The Barnwell people-sentinel. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1925-current, February 01, 1934, Image 2
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m ftAftMWftLL frEOPLE-SENTT^EL, BARNWELL, BOITTB CAKOLL ..
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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1984,
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ity Dispensary
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JOHN W. HC
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* F. DAVIES, Editor end Proprietor.
Entered *t the post office *t Barnwell,
• S. C., as second-class matter.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
One Year $1.60
Six Months .90
Three Months — .60
\ (Strictly in Ad ranee.)
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1934.
♦»»»» ♦
’I'Ahally
to breakfast, and the very first thing
I did was—squirt grapefruit juice in
to my eye, and the next thng—I- spilt
gravy on my vest.
fntr
rotative
Hiatt and Others Killed,
58 to 33.
By Gee McGee.
Political Dope.
flat fock, s. C., janny. 24, 1934.
deer mr. edditor:—' J
a large number of my friends, not
including my wife’s kinfolks, have
been beseeching me for sevveral days
and pleading with me to threw my
hat into the pollitical ring and iMn
for the leggis?lature. i have been
figgerin on the govvefnor’s chair, but
i want to pick out what in best for my
coostiturents, ansoforth.
i am sure i would make a fine gov-
vernor and could possibly be -elected
on the first ballet, but my wife dc not
want to move to the gevvernor’s man-
ahion and leave her flat rock rella-
tives, and a-cording tc law, if j was
the cbeef executive of our fait St*U T
i could not name anny of game to jobs
on public works ansoforth.
the leggis-lature Looks like the
"tiW^TSR^^^VpYeasenY. "TTTave b^nn
informed that the_woods will he full
of lobby-istg next session and i want
to Agger with seme of them as well
as the highway departments, which,
a-cording to my way of thinking, as
al. smith uster say when he wa s a
dinuneicrat, owns and runs the g:v
Vermont machinery of my state just
as it do in all other states.
The toast was ok, except it was
burnt on both sides instead of one
side. I knocked 'CV£V my cup of cof
fee reaching for the salt shaker to
shake-over some soft-boiled eggs that'
I ordered scrambled instead. After
a few mere mishaps, with my blood-
pjxrssure sizzling round 320 (normal
for me is 130), I went out to my car
to stait to rpy office.
Caw!* Chadwick
Cassia Chadwick was
h jhs,i
The stubborn liquor control issue,
thrust fcFwaid by the “new deal” to
confront State political leaders, ap
pears to be headed back to “the peo
ple” for a decision.
Whether the legislature order g an-
ciher referendum; on liquor or not,
the voters will have a chance to ex-
presa themselves.
Ifi electing a complete roster
State representatives and half of the
senators along with a host of other
----The car looked all right,^“except L afftctalV this 'year, they can efnbody
the left rear wa s flat. I had it fixed ( their' “latest" vi^vs in their choice s at
in exactly 45 minutes, NRA time. 1 the polls. /
When I crawled into- the seat of the [ Seme cf the
car, the tail of my overpeat got hung would prefer not to face/the question
on the doer and I tore that ofL ThaJ-on the hustings. But it already has
battery was so near dead, 1 had to be flamed up in the legislature and in
pushed off by 3 idle policemen. Then J the public mind and will be hard to
traffic liffMq ■♦■nppoH mo 3 .times down. '.
white I was being choked five times.| Enmeshed witty- other perplexing
I finally got to the office, and I had problems, the legislators' haver shqwn
to explode. £Io fire made, no floor, little dispcsitjqh so far thi 8 season to
swept up, no orders delivered, and 10 consume time in liquor debate. Re-
bill collectors—I never intend to try peated moves were made last week in
to be abnormal a~gain so long as I live, the house for a showdown before the
It simply went worfc ' county dispensary-local option bill,' in-
troduced by Representative Sobmon
flat reck, s. C., janny. 23, 1934 Blatt, of- Barnwell, and others, was
• The
regard
en to
und o
fenced to ten.yearn’ imprisonment In
1906; she died t^o years later in the
Ohio state penitentiary.- fSheVas born
at Eastwood, near Woodstock, Ont.
In 1857, as Elizabeth BlgJey and she
was first tried for forgery at the age
of sixteen. A short sketch of her
criminal Jife Is glved In Charles Kings?
ton’s “Remarkable Rogues.” For «
time ibe practiced clairvoyance; sh>*
posed as the daughter of a former Amer
ican President, the widow of an earl,
tc.- She forged the name of Andrew
irnegle-to get a big bank loan, while
the frauds led to the failure of one
Ohio bank, filer, cleverness in extra*
ing large sums from millionaires
through her Impostures gave her tho
name of the “Madame Humbert of
53.
America. 1 ’
M
THE OPENING OF
BARNWELL’S NEWEST DEPARTMENT STOR1
, Feb. 1
Located on Main Street in Building Formerly Occupied
by. Giggs’ Cash Grocery
SEE BIG CIRCULAR FOR OPENING BARGAINS!
N SURA N C E
FIRE
WINDSTORM
PUBLIC LIABILITY
ACCIDENT - HEALTH
y
v
seeker-terry Wallace,
department of agger-culture,
Washington, d 1 . C.
deer sir:— ^
i am now i eddy to i snt you the (
part of my farm which t wiH agre^
blasted, 53 to 33, the second day it
wag Ctmiideied. -
There doubtles s will be further de
bate on the gtfnen&l subject", but most
of the wets have aboui given up hope
df^blhg anything more this sessbn
SURETY BONDS
AUTOMOBILE
THEFT
Calhoun and Co.
P. A. PRICE, Manager.
To the Public:-
1
Don't Read This
not to plant in corn 'fY lielb ieduce than possibly to liberalize the quart a
hogs, and not to plant in wheat to month law. This would fall'short of
help reduce the su*'p!u« in fl ur and their' idea s cf a real control measure,
not to plant in cotton to help the ! The border-line group, holding the
•b«rancc of power bfclwwn thii dlTp'-'
some taxes, / ping wets and the bone drys, s.eem to
take the position “the paopJe” hav»
i meant to sow wheat in the four not yet spoken with oMfficient elear-
akers-behind the smokehjorase, but y u n^^otrthentpigstltiii b wynkTit'defi^ ~
can have 2 of same for 11$ per aker, nite action.
making a total of 26$. i will plant When most of the present legisla-
my 2 akers left over’ in pea.s aj r.Q- ture wa: elected in 1932 “economy”
debby has get a suppluss of peas and rather than liquor control" was the
they are ah eddy-2$ per bu. /binning issue. Dry.; have empasized
— — | their 3,000-boHut 'Vlttoiy in the lost
the ieggis-lature do not pay anny
big sallery, but i wont mind that, i
will have sevveral planks in my fiat-
form that will appeal to the voters,
ifazly: 2$ otter-mobile tags, c5 beer
in bottles, licker control by.the state
goWemment, fiee pencils for scholl
children, bigger* pay by industry mills,
abolish nearly all of the useless jobs,
and put fish in creeks and rivers under
the game wardens ansoforth.
if you can see yore way e'esr to
pull for me through the collums "of
yore paper, } wtll announce at once/
if you will hepp me* out, i will, get a
low postage rate on newspapers, and
make it a-ginst the law for a nabor
to borrow another nabor’s paper, thus
forcing him to subscribe for same, or
dent read it. i might a.Iso get some
of yore folk® a seat at a nice pie
counter after being eleckted.
i wont plant no corn a-ta'l and y u November Tth referendum, but the
can have them, 5 akers at 10$ pe , »* slimness of the total vote has tended
aker down below the cow pastor and j to .discount their -argument,
will fetch me in 55$ a.;'to the hog sup- j Now faoihg the house is the, “retalia-
pluss; i new have 2 stoats; i wi'.l kill tory” iron-clad prohibition bill intro-
1 of same in martch, an^ wont feed duoed by Ropresentoftive C. Lester
the other 4 very much, and thus reduce Thomas, of Hampton, a dripping ytet,
my hogs 60 percent, so send me cG a. after the county dispensary'ptfi'n'WitT
pound, for him, vizzly; c6 times 75 killed.
Unless you are interested in a
medicine which has helped
700,000 women and
I am pleased to announce that I am now rep
resenting the Williston Fertilizer Works and-am
r prepared to offer prompt delivery on all brands
of fertilizer/and materials.
over
girls. Taka is
childbirth, at the Change or
whenever you arc nervous and
rundown. 9$ out of 100 say,
me!”
“It helps
LfB 1A EHHMfiA4FS-
/
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
I l wish to thank my* friends and customers for
the splendid tonnage they have given me in the
TTa^rirrrd'lTa'^ure them, as well as new ohesiThaT'
prepared to serve them better than ever be-
Radway 9 s Pills
For Constipation
pound K equals 7$ and c20.
if you'think.-best, i will allss rent
ybu 2 rooms in our house for use of
^cre c. C. c. workers, or the i'. f. c.
hand**, or mebbe the - w. -i yrn -ron-
Thcmas said he offered this meas
ure as an acid test f .u “diinking” drys
and'it would hot pass. Wets -held,
however, that if " ironically if should
be enacted it would strengthen their
ccitsg: -bjr stowing "h^tv utterly inf-
have our parlcr-room and heff of our possible real.^rohibition” is' in what
l ._ —, : O-i _ * '• . * .
kitchen for 8$ per month, making they describe ‘a 3 “wet South Caro-
164$ for came, me and my old lady ! lina.”-
c:n sleep uj) in the 1 ft for 8$ per j / bevy cf ether problems wil! be
mrnth. clamoring for aetijon when-the legis
lature reconvenes this week, the 4th-
of the session.
They will include the still unde
cided auto~ tag cut, legislation on
/
Whnt Th«y Are«
A mild rtlublc Vegetable Uxativc
which doc* not gripe, cause dutrcaa
or disturb digestion. Not habit ioctn-
ing. Contain no harmful drugs.
- What They Dot
Millions of men and women, since’
1847, have used them to relieve sick/
headaches, nervousness, fatigue,
of appetite, poor complexion _ and
breath when these conditions
caused bv COSlfitipAtXOXl* 1
At All Druggists'
Rad way 8C Co., luc., New York, N.Y.
ire, for you are invited to uie plant to see your
^fertilizer mixeci. ~See for yburF.slf and know that
you are getting no filler—absolutely 2,000 pounds
of plant food to each ton from the best materials.
• ; ^ .. ■ ' x 'V • -
• e
R. L. HAIR, Agent
•*' i
Williston Fertilizer Works
- *, _ — •_ '' “
, ’ . ... • . * • *
WILLISTON, S. C.
PHONE 69
• •. . . t . . . ...... •
let *me hear frem you at once, i
will not jump in till the waiter gets
a little bit finer rght at present, it
locks like our state needs some good
men in the leggis-lature, men with
strong brains, men that can’t be
swayed by the tattle of monney and
fine linen and the wide when it is
red. j. am the man of the hour and
will run if urged just a little bit more,
yores trulie,
; mike Clark, rfd.
corTy-sponden't.
i had planned-to plant the big field
ccntaining 6 a,kefs betwixt the branch
and the scholl house in cotton, but.
if y:u w! ! send me a option on 10 , hanking, metof truck regu ation an:!
bales and loan me c4 a pound on same textbook selection and distribution in
at .nee, i went plant none a-tall, and a ^h'°n to the keystone general ap-
will not therefore have to plow up-any P ro pTiation/bill.
next summer as heretofoar. Tarigied 7 with the appropriation task
is a 10' per cent, teacher pay raise
^called for in bills, pending ip both
H’a the Little Things That Ccunti
T —-.Ever since I had the flu a year
ago, my temper has been unbalanced.
I find it mere difficult to be sweet and
land ajrd gentle, but I took stock cf
myself the other night after ictiring
and made up my mind that I would
begin 4 he following morning/and he
good natuied, more comnderate of
others, and smile—ever afterward.
i am wi’h the govvei'ment toddy
and sc!e when it comes to getting
bettor price s f°* r us farmers and i am
allso thankfu 1 fer the emergency relief
where we get our vittals at pr'esseni.
wassent for that, we would pc.rsibly
hafter work for a livving. my wife
say s it went be long liow till the
govvermen: wil' furnish everything
and do everthing f:r us. i am reddy
for thst in toto. v/
yores trulie,
mike Clark, rfd.
dirt farmer.
house and sernste.
-The senate finance committee, work
ing ever the house supply bill, gave
consideration last week to pay boosts
fpi both teachers and State employes
but fan into the clft'torg'tfboo cf find-
4 ’ ^ __
ing sufficient revenue to
them. ^
When the mcn^y "bill was sent Jby
‘the house' to the senate the second
week of the session it totaled $6,241,-
DQbr~ ATijrctJTrsfderabie lncrease in this'
figure is sure to piovoke epppsitibn
from the repiesentatives.
Rice Most Important
Everything went along a’l right
till my alarm clock went off at 5:30.
(I thought I set it so’s it would be
gin raising sand at 7:30, not 5:30.) I
crawled out of bed. toward the fuss-
making demon enp stepped on a pecan
hull, and the next step contacted my
left ankle with the right rocker cf a
chair. I went hack to bed, but could
not sleep any more.
According to a professor of botany
at the University of California. Los
Angeles, rice Is the most Important
crop in the world, as it furnishes the
basic diet for over a billion people
and Is almost me only food of millions.
It was grown/ and cultivated In C(iina
as early ns 2800 R. a It is estimated
that there »re from 5,000 to 7,000 rice
varieties under cultivation, some mu
tuflng In 00 days and some requiring
a year. Rice production in the United
States Is small compared with that of
other cereals, but still it ranked eight
eenth in the list of cultivated cropS in
1024.
—..I ga! up at 7:30. Tried to take a
hot bath in cold water'. While shav
ing, I niptped the southern end of my
nose off. I started cut cf the bath
room ana Stepped cii a cake of soap,
and came to a few minutes later
Handing at the nose. I pulled my
nock He in two trying tp get it to slip
in a at:AT collar; there weie 3 battens
missing fr:m my dean shirt, and I
ameer did find my back collar button.
“Pa»i»on Flower”
The name “passion flower” (flos pas
slonis) arose from the supposed re
semblance of its corona to the crown
ol thorns and of the other parts of
the flower to the nails ami wounds of
Jesus t.’hrisL at ills cnirltixlon. white t-'pom
the five sepals and five i»etals were
taken to symbolize the ten uiKistles;
r. who denied, and Judas, who be-
traVetl. hetpg nmlttorf !■ ^
a sock to hard, my frot' V. cahingion star.
' v- • - ; * :
given to the sufferings of Christ
during the luat days of Hla Ufe.-
m
Pine Gives More Heat
Than Heavy Hardwoods
Pound for pound, pine wood gives
off more heat than hickory. There is
a widespread belief that/ hickory or
other heavy hardwood has a higher
fuel value than pine: Tests by the
forest ^products Inhorptory of the
United States Department of Agri
culture show the fallacy of this
notion, which probably has held sway
sioce stoves first came hito use.
A cord of hickory wood, being*
heavier, may give off more heat than
a cord of ' pine. / But most resinous
woods, like pine,/have a higher hent-
productlon vnlqe* per pound, than
nonreslnous wc
>«otbery mistaken idea about fuel
wood is that/ sapwood of' long-leaf
pine contain^ more, resin than the
hearmood. This notion comes prob
ably from /the frequent , sight of
glistening on the freshly cut
“sapwood, but not on the heartwood.
Although the resin Is formed in the
sapwood, /lt Is stored mostly in the
hMtrtwoqil, according to the forest
service.
COTTON
r
Here’s why you should use
Field Tested Fertilizer
HEAVY yield of good sta
ple cotton is hard to get. It takes
hard work, experience, favorable
weather, proper soil and the
right kind of fertilizer. It means
a real investment in money and
plenty of worry. Yet all this
means nothing if the fertiliser-
does not get your cotton off to
a quick start and early maturity.
Play safe. Protect your invest-
ment. Trust your cotton crop to
Royster’s—the fertilizer that has
been proven right in the cotton
field for half a century.
Remember this: Royster’s is
made in one quality only—the
best. You can pay more or you
can pay less, but you cannot buy
better fertilizer for growing
cotton.
Royster experts are continu
ally studying cotton, learning all
there is to know about fertilizing
it. They never stop experiment
ing and improving. They test
overjr fertilizer in the laboratory,
and field-test it in the cotton
field. Only refined materials
used to make sure that the pur
est obtainable grades go inyo
Royster sacks. As a result We
know that Royster Cotton Fer
tilizer will give 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,Miss.
>ster
pAVr-i I
FIELD TESTED FERTILIZERS
AD VI
riSE in The Feople-SeattnaL
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