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\ m 2 • > ' ... ■ U.'i'W \ 4 :■- .u«ic4X- -3. P ; PAGE TWELVE THE BARNWELL PEOPLE-SENTINEL, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA THURSDAY, JUNE 14, IW4. t" itT iff.: ■' ST ► ' 'VH?; 6 5. ? V' tX-. I All unpaid Taxes for 1933 S'-' *> d w31 be turned over to the eriff at close of fiscal year, June 30th. •’ . '. - By paying NOW you save 5 per cent.\collection charges and mileage for Sheriffs riders. v Pay at Treasurer’s office NOW! , ^xV' J. J. BELL, Treasurer, Barnwell Co. % ! - tl nf.fij n- T“ 1101 JEWELER Augusta, Ga. Havel anywhere*.any day^f ja on the SOUTHERN ^1/2 A JanAr every parse...! • PIE MILS Way Coach Tlckots On Sale Daily • • • • • • Round Trip Tickets . for each mile tisveleil , . . return iumt 15 days Good in Sleeping and Parlor Car* on payment oi proper charges lor space occupied Trip Tickets . . lor each mile traveled... return Krait 6 months Good in Sleeping and Parlor Cars on payment oi proper charges lor space occupied • CO One Way Tickets • • Good in Sleeping and Parlor Cars on payment oi proper charges lor space occupied NO 8URCHAROE! HIGH CLASS TRAINS Lam Pull nun Equipment, including Ciia|1f r. Drawing Roots and Open Section Sleeping Cart COACHES.. GOIfVEIflENT SCHEDULES Inauia Sarialartory Service on the Southern Railway Syatani Be Comfortable in the Safety of Train Travel FRANK LIENK1NS ac Paara^R Trafic SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM ■ SSMP US TUCK QKPEBS FOB JOB PBINTWO. —2. .■1*01 "t* r '•.VvWC^'C;^ iH THE UIKS By P. N. SHEPHERD •• i Executiv* Manager American Baykert Assaciatiaa ll/HILE banking today appeara In a ** wholly distorted light in the eyas of some, the more reasoning elements in onr population undoubtedly have WYNDHAM MANNING Candidaee for GOVERNOR Economy—Efldency and Law Enforcement a less Isandlced MANNING FOR GOVERNOR. their fellow bankers. The public mind VISIT OUR CHINA AND GLASS DEPTrFOR THE BRIDE. DIAMONDS WATCHES Cash cc Credit Cash or Credit EYES EXAMINED GLASSES FITTED DR. J. C. TINLEY OPTOMETRIST SPECIALIST REFRACTION AND MOTILITY OF THE EYE 128# BROAD STREET AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. (Sumter Daily Item.) The resolution of the county Demo- cratic convention endorsing Col. Wyndham M. Manning for governof meets with our hear4y approval. The convention also paid him the hand some tribute of election as a dele- 'gate to the State convention by ac clamation. Col. Manning's views bn public ser vice measure up to the standard that this paper has striven for during all the years of its effort to serve the people qf this section. Nor does he view than would appear from cer- ' tain irresponsible orators, often posing si ipokes- «en for that in definite quantity ■ called “the mass” k of our people, p Anti-social acts on the part of some bankers for merly hays been the snhjact of spectacular exposures. P. N, SHEPHERD but I can say without resenratlbfi that they were In no way typical of the acts and attitudes of the rest majority of give mere lip service to his principles. His record shows that he lives and fights for. them. He was educated at West Point. As a lieutenant in the regnhrr army he had a certain living guaranteed him. But in the old peace days before the World War, this did not appeal to him. He resigned and entered the teaching profession. The moment trouble loomed on the Mexican border, Manning offered his trained services to our great president, Woodrow Wil son, and took a company of 0»arlea<- ton volunteers to the Mexican border, serving during all of that trouble. No sooner was that over that the World War started. Manning was again among the first to volunteer. Once more he served throughout the war, with distinction, reaching the rank of Lieut. Col one 1 . When the '‘piping days .of peace” brough him, ht.me frouu- foreign *er-. vice, the farm called hfm. It wa* in his blood. His fathers before him had been farmers. . . . This was just about the time the post-war prosperity began to fade out and deflation set in for the farm- erst No-one-4a more famiiiar with the stiugglej and hardships that have confronted our farmers for more than a decade. He Httl theM pnti- lems face to the front—with the same courage and determination that he showed on the field of battle. His two terms in the legislature have been characterized by dilligent attention to his duties, careful study of questions presented and clear cut, manly decisions on these questions. His analysis of the tax situation has been given in addresses before thoughtful audienceg in various parts of the State; it shows unusual dili r gence in gathering data and ability to grasp and make clear a complicated problem. It will thus be seen that Col. Man ning has touched the life of our people at many points. He knows the problems of the great calling of a teacher, and as such has dealt with young people. He has struggled with the hardships confronting the farmer. He has studied, as few have, the knotty problems of governmental fi nance. And above aH, he has played no petty or mean political game, but has shown himself a man of simple sincerity and courageous convictions. His politics are of the same type as those of Woodrow Wilson and F. D. Roosevelt. . was shocked into the belief that these untypical instances were far more rep resentative than they really were, and this belief haa been enconraged by po litical and demagogic elements. The Banker* Today The bankers who are in charge of our banks today represent men who withstood the temptations and avoided the economic pitfalls of the great boom, ft they had not they would not be there, or their banks would not have been able to eurTivq the rack and min of the economic hurricane, by. which even many banks and bankers, wh A «+ win above have been destroyed. The other types of bankers, those that fell below the high standards of professions! ethics and business prudence that character ized those that remain, have passed out of the picture. But they have left for those that remain a difficult herit age of suspicion and ill will. How irrational this Is, when we re flect that not more than three or four per cent of our entire population suf fered personal loss because of what any banker did or neglected to do, whereat literally millions of bank de positors did not lose a single cent aa a result of banking dfflcultles and really owe a vote of confidence end thanks to their own bankers who were true to the highest conceptions of their stewardship and brought their tnstitn- tlons and their customers safely through the greatest*business disaster the world has ever seen. It has been a peculiar feature of tbe psychological distortion of the times that many who owe nothing but gratitude to their bankers Joined In blaming the banker rirout of pi'dbbrHoff With my rational - consideration of the facts. ijllMIBMi T ••i » - — MM Mrftlil The famous General Electric Monitor Top mechanism requires no attention, not even oiling. / # Look to the Hjechanism of the refrigerator you buy for your greatest value... and your greatest satisfaction in its use year after year. With its unparalleled record for dependable trouble-free refrigeration service at low cost, the ~ ^~at AUW HIV Generil Electric Monitor Top has won universal recognition as the standard of excellence. In General Electric 1934 models this matchless mechanism has been robed in new striking beauty and distinguished style; " • Quiet operation. t • Freezes more ice faster. • Uses less current and is powered for even unusual demands. • Stainless Steel Freezing Chamber. ~ — • All-steel cabinets, e Adjustable sliding sbelvi • Automatic Interior Lighting. • Auxiliary foot-pedal door opener. • Automatic defrosting. Responsibility for our reputation is shared by each mem ber of this organization. Proper appreciation of this fact stands behind every improvement in the service which we ren der, r , E. L. GODSHALK, Vice-Pres. and Genl. Mgr. South .Carolina POWER. COMPANY J. W. Ruff, Local Mgr. EXAMINATIONS FOR TRUST INSTITUTIONS New Move by Federal Banking Authoritiea Welcomed by Banka and Truat Com- paniea, Saya Bankera’ Organisation We are offering a few tons of 4 Chilean Nitrate of Soda at Cold Moqthful PEDERAL examination of trust de- * partments Is the latest develop ment In banting supervision and trust companies and banks operating trust departments are welcoming this de velopment because It fills a long-felt want, it Is stated by the Trust Division of tbe American Bankers Association. Despite tbe growing importance of American trust business in recent years examining officials have never given to trust departments the atten tion paid to commercial banking de partments. this authority points ont Now the Federal Reserve System, In conjunction with the Comptroller of the Currency, has undertaken to bring the examination of trnst departments up to the level of commercial bank ex aminations, it says. Experts in trust work are being em ployed by the various Federal Reserve Banks. Thes< experts win bead the special staffs of trnst examiners In the twelve Federal Reserve Districts. Spe cial staffs are already at work in some of the Reserve Districts, Including Boston, Atlanta, Richmond and Chi cago. The Federal Reserve will ex amine the trust departments of state- chartered members of the Reserve Sys tem. Uniform Supervision Meanwhile, the Comptroller of the Currency has built up over tbe past two years a staff of special examiners for the trust departments of national banks. All national banks are members of the Federal Reserve System. Since nearly all state-chartered trust instltn- tlons are members of the Reserve Sys- $32 pefTon I ..—i „ . „ MM. ——*■» ».■■■ iiy i. Ti» •». - -JlilM. I II .g Also limited quantity of 20 per cent Manure Salts under the market. s * \ W. H. Kennedy & Son Williston, S. C. mr SAVAN NAH Home tern tbe new plan will bring about moants te Federal examination —V, It’s a tries te noia uquia sir, at 312 d«Qr«M below zero, la your mouth, but Elliott James does it as partof th« fro* show tn the Science theater of the now World's Fair in Chicago. for tbe trust business. State examining authorities probably will follow Federal supervisory policies tp * considerable extent. Hence, coor dination of the procedure of the nation al-banking syotonrand the Federal Re serve System is expected to result in a uniform system of examinations for trust departments In all banks. This in turn should produce considerable standardisation In the operation of trust departments, tbe division da daraa. -I—t SEND US YOUR ORDERS FOR JOB PRINTING. ;