The Barnwell people-sentinel. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1925-current, May 21, 1931, Image 6
i’.%
Ellenton, May 16.—Mr. and Mrs.
Jule B. Smith spent the week-end in
Gretmwood with relatives. The lat-
ter’a father, Richard Miller, returned
home with them for a visit.
M iss Claire Jenness visited her
mother, Airs. Carrie Jenness, for the
week-end.
• Mr. and Mrs. Jack Crossland, of
Miami, Fla., weie the guests a lew.
slays recently of Mr. and Mrs. F. D.
Bush and Mr. and Mrs. I). C. Bush.
M is s Mary Quarles, Miss Gladys
Owens, Miss Anne Glymph, Miss Alice
DeShields and Miss Virginia Cassels
T*pent Satuiday in Augusta.
Mother’s Day was obseived at the
Baptist and Methodist Churches Sun
day morning with appropriate .exer
cises.
Mrs. Lillie Kennedy had as her
Kue^t* Wednesday, Mrs. Alice East
erling, Mrs. Josie Reid, Mrs. Roessler,
Miss Frances Reid, Miss Elizabeth
Reid. Miss Mary Reid and Mis# Cath-
vrine Roessler, of Augusta.
Mr. and Mrs. B. T. Brinkley and
children were visilois^i Denmark on
Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. T. S. Dunbar. Mrs.
*
W. H. Jones, William, X^ omas an< ^
Eugene Dunbar, spent Sunday in
Charleston.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Chewing, of
Mununeiton, Mr. and Mrs. Carroll
Penrce, Miss Edythe Pearce, George
J’earre, of Greenwood, Sumter Bailey,
Mrs. W. P. Etchison, Preston Etchi-
»on, of Columbia, Mr. and Mrs. Camp
bell Davenpoit and Mis» Belle Bailey,
•>f North Augusta, were among the
out-of-town relatives present Sundry
at the funeral services rf A&ts.-Chari|t>
T. Bailey, who died Saturday in
Columbia hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. George D. K'rkhnd,
<»f Milletts, and Mrs. H. E. Johnson,
• if Martin, were visitors here Stin
• lay.
Some of the friends of Mrs. Lillie
Kennedy remembered her 6Mh b’rth-
day Friday, with a “pounding.”
Mr. and Mrs. M. M. ('-aDioun and
M ib* Chicora Calhoun, of Greenwood,
ware the guests Suncay of Mr. and
Mrs. S. M. Cassels.
The play, “Mammy’s Lil’ Wild
Rose'’ was given Friday night in the
High School auditorium by the senior
class. Miss Dora Brown directed the
production.
A large group of the ladies of th^
Methodist Missionary society attend
ed the zone meeting of their organiza
tion in Denmark Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Smith and chil
dren were vi-itors in Augusta Satur-
day.
The Parent-Teachers Association
pirsented a fine program directed by
Miss Annie Glymph of the school
fatuity on Thursday evening in the
auditorium in observance of Fathers’
night.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy R. McElhenney
and children, who have been living
at Cowards, are now making their
home heie, where they formerly lived.
The ladies of the Christian Lead
ers Aid Society will sponsor a base
ball game Tuesday afternoon at 4:30
o’clock. The opposing sides will be
the married women and the single
women.
McKella Eubanks spent Sunday in
Charleston.
Mrs, F. M. Youngblood,“^Mrs. N. S.
Brinkley, M>s. C. G. Youngblood and
Miss Elizabeth Brinkley spent Thurs
day in Augusta.
Mrs. J. H. Kent, Miss Emily Kent
and Miss Doris Kent spent Sunday
in Charleston.
Paid to Winners of
- ^V-i~
jftvVvi'Arn.' rkvf
R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company takes pleasure in announcing
that the decisions of Judges CHARLES DANA GlBSON % ROY W* HOWARD
* O'.'
and Ray Long in the $50,000 Camel Prize Contest have been
4 - '
• '■ - ^ • O'-.
reached and that prizes accordingly have been awarded as follows:
1, ~ ~
«• * ~ 1 If IBil ■ mi > . M. ■—■■■in . ,■
First Prize, $25,000
• . • , • •^'* r »' #
JAMES THOMAS SHARKEY, 101 Train Street, Dorchester, Mass.
Second Prize* $10*000
MRS. WALTER SWEET, Navy Yard. Brooklyn, N. Y.
f *ooo
Third Prize, $*».
JULIES M. NOLTE, Clen Avon, Dululh, Minn.
5 Prizes of $1,000 each
A. B. FRANKLIN, III, 52 Kirkland Su, Cambridge, Mam.
JOHN R. McCarthy, 721 Main SC, WUlimanUc, Conn.
FREDERICK E. ROBINSON, Coronado Beach, Calif.
WM. A. SCHRADER, Brent Apia., New Albany, Ind.
DR. D. H. SOPER, 523 E. Brown, Iowa City, Iowa.
5 Prizes ol $500 each
V. CARTWRIGHT, TranapVn Bldg . Waabington, D. C
EDITH COCHRANE, Glenvale Aee., Darien, Conn.
BARBARA LAWLESS, Ardmore, Pa. »
JANE PARSONS, 325 E. 79tb Sc, New York, N. Y.
RICHARD W. VOGT, Green Bay Road, Waukegan, IIL
25 Prizes of $MOO each
MARIE ALBERTS, 6252 So. Spaulding Ave.. Chicago
W. B. BARKER, JR, 420 N. Spruce, Winaton-Salem, N.C.
EUGENE BARTON, 3625 U Los Sc, El Paao, Texas
MRS. EDW. F. DALY, 11B3 LooiavUle Sc, Sc Looia, Mo.
WM. G. ERBACHER 308 N. Front Sc, Conway, Ark.
LEROY FAIRMAN, 69 Dartmouth Sc, Forert HUla, N. Y.
KATHRYN R FRANCIS, 448 E. 22d Sc, Baltimore, Md.
MRS. ALEXIS GODILLOT, 191 Waverly PL, New York»
C W. GRANGE, 2316 Central Sc, Evanston, IIL
C S. CRAYBILL, PastonviUe, Pa.
JOHN L GRIFFIN, 1208 Jackson, Pueblo, Colorado
DAVID C HILL, Peyton and Arlington Rda^ York, Pa.
ELIZABETH JARRARD, Porter Apta^ Unsing. Mich.
J. W. KEATING. 523 Prospect Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
J. H. KENNEDY, 2627 W. State Sc, Milwaukee, W isc.
JOHN K1LPELAINEN, West Paris, Maine
DR CLIFTON B. LEECH, 211 Angell Sc, Providence, RL
EDWARD MARTIN, 121 Liddell Sc, Buffalo, N. Y.
MRS. L. C MILLARD, 609 Stockley Gardens, Norfolk, Vu. -
EUGENE SARTIN1, 745 Chapel Sc, Ottawa, IIL
GREGORY LUCE STONE, 755 Texas Sc, Mobile, Ala.
DR. C. L THOMAS, Mount Airy, N. C
LEE R WOMACK, 448 Tenney Ave^ Amherst, Ohio .
J. ARTHUR WOOD, 21 Burke Sc, Meebanieville, N. Y.
EMERY HERBERT YOUNG, Painted Post, N. Y.
I
N congratulating the winners in the
great Camel contest we want at the *ainc ^
time to thank most cordially the approxi
mately million men and women who dis
played their friendly interest by sending
in an entry.
We w ish also to thank the millions of smokers
throughout the country for the appreciation
they are showing for our new Humidor Pack
as is evidenced the notable increase in the
sale of Camel cigarettes.
* * ■ - >
By means of this dust-proof, germ-proof,
moisture-proof Cellophane wrapping the
rich aroma and full flavor of choice Turkish
and mellotr Domestic tobaccos have been
air-sealed in Camels for your enjoyment.
If you have not tried Camels in the Humidor
Pack all we ask is that you switch over to this
brand for one day.
After you have learned how much milder,
how much cooler, how much more enjoy
able it is to smoke a perfectly conditioned
fresh cigarette, go back to the harsh hotness
of stale cigarettes if you can.
Slot Machines Broken.
Columbia, May 14.—More than 1,-
001) slot machines in South Carolina
crashed into bit s beneath axe Wows
and other s were hastily transported
from the State Wednesday following
bublic potke that the act outlawing
snrh devices had been signed by Gov-
•ernor-Blackwood.
Charles H. Gerald, governor’s sec
retary estimated that 1,000 machines
or more have been held in sheriff’s
ogievs over the State for the last
one to four years, following their
confiscation.
No law authorized their destruc
tion, and they accumulated in such
numbers that Sheriff J. M. Poulnot,
<a Charleston, found his office cram
med by nearly 200, and Sheriff Cliff
BrUmlet, of Greenville, had a large
number. The new law carries a
special clause to authorize their end.
Unconfiscated slbtP machines' and
punchboards under private ,owner
ship began disappear from the
State meanwhile, it being reported
to State officers that a number had
placed- lit ■ cars at Columbia,
transported e
State constabulary and sheriffs re
cerred copies of the law Wednesday
from the governor’s office ttfith
to enforce it strictly.
Camels
(0IM1, a. J. B.7MU. T.kMM C*mp*mj, H.C.
Om
Ten Unemployed Families Go to Farms
In Abbeville Leased From Land Bank
Greenville Unemployed Settled on.Plantation by* Co-operation
Local Relief Group and iBh’st Carolinas Institution.
y ■ ’ a \ '
Between
\
Ten families from Greenville,' the
working members of which, out of
employment, were depeadent upon
Red Cross relief, have been settled
upon faims in Abbeville County
through an arrangement worked out
by a Greenville committee, in co-op
eration with the First Carolinas Joint
Stock Land Bank, of Columbia, S. R.
Spencer, president.
These families ham* been placed on
a thousand acre plV^Vtion, owned by
‘the land bank, each oCing assigned a
sufficient ’acreage for a crop, which
it will cultivate and gather, at the
unityrm rental of $25 a year. Machin
ery, tools and other equipment will
be provided for the common use,, of
the colony. The farming will be
supei vised by R. G. Ellis, of the
Lahd Bank field staff. The plan eon-
template* that each family shall grow
considerable truck and (but little
cotton the first year, thus producing
or-! much of Us own substance and a
larg e surplus for sale in nearby mar
kets, which will yield necessary cash
income, without waiting until the
cotton crop comes in. This is neces
sary, in any event, as the families
are all at present destitute and de
pendent upon 'the 'Red Cross for cur
rent supplies.
Thi s Abbeville colonization venture
is part of a program for placing 60
families (comprising 460 persons)
back on the laid, which has been
worked out byl^'Hpreenville com-
gift of $5.00(F
Ivi^c
mittee, with a
and with.the advi^of two men from
the federal department of labor.
Families from Greenville have been
placed on farms in six Piedmont coun
ties, about 20 out of the 60 buying
their farms, on long term easy-pur-
chase contracts, and not a few using
. P art ,C.% P r( i c . eed /
-gewqiwiww<>wri if! 4ff ~
making their down payments.
Oho-O,
- / TRY A BUSINESS BUILDER
FOR SATISFACTORY RESULTS.
UNITED STATES CIVIL
• ♦ «
SERVICE EXAMINATIONS
The United States Civil Service
■Oommissicn announces the following
open ccm-petitive examinations:
, Village carrier tq be ^d in Bam
berg, S. C., to fill vacancies in the
position of substitute village carrier
in the Post Office, Blackville, S. C.
Receipt of applications will clos« on
June 5, 1931. Applications and an
nouncement containing ge^nral ihfbr-
mation rega.yng the examination
can be obtaineff from the Postmaster
at Blackville, S. C., or the Manager,
5th U. S. Civil- Service District, At
lanta, G-a.
Substitute appointment is for ir
regular, or part-time .service, and no
regular or definite amount of service
can be guaranteed because of uncer-
tainty as to the needj of the office.
Regular full-time positions aie filled
by ttfe promotion of the substitute in
the order of their seniority. The
necessity for substitute service prac
tically makes it necessary for a sub
stitute to reside in the vicinitjp of
Blackville, S. C. However, there is
.nar-pesMknce-a^quijQemeAt for .^admis-
lyrwyff.. 'lepJ’i! Wig*BflXlk 1 ' • ~ “
As difficulty has been experienced
in obtaining eligibles for this posi
tion, qualified persons are urged to
file application at once for the exami
nation.
Further information and applica
tion blanks may be obtained from C.
J. Fickling, Postmaster at Blackville.
ADVERTISE IN
The People- Sentinel.
*
—
>
FOR SALE
i
WE HAVE ON HAND SEVERAL' GOOD MULES FOR
SALE. PRICES RIGHT.
SIMON BROWN’S SONS
blackville, s. c.
HALL & COLE, Inc.
94-102 FANEUIL HALL MARKET,
Commission Merchants and
BOSTON, MASS.
Distributors of
f awii'nfrfi—rr>- r -.i
One of the Oldest Commission Houses in the Trade.
SEND FOR SHIPPING STAMP.
X-X^X-X^X^X-X^X^X-X %•
■hi
■ . rf l
-
• -