The Barnwell people-sentinel. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1925-current, November 22, 1934, Image 8
VMIB EIGHT.
THE BARNWELL PEOPLE-SENTINEL, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 22. 1224
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UQUID
TABLETS
COLDS
and
FEVER
flrst day
HEADACHES
in 30 minutes.
.SALVE - NOSE DROPS
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db.
Get a
Permanent
_
m.
Wave Now!
Al Permanent that will magnify
your natural beauty . . . your
hair softly waved and set in a
modern mode most becoming to
your type. Indeed, a wave that
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win win you many compliments.
FOR APPOINTMENTS
«
PHONE NO. 43.
The Barnwell
Beauty Shop
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HOW COME /
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Hie curb market in Barnwell has
•ted another successful year
sales amounting to $906.12. The
let operates two days a week—
•sday and Saturday—ami except
in extreme wea;her it open* at the
appointed hour. Selling in the open
«m cold windy days as the club women
ci» in winter, is a true test of their
•eagerness to help increase the cash
inuame of the^familjf. The club mar
ket was cloBed only 4 marktt days
during the year.
la lecognition of the good work
Mrs. L. B. Creech has done, she is to
receive 100 pounds of Arcadian Ni
trate of Soda for her garden work
«n other year. This was offered by the
company.
The following are reports of the
marketing and gardening work done
by several of the producers who sell
teguiarly on the maTket:
Mrs. L. B. Creech.
“1 have been a member of the Curb
Market almost ever since it first be
gan, and I find it has been a real big
help to me an^ my husband.
“I am a regular member, and it
helps us in running our farm besides
buying groceries, and paying for the
extra work we have to hire done.
“The things I have to sell are sur
plus. Besides what I sell, I have
things to give my neighbors which I
am glad to do.
Barnwell 50 and 25 Years Ago.
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Interesting Items Gleaned From the Files of The Barnwell People.
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NOVEMBER 20, 1884.
UapL. George Deer’s gin house in
•Sjeuraore Township was burned on
'Yfeuraday night, it is thought, by an
incendiary.
“tn the Track of Sherman’s Army,”
by Mr*. A. P. Aldrich, of “The Oaks,”
xaiY be published in the Charleston
Weekly News of next Wednesday.
Mr. John D. Browne, of Williston,
who has ably and acceptably filled
the position of sergent-at-arms of the
House of Representatives since 1876,
has announce^ himself a candidate for
re-election.
'Mr. W. R. Moore, who commended
Farming this year in George’s Creek,
** usel pleased with his experience,
hajraxg made 12 bales of cotton, 150
bushels of corn, 60 of peas and 100 of
potatoes to the plow, besides a good
*£rop of oats and cane.
At the South Carolina Gub Ball in
Vkkkumbia last week Mrs. Governor
Hagmod •was beautifully dressed in
Mack silk point lace, ornaments pearls,
■'ami Miss Zell Patterson in cream
malm and brocade, Spanish lace, blush
Jatifuinninto roses, ornaments dia-
The house and cotton press of
Wr. T. B. Harley, of Bennett Springs
», was burned on Friday morn-
w*Q» ever a bale of cotton. The
was accidental.
Ik grin house of Mr. Henry Pries-
ome and a half miles from Allen-
e. was burned on last Thursday
Ik about eight o’clock. The build-
contained about five bales of cot-
There was no The
was undoubtedly incendiary. The
k had been guarded for eight
mm nighta before but the fire was
before the watchman bad
duty.
Yes — we mean we
have the only tires
ever built with NO
WEAK SPOTS. Other tires are vulcanized with hot, dry, scorch
ing heat which devitalizes rubber and cotton. Seiberling tires are
soaked in steam—Vapor Cured—welded into a single unit of live
rubber—live cotton. Safer—far safer and 10% to 30% greater
mileage. Yet these Seiberlings of ours cost you not a penny more.
Why not make your own comparison here at our store? See our
fresh-from-the-factory 1234 stock. Come in today.
Gardner’s Service Station
PHONE 9106 ' BLACKVILLE, S. C.
Gulf Refining Company Products
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SEIBERLING
l/ar c1
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y
TIRES
ANOTHER SUCCESSFUL YEAR
FOR BARNWELL CURB MARKET
I.
“I have sold during the past year, vegetable to the garden. We planted
September, 1933 to August, 31, 1934, •
$209.14.
Sales for Past 12 Months Totaled $966.12.—Operates Two Days
a Week.—Interesting Reports Made by Three
Club Members.
“The procUcts I have sold on the
market, eie cooked food, poultry,
pork, butter, eggs, butterbeans, string-
beans, peas, carrots, cabbage, ourons,
collards, turnips, ckra, pepper, toma-
1-4 acre of Bountiful beans, which
brought $10.00 cash, besides 25 cans
and others we gave to neighbois.
Everyone Went wild over them and
they are the best bunch beans to plant.
Our fruit during July and August
brought $2.00. I sold $16.00 worth of
toes, eggplant, squach, Irish potatoes' chicken s an<i vegetables, and all sum-’
mer never failed to meet my Insui ance
payments promptly.” . - -
Mrs. O. B. Staiey.
“During the year from September
1, 1933, to August 31, 1934, I have at
tended the curb mrrket at the Court
House at Barnwell, about 95 times
of 104 market days, where I sold our
garden and other produce to the a-
mount of $121.25. The money I made
at the market I invested in various
ways. Some I spent for church ex
penses, telephone rent, subscription
... papers, insurance on home, groceries,
them, but the boring worm I have not lothe< and a „ umb( , r of oth , r thing ,
found anythin* that would kill them.| .. Th( , thiw , , so|d „„ the mart „ t
“Besides this $209.14 I have sold at were: cocked foods, poultry products,
the market my general sales were 125 poik a l)eef, c'kiry products, flowers,
pounds cf butter, $31.35; 60 pounds of garden products and fruits.
and mutton com. These I try to
grade so I may have the best.
“I sold vegetables the year round.
I find collards and Japanese Shcgoin
turnips sell best in the winter months.
“In planting vegetables for the mar
ket I always plant a little each time,
and plant often of different kinds of
seecl then I always have something
nice and fresh for market. -
“Sometimes I am bothered with in
sects on my collards. For the bugs,
f use cotton seed meal and lime on
NOVEMBER 18, 1909.
On Thursday night burglars broke
into^the Olar dispensary, stole and
hauled away in a wagon seven cases
of one X whiskey, valued at $85.88.
We had a new experience last week.
An esteemed friend’ insiste4 that the
higher price for cotton mae'e it just
and proper for him to increase his
subscription payment.
Attorneys Char.es Carroll Simms,
C. Arthur Best and J. Emile Harley
have completed their appeal to the
Supreme Court in behalf of a new
trial for their client, J. Chester Ken
nedy. T*ei r brief contained 150
pages.
The Barnwell dispensary sold its
last liquids early Saturday morning
and the door was closed sine die. Not
a single arrest was macle during the
day and evening for drunkenness or
disorderly conduct. On the previous
Saturday eight transgressors were
calaboosed.
The People Graduates:—The Bur
lington, N. C., Dispatch of recent date
contained a highly complimentary ar
ticle descriptive of the excellent and
increasing good reputation of the job
printing firm of Pate and Davies, who
three years ago began business in that
hustling young tar heel city. . . .
The Burlingtonians will find that the
longer they know the more they will
like these two graduates of The Peo
ple office* for they are ail right, up
right and downright and outright.
They are square deal fellows, giving
value received for every penny .they
get and their first printshop is glad
to know that they are achieving suc
cess by deserving it
The gin, saw and griat mill of Mr.
EL W. Brunson in Boll Pond town
ship waa burned two weeks ago lest
night.
meat, $9.00, end 50 gallons of syrup,
$32.50. A to.al of $281.99.”
Mrs. G. W. Delk.
“My son and I planted my garden
on September 4, 1933. We planted
carrots, winter cabbage, turnips, let
tuce, mustard, spinach snd rutabagas.
“During the month of September !
attended the club market with only
chickens, eggs, sugar cane and syrup.
Firm these pioducts I made about
$25.00. With this money I paid my
church dues each Sunclay and helped
my daughter pay her graduation ex
penses.
“We live ten miles from the Barn
well club market. Therefore, we
couldn’t attend regularly unless we
had a variety.
“My son and daughters sometimes
grumbled, thinking the club market a
waste of time. I finally convinced
them it was » great help.
“I began selling vegetables Octo
ber 15. I graded, washed! and sold
only the best. I attended onty once a
week but each Saturday made enough
to buy groceries. Winter cabbage
was my best seller and just as they
began to head, the worms attacked
them. I fought them with calcium ar
senate and finally succeeded in driving
them out.
“Earljr^pring I started! selling car
rots, spinach and! rutabagas. I had
to buy equipment for my three chil
dren in school, I usually cleared $1.00
each Saturday.
♦‘‘January, 1934, I hatched off 60
baby chicks and brooded them with
the hen. I was fortunate in raising
the flock, not one died. In March, I
culled my hens, guineas, etc., and sold
them to the poultry car for $8.45.
With this money we sorted our spring
and summer garden.
“In February we planted Irish pota
toes, cabbage, onions, tomatoes, pep
per, peas and English peas.
“April, 1934, I took out burial in-
■Suranee over all members of the fami
ly. I vfuIJy depended upon my gar
den and chickens to meet the pay
ments which were $1.30 every two
weeks.
“When the spring months turned
into summer I kept setting another
“In the fall and winter I planted
Tendergreen, Shogoin turnips, must
ard, spinach and other varieties of
turnips, also cabbage. I planted col-
lard seed in October and sold them in
the spring after other peoples’ were
gone. *
“In the spring an<j summer I sold
asparagus, garden peas, turnips, cab
bage, onions, beets, beans, okra, to
matoes, garlic, squash, pucumbers,
Irish potatoes, and corn. In the fall
I sold sweet and hot peppers, green
peas, butterbeans and gtringbeans.
“I sell vegetables the year round,
-and to do so I just keep planting when
the season and soil are suitable.
“I find that the Kentucky Wonder
is the best seller in the running varie
ty, and the stringless Green Pod in
the bunch vareity. Shogoin turnips,
Tendlergreens, collards, tomatoes, corn
and butterbeans are our best sellers.
*“I plant my vegetables in rows,and-
as one vegetable is gathered I plant
again on the same row and in that
way I have almost a, garden full of
growing vegetables all the°time.
“I do not have blight in my garden.
I had it in my old garden and moved
it on that account.
“I grade my vegetables and only
sell the best
“I have also sold some garden pro
ducts in wholesale to some merchants.
Besides the produce named I' sbld
quantities of other things consisting
of cured meat, ribside and ham.
“The fruits I sold - were plums,
blackberries, cantaloupes, peaches,
pears and apples.
“I enjoy growing and! marketing my
produce.”
Around the Clock with
Reddy Kilowatt
NOON
JUS
I’vo also got a bunch
That the way ho cooks your lunch
Will knag a light of arondor
to your oyos.
“REDDY KILOWATT” YOUR ELBCTRICAL SERVANT
SouthjCarolina
POWER. COMPANY
J. W. Ruff, Local Mgr.
Card of Thanks.
_ The family of the lata A* E. Corley
wish to acknowledge with gratitude
the many kind expressions of love
shown them in their bereavement.
HUSKY THI
Overtaxed by
•peaking,sing
ing, smoking
ADVERTISE IN
The People- Sentinel.
■
COUN’prr SAUSAGE MAKERS
We ship by parcel post, prepaid:
Sausagh casing, 60c per lb.; sage, 35c
per lb.; red pepper, 35c per lb.
EASTERLING BROS.,
476 Broad St. Augusta, Ga.
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1046 BROAD ST. AUGUSTA, GA, ' Phone 3586
BROWN & BUSH
Attorney »-at-Law
BROWN-BUSH
BUILDING
BARNWELL.
SOUTH CAROLINA
\
PRACTICE IN STATE AND FEDERAL COURTS
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