The Barnwell people-sentinel. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1925-current, March 02, 1933, Image 3
'X
THURSDAY, MARCH 2, 1933.
• vHBRE AND HEREABOUTS. •
Mrs. Anj?u g .Patterson was a visitor
^ in Augusta Friday;
r |frs. R. S. Dicks and son, Bobby,
“fepent Sunday with relatives at Cope.
Dr. L. T. Claytor and Eugene
Easterling were visitors in Columbia
Friday, .
Ben Davies, Ji., and Calhoun Lemon
spent the week-end with friends in
Columbia.
THE BARNWELL PEOPLE-SENTINEL, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA
V '
PACT T1
The monthly business and social
meeting of the Mary G. Harley Sun
day School Class will be held Friday
evening, March 3rd, 81, 7:30 o’clock,
at the heme of Miss Dora Greene.
Every member is cordially invited to
be present. —^
'baety
Mrs. E. H. Girardeau is spending
% some timje with relatives anj friends
in Charleston.
Herman I. Mazursky, Esq., was a
visitor in Orangeburg on professional
business Monday.
4 Mrs. Winchester C. Smith, Jr., and
Mrs. Phil Han is, of \V illistcn, were
visitors here Monday.
Mrs, Charlie Brown, Jr., ha« re
turned home after a pleasant visit to
relatives at Lady Lake, Fia.
Mr. and M rs. G. P. Caughman, of
Columbia, were the wesk-end guests
of Mr. and Mis. L. E. Par’er.
Mrs. B. S. Moore, Jr., Misses Mar
garet Zeigler and Virginia Hutto were
sh; ppers in Augusta Saturday.
Mrs. W. C. Cathcart. and Mrs.
Haggard, of the Children’s Buieau,
of Columbia, were victors in town
Monday.
Mrs. Spann and daughter, Miss
Rosa'ie Spann, of Sumter, spent the
week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Perry
A. Price.
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON
I
BRIDGE CLUB.
Mis. Solomon Blatt was hostess last
week to the member s of the Wednes
day Afternoon Bridge Club. The high
score prize was wen by Mrs. Edgar A.
Brown and the consolation was cut
by Mrs. R. S. Dicks, each of the win
ners being presented with a half-
dozen lemonade glasses. The guest
prize, a pair of silk hose, was awarded
to Mrs. Ralph Smith. A salad course
with coffee was served during the
afternoon. Guests other than club
members included Mrs. Winchester C.
Smith, Jr., and Mrs. Phil Harris,^ of
WilUston; Mis. E. B. Sanders, Mrs.
Phil Huff, Mis. Josh Baxley, Mrs.
Angus Patterson and Mrs. Ralph
Smith.
Tuesday aftemcon the members of
this c’ub were entertained by Mrs.
J. N. Anderson. The high score prize
for club members, a set of flower gar
den tools, was won by Mrs. B. P.
Davies and the consolation, a bath
towel, was cut by Mrs. Th^s. M. Boul-
ware. The high score guest prize, a
cup towel, wa s awarded to Mrs. Mor-
decsi Mazursky. A salad course with
coffee was served. Guests other than
club members included Mrs. Louise
P. Bauei, Mrs. Mordecai Mazursky,
Mrs. E. B. Sanders and Mrs. Josh
Baxley. T
JUNIOR-SMART SET
J. E. Mahaffey t|td s r. Wilbur. BRIDGE CLUB,
spent -the week-end in Washington,
visiting Mr. Mahaffey’s bro:her who
is quite sick.
Mrs. Lewis Dubose and children, cf
Wil i-ion, are the guests of her
mother, Mrs. Olaree Cail, at the
Diamond Hotel.
The Rev. Edward Long, pastor of
the Clinton Baptist Church, filled the
puipit the local Baptist Church
Sunday morning.
Mis. J>hn Simpson, of Augusta,
Mrs. Sophie Jones and Mr. Jones, of
Atlanta, spent Monday with Mr#.
• Giforhr- Brown, Su. .
Mr. and Mrs. B. L. Easterling, Mi«.
Marvin Hale, Mrs. H. M. Lyons, Mr.
and Mrs. H. J. Phillips and children
mote red to Augusta Sunday.
The Jchnson Hagood Chapter. U.
I). C., will meet at t’no home of Mrs.
Forest S. Biown on Friday afternoon
at f ur o’clock. All members are
srpecia ly invited to be present.
Miss Icne Brown, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Charlie Brown, Jr., cele
brated her fifth birthday Tuesday af
ternoon by entertaining a number of
her little friends with a party.
Perry B. Bush went up to Columbia
yesterday (Wt'dnesriayiir-te- attend a
meeting of the. executive committee
cf the anti-ptohlbition forces at the
Jefferson Hotel. He was accompanied
by Judge R. C. Holman.
Miss Mildred Hayes, daughter of
Mrs. W. A. Hayes, left on last Wed
nesday Sot Columbia, where she en
tered the training class for nurses at
the State Hospital. Miss Hayes has
many friends here who will be inter
ested in thi s announcement.
The friendg of Mrs. Jessie J. Bron
son will be glad to know that she is
convalescing at the Orangeburg hospi
tal efter a recent operation. She was
visited Sunday afternoon by Mrs. R.
L. Bronson and son, Robert, Jr.,
Misses Ruth Craig, Nell Dunbar and
Grace Hogg.
WILDER I
X
PUBLIC SCHOOL FACTS.
4
FOR RENT:—7-room Bungalow, in
cluding batfy on Washington Streec. 1
Interior recently painted. Price very
cheap. Apply to Mrs. R. S. Dicks,
Barnwell, S. C.
MEN WANTED— for Rawleigh
Routes cf 800 Consumers in Cities of
Barnwell, Blackville and -^arts of
Aiken County. Reliable hustler can
start earning $25 weekly and increase
every month. Write immediately.—
Rcwleigh Co., DetpL SC-12-S., Rich
mond, Va. * ,
(By Dan Crosland.)
The opinion prevalent throughout
the State that public schools are ex
pending too much of the public reve
nue may be altered in consideration
of the fact that the annual cost of a
student in South Carolina is less than
half of the national average cost.
The State spends $41.83 for each
student annually, whereas the nation
over the annual cost is $86.69. With
thi s comparison in mind, it is not dif
ficult to comprehend the fact that 44
Spates spend mye for each student
annually than South Carolina.
The low annual cost -for each stu
dent in the State has been maintained
de-pite a rapid growth in school popu-
laticn since 1900. While the entire
population of the S(ate rose 29 per
cent, in the three Idecades between
1900 and 1930, the school enrollment
skyrocketed to a growth of 84 per
cent.
The foregoing facts, compiled by
the research committee of South Caro
lina Education Association, have led
public school champions to conclude
that much of the discussion for radical
reductions in the program of public
school education is more reflective of
the hysteria caused by current econo
mic conditions than cf the logic which
should be applied to a system involv
ing the future leadership of the State.
Barnwell County Boy
Making Good kecord Pkjt ** th< with Juniper qlu
jj WMkit i < svm I USED CARS
Cadet S. J. Mathis, of Blackville,
RanksJHlgh at The Citadel in
Scholarship.
Mrs. LeRoy Moiair was hostess to
the members of the Junior-Smart Set
Bridge Club Thursday afternoon. The
high score prize for club members,
rwo c denial prints, was won by Mrs.
Eugen& Eu.flerling; the high score
pi be for guests, also two colonial
prints, was won by Mrs. Solomon
Blait, and the consolation, a deck of
curds, was cut by Mis. E. B. Sanders.
The hostess served a sweet course and
e< tfee. Besides the club members the
guests inc’uded Mrs. Charlie Brown,
Sr., Mrs. B. P. Davies, Mrs. J. Julien
Bu?h, Mis. S. V. Brown, Mrs. Marvin
Hale, Mrs. T. M. Boulware, Mrs. Phil
Huff, Mrs. R. A. Patterson, Mrs. Ralph
Smith, Mrs. Solomon Blatt, Mrs. R.
S. Dicks and Mrs. Louise Bauer.
Monday afternoon Mrs. Angu< Pat
terson was hostess to the memb?i.s of
this club at the home of Mrs. W. A.
Fuller. The high score prize f r club
members was won by Mrs. Josh Bax
ley; the high score prize for guests
was won by Mrs. Marvin Hale, and
the consolation was cut by Mrs.
Chat lie Brown, Jr. t each of the win
ners being presented with a flower
pot. A sweet course and coffee were
served. The St. Patrick’s Day motif
was effectively carried out in the
decorations and refreshments. Be
sides the club member g the guests in
cluded Mrs. R. S. Dicks, Mrs. B. P.
Davies, Mrs. C G. Fuller, Mrs.'Solo
mon Blatt, Mrs. T. M. Boulware, Mrs.
Marvin Hale, Mrs. S. V. Brown, Mrs.
B. S. Mooie, Jr., Mrs. R. A. Patter
son, Miss Anne Mabry, Mrs. W. C.
Smith, Jr., Mrs. Phil Harris and Mrs.
Ralph Smith.
Statistics gathered recently by a
group of beneficiary cadets at the
Citadel reveal some interesting facts
about the superiority of men holding
State scholarships. This material was
u-ed in an effort to prove that students
that hold scholarships under the com
petitive system of awarding them
have proven themselves worthy of
their reward. The present holder (ff
the scholarship at the military college
from Barnwell County is Cadet S. J.
Mathis, sor^ of Mrs.. P. M. Mathis, of
Blackville. He i s one^ of the most
valuable members of the Corps of
Cadets and has shown himself in
tensely interested in making the best
of his opportunity.
The honor roll for the first semes
ter shows that beneficiary students
generally prove themselves highly
capable in scholastic work by the fact
that 78 per cent of their number are
mentioned on the list. That more than
one third of the honor students should
come from the cne sixth of the stu
dent body represented by scholarship
men would indicate that these men
are, on the whole, the leaders and su
perior students. Moreover, it is shown
that about one-haalf of the highly dis
tinguished is composed of beneficiary
men. -
Cadet Mathis also holds the grade
of Lieutenant in the Corps of Caadets.
In the ROTC organization of the
Corps at The Citadel the selection cf
cadet officers and leaders is made
with great care in order to obtain the
utmost efficiency and geneial excel
lence in the J student body. The many
•tudent activities, in which the various
units of the military organization at
The Citadel take the place of the
club- and fraternaties at other in
stitutions, provide a rigid test of the
practical leadership and qualities of
cadet officers and non-commissioned
off’cers. Scholar.'hip men have proved
themselves highly capable of per
forming the many varied functions
thus called f r. In the present Corps
of Cadets there are about enough
beneficiary cadets to make one full
company, but records show that such
a company would be a queer one in
deed, becati'e it would containm more
officers than privates, having three
captains, seventren lieutenants, four
supply sergeants, fifteen sergeants
and twelve corporals and only thirty-
five private.- including freshmen who
are not eligible to hold rank of any
kind.
Besides these major field? cf activi
ty, the beneficiary cadets have shewn
supeiior interest and ability in all
foims in extra curricula activity. The
Round Table, the literary society at
the military college, has it* presi
dent and considerable part of its mem
bership cut of their number. More
than half f the present editorial and
managerial staffs cf the Bull Dog, the
student weekly pub’ication are holders
of competitive scholarship'. Although
athletics plays no part in the competi
tion for these scholarships, twenty-
three of the men new in college on
scholarships have represented The
Citadel in some form of intercollegi
ate athletics, and quite a number of
others have rendered valuable service
to the athletic program in managerial
or other capacities^
Week of Prayer.
\ #
Dqve out the impurities and excess
acids,) that cause irritation,_ burning'
and frequent desire. Juniper oil
pleasant to take in 1 the form of BU^ ! V
KETS, the bladder pliysic, also con
taining buchu leaves, etc. Works on
the bladder similar to castor oil on
the bowels. Get a 25c box from any
drug store. After four days if not
relieved of “getting /tip nights’’ go
back and get your money. If you
are bothered with backache or leg
pains caused from bladder disorders
you are bound to feel better after this
cleaning and you get your regular
sleep. The Best Pharmacy says BU-
KETS is a best seller.
We are offering at sacrifice price s
25 used Ford cars and 5 Chevrolet
?«arJf, 1928 to 1930 model?. Will give
i 'f.
•terms ’ and will a$e accept school
claims as part payment. *
Rizer Auto Co.
Otar, S. C.
Special Prices
on
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 treatments, $1.00 for one
treatment, 6 fer $5.00.
The Barnwell Beauty Shop
Main Street, Barnwell, S. C.
ADVERTISE IN
The People- Sentinel.
INSURANCE
FIRE
WINDSTORM
PUBLICLIABILITY
ACCIDENT - HEALTH
SURETY BONDS
AUTOMOBILE
THEFT
Calhoun and Co.
. P. A. PRIC15. Manager.
This Woman Lost
64 Pounds of Fat
Mr*. H. Price of Woodside, L. I.
writde: "A year ago I weighed 190 lbs.
I started to take Krusehen and now I
weigh 120 and never felt better if! my
life and what’o more, I look more lika
20 yrs. old than the mother of 2 chil
dren, one of 19 and the other IS. My
friende eay it’s marvelous the way I
reduced."
To lose fat SAFELY and HARM
LESSLY, taka a half tsaspoonful of
Krusehen in a glass of hot water in
the morning before breakfast—don’t
mite a morning—a bottle that lasts 4
weeks costs but a trifle—but don’t
take chances—be sure it’s Krusehen.
If not Joyfully satisfied after the first
bottle—money back.
To All Who Suffer Stomach
Agony, Gas and Indigestion
Money Back If One Bottle of Dare's Mentha Pepsin Doesn't Do
You More Good Than Anything You Ever Used.
Why bother with alow actors when
one tablenpoonful of this splendid and
pleasant liquid remedy will cause gas,
bloating, heaviness, heartburn or any
upset condition of the stomach to
speedily vanish.
And why should guy man or woman
Buffer another hour with Indigestion
or any stomach misery when the rem
edy that acta almost Instantly can be
easily procured?
But there Is more to eay about this
remarkable remedy—something that
will Interest thousands of despondent
people.
Dare’s Mentha Pepsin not only
quickly relieves stomach distress, but
it also conquers stubborn Indigestion,
dyspepsia and gastritis, and puts an
end to dlsslness, nervousness, head
ache, sleeplessness and despondency
which distressing troubles are nearly
always caused by chronic etomach
disturbance.
Dare’s Mentha Pepsin la a supremely*
good remedy that druggists every
where guarantee—a line tonic that
builds you up and makes you work
with vim, eat with relish and sleep
soundly.
BROWN & BUSH
Attorney g-at-Law
BROWN-BUSH *
BUILDING
BARNWELL,
SOUTH CAROLINA
PRACTICE IN STATE AND FEDERAL COURTS
THE BANK OF BARNWELL, Barnwell, S. C.
Statement of Condition February 28, 1933
RESOURCES:
Loans anj Discounts, made up cf 50 different loans with short
maturities ,, $24,281.47
Distribution of above loans: ' ,
Notfs from $ 1.00 to 8 100.00
Notes from 101.00 to 200.00
Notes from 201.00 to 400.00
Notes from 401.00 to 800.00
Notes from 301.00 to 3000.00
The Woman’s Missionary Society of
the local Baptist Church will observe
the Week of Prayer for Home Mis
sions on next Tuesday morning, be
ginning at eleven o’clock. Each Cir
cle wil have a part in the day’s pr>
giam. Lunch wil! be served in the
dining room of the church at noon.
Every woman in the church is urged
to be present.
Watermelon
Land to Rent
I havgv.a number of acres of
excellent land suitable for p’ant-
uig watermelons. This land
has never been planted in mel
ons; in fact, it has not been
cultivated at all in several
years. Wiil rent very reason
able. Barn, stable? and garage
also available, and can furnish
room and meals if desired.
Farm is located only miles
from Millett on a splendid road.
For further information ad
dress—
MRS. A. L. KIRKLAND
MARTIN, S. G
| 1500.32
1262.15
3044.00
3915.00
14560.00
V *
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$24281.47
Security to above loans: ‘
Notes secured by Bonds and Stock? read ly marketable.. $7698.15
Notes secured by Warehoused Cotton not exceeding
4Vfcc per pound ... ..10227.32
Notes secured by other Warehouse Receipts and other
Collateral's 4505.00
Notes secured by two or more signers and Collatera;s 851.00
Note? secured by City Obligations 1000.00
* .
$24281/4/7
United States Government, State of South Carolina and County Bonds - $47,000.00
Cash on Hand and Due from Banks j 90,678.01
Bank Building, Fixtures and Equipment 5,000.00
f . . * |
f , i "
$166,959.48
LIABILITIES:
v
Capital Stock Paid in 1 _$ 26,000.00
Surplus Paid in 2,500.00
Undivided Profits 2,177.29
Reserve Fund ; 1,778.82
Deposits Subject to Check 1-jU: 113,171.80
Savings Deposits L 22,280.04
Cashier’s Checks _• • 61.53