The Barnwell people-sentinel. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1925-current, August 10, 1933, Image 3

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THURSDAY, AUGUST !•, Ittt. THE BARNWELL PEOPLE-SENTINEL. BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA • HERB AND HEREABOUTS. • Miss Anna Sams Clark is visiting relatives at Okatee Club. cut by Mrs. Charlie Brown, Jr. Misses Rosalie Spann and Anna Sam s Clark were each remembered with a gift by the hostess. A salad course with tea wa s served. / Former Speaker Dies. Miss Helen Clark returned home on, Friday after a visit to Miss Kathryn Holland. * ^ Mrs. William Dunbar ha s returned to Augusta ^'after a visit to Mrs. Charlie Brown, Sr. Wilbur L. Gleaton, of Springfield, has accepted a position as cotton buyer for C. F. Mcla;r. Mrr and Mts7 Henry Wihgb, of Columbia, visited relatives at Barn well and Kline last week. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Kennedy and two children were the guest s of Mrs. Estelle Patterson on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Smith and lit tle daughter arrived here from Ala bama Saturday for a visit to re'.a- Ben T. Sexton and Jack Harley left Saturday for Bluffton to spend a week with the former’s mother, Mrs. B. W. Sexton. John K. Hamblin, Union attorney, and speaker of the South Carolina house of representatives for seven session.-, died at a hospital at Frank lin, N. C., Monday following an opera tion foiwthe removal of a brain tumor, which was performed Satur day. After serving ten years in the house, he succeeded Col. Edgar A. Brown, of Barnwell, ^is spe-aker in- 1927. Mr. Hamblin, who was 52 years of age. i s survive^ by his widow, a son and a daughter. His body was laid to rest Tuesday. League Closes Sept. 2nd. Mrs. Jcha-on Hag:od and children and Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Denman, of Avenel, N. J., are visiting Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Price. Miss Margaret Lemon, Mi« 8 Ann Scott McNab, Wilson Sanders and Ray Fleming were among the visitors to Augusta Tuesday. The Georgia-Carolina League’s sec ond half will close September 2nd, it was decided Monday night at a board pf directors meeting held at the Au gusta Y. M. C. A. , '. The directors also allowed a pro tested game won by Millefi over Thomson to Thomson on the ground that some of Millen’s players at the time were ineligible ,and a game" be tween Sylvania and Graniteville, won by Granitevile, was ordered replayed on the grounds that a Graniteville player had interfered with a Sylvania base runner. Shorting Affray at Baldock. John J. Faust, of Baldock, S. C., L* in the University hospital with gun shot wounds in the rtomach and Joe Lee, his brother-in-law, also of Bal dock, i B being held in the Allendale Mrs. B. P. Davie* and son, Billie, | Count y >'1 Pending the outcome of Faust's injuries, officers of that coun ty told The Augusta Chronicle last nighc Details leading up to the shooting which recurred about 10 o'- mmmmm I clock Saturday night, were meager. Mr. and Mr*. Henry Ki.l ng-worth. Attache* at the University hospital of Philadelphia, and the atWr>#»«*-1**** 1 J** night that due the nature ter. Mr*. M> m*on, of Maryland, are |<f Faurt'a wounds hi, condition it diA- t* of the former’* mother. <‘*1* to determine with any degree of *ie B. Ea-ttrl ng. . xactnea*. However, they said he b _____ doing a* well a* could be expected.— FUfeme and Helen Mar- Augusta Chioaiele. August 7th. were visitors in Augusta Tuesday. They were acompanied by Mrs. ‘I>^fla Davies, who : a spending a few days there with friendf. the gut Mr* Lt garct Pei irork, of P»rkton. S C., and j • Mia* Eh s ( nbrth Wi.I t, of Blnrk Creek,' p the gurot, of Mr. and Mr*. Fail—Sander* Eraimtt E. Good»on thi* week. Olnr, Augu-t ft.—Coriiai tntein Will be taken in the announcement < # Mr an I Mr* T A Holland and M m the mnrttage of Mi** Mary E’izsbet JUtbryn Holland %i* t.d Mr. and MrJ Fa.l. of Otar, and Mr. C. B. Sander * W II »idM4 at Spmrtanbwg recant-; ie there they m tired (A 'of Fairfax, which took place Satu Wh- day, August S, in BsinwelL Oni • (*hiinp«'V c. Rotk and fl»nder*onu le. N. ' member, of tke family and n few elm 1 ft tend* were present when tke cee was perl ly Judge John _ Har ey. Jr, have Mr * m automobile tour of Mr * * r '’ * i a vie it * “ • "mr r***"* »omaa. who I, « t* I admired and Century «f Pr gr«s« Capo* • , of fnendr. the daughter of Pall, of Otar, and rved by a wide circle LITTLfc GIRL ENTERTAINS FOR VISITOR. Mr. Sander s t* the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jame* Sanders, of Fairfax, and i b a popular young man. He is in busine** in Fairfax, where they will ! make their home. To Speak at Haptbt Church. Dr. J. W Pratt ha, arrange^ with hit churches in Estdl and Barnwell to Little Miss Gene Peeples, daughter speak at the regular union services of Mr. and Mrr. George Peeples, of next Sunday evening. This will be this city, entertained about th rty of the last if the union meetings this her friend* Monday evening in honor *ummer and we trust that the mem- of her vb-itor. Miss Edna Earl Sandi- bers of all the chuiches will be pres- fir, if SL George. Punch and cake |ent to hear this request sermon. Dr. were served during the evening. COMPLIMENTS VISITOR WITH BRIDGE LUNCHEON. ML-s Claire Dicks entertained de lightfully cn Wednesday of last week with a bridge luncheon in honor of Miss Helen Clark, who was the guest of Mis s Kathryn Holland. The living room was artistically arranged for two tab'es. The high see re prize, a deck cf cards, wa.- won by Miss Ann Scott McNab and the guest of honor received a dainty gift from the hostess. THE COMPOSITION OF ESSOLENE IS ROTECTED BY U.S. PATENT FENDING Write or emit at E»$o Tour ing Sorrier, 26 BroaJtear, h/om York, before ttaning m motor trip, for bett mule and other tomring informa tion. Individual attention, by return mail, froo. • rT»a«M«d and gwaraataad b, |Im aaaM'a laadla* all aatsataaltaa STAN DAR D Ol L CO. OF NEW JERSEY 'STANDAR0 ^ Esso STATIONS When people tell you, “all motor fuels are alike,” remember thlat The composition of Essolene it protected by U. S. Patent Pending. And remember this: Squarely behind Essolene ... as a guarantee ... is the world's greatest oil organ ization, fully aware of its responsi bility to the public as the leader of the industry. Essolene contains a special sol vent oil which cleans, keep# clean and in proper working condition valve stems, piston rings, piston ring grooves. It contains no ordi nary lubricating oil. Its anti-knock value is unsurpassed by any regu lar-priced gasoline, and it is non- gas-locking. These are guaranteed facts. Prove them! Try Essolene today in a tank cleared of other fuels. OASOLINK PftICI Smoother Performance Prett i* an able preacher and we wel come him into our fellowship. The service will start promptly at eight- thirty. Sunday School—P. W. Price, Sup erintendent, 10:30. Morning Worship Service, sermon by the pastor at 11:30. B. Y. P. U.—Mrs. L. M. Cave, gen eral leader. Prayer Services every Wednesday evening at 8:30. Choir practice every Wednesday af ternoon at 6:00. We welcome all visitors in our midst and are happy when they can come to worship with us. We have a place of service fo^a! and earnestly a place for service for all and earnestly entreat you to engage in the work of Jackson Was Visitor in County This Week Evglaual < oMMiliaat ef A. A. \4mia- iatraiwa Urge* Farmers (• ( •m- pbtr < •atravt* lr k th. || *om« (*•»• to g to finish 4**troy tnetrly where WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON CONTRACT CLUB. Mrs. J. Julien Bu.=h entertained the mep»beis of the Wednesday Afternoon L or( j f th e only eternal work. Contract Club last week. The high j H H Stembridge, Jr., Pastor, score prize, a novelty bowl, was won J — by Mrs. Sc 'onion Blatt and the conso-1 STAB WOUND IN HEART lation, correspondence cards, was) SUCCESSFULLY SEWED UP Chicago, Aug. 6.—A stab wound in the heart successfully sewed up after i the organ had momentarily ceased beating, 18-year-old Elihu Garmi?a wa- given an even chance tonight to I recover. B us IIVESQ T'lLDERO »» »»»»»»»»»»»♦♦»»♦»»» WANTED:—Boarder. Also two furnished room to rent. —Apply to Mrs. T. A. Holland, Barnwell. The youth, attacked by an unidenti fied man, was. taken to the Lutheran hospital, where Dr. J. D. Kockey, a lurgeon of the staff of the Univer*i f y of Chkafro Medical school, vndertook FOR SALE:—My residence on the unusual or.f.itnn. It require) furnished room* to rent.—Apply to <c j • few min ite* P*" hi art *top- Georgv G Wrathersbee, Barnwell S. ».d beating while Kockey was operst- G. R. P. D. No. 2. lag but was survived. ° as All tho«e farmer* wh nrt iWd that the r toetra t* have b accept'd are uiged to finish t mplete- y do r )ing then cotton thig week. In order that they may be cheeked by l^e local ci mmi(‘eenan a* qu-ck.y a* po**ib'e they ate urged to ge*. the job fully d ne immediatoly *o that there will be ne for* her deity when the md vtdual acceptance is put into the hands of the local ec mmitteerr. *n. E. B. Jatk'on. Regiona. C nau.tant of the Agncultuial Adju-tmen* Ad ministration. w*.- in the *Rtnt’ s iffict- on Monday cf this week and stated that the Wa!>h:ng:on tffice fully appreciated the full co operation given by the farmer* gen erally, a* well a* the committeemen and all other* who r.ntribu'ed to the ruccea* of the cctton reduction cam paign. He urged that farmers re member several important point* that their contrats, which had been accept ed by the Government, may be car ried out: i t —Be sure to destroy a.l cotton offered this week. 2nd.—Completely and fully destr y the cotton on the 'and offered in the contract. 3rd.—Be . i ure that the ccrrect num ber of acies and the same acreage of fered are the ones destroyed. 4th.— Even though at a later date a farmer hrd received hi s pay and ; spent the money the Government may [make other checks on a farmer’s field to deteimine if his acreage destroyed ( was equal to the amount offered or that it had been fjilly destroyed and to determine if any effort had been made to harvest any of the cotton on the acreage cf land which really be longed to the. G: vernment. If any cf the important features had been violated a farmer would find himself in a very embarrassing posi tion. Mr. Jackson, as a direct rep resentative of the Washington office, urges all farmer- to comp ete the term? of their ccntracts immediately so that there will be no delay in finan cial settlement being made. The county agent is calling upon the com mitteemen in the different ccmmuni- tie* tb be very careful in making their check to be rare that the cor rect acreage has been destroyed and Uut the jcb has been ,.. a _ .. . an A i» wi.I do well to r I •< r* agr and a.*■ I back over the n I lag the cotton l ha* not been d >oe. All if tho*e having to do with the { •orcea-ful* campaign of acreage re- ■ dwrticn very earnestly urge every | farmer to flni*h hi* job well.— Pie par- lave been led by H. G "B©yl*t«»n. Co. Agent, have II. H \ n n.-. r, < th. (*olor«d.> :iu-e um of natural hUtory. Hi* calcu'a- * ion* are ba*ed n veriAtd meteor* «trik Rg the ear*h. The*# number l3u.Aij0 in the pa*t 125 year*. In that time Texa* has reported • han any other State, a kan»t and North t'aro- > a. #v 4 an * 1 Meteor Shower Due to Be Seen Friday Night Earth In t'rw*a Orbit *f (Vraeida After Midnight. AugwM II.—Little (lianre of injury. more TAiit rtruJit of 11. m Una r * me *ecoa ng the number KaiHa*, Mr. Ni tbe ihancis f j with 23 each. T*k f recorded fail* la tger eetimatc* that mtaon being hit ia [that State are one la aeveral thouaand year*. la thr brief perwd of keeping au- I’hea'ic record*, a man arm* injured at Mhow, India, February Id, 1*37 I \t ra*t eight budding* have been ! •truck and penetrated by meteors. Philadelpha, Aug. $.—The chance* ; of a falling meteor kil'ing any ne in' county the United State* art estimat'd a* go more than one person in severs! gerr-' oration*, and the annual «hower if meteor* due the night cf August Hi will never harm anyone. Fcr these August , .-hoot.ng rtars, j the Perseld*. are calculated to be not’ much larger than grain* of wheat. They burn to dust while still 50 U 60 mile* aloft. They have a history prov ing their safety, for they have been observed for more than 1,000 years. Punctual Visitor*. These perseids punch the celestial time clock with more punctuality than any other vsitors from space. They were first reported authentically 1103 years ago, on July 26, 830 A. D. In the long period since they have chang ed their arrival, slowly getting a little later, by cnly 15 day?. They should appear in the northeast sky after midnight of August 11-12. To see them it is necessary to be in the country, because the lights of cities dim them too much for more than occasional view. The average watcher is likely to see 15 to 20 per- seids an h: ur. These meteors are visitors from regions of space high above the eaith. ^Jhey travel in a very wide pdth which i s steeply inclined to the plane of the earth’s annual journey around the sun. Like that of the planets, this me teor path is elliptical, hut it i^ longer than any of the planet’s orbit* except Pluto. It takes the Perseids about 2,000,000,000,000 miles up en<j out in to space when they are farthest from the sun. As they come .-wooping d:wn clo.-e to the sun the earth cut* thi s perseid path every August. Texa* Lead* in Fall*. The estimUes of how often a me al! d on * Iteor might hit a man are made by Bedouin Tribesmen Hard Hit by Famine Mosul. Iraq.—Recent rains have come too late for many of tbe Bedouin tribes In the Syrian des ert. Stricken by famine aa a re sult of a two-year drought, they have been unable to withstand the bitter cold of the last two month*, living a* they do In ojien de*ert BtretchiMi 2.U00 to 3,000 feet above nea level. Dalr-a* 7.0^ on the frontier, re port* many refugee* pouring In, having deserted their villages of reed huts and mud house* when their live stock either died or wa* slaughtered to keep the villager* alive. These refugees are practi cally destitute. Reports from Amman state that alarm was felt when bands of Bedouin* appeared -on the Trans jordan frontier, but It was not a hostile attack. The starving tribes men were merely on the move in search of food. In one district it is reported that the Emir Abdullah’s patrols have found numbers of starving babies in deserted tents. In all, six truckloads of these children w-'jre collected and taken to Amman. “NOW I FEEL FULL OF PEP* INSURANCE FIRE WINDSTORM PUBLIC LIABILITY ACCIDENT - HEALTH SURETY BONDS AUTOMOBILE THEFT Calhoun and Co. P. A. PRICK. HMinr Railway’s Pills For Constipation What They A ret A wild PtiiafeU vagctabU What They Dei MiUmm at 1*47, Special Low Prices on all Waves and Beauty Treatments We are offering our work at the following ATTRACTIVE prices for the next two weeks: 110.00 Oil of Tulkpwod Wave for — $6.30 |7.00 (Genuine) Frederic Vita Louie Waves for $5.0(1 150 French Method Waves $2^0 Manicure -50 Facial 75 Yweeze ....... JS Eyekfih and Eyebrow Dye, each -- 25 Violet Ray Scalp Treat ment, each - Si • Or Six for - $e.vj0 All work d«ne by experienced operators The Barnwell Beauty Shop Main Street. Barnwell* & C TRY A BUI