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T ''iVijitiin iT . .. \ THURSDAY, JANUARY 5, 1933. L THE BARNWELL REOPLE-SE^TINEL, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA V ! PAGE •••••••••••••••••••a • HBRB AND HjBRBABOUTS. • Mrs. Jessiee. mother at Noi iscm visited her ig the holidays. Miss Hilda Martin was the guest of ' of Miss RubjTStlTTTn Blackvllle last week. Miss Elizabeth Mace entertained a number of friends with a dance Fri day night. Miss Miriam Creech, of the Fork section, is the guest of Miss Elizabeth Vaughn this week. Misses Dorothy Richardson and Elaine Harley attended a dinner dance given by'“Miss Eleanor Sanders in Blackville last week. Warren Calhoun, cf Spartanburg, spent the week-end with Mr. an<l Mrs. W. J. Lemon. Hummel Hailey returned to Wof ford College Tuesday after spending -the holidays with his parents. Col. and Mrs. J. E. Harley. 'OCWi “Stranded” Man Gives ~ $5,0()0 to Bible Class MRS. BROWN ENTERTAINS FOR AUGUSTA VISITOR. Mrs. Lucile C. Brown entertained with a dance Friday night, December 30th, in honor of Miss Dorothy Boyd, of Augusta, who is visiting Miss Irma Brown. Music wa s furnished by a local orchestra. Adopted Son of Marion Shows Appre ciation for Kindnesses During Stay in That Town. ^ * Henry Spann, of Garnett, spent the week-end here with Mr. and Mrs. Perry A. Price, Mis s Maggie Lemon, of Indiana, Pa., was the week-end guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Lemon. Dr. and Mrs. M. C. Best are moving into their lovely new home on Main Street this week. Mrs. R. S. Dicks and children spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Antley at Cordova. Mrs. J. W. Vincent ha s returned to Union after a pleasant visit to rela tives and friends here. Mrs. C. F. Molair entertained the Ladies’ Guild of the local Episcopal Church Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. Robert A. Patterson and son spent several days during the holi days with relatives at McColl. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Mahaffey and children visited Calhon Falls during the holidays, returning on Tuesday. Mrs. Livingston, of the Barnwell Beauty Shop, was the guest of friends in Springfield during the holidays. Pi of. Dan Hartley has returned to Millwood, Va., after spending the h lidays in Barnwell with relatives. Mr. and Herman Brown, Miss Janice Brown and Herman, Jr., of Blackville, were visitors here Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. J. Julien Bush and tw*o children, Mr. and Mrs. Perry Bush and little daughter attended a family reunion at the home of Mrs. Eugene Buckingham in Ellenton Friday.X Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Greene had as their guest s during the holidays MrS. Leila K. Best and son, Dr. L. K. Best, of Fall River, Mass., James Best, of Asheville, N. C., and Mrs. George C. Glaspy and children, Billy and Anne, of Burlington, N. C. > ’ V Miss Martha Fiances Grubbs cele brated her thirteenth birthday by en tertaining a number of her friends on Tuesday evening with a dance at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Buist Grubbs. Refreshments were served during the evening. y 4 B US INK Si UILDERi <"X~X~X~X~X~X~X~X~X~X"X“X~> MEN WANTED for Raleigh Routes of 800 Customers in and near Cities cf Barnwell, Blackville, Counties of North Barnwell and parts of Aiken. Reliable hustler can start earning $25 weekly and increase every month. Write ' immediately. Rawleigh Co., Dept. SC-12-S, Richmond, Va. Jan. 5-19. Cadets Gene Parler and Wilson San ders returned to The Citadel Monday after spending the holidays in Barn well with their parents. V V Mrs. Lena Davies returned to Ag nes Scott College, Decatur, Ga., Sun day after spending the holidays with Mr. and Mrs. B. P. Davies. Miss Elizabeth Kennedy, of Willis- ton, and Miss Nancy Davis, of Wil liamsburg, Va., visited Miss Elaine Harley during the holidays. ENTERTAINS 4N HONOR OF MRS. DAVIES. Mrs. B. P. Davies entertained in formally Saturday afternoon in honor cf Mrs. Lena Davies, of Agnes Scott College, Decatur, Ga. Those who en 4 joyed the occasion were Dr. and Mrs. A. B. Patterson, Mrs. Maude Holmes, Mrs. Sallie McNab, Mrs. L. H. Chris- S tie, Miss May Brown, Mrs. J. A. Por ter, Mrs. N. G. W. Walker, Mis s Anna Walker and Mrs. Lizzie M. Cave. Miss Lena Cave, of State Park, spent a few days during ' the past week with relatives and friends in Barnwell and Dunbarton. ^larvin Hale has returned to West Virginia after a w-eek’s visit to Barn well relatives. Mrs. Hale remained for a more extended stay. Mrs. Maigurite Patterson Martin has returned to Newjlfork City after spending several days with her mother, Mrs. Kate Patterson. Mrs. Chas. E. McGregor and two s ons returned to their home at Girard, Ga., Thursday afternoon after spend ing two days here with relatives. Mis s Mavine Helen Walker, of Col umbia, spent last week in Barnwell as the guest of Charles Burckhalter. Miss Anna Sams Clark has returned tf\ Williston after spending the holi days with her aunt, Mrs. M. B. Ha- K <*!• Mislr Julia Lemon has returned to Columl^a after spending the holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mis. W\ J. Lemon. \ Mis. Hdrvry .Wingo returned to Columbia Saturday after spending several days with her father, J. W\ Patterson. \ Mrs. Lessie Easterling, Mrs. Barn ^vejl Sanders andyBrown Easterling spent the week-end\ with relatives in Columbia. \ \ Mrs. Winchester C.XSmith, Jr. of Williston, and Mrs. Pin! Harris, of Spartanbuig, were visitors here Monday. \ Capt. J. 0. Sanders, cf Olar, was the first subscriber to renew his sub scription this year. He called Mon day morning and shoved his subscrip tion up one notch. Misses Elizabeth Grubbs, Patricia Dick$ and Dorothy Richardson return ed to Coker College at Hartsville on Tuesday after* spending the holidays with relatives here. Mr. and Mrs. Hagood Bostick, of Columbia, were visitors here Sunday. They were accompanied home by Miss Elizabeth Hagood, who i s a student at Columbia College. Misses Jennie Black, Claire Dicks, Ahne Scott McNab and Kathryn Hol land have returned to Winthrop Col lege after spending the holidays with relatives in Barnwell. Dr. ahd Mrs. J. A. Watson, Mr. and Mrs. Ddpglas Jeppe and Lodwick Hartley, all of Batesburg, spent New Year’s Day in Barnwell a g the guests bf*G. W. Manville and Dan M. Hart ley > Cadets Brown Easterling, James Riley McNab, McTyre \Calhoun, Dean Fuller, Robert and Steven Deasoh re turned to Gemson College Monday af ter spending the holidays'^! Barnwell with relatives. . The Mary G. Harley Sunds Class will hold it s regular BIRD BROTRERS’ Pure Bred Giant Bronze Turkeys. Young toms weigh ting 22 to 3(X pounds for $6.00 to $7.00 \ social and business meeting bt each. Young hen s weighing 12 to 16 home of Mrs. B. L. Easterli pounds $3.00 each. I guarantee satis- j Friday evening beginning at faction.—W. H. MoodyV Jr., Kline, 'o’clock. Every member i s s S. C. l-5-2tp invited: ' „ - ' School onthly the on 7:3<J ally WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON BRIDGE CLUB. Miss BeBee Patterson was hostess last week to the members of the Wednesday Afternoon Bridge Club. The high score prize, a crumb tray and brush, w’as won by Mrs. R. S. Dicks; the consolation, a basket of fruit, was cut by Mrs. J. W. Ruff, and the guest prize, a handmade card table cover, was presented to Mrs. T. D. Gogleman, cf Burlington, N. C. Delightful refreshments were served during the afternoon. Social and Personal News from Williston Miss Elaine Harley has returned to the University of South Carolina af ter - spending the holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John B. Har ley. Miss Daisy Anderson entertained a number of friends with a Christma- party Thursday night at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. N. An- drs-n. Mrs. Maude Holmes and Miss May Brown leave today (Thursday) for Columbia, where they will spend the remainder cf the winter with rela tives. Mr. and Mrs. T. D. Fogleman re turned to their home in Burlington. N. C., Friday after spending a few days here with Mr. and Mrs. B. P. Davies. Mrs. Carroll, Mrs. J. L. Widman and son, of Asheville, N. C., and Mrs. Louise Bauer, of this city, left Satur day-for a week’s stay at Daytona Beach, Fla. Williston, Dec. 31.—Miss Ruby Courtney, of Murphy, N. C., is spend ing the holidays here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. O. N. Courtney. Lewi 3 Bell, cf Cumberland col’ege, Williamsburg, Ky., is among the col lege set at home. Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Jones spent Christmas with the latter^ parents in Bartown, Ga. - \ Mr. and Mrs. C. K. Ackerman and children spent several of the Christ mas holidays in Charleston. Mrs. E. E. Crowson spent Christ mas with her parents in Buie, N. C. Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Pender are spending a few days in Miami, Fla. Mrs. Bessie Brabham and son, are spending this week in Eairfax. James Stallings, of Greenville, is visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. E. L. Stallings. Dr. and Mrs. John Black and Miss Elizabeth Stallings, of Jacksonville are visiting Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Black and Mr. and Mrs. R. E. L. Stallings. Misses Mildred Woolty, Nina Fred erick, and Von Etta Boyd, of Charles ton, are spending the holiday? here with their mothers Miss Nancy Davis, of Williamsburg, Va., is the house guest of Miss Eliza beth Kennedy. Mrs. M. B. Robinson, of Yonges Is land, is the holiday guest of her par ents, Mr and Mrs. J. W. Folk. Mesdames T. J. and J. C. Folk have returned from a visit to their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kent, of Glenn- wood, Ga., and Mis. and Mrs. Hodges, of Oconee, Ga., respectively. Miss Sibyl Smith, of Springfield) is visiting her aunt, Mrs. J. W. ’Cook. Jtfiss Alice Lard is spending a few days with her mother, before return ing to Wairentcn, Va., where she has been working for some time. Marion, Dec. 31.—“Uncle Charlie” is dead, and the little, old, bent figure has vanished forever from the shoot ing gallery on the vacant lot on Main street. This adopted son cf Marion was borne to a grave in Rose Hill Cemetery by Yileh With" bow(!d 'heads ‘and sad hearts who had learned to like and respect the man who had chosen to spend his last years here, and showed so much appreciation for the kindnesses shown him. ^Several years ago a carnival was stranded here, and “Uncle Charlie” Ha'yn es, who ran a shooting gallery, was one of the derelicts which came to anchor and found a safe harbor in Marion. He set up his shooting, gallery on a vacant lot on Main street and became a familiar and pathetic figure. He did not seem to get much custom, but he stayed on, and little by little, he got acquainted with the men of the town. He was rather a mysterious charac ter, for without being exactly secre tive, he was very reticent,x and little wa s ever learned of his history. He hadr always been a show man, but there was never anything of the tough about him. He rented a room where he carried on his housekeeping, and Sundays he spent mostly seated cn a bench on the public square. One Sunday a member of the Men’s Bible class of . the First Methodist church, on his way to Sunday school, stepped and asked “Uncle Charlie” to go with him. His invitation was ac cepted, and “Uncle Charlie” became one of the most devout members of the class. Amid the good fellowship he found there, hi 8 mannei expanded and his character showed up well. He wax mild and gentle, considerate and honest, and became sN favorite with his class mates. Some months ago he fell ill, and was taken to a hospital, where he disclosed the fact that he was any thing but a charity case. Besides be ing able to pay all his expenses, he made a will leaving an amount said to be in exces? of $5,000, all of which he had made running “hot dog” stand s and shooting galleries, to the .Bible class whichd had taken him in ant given him a companionship he prizec very highly. “Uncle Charlie” did not die then but returned to the room w r hich was his home, and, too feeble to walk the block to the church, hi s friends came in their cars and took him , so he was able to go until nearly the very last Just a few days before Christmas which would have been hi g seventy- seventh birthday, while the earth was covered with a snowy mantle, the tired eyes closed and the life of mys tery ended. It is not thought he had any rela tives, a s he never mentioned them, and showed no concern for anyone or plkce, but his friends here, and the town where he built up a worthwhile life after - bein^ stranded at the age of three score and ten. Alleged Attempt at Robbery. Mr. and Mrs\. J. Julien Bush enter tained with a dance New Year’s Eve in honor of their son, Browm Towles, and his bride, wno was Miss Sarah Patterson before their marriage a short time ago. Cliff Williams, colored, was arrest ed Saturday and lodged in the Barn well County jail by Policeman John Hogg for an alleged artehipt to rob the store cf the Farmers’ Union Mer cantile Co., of this city, Friday night. The officer says that he caught the negro, with an open knife, in what appeared to be an attempt to enter the side door of the store. Williams explained his presence there by say ing that he was trying to get an old inner tube that had been given to him by an employe of the store. Aftef an examination of the door the following day and an investigation of the cir cumstances, the authorities decided to lodge Williams in the county jail. One night last week unknown par- ties A- $fole about 75 chickens from Her bert Black, who lives just out of Barnwell near the Barnwell-Black- ville highway. i “DANCE OF. THE VIRGINS” Indian Mysticism, Strange Cults, Weired Ceremonies—and Romance— in “Dance of the Virgins,” a Thrilling New Fiction Seiial Beginning in The American Weekly, the Magazine Dis tributed with Sunday’s ATLANTA AMERICAN. Boy’* Loyalty Frees Father Held for Theft 1 Danville, 111.—The loyalty of a ten- year-old boy to his father, lo Danville, I1L, enabled the father to gain his freedom from jail and made the son one of the town’s best-known and most-beloved characters. Several months ago Samuel E. Chaplin was arrested in an automo bile reported stolen In Tennessee. He asperted the owner had wrecked the machine after a drinking bout and sold it to him for $25. The boy, Ernest, trudged several miles into Danville from their home, In Sanders, Ky„ and when his, father went to jail stuck right with him. In the morning he called at the home of District Attorney Paul Jones and pleaded his father’s ease with the composure of a trained advocate. Impressed, the prosecutor redoubled his Investigation. It was found that the motor number of the automobile had been changed before It fell Into Chaplin’s hands, a fact which react ed to the credibility of his story and against the complaint All of this required nearly two nionths, and in the meantime Danville had a problem oh its hands For days Ernest refused to leave his father’s side. H,e slept and ate at the Jail. Finally officials obtained a newspaper route for him, and he was Induced to stay at the home of a woman deputy clerk. When the father was freed of the charge the two, with money and wardrobe given by the boy’s friends, left Danville In search of employ ment WVvW v V W V w ADVERTISE IN The People- Sentinel. < you could be in two places at once... - 1 ^ Suppose you could he seated comfortahl) at home and ye: be enjoying a visit to a frienthur relative miles away ... suppose a salesman in one city could add that good prospect in another City to his day’s territory ... But why suppose? Just lift the telephone receiver, call ‘ Long Distance,’ and shortly your voice is making the trip quickly and at small cost. For all practical pur poses, you are in two places at once, with the full expres sion of your personality which ’/our voice conveys. Thar is why friends enjoy the personal touch nf a long distance telephone conversation. In business, long distance telephone service is being successfully used in buying, selling and collecting. Use long distance telephone service today—or tonight if you wish to Take advantage of the lower rates on night Station-to-Station service. You, too, will he pleased. Southed b^ell Telephone and: Telegraph SAVE... Have Your MEAT CURED By Experts Will you be among thoee this season who will lose their meat through improper curing and storing ? 2,000,000 Pounds Lost Last year, it is estimated, two million pounds of meat were unnecessarily lost in Georgia alone by improper home-curing and unfavorable weather conditions. You need not lose s pound. This modernly equipped plant has facilities for receiving your meat and rendering you expert curing service re gardless of outside temperatures at a cost just about equal to what you save in Write for an illustrated booklet about best method of butchering and bring us your meat for safe, expert, curing. Augusta Ice & Coal Co. Nslsoit at 13th Street AUGUSTA, GEORGIA Capacity 1,000,000 Pounds BROWN & BUSH Attorneys-at-Lav BROWN-BUSH BUILDING BARN WILL, SOUTH CAROLINA >\ PRACTICE IN STATE AND FEDERAL COURTS Special Prices on Permanent Waves OUR SPECIAL $3.0« EUGENE FREDRIC 5.00 OIL of TULIPWOOD ^.OO Guaranteed work by capable and experiertced operators. For falling hair, dandruff, oily or dry scalp, try our reconditioning scalp treatments, $1.00 for one treatment, 6 fer $5.00. The Barnwell Beauty Shop Main Street, Barnwell, S. C. Bargain Excursions Fridays, Satrdays, Sundays to AUGUSTA Round-trip Fare $0.75 From other points proportional Tickets good returning follow ing Monday. Consult A. C. L. Ticket Agents for details. Atlantic Coast Line You Are * >"5s Fortunate 1 .1 . ‘ WHEN YOU MAY OBTAIN RICH CREAMY AND PI 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 points, rain Jr or shine. See our truck oe drop us a card to— LAURIE FOWKE; Appledale Dairy LYNDHURST, S. C. (BARNWELL COUNTY)