The Barnwell people-sentinel. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1925-current, July 14, 1932, Image 4
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THE BARNWELL PEOPLE-SENTINEL, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA
THURSDAY, JULY 14TH, ,1932.
The Barnwell People-Sentinel
JOHN W. HOLMES
1849—1912.
B. P. DAVIES, Editor and Proprietor.
Entered at the poat office at Barnwell,
S. C., as second-class matter.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
One Year $1.50
Six Months .90
Three Months .50
(Strictly in Advance.)
THURSDAY, JULY 14TH, 1932.
The Republicans are now in the
position of trying to make black ap
pear white. They would hav e us be
lieve that President Hoover is the one
to lead us out of this slough of de
pression and despond. Well, he and
his predecessor* led us into it—it
would seem that he ought to know
the way out.
---I am very, very;'very fond of vhe
late bathing suits—for women. The
recent designs carry the full sun-
back features, as well as the exposed
sides; some have shoulder straps
while others have pictures of little
moons and stars in the two or three
places that are big enough to hold
little mooiw and stars. A few of
them are 2-piece-garments, but the
majority of them are—nit. Our own
sweetheart and the other guy’s wife
certainly do look stunning in these
new swimming excuses.
Seuator Byrnes.
Senator James F. t Byrnes is rapidly
rising in the council* of the Demo
cratic party and vindicating the confi
dence placed in him and the good
judgment shown by the people of South
Carolina in electing him to the United
States Senate two years ago. “Our
Uncle Sam has merged my busi
ness with his business. I believe—by
eathing less, drinking nothing at all,
wearing my old clothes longer and
working harder—I can possibly earn
enough to pay the last bunch of taxes
levied, but there won’t be nothing
left for me and my folks. One of th e
senators suggested (in conference)
that the government reduc e operating
expenses instead of raising more
taxes. He was promptly thrown out
of the back door—and h e is- now an
ostracised economist.
Pity Ua Who Stayed at Home.
1 ain’t worrying about the 4,-
000,000 exservice men- that won the
war. Uncle Sam will <ak e care of
them, but this j.s what bothers me:
What in the thundev is going to be
come of the 117,655,444 folks that
hours
r
"V
This event took place in August.
A big campaign meeting was to be
held during the week tiiat I bought
my shoes and I had selected that oc
casion to introduce the patent-leather
shoe style to the community of my
birth. The memorable Friday came
around at last. I had got up early
that morning and slopped th e * hogs
and fed the cows and took a bath in
the creek behind the bam.
Legal Advertisements
CITATION NOTICE.
1 finally got those No. 7 shoes
on my No; 10 feet. Th e temperature
at 10 jO’clock that morning wa.s at
least 97 in the shade of the old ajf-
ple tree, where I finished dressing.
I hobbled around the house a few
minutes and then set out for Smith’s
Cross Roads. I decided to walk to
the meeting, as there was no other
way to get there—except run, and I
couldn’t do that.
. I stayed at home? Soldiers ainlt the
Jimmie ’ played a prominent part in ' only person8 that can boast of pover _
the Democratic national convention at
Chicago and only a few days ago a
Washington corre^ondent, in a high
ly complimentary news dispatch to a
daily paper, referred to tlie Senator
a* “the watchdog of the treasury.”
Senator Byrnes has attained his
commanding position because of his
native ability, coupled with his years
of service and experienc t . in the
national Hou-e of Representatives,
and if the Democrats ar„ successful
in the November elections he will
have still greater power and influence.
ty and unemployment.
‘When Will Business Improve?"
Under the above caption the Geor
gia Railroad Bank and Trust Com
pany, of Augusta, publishes ibis
week the first of a series in interest
ing and instructive advertisements.
That institution, which enjoys the
confidence of thousands of people
throughout Georgia and South Caro
lina, correctly takes the position that
“business will improve when a majori
ty of our people decide not to wait
for something to happen, but instead
to make a strong personal effort to
improve each his own individual busi
ness.” It tells the people to balance
their own budgets and to save a part
of every dollar. That L« sound com
mon sense.
Too many of us have come to de-
pefid too much upon “government
aid.” We have the wrong con
ception of what government should
be. We have come to believe that the
government should support the peo
ple, whereas the people should sup
port the government. *
^There’* 1 - no neeed to wait for
business to get better. These may be
normal times for a long while yet.
The sure way to get ahead is to start
*>ow,” continues the advertisement.
To which we might add that there’s
no need to wait for Congress to au-^
thorixe immediate payment of the
solders’ bonus money or repeal the
18th Amendment or perform some
trick of magic that will restore pros
perity over-night. It is just about as
hard to legislate prosperity into a
country as it is to legislate morals
into a people.
In the meantime, let’s all do our
bit. •
Cotton Letter.
New York, July 12.—Liverpool was
affected by Manchester hedges, but
July eased off only 19 points when
Bethlehem steel scored ij gain in sym
pathy with call money. Secretary
Mills premises to use cotton in the
manufacture of government red tape
in the future: that ought to consume
fcit least 1 (tO,000 bales per day, count
ing round bales three times—but this*
information had no appreciable kick
insofar as spots and tariff' ate con
cerned. Boll weevils and second
hand cars are active in the. central
belt, but home-brew is scarce in Texas
since the convention — in Chicago.
Don’t hold, please.
Them shoes commenced to bite
and pinch and squeeze and mash and
hug and twist my “dogs” before I got
a mil,, away. I was walking pigeon-
toed, but that wa-en’t very unnatural.
I sat down on a stump and unloosed
my suffering feet; after a short rest,
I worked 25 minutes getting them
back on. ,
1 finally arrived at the meeting
place. I got a seat in the hot sun
clo>e to my sweetheart. I was suf
fering. Big tears were rolling down
my jaws. She asked me who was
dead and I teld her grammaw. The
candidates; began to speak. They
talked about free silver and 16 to 1,
but my toe J and fallen arches were
bleeding and burning. They were
talking of the tariff; I th ught the
tariff was a new kind of food, but
my agony continued.
How to Get Kid of Cock-Roaches.
1. —Catch loach between (linger and
thumb.
2. —Lay him flat on the floor.
d.—Bore hole in back with gimlet.
4. —Blindfold iPach iwith sticking
plaster.
5. —Tie left hind-leg to right front
leg.
1 he aid very litt'e a t the meeting.
I saw nothing at all. Them patent
leather shoes had ruint my feet.
When I regained consciousness five
h' urs later, .1 was walking into our
front pi-izza at home, bare footed,
but happy. Nobody, not even me,
ever found out what became of that
pair of feet killers. I wasen’t able to
walk very good for six months.
Hom e Demonstration News.
The State of South Carolina,
County of Barnwell.
By John K. Snelling, Esq., Probate
Judge.
WHEREAS, Starrie Mack hath
made suit to me to jjrant unto Jennie
P. Greene Letters of Administration
of the Estate of and effects cf Rivan-
nah DeVoe. V
THESE ARE, THEREFORE, to
cite and admonish all and singular
the kindred and creditors of the said
Rivannah DeVce, deceased, that they
be and appear before me, in the
Court of Probate, to be held at Barn
well, S. C., on Tuesday, July 26, next
after publication thereof, at 11 o’
clock in the forenoon, to show cause,
if any they have, why the said ad-
inistration should not be granted.
Given under my hand this 11th day
of July, A. D. 1932.
JOHN K. SNELLING,
Judge of Probate, B. C.
Published on th e 14th day of July,
1932, in the Barnwell People-Sentinel.
CITATION NOTICE.
The State cf South Carolina,
County of Barnwell.
By John K. Snelling, Esq., Probate
Judge.
WHEREAS, Bessie Hayes, hath
made £uit to me to grant unto
her Letters of 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-
ticn should not be granted.
Given under my hand this 6th day
of July, A. D. 1932.
JOHN~K. -SNELLING,
Judge of Probate.
Published on the 7th day of July,
1932, in The Barnwell People-Sentinel.
residence.
The qua^fications for- voting *haR
be as follows: ‘‘Voter shall be a white
Democrat twenty-one years of age, or
shall beepme so befor e the succeeding
generail 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
ceeding general election, and o he
club 'district sixty days prior ic. the
first primary, following their offer to
enroll: Provided, That public school
teachers and ministers of the gospei
ip charge of a regular organized
church shall be exempt from the pro
visions of this section, if otherwise
quklified.
Hi-
All candidates shall be required to '
fil e their pledges and pay their as
sessments to Perry B. Bush, Secre
tary, on or before 12:00 o’clock i:oon,^N
Friday, July 15th, 1932, and .'hallM*/
publish their card in the local news
paper at least two isues preceding the
V
County six months prior to the suev first primary. The assessments shad
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 *h«t
Town of Barnwell. ^
* P. W. PRICE, President.
BROWN & BUSH
Y V
Attorneys-at-Law
BROWN-BUSH
BUILDING
BARNWELL,
SOUTH CAROLINA
PRACTICE IN STATE AND FEDERAL COURTS
SUPERFEX
The Oil-Burning REFRIGERATOR
At thw- season when the tomato 'is
so plentiful our attention i* called to
the importance of it as a food. No
other vegetable gives quite so many
kinds of valu e for the money. We
6. —Pour hot tar in opening on back, have nothing to match the tomato in
7. —Carry him out and leave him in AavoV, in color or in variety cf pos-
middle of street. sibilities for the table.
8-—Let your neighbor run over him The nutritive value of tomatoes has
with his Ford. not always been recognized, but it is
9.—Give dead roach to your parrot now known as an excellent source of
or chicken, if any.
Old Stuff.
Folk' don’t pay as much atten
tion these days to a fellow who flies
across the Atlantic ocean (unless it
happens to be a woman) as they paid
to my pa when he drove home in a
rubber-tired buggy 30 years ago.
And the Woods Are Full <of ’Em.
My community is seriously affect
ed with political hand-shakers. If
anything in the world ought to he
Vitamin C, the antiscorbutic vitamin
and a good source of three others, A,
B and G, according to the Bureau
of Home Economics cf the U. S. De
partment of Agriculture. ThL mear-
that tomatoes contain the vitamin's
which promote normal growth and
help to keep the tissue of the eye,
ear, nose and throat resistant to in
fection; stimulate the appetite; aid
in the digestiv e proce-ses and pre
vent pellagra.
Investigation has shown that can
ned tomatoes, if processed by the
cold pack method, as are all commet
Nobody’s Business 1
outlawed, it’s that form of greeting.
Congress -hould pass ,a law requiring! hav e essentially the same
candidates to deposit a nickl e in the' Vitam ' ; n C content as full ripened to
hand cf every would-be constituent
they grab and squeeze. This haHt
might not obtain up North, but it’s
terrible down South. And if there is
anything in captivity that I hat? to
do wor e than to be clutched by a
politician, it’s being clutched by two
of ’em. This disease could well be
called “Disgust-itis.”
By Gee McGee. Y
Pot Shots.
Ripley, in his “Believe it or not,”
,tells us that an old hen, native of
Iowa, adopted 4 little jpddy polecats
*nd has raised them. I imagine that
'this Rhode Islad red mother does not
stand at the toprung of the ladder in
poultry circles—after this act of char
ity. ’ V ,
/-(top
A glas J of near-beer does a feller
Where (he Pir. h Came.
1 don’t remember where I got
them $2.00 I bought my first pair of
patent leather shoes
shoulddent be considered now. I was
ion the verge of 18 when my feet ft.lt
th e urge of dressing up. •' I had al
ready invested $4.98 in my first store-
,'bought >uit, and only shoes were lack
ing.
matces even up until nine months af
tdr canning. The same is not true of
tomatoes canned in open kettle, for
Vitamin C is unstable during oxida
tion.
To Car. Tomatce-:—Select firm, uni
formly red, ripe tomatoes of medium
size. Put into trays and lower into
boiling water for 1 minute. Remove
end cut out the core with a slender-
pointed knife without cutting into the
seed cells. Peel promptly and pack
into jars. Add sugar and salt season-
with, but that' in K an:1 AN the P ars with juice. Crush
tomatoes and strain juice through the
seiye or through cloth: bring this
juicp to boilinjr heat and fill jar r
The storekeeper happened to pull
down the pa|ir of shoes 1 fell in love
with—it was' his
NOTICE OF ENROLLMENT.
By virtue of the authority vested
in me as President of the Barnwell
Municipal Democratic. Club, I hereby
give notice:
That the enrollment bo .k will be
opened at Lemon Bras’. 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. Robertson
and N. D. Coclin.
Those entitled to enroll shall write
their full name, giving therr age and
0
For Demonstration, Prices and Terms
See
KLINE TRADING CO.
KLINE, S. C.
. . ENJOYAN INEXPENSIVE
- c \eashore weekend
.o
ONLY / ‘-l PER
f or ' O . ^ person
2 NIGHTS • • 7MEALS
TICKET TO ANY THEATRE
AND TO TYBRISA PAVILION
SUIT PRESSED-FREE LAUNDRY
PER
PERSON
third grab from the
shelf—and 1 told him that I’d
take them. Having gone barefoot-
, for the past 17 years, mere or
just about a s much good as he de-. lo;.-, my f.,. t had done considerable
nyes from (retting a kiss over the I spreading and they looked like 2
telephone. Light wines will pleas t , a fly-swatters.
Yew of the folks, but what this old
country needs is 25-horsepower booze The man told me I needed a size
«ith a Big Bertha kick, to it. Nobody
ever heard a man that was half-shot
complain about hard times. Our citi-
xeik«hip demands, however, that whis-
kejr should b e regulated—which means
—4fcat nobody ought to have the right
to fay it except him. I am a tee-
Jtotekr, and so is my Unde Bud who
Jfa killed in the war.
7, and he said the shoes he had wrap
ped up for me was a size 7-EE. I
found out later that EE didn’t mean
ease. I have always believed that
that man should have sold me a num-
bebr 9-GGG. Anyway I gave him
all of my money and betook myself
back home; we lived only 4 miles
from the ngaraat storey-just a two-
tin can, covering tomatoes and bring
juie** to within 1-8 inch of the top
of the tin can, and .complete to the
top of the jar. Seal and process pint
and quart jars 25 minutes and No. 2
cans for 20 minutes.
Tomato Juice Recipe:—In packing
tomato juice, only firm, red-ripe to
matoes should be used, and they
.'hould be vine-ripened. Thoroughly
wash them and trip out all mould,
decayed spots, etc. Next, run them
through the extractor, eithe*- hot or
cold, and then bring th e extracted
juice to a tempeiature of 140 to 150
degrees. Fill into thoroughly washed
cans at -this temperature and then
sterilize 10 to 12 minutes at a tem
perature of 212 degrees, after steril
izing, thoroughly cool.
Great care must be exercised not
to expose *he juice to the air any;
mote than ia possible. j
Elizabeth McNab, A. D. Aft / B ‘ p -
1
dining//
dancing/
bathing/
fiat n; -;T ^
— -JrSJlLirYn ini
;■ '' SAVANNAHS BEST 0
HOTEL SAVANNAH
A N D () F w A . SMITH. , N A G r ,,
SAVANNAH . .GEORGIA
note: present this ao to obtain the above special week en^Ttes
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