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\ ! v ¥- i L TheBrnwl! People-Sentiifi JOHN W. HOLMES 1840—1912. K p. DA VIES, Editor, and Proprietor. \ Entered at the post office at Barnwell, S. C., as second-class matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year — $1.50 Six Months 4)0 Three Months , .50 (Strictly la Advance.) THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1933. “Blood Transfusion.” Under the above caption, The News and Courier says: “We see by the papers that the ‘R. F. C.’ has 'poured $3,500,000,000 into the nation’s credit arteries’ from which we conclude that a conaideraWe num ber of American taxpayer,, have been contributing: blood for transfusion.” Well, it may be termed just that— and what of it? It often happens that, in order to save 'an individual’s life, it is necessary to take blood from a well person and inject it into the stricken one’s arteries. Some of this blood is bought, some is freely given by volunteers* t, r ‘ If it be important to save the life of a single individual, how much more important it is to save the life of the entire nation, which has been bled w’hite by the selfishness of big busi- ne s s and international bankers! If they will not give the necessary “financial blood” voluntarily, then it must be gotten by other means—and that is what the New Dead is doing. The transfusion may be delayed but not stayed by such obstruction ists a« Alfred E. Smith, The News and Courier, et al. of tfie non-busy before the peal of the repeal was heard, and now they are in it for a fact. The average hill-side or creek-bank still furnished employmnt to the owe nr an4 his wife, plus a mash-maker and a supplies- deliverer, not less than 7 or 8 dozen peddlers, and 2 or 3 watchmen; all of these will be hunting work soonly. I saw 6 lonely bootleggers yes terday; they were a)l planning to run far some political job next summer so’s thy could fetch the country back to her senses, but it’s going to be hard for them to land any soft job, certainly none as soft as selling licker for a dollar a quart, C. O. D., cash only* and ‘don’t you ^ell nobody but friends who want good refreshments.” Bay-rum, shoe polish and em balming fluid—formerly component parts of perfectly fine rye, Scotch, Haig and Haig, Burgundy, or gin, might as well take a back seat; Uncle Sam will be our future bartender, and here’s about how he will figger a price on a quart of his joy-producer: his residence Tuesday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock. Dr. W. M. Jones, pas tor of the Kline Baptist Church, of which he was a member officiated. In terment followed in the Kline ceme tery. The announcement of his death brought sadness to <a host of friends. For a number of years Mr. Ready was engaged a g a merchant, later e g a farmer. He wks well known and highly esteemed ..(throughout! the entire State. The pallberpters were: Active, M. H. tee, Fitzhugh Lee, G. C. Best, C. D. Qwens, Lloyd Sandifer and J. Ulmer./ Honorary, G. S. Boynton, J. S. Plexico, B. M. Jenkins, Jr., Victor Lewis, W. H. Johnston and F. M. Harley. Surviving him are his widow, Mrs. Cora Lee Ready; two sons, Harold Ready and J. F. Ready, Jr; one daughter, Jewel Lee Ready; his mother, Mrs. J. P. Ready; one brother, Earl Ready”. ' N. R. A. News. The People-Sentinel has been re quested to publish the following for the information of the general public: “The President’s executive orddir of October 21, 1933, exempting those es tablishments employing les 8 than five persons in towns of less that 2,500 population does not apply to employ ers engaged ih any and all branches of the petroleum industry. “A firm operating a general mer chandise store in three different cities under 2,500 population and not in the immediate trade area of a larger community having 2,500 population or James L. Bradley. Actual whiskey _ $0.30 Federal tax .80 State tax * 1- .80 County tax l .60 City tax . — .30 Enforcement tax .20 Processing tax .25 Transpbrtatlon tax .10 Fiduciary tax t .03 Sales tax .05 Stamp tax .02 t' $3.50 James L. Bradley, a prominent farmer of Barnwell County, died at his home in Kline Friday afternoon. He was for many years a deacon of the Kline Baptist Chtirch and for 30 school. Car Damaged in Collision. Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Sanders and lit- ; He is survived by his widow, one daughter and six sons, Mrs. P. B. Harley, of Auburndale, Fla., J. L. Bradley, Jr., J. R. Bradley, of Orange burg, T. S. Bradley, pf Bamberg, J. C. Bradley, W. W. Bradley and John Reid Bradley, of Kline; cne brother, L. W. Bradley, of Orangeburg, and one sis ter, Mrs. Martha.E. Jenkins, of Klin?, and one half-brother, Edward‘Reid, of Birmingham, Alabama, to whom ^ fof 4-V BILIOUSNESS Hf Sour stomach. Il j| gas and headache M due do , H CONSTIPATION H more is not exempt from the provis ions approved for the retail trade unless the total number of employees in all three stores does not exceed five in number.” Complaints of non - compliance should be sent to Harold C. Jackson, district compliance director, Charles ton, S. C. Regular forms for com- piaints can be had at all post offices. = \ tie son, of this city, escaped injury but the sympathy of many friends is ex- Roosevelt and the People. None of us can. foresee what may be the outcome of the elections of 1934 and 1936, when the Alfred E. Smiths, the J* Pierpcnt Morgans and other s of their ilk gird their loins and go forth to battle with President Franklin D. Roosevelt and hL« poli cies, but at the piesent time it be comes increasingly apparent that the New Deal is popular with the “com mon people.” S'.me think that Mr. Smith is being groomed or is grooming himself for another attempt at the presidency in 1936. Other s are of the opinion that President Roo-evelt must of necessi ty Ik* renominated, as was the case with President Hi-over in 1932. The record of his administiation wi’l be the overshadowing issue, as the their car was badly damaged in a col lision with another machine, parked in the middle of the highway without lights, Sunday night while they were returning home from Augusta. Mrs. Sanders is confined to her bed, suffer ing from shock. ’34 Chevrolet* to Be Radically Different Increased Speed and Economy _Are Promised.—Independent Front Wheel Suspension. I tended. The funeral services were conducted by Dr. W. M. Jcne s in Mount Arnon Baptist Church at 3:30 Sunday* after noon and. intei ment took place in the churchyard. The large crowd of relatives and friends who attended the funeial services End the many and % beautiful floral designs attested in s'lme measure the respect in which Mr. Bradley wa s held by those who knew him. ADVERTISE in The People-Sentinel The CEDARS Service Station Jno. B. Harley, Mgr., Barnwell Chevrolet is now in production on new 1934 models as the beginning f next year’s program, M. E. Coyle, General Manager of the Chevrolet Motor Company announced today. | Employment is nearly normal in the Forge 'Plant in Detroit, the Foundry in Saginaw and the Carburetor and Springfield Republican say.«, and the ’ Die Casting Plant in Bay City. The_ Democrats could not repudiate it and other manufacturing p’| rvts h eated win. * n Flint, Detroit and Toledo have al- Up in the Third Congressional Dis trict of West Vitginia an election was held the other day to fill a Vacancy. It is rated as a doubtful district, ready half their tegular employes neither party having won by mot;e back at work and the production at the various assembly plants is start ing slowly. “We are, however, fully staffed with than >2,00t) majority in many years.! «ur regular employes, who are being In the recent election, However, a former Republican governor wa s de feated by a candidate^whose p’atform was simply this: "A vote for Edmis- ton is a Vote to sustain the president.” The majority for Mr. Edmiscn and the president wg s more than 5,000— breaking past records for either party. en- in- summoned back to work as Mr. Coyle stated. Radical styling and many gineering changes, with creased speed and economy, aie promised.* Independent front whee 1 suspension, providing a cushion ride with ‘knee action” springs, recently That, at least, is an indication of announced for all new General Motors the approval being given President models by President Alfred P. Sloan, ’ Roosevelt’s policies. ( j r . f w jU help make the 1934 Chevro- let the most extensively improved an- nual model since the car was stepped $ ; up to six cylinder^ in 1938, according Nobody’s Business \ By Gee McGee. Wait and See. The Volstead Act has been re pealed and 10,564,322 bootleggers have been thrown out of work. What- U shame! The N. R. A. and T. V. A. and the C. C. C. and the R F. C. cer tainly have a problem ahead of them. N. B.—This number of newly unem ployed bootleggers does not include Chicago. to the Chevrolet executive “ManufacUiring operations are be ing pushed ahead with all possible dispatch to get a full quota of regular Chevrolet employes on the payrolls with a minimum of delay,” Mr. Coyle stated. “As soon v as suflXeknl dis play caas to stock the company’s 10,- 00Q domestic dealersare in the field , tthc public.showing will be heW,” he ‘ said! If we have to drink good licker from now on, half of our doctors will starve to death and most of our hospi tals will bust. The stummick special ists—who patch up burnt out stum- micks—will' have tu take up a new line, possibly nose and throat troubles —or mebbe farming. —^The fruit jar factories might as well lookup a nice receiver; and the potash and lye manufacturers will surely tose half of their trade. Wood . alcohol will be a “drug” on the mar ket Since bootleggers have passed out, and old garbage cans (from which illicit stills are made) win choke our racenerators* out of existence.) In the first ten months of 1933 the company built 609,000 units, 55 per cent more than in the\full twelve months of 1932. This sharp increase, achieved mostly, in the past six months, enabled the company to finish its 1933 program with hourly wage rates 20 percent higher than at the beginning of the year. Mr. Coyle stated that no definite date for the public showing of the 1934 cars had yet been detei mined. He said he felt sure, however, that it would be held in ample time to en able the company to participate fully in New York automobile show activi- Every Member of the Family Jf: Should Read \ £(k S State Daily and Sunday Because: A The State is a complete, symmetrical newspaper, edited to serve the interests and needs of the whole family: Father and Mother, of course; Big Brother and Big Sister, ( And Junior and^ittie Sister, besides. The State is a clean newspaper with nothing in it, ever, to be withheld from any member of a decent, intelligent k And that^f aomethiag 4o Aiak about, isn’t itf , The State is especially valuable to all South Carolinians, everywhere, because it reports to them, 364 days in the year, the news of their Capital City. Not a day in the year but brings news in Columbia which is of statewide import. The legislative session of 1934, beginning the second Tues day in January, will be particularly important. The State’s legislative reports are fuller than those of any other news- i \y' paper. The State has the leased wire, services of the Associated Press AND the United Press. ties, where Chevrolet ^by virtue of leading the industry in production and sales .w'ill for the eighth consecutive year occupy first place. Yon Cannot Afford to- Be Without The State in Your Home!? Subscribe Today Jofi F. Ready Laid to Rest. The re-employment agencies have had hard enough time taking care j dent Mcnday, were conducted Kline, December 2.—F’unerel ser vices fer Joe F. Ready, 49, who was fatally injured in,* an automobile acci- from $9.00 Per Year by Mail ADDRESS CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT THE STATE, COLUMBIA, S. C. The Stale Will Make an Ideal Christmas Gift. Perfect Fitting, Nnlerel Looking TEETH 1 v i !■ end you cen get a written guarantee MADE IN SIX HOURS U*7 50 Up DR. EMRS, Dentist 3 Johnson Bldg. Broad a Klgkth Sts. Angnsia, On. 10 Years nt This Locatto* V • Treasurer’s Tax Notice The County Treasurer’s office will be open from September 15th, 1933, to March 15th, 1934, for collecting 1933 taxes, which include real and per sonal property, poll and road tax. All taxes due and payable between September 15 and December 31, 1933, will be collected without penalty. All taxes not paid as stated w:Il be subject to penalties as provided by law. January 1st, 1934, one per cent, will be added. February lst„ 1934, two per cent, will be added. March 1st to 15th, 1934, seven per cent, will be added. Executions will be placed in the hands of the Sheriff for collection af ter March 15th, 1934. When writing for amount of taxes, be *ure and give school district if property is in more than one school district. All personal check s given for taxe s will be subject to collection. T 1 , V V •w CC ■4S CO Ordinary County Road and Bridge Bonds Past Ind. Bonds 0 Constitutional School % Special Local •y < t- C r* No. 24—Ashleigh 5 4 . 4 1 3 12 29 No. 33—Barbary Branch - 5 4 4 1 3 30 47 No. 45—Barnwell 5 4 4 1 3 29 46 No. 4—Big Fork 5 4 4 1 3 18 35 No. 19—Blackville 5 4 4 1 3 A 20 37 No. 35—Cedar Grove ' 5 ' 4 4 1 3 \ 07 l 44 No. 50—Diamond 5 4 4 1 3 14 31 No. 20—Double Pond 5 . 4 4 1 3 19 36 No. 12—Dunbarton 5 4 4 r 3 27 R 44 No. 21—Edisjo I 5 4 4 1 3 •8 25 No. 2^€lko' 5 4 4 1 3 26'' ' 43 ‘ No. 53—Ellenton 5 4 4 1 3 l 24 No. 11—Four M.le 5 4 4 1 3 8 25 No. 39—Friendship 5 4 4 1 3 , 14 31 No. 16—Green’ s 5 4 4 1 3 .19 36 No. 10—Healing Springs 5 4 4 1 3 20 37 No. 23—Hercules 5* 4 4 1 3 27 44 No. !»—Hilda 5 4 4 1 3 35 i 52 No. 52—Joyce Branch - 0 4 4 1 8 26 43 No. 34—Kline : 5 4 4 1 3 18 35 No. 32—Lee’s 5 4 4 1 3 10 27 No. 8—Long Branch 5 4 4 1 3 17 34 \o 54—Mever’s Mill 5 4 4 1 3 21 \ 38 No 42—Morri* 5 4 A 1 3 12 29 No. 14—Mt. Calvary 5- . 4- - ^ ^4 _i -.J 1 3 44.,' •No: 25^Nrw Forest J —5— —4— 4 1 o 27 44 No. 38—Oak Grove 5, 4 4 1 3 19 36 No. 43—Old Columbia 5 4 4 1 3 26 43 No. 13—Pleasant Hill 5 4 4 1 3 14 31 No. 7—Red Oak - - 5 4 4 1 3 16 33 No. 15—Reedy Branch 5 4 4 1 3 14 3L No. 2—Seven Pines -- 5 4 4 1 3 12 • r 29 No. 40—Tinker’s Creek 5 4 4\ 1 3 - 16 .. 33 No. 26—Upper Richland 5 4 4 1 3 y 26 43 No. 29—Williston ... .. 5 4 4* 1 2L* /31 48 The commutation road tax of $3.00 must be paid by til male citizens between the ages of 21 and 55 years. All male citizens between the ages of 21 and 60 years are liable to poll tax of $1.00. V . • Dog Taxes for 1933 will be paid at the same time other taxes are paid. It is the duty of each school trustee in each school district to see that this tax is collected or aid the Magistrate in the enforcement of the pro visions of thi s Act. «* t Check s will not be accepted for taxes under any circumstances except at the risk of the taxpayer.—(The County Treasurer reserves the right to hold all receipts paid by check until said checks have been paid.J Tax receipts will be released only upon legal tender, post office money orders or certified checks. J. J. BELL, County Treas. • v 110 CENTS PER POUND 1 LOANED ON- COTTON! X =&= a f SANDERS GINNERY (Oil Mill) # | # South Carolina Bonded Warehouse No. 1913 Y JENNINGS A. OWENS, Mgr. BARNWELL,vS. C. V BROWN & BUSH Attorneys-at-Law BROWN-BUSH J BUILDINC^ BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA PRACTICE IN STATE AND FEDERAL COURTS ^ ——