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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1,19S2. THE BARttWBLL PEOPLE-SENTINEL, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA • HERB AND HEREABOUTS. • Dan Hartley left last week for Richmond, Va. Mrs. Lena Davies returned to Barn well Saturday after spending a week with friends in Augusta. , Bates Hagood was a visitor in Columbia Sunday. C. G. Fuller flew to Columbia in his plane Monday on business. Miss Dora Cannon was the guest of relatives in Columbia this week. B. S. Moore, Jr., and Ben Davies, Jr.; were visitors in Columbia Monday. Dr. R. A. Deason and son, Robert, spent Sunday with relatives in Green ville. Mrs. Edgar A. Brown, Emily Brown and Mary Bush spent Friday in Augusta. Mrs, M. M. Mazursky and two lit tle daughters ae visiting her parents in Aiken this week. Mr. and Mrs. R. S. F.tzpatncK hit Sunday for a visit to relatives in North Carolina. David Hair left this week for Au gusta, where he will attend Richmond Academy this session. Mrs. Bobbie Holmes and daughter left Sunday for Augusta after a visit to Mrs. Maude Holmes. Misses Patricia Dicks and Eliza beth Grubbs are visiting Miss Eunice Moody in North Augusta. Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Sexton, r of Wren.?, Ga.* are visiting the letter’s mother, Mrs. Sallie McNab. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Dubose and children, of Williston, are the guests of Mrs. Olaree Cail this week. Miss Willie Bush Deason left Tues day for Ridgeland, where sh-i will teach school again this session. Mr. and krs. Benson and sap, of Charleston, were guests of Dr. and Mrs. H. A. Gross during the past week. Mrs. R. S. Dicks and two ch'ldren, Miss Patricia and Bobby, spent the week-end in Denmark, Columbia and Cordova. Mrs. Sidney Smith and Mias Saw yer, of the Children's Bureau of Col umbia, visited Barnwell Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Jv Herbert Black and little son are attending the Short Course at Clemson College this week Mrs. B. W. Sexton and two sons, Ben T. and Buddie, haW returned to Barnwell after spending the summer nea Bluffton. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Wray and son, <£f Memphis, Tenn., are the guests of Mrs. Wray’s mother, Mrs L. H. Christie. , Mrs. John West and son spent the week-end here while en-route from Charleston to Clemson College. Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Easterling and daughter, of Denmark, spent Sunday in Barnwell with relatives. Mrs. C. Keys Sanders and daughter, Miss Eleanor Sanders, of Blackville, were visitors in Barnwell Saturday. Miss Blanche Ellis, of Due West, is the guest of Miss Elizabeth McNab this week. She is a member of the local school faculty. 'V Mrs. L. F. Behling and children, of St. George, are the guests of her par ents, the Rev. and Mrs. W. E. Wig gins. ocw Mr. and Mrs. P. B. Huff, Mrs. Ina Diamond and Georgie Diamond, of Palatka, Fla., visited Barnwell Coun ty relatives for the week-end V Mrs. Rufus Jackson, Jr., who has been visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Diamond," left for her home at Palatka, Fla., on Sunday. WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON BRIDGE CLUB. Mrs. J. Julien Bush was hostess last week to the members of the Wednes day Afternoon Bridge Gub. A deli cious salad .course was served after cards were laid aside. CANDIDATES, ATTENTION: — A limited number of copies t)f the 1932 B&rawell County poll list at jjeasonable pifice. Apply at The People-Sentinel office. \ v ^ B E f^ILDE FURNITURE! SLIGHTLY USED AND FLOOR SAMPLES: $45 Wardrobe Trunk (floor sample) $24.50 $25 Low Base Dresser (re conditioned) $1250 $25 9x12 Rug $1250 $12 Floor Lamp (shade dam aged) $*55 $85 Wood an<] Coal Range... $2540 R. D. REID ESTATE Dr. W. C. Smith, of Easton, Pa., was a hou?e guest at the home of Dr. and Mrs. C. N. Burckhalter last week. Mrs. B. L. Easterling, Mrs. K. M. Hale and George Easterling spent the week-end with relatives in Augu.-ta. Mr. and' Mrs. Hermen Brown and little son and Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Brown, of Blackville, 1 were visitors here Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Zack Creighton, of Augusta, were visitors here Monday and were accompanied home by Mrs. Lucile Brown, who spent several days in Barnwell with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. D. Creighton. Billie Davies x-’eturned home Satur- (■ 1 ' day after enjoying a week’s camping trip on Wadmalaw Island with the Allendale Boy Scouts. Prof, and Mrs. W. W. Carter and two children, Ida and Wingard, have returned home after spending several weeks at their cottage near Bluffton. Mrs. Cecil S. Harris and little daughter returned to their home in Richmond, Va., Saturday after a two weeks’ visit to Mr's. Harris’ mother, Mrs. J. A. Porter. Mrs. D. J. Wallace and children, Charlie and Misses Jeanette and Em ma Julia Wallace, of Wayne-boro, Ga., werr the week-end guests of Mrs. Olaree Cail. v Misses Frances and Margaret Lemon left Thursday for New York City. They were accompanied as far as Columbia by their parents, Mr. and Mr's. A. A. Lemon. ^7 /)// Hashin<U on lhis if(ftr Gtorrr Wdvliinolon Bicc nlenni il! * * llcduccci jci/ ( j f ■ Southern ftailwaij Si|stem Mrs. N. Kartus and two daughters and her niece, Miss Cecile Kohn, of Asheville, N. C., left Sunday for the former’s home in Montgomery, Ala., after an extended visit to Barnwell relatives. The regular monthly meeting of the Mary G. Harley Sunday School class will be held at the home of Mrs. P. W. Price on Friday evening at 8:30 o’clock. All members are cordi ally invited to be present. Mrs. H. T. B. Moye and grand daughters, Misses Annie Mae and Georgia 1 Alice, leave today (Thurs day) for Atlanta, after spending the summer with Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Molair. BROWN & BUSH Attorneya-at-Law BROWN-BUSH BUILDING BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA PRACTICE IN STATE AND FEDERAL COURTS SECRETS OF WAR CHEMISTRY DISCLOSED EXPLOSIVES, FERTILIZERS AND OIL MADE FROM AIR, WATER AND COAL BY HYDROGENATION It is now revealed that in the discovery of “hydrogenation” Germany’s ability to “carry on” may be explained. Hy drogenation provided for an unlimited supply of explosives and fertilizer. It, even promised a solution of the piT problem. ACQUIRES HYDROGENATION The development of the process of hy drofining (the catalytic hydrogenating of petroleum) to make motor oil is generally regarded as of the greatest importance to the oil industry and to the world. Tha American rights to the process of hydrogenation have been acquired by the SUndard Oil Company (N. J.) from the I. G. Farbenindnstrie of Germany. (Gear. IMS, lea) HYDROFINED OIL REPLACES “STANDARD” MOTOR OIL Essolube, the only hydrofined oil, is now available to every motorist at the price of ordinary motor oils. This oil is a result of the great hydrogena tion discovery. Hydrogenation of atmos- pheric nitrogen was the chemical secret that enabled Germany to produce unlimited quan tities of explosives and thus to “carry on” years after the experts considered her con tinued struggle impossible. Hydrofining, developed by the Standard Oil scientists, is an advanced process which makes the hydrogenation of motor oil com mercially possible. Hydrofining gives Essolube all the five essential qualities for complete lubrication. Paraffinic oils have three of these essential qualities. Naphthenic (Asphaltic) oils have^ two of them. Essolube, by hydrofining, com bines all five qualities. There has been no commercial method before hydrofining that could combine in one lubricant the good qualities of these two types of oil. Essolube is so superior to all other oils that we are not only proud to name it after its ■ — ► » - companion product in quality, Esso, “more powerful than any gasoline,” but we have i** replaced the widely known “Standard” * Motor Oil with this new product. Hydrofined Essolube sells at no extra cost. It is on sale at all stations and dealers of die following companies: Standard Oil Company of New Jersey, Standard Oil Company of Pennsylvania,Standard Oil Company of Loui siana, Standard Oil Company, /ncorporatedin Kentucky,Colonial Beacon Oil Company,Inc. NOBEL PRIZE TO DRS. BOSCH AND BERGIUS HYDROGENATION SCIENTISTS GET HIGHEST HONOR mi BOOKUT— u Estblube, A Five-Star Motor Oil" gives you the story of tha great hydro- fining invention which makes Essolube possible. Ask for it at your "Standard" station. Announcement of the division of the 1931 Nobel Prize for chemistry be tween Dr. Bosch and Dr. Bergius, both of Heidelberg, Germany, brings before the world the story of what is perhaps the most important single achievement of modem industrial chemistry—the fixation of hydrogen to reproduce by synthesis a variety of natural basic products of enormous commercial im portance. Although not collaborators, and only by chance both residents of this same- ancient seat of European learning and romance, the activities of these two- scientists followed converging Knot al most from the begianing ef thagr labors, and from the standpoint «f chemical industry merged In the Mfm . %* '■ i> tion of e now type. $flt''<vwsSl