University of South Carolina Libraries
' VAGB EIGHT THE BARNWELL PEOPLE-SENTINEL, BARNWELL. SOUTH CAROLINA THURSDAY, JULY 5TH, 1M4. EURLBY HONORED BY HOME , POLKS AT MEETING FRIDAY •^CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE.) <«l a Hqvor tax would finance an aifht- wth school term but he hoped to anaad the State constitution so reve- J ■nw from liquor would not bo labelled ftar schools. , . ' I **11 any county in this. State wants be dry,” Sheppard emphasised, 'T idfe that as governor I’ll do my best keep it dry, unlike the United Elates government that has licensed wf-doetors iir tfrij State.” " JMannitig focJiew .1 Manning said he would “vote on the side to liberalize the liquor laws m they can be best suited to all sec tions of the State,” and Cooke claimed school term, county canneries, bien nial legislative sessions, and for tnain- taining roadg while cutting highway office forces. • , 'HI appoint only highway eoramia^ sioners who will vote bo remove Ben Sawyer (chief commissioner) because he’s made so many political promises it will cost the State too much to carry them out,” Johnston announced. 'Til be an active governor of all the Stlte and people.” He did not have an op- portunuity to answer Sloan, who spoke after him. • — ~Farm Rettef tTrggff. ^ Manqjpg prnnjiaoH »n “uaa pra«Mirn from me.” Sheppard defended the record of the State government, ssying ‘‘not one audit has ever shown rottenness in it,” and ended “I’m proud I’m not running on a platform four year s old.” Mayor L. B. Owens, of Columbia, advocated improved farm marketing and canning factories and promised to represent “the masses against the slickers, sharpers and master minds that have taken everything away from them and brought this trouble today.” Blease Claims Most Votes. and wasteful- •uch mismanagement nss.” A chief c’erk and chief inspec tor weze-discharged by Shealy, he asserted, “because they told him they would inform the governor unless he put back certain money and he put some of it back. The legislature re warded them.” ADVERTISE IN The People- Sentinel. -V BOYS MAKE MONEY—WIN PRIZES . ” ■ SELLING ATLANTA SUNDAY AMERICAN Your friends and ffeighbors will be your custohers. You Thursday of each week. 'Write at.once for get your paper s on full information and our new prize catalogue. Address—BOY SALESMAN .CLUB, ATLANTA AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA. V SUNDAY Blease cited his record of economy for introducing the first bill to xapeal State dry laws four year g ago. 1 First of the eight candidates for 'governor to speak, Senator H. Kemper Horry’s “backwoods states- announced he had turned into w* political “lone wolf” to carry out /UMnraments he initiated to halt “legal lower taxes, improve the >1 law, and liberalize liquor and statutes. He added he had op- “posedlTrural electrification bill In the uanate because of its “absurd” terms ilwt agreed to the Santee-Cooper bill, mad concluded: “Since the governor's office has boen occupied by se darned many politicians, I don’t ask you to elevate ■mm to the office, I ask you to lift it iqqp to me.” Johnston described himself as “the mform candidate” whose 1930 pro of State department consolida- had largely been enacted. He for a seven-month State in Washington as governor to get you farmers relief from the price-fixing racket in big cities.” He spoke for rural electrification and canneries where financially feaaible, and warned against using surplus State' funds “for new expenditures instead of the relief of the taxpayers.” Citing the reestablishment 4>f sound State finances by legislatures in which he served, Manning told also of his agricultural activities on the farm and at Washington in “pegging” cot ton prices last fall. Tom B. Pearce, Columbia business during forty-five years of public vice. He said clamors for the enlarge ment of State ifistitutians are only “an excuse to raise your tax levy to keep up salaried people who have noj business in office. You’ve got to haVe governor with the manhood and backbone to veto these things. I’ve vetoed more expenditure g than any governor since Wade Hampton.” Sloan claimed “I passed morejegis ation than any other man in the State,” including a reduction in inter est rates, highway bond limitation act, and tag cut. He charged Pearce lad voted to double auto tag fees in man said “I’m close enough to the administration to get federal-financed canneries for you to save your pro duce; I favor rural electrification to relieve the farm women of drudgery; paying -school teachers like other em ployes,” and a State unit in education to give “all children equal opportuni ties.” “Vote for the candidate you .think best,” Pearce concluded, “and if I’m defated you’ll nver hear me howl- in* »nd aauawkinar over the State about someone stealing the election r THEATRE Three Shows a Week Mon.-Tues. Wed.-Thurs. Fri.-Sat. r s and Thursdays at 4 p. m. Matinee: Saturday at 4 and 5:30 p. m. Admr. Night 10c & 25c. Mat. 10c & 20c Colored Balcony 10c and 1 5c Wednesday-Thursday JULY 4-5 ROSEMARY AMR* and JOHN BOLES in 1 Believe in You She Trusted the Wiong Man—Before She Met the Right One. Added:—COMEDY. DON'T FORGET DRAWING ON THURSDAY NIGHT AT 9:80. FIRST PRIZE $5.00—SECOND PRIZE 10 PASSES—THIRD PRIZE FIVE PASSES. FRIDAY-SATURDAY JULY 6-7 THE GREATEST PICTURE OF SHOWMANSHIP SINCE THE “BIG PARADE.” WALLACE BEERY in “Viva Villa” ’The Greatest Epic cf Adventure in v Screen History. Pancho Rides Again. Added:—COMEDY. Monday and Tuesday JULY 8-9-10 MID NIGHT SHOW SUNDAY 12:01 Will Rogers —IN— Rogers’ Best Picture to Date. You Can’t Afford to Miss This Picture Added:—COMEDY. Wednesday-Thursday JULY 11-12 RAMON NAVARRE and LUPE VELOZ Laughing Boy Added:—COMEDY. mr SAVAN NAH urn? 'On Johnson Square- /< 3«fi- .\ Prestige-P! L jou deni have to moke excuses ufhm stopping at this .HOT*Lss~ £ You're "There* ^Accommodations that ftddsednfSalufrSeMCB that 3Ub6*try i _ ideation that Places you.' ‘MegrOtoythinfa “ IJtnyone can. J, a. WOUND PftCS. ANDftcw a. Smith mom. the past while he voted to cut them by half this year. J. Roy Jone 8 and J. W. Shealy, for- iryar commissioner of agriculture, started the explosions. Shealy said employes in his office “scraped up stuff to shove me into court for politi cal ends and when I get back I’m go ing to reorganize that department.” “The grand jury said Shealy has committed no crime,” he continued, and a referee in civil court found only. $135.00 on hi* bend.— He—criticized- Jones’ appointment as paying off a political debt” by Governor Black wood. Jones said the house of representa tives asked Shealy’s prosecution on a unanimous report in order that there would never be a recurrence of Going Out of BARNWELL, S. C. Entire High Grade Stock and Fixtures To Be Sold to the Bare Walls Stock Consists of Ladies* and Men’s Furnishings, Shoes, Caps, Dresses, Clothii Phildelphia Salvage Company. k % . * • _ Thii tale will last for a thorl tim# never to be forgotten. STIC PRICE UP TO BRING / to the record low price of MALE* ADVERTISEMENT I—: ■HOTEL SAVANNAht SAVAN NAH , C F ORCIA . NEW IEDICED PRICES Amount STANDARD MODELS X/ Sport Roadster....... ........ $465 $25 Coach ——A 495 25 Coupe 485 25 MASTER MODELS — ' ' . — Sport Roadster 540 35 Coach... r 580 35 ■.Town Sedan 615 30 Sedan 640 35 Coupe560 35 Sport Coupe. 600 35 Sedan Delivery 690 45 COMMERCIAL CARS „ Commercial Chassis 355 30 Utility Long Chassis 5(5 5# Dual Long Chassis 535 50 Utility Chassis and Cab 575 . 50 Dual Chassis and Cab; 595 50 Utility Long Chassis and Cab. 605 50 Dual Long Chassis and Cab 625 50 CommercialPanel% — 575 35 Special Commercial Panel. 595 35 Utility'Panel. rrrr.. 780 50 Dual Cab and Stake Body 680 50 Dual Long Cab and Stake Body..... 740 50 ■Abort ere /«•( erfoee of peMender oera mt Flint, hiioh. With bumporr, apart tirt and tirt look, tht fiat prita ot Standard Modttt it $19 S30 additional. LTai orrota ot eomtatreiat cart at art t.o.b. Flint, Mich. Sptcial tquipmtnt extra. Friott aubjtct to ohanpt without notiot. Compart Chtrroltt'a low dtlivtrtd ptieta and taty O.M.A.C. ferine. A Gtntral Motora Value. AND UP, F. O. B. FLINT, MICH. With the announcement of price reductions several weeks ago, Chevrolet stepped into the most favorable price position it has enjoyed in a long time! t ' . • . Reductions amounting to as mnch as $50—the most substantial price cuts announced in the low-price field this year—dropped Chevrolet** base price to a new low figure of $465. Just compare this price—com pare any, Chevrolet price—with those of other cars. Then compare what you get for what you J>ay! There’ll be no question in your mind which car to buyr • Chevrolet offers patented Knee-Action—gpd others do not! The same ‘ to Fisher body, cable^ntrolled brakes, shock-oroof -'j* ■y / steering, and valve-in-head six-cylinder engine/Chevrolet gives you far more features-/ar finer quality. Yet the price of the Chevrolet ; Standard b lower than that of any other six or any eight in the world. I CHEVROLET MOTOR COMPANY, DETROIT,* MICHIGAN GRUBBS CHEVROLET COMPANY, Bamwell, S. C. c-'s&kjC.'A it «