The Barnwell people-sentinel. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1925-current, September 08, 1932, Image 5
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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER R, 1932
HERB AND HEREABOUTS. •
Mrs. Carrie Dyches spent last week
with friends in Blackville.
THE BARNWELL PEOPLE-SENTINEL, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA
Mr. and Mr’s. T. M. Boulware and
Mrs. A. B. Patterson were visitors in
Columbia Friday.
Mr’s. A. D. Furtick and Misses
Thelma and Dorothy Furtick spent
^ Friday in Augusta.
— *
Robert Deason, Brown Easterlihg
and Dean Fuller will leave this week
to enter Clemson College.
Miss Donie Lee McClendon, of
Aiken, is spending this week with her
sister,. Mrs. H. S. Dyches.
Miss Vivia Wiggins left this week
for Easley to resume her duties as
teacher in the schools there.
“Mack” McCaw, of the State high
way department at Walterboro, spent
Sunday in town with friends.
Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Furtick and
daughters, Misses Nellie and Doro
thy, spent Tuesday in Columbia.
awarded to Mrs. Eugene Easterling.
A sala^ course was served after cards
were laid aside.
SUNDAY SCHOOL CLASS
IS ENTERTAINED.
On last Friday evening Miss Mar
tha Moore entertained very delight
fully the members of the Mary G.
Harley Sunday School Class. Several
unique contests were enjoyed by the
members, winners of the prizes being
Mrs. J. B. Harley, Mrs. F. S. Brown,
Mrs. Jim Dicks and Mrs. T. A Hol
land. During the business session
Captains for the month of Septesmber
were selected, Mrs. B. W. Sexton,
Captain of the Blues and Mrs. G. M.
Greene, Captain of the Reds.
Delicious refreshments, consisting
of several kinds of sandwiches and
iced tea were served. The hostess
was assisted in serving by her mother,
Mrs. P. W. Price.
MEMhr QUIPS
Hurricane Passes Off S. C. Coast.
Mrs. Olaree Cail was called to Wil-
liston Sunday on account of the ill
ness of one of her grandchildren.
Dr. and Mrs. Bailey, of Greenwood,
are expected here this week for a
visit to Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Ander
son. _
Mrs. J. Julien Bsh entertained the
members of the Ladies’ Guild of the
Church of the Holy Apostle.s Tues
day afternoon.
The tropical hurricane that threat
ened Florida for several days during
the past week has apparently passed
to sea off the South Carolina coast,
and as a result Barnwell and this
section experienced rathet* strong
winds yesterday.
James A. Moody Passes.
Mr. and Mrs. H. L. O’Bannon and
two children have returned home af
ter spending a couple of weeks at
Waynesville, N. C.
Lieut, and Mrs. Michael Smith and
little son, of Columbia, spent the
week-end here with Mrs. Smith’s
father, Dr. R. A. Deason.
Mrs. Lena Davies returned to Ag
nes Scott College, Decatur, Ga., Sat
urday after -pending the summer va
cation with Mr. and Mrs. B. P.
Davies: ————
B. P. Davies attended the meeting
of the State Executive Committee in
Columbia Tuesday as proxy for Col.
Edgar A. Brown, who is away on an
, airplane trip to the Middle West.
Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Clary and son,
Mrs. Howell and son, and Mi&« Easter
ling, of Savannah, and Mr. and Mrs.
C. A. Bennett, of Sylvania, Ga., spent
the week-end with the latter’s daugh
ter, Mrs. Jane Clary.
Mrs. Marvin Hale returned to her
home in West Virginia Saturday af- (
ter a visit to her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. B. L. Easterling. She was ac
companied as far as Columbia by Mrs.
Easterling, Mrs. H. J. Phillips and
Mrs. Eugene Easterling.
r ocm
BURCK HALTER-SMITH
ENGAGEMENT.
Dr. and Mrs. C. N. Burckhalter, of
Barnwell, announce the engagement
of their daughter, Mabry Elizabeth,
to Dr. A. C. Smith, of Easton, Pa.
The wedding will take place in the
late fall.
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON
4—.
BRIDGE CLUB.
Mrs. B. P. Davies was hostess last
week to members of the Wednesday
Afternoon Bridge Club. High score
prize for club members, a deck of
cards, was won by Mrs. Solomon
Blatt; the consolation, a box of cor
respondence cards, was cut by Mrs.
B. Wilson Walker, and high score prize
for guests, a dainty handkerchief, was
James A. Moody, aged 72, of the
Big Fork section, died at the home
of his daughter, Mrs. Lee Wilson, on
Thursday morning, September 1st,
after an illness of several years. He
was buried the following day at Al
len’s Chapel Church, the Rev. Tarle-
ton Sander* conducting the funeral
services. Mr. Moody was a farmer
and had spent his entire life in the
Big Fork section where he wa.s born.
He is survived by three .sisters.
Mrs. Anna Lee, of Kline; Mrs. Lilia
Harley, of Beaufort County, and
Mrs. Clara Ready, of Kline; one
brother, W. Holmes Moody, of Kline;
three daughters and three sons, Mrs.
Eva Williamson, of Savannah, Ga.;
Mrs. Lee Wilson and Mrs. Annette
Sanders, of the Bijr Fork section; W.
H. Moody, Jr., and J. M. Moody, of
Kline, and L. B. Moody, of Atlanta,
Ga,.
B«yoa<i Question
Blooey—What, indeed, would a pub
lic banquet be without celery?
Flooek—It would be quieter.
Profound Unbelief
“Do you believe in dreams?”
“No more than when I’m awake—
I’m a cynic.”
Kept It to Himeolf
“Have you and your wife ever had
any difference of opinion?”
“Yes, but she didn’t know IL”
, Making Up HU Case
Judge—Would you like a lawyer?
Negro Prisoner—No. sah, but Ah
would like a couple witnesses.
Reverse
She—I’ve just turned twenty-three.
He—1 thought you were about thir
ty-two.—Loudon Answers. \
At the Hop
“I like that new step of yours.”
“That wasn't a new step. I have a
nail In my shoe.”
Gets Them All
“They say the moon has an influence
on the tide.”
“Yes, but, more on the untied.”
i —... - i.
With • Proviso
Doctor—Say “Ah-h-h!”
Patient—All right. I’ll say It, but re
member, I don’t mean it!
Altogether Out of It
“Does his wife still play second fid
dle to that other woman?”
“She’s not even in the orchestra.”
Home Hint
The best way to deal with a stain on
a tablecloth is to cover It with a plate
before the wife spots it.—Pearson’s.
Foods and Nutrition—(Salads.)
Every housewife is casting about
these hot daysTToV articles of food"
that are inexpensive appetizing and
at the same time meet the nutritional
, Climax!
Bill—Who won the race to the fence,
you or the bull?
Pete—It was a toss-up.—“Our Pa
per.”
Hairless Heirs
It says here that down in South
America baby Indians are born bald-
headed.—Exchange.
Camel-Step Surveying
The best aid in surveying the desert
regions of Asia is the camel, accord
ing to Dr. Sven Iledin, Swedish trav
eler and explorer. In a recent news
paper article he disclosed the meth
ods im had used for preparing his
maps of the most inaccessible re
gions. “Anything simpler than the
equipment ot ImJrnnionts rarrieri hy
me on my travels can scarcely he
conceived,” he wrote. “On the whole,
I used for mapping 18,000 miles of
mostly unexplored territory only com
needs of the body. The *alad is a
convenient means of balancing a meal pass, watch, measuring tape, paper,
otherwise tco heavy with fat, or pro-
B USINESC
riLDERO
FURNITURE!
SLIGHTLY USED AND FLOOR
SAMPLES:
$45 Wardrobe Trunk (floor
sample) $24.50
$25 Low Ba^e Dresser (re
conditioned) J $12.50
$25 9x12 Rug - $12.50
$12 Floor Lamp (shade dam
aged) $3.95
$85 Wood and Coal Range $25.00
E. D. REID ESTATE /
■. V .
visit, -• ;*
tein, or starch; it is cheap and is as
the name suggest*, cool and fresh,
with a stimulating tang. The salad
should be considered especially for’
its vitamins and mineral*. Almost
every salad includes green leaves, us
ually lettuce, cabbage, watercress, ro-
maine or erdine according to the
local mat kef. Even if it has no other
ingredient a salad provides in any one
or any combination of these leaves a
rich store of vitamin A, vitamin B,
vitamin E and vitamin G, some iron,
some calcium and other mineral salts.
Vitamin A is a member of the vitamin
family that helps to protect the
human body agaimt a number of
troublesome infections, especially in
the eyes, ears, sinuses, mouth and
throat.' ^ —*— —£——
Vitamin B promotes appetite and
good digestion and as this vitamin is
oasily destroyed by heat, green salads
are a valuable source because they
are not cooked. Cabbage salad is
rich in vitamin A and B and particu
larly vitamin C, cabbage being one of
the be*t sources of this vitamin.
Vitamin C is that highly essential
vitamin which prevents sore gums,
sore joints and other conditions which
in the acute stage arc the disease
called scurvy.
The salad, especially the vegetable
salad or the salad made of citrus
fruits besides being a cool and appe
tizing dish for summer time, is proba
bly the most attractive, convenient,
effective and the cheapest way to pro
vide the family with most of the
“protective foods” other than milk
and butter.
Combinations for Vegetable Salads.
1. Diced cooked beets, cooked
snapped beans, chopped dill pickle.
2. Shredded cabbage, chopped
green pepper, chopped onions, chopped
peanuts.
3. Cooked or canned snap beans,
diced cooked carrot, chopped onion
or chopped celery.
4. Cooked green lima beans, diced
tomato, dice<T cucumber, chopped
onion.
5. Cooked or canned peas, grated
raw carrots, shredded cabbage.
Mayonnaise Varieties.
1. Mayonnaise, chopped pickle,
finely chopped celery.
2 One cup mayonnaise, half cup
chili sauce, catsup or cooked tomato.
If desired, add a little chopped
celery or green pepper, or pickle if
catsup is used.
lead pencil and one of my most im
portant instruments—the camel. For
computing the distance traveled I used
as unit of measure the length of
>i|teps of my riding camel.”
Where’* the Interpreter?
From Washington diplomatic cir
cles there floats to my big and ready
ears a delightful little episode of Sir
Esrue Howard and the bell boy. Sir
Ksme quite enjoys telling, so I hear,
how he walked briskly into the foyer
of the magnificent Mayflower hotel,
and stopped for a moment to speak
with one of the bright-buttoned
servitors in the lobby. After he
walked on, an assistant manager who
had noted the incident, went over to
the hoy and said: “What did the
ambassador want?’
“I don’t know.” answered the bell
hop. “He couldn't speak English.”—
New York Morning Telegraph. ---
Nowhere to Land
Frank Goldsborough, the boy avi
ator, said the other day In Flushing:
“Aviation would be all right if you
got your engine trouble in good
places, but your engine always stalls
over the sea or over a precipitous
mountainside.
“It’s like the story of the rich man
who said to the poor man:
"‘After all, George, It doesn’t do a
chap any harm to be thrown on his
own resources.’
“‘Bnt’ growled George, ‘it always
happens when he hasn’t any.’”
Two Million Tons of Limo
The total amount of all ‘lime mate
rials used on farms in , thd United
States during the year 1931 was 2,548,-
941 tons, about two-thirds, 1,618,355
tons, being ground limestone. Other
main types were: hydrated lime 261,-
080; marl 104,152; burned lime 49,134;
limestone screenings, 445.670 tons. Il
linois used the most liming material
of any state. 325,000 tons; Kentucky
229,000 and Kansas 227.727.
Dishes Sweating
Alice was helping with the dishes.
Mother noticed she w’as drying them
very qnickly so investigated.
“Alice, you are not drying these
dishes,” he said.
“Yes, I am, mother, but they are
sweating,” was the reply.
The Oriental ~
Teacher—Who staged the first non
stop flfght?
Knowing Child—My mother says
Ide L’Gossip.
Yen Knew the Kind
Explorer—From the Chines* fron
tier we pushed into Tibet.
Sympathetic iJtdy—We had s car
like that.
THE BANK OF B^NWELL, Barnwell, & Cl
STATEMENT OF CONDITION 11ST AUGUST, 1932.
‘saws?
V
RESOURCES:
Loans and Discounts,-made up of 48 different loans
with short maturities __ ...
Distribution of Above Loans:
&
V
Notes
from
$ v 1.00 to $ 100.00
— 17
—
$ 1058.14
Notes
from
101.00 to
200.00
— 12
—
2187.47
Notes
from
201.00 to
400.00
— 14
—
4297.00
Notes
from
401.00 to
800.00
— 1
—
500.00
Notes
from
801 to
3000.00
— 4
—
7550.00
\
V
48
mmm
$15592.61
$15,5t2£*
Security to Above Loans:
Notes secured by Bonds and Stocks readily
marketable $ 2542.40
Notes secured by Warehoused Cotton not
exceeding 5 cents per pound 3700.00
Notes secured by other Warehouse Receipts
and other Collaterals 3500.00
Notes secured by two signers and other
Quick. Collaterals 4850.21
Notes secured by 1932 City Taxes 1000.00
-4>i*
V
$15592.61
United States Government, State of South Carolina and County Bonds
~—t ' ; ——*. ——:—i'—
Other Bonds with daily market
Cash on Haqd and Due from Banks
Bank Building, Fixtures and Equipment
LIABILITIES:
.$ 62,506Jft
. 15,OOOJB
. 52.506JS
5,000JB
$150,6
Capital Stock Paid in j 25,000Jl9>
Surplus Paid in 2,500.9*
Undivided Prefits l,956J9t
Reserve Fund __ _ 1 778J2
Deposits Subject to Check . 92 343J0
Savings Deposits ^ . 26,84444
Certified Checks HUB
Cashier’s Checks SSUNT
$150,(
PERRY A. PRICE, Cashier.
For a Limited
Time Only
WE continue to offer our very popular
Permanent Wave with the beautiful
ringlet ends for only—
$2.50
FRENCH Method Permanent
wave „ ... $3.50
Standard Frederic and Eugene
Permanent Wave $5.00
Vita Tonic Permanent Wave $7.50
All Waves Guaranteed for $ Months.
Series of Six Hot Oil Treatments for
Dandruff and Falling Hair for only
$5.00, including Shampoo and Finger
Wave.
Shampoo and Finger Wave 50c
We Specialize on Inectc Hair Dyeing.
Modem Beauty Shop
Phone 47. Blackville, S. C.
COTTON
We obtain highest net prices for
cotton. Also store cotton for farm
ers, buyers, banks, fertilizer compan
ies, the Farmers’ Seed Loan and
others. Ship or truck your cotton to
us. We make liberal advances on un
encumbered cotton. Freight and truck
rates to Savannah are very low.
Savannah Cotton Factoraie Co.
(Capital $100,000.00)
Savannah’s Largest and Li vest
Factors.
WE INSURE TRUCK COTTON.
INSURANCE
FIRE
WINDSTORM
PUBLIC LIABILITY
ACCIDENT - HEALTH
SURETY BONDS
AUTOMOBILE
THEFT
Calhoun and Co.
P. A. PRICE, Manager.
6 66
LIQUID - TABLETS SALVE
666 Liquid or Tablets used internally
and 646 Salve externally, make a
complete and effective treatment for
Colds/
MOST SPEEDY REMEDIES KNOWN
FALL
1932
We Present—
To the People of Barnwell County
MR. r. L BENSON
- , - * * * '
\ » * 5 t
" ■ ♦ ’ - \ .
A' man who is experienced in all lines of merchandise,
but who has Riven special study to ladies' ready-to-wear.
Mr. Benson knows what Milady will wish for Fall and
Winter wear—one look at his present selection win
convince you of that.
AND NOW
What we wish to Impress Upon You la This—
We have bought new merchandise in aB lines for the
Fall and Winter Seasons.
We have the newest, prettiest, smartest there is to be
had in ladies’ ready-to-were, including dresses, coats,
hats, footwear, and accessories. Some of the new goods
are here now, and others will be coming in this week,
and then right on throughout the season.
*
We know, too, that you are interested in price this year,
and have made every purchase with a view to offering
the goods to you at prices that will make our store, in
your opinion— ~
THE STORE OF BIG VALUES
We will be pleased to have you come in and inspect our
merchandise before making your purchases.
' -v- ^
* w f
m
W. H. KENNEDY & SON
WiHiston> $oJ