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The Barnwell People-Sentinel JOHN W. HOLMES i Me—it u. ML P. DAVIES, Editor mmi Proprietor. Metered at the poet office at Barnwell 8. C., aa second-claaa nutter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: />oe Tier ■■■■■ ■ ■■■.. tLIO Mbc Mdntha M Montha ....... JfO (Strictly la Adrance.) THURSDAY, JUNE 11TH, 1931. V'** Perhaps the present depression is caqaed by sun spots. Some people contend that a (rood 4lrink of Barnwell County bobte is worth an automobile. When Texas complain H of hot winds bvrninir up the cotton crop, look out for a bumper yield. And it has been ■cur observation that when some peo ple complain th e most, that’i when they are really making money. Stockholders of the Yorkville Cot ton Oil Mill on Wednesday received a twenty per cent, dividend on their stock. Previously an eighty per cent, payment was received and thus far the stock has paid its full value. The officials are sure that there will be another payment in th P future.— Yorkville Enquirer. It i 8 not clear from the above paragraph whether the dividend* of HO and 20 per cent, represented the profit* made by a going concern or MTt the salvage from a itock com pany in process of liquidation. If the former, it can easily be seen why the farmers are receiving such low price* for their cotton seed. A Modern Widow’* Mite. The farmer* of Beaufort County have had a very disastrous season this year from the standpoint of prices. Good crops have been produr- «d but the return 1 have been disap pointingly low. The potato crop was probably the worst of all in this re aped, yet these same farmers who have suffered auch heavy losses im mediately offered to assist the hail sufferers in Bamberg County with donations of potatoes ami other vege tables. They have no money to give but they generously offer to share what they hav e with those who are even more unfortunate. This modem “widow’* mite" reflects the true South Carolina spirit. these healthful ray* have been de- show window I observed that she veloped for use in general lighting, had darned her hose with Flappers* thus performing a double duty. In Darning Cotton, byt as the rip had fact, such lamps are already avsila- oocunjed considerably above her ble, but so far their use has been re- knees, the cotton feature did not stricted principally to home treat- show except on sightseeing occasions, ment of diseases in which suplight or (I think nearly ail of the younger set its equivalent is necessary .. are trying to help the poor cotton When the new lamps are adopted farmer out as much as possible.) for general use, as it is believed they eventually will be, it is expected that; i have also understood from an un- they will be of immense benefit, es- married gentleman’s source) that the pecially to indoor workers who have draw-string the women us e in keep- little contact with the health-giving i ngr their armless -BVDs on is made rays of ngtutal auniight. , ^ | of twisted cotton cord. This is ‘a very recent innovation, and takes the Washington Not Hailed aa “Second Cincinnatua” George Washington has soaiutpneK been called “the second Clnciiinatus’* In allusion to his having been called to the Presidency from his plantation at Mount Vernon, to which he retired after having voluntarily resigned Ids commission as commander in chief of the array. Bat it was William Henry Harrison, who was called from his es tate at North Bend, on the Oiiio river, to be the ninth President of the United States, who was termed “the Cincin- POINTS TO SUN AS CAUSE OF WEATHER natns of the West.” J place of silk straps which formerly passed over the shoulders and then Nobody’s Business Charge It. downward toward the hips. Miss Shcza Lyre, of the Peekpboo community, says that she sent, her last wedding present 'through ' the mails tied with cotton string instead of a silk ribbon. If all contributors Ft is mighty easy to lose friends to impending newly weds would re- and make enemies. I refused to gort to cotton for tying the presents credit a man once, and he never got extracted from them, at least 2 bales over it. I credited his brother, and 0 f the fleecy staple would be con- he never got over it. I asked him for i sumed for that purpose -in the course my money, and he said he didn’t like 1 0 f l^o^2» y«iM«^-4(Evdry little bit to be dunned. He flew up and has been mad ever since. He made 1 barrel of flour and 1 ham and 2 pairs of shoes by falling out with me. I took a man’s word as his bond a !nc few weeks ago, but found cut a Tittle helps —as the cld woman said when Bicther Brown gave her a penny fpr the missionary society.) And furthermore, there’* the bath ing beauties. I am told that they , . ... , ,,, stuff cotton “in their ears when they ).t«r n»t hi, bond -wan Ml „ K far dWe a „, 0 , 0r , h ^ , tj prM . Wow par. U. told mo if Id .end ha,*hove In ai,ht. him some good* he d pay me that Scientist Tell* of Study to Trace Change*. r^-r—— - .- 7. Washington.—Science is beginning to point to the sun as the cause of our weather. In the same gesture is contained a promise that the sun may enable accurate long-range forecasting in the future. r Facts and promise were revealed today by Dr. C. U. Ahl*ot. secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, In the 1030 report of field w-ork and explora tion. He described the findings of Ids sun-observers—engaged in three scat tered stations at their tedious labor over a period of many years—as ’‘sur prising." ■ : -S-r—* ^ • Sees Error in Old Views. • The weaHier-to'which-Doctor Abbot refers Is not climate. Weather is the changeable, day-to-day conditions of the atmosphere. -Science thought it knew where weather, came from. Ttoctor Abbot believe* the earlier conclusions timy have been erroneous. His report depicts our weather as the result of solar variations. , ,. „ 0 , , “Hitherto," the report says. “It has In Id. "Rn-n-. an, »ii W Kiwd that wealh .Miller relates that “one night In the In both of these instances the ah lusidu is tdiiWF*Vffrtfy^pf the Roman historian, Livy, relating that in the year 458 B. 0., when the Aequi and Volsel had shut up the Roman con sul, liucius MTnucfus, and his army in a defile, and. Rome itself being in great danger, the Roman senate, in alarm, had made Lucius Quintius Cin cinnati)* dictator, the messengers sent to Inform him’ dT^his appointment.' found him at the plow. Modern inves- } tigators, however, have pronounced the most attractive parts 'of the story fic tion.—Cleveland Plain Denier. Dense Sulphurous Fog Precursor of Plague Temper Tests. If your hat blows off and you same afternoon at 5 o’clock. He’s pouting now because I sent a collec tor to see him. 'He got $4.25 for L- telling that one littl^ lie. A friend hav e to chase it 4 or 5 blocks down of mine informed me that, that guy the street, if you don’t cuss, you arc would tell lies all day for 2 cents a fit candidate for a deacon in the apiece. church. Some folks will dodge you for f> years lather than pay you 75 cents. Extending credit to a deadbeat is a good way to get rid of him. I have Hard Times? We had listened to hard times talk at Intervals during the day,—of AO cents cucumbers, of eight cents cot ton, of the damag r done by the hail, of the time in the not distant future when toll gate* will be built on the highway* in a despetate effort to pay off the bonds, of poverty-streken men trading a couple of egg* at a country grocery store for a handful of rice, and ro on ad infinitum. That night we attended n Masonic lodge meeting and saw well dressed men who had ridden mile* in nice looking automobile* to witness a bit •f “goat riding” and incidentally re gale the inner man with a sumptuous JUh supper with all th^ trimmin’s. Hard times? Well, you tell one. knowq a man with a family of 10 to prdy‘Th'public. pick up and move 45 mile* to another town rather'than try to pay a small grocery bill, and hi* “moving cost” 2. If you bump your head sudden* ly and severely, and utter no bad words or think any evil thoughts, you arc certainly sufficiently pious to 3. If some fool tracks his Ford in to your Chevrolet and bends your was Hire*, dollars more than the drtrt fender, and does not even apologize smounted to that he was running f wr rudeness, and you don’t get away from. j ma d enough to kill the said fool, ’ then you should be entitled to the But if you want to get a real privilege of conducting a prayer shyster’s dander up, make him pay feting or leading the choi r on you after he has decided not to do Christmas eve. so. He will never get over it, and • _____ furthermore—he will accuse you of being u rases! and a scamp and a fWf as long a* he IHes. Some people will work for 2 dollars a day and go buy 2 dollars worth of mer chandise a day on credit, and then “talk, it about” that they make four dolluTs a day, but don’t explain that they make 2, and take the other 2 malice aforethought. month of August. a cold eaift wind, accompanied by a dense sul phurous fog. passed over the country, and the half-filled corn was struck with mildew.' It shrank and whitened In tile sun. till the. fields seemed as if sprinkled with flour, and where the fog hod remained longest—f«rr in some places it stimd up like a chain of hills during the greater part of the night—the more disastrous were its effects.” In November, a pestilence broke out/ wlu% many of the people were seir.etT by “strange fevers, and sore fluxes of a most infectious na ture.” In the parish of West ('aider, out of JKJO persons .’MR) were swept away, and in a little village called the Craigs. Inhabited by only six or eight faihllles, there were 30 corpses In the space of a few days.—lamdon Mall. on the subscriber at their office in Allendale, S. C., withm twsftty days after the service hereof, exclusive of the date of service. And if you fail - to answer this complaint ■within the —. time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this case wjll apply to the cwftt fbr the relief demanded in the complaint. PATTERSON and TOBlN, ' Plaintiff’s Attorneys. Allendale, S. Cj'May 13, 1931. Notice of Meeting of Stockholder*. ot The oasievt debt in the work! collect today is the installments a car and it is singular, but true—a fellow never get* mad when he iA “dunned” for an account which is secured. Where his obligations aic collatcral-ized, he calls «uch a debt an honest debt, but where he gets the goods on the confidence plan, that’s another thing. x. , ' i ' 4. If youi; wife tells you to get up and go sliekc down the furnace or put the cat Out while you are reading the evening pqper, and you still feel that you arc re*Hy proud of the fact that you marriod^uch af woman, you will ^po doubt pro be a dutiful husband and a lovi daddy—and an all-round agreeable cuixea. To Stand for Age*. Although America’s greatest cuthc- dral, that of St. John the Divine in Mow York, will not be the targest in tke world, jt will rank third in ground But it will be the most dur- o/ any cathedral ever built by the hand of man. In structural strength, due to bet- tar materials and finer workmanship, St. John’s will greatly surpass any of the European cathedrals of the Middle Ages. It i* estimated that the granite used will not wear down as much as an inch in 5,000 years. An eminent engineer, J. Bernard Walker, recently declared that he has seen a finer job of masonry, or in which the cutting and setting «f stone showed greater exactitude and care. Bhrring some great cataclysm of satore, St. John’s cathedral should stand for thousands of years as a monument to American genius of the twentieth century. Light and Health. Electric lamps of the future will be fcanlth-giving as well a 3 light-giving, declare* an engineering publication. It Is well known that quartz mercury which radiate the > beneficial vttowolet !*ys, teye been us physician 5 for some time. But these required expert and careful Therefore, my advice to you is . . . . If you want to keep your fiicnds, sell ’em for cash. But it u absolutely all right to sell folks not counted among your friends on credit; they will pay you. Promis- cous credit business has put more men in the asylum and Cemetery than has all other hazards combined, ex cept drinking, making booze. 5. If one of your Halitosis friends meets you on the street 1 and proceeds to poke his loud-speaker *o close to your face that his slobbers land in your eyes—while he’* telling you the same joke that he told you year before last and last year and three times already this year, and you don’t haul off and knock the lard out of ‘him, you certainly are a real Chris tian gentleman, and by rights—you should be occupying a pulpit at least two times every Sabbath. Old King Cotton. I am plad to s ee the women “taking to cotton” here of late. The develop ment of the South depends on the use of cotton goods. Now, just yesterday, Mrs. Brown came down town with a cotton string tied around her little finger to re mind her that sire should take a loaf of bread home with her. Up till very recently she used silk exclusively for this purpose. 6. If you can sit still and rest con tent, and b e satisfied with all and singular in ami about you, while some bonehead is making a 50-minute Speech when a 2-nvinute speech would and selling over-load him and hi* hearers, you are indeed possessed of a sweet, ami able disposition; and if your friends really appreciate the meiits you are possessed w'ith, they will point you out in a crowd of a thousand as be ing the best, the most eventempered, honorable man in the world, and if you ain’t sprouting wings, you ain’t getting your entitlements ansoforth. ■' i 7. If your wife spend* more than - —-Air Scout’* Pledge The oath of the Air Scout* Is as follows: "I am mi Air Scout! I am living to the best of my ability the' Scout oath and law. I believe in the slogan ‘Safety in the Air.’ I know that a healthy mind and body an* the greatest factor* of airworthiness. I shall strive to further aviation by ap plying the principles of. scouting in all matters |>ertalning . to flying. 1 shall always remember that a good flyer is an efllcient flyer, and that ef ficiency comes through application. 1 will never forget that an Air Scout is first, last and always a Boy i^cotit. that he practices self-control, is a clear thinker, la coobhoaded. a student of aviation and has n*spect for experi ence.” . . Airplane* and Bird* It ha* been* asked. “Why can’t air planes be made to fly as the bird lies?” I.a Technique Aeronnutique “It is well known that the prl- tisiry ^gathers of a bird’s wing an? dis tinct!} ^uparated .svhiie in flapping flight. TesttKmade nq. models simulat ing this constroviiun showed that the lift increased threeximes, and drag in creased pine times. , nqe of the most important assets of the Irtcii's wing is it« flexibility and control—n vendition exceedingly diflieult to copy meefinni- cnlly. Many scientists are studying tiie flight of hints to find sny hitherto overlooked details of nature's tech nique that will help man 4|i mechani cal flying. When inventors produce a material that lias the strength, weight ratio of feathers and the hollow lames of lord* with an engine which has the efficiency of a bird's digestive system and muscles, it will then he easy to build an ainflane as safe as a bird.”— Washington Star. er was merely the fluctuation affected by local terrestrial conditions In the ordewti' periodic march of climate. *Thte4nnew results indicate, on the contrary, that weather is principally caused by frequent interventions of variations of the sun. affecting ter restrial affairs. Tells of Mountain Test*. “For many years we have operated stations on high mountains In distant desert lands making daily observa tions of the intensity of the sun's rays, on which mil life ami weather depend. This tedious campaign Is just reaching its victory. “Short-Interval changes of solar radiation, taking four or live -days in which to produce a rising or a falling sequence of sbiar» changes averaging only eight-tenths of 1 per cent, ob viously cause changes In. the tempera ture and barometric pressure at Wash ington and other stations’ as well. Opposite cause in solar change plainly produce opposite effects In went her. Some of the effects are simultaneous with their solar causes. Others are delayed ten or more days, iwobulfly drifting down in waves from distant centers of direct solar actioai” ■ - r * D«H-t«r Abbot disclosed that live defi nite periodicities of soiai variation - have up|*eured in iieritnl* of 118. 45. 25, 11 and 8 months respectively, and that these appear lo In? related to the sun-spot cycle and to other regular phenomena of the sun. The observer* and Doi t or Abbot now are seeking a cycle of shorter period*, and for (be year 1!*24 he hu>« established one repeated period of .45 days and another of approximately C> days. NOTICE JS HEREBY GIVEN that a meeting of the stockhoMerg of J. B. Mixson Brokerage Co., Inc., will be held at the office of Brown and Bush, Barnwell, S. on th® 6th day of July, 1931, at 10 o’clock a. m., for the purpose of* considering a resolu tion to dissolve said corporation, sur render its charter and liquidate its affairs. *- J. B. MIXSON, President. * E. M. MIXSON, SecreUry. Barnwell, S. C., June 3, 1931. CITATION NOTICE. State of South Carolina, \ County of Barnwell. By John K. Snelling, Esq., Probate Judge. —^ WHEREAS, G. Herman Harden, hath mad e su ' t to me t0 K 1 * 811 ^ unt< ’ him Letters of Administration of the Estate of and effects of Providence H. Harden. | THESE ARE, THEREFORE, tn cite and admonish all and smgulai the kindred and creditors of the said Providence H, Harden, deceased, that they bo and appear before me, in the. Court cf Probate, to be held at Barn well, S. C., on Saturday, June 13th. next, after publication thereof, at IT o’clock in the forenoon to show cause, if any they have, why the said Ad-' ministration should not be granted. Given under my Hand this 1st day of June A. D., 1931. JOHN K. SNEELLING. Judge of Probate-. Published cn th e 4th day of June. 1931, in The Barnwell People-Sentinel. ~ ~~ CITATION NOTICE Miss Iva Figger, of the Plninview neighborhood, told my Cousin Willet HuYt that she uses cotton thread al together now in hasting her knickers you make, and leaves the iyoungmns at home whil e she plays bridge 12 times a week, with her friends, and forgets to > sew the buttons on your union .suit, and refuses to Come into the “company room” when you’ve brought- your Brother Bill down for a short visit, and makes you “eat out” when the cook happens not to . , come—and you don’t have thoughts preparatory to aewmg them up w,th of n)Urdw> suicjdc and ([rand larceny, then heaven Js ymir home, and this old worUL a^. worthy v of such a worm of the dust. floss. (1 do not know this to be a fact, as I never' saw 0 o step into a Ford.) Sumter Ships Many Hogs. ** • I Xhen there’s Reddy Jazzer, of Huggo Center, she cut her finger a few days ago while helping herj Sumter Couhty farmers have ship- mother open a box of sardines for ped 2 5 cars of hogs this season. The cars contained 2,228 hog s that weigh ed 402,851 pounds, for an average of supper, and “she tied the disfigured digit up with a cotton rag. (Hereto- f° re ifri'to [men for mis purpose.) While Miss “Nono” Kidd was bend- mount received by the 163 shippers was $27,800.14. “Dues’*” Crecting to America The National Broadcasting coui|Miuy says that the first international pro gram ever broadcast from Italy to the United States was staged on January 1. 11131, when Premier Benito Musso lini, speaking from Fascist heudquar tens in Rome, sent his New Year greet ing to America through const-to-oonst networks. This-was the first program ever heard in this country originating on the l4.allmr**mulnlan<ir Twice lie fore, however, listeners had heard pro- grams from Italisn waters—from the yacht of Senators Guglielino Marconi, the father of radio, anchored off the coast of the peninsula. Keep Up Old Cuctom * It is signlticar^/iat, although In the country.mowing no doubt to' .sjj-oss of circumstances, many old customs have itled out, in London ceremonies dis tantly connected with them still linger. For instance, fanners once gave their laborers the traditional “Plow Monday Supper” to celebrate the beginning of another year’s plowing. Il would be hard to find a farm where the custom ts still kept up. Inn the lord mayor keeps the festival by giving a Plow Monday dinner to all the officials of the city corporation.— London Morning Post. • Nevada Mourn* Desert Music Makers’ Passing Tonopah. Nev.—Folks of iheTBViitb- ern Nevada desert country hare mourned the passing of Fred Thomas, known as the “music master of the desert." who died here recently only a few days after re-establishing rela tions with his high' born kinsmen in England. Born to the purple. Thomas left his ancestral home in England in ItHMl. where he enjoyed the wealth and lux ury of peerage, to roam the world as an adventurer anil wandering inusi- ciaiv^ The mining uni) construction CampsNln many parts of, the West knew him before he came to Nevada In, 1914*witli1*ls violin to ploy for the desert folk, k Several months a)so. when he knew death was approaching, he wrote to his relatives who could not at first believe he was alive. Two days aft er they had accepted him, he died. Record' Wolf Caught Thornburg. Ark.—The -largest wolf caught ip this part of the state was exhibited recently by Bud Wxwlward. veteran state trapper. The wolf weighed 75 pounds. ADVERTISE in The People-Sentinel The State cf South Carolina, County of Barnwell. By John K. Snelling, Esquire; Probate Judge. WHEREAS, J. F. Ready ha* made suit to me to grant unto him Letters of Administration of the Estate of and effect* of Eugene Ready; THESE ARE, THEREFORE, to cite and admonish all and singular the kindred and creditors of the said Eu gene Ready, decca^, that they be and appear befoie m^, in th^ Court of Probate, to be held at Barnwell, S. C., on Saturday, June. 20th. next, after publication thereof at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, jf any they have, why the said Administra tion should not be granted. Given under my Hand this eighth day of June, Anno Domini 1931. <JOHN K. SNELLING, Judge of Probate, Barnwell Co. Published on th e 11th day of June, 1931, in The Barnwell People-Sentinel. PROBATE SALE. SUMMONS FOR RELIEF Happiness Joy is a condition of the mind and heart, not a circfinistunee of environ fFIWff^iftthetlilng we create, not a gift from tiie world. The real secret of happiness is not in doing what one likes, but in liking \\'luit.-uije does.— Grit. State of South Carolina, .County of Barnwell. In Common Pleas. W. T. RILEY, SR., PLAINTIFF, vs. B. M. JENKINS, JR., SOUTHERN COTTON OIL COMPANY; COL OMBIA NATIONAL BANK; ED. L. FROST CO.; MILES COURTNEY CO.; G. M. NEELEY, RECEIVER OF THE BANK OF OLAR; AND THE STANDARD «OIL COMPANY OF NEW JERSEY, TO THE DEFENDANTS. DEFENDANTS ED L. State of South Carolina t __ T County of Ajken. Court of Probate. ADA TUTT, a* Administrator of tlu* Estate of George Yutt, Deceased,' Petitioner, •'.vs. . ADA TUTT, in her own right, STEVE TUTT, JIM TUTT, BEN TUTT, WILLIE TUTT, and BANK OF WESTERN CAROLINA, DEFENDANTS. By virtu* of an orde r of the Pro bate Court of Aiken County, South Carolina, dated and filed on the ,|4tb day of J48b 1931, in the above enti tled cause,. I will offer for sale at public cutciy to the highest biddei*' in front of Barnwell County Court House, at Barnwell, South Carolina, bn Salesday, Monday, July 6th, next, the following real estate Ho-wit: All that certain piece, parcel m* - trad of land, with dwelling thereon,' containing forty-fiv e acres, more or less, situahe, lying and being in Four Mile Township, School District No. 16, Barnwell County, South Carolina, bounded as follows: North-east by Old^ Savannah Road; North-west by lands of Annie W. Youngblood; South- east by land* of Annie W. Young blood. and on the" South-west by lands ^>f Annie W. Youngblood. Termg of, sale, cash; purchaser to pay for deed and revqpue stamps. The successful bidder wi'U be required to pay over the sum of one hundred dollars as earnest money, or his bid FROST CO. „ . You are hereby eurumoned and Wieregjrde^ and the quired to answer-the-eomptamt in this case, of which a copy is on file in the office of the Clerk of Court for Barnwell County, and to serve a copy! of your answer to the said complaint ( June 4th, 1931. immediately resold. GEORGE R. WEBB, Judge of Probate, for Aiken County, So. Car.