doil’s sper- they are not playing havoc with the rit or notf but it walked up to the rubber trees. j b ed of my bed and shuck it and sed— F.lephants are the practical jokers m j ke , is that you, and i sed yes, is that of the animal kingdom, according to y 0 u, and it sed what you doing here and i sed i am trying to sleep, what do you want? the sperrit then moved over to the other hied post and shuck it and sed are you there still, and i sed i am here but i ain’t still, and he took his left arm off and flew away, rite or foam if you ever saw a sperrit. yore s trulie, mike Clark, frd. liston, R. C. Holman, of Barnwell, and Friday. W. W. Cain, of Blackville, in the order | Mis8 M p Hay le f t Saturday for named. The Rev. D. W. Heckle, °f Hendersonville, where she will visit Healing Springs, was unable to ad- ^ re i a ti ve *. dress the voters by reason of his aUi Louis Gaunt is spending a few days tendance at the funeral of J. M.Jj n B eau f 0 rt. Grubbs. Mr. Kennedy continued hisj Mrs Wm m. Steinmeyer and chil- attack on the chain gang and *he pres-ldren, Billy and Marie, of Beaufort. (his manager, and their favorite sport 1 ia pulling up young rubber trees with their trunks and tossing them at one another The plantation is also fre quently visited by tigers, rbinoceri tropical deer, wild pigs and other in habitant* of the jungle, which like wise take their sport in messing up the place. Still, the damage done does »ot prevent theraising and export of ▼ait quantities of rubber. » The increased demand due to the growth of the automobile industry and the new uses which have been found for this product tend to assure the I prosperity of the rubber farmer, in I apite of the playfulness of elephants and other jungle neighbors. False Ideas Slick. Behold the Country Savers. Ouch! My Poor Hand!! I went up town this morning and flushed a covey of candidates near the court house. There were 30 or 40 of them. And they made a drive at me with their food-hooks extended, and of all the Harris said: ent form of county government, and corrected some statements made at previous meetings relative to the number of convicts on the gang. Mr. Smith reviewed his platform, a 3 did also Mr. Holman and Mr. Cain, the latter advocating the reduction of county expenses by cutting salaiies and combining offices. Mr. Holman made what many people declared was the best speech of his campaign. Senatorial Candidates. The candidates for the United States Senate deviated little from the progiam they set up during the nine weeks tour through the State’s 46 counties. Blease defended his record; Harris rapped Blease and submitted suggestions for restoration of pros perity; and Byrnes discussed economic questions, advancing his proposal* to solve them. In concluding his address Friday, Notwithstanding the horrible hand-shaking I ever exper ienced they administered it. fact that Senator Blease has not spoken to me for the past eight weeks and I know he would not speak to me The first law I hop£ to see passed now, yet I am willing to take his asked why the addition of a fish to a pail of water would not add to the weight of the bucket and its contents. Several ingenious explanations were After an erroneous statement has been repeated often enough it i s next to impossible to eradicate it from the when congress convenes is one to out-(hand or that cf Jim Byrnes and say popular mind. ^ aw political hand-shaking. Son e of j‘May the best man win.’” For many years the question was those men had the gra&p of a vice, others had axe-handle and plow-stock corns in their hands and those ‘*ccl- louses” frictioned like sand-paper. Of course the majority of the boys Washington offered, but the real reason could not i had never done any work, but their j Blease and Byrnes, he said had done nothing for freight rates, Blease while in the Senate and Byrnes when in Congress. He again proposed that the government lend money to cotton mills without interest, which he After declaring that Byrnes and Blease opposed woman suffrage, Har ris turned to economic matters and said, “You can expect nothing from on a slilver platter.” be agreed upon. Finally some inquis-; squeeze was terriffic. Hive akepti^ weighed a bucket of! water and after adding a 5-pound fish ! Borne of the “candyda r es had never weighed it again. It weighed just i shaken hands or sm.’led oefore, but five pounds more than it did before their faces were a-beam with bhssful Mrs. Edwin Ellis, of Savannah, and Mrs. Deer, of Beaufort, were visitors here Thursday. Mrs. A. P. Hay and sons, Henry and Charles, and Thomas Gaunt, spent Sunday in Allendale. Miss Marie Steinmeyer was the guest of her aunt, Mrs. E. M. Gaunt, several days last week. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Fowke and children, Edward andi Ben, of Au gusta, are visiting the former’s pnoth- er, Mrs. J. C. Fowke. Longstreet Gaunt, of Winnisboro, is visiting his sister, Miss Sarah E. Gaunt. L. C. Fowke and family attended church at Siloam Friday night. M iss Kathryn Gaunt returned to * Savannah with Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Classen to attend school this winter Death of J. M. Grubbs. Barnwell, R. F. D. No. 1, Aug. 25.— J. M. Grubbs, 70 years of age, we! known and highly esteemed citizen o:' the Reedy Branch section, died Wed nesday, August 20th, following an illness of four years from heart trou ble and complications. Although not unexpected, his death comes as shock to his many friends, whom he numbered by the hundred. Mr. Grubbs, better known to his friends and family as “Mai,” wa s born and reared in this community. He was a good man, and wielded a strong influence for good throughout his entire life. * He was always ready to carry on the work of God, being and lead toward prosperity. adding the fish. The question, there- K r > ns when they poked forth those fore, was shown to be based upon a' P ron £s of misery. It is wonderful false assumption. I how entering politics changes aome A similar situation is pointed out j mt,n - The y suddenly became pleasant j man on Blease’s record. i|y the Christian Science Monitor in an d agreeable, affectionate and tolcra- answer to the question of why the ( ^ e * decent and generous, wise and :il- younger generation i 8 so much in-! fallible, courteous and vohiabK sober dined to crime. Thiiteen cities re- an ^ energetic, active and idotic. porting to the United States Chil , deacon and senior deacon of the sa ; d would put money into circulation Reedy Branch Baptist church. For years he was of a genial disposition, He said that Aren's Bureau showed that in nine ef them juvenile delinquency decreas- ad, while an increase was noted in only four. Most of them know how to farm, some of them axe familiar with goo ber parchers, many a v e trained in buck-passing, several lean strongly Attacks were made by the Anderson a , ways with a ami | ei even though his heart was burdened. He was of wide acquaintance and the community has lost a good leader and a genuine Chris tian character. / The funeral and interment took place Friday, Aug. 22nd, at Reedy Branch Church, the services being Likewise, it is popularly supposed toward fishing, p, few understand that {tat crime in Chicago is more pre-1 ^ and 2 make 4, lots of them can ^pell valent than ever before. Yet actual “c-a-t,” nearly all of them car count atatistics show that crime since 1915 nioney, it is hard to find one that can’t fa that city has not increased in pro- rea ^ a an( ^ s P e B a heap, and the portion to the htcrease in population, f®* 1 m hands and the bench-warmers So, si Josh Billings once said, “it's that are a-fixing to get mint by this joat as well not to know so much ss Political strutting is something terri- to know so blamed much that ain't so.”, ble!t And when voting time cornea we • n . * < > i vote our feelings and not ou.* minds. r s Business * * bui ' *• • f^* ^ *** ^am n y ‘ grand-daddy a Jug once, and ! am going to support him. G’oom Sprsd- ia not right bright, ha! he’s a Bap- it** my duty t? sup- Blease when governor, pardoned 77 men, who were convicted of statutory offenses, “And Blease says, ‘To hell with the constitution’ in the face of such a record,” Harris declared. His citing of what he termed “the other side” of Blease’s record elicited con siderable applause from the large CITATION NOTICE. crowd. Senator Blease, who was the first.The State of South Carolina, speaker, was greeted with applause! County of Barnwell, and was presented with a bouquet. “I By Johr. K. Snelling, Esq., Probate have no personal ambition,” he said Judge. “but a desire to serve the people.” He stated that he made friends with Republican senators in Washington which aided him in getting legislation through. He -drew some applause when he said, “When I wa s governor, 1 was ‘the’ governor.” He predicted hia renomination by 30,000 to 35,000 votes. James F. Byrnes, ia a mo«t states manlike speech reviewed the p WHEREAS, Mrs. Julia B. Grubbs, hath made suit to me to grant unto her Letters of Administration of the Estate of and effects of J. M. Grubbs, deceased. • THESE ARE, THEREFORE, to cite and admonish all and singular the kindred and creditors of the said J. M. Grubbs, deceased, that they be and appear before me, in the Court of reviewed the prate* j Probate, to be held at Barnwell. 8. C„ -with cu<Ux» j on Saturday Sept. 6th next after pub- a pound and the | tra tiaa thereof, at II e’dork in the te shew cause, if aty they (he said beautiful was rorered with Peace be te hie Six of his son* were active pall bearers: Millard, Elbert, John Gary Boyd, Moye and Otto Grubbs. Honor ary pallberarea were: J. M. Farrell, C. C. Black, G. A. Bonds, Johnson Black, Otia Creech, B. W. J. Still, W. H. Black and Willie Black. Supriving*are}iis widow and 14 4 Gary Or**, ft t »- CrabW. W Orf^to*. Mi. O»to mnd Algie Grubb*. *f Barnwell, Mr*. 8. Delk and Mrs. J. L Redmond, Blackville, Mrs. D. M. Grubbs, «1 Springfield. Mrs. T. J. Still, of Char lotte, N. C.. Mrs. O. L. Sandifer, of Cameron, Mrs. A. F. Birt, of Frost proof, Fla., and Miss Myrtle Grubbs; 38 grandchildren and one sister, Mrs. Johnson Black, Jr. Thanks I want to thank the good peo- A f pie for the splendid vote given me £ Tuesday and I hope I can be of U some real service to Barnwell U County. I hold no ill feeling Y . , v . ♦> Y against anyone, and am going to ❖ ♦Te f try and serve all the people. f ♦ T T Y WINCHESTER SMITH ♦♦♦♦♦ SPEED BOAT RACES AT Clear Pond SEPT. 1st, 3 P. M First and last race this season. Good Snappy Races as Usual. i-t * » > '4 Thrifty, Energetic Employes Compose this Big Company Telephone men and women, wherever they live and serve, are known as public spirited, home loving people. Their loyalty to the service and to the public is a tradition which proves itself a living fact whenever the emergency irises. Naturally their Company is proud of such a personnel and encourages the industry and energy which enables them to get the most out of life now, and to prepare for their personal aod family needs in the future. These thrifty folks are taking advantage of these oppor tunities. Last year their aggregate savings were at the auuual rate of $2,419,000, made possible by the stock purchase plan, the employes’ saving plan and the life in surance plan. W ^ Wh “ k ,W T . tW per. d tW e