The Barnwell people-sentinel. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1925-current, September 29, 1932, Image 2

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TWO. TOE BARNWELL PEOPLE-SENTINEL. BARNWELL, 80IJTH CAROLINA A v TRADK MARK REO. For lazy liver, stomach and kidneys, biliousness, indi gestion, constipation, head ache, colds and fever. JOff and 35l at dealers. ECONOMY' v- v For Nervous v Headaches A headache is Nature's warning: of high nerve strain. You can get quick and delightful relief from headaches and other nerve pains by using Capudine because it soothes the tense nerves. Contains no opi ates and does not upset the stomach. Being liquid, Capudine acts al most instantly—much quicker than tablets and powders. Sold by drug gists in 10c, 30c, and 60c sizes, also >y the dose at founts, (adv.) Thinks Hare Could Have Been Elected Newberry Herald and News Says For mer 2nd District Congressman Is Tireless Campaigner. It is not difficult to explain why dCaqgiessman Fred H. Dominick lost Hum *eat in the lower house of con gress to John C. Taylor, clerk of uiMMrt of Anderson County. Mr. Tay- flsr and his cohorts, which were le- Uron, according to common report persistently, while Mr. Domi- relying, it now appear.*, too ■■plii itlj on the assurance of friends dU not exert himself as strenuously ws be might have, done. It Is our d judgment that with half effort expended by Mr. Taylor, Wr. Dominick could have kept his Having a political office is always 3na advantage and lopg tenure adds ta it. On the other hand, Mr. Taylor ftad an astute campaign manager <Mr. Dominick had none), the back- ■Bg of two daily newspapers, and fbqiAties for turning out in large •qwanlities potent campaign litera ture. Moreover, he was, a< previous Auctions show, well intrenched in the esteem of the people of the mo.«t populous county in the district. Mr. XVuninick, going squarely against the juferment of trusted friends, disdained Hfce nse of any publicity whatevir. This, we believe he will now concede, ••x* one of his major blunders. There m no denying the fact that publicity 'weti directed will “sell” a man as well create a demand for galliL-es and r v»: A" You Are Fortunate Butler B. Hare did a gracious thing for the sake of friendship he dtaefined to oppose Mr. Dominick feel- nag no doubt that he w’ould be re- iorned. Knowing him to be a skillful tirele.v campaigner, we have no that, had he offered, he would e polled a much larger vote than Mr. Dominick. In Saluda and Edge- Jd Counties he could have gotten W per cent, of the vote. With him *» iJae race, Newberry would not have jupvro Mr. Taylor a majority :rn<i in Use other counties in the district Mr. Haw would have gotten his share of the votes—including a slew which wrat to Mr. Taylor because Mr. Etominick didn’t bother to go after Siera. In this connection, it should fer remembered that Mr. Hare is situ- geographically, in the third dis like he was in the old second, is to say, in a border county. in the old second, like Ander- in the present third,* was much 1b population <fhd area than f other county of the group, and two occasions Mr. Hare had deter- opposition from Ailcen. Living «>j» .«mall border county did not pre vent Butler Hare from holding his *ez.l from the time he took^ it until r4he district was dismembered. It 'Mucoid -not have prevented him from mahing a creditable race in the re- mral -primary. His participation vmaii have made a second race inevi- « table, we believe, and with the Domi- ■tfrSt backing and the friendship of Q&xL* partisans, his election highly tjarohable. However, all this is water ' wsmr the wdieel. Mr. Hare stayed out yrf ifce race to oblige Mr. Dominick, an»/c Mr. Taylor grabbed the plum Mr. Hare eschewed for his friend. AmAher factor which deprived Mr. BteAtnirk of votes is the feeling that NHEogres.* is in large measure respon- .•sflsle for economic conditions. To e the Mam? on the Republicans, iB the greater part of it belongs, not placate the people. When a ’Vigorous speaker like Mr. Taylor gets wp and denounces adfnitted dVils and avRgarats remedies which sound prac ticable, many will get the impression ttet, by his exertions, alone, he can <4e!«mnine the courts* of corrective on. This is far from the as even members of the gen- assembly can testify. Another thing that hurt Mr. Domi- mmk was the nepotism charge. Now, iK la our judgment that Harry W. Donmick, as his brother’s clerk here Om Newberry, is earning his stipend, it is a notorious fact that kins- of other members of congress a cinch. It is highly probable GOOD way to extend both the fresh and canned fruits which you serve this season is to.put them in a rice ring. This makes them not only attrac tive and appetizing, but it is a real economy since It makes.^he fruits go much, further, fttce rings are simple to make, and give a festive appearance to the dish. Here are some recipes for combinations of fruit and rico which you will like. All in a Ring Bice Circles xcith Figs: Cook one cup rice in boiling, salted water until tender, drain and pack into buttered individual ring molds, and chill. Turn out onto small plates, and iiil cen ters with figs from a No. 1 can. Pour the fig syfup over the rice, and garnish with whipped cteam. Serves six. Furisicn Fruit and Rice Me lange: Boil one cup rice, and drain. Add one egg yolk and two tablespoons sugar slightly beaten together, pack into a but tered ring mold, and chill. Turn out and lill center with the drained contents of a No. 2^ can fruits for salad. Pour over one cup creamy custard sauce, or pass it on the side after serving des sert. Serves eight. Fruited Bice Ring: Boil onp- third cup rice as usual, and drain. Soften one tablespoon gelatin in four tablespoons cold water, and dissolve in the contents of one 8-ounce ran of crushed pineapple and one-fourth cup sugar brought^ to boiling. Cool, and when it be gins to set. fold in the rice and one cup beaten cream. Turn into a wet ring mold, and chill. Turn out, and fill center with sliced oranges or whole fresh straw berries. depending on the season. Serves eight. A Mound of Goodness Bice Mound with Pineapple Cover: Soften one 'tablespoon gelatin in four tablespoons cold water, and dissolve in one-half cup boiling canned pineapple syrup from a No. 2^ can of sliced pineapple. Add one-fourth cup sugar, and let cool. When it begins to thicken, add one cup cooked rice, one-half teaspoon vanilla and one cup beaten cream, and pack in a fancy mold. Chill. Add enough water to rent of pineapple syrup to make one cup, add one-half cup sugar and eight cloves, and bring to boiling. Cook the pineapple slices from the No. 2M» can in this syrup un til very soft and the syrup thick. Chill. Lay cherries in center of slices and garnish with whipped cream. Serves six to eight. A Special Treat Butterscotch Bice Ring Filled with Apricots: Boil one-half cup rice throe minutes in salted boiled rice, one-third cup sugar water, drain and add two cups 1 and one-fourth teaspoon nutmeg, scalded milk. Cover and cook in j Cut the sliced peaches from a double boiler until almost tender.; one-pound can in pieces and add Melt together until thick one them and enough peach syrup to tablespoon butter and two-thirds i just moisten. Pour into a but- rup brown sugar, add to rice and I tered baking dish, dot with one continue cooking until rice is very) tablespoon butter, and bake in a tender and mixture thick. - Add eet and cold, turn out onto a plate. Meanwhile, boil one-half cup sugar with the apricots for three or four minutes, chiM and fill center of rice ring. Serve plain or with plain or whipped cream. Serves eight. The following recipe includes pineapple as w-ell as apricots with the rice. Fruit Rice Parfait: Press out all the syrup from the crushed pineapple in a No. 2 can, drain the contents of a No. 2 can of apricots, and combine the syrups. Bring to boiling, add one-fourth cup rice, boil five minutes, then cook over boiling water until rice is very tender and the liquid all absorbed. Add one-fourth cup sugar, the drained pineapple and the apricots pressed through a sieve. Chill thoroughly. Just before serving, fold in one cup beaten cream. Pile lightly in glasses and garnish with a bit of preserved ginger. Serves eight to ten. An Old Favorite And here is an old favorite in a new guise. Peach Rice Pudding: Mix to gether one and one-half cups WHEN YOU MAY OBTAIN RICH CREAMY AND PURE MILK OF A DELICIOUS FLA VOR (no odor of the animal) at a “LIVE AND LET LIVE PRICE. We deliver every morning in Barnwell and way ipoints, rain __ __r^ : ^ i i or shine. See our truck or . * drop us a card to— LAURIE FOWKE, Appledale Dairy LYNDHURST, S. C. (BARNWELL COUNTY) THURSDAY. SEPTEMDEI^^W^ legal Advertisements UNITED STATES OF AMERICA IN THE DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF SOUTH CAROLINA AIKEN DIVISION. FEDERAL INTERMEDIATE CRED IT BANK OF COLUMBIA, Plaintiff, VS. HENRY DAVID STILL, JR., MRS. M. E. STILL AND V. C. BADHAM AND FRANK G. HAMBLEN as Receivers of Badham Lumber Com pany, Defendant?. Pursuant to an order of sale in the above entitled cause granted by Honorable Ernest F. Cochran, United States District Judge for the Eastern K District of South Carolina, on July 27, 1932, I will offer for sale to the highest bidder for cash in front of the Court house at Barnvyell, South Carolina, on Thursday, November 3, 1932, between the heurs of eleven a. M. and two p. m., the following de scribed realty, to-wit: All of that certain piece, parcel or tract of ]land, situate, lying, and * V v DR. A. B. PATTERSON Now Devotes Himself Exclusively to the Practice of Eye, Ear, Throat and being partly in Barnwell and Orange burg Counties, State of South Caro lina, containing seventeen hundred (1700) acres, more or less; and bounded, on the North by the Edisto River and lands of Odom, Martin. Willis and Staley; East by lands of J. T. Boyl-ton and E. C. Matthews; and West by E. C. Matthew’s and J. C Matthews, and E. S. Hammond. This being the same tract cf land con veyed to M. E. Still by M. M. Still by deed recorded in Book 8-P at page 125 in the office of the Clerk of the Court of Barnwell County. No bid will be received from any bidder other than the plaintiff who has not prior to the opening of the- bidding deposited with me a certified check upon some National Bank or some Bank which is a member of the Federal Reserve System. All depos its made by unsuccessful bidders will be immediately returned. The de- two slightly-beaten egg yolks, cook one minute longer, and pour into a buttered ring mold. When moderate oven—350* to 375*—for Serve warm or cold with thin cream flavored with nutmeg. Serves six.* about twenty-five minutes. or cold Nose Diseases, and Diseases of Women and Children. Eyes tested posit made by a successful bidder will . j be applied upon the purchase price of ,s the property ort held as liquidated damages in case of default. ERNEST L. ALLEN, — — Special Master.— and Glasses Fitted. Office at h Home in Barnwell, S. C. that many voters in the district, re sentful that any man should have two jobs when so many have none, put Mr. Dominick’s brother' in the cate gory with the parasites. This newspaper gladly credits Mr. Taylor with a. sincere and earnest purpose to serve his district worthily. We have it from the Anderson Inde pendent that Mr. Taylor “regards a preelection promise as a sacred trust.” He has led the people to expect much of him—mere, we fear than it is humanly possible for him to per- foim, as he may learn when he gets to Washington. There is no man un der the sun that can shame or bully congress into doing anything. A new member who undertakes it soon be comes a pariah. No slur upon their successor's is intended when we say that, in our'judgment, the retirement from the lower house of congress of Messrs. Dominick, Hare and W. F. Stevenson, of Cheraw, reduces the power of the South Carolina group in that body by at least half.—New- bciTv Herald and News. Farmers in Lead on Next Session’s Roll Agriculturalists Total Thirty-Six With Lawyers Next in Order With Twenty-Six. Selling Com to Hogs Is Advised by Clark Economist Thinks Hogs Offer as Good Market Now as During the Pre-Depression Period. For a Limited Time Only WE continue to effer our very popular Permanent Wave with the tcautiful ringlet ends for only— ‘The One-Drink Driver.’ Now comes an investigator of road accidents with the statement that the “one-drink driver” L? more of a men ace to the*safety of others on the highway than the outright drunk. The outright drunk can frequently be detected as soon as he comes over the hill. His swaying from side to side of the road is a warning to get out of his way. When he is drunk enough he ceases to drive. We recall being awakened one night by the howling of a horn that kept on and on. After a few minutes some of the neighbors began to swear outrage- ^ eac ^ er ' ously; others threatened to shoot the Civil engineers nuisance. Investigatioi\jrevealed that the driver had gone so peacefully dead drunk with hi' head on tbe horn button that he did not know that his car was just standing still blowing. But the one-drink driver is just cocky enough to want to show how close a shave he can make.» He is quick to assert his right to his’ half of the read by taking part of the other half if he gets the notion that he is not being quite sufficiently re spected by the approaching car. Long before his legs would give the slight est hint of his condition, he is in fact drtunk in his nervous system.—New berry Observer. Should the farmers and the lawyers form some sort of an organization at the next meeting of the house of representatives of South Carolina— which of course they will not do— they could just about control the out put of legislation in the lower body of the general assembly. For the farmers number 36 and the lawyers 26, which gives a total of 62 —just exactly half of 124, the total bouse membership, _ including the speaker.. Of course no normal observer can conceive of farmers and lawyers see ing alike on all matters which will arise to perplex the next legislature —but should they do .so they could control. J. Wilson Gibbes, clerk of the house, is compiling a list of house members according to trade, business or pro fession, and the figures given above are fiom the list. , Practically every business in the State is represented. There is one dentist among the members; two phy sicians and one physician-farmer; one mortician and one minister and three newspaper editors. Law students next year in the house will number five and lawyer-farmers five. There is one farmer-banker in the list, one farmer-lumberman, on? faimea'-minuster land one farmer ADVERTISE In Th« PeopU-Sentiotl. number two and locomotive engineers one, with one insurance agent, one lumber dealer, one railway mechanic, one real es tate- dealer, one teacher textile operatives. Cotton mill executives number one; cotton mill outside oveiseers, one; cotton mill service manager, one; cot ton broker-auto dealer, one; barber, one, and auto salesman, one. There are three lumber manufactur ers, 11 merchant-farmers, seven re tail merchants and one wholesale merchant and manufacturer. In many instances members carry one or two more businesses, and in such cases, effort was made to classi fy the members by their principal business. Clem.-on Colleg^, Sept. 27.—“With the low price of hogs it is evident that the hog producer, who is also in general the corn grower, can not make as much money from the corn- hog combination as he could during periods of higher hog prices,” says O. M. Clark, extension economist, who urges, however, that “where the choice is between selling com as grain and marketing it through hogs, the opportunities offered bV hogs a^*-|* a means through which, to market corn are not far out of line with the opportunities offered during the pre- depression years.” “The price of hogs,” Mr.’ Clark continues in explanation, “has been lower during the current hog mar keting season than !t has been for the same quality of hogs in the more than 30 years of which we have rec ords; but even so it has not been as low relatively as have the prices of corn, oats, and cottonseed meal, and only somewhat lower relatively than fish meal and tankage.” To illustrate his point Mr. Clark says: “Hogs at $4.25 a hundred, assum ing an average feed requirement and average gain, would leave the same return above feed cost as hogs at $8.65 would have left at this time in 1928. The average price of things farmers buy has declined about 30 per cent, since 1928. Allowing for this decline, hogs at $4.25 now will leave above feed cost a return which j will buy as much as could have been and two V vith the return above fee cost from hogs selling for $9.10 at 1 , th^; corresponding period in 1928.” N. A. Hiers Appointed. $2.50 NOTICE TO CREDITORS OF BANK OF WESTERN CAROLINA. FRENCH Method Permanent wave . $3.50 Standard Frederic and Eugene Permanent Wave $3.00 Vita Tonic Permanent Wave __ $7.50 All Waves Guaranteed for 6 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- flair Dyeing. Modern Beauty Shop Phone 47. Blackrille.vS. C. C O T T ON We obtain highest net prices for cotton. Also store cotton for farm ers, buyer?, 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. ' Cotton Factorage Co. (Capital $100,000.00) Savannah's Largest and Livest , Factors. WE INSURE TRUCK COTTON. Pursuant to an Order of Th? H-m- crable E. 'C. Dennis, Circuit Judge, dated March 14. 1932, in re, Bank of Western Carolina, all persons, firm.* or corporations having claims or demands against the Bank of Western Carolina, including any claim or claims to preference in pay ment of such claims from the assets in the hand? of the Receiver of said Bank, except deposit credito-'s who do not claim a prefercence, are here by' required to file their claim, duly itemized and sworn to, with me, the undersigned Receiver of the said Bank of Western Carolina, at the head office of the Bank of Western Carolina in Aiken, S. C., on or before the 1st day of December, 1932; and in ca e e yoq fail to file such claim on or before said date, the s ajt1 will be barred. Where such claims have already been filed with the Re ceiver, it will not be necessary Uv'file them again under this notice. V T, C. TARVER, As Receiver of Bank of Weriern September 20, 1932. Carolina* Notice to Debtors and Creditors. Governor Ibra C. Blackwood has appointed N. A. Hiers, of the Hercu les section, to the office of Coroner of Barnwell County for the unexpired term of the late D. P. Lancaster. Mr. Hiers was recommended by the Barn well delegation shortly after Mr. Lancaster’s death but the appointment was not made by the Governor until Wednesday of last week. INSURANCE FIRE WINDSTORM PUBLIC LIABILITY ACCIDENT - HEALTH 1 SURETY BONDS AUTOMOBILE THEFT Calhoun and Co. P. A. PRICE. Manager. V 6 66 LIQUID • TABLETS - SALVE 666 Liquid or Tablets used internally and 666 Salve externally, make a complete and effective treatment far Colds. MOST SPEEDY REMEDIES KNOWN Notice is hereby given that all persons holding claim- against the estate of Robert B. Harden, should file them duly attested to the under signed Administrator on or before Saturday, October 8, 1932 r at 11 o’ clock jn the forenoon, or prove the same in the Probate Court for Barn well County on said date, and all per sons indebted to said estate are ask ed to make prompt payment to the undersigned administrator; G. HERMAN HARDEN, Admr., Estate of Robert B. Harden, Deceased. Kline, S. Sept.. 21, 1932 3t. NOTICE OF DISCHARGE. Notice is hereby given to all per son* concerned that I will file my final account as Administrator upon the estate cf Robert B. Harden with the Hon. John K. Snelling, Judge of the Probate Court for Barnwell Coun- ty, State of South Carolina, upon Saturday, October 15, 1932, at 1V:00 o’clock in the forenoon, and petition the said Court for an Order of Dis charge and Letters Dismissory. G. HERMAN HARDEN, Admr., Estate of Robert B. Harden, Deceased. Sept. 16, 1932. 4^ (CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE.) 4/ J y