The Barnwell people-sentinel. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1925-current, January 12, 1933, Image 3

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i \ t l THURSDAY, JANUARY 12, 1933 \ THE BARNWELL PEOPLE-SENTINEL, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA PAGE THREE HERB AND HEREABOUTS* • Sheriff Jack B. Morris was visitor in Columbia this week. Mrs J. M. Haifo.d, of Hardeeville, spent last Sunday with Miss Gladys Halford. . r- Mr. and Mrs. Brown Towles, of Tillman, spent the week-end in Barn well with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. J. F.Hartin, of Springfield spent last Sunday after noon with the latter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. 0. Halford. Ben Davies Jr., returned to Barn well Monday night after spendinjr a few day s wi th relatives and friends in Greensboro and Burlington, N. C. The Barnwell Chapter, D. A. R. will meet Friday afternoon, at four o’ clock, at the home of Mrs. W. M. Jones. All members are invited to attend. Mrs. E. L. Wilder, of Baltimore, Md., and Major and B. R. Hun ter, who are en route from Panama to Baltimore, are the guest s of Mr and Mrs. Charlie Brown, Jr. Mrs. J. L. Widman and son have „returned to their home in Asheville, N. C., after spending some tir.e with Barnwell relatives. They also visited point g in Florida last week, being ac ccmpanied on th^ trip by Mrs. Louise Bauer. dciety WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON BRIDGE CLUB. Mrs. R. S. Dicks was hostess last week to the member s of the Wednes day Aftemcon Bridge Club. The high score prize, a deck of cards, was won by Mrs. J. Ju’ien Bush and the consolation, a salad fork and spoon was cut by Mrs. Solomon Blatt. Re freshments were served during the afternoon. .. ^ Hcovers Arrested Again. Duffie and Broadus Hoover, who are under a suspended sentence imposet at the recent term of the Court o: r General Sessions for Barnwell County, aie in the Saluda County jail charged with larceny, according to Deputy Sheriff Gilmore S. Harley. A tw*o- year sentence was suspended by Judge P. H. Stoll on condition that they leave the State. Rate Reduction Ordered. Mclair, W. L. MolahvJ. W. Ruff and Charlie 'Brown, Jr.; alternates, Dr. A. B. Patter*5on, Eugene Brown, Billie Davies and Jim Bush. The annual repor^Hjf the treasurer was read and adopted. " ■ ■ I ■ "V period. The box was charged with 400 pound s icfc * day before the hogs were killed in order to have the box chilled when the meat was put in. After butchering, the meat was salted and placed in the box, the outside temperature being 60, the tem perature in the box 40, and the tem perature inside the meat 58 degrees. After the fifth day the temperatures were as follows: outside 65, inside the box 44, inside the meat 44. The meat was salted three times at six day intervals. The ice lasted about 19 days, after which the meat was found to be satisfactorily cured. Local and Personal News of Biackville Blackville, Jan. 7.—Mrs. Bill Mont gomery, of Winston-Salem, N. C., was the guest this week of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Altman. M rs - Eugene Doughtie and little sen of Columbys, Ga., spent this week with I The box has six-inch insulated the former s mother, Mrs. T. R. Chis- Kvalls. T. and G. flooring is nailed °* m ’ ' to 2 by 4 studding, inside - and out. The Misses Hettiejmd Etta Mathis, Heavy tar building paper is used un- who are studying at Tulane universi- der the flooring and the four-inch ty, New Orleans, as candidates for space is filled with dry wood shav masters” degrees, wer^ guests of ings. Inside dimensions of the box are' their mother, Mrs. Charlie Mathis, seven feet loife, five feet wide, and during the Christmas holidays. J four feet high. Special ice racks are Mr. and Mrs. Dan Teare and little provided at each end of the box for daughter, of Greenville, were guests HoHing i 300-pound bSock of ice for the holidays of Mr. and Mrs. S. I Meat r'acks are provided in the cen- G. Lowe. ter, which allow the meat to be placed Among the college students who J so that the cold air can circulate spent the holidays with their parents around each piece. The capacity of here were: Miss Evelyn Poliakoff, of the box is approximately 1,000 lbs. Greensboro Normal college, Greens- of trimmed meat, and two 300-Vb. boro, N. C.; Miss Kathryn Weissinger, block s of ice should be sufficient to of S. C. university; Miss Jenice Brown, cure put such a quantity of meat. A of Agnes Scott college; Misses Myitis limited number of blueprint plans Boland, Myrtis Martin, Elinor Still, I which show construction details is Louise Boylston, Isabelle Murphy, of j now available through county agents. Winthrop college; Miss Doris Baugh man, cf Limestone college; Miss Kath- j FOUR POINTS OF COMPASS ryn Matthews, of Columbia college;! -po GUIDE S. C. FARMERS licence tests belpg quite worthless fn evaluating their potentialities. “How often > have we learned of deaf-blind children or adolescents be ing refused entrance In schools for the deaf because they are blind, or •f, In schools for the blind because they are deaf; or because schools have no trained teachers available; or because they fear that such pupils will prove too difficult, expensive and burden some. “We have the names and addresses of 944 deaf-blind persons living In the United States and Canada, and much assorted Information about them. song, although a number of negroes also figure, and one Indian; there are men, women and children of all ages. Many of them are maimed as well as deaf and blind. A small handful are war veterans. In addition to braille, the deaf-blind have various other methods of communication^, such as the sign language, the Morse code, etc. In most of our listed cases, the persons have retained or acquired the faculty of speech, of the spoken word.” Some efforts to register, educate, and care for the deaf-blind are now being made In London, Paris, Ber lin, and Montreal, according to Mrs. Rouleau, who adds: “We hope that all these things and more will be done for our American cases through the well-directed efforts of a central committee for the deaf-blind.” Such a Joint committee was started last year, with Mrs. Rouleau as chair man, by the Volta bureau, the Ameri can Federation of Associations, for the Hard of Hearing, and the Ameri can Foundation for the Blind. WE WISH TO EXTEND to cur customers and friends, and to those whom we hope to have as our customers and friends and to the public in general, a speciaV invitation to in spect our new Allendale home. WE HAVE SOMETHING like 4,00 square feet of floor space, used solely for the display of HOME FURNISHINGS —everything from a kitchen stool to a piano. Naturally, we are proud of it and want our friends to see it. \ Won’t You Pay Us An Inspection Visit? YOU DONT HAVE TO BUY. However, we might men tion that piices on our entire line have been reduced in order to get off to a good start in our new location and we want every one who will to take advantage of these reduced prices. COME, LOOK and FEEL at HOME, remembering that thi 8 is YOUR Store. Reid’s Furniture Store ALLENDALE, S. C The South Carolina railroad com mission Tuesday ordered reductions of $173,446 a year in the rates of the Broad River Power Company, of Col umbia, the first company it proceeded against in an announced program for reductions of more than $1,000,000 a year in power rates in the State. Of ficials of the company said they would fight .the order “to. the last ditch.” Church-Elects Officers. At a congregational meeting of th^ Church of the Holy Apostles Sunday morning, the following officers were elected for the ensuing year: C. F. Molair, senior warden; J. W. Ruff, junior wardens; B. P. Davies, W. L. Molair', Dr. A. B. Patterson and Charlie Brown, Jr., vestrymen. Delegates were also elected to the Diocesan Council, as follows: C. F. Harry Haigler, of Ciemson; Theodore Ninestein, Frank Hutto and Leroy ciemson College, Jan. 7.—Better Lancaster, of S. C. university, an( i utilization of land, further step s to Cadets James Buist, Sam ^ a this, J war djt. “subsistence” farming, mere Jack Matthews and Pinkney Still, of ij ves t oc ]^ j n tbe farming scheme, anc The Citadel. cooperation in buying and selling are Mrs. W. C. Buist spent last week j f our 0 f t be cardinal points given by at the home cf her mother, Mrs. L. Dr> w . w> Long> director of the Ex W. W est, of Chester. ' J tension Service, to direct farmers along Mr. and Mrs. Dominic Peay and the road to better success in farming Miss Roberta Peay, of Clinton, ac- j n 1933, On these several points Dr companied the former’s daughter, Miss Long says briefly: Patsy Peay, a member of the high J j ^ rearrangement of the present school faculty, on her return trip to J i a y 0U t 0 n most farms is urgent. En- Blackville Monday morning. j i ar gj n g and reshaping fields will save Wihiam A.tman, of Greenville, Mq t 0 20 per cent in labor; and using spent two day s of last week with his enterprises that do not demand labor parents, Mr. and Mrs. W illiam Alt-K 0o heavily at the same time wil rnan * biing mere effective distribution of The Rev. L. H. Miller, of Green-1 i a bor over the year. Transfer of ville, spent several days of this week j ; a nds not best for economic crop pro- with friends in town. Mr. Miller is j duction to pasturage and growing cf a former pastor of the local Baptist | trees must also be considered church. j 2. The production cf a large Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Brown, Miss p ar t 0 f the family living at home is Jenice Brown and her guest, Miss J 0 f fi rs t importance. The vegetables, Edith Dorn, of Atlanta and Cadets J. j f r uit and meat products needed for L. Buist and Sam Mathis were guests t he table and the feeds needed for of Dr. and Mrs. Golden Battey in Au- the livestock may be ^rown largely gusta Thursday evening. on eac h farm. W’hile many farmers Saturday afternoon, Miss Jenice I are now on a five-at-home basis, Brown was hostess to a number of I there are thousand s of others who can friends, honoring her house guest and an d should thus avoid the necessity college friend, Miss Edith Dorn, of J 0 f cash purchasing of such needs Atlanta, Ga. Five tables were ar- 3. More livestock in the farming langed for bridge. Out-of-town guests g y S tem will first of all mean better were: Misses Virginia Battey, Fran- u tjfi za tion of land, give a better dis- ces Robinson and Marian Neely, of tributicn of labor, and build u-k solid Augusta, Misses Susan Gibbes, Sever- productivity. Though the immediate ly Jones, Claybourne Bunch, Marie cu ti 0 ok for livestock is not bright, Weston and Dukie Mullins, of Colum- the far seeing farmer will bdfein now bia. Highest score prize was award- to establish herds and flocks at low ed Miss Beltye Hair. cos t against the time when livestock Recent guests of J. C. Matthews in- w iu bring better prices; and of eluded Ralph and Hubert Matthews, J course he will grow* all home and of Birmingham, Ala., and Mr. and j farm needs of pork, poultry, and •Mrs. Henry Jones. Mrs. Jones will other me ats. ~ Meanwhile it is the be pleasantly remembered by scores j best way tb make our soils more pro of friends here as Mis s Sara Mat- ductive. thews, r | 4. Some form of coqpe’ative buy Mr. and Mrs. . C. Schtrmei' and | j ng an d cooperative selling will go far Miss Julie Schirmer, of Charleston, I tcwar ds eliminating much of the were guests of Mr. and Mrs. W.- R-J costly middleman service between pro- Carroll during the week. ducer and consmer. The joint buying Mr. and Mrs. G. F. Posey and M r s. 0 f suc h things as fertilizer, seeds, S. B. Rush were guests- of their par- feeds, and implements would save ents, Dr. and Mrs. B. F. Bruce, in f armers much cash; and cooperative St. Matthews, recently. selling of farm products should re- Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Wragg enjoyed su jt securing better advantages in as their recent guests their daugh- the markets through uniform quality ters, Mrs. Hugh McLaurin and baby 0 f products, direct dealing with large son, of Sumter, and Mrs. Leroy Mo- buyers, etc. lair and little daughter, Sevena, of Barnwell. Statement of the Condition of The Bank of Barnwell, located at I Barnwell, S. C., at the clos e of | business December 31st, 1932. RESOURCES: Loans and Discounts $24,981.64 Bonds and Stocks Owned C • by Bank 53,816.66 Furniture and Fixtures 500.00 Banking House 4,500.00 J Cash on hand and due from »»»»»»»» BROWN & BUSH Attorneya-at-Law BROWN-BUSH BUILDING BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA PRACTICE IN STATE AND FEDERAL COURTS TOTAL $186,128.59 | LIABILITIES. Capital Stock Paid in $25,000.00 Surplus Fund 2,500.00 Undivided Profits,‘less Cur rent Expenses and Taxes Paid 441.62 Due to Banks and Bankets 95.17 Individual Deposits sub ject to check 134,437.10 Savings De posits 20,915.96 Certified Checks 706.35 Cashier’s Checks. 253.57—156.312.98 Reserve Funfi Catried on Gen eral Ledger 1,778.82 FARMERS CAN MAKE OWN HOG-KILLING WEATHER B tjsinesc UILDERO •:~x~x“x~x"x~x~x~x~x~:~x-x~x* STRAYED from my lot late Satur day afternoon fight bay horse mule, elnut r.ine years old, weighs 900 lbs.: two white spots on back and brand South Carolina farmers who experi- on left hip. Liberal reward for re-, enced considerable less of home-kill- DEAF-BLIND MOST NEGLECTED CLASS Ciemson V College, Jan. 7.—Mark Twain’s fatnous remark that nothing is ev&r done about the weather has been modified to some extent by turn of mule to Mrs. E. M. Boyles, Allendale, S. C. Itp MEN WANTED for Rawleigh City Routes cf 800 Customers in and near Cities of Barnwell, Blackville, Allen dale and Bamberg. Reliable hustler can start earning $25 weekly and in crease rapidly. Write immediately. Raadeigh Co^. Dept. .SC-12-V, Rich- j out with success, mond, Va. Jan. 12-26 BIRD BROTRERS’ Pure Bred Giant Bronze Turkeys. ^Ypung toms weigh ing 22 to 30 pounds for $6.00 to $7.00 each. Young hen s weighing 12 to 16 pounds $3.00 each. I guarantee satis faction.—W. H. Moody, Jr., Kline, fi. C. l-5-2tp el meat during the mild winter weath er of 1931-32. This has been accom plished by the use of a home-made meat-curing ice box which in effect enables farmers to make their own hog killing weather'. The box was designed by J. T. McAlister, extension agricultural engineer, and several of these boxes have been built and tried In November, 1932, Boyd Atkinson, of Marion County, boult a box and cured out 800 pound s of meat success fully, using only 600 pounds cf ice costing $2.50. The total cost of the materials used iff constructing the box amounted to only $13.00. Mr. Atkinson kept an accurate record of the temperature during the curing 'x Survey Finds 887 So Afflicted m United States. 1 j New York.—Five years’ reasearch has located 887 persons In the Unit ed States, and 57 in Canada, who are both deaf and blind. It Is disclosed in a report to the American Braille Press here. The report summarizes the findings and conclusions of an exhaustive sur vey of deaf-blindness conducted by Mrs. Corrlnne Rocheleau Rouleau, of Washington, D. C., and Miss Rebecca Mack, of Cincinnati. Ohio. Mrs. Rou leau, author of the report, has been deaf since childhood, ^but has perfect sight; Miss Mack hps been partially blind since childhood, but has per fect hearing. “As a class, the deaf-blind in our midst are not only the most heavily handicapped and the most lonely of all human beings, but also, as a class, the most neglected,” declares Mrs. Rouleau. “We even know of deaf- blind children who have been placed in asylums for the feeble-minded with out proper trial—the so-called Intel- Legal Advertisements SCHOOL CLAIMS FOR TAXES TOTAL $186,128.59 State of South Carolina, County of Barnwell. ss. Before me came Perry A. Price, Cashier of the above named bank, who, being duly .«worn, says that the above and foregoing statement is a true condition of said bank, as shown by the books of said bank. PERRY A. PRICE, Sworn to and subscribed before me this 5th day of January, 1933. NELL DUNBAR. Notary Public for S. C. Correct Attest: C. G. Fuller, _ Edgar A. Brown, Perry A. Price, • Directors. . ~ For a limited time only, school claims will be accepted at the county reasurer’s office in payment of 1932 State and county taxes. J. J. BELL, County Treasurer. NOTICE OF DISCHARGE. Notice is hereby given that we will fie our report as Administrator and Administratrix of the estate cf W. T. Walker, deceased, with Hon. John K. Snelling, Judge of the Court of Pro late, on or before the 23rd day of January, 1933; and will petition the said court for an Order of Discharge and letters Dismissory on that date. J. Mims Walker, Edith A. Walker, Admr. and Admx. Thi s 28th day of Dec., 1932. - Special Prices ♦ NOTICE! Statement of the Condition of The Bank of Blackville, located at Blackville, S. C., at the close of business December 31st, 1932. RESOURCES: Loan s and Discounts $4,17.4.60 Bonds and Stocks Owned by Bank 10,000.00 Cash on hand and due from Banks 9,059.59 Accrued interest on Bond s Purchased * - * 5.15 TOTAL $23,239.34 LIABILITIES. Capital Stock Paid in $10,000.00 Surplus Fund 3,500.00 After giving three day*’ notice the undersigned will apply to the Secre tary of State for a charter for a cor poration to be organized and known as the Edisto River Fertilizer Com pany, Inc., and a meeting will be held at the office of A. H. Ninestein, attor ney, on January 14, 1933, at 10 o’clock a. m., for the purpose of forming said corporation. The capital stock of said corporation is to be Four Hun dred Dollars, divided into forty shari-s of Ten Dollars each. The purpose of said corporation will be to manufac ture and mix fertilizer products and component parts thereof for sale, and to sell raw materials, to buy and sell produce of everV kind and nature, to Permanent Waves OUR SPECIAL $3.00 EUGENE FREDRIC 5.00 OIL of TULIPWOOD 7.00 Guaranteed work by capable and experienced operators. For falling hair, dandruff, oily or dry scalp, try our reconditioning scalp treatment?, $1.00 for one_ treatment, 6 fcr’$5.00. The Barnwell Beauty Slop Mam Street, Barnwell, S. C. Undivided Profits, kiss* Current ? Expenses and Taxes Raid 289.69 store, cotton, grain and ail kinds of Individual Deposits sub ject to Check $9,387.85 Cashier’s Check 8 61.80— 9,449.65 TOTAL $23,239.34 State of South Carolina, County of Barnwell. ss. Before me came Perry A. Price, Cashier of the above named bank, who, being duly sworn, says that the above and foregoing statement is a true condition of said bank, as shown by the books of said bank. PERRY A. PRICE, Sworn to and subscribed before me this 10th day of January, 1933. W. B. TURNER, II, Notary Public for S. C. Correct Attest: v C. G. Fuller, Edgar A. Brown, Perry A. Price, ; Directors. produce, to buy, sell or manufacture all kinds of crates, baskets and barrels that are used in the produce or kin dred businesses. Said qffporation to be located at Blackville, S. C. S. G. Lowe, E. H. Ninestein, A. H. Ninestein, You Are Fortunate 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. \ INSURANCE FIRE WINDSTORM PUBLIC LIABILITY ACCIDENT - HEALTH SURETY BONDS AUTOMOBILE THEFT Calhoun and Co. P. A. PRICK. MM*cw. We deliver every morning in Barnwell and way points, rain or shine. See our truck or drop us a card to— LAURIE FOWKE, Appledale Dairy LYNDHURST, S. C. (BARNWELL COUNTY) ADVERTISE IN The People- SentmeL