The Barnwell people-sentinel. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1925-current, January 25, 1934, Image 8
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THE BARNWELL PEOPLE-SENTINEL, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA
1 - 1 1
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THURSDAT, JANUARY 2STH, 1M4.
Fight on Liquor Bifl
Looms for This Week
Sponsors of Dispensary Bill Ready to
* ’
‘Trade” to Give Wet Ccsintiea
Lesal Liquor.
Ready for Nation’s Biggest B irthday Party
(Acme)
THE PfftSIDENT AND HIS MOTHER. MRS. JAMES ROOSEVELT
Columbia, Jon. 21.—The State legis
lature faces a crucial period of its
1934 session thi g week.
The attitude of the house pn liquor
control and of the senate on appro
priations may determine by Friday
whether the session wilPgo down as
one of the briefest in recent years
Unger on for seyetfad months.
First of the term .on liquor control'
probably will be reached soon after
the house takes up a bill Wednesday
to reestablish county dispensaries at
local option.
The bill introduced by Representa
tives Blatt, Calhoun Thomas, Edens,
Sinkler and C. W. Martin, received a
majority favorable <committee report
last Wednesday after drys attacked
it as contrary to State referendum
results.
„ It would license distilleries at $200
to $3,500 a year and divide profits
and license fees 25 per cent, to the
State, 25 per cent, to municipalities,
and 50.per cent, to counties.
Dozen Counties Exempt.
A dozen counties were exempted
from the bill as introduced. Its spon
sors freely admitted they would eli-
mina'te others in legislative “trading”
to secure legal liquor control for wet
lower State counties.
Not.even the element favoring more-
liberal liquor laws, which enatced the
beer bill last spring, presented a
unanimous front as the fight neared.
. - i . *
Some more conservative house mem
bers were said to prefer a State con-
- -trol? -refeeettdtmr -beft»re-f>a sstng—any-
liquor laws.
Chairman S. M. Ward of the senate
finance committee said the committee
would resume appropriation hearings
it began last week cn Tuesday.
There was a £ossjbility„the commit-
Tee~would brfng out its vergldn cf the
$6,240,000 house bill and get it to a
. 1 by Friday as a, Tstorm center of
legislation.—: »—~
$638,000, house advanced appropriation
bill to third reading.
■ House allotted $30,000 for night
schools, raised appropriation fcr John
de la Howe school $5,000 and cot sal
ary of State tax commission chairman
$440.
Senate ^advanced to third reading
bUl making publication of names of
drunken drivers ncn-libelous.
House judiciary committee decided
to hold public .hearing next Wednes
day olr Glymph bill to develop Santee-
Cooper project.
House passed auto tag bill and sent
it to senate. - -
Friday.
Appropriation bill totaling $6,240,000
given final reading in house after
$15,000 increase in allotment for Win-
throp CciHege. —
Senate received appropriation bill
from house and referred it to finance
committee, which already had con
ducted hearings. - *
Resolution adopted in senate fpr
sine die adjournment by March 3rd.
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over 700,000 women and
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whenever you are nervous and
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LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S
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PULLMAN SURCHARGE ABOLISHED
o CONSULT TICKET AGENTS
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ing, shaving and any other need for hot water that may come at any minute, day or. night.
Throughout the ReptaL, .Period _any npceiaary repairs -ta,-ranga or water heater .tPMe.
without extra expense to you—and you have the privilege of buying range or water heater at a
reduced price, deprecia.ti.Qn Jcom use being allowed for, at any time during the rental period.
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$1.75 pep* mo. Second Yr.
$1.50 per mo. Third Yr.
$1.25 per mo. Fourth Yr.
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$1.50 per mo. Third Yr.
$1.25 per mo. Fourth Yr.
$1.05 per mo. Fifth Yr.
and Thereafter
When the President becomes 52 years old on Jan. 30 every community
In the nation will give a ball In his honor to help raise an endowment for
axtenaion of the work of Warm Springs Foundation for Infantile Paralysis.
Tlie Prealdant’a mother bought the first box sold for the great society ball
te be held In the Waldorf-Astoria in New York, saying: “After all, it is my
aon’pftlrthday and I am extremely interested in the splendid work’dfiftairm
Springs. Foundation.”
/
Barnwell 50 and 25 Years
latereating Items Gleaned From the Files of llie Barnwell People.
r
I
JANUARY 24, 1884.
Gen. F. M. Bamberg sold eighteen
horse* and mules on Saturday.
Passenger fare between Barnwell
and Blackville ha.< Been reduced to
35 rents.
Mr. William Dicks has been appoint-
•«d postmaster at Greenland, vice
George H. Bates, Esq., resigned.
Mr. J. L. Ellis, an energetic young
jceoileman from the Lower Runs, has
removed to Atlanta, where he will go
into business. x
We learn that T. G. Robinson has
executed his bond for the Bamberg
jSMrtma ate ri hi(p.
Married, on the 16th inst., at the
residence of the bride’s parents, in
Rad Oak Township, by the Rev. F. J.
Sanders, Mr. B. G. Britton, of Sumter,
and Mis? Rosa, daughter of Mr. Jame s
Lntz.
Mrs. W. J. Mixson will remove the
post office to the building on the
.sooth side of the square opposite The
People office.
At the municipal election- in Allen
dale on the 14th inst^ the following
ticket wa* elected without opposition:
Intendant, I, L. Tobin, Esq., War
dens, Messrs. IjeRoy W r ilson, C. M.
Hiers, F. H. Creech -and Bon Myers,
colored. _ . x ^
. ‘CcfiutnbTa has 41 barrooms.
The State is now paying the Rail
road Commissioners to do nothing but
hold their offices. • ' ,
Better to court a girl for her money
Than to marry a scolding wife;
Better to eat your bread without hon-
ey , • v
Than to have dyspepsia through
iife;
Better to live a life of eobriety
Than to be carted ’round in a hack;
Better to keep your wife out of society
Than to owe for her sealskin sack.
JANUARY 21, 1909.
In three days Mr. J. yk. Porter has
bought $3,000 worth of Cotton, all for
expoit to Europe, and there’s more in
the- country.'
Hercules Schcc’ has made a .re
splendent record for December and
January. On the Honor Roll are the
names of 87 pupils. "
Discussing chickens Mr. J. E.
Owens, of Ashleigh, remarked that Tie
has never lost one from eoUtamon dis
eases. He raise* gained exclusively.
Occasionally one topples dvei^ dead
from heart trouble.'!-—' -. x \
On the night of the 11th inst. the
residence of„MI*. Martin F. Weathers-
bee in Williston wa s burned by an ac
cidental fire, together with most of
its contents. The building jyas one of
"the most substantial and comfortably
furnished in Williston. The property
was paitially insured.
Much solicitude has been felt in
Barnwell because of the critical con
dition of Dr. E. L. Patterson, who un-
derwent a surgical operation in a New
York hospital cn Thursday. On Tues-
d»y his condition became most critical
and his fi lends are greatly distressed.
Mrs. Mary McLemore, wife of Mr.
Alfred I. McLemore, of Rosemary
Township, departed this life on the
13th inst., after an illness of three
Tveek s with pneumonia, aged abcut 37
years.
The many friends of Mrs. Fanny
Hair were sadly shocked cn Monday
morning by the announcement of her
sudden death.
The' said news of the death on Mon
day of Hon. W. J. Sanders, of Fairfax,
came to u s just as we were going to
press on yesterday. The State and
county have sustained * great loss.
That is an unusual advertisement of
Mr. A. Fv Greene today—200 acres of
pine timber. •
“Starves” Institutions. - •
Several influential senators criti-
* */ I—
cized the measure passed through the
house Friday a s “starving” State in
stitutions and employes having to
meet price increases under the NRA.
. The bill in its present form holds
their appropriations practically at
last year’s figure, and) a fight-to in
crease them was in prospect. State
hospital officials announced they
would run a $75,000 deficit by June 30
unless some action was taken.
* Auto tag bills also held a latent
threat against early -adjournment of
the session. The principal difference
between a house bill sent the senate
and a senate measure passed to the
house was the date of effectivity.
The house would make the cut May
1 and the senate November 1, when
the tag yeqr ends. Senators saM- in
debate that the governor would veto
reduction bill effective, before Novem-
ber lair-—— —— -- r - •
The Past Legislative Week.
Tuesday.
Both houses approved similar bills
making kidnaping a capital crime.
Senate passed a bill directing State
courts to order mortgage foreclosures
chly a« Vlast resert during depressed
times.
Representative Wolfe, of Spartan
burg; introduced bill to" raise age for
compulsory school attendance from 14
to 16 years.
House, at night session, begaP con-
sideiatiun of $5,565,832 appropriation
bill. It voted $775 increase in clerk of
house’s salary, and cut appropriation
for State negro reformatory $14.000.
Electricity
Cp«n« the gates
of freedom for every
houeewife • • • Thou-
sande of women in
this eection are en
joying leisure houre
through our Homo
Electrifica
tion Plan.
Some men find agitation for public utility regula
tion a dependable lever for prying themeelves on
to the government payroll.
E. L. GODSHALK, Vice-Pres. A Gan’I. Mgr.
SouthjCaro
town. COMPANY
■
■ r
=7
t *
aid improved
Vf. ■
-Don’t Give Up tke Skip”
pt James Lawrence of the U. S.
Chesapeake used the words
; Give Up the Ship” as he lay on
mortally wounded during an
with the British Frigate
June L, 1813, off Boston.
Theme words became famous and a 1
snap it ladles sewed them on a flag
Mar Commodore Perry's flagship. Law*
for hla use In hla lake campaign.
3|s&V:.
This flag was afterwards sent to the
Navy department and then transferred
to Memorial hall at the Naval Acad
emy in Annapolis.
TYPEWRITES CLEANED.
Let me clean and oH that type
writer. It will run like new
when I return it to you. Prices
most reasonable and satisfaction
guartnteed.—Emmett E. Goodson.
/ ; r- ■—
▼> ednesoayv
House judiciary committee gave
favorable report to county dispensary-
liquor control biji, 10 to 4, and debate
in house en it set fpr next Wednesday.
A FEWextra bolls on each plant
make a lot of difference in
your yield—they may mean the
difference between a profit and
a loss. That’s why it stands to
reason that if you’re growing
cotton you ought to use the fer-
come from
Fertilizer
best. You can pay more or you
can pay less, hut you cannot buy
better fertilizer for growing
cotton.
Royster experts are continu
ally studying cotton, learning all
there is to know about fertilizing
tilizer that has stood the test of
time for nearly 50 years, under
actual growing conditions. That
means Royster’s.
it. They never stop experiment
ing and improving. They test
every fertilizer in die laboratory,
and field-test it in .the cotton
Bill-to cut auto tag fees 50 per cent,
passed second reading in house.
Senator Laney, of Ghesterfield, in
troduced bill to naise teachers’ pay
10 per cent.
Joint session re-elected Chief Jus
tice E. S. Blease and six circuit judges
and elevated Representative Arthur
L. Gaston, of Chester, to judgeship of
Sixth ciiouit-to succeed Judge J. K.
Henry. ^ ,,
Senator Brown, of Barnwell, and
Representative B. T. Leppard, of
Greenville, were chosen to fill vacan
cies on Glemson College board of trus
tees, and Representative Sipruill, of
V/IIYrSvdl ItYTKvIp ,
board.
House adopted ban
bills.
Taking up appropriation bill again,
house ngfused to permit new college
scholarships and tabled amendment to
appropriate $11,750 for industrial
school for girls.
Thursday.
After boosting State school aid]
Don’t take any chance when „
you buy your fertilizer. You
have to take enough chance on
the weather. Let- Royster’s ma
ture your cotton early and help
yqu heat the rainy season and the
weevil.
Remember this: Royster’s is
made in one quality only—the
field. Only refined materiab are
used to make .sure that the purest
obtainable grades go into Roy'- 1
ster sacks. As a result we know
^hat Royster Cotton Fertilizer will
jgive you the results you want.
See your Royster dealer today
and let him know how many
tons you need.
F. S. ROYSTER GUANO COMPANY, NORFOLK, VIRGINIA
Charlotte,N.C., Columbia,S.C., Atlanta,Go., Montgomery, Ala., Jackson,Mist.
m
FIELD TESTKD-FERTILIZER*