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tAOBTWa TheBarnwell People-Sentinel JOHN W. HOLMES .ISMrrJtU, THE BARNWELL PEOPLE-SENTINEL, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA — ta - B. P. DAVIES, Editor and Proprietor. Entered at the post office at Barnwell, S. C., as second-class matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year $1.50 Six Months 1 .90 Three Months .50 . (Strictly In Adennc*.) THURSDAY, JULY 7TH, 1932. ’Most any time now we expect to hear President Hoover declaim that this is a depression to end depres sions. th e common people isn’t now con trolled by “big business,” with whom he has been closely affiliated for some years. At any rate, he has again proved th e truth of the statement that “poli tical gratitude is for favors yet to come.” When Staith and McAdoo buried the hatchet, they evidently left the handle .sticking out, judging from what McAdoo did to Smith a t the Chicago convention. Nobody’s Business By Gee McGee. Lost ar.1 Found. Th e dead body of a very fat man was^found out in Colorado th e other day by a snipe hunter. This carcass was partially petrified. Its head was a solid bone. Guess it was the remains of a congressman that met with ap accident on his way hme. Cotton Letter. New York, July 2.—The spot mar ket was disturbed near noon by the A week’, program at a movie receil>t of Mv< ' ral h,,ndred P rivate theatre in a neighboring town tacM-' “"t *• ed the following pictures: “Amateur Daddy,” “Unexpectad Father” and “When a Feller Needs a Friend.” From which we gather that if an amateur daddy becomes a n unexipect- ed father that’s when a feller needs a friend. 1 do all of my eating at the hotel. My breakfasts consists of cakes and coffee and a gobbler of orange juice. They store tp/if silverware on the dining room tables; I have ^t . my plate the following utipsels: 1 prong ed baby fork and 2 more, 2 knives, 3 forks, 4 spoons, 2 ladles, spoons. So far I have used only 1 knife and 1 spoon. Th e knife is dull like I want it to be so’s I won’t cut my mouth. There are half a dozen pretty waitresses at my command. I am a little bit deef; that interferes ma terially with conversation. The cute little blond came to my table at din-, ner th e other day (noon meal) and I thought she asked me if I wa.s lone some with my wife gone to the moun tains and I said yes. She whisked oft' towards th e kitchen and fetched m£ some ice-cream. Deefne.«s don’t pay. which were French. Not counting lound bales at al., ignoring hay, hides and alfalfa, the estimators estimate in g porch. I have drifted modern 1 guess we are getting along all right—considering the depression and soldiers bonus. The mountains ain’t very far off from my hotel, only 75 miles. That fixes it so’s I can drive up there for the weak-ends. Keeping hotel-batch is fine, but I itfiss getting up a t night and putting out the cat, and the southern breez e in my slcep- ‘The Editor's Opportunity.” Under the abov e caption, the edi tor of the Nes and Courier discourses at length on how, if he were a country editor again, barter would b e im mensely important in his business. He would tour the county and “take in anything that the people had to of fer in exchange for sulvcriptions, want ‘ads,’ and printing jobs.” Far be it from us to disillusion the brilliant Charleston editor. Suffice it *to .?ay that in the past we have offered to take farm produce in exchange for subscriptions and received a most in different response. Last fall we of fered to allow double the market price for cottonseed and a scant half- dozen subscribers availed themselves of -the offer. We have had subscri bers who couldn’t sleep (so they said) if the paper did not arriv e on sched ule time each week and have cured these dear friends cf insomnia by parting company with them when their delinquency became too great. As long as Editor Ball can t*- chang e his talents for good old coin of the realm in the City by the Se a , we’d advise him to stick to hi* knit ting. It’s pretty hard to make ends meet with a few bushels of cotton seed. a crop of about 12,222,211, but the boll weevils have not yet made their report. July broke 12 points when it looked lik e rain in Texas, but the nearby months held firm at a new low/ The straddlers were . e hort and the longs were straddling near the close. Raw cotton and' long-tailed rats were rot taxed in the recent budget ■> balancing tax measure; we therefore predict ice next winter, so hold. since now. I moved: I sleep in pajamas * A Beauty Hint. * — A elos e obseiver (male) told me today about a wonderful discovery. You remember a little seam that runs up and down on the back-side of mi lady’s .-lockings? Well—he says if a nybody is afflicted with bow-legged- ness—they can overcome most of it if they wilj wear their hose in such a manner that the seam.' wilt curve in rather than out as they follow the calves northward. He did not mean that this was a cure, but merely a favoiable hallucination. A Political Ir.grate. An ingrat e is one of the most de spicable things ever created by the Almighty in the shape of man, and in the light of political developments Buy Now; Be Closed Out Later. All kinds of bonds, except Uncle Sam’s favorites, are selling powerful low. Certain city improvement bonds ar e being offered at $5.00 per bundle, over-due water-wmrks bonds can be had at $25.00 per batch, while miscel laneous municipal bonds are fetching 1-eent per pound; provided, of course, that no person be allowed to buy le-’S than a bale of 100 pounds. I advise Wanted:—Farm Relief. By reason of accident and invest ment (?), I am a farmer. Up to 1917, I bought land as land was the thing. From 1917 4o 1920, I loaned all my mdney on land, as 8 percent interest was the thing. Nobody questioned the value of farm acreage —and my banker said, “McGee is all right—he owns several hundred acres cf good farm property.” Friends who borrowed my cash paid me off in land with 5 years taxes due thereon. Times have changed. I never let a banker know that I own any land at all. I don’t even let it leak out that I own 2 old automobiles. He never has found out that I still pos-es- some (paid for) Wall Street stocks. In fact, he finds out very Hale about things generally—except my liquid as set-, and that means that there ain’t much to find out. But going back to Gee McGee the Farmer”: I appreciate my farm interests just about as much ac the average guy loves his mother-in-law. If a man were to come to me and of fer me my choice—free of cost—100 acres of good farming land or the measles—I’d take the measles with a smile as my preference—for there’s a chance that I might get rid of them in time, but the only way to shuck loose from a farm is—forget to pay bank 2 time.'-. investors to select green-and-gold-1 y 0 ur taxes—or skip the federal land bordered bonds, as they are much prettier and will look better when used for wall paper. Political Weather Forecast. For New Yoik and the New Eng- of the past several months, Alfred ^ an( ^ States, Maine excepted, very Emanuel Smith, one time Democratic wet ’ for the Centr al States, much candidate for the Presidency of the ' fhunder and sCme moisture; for the United States, seems to qualify as a Southern States, dryness will prevail political ingrate of the first water. No one seems to know exactly just except near the swamps and in large towns; the Western area, storms ar? by the week-end. General:—Many disturbances may be looked for throughout the country, pruch hot air, strong wind.-, and cyclone cam paigns may be expected. what caused the rift in the personal i a-brewing and may reach light wines and political friendship of Smith and Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt, the “Al and Frank" counterpart of Damon and Pythias. On two occasions the present nominee of the Denuocratic party had placed in nomination his friend Smith for the highest office in the gift of the American people. In an effort to promote th 0 Smith candi dacy in 1928, Roosevelt consented to run on the Democratic ticket for the office of Governor of New York State. He was elected, whereas Smith lost the electoral votes of his own State. Governor Roa-evelt proved himself to be presidential timber and when he began to gather delegates from vari ous States, Smith, in spite of the fact Summering vs. Simmering. Our favorite doctor cam e to our house 3 weeks ago and after using an instrument or two, he told me that my wife had the high blood pressure and a slight skip in her heart. He recommended an immediate change of latitude for her. Well, I set out to explain to the doctor that it would cost money to change latitude, but he said wives like my wife is scarce, and they are. My baby girl was pronounced norma’ except as to appetite, color and rid ing her bicycle, but he told me to take her a long, too. that he had met ignominious defeat four years ago, sensing Democratic victory this year and evidently blind ed by his over-mastering personal am bition and egotism, could not bear to see his former friend and ally get i _—The family held a council of war the prize that was denied him in and finance. I was convinced that if 1928 by the American people. He, I would stay at hom e and work that therefore, headed a movement to my cld Jady and the child could put “stop Rc^evelt” and in this he failed up at a nice mcunt.an resrrt just as ignomimcusly as he did in his can- about as cheap as they could live at didacy fpr President. His defeat was home, and when we commenced to pack encompa.-:sed by no less a man than J up. When they got thru, .the follow- William Gibbes McAdoo, who was 1 ing things were left in the house: 1 feiled in his ambition to win the pianc, 1 electric range, 1 kitchen sink nomination in 1924 by the Smith and 2 rugs, forces at Madison Square Garden. Instead of accepting his defeat at the Chicago Convention Friday night in a sportsmanlike manner, Smith sulked in his hotel room and his as sociates intimated that he will not support the Democratic ticket this fall. la view of his fight against the Nsir York governor and his attitude ii defeat, many people will doubtless if the one-time champion of and black cats. —I get them trucked and bussed Old Fashioned Auto Horn and drayed to their new home and it’s place. They decided that I cla?e up our dwelling and moye to the hotel down town. 1 did that the next day. They gave me room 512 on the 5tb floor; they tried to put ra^ in room 513, but there wassent anything doing. I hate 13 I have about 75 tenants (young- uns and all) to care for. Some of them are in good shape and don’t ask me for much—but there are others. I ought to lov e my helpers more than I do, but I hate farming so bad, I have to take some of my .spite cut on the tillers thereof. I just as soon see a cyclone coming toward m c as a tenant; I can possibly dodge a cyclone, but a tenant—never. The average tenant'? want—flour, meat and tobacco—especially tobacco. If there ain’t any tobacco in hqr.ven and some of my fellows go there, it’s going 'to be hades to them regaidless. They will quit work at 10 o’clock in the morning and “walk a mile” for a chaw. Tobacco comes ahead of something to eat, wear, drink or ride in. If they don’t keep a quid in their mouths all the time, they are liable to kill a mule, cow, another negro or fall dead. Some are almost as bad about tobacco as whitp folks. Here’s hew I feel about these earthly good.^i If all my farms were to suddenly sink out of sight, I would not even-go down to look at the hole they left. If my tenants all moved away and took my mules along, I don’t-liiink I‘d ever ask where they went. If my neighbor were to deed m e all of his land, I’d .-hoot him at first sight. I am possibly able to own land, but I ain’t able to pay taxes on it and farm it. ~l have had my fi 1 !. I am thru. Five-cent cotton and'75c chawing tobacco don’t suit me. Two families lived on one of my farm* 3 years and I never found it out till one cf them died and they wanted me to buiy her. Causes Lot of Trouble Snoqualiuie Falls. Wash.—The old- fashioued auto horns with rubber bulb attached are still a menace! J. C. Et- ler reported his horse stepped on one In his hack yard. Etler’s wife d|*opj»ed a pan of dishes on hearing the lionk and a neighbor driving h rwas so star tled his flivver smashed a bole through Etler’s woodshed. Zoo Got* $300 Parrot San Antonio, Texas.—A Gomora Is land parrot, valued at more than $300, and believed to be the only one of Its kind In the United States, has been added to the zoo here.— r— Finds His Quarry Former Army Pal! Denver.—City Detective .frames O'Donnell recently returned to Denver from a trip to Portland, Ore., wlthodt his man. O’Donnell was sent to return George Hay to face charges of embezzlement “But that was one time I was perfectly satisfied to come home without my man,” O’Donnell de clared. “Hay, I discovered, is the same George Hay who served^ with me in the same War-time outfit in France. i “Believe me. when the gover nor of Oregon showed me a let ter clearing Hay 1 was t.’ckled to death.” residence. The qualifications for voting shall be as follows: Voter shall be a white Democrat twenty-one years of age, or shall become so befor c the succeeding general election. They shall be citi zens of the United States and of he State. They shall also have resided in the State two years and in the County six months prior to the suc ceeding general election, and n he club district sixty day* prior io the first primary, following their offer to enroll: Provided, That public school teachers and ministers of -the gospei in charge of a regular organized church shall be exempt from the pro- Legal Advertisements CITATION NOTICE. The State cf South Carolina, County of Barnwell. By John K. Snelling, Esq., Probate Judge. WHEREAS, Bessie Hayes, hath made suit to me to grant unto her Letters cf Administration of the Estate cf and effects of M. L. McEl- haney. THESE ARE, THEREFORE, to cite and admonish all and singular the kindred and creditors cf the said M. L. McElhaney, deceased, that they be and appear before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Barnwell, S. C'., on Saturday, July 16th, next, after publication thereof, at 11 o’clock in the forenoon, to shew cause, if any they have, why the said Administra tion should not be granted. Given under my hand this 6th da y of July, A. D. 1932. JOHN K. “SNELLING, Judge of Prebate. Published on the 7th day ol July. 1932, in The Barnwell People-Sentinel. THURSDAY, JULY, 7TH, J932. visions of this section, if otherwise qualified. All candidates shall be required to fil e their pledges and pay their as* EPjgqmpntg to. Perry B. Bush, -Secre tary, ©n or before 12:00 o’clock noon, Friday, July 15th, 1932, \ and .*hall publish their card in’the lo^al news paper at least two isues preceding the first primary. The asses.*mcnts shall be for Mayor, $10.00; for Alderman, $2.50; for Commissioner of Public Works, $2.50. The boundaries of the club district shall be the incorporate limits of the Town of Barnwell. P. W. PRICE, President. BROWN & BUSH Attorneys-at-Law BROWN-BUSH BUILDING BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA PRACTICE IN STATE AND FEDERAL COURTS SUPERFEX The Oil-Burning REFRIGERATOR NOTICE OF ENROLLMENT. By virtue of the authority vested in me as President of the Barnwell Municipal Demociatic Club, I hereto give notice: That the enrollment bo >k will be opened at Lemon Brtx*’. Store on Fri day, July 1st, 1932, and will remain open until Saturday, July 30th, 1932. The enrollment committee shall con sist of A. A. Lemon, E. D. Roberlson and N. D. Coclin. Those entitled to enroll <hall write their full name, giving the:r age and For Demonstration, Prices and Terms See KLINE TRADING CO. KLINE, S. C. J _ SA^AN NAH , . .ENJOYAN INEXPENSIVE (Seashore weekend ONLY 75 PER /or 2 NIGHTS • • 7MEALS TICKET TO ANY THEATRE AND TO TYBRISA PAVILION SUIT PRESSED • FREE LAUNDRY dining// dancing/ $ bathing/ ; SAVANNAH'S BEST y/ HOTEL SAVANNAH ANDREW /..SMITH, m r> N A G r ,, SAVANNAH . .GEORGIA note: present this ad to obtain the above special week end rates ‘ • \ B. P. S.—135.